The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 23, 1937, Page 1

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Tdghme | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [=] 2 200 North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper Ses ee ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, N. D., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Si peti | Sister Boniface Dies Peacefully . Streamlined Train Plows [ _ Death Comes for 1 Into School Bus, Kills 10 | eae! ae 19 OTHERS INURED [Entries Point to One of rane ——- a wall petty State’s Best Corn Shows permet ner RISING TOA TTERGREN MAKES] sn xm BISMARCK, WOMANS Witty, Kindly and Strong Woman Established Bus Driver, Two Teachers, Sev-. innual Exposition Open- en High School Students RE AL HIT IN R IRST vies fae siobsay MOTHER PERISHES N the First,Hospital in Vast Territory When Bismarck Was Frontier Town Are Victims conpition or # crrricatlOF CONCERT SERIE shan ae gotten DEVILS LAKE BLAZE The Venerable Sister Mary Boniface, O. S. B., superior ot St. Alexius hospital and pioneer of the nursing sisterhood in the Northwest, died Friday in the institution that is a monu- ment to her lifelong work. Death came for the beloved nun in the room to which she had been confined since the middle of July because of a general anise weakness. She was 83 years old. The end came at 10:20 p. m. Requiem high mass will be sung in St. Mary’s procathedral Monday at 9a.m. The body will then be taken to St. Benedict’s convent, St. Joseph, Minn., for burial. Until 6 p. m. Sunday the body will lie in state in the parlor of St. Alexius hospital. It was taken there Saturday from the Webb funeral home. One of the most widely known of her profession in North America, Sister Boniface had carried on the ceaseless activity that has characterized her life since she was 17 years old up to u few months before her death. On Tuesday, July 18, she suffered a chill as she sat in the sun attempting to combat the effects of a cold. She was put the offices of the 1] leading Wooden Truck ‘Pops Open Like | wedish Contralto Successfully |them to the prediction that this year’s Se Dropped Watermelon’; Bod- Launches Artist Course in eae me bs) one oh he inet on ies Strewn 500 Feet “quality is high and tt Friday Night Performance dee q ht ‘ igh compet ; Mrs. Herman Peterson Found Dead in Ruins of Her Home Saturday Mason City, Ia., Oct. 23.—(7— Grief-stricken parents traced the tergren sang | Most of these received to date come| Devils Lake, N. D., Oct. 23.—(P)}— entered Wet a concert at the City Audi-| trom sections of the state far removed | The charred remains of torlum Friday night—and then/trom Bismarck. The Neavy influx the most disastrous streamlined train |M¥mbers which left-her audience with | monday and up to noon Tuesday |: accident in the history of mid-west-|* Sense of increased c ern railroading, the One The new Rocket, streamlined pas-|St#™ was intended to give the artist /come trom Emmons county, accord: 5 i E é z : i i g i i the outskirts of the city at 4 p. m, |°R- sound system of agriculture. Fri ten persons =| agrrroughout most of the concert!” wre just half the acreage put into|falled to reveal any traces of the to bed immediatel: id afte: 1 weeks of coma, sh ‘ Madame Wettergren was the vocal bod: ‘she 0 i jiately and after several weeks of coma, she juring all the others. wheat and rye was put into corn. ly and relatives thought may astounded all about her by recovering consciousness and a men- tal clarity that continued to within a few minutes of the end Friday. Although she never fully overcame the ravages of heart op, litle Golden Sis disease, she maintained her interest in the activities of the hos- sae! eat Maaed \ pital. There were days when she was able to sit up in a chair Over there.among the snows, and converse with intimates. There were days when she did to institute their own inquiry. characte much to encourage planting more The : rs of operatic music came to a Who bri Golde: hii 5 5 a poaposliees poakes dcetiab ial life and stood, saucy and defiant, on |#"4 better corn, Ades! Schinnces ‘GOR bn) oabivea ings rays of m sunshine ; ice trays Ce inerarti to leave ee ee ker phvaicigen ee Pobreenpei the City auditorium stage. : in pte cee hubs Everywhere she comes and goes, About noon Friday it became obvious to her physi “The bodies of dead and injured Decorations “But sometimes the cart gets ahead!|e salesman for the Nesh-Finch com- And Pm writing her a message the end was near. Her immediate relatives were notified, but were scattered 600 feet down the|,, 10¢ Voice itself was a marvelous|or tne horse, For example the state pang, as reported in the Wiliston On @ little paper scroll” tee data tepid to sean che Denese, to a few meoem i £ fore the end her mind remai s : To sey how much L love her «+ ander the impact, cuts. off pe ‘The accident. occurred at.» ~rivete ete Apne ot the corse tion. seed Sitges thay: : Langs ffs So a oe nneined hep great big Colden soul... eyes for the last time, Aancommodetions tor the sid. were Gity Buick aad tie company. Wend ind gifs of three Butopeat oe cutimubes te Meena DE : : i Sa * Jatmost totally lacking when Sister a The students came hare.from Ren- : ry “She has done so much of Mndstess NEW SELLING WAVE Boniface came to ploneer Bismarck PAYMENT EXTENDED) eect, | mg cr i er ce Hoenn a hak ine inst vine |Sitllac to. that which she ‘received | Will soon be x among! And has dried so: many tears, was before returning home—when the|#fom the King of Sweden. _|- “I will be right with the exhibis ry Thus F And P'm wishing—how P'm wishing! hauled from the river for 26 cents per corre i ae ean tae ee from a cee ped ty during the bai Collections in October Thus Far That from i mere; pom of Des He expects and warmth of |{le for the state cup. Emmons is well) Larger Than for Entire + © © Pentght dipout alate _ . Prices Fall $1 to $19 or More;|® few bulldings on Main svenue. beer eee Moines 18, Itone, She had thet. He expects the |able to carry on without my exhibits, ? chon ‘There were no electric lights and no engineer of the streamliner, said his (Continued on Page Three) T have had my fling at the shows and Month Last Year And give her fifty more. Freight Rates Figure in ‘apt nT hardt nt 25 miles an hour,” sowing down for Eager sap pam sa as ae . sh geSIE TIENT TROT Heavy Trading that could be called & modern publis J , carry on me. “ stop at ps eisson (Ci depoy Ooty “Tam taking this afternoon off to| _ Burleigh county residents who have Pve a little Golden Sister Gaceorneak * stare of the students were s0 seri- ) Fratch the ¢H club boys work over) or their 1996 taxes may have several ina vine ip eis Selden heart, New York, Opt. 23—UP)—The stock| Alexander McKensle, North Da- ously injured they may not survive. “This year T planted 200 acres of| more days in which to do so without, in spirit 1 am near her, market swept into another broad de- | kota’s political boss, and Richard B. he Coa: 10 STATE PRISON corn, About 80 acres of this was badiy | being charged interest end penalty, Though we may be far apart, cline Saturday as offered shares| Mellon, the Pittsburgh financier then Rex Simpson, 38, formerly of damaged by worms and is very thi ae es " And I have to stop a moment swamped traders and forced prices| operating a small bank here, had Fairmont, Minn. driver of the but the balance probably will make) "Dion of tax payers to get thelr ac- Just to brush away the tears down $1 to as much as 90 or more. | constructed = four-story red brick y writes Dorotby Ross, 35, ef Ores- | Jansonius Decrees Men Must ate Te eee petee shows | counts with the county settled has As I wish her God's best blessing Railroad and steel issues were the| building, still standing, at the north- her first c caused # congestion in the treasurer's On her fifty Golden 9 first to feel the selling wave, which| eastern interesection of Main and ton, Is., serving year as Se T for Fi what corn means to me. I would not that take Une to ne fifty years.’ 5 an English teacher in the Ren- rve Terms for Forgery, {farm where good corn could not be| office Laballiy van pereediname ts a. : spread through all divisions of the|Sixth 8t., for a hotel. A depression wick high scheol. Car Theft raused. (The picture is of feed tut | Telleve, Taylor sald, pointing out : By James W. Foley. market. U. 8, Steel common dropped | came and McKenzie and Mellon were i Loren Morten, 26, of Guernsey, with about 100 pigs visible.) collections during October year |i. to a new low level for the year and , Is., teaching his second term in —_———___ already exceed the total amount of — Union Pacific, Loulsville & Nash-| Rly too glad to dispose of their commerce at the school. ‘Three men who pleaded guilty totwo} Good Exhibits . taxes collected during October last (Baitor’s Note: In 1922 on the S0th anniversary of ville, Santa Fe and Southern Pacific | property to the Benedictine sisters for Don noes 16, Goldfield, In, | different charges were sentenced. to| “After 17 Sat nt hats tan datas to hold the books open for ister Boniface's entrance into the Benedictine Sisterhood, suffered a wie eee: ean Ge hospital and school purposes in 1864 studen’ terms in the state itenti Emmons count riend, James W. , y Invest pointment Lillian Cedar, 14, Hardy, Ia, |pistrict Judge Pred Penitentiary PY lone crop of wheat of 22 bushels per| several additional days was made be- ee, frien Jetaee reise Demet poet freight rate increases granted the First In North Dakots student. Friday. acre, During the other 16 -years if I| cause some tax payers did not realize wines’ life ‘ebbed away in Bismarck Friday.) carriers Friday by the Interstate} In that first hospital, the first in Patsy Turner, 14, student. Allan W. Woodin, 22, New York, and kept every bushel of wheat raised Ij that the deadline for payment of the Commerce Commission, coupled With | North Dakota and then the only one Norman Eggerth, 16, student. Anton Schafer, 23, Berwick, N. D, doubt if I would have had seed for} second installment was Oct, 15, Tay- the fact the market already had dis-|between Miles City and St. Paul, Lowell 15, student. were each given sentences of a year |¢#ch following year.” lor said. counted them in higher prices the/there was little to identify it as 9 Jimmy Bell, 15, student. and « half in the st prison. when Giving poirit to Crimmins’ observa. Collections of the current levy thus last few days, was said by brokers tO! refuge for the ailing and dying. The Albert Siemans, 16, student. they admitted stealing a car at Tuttle tions is the exhibits received to date.| far this month total $73,150.29 as com- have been one of the primary cause3/beds were hotel beds and in those ‘The last five all live in Renwick. |iast Saturday night. “Harold Thomas, Bee ee ar a eee eee ee re MONTANA MAN KILLED — | °F {he uP. heavy, with the ticker |(ATy years the Kindly sisters, rast eens rare tinted’ une theg| 2h, Bismarck, was ordered to prison |" Sacop a. Krein, Antelope, Btar| current levy collected during October| | Football Scores |} a, susiy, 0, oct 22-—1e—A man| Pe behind ag much as four minutes| and hotel, ‘There were only” a few for an indeterminate term of not le88/ county, sent in samples of eight dif-| test year was $48,282.37, little more Shomer at times. Buyers were not plentiful, sanitation facilities, Lam; that Kept her from taking the eld /than 1% years and not more than 2% | ‘erent ‘varieties. Thor Hovet of Rey-|than half of the amount already . identified by police as Thomas Welsh,| ard the frequent wide spread between | Peron kererene, Surgeons used rough oe trip with the re for Paulines| "ho he pleaded gully to a charge | poids, Frail county, will show Minne gathered in this year with several] oy, 9, Pista irieeg about 50, of Great Falls, Mont. was| offering and bid prioss cauwed dlt-| wood tables to thold Chole instouenntt body Frit ht, until notified third degree forgery. sota 13 nt. Fred Lang | days yet to go. ; Michigan . killed when struck down by an auto-|ficulty, at times, lecting trans-/and their patients. y Seay olen a at Med ‘The car which Woodin and Schafer |or Tappen, Logan county, will show Marquette 0; State 7. actions. Into ade panes atmosphere came Delinquent tax collections this Washington university (St. Louls ie; | meee while walking near Huron. last minute, not to make the trip, | *¢mitted stealing was recovered after! yellow Flint and John 8. Kreusel,| month have already reached $4,385.67. | the young woman whose courage and ‘Vern Mot! Mason City, coal dealer, Woodin abandoned it near Steele] Anamoose, Pierce county, will display| The total at the same time last year 1s executive ability had prompted the who was in his automobile only 100] When @ tire went flat and hitch-hiked | Rainbow and Squaw Flint. was $4,687.83 and for the month was ° e superior of the mother house to send feet behind the bus, gave s graphic|‘0 Bismarck, where he was nabbed. | Other entries received Saturday in-| $4,684.75, her to the frontier hospital, the first d the accident. Thomas, held in the Burleigh coun-|clude: Jacob Beck, Lakota, Nelson : that the Benedictine order had esta- blished in the Northwest. : g F i i § L ¢ i i i e If Sister Boniface was ever appalled by what she found, she gave no hint. 1 t axes She had dedicated her life to the service of others and she attacked ie —_—_—_—ee_eereenr seemingly king FR Reveals He Wants No New enone er He’ Deveidenee genuity that marked her as a woman passing s no-good check. Mott, Buregh county, Mixed Flint eenaomen - 1 Indians j ‘Emmons county, Mixed Flint; idon mgruaye Tulane Rice, Morton Q JAMES’ PIONEER DIES Paul C. Tate of Tulss, Okla. A Someone D. oe heap ire note attached said the gavel viel Treasury Grants for Crop heen seas oe be sare eznbodying et unueet ee ae Mrs. J. T. Tracy, 10, Jamestown fashioned with , inch; added rminat make Fest Second Third Fourth Wins! | heer snd Gold Star mother, died Pri-| and cand paper. ‘The governor Control Program “hopeful thet we may have a bill| matoe = Detter place to lve in om fashington, ig : tor in tal it OF WE® J : men Jones (Dem., Tex.), of the house the features. that 22° "so sends menonges fot one, Tt Ohio State = ° . fare committee’ made public |he said he believed should be incor. |S6FY (0 send & messenger for one, T% : = oO 7] Saturday a letter from President porated in new farm legisla! immediately welcome Reese a S Roosevelt saying new taxes will be|the special session, Mr. Roosevelt to" savent of the telephone. She saw : the the | O B Y | necessary {f the cost of a crop con- |ssid, “the new national farm acts}. "11 now instrument of e i a 4 an Wrontars Boatrtossd 0; Hoty Bere canara ee eee Sail as thee soll fertility, “Tt shoud |caton the means 6; Cross 6. Q Michigan Lo | Ba BS Still Higher Rates |= teint faite, present ned tie plans prove, for sorege of rere fod [eye of Palenis i Snerneer = a for con! i]s ‘ THIRD PERIOD to Chairman Smith (Dem, 8. C.), of |s0 thet i severe and widespread | ,,, Insialled First Telephone ‘ Notre Dam «| rc | B B a s St vial may Tune pao | isbems 18: Georse Weshinston @ |the senate agricultural commis énd Growth, recurs consumers will be ee eee i the i jay Seek mes reg berry mete B petition, Valley City Upset ote te of course, especially import-|with less drastic increases in price suerestion et » epgeene? atin ' Navy 7 | oe | | | er Than $47,500,000 Fig- | Thursday at Chicago. ey ity psets ant that any new Jesisistion should than frosted ot bernie ioe. Hamat p oevered pol Lads = “Yall ; f ure Approved Friday Pretieat Wine At settee at ‘the Fargo Eleven, 8-0)27 nee ee eaident wrote. | “Tt should provide for control of | druggists, She made her frst t “sale” t0 e rc | i | | a Union Pacific, the railroads may ve Le “In other words, no additional fed- | surpluses wi as necessary, Dr. eae . ddeite — 42 fashington, 23—Ue)—Execu- | “forced back into government opere-| Fargo, N. D, Oct, 23—(#—Valley|eral expenditures’ from the general|st the same time it should preserve |Dr. H. R. Porter, one of Bismarck | ree Me hatuna oie ee fle tun.” ‘ City's high school football team, |fund of the treasury should be made |the export markets that still are open |first physicians and survivor of the Cornell Fun pan freight Chicago, Chairman Harry Guy | themselves definitely out of the run-|over and above existing planned ex-|to our farmers. It should protect |Custer campaign, that he needed s out —. #9 ot Fee ee een matuntay| Taylor of the Western association of |ning for the state gridizon title, de-|penditures, ‘The only’ exception to both farmers and consumers against jtelephone. | Then all the doctors Fordham | (| a] B B they will ask the Interstat> Com. | Railway Executives said the increases | feated Fargo here 7 to 0 Friday night | this would be the incurring of addi- extreme ups and downs in the prices pcg f be merce approve «| would go largely to eastern to deal a severe blow to the Midgets’| tional obligations on the part of the |jof farm products. Tt should be fi- | They were amons telephones | xas Christi: & @ O G turther increase of possibly ten times} The $47,500,000 figure hopes of a state crown. treasury, backed 100 per cent by ad-|nanced by sound fiscal methods. Local ipl Senge 5 * ” a mW r Ban Soannoinee whic he carte) aes Mane meen eee See rn pelanes Ontos farmers’ hands.” be Kept in the | Snifested iteelf soon after ber ar- } = Wage increases in recent months. ve | five | Ss 5 Ly ese peste 4 | carriers tended, added ~| lasted for months. The 1.C.C. refused ying as a unit, would not be stop- ‘In other words, whatever goes out | Some advisers to Secretary Wallace Mone: scarce ° : : Pittsburgh @ i) | a | $0050 to tness ennal outgo, or tntes to raise rates on anthracite coal. re- er It was the first defeat in six|must be balanced by an equivalent |have estimated his ever-normal gran- Garmossion. The marti ofS ‘times the extra income approved dy | fined petroleum in the southern ter- starts, tor Purge sad the fourth win AioUnLOmnEe ea E| EEF penerae would ecb enon 900, Nas Meee oe ee Lee isco |the LC. ritory and iron ore between mines w | a» against two losses for Valley approxi- | annually, more being Wi onsin 0 | 0 | ru) | | J. J. Pelley, president tones Malneneents, oO docks on UR bee Ie semenenn a ern ee undefeated ne 9600,000,000 for soil conserva- | the. half-billion now being spent on ‘one Continved eb Pose We) Iciation of American Ra:

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