The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 11, 1936, Page 7

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CONTINUE from page one Will Whiskers Wow Or Worry Worthies; b Representatives Will Washington, March 11.—(#)—T! Test D. C. Privileges tag that a policeman says he hung on Senator Duffy’s automobile may lead ———————— ee of Mrs. Ada French Rice, 58, to which District Attorney Gilbert Ferrell said he confessed. He led authorities to a spot where her lime-covered body Jay in a shal- low grave and then detailed an ac- count of dropping the rail-laden body ‘he Port Arthur Tied Up -By March Blizzard Port Arthur, Ont, March 11.—(— Fifteen woodsmen arrived in Porth Arthur Tuesday night from Duluth, We Want to Know their pictures taken before shaving off the hirsute adornment. of a man named “Barovich” from the to a final decision of ‘the long de- J San Mateo bridge last November. bated question: Does & member of congress enjoy any more immunity from arrest than Minn., and are stormbound Wednes- day in one of the worst blizzards of the season. Older men generally were not so enthusiastic.. They apparently enjoy their morning sessions with lather and razor but it may be only that they place a higher value on their dignity. the ordinary citizen? The policeman tagged the car area, Senator Duffy (Dem., Wis.), on the i ground it was parked in @ no-parking Employment Mounts, Secretary Reports Brooklyn, N. ¥., March 11.—(P)}— Secretary Perkins told the Civitans of They are waiting for the weather to . clear before being moved by-airplarie to Isle Royale, Mich., which is 45 miles from here to join the camp forces taking out pulpwood. The men are to be moved by air be- Expressing doubt that any traffic laws were violated, Duffy also de- clared he would fight the charge on the ground that members of congress To obtain information about whisk- ers, their design, care and general utility Gf any) The Tribune Wednes- day interviewed John Dolan, nestor club Wednesday that industrial em- ployment mounted 31 per cent be- tween April, 1933, and December, 1935. At the same time, she said, indus- cause the lake is impassable. of local tonsorialists who has been scraping chins in Bismarck since 1889. Is Individual Proposition Dolan gave his blade a few remin- iscent flops on the strop, turned his memory back and then broached the theory that whiskers are an individual proposition. Each man can raise his own and have them trimmed in any one of a variety of styles—and each style is subject to individual variation. If Bismarck is going to raise whisk- ers, he said, the best thing it can do is to consult the family album and see what grandpa or Great Uncle George wore. Hardier souls can just start in and do a catch-as-catch-can job. It probably will turn out all right. Of course, the decision might hinge somewhat on the standing or pro- fession. Doctors, in the early days, all wore van dykes. They were al- most as much a badge of the profes- sion as the badge and a mace of & policeman. Rich men went in for side whiskers that swept gracefully away from the face on either side. When they were asleep they must have looked like mis- shapen handlebars on a bicycle. Mutton Chops Popular Another peccadillo of the financial greats of another day was the mutton- chop whisker. It was made by letting the hair grow on the sides of the face, then barbing it up and trimming it off te shape. The Imperial was a Kentucky Col- onel sort of beard, consisting of a sweeping moustache with a dab of whisker on the chin just under the lower lip. The goatee created the same general effect, except that the lower whisker bloomed more vigorously. Kentucky Colonels went in for them, too. ‘The really practical whisker, Dolan recalled, was the Donegal which takes its name from a part of Ireland and was a thing of utility. “Did you ever wonder about those whiskers you see on pictures of sailors?” inquired the nestor as he warmed to his sub- ject. “Well those were Donegals. When men wear rubber slickers which rub against their necks the chin some- times chafes. Also, salt water ~ times irritates shaved portions of the face and neck. Those considerations created the Donegal. It consists of ® whisker running around the under part of the neck.” Nature Does Rest To create one all the modern has te do is to shave down to the jaw- bone, then quit. Nature will do the rest. The Galway: also gets its name from Ireland and consists of a short, well-trimmed stubble under the chin with a clean-shaven area around it. ‘Very neat and aggressive looking. To get a truly masculine effect, however, those who can do should try the full beard. Like the Galway, it has utility. For instance a real beard in full bloom makes a shirtfront un- necessary; To the man who wears one a necktie becomes a mere gesture. In the old days when pioneers often went hungry the end could be chewed. It gave the illusion of chewing un- cooked wheat and sometimes yielded real nourishment, brushed to a sheen or well curled, whichever style fancy dictated, they could be the envy of the neighbors. 8o much for styles. “But the trimming was the thing,” said Dolan as he turned a corner in- LOW FARES ARE EASY on YOUR Fares like these to all America Sample Low One Way Fares seeees $28.85* .. 23.85* -. 13.95* «» 3.75 6.25 Fargo .... Twin Cities Duluth .......... 8.60 Seattle .......... 24.00 Los Angeles ...... 27.50 Winnipeg ........ 8.25 Miami .......... 38.15 Tampa .......... 31.25 (*30-day excursion fare on sale ‘until Apeil Ist) Warm, comfortable coaches for early spring trips 1G TROPIC AIRE heaters B peace wee eee partures are frequent and well timed. Round trip tickets save an extra Bismarck Greyhound Depot Broadway at Seventh. Phone 501 NORTHLAND GREYHOUND GEORGE BERNARD SHAW “KING GEORGE” to new territory. “Take the Van Dyke. It could be enarp pointed, spade pointed or rounded or any var- iation that suited the wearer ice Subject Too Thick But the interviewer had enough {of beards. It was much too deep and sometimes too thick a subject for an amateur. Examination shows that whiskers weren't so awfully popular in the 80's and 90's although they were much more common than now. In those days, however, nearly everyone wore @ moustache. “Can a moustache qualify as whisk- ers?” ‘This question directed at Chairman Milhollan made that worthy throw up his hands, “How do I know?” he said. “We'll have to see if the public wants them first, Then we can make the rules.” So there the question stands. “To grow ‘em or not to grow ’emt.” Sonja Henie Retired, Seeks Bright Lights New York, March 11.—(P)—Less skimming about on skates, and more are not subject to arrest for such vio- Investigation Pushed DAVID LLOZD GEORGE ——_9¢——— CHARLES CHAPLIN Mercy Flight Futile; physicians said. juries, clinic in an ambulance. Murder Victim’s Body lations. He said he himself does not drive the car and no member of his family recalled seeing a ticket on it. Disease Victim Dies Little Falls, Minn., March 11.—()— Funeral services will be held Thurs- |day for Albert Barton, Jr., who died at a Rochester hospital Monday after @n unsuccessful attempt to speed him to the Mayo clinic by airplane for treatment of cerebral meningitis. Loss of time in getting him to the hospital was &.contributing factor to his death, ‘The airplane in which he set out from Minneapolis with four others nosed over in a forced landing near | New Ulm, Barton’s physician, Dr. L. |M. Roberts, Little Falls, suffering in- 1 Barton was rushed to the Mayo | Hunted in Coast Bay trial payrolls had increased 61 per cent. The labor department chief com- pared these figures with a 33 per cent. drop in employment from April, 1930, to April, 1933, and a decline of 53 per cent in payrolls during that same period. Boy Ends Trial Quickly By Admitting Slaying Reading, Pa, March 11.—(®}— Louis Toontas, 14-year-old junior hign school student, abruptly ended his trial on a charge of slaying his father Wednesday by pleading guilty to voluntary manslaughter. Judge Paul N. Schaeffer ordered the records turned over to juvenile court and the case disposed of immediately. FIND DECAPITATED MAN Crookston, Minn., March 11.—(?)— The decapitated body of Olaf Hoi- dahl, 32-year-old Winger farmer, was |found Tuesday night a mile from Winger in Polk county. He is be- lieved to have fallen from a train while hooking a ride to Mahnomen | Sunday. Into Prison Tragedy Sioux Falls, 8. D., March 11.—(7)— Investigation into the prison break here last Friday continued Wednes- day without the services of W.'8. Gor- don, chief investigator for the depart- ment of justice, who was taken to a hospital Tuesday night suffering from arthritis, His condition was not serious. | Puneral services were to be held Wednesday afternoon for Warden Eu- gene Reiley, one of thsee persons killed during a gunfight between es- caping convicts and police. HELPS AVOID MANY COLDS Especially designed aid for nose and upper throat, where most colds start. Used in time, helps Prevent many colds, ITALO BALBO BEN PURNELL Just in case Bismarck’s younger gentry has never been properly educated in whiskery, we present modern examples of what hirsute appendages can and may be. Upper left is the gay caballero type of Spanish origin as worn by George Bernard Shaw, the Irish eccentric, who finds his waxed mus- tachios and spade beard comfortable. What the boys were wowing the ladies with 60 years ago is best exemplified by this portrait of the late Gen. George Armstrong Custer. He had the drooping upper lip herbiage coupled with & chinlet and set off with long hair that framed his face a la Pade- rewski. To the right of Custer, David Lloyd George, former premier of Great Britain, sports the close-cropped soup strainer the British find 80 useful at the dinner table. He also effects long silvery locks that tickle the back of his neck. Charles Chaplin has that wistful, whimsical mustache that set styles here 10 years ago. In lieu of a pinch of snuff, Charlie finds that laxy shaving of the ppper teeth protector leaves an irritating growth of weeds that keeps his nostrils twitching. The late King George of Great Britain maintained the dignity of all those men who attain professional standing by cultivating PRINCE MIKE Hagood’s Return to Command Requested Redwood City, Calif., March 11.— (®)—San Francisco bay was dragged; Wednesday by officers hunting the | weighted body of another supposed victim of Jerome von Braun Selz, con- jfessor of one slaying and a suspec: in two others. Sheriff James J. McGrath said th: 27-year old prisoner declared the bay victim was killed as an indirect re- @ Bla sult of the “accidental” poker slaying $oaj lear up blemisheswith world-famous ick and White Ointment. Famous for 20 years. Trial size 10c. Large can 25c, Use with Black and White Skin for_best_results. iste, All_ dru Vicks Va-TRO-NOL J. W. CALNAN Funeral Home Phone 22 208 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. young, You Need It! The Wonder of the Ages—the Beloved Volume—the Great Book of Books—the Bible. It brings a sense of peace to all—the old, the the rich, tHe poor. Every- body needs the Bible, and lead- |: ing newspapers are offering this opportunity of j getting it. In your own city ° time in evening slippers was the vow ‘Wednesday of Sonja Henie, Norway's ttle blonde skating star who is re- tiring from competition undefeated. Barely off the boat that brought her from her third victory in the Olym- pics, she announced her intention to break some ice with music and bright lights. “First of all,”+ she said with = roguish dimple, “I'm going to stay up ‘until midnight. All my life I've gone to bed at 8:30 or 9.” Sonja is out for fun—“maybe even romance”—now that her competitive career has closed with 300 cups safely stowed away in the family cupboard in Oslo. As to romance she smiled, “Walt and see.” Charles K. Nelson, Jamestown, Is Dead Jamestown, N. D., March 11.—(7)— ness man, passed away Wednesday morning, hia death being due to a stroke of apoplexy suffered Monday night. Mr. Nelson was the owner of the Blackstone Billiard hall and bowling alleys and the Park cigar store. He is survived by his widow, three sons, Charles, Jr., Kenneth and Herbert, Jamestown, and a daughter, Mrs. Merlin Wagner, Granville, N. D. No arrangements for the funeral services have been made. . Fate of Securities’ Act in Court’s Hands Washington, March 11.—(#)—The fate of another New Deal law—the 1933 securities act—was consigned to the supreme court Wednesday efter the statute had been denounced by James M. Beck, former solicitor gen- eral, as an effort to “coerce American citizens to waive constitutional rights.” The court took the case under ad- vieement after hearing three hours .of argument, and then turned to the Guffey act which seeks to regulate the soft coal industry through a “little NRA.” Garbage Is Excellent Indicator of Recovery Minneapolis, March 11.—()—Ref- use is an excellent indicator of pros- Penty. The January, 1936, report of the department showed 246 tons more refuse collected than during January, 193§, and that, said Jay Vincent, as- sistant city engineer, is perhaps a “real mark of recovery.” Charles K. Nelson, Jamestown busi- |. neatly barbered hedges that bloom with all the glory of lilacs in May. Italo Balbo's disguise sticks earth on the bed of a North Dakota slough in early fall. ruption of the Van Dyck style introduced in Italy by Dutch painters. Ben Purnell, king of the the birdsnest, a magnificent sprout of hair that is the envy of the Baltimore orioles. “Prince” Mike Romanoff, famed imposter, has the statesman’s adornment, a perfectly trimmed, well-shaped crop of pricklers that hides many a lip that quivers when the owner finds himself holding a royal flush. out on his face like hummocks of It is a cor- House of David, proudly displays See This N: AND Why yeu.need the geod light provided by « new LES, BETTER SIGHT LAMP Bh ie anayernc eae pA Cosel Washington, March 11—()}—A reso- lution to request President Roosevelt to reinstate Maj. Gen. Johnson Ha- good as commander of the eighth corps area was introduced in the house ‘Wednesday by Rep. May (Dem. Ky.). Hagood recently was relieved of his |command after he had testified be- fore a house appropriations subcom- | mittee on WPA “stage money.” READING LAMP ew Lamp on Display at the Following Dealers or at Our Office Bowman Furniture Co. — Montgomery Ward — Webb Brothers NORTH DAKOTA POWER & LIGHT CO. The Bismarck Tribune makes this distribution for the benefit of its readers in this great movement toward encouraging Bible reading. Choose the style you want—Style A being illus- trated opposite. Curious Facts .Concerning the Book of Books The Bible hae 1189 chapters; 929 belong to tha Old Testament and 260 to the New. The 117th Psalm is the middle chapter of the Bible, its number being 595. Exactly 594 chapters pre- cede it, and 594 follow it. / The middle chapter of the Bible is aleo the short est; containing only 33 words, composed of 133 letters. The longest is the 119th Psalm, con- taining 176 verses, 2,445 words, and 10,146 letters. Gy The text of the Bible is divided into 31,10! verses; 23,144 for the Old, and 7,957 for the New Testament. The shortest verse in the Bible is John Xl: 35, containing only two worde with nine letters. One verse in the Bible contains all the letters of the alphabet except J—Ezra 7: 21. id The famous inscription on the Liberty Bell, in In- dependence Hall, Philadelphia, is taken from Leviticus 25:10. It reads, “Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof.” Hundreds of BIBLE HELPS in each style Clip the Coupon printed in another column of this issue, present er mail it with two others, and take your choice of these splendid editions This illustration shows the full size of Style A— Divinity Cireuit—Gilt Edges—Complete Concord- ance—Colored Maps—the big print Red Letter Edi-- tion with the words of Christ printed in red for ready reference, given for 3 coupons $1.98 STYLE B—Just as complete, medium large print, but not so elaborately bound, 3 coupons and only Plus Sales Tax- jee Coupon .98e. waF See Coupon for Mail Orders £

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