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h it to sa 5 EST 0G A AE ETO the D ay’s Photo News :: x : Kentucky's claim to fast horses and beautiful women is slightly dented by this evidence from the Will Rogers Memorial field at Hollywood, where these four film actresses had seats at the rail for a polo game. Luise Rainer, at left, is trying. to.keep her eye on the. field while she listens to a remark from pretty Gloria Stuart, in the second row. Next is Anne Shirley who, with Ginger Rogers, right, is intent on the action of the players. To look at it, you'd never think the contraption invented by Professor Heinrich Focke ever could leave ground; yet it's not an optical illusion that confronts you above. It’s actually in the air, at the Bremen airport. Devoid of conventional airiane ae it is lifted by whirling autogyro vanes poised at the sides. ines ___THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1937 More Teachers To Boost Budget City’s Growth Increases School Expenditures; Park Bud- get Detailed Larger appropriation for teachers’ salaries is the principal item of in- crease in the Bismarck school dis- trict’s $153,514.80 budget, recently given final approval by the board of budget review and the school board. An announced number of extra teachers will have to be hired to care for Bismarck’s rapidly swelling school: population. Increase in the salary ap- peopristion is from $96,546.45 to $105,- 860. Other 1938 school board expendi- tures compared with 1937: (The former figure in each case is the amount spent during the last fiscal year, the latter figure the estimated expenditure next year.) Salaries Up School board salaries — $810.00, $810.00; school board expenses — $358.43, $450.00; teachers’ salaries— $96,546.45, $105,860.00; text books— $4,743.76, $4,800.00; library books — $749.49, $750.00; teaching supplies — $3,784.42, $4,000.00; teachers’ retire- ment fund—$1,334.90, $1,400.00; health (medical inspection, etc.)—$1,325.17, $1,550.00; play equipment — $159.05, $300.00; fuel—$6,294.18, $6,850.00; light, water etc.—$3,780.58, $4,000.00; jani- tors’ wages—$7,687.50, $8,700. tors’ supplies—$550.74, $800. to buildings—$797.54, $1,500.00; up- keep: of grounds, etc.—$1,012.93, $1,- 000.00; repairs to equipment—$666.17, $1,000.00; insurance—$. 1ts—$2,415.43, $2,600.00; -se3 New buildings—$2,- 084.54, $2,000.00; new equipment — $2,667.02, $2,500.00. Except for the municipal golf course and the swimming pool, both park board properties, the park board will spend the most money on Custer park in the west end of the city next year, the park board budget reveals. The total budget is $20,980.00. Also Approved It has likewise been by the board of budget review and given final approval by the park board. Detailed 1938 expenditure estimates compared with 1937 figures: (The 1937 figures are given first.) General Government—$878.90, $2,- 830.00; Custer Park— $1,320.11, $2,- 000.00; Tatley Park—$101.32, $350.00; Riverside Park — $478.08, $950.00; Hillside Park—$862.10, $1,500.00; Ki- wanis Park—$399.19, $700.00; Pioneer Park—$358.99, $700.00; Park Lake— Ear Sheared Off But Is Sewed on 8t. Louis, July 20.—(?)—Eleven- year-old Ben Kozak’s left ear, sheared off by the wheel of an automobile trailer as he slept in a parking lot, is practically as good as new. ‘The ear was found by an ambu- lance driver after the boy was taken to « hospital. Physicians sewed it back in place. FARMERS MAY GUT HAY ON U. §. LAND All Available Acres Previously Used Already Leased, Maurek States Minot, N. D., July 30—(4)—While federal authority has been given the Minot office of the U. 8. Bureau of Biological survey to permit farmers to cut hay on the upper and lower Souris migratory wildfowl refuges, all available land had previously been leased to farmers in the vicinity of the refuges, according to Burnie Maurek, regional director of the bi- logical survey. were to make deposits be- fore’ Aug. 1, but many have failed to 3 |@o so, Maurek said. They have been notified that if they do not post their deposits by the deadline, the sand ne be reallocated, he ex- A Wililams county delegation vis- ited the refuges this week in an et fort to determine whether, if farm- ers in that county should be allotted leases later, it would pay to esta- blish a haying crew and transport the hay to communities in need. Of the 87,000 acres in the two re- fuges, much is under water or on hills which had been over-grazed and ar now covered with weeds, Maurek sal Magnus Anderson, 35, Beach Farmer, Dies Magnus Anderson, 35, farmer four miles north of Beach, died in a Bis- marck sanitarium at 5:30 a. m. Fri- Gay of diabetes and dropsy. He had HGHTY-EGHT HAVE [Smith Re-Enters Political Picture PERPECT RECORDS Names of Burleigh County Chil- dren Who Missed No School Announced Eighty-eight rural Burleigh county school children maintained perfect attendance records during the 1986- $7 school year, County Superintendent of Schools Marie Huber announced Friday. ane with perfect records, by town- Ips: Grass Lake: Melvin Backman, Ada Magnuson, Glen Magnuson, Ruth Magnuson, Viola Thor. Wilson: Alma Berg, Alvin Hoch- halter, Theodore Wall. Trygg: Betty Jane Kell, Ernest E. Kell, Jr., Rose Mary Kell. Anna Garowski, Peter Garowski, Esther Holden, Violet Holden, Delores Murrey, Virginia Mur- tey, Alden Roseberg. Ghylin: Robert Lucy. Phoenix: Richard Bailey, Calvin Miller, Glen Miller. Christiania: Helen Anderson. Lyman: Violet Eliasson. Richmond: Esther Degner. Lein: Anita Heidt, Glenview: David Morris, Patricia Morris, Elice Simons, Beverly Simons, Marvel Simons. Linden (Wing): Clara Bossert, Clyde Edgerton, Marvin Josephson, Elma Kavonius, Ina Kavonius, Irene Knowles, Lindy Lein, Edgar Millet. Baldwin: Alice Hogue, Lucille Hogue, Lulu Marie Lenihan, Laurena Belle Lenihan, Merton Lenihan, Jean Meyer, Charlotte Rupp, Delores Rupp. in Creek: Edna Nagel, Robert Na- gel. Menoken: Rex Gene Abelien, Marion Dance. McKenzie: Junior Adams, Joyce Johnson. Sterling: Loyal Belk, Robert Brown- awell, Harold Prince, Mary Ann Tur- ner, Betty Jo Wildfang. Driscoll: Frances Alber, Clara Ba- ker, Esther Baker, Frelda Berg, De- lores Bruschwein, Marcella Eisenbeisz, Wilmer Koessel, Phyllis Pederson, Betty Quale, Dolores Quale. Cromwell: Kenneth Engdahl, Rode ney Endahl. Lincoln: Donald Baertsch, Gerhart Kalmbach, Claude Turner. Apple Creek: Bruce Burch, Jackie Sullivan, White: Dick Ward, Donald Ward. Macomber: Dorothy Albrecht, Eu- gene Corrington, Marian Morgan, Patticia Morgan, Irving Ollenberger, Thelam Ollenberger, James McGinnis, Jermain Polzin, Jemet Polzin. ‘Wild Rose: Luella Thompson, Rich- ard Thompson. $44.74, $400.00. been ailing about 10 years but recently 5 hit the Athletic Field — $456.97, $600.00; | his condition became critical. 2 American Students erat East End Playground—$244.98, $700.00; | Funeral services will be Monday at 5 gts Municipal Golf Course—$3,396.74, $3,-|1:30 p. m, in the United Lutheran| Are Freed in Poland n the| 000.00; Sibley Island—none, $1,000. ch was) when} “It is believed this plane can overhaul any air tar, announces the development of the fastest Hghting ofane in the world, the Bere tare revolutionary is the craft that new tactics for its use must be worked out. It is a mi i ieee cae ‘ing a crew of five; has two et operating pusher types of propellors, which give tt . aunners in the hting cockpits, at each side of the pilot’s cockpit, freedom to fire Dax Aivection ts eee le or climbing to 30,000 feet. The armament consists of six machine guns and light bombs. craft Corporation of Buffalo built the experimental model. pee (Copyright, Bachrach) Although they ordered him to spend his 79th birthday anni- versary, July 26, in bed, physi- cians said the condition of Col. Edward Mandell House, above, was not serious. The war-time adviser of President Roosevelt is suffering from neuritis, si ny attempt to attack New York from the air, this, aoe Oe as ocr would be in store for the invading planes. Silhouetted by the glare of searchlights that pick out ee Battery sends is MGcadly shrapnel lazing i to the night at Gover ds its - DaMety se0er nors id, N. %. ‘ 25 ge .U. 8. Arm: Air Co s Le ae acest ay tee sketched above. So H Miscellaneous—$233.39, $300.00; Pur- chase of Land—none, $1,000.00; Re- creation, including Junior Baseball, Playgrounds, Skating Rinks and Municipal Swimming Pool—$1,900.65, $4,950.00; Interest and Retirement of Debt—$831.38, none. Park board expenditures and est- imated expenditures by objects are as follows: Salaries and wages—$5,628.20, $8,- 380.00; maintenance and operation— $5,571.13, $5,950.00; major repeirs and betterments—$728.12, $6,650.00. Threshing Gets Under Way in Winona Area Winona, Minn. July 30.—(%)— Golden grain flowed in the Winona area Friday as threshing rigs swung into operation in Winona, Houston, Fillmore and Wabasha counties in Minnesota and generally through Trempealeu, Buffalo and Pepin coun- ties in nearby Wisconsin. Winter wheat yields from fields al- ready threshed have been especially good, and in valley farms of Wabasha county, said County Agent ©. D, Nel- son Friday, with some fields pro- ducing as high as 45 bushels an acre, ‘The world petroleum industry was founded by an American, Col. Edward Laurence Drake, who struck oil at Titusville, Pa., on Aug. 27, 1859. You say you're bring- ing a friend for din- ner? Why of course that’s all right. We're having that cottage cheese salad you like so well and there's plenty of it. No, you needn’t bring any- thing else. Cottage cheese salad is a meal in itself. Men Like Everett officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Mr. Anderson was born at Beach Nov. 27, 1902. He had lived there all his life. A bachelor, he leaves his brothers Hans, Carl, Erling and Julius, and a sister, Mrs. Marie Brunsvold, all of Beach, Johnny Dawson Leads In St. Paul Tourney strokes under par for the Keller course Friday to move into the lead in the $5,000 St. Paul open golf tour- nament, with about a fourth of the field reported, Birdies on the last two holes of his opening round helped Dawson to his sub-par round and moved him into the pace-setting position ahead of E. J. Harrison of Little Rock, Ark., who turned in the first better-than-par oh Bridgeman-Russell’s Washington, July 30.—(#)—The state department said Friday two young American music students, who were arrested at Gdynia, Poland, on charges of violating Polish currency | restrictions, had been freed on bail. The two students are Walter P. Mi- lewsk!, of Milwaukee, and John Glow- acki, of Lawrence, Mass., and are un- derstood to be enrolled at the Acad- emy of Music in Warsaw. Assumes Task of Guiding Tam- many Endorsed Candidate for New York Mayor New York, July 30.—(?)—Former Governor Alfred E. Smith, the “happy warrior” of other years, returned to the political wars Friday faced with the unprecedented task of guiding a Tammany-endorsed mayoralty candi- date through a Republican primary. Dropping his role as behind-the- scenes advisor, Smith stepped into the breach after the funeral Thursday of Tammany Leader James J. Dooling and attempted to rally the hall’s quarreling factions firmly behind the candidacy of U. 8. Senator Copeland for the mayorship of New York City. Meanwhile, announcement by both Copeland and Mayor Fiorello La- Guardia that they would seek the Re- publican nomination for mayor, in- dicated the wearer of the brown derby in supporting Copeland would have to cross party lines in one of the most tangled campaigns of his 43 years in politics. Smith, a grand sachem in the wig- wam whose policies he has fought for and against many times since he entered politics in 1804, met with a majority of the Tammany leaders in his office in the Empire Siate build- ing whose management has been his chief concern in recent years. Grayed since 1928, when defeated for the presidency, Smith pleaded with sub-leaders of disordered Tam- many to unite behind Copeland, his personal friend and a friend of the dead Dooling. Although the hall is formally pledged to Copeland, many of its chiefs have openly declared their in- tention of supporting Grover A. Whalen, former police commissioner and candidate for the four Democratic borough organizations outside Tam- many-controlled Manhattan. Formal return of Smith to an ac- tive political role emphasized the New Deal as an election issue. Whalen is supported by Democratic leaders friendly to Postmaster General James A. Farley. Copeland has opposed many measures sponsored by the na- tional administration, and Smith has been a vitriolic critic of New Deal po- licies. F 20-P)- Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hanners wanted to take their son’s dog to him in Pocatello, Idaho, but the pet had a different idea, They took the animal with them, but he was back in Mo- Cook, several days before the Hanners were expected to re- turn, : Public Debt Reaches New Record Summit Washington, July 30.—(#)—The public debt increased $50,072,521 on July 28 to a new record high of $36,= 107,757,744, The treasury seid Friday the ine crease was caused by an issue of dis« count bills to put new cash in its worke ing balance. 87 Children Sentto _ Hospitals in Period Eighty-seven crippled children were ‘sent to hospitals for treatment and care during the months of April, May and June, Miss Theodora Allen, head of the child health division of the state public welfare board, said Friday. LIGHTNING KILLS THREE Brazil, Ind. July 30—(?)—Light- ning struck a hay wagon near here Friday, killing three men and injur- ing ® fourth critically. The men had taken refuge under the wagon during @ storm. Sam Boyce, 66, Fred Buckalew, %, and Clyde Cheezem, 28, were killed. WILSON’S NEW Jen EN OEE PICNICS HAM Perfection On Ice EEGARDLESS of season, weather or demand --. your SCHLITZ is always fully aged: the Creamed Cottage Cheese Yes, they do, and you'll like it yourself. It's such a delicious and nourishing food ... and so cooling. Serve it tonight for dinner. {t's wonderful for salads or as a delightful side dish. Ask your grocer. Manufactured by finest, most refreshing, wholesome, and full-flavored beer that men and science brew. Be sure your refrigerator is stocked with delicious SCHLITZ. You don’t have to cultivate a taste for it. You like it on first acquaintance . . . and ever after. JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING COMPANY Milwaukee, Wis. BRIDGEMAN-RUSSELL CO. Phone 740 — Home of Pasteurized Purity Milk — Bismarck, N. D. Copyright 1957, Jos, Schfits Brewing Ca—$5 Scrap Iron aid Prairie Bones The Beer That Made Wilwaukee Wanted in Carloads and Truckloads Write, phone, or wire for carlead prices. RECEIVE MIOMEST Market Valen? THE BISMARCK HIDE AND FUR CO. Corner 8th and Front Streets rey aed Bldg., Across trom Occident Elevator, Mill Bismarck, M.D. "Weite F. 0. Box 463 Chas, Migier, Mar. Gonzalo Quiepo de Llano, Na- tionalist “broadcasting general,” who does his part to help Gen- fal Franco win the Speneh jar by making daily radio Speeches, is expected to become minister of war in Franco's pro- Posed dictatorship. The general 's pictured at his microphone. His imagination and his choice ef epithets, punctuated by hic- ‘oughs, have won him millions of listeners op. the continent. Famous ty i i ive ceremonies will mark the dedication of ee ee ects warid War memorial at Montfaucon, France, Sunday, Aug. 1, in the presence of Gen. John J. Pershing, when the towering monument shown above is commemorated to the million American doughboys who served in the Meuse-Argonne offensive. It was designed by John Russell Pope of New York and erected ie a cost of nearly a half million dollars. Inset is shown soother the series of American war memorials being dedicated ween August and October. It marks the spot where American SAYER stopped the German advance at Chateau Thierry in July, 1918, ‘and was designed by Dr. Paul P. Cret of Philadelphia. 815 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. PHONE 128 FY MISSOURI SLOPE DISTRIBUTED BY DISTRIBUTING CO.