The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1936, Page 7

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PAMILY POSSESSES COPY OF ORDERS T0 PICK M'KEEN SITE Mrs, Hedstrom, Daug Daughter of Early Army Surgeon, Loans Document The Tribune is indebted to Mra. Albin Hedstrom, 701 Twenty-first 8t., for a copy of the special orders au- thorizing selection of the site of Fort follows: HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF DAKOT: ‘A, Saint Paul, Minn., April 16, 1872. Orders, ce en ee ion. Captain Heap will lay off a reser- Assistant Adjutant General. {{ MOTOR FREIGHT PERMITS GRANTED Need for Hauling Livestock in /*° Drouth Areas Noted by Railroad Board Eleven applications to provide mo- tor freight ‘service in North Dakota have been granted, the state board of railroad commissioners announced Friday. A need for hauling livestock in con- nection with their shipment to market was cited by petitioners for five of the applications granted. Applications to haul livestock to the local market and to West Fargo and also the hauling of heavy set-up machinery were granted the Fuller- ton Equity Elevator company and Fullerton Shipping association, Puller- ton; Paul E. Smith, LaMoure, and Dan Moldenhauer, Fredonia. A need for livestock and road ques ment hauling in the Wahpeton vicin ity was cited by the Lenzmeler truck line, which was granted a permit. ‘Theodore Hoffer of Streeter also was granted a certificate to haul in live- stock from the surrounding territory. A contract permit to haul cream from Kulm, Ashley, Zeeland, Hague and Linton to Mandan was granted Michel Hilscher, Kulm. The commission granted the Auto X-Press Transfer company of Flasher @ contract permit to furnish motor freight service between Mandan and Mott and Mandan and Killdeer and intermediate points. Specifl motor freight service will De eres te oun en Maw. Teh Carmichael of Beulah, Hei iS eee See coe titenlse Seatat! te A limited cegtificate was issued to GASS OLD AGE WORK NEARS COMPLETION 118 of 609 Applications Have Been Approved; Bonus Cuts Relief Rolls Fargo, N. D., July 3.—()—Investi- gation of the bulk of Cass county's age assistance applications completed before the end of ae R. M. Parkins, executive secretary, Parkins reported that to date 600 applications have been cleared through the Cass county board and that 115 cases have been approved by the state welfare board. There have been 151 old age assistance checks received in Cass county to date, 45 persons hav- ing received their second monthly. al lowance. Of the persons who were Granted pensions under the 1933: old agepension law and who ap} for old age assistance, 110 have been re- Jected by the Cass board in addition to-€3 other applications. Payment of the bonus has helped in cutting down the number of cases on , Parkins reported, not a single person who received a bonus check being on relief at present. The board acted on 60 applications Thursday night, 28 of which were ap- Proved and 32 rejected. Parkins reported that he had dis- missed one member of his staff of workers Thursday and expects to re- lease another in a short time because there is not sufficient work to war- rant keeping them on the payroll. Perry Annexes Third British Tennis Title Wimbledon, Eng. July 3—()— Fred ePrry won the all-England ten- nis championship Friday for the third straight year. He overwhelmed ’s Baron Gottfried con Cramm, 6-1, 6-1, 6-0 in the final. ‘Thus, Perry became the only play- er in more than-a score of years to ul |win the championship three years in Famed Flier Unexpectedly Ask- ed to Dance With Sitting Bull's Offspring Col. Arthur C. Goebel, internation- ally known aviator and trans-Pacific fae Ee ga BHEEPESEE ae & row. Immediately after the match von Cramm announced he had, torn a muscle in his thigh in his first serv- ice. He asked the referee to apologize to the capacity crowd for his poor frey Fabyan advanced of the doubles championship. The Amrican team defeated Joan Ingram ‘and Mrs. Phyllis Hudford King, Eng- land, 6-4, 6-3. Alf Landon’s going fishing on @ big scale for votes before long, but all he was interested in here was landing some trout for the supper frying pan, as he whipped the waters of Crow creek. The nominee is shown on his first venture into the fine trout stream that runs through the McGraw ranch, where he is spending his vacation with his family. Creel “ freee Prbecs Roni ate and a ather jacket was casting with deadly seriousness as the camera caught him. PROSECUTORS TRY TO PICTURE JAMES ASNEW BLUEBEARD ‘Woman Witness Will Tell How Barber Made Love as “Wife Lay Dying ~ Los Angeles, July 3.—(?)—Prose- cutors of a wife-murder charge against Robert 8. Janfés turned to a woman witness Friday in an effort to picture him as a Bluebeard who made love when he should have been in mourning. The witness was Madge Reed of Los Angeles. Attorneys for the state said she would tell the jury that James Proposed to her just one week after the death of his seventh wife, Mary. The state charges he killed Mary last August by drowning her in a bathtub after exposing her to a ri tlesnake in a plot to collect $20,000 in life insurance. The principal witness Thursday was Grace Yarnell, a cousin of the late Winona James of Fargo, N, D., the defendant's fifth wife who was found drowned in a Manitou, Colo., tourist cabin bath tub in 1932. She testified James tried to make love to her whils Winona lay in a hospital recovering from injuries sus- tained in an automobile accident the state contends he engineered. Miss Yarnell testified that the day after Winons’s death she wrote to an insurance concern for James, in- quiring about the procedure for apply- ing for payment as beneficiary. S. D. GOLD SECOND luly 3.—()—South, Dakota was the second-ranking gold producing state in 1935, the bureau the mint reported. That state Produced 567,120 ounces worth $19,- 849,200. California was first with 870,120 ounces valued at $30,454,200. ot 'WELFORD MAJORITY INCREASED BY ONE Official Counts in 29 of State's 53 Counties Are Report- ed Friday Gov. Walter Welford's majority in’ the Republican gubernatorial contest stood at 508 Friday when 29 of North Dakota's 53 counties had made offi- cial returns from the election on June 24, Early reports on the official count dropped Welford’s majority from 507, where it stood when the unofficial count was completed, to 433 on Thurs- day, but later corrections from other counties brought it up to one more than the unofficial total. Further re- ports on the Lihiciee count by county canvassing boards were expected to become available Friday. In the counties canvassed so far in seven) Langer-controlled convention at Jamestown to enter three candidates | for office, defeated at the primary election, in the independent column in the fall. They are Langer for Gov- ernor, William Crockett for Lieuten- ant Governor and Owen T. Owen for attorney general. In contests for other posts Langer-endorsed candi- dates won Republican nominations. Whether to ask for a recount of the vote by which Langer and his cohorts lost in. the Republican pri- mary was left to the discretion of the group's executive committee. The committee also is to decide whether Langer-endorsed candidates who won Republican nominations will be asked to abandon those nominations and campaign on the independent ticket. Among the speakers were Langer and Congressman U. L. Burdick who announced Thursday that he would support the Republican nominees for state office. Noted Indian Agent’s Granddaughter Here Among visitors at the Pioneer Days Festival are Mrs. R. 8. McLaughlin of McLaughlin, 8. D., granddaughter of Major James McLaughlin, one- time Indian agent at Fort Yates, and J. R. Harmon of Fort Yates, grand- son of the famed Eagle Woman of North Dakota Indian history. Montreal will celebrate its ter-cen- tenary in 1942, and is planning an ex- position for that time. OUT OUR WAY HOLIDAY GROUP BY LEADING REBELLION = Lemke’s Campaign Manager Is Leader in Secession of Union Proponents St. Paul, July 3—(—With Rep. Usher Burdick of North Dakota, manager of Rep. William Lemke's Union party presidential campaign, as its head, a “rump” organization of the National Farmers Holiday associa- tion Thuraday was proceeding with plans for its own “national conven- tion” to be held “within 60 days.” The group headed by Burdick ‘Thursday seceded from the organita- I taabtaese Ge peesiaons clanab Communistic contrel and that “the Purpose of the assemblage (the na- tfonal convention here Tuesday and Wednesday) did not appear to be rep- tesentative of the national body.” ‘The national convention tabled a resolution endorsing Lemke after a heated debate during which five state unit presidents walked out. The “rumpers” named ‘William Keane of Towa vice-president, sad ‘Walter Groth of Minnesota George Nelson, president and Dale Kramer, Iowa, secretary-treasurer. ‘The Burdick faction claimed to rep- resent three-fourths of all state presi- dents who attended the convention here, but from Bosch came the asser: tion that the states involved had rela: tively few members and that “Minne: sot, alone has two or three times as months ago. “I don’t think the new organisation will make any differ- ence,” said Bosch. Business Trend Is Up In All Re Retail Lines Dr. Armin A. Holzer Is Revival Speak: Dr. Armin A, Holst, noted Jewish Oot verted. oat oo ee ae on arranged by aantant: Herbert} Sats tte hee sa ee They will be held in Se ee ice f Seventh 8t., and Thayer avenue. Aire Wis ceua ar opine aes Dr. ‘Holzer will speak on “Broken Down Altars,” at 3 p. m., his subject will be “The Four Horgemen of Revela- tion, ‘and at 7:46 p. m., he will speak on “Ominous. Signs of Our Times.” Se — Public is invited to attend these and all other services during the re- ‘vival. Dr. Holger, the son of a rabbi, is a missionary in behalf of Palestine and is the editor of “Palestine,” a mission- ary magazine. He only recently ro- turned from a trip to Palestine. He is an ordained Baptist minister and holds an evangelistic commission with the Interdenominational Evangelistic association of Winona Lake, Ind., of which “Billy” Sunday was one of the leading officials. FIRST EARTH DAN IN ND, BUILT IN 1883 Son of Williston Pioneer Recalls Conservation Effort 53 Years Ago Williston, N. D., July 3.—(?)—Water conservation, pictured as a “salvation” for farmers in this drouth-stricken ieee Friday, had its inception here years age when Williston was iowa, as “Little Muddy, Dakota ter- tory.” The first known earthworks dam in. western North Dakota was built two miles southeast of this city on Stony ‘Creek in 1883, Robert Heffernan, son of John Heffernan, one of Williston’s pioneer cattle ranchers who helped establish the community, stated Fri- day. The dam was built during a dry cycle, Heffernan said. The senior Heffernan, cattle fore- man for Leighton-Jordan and Hed- ce aes pioneer post traders, and Rob- old time settler in that mote built the dam to create a stock reservoir and to irrigate a small garden on the Matthews ranch. Remains of the old earthworks structure may still showing in more than a month this} Mr. Heffernan, ‘week, according to the weekly review county sheriff, believes the range of Dun & Bradstreet, which trend was bine Parley the stronger demand for apparel and/|this city. vacation goods.” rd in all} homestead gains in|rancher, should never have been opened to his son said. The} wi stock carried the’ “Cross L” and “111” brands, planted only one crop. That was in 1912. The former sheriff still resides in Mr. Mathews died many years ago. or REINFORCED SYSTEM OF REGIONAL PACTS ja FAVORED BY FRANCE Se Reporter Shoots r Shoots Self in in League |" Chamber to Draw Atten- tion of Members Geneva, July 3.—(?)}—France called | Friday for a reinforced leon of regional A basi ‘Yvon Delbos, French foreign minis- ter, urged before the assembly of the league a speed reformation of the in- ternational peace body by which ag- gressors would suffer swift armed punishment. ree eleen een as ieee ke whose nerves were on edge after the Dakota Veterans fo Back Nimens for Job Detrot Laka, Ming nb coavantion’s eciorselnens tor te aoe ee aaa ee DEDICATE MERGER LUTHERAN GHURGH firing of two shots in the assembly | Dr. David Stoeve and Other Vis- hall. A Czech newspaperman, Stefan Lux, seated in a gallery adjoining the delegates’ benches, had shot him- self, The wounded man was removed to a hospital before the session con- tinued. Lux left a letter saying he wished by his act todraw attention to the situation of Jews in Germany. Delbos announced France planned to establish new — and to strengthen existing pact He advocated euiaination from the league coverfant of the requirement in Article XI that a unanimous vote of the council is necessary on meas- ures to safeguard peace. However, he said, the fundamentals of the cove- nant should not be changed. The French foreign minister as- serted a system of regional pacts under Teague supervision would establish a close link between economic and mill- tary sanctions and would strengthen provisions of the punitive Article XVI to make automatic military action against an aggressor certain. Dr. Halvdan Koht, foreign minister of Norway, expressed grave appre- hension “of the menace that lurks in regional pacts.” Honey of Stunt Is Staged by Fireman Fargo, N. D., July 3—(P)—A bee-keeping Fargo fireman pulled honey of a stunt Thursday eve- ning as he cleared a street of some 40,000 escaped bees. The buzzing swarm held undis- puted rule over the street, before P. J. McGlynn, attracted by con- siderable commotion, arrived with @ broom and calmly thrust it in- to the mass while spectators gasped. One man was stung for his efforts to help the nonchalant fireman. ‘When the bees, layers deep, were all on the broom, McGlynn transferred them to a hive and took the swarm home until the owner claims them. iting Ministers Ald With Elaborate Ceremonies Dr. David Stoeve, Fargo, deliveréd the sermon and laid the cornerstone cently. The auditorium and were profusely decorated with flowers for the occasion. Charter members of the congrega- tion, formed several years before the church was built in 1931, Special music included preludes and offertories played by Mrs. O. 8. Hjelle, the choir director, hymns and anthems sung by the vested choir, a vocal solo by Miss Eunice Hjelle and selections by a group composed of Margit, William and Victor Sorenson, Mrs. Hjelle and Miss Helle, Carol Ul- vilden, 17-year-old daughter of the first esd the church, plsyed a vio- Un Rev. R. Ulvilden of Minot, Rev. W. Mathre of Plaza, Rev. E. K. J. Christiansen of Ryder, Rev. C. E. L. Lucky of Washburn, Rev. 8. O. Sor- lien of Max, Rev. O. Akre of Stough- ton, Wis., and Rev. Henry Norem of las. close of the afternoon program. N. D. GETS $7,132 Washington, July 3—(?)—The child- ten’s bureau of the labor department announced Thursday plans nal and child-health benefits under the social security act had been ap- proved for North Dakota and an allotment of $7,132 made. the beer with Svnshine VITAMINeD pov Emibe summer sky. Below—the summer sea. Poised between them both for one little moment— then invigorating, swirling coolness. If you've ever known that moment ’twixt sky and sea —you know the anticipation of lifting a glass of cool, sparkling SCHL!TZ to your lips. The tangy aroma of choice malt and hops—and then—bracing, vibrant coolness. - SCHLITZ, the beer with SUNSHINE VITAMIN D*, brings you extra health value. A cooling aid to summer vitality, it gives more /asting benefits—adds new meaning to réfreshment! Beer is good for you—but SCHLITZ is extra good for you. Relaxes...revives... invigorates. SCHLITzZ, the beer with SUNSHINE VITAMIN D, bas the same old-time SCHLITZ flavor and boxeuet... safe- guarded by PreciSE ENZYME CONTROL .. . with new health benefits... and at no increase in price. In Brown Bottles or Cap-Sealed Cans. Each 12-0unce bottle or con of SCHLITZ contains 100 U.S. P. X. Units of Sunshine Vitamin D SCHLITZ brewer's yeast contains the bro-vitamin D which is activated directly by the ultra-violet rays of the sun to form Vitamin D. (Protected by U. S. Letters Patent.) Jos. Scnutz Brewin Company Milwaukee, Wise. Core 1936, J-8.B.Co—6

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