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i i CM TAKEN O VST 7 OUD PORT LNGOLN Youths Get Taste of Real U. S. Army Life Spending Over- night Out-of-Doors Students at Fort Lincoln’s annual Citizens Military Training camp this afternoon were to enjoy a visit to the site of old Fort Abri Lin- coln, a few south of Mandan along the Missouri river. The boys were to be taken to the location in automobiles by members of the Bismarck post of the Ameri- can Legion. Col. A. B. Welch, Man- dan, who is acquainted with Indian history, agreed to describe points of interest on the trip and give a short review of the history of the old! Army post. The boys received a taste of real army camp life Friday night and Saturday morning when they took a short practice march in full field equipment and pitched camp out- By? i, 45 NS mf te side the post. After sleeping on the MN pallatel! ground overnight, they broke camp Saturday morning and marched to ess Att tone their permanent tents. Company K this week won the streamer given each week for the “anhteee best all-around performance. Com- Ie re pany K defeated Company I 13 to eagle eter 9, and Company M trimmed Com- ae pany L in Friday’s basball games. Religious services will be con- ducted Sunday morning at 8:30 Wel ye o'clock, He nano iat gym- To nasium and Catholic in the hostess A house. \ AGM y Mt eaten Standing in three athletic leagues te at the camp Saturday morning were: usar. Baseball c ii Ww a Pet. “ ompany 4 1.000 Company L 2 2 .500| La! Company K 22 fo | Clear ke | Company | .. o4 . Volleyball By MYRTLE CHRISTENSEN Genviany L. WL iFct. | Mr. and Mrs. Christ Scheon and son Company M 2 1 .667| Gussie were Bismarck callers Wed- Company I 12 "33 | nesday. Gussie received his usual Company K 0 3 ‘000 medical treatments. Kittenball Miss Charlotte Olson visited with W L Pet,| ber cousin, Miss Nora Olson, over the Company L 21 oe7| eee Company I 2 1 .667|__A surprise shower was given on Company M 1 2. .333/ Mrs. Roy Smith Thursday afternoon. Company K 1 2 .333! Mr, and Mrs. Boyd Randolph and CAPONE IS AT MERCY OF JUDGE HE DEFIED Wilkerson But Won When He Appealed Chicago, June 27.—(P}—A kindly ex-school teacher whose brisk actions belie his 61 years will sentence “Scar- face Al” Capone June 30 on the erst- while gang chief's plea of guilty to federal indictments charging income tax evasion and liquor law violations. Twice in the last 15 months have the Capone brothers—Ralph and Al —sidestepped his judicial decrees, but now United States Judge James H. ‘Wilkerson can prescribe punishment for the more notorious brother with assurance that the “rap” will be tak- ay | Capone's plea of guilty to the fed- eral charges, rounded up after a long | campaign by United States Attorney George E. Q. Johnson and his aides, admits of no appeal. Brother Also Appealed | In April, 1930, Ralph Capone was | found guilty and sentenced to three years in prison for tax frauds. Last January Al was found guilty of con- tempt of court and got a six months’ sentence. Both sentences, passed by Judge Wilkerson, still are under ap- Peal. Judge Wilkerson, who received an A. B. degree from DePauw university in 1889 and an LL.D. degree there in 1892, has risen steadily to his present post. He was a high school principal in Hastings, Neb., one year, an instruc- tor at DePauw for two and in 1902 be- came a member of the Illinois house of representatives. Took Bench In 1922 The next year he was Cook county attorney, then special assistant to the United States attorney-general, then United States district attorney and chairman of the Illinois public service commission. In 1922 he took | ba place on the district judge's bench | ere. | Unlimited patience with lawyers in the preparation of their cases, punc- tuality In getting his court opened and under way at 10 o'clock each/ morning, alertness on the bench and his active sense of humor have made Judge Wilkerson’s court popular. When he is annoyed or thinking furiously, he paws a lock of his slight- ly gray hair down over his forehead. He lives in suburban Glencoe with his wife and one son. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | FOR RENT—Modern two room and/ kitchenette furnished apartment on second floor, all outside windows, nice and cool. Price reasonable. children of Lansford are visiting with Randolph's parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Paslay. A number of persons from this vi- | cinity attended the dance given by Adolph Hansen and Willie Scheon at the Jens Hansen home Saturday eve- ning. Friends from Litchville called on Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Smith the latter Sentenced Once Before by Judge, part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eisenbize | spent Saturday evening at the Henry | Neiman home. | Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Olson and Mr. | and Mrs. Henry Olson and family vis- | ited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Burns Bailey near Moffit. Boyd Randolph returned to his home at Lansford Monday. Mrs. Randolph and children will remain for an extended visit with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Paslay. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Olson and niece spent Wednesday in Bismarek. -—_—_—_————______—_. & | Schrunk J < By MARGARET MARCHANT Emil and Annie Stroh, Annie and Ruth Wahl, Ted Hochalter, Gust Witt and Herbert Hoffman were Sunday | visitors at the Marchant home. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hochalter and Emil ‘Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Julius Hauff and son Albert spent Tuesday at the home of her parents. Margaret Marchant spent Wednes- Road work begun in Schrunk town- ship Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Roth of Tuttle Mrs. Roth was formerly Bertha Witt of this vicinity. The two small children of Dave at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stroh while their mother is in Bismarck. Charles Johns and daughter Miss Theo, Margaret and Irene Marchant, Annie and Emil Stroh spent Saturday night in McClusky. Driscoll — By MRS. F. 0. JOHNSON Mrs. Irving Hanson of Bismarck is Adam Eisenbeinz for a week. Little Velma Anunson entertained @ few friends at a birthday party Saturday afternoon. Mrs. I. H. Omodt and daughter, Dorothy. left for Idaho Saturday for a visit. Mrs. Mackey and brother, Lowe Diger of Flasher, called on Mrs. Rey- nolds on their way to Fargo. The Driscoll 4-H. club met with May and Lois Anunson Thursday aft- ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Johns spent Sunday as the H. M. Ward farm near Baldwin. Chas. Swanson Ri Pome ‘ae Stroh motored to Bismarck | day evening with Mabel Pytle in Wing. Theodore Nolan is ill with the mumps, are parents of a son born Thursday. | Hochalter's are spending this week | | l Missouri . ——— visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. SAMPSON AND DELILAH Vj yy 2 ~ Of, —> © Ml Ny thyt Tif SS : yy Q TRWILLIAMS 0-26 ©1031 BY NEA Co Ime. and Miss Lilly Sampson at dinner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Johnson spent @ few days in Fargo. Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Olson enter- tained Mr. and Mrs, E. C. Ruble and Rev. Lars Foss Sunday evening Miss Helen Anderson of Bismarck Spent Saturday and Sunday with Wilma Van Vleet. Miss Nora Hendrickson and a friend of Harvey, were supper guests at the A. H. Meland home Sunday. They were on their way to the Bad | Lands, | Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Meland, Mra. jVic. Pederson and Ernest Meland day afternoon. Miss Josephine Johnson returnea Monday from a week’s stay in James- town and a short visit in Steele. |. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Syverson en- |tertained Mr. and Mrs. Ed Madson jand Mr. and Mrs. Carl Meland Sun- day. Mrs. A. H. Knudson is at home ; again after a stay in the Bismarck | hospital. Mrs. Knudson is improving nicely. | Mr. and Mrs. Metcalf entertained | Hull at dinner Wednesday. o——__—_ —_____—_—_-» | Ecklund > By JUSTICE MORRIS Mr. and Mrs. H. A. McCullough left by car for Iowa Monday where they will visit relatives. Mrs. Bennie Lein of Regan visited with her mother Mrs. Harry Dimond Thursday. Bennie Anderson returned to his home Monday from Worden, Mont., where he has been visiting with his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Archie Holden. Mr. and Mrs. John Vollan were callers at the Willard Dimond home | Monday evening. John and Vergil Morris of Bis- marck visited at the T. F. Morris home Sunday. | Mr, and Mrs. Howard Taplin were | callers in- Wilton Saturday. | Aldyth McCullough spent the week- |end at her home. | Among those that visited at the T. F. Morris home Sunday were Levi Bennie and Clarence Anderson, Sam Brown, Gladys Nelson, Elsie Keator, | Arthur Reisch, Issie Brown, Ralph |Taplin, Teddie Anderson, Frank | Miller, Vernal and Margaret Ander- son, Carl and Fred Herdebu, and | Steve and Brandt Morris. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Anderson and | Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cornell visited at | the Victor Anderson home Sunday. | A number of the young folks from this vicinity attended the rodeo at the Bert Hendershott home Sunda; | afternoon. | Miss Mabel McCullough has been driving mail for George Gray the Past week. ° By L. M. CRAWFORD Miss Eleanor McDonald spent Wed- nesday night as the guest of her sis- | ter, Mrs. Andrew Irvine. Miss Lucille Crawford spent sev- eral days with her sister, Mrs. Clif- |ton Kimball last week while Mr. Kimball was in Dunsieth. Miss Edna Doehl of Moffit is spending a few days visiting with her sister Mrs. Leslie Clark. The Misses Caroline and Imogene Irvine spent Thursday night with their grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. William McDonald. Mr, and Mrs. James McDonnell vis- ited at the Clark home Saturday night and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Studie Woodworth | were callers at Sam Robinson's Sun- | day afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. John Crawford, Henry Crawford Sr., Mr. and Mrs. James Robidou spent Sunday visit- ing at the William Mills home near Brittin. Mr. and Mrs. Emory Woodworth -|sionary society gathering at the Stewartsdale church Thuraday. Mr. and Mrs. George Robidou and Mrs. Lerry White of Bismarck, Mrs. Ida White end daughter, Miss Flor- |Went fishing at Crystal Springs Mon- | | Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hull and Mrs. E. | ence of Spokane, Wash., visited at the John Crawford and William McDon- ald homes Saturday evening. W. E. Cleveland spent Saturday night and Sunday visiting with his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Emory Woodworth, Mrs. Joe Clooten returned to this vicinity Monday where she will visit for some time. Mrs. Clooten has been in Kansas for the pass month. f Florence Lake ° Sane 2 By HELEN WITT | ly and Charles Johns and son Ver- | non and daughters Alice and Clover | E. E. Glanville purcahsed the old schoolhouse in Florence Lake Satur- day. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seilinger and family, Mr. and Mrs. John Witt, Fred | Smith, Emma Hinbouch and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Glanville were Wing shop- | Pers Monday. |. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scalion and fam- jy and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johus and family motored to Wing Wednes- day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Tees and son Junior spent Sunday afternoon at the o Josephine Tees home. D. T. McClellan was...a business caller in Bismarck this week. Ruth Lytle spent the week visiting Alice Johns. Miss Theo Johns arrived here this been attend¥ig school. Monday to get his wife and daughter Esther, who have been visiting at the Jacob Roth home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seilienger and family and Emma Hindbouch spent Monday evening at the Herman Set- linger home. VALUABLE TERRACES E. G. Johnson, farm mechanics ex- tension specialist of the University of Illinois’ college of Agriculture, esti- mates that terraces are worth $30 an acre in preventing erosion. WORLD COMPETITION About 90 per cent of the products of American farms are directly af- fected by foreign competition, Arthur M. Hyde, secretary of agriculture, re- Ports. Forest planting in the United States in 1930 amounted to 138,970 acres, an increase of 24 per cent over the planting of 1929. This report of the U. 8. Forest Service is based on MANUEL B. COSSIO Madrid, June 24.—(#)—While gov- ernment officials are preparing for the opening of the National Assem- bly on July 14, political circles are buzzing with the name of Manuel Bartolome Cossio, 74-year-old school teacher as a: presidential prospect. Senior Cossio has been little known asa politician, but he is widely’ re- pperted as an ‘educator and; adminis- +. The task of picking a new presi- dent to succeed Niceto Alcala Zamora, who is head of the provisional junta, | falls upon the assembly as one of its important tasks along with fram- Ane A comatitaion for the. new ropase Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith and fam- ° | called at the John Witt home Sunday. | week from Mayville where she has William Witt motored to Tuttle | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1981 PRICE-CUTTING IS FEARED BECAUSE OF CANADA PROPOSAL Prime Minister Suggests Gov-| ernment Absorb Part of | Transportation Chatge Washington, June 27.—(?}—Anoth- |er world price-slashing orgy is fearcd | by some American experts if the Ca- jnadian plan to cut the freight rate {on export wheat is reflected in quo- | tations to foreign buyers. | Prime Minister Bennett has pro- posed that the government absorb |five cents a bushel in the transpor-| tation charge. That is, pubilc car-| |riers would haul export wheat to the| | Seaboard for five cents a bushel less than the usual rate and the govern- ment would refund the «lifference, | Theoretically the exporter would add the saving in freight to the price he paid for wheat. He no doubt , Would if there were a scarcity of wheat in the world market ard con- sumer countries were bidding for grain. | There is, however, an overabun- \dance of wheat, and every exporter in the world is fighting for a sale. Rather than add his freight saving to the purchase price the Canadian exporter naturally might be expected to deduct it from his selling price. Recall U. 8. Experience It is recalled that a year agu, when |President Hoover persuaded the railroads to lower the rate to the seaboard 7% cents to alleviate the dometic emergency, the Igwer trans- Portation cost was reflected in export quotations and the general world | price of wheat dropped 10 cents a bushel under furious competition among other nations to meet Amer- ican prices. Dr. J. W. T. Duvel, chief of the U. 8. grain futures administration, says that any attempt to offer Cana- dian wheat to the world at a lower | price undoubtedly would bring instant |reductions to Russian and Argentine |srain and, if the United States were to stay in the export market, a com- |parable decrease in quota. tions. Set-Up Awaited | | It seems to be the general impres-| 4th sion in Canada that paliament will provide a set-up by which the pro- ducer will get the benefit of the low- er freight rate, Nevertheless, economists say there is always a question who gets the benefit of a cut in freight rates; whether the producer if the market {is hungry, or the consumer if the market is glutted. Since 70 per cent of Canada’s wheat goes into export, any arrange- ment whereby foreign consumptioa of the prairie product could be stim- ulated without lowering the. price to the producer would be considered of vast importance. BABIES MUCH ALIKE, RESEARCHERS FIN Progress Through Same Cycles of Co-ordination and Locomotion All Minneapolis, June 27.—()—Moth- | ers may not believe it, but it seems that babies are pretty much alike, Two years of scientific study by reserch. workers at the University: of Minnesota -Child Welfare Institute has presented proof that all babies Progress through the same cycles of co-ordination, locomotive and motor Play. One baby may reach one stage fas- ter than others, but despite claims of mothers—and fathers—the study has indicated that no baby can skip any of them. Dr. Mary M. Shirley, a director of the research, has concluded that tho order of development is as immu- table as the course of Jupiter or Pluto. A chronological table showing the times for the first smile, the initial expression of a desire to todcle and the original impulse to swallow a pin is one result of the study. At six days of age the table shows that the average baby’s eyes first follow light, while two weeks later it will watch persons in the room with it. At 14 weeks it reaches for and touches objects and seven weeks later it first enjoys the thrill of putting objects in its mouth. The grand mo- ment when it can play with its toes comes when it is 25 weeks old. When the median baby is between 30 ‘and 31 weeks of age it can sit alone for a full minute. At 45 weeks it walks when led and also creeps. ‘Two weeks later it can pull itself up and stand with support. Worn-out spark plugs waste gasoline Every time you try to get more than10,000milesonasetofepark plugs, you stert buying. extra gasoline. Buy a new set of ACs instead. You save gasoline, = AC get better engine Change your performance. spark plugs every lO,OO0Omiles ‘NLA LEWIS FORGIVEN BY SAUK CENTRE RESDENTS Caustic Critic Did Not Aim Satire at Them, Former Fel- low-Townsmen Say Sauk Centre, Minn., June 27—(AP) —Main Street is at peace once again with its favorite son and worst critic, Its pavement still burns under the noonday sun, gangs still gather around the drugstore corner and sing “Sweet Adeline’—but somewhere, somehow, things seem a little better ce Sinclair Lewis announced that Main Street, after all, is “all right.” He didn’t come out here and mgke @ speech at a local luncheon club; instead he was given space in the high school annual to pen his im- ressions of the town which once elt some pretty intensive resent- ment when it was accepted as the locale of scenes in his best seller, “Main Street.” Values His Experiences If he could have a second boy- hood, Lewis writes in the annual “O-Sa-Ge,” he again would choose a Rane village, and in his article lain Streeters believe they read an explanation that his novel never was aimed directly at its people, ways and talk at all, “It is extraordinary how deep is the impression made by the place of one’s birth and rearing and how lasting are its memories,” Lewis said under the title, “The Long Arm of the Small Town.” “It is 29 years now since I left Sauk Centre to go east to college. In this more than a quarter of a century I have been back two or three times for a couple of months, several times for a couple of weeks, but otherwise I have been utter! out of touch with the town. Yet it is as vivid in my mind as though I had left there yesterday, “I find myself Mapa! of its streets and its Feople and the fa- miliar, friendly faces when I on the great avenues of New Fork Paris, Berlin or Stockholm; when I am in little stony hilly villages of Italy or sun-basking villas in Spain or the ancient yellow temples of ens. 10 Miles Between Towns “To me, forever, 10 miles will not be a distance in the mathematical tables, but slightly more than a dis- tance from Sauk Centre to Melrose. |. “To me, forever, the direction west will have nothing to do with California or the Rockies; it will be that direction which is to the left—toward Noboken hill—if you face the house of Dr. E. J. Lewis. _“‘So primitive _and inherent the impressions of Boyhood. And I, who am writing this in Connecticut ———ee_—_—_—_— “AN ADDRESS OF DISTINCTION” of a Nation” Tax logical meeting place of those who appreciate the superlative in foods . . . ele- ce_in accommodations. detail. Rates begin ot $4 per dey. Permanent Suites at THE HOTEL, CHICAGO Under Blackstone Management (of Europe, for matter of that. shall go in mid-day to the farm bought in Vermont haven’t lightest regret that I was born reared in a prairie village in- stead of in New England or New ‘York, old England or the continent! and “If I seem to have criticised prai- rie villages, I have certainly criti- cised them no more than I have New York or Paris or the great uni- versities, I am quite certain that I could have been born and reared in no place in the world where I could have had more friendliness.” CANADA LOSES, TOO Entomologists of the Canadian De- partment of Agriculture estimate that insects do more than $125,000,000 worth of damage to crops in the do- minion every year. ‘PAYS TO THIN TREES Peaches paid from 25 to 50 cents more a bushel, tree run, and apples paid 34 cents more a bushel where the fruit had been properly thinned over in North Carolina, World pork production figures, as gathered by the U. 8. Department of Agriculture, indicate that production in the United States and Canada probably will show a marked decline. European production, however, is showing ® marked increase. You’ TWO SISTERS AR MOTHERS OF YANK, GERMAN SOLDIERS Mrs. Elizabeth Streiber, Cleve- land, and Mrs. Anna Vau- pel Reunited Paris, June 27—another vivid ex- ample of how families are struck by the forces of war has been seen here by the meeting, brought about by the Gold Star Mother pilgrim- age, of two dear old ladies, one the proud mother of an American hero and the other a proud mother hero of a German hero. And these mothers are sisters, : Mrs. Elizabcth Streiber, of Cleve- land, came to France to visit the rave of her son, Private Walter J. treiber of the 11th Infantry, 5th Division, who fell in the Argonne drive. But in her sorrow there was another deep feeling. She had a younger sister whom she had not seen for 57 years. 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