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LIONS CLUB DATED | _ PORTHREE TRIPS 10 FORT LINCOLN CAMP Besides Brocopp Ceremonies Next Monday, Will Enter= tain and Lunch There The Lions club is now booked for . three visits to Fort Lincoln this month. As a result of two invitations received at the luncheon, at noon to- day, two trips to the fort were added to the original date of August 12, next Monday, when Captain Herman A. Brocopp is to be decorated by the war department with the distin- guished service cross for conspicuous neroism in the World war. By acceptance of the two new in- vitations the club will hold its Mon- day, Aug. 19, luncheon at the citizens’ military training camp at the fort, then Thursday evening, Aug. 22, the club will go down to entertain the camp and the garrison with a pro- gram. The invitations were delivered by Col. A. W. Alfonte and Chaplain Fa ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1929 oe AFTER CDER BOUT Auburn, %. Y, Aug. 5.—(#)—For the first time in the century-old experjence of Auburn prison a pris- oner returned voluntarily today—two | weeks after he had effected his escape from a road camp at Scipio. The prisoner was Cornelius Lynch, 30, of Hoosick Falls, who was serving the last few months of an cight io twelve-year term for first degree rob- bery. He told Warden Edgars Jen- nings that he had not meant to leave, but had gone for an auto ride with another convict and a farmer and had imbibed too freely on hard cider. STOWAWAY THROUGH WITH RIDE IN THE AIR Gloucester City, N. J., Aug. 5—(?}— Albert Buschko, 18, of Werne, West- phalia, Germany, stowaway, says he is through with airships for all time. In_ the immigration detention building here to which he was | " de owners are showing aaa VICTOR OVER BANDIT growers of the Pacific coast are en- "Auto Lights Goon 7 HOTEL NIGHT CLERK | At 8:40 This Evening a Peak Outlet for Crope|NOT MUCH BENERIT FROM SUNDAY RAIN: Gunman Is Overpowered by Hoe | sociation and curtail, if possible, the h Dak 4 Fifteen North Dakota points fet crop for economic purposes. tation tel Proprietor’s Son After | Six hundred acres in California will | poll periad’ Vating ie Gas Order to ‘Stick 'Em Up’ Ban Francisco, Aug. 5.—(?)—Hop in observing the provision for rear lights half an hour after sunset, in driving and parking. One citizen | counted 115 violations of the light | provision of the city ordinance Sat- urday evening. Sunset hour this evening is 8:10. deavoring to form a cooperative as- | .{ hour period ending at 7 o'clock this not be harvested this year in an ef-| orning, but the rainfall was light fort to stabilize the market and cell/ 114 of not much benefit to corn or | surplus. Mgkgre oe ait vide late small grains, according to the It, therefore, is necessary to have |, Waseca, Minn., Aug. 5—(AP)— | Eten as a surplus Of | 6.177 bales and | £ederal weather bureau here, lights on at 8:40—or run the risk Overpowered and knocked uncon-' estimates its 1929 yield at nearly | Ported 25 of an inch to lead the list of being tagged and fined. [scious when he attempted to rob! 199,000 bales, averaging 200 pounds! , Jamestown and Lisbon each re ——_— jthe "Waseca hotel early today, 4 each. California has 14,000 bales on Sita oniv at's light shower on Eagles Open Sessions beyond saying his nue is William. | D8? sisted only of a light shower. © In Minneapolis Today |;2, 4. "t.i%a"", G2" **"" Pools Plan New Moves |Cars in Collision Officers found th man had acat| J Securities Market| At Intersection of Minneapolis, Aug. 5.—(%—By air-|bearing an Illinois license plate, | ; plane. automobile and mail and rail,|parked a block from the ney In —_— i Sixth and Avenue CG New York—(APi—Several new ‘Two Dodge cars ran into each other delegates came today from all parts |his pockets they found $100, and in| of the United States, Canada, Alaska, |the car $70 in silver. They are seck- pools have been organized recently the Philippines, Hawali, and Porto/jng to determine whether he par-|in Wall street and the general ex-|at the intersection of Sixth street and Rico, to attend the convention of the |ticiszted in a robbery elsewhere, and |pectation is that the public will be; Avenue C, at 1 o'clock this noon, and 3ist grand serie of the fraternal Or-|<aid tools and a gun were in the back in the market on a large scale/one car was overturned on its top. der of Eagles. The opening scssion | car, within a few weeks. |The top was wrecked and one wheel will be held tonight. | As Robert Morison, night clerk, Leading brokerage houses have torn off. Governor Theodore Christianson | and son of F. 0. Morison, proprietor, opened scores of new branch offices} Neither of the participants reported and Mayor W. F. Kunze of Minneap-|sat in the hotel the masked man |through ut the country and several/the crash to police headquarters. olis will welcome the visitors. entered and told him to “stick ’em jin Europe, | Neighbors said the wheel torn off was Pre-convention activities centered up.” The clerk shouted to his father,) With more than 2,000 .securities| replaced and both cars went their around candidates for the presidency | asleep in a nearby room, and hid |traded on the floor cf the New York) way. One car was going north and and the next convention city. The/behind the chair. |stock exchange alone, the old mem-| the other coming west. Sudduth. Committees to Stir Up Interest President W. 8. Ayers appointed Sofus Robertson and Ed Klein a com- mittee to get Company A, national Pacific coast was in the leading posi-| As the fathcr came into the lobby |t-rship of 1,100, cf which not much] Lakehurst tast | (0% for both honors, with San Fran-;the gunman turned to him and told|more then half w:s represented at night, he said today he was ready to cisco planning to make a strong bid|him to “stick ‘em up,” the son/any one time, proved unequal to the Meise to CeeNIAy ie Wak nef ne| (or the next meeting place. Charles |tunged from the rear and threw the |task. It was voted ear! Sas peing By ohn dy Ls J. Chenu, Sacramento, Calif, is be- intruder to the floor. The father, to increase the seats by brought after he landed from the CHICAGO POULTRY Graf Zeppelin at Chicago, Aug. 5—(4)—Poultty alive, this year]steady; receipts 5 cars; fowls 28; Here’s a group of nature students at the Pnensylvania State College 5 per cent. springs 29; broilers 26; roosters 21; a) guards, to attend the Brocopp cere- monies. Joseph Spies and Archie Johnson were named to get the mem- bers out for the ceremony and the subsequent banquet at the Grand Pa- cific, Additional points will be allowed the two membership teams for the oecasion as they get members on their sides out and also added points in the membership score for guests they may bring. It will be a $1 dinner. The ceremonies at the fort will be held at 5 o'clock. William Doty and Harry Crane were appointed a committee of arrange- ments for the banquet. David Shipley, A. l.. Fosteson and Congressman Tom Hall were appointed a committee to invite outsiders to attend the Bro- copp ceremonies and dinner, while F. 3. Bassett and Harry Hanson were appointed to handle the dinner tickets. ’ Chaplain Sudduth announced that the entertainment date assigned the Lions was one of three, each service club being booked for an entertain- ment. Will Permanently Boost Camp Colonel Alfonte, formally intro- duced by Congressman Hall, thanked the club for the part it played in boosting the training camp into an attendance of 250, and assured the Lions that the fort post is to be a permanent one. Of the camp, he said it had been organized into four rifle companies and a band. Both he and Chaplain Sudduth spoke of the in- xk * State College, Pa.—(AP)—It legs, it’s easily cooked, and once you try it you're sure to come back for more— That, according to students at the nature study camp of the Penn- sylvania State College summer ses- sion, is the verdict on fried rattle- snake meat. And the students should know—because they make a picnic lunch on rattlesnake meat every time they can catch one. A Wild Luncheon Menu ters mountains, and rattlesnake has been a leading article on its George B. Green demonstrated that the flesh of this highly poisonous reptile is a genuine delicacy. Here is the sort of menu the nature stu- dents like when they go picnicking. Snapping turtle soup, fried rat- tlesnake, roasted Indian turnip, Jub would put {creamed hemlock fungus, green briar Hatarien nities ead ‘after the novelty salad with staghorn sumac dressing, dies down the camp routine 4s likely|a@nd wild huckleberries. to flatten the spirits of the young men, they said. Dr. C. D. Dursema proposed that, in view of what happened this year, the club make it a point two months/hard part about it. Y ie Aes of the seek each year | your own method in this part of the | ki But it’s the rattlesnake that is the really startling part of the bill of fare. Catching the rattler is the only You can use to take up the same state-wide boost job, taking care not to bruise the for the affair. Join in Legion Band Uniform The matter of supplying a uniform for the legion’s state band was brought up by D. E. Shipley, and the club agreed to donate its one-third of $75 to the purchase, the other service victim, for that -spoils the meat. Anyway. once the siake is caught, here’s the procedure: Grasp the reptile back of the head and cecapitate it with a hatchet. Cut off thé rattles for souveni: turn the victim on its back, and with clubs here being allowed a similar|/a sharp knife slit iv from head to privilege of subscribing $25 cach. | tail, cleaning and dressing the snake There are seven members in the band! as soon as this slit is made. from Bismarck and Mandan, and the|strip off the beautifully organization wants to visit the Louis- ville convention in September, but needs some new uniforms to make it presentable for the band contests. A. L. Fosteson was sworn in as a Lion, and the entire club and guests took the oath of allegiance to the flag with him. The guests were Dick Hall, Chicago; Professor Waldron of the agricultural college, Fargo; H. G. Keller, a Dickinson Lion; F. B. Strauss Jr., Bismarck; H. G. Patton, Duluth; and Colonel Alfonte and Chaplain Sudduth, Fort Lincoln. Adam Takes Challey Post in Mandan High Robert J. Adam, Drake, has taken up his new duties as Smith-Hughes instructor of vocational agriculture in Mandan high school. He succeeds Clyde Challey, who will reenter col- lege for post-graduate study of ag- riculture. . Adam was a member of the 1! class of the North Dakota Agricul- tural college. He will spend the greater part of August in familiarizing him- self with his work and assisting R. C. Newcomer, Morton county agent, with whom he cooperates. Northwest Crops Bad, O. P. B. Jacobson Says Minnesota railroad and warehvuse commission, returned to his office * today after a long trip through the northwest wheat preducing regions with the statement that pessimistic ieports of wheat production have not been exaggerated. “The dry weather in the Dakotas, Montana, Ce RORnEDD Rc naatony cut the crop to a ent Cetente” acobson id. “South- crop but not a big wheat for the markets ; factor from that section as“a large share of the grain raised there is for feed. “Examination of the wheet in the fields show the grzin has » been shriveled in a great many localities and the yield will not be high, it is certain,, I expect a great reduction in the ipts at th Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth terminals where the commission maintains its in- ion.” WoopMEN {ASK INJUNCTION pring?! ug. 5.— — Individual members cf the Modera Woodmen of America filed s bill for an injunction in circuit court tovay asking the national organization be restrained pod puttieg ae effect its proposed cl m a fra anne society to ‘a legal reserve association. WOMAN 18 KILLED Then marked skin, to be tacked on a board, dried ‘and salted for another souvenir— camp to fry a rattlesnake. Toledo, O., and Isabelle Adams of Perryopolis, Pa., are getting the pen ready while an instructor holds the snake. tastes just like chicken or frogs’) The nature study camp is located | i in a snug valley of the Seven Sis-| bill of fare for years, when Prof. | Bernice Wagner (left) of ae If You Want a Real Treat, Try Snake, And Let It Be Rattlesnake, Well Fried and take the remaining length of clean, white meat and put it on ice for 24 hours, Next day the meat is ready to ;cook. Get a frying pan hot, melt |some butter in it, cut the rattler jmeat in lengths about half an inch Hong, roll them in flour or bread crumbs, and fry them a nice gold- en brown! | At the nature study camp forks are never used in eating fried rat- tler. Each diner is given his plate- iul—the cooked meat looks much lis a plate of fried scallops—and iven a sharp lark-spur thorn- apple spike to use as a spear in eating the meat. 5 | Newcomers to the joys of rat- | tlesnake-cating usually wait four or five minutes, getting up their nerve, \before the first bite. But no one jwho bas ever tried it here has fail- jed_ to inish his entire allotment. One ‘and all vow that the meat is as tasty and delicate as chicken. A Famous Society Having eaten rattlesnake at this camp, one automaticajly becomes a member of the society known as “The Den of Rattlers”—membership in which is limited to those who {have dined on rattlesnake. There are jnow upwards of £00 members in this camp, and the only thing that the fried rattlesnake from ap- ing on the bill of fare is the ‘fat that rattlesnakes in this vicinity lare getting scarce. fi | Every visitor who comes here is initiated, provided a rattlesnake can |be captured. Among the prominent ‘people who have dined on rattle- |srake as guests here are Ernest Thomnson Seton, famous naturalist; + Elmer Ekblaw of Clark sity, Arctic cxplorer; Albert Ganier, noted bird specialist, and Mrs. Anna Botsford Comstock of , Cornell University. Two Bismarck Men Escape Uninjured As Auto Hits Cow Hi diddle diddle, the cat and the fiddle and the cow jumped over the moon! Only the cow we are about to speak about jumped over an auto- mobile owned by a Bismarck man. escaped without.a seratch when the car which Sailer was driving struck the wandering bossy on state high- way No. 25 near Hazen Saturday night. The front bumpc:, headlights and fender were smashed as the car plowed into the perembulating bo- vine who did a balloon ascension over the hood to graze the side of the car and drop on the rear fender, crushing that. As far as could be determined in the dark, bossy su::cii i. nor bruises. Anywa: lowing | somewi darkness, the Bismarck men said Men Leave Wales, Girls Plan Pursuit Abertillery, Wales.—(?)—The man Problem has become acute in many communities in this South Wales mining district. The youth of the country appar- ently prefer to make their fortunes in: America or the » with the result that hundreds of girls are SIGN FOR “NATURAL” New York, Aug. 5.—(AP)—The best “natural” match of the New York outdo.r season was signed to- day when Al Singer, Bronx -junior lightweight. and Kid Chocolate, sen- sational Cuban bantamweight, agreed oo 12 trea ist 9 a Ae grounds. e New York fa- v.rites evreed to weigh 128 3-4 pounds or less. TOURISTS INCREASE Dublin—(AP)—The influx of American yromises to ex- ceed pp records by 15 per vain Steams! s report bookings until September. Severel lines are Sonning: ‘at Gal lich Hopes rival Cobh ap elo . in vessels, POULTRY RANKS HIGH State Colles .— (AP) —More in Pennsylvania, Adolph Rheault and Arthur Sailer | [Bismarck Kittenball |Team Swamps Mandan | Bismarck diamondball exponents proved too much for Mandan stars Friday when the Bavk of North Da- kota ten bludgeoned their way to a 30 to 5 victory over the Western- Pioneer team on the Mandan dia- mond. |. Don Tarbox, Mandan tosser, al- jlowed 22 runs in three innings be- | fore he was benched in favor of Bill Skinner, who managed to hold the |Capital City clouters to eight runs jin the remaining four innings. ‘Writing on Sand’ Shows Potash Value Howard City, Mich.—(?)—Using a {small fertilizer drill for a pen and | muriate of potash for ink, B. O. Hag. jerman, Grand Rapids, and I. J. Matthews, Chicago, did some fancy |of the Pennsylvania railroad’s dem- | onstration farm. | The letters sand out stronger today i than they did a year ago when the |two specialists, one an agricultural agent and the other a fertilizer ex- pert, penned the words: “Potash Pays!” The message was written in an al- falfa field as part of a demonstration showing that legume crop on light soils needs commercial. fertilizers having a high content of potash. Where the letters were written with the fertilizer drill, the alfalfa has made @ longer and heavier growth, green, the stand-.of plants is thicker, and each plant has stooled vigorous!: Before the first cutting was taken, i each letter was plainly visible. Rio Grande Farmer Plants Year ’Round Brownsville, “Tex.—(AP)—It__ is one planting and harvesting after another for farmers in the Rio Grande valley. No season is exempt. ‘all cabbage is planted any ti: from July 1 to December 1. It marketed about 130 or 150 days aft- er planting. lanting dates on cauliflower range from July 15 to November 45. The marketing season runs from October to March. Eggplant is an all. crop. July, January or the spring ‘3 pepper-planting time. Tomatoes are janted all through the summer for fall shipment. EMPEROR TRAVELS Tokyo—(AP)—En:peror Hironh'to broke precedent recently by an in- spection trip to western industrial cities. He may mate similiar trips cach year. Hitherto Japanese tul- ers -have Sena only to Kyeto Bea anotuvers or to the imperial sum- met or winter villas. ~ writing a year ago here in the sands! Buschko, who does not speak Eng- lish, told the immigration authorities his only motive in stowing away was to travel to America in an airship. He had read much about airships, he sald, and desired to ride in one. He told immigration authorities he was fairly well treated on the Zeppelin except that he was kept in practical confinement. Ordered deported by the immigra- tion authorities, the youth will be taken to New York and sent back to Germany on @ German liner. His transportation from Lakehurst to Gloucester City, his board at the de- tention building and his transporta- tion to New York and many must be defrayed by the @Wners of the Zeppelin. a Young Buschko is a baker. Iowa Farm Tourists Will Be Here at Noon Wednesday, 185 Strong Word received by Tom P. Allen, N. P. agent, relative to the farmers’ tour to visit here Wednesday, is that there will be 185 in the party and that they will arrive here at 12:45 p.m. They are the Wallace party, on the way to Yellowstone park. The visitors will make a stay of three hours here and at Mandan, the Association of Commerce here and the chamber at Mandan joining in their entertainment. The Iowans will be taken to the Northern Great Plains experiment station at Mandan to see experimental results in dry farming. They also will be shown the Roosevelt cabin at the capitol. | Freda Farmer’s Son Fires Barn, Granary Playing with matches has caused [one oe fire loss. A barn and granary owned by E. O. Carlson, farmer living in the Freda community, was destroyed by flames caused when Carlson's little son fired @ haystack adjoining the bs’n. The barn was partly covered by in- surance. Congressman Suggests Big Radio Combination Portland, Me.. Aug. 5.—()—Merger of all the radio companies in the United States into one cooperative body is urged by Rep. Wallace H. White of the second Maine congres- sional 4istrict. Reprasentative White says such combinstion is necessary to enable the United States to compete with Great Britain for leadership in world communication. Crack on Jaw Ends Eight Suicide Trials Nice, France —(AP)—To an Ital- Pi it, Antoine Gagliero, goes the world’s record for preserverance in trying to commit suicide. He has made eight attempts within twelve hours but could not manage to kill himeelf. Makir.~ three attempts to drown himself, twice throwing himself be- fore automobiles; once trying to shoot himself with a water-logged revolver, once trying to cut his wrist with a dull table knife, Gaglicro was saved by officious bystanders every time. Tak 1 to the police station, he tried to obtain a detective’s revolver. The nearest he ca.se to death was when the officer floored him with a tight to the jaw VEBLEN DIES Palo Alto, Calif, Aug. 5.—(P)— Thorstein B. Veblen, internationally known ecenomist and author, died | here Saturday night of heart diséase. 1 Announcement of his death was with- | held until toda: RADIO LINKS YACHT, OFFICE Chicago, Aug. 5.—()—Were it not for radio, Leslie Atlass, one of the owners of WBBM, could not combine Pleasure and business. He has in- stalled receiving and transmitting equipment aboard his yacht and while cruising Lake Michigan keeps in yach with his office as easily as ore, TWO ARE RELEASED Minneapolis, Aug. 5—(#)—Bill Bag- well, outfielder and Mule Shirley, outfielder and first baseman, were Teleased to the Asheville club of the South Atlantic League it was an- Bounced by Mike Kelley today. ing advanced by many delegates as the next president. MOTOR FREIGHT HEARING Hearing will be held August 9 by joined in the scuffle, seized the gun, | Most of the additional and struck the man cn the head. jbeen sold. ‘wo operatives of the state bureau bem on eng Pee regganrsceerapcmen 4 of cri inal apprehension joined lo- LIBERIAN SECTION CALL MONEY RATES & cal officers in questioning the man}, Leipsic—(™—A Liberian section | New York, Aug. 5—()—Call money, the state railroad commission at) 4:4 were 1d he lived in Los An-| 8s been opened in the Ethnographic firm; high 12; low 10; ruling rate ge co Being lore By geles. The operatives are here seck- beg ted here under the auspices of | 10; time loan: (except Sunday) motor freight serv. |‘laving of Julius Sctuch and his two| (Clecteg the material on various tris ice from Grand Forks to Dovils Lake |children on a farm near here in) (olin oe mec ong has made INNEAPOLIS HA | May. fo tho negro republic and has made MINNEAPOLIS HAY and points intermediate and from ’ SER Seen gag racial differences between Libertans' Minneapolis, Aug. 5.—(#)—Timothy, Grand Forks to Neche and points in-) «phen guess where the Augarten | *Nd the people of the Sudan a spe-| No. 1 15.00; No. 2 13.50; alfalfa, No. termediate. | pridge is."—Faun, Vienna. ~~ | ¢tal feature. {1 2000.; No. 14.00. New smart STUDEBAKERS now on display at e new prices! Reductions up to *250 AUGUST 5t 5 seats have | turkeys 20 to 30; ducks 18 to 20; geese 15, spring geese 21. Prime commercial paper 6 1-4. EFFECTIVE Sedan as low as $1325! A Dictator Eight Sedan, latest creation of Studebaker engi- neering genius, $1235! A Dictator Six Sedan (better than those which sold in enormous volume at $1345) now priced at $1095! increasing volume and by economies result- ing from consolidation of all Studebaker manufacturing operations in South Bend. It is a price reduction on the cars which are today rolling off the assembly line in Studebaker’s great One-Profit plants—the finest cars Studebaker knows how to build. Brilliant new body designs—champion per- formance—and now sweeping reductions in prices! More people have been buying Studebaker eight-cylinder cars than any other European or American eight. Now, eights—on Presidents as well as on Dictators and Commanders—unprecedented demand may be expected. Imagine! A President Eight Sedan offered at $1735 (and a seven-passenger President at $1995)! A Commander Eight Sedan only $1475! A Commander Six IF YOU DON’T WANT TO WAIT FOR DELIVERY, GET YOUR ORDER IN NOW! 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