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MINI ~ II
,
, NEWS
Ux ~ x~d Parnell Johnson went
n~ rabbits, came back with a
ta Ln lion,
• In Flxgo, blue predominate~ in the
s used inside the new Grand
Theater, opened C~ day, be*
it is sound absorbing.
~iettinger the Legion post p~
~ erecting a sod shanty commem
the earlier pioneer days when
of sod dotted the prairies.
~ear Java, S. D., Wilson Haux, 19,
accidentally hung himself when .his
n~k caught in a loop of bailing wire
when he Jumped off of the side of a
truck in the farm machine shed.
..Wuk
Near Mandan Frank Berger was
b11risd beside the grave where one
week before he had watched the burial
of his wif~
-- ea~
Honors for sale of Christmas S
~ goes to the students of the ..Car-
rtt~On school. This is the secona tame
henor has gone to Carrtngto~ The
sold 22~q6 seals this year.
In Hebron high sch~l students are
I~ve~ |oI~ during the C3~istmas sea.
by local merchants as store deice-
Unknown to CmUaUa~afoe~r ~Y.
with the trade, watch or ep-
~- f
In Bismarck were opened bid= or
~ctton of the second story of
Mandan's community building, an
pro|ect A brick finish for the
I['ound floor, already erectea, was amo
by the bid.
"An~h/ng Goes"
In Dickinson friends of the SUckney
hunily are interested in the new musi-
eel production "Anything Goes':. now
playing in New York because It was
written by Howard Lindsay, husband
of Dickinson's famed daughter of the
stage, Dorothy Stickney.
Rorle
In Mandan a recount of votes for
commissioner reversed the
two vote victory of Robert
it to Carl Borge+ The
r~o-tmt resulted in the throw-
~ of eleven absent voter's ballots
were not property stamped,
Nichol and Kenneth
and Joseph Chernick, all
rode in the cab of a heav-
|'coal truck as it carecmed
hill at high speed and into a
The heavy lignite crushed for-
onto the flimsy cab, killed Nichol
Joseph. seriously injured Ken-
net~
iill~ve
In Kensal Johnny Cyscwski was as-
tonished when his overcoat sleeve
bur~ into flame when he lighted a
match for a cigarette. He had not ob-
asrved how a few moments before
while fixing the vacumn tank on his
ear it had become saturated with gaso-
line. His hand was badly burned be-
lore be succeeded in getting out of
the coat.
" J South of Steele Mrs. Hartvig Sterk
and Carl Sterk, her brother-in-law,
nw no signs of life about the ~mm
boule of Bachelor Nels Berry as they
drove up in the yard. They were
Mr. Sterk who had not
the night before after go-
Berry's for a call. Worried
open the door. found the
with smoke. Neighbors
and helped extinguish the kitch-
flOOr which was smoldering and
~. Half in the flames and half
out was the body of Olaf Borrud, a
bachelor neighbor. In the next room
were ~he bodies of Sterk and Berry.
All three were dead. It was believed
by authorities that smoke in the tight-
ly closed home had smothered the
men to death. The kitchen lamp on
the floor beside Berrud's body ex-
plained the cause of the fire.
Near Carson Gottfried Schmeiss, 16.
rak~I thistles while keeping a wary
eYe out for a possible rabbit to shoot
wi&l his ,22 rifle which he had braced
between his legs. In some way the
rifle fell, discharged when the ham-
mer hit a stone, sending a bullet into
Gott~ied's shoulder.
Approve Federal
Restriction Plan
Washington--By a huge majority,
~tton farmers of the South have voted
the Bankhead cotton
%n unofficial count of
of all the states shows the
growers favor the compulsory control
measure about 10 to I; Oklahoma was
the 0nly major cotton growing state
which did not give the act the neces-
sary two-thirds majority.
The l+sided vote immediately raised
around AAA hea~quar.
to whether producers of other
commodities would demand
compulsory control to aid in keeping
their ~oduction within bounds and
what answer would be given should
this demand arise.
Secretary Wallace has said that he
no reason to extend the Drinclple
to other m~Ior
POP--A Safe Policy By J. Millar Watt
't' W;lt~lX YOU TO LI4~Ei~.RT~@41~ TI-I.~T 'rl-41S OI=I=ICI= 15 RUN e~Y ' A~yD
n r,,.. \
" AT ALl., COSTS .IA#~ KEEP '
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