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Show ( THE BULLETIN1 SELECT SHOPPE 1045 East 21st So. SUGAKHOUSE Ily. 3343 o Critxy-Bell- WASH FROCKS NEW PATTERNS STYLES CLEVER FAST CGIOrtS $1.00 and $1.95 Slip-OvAprons er SHEERS and PRINTS Wonderful Gifts For Any Occasion 39c to $1.00 FREE! FREE! Pieces Quilt Come In and Get Yours BAYON Panties and Bloomers High GraJe Fabric 25c Beautiful Selection BUY NOW U. S. SPEEDS DRIVE I Washington. For the first time in history the civil service commission will hold cn examination for blind persons to supervise in part a survey of employment opportunities for the blind, for which congress made provision in legislation passed last session. The same act authorized the establishment of vending stands in Federal buildings throughout the country to be operated by the blind. Under the law, half of the persons employed in the survey must be blind. For purposes cf the examination a blind person ii defined a 3 one having not mure than 13 per cent visual acuity in the better eye when corrected by glasses. The commission plans late. to hold another examination to select several blind dictaphone operators. In this legislation congress sought for to widen the more than 130,000 blind persons throughout the United States. Administration of the program will be in the hands of the United States office of education. In addition the office will designate the state commission for the blind in each state as the agency for issuing licenses for operating the stands in public buildIn states that have no comings. mission for the blind the office of another education will designate public agency to handle the licenses. Each state commission must with the comagree 4o missioner of education and with the division of vocational rehabilitation of the state in training, placing and supervising blind persons, and also to provide by loan, gift or other means an adequate initial stock of suitable articles for each blind stand operator. A special staff will be set up Li the rehabilitation division of the office of education to guide the work. economic-opportunitie- s ar te FOR FINGERPRINTS 700 Taken a Day aa Movement Sweeps Nation. Driving steadily for Washington. Wider Economic Opportunities ta Be Provided. nswspd-per-and-cig- Christmas Cards ! BLIND MAKE SURVEY ' OF JOBS FOR BLIND a vast file of such records. Director J. Edgar Hoover of the federal bureau of investigation, is enlisting civic groups throughout the nation g in the task of the Aviator to Study Source population. Maintained as a separate unit, of Nations Cold Waves apart from the criminal record The cause of wintry Washington. division, the civil fingerprinting section of the bureau already boasts cold waves will be studied for the first time in plane flights to be 200,000 prints. made at Fairbanks, Alaska. Gathering swift momentum as vaHarold Gillan, commercial pilot, rious groups Join the movement, new civil fingerprint records are will attempt twice daily until next 15 to soar three miles above flowing into the bureau at the rate March to make observations that the earth 700 of a day. Intent upon further accelerating are expected to throw new light on the campaign, Director Hoover em- the structure of polar continental phasized his sole aim is to protect air. In his plane, Gillam will carry American citizens against loss of instruments identity. Traffic accidents, fire and aerometeorographs, a dozen similar instrumentalities of which automatically record temperfate annually send hundreds of per- ature, pressure and humidity in the sons to unmarked graves, he pointed air through which they pass. out. A contract with the government Thousands of parents, aware of provides Gillain will be paid $60 for the value of fingerprint records in each flight that he is able to make the event their children are lost or according to specifications. The funds will come from money apkidnaped, have filed prints here. Recently scores of commercial propriated by the Bankhead-Jone- s houses, including banks, express act, passed by congress to further research in the field of agriculture. companies, oil companies and hotels employing large numbers of The upper-ai- r observations will be people, have had their workers telegraphed to Seattle for use in Noted statesmen, making the daily weather forecasts. fingerprinted. diplomats, entertainers and mer- Analyses of the observations are to chants of international prominence be made in Washington. have filed their prints with the bureau. Flooded every week with scores Canadian Mounted Police of urgent pleas to aid in the idenGet Man After 7 Years tification of persons seriously inOnt. A national Ottawa, jured or killed in accidents, the bu- center available to all the'training police reau has played an important part forces in Canada is projected by in identifying them. the Royal Canadian mounted police. Sir James MacBrien, commissioner, says in his annual report. The trainYen for Curls Gets ing center at Regina would be exStudent Into Jail panded under the plans. A sectional report by Assistant Mount Vernon, N. Y. Allan S. T. Wood of ReCommissioner school Lamprecht, high student, gina gave an instance of the tradisnipped the curls from nearly u tional mountie persistence in getscore of girlish heads before poting their man." In 1928 a farmer lice caught him. near Meyronne, Sask., reported a Allan, who explained he had herd of thoroughbred cattle stolen. suffered a nervous breakdown reBy long investigation the cattle cently, developed a yen for curls. were traced to St. Paul, Minn., and He would attract the girls to his suspicion turned on Milton Talbot automobile with the offer of canof Saco, Mont. Talbot, however, was their dy, police charged, clip missing. tresses and drive away. He was traced through Montana, A search of cars resulted in California, Washington and other of the scissors and a discovery States and eventually arrested at large collection of curls in Cheyenne, Wyo., brought back in automobile. He was 1935, tried and lound guilty. It took Looked on four charges of third seven years to get the thief. assault. degree finger-printin- Nickel mated, True Edge ICE SKATES on all NORTHLAND Bcnes of Iguanodon Are Resurrected in England Qabby Qertie London. Eighty fossilized bones an Iguanodon, which, experts say, roamed the forests and marshes of Kent and Sussex Wealdan years or more ago, have been unearthed at a quarry at near Rye, Kent, England. A British museum paleontologist visited the quarry and pronounced the bones to be in excellent preservation. They include twelve caudal (or tail) bones, several long vertabrae measuring nine inches across, ribs set in matrices or ironstone, and limb bones. Close watch is being kept for the skull, which is believed to be still of Stouts Moving & Transfer EAST 21ST SOUTH HYLAND 3838 in the quarry-face- . Iguanodons were sometimes over feet long, stood 12 feet, or 20 feet high, browsed on plants, and probably swam with the aid of an immense tail. They were fierce fighters, although not carnivorous, and they belong to the Msisazoii. age. 300 GRAND OPENING AND NEW LOCATION dr ' r. Ralph Rinalls ; CONOCO SERVICE tor. ramify Moves by Train a man loves a girl he Is generally a chiroprac- When ter-ilbl- y but Father Rides Horse Sheldon D, San Francisco. Smith, of Alturas, Calif., has comhorseback ride pleted a from that city to San Francisco. It took him 11 days, at an average speed of 35 miles a day, with the exception of the last, when he covered G5 miles to attain his goal. Smith declares that as he wanted to move to San Francisco, and lie did not wnnt to part with his horse, he sent the family by train and fpde U)Q borsc. 450-mi- le Corner 21st South Lincoln Street pin : " - DERM TROCESSED S ; MOTOR OIL' CHECK CHART LUBRICATION C Hawailans Are Proud Hawaiian! are proud of the fi.ct that all progress does not n.c?;sarily have to follow the flag. They installed their electric light and power system in monar-chltimes, 50 years ago, or 14 years before Hawaii became a part of the United States. Honolulu. CONOCO al I GAS SKIS 1080 East 21st South ALL. SIZES Lam-prech- ts .057 Reduction 10 aesgrfawawL'ViHJMr swtu&'i.mjgs Out in the Open: In these days, 43 States Urged ta Halt new designs in trolley cars are a bit rare. However, over in BrookCommuting Criminals lyn, some of the patrons of the state legisChicago. Forty-thre- e surface lines are really riding on latures, convening in 1937, will be rubber, the Brooklyn Queens urged by the interstate commission Transit company having put 100 on crime to start a legal war against ( cars cf new de sign into service recriminals." V "commuting cently. Not only do they have rubA four - point program will be ( ) ber springs but the wheels also arc to simplify the procedure of Those who have pressed criminals, facilitate the extraditing tried them out say there ia a Pullof . witnesses, man effect, which seems strange summoning to officers cross state permit in Btrcct transportation. The cars lines to arrest fleeing suspects and are streamlined and look much like interstate permit compacts for subusses. Also, when he wants to of persons on parole. pervision put on brakes, the motorman uses The American Legion has pledged a foot pedal instead of a hand to back the commission's proitself gadget. The first fare on the first gram. New York and New Jersey car was collected by Mayor and was paid by William have adopted the four statutes adS. Mcnden, president of the B. M. T. vocated; Rhode Island has adopted and the B. Q. T. And to those who three, and Illinois, Indiana, Louisiand Maryland, Michigan, Minjoshed the mayor about taking ana, nesota and Virginia each have apfrom Mr. traction money interests, LaGuardia replied it was all right proved one. if done in public. ivated skirt effects in linits are : very attractive. In eome instances the is widened with skirt godets. POTPOURRI And have you heard about tha new black sweater craze? As a college fashion the black sweater worn Wolf Fish with a bright plaid skirt is scoring One of the most savage fish a big success although every fashion alert woman is yielding to the of the North Atlantic is the wolf fish. It attains a length of five urge of these sweaters. The new knit fabiics are introfeet. Interlocking teeth which line the front of its mouth are ducing such interesting themes as jacquard patternings that are knitstrong enough to crush mollusks s ted right into the fabric. These and to inflict injury on its whom it fights. Its skin is are perfectly stunning for tha separate blouse or the swanky waistvery tough and when dried is coats that fashion is so conspicuum'J as a leather substitute. Cl Weilrm u. ously spotlighting this season. ! A rubber-cushione- ' d. out-of-sta- te cap-tor- Mer h 45 Wcslerti NciUr Union, j rm t |