The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 4, 1934, Page 3

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HANDS OFF’ POLICY | IS DRMOGRAT RULE Dne Exception fe Support Be- Ing Given Hiram Johnson's Candidacy Washington, Aug. 4.()—National Democratic leaders, officially keeping their hands off primary contests, are manifesting preferences for senate candidates believed to be favorable to ioe ceonenttide the Dem e and 10~ cratic national committee, so far as Open pronouncements go, are avoid. ing pre-primary matters—with one exception. The full weight of the administra. tion and committee is behind Senator Hiram Johnson, seeking nomination in California on the Democratic, Re- publican and two minor tickets. John. son, an independent Republican, sup- ported President Roosevelt in the 1932 campaign and in the last servers here said. But in other states where preferences have: been made known considerable intro-party strife is reported developing. piney Democratic gest concerning some leading Roosevelt followers here. They are supporting Representative Edward R. Burke, the candidate backed by Arthur F. Mullen, floor leader of the Dr. William J. Mayo ‘The famous Mayo brothers THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, S/ \Half Century of Healing Brings Nation in Tribute to Mayos’ Door Dr. Charles H. yo TURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1934 eo @ ** Counsellor Knew Too Much OF STAVISKY RECORDS But Dead Men Tell No Tales FULTON THATCHER GRANT | mass, beyond recognition. a CHAPTER TWELVE Engineer Discovers PART II often Let us recall the 1926 case, 80 postponed, in which Stavisky and several associates were to be tried for taking several million from exchange- agents. Now you will remember that strange obstacles had been thrown in| the way of the wheels of law and order. Stavisky died... oF assassinated. Twelve hundred docu- ments vanished from the dossier. Legal tricks and quolibets entramel- led the case. Postponed, put off, set back, the case was finally to come off in February or March. The public had forgotten the date, if any fixed date there was. Greater events had shifted public attention. But somewhere a man ee busily engaged in picking out the threads of that tangled 1926 case .. . not s0 much for the case itself as for its bearing upon the whole tangled skein body was digging out the roots the rhizomes from the black, hardened Girt of the earlier year, ond slowly de- taching from them the fruits of in- vestigation, in order to reveal the in- tertwining of important. high-seated te men in this muddy affair. That man was Counsellor Albert Prince. In 1925 he had been made judge-| * substitute in charge of the financial 3 TRIBUTE PAD 10 COOUDGE MEMORY Would Have Preferred - ‘Square Deal’ 7 Plymouth, Vt., Aug. 4—(7)—U, 8. Representative James M. Beck, Rep., of Pennsylvanis, speaking Friday at exercises in honor of the late Calvin Coolidge, charged that the New Deal had subjugated “individualism” and ‘The representati who criticised the administration of President Coolidge. Contending that under the New Deal, “individualism” was smothered, . he said: “if Calvin Coolidge were alive today he would prefer that ‘square deal’ of individualism to the ‘New Deal’ of bureaucratic regimentation y| Which has changed the American from a citizen to a subject. “The constitution never intended to vest all over trade and inn- dustry in the federal government. It Prescribed a much narrower channel ‘of power. Each state was to regulate in its own discretion the trade and industry that was in its borders. To- day the federal bureaucracy controls all trade and industry within the United States. Never in the history of our nation has there been such an succeed Roosevelt. —________—___.-4 i | Weather Report | and their equally famous Mayo Clinic, at Rochester, Minn., to be visited Aug. 8 by President Roosevelt, on the occa- of a citation by the American Legion to these two surgeons. Dr. William James Mayo is shown at left, and his younger ¥ brother, Dr. Charies Horace Mayo, at right. hurricane six years earlier. And it was from this small St. Mary’s Hos- Then after a minute's search, it discovered that the body had been bound to the tracks. The hemp cord was found, tied to the ankle of a dismembered left leg. Another piece government. stitution, and it cannot be justified on the theory of an emergency, for if a so-called emergency can investigation service of the Paris mag- aed istrature. When Judge Pachot in 1928 made his complete reports of the For the Mayos are just as noted|surgical wonders, because the Mayo actions and deeds of Serge Alexandre, for their charity as they are for their/ brothers naturally drifted into this the man to be Stavisky, and NEA Service Rochester, Minn, Aug. 3.—In all the pital that the great Mayo Clinic sprang. Today, the institution known as the Mayo Clinic comprises a modern $3,- 000,000 13+story structure, a smaller building which was the original clinic, and some half a dozen other hospi- tals, “hotels” with hospital facilities, sanitariums and laboratories — all staffed by some 500 physicians and surgeons—the entire enterprise rep- resenting an investment of about $10,- 000,000. Some 60,000 patients enter this in- stitution’ annually, among them some of the most famous personalities of the world. FAMED FOR CHARITY Rich and poor alike are treated re- Bardless of their fame or fortune, un- President Roosevelt will FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly tloudy tonight; d Mayos to charge for their services ac- cording to a person’s capacity to pay, not to charge more than 10 per cent of his annual income no matter how. long he stays or how troublesome the case, and—here is an example of the noted Mayo altruism—to set aside all money above $1,000 in each fee they get to outside charity. der an established rule of the two keen surgical ability. Their father, who came to Minnesota in 1855 and set up practice as a simple country doctor, soon became famous for his charitable work. And the two sons just continued this, but on a much larger scale. GROUP OF NINE OWN CLINIC surgeons physicians throughout the world, just as much as it is the center of medical aid for sick persons of all countries. EACH HAS SPECIAL FIE! The clinic is most famous for its Phase of medicine and soon became |turned it in the country’s leading surgeons, Dr. ‘Will found himself, as he once called it, “the belly doctor,” while Dr. Charlie became “the head doctor,” each an expert in his particular field, but both interested in the entire realm of medicine as well. As Dr. Will once remarked: “Instead of the patient having one spoke looked over, we go over the whole wheel.” BOTH HAVE LARGE FAMILIES Dr. Will was married in 1884 to Miss Hattie M. Damon of Rochester, and had five children, three of whom died in infancy. The other two are Carrie, now Mrs. Donald C. Balfour, and Phoebe, now Mrs. Waltman Wal- ters. Dr. Charlie married Miss Edith M. Graham, also of Rochester, in 1893, and this couple had eight children, two of whom have died. They have since adopted two more children, John and Marilyn. Of their own chil- dren, Charles W. and Joseph G. are now practicing physicians. The other four are Dorothy, Edith, Louise, and Esther. with the 1926 and 1927 reports of detective Gripois attached to it, Judge-substitute Prince studied it, collected other material, enlarged the report and passed it on to his superior. That was in 1933, and his superior was Procuror Press- ard of the Republic. ‘We know that those reports were hg Te ES ti position of - Judge in the of Appeals, still retained his own personal notes and when time revealed that the inaction which had smothered the Stavisky case was about to be overcome by Doumergue’s famous forty-two-man commission, Councellor Prince as- sembled his facts and composed another report which would have elec- trified the whole legal world of France. There is one point I wish to make before we examine the dramatic and extraordinary circumstances sur- reunding the death of Albert Prince. We have noted that he changed his functions to the Court of Appeals from the financial secticn of the Paris was atill attached to the track. Further examination, despite the had|Garkness, revealed some cigarettes, a steel watch, a little box of talcum Had the ‘counsellor becn alive when phos by fen 4005? n killed that blocdy knife, his body bound to the track and left to)Senator Warren R. Austin, Repub- be destroyed, beyond recognition, be- banknotes were . Certainly it yound proof? Motive? Several eventually was not robbery. And the local police of to @ temporary conclusion that the! victim had been killed before being attached to the track. They came to the te: a ; saan ee el Give Song and Dance cause, Then the inquest began. AGENTS CONSIDER Or had he Dijon came temporarily suspend the constitution, then we are living under a government of un- limited powers, for the federal govern- ment can, at any time, when by the lust of power, create the emer- gency, then declare its existence and then arbitrarily suspend the constitu- tion. That great compact never au- thorized the creation of a dictator or @ Suspension of its mandates.” A vigorous denunciation of the Present administration was made by lcan, of Vermont. He eulogized the former president briefly and interspersed his criticism with quotations from various political Pronouncements of » showing by implication that the Vermonters’ credo was hostile to the ideals of those now in power. Program Before CMTC The Lions’ club quartet and pupils of the Margaret Ann Ramsey dancing studio gave an entertainment at the Fort Lincoln stadium at |C ONTLNY® D\Respiration Exhibition (OLSON MAY DEMAND [sierra Bt FEDERAL PROGRAM a Twelve Counties Represented as State Officials Outline Compliance Work Two Pickets Shot ments for the quartet which gave selection of songs as the first part of the program. The quartet mem- bers are Otto Bauer, E. B. Klein, Al P. Simon and Henry Halvorson. The second part took in the fol- lowing dance numbers: song and tap, “Two Tickets to Georgia”—Viv- ian Coghian; “The Toreador”—Audrey Waldschmidt; “La Czarina”—Ann and Mary Dolen and Mary McGraw; “Highland Fling,” Margaret Shaft; tap dance by Eugene Azar, three years old; ballet number, “The Rose it weather prevails over Northwest. Bismarrk station barometer, inch- 8; 2792. Reducéd to sea level, 29.62 tt. Restores Life to Youth In New Mill City : of the state highway commission. “It is further adjudged and decreed Strike Violence omen that Burt M. Salisbury Pili duly *» \@Ppointed and qualified state high. way commissioner. and as such is en- titled to immediate possession of all In that connetcion, he added, “the lof the aforesaid instruments, records information. gathered from the seized | and property and that he is entitled Papers would be followed up.” Gov- |to exercise all of the prerogatives and ernor. also claimed the raid | authority of such office. “ so-called law and order) “it is further ordered and ad- * GOVERNOR MANSION] =. Until Request Is Filed, How- ever, Langer Will Retain Residence There river stage at 7 @. m.: -1.1 24-hour chngae, 0.0 ft. Lad Revives After Two Hours to Find Own Death Certificate In Hand Corn-hog and wheat . compliance Programs and federal cattle-buying Problems were discussed by county agents from 12 southwetsern counties at a district conference held here ee. . D. Gorman, state county nt leader, gave a short resume of the Madame Prince received a telephone call, The conversation I report is) taken from her statement to the po- William Langer, ousted governor, NORTH DAKOTA POINTS ‘The coroner concurred. They called will have use of the state’s governor's Proposed Dance”"—Mary Cecelii es High- Low. ved and its actions | judged that this determination of the | the i mansion at Bismarck and a state/ lice fram that if banried 5 out as. planned Caroline Datilen’ “Mulady Goes "Ac est _ same clique. Parties in relation to the office of| Everyone in the crowd that gather-| came and fish department cottage at will resemble the wheat and ‘ad-|Shopping”—Mathilda Towne, 73 00) gprnoush the governor rescinded his |the state highway commission and the |ed on the dock when the lad, Stanley | Spiritwood lake until request is made 2 Justment programs already in eff In the third section, more dances ay 58 ‘99 Street restriction order soon after it/rights of the plaintiff and petitioner |Kadluboski, 10 years old, was hauled] for possession by Acting Gov. Ole H. Requirements for fulfillment of the| Were given including “The Drum Ma- 6 «00 have become effective in relation thereto may be enforced|from Manhasset bay early Friday | Olson. “He's not here. He has to the| 1934 wheat t contracts joress”—Miss Waldschmidt; tap, ‘Lake, rain 68 99] minute past last midnight, he quall- lhy further and additional supplemen- | night agreed. No one can stay under| Members of the state board of ad- ‘s = Memesiaeme allotment were | Hotel"—Maty Jane her, on. 8 | Ded Bay iaccare hysaenony by | {SY orders of the court if such is/ water 10 minutes and live. ministration, under whose control the oo. This aera speaking. Genter, clear ....100 68 00! Sunday night I will issue the order | re is farther ordered that certified | Ay aes to be aes “I am telephoning for Doctor| the : 58 00! effective Sunday night at wr o » Z hee + has been made for. any ... from Dijon. He asked clear 93- 60 00 copies of his judgment be served|The boy was dead. lo request to tell the Counsellor that Ma- Sc BE By i erie eal ears aon te old Prk Veo ry eg SS a ar 90 68 interstate ‘commerce ve i] cnet judgment enter accordingly.” preme court decision, ‘I understand Sg Se ae ee ey ES id soeeee 986 72 00 the majority opinion, said in his dis- ing. Until a req 5 pias cceAah RBI Nenad" Gare “enerco miiary|™2 aos sor ene mame reo ax saa a anaes a illiston, clear 00 72 = 90) Tule here, “lin the case of Ole H. Olson versus quests use of the mansion it will be Wishek, ptcldy :....... 98 71 00) ‘Trucks William Langer.” given him: SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS ; ; Inke is aet ‘aside for yr the gov. gan __—? se le e High- Low- oat et Pet oud Man Slows Up Cars clear oe ? Rapid ‘City, pistdy".:.1102 14 90) | But Law Says, ‘Nix’ —______-—_____.. MINNESOTA POINTS 8 EF bi + Baseball fans who have been in the cottages. Attaches said no re- ® hurry to get to the park and quest had been made for the cottage by Olson, and that until such request|the is made it would continue to be set! her. aside for use of deposed Langer, GEHRIG STEPS OUT New York, Aug. 4.—(#)—Lou Geh- 38, g 835 HE ? 4 in tae pay Free noon. Fun for le refreahments, coffes, ice cream. ae E BEE g fe saving. One of Stanley Kadluboski’s eye- fluttered. It wasn’t much, but Dr. Gurin saw it and leaped forward. i & 3 | would car hit the ditches at The speed, nearly throwing the cn and the third, did Hkewiae, NY PROBLEM! he Bos, Santa Wey, bemne te slow a HEAR ’ bea tls bie TANFORD KINGSLEY pace Wanted at Once CLAUNCH of San Francisco World-Famous Authority on Foods, maser Ste Two Expert Beef Dressers Must Pass Physial and Health Examination 5 FREE LECTURES sases aeesretuarssasesasasnesseetassanndy 8388 BBBBBRELRBRSBERERSBEEEESRERSBEeEeEES : Us BLEVATOR A. vivid of and oe bt ae onsectarian oes Admission Pree.» GUSSNER’S PACKING PLANT Equipped With Full Sanitary and Modern Equipment Sunday Night, Music by Wee Willie and his 8 Memphis Blue Devils (colored band). Same band next Tuesday, and Wednesday. _| Floating Cabaret Make Excursion at BOAT | “tc'o-Giock Tong ~

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