The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 10, 1936, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

doint Gathering of Bismarck “f Associations Will Be Held Here Tonight Talks by prominent citizens, a con- cert by the Bismarck high school band and community singing will be , features of the joint gathering of Bismarck’s Parents and Teachers as- sociations in the Bismarck high school auditorium tonight to open the local Program of National Education week, now being observed throughout the United States. : Those planing to attend the pro- gram are urged to note that the band concert and program outlined above, together with the joint meeting of the Parents and Teachers associations, are scheduled for tonight and not for Wednesday night, as stated Monday. The speakers who will appear on to- night’s program are Judge James Morris, Spencer Boise and Mrs, R. R. Smith. The band concert is sched- uled to start at 7:45 p, m., and last until 8:15, when the remainder of the program will be carried out. Thursday, at 4:15 p. m., the local ‘program of National Education week will be continued with a panel dis- cussion over radio station KFYR, in which Edward B. Cox, Gertrude Ev- arts, Mrs. D. E, Shipley and E. J. Conrad will take part. Glenn Hanna, coach at Bismarck high school, and Caroline Lakin, girls Physical education instructor, will discuss the value of physical educa- tion over KFYR at 10:45 a. m., Sat- urday. 4 Stabs Father to Save rt ‘Mother from Assault a Chicago, Nov. 10. — (#) — Dorothy , iy Palmer, 14, was in custody of juvenile authorites Tuesday, accused of stab- 4 bing her father in the back, probably fatally, when he assaulted her moth- er, Police Capt. Herbert Burns said the girl seized a knife and plunged it in- to the back of her father, Earl Pal- mer, 41, when he struck her and her ’ mother while the latter held her in- ’ fant daughter in her arms. Dorothy told Assistant State's At- torney Julius Sherwin, the latter said, that her father came home intoxicat- ed, swept the dinner from the table and began huling dishes at his wife. Mine Officials Face Quiz Into Funds Use Baraboo, Wis., Nov. 10.—()—Three F men were arraigned here Monday y night on a charge of illegally convert- ing funds of the Gold Creek Mining ‘ company to obtain their release under bond from a previous charge of illegal sale of the mining stock. ‘The men arraigned were Harry I. Zieman, Wauwatosa, Wis., president of the Mining company; Nathan 8. Schwartz, Milwaukee, and Willam Schmitt, Saukville, Wis. A prelim- inary hearing was set for Nov. 19. All were released under bond. Lose ATi FAT! Quickly—Safel with WATE-O P Sclomtinc Welght Reducing Teport that aft for ye ‘WATE-OFF they actually i have in years. makes it women, ~- pounds a week, or even more, with- out strenuous exerc! and without we for men too, to take off five of it only UDOR better but you actually FEEL better. ‘The insti es is are xing? say: “Resul FS amazing: Unsightly flesh frequently mel away like , Without caus- ing ‘the skin or wrinkle as 80 foaueney, happens with fast-acting You have seen rATE-OFF_adver- we will return Capito! Cut Rate Drug, Inc. Bismarck, ,e » Ne Main Ave. & Fifth St. Phone 347 a TA. WILLLAUNGH [Survivor | SCHOOL WEEK PLANS/Owes Life to Quick Thinking London, Nov. 10—()—A flash of quick-thinking, just a few seconds be- fore he lost consciousness, saved the life of 17-year-old Frits Roethke, cabin boy and lone survivor of the foundered Hamburg-American motor- ship Isis, it was disclosed Tuesday. Still exhausted. from hig 32-hour ordeal of being tossed on a storm- swept sea, alone in a lifeboat, Frits furthe? described his narrow escape from death. “I thought I was gone,” he related through an interpreter. “The waves smashed into my little boat, and I saw my companion’s fingers slip off the side... . He was—lost. | “Then another big wave crashed over me. It stunned me. I felt all weak ... dizzy ... everything going blank. Just before I lost conscious: Nasal te Bi ard gl Nada ALEX SEMINUKE, 50, WILTON, SUCCUMBS Former Member of Austrian Army. to Be Buried at Wilton Wednesday Alex: Seminuke, 50, Wilton coal miner, died of heart disease in Bis- marck at 3:15 p. m., Monday after less than two days in the hospital here. He had been suffering from the heart ailment for the greater share of the past two years, friends said. Mr. Seminuke was born in Austria July 18, 1886, and was married there * | Feb. 15, 1909. He was a former mem- ber of the Austrian Imperial army. He leaves his widow and two chil- dren, John and Anna, all living in Austria. He left his family there when he came to the United States 24 years ago. Mr, Seminuke has lived in Wilton for the past 20 years, going there after spending the first two years of his life in America in Pennsylvania and New York. Funeral services will be held from the Sacred Heart Catholic church of Wilton, of which Seminuke was a member, at 9 a. m. Thursday. Burial will be in the Catholic cemetery there. Rubber-Tired Farm Vehicles Advocated Farm vehicles mounted on low-pres- sure balloon tires—patterned after those used on airplane landing gears —are taking the noise out of farm operations and saving money for the farmers as well. After several weeks of piloting rub- ber-mounted tractors and other equipment over Ohio's rolling farm- lands, Prof. G. W. McCuen and his assistants at Ohio State university's school of agricultural engineering re- ported Tuesday that the pneumatic shod vehicles performed better and more cheaply than those with the old fashioned steel wheels and lugs. Tractors with rubber tires used less fuel at the same relative drawbar pull than the noisy, steel wheeled models, McCuen said. Wedding of Chaplin, Goddard Is Reported Los Angeles, Nov. 1.—()—The ex- aminer in a copyrighted story Tues- day said the marriage of Charlie Chaplin and his protege, Paulette God- dard, has been confirmed by Ran- dolph Churchill, son of the British chancellor of the exchequer. Churchill, a visitor for several days in the movie colony, was reported by the examiner as saying: “I am not at liberty to quote Mr. Chaplin directly. But I can defi- nitely say that they are married.” Friends of the couple have whis- pered for some time that the dark- haired little actress became the bride of the noted comic in a ceremony performed on his yacht off Catalina Island on June 23, 1934. Two Chap- lin marriages have ended in divorce. GRANDIN PIOEER DIES Grandin, N. D., Nov. 10.—(#)—Fu- neral services were held Tuesday for Mrs. A. 8. Duntley, 74, Grandin resi- dent 56 years, who died last week. Surviving are the husband, two daughters and a son. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye ts an organ you can't afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices opposite the G. PF. Hotel eines 1914 Phone 533 = Bismarck, N. D. Phone 2285 Richard Gerlach 511% Second Street For Sale -|reaved mother and uncle. Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 10—()—/the monarch of Austro-Hungary | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10; 1996 of. Ill-Fated Ship ness, I jammed myself under the scat of the lifeboat. “Lucky I was small! The next thing I knew, hours later, I was still alive and safe.” Frits was weak and shaken when he arrived aboard the 8. 8. Western- land, which found him in the bobbing lifeboat after a fierce Atlantic gale had bashed in the hatches of the 8. 8. Isis and sent the ship to the bot- tom, along with its crew of 39, abovt 200 miles off Land's End, England. Wrapped in blankets, he told Cap~ tain Ferdinand Kahlbetzer. com- mander of the Westernland, how the storm struck the Isis Sunday night, of the sinking ship's lurch which sent its crew sprawling into the water and of his own struggle to remain in the water-filled bottom of the lifeboat. 19-Year-Old Soldier Dies at Fort Lincoln The body of John R. Cook, 19-year- old soldier who died at Fort Lincoln at 2:22 a. m., Tuesday of pneumonia, was being taken to his Minneapolis home Tuesday afternoon, accompa- nied by a soldier escort and his be- Funeral services for the young sol- dier, who had served at Fort Lincoln for seven monthe when his death oc- curred, will be held from the Ascen- sion Catholic church in Minneapolis with Father Dunphy officiating. Burial will take place in the Crystal Lake cemetery in North Minneapolis. The mother, Mrs; Stella Cook, Min- neapolis, and an uncle, A. A. Mor- gan, also of Minneapolis, arrived in/ Bismarck by plane a few minutes af- ter the youth’s death. Recovery of Kathi’ Cause for Rejoicing Vienna, Nov. 10.—()—Sentimental Vienna rejoiced Tuesday, For 8l-year-old “Kathi” — once known as Emperior Franz Joseph's “uncrowned empress” and one of the capital's most beloved characters— has arisen from her sickness and re-| sumed her early morning walks around her home near the Schoen- brunn castle. i Swiftly, the word of her recovery sped from humble beggars to the highest circles, reviving. memories of Vienna’s sparkling days when Frau Kathrine von Kiss-Schratt played a powerful role in imperial court circles. ; For more than 30 years, she gave gossip and advice, “ALL-BRAN KEEPS ME. IN SHAPE EVERY DAY “When I had eaten a heavy breakfast, I would feel logy. After a couple of days of this, I would | have to take a laxative. | “One morning I had a dish of Att-Bran. Believe me, it beats any every dey Wen Billings, 1380 | eve Wm. C; Toth St; Denver, Colorado. when a delicious cereal will make yn feel so good? Because ALL- RAN has “bulk” which absorbs moisture within the body. Then gently sponges out your system, away the listlessness, the “blues,” the headaches. 1 Scientific tests prove this nat- | ural food is both safe and effec- | tive—worlds better than taking patent medicines. ALI-BRAN is guaranteed. Take it a week. If not satisfactory, an money will be refunded by the Kellogg Company. Serve as a cereal or use in cook- ing. ALL-BraN also supplies vita- | in B and iron, At all grocers. | Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. | las it affected necessities. ‘Why put up with half-sick days, | SALES TAX FARES DIFFERENTLY IN NW Proposal Defeated in Ohio, Idaho, Mississippi; Wins in Michigan (By the Associated Press) Chicago, Nov. 10.—The general sales tax, a campaign issue in at least half 8 dozen states this fall, met with both victory and defeat in the Nov. 3 elec- tions, A proposed constitutional amend- ment to repeal Michigan's three per cent sales tax on foodstuffs was de- feated by approximately 150,000 votes. Ohio voters, on the other , issued @ mandate for repeal of that state's levy of three per cent on food con- sumed in the home. The tax, esti- mated to bring in $12,000,000 annually, will be lifted Wednesday. Incomplete returns from a referen- dum in Idaho, where a two per cent tax is in effect, showed repeal favored. Mississippi voters rejected a consti- tutional amendment proposal which would have written the sales tax into the organic law as a consumer's levy. A tax of two per cent already is in effect. Adoption of a constitutional amend- ment in Colorado for a $45 a month old age pension was approved by the voters in the face of charges by some groups that it would mean perpetua- tion of the two per cent sales tax there. Changes were in sight for the two per cent sales tax of Arizona, Spokes- men said a bill would be introduced in the legislature convening Jan. 1 to repeal the provision of the present law dealing with “necessities of life.” In Lilinois voters re-elected Demo- cratic governor Henry Horner, whose Republican opponent, C. Wayland Erooks, promised repeal of the three per cent occupational, or sales tax, Horner de- fended the measure. Only about 25 per cent of auto- mobile purchases are for cash. NEST ALUMINUM @ Time eavii Alumilite —— | Divorce Decree Is | Sent Wrong Mate Falls City, Neb., Nov. 10.—(P)— It’s just things like this which cause trouble in the world: A Falls City woman opened a letter. “I am enclosing a copy of the divorce decree your husband ob- tained in Missouri,” it said. It was as though the sky fell on her head. Her husband had been gone a few days. This, then, was the real reason for his ab- sence, = A few days later the husband re- turned joyously. In a state bord- ering on hysteria his wife greeted him with the divorce decree, To- gether they examined it closely. It was for another man of the same name. Lewis Action Widens Breach in A. F. of L. New York, Nov. 10.—()—Charges by President William Green of the American Federation of Labor that the committee for industrial organiz- ation, headed by John L. Lewis, had “closed the door” to arbitration of differences continued Tuesday the breach between the rival labor or- ganizations, Green asserted the refusal of Lewis Monday to confer with him person- ally on conciliation “is one of the closing steps in a deliberate plan and policy (by the C. I. O,) in the begin- ning to set up a rival organization to the America Federation of Labor.” FARGOAN SUCCUMBS Fargo, N. D., Nov. 10.—(#)—Mrs. Peter Matthys, 70, who lived on « farm near here, died Monday follow- ing ® month’s illness with heart dis- ease, ABBIE ANDREWS AND HIS ORCHESTRA (Fargo) will play at the Dome Pavilion Wed- nesday night for the Armistice iy é / This new, large size Mirro cooky recipe, makes 60 or more cookies without re-filli ! And so easy to use! Electro-hardened nish. Twelve inte: Celebration dance. month press holds a full ing. able forming plates Hiaeed ae almost sinless variety of dainty 8. Oo gauges, . y S ohie gaug thick or fail to see it. FUNEST ALU @THE 12C-E 3 AT DEPARTMENT Don’t Recreational, Work Projects Approved ‘Washington, Nov. 10.—(#)—The na- tional parks service announced Tues- Gay presidential approval of a $2,946.- 625 allotment for continuing con- struction of 46 recreational demon- stration projects in 24 states. The fund is to cover operations from Oct. 1 to Jan. 1. * At the same time, it was announced that $2,590,600 had been authorized for operation of 42 work camp proj- ects, formerly called transient camps, from Sept. 1 to Jan. 1. The work camp projects for which the fund was authorized include those in Minnesota; North and South Da- kota and Montana. MARKETS TO CLOSE “New York, Nov. 10.—(?)—All domes- tic financial and commodity markets will be closed Wednesday in observ- 8 | When Colds THREATEN... “VICKS VA-TRO-NOL Helps Prevent Many Colds llow Vicks Plan for Better Contro| of Colds Full details of the Plan in each Vicks Package Uf a Cold STRIKES... VICKS VAPORUB Helps End a Cold Quicker ance of Armistice day with the, exoepe : tion of various livestock centers, MODERN WOMEN bet Sefer pain deste Ci melee agate Sali CHICHESTERS PILLS "THE DIANOND © BRANDT Attention MUSICIANS! Realising the need of an -Mandan, 8 p. m. Thursday, Nov. 12 Bismarck Telephone 475 Save Money! See them today! You MONTGOMERY WARD Bismarck, N. D. This Is Wards New Master... 20% OVERSIZE PORCELAIN TUB A $69.50 to $79.50 Value #5795 [85 DOWN delivers it. Small carrying charges 300 4th Street The tub is big, generous—holds 18 gals. to load- li Ibs. dry clothes—Streamline cover— curved-in top which prevents splashing. The ’ Lovell wringer is of durable, rust proof, pressed steel. 214 inch balloon rolls, adjustable pressure. Mechanism sealed in oil for years ; of trouble-free service. ‘With Rriggs and Strotto 5 $57.95, Shu 'abecs Woon belie Warre:y Charger for only $5 extra, $49.50 Value... Full Size Gyrex $3.00DOWN, lj geet: 28s charge } First quality—a sturdy wash- ,’ er has the same gear mecha- nism as higher priced ma- chin led in oil. 16 gals. capacity, holds 6 pounds of | dry clothes.: Easy to clean, srcelaln enacnsl tab. sturdy, porcelain enamel Lovell’ wringer with adjust- able pressure — semi-balloon rolls.” nol Sidene On Can't Beat WARDS NEW 1937 rs f New beauty ... Many new features— More efficient . . . Smoother, faster... At Wards new low price We believe they are the finest washers made toda: Compare them point for point with other makes. Com- re dollar value, performance, sturdy construction. We now they are equal to, if not better than many of the higher priced machines. Ward washers are made by one of the oldest and best-known manufacturers. Test- ing Bureaus show that Ward washers are faster, more cient and give cleaner, sno save up to 40! cost white clothes! You it Wards. Don’t forget! These washers ards as much to make, but it costs Wards less to sell. No high national advertising costs nor middleman rofits with Wards. Consequently, you save. Put ards first on your washer list. See the new ones today ... you'll be glad we told you about them. Sit Down and tron Everything

Other pages from this issue: