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CLUB HEARS TALK ON ELECTRIC =" C. J. Strike, Huron, S. D., Featured Speaker Before Rotary Club Members of the Bismarck Rotary club at their Wednesday luncheon meeting heard a talk on the develop-} ment in the electrical industry by C. J. Strike, Huron, S. D., vice presi- dent and general manager of the Northwest Public Service company and the North Dakota Power and Light company. Strike traced the growth of the in- dustry from the days of the first isclated plants up to the present time, which has modern connected transmission line systems. i He said this development has brought vast benefits to the public; and declared that today in North and South Dakota the transmission lines operating on one system would reach further than from New York to Bis- marck. With a large chart he illus- trated the interconnected transmis- sion system in the two Dakotas. Among the guests at the luncheon were Rev. Thomas Dewhurst, a mem- | ber of the Rotary club at Stillwater, Minn., who was rector of St. George's Episcopal church in Bismarck from 1920 to 1922. Othe guests included Endre Ander- | son, Northfield, Minn.; W. T. Kraft,; Bismarck; John W. Conrad, Keokuk, Towa; Glen Wallace, formerly of Bis- marck but now of New York City; L. R. Baird, Dickinson; T. G. C. Kennel- | ly, Mandan; L. F. Lyman, Mandan; Charles R. Robertson, Valley City; Victor Moynier and William Fricke, Burleigh county commissioners. ‘The entertainment committee of | the club is in charge of an hour's| program which will be presented for | the benefit of the boys in Fort Lin- coln'’s Citizens Military Training camp Thursday evening. Thv pro- gram will be given in the arena at the army post. 2 TO CREDITORS ate of Delos ¢ known a. In the Matter of the , other D. O. Wickham, Dec Notice is hereby ned, frinistrator with the wil the estate of Delox 0 York, and all persons hit the estate of said A | them with the n ary vouchers, | within six months after the first pub- on of this notice, to sald George i 8. Registe the will in Bu or to the ‘ourt of Burleigh ota, at hig offic Judge of the Coun ‘ounty, North Da- in the Burleigh ta, Court House , in Burleigh Court, unty, > oth day of J hour of ten at the © adjusti Mt the estate of the said Delos Wickha n as Wickha which have been duly a ly presented as hereinbefore | Dated this ith day of July, A. D. 1931. ORGE S, REC g, the administrator with the will nexed of the estate of Delos Wickham, otherwise known as ©. Wickham, deceased. tion on the Sth day ofthe father says. Citation Hearing Petition for License | to Sell Real Estate of North Dakota, County of | Btate In County, Court, Before | Burleigh, Hon. I. C, Davies, Judg In'the Matter of the Estate of Carrie D. Taylor, also known as Caroline Donnelly T a1 rator, Petitioner, Sarah Preavey, rdner, Florence lzer, Edith Harms, h' Butler, Anna} ne, Frank Ches rown, Joseph Che: rown, juy. Chesrown, Clifton D. Hollister, the Administrator of the estate of Susie Day, deceased, Alice F. Miller and Sara E. Gardner, the will and Katie the last estate executrices of persons interested tate of Carrie D, Taylor, also known ‘oline Donnelly ‘Taylor, de-) Respondents. i rth Dakota to the| | abo . Hexpondents: ch one of you are here- nd eac by cited and required to appear be- fore the C ‘county Court of Burleigh rth Dakota, at the office of | y Judge of Burleigh county, nT Rota at the Burleigh county, raed Dakota Court House in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh county, North Dakota, on the 29th day of July, A. D. 1931, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of that day to show cause, if any you have, why the pe- tition of J. L. Bell, the administrator of the estate of Carrie D. Taylor, also known as Caroline Donnelly Taylor, deceased, on file in said Court, pray- ing that license be to him granted to sell at private sale lots 1 to 6, both in- clusive, in block two (2) in Coffin's Ad- dition to the city of Bismarck, in Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, the southeast quarter of section twenty- one (21) in township one hundred a thirty-eight (138) north, of range sev- enty-six (76) west of the fifth prin- cipal meridian in Burleigh county, North Dakota, and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter, the south half of the north- ‘west quarter and the northwest quar- ter of the southwest quarter of sec- tion five in township one hundred and thirty-five north, of range sev- enty-eight west of the fifth principal meridian in Emmons county, North Dakota, and any part thereof or any part thereof, and any of it, or any of it, belonging to said estate, should not be granted and allowed. The late residence of Carrie D. Taylor, also known as Caroline Donnelly Taylor, the owner of said e: e, now de- ceased, was the city Blamarck, in Burleigh county, North Dako Let service be manda of ‘this citation as required by la’ Dated this 7th vay, of July, A. > 1981. By the Court, (SEAL) DAVIES, Judge of nal said County Court. TOO LATE TO TO CLASSIFY. SPECIAL THREE IN ONE—Focisl, Shampoo, Marcel or Fingér Wave|. for $1.50. All branches of beauty WOR RENT—Apartment on ground ‘é oe ee aren. ‘Call at 415 work and peinting. = guaren- bn’ 404 Fitth Bt. tee. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Post, par- ents of Wiley Post, are shown here at their farm home near Maysville, Okla. Above is Mr. Post with his favorite farm ‘horse. Mrs. Post is shown in a close up at the right and also, below, with her chickens, 59 of which were stolen recently by a chicken thief. At the left is an old picture of their son, the world-circling aviator, as he appeared at the age of 5. ek * Wiley Post Couldn’t Be ; Kept ‘Down on the Farm’ Says I don't worry much about him any president of B'nai B'rith District | ‘Just Wasn't Intereste Interested,’ Father in Recalling Flier's Boyhood Days Maysville, Okla., July 8.—Wiley | post's parents did their best, but they just couldn’t keep him down on the y | farm. The globe-circling flyer, whose dex- terous handling of the complicated controls of an airplane carried he, and Harold Gatty safely across the | treacherous Atlantic and the bleak ; Siberian wastes, never could *;such simple farm lessons as which | ; | harness went on which horse, accord- | learn ing to his father and mother, Mr, and Mrs. W. F. Post, who live on a 90- acre farm two miles north of here. The farm is in an: isolated section, even without a telephone. But a joyful gleam comes to their eyes as they tell of. futile efforts to keep Wiley on the farm, digging pota- toes, calling hogs and hoeing corn. For if they had succeeded, he would- R, [n't be a world hero today. Tried to Keep Him Down “He didn’t have our blessings when ‘| he started out in this flying business,” “I did everything I. could to keep him out of the air and| make him stay on the ground as a farmer. “He was always a good worker here on the farm, but he just wasn’t inter- ested. He could cultivate and plow and sow, but never until after I had| fixed everything for him. He never could learn which’ harness went on which horse or how.” Post shook his head in a puzzled | way as if he couldn't figure out how a smart son of his could be so dull in| such a simple thing as that. So, despite parental opposition, Wiley went away to a mechanical school and learned the intricacies of machinery. The things he learned there are in a large measure respon- sible for his world flight. Mother Doesn't Worry Mrs. Post celebrated her 58th birth- day soon after her son started wing- ing his way around the world. She refuses to become excited about his flight. “Wiley’s always flying around and | Couldn’t Keep Wiley Post ‘Down on the Farm’ | *-* * * ee more. I’m used to him,” she says. The Posts have no telephone, and} must wait for a courier to bring them news of the flight. Wiley began his flying career by making parachute jumps when he wasn’t working in the oil fields near | Holdenville. That was about six) years ago. “One time when he came home to| Maysville to make a jump before a Grand Lodge No. 6 Tuesday at the \closing session of the sixty-third an- nual convention. The election of Mr. Lashkowitz. who is an attorney, marks the first time that a representative fron North Dakota has been made presi- ,dent of the District Grand Lodge. H succeeds William Sultan of Chicago. big crowd of farmers who had gath-. ered for a cotton meeting, I told him I wouldn’t let him make the jump,” | mr. Post recalled. “I just hid his parachute.” When Wiley missed his ‘chute, he strode into a cotton meeting in full swing and demanded his father to go out and find it. “He raised the devil—but. he didn't jump,” Mr. Post says with a chuckle. Mrs. Post. who, according to her husband, is the best chicken and hog raiser in the southwest, wasn’t so sure her husband did the right thing by hiding that parachute, and she said so. | Injury Started His Career The parents recall how an injury in the oil fields furnished the funds with which Wiley bought his first| plane. A piece of flying steel blinded his left eye and the company employ- | ing him paid him $2,000. Wiley bought an old “crate” and! started barnstorming, the same way | in which so many other famous flyers {got their start. After three years of this he became pilot for F. C. Hall, wealthy oil operator, on flights to and from Hall's scattered holdings. After winning -the National Air | Race from California to Chicago last year, talk was started of an around- the-world flight. Hall put up the ‘money and Post and Gatty sailed |away in the “Winnie Mae,” named) Mrs. Winnie | Mae Fain, to fly around the world) after Hall’s daughter, faster than any men had every flown around it before. Lashkowitz Named To Head B'nai Brith St. Paul, July 8—(#)—Harry Lash- kowitz, Fargo, N. D., was elected Pastor Speaks to | Epworth Leaguer Valley City, N. D., July 8—(>)—Th problem of this generation is to right ly employ the power, discovered by science, Dr. E. Guy Cutshall, pi dent of Tliff School of Theology Denver, Colo., told the ninth institut- of the North Dakota Epworth Leaguc here Wednesday. The Grand Forks district led the, attendance with 172 persons from that! section. ‘Camp Association | Reelects Officers} Washburn, N. D., July 8—All of- ficers of the Asbury Camp Meeting association, which conducts a camp annually on the shores of the Mis- souri river near here, were reelected at a meeting following the conclusion | of the 1931 camp. They are John Bibelheimer, Wash-| ‘burn, president; F. W. Gress, Under- |wood, first vice president; William/ Slagg, Washburn, second vice presi-| dent; Oscar H. Swenson, Washburn, Secretary; and A. W. Schaeffer, Washburn, treasurer. Workers engaged for next year's} camp are Rev. Paul S. Rees, Detroit, | Mich.; Dr. J. M. Glenn, Flovilla, Ga.; and Miss Florence Bergquist, Glad- { stone. les Trustees are George W. Busch, C, G. Gross, and L. W. F. Pfaff, Under-' wood; H. J. Wiese, Washburn; and Ned Asplund, Wilton; A. Aiderin, Fort Clark; Vaughn Hanson and L. i Hirsch, Turtle Lake. | fro. NO~'YOU CANT COAX NO MORE OUTA ME, Coz ATS ALL THER WAS LEFT FROM SUPPER — BUT, NEVER MINO, PARTNER, WHEN IM GROWN UP HIANE A HOME OF MY AN OWN, YOU WONT HAFTA SLEEP H OUT IN A OL Box FOLLA CRACKS NER EAT SCRAPS OvTA A OL RUSTY PAN, A NER GIT CHASED OUTA TH’ HOUSE , 51S COZ You SCRATCH YOURSELF A00G WHO CN HUNT AN! FIGHT AN' Do TRicKs |— UKE You, DESERVES BETTER AN' YOU'LL GiT IT. TGR, | OUT OUR WAY By Williams rc The Entire State Awaited the Result VIOLENT storms ‘disorganized the ‘communications “of a” middlewese state on’ the night of the most bitterly contested Senatorial election in its history. The vote was unusually close and only a tabulation of every precinct’s ballots could accurately de- ‘termine the outcome.\ Facing * terrific f obstacles, with” telephone] and * telegraph ‘lines out of order, roads impassable and rain drenching the entire state, THE ASSO- : CIATED PRESS election returns’ staff, worked throughout the night'and_ the following day. Twenty hours after the polls closed, the last precinct had been ‘reported ; But the plurality for the incumbent Senator was so small that even a ‘slight, error in one of the 2.000 precincts might have altered the result. An immediate’ recount’ was necessary! Through another night, the same ‘Staff kept’ at work. Tired election, officials were routed from their beds to assist in " checking” reports.’ Early, the next’ morning. the the task was completed and the first’totals verified.” A few weeks later the official canvass confirmed the result. THROUGH such ‘painstaking and tireless efforts,} (THEZASSOCI. ATED PRESS serves the readers of member r, newspapers u. able and unbiased reports of the day's news. } - Subscribe Now 1 year (in North Dakota) .... .$5.00; 6 months (in North Dakota) 2.50; 3 months (in North Dakota) ... 1.25; by carrier in Bismarck ...... .$7.20 by carrier in Bismarck, 6 mos. 3.60 by carrier in Bismarck, 3 mos, 1.80 SUBSCRIPTION BLANK The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. Dak. Enclosed find . «ee-..for which send The Bismarck Tribune for ..................monthsto Name ot ee cccee Postoffice .............-. cons eves esecs cess SHALE voc. cnee PLEASH WRITE OB PRINT NAME PLAINLY TO AVOID MISTAKES The Bismarck Tribune A Member Newspaper of the Associated Press eo bo wc al \ 4