Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PeDRTANSSReSVeRseansareserranens sos hee Teer RUNES” #5 BABIES. ARE BORN,| Youngest Pot 13 DEATHS REPORTED HERE DURING MONTH Only One Bismarck Person Dies; Twins Are Born to Fam- ily at Arena Forty-five children were born and 13 persons died in Bismarck during June, according to vital statistics an- nounced today at the office of Myron ‘HH. Atkinson, city auditor. Twenty-five of the babies were boys and 17 of the children were born to Bismarck parents. Only one Bis- marck person died during the period. ‘Twin boys were born to Mr. and Mrs. Harrjson B. Rodgers, Arena, June 10. Births and deaths for the period follow: BIRTHS May 19 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Alfred Fricke, Menoken, a daughter. May 30 . Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Quanrud, Bismarck, & son. May 31 Mr. and Mrs. Nels Peter Jensen, Hagen, a son, June 1 Mr. and Mrs. George Yinneman, Bismarck, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Binder, Bis- marck, a daughter, June 2 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Edmund Eng- breeht, Golden Valley, a son. June 3 Mr. and Mrs. Valentine Steiner, Bis- marck, &@ son. June 4 Mr. and Mrs. John Herdebu, Bald- Mr. and Mrs. John Pitzer, Huff, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Bellar, Steele, a son. June 9 Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Dohn, Bis- marck, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Arthur Mann- ing, Mandan, a daughter. June 18 Mr. and Mrs. Harrison B. Rodgers, Arena,.twin sons. Mr. and Mrs. John V. Broxmeyer, Bismarck, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Clarence A. Jullickson, Solen, a son. June 11 Mr. and Mrs. Grant Onge Lindsey. Regan, a daughter. June 12 Mr. and Mrs. Albian K. Thysell, Bismarck, a daughter. June 13 Mr. and Mrs. David H. Kershaw, Bismarck, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sturn, Sweet Brair, a son. June 15 Mr. and Mrs. John 0. Johnson, Bismarck, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nathan Mc- Clure, Bismarck, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson, Ster- ling, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Frithjof Elvig, marck, a daughter. Bis- June 17 . and Ms. William. Brausseau,, Steele, a son. June 18 Mr. and Mrs. Otto Seifrid, Lehr, a son. Sune 20 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Earnest Starck, Judson, a daughter. June 21 Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Parkins, Steele, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Madland, Mc- Kenzie, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Weslie Antrim, McKenzie, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Alex DeRemer, Braddock, a daughter. June 22 Mr. and Mrs. George Steingruber, Hebron, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Hillard Atkinson, Bismarck, a daughter. June 23 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin Took- er, Menoken, laughter. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Boorstad, Bis- marck, a daughter. June 24 Mr. and -Mrs. Mathies J. Bertsch, Bismarck, a son. Mr. and Mrs. George Janke, Bis- marck, a daughter. Sune 25 Mr. and Mrs. Emil Sabot, Bismarck, @ son. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Loran, Hebron, a ‘son. f June 26 ‘Mr. and Mrs. Andrews Vinding An- derson, Bismarck, a son. Sune 27 Mr. and Mrs. Nichedemus Lipp, Center, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse J. Wilson, Bis- marck, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Armand Alois Blanc, Linton, 2 son. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley A. Woolsey, Shields, a daughter. % \June 29. Mr. and Mrs. William Fredrick Hi , Wilton, a son. DEATHS June 2 Tilda Swadberg, Tappen. June 3 ‘3 Fredrick Skaley, 81, Turtle Lake, June 4 ‘William “Barney Noyes, 73, Care son, June 6 Vernon Bittner, 4, Lehr. June 8 Mrs. Elizabeth Stockert, 25, Solen. June 10 Mrs. Adam Wetzstein, 67, Mandan. June 11 John G. Ostby, 44, Medow, S. Dak, Peter Robung, 73, Yakima, Wash. June 12 William D, Boyce, 48, Bismarck. June 23 George E. oo. 2. Ween: junc Kittie P, Merrick, 57, Minneapolis, Minn. . June 28 Emma Randina Sevold, 46, Winger, Minn. June 30 Prank J. Greenstein, 28, James- A grown-up man breathes about 15 or 16 times a minute; a woman per- haps 18. Children breathe much more In these modern days of speed, they start to fly early. Here's Malcolm Allstadt, of Memphis, Tenn., just turned 17 and a ‘licensed pilot, per- haps the youngest in the United States. Allstadt, flying for 18 months, has 160 hours in the air and hasn't had an accident. And he is willing to race any pilot of his age and ex- perience from here to there or furth- er, any time. WOOL BIDS INVITED ON SLOPE SAMPLES uaF : Growers Sending in Packages to the County Agent to See What Will Be Offered Samples of wool are coming in to the office of A. R. Miesen, county agent, who also is active in looking after the interests of the Missouri Slope Wool pool, and bids are to be asked of buyers.on these samples up to Monday, July 15, when they will be opened and sale of 500,000 pounds will be considered. Buyers are being canvassed on the Proposal by personal letter. The wool houses have been playing a waiting game and have not been making many contracts. Woolen mills are buying largely as they need supplies, it is said, and the buyers of the wool houses have been assigning this as one of their reasons for slowness in buying. All the houses are working under a gentlemen's agreement not to push buying, thereby bringing prices down, Mr. Miesen said. They claim they lost money last year by early buying. APPLICANTS ARRIVE TO TAKE BAR EXAM Twenty-four applicants for admis- sion into the state bar association were expected in Bismarck today for examination by the state bar board. Written and oral examinations will be conducted at the state capitol be- ginning at 9 a. m. tomorrow. Mem- bers of the bar board are 8. D. Adams, Lisbon; C. L. Young. Bis- marck, and John Knauf, Jamestown. Examinations are given twice each year. Applicants are from North and South Dakota, Montana, and Minne- sota, é Towa Farmer Killed By Bandit Suspect Worthington, Minn., July 8—(@)— George Louscher, farmer living three miles northwest of Harris, Iowa, was shot and killed early today by Omer Edwards of this city, who later sur- rendered to the sheriff here. The shooting occurred on a high- way near Harris, authorities believe Edwards attempted to hold up the Iowa farmer, police said. Edwards, who has a wife and child, had been with @ rodeo at Lake Okoboji, Iowa. Should he refuse to return to Iowa, Officers said extradition would be asked of Governor Christianson. A ue. and five children survive Lou- scher, Bismarck Will Have Chautauqua in 1930 Bismarck will have a Chautauqua . This was assured today #8 The main offices of the company are located at Topeka, Kansas, The range of milk consumption in Boston is between 28,000,000 and 32,- | 000,000 pounds per month. ESSgige ning : i Hee i fl 5 é ¥ a i : j é TARIFF PROVISIONS CAUSES OPPOSITION OF BOURBON FORGE Increase of Chief Executi Power to Change Duties Promises Bitter Battle Washington, July 8—(?)—The ad- .| ministrative provisigns of the house | tariff bill, increasing the chief execu- | tive’s power to change import duties, stood out today as rivaling even the j Sugar schedule as a potential source of prolonged controversy in the sen- | ate. An organized ‘Democratic effort to eliminate the flexible provision from this section of the measure was seen in the issuance by the Democratic na- tional committee of a statement by Senator Simmons of North Carolina, Tanking minority member of the finance committee, announcing a “fight to the bitter end” against the Proposal. x The extent to which the Democrats will gain support from Republican Independents for their campaign against the provision in the senate has rfot been indicated. It has been made clear, however, the two groups, which succeeded twice in overriding President Hoover's opposition to the export debenture plan of farm relief, will stand more or less closely to- gether again in the tariff debate at least in so far‘as the effort to confine | revision to ggricultural and related Products ts concerned. That movement, already organized amcng Republican Independents, was given fresh support in the Simmons statement, which assailed the house bill as “the most signal victory ever won by the seekers after privilege and government favors” and declared that | unless the finance committee changed it radically, the Democrats would at- tempt. to limit it to agricultural rate revisi ions. ‘The administrative provisions have not been reached in the committee's public hearings, which are now ex- | pected to continue until the latter part of the menth. Chairman » Meanwhile, was prepared to.lay fore the committee his tentative proposal for a sliding scale tariff as a substitute for the present duty of 1.76 cents a pound on Cuban sugar and the rate of 2.40 cents proposed in the house bill. He has described his plan, under which the rate would increase as sugar prices declined and vice versa, as pro- viding lower rétes than the house schedule, but has withheld details. OFFICER 1S KILLED INBOOTLEG BATTLE: Camden, Ark., July 8—(?)—E. E. Marsh, city marshal at Chidester, near here and Walter Patterson, an in a gun battle which grew out of a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, JULY 8, 1926 EDITOR SCANLAN IS. HERE: WAS FORMER CHIER HOUSE CLERK Miles City Publisher and Polit- icat Leader Drops in to See Friends of Yore Joseph D. Scanlan, owner and editor of the Miles City Star and president of t? > Commercial club in that eastern Montana city, is in the city for the cay, looking up old friends. in his earlier days he was on the staff of the Grcond Forks Herald and he servei two terms as chief clerk of the house of represent atives here in the period around 1904, Greatly to his regret most of his old friends of Bismarck, as Tom Poole, C. B. Little, E. A. Hughes and James Curran, state printer, were not in the city, but away on trips, today. He met Frank Hughes of Chicago, brother «f E. A. <i aghes, at Glendive on the way over and renewed old acquaintance. Mr. Scanlan is on the way to Su- perior, Wis., his: former home after he came west from Scranton, Pa. He stopped in <o visit The Tribune and alleged bootlegger were shot to death look over its stereotyping and press | rooms, as he is putting in a $20,000 | liquor raid near Chidester last night. Marsh was said to have been slain by Patterson who in turn was killed by another officer, Constable Luther Meeks. duplex tubular press in the Miles City plant and expects later to move the Star into a fine salmon brick building for its new home. Mr. Scanlan is known well and faverably from one corner of Mon- tana to the other. He was Repub- lican state chairman several years ago and has several times been mentioned in governorship gossip as a fitting candidate. He served as register of the Miles City land office some years. Mr. Scania. said Miles City put on a successful roundup over the Fourth. The crops are doing * cll, he said, the sheep men, who are thick in country, have big clips of wool awa ing had an early abundance of mois- ture—of which the Wibaux flood was more evidence than needed—they had a good start and now rain is bringing relief. Miles City is a very active place at present, he said. There is a large building movement under way and the city is putting in a $160,000 be- ginning of a storm sewer sy:tem. The city virtually is out of debt and has money in its treasury. That is, the sinking fund more than covers outstanding bonded debts. In part this was due t) the city selling its old Mght plant to the Montana-Da- kota Power company for $377,000. ‘The city now is thinking of erecting @ community building and a swim- ming pool and of corfing its area on the character of the future buildings. ROGERS HOME BURNS Valley City, 'N. D., July 8—(?)}—Fire destroyed the house of W. J. Pickett at Rogers Sunday afternoon. The loss is partly covered by insurance. Defective wiring is blamed for the blaze. AMERICAN WEDS PRINCE Paris, July 8.— The wedding of! Mrs. Margaret. Rutherford, former wife of Sir Paul Dul and Prince Ke ack “TTWOMEN MUST STA FOR RIGHTS OF § Feminine Leader Declares band-Getting Is Not Sele Aim in Life Mackinac Island, Mich. July (®)—Every woman fer every woman instead of every herself should be the modern New York, president of Gi nati ew . nat federation of business and sional women’s clubs, to the opening of the pioneer cert tion of the federation, which Back to the American movies, and | periaps the squawkies, comes Lya | De Puttt, German screen star. After a visit of several months in her na- tive country, she returned to New | York on the 8S. S. Majestic. She is shown waving a “Glad-to-be-back” greeting for the cameraman. Charles Murat, third son of Prince Joachim Napoleon Murat, was cele- BS brated today at the Church of st,| ‘triment. Francois the Saviour. Mrs. Ruther-| Broad leaf wood is carbonized | ford is the daughter of Mrs. W. K. |acetic acid and wood naptha | Vanderbilt and the late Morris Ruth- | Coniferous wood for turpentine, | erford of New York. [ana . ful in business and as a whole they must women. Knocking reacts to CORRECT at AllS Where folk of taste congregate at fashionable functions, you'll almost surely find the better sort of Purity Ice Cream avidly consumed. Purity Ice Cream is the Not only the elite of Society but folk in humble walks of life, too, delight in the rich, creamy tastiness of this super-re- - freshment, available to every purse and every person. Boys and girls and their par- ents and their grandparents take equal de- light in this most wholesome and enjoyable of all refreshments. ’ Functions ocial universal dessert. All flavors and combinations are avail- able, so that everyone’s taste is sure to be gratified. Purity Ice Cream is, indeed, the ideal refreshment for dessert or as a charm- ing climax to social afternoon or evening. Purity Ice Cream is composed of pure cane sugar, rich pasteurized cream and tasty fruit.