The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 14, 1935, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WASHINGTON’S NAME INVOKED IN SUPPORT OF NEW DEAL LAWS ‘General Welfare’ Clause of Constitution Cited in Behalf of HOLC Washington, Nov. 14—(#)—The name of George Washington has been invoked to support a New Deal law fac- ing a supreme court test. The Heme Owners Loan Act of 1933 tals the law and in its behalf govern- ‘cmational university.” ment lawyers have"cited the “general ‘- welfare” clause of the constitution. .. They stated in a brief Wednesday thet Washington suggested in 1796 : that congress spend federal tax funds to “aid agriculture” and establish “a If the welfare clause were interpreted narrowly, the lawyers contended, both of Washing- ton’s projects would have been un- constitutional. Defending the loan law from charges that it is an invasion of states’ rights and beyond the limits of the constitu- tion, the New Deal men asked the court for a broad interpretation of ‘the welfare clause. It is known that the New Deal hopes to base its defense of AAA, TVA, PWA and other experiments largely on this - Clause. The government filed its‘brief mere- ly as a “friend of the court” because the dispute is between Wisconsin state officials and three Milwaukee building and loan associations which tried to shift from state control to federal units under the home loan law. The Wisconsin supreme court bar- red this transfer and also held in- valid that section of the federal act which permitted it. zs ‘The Wisconsin attorney general at- tacked the act as unconstitutional. | SLOPE NEWS Anamoose—Anamoose firemen will |, hold their.annual hall here Nov. 27. Hettinger—Mrs.~ .° Leslie Sims has been appointed director of the public library here. Medora—Hans Gotfredson trapped a bobcat weighing about 35 pounds, 3 feet, 6 inches in length. Mott—Funeral services were held here for Mrs. Henry Banning, farm mother residing south of here. Underwood—Falling from a teeter- totter, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Schempp fractured an arm. Kief—Puneral services were held from the Mennonite church here for John Dessenko, 21, victim of pneu- monia. Steele—Interment was made in the ‘Woodlawn cemetery of Ralph Phillips. farmer south of here, who died unex- pectedly. New England—Funeral services were held at Ortonville, Minn., for Mrs. C. J. Stark, 68, who suffered a cerebral hemorrhage here. Elgin—Cattle thieves using trucks are active in this area, ranchers re- port. G. G, Heim is the latest to re- port thefts of livestock. Hettinger—L. H. Fountain, 74, father of Sam Fountain of this city, died at his Lemmon, S. D., home. Funcral services were held there. Napoleon—H. G. Bonemeyer of Gackle was named president of the district here of the Northwest Retail Coal Dealers association. Dickinson—Two Dickinson girls, one 18, the other 12, were arrested for shop-lifting here. They were turned over to juvenile authorities. Bowman—Word has been received here of the death at Miles City of Mrs. Delilah Cook, formerly of Bow- man. Interment was in Miles City. Hettinger—Because of excessive costs, the Hettinger hospital has been closed by Dr. M. F. Williams, staff physician, and Miss Ruth Henstrand, director. Hazen—Word has been received here of the death at Memo, 8. D., of Rev. Augustus, Schult, former pastor of the Stanton Lutheran church. He was 51 years old. This Week’s SPECIAL Storm Window Glass 12x28 (single strength) ...... ae) |. 12x30 (single strength) . 24x26 (single strength) .. 24x24 (single strength) .. 24x26 (double strength) .. 24x28 (double strength) Vantine Paint & Glass. 313 Main Phone 544 aa psy omer OUT OUR WAY { OH, MY GOSH THEMS MY PRESSED BUTTERFUES YOU faim iil LEFT DROP OUTA MY FLOWERS! My TIFUL. COLLECTION OF PRESSED. FLOWERS T CANT HAVE A THING, AROUND HERE ~ B-HOO> CS SOON JAPS WARN NANKING AGAINST AC ACTIVITIES : Demand More share: Tours Carry- ing Out of China’s Pledges to Halt Incidents ————- | Nanking, China, Nov. 14.—(4)—Th>! Japanese government, through its! embassy, Thursday warned the Nan- king authorities of the necessity for) a more thorough carrying out of| China’s pledges for the suppression) of anti-Japanese activities through- | out the country. In a call on Tang-Yu-Jen, vice for- eign minister, the Japanese embassy counsellor, Y. Summa, insisted the re-' cent incidents. at Shanghai must be {regarded as a clear breach of the} Nanking government's mandates sup- pressing anti-Japanese organizations.| The incidents referred to were the {killing of a Japanese marine, al- legedly by a Chinese, and demonstra- tions before Japanese-owned busi- nesses. Summa also called on- Chu-Chia-| Hau, minister of communications, and drew his attention to China’s alleged breach of good faith in secretively concluding the Canton-Hanoi air pact while the prolonged Sino-Japa- nese negotiations for an aviation: agreement remained incomplete, Only five vice presidents of the) United States were ever elected to! second terms: John Adams, Daniel| Tompkins. George Clinton, John Cal-' houn, and Thomas Marshall. improved can for beer. | bottle with almost any openey. If you | like to drink your beer right out of Beer ‘Now Distributed | In New “Metal Bottles’ Although the use of beer in cans| or metal containers still is in its in-| | fancy, improvements in the type ot jean already have been made, accord-| ing to H. R. Winter, manager of th| ; Missouri Slope Distributing coe in Bismarck. A few months ago, Winter said, ‘t he ‘country was startled by the announce- | ment that beer would be obtainable | in cans just like tomato juice, vege- tables or fruit. There was some spec- | ulation how Mr. and Mrs. Consumer) would react to the idea of departing} from the time-honored tradition of! drinking their beer from glass bot-| tles. “Now, along ccmes one of the big-! gest breweries in the United States—| Schlitz—with an entirely new and! A ‘metal bot-! tle’ they call it. It has a crown or cap just like the popular beer bot- | tle. It may be opened just like a} the bottle, Schlitz has made it pos-| sible for you to drink your canned! beer in the same manner. Just pu!l| off the cap and tip up the ‘metal bot-! tle’ “Schlitz states that their Lager in| cans will make an ideal companion package for Schlitz in brown bottles,” ‘Winter continued. “The can, or ‘metal bottle’, will provide a modern andj eonventent can when that type of} container is desired.” | An eight-mile subterranean walk | beneath two Kentucky counties can! be taken by visitors to Mammoth | Cave, Kentucky. By Williams SRWLLAMS, | T.M. REG. U. 8, PAT, OFF. ks » AMERICAN WIFE OF CHINESE SEEKS JOB: Pretty Ohio Girl Who Wed Son; of President Says Ro- mance Has Ended Columbus. Ohio, Nov. 14.—(P)—Viola | Brown Lin looked peel for a job! —snything but clerking in store. The pretty Columbus girl who elop-; ed with James Lin, foster son of the president of China, admitted the “east-west” romance “is all washed up.” vorce. Not inter-racial difficulties but! Lin’s job with the Chinese govern-| ment came between them, she said. “We agreed to separate because James’ father insisted he return to China and talte a Chinese job,” sae said. “He left Sept. 14 and we parted the best of friends, with the under- standing he would not return but would write.” Recent dispatches from Petping a dime ‘eaid Lin had become reconciled with a former wife, a Chinese. “Meantime,” Viola Brown Lin con- | cluded, “I'd like to find work—but not in a-‘five and ten!’” She met him when she was clerk- ing in a dime store. He had lost his wallet at her counter and she return- led it. Eighty per cent of all adults are} jimmune to infantile paralysis, ac- | cording to estimates. She said she would seek a ma ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1935 2,600,618 PERSONS ON U.S, PAYROLLS Number Working for or Depend- ent on Uncle Sam Is Ap- proximately 9,000,000 i ! Washington, Nov. 14.—()—A sur- vey Thursday showed 2,620,618 per- sons are now employed directly by the government with millions of other partially or wholly dependent upon federal funds. The others include an estimated 2,000,000 families still on direct relief,' 400,000 persons employed in govern- | ment construction outside of the} works progress administration pro- | pensation or pensions. An estimated | 3,000,000 farm benefit payments also will be made during the year. Because of the inevitable duplica- tion in some of these figures, a total of the persons or families drawing | support from the treasury could not | be reached. The grand total, includ- ing duplications, is almost 9,000,000. | Completion of the administra- tion's program for putting 3,500,000 unemployed on work relief will swell ithe total drawing regular pay checks from the government to more than 4,500,000. Correspondingly it will de- crease the total of those not employed directly, but dependent upon federal | \money. | ‘Planes Equipped With | ‘De-icing’ Substances} St. Paul, Nov. 14—()—Northwest Airlines, Inc., Thursday reported it is equipping its planes with a “de-icing” substance for safer winter flying. On wing and tail surfaces, said Croil Hunter, vice president and gen- eral manager, will be pulsating rub- ber strips to keep ice from forming. |The rubber “shoes” automatically in- \flate and deflate twice a minute. “Rubber cones for propeller hubs jare impregnated with a material pre- iventing formation of ice, Hunter said. SEEK RESCUED FAMILY Billings, Mont., Nov. 14—()—Au- ithorities Thursday sought where- ares of a Nebraska family rescued by CCC recruits when trapped near West Yellowstone in a snow storm and sub-zero weather. | | | | 815 Main Avenue gram, 855,867 drawing veterans com- |, e Beer That Made Milwaukee Famous Distributed by MISSOURI SLOPE DISTRIBUTING COMPANY Bismarck, N. D. Says Famous Art Pieces Are ‘Fakes’ ————— Dr. David mM. Robinson (above), professor of archaeclogy at Johns Hopkins university at Baltimore, con- tends that 40 to 50 per cent of the Etruscan statuettes at the Carnegie museum In Pittsburgh, and some in | imitations, other collections, are (Associated Press Photo) | Minnesota Corn and Potato Crops Grow St. Paul, Nov. 14.—(#)—Corn pro- | duction in Minnesota as of Nov. 1, the Department of Agriculture reported Thursday, totaled 142,791,000 bushels compared to last year’s final produc- | tion of 76,619,000. Potato production was estimated at 29,392,000 bushels. Last year’s yield was 23,380,000 bush- els, a 70-bushel average. 125 Policemen Killed During Last 25 Years Chicago, Nov. 14.—(4)—Police Capt. John P. Stege, veteran nemesis of gunmen, somewhat amazed interest Thursday to this statement by Detective In- spector Arthur Bishop of London’s famous Scotland Yard: “Even in the search for, as desper- ate a criminal as John Dillinger the Phone 128 listened with polite but} | scotland Yard police would not have been armed.” “If we tried chasing these hoods in Chicago with a billy club we'd get our ears shot off,” Capt. Stege replied. “Up at the commissioner's office are 125 stars, collected in the last 25 years. They are the stars of Chicago policemen killed by criminals, An elephant would consume 10 tons of food daily if it ate the same amount proportionately as a mcuse. Coronado Radio is the buy—They’re selling like hot cakes and what’s more, they’ve got sets to deliver. Consoles or Mantel, in A. C. or Battery Sets and Car Radios. Farm Mantel, $21.15 complete. 10-tube A. C. Console, down pay- ment, $7.00. “B” Batteries, 98¢ up. Gamble Stores. The actual consumption of food is 100 pounds, however. RED POLL BULL 20 Months Old H. T. Beckert 11 miles west of Killdeer Use Dak-O-Nite Toilet Soap for your hands, your face or as a shampoo. Then note the truly laxative effect on your skin. | refunded. E. A. Brown Grocery Speaks’ Grocery Dak-0-Nite Soaps and Powder We have them in stock and recommend them for all household purposes. Ask us about these North Dakota products. We have a very attractive introductory offer for you and each item is guaranteed to please or your money will be cheerfully Use Dak-O-Nite Green Laundry Bar or Washing Powder for cleansing your finest fabrics, silks, woolens linens. Guaranteed not to injure the most delicate fa- brics or colors. Richholt’s Grocery ' Zerr’s Grocery No. 2 Turx .... Armour Creameries will buy turkeys for the Thanksgiving period from Nov. 8 to Nov. 16, 1935 CASH “POOL” ADVANCE Our advance prices based on dressed weights, FOR LIVE BIRDS delivered at our plant, are as follows: No. 1 Young Toms ..... No. 1 Young Hens ..... Choice Young Hens and Toms. . No. 1 Old Toms .............-. No. 1 Old Hens ........ you at @ time expert and efficient service 1g 80 badly WEBB BROS. Funeral Directors Phone 50 Night Phone 50 or 887 - Opens like.a beer bottle. Pours per- fectly. Seder No deposits. No Used once, thrown away. Cools quickly, Takes up little space. * * pay} "Holds 12 ounices-~same as famous Schlitz Brown Bottles. Protects the real draught flavor of : SCHLITZ LAGER daa salable senadag en Oa NEW SCHLITZ CAP-SEALED CAN OFFERS YOU THESE ADVANTAGES Brewery lined—like Schlitz draught beer barrels. Safe—no sharp tools needed to open; no raw edges e -Clean—the outside of che can is not obese punched into the beer. empties to return. ‘OU’VE read about beer in cans! It’s the hig news of today! Everybody is talking about it. But here’s the biggest news yet. The best known beer of them all... the Beer That Made Milwaukee Famous... has come to town in a brand new kind of can. You can now enjoy SCHLITZ LAGER .. . with all its real draught flavor protected by a new Cap-Sealed can. It’s the can that opens easily—just like a beer bottle. Flip off the cap. Pour this appetizing SCHLITZ LAGER into your glass. You'll instantly recognize the bouquet and flavor of real draught beer. For it is brought to you just as it left our brewery in Milwaukee ‘ +» ite. fine Reyer. protected in this now: can shet:ja dined Seana like a Schlitz beer barrel. Isn’t it a satisfaction to know that your beer never touches the tin ... that it is always clear and brilliant . . . always protected. Ask for SCHLITZ LAGER in the new Cap-Sealed can. Until you do, you will never know how good ‘canned beer can be! ~

Other pages from this issue: