The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 6, 1929, Page 3

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4 ROBERTS TO MANAGE ~ ARR RAGE CONTROL ACTIVIMES HERE i { Portland-Cleveland Planes, 25, to Stop in Bismarck to Refuel and Reoil O. W. Roberts has been appointed chairman of the activities at this control point in the Portland-Cleve- land flight of the National eir derby of August 25-September 2, The Port- Jand racing planes will arrive here August 26. With Roberts will be associated Joe Spies, Tom Allen, Obert Olson, Carl Nelson, William Reibold, Frank Ells- worth, E. B. Klein and H. T. Murphy. ‘This committee will start Thursday morning, soliciting funds. ‘The expenses of the filght stop here ‘will be $250 cash for the honor of be- ing designated a control station and about $150 for local expenses. ‘There will be about 25 planes in the race from Portland to Cleveland, that number already being entered, while others are expected to enter. These planes will be refueled during their stops here. The time limit out of Bismarck will be 5 p. m., 80 that the flyers can make St. Paul before dark. ‘About eight tanks will be on the field to refuel and reoil the planes. In last year's derby the force on the field here gave record service of about three minutes to a plane, which at the time called out an expression of admiration from Major Fancher, who was at the head of that derby—Spo- kane's. Chairman Roberts will name judges, timers and referees later. The local pilots are expected to take & big hand in the affair. Col. W. A. Alfonte is extending every assistance possible to the local committee on the derby. He has del- egated Lieut. G. Bleakney, post pilot, to assist Chairman Roberts. ‘The planes to stop here will all be Class D planes. AUTO CRASH IS LADD TO DRIVERS’ NEGLECT One Going 25 Miles an Hour and Other Ignored Stop Sign, Say Police Tardy reports filed at police head- quarters on three car collisions Mon- day noon and afternoon, reveal that the crash at the intersection of Sixth and Avenue C was between W. Peter- son, 701 Twelfth street, and the car of Darwin Aune, 1019 Twelfth. ‘The report says Peterson failed to heed the stop sign at the corner as he came east on the avenue, while Aune is docketed as driving at 25 miles an hour. His car was over and the top wrecked. A Stacy - Bismarck grocery truck coming from the south on Third street, and driven by Alex Lynch, was tipped over at Rosser avenue by the truck of R. E. Morris, going west on the avenue, at 11:20. Trucks of the Montana - Dakota Power company, driven by W. G. Tharp, and of the Mandan Cream- ery, driven by William Stoltz, were in collision at the corner of Seventh and Broadway. The gas truck was slight- ly damaged. NACDONALD, DAWES CONTINUE PARLEYS Lendon, Aug. 6—(AP)—New steps in the series of Anglo-Ameri- can conversations on naval disarma- ment were taken tcday when Am- bassador Charles G. Dawes and Prime Minister MacIJonald conferred at No. 10 Downing street this aft- ernoon, m Two attaches from the American embassy accompanic:: the ambas- sador to the prime minister's official residence. ‘ During. the morning Premier Mac- Donald had a talk with First Lord of the Admiralty A. V. Alexander. He also received Jord Thomson minister for air. NACARA ELEVATOR DESTROYED BY FR Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 6.—(>)— Fire early today destroyed the North Dakota Wheat Growers Ridin - close a two-day session with ‘a. ban- quet tonight. Election of officers fs scheduled for this afternoon. — ae ees The name for the state of California comes from a Spanish word meaning “hot furnace.” ; [ b . HER: It took sand to make this shot. Johnny Farrell was trailing on that first day of the metropolitan open at Long Beach, Long Island, and it was almost do or die when his ball went/ into a trap on the eighteenth hole. The American open champ is pic- tured above, in a miniature sand- storm of his own making, as he cleared the treacherous pit. He brought in a card of 81. King Fuad Departs For Egypt Via Paris| London, Aug. 6—(?)—King Fuad of | Mohammed Pasha Mahmoud left here today for Paris en route to Egypt. Representatives of King George and the foreign office —Decisio . Beebe Wins Dog | . With Fish Tale | —?@ New York, Aug. 6.—(#) — Today's fish story. William Beebe, naturalist. With a radium baited hook caught one with an extensible stomach per- mitting the swallowing of another fish three times as large as itself, and & second species that had reguiat, fishing lines with hooks fastened to its flippers. COMMUNICATION OFF, NOUANS WILL HOLD | THEI ANNUALFAIR SEPTEMBER 2 10 4 Bede Walkiron Is Elected Presi- dent of Association; Tom Come-Last Secretary Cannon Ball, N. D., Aug. 6.—(AP) hold t: annual Sioux county Indian fair September 2 to 4, was announced at a meeting of Indians of the Cannon Ball district here last night. The fair will be held at the Indian agency at Fort Yates. Indians of the Cannon Ball district organized for the » wpose of taking part in the fair by electing officers and committee chairmen. A hae of women from Bismarck, Mandan and Solen vere spectators at the meeting which lasted alm>st until daylight. Officers of the Can- non Ball district were named as follows: president, Bede Walkiron; vice president, Martin Iron Bu!l; secretary, Tom Come Last; treas- vrer, Daniel Cold Hand; arrange- ments committee, Frank Young Bear and Henry Fart Horse; councillor, Matthew Red Fish; announcer, Hen- ry Four Swords. RUSSIANS, CHINESE BY MONGOLIAN TRIBE Russian Influence Is Dominant Among Chieftains; Officials Hear of Upheaval Berlin, Aug. 6.—-(AP)—Shangnai dispatches to the newspaper Mach- Tausgabe today said telegraphic communication between Urga, Mvn- golia, and Kalgan, Chili provirce, had been broken todav to the con- sternation of Chinese circles who feared it meant invasion of China by outer Mongolian tribes. Russian influence is dominant in outer Mon- golia. General Yer Chung-Chang, chief of police in Shanghai, has been in- INVASION IS FEARED |: Egypt with his suite and Premier|ynable to accept the Russian demand INDEADLOCK OVER RAILROAD SEIZURE Nationalist Authorities Are Un- able to Accept Soviet De- mand for Peace Nanking. China, Aug. 6.—(#)—The foreign office of the nationalist gov- ernment announced today there was @ deadlock at the conference between Russia and China, over seizure of the Chinese Eastern railway, which has been in progress at Manchuli, Man- churia, The nationalist authorities were for reinstatement of the Russian as- sociate managers on the railway be- fore the opening of formal negotia- him farewell at the station. It was understood King Fuad) planned to remain in Paris a week. BRING CAR THEFT PRISONER 10 CITY Man Arrested in Montana Is Advance Agent of St. Paul Negro Baseball Club Sheriff Rollin Welch, Deputy R. H. Crane and Police Chief Martineson got back from Plentywood, Mont., Monday night with George Barton, who is charged with the th-"t of J. F. Malloy’s car here last week. The prisoner, arresvcd «v ....les from Wolf Point, Mont., after he had be- trayed the whereabouts of the stolen car by wiring Malloy’s wife in his name to send some money, is the ad. vance man of the St. Paul Gophers, a negro baseball team, which he was trying to date here at the time the car was stolen. When arrested he gave the name of Williams. Barton will be arraigned before R. H. Crane as justice of the peace, and his plea will be taken. He is at present in the county jail. Equalization Board Approves Schedules Members of the state board of equalization, meeting today, ap- proved the schedule which was sug- Vato by Tax Commissioner Iver ker. The board will get down to busi- the matter of valuing railroad prop- erty for taxing purposes. —_—_——__——_ BS zeF ty ness August 8 when it will take up| bade | tions. The foreign office instructed Chi- nese Minister Wu at Washington to | notity signatories of the Kellogg pact ‘as to the discussion in full detail. TWENTY-ONE HURT IN ELEVATOR FALL | New York, Aug. 6.—(#) — Twenty- jone persons, five of them women. were injured when the elevator fell from the seventh floor of a. midtown ‘loft building to the basement today. | Two of the injured were said to be in |@ serious condition. Several of the ‘passengers, all of whom were from New York, suffered broken bones. BOAT PUT-PUTS AHEAD Winona, Minn., Aug. 6.—(AP)— The craft piloted by Claud Clark and Alfred Von Sauer passed the |72nd hour today in its outboard mo- jtor endurance run in Lake Winora. The two Winonans were confiJent they could reach their goal of 450 hours. | to SCWRITE OFTEN?? ‘Tat who expect letters from young moderns about to leave for college should make writing more tempting with the gift of a WAHL- EVERSHARP Personal-Point formed of uprisings among the tribes of inner Mowgelle and against the Kuomintang. e headquarters staff of the Nativanlists in inner Mongolia had fled. HIGHWAY ACCIDENTS KILL 25 IN ENGLAND London Aug. 6—(P}—Twenty-tive | persons were killed and seventy-five injured in accidents on English high- ways, in the heavy traffic of yester- | day's bank holiday. Alabama was bone dry prior to! December, 1918, and in 1919 ratified THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1929 MANSAWS WAY OUT OF JAIL IN MANDAN; MAY HAVE HAD AlD Escaped in Automobile Be- longing to Sheriff Sewing his way to freedom, W. F. Morris, 20, held on a charge of rob- ery, escaped last night from the Morton county jail and is believed to have stolen a 1929 Buick sedan be- longing to the sheriff, H. R. Handt- mann. His escape through the tron bars was facilitated by his small physical stature. Morris was held on a charge of holding up a garage attendant here recently at the point of a pistol end robbing the cash register of $92. Through the alertness of a_ hotel jclerk Morris was traced to his room W. F. Morris Is Thought to Have | ind captured. Outside to have enabled him cape. JAMESTOWN TO HAVE DETENTION HOSPITAL Jamestown, Aug. 6.—(AP)—The \city council last nigh: ordered plans drawn for a new detention hospital j to cost $13,000 of which the county | will pay $10,000. It also gave first reading to an ordinance providing for the censtruction of airport. Reports § Son Missing; | Is 18; 5 Feet, 4; 140 Peter Renick has reported to police | headquarters that his son has disap- peared from home. He is 18 years of ; age, 5 feet 4, weighs about 140 pounds, and wore a blue coat, a yellow shirt, ! denim overalls, a belt, and black shoes. He has a scar in the back of his head. | Offers INTENSIVE COURSEE in Runtnens, mic and Ranking that will fit you for a good position in a ab Expenses Unusually Low { Fall Term Will Open Sept. 2nd MANKATO COMMERCIAL COL! Secretarial. Office ‘Training re time, Send for Free Catalogue LEGE MANKATO, MINN. < the prohibition amendment. | T. H. THORESEN | Formerly State’s Attorney of Dunn county, North | Dakota, and state tax commissioner for North Dakota, announces the opening of his law offices at 4051, Broadway over Cowan's Drug store, Bismarck, North Dakota. Practice in all state and federal courts. | emer ieee SORES CTS ae mE 8 9, did not look Couldn’t Give Wheat tered to wal the oy as @ Away So Makes Money veo Hapel yan comb! ied'to cub tie By Cutting His Crop tine cut‘ot When he did’ 90 he Paul Hapel. 12 miles south of the the stalk was profitable: He sot Sa city, had in 90 acres of wheat that bushels. e To make the party 3 a little gayer, ‘CANADA DRY’ | The Champagne of Ginger Ales serve— Women everywhere pronounce Thousands of women hail the New Silent Kelvinator as the year’s greatest achievement in perfected automatic refriger- ation for the home. A wonderfully improved Kelvinator— positively silent, more economical, more convenient and far more beautiful than any Kelvinator ever built. —tested and re-tested in sound-proof rooms to bring silence _ asnear to perfection as possible— these new 1929 models will stay silent even after years of service. The handsome new Silent Kelvinators are on display at You must see them to appreciate the many new ideas they reveal both for perfect care and preservation of food and added convenience. Your New Silent Kelvinator may be bought on surprisingly reasonable and generous terms through Kelvin- atot’s ReDisCo monthly budget plan. Enjoy its healthful, helpful pleasures now while you are paying for it. North Dakota Power & Li Phone 22 our showrooms. T KELVINATOR H E R the NEW SILENT KELVINATOR the final word in electric refrigeration 4 The Kelvinator Cold. E L I for Dainty Frozen Di: A wonderful economy factor of the Kelvinator, the none acts prey constant reservoir ity salads, creams, jellies. cake them, 00 well as all the ice you will ever ened. of cold ies. There bet : A BE B ght Co. Bismarck, N. D. * /

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