Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1927 | Additional Sports || MEDAL HONORS IN CLUB MEET WON BY COOK Field By Seven Strokes in Qualifying Play AMERICAN LEAGUE Morning bier Philadeiphia . Zachary and Tate and Cochrane, iiden and Francis T. Hunt Gray/ national doubles tennis championship | !feating Wi Afternoon Game R Washington .. } Thomas and Crous {and Woodall. Gibson, Smith, | Afternoon Game R E) are ready for ci 4) lie Library toda: ! 1) “Bradford. Darwin, An interesting! and human biography which shows! ;the man in his personal relations THREE TIE FOR SECOND arnabee and Crouse; | | Carroll, Stoner and Shea, t Play in Bismarck Open Tour-| ney Will Continue Through: out This Week Hoyt and Bengough, Collins Wiltze and Hoffman, Hartley, Moore, Second Game Turning in a eles, seven strokes better than the st in the quali Bismarck Country’ club's annual ‘nament which began over ing round of in the tourney played their qual Shocker and Collins; Wiltze ing rounds Sunday and Monday, and round matches completed by tonight. matches must be fidished by Wed nesday night, third round matches by Saturday evening and the finals will be played next Sunday. rad E Thorberg, C. A. Heupel and| lin, Grant and Hu were tied for score in the opening rounds, each turning in a card of 90. Title Contestants The 16 players to quality for this | of South A Second round Wingard and O'Neil, D Shaute and | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION + W. Simons, Morning Game R championship matches completed up to no ‘shorberg deteated Morris, en won, 2 up, from Lyneh, Cave ae- un, 4 and J, and Heupel U son and Kenna; Shealey and Gas | written, full of common sense, 1 won from D, Afternoon ae rst flight are: eo Rebing 9 cup: rsch and Gaston; ons defeated Ols s; O'Hare won 6; and Slattery finished 2 up on Bax- Qualifying Scores The qualifying score were as fol- F, j work by a m a wide influence among the Brahmin! Ej class in Indi Second Game R 0} : 2] Distinction. Nelson and Wirth; | Jonnard and MeMenemy. Morning Game R R y Ed. Cox, last open champion, qualified for the championship flight by virtue of his title and did not play in qualifying roun Afternon Game R picinitierinoninnmmasoneineile | Yesterday’s Games | Columbus . = O : Zumbro and Ferrell; zinger and O'Neil. ex Ryan, Hunt- By_ The Assoc NATIONAL i 11 Tincup, Culiop and Meyer; Burwel Kixey and P 1 1 Swetonic and Florence, Tesmir. i pros, Hill, Dawson and Spencer, Afternoon fom Leverette and Tesmir. Morning Game bree gta LEAGUE R x Wichita 1-10; Oklahoma City 5-4. rell; Weiner and’ Hartnett, ee See ‘Simons Is Winner of Golf Tourney : _K, W. Simons won the handicap championship of the Capitol golf defeating W. E. 3. ae wg oe match by defeating Haro! n, one ak while Tarsons deteated Paul Cook by a similar score. x Parsons was four down at tie end of nine hol having got into difficulty on se ‘ each of the next six holes wi halved, the match ending on fifteenth green. sons, 53-49—10: — ra, 7 Sport Briefs (By The Associated Press) Altoona, Pa.—Frank Lockhart out- stripped a field of 14, winning the 200- mile championship automobile race and prize of $7,000. Piloting a iller Special, Lockhart covered the distance in one hour 49.4 second: an average of 117.5 miles an hour. Colo— Glen Schultz of Colorado Springs won the ninth annual Pikes Peak automobile hilk climbing contest. a treacherous zigzag course up steep grades , 12 miles 2,200 feet, in 18 minutes 26 1-5 seconds, and retained the Spencer trophy. i Amatol, N. J- Afternoon Game R adheres to the st and Hartnett, Gon: club Saturday, Parsons, 4 and Plitt and Henline. Second Game R ea 1 1 0 Wilson; Doak, Plitt, Vance and DeBerry. iG ors 1 9 Robertson and Gibson; Barnes an: @|the Eltinge again tonight Morrison, R. Smith and Urban, Fitzsimmons, — He conquered ry ‘Tom Rooeney of In- averaged 96.30 miles an hour in winning the 150-mile 5! eight-cylinder stock car race at the speedway here. Atlantic City time was one hour 33.27 minutes. When the: ton; R.P.M. it’s a safe ‘bet the brain is in neutral. | Scme of the loudest talkers The quiet think- {er buys one of our GOOD uscd cars and rides, Pittsburgh, — 108 faker, panes a., took first place in a 75- Bie iaes” on the half mile Bridgeville speedway in one hour one minute 31 seconds. Pittsburgh won the 25-mile race in 25 minutes 25 second Detroit.—Little Spitfire, owned by |. H. Randell, finished first i th boat contests and America retained its world su- premacy among high-powered motor | are walkers. mile auto race Jack Casey of } ler 70 sedan...$1050 $1 Bilve-Koight 10 se- $100 ‘a 250 r Ford Se St, Petersburgh, Fla.—First honors in the three-day Lipton : to’ determine the best skip) fish class sloops. were. divi Florid hi Rs ‘acht a ph at ser Ma pons 18 CO! be’ ron oft race" sia tas $5,000 Sir Thomas Lipton trophy will be shared. Brookline, Mi iam T. Til jat the Longwood Cricket club by de. Cochet of France, rge W. Wightma were 2-6, 6-0, 6-2 The followin, | rather than as the originator of a} ientific theory. Andrews. On the Trail of Ancient Man. A id narative of the events | are as large as forecusted on August 1 d discoveries of the Central A: lia. Lindbergh. “We” The famous f!: er’s own story of his life and tlantic flight. prejudic to illuminate q great figur Mullin, The South Afr A! hindered mpathetic interpretation i i uthor{damage is an ¢ | wheat apparently eseaped with small , the planting se: vivid and first volume deals with the — period | prior to the Civil and the ond with the | Quick, —_ Mississippi Begun by Herbert Qu Quick, covers all old steamboat days Ripley, Ma and Wall rain keted with a Street. startli expose present-day financial methods should interest every investor—small or great—throughout the United S Russell. Education and the Good jf; Life. A stifmulating book, imp! and ors. Wembridge. Other People’s Daugh ters. 17 studies from life of i nd their surroundings. e Purpos book is frank’ spirational. Jones, The Christ of the Ind Road. The significance of mission: ionary who has Hughes. David Livingstone. refurnish on Guedalla out intending it) made two natio! grow where one nation grew before. Dearden. Understanding Our-! ation of the| Build principles of modern psychology and mental healing to the daily life and conduct. File Careers for Women. Nesbit. After-Dinner Speeches. The New Butterick Dressmaker. Clark. When You Write a Letter. Book on letter writing. gs ! At The Movies La eee per li 4! CAPITOL For two years we have waited | the William Fox version of “What Price Glory”—and it was worth wait- ing for. At the Capitol theatre | inight, where this magnificent d matic comedy of the war opened a four days’ engagement, the packed theatre fairly shouted it: approval. cture conducts itself in the d corpuscled, tensely dramat- ion which made the stage uch a highly success- ment. The film truly its essential details 3 on it in its scope of the war-scene interest, its thrills and its hilarious laughter, “What Price Glory” is marked by one of the greatest performances THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bertaud, back in the ai carried the first motion picture fi of Col. Lindbergh's flight from New| Yerk to Cleveland; and this was the; / hs flight that Bertaud had hoped to be learned to fly Gb the Glenn Curtiss the first to make, Mill Born in 1885 James De Witt Hill, conavigator of Old Glory, was born March 2, 1885, the BERTAUD ' HILL HOP OFF ON LONG TRIP (Continued from page one) slowly but steadily into the; Jin Scottdale, Ps son of Scotch-Irish His boyhood but seldom do they become so spec- It is often said that every well watched, so that re may be as few suicides aa pos- | le to dampen the spirits ct the, gambling crowd or to ruffle the dig- The depressed ate, CROPS MAKING GOOD PROGRESS: jacross the Monaco border. 12 ENTERED IN NON-STOP RAGE to Spokane—Planes before to Pass’ Near Here j heavy loser | er won the - | ity of the place. m M. Johnston and | carry {Richard N. Williams, 10-8, E, The mixed doubles title was 0} off by Miss Eileen Bennett of 3 0} land and Hen Hadley, Burke, Johnson and Tate;| who beat Mrs. ( i Boston und Rene LaCosta of {France. The scores Ei? 6-3. | atte | Federal Reserve Bank report Optimistic For Two Da: kotas, Montana There was a margin of at! Idast a mile between the take- ‘off and Old Orchard pier, | which’ crosses the beach. Hill! bore out over the water and; ‘passed the end of the pier) with a few hundred feet alti- He kept on away south swinging off and tak- ing his course. |BERTAUD AND HILL ALWAYS Sept. 6.(Special| INTERESTED | Twelve requests re-| 13 applications mechanical, with ssanehe indication of a hankering after tne “Crops in the ninth federal reserve | 4 At the Bismarck | aist rict made good progress in July." Public Library ‘Sin gu" nd business conditions in itory issued by th this rigged out a d from the barn ~) of non-fiction, nat the Pub- jured when he hit the ground. Hill began his college education at | after the Wright of Agriculture! than forecasts made es Department | Latayette, shortly had made their and when he did not get in college the sort of studies he thought would | New York. Spokane, Wash, \to the Tribune) cents in the med q dark northern spring wheat in July over the June price. en- Wilson Be: st non-stop race gutor of the New Yor! of the plane Old Glo have'hibit his flying genius’ when hi which he decided upon, he quit. La he went to Cornell, taking up If the crops across the United York to Spokane, Septemb: ved at’ the head.qus ir Derby association tates from Ne » began to ex- j forced Hill to qui: turned to Scottdal as an antomotive engineer. Studied Aviation Diligently Still interested in flying, Hill went At the age of 12 he di a glider and demonstrated it before e and went to work 125 | | and potatoes will p the income from the 1:2 ich was $444,000,000. Rai y his compa = him home with a lame b: Bertaud was born in Alameda, Cal, pt. 20, 1896, i een Wilson and Dr. E . who helped Martin Jensen, ! se; “Good rains over our whole terri-| first and second wi in the middle of August we beneficial to corn and pasture: vesting and threshing of for a day or two. Jefferson. Written without and with an honest desire ish himself for fl Portland, Oregon, Hill milton at a county fair, day he went back to wateh Hamil From this time on, Hill ‘studied i n Hamilton's death sh did not deter as still such that h nt und his father Pa eenaal he Gils © Lipyd was two A. ¢ | sh round-the w prob- popula ft; 9 bepulation of con was unusually dla » Mr. Callaghan died. jeatt Childhood, | injured | the not HOC back Le A health w and he ha lots and manufacturers a umage to oats race include, in Minnesota 1 To bring back his health, Hill took 160 aeres of vinner of the helt Bert Acosta, ae of light | Cadet en chief 0 29 has been unfa « lopment of rust, but has the growth ot neer, his uncle, ‘ineer of the Pac getting him a job. ‘k and finished et are excellent, after his death by his son Edward f the aspects of the | inetuded in this dist 4 f et changed: his mi: He went to Silas Geo r ML; He J, Tucker, | fi ht, Th Cy » Parker Van | euginee | Christoffersen’s flying field a course in the rudimen Christoffersen gave youn beat his Ingleside Beach £1 of the principal ra Capitol Theatre Tonight—Tues., Wed., Thurs. : 5&9 P.M. jways and b regarding hart ‘h moisture con- died by the ordin- tes,| #7Y country elevators in our district, they are not equipped with dryers. igh moisture wheat is reported to selling at heavy discounts Dairy Product Inocme Larger income from dairy products | than the July,, Evenings 7 Matinees Daily at 2 Bertaud accepted only our $5 of each week's pay, und th. mainder went for further | At the age of ta pilot’s license, at the time be ing the youngest licensed pilot in a. “Served During” War Bertaud did the ¢ ucross the United! mai no more colorful and flying. id Major Faucher” he | nd WILLIAM FOX presents 28 Humorous Siories. Old! ; w by twenty and eight auth- } several hours ,in rkness across the continent. There are no lofty | mountain peaks te be ock marketings in| July’ were much smaller than mar- ual barnstorming, ad stunt exhibiti Ren ritns sane Ocean flights are largely one ctor at Ashbu at Hs te j hoping to get overseas. assigned to instruction duty, teachinp udents at the Cornell ove Field, Taylor $ & serious nay ell as the added | icient altitude to then the Black Dakota, the Roc! ‘ ating prablems ree clear the Alleg Hills of South in Montana and the Bi !in Montana and Idaho,’ along the route ace, the first hens sold at the. ad the pos: s he Northwest Shippers Advi board estimates 3 ngs and Monologues of! jn shipmen {ments and ve' ' ter of 1927 over shi Mead. Homes of Character. Of! quarter of 1926. great interest and value when you) crease build or buy a house, or furnish, or After the war he was mustered out iJ and joining with Eddie ja plane manufacturer, he ru short time. f agricultural in the third quar- pment in the third) cf which is expected to be flown ly over the route of the trans- Then he became a e American Le 000 and $4,000: Other important in are forecast for grain, pota-' continent: lime, New York, through the night on September 22 ing battle over-head nd of the racing motors as they speed toward Spokane, Under the rules stop the start will be mad F air derby at Bertaud won the speed prizes by flying his Ansaldo' machine at 172 miles an Omaha, the day after this, he won a }0 prize in the Pulitzer races. Witl prize money, Bertaud be- gan building flying boats. Became Air Mail Flyer In 1924, Bertaud joined the ail service, earryi and ‘plaster and pape a. Fathers of the Revolu-|ter and boo on, The characters here concerned! cast for shipments of livestock are “men who (some of them with- printed mat- to hear the re Building Permits Less “Building permits in July were 2. per cent smaller than in July, 1926 jug contracts were only 4 per| New York, between 2 a smaller, owing to the letting of on W for a $4,000,000 warehouse nd 4 o'clock y afternoon, Septe bout the time the planes flying e National Air Dert York and the Pac by race from San Fran x at the Spokane a ‘Will Pass Near Here As the non-stop planes are no! quired to fly a specif’ pected that they line route across the nation. 1a cotrse would cari | Buffalo, and the 3 higan into Wi: urse, if followed, would mean that the nonestop racers would cross the route of the National Air race first ' between and Fargo, and ne: jand Bismarck, problems of y comparison between volume of busin |the volume in July last y ance must be made for the fi jJuly, 1927, had one less bus’ ame eligible for membership in the: Caterpillar Club) whe in a parachute fro {erly last June, while fly 4 Allegheny mountains in bad weather, Bertaud saw a house afire ut Miles: He swooped low he descended nearly 4 per cent from this cause to be expected. However, for this circumsta in July was on it H take an air! h : attention, and a A sardonic com- edy, tinged with love romance, set against a back- ground of world Debits to individua 4 per cent smaller aud Huron and 3 carloadings of. freight were ‘$ cent smaller than in the correspond- | ing period last year. dearly, for he was tri Sard bad weather and could for! ear, Flour and lin-| shipments and depart-! house, afterwards w ere smaller than! ent store sales in July last year, ‘Walking Musician | Is Belgian Hero 6.—P)—Long dis- pattern in all, tance accordion playing is a current nd improves up- | “marathon” fad in Belgium. preikine irumniers. bad ae center i its ev increasing {of the stuge for awhile, and a abs abuonb from Maurages walked 40 miles bea ing a drum all the while. But walking accordion players are more popular, for 40,000 Bel between Fargo k The' air line course ‘ad just slightly. one of the contro! stations in the National Air Derby. pass just north of Gre: Bil the lives of Mr in the house. Levine and Clarence .D. Cham shaking conflict. ‘lew to Germany. between Levine, backer of t and Levine went By a trick of fate, Differences arose op planes should fly the continent in about 20 hours, in the ond Bertaud Bertaud’s place ‘tional Air Derby race fr to New York in 24 hours and 31 mii utes actual flying t “The planes wi use in the non. the Douglas, 02 the fiers will used by himself, and} PAGE Taine mail service, | homesteaded for 18 months, This re- stored his health and he went to North Island, near San _ Diego, and school, ite later took a course in flying seaplanes at- Hammondsport. Ind. There was not much oppartun- ity for flying in those days, but HUN went up whenever he could. eh When the world war broke out, and from Oct. 1, 1 until the end of 1919, Hill was an instructor in. fly- ing at various fields. Two of his students were Lt. Macready, who made the first cross-continent flight | with Lt, Kelly, ard Tt Re ' Chem. tablecloth from his mother and, with; parachute, jump. | Although the ‘ did not perform its ex-} ber, war ace. He also helped ine struct Gen. James E. Fechet, later to become head of the U. S. air corps, Also'an Air Mail Flyer After the war, Hill joined. the air serv engineering division at Me- Cook Field, Dayton, 0. He went barnstorming after this, and on‘Ja'y 1, 1924, he joined the air mail serv- ice. From 1925 to early in 1927 he carried mail between Cleveland: and Hill is unmarried. His sister, Mrs. Walter F. Stauffer, lives in New York, and he has three brothers, Frank W. Hill, residing in Scottdale, William R. Hill, who lives in, Win- terhaven, Fla, and Albet L, Hill, of Portand, Ore. LEVINE FLIGHT IS DELAYED BY FOG AND WINDS (Continued from page one) “We have a 510-horsepower engine, only a 210, which is ther weak to battle aguinst head winds aad foul weather We admire Levine for his pluck, but) whatever happens he is not going to beat us.” 30 Matinees—35c and 15¢ . with ICTOR M‘LAGLEN - EDMUND LOW! DOLORES DEL RIO. and a superb cast avnance STUNG 22 MMWELL ANDERSON RAOUL WALSH ‘Piodiction, sh teins El Rei Coen ever flashed upon the screen, that of Victor McLuglen, the hard boiled captain of the marines, who gives a portrayal which astounding. In fact, you cannot imagine anyone else in this rvelous role after seeing MeLaglen’s performance, Edmund Lowe, as the shifty Sergeant Quirt, also gives a striking portrayal of i most difficult part, and Dolores Del Rio, as the charming, seductive Char- maine, could not, in our opi given a stronger impersona ELTINGE THEATRE Douglas MacLean will be sean at e. novelty comedy “Soft Cushions,” in which he adventure’ in the Orient. Lewis Stone will be seen at the Eltinge for Wednesday and Thursday in “The' Prince of Headwaiters,” a new picture ‘and one of the outstand- ing dramas of the season. Advance reports indicate that this pictyre far excells any that Stone has yet ap- peared in. The story is adapted from Garrett Fort’s Liberty magazine story by the same name. Lilyan Tashman, Robert Agnew, Priscilla Bonner and John Patrick are fea- tured. NOTICE FOR BIDS. Sealed bids will be received up to 2 o'clock Monday, Sept. 12, by The Board of Education of McKenzie, Dis- trict No, 34, for the transportation of pupils by two routes. 8) BO home. : responsible bidders, and bidders will be required to furnish bonds, CORA A. PAUL, Clerk, 9/2, 3, 5, 7,9 Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—Cozy room, reasonable. Near both hospitals, Call 70! after 5:00 p. 413 Ninth stgeet. FOR RENT—Nitely furnished apart- ment at 719% Thayer Ave. Phone 622 or 442-J, WANTED—Experienced Ingstad’s Garage. FOR RENT—An attractive, newly furnished room in a new modern b; jome in western part. of city. Suit- othe ire ‘¢ i for one or two. Ladies pre- ferred. C: fter 6:00, the distance will be shorter b; siderable distance ifthe is followed,” sport, music and exercise b; ulating the “poor man’ And Emile Glaneur is the accordion, hero. He played his musical bellows rom Thieu to Brussels und back, about 560 miles, with an hour off for lunch and sleep at Brussels, were lined with people player on his march, a walked with him in rela; Stone Walls Used to Rebuild Church Wolcott, Conn.; Sept, 64)—Stone walls may not make a prison, but on occasion they go a long way toward Units of many of the stone walls so common here have gone into the little chapel which the people of Woodtick, one of the small communities of t erected after a long financial cam- paign to raise necessary funds. When fire destroyed woodén structure which had served the settlement as a church since 1885, only one service had been held in it for many years, although served occasionally as a hall for lay major Fanche: “However, if this course is followed the pilots will not take the transcontinental air mail will therefore be flyi | ness from 7 p. m. | until about in total dark- esday evening i o'clock Wednesday | morning, when they will be entering | Montana after having navigated the ; Great Lakes in darkness. YOUNG,NAMED: ON , JUDICIAL COMMISSION (Continned from page one) down by the leaders of the profession from the earlier times. Continuation of the work for better A The country roads making a cha “t merican citizenship, . formation of more district bar associations and the maintenance high standards. for ad bar were urged in committee reports raade at the’ open- | A Berlin candy manufacturer, ad- vertising his product, hired an avia- over the city Police stopped the After the fire, however, the neigh- bors decided that to have no church was not in accord with New England and Connecticut tradition. subscriptions, and food sales were held, the money was raised and the chapel was built |, from stones taken from walls of the neighborhood. Gunplay Ruffles Monte Carlo Quiet | Ni Sept. 6. — (P). = Threat of fire, some pisto! shots anda suicide recently spoiled subdued quiet gam ling room that has made chocolate drops, practice when people reporte: tent, you've a ‘cominig: when you siya La Polta For it's have made Le Paline America’s’ largest selling high grade cigit’ over a million a day. . ecifications may be seen at H, "Neill’s office or J. F. Wildfang’s Contracts to be let to lowest Phone 944 for ————S=— Headathe; Neu Tire’ Service. ( lyspepsia, Bowel Pains Jaundice c Pills restore Ibst; Hats Stet FU it ie ett Monte, Carle, lh popula: sand shapes, from 100 t0 3 for remove chronic consti- onditions tending to a famo 4 ‘stem. } Kostich Radomild, a Jugoslav, ap- ‘The ingredients in Red Cross Pills roulette bottle of aleoh p ‘on the n-to) floorman.| gaming table and itd 44 le ar'if ta and bowel - troubles; le liquid wit _by inducing th atrong-a: secretions to act; the: lisease by destroying bi ete wh CIGAR a0 malay Greeny En Local Distributors MINNEAPO! jstol_and fi * shots went w An yee at he brake through wiitate Carle "bat large vaviety of, sizes” , 2