The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 6, 1930, Page 6

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6 STATE HEADS LISTE ~ POR SCHOOL TALKS Board of Administration Mem- bers to Make Tour of N. D. Commencements | Lions Leaders Will Leave for Regina to Attend Convention: Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Ayers and mr. | and Mrs. D. E. Shipley leave Satur- | day for Regina, Saskatchewan, to at- tend the international convention of | the Lions clubs. Mr. Shipley goes as | | zone governor and president-elect of | | the Bismarck club, while Mr. Ayers goes as retiring president and mem- ‘ber of the resolutions committee of | THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1930 GOLDIER 1S FACING CHARGE OF FORGERY Jess Cather Tells Police He Wanted Cash to Buy Way Out of Army Allotment of $10,000 For Missouri’s Survey ‘Is Approved by Hurley — W. E. Parsons, deputy superintend- An allotment of $10,000 for a survey} ent of public instruction, will leave of the Missouri river from Sioux City, | next week to participate in nine coun- Ta., to Fort Benton, Mont., was ap-|ty school officers’ meetings. School proved today by Secretary Hurley, ac- cording ‘o an Associated Press dis- patch. Allotments totaling $39,580,090 fo: rivers and harbors work in all part: | Parsons to Visit Nine | laws and methods will be discussed at | the various sessions. County School Meets: ane June 14, Mr. Parsons will at- nd the school officers meeting at Minnewaukan, and on the 16th at Bottineau. The others are Rugby, June 17; Cooperstown, 18; Ellendale, 19; Napoleon 20; Steele, 21; Crosby, 24, and Langdon 26. | Storm’s Queer Pranks Cause $25,000 Damage Chicago, June 6—(7)—Queer pranks of a sudden high wind storm which restricted its activities to a south- western suburb, Midlothian, were seen Commencement addresses will be) the international. If business per-| given at the various state schools by | mits, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Peterson and | members of the state board of admin-| Mr. and Mrs. Harry Woodmansee, | istration, beginning next week. | also will make the trip. Mr. Peterson | ‘The five members of the board will| is on the international nominating be present at graduation exercises at committee. | the University of North Dakota at; The trip will be made by way of | Grand Forks, June 10, and at the| Fargo, International Falls and Win- Agricultural college at Fargo, June 16. | nipeg, arrival at Regina being sched- | Individual members will be on the! uled for next Wednesday. speaking program at the state nor-| mal and other schools, R. B. Mur-» phy is to give the principal address at | the Mayville State Normal school | June 13. The school also will cele- brate the 40th anniversary of its founding. County Farmers Union} O'Connor, director, and other state | Joseph A. Kitchen, commissioner of | leaders in the organization will attend | typewriting and Cather’s attempt to and ex-officio | the annual Burleigh county Farmers get the cash by violation of law is | ditional claims for damages totaling agriculture and labor, cashed at the Frist National bank. Subsequently, it was charged, Cather! and river, Minnesota, $3,000. 9 Cog appeared at the Dakota National with aaa Plans Menoken Picnic) an order for $254 bearing the name Tog Angeles to Pay | of Gordon B. Cox typewritten as was C. ©. Talbott, state secretary, D. J. | the rest of the paper. | $30,000 in Damages Jess F. Cather, a soldier at Fort wer approved by the secretary at thc Lincoln, was bound over to district same time. They ranged from court, today, by Police Magistrate E. | $3,380,000 for the Delaware river pro)- 8, Allen, on a charge of forgery. He’ ect from Philadclphia to the sea to » is said to have obtained $46 at one of | few hundred dollars for smalle: the local banks and aitempted to ob-| works. They included: tain $254 at another. Cather was charged with using the | channel, name of Sergeant Hunter on a forged | $180,000. army order for $*6 which he had upper Mississippi river. Warroad harbor and river, Minne- sota, $11,000; and Baudette harbor Cox was called up to explain the Los Angeles, June 6.—(?)—Four ad- member of the board of administra- | Union picnic which will be held at the | said to have been revealed. Cather | $30,000 have been allowed against the tion, class at the state normal at Valley | June 18, acc-rding to William B. Fal- | City, June 12. | coner, county secretary. W. J. Church is to talk at the state | is to address the graduating |Menoken picnic grounds, Wednesday, | was turned over to the police. | who is but 20 years of age, confessed | Leaders in the state organization | his purpose. He said his mother is | the judgment here yesterday. He had ‘City of Los Angeles as the result of Later, “udge Allen says, the soldier. | the St. Francis dam disaster of 1928. Ray E. Rising yesterday was given normal school at Minot and at the | will address the picnickers between | dead and his father in bad health | brought suit for $175,000. Forestry school at Bottineau June 13./1 and 4 p.m. At 4p. m. the Farm- | somewhere in the east, so he wanted Rising was given $30,000 damage for J. E. Davis, chairman of the board,/ers Union rodeo w#I begin, under | to buy his way out of the army andthe death of his wife, and three will talk at the Dickinson Normal | supervision of “Bronch” School exercises. Miss Bertha R. Palmer, state su- | Alex” Asbridge. perinterdent of public instruction,! A dance at the Menoken Hall in the | and ex-officio member of the board,'evening is on the program, with is to address the graduating class at the Normal and Industrial school at Those who attend are urged to bring Ellendale and the school of science at lunch and plan to stay all day, Mr. ‘Wahpeton. June 12. | Palconer says. “Wild-Horse” Thomas, | go back home. Madland, and “Big! ary money, he sought to obtain the | | cash by forging checks. “Happy Bill” Johnson in charge. liam and other popular songs, is valued at! $250. Not having the neces- | daughters. Rising contended the breaking of the dam, which released a 15-foot een aan wall of water into the Santa Clara New York—The estate left by Wil-| river valley and drowned more than Denright Cobb, who wrote | 400 persons, was the result of faulty “Goodbye, Dolly Gray,” “Schooldays” | construction. The flood cost the city approxi- mately $7,000,000. 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