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ar LINCOLN BOYS HAVE TOUCH OF WAR | INRIFLERANGE HIKE Battalion Stage Stages | Three - Mile March to Apple Creek Range for Camp Citizen soldiers at Fort Lincoln Tuesday and today had a touch of the experiences that the A. E. F. went through day after day in the World war. Shouldering their packs and fol- lowed by mule-drawn field wagons. the C. M. T. C. battalion yesterday morning staged a three-mile march to the target range on the banks of Apple creek, where they held prelim- | inary target practice. The departure of the battalion from the camp was reminiscent of the days ever there. Whistles shrilled, mules brayed, commands rang throughout the ranks as the column sct out with- out fuss or confusion. Pitch Camp Rapidly Arriving at the range. some of the | boys were ordered to the firing line | immediately, while others set to work making camp. Cook ter officer tents and the pup tents of the stu- dents were pitched rapidiy Firing and “sand-ratting"—the lat- ter being the op nn of target the pits—consumed the first 4 range work. A band conc in t and promptu kittenball games took up the evening. It was late when the boys settled down for their night in the pup tents. Blankets Are Required And what a night! The weather of the month des: by morning those who jhardy cnough to undress had pented and had on all of th clothes and blankets and they could purloin from more s siceping neighbor ‘The cold gray dawn brought chow call and welcome hot coffee. With 90 dozen eggs as the main issue, the bo; seon warmed up. and afte breakfast were ready to attack the day's “rec- ord” firing Tuesday's “preliminary” firing brought some good scores. Randall Elofson of Sioux Falls, S. D.. with 88 out of a possible 100, lcd the Reds. or second-year m« ik ugene Couture © % End Lorenzo Durman of White River, S. D., with 67 out of a possible 75, ve The scores of these last two boys arc more remarkable ince they init mad of the smallest re- Johns, N. D., Wine Cc. M. T. c returns to the post tonight, and at noon tomorrow will come under the command of a new group of officcrs PATROL HIGHWAYS SEEKING BANDITS Im { Fargo. N. D., ‘hug, 14.—)—Sherif Mark Andrews and Police Chief E. J. Madicon spent last night touring Cass | gounty roads in a vain hunt for the | robbers who yesterday looted the American National Bank at Redfield. . D. “A local patrolman believes the rob- bers passed, through Fargo Tuesday night. He notified police headquar- | ters and the hunt followed. trolman became suspicious when an automobile carrying three men and a woman passed him and the occu- | pants looked him over closcly. EDDY IS REELECTED WAR VETERAN HEAD Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 14. — P. W. Eddy, Jamestown. was reelected president of the Spanish-American veterans at their reunion at itwood lake Tuesday. Other of- elected are R. A. Thompson, wseerctary and J. E. Mattison. Jamestown, trcasu ‘The principal addi by Col. W. C. Trueman, Grafton; Anzus Fraser, adjuiant general of North Dakota. and Joseph Schianser, Mount Vernon. Washington. sses were given Two Travelers Hurt In Overturn of Car As it Picks up Nail A 2-penny nail caused the cae et H. B. Hendexson. everturn in a six-foot ditch several miles eas: of the ciiy. Monday night The nail caused a tire blowout and the car toppled into the ditch. Henderson was cut in the forehead Among the Basics | The pa- | & | Pioneer Burleigh County Woman Dies Mrs. Eliza Wagner. 90, Sterling. Mh Merl Eo iab in Burleigh county assed away at 9 o'clock this 4 morning ay the home of her son | Horatio Wagner, farmer living near [eeeea, |. Mrs. Wagner, who was known to ‘her many friends throughout the county as “Grandma” Wagner, cele- [brated her ninetietn virthday Au- igust 5. Mrs. Wagner had {health, but sufferet from which she wat nct able to rally. Funeral services will be held from the Sterling hall at Sterling Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. CLINIC MANAGERS SELECT MEMPHIS Sessions of Conference Adjourn With Round-Table as Fi- nal Discussion been in Memphis was chosen by the confers fence of clinic managers for next year's meeting. before the ses- sions at Masonic temple adjourned this forenoon No officers were elected. It is cus- tomary for the manager in the host serve as chairman Tuesday evening a smoker was held at the residence of S. S. Boise, the c of Quain and Ramstad’s . who served as the chairman of conference here. This morning a round-table was conducted, A. G. Stasel, Nicollet clinic, Minnesota, presiding. The subjects c in three topics: correlation be- clinics and clinic hospita’ methods of financing clinic buildings fire protection. In addition to Tuesday's business sessions, a tour of the city and Man- dan was made as part of the local en- tertainment for the guests. The visiting managers were much impressed by the modernity of the local clinics and their volume of serv- ice. F. K. Stroop of Temple, Tex., who manages a large clinic in his home city, said the clinic faoilities here were far in advance of what is nor- |mal for a city of even larger size. The clinic was attended by about managers from over the count a conference being {They came from Toronto, | Woodlands, Cal. Fail River, Mas | Memphis, Detroit, Pueblo, and Butte, outside of the cen west, which was strongest represented by the states of Wisconsin, South Dakota, Ilinois and Towa. Each of the visitors was presented ith a copy of Pat Byrne's book, | Soldiers of the Plain: This was a doubly interesting souvenir, as the {managers in their tour of the city jand Mandan were taken to the site jof old Fort Abraham Lincoln, where | Major A. B. Welch, Mandan histor- | jian and Indian authority, made a Htalk on the Ci ster expedition and the lextinction of Custer’s troops in the eee Big Horn | battle, The chairman for next year will ibe W. S. Shawhan, Memphis, As- jsociated with him as the general committee will be H. J. Harwick, of ithe Mayo clinic, and S. Boise, of | Quain and | Ramstad. | Nov Owne: given no: cut on wi | they w at thereof charied against the lerty. Me Me ATI YSO: Auditor. | Canfield receive sealed bids unit Aug. haunting winter supply of ard} 5 all bid 2H BTS 16-17 good ; a stroke Sunday | , to New York, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1929 FORT LINCOLN BAND TO GIVE CONCERT IN BISMARCK ON FRIDAY Sergeant t Ferretti t to Conduct 30-Piece Organization's Premier Program Bismarck and Mandan will have the opportunity to listen to a mili- tary band Friday night when the C. M. T. C. band under the direction of Technical Sergeant Q. Ferretti gives s first concert in the Northern oes ‘cific park from 7 to 8 p. m. Musicians who have heard the 20/ Piece organization from Fort Lincoln proclaim it one of the finest boys’ bands considering the short time that it has been grouped together. Seven members of the crack 4th cavalry band of Fort Meade, S. D., form the nucleus for this organiza- | tion. The other members are boys from all of the states composing the | Seventh Corps area. Plans have been made by Sergeant Ferretti for two concerts and three broadcasts over radiocasting station KFYR of Bismarck. Besides Friday night's concert, the band will be heard again before the close of the camp August 31. The first broadcast will be given over KFYR on Saturday night from 7 to 8 o'clock. Sergeant Ferretti, director of the) band, is a musician and composer of distinction. One of Sergeant Fer- tti's own compositions, Paratus ct ielis, a march, will occupy a con- | spicuous place on Friday's program. The program follows: March, Riders for the Flag (Sousa), 4th U. S. Cavalry regimental march. Intermezzo, Gavotte ‘(De Luca). Overture, The Bluc Ribbon ‘Allex- ander), Air Varie, The Old Home Tewn on the Farm (Barlow), bari- tone solo, Sergeant McCloskey. In Melody Land, from Italian Operas . Around the Camp Fire March, Paratus ct Fidelis The Star Spangled Ban- ner (Key). Technical Sergeant Fer- retti conducting. Paratus et Fidelis was especially written by Sergeant Ferretti in com- memoration of the 60th anniversary of the organization of the 4th U. S.| cavalry of which regiment he is a member. The march was dedicated to the officers and men of the regi- ment. Aid of Polar Flyers Wilkins and Eielson Goes Through East Earl Rossman. the arctic explorer and writer, went through, castward, on the park special Comet at 11:41 this forenoon. He is returning from | Alaska, where he has been gathering material for some special articles on the polar flights of Capt. George H. Wilkins and Ben Eielson, the later the Hatton, N. D., pilot who flew the Wilkins plane. Mr. Rossman was still in his berth when the train passed through here, making a mere pause in its journey. It was learmed that he is on the way where he wilt-compile his stories of the Wilkins adventures in the arctic and over the pole and on the possibilities of air flight over the icy wastes and waters of the polar area. «Ferrett Bismarck Sparrows Know Their Hoppers | x. Bismarck's street sparrows are more learned than those of Fargo. That is the only conclusion that can be drawn from the report that the Gate City is aroused by the discovery that “a famished little street sparrow * VIENNA IS SUBJECT | | made a meal of grasshoppers plugging the pores of an automobile radiator.” It is a well faa area pr uae Bismarck sparrows as wel members of the fTesthered tribe re long been known to banquet on the delicacies found in auto radiators. Informed of the Fargo sparrow's | ignorance today, one of Bismarck’s | well known street gamins chirped, ; “Those Fargo sparrows are behind the | i times. I've picked ‘hoppers ‘rom air- , plane radiators already.” QUAINT AND CLASSIC OF TALK TO ROTARY Dr. Griebenow Sounds | Keynote! of New Activity This Year: Internationalism Vienna was set forth in all its! Teutonic Prisianisms to the Rotary luncheon, today, by Dr. F. B. Griebe- now. He spoke from his acquaint- | ance with the old capital growing | kee of his trip there in post graduate ‘ork last winter. Vienna, he men- tioned in passing, is considered to have, next to Rome, the most fascin- lating history of any European city. The pride of Vienna, said the doc- tor, is its university, its state opera and its concerts. It has been the hub of musical genius for Europe, {but onnly Strauss and Schubert, of ‘all the hundreds of these notables, ‘were native musical geniuses. Its cafes, he said, are places. When a patron has fi cating and drinking, the waiter, as| a custom, brings two glasses of wat- ‘er and places them on the table, to permit the guest to avoid the embar- rassment of lingering without pat- |ronizing. The water is an invitation to stick around as long as one likes. | Dr. Harry Brandes, president of {the club, announced that attendance will have to be jacked up or fines will be imposed for absence, The jclub has dropped to thirty-fifth place among 39 clubs, he said. He also announced that international e will be stressed by the or- | ganization this year. It is the new ctivity which Rotary has added to |the former three majors. A report showed that Rotary has added 11 new clubs—two in Argen- jtina, two in Chile, one in Germany, two in France, one in India, one in | Belgium and three in Czechoslo- |vakia. This brings the total to 3189, ith estimated membership of 145,- 000, Next Wednesday, the president announced, the club luncheon — will be held with the training camp mess jat Fort Lincoln, The hour will be 12_ noon. ; _ Volunteers were called for to as- jsist with cars in transporting the ‘training camp boys to Wildwood |next Sunday. There is a big deficit ‘of autos to be provided before there will be sufficient for the trip. Rotary members have been drafted for 20. The president also announced that a questionnaire will be passed around to obtain suggestions on the nature of the coming programs. The luncheon was brightened by two songs sung by Mrs. F. J. Baven- dick, accompanied ‘by Mrs. Grace Morris, The selections _ were !“Cradle Song” and “Morning Wind.” Guests included P. F. Edholm, Spearfish, S. D.; John Larson, St. Petersburg, Florida, father of Dr. L. W. Larson; Mrs, Bavendick, Mrs. | J. Bassett, C. E. Larson! and Dr. F. B. Griebenow, Bi: ck; J. W. Jackson, Madison, Wi . Ke Stroop, Temple, Texas; C. S. Nelson, | Fargo, and F. L. Taylor, Williston. Motor vehicles registered in Ber- lin numbered 93,482 June 1. AcE... 7722 BUSINESS. . and his arm was bruised by the wind- | shield. His daughter, Mrs. Lillian Arnold, also of Winnipeg. suficred an j abrasion of the nose. When the car overturned, the wind- shield pinned Henderson's arm un- derneath and he was held prisoner | until other tourists came along and lifted the car. The ‘travelers are stopping in the city to have their hurts given professional attentiop. Bismarck Police Seek Bismarck po! teday are on the leokout for two stolen automobiles believed to have been driven to Bis- Marck or the vicinity. ; Chris Martineson. chief of police. received telegrams today from Iver Jensen, Madison. sheriff of Lake “ eeunty, 5. D., and from John Kram- Beek. Deadwood, sheriff of Lawrenc: Two Stolen S. D. Cars| PRICES AS Low AS $ AT THE FACTORY eooree. -\ CHRYSLE joes eooerece reece eo eee eceeoeeeeee ee eeeee | reanve, LO tome Decor -Ybae CUM eerecee jhis third term, it was said by the of- |ican warehouse, but that the bottles [BOY BANDIT PERCH Mere Adventurous Wanton- ness Is Uncovered Raiding of a plunder cache under jthe upper landing of an auditorium ‘tire escape by Policemen Cleveland jand Reed, this morning, disclosed that boy gangs have been playing banditry in warehouses and garages here. The police recovered a collec- {tion of milk bottle caps, milk strain- ers and butter wrappers, hidden back of burlap flaps in a cubbyhole con- structed much like a playhouse in a treetop. The stolen articles had ‘een taken | from the North American warehouse on Ninth street along the Soo tracks and were out of the stocks of the Bridgeman-Russell dairy. Entrance had been gained by breaking a rear) door. Other boys who had played detec- tives on the young bandits reported the cache to the police and also brought in some of the stolen sup- Plies found in other hiding places. The aid of the juvenile sleuths started the police wheels turning on what seems to be a widespread wan- ton raiding of warehouses and gar- ages by two gangs of idle boys, some yet in their teens, others not so far) over ten. The police ie Preparing | to bring the matter before juvenile court today, and were getting com- Plaints signed so that Judge Fred | Jansonius could do something to break up the gangs and get the boys | off the path that otherwise might lead to permanent criminality. | Two of the boys are sons of a con-| vict in the state prison here, serving ficers. As far as known, the boys took nothing that could be of use or Pleasure to them, and their pilfering seems rather the result of whim or wantonness. The complaints against them, therefore, are for the purpose of reforming them, not to punish their thoughtlessness. The boys who reported the plun- dering and the cache up in the iron framework of the auditorium fire escape said the gang who constructed it and kept their loot there also had | stolen a lot of milk bottles somewhere | and had had 59 of them hidden un-; der a platform at the No:th Amer-/ have since disappeared. The cache was constructed of | | boards laid across the horizontal; braces of the upright framework sup- Porting the landing at the upper gal- lery entrance and exit. Other boards closing the sides gave the cache a boxlike construction. The cide facing | the steps of the escape was left open and was curtained off with burlap and bags. Entrance was gained by ascending the steps and climbing! down the pipe supports from the! landing, merely a few feet, and then | twisting in under the steps and crawl- | ing into the small enclosure. Not all of the loot was kept in the cache, however. Some of it was hid- den in the weeds and -rass at the base of the building. Louis Tibesar also has becn miss- ing things from his garage at 903 Front, and some auto supplies have | been taken from the Capital Chevro- | let garage. These thefts were being | what had been taken and the extent of the thefts. Another gang was said to be implicated in these thefts. ‘ARMS LIMITATION IS FIREESCAPERAIDED BREAKFAST SUBJECT |Gang Looting Warehouses in| President Confers With Cabinet Members on ‘Yardstick’ Method Proposal Washington, Aug. 14.—(AP)—Limi- tation of armament was the subject | of a white house breakfast conferenec today attended by President ee: Secretary Stimson, Secretary Adams, Under - secretary Cotton of the state department and the executive com- mittee of the general board of the navy. The white house declined to reveal details of the discussion, beyond say- ing it had to do with the “yardstick” method of effecting re- ductions in naval armaments. It was added, however, that both Secretary Stimson and Secretary Adams had {been out of the city for the past week or so and that the conference had to do with developments occurring with- in that time. TANGLED WILLISTON BANK CASE CLOSED Supreme Court Refuses to Re- view Status of Closed Institution The supreme court, in an opinion issued today, declined to further re- ceedings to determine rights to cer- tain property formerly owned by the Williams County State Bank of Wil- liston. L. R. Baird, as receiver for the bank, claimed certain property award- ed: to the city of Williston after a previous trial. The Bank of North Dakota also sought to obtain an in- terest in the property which had been assigned to the city prior to the bank's closing in 1923, to secure a deposit of city money. The court held that the matters at issue had been determined in a suit) by the city becker a bank and could not be reopened. ‘AIRPLANE HANGAR EXECUTION PLACE; Rum-Runner Who Slew Two Coast Guardsmen Will Be Hanged in Secret Fort Lauderdale, Fla, Aug. 14—(>) —An airplane hangar at the United States coast guard base has been des- ignated as the execution chamber of James Horace Alderman, convicted Tum runner slayer of two coast guardsmen in 1927. In announcing their decision last night to erect a scaffold in the sea- plane hangar, federal officials said they had complied with the order of Federal Judge Halstead L. Ritter, to keep persons other than officials from witnessing the hanging. A site for the execution was denied twice by state authorities. The gallows where the man known as a “whiskey pirate” is scheduled to hang is within the sheet iron hangar, cut off from observation on all sides. The scene of the hanging ts only a few feet from the spot where Alder- man was landed from the C. G.-249 view the tangled skein of legal pro- ——: after his high seas battle in 1927 in 120 MAIN investigated today, to determine just De Soto Six—one year old—August 4, 1929. During the past twelve months, 81,065 De Soto Sixes were eold—breaking all records for a first-year car in the entire history of the industry. It is not surprising that a car so handsome, eo com- fortable and responsive—and so safe and easy to drive as De Soto Six—ehould find a ready market Dut it is significant that even such a car as this should set a new eales record for the industry in the firet year of its existence. This unprecedented public acceptance is your assur- ence that no matter what model you may choose for your own, you will possess a car whose distize- tion and quality will afford lasting pride and estis- faction—such as no other car st its price can offer. it Tet De Sate Sin ln sr war nt zon dexteenctatee ' A demonstration will enable you to _confirm for yourself the popular judgment thet has " made De Soto Six s record-breaker in its first yeer. De SoroS1rx ‘MOTORS Propuct @ INNER. Tal NGS The cushion inner ring forces onter ring to sea’ out of round cylind perfectly. Note the illustra. tion—how the inner ring exerts even outward pres- sure at six different points on the piston ring. Ring and inner ring both for GAMBLE STORES The Friendly Store which he killed two coast guardsmer and a federal agent. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE—Hoover vacuum cleaner. Inquire the Fur Repair Shop, over bb Bros. Phone 610. Ge Oe or man first cll cook. Call 59. a Towa spent mi than on its highways =< year. —— NOTICE FOR BIDS Bids will be received by t n j hoard of Beklund Township sche | August 22, 1929, for moving: piecing jon foundation, ‘and. remod reams: school house, known ae School Details and specifications of job 6n file at the office o} | file at the office of clerk of the above MABEL McCULLOUGH,* 8/18-14-15-16-17-18-19-20691 Dr. R. S. Enge Chiropractor Drugless Physician MILLIONS nee Bismarck, N. Dak ESMEX ze Otallenger Essex the Challenger hes outstandingly tablished itself as the Relishility car of the year. How sweeping and convincing are its proofs! In the hands of more than 200,000 owners, the actual service records prove the |owest service costs, and smallest; service requirements of any car we know. ae 4 Hydraulic shock Starter and electric gauge for fuel jator shutters —Adjustable seats, front and rear— All bright parts chromium-plated— saddle lamps—windshield wiper— aad oil on dash—Ra de Choice of Color at no extra cost absorbers — glare-proof rear view mi irror-—con- trols on steering wheel—electrolock —New type doublersction 4-wheel ‘695 and up-at factory E. D, ROSE, Manager. These are but the dramatic representation of the kind of reli bility every Essex the Challenger owner knows. Under every. condition of climate and road, in hard country usage as well as continuous city service, it has made itself known to its owners and through them to the world as “the Reliability Car of the year.” ISMARCK, N. DAK. SALES AND SERVICE IN ADJACENT Te TERRITORY U's Wy Witt Motor i Raion, Gree: Hamer Mater Ce. 16r- Heawe. Wim. Gimbel, tit Meter Con 0. L, Mennes, Napoleon, Lewin Two Essex cars made the only perfect scores, in the famous inter- national reliability classic, the Tour de France, winning against many far costlier cars of American and foreign make. And every American locality knows Essex the Challenger for some out- standing reliability record—in Arizona, 1343 miles in 24 hours; in Michigan, 1259 miles in 24 hours and in Kansas 1109 miles in 24 hours. DOVER, the Super-Six of Commercisl Cars, is Now Available ___ SUPER-SIX SALES | 118 Second Street . ganeoe' hers Motor cone remy urtle 1 Take mote ‘Turtle css "ratte, Underwood @ 4 mY # 4 % ia ti S « }) q y ‘ q N Roy