The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 9, 1937, Page 7

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87,172.88 RICHER | In Father’s Footste FROM STOCK SALES}. susssors. x p. xer Business Concerns Grab Off 99 Prize Animals in Spirited Bidding Fargo, N. D., Nov. 9—(#)}—North Dakota's 4-H livestock exhibitors are $7,172.88 richer as a result of the 13th annual sale held in connection with the annual achievement institute. ‘That was the price paid by business concerns in spirited biddings after one of the speediest sales on record con- sidering the fact that 99 animals went through the ring. Last year 77 ani- mals brought $8,011.45. H. L, Finke of Minot was the auctioneer, assisted by his two colonels, J. F. McGuire and W. P. Chestnut. Once again the Powers hotel of Fargo bought the grand champion beef animal, paying 31 cents a pound for the 1014 pound steer shown by Kenneth Koenig of Page, Cass county, the price being $313.34. The Fargo Forum paid 21 cents for the reserve beef animal, produced by Alex Ford of Walsh county, $212.94. Armour and company of West Fargo bid in the grand champion hog at 30 cents. It was produced by Leroy MiI- ler of Benson county and brought him $92.40, The Merchants National bank of Fargo bought the reserve champion at 21 cents, Ivan Johnson of Barnes county getting $63.26. Lambs did not bring the bidding of former years, either for top or’on the average. The Graver Coffee shop of Fargo bid in the grand champion raised by Hazel Brekke of Wild Rice, Cass county, at $1.50 3 pound, pay- ing $168 for this 112 pound animal. The reserve champion produced by Florence Reitan, also of Cass, who migsed the championship almost by a hair, went to the Cudahy Packing company at 30 cents a pound, $27.50. NORRIS BILL WOULD FURTHER DIVERSION Regional Planning Agencies Would Aid Missouri Scheme, Says Frazier —_————_—— Washington, Nov. 9.—()—Senator Lynn Frasier of North Dakota said Monday he believed enactment of the Norris bill for regional planning agencies would give fresh impetus to the proposed river diversion plan in North Dakota. “The Norris bill,” Frasier said, “is a great thing for the people in the smal] towns and rural areas because it would afford méans of obteining cheap electric’ power.” Frazier said he believed the pro- posed Missouri river development, in- cluding flood control, power develop- ment possibilities and irrigation proj- ects, could be carried out: better under. the Norris plan than under the board of army engineers, CROOKSTON MAN DIES Crookston, Minn., Nov. 9—(?)—Geo. Castel, 60, resident of Crookston 47 years, died here. BEULAH oer because of its hard structure, high heat, and easy firing. We Recommend Beulah Lignite ss “Good Lignite” WACHTER TRANSFER CORPORATION 121 Seuth Fifth Phone 68 Bismarck, N. Dek. HOTEL NICOLLET MINNEAPOLIS Neil R. Messick, Manage: jement Company. Inc., Ralph Hits. President Notions) Hote! MINNEAPOLIS STOP AT THE NICOLLET ‘feur more to drop from the field. Courteous service fom the = "The director declared the state lost ‘about $87,000 in stamp tax revenue duging the past year as a result of j vacancies in wholesalers ranks. iP} Glenn J. Talbott of Jamestown, who has stepped into the position of the late ©. C. Talbott, as president of the North Dakota Farmers Union grew up in the movement under his father's tutelage. “It is my ambition to carry on the work which my father go ably began,” young Talbott declared in settling down to his new duties, “That work,” he explained, “is build” ing an organisation of farmers suf- ficlently powerful, with s common un- derstanding of our problems and our Practical needs, so that we may speak with an organised voice on matters of legislation.” When he speaks of “legislation” he refers to measures of both state and nation which have an effect on agri- culture. “We must build our cooperative movement to de those things for us in an organised way which we are unable to do for ourselves as individ- uals,” he asserted in explanation of the union’s purpose and why he is follow-* SUSTAINS EXTENS! OF PERIOD 10 PAY High Court Acts on First Case Involving 1937 Moratorium to Come Before It ——___ The North Dekota supreme court. Tuesday sustained a district court order granting an extension of time on which to make payments under a land contract in the first case involv- ing the 1937 legislative morstorium to come before the high tribunal. Ruling on the sufficiency of the evidence in a writ ef certiorari pro- ceedings, the court held R. H. Points, Divide county states attorney, Was en- titled. to an extension of time to make Payments on s land contract to Elsie Peterson, Crosby. The plaintiff argued the district ‘court, not having heard the applica- tion within 20 days from issuance of an order to show cause why @ mora- terium extension should not be sane, lost jurisdiction to grant re- lief. She further contended the trial court erred in finding the defendant is entitled to any relief under the moratorium law, passed by the state legislature to provide temporary relief against the. enforcement of certain contractual obligations. ‘The supreme court held, however, that the court having once acquired Jurisdiction, did not lose it by @ con- tinuance, especially since there was no objection to continuance by the plaintiff. Further, the opinion written by Jus- ioe James Morris, stated: “The fact thet specific provision was made for @ review by certiorari indicates an intention to permit more comprehen- sive consideration in the appelate court of cases arising under the act.” A review of the before District Judge A. J. Gronna showed Points had paid $6812.78 in principal and interest on the contract and thet $1,613 was stil] due. Gronna allowed Points until July 1, 1939 to make pay- ments and was upheld by the supreme Descendant of George Washington Is Dead Alexandria, Va. lov. 9.—(P)--Mrs. Wieence Selden Wratten Howard, at Mount Vernop, died here Monday. She was the great-great- grandniece of George Washington. moment you arrive to the me yeu depart Most med- ern hotel in the Twin Cities Drive-in garage. Four air- conditioned resteurants 600 outside rooms Mini- mum rate with bath $3.00. ‘and whirled the cylinder,” state | Tuseday. ps GLENN J. TALBOT ing his father’s footsteps in the Farm- ers Union program. US.. Bars Girl Who Linked Self, Il Duce New York, Nov. 9.—(?)—Magda de Fontanges Tuesday was barred from entering the United States by a board of U. &. immigration commissioners who heard her case at Ellis Island. ‘They refused her entry on grounds of “moral turpitude.” The dgtk eyed French girl, who shot the former French ambassador to Italy, Count Charles de Chambrun, after she said he ended her love affair with Premier Mussolini, was refused the right to enter the United States by @ board of special inquiry. (CAR REGISTRATIONS NEAR YEAR'S GOAL Less Than $30,000 Separates Regstration Bureau From $1,500,000 Mark Less than $30,000 separated the North Dakota motor vehicle registra- tion bureau from its $1,500,000 goal for the year, Director C. E. Van Horne, said Tuesday after checking depart- ment records for the past few months. Van Horne pointed out the depart- ment issued 172,406 registrations since Jan, 1 to bring total receipts to $1,- 472,764, about $27,000 short of the year’s goal. Comparing 1937 figures with those sét for a similar period last year, the directors said $1,468,580 was collected Nov, 1 against $1,343,645 for the pe- Tiod last year. Possiblilties are “exceedingly favor: able” that the motor vehicle depart- ment will collect $1,750,000 before Jan lit license registrations continue “at this pace,” Van Horne believes. He asserted 1936 receipts totaled $997,639 for passenger car registra- tions compared with $1,041,879 collected in that division for ten months this year. Truck monies, second high in that department, totaled $313,584 against $295,565 in 1936. Total regis- trations for the period were increases 6,867 over last veer. Rate Hearing Set for November 19 Hearing on a petition of North Da- kota railroads for increases in freight tates on several commodities moving in. intrastate commerce has been set for Nov. 19, in Bismarck, Elmer O!- son, secretary of the board of rail- road commissioners, announced Increases sought would correspond to increases authorized on interstate traffic by the Interstate Commerce commission decision and would apply to lignite, brick, reinforeed concrete Pipe, iren and steel articles, petroleum Products, sand and gravel and others. Submitting the petition were the Chicago and Great Western, Soo Line, Northern Pacific, Great Northern and Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pa- cific railways. Boy Kills Self With Gun on Sixth Chance Hollywood, Nov. 9.-(#)—Carroil 8. Anderson, 16, offered to show 11-year- old Robert Bellon how a dish imperial casrist guardsmen would kill himself. “Carroll put one bullet in the gun Rober* ‘the Russian related to police. ““You see,’ he said, ,aiways had five chances out of six net to be killed.’ “He just stood straight, like a czar’s bodyguard, lifted the gun to his head and pulled the trigger.” The sixth chance sent a bullet through Carroll's brain. He fell [16 Beer Distributors in North Dakota Quit Hard liquor sales and |patition has forced 16 North Dakots j beer distributors to retire from the field, Director A. J. Gerlach of the regulatory department ssid fer” com- Gerlach said 114 beer wholesalers CIVIL, WAR VETERAN DIES ‘us Falls, Minn., Nov. 9.—(?)—K. O. Bletto, 94, the only Civil War vet- eren in Fergus Falls, died suddenly at his home here Monday. | ad DR. R. 8S. ENGE Chiropractor Drugless Physician Lucas Bik., Bismarck, N. D. Telephone No. 260 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1987 Grant 2 Custodial | Requests; Deny 3rd Two applications of North Dakota Tailroads to substitute custodian for agency service have recently been granted and one denied, Elmer Olson, | secretary of the boerd of railroad com- missioners, announced Tuesday. Approved were the petitions of the Northern Pacific railway to discon- tinye agency service at Elliott and Grand pape Effective Nov. 15, the orders will stand until July 15, 1938. The board denied the application of the Soo line to substitute custodian service at Geneseo, Man Girl Whipped Guilty of Slander New Orleans, Nov. 9.—(®)—Oscar Kay, 47, who said he was whipped by ® lT-year-old girl last August after her father and two brothers accused him of slanderous remarks, stood con- victed Tuesday of the slander charge. Alfred Willis, father of the girl, Hloise Willis, told police last Aug. 8 that he and his sons had tied Kay to a tree, and that the girl had flogged him for alleged slanderous stories. Kay reported the whipping to the police. Charges of beating and wound- ing filed by him against the girl, her father and two brothers are still pend: LENKE SEES LITTLE | HELP FOR FARMERS. | only Law of w of Chance We Would Give Agriculture Something From Congréss, He Says Unrest Has Granziani Mending Border Fences Addis Ababa, Nov. 9.—(#)—War nerves swelling under the surface even in this remote Italian domain have caused Viceroy General Rodolfo Graziani to intensify his border de- fense and internal police work. ‘The conqueror of Somaliland, known to brother officers as the “wolf” of many Italian colonial campaigns, re- cently made a swing around East African territories under his care. He had in mind two military problems: 1, Strengthening of garrisons along the British and French Somaliland fzontiers, on the gulf of Aden to the east; and placing adequate defense forces along the frontiers shared with ieee Britain to the north, east and west, 2. Police and military provisions to restrain tribes traditionally turbulent during the dry season; and, armed in- surance against possible infiltration of revolt propaganda within Ethiopian boundaries, The first problem arose directly from tension in the Mediterranean over the Spanish situation. Premier Mussolini desires “military autarchy” in Italian East Africa. That means he wants the CONZENSHP HONOR ROLL IS ANNOUNCED 223 Included in Lists § in List; Program Attracting Notice In State Minneapolis, Nov. $-(™—The| farmer can expect little from the coming session of congress, Congress- man William Lemke of North Dakota said here Monday night, unless the “law of accident prevails.” Lemke, presidential! ndidate of the Union party at the last election, stopped here long enough to declare that the ferm bill proposed by Sen- ators Pope and McGill is “the same old story of doing everything but what ought to be done.” “You would think by the law of accident we would have stumbled on the right thing by now,” he said. “The law of averages doesn't seem to ve working.” His idea, he said, of the right thin, would be passage of the Frazi Lemke refinancing bill “which has been in congress $0 long it has had & baby, the Frazier-Lemke bill for home owners.” ‘The first citizenship honor roll in the junior high school for the current school year was announced Friday by Principal C. W. Leifur. The citizenship training program in the local junior high school is at- tracting very favorable comment and inquiries frem educators in the state. Leifur points out that the program stresses in the minds of the students those qualities of citizenship that make for an ordered, consistent and useful life. The purely scholastic type of honor roll was discarded several years ago in favor of the broader type. To be on the citizenship henor roll @ pupil must, in the collective opinion of all his teachers, rank high in the following qualities: 1, Dependability as evidenced by) piritor. ‘y to be able to defend itself in Protection should be given home| ing. fe een Leearet Bee case he sliddenly is pressed for troops owners, he said, because the HOLC rth to defend the homeland. has “thrown more than 100,000 fem-| wHy uD: trol. 2. Co-operation as evidenced by the record in respect for authority, ilies oyt of their homes by foreclos- Viceroy Graziani paid particular at- yreeeiant urés in a little over a ed eae ie tention to military strength and dis- cipline in garrison points along the txcess. rot) Distnass oF | STOMACH ULCERS respect for property, respect for the /Eritish and French Somaliland fron- i Hats of oltera: and) Sourav. tiers Gen. Rodolfo Gratlani Angelus Temple. Tem mpl Is | Mourstomach pain accompanied byGAS loyalty oe aad ALiowiatbe er the 1 A Bombed; Maimed DIGES’ TCESTOR manatee dt keting Purpose expressed in the preamble of nstrom, Ebelin: at igsorhalf-way measures, the Constitution of the United States. | ig seeee pete Jala Bat lo he Teed of the ota 4. Cleanliness in speech and per- Devils Lake Meeting sonal habits. | RDN cxplbelon Soy) Asics. Eetap cesstomach adda UDGA abies bused The following pupils. in the opinion 859 IN ROUNTIES Sheriff Fred Anstrom of Burleigh; McPherson's Angelus temple whic! & physician's successful Fiption, work of the teachers, rank high in the ) county and Chief of Police W. R. cerleubly Reine’ two bible students Seutto bey iat es erceas acids above qualities: Ebeling of Bismarck were in Devils] *"d terrified $00 others Monday night. Leelee ment rupply only $ton a ds Placed Pty repre permeate 93 of Eighth Grade Listed Eighth grade: Emma Bechtold, Al- thea Belk, Calvin Baertsch, Gladys Betterly, Robert Billings, Arlene Boelter, Robert Jones, Margaret Bra- strup, Betty Brauer, Venette Bru- nelle, Jean Burman, John Carlson, Mildred Caya, Marion Chernich, Arla Clark, Charles Conrad, Joyce Coleson, Graydon Dahlen, Leona Davis, Robert Devereaux, Virginia Devitt, Betty Dick, Janice Anderson, John Belk, John Engen, Violet Fa- gerstrom, Jack Fossum, Robert |Gerke, Norman Gillenberg, Leota Goodman, Edward Hall, Allen Hekt- ner, Lawrence Hellickson, Roberta Henderson, Eva Hendrickson, Eleanor Hoffman, Gail Indseth, Persis Hite, Marjorie Jones, Ethel Keator, Edward Kallenberger, Robert King, Jack Kinsella, John Knutson, Verna Koenig, Mary Langer, Jeanne Lar- son, William Lauer, Guilford Man-j digo, Joyce Martinson, Anna Mauk, Russell McCullough, Suzanne Mel- ville, Dolores Meske, Marie Morten, Audrey Neideffer, Mary Nelson, Henry Nordstrom, Cleo O’Brien, Clarence Olson, Welland Orchard, Janet Over- bee, Lois Peterson, Jean Pickles, Milton Quamme, Betty Reynolds, Dorothy Roberts, Joan Rosenthal, Mae Rudrud, Gretchen Schneider | Alice Schuh, Harriet Scruby, Rose: marty Selvig, Virginia Shafer, Eunice Siems, Norma Skei, Allene Small Mary Smith, Olive Smith, Millicent Sorkness, Joy Stoen, Barbara Stroe- bel, Kenneth Tellinghusen, Annette Torvik, Shirley Walker, Betty War- ner, Dolores Wells, Ruth Werner, Thelma White, Mary Wildes, Jean- ette Williams, Betty Walt end Elize- beth Wyciskala Seventh Grede Has 1508 Seventh grade: Vivian Andersen Kathleen Anderson, Beatrice Arnold. Doris Asbridge, Arlene Asch, Eliza-| beth Baer, Fred Bates, Robert Beat-' tie, Beverley Beaudoin, Leonard Belk, | Lake Tuesday attending the annual meeting of the North Dakota Sheriffs’ and Peace Officers’ association. Others from Bismarck attending the sessions, at which future mainten- ance of the state bureau of criminal identification will be one of the chief problems up for consideration, are A. J. Loudenbeck, warden of the state penitentiary, and C. A. Milley, chief of the bureau of criminal identi- fication. The meeting was to last through Wednesday. responsibility for the “bomb acare” on ; four students working their way through’ Bible college. Expect Entire Emergency Fund of $60,000 Will Be Gone by April 1 Brcemmendad by Capitol (hi Rate in Bi tek, Central Drug Co. in Man- nd ali good drug stores FINNISH STEAM BATHS SEEN woe Btatica, uyBACO. AINS AND Ci Runpers & Johnson Phone 2486 North Dakota coyote hunters have received bounty payments totaling more than two-thirds of a $60,000 emergency appropriation set. aside by the last legislative session to eradicate the prairie pests. John Lyngstad, deputy state auditor, asserted $43,860 has been paid to coyote hunters since the emergency measure became effective, leaving a balance of $16,140. The deputy audi- tor said he expected the entire fund would be spent by April 1. Commenting on bounty payments, Lyngstad asserted the bulk of the money was paid to hunters who have been collecting pelts during the lest two and a half years because former Gov. Walter Welford vetoed a bounty payment bill in 1935. Payments monthly since the appro- priation became effective include: March $4,206.40; April $21,965.05; May $10,437.65; June $3,622.55; July $2.- August $721.4: September and October $507. AR AC! es. € 119 West Thayer we Pieote reece of International Harvester Co RU Gptt! 10 p. m. daily, including Sundays uhberg, ete m New York Mills, Minn., have hed ten years of actual éaperionce In Swedish massege. Mr. and Mrs. If Someone Left YOU a Million Dollars! ey the very fret sip; you'll give Crab Orchard yaur stamp ef eppreval— it's Gamma} KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON Ruth Bender, George Bird, Robert Blensley, Marian Brandes, Margaret! Bredy, Ruth Brittin, LeVerne Carfley, Marcelite Carpenter, Betty Cave, Shirley Christenson, Elaine Cleveland, Renee) «TWO YEARS OLD a 94 PROOF cme) §6TOP-REN WHISKEY Fs jonored | Oistad, Charles Onstad, Donald Over- | Ow Crab Orchard! airen lop Atel Kiniurny SIR AIC He YOUR stiue te ‘Vance Coffman, Robert Cook, Norma! Cordon, Ferris Cordner, Roscoe Cor-| ell, Clarence Crawford, Jack Cripe, Charles Crum, John Davis, Frede| Daniel, Marie Dow, Irene Fetch. Richard Fevold, Vane George, Violet! Goehring, Norman Grantham, Bey- erly Gunness, David Haggerty, Bette) Hall, Dorothy Hanson, Lorraine} Hauch, Lucille Heidt, John Keising, | Ethel Hendricks, Ruth Hochhalter, Alvin Hoff, Laurence Hoiting, Roger | Holkesvik, Dorothea Holm, Marian | lichen, Kathleen Kell, Evelyn Klein, | One Kneif, Richard Knudson, Mar-| lys Korrup, Esther Kottsick, Mar- forie Larson, George Karas, Roberta Lasken, Burnette Landerholm, dune LéRoy, Roy Logan, Pearl Fedje,! Phyllis Fleck, Donald Haakenson, Robert Lowen, Marcia Morris, Marion Martin, ¥da McCullough, Marie Mee-; dér, Robert Meyer, Marlowe Mogul,’ Charles Morton. Virginia Nassif, Ruth Nelson, LaVonne O'Brien, El- mer Oberlander, Jack Ohde, Allene, BOURBON WHS? wil, TT Un Distributed by Northwest Beverages, Inc. BISMARCK MINOT FARGO bee, Jacqueline Parks, Alice Patter son, Merrill Pike, Anna Rasche, Dor- | Su some long lost othy paar: Lene see vane le left you @ million Riggs, Norris Miller, Ruth Richert, dollars...end amon; Margaret Meili, Martin Rosenberg. Marjorie Robinson, Monte Russell, other things yo a decide you want bares tele- Mildred Schlecter, Edward Schmidt,’ phone service than the Cleo Schultz, Elsie Schultz, Norma QUALITY Selvig, Dorlyn Shaw, Jane Skinner.” average person. Alwyn Smith, Betty Smith, Jean Slean, Darwin Solberg, Curtis Stal. We would have to tell TI NG Louise Sorsdahl, Nancy Tavis, Ralph! you that we provide only Thompson, Sylvia Tolchinsky, Ines! one q quality of telephone Toppila, Duane Torvik, Laurence seeriee st at we could Wale’ June Walker Sathew Walter, suppl you with addi- ee eoge . . 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Consult ys on your next order of printing, whether large or small, and realize the dependable service and quality of work produced by experienced artisans. it is named. | charges will contiaue to eS be as asecononmy snd | and fait Hess ment of employees and Eyes Examined investors sto make them e xem more Glasses Prescribed and is ee ala aa The eye is an organ you can't afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hote] since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. D. BISMARCK TRIBUNE co. Commerejal Printing Department Telephone 2200 Quelity Pridters NORTHWESTERN SELL Since 1878 TELEPHONE COMPANY

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