Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Aha \ ~—” WEILL AS CAR RACES STOCK TO FEATURE FAIR AT MANDAN, AS Farm Herds Now Being Shown on Circuit Around State to Be Collected Here Now that the Bismarck July Fourth has come and gone the next lumi- nous event in the twin communities on the Missouri and Heart will be the Missouri Slope fair at Mandan, July 23-26 inclusive, The Mandan fair is going to be a real agricultural show this year. It will specialize in all branches of farm- ing, stressing especially the forms which are to the fore in Morton county, and livestock and dairying. Some of the classiest animals shown in North Dakota this year will be in the pens and stalls at Mandan, according. to the division chiefs in charge of livestock. Last week Devils Lake held its annual Lake Region fair, this week, Minot and Jamestown fairs hold the boards; next week, July 8 to 13, Fargo will be the Mecca of the fair crowds and the following week, July 15-20 the state fair is on at Grand Forks. The Missouri Slope Fair dates were set the week following the Grand Forks fair so as to complete the chain of the big exhibitions in North Dakota for the year. Attractions featured at the other fairs are included in the big program at Mandan. Of chief interest to the dairy farmer and live- stock men will be the exceptional showing of fine cattle and sheep. The sheep entries are especially nu- merous inasmuch as there is a tre- mendous trend toward sheep raising in this part of the state at the pres- ent time. E. A. Marcotte, Dic.iinson auto race driver who completed a sensational five-mile run last year guiding his car by a broken steering wheel quad- rant, expressed satisfaction with the extra prize money offered to inde- pendent drivers this year when in Mandan Sunday. The list of entries in the auto race program of two thrillers with eight prizes a day for three days, with the qualification races on July 23, has Parachute Champ Plans to Leap Into Matrimony THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1929 i CLUB CAMPAIGN PUT "quits Priesthood MEMBERSHIP 10 320 | Adelaide Laurie Closes Stay of | Three Weeks in County With Prospects Left --——— | | bi if The three-weeks campaign of the | state extension service on the or-| * ganization of Home-makers and |dunior clubs in the county, which | Miss Adelaide Laurie has been con- ducting, has ended and Miss Laurie has gone to other fields. During her stay here, Miss Laurie rganized Home-makers clubs at » Menoken, Canfield and Sterl- ing and in Hay Creek and Frances townships, while arrangements were made to form others in Boyd town- ship and east of Baldwin. Junior clothing clubs were organ- d in Menoken, and, in addition, Miss Laurie met all existing Home- maker and Junior clubs in the jcounty, Each of these organiza- tions now numbers approximately 160 members in Burleigh county. Miss Laurie said the work was favorably received everywhere she went. She came here June 12, but, in the three weeks here, it-was im- possible for her to get to every part of the county. However, any com. munity that wants a Home-makers or Junior club will be given every assistance possible through the coun- ty agent, A. R, Miesen, BONHAMS ARE BACK FROM LONG CAR TRIP Went Through Southwest, Up Along California Coast and Visited Canada Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Bonham have returned from one of the biggest va- cation trips taken by anyone from Bismarck this season. They got back Wednesday evening from the Pacific coast and the western provinces of Canada, on a trip that started here | April 21, | From here they first went to Ne- braska, Kansas and Oklahoma, gct- | ting into those states just as lila were in full bloom. Then they head- ed southwest and went through New Mexico and Arizona to California and visited Mr. Bonham’s brothers around | Los Angeles and Palo Alto. | On their way north they traveled | the coastal highway which in part Passes through the redwood timber and at other points skirts the se: coast at an elevation of 200 fect. Thi jhe was at Sauk Center, it was i It is thought that the Mississippi cated that Petersoi life was in| Valley was once a great interior sea. danger from the big silver bass tipping and capsizing the boat. One | : of the pictures shows the craft all THEATRE but shipping water as the catches Last Time Tonight made by Peterson struggle to slip “PROTECTION” overboard. The Minnesota bass are so large, | said Peterson, that it is no sport to Nervy news-gatherers ana reckless racketeers have a show-down when a fearless !catch them, the hard labor entailed taking all the pleasure out of the | editor gets out a bullet- proof edition. fishing. So he returned home to Also march withthe Lions in the parade of the Fourth and to rest up from his vacation, The Collegians in their first All Talkie “King of the Campus” BRITISH MONARCHS WED 36 YEARS King George and Queen Mary Receive Felicitations of Na- tion om Anniversary London, July 6—(?)—Today King George and Queen Mary received | felicitations on the 36th anniversary of their marriage. ‘Tomorrow both made their way north into the state | will join with Britain's millions in a of Oregon by way of Grant's pass, and | thanksgiving service for his recovery into Washington, then went over to} from his long recent illness. Canada, with Lake Louise, Banfi,| The royalties, in simple morning Calgary and Winnipeg as objectives. | dress, will go by open carriage tomor- Part of the trip was through the|row to Westminster Abbey where a northern part of Montana by way of| special thanksgiving service—post- the T. R. highway. They found this’ poned once before when his majesty Coming Mon. - Tues. - Wed. in Sanccninapeinaiimaeiiaseeiiian coer PICTURE Y good in parts, as at Havre, Montana,| suffered a relapse—has been ar-| ~ y and their last link was over this high- | ranged. 1) AND SON way down through North Dakota to King George and Queen Mary were (4 x Bismarck. | married July 6, 1893, in the chapel , PERKINS TAKES POST 'AS HARVESTER HEAD Alexander Legge Quits to Be- come Chairman of Fed- eral Farm Board | 1 ‘ Marriage may bring flighty young men down to cartlf, but it will be a pres carious route that John Charles Krajick, left, will take to his wedding. | He literally is going to jump into matrimony. Krajick is one of ten army | men holding the world’s parachute record. and he intends to leap out of a|_ Chicago, July 6.—(4#—Herbert F. plane at 5,000 feet and drift down to a ficld at Newark, N. J., to say his “I | Perkins, after 31 years in the Inter- do's” with Miss Elizabeth Sais, center. By manipulating the cords of his: national Harvester company, today ‘chute, he expects to be able to maneuver right to the side of his bride-to-be | stepped into the presidency vacated and the minister. The couple aré being congratulated by Captain J. O.| by Alexander Legge, who resigned to Donaldson, chief of the Newark Airport. | become chairman of the federal farm ‘shown below, at Fort Worth, Texas. quarts, In order to marry, Albert Negahnquet, above, who is said to be the only full- blood American Indian ever to be- come a Catholic priest, renounced his priesthood vows. He then married Mrs. Edith Duncan, 31, a widow, Negahnquet’s father struck oil near Shawnee a number of years ago and he is very wealthy. He and his bride live at Oklahoma City. One of the experiences they hot forget was buying ga: Lake Louise country at 50 cents a gal-| the succession through death of I lon, but a Canadian gallon is | Peterson Will Report | Big Bass Catches to | Patrick Champlin of 1: Lions Club Monday j persons hurt Friday cn an automobile | | Fred Peterson is back fr big fishing expedition into of Minnesota and big doings in the Lions day, when he reports his ¢ i From snapshots sent back while JACK HOW DOROTHY REVIER MICKEY Mc BAN will | Royal of St. James’ palace. He was line in the | then Duke of York, newly attained to five | elder k INJURED 1 Towa, July 6.—(?1— 'y. Minn., {was scriously injured and six other | FASCINATING MUSIC SCORE sou bh abd | collision. DIALOGUE amet by ERLE C.KENTON He te | Dance at the Dome tonight | eto be; to Fletcher's band. | Mon. | Sateen “| The 10th is the last day ot discount on Gas bills. | there a grown with the names of additional speed kings listed. The public is urged by President W. ‘'T. Cummins of the fair board to enter exhibits in some department of the fair, for the premiums are guaranteed to cover everything but bees and honey which somehow were over- looked this year. ‘With the Mandan fair winding up the season for the big shows of the state this year, the Missouri Slope fair promises to eclipse any former effort in size and number of exhibits, while the fireworks and big time free acts are without question more at- tractive than 1928 and persons who attended last year know that means @ wonderful show. DICKINSON HOST TO CELEBRATORS Beauty Contest, Athletics, Air- plane Events and Parade Feature the Fourth (Tribune Special Service) Dickinson, N. D., July 6.—With no accidents reported here from either automobiles or fireworks, one of the safest Fourths ever observed was held. Hundreds of persons from over the Slope country gathered for the big free celebration which was staged by the Dickinson association. People began pouring into the city early in the morning, and by noon the town was filled. Most of the business men_ entered nee iS the parade which opened Jay's ¥ First prize was awarded the entry of Pagenkopf & Gerlich, a large sedan entirely covered with shredded white crepe paper, with bouquets of pink roses fastened in various places. The Dodge bull was adjudged the most comical " float. Lois Agnew Miss Lois Agnew, who received more the day, and a picked group of them played for the dance in the evening. Took Airplane Rides Palm Beach also drew its share of Bismarck Invites Pure Seed Show Here For 1930 Corn Expo. : i it g » B > P : i E i | EN i i Bee ag it ii E Gj ie i i : , i l : i E i a seen board. His election was announced by About 200 Tourist Cars Using Riverside Camp During Week The Bismarck tourist camp now is accommodating about 200 cars a week, Gus Wingreene, chairman of the camp committee of the Associa- tion of Commerce, reports. The addition of shower baths and the erection of additional cabins has been an improvement that is ap- preciated by the motorists in from the road on their long vacation travels, said Mr. Wingreene. Nights at the camp have been com- fortable and so far fairly free of mos- quitoes. Frank Schloemer, the custodian, is giving the camp and tourists his full attention and nothing is being left undone to minister t» the comfort of the city's outdoor guests. | Return of Lost $20 Makes Spanish War Veteran Optimist) Howard Boone, a Spanish war vet- eran, on his way to Hot Springs, S.' D., has becn telling everybody he} could buttonhole here since the} Fourth, that he had ‘recovered his| faith in humanity. He left a $20 bill| lying on the ledge of the N. P. ticket | window the other night and walked! away. J. T. Smith, the night man, discov- ered the oversight and chased after | the veteran and returned his bill. His} act reestablished the soldier's faith) in humanity, which had been shaken | by recent experiences, he said. Four American shows are playing Paris theaters. Cyrus H. McCormick, chairman of the board of directors. Perkins is a native of Constantino- ple, born there in 1865 while his fath- er, George A. Perkins, was a professor at Robert college. He was graduated from Yale in 1887 and in 1898 became associated with the McCormick Har- vester company. Since 1922 he has been vice president of its successor, the International Harvester company. The new harvester president him- self has seen government service, act- ing as business adviser in 1918 to the chairman of the war labor policies board, and in 1919 as a member of the first industrial conference called by President Wilson. He is president of the Wisconsin Steel company, the Wisconsin Lumber company and di- rector of several banks. Up According to a wall tablet in Flor- ence, Italy, spectacles were invented in the thirteenth century by an in- habitant of that city. A POOR stove ‘in ruin a GOOD disposition bat you CAN TRADE IT IN before it does. will allow you $12.50 for your old stove, regardless of con- dition or kind, on the purchase of a New Gas Range. - If you think it is worth more, we will gladly estimate it’s value to us. BvY A NEW and Modern Gas Range, equipped with the Oven Regulator--the kind that insures perfect results with everything cooked or baked meals will cook to deliciousness or visit miles away. Cook with Gas-it’s Better! Montana-Dakota Power Co. while you in the overt. Even whole BRILLIANT PERFORMER During July we onumeeal beauty makes it a car you on your pocketbook. entertain guests around sharp Curves HIGH COMPRESSION POWER MAKES THIS LOW-PRICED CAR A The Superior Whippet’s new and higher compression engine gives more than 20% added horsepower—result- ing in even faster speed, quicker pick- upand greater hill-climbing ability. : Besides its improved engine, the ® new Superior Whippet is the only low-priced car with all these important advantages: Extra long wheelbase, oversize balloon tires, full force-feed lubrication, silent timing chain, invar- strut pistons, “Finger-Tip Control,” and, in the Six, a heavy, seven-bearing Coupled with its brilliant per- formance, Whippet's outstanding proud to drive, while low price and remarkable operating economy make Whippet ownership decidedly easy WILLYS-OVERLAND, ING, TOLEDO, OHIO Lahr Motor Sales Co. . The Pioneer Automobile House STEFP HILis - WHIPPET 6 SEDAN Balance in 12 easy monthly pay- ments, Line includes Coach, Coupe, Sedan, Roadster. All Willys-Over- land prices f.0.b. Toledo, Otis, and specifications subject to change without notice, Down payment only 76. WHIPPET 4 COACH *235 NEW SUPERIOR HIPPET ~ FOURS AND SIXES Balance in 12 easy monthly pay- ments. Line includes Coupe, Sedan, DeLuxe Sedan, Roadster, 4-Pass, Roadster, Collegiate Roadster, Tour- ing, Commercial Chassis. vwill be E (e ‘S