The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 19, 1936, Page 2

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NAZARENE MISSION __ PIBLD IS EXPANDING “Morrison Tells Conventi Tells Convention Dele- gates Work Is on Sound Financial Basis Decision of the Church of the| Nazarene to send 27 missionaries into foreign fields this year, more than have ever before been assigned to suck work in the same period, was announced here Thursday by Rev. J. G. Morrison, Kansas City, a leader in the church mission field and the leading cleric at the church conven- tion in progress here. Dr. Morrison said the mission pro- gram has been carried on and ex- panded during the last few years without going into debt and that the church is ready to accelerate its pro- | gress, Dr. Morrison, who spoke Wednes- day night on the power of prayer will close the convention tonight with his final sermon. In his sermon Wednesday night, Dr. Morrison called attention to the declarations of Jesus on the efficacy of prayer and asserted that if mod- erns would carry out these directions with any degree of completeness they would “see ten times as much pro- gress as they see now.” A number of visiting pastors took part in a discussion of religious sub- jects at Wednesday afternoon’s ses- sion. Rev. George McDonald, New Rockford, read a paper on the “Pas- ter's Vacation and Day of Rest.” Others in the series were: “The place the preaching of holiness should have in our denomination,” by Rev. Julius Miller, Fargo; “What elements are most vital to @ successful minis- try” by Rev. J. W. Pattee, La Moure, and “The relation private devotion bears to our public ministry” by Rev. L. E. Teare, Van Hook. Approximately 200 persons attend- ed the devotional session Wednesday evening and more visitors and dele- gates were arriving Thursday. ONTINUE D C from page one‘ Germany ‘Forced’ To Denounce Pact, Hitler Envoy Says certain circumstances to decide who ‘Was an aggressor. “The German chancellor has many times offered a hand of friendship to France, but it was not taken,” he said. Insists Offer Sincere Hitler's offer of 25-year non-ag- gression pacts, he insisted, represent- ed “the most heartfelt desire of a country living in middle Europe.” Soviet Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinoff, who criticized both Ger- many and Hitler strongly in a speech to the couneil earlier in the week, fol- lowed evéry -word closely. The league announced, after an early-morning private session: ; “After an exchange of views . . . the counoil decided that after hear- ing the German representative in Weather Report. | WEATHEE FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair ‘and acne ants : and Friday. For North Da- kota: Fair tonight and Friday; some- what warmer southwest tonight and central and kota: Far ‘fonight and Friday; oe Friday. east of’the Divide Friday. For Minnesota: Fair tonight and Friday; somewhat warmer Friday. WEATHER CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is low over the middle Mississippi Valley, (St. Louis, 29.76) and over the central Canadian Provinces (The Pas, 29.86); while a high pressure area overlies the Rocky Mountains and Plateau states (Boise, 30.40). Temperatures dropped somewhat over the northern Great Plains and over the Plateau states, but readings are moderate in all sections. Generally fair weather prevails from the Great Lakes region ‘westward. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.27, Reduced to sea level, 30.11, Missouri ‘river stage at 7 a. m. 15.6 ft. 2¢ ie change +15 ft. Flood Btage 19 fi Sunrise 6:48 a. m. Sunset 6:54 p. m. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: ‘Total this month to date ... Normal, this month to date Total, January Ist to date .. Normal, January Ist to Bale ‘Accumulated excess to date . NORTH DAKOTA WEATHER ge. Bees’ Jamestown, clear . Fargo, clear .. WEATHER AT OTnEe POINTS ane _—< es Pct. Amarillo, Texas, cldy. 78 00 Boise, Idaho, clear % a seezest Des Moines, iowa, cldy, Dodge City, Kans., clear Edmonton,’ Alta., ’clear Havre, Mont., clear ... Helena, Mont Biron. 8. D.. Bebssessessseeesssse33 Public, it would take m, on the draft of the resolution sub- mitted by the Belgian and French governments.” This resolution charged Germany with “infringement” of treaties. A German spokesman described the | provisional agreement reached earl- ier by other Locarno powers for sct- tlement of the Rhineland crisis as “futile, useless and unnecessary.” Part Submission Futile Commenting on the first provision lof the agreement, as reported in French quarters, the German spokes- man declared: “Tt is futile and useless to talk about submitting the Franco-Soviet pact to the Haugue court.” A proposal to preserve demilitari- zation of the Rhineland by policing the zone with an international force, the spokesman called “absolutely un- acceptable.” The third provision, for drawing up a system of mutual guarantees among the Locarno powers, to operate in case of an attack, the spokesman said, was “unnecessary because Germany has no intention of crossing her frontiers.” A French spokesman, nevertheless, declaring prospects for a final agree- ment were “hopeful,” announced the plan would be submitted to simultane- ous meetings Thursday night of Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin's cabinet in London and Premier Al- bert Sarraut's ae gta! in Paris, C oO NT i NTINU E D Terror, Misery And Destitution Hit Eastern U.S. The fear of was found @ spread of epidemic. pestilence, likewise, throughout the east. The crisis in the national capital was expected Thursday night. Walter street in Georgetown was flooded. Relief workers hastily piled up @ 19-foot wall of sandbags to pro- tect the Washington monument and other federal structures. The White House, quarter of a mile away, was believed free of danger. The capitol, on a hill at the end of Pennsylvania avenue, gave no concern. In the 1889 flood, the Potomac washed the famed avenue. Gravest fears were felt along the Connecticut and Merrimack rivers far above their all-time peaks of 1927. Red Cross, Legionaires, CCC and PWA workers joined the national guardsmen in all the states in reclam- ation and rescue work. Dam Badly Battered The Vernon dam on the Connecti- cut, near Brattleboro, Vt., was still holding, but badly battered. Fre- quent reports that the dam had burst, or was about to go, sent thousands to higher land all down the valley. At least half a hundred communi- ties were completely isolated from southwestern Maine to Connecticut, incuding Concord, capital of New Hampshire. Highways generally, were closed and train service was halted throughout the area. Heavy rains continued throughout the day, increasing the danger. The crisis along most of the rivers was expected by nightfall. New Hartford, Conn., was hard hit. State patrolled the streets to prevent looting. All persons in néar- by Satan's Kingdom imperiled when & dam on the Farmington river. went out Wednesday, have been rescued. Lowell In Danger At Lowell, Mass., confluence of the Concord and Merrimack rivers, the danger was described by officials as the greatest the town has ever facea. Boston: was faced with a dangerous shortage of milk. During the fore- noon, the first string of trucks from be New York milk area reached the city. Flood waters ripped through the entire village of Green Island in the Hudson river. Its 7,000 inhabitants Prepared to flee in row boats. At Binghamton national guards- men patrolled the streets. Terror- stricken residents set out receptacles to catch rain as a water shortage grew. Schools and factories were closed. The Finger Lake district near Ithaca was generally inundated. Hudson Points along the Hudson Valley re- Ported the Hudson river was slowly receding. Governor Earle of Pennsylvania mo- bilized 2,000 national guardsmen to Tush relief to stricken areas as the flood-maddened rivers slowly abated. From Williamsport came emergency appeals by radio for the 3,000 home- less. An epidemic of measles and scarlet fever struck Sunbury, Fears of a flood shortage increased. A quarter-mile dike at Milton col- lapsed placing almost the entire city under water. Five firemen were miss- ing in a rowboat rescue attempt. Community Marooned . The community of Watsontown was marooned. Six were dead at Hunt- ingdon where bridges and houses col- lapsed before. the onslaught of flood waters. Boats rescued 50 families marooned at Skinners Eddy. In New Jersey heavy rains brought renewed fears along the Delaware river. ‘ Bridges were holding up but residents of Trenton were forced to abandon homes along the river. The heavy snows of Wednesday brought new dangers to western North Carolina. Food and fuel were running dangerously low in the News- lands community, where several hun- dred school children are marooned by drifts. Virginia Waters Recede In Virginia, the waters of the Shen- Sr For Expert Plumbing Call 0. H. HAGEN 813 Thayer Ave. Phone 698-3 our trade where plumbing was a profession. Wanted Two First-Class PLUMBERS R. C. FORSYTHE T10 Fitth st. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1986 ~ andogh likewise receded the danger shifted to the threatening Richmond dad other towns along its course. Typical of the isolation was Pitts- burgh. Throughout the night, there was only candlelight. All power was off Only airplanes traveled to and from the steel city. Fire sirens constantly increased the terror and panic. Frequent fires in the industrial area brought @ red sky above the debris-strewn waters. The famous “Golden Triangle” downtown, where the Monongahela and Allegheny rush together to form the Ohio, was a whirlpool of desola- tion with the skyscrapers and business houses in darkness and many of them boarded up. The flood waters in Pittsburgh reached a peak of 45.98 feet, the high- est on record, before starting to re- cede witit the dawn. The anxiety and fears that spread through Pittsburgh during the night were enacted all over in Johnstown. The national guard patrolled sev- eral cities and towns throughout the night to prevent looting. Shortages Threatened Food, water and medical supply shortages were threatened. Six were reported dead in the Pittsburgh area, and 28 others in Pennsylvania. Dam- age in Pittsburgh was estimated at $25,000,000. Strict orders against “racketeering” came from Mayor William M, Mc- Nair. He directed prosecution of any merchants asking exorbitant prices. In some suburban districts bread pleted with wholesale sources shut off. Prices soared. All lights flickered out during the night, plunging the city into dark- ness. Transportation and communi- cation systems failed almost entirely. In suburban Braddock more than 2,500 persons were forced from their homes by the swollen Monongahela river. Fifty blocks in Braddock were under water. Steel Works Closed ‘The Edgar Thompson Works of the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Co. were closed by flood waters, throwing 2,500 men out of employment. About 500 men, women and children were reported marooned in the Blaine school in suburban McKees Rocks. A houseboat dweller drowned in the Ohio river in a vain effort to rescue his wife,-who toppled from the boat. Both were swept down stream. At suburban Sharpsburg, one uni- dentified man drowned and between 300 and 400 persons were marooned in the upper floors of their homes and branches of trees. : Hundreds of motorists found them- selves stranded, unable to buy gaso: line because storage tanks were flooded. An almost holiday atmosphere had prevailed Wednesday before the city realized the extent of the flood which ;|sent waters to 49 feet—24 feet above flood stage. ‘Thousands Then, as the power failed, dismay came. Water companies warned of shortages after debris clogged pump- ing lines. Gas companies reported pressures might run low. Electricians said days may elapse before power and light can be restored. Fire added to the terrors. One blaze, preceded by the of a submerged gasoline tank car, injured more than & score, destroyed four warehouses and three dwellings, then damaged a railroad trestle —sole/g the though hundreds remained in Upper stories of their homes. A gas explosion in South Wheeling killed two persons and injured three, Two others drowned when a skiff up- set, a child lost its life in a flooded basement and & woman died from exposure and shock. Rescue work was pushed in a driv- ing rain as the river reached 49.1 feet, more than 16 feet above flood stage. At Wellsburg, W. Va, two men drowned as one tried to rescue the other from a flaming, partly-sub- merged house. Pennsylvania Scenes similar to those in stricken Pittsburgh were enacted throughout western Pennsylvania. Scores of com- munities, even some in the eastern Part of the state, were flooded. Families in devastated Johnstown, freed from momentary panic caused by incorrect reports that the huge Quemahoning dam had burst, re- mained in the highlands. After s survey of the flooded Johns- town area, Frank/C. Jordan, a news- Paperman, estimated half the 17,000 dwellings were inundated. Mayor Daniel Shields was quoted as saying property damage would greatly exceed that of the 1889 flood in which 2,235 persons lost their lives. In the vicinity of Wilkes-Barre one death was reported. National Guard units were mobil- ized at Sunbury, Lewistown, Hunting- don, and other cities to prevent loot- and milk supplies were reported de-| ing. New England Melting ice and snow from the ‘White mountains, washed by 24 hours of incessant rain, swept eastward through southern Maine and flooded the broad valley of the Connecticut through the length of New England. Six deaths were reported, National Guardsmen were mobilized in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts and Connecticut. Guardsmen and frantic volunteers worked with employes of the New England Power associates to save the $1,600,000 dam at Vernon, Vermont. Behind the huge dam a six-mile ice Jam piled up. In western Massachusetts state po- lice reported the towns of Hadley and Sutherland were abandoned. Worcester, second city in the state with a Noncarer of 200,000, was faced ‘with loss x bl id and power sta- tions, fi the Leesville dam went out, cvinnipten was virtually isolated. In Connecticut, the Greenswood dam on the Farmington river, broke ‘Wednesday, releasing 8,000,000 gallons of water on New Hartford, isolatin: re the village of Satans Griving hundreds from their homes. New York State National guardsmen in many up- state communities were ready for serv- {ee if rising water created an emerg- ency. Move than 2,600 persons were Griven from their homes, and prop- erty damage ran into millions of dol- lars. The southern section of Bing- hamton was flooded, Auburn was threatened, and Hor- nell, Ithaca, and other cities were iso- lated for se hours. Potomac Valley and South Fifteen hundred relief workers buils & dike of 80,000-sand bags at Washing- jae to protect the downtown area and ernment buildings in the nation’s means of public transportation to! Septal against the raging Potomac. populous western suburbs. Nearly 50, were injured in other fires and explo- sions. Fire sirens shrieked through the night. Bells clanged. Flames cast reddish glows in the sky. Foundations of the historic Wash- ington monument and the Lincoln Memorial were threatened. In Maryland at least seven towns were inundated. and industrial activity in (By the Associated Press) ‘Webster, Mass. — An embankment over which New Haven railroad trains ran was dynamited last week jto release waters of the Maanexit river which threatened to inundate homes. The railroad rebuilt it. Early ‘Thursday the embankment was again dynemited for the same reason. Port Jervis, N. Y. — Bill Marvin, hermit who lives on @ knoll in the Delaware river, refused to move. Neither would his four dogs or two cows. A crew of firemen, a policeman and a state trooper rowed to the island, warded off the axe the her- mit brandished, handcuffed him, rowed him ashore, and locked him in the city jail. The cows were coaxed to swim to safety. Eddyville, N. Y.—Flood water ed- died into Eddyville, but did the school children get a holiday? No! They were taken to school in rowboats, McKees Rocks, Pa.—Rescue work- ers reported seven persons drowned in flood waters sweeping through this Pittsburgh suburb. Men man- ning skiffs, canoes and motor boats, said a baby fell from one skiff while being carried with her parents to a bridge crossing the low-lying residen- tial section. The father was reported to have jumped into the swift waters in an attempt to save the baby. Both drowned. Harrisburg, Pa—Weary and worn, Governor Earle came back to the capitol early Thursday to direct his state's relief and rescue efforts, after @ hazardous trip from Johnstown on which he twice narrowly escaped with his life, once on a badly damaged bridge and later when he almost was swept away in a rowboat. Wellsburg, W. Va—The Gretna Green of the tri-state area was cut off from the world by a 55-foot flood stage in the Ohio and Police Chief Arthurs said) he knew of three drowned. The town is scarcely four blocks in width, strung out along the Ohio river bank, and all but the houses back against the hill had wa- ter up to the second stories. Pittsburgh.—Maj. William D. Styer, chief of U. 8. army engineers for the Pittsburgh district, said the toll of floods at Johnstown, Pa., and in the suburban Sharpsburgetna district may total 36. The list of reported dead had reached 19. Hatfield, Mass. — The steady up- sweep endangered 150 persons ma- and/rooned on an isolated hilltop. Offi- cials Supressed tears’ for, thi fears for, their safety. CONTINUED from page one- Salvation Army to Care for Refugees Driven From Home one to keep out of the lowlands, lest he be trapped there by rising water, and said persons living in the bot- toms should be prepared to move on short notice. The movement of ice in the river Is strictly localized and until it is clear to the south anything could happen, observers said. The current was moving slowly Thursday morning in view of the heighth of the water. This was at- tributed to the ice pack down stream. Scores of Bismarck residents were going out to take a look at the river Business One of the biggest blazes, starting/Cumberland, Maryland’s second city | Thursday and the banks were lined at a gasoline storage plant, enveloped| were at standstill, and 40 homes were| with the curious. an entire block. were destroyed. Boats plied normally choked with heavy automo- bile traffic, An appeal for aid broadcast taropaty the WPA brought three thousand me! to work, Get Relief Funds Two million dollars in relief funds came immediately, half of it from the federal government, the remainder from the city treasury. Downstream at the western Penn- sylvania penitentiary on the banks the ground floor quarters. Up the Allegheny and Mono! rivers, the waters swept into of industrial plants. The flood waters reached a peak of 45.95 feet before starting a reces- sion which gradually ‘Seesed to six inches an hour. The crest was ane feet above the legendary high of great flood in 1763, At the crest, Smithfield street, six blocks from the river's bank, was the “shore.” From McKeesport came an offer of a reward of $100 for the recovery of Patrolman John Spilman’s body. whte officer was swept downstream whill carrying on rescue work. Tiny flames of candles. and inter- mittent beams of flashlights dotted the city's streets throughout the night. traffic was limited. Several hundred | the dining swept away. eelena Poe mint peodutes aeaa ot the cumbersome pieces in 1934. There’s fun in walking ... in “Happy Hikers.” All sizes and colors. People’s Dep't. Store. . Hey-Kids! What do you suppose is going to happen to “Sonny and Buddy!” ‘You heard over Station KP¥R Wednesday night how the medicine show man locked them in his truck. Tune in Again FRIDAY’ NIGHT at 6:15 (CST) Station KFYR to find out what happens to the two adventurers, © Sponsored by Bak! ing Co. wahere of “Wonder Bread =m TOTS & TEENS SHOP Smart Spring Apparel for Young Boys and Girls JOHNNY SMART SUITS, with Bi-Swing Backs, for boys. Girls’ Silk and Cotton 6, No Dresses. Girls’ Silk Slips and Underwear Ladies’ Wash Dresses Seventy per cent of the hay fever through the streets) Though never very popular, five-|in the United States is caused by rag- weed. PARAMOUNT, Te girl you raved’ ‘about in “Rendes- vous” and “China. Seas” in the arms of an ardent new lover! RAFT- RUSSELL : The “Rendesvous” Girl keeps a daring date with the screen's irresistible lover! Laughter - Thrills - Adventure Comedy - News - Pictorial COMING SATURDAY - AMERICA’S BLACKEST PAGE |] STANDS REVEALED! @ cast of one théusend, a OARRYL F. ZANUCK "20m CENTURY PRODUCTION ONTINUE from page one *, July Celebration A To Have Something Doing Every Minute continue in operation at least on July 4. July 4 will be enlivened by more band concerts, continuance of the mis- cellaneous contests, a basebali game. @ street dance and a gigantic fire- works display in the evening. July 5 will be marked by continu- ance of the air show and carnival, an- other baseball game and completion of the events begun the preceding two days which may be unfinished up to thattime. A number of other attrac- tions will be added to fill out the day and complete the most ambitious publi¢ entertainment program in the history of Bismarck. Whether er’ not a band contest and @ chorus contest will be held will be determined later. One suggestion has been made that the bands and chor- uses attending the affair be massed on either side of the speakers plat- form at the capitol building for the formal observance on July 3 to pro- vide music for that occaston. Whether or not this will be done will be worked out later, together with @ schedule of prizes for the contests already agreed upon and a number of others which may be of a unique char- acter. CONTINUED from page one: Cage Tournament Crowd Gathering Zimmerman of Grafton, members of the state board of control. Si Holgate of Aberdeen and Dick Holzer of Moorhead, game referees, also were here as were R. D. McLeod of Valley City and R. W. Johnson of Carson, scorers; B. G. Gustafson of Linton and ©. H. Kimball of Fargo, timekeepers. Grand Forks and Jamestown were scheduled to meet in the opening tournament game this afternoon to be followed by the Walsh County Aggie- Grafton tilt. Tonight Wahpeton plays Bismarck and Valley City en- gages Williston. Reserve season tickets which were on sale at Woodmansee’s went fast during the last week with out-of-town fans reserving whole blocks of seats. One block of 53 seats, the largest ever reserved by one town since Supt. H. O. Saxvik started acting as tourna- ment manager, was reserved for ‘Wahpeton. Kappa Sigs Give Dinner Members of seven teams were guests of the Bismarck alumni chap- ter of Kappa Sigma fraternity at a luncheon given in the Grand Pacific dining room Thursday noon. Ap- proximately 100 players, coaches and tournament officials were present in addition to 15 members of the fra- ternity. Iver Acker, head of the rural re- settlement administration in North Dakote, was the principal speaker. He talked on the development of ath- letics at the University of North.Da- kota since 1910 when he was gradu- ated from the state school. Other speakers were Fay Hunter, who spoke on fraternity life; Fay Brown, KFYR sports announcer; and Bob Finnegan, co-captain of the 1936- 37 University basketball team. Ralph Soule led the group singing with Clarion Larson playing the piano ac- companiments. Dr. W. E. Cole acted as toastmaster. Teams represented were the Walsh County Aggies, Wahpeton, Bismarck, veo Mandan, Minot, and Valley City. CAPITOL Last Times Today “P’s & Cues” (the billiard movie) News - Cartoon - Musical Fri. - Sat. Warner Bree. Pleture Continuous Performance Saturday and Sunday from 2 p. m. to 11 p. m. Admission Prices for this attraction Matinees 10c and 26¢ Evenings 10c and 36c Victim of Poison Gas Found by Train Crew Devils Lake, N. D., March 19.—(?)— The body of a transient, believed to be Orlando Lupas, about 50, was found by workmen as they unloaded a re- frigerator car at the Great Northern freight station here Thursday morn- ing. Death was the result of carbon mon- oxide poisoning,.an autopsy at the Ramsey county morgue revealed. Au- thorities said the victim had not been dead .more than six hours when found. Sheriff Bert Smutz wired officials In Waldo, and Mankato, Kantas, follow- ing discovery in the man’s clothing of bank deposit slips from those cities, dated 1933. | _VET SURVIVES OPERATION Fergus Falls, Minn., March 19.—(?) —John B. Hompe, 90, one of three re- maining Civil War veterans in Otter Tail county, submitted to an opera- tion at Rochester for a bladder ail- ment and is reported recovering. NOONAN VETERAN DIES Fargo, N. D., March 19.—(#)—Ber- nard Melby, ‘War veteran of Noonan, died Monday in a Fargo hospital. The body will be sent to Noonan. DEATH TAKES FARMER Fargo, N..D., March 19.—(?)—Oscar Gjellereit, 34, Hatton, N. D., farmer, died here Wedpesday night. MALTA WOMAN DIES St. Paul, March 19.—(?)—Funeral services for Mrs. Catherine Campbell Kilduff of Malta, Mont., former St. Paul resident, will be held here at 10:45 a, m., Friday. Burial will be in Calvary cemetery here. St. Paul—Minnesota’s 1937 legisla- ture will face the problem of finding new tax sources capable of producing more than 30 millions of dollars an- nually, Harold L. Henderson, director of the Minnesota institute of govern- ment research, said. The mosque of Amr, Cairo, Egypt, has a spdt in a corner of its wall which is worn concave by the touch of many tongues. Believing it to be a cure for indigestion, natives lick the stone, until their tongues bleed. 63, Spanish-American | > Frazier’s Plea Still Has Colleagues’ Ears" Washington, March 19—(#)—Solons Thursday were considering a renewed plea by Senator Frazier (Rep., N. D.) to. withhold federal funds from any college or school having compulsory military training as the senate moved toward a vote on the $611,000,000 war department appropriations bili. Frazier read a war department memorandum saying 49 of the 51 land grant colleges receiving federal as- sistance requiréd military training. The memorandum also stated 41 of 98 high school units required the train- ing of its male students. HEARING SET Bowman, N. D., March 19.—(?)—A hearing will be held here April 8 by the state board of railroad commis- sioners on the application of Stebbins Brothers of Bowman for a special permit to furnish motor freight serv- ice in the vicinity of Beach. = res . The beauty prize among certain ig tribes of the French Congo is taken by the woman with the fanciest headdress. aD i Additional Markets | o— a nlse*e CHICAGO STOCKS (By the Associated — Midwest lah Ctfs. 8% McGraw El. - 3 NEW YORK BONDS New York, March 19.—()—Bonds close: Great Northern 7's of 1936 101% GOVERNMENT BONDS New York, March 19.—(#)—Gov- ernment bonds: Treasury @%’s 117.15 Treasury 4's 112.12 MINNEAPOLIS STOCKS Minneapolis, Minn., March 19.—(#) —Stocks close: First Bank Stock Northwest Banco 14% 12% INVESTMENT TRUSTS (By the Associated Press) (Over the counter in New York) Maryland Fund. 19.21; 20.77. Quart. Inc. Sh. 3.71; No. Sel. Inc. Sh. 4.99; No. Here are sharkskin, gab- ardine, flannel, cheviots and fine worsteds at only ‘These are tailored the way they would be if they’d been custom made only for you! The lapels are padded and bridled, the edges are taped and felled, armholes are taped front and back. Linings are meticulously done. Each suit comes from the hands of an expert men’s tailor ... so their good looks, fine fit, and long wear are assured. Sizes and Styles for Women and Misses! DEP’T. STORE DY rantccum D Opens We no PEOPLE’S Patterson Hotel We do not and will not serve hard liquor. We want to assist the Attorney General’s office to keep down crime, but we do serve a stimulant— A perfect cup of Coffee. Always the same, day or night—piping hot. When you want a bracer drop in and try a cup. The Bismarck Tribune Bible Distribution COUPON Two distinct styles of this wonderful Book of Hooks have been adopted for this great newspaper Bible distribution. One is the far-famed Red Letter Bible (Christ’s sayings printed in red for immediate identification), and the Plain Print Bible for those who can spare but,a nominal sum. WF Only Three Coupons Clip this coupon and two others and present or mail them to this paper with the sum set opposite either style, and come into pos- session of your Book of Books at once. St; 1 AmRed fatter! Bible, pyar: Tal pee black leather c ers. Ne te mee Found corners, gold lett print, thr and onl: Blu Style Be-Plain Print Bible, Di- vinity Circuit limp “black seal grain textile leather cover, red large type, Send amount for Style A or Style B, with ree of these coupons, and include 13 cents

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