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AK BISMAKCK ‘TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1931 PIONEERS 10 GIVE. * PARK SIT 0 fT to! Attorney General Morris Give Principal Address at Ceremony Between 200 and 300 Burleigh coun- ty pioneers are expected to be present | ‘at the dedicatory ceremonies at the} Burleigh County Pioneers Memorial ; Park north of the city Thursday eve- ning when the park will formally be presented to the city, ! ‘The park is sityated about two miles | northwest of tMe city on the hills | overlooking the river. ! James Morris, attorney general, will be the principal speaker. William Watson, McKenzie, pres- | ident of the association, will preside. | George Will, Bismarck, will make the presentation on behalf of the pioneers | association and Rev. Father John} Slag will respond for the Bismarck | Park board. | The festivitics will begin at 5 p.m. | ‘Those attending have heen asked to bring their lunch so that they may participate in the picnic which will be held in the timber land below the rk. Officials of the organization said ‘Wednesday that coffee and lemonade | would be supplied by the association! aid potato chip manufacturers, and buyers for hotels and restaurants 1n/ free of charge. | which French fried potatoes are serves ‘An invitation to attend has teen | specialist of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, has devised a test to de-' for this purpose, With a solution of picric) acid and sodium carbonate, the amount of soluble sugar in a sample potato of sugar indicates unfitness, photograph of the club will be taken, The Shriners will leave in two spe- cial Pullman cars from Mandan the afternoon of July 10. At St. Paul the two cars will be joined by a dozen cthers carrying Shriners to the con- The train is to be known as ‘the “Northwest Indian Special.” extended to the general public. RADIO ENTERTAINER IS GUEST OF ROTARY Captain Tim Healy, of Austra- lian Intelligence Service, Gives Talk termine the fitness of potatoes | MANDAN NEWS 14 GLEN ULLIN GIRL | SCOUTS WIN BADGES Troop Again Planning Annual: Encampment; Study Courses Are Outlined Captain Tim Healy, nationally known through his radio talks on his experiences as a member of the Aus- tralian Army Intelligence Service dur- ing the World War, gave a short talk before the Bismarck Rotary club at} the organization's luncheon meeting | | Wednesday. | | Healy was in the city to make a Personal visit to station KFYR, mem- | ber of the National Broadcast! company radio chain. The Austr. ian at present is on a tour making visits to all stations of the chain He came here from the Twin Cities and was to give his regular talks over the local radio station at 4:30 and 7 P m. today. Friday he will speak before the students of Minot state teachers college and Saturday will| "i Turk. and Caroline Navertile | make a feature appearance at the | The group took its eats Vi Northwest State Fair, Minot |der Mrs. M. B. Stelg, R. N. In his talk before the club, Captain | Healy informally described a few of his interesting experiences during the | World War. Guests at the club meeting were V. T. Collins, Louisville, Ky.; R. D. Ward, Minnewaukan; W. Camp- bell, Boulder, Colo.; W. F. McClel- Jand, Mandan; L. R. Baird, Dickin- son; R. N. Rishworth, Jamestown Father Robert Sheehan, recent grad- uate of Catholic College of Theology, Washington, D. C.; and former resi- dent of Bismarck. Supreme Court Justice A. M. Christianson made an appeal to mem- bers of the club for more cots for Camp Chan Owapi, Boy Scout camp. A report on the work of the vo- cational committee was given by Carl Nelson, while George Duemeland pre- sented the treasurer's report and N. O. Churchill reported on community service work. A tribute was paid by Dr. R. S. ‘Tawne to George Bird, outgoing sec- retary who has held that office for four successive year. Bird was pre- sented with a set of Mark Twain) books in appreciation for his services, A past president's service pin was presented to John Hoffman, retiring president. The club now has 11 past | presidents, all active members of the | eaten. Mr. Hoffman responded | an y Bergeson, the new president, ‘ - ma seated with a gavel emblema- eri tiring cemmyentionasuly 1) tic of a collar button, which denotes | Me | Other practice sessions are ar-j the classification of his business. iranged as follows: Thursday evening An invitation was extended club : y, members by Col. Wallace McNamara, |? >. ™. (Mandan time); Sunday. 4) commandant, to be guests at Fort soon will receive the “Home Nurse’ merit badges following work during | the school year, according to Mrs. Helen T. Benson, troop captain. The girls are Ramona Lid-trom, Irene Swain, Agnes Bean, Fiorence; Tellinghausen, Lois Lidstrom, Vera Lidstrom, Evelyn Waechter, Mannie | ment for this summer. During camp, they will attempt to meet require-} ments for the three Girl Scout ranks. | will be Miss Marie McGinnis, pal of Wing's public schools, prinei- | 0 will, artment. Miss McGinnis will in- struct in cooking. Mrs. Rosenau, R. N., will be in charge of first aid work, Other stu- les will be instructed by the follow-' ing: Bird study, Miss Ruth Bean; signalling and map: making, Irene Swain and Florence Tellinghausen; swimming, Ramona Lidstrom; nature study, Mrs, Benson and Ramona Lid-| strom; and singing, Mrs. Saul Hal- pern. Z The troop has four first class, nine second class, and 10 Tenderfoot| scouts. Indian Shriners Are Practicing Intensely Mandan’s Indian Shriners Tuesday | evening began a week of intensive; practice preparatory to their trip to! Cleveland, O., where they wiil act as! escort and bodyguard to Imperial Po-| commandant, to be guests at Fort ining,’ 7 o'clock (Mandan time): and aco e, beginning te S18 o'clock, JU 9. 7p. m. (Mandan time). The| g at §:15 o'clock. |Tdian Shriners are to gather at the The club will have its regular unch- | Indian Shriners are to gather Ot Uo con meeting next Wednesday des | id Gnesday despite according to Col. A. B. Welch, first] the Tuesday night progr: ee chief. ' | Songs and ritual are being prac- |ticed intensively. Next Sunday each! jmember of the group will attend the Judge Burr Speaks Supreme Court Justice A. G. Burr gave a short talk on his recent trip) to Ann Arbor, Mich., before the Bis- marck Kiwanis club at its regular, luncheon meeting Tuesday. | Members of the club were invited by Col. Wallace McNamara, com- mandant, to be guests at Fort Lin- | coln's C. M. T. camp next Tugsday | evening, the program beginning at 5:15 o'clock. lot iy a ac ape ° ‘e have just received several ship- | City-County News ; ments of beautiful new dresses—- ‘Mr. and Mrs, C. E. Pickles are par- ents of a son born Monday at the Bis- marck hospital. day. fine all white crepe, with A marriage license was issued Tues- day at the county judge's office, to} Grant Day, Bismarck, and Margaret Wandler, New England. On Monday| a license was obtained by John Hel- mer Baker, Driscoll, and Miss Lydia Bauer, Wilton. white idea so very pop summer. Our Price . HERE FOR CONFERENCE C. M. Pesek of the Minnesota Dairy Inspection department at St. Paul, conferred today with E. A. Green- wood, North Dakota Dairy Commis- sioner, as to the details of the state's can brand law. Minnesota has enact- ed a law similar to the North Da- kota act, and Mrs. Pesek sought in- formation as to its operation. Ladies’ Blonde Shoes! A great group of fine kid pumps, straps and ties. Regular to $4.95, all sizes. Choice now $3.49 per pair ... SHOP EARLY! RAISE WHEAT DUTY Vienna,: July 1—)—The duty of has been | vention, New Dresses For the 4th especially styled for this great holi- The number pictured is of a broidery of bright flowered sprays. A perfect complement to the all . $4.95 V infirmities of old age. band concert director. (Mandan time). Numbets will be: Your Hair Has Turned to Silver (Tobias & St. Rose); patrol, The Night Riders (Huff); intermezzo, a Nation (Moses); Wagner's opera, (Richman); waltz Timers (Lake); Banner. during June, Boehm, assistant auditor. | Six girls and two boys were born, |seven of them to Mandan parents. |The persons who died were not Man- dan residents. Births May 30—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mill- ner Jr., Mandan, son. June 11—Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Koch, and = Mrs. tentate Esten A. Fletcher during the; Roy Young, Mandan, daughter. June 12—Mr. and Mrs. William A. Mandan, daughter; Mr. Kuebker, Mandan, son. June 16—Mr, and Mrs. gohn Geig- er, Mandan, daughter. June 22 and 23—Mr. ters. June 24—Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stack, St. Anthony, daughter. Deaths June 4—Brighton B. Roberts, 53, Denver, Colo. d, Dr. W. M. Peacock, above, potato alentine Majestadt Is Buried in Hebron Three sons of the dead man Tues- day afternoon returned the body of Valentine Majestadt, 69, to his home at Hebron for burial services there today. Mr. Majestadt died in the Mandan Fourteen Glen Ullin Girl Scouts Deaconess hospital Monday from the ‘Program For Band Concert Announced Program for the Mandan Municipal \Turk, Ida Martin, Agatha Berger,| Rivers Settee Ness Se | Riverside park, Mandan, was an- Claudia Tavis, Florence Berger, Ed-| nounced Wednesday by Ralph Law. It will begin at 7:30 o'clock 2 , march, Indiana | The troop, which has 35 members. ‘state Band (Farrar); overture, Prin- is planning its fifth annual encamp-' Coss of India, (King); waltz, When Assisting Mrs. Benson at the camp} simplicity (Lee); march, Victory of Selection from Tannhauser; be in charge of the commissary de-' trot, Walkin’ My Baby Back Home medley, march, Old Com- rades (Teike) and the Star Spangled le fi 'Eight Children Are Born During Month Births of eight children and deaths of three persons were reported to | City Auditor W. H. Seitz in Mandan according to Hilma Births and deaths reported fol- How 1 and Mrs. |p. m., (Mandan time); Tuesday eve-| Frank Kuhn, Mandan, twin daugh- June 25—Mrs. A. F. Brown, Sanger. i i Ju 29—Vi Before Kiwanians | irecting in full Indian costume and a a alanine Malena 9%) Hebron. wool em- ular this combination. Sizes 14 to 46 Store Closed on Saturday— Open on Friday Evening. Afternoon Frocks! Cool voile prints, in every popular style and color $1.95 + Oh (Eight Juveniles Are lice court Wednesday. court officials said. \Police Arrest Ft. as a deserter from the local post. thorities Wednesday. vember of 1928. Man Wanted Here is local authorities. cal dealer. ary a few years ago. to force his return to Bismarck. BAR GROUP ELECTS Bar association Wednesday. retary, and P. O. Sathre, treasurer. MINOT SURGEON HONORED Glacier Park, Montana, July 1. —Dr. FP. C. Sarazin, Superior. Wis. was elected president of the Grea! nell, Minot, N. D. Nevada has been added to the lis Service in a campaign to prevent for. est fires. the list. fox- oO” 33, W195, Laeger Arraigned in Court Eight juveniles, charged with com- | plicity in a series of store robberies | lhere recently, were arrainged in po-| ‘Three of them were bound ever to juvenile court. Action in the cases of the remaining five will be taken as \soon as further evidence is gathered, | |" ‘The boys are said to have been im-| plicated in a series of seven robberies. |board of trustees soldiers’ home, July ' Lincoln Deserter; Homer Davis, a vagrant picked up by local police Tuesday, has beer: {identified by officers at Ft. Lincoln He was turned over to military au- | He is said to have deserted in No-| Vietor C. Doyle, wanted here to an- swer charges of forgery, is being held in jail at Aberdeen at the request of Doyle is alleged to have forged a $300 check, tendered in payment for an automobile purchased from a lo- C. J. Martineson, chief of police, said Wednesday that Doyle had served a term in the state penitenti- The defendant refuses to waive ex- tradition and steps were being taken | Grand Forks, N. D., July 1—(®)— Tracy R. Bangs, Grand Forks, was elected president at the annuai con- ve hi t Judicial District | Hee e ee ation Want Alvin |struction, Under a law passed by the Purcell, Grand Forks, is the new sec- Northern Railway Surgeons’ associ- ation at the annual meeting Tuesday. Other officers named at the closing, session included Dr. A. D. MacCan-| of states cooperating with the Forest There are now 36 states on Jamestown Man, La Moure Woman (Continued from page one) |fund, July 1, 1934. Burt Finney, Bismarck, state board lor pharmacy, May 8, 1936. + Mrs, Abbie Stenerson, Minot, state ‘board of hairdressers and cosmetolo- | gists, July 1, 1934, Dr. Larry B. McLain, Jamextown, }1, 1936, | Fred K. Ode, Bismarck, state bar- jbers’ examining board, July 1, 1934, ‘The remaining appointment is that jof W. K. Truemann, Grand Forks, as a member of the abstracters’ examin- ;|ing board to succeed A. W. Dennis, - |Grand Forks, whose term expired last ;April 1. Mr. Truemann’s appoint- |ment is for six years, ending April }1, 1937, Is Business Woman Miss Sanderson is & business wom- an at LaMoure where she operates & mercantile establishment. At one time she served as superintendent of ! Jailed in Aberdeen school in her county, and is @ for- mer member of the Igislature, Rishworth is a farmer and banker at McClusky, but recently has made his home at Jamestown. He is a for- |mer member of the University board jof regents, serving under ‘former [Goran John Burke and L. B. Hanna. | With the naming of the two new ‘members of the board of admiuistra- tion, the governor has disposed of two of the most important appointments |confronting him this year. Recently he named Nelson Sauvain, Devils Lake, as a member of the »oard of administration to succeed J. €. Davis, who resigned. The other two board members are ex-officio positions now occupied by |Joseph A. Kitchen, secretary of agri- |culture and labor, and Bertha R. Palmer, superintendent of public in- {recent legislature, however, the ex- \officlo members are removed from the board next January 1, leaving ‘only the three appointive members. May Challenge Validity While doubt has been expressed in |some political circles as to the valid- ity of this act because it lacked a two- thirds majority, no steps have yet been taken to challenge it. The act was declared passed and was subse- ‘quently signed by the governor. For the time being, nowever, the {board membership will contain two set at about 766. | women, Miss Palmer and Miss San- | lerson. | Other important appointments to ibe made by the governor soon include | Are Given Jobs a highway commission, composed of three members, one of whom is to act ase chief. commissioner. ‘The new highway act removes the governor as an ex-officio member of the commission and Governor Shafer attended his last meeting of the com- mission last Friday. He. plans to name the new commission before the next monthly meeting, scheduled for the end of July. The law provides that the appointments be made with- in 30 days of the effective date of the act which takes effect July 1. Must Name Commission In addition a mill and elevator commission is to be named by the governor, to manage the institution of which the governor is now ex- officio manager. These appointments must be made within 40 days after July. 1, and are expected to be an- | nounced early in August, ‘The recent death of Oliver Knud- son, state grain commissioner, at Far- go, will make necessary the appoint- |ment of @ succssor by the governor, who plans to do so in the near fu- rs ure. ‘The recent legislature also pro- vided for a governmental survey commission of five members to be appointed by the governor, but no | specific date is provided for their ap- pointment. | A teachers’ insurance and retire- ment fund commission of five mem- bers also must be named by thc gov- ernor under an act of the recent leg- islature, but there is no specified date for the appointments. |Northwest Is Cool | | But East Swelters | | (Continued from page one) | list in the Northwest for the six-day | period standing at 136, | ‘The cooler weather in the north-| west apparently pushed the heat wave farther into the east and south where heat records were broken in Virginia, Pennsylvania, the Cacolinas | and Georgia, No relief appeared for| these states. | But the promise of relief in the mid- dlewest seemed short lived. Compar- ling his records, the weather man| \said they showed hot Junes are fol- |lowed, two out of three times, by | torrid Julys. dead in the fields, and and streams dry up. summary of conditions yesterday around 78 degrees. Temperatures mounting in central east and south with no relief in sight for Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia, North Mississippi, and upper Louisi- ana, New Orleans and the Mississipp! Gulf coast. were cooled by a gale which caused some damage and re- duced temperatures. In Haselton, Pa., where the temper- ature was 96, car service of Wilkes- barre and Hazelton third-rail line was disrupted by buckled rails. ‘A severe hail storm Tuesday near Great Falls, Mont., destroyed crops. Electrical storms in northeastern North Dakota and northwestern Min- nesota, brought temperatures down. Hail damaged crops and property. MOORHEAD MAN HURT IN FALL FROM HAYLOFT Moorhead, Minn., July 1—()— ‘His first day on the job, Henry Her- branson, 43, Moorhead, was over- come by héat yesterday while working in the hay loft of a barn on the Fair- mont farms, fell through a chute in the floor to the cement floor below and ered which may juries prove fatal. His physician said he has a broken wrist and X-ray pictures in- dicate a fracture of the skull. He has a wife and six children. Grasshoppers Alarm Farmers in Benson Minnewaukan, N. D.,. July 1.—(?)— Nymphs and grasshoppers in alarm- ing numbers are reported from the farms in the Baker vicinity, according |to H. W. Herbison, Berton county agricultural agent. ‘He has requested that farmers be) on the lookout for the pests and re- port any outbreaks to: his office*so that proper steps for their control may be taken before serious damage is done over a large territory. | Total deaths attributable to the |heat during the last 24 hours, includ- |ing drownings and one youth killed in| jan electrical storm at St Louis, were | | estimated at approximately 230. Total | | deaths for the current heat wave were | Supreme Court Takes Tax Battle Under Advisement (Continued from page one) ‘court upholds Byrne's view that | To midwest farmers, the forecast of | nearly 3,000 signatures are defective. | cooler weather, came as good eee | They have seen their crops withered | ,and scorched by the sun, their live- ‘William Lemke, Fargo, their attor- ney, indicated that if this permis- [ston is granted the petitioners are gtore or grocery. 8s ed to refer a law. —————. BANK PRACTICES 0, K. Grand Forks, N. D., July 1—(— Committees appointed last year to investigate the alleged law practice of banks and companies re- ported to members of the first judi- cial district bar association in con- vention here Tuesday, that they had found insufficient facts to warrant the association in taking a stand on the subject. ‘ Mosquitoes Inject Poisonous Thinging Fluid Into Blood! Cause of Horrible Blood Diseases Now Knewn Most people think the pain and itch of a mosquito bite is due to irritation: of the “bite” itself. This is far from tie truth, as science shows. When the mosquito sinks her stinger thru your skin to drink, she first must inject s bp ba her serum sac to thin your lood. This thinnin; | often alive wit! nant _ diseases, | tre | is | germs into the blood it constitutes | terrible danger. You shud an awful blood disease is | Shudder when you see a | lose no time in lor your | FLY-TOX gun and ending the mos- quito’s life, puree FLY-TOX is proven to be thi surest, quickest-killing househol spray made. It is Seth to ihe ‘EARFUL7,—Fiy,. 1Y-TOX at your drug | i | Bed Bug, Ant, Flea, M Insist on You wouldn’t be without them! As much a part of your smooth- ; running day —Chesterfields—as is your secretary! you like, he Pa ste rlie THEY'RE MILDER...and THEY TASTE BETTER TASTE BETTER. You enjoy as many as you smoke. : For Chesterfields are made And if she isn’t at hand for the moment, you light up..'.. and im- mediately stop fretting! MILDER. Smoke as many as ripe mild tobaccos, the best that money can buy—and the PUREST cigarette paper obtainable. Put them on your permanest }