The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1937, Page 1

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)

Telephone 2200 @ Six Quarter Million Gripped in Battle on Tientsin Front Where Were Killed CHINESE ADVANE Special Session GUARD OPENS PUSH AGAINST INVADERS Battlefront Extends Over 150 Miles as Defenders Attack on Four Points JAPANESE CAUGHT BY RAINS Fighting Continues at Shanghai » as Attackers Promise ‘Big Offensive’ were engaged by these irregulars, thus being kept from use against the (Continued on Page Two) JASZKOWIAK RITES WILL BE THURSDAY Funeral for Drowning Victim to Be Held in St. Mary's Procathedral at 8 A. M. Funeral services for Leo Jasskowiak, 32-year-old Bismarck man drowned northwest of the city Sunday eve- ning, will be-held at 8 a. m. ‘Thurs- day at St. Mary’s procathedral. Jasskowiak’s body was recovered after @ three-hour search directed by be in 8 family plot at ei} 5 Pallbearers will be John Henlein, Carl Maassen, Lawrence Wyciskala, E. M. Davis, Carl Eliason and Wil- a aastowiek body will le in state ¥] at Calnan’s until 4 p. m. Wednesday when it will be taken to the home of his brother, Paul, at 419 Twelfth St., to lie there until the funeral. Horst Adoption Case Hearing Is Postponed Horst wi ustody of the boy since his birth. Leo Utecht Is Named THE BIS . ESTABLISHED 1878 @ Killed As Na Idea Is oe BURTON W. DRIGGS RESINS HIS POST WITH DEAF SCHOOL Superintendent of Devils Lake _ Institution Since 1921 Leaving for Idaho DRIGGS to receive it sometime Tues- a. Degas stated the appointment The board de- resignation until appointed him for a two-year term. as one of the nation’s ical education for the blind, He has been active in various other national associations. Driggs will not be going to un- familiar country. He was born at Manti, Utah, and was raised in the ‘West. He attended the University of Utah and was graduated from Gal- laudet college. He received his higher education at the University of Cali- fornia and was awarded s master’s degree by Gallaudet. For seven, years he was an instructor in the California School for the Deaf and Blind. At Devils Lake, Driggs has been active as 8 Mason, an Elk, a Rotarian and as a member of the Country club. ‘The Driggs have three living. chil- dren. ‘The board of administration an- nounced its-decision to readvertise for bids on materials to finish the 17th floor of the state capitol. New bids will be opened Sept. 17. All pre- vious proposals were rejected. Appointment of five instructors at the state normal and industrial school, Ellendale, was approved by the board after conference with Pres. J. M. McMillon of the Ellendale institution. The instructors are Miss Ruth Mc- Carthy, Great Falls, Mont, librarian: Miss Phyllis Greenland, Aneta, in- structor in foods of the home eco- nomics department; Miss Ruby Cone, secondary training; Miss Shirley Contracts for two experimental roller mills to be used at the state neapolis, on a bid of $735. Reserve Banks Cut Down Discount Rates Warden Temporarily} money” policy, designea arden who died Friday. Members of the state board of con- ol will study the situation before t appointment, paking @ permanent id Downer Mullen, secretary. planned by the civic associa- . 8 cattle buying days will be staged by the association later in the fall. : TINY MISSING BABY IS FOUND NESTLED ONALLEY DOORSTEP Child Was’ Abducted Monday Night From Carriage as Mother Entered Store MOTHER Opposed Democratic Leaders Suggest It Might Increase Dissen- sion Within Party Washington, Aug. 24.—(#)—Presi- dent Roosevelt called in his leaders in congress for luncheon Tuesday for what officials said was a conference on calling a special autumn session of congress. Senator Barkley (Dem.-Ky.) and Representative Rayburn (Dem.-Tex.), Democratic leaders in senate and house, were invited to the White House midday IDENTIFIES. GIRL White Blanket Wrapped Around Infant, Taken to Police Headquarters at Once Chicago, Aug. 24—(P—An infant Carol Lucas, . three months old, was found alive Tuesday at the rear of an apartment house pera iediteetthedl 214 kidna) ® busy uptown shopping district. Wrapped in a white blanket, the baby was nestled on a doorstep off A squad took her immed- dase to) 8 Rogers Park police sta- ion. ness at the next session, special or regular. The president's conferences with capitol leaders occurred amid ex- pressions of strohg opposition to the early return of congress from within the Democratic party. These oppo- nents speculated that. such a session might increase party dissension, One leader said “no practical good and maybe some harm” would come from a special seasion on farm and her daughter. The baby was snatched from her carriage Monday as Mrs. Lucas left it on the sidewalk while she shopped in a grocery store in the Wilson avenue district. Police had gone to. the alley after feceiving an anonymous telephone ‘call to “Police 1313,” the police alarm teephooe, number in the central sta- ne abductor. apparen escaped witht arouling she pelos of President Roosevelt before ‘the capital. argued that it would be poor icy for the president to run the of reopening party strife in Oc- tober-or November,’ Many members, he said, might feel none too kindly toward the admin- istration and its legislative program if they were summoned back to Wash- ington while in the midst of building political fences for next year’s ‘eléc- the tors” doubt ‘STENCH OF PLANT City, County and State Asked to Take ‘Immediate Action’ on Situation Sonvicton of the Kidaaper fe if it were of shown the abduction was with crim inal intent. Two Other Cases of Human Anthrax Noted At least two instances of human serious of Petitions signed by 178 Bismarck residerits “the horrible stench and smell ee ooceee ies the rendering plani eas Bismarck” were presented to Burleigh !County Commissioner W. G. Worner, Monday afternoon. Most of the signers live east of \ charge that the smell has, . residents and interfered with sleep. Florence P. Tem~- former wife of Walter 8. ate Tuesday by the newspaper Lenin-| kil gradskaya Pravda. AFL EXTENS North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper — BISMARCK, N. D., TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1987 WITH LEWIS INTO. ~ POLITICAL FIELDS Green Declares Belief CIO Leaders Will Have 1940 Presidential Ticket Atlantic City, N.-J., Aug. 24.—()— Recent talk of John L. Lewis’ labor party for'the 1940 campaign led American Federation of Labor lead- and the tional committee’s labor division, on the other hand scoffed at the third party talk. John Lewis, he said, “will not make starting one.” victims .were Second Lieut. Robert OC. ‘Wood and Flying Cadet Frank Fisch. |O0 MORE REDUCTIONS fashingten—President tha. Bismarck Girl, Th End of Nine, Rallies Dur- ing Second Round Paul, Aug. 24.—(7)—Miss Na- O'leary, Bismarck, North Da- women’s champion, ‘ost, 3 and 1, McDougal, Berg of Minneapolis, a big local favorite, gained a 4 and 3 vic- tory over Mrs. Hayes Dansingburg of Rocheeter, Minn., while Edith Esta- brooks, Dubuque, Iowa, defeated Goldie Bateson of Milwaukee, Wis- consin state champion, 4 and 3. Mrs. Shipp’s Body at Convert Funeral Home Friends of the late Mrs. A. E. Shipp, long-time Bismarck resident who died here Sunday afternoon, are invited to call at the Convert Funeral Home, 715 Rosser Ave., to view which will lie in state there from Tuesday evening until the time of the funeral, which will be held at 2 p—m., Wednesday, in the Episcopal church, ‘Through an error it was announced in The Tribune Monday that the body would lie at another local fu- neral parlor. Rev. N. E. Elsworth, rector of 8t. y urch, will have COUGHLIN VACATIONS Detroit, Aug. 24.—()—Father Charles E. the body |}, MARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Generally fair tonight PRICE FIVE CENTS FARMERS GETTING HELP FROM RA ARE _ LARGELY TENANTS Handling of Standard Farm Loan Cases Is Aimed at Eventual Ownership Lincoln, Neb., Aug. kota farmers. operating under re- habilitation loans from the Resettle- ment administration are largely ten- ‘ants, according to a county survey ordered by Cal A. Ward, regional di- rector. ‘All but three counties in North Da- kota show a total of 3,123 standard and Wednesday; cooler tonight, Flying Boat Crashes GIANT PLANE HITS ABANDONED HULL, NOSES INTO WATER Two Members of Crew Escape Without Serious Injury in San Diego Bay WAS TRAINING FOR FLIGHT Large Searchlights Illuminate Hunt for Bodies of Two Missing Men Navy's armada of giant flying boats for the first time Monday night, killing six of eight men aboard a new $150,000 craft as it crashed into shallow San Diego bay. Two crew members escaped with minor injuries but three officers were killed and the plane almost demol- ished by the impact. Four bodies had not been recovered early Tuesday. Its hull submerged, the wreck was quickly surrounded by navy and pri- vate ships as giant searchlights illu- minated the bay. The dead were listed as: W. C. Dey, dr., Meutenant junior grade; F. L. Wallace, lieutenant junior grade; W. M. Freshour; R. Fall, machinist’s mate; R. M. Purdy, radio- man, second class, and H. K. Bryan, meomen: third class, naval aviation Two survivors lifted out of the hull and rushed to Naval hospital were J. W. Blackman, aviation ordinance ND. RELIEF NEEDS Plans for Winter May Be Made Now on Basis of Actual Facts, Executive Declares resettlement clients. Of this number | t! 2253, or approximately 72 per cent,| Langer are tenant farmers. Practically all of them lease their farms on a crop percentage basis, with the renter fur- nishing operating expenses and labor and paying a share of his crops as the rent, Only 229 of the tenants are paying cash rent and in but five cases does the landlord furnish equipment and seed with the tenant receiving @ percentage of the crop for his labor. ‘The survey showed only 20 per cent of the North Dakota farmers re- ceiving rehabilitation loans have lived on the places they now occupy for five years or more. “In. this respect the rehabilitation division of the Resettlement admin- istration is along the lines of the newly enacted Bankhead-Jones farm tenancy act,” Ward said. “In making low-interest loans over a per- od of years for feed, seed, livestock and equipment we are seeking to re- habilitate the farmer on the place he leasing livestock and equipment, we believe, will point the way to eventual farm Average Payment to Blind in June $18.30 Sixty-seven blind persons in North Dakota public welfare board, L. vision supervisor, basis. The July total is an TWO YOUTRS GIVEN {8 MONTHS TERNS Begin Sentences in State Pen!- tentiary Tuesday After Pleading Guilty ! , Bl, i fl rl fie i 5 g E ; { i i i I i ft il a 5 i < # iy F aes i > ba) i g i tit this form of assistance in June, Nich-|of the olson said.

Other pages from this issue: