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Dorothy Sigurdson Awarded Winchester Arithmetic Prize Dorothy Sigurdson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. 8. Sigurdson, 818 Sixth St. and a pupil at the Will Junior high school, is the winner of the Winchester arithmetic prize of $25, awarded annually. Announce- ment was made Monday by Miss Marie Huber, Burleigh county superintend- ent of schools, under whose supervi- sion arithmetic examinations for the prize were given about a week ago. The award will be formally pre- sented later, with some member of the family of the late Judge W. H. Winchester in whose memory the contest is held, making the presenta- tion. Judge Winchester, a pioneer resident of this city, and formerly county superintendnt of schools, was greatly interested in the teaching of arithmetic during the years he was in office. Only eighth grade students of the city and county, selected for excep- tional ability in arithmetic, are per- mitted to compete in the examina- tions. This year only seven of the nine pupils eligible participated. * * Mr. and Mrs. Gus Kaline, 417 Tenth St. left Sunday for Detroit Lakes where they have taken a cottage for two weeks, ee Miss Rose Dewitz of the motor ve- hicle department, has returned from Tappen where she spent the week-end with her parents. * * * Mr. and Mrs, Harold Hopton, 615 Second 8t., left Saturday for Detroit Lakes where they will spend about two weeks visiting with relatives. * 8 ®% Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Carufel and chil- dren, 202 Eighth St., left Monday for Lake Metigoshe in the Turtle moun- tains where they will spend a few days. They expect to return Thurs- day. eH Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cotton and Miss Ivah Patterson, Pasadena, Calif., left Monday by plane for Fargo where they will visit friends and transact business following a week-end visit in Bismarck. ee % Miss Ethel Childs, 220 Fourth St., and Miss Viola Toews, 615 Sixth 8t., returned Sunday from a vacation trip to Chicago and to the Minne- sota lakes, They were away two weeks. ee * Mrs. A. L. Overbee and two children, 614 Second St., returned to Bismarck Sunday evening after spending a week at a cottage at Spiritwood lake, near Jamestown. Mr. Overbee motored there for the week-end and accom- panied them home. ee * Tom Dunn, formerly of Bismarck and for the last several years a mem- ber of the staff of the Minot Daily News, visited with friends in Bis- marck Sunday. He accompanied the Minot baseball team here. «- x * Mrs. E. H. Miller, 715 Fourth St., entertained a group of 13 small chil- dren at a picnic supper in the Man- dan park Thursday afternoon for her son Alan, who was three years old. A color note of yellow, pink and green was carried out in the table decora- tions and favors melee the places. * Mrs. Rex Albrecht, 71812 Mandan &t., has as guests her cousins, Misses Irene and Lois McGinnis and Ivan McGinnis of Coin, Iowa, who arrived Saturday for a two-weeks visit. Other guests at the Albrecht home over the week-end were Mrs, Albrecht's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Armstrong of Steele. xe & Miss Irene Lambertus, 518 Sixth 8t., will leave Tuesday for Parkston, 8. D., to spend a few weeks with her palents, Rev.-and Mrs. J. Lambertus, , before going to the Black Hills for the remainder of the summer. Miss Lambertus will return to Bismarck in the fall to begin her duties as an instructor in the Richholt school. e % *% Mr. and Mrs, O. N. Nordlund and daughter Ruth, 314 Mandan St., re- turned to Bismarck Saturday from Grand Forks where they spent about ® week with Mr. Nordlund’s mother, Mrs. Sigrid Nordlund, and with his sisters, Mrs. B. O. Norlin and Mrs. ©. B. Hedstrand. They went to Grand Forks from Fergus Falls where they enjoyed a week’s outing at a lake resort. * e Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Hulett, 1008 Avenue B, had as their guests over the week-end Mrs. Hulett’s sisters, Miss Hannah Rafteseth and Mrs. A. H. Nagel and her two daughters Caryl and Eloyse, Harold Rafteseth, all of Elgin. They were accompanied to their home by their mother, Mrs. I. Rafteseth, El- gin, who has spent the last week at the Hulett home. Caryl Nagel re- mained in Bismarck for a two weeks’ visit. Z eke Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Myhre, 818 Ave- nue C, returned to Bismarck Sunday after a three-weeks trip to Chicago and to points in Wisconsin and Min- nesota. At Chicago they attended the Century of Progress exposition. Later they went to LaCrosse, Wis. where they were joined by Mr. Myhre’s sis- ter, Mrs, N. B. Munkeby, who accom- panted them here for a visit. En route they visited relatives and friends in Minneapolis, Detroit Lakes and Fargo. Mrs, Myhre's sister, Miss Betty New- ton, who had spent the week-end in Fargo with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Gill, re- turned to Bismarck with them. Mrs, Anton Solle of Mott Seriously Ill Mrs. Anton Solle of Mott was in a local hospital Monday seriously ill of peritonitis but with a fair chance to recover, according to her doctor. ‘The peritonitis developed from gall stones and perforations in the gall. bladder,’ which is in gangrenous con- dition, her doctor said. Mrs. Solle was brought here Sun- day afternoon. Try a i KpiSpY FRIZZ At all ice cream dealers and _a_brother,| Michael Jacobs Weds Miss Margaret Shane At a high nuptial mass read at 8 o'clock Monday morning by Rev. Father William Klinkhammer in Sac- red Heart church, East Grand Forks, Minn., Miss Margaret Anilla Shane, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Shane, Grand Forks, became the bride of Michael Jacqbs, Bismarck, son of Mrs. John Jacobs, East Grand Forks, Minn. During the ceremony “Adoro Te” was played softly and “Ave Maria” was sung by James Kelleher, Connie Kelleher and Stephen Burchardt. The bridal party entered as the wedding ,;march from “Lohengrin” was played by Miss McBride. The bride wore a gown of petal chif- fon, with a white picture hat and white accessories and carried a bou- quet of Columbia roses and sweet peas. Her attendant, Miss Kathleen Lud- wig, Grand Forks, was gowned in pale blue organza and carried a sheaf of Premier roses. Her accessories were in pink and she wore a wide-brimmed hat of pink straw. Bryan Spain, East Grand Forks, was best man. Wil- liam Leoles and Joseph Oliver, East Grand Forks, were ushers. A wedding breakfast at the home of the bridegroom’s mother followed the ceremony. Covers were marked for 20 relatives at small tables decorated in pastel tones of orchid and pink and centered with bouquets of sweet peas in the same shades. Later Mr. Jacobs and his bride left on a short wedding trip to the Min- nesota lakes. They are to make their home in Bismarck after August 1. The bride attended Central high school Grand Forks. Mr. Jacobs is @ graduate of East Grand Forks high school and is employed as a salesman by the Bismarck Baking company. Guests at the wedding included Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Ferguson, Manvel, N. D., brother-in-law and sister of the bride; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dietz, Devils Lake; and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ebbinghauser, Fergus Falls, Minn. * * % DAIRY DEPARTMENT ASSISTANTS WILL SERVE WITHOUT PAY Volunteer Deputies Have Been Appointed With Authority of Paid Workers A new deal is in the making in the dairy industry of North Dakota. The dairy department, crippled by the governor's veto of its entire ap- Propriation, has determined that nec- essary inspection work will be done with the cooperation of those en- gaged in the industry and that the office will function as efficiently as ever. At least that is the belief of Dairy Commissioner O. P. Shelstad. Twenty-two cream buyers in-the state have been appointed assistant dairy commissioners and they will assume the duties heretofore exer- cised by the paid assistants to the dairy commissioner. They will serve without pay and have already signi- fied their desire to cooperate to the fullest extent in seeing that the laws regulating the industry are enforced. They have been deputized by Shel- stad and will have full authority to enforce laws and rulings of the com- missioner, Only those have been appointed who are qualified to give testers ex- aminations. They will check cream stations, creameries, direct shipping of cream and discrimination in prices. They also will supervise the licensing of cream testers, cream stations and creameries in their localities and re- Port to the dairy commissioner. Deputies will not be allowed to check stations or creameries in their own localities. Outside deputies will be brought in for that purpose. For those taking testers examina- tions the new program should prove a real saving. Heretofore they have been compelled to come to Bismarck to take the examination. From now on they will take the examination from the deputy nearest to their Mr. and Mrs. George M. Register and daughter, Miss Beatrice Register, 1017 Fifth St., left Bismarck Monday for Lewis, Delaware, where they will visit relatives. Lewis is Mr. Register’s former home. Later they ‘will go to Washington, D. C., to spend a short time, returning by way of Buffalo, N. Y., where they will visit relatives of Mrs. Register. They also plan to stop in Chicago to attend the Cen- tury of Progress exposition before re- turning about Sept. 1. Dern Says Recovery Act Must Not Fail Sacramento, Calif., July 24.—(7)— Secretary of War George H. Dern Monday told the annual conference of governors “if the national indus- trial recovery act fails, something more radical will have to be tried, because our national existence will be at stake.” The secretary, formerly chief ex- ecutive of Utah, addressed the gov- ernors in the assembly chambers of the California state legislature. “For effective economic planning, Such as we are embarking upon for the first time,” Secretary Dern said, “state borders must to an extent be disregarded and the United States ‘must be taken as one economic area. “And it will be good for the states. After all, we are not primarily Cali- fornians or Nebraskans or New York- ers. We are Americans and the good of America is the good of all of us, Surely by this time we are conscious of the fact that state welfare and national wetfare are one.” Local Lion Golfers Win From New Salem Four members of the Bismarck Lions club Sunday defeated a quartet of New Salem Lions in a special golf match at New Salem. Total medal score for 18 holes for the Bismarck quartet was 386, com- Pared to 428 for the New Salem men. here in a previous match, Capital City Lions Tuesday evening will endeavor to avenge a defeat re- jceived last week from Mandan Lions. The Bismarck-Mandan clash will be Played over the Mandan municipal course, Those who went to New Salem Sun- cay were County Treasurer Ernest Elness, C. E. Ligon, Joe Patera and E. B Klein, Desperado and Wife Captured by Posse Dexter, Iowa, July 24—()—Marvin Barrow and his wife, bandit suspects, were captured here Monday in a bat- tle with state and county officers. . Barrow was critically wounded and is a expected to live, a physician said. Two men believed to be Clyde Bar- row and Jack Sherman and a woman escaped in a car stolen from Valley Fellers, a farmer. Three squads of officers surround- ed the woods where the five suspects were hidden. As they closed in the suspects began to fire with machine guns. The officers returned the fire, wounding Barrow. “Rags” Riley, Polk county deputy sheriff, was wounded. Name A. L. Roberts to Hotel Recovery Group Arthur L. Roberts, president of the Arthur L. Roberts hotels, which ope- rates the Hotel Prince in Bismarck, has been named one of 37 hotel men in the United States to serve for the American Hotel association on the in- dustrial recovery committee. This committee will formulate code for hotels in the recovery cam- paign and will meet with the indus- trial administrator in Washington Wednesday. GERMAN MUSICIAN DIES Berlin, July 24.—(?)—Max von Schillings, 65, an outstanding figure in German music for nearly 40 years, died Monday of embolism. He was instrumental in forming the German Opera company which toured the United States several times until recent years. Some of the games played by chil- dren in rural England are over 1,000 years old. Bismarck had defeated New. Salem| Place of residence. It is planned to appoint deputies in every county in the state as soon as necessity arises. When com- plaints are made to the department here the deputy nearest to the point where the complaint is made will be sent to make a check of the station or tester. The new program will result in a saving to the dairy commissioner, who at present is paying his travel expense and stenographic hire out of his salary appropriation. Letters received by the department indicate that the proposition is being received with enthusiasm and if it works, out as Shelstad thinks it will, the volunteer deputies will be con- tinued if the department is again given an appropriation by the legis- lature with which to function as in the past, ELEVATORS MUST BE BONDED SEPARATELY Supreme Court Affirms Ruling of Railroad Board in Wheat Growers Case The North Dakota supreme court handed -down a decision Saturday which confirms the right of the North Dakota railroad commission to require Separate warehousemen’s bonds for each elevator in the state owned and operated by so-called line companies. The decision was in the case of the railroad commissioners as trustees of tine Wheat Growers Warehouse Cor- Poration vs. Wheat Growers Ware- house company and the Maryland Casualty company. The railroad commission, as trustee for the storage ticket holders of the Wheat Growers Warehouse company, took charge of the elevators when the company was unable to pay the ticket holders. The commission took over the stock of grain and other assets which it sold, deposited the money in the Bank of North Dakota and called upon the bonding companies to make up the deficit. The bonding companies contended that the commission should throw the grain sold from each elevator into one ‘fund and pay the storage ticket hold- €rs on @ percentage basis, contending also that their bonds were of the blanket variety. The commission ruled that the ele- vators were bonded separately and the grain stored in each elevator could only be used to pay the obligations incurred by that elevator. The su- Preme court upheld the ruling of the state department. ‘The money realized from the sales of the assets of the elevators has been deposited in the Bank of North Da- kota pending the decision of the su- Preme court. It will be paid to the storage ticket holders within a short time. ‘The Wheat Growers company’s ele- vators at the following points were bonded for $5,000 each: Hoople, Hensel, Walhalla, Bowes- mont, Hazen, Beulah, Dunn Center, Killdeer, Eckelson, Spiritwood, Eld- ridge, Windsor, Cleveland, Modine, Crystal Springs, Tappen, waon, Steele, Burleigh, Brinsmade, Flora, Hesper, Edgeley, Alfred, Gackle, Streeter, Adrian, Dickey, Grand Ra- pids and Marion. Fruit Representative Flies Here in Plane C. P. Wheelock, northwestern rep- resentative of a fruit growers’ ex- | change, flew to Bismarck Monday in his own plane to call on Bismarck wholesale fruit dealers. The plane is piloted by his son, “Chuck” Wheelock. After visiting jobbers here, Whee- lock left for his home in Minneapo- lis, planning stops en route at James- town, Valley City, Fargo and Wah- peton. TO VISIT WALL STREET New York, July 24.—()—Ferdi- nand Pecora, counsel for the senate banking and currency committee, said Saturday he planned to confer Monday with officers of the New York stock exchange regarding pres- a stock speculation. Home-comers : The Wimbledon tennis title wasn't all that Helen Wills brought home with her. Meet “Bossy,” one of the two terriers which accompanied the net star on her arrival in New York the other day. Note Helen's chic Parisian travel dress, too. TWO ARE SPEAKERS AT CLUB LUNCHEON Judge G. Grimson and State Engineer R. E. Kennedy Address Lions Two men spoke before the Bis- marck Lions club Monday noon at the organization's weekly luncheon meeting. ‘They were District Judge G. Grim- son of Rugby and State Engineer R. E. Kennedy. Judge Grimson discussed the atti- tude of European nations toward the United States, saying their opinions in many cases are warped by promi- nence given vo gangster stories from the United States. The speaker had an opportunity to feel out the opinions of Europeans during @ visit to Europe a year ago, when he secured franchises from Denmark and Iceland for American planes to experiment on a northern air route between North America and Europe. He represented Pan- American Airways on his trip. Kennedy discussed dam construc- tion now being carried on in North Dakota, emphasizing the necessity for water storage in the state. Obert A. Olson was named to rep- resent the Lions club to cooperate with James C. Taylor of Bismarck, recently named state director of re- employment, 8. J. Sloan of Duluth, Minn., sang several vocal numbers. He was ac- companied by Grace Duryee Morris, pianist, and Adolph Englehardt, vio- linist. Ray O’Brien and Joe Patera were named members ofthe entertainment committee for next week. E. B. Klein was in charge of the program Monday and Dr. F. B. Strauss served as chairman, at the request of President J. P. Spies. Frish Is Appointed To Direct Cardinals St. Louis, July 24.—()—President Sam Breadon of the St. Louis Card- inals Monday announced Frankie Frisch, second baseman, had been named manager of the team for the remainder of this season and for 1934. succeeding Gabby Street. Breadon said the change was made because “we want to win the pen- nant.” > —_O | ‘Whisker Court’ Is_ | | Jamestown Feature | [nae \ Jamestown, N. D., July 24.—(P) —A special session of “Judge Ben Gilbertson’s whisker court will be held here Wednesday when sever- al prominent residents will face charges of violating the reguls- tions of the Jamestown and Stuts- man County Whisker Club. They are charged with using a razor to frustrate the natural growth of whiskers in violation of a whisker-club edict which de- clared men must let their brush grow as a feature of fiftieth an- niversary celebration which is Planned for this city. Berths on trains are made up with pillows toward the engine so that pas- Sengers will suffer from draft by sleeping with head in that direction; also, the face and shoulders are bet- ter protected from dust and cinders. Perfume is worn in the ears by Negrito girls of the Philippines; the perfume is placed in a rolled cloth and inserted in-the split lobe of the ear. . Approximately two-tenths of the 365,000,000 acres of land in the Unit- ed States occupied by crops, or 76,- 000,000 acres, produce food for human consumption, The first package of merchandise ever sarried across the Atlantic by an airship was a consignment of toys aboard the 2-3. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, JULY 24, 1933 MURDER IS SCENTED BY WARD OFFICIALS IN STRANGE DEATH Coteau Lumberman’s Body| Found Near Machine; Skull Had Been Fractured Minot, N. D., July 24—(?)—Strong Possibilities of murder appeared Mon- day in connection with the unexplain- ed death of Howard H. Anderson, 39, manager of a lumber yard at Coteau, missing since Friday evening. His body was found Sunday, lying at the rear of an automobile in a secluded spot one and one-half miles northeast of Baden in northern Ward county. ‘His skull was fractured. Anderson's body was stretched out on its back a blanket hung from the rear bumper of the car covering him. The blanket bore a black spot made by carbon from the exhaust, but the motor of the car had ceased running when the body was discovered. The body was found by Ray Clouse, & farmer, who with a neighbor, visited the scene Sunday forenoon. Sheriff R. W. Kennard and Dr. E. C. Stone, Ward county coroner, investigated. A post-mortem, performed by cor- oner Stone at Bowbells revealed the fracture in the skull. Although there was @ break in the top of the cranium, the scalp had not been broken. Coroner Stone said, following the examination, “I am inclined to think this man was struck with a blackjack on the top of the he: I think that Anderson was murdered.” Anderson leaves his widow and three daughters residing in Coteau; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Anderson, who farm just northwest of Kenmare; a sister, Mrs. David Hawbaker of Coulee, and a brother, LeRoy Anderson, of Minneapolis. Funeral services have been tenta- tively set for Tuesday afternoon in the Lutheran church at Coteau, with burial at Kenmare. The time of the funeral, however, depends upon the hour and day of the inquest called by coroner Stone. Big Grain Trader Dies in Mill City Minneapolis, July 24—(@—Frank Leighton Carey, 66, vice president of the Hallet & Carey company, Min- neapolis grain commission firm, and former president of the Chicago Board Me Trade died at his home here Sun- lay. He had been in ill health for nine years but had remained active. Carey was one of the city's pioneer grain men, having been with the firm of Hallet and Carey company for a quarter of a century. Before that he was associated with the Barnes Ames company of Duluth. During the World War he worked with form- er President Herbert Hoover as vice President of the food administration grain corporation. After ae war he was active in the reorganization of the Nye, Schneider, Fowler company of Chicago. He was in Chicago for @ short time but re- tained his partnership in the Min- neapolis firm. In 1923 he was elected peaiens of the Chicago board of rade. Farm Laborer Killed By Train at Manvel Manvel, N. D., July 24—()—Alex Zinyk, 35, was killed at Manvel at 6:30 a. m. Monday when he attempted to board a moving Great Northern freight train. Zinyk, a farm laborer, apparently slipped as he attempted to catch the train and was dragged about 35 feet between the tracks and the depot Platform, according to Acting Cor- oner Phil McLoughlin of Grand Forks, who investigated the accident. An inquest was started here Mon- day and will be completed in Grand Forks Tuesday when the train crew will be questioned. Zinyk was un- married and officials have not been able to locate any relatives. When found he had $61 on his person. He also had $400 deposited in a Grand Roses bank and $500 in postal sav- B83. Resemblance to Balbo Thrusts New York, July 24.—()—Mr. Smythe leaned on his broom Monday, stroked his beard thoughtfully and dreamed of his big moment. It was in front of the hotel in which General Italo Balbo had an engagement two evenings ago that Mr. Smythe—as good a white wing as ever pushed a broom—reached the climax of an ordinary routine life. In that moment he was a hero. Great crowds were gathered to catch a glimpse of the Italian airman. They were on the alert for the first sign of his starched white suit and well-trimmed beard. About that time, when the crowd was growing impatient, Smythe wandered upon the scene. His pail-on-wheels and his broom had been parked on another street. He was drawn from the routine of work by an urge to see what was going on. He sauntered into the crowd. An eagle-eyed youth rushed for- ward and grabbed his hand, shaking it delightedly. ' | “Viva Italia!” the youth said. Smythe responded to the hand- shake rather uncertainly, but the youth seemed to be well inten- tloned so the street cleaner smiled. In a moment he was the cen- ter of a pushing crowd, with men and women vying for a chance to shake his hand, clap him on the back or even touch the hem on his white garments. Someone led a cheer. Smythe beamed. To few men come such spontaneous applause. They were probably he figured) finally waking up to the excellent job he had been do- ing lately on the avenue. Then General Balbo, his bosom. dripping with medals and each hair of his beard carefully ar- ranged, drove up. The crowd, recognizing it had erred, swept towand him. The general acknowledged the cheers and passed on into the hotel. The other bearded man in the white suit went back to his broom. It is a question which was the happier. 2 |Heads Women’s Club; ae Comte tend iaionts Elected president of the National Federation of Business and Profes- sional Women’s Clubs at the biennial convention in Chicago is Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman (above) of Rich- mond, Va. She is head of one of the| South's largest advertising businesses. | Producers Seeking Agreement on Sugar Washington, July 24.—(#)—Farm administrators moved Monday to speed approval of a basic sugar mar- keting agreement under which the American market would be pro-rated among domestic beet and cane pro- ducers, Hawaii, the Philippines, Puer- to Rico, Cuba and the Virgin islands. They set Aug. 7 as a tentative date for a formal hearing on the proposed agreement submitted last week by Dr. John Lee Coulter, Fargo, N. D., mem- ber of the tariff commission who ac- cepted the assignment of attempting to establish more orderly marketing for the industry. A Dr. Coulter said he believes an egreement is greatly needed in view of the apparent continuance of the over-production problem. He explain- ed the prospective supply this crop! year is 7,500,000 short tons while the United States market, the principal reliance of the producing areas, will absorb about 6,350,000 tons. Chicago Trade Board Member Is Suspended Chicago, July 24.—(?)—Edward A. Crawford, member of the board of trade, was suspended from all privil- eges for “inability to meet obliga- A new frozen ice cream bar Swamps and wet lands of the Unit- ed States have a total area of about! 79,005,023 acres, | 5¢ KpiSpY pRIzZ tions,” exchange officials announced Monday. The Daily News, commenting on the Crawford suspension, said it was the talk along La Salle street that a spec- ulative pyramid which might have rivaled the great fortunes of the coun- try had gollapsed. Although impossible to boil down to known facts, the News asserted that market rumor credited Crawford with being one of the most daring speculators of the inflation market, amassing at one time holdings of 13,+ 000,000 bushels of corn and a tremend- ous amount of rye. If these rumors were true, the News estimated he would have profited $1, 300,000 on every 10 cents advance in corn alone, and would have lost at a similar rate on the decline. | . i American Training Methods Condemned Paris, July 24.—(#)—Sharp criticism of American methods, which it was asserted sent Ellsworth Vines and Wilmer Allison into the Davis Cup matches with England “over-trained,” developed Monday in the sporting columns of the Paris newspapers. “The principal American adversary was their own captain, Bernon Pren- tice,” charged Jean Augustin in the Paris Midi. “How can any country confide its sporting interests to a man who presented two players of great value, Vines and Allison, resembling cadavers instead of athletes?” The collapse of Vines in his final match with Fred Perry, as the result of a twisted ankle, proved “super- abundantly,” said Didier Poulain of L'Auto, that the Americans were bad- es, TO FACE WEAPON CHARGE Chicago, July 24.—()—Police an- nounced Monday that Roger Touhy, PUNE IN WIp¥l Our All-Expense tours to the World's Fair provide maximum enjoyment at lowest cost. For full particulars call Northwest Airways, Inc. Telephone 800 or 826 ly prepared for the inter-zone match- gang leader, and three of his follow- ers, seized as suspects in the John Factor kidnaping, had been sent back to Elkhorn, Wis., scene of their ar- Big Moment on Street Sweeper '::,'2 us cuse ot carving on- |cealed weapons. It was reported that federal auth- orities were unable to connect the |men with the Factor abduction. |Father Sought for Slaying Young Child Cook, Minn., July 24—()—Sheriff Sam M. Ownes and 30 deputies con- tinued searching the woods six miles west of here Monday for Alex Alango, 27-year-old railroad man, who late Saturday night fatally beat his 14- month-old son and critically injured his parents-in-law in an attack po- lice said was the outgrowth of do- mestic difficulties. The baby died Sunday. Eskimos Journey to Lindbergh Anchorage Godthaab, Greenland, July 24—(#) —Eskimos, to whom Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh is as much a hero as he is to admirers of his aeronautic feats in less remote parts of the world, are traveling to Godthaab from great distances to get a glimpse of the American filer, With his wife Col. Lindbergh ar- rived Saturday from Labrador. They are making air maps of this north- ern region. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our friends and neighbors for their kindness and sympathy and the beautiful floral offerings during our recent be- reavement in the death of our be- loved son James. MR. AND MRS. W. W. CARLEY AND CHILDREN 2 PARAMOUNT Today and Tuesday i caeieaieeiidieitieiiiiainteai aii aaa COLLEGE LIFE In the RAW! RAW! RAW! is seldom mild. You just know he wears them! - Here’s the tuniest... crooniest .. . looniest spec- tacle that ever gets a di- ploma! .. . Here’s college life in the Raw-Raw-Raw -.-and IT’S NOT MILD! Hear These Songs: ee “Learn to Betty Boop (Croon” “Moonstruck” | ‘Tom Howard “The Old Jolts and Jabs Ox-Road” and “Play Ball” Sound News Look at the Brakes when you “look at All Three” 7 years, Capt. Doughty For 1 sailed out of Portland harbor. Ni adays, you'll see him sailing around Portland streets in the Plymouth sedan that’s pictured at the right. Why a Plymouth? “Out at sea,a man has lows has room to maneuver out of trouble,” says the Captain. “On land ... you have to be able to stop in your tracks!” .. So hydraulic brakes win another friend. Because they “stop you on a dime.” They are self-equalizing. No other low-priced car offers you hydraulic brakes. No other low-priced car offers you the combination of Floating Power engine mountings, safety-steel bodies, rigid-X frame. In short... no other low-priced car offers you the bal of comfort, safety, style and performance, and you have only to “look at all chree” to find this out. Do that... before you buy. NEW PLYMOUTH SI koow something about mechanics. Aad I’m proud to show Plymouth...because it's aot only tim-looking but sturdyand dependable Standard: 2-door sedan $465; 4-door sedan $310; rumble coupe $485 ; basi- ness coupe $445. De Luxe: 2-door sedas coupe $595 ; rumble coupe $545 ; busines: 10 $525; 4-door sedan $575; conv. 3 coupe $495. All subject to change. ‘See PLYMOUTH at the Chrysier Meters Bullding, Chicago Contury of Progress WITH PATENTED FLOATING POWER | WOULDNT DRIVE A CAR WITHOUT | | wheal, (Beahe:!” AN INTERVIEW WITH CAPT. FRANK DOUGHTY, 91 VESPER ST., PORTLAND, ME. F.0.B FACTORY