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nein cS RIE she iat iaerirn iam 2 MAIL BOX SERVICE DELAYED ONLY HOUR Boxes Shifted, Mail From Eve-! ning Train Distributed, in Four Hours Postal authorities promised anxious ‘box-holders only a half-day's delay in getting their mail when the boxes were shifted from the postoffice to temporary quarters in Rosen's garage Saturday night, and then rolled up) their sleéves and shortened the prom- ised delay to a single hour. At 6 p. m., Saturday postoffice em- i ployes and the Wachter Transfer company started moving the boxes to the quarters they will occupy dur- ing the enlargement and remodeling | of the regular building. | Four hours later they were in place ‘on the main floor of the Rosen gi age, and inside them rested the eve- | ning mail from the North Coast} Limited waiting to be called for, just | one hour behind regular schedule. | Monday, with @ll equipment except} @ few odds and ends installed, both the postoffice and the federal offices on the second floor were open and ready for a full quota of business. Merchants and businessmen west of Fifth street were frowning; those east of Fifth street were smiling; and those on Fifth street didn't seem to care. | Offer of $10,000,000 | Made for Gold Mine, San Francisco, Aug. 17.—(#)—The Chronicle, in a copyrighted story Monday, said a gold mine is operat- | ing near Jungo, Nev., for which the owner has turned down offers ag-| gregating $10,000,000, including a bid/ by ex-president Herbert Hoover. | George Austin, Jungo storekeeper, | has been daily milling gold valued at || $500 for the past year, the newspaper | said, Austin bought the mine from J. C. Stagg, Fallon, Nev., prospector, | for $500 down—which he re and a total of $10,000. Hoover, The Chronicle said, advised Austin to keep the mine after his of- fer had been turned down, and the storekeeper offered to pay for the ad- vice, but the ex-president smilingly* declined and said “that kind of ad- vice is free.” Austin said one offer was for & million dollars cash, with the owner to set the other terms. The news- paper quoted Austin as saying he re- fused to sell because he feared the effect sudden wealth would have on his two sons, Kenneth, 24, and Wil- fred, 20. Horse-Shooting Case Decision Reserved Police Magistrate E. 8. Allen Sat-| urday reserved decision for a week in the case against Henry B. Gill, farmer near Regan, who is charged under a special animal injuring statute. The specific charge against Gill, brought by a neighbor, A. J. Krause, was wounding with a shotgun some horses which were trespassing on his prop- erty. Allen took the same course of) action in the trial of Fred Bender, Sr.,| Burleigh county farmer charged with | stealing hay. Testimony at the trial indicated that Bender may have cut hay which he thought was on his own property, and Allen said he expected the case would be settled out of court before the week was up. Local Man Charged With Attempted Rape| Charged with attempted rape in the second degree. Virgil Walker. 22, Bismarck. was held in Burleigh coun- ty jail Monday under $1.000 bond. The alleged attack. made upon a Bismarck irl, occurred Saturday nizht. A pre- liminary hearing was set for 2 p. m.. Monday. before Justice of the Peace H.R. Bonny. f { | | | | FOUR CRASH TO DEATH Phoenix, Ariz, Aug. 17.—(7)—An ugly, charred area marked the spot Monday where four men crashed to their death at dusk Sunday in a pri- vately-owned plane. The craft struck @ tree shortly after taking off. oO | Additional Sports Sioux Five to Play Two Big Ten Teams Grand Forks, N. D.. Aug. 17.—()— The University of North Dakota will play two Big Ten teams in basket- ball next winter, according to an- Nouncement made here Monday. The Sioux take on Wisconsin at Madison Dec. 7 and Iowa at Iowa City Feb. 3. On the trip to Madison Coach Clem Letich’s outfit stops off at Chicago to play DePaul Dec. 5. The Sioux start their drive for a fourth consecutive North Central 15. South Dakota State at Grand State at Gr Forks, Feb. 26 and 27, North Dakota State HANDS A WITH MAZOR HOOPLE—~ B CACTUS ‘ew & FOREMAN, ZN MAZOR ! Cone SY eh THE Our Boarding With Major Hoople CACTUS, SHAKE SE HAW/cACTUS! DELIGHTED, EGAD/ AFTER A SHORT INSPEC GIVE YOU SOME VALUAB: GQ CONCERNING THE IMPROVEMENT OF YOUR HERD / HARR-RUMF —~1 WAS FOREMAN, YOU SEE, OF THE EDEN VALLEY RANCH, OWNED BY HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS, THE PRINCE—~ DOUBTLESS, YOU HAVE HEARD OF MY PATENTED SNOW PAWER! Wit IT STRAPPED TOTHEIR FRONT HOOFS,CATTLE CAN PAW THEIR WAY DOWN TO THE TURF, THROUGH TEN-FOOT DRIFTS, THUS BEING ABLE TO GRAZE ALL WINTER ey BILLS, oO? / CUTTING YOUR BISMARCK TRIE TION, T WILL LE ADVICE SOUND FOR YOUTH Milwaukee Lad Tries to Accus- tom Himself to New- Found Hearing othing echo of water lapping against soot 10 of wat pping against & raft mobred beneath an arched bridge is the sound most. pleasant to six-year-old Carl Thelin, Jr., as he tries to accustom himself to the hear- ing he regained July 24, Ce voices, especially high- Pitched ones of children, annoy the round-eyed, curly-haired lad who shook off the effects of an ansesthe- tic after a tonsil-adenoids operation last month and heard his mother speak, Monday, almost a month later, Carl was taking his daily lesson in how to put into sounds he once understood only by movements of the lips. Deaf since suffering brain meningitis when seven months old, Carl has built up by lip-reading a vocabularly as large as almost any child’s at his age. As Carl talked and listened to his mother and father on the porch of their quiet summer home along the Milwaukee river banks, his two-year- old brother, Valfred, began to cry. Carl clamped his hands on his ears, winced and begged his parents to silence his brothers, Firecrackers, sparkling and flash- ing, delighted him before he could hear; now their ndise pains him. WPA WORKERS INJURED A People’s Forum (Editor's No ‘The Tribune wel- comes let on subjects of inter- est, Letters dealing with contro- | versial religious subjects, which | | attack Individuals tly, oF |! which offend good taste and fair || play will be returned to the writ. |/ ers. All letters MUST be signed. If you wish to yse a pseudonym. onym first and your 'e make it advisable. must be imited to not more than 600 words. RELIEF GRANTS Bismarck, N.D., | Aug. 11, 1936. Editor, Tribune: | A large number of Burleigh county farmers have been laid off relief work on the WPA because their families number less than four persons. These farmers have been told to; apply for relief grants, at a sum of! $15.00 per month. What we want to know is this: Do these relief grants to smaller farm families have to be repaid or not? We cannot seem to find out. not work for them. They are merely , paid this sum each month for the| support of their families. If these grants, small as they are, | have to be repaid it seems unfair, as the farmers recéiving them should bé given the same opportunity of work: ing them out as those receiving reg-| ular WPA wages get. Will you kindly inform us through the Tribune as to the truth of whether ! or not these direct relief grants must be repaid. | | A FARMER. Editor's Note: The amount of the relief grants for which farm- ers with small families may apply are not definitely fixed at $15 but range-from $10 for a single man to $30 for a three-member family. depending on the need. These re- lief grants do not have to be re- paid, being an outright gift of the government. They are given in order that farmers with larger families may be kept on the WPA | Program at wages sufficient to | Provide necessary food and cloth- | a | ing for larger families. ConzINU? D Radio Priest Taken | Suddenly Ill While | Attacking New Deal Punctuated with roars of “we want Lemke,” and convention songs urg- ing “Vote the Union way to free- | dom.” The audience rose and cheered as Lemke told them “some of my friends Say ‘you're going to beat Mr. Roose- | velt.” ‘ | “This is what we intend to do,” he| shouted, “and this is what we're go- ing to do. We are also going to de-| feat Mr. Landon. We have defeated | 5 him already.” The Union party candidate aban- doned a prepared manuscript and Spoke extemporaneously as he de- voted most of his time to an outline of his platform. O'Brien told the audience that Representative Lemke “is definitely which stand four-square with the 16 principles of social justice.” Fargo, N. D., Aug. 17.—(P)—A de- at Fargo. Home games have been arra: inged with Jamestown college, but the dates|of which she is assistant secretary,| have not been set. The contests are| was filed in county court Monday by| expected to be in December. FOUR IN JUNIOR FINALS Fargo, N. D., Aug. °17.—()—Bud Paulson of: Fargo, Bob Lang of Grand andj national guard died last night of a ton Building and Loan association. Roy K. Redetzke, her attorney. BRIG GEN. WILSON DEAD Flint, Mich. Aug. 17.—(4)—Brig. Gen. Guy M. Wilson of the Michigan heart ailment. He had been ill for tonight and Tues Farmers who get such grants do}? } | Dunn ‘Ce! committed to policies of government | M. if Two Ships Aground, | Weather Report | “One Lost in Typhoon WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Cloud: For North Dakota: Cloudy, cooler west portion tonight; Tuesday gener- ally fair an@ cooler. For South Dakota cooler Tuesday. For Montana: night and Tuesd gents and extreme east portion Tues- ay. Minnesota: | Mostly cloudy, warmer tonight; Tuesday cloudy, possibly showers in extreme north Portion. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS High. pressure overlies the Great Lakes region, (8. 8. Ma loops, 30.02) while a “Low’ ed over the northern Plains States and south-central Canada, (Swift Cur- rent, 19. Light scattered showers have occurred over southern Canada and in the Mississippi and Missouri valleys and the southern Rocky Moun- tain region, with generally fair weather prevailing in most other sec- tions. There has been a general rise in temperature over Canada and the Northern Plains States with abnor- mally high temperatures continuing over the lower Missouri Valley. Reduced to sea level 29.87. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 4.6 ft. 24 hour change -0.2 ft. Sunrise 5:43 a, m. Sunset 7:51 p. m, PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: ‘otal this month to date ...... ‘mal, this month to date an. Ist to date ; Normal, January ist to date .. Accumulated deficiency to date WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA High- Low- est 38 Garrison, Jamest 31 Max, peldy. . 5 Minot, clear 82 49 199 Parshall, p 82 49 100 Sanish, pelds 81 ‘51 100 Williston, clei 82 56 100 EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA Low- est Pet. 46 0 Devils Lake, peldy. Grand Férks, cle: . Hankinson, cld, Lisbon, cld: Napoleon 54 Oakes, cldy. 55 Wishek, cidy 55 MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pet. Minneapolis, pcld: 102 62 4B Moorhead, cldy. 9 54 OL SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS Huron, rain Rapid City, MONTANA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. Havre, clear ... 94 60.00 Helena, clear . 86 54.00 Miles City, clear . 04 64.08 4 The above record is for 48 hours. WEATHER AT OTHER, POINTS , clear. » peldy. 7 eldy. 104 DEMURRER FILED | Ok Sheridan, Sioux City, Iowa, cldy. Spokane, W: clear Swift Current, The Pas, Man. Winnemucca, N,, el Winnipeg, Man, cld: tonight; Tuesday generally fai cool. | aground, cloaked with mystery the er. Generally fair .| Killed by the converging of two ty- 9| door and clubbed to death Dorothy ing Dorothy. Their father is @ WPA .00 | foreman. 0 | Wishek, Wish ij | follows: One expert predicts that apartment stairs. Gentle slopes would replace ‘staircase. Pipestone, Minn., Aug. 17.—(P)— Lightning struck the split rock dam near here Monday injuring several WPA workers, four of whom were brought to a Pipestone hospital. Most of the 30 men employed on the proj- Manila, P. I, Aug. 17.—(#)—Death- dealing typhoons sent two ships oO: stunned. te of a third and left a threat of famine Monday among natives on North Luzon Island. Pleas received here for government aid said at least 11 persons were and Wisconsin have the violet for a state flower. COMING TOMORROW AND WED. JOAN CRAWFORD CLARK GABLE ASTAIRE EDDY —IN— “Dancing Lady” THE STAR-STUDDED SHOW OF SHOWS Paramount Theatre phoons sweeping in from the Pacific Saturday. The storm destroyed prac- tically all native houses and 90 per cent of the crops in Cagayan River Valley. As the storm struck and then pass- ed on toward the China coast, three ships caught in its grip sent distress calls. One vessel has not been heard from since. The United States Coast and Geo- detic survey ship, Fathomer, lay on a rock reef. The crew came off safe- ‘Sex-Mad’ Murderer Is Sought in Pueblo Pueblo, Colo, Aug. 17.—(#)—A hatchet-killer, termed a “sex-mad maniac,” by police, was sought Mon- day for the second fatal bludgeoning here of a woman within two weeks and numerous attempted assaults, The latest crime, police chief Ar- thur Grady said, was perpetrated by a man who crept through an unlocked Drain, 15, and beat her sister, Bar- bara, 12, into insensibility early yes- terday after first criminally assault- Births Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. Gleason, Stanton, born 1:10 p, m. Saturday, Bis- | marck hospital. Daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Renbolt, 222 8th St. born 4 Saturday, St. Alexius hospital. Daughter. Mr. and Mrs, John H. 5 a. m. Sunday, Archie St. Alexius hi Son, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Malvorgon, 320 Mandan St., 11:25 p. m., Saturday, St. Alexius hospital. Son, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Troojin, 306% W. Thayer, 8:50 p. m., Sunday, St. Alexius hospita | Saturday, at his hom Missouri, Mississippi River Flows Decline | Washington, Aug. 17—(?)—A con- tinued decline in the flow of the Mis- sissippi river at St. Louis, bringing it 1,100 second-feet lower than during the corresponding period of the 1934 drouth, was reported today by the geological survey. Other conditions were reported as North Dakota: Flow of Missouri river at Bismarck 5,000 second-feet.on August 1 compared with 6,380 a year ago. Need Money? $5 to $50 _ On Your Plain Note SECURITY! EASY PAYMENTS! Auto Loans - $25 to $200 —REFINANCING— Out ef Tews eens Made by SALARY LOAN CO. tlocks may one day be built without WATER IS PLEASANT ect were either knocked to the ground | Illinois, New Jersey, Rhode Island | By MRS. WALTER DIETZMAN . - Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Carlson and Joe Fischer were business callers in Bis- marck Monday. Mart Kershaw is visiting at the home of his brother William. Tebbo Harms was a business caller in Bismarck Tuesday and Wednesday. The Homemakers club had @ show- er for Mrs. Clyde Monroa at the home of her mother, Mrs. Tebbo There were fourteen Iadies present and Mrs. Monroe received many*use- ful preserits. Shoppers in Bismarck from this vi- cinity Saturday were: Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Kershaw, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Melick, Mr. and Mrs. Tebbo Harms, Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Lundquist, John Kruger, and John Olsen, Mrs, W. A. iter from rf callers at the home of Mr. and ‘Mrs, Eimer- Bloomquist Tuesday. Mrs, Ida Johnson and Mrs. Wm. Kershaw were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Gilbert Melick ‘Thursday. Mrs, Wm. Kershaw and son Arthur and Mrs. Gilbert Melick took Mrs. Johnson to thé home of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Ray- mond. Johnson, in town- 23 oon. Mr.. and Mrs. Wm. Kershaw, Mr. and ‘Mrs, Melick and Floyd Owen ‘Harms.| tTansacted business in Bismarck Fri- day, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fischer are the parents of a girl born at their home Sati ’ Visitors at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Walter Dietzman Sunday were Mr, and Mrs, Ernest Johnson and daughters, Glen Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Johnson and their mother, Mrs. Ida Johnson, Mr. and Dietzman and son Edwin and Mr. and Mrs. Paul McCormick, Louis and Leon Owen attended the Epworth League pienic at the Meno- ken picnic grounds Thursday eve- ning. Visitors at the Joe Fischer home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Trygg and Alfred Karlson, Mrs. Mrs, Harry Clooten and John Elness. TOWNSEND FAILS TO APPEAR Cleveland, Aug. 17.—(?)—Dr. Fran- cis B. Townsend failed to appeer Monday at a scheduled deposition hearing in common pleas court in a Walter Dieteman and daughter Mil- dred and son Edwin. Mrs, A. C. Carlson and son Paul attended a school program and ice cream social at the Naughton bari Thursday evening. Maurice Dance of Menoken this week. Mrs. Lulu Tollefson, Miss Jasman and Mrs. Ida Johnson of Bismarck were entertained at a chicken supper at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Kershaw Wednesday evening. Mrs. Johnson remained at the Kershaw home until Thursday noon. Mrs. Elmer Bloomquist and little nr PAMMOUNT Detighttally ENDS TODAY AMERICA’S GRAND NEW SWEETHEARTS! several days visiting the Owen boys; receivership suit against his old age pension tion. A telegram from Gilmour Young, national secre- DON'T LET ANY FROM SEE rges, Dear: , STARTING FRIDAY fig 7) North of MeKengie N. D. Candidate Claims He'll Carry 13 States Cleveland, Aug. 17.—(?)—Rep. Wil- ‘liam Lemke, Union party presidential candidate, here to attend a meeting of the National Union for Social Jus- tice, fold newsman in a conference he has claimed 13 states and describ- ed the rest “@ battleground.” “I don’t know, or care from whom I take the most votes,” he said. He added, “I am just as much against Landon as Roosevelt.” “To me,” he said. “Roosevelt is a ibewildered Kerensky not knowing where he is going, while Landon rep- resents the dying shadows of the past civilization and doesn’t know it, I would vote for neither if I were not @ candidate.” States claimed by the North Da- kota congressman were Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, both Dakotas, Nebraska, California, Michigan, Ore- gon, Massachusetts, Maine and Rhode Island, by About 31,000 fires in New York City‘ during 1931 took a toll of 122 lives, including those of six firemen. ‘THING KEEP YOU REEN PASTURES OMe A POUND OF FRESH BUITER A DOZEN FRESH EGGS ANA @ Carron or FRESH CIGARETTES She neglected to mention those Prize Crop Tobaccos Of course it’s wonderful that you can now get strictly : fresh cigarettes anywhere in the U.S.A. Thanks to those two jackets of moisture-proof Cellophane on every pack of Double-Mellow Old Golds. But the teal charm of “Double-Mellows” is their prise crop «> tobaccos ... the very pick of home-grown and im- : ported leaf. With a flavor you've never met before in a cigarette ... and one you'll never want to leave! . KET fay aN Copyright, 1926, by P. Lorillard Co., CELLOPHANE ORY-FRESH E sf