The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 12, 1931, Page 2

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| Youngest Governor in i i EXECUTIVE IS SON OF CHIEF JUSTICE OF GEORGIA COURT Richard Russell, Jr, Only 33 Years Old, Will Be Inaugu- rated June 24 1$ FOURTH OF 13 CHILDREN Governor-Elect 1s Member of One of State’s Most Prom- inent Families Atlanta, Ga. June 12—If Richard B. Russell, Jr, of Winder, Ga., turns | to his handsome, gray-haired father, Chief Justice Richard B. Russell, any | day after June 24 and says, “Well governor—" the senior member of the Russell family very likely will turn right back and ask, “Well, governor, what is it?” j For Richard, Jr.—only 33 years old —on June 24 is going to become gov- ernor of Georgia and the youngest governor in the United States. His own father, Chief Justice Russell of the Georgia supreme court, will ad- minister the oath of office at the inauguration ceremonies. Young Governor-elect Russell, who was elected last October, has other distinctions. He is a bachelor. He is one of 13 sons and daughters of a family whose forbears have lived within the boundaries of Georgia since colonial times. He left the Uni- versity of Georgia to enlist during the World war. He made his first po- litical campaign driving from house to house in @ second-hand automo- bile. On assuming the office of chief executive he gives up the post of speaker of the Georgia house of rep- resentatives. He served as speaker for three years. His Plans as Governor Some insight into the personality of this unusual young man may be gained from the fact that he has stated publicly he believes govern- ment should be simplified. Speaking of the work of a special legislative committee of the General Assembly not long ago he put his views thus: “The machinery of government should be so simple that the hum- blest citizen can understand it. Here in Georgia we have more than 100 different agencies to carry on the ‘State's business and I venture to say there are very few who can sit down with pen and paper and name them all and outline the duties each is supposed to perform. “Coordinate and combine the de- partments of state to a minimum,” | he urges, “and thus give the people | of the state the economical govern- ment Georgia today so badly need: It is doubtful if his own inaugur: tion will make so glamorous an i! pression on Richard Russell, Jr.'s mind as did a visit to Atlanta when he was nine. On that ocacsion Mas- | ter Richard arrived as the guest of! Governor and Mrs. Joseph B. Terrell, intimate friends of his father and mother. The boy slept in the gover- nor's mansion and sat in the gover- nor's chair at the capitol. Started as Lawyer Young Russell was graduated from ‘an agricultural and mechanical col- lege in 1914. He spent a year at Gor- don Institute and attended the Uni- versity of Georgia where he was grad- uated with an LL.B. degree in 1918. | operator of the Rubner Flying Sei iM ONE OF Tropes. FAMILIES IN GEORGIA- ministry. Fielding Dillard, twin brother of William John, is a high school professor. William John is in| business in Hendersonville, N. C. The | sisters are all married except Ina Dil- | lard Russell, who lives in Washing- | ton, D. C., and Carolyn Lewis Russell, the youngest, a student at Agnes Scott college in Georgia. Carolyn is not allowing her brothers to excel her. She won an oratorical | contest a year ago and was chosen to represent Georgia at zone finals in; Pittsburgh, where she won second honors. | Two Chicagoans Die In Airplane Cra | | | Toledo, O., June 12.—' cago men were killed and was badly injured when a monopl: crashed one mile from the Toledo port Thursday. cident is not known. The dead are Captain M. Rubner 42, of the Illinois national gu in Chicago and Captain C. F. Kokus, of the Illinois national guard Tokyo, June 12.—(4)—American, | British and Japanese consuls at Choo: | chow, China, tonight asked their gov- | ernments to send warships to Pukien Province their respective nationals from com- munistic violence. | Foochow was said to have been ex: Re left school to enlist during the World war. After the armistice he began practicing law at Winder. | In 1921 he was elected to repre- | sent Barrow county in the state legis- | lature and he has served in the house of representatives continuously ever since. During two terms he was; speaker pro tem, and for three more | he was speaker. He has never been | defeated in an election | When young Russell began his first | campaign for the legislature he hired a second-hand automobile and visited | every family in his county. Judge | Russell, one of Georgia's oldest and | most successful campaigners, gave his son whole-hearted support, but did not attempt to run his son's cam- paign. | One of 13 Children { Mrs. Russell, his mother, tells an | amusing anecdote about Richard. Jr. | He was the fourth of 13 living, brothers and sisters. | “When he came into the world says | Mrs. Russell, “we had three daughters | and Judge Russell and myself rather despaired of a son, much as we loved the little girls. Dr. C. B. Almond of ‘Winder was our family physician. He was holding our first boy in his arms ‘when Judge Russell came in the room timidly. With a broad grin Dr. Al- mond anounced, ‘It's a boy, Dick!’ | “Upon hearing this news the judge; gave the doctor such a clap on the back he almost knocked him across the room and the baby barely escaped being dropped on its head. Right then the youngster was informaliy christened Richard Brevard Russell, on” The boy was reared in an atmos- phere of politics. His father, who was once @ defeated candidate for governor, served in the state legisla- ture as a young man and was solicitor | period. general of the western circuit from Posed to ted depredations with the crushing defeat of Chinese govern- | ment troops by invading communists. Method Is Evolved for Killing Insect Pests; A mixture of kerosene and water in | a container placed a few inches under an electric light has proved an effec- | tive means of killinz moth millers, according to a number of persons who | have tried the experiment | The insects are present in numbers this year as to prove a se! ous annoyance in many local hou’ holds. The light attracts the ir the mixture, those who have the experiment say, and ar y the vapor arising from it kills them An open dish placed six to eight inches under an electric light and containing three parts water to one part kerosene was used. Negro Problems Are Subject at Meeting St. Paul, June 12.—(\—The negro community and its social needs form- ed a topic for discussion at the open- ing Thursday of the National Urban League conference. H. A. Lett, industrial secretary of the Pittsburgh Urban League, here to address the gathering on the ef- fects of unemployment on the negro, said there always is a condition of under-employment among negroes. even in the best of times. “However, this situation has been greatly intensified in the depression because of additional social pene negroes face,” continued Mr. 1889 to 1906. In 1907 he was elected | Lett to the Georgia court of appeals. From 1913 to 1916 he retired to practice law. Reeritering public life in 1923, Judge Russell was elected chief jus- tice of the Georgia supreme court. The Russell hers of the governor-elect—hi ¢ with ~elect—have met suc- cess, Robert Lee Russell is Richard, Jr.'s law partner. Henry Edward, an- other » is preparing for the The urban conference will be one of several organizations holding pre- liminary meetings here and in Min- neapolis prior to the convention of the National Conference of Social Work which opens in Minneapolis Sunday. keel FMAMAR PREDICTED , June 12—(/)—There is nothing certain about it yet, but) some of Chicago's fashionable women may go to the opera this coming summer in pink lace pajamas and | dainty blue sandals. Pajama styles for the Ravinia, Chicago's annual out-of-doors opera, were on display peony at a large Loop department store. i TO GET YSAYE’S HEART Brussels, Belgium, June 12.—(7\— | The heart of the late Eugene Ysaye, master violinist, will be presented to ‘was announced Thursday. His library | and studio also will go to Liege, his birthplace. | incoming ishown above. ‘dame was ck woman” by her own testimony on rec-j [ord in a civil action here Thursday. 2,cent I ever made in my life. |concert work. Ask for Warships pet the i¢, capital to protect © the City uf Liege by his children, it | [Fates eons BODY FATS POUND Lye a’ Bs HS FATHER MINIS TEI i ae Richard B. Russell Jr. Georgia's 33-year-old governor, is Below is his father, Richard B. Russell Sr., chief justice of the Georgia supreme court, who will administer the oath to his own son. [3 “HARD WORKING’ Madame Ernestine Schumann- Heink Testifies in Suit Against Film Chief Los Angeles, June 12.—()—Ma- Ernestine Schumann - Heink racterized as a “hard working The case was a combination of two suits filed by the singer and her son Ferdinand, seeking to collect $86,000 vin Carewe, motion picture for an alleged breach of ract involving a film featuring prima donna and the son. Carewe claimed making the picture as contingent on certain financial The cause of the ac- arrangements. am a hard-working woman,” she when questioned. “Maybe I am famous woman, but I earned every This| t ruined my whole season at} ¢ Metropolitan opera house and my | How can I remember I do everything myself. T have no secretary, no maids like lots In Fukien Province! peontc. 1 may be just a dumb-bell but I can't help SEARCH FOR SENATOR The Weirs, N. H.. June 12.—(>}— heriff Frederick Elliott, of Belknap y, With a posse of 150 men, be- a search of timber land, Lake Winnipesaukee, at daybreak ‘Thurs- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1981 United States W ill Rec [our ouR Way ~ By Williams NO-NO— You'tL STRAIN, YOURSELF-| LET IT GO “TLL UNCLE AAT COMES OVER NEXT WEEW ~ § HE'LL HELP ME wits IT. INJURIOUS TO EYES IN SOME INSTANCES Alterations of Body Lipids Are Described Before American Medical Group ss ‘ Philadelphia, June 12—()—A new role for fat, as the injurious agent in several forms of eye trouble, was explained at the American Medical society meeting Thursday, These troubles have no relations to overweight, but are due to alterations of the body fats, called lipids, which cause them to directly or indirectly affect the eyes. Diet promises control sufficiently to be a preventive | in_many cases. The work was presented by Parker Heath, M. D., Detroit. He said it is “based upon a new understanding of broad biological and chemical pro- cesses and offers simplification in understanding many diseases.” Something Goes Wrong These fat changes come about in connection with something going. wrong in the army of disease fight- ers regularly maintained in the blood, the white cells, called . phagocytes. Their job is to clean up the infections, and their name means the “eaters.” They change into trouble-makers be- cause of alterations in the body's metabolism, its processes of changing food into the substances needed for nourishment. If this metabolism is upset, the fats also may undergo changes.’ The result is an increase in the white blood cells, which appear in the form of very large cells called macro- phages, and start injuring or destroy- ing body tissues. Dr. Heath has iden- eo Stee ri e severnen MOMENTS? WE'D" LIWE TO Liv WHY, 1 Bor, DON'T CN UNET * | FoRGET-THaT: HAFE OF IT,}) Has TO GO EAsY! cuEAR oot! WATCH NOW, TO TH’ SHED. WATcI4! 1 wever £ Ste THERE!) saw You SO ANxI6US To WoRW BEFORE. EASY, >. AP en ed te > + Tat —— >. Py DS oy wo ee », - ae <= cover OH~ TL Know, L Know, way t SE -HEE -HEE HES AFRAID WE MIGHT HAVE A UTTLE COLO § SNAP AN HE {Mian Harta BRING OF ANOTHER BucHer ? ST Rwilliams b-1z i ©1991 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. tified various eye troubles as due to hi Paralysis, He credited newspaper eGno Pubilety at the time of the outbreak Changes in diet, Dr. Heath said,| Re ene ee may control and correct the metabol- |40n5 from drinking the adulterated | ism alterations in facts, and so pre- | material. | vent the eye diseases, but are un-| The polson was trio-ortho cresyl, phospate, but Dr. Burley said its! Prgelld Sioa oa eked source has not been fixed other than The destructive effects of drinking ® Teport that it was shipped from an adulterated form of jamaica gin- |New York city. ger were demonstrated for the first eres eee ee ce time at a session late Wednesday by| Lake Region Soldier Benjamin T. Burley, M. D., of Is Appointe d Captain neurological department of the Wor- chester, Mass., city hospital. He was, assisted by Raymond H. Goodale, M.| Devils Lake, N. D., June R—P)—; D, bikie te Medicine |Phil Christopherson, son of a Lake! Dr. Hurley said this position is new Region pioneer, has been appointed to medical annals. It attacks the | Captain of the North Dakota national peripheral nerves, that is, those rad-/ guard, assigned to the quartermaster fating from the spine. Pictures were |corps. _ shown of nerves of patients who had' Christopherson 1s custodian ot died, with part of the nerve fibre|Camp Grafton and has done much destroyed. work in building up the camp, The poison first attacks the toes; He attained an unusual service cutting them off from control. This|record during the World war. After fs called toe “drop.” Wrist “drop”! being a cook for General John J.) comes next, and then loss of strength! Pershing, he went to the front, where in the hands. In all but the mildest he was wounded in battle at Mont-| cases ability to stand is lost for nine didier, Compeigne and Soissons. Hej months or longer. suffered from gas while at Columbia “Many of the severe cases.” said! Les Belles aerial field, where he lost Dr. Burley, “now 16 months after the the sight of one eye. He was a mem- onset, cannot yet move a muscle be- ber of Pershing’s first division and low the knee.” was decorated with the Croix de | Japanese Ambassador Former Devils Lake Farm Woman Is Dead Devils Lake, N. D., June 12—()— Mrs. Cora McKay, 61, former resi- dent of this community, died Thurs- day at Los Angeles, Calif., from diph- Witton according to word received ere. Mrs. McKay resided on a farm near Grand Harbor with her husband from 1886 until 1920. Her husband died in 1925. Mrs. McKay will be buried in Los Angeles. Host to Lindberghs Washington, June 12—(%)—Mr. and Mrs. Charles A, Lindbergh landed at Bolling field here Thursday in a bor- rowed biplane to keep a luncheon en- gagement with the Japanese ambas- sador. Lindbergh also conferred with Un- der-Secretary Castle of the state de- partment concerning his forthcoming flight to the orient. * Officials said they still were await- ing Thursday the receipt of formal | permission from the Japanese and| Chinese governments for the two to land there on their far eastern air He estimated 15,000 cases of this! Guerre. the belief that Chelso Arrigoni. ng Connecticut state senator, was alive on the island. WILL ADDRESS MEETING Aberdeen, S. D., June 12.—(P)—Rt. Rey. Hugh L. Burleson, bishop of South Dakota and_ assessor to the presiding bishop of the ck the principal speaker at the 1981 con- vocation of the Missionary district, South Dakota Episcopal church, Sun- day, Monday and Tuesday. Tomorrow? Here's a way to be rid of constipation and its ills—often overnight! A candy Cascaret at bedtime—to- morrow morning you're feeling fine. Breath is sweetened; tongue clearedy biliousness, headaches, dizziness, vanish, Repeat the treatment two or three nights to get every particle of the souring waste out of your system. See how appetite and en returny how digestion improves. The action of Cascarets is sure, complete, help- ful to everyone. They are made from. cascara, which doctors agree actually Strengthens bowel muscles. All drug stores have the handy boxes, Try Cascarets tonight, ' \ Eyes Examined Glasses Preseribed The eye ts an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1916 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. GOOD.. they’ve got one burns evenly. No wonder © 1981, Lisaerr & aver: Tessece CO, smokes milder and tastes: better! tour. Unofficial assurances of | to be good! ec No top to their “ceiling Smoke as many as you like. Chesterfields are milder. Mild ripe tobaccos and pure French paper. Every one well-filled. Every Chesterfield SMOKED B¥ MORE MEN AND WOMEN EVERY DAY hearty welcome in both countries, however, have been received. ! The stream-lined Lockheed ship} that ‘will carry them to the orient already has been fitted with pontoons and Lindbergh borrowed a land plane | for the trip Thursday. 4-H Club Members to . Attend Summer Camps Six 4-H club summer camps for farm boys and girls of North Dakota are to be held during June. | June 14-17 Burleigh county club! members will camp at Wildwood lake hear Wilton, and on the same dates a | camp is scheduled at Chautauqua | park in Valley City for Barnes, Stuts- man and Cass counties. Morton and Grant county clubs will he repre-' sented at a camp to be held in the fairgrounds at Mandan June 18 to 25. | The last camp of the series will be for Slope, Adams, Hettinger, Golden Valley, Stark and Bowman county clubsters at the H-T Ranch near Amidon. JANE ADDAMS HAS COLD Chicago, June 12.—(P)—Jane Ad- dams, the social worker and head of Hull House, was in a hospital Thurs- day, suffering from a severe cold. Her associates said they did not regard her condition as serious. e6csrre MYERS TOBACCO ca ceive Oath from Father PIONEER ST. PAUL CAPITALIST DEAD William Hamm, Former Brewer and Theatre Owner, Dies at Age of 72 Bt. Paul, June 12.—(?)— William Hamm, pioneer St. Paul capitalist, builder and theatre owner, whose ac- tivities had extended into many sec- tions of the northwest, died Wednes- day night bald a long illness. He was 72 years ol Before prohibition, he was head of St. Paul's largest single industry, the Theodore Hamm Brewing company. Early in tae ‘80s he succeeded his father as president of the firm. The advent of prohibition sent Mr. Hamm into other fields. As president and treasurer of the Hamm Realty company, he financed construction of many business blocks in St. Paul. At one time he was associated with the late M. L. Finkelstein and the late I. H. Ruben, motion picture theatre operators, in forming the Northwest Theater Circuit, Inc., which grew to a chain of 150 show- houses in the northwest. The chain was sold in 1929. Mr. Hamm was an ardent booster for development of the Mississippi river and was a director in the upper Mississippi barge line. His widow, three daughters and one son are left. WILLISTON STAGES ACHIEVEMENT DAY 251 Homemakers From 16 Will- iams County Clubs Exhibit Year's Work Williston, N. D., June 1.—()—The fourth annual Homemakers Achieve- ment day celebration held here Thursday brought to a close the year's work for 251 homemakers from 16 clubs in the county. Exhibits of club work, a pageant and a picnic featured the achieve- ment day program with community singing as an added entertainment. The pageant consisted of a dress review with the various clubs rep- resenting types of dress. Norway was represented by the Orthell club; Bcot- land, Hofflund club; France, View; Czechoslovakia, Champion; Spain, Missouri Ridge; Holland, North Star; Italy, Judson; Germany, Alamo; Ire- land, Zahl; Early American, Brook- lyn; Present Day, Tioga; Frontier, Marmon; Romany, Hanks; Indian, ‘Truax; Negro, Williston; and Unele Sam, by the Williston Township club. Earl Hendrickson, McKenzie coun- ty agent, addressed the gat at the afternoon meeting, ae! PUBLISHER LOSES FIGHT Minneapolis, June 12—(7)—Arthur Kasherman, publisher of a weekly newspaper, was denied an injunction to permanently restrain the police department from interfering with his Paper. pr. ae | Pe ee Ih 4 itiet pPeeeeraeneseeecauMte asteanan wens me

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