The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1929, Page 7

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ave ‘yr r a \ x | \ THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1929 UNION PREPARING T0 EQUIP FARMERS FOR GRAIN STORAGE Tank Meetings Will Be Held in 49 Places in N. D. and Montana to File Orders Btorage tank meetings throughout the state have beer arranged by the Farmers Union, with the purpose of making the purchase of wheat storage} tanks more accessible to. farmers who wish to take advantage of the new state law for financing storage of grain on the farms where grown. The Burleigh county meeting will be held in Bismarck July 10. This is one of 49 meetings to be held by the Farmers Union in this state and Mon- tana following the Fourth of July. The union asks, in the interest of successful tank meetings, that no pic- nics be dated for July 7-13 inclusive. The union announcement says orders must be assembled at once. The storage receptacles are made in Kansas City and it is desired to ship them in in carload lots. Union mem- bers get them for $10 less a tank than non-union farmers. Speakers for the meetings will as- semble in Bicmarck July 7 and a school of instruction will be conducted here. Locals are urged to call special meetings to prepare the farmers for the county meetings at which their orders are to be handed in. In addition to the meeting here, | ; there will be mectings at Stanley in Mountrail county, July 10; at Lin- ton, in Emmons county, July 11; at Garrison, McLean county, July 8; at Beulah, Mercer county, July 9; at Dunn Center, Dunn county, July 10; at Dickinson, Stark county, July 8; at Bowman, Bowman county, July 9; at New England for Slope and Het- tinger counties, July 10; and at Beach, for Golden Valley county, duly 11. DONATIONS ASKED FOR CAMP GRASSICK Children Coming in Lack Bath Robes, Rubbers and Shoes ii for Sun Treatment » Donations of bath robes, rubbers land tennis shoes are asked by the North Dakota Tuberculosis association for Camp Grassick. The need is ur- gent and any donations can be scnt to the association office in the First Guaranty bank building, or a call offering them can be put in to No. 389, Miss Helen Katen, the secretary announces. The supplics are desired for children between the ages of six and 12, Camp Grassick has becn opened ‘with 28 children there and this num- ber will be increased to 36 in a week. ‘There are to be two periods of camp. ‘The first group of children may re- quire six weeks, but as rapidly as in- dividual children condition under the Open-air treatment, they will be sent home to make way for others. The cam will be kept open 11 weeks. The plea for donations is made to reach conditions of insufficient equip- ment. Not alone what has been asked is needed, but cots and also a cabin for boys. It is desired to turn the entire present plant over to the girls and house boys in the proposed cabin hereafter. The association does not have the funds, however, to con- struct a cabin. Portable cabins also will be installed, according to pres- ent plans, Children from Cavalier, Burleigh, La Moure, Walsh, Grand Forks, Sar- gent and Grant counties are at camp at present. Matilda Hagerott of Mandan has been added as camp nurse. J, L. Hewitt, of New Rockford, is camp director. Se JURY CONSIDERING HILDERBRAND CASE Local Plumber Charges Pool Hall Man Alienated Af- fections of Wife A Burleigh county district court jury at 11:55 a. m. today began con- sideration of evidence prestnted in the Hilderbrand $20,000 alienation of affections suit yesterday and this morning. Fred Hilderbrand, Bismarck plumb- er, has brought suit against Nick Bittis, local billiard parlor employe, for damages, charging that the de- fendant alienated the affections of his wife, Jeannette. Hilderbrand and his wife separated last October but were not given a di- vorce until carly this year. Bittis, who boarded with the Hilderbrands for a year and a half immediately be- fore the separation, is responsible for the separation, it is charged. Hilderbrand, his former wife, Bittis, and Madame Marguerite B. Latti- ~ morelle, local phrenologist and sister of the former Mrs. Hilderbrand, were the principal witnesses and testified regarding the relationship between Bittis and the former Mrs. Hilder- brand. Scott Cameron a eee L Crum, both Bismarck attorneys, rep- resented the plaintiff and defendant respectively. ‘she 4 scheduled for trial this afternoon was an action brought by Ell Paster against the Fleck Motor company or on emeht by Heart ‘Trimble against the same company, ‘was announced by Judge McFarland. Driscoll Wornen Want Homemakers Club and Will Confer July 5 ‘A meeting at which tt ts expected to form another Homemakers’ club “will be held at Driscoll, July 5, by Miss Adelaide Laurie. She visited the Y community, Wednesday, and { considerable sentiment in favor of or- , ood for the the state workers from the "Today Miss Laurie met with » new group at Menoken, to talk over or- i Farmer Speeded To Cool Off Hogs | ° Kansas City, June 27.—()—Farmer Percy Smith, brought a truckload of hogs to town yesterday and was ar- rested for speeding, “Forty-five miles an hour,” the ar- resting patrolman told the judge. “The hogs got hot packed in like that and I \ as driving that way to keep them cool,” Farmer Smith ex- plained. “Get a tan,” said the judge, “You're fined $25. CHURCH BELLS PEAL THROUGHOUT MEXICO Catholics Rejoice at Return of Ecclesiastical Property to Priests Mexico City, June 27.—(?)—The first public masses in almost three years will be said in Mexican churches tomorrow. The first service will be at the Church of Nuestra Senora De La Guadalupe, the national shrine with others following in other capital city altars. Archbishop Pascual Diaz announced that eleven churches had been re- turned to the priests yesterday, while three others would be given back to them today. The priests taking charge have registered according to law. The church bells will be pealed for tomorrow's masses, sounding a joyful note where on July 31, 1926, their toll- ing carried foreboding to Mexican Roman Catholics. The promptness with which the government went about turning back the churches to the priests after last Friday’s settle- ment made it possible to move the time for the first mass up one day. Originally it had been planned to have it said Saturday, the feast of Saint Peter and Saint Paul. HAMBURG-NEW YORK | SKIFF VOYAGE ENDS ON CAROLINA ROCKS Berlin Grocer Brokenhearted as Storm Cheats Him of Fin- ishing Adventure Charleston, 8. C., June 27.—(7)— The beach at Kiawah Island, 20 miles south of here, today held the battered and burned remains of the Aga, 18 foot boat in which Paul Muller, Ber- lin grocer, crossed the Atlantic alone. Her skipper, safe here after a ship- wreck and night of exposure, told the story of the disastrous end of ‘his Hamburg-New York voyage. Beating his way up the coast from Miami, where he first touched the American shore, Muller ran into storms off the South Carolina coast, late Tuesday. A squall struck the Aga, tore her sail to bits and tossed her on the rocky Kiawah shore. “The Aga, began to break up,” said Muller, ‘so t decided to set her afire as a signal for help. I poured what was left of my lamp’s petrol over the decks and touched a match.” When no help came, he related, he began swimming for John Island, seven miles away, where he could see a house. When he had covered part of the distance, Fritz Stroebel, of Charleston, drawn by the fire from Johns Island, picked him up in a rowboat. They made their way to Snake Island, which is uninhabited, Shivering in a blowing downpour the two men spent the night there. With clearing weather the next day they made their way to Charleston ‘and food. Muller is staying with Stroebel until he can make arrange- ments to continue to New York. The grocer-sailor was heartbroken at his voyage’s unhappy ending. He told of a girl waiting for him in Ber- lin and of how he had hoped his dar- ing would bring him money enough to marry her. Agatha Gavinsky is her name. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ae Film Star toHave | Record of Wedding | e Beverly Hills, Calif., June 27.—(4)— With motion picture cameras and sound devices recording the cere- monies, May McAvoy, film actress, was married to Maurice J. Cleary, Los Angeles banker, late yesterday at the Church of the Good Shepherd here. Rev. Michael J. Mullins officiated. HENRY FORD SELLS D,, T.& 1, RAILROAD Unnamed Group Buys the Line Which Made Millions for Automobile Maker o Detroit, Mich., Juae 27.—(—Suc- cessfully terminating his excursion into the transportation field, Henry Ford has sold the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton railroad to an undisclosed group of investors, believed to repre- sent the Pennsylvania railroad. ‘The sale was announced late yes- terday by officers of the First Na- tional bank in Detroit, through which t..2 sale was made. Ford officials had announced Monday that negotiations for the sale of the line to the Penn- sylvania railroad were “almost com- pleted.” Purchased in 1920 to round out the Ford program of controlling every step in production of his motor cars, the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton later was so renovated under the motor magnate’s administration that it be- came a paying business in its own right. f ‘The announcement of sale of the railroad did not mention the price. Ford bought the line for $5,000,000, but in 1924 it was learned it had earned more than $1,000,000 a year over the four-year period of Ford ad- ministration, and in 1926 before the interstate commerce commission Ford attorneys argued the rate-setting val- uation of the road should be placed at $23,061,208. The total mileage is 529 miles. 121 Fourth St. “the Avenue” Young Men’s Suits Young men who dress for style pre- fer “the Avenue.” Peak lapel coat with waist seam vest and pleated trousers, ‘Shop Caps That Are Washable Made of black sateen, white duck, stifel stripe and khaki. ‘Un- breakable vitor. “Aywon” Requisites Large-sized tube ~ of Pe cream pure, safe in- redients. er set— 39c Work Gloves iota Spiycnas , lined flexible po value at sacle J.C.PENNEY CO Bismarck, No. Dak. Low Prices Here Not Now and Then~But Every Day We Welcome Your Inspection Phone 185 Boys’ Pajamas Of Fine, Soft Percale Choose from tan, blue, helio and white. They're cut full and jacket is trimmed with four frogs and ocean WIFE HELPS JENSEN IN FLIGHT ATTEMPT | Pilot Takes Off Third Time in Effort to Break Refueling Endurance Record Roosevelt Field, N. Y., June 27.—(P) {—With his wife at his side, Martin Jensen in the monoplane Three Musketeers today was making his third attempt at a refueling endur- ance record. He took off at 7:32 o'clock last night. He must remain in the air one hour longer than the record of 172 hours, 32 minutes, and one second, set May 26 by R. L. Robbins and James Kelly in the plane Fort Worth. Jensen carried 165 gallons of gaso- line at the takeoff, enough to carry the plane through the night, and Planned to refuel in the air twice a day through a pipeline from a plane flying overhead. His wife, an auburn- haired young woman of 26, holds a Private pilot's license and arranged to take her turn at the controls. Dr. Geo, F. McErlain Osteopathic Physician Electrotherapy Solar-Ray Chronic Diseases a Specialty Hoskins-Meyer Bidg. Phone 240 Bismarck, In What Month Is Your Birthday? On your Birthday send your Mother Flowers Hoskins-Meyer She | was smiling with eagerness as she en- tered the plane. She wore @ black sport skirt, white waist and white low shoes, without stockings. A third member of the crew was William Ul- brich, a veteran pilot, who also took part in Jensen's previous attempts, The plane is the came Jensen used previously but a catapult refueling device, the cause of his failures, was discarded. The refueling plane will | be piloted by Emil Burgin and H. B. Clarke. The plane carries a radio eet. Ninety gallons of gasoline wert emptied into Jensen's tanks after 8 a. m., through the pipe ling from the refueling plane, Burgin, pearl buttons, with si A French ncck style. Y Cut full and well made. Absolutely color fast. Trimmed. Preferred by millions of workers. 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Full dustproof construction. A truly remarkable value! Kennelly Furniture Co. Mandan North Dakota Sant GAMBLE STORES > Bismarck, N. D. You actually save

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