The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 1, 1936, Page 7

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4 [ a Sif oF Ae started Tuesday . | Superintendent of the | highway, Placed | “Rearcely had’ prose igi ey Three-Way Inn, Nash-Finch Still Tied In First; Three More Deadlocked ne rma o irene jeague week Schlits Beer, of North Dahoth and sive Gas ae py tH fell i 8 5 Py £ i ‘: Wedge paced the winners at the plate. 3 Schlitz Beer, AB C. Balzer, if L, McCorrie, c. J. Ashmore, 1b 4 2 & A. Neibauer, p 3 Sameulson, ss. 3 L. Cleveland, 3b 2 ) R. Spangler, cf 3 ™. | t., 2 3 1 z Christopher, , Barbi Enge, 3b Beaudoin, Diehl, If *) Beylund, Fox, rf . Totals . Score by fi Schlitz Beer “Three-Way I 330 Summary: Left on Beer 9, Three-Way Inn 8; stolen bases —Beaudoin; two base: hits—Martin, Beaudoin, Spangler; three base hits—Ashmore, .’ Thorberg, Benser, Frolund; ‘hits off Martin 4 in @ in- nings, off Nelbauer 12 In 7 innings; struck out by Martin 8, by Neibai 2; bases on balls off Martin 9, off Nei- | -) bauer 7. Umpire; Ted Moe. P52. Shell Gas AB R H PO A B Oe ee ae Gk a 5 3°53. 3.0 6 6424 021 LD anes Pr Vineet BY 8 8 8 8 40 0 8 41 0 eee ea 4 1 0 @ 1 4300 0 1 42 0:3 0 1 11 318 H.PO A Cay Gre | 6 O° b Wee ae | 0 10 6 o 11 0 0 8 bo Wate, Bat Pe 0 0 6 1 1 0 463 o 6 Totals .... 34 9 4 core by innings: i tt Gat. es «200 035 5-16 o's .. 7003 Hl 38 ‘ Carlisie, B ' hits—-Browa; hom hits off, Brown ' ’ “tor the right to play in Dakota semi-pro eham- baseball sas, where the North Dakota cham- pion will compete against the winners int 31 other state meets for the na- ‘tional title August 14-26, 12 High. Scorers in Sunda: Meet to Represent State _ at Camp Perry Bismarck, N. D., June 30.—(®)— Winners of the civilian rifle meet who qualified in a tryout at Fort Lin- coln Sunday and won the right to rep- resent the state at the National Civ- by Adjutant General Frayne ker. ‘The twelve high scorers in. Fort Lincoln competition will eomprise the ohn | Enderlin, according to 4} 80 it with trees six fect * high. In 1938, 696,000 trea were| G.N.D.A. Compiling . | Planted on 38.55 miles of strip plant- From the Standing Rock reservation in October, 1888, went this delegation of Indians to meet the Great White Father. There were 16 men in the party—14 Indians, an interpreter and Major James McLaighlin, the Indian agent. | From left to right they are: Thunder Hawk, Bear’s Rib, Hairy Chin (standing) Black Prairie Dog and Gray Eagle; Second row: Big Head, Gall, John Grass and Fire Heart; Top row: Louis Primeau, in- TINK RAPS AIRLINE FOR REFUSING PASSAGE Washington's Playboy Solon Forced to Board'Train En Route to Seattle “I wanted to kn they should cancel ours. Te sieninat replied: | Amdahl was driving. 's sku « caplet hothing else | Ws ‘ ve f F. J. Bixler, trafti t, sald Al ‘tted 84,27 Zioncheck had been relied paitane N. D. Allo $1 5 because he had not purchased tickets in advance and because the plane had & capacity load when he arrived at airport. admit we were afraid to up,” Bixler added. “We careful not to endanger the our passengers. We told him off. He refused. Finally we all passengers out. While he was raising-hell in the hangar, we reloaded the passengers and took off.” Zioncheck drove to the Union sta- tion near the loop. legislator left on the Mil- railroad’s Olympian promptly at 11:15 p.m. (CST). How long he would stay on board depended upon @ reply to his telegram inquiring about the condition of his mother in Seat~ tle. If she were seriously ill, he said, | he would leave the train and take the. fastest plane available. Discusses Detention | He ended an unwonted silence at the terminal to discuss his recent de- tention in Washington for mental ex- amination and his flight from a hos- pital at Towson, Md. The reason for the action, he maintained, was that “I favored certain bills which certain interests opposed.” He named neither names nor measures. Zioncheck said he escaped from the Towson infirmary last Sunday by For Special Security 4 a & & and Minneapolis. About the airplane incident—North- west Airlines officials said he didn’t have a ticket—he commented: “I don’t know whetber I'm going to sue the airplane company, but Ca Oe eee Te No Man... CAN HATE ANYTHING MORE THAN A WOMAN HE HAS ONCE LOVED! See “Forgotten Faces” Towson, Md., where he was confined after a long series of excapades. He fleti from there Sunday night. “Tt Uthe detention) was the idea of some political enemies of mine,” he declared, adding he planned when he gets to Seattle to check.up on the condition of his mother, whom he had heard was ill, and his father and then — fishing in the 4.” ‘ ‘SHELTERBELT TREE Front row: High Bear, | BUREAU DISBANDING e=/Shelterbelt Work As . “\ehamber is seeking to present the terpreter; High Eagle and Stephen Two Bears. Two Indians of the delegation are missing—Sitting Bull, who | kept out of sight, and Mad Bear who was sick. H i _ Drouth Aid Proposed ; eee 3 PARIS OPERA STARS Jamestown CC Thinks Farmers Should Get Cash Credit for Tree Planting Jamestown, N. D., July 1.—()—Use | of the present shelterbelt set-up to} give North Dakota farmers employ- ment in the preperation of the soil! for the planting of 9,000,000 trees now | growing in North Dakota nurseries isi being advocated by the Jamestown! chamber of commerce and others in- | terested in drouth relief projects. The | Government's Decision to Dis- solve Rightist Leagues Upheld by Deputies Paris, July 1.—(?)—Striking opera performers danced on the stage of the closed Opera Comique Wednesday with-police guards-for an audience. Proposal to Governor Welford, Secre- tary Wallace, and the officers of the Greater North Dakota Association. ; Local chamber officials int out, that these trees, whion are ara ;night to begin an “occupation strike” erty.of the government, could be uti- ‘horily after the curtain fell on the lised in local or state parks and in | last performance of the season. pene F sptios the farmers for their ;™ore worry to the harassed Socialist "twork in preparing the soll would be 80Vernment, whose decision to dissolve rig ss Biante In te ae, Wa Toe caainber approved the govern- ite oleck conducted by | Lopes of the state-owned opera demanded the resignation of the di- came to a close June 30 with the ex- ector and new wage agreements, En. ‘amped backstage, the members e company organized a ball to pass ee ee out srl esi Bt ithe time. They will occupy the thea- Mandan, Bismarck, Valle! jter, they said, until their demands f 7 {are approved by the management, | Charges by Roger -Salengro, min- ister of the interior, that rightists plotted to assassinate Premier Leon |Blum brought a storm of protest from the right wing. ig dc ne ailed throug! The number strikers ie pee jh. the. central Part | country remained at approximately of the state, Of the plantings made 150,000, FE. Cobb, state director. ‘A broad survey over all of the plantings made in 1936 show a survie val in North Dakota of 79 per cent despite the extreme drouth that has in 1935 a survey showed a survival of Pasture Information | North Dakota farmers and stock- in the Cedar, River Valley southwest ‘men who may need immediate feed for ‘of the Missouri river, Bottineau, Bur- | leigh, nag alt pens and: Mercer) counties. In 1936, 3,762,000 trees were | od Danio ot bai men of np ar comms of te reser orth a 4900 ‘acres, and 235.81“ within the last few weeks numerous acres as farmstead plantings. letters have been received by The Over 1,000 farmers coopzrated and | rripune or turned over to The Tribune peontributed time and materials in this! ty iocal residents. All of, them speak e ‘These ‘of plenty of pasture in parts of eakt- farmers have agreed to car2 for trees ern North Dakota and Minnesota and pend fences after June 30 and in alll offer to pasture animals who might 1936 plantations that will have re | pe shipped in from western North ceived good:care, replacements of dead : trees will be made from stock now Bs ios i i: |170 Employes Find Work in day. two letters from Minnesota and from Nebraska with cattle raisers that would be de- sirous of shipping stock out of the state for fattening, preparatory to Other Branches as Fed- eral Project Ends aes Lincoln, Neb., July 1—()—Disband- ing of the federal shelterbelt project began at its headquarters here Tuss- Paul H. Roberts, acting director, bid farewell at a staff conference to the one-time $75,000,000 plan to plant windbreaking belts of trees in a 100- inile wide zone from the Canadian border to Texas. STRIKE UPON STAGE rs aos In two years, the project spent $2,800,000 in six states, but a few appropriations except a small sum for mandatory liquidation of the project. Roberts said the project stimulated tree planting in the zone and ex- pressed hope the shelterbelt idea would be continued in the area. “During the past two seasons, shel- terbelts have been planted on 4,213 farms, They will require three or four years more care before they can be considered well established. At the present time, 80 per cent of those planted are living. I appeal to the ‘The entire company voted Tuesday|farmers to give them care. It will mean not only the successful estab- lishment of theip tree plantations but also it will demonstrate the feasi- projects. ‘The! The professional walkout added one | bility of growing trees in the plains re- gion.” Roberts said the 170 civil service employes on the project will be given work in other branches of the U. 8. department of agriculture. BURLEIGH FARMERS MAY MOVE CATTLE Opportunity Presented to Ship Stock Out of State for Pasturing SLR SSE TN Drouth-stricken farmers in Bure leigh county may avail themselves of the opportunity to send cattle to Min- nesota and Nebraska for pasturing, Extension Agent H., ‘Wednesday. Putnam sald The county agent was in receipt of one requesting contacts hei Because of the difficulties of trans- tion from Bismarck to Omsha, portal Putnam was of the opinion that the Nebraska offer was of little value but urged gny producers interested in the Minnesota at the Memorial tocontact him building. Because of the seriousness of the feed situation, ‘the extension man Pegg gga greenday Bo gd a al title feed | In the field of politics ed on Congressman W! \ SA telephone call. will bring a case to Paramount Today scaling to a balcony, and leaping for & pole 10 feet away. He missed. He| he comment- ‘illiam Lemke’s @ Plenty of experiments our grandfathers wouldn't approve are being tried with food and drink. For some old-fashioned charcoal-broiling for chops, and the way. Old Style Lager is made can’t be improved. But one modern development would draw applause from our most conservative ancestors. Now Old Style Lager, famous for 85 years, is mellower, fuller flavored and better than ever in the new cap-sealed cans. It i8 pasteurized faster and ‘completely. protected from light, good beer’s great- est enemy. M your deor. @. HEILEMAN BREWING CO., Le Creme. We. In continuows operation tince 1850 HEILEMAN’'S Aa Old Style Hager \

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