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2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1986 ‘. FIRST FARM INN. D. RR, ° Famed Pilot, Art Goebel, to Write in Sky With Plane | i : 7. KWOOSeveit Limne — ET mid Feat Dlanketing | ; ; lWestern North Dakota S inspire 1e este Oo ako " ONLY 76 YEARS AGO Ei 1 Charles Bottineau Plante dj 4 in and Had Wheat | * * U ee vad ti ie |Mack, in Nomination, Asserts Attacks on FDR ies ied at Winni pes | Come From ‘Those Who Themselves Brought Ur Although the Red river valley area| About the Great Depression’ i Jong has been known as the world’s apes ca t richest agricultural region, the first} Philadelphia, June 26—(#)—Pictur-)and cheating the consuming public regular farming operctions in the/ing President Roosevelt as an in-|by inflated rates.” M attics show that ‘the first farm |28inst “greed,” Judge John E. Mack | our leader.” But now: ; re mm: in the state was operated four miles/of New York Friday placed the Presi- | “Tnese classes of privilege have thro th t of Neche by Charles Bottineau dent's name before the Democratic | seen the handwriting on the wall They the pr M oe gan operations in the sprin§) onvention for renomination. ew that ayer ‘administration M fe Botineau, a brother of Pierre Bot-| Mack, an old friend and neighbor | mien Which -thelr Seat hid given | ei he tineau, for whom the city and county |of the Roosevelts, spoke only 20 min- | them is now gone.” sat ve! in the state were named, came UP utes, pointing his address toward the; This knowledge springs, Mack said, ‘Wed from Minneapolis in 1859 and with climatic statement: jfrom the security, taxing, social se- - in Charles Grant of Roce eee “With our decks cleared for battle, /Curity and other New Deal measures ba ay cian ey ae had detceeen (eee justice and right and progress| Which demonstrated “that the con- a ee carers and Bottineau preempted a/W#th Us, we are ready for more ac-|trol of legislation had passed from : pote me tract of 160 acres ition under the inspired leadership of | their hands to the people themselves.” : : thre ¢ Tact of Sa Hecate that great American whose name I) “The issue is now,” he asserted, — — ol. Arthur ©. Goebel, nation- surveys in the drouth areas for some) ssid, their surveys had shown the | term Prior to that time cultivation of the give You as our candidate for presi- | ‘whether the people are going to re- | ally known pilot and winner of time. Between 2,500 and 3,000 proj-| only serious situation was that in the } vote k Prior to thai nt, no longer a citizen of merely|tain that control of the processes of the Dole Hawaiian ONTINUE ‘ects are undet consideration for these | northwest. aes soil had been confined almost entirely | pore tof Wath air derby, will Haten, be sheeted. He tt to gardening. There had been some!he state, but a son of all the saab dotinrte wi pel rgd tle be at the Bismarck air show July from page one- “We will place emphasis on the de-| @——>>——___—————o tl k experimental grain raising in the vi- states, Franklin D. Roosevelt. i emt Dac ae seme small 3, 4 afd 5. Flying his special- Confe Point to velopment of water conservation Additional Markets ” i tunity of Pembina and in the upper! Mack dealt briefly with campaign | gtoUup whose destructive abuse of their built Boeing pursuit plane, Col- Trees roin' re vill be aa | regu part of the valley, but Bottineau es-|issues. He asserted thet “the éries former power was responsible for all One] Goebel will give wyiwriting | Dire Necessity for | with projects planned by state and “n tablished the first real farm. Re-|Of anger and the vicious attacks’ Bite les.’ bitions at 10,000 feet. The i. r4 local governments. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR ae G tiniscing five years ago, the late|®sainst the New Deal emanate from 7 bl hoard the dramatic ——__— ship bolt equipped with two- Beginning Program “We plan: more than mere relief,”|, Minneapelis, June | 26. Flour Wh esa r Hyacinthe Villeneuve, "pioneer , at|(iseee who, thenssives MrOught shot | Pome Nese: "| Annual Assembly for Indian mt Jog it possible for Goebel to talk iam said Hunter, “We will put men tol Brea Fe eentaatd Miaaites Wyk bei loyed the foe iJ g si ir jans studies to determine i eee 8 : Sincamwiee “From the great financial interests| “We are ready for the issue. We through ® public address Scanmactng 6 sete ot low Ghee in| tegen Re ot erranneat Bert t ‘At that time, there was no market) Whese high-powered salesmen 1n- have ended starvation, bread lines, Elbowoods Fair Grounds located on the ground while he | North and South Dakota to impound we.’ * eats eins. the 1 for grain and Bottineau used what he|duced foreign countries unnecessar-,/ soup kitchens, and have brought this Will Open Friday is in prod air. He thrilled crowds | water and facilitate irrigation. One he be to BOSTON WOOL Haw a raised for ceed and feed, except the ly to plunge themselves into debt | country through the greatest depres- Bismarck & year ago. ‘cia pee Gems ine te pd vers Boston, June 26.—@—(U. &. D. A.) M | wheat. This he hated on bobsieds|and unload their bonds on trusting | sion ever known. —_——_ WPA AND BRA TO Wi Hale THEA the cahek cath | Gia nna Co neice Ae ‘ to Winnipeg and there at a small/ American investors—bonds many of “With increasing national income} Reminiscences of the older Indians SPEED DEOUTH RELIEF spring may be conserved and utilised| on at mostly 8! scoured ttt } mill operated by Robert Tait, five}which are now in default and prac- | and increasing national prosperity, we | will highlight the 10th annual meet- C ONTIN E Chicago, June 26—()—Two federal| throughout the hot, rainless sum- for wools of a1 to gooa Jam : miles north of the present site of|tically worthless. are moving forward.” ing of the Indians of the Congrega- from one works progress admin-| mers, 2 cl Comb aS. leng' at 83-85 ff erly Winnipeg. it was ground into flour; “From the same great financial in-| Mack devoted the early part of his/tional faith at Elbowoods, from ri- T= istration and the resettlement ad-| Hunter said Guy Rexford Tugwell, Peal maustiureiecce: Lo 4 and hauled back to the farm. Bot-| terests that pyramided company upon talk to praise of the president and /day until Sunday which this year| Flag Lead of 1,212 ministration—will speed releif to the| resettlement administrator, would eee i _cents tineau bought the first wagon brought /company for the purpose of rooking | recital of his upward climb in pub-/ also will be a celebration of the 60th as o 92 drouth stricken areas of the north-| have representatives at the St. Paul basis below the: INE quo- R into this country from Sioux who the investing public by watered stock | lic service. anniversary of mission work on the Votes With 45 of west, Howard O. Hunter, assistant ad- < canes tee Beostly only tor 9} Mar escaped in it from the scene of the| Fort Berthcld reservation. 4 in charge of WPA activi-| “The is for im- interested in sizeable ‘quantities tome cre in the Minnesota valley of] Because of the anniversary celebra- Precincts Not In | ties in the Chicago area, announced] mediate relief,” said Hunter. “Money making inquiries but were not | kote | tion, an unusually large number is is needed at once to obtain feed for tule making commitments. Star st one quarter was farmed and; Weather Re rt expected to enter the encampment on|the nomination had been . wa? rhe operated three. Bottineau had po! the fair grounds south of Elbowoods. . done through loans.” = ned farming in Minnesota and They now are arriving by car, team th 1,583 | to develop plans for work relief proj-| | Although other areas have been hit) THREE-WAY INN has RE- [ 2. d with which to work| WEATHER FORECASTS i and even on foot from the various ects. fo an extent by the drouth, Hunter| OPENED for business. RS a good he: ut the needs of the land and the|_ For Bis care and feeding of the stock of which | fittle change he had plenty of all kinds. He milk-) xy ed only cows enough for his own use and raised the young stock. There, was no market for butter. Sheep. too, were raised and sold in Winni: 2 The Bottineaus always had @ large garden and grew all kinds 0! Attending the conference, he said, will be Harry Hopkins, WPA admin- istrator, the governors of North and South Dakota and WPA officials of southern Montana and southern Min- nesota. “The drouth is apparently worse ald, |than that of 1934, altough not as ex- tensive,” said Hunter. Large areas in the Dakotas have no crops at all.” For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- | tonight and Saturday; | in temperature. | Generally fair | and Saturday: slightly cooler | night. Generally fair | and Saturday: cooler tonight. Fair tonight and cooler tonight extreme east | CARRIERS IN *70S Grandchildren of Custer Post Man Who Drowned in Riv- er Are Living Here congregations. Arrived in 1876 Dr. C. L. Hall, the first missionary, | insurance who set foot in Like-a-Fishhook vil- lage in 1876, will be unable to attend | this year due to his advanced years, but sends a message of love and en- couragement to the people for whom he spent. 50 years of his life. tonigh northwest portion For Minnesota: Unsettled this af- vegetables, watermelons and all such) things. They lived well at their, tables and were rich men for those; ternoon, generally fair tonight and Saturday; cooler in extreme south to- night; not so cool in east-central and along Lake Superior Saturday and days: {along Lake Superior by early morn- The Indians were a source of con-, ing. siderable trouble to the state's first! farmer. They stole his cattle. sheep, | hogs, and other things, Villeneuve’ wrote. “When I was ready to go to! work one morning I found my two lie s of oxen missing. Bottineau| said, ‘You must find them.’ I went) to the tepee of Red Thunder. He had! been a general under Little Shell «Chippewa chief) and was living there with the other Indians. Found Animals Butchered | “I found every indication of butch- | 2 ering—entrails, beef, hides, ete. I told him I was looking for my oxen) and he said, ‘There is one,” and) pointed it out ot me. Then he told! me there was another at Little Bull's tipi and the other two in the tents of two warriors.” Bottineau farmed with oxen chief- ly and had but a few horses. At tha: time the entire region west of Pem-| bina and for a considerable distance; south was virtually a wilderness. The} only settlers were isolated traders. And the only other inhabitants except, the Indians were halfbreeds whose; habits linked them closely to the for-| mer. Even as late as 1870 no agricultural | products were exported from the state, except those Bottineau took to Win- tineau farm here was a real pioneer; venture. The census of 1860 shows) that Bottineau was 29 years old then and had married a mixed blood wom-) an, the couple being the parents of) several children. | Sovereignties Over Dakotas 1660—Charles II of England grant- ed to his brother, James, Duke | | ca i of York, the region from the /yecrhead, rain ....... 96 68 Knott and Leonard McDougal, Jr. Hudson river to the Pacific i ‘the children living at Fort "0108 piewe wim bean, This, grant included pant oe cisen Ie ie ON TL NUE Dif Rozerr TAYLOR PATSY KELLY North Dakota. a Dolan, from. eee, LORETTA YOUNG BASIL RATHBONE 1717—John Law was gran Huron, clay Democrats’ Stand ced MARJORIE of Louisiana, with full rights by | Rapid City. peldy. ee “PRIVATE NUMBER” saieaiiiaial the French government. On Constitution Is | GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS nipeg. So it is evident that the Bot-/ P: | Grand Forks, rain . A low pressure is centered over the ern half of Iowa, Sioux City. while a high pressure area over- states, Helen: wei 29. 30.08. the Mississippi ley and States, but somewhat cooler prevails over the Rocky region. Scttered showers curred throughout the north-central states, but generally fair weather prevails from the Rocky Mountain r¢ gion westward to the Pacific coas level 2 PR! For Bismarck Station: Total this month to dai y this month to Accumulated deficiency to date 5.80 WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA High- Low- BISMARCK, celdy. Carrington, cld: Crosby, peldy. . Dickinson, clear . Drake, cldy. . Dunn Center. pi Garrison, peldy. Jamestown, cldy. EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA ‘igh- Lew- Devils Lake, rain Minneapolis, clear ...- Pct.| Clara. The former was married to 3 |Kan.; Alice, still living, is the wife ¢| Knott, Harry R. Cunz, Alice Cunz, Approach of Bismarck’s great Pio- neer Days celebration, coupled with the observance of the 60th anniver- sary of the Battle of the Little Big Horn, recalls to three Bismarck: fam- ilies the perils which attended so simple a thing as carrying the mail in those far-gone days. The story, as told in Hanson's book about Captain Grant Marsh, “The Conquest of the Missouri,” is that Sgt. John Henry Fox and two sol- diers were detailed to take the mail to Fort Buford which had accumu- lated for the Custer command after leaving Fort Lincoln. They left the “Far West” in a skiff but had gone only 50 yards when it was upset by the current. The men drowned before help could reach them and the mail pouch sank to the bot- tom of the Yellowstone river. The mail pouch was recovered by the use of grappling hooks but the bodies of pity three soldiers were never recov- ered. Sergeant Fox was the father of three daughters, Mary, Alice and Sgt. Walter S. Knott of Fort Riley, of Gen. Harry Rene Lee, Nashville, Tenn., former Bismarck resident and now national commander of the Con- federate War Veterans, and the youngest daughter, Clara, married Rudolph Cunz. She died in Bis- marck in 1929. The program will be made up of Bible study and dresses, according to Rev. H. W. Case, missionary in charge. Dr. Hall has witnessed many changes take place on the reservation inspirational ad-/| over Ole H. Olson of New Rockford, jthe Missouri river on the same steam- where the Arikara, Mandan, and Gros Ventre tribes have associated for many generations. | ines eee ee Came With Custer’s Freight sive” faction were ahead in the count, He and his bride had journeyed UP | insur, candidate of the “progressive” wing. boat which brought General George Custer's freight, and upon their ar- rival at the village they found much to interest them. All was ditterent from their home in New York and different, too, from the Sioux country ‘where both had worked, one as @ pas- tor, the other as a teacher. Dr. Hall recalls the round lodges made of earth over a framework of saplings. Beyond the village was the scaffold where the dead were plated out of reach of animals, but exposed to the elements and in all stages of decomposition. Skeletons had blown down and bones lay scattered around. To one side high posts marked the place where the Indian braves tor- tured themselves to prove their phy- sical fortitude. Women took care of | the gardens where squash, corn and other vegetables were grown. Built School and Home Against the opposition of the older members of the tribes, they estab- lished a school with daytime classes To Trace Bismarck’s Church Development refer to the 55th anniversary Qf First Baptist congregation which is observed this year. “God Country” is the title for which will answer the question, Surveys Already Made THE NEW NETWORK OF for children and evening classes for | “What is the religious emphasis we Grandchildren of Sergeant Fox now living in Bismarck are Alice (Knott) Wannagat, Irene (Knott) Marsh, Ha- zel M. Knott, Walter Procter (Bud) Gertrude (Smith) Devlin, and J. Wil- liam Smith. . Those outside of Bismarck are Clara j (Bnott) Shenkenberg. Puyallup, Wash., iand Dewey Knott and Beryl (Knott) adults. This meant building a school | need at this time in the life of our as well as a dwelling house, but they | city?” lived to see their efforts richly re-| Rev. warded. The church now has | tely| church. The building will be open pproximat 900 adherents and a school system| all day Friday, Saturday and Sunday comparable to those in off-reserva-|as a gesture of hospitality. tion towns. The various communi- = ties now have their own church buildings, help support their native pastors and contribute toward the support of the mission work which has its headquarters at Elbowoods. ANOTHER HEAT WAVE STARTS SATURDAY CRIME BULLETS OR BALLOTS JOAN BLONDELL with Larry “Buster” Crabbe. Tom Keene - & Paramount Pictore Gang Comedy - - Novelties —NEXT ATTRACTION— PARAMOUNP me Delightfully Coot . SUNDAY - MON. JHRILL TO THE SCREEN'S MOST EXCITING I ROBERT TAYLOR LUKELTA YOUNG Delightful - - Amusing! 1743—The Missouri valley was ex- MONTANA POINTS plored and claimed for the High- Lew- Surprise to Foes ° French by Verendrye. ss 6481 ——— 1162—Driven from North America, 54-00 scistieg.obsthe. Cale aaaior disgate Added! “The Cobweb Hotel,” Technicolor Novelty France ceded Louisiana to Spain. 1800—Spain gave Louisians back to France. 1803—President Jefferson bought 1804—Louisiana its administration given to In- 1812—Dakote was included in Missouri territory, organized. that year. 1834—Michigan territory, created, then extended west to the Mis- Michigan to Missouri river. 1838—lowa territory ited, in- cluding Dakota. WE. R AT OTHER POINTS A THE! High. Lew I est Amarillo, Tox., clear - a Los Angeles, Cs! Pi a, Utell Oe 00 | m, Thursday, local hospital. Marriage Licenses Lester George Schonert and Miss Pct. | Pauline Theresa Wilmes, both of Bis- Myron R. Knutson, Bismarck, and Miss Caroline Frey, Hebron. Births Son, Ms. and Mri fridge, gt 16:06 a. marck hespitg!. J. Umber, .. Friday; Deaths Richard F. Fileatreau, 52, Mott, at 2:05 p. m., Thursday, local hospital. John Waleri, 38, Hebron, at 4:45 p. LAST CHANCE! Few Hundred Nicely Started even broached. tation plan, representation in conventions beginning eight years hence would be apportioned accord- ing to the Democratic strength in each state. At present popuiation is the basis. The Republicans already give greater voice to sections strong for the ticket. The national committee was in- structed to. recommend the new method to the 1940 convention after meo > MANDAN SAT. FairGrounds JUNE ONLY RAILROAD : CIRCUS COMING! BERT NELSON LORD AND MASTER OF THE MOST FEROCIOUS - SRUTES OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOMS FAM RE BACK RIDERS — CRISTIAN SENSATIONAL KNOW ! UBLIC MAY a Pa raveling concerns teu