Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, KIWANS PRESENT SLATED FOR SPEECH AT PEAGE GARDENS Annual Rededication Ceremony * Scheduled North of Dun- * seith on July 18 Rolla, N. D., July 3.—(#)—F. Traf- ford Taylor, St. Boniface, Man., pres- Ident of Kiwanis International, will be present at exercises at the Inter- national Peace garden, north of Dun- seith, July 18, when Kiwanians will Present a plaque in ¢ommemoration of more than a cenvary of friendly relations between the United States ‘and Canada, it was here Saturday. ‘The peace garden on that day will be the scene of plenic which thou- sands of persons, both Canadians and U. 8. citizens, are expected to attend. Two Kiwanis district governors also will be present. They are Paul R. Brekken of Calgary, Alta., governor for Western Canada, and A. F. Bran- ton of Winona, Minn., governor of the Minnesota-North Dakota district. Several lieutenant governors are ex- pected, including J. M. Dobbe of Brandon, Man., and R. 8. McNeal of Crosby, N. D. The annual rededication of the peace garden will be held on this day, and peace garden officials have ‘ranged for the Kiwanians to have charge of this ceremony also. ‘The ceremonies will be held at a natural amphitheater on the Amer- ican side of the garden, which has been improved by COC workers from the U..8. park service camp. Among speakers will be J. 8. Mc- Diarmid, minister of mines and na- tural resources for the province of Manitoba. The program is being arranged by \ Kiwanis committee which includes E. C. Fuller of Minot, chairman; Judge C. W. Buttz of Devils Lake, and H.C. Austin of Brandon. Weather Report WEATHER FOREVA‘! For Bismarck and_vicin' Gen- erally fair tonight and Sunday; some- what cooler tonight; Monday fair and ‘warmer, For North Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Sunday; somewhat cooler tonight; somewhat warmer north- west Sunday; Monday fair and warm- er. For South Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Sunday, except local thundershowers extreme southeast tonight; somewhat cooler tonight and southeast Sunday; Monday fair and somewhat warmer. For Montana: Generally fair tonight and Sunday; cooler southeast portion tonight. Minnesota—Partly cloudy to cloudy, thundershowers | jt it portions tonig! east Sunday; warmer along Lake Su: Perior, somewhat cooler in Red River valley tonight; somewhat cooler Sun- day. Monday fair, cooler southeast portion. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is lew over he north-centrai districts, Winnipes 8 inches, and over the Southwest, Phoenix 29.64 inches, Pressure area overlies the Northwest, Calgary 30.14 inches. somewhat unsettled from the Grea! Lakes region to the Rocky Mountain region and light, scattered precipita- tion has occurred in the central and northern Plains States, in eastern Montana and at scattered places in the western Canadian Provinces, C Bismarck station barometer, inche! 28.11. Reduced t Missouri rivei Outlook for Great Lakes reg’ ‘Local Monday and ain about ‘Thursday or Friday; cooler first of week, warmer middle, cooler Friday or Saturday. Upper Mississippi and lower Mis- souri valleys—Showers south portion Monday; showers again abdut Thurs- day or Friday; temperatures mostly near or above normal. Northern and central Great Plains— Generally fair except showers about Wednesday or Thursday; tempera- tures mostly near or above normal. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total, this month to date Norma!, this month to dati Total, Jan. ist to date Normal, Jan. ist t Accumulated excess to date . NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Hi ie Low- est Pct. = coms BISMARCK, eld Beach, ptcldy . Carrington, ptcl Crosby, clear .. Dickinson, ptcldy \: Drake, cldy Dunn Center, ptei Garrison, ptcldy Jamestown, cldy Max, ptcldy . Minot, cldy Parshall, beel Sanish, pte Williston: pteiay’ Devils Lake, ptcldy . Grand Forks. pt Hankinson. cle: Lisbon, cldy ... Napoleon, cldy Oakes, ptcldy . Pembina, cldy Wishek, cldy . MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pet. 92 72 86 00 Mpis.-St. Paul, eldy ... Moorhead, clear .. SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Aberdeen, clear . 96 56 .00 Huron, clear 66.00 Mobridge. cldy 2 64 00 Pierre, clear .. 6416 Rapid City, rain 66 20 MONTANA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. Glendive, cldy 90 60 .4e Havre, clear 58.00 Helena, clear 58.00 Lewistown, cl 50.00 Miles City, cle: 6s 04 WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS High: Low- and buttes that dot the innaeosie: Amarillo, T. 14 3 TO 00 marillo, Tex., cldy 5 Underlying the area Hewes depth Boise, Idaho, clear . 58.00 Calgary, Alte., cle 46 18 |0f 1,700 feet are the shale and fine- £ Casper, HR Ht 4 grained sandstone that provide a cago, 5 foundation Denver, Colo,, clear #4 :09 | four Pie Pa is Bas ey) Dodge City, Kan. clear 98 68 .02 wn as the and Lance ee Sdaho, clear 3 2 a4 formations. Imonton, a., Clear 4 Lignit beds, fossil trified Kamloops, B.C.’ ptcldy 80 52 ‘00 te Soupl) Went pt; De Kansas 92 72 106 Los Angel 90 «64 =—.00 Modens, Uta! su as 00 No" Platte, Neb. clear’. 60 (08 Skianome’ City, ‘picldy 38 6 00 Phoenix, Aris. ptcldy 114 $8 .00 Pr, Albert, 8., ptcldy .. 58-00 Qu’ Appellen clear .. 58.00 Roseburg, 0: 54 100 St. Louis, Mo., p 68 :00 Salt Lake City, clear.. 98 58 .00 Santa Fe, N. Mex., peldy 84 60 .00 8.8, Marle, Mich, clear 72 48 .00 % 54.00 he Pas, Mai 56 (C18 Winnipeg, Maa, Se i 58.00 Dr. Alexander H. Kemp, medical gola in Africa and a speaker in the McCabe Methodist Episcopal shown here vaccinating native children at his hospital below the Bismarck men, women and children prepared Saturday to join the parade of thousands of North Dakotans to holiday playgrounds. Many residents of the Capita) City contemplated a restful week-end at home but more planned trips to near- by lakes and resorts and to pleasure- grounds as far away as Minnesota's ait thousand lakes and the Black Some persons looked forward to the close of work Saturday so that they might start for the North Dakota Badlands and three days of horseback riding in the Roosevelt state parks. People unaffected by the lure of the open road looked forward to a full day on the golf links, or to an easy chair, a pipe and a good book at home. Disciples of Izaak Walton any, planned to use the holiday to catch up on crowding work. Frequent explosions of firecrackers Saturday gave an early Fourth of July atmosphere as “the kids” warmed up to the Independence Day spirit. Chief of Police W. E. Ebeling and Police Commissioner E. B. Klein re- iterated their warning of Friday to beware of careless handling of fire- crackers since often gaiety has been; turned to tragedy by some unfore- seen accident. Lake resorts and picnic grounds) drew the biggest percentage of vaca- checked their fishing gear. Few, if|* Geel in the eastern part of the state, There was no vacation in sight for many of North Dakota's official fam- liy. Governor will share the spotlight with Miss Jeanette Rankin, first American congresswoman, at the Canadian-American peace ceiebration opening the Northwest Fair at Minot, Sunday. Monday the chief executive will speak at Wishek and Tuesday he is scheduled to address the crowd at the three-day celebration at Dickin- son, Nye to be Speaker U. 8. Senator Gerald P. Nye will speak at several events and State WPA Director Thomas H. Moodie will give the main address at the dedication of a $40,000 swimming pool in New Rockford. In addition to the Northwest Fair at Minot, the annual Stutsman coun- ty fair will open at Jamestown, Sun- day. Regular Fourth of July celebra- tions, featuring fireworks displays, rodeos, speeches, baseball games and other amusements, will be held in many communities. Fair vacationing weather was forecast for the week-end. The pre- diction for North Dakota was: “Gen- erally fair tonight and Sunday, some- what cooler tonight; somewhat warmer northwest Suriday; Monday fair and warmer.” CONTINUED from page ens: Oil Firm Seeks to Develop New Field and leasing thousands and thousands of acres. Almost equidistant between Ray and Tioga in Williams county and be- ginning about 12 miles south of these two villages, the tract runs due south 1! across the Missouri river into north- ern McKenzie county. Selsmographic Survey The Standard Oil company has two geologists and five surveyors of its own at work. In additon it has em- of Dallas, Tex. to make @ seismo- gtaphic survey of the anticline. There are 16 men in the Dallas party. Also active in the field are Thomas are leasing ‘solid blocks of acreage in the prospective oil field. Approximately 170,000 acres in seven townships are being surveyed and leased. The block is cut almost river, which runs due east and west in this area. Frankly » Wildcat Known to the oil world as a No. 1 wildcat shot, the activity here is based on geological surveys made 20 years ago by the U. 8. government. Mapping lignite beds in Williams county in 1917, government surveyors discovered the anticline, the type of Beologic structure in which the vast mao of producing oil wells are Anticlines or domes are upheavals of hidden layers of the earth’s crust. The Rocky Mountain peaks are visible domes. To find the top of these sub- terranean mountains is the goal of oil well drillers. Anticlines are difficult to discover in North Dakota because rock out- croppings, which are clues to such geologic structures, are few. This is due to the thick layer of glacially- deposited material that covers the whole state like a blanket, hiding what. Buttes Bedrock The rock layers in North Dakota generally lie flat. Diggers of water wells long ago determined this. But here in the Nesson valley, so-called because of the smail village of that 00 |lies beneath. ‘|pame that once existed here, the bed- Pct. |rock has been exposed in the sides of buttes and so geologists knew that one or more domes existed. The surface of the region is a gently rolling upland, y the Missouri river cuts « valley from 300 to 500 feet deep. The uplands are the lowlands along the river and creek salar ate comeren with Teed -eppatt: It is along the valleys that the bed- rock is well exposed in the hillsides ployed the Geographical Service, Inc.,| ing squarely in the center by the Missourt | 4, largely covered with glacial drift while | this region. This is the Pierre for- mation. Far below the Pierre formation is the Dakota sandstone which is reached in artesian wells at depths Of 2,000 to 3,000 feet. Shale Is Indication Oil has never been found in either the Fort Union or Lance formations nor have drillers so far been success- ful in locating oll-bearing strata in the Pierre shale. But it is from the Pierre shale in eastern Montana and western North Dakota that gas comes for distribution from Baker. Gas also has been detected in deep wells in this area. But where there is natural gas there 4s likely to be oil, and it is on this hope ay the Standard company is explor- ere, Just where the oll may be, if any, the geologists do not know. However, they estimate that on the basis of experience of the Montana-Dakota company in its exploration of the Marmarth field, drillers will have to go at least 7,000 feet down and maybe further. Wells 12,000 feet deep are not uncommon. Gambling on a Hope the surveyors of 1917 discovered the anticline, they not make a thorough survey. It is for this reason that the Standard company is seeking an accurate map- ping of the area both above and below the ground to determine just where to sink their first well in hopes of hitting the top of the dome. The dome, the geologists feel, is likely to be found in Madison lime- stone, the type of rock strata bearing re an the Montana and Wyoming (Tuesday: Some facts and figures on the exploration work done to date.) Patrolmen Assigned To 4th 1 Celebrations Henry G. Lund, superintendent of the North Dakota highway patrol, said Saturday that state patrolmen will give traffic protection at five North Dakota communities during Fourth of July celebrations. Fou: patrolmen will be assigned to handle traffic at the state fair in Minot and three will go to Dickinson for the celebration being held there July 4, 5, and 6. One patrolman will be assigned to other celebrations at Killdeer, Wishek and Brush Lake in McLean county. ——_— ——_—_—_—_ | Additional Churches | BISMARCK BAPTIST CHURCH Eighth and Rosser Streets Benjamin Schiipf, Pastor 10:00 a, m.—Sunday school. roups with the b and competent teachers. Deutscher Gottesdiens: helligen Abend ah! n der Gemeinde. Jedermann inden, zu ‘lien Go! diensten einge- ee m.—Baptist Young People’s union, isther Schlipf, president. The program is conducted tongue. Old and young enjoy 1 8 Deutscher popula nst. Lebhafter G Lieder des Evang: —Wednesday, Gebets: mit Betrachtung mad Bes rechuns von einer wichtigen it. Vs t eine “es ab?” wollen wir besprechen. Cool, mesh sport shirts, $1. —Ber, "Ss. RODEO Midway—123 miles north of march Contest and Mount Money Given ADULTS SSe-CHILDEEN 250 missionary to the country of An- church of Bismarck Sunday, is equator, Bismarck People Join |C °XILN2=D Holiday-Bound Parade) *"Howiand islet on : Hazardous Flight kite and emergency food and water rations. Headwinds and static combined to plague the fliers almost from the time they left Lae. They were unable to communicate with the Itasca because of the static and adverse winds cut spect and increased fuel consump- ion. “We have had no position, speed or courses from Earhart’s plane,” the Itasca radioed headquarters in San Francisco. “We believe it passed north and/*' west of island and missed it in glare of rising sun, although we were smok- ing heavily at that time. Judge she came down within 100 miles of island.” Barren of Islands Within that 100 miles of shark-in- fested waters, however, there are no regular shipping lanes, and tramp} Bp: freighters seldom course through it because it is barren of inhabited islands or ports. The nearest land is tiny Baker island, 40 miles south but there is no other for hundreds of miles. Howland island is a treeless sand- Spit located on a direct airline from Honolulu to Australia. At San Francisco Lieut. Frank Johnson, explaining that the Earhart plane presumably came down at a point 100 nautical miles from Howe land island, said he had estimated the drift would carry a floating plane westward at the rate of two knots an hour, about 50 miles a day. Sailing ships ply the area about 300 miles westward, he said. Might Reach Islands Within nine days, Johnson estimated, the floating plane might reach the Gilbert islands, 420 miles to the west. Belief that Miss Earhart’s direction finder was not functioning properly was ¢ in @ message from the Itasca with reference to the earlier stages of the flight. “Earhart direction finder apparently not functioning well as could not get Itasca on agreed frequency,” the cut- ter radioed. “Earhart had barely sufficient fuel under the best conditions to make Howland island where she was expect- ed at 1:15 p. m. (CST) Friday.” Miss Earhart first flew to Honolulu in March to start her equatorial globe flight west to east. A takeoff acci- dent caused her to return to the mainland and again start around the globe in the opposite direction, going from Oakland, Calif. her starting point, to Miami, Fla. in May. By quick hops she passed San Juan, Puerto Rico, Dutch Guiana, and Natal, Brazil. From there she went to Dakar, French Senegal, 1,900 miles away on the West African coast. From there they proceeded to Khar- toum, then to Massawa and Assab, Italian Eritrea cities, thence to Assab- Karachi, Calcutta, Akyab Burma, Rangoon, Singapore, and Bandoeng, Java. Next stop was Darwin, Aus- tralia. From Darwin it was but a short flight to Lae, New Quinea. NOONAN WELL KNOWN TO FLYING FRATEBNITY New York, July 3—()—Capt. Fred F. Noonan is as well known to the flying fraternity as Amelia Earhart is to the whole world. While Miss Earhart lived in a whirl of daring exploits, society, pene reels, interviews and au Capt. Noonan plugged along teaching other fliers how to find safe landing fields and thereby achieve old Age. Mrs. Noonan, wife of the flyer, be- came hysterical Saturday and was placed under care of a physician at her home. She was in an automo- bile going to the Oakland airport with a friend to confer with George Palmer Putnam, Miss Earhart’s band, when she collapsed. PARAMOUNT Sunday Gala Holiday Attraction IT’S A HORSE ON US 4 Hf the mad Marxes don't tite JONES O SULLIVAN A SAM WOOD PRODUCTION —_— July 4-5-6 Sun.-Mon.-Tues. to Bismarck. in this country, on his first furlough, he addressed a capacity crowd at the Methodist church. his African duties, Dr. Kemp is mak- ing ® 10,000 mile tour in an auto MISSIONARY SPEAKS AT CHURCH SUNDAY Dr. Kemp Will Address Morn- ing and Evening Methodist Services Dr. Alexander H. Kemp, since 1923 & medical missionary in West Africa, will address both morning and eve- ning services at the Methodist church Sunday. Morning service will begin at 10:30 o'clock and evening service at 7:30 o'clock. It will be Dr. Kemp’s second visit In 1929, when traveling On this, his second vacation from trailer he made himself. Traveling with him are his wife and his four African-born daughters. In Angola, on the west coast of Africa, Dr. Kemp maintains a hos- pital, where he has treated some 20,- 000 natives and a school, which is at- tended by 200 native boys. He has erected several mission buildings in Angola, has had charge of industrial and agricultural works, and has been superintendent of a large district containing 50 com- munities, Dr. Kemp will return to Africa in September. HOTEL REGISTRATIONS — Prince Hotel Esther 1 Teon Halliday; Miss Belle Boese, t Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Zoerb, Duluth, ‘Minn.; and Mr. and Mrs. Kondos, Devils Lake. Grand Pacific Hotel Beatrice Stillwell, Watford City; Mr, and Mrs, H. J. Rodenbaugh, Shields; Harold E, Buri, Hazen; Rev. Louis Traufler, Devils Lake; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Schutt, Grafton; Mr. and Mrs. R. R, Domsife, Sunbury, Pa. ene Lundstrom, Kerkhoven, Min: Wilson, Belcourt; Elbert Hubbell, Belcourt; Mr, and.Mrs, George Powell, Harlem, Mont.; Mr. ‘and Mrs, Alex Couttle, Milwaukee, Wis.; and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nelson, Helena, Mont, Son, Mr. and wre Marvin Spellman, 405 Fifth St. 4:12 p. m., Friday at the ismarck hospital. Son, Mr. and Mrs, Alexander Ger- litz, Hugh apartments, Mandan, 9:03 Sap Saturday at the Bismarck hos- t Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Schmidt, 503 Ninth St. 8:50 a, m.,, Friday, at the St. Alexius hospital, Daughter, Mr, and Mrs, William J. Baker, Bismarck, 4:30 a. m., Satur- day at the St. Alexius hospital. Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Stratton, 518 Sixth St., 9:55 p.m, Friday, at the St. Alexlus hospital, als M. Ornerit ‘on Lake Williams, a, m., Saturday at a local hospi- it Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota said here Saturday $62,000 had been apportioned by congress under the department of interior In- dian bureau bill for construction of a new school building on the Turtle Mountain Indian reservation. He said construction was to be started this summer, Gov. William Langer announced the appointment Saturday of A. Wold of Devils Lake to a five-year term on the state board of optometry. He succeeds Dr. C. G. Hendrickson of Grand Forks. THE DRIVER'S jaded whe JOAN PERRY Nana ™+ | ketable hogs, many of which farm- O.|neral arrangements, which have not Aimed straight at the heart by one of America’s greatest writers, Albert Payson Terhune. NOAH BEERY JR. BARBARA READ CAPITOL 2+ SE) Sunday - Monday - Tuesday 4 Shows Sunday and Monday at 2-4-7-9 PUT ‘EM ON THE HOT SEAT!” ploy DEVILS DRIVISG John Bosch Election of officers was the final order of business for about 400 delegates to the annual convention of the North Dakota Farm Holiday association, which ended here Friday. Oliver Rosenberg, New Rockford, was re-elected president. Other officers named were John Walz, Fessenden, first vice-president; Aslak Haugo, Sheyenne, second vice-president; Math Dahl, Hazelton, third vice-president, and Leo Nelson, Sheyenne, secretary-treasurer. John Bosch, president of the National Farm Holiday association, addressed the convention Thursday. qi FARMERS UNABLE TO [Hee Burn to Death = MEET HOG DEMAND Oneonta, N. ¥., July 3.—(?)—Three Plants Pinched to Maintain persons were reported burned to death and a fourth seriously injured Operating Volume Though Prices Are High Saturday when a private cabin air- Plane overturned and burned at a Private airport of H. H. Lynn, 12 miles from here. Reported unofficially among the dead were H. H. Lynn, 60, of Morris, founder of the Lynn Manufacturing company, who owned the lane; Capt. George Stead, Norwich, pilot, and a Mrs. Hansen, of Morris. The husband of Mrs. Hansen, be- lieved to have'jumped or been thrown from the plane, was injured, WILLISTON JUNIORS WIN Williston, N. D., July 3. — (®) — Gronfur, Williston’s American Legion junior baseball pictcher, handcuffed the Minot Juniors Friday, allowing only four hits and fanning 20 oppo- sing batters as the locals scored a 3-2 triumph. Chicago, July 3.—(?)—That old farm dilemma—high prices but little to sell—had the nation’s hog produc- ers perplexed Saturday. At the Chicago stockyards, where half of the hog alleys were closed because of small supplies, packers were willing to pay the highest prices in_ eight. years for swine. The big plants were geared to process a normal number of hogs but, with reduced receipts, packers were pinched for supplies with which to maintain operating volume. Buyers moved through the checkerboard yards offering $12.50 per hundred- weight for best hogs. In the east quotations were up around $13. But farmers in the corn-hog belt, biggest pork production region in the world, could not meet this demand fully. Their corn cribs held scant supplies of the grain best suited to fatten swine. Their piglots contained @ smaller than usual number of mar- ers wanted to save for fattening on the coming corn ioe which grain experts predict will be the largest since 1932. Funeral Services for Orner Not Completed Frank M. Orner, 63, of Lake Wil- Uams, died at 2:20 a. m, Saturday at a local hospital, Cause of death was heart disease. The body will lie in state Sunday at the Calnan Funeral Home. Fu- PAT O'BRIEN been completed, will probably be held at Lake Williams Monday. Orner was a blacksmith at Lake Williams. Sas “YANK THESE KILLERS OUT OF SEAT... AND Margaret Lindsay & Stuart Erwin in Wm. Wister Haines’ Best Selling Novel * «" “SLIM” The daringly different story of the unsung heroes of the high tension lines—charged with thrills—crackling with laughs—It’s the thrill show of the month! PLUS CARTOON & NEW§ y Starts Sunday ==) They’re Yours for 'a Glorious Fourth! ‘ HOLIDAY GROUP ENDORSES STRIKE Resolutions Passed at Conven- tion Here Also Condemn Relief Setups Endorsement of Bismarck’s two hide and fur company strikes, a de- mand for immediate removal of ex- ecutive secretaries of county welfare boards, and a demand that sale tay monies be used for relief purposer were contained in resolutions passed by the North Dakota Farm Holiday association before it adjourned its an- nual convention in Bismarck Thurs- Gay. The resolution also: Condemed inadequacy of relief set- ups and asked state elective officials to take over poor relief and drouth relief administration. Urged @ practical works program at union rates, which would occupy it- self largely with construction and re- pair of individual workers’ homes, etc. Condemned discrimination against single men and women by relief agencies, Criticized land rent practices of the Federal Land bank, the Bank of North Dakota, and other large land- owning organizations, Asked North Daokta’s congressional representatives to insist that at least 10 bushels from each acre of crop be freed from seed loan mortgage claims Endorsed Dr. Herbert C. Hanson, professor of botany at the State Agri- cultural college, for the presidency of the college. PARSONS CASE STATIC Stony Brook, N. Y., July 3—(®)— After two days of intensive investiga- tion, representatives of the Sufflock county district attorney's office said Saturday they have “suspects in mind in the disappearance of Mrs, Alice McDonnell Parsons.’ SCOUTS FETE FRAZIER Washington, July 3.—(?)—Senator Lynn Frazier of North Dakota was @ breakfast guest of 250 North Dakota Boy Scouts Saturday. “Gan-Dhi-Pants.” son’s Men’s Shop. — Berge- ALWAYS COOL AND COMFORTABLE ENDS TODAY (Saturday) HENRY FONDA A DAY. RACES Music and Madness Girls and. Guffaws! Bryant Frank C. Wilson A firecracker loaded with SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY, JULY 4-5-6 SHOWS SUNDAY & MONDAY AT 2- 4-7-9 ALLAR JONES MAUREEN O’SULLIVAN