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3 * | TOWNSHIP OFFICER ~TISTIS CONPLETED Final Reports on Elections Held Late in March Received by County Auditor ‘J enue ae Complete returns from all remain- {ng Burleigh county township elec- tions, held late in March and not previously reported, were received ‘Wednesday by C. G. Derby, county guditor, and are being prepared for publication. In addition to the lists of officials previously announced from 35 town- ships and the Village of Regan, the following officers have been elected. Painted Woods—O. W. Brostrum, chairman; Fred M. Brown, R. E. Ha- gen, supervisors; Mrs. Fay Brown, clerk; Mrs. Alfred Johnson, treas- urer; Iver Erickson, assessor; Frank Riebe, justice; Emery Johnson, con- stable. Phoenix—Elmer Perry, assessor. Richmond—Elmer Perry, assessor. Riverview — Lynn W. Sperry. as- sessor. Rock Hill — William McCullough, Jr., chairman; R. W. Feltheim, Oscar ‘Magnuson, supervisors; Marvin E. Alm, clerk; K. O. Knutson, treasurer; Andrew Olson, assessor; Roy Farley, justice. Hay Creek—Sam Turnbow, chair- man; W. E, Sellens, Peter Milun, su- pervisors; K. B. Green, clerk; M. G. ‘Ward, treasurer; George Morris, as- sessor. McKenzie — C. D. Rodgers, chair- man; Ed Adams, B. A. Drawver, su- pervisors; M. A. Johnson, clerk; W. ‘L. Watson, treasurer; H. E. O'Neill, assessor; L. M. Wildfang, justice; Ed Easton and George Manley, con- stables. Sterling — Freto Envik, chairman; Eva Turner, Oscar Anderson, super- visors; H. J. Brownawell, clerk; Mrs. ‘Vernice Sherman, treasurer; M. H. ‘Nelson, assessor; William P. Langley nd Thomas Parke, justices; Joe Cox, constable. Lincoln—Dwight Ferris, assessor. | Fort Rice—William B. Falconer, as- ipessor. '_Crofte—C. A. Nordstrom, chairman; 3H. A. Kickul, supervisors; Fred A. food, clerk; H. W. Little, treasurer; “Adam Herdebu, assessor; Charles ;Blackreid and Julius Meyer, justices; - Alex Waltos, constable. Village of Wing — B. W. Graham, jtrustee; George Anderson, clerk; ‘George Wilkenson, treasurer; Eliza- beth Knowles, assessor; James Sedivic, marshal; I. F. Lytle, justice. South Wilton — A. W. Fiegel, as- | Tiny Dots of Land Will Be Link- ed in Romance of Fight With Distance San Francisco, May 2.—Like siep- ping-stones across 8,500 miles of wa- ter between California and China lie tiny islands where modern air bases ‘are being established for Pan Ameri- can’s regular-schedule flighte to the Orient. On the high seas now west of Hawaii is the good ship North Haven, of 15,000 tons, with a construction crew of 74 and an airways technician personnel of 44 aboard, carrying out the all-but-final step in the greatest aeronautical project yet undertaken. The operating airway will be set up from San Francisco to Hawaii, 2,400 miles; Hawaii to Eastern island in the Midway group, 1,380 miles; Eastern to Wilkie’s island in the Wake group, 1,200 miles onward; Wil- kie’s to Guam, 1,450 miles; Guam to the Philippines, 1,500 miles. From Manila, in the Philippines, the airway continues 700 miles to Can- ton, connecting with Pan American's 3,000-mile system in China. Establishment of at least two of the bases is really a colonization proj- ect. Completely isolated, none of the Wake group has been inhabited in the history of man. No one lives on Eastern island, in the Midway group, although @ cable station is maintain- ed on Sand island, across a coral lagoon. e sessor. City of Wilton—A. D. Hitt, mayor; iL. E. Nugent, H. W. Gray, J. A. Schroeder, F. McFadden, B. Bartholo- mew, B, Soderquist, aldermen; J. J. Schmidt, treasurer; J. R. Hilsdorf, po- lice magistrate; J. C. Hilken, justice of peace; Mrs. L, J. Truax, assessor. North Wilton—L. W. Heston, mar- shal; Dr. R. C. Thompson, health of- ficer; J. 8. McGogy, city auditor. CUBAN ANARCHISTS HELD Havana, May 2.—()—Simultane- ously with the arrest of six suspected anarchists, police expressed the opin- fon Thursday that there was a pos- sible connection between the exist- ence, of anarchistic groups here and disasters which have befallen vessels Bailing to and from Havana. The authorities declined to identify the ehip or ships to which they referred. Approximately 2,000 acres of farm Sand in Texas county, Oklahoma, has — contracted for terracing proj- * * * TASK 18 MONUMENTAL ‘The stupendous task of establishing this 8'500-mile airline is expected to be completed in mid-July, after which the first of scheduled flights will take place. Operating airports, homes for the men, complete machine and mechan- ical shops, and the most powerful of airways radio stations will rise in this limited time. Plans for the model airports have been in the making for two years. Pre-fabricated buildings and com- bined findings of experts in the as- sembly of supplies. for man and ma- chine have gone into a detailed in- ventory that makes such speed pos- sible. ‘When the North Haven sailed from KEEP YOUR *$ LO IE best of men et tired of irri- table, eoneetetas wives. If you are weak, nervous and ) E famous Biblical story of the | = Deluge is carried over into % lore with Armenia's issue of 1920. on which Mt. Ararat is illus _ Srated. It was on this snow-topped mountain, which rises 17,000 feet | above sea level, that Noah, tenth 4patriarch in direct descent from | ‘Adam, brought his Ark to rest and ‘started a new civilization on earth. ‘The series of stamps of which je Mt. Ararat design is one never ‘gaw actual postal use. They were ‘primtes in Paris. A large amount ‘wae lost on the way to Armenia, id the rest got to Armenia after Bolsheviks had driven out the Mationa! government. i H E s al ie aE i Fe a I FEez z . g manager, three @ chief radio me- and THE Power! Here are the four throbbing motors that are to carry the Pan American Clipper to the conquest of the Pacific. Just forward of the open hatch is the control cabin, where. sharp Midway Island, one of the relay points. There no man lives except at the cable station, left, where 17 men defy mid-ocean desolation. when the North Haven sails on her return voyage. She will drop additional supplies at each base and pick up construction crews en route to California. When the first clipper flying to the Orient setties on lagoon waters at either Wilkie’s or Eastern Island, Passengers will see a model airbase community. In each landing lagoon will be a landing boat and dock leading to the shore. To the right, as the passen- ger steps ashore, will be huge under- ground gasoline storage tanks; be- yond them a powerhouse, and still beyond a building for the powerful radio transmitter. The transmitting station of the radio direction finder will be off to the left. First in a group-of painted frame houses as the passenger walks up a graded walk will be the airport of- fice—here he may receive cabled messages from home—and opposite it the radio eae station. * GARDENING “MAJOR” JOB Purther on will be staff quarters, arranged in a central circle, with quarters for the crews of visiting ships. Kitchen, mess hall, and ser-/ley vant quarters are off to the right, outside the circle. Between visits of the clippers on their flights between California and the Orient, the airbase crews will It is evident that Pan American expects its staff to go in ing in a big way, as the to go ashore is a large games, ‘And, of course, there will be radios to make audible the longwave With completion of these bases, Pan American’s program to conquer the Pacific is nearly realized. Sev- eral test flights remain to be under- taken and finally, the start of reg- ular-schedule flights to the Orient. Congregationalists Rename Rev. Hacke Congregational Dakote Wednesday night as the an- nual convention was concluded here. and Rev. R. A. Beard of Fargo, histor- jan. Resolutions denounced the sale of liquor and Sunday movies. 40 Schools to Enter FHA Essay Contest HOUSE FOR SALE ‘The Board of Education of the City of Bismarck, N. D. offers for sale and certain Mouse with and including all. fixtures to attached, Belonging, to sald Board, located on Lots Nos, 9 and 10 Block 65—McKensie & Coffin Addi- tion to the City of Bismt N. D. (known as the Knauss house) to the highest responsible bidder for cash, with the provision that said buildings ighall be removed from said Block within 30 d fter acceptance of bid. | Privile ved to reject any or all offe: to be ned vi 1th, 3095 oP. M. in dent’s office High School. By order of the Board of Educa- tion, Bismarck, N. Richard Penw: 5/2-25 6/8. y Islands in Pacific to Be Airline Stepping Stones of No. 1 public enemy Alvin Karpis Popped up Wednesday afternoon in Hennepin county district court when Elizabeth Emmons, Langford sand- street purse-snatching, identified a icture Darniss-4a a pictare'oe the uate is on trial for stealing the money. the trial of Obie Heston, 25, Grand Forks, N. D., after Miss Emmons, witness for the state, had positively identified Heston as the man who snatched a bag containing payroll T. Buckley, defense attorney, that the name of Karpis mons was asked to identify a picture said she thought the picture was of Heston. ture you identified as Obie Heston was .jPlement tires reduce rolling resist- D, arden, Clerk. BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1935, any Ice reported that four or five men, made from cabbages, bananas, or armed with machine guns and re- other vegetable matter from volvers, forced the bank messengers’ cellulose is obtained. car to the side of the road and seiz- ! Actor Will Prove | Mae West Nuptials | 4 Milwaukee, Wis. —(P— pena F Ena ‘Tex. May any nco-Soviet Pact k lwaukee, » May 2. . Py 5 5 . Whether it would change the |Question Writer of didn’t rain’ but the “Last Man” Is Near Completion “Wall street betting” odds, he Thi t to Li db: h club of the Texas panhandle has — didn’t know, but the register of rea! indberg! more members than ever. Paris, May 2—()—A Franco-Soviet deeds here Thursday was ready — Hopeful farmers in this dust pact of mutual assistance, first defen- to fill the request of a Broad- |, Paterson, N. J., Mey 2—(®)—Alien-| swept section heard bomb after |sive agreement by Germany's = way actor for a copy of the ii- | {sts will join police Thursday in ques-| bomb burst Wednesday night 88 |rearmament, neared completion cense the actor said he obtained Phillip Martin, 46, held as the} Tex Thornton, fire extinguisher | Thuraday. turned “rainmaker,” sought un- successfully to coax some mois- ture from the clouds with TNT. It didn’t rain. Instead the dust blew, sifted across the plains country as the farmers and ranch- ers some of them wearing pro- tective masks over their faces, < silent, watched and wait- For a few moiments the clouds seemed to hover closer, but soon here in 1911 when he married Mae West. To Register of Deeds George A. Bowman, who held down a hum- drum job until the Wallace-West license turned up here 10 days ago, came a letter from Frank Wallace, 325 West 45th Street, . New York City, reading: “Kindly advise me on proper steps necessary to obtain a photo- static copy of my ie Police said Martin had shown an @ Bronx cemetery. they started to.waft away. Later comm a cense to Mae West on April 11, | “This is not ® ransom note: This| the weather bureau forecast high peer Pl cepemig id ada 1911. Let me know what evi- |is a killing note,” said one of the let- mitter from Minot to N. D. wane or information you re- bag ae kill Lindy and myself.” change its frequency from 1240 kilo- : . tters were sent to Paterson} John L. McCarty, Dalhart news- cycles change its time Bowman said evidencé and in- {police and Warden Lewis E. Lawes of] paper publisher, who circulated bei! a “oot formation were unnecessary, but & 50-cent fee would be needed, The actor said he still has his among the crowd explaining his “Last Man” club in which mem- bers pledge themselves “to be the 1911 copy of the license, but “it's | the backs of the enveloj man ‘Texas ' where I can’t get it right now, in ied venhenen. = DON T MISS & secret place.” % % The strangest job in the world is “Every time we have clouds “the keeper of the lookout of the| they are blown away by wind that BANDITS GET $20,000 Cinque ports” in England. This per-| brings more and more dust.” ; , Boston, May 2—(4)—Two Way-|sonage scans the horizon daily for eyes will watch for mouth Trust company hostile ships and is paid $5.50 annu- messengers: Although most artificial silk fabric Thursday were robbed of $20,000. Po-/ ally. is made of wood pulp, it can also be Karpis’ Name Enters Trial of Forks Man Minneapolis, May 2.—(7)—The name wich shop cashier who was robbed of more than $400 last March in a loop which was said to be that of Injection of Karpis’ name came in first money from her hands. It was on cross-examination by E. appeared. Miss Em- which purported to be of Heston. She “Do you know that in fact that pic- actually that of Alvin 2” Buck- Karpis' “No, sir.” Tires Revolutionize Modern Farm Work Astonishing! Famous J.C.P. Work SHIRTS Priced to make you hurry in! 4% If you've ever worn ki Tel tee! sion Suceets So lined collar! St: stitched! St buttons! 14%elT! ys” 6-14, me Best-seller! 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