Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
"THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1928 ' ARMY DOCTORS “AND BANDSMEN ORDERED HERE ‘Fifty Piece Band to Be Organ- ized and Rifle Team Se- lected at C. M. T. C. "BY CAPTAIN SHUTTER Six additional medical officers are expected to arrive at Fort Lincoln July 29, to assist in processing. Th addition of these men to the perma nent staff will greatly expedite the ~ handling of new arrivals, and candi- lates for admission to the camp can be run through @ complete physical examination without any sacrifice of of nine more regular i army men from the cavalry post at . Fort Méade, 8. D., is expected on July 31, These soldiers are bands- ‘men, and will form the nucleus of + the band which is orgarized at every C. M. T. camp. No difficulty is an. * ticipated in picking up enough addi- - tional musicians to recruit up a 40 ito piece band. Music, instru. ments, and instruction are a part of the program of the summer camp, and no additional expense to the stu- dent who elects to take this training is involved. By the end cf the sec- ond week the young m:n are parad- ing under their own officers and to the accompaniment of their own - music. Everyone who attends the camp at Fort Lincoln will receive instruction in firing the service rifle. From among those who make the best showing, at this. and other camps in this corps area, a team will be se- lected to compete in the National Matches held every year at Camp Perry, Ohio. The National Match is held in the latter part of August, and arrangements are made to send the team member: to the match dur- ing the time that they would norm- ally be at camp, so that no additional time is required beyond the regular training period. Expenses of men so selected are taken care of by the government, including meals, lodg- ing, and transportation. The men to comprise this team vill be selected from among the ious C. M. T. camps as fol- Fort Leavenworth, 4; Fort ing, 4; Fort respective camp commanders to Fort Des Moines, Iowa, so.as to report there not later than noon, August 24. At this point the team will be as- sembled, and will proceed to Camp Perry, arriving in tim: for the matches on August 26. Only candi- dates who volunteer and who have received the written consent of their parents (if minors) will be selected as team members. HARPER LAUDS PEACE TREATY University Law Professor Tells League of Women Voters It Is Forward Step Devils Lake, N. D., July 26.— (AP)—Perfection and development of adequate peace agencies to settle international difficulties will be the only problem hindering world peace after the proposed multilateral treaty becomes a reality, Fowler P. Harper, professor of law at the University of North Dakota, told delegates to the annual convention at the Leagfiue of oWmen Voters ere ry. “We now have the League of Na- tions, the World Court and the Haig Court of Arbitration,” Harper said. “None nor all of these wil be suf- ficient. The establishment of some world tribunal, organized exclutively upon Jndlets} principles, and apply- ing an accepted code of international jurisprudence must follow. “In ever experiment toward this end and in every move for interna- tional cooperation, this nation should be morally bound to participate. This ean be insured only by the’ develop- ment of an enlightened, peace-deter- mined pubic opinion. And, fortun- atelyythis is coming. The day when the term ‘internationalist’ can be as a term of reproaed is hap- uily .passing.. May God speed its eventual oblivion in this respect, for the society of the future will be or- ganized upon a world basis, and only + Wort? thinking can make it either endure or endurable. Anew Rete a of the Atlantic was the aim of Bert R. J. Hassell (left) of | from Rockford, ind Parker D. Cramer The proposed flight temporarily postponed today when their hea’ earth after a short run following the hop off. THREE EXPEDITIONS TO ANTARCTIC oe 3 GIVE AIRPLANE ITS SEVEREST TEST &:°"2'st sts Three Bands of Explorers Will) Probe Bottom of the World by Plane—Commander Byrd and Sir Hubert Wilkins of North Pole Fame Lead Groups | | By JOHN L. COOLEY | (By The Associated Press) | New York, July 2 AP)— Down to the dead land that towers | bands of explorers sail in the next few months to pit the airplane against the defenses of Nature’s most formidable stronghold—Ant- arctica. | Whether aircraft that can carry | men across the oceans, across the! Arctic wastes, even to the north, Pole, will surmount the barriers of | ale and storr:, icc and mountain, that have kept the south polar con- | tinent a land of mystery will soon | be determined by Comm. Richard E. Byrd, Capt. Sir Hubert Wilkins, Comm. Douglas George Jeffery, Royal Navy, retired, and their re- spective parties. Aviators have great faith in the modern plane, but they know that this task is the hardest ever assigned io it. Antarctic weather is the worst in the world. The Byrd expedition starts on its $500,000 venture about the middle of | August. Most of the 55 men and virtually all of the elaborate equip- | ment will travel to Dunedin, New Zealand, aboard the barkentine | Samson, although the commander himself plans to leave about a month | later. From New “-aland the ex- plorers will steam across the south- ern ocean to the Bay of Whales, a threshold to Antarctica on the Ross | Sea ice barrier, there to establish the base of operations. ‘They hope to reach this point by January 1, summertime in the Antarctic. | The Wilkins expedition, smaller | than Byrd's, plans to leave a Cali-| fornia port in October, proceeding first: to Panama, where it will board a whaler for the long voyage to the Ross Sea, where it, too, will start work. A whaling vessel will bring | the little party north when its work is over, Jefiery, a veteran of the last, Shackelton expedition to Antarctica, sails south from New York in Sep- (right) of the United States Bureau to Stockholm, Sweden, however, wi laden plane dived into the tember, expecting to return in May. He is chartering a ship. Something more than a spirit of adventure, more than a desire to give the airplane another strenuous workout, is sending these pioneers into the most inhospitable region on tke globe. The vast south polar con- tinent, nearly as large as the United | States and the mainland of Canada together, is the last great geograph- ical challenge to science. Buried un- der a colossal ice-cap, it has given only fragmentary interviews to the geologist, meteorologist, oceanog- rapher, paleontologist, biologist and above the bottom of the world three | the other biographers of ihe planet, Earth. Now, however, science is taking to the air, and given good luck its representatives with the forthcom- ing expeditions should sec and learn more about the Antarctic in a few days than the men of sledging days saw and learned in years. The persistent efforts of explor- marks our at all times. rience ha how to » taught us serve in such a way as to relieve the sit~ uation of all confu- sion and misunder- standing. We Understand. Webb Bros. Faneral Directors Phone 246 Might Phone 246 oe 887 OF COURSE WE WATCH THE CLOCK products that come from ovens wouldn’t be so re- markably good. Every bit of our baking is timed, every ingredi- ent is carefully .inspect- ed and measured. That’s why our large variety of breads and sweet goods are so popular. They’re delicious, whole- some. and nourishing. Ask to see them at your VARIETIES LOAF item WHOLE wiea WHEAT ’ GRARAM RAISIN RYE RAISIN RYB ‘FRENCH BREAD SWEET ROLLS PLAIN ROLLS * _ BARKER BAKING & If we weren’t so devoted to the hands of that dial on the wall, the Phone 912 Serve a Variety of Baked Goods—Your Grocer Has Them our CANDY COMPANY _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE THRE Captain Cook have gleaned such scant information about this frozen land that even today sections of its outline must be drawn’ by guess. Parts of the coast and their imme- diate hinterlands have been explored |rather thoroughly and have yielded valuable data, but the narrow stretches of the far interior seen by | Amundsen, Scott and Shackleton are {the only recorded glimpses of the continent's heart. There Antarctica lies, surrounded jand covered by ice—a {dome with the South Pole near its {center, perched on a plateau nearly two miles high, and the remainder of {its 5,000,000 square miles tapering to the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian | oceans, down to the sea at near! ‘It terminates generally i Junscalable ice cliffs, break huge bergs, co’ ith ite mountain: eto ice that hold ships at bay. ring the ocean cessible than others, and it is from two such points that the three ex- beditions purpose to operate, A | glance at the map shows two great indentations or gulfs—one, Ross Sea, opposite w Zealand; the other, Weddell Sea, from South America. The Byrd and Wilkins parties plan to launch their aerial assaults on | the interior frcm Ross Sea, or rather the ice barrier that chokes more than half of that ocean arm. It was from this barrier that Amur {sen and Scott started on their to the pole. Jeffery expects to at- jtack from the shore of Weddell Sea, and will therefore be across the con. tinent from the other two leade The three zones of flight, nee, will hardly ov d plans to fly eas ward VII Lan in addition, of course, he will attempt :. flight to | the South Pole, which Amundsen and | Seott reached after laborious sledge nevs. Hubert proposes an eastward flight along the unmapped, unseen convincing. dient power, safety because o brakes .... Claims, promise: requirements. You will see why everywhere are rate of more than 1%-TON—130" wheelbase *4 1%-TON=140” wheelbase PHONE 808 huge. white | | The ice-cap is believed to extend | i°P" and closely ; arts of the coast are more ac-j/ is revealed inthe most concrete and convincing way by SALES BUYER'S name on the dotted line of an order blank is high Praise —sincere, conclusive, are crushed under the wei purchasers’ dollars. See these trucks . . . . Drive the size that fits your business needs —they are built in the sizes that fit 95% of all hauling or delivery ers since the time of the famous|coast between Ross Sea and Gra-|few years has been largely with the jham’s Land, the western boundary He does not con- jof Weddell’ Sea, template a hop to the pole. Land. He plans to do his explor- ing castward to Coat’s Land, which lies on the other side of Weddell Sea. He may also try a to the pole and across the co’ | oss Sea. (Grant County Agent Says Farmers Busy or raising, cattle by incubator, a record in nd purchase of purebred Grant county farmers are y County Agent Theodore jus, Elgin, has con- pit silo 16 feet across a 10-foot cover. Rivinius is a farmer. . A. Seliner is proud of the hog he has built during the William Hanson, Thain, chal- | lenges the world to beat him in rais- ting beans. Bill says his beans are hick as hair on a dog’s back’ and growing fast. “Rudolph Tibke, Carson dairy ‘farmer, has purchased two Holstein cows. He has an accredited herd. “Amon Johnson, Heart River, has purchased a purebred bull to head his herd.” State Women Voters Devils Lake, D., July 26. ) Cooperation of local women’s clubs in North Dakota towns and mplish far-reaching results, ac- rding to the annual report of Mrs. . Poppler, Grand Forks, before inual convention here today. Mrs. Poppler’s work for the last fod careful i toowands of them, are purchasing t 6 cyl- inder Graham Beothers el enthusiastic over their smooth, proud of their fine appearance, surprised at the speed obtainable with perfect f their 4-wheel s and ballyhoo t of truck operators buying—why deliveries are being made at the 300 a day. be § 1%4-TON—150” wheelbase S341 roe ES be a. be { 2%-TON—165” wheelbase Chassis f.0.b. Detroit + M. B. GILMAN CO. Broadway at Second St. SISMARCE, N. D. — JRUCKS. BUNS BY TRUCK DIVISION OF Jeffery’s effort will start from a base on the west coast of Graham's inent to|but there never has been an educa- Construction of a pit silo and aj bean | Slowly Get Results: tional movement with deep and en-| ment there must be ever a financing and organization of the ‘during foundation that has gone as! ideals and care must be taken no association. \fast as its proponents have wanted |overtake any of, the standards | “Members of the state board and|it to. In a true educational Move- jhave set for ourselves. i. friends of the league have supported the work of this department most generously,” Mrs. Poppler said. “The work has not gone ahead as fast as we would like to have it, Wanted &: 15. ,000.00 worth of Loan Applications by Au; Low interest rate and prepayment privileges. “The Pioneer Investment House” P. C. REMINGTON & SON ANNOUNCEMENT We, the undersigned shops, will close at 6:30 p. m., except Saturday, close Saturdays at 10:00 p. m., begin- ning August Ist: G. P. Hotel Shop ; Harrington’s Shop Annex Shop Erbe’s Shop Knott’s Shop if We are doing this because we believe we can serve the public better by having a full force at work during the 6 o'clock dinner hour, Fon tnereiied energy in your Broadway Shop work, for greater zest tolife, for akecner appetite, for better digestion, try Guasti Tonic. At all druggists, Guasti Tonic con healthful ingredients to a di y and to build up weakened, run-down con. GUASTI : Capitol Theatre (Pronounced Gwah.stee) TONIC ee MADE WITH @ ay a PORT OR SHERRY STARTING TONIGHT Expecially prepared by The thrilling story of one of the greatest characters that ItalianVineyard Co. Operating the large® vineyard under ‘one ownership in the world. Est. 1883 Vineyards GUASTI, CAL, Oficts LOS ANGTLES Branches: New York, Chicago, ew Orleans ever lived, Entertainment Call 577 and get real help with your insurance, — You don't have to wait for an insurance salesman to come around. if the phone. Call We make our service over the telephone the sort you like. Pleasant voiced people will tell you quickly and accur- ately just what you want to know. that packs a million dollar punch? qyno® pn TUN ae Anant JES aseet | the idol of | reins in his teeth, two guns | irst for Para- | blazing in his hands, two more | MURPHY Thomson as | at his belt and a brace of sawed- — the outlaw who | off shotguns lashed to his { rode hell-bent—who fought with | saddle! “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 218 Broadway Phone 577 BISMARCK, N. D. Don’t Miss This If You Like Excitement Asis the Call of the Mountains this Summer» SLEEP with blankets drawn up snug— with the tang of pine and fir in the air, and the murmur of running water to lull you to deep, refreshing sleep. Go THE WESTLAND WAY from Minot to thePark Any Westland Station will tell you about this direct, conven- ient trail to America’s hap- piest vacation land. We have descriptive booklets, accurate maps, and can offer full infor- mation to help you plan a joy- ous vacation. It isentircly free. A Mail the coupon if there is no ee Westland station near you. Nights of restoring rest—days of adven- ture in Glacier Park—Land of towering peaks—glaciers—dashing, tumbling streams and deep, cool mountain lakes. You will enjoy the auto trip out to this Playground of a Nation. It leads you through the last of the Old West—a region filled with memories of frontier days. WESTLAND OIL COMPANY . 1 WESTLAND OIL COMPANY, MINOT. NORTH DAKOTA Please send me illustrated literature and full information about’ ‘THE WESTLAND WAY TO GLACIER PARK. a Y ee | Be moe and write your nome plaints ‘You'd be surprised ot how many are sent ws ue canner read ‘ i) ' { 1 Name. ' ‘ i] '