The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT RQUALIZATION | WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1927 'Sorlie Wil] Attend —_--- Sets Her Wings For Rome Hop ‘SETON SPE AKS é finde es foe in Ieee KBR PLAN BEST SAYS LOWDEN It Is Farmers’ Turn to Enjoy Benefits cf Stabilized Mar- ket, He Claims 5 | The} the law sed are those | BEFORE CROWD | Tells cf “Woodcraft League’s’ Werk in Guiding Young People of Today Before an enthusiastic piorer, author and scientist, this noon told of aims and accomplishmetns of the Wooderuft League, an organizu- tion sponsored by him’ and called “a man-making scheme with a blue sky background.” Mr. Seton spoke at a joint meet- ON WOODCRAFT roup, Ernest. ‘Thompson Seton, famed. ex. | | Governors’ Meeting — ’ Lansing, Mich., ~ Jel; ighteen governors have to date si nified their intention of attending the conference-of governors at. Mackinac Island, July 28 to 26, Governor .Fred |; W. Green of Michigan was notified today, The governors include ‘A. u. Sorlie, North Dakote. Storms General Over Middlewest Chicago, July 13.—()—The mid- dlewest, particularly Nebraska, Min- nesota and Towa, experienced heavy rains last night, and in some places clk were winds of tornadic inten- sity. The storms were more beneficial Nebraska especially rain, At Omaha 85 of an’ inch and be Near Sandusky, along thé shores cf Lake Erie is “Rum Row,” one of as strangest settlements in the country. Twenty large wine casks|the fall was re om over the state. of 1000-gallon. capacity, with a sleeping porch tacked on the front Sroix valley on the eastern of each, form the unique summer homes cclony. Sette renmannitere Ba it ed crop damage was reported there and crop damage was reporte dthere and in west central Wisconsin, where the storm was of reduced intensity. R ports to Des Moines from varior parts of Iowa showed the rainfall general throughout the state. ing of the Kotarv. Kiwanis and Lions iy Jelubs, held this noon at the Grand give eres jHacitie novel. Me is to speuk tonight latio f : 4 at the city auditorium at 8: All y y ters between the ages of eight and 18 are to be admitted free. | — keserved seats for adults may be | ®-<=== obtained “at Harris and Woodman: | | Man dan Ne WS - League, Mr. Seton said, was! ee | and Noraine, of Towner. Mr. Ve zed to develop the character of the young people of today, “It @ ABSTRACTERS | milya is attending the North Dakota Title Men’s association ‘convention. CLOSE MEETING | RETURNS FROM LAKES offers so ‘hing to do, think about, J. P. Hess, who has spent the past enjoy 2 remember,” he said, i | week ‘at Detroit Lakes,Minn., where |the Hess family are spending the | sumiyer, returned toi Mandan Mon- : | at Dr. Scholls Zino-pads are medicated, antiseptic, protective. druggies and shoe dealer'e—35e. Zino-pads Put one on—the™ pain is gone? pros ame from under Now, he it is turn to be permi benefits of stabilizin with the approval of the If all farm producers w power by congress to fix their sell. | 27: ing price at or near the cost of pro-| = 25 duction, the greatest of all obstacles to successful cooperative marketing | enterprises would be removed, he) believes. | Hut,” he pointed out, “the equal. | wrouping the ¢ PRINTING of All Descriptions jas their guests Mr, and Mrs. George |B. Vermilya and daughters, Charlott dling surpluses needs to be ap-j) Leagie culkin ia lige hat Coren universally to make the farm relief | Mr. Lowden the equal ization fee, universally applied to all producers of a single commodit the only way A Built on Indian The work of the league is built on the work and life of the Ameri Indian, because the early Ind ve the world some| of his information on wooderaft and | outdoor life first began to crystallize | day. after “he met Rudyard Kipling in|’ | i 1898, Seton said. He told Kipling at | | for handling the expense of con- that’ time that he planned to compile| Towner Man Named New) | President—Arnot of Bis- n stood for all that is best in American | RETURNS TO MEDIANA trolling surplus production, as the a dictionaty” on. wooderaft, - Kisthy marck Reelected Secretary |. Miss Gertrude Knief has returned to Indianapolis, Ind., after spending the past week With ‘friends in Man- an. | TAKE TRIP MGIavice. to cover’ ‘the cost of| outdoor life, the speaker said. The idea of meeting the costs out of the jadvised him, he said, to write a novel iederal treasury partakes too much of |Gladys Rey, pretty Los Angeles fiyer,-nolds records for parachute | on the ae instead. the n ture of a eo to be -|jumps at both high and low altitudes. Now she has made up her i rcantenh Pe jioe Mo eee | e e farmers Y % Jew ‘York Pp, A wo va e, be of ined 4 a her to the [mind to fly from Ne w York to Rome. A pecial Ryan monoplane, of eas" Fyailing. tilts ROEM >A." g> SLUM@GLST ORIN eee wa | ape ERA ei ree aaa the kind that Lindbergh used, has been lected as the machine in| +t exhausted his subject, he| atected Pehle f the left Mond for Billi ch she es to make the . Her co-pilot is Lieutenant Delmar ite“ Labbe ob tsiciel tyharatet bid igi ae teat Ings, Mont., which she hopes to make the trip. F a ent on to write “Rolf of ' the North Dakota Title association at the | where they will spend » few days L. Snyder of Cleveland, 0. "and other of his books | closing session of its annual conven- | with friends while en route to Yel- Dicgen, D., Jaly 1 are known as classics for tion, held here this morning. O. Lowden, former gover ois, today received a petition bearing the signatures of 10,000 Montana} voters asking him to become a can-/ Aidate for the Republican nomina- tien for president. . The petition, which had been cir- culated in every Montana county, was presented to Mr. Lowden at his farm} home near here by W. E. Stockton,| of Bozeman, Mont., president of the Montana Farm Bureau. i “Mr, Lowden said that ne could be said at this time,” said Mr. Stockton. TOMPKINS TO END SERVICE | WITH SEVENTH Beloved Officer to Be Hon- cred on Occasion of His G4th Birthday ington, July 13—()—There is rejoicing tinged with sorrow out in the barracks of the seventh cav- alry at Fort Bliss, Texas, for a sturdy old Indian fighter, who for more than 30 years knew no other Lome than the seventh, is back again to his last command. He is Colonel Selah R. H, Tomp- kins, on the army list, but to the troopers of the seventh and to nearly every officer of the army he is “Tommy” Tompkins. From a shavetail second lieutenant to colonel commanding, Colonel | ‘Yompkins has carried the saber the seventh through every comm sioned grade. He was born in Wash- | ington, D. C. a son of General | Charles Tompkins and of a family that has contributed its sons to the officer corps of the American army ever since that-army came. into be- ing. . Active Service Ends Next Sunday Colonel “Tommy’ will-lay aside his saber on his 64th birthday and the occasion will be made one of honor to him and regret that his active service is at an end. | For no officer of the army is held | by his brother officers to be so be- loved by his men as Tompkins of the seventh. Even the serious minded war de- artment was touched in his behalf yy emotion such as it rarely shows. . It was a special war department or- der that sent the colonel back from command of Fort Stanley, Texas, to the seventh at Fort Bliss for the last | week of his active service that he might round out his career with the regimen? with which all bub six | years of his army life has been| 5 | pent. Colonel Tompkins commanded the seventh when it rode into Mexico ‘with Pershing on Villa's trail. Dur- ling the war he led the seventh in it rying work along the border ack In 1900 he’ rode with it against the Sioux in the battle of Wounded Ene There is no doubt where his heart is, for his preference card at the war department, indicating the type of duty he desires, calls at- tion to his long service with the renth and adds: UMy preference is to serve with that regiment, wherever it i: ption to Mark Goldeh Wedding at Underwood Thursday jrwood, N, D., July 13,—Mark- ir golden ig _anniver- wy, (Mr. and Mrs. Matt Kowarsch of Ui ‘wood will have a family A tomorrow, with over 100 e: et z wedd! ceremony is te be bad ie ithe, warcing’ at) she evening in the are to be pres- Umder-¢ood ie apareh and 3 nothing? [is :|AUTO REGISTRATIONS FIRST HALF OF 1927 MORE THAN FIRST HALF 1926 Altho hicles re; months ih the number of motor ve- stered during the first six showed an_ ine e period a such reg ing to data "red B ase tg Re ; The deep Hing off in the new automobiles, Under the North Dakota system new cars take the highest registration fee and the cost of registering the machine is de- creased as it grows older. Comparative statisties show 145,611 motor vehicles registered during the registration of Counties— Adams Barnes Benson Billi Bottineau Bowman Burke Burleigh Cass Diekey Divide Dunn Golden Valley Grand Fi Grant .. Griggs Hettinger Kidde La Moure Logan McHenry MeIntosh McKenzi McLean Mercer Morton Mountrail Nelson Oliver Pembina Pie R: ey Ransom Renville Richland Rolette Sargent heridan Steele Stutsman Towner Traill Walsh hone Ward ¢... Wells Willia 19,697.40 | youth, {that “If somebody doesn't get this |(the outdoor) idea across before 50 iting astride our necks.” Is Fine Recreation The Woodcraft League work, the} speaker said, is “fine recreation for | ix months of this year as com- | boys and girls of all ages trom four | 320 for the same pe-|t 94.” It is distinet from one’s vo- | Fets collected for {cation in life, but it is an avocation, | six months of 1927 totaled d. 3.90 as compared with $1,- Leagus also works on ie arin e that youth's natural instinets | rained, but should | right channels. 0,000 $s c 0,000 has been deduc id how, from early youth, he had | for purposes s->cified by the le; ature, ie eceipts z et j= ed between tie state Saually di lthat time, that all natural instincts | were sinful and should be repressed. In his life as a cowboy on the north- ; .jern range he thought the matter ver and in the of his travel- ing came to the conclusion that his! natural instincts were oftentimes a better guide than his judgment.” j Traces Instincts’ Growth } He went on to trace the develop- 7 {ment of the various instincts in a child’s life. First came the play in-| then the dream period, when tales seem real and’ vital; | 80 /then comes the gang instinct; then 31 the. man period and, during this | period, parents, instead of curbing | 5001.48 : their children, should make outdoor | 5 !men and women of them; then comes | the religious instinct, and later on,/| boys and girls begin to realize that | they have a country. The impulse for hero-worship is strong at this | time, and should be developed, the | speaker said. Much later, he ‘said,! comes the idea of service. How the Wooderaft League was ted during the d ending June 30 is shown by the/ following table: County State Highway Shi Share of youngsters at reenwich, Con how it was successful, and’ how has spread to countries all around 2 ithe globe was told by the speaker. Hettinger Co. Old Settlers’ Picnic ‘Largely Attended Mott, N. D., July 13.—(Special to the Tribune)—More than 1,200 pe ple were present at the annual Het- tinger county old Settlers’ picnic held yesterday at the historie Chas. Mut- schelknaus ranch five miles west of| this city. Joseph A. Kitchen, cominissioner of ag: Iture and labor, and Joseph M. Devine, commissioner of immigra- tion, were the principal speakers on the program. Sports events of var- ious kinds provided. amusement and entertainment for the large crowd and a mammoth barn dance was much enjoyed. .The Regent band: furnished music throughout the day. agai PCR a ceca | Police Court POE ii adi Charles Osterlund was fined $5 and costs by Police Magistrate J. M. Belk last night when he. pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding on a motorcycle, running with the cut- out open and driving without proper lights. The fine was\suspended up- on payment of the costs. 7,515.75 $633,227.65 es ’ $241,613.82 |W. H. Brown of the Regan vicin- $241,613.83 bs ity will be given a preliminary hear- County Board Meets. to Consider Budget The Burleigh county commission- ers are meeting here today to give final consideration to the proposed budget for the year beginning July 1. 1927, a publio hearing on which was scheduled for today. Only one or two persons had appeared to argue for or against the proposed budget up to noon, The board ig also sit- ing as a board of equalization to go over the assessments made this spring. In ion yesterday, the board voted to sell to the village of Wing lots 19 and 20, block 8, Wing town- site, for $1. It was also decided to lease to Theo. Torgenson for $8 the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter, section 2, township 140, range 75, and to Martin Ambers for the southeast quarter of ,sec- tion 25, township 139, range 75. The seed lien on the southwe:t quarter seetion 10, the west half sec- tion 16 and the north half irre Gis ing before Judge J. M. Belk late this 19, towns 139, range 80, Was! afternoon on a charge of threaten- released so that the owner may re-! ing to commit murder. The case was new a mortgage thereon, with the| taken to Judge Belk’s court on a provision that a new lien be issued | change of venue from the court of and recorded as soon ag tué Mortgage) Justice of the Peace R. ‘H. Crane.} is placed on record. Brown is at liberty on a $500 peace, bond and $500 bond to guarantee his s 2, appearance. Claire Windsor and ytell Separate Bert L Hl D present day, and the Saracens manu- . a factured an excellent steel. Los Angeles, July 13—U)—The . Examiner Claire Windsor, film star, and Bert stage and —— poe health’ separated and..that the question of Sake * TRY The early Romans made cement, as good as or better than that of the 1 a recenel BRS y a Me Sontieed at 4 confernce with attorney: today. The newspaper said Miss Windsor declared she’ and Lytell, with their attorneys, would. confer and that if the marital rift could not be bridged, divorce pi ings. would be started. In her statement Mise Windsor was i long greene Kipling told him, he said, | "° rs elapse, the Chinaman will be ¢ d with the idea, common at ‘ loriginally organized among a group; th ___lowstone ahd Glacier parks. George A. Vermilyea of Towner is | the new president, succeeding John L. Bowers of Mandan. Wi) im Bai SPE SL os NE Mr. and Mrs. A. G. children of Glendive, Mont., are 1928 meet-' the city as the ing is to be held at Minot, it was|for two weeks: decided. James S. Johns, Pendleton, Ore., chairman of the abstracters’ section, American Title association, was the y of Finley is the new vice presi- dent. The organization’ — RETPRNS TO MEXICO Miss herine Coieman, who hi el “ 7 A spent the past month in the city a: a house guest of her sister, Mrs. K. Porter, left Tuesday evening f title associa- | Mexico City where she will a tion meetings. He came here froth Pierre and left today for Great Falls, where the Montana Title as- ion is meeting. bag Mexican — Rev, G. W. Stewart was the prin- a wes cipal speaker at the annual banquet, held last night. Speakers at yester- day's sessions included Governor A. Sorlie; C.D. Cooley and County lige B. 'W. Shaw of Mandan; 8. D Adams and’ George H. Bowbells To Decide Matter of Jurisdiction in Ouster Cases , Whether the distriét court has any jurisdiction over the cases of Henry Geffert and R. B. McDonald, Sioux county commissioners against whom ouster proceedings have been in- stituted, was a matter to be decided today. in court at Fort Yates by George E. McKenna of Napoleon, presiding judge. The defense claims that:- the charges laid against the men are those of malfeasance and misfeas- ance in office, which would require eR ) ae oe them to be taken to thf governor or \ oe laid before 9 grand jury. ee rial of the two men was to open ee Motor Boating this morning, with 40 jurors If you own a motor boat’ panelled. Fr. Clemens Dimpfl —whether it be a handy out-board driven craft or “Is Now in Minnesota cabin cruiser— Father Clemens Dimpfl, former] & pastor of St. Joseph’s church at Man- you'll find Champion, the better kK plug, dan and lately pastor at Strasburg, more efficient —and more - Dickinson, EN ROUTE TO. CALIFORNIA Mrs. Emma Holly of Blue Eart! Phelps of | Minn. arrived Monday to’ spend: few days with her sister, Mrs. T. Krai gele: future home, is now at St. Martin, Stearns county, Minn., where he has been named pastor, according to information reaching here. her Clemens was moved to the Strasburg parish last winter from Mandan. where he had been for some time. When he left Mandan his parishoners, to show their apprecia- tee Presented him with an automo- ile. a Father Augustine Fox of Karls- ruhe, N. D., has been assigned to | the Strasburg paris! Personal and | Social News of | Mandan Vicinity HERE FROM DICKINSON Miss Katherine Brown of Dickinson is in the city as the house guest of Miss Betty Mackin. GUESTS. AT ROBERTS HOME Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Roberts have Parker, and in guests of relatives i] take up her work with the, claims e mn department of the United government. Wh Coleman was also the guest of relatives in h, * a Jd while en route to Los An- Calif., where she will make her AM PION For your protection be sure Sitamacote WAY NOT SAVE YOUR LAWN? Nature has done well sp far, ‘but bpiaveritiy shé ‘re: quires a little assistance pow. ‘A dollar’s'‘worth of w ter goes a long way—anil our hose at 14:cents a foot | will last_you several years,

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