The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1929, Page 6

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"PAGE SIX CITY 15 DISTRICTED FOR CLEAN-UP WEEK ACTIVITIES OF SCOUTS Ten Teams Appointed to Can-, vass Householders and Sug- gest What They Do The city was districted, Monday evening, for Clean-up week purpost by the committee in charge and the! Boy Scouts. The meeting held at the ! High school by Captain H. A. Bro- copp, Dr. W. S. Koller and A. L. Bavone was attended by about 50 scouts and scout masters, and cap- tains for ten districts were appointed. | These, in turn, named their teams and the teams will make the rounds of their districts as sanitary scouts. calling on householders with a card on which any desirable attention to the sanitary condition of the premiscs Will be noted. These cards are arranged as lows fol- Clean-Up Week May 6 to 11 HELP Make Bismarck Clean and Beautifu! We'll be back next week. Troop Bismarck Boy Scouts House No. .... Street No... To be Cleaned up | Ashes Alley dirty H Rubbish H Manure Pendens ‘Troop... | The items indicated on the | ca ‘will be checked to indicated the a! tention to be given the premises After the Clean-up drive has been completed. the scouts will come back and cheek again, to see whether the premises have been cleaned ac- cording to the card. Teams and Districts The teams appointed are lows Team 1—Grant Hartley. captain, Bob Hoskins, Wade Green, Leslie Me- Crorie, Earl Kitchen, and Theodore Omett. Team 2—Houston Calyen. captain. Bud Munger. James Hyland, Delain Ward, Ted Olmstead. Shafer. fol- Gussner, Robe Stackhouse, Art Hoffman, Albert Thyseil, Art Sandin Team 4—Myron Benser. captain, Raymond Evans. Bob McCurdy, John Yeasley, Eddie Koffel, Smith. Team 5—Ben Cove, captain, Ken- neth Joslin, George Brittin, Wally Peterson, John Wachter, William | Cayo. | Team 6—Quinton Taylor, captain, Garvin Croonquist, Miles Parke, John Cameron, Delert Perry, George Mark- ham, Alvin Hedstrom. Team 7—Carroll Baker, captain, Charles Sheern, Robert Edick, Hov- ard Brier, Pinky Register. Team 8—Raymond Jenkins, cap- tain, Joe Wright, Melvin Rudor, Paul Gussner, Jack Andrews. Team 9—Ed Church, captain, Ben- der, Carl Thomas, Berg, Albert mas. “Team: 10—Vincent Case, captain, Lioyd Mu: Walter Ulmer, Shafer, Swick, Russéif Saxvik. The territory has been allotted by districts as follows: Team 1, west of Washington street; j 2, between First and Third streets: 3, between Washington and Fi 'D. C. McLeod Rounds Out Agri-| | Ten years ago in May, United States navy flyers made t he first transatlantic flight in the NC-4, whose histdric in the Smithsoman institution. Comm. Albert C. Read (upper inst hull tbeiow) resis reached Lisbon har jor (above. H. Towers dower) commanded the flight. S00 LINE APPOINTS NEW VALLEY AGENT cultural Department; Lo- | cated in Minnesota With the appointment of D. C. Mc- Leod as livestock agent, the Soo Line today boasts of une of the best bal- anced agricultural departments main- tained by railway companies in the United States, according to an an- nouncement made by E. F. Johnson, general agricultural agent of the company. McLeod will be located at Thief River Falls, Minn. In addition to having charge of some specific proj- ects in the Red River valley related to the control of sow thistle, he will assume full responsibility for the sheep projects already underway as @ part of the development work car- ried on by the department. His territory extends from Detroit Lakes to Noyes, Minn., and from Cass Lake, Minn., to Fordville, N. Dak. During the last year, McLeod has given valuable help to the sheep work in North Dakota, while employed as 4, east of Ninth to Avenue in; 5, between Seventh and , between Third and tween Fifth and Seven’ side; 9, east of Ninth between 4 ve- | nue A and D; 10, east of Ni of Avenue D. Today was fly and @nd tomorrow 1 be cleaning cellars and rubbish. FARM RELIEF VOTE IN SENATE IN DOUBT Senator Watson Tells P-esicent Hoover Roll Caii Will Se Taken Wecnescay ent Hoo Watson, the majority lead told the chief executi stricken from the bill as desired by president. After the conference, Watson said regardless of the result of tomorrow's | 2 Conception of the task before them | he was confident that in its I form the farm bill would not the lan. If it be expected the debenture pro- be turned down by the house i eliminated in. conference. +. Recently Watson has been in close touch with the president on the farm and in addition to frequent visits to the white house, he ‘disclosed, he has made daily reports the chief executive by telephone. ‘Civil War Veteran of Jamestown Is Buried by Jamestown, N. D., May 7.—(7%)—W. C. Rich, 83, civil war veteran of Com- B, epeete Volunteers, who with es’ Independent was buried here today with A. R. services. Rich died at Arthur ~ ich who came to Car- in. 1892 leaves his widow and A y, of Jamestown and a daugh- ‘ ‘Mfrs. James Buchanan, Carring- livestock specialist by the state ex-| | Bork in La Moure county. i hay pl debenture p! | added by the senate, he; ension department. He formerly was | ngaged in county agricultural agent | Other members of the company’s | ral department follow: H. A. | iture, Bismarck; 8. J. | , Enderlin; C. O.| re, Gladstone, Mich.; . potato development, | ¢ W. W. Davenport, | The der direction | 2 © president in| HOOVER SATIIED WITH NAVAL MEET val disarma- itiated the oward a conference of this sort. . Hoover said he was greatly gratified with the results of the con- He added he was particular- ed that all the principal naval | powers had expressed their adher- jence to suggestions made by the | American delegation which included | as one of reduction of naval arma- je rather than c* limitation. ‘450 ENROLLED FOR i Grand Forks, N. D., May 7.—In- creased interest in the University of North Dakota summer session which will open June 17 indicates an enroll: ment of approximatcly 450 students, according to Dr. J. V. Breitweiscr, director. This figure indicates an increase of 20 over other years, the dean points out. The 50 student increase, he ex- plains, means considerable Lecause a bulk of summer session registra- tion is made up of advanced students working for master’s degrees or con- ducting special research. “It ‘means,” the director declared, |nautics through a recent appoint- } tion. } with other planes in the trio and with | | ~U SUMMER SESSION Washington, May 7-—(®)—The tenth versary of the first transatlantic | by the NC-4 in May, | $ into aviation histo without any spectacular demons! tion from an air-minded world to; mark it. Aviation historians. however, rec- ognize it as one of the outstanding | triumps of acronautics, surpassing in importance many other flights which received more general public recog- nition, No official observance of the his- tory-making venture is planned by | the navy or by the aviators, now | scattered, who made the flight. The hull of the first successful | transatlantic plane rests in a remote | corner of the Smithsonian institution. | The wings of the great ship are stored away in an obscure section of the naval aircraft factory at Phila- delphia. Attempts to obtain a suitable mu- | seum building in which the famous, | but now almost forgoten, plane might | spread her wings in full glory, failed | years ago. The ship, which carried six men in | safety from New York to Plymouth, | England, by way of the Azores, on; one of the best planned flights in his- | tory, awaits a better day in which to claim her just reward. | Her gallant crew and the men who | designed and built her continue to | work out the problems of naval avia- | tion, except for one or two who have dropped from the ranks. Comm. Albert C. Read, command- ing officer of the NC-4—the only one of the three plancs which completed | the transatlantic flight—has been namer executive officer of the air- craft carrier “Saratoga.” the giant “floating nest” for the navy's planes at sea. Comm. John H. Towers, who com- manded the flight and was navigator of the NC-3, which was forced out of the race at the Azores, becomes a: sistant chief of the bureau of acro- ment. Capt. H. C, Richardson, credited with the design of the NC planes’ hulls and pilot of the NC-3, leaves the navy this month to enter civil | aviation as an expert designer. His | ideas dominated the design of a long | line of navy flying boats which rec- ognize no superior. Lieut. Walter K. Hinton, who with Lieut. Elmer F. Stone piloted the cuc- cessful NC-4, is head of an aviation correspondence school in Washington. Lieutenant Stone is stationed at the Wilmington, N. C., coast guard sta- Ensign Herbert C. Rodd, the radio operator who kept in communication ships at sea during the flight, is in the navy's bureau of engineering in Washington. Lieut. J. G. Breese, the pilot engineer, left the navy to be- come head cf a Chicago enginéering corporation, while his assistant, E. S. Rhoads, chief machinist’s mate, is stationed at the naval air station in Pensacola, Fla. The three NC planes, built not for 2 conscious attempt to be first to span the Atlantic but as an answer to the world war submarine menace, arc bigger than any planes now flying in the United States. The huge plane received a tremendous ovation when it | at his WAR DEBT EXPERTS RESUME PERSONAL REPARATIONS TALK Schacht Delivers Text of C tain Conditions Under Which Germany Will Accept — «$9 SOS SSSA SESS, Paris, May 7.—(?)—The repara- BS ° len experts today resumed con- RY » i fidential personal talks in a final ef- |X FY fort to come to an agreement on a|¥% art iC ner arx ce) of the figures proposed by Owen id x ' . Young. Be x Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, head of the |S e ° . German delegation, conferred with ul § cia Ss a Mr. Young this morning and deliv- | \ g ered the text of ecrtain conditions 3 BY under which the Germans are ready | c > Y to accept the proposed settlement. |% BY These conditions were at once com- NY Dy eae Le) to the a h and Ga x ‘i oO BN gian experts. The conditions, already | % ‘3 known in the main, demand right to | T Ny revision of the plan or een of NY s unprotected payments at any time . ‘ . that the Reich may find iteelf in 3 That’s what you save $5 to $10 on bright new suits, just out of the % economic difficulties. Hart Schaffner & Marx tailoring shops in all the new colors and styles 3 May Reduce Further g at $25 - $35." They are priced $5 to $10 less than usual. Some come with S They also ask for the right for | t irs ‘t x Germany to demand the convocation N ‘WO pairs trousers. x of Lea committee of baad to g : AY consider whether the reparations pay- —S y. J fretite ahiell ot ‘tie. fuptune radoeed NY REMEMBER THIS SATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK 3 under certain circumstances. The un- 3 protected part of the annuities, which x would be the part attributable to in-/% z AY terest on bonds for commercialization | 5 . of part of the total debt, would be | A Payable under the circumstances and | % BY would amount, according as the Ger- bY DN man offer or the allied demands pre- | % 3 t) was the skipper of the NC-4. Comm. John pao see qieenoeONe to eis. : New Clothing Store on Broadway Opposite Postoffice 3 000,000). x pe —— It is on this point how much of the $ reparations debt shall be mobilized s anc what shall be the part of the cash | & x thus realized to go to France, that forms the knotty point of the nego- tiations. French Critics’ Points French critics of Mr. Young's Scheme assume it will furnish little over half of the anticipated 50,000,- 000,000 francs for purposes of amorti- zation of the French internal debt. They say since that was the only in- ducement held out to France to con- tinue its policy of concessions to Ger- many, there is no longer any reason for the existence of the sccond Dawes committee. It was confirmed today that the schedule of payments proposed begins with 1,675,000,000 gold marks (about $402,000.00) increasing by 25,000,000 gold marks annually, reaching 2,050,- VETERAN OKLAHOMA PEACE OFFICER DIES Buck Garrett, Captor of Clara Smith Hamon, Succumbs After Turbulent Life of another, which also struck him. He received a broken collar bone, abra- sions of both legs, and a few cuts. New Spark Plug Week At Hand; Dealers Urge Change from Winter Local dealers in automotive- equip- ment are uniting with their col- leagues throughout the country in urging car owners to join in observ- ing National Change Week, which has come to be recognized everywhere as the annual period when motorists Ardmore, Okla., May 7.—(?)— Cheating death of the violence that marked the passing of his numerous contemporaries, Buck Garrett, veter- an peace officer of Southern Okla- home and Texas, is dead, a victim of paralysis. He passed away peacefully home here yesterday at the age 000.000 (about $492,000,000) in the | install new sets of spark plugs in of 58. | sixteenth year. their engines. National Change Week Although turbulence accompanied |” ‘Deliveries in kind would be limited | this year is set for May.5 to 11. his early day campaigns against des- peradoes and his later political career, he gained perhaps his greatest. na- tional note as the captor of Clara Smith Hamon, who in 1920 shot and killed Jake Hamon, Republican na- tional committeeman. Mrs. Hamon fled to Mexico, where Garrett found her. She was acquitted after a sen- sational trial. Garrett was known as a two-gun man, but his intimates insisted that this was a misrepresentation and that he resorted seldom to the use of fire- arms. One of Garrett's exploits which gained the adulation of the masses was his capture of “Wabbling Billy” Ballew, a character of the days when Ardmore was an untamed boom oil town. Ballew killed a companion and retiring to a basement dive on There is a consensus of opinion among automotive experts that last winter's prolonged cold weather and the rough conditions of roads in most parts of the country imposed an un- usually severe strain on spark plugs, with the result that this spring, even more than after normal winters, mo- torists find new spark plugs needed for easy ‘starting and generally sat- isfactory engine performance. “The monetary saving in gasoline and oil more than offsets the cost of new spark plugs,” says R. A. Strana- han, president of the Champion Spark Plug company. “In addition repairs to the engine are obviated, through better performance, greater efficiency and reduced oil dilution.” Work on ’31 Dacotah to 750,000,000 marks the first year. Diminishing 50,000,000 marks cach year. Fraternities at U To Hold Track Meet Grand Forks, N. D., May 7.—In ad- dition to high school track competi- tion at the May Conference here May 17-18 on the state university campus, fraternities also will compete in a separate meet on the cinder track, C. A. West, athletic director, announced this week. Individual medals will be awarded winners of first, second, and third places, and the group placing in the greatest number of events will be awarded a trophy, plans outlined an- “Bloody Caddo” street, sent out word | nounce. r} . that he would kill any officer who at-| So that a uniformly high grade f Will Begin at Once tempted to arrest him. Garrett, newly |competition is afforded, Leland —_e elected sheriff of Carter county, strolled unconcernedly down the dark stairway, toward the hiding place of the drink-crazed man. “I've come after you, Bill,” the sheriff proclaimed, “and I haven't even got a gun in my hands.” Ballew surrendered peacefully. BIG TOURIST SEASON PREDICTED FOR CITY With carly tourists already making use of Bismarck’s Tourist camp, im- mediately south of the Memorial bridge on the Burleigh county side of the Missouri river, a “bigger and bet- ter tourist year” for the city is pre- dicted by H. P. Goddard, secretary of the Association of Commerce. Frank Schlomer, who had charge of the camp last year, again is in charge this year. One new cabin already has been constructed and a caretaker’s home and building with modern toilets, lav- atories, and shower baths will be built this year, according to G. E. Win- greene, chairman of the Association of Commerce committee in charge of the camp. The park has been enlarged this year, an additional tract of land being ranted for tourist camp use by the “Tiny” Lewis, university track coach will assist individual competitors in Grand Forks, N. D., May 7.—Work on the Dacotah for 1931, next year- their preparation for the event. book to be published at the Univer- sity of North Dakota, will begin in SURE TO GET HIM the immediate future, it was gn- Spencer, Mass., May 7.—Homer Fre-!nounced Saturday by newly elected dette, 45, is probably the only man to|staff heads, Robert experience being struck by two auto- mobiles at the same time and live to tell the tale. In crossing the street recently Fredette was struck by one automobile and hurled into the path They had a wing span of 126 feet, demonstrated their ability to carry 51 men on a single flight—still a record —and carried six men on their his- toric flight to Europe. No plane since the NC-4 has carried six men on a transatlantic flight. SUMMEK $1UDY SAVE$ MONEY “Students who enroll at Dakota Business College, Fargo, in June, show good sound Sefite,”” says Pres. Watkins. “‘Progress is faster, students save living expenses, be- come wage earr.ers earlier.” “That a large proportion of the prin- cipals and superintendents in state high whens will be attending school D.B.C, ACTUAL BUSINESS training (copyrighted—unobtainable elsewhere) accustoms pupils to 8- hour day and 6-day week; to cll medern office devices and ices. schoe! graduate, now has a $145 sition with the Trainmaster, lontevideo, Minn. *‘Follow th 6 ie Succe$$ful’’ June3-10..WriteF. L. Wet'ins, Prec.,806¥F rort £t., Fargo. Bismarck park board. The camp is equipped with water, electric lights, and a kitchen. Out-of-door ovens also will be con- structed this year for tourists’ use, it is announcer All In Intestinal poisons are sepping your energy, stealing your pep, making you i!!, Take WR A Clean Home Deserves a Clean Heater ‘The Super the dist into the 1 theoggh the dag_eogptacl of E be ready for any emergency. . THIS CLEANING SERVICE PAYS - eda ste es FOR ITSELF IN FUEL SAVED -: which includes m of ané iat EP mee St PHONE 141 FRENCH and WELCH HDWE. 0, An Easy Way to Make meir, Goodrich, in a poll conducted among book is edited annually by the junior class, and elections are held in the spring preceding the junior year, ac- cording Board for Control of Student Publi- cations, A call for bids for engraving work soon will be issued, it was announced. Elections were held carlier this year ‘to allow additional time for work in Bismarck Auditorium | Seats on Sale Tuesday at Harris & Woodmansee's. Mail Orders Now. TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1929 GOS to $10 the spring. Also an opportunity is* provided for new staff heads to get in contact with their predecessors. PROTESTS TERRIFYING SIGNS Richmond, Va.—()—Such signs as “Prepare to meet thy God” and ‘Death is on thy track” do not add to the spiritual uplift or happiness of motoring tourists, avers Henry J. Shirley, chairman of the state high- way department. sophomore students. The to plans outlined by the One Night Only, Thursday, May 16th THE EVENT OF THE SEASON! ALBER’ Z MTS Lar, Pee ep eS ee LOS ANGELES AND SAN FRANCISCO! SIG. ROMBERG’S BEST MUSIC 20 scumzs . F100 WITH THE ORIGIIAL SINGING STARS TANES tewart’s Symphony Orchestra Arriving 2 p. m. in their own special tain, 7 cars. Prices: $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00. Don’t Get Left! A great Comedian brings his latest success— his most popular comedy in ten years—and his‘NEW YORK CAST INTACT. This attrac- tion is guaranteed to be of the HIGHEST CLASS and merits the patronage of Bismarck theatre goers. E. H. L. VESPERMAN, Manager Auditorium. The Famous Star, Himself, in His Smart Mystery Comedy “Straight Thru the Door” TOMORROW NIGHT, MAY 8 AT THE Auditorium The Famous Comedian, Himself with his New York cast intact. “HODGE In His Smart New Comedy “Straight ThrutheDoor” ONE NIGHT ONLY Why Pay Rent? — The Bismarck Building and Loan association ha funds on hand at all meng loans on Bismarck city Low rates of interest—monthly payments— Pl ys advances made for building new homes, Bismarck Building and Loan Association Room 11 First National Bank Block

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