The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1937, Page 2

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PLANNED BY SINGER Madame Wettergren to Present English, Italian, French, Ger- man an Swedish Numbers Gertrude Wettergren, Metropolitan ‘oontralto, who will appear in concert Friday evening in the World War Memoria! ‘building, will present a varied group of songs to her audience. Madame Wettergren will sing Eng- lush, Italian, German, Swedish and French numbers. Beginning the program will be the Recitative and Aria from “Orpheus,” Gluck, “Ahi-me! Dove trascorsi?” and “Che faro senza Euridice.” Also duc- ing the first section of the program she will sing four songs in German and four in Swedish: “Gib Mir Dein Herz (Give Me Your Heart),” Erkki Melartin; “Ich Liebe Dich (I Love You),” L. van Beethoven; “Vor Mir Die Steppe (In Front of the Steppe).” A. Gretchaninoff; “Zueignung (De- yotion),” R. Strauss; “Hur Skall Man Bruden Klada? (How Shall One Dress the Bride?)” and “Vad Soker Du Pa Stranden? (What Seekest Thou at the Shore?)” both by Oskar Lindberg; “Saf, Saf, Susa (Reeds, Reeds, Rustle),” and “Svarta Rosor (Black Roses),” both by Jean Sibelius. Following intermission the English section will be sung, including two songs from a lover in Damascus, “Faz Across the Desert Sand” and “Allah, ” both by Amy Wood- ‘Willow, Willow,” Percy Grainger; and “Come Love, With Me (Spanish Serenade),” Vito Carnevall. Closing the program Madame Wet- tergren will sing “Connais-tu le pays?” from the opera, “Mignon,” Am- broise Thomas. Frits Kitzinger will accompany the @rtist at the piano. Madame Wetter- gren is appearing here under the sponsorship of a local committee wit ‘Miss Florence Fritch as manager. She is arriving Thursday afternoon and will be honored at a reception ‘Thursday evening from 8 to 10 o'clock ‘at the home of Dr, and Mrs. H. Mil- ton Berg, 214 Avenue A, west. All ticketholders are invited to be pres- ent and meet Madame Wettergren at that time. NBs «x NEWS HOTEL RNGISTRATIONS é —— ees VARIED PROGRAM IS ELETYPE BRIEFS++: Associated 9 a eS POISON CASE CONTINUES Cincinnati — Virtually completing one phase of its case against Anna Marie Hahn, the state heard testimony ‘Thursday from A. O. Spriggs, Springfield chemist, that a harden- ing compound used in embalming Jacob Wagner was free of a poison later found in his body. MONTAGUE IDENTIFIED Elizabethtown, N. Y. — Holly- wood’s John Montague was iden- tified Thursday as a participant in s $700 Adirondack roadhouse robbery in 1930 by a man who has served a prison term for the crime. DISPERSE CATHOLIC PARTY Free City of Danzig—The Catholic Centrist party, last parliamentary opposition to the Nazis, was formally dissolved Thursday by police on the charge that a leading member had worked against the state. DRUG KILLS ANOTHER Chicago—Death of C. W. Miller, 25, in Memphis, Tenn., the Amer- ican Medical association reported Thursday, had raised to 15 the reported total of fatalities which | the association blamed to use of a drug compound, EARNINGS DECLINE New York—Cream of Wheat cor- Poration and subsidiaries, with prin- cipal plant at Minneapolis, for the September quarter reported net profit of $264,557, equal to 44 cents a com- mon share, against $294,362 or 49c @ share in the like 1936 quarter ARMY ORDERS 55 PLANES Washington—The army gave a $1,731,407 order Thursday to North American Aviation, Inc., of Inglewood, Calif, for 55 single- motor observation airplanes. Most of the new craft will be assigned to the national guard. BOY BLEEDS TO DEATH Waterloo, Iowa—Cleo Weber, 6, Gilbertville farm boy, was dead Thursday, the victim of a rare dis- ease, hemorrhagic purpura, which, doctors said, caused a general hem- orrhaging from all membranes of the PEDESTRIAN INJURED East Grand Forks, Minn., Oct. 21—(P)—A man identified as Jack Madison of Crookston was. critically injured Thursday morn- ing. by a hit-and-run driver on a highway nezr here. Police Chief i pincaniet Ferg us F es. man Dickin Paul, Minn. . L ‘arg ind Mra, "Richard Max, Minneapolls, Minny and Robert Bak: er, Ryegate, Mont. ny nd Mra. Gene Imus, 09 a, m, Thuraday, Daus! 33 en ae n'Bt., ismarck hospital. Judge A. M. Christianson of the su- preme court will speak at the annual of the Red River Boy Scout, in Jamestown Thursday| 7 Hy Dakota Indian agency si tendents had assurance Thurs- the state public welfare board Farm Security administration, co-operate with them in work- the relief problem for Indians four state agencies, was received Thursday by James Mulloy, secretary of the stat: oaiagind comnisaicn, Larder father, J. Mulloy, 73, was c: ly 02 in Minneapolis hospital. Mulloy, a creer ot of North Dakota since 1880, is now head of collections at the sta‘e mill and elevator. il iS ff SS Funeral services for Marcus J. ‘Comes, 60, a resident of Mandan since 1922, will be held Saturday. George Baska, superintednnet of the auto plate plant at the North Dakota state penitentiary, was in the St. Alexius hospital here Thursday with @ broken leg suffered when a» - plece of steel fell on him Wednesday afternoon. Baska’s leg was broken in | | two or-three places and his foot was ————————————————————— CITATION HEARING PETITI: PROOF AND PROBATE OF WILLY STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County Harry Gregg said he thought the man was hit by a bakery truck which was stolen early Thursday. FACES LIFE SENTENCE Cleveland — James Widmer, erat- while fugitive companion of the des- perate Bird brothers, pleaded guilty Thursday before Federal Judge Paul Jones to participating in three Cleve- land bank robberies. Widmer faces life imprisonment. Is Dead at Jamestown Dosceelore N.D,_ D., Oct. 21 —P)— Funeral services for J. Morris Severn, 47, who died Wednesday, will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. Death was caused by a stroke. | voluntary exile MRS, TOSTEVIN 1S | BURIED AT MANDAN Rev. G. W. Stewart W. Stewart Officiates Services for Wife of Publisher Last rites for Mrs. Florence G. Tostevin, wife of E. A. Tostevin, pub- lisher of the Mandan Daily Pioneer, were held at 2 p. m. Thursday at the Presbyterian church with Rev. G. W. Stewart, pastor, officiating. Members of the Mandan chapter of the Daughters of the American attended the services in a body. Music was furnsihed by a double quartet. Interment was in the Union ceme- tery. Mrs, Tostevin died Monday after a long illness. Out-of-town arrivals for the serv- ons, and Mrs. Elena Tinker, a cousin of Mr. Tostevin, both of Racine, Wis. Pallbearers were Dr. A. O. Hender- won, C. C. Gurtner, E. W. Miller, George H. Wilson, I. C. Iverson and Charles F. Pierce, all of Mandan. LITTLE RALLS STILL HOME T0 LINDBERGH Sculptor Relates Experience of Modeling Bust of Famous Flier Little Falls, Minn., Oct. 21—(7)—A in England, Col. Charles A. Lindbergh speaks freeiy o1 Little Falls as his “home town,” said H. A. Stermann, London sculptor, who visited Lindbergh State park Wednesday. Stermann was with the celonel about six weeks early in 1937 when the aviator was sitting for a bust. “He referred to Little Falls so often that I was surprised to learn he was not born here,” the sculptor said. “While he sat for the bust he would talk about this town and of Min- nesota, the land of water.” Stermann was shown about the old Lindbergh home and recently im- Proved wooded area by Martin Eng- strom, park superintendent, and friend of Lindbergh. “It looks so beautiful I want to go straight back to England and tell the colonel about it,” he asserted. Stermann told how Lindbergh hap- pened to sit for him. He had just completed a bust of Ramsay MacDonald. Robert Bingham, American ambassador, was so pleased with it that he told Stermann he would ask Lindbergh to come for s sitting. “I doubted very much the coloncl would consent, and I was greatly gratified when he appeared at the studio,” Stermann sald, The colonel was so pleased witi the sculptor’s work that he had his J. Morris Severn, 47, [fits Amne tf, bust, althour Lindbergh gave instruct to the busts packed for to, erica but did not reveal ‘thei destination. He also consented to have three ad- ditional busts made of himself on a non-commercial basis for Little Falls, Severn had been secretary of the Jamestown Building and Loan com- pany for the past 16 years and was & member of the firm of Severn and Bensch insurance agency. | Weather Repo | WEATHER FORKUA! os For Bismarck and vicini cloudy. tonight and Frid change In temperature. For North and South Dakota: Part- ly cloudy tonight and Friday; little change in temperature. For Montana: Generally fair to- pieits and Friday; cooler south portion onigh| For ‘Stinnesota: Unsettled tonight; Friday partly cloudy to cloudy, con- tinued cold. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS ‘The barometric pressure is low over the Great Lakes region, 8. 8, Marie 29.52 inches, while a high pressure area extends from the northern Great 8 westward to the north Pacific Spokane 30.38 inches, The weather 1s somewhat unsettled, and light scattered showers have occurred in the Great Lakes region, Miaaissipp! Valley, Plains States and over north Pacific const. Generally.” fair Bet" prevails from: the middle rtly Pintle Been) oe jocky Mountain region to Cailforals. courr, eratures dropped. somewha © Davies, Judge, Eplore Mond: tek i? Valle: and Rea River im the Matt: f tl ley, but warmer weather prevails w. Eckiund, or of the Estate of Oscar | over the Rocky Mountain region. Emma C. Beklund. Bismarck station barometer, inches: Petitioner, | 28:85. Reduced to sea lev Ruth Esther Christine Ecklund, Ecklund, S'antonie Nan ‘arl_ Dewey Bovtun cy Ecklund, Mabel yrtle Ecklund, Melvin Georee ery Ines Amy Eck- Bt Seth Abel Ecklund, Ardys Charlotte Eckiund, a minor, ly Ardys June Charlotte jeigon, @ minor, Mary. Bea! ir, the special guardian of rdys June Charlotte Eck- min formerly Ardys @ minor, Saeuas Fate Warren Nel » Geceased, Arthur son all other persons inter- Sh in the estate of said Oscar 16, deceased, A ondents. FATE OF NORTH Bake: ne Of youre he iets and je ae to tag are feraty County Court of the County of Dakota, at je County Judge of sald Burleigh County, North a aaid“Causiy ad Blue on the téth Guy of Novemune, u's! Ies7, at the hour of two o'clock in’ afternoon of sald day, to show asy you ot why the Petition “tor root ina robate of Will, executed mma C. Ecklund, on flte in said praying that a certain instru- tte seine cig to be the estament of Oscar W. file in said Pishate in and Pinaid Burleigh yeas testament pareceeeet, uri river nes at PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Statio Total this month to di Normal, this month to Total, January 1st to date Normal, January 1st to dal Accumulated excess to dat NORTH eae POINTS BISMARCK, Devils Lak: Minot, olea: Williston, cle: Fargo, snowing . Grand Forks, rd Jamestown, clay) Carson, cle: Langdon, oldy.” WEATHER AT \T OTHER POINTS Low- High- the tl see van a, eee tims At sald Bere County, North Da- it nite Bp wate of this citation eee this Stet day of October, A.D. ‘__ BY THE COURT: < (BAL) ost Pet est Pet. Aberdeen, 8. D., 46.00 Boise, dane, cloar 68 00 Calgary, Alta., cidy 52.00 Chicago, 111, peldy. 52 100 Denver, Colo,, cli iy. ae 46 64 00 Des Moines, fowa, cldy, 36 58 00 Dodge City, Kans. cldy. 50 74 .00 Eamonton, Alte, ‘eldy.. 30 50 100 “spel iy. 32 48110 2 se 38 60 100 font, clear <1 32 84 (00 5 dy. 30 53. 00 Kamloops, BC. clay... 44 52-18 Kansas City, 48 «64 = 00 Lewistown, ‘swont’, oldy. 40 54 100 Los Angelés, Cal, clear 58 82 100 Miles City, Mont, clear 40 60 :08 Mple.-St. Paul, SM. rain 36 44 00 Mobridge, 8, D. 32 100 Moorh in 30 100 40 100 ‘00 i 200 ; 100 pelle, Ee dy. 5 Quan City, 8. B, clear 40 56.02 Roseburg, Ore. tog 46 72 [00 hab 18, ¥ 6 66.00 gait La rat $ $6.09 a iy Bheridin W 58 108 Sioux x City, lowe oldy. 54-00 sete Caren Sb The Pas, 38 {o Winnipes, 3 a Ot the Smithsonian institute, andthe &t. Louis Museum. Lutherans Unite for Evangelism Program Minneapolis, Oct. 21.—(#)—Five na- tional groups of the Lutheran church united Thursday in the first co- operative effort of the kind ever at- tempted by them in America. The American Lutheran church, the Norwegian Lutheran Church of América, the Augustana Synod, the United Danish Lutheran church and the Lutheran Free church with a combined membership of 1,500,000 communicants have combined their forces in @ program of evangelism that will extend from Chicago to the Pacific Northwest. Aeronautic Inspector For N.D. Is Is Appointed Chicago, Oct. 21-0. W. Young, acting Chicago district supervisor, said Thursday R. O. Lindsay of the Chicago staff had been appointed fed- eral aeronautics inspector for North end South Dakota, with headquarters in Minneapolis. Lindsay replaces Les- ter G. Orcutt who was 5 tranaterred to duty at Curtis Field here. TO WIN—BR: EAK A RULE! By WILLIAM SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM Effective defense must be mixed ‘with imagination, When the novice takes up the Play of the hand at bridge he is taught not to lead up to auch a Revolution and the PEO. Sisterhood |Combination as the ace and queen jentries, of a suit adversely held, because obviously if the declarer can play last with such a combination he is sure of winning two tricks regard- less of the location of the king. ices included a brother, H. A, Clem-| However, there are exceptions to all rules, and when the defender knows that the king is doomed anyhow, other considerations, such as suit establish- ment, may control his play. Today's hand was played in a dupli- cate at the Washington Bridge League, which will be host the week of Nov. 29 to the national championship tour- rament of the American Bridge League. The same contract was reached at every table, and whether it was made entirely @ question of defense. Chicago Traffic Plan Is Offered by Mayor Chicago, Oct. 31—(P}—A $157,000,- 000 program, calling for construction of subways in the loop and a 20-mile system of elevated highwa: cone stituted Mayor Edward J. Kelly's plan Wednesday for settlement of Chica- gc’s local transportation problem. ‘The construction work would require | © six yea! pvt ee, ie ee barr veins complet in four. The mayor's proposed plan pro- vides for unification and moderniza- tion of all transit facilities, a down- town subway for the north-south elevated lines, conversion of two west in This Story of a Palace Rave-olution! e A pria danger in love! Swords clash! Women scream! Horses ia t|Some Established Principles of Bridge Must Be Ignored, at Times, If Defense Is to Be Flexible E. McKENNEY Bridge League The opening lead of the heart three was won by East with the ten, dummy Playing the nine. Where Mr. and pod James H. Lemon of W: defending, Lemon (East) returned a ND. 10 GET REBATE ON TAX FROM U.S. Levies Made on Payrolls in State Washington, Oct. 31—(?)—Treasury experts added $5,000,000 Thursday to the total likely to be needed for the Were jreimbursement of 13 states, Hawali Reimbursement to Represent Breakfastless Man Is Granted Divorce [PAWTUCKET FIGHTS RACETRACK PADLOCK Governor's ‘Dictatorial Abuse of Power’ May Be Carried to High Court CAPITOL gov- heart right up to the ace-queen collected all tenace. No use, he reasoned, in try- ling to establish his suit when he lacked AS EDDY SHERIFF: Sheyenne Man Named Acting Dummy’s queen won, and a small diamond was led and the finesse lost is/to West's queen. Now the heart suit was cleared, and when the diamond was again returned, Mrs. oe Head Until Taverna's cashed her two good hearts and de- Case Is Settled feated the tr Ee mast Rey A spade shift on second trick would have permitted South to| 7ne collec! Petition Pope to Lift Father Coughlin’s Ban G-Men Silent as’ They Hunt Abduction Victim Oct. 31. Federal a Mies agents matniined aiguuadniees 8 #KQI10987 Duplicate—N. & S. vul. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, side elevated lines into elevated super-| 5 hways, and the construction ot | re | street car subways to take all t side carlines off the sur- bess int the loop. MRS. WARD MARRIED London ,Oct. 21—()}—Mrs. Durley | 44 Ward, one-time favorite dancing {8506 partner of the Duke of Windsor and belgeheaigeaed known Mayfair hos!- was married at the Marylebone es office odhentey to Marquis de Casa Maury. HUNTER KILLED E Great Falls, map Oct. Lite! Francis A, Corrigan, 24-year-old form. ler resident of Frazee, Minn. was dead Thuraday, victim of s hunting accl- Shove Off with the Marines Today laid underground If possible, “On te |e For Romance to Enthrall You! Rice tus ormeea sie 7 Six Song Hits to Thrill You! Comics to Convulse You! Dances to Dazzle You! HERE COMES “THE SINGING MARINE” Pipettes Te tat Some Bien: ta ee enti of a Million { lear DORIS WESTON, Today, Friday and Sat. Matinee of the LIGNITES! -- that’s -- BEULAH uare fracture it the Ideal “IT DOES NOT CLINKER” Occident Elevator Bismarck, N. Dak. ‘112 Front Ave. Phene 11 Plus NEWS - COLOR - CARTOON COMING SUNDAY “STAGE DOOR” KATHERINE HEPBURN — GINGER ROGERS The old feathers out. | Pui tin id - STEP UP TO Mattingly 2 & Moore AT YOUR FAVORITE BAR OR TAVERN ... IT’S ALL WHISKEY! ORT DISTILLERIES, inci ORATED, LOUISVILLE MR. MATTINGLY: “The town's best bars, you will observe, Are getting praise they well deserve.” MR. MOORE: “For up and down this old Main Stem, Most all of them serve M & M!” QUALITY PRINTING Quality in printing, with all of the attractive- ness and distinction of appeal that brings definite results, can be obtained at the fairest possible price through careful planning. Consult us on your next order of printing, whether large or small, and realize the dependable service and quality of work produced by experienced artisans. Quality Printers Since 1878 BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Commercial Printing Department Telephone 2200

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