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BISMARCK MEN | HAVE AIR TRIPS B Daily Airline Service to Minot Pf eo Expected to Start Next & Week i Air service will be started between} Bismarck and Minot the first part ‘of next week with two daily round- trips planned. i This announcement was made in Bismarck yesterday by officers of the Northern Airlines, Inc., who flew from Minot to Bismarck in 56 minutes in a Lockheed-Vega mono- plane piloted by Lee Schoenhair, Los Angeles. : Uificers are A. W. Hugh, D. H. Partholomew, J. C. Blaisdell, Jr., all of Minot. he trip to Bismarck yesterday was in the nature of a goodwill tour. The pilot and officers of the com- pany also made suggestions for the improvement of the local landing field. That air transportation between Bismarck and Aberdeen, S. Dak., and Fargo may b ituted soon was also indicated Schoenhair, who dy the Lockhee: nufacturing plant at Los # ‘and who flew over North Dak ago while a mem- national reliability ur, piloted the plane to Bonds from California. i The plane, painted orange, is the pilot. ig gtered in gray leather | cushion sea Maximum speed of the plane is 190 miles per hour, and| the touring average spect will be} 120. | Bismarck passengers who were feken for short flights afternoon in the ptane ar fJows: . i Fay Harding, chairman, Larkin, E. H. Morris, and sons, all of the state ra mission; Dr. H. T. Ferr year-old son; Paul Wachter, city €ommissioner and son Paul, Jr.; J. FP. Mott, Capital; J. A. Larson, city fommissioner; Chris Martineson, chief of police, and son; J. G. Mac- Gregor, Tribune; <=. C. Wachter; $ieut. Col. E. M. Norton, commander of the C. M. T. camp at Fort Lin- goln; Col. W. A. Alfonte, ‘command- ant, Fort L:.coln; H. P. Gcddard, gecretary of the Bismarck Associa- tion of Commerce; and F. H. Waldo, rea manager of tie Northwestern Bell Telephone company. HOT WEATHER AIDS HARVEST Clear skies and high temperatures continued to favor harvest workers throughout the state today. A fore- cast of mostly fair tonight and con- tinued warm was issued by the state weather department. Temperatures in all sections are slightly above the seasonal average, the weather bureau said. Light, scattered showers occurred in some sections of the state during the last week but they did not inter- fere greatly with harvesting and haying, a weekly report issued today by the weather bureau said. Rye and barley harvest is nearly com- leted and some threshing was done. lax is mostly in the boll state. with | Bn excellent crop in prospect. Pota- toes are in blossom, with many dug] wr the markets. Severe scattered | storms did considerable damage to field crops. The condition of ing wheat remains good to excel- _Amenia, Jamestown and Moor- , Minn., reported the highest iperatures this morning. Amenia, with a mark of 94 degr Order Permits Board + to Certify Larvick F ‘An order permitting the state can- Wassing board to certify Carl Lar. ‘wick as the Republican nominee for legislature from the twenty- h district was issued today by ief Justice Muessle in the supreme The order ends the case which) Herbert F. Swett had brought in an ‘effort to have himself declared the perinee instead of Larvick. First showed Larvick winner by vote but two corrections which \ made after the result was hallenged, increased Larvick’s vote * It was said today that attorneys Swett probably will demand a it of the vote. In that case court would order the county wassing board to examine all of votes cast in Emmons county or thaps in the entire district com- of Emmons and Kidder coun- oA ¢ milk caused nearly y ill in Lee, Mass., has won a temporary stay of execu- fter the milk that produced throat infections had been traced to he was sentenced to death, but afterwards reprieved to be studied by scientists. a score of deaths and aoe many " | Airplanes Are Common Car-; riers, Legal Department Ad-| vises Railroad Commission- ers; Passenger and Liability Insurance to Be Studied | | g been advised by its legal department tha lanes operating over fixed routes are common car- riers and come under the jurisdiction | of the state railroad board, that body | has begun consideration of the prob- | lems of airline regulation. | Before regulations are adopted | and rules laid down to govern the op: | cration of airlines, it was made clear, | persons planning to operate such | will be called into conference and} their ideas considered by the com-| mission. The matter has been broughi forcibly to the attention of the com- | mission by intimation from persons | who are planning to operate airlines that they will seck certificates of convenience and necessity in the near future. The permits are necessary under the law before a public utility may legally establish itself in busi- | ness. Matters Considered Matters which will be considered in making regulations for airlines, commission iembers said, are in- ility insurance and facil- ities for sa! P ion. Under the latter classification will come in- spection and approval of landing fields from which planes propose to operate. In some cases, members of the commission said, would mean imp: ment and expan- sion of some airports before’ public planes would he permitted to use them. The fields would have to be large enough, smooth enough and of proper design to meet the needs of planes engaged in regular passen- ger service. Another requirement would be that the planes would have to be in- spected and of a type approved by the federal department of commerce and every pilot of an airline plane would have to meet federal license tests. W. McDonrell, one of the com- members, said his view is that the commission should not con- sider airplanes as competitors of any her common carrier since they uld render an cntirely different class and character of service than the bus lines or railroads. Encourage Airlines He also favors action by the com- ion in granting permits for air- jlines, directed to the end that all \parts of the state would have satis- factory air service. It is probable, he said, that airplanes would meet idea is tc encourage a system of airlines which would put each sec- tion of the state in rapid communica- tion with every other part cf the state. Definite action probably wil! be taken by the commission whenever applications for airlines are received Unofficial reports to the commission indicate that *''= will be soon. McDonnell said he considers it probable that the matter will be taken up by the legislature next win- McLean Agent Names t-Labor Committeemen L. --'To aid in distributing farm labor McLean county for the harvest threshing season this year, ‘County Agent A. L. Norling has 1 ited committees in the larger ws desiring laborers are re- @uested to communicate with the closest to their the agent said today. are as follows: jo fiton, Milo Christensen; .Wash- bus iburn Motor company and A 8 Watioat Bank; Falkirk, Fal- i State Bank; Underwood, Secur- Ry State Bank and First National Co! farmers L. Vi Bank ¢ A. D. Nelson; Ruso, é ‘2 |; Butte, J. G. Over- 3 Mercer, Mercer Motor y; Turtle Lake, P.O. tot "Bas, cae air code for the state, Black Chaff Affects McLean County Wheat Several examples of wheat af- fected by the black chaff disease have been sent to McLean County Agent A. Norling by county farmers. This was announced in a regular rt of the agent. examples were sent to an ex- pert plant pathologist, W. E. Brent- zel. it, other than marquis, may also be affected, the agent ys. The disease thrives in warm weather similar to All ae from re} rust. affected fields Fargo Men Plead Not it probably | a real transportation need and his! by the commission, McDonnell said. | ter end an attempt made to draft an | “| RULES GOVERNING PLANE OPERATION T0 BE LAID DOWN BY STATE BOARD Robbinsdale and back to Memorial drive, where the victims were forced from the car. Bitten Four Times by Snake, Will Recover Minneapolis, Aug. 8.—(@?)—Mrs. Grace Wiley, museum curator at the Minneapolis public library who was bitten four times Monday by a black diamond rattlesnake, will recover, Minneapolis general hospital au- thorities said today. Her condition is much improved and she will have to remain in the hospital only about a week, Dynamite Ruins Rear of Home in Milwaukee Milwaukee, Aug. 8.—@)—Dyna- mite, placed under the rear of the home of William Wellman, a gen- eral foreman for the David Adler and son company, blew away the .| back door and portions of the ateps early this morning. The Adler company has been in. volved in a wrangle with the aniol. | gamated clothing workers’ uaion the last several mont. None of the family was injured. Chinese Are Censured for Failure to Leave American Properties Shanghai, China, Aug. 8.—(P\— John Van A. MacMurray, American minister at Peking, has sent a note to the Nationalist foreign minister calling attention to the failure of the Nationalist government to fulfill promises made on several occasions to evacuate all American property occupied by soldiers otherwise, and to prevent further such occurrences. The note says that despite prom- ises by the Nationalist government only a portion of such properties have been cvacuated, and even ad- ditional property has been seized. As a “rew amonw many” ex- amples, the the American church mission and cathe- dral, the consulate at Nanking, the American Presbyterian missions, and properties at Hskcnowfu, Tsining and Shuntomfu which are at present, occupied by the Chincse. Herb Fishes note instances i ee : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE * —~ ~—-—~-- = 77 -- > Lawyers in Railroad Wreck WOODS CLIMBS UP HOTEL FACE ‘Human Fly’ Thrills Bismarck Crowd With Daring Exhibition Johnny J. Woods, New London, Conn., led several hundred Bis- marck spectators when he climbed the eight-story Patterson hotel walls at 8 p. m. yesterday. The human fly climbed to the top story of the structure, and decided not to climb to the roof when he found that the cornice was too wide to eee his Pace Peso from the wall without a safety belt. - ‘Woods experienced difficulty in gaining headway to the center of the building, walking slowly about 50 feet on a narrow ledge, which offered him no hand holds. Strength in hand and foot proved beneficial to the wall-climber. ‘The Connecticut man hung by his hands on stone window sills, raising him- self up to the next floor by the aid of his feet on the window ledge brick. He leaves for Aberdeen today. He will climb the L. C. Smith building in Seattle August 16. SWEET CLOVER PERILS CATTLE Spoiled Feed Causes Ani- mals to Bleed to Death Readily Minneapolis, Aug. 8.—)—The real danger of feeding spoiled or damaged sweet clover to cattle is in the blood condition it creates, Dr. L, M. Roderick of the North Dakota Agricultural College at Fargo told the American Veterinary association toda: Animals readily bleed to death af- ter such feeding, for it causes losses of clotting properties of blood, said Dr. Roderick, a speaker before the section on education and research. The noticeable outward injury to cattle getting such hay is slight, he said, compared to this internal cor dition for which it is responsible. The blood ceases to coagulate grad- ually and within a month it may fail completely, he * The animals die of fatal internal hemorrhage or bleed to death from wounds which may be si otherwise, said the doctor. He the case of a herd of 80 cows fed on spoiled hay. Sixty died from loss of blood within a day or two after their horns had been removed. “This problem is not only of eco- nomic importance but it is also one of considerable scientific interest,” said the speaker, who has been en- gaged in research to determine changes caused in the animal by poisonous properties found in spoiled forage. The convention, the 65th of the iation, opened Tuesday and cot inues through Friday. The fore- noon today was devoted to sectional meetings, with a general session and meeting of the women’s auxiliary this afternoon. Automobile Dealers Die in Plane Crash ‘Cincinnati, Aug. 8.—()—Wendeii Pavey, prominent Cincinnati aut mobile dealer and J. L. Bovis, cinnati proprietor of an automobi establishment in Hamilton, Ohio, crashed to their death in an airplane near Lunken airport hery soday. Parole Recommended for Finance Wizard Washington, Aug. 8.—(?)—Frank Beddow, famous in the middlewest for his sudden rise to a financial wizard, and later convicted in Iowa for using the mails to defraud, has been recommended to the attorney general for a parole. The action taken by the parole board, has not been passed upon by Attorney General Sargent. idow is a federal prisoner in the South Dakota penitentiary. Nuessle Will Welcome Dixie State Boosters Judge W. L. Nuessle, chief justice of the state supreme court, will rep- resent Governor A. G. Sorlie on August 11, when Bismarck enter- tains a trainload of boosters from Mississippi. Ke governor ae said Senay to gaining strength as rapidly as could be expected. MATCH SEEKER REVILED Residents ‘of"a" large apartanoat sidents of a house in Brooklyn are appear en masse aga’ fovick when his case is called in court. In a y, humid 5 th the building ringing bells and arousing whole families in the effort to, borrow a match, 21,000 PAUPERS TREK Rzeszow, Poland, August 8.— —Probably the record k ALMA MATER STOLEN New York, August 8.—(AP). Alma Mater, Columbia Uninscshy’s. tet statue in front of ledical | 2 This remarkable action picture shows the injured being taken from the wreckage after the Cascade Limited had crashed into the rear end of a special train carrying lawyers returning from rape? Bar Association convention at Seattle, near Cortena, Cali Forty-six lawyers on the special were injured. Above, an injured man is being passed from the side of an overturned car to a stretcher by brother at- torneys. This photo was taken by Milton C. Bucky, prominent New York jawyer. ROBBERS STEAL ORIENTAL RUGS Milwaukee, Aug. 8.— UP) —Local thorities are pushing a wide search today for a band of rug specialists, who, some time Sunday night while the family was_ away, entered the home of Otto A. Lemke, Milwaukee lawyer, and carried off 13 antique oriental rugs valued at $18,000. , One of the rugs, according to Mr. Lemke, is more than 600 years old, and represents perfection in the art of Armenian rug-making. Minot Good Will Tour to Extend to 14 Towns Minot, N. D., Aug. 8—)—Fif- northeastern Mon- tana, will be visited by the annual Minot friendship tour when it makes a 448-mile trip northwest out of this city on August 14 and 15. This was the announcement made today by the pathfinding committee members of the tour, who returned to the city this morning. The towns to be visited on the Disease Germs Carried by Flies Flies Must Be Killed If Infec- tion Is to Be Prevented Eminent health authorities say that the ordinary housefly reeks with filth and germs of dread discases. These flies’ bodies are covered with intended for human consumption. Flies taint everything they touch. eergenn caveloned a pleasant way to ish this most us insect. Send a cloud of FLY-TOX h into the air and envelop and s1 flies crawling on ceilings, resting on lighting fixtures or hiding behind hanging pictures. Have the sprayer handy, filled FLY-TOX; and when those insects such as flies, moth-millers and other your home; or spiders appear with an unsightly, web, a few strokes of the sprayer ends the in- vasion with death. FLY-TOX is a clean, pure, fra- t liquid which is stainless and less _to people. oped at Mellon Institute of Indus- trial Research by Research Fel- lowship.—Advertisement. Lil cel ¥ s first day are Kenmare, Bowbells, Flaxton, Columbus, Noonan, Crosby, Fortuna, Alkabo, all in North Da- kota, and Westby and Plentywood, Montana. On the second day Medi- cine Lake, Froid, Culbertson and Bainville, Montana, and Williston, North Dakota, will be visited. -< WEDNESDAY, ident; see Move A City, second vice ident; Dr. A. S. An- derson, Williston , and Dr. BLACK RUST LOSS SMALL “AUGUST 8, 1928 . C. P. on, secretary, Andrew Lee, Carrington, Farmers in 13 North Central/ 7 States Escape Annual Grain Scourge Minneapolis, st 8.—(AP)— Farmers yn the I North Central tes, including Minnesota and the Dakotas, will suffer » smaller loss to grain from stem rust this year ted during recent years, according to a report issued Tuesday by the rust preyention as- ely with headq ts in Min- nea! 's. A toe of the grain fields which recently was completed by a re; resentative of the association, tl report says, offered a very com- prehensive picture of the crop situa- tion. . “It is believed that the actual loss in bushels of grain, including wheat, oats, barley and rye, Will not amount 5,000,000,” ° tl raging when one remembers that the aver- age annual loss for the Coy 13 years has been more than - 000 bushels.” ‘The noticeable reduction in loss is attributed to the efforts of plant breeders in placing rust resistance varieties of grain in the farmers’ hands, the better cultural ices which the farmers themselves are using, with proper rotation of crops, and the every decreasing number of common barberries. Optometrists Select Fargo for Convention Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 8.—)— Fargo was chosen for the 1929 con- vention of the North Dakota Optom- etric association which closed its annual convention here today. Officers elected were Dr. L. G. Power, Minot, president; Dr. A. E. Anderson, Towner, first vice pres- )UDWEISER is the buy-word that spells satisfaction to millions Distributors It was devel-|* Fruit Co.- Bismarck, N. D. BMS ‘Fall taformantos end I:tasrary from Apply to local steamship agent or 4 Canadian Pacific—611 Second Ave. South, Minneapolis, Minn. Canadian Truck Driver “ I believe Cham is the better spark plug because of the way If the copy we write and the printing we do for our own business seems attractive—if it seems effective—act on the Thought that the work we do for you will be equally, effective for' your busi- 2 tsar ness. ‘ Bismarck Tribune Co, .