The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 14, 1930, Page 6

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Kremer, Schultzand | ARKANSAS INSURANCE-SLAYING _ Englerth Are Chosen —— : 10 G0 UNDER PLAN | oa | New acter ~AMPTEDBY STATE : {Highway Department to Follow Federal System of Death ahs ‘ ™ ‘Tuesday owes | ne welal meeting. Trap Elimination ate aie ; Farmers Union Plans that the state high-| ’ | To Handle Huge Crop St. Paul, April 14—(%)—Handling 78,000,000 bushels of wheat in the 1930 Public roads was made here today by H.C. Frahm, chief highway engineer. crop year, an increase of 650 per cent In its memorandum the government over 1929, is the aim of the Farmers bureau sets forth its ideas of grade crossing elimination and establishes i @ priority list for such work. The government's view is that all THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, APRIL 14, a 5 ze 23 ate B2aege o—e tribu " i aa | Associated Press Photo bey ne Coecigral a of the Slaying of William Robert Pearman (upper left), Columbia, Mo., al of A able snnusl pro », automobile mechanic, was attributed by police to a plot to collect be $200,000 insurance. Or. A. J. Bass, retired dentist and wealthy land. ‘The classification of grade cross- eeeeeeEeEeEeEeEeEeEeEeEeEeee owner, is under arrest. Pearman’s body, found near Gravette, Arka. ings to cling priority of their ‘Associated Press Photo was Identified by his children, Robert and Joling Pearman (below). 1, Grade crossings which may be Capt. Frank M. Hawks surrounded by welcoming committees and eliminated by relocating the road. epectators r completing His flight from San Diego, Cal., to New Service to the public and the cost are York In towed by an airplane. Picture below shows his to be considered as well as the phys-| glider, Ea: just before It landed at Van Cortlandt park, New York. ter ‘and topographical conditions to bers of his class have been conducti Kildeer, N. D,,. April 14—Dunn| Mobridge, April 14—Clyde Gorham, 3 Crossings of primary highways | seed tests for those farmers who wes | Beach DeMolays Turn | tuesday atternoon. comangrs “aarhaal“stbio.~ onto | Wall ivi alk ROU Daten Webel Rama tsas suspicious of thelr seed. Thespians for Night |. : again being sponsored by the Kildeer |cian, having been member of the 3. Crossings of single-line trunk — i 7 | Huron city band for 11 years and a rallways and a primary roed, of ot Beach Voters Choose | seach, x. , april 14—“The Order |in dase ahs was the Rilldeer high’ school, eeturdsy ‘ any eis way @ Bec- Joseph Peall Mayor of The Boiled Owl” was the name of aureromdnoracan Beach, N. D., April 1¢—Joseph Peatt |S Schoo, symnastim Tdey ree ‘won Beach’s mayoralty election by|piay was under the direction of a H i i i ELETE Bg, # i i 3 ie A and P..A. Cook won in the| BEGIN FORT YATES ROAD Mott Students Test . Halvorson'and Theo-| _ selfridge, N. D., April 14—Work has Seeds for Farmers in the second, and W. | started near here Ie i F se : al i 4/1-5-8-12-14 l be —_—_—_—_—_—_—_— Ee + miles long. It is expected that the Announcement for Stomach Sufferers road will be completed by the middle t A re smonnarea Stomach sufferers in of July. extension vicinity, will be glad. to Hall’s Drug Bi CLEAN STANTON CEMETERY ., ry farm near here. So far|cleaning recently by public-spirited wn, Mr. Moffit is the earli- | citizens. It is a matter of community ground tural Economics. a i saneed dhee, early birds to report com- | pride that the abode. of the dead be|to quit when the fine particles clog- general commodity price level Pletion of planting of this one crop. | cleaned first each year. ged carburetors. : NEA Service Shutes Bull’s-Eye With Shute’s Series on Golf OBBY JONES had just holed a miraculous putt to tie Al Espinosa in the National Open at Winged Foot last year when word came along the course that a young Ohio boy was burning up the fairways with birdies and eagles and pars. * Some friends of Bobby and Espinosa didn’t have the heart to stay there on that 18th " green and watch the Ohio boy play the last hole. With nerves jumping, they retired to the club house and waited for the cheers. It was a tense moment. * The young man from Ohio came blazing along, on fire with fight, driving and approach- ing and putting with a deadly accuracy born of the chance to win. But on the last heart-break- ing drive, he fell just short of the prize. ; ‘The young man was Denny Shute—Hermon Densmore Shute—and though he did just miss victory at i. Mamaroneck, he sounded a warning to all and sundry wielders of brassie and niblick that a new. power had | arisen on the fairways—and that when they had reckoned chances in the big tournaments of the future, the _ J} name of Denny Shute had to be included. | ... The warning was fulfilled in the professional play during the winter in the west and south. For Denny, - Shute won the Los Angeles Open and the Texas Goon tournaments. . In his wake at Los Angeles were Horton \ | pnd Ea Dude Cruickshank, tied for second, and in the Texas open the runners up to Shute were Al Espinosa Sbeee berets eR ATS IT iia Tb d Shute is 25 years old and has been playing since howe a boy in Huntington, W. Va., but most of his skill * plossomed after he joined the professional ranks: three years ; pe Denny porte ipated in his first tournament—qualifying in the National amateur in St. Louis—when he was - years sari be never bas alled th quality in.se tromeonout he sosered, ce that time. This year, he ‘as. one of See roe Sega threats among the younger school-of golfers who will do. battle in the articles are not merely technical ideas on how to play golf, -They sfastian chronicle of halos ares : erie and they tll ins colorful way what he bas learned not ony by himolf but what exe with the series, which begins just thie moment when Jolin. Dufter is polishi- . another major assauivon 00, ee te i eset ;

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