The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 27, 1937, Page 3

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i rays a MOTHER IS KILLED AT HOLIDAY PARTY; DAUGHTER, 28, HELD Ohio Steelman’s Granddaught- er Gives Useless Blood, Then Goes to Jail visit to lonely lighthouse keepers along the coast. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1937 Flying Santa Pays First Call included on the flight. First rays of morning sun highlight the island as Capt. William Wincapaw’s big tri-motor plane swoops down on Graves light, ten miles down Boston harbor, the first port of call on an annual Christmas The big ship, loaded with scores of Christmas bun- dies, drops one at each of 130 penthouses North of Boston. Captain Wincapaw handles the controls as his son, William, Jr., tosses the packages overboard’ at the right spots. One Canadian lighthouse was pleasure on the large Campbell es ee en one, Cronalne: By JOAN DURHAM (AP Feature Service Writer) Gentlemen, your pockets. For one thing, you probably couldn't tell, off- hand, how many pockets you have. Then, you'll find men everywhere loaded with pockets and odds and ends, but never giving a thought to what goes into which pocket! Well, thanks to Raymond G. Twyef- DIAMOND-SHUGGLNG RING IS SMASHED New Arrests Believed to. Shut Off $13,000,000 Stream From Europe committee of the American Merchant Tailors’ association and has gone through your pockets pretty thor- oughly. : Should Have Fewer He thinks you should have fewer of them. He wants to streamline the years| male figure. But, good heavens, you York | can’t slick up a silhouette if loaded iden pockets push out bulges all over the anatomy. Mr, Twyeffort will let you keep all your pockets for the nonce but he pleads for planned distribu- tion, Your sack suit (business suit). has thirteen pockets, placed, he points out thus: Coat—One breast pocket Spually on the left), and two side pockets. ‘Vest—Two breast, two waist. one in- side (usually on the right). ~ Change Pocket Optional _ * Prousers—TWo side and two hip. Optional, but usually added, says Mr. Twyeffort, are a change pocket in- side the-right side coat pocket, and a fob pocket at the belt line. Mill City Workhouse Superintendent Quits Minneapolis, Dec. Dee, 277) —Dr. A.C. ‘Tingdele, under fire of special investi- of the Minneapolis board of Public welfare for several months, re- signed Monday as superintendent of the workhouse at an executive session New York, Dec. 27.—()—Diamonds aegpgiata worth—beautiful, spark- fey Week after week for seven Today, after two years of tireless sleuthing that led all over Europe, the government moved to cut off the last rivulets of that glittering stream of diamonds. A huge liner moved toward New York Monday, but this time it carried two men and a woman the govern- ment charges were among the last fugitive cogs in an international smuggling ring. ‘The travelers who will arrive Tues- day on the Berengaria were Nat Lukin, Gussie Firstenberg and Solomon Hal- per, three of 55 men and women in- dicted last June, 30 of whom were sub- sequently convicted. ——_—_———_ ‘Price-Fixing’ Jury Have Court Party the Tuesday. of the board in the mayors’ offlee, Re- Most persons with the case—ex- | cently the welfare board accepted a cept the jurors and bailiffs—spent | check of Dr. Tingdale for $971 in pay- Christmas at home. ment for alleged unauthorized use of U. 8. Marshal John Comeford | supplies. and his staff gave the 14 Lifes including two alternates, a party in the courtzoom Onristanas day. 3 Plead Guilty to of their families, from whom they | Offense Against Girl Ihave been separated since the — trial began Oct, 4, and exchanged Minneapolis, Dec. 27.—()—Three gifts. The jurors ate Christmas jyoung Kansas City, Mo., men arrested in an investigation of a white slave rr ring involving seven men and three :|Pocket Survey Reveals ‘Side Pants’ as Catchall Here are Mr. Twyeffort’s recommen- dations for efficient and esthetic stowage: Show handkerchief — Coast breast pocket; handkerchief for use, hip or side trousers pocket. Pencils, cigars and pens—Let top vest, or inside coat. Glasses—Top vest or side coat. Comb—Top vest or coat breast. Notebook, address book, letters, etc. —Inside coat preferred, side coat sec- ond choice. Checkbook and wallet—Either hip all right; those pockets usually have buttons. (It may be interpolated that police authorities disagree with Mr. Twyeffort; safety pocket for a wallct, they hold, is the inside vest.) Watch in Vest ‘Watch—Upper or lower right vest. or the fob pocket. Keys—Left or right side trousers. Bide coat may be used. Matches—Usually side trousers, the Seneral accumulation pocket, inciden- ly. Change—Change or side trousers. Pipe—Side coat, tobacco with it, for convenience, Cigarettes—Mr, Twyeffort gives you great latitude—any of your four vest pockets are acceptable. Well, that’s the list. Tf you find it difficult to remember, you probably will get along if you continue to use the pockets you al- ways have used for your gentlemanly perquisites. | Sow Prisoner in | Hay Pile 5 Months - Albert Lea, Minn., Dec, 27.— (®)—A 500-pound sow, missing five months from the R. E. Van- dergrift farm near here, was found Monday, alive ad squeal- ing but weighing only 100 pounds, The porker had been impris- oned in a huge straw pile on threshing day, Aug. 2. The animal had eaten out a space 16 feet long and three feet wide, living on grain kernels and straw but without any water whatever during the five months. Slays Wife, Self With Pocket Knife Lancaster, Wis., Dec. 27.—(#)—Oscar Dailey, 50, father of four children, slew his wife, Luella, 50, with a pocket os, we, | sears old, double-breasted sles |i peatutory ottieas tpaincerenaies ue 37, 38, 42, Dahl Clothing store, [ets Sis To give you an opportunity to try flying and enjoy its greater speed, safety, comfort and " “Educational Fares”—at special low rates— effective January 1 to March 1, with a 30-day return limit. .Take advantage of these money- saving fares. . . Fly for business or pleasure. BISMARCK to TWIN CITIES . . . Round Trip, $34.50 to CHICAGO .. . . Round Trip, $49.50 . toSEATTLE .. . . Round Trip, $96.00 ' ASK ABOUT REDUCED FARES TO OTHER POINTS Fee Reservations Caik CATY TICKET OFFICE... ore eee BAITTIN FIELD .. . Phono 826 LOCKHEED SKY ZEPHYRS ‘WORLD'S FASTEST TRANSPORTS . . . CHICAGO to SEATILE cana AIRLINER one knife in their home here Sunday night and then committed suicide by slash- ing his own throat, Coroner George Harrower ova $44,000,000 Water 000 Water Project Is Okayed Washington, ‘Des. 27.()—Presi- dent Roosevelt approved Monday & Colorado transmountain water diver- .jthat an open battle for control of SHE OPEN BRRAGH AMONG DEMOCRATS Battle Among Liberals, Conser- vatives for Power in Con- gress Predicted By NATHAN ROBERTSON Washington, Dec. 27.—(7)—Some senate Democrats forecast Monday the party would develop between liberal and conservative legislators during the coming session of con- gress. Although unwilling to be quoted by name, they predicted the present division would carry over into the 1940 national convention, Seriousness of the party split was acknowledged generally by congres- sional Democrats in private conver- sation. Many believed that President Roosevelt's course during the next three years would be the determin- ing factor in the outcome of the di- vision, St. Paul Man Gives Fortune t to Charity St. Paul, Dec. 21 ——The Carstein Borg, ‘St. Paut furnttire merchant, bequeathed nearly. a half million dollars to charities and social service organizations, it was revealed Monday when his will was filed in Ramsey county probate court. Value of the estate is estimated in the will at $530,0000, About $50,000 was bequeathed to relatives and friends. The balance of the estate is left under trust arrangements to the St. Paul community chest, 8t. Paul Red Cross, Minneapolis Coun- cil of Social Agencies and the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of the United States and Norway. Ace’s Wife Again Appeals to Franco Paris, Dec. 27.—(7)—Mrs. Harold E. Dahl sent a Christmas appeal to In- surgent Generalissimo Francisco Franco Monday to “take advantage of this season of the year” to release her husband, @ 28-year-old Champaign, Ill, aviator. Dahl, shot down by insurgents last July while flying for the Spanish government, was sentenced to death by a court marital and immediately reprieved by Franco in October. The American flyer has been re- cuperating in a Salamanca ‘hospital from his long imprisonment. Northern Pacific Income Is Down &t. Paul, Dec. 27.—(#)—The North- ern Pacific Railway company Monday reported net railway operating in- come for November was $750,804, decrease of $868,280 compared wit the same month last year. sion project estimated to cost eventu- ally $44,000,000. Finds Brother’s Body SMALLER PIG CROP IS SEEN FOR STATE Production Next Spring Put at 101,000 or 20,000 Less Than Year Ago During the period June 1st to Dec- ember Ist, 1937, 16,000 sows farrowed on the farms of North Dakota com- pared to 20,000 for the same six months period of 1936, a decrease of 20 per cent. This information was “|received at the office of the federal agricultural statistician at Fargo as a result of the information gathered by postmasters and rural carriers in co-operation with the department of agriculture. The number of sows farrowed this fall is lower than in @ny other year since 1925, when these records were first begun, except the fall of 1934 when the same number of sows are estimated to have farrowed. Based on the average number of pigs saved per litter of 6.33, the total number of pigs saved this fall number 101,000 as compared with 121,000 a year ago when the pigs saved aver- aged 6.07 per litter. The total 1937 pig crop (spring and fall farrowings) is estimated to be 551,000 head com- pared with 786,000 head for 1936, a de- cline of 30 per cent.. The decrease of course is due to the very short sup- plies of feed carried over from the 1936 crop in our important hog dis- tricts. The 1938 spring farrowings, based on the reported intentions of growers, will exceed the spring farrowing of 1937 by 12 per cent, indicating 76,000 sows to farrow next spring compared to 68,000 farrowed in the spring of 1936, Drop in Rye Seeding North Dakota farmers seeded 1,210,- 000 acres to rye this fall, compared to 1,301,000 acres seeded in the fall of 1936, a decrease of seven per cent, according to reports received at the office of the federal agricultural sta- tistician at Fargo. In the fall of 1935 the seeded acreage totaled 1,712,000 but all except 445,000 acres of this was abandoned or used for other purposes due to the severe drouth which pre- vailed in 1936. Of the 1,301,000 acres seeded last fall, only 672,000 acres were harvested for grain. The average acre- age of rye abandoned or used for other purposes than grain during the 5-year period (1933-1937) amounts to 56% per cent of that planted. Soil moisture conditions were rather unfavorable to rye seeding this fall, but still somewhat more favorable than a year ago. In September and October, the months in which the 1937 At a Glance Roosevelt looses supreme court battle; Senator Robinson dies ; Senator Black appointed to bench amid Ku Klux Klan controversy. Labor splits and then moves to make up; CIO invades mass production industries; sit-down strike appears. War invades two continents as nations engage in new busi- ness of forming “axes”; Roosevelt inquires about “quarantine.” Zeppelin Hindenburg destroyed in sensational tragedy of e air. Business recedes and administration moves to check decline, Duke of Windsor, ex-king, takes American for bride. Nearly 300 children die in New London, Texas, school ex- plosion. pamnelle Earhart disappears in Pacific on round-the-world ight. England crowns a king; a royal spectacle of interest to dem- ocratic America. Ohio: end Mississippi rivers rampage; misery in the low- lands, Other significant happenings: death of John D. Rockefeller; LaGuardia-Dewey victory over Tammany in New York and emergence of American Labor party with balance of power; Russian polar flights; death of 19 in Western air crash; illness and recovery of Pope Pius XI; Gedeon triple murder in New York; Soviet Russian liquidations; forming of totalitarian state in Brazil; death of Andrew Mellon; Roosevelt-Dupont wedding; campaign against venereal dis- eases; Mattson kidnaping; War Admiral surpasses sire, Man o’ War, in triple track victory. FARGO WOMAN DIES Fargo, N. D., Dec. 27.—(?)—Funeral services for Mrs. Lars I. Sundfor were held at 2 p. m. here Monday. om, ys (943 FISPTTEE AL OPIT FILET (ov 1 / : i a frre a : 8 WILL RUSH PANAY FILM 10 CAPITAL Newsreel Record of E Record of Bombing Will Be Shown First in Washington New York, Dec. 27.—(7)—A special- ly-chartered United Air Lines plane is scheduled to rush the first newsreel films of the bombing of the U. 8. 8, Panay from Alameda, Calif., to New York Tuesday—and the first unedited print will be flown to Wi: D.C.,, it was announced Monday. Norman Alley, Universal newsreel cameraman, who “shot” the dramatic scenes of the bombing, standing on the deck of the little American gun- boat while it was under fire, will ac- company the films on the trans- continental flight. The Associated Press Newsphoto service has obtained exclusive rights fos newspaper reproduction of the ms, CUT-RATE EYE GLASSES, Ine. Special, $9.75 Glasses Complete Oculist’s Examination FREE! Why Pay More? Dr. MacLachlan Oculist — Optician 13 First St. Just South of Chevrolet Garage Bismi arck, N. D. Phone largest portion of the rye acreage is seeded, rainfall for the state averaged 2.27 inches compared to a normal of 2.56 inches. Last fall September and October rainfall totaled 1.41 inches. The eastern division, where around 35 per cent of the rye is grown, re- ceived relatively less rainfall during the fall months this year than did the central and western divisions. The December first condition of the crop is 62 per cent of normal compared to 46 per cent last fall, 56 per cent in the fall of 1935, and 80 per cent, the 10-year average (1923-1932). Veteran Hillsboro Businessman Dies Hillsboro, N. D., Dec. 27.—(?)—A. G. Foogman, 74, who with A. L, Lien shared the distinction of being the oldest Hillsboro business man, died Sunday at his home. He had been ill six weeks. Foogman came to Hillsboro 53 years ago from Portage, Wis., and began a: Grug business. He was a business rival of A. L, Lien from that point, running competing stores beside each other. They were fast friends. Rites for Foogman will be Tuesday. Survivors includs Mrs. Foogman, two Gaughters, Mrs. Harry Tonn, and Rosalie Foogman of Hillsboro and & brother, G. W. Foogman of Grafton, Burial will be at Hillsboro. ———— A NEW LIFE OPEN TO YOU Rosicrucians Reveal a New World of Possibilities At last a new method of mas- tering our lives and putting al) the obstacles to success and hap- pinese in their prep ey: places, has” een outlined by the supreme Council of the Rosicrucians, And copies of this NEW PLAN and an explanation of WHAT IT WILL DO, will be loaned to those who wish to make a new start in Iife and change the course of their career, The Rosicrucians have ever been known for their ration- al, simple, and thorough knowl- edge of the arcane facts of life. Through all the ages they have held the Light of Knowledge as a sacred trust, and thousands of eminent writers and historians have conceded the highest tribute to them. The new book, called “The Secret Heritage,” will be mailed to sincere inquirers without obll- gation and postage prepaid. Write a letter (not postcard) addressed to: by @ special concession, Scribe 111, AMORC Library San Jose, California HIDES MARKET HIGHER We are paying higher prices for beef hides and horse hides. Bring in all your hides such as horse and|cow hides, sheep pelts, jack rabbit and all others. Do not forget to bring your old metals along with you and receive Highest Cash Market Prices Pai ‘“‘Northern’’ Hide, & Fur Co. brick building, corner Ha a Preot Bia, Blamarcl Newest styles! es 10 1.69 " vale Regularly 13c! Tub- fast percale. New! 36 © Vat-dyed tubfast percales? © Styles that are all brand NEW! © Perfectly tailored and finished! © Colorful prints! New patterns! @ Organdy, pique, or self trims @ Flared Skirts! Set-in sleeves! © Tie-back, shirtwaist, dressy types! @ Sizes for everyone! 14 to 52! Wards Greatest 5 Day COTTON DRESS SALE BETTER FABRICS! BETTER STYLING! BIGGER SAVINGS! Prana 42x36". .nsanv 000 21¢ 1214 THRIFT CASES ie Sturdy muslin. 42"236"... 36" se" ECONOMY MUSLIN Regularly 10c! Bleached......+ 38%" ECONOMY MUSLIN Regularly 8c! Unbleached...... 19¢ CANNON TOWELS Turkish. Pastels, 20°x40".... Blankets See BAS 65c Fleecydowns. American cotton. 70"x80". Pastel. 300 Fourth St. MONTGOMERY WARD .. 10 an. 7, 14e

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