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Ea possession of the prisoners the po-| lice said it was learned investors in 5 i i ce anid tt was jearned investors in} | Anti-Voliva Choice been contributing, usually in small amounts to finance liquidation of the tmythical estate of Sir Francis Drake. Two Children Die as Flames Devour Home i N.D. CAGE TOURNEY GROSS WAS $5,404 Receipts From Class A Event Were Second Largest in 22-Year History -Among_ the “There's No Disappoint- wen,” “How Beautiful toxics Must Be,” “Wonderful Words | Per | etites—Dr. R. P, Baker, of # “when the Roll Is Call-) ve! t ‘venves” The Salvation Army Pennsylvania, addressing osteopaths’ also will be heard. An invita- convention, ea E zu iy 5 i La Crosse, Wis., April 9—()—Two | : : / were injured in a fire that destroyed « Receipts from the 1935 North Da-| : . : _ r: : : WHY YOU'RE 80 FOND oF ° ‘kota Class A basketball tournament | ‘were the second largest in the 22-year history of the cage classic, a financial report made by Supt. H. O. Saxvik, | tournament manager, revealed here Tuesday. Gross receipts this year were $5,-/ 404.75, only $49 short of the peak figure of 1934. Expenditures for the tournament totaled $1,499.03, an appreciable in-| crease over the 1934 cost because of | the added cost of trophies and the} expenses of one additional man for each of the eight teams which par- ticipated, as provided under a ruling made this year by the state high school league. | Distribution of the $3,905.72 cash | balance was made with $3,105.72 go- | ing to L. A. White, secretary of the | board of control of the league, and| $800 to the Bismarck Association of | Commerce for the use of the World| War Memorial building and services | in connection with the tournament.) Expenses were listed under three! separate heads. They were—officials $286.88; teams, $867.85, and manage- ment, $344.30. Itemized Receipts Receipts were itemized a: tickets—541 reserved sea While Germany proceeds at top speed to recreate her army, Italy, prepairing for any eventual! Ine tensively drilling her forces. Tanks, disdzin‘ul of ordinary barriers, are shown negotiating a difficult grade (Associated Press Photo) William N. Edwards (above), heading the Independent ticket which opposed the slate approved by Wilbur Glenn Voliva, tong the “boss” of the religious colony at Zion, Ul., was elected as the town’s THIS BOOK is full of facts you'll want to know Angered Neighbors | Seek Brutal Father 1249 unreserved season, $2,185. - + * x *k * * * * * ee new mayor—and promised “plenty unreserved for Saturday games, $135. oo 5) ° eo of changes.” (Associated Press Photo) . REE! _ Single reserved—106 single re- Py You Be Sur rise 33 IT’S F served, $106; 257, single reserved, m et — “The ot $321.25; 116 reserved Saturday, $200.|| * * + eee ee * ee * Saivation Army Will -* bl ae ~opgtoed —! tet yn, 8. : lorge,' Howard E. Blood, eet erney cure, gam: sate © ’ ’ 5 Give Musical Program learn why Norge owners are 80 $94.50; Friday e 6. t sti 4 Rollator i urday morning, $117; Saturday after- | os U1) resents ar (4 or enthusiastic about Ro Refrig noon, $34; Saturday evening, $630. . td te radio ber atin vente oaying tae a on Expenses and fees of the — " sid on ne known “Turkey were: F. E. Wyttenbach, $109.15; J. R. : _ —how Norge owners save up to $11 Nichols, $120.23; William Gussner, By NEA ebevece ONTERMYER, Susmnt, terry 4 Leu re a month in food and refrigeration os, = J ; Gl Hi $7.50; cashiers The ten greatest people in the | burg, Va, June 6, 1858; « ‘and Therese $7.50; Glen Hanna. $7.50; United States do not include Frank- | fists Vs planer whopayed in Confederate Arm covered wi BAKING igre pe cea and other labor, $42.50. A so450; 22 D. Roosevelt, John D. Rockefeller. tudeat Before you invest in refrigeration ‘Team expenses were Minot. $94.50:| J:., Henry Ford, or any of the others POWDER for your home, visit the Norge dealer we Wahpeton, $163.80; Mandan $15:/ ou are likely to think of offhand. near you. See the beautiful Rollator 7 Valley City, $12: Fargo $130.05. Grafton, $195; Says who? Devils Lake, $144. . Refrigerators on display there. Says Who's in America for 1934- Examine the 3 thoughtfully arranged ad ») ‘Management expenses were: adver-| 3; : tising, $1740; tickets, $37.95; ticket" “This big compendium of accom- Eight Are Held i Suesaaey seater ot I punehes, $477; score books, etc. $4.25;| plishments, which includes 31,081 out- | 1g! re Heid in vases Ask for a. pchaeaedn cnet refund on tickets, $5.25; towel service |standing men and women, naturally Old ‘Estate’ BS dle ing powder—under : for teams, $6.00; trophies, balls, etc.,|lists the Roosevelts, Tugwells, Rocke- win —< eoeeoteieae oe famous Rolla! tne $244.04; telephone installed for As-/fellers and such. But it doesn't ac- PeerEr ear rae simple, ealeaiiicg stasis sociated Press, $7.75; printing, $2. cord them nearly the space that is Chicago, —(P)}— Eight chemists. * m making semen sees postage, $3.64; players’ cards, $7.20; telephone and telegraph $: Motor Workers Talk Detroit, April 9—(7)—A threat of sympathetic action by some automo- bile workers if the United Rubber ‘Workers union calls a strike at Akron, O., injected a new element into the nation’s newst labor dispute Tues- day. With automobile workers and labor leaders closely watching the situation in the Akron rubber factories, Fran- cis J. Dillon, general American Fed- eration of Labor organizer for the automobile industry, said that any walkout of rubber workers will mean “the automobile workers will go out WHEN YOU buy shoes first fit your feet and then your pocketbook. If you buy only on price your shoes give neither comfort nor wear as you expected. Proper shoes must fit but also give you assurance of protection in all weather. Insurance in a dependable stock company fits your property with protection against every type of loss. Consider the quality of your insurance before you think of the premium! MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Of Sympathy Strike! devoted to the biographies of some | cther individuals. Edward John von Komorowski | Menge, for instance. You may not! know very much about Edward John von Komorowski Menge, but you can | learn quite a lot about him by look- | ing in Who's Who. Mr. E. J. von K.} |Menge, a psychobiologist living on |Rural Route No. 2 near Fond du Lac, | Wisc., rates 72 column inches of type | jm the volume. That is more than jtwice the space given President |Roosevelt, and more than four times | the space devoted to John D. Rocke- | feller, Jr. | His Accomplishments i | Here are some of the things you |may learn about Mr. Menge: From | |1902-04 he was private secretary to the receiver of the Little Wolf River Telephone company. Later he lec- } jtured on biological subjects; taught } at several schools; a’ wrote a lot including “A Critique of; Biophilosophy (a com-; study of Latin, Slavic, and | Anglo-Saxon ntific reactions—ar- ranged for the National Universities | of Poland) 1934.” i | Judged by an actual yardstick, Mr. Menge is not as famous as some other | Persons in the current Who's Who. | At the top of a list of the ten most! famous must he Samuel Untermyer, ’ since 1879. He jrates 12% column inches of biogra-| phy, which includes a listing of most! |of the big legal cases he has handled, | complete with amounts of money in-| volved Eleven Inches of Degrees Charles Horace Mayo, the Roches- | jter surgeon, comes second with an leven eleven inches devoted almost jentirely to his degrees, titles and | memberships. | Third gregtest is William Fortune |—8 3-16 inches. An ex-newspaper- man, he seems to have done a great ; Many things for Indiana, and Indian- japolis especially; organized innumer- jable charities, celebrations and civic enterprises. He made a trip through Mexico in 1906 and has a citation {from the Kiwanis club and from the Emperor of China. Loser of third place by exactly two {lines, or %% of an inch, is Marston |Taylor Gobert. He is a chemist and for two years has been director of the research department of the Rosin Oil Institute of America. He does a lot of other scientific things, too, and is a member of the advisory council of the simplified spelling board. Also belongs to the Megantic Fish and {Game corporation, and is a com- mander of the Order of the White Lion of Czechoslovakia. Room for Expansion Henry Fairfield Osborn, New York paleontologist, wins fifth honors over Nicholas Murray Butler, Colum- ,bia university president, by only half a dozen words. Both showed credit- able restraint by putting into Who's Who only part of the titles of their published works. Their standing may be very different next year if Dr. Butler lists invididually his “many other published essays and addresses,” and Dr. Osborn names his “eight memoirs” and “over 860 scientific and educational papers.” A Peekskill, N. ¥., attorney named Chester DeWitt Pugsley, takes seventh rank in the space race by dint of 7% column inches. Besides being a founder of numerous scholar- ships and institutes, Mr. Pugsley is interested in the American Flag as- sociation and the American Scenic and Historic Preservation society. The aforementioned Mr. E. J. von K. Menge is eighth in the celebrity list. Percy Mackaye, dramatist and ‘author, comes next. He has turned to Poetry lately, and is pretty fond of American folklore. participated fa formulation of erve Law; for isohm ntreta in contest with F- Augustus Helaae over Montana copper mines; counsel for Rogers and | New York district attorney in 1883, and by 1899 had become Secretary of War in the cabinet of President Mc- Kinley. WOULD BOOST AIRMAIL RATE Washington, April 9. — (®) — In- creases in certain air mail contract rates were favored Tuesday by Chair- man McKellar (Dem., Tenn.), of the senate postoffice committee as he prepared to start a push for air mail legislation. He did not name the con- tracts he believes should be altered. Approximately 5,000,000 trees are cut annually in the United States to be used for telegraph and tele- j phone poles. CHICHESTERS PILLS "THE DIAMOND y SAVE on Every Trip! Bismarck Greyhound Depot Broadway at Seventh Phone 501 NORTHLAND GREYHOUND John, have you seen Gam- ble’s new 48-page circular— It’s just 48 pages of bar- gains that we can get right here in our own town, APRIL SPECIAL—12 Gal. Drum Gam Oil, $4.98, of really important items in the data concerning him. After all, he was a Gall Stone Colic Avoid operations, {f possible. Treat ‘a sensible, painiens, in- ‘at home,” Write Home Co,, 18-B No, Fourth St, Min-| neapolis,” Minn. for @ reco ised pearly, proscrinlon on been givi 1s results # ney finder Get Relief or your|literature on Sips t. wpicp bag guare vertisement. Ehtes. Clip this out sow—Adve sons, including three women, were held for questioning here Tuesday in connection with the widely publi- cized “Drake estate” fraud after po- lice said they accidentally discovered the “main office” of the You will want a new refrigerator before summer. Get all the facts. Read this book and see the Norge. NORGE CORPORATION THE ROLLATOR COMPRESSOR... organization Smooth, easy, rolling power instead . waa of burried back-and-forth acti Division of Borg-Warner Corp., Detroit, Mich. Tipped off by an individual who Result—meore cold found a “dividend” inquiry in the | for the current street, police raided a north-side ho- | used. Only Norge tel and oe 2 —— In addition | bas the Rollator authorit y _ confiscated | 5 shila acevereccy <stios thes alanedl 25 eunces ter 25e | cold matint GES CAcbhior rafpégaralion leaders of the scheme received as part FULL PACK i , i of aerate one ae since the sete 20N9 3 of “the »” Oscar Hartzel . tas recently tent to pao for feu NO SLACK FILLING Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. nt use e mails. ‘ N From hundreds of letters found in 122: Main Biemarck sont ‘t READY TODAY_NEW OF SUMMER MOBILOIL! “7PHE FASTEST motor oil success in Ameri- can history!” That was the record... made by the new Mobiloil Arctic last Winter. That is ee scape for the tremaniions im- portance is announcement. eee Par enc pat Buinmer Mabiod, reload ty te same Clearosol Process as Mobiloil Arctic. Now you can have the same remarkable engine per- changed matter that formerly resisted refining. The price of this new Summer Mobiloil has not been raised one cent! Try it today! Socony-VacuuM Om ComPANY, INC. 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