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Harty investigation of what she/a number of “wholesale sterilization” of girls in te Kansas industria school t Beloit before Gov. Walter A. Hux- CHARGES WHOLESALE = GIRL STERIMZAMON econ Democratic women school showed 62 of the 148 inmates at the time Huxman was inaugurated early this year had been sterilised and that %2 more were slated for opera- tions. “Bo .far as I can determine, ster- eapeaar tee done as a punishment, ral for for Ndi Kas. Oct. 23.—(7)—Mrs. | society,” ayn aan dee Kathryn O’Laughlin McCarthy, for-| Will eee, former vice-chairman of Mer congresswoman, Saturday de-! the state board of administration, said Le ————————e——eEeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee A Fur Coat MADE FOR YOU Kansan Demands Investigation of Industrial School; Says 62 Operated on HAMILTON BLANES PDR FOR SLUMP President's Practices Have Made American People Jit- is tery, Says Leader Manufacturing Fur Garments for those who are particular as to style, quality and fit at lowest possible prices. @ Cleaning—Repairing—Restyling “If you don’t know your furs— know your furrier” Fur Department Capital Laundry Co. 301 Front Phone 684 Hamilton declared in an address pre- pared for a meeting of West virginia Republican women, “ Great possible distress” and Mr. Roosevelt “should prepare to deal with the squalls.” Hamilton said administration poli- cles have created “widespread alarm” instead of “true prosperity” and that the president “has shown himself unaware of actual economic develop- ments.” Whales are the largest of all mam- Welcome to the State Corn Show: The Cheapest Way to Cook, Heat Water and Heat Your House Is With NATURAL GAS Special “Load Building” offer available now to use Natural Gas. Complete information and surveys made with no obligation on your part. Call Us and Let Us Explain Our Special Offer PHONE 1030 ¢ Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. 120 THIRD ST. BISMARCK, N. D. inson Crusoe will come to life—almost—on the stage of the city auditorium here Nov. 1. True, this famous character will be only a few inches high and his motive power will be strings in the hands of a skilled puppeteer, but so far as the audience is concerned he will be almost the real thing. Along with him will be his man Friday and all the other stars of the famous Defoe story, which on real life. Behind the puppets will be Tony Sarg, one of the most noted experts in this field of phantasy, who is more of an expert on the human muscles than some physicians. He has to be in order to s0 build his characters that their movements will be lifelike. So perfect is the illusion, worked out by the characters and the stage setting, that when the puppeteer appears on the stage to take {CONSERVATION WORK may or may not have been based a bow, along with Robinson Crusoe and the rest, it usually is some- Coes of a shock to the audience. 500 State Employes Members of A. F. of L. Valley City, N. Di, Oct. 23—(P)— jApproximately 500 members of the state employes union of southeast- jern North Dakota became affiliated | with the American Federation of iLebor here Friday. James L. McCormack, Milwaukee, Wis., | organization, was the principal speak- yer. Gov. William Langer and High- ,way Commissioner P. H, McGurren iwere unable to attend. Sam Diemert, Valley City, presi- \aent, appointed a committee on by- jlawa and constitution which will re- port at a state meeting to be held shortly. |Rock Hurled in St. 8t. Paul, Oct, 23.—(7)—First vio- j lence in the laundry and dry cleaning strike here occurred Friday night plate glass window in the Schwartz !Bros., Inc., plant, Selby Ave, and North Milton St, The rock apparently was thrown trom an automobile. Schwartz Bros. Inc. has been c.osed for two weeks as a result of the difficulties which have shut down | 95 per cent of St. Paul's laundry and ary cleaning establishments. No new progress in negotiations to settle the strike were reported Sat- (urday. FIVE FLIERS KILLED‘ Ankara, Turkey, Oct. 23.—(4)—Five | and three parachutists—were killed | |Saturday when a military airplane crashed during training exercises near here. DACOTAH SEED COMPANY Wholesalers and Manufacturers Seeds, Grain, Feed, Flour Telephone 106 : : Bismarck, N. D. Corner Ninth and Main Paul Laundry Strike’ when a rock was thrown through a: Turkish army fliers—two instructors | ‘AMERICANS DRAW | 496 SWEEPSTAKES DUCATS SATURDAY U. S. Holders of Tickets in $13,- 000,000 Lottery Concen- trated in N. Y., New Jersey representative of the national |’ Dublin, Oct. 23—(?)—The heavy American participation in the Irish Hospital sweepstakes was demon- strated again Saturday when United States ticket holders won 426 out of | 800 consolation awards drawn from the drums of chance. Each is worth $500. ! Eight hundred more consolation prizes were to be drawn later, The total intake of the sweeps, based on the Cesarewitch race to be run next Wednesday, was announced as £2,695,155 (about $13,610,000), of which £1,582,753 (about $8,700,000) made up | the prize fund. Four out of the 10 residual prizes— |each worth $41,378—were won Satur- | day by ticket holders in the Irish Hos- pital sweepstakes from New York and | New Jersey, One of the other residual prize win- iners wes from Canada and five from ; Europe. The United States took 26 of the first 50 out’ of 1,600 $500 consolation {Prizes to be drawn. | Added to the drawing Friday by 764 Americans of tickets worth $1,920 each —a total of $1,465,680—Americans have iwon $1,649,192, Holders of tickets on thorses finishing first, second and third in the Cesarewitch race next Wednesday at Newport, Eng.,on which the sweepstakes is based, also will win jabout $150,000, $75,000 and $50,000 re- | spectively. Thirty-four Americans drew tickets on the five favorites: Epigram, Near ‘Relation, Solar Bear, Harewood and | Maranta. ‘No Big WPA Boost | Expected in Winter Washington, Oct. 23.—(4)—Howard |O. Hunter, WPA director for Illinois land regional director for 13 mid- j Western states said Saturday that he jexpected only a slight increase in the number of persons on WPA pay. jolls in his area during the winter | months, Hunter said there was an increase ia the number of private jobs and ‘that was taking up some of the un- employment slack. He estimated that there were 500,- 000 persons on the WPA payrolls in his 13 states, approximately half as many as @ year ago. CARD OF THANKS ‘We wish to thank our many friends end neighbors for the beautiful flow- ers, words of sympathy and kind assist- ance given during the recent passing ‘of our dear father. We also wish to express our thanks to Rev. and Mrs. Griepp for the lovely music which, Wm. McCullough. GOES FORWARD IN 3 LINES OF ENDEAVOR) Workers Report Progress in Soil Conservation, Stabilization, Anti-Erosion Work Washnigton, Oct. 23.—()—Federal i workers in the broad field of cone | servation reported progress Saturday : in three lines of endeavor—to restore soll fertility, stabilize agriculture and bring back woodland to eroded hills. | They grouped the soil and farm! production problems together. Next year, they said, will bring an exten- . sion of the practice of building up good land and taking poor land out of cultivation. ' They issued figures showing the. Planting of millions of trees—a pro- | gram designed to help agriculture! and at the same time prevent floods. Secretary Wallace called the 1938 | soil conservation plans “a progressive development” from practices of _the His aides have not yet tabiated | reports on participation in the 1937 program, but 65 per cent, or more than 283,000,000 acres, of the nation’s total crop land was covered by the 1936 program. The 1938 extension calls for a lim!- tation of 275,000,000-290,000,000 acres for all soil-depleting crops, as com- pared with the 1928-37 average of | 305,000,000 acres for such crops. The soil conservation service, which has a program designed primarily to show farmers how to solve erosion and similar problems, had under agreement as of June 30 a total of 8,543,449 acres. These agreements provide for a five-year period of co- operation with landowners. The service said there were 18,155,- 000 trees planted in the Great Plains shelterbelt, which runs through the Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, Okla- homa and into the Texas Panhandle. The shelterbelt is being financed from emergency relief funds, using $695,000,000 this fiscal year. Benson Making Own Relief Investigation St. Paul, Oct. 23—(?)—A quiet in- vestigation of the state relief admin- istration has been underway “several weeks,” Gov. Elmer Benson disclosed Saturday in branding as “ridiculous” a statement Friday night by State Auditor Stafford King that he (King) was inquiring into relief affairs. Of the state auditor's announce- ment that he was trying to deter- mine disposal of several millions of dollars in federal relief grants, the governor said: \ “It amounts to a proposal by King to investigate himself, Julius Schmah! 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