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DONOR GROUPS NEW 40 AND 8 PROJECT Grande Cheminot Also Decides to Promote Highway Safe- ty, Legion Membership can Legion membership, and forma- Saletan CREATION OF BLOOD THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1937____ Cite Reduction McKenney om Bridge | DEFEATING A BAD BREAK Southern Bridge Star Fulfills Contract by Strategic Play Against Five-One Division of a Major Suit By WILLIAM E. McKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM (Secretary, American Bridge League) —_—— In playing contract bridge a player Jamestown, N. D., Nov. 1—(#)—|should always play for the breaks, bu: Highway safety, promotion of Ameri-|should expect that at least half of these breaks will be unfavorable .Thus tion of blood donors groups for hos-| holding five cards of a suit in one pital patients who cannot afford to/hand and two in the other only an hire professional donors were adopted | incurable optimist will count on a Sunday as the projects of the North Dakota 40 and 8 at a meeting of the grande cheminot here. W. R. Pettit of Fargo, grand chef Ge train; John Degg of Bismarck, 8rand conducteurn and R. R. Nelson, chef de gare locale at Bismarck, were appointed the committee to confer with state highway officials to put on highway safety campaigns in each of the nine counties where 40 and 8 voitures are located. The grand voiturere commanded thateach chef de gare locale challenge the commander of the Legion post in his home city to a contest between Soveseurs and Legionnaires for mem- TS, State Commander Harry Edblom of Oakes then accepted a challenge of grand chef de gare W. B. Allen for a Membership contest of the two or- ganizations, the loser to pay for the telephone calls for a report of member- ship standing to the national head- quarters at Indianapolis. The contest ‘will close the night of November 14.° The grand voiture then recommend- ed that each voiture in the state adopt the policy of the Fargo voiture and have its members take blood tests for donation where hospital patients are unable to pay for the services of a Professional donor, three-three break of the remainder. 4 Q1087 4 10 @754 #10864 Duplicate—All vul. South West North East led 1@ . 14 1N.T. Pass 39 49 Pas 69 Opening lead—@ 7. Often there are ways of taking care of even a five-one break in a long suit, as was shown by Wm. E. (Billy) Barrett, of Augusta, Ga. who will be one of the southern stars at the) forthcoming national championship tournament in Washington the week of Nov. 29. Barrett sat North. He won the Speakers at the dinner meeting in opening lead with the ace of dia- the evening included Commander Ed- monds in dummy. Then played two blom, Harry Rosenthal of Bismarck, |Tounds of trumps, taking the last sous chef de chemin de fer and C. | ‘rick in dummy. ‘Thoverson of Fargo, cheminot nation- ale, who reported on the promenade When he found that West still held @ heart, he decided that he should x sefeguard himself against a bed spade eauonale BeNOR break. He led a soasly spade sane the jack dropped from West’s hand. Say: s State Should ‘tt this was a singleton East must Yield 30 Meteorites) 3", ‘9st one sence tiem declarer Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 1.—About 30 meteorites should be discovered in now led the three of spades. East North Dakota, according to Dr. H. H. [ Weather Report | Nininger, director of the American W th R Meteorite laboratories, Denver. po Dr. Nininger is one of the few scien- ea er e rt tists in the world to specialize in this field, and at the present time is ex- WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Cloudy ploring a crater near Climax, Minn. epal colder, Ronishty ANY generally 25 miles from Grand Forks. He ts of | ‘air and continued co! For North Dakota: Cloudy, snow the opinion that a state as large 88 /tiurries northeast portion; colder to- North Dakota should yield at least 30| night: Tuesday generally fair, con- meteorites, tor South Dakota: Mostly cloudy ‘or South Dakota: Of the four meteorite finds in the| ana colder tonight; Tuesday generally ‘state, the most spectacular was in 1918| fair; continued c when a small area between Richard-| .n4 colder e: ton and Mott had a virtual hail- po + storm of metal and rock fragments. jortion tonig! For Montana: Fatr west, cloudy showers extreme east Tuesday generally ir; warmer west portion. For Minnesota: Cloudy, rain or ‘One of the largest of these was valued) snow flurries in north and extreme at $965 in 1921. east portions, colder tonight; Tuesday Persons who think they have found| mostly cloudy, colder east and sout! meteorites may have samples ex- portions, amined free of charge by writing Dr.| geNERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS Howard E. Simpson, state geologist, at The barometric pressure is high the Univeraity of North Dakota, Dr.| over the Great Lakes region and over the northern Rocky Mountain region, Simpson says that meteorites may be| Kamloops 30.58 inches, while a low identified by a stony or more often by ai & nickel-iron composition, They are extremely heavy, have dark brown or conpaninn by hi ht precipitation area overlies the Mississippi States, Winnipes led weather, ac- a8 black colored crusts, and are never|occurred from the upper Mississipp! Valley to the northern Rocky Moun- round or hollow. tain region. It is snowing in north- ern North akon the moraine Te perature are moderate from the Plains Thompson Urges Biites eastward, but readings a somewhat lower over the Rocky Moun Safety Education tain region and In the western Cana- ‘The highway is not the only place Where accidents occur, Superinten- dent A. E. Thompson of the depart- ment of public instruction declared Monday as he pointed to tragedies which beset North Dakotans in their city and farm homes. Total for O . ’ Asserting safety education, on high- Nornaye for et. way and in the home, is one of the| Normal, January principal parts of the state Parent-| Accumulated e: Teacher movement, Thompson de- elared an organized campaign for safety sb being carried on in the state by his department, state highway de-| BISMARCK, cldy. Devils Lake, snow Mi 1d: companies and the state workmen's Winton “inowing partment, press, numerous insurance compensation bureau. “In keeping with interest in safety,” Thompson said, “the department of public instruction in co-operation with state highway department is con- Be uing pulso! automobile driving for all high schoo) seniors.” Mrs. Emma B. Marsh Bae cae ae Dies in Minneapolis) # ft, 24 hour chan, & com] Beat ites ten |e dana Provinces. Bismarck station barometer, ine Sunrise, 7:26 a. m, Sunset, 6:27 p.m. PRECIPITATION For pace Station NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- High- est Pct. WEATHER AT oT! OTHER POINTS Low. Huron, 8. D., 00 Kamloops, B. C., clear.. 26 54 .00 Mrs. ploneer|Kansas City, Mo, cldy: 64 78 00 n Wat ee Marah, 63, ploneer| Nistown, Mont, snow 28 42 06 resident le, passed away Sat- 0.00 urday at the Jones-Harrison home iiles ts Tony, od it “09 ‘Minnespo! - i grain ‘ bee home for eee ae pa apes Mies ea 8 01 ler of -| Oxia. y a, cldy. B thian sisters, also was s life mem-|Bhoenix, Aris. clear .. $8 88 0) ber of the Bismarck chapter of the} pr. Albert, faut cid. 28 40 24 Order of Eastern Star. Qu’Appelle, 8. 30 Ly +09 Funeral services will be held in Fenton Goddard, paymaster in a ‘Weyerhauser lumber camp at Head- quarters, Idaho, arrived in Bismarck Sunday for a several weeks’ visit with hig parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Goddard, 808 Mandan St. If you are poisoned by URIC ACID: will be filled strictly on = merit basis. The commander-in-chief of the guard said “every boy of the North Dakota National Guard has an equal '¥ | opportunity ity regardless of race, color or creed, rich and alike.” oatranrtiar at stitt Jot ser vFheematic pains, neuritis; neura! Bladder eset went Up ma: it"? “Ael Cat tel Sept Skin tteny? No “pep’? Nerv- WANT A 75¢ BOTTLE? (Regular Prescription Quantity) thers to comfortable da: ANNOY axes uric acid Rapid City, 8. sienlo Tuesday or Wedneaday, 20- Se tous! Mos cording to the Associated Salt Lake Cit A Nae x. 5 Fenton Goddard Here |fesitix, ares gear. i To Visit With Parents) 2231?"%,.105 ‘The Pi Winnipe; 333838) ry Soh Ss ianitoba, ‘snow 2 42 eldy. 38 50 Se 32 Urges Guardsmen to Try for West Point Urging North Dakota National Guardsmen to take advantage of the |p; ae William Edward Ford Dies in Minneapolis played the seven and West discarded &@ diamond. East having discarded two diamonds on the trump leads, now led the queen of spades, which North won with the ace. At this point North held the nine and six of spades, the queen and five of trumps, and the three and two of clubs, In dummy there were the four original clubs and the trump seven and the diamond six. East held the ten and eight of spades, and four clubs, while West held three high diamonds and the queen, jack and nine of clubs. A club was led by declarer and won in dummy and the last diamond re- turned and ruffed with the five of hearts. East had to discard a club. otherwise South could establish a spade by ruffing. Deotarer now ied his last club, won in dummy and re- turned a low club which he ruffed. Now a spade was led and ruffed in dummy and the established club won the last trick. Contract Problem (Solution tn next tesue) East's contract is four spades. He won the first trick with a trump, then cashed the ace of clubs and conceded the club king to North who forced another trump from East’s hand by a diamond return. When South plays the club queen on the third lead of that suit, what card should East play frém dummy? @AKJ9 7 AGREE ON OPTIONAL In Fire Hazards Benefits From Added Protection Diversion Would Afford Total $8,515,240 (Editor's Note: This is the sev- sisee bs sctareeone made a study of this subject with special reference to increased cost in insurance that Frank Bird (above), 30, con- victed slayer and bank robber, was scratched from the lst of wanted public enemies after his arrest in Cleveland with his wife, Sylvia, ae we home of her tears of homesickness in New York for his return to Cleveland and his eventual capture. Bird faces a demand for execution for fora Rinaping during a s Cleveland Skunk, Not Drunk, odete @ None ef 1087 Rubber—N. & S. vul. Opening lead—@ 2. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) CONTINUED) from page one: Ted Martell Wins In Grid Guessing Lincoln, all the ‘others in Bismarck. ‘Scores of the games which were the basis for the contest included: Holy Cross 0; arin) 0. Yale 9; Dartmouth 9. Oregon State 0; Stanford 0. Michigan State 16; Kansas 0. Notre Dame 7; Minnesota 6. Alabama 41; Kentucky 0. Cornell 14; Columbia 0. Manhattan 20; Georgetown 12. Villanova 7; Detroit 0. Northwestern 14; Wisconsin 6. Ohio State 39; Chicago 0. Pittsburgh 25; Carnegie Tech 14. Pennsylvania 14; Navy 7. Purdue 13; Iowa 0. U.N. D. 37; N. D. State 0. Nebraska 7; Indiana 0. Harvard 34; Princeton 6. Fordham 14; North Carolina 0. Michigan 7; Illinois 6. N, Y. University 14; Colgate 0. Cc oO NT TINUE D from. page one’ Larimore Widow Killed Against Cemetery Fence at an intersection. The Murphys and McKinnon were en route to Bismarck trom Grand Forks. Five Wahpeton, N. D., teachers and two students were injured, four of them critically, when their car over- turned 14 miles west of Fergus Falls, Minn., Sunday night. Three Sisters Hurt In critical cat condition Monday were: Theresa Kulla, a teacher, and her two student sisters, Genevieve and Mary Kulla, of Royalton, Minn., and Camilla Scramstad, Wyndmere, D., St 6 |e teacher. 56 CY James Wilkins, Battle Lake; Ida 4§ -° |Urstad, Moorhead, and Anna Wett- 72 ‘00 |stein, Wahpeton, escaped with minor 66 .00/cuts and bruises. 78 «.00/ At least 172 persons died in auto accidents on the nation’s highways lover the week-end, Seven young persons were killed in Alabama when an automobile plunged from @ mountain road near Huntsville into a ravine. 00 | MINNEAPOLIS MAN 00 |HURT NEAR FARGO Fargo, N. D., Nov. 1. —()—Robert, oe Wilson of Minneapolis is in serious condition in a Fargo hospital with in- 00 | juries suffered Sunday when his car hit loose gravel and spun into a bridge railing south of here. ‘Wilson, alone, was coming to Fargo, his former home, from Oakes, N. D., where he visited his parents, Mr. and| Mrs. George Wilson. Western N.D. Water Meetings Scheduled Conferences with county commis- sioners, members of planning boards and water reclamation and conserva- tion association officials will be held this week by D. J. Beakey, secretary of the state water board, and Floyd Jen- nings, executive director of the state lanning board. Nine western North Dakota counties ‘are on the itinerary. bottoms on the western state rivers ‘e will be discussed, Jennings said. i i i Routes Policemen Wilmington, N. C., Nov. 1.—() —Policemen cruising ina palrol car thought the voice coming ove! the radio told them to “pick i 4 ” They investigated—then beat a The voice had seid: “Pick up ‘Ralph Conner’ Dies In Winnipeg Sunday Winnipeg, Man., Nov. 1 — (Cana- dian Press)—The Rev. Charles Wil- Mam Gordon, 77, who under the pen name of Ralph Connor, wrote N »” and other pre-war best sellers, died here Sunday. Dr. Gor-} Whit don formerly was moderator of the/2. Presbyterian church in Canada gnd later a leader in the United church. Capitalized at 5 five per cent this lamounts to a total benefit of $8,515,240. | for j—Saving in plumbing and ground water benefits. Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 1.—High rect Mr. ane wre Glenn 8 us: Bismarck. ‘hospital. mantic novel lost much of its Sosa for a newer generation. Gridiron Takes Toll cals Of 14 Lives to Date Lafayette, Ind, Nov. 1—(#)—The first. half of the 1937 football season took a toll of 14 lives, some 25 per cent | Frida! Jess than in the same period last year, Dr. Floyd R. Eastwood reported to the Associated Press Monday. Deaths 4, 1203 Bowen Ave. > sturdy, in a local hos- jan, $3, rural Leet} junday, in & local Leona EB. Hookie and Warren Bismarck, B'smarc ‘Heretic’ Epi Bishop Dic Dies Sunday Galion, Ohio, Nov. 1—)—William Montgomery Brown, 82, lo) wement MENTHOLATUM ‘CROP CONTROL BILL of Voluntary Participation, But Not for Tobacco Washington, Nov. 1—(#)—The house Chairman Jones (Dem.-Tex.) said the group also has virtually accepted paceueceel for compulsory control of The ‘question of compulsory or volun- regula: tion of crop production has been one of the most controversial before the committee, which is yea Nov. 15, outlined by Jones To Visit Bismarck DG preslient of tne Amersan Builders association . come to North Dakota Friday as the ‘guest of the North Dakota highway contract- ors association and the state high- way department. Milton Rue, Bismarck, vice presi- dent of the state contractors group will be toastmaster at a banquet in eeretee + ante A0r anne oma missioner P. H. McGurren and way Engineer Z. . Sevison and State Safety Engineer W. J. Brophy of the ;| Righway department are scheduled speakers, Seek Support for Irrigation Project Flasher, N. D., Nov ne Radertnst ay ‘The project involves a reservoir that would store 180,000 acre feet of committee as a class A project. High School Debate Question Selected year which are members ‘ENDS TODAY! MINNESOTA ~ Football Flashes! TUES. - WED. Girl Meets Boy— Boy Meets Family— Boy Loses Mind! JACK HALEY | ANN SOTHERN MARY BOLAND EDWARD EVERETT HORTON + “DANGER Love at Work” a Pine City hospital early Monday. Adams Team Third Apples ss. 25C Pork, , .. 18¢c Gunshot in in Stomach Is Fatal to Hunter Pine City, Minn., Nov. 1—(#)—Shot ie the telly tin when his shotgun discharged while hunt- pig cree near here Sunday, John lace Committee Approves Principle beg Palmer, 17, son of A. M. Palmer, . 4 Been oe hare; dle in 1,628 out of a possible 1.800 points, was the fourth competing team. . dging, with Barnes leading In Stock-Judging hess and sheep eyent Series aa Cavalier tied in cattle. Fargo, N. D., Nov. 1—(—For the @ Barnes county team has| The first airmail trip in the United rice crops in| won the state 4-H club livestock judg-| States was on May 15, 1918, between ing contest held Saturday at the| New York and Washington, D. C. one chance in a thousand thot he'll ever return! loved by @ women whese business is betreyel...the fate of a million marching men in his hands ... the firing squed it Re foils! CAPITOL Today & Tuesday TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY Fresh Gi Bent, Ib Fancy Jonathan, 6 Ibs. ween pox. LOC Kraut, Ib. 5c Grape Jelly 90, | == Hig endipae< Squares, I Ib... 21C Cake Flour... 25c Is Sausa e, Ib. 194c No. 2% tin....... ALL WEEK SPECIALS CRISCO or SPRY__.3-Ib. can 59¢ One-pound cans 22c ICHIGAN HAND-PICKED NAVY BEANS 4 bs, 22c KIDNEY BEANS ...3 %' 25¢ PANCAKE FLOUR 4 ==" 17¢ SYRUP. 10-Ib. pail 55¢ MINCE MEAT 9-07. pkg. 10¢ HARVEST QUEEN EVAPORA’ Meat Specials MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY SPARERIBS __..____._..._Ib. 19¢ VEAL STEW == ~— th. 13¢ BACON SQUARES _____. Ib. 24¢ ‘SMOKED HERRING ___.2 for 15¢ TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU $2.00 ORDERS DELIVERED FREE Li RED OWL FOOD STORE walier county was second and Adams county third. Ward county The Adams team was high in swine