The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota (2024)

a a NUBS of the NEWS MUNICIPAL COURT (Judge David L. Milhollan) Vern Kapp, 18, S. 13th and Paul Bender, 18, 600 S. Ninth pleaded not guilty but were found guilty on charges of making loud noise and were each given six months deferred sentences. Margaret Jones, 40, 123 Sioux pleaded guilty to a careless driving charge and was fined $20.

COUNTY COURT (Judge W. J. Austin) Steve Krushe, 54, Wilton, pleaded guilty to a charge of failure to display 1968 license tabs and was fined $5. JUVENILE COURT Robert Clooten, 17, Rt. 2, was found delinquent on a charge of careless driving and was warned by the court.

DRIVERS CHARGED Bismarck police cited David Steidl, 21, Summit Boulevard, on a charge of careless driving. Larry Roth, 20, 707 12th was cited for speeding. CHECK CHARGE Bismarck police arrested Susan Staafe, 23, Ave. on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses. Miss Staafe is alleged to have written checks totaling $175 with intent to defraud during the period between June 19 and July 9.

Checks listed in the criminal complaint were written to Super Valu Store, Dakota National Bank, Speedy Skelly Service and Red Owl. VANDALISM REPORTED Merle Kenny, 1237 Coulee Road, reported to Bismarck police that the rear window had been broken out of his car while it was parked on the street near his home. Hank Goertzen of Hank's Barber Shop reported to police Wednesday that windows in the shop had been broken out. Also reporting broken windows was Marvin Becher of Wig Inc. at 110 Sweet Ave.

Noel Gunderson, 815 W. St. Benedict Drive, told police someone threw a rock through a window in his home Tuesday night. W. M.

Hornberger, 1116 Riverview reported that a panel had been broken out of a screen door in his home. Mrs. Arnold Miller, 1421 Seventh told police someone entered her garage Tuesday afternoon and wrote on the walls and destroyed some toys. Vivian Peterson 709 Fourth reported to police Wednesday that she had gone out to her garage Wednesday morning and when she went back in the house there was a young man about 16 or 17 in the house who ran towards Fifth St. and Ave.

D. She said nothing appeared to be missing from her home. REPORT THEFTS Clarence Daniel, LaMoure, reported to Bismarck police that a camera was taken from his car while it was parked in the 700 Block on Main Ave. Tuesday night. Frederick Meyer, 1822 Assumption Drive, told police an electric drill was stolen from his garage.

LUMBER TAKEN The Burleigh County SherIff's Office received a report from Meisner and Co. Construction Tuesday that approximately $2,000 in used lumber had been taken from the company's construction site at Annunciation Priory during the past month. The lumber was used for forms, Burleigh officials said. DRIVER ARRESTED Mandan Police arrested William Henry McCormick, 18, 108 Seventh Ave. NW, on charges of careless driving.

HOUSE BURGLARY Marie M. Renner, 1306 W. Main reported to Mandan police that someone entered her home and took $15 from a bedroom. BIRTHS St. Alexius Hospital Son, Mr.

and Mrs. Augustin Tschosik. Strasburg, 4:48 p.m., July Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse Nagel, Linton, 5:19 p.m., July 9.

Bismarck Hospital Son, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Usselmann, Hazen, 7:07 a.m., July 10. MANDAN HOSPITAL Son, Mr. and Mrs.

Edward Klinner, 702 Tenth Ave. SW, Mandan, 4:08 p.m. July 9. DEATHS Mrs. Agnes Gilbert, 63, Mott, in Bismarck July 10.

(Erdman Funeral Home, Mott) Anton L. Gerhart, 64, 826 Tenth in Bismarck July 10. (Hall Funeral Home) Cecil C. Atkinson, 89, 304 Sixth Ave. SE, Mandan, in Mandan July 10.

(Buehler Funeral Home) Benjamin J. Kruckenberg, 35, Moses Lake, in Spokane, July (Aarthun Funeral Home, Hazen) MANDAN HOSPITAL Admitted July 9-Mrs. Edward Klinner, Mrs. Raymond Friesz: Jay Busher, Bismarck; Mrs. Archie Brunelle, Carol Boehm and Mrs.

Tony Heck. Discharged July 9-Dale Charvat. FIRE CALL 12:14 a.m. Wednesday- Ninth Boulevard, fire in car owned apparently by Robert Dockter, 17th ed by cigarette blowing into back seat. MINOR ACCIDENTS 1219 Simie Drive- -Margot L.

Schmidt, 1219 Simie Drive, and pole. Sears Parking Lot -Delores Glass, Hollday, Park, and Mary Renz, 1107 Ava. A. backing. 500 Block Broadway Kling, Wilton, and James Laver, 1009 Mandan parked.

Municipal Country Club Jerome son, Bismarck, parked, and Peter Gregware, 1239 Highland Acres Road, backIng. 604 21st Fode, 625 21st driverless moving; Duwayne Bostow, 604 21st parked, and Leah Fischer, 604 21st parked. MANDAN FIRE CALL Tuesday 8:22 p.m.- Garage on fire 105 Seventh Ave. NW. MORTON MARRIAGE LICENSE Edwin mi.

Maxon, McLaughlin. and Patricia A. Schanandore, Mandan. JUVENILE ARRESTS Mandan Police arsested a 14- year -old on charges of disregarding the curfew laws. Gary Adam Schmidt, 17, 108 Eighth St.

NW, was charged with careless driving. VANDALISM Mrs. Theodore Jesser, 502 Fourth Ave. SE, reported to Mandan Police that someone broke a window in her home with a stone. HIT AND RUN Gary Bentley, 19, 806 Custer Drive, reported to the Morton County Sheriff that his car was damaged while parked at the Midway Bowling Lanes.

MORTON COUNTY COURT (Judge William F. Hodny) Michael John Brodie, Walla Walla, failed to appear on a speeding charge and forfelted a $15 bond. Sigmond J. Krebsbach, 813 Second Bismarck, failed to appear on a stop sign violation and forfeited a $10 bond. Larry James Giesinger, 21st, Bismarck, pleaded guilty to disregarding a stop sign and was fined $10.

Paul Henry Genz, Glen Ullin, pleaded guilty to a charge of failing to yield to another vehicle while entering a highway from a private drive and was fined $15. Adolph Tollefsrud, Rhame, failed to appear on a charge of driving the wrong way on one way highway and forfeited a $10 bond. John Bender, New pleaded guilty to a speeding charge and was fined $15. Clifford John Jorgenson, Wilton, pleaded not guilty to a charge of having an open container of alcoholic beverages in an automobile and was found guilty after a trial in court and was fined $50. MANDAN MUNICIPAL, COURT (Judge O'Neil) Alice Butler, 23, 811 Parktown Trailer Court, forfeited a $20 bond when she failed to appear on a speeding charge.

Theodore Olheiser, 24, 308 Fourth Ave. NE, failed to appear on a stop sign violation and forfeited a $5 bond. 501 Thomas K. Anderst, 18, Seventh Ave. NW, failed to appear on a charge of failing to yield the right of way and forfeited a $15 bond.

MORTON COUNTY COURT (Judge William F. Hodny) John Howard Elsperger, 1419 19th, Bismarck, pleaded guilty to charge of driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor and was $100 and surrendered his driver's license to the court. SelJoseph John Froelich, fridge, pleaded guilty to providing service without authority and received a suspended fine of. $25. MANDAN MUNICIPAL COURT (Judge Patrick S.

O'Neil) Richard M. Aberle, 20, 507 12th Ave. NW, failed to on a charge of reckless driving and forfeited a $25 bond. Roger R. Dockter, 22, 606 W.

Main pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding and was fined $35. Randy C. Beals, 21, Lemmon, S.D., failed to appear a charge of speeding and forfeited a $15 bond. BURGLARS HIT AGAIN Mandan police are investigating the burglary of the Mandan golf pro shack, broken into for the fourth time since June 5. Cigarette machines and soft drinks dispensers have been broken into each time.

The attack Monday night was found by officers about 11:50 p.m. DRIVER CHARGED Mandan police arrested Gerald Thomas Schmidt, 19, 2022 N. Third, Bismarck, on charges of improper backing. Town Asks Citizens To Turn in Firearms CHAPEL, HILL, N.C. (AP) The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen has adopted a resolution asking citizens to "voluntarily relinquish all unnecessary firearms" to the town's police chief.

The measure, adopted by a vote, also invites children to give up their toy guns to demonstrate their opposition to "violence as a way of life." THEATER SHIFTS TO FILMS NEW YORK (AP)-After a single play production, the offBroadway Evergreen Theater is being shifted to a movies-only schedule. The 162-seat auditorium was acquired last year by Barney Rosset, president, of Grove Press, and the first presentation was "The Beard," a controversial two character play that closed with a deficit after 100 performances. Besides new films, the house intends to schedule material acquired in Grove purchase of Cinema 16's collection of experimental shorts: 'MOTHER'S KISSES' ADAPTED BY AUTHOR NEW YORK (AP)-After two previous efforts by others, Bruce Jay Friedman is doing a stage adaptation of his best-selling novel "A Mother's Kisses." The musical project is scheduled for next season by Broadway producers Lester Osterman, Lawrence Kasha and Richard Horner. Friedman's first play, "Scuba Duba" is a current off-Broadway hit. 'Sniffers' Help Army In Vietnam By GEORGE MCARTHUR LONG BINH, Vietnam (AP) The combat nose of the Army has been vastly improved, the three people sniffers agree.

The Army's nose at first wasn't very efficient, as though it had a cold in the head all the time. The arrival of the military people sniffers changed all that. The senior sniffer, lanky Capt. Kervin Sellers, a 27-year-old regular from Texas City, admitted that he had first approached the job with some skepticism. Sgt.

1.C. Forest Sweitzer, 39-year-old married man from Springfield, Ohio, was also lukewarm. LT. LYLE PARATT, A 24-yearold from New Orleans, was the most doubtful. "Sniff people! You must be kidding me," he said when he got the assignment.

Getting started wasn't easy. The first time Sellers carried his equipment to a helicopter the pilot snorted at "that pile of junk." The people sniffer-unimaginatively called a personnel detector by the Army--came to Vietnam last year. It detects body odor. Flashing over the jungles and paddies at tree top level, the machine sniffs out human odors -and consequently guerrilla trails, hideouts, camps and even underground bunkers. THE ONLY thing that can fool the machine, its makers claim, is a chimpanzee.

Whether human beings like to admit it or not, the chimp smells just like we do. Sellers, Swietzer and Paratt, flying as a people sniffing team for the U.S. 199th Light Infantry Brigade, have been sniffing for almost two years- mostly over the jungles north of Saigon. The machines themselves are still top secret. They look sort of like a briefcase with a tail.

They all have different personalities, "Some have more delicate noses than others," Sellers claims. But the important thing for the people sniffing teams is that the machines have been generally accepted. They are so good, in fact, the ground commanders now demand them. In the daily briefing sessions held by the U.S. Command for newsmen in Saigon, the report of "sniffer missions" has become standard and military maps are dotted with "hot spots" that have been sniffed out.

But inevitably the ribbing continues. "Have you smelled any good people lately," is the standard clubhouse greeting to a people sniffer. "We smell 'em, you fight the sniffers reply. Jumping's Illegal LACONIA, N. H.

(AP)-The City Council has passed an ordinance making it illegal to jump off bridges. The council passed the law because divers from a bridge over Wiers Channel have narrowly missed hitting passing boats. Weather Report (From U.S. Weather Bureau) First figures indicate highest fem. peratures during last 24 hours; second, lowest temperature last night; (x) lowest temperature during last 24 hours: third, rain or melted snow during last 24 hours ending at 6:30 a.m., Central Standard Time.

North Dakota Other Points D. Lake 69 Albany 90 68 Fargo 70 52 Albuge 91 60 Bismarck 74 56 Atlanta 75 50 .03 Williston 83 Boise 100 75 Minot 75 56 Boston 89 67 Gnd Fks 70 50 Buffalo 85 Dickinsn 79 58 Chicago Jamestwn 73 4 Cincinati 85 65 xBeulah 79 47 Clevelnd 86 xRiverdale Denver 88 Ashley 70.53 D. Moines xCarringtn 71 43 Detroit 86 .60 xDrake 74 Fairbanks xEnderlin 71 Ft. Worth xHankinsn 71 Honolulu 76 xKanmare 80 Indapolis 87 68 Napoleon 72 55 Jacksnvile 87 75 .71 xOakes 70 Juneau Parshall 76 Kan. Cty 94 xWishek 71 53 92 70 Montana Louisville 83 66 Gt.

Falls 95 64 Memphis 88 72 .12 Billings 90 66 Miami 81 .02 Glasgow 86 Milwaukee 75. 50 Missoula 98 62 St. Paul 73 51 Havre 98 68 N. Orleans 86 74 Helena 94 57 New York 84 70 Miles South Cty 94 Dakote 67 Omaha Phildelpha 84 78 56 70 Rapid Cty 85 61 Phoenix 107 81 Philip 84 65 Pittsburgh 87 65 Pierre 79 61 Ptind, Me 84 55 Aberdeen 76 Ptind. Ore 81 62 Watertwn 72 52 Richmnd 83 71 .07 Huron Fais 76 57 St.

Salt L. Louis Cty 93 69 59 76 Pickstwn 82 San Diego 86 68 Valentine 63 San Fran 59 53 Lemmon Seattle 76 60 Mobridge Tampa 80 76 1.74 Sioux Cry 79 57 Washingtn 84 72 Winipeg 65 52 Sunshines Sunset Wednesday: 9:37 p.m. Sunrise Thursday: 6:00 a.m. Missouri River Missouri River stage: 4.95 feet 24 hour change: plus .3 feet Missouri River flood stage: 19.0 feet Precipitation Total this month to date: trace of an Normal this month to date: .79 inches Total Jan. 1st to date: 11.77 Inches Normal Jan.

1st to date: 9.03 inches LAKE SAKAKAWEA Pool elevation 1.844.9, no change from. Tuesday. Year ago 1,849.0. Discharge Tuesday 14,900 c.f.s. Estimated discharge Wednesday 15,000 c.1.5.

LAKE CANE PIERRE, S.D. (AP)- Lake Oshe elevation 1,605.74 feet above sea level, down .26 of a foot. Average discharge rate 33,900 cubic feet per second. Tailwater 1,425.21. Temperature 61 degrees.

Big Bend discharge 22.600. North Daketa Variable cloudiness and warmer Wednesday. Highs 80-92. Partly cloudy Wednesday night and Thursday. Warmer east and south Wednesday night and in east portion Thursday.

Lows Wednesday night 60-66. Minnesota Fair and warmer Wednesday, high 75-85. Fair south and variable cloudiness north. Warmer Wednesday night. Lows 55-65.

Thursday variable cloudiness and warmer. South Dakota Fair to partly cloudy and warmer Wednesday. Highs 82-95. Variable cloudness with continued warming trend Wednesday night and Thursday. Lows Wednesday night in 605.

Montana Partly cloudy Wednesday and Thursday with scattered afternoon and early nighttime thundershowers. Strong gusty with some thunderstorms Wedneswinds, afternoon. Warmer east Wednesday. Slightly cooler west and north Thursday. Highs Wednesday 90-100.

Lows Wednesday 55-45. Here is a summary of top political developments: The Republicans: New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, getting rebuffs on proposal for GOP poll on who strongest presidential candidate would be, reported ready to conduct it himself. Richard M.

Nixon seeks in Midwest to increase his delegate strength for GOP nomination. The Democrats: Sources close to Vice President Hubert H. say he has offered vice presidential spot, if he's the presidential nominee, to no one and is not telling even closest associates his choice. Sen. Eugene J.

McCarthy resumes presidential campaign Friday with western swing. The American Independent Candidate: Former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace says Supreme Court is "handcuffing the police' and adds: "The country's not sick, the Supreme Court is sick. Postmaster Predicts Service Will Be Cut WASHINGTON (AP) master General W.

Marvin Watson was quoted today as predicting mail deliveries will be reduced to five days a week and thousands of small post offices will be closed unless his department is exempted from a government-wide cut in personnel. Watson met behind closed doors with the House Ways and Police Faked Drug Photo, Witness Charges Politics At-a-Glance By The Associated Press Means Committee. An exemption proposal is pending in the committee, but sources said there is little likelihood of action on it this year. The new surtax law carries a requirement for agencies to fill only three out of four vacancies until the federal payroll is reduced to the 1966 level-a cut of about 250,000 jobs. Watson was quoted as saying the full cut would take about four years in the Post Office Department, but some reductions in service would have to start almost immediately.

Mandan (Continued from Page One) at a rate of $290.40 per pupil in high school, and other sources from federal programs interest and so forth will amount to 000 for a total estimated collection of $810,000. With the $205,571.68 on hand and the $810,000 collections the board will have estimated receipts totaling $1,015,571.68. IT WAS NOTED that the present mill levy-34 mills- will not raise the additional $282,928 needed. In addition to the 34 mills levied for the general fund there will also be 10 mills for the building fund, 18.72 mills for the sinking and interest fund to pay off the bond issues of 1954, 1957 and 1965. 2.78 mills for the special assessment fund and 7.64 mills for the social security fund requirements.

Total proposed mills for the next year will amount to 73.14. It was 70.50 in 1967-68. A. L. Spiss told the board that the schools had a total enrollment of 2,606 students during the past year and the cost per pupil amounted to $409.24 per student without the cost of the building sinking and interest funds included.

This averaged out to $318.29 per high school student and $266.45 per elementary student. The student had a daily average attendance of 2,499, SPISS ALSO read a letter from the North Dakota Attorney Generals office informing the board why they could hold another election on the increase of the mill levy without having to wait the six months as previously assumed. There are two different laws involved in the second election, according to the letter, and therefore the board does not have to wait six months for an election to raise the mill levy by 25 or 50 per cent. The previous election was to allow the board to set their own limit. It was noted that this was the opinion of the office of the attorney general and had not been tested in court.

The board will discuss the proposed election at their next meeting. The board awarded a contract to re-roof the old central school to Twin City Roofing of Mandan for $3,197. Another quotation was received from Skinner Roofing and Sheet Metal of Bismarck of $3,685. An agreement to service the school's typewriters was signed with the Standard Office Supply of Mandan. In other action the board Gordon Berge as clerk and Douglas Walery as treasurer.

Wynn Keller and John Niles, board members were appointed by Wirtz to represent the board on the budget board of review. Letters of resignation were received from Barbara Andrews, elementary teacher and Modesto Delbusto, Spanish teacher. Both were accepted and the teachers were released from their 1968-69 contract. TEARFUL BURGLARY FREEPORT, 111. (AP)burglar stole $125 from a safe in the Bankers Mutual Life Insurance Co.

builling. As he battered open the safe door, he triggered a mechanism which released a quantity of tear gas. When police investigated the theft, they found a note the burglar had left behind. It read: "I cried over you. SOMETHING NEW IN TOWN NOW OPEN BAUER'S SUPER CAR' WASH WAX "Just the right amount of soft and warm water and excellent pressure to do a first class job SELF SERVICE COIN OPERATED FOR MINUTES Located at 22nd Street and Thayer "Right, Next to King Koin Laundry" Anderson President Of the Board Harold Anderson, elected to his second term on the Bismarck School Board this spring, was elected president of the board at its reorganizational meeting night.

He succeeds Harlan Erskine. Dave Blackstead, who was elected to the board last year, was named vice president. The board named Dorothy Moses to her 29th term as clerk of the board and renamed Warner Quale, a former school board member, treasurer. The board again selected the law firm of Wolf, Glaser and Milhollan as its legal representative. It also was decided to have the State Bank again do the district audit.

Named to represent the board on the Library Board was Dr. Paul Johnson. The board selected William Strutz to replace William Eckberg, who has resigned, and renamed Mrs. Betty Mills to the city library board. The board elected Anderson and Blackstead to represent it at the City Board of Budget Review meeting.

City (Continued from Page One) pint this coming year. He said that if the school distributed the milk, it could purchase it at a cost of 5.04 cents a half pint. The district purchases an average of 100,000 half pints a month. Miller said that the district would not have to buy a refrigerated truck. The truck now used to transport food between schools was approved by the city health department for hauling the milk.

Miller said he should know next week whether he will be given a distributor's license by the State Milk Stabilization Board. The average person can absorb about 100 million items of information in a lifetime, according to estimates of scientists. The Gobi Desert lies in China and Outer Mongolia. (Gun Control Fight May Go Right to Senate WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Joseph D.

Tydings, said that if the Senate Judiciary Committee fails to act Wednesday on firearms registration and licensing legislation he will carry the fight directly to the Senate. Talking to newsmen in advance of a closed committee session, he anticipated that opponents would attempt to block a vote by filibustering. Tydings said that if the committee defers action any longer, the only chance of passing a bill at this session would be to offer it as a rider to other legislation already on the Senate calendar. "I'm going to insist on a vote on registration and licensing," he said. "I'm entitled to it and the American people are entitled to it." He noted that his bill to require the registration of all firearms and the licensing of the owners has the support of party leaders in the Senate, Mike Mansfield, and Everett M.

Dirksen, R-IlI. Tydings, at the last meeting of the Judiciary Committee, two weeks ago, offered his bill as an amendment to an administration bill to ban interstate maii order sales of rifles and shotguns and their over-the-counter sale to nonresidents of the state. Water from Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park finds its way all the way to the Atlantic Ocean. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Wednesday, July 10, 1968 Late News Briefs PARIS 3 (AP) -George Pompidou, premier of France for the longest period in modern times, resigned Wednesday in government shuffle ordered by President Charles de Gaulle. OMAHA, Neb.

(AP)-The Federal Bureau of Investigation office here Wednesday reported the arrest in Minneapolis of Donald Robert Chandler, 27, described as a native of Omaha, charged with robbing the Gretna, State Bank Monday. Squids move faster than most other sea animals. Some can shoot 30 and 40 feet out of the water and glide over the waves for more than 100 feet. The fall of Troy was foretold by the prophetess Cassandra. U-Rent Sales Co.

1152 Memorial Highwey WE RENT or SELL LARGE ROTO-TILLERS SEE US SOON Phone 223-1632 Great Change of Pace Entertainment! THE FINE SOUND Starts at 7:00 A.M. WASHINGTON (AP) A former supervisor in a federally fitified nanced Wednesday antipoverty he saw project tes- a Chicago policeman set up a photograph to indicate falsely that liquor and narcotics were involved in a shooting at a job training center. The testimony was given to senators probing the operation of the training program-financed by a $927,341 Office on Economic Opportunity grant. They were told 17 empty bottles were taken from garbage cans, placed in a room next to the shooting scene and photographed. The bottles bore champagne and wine labels and labels of a cough syrup known to contain codeine, a narcotic.

The witness, Everett C. McLeary, 20, who said he earned $7,000 yearly as a supervisor and job counselor in the OE0 project, said the incident occurred last January in a training center run for members of a Chicago street gang the Devil's Disciples. McLeary and the Rev. Arthur Brazier, head of The Woodlawn Organization, coordinator of the program, told investigating ators they believed the shooting, of trainee Joseph Evans, was accidental. McLeary said a policeman of Chicago's gang intelligence unit whom he said he knew as Robinson, nicknamed "The called him form the shooting scene to garbage collection area at the rear of the two-story building where the center was located.

want to show you something," McLeary quoted Robinson as saying. He said the detective then took the bottles from the garbage cans and carried them to a front room where he had a police photographer make pictures. McLeary said occupants of the second floor of the building also used the garbage area. He said he did not know who placed the bottles in the cans. Police Quell Demonstrators NEW YORK (AP) Police charged into a group of 1,500 teen-age demonstrators in City Hall Park Wednesday after policemen were showered with bottles, rocks, and other missiles hurled by the boys and girls.

The teen-agers, mostly Negro and Puerto Rican, milled about City Hall, demanding 20,000 additional summer jobs in the city's poverty areas. Some looted four frankfurter stands, an ice cream stand and a news stand near City Hall. A 12-man delegation entered City Hall to meet with Deputy Mayor Timothy Costello. The youngsters, in disorganized fashion, at times picketed and at other times milled about City Hall Park. Some carried hand-lettered signs espousing, their demand for the additional job slots in the Neighborhood Youth Corps program.

Willie J. Smith, executive director of the city wide Neighborhood Youth Corps said the demonstrators "will stay here until we get the money for more jobs." American Legion Club Events WEDNESDAY Frank Ray 8:30 Trio P.M. Pony Lounge THURSDAY Gene Senger 8:30 Trio P.M. Pony Lounge SATURDAY Gene Berl Senger McDaniels Trio Orchestra Pony Lounge Americana Room DORIAN FURS FUR VAULT SALE HOURS: 10 A.M. UNTIL 8 P.M.

Fur products labeled to shove HUNDREDS OF FURS country of origin of imported furs SOLD AT A FRACTION OF THEIR ORIGINAL COST! HERE'S THE STORY: The Dorian Fur Co. of St. Louis, Missouri, one of the country's largest used fur dealers, are selling: all garments. left in their vaults for due. Trade-ins from some of the most fashionable fur salons in the world.

Uncalled for new furs from will 'call and many one-of-a-kind close-outs from leading fur manufacturers. Emba Mink Breeders Hundreds of furs to choose from Assn, at ridiculous prices. All merchandise tagged and classified second PAY CASH or EASY TERMS hand used or new. Fabulous buys. Hurry! UP TO 24 MONTHS It makes good sense to buy a fine used fur, Dollar for dollar, you get a better BANK FINANCING buy for your money! IT MAKES GOOD SENSE TO BUY A FINE USED Dyed Blue Sheared FUR STOLES FUR.

WE THINK THAT BEAVER JACKETS Dyed Dyed Squirrel Muskrat DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR $249 and Persian others Lamb BUY FOR YOUR Dyed Marmot $19 YOU GET A BETTER 2nd HAND USED 2nd HAND USED MONEY! Natural MINK Brand New, Full Length MAGNIFICENT COATS $399 Natural Ranch Mink Coats, Stoles MINK COAT At a Fraction of Natural Ranch and Pastel One Original Cost! MINK $950 Only Mink Natural Stole Cerulean $89 Natural Ranch Mink $119 While They Last! Spencer Jacket 2nd HAND USED $279 Natural Haze Natural Mink Autumn Coat $1350 MINK Natural Autumn Haze MINK BOAS 2nd JACKETS HAND USED Natural Walking Dawn Coat. New $30 $238 $799 Mink Stole $169 Natural, Coat Ranch Mink $499 Raccoon Muskrat Beaver FUR $5 per skin Mouton SCARVES Mink Natural Stole Pastel New $299 Coats and UP Natural Breath of Spring Jackets $29 Dyed and Natural Silver Blue 2nd HAND USED PERSIAN LAMB Mink Stole $399 Natural Turmaline UNCLAIMED STORAGE COATS $69 Mink New $1550 FUR JACKETS COATS 2nd HAND USED And Some Many New Others- Included SCARVES CAPES $4 New Shipments We get trade-in minks from JACKETS As Is the most exclusive fur salons. Arrive Daily Some bear original labels. Dressmakers, designers. and furriers invited to save too.

SHOWING AT 2nd HAND USED Holiday 10 SALE Thurs. July A.M. until Fri. 11-12-13 HOURS 8 Sat. P.M.

Presented by DORIAN FURS OF BISMARCK OF ST. LOUIS.

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