The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 26, 1935, Page 4

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FARMERS URGED 10 USE DEBT’ PARLEY AGENCIES IN STATE Welford Calls Attention to Var- lous Setups Available to Worried Person North Dakota farmers were urged ‘Tuesday by Gov. Walter Welford to take advantage of various agencies set up to assist them in an adjust- ment of debts and to prevent law- suits or loss of machinery and equip- ment through legal actions or repos- sessions. Many farmers now may make such adjustments but because of lack of knowledge of these agencies have taken no action, Welford said. Debt adjustment boards in various coun- ties, under supervision of district judges; the Resettlement administra- tion and Rehabilitation corporation all now operate to assist the farmer, he_ declared. Farmers who have written Welford|” seeking advice before these facilities were available now are being advised of the procedure necessary. Welford has already communicated with var- fous boards asking they cooperate with needy farmers. “The farmer who is up against it and who is threatened with lawsuits ‘or with loss of his farm machinery ot other equipment through repos- session or other legal action has ac- cess now to these new setups,” Wel- ford said. “Both national govern- ment and state administration are anxious to keep good farmers on land with sufficient equipment to carry on their work efficiently.” Provisions of the moratorium are not to be modified in any way and will be invoked in all cases to help de- ser ing citizens, overnor Welford said, but by readjustment and refi- nancing many can be relieved of the worry incident to their debts. Social Security Plan Adopted in Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. Nov. 26.—(4)—With the curtains drawn on what prob- ably will be Nebraska's last bicamerai legislative session, representatives and senators returned to their homes Tues- day, leaving on Gov. R. L. Cochran’s des’: a $10,000,000 social security pro- Pilots Sister Ship of China Clipper J ILOT> of the Pht tippine Clipper, sister ship of the China Clipper. is Capt. Ralph Dahlstrom, a veteran of the sky lanes, The ship, scheduled to start trips on the trans: Pacific route soon, ts the sec- ond ship built for the service. — Muhtstrom MAYOR ASKS HELP IN SEAL CAMPAIGN Women’s Community Council Workers Will Inaugurate Drive Friday Morning Mayor A. P, Lenhart issued Ties- day his proclamation in support of the North Dakota Anti-Tuberculosis association's 1935 Christmas seal drive, which will be launched in Bis- marck the day after Thanksgiving. The Women’s Community Council is sponsoring the local drive, which will have three phases, general down- town sales conducted by council workers; sales. by school children, opening Dec. 2, and the annual Christmas seal tea coming late in De- cember. Following is the statement from Mayor Lenhart: “Twish to urge your generous sup- port of the Christmas Seal Campaign, which startes this week. “Tuberculosis is still a cause of death. “Many of us can remember the time | when this disease killed more people, than any other, and it was consider- | \ed a death sentence by most people. “Today there is enough knowledge about tuberculosis to completely con- trol it. Yet it still kills more young people than any other disease. It is still a threat to our children, “Christmas Seals give us each an opporunity not only to save lives, but to promote protection for our homes. I urge every man, woman, and child to buy and as many of these penny seals as he possibly can during leading gram that was 29 days in the making. the coming month.” BEAUTY PARLOR’ IS FIRST STOP OF FARM ANIMALS IN CHICAGO: Waves, Rinses and Latest Hair Trims Given Before Show- ing at Exposition Chicago, Nov. 26—(?)—There’s 8 facing thousands of America’s finest farm animals. trip to the “beauty parlor” Ivll be their first stopping place when they arrive in Chicago for the 3€th International Live Stock expo- sition in the new stock yards amphi- theatre Nov. 30 to Dec. 7. The “beauty” treatment comes just, before the formal ope! ning. Some breeds of cattle look best with curled coats, accomplished by apply- ing special combs to dampened hair. Horns and hoofs are scraped, sand- papered and polished. Horses’ manes and tails are braided and trimmed with rosettes; pigs are washed and oiled, and sheep must be sheared by experts to bring out the blocky forms that shepherds consider ideal. Many in Competition B. H. Heide, manager of the show, says great interest in this year's ex- position is due to the notable success of recent state fairs, many of which established all-time records for both number of exhibits and visitors. be competing. Beef cattle herds are to be en- tered from such distant points as New England and the Pacific slope states, in addition to the provinces of Alberta, Ontario and Quebec in Canada. Sheep breeders from 14 states and Ontario have made entries for ten Swine exhibits, largely from the corn belt, are 40 per cent in excess of last year’s entries. different breeds. King of Steerdom Draft horses, says Heide, are com- ing from nine states and Canada to stage one of the biggest shows in the Some of the contenders have recently been imported from Scotland, France and the native lands of the Clydesdale, Percheron and Belgian history of the exposition. Belgium, horses. Interest in the exposition will cen- ter in selection of the grand cham- pion steer, scheduled this year for Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 3. The judge will be Walter Bigger who annually makes the trip from his home in ~_ oe | FOR T —— OR THOSE INTIMATE a She Will A Lingerie made o Sizes 32 to 42 » 4 This Christmas present her with dore f Satin Dasché lush or Tearose. Gowns also in Dusty Pink and Turqu Delightful Gifts Dalbeattie, Scotland, to officiate in this important ceremony. - Next in importance is the ‘sale of the grand champion on the auction of steerdom, year’s cham- pion sold for $8 a pound on the hoof, far under the record price of $8.25 a pound bid for the 1929 champion. CONFESSION CLEARS LOST BABY MYSTERY Elderly Man Admits Throwing Child in River After Hos- pital Mistake 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1935 MRS, EMMA HAGA PLEADS INNOCENT McKenzie County Farm Woman to Stand Trial for Murder in January Williston, N. D., Nov. 26.—(#)—Mrs. Emma Haga; Fairview farm woman, confessed “self-defense” slayer of her husband, John, Tuesday awaited trial on first degree murder charges fol- lowing her plea of innocence. She was arraigned at Schafer-be- fore District Judge A. J. Gronna, who ty authorities ,convinced they have learned at last the fate of h son of William C. Greatrex, debated Tuesday what action to take Alphonse Viemminck, elderly Belgian be had thrown the baby in the Detroit ver, hSeriff Henry Behrendt said Viem- minck, now under a 12 to 15 year sen- tence for molesting a 4-year-old child, will be questioned further. Viemminck related Monday that the Greatrex baby, given him by mis- take when he called at the hospital in 1923 for the son born at about the same time to his 19-year-old unmat- ried daughter, had died of suffocation while wrapped tightly in his coat as he drove around deciding how to get rid of it. Detroit, Nov. 26.—()—Wayne coun-| denied # defense motion for dismissal, infant who signed a confession Monday that| ™! and ordered trial for Jan, 6, 1936, at ‘Watford City. Mrs. Haga remained in the Williams county jail here, in default of $15,000 bond. Bonds were reported being ar- She is alleged to have shot and killed her husband Nov. 9, following a quarrel. She declared the shooting occurred when she sought to defend ine against a clubbing by her hus- ban PHOTOGRAPHY AIDS ACCOUNTS SALVAGE Police Deny Investigator’s Statements of New Evi- dence Uncovered New York, Nov. 26.—(#)--The chief investigator for Bruno Richard Haupt- mann declared he had learned on “unimpeachable authority” that Lindbergh ransom bills have turned up recently in Boston and ‘Worcester, Mass. The department of justice in New York said, “We have no information on this matter.” No Lindbergh Ransom Reported Found in East SPLIT AMONG BORAH COLLEAGUES IS SEEN ‘| White House’s Blind Piano Tuner Is Dead ‘Washington, Nov. 26—(7)—The of-_ ficial piano tuner for the Whi House, Benjamin Franklin Parker, dead at the age rris, LaFollette and Johnson Probably Would Follow Roosevelt He expects more than 12,000 animals to Greatrex, the rubber plant work- }man who returned from the funeral of his wife in Toronto to learn of the tragic error, confronted Viemminck after the latter had told of throwing “the baby, coat and all in the river.” “I'm sorry I killed your baby, Viemminck said. “I never would have done it if I had known it was not my child.” Greatrex sprang up and struck the prisoner before deputies could seize ST PAUL FIRM HAS HOSPITAL CONTRACT Jamestown and Faribault Com- panies Also to Aid Con- struction at Jamestown Contract awards totaling $335,199 for construction of the new six-story men’s wing at Jamestown State Hos- pital for the Insane were announced Tuesday by the state board of admin- istration. To Maurice Schumacher of St. Paul went the general contract at a low bid of $269,900. Two supplemental contracts of $9,- 139 for electrical work awarded to James River Electric company, James- town, and $56,160 for plumbing and heating by P. J. Gallagher and Sons, Faribault, Minn., also were let. The building will be of steel and concrete fireproof construction. Wards and dormitories together with labora- tories and operative facilities will be included in the structure. An appropriation of $200,000 was voted by the state legislature for the construction work. In addition a $138,850 PWA grant has been obtained from the federal government. The dog’s head butterfly has an ex- cellent likeness of a dog’s head on each of its front wings. Even the eyespots are in the right place. Store Bills Charred in Fire Re- produced by Aid of Ultra Violet Rays Mitchell, 8. D., Nov. 26—(#)—Em- ployes of the fire-razed Butterfield: Department Store here were ready Tuesday to begin collecting $10,000 in outstanding accounts by means of photographs. ‘The pictures are copies of accounts salvaged from, the ashes of four ac- count books by a Sioux Falls police identification officer, D. V. Baker, who combined a knowledge of photography with knowledge of the penetrating power of ultra-violet rays to repro- duce the photographs. Baker said he used a supersensitive film and, after focusing the camera by use of a photo-flood lamp, used| only the ultra-violet rays to produce the picture. The rays, he said, were reflected from the carbon on the paper. About 100 pictures were taken suc- cessfully, he said. The indiviual ac- counts ranged from a dollar to $350. The account books were so badly charred that extreme care was neces- sary in handling. After one picture was taken it was necessary to peel off the charred remains of the bill by means of a surgeon's scalpel to get to the next, Baker said. Poll Results Do Not Bother Democrats poll on “legislative trends” conducted by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, but Democrats declined to take it seri- ously, Senator O'Mahoney (Dem.- Wyo.) said it was “perfectly obvious” the questions were “loaded to obtain a particular answer.” S. D. VETERAN DEAD Yankton, S. D., Nov. 26.—(#)—War- | ren Osborn, one of the last of’ South Dakota’s Civil war veterans will be buried here Friday. “I have been informed,” the inves- $700 in! Lindbergh ransom money has _been| received by the Boston Federal Re- serve bank since Hauptmann’s ar- It is continuing to show up. My authority is unimpeachable, de- tigator said, “that almost rest. spite the-denials of police.” Found Letter in House The investigator, kidnaped, which read, in part: “Why don’t you return that poor little Lindbergh baby? You have had it long enough.” He said the writer and recipient of the letter were known and that he would soon have “a full accounting: from them.” who requested that his name be withheld, said he recently found in a house near Ashby, Mass., a letter dated March 10, 1932, 10 days after the Lindbergh baby was Washington, Nov. 26—()—With Senator Borah apparently considerine the idea of running for president, po! {ticlans noted Tuesday that his Re- publican independent colleagues in the |senate probably would be divided on |such a candidacy. * Three members of that little band in which Borah has been a leader for years—Senator Norris of Nebraska LaFollette of Wisconsin, and Johnson of California—have become so closely affiliated with President Roosevelt that a break would be unlikely, po- litical leaders contended. These three have taken so little part in Republican affairs of late that they could probably give Borah small help even in a fight for the nomina- tion. LaFollette has left the party A WINDOW not entirely closed fails to serve its pur- pose in stormy weather— an incomplete insurance In the same house, the investigator said, he found wood “similar” to that used in the ladder believed to have been used in gaining access to the Lindbergh nursery. Under Expert Examination “It’s the same type,” he remarked, “and I’m having it examined by ex- perts.” He recited reports that the same house yielded ransom bills as “abso- lutely wrong,” and added, “I wish it had, however.” C. Lioyd Fisher, Flemington, N. J., chief of counsel for Hauptmann, has received a copy of the report of the Massachusetts investigation, the in- vestigator said. Besides handwriting and wood, the investigator said, several articles used by a baby were found in the house, as well as newspaper clippings of other kidnapings, executed, in some respects similar to that of the Lind- der the the entirely and become a progressive. Senator Nye of North Dakota has continued in much the same category with Borah. His colleague, Senator Frazier, already has spoken up for Borah. Dakota might also be a Borah sup- porter, observers believe, AAA Ready to Start Washington, administration Tuesday corn loans may put as high as 250,000,000 bushels of the grain un- With $100,000,00 available from the Reconstruction Finance corporation, and the AAA were prepared to start plan, with even one policy inadequate or perhaps one risk not insured, does not soundly protect your busi- Senator Norbeck of South} Ness and property. For sound protection you re- quire insurance that ts com- prehensive —ask this Hart- ford agency to plan yours. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck 218 Broadway Corn Loans Monday Nov. 26—(2)—Farm officials estimated seal in the next few months. Commodity Credit corporation corn loan program next Monday. bergh baby. i Foul Bay is the name for one part of the Red Sea. f y Git 308 y Ph Sal pret Wards Budget Plan ellows youte pay little down anda little each month, with smell carrying charge, en any items ‘ef merchandise sold in the store when the purchase is $20 or more, Pay for gifts ovt af income. en) MONTGOMERY fi WARD & CO.HHE easvuauovdenetveatanuaveueegavanccaeacgvaateeensevaneconensavecconecsvsccuonceanvucnoceevauecengecanacceegceasucceesnanveettn For Your Thanksgiving Dinner Eat and Enjoy Wonderful Food: Blue Points, Cherry Stone Clams, Deep Sea Scallops, French Endive. Roast Young Tom Turkey Avocado Salad, Old English Plum Pudding, Apple Cider, ete. The Patterson Hotel Dining Room ALL FOODS ELECTRICALLY COOKED Make Your Reservation Now UODAAAEAGAAUDUAAGHOEQUOLOALDEEADONOGODEGNGOUQQUOUENGGOGAUODUGEOCQOOOEAUENONGUOURGEAOMOUUERADOQOUREQUDOUEREAUOGOREHLUUADIL LENA “ITS NICE TO LOOK FORWARD TO COMPORTABLE DRIVING vuis WINTER —that’s why we bought our new Ford V-8 now instead of waiting until Spring.” EITHER cold nor slush affects the baked enamel finish of the 1936 Ford V-8. Its direct-driven ignition starts the car quickly even on sub-zero mornings. A new Ford needs no tedious “breaking in”—Drive it 60 miles an hour the day you get it, if you want to. And this year, because the 1936 Ford V-8 came out earlier, you make a triple saving by buying this fall:—You get a bigger allowance on your old car now than next spring. You can drive your new Ford this winter, and it will sili be worth as much next year as if you waited until spting to buy it ; ; . And you avoid the winter conditioning costs—for battery, tires, brakes, winter lubricants and engine tune-up—you would otherwise have to pay on your old car. Come in and see the 1936 Ford ¥-8 Wonderful underwear! And priced” about half its actual value. Neverbefore has it been possible to get a combi- nation of these two premiere qualities «+. the famous patented non-shrink, non-sag Bryn Mawr cut and that queen of washable ‘satins, Satin Dasché. It's gorgeous for gifts and really the most economical underwear you can buy for yourself because it wears and washes beautifully. SLIPS. Deinty Lace Trim.. *422 SLIPS... Medium or long Buttress BISMARCK, N. D. HEMET HE TEE EE EE Me HEE EEE od x od x od x ed rod x od 3 x e Ed ‘ 4 et 3 5 : x ¥ ke : 3 3 Fed 3 ¥ 3 a YOO BERENS ES Ie IC IC IC ee ee ee ME is

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