The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 24, 1935, Page 3

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1935 3 LEMKE T0 SPEAK AT Wa —__ Sti Wants to Fightin War 116 OF 10 PATIENTS | WINS LOVE OF HEIRESS DAUGHTER |World Mat Champion fey uy"im.tn!"eme To Appear in Forks) vere out of Jobe as the strike moved COUGHLIN MEETING AT ASYLUM CURED Grand Forks, N. Geet inars Wednesday had been set as the date ygeteatieetar bial dial ad Only 8 Per Cent Classed as eral Invited to Social Justice ‘Repeaters,’ Hospital Super- Union Session intendent Reports nounced that he has signed for Ed (Strangler) Lewis, several times hold- er of the world’s title and Bronko Detroit, April 24—(#)—The Rev. Fr. Charles E. Coughlin called the Michigan members of his National ‘Union for Social Justice to Olympia. sports arena for a mass meeting ‘Wednesday night which he expects to be the first effort to “translate our beliefs into action.” Three members of the national house of representatives were in- cluded in a Leatrt list of speak- ers announced by Louis B. Ward, as- poctate of Father Coughlin. Two sen- ators and another representative, their names as yet undisclosed, are to wrestle here in May. Approximately 60 per cent of pat- President of General Motors Gar chk Union Pickets Guard |iign an agreement for's closed shop. Toledo Auto Factory oregano pilot DIES ON ANNIVERSARY Toledo, ©. April 24—(#)—Union| Philadelphia, Tenn—L. H. Davis pickets guarded each entrance to the | often voiced the desire to die on the ‘Chevrolet Motor Company plant here} hour and the day of the month in Wednesday and prepared to hold the| which his wife died three years ago. lines for “two weeks or more” in their} The ae Tt old man’s wish nearly fight for a closed shop and a signed|came true Tuesday. He died contract. 10 minutes of the time his wife had — Inside the plant machines were idle.' died. institution as cured, Dr. J. M. Carr, superintendent, said here Wednes- day. Of this number only about eight per cent are classed as “repeaters”— those who return with their ailment active once more. Thirty per cent of the patients re- main permanently at the hospital as incurably insane, he said. Of the total population of approximately 1,900 persons, only five per cent are expected to arrive from Washington, i! ign ‘Wednesday afternoon. pendent merchants, small business- men, veterans and youth of Michi- gan,” a close to capacity audience of 17,000 is expected. The speakers listed by Ward are: Rep. William Lemke, of North Da- kota, co-author of the Frazier-Lemke farm relief bill; Rep. Martin Sweeney, of Ohio, co-author of the Nye- the house, Edward Kennedy, secre- tary of the National Farmers Union; the Rev. Herbert Bigelow, of Cin- insane because of disease, while but one per cent are classed as alcoholics. The state has one of the lowest Persons suffering from senility and alcoholics, were eliminated from the Tolls of the hospital. Dr. Carr said that between 300 and 400 old persons, suffering from sen- ile decay, are included in the hos- pital population. He explained he did not class these persons as insane, and declared other states provide homes for the aged for the care of elderly persons. In addition, a number of drug ad- dicts who are not to be classed as OF COURSE YOURE cinnati, and Rabbi Ferdinand Isser- Her ardor for a women's air reserve corps undampened by reply insane, are included in the hospital man of St. Louis. from Chairman J. J. McSwain of the house military committee that bd ‘Ward said that a representative of] Women should stay home during wartime, Joan Sighs (above), 20- | *eeords, Dr. Carr sal It was reported In New York that Mrs, Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, the Americain Federation of Labor year-old Chicago girl, replied she still thought women should be ° recently involved in a court fight with Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney for alto would be among the speakers. trained as well as men to fight, with service to be purely voluntary. |Counties Asked to the custody of her 11-year-old heiress daughter, Gloria Laura Vanderbilt, (Associated Press Photo.) had won the love of the child on the week-end visits permitted her by “ Reappoint Veterans the court. Mother and daughter are shown here in a recent photograph (Associated Press Photo—Copyright by Hal Phyfe) MANY WANT CHEAP HELP nar decided tere nto weet il Dust Storms Not to Make [oli 4 Raitt Mae for anyone willing to work and bred state public welfare board addressing Symphony Orchestra [2#"4_ of Bei apa eho announced ting for “heattarut ‘outsoor wort] MAiddlewest Sahara of U. S.|.ui ts. occ" 22 Se'| Will Appear Sunday] tm wes im comparison to 1m.) | JOH THEY'RE FRANKLY j BS and offering to accept $10 a month pointment of incumbent county re+ eG Nelson Sauvain, chairman of the \ ae a he has received 290 replies Roos New Studebaker lief committee members s0 far as! Miss Vivian Coghlan, pianist, wan] DORA, ai poet 30,000 excess ae TO MAKE HER CHANGE Roo: U. S. Meteorologist Declares es the larger counties he recom- | Sloist for the Bismarck Little Sym- | year, ‘The world’s richest emerald mines) Engineering Chieftain ‘ ‘ mended larger county boards. ‘The|Phony orchestra's second concert. of re in the Ural mountains. a Shifting Soil ts ny Tom: law permits boards of five, seven or |the season which will be given at the} yISSIONARIES THREATENED | South Bend, Ind, April 24.—The porary Condition nine members. city auditorium Sunday evening.| tondon—The China Inland mis- election of D_G. Roos as Balai H. C. DePuy of Grafton, president|starting at 8:30 o'clock, according to] sion station headquarters was inform- pact sip nromcar op Magners of the state board, spoke briefly but|Clarlon E. Larson. director, led that two of its missionaries were aan nee ea er ioats| Washington, April 24—“7—It wilt|sald he was not attending officially] | Mise Coghlan and the orchestra | threatened with execution by Chinese eae ration’ Roce ig|take mee than dust storms and|but to seek information. He will pre-| "tt play the Srieg composition, “A/pandits who kidnaped them unless Mee charge cf all Siudebaker| crouth to turn any of America’s mid-|side at similar district gatherings in /Mmee Consetm fet tame uber oa (Tansom demands are met by May 9. oes vine ana’ tile ‘assumption of| West into Sahara-like desert, de-|other parts of the state later. she lt Recae des Gaecifoaramda spite the ominous portents of the| Counties represented at the confer-|"NE DIENT 1. custom established| y POWs from = grotto near La ee retired. ‘from |Current swirling dust clouds. ence were Dickey, Sargent, LaMoure,| tie tirst concert, the hour has been| Virtud. Honduras, the “fountain of| This is the reassuring opinion of|Ransom, Barnes, Cass and Richland.|®) 1. 's:99 o-clock so ‘Gan tee | plood” is one of the world’s strangest | the presidency of the Society of Auto-!p- witiam J. Humphreys, veteran PLANE ORASH KILLS Two [wish to do so may first attend sua sights. The liquid’ has the appearance | meteorologist of the U. S. weather CRASH KILLS “| of and even coagulates. | paper reat here mer bot sagas bureau. Although the dust storms,| El Paso, Tex. April 24—(P)—Mr. day evening church services, | which have | eeeped with|#ided ‘and abetted by continuing|snd Mrs. Carl Denkman, Tucson, Aris., So eee | many “firsts oe drouth, are doing heavy damage, he|Wwere killed and their bodies burned! No Automobile Tags eran rendcbakey goss credit for the i#¥S there 1s no reason to feat inat beyond recognition when, thelr alr-/ 7 O6t Over From 1934 J To Studebaker g068 crott Joments| the area where they prevail will be-|plane crashed Tuesday night near m development of sucl vancements| come a permanent desert of shifting | Fort Hancock, 54 miles east of here. is sponsoring « College Ball THURSDAY EVENING Just use Lux in the dishpan. It keeps hands eoft and youthful. It’s foolish to risk soaps with « ee 5 If Thad my way as free-wheeling, automatic ride con-| sands vegeta: North Dakota's prison antomobil Roo. harmful alkali when Lux is 2 regular beaut i I'd take my Schilling Coffee trol. all steel bodies, planar front pice ligt to sere The New Guinea spiny ant-eater|license plant ended its ‘manufacture po = reg treatment for less than 1¢ a day. = like a Persian P. wheel suspension and many others,”| Onty » complete change of climate |!5 ® (et acl pen eggs. These|of tags for 1934 with no passenger jerson 10! like a Persian Pasha, ‘hé said. ““We're* going on giving calamity, |#fe carried around in ® pocket until | plates left over, and only 240 pairs of motordom new devices that make pesca anes Naren a there ty. at hatched, commercial plates in excess, the state automobiles perform better, ride bet- -] ter and look better. If you think % freer _ a eager in — Weather bureau scientists are ex- i, leased some pecting a slight change soon, toward the things we're planning for the fu-/— cycle of cooler, wetter years, but ture. Studebaker really is on the way’ this shift will be only part of the Slowly! Luxuriously! Drain every fragrant drop! ‘ Men like Schilling Coffee mY: for its sturdy quality. to big things now that we're refin- i regular rhythm of periods of hot: : : : Bs Handle it with reasonable Lebar semper pier preemeren and cold-wet a Sale been ee Ss oe “ee care (but not kid gloves) since 1028, He is a graduate of Cor-| records have been kept, th H hs Sci and it's always nell University. ‘Twenty-four years) The Sahara desert of northern very. ing that Science re. ago he joined the Locomobile Com-/ Africa was produced by a major i = 2 Pee : fragrant and full flavored.* Schilling Coffee ‘There are two Schilling Coffees. One for percolator. pany of America and became vice! change of climate far greater than president. Resigning in 1925 he be-|any in prospect for this country. came chief engineer of the Pierce)That change took place slowly Arrow Motor Car Co., and later of!through countless ages, while what the Marmon company and served in/is now Europe was slowly emerging that capacity for a year, when he be-|from under the great ice sheet that came chief engineer of Studebaker. covered it in yiacial times. _ How Sahara Was Born Charley Hornbostel, Indiana uni-} The ice sheet covered Europe for versity’s great half-miler, hopes toja vast length of time, but when it take up graduate studies in Boston! began to melt, the air currents that govern weather were shunted into new paths as they flowed south, no longer bringing rain to northern Africa. As a result the Sahara desert was born. No such change of climate is in prospect for North America, says Dr. Humphreys, as long as the froz- en north stays frozen. He believes the ice there will melt some day, but not for 5,000, perhaps 10,000 years. Dust storms ure nothing new for the United States. for they have al- ways existed in the west, but until the last two years they were purely " about making cigarettes maine | CHESTERFIELDS | UGGETT MOVERS TOBACCO Co. The cigarette industry could never have been what it is except for these modern ciga- rette machines... They make good cigarettes and smokers know each individual cigarette receives the most care- ful inspection. _ You'd hardly believe such local disturbances. However, sev- attention to detail possible un- eee tess you could see it with your W | t h g ing 4 own eyes. ingredient of When the Chesterfield tobacco comes to the cigarette making machines it has been blended new Victor. strong winds eke ee cee and cross-blended. over le ee gd Then it is cut into long even dust waiting ww be whirled into the shreds just the right size to smoke fee ean ee ge gt right and burn right. Se Sees may coniinne, save De Every Chesterfield Cigarette storm, has to be perfectly made to get by our inspectors. Until you open the package * b ge the eg - Galiaedtis yourself the cigarettes are scarcely baler Corporation, with millions in ow 5-pgssenger Sedan touched by human hands. ih you—no beak lane, no =" ¢ Mild ripe tobaccos, skilled aerh Eee vet vinaions” $ workers and the most modern ( other cars—it’s streamlined in the Pleasing p gear ag Psa ee help bai to e Si other Sa eceosns Phe includes Ghareeere equipment sod Fea. cigarette that nt fm eae am s = eral tax. teo'cew soorpound hedcenlic Wakes bring Completely Equipped youtoa line stop. You don’t have Nothing More te Pay delivered price brings it easily © IN BISMARCK, N. D. within your means. Caravan Car 1 WILDE MOTORS, INC. oe 204 Fourth Street Bismarck, N. Dak. Ki ginttaner-Beisbame, i. D. beter, bone rr be ™ favre, One eeitany, M. a Baumann Motor Sales, Wishek, N. D. Con Underwood, fan NT BS en be c cpemnmmane Bo ™. a LM suena Regan, N. D. C3

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