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SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1924 eS "PAGE EIGHT * THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE : lc AVIATOR BESTS | = Hollywood's Passion Play |RASKOBNAMES | #¢! Be on Fight t ICTATR OFFICER _ TRUCK DRIVERS GERRY T0 HEAD incidental to the lif i HAIL inciden le of confinement TO TUNNEY Stockholm Monday Ewert is scheduled to| New York, July 21—A dispatch & physical examination |to the American from Speculator, N. Y., says that Gene IS DRESSED I his prison Tunney has~ 1 Ewert accom by his son,|Tefused $10,000 for an advertise. ‘ Mark, arrived here this afternoon |™ent. A manufacturer wanted him ¢ Sioux Falls, S. D., July 21.—(AP) | and surrendered himself to Sheriff |to say; “This Tust be a 2 A. W. Ewert, sentenced to serve/S. L. Strebel of Faulk county, who ci use all I: He Ratt ieee peneneiaTy | had. the commitment papers ia [fesrasags "the chon ak following mviction on| at Fau! a Uses Ship to Get Even With General Staff, Executive and charges of embezzling more t vy. smol $200,000 of state funds, urer of the rural credi ; iven convict number 5528 imme- Advisory Committees, to Conduct Al’s Campaign ir Men Who Tried to ‘Pick ; Him Off Public Utility Invest; hes Newark, N. J., July 21—()—A lone aviator and some forty truck drivers were engaged in a feud to- day that started over the literal throwing of mud. The aviator, Kenneth S. Collings, accused the truck drivers of delib- erately splashing mud on his new biplane, which he hed parked on a flying field along a road they were repairing. His protests, he said, ‘were answered with more mud and attempts to “pick him off” with their trucks as he walked along the road. Yesterday Collings decided to have his revenge. He leaped into his mud- spattered plane and headed down road and toward the offending truck drivers. He swooped low as he passed one truck and clipped off the driver’s mirror with his tail skid. Flushed with success, he swooped over another and, according to the driver, Frank H. Krouse, ripped off the top. He was later arrested on a com- plaint made by Krouse charging Malicious mischief, and released un- der $200 bail. ., I was just giving those truck @rivers a dose of their own medi- cine,” he si “They weren't in any danger. I handi lane better than they can handle a truc!-.” The aviator told police he was a son of Franklin W. Collings, as- Pretty Althea W: Pilgrimage Pla: of Hollywood. equivalent of Europe's Passion Play at. Oberammergau. costume, like others in the play, is a faithful reproduction of fashions | cast in the role of the Samarian slave girl in the g This is the ninth year of the play, which is the American of dress in the day of Christ. sistant United States district at- torney in Lincoln, Neb. He was for- merly a captain in the marines, and is employed as an instructor in = flying school. MISSIONER IS HERE T0 TELL _ ARRICA STORY State Pioneer Spent Fourteen Years in British East Africa How British it African natives live and learn, what they eat, how they fight malaria and wild beasts, and. their superstitions will be de- scribed in an illustrated lecture in Bismarck Sunday night by a mis- sionary who spent 14 years among 0, President Coolidge has . West, of Chicago, Re} tional committeeman to be the new secret: terior. cabinet of Hubert W. tion of his successor. friend of Mr. Coolidge in w paign four years ago h prominently by being the Republican national committee. The chief executive, it is understood, had Mr. West in mind for the cab- inet vacancy as soon as it became evident last June Dr. Work might be | elected chairman of Roy West Named for Cabinet Post Superior, Wis., July 2 (AP)—/ but he then said he had received no imation that he was being con- ered for the interior department. While Secretary West will prob- continue in his capacity as na- nal committeeman from Illinois it was thought likely here that he would resign from the other two offices he holds within his party, those of member of the executive committee The resignation and vice chairman of the finance onal committee of the national secretary. cam-| Secretary West is sixty years old ured and a native and a resident of Illi- ry of | nois. His experience in politics, both national and local has been very | extended, having held, in addition to other offices, the chairmanship of the Minois Republican state central committee for five times. He was Mr. West has long been a pe n this year in the outdoor amphitheater in the hills | Miss Wayne’s | New York, July 21—A—A gen- eral staff, composed of an executive and an advisory committee, has been named by Jokn J. Raskob, Demo- cratic national chairman, to conduct the presidential campaign of Gov- ernor Alfred E. Smith. Both committees will operate from the national headquarters to be established here in the General Mo- tors building. Senator Peter Goelet Gerry of Rhode Island will head the advisory committee, The executive committee, in ad- dition to Mr. Raskob, consists of Senator Ger-y, James J. Hoey, Col. Herbert H. Lehman, Mrs. Henry Moskowitz, Franklin’ D. Roosevelt, and George R. Van Namee. Mr. Raskob also announced that two regional headquarters, one at St. Louis, the other at Salt Lake City, would be established. Senato: Harry B. Hawes will be in charge of the midwest office, and Fred W. John- son of Rock Springs, Wyo., in charge of the one in Utah. The executive committee as now announced will probably not be en- larged, but several additional mem- bers of the advisory committee are to be selected. There will be a mem- ber from the state: which inelude Ohio, Indiana and Mlinois, another from Wisconsin, Minnesota and the Dakotas, and a third from the Pa- cific coast, with vrodably others rep- resenting other sections of the country. 3 MEET WITH FAMOUS CLUB St. Paul, July 21—(7)—A gallant trio of civil war veterans kept faith’ today with their departed comrades. Civil war days and memories of the dead were recalled by the three men, the only survivors of the Last Man's club formed by 34 members of Company B, First Minnesota vol- unteers, 43 years ago. For the first time since the or- ganization of the club, the members held their annual gathering outside —_a the national | first elected to the Republican na- Process of call “dressing in.” He will be Parker D. Cramer, of the Depart- ment of Commerce at Washington, will accompany Bert R. Hassell, Rockford, Ill, flyer, on the attempt to make a eis flight from Rockford to Stockholm, Sweden. They will pase over Greenland and will halt there t> refuel. of Stillwater. Pees fy ba > Ae at the home of John F. 85 ld, secretary of the club, where he lives with his daughter, Mrs. William Griff. The other two members are Peter Hall, 90 years old, of Atwater, Minn., and Charlie Lockwood, 86 FREE re a bape D. A bottle Burgundy wine, which graced Pgh at all pre- vious meetings, was missing today for the first time. Donated to the club when it formed, the wine was to be drunk the fers ey of the club toast departed. however, the trio opened and drank “to our departed trades.” Capital Funeral and quick. 208 al Phone—Day cr Night—S2 Jos. W. los. W. Tschumperiin Five chassis—Sixes and from $860 to liately following his incarceration A ero Ewert will go through the what prison authorities in prison clothes, his hair will be clipped short, his photograph and thumb prints taken, «.' other things is Model 614, 5-pas- Sedan, with trans. paying 8 per cent; United ' tenth ments, Cities Service Co. largest in and Cua ms For. Sale “The A Motor Car of Unusual | U will appreciate the beauty, comfort tesponse of the 614 as unusual in a car so moderately priced. We will gladly place one of these cars (with four forward—standard gear shift) at your: & Gis ae bfaham by P. C. REMINGTON & SON 7> _— rit committee and resign from office. Mr. West visited Mr. Coolidge at the summer White House last week, his tional committee in 1912 fér four | years and upon reelection in 1924 he , became its secretary. By profession Mr. West is a lawyer. them. The Seventh Day Adventist mis- sionary, Rev. A. A. Carscallen, who yeturned from Africa because of broken health in 1921 and expects to return, will give his descriptive address at the Bible Chautauqua Tent at Seventh street and Avenue On Saturday, July 2ist, with every oil change, 1-2 Gallon a Enarco Motor Oil at OLSON MOTOR CO. Phone 925 204 Fourth Street is visiting town. “I guess I'll buy! one of these flying machines,” hej reproves you when you say “it’s me” refer him to Kemp Malone, instruc- said. “The boys on the ranch will|tor in English at Johns Hopkins. 4 5 _ : oe an 14 years, Rev. Mr.| top dead when they see me.” In a lecture at Yale he expressed MODERN GARAGE 511 BROADWAY . Bismarck, North Dakota was acting director of a a = the belief that such usage is more . dozen missionaries in the British IT’S ME” IS GOOD sensible than ,the grammatically New Haven, July 21.—If anybody possession. His mission wes locat- correct “It is ed on the shores of Great Lake Vic- toria Nyanza. Suffering from ma- laria, he was forced to return to the LE ateceert “st nace ier loo! orward to because he wan ——————— ome pe _ educated in the United a Cc H R Y AY L E R = — Climate Exacting “African climate is trying,” he said, “‘but one gets used to it short- ly. One knows when malaria is coming on and he can easily kill it before it gets a good start, with rquinine. In the mountains the eve- ‘ mings are wonderfully cool, and one 9 uses three or four blankets on his ” Plymouth, “Vegetables, which grow them- selves, make up the greater part of the negro’s bill of fare. Wild game is tiful. e started to educate the na- tives immediately,” he said, ‘“‘and about the first thing we did was translate the scripture into the na- tive Kavirondo language.” This was a long task and it was neces- ®ary to work at it constantly. He also wrote a grammar and a dic- tionary for the natives. “The natives used to think that senting, 2nd writing were part of white man’s witchcraft. They could not understand how one man a@ piece of paper with writing on it to another man who make the Paper talk,’ as the patives ex) it.” Game Plenty The rhinoceros and elephant are the most common large animals on the continent. Rev. Mr. Carscallen has many hunting adventures to de- seribe and many descriptive actual miele ‘The sionary is now Renter of & itt The $-Desw Sesion Body by Faker Way You Figure os 2. Plymouth ¢-Door Soden, $725 the church at Fargo. He in Bismarck about one week , ing Rev. F. T. Schwimbt in his lec- tures, and sparse to return to Far. M ERICA ACCEPTS pig you jute om —— teat ies Peo ioe . Mr. Schwimbt is H. Wentland, formance . . . by and by for ou jamestown. Sac .| AND ACCLAIMS THE NEW PLYMOUTH aC eee Fo ertase peeled tied : 5 : ‘ Fisher... Smart « » > roomy eee All combined in the All-American Union Collegeville, Neb., iscovers at Las y tering same great market. lnzuricus Perform- offered for as little as sete Beale a ge - veal Bien =a — toe ek Sea at oe) it Sd roplhcotlacenalll le, Performance and Sa They see contrast in size, style, perform- gue. Simplo..;powerial -.. bewerer te cc ye in esi tel Minar S Pt ith that bursts into Endurance resulting from a deep _ the biggest buy in town. . fh The sales record of the new Plymouth, dics sleeG 2-Deor Sedan, $1085; Spore Roodeter, Phaston, $1075; GOLFING TODAY| Swiite/twe'wets'ine ise sa ee ric ae a eee fe — ; ont rag ag So il or In fine, the millions seeking a low first Plan ot mintinum rete. . One of the most unusual golf ise sett centers cost now discover in the new Plymouth = sell be played Bt'ihecountry| over the whole country. theone carin the iced field which ° Has 78 oblys ye A Capitol Golf club, Hundreds upon hundreds of thousands— is and does everything that they have long é Stair Motor . Co. ; inte, teams fapiained | by yes, millions —eager to see the new Plym-. hoped a low-priced car be and do. hee " : nil eagage in & two ball four- ecb a built by C oy cone Se You, too, ows it $0 yourself to dee it, side 606 Main Ave. "ASSOCIATE DEALERS Bismarck tales two men will play t salee- in it, drive it All doubt as to the highest Re eg ee atic an making an snaeae egerafaane. dollar-for-dollar valuein the lowest-priced er Ss oe ! upg : Theycompareitwiththethreeorfourcther field ends right Po ™ : isis Corwin-Churchill Motors, Ine.