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‘LLOYD SPETZ POST TOBE BIG FEATURE OF VETERANS’ MEET Drum Corps and 40-and-8 Will Be Conspicuous in Spec- tacular Activities TAKING BASEBALL JUNIORS: Cubs Will Play for N. D. Cham- pionship; May Be 200 j From Bismarck Bismarck legionnaires head Minot tomorrow morning to make a big splash in the proceedings of the annual encampment of the American Legion of the state. i ‘The caravan sets out between 3 and 9 o'clock in 25 cars from Fourth street headquarters. With veterans, auxil- fary members and citizens going to the convention, later, Bismarck will be represented by possibly 200 veterans and friends set | on making the capital city’s partici- pation in the gathering a striking feature of the program. Bismarck is going not only to put color into the parades of the con- vention and to do its share in the bus- for | some a day or two! egion Carav iness proceedings, but also to obtain | next year's convention if its invita- tion, backed by the service clubs and | Association of Commerce of this city, is favorably received. The Association of Commerce and civic committee which is to supplement their bid will go to Minot an Monday to take part in the canvass for the 1930 convention, headed by W. 8. Ayers and including Fred Peterson, Harry Woodmansee | |, and D. E. Shipley. ‘The caravan starting out Sunday morning will be headed by the dele- gates of Lloyd Spetz post, who are A. L. Fosteson, Charles F. Martin, Harry Rosenthal, Carl Knudtson, John Bow- ers, Major Harold Sorenson. Dr. Wal- ter E. Cole and Walter Sather. With these go the alternates.. who are A. D. McKinnon, Eugene Wachter, Oscar Boutrous, John Musolf, George Haug- en, Ryder Hamro, Tom Galvin and Harold Shaft. Bismarck's Side Features ‘The bugle and drum corps will co 25 strong, headed by Walter Tester, its big drum major. This will be the first occasion to appear in a state Le- gion gathering in the new uniforms and the corps cannot escape being a big attraction of that portion of the convention activitics that have to do with parading. It is probable that Rothing so striking as the corps will be in the lines of the several parades that are to be held during the meet- Another feature of the Bismarck caravan will be the Bismarck Cubs, the district champions of the Ameri- can Legion junior league. They won the fourth district championship, then defeated Mandan in the elimin- ation contest of the two districts here 80 they go to Minot to play for the state championship. If they win that they are entitled to play for the championship of the West, which will | be played off at Denver. The Bismarck delegation thus will be the largest and most striking ever sent to a state convention of the | the alternates, Harry Rosenthi !while in Minot. jommendation of local bandmasters. Sra ME REN SAS AEDS Ee ON | SIDE GLANCES - - - - By George Clark | I cca ee “National Edj‘cashun S‘ciety tawking— some convention features of its own. The delegates of the “40 and 8” to its own proceedings are Oscar Boutrous. Reed Murdock and Gerald Richholt. a}, John Bowers and Charles F. Marti The headquarters of the Bism: gionnaires will be the Way Farmer Makes Cheese At Home Near Velva (Tribune Special Service) Garrison, N. D.. July 20.—Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Whipple, who live near Velva, have a cheese factory of their own. Mr. Whipple is a cheese maker of the old school, having established the first cheese factory in North Da- kota, at Spiritwood. in 1892. Later he had a factory at Medina. At the present time Mr. and Mrs. Whipple turn out about 30 pounds of cheese a day. The product is a full cream cheese of the finest quality. They have about 700 pounds in the storage room. Mr. Whipple thinks cheese making is more profitable than selling cream. Steele Boy Receives Scholarship to Band (Tribune Special Service) Steele, N. D., July 20.—Roy Omodt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Omodt, of this city, has won a scholarship valued at $400 in the American High School Cadet band. The band is sponsored by the Appollo club, of Chicago. Entrants to the band were selected on the basis of information contained in application blanks and on the rec- The scholarship winners will go t Chicago for 11 weeks of intensiv veterans. Until the proceedings open, |training. receiving daily instruction the side degree of the organization, | the “40 and 8,” will be absorbed in the general mass of the legionnaires, but when the fun starts it will step out in f Weather Report | &— eo ‘Temperature at 7 a. m. a 67 Highest yesterday 83 Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 a. m. race | st_ wind velocity .. 24 Temperature | %a 8.32 FA H $8 23 338 aS G8 a8 86 64 0 Clear 7 53 16 Clear 80 48 0 Clear 78 60 .34 Cloudy 86 59 0 Clear 78 04 Clear 84 21 Clear 82 65 PtCldy 8 0 Clear 2 01 Rain 80 50 Cloudy 83 0 Clear 79 07 PtCldy a 15 Cloudy 81 0 Clear under Chicago's most foremost musi cians. The band is to play at the world fair of 1933, | Beach to Celebrate Paving’s Completion Beach, N. Dak., July 20.—Beach will | celebrate the compietion of its paving by entertaining its neighbors at a one-day program. The celebration will be sponsored by the Lions club. ‘WHEAT ACREAGE DROPS A report of the probable world wheat acreage for 1929 sets it as 139,- 671,000 acres. This is more than 2 per cent below that for 1928. when the acreage was reported at 142,683,000. OUT OUR WAY HAVE THe HH BEEN THERE AT MY MACHINE 2 Hobby Lighthouse Proves Necessity he mariner's| and on clear £ rays were visible he lake. The light. is property Subsequent seve governm | and low plex. a of it but to no avail. The gov insisted it be operated. Mrs. J Thompson, wife of the present owner, now is the keeper. A group of lake craft owners pay for the lighth 's upkeep. Mr. Bray is said to have found bigger and | better lighthouses in Oregon. ‘Lake Cities Receive Big Iron Ore Imports | Cleveland.—(#—More than 53,000,- 000 tons of iron ore flowed into the |ports of the Great Lakes for the blast |furnaces of Pennsylvania, Ohio, In- diana and Illinois last year. | The annual report of the Lake Su- perior Iron Ore association shows that the bulk of the flow went into nine inlets on Lake Erie, Cleveland receiving 9,400,000 tons, Conneaut, Ohio, 8,400,000 and Ashtabula, Ohi 16,400,000. Lorain took 3,400,000 tons, | Fairport, 1,800,000, Toledo 1,500,000 and Huron 1,000,000. | Buffalo's share was 4,300,000 tons, Erie's 700,000, and in Indiana South Chicago was the largest importer, {with 7,000,000 tons. Gary received 4,800,000 and Detroit 1,000,000. ‘The Mesaba in Minnesota. largest ore range, shipped 34,000,000 tons. PIONEERS WED 71 YEARS Sebeka, Minn.—(#)—Both 92 years jold, Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Magnusson, pioneer settlers here, are starting itheir seventy - first year of married \life. Mr. Magnusson still does the chores and both are in good health. HIGH RECORD | MacDonald Veda’s Baroness, two- | Year-old heifer owned by MacDonald | college, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Que- bec, has the second highest record | ever made in Canada in the two-year- | old 105-day division. Her production was 13,535 pounds of milk and 648 | pounds of butterfat. PEAT AT TH THING T' WORRY ABOLT— HOW LONG THEM Bosses HAVE BEEN THERE. —1TS HOW LONG YOu'vVE BEEN AWA/~— BECAUSE. THE LONGER YOU BEEN away THE LONGER YOU THINK THe BEEN THERE. an Starts for Minot Sunday to POSTMASTERS ASKED |= = TO AID SAFETY WORK Carl Bauer, Max, Presides Over Annual Convention at Devils Lake Devils Lake, July 20.—/)—North Dakota postmasters and rural car- riers, in convention here, today were asked to aid and join in a campaign for public safety by Mrs. J. E. Stevens of Devils Lake. John A. Isrealson of Hyrum, Utah, vice president to the national league of district postmas- ters, addressed the convention about that organization. Others addressing the meeting were George P. Drake, St. Paul, postoffice inspector; J. A. Linderman, Ireton, Ta., national vice president of the rural carriers association; Waiter P. Osborn, Hunter postmaster, and J. G. Sigurdson, Upham postmaster. Carl Bauer of Max, president of the rural carriers group, presided at the meeting. f AT THE MOVIES o j ° CAPITOL THEATRE Something entirely new in the mat- ter of murder mystery stories comes to the all-talking screen in “Thru Different Eyes.” Fox Movietone pro- duction, directed by John G. Bly- stone. The title is self-explanatory, for the basic theme is the summary of a mur- der case as revealed through the eyes of a prosecutor, a defense lawyer and eventually a mysterious girl. “Thru Different Eyes,” based on the story by Milton Gropper, who also wrote the dialogue, in conjunction with Tom Barry, is expected to be the most important all-dialog drama of 1929 and is the forthcoming attrac- tion at the Capitol Theatre starting | Monday. Mary Duncan and Warner Baxter are co-featured with the supporting cast a very formidable one, including Gavin Gordon. recent recruit from the Broadway legitimate stage; Natalie Moorehead, another stage recruit; Donald Gallaher, Sylvia Sidney and Florence Lake. A. H. Van Buren, who staged many recent New York successes, acts in the capacity of stage director. 19 Beach Girls Leave For Yellowstone Park Beach, N. Dak., July 20.—Nineteen girls have left here for a 10-day sight- seeing trip through Yellowstone park. ‘They are traveling in a truck driven by Tom Gilman. Misses Carol Schwinghammer and Elma Ramstad accompanied the party. The girls are Marjory Bradley, Ber- nice Gilman, Meredith Fuller, Ruth Beck, Lola Farquhar, Catherine hind Eva Young, Marjory Fuller, vi Miller, Cecilia Enderle. Lu- ella Sticka, Dorothea Golliet, Eliza- th «Spieggerberg. Olive Moyer, Stella Richards, Ailene Gilman, and Hollis Golliet. SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK REVIEW South St. Paul, Minn., July 20.—(7) —(U. 8. D. A.)—The local cattle mar- ket has experienced a week of ex- treme unevenness with inbetween and grassy kinds of steers and yearlings showing losses of 25 to in spots 50c, while strictly choice material closed the period on a strong basis. Weighty medium grade bulls were about steady, common light kinds 25¢ or more low- er, with vealers 50c or more higher. Late sales included a load of 862 Ib. mixed yearlings which topped for the week at $15.75, this also being a new top for the year to date on this class of cattle several other cars includ- ing yearlings and medium weight steers sold from $14.00 to 14.50, with the bulk of all steers and yearlings at 13.00 to 14.00, grassy kinds down to 11.50 and below. Most beef cows closed at $7.50 to 9.25, heifers from 9.50 to 11.50, cutters from 6.00 to 7.25, with common light bulls selling on down to 7.25, medium grades up to 9.50. Vealers closed with a bulk of mostly 15.00. A broad call and light supplies held desirable light and mediumweight highs on a strong to 5c higher basis for the week, while ‘heavy butchers are as much as 25¢ lower and pack- By Williams 4ES-4OU C'N BE Awad FROM YOUR JoB NOT FEEL LUKE OL, “RIP VAN WINKLE’ Comin’ HOME.: Ask fo Chicago Gangland Minds Have Chan To Match Strength With Col Science sows 40 to 50c lower. 160 to 230 Ib. weights closed at 11.75 to mostly 11.90, with heavier hogs largely at 11.00 to 11.75. Packing sows bulked at 9.85 to 10.00, with pigs and light lights at 11.75. Lambs were mostly 25¢ higher, yearlings and ewes closing steady, with bulk of the trimmed native lambs selling at 14.50, bucky sorts largely 13.50. Fat ewes on killer ac- count brought 5.00 to 6.00, breeders taking desirable kinds from 5.00 to 8.50 according to age and weight. Feeder and stocker cattle closed 25 to 50c lower than a week ago, bulk of the sales comprising steers scaling un- der 700 Ib. at 9.00 to 10.50, a few loads of ‘desirable kinds selling up to 11.25 and occasionally above. Stock cows met with good call, bulk selling at 7.50 to 875, with heifers at 8.50 to 10.00. Stock pigs were about steady with most sales at 11.75. Demand was less active for breeding ewes, desirable kinds selling from 5.00 to 8.50 accord- ing to age and weight, a few yearl- ings selling from 10.00 to 11.50. Odd lots of thin ewe and wether lambs cleared at 10.50 to mostly 11.00, those being natives. FINANCIAL REVIEW New York July 20—(4)—Wall street witnessed one of its mast active and interesting midsummer markets of recent years this week with the “bull” forces still in control. While a rather long list of stocks lost ground, railroad and public utility shares were whirled to record high levels, together with an assortment of individual in- dustrial shares, notably U. 8. Steel common. Outside the stock market, chief speculative interest centered in the sensational gain in grain prices, and a drop from 12 to 7 per cent in call money rates. Easing credit conditions, favorable trade news and unconfirmed rumors of new consolidations, stock split-ups and higher dividends provided the background for the advance in secur- ities prices. Public utility shares were heavily bought in the speculative belief that at least two major consolidations will be effected before fall. National Power & Light, Public Service of New The University of Chicage and Northwestern university, aroused by Jersey, Engineers Public Service, |£80g killings, have set up “super” detective bureaus to combat crime. Standard Gas & Electric and United | Among leaders in the work will be August Vollmer of Berkeley, Calif. Gas Improvement were among the | (abeve), and Maj. Calvin Goddard (below). many issues to attain new peaks on the New York stock exchange. Railroad shares also received con- siderable impetus from consolidation Tumors, as well as from the excellent character of most of the current traf- fic and earnings reports. Atchison, New York Central, Pennsylvania, Union Pacific, Northern Pacific, Southern Pacific, New Haven, Kansas City Southern, Delaware & Hudson and Lackawanna all sold at their highest prices of the year. U. 8. Steel common was rushed up to a new high record at 208% in Fri- day's session, with the other steels following in its wake. Coppers picked up late in the week after a period of heaviness. Motors were sluggish all week. Some of the oils enjoyed brief intervals of strength, but general asphalt was one of the few issues to record any substantial gain. Time money held firm. paubiszi enemy Chicago.—(#)—High - hat gangsters |vestigation,” says Dean John H. Wig- here soon will be fighting two “super” | more of the university's law school. detective bureaus that science is set-/ “Its aim will be to gather evidence ting up to strangle them. and have it presented to court and Cunning gangster minds will be|jury by men who have standing in matching wits against all the cool,/their professions and whose testi- incisive scientists of two great uni-|mony will be taken seriously,” Massee versities—the University of Chic explains. “They will be men who are and Northwestern. It will be @ bat-j/under no political domination and tle of the machine gun against the|cannot be bought! laboratory. “The trouble now is that police do Establishment of these “big shot”/not get scientific evidence. Much detective agences, one at each school, | evidence is obliterated when a police- can be traced directly to the bloody|man arrives on the scene. Detectives Valentine's day on North Clark street can be trained in the bureau and the when seven men met staccato death. jentire department instructed in pre- Public horror mounted swiftly and a|serving evidence.” jury of leading business men probed} Maj. Calvin Goddard, leading au- the killings. thority on ballistics, the science of Out of their inquiry grew first ‘he| bullet markings, is to be a member crime bureau at Northwestern. The|of the laboratory staff. At the University of Chicago a great center for scientific study of police work, with the whole country as its field, is to be established this fall under August Vollmer, chief of police of Berkeley, Calif., internation- ally famous for his scientific methods of combating crime. ‘The entire resources of the univer- sity will be absorbed into this study. Primarily the center will be for police research, aiming to put the university in a position to advise police depart- ments. At the same time it can be called upon for immediate aid. GRAIN REVIEW Minneapolis, July 20.—(AP-U.8.D. A.)—After making one of the most daily fluctuations dependent almost entirely upon weather reports. No. 1 dark northern 12 per cent protein was quoted Friday at 1 to 3 cents over July, 13 per cent 7 to 13 cents over, and 14 per cent 13 to 22 per cent over. July closed Friday at $1414, a net gain from a week ago of 13% cents, while protein premiums were down 2 cents on the lower end endowment of $300,000 for it from | coroner. This bureau plans no idle study to stuff library archives. “It will be primarily a place of in- the Bureau of Animal Industry. @ whole, milk production per cow in- * * * Sletvouasaca vr - Since the organization in the at $1.54%4 to $1.63, a net gain of 9% vA creased 20 per cent, wi cows and | Chemical and Engineering Division of ve Suruce was egain fully as firm as| elfers kept for milk only |the U. 8. Bureau of Chemistry and other spring wheat in the futures. 8 per cent. For the United States | Soils of a fire information department | Daily Cross-word Puzzle Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie & Emitted light 15 cents for the week, closing Friday at $1.32%. Rye Lge aaa but felled to sem con geome din Common Ine as much firmness, Rosen 2 to 3 cents over September, Which} 16 Venesouttoss- (CLELGMMATSIETAMMCTATMIE! 12, act of cotting GAO ARBOR OOOORRI O00 0060 DODO we as FiLlelAMme| lelals| beat bo oOfO Boo closed at $1.06%, a net gain for the week of 7% cents. No, 1 rye was 1 to 3 cents over. Oats fluctuated, but movement was relatively narrow. July oats closed Friday at 46% cents, a gain of 2% cents for the week, while December made a net-gain of 1% cents. No. 3 whites sold at 44% to 45% cents. ous . 52, Mineral spring 76, Name of Eng- unit of 5% Deed wan, ¢ & Dowx . , *Eer ee cleres- & Pat into cans 2 : aa t Eee € £piee ee ¥, a ® organic % * ne r 1930 Convention wrieco bas bee reduced toes to about $200,000. ‘resect! five years ago, the average loss from and else- major 1 ‘They sre: peo , soll in vestigations, and fertilizer and fixed- be vities in of tilizer and fixed-nitrogen investiga- tions include the study of fertilizer resources of the country and methods of manufacturing fertilizer FIRST EVANGELICAL CHURCH Ira E. Herzberg, Pastor. Morning worship at 10 topic, “A Little Farther.” O'dlock; Sunday school at 11, for all de- partments. Evening worship at 8. Dr. C. N, Dubs, superintendent. of our mission work in China, will Sunday morning service at 10: 5 broadcast by KFYR ( eee Sermon, “The Cross in the Wilder- ness”—Paul 8. Wright. Postlude, “Postlude in G” . 12 noon, all meets at this hour in the auditorium. Evening worship at 8. Organ prelude, “Intermezzo” (Shep- Perd)—Grace Duryee Morris. Oftertory, “A Heavenly Vision” (Field), Sermon, “Three Aspects of Christ” — Paul 8. Wright. Organ postiude, “Hosanna” (Diggie). 7:30 Wednesday, service. MCABE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Walter E. Vater, Pastor. worship 10:30. Organ prelude, “Water Lilies” (St. Clair)—Mrs. A. J. Arnot. Anthem, “A Man of Sorrows’— Ladies’ quartet. Offertory, “The Rosary” (Nevin). Solo, “The Penitent” (Van de Wa- ter)—Harold Beall. Sermon—Rev. F. L. Watkins of Un- derwood, N. D. Mr. Watkins is well known in the city and throughout the state. He will speak on a subject of his own choosing. eee: “March Militaire” (Ash- ). 12 noon, Sunday school, with classes Orgaz music: “Wayside Chapel” (G. D. Wilson); “Lowly Before Thee” (Neat); “Postlude” (Leybach). Anthem, “Where Jesus Lives” (Parks). This will be sung by a trio. GOSPEL TABERNACLE of Eleventh street and Rosser avenue as follows: Sunday, July 2h—Sunday school rs at 3; ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Third street and Thayer Avenue Rev. Albert Clayton Baker, B. D. Holy communion 9: m. Morning prayer and address 10:20. You are cordially invited to worship with us. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH a