The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 8, 1935, Page 2

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_2 NRW TRIAL SOUGHT INN. D, WILL CASE Daughter Seeks Estate Her Tuttle Father Left to His Housekeeper Hearing on a motion for a jude- ith ding or a new trial ook the case un- d will render his in the case have the attorneys. aled for a new} which le y to his housekeeper, Mrs. | ict for the plaintiff was given | 7) iy case was heard | ict court two L. Crum of Bis- also of Bismarck, Seibels, They re- among the ts and out in which to prepare Baby Daughter Of Cabinet Aid Cabinet memBers are nore often Parents | grandparents than proud of newborn children—which tion. tant Secretary of War Woodring, held by her adm “rome young mother at their Upper Marlboro, Md. Father, Son Burned As Gasoline Ignites Minot, N. D., Aug. 8—()—A father and son are in a hospital being treated for Burns sustained when gasoline which the parent was pour- ing into a vacuum tank of a truck TRAFFIC CENSUS A ') GUDE 10 HIGHWAY BUILDING PROPOSED Increased Gascline Tax Pro- posed as Property Levy Replacement Measure BREAK CAMP HERE guide in construction of various types of roads in the different sections of Fort Lincoln Citizen-Soldiers Leave for Homes in North, ignited. Worst burned is Lloyd Aus, 7, whose legs up to his knees were seared while the father, Clifford Aus, sustained severe burns on his right forearm and lesser burns on the left han te, Thursday was under con- ion by state and federal offi- The proposal marked the closing of {the state interim tax survey commis- sion conference between state and fed- leral officials on road conditions and _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1935 TWO MEN JAILED A CANDO T0 FACE BANK ROBBERY WITNESSES Duo Under Suspicion Serving Sentences for Petty Lar- ceny in Towner County do for petty larceny will be questioned in connection with the robbery of the Security State Bank of Wishek, C. A. Miller, head of the state bureau of criminal ‘Thursday. The men are serving 25 day senten- ces under the names of Joe McBride, Louisville, Neb. and Frank Haugh, Lebannon, Mo. Sheriff Albert H. Bodelson of identification, announced ‘Two men serving jail terms at Can- isan Haven. Heads of these institu- She is Melissa Woodring, six-weeks-old daughter of Assis- | problems in the state. | The traffic census was proposed ect, l ty | Points, they said. of the conference, Hi sion to get a first-hand view of various phases of public service j wil supply the proper amounts Portrait of a CLEVER GROCER MY WHOLE FAMILY WANTS SOMETHING NEW FOR BREAKFAST. WHAT DO OTHERS EAT? MANY OF MY CUSTOMERS ARE CHANGING TO KELLOGG. ‘PEP BRAN FLAKES and how he solved A PROBLEM GOOD MORNING- MADAM’AND HOW DID YOUR FAMILY LIKE THOSE BETTER BRAN FLAKES to >. ‘a ‘THEY JUST,LOVED THEMNTHEJFIRST PACKAGE|IS’ALL GONE"! SHALL NEED TWO MORE TODAY. Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakes are genuine bran flakes. They conform to the recent ruling of the U. S. Pure Food and Drug Administration. Your grocer has these better bran flakes. Oven-fresh and crisp. Ready to serve. Enjoy PEP Bran Flakes often. Popular. Nourishing. Mildly laxative. Delicious with milk or cream. Buy a package today. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. v ious shooting from ambush of La rence Wolfgram, 27. Ros tacks on several persons in western Minnesota in the y ~ MINNESOTA FARMER MYSTERIOUSLY SHOT Other Eerie Attacks on Persons} in Northwestern Part of State Recalled St. Paul, Aug. 8.—(?\—The as he worked in ‘ursday recalled the my S. ” ‘The most recent case, on an isolated | t the Detroit Lakes) y cost the life of a 55- a Roseau hospital. He w Mons in a brush patch abou from where Wolfgram was w when the shooting oo Began in A y found ty gagged and tied in a barn Jeral hours later, holes ina ‘The attacker's ambush was ‘The Killings began Jacobson, vening to do chores, over the head the bod in Jacodson’s hea As officers were Jacobson’s assailant! August Grage. 70, by rifle bullets by an man who hid behind a s paces from Gragi 1933. farmer near Detroit Lakes, was plo ing when a dropped in his tracks, a through his body. His att: 1D HATE TO HAVE THAT 108 IN THIS HOT WEATHER Wolfgram lies critically wounded in| be j Adjustment contracts with the federal mment, only one in North Da-| q, as been assessed @ penalty for]/to thumb through law books to see violation, Dr. J. T. E. Dinwoodie, state sett he einaeeea any law. Se 10 There were > was mowed wacker fired | revenue and equitably distribute costs back to the people through medium of our tax laws,” he said. | in | commissioners myster- co! Commissioners’ as . Wing. Cass Farmer Fined ¢ three | gover Joc: ed compliance officer, announces. Cass county. chardt recovered. Settler Clubbed covered. On June %, 1934, das she walked along a road. hole VM GLAD THOSE SCRUBBING AND BOILING DAYS ARE GONE FOREVER ITS NO HARDER THAN SCRUBBING AND BOILING AS NICE AND COCR works progress administration proj- | Such a census would depict the ‘number of passenger and commercial | Vehicles and tucks moving across the roads of the state and would enable | Toads officials to compute the mov- jing tonnage of vehicles on the high- | Ways, aiding them in providing heavier of road construction at proper Dr. Spencer A. Larsen, consultant to the state tax survey commission, | expressed satisfaction at the outcome “It enabled members of the commis- that the commission will be in a po- sition to prepare tax measures that At the conference also came sug- gestions from county commissioners | and representatives of the North Da- | kota League of Municipalities favor- n se in the gasoline tax) nt of present levels on road building purposes. tives of the League of Mu- expressed the feeling a officials were Christ nestown, chairman of the Fricke, Baldwin, and} For AAA Infraction ral other cases are pending. The iff Vi rmer asseased the penalty lives in Deputy Sheriff Vincent Lee and L. P. from behind a pile of stones. Bor-|Shortly afterward signed the state- Charles Kaikomen, a settler, was/Odtain good money from the ind!- in the yard beside his woods | Vidual with whom he was dealing and four weeks|Sive him nothing in return. er, when he was struck from be- aT with a blunt instrument and i i en clubbed about the head. He re-| 214 Foreign Machines Mrs. Louise Markie, widow, was clubbed to death Shortly afterward a mysterious rifle! Minot bearing out-of-tate made on Warren Johnson. Towner county informed Miller the men were in jail after receiving cir- culars asking the whereabouts of the “a South Dakota two. Miller said suspicions of a Hazelton banker were aroused recently when the two, with a companion, were in that vicinity, Witnesses of the Wishek bank hold- up of July 16 when $2,000 loot was obtained, will go to Cando to look the men over, Miller said. Two hundred citizen-soldiers don- ned civilian clothes for the first time since July 10 Thursday and returned to widely scattered homes in North and South Dakota, bringing to an end the 1935 Citizens’ Military Training camp, “one-month school for the soldier” conducted annually at Fort Lincoln. The youthful soldiers, filled with army and citizenship teachings and hardened by a month of outdoor life, took to the highways and the trains shortly before noon after receiving their transportation money and turn- ing over uniforms to the camp quar- termaster. Officers, who directed the activities, of the C.M.T.C., were expected to leave for their homes Friday. Colonel Clarence J. Frankforter will return to Lincoln, Neb., and other officers miso will go to their respective headquar- ters. An amateur night wound up the entertainment program at the camp Wednesday night after all winners in athletic and proficiency contests had been named in competition conducted during the training period. Lieut. Colonel Joseph S. Leonard, post commandant, was in general command of the camp, assisted by staff officers, Major Chauncey H. Hayden and Lieut. Colonel E. L. Wil- bur, both of Sioux Falls; Major John L, Dunn, Fort Lincoln, and Colonel Frankforter. The average top speed of automo- biles in 1926 was about 57 miles an hour; today it is over 80. the so of the the at- ‘ia- Counterfeit Money Swindler Thwarted Minot, N. D., Aug. 8—(P}—A Minot man who signed a statement say- ing that he was attempting to per- petrate a swindle when he offered to sell another Minoter $500 of counter- feit money for $200 was freed Thurs- lay. while federal officials prepared better than 437% v-| Taken into custody Wednesday by Jackson, St. Paul, government secret service man, the 40-year-old Minoter ment. ‘The man told officers he hoped to the In Minot on One Day Minot, N. D., Aug. 8—(?—Making la four day check of automobiles ia the Minot police found Wednesday on the first day of their tabulation that 214 machines were here from The automobiles came from 25 states and three Canadian provinces. screb clothes on a board — when there's 8 quick, easy, ausers method of gecing snowy washes? Use Rinso. It SOAKS oat the dirt. It gets choches . Ewea stubborn cols and edges come whiter — safely. Clean with a hatle geatie robbing berween che fingess. Thac saves the Gloches—saves mooey— saves YOU! “Use Rinso in washers,” say experts Chips, bar soap or powders needed. Recommended by makes of 34 famous washers. Safe for colors. Easy on Paramount Theatre Offers a Special Feature on Thurs. & Fri. Goodyear can give you bigger value at as low or lower prices — because Goodyear is the world’s largest tire builder. That was proved over and over in Detective Faurot’s famous investigation that showed the sensational “G-3” All-Weather is giving thousands LONGER NON-SKID MILEAGE AT NO EXTRA COST WE'VE GOT THE EVIDENCE — actual foot- prints of “G-3’s” on your neighbors’ cars—driven on the same roads you drive—proof that this great tire keeps its grip longer. These Prices Settle we ‘Prince subjert te chases ein? oeaie Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Fer 21 years Bismarck’s leading automobiles and automobile merchandise and serv- Administrators Will Study Appointments Members of the state board of ad- ministration Monday will consider various appointments to state insti- tutions, which have been delayed itd completion of the board it- se ‘With appointment of a new chair- man, J. D. Harris, the board now is preparing to move ahead. Under consideration will be terms for heads of the blind school at Bath- gate; the Grafton state school and the state tuberculosis sanatorium at tion are appointed for definite terms. $18 HOGS BACK Chicago, Aug. 8—(?}—The twelve dollar hog came back Thursday for the first time in six years. Hog prices here rose to $12 per hundred- weight in early rounds, the highest! pice since August, 1929, when a top of $12.25 was reached. The market) was 10 to 15 cents higher, the top reaching $12.05. LOUIS-BAER MATCHED Chicago.—Max Baer, former heavy- weight champion, and Joe Louis, sen- sational Detroit Negro, Thursday were matched by Promoter Mike Jacobs of New York to fight on Sept. 26 or 27 at either New York or Some great hitters go through whole seasons without hitting a home run with the bases full, but Al Sim- mons of the White Sox recently hit two such drives within three days. SEATTLE JAMBOREE SUITS 0B RE Washington Group Will Spend Five Hours Touring Two Cities Saturday Twenty-seven Boy Scouts from Se- attle, Wash., bound for the National Jamboree ‘Washington, D. C., will stop here Saturday for a five-hour visit in Mandan and Bismarck. A delegation of Bismarck Mandan Scouts will meet the train at Mandan Saturday morning and con- duct the boys on a tour of the two cities. Included in the local delega- tion are Eagle Scouts Rufus Lumry and Arnold Anderson, Life Scouts Warren Kraft of Bismarck and Jo- seph Thysell of Mandan and Paul O. Netland, Missouri Area Council execu- tive, The Mandan Indians will entertain during the noon hour after whicl the Washington Scouts will be taken through the reconstructed Mandan Indian village Later they will be shown through the new North Dakota capital by Charles Leismann. If suf- ficient times remains until the train leaves, they will also be taken to Fort Lincoln and given a swim at the Bis- marck municipal pool. Netland urged that as many Bis- marck scouts as possible be at the train at Mandan Saturday morning to welcome the Seattle delegation. Meanwhile plans for the two-day THESE FOOTPRINTS PROVE Argu Cash prices— other sizes Proportion GUARANTEE —in writing against road injuries and defects with every Goodyear tire. DON’T BE FOOLE padded price lists. BUY NO TIRES until you see how MUCH MORE QUALITY Goedyear gives you FOR THE SAME MONEY—OR LESS! 4 by trick dis- counts from ice. We have to satisfy. 3A Ww training camp which will be held here preparatory to the scouts leaving for, Washington, went forward under Net- land’s direction. The first jamboree staff meeting of the Missouri Area council has been called for 9 a. m., Sunday at the scout headquarters at the city auditorium. Jamboree scoutmasters and their assistants will meet with the scout executive and jamboree committemen to draw up final plans for the organ- ization of six patrols which will make up the council's aelegauon. Invitations have been mailed to F. W. Perry, McClusky; Clifford L. Done- hower, Lidgerwood and Torlor Johan~ sen, Bismarck. Junior officers will meet with the staff leaders following the conference. A. G. Hill of England, Olympic 800- meter champion of 1920, is living in the United States. He has a 15-year- old daughter who is distinguishing herself as @ sprinter. Ladies Attention! | |] Don't miss the opportunity to |] take advantage of the Bargains on Dresses, Suits, Coats now available at the People’s Dep’t. Store On Fifth St. The National 6 9 construction and use of au! c= “Everybody's __4 PLYMOUTH CAR ‘== Business” S2SAnRSSrSArsss made for the sole purpose of impressing the need of greater safety in the ‘tomobiles,

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