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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 2
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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 2

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JAMESTOWN COLLEGE ENLARGES FACULTY Larimore Man to Head Speech Department New Singing Teacher Employed Announcement that Dr. W. E. Ltllo Of Larimore has been added to the faculty of Jamestown college as head Of its speech department was received In Bismarck Tuesday from Dr. B.

H. Kroeze, head of the institution. Dr. Lillo has been superintendent Of schools at Larimore for the last nine years and in eight of those year's Larimore's debate teams have gone through to the state finals, winning the championship six times. This record is unparalleled in the state.

In 1924, when Dr. Lillo was superintendent of the high school at Cavalier, his team also won the state title. While a student at the University of North Dakota, from which he has received three degrees, Dr. Lillo woti the Merrifield medal for oratory three times, the Ruettell medal for debating and the King prize for extern poraneous speaking. He also was the first North Dakotan to win the national W.

C. T. U. essay prize of $100 tn gold. As head of the speech department, Dr.

Lillo will take over duties to which Prof. T. W. Jackson and Miss Marion Jackson have given part of their time in recent years, making an enviable record. Announcement that Miss Elizabeth Moutray has been named to head the voice department in the school of music also was made by the board.

A graduate of the University of Illinois, she has numerous musical degrees and distinctions received after study at the Institute of Musical Art, New York City the New York College of Music and Northwestern University. Mercer Woman Dial After Brief Illness rMs. David Pink of Mercer, mother of Mrs. Clarence Peterson and Emil Helfenstein of Bismarck, died at 10 p. Monday at her home in Mercer, according to information received iiere by her daughter.

Mrs. Pink, who was 47 years old, had been ill three days following a second stroke of apoplexy. The first was suffered about two and a half years ago. Married twice, Mrs. Pink was the mother of 16 children, of whom 13 are living.

In addition to Mrs. Peterson fnd Mrs. Helfenstein here, they are Jttrs. D. V.

Poland of Minot and 10 Children living at home. Her first marriage was to Jacob Helfenstein and they lived at Hazelipn. Following Mr. Helfenstein's death Bismarck during the influenza epidemic of 1918, his widow married Iflr. Pink and the family moved to Mercer where It has since resided.

Mrs. Fink was a member of the German Lutheran church. Although details have not been decided, Mrs. Fink will be buried Wednesday at Mercer. French Strato Plane Destroyed by Blast Paris, Aug.

pioneer plane for stratosphere flying was demolished and its pilot was dead after a disastrous test flight which wrecked three years of secret work. The cause of the accident Monday may never be known, but air officials expressed a belief that the pilot, Mar eel Cogno, 28, must have lost consciousness in the hermetically seal compressed air chamber after hours of flying at an altitude of more than five miles. Cogno's body burned in the plane as the ship exploded and caught fire after crashing into a woods within sight of a number of farmers in the fields near bonnieres. New Tribune Record Set by Gum Company Breaking the record it set last year for consistent daily advertising, this newspaper reached a new high Tuesday with the appearance of the 580th consecutive Wrigley Gum advertisement. Ads for this famous gum manufacturer have appeared regularly on the comic page day after day for the last three years.

The first advertisement appeared Oct. 7, 1932. The continuous appearance of these chewing gum ads carries out the Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company's policy of frequent repetition in advertising.

City and County 9 4 Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Mergens, 226 W.

Hosser, are the parents of a boy born at 11:25 p. Monday, at St. Alexius hospital. Tuesday evening at the World War Memorial building, Evangelist A. J.

Lamm will speak on. "Who is at the Door?" Imam to draw, opens Septombtt 23rd Complete courses in idvertiting art, fuhSwi interior decoration, illuitrition, sculpture, Mistriil design in both dty and night cIm see. Finest instruction. Low tuition rates. Wrltu for kmiutiful FREE MINNEAPOLIS '8X8 ZOO Minneapolis Concrete Building Tile Drier and Ideal Building Material See us for estimates BISMARCK BRICK AND TILE COMPANY Wm.

Noggle, Snp't. Phone 728 I Walsh Construction Co. Boose Moving, Raising and Cement Work. No Job Too LargeNo Job Too Small. All Work Guaranteed.

J. V. WALSH Geaeral Contractor Phone 834-W Guarding Swastika Against Rioters) A Nazi swastika banner like this one, launched an International li cident when it was torn down by demonstrators before the S. 8 Bremen sailed from New York. In reply to Germany's protest, U.

S. State Department expressed regrets but blamed the Hamburg American line officials for not taking precautions when warned police. The sailors aboard the docked Europa in New York stand ready to guard the banner with their lives against repetition of tfee rioting. ELETYPE BRIEFS By Associated Press PROBES S. D.

STRIKE Sioux Palls, S. D. Mintener, head of the South Dakota department of justice, was here Tuesday to investigate the strike at the Johin Morrell and Company packing plant. He is empowered to call out sheriffs and deputies to handle the strike, if he considers It necessary. KRESS LEAVING U.

S. New W. Kress, the German alien who asked for a New York masseur's license and thus started a train of events that resulted in a diplomatic incident, doesn't want the license any more. He is sailing Wednesday for Germany. HUNT OHIOAN'S BODY Lethbrldge, pressed the hunt for the body of Prof.

F. H. Lumley, of Columbia, who disappeared here a year ago. Park employes thought he fell over a cliff. STRIKERS BAR ROADS Potosi, were barricaded and pickets stood guard at every mill Tuesday as the strike of 2,600 Washington county Tiff miners for higher wages reached full swing.

COLORADO TO USE TOKENS Denver Colorado expects to proceed with its plan for use of metal tokens in payment of sales taxes, despite a treasury decision that use of the tokens is illegal. CRETE STRIKE SETTLED thousand strikers, their revolt crushed, returned to work in Crete with a 15 per cent wage increase. Six persons were killed, 51 wounded in riots. 3,000 BACK AT WORK Uxbridge, 3,000 employes of the Uxbridge Woolen company returned to work in three New England states Tuesday after voting to call off a strike sponsored by the United Textile Workers of America. RAY BLADES SUSPENDED Chicago, Aug.

Blades, manager of the Columbus club of the American association, was indefinitely suspended by President Hickey Tuesday for his stalling tactics to delay the final game of a doubleheader at Minneapolis Sunday. From 1926 to 1924 the average weight of automobiles has increased more than 25 per cent. CRASH! A slippery applied too quickly the fist of folly causes damage to your car. You may escape disaster but the odds are against you! Make sure you have complete automobile insurance. This agency, representing the Hartford Fire Insurance company, offers you this protection.

Phone today! Tomorrow you may be glad. MURPHY "The Man Who Knows Insurance" Bismarck Ztt Broadway Phone ill Federal Land Banks On Cash Loan Basis Washington, Aug. I. Myers of the farm credit administration said Tuesday that federal land banks are going on a cash loan basis immediately for the first time "In many months." The cash, he said, will be given instead of federal farm mortgage corporation bonds. He expressed the opinion the outlook for agriculture is better than it has been for several years.

CCC GETS $200,000,000 Roosevelt allotted $200,000,000 of work relief funds to help carry the Civilian Conservation corps through the final fiscal year. ggjgfr" THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FMD ASTAIRE, 'WHISPER' CAMPAIGN AUTO LOSES JOB Thomas A. Edison Company 'Fires' Employee Who 'Hurt' Roosevtflt West Orange, N. Aug.

Edwin p. Cramer, who suggested a "whispering" campaign against the New Deal, has lost his job and now he wants to be a "forgotten man." Cramer said he holds no ill will against the Thomas A. Edison company which discharged him as editor of a house organ Monday because of his "advocacy of so reprehensible a plan" as the covert attack on President Roosevelt he suggested as a means of combatting the utilities bill. "I want to be forgotten," Cramer said. "I've been smeared all over the front pages of the newspapers.

I want to drop out of sight." Charles Edison, president of the company and son of Its founder, the late inventor, Issued a statement explaining Cramer's discharge. "A careful investigation has developed the fact that Mr. Cramer, acting wholly on his own initiative and on his responsibility as a private citizen, has written letters to certain public utility interests, recommending, among other measures, a 'whispering campaign' against the president and other national officials," the statement said. "Although we have obtained no evidence that Mr. Cramer actually engaged in such a campaign, we feel his advocacy of so reprehensible a plan Is sufficient to warrant his release from this company.

Thomas A. Edison, is not a public utility, has no interest in the Wheeler-Rayburn bill, and no interest in Mr. Cramer's political views." Lindbergh Candidacy Demand Is Widespread Washington, Aug. that Col. Charles A.

Lindbergh would make a good candidate for the Republican presidential nomination was reported Tuesday to be widespread by Robert H. Lucas, former executive director of the O. O. P. national committee.

Lucas expressed doubt that Lindbergh would ever be a candidate, saying that the flier had discouraged persons wishing to give him political preferment. 76 TO GET DEGREES Valley City, N. D. Seventy-six students will receive degrees and diplomas at commencement extrcises of the state teachers college here Friday. NEVER A DULL MOMENT MISSED THETRAIN? WELL WHO WONT BE A DULL WAIT.

WEVE PLENTY OF LUCKIES. TUESDAY, AUGUST 1938 Nude Dancing or Her Problem As pretty of face as of figure, Joan Warner, American girl whose near-nude 'n Paris stirred a furore and cost her a fine, has more than her powder puff to think about in her Paris dressing room these days. Deluged with offers of contracts, she is pondering an offer of marriage from a wealthy young French aristocrat whose family, she divulges, would certainly, prove, of their marriage. Monkey Frozen Stiff, Revived Hollywood, Aug. Jekal, a pet Javanese monkey, chattered amiably in his cage Tuesday, apparently in the best of health after being frozen stiff in a below zero ice chest.

Jekal was the object of a test by Dr. Ralph Willard, gland researcher, who declared the monkey "died" and was brought back to life to prove his theory that certain malignant organisms and dead tissues can be killed by freezing. -5 i W- R.KJCtsfar, introduces new songs and dances from dHOTTEE PICKED Clemmer, Walster and Ryan to Study Erosion Problems in North Dakota Appointment of a state soil conservation advisory committee for North Dakota was announced Tuesday by the state planning board. The personnel was appointed by M. D.

Wilson, assistant secretary of the U. S. department of agriculture. Appointed to the committee were: H. J.

Clemmer, state acting coordinator of soil conservation service H. L. Walster, director of the state experimental station, and M. O. Ryan, executive director of the state planning board.

The committee will study soil erosion and conservation in the state and will recommend the type of control activities which the federal soil conservation service should carry on in the state. Location of demonstration projects, formation of volunteer conservation associations and development of control devices are expected to move through the state group, Ryan said. Local planning boards are being advised of various methods of developing soil conservation work in their respective counties, Ryan explained. Farm Laborer Dead From Crash Injuries Fargo, N. Aug.

6. ITS THE TOBACCO THAT COUNTS There qre no finer tobaccos than those used in Luckies (Jf) The week-end automobile toll mounted Tuesday with the death of Art Groepper, 29, in a Fargo hospital. Groepper, a farm laborer from St. Cloud, suffered a broken neck in an auto wreck near Casselton Sunday. Groepper's death brought automobile fatalities for the week-end to eight.

For the year the tabulation reveals 48 deaths in North Dakota, 11 under the fatalities at this time In 1934. Meantime several others critically injured showed Improvement in local hospitals. Torches Theft Laid To Fugitive Convict Chicago, Aug. that Henry "Midget" Fernekes, Chicago desperado who recently escaped from prison, may have led a robber band that stole acetylene torches and gas from a railroad roundhouse Tuesday was expressed by Deputy Chief of Detectives Walter Storms. Fernekes is an expert safe cracker.

the Berserk Squirrel Minot Killed Minot, N. Aug. girls in the Eastwood park district need no longer fear the grey "attacker." Six-year old Beverly Maxine Mellberg, the latest of three "victims," suffered lacerations about the lips and arms when she was attacked by a grey squirrel which bit and scratched her. Two days earlier Margaret Beaton, 9 years old, also was attacked. Attracted by eBverly's screams, Ole Rud, truck driver, leaped from his machine and knocked the animal off her head.

George Foster, trimming trees on the boulevard, killed the squirrel when it attempted to spring at him. Helen Jacobs Returns, Will Defend U. S. Title New York, Aug. Jacobs returned from abroad Tuesday and expressed delight when informed she probably would meet Mrs.

Helen Wills Moody in the national tennis championships starting at Forest Hills August 29. VALKER RITES HELD Minot, N. Aug. services were held Monday for H. H.

Valker, 76, who died last week in Yakima, where he was visitinga sister. For many years, he had managed the greenhouse of the Valker's Greenhouse, Inc. of Minot. KILLED IN GARAGE BLAST Haverstraw, N. Aug.

Aug. Hoyt, 52, described as a former holder of dirt track automobile racing records, was killed Tuesday in a terrific explosion which authorities feared might have been caused by a bomb. The blast occurred in a garage operated by Hoyt. FIVE DIE IN MOSQUE RAID Bengal, India Five persons were killed Tuesday when police fired 30 rounds into 3,000 Hindus attempting to raid a Moslem mosque. To reach you at a more convenient time Che Palmolive Beauty Box Theatre is now broadcast every Friday night instead of NEVER A DULL MOMENTl'M YOUR BEST FRIEND, I AM YOUR LUCKY STRIKE.

LUCKY STRIKI ELOPEMENT CAUSES TWO TEXAS KILLINGS Father and Brother of Brids Suspected of Slaying Two Marriage Aides Linden, Aug. father and brother of a 17-year old bride of last week-end faced probable murder charges Tuesday for the slaying of two who helped her Those killed were Jack Parton, 46 and his daughter, Kaydell, 15. Accused as the slayers were R. Gillespie, 50, and his son Wallace, 22 The Partons fell under shotgur fire after the Gillespies had sought Information Monday as to the whereabouts of Carrie Gillespie, 17, who married Parton's hired hand, Clyde Hammonds, in Texarkana, Saturday, AMELIA EARHART RESIGNS Washington, Aug. Earhart Putnam, trans-ocean flier.

Tuesday resigned her dollar-a-year job as a commerce department aeronautical expert to pursue commercial aviation activities. FIRE DESTROYS RYE Fargo, Aug. acres of rye were destroyed on the El Solberg farm by fire ignited by a hot tractor manifold. For a time the grain combine was endangered. exquisite flavor never i reezes out of FROEEIf DESSERTS PALMOLIVE BEAUTY BOX THEATRE CHANGES TO FRIDAY NIGHT Tuesday.

No show tonight. Next Friday night, August 9, the "Desert Song" on the new hour and station. Tune in! STATION KFYR FRIDAYS 7 P. M. IMS.

Aatricw Hit fhrade, Saturdays, N.B.C. 6 P.M..

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About The Bismarck Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,010,349
Years Available:
1873-2024