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DRISCOLL PIONEER | ” DIES THERE SUNDAY) {Theodore Skogen Passes Away After Long Illness; Funer- al Services Thursday Theodore Skogen, 49, resident of Lien township north of Dricoll since 1907, died at his home Sunday after a lingering illness brought on by a stroke of paralysis. He was born March 22, 1885, at Kenyon, Minn., and moved to Pelican Rapids, Minn., with his parents when ‘hoy. He leaves his wife and seven chil- dren, Thelma, Evelyn, Melvin, Joyce, Florence, Theodore, Jr., and Maxine of Driscoll; two daughters by a former marriage, Mrs. Robert George, Miles ' City, Mont., and Mrs. Henry Wokal, Lidgerwood, N. D.; two grand chil- Gren, Robert George and Archie Wo- kal; his father, Jorgen Skogen, Grandy, Minn.; two sisters, Mrs. Nels Bakke, Grandy, Minn., and Mrs. Mar- tin Exe, Hayfield, Minn.; and two brothers, Henry of Grandy, Minn., and George of Casson, Minn. Puneral services will be held from the home at 1 o'clock Thursday after- noon and from the Zion Lutheran church, north of Driscoll, at 2 o'clock. Rev. O. S. Rindahl Bismarck will be in charge of the services. He will be assisted by Rev. L. K. Jacobs of Tut- tle. Burial will be in the Zion church around $35 an ounce. A new gold rush has started out west, with the price of gold up It isn't so exciting or adventuresome .as the pioneer event of ‘49, but at least it has the industry working all available veins for more of the precious metal. tipple of a new shaft into the Homestake Mine near Lead, S. D., will complete a $2,000.000 investment on this project alone. * Strange But True (By The Associated Press) Oe JUST A CHINESE CUSTOM Chicago—Another old Chinese cus- tom has been brought to light, Ken- neth E. Foster, director of stage art and design at the Chicago academy of fine arts, says. . He told the junior association of commerce that prototypes of the na- tional recovery, agricultural adjust- ment and public works administra- tions existed in China more than 700 years ago. HE WAS SURPRISED Philadelphia—Imagine the surprise of James Benney when, upon open- ing a window of his automobile, he found himself in a subway station. His vision obscured by ice on the wind- shield, Benney had followed the street car tracks which at 29th street leave the surface, cross a bridge over the Schulkill river and go into the subway. Traffic was held up 42 min- utes while Benney got out. a n Bits of News From | ' Throughout World ' (By The Associated Press) | scl reeset aE —_ FRENCH HAVE NEW PLAN Paris—A vast military and economic rehabilitation scheme, involving reor- ganization of France's air, sea and News Items of Day | Linked in French 'GONTINUED Swindle Probe pedis Lote? Johnson Beats Gun By Proposing New Plan for Industry up the errors, shortcomings and mis- takes of the rapid process of codifica- tion, which, measured in figures of employment, has already covered about 90 per cent of American indus- try and which in a ‘relatively short time will have covered it all.” Welcoming the critics, Johnson turned a fresh attack on those who make “unwarranted aspersions on the good faith of men assisting here.” "He assailed also those who make “attempts, by furtive innuendo, to shake public confidence by outright lies or half-baked and ignorant as- sertions respecting acts and policies.” He denounced also those who as- sailed the Blue Eagle campaign as a public support had lagged. “But it will not lag long,” he add- ed. “We are going ‘out to restore public information about the Blue Eagle in any regions where that may be necessary. Call it what you will i—and chiselers, big or little, call it land forces, will be proposed to the otha hi Doumergue cabinet soon. DUKE NOT INTERESTED cemetery. Dickinson Youth Is Held in Forgery Case Dickinson, N. D., Feb. 27—(?)— Adam Kipp, 28, son of Jacob Kipp, member of the Dickinson city com- mission, is being held in jail here without charge while authorities in- vestigate the source of a number of alleged forged checks passed here ‘Sunday. Offices of the Dickinson Fire and Pressed Brick company, where young Kipp formerly worked, were broken iu:to Saturday night and a check writ- ing machine and company checks stolen. Authorities said charges of forgery would be filed against Kipp. Ce LA 4 Weather Report —_—__—__——__* FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly tloudy tonight nad Wednesday; warmer tonight. For North Da- kota: Partly cloudy tonight and Wed.; warmer to- ni othe SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM By WM. E. MCKENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League Many players are under the impres- sion that, if they can get a bid in, they can interfere with their opponents the proper contract. Do you know that aimless overcalls are more often triment? In the first place, as soon as you must account for the losers in that suit before they go far with their bidding. Unless your suit is solid, it may work out to the advantage of the declarer, when your partner op- ens that suit because you have bid it. The Bidding Ot. south Da-| While North has a weak four-card | i | kota: Generally |suit, his hand is not strong enough to} fair tonight and |make an original bid of one no trump; | Wed.; Wwarmer|therefore, he must open his best four- | Beast ’’and central] card suit. Portions tonight. |“ gouth’s bid of two hearts is simply Unuettled era @ chance-giving bid. North showed) and Wednesday, |that he held a four-card suit origin- snow or rain west \ | ‘ portion; warmer | tonight, except extreme north-cen- tral portion. For Minnesota: Generally fair and warmer tonight; Wednesday partly eionay, warmer in extreme east por- tion. GENERAL CONDITIONS The high pressure area, with its accompanying cold weather, has mov- ed slowly southeastward and extends from the southern Plains States east- ward and northeastward to the At- lantic coast. (St. Louis 30.78). Sub- zero temperatures occurred in Minne- ; sota, Iowa and Missouri. A low pres-! sure area is centered over Alberta (Edmonton 29.60) and warmer weath- er prevails over the Great Plains and Rocky Mountain region. Tempera- tures rose 25 to 50 degrees over the; northeastern Rocky Mountain slope. | Precipitation has occurred from the | western Rocky Mountain slope west-/ ward to the Pacific coast but the/ ‘weather is pag fair from the/|ally. eastern Roc! ward. | Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead—@ 9 West North Pass South East Pass Pass Pass Pass ‘y Mountain slope east-| West's overcall of two spades is his 2 4 bids two no Bismarck station barometer, inches: |"uination. North now 28.16. Reduced to sea level, 30.07, {trump and South, of course, must take him back to three hearts. When North persists with three no |trump, South wisely goes to four 03|hearts. East did very well not to 41 double the contract. ‘a6 | The Play Accumulated deficiency to date | East opens the nine of spades, the {top of his partner's suit, and that NORTH DAKOTA POINTS finishes the hand for East and West, a.m. est. Pct,| because dummy. plays the ten; West PRECIPITA’ IN For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date .. Normal, this month to date Total, January ist to date Normal, January Ist to date 86 Ly Grand eisaeaa : sl a must go up with the jack and declar- ley City, clear 2 2 . Jamestown, clear”. 6 ca ao | er wins the trick with the queen. North lays down a small heart to |the queen: from dummy, returns a ismall heart, and West shows out, Declarer WEATHER IN THE, NATION w= h- est. est Pet,|discarding m small club. BISMARCK, N.D.. clear -2 12.06) CONTRACT IDGE EXPERTS PLAY IT and prevent them from arriving at | an aid to your opponent than a de- | overcall, it warns them that they - i} | Brussels—Persons close to Arch- duke Otto, claimant to the Aus- trian throne, denied that he was thinking of interesting himself in the Austrian situation. SERVANT GIRL TO HANG Ankara, Turkey—A pretty servant girl was sentenced to be hanged for poisoning her mistress and the lat- ter's son. She will be the second woman to go the gallows in the his- Today’s Contract Problem tory of Turkey. South bas the contract at three no trump. West opens the jack of spades, the queen is played from dummy, East wins with the ace and re- turns the five of spades. Now what is the most important card to the declarer, and how should he play the hand? @KQi2a WSs: STEELE BEATS TUTTLE Steele, N. D., Feb. 27.—(#)—Steele defeated Tuttle by a 29 to 16 score to win the final game of the Kidder county high school basketball tourna- ment. Shute Prize Winner At Open Golf Meet St. Petersburg, Fla., Feb. 27.—(P)— With $500 first prize money from the Gasparilla open golf tournament jingling in his pockets, Denny Shute of Miami was ready Tuesday to com- pete with virtually the same field in the $1,000 St. Petersburg open, Shute downed Horton Smith of Oak Park, Ill., Monday in an 18 hole play- off after they had finished in a tle Sunday at the end of the regular 72 holes of play. 82 (Blind) (Blind) Suspected also as a Hitler agent, Marianne Kupfer, Hungarian opera singer, above, comes into the probe of the weird mystery of the Stavisky pawnshop scan- dal in France, just given a se- rious setback by the znurder in Dijon of Magistrat Prince, who atmo: the secret of the scandal. Police are investigating Mile. Kupfer’s relations witb Stavisky. payroll Government to Aid [272° Stem conference on June 6. That, far up Income Tax Payers pre peng eps ee between September and February) Announcement that John Miller,/prought about this substantial in- Minneapolis, has been assigned to the|crease in purchasing power while the, local internal revenue office to aid in|Cost of living, as reported by the in- the preparation of corporation income Prceaelgterechead boot Mere res tax returns was made Tuesday by/773 in December, 77.5 in January and Perry R. Benner, deputy'in charge of |77.8 at present. overproduction at cheap wages. That the Blue Eagle campaign net- ted an increased employment “on the most conservative basis” of 2,750,000 with a three billion ‘increase, the local office, located in. the -post- Review Board Organizes Office building. : ‘The administrator received Clar- Benner said Miller was added.to the) ence Darrow and fellow members local staff to help meet the antic-|of the new review beard, charged with ipated rush of persons and corpora-jprotecting the little fellow against tions wishing to file their reports with |oppression, and arranged to have the federal government. He askedjthem receive Tuesday at the White that all who can do so “come early|House an official grant of power from to avoid the rush” since the govern-/President Roosevelt. ment workers then will be able to give] Senator Nye (Rep.,N.D.), who nom- more assistance in the preparation of |inated the members, said he under- the reports. stood them to be definitely opposed »| restitution of the value of furs stolen \terprise | Association's Department of Superin- lustrylown great adventure. — Senator Ar- to becoming a mere cog in the NRA machinery. The members, it was in- dicated, felt they must operate as something of an entity to treat the problems of the small business man and the codes under which he comes. Fred P. Mann, Sr., of Devils Lake, N. D.;_W. W. Neal, Marion, N. C; and J. F. Sinclair, New York. Creation of bo board ap aba oot ecmplaints chiefly from Nye = ator Borah, (Rep. Ida.) that the codes were working hardships on the small shop, store and other business owners whose overhead ate up profit when they attempted to comply with codes ‘as drawn for big industries. Larceny Sentence Suspended by Judge Sentence of nine months for larceny ‘was suspended by Judge Fred Jan- sonius when Charles Edwards and Leo Spear, who pleaded guilty to grand larceny charges, made complete irom Brown & Lee; local butchers. stolen articles. EDUCATORS ELECT Cleveland, Feb::27.—()—E. E. Oder- haltzer, superintendent of schools at Houston, Tex., Tuesday was elected president of the National Education | tendence, now holding its annual con- vention. ! ‘The president should pray to Heav- | en for a vigorous and vigilant opposi- tion party to help him dicispline his own chiselers who would wreck his ther H. Vandenberg of Michigan. eal LYDIA E. PINKBAR'S TABLETS ‘OR the relief and prevention of periodic painand such like ailments peculiar to women. No just another pill to deaden Scale wa sean o neem trouhje and so helps to foture diserbaaces: If youne is nota surgical case, persistent use should bring permanent relief. Chocolate coated. Small box We Have a Complete Line of Township, Village and Petition for Nomination Blanks. Special Orders Given Prompt Attention Write or Call : The Legal Blank Department i Bismarck Tribune Company \during the past year as part of their Plays the jack and East wins the trick with the ace. uy East leads another spade, declarer plays the eight from dummy, West is forced to cover with the king, and the declarer wins the trick with the ace. He then leads the king of hearts, picking up East's ten. The declarer cashes the good seven of spades, East discarding a high dia- mond. Declarer cashes the king of clubs and then plays a small club. East puts on the jack and the declar- er wins the trick in dummy with the ace. He returns the ten of clubs, which throws East in the lead, and all East can do is to cash his ace of diamonds, and the contract is made. If West had not bid spades, the de- clarer probably would have lost one spade trick. (Copyright, 1934,-NEA Service, Inc.) The 19 4-H clothing clubs in Wil- llams county made 1,784 garments club activities. They remodeled 410 garments and made 587 useful house- hold articles. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Under the pretext of building huge apartment houses for the working class, the Socialists really built fort- resses for a long-planned civil war.— Engelbert Dolifus, chancellor of Aus- tria. An optometrist declares it's not the cards, but their color, that causes family bridge wars. Maybe hostilities would cease if all the cards were white—and blank. TOO MANY persons _ in IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Mary E. Thompson, Deceased. TICE is hereby given by the un- dersigned Administrator with Will Annexed, of the estate of Mary E. Thompson, late of the City of Muske- gon, in the County of Muskegon, and State of Michigan, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against, said decedent to exe hibit them with the necessary vouch- ers within six months after the first publication of this notice to said Ad- ministrator at his Law Offices in the City of Fessenden in said Wells Coun- ty, North Dakota or to the County Judge of said County, In his office in said County of Burleigh, North Da- ota, NOTICE is hereby further given that the time and place fixed by the court for hearing and adjusting such claims are the 25th day of September, 1934, at ten o'clock A. M, in the Court Rooms of the County Court in the Court House in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota. lispates this 26th day of February, John A. Layne, Administrator with Will Annexed. 2-27 3-6-13. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN_THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF George joan, Deceased, | Notice is hereby given by the un. dersigned, Jewell . Doan, the administrator with the will xed of the estate of George H. Doan, late of the city of Sacramento, in the County of Sac! ento and State of California, d creditors of, and all claims against the to exhibit ry ith ti vouchers, within six months after the first publication of thi said administrator on the south east quai twenty eight (28) in towns shi of range seventy seven (77) west o! leigh eig 9 North Judge of the Count; Burleigh County, at his office in thi Burleigh County, North Dak Cou! House in the oie of Bisma: 01 Amarillo. Tex., cldy. 00 | Boise, Idaho, rain 52 .01/ 1 i A & Swope Gives View % %' on 30-Hour Week Lake, N. D., clear 0 10 .00| Dodge City, Kans. peldy. 8 16 00 | Edmonton, Alta. cldy.. 18 28 00 Havre, Mont., clear.... 18 38 00 a Mont., snow 22 «00! luron, 8. D., clear. <4 10 00, Kamloops, B. C., cldy.. 28 34 00, Kansas City, Mo.. clear -14 10 .00/ Lander, Wyo, clear.... 2 14 .00/ Medicine Hat, A, pcldy. 18 30 .00/ Miles City, Mont., cl 8 22 00 10.00 44 (04 10 00 14.00 22 «00 14 00 18 00 3000 62 «(06 14 00 48 «02 0 00 5236 18 02 10.00 32 (02 28 (00 14 00 10 «00 2 6 2B 4 00 to hogs . Large before ten up and may do consider- fed upon very in- too, of from the S| Corard Swope, president of the Classify ALP ee Harrington, e practitioner of scalp trouble. Examins- Phone 130. Burleigh County, North Dakota. ne You are hereby further notified that Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge of the County Court’ within’ and for the County of Burl nd State of F North Dakota, hi the Sth day q of September, A, the hour of two o'clock terns thi said day, at the Court Rooms o: Court County, North Dakot a th claims ains' ‘of the said George =H. Doan Deceased, which have been duly ani Dresented as herein! PrDated February 10th, AB. 1930 4 a estate of George Deceased. Rte Mor eald adintntetrator, Bismarck, North Dakota” of ruary, A. ip one hundred and thirty eight (138) Bore, the fifth principal meridian in Bur- Dakota, or to the Court of a rt x, in in'the city of Bismarck, in sald ry for hearing” nd : f the fore the administrator with e will annexed of the ‘H. Doan, blication on the isth day sary. A: Dy 3038, renewing their fire insur- ance think only of the fur- niture used daily. They overlook such things as awnings and screens which you know represent quite a bit of your money. Are yours insured? Ask us to insure your household goods and per- sonal belongings in the Hartford. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows i The Bismar North Dakota’s Okiest Newspaper OFF To Its Readers ACTOS MGLY LL Bismarck, ERS MAMAN, ON LEADING MAGAZINES Bismarck 1 Year Value 07.40, You Save 61.00) 1 fey 1 Yr, | Value 60.25. You save 93.40. Blomarek Tribune, 1 Year All Four for Valse 97.50, You save $2.00 NAME Strest or BR. ‘Town CLUB Ne. 8-128 $5.50 $6.00 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE (ONE YEAR) And Your Choice of Any 3 of i fi i i _*NOTE—It you prefer () Liberty, () True Stery, O Real Amerton, () Outdoor Life or () Redbook eons Fr De voces, ck Tribune North Dakota % Al