The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 18, 1936, Page 2

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THE BISMAKCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1936 : 2 = POOR JUDGMENT OF Were Election Day William Lemke of North Dakota the first major convention talk Tucs- H day night. Lemke, defeated Union party candi- Gate for president, told the conven- tion that he would introduce the Frazier-Lemke farm mortgage reduc- tion bill, “the first day that congress is in session.” “Most of the farm debt reducti - which the president curing the campaign,” Lemke said, brought about by foreclosures. . prices have increased but that is credit to the department of ag! culture, have to be paid back some day.” Referring to the presidential cam: know! where all my friends were on election cay. I don’t know how many people! «~ told me they voted for me and then I - found out that I had no votes at all paign, Lemke said. “I dont in thelr precincts.” N “T am still proud of the American! ' surprised at their people but I poor judgmen' 4 he declarea. age License "Robert Walliam Barrows, Minn apolis, and Mathilda’ Augus' 1 > Births 4s Mr. and Mrs. John Mo Klevenih t 4:20 p, St. Alexius hospital Deaths diner, 27, Washburn Mattin. of urday, local hospita K Harry Imai, manager of the Dakota| {: Photo Engraving company of Fargo, | is a Bismarck business visitor. «Mrs. A. L. Nichols of Mandan r ceived word of the death of her brother, Ed Kean, 68, at Butte, Mont., form local resident. Lee Nichols, ~ ecmmmissioner, is a nephew. C. A. Miller, head of the state bi reau of criminal identification, left Rochester, Minn., and entered the Mayo clinic This is the criminal; 5 to the} < * Bismarck Tuesday for ; for treatment. bureau chief's second trip Rochester hospital this fall. No one was injured: phen, aut - mobiles collided at the interéection ‘Thayer Ave. and Fifth St. here Wed- nesday forenoon. One of the machines, riven by Ed Fite, employe at a local erage, was swung halfway around and turned on its side by the impact. Neither Fite nor his sister, Evelyn, who was riding with him, were in- Jured in the accident. Speen Bee EN | Additional Markets ——________», GOVERNMENT BONDS Noy New York ment Bonds Treasury 41. Treasu 18.—()—Gover: CHICAGO STOUKS (By the Anxovinted Press) Midwest 3 McGraw PROPLE SURPRISES VANQUSHED LEMKE | Doesn't Know Where All te | People Who Promised Votes Des Moines, Iowa, Nov 18—")—Ap- | proximately 300 delegates to the Na-{* tional Farmers Union convention con- tinued their sessions here Wednes-) Gay, after hearing an address by Rep. talked about Farm Its only because God Al-| mighty didn’t give you enough rain! * and because 16 billions of dollars have been put into circulation which will m ughter of Mr, and Wilton, at ate tax Men Made Normal By Glands of Dead Abnormal Body Functions Are Ended by Transplantations, Doctors Report Weather Report WEATHER FORECAST | For Bismarck and vicinity: Gener- ally fair tonight and Thursday, ris- ing temperature \- Baltimore, Nov, 18.)—The story {of how a dead man’s glands were Generally fait! transplanted into another man to and ‘south. | Sting him from abnormality to nor- mal life for two years was reported erally fair) Wednesday before the Southern Med- rising temper- | ical association. Generally fair to- Dr. Hugh H, Young and William P. i somewhat colder] Didusch of the Brady clinic of the Generally fair in) Johns Hapkins’ hospital discussed the nsettled in north-| case, together with that of another Caner pan tends nt and Thursday; ! man who apparently returned perma- Hh Ree eee | nently to normal after a similar glana WEATHER CONDITIONS | operation. uth Dakota: nd Thursday; in Sees a) § are centered | As described by Dr. Young, the first N and over” the| case was that of a 48-year-old man jon | rr. nd Plateau states, | whose glands failed to secrete the while a “Low” powerful hormones which regulate the Some- { body's functions, K brevau soya) Shortly after he asked for an op- tanita deta : ye | eration it was found that a healthy ove the seasonal normal from the Plains | YOUNg man was to be executed at @ States westward. A few light show-| nearby penitentiary within two weeks. ceeet nScky SHountain, “vlope tui | There followed a remarkable experl- elsewhere the weather is generally | ment of medicine. fatr, _| Arrangements were made and im- 28 aden barometer, inches: ! mediately following the execution, Missouri river stuge at 7 a. m. 4.8' the glands were removed and rushed 24 hour change, -9.1 ft | to Dr. Young's clinic where they were ogee | Quickly transplanted to the abnormal | man, : As a result the individual changed ing; almost immediately into a different ‘0 | man, the Johns Hopkins scientists de- clared. Two years later he reported a grad- j ual decline to his old self, however, | apparently due to a failure of the Pct. | transplanted glands to continue func- | tioning, Dr. Young said. $9 On the other hand, # 22-year-old no ri- PREC TION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date ...... . this’month to date . 'y Ist to date Nor: January Ist to date .. 1 Accumulated deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- High- est 82 {00 | ‘oo ; man who was also abnormal received ‘ 4 Fargo, aay | Minot, 3 40 00) ;@ similar gland transplant at another o- | umoatown: cldy. uct: TS 4% 90 | clinic and has continued in @ normal state for many years, he added, hav- ing graduated from college recently. i CONTINUED from page one- "| Death Stills Voice of Schumann-Heink ‘ian contralto, achieved riches as an {operatic and concert prima donna and. jin the twilight of life, won a huge popular following in vaudeville, radio ‘and moving picture theatres as a singer jot simple German “lieder.” Became Wealthy ta WEATHER AT OTHER Low re los Angel Miles City, = mother with the housework. But word of her voice had traveled and there came an invitation to try for a place with the royal opera at Dresden. She | left home on the pretext of visiting a j School chum and came back a few days later amazing her parents with &@ contract to sing three years at “Il Trovatore” on Oct. 13, 1878, Up to this time all her singing had been by ear and she had almost no knowledge of musics] , BO she began a strenuous course of in- struction under Herr Krebs and Dr. Franz Wullner, but in the midst of it, in 1882, married Ernest Heink. Im- mediately her contract was cancelled and for a year she was “at liberty.” Late in 1883 she got an engagement in Hamburg, but at a pitifully smal! salary. Here her musical ear and in- nate sense of pitch came to her rescue. The chief contralto of the company became piqued and refused to sing “Carmen,” notifying the management only @ few hours before the curtais| was to go up. It was too late to change the bill and the manager sent for Frau Heink. Without rehearaal or other study, she sang the role by ear and scored a complete triumph. Divorces, Death, End Marriages Still in Hamburg, after four child- ren had been born, Heink deserted his wife and family. The sheriff attachea everything the singer owned to sat- isfy creditors. In 1887 made her first appear- ance in Berlin, singing in “Il Trova- tore” and for the next nine years was heard in contralto and mesto-soprano toles in many German cities in operas and oratorios and at festivals. Then she signed the 10-year contract which she later cancelled because of Ameri- can successes. Just before entering upon that con- tract she divorsed Heink and married Paul Schumann, actor-manager of the Thalia theater, Hamburg. Four children were born to them. He died in 1904 and that was one of the few years in which she missed singing at Bayreuth, Her third husband was George Rapp, jr., a Chicago lawyer. She mar- ried him in May, 1906, shortly after she had taken out her first natural- jaztion papers. They separated in 1911 and were divorced in 1914. The world years were difficult for Mme. Schumann-Heink, She had sona in both the American and Ger- man armies and another was aboard a German submarnie. But she held loyally to the Jand of her adoption, touring the training camps, singing for the soldiers and begging in- dulgence for her boys in the German army because they were doing their duty as they saw it. She was widely popular among war veterans and was an honorary officer of the American Legion. No Platte, Nebr., Okla, Ch 4 Phoenix, Pr, In the hey-day of her career she was reputed to carn $135,000 a year . he jfrom concert work alone while royal- 09 |ties on machine records of her voice 00 |brought in an additional $50,000. of | Thrifty investments, mostly in Chicago “oo /and California real estate, were made 00 jand managed by her with a skill that 54. | brought steadily increasing values and 36.) |she became one of the wealthiest sing- jers of her day. But her own generosity to numerous friends and relatives and the world’s turn from high prosperity to acute economic depression shrank her for- tune to the vanishing point. When er “00 Albe i, Appelle, Sask., id Cl DD, oseburg, Ore., is, Mo., cl eldy. clear i u- 1th Pastor at Hebron Is Called to Hillsboro Rey. Harry R. Harris, Hebron, pastor of the Hebron and Glen Ullin Congre- gational churches for the last three years, announced in Bismarck Wed- jengagements which paid for a week said she had been wearing the same hat and coat for two years. she was past 70 she was glad to take |John MRS, KELLER, 72, 1S CLAIMED BY DEATH Succumbs to Kidney Ailment at Daughter's Home; Funer- al Plans Incomplete Mrs. Magdalene Keller, 72, widow of | second place by the Courier in the eller, who died a year ago in|state high school publication contest. June, succumbed to kidney trouble at 12:45 a. m., Wednesday at the home|U-shaped table decorated with bou- pee feet man renee hee qecelved of her daughter, Mrs. Wendelin Brown, | quets of red carnations, red, white Thirteenth St. Final funeral arrangements are be- Her voice by then had become com- | 08. held up awaiting word from sev-|made from newspapers. \nesday that he has resigned his pas- torates in that area to accept a call to the Congregational church at Hills- |boro. He will take up his new duties Dec. 1. Reverend Harris has lived 14 years in North Dakota, having been pastor ot the Congregational church at New Rockford for 11 years before going to the Missouri Slope country. ° | n= | Tacoma is an Inian word meaning} j highest, or near heaven. | A red blood corpuscle has an aver- ‘age life of 30 to 70 days. Exceptio |Women SYLVIA SHOES Be bined. Non-scuff pon very fine value! ° Smart and Distinctive Styles +798 Black calf and suede haniioree Gabardine Ties lobhap PUMPS and Straps Bleck o mee © RR hn sg nothing mere fistteri: EvEw=*| 98c nal Values m ’s Shoes! BROWN SUEDE Wide-strep s 1 98 “Sylvias” Smooth leather trimming. New, wide strap with big button. Non-scuff Continental heel: 150 Pairs Suede Pumps pressed to little more than half its /¢ral of her children. The rites will be former range and she was limited to jsuch numbers as Brahms’ “Lullaby,” the traditional Christmas hymm “Holy Night” and similar songs of short range and brief phrases. But the artistry of the singer, plus the materna: character of her personality and un- dimmed stage presence, overcame the she remained a drawing card. Coached Pupils Also in these late years she took a few pupils, but this work was limited |more to coaching than to vocal train- ing. She was 8 star in her own right, backed by 20 years’ experience on Ger- man operatic stages when she made her first appearance in America on Novy. 7, 1898, singing “Ortrud” in a pre- sentation of Wagner's “Lohengrin” at the Auditorium theater in Chicago. Her impresario was Maurice Grau of \the firm of Abbey, Schoeffel & Grau, predecessors of the Metropolitan Opera company of New York. She took out American citizenship |Papers at Cincinnati in 1905. | Married three times, she was the mother of eight children. She lest her voice temporarily after her first con- finement, but later regained it with ‘note added to her register and in later years she said that each of her ;eught experiences in motherhood hac added a note to her range. She was born June 15, 1861, near what is now Praha, capital of Czechu- siovakia, and then was Prague, Aus- jtria. Her father was Major Roessler, an Austrian army officer, and her mother was an Italian. Ernestine inherited her voice, for her mother also possessed @ rich cun- tralto, Until Ernestine was 9 years old she spoke only Italian, meanwhile, under her mother’s tuition, learning to sing by ear contralto arias from I! jan operas. Childish dreams of fame as a sin; were squelched by her father who, despite his struggles te maintain s family on the small pay of his service, tage career for his daughter. So at 1} Ernestine Roessler was sent to the Ursuline convent in Prague. j bun in charge of the school cholr sing tenor parts at mass. QOvercomes Early Rebuff noted her voice and assigned her to Out of that development came in- B conducted from St. Mary's procathe- dral here and burial will be made in St. Mary's cemetery beside the body of her husband. Magdalene Webber was born Feb. 14, 1864, in Russia, the daughter of My, and Mrs. Anton Webber. She was married to John Keller in Russia in effects of obvious shortcomings and |1882 and immigrated to the United! Northwood, N. D.—Funeral services States in 1903. Seven years later the family moved to’ Bismarck where they have resided continually since, Mrs. Keller has made her home with jughter and son-in-law since the death of her husband June 28, 1935. She was a member of St. Mary's Cath- olic church and the altar society. Besides her daughter she leaves two sons, Valentine Keller of Bismarck and Frank Keller, Stark county regis- ter of deeds at Dickinson, and three other daughters, Mrs. Nicholas Brown of South Solen, British Columbis, Mrs. ‘Chris Free of Salem, Ore., and Mrs. T. W. Larson of Grand Forks. Her parents and a sister preceded her in death. Her body is at the Calnan Funeral home. Four Golfing Greats Eliminated in Meet Pinehurst, N. C., Nov. 18.—(P)— Harold (Jug) Mc8paden, young pro- fessional from Winchester, Mass., knocked out defending champion Johnny Revolta of Chicago, one up in 19 holes, Wednesday afternoon in the second round of the professional golfers’ championship, Gene Sarazen, Tommy Armour and Paul Runyan also were put out, Sarazen losing to Jack Patroni, one up; Armour to Mortte Dutra, 4 and 3, and Runyan to Clarence Doser, 2 and 1, Sod House Protects Tolna Dam Workers Tolns, N. D., her lack of pulchritude. personality at a! pect to succeed?” Guardia “With such = face and figure, nojly elected Wednesday as }, how can you ex-|the United he exclaimed. With | Mayors. ngton.—Mayor of New York was a president States conference of QUILL AND SCROLL HONORS INITIATES ism Society Elects Four Newspapermen | An afternoon ceyemony and a 7 clock formal banquet and program in the Lewis and Clark hotel marked the initiation Tuesday into the Man- dan high school Quill and Scholl chapter of four honorary and eleven active members. Honorary members initiated are William Allen White, eels or the Emporia, Kans. Gazette, who was represented by K. Frederick Olsen of the Bismarck Tribune; William Pres- ton Davies, editor of the Grand Forks Herald and dean of North Dakota newspapermen; Smith Abraham Young, editor of the Morton County News, and E. A. Tostevin, editor of the Mandan -Pioneer. Mr. Tostevin acted as proxy for Mr. Davies. 11 Are Affiliated The high school journalists admit- ted to membership are Thomas Carl- son, Robert Priesz, Richard Gallagher, Ethel Mae Hansen, Muriel Johnson, Ralph Riedinger, Violet Stasney, Bernice Tavis, Estelle Toole, Burgess} Thysell and Tobert Weibers. These were admitted in the afternoon and the honorary members in the evening. Robert W. Mackin, adviser of the Chourier, Mandan high school stu- dent publication, and state president of Quill and Scroll, headed arrange- ments for the banquet and acted as toastmaster. Guest speakers were the two Man- dan publishers admitted as honorary members, Mr. Olsen and Miss Jose- phine Hosch, also of the Tribune ed- itorial staff, All spoke on the general subject, “What Cooperation Can Be Expected From a Professional News- paper by @ High School Journalistic Society?” Honor Guests Speak Mr. Tostevin and Mr. Young, who have engaged in the newspaper pro- fession for 50 and 58 years, respec- tively, both told colorful incidents in their careers. Mr. Tostevin read @ communication from Mr. Davies ad- dressed to the society members, tell- ing them that they goon must carry on the work and traditions of the newspaper world. Mr. Olsen spoke principally of the life of William Allen White and then instructed the young people to learn first what news is and secondly how to write it. Miss Hosch, addressing the girls in the group, traced briefly the rise of wo- men in the newspaper world and told something of the conditions which beginners will find and the rewards of the work. Mr. White sent a letter witich was read by Mr. Mackin. Hear School Officers | J. C, Gould, Mandan schoob super- intendent, and W. L. Neff, high schoo! principal, concluded the program with congratulations to the new members and words of appreciation to the press of both Bismarck and Mandan for help given in publicizing school activities. ‘This was the annual meeting. of Quill and Scroll and in addition tothe initiation celebrated the winning -of as ‘There were covers for 50 guests at a and blue tapers, copies of the Courier, printed programs and place cards ELETYPE BRIEFS+=2* Anseciated Press PIONEER DEAD were held Wednesday for Andrew A. Holman, 73, Northwood’s last pioneer business man who operated his black- smith shop until a week before his death, HUNTERS MAROONED Midland, Ont.—(Canadian Press)— More than 50 deer hunters were re- ported marooned Wednesday some- where along the north shore of Geor- gian bay by a howling gale, zero weather and mountainous waves. SENTENCED TO DEATH Alicante, Spain — Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, son of Spain's late dictator, Gen. Miguel Primo de Ri- vera, was sentenced to death for the crime of military rebellion by a pop- ular tribunal Wednesday. His broth-|@ er, Miguel, Jr., was sentenced to 30 years in prison, CHRISTMAS BUYING GROWS Washington—Secretary Roper said Wednesday & “conservative estimate” showed Christmas purchasing through department stores this year would in- crease 15 per cent over 1935, MINOT BOY WINS Des Moines—Dale Hight of Minot, N. D., won the Farmers Union junior speaking contest held in connection with the national Farmers Union con- vention. in session here Wednesday. Loraine Smith, also of Minot, was tied for first with Clara Schuttoffel, Wal- nut, Iowa, in the essay contest. Need Money? Briefly ... Here's Our Loan Plan 1=85 to $400 loaned, and you get the entire amount in cash. 2—Repaid in monthly install- ments. 3~Loans made to single persons @¢ married couples on their own signatures, or automobile collsteral. ’ Phone, Write or Call Out-of-town leans made Dolled up at Marshall. ‘Chimp on ‘Baccy Binge’ Chicago, Nov. 18.—(#)—Charles, the chimpanzee, whose “marriage” failed because he couldn't live up to his wife, | found solace Wednesday in nicotine. He puffed his cigaret and groused @ bit in the Brookfield zoo. Too late Charles acquired the social Polish which made Meshie—his “ex-” —the upper crust of the animal hier- archy. Meshie, then a member of Dr. Harry C. Raven's household in New York, won national notice a few yerag back her own clothes. Meshie often accompanied Dr. Raven to luncheon clubs and fashionable dinners where he lectured on animal behaviorism. a social light. in Divored From Shrew, FRENGH MINSTER COMMITS SLICE Died, Brother Says, Because of ‘Campaign of Infamy’ Launched Against Him ‘Then he donated Meshie to the Brookfield zoo. The management im- ported Charles from the Belgian. Con-| go as a “husband” for her. But Meshie, sald Assistant. Director Robert Bean, had become a shrew. Her intemperate scoldings and the way she cuffed Charles about became the scandal of the primates house. Henpecked Charles’ disposition was “soon shot,” Bean said; and. on grounds of Meshie’s mental and physical cruelty the zoo divorced them after 1§ months. Now Meshie is mated with an un- couth fellow who can’t‘even comb his own hair but is powerful enough to “give her a good trimming” when she flies into tantrums. OLD INJURY CLAIMS WASHBURN FARMER Brain Tumor Resulting From Fall Two Years Ago Takes Willard Gardner A tumor which exerted pressure on) his brain and which resulted from an accident received over a year ‘ago when he fell off a coal wagon re sulted Tuesday in the death of Wil- Jard Gardner of Washburn. He was 27 years old. Mr, Gardner entered a local hos- pital for tteatment of the brain tu- mor last Thursday. He was operated on Saturday but passed away at p.m. Tuesday, two days before his 28th birthday. Besides his widow, he leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. Gardner, who live on a farm near Marshall, Ta., and three children, Gertrude, Cleo and Audrey. Mr. Gardner was born Nov. 19, 1908, He came to North Da- kota several years ago and married Miss Viola Lahren at Hensler in Aug- A el Rat Daily at 2:30 - No advance All Phones 34 We Deliver Grocery Specials Nov. 18th to Nov. 25th Just received wheel domestic Swiss Cheese Peanut Butter, 2-lb. jar Van Camp’s Pork & Beans, 27-02. tin, Minneopa Vienna 2 for Aecian vere QDC Sausage, 3 for.... 5c Libby's Libby's “= ears pple No. 24, tin Butter 2 for Qt. jar 53c 21c Firm, perfect A tasty, ied gprs Monogram Dates, Dromedary Pitted Dates, 1%-pound et package .. Aeneas 2lc Ly ngh ga 2c Acute : "Or Sweet ; Sapeehicont 103-08, tin Be Le Ne 2 tin 2 for 27c 2 for 25c 2 for 37¢ === EDMUND LOWE - ZASU PITTS - TED HEALY —in— Mystery “MAD HOLIDAY” ‘un FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! WW TS ENTIRETY... Exactly as shown ¥ at Roadshow _ Prices! W REGINALD 0 WAT PENDLETON PARAMOUNT, ust, 1931. The family lived for two years at Henslér and then moved to & farm near Washburn. Chee Lefer Bre Rell up pending receipt of wo) from his parents. Edward E. Ackley to Be Buried in Iowa Private funeral services for Edward Earl Ackley, 47, who died at San Haven, Monday, will be held at the ‘Webb Funeral chapel Thursday with Rev. F. E. Logee, pastor of the Pres- byterian church, officiating. Following the short prayer service the body will be taken to Marble Rock, Ia., where interment will be made in the West Side cemetery after regular rites at 2 p. m., Saturday, with Rev. Van Benschoten in charge. Burial will be made-beside the bodies of his mother, sister and brother. Accompanying the body to Marble Rock will be his widow, a sister-in- law, Mrs. George Watschke of Bis- marck; G. L. Ackley, his father, and H. J. Ackley, both from Marble Rock, who arrived here Wednesday, and Mrs. Myna Sallee of Green, Ia., niece, who came Monday. The body will lie in state at the Webb Funeral chapel Thuraday. day. FRANK MORGAN Woe RAY BOLGER + FANNIE BRICE HARRIET HOCTOR * ERNEST COSSART Thur., Fri., Sat., Sun. 260 6:30 - 9:30 in prices for chiffiren or students croc L Minneopa Fancy Red Sal- ttre. 41¢ Lille, France, Nov. 18.—(7)—Minister of the Interior Rober Salengro died Wednesday in a sealed and gas-filled room, a suicide, his brother said, be- cause of a Rightist “campaign of in- famy.” His death created grave new prob- lems for the French government of Premier Leon Blum. Observers coi- sidered the possibility the Rightist op- position, which had repeatedly charged Salengro was a wartime might base a new attack on grounds that the government protected a “guilty” man. Both a court of honor and the cham- ber of deputies recently cleared Salen- &ro of the desertion charges, which Rightists described as constituting “be- trayal” of France. Salengro’s private secretary con- firmed the suicide announcement by Henri Salengro, the minister's brother, who declared Roger Salengro was “harrassed and broken in health oy the campaign of infamy against hiin.” At the same time, it was learned in Paris that the cabinet had received new and secret charges against Min- ister Salengro during a meeting Tues- Retail Turkey Prices Less Than Year Ago Chicago, Nov. 18. tail prices at least five cents a pound lower than a year ago are probable at Thanksgiving time, Dairy Produce, a trade journal, said Wednesday. Prices for live birds at Chicago re- . cently have ranged around 16 to 17 cents a pound for No. 1 hens and toms. Dressed wholesale quotations have been as high as 23 cents. A year ago, dressed prices were at 28 cents and advanced to 30 to 31 cents a few days before Thanksgiving. Capitol TODAY & THURSDAY The Three Stooges “Disorder in the Court” Vitaphone Vaudeville News FRI. - SAT. - SUN. deserter, the (#)—Turkey re- MAN WHO LIVED TWICE RALPH BELLAMY MARIAN MARSH ~—ADDED— HER GREATEST ROLE SINCE

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