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THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, OCTOBER 235, 19387 2 (-MEN PIN HOPES OF SOLVING SNATGH ‘ON RANSOM NOTES Chicagoan Feared Killed Like Abduction Victim of Same Name Years Ago Chicago, Oct. 25.—() — Wealthy Charles 8. Ross was kidnaped a month go Monday. days have elapsed since the 92-year-old retired manufacturer of greeting cards was forced into an automobile on a lonely road near Chi- eago and driven off by three gun- men; yet Monday his abduction re- mains as puzzling as one of the na- tion’s first sensational snatches—that of little Charley Ross in Germantown, Pa., 63 years ago. Charley Ross never returned, It was believed he had been killed by his captors. The family of Charles 8. Ross fears he, too, died at the hands of his abductors. ‘ During the last four weeks there has been no word as to whether he is alive or dead. State's attorney's po- lice say the Ross kidnaping is de- astined to add one more chapter to the city’s book of unsolved crimes. But famed federal agents place their main reliance toward a solution on a nation-wide net formed by the circulation of lists of the serial num- bers of the $50,000 ransom in cur- rency turned over to the abductors in a vain attempt to obtain the vic- tim’s release. CONTINUED from page one- Bismarck Man Picks 17 Football Winners KEEPING THE LEAD RIGHT Declarer Often Can Succeed by Timing Trick-Taking So as to Nullify Power of Opponents’ Cards By WILLIAM E. McKENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM Which defending player shall have the lead at a crucial point in the play often determines the success or failure of the contract. Sometimes the declarer is helpless in the matter, as fate has so distributed the cards that nothing he can do will avail. However, there are many cases in which, by timing his taking of the Rubber—N. & S. vul. South West North East 1v Pass 1N.T. Pass 2a Pass 34 Pass ah Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—@ Q. 25 only trick in a certain suit, the de- clarer can force the play of the hand to follow along lines that are bound] to bring success. In today’s hand North’s cards were poor. But he knew that his partner had a big hand, shown by his re- versal of the bidding (that is, bidding St. and J. J. Thomas of 818 Fifth St., Bismarck, split the $5 second prize, each getting $250. | Checks are being presented to the winners and details of the contest coming up this week are found on another page of this edition of the Bismarck Tribune. Had Good Average Huss had an over-all score of 57 out ‘of a possible 60 for a grand average of 95 per cent compared to the 56 cat of possible 60 for Zuger and ‘Thomas. 2 The other three persons picking 16 winners were Max Wielock of Brad- dock, 54; Glenn Hanna, 1006 Fifth &t., Bismarck high school athletic di- rector, 52; and Lorna Ostroot, 511 Twelfth St., Bismarck, also 52. Nine others succeeded in naming| ¥! 18 winners and 2% others selected 14 winners, Though by far the greatest number picked 12 winners in the contest, the average for the entire group of contestants was only 11.23. Winning selections ranged from 5 to Lack of ties in games last week-end ‘was @ notable feature. Many fore- cast tle games, one contestant even prognosticating eight ties out of the 20 games. Most contestents stumbled by failing to ‘pick Stanford over ‘Washington, Vanderbilt over Louisi- ana State, Winnipeg over University of North Dakota, North Carolina over Tulane, Ohio-State over Northwest- ern, Dartmouth over Harvard and Notre Dame over Navy. Other Winners Trail Scores registered by previous cash winners included Alton Newton of Fort Lincoln 13; M. H. Anderson 10, Marth Miller 12 and Willam Cohen 14, all of Bismarck. Ballots were entered from Bis- marck, Braddock, Fargo, Menoken, Beach, Wing, Fort Lincoln, Wash- burn, Underwood, Hensler, Mandan, Scores week-end’s games in- cluded: io Stanford 13; Washington 7. Detroit 14; Boston College 0. Arkansas 13; Southern Methodist 0. Colorado 47; Colorado State 0, Fordham 7; Texas Christian 6, Vanderbilt 7; Louisiana State 6. California. 20; Southern California Duke 13; Colgate 0. Winnipeg 10; Universit; Dal %. , ly of North: North Dakota State 13; Moor! 8.7.0. 6. meee Michigan tet 6. North Carol ; Tulane 0. Oregon State 14; Oregon 0, Rice Institute 14; Texas 7. Pitteburgh 21; Wisconsin 0. Ohio State 7; Northwestern 0. Yale 9; Cornell 0, Baylor 13; Texas A. & M. 0. Dartmouth 20; Harvard 2. Notre Dame 9; Navy 7. Richardton Abbot to Return From Europe Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 25—()—Rev. Goeb, abbot of Assumption Outhbert Abbey, Richardton, will return to the| $2! a higher ranking after a lower rank- ing suit). With the knowledge that his part- ner’s hand was filled with honors, North was justified in raising the second suit. When the dummy was spread South saw that the contract was fairly safe, provided trumps could be drawn and the hearts established without letting East lead. With this in mind West was allowed to hold the first trick, but the suit was continued and the ace won. Now the trumps were drawn, the third round being won in dummy. The queen of hearts was next played and finessed, West winning with the king. Now whatever suit he choose to re- turn was immaterial. South was able to discard three losing clubs in dum- my on his long hearts, and lost in all one diamond, one heart and one club. Today's Pointer: In plenning the play of the hand, assume thet the important cards are lying wrong, and govern your play ac- cordingly. Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) South’s contract is four hearts, doubled. After ruf- fing the opening lead he ree turns a heart, which East wins. ‘What return can East now make to set the contract? (Blind) (Blind) OFFICIALS OF FSA Will Discuss Relation of Irriga- tion, Rehabilitation at Meeting Here George 8. Knapp, state water con- servation commission technician, will speak to federal farm security ad- ministration supervisors at a state meeting here Oct. 30 on relation of irrigation and farm rehabilitation in North Dakota. Knapp and State Engineer E J. Thomas will discuss possibilities of rehabilitation of drouth farmers on watered tracts to relieve agricultura) stress in the state. Walter Maddock, state FSA di- rector, asserted 10,000 farm families can be rehabilitated on irrigable acres if sufficient land is made available for watered projects. Also scheduled to address 17 dis- trict supervisors including 10 women supervising FSA home management divisions in North Dakota are Mad- dock, and O. Leonard Orvedal, di- tector of the FSA debt adjustment division. NUBS = NEWS HOTEL REGISTRATIONS Pri Hotel ice Hotel C. I, Hilton, Caltex, G._H. Brown, Miss'C. A. Knopf, Pacific Hotel O. L. Sat! and son, Grand Forks; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kidd, Ottawa, Ont.; Mr. and Mrs. H. G, Johnson, Mott; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lee, yl Wyo. id Mrs, H. J. Spiller, Bis ff Johnson, Jr., Detroit Lak Mi a Mrs. G. ©. N’ Campbell, Hampden: Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Holte: ismerck; Eunice Collins, Hettinger; Mr. and rs. . Wheeler, Gerrison; and 8. B. Abreham, Dickinson. Mr. Duplicate—All vul. Opening lead—& 9. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) | Weather Report | WEATHER FORKCASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- erally fair tonight and Tuesday; cool- er tonight, For North Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; cooler west por tlon tonight. For South Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; cooler tonight. For Montana: Generally fair to- night and Tuesday; colder east of Di- vide tonight. For Minnesota: Unsettled, slightly warmer extreme southeast, cooler in extreme southwest portion tonight; Tuesday generally fair, cooler ex- treme southeast. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS ‘A deep low pressure area is center- ed over the upper Mississippi Valley Minneapolis 29.42 inches, while a high Pressure area overlies the northwest- ern districts, Boise 30.26 inches, The weather is somewhat unsettled in the northern border states and light pre- cipitation has occurred over the Far Northwest. Skies are mostly clear throwghout the central and southern states. Cool weather prevails in the Great Lakes region, but temperatures are moderate from the Mississipp! Bisi 27.98. Reduced to sea level, 29.7, Missourl river stage at 7 a. m., 4.3 ft. 24 hour change, -0.1 ft. Sunrise, 7:16 Sunset, 5:88 p. m. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date . Normal, this month to date Total, January 1st to date Normal, January tat to dat Accumulated excess to date .. NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- High- it est Pi 74 68 BISMARCK, Devils Lake, Minot, cldy. Williston, cld Fargo, cldy. Carson, cldy. Bottineau, pei Jamestown, clear Grand Forks, cldy. Langdon, clear .. . 59 WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS Low- High- est Pet, cldy. at 70 72 56 16 67 15 Aberdeen, 8. D., cld; Boise, Idah r Calgary, Alta., clear . Chicago, Mil, clay. Denver, Colo., cle: Dec Moines, low: Dodge City, Kans., c Edmonton, ‘Alta, cl Glendive, "Mont, pc! Havre, Mont., clear Helena, Mont., peldy. Relay Mpils.-8t. Mobridge, 8. Moorhead, Minn., No. Platte, Nebs Okla. City, Oki Phoenix, ‘Ariz. clear . Poerre. §. pid City, S. Roseburg, Ore. St. Louis, Mo. La. United States late in October from a! 8. 8. M ‘world conference of Be: \- bots at : nedictine Ab: United States. A visit to Monte Casino where the order of St. Benedict was ‘founded and an audience with Pope Pius XI have been outstanding fea- ‘tures of the abbot’s European tour. The Pas, Man. Winnipeg, Man. The “big room” in the Carlsbad Cavern, N. M., is 4,000 feet long and 625 feet wide. tama” MONDAY, NOV. 1 in “ROBINSON CRUSOE” 03 | in the auditorium of the ‘the $0 | built. , | market, CONTINUED from page one’ City Pays Its Last Tribute to Sister House of the Benedictine order Tues- day morning. Assisting Bishop Wehrle at the mass were Rev. Thomas Egan, St. Mary's cathedral, Fargo, as arch priest; Rev. Herman Mandry, Garri- son, a8 deacon; Rev, John Halloran.| Ray, a8 sub-deacon, and Rev. An- drew Kolbeck, St. Anthony, as master of ceremonies. Follows Catholic Custom In accordance with Catholic cus- tom, Bishop Wehrle made no effort to eulogize the dead nun, explaining that every soul receives justice when Hs appears before the Judgment Seat of . Instead he discussed the beauty of serving God, each, 2 his place, and the necessity for ving @ brotherhood or sisterhood with Christ if that place is to be filled | properly. This attunement is as val- uable and as necessary to married couples as to those called to the di- rect service of Christ as priests and nuns, he said, Commenting on the Sisterhood, Bishop Wehrle said Sister Boniface was a fine representative of unselfish service to God and her fellow man. Receiving a calling to such service early in her life, she followed faithfully and conscientiously, have thousands of others enlisted in the same work. Their dedication 6| to such unselfish service is a fine tribute to the Christian homes from which they came, he ald, and the value of their service is immeasurable. Closes With Ritual The service closed according to the ritual of the Catholic church, with the Bishop praying “Eternal Rest grant unto her O Lord” and the con- gregation responding “May she rest in peace.” After the services the deft un- g z Bs d til time to take it to All day Sunday it lay the parlor of St. Alexius which the foresight, energy ness acumen of Sister Bonift E Ha : BEE & gi. Hundreds called throughout and far into the evening to last respects to the nun wi Dakota's ue atbits continued ‘99 | Country. Among them were tele- grams from two persons of national prominence, ‘ket for American passenger automo- biles, while Japan is the chief truck Births Daughter, Mr. OH Mrs. Wil rocke| pagmmons . a turday, Bismarck hospitel. iam D. pm, Death: Mrs. John Bachman, D., at 2:45 a, m. hospital. 43, Stretter, N. Sunday, in @ local es | cee t Chicago, Oct. 23—(/)—J, O. Clarke, central division chief of the U. 8. food and drug administration, re- Monday in Of 700 bottles, mostly pints, of the solution sold originally by a south- ern medical concern, Clarke “very few” remained untraced. The A. perversion: contains diethylene g! Meanwhile the American Medical association traced reports of seven ad- ditional deaths which Dr. Morris Fishbein, AMA spokesman, said may have been caused by the potion. ‘Upper photo shows a chemist at a micro- A. M. A. lab- Chicago. Lower photo shows the sulfanilamide label as it appears on bottles. "| Wilkins Fits Skis to ws returned from Minne- he attended the recent institute on Mrs. F. R. Smyth, 318 Third 8t., ‘loval hos- C. B. Smith, Fargo, zone manager, for the Chevrolet Motor company, visited in Bismarck for a few hours Saturday night with F. M. Davis, local Chevrolet dealer. Mr. Smith was on bis way west on a business trip. Plane for Arctic Hunt big Soviet-owned monoplane for a fught to the Arctic to search for six missing Russian trans-polar fliers. Wilkins arrived here Sunday with his pilot, Herbert Hollick- INVENTION CALL TED 8t. Prul, Oct. 25.—(#)—A conven- tion committee of the Republican party was to meet Monday afternoon to draft the formal call for a state would be spent for toys this year, 10 per cent more than last season. COOK KILLED IN FALL Billings, Mont., Oct. 25.—()—Floyd to prices as they have in the past, ac-| sugar beet cording to the U. 8. Bureau of Agri- cultural Economics, With average yields, an acreage of this extent will produce a crop of 950 million bushels, ‘The plot of the book, “Ben Hur,” Lew Wallace, event place near the beginning of the Christian era; yet the horses of Sheik Iiderim mentioned therein are named after stars which were not named un- til about 1000 A, D. Triplets and Named ‘Dion’ | The quotation, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder,” is ftom Thomas Haynes Bayly’s “Isle of Beauty.” By the Associated Prese BRIE MEAT PRICES TO FALL Chicago.—Lower retail meat next year were envisioned Monday. by C. A. Burmeisiter, senior agricultural economist of the U. S.-department of agriculture. Burmeister said larger meat supplies would produce a “lower average.” PRIEST'S WRITING STOPS Detroit.—Rev. Charles E. will write no more articles for the ‘weekly publication “Social Justice,” its pewly appointed editor, Walter Baert- schi of Toledo, said Monday until “it is determined whether he can speak his own mind or not.” PLAN PACKERS’ DRIVE ‘The Committee for In- dustrial Organization announced Monday formation of a packing house workers’ organizing committee and inauguration of an intensive mem- bership campaign. TO DIVORCE COUNT Havana—The former Marte Roca- fort Monday filed a new divorce ac- tion against the Count of Covadonga, once heir to the throne of Spain, charging incompatibility. AFL-CIO SESSION RECESSES Washington, Oct.25—(?)—The first session of the American Federation of Labor-CIO peace conference re- cessed Monday with preliminaries still being discussed. The meeting was to be resumed Monday afternoon. SLAYER RESTING UP Iselin, N. J.— Margaret acquitted of a charge of said] she said she shot when he attempted to attack her again after having made her pregnant, was reported by her family Monday to be “somewhere in New York state,” resting up after the ordeal of her trial. The state of New York now uses an airplane to catch fish pirates. CAPITOL Presents for the last times today JOHN BOLES JACK OAKIE Ida Lupino in “Fight for Your “The Old Mill” (Technicolor Silly Sympheny) “St. Regis Hotel Orchestra” “Alpine Grandeur” (All Color Travelree!) Latest News Events TUES. - WED. Return engagement of that favorite and unforgettable laugh hit. o«. but then he played so hard they begged him ROBERT TAYLOR PEGGY WOOD It is none too early te make your selection * of Genuine Engraved Christmas Greeting Cards Personal Stationery Stop in and plece your order. carly BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. . Commercial Printing Dept. NAVY HISTORY IS TRACED FOR LIONS Judge Nuessie’s Talk Directs Attention to Navy Day Celebration Wednesday An historical survey of the U. 8. navy was given members of the Bis- marck Lions club Monday by North Dakota Supreme Court Justice W. L. Nuessle. Judge Nuessle touched on several highlights in U. 8, naval history, dwelling chiefly on the spectacular career ‘of John Paul Jones—“not Am- erica’s first naval officer. but her first great navy commander.” Not until 1905 did America honor fully the man who first brought in- ternational respect to American ships and the American flag, said Judge Nuessle, Judge Nuessle was introduced by Dr. W. ©. Brunsoman, program chair- man. W. R. Koch was named chairman of the committee for the Ladies’ Night meeting, Nov. 15. Other committee members are Ed Klein, Phillip Edel- man, Charlie Schatz, Dr. A. M. Fisher, J. F. Meckler, and W. A. Hart. Lions were reminded of the zone convention in Rugby Nov. 10. Several are expected to go from Bismarck. C. Ruble, Driscoll and Minne- apolis attorney, was the only guest. Progtam chairmen for next week ate Meckler and Dr. Charles A. Arne- aon, B'smarc THEATRE Students Flee From Oil Well Blast, Fira - Oklahoma City, Oct, 25—(?)—Five hundred students fled from Northeas{ high school burned as they brought the flameg under control, No students were hurt, St. Mary’s Classes Tour Filtration Plant Thirty-five members of Sister Norine’s biology classes of St. Mary’s high school toured the filtration plant west of the city Monday afternoon, Another group of 35 is to go soon, Moarhead, Minn. Oct. 25 —(P)— James Dunne, 19, Fargo, who already has spent nearly 10 years in train= ing svhools, Monday pleaded guilty to an, oil station holdup and a burg- lary before Judge Byron R. Wilson here and was sentenced to not to exe ceed 25 years in state prison. While the early submarines took 28 minutes to submerge, modern war- time submarines can submerge in from one to two minutes. The sube poeresoy. tine as ener to Be. 8) vital Providing rapid escape from gun ramming and attack. TODAY AND TUESDAY 25c Till 7:30 “STAGE DOOR’’ mo Ginger Rogers ADOLPHE What the Critics Say about “Stage Door” “Head and Shoulders above any of the big hit pictures of recent months”! — Variety, ‘ace theatrical publi- cation, HARVEST QUEEN FANCY BLUE G's CORN FLAKES SPINACH *‘SUNSWEET—FANCY, LARGE STOKELY'S TOMATO JUICE BEEF RIBS PORK CHOPS, lean _ PORK SAUSAGES __ PIGS’ FEET 2 Ihe. 19 TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU Main—Phone (60 508 $2.00 ORDERS DELIVERED FREE Katherine Hepburn MENJOU “One of the Peak Shows of the Holly- wood Picture Pa- 2 cm 19¢ 2 ne. 196 2 = 19¢ 2m 19¢ an 200 50-oz. can ROSE pound pkg. BREAKFAST CEREAL 3. 21c KRAFT’S DINNER . Meat Dept. Values ----pkg. 15¢ To Bake or Boil lb. 14¢ ---[b. 24¢ _lb. 276 RED OWL FOOD STORE