The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 24, 1936, Page 9

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“: “THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRID , APRIL 24, 1936 Gall Tucker (above), 13, was named along with a 14-year-old boy in mayhem and delinquency war- rants after admitting, according te ‘authorities at Jerseyville, II,, they had branded four-year-old Joseph Hagen with a hot wire because they had a “desire to torture some body.” (Associated Press Photo) One of springtime’s most at- tractive gardens undoubtedly is this one, surrounding pretty Eleanor Akers of Dallas, Tex. Her beach corsage is entirely of bluebonnets, the state flower, To wear it, Eleanor, a Ranger- ette at the Texas Centennial fair, had to abandon her cus- tomary chaps. But, never fear, they’) be back. Trethaway and Pilot Richard K, Smith, above, may still be alive. Alameda police are probing rumord of a letter from Smith purporting to re- ‘veal that the couple were liv- ing in San Antonio, fter their rented plane cated in Mexico, The woman's ——---husband hag just won a di- vorea. LYN Mh, & These exclusive pictures, taken on the world’s largest dirigible afrship, the Hindenburg, during Its maiden flight from Germany to South America ai tt the first to show passenger life aboai the huge @hip, which ts expected to visit the United States in the deck dining room, Thi At left passengers are shown ly in Ma: ight corridor scene at right telle Its own story. (Associated Press Photos) After months of planning, ‘he federal housing .administration in Washington made public plans for a four-room house, complete with plumbing, wiring and a heating system, that can be built for $1,200. Here lp an artist’s sketcl. of thc completed dwelling. (Associated Press Photo) Mounted on bounding surfboards instead of prancing chargers, and armed with padded poles in place of lances, these two Los Angeles lassies emulate knights of old as they take part in a 40- mile-an-hour aqua-jousting bout in the new Newport Bay and Harbor on the Orange County coast. Jeannette » left, and Olive Fisher will participate in the water sport program to be beld $2,000,000 federal improvement is officially opened May 23-24. erick (above), T: and Chairman McSwain, South Car- Olina, of the House military com. mittee over Maverick’s charges that witnesses bald not Arg fair Although Mrs. Jane Giles (left) and Mise Rachel. Mader, 91, brow: @ eudden adjourn. Pulask!, 1a. don't claim the title of the nation’s oldest living twine, they ment into the investigation of the do say they are 19 days older than Joe and Dave Maddux ef Philo, 111, disposition of surplus army goods. xnPicture string of 13 thoroughbreds stepped single file from the railroad tracks t Churchill Downs upon arriving at the scene of the Kentucky Derby from Lexington, Ky. In the contingent were three derby candidates, Banister. Bien Joli. and Bow To Me. (Assoct- ated Press Photo) fornia’s Folsom peniten- tiary, which houses convicts who have served previous terms, now has at its head a burly man recognized as one of the “toughest” penal insti- tution officers in the United States. He is 6-foot-6 Clarence Carolyn Oliver (above), president WZ Wi Mi: 1M Wit Wl Us Frederick H. Harvey, Kansas City business executive, and his wife became victims of the second Allegheny mountain air tragedy when their plane crashed near Johnstown. Pa., 60 miles from where the TWA Sun Racer met disaster with loss of 12 lives. (Associated Press Photos) A noblewoman’s place, during wartime, is at the front, believes Crown Princess Marie Jose of Italy, above. A qualified nurse, A. Larkin, above, former cap- tain of the guard at the Cali- fornia prison. of the senior class of Florida Sta‘ College for Women is one of girls designated to take screen tests in a nation-wide hunt for movie talent. She is 20 and a resl- dent of West Palm Beach. (Asso- ciated Press Photo) the wife of Crown Prince Hum- bert, she is in East Africa, pre- paring to minister to Il Duce’s ill and wounded troops. A tal- ented musician and daring sports: woman, she is the only daughter of the late King Albert and Queen Elizabeth of Belgium. . Direct descendant of Willtam Bradford, founder of the first New York newspaper in 1725, Anne Sete of New Rochelle, . Y., is p intai the family tradition for asso tion with printer’s ink. She's a journalism student at New York University now. Mrs. Gertrude Karns, 28, whose claim as ihe “world’s largest woman” {Is backed by 745 pounds, is shown with her .nine-pound, three-ounce baby daughter, born on the birthday of her 304-pound husband, Cliff Karnes, at Shreveport, La (Associated Press Photo) This group of Kentucky farmers and cigare. demonstrated so successfully that the state legi versed Itself ind rejected a proposed tax factory emplicyes e at Frankfort, re. on cigarettes. (Associated After breaking out of her cell by battering down the door with @ poxer, Madge Copeland, 21, liberated her suitor, P. E. Griffin, a former prei ir, and toth fled the Harrisonville, Mi ing held on abduction charges, The ministe father of three children. (Ass Thirteen-vear-old Helen Wellman bove) of Des Moines, la. got her dd; jiiman, $8, out of jonal ap’ to So Impressed “paroled” the fas f Paul Edward Starke; and Mrs. Fred Starkey, farmers liv- through a ing near Newark, 0., weighed 18 Judge Ralph Po at birth and, later, was reported doing very nicely, He is the counle’s ninth iehild. (Associated Press Photo)

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