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(+ THRESHING RETURNS SHOW BIG YIELD IN ~-REDRIVER VALLEY Conditions Spotted, Says Farm- ers Union Survey; Western Balloonists of 5 Nations to Race for Bénnett Trophy at Cleveland | ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1930 ‘ backs of 1929 who will return and see Plenty of service. Captain-elect Milo Lodoen, West- hope, is expected back at his end po- sition, and Casswell Mills, Minot, will be at the other flank, Holding down the tackle jobs will | be Walter Johnson and “Bud” Mer- | fen, Minot, each tipping the scales over 170 pounds. Merle Ahistrom, Carpio, who played center last year, and Harry Larson, Dunseith, ad Allen Feldner, Donnybrook, will complete the line. Present indications are that Cole- Cl 272 Entered in Marathon Swim jarence Ross, Norman Ross, Marvin Nelson, George Blag- den Among Entrants Toronto, Aug. 27.—(P)—The Value Slick Estate i | At Over $75,000,000 1 Clarion, Pa., Aug. 27.—()}—An es- tate estimated at beween $75,000,000 and $100,000,000 was disposed of in the will of Thomas B. Slick, inde- pendent oil operator, which was pro- bated today. Slick was reputed to be the wealthiest independent oil opera- tor in the world. The vast fortune was left to the widow, three children and Slick’s To Start Good Will Trip to So. America Winnipeg, Man., Aug. 27.—(7)—A good-will and educational air tour from Winnipeg to Buenos Aires will be started trom Stevenson aerodrome here late today by H. 8. Miller, a Des Moines, Iowa, newspaperman. The flight will cover 20,620 miles including the return trip from Buenos Aires to Des Moines involving 23 days of actual flying. He will travel via man will use Allen Johnson, Donny- anadian National exhibition's 15- mother. While no estimate of the regular commercial air routes. Section Hardest Hit brook, at quarterback. After the opening game with the mile marathon swim in Lake Ontario today attracted 272 entrants. value of the estate was contained in the will, Slick’s attorney and others The object of the tour, he explained, is to focus public attention on the The first five to finish split $15,- 000—$10,000 to the winner; $2,500 for second place; $1,750 for third; $500 for fourth; $250 for fifth. The United States furnished the feasibility of expedient and safe air Passage in the western hemisphere. His first stop will be St. Paul. HEAT ENDS ENDURANCE Foresters here, Oct. 4, Mayville State Teachers college will oppose the Mi- not eleven at Minot, and the follow- ing week the first. game away from home will take the athletes to Moor- Threshing returns from farms in Minnesota and eastern North Dakota have been running considerably heav- jer than early estimates with quality who were closely associated with him Provided an estimate of its worth. EIGHT DI£ IN FIGHT of grain excellent, the Farmers Union Terminal Association says in its weekly crop report today. “The harvest has been the earliest in the memory of many veteran grain men,” the survey says. “As a result, the receipts of 1930 wheat at Min- nesota terminals have been the larg- est for August of any year that many Brain traders remember for wheat grown in the same year. v1 “One unfavorable result of the heavy August receipts of grain in the Minnesota terminals is that it has tended to depress prices but grain traders generally think that the ef- head, Minn. The Dickinson Normal squad will | invade Minot for a game Nov. 1 and the following week the Beavers jour- ney to Jamestown to face Jamestown college. Perhaps the most interesting game of the. season is booked for Oct. 18 when the annual installment of a long standing gridiron feud is enacted ty before @ coleefil homecoming crowd /2#0¢ Roland Tehgtmeier, Tacoma, with Valley City Teachers as the op- | Wash. Position. winner last year in the person of Ed Keating, New York, and had a formidable contingent. entered today. Carrying the hopes of the stars and stripes were such stars as Clarence Ross, New York; Norman Ross, Chicago; Marvin Nelson, _ Fort Dodge, Ia.; George Blagden, Mem- phis, Tenn.; Sam Shields, Miami, Fla.; Lyle Hubbard, Toledo, 0.; John McMahon, New London, Conn.; ‘the only woman entrant also was from the United States, Ann Priller Benoit, Miami, who finished fifth in Mexico City, Aug. 27—(P}—A dispatch to Universal from Oaxaca States that eight persons were killed and six wounded in a battle this week between villagers of Santa Etla and Magdalena’ Apazco, on one side and Asuncion and Santo Domingo on the other. The dispatch says the Oaxaca government stated the battle was! fought over a farm boundary dis-| pute, with rifles, pistols, machetes and knives. Lebourget, France, Aug. 27.—(7\— Terrific heat which caused her to have a slight sun stroke in mid-air today forced Maryse Bastie, French aviatrix, to the ground in the midst of her attempt to break the world’s duration flight record. A railroad sign from Verdun and @ lantern from a Verdun catherra! are among war relics exhibited by the Chicago Historical society. Morrow Lindsey, 16-year-old Alex- the women’s 10-mile marathon swim andria, La., youth who recently won| last week. @ municipal tournament, scored two | holes in one within a week. | fects of the heavy arrivals have been discounted by the action of the market. “Yields of wheat and some other grains in eastern North Dakota also have been larger than was anticipat- ed, with unusually favorable results in the Red River Valley in both Min- nesota and North Dakota. The first “open match play” golf tournament ever held on the Pacific Paul McBrayer, Kentucky's all- coast will take place in San Fran- Southern basketball guard, will try cisco, December 4 to 7, for a $7,500 out for an end on the football team. | purse. Summer Dress Sale Beginning Tomorrow Morning.at Leading balloonists of five nations will try for the Bennett Trophy Labor Day at Cleveland, including Ward T. Van Orman (left) and Ernest DeMuyter (shaking hands), Roland J. Blair (lower right) and Edmund J. Hill. Start of last year’s race is shown at top. “While crop conditions in Minne- Sota have been considered fairly favorable, yields on all crops are run- ning ahead of expectations, though Prospects for flax are rather poor and for potatoes only fair. The early hay crop was quite large and sweet clover and alfalfa fields generally are in fair condition. While there was considerable drouth damage to corn, it is largely in spots and the pros- Pective yield for the state is large. Alfalfa and sweet clover particularly have proved their worth in providing feed for livestock, as other pastures €re pretty well burned up. Rains Help Pastures “Fairly liberal rains in North Da- kota have improved pastures but. moisture is needed for pastures and fall feed. Harvesting is generally finished and threshing from shock and stack is far advanced due to dry weather, which at least is favorable for garnering ‘the grain. Corn has gone backward and late planted corn will be good only for fodder pur- Poses. Potatoes and garden vege- tables are poor. Wheat yields gener- ally have been running from 5 to 15 bushels in the state, except for the Red River Valley and some other favored sections of eastern North Da- kota, where yields as high as 25 to 30 bushels an acre are reported. “Around Sheyenne and Eddy coun- ty, North Dakota, weather has been unfavorable for corn and feed crops. | 8 Flax is showing no improvement. Hay ‘crops are below average, barley and cats below normal and conditions un- Satisfactory with pastures short and ‘drying up fast. “Crop conditions are spotted and far below normal in western North Dakota and most of Montana, though Cleveland —(#)—Eight silken bags, bearing the colors of five nations, will be cast to the winds here Labor Day in the nineteenth international Gor- don Bennett balloon race. 2 It will be a silent battle in the clouds—three their mounts for the fifth straight Amer-|MacCracken, aide ican victory while five foreigners tinker with valves and scatter sand ballast to take the classic trophy abroad. Rivalry will be sharpest between champion, 5 Belgium balloonist who single-handed won the first Bennett award with three consecutive victories. They are the lone pilots to win more than once. DeMuyter’s record it. Louis . Pittsburgh Boston .. Cincinnati Philadelphi AMERICAN LEAGIE Clu! WwW. lL Philadelphia Washington New ¥Y there are areas in both of these sec- | Det tions which will produce fair crops. ‘The feed situation is serious in this area, “A report from the State ment of Agriculture of South Dakota says corn has deteriorated greatly. As an example of the early harvest, it was stated that 60 per cent of the wheat had been harvested by August 15, compared with 41 per cent in 1929 ‘and 22 per cent in 1928 at correspond- Ming dates.” f Tombstone Samples ' Taken from Graves < Fergus Falls, Minn., Aug. 27.—()— Buspected of removing tombstones from graves and using them as sam- ples in taking orders for the stones, Edwin E. Wigand; Wood Lake, will hhave a hearing on a charge of second ‘degree larceny here Friday. Officers claim Wigand represented the Home Granite company of Wood Lake, but authorities of Yellow Medi- cine county say no such organization vexists. ‘When arrested, Wigand had three small tombstones in his automobile. Sheriff O. J. Tweten of Otter Tail ‘county investigated and found the stones had been removed from graves 4n the cemetery at Blowers. Officers say Wigand collected con- Siderable money from residents in the Bluffton and New York Mills section. ‘Wigand was accompanied by his wife and two children while traveling, of- ficers said. TO PROBE FATAL WRECK Olivia, Minn., Aug. 27—()—Prepa- ations were made for an inquest to- day into the death of three persons in a headon automobile collision west of here. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dillon, Eden, Wis. and Mr. Dillon’s sister, Mrs. Tom Smith, also of Eden, were killed when their automobile collided with a truck two miles from here yesterday. Coroner August Dirks, Olivia, will conduct the inquest. BOMB FORBIDDEN CITY Peiping. China, Aug. 27.—(P}—Two pationalist flying from ‘Gimanfu drogped six bombs in the ‘Tartar city and the forbidden city . |in the home run race. BABE FOR BACLANOVA ‘ Los Angeles, Aug. 27.—(?)—Olga aclanova, Russian film star, wife of ficholas Soussanin, actor, is _the mother of a nine-pound son. The ehild was born®last Friday but its ar- ~ fival was not made known immedi- ptely. DANCE Louisville St. Paul . Toledo .. Minneapoii Kansas City Columbus .. Milwaukee Indianapolis Hack Wilson, Man NewYorkDropped, Is Home Run King Pudgy Cub Outfielder Swats No. 44 to Tie Babe Ruth for Present Season ~~ Chicago, Aug. 27.—(AP)—Hack Wilson, the man the New York Giants once forgot, is the new home tun king of the National league: The pudgy Cub outfielder ascend- ed to his throne during the seventh inning of the Chicago-Pittsburgh game yesterday when he belted one of Larry French’s southpaw slants into the tht field bleachers at Wrigley field for his forty-fourth circuit smash of the season, one more than- the all-time record es- tablished a year ago by “Chuck” Klein of the Phillies. The blow not only helped the Cubs defeat the Pirates, 7 to 5, and hike their lead over the Giants to five and one-half games in the Na- tional league pennant struggle, but tied Hack with Babe Ruth in the fight for home run honors of the major leagues for 1930. enty-eight of Wilson’s homers this season have been made at Wrig- ley field with 16 on foreign fields. ison, a ponderous fellow despite his five and one-half foot pest: broke into the majors in 1923 when he joined the Giants. Although he batted fairly well, he was released to the Toledo club of the American association. There he was a sensa- tion with a .343%batting average but the Giants forgot him and the Cubs grabbed him via the draft in 1926, His first year with the Cubs found him in front of the growing home run brigade with 21 four base blows. The next year he hit 30 and in 1928 he batted out 31 to tie for first place While Klein established his National league rec- ord ue year with 43, Wilson banged out. Jamestown Horse 3rd In Des Moines Event Des Moines, Iowa, Aug. 27—(P)— Leon Worthy, owned by the Reynolds Stables, Kansas City, won the 2:15 trot and @ purse of $1,812, the feature event of yesterday's great western circuit horse racing program at the Towa State Fair. Leon Worthy romped home first in the second and third heats after be- 3 Foresters, Mayville, Dickinson, is the most impressive with victories in 1920, 1922, 1923, nad 1924. Van Orman pits against it his record of victories in 1926 and 1929 and four consecutive firsts in the national elimination balloon race. Van Orman will pair with Alan last year when their gas bag floated 341 miles for first place, the shortest distance ever covered by a Bennett race winner. Veterans will man two other Amer- ican entries, Edmund J. Hill and Ar- thur G. Schlosser, winners in 1927, and Roland-J. Blair, one-time army balloonist, and F. A. Trotter, a former navy midshipman, The French will have two balloons, guided by the pilots Doitard and | Herbe, while Hugo Kaulen, jr., will) ing second in the first heat. G. W., owned by C. B. Buckley, Jamestown, N. D., and driven by Billy Smith, took third money in this event, finishing | fifth, second, and fourth in the three | heats. The best time was 2:08%. Minot Teachers to Tackle Ambitious | Gridiron Program Moorhead, Jamestown, Valley City Play Minot, N. D., Aug. 27.—@)Open- ing with School of Forestry at Bottineau, the Minot Teachers college s race for Germany, for the fodrth time. Canada has filed entry papers but has not named the pilot and aide who will race. Belgium earned ownership of the first trophy, donated by James Gor- don Bennett, New York publisher and sportsman, by DeMuyter’s third suc- cessive victory in 1924. It donated the second emblem, which went to the United States by Capt. W. E. Kepner's victory in 1938 after Van Ormen and Hill had won in 1926 and 1927. The third award, donated by the United States, went into competition last year, Van Orman winning the first leg for America. football team will engage in one of the most ambitious schedules in its history. The program calls for contests with every state. school in the Interstate Athletic Conference witM the excep- tion of one, and will start Oct. 4 and run through Nov. 11. Coach J. W. Coleman has issued the call to candidates to report one week before school opens, and he ex- pects pearly all of the last year's reg- ulars back in uniform. The addition of a number of for- mer. high school stars will bolster the squad and Coleman expects to turn out @ machine that will go far in conference play: y * Olaf Ribb Returns Leading the vanguard of returning lettermen will be Olof Ribb, Donny- brook, last year’s captain and rated one of the classiest halfbacks of the conference. Bernard Busse, Minot, and Douglas Johnson, Carrington, are other half- A THE magoetic,got den voiced star of grond opera DON JOSE MOJICA Performances: 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 Capitol T THURSDAY Theatre OME T Baby ills and ailments seem twice as serious at night. A sud- den cry may mean colic. Or a sudden attack of diarrhea—a con- dition it is always important to check quickly. How would you meet this emergency—tonight? Have you a bottle of Castoria ready? There is nothing that can take the place of this harmless but effective remedy for children; nothing that acts quite the same, or has quite the same comforting effect on them. For the protection of your wee one—for your own peace of mind —keep this old, reliable prepara- ti a 9:00 o'Clock ‘ion always on hand. But don’t , keep it just for emergencies; let it be an everyday aid. Its gentle influence will ease and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. Its mild regulation will help an older child whose tongue is coated. because of sluggish bowels. have Castoria; the genuine bears Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature on AU druggists he wrapper, Just a Word of -CAUTION the tremendous success of ENNA JETHICK has invited many imitations Ki ‘amet WE POSITIVELY GUARANTEE. There's no quictcr acting, freeae, fons cz better ¥-TOX 131s Clear NEED ling 40,000 People Annually Breeding by the Millions » Hatched in THE FEARFUL \7hat You Get. See \ fow Look for the name ENNA JETTICK on the sole and lining of every pairof 5@ _ ENNA * JETTICK Filth SUPER-STRENGTH 2 to 10 Times as Effective 4s Many Substitutes Cheaper to Use ‘Will Not Stain Pleasing Fregrance « PLY-1 Harmless to People FLY.TOX FLY-TOX Made by the Largest Spray Business in the World KILLS THEM ALL ONI This assortment of about 30 beautiful sum- mer dresses are of washable silks and some chif- fons formerly priced as high as $22.! out tomorrow morning while they $5.00 ‘ \ 50. To clean last for only Voile House Dresses, a good assortment formerly priced at $2.25, to close out, only \ $1.00 COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION SARAH GOLD SHOP Style Without Extravagance JONES G 312 Main Avenve ROCERY We Feature Patterson Seal Brand Canned Goods Now located in our new place of business, 411 Broadway, Cowan Block Our New Store Is Open for Your Inspection We would like every housewife to pay us a visit. As ag hot Wednesday, Aug. 27, ‘ial inducement we will give away free to every isewife making a purchase at our store during this sale to Saturday, Aug. 30 FREE---FREE A Beautiful Flower Vase Let Us Serve You BLUE ROSE , RICE » 3 Ibs. for . 21le SWANSDOWN : CAKE FLOUR “> Per pkg. . '" 25¢ P. & G. SOAP ‘N10 bars » 34c PEANUT BUTTER 82 oz. glass “jar 35c Patterson Seal 1000 Island Salad Dressing ADDS THE Fi GHT JELLO, Any Flavor 3 pkgs. for. FF 19c ¥ GRANULATED SUGAR / 10 Ibs. for 53c CARNATION MILK 3 tall cans 25c Patterson Seal NISHING TOUCH TO ANY MEAL ; Music by Virginia Ravens’ Colored Orchestra Don’t forget Labor Day Dance Sept. Ist