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PAGE SIX KIWANIANS LISTEN TO DR, GRIEBENOW TELL OF VIENNA TRIP Proposal to Observe Zero Hour Put to Entertainment Com- mittee at Luncheon ° ° Enge Feels Safer _ In Airplane Than In Skidding Auto | H ° — > Dr. R. 5S. Enge, Bismarck, feels ‘safer in the air in an airplane than lin an automobile skidding about on |muddy roads. He made this discov- lery in flying to Bismarck from ! | | | | Shelby, Mont., one of his experiences | on the trip being pushing the plane from a mud-hole near Havre, Mont., |and catching the plane on the move. Enge flew to Shelby last week-end with Stuart W. Hannah, representa- AMERICAN CRUISER President Hoover Directs Activ- | ities; Federal Budget Pro- | visions Are Made || Baby Boy in Fargo BUILDING PROGRAM |*Fs.3.>, ; M. J. Englert, Valley City, today will ; ‘seek to determine in district court | PL; ANS PROGRESSING here who is the real mother of . | Billy,” baby boy at the North Dakota ‘Ruth Hanley, Fargo, insist they are district court Monday. affidavits of | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY. JUNE:4, 1929 Ga eg] | Two Women Claim | ‘| June 4.—(%)—Judge children’s home. Two women, Mrs. William Wold, Moorhead, and Mrs. | the child's actual mother. When the case was brought into; rejudice barred Judge A. T. Cole. SS A New Comic Ot jand Englert was scheduled to begin tive of Cosmos Petroleum, Inc., and} i * hearing of the case this afternoon. Kiwanians heard of Dr. | y; a ‘_ | Washington, June 4.— (4) — The + Ki Vincent Cavasino, Bismarck aviator. american’ cruiscr-building program Friederich Griebenow saw in Europe. in a Curtis-Robin plane, to inspect | | 2specially in Vienna, on pe arene oil properties in the Montana clty. | Waaee Panacea ee pact, tour to the Austrian capital, at to-|pians were made for two planes to S q day's luncheon. His talk w the | {provision for new ships will be made what by the originator of ‘There also was some humor injected | Unable to do co... | ‘The administration recognizes that into the meeting by receipt of a mock |UNADIC to do so. ‘ ; Work toward construction of 15 ad- li Hannah and Dr. Enge were en-!Gitional 10,000-ton fighting. shi complaint from New Rockford, charg- » : i "a4, | ditional ,000-ton fighting ships is ‘ husiastic over the possibilities of air | iniq te j ing two prominent members—kept | ransportatjon when they arrived |™&de mandatory under the program there overnight by automobile break- | juntil an agreement for reduction of ! e down on the recent club trip—with | failing to settle hotel charges of $77 cach for lodging, breakfast and dam- | age. The matter was placed in the |¢ hands of Gordon Cox, who discovered favre. nding wi a defense in the complaint, inasmuch | Perfect manner, according to the as it inadvertentiy. alleged the -of- |Passengers, but the field was soft an fense to have been committed May 21,{the Plane became stuck. After some ifviculty and pushing, the trio suc 329. 2 , me matter of celebrating the .o jcceded in getting the plane to a spot hour at the opening of Kiwanis In-|‘eFe @ takeoff was possible. Han- ternational, June 24, was brought up moving and gaining by President Worth Lumry and re- | after it was ferred to the entertainment commit- | *Pccd- tee of the month for action. Harke, new manager of the Central | Lumber company here; H. W. Swen son, of Devils Lake, former judge of} Dr. Griebenow told of the prelimin- | Nea ary travels through England, France Auditorium Attended by and Italy which preceded his visit to Many Friends tomed to in their own country | city auditorium Monday evening of the striking features of travel inj were attended by a large audience of France. lfriends of the hospital, the nursing pressed him with its paintings and |B. Strauss presented the diplomas. seulptures. Venice gave him the; The program opencd with a march thrill of noiselessness and beauty, ‘by Bennie Bermci’s orchestra; the owning a Ford being $250 a year. | solo; and the students concluded the Water is free, he said, and electricity | evening's exercist with the song, costs about a cent a kilowatt-hour. | “Roses Everywhere.” long air trip. Running into a heavy rainstorm, sino landed his plane 18 miles tof Havre. ‘The landing was made The luncheon was attended by sev- | IN eral members of the pardon board, in- fh yy cluding as guest Dr. D. T. Robertson ‘ sey county; Joseph Shuckard Pitot wists Willow City; and C. L. Foster, Vienna. He found the most tourists in Paris and he described the abs In Rome the doctor saw the cere- | school, and the graduates. monies of the Golden Jubilee of the} The address to the graduates was Vienna, with iis communistic gov- | students’ chorus sang “Barcarolle,” ernment. impressea him economically. | accompanied by Mrs. A. J. Bauer; Fargo. Other guests were August C. | i a new | 3 member of the club. {Commencement Exercises at of comforts Americans are ac St. Alexius graduation exercises at pope at St. Peter's. Florence im-! delivered by C. F. Kelsch, an Dr. F He found taxes high—the cost of {Miss Marcelle LaRose ‘¢ a piano He praised’ the school system with its} Graduates included Mabel Janct 100 kindergartens. Into this fits the; Bowman, Alvina Bucchler, Angela opera, without a knowledge of which | Marie Damberger, Margaret Cather- one is not cultured in Vienna, he said. | ine Fleck, Maric Anna Forster, Louise While he was in Vienna, said the | Mary French, Marion Margaret Han- doctor, there was great depression} son, Mylo Iverson, Grace Jeweski, and many beggars abounded. There | Edna Johnson, Anna Elizabeth Kilzer {s No opportunity to the young of the | Elizabeth Anna Kuhn, Gertrude Lin- zity. Many would like to migrate to|nertz, Eleanor Venita McLaughlin, this country, but the American im-| Violet Mac Ri nnigration quotas prevent, he said. | Seidl, Lillie Christie Solmonson, Lil- It was suggested that the doctor | lian Ulrich, Frances Wynkoop. continue the talk at a future meeting here at the completion of their first} che, Monica Dorothy | as he had just begun to scratch the; | applicable to all the navies. Surface of the subject of Vienna. Ny APL, ANE: ALTITUDE ee ees |Elite Beauty Studio McFarland Will Delay Potter Motion Ruling | Judge R. G. McFarland said today that he probably would take no ac- tion on the state’s motion for a change of venue in the second trial of Raymond E. Potter until after this term of court, when he returns to Jamestown. Time allotted for filing of arguments on the motion of the Prosecutors and defense counsel end- ed at 6 p. m. yesterday. Two men found guilty in district | court were sentenced by Judge Mc- Farland this morning. Frank Moll, convicted of a statu- tory charge, was sentenced to four years in the state penitentiary. He began his sentence at noon. J. H. Webster, convicted of engaging in the liquor traffic, was sentenced to 90 days in the county jail, $200 fine, and costs. Juries in both cases recom- mended leniency. After deliberating from 11 a. m. un- til 12:05 p. m. today, a jury found C. J. Pangkovich not guilty of a charge of engaging in the liquor traffic. Luverne, Tower City Burglars Are Caught! Fargo, N. D., June 4.—()—Charged with burglarizing three stores at Lu- verne, N. D., and an oil station at Tower City, Clark and Milford Schernetton, brothers, of Cumberland, Wis., will be arraigned before Judge M. J. Englert in district court here late today. They have told John C. Pollock, Cass county state's attorney, that they would plead guilty. The men were seen driving away from the Cowan oil station at Tower City early today. gave chase, passed them before reaching Buffalo, secured help at that point, and arrested them. A large assortment of supplies, later identi- fied as belonging to Luverne stores were found in a trailer. Veteran Brakeman Is Killed Coupling Train » Minn. June 4.—()— Jesse Long, a Northern Pacific brake- man, was killed here early today when he was struck on the head by the iron coupling on an air hose as he ‘was coupling a car. Long had acted as brakeman for <0 years on the Nor- thern Pacific “Commuters” train be- tween St. Paul and Taylors Falls. His widow survives. Delegates Leave for Grand Lodge Meeting A company of Rebekahs and Odd Fellows from Flasher passed h Bismarck throug! today en route to Devils, convention of} Tiegen, end 7. of delegates included | nus! convention Sunday at the Pleas- ane Valley Methodist end Dr. J. ‘Olson and | bouth of here. Stewart Cowan/ RECORD HOP STARTS | Washington, June 4. | Appolo Soucck of the navy bureau of | aeronautics, took off from the naval | air station at 12:30 today in an at- tempt to break the world’s scaplanc { altitude record. Soucek’s target was the 37,995 foot mark made by Lieutenant C. C. ; Champion of the navy in 1927 in a Ppontoen equipped plane. Champion's land plane record of 38,418 fect was broken by Soucek several weeks ago when he ascended 39,140 fect in the same ship Champion used. ; The attempt today was in a single | scat navy pursuit plane, powered by a 425-horsepower wasp engine. It was equipped with a supercharger to | maintain sea level air conditions at ; high altitudes. Two Seriously Injured ;As Auto Plunges Over 120 Foot Embankment |. St. Paul, June 4.—(?)—An automo- | bile plunged over a 120 foot embank- ment at Godfrey road and the Mis- sissippi river boulevard at 1 a. m., to- day with serious injury to the two oc- cupants. William Rehman suffered lacerations about the head and his woman companion, Bernette Brandt, was slightly cut about the scalp. The cause of the accident was not learned. \Burial Services for Man Killed Climbing | Cliff Are Arranged Fargo, N. Dak., June 4.—(P)—The body of Oliver Norman Crosby, 23, Seattle, Wash., who was fatally in- jured when he fell 100 feet off a cliff near Tye, Wash., last Memorial day has been brought here. Funeral serv- | ices for Crosby, who is a former stu- dent of Concordia college, Moorhead, will be held at Perley, Minn., his for- mer home, on Wednesday. | Crosby was climbing a mountain \near Tye with a companion and had reached the top, paused to look around and then slipped and fell over the cliff. His wife, a bride of less than a year, took him to Everett, Wash., where he died several hours later. Golden Valley Woman Heads Oliver-Mercer Sunday School Group Stenton, N. June 4.—Mrs. A. H. Golden Valley, was elected it of the Oliver-Mercer county lunday school association at its an- church. 10 miles Other officers elected follow: Mrs. \—Lieut, | 0 be opened tomorrow in the E. H. | |Minnesota Civil War |sea armaments is | Senate, {abandon that policy. Contrary interpretations jfrom the president's Memorial day address and the statemet issued {afterward by Secretary Stimson arc | described in high administration cir- |eles as erroncous. Actual Agrecment Unlikely ; Although the administration is heartily in favor of a reduction of luating relative naval strength, it |regards an actual agreement as un: likely in the near future. Without such an agreement, ratified by the senate, no modification or abandon- ment of the American building pro- gram can be considered. As the disarmament situation now stands, the preparatory commission is jmarking time while the principal powers are studying and undertaking to make practical application to their own navies of the “yardstick” formula presented by Ambassador Hugh 58. son to the Geneva conference. Officials hicre say that, since highly technical questions are involved, slow progress is to be expected. First, the jnaval experts of the other powers |must determine how the “yardst! {can be applied to their own navies, taking into account their individual needs for certain types and classes of ships. Percentages Will Differ Having made this determination. they, like the American experts, must then settle upon the ratio in th? tonnage, to armament, and to the other factors. The opinion here is that the experts of no two nations will arrive at precisely the same figure of percentage. After the,experts of the five lead- ing sea powers have computed their j Percentage scale, they will report to the preparatory commission, which adjourned subject to c Reassembling in Switzerland, the experts of the various nations then will be faced with the probviem of | composing their differences in the ef: fort to reach a common “yardstic! Is Name of New Shop} The “Elite Beauty Studio” is the name chosen for the new beauty shop | Millinery on Broadway, as the rest a of a contest staged last week, Mrs. | Myrtle Ackerman, proprietor. an- | nounces. Mrs. Ackerman, who is also ; the owner of the Vanity shop in| Jamestown, will be in charge. nue B, who sent in the winning name, will receive a permanent wave free. | Judging was done by a committec | from out-of-town, | staff of three operators, with private white. | According to Mrs. Ackerman, the | Elite studio will specialize particular- ly in permanent waving, using Paul's and the Frigidine methods. Mrs. Ackerman, who took private training from Don Morris, of the Powder Puff shoppe, Minneapolis, and previously studied beauty culture in Milwaukee, expects to devote all her time to the waving. For the opening tomorrow, all thse | who visit the shop will receive a card | entitling the holder to a free shampoo with the first appointment. Veterans Are Meeting St. Paul, June 4.— (4) — Welcomed by Mayor L. C. Hodgson, the 63rd an- nual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, department of Min- nesota, convened with 32 members in attendance. The Women's Relief Corps of Minnesota is holding its an- nual meeting simultaneously. Potato Shippers Plan Cooperative Company | Fargo, N. D., June 4.—()—Tenta- tive plans for the formation of an organization to be known as the Red River Valley Potato Shippers associa- tion were made at a meeting of 40 potato growers and dealers in Moor- ; head Monday night. Fin=] crganiza- tion of the association is expected to be made at the second meeting to be held in Grand Forks, N. D., at 7 Pp. m. Saturday. 3 The object of the association, ac- cording to tentative by-laws, will be “to bring together for mutual co- operation the carlot shippers of po- tatoes in the Red River valley.” George Hoople, Hoople, N. D.; W. G. Knowles, Leo H. Wright and H. A. Wieneke, all of Moorhead, and R. H. Burrill, Hawley, Minn., were made members of a committee which will make arrangements for t Grand Forks meeting. a Garrison Man Sought For Reckless Driving reached by the | leading nations and ratified by the and the president has no in- tention of attempting to modify or drawn val armaments on a new basis for | whole equation that is to be given to/ Miss E. Amclia Anderson, 1208 Ave- | The new beauty studio will have a| Plans. The board, besides surveying booths, and furnishings in blue and | Study the need of additional locks and PUBLIC SENTIMENT ‘Daily Reads Compilation of News From All Sections of Nation in Private Paper | Washington, June 4.—- (4) — Presi- |dent Hoover is keeping a_ vigilant watch upon the trend of public senti- ment on the great questions of gov- | ernment as it is reflected in the press of all sections of the nation. Late each day there is placed be- fore him his own specially prepared and private ni aper, dubbed “the {yellow journal” by white house at- taches. not ‘or its contents but be- cause it consists of clippings :1:ounte 1 upon sheets of yellow foolscap loosely bound together with the red tape that adorns, literally, so many of Wash- ington’s public documents. Essentially the president's paper is a compilation of news dispatches and editorial opinion gleaned from the} columns of more than 35 daily papers which are received each jmorning at the executive mansion. But even this lis not sufficient to meet the desires |of the chief exccutive, and to it have | been added the services of two spe- cially selected clipping bureaus. | If his busy schedule permits, Mr. | Hoover makes a careful study of the | clippings before leaving his office, al- though he sometimes takes them to} the white house proper and goes over ) xem there a little later. | President Hoover is most interested at present in the reaction of thej press to two of the great domestic problems of the day, tariff revision and farm relief. Numerous journals from the agricultural northwest have been added to the list of papers usu- ally received at the white house so that the president may have a thor- jough krowledge of the attitude of the press of the section vitally in- terested in these topics. The papers from which “the yellow journal” is compiled are the dailies ; ef the larger cities. The task of comb- ing the smaller papers has been given over to the clipping bureau: ‘NICARAGUAN CANAL SURVEY IS PLANNED Washington, June 4—()—President Hoover is expected in the near future to appoint a consulting board of army and civilian engineers to survey the possibilities of another isthmian canal through Nicaragua to link the Atlan- tic and Pacific. The survey, which was authorized n the Edge resolution adopted by the Oth congress with an appropriation of $150,000 for the work, will be launched in September under present |the proposed Nicaraguan route, will facilities on the Panama canal. Army cngincers estimate that con- struction of the proposed Nicaraguan canal would cost appreximately one billion dollars and take 10 years. The advocates of the proposed waterway contend that it would be worth the outlay and effort because it would afford a second interoceanic route for national defense and would be of im- mense value in opening up trade ter- ritories in Central and South Amer- | SCREEN FAVORITES | SECRETLY MARRIED .New York, June 4.—(7)—Work on the motion picture lots of Hollywood will defer for a time the honeymoon of the screen's latest newlyweds, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Joan Crawford. Married yesterday at the rectory of St. Malachy’s Roman Catholic church, they plan to return to California next Tuesday ‘ where each has _ several screen productions to make this ycar. Upon completing their year’s sched- ule, they said, they would return east and sail on a European honeymoon. CHEVROLET SALES FORCES IN SESSION Chevrolet representatives from the General Motors headquarters and distributors of the Slope territory were in session here, today, signing up the distributing contracts for 1929- ‘The session began at 9 a.m. At noon the meeting held a luncheon, at the Grand Pacific dining room, then resumed activities. Representing the company were T. F. Kinman, Fargo. zone sales man- Minet. N. D., June 4—(F)—A war- rant charging reckless driving wes is- sued today in Minot for the arrest of . C. Lyon of Garrison, who is ac- cused of having forced an aut 3 tomobile treasures, [containing two Minot families into y | ditch south of here Sunday night. passengers in the automobile forced into the ditch. Mr. and Mrs, John Martyn and two children were Fargo, |the other occupants. when questioned. by the po- haps oleae ca ahy Knowledge Lyon Mee of the Detroit. The company managers came in! from Montana, Monday . and will leave for Minot late this eh G in grades among 169 senior graduated from the Chicago of den- tal surgery, dental department ot Loyola university, delivered the vale- dictory address at annual commence- Our Gang Comedies T’S none other than TOM M’NAMARA, origi- nator of the famous Our Gang Comedies, who has created this great SUNDAY NEWS comic strip. With sound, too ... but the sound will be yours when you look in at this brand new band of rib-ticklers! Just for a laugh, don’t miss these Three Kid Musketeers, In the Bismarck Tribune Every Saturday Subscribe Now And secure the World’s important events through The Tribune leased wires of the Associated Press, the daily market reports, and the following comics daily: The daily Gumps, Freckles and His Friends, Mom’n Pop, Salesman Sam, Boots and Her Buddies, Our Boarding House and Out Our Way. 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