The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 9, 1937, 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)

oron- ehke, aman, n, St. Beur. Lu ; and arck, City, hos: umes nt to e will ituts- athre om 3 8 for y the ners, War- Kelly, icate, wood akota, t, for clud- Lor< id ing AP) — e for eF& SaakE FEES 8 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1987 a Bismarck Building Activity Slightly Less Than in 1936 VALUE OF PERMITS ISSUED THIS YEAR TOTAL $138,855 Four Permits in Last Two Weeks Call for Construc- tion Worth $4,500 Building activity in Bismarck dur- ing the first six months of 1937 was slightly less than during the same pe- riod in 1936, according to city hall records, Building permits representing $164,- 002 worth of construction activity were issued between Jan. 1 and July 1, 1936. About $26,000 less, or $138,855 worth were issued to July 1 this year. March of this year was the great- est building month during the en- tire period. Permits representing $69,250 in construction work were taken out during March. Value of perimts month by month: Jan.—1936, $550; 1937, $100; Feb— 1936, $40; 1937, $2800; March—1936, $18,200; 1937, $69,250; April—1936, $47,660; 1937, $11,875; May—1936, $63,915; 1937 — $25,430; June — 1936, $33,637; 1037—$29,400. Four builditig permits representing about $4,500 in construction and al- teration work have been issued at the city hall during the pas two weeks. Permits were issued to: Henry Kallmann, alter dwelling at 608 Thirteenth 8t., Problems encountered by re- tail business men will be discuss- ed at ® conference in the Bis- marck Association of Commerce, Wednesday, Aug. 25, with H. P. Godard, association secretary, in charge of arrangements, F. E. Sperling of St. Paul, sales man- ager of G. Sommers & Company, will outline better sales methods for stores. E. B, Moon, St. Paul, secretary of the wholesalers di- vision of the St. Paul Association of Commerce, will ‘speak on “Plans for Meeting Competition. $400, Ludwig Peterson eet, co! German Test Flights Otto Fink, alter dwelling in Park Hill addition, estimated cost $375. C. J. Reff, construct 4-room stucco dwelling at 812 Eleventh St., esti- Haaken Tosterud, contractors. H. G. Froemming, alter garage G. F, Pelke, contractor. AGED WOMAN SUCCUMBS Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 9—()—Mrs. here Sunday night after a long ill- May Begin Tuesday} ‘emperatures mounted rapidly in Laker ace ny, sane: esac bureau forecasts holding pa ite) mated cost, $3.500. ufthansa ie mechanics groomed |for relief Monday night or lay se ore tae: Anton Nelson and/in. ‘1¢-ton seaplane Nordmeer Mon-|except in the northwest portion, aay for the first of German survey 301 Tenth St., estimated cost, $200, Pi lreisaice toelete are ee a EILAi Inet | war weather during which rain fell The takeoff of the Tirst of eight|state, the mercury began climbing Frojected flights by the Nordmeer|nearer the century mark again. and her sistership the Nordwind was Martha Haugen, 85, Cleveland, died ern ace ae 6 a. m., Tuesday |with the mercury rising. Flight Captain Joachim Blankenburg expected to|settled tonight and Tuesday; prob- years. Released jointly by the state board, this analysis reveals inexplicable, ranging from a peak of 506 deaths in 1930 down to 383 in 1935. Heart disease, cancer, cerebral hemorrhage and lobar pneumonia are the only death causes claiming a greater annual death total in the state. Other leading causes, in the order of their 1935 toll, were nephritis, broncho- pneumonia, premature birth, tuberculosis and influenza. Fatalities in Burleigh county, annually since 1926, -| 1926—19; 1927—25; 1928—18; 1928—21; 1934—% 935—22, Rate per 100,000—120.39. 1926 1927 1928 19: 20617 6 4 12 29 19 8 4 Minot . 14 23 17 Valley City 2 6 5 Williston .... ‘ Accidents comprise the fifth largest death cause in the state, according Confe: to an extensive examination of vital statistics by counties for the past 13 s Choking, Ravishing 8-Year-Old Brooklyn Girl After Grilling department of health and the state a fluctuation in mortalities which is New York, Aug. 9.—()—A 49-year- old married hospital orderly who has spent more than a third of his life in were as follows: \. rs ; 1933—25; | Prison was charged with murder| fice.” 1930—30; 1931—33; 1932—20; 1 + | Mon day as tho atrangler’ Fai of Paula Magagna, 8 fourth al inventors’ Brooklyn child in as many years to die at the 29 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1 2 2 17 «17 «22 = 19] hands of an attacker. 4 10 1 4 12 6 16; The man, Lawrence Marks, pa- 6 10 8 6 7 . 9 18) roled from Sing Sing several months 18 40 34 2 32 26 23/ ago, broke after police shattered 15 144 16 «16 «616 «631 «618 ~—s:17 | separate alibis he gave during a 13- 16 4 . 2 2 ‘ H hour grilling. 5. He confessed to choking the girl to i 22M alah 818 death with a Sond and muitiaticg her| Etta of Protestant 6 15 8 12 6 5 10! body in the basement of her tene-|- 1213 10 # 98 812 ment home July 31, Assistant Dis- MERCURY MOUNTS THROUGHOUT ND. Scattered Points Report Light Rainfall; Heat Relief Is Unlikely North Dakota Monday with weather After a week-end of moderately at scattered points: throughou the It was 87 in Bismarck at noon The prediction is “more or less un- ness. Ben Haugen, Cleveland, a son, Portu- ip ine lonly sascha meres eee He Lisbon, ju-jably thundershowers extreme east Yangements have been made. —— eee DEVILS LAKE MAN DIES Azores, ‘Schwabenland waits to launch the|,25 and Carrington with .24 led the portion; not so warm Tuesday north- The next stop will be Horta, the|west portion.” where the catapult ship Oakes with .26 inches, Drake with Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 9—(P}— seaplane on its fli 2 ight to New York.jrest of the state points in the pre- John Knutson, 56, Devils Lake labor-|The final le e tal ipitatic oll ie week-end. er, was found di on a vacant lot in| a Hse SS xpected to take |cipitation column over tht the business district Saturday night, 2 victim of heart failure. BISMARCK PAINT & GLASS CO. 401 Fourth St. Phone 399 8 1, JEWEL Paints, Varnishes, Brushes, fa- Glass and Artists’ Materials. 8. E. Spohn, Mgr. Bismarck When Las tions? ... enjoying it with GAS in your home. -: DON’T George Bowers, 90, JAMESTOWN MAN DIES Rain also fell at Parshall, Garrison, Dunn Center, Sharon, Max, Hankin- son, Devils Lake and Pembina. Beach and Dickinson in the west- Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 9—()—lern portion each had maximum tem- er home at Doon, Iowa. Fred J. Hessinger PLUMBER 410 Tenth Street Phone 1603 PROMPT GUARANTEED SERVICE No job too large—No job too email t Winter was over... did you make any resolu- If not RESOLVE that next winter will find you HEAT—automat- ically circulated throughout every room BUY or make arrangements for your winter heating until we announce our BIG SALE on August 16. It will pay you to wait until the details are explained to you. MONTANA-DAKOTA UTILITIES CO. who came to peratures of 96 over the week-end, the Jamestown two weeks ago to make his |tvarmest in the state. home with his daughter, Mrs. A. R. Thompson, died Saturday night the ye} result of @ stroke of apoplexy. Fu-| Officials Return to neral services will be held at his for- Farm for Farm Ideas Washington, Aug. 9.—(?)—Two groups of government officials are go- ing “back to the farm” to get ideas for agricultural legislation. Secretary Wallace and his lieuten- ants will discuss a 1938 farm program at 16 large picnics in the corn belt between Aug. 11 and 20. A group of six senators has an- nounced general arrangements for hearings in the principal farm areas on crop control and crop loans. Chairman Smith (Dem., 8. C.), of the senate agriculture committee named himself head of the invesi- gators. To serve wilh him he chose Senators McGil (Dem., Kas.), Pope (Dem., Ida.), Moore (Dem., N. J.), Bankhead (Dem., Ala.), and Frazier (Rep., N. D.) Pope and McGill introduced in the senate the “ever-normal granary” program advocated by Secretary Wal- lace and some farm organizations. Valley City Beauty Is Named Festival Queen trict Attorney Fredick Kopff an- nounced, Slope Briefs New Salem — Grimacing children) jyn girls, have greeted Superintendent MB aa Jacobson’s announcement the school! Mrs. Miram Saratkin, who has an year here begns Tuesday, Sept. 7. Kulm — Air-minded Carl Wilke, | her 8-year-old daughter Aug. 3, three merchant, has purcahsed & $10,000/ days after Paula was isin i cabin plane of the latest model. pioeenas Mr BSE Gillette Family Is Hazelton.—Funeral services were conducted here for Nels P, Anderson, 6C, pioneer, well driller and business- man ‘of Emmons county. loose gravel and overturned near Buf- Steele — Homestead resident nine miles south of here for 32 years, H.|fal0 §. D. Priday morning, Mr. and P, Johnson, 72, died at Woodlawn, | St Neve Gillette, 706 Tenth 8t., Wash. Mrs. Calmer Uglem of Steele/ ii 75 two daughters, Geraldine, is a daughter. sand Jean, 14, were recovering satis- Lesh hiya ; ite, an employe of the Bis- Hazelton—With WPA help Hazel-| marck Grocery conan received a ton is launching @ sidewalk bullding | deep gash on his arm. Geraldine’s and repsiring, street gutter building} head was cut and Jean suffered a and repairing program. pactuted collar-bone. Mrs. Gillette, who works for the Northwest Bell Linton—Making its roadbed safer,| Telephone company, received bruises the Northern Pacific is laying 90-| and a strained back. pound rails on Linton branch curves.| The car was badly wrecked. Tracks have been reballasted with} The Gillette family was returning cinders this year. to Bismarck from a vacation in Colo- rado when the accident occurred, Irene Anderson Is Bruised in Wreck Severely bruised when the car in Strasburg — Dead at Aberdeen 15! which she was returning to Bismarck Mrs. Eva Volk Burgad, resident here/ nit another car that had stopped 30 years. : suddenly in the road Sunday after- noon, Irene Anderson, 617 Eighth 8t., Selfridge—Sioux county friends of| was ‘recovering at her home Mon. former AAA agent Ross Cook con-/ day, gratulate him on his appointment] ‘The accident occurred about 17 as Renville county agricultural agent.[ miles south of Valley City. Miss Anderson, an operator for Northwest Bell Telephone company, was returning from a vacation spent; at Lidgerwood, N. D., when the acci- dent occurred, She was traveling with her uncle, Frank Prochaski and a cousin, Leona Kabella, of Lidgerwood, both of whom received only minor injuries. Zeeland—Buried here was John P. Pfeifer, 24, band director of Rock Lake schools, who died of pneumonia at Dayton, Wash., while on a vaca- tion trip. New Salem — Hans Kramer's left hand was snagged by a falling win- dow, severely gashed. The 12-year- old son of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Kra- mer will be able to write by the time schoo] bells ring. Livona—Plunged 18 feet when stakes holding guyline supports of a iledri' , Fred W. : WPA worker suffered @ aught sku | Long Illness Fatal to srecture, dislocated) 42%) Cleveland Woman, 40 and severe bruises. Havelton—Six-year-old Lester Al-| , Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 9—(P)—Mrs, baugh examined his father’s moving|J0hn L. Williams, 40, died Saturday mower with a finger. Off came the| Dight at her farm home southeast of tip of the finger. His physician was Cleveland after a lingering illness. forced to take off another section to| Survivors are her husband and five fix it. children, her father, C. M. Holter, Valley, Olly, and the following broth- Hettinger—John Marion expects | €Ts an r: Mrs. Paul Jungwitsch, operations of his new brick plant here | Carl O. Holter, and George Holter, to commence in 10 days. The plant | Valley City; Martin Holter, Bismarck; has a capacity of 25,000 bricks and|Theodore Holter, Fargo; Reynard, 6,000 tile per day. Minneapolis, and Clifford, Los Ang- Devils Lake, Aug. 9.—(?)—Maxine Pagel, brown-haired lhss from Val- ley City, was crowned “Queen of the Dakota Harvest” near midnight Sat- urday to climax the three-day Golden Grain festival, sponsored by the state junior chamber of commerce. A crowd of spproximately 10,000 saw Miss Pagel receive a golden crown, festooned with wheat, at a street dance. She also was given a vase made of North Dakota clay and presented by the state university as a token of her victory over seven other beauties, OTTO DIRLAM LOCK and GUNSMITH —— MACHINIST — Sharpening Lawn Mowers Our 218 Main Avenue French & Welch Tin Shop PHONE 141 eles. Funeral services will be held Richardton—State Senator. J. P.|here Tuesday afternoon. Cain of Dickinson will be one of the ae Expulsion of German principal rete ah the Richasdion waterwor! cation celebration Newsmen Protested Aug. 20. Burns, president of the Nation- congress, reviewed the bright ideas of 1937 patented by members of the congress and found “some real boons to man- Kind have turned up. “Take the key hole funnel for | Tospeak Here ]|Accidents Fifth Largest |HOSPITALORDERLY |Non-Skid Garters for Cause of Deaths in State} [5 HELD IN CRIME; Men Among Inventions Chicago, Aug. 9.—(#)—Looking over a list of devices including a keyhole funnel, non-skid garters and a bullet-proof vest that shouldn't leak, Albert G. Burns of Almeda, Calif., opined: “Yes sir, this has been one of the greatest years for inventions since they opened the patent of- or another have thought how nice it would be if we had a funnel on our key hole when we came home those dark nights. “Well, Mr. Ralph A. Ringseis of San Francisco has patented such @ device and gets hundreds of letters from those husbands of America who spend an evening with the boys. “I could name others, like the non-skid garters for men with twitchy legs, invented by Miss Sarah Lipton of New York, and waterproof matches invented by Mr. Thomas L. Cunningham, also of New York, for the convenience inetance. Most of us at one time of swimmers and hunters.” Leader Is Postponed Saar Lotiad atts of the Kopff said the prisoner, a small, canfeeslanal leader, a wiry, partly bald man with bulging| postponed Monday after several hun- brown eyes, denied complicity in thelareq church-goers had paraded in unsolved slaying of two other Brook-jthe ete isles of suburban Dahlem agi a on prayer meetings for Marks was arrested Saturday after|the “rebel pastor.” - . apartment in the building where he| tsi” Tusciay charged whe ree, lived, complained he had molested|ance to Nagi church policy, The eleventh-hour postpont was explained cryptically in official quarters as due “to the necessity for * ° agal e sul e com- Injured in Accident|mancer. No new date was known to have Injured when their car struck | been set. . lement, “Where FOR SOUND J. HEATING COUNSEL?” U, S. OFFICIAL DIES St. Paul, Aug. 9.—(?)—Sigurd B. Qvale, 73, district supervisor of the northwest alcohol tax unit of the U. 8. treasury department, died here Protestant | Sunday after a long illness. He had 8. FEVOLD < BOILERS _ STOKERS Come to Crane—the one place where you can get impartial advice! Crane will help YOU choose the type of heating system that best suits your particular house and requirements. The reason? Crane has a COMPLETE line of equipment, embrac- ing every known type of heating system. Your bome—your preference—and your budget can be fitted exactly. No matter what system you choose, you will get Crane high quality io every detail. Perhaps a Basmor Gas-Fired Boiler will suit you bese. But regardless of your requirements, CranEquipment will fill them. CranEquip for lasting satisfaction and economy. Seeyour Plumbingand ‘Heating Contractorforcompleteinformation CRANE CRANE CO., 636 Northern Pacific Ave., Fargo, N. D. USE OUR DISPLAY ROOM FOR SELECTING HEATING AND PLUMBING EQUIPMENT Napoleon—Bill Fercho paid a fine of $10 and spent a few days in jail for taking a “crack” at his wife while celebrating with his friend, Joe Bosch. Bosch was fined $5 for being drunk The three, Werner von Crome, of rd discs nexiy the Berlin Lokalanzeiger, and the McClusky—An old church building | Y°U"ger writers Franz Otto Wrede and Wold Dietrich Langen, workirg here ney been puree by McClusky for ® news agency whi ich reports ‘Masons lodge purposer news and opinions of Germans Richardton — Rt. Rev. Cuthbert | 2broad, were ordered to leave England Goeb, abbot of Assumption abbey, by the home office last week-end. sails from Boston Aug. 15 for Rome London, Aug. 9. — () — Germany protested formally to Great Britain Monday against the expulsion of Three Nazi newspapermen. ‘There was no explanation of the or- where he will attend an international | ¢er. conference of abbots. He will be away at least two months. Father] LEARY WAS SOLD TO CUBS Prior will be in charge of the abbey| Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 9.—(P)—Al in the interim. Leary, Bismarck and Jamestown base- ball player, was sold to the Chicago Richardton—Costing approximately |Cubs Monday morning. He will go $14,000, the Mischel Lumber company|to the farm at Pensacola, Fis. Al will build a new petiole gaeh in| Breitbach announced, the Haymarsh communit; replace “A , The Athletics and Phillies won't an original structure destroyed by ire. play their spring series next year. PLUMBING FOR “tome” f'l Insurance of every kind SEE Obert A. Olson 106 sr st, Bismarck PHONE 250 H. A. THOMPSON & SONS poate + - Heating it 205 Seventh St. Phone 66 It’s August again! A good month to paint your house. This time use— MOORWHITE PRIMER —and — MOORE’S HOUSE, PAINT You Need These LOOSE LEAF Social Security Outfits Complete with Forms Adopted by Accountants Everywhere FOR 50 EMPLOYEES OR LESS stocxno.so-sa ea) Ao 0 and six divider sheets Sack 50 Personal Record Sheets 50 Employees Earning Record Sheets Outfits for larger firms proportion. ately priced PHONE 2200 suddenly was | been on leave of absence since Jan- uary because of poor health. Loans Sales and Rentals, City and Farm Property Over Cowan’s Drug Store Bismarck, N. D. PHONE 706 THESE LABOR-SAVING SYSTEMS ON SALE AT Bismarck Tribune Co. STATIONERY DEPARTMENT Baby Born in Death Dies After 46 Hours Philadelphia, Aug. 9.—(?)—Domi- nick Boccassini, stunned by tragedy, prepared Monday to bury his dead— his wife and the tiny daughter med- ical science was unable to save. The baby, Frances Mary, lived 46 hours after she was delivered in a post-mortem Caesarian operation at +|the Philadelphia general hospital. feakened we by choking attacks, she died shortly after midnight Sunday morning in a scene similar to that two days before when Dr. John Nor- bit, chief resident obstetrician, deliv- ered her one minute after her mothers death. Dr. Corbit said premature birth was the cause of death. *R, C. FORSYTHE “The One-Trip Plumber” Plumbing—Heating—Gas-Fitting Estimates Furnished — All work Electrical Wiring and Contracting General Electric Products Hot-Point Refrigeration Cool-Aire Air Conditioning Service Electric Company John B. Kottsick, Prop. 206 Broadway Telephone 8 if FURNACES BURNE NERS | ‘Smal in Siza—a Giant te Performance THE BASMOR f GAS-FIRED BOILER Peon $25 Be; 99-10 Outiit Consists of Loose Leaf Ring Binder 8210% Personnel Record Sheets All Necessary Information for Secial Security Recerds

Other pages from this issue: