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‘MARMARTH HEARS - ONL WELL YIELDING O40 BARRELS DAILY 90: Big Steel Tanks Erected! 1,000 Feet West of N. D. Border to Store Fuel (Special To The Tribune) Marmarth, N. D., June 21—Only a) thousand feet west of North Dakota's) western border a new kind of farm has sprung up which is being watched with more than ordinary interest by | people in this area. | It is a “tank farm” where 10 big; steel tanks are receiving the oil be- ing pumped from the Montana-Da- kota No. 3 well near here. Although both oil and water are be- tng pumped from the 6,700-fuot-deep hole, only oil is going into the tanks, a de-hydrating apparatus having been installed at the well head to separate the two fluids. What progress has been made since May 8 when the company announced Officially that 350 barrels of fluid, half of which was oil, were being pro- duced daily, cannot be learned here. But latest unofficial reports are that production has reached 540 barrels a day and that the percentage of oil | has increased. Further Testing Seen Another rumor in circulation here is! that the Montana-Dakota company is buying its own drilling equipment and soon wil) begin further explotation of the field. First. additional work to be done in| the field is expected to be at the No. 1 well, half a mile south of the No. 3 hole and also near the North Da- kota border, This is the well in,which oil first was discovered in this area but in which the oil turned to water. Tt was drilled to a depah of 8,100 feet | after oil was struck at the 6,700-foot | horizon and there {s some speculation | as to whether it will not be drilled still deeper in an effort to make it a commerical produce. In its official announcement the Montana-Dakot company said it had failed in an ef- fort to develop this well for commer- cial purposes. Camp Crook Area Active Menwhile, speculative attention has shifted somewhat to the Camp Crook area south of here. It is one of num- erous geologic structures beileved to contain oil in what is known as th) tri-state ‘basin of the Dakotas and ‘Wyoming and leasing has been going forward there by the Kennedy-Miller Oil and Gas company. This organ- ization has announced at Camp Crook that it intends to bring in @ small w he el di J. when the gas is avilable a large! ®! drilling rig will be installed to drill for of], using the gas as fuel. It is expected that gas will be obtained at @ depth of 1,600 feet in the Eagle sand stone, the same formation in which gas is produced in the Baker gas Hee cereiope by-’ the Montana- COM pany.. | wildcat’ venture - will “find |'7 the “McDonald interests” of Kansas| ™ City drilling on the Coal Creek struc- ture southwest of here. This outfit,| it. 15 said, expects to get oil at a.depth of 3,000. feet. A well drilled in this area by the “Carter interests” in 1930 obtained a:showing of light green oll atau unrecorded depth. The Carter well-was put down 2,000 feet. Parole Violators to Face Miller in Minot Fargo, N. D., June 21—()—-Alleged | tu have violated conditions’ under’! which, they were placed on probation, John Jorgenson, Northgate, and Har- rison P, Greene, Rugby, jailed in Mi- Not, appear before Judge Andrew. ‘Miller in federal court at Minot Wed- nesday. Jorgenson was placed on probation | for a two-year period Jan. 16 when he. pleaded guilty violating the tariff act for wool smuggling. Greene. was Placed on probation for 18 months following his plea of guilty Feb. 8 to ® charge of violating the federal al-| o¢ cohol tax act. CAPITOL TODAY and TUES. THE SPELL OF HONOLULU! Gay island escapades... Romance in Brass Buttons Glamour...Intrigue... :Tense Drama..Excitement! cf | | ti GS. VE GNGLELY Hi Fort, Former Aide of Relatives of Franklin W. Fort, 57, 125 TOWNSENDITES Election of New Congressional tors from all parts of the state were registered Monday afternoon as North Dakota Townsendites convened heré for a two-day convention and rally. / Smith gave the tors started Monday Patterson hotel when members of the | * War send club members arri |, meetings, said. of St. Paul will speak. An auto tour to points of interest in and near Bis- drilling rig to drill for gas and that/marck will occupy most of Tuesday istration committee appointed by the Capitol Townsend club of Bismarck are Mrs. Fred Werre, Dr. A. D. Lath- Top, Mrs, Wanda Mills, Mrs. Géorge Robideaux, Mrs. Rose Helbig, Martha agen! Fred Cote ee gel French, red v v tre, E. A. Nyberg, Campbell is chairman of the program Mrs. Knudtson Heads McLean Nonpartisans Mabel Venaas, delegate. three separate island cities and parts of two states, making the problem of transportation within the Port dis- trict unusually complicated. across the channel connecting Lake Maracaibo with the Gulf of Venezuela, only vessels drawinb less than 12 feet of water can enter the port. Hoover, Dies Aged 57 Rochester, Minn., June 21 —(7)— |former New Jersey congressman, left Monday with his body for Chicago as they went east for funeral serv- ices in East Or- ange, N. J., Wed- nesday. Fort, who was floor mana- ger for Herbert Hoover at the Re- publican -national ' THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1937 ROBINSON'S REVOLT CAUSE OF SURPRISE President's Right Bower in Sen- ate Demands Slash in U. S. Relief Burden Washington, June %1.—(%)— Senate tion forces, ig- noring economy pleas of their own leaders, rejected Monday an amendment to the relief bill de- convention in Kansas City in| 1928, when Hoo- ver was nominat- ed for president, inder President Hoover. HERE FOR MEETING Board to Take Place Mon- day Afternoon More than 125 delegates and visi- » president of the 8. W. Hagan, ngressional called the after- 01 lected to the board to replace others named at a meeting in Jamestown May 10. Mayor Obert Olson of Bis- marck welcomed the convention del- gates to the city after Rev. R. E. Opening invocation. Registration of delegates and visi- londay morning in the present congressional board met for n informal discussion and continued Monday afternoon at the auditorium. Deliberations were to continue in the auditorium during the afternoon, with the evening program to start’at| heard in convention halls as Valley| Bredy, 7:30 p. m., and s dance in the World| City and Bismarck were main con-|here Friday, were ibe peasecgeep ery St 9:30 sched- | tenders for the 1938 state Legion con-| William A. Lemke of the Evangelical close y's program, The lance will be open to the public, Mrs. H, Sleight, one of the local Town- ‘anging for the Meetings Tuesday will open at 9:30 inal session . m., and close with the final " 330 p. m., at which J. J. Alberts fternoon, Members of the reception ‘and reg- Miss Werre, Mrs. C. and Mrs. Rachel Anderson. Paul ommittee, Mrs, EH, Knudtson was elected Well attended, the convention was The program included community: of welcome, Mrs. Borchardt; Mrs. Loudenbeck; club reports Te- ‘ion in Bismarck in February by Mri. The Port of New. York includes Because of an outer and inner bar African wild dogs run in relays when hunting. By taking turns, they can soon bring down the fastest game. HURRY! HURRY! ONLY TODAY AND TUESDAY signed to put more of the cost on local communities. Washington, June 21.—(?)-Senator Fort died: here Sunday. He served as chair- | Robinson of Arkansas, administration iman of the federal home loan bank | leader in the senate, has started litical tongues wagging by his re on the pending $1,500,000,000. relief bill. The veteran Arkansan rarely has differed publicly with President Roo- sevelt since he became “boss” of the senate majority in March, 1933, For that reason colleagues watched him with some surprise Monday as he fought side by side with the Re- publicans and some Democrats to write into the relief bill a curb on administration spending. Robinson’s amendment would re- quire’ local governments, where able, to put up at least 25 per cent of ‘the cost of local projects. Senator Barkley (Dem.-Ky.), lead- ing the administration’s battle for an unrestricted bill, contended the amendment would be rejected. Both sides hoped for a final vote before nightfall. Friends forecast that Robinson would be back in the fold when the |noon session to order @t 2p. m., for| present issue was settled. They said its first business meeting, during | Robinson's attitude on the rellef ques- which 15 new members were to be tion reflected a deep-seated per- sonal conviction. CONTINUED from page one Political Education Urged by by Colmery day afternoon “through flag-decked streets, “Devils Lake in 1939,” was being vention, Three Men Boomed Names of three Legionnaires were being mentioned for department com- mandership. Vice Commander Harry ‘Edbloom of Oakes was most promi- nently advanced: Also supported were District Deputy Ben Myrhe of Williston and Oscar Troyer of Rug- by. Commenting on the change in method of selecting the state veterans service commissioner by the 1937 state | legislature, Adjutant Williams de- clared: “Under the new law, all re- strictions as to qualifications are re- moved.” Pointing out that previously con- trol of the commissioner's appoint- ment rested with the Legion, he said under the new order the Legion: ea share with the other veterans izations the. responsibility. for the prs vice work through the department heads. “In the event the office of veterans service commisisoner be- comes merely @ purely political ap- pointment and ceases its effectiveness in behalf of the veterans.” Kreabel Recommends Veterans Service Commissioner T. Kraabel, who resigned the post re- °. president of the McLean county Non-| cently to accept a position with the Partisan clubs at the county conven-| national staff of the Legion, request- tiin held in Underwood. She will! ed that operation of the fund be con- serve for the next two years. Elected | tinued through the department head- with her were Mmes; E. E. Kraft, vice-| quarters of the Legion. president; R. L. Fraser, treasurer; A.| Also discussed informally, looking J. Loudenbeck, secretary; J. J. Bor-| toward an expression from the. con-| pets delegate, and Mabel Venaas,| vention, was the death of tarry | alterna’ Herschleb, Mandan World War vet- eran, in which state authorities have presided over by Mrs. Kraft,-Cole-| been conducting a continuing investi- harbor, in the absence of the .presi-| gation. dent, Mrs. Knudtson, who was ill. Authorities. seek to determine the cause of @, fractured jaw he received singing, led by Mrs. Albert Peterson; | before his death. invocation, Mrs. R. R. Scholl; address} Committees announced by Com- mander Webb named Vice Command- er Edblom as chairman of the reso- sponse, by individual. club delegates; and ajlutions group. Other members were report of the biennial state conven- B. N. Meland, Willistin; M. G. Kelly, Devils Lake; A. D. McKinnon, Bis- marck; F. W. Tellner, Jamestown, Stan Laskey, Wahpeton; C. T. Hover- son, Fargo. T. E. Whelan of St. Thomas headed the credentials committee and others chosen were Spencer 8. Boise, Bis- marck, dist! 3 John. Meidinger, Ashley, finance, audit and budget; John McGill, Verona, Re- habilitation; M. B. Zimmerman, Grafton, trophies and awards; T. I. Dahl, Grafton, constitution. Turkish marriage issued a license only on the presenta- tion of a certificate showing that they know their new alphabet. “Hey, folks! He's what I've been bollerin’ . for!” LEFT TO SEE THE FUNNIEST SHOW OF THE SUMMER PARAMOUNT applicants are| Al Smith Admits He Is-Homesick oat seg fae nas londay admitted he was homesick. ‘ The cigar-smoking crat, ~ on his first European trip, said he was counting the days until he felt. New York sidewalks beneath his feet again: _ Smith said he would visit Irish Free State President Eamonn de’ Valera before leaving from Cobh aboard the Manhattan Aug. 3. ° Deaths Bernard Duane Hinés, 14-month- gon, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Third. street, 10:30 p, m., Bunday, lo- cal hospital. George Vik, 21, Wellsbetg, N, D. at i iday, in a local ‘hospital, . Joneaun a Emineth Eh Linton, and ‘ohn Volk, Bismarck, Saturday. Miss Irene Loretta Butler, Mandan, and Vernon Leroy Clark, Bismarck, Saturday, Miss Kathryn O'Day Brown and John J, Wingate, both of Bismarck, Saturday. Dr. Paul H. Burton of the Dakota |clinic, Fargo, is a business visitor in Bismarck. The Juvenile Foresters will hold s Picnic Tuesday at the Kiwanis park. requested to be there William Hollanbeck returned to Bismarck Sunday evening from Min- nepolis, where he spe! and visiting with relatives and friends. He is sales manager @ regional conference at Rapid os: 8. D., where state co-ordinators project managers of four states a ferred with the new regional con- eervator on fiscal year. plans. Funeral services for Gustave Carl Bredy, 27-year-old son of Mrs. Frank , 622 Eleventh 8t., who died were conducted by Rev. church from the Convert funeral home at 2 p. m. Monday. Burial was in Farien, y cometary, Rev. Opie 8. Rindaht will officiate at services in Driscoll at 2 p. m., Tuesday for George Haugen, 46, who died in a local hospital Saturday of blood poisoning, Interment will bé made in the Driscoll decal cem#lery, Pp, J. Meyer, er, president, Frank Fitzsimonds, manager, and Ivar Nel- son, chief engineer of the Meyer broadcasting company, are attending the annual convention of the Na- jtional Association of Broadcasters at Chicago. NTINUE Taft Emphasizes They Do Not Have . Power to Compel rolling proudly from their great| Nn: | stacks despite ClO’s long picket line. \"They bowed to the governor's will only when he invoked martial law and told Bethlehem he. would close the mills by force of arms, 4f neces- sary. Bitter Enemies Meet Coming under the same roof at the Cleveland mediation conference were two bitter enemies of the steel-labor controversy: Tom Girdler, Republic steel’s chairman; and John L. Lewis, the leader and “strong man” of this young labor union, the Comimnittee for Industrial Organization, which seeks mass rather than craft unionization. | They come at the invitation of the federal mediators—Taft, Dean Lloyd K. Garrison ofthe University of Wis- | 1 consin law school, and Edward Mc- Grady, assistant sercetary of labor and veteran arbiter of strikes. Back-to-work movements which have been persistent in some sections, brought from CIO speakers in War- ren, Ohio, Sunday the threat of & general strike. Casualties in the Youngstown bullet-punctuated battle leaders claimed were 50. : | -to Aid Housewife |: -8t. Paul, June 21.—(%)—Mrs. . -Esther E. Zandell, who lives near the railroad tracks in St. Paul's midway industrial district, wanted . the railroad to keep the trains away for a couple of days to vent smoke and soot from. coating: the. pain orders for trains moving ae to firms in the area not to stop near. Mrs. Zandell’s house. Smoking and Drinking? Watch Your x and drinking Adla Tablets. Sold on money guarantee. Capitol Cut Rate Drug, Inc.—Advertisement. Vacation? ‘We Make Leans fer Any Purpose . Salary Loans $5 to $50 On Your Pisin Note 2. Auto Loans $25 to $400, 3. A Refinancing Ont-of-' me Leans by SALARY LOAN CO. Dek, Nett wast Bide, Fhome 408 Bismarck, 8. D. Welfare Board Still Has Money to Lend With Time Limit Expiring Request for extension of time for livestock feed firettor of the tate public welfare board, who said nearly $100,000 re- sppropriated: "| mained in the state fund's) Hines, ,421 be ‘The weifare board head said he hoped arrangements could use some of the fund to match North Dakota Rural Rehabilitation corpora- tion monies for forage seed loans’ to eee in. areas where sufficient amount $125,000 was appropriated by the state and nearly $100,000 was left when the deadline was reached June 1, he said. Seven Persons Killed by Storm in Michigan Detroit, June 21.—(@)—Wind, rain and lightning which swept Southern and Eastern Michigan Sunday night jeft at least seven persons dead and many thousands of dollars of prop- erty damage in their wake. Three persons drowned in Saginaw. bay, off Linwood, Mich., when their outboard motorboat capsized. One man was killed by flying timbers from a de- molished barn. Two men were killed by lightning and a fallen wire electro- cuted another man. Weather Report ‘WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- erally fair tonight and Tuesday; little change in tempera: For North Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; little change in temperature. For South Dako! tonight and Tuesdi eee and ext n jenerally lightly cool: joutheast to For Minnesota: Fair tonight and Tuesday; not much change in tem- Perature. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS area Is centered over EeB lon, 8. 8. Marie ile a high pi area overlies the hern Mountain states, Sheridan 20.08 inches. Precipitation has occurred in’ the’ Great Lakes region, over the north Pacific coast and at scattered pl in North ry Elsewh. is _ge qui Hy Lak lon and filesiesipt val Walley: but feadings are lower over the Rocky Mountain re; SARS ills Reduced to sea level, Ky impor river stage oF i a, m, 10. weath atures PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Fatal this month to date 1, this month to date Total January Ist to date Normal, January 1st to date Accumulated excess to date .«: NORTH Pamunensies BISMARCK, clear Beach, clear . Carrington, cle Crosby, glear . Dickinson, clear Drake, clear . Dunn Center, cle: Garrison, clear Jamestown, cle: Max, clear . Minot, clear . Parshall, clear Sanish, clear . Williston, clear Devils Lake, clear Grand Forks, clear aR inson! clear be made to|. game Monday. separa Pet Jad Srooketon inthe batt for fet 00 0 jbeen scheduled between and the North Dakota 08 |perior 4-2, but dropped the Lisbon, clear Pembina, clear Wishek, clear . Moorhead, clear .. Mobr! | Trains Kept Away | Rei to, paint her house, so she asked | a) Boise, Idaho, Mod tomach! ion, SOUTH DAKOTA FoINTs Aberdeen, clear Huron, clear cl lerre, poldy. Rapid chy, iat MONTANA POINTS Glendive, clear . Havre, clear . WEATHER AT OT! OTHER , POINTS ashe = Low= es Amarillo, ‘Texas, clear. clear 84 Calgery, dite. clay. Cal Dee elegy ya Frit see pee eae Ore., St. ‘oul Mo. Pp a eae Lake Cit; v, at Sloux ‘Clty, Yous: ous Spokane, Wash, clea Swift Current, 8., cli ne Pas, Mi Claire #31 uulled ints third ‘place in, the loop 00 Wausau, the first game 7-6 in 12 in- ‘Winnipeg double victory 06 to show? fs for its day's work, with , | the second, 8-2 in seven innings. 06 Boots Anderson Wins AT YOUR GROCERS * Baked im Blemarek by City Bakery Moines, Ia., June 21.—(2)— The heart that beats beneath the hugging and kissing, even in bel parked car. Henceforth, he ‘aid, spoontag tn the city’s “lavers’ lanes” may pro- coed unmolested by *palioe. CONTINDED Wellsburg Youth — Dead of of a struck from behind by a brs driven by Buckeye. Miss Maristuen lost a large amount of blood, and the flesh of her leg was badly torn. ‘were appre- hensive of her condition. Amputation of her leg may be necessary. Lions Hear Reports on District Confab Report of delegates to the Fifth dis- trict convention at Moosejaw, Sask., last Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs- day and a talk by L. L. Rudrud, dep- uty state game commissioner, shared the Monday noon meeting of the Bis- marck Lion's club. VAN ZEELAND MAY DISCUSS WAR DEBT Belgian Premier's Visit to U, S. Cause of Much Specula- tion in World Washington, June 21—()—Uncon- that Premier Paul. van Zeeland of Belgium intends to discuss war debts with President Roosevelt during .a one-day visit to the White House Wednesday. 5 Informed observers attached some, credence to the reports on that a settlement of the debt problem would give, Layee world economic readjustment ant velopment. ‘The tall, blonde leader of the IP government, who has been. ed Europe's “unofficial” am! to the United States, admittedly hopes to exchange views with Mr. Roosevelt on a variety pf international subjects. ‘The Belgian embassy said Van Zee- land’s trip to the United States had no connection.with the mission en- trusted to him by the British and French governments to explore pos- sible avenues for a restoration of nor- cents trade relations among European ‘The president has made tentative arrangements to hold his conversa- tions with the Belgian visitor onthe presidential yacht Potomac. The two will embark Wednesday pctetbai weather permitting, for a cruise of several hours on the Potomac’ river or Chesapeake a Labor Policy’ Court Plan Hit by “Angell| ¥E Haven, Conn., June 21.—(®)— An attack by President James Row- land Angell on the administration's labor policy and President Roosevelt’s supreme court bill was in the record as commencement activities continued on the Yale campus. In his final baccalaureate begahead Sunday as head of the university, Dr. Angell charged that “the national gov- ernment has appeared as a partisan” in the present labor conflict and as- serted the supreme court bill is a means to abet a “rape of the con- stitution.” Delegates to the convetnion were E. O, Bailey, who made the report, G. A. Dahlen and Al Simon. Meetings were held in the Temple Gardens,| 1 owned by a former Bismarck man, Kel Temple Bailey reported. The fact that Minnesota and Manitoba have moved to split (rom the Pith district was disclosed at the convention, Bai- Meg sald, which would leave only North Dakota-and South Daokta and Saskatchewan in the district. Seven!’ North Dakota towns sent delegates. Alvin Strutz, who with Dr. F, B. Strauss was on the am commit: progr: S| tee, introduced L. L. Rudrud, who pointed out ‘that the state fish and game commission is run on a non- political basis as much as humanly possible ane is “a people’s commis- commission, Guests at the enls were Fred- erick Strauss, of Minheapolis, son @ Dr, Strauss, and Al Kubfeld, assistant attorney general and former Fifth district governor. Crookston Narrows Duluth Dukes’ Lead nlinneepolis, June June 2i—(@)—Oaly oan in the Ne ? Duluth club was Crookston marched to a 2-1 victory over Moorhead. two games had Crookston team. Duluth won the first game with Su- nightcap by_a 5-4 margin. The fighting Eau by winning a doubleheader nings snd the second, 7-1 in seven innings. also had a vic Jamestown being the victim. The first game was decided by # 6-4 count and Valley City Tourney Valley City, N. D., June 21—()— A. M. (Boots). Anderson of 00 ee won the annual invitational golf || 00 | tournament at ‘the country ‘club here 4 | Sunday, defeating Dr, Bruce :-Zimmer- pionship flight. by. defeating Jantzen. ‘The - industry is the second largest in the United States. It is capitalized at about $6,000,000,- 009 and normally employes 4,000,000 ‘fort just sprit ‘The astronomer, Purbach, made the first printed almanac. It appeared in 450. Several of the parlimentary divis- fons of Scotland are so large that it requires a fortnight to tour them. Now You Can Wear FALSE TEETH With Real Comfort FASTEETH, a new, pleasant pow- der, keeps teeth firmly se’ Deodor- izes. No gummy, gooey,’ pasty tast ‘or feeling. To and laugh th com- on a “Tttle FASTEETH our plat -Advertis of apes | at Got it today ai au i ent, t Habitation of Ancie People in U.S, Found fitmed reports. clealatee ore t and St, Paul a city attorney who died Sat- YOUNG MEN WANTED Hespatararaernanrirernf a $1.75 Unit TODAY Only 98/—A eet Sie! 2 pae 7 se, TODAY 98 Hl 2, 20-02. can 10 APRICOTS . ss mn 196 COCOA... 2h. pkg, 15e Sunbrite Cleanser - - 4 cans 15¢ INSECT SPRAY. oe mm can ba Popular Juice Size’ Calif. Valencia cuaiitie baer POTAT os p pers MEAT DEPARTMENT TUESDAY: and WEDNESDAY - SLICED HAM to fry .... RING BOLOGNA _ Ib. 29¢ _----- per lb. 17¢ ROUND STEAK ih. 27¢. SPARE RIBS - tb. 17e TWO STORES TO oe YOU 308 Main—Phone 460 $2.00 ORDERS D! 506 Broadway—Phone 746 ELIVERED FREE RED OWL FOOD STORES