The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 11, 1937, Page 2

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2 1,149 HANDICAPPED CHILDREN GET FREE MEDICAL ATTENTION 208 Get Nearly 4,000 Days of Hospital Care During Three Months Period Free medical attention was given 1,149 crippled children in North Da- kota during the first quarter of the current fiscal year, Miss Theodora Allen, state supervisor of the child welfare division of the public welfare board, said Thursday. Nearly 4,000 days of hospital care were given 208 crippled youngsters throughout the state. Hospital serv- ices included operations for club feet, hare lip and cleft palate as well as the convalescent period, she said. Another 125 youngsters were given medicial attention and sent to private and public convalescent homes for a total of 1,948 days. Three were cared for in foster homes and given 182 days of medical care while 161 were admit- ted to the nursing service, caring for them in their own homes through 430 separate visits. Besides these services 1,750 days of physiotherapy care were given 50 crip- pled children at Camp Grassick where youngsters were shown how to correct their deformities through a program Oi daily exercise. The child welfare division spent $31,- 978.93 to provide these services, Miss Allen stated. Expenditures included: surgeon's fees, $11,413.55; hospital care $11,681.89; convalescent care, $1,992.64; appliances, $1,462.96, and all other services $1,567.18, CONTINUE from page one Peace Picture Is Discouraging On Armistice Day Father Feehan recited that the ap- proximately 50 billion dollars spent to kill millions of men from 1914 to 1913 if turned into constructive channels would have built $2,500 cottages on 5-acre plots costing $100 per acre for every family in England, the United THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1987 McKenney om Bridge HOW TO AVERT A SQUEEZE Declarer Could Have Made This Contract, If Chance to Apply Pressure Had Not Been Foreseen By WILLIAM E. MCKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM This is the sixth and last of a series of articles, giving hands played by the leaders of New York's social world at the Regency club, where a number of the country’s experts play ‘daily. shifted to the king of spades, not leav- ing the guess to her partner as to what return was wanted. She realized that if her partner won the third round of diamonds, and then made the natural club return, she could not protect both clubs and spades, and that the declarer could force her to part with the setting {trump suit with which he was marked by his bid. This play defeated the contract, as it deprived East of his entry to dum- my, and thus averted the squeeze. The reader who enjoys seeing a de- clarer force out high cards from a hapless defender may easily study KQ3 have followed had North been allowed 104 to cash his diamond trick, and then K returned a club. 1 AK5 #K 10543 Rubber—E. & W. vul. jhe did not continue the suit, t trick by continuing with the long| out for himself the squeeze that would | BRING POSTMASTER SLSPENDED COUNT Ross Former Chief Gets Year for Embezzlement; Court Continues in Minot Won't Go to Paris Church With War Comrades, Though Pastor Begs Him to Paris, Nov. 11—(7)—An Anglican pastor apologized Thursday to the Duke of Windsor for an “insult” to a “man who couldn’t defend himself,” but the duke, nevertheless, shunned an Armistice Day service within St. George’s church here because his presence previously had been declared unwelcome. The pastor, The Rev. J. L. C. Dart, explaining his expressed wish that the former British king and former head of the Church of England not attend the service, told the British Legion: “The very last thing I wished to do was publicly to insult a man who couldn’t defend himself. Reporters made me do that. Nothing was farther from my intentions. I swear thai is true. I wish to take this oppor- tunity publicly to apologize.” The vicar revealed he had tele- phoned to the duke’s equerry, Lieut. Dudley Forwood, an hour before the Minot, N. D., Nov. 11—( ° sideration for the defendant’s wife and children Wednesday led Federal Judge J. W. Woodrough, Omaha, to suspend a year-and-a-day sentence he imposed several hours earlier on Everal McKinnon, 29, former Ross postmaster, for embezzlement of postal funds. Judge Woodrough put McKinnon or. probation for three years and or- dered him to pay a fine of $804.89, the amount he embezzled. Disposition of land acquirement cases brought by the government to obtain property for bureau of biv- logical survey refuges started Wed- nesday to continue Thursday. Disposition of other cases in fed- eral court included: John Jorgenson, Northgate, named experts was playing a doubled four heart contract, Mrs. Arthur B. Claflin displayed her skill in averting an impending squeeze and thus defeated @ contract that would, without her foresight, have compelled her to give the declarer his game and rubber. sponse to the opening bid was a “smoke screen” to conceal weakness, and the expert, who sat East, was not deceived. When his partner showed some strength by his no trump re- sponse, he went right to game. ind despite the fact that North gave a “come-on” signal by playing the nine and then the four of diamonds, South West Pass North East ld 1@ Double Redouble1N.T. Pass 49 Double Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—@ K. nu Leaders of society proved them- selves quite adept in using the tools of the expert in playing the cards. In the recent rubber game shown today, where one of the recognized first-rank Of course, North’s one spade re- Mrs. Clafin, who sat South, doubled, States, Canada, Germany, France, Belgium and Russia or every city with a population of 20,000 in these same countries could be supplied with a $5,000,000 library or hospital and a $10,000,000 university. “A doctrine that might makes right is dynamic materialism, ma~ terlalism in action,” Father Feehan expounded. Claiming that only through per- sonal and national tolerance may the nations and the peoples of the world live at peace, Father Feehan asserted that “respect for God and man must begin in the home, respect for law end order, for discipline. The school can never take the place of the home, and the tutor can never take the place of the parents, A nation 15 just as strong as its homes. Nation Needs Character “America is safe, I believe, so longt* as we have a nation which is built on that type of character.” While economic rivalry, pelf, greed and intolerance may be the roots of war, Father Feehan expressed a greater fear that propaganda’ may touch off the flames of another in- ternational conflict. Some men and nations will do “anything to ignite in the human heart the greatest hatred against our fellow man who is made out of the same clay as ourselves and whose soul bears the image and likeness of the great God,” he said. In the observance of Armistice day, Father Feehan saw that a senti- mental love for heroes is not dead but living, the kind of sentiment that Prompted Americans to cast off the shackles of pclitical bondage 200 years ago and that has ever spurred the United States to greater deeds, “And the flag conjures up all of the great events that have taken place in ee formation of our country,” he sai Report Government — Victories in Spain Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Nov. 11 —()— Catalan militiamen were reported by Spanish government Scurces Thursday to have broken through the Insurgent line in north- ern Aragon in guerillia warfare. Men Meet at America’s oldest band of fight- ing men has chosen Armistice Day as the time for its annual celebra- tion, John C. Spare, Bismarck war veteran and adopted son of the Sioux announced here Thursday. The society is that of the Brave Hearts, founded by Sioux war- riors more than 400 years ago. Only men who have distinguished themselves in battle are eligible to membership. The annual meeting and dance of the braves was to be held Fireman Saves Couple In Thrilling Rescue New York, Nov. 11—(#)—While 180 guests safely streamed out the doors and down fire escapes of the blazing Cosmopolitan hotel, a lower Broadway landmark, Thursday, Fireman Charles Roschler was lowered by a rope from the roof of the seventh floor. He swung in through a window and emerged a moment later carrying Mr. and Mrs. Chester McAuliffe, one in each arm. They had been trapped in a burning room, The three were lowered to a sixth- floor window, where all were pulled in to safety. The McAuliffes had been slightly burned, Fillmore Merchant Guilty; Is Fined Marcus Thomson, Fillmore merch- ant, pleaded guilty to selling cigarets without a state license and was fined $50 and costs by County Judge O. D. Comstock at Minnewaukan, Director A J, Gerlach of the state regulatory department announced Thursday. ‘The director said Thomson was one of several offenders who have been sentenced for failure to obtain a state cigaret license or for sale of cigarets with state tax stamps, SLICED STEAK HALIBUT .. FILLETS _. OYSTERS SEA FOODS Oldest Band mission has approved the application of Carl Johnson for a special certifi- cate to furnish motor freight service ia the vicinity of Buffalo, N. D. A similar application made by Arthur Roop of Wilton was denied. in three smuggling indictments, ten days for each, to run concurrently; George M. King, Northgate smuggling $100 fine; Lloyd A. Nolting, Northgate, smuggling, $50; Alphonse Beaudry, Canadian, illegal entry as second of- fense, ten days in jail and deporta- tion; Gunder lLegaard, Fortina, smuggling, two weeks in jail, expir- ing Thursday; John Oien, Grenor, forging government check 30 days in Jail, suspended, one year probation. Bench warrants were ordered for Mike Enright, Van Hook, charged with selling liquor to, Indians, and Thea Halvorson, arrested in Minot last spring and accused of using mails to defraud. NBC BALKS ON TALK ON SOCIAL DISEASE Cancels Hugh Johnson's Speech Containing Words ‘Syphilis,’ and ‘Gonorrhea’ Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) North is playing a contract of three no trump. Ean wins the first trick with. the dia- mond king and continues the suit. North can count eight sure tricks, but the ninth will require development. How is he to develop it? Duplicate—N. & S. vul. Opening lead—@ K. u (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) New York, Nov. 11.—()—Blunt- speaking General Hugh 8. Johnson and National Broadcasting company officials Thursday locked horns over the role of radio in the war against social disease, The NBC officials after a hurried conference Wednesday night cancell- ed Johnson’s regular commercially sponsored broadcast because it dealt in plain terms with the ravages of “public enemies Nos, 1 and 2, syphilis and gonorrhea.” A 15-minute “stand- in” musical program was substituted. The radio officials later issued a statement saying they had tried un- successfully to reach General John- son before the broadcast and added: “The NBC is in entire sympathy with the war on social diseases, but of Fighting Cannonball Thursday at Cannonball and will last all day. Spare, who com- manded a platoon of Indian snip- ers in France and later became an adopted member of the tribe, will be master of ceremonies, The dance, high spot of the cele- bration, is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p. m,, and a number of local persons are expected to attend. The public is invited. : Indians are expected to be present from South Dakote, Mon- tana and possibly; Wyoming. Repaired, Painted Fort Clark, N. D. Nov. 11— Proud are the worshippers of the Fort Clark Nazarene church as they view the beautiful results of @ summer’s labor. With hammer and paint brush, the church has been thoroughly repaired and repainted inside and out. W. A. Cunningham says it makes the Autos Kill Off 50th Minneapolis Resident| ni" Minneapolis, Nov. 11—(?)—Trattic| Rumor Wolverines fatalities in Minneapolis for ° reached 55 Thursday with the death Get Alumni Money of a pedestrian who was struck by an automobile Monday. The victim was] Ann Arbor, Mich., Nov. 11—(?)— Clarence Hamrick, 53, The inquiry at University of Michigan The driver of the automobile, Don-| dealing with possible subsidization of ald Matheny, 25, is serving a 90-day) athletics turned Thursday toward & workhouse term for failure to stop af-| rumor that alumni money was paid to ter the accident. some promising freshmen football players through an Ann Arbor manu- facturing concern. The North Dakota railroad com- Last Jap Graduate of Naval Academy Dead/ Typhoon Sweeps Over Tokyo, Nov. 11—(?)—Admiral Baron Sotokichi Uriu, 80, last surviving Jap- anese graduate of the United States} Manila, Nov. 11.—(#)—A_ typhoon] teir Naval Academy at Annapolis, died| swept across Luzon island Thursday Thursday at his home at Odawara,| leaving at least four persons dead, played prominent roles in both the| and two native craft swamped. Chinese-Japanese war of 1804 and the) Four Filipinos were electrocuted by uae Jepanee war of 1904-05. fallen wires. Finds 3 Sons Dead in | Papa Rubinoff to Bed—Victims of Gas Let Daughter Wed Sioux City, Iowa, Nov. 11—(P}—A Waterloo, Iowa, Nov. 11—(?)— service and said he wanted to apolo- gize to Windsor for “what amounted to a public insult.” Asks Attendance He said he told Lieut. Forwood that the duke would be received by him and the church congregation with “all the respect due the king’s brother” if he would consent to at- tend. The duke, however, refused. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, remaining within their hotel, bought poppies from an Englishwoman and gave them to British Legionnaires, The. Windsors gave “quite a bit” to the veterans’ fund in return for the Poppies, the Englishwoman said. Windsor dismissed the car he had called to his hotel and remained in World war veterans filed into Saint George’s a few minutes before 11 a. m. The Rev. Dart explained to & group seclusion in his suite as his fellow|® WIFE AND CHILDREN Duke Shuns Armistice Service After ‘Insult’ character training is built and with- out it we can have neither law nor order at home or abroad. “I believe in implicit obedieince, and 1 also believe the arbitrarily enforced commands of the parents and the les- son of unquestioned authority are an for he must never be coerced—there 4s nothing more effective than fa- ther’s good old-fashioined carpet slipper properly applied, and it is al- most a 100 per cent cure for dis- obedience, In short I think a good spanking is never out of order in treating certain childhod difficulties, and I. recommend it. Moral Training Fundamental “Moral training is equally funda- mental, Morals are vital. They should be so in the mind of every child, by example and precept, as well as by teaching, that they in- stinctly know right from wrong. The cultivation of decent habits of living will do much to impress upon the youthful mind the importance of mor- als and moral standards as a guide to every-day living. Morals are not out- moded as some would have us believe. They are still very important. With- out @ well-disciplined moral sense the | youthful citizen will find himself in difficulties. His most valuable guide in life will be a well-trained con- science. “Honesty is so essential in char- acter tral and in every-day life that it is lered by Biblical com- mand. Failure to train the child in habits of honesty and truthfulness is a serious impediment to the building of strong character and leaves him unprotected in a most vulnerable spot. “Since it is generally recognised that the major factors in producing delinquency are found in lack of respect for authority, dishonesty and for morals and moral ‘school authority, Henry Schumacher, ‘associate professor of mental hygiene at Western Reserve If you think Ethiopia has been humbled by the Italian conquest, take a look at the resplendent uniform worn by Dr. Asaj Mar- tin, Ethiopian minister to Lon- don. He still represents his coun- try, for Great Britain hasn’t rec- ognized Rome's seizure of the an- cient kingdom. Dr. c. standards, are we not in charging those results back to the home where faulty training is respon- of 60 British Legionnaires gathered at @ small “protest meeting” outside the church that he was only expres3- ing personal views when he said Wed- nesday: “I would rather the duke did not attend the services.” . The vicar told the group: “I will be very sorry if the duke does not come. I will be very sorry if my statement is taken as a suggestion that the duke stay away.” Windsor issued a statement saying it would be “inappropriate” for him to accept the legion’s invitation to Notre Dame. CONTINUE from page one Home Is Source of Most Delinquency, Miss Cashel Says not, for I firmly believe that when /| I believe, who said, ‘Give me a child Island in Philippines| southwest of Tokyo. Admiral Uriu! two missing, large freighter ashore we come to ascribe responsibility for delinquent behavior and delinquent | o¢ primary burden. ¢ “The family is the unit of our struc- ture and is divinely ordered. It is made up of mother, father, and chil- dren, each with its share of responsi- bility toward maintaining Christian standards of living. “In this social unit there are two primary factors, heredity and envi- ronment, and they det the character of the child born there. Parents not only determine the hered- ity of their child--they are its hered- ity and upon the quality of their mating rests the foundation of the family life. The child comes into the world with no endowments of mental or moral qualities — he is merely a bundle of potentialities de- rived from his parents. Some are born to strength, some to weakness. Whatever the traits we say ‘It is in B the blood.’ Should Study Parents “Now the most telling environment of every child is its home, and there the parents exert the most powerful influence over the child, so that in analyzing causative factors in de- linquency we should study the par- ents even more intensely than we do the child, “It was the late Cardinal Gibbons, sible for the condition? That is, shall we bring an indictment of de- hhnquency against the child or against the home? Not All Homes Indicted “This is not an indictment against all homes for we are well aware of the fact that there are thousands of homes that are doing a fine piece of work in child training, and I believe I am justified in saying that the av- erage parent wants to keep his child up to the level of decent behavior and has the natural hope of making a use- ful citizen of him. 2 “It is true we are living in a less age where ideals have collapsed and the old standards of have been underminded by an mad pursuit of pleasure, comes the tendency to let for itself, to let it make its own and determine its own future. the outgrowth of- a philosophy was preached in this country shortly after the World war and was an at- tempt to bring about the self-deter- mination’ of youth. This new cult found pleasure-loving has not yet { ®@ way for radio to/jattitudes the family must assume the 8 contribute to this campaign without became emanicipated from the obll. seriously embarrassing the family group.” | Fort Clark Church gations of the home, letting it degen- erate into a mere parking place where children come and go at will, no re- strictions, and only one rule—that not to mislay their two most important household utensils, the corkacrew and the can-opener. “That type of home is altogether too ni and in common with ‘all other types of the decadent home, presents the greatest moral hazards for youth. It is the home of greatest instability and also the home from which most of our youthful delin- quents come, Statistics show that 57 per cent of delinquent boys and 65 per cent of the girls come from those homes, Homes that have been broken of the child and warp his mind—they are the worst offenders in promoting gelinauency and bad conduct in chil- ren, Poverty Is Contributory “We must not overlook the fact that in some cases poverty is a contribut- ing factor, but we must never charge the home of the poor, as such, wit more responsibility than we do for the first seven years of his life nd I care not who has him after “In that statement he gives a direct charge to parents defining clearly responsibility in the training of their children, for by more than any other agency their characters are moulded by their home life. The rear- ing nitude that it is truly said, ‘being parent is the biggest job on earth.’ Child Reacts to Hi jome “If the home sets the right pattern cf conduct the child will react ac- cordingly. On the other hand faulty patterns produce faulty results and we get the child with delinquent ten- dencies, The home training is our BONELESS and SKINLESS Standards, ............ YY Pike, Salmon, Black Cod, Fresh Herring, Smoked Salmon, Finnen Haddie RED OWL MARKET _ tb, 22¢ pt. 42¢ .. Pint 33¢ father who wanted to awaken three of his sons to participate in a birth- day celebration found them dead in their bed here early Thursday, vic- tims of escaping illuminating gas. The victims were Raymond Lefer- riere, 12; Jerome Laferriere, 10, and Fabine Laferriere, 9. Sand-Lot Football Is Fatal tol Butte Lad Butte, Mont. Nov. 11.—()—John William Sullivan, 15-year-old high school freshman, died Wednesday while he played in a pickup sandlot football game. Strictly Fresh Selects Great Britain, is ill at his home here Thursday. |, Batteries, SKUNKS WANTED NOW ALL OTHER LEGAL CAUGHT FURS seaso! n Also bring in your Radiators, Brass, Copper, Aluminum, Hides and Pelts and RECEIVE TOP MARKET PRICE BISMARCK HIDE & FUR COMPANY Charles Rigier, Mgr. Cor. Sth & Front St—in Frame Bldg. Across from Occident Elevater Mill _ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Ruby Rubinoff, daughter of the violinist, Dave Rubinoff, Thurs- day had her father’s word that he would consent to her marriage to Robert Claymen, Pittsburgh, Pa., orchestra leader. The marriage license bureau in Pittsburgh refused to issue a li- cense to the couple Tuesday on the grounds that Miss Rubinoff would not be 21 until Dec. 10. primary consideration and in my opinion should be based upon the fundamentals of obedience, honesty and morality. Obedience is the key- stone upon which the foundation of FRESH LOBSTERS AND au POINTS AT THE PAT- TONIGHT AT 8 GOOD NEWS OF 1938 takes you on another behind-the-scenes visit to the great M-G-M lot. The evening's high light: A preview of “MANNEQUIN” starring JOAN CRAWFORD SPENCER TRACY You'll also hear these and many other famous stare: . Robert Young Charles Igor Gorin Betty Jaynes Ted Healy Meredith Willson Judy Garland and his stooges and his orchestra Brought to you by MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE EVERY THURSDAY, KFYR home of the rich. Delinquency is confined to any one social class. find homes that are poorest in world’s goods, richest in character training. Most of our really great men have come from poor homes. “Having charged off the major responsibility for delinquency to faulty home training let us consider for a moment the place of the school in their relation to Beets ‘university, ‘Our school system is one of the greatest contributors to child delinquency of any institution or group—yet the one agency in the country society looks up to and ex- pects to perform miracles. A good many of our children should never be exposed to acadamic high school training. It is a waste of time. Gets False Notions “Another causal factor, he states, is giving a child false notions of what to expect in life, especially as it re- lates to work, and in a more telling way by training 90 per cent of its students for white collar jobs when their mental equipment may be that of a sheepherder and the strain imposed upon him by curricular cenusnemente This causes confusion thinking, unhappiness in work, and s frustration of innate ability, which eventually will lead to ble conduct. “It has been a contention always that we are over educating the masses in our attempts to make Tawyers and doctors out of material from which ditch-diggers are made and there is much good material go- ing to waste for want of vocational training, for give a boy or girl work here they are happy and they cre- no social problem. “To assign the church its proper place in preparing youth for living & normal life, I am quoting from a noted writer who says it so much better than I can. He says: ‘The Sun- day school and the church are of in- calcuable assistance to the parents and society in giving school children the necessary foundation for develop- ing good characters and good per- sonalities, “‘From a psychological as well as from a common sense point of view the greatest source of help to the parents is religion, for the relations of the church to the home are es- sential and intimate. Religion is the only unifying and ever present force which can help to solve the inevitable moral and intellectual conflicts cf parents, children and society at large. In a world of change and ze- bellion to authority God is the only soul) fixed point.’ (quotation from “The Return to Religion” Link.) “In closing let me repeat that be- ing a parent is the biggest job on earth and nothing, nobody, can sup- plant the father and mother in theit influence over their children.” by Henry C. IS tT SIOIRIE|SHETIEINIDIE IRIS) IPIVIRIR MES! LOIS AIH! UUTISHETIAIP! IRE AIMIA! 1 MEF IAIL ISIE BAIPIOID EINGITINE) (VIAILIIISIE Evening Shows Start at 6:30 - 9:00 Glory of Ethiopia | coast, Sei ‘tion ‘has | Canadian Provinces and in the north 1 Pacific coast states, while elsewhere ‘over the central and western is unequal to) corte [ Weather Report | | WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- Friday; some- colder Friday. Generally fair xcept unsettled mewhat warmer ler nd north Friday. Dakota: Fair tonight | and Friday; colder extreme west Fri- i day. ' For Montana: Fair east, cloudy west, rain probable extreme west to- | night and Friday; not much change in ta: Generally fair west ; somewhat unsettled in east portion | tonight and Friday; not so cool to- ‘night; somewhat warmer in east and | south portions Friday. | GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS erally fair tonight and ‘what warmer tonight; | The high pressure area has moved | eastward to the |S. 8. Marie 30.5: Great Lakes region, 2 inches, and the pres- gradually from that stward to the Pacific tle 29.56 inches. Precipita- occurred in the western tates the weather is generally fair. Tem- peratures dropped slightly over the Great Lakes region, but readi: above the seasonal aver: 410, Reduced to sea le: Missourl river stage ft. 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Sunrise, 7:41 a. m. Sunset, 5:13 p. m. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to di 20 Total, January ist to da! 15.83 Normal, January ist to 15.40 Accumulated excess to date . NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- High- est est Pct. BISMARCK, clear 56 On Devils Lake, clear . Minot, clear ... Williston, clear WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS Low- High- est est Pct. Aberdeen, 8. D., clear . 40 00 Boise, Idaho, clear .... 56 Calgary, Alta. cldy. .. 28 Chicago, Ill, clear 38 Denver, Colo., peld: Des Moines, Iowa, cldy, Dodge City, Kan, clear Edmonton, Alta, cldy... Glendive, ‘Mont, clea: Havre, Mont. Helena, Mont., clay. Huron,’8, D., clear .... Kamloops, B, C., clay... Kansas City, Mo. Lewistown, Mont. Los Angeles, Cal. Miles City, Mont. Minneapolis, Min: Mobridge, 8. D. Moorhead, Mini No. Platte, Nel Okia. City, Ox! ‘Ariz, Plerre, 8. D. Erince, Aibert u’Appelle, Rapid City, 8, D. Roseburg, 0: St. Louis, Mo., eldy. Salt Lake City, U., 322223233) 33 a Spokane, Swift Cur. The Pas, Winnipeg, Will Hold Custodian Hearing at Driscoll Hearing on the application of the Northern Pacific railray for authority to substitute custodian for the present agency service at Driscoll will be held Nov. 18 at Driscoll, the state board of ri commissioners announced. , CAPITOL S532 Thursday, Friday, Saturday A ting them toda blazing headlines BORIS Karloff in “West of Shanghai” AS GLORIOUS AS “MAYTIME"! uN) NOW SHOWING TODAY - FRL - SAT. _ with. ALLAN JONES ° WARREN WILLIAM A ROBERT 7. LEONARD Production - Birested by ROBERT I. LIONARD 25e Till 7:30 Shows Daily MARC K

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