The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1937, Page 3

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NOW 46; MOST OF DRUG OFF MARKET Principal Shipments of Deadly Preparation Confiscated or Accounted for Chicago, Oct. 26.—(P)—A govern- ment official said Tuesday virtually all of the elixir of sulfanilamide which caused 46 deaths in the nation has been removed from the market. J. O. Clarke, chief of the central States division of the U. 8. food and drug administration, said federal in- vestigators had confiscated or ac- counted for all principal shipments of the preparation, 700 bottles, mostly pint size. : Several one-ounce samples given to salesmen and physicians and three ounces given to a St. Louis resident by his physician were being traced, Clarke said, adding he knew almost all of the elixir had been confiscated in 20 midwestern states and had been assured of its removal from the mar- ket elsewhere, Five deaths in Georgia, and one each at Madisonville, Texas, Copley, O., Cary, Miss., Clayton, Ala., and St. Louis, Mo.; were the latest reported to the American Medical Association. Dr. Morris Fishbein, the associa- tion’s spokesman, said other deaths were being investigated to determine whether they were caused by the wine-colored preparation. Laboratory experiments disclosed diethylene glycol was the lethal agent in the mixture, he said. Sulfanilamide, in contradistinctipn to the deadly preparation in which it was only a component, is a new drug made from a red dye discovered in Germany, Spud Control Group Meets in St Paul St. Paul, Oct. 26.—()—Initial steps looking to enforcement of the crop control act as relating to distribution of potatoes grown in Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin and Michigan were taken Monday at a meeting of AAA official and members of the potato control committee at University Farm School. Named permanent chairman of the regulation committee was John F. Jardine of Waupaca, Wis. . Vice chair: men named include George H. Hoople, Hoople, N. D. Offices will be set up in respective districts, with regional headquarters at St. Paul. Bi-state headquarters for Minnesota and ore Dakota were assigned to Moor- ead, Meanwhile, in W: , an at- tempt to fix potato production next year at 3,100,000 to 3,300,000 acres was \nnounced by the AAA, Hawaiian Prince Is Charged With Murder Honolulu, Oct. 36 —)}— Husky Frince David Kalakaua Kawanana- koa, 33-year-old member of the Ha- wailan royal family, was charged with yecond degree murder Tuesday in the death of his pretty 22-year-old half- taste companion. The new charge accuses him of severing an artery in Arvilla Kins- Jea’s neck with a broken plate during & fight with dishes. The scene was their cottage, where they were giving an all-night party last week-end. Police Lieut. John Cluney, who filea the charges, said he was not sure whether Kawananakoa held or threw the plate which killed the girl. Wyndmere Bank Insured by FDIC Liquidation of assets of the Farm- ers State Bank of Wyndmere, which voluntarily closed its doors Saturday, was in charge of state bank examiner Adam A. Lefor Tuesday. Depositors of the bank are fully protected by the Federal Deposit In- surance Corporation, which will be appointed as receiver at the next meeting of the state banking board, Yefor said. The Wyndmere bank is the third state bank to close this year. Deposit- ors of the other two banks at Burt end Noonan were insured 100 per cent under the FDIC. GLAND INFECTION FATAL Valley City, N. D., Oct. 26.—Edward Gruber Collins, 15-year-old son of Mrs. James Collins, died here Mon- day of a gland infection. He was born Sept. 5, 1922 at Buchanan and attend- €¢ Jamestown . Schilling i le For Sheyenne, River AFFIRMS CONVICTION Construction Witl Eliminate Miles of Proposed Diver- sion Canal System Editor's Note: This is the sec- ond of a series based on the text of the Missouri river diversion report recently submitted to army engineers by the state water con- servation board. dam on the Sheyenne river in the location of sections 20 and 21, Benson county. the need for water eed as wage disposal purposes great during the five winter months as the seven summer months, . the district "s plan makes no pro- maximum depth of 120 feet. The reservoir would have & surface area of 20,000 acres and a storage capacity of 996,000 acre feet, with 356,000 acre feet of storage between elevations 1520 and 15040. It is pro that this 356,000 ecre feet of capacity shall be available to deliver water to Devils Lake, to the James river, without pumping and to the Sheyenne river in accordance with current needs while waters from the Missouri river are discharging into the reservoir at @ constant rate or are being directed into the Souris valley at times for ir- rigation or for U. 8. biological survey needs on that stream. The capacity is sufficient also to provide carry-over storage and thus meet the varying needs of wet and dry years. Cite Recreational Values The reservoir will, in addition, have very extensive recreational values. It miles of excellent Dekota or porti the Souris valley below Velva, it will have a greater effect on ground water replenishment, than te other feature pro; of the proposed ie The construction of this reservoir will eliminate 63 miles of the pro- canal. system including all of the sidehill construction and all of the pipes or inverted siphons in the plan of the district engineer. The remaining canal construction will consist almost entirely of the im- Provement of natural water courses, Laterals Would Replace This will remove the greatest ob- stacles to the operation of the project during the winter months, The main . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1987 BUXIR DEATH TOLL [Reservoir Is Planned St. Paul, Minn., Oct, 26.—E. W. Bennett of St, Paul, (above), suc- ceeds the late H. K. Cole as sec- retary-treasurer and historian of the Veterans’ Association of the Northern Pacific Railway. His appointment was announced by W. C, Smith, president of the Vet- erans’ Association. Bennett retired under the pen- sion rules of the Northern Pacific in 1935 after 37 years’ service. He came to the railroad as assistant to the president of the old North- ern Pacific Express Company, in charge of express traffic. Bennet se at 776 Dayton Avenue, St. Pal URGES ABOLITION OF NFTALKING RULE Governor Benson Seeks Reforms at Minnesota Prison; Criticizes Diet St. Paul, Oct, 26—(7)—Gov. Elmer Benson Tuesday demanded abolition of the “no talking” rule at the state prison at Stillwater during meal times and asked that the diet be improved. In a letter to the state board of control following his visit to the insti- tution last Friday, the governor sald he was of the opinion that the “sl- lence system” still in vogue during the morning and evening meals should be discarded in the interests of prison morale and discipline. The governor also recommended de-centralization of the state prison with establishment of penitentiary camps in positions that would permit inmates to work on forestry or conser- si 3 Souris,| “We also found that butter is served 20 ‘Are Initiated by Columbian Squires C. F. Kelsch, chancellor of the Man- dan Knights of Columbus, acted a3 installing officer when a class of 20 candidates was initiated into the cohen Squires Sunday at Man- Initiates are William R. Boehm, ‘Peter Eckroth, Raymont George, Sam Giardini, Frank Gustin, George Heidt. Francis J. Helbling, Donald Herts, Richard W. Ilse, Charles T: Kapsner, ‘Nicholas Koch, Clyde F. Lehman, John Leingang, George Millner, Pat- tick Regan, Eugene Stoltz, Richard Lubke, James B. Myers, |Weber and Frank J. Yetter. Members of the degree team were Jack Broderick, Emil Stoltz, Clement Bernard, Lloyd Iohstreter, Clemeni Ressler, Clement Knoll, Robert Stein- bruck and Patrick McCormick, Democrats Discuss State Organization Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 26.—(P)— Members of the executive committee of the Democratic county chairman's association discussed organization of the state at a meeting here Sunday, at which Peter ‘An intensive organizati ampaign ion c: will be put on in the state, the date lof which has not been decided. A set ‘Those present included Zappas, Sam Nagle, Edgeley; A. E. Anstrom, Gar- rison; Irvin Hall, , and A, P. at only two or three meals during the week—and then never more than one small piece per. person; that milk is served sledom, probably not more than once @ week.” # Irrigation Projects Affected by Hearing |". North Dakota's proposed irrigation projects near the junction of the Yellowstone and Missouri rivers in Northwestern North Dakota are af- fected by s hearing scheduled at Bill- ings, Mont., Tuesday, State E. J. Thomas said Monday before he left to attend the war department hearing on water uses of the Yellow- stone river. “Results of the hearing are import- ant to North Dakota which has sev- eral proposed irrigation projects near the junction of the two rivers, 20 miles west of Wi'liston near the Montana line,” Thomas asserted. i —_—_—K—X—X—X—XKX!_—_ ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids.for the construction of @ sanitary sewer extension on Wash- ington Street from Avenue B to Ave- Zappas, Jamestown, | s: nue C in Sewer Improvement District Number Thirty-five of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, will be re- ceived by the Board of City Commis- sioners of the said city until eight o'clock P, M., Novemnber 15, 1937. Plans and specificagions are on file In the office of the City Auditor or may be obtained from the City En- gineer. The following approximate quan- titles are given for the guldance of bidder: 37 place 0 1 Pipe in 4—8” x 6” Y's in place 1—manhole complete in place All bids shall be made upon a basis of cash payment for all work to be done. Work on this contract shall be be- un on or before November 22, 1987 and shall be completed not later than December 22, 1937. Each bidder must state in his bid the rate of interest the warrants shall bear (not exceeding seven (7) per cent per annum) which shall be received and accepted by him at par in pay- ment for the work. Each bid must be accompanied by a ear feet of 8” vitrified sewer certified check for Five Hundred | by th ($500.00) Dollars made payable to the order of Obert A. Olson, President of the Board of City Commissioners, of Nor! ota, tra puataniee that the bidder will, ec a contract for the performance of the work. Each bid must also be accom- panied by a bidder's bond in a sum equal to the full amount bid as pro- vided in Section 3707, Compiled Laws ota. The Board of City’ Commissioners RES the right to reject any or all s. Myron H, Atkinson, City Auditor. as it 10-36 11-2. Ito! it Rate in Bi: Cen- far fee! Co. in "Manda! nea {WOMAN'S DEATH IN tl will be ul, enter into and execute | 6! N.D. SUPREME COURT OF TWO MOHALL MEN Is First Time Since Burke's Death That District Judge's Vote Decided Case The North Dakota supreme court ‘a truck on Minot streets in 1936. was the first time since the death Judge John Burke, which created four-judge court, that @ district Judge’s vote decided a case, J. H. Newton, clerk, said. Chief Justice A. M. Christianson, tending “evidence is insufficient to Justify conviction and Shepard is en- the decision because in a four-man court two judges voting to affirm and two dissenting will uphold a decision. The clerk said Shepard, who was sentenced to 3% years in the peniten- Wary and Paris to two years, appealed |report from to the supreme court Ward county district court and from an order denying a new trial. FIRE ‘ACCIDENTAL’ State Officials Investigate Blaze That Took Life of Devils Lake Resident Devils Lake, N. D., Oct. 26.—(7)}— C. A. Miller, head of the North Da- Duke of Tallyrand Found Dead in Bed 5 to Anna Gould, daughter of the late Jay Gould, after her divorce from Count Boni de Castellane. Servants said they found the head of the famous family dead in his bed. Physicians said death was caused by a heart attack. STATE INSPECTORS MEET WITH GERLACH RESIGNS NAZI POST Economics Minister Had Op-, posed 4-Year Self-Suffi- ciency Program Berlin, Oct. 26.—(7)—The resigna- tion of Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, German economics minister, was accepted Lear, by Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hit- Dr. Schacht said: “My resignation took effect Mon- day. I shall remain as president of the reichsbank for the time being.” Plan to Speed Licensing of Tap- rooms; First 1937-38 Permits Issued Inspectors of the North Dakota regulatory and beer departments con- ferred Tuesday with A. J. Gerlach, director of the regulatory department. Twelve beer inspectors and six regu- latory fielimen began a study of the state's beer law and planned to map a new campaign to speed up licensing ot state beer taprooms, for which old licenses expired Oct. 23. The director said applications for about 1,000 beer licenses have already been received by the department which is about half of the state's total, He asserted that in some cases licenses will be held up until taproom proprie- tors holding cigaret licenses make a of purchases of cigarets and snuff for the year. The first two beer licenses issued for ‘1937-88 went to Joseph C. Wetsstein of Mandan and Gudajtes brothers of ‘Warsaw. Wetzstein lined up 100 silver dollars on Gerlach’s desk in payment for his license. Unusual Interest Is Shown in New Autos An unusually large number of mo- toring enthusiasts have been looking over new automobiles for 1938 recent- ly unveiled in Bismarck. “As near as we can determine,” says F. M. Davis of the Capital Chevrolet company, “crowds visiting our show rooms are the largest we have exper- fenced for introductions of new models, ‘This is only one of the indications of called | the prospect for widespread auto buy- “quell rumors of foul play.” After confering with Ramsey coun- scene of the fire, and Mrs. D. Ruten who turned in the . ing this fall, as actual sales and pros- pects for new cars are greater now than we have ever noted st this sea- son of the year.” Similar reports are being made by other Bismarck automobile dealers whose new products for 1038 have been introduced to the public during September and October. Knights of Columbus Will Sponsor Bazaar Decision by the Bismarck Council of the Knights of Columbus to sponsor Navy to Ask for 2 & basaar on Nov. 4, 5 and 6 was an- nounced Tuesday by Albert V. Hartl, grand knight. The bazaar will be held in the World War Memorial building, Hartl said, but plans have not yet been completed and definite announcement of the de- tails will be made later. EGYPT'S KING TO WED More Battleships ae Botson, Oct. 26.—(/P)—Aasistant Sec- retary of Navy Charles Edison said Tuesday, the navy department would request congress for funds to build two more $60,000,000 battle- He said two vessels of this type now were under construction, first of such craft built by this nation since the world war. Edison also said the navy soon would build two speed boats for experimen- tal purposes. They would have maximum speed of 50 miles per hour and would be equipped to fire tor- pedoes from fore and aft tubes. LANGDON AT DEVILS LAKE Devils Lake, N. D. Oct. 26—Rev. Charles W. Langdon Sunday preached his first sermon in the Methodist q, Episcopal church here. He succeeds Rev. F. G. Norris as pastor. Rev. Langdon formerly was pastor at Dick- KILLDEER PLANS SEWER Killdeer, N. D., Oct, 26.—(7)—A pre- liminary survey of a proposed sewer- age project for the City of Killdeer| &' started this week by Louis Veigel of Dickinson. The survey was ordered by the city council to deter- mine approximate cost of s sewer sys- m, ‘ INDIAN AGENT NAMED Washington, Oct. 26.—(#)—Archie Phinney, a Nez Perce Indian, was named Monday as field agent for the Indian bureau in Minnesots, Wiscon- sin and Michigan. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids for the construction of a sanitary sewer extension on First Street from a point two hundred forty (24) feet north of the center of man- hole on Avenue D to the north line of Lot Two (2), Block Fifty-eight (58), McKenzie and Coffins Addition, in Sewer Improvement District Number Thirty-four (34) of the City of Bis- ‘ck, received Novem! 5 . Plans and specifications are on file in the office of the City Auditor or may be obtained from the City En- ne “following approximate quan- are given for the guidance of bidd 175 lnear feet of 8” vitrified sewer y's in place 1—lamphole, complete in place. All bids shi! be made upon a basis of h payment for all work to be ‘Work on this contract shall be be- gun on or before November 22, 1937 hall be completed not later than December 22, . Each bidder must state in his bid the rate of Interest the warrants shall bear (not exceeding sev (7) er annum) which shall be and accepted by him at par in Pagment for the work. ach bid must be accompanied by & certified -check for Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars, made payable to the order of Obert A. Olso of the Board of City Commi: the City of Bismarck, Not as @ guarant t tl successful, enter {1 contract for the performance of the work. bid must also be accom- panied by a bidder's bond in eq! to the full amount bid in Section 3707, Compil of North Dakota. The Board of City Commissioners reserves the right to reject any or all ids mee Myron H. Atkinson, City Auditor. daughter of an Egyptian high court judge, Tuesday was officially set for next Jan. 6. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS @ealed bids for the construction of & watermain extension on Washing- ton Street from Avenue C South to a point twenty-five (25) feet South of the South line of Lot Six (6), Block Fourteen (14) McKensle's Addition in Watermain and Waterworks District Number Forty-two (42) of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, will be re- ceived by the Board of City Commis- sioners of the said city until eight o'clock P. M., November 15, 1937. Plans and specifications are on file in the office of the City Auditor or may obtained from the City En- gineer. re given for the guidance of bid- 235 lnear feet of three (3) inch cast Hen (Bell and Spigot) watermain in pia” x 16” smith patent (Sleeve and Valve) in place 1 In place. —3” gus All bids shall be made upon a bas of cash payment for all work to done, ‘Work on this covtract shall be be- un on oF before November 22, 1987, nd shall be completed not later than December 22, 1937. Each bidder must state in his bid the rate of interest the warrants shall bear (not exceeding seven (7) per er annum) which shall be re- ceived and accepted by him at par in payment for the work. ch bid must be accompanied by & certified check for Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars, made payable to the order of Obert A. Olson, President of the Board of City Commissioners of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, as a guarantee that the bidder will, if ful, enter Into and execute a lor the performance of the work. Each bid must also be accom- panied by a bidder's bond in # sum equal to the full amount bid as pro- vided in Section 3707, Compiled Laws of North Dakota. The Board of City Commissioners 1s the right to reject any or al! Atkinson, ‘ity Auditor. cent Myron H, " Cl The retirement of the economics chief had been predicted many times luring the past year. His duties gradually were usurped by the organization of Col. Gen. Her- man Goering, established to executive Chancellor Hitler's four-year plan to make the reich economically inde- pendent of other nations and now in its second year. Dr. Schacht some time ago left the economics ministry offices, when it became clear that he no longer had full sway, and established headquar- ters in his offices at the Reichsbank. HALMAR SCHACHT sgn Bruce Culver City, Calif, Oct. 26 — @ — Virginia Bruce, screen act- ress and widow of the late star, John Gilbert, disclosed Monday her en- gagement to J. W. Rubin, film di- rector. Miss Bruce said Tuesday they would be married in Hollywood sometime during the Christmas season. Ruben, divorced last year from Mildred Stephen- son Ruben, and the Blonde Miss Bruce have been acquainted several years. Their ro- mance deevloped Miss Bruce in the filming of a current picture (The Bad Man of Brimstone). lekend Bruce is a former Fargo, N. He recently had been reported in opposition to Hitler, by urging more money with which to develop Ger- man commerce abroad and less for LEITH CHURCH CASE ON COURT CALENDAR 2 Presbyterian Factions Seek Control; Young Files Affi- davit of Prejudice Carson, N. D., Oct. 26.—(#)—The Leith church case, involving the right of two factions of the Presby- terlan church to the church property, Presbyterian doctrinal beliefs, . mother organ- seeks to obtain the church property. Rey. 8. J. Allen, one of the pastors tho seceeded from the Presbyterian church of the United States, claims special conditions of ownership apply to the Leith church, Carson Presbyterian Church Newly-Painted Rey. James Austin, Carson, in Bis- cf white paint. Weather of the past two weeks has allowed the painting work to go forward rapidly, he seid. The Carson congregation was given financial aid in the project by the national board in New York, Reverend Austin said. The Carson church will join with other Presbyterian churches in cele- brating the centennial of the founding of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign WINDSOR WOMAN DEAD Windsor, N. D., Oct. 26—Resident here 31 years, Mrs. Frank Kulla was iaid to rest following funeral services in 8t. Mathias church. She died of a ATHLETE IS BURIED Robinson, N. D., Oct. 26 — Funeral services were conducted here for Ed- win Shirley, Robinson, high school aihlete who died in a Jamestown hos- ‘ollowing approximate quant!- | pital. FA LAHR INSURANCE * ONDS SULT YOUR AGENT OR WOULD YOUR R LAWYER LIGNITE This Seper Clea, Premiem Lignite is the proper fuel for your farnace, heater or range. Keeps your home comfortable with less firing. if WACHTER TRANSFER CORPORATION 191 South Fifth Phone 62 Bismarck, LOW REACHED IN NEAT PRODUCTION Wholesale Prices 5 to 31 Per Cent Under Mid-September Figure, Says Woods Chicago, Oct. 26.—(?}—Whitefleld Woods, president of the Institute of American Meat Packers, said Tuesday the decline in. meat production, to which has been ascribed high prices, apparently has reached its low point In a prepared address to the Insti- tute’s annual convention Woods said production, particularly that of pork, will increase steadily during the next few years, barring unforeseen -de- velopments. Most classes and grades of meat at wholesale are now from five to 31 per cent lower than mid-September levels, he said. Thomas E. Wilson, Chicago, chair- man of the board of Wilson and Com- pany, said decreased production of livestock in the United States during recent years has cut consumption capita to approximately that of the citizens of Great Britain. He said the per capita consump- tion of meat and lard in the United States in 1935 was estimated at 127 pounds, i RATES REDUCED Since 1933 greater electric rate re- ductions have been effected in North Dakota than in any other state except the few directly affected by the TVA, declares Ben Larkin, president of the state railroad commission. BANK ROBBED $600 Butternut, Wis., Oct. 26.—(7)—The state bank of Butternut was robbed lef $600 Tuesday by two men who held up the cashier and then fled in an au- tomobile containing two other men. 8 NOT ROBBER, SAYS MYSTERIOUS JOHN Tells Jury He Filed New York Be- cause His Clothes Were Found In Holdup Car Elizabethtown, N. ¥., Oct. 26.—(7}~ “Mysterious” oes jury Tuesday he was innocent of a robbery charge, and fled New York state because his was found in a holdup man’s auto- mobile, Denying participation in the seven year old $700 robbery of Kin Hana’s Jay, N. Y., roadhouse, Montague, known in Syracuse, N. Y., as Laverne Moore, said he was “ashamed” of his connection with the case, Montague said he “was not and am not” ashamed of the name Moore, but assumed the name John Montague in 1930, because it was “different” from his real name. The defense rested its case after ‘Montague’s testimony, which required two hours. Summations were called for after the noon recess, with both sides predicting the case would ga to the jury before nightfall. The defendant took the stand ab- ruptly after listening to the heading of depositions from his screen colony friends as to his good character and honesty. Direct examination by James M. Noonan, of Albany, N. Y., chief defense counsel, required only four minutes, ‘and consisted mainly of a categorical denial by Montague that he had been jin the vicinity of the Hana roadhouse the night of the robbery. Montague chuckled as he recalled, ‘under his attorney’s questioning, that Ihe once had been fined $5 for stealing cherries, Monday, William Carleton, owner of the escape car and @ confessed par- ticipant in the crime, testified the bag was placed in the machine a week before when he and Montague went to Rochester, N. Y. pranharn aoe ae defendant did not pat tobbery, Montague identified articles in the bag as his property, placed there for the Rochester trip. CHARGES CRUELTY Reno, Nev., Oct. 26. Elizabeth Eaton Guggenheim, promi- nent in Long Island, N. Y., society, charged cruelty Tuesday in a suit for Perl divorce from Col. M. Robert Guggen- heim, an heir to the vast Guggen- heim mining fortune. WOLD SENTENCED Towner, N. D., Oct. 26—Judge G. Grimson of Rugby has sentenced O. C, Wold, former Drake , 0 serve one year in the county jail for arson. Wold pleaded guilty to setting his newspaper plant afire. Don’t Miss the Big Masquerade Ball at DAWSON FRIDAY, OCT. 29 Music by Joe Fejfar and his “"Tobacce Read’? .--the greatenter- tainer who heads the cast of the rec- ord-breaking the- atrical success, “Tobacco Road” EYES ofa great entertainer Large, clear and alert — customarily held in eome- what narrowed position. The browsare heavy and far apart, and grow closer to the eye at the inner edge than at the outer edge. Several horizon- tal lines are observed above the brows and also at the eyes’ outer edges. Eis As a great entertainer you'll score a hit, if next time you entertain, you give your guests the“double-rich” Kentucky straight Bourbon! A.90 PROOF whiskey with che Mark of Marit. Made inthe Bluegrass Countsy by master distillers the good old — - nd ad Ask for it at your favorite Bar. COPR. 1937, SCHENLBY DISTRIBUTORS, INC... N.Y.€,

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