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OF RAILROADS GIVEN) ~Doubtful As Army U-CENT PAY BOOST Daily Increase to Up Annual Earnings 6.6 Per Cent; Strike Danger Over Rew wage agreement put $85,000,000 a-year more in their pey en welopes. The agreement, calling for = 44 cents a day raise for 250,000 engine, train and yard service employes, was signed Sunday night by heads of the big five railroad brotherhoods and representatives of 86 carriers. It ended protracted negotiations for @ 20 per cent pay increase demanded by the brotherhoods. Railroad representatives estimated the increase would add an average 66 per cent to the workers’ annual earnings. Last August 25, the railroads granted a 4 cents a day wage in- crease for an estimated 750,000 mi ne of the 15 non-operating brother- he 5 NYA SUPERVISORS GATHER IN CIFY Gounty Leaders Discuss Ge _ al Policy; Stone, Holland in Charge Adoption of a general policy and co-ordination of reports from over the state 1 discussion subjects MonQay at a state meeting of National ‘Youth administration pce supervisors. Twenty-two county supervisors par- eeipatea ay in the two-day session which opened under direction of J. Lioyd Stone, state supervisor of work proj- ects and his assistant, Roy Involved in the conference is the setting up of new projects for 2,000 ous employed under the program construction work, build- cy of youth and community halis and their repeir; construction of dams for the biological survey, grees of game Lecnadianbey and Ethiopian, ‘Asiatio,: Spenish Wars Have Not Demonstrated Bombers’ Effectiveriess Mane'’s value asa decisive tactical weapon been Posen pa ib Effectively asa yardatick in appraising the worth of the airplane in a war be- tween two major powers, the more enthusiastic proponents of a greater air fleet for thé United States point- edly assert that combatants in neither Spain nor China know how to eae effectively. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1937 (PIRATNGENPLOTES| Value of Planes in War Remains One of Uncle Sam's Latest Bombers Fail at Shanghai The air arms of America’s defen tributing | sive forces think differently. cause of the cegprees of met Ttalian columns. Ground not air- planes, caused the tall of Bubao and Santander. Holland.| Auditor’s Hearing to - Be Resumed Monday A. H. Thme, Napoleon, ‘suspended ‘as Logan county auditor, was to ap- Shey e projects for Mee are aring making of Among activities, especially the clothing for welfare boards and other relief agencies. Speakers before the NYA confer- ence were Lester Diehl, state direc- tor of finance and statistics; Allen Eastman of the division of employ- ment, Hazel Falley, division of wom- en's and professional projects, all of ’ the Works Progress end Roy Bach of the U. 8, U8, blot survey. Four Waylay Sheriff, Lynch N egro Prisoner -Milton,'Fla., Oct. 4 4.—(@)—Four men waylaid ‘Sheriff Joe Allen on the Sunday nights ised Tsoevo prisoner seized a and lynched is A coroner's one Teturnéd @ verdict that the Negro came to his death at the hands of “parties unknown.” eS NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF STATE OF RORTH DAKOTA, County of Bu To Emm im, we Zi iT Ne pen: Gin smarck, N. ismarek, N. ou ar tract of land hi and which was a: for taxation for P1929 w. the 9th day of De mabe: er, 1920, at sold, as Provides, By law, for ¢) Lnquent taxes of the year 1 el idk my ot Let, ee Block 36, Northern eel Hi ecens Addition to ine. City of Biamerek Ce cone of Burleigh, State Amount estas for, $17.03. ale reauires, to redeem at this ate, $17.29. je tax sale cert! (4 raed by Saw. eal this iedteh Gx: Wats reat aT * lay o! er, (BEAL) Acting Auditor oeineen ee Seater, orem Daxore. J Sox, Manras vente un. a claiming 62: to oF in- terest in or lien or incumbrance meee the property herein Ges- eribed, iter a6) itt if 4s eee "3 iilai te for SBeted at Septem! py ed 335 iL see Meee Pisin 4 he relief Grek. North Dakota, guijtiss Wetherby A66! F. Tillotaon, Bismarck attorney, eae appointed by Gov. William Lan- ger to hear ‘Was Buse TFs of ‘caring for the newcomers, who become mothers on Oct. unity to ij- are the days when “Stella feature film, is appearing at Bismarck theater. the a : Rea 3 z Advises F First Lady We will call at ome and Me vistors, We eotimate ie A confidential report circulated among some members of the army air force asserts that the character of the aerial warfare in Spain is just Co-eds Pose in Nude | | For Posture’s Sake Detroit, Oct. 4—(P)—A candid camera's role in higher education, with photographs of co-eds in the nude, commanded public inter- cortect posture at Wayne univer- aity, clvic comment developed. As explained by Dr. Irvin W. Sander, health service director at Wayne university, the pictures are made with the suojects mask- ing themselves to conceal identity. A nurse is present. What follows is a study of the photograph, made ugainst a chart, to determine incorrect bearing, and exercises for im- proving the posture. Dr. Sander, expressing as- tonishment at publicity when “this procedure has been so long in use at leading universities,” said “many hundreds of students have been photographed at Wayne since the project was be- ey in Beittath and “only three” jected Terrorist Campaign for the next) Tn Holy Lar Land Broken Pion Jerusalem, oct, +— 4.—(?)—More than 1,000 British soldiers with full war equipment encircled the old city of Jerusalem Monday in a display of force to Arab terrorists. ‘The British, despite a shopkeepers’ and the threat of {of only a few hours. Strike May Spread New York, Oct. 4.—(®)—Owners of 5,000 kosher shops kept their doors shut Monday as indications grew thet their “sit come strike” against the high price of wholesale meats ACCIDENT VICTIM DEAD Faribault, Minn., Oct. 4—(P)—Ber- ard Gretz, 72, died in St, Lucas hos- vor Wie. WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER WINDOWS WI:HUUT CHARGE 313 Main PAINT & GLASS CO. Bismarck Phone 544 whet it was at the close of the World War. Enthusiasts for bigger air Ha dete priations contend Madrid has been are by the superiority of Loyalist lanes. That the United States does posséss secret devices which convert the air- Plane into an unusually destructive agent would seem to be evident from the repeated requests of foreign mili- tary observers to see army and navy bombing sights. Invariably they are refused. 10,000 ‘No Hunting’ Signs 4 Are Issued Wahpeton, N. D, 0c Oct, 4.—()—Rich> iand county sportsmen’s answer Mon- day to Game and Fish Commissioner DN W. Hulterstrum’s tefusal to curtail the 10-day season on upland birds, was *o issue 10,000 “no hunting” signs. “By aerate ” sqid W. BE ‘Morden, president fahpeton Sports- men club, ail have 80 per cent of the hunting land in Richland coun- ty posted.” on the sign is this declaration: “The farmers in this section are tak- ing this action to save the few remain- ing birds. Please do not ask for per- mission to hunt.” Veteran Twin City Stereotyper Dies St. Paul, Oct. 4—(P)}—William F. Dunn, 73, superintendent of the St. Paul Dispatch-Pioneer Press stereo- type room and charter member of the Minneapolis-St. Paul Ste union, died Sunday in his home et Lake Owasso. In 1907 he went to the Grand Forks (N. D.) Herald. In 1910 he returned to St. Paul to take charge of the Dis- patch-Pioneer Press stereotype room. eer East Grand Forks Woman Dies East Grand Forks, Minn., Oct. 4.— (®)—Mrs, M. L. McGuire, 86 years old and a resident of this community for Nearly 60 years, died unexpectedly Sunday at her home after an iliness Born November 7, 1850, at Renfrew, Ont., Mrs. McGuire came to East Grand Forks in 1876 and lived there until her death, Survivors are s son, three daughters and six grandchildren. Funeral What Do You Expect?) What do you expect from the, agency that handles your fire insur- | ance protection? You want sound insurance at the lowest price consist- ent with safety, of course. Are you eure you are getting it? Tf your fire insurance is in the hands of this agency of the Nartford Fire Insurance Company you are in touch with Hartford engineering eer- vice. This service reduces insuraticé costs and makes property safer. Call us today. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Phone 577 Bis: 218 Broadway NAME RUGBY MAYOR Experts Argue LEADER OF STATE MUNICIPAL LEAGUE CGN. Knudson Elected Elected at Con- vention in Fargo; Seven Lo- cal Persons Attend | plain ‘Sage of Potato Hill’ Dies. at Editor, | Ed Howe, Famous Achieves ‘Absolute Tri- umph’—Dies In Sleep solue triumph.” After a long lifetime of observing and writing about the foibles of people, the 88-year-old author, Me altar, philosopher. died Sunday in “| never awaken. Cass county deputy sheriff, who dis- cussed ways of cos delinquent personal property tax Members of the Bismafck delegation were Mayor Obert A. Olson, City Com- missioner Homer Spohn, City Attor- ney c. L prep City Budior Mires wed ‘tkinson, City Engineer D. R. Me: Donald, City Assessor John A. Gra- Owen, John Gray, state treasurer, es Tom Moody, state WPA admin- Ruth Coghlan Leads Big University Band Grend Forks, N. D., 4.—The University of North Dakota-South Da- kota football game may have been the big event of the evening, but for @ few minutes between helves petite Ruth Coghlan, , Was the] center of all eyes in Memorial stadium here Saturday night. For between halves the little Bis- marck miss, only slightly taller than her baton, led the university Pend in its initial field appearance of season and gave a baton exhibition at bes her own, Miss Coghlan, the first co-ed drum major ever to lead the Sioux band, high school aniversity. Sports- | dént she was drum major of the Bis- marck Juvenile band. GRAND FORKS WOMAN DIES Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 4—(®)}— Mrs. Knut Mahlum, 90, a Grand Forks county resident for more than half a century, died of a heart at- tack Sunday at the home here of her daughter, Mrs. James Shannon. Fred J. J. Hessinger 410 Tenth peel NTE PROMPT ae SERVI No job too large—No job too emall the While @ high school stu- y his sleep of the infirmities of age eal nerrery by peralysis. His death fulfilled his once ex- pressed desire, “my hope is to go One night after a hard day's work and That would be the absolute triumph.” Edgar Watson Howe, editor, author, and village sage, made his living and gained a large measure of his fame |), by giving advice—a commodity for which few people find a market. Preached Without Pretense For moré than 50 years Ed Howe, 28 he preferred to be known, preached the doctrine of success and respect- ability. He preached without pre- tense, without fuss, and in direct and simple language. Many who read his era felt that they had been strip- fee bare and left exposed in. the mar- et place. It was through the Atchison (Kan- sas) Globe, which he founded in 1877, that Ed Howe first became known. His 84 Ed Howe Ind., May 3, 1884,. As a youth he learned the printing trade and worked in various newspaper shops im the middle west. He published newspapers in Golden, Colo. and Falls City, Neb. before he founded The Atchison Globe. CRASH VICTIM DIES &t. Cloud, Minn., Oct. 4—(#)—Isa- dore Chrihart, 85, central Minnesota pioneer, died Friday night from in- juries sustained in an automobile crash Saturday afternoon. homely philosophy and unique style | % intrigued his readers and they de- Ughted in quoting his newspaper. When he was in his twenties he whote “The Story of a Country Town,” a novel which still has a steady sale. His subsequent writings made him an international figure. Mr. Howe retired as publisher of the Globe in 1914. He was succeeded by @ company, stock of which was owned by employes with controlling interest vested in his son, Eugene A. Howe, who became editor. ‘Journal of Indignation’ From that time publication of “Ed Howe's Monthly” served as the father's recreation and as a vehicle tor the expression of his personal views. It had readers in all parts of the world, including such extremes as John D. Rockefeller and H, G. Wells. The editor's own cemeriblion of this publication was “A journal of uation and education.” In addition to his own magazine sieady contributions to a number of leading magazines and syndicated writing for daily newspapers occupied ime. Mr, Howe was born near Treaty, Electrical Wiring and Contracting General Electric Products Hot-Point Refrigeration Cool-Aire Air Conditioning Service Electric Company John B. Kottsick, Prop. 206 Broadway Telephone & Ruuch of the small town Philosopher's | 22 Feared Dioveel When Vessel Sinks Vers Crus, Mexico, Oct. 4—(#)— Twenty-two persons were feared to fhe’ coastal passenger liner Vioente e passenger liner Antonio sank ing the Gulf of Mexico en route to Yucatan. Only eight pas- sengers were rescued from the 120-ton vessel which was @ total loss. J.S. FEVOLD Investment, Real Estate, Insur- ance, Bonds, Auto and Truck Loans Sales and betters! City and Farm Property Over Cowan’s Drug Store Bismarck, N. PHONE ie PLUMBING “By Men Who Know How” Consult us on all Plumbing, Bi » Gi - jumbing, pester gees) H. A. THOMPSON & SONS Prat on Hestine 208 Neventh Bt * phone 64 It is none too early to make your selection of Genuine Engraved Christmas Greeting Cards — AND — Personal Stationery Stop in and place your order early BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Commercial Printing Dept. THE SHOPPER is a true PROSPECTOR Since the 16th Century the prospector in search of deposits of precious metals has carried a forked hazel twig, called a divining rod, to discover treasures beneath earth’s surface. But never forget that you, too, are a prospector! You, too, when you make your rounds of shops and stores are seeking hidden values. And for two cents—the price of this newspaper—you may acquire a detector which is sure, quick, resultful! Advertising! Turn to advertisements for information and advice about what.and. where to buy. Turn to them for a fair, accurate presentation of the merits of various refrigera- tors, motor cars, furniture, hats, shoes and fountain pens. Turn to them for first-hand facts about life insur- ance, savings funds, investment services. Advertisements are your divining rods. It is better to trust to them than to trust to guesswork.