The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 19, 1934, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

4 CLARK WILL PUSH “PLAN TO LIGESE | BUSINESS IN WAR THE STORY OF 1934 | 3.—Year Finds Europe | ‘This is the third of a dally se- Senator Says He Will Introduce| ries of 12 articles. Legislation as Soon as Congress Meets asserted, would authorize the presi- license {id $EpYE geageie.e ares bate wi £ 5 Tuesday night from Pierre du Pont. County Agents Will Wind Up Convention SOOO ORO e ee OEE EOE ETOH TOO EO EEE EELS CEE HEL EEO EO LOC REEL OLED NO LIBRARY Can Be Complete Without a Copy of the New North Dakota Capitol Souvenir Booklet Which Has Just Rolled Off the Presses all business in wartime} This was the outstanding develop- plete censorship of|ment abroad in 1934. Grim fear aera the cate after i og5R2 oF i : Hy ue ie 5 i Ky : fH i ‘ il BE ae iy g g f re . ¥ i Ht i i ; gq E3 i ge: e 5 g ee i i : [ H eft E i i D i He 558 i Hil B ? q if PeeTT Ieee eee eee eeeereeereeeerererrererrrerrrerrrrrrrrrrrrere) ‘All women love LINGERIE, silken, soft, lovely garments—slips, panties, cL Sgwas, Dancettes. BAGS - - MILLIN! IERY - - FROCKS - - COATS Jittery Over Prospect of lerashed its way across her without warning. Her neigh- to_make her Mussolini to his but started an intensive drive country military minded. that even infants should tutored to this end. of Marseille ander, Yougoslavia’s soldier-monarch, and thousands of Hungarian subjects gary. Yugoslavia and Italy were at sword’s points, having missed war by a hair’s breadth at the time of Mussolini’s in- tervention in the Austrian Nazi revolt of July. Europe herself never knew exactly how close to armed conflict she was at that time. Mussolini, bent on preventing the revolt from unseating the Austrian government, rushed troops to the bor- der, prepared to throw them across if necessary. Yygoslavia, fearful of a threat to her security from the north, likewise hurried an army to the Aus- trian border, ready to fight if Italy crossed the Austrian line. « Submarines at Viadivostok Russia, with her vast standing army and powerful new air equipment, de- clared for peace but made it clear that she felt she could take care of herself. Meanwhile it was officially admitted that France and Russia were playing about with the idea of an alliance un- der which Russia would come to France's aid if the latter were attacked by Germany. In the troubled Far East Russia was said to have a heavy congentration of airplanes and sub- marines at Viadivostok, across the way from Japan. Most of the small countries of Eu- Tope were doing their busy best to pre- gating the Washington Treaty, where- only was looking care- | ilitary and naval ma-j Village. WEALTHY SOCIETY] MATRON OBJECT OF | WIDESPREAD SEARCH Wife of Eliot Schaffner, Cloth- ing Manufacturer, Disap- pears During Night Carmel, Calif, Dec. 19.—(#)—The Tugged country and beaches around Carmel were searched Wednesday for Mrs. Eliot Boke Schaffner, 39-year- old member of the wealthy clothing family. Apparently clad only in nightgown, bedroom slippers and a fur coat, she disappeared between midnight and dawn Tuesday from her isolated home on the southern tip of this artists’ Released only Monday from Mon- terey hospital where she was taken ten days ago for a rest, fears were felt Mrs, Schaffner may have wandered into the ocean surf of Carmel bay or into the tidal mouth of the Carmel river, both close to her home. After a day of secret though inten- sive search by the village police, blood- hounds were brought by airplane from Berkeley to Monterey county during the night to join the hunt for the missing woman. Her husband, Joseph H. Schaffner, a director of Hart, Schaffner and Marx, was flying to Carmel from Chicago. The socially prominent cou- ple divided their time between New York, Chicago, Carmel and San Fran- cisco, 135 miles north of here. Her sister, Mrs. Marion Todd of San Francisco, early Wednesday morning reached the Carmel home from which the search is being di- rected. Like attendants at the hospital where Mrs. Schaffner was recently confined, Mrs. Todd refused to discuss her sister's illness. ‘Mrs. Schaffner's disappearance was discovered Tuesday morning when a maid brought breakfast to her room only to find it deserted. A careful check of Mrs. Schaffner’s wardrobe disclosed she stopped only long enough to slip on slippers and pull a fur coat over her nightgown. She may easily have wandered down to the rocky, precipitous beach where Carmel artists frequently paint white- capped beach scenes or cypresses twisted half out of shape by the con- stant wind. The treacherous tides which sweep into the mouth of slug- gish Carmel river were close. A third possibility was that she had crossed fields bordering her home into the wide stretches of open country. All three of these were checked as thoroughly as police could with a secretly arranged group of searchers. Finding no trace of the missing wom- by her naval strength was limited to|®". Police Chief Gus Englund called bility of a costly race for naval su- Premacy was freely predicted. this was were being expelled from Yugoslavia. Italy was extending sympathy to Hun- islands. Washington noted that, by|kota must refund coincidence, these dots in the L ft EE 1a] 3 upon Berkeley officers to rush blood- hounds here in the hope they could lead searchers over the trail followed by Mrs. Schaffner. They were brought .| by airplane to Salinas, 20 miles away, where they were held until dawn. Mrs. Schaffner, daughter of the late Prof. George Boke, former dean of the University of California law school, was alone in her isolated home going on, reports |¢xcept for her two-year-old daughter and servants. -|N. D. to Make Gross Earnings Tax Refund Fargo, N. D., Dec. 19.—North Da- $4,500 collected from the Fruit Growers Express company under the 1923 gross earn- .]ings tax, according to an order filed with the clerk of the federal district Jaws is found to! both the United Dakota constitu- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1934 pg ee ee | Gloria to Spend | | Yule With Mother | [eR TE ER MRO New York, Dec. 19.—(4)—There’s going to be a big Christmas tree at 49 East 72nd street next Tues- day, @ tree ablaze with candles and with its bristly boughs bent with gifts; Gloria Vanderbilt’s coming home! _ “It's wonderful that I’m going to have Gloria for Christmas,” said the “poor little rich girl's” mother, Mrs. Gloria Morgan Van- derbilt, Wednesday. “I'm going to start at once to make it a big day—a big day for Gloria and a big one for me.” An apellate court decision an- nounced Tuesday has made the reunion possible. Sometimes, when little girls are very, very rich, solemn judges have to be consult- ed about what chimney Santa Claus can come down without vio- lating the law. Fow ten-year-old Gloria the holiday promises to be a double- barreled—at least a two-treed— Christmas. Christmas eve she will hang her stocking at the fireplace in the home of her aunt, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, and she will awaken Christmas day to de- light in presents left there. But she must not linger too long, for at 10 o'clock in the morning the Whitney car is to drive se- dately up to the door of 49 East ‘and street, and the little heiress to “Reggie” Vanderbilt's millions At be escorted to her mother's r. Second Black Hills Flight Is Planned Washington, Dec. 19.—(#)— Plans for another stratosphere flight start- ing from the Black Hills next summer under joint auspices of the National Geographic Society and the army air corps were announced Tuesday by Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor, president of the society. The major part of the expense of the expedition will be borne by the society. The war department will sup- ply flying officers and direct the flight. Dr. Grosvenor said a balloon of three million or more cubic feet ca- Pacity would be used. The flight will be commanded by Captain Albert W. Stevens, scientific observer and aerial photographer, and piloted by Captain Orvil A. Anderson. Both officers were in the flight of the ‘© |“Explorer” when it climbed- to 11% miles above sea level but exploded before descending to earth. Beach Eastern Star Elects 1935 Officers Beach, N. D., Dec. 19.—Beach chapter of the Eastern Star has elect- ed the following officers to serve in 1935: Worthy matran, Maria Rob- erts; worthy patron, E. M. Enderle; associate matron, Ina M. Stone; as- sociate patron, Geo. M. Osterhout; conductress, Irene Miller; associate conductress, Alice Edkins; secretary, Charlotte Carlson; treasurer, Minnie Smith, Installation will be held at the next regular meeting. The Eiffel Tower is said to stretch as much as 11 inches on hot days. Dance at Dome, Saturday night, Dec. 22, sponsored by Forty and Eight. Leonard Dahl and his orchestra. when you want to..... Sagstertt Fives We telegraph Flow- ers to any part of the world at a small extra cost. OSCAR H. WILL & CO. 315 Third St. Flowerphone 784 Open evenings and until noon Christ g Gill onus for advice 502 Broadway coffee. Pigely Wiggly Store “x Empress Coffee H Demonstration and Sale Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Dec. 20, 21 and 22 Everyone invited to visit us and taste our delicious Phone 630 End of Season Sale = On - _MEN’S OVERCOATS 20% Discount Make Your Selection Now ALEX ROSEN & BRO. Here is the most thought- ful gift you could give. A nightly reminder of your wish for someone’s health and happiness. A famous Simmons’ Beautyrest, rec- ognized as the world’s most luxurious mattress. Why not ask other members of your family to join you in giving a Beautyrest to someone you love? Our special Christmas terms make payment so easy you'll never notice it. Come in today and select one in a lovely damask cover. $1 delivers a Beautyrest for Christ- mas. $l a week there- after pays for it. 80 easy you'll never miss it out of your pin money. SQPRERELETE SSS Do Not Forget Mrs. Santa Claus She may not ask for a new Electric Range. There are so many other things she wants—for the children and you. But a modern Electric Range would mean a lot to her—in time and labor saving. More than likely her cooking equipment is a bit out of date. Modern Electric Ranges have oven heat control—oven insula- tion—smokeless broilers—a wealth of improvements that make cooking quicker, easier—and more economi- cal. Why not replace that old range or stove with a 1934 model this very Christmas? Se aa ee Full Porcelain Range as Above for as Little : as $79.50 North Dakota Power & Light Co. what Shed Like to Get You'll Find It At the SARAH GOLD SHOP - Open Evenings Until Christmas

Other pages from this issue: