The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 31, 1934, Page 3

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1934 3 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FC A Clears 1 400, 000 Hr serionied in the ‘ake and Norris World’s Fair to End witnessed the $38,000,000 spectacle Loans Since May, ’83|"m ie ne prcuwea ww wns] Wednesday Midnight ws, Sc ott attains # NRA HELD LEGAL Overlapping College MUST BUY 10 SELL, BY ALABAMA JUDGE; Courses Weeded Out} RiPER PONTS OUT see Tek Se ee a Na a oe of the concern. \dministration, said Wednesday his . ® half million serial bombs, bursting| Managers and backers of the pro- 10 u rng ee Ate a Gane Gi nts are along Chicago's rie ieasaeet | ject, which will be ready for the junk- 7 ” * iil if * merce Ad-/1.400,000 loans total! 1,960,000,000 . J. T. .. Mrs. | will signal the end of t! =! ;man after 3 a. m., Thursday morn- Indictment Dismissed When/Six Important Changes in Ad- fein. OG ene eee eee sabi - since operations corre Marte ty Aidis West of Los Sates, Calif., and |Century of Progress exposition, a ven-|ing, said the exposition was the most Jurist Finds Code Uncon: dresses Foreign Trade Con- Also about 400,000 farmers who re- | Gye, Marguerite and Marcus at home. ture that paid out despite the econo- /successful one of its kind in history, stitutional | vention on New Deal ‘Thursday's rvan ministration of Classes st. Mary's phen ey Mg ren ceived federal land bank loans before |There are seven grandchildren. mic recession. |from the financial point of view, with Made by Board masses at 7, 8, 9 and 10 o'clock with the administration was organized| Funeral services have been set ten-| By that hour close to 40,000,000 the attendance topping all other in- - the 9 o'clock mass for children, Rev. Pe Reorte hia ey have obtained reductions in interest |tatively for Monday. jmen, women and children will have ternational fakw EE .|Robert A. Feehan, pastor, announces.| New Yorx, Oct. 31—()—Secretary|and deferment of principal install- = = Birmingham, Als, Oct. 31—(P—| Restriction of courses and ellminé- as each priest is priviledged to cele-|of Commerce Daniel C. Roper said| ments, Judge W. 1. Grubb in U. 8. district ahi cnatientiatis ‘were announced |tate three masses on All Souls day,| Wednesday that no nation can expect) “Lending of this money has prac- court Wednesday dismissed an in- bo Raieaihy by Nelson Sauvain, chair- which falls on Friday, there will be} to sell goods unless it buys goods in/tically meant the stoppage of fore- 4 a Masses continually from 6:30 until] return. closures which were at their peak roger ia milla yrs tse ee ~ inistra-| 9:30 o'clock that morning. Confes-| ‘The day has definitely passed when | when the farm credit administration e 5 doin the Parade BACK TO QUALITY BUYING . . |sions are being heard from 3 to 5 and| we may expect to unload our surplus | was organized,” Myers declared. ery act and the code of fair com- sant eae foaae maee to ba ee 7 to 9 o'clock Wednesday andj products upon foreign an with- —_——— sede kee nie cua oman psy, er[ =n atroon and ernie. |G cade of, ee Prominent Mayville Sietment was founded; afte uncon-|until modified or repealed by the 4 “he, good neighbor in| interaational Citizen Succumbs stitutional. board, at agree-| Under the sulings, reached after . ment of 0. "S, ‘Distict Atwrney | conferences with various school heads, Which the buyer and seller both Ben) saayvite, N. D., Oct. 31—(P)—M, Le James Smith and Jerome T. Puller of |!t has been decided that: : Secretary Roper spoke before the| =lken, 77, one of Mayville's most Centerville representing Belcher, to| No aaa hae oi hod ei ROU ALITY OF N AVY 21st national foreign trade convention Bae wary wera at his home * 4 more than two lan- “6 5 ore perengetg the work in for- ane a Spd tote pot ealyaid Born in Hadeland, Norway, August preme court. ener awe: have definitely reached that | 7 1857, Mr. Elken came to this coun- Delegation to Tell Americans point in our economic ‘progress when | ‘TY in 1880. Moving to Mayville trom increase 3 Belcher, who operates sawmills at|/ #2 Leeper ad — Centerville, Plantersville and other ate tp ie ti jocirnitisin ated points, was indicted on charges of in bookkeeping and ated Paying his employes less than 24/5 72¢tfcal business be not given at the - Gente an hour and working (hem |agricultural college, and thet the more than urs per week as pro- a training of high school teachers at pone pe oenceenennanny sigent and comprehensive foreign trade Mena Hemi dese Shag hash gueiloeie the college be restricted to Smith-/ London, Oct. 31.—()—The Japan- | porkgaetive nee Or Eee ae ner tia wavernment and|Hughes work and other phases of lese delegation to the naval conversa- |" He split sharply with thoce.who ad-| for Belcher in reaching the agree- | %2ching applied sclences. .|{tions, it was authoritatively learned, | vocate a strictly nationalistic United | ore ocide it, Would he en te seibiie| Beginning with the fall term of 1935,| will inform the Americans late Wed- | Statés and questioned whether stich mens oe hay ut malin by one year of college work shall be re- | nesday there can be no surrender on 'a policy might not in time endanger Tee ee eres te veligy (quired as a pre-requisite for taking |the question of the principle of naval the peaceful status of the nation. os wh mene _ geld Alta ee - tural training course at a Teacher |tonnage equality. | His argument, he said, was not in Sahty “onitusion” eee so ti- |Colege. ‘The Japanese will make it clear. it favor of free trade but “for a freer clarity ‘confusion” as to the constl- Discontinue Specials was learned, that unless the British trade with due regard for our own | Lcbeaede tte cadet naa The Teachers colleges discontinue |and Americans are willing: to conced dustries.” | the so-called special courses, and re- | equality there is virtually no hope for, One of those industries, he said, is New Hearing Set for |strict their offerings in art, music, an agreement. H farming, adding “I believe the per- ‘ commerce, home economics, industrial} The British and American delegates manent solution of our farm problem Thomas Robinson, Sr. arts and physical education to not|to the preliminary naval treaty con- | rests to a considerable extent upon| more than 36 quarter-hours, in “no|versations today rejected as impossi- | the revival of proper export demands | Louisville. Ky., Oct. 3!—()}—A new' case shall the amount of such work | ble suggestions made by Ambassador for our agricultural products.” hearing at Nashville on removal of| given be in excess of the amount given | Saito of Japan in Washington that | peleiass ieee seaabrert Thomas H. Robinson, Sr., to Louis-|in the year 1933-34. Japan be gtanted a naval tonnage| Films in which animals appear are ville for trial in the Stoll kidnaping| The courses in home economics equality on an instalment plan. ithe most popular of all motion pic- will be set for Nov. 9, Thomas J.|given at the University of North Da-| Spokesmen for both the British and | tures in Japan. | . southern Minnesota in 1882, Mr. El- There Can Be No Sur- | foreign trade and domestic puacon. | ken started work as a railroad section render of Principle omic entitles,” he said. “Our great |™an and a short time later became a need today, therefore, is for an intell- | CARPETS AND RUGS a ' The golden-domed* great mosque of Meshed, Persia CELEBRATE HALLOWEEN at the Quality is the thing that makes value, not price. Whatever you and deep-piled and luxuriously soft—they’re DURABLE as well. said Wednesday. Sparks said a new werrant against the elder Robinson wit] be issued and served in time for the hearing to be held on the day appointed. Robinson, his son, Thomas H. Rob- inson, Jr., and the son's wife, Frances Robinson, were indicted by the federal grand jury here on charges of conspiring to kidnap Mrs. Stoll. Mrs. Robinson is in jail here. The younger Robinson ‘s a fugitive. Sparks said the elder Robinson is at liberty in Nashville and is under no restraint at all. U. 8. Commis- sioner Julian Campbell Monday re- fused to order him sent back here for trial, holding he had refused the presumption of guilt raised by the indictment. Mrs.!ed, should be considered a minimum and “shall not aim to provide profes- sional preparation or a major in that field of work. Giving courses for small groups “shall be avoided as uneconomical.” An enrollment of 19, the board decid- “as far as practicable, especially for elective courses.” The board also ruled, according to Sauvain’s announcements, that “while the departments of enigneering of the University and Agricultural college do provide for similar courses, the pres- ent demands of the state for such courses require their maintenance at both institutions at least for the pres- ent time. It would require consider- able outlay for increased quarters and equipment at either institution to meet Sparks, U. 8. district attorney here, |kota shall be limited to service courses, |the American delegations asserted V . | that tonnage equality will not be ap- | — Proved under any consideration since Great Britain and the United States stand firmly behind the continuance of the present ratios of the three na- | Under these ratios, Great Britain and the United States are given ap- | proximately the same tonnages while that of Japan is three-fifths as larze | as either of the others. | WISCONSIN BANK HELD UP Fox Lake, Wis. Oct. 31—()—Two Toughly-dressed men, armed with pistols, entered the State bank of Fox Lake Wednesday morning and forced the president to hand over about $3,000. They escaped east to-| ward Waupun, Wis. | PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS T. H. THORESEN Schlitz Palm Garden 121 Third St. Art Bernstein, Manager Where you get the Best in REFRESHMENTS LUNCHEONS SERVICE Special Decorations and Features in Keeping With the Occasi TONIGHT—8:00 P. M. HEAR OVER KFYR TONIGHT—8:30 P. M. (Pol- Adv.) pay for a Hardwick & Magee rug or carpet—and they come in a wide range of grades and prices— you can depend on it that you’re making a real investment. Hard- wick & Magee rugs and carpets are “Woven the Wilton Way,” of the finest materials possible to buy and will give satis- factory service over a long period of years. Don’t be misled by a price tag. Buy Beauty that Endures. Why it is important that you buy a genuine Wilton— A genuine Wilton rug or carpet is one that has been woven on a Wilton loom—, operated by a Jacquard. In a Wilton, every color on the surface is backed up by all the other colors underneath, forming « cushion of several thicknesses of buried yarn. This gives to the rug or carpet its rich “feel” and amazing dur- ability. . ; ——— the demand if such work were aban- | = They’re not only beautiful, not only exquisitely colored Sauvain expiained that demands for engineering courses had increased greatly during recent times. giving as " [Artificial Heart | Revives Suicide AUDITORIUM ‘ doned at the other.” | Se a TONIGHT On Display at Bowman Furniture Company nad restore? fe for two min- | Holy Day Observance 7 HARRWICK & MAGEE COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS ates to a man who had hanged nimself three hours earlier by she use of an artificial heart. The heart is a device invented - by Sergei Bruikhamenko to do the joint work of the heart and Planned by Churches)} All Saints day services at St. George's Episcopal church on Thurs- day and special services for All ete lungs in pufrifying the blood. day and for All Souls day at St. ae ae I macs Kukotsky |Mary’s procathedral were announced announced results of the experi-| Wednesday by the respective pastors. ment, which is the first made The sacrament of holy communion on a human, although many [Will be administered at the 7 and 10 have been held on animals. O'clock services at the Episcopal ore according: to He N. ist eae Homer, N. D. Elevator |e over in tine for those who must be Tickets Will Be Paid at work at 8 o'clock to attend. Offer- An order directing the board of} TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY reilroad commissioners to distribute funds amounting to $1,478.99 to|SPECIAL—Our regular $5.00 oil tonic ticket holders in the insolvent Ho-| permanent complete with shampoo, mer, N. D., Farmers *Elevator com-| trim and fingerwave, $3.50. Cali- Pany was issued Wednesday by Dis-| fornia Wave Nook, 102-3rd 8t. trict Judge Fred Jansonius. Phone 782. Halloween Balloon Dance Tonight at the Green Lantern (In Mandan, Four Blocks South of East End Crossing) Special decorations in keeping with season. Novelty prizes to winners of dance features. Now featuring a new novelty dance band The Green Lantern Playboys HEAR TOM MOODIE Democratic Candidate for Governor JOHN MOSES Democratic Candidate for Attorney General eee) Discuss the future welfare of North Dakota and issues to be decided at the general election next Tuesday, November 6. CITY AUDITORIUM BISMARCK Friday, Nov. 8:00 P. M. (C.S.T.) WORLDS GREATEST RADIO TONIGHT Special Music, Features, Dances apvEn since the beginning of radio, Crosley has been a leader in outstanding values. Never has this value leadership been so pronounced as today—as an example, look at this amazing Crosley FIVER Here is beauty and perform- ance at a price beyond com- pare! Distinctive all-wood cabinet. Five-tube super- heterodyne with perform- ance of ordinary six-tube sets. Gets all standard pro- grams and some police calls. 19% A MODEL FOR EVERY PURSE AND PURPOSE There is a new Crosley Radio for model to the cight-tube All-Wave every taste and pocket! . From Console, every one excels in the compact A.C.-D.C. portable performance, beauty and value. orwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Freezing Weather Is Here Prepare Your Car for Cold Weather DON’T DELAY; IT MAY MEAN EXTRA EXPENSE We Suggest--- Change to Winter Lubricant Differential and Transmission Alemite Lubrication Flush Radiator and fill with Methonal-Firestone Super Pryo or Prestone. HEATERS—$9.40, $10.95, $12.50 Installed” PUROL PEP GASOLINE For Quick Winter Starting FIREPROOF STORAGE 24-hour Service See Us at Once for Complete Motoring Service Copelin Motor Company Phone 318 Bismarck

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