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¥ at MOTE TRANSPERED TO INDIAN SCHOOL AT PHOENIX, ARIZ. Construction of Million Dollar Plant at Fort Yates De- layed by U. S. Because of economies being inaug-/( urated in Washington, work on the new Fort Yates Indian school en- largement program is not developing as fast as anticipated, Sharon R. Mote, superintendent, announced Wednesday as he also made known| the fact he has been promoted to the superintendency of the Indian school at Phoenix, WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair tonight and Thursday; not so cool to- night; warmer Thursday. For North Dakota: Fair tonight cool west and north tonigh y. For South Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Thursday; somewhat cooler extreme southeast tonight; warmer Thursday. For Montana: Partly cloudy to- night and Thursday; warmer tonight extreme east portion. For Minnesota: Fair tonight and Thursday; slightly cooler in extreme east portion tonight; somewhat warmer Thursday afternoon. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is, hig! over the northwestern states, Seattle 30,24 inches, while a low pressure area extends from the middle Missis- sippl alley to the southwestern states, Phoenix 29.78 inches. The weather is somewhat unsettled in all sections and showers have occurred from the middle Mississippi Valley to the southern Plains States and at a few scattered stations in the northwestern states. Temperatures are quite high in the central states, but cooler weath- er prevails in the Dakotas, North Dakota Corn Wheat Re- gion Summary on the week ending August 10, Warm drying week caused small grains to ripen rapidly. Some reports of corn curling received. Corn most- ly in silk stage, much in milk » Potatoes fair to excellent east por- tion, but need rain badly central and west portions. Pastures, ranges and meadows generally in need of mois- ture. Bismarck station baromet 8. d to Sunrise, 5:35 2. m. Sunset, 8:01 p. m. : PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to date Total, January 1st to dat Normal, Ji Accumull exce: | been given harvest jobs in more for- | Forks, and Devils Lake. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1937 OVER 3,000 MEN IN DROUTH AREA GIVEN JOBS FARTHER EAST Over 7,000 Men Found. Work in Harvest Fields During Last 15 Days Between 3,000 and 3,500 men from cropless areas of North Dakota have tunate areas of the state through the national re-employment service, Don Larin, state field supervisor, estimat- ed this week. Approximately 7,000 men altogether have found harvest jobs through the service during the past 15 days, Larin said. Jobs are still available, he said, if job-seekers’ applications are cleared through their local offices. Between Aug. 2 and Aug. 7, 1,851 orders, representing 2,500 men, were sent the service’s offices at Jamestown, Fargo, Grafton, Minot, Wahpeton, Grand IRVING G. IVERSON DIES AT SAN HAVEN Funeral for Wilton Tuberculosis Victim Will Be Thursday at 2:30 NiS=NES 5 eyes Sas! William ‘Erickson, Little Falls, William L, Ganson, Terry, Mont.; and Mr: E, Thomas and_ family, Hettinger; Mr. and Mrs, Martin V. Keller and family, Larchmont, N, Mrs. Larrabee and daughter, Paul, Minn.; and A. E. Ellis and fam- ily, Cuenca ‘Ecuador, South America, ince Hotel Mrs. J. Johnson and Mrs. W, Smith, Moose Jaw, 0. BL, Schmidt, San Mateo, Calif; Blanche Cassidy and Ruth Greggs, Tomah, Wis.; Mr. and Mrs. 8. Israel, Detroit, Mic! Mrs. J. Y. Jeans, Villa Nova, Pa; Mi: Margaret Teeney, Haverford, Pa.; A. W. Chadwick, Regina, Sa Mrs, Clarence Crystel, Mi Stanley Guy, Terry, Mont, Births Son, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Miller, Price, N. D., 5:15 p. m. Tuesday, Bis- marck hospital. Hearing on the application of J. A. Roswick, Bismarck, to purchase the Class A certificate authorizing mo- Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl, pastor of Trinity Lutheran church, will con- duct worship services in the Congre- gational church at Wing, Sunday at 8p.m. William Schants, chief accountant, and J. K. Murray, counsel, for the E. day for Duluth where they will at- SOLDIER'S RAGE 10 DYING WIFE FUTILE = | Mrs. Donald MeConn, 20, Minot, Dies Few Hours Before Hus- band Arrives Home Minot, N. D., Aug. 11—Death won ; Donald McConn of Co. D, raced from Camp Ripley, Minn., to Minot to reach the bedside of his wife, stricken with pul- monary edema. Private McConn arrived in Minot & few hours after Mrs. McConn, 20, had passed away in =. local hospital. She had been taken to the hospital Saturday. Mrs. Elverna Taylor McConn was born at Milton, Feb. 19, 1917, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Taylor of Minot. She formerly re- sided at Devils Lake. She was mar- ried to Mr. McConn, a clerk in a local store, April 28, 1935. They had no children. Funeral services Wednesday afternoon at the First Methodist church with Rev. H. E. it | Dierenfield officiating. Burial was in Rosehill cemetery. Seriousness of Mrs. McConn’s con- dition was not recognized until Sun- day morning a few hours after her physician had informed the husband that he might leave with the national guard unit for the encampment. Roosevelt Approves Flood Control Monies + Washington, Aug. 11.—(#)—Preal- dent Roosevelt has approved alloca- tions totalling $44,437,700 for 44 flood "| control projects congress authorized Albino Robin Seen With Fellows Here vr A_ white robin, apparently hatched this spring, has joined the crew of red-breasts which ca- vort on the green lawn of the Bismarck waterworks plant west of the city. % The albino, all white except its eyes, has been seen around the ‘Waterworks several times daily since Saturday, according to W. B. Hartley, engineer, - It is usually in company with other robins, and except for be- ing wilder than the other birds, seems normal, Hartley said. He has made no effort to catch it. Albino robins, though quite rare, do sometimes occur, accord- ing to Russell Reid, curator of the state historical society. INSURGENTS SHOVE BACK LOYAL LINES Open New Drive on Provincial Capital of Cuenca as Com- munications Center lendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, U. §. OFFICIAL URGES FARM LEGISLATION Existing Laws Incapable of Holding Up Prices, Alfred Black Declares Md., Aug. 11—()—Alfred G. Black, chief economist of the agriculture department, said Wednes- day existing farm laws are “clearly incapable” of supporting prices. Black told a joint meeting of farm bureau and grange members here “it is too much to. ask that the burden ‘of meeting the problem of low prices be solved with the limited machinery made available” under the soil con- servation act. Black said an adequate trol program that will improve upon the old AAA program, and include provisions of the “ever-normal gran- ary” advocated by Secretary Wallace, will be needed. “But it will not be supplied,” he Predicted, “unless farmers and farm crganizations, east and west, north and south, can after free and open discussion arrive at an agreement.” Black said “attractiveness’ of pres- ent day farm prices” could change quickly into “only a happy memory.” “If the drouths of 1934 and 1936 had not come,” he said, “I am not at all sure that we would find the farm commodity situation as satisfactory as ‘ crop con- supplies and prices.’ The economist predicted farm cash income for this year “will be in the vicinity of $10,000,000,000.” FINDS WAY FROM MINE Marion, Til, Aug. 11-—)—Jesse Wilson, 28, lost in the abandoned workings of an old mine near here fo; nearly 40 hours, unaided from the slope today while 30 rescuers searched for him. CAPITOL Last Times Today First. Show at 6:45 Big 2 Features Fs find it right now with regard to Funeral services for Irving G. Iver-| tend regional conference of state pp dune er BS el bee olnacl woud at 7] unemployment compensation commis- High Ter pct,|@ m., Tuesday at the state tuber-| sions. heat Ee CHAT ANE oe Army engineers, making this an- nouncement said other allotments Probably will be made within two months. Work. on the $44,487,700 worth of projects can start as soon as conditions in the various areas per- mit, they said. NORTH DAKOTA POINTS BISMARCK, clear . Sharon R. Mote Beach, clear ‘arrington, Although the Indian bureau had Groce clear anticipated expending $200,000 this| Dickinson, cl year in constructing a new combina- rakes olay, tion high school, Wilton. Burial will be in the Wilton ceme- Mr. Iverson was born in Bismarck oo |in December, 1900, and attended schools in Wilton. Two years ago he married Ruth MacMille of Los Ang- eles, His widow is now in Los Ang- mountains. The insurgents sim at The approved projects, with allo-|capture of Cuenca, the cations from regular department and | capital, as center of the vital govern- relief funds included: Glasgow, Mont.,/ment communications network in on Milk Riyer, $12,900 and $12,900; | Eastern Spain. 1, Mont., on Yellowstone river, CHARLES QUIGLEY DOROTHY WILSON EDDIE NUGENT, “YouCan'tHave Everything” auditorium and! Garrison, gymnasium at Fort Yates, the budget | Jamestow: bureau refused to approve the al-| Max, clear location, Mote declared. ‘ai Parshall, clear Under the enlargement plans, $200,- 900 was to be expended yearly for the next five years in constructing a mil- licn-dollar school plant to accommo- date all pupils of the Standing Rock reservation who now go to schools at Yates, Pierre, Wahpeton, Pine Ridge and other schools. With Mote’s transfer to Phoenix, L. C. Lippert, superintendent of the Indian agency at Fort Yates, becomes manager of the abandoned Bismarck Indian school plant which probably will be transferred by the department of the interior to the war depart- ment for CCC purposes. According to plans now underway, the North Dakota administrative of- fices of the CCC at Fort Lincoln and the CCC camp force at Mandan will be stationed permanently at the plant on banks of the Missouri river west of Bismarek. ’ Mote will have charge of a school &¢ Phoenix with an average enroll- ment of 500. Children of the Apache, Pueblo, Navajo, Mojave, “Pima “and Papago tribes attend. Accompanying Mr. Mote to Phoenix when he leaves sometime next week will be Mrs. Mote and four of their children, and Mrs. Mote’s mother, Mrs, Elizabeth Gerhardt. Robert Mote is matriculating at the Univer- sity of California in Berkeley and William will finish his senior year @t Jamestown college. Former Lake Bottom Now Rich Field Land Williston, N. D., Aug. 11—(P)— Prospects of a 40 to 70 bushel crop were visualized Wednesday by John Lohse, Williams county farmer, liv- ing in the heart of the drouth strick- fed Lag ef Northwestern North Da- cota. Lohse this spring plowed and seed- ed land which once was the bed of Cottonwood. lake, near Alamo, dried up after recurring years of drouth. Watered by the store of subsoil moisture, the crops have grown and ed. Lohse expects the barley will yield 40 to 60 bushels to the acre, the oats 55 to 70 bushels. ‘Complete Liquidation Of 26 Banks Revealed ‘Washington, Aug. 11—(?)—J, F. T. O'Connor, comptroller of the cur- rency, announced Tuesday completed hai of 26 receiverships during The banks and total disbursements, including offsets allowed to depost- tors and other creditors, included: First National bank, Stone Lake, Wis., $60,419, Mills County National bank, Glenwood, Iowa, $278,924; First Na- tional bank, Manilla, Iowa, $160,569; First National Bank, Woodstock, Minn., $108,602; Jackson National bank, Jackson, Minn., $37.027. GETS PRISON SENTENCE Appleton, Wis., Aug. 11.—(7)—Glen Barker, 24-year-old Shiocton farm youth, was sentenced Tuesday to 14 to 25 years in the state prison after the pleaded guilty to a charge of stab- bing to death Helen Welhouse, 18, of Kimberly Sunday night. , MINNESOTA YOUTH DROWNS Pipestone, Minn., Aug. 11—(P)— Byron Hoving, 18, drowned Tuesday night while swimming in a reservoir at Ihlen, nine miles southeast of Pipestone. eS ATURE, OR TN Sanish, peldy Williston, pc! Devils Luke, Grand Forks, clear Hankinson, cle: Lisbon, clear Napoleon, clear Oakes, clear . Pembina, clear . Wishek, clear .. MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. Moorhead, clear 80 60 00 SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- Aberdeen, peldy, Huron, peldy. Mobridge, peidy Pierre, clear .. Rapld City, cldy. Glendive, clear .. Havre, clear Helena, cldy. .. Lewistown, clear Miles City, pcldy. Amarillo, Texas, cldy. . Boise, Idaho, clear .... 86 Calgary, Alta., peldy. . Casper, Wyo., pcldy. 9 Chicago, Il., cldy. Denver, Colo, clear 94 Des Moines, iowa, cldy. 94 Dodge City, Ki clear 106 Dubois, Idaho, Edmonton, Alta. Kamloops, B C., peldy. 72 Kansas City, Mo., pcldy. 90 Los Angeles, Cal., Mplis.-St. ul, M., cldy. 90 Modena, Utah, clear .. 94 No. Platte, Ni 14: Okla, City, Phoenix, Ariz., ¥- Pr. Albert, eldy. Qu’Appell Roseburg, St. Louis, Salt Lake Cit; leat Santa Fe, N. Mex., clear 92 8, 8. Marie, Mich., peldy. 84 Seattle, Wash., cldy. .. 70 Sheridan, cldy. .. Sioux City, I Spokane, W: a Swift Current, 8. The Pas, Man. Winnemuca: ‘Winnipeg, Mr, and Mrs, and a sister, Mrs. F. M. Wilton. There were no children. 0 | Jury exonerated i |band, George, 46, because he ques- eles, too ill to return to Wilton for the funeral. Mr. Iverson also leaves his parents, I, G, Iverson, Wilton, Corrington, Death came after an illness of eight months, SO | Drivers Must Have | Licenses by Sunday Final deadline for purchase of drivers’ licenses required by law has been set for Sunday, P. H. McGurren, state highway ¢om- missioner, said Wednesday. . The road official said approxi- mately 48,000 North Dakota au- tomobile operators have not yet purchased drivers’ licenses ac- cording to the July report issued by A. J. Fischer, department di- ae jurren asserted he will -or- der all state highway patrolmen and law enforcement officers to arrest any person found operating @ motor vehicle on state highways without a license after the dead- line. He said sale of licenses this year has been less than for the similar period last year, He ex- plained there are 230 agents in the state who are equipped to is- sue loenses. Woman Justified in Killing, Court Holds Chicago, Aug. 11.—()—A coroner's a Ruth Werlein, 35, who police confessed she shot and killed her hus- tioned the paternity of their nine months old son, David. The jury returned a verdict of 00 | “justifiable homicide” after hearing the testimony of Mrs. Werlein’s Child Made Orphan by Poison Now Has Home St. Paul, Aug. 11—()—Little two year old Ruth Degler who was or- phaned by food poisoning which kill- ed her father, mother, five year old sister and her mother's aunt, hed s home Wednesday. Her maternal uncle Eugene Buch cared for the child under instructions of @ painfully scrawled note her moth- er, Mrs. Frederick Degier, 29, scratch- ed out on hospital note paper when she learned physicians had given up hope of saving her life. The message said simply: “My baby is yours, my brother.” Wednesday Butch and his wife, childless, are for the only member of the Degler family who did not eat the green home-canned beans which physicians sald caused the Poisoning when served in a salad. Mrs, Ursula Lorch, 81, Mrs, Degler’s aunt, died Tuesday night from the af- fliction—botulism. x FARGO WOMAN PASSES Fargo, N. D., Aug. 11.—(¢?)—Funeral’ services will be Friday for Mrs. Syvert Boe, 70, of Fargo, who died Monday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Mike Aune of Colfax, N. D. Besides her husband and Mrs. Aune, she jeaves another daughter, Mrs. Min- nie Connolly, Fargo. daughter by her first marriage, Shir- ley Ruth Hall, 9, who said her mother fired only after Werlein had severely beaten his wife. Consider Wage Lifts For Railway Workers Chicago, Aug. 11.—()—Discussion of demands for a 20 per cent wage increase for about 300,000 railroad operating workers began Wevnesday at a conference of representatives of the big five brotherhoods and a com- mittee representing the nation’s car- riers. The sessions were closed. Spokes- men said the conferees’ included 350 delegates from the brotherhoods and 15 from the railroad companies, AGENTS NAB MAN Fargo, N. D., Aug. 11.—()—Arrest- ed at Cavalier late Tuesday by fed- eral narcotic agents, Joseph Allair, said to be @ doctor, is being held in the Cavalier jail pending transport- ation to the Cass county jail on a charge of forging prescriptions for narcotics. FIGHT GRASSHOPPER PLAGUE St. Paul, Aug. 11.—(#)—The state executive council Wednesday granted A. G. Ruggles, state entomologist, $50,000 to fight a grasshopper plague which Sam Hauge, deputy agricul- ture commissioner, reported spread to 51 Southern Minnesota counties. Evidence Given by Drunkometer Holds GREEN SERVICES FRIDAY Fargo, N. D., Aug. 11.—()—Funera] services for Fred G. Green, R & G Bootery owner, fatally injured Tues- day when his car left the highway near Glyndon and turned over in the ditch, will be at 2 p. m. Friday nee E. F. Moore funeral chapel NAMES DEPUTY St. Paul, Aug. 11.—()—Ray D. No- lan, director of the state division of lands and minerals,. We Hops Off on First Leg of Survey Flight Over Atlantic to New York Luebeck, Germany, Aug. 11—(7)— The seaplane took off for Lisbon at 7:50 a. m. (1:50 a. m., ES.T.) Wernesday on the first Jeg of her maiden voyage to New York surveying a route for future trans- Atlantic air service linking the United States and Germany. The 16-ton flying ship roared Portugal, considered. the most dan- gerous section of the journey because Flight Captain Joachim Blanken- burg said he expected to make the first leg in about-13 hours, Lisbon the Ne wed fly to the Azores > catapult ship Schwabenand is stand- ing by to refuel and launch the plane nae 2,300 mile final hop to New ‘orl ! + The flight is the first of eight trips scheduled this year across the At- French Air Bombers Forsyth, $40,000 and $40.000; Saco, Mont., on Beaver Creek, $13,400 and $13,400; Belle Fourche on Belle Fourche river, $14,500 and $14,500. RETIRED BANKER DIES Los Angeles, Aug. 11.—()—Fu- neral services will be held Wednesday for Hians I, Olston, retired president of the First National Bank of Lake Preston, 8. D., who died Sunday at his home here. He came here ten years ago. D,, farmer, died at the home of @ son- in-law and daughter at Climax. The body was taken to Pekin for burial. Act Against Rebellion Deir-El-Zor, Syria, Aug. 11—(P)— army Syria are primitive; also, the French authorities kept the incident quiet. Boy, 6, Unable to Talk English, Travels Alone Chicago, Aug, 11.—(#)—Tagged like ® parcel, 6-year-old Arthur Koch, who speks no English, was delivered to the Northwestern railway station safely Tuesday and given reservations for the next leg of his trip from Ger- many to San Francisco to visit his The tag about Arthur's neck, car- and other information. His papers showed he had left his father. Henry, at Hartford, Conn. $ 72 Alleged Sabotists Executed by Russians Moscow, Aug. 11.)()—The execu- tion of 72 alleged Far Eastern rail- road wreckers accused of conniving with the Japanese secret service was reported Wednesday by the Irkutsk newspaper “East Siberia Pravda.” The executions followed others ih series, but the group was one of the largest to be executed in Soviet Rus- in this Far Eastern campaign to root out spies and wreckers is 320. Spotlight Turns To Older Dionnes named as his deputy, Henry E. Cass of New York Mills. Cass, now re- siding in St. Paul, is deputy state aminer with the banking NAGURBSKI TO WRESTLE ex- it. Mexico City wil) wrestle Wednesday night at Wrigley field for what Promoter Jack Daro says is the prota championship. ¥ whiekies, wevtral epirite dictilied trem Corporation, His Consideration Is All for Naught Charles Kupitz, Jr., knows false alarms are a waste of taxpayers’ money and firemen’s patience, So when he wanted to clean his car motor with a new type of carbon-cleaning fluid, which produces quantities of smoke, Tuesday night, he took the car out to the eastern limits of Bis- marck, at the corner of Twenty- fourth 8t., and Main ave. Residents who heard the fire whistle about 8:30 p. m., Tuesday, now know he should have saved ht whistles tn thl 6 otraigt 18 product are 8 years Executive Offiecs, New. York. DISTRIBUTED BY MANDAN BEVERAGE COMPANY | Mandan, N. Dak. Telephone Ritz Brothers Don Ameche Tony Martin - Next Attraction Thursday - Friday See what really happens behind the doors of a great hospital! Thurs., Fri, & Sat. HOWLywood’s Favorite Sons ... in a Patent BERT Medicine Drama! Wi Good medicine for giggle glands! “O35 " LES PER GALLON IN OUR RVSLER ROVALS* f “My wire AND I recently drove from San Francisco to Seattle. Upon checking our. mileage, we were unable to believe our Chrysler Royal could be so economical. “Subsequent check-ups, how- ever, proved that we were getting THESE COMMENTS ARE TYPYCML OF OWNERS MLL OVER THE COUNTRY! & cnnvstzr RovAat . . . Coupe, $810. Pour-Door Touring Sedan with tronk, 9920. Right ether body etyles. He CHRYSLER IMPERIAL... Coupe, $1030, Feur-Door Tou ag Sedan with trank, $1100. Four echer body styles. k CHRYSLER CUSTOM IMPERIAL. ++» Gor S-Possenger Sedan, $2060, Sedan Limousine, $7160. He CHRYSLER AIRFLOW +o, Passenger Seden 20d Coupe, $1610. EASY TO BUY 01 convenient terms with the official Commercial Credit Company time payment plan, % All prices quoted are dclivered prices in Detroit, with Federal taxes, bumpers, epare tire and tobe, and prepara- on for delivery included. Any otate OF local tax must be added, To ascenain grice in vour'city, simply 044 transportation cherres. . . local and state taxes if any. Additions! -ncoossories available at prices to be quoted by the dealer, Tune in on Majer Every Thursday, 9 to 19P. M., £.D.S.T. macnn +BILL HUDLOW 1 Tenn. “‘Beueve ME, 1 am the proudest boy in our school when dad and mother let me drive our Chrysler © Royal—and, boy, how I can drive it!- It sure has pick-up, Power and pep and its brakes stop you on a dime. I like its side-sway eliminator, too, be- cause it permits me to take curves safely. I think it’s the swellest-lookingcarontheroad.”” ER INVADES THE LOW-PRICED FELD FREDERICK £. DUFFIELD, San Francisco, Calif. slightly less than 24 miles to the gallon—23 6/7 to be exact. The new Gold Seal Engine is truly amarvel!”” CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, Inc, 122 Main Ave. Bismarck, N Phone 700