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te ERURSE Lo eToreees saeey Se Bireereriss ie. HOOVER APPARENTLY APPROVES CAMPAIGN FOR HIS REELECTION irs. Edward Everett Gann Says It Is Important to Elect Republican Washington, June 12.—()—The campaign for renomination of Presi- dent Hoover is officially under way and with the apparent consent of the chief executive. Senator Fess, Ohio, chairman of the Republican national committee, sounded ‘the administration call to action before the conference of young Republicans Thursday and the young Republicans cheered it. After Senator Fess had predicted the “unanimous renomination” of Mr. Hoover and his “overwhelming reelection,” Representative Free of California reviewed the life of the president and joined in the call for renomination. The president arranged for a visit | from the young Republicans late Pri-| redistrict, or if it were palpably cor- | Walter Newton, his executive attended the meeting ‘Thursday, but took a back seat. Secretary Hyde was the first speaker on Friday's program with an addre: “The Farm Board and Ag- riculture.” Professor James J. Rob- inson of the University of Indiana and David S. Ingalls, assistant sec- retary of the navy, were the other listed speakers. day. secretary The first day’s meeting was fo-/ cused upon President Hoover and the protective tariff policy of the admin- istration. Speakers lauded the ef- forts of the president in the depres- sion and pointed to his stand in fa- vor of maintenance of wage scales. | Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, sister of Vice President Curtis, in her speech urged united support for the president during the depression. As for the next presidential race, she said: “There never was a time when It was more important to keep a Repub- lican at the head of this government | than now * * *. Pledge as many as you can to the Republican party.” The conference, which was called by Robert H. Lucas, executive direc- tor of the Republican national com-} mittee, will be concluded tonight with | a dinner dance. Railroads Will Ask Increase to Offset | Earnings Reduction| (Continued from page one) has ordered a reduction, the effective date of which has been postponed to; next Dec. 3. | Rates Are Reasonable H “Many rates in North Dakota have been approved as reasonable, and there appears to be no occasion for} an increase of the nature proposed | py the railroads. The people who are | complaining their rates already are too high would be compelled to pay} even a higher rate under the plan Proposed. “The railroads have been showing earnings in the state, while the farm- er, who would pay a large share of the freight bill, has not shown any earnings. Business in the state also would be materially affected by high- er rates. “The people cannot stand an in- crease and we will take a firm stand before the interstate commerce com- mission in opposing the rates.” Representatives of eastern, western | ‘and southern groups of roads who participated in the agreement reached ‘Thursday said the increase was de signed to offset some of the reduc-| tions in freight tariffs made since, 21 and would bring an estimated increase in revenue of 10 per cent, or ‘about $400,000,000. The petition was described as an} emergency measure to meet a slump| in rail revenue which has resulted in| earnings falling to the lowest level in @ decade. The railroads hope to have their petition on file within a week and hope it will be treated as an emerg- ency measure by the commission so ‘the increased rates may go ito effect ‘within three months. They will seek to have an order {s- sued by the commission omitiing the 90-day suspension clause, under ‘which rate increases are automatical-| ly suspended for that period. { A general increase of 15 per cent| ‘was decided upon to make the ques- | ‘tion one of revenue rather than one involving individual rates to prevent Jong debate. H Although the petition will be for a! general increase, the roads do not in- tend, representatives said, to increase all rates by that amount. Cosmopolitan Club To Be Inaugurated At Program Tonight (Continued from page one) | ficers of the new club. These have not yet been selected but will be chosen at the meeting. All were chosen in accord with the rules governing organizations of this character, membership being limited to one man from each profession or division of a business, thereby group- ing within the club membership a cross-section of the business, profes- sional and industrial life of the com- munity. The principles of fellowship and service, eStablished through weekly luncheon meetings and community of effort in a common cause, are the forces which bind the club together. Inified Action Is Aim Ur The immediate aim of the organ- ization is to act as a unit in an effort to build up sound business and com- mercial relationships on a mutually profitable’ basis. The ideas upon which these efforts will be based are) unity, service and action and the word of the club is “Think,” and Canada, Its headquarters are in Chicago, Hodgins, who has gained a wide reputation as a speaker, stopped off here en route to the Pacific coast | where he will deliver a series of lec- | tures. On the way to Seattle he will | stop off for visits to Cosmopolitan {clubs at Great Falls, Mont. and | Spokane, Wash. ;Rules Against Veto | Of Governor Olson In Minnesota Case (Continued from page one) lative or political question, calling for action by voters or legislators rather than by the courts. |, “These inequalities are undeniable,” ; the decision said. “They appear to justify the governor's strictures.” No Requirement Applicable However, the judge continued, “this court cannot hold the act violative of |any federal mandate. Neither is | there any state or constitutional re- quirement, which, if it were applica- | ble, could be invoked to support @ ju- | dicial veto of th? act.” | “Perhaps if the numerical inequali- | ties were so gross as to be in effect a denial of representation to a substan- tial portion of the population or so arbitrary and unreasonable that the courts would be justified in conclud- | ing the act amounted to a failure to jrupt, the court might set aside the | act upon the ground that the legise | lature had failed to exercise any leg- ltslative discretion at all. But that | is not the situation.” | order, held the act invalid because tt | was vetoed by the governor and said meant the entire legislative machin- ery of states, including the governor. He also contended inequalities in | districts were such that setting aside | the action was justified and thai the | congressional act of 1911, prsviding reapoortionment according to laws of the states, still sas in effect. Minneapolis Divided Under the plan which Judge Loev- ‘inger held iegal Hennepin coun | which includes Minneapolis, shares | | in three districts, the third, fifth and seventh. Under the previous law it was represented in two, the fifth and 10th. Ramscy <ounty, including St. Paul, remains in a separate fourth district as before, while a few other dis- tricts remain unchanged. What was the 10th district, now eliminated, has for the most part been added to the sixth, except the rural Hennepin por- tion. The northern half of rural Hennepin under the new law is in the | seventh and the southern half in the | third. | Expect Six Bands to Take Part in Picnic’ Six bands are expected to partici- Pate in a picnic to be held Sunday at! Lake Isabel, according to J. A. Pres- | cott, Steele, who is arranging for the musical celeoration. Organizations expected to be on hand are tose from Steele, Driscoll, Wing, Robinson, Woodworth and Tap- pen, Prescoit said. A feature of the day will be a concert in the afternoon in which <ll the bands will partict- Pate. More than 100 bandsmen prob- ably will take part in this event. Dickinson Clubmen Elect Tobin Head Dickinson, June 12.—Voting to meet on the first and third Tuesdays only during the months of June, July and August, members of the Lions club elected six officers, a Lion tamer, a tail twister and two directors at their regular meeting here. | E. W. Tobin was named president; | E A. Patterson, first vice president; joe Spencer, second vice president; Harry Diedrich, third vice president; Ansu! Suckerman, secretary; E. S. Hatch, treasurer; Frank Richards, Lion tamer; H. E. Brown, tail twister; G. H. Plamann, director and Charles | Parker, director. Dr. A. E. Spear and Paul Mann are hold-over directors. 00 MEETING OF U, C. 1.) sire: Soe 'Seetsntien ine Convention, in Effect, Is Re-| ee 12 others by deputy sheriffs, union of Minnesota, North THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1931 DELEGATES AR | county Friday despite a march on the county jail Thursday night by 2,000 | creating disorders and the tear gas- | disorders at the jail, the first | Serious outbreak in the week-old | ender followed the arrest of seven Dakota Councils leaders of a march on the New Laf- ee County Jail in Ohio| SURGEONS DESCRIBE ATTENDING WINNIPEG: .e:.c2:x-,ctc2e%<:0--] OPERATION AGAINST MERCURY POISONING sitet nacre Pendicitis, they reached the cecum, ‘& sort of pouch close to the appendix. The cecum is the site of « valve, 50 that it is a gate between the small and the large intestines. The poison, after leaving the stomach, has to pass down through this gate before continuously, washing out the poison as fast as it a the gate. ‘They reported several patients who Divert Flow of Poison at Cecum| were expected to die, had been saved, Before It Causes Gangrene Dr. Berger emphasized the opera- tion was successful only when per- formed within a few hours after the poison had been swallowed. Those upon whom it was performed after in the “80s” to sell groceries and over- with younger ambassadors of trade Thursday at the international grand, council, convention of the United | Commercial Travelers. More than | west. The convention fs, in effect, a re- | union of the Minnesota and North | Dakota councils and the prairie grand | the 1921 meeting at Fargo, due to the | ered. “The salesman who breathed de-| clared Arch McFarlane, lieutenant | governor of Iowa, and supreme coun- cillor of the 112,000 “drummers” who! form the United Commercial Travel- | ers’ Association of America. “Salesmen are true ambassadors and among the Smiley, in seeking the restraining | important assets of our two nations.” | He urged the delegates to stand up Three wesvern Canadians were hon- ored. Presentation of grand coun- cillor's jewels to T.H. Treleaven, | Saskatoon, Sask.; J. W. Patterson, | Brandon. Man.: and D. M. Bullock, | Swift Curresit, Sask., was made by | McFarlane. | A stag smoker featured the night Program. The Ladies Auxiliary held an “at home.” Principal business of the conven- tion Friday was to be election of of- ficers and a ball at night which will be attended by Lieutenant-Governor R. D. McGregor of Manitoba, Mayor Ralph H. Webb of Winnipeg, and W. | a Major, provincial attorney-gener- al. 202 Are Graduated in | Grand Forks County: Grand Forks, N. D., June 12.—()— | Two hundred and two eighth grade | graduates were given diplomas at the | first combined commehcement exer- | cises of the Grand Forks county | schools here Friday. Congressman O. B. Burtness, in the | commencement address, advised the | members of the class to continue their education with a view of becom- | ing leaders in their communities. All but 22 of the pupils finishing the county grade school work were pres- ent at the exercises, MAYOR'S WIFE TO REDUCE New York, June 12.—(®)—Mrs. James J. Walker, wife of the mayor, Proposes to reduce 40 pounds by diet- ing and to bring her weight down to 100, what it was when she was mar- ried. ARCHDUKE TO WED PRINCESS | Rome, June 12.—()—It was reliably reported Thursday that the Archduke Otto of Austria is to be married in October to Princess Maria, youngest daughter of the king and queen of Italy. In parts of the Philippine islands, | cotton is grown as a second crop, | being planted in the dry season after | rice has heen harvested. | alls to ploneer communities, mingied |Federal Officers Raid 500 delegates are in attendance f: Be, PaERiee inson, les e rom | Hurick, farmer living near Dick! 4 United States points and the prairie | {s being held in jail here charged with violating the federal prohibition laws as the result of a raid by federal pro- hibition Ser lk ther ‘The offic councils of the order. The territory | two wits, ons ‘ cre caer between the two councils was split at | gation capacity. great distances which had to be cov- hey seit L006 anton ot eas a0 BLOOD POISONING FATAL Fergus Falls, Minn., June 12.—()— | intestine. Blood poisoning developing after he| oThey t 0 j against the exaggerated moodiness | = reference in the federal constitution | of the coniinent. etal | ferty mine CAs) M. A. Hanna Coal in Intestine | " 320 men continued Winnipeg, Man. June 12—(— | ComPany, wi Knights of the Grip, who sallied forth | 8* Work despite the strike. Philadelphia, June 12—()—Dis- covery of an operation somewhat re- sembling uppendicitis that cures some hitherto fatal cases of bichloride Dickinson Liquor Farm) of mercury poisoning was described to the American Medical association Friday. The operation is called cecostomy, D. June 12—Joe Poison out of one of the vital parts of the body. It was reported by Sam- uel Berger, M. D. and his associates, H. 8. Applebaum, M. D. and A. M. Young, M. D., of the department of medicine and pathology of Mt. Sinal hospital, Cleveland. Study 163 Cases They studied 163 cases of bichlor- were confiscated, authorities said, as|ide of mercury poisoning and found pression never was successful.” de- he ite anit used to artificially | in a large majority of those who lived beyond the first 24 hours after swal- lowing the bichloride, death was due |to the gangrenous condition of the They therefore devised an operation had picked his finger with the fin of] to head off the poison before it reach- a fish caused the death of Charles| ed this position. By making an inci- Waletzko, a Todd county farmer. sion in the same place as that for ap- and enables physicians to wash the | tal, Boston. two days or more all died. Detected By X-Ray An X-ray method of detecting lead Poisoning in babies and children in time to save them from the worst ef- fects was reported by Edward ©. Vogt of the infants’ and childrens’ hospi- “Infants, especially in the teething season,” he said, “will suck toys, chew furniture and woodwork. If sufficient lead paint is ingested in these ways, anemia and symptoms of encephalo- pathy develop. Perverted appetite of- ten follows; some children thus ad- dicted show evidence of mental de- ficiency.” ‘The X-ray shows the gathering of this lead in the system by 9 dark band at the growing margins of bones. The band is a deposit of lead. HAWAII HAS QUAKE Hilo, Hawai, June 12—(P)—A se- vere earthquake shock was felt here at 5:53 p. m., Thursday but no dam- age was reported. The Cosmopolitan Club of Fargo Pioneer Club.of North Dakota Inaugurated July, 1926 Extends Hearty Congratulations and Best Wishes to The Cosmopolitan Club of Bismarck and Welcomes the New Members Society of Red Bloods Cap Miller, president; George A. Johnson, vice president; Ralph H. Butter- wick, treasurer; Gil Wagner, secretary; J. R. Larson, Roy G. Frolong, and John J. Hannaher, trustees. to the H. J. Wienbergen, retiring president of the club, will install officers at the meeting the first Tuesday in July. Dickinson College Annual Is on Sale; Dickinson, June 12. Distribution | and sale of the 1931 Prairie Smoke, Dickinson State Teachers’ college an- i nual, has begun in Dickinson. 1 The publication, edited by Fred} Kanan, is a 116-page annual de- yoted to the college, its students and activities. Its five sections are di vided into classes, athletics, faculty, ; activities and features. Each page; bears a border, printed in pale green, | of pioneers driving over the trails in covered wagons. } Members of the staff, besides Mr.} Kanan, include Walter Wilberding and Clifford Mawkinney, business! managers; Lester Eckes, advertising manager; Dale Derouin and Clifford Mawhinney, advertising assistants; Virginia Wilberding, feature editor: Eloise Crow, alumni editor; Muriel Johnson, lower classes; Rex Camp- bell, faculty and administration; Ar- | lene Loehrke, graduate editor; Wil- liam Huncovsky, sport editor; Earl Olson, organizations; Claire Smith, society; Clement Rose, music; Val- borg Hansen, art editor; Ethel John- son, staff typist; and T. A. Barnhart, staff adviser. | RECEIVE WAHPETON CLUB Wahpeton, N. D., June 12—(@)— The Wahpeton Junior club, women’s relief corps, was received as a mem- relief corps, at the annual two-day sessions being held in conjunction army of the republic. SENTENCES CROOKSTON MAN Crookston, Minn., June 12.—)— Joe Corbin, Crookston, was sentenced to 30 days and fined $150 when he pleaded guilty in district court to Cad of violating the prohibition act. DENY EDGE WILL QUIT country’s representative in France. ber of the state department, women’s |} with the state encampment, grand; Congratulations Cosmopolitian Club of Bismarck on their Inauguration Tonight Montgomery Ward & Co. ae The habit of viewing Sey things cheerfully and of other habit, Service 206 Main Avenue A Healthtul By John F. Class Health System Bismarck, N. Dak. A. E, ELVIN, “Cosmopolitan” CUTWORMS RUIN CROPS Saskatoon, Sask. June 12—(P)—' Many fields of wheat around Saska- toon have met with 100 per cent de-; struction by cutworms, K. i of the dominion tomogy, reported. An United States j one cutworm to the square foot, said, can clean off all the crop. Utilization of Service is the foundation of all Good Tire Shops. PHONE 356 A & M Tire Service OLIVER P. VOLD, “Cosmopolitan” of usefulness. 314% Main Ave. PROF. R. thinking about life hope- fully, maybe made to grow up in. us like any The Annex Barber Shop GEORGE W, JANKE, “Cosmopolitan” A Photograph Will provide an enduring 4 6 . and faithful record. SLORBY’S STUDIO C. A. SLORBY, “Cosmopolitan” Like the 5th object of Cosmocraft, our institution endeavors to broad- . en the scope of knowledge and field Capital Commercial College “Cosmopolitan” into the ‘DO YoU KNOW ‘T' ee e that Kellogg’s Corn Flakes have a special package that is different from all others? e e © a WAXTITE, inside bag perfected and patented by Kellogg? e e e a WAXTITE bag that is actually SEALED against odors, moisture and contamination? e © e that brings Kellogg’s Corn Flakes OVEN- FRESH and FLAVOR-PERFECT to your table? Just another reason why it pays to specify the name Kellogg’s when buying corn flakes. One of the most economical and convenient of foods. Delicious with milk or cream for breakfast; extra welcome for lunch with fruits or honey; fine for children’s suppers or a late snack. Easy to digest. Always ready to serve. No trouble. No work. With a “wonder” flavor that can’t be equaled. Look for the red-and-green package at your grocer’s. It means genuine Kellogg’s — the original Corn Flakes — the world’s most popular ready-to-eat cereal! Greatest Good Is Found in Service to His Fellow Man. Funeral Director. O. A. CONVERT, “Cosmopolitan” Sh Phone 121 E. JACK H. H. Engen Painting & Decorating Phone 748 207 Bdwy. Sat sa) xan ‘ ee Welcomes Bismarck’s New Service Club The Cosmopolitan €