The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 3, 1935, Page 2

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2 DOLE MAY CONTINUE |; Tesx 2 shots "1 TEACHER OATH DESPITE NEW DEAL °;s=osesve*) ACTS ARE PENDING! nadian government sharpshooter, | “felt low” Tuesday because he ||. took 24 shots to kill 23 bison. {Vigorous Controversy Attends Prrshell hae the fob of slaughter- Welk oe ‘ ing 500 buttalo to keep the fast- Srive ts Require Sworn multiplying Elk Island herd from _ BRRORT 10 DROP IT that the administration may possibly deem it necessary to ask congress for| In‘20 other states teachers’ oaths bills more “dole” money, despite the New| Deal effort to scrap this form of re-| N| RRS IN CHORUS: are pending or are expected to be in- i | troduced wh legislatures open Hof, was heard ‘Tuesday in intormea| \ANULY ) 1 bgeathe sh Jee ee Fe quarters. i | "Vigorous controversy has attended This possibility was under discus-/ St | the drive. “Swear to uphold the con- sion in one part of town while in an-;Qrganization Placed on Tem-' stitution” is the cry of the Daugh- other the house appropriations com- . ers of the American Revolution; the mittee sat down to preliminary work; porary Basis; Plans Christ- | american Legion and its Auxiliary on the budget for the fiscal year be-/ mas Program and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. ginning next July 1. | ‘4 ! In reply, “academic freedom” ts be- Chairman Buchanan (Dem.-Tex.)| z ‘ing urged by John W. Studebaker, ted- of the appropriations committee has} k men ified eral commissioner of education; by expressed hope of cutting the deficit from an estimated $3,281,000,000 this year to $500,000,000 next. But most committee members ser little chance of making any rea!ly sizeable savings anywhere excep. on! relief funds. Ihme Calls Attention To Board Resolution laws, seven of them in the past year. i; ‘ i Aprropriations Committee il Ovarrunning: tes @bdcadts rahae, Pledge of Loyalty ith Federal Budget | Park officials hope to double the Huddle With Federal Budg kill today and maintain a rate of | Washington, Dec. 3.—(P)—A survey Pruning Knife 50 a day until the job is done. Tuesday showed that the movement | se jto require teachers to swear oaths o! ca ae | loyalty has gained much momentum. Washington, Dec. 3.—(#)—Talk A BISMARCK MALE Twenty-two states have passed such | Li Ft Pk | Bism in the organization of a Com-| the National Educational asscciation Chorus at a meeting in the}and the American Federation of Memorial building Mon- | Teachers. day evening. | Because the last congress passed, The group was organized on a;not only an oath law for the District temporary basis with a view to sing-|of Columbia, but a law under which ting one or more pr n during the} teachers here have to sign a state- {Christmas season. If it proves suc-|ment they did not teach Communism ‘cessful and the members desire to! before receiving paychecks, this city ‘continue it manent basis and will constitute the | struggle. first male chorus, recruited from the | public generally, in the history f/ Aged Leith Resident Attention to the fact that provision had been made for the Logan county | Bismarck. ‘ | * A FERA offices in the court house atj Myron H. Atkinson was elected/ Will Be Buried Here Napoleon is asked in a letter received!temporary president with George} by The Tribune from A. H. Ihme, Lo- | gan county auditor. | A copy of the minutes of a special meeting of the Logan county board, attested by Ihme, showes that a spec-| jal meeting was held Nov. 18 wiil 7 Sk ; John E. Williams and Mrs. Grace|°*cellent singing organization. Clendenning, Bismarck, and Lesli|, Many of the men who attende Ovre, Logan’ county administrator, a:/Bave never before sung in Bismarck which time the FERA was assigned, [ut proved themsolvis possessed of exclusive use of the courtroom and|Cxccllent voices. In the one practice | Gbei clerk of; court's office With the|ne eum | exception of such use as might be | CRttNy. 1 1 practice twice a|1f@ Herbert, formerly of Bismarck made of it in connection with judicial! yee); until Christmas, from 8 to g | but now residing at Fort Yates. business, and that the FERA exec Bon Jan. 18, 1860, at Monee, Ill., ;each Monday evening and from 6:3( tives agreed to the rules governing its! ty 7:39 each Friday evening. The|M®. Herbert came to North Dakota use laid down at that time. . y ractice ti riday will be dis} eq {Many years ago. His first wife, Miss The letter is dictated by the action Pie Ky tatae tee all be dispensed . ith, however, because of the Amer-|Mary Peterson, whom he married in of the FERA in moving its county of-| ican’ Legion carnival this week-end | June, 1892, dicd and he was married fices to Gackle subsequent to th?) and a practice will be held at 3 p. m.,/a@gain in January, 1919, to Mrs. Anna passage of the resolution. Sunday. Puture practice sessions will | Sills. Fisher as temporary secretary. | ae, d, Hecpert, 8 be Dele De _Ralph W. Soule, director, put the | win’ be buried here Wednesday fol- eraup through «brief praciice after loving funeral services in the Webb disposed of and at its close expressed |fyOtners CHAPS. Fev. Walter Paiste confidence it would develop into an| onurch, will officiate and services will qjstart at 3 p.m. Mr. Herbert died Monday at Leith |from complications of old age. Short services were held there Tuesday be- fore the body was brought to Bis- marck. Mr, Herbert is the father of Min be held in the American Legion club| He leaves his widow, his sen and Jeight grandchildren. He had been ill jfor several months and spent several | ring for the chorus |Wwecks in a local hospital. {Monday night were: L. E. Standley; | ere Omaha, Dec. 3—(#)—Maj. George | George Regstad, 2. J. Berger, Paul c.) Bangs Is Honored by Gibbs, regional officer of the Nationa!| Bennett, George H. Fisher, Gordon| * ge Park office, said the regional’ office| MacGregor. Archie A. Oman, Louis | Lawyers Association here Monday took charge of 10 civil-|H. Auerbach. Leonard Mille: soi . " fan conservation camps for which the) ae arate cee SEES eer Lead laa babe ners i viding | He son, Fred Brodl, E. L. Kap- a Fe erent prowling cer, Mr president of the United Mutual Life ‘The camps include those at Cannon | ance company with offices at apace rr | Indi is, Ind., n named a Falls, Lake Shetek, New Ulm, Crysta be eiseon Se at otis sainehiexa eBay AMbOlS eee ene ew onmitasea Fate § man, John B(ation’s special committee on legisla~ PUK Ptae ces oe Noe Be ‘Al Wohl, Bot | tion relating to municipal insolvency peer c en Bt TORE iy "Lille- |has been received by friends in Bis- Dakota, and Laurel, Mont. ies n, S. T. Lille- | has y jmarck. The committee will study the er Kunz, | est means of assisting many cities to Two Fargo Men Face jy Face Robbery Count) Dei: Detroit Lakes, Minn., Dec. Two Fargo, N. D., men, Silas S' m= Martir Hall, sent its recommendations to the com- |ing session of congress. REFUGEES Bangs previously had been made a »\—The Standard | member of the standing committee 30. and Al Stullick, 31, were in Becker | Oil York announced | Municipal law. ‘The new apopint- sday it was holding a motorship ment is of a temporary character and county jail Tuesday charged with; T ‘ 7 first degree robbery in connection} sha, Human Province, in|4" addition to his regular duties. RENO INVITES DEBATE with a series of holdups. They were} readiness to assist the evacuation of | arrested several days ago in Hibbing.| 100 American sees fleeing before} pes r 4 | 2 les Moines, Dec. 3.—()—Milo Re- The pair waived preliminary hearing| the advance of thousands of commu- no. nen president of ae Farmers and were bound over to district court.! nists across Hunan Province. ‘Holiday association, invited Secretary | RCE Sag RE | Wallace Tuesday to debate him “at | STRIKE CLOSES 40 STATIONS | CLIPPER AT WAKE | Minneapolis, Dec. 3—()—Forty| Ww Island, Dec. 3—(P)—(Via| aay eee Anon emmislennes service stations of the Texas Oil com-| Pan-American Airways Communica- | ———————— pany were closed here Tuesday after| tions)—The trail-blazing China Clip-} 2 DIE IN MILL CITY Local No. 19802, Gasoline Station Em-) per landed here at 3:58 a.m. C. S. T.! Minneapolis, Dec. 3.—(#)—Two per- Ployes union, called a strike charging | Tuesday completing the second leg of |sons were killed Monday night in the company discriminated against|is return flight from Manila to the |traffic accidents. They are William union members in leasing stations. California mainland. | Foth, 29, and Peter Larson, 51. | Wednesday and Thursday Only A Special Group of 200 Fall Hats— Regular $1.88 Sellers for 49° Dunn Hat Shop 407 Broadway e Many Styles to Choose from in Black, Rust, They’re Smart! Pep Styled! Navy, Brown and Green. Get Yours Early. No Exchanges No Refunds FIRESTONE TRAV-LER apo jomss crc Lt crouse hte vill be placed on a per-'has become a storm-center of Boal . {escape from the financial morass inj ") |Which they find themselves and pre-| jthe —————_——¢ Heiress Deserts Canadian Convent New York, Dec. 3—(?)—Life ihe an American college instead of a Canadian convent awaited Nataie a Carr, 21-year-old heiress, Tues- lay. The girl, who entered the Pres- entation of Mary convent at St. Hyacinthe, Que., two years azo so secretly that a widespread search developed before her whereabouts were discovered eight months later, is back in New York. Her departure from the con- vent last Friday was almost as mysterious as her entrance. When she left the convent she was within a few months of qualify- ing for sher final vows as a nun. RABBIT HUNTER IS Lake Farmer, Dies in Rugby Hospital Rugby, N. D., Dec. 3.—(#)—Clarence Toste, 28, Pleasant Lake farmer, was fatally wounded in a hunting acci- dent late Menday, dying at a local hospital. Toste was hunting jackrabbits with a brother-in-law, Cecil Rohrer. Ac- cording to the information given au- thorities, Rohrer’s gun accidentally {discharged when the trigger caught on a twig, while he was following Toste. The charge entered Toste’s ‘back and abdominal region. The widow and two children survive Toste. Stanton Community Spirit Wins Praise Stanton, according to a letter re- ceived by The Tribune, is the place to go on deer-hunting expeditions. The communication, signed by hunters from Jamestown, Hankinson, Fargo, Dickinson, Reynolds, Bu- chanan, Kindred “and other places,” asserted that the group from that district went home with a “nice lot of bucks” and expressed appreciation of “wonderful treatment” shown them by Stanton residents, especially G. Herber and H. C. Leupp. The let- ter ¢losed with a declaration of inten- tion to return to the Stanton vicinity next season. FLORISTS ELECT #t. Paul, Dec, 3.—(#)—Delegates to an organization mecting for a north central unit of the Society of Ameri- can Florists and Ornamental Horti- culturists Monday elected Henry Ro- sacker of Minneapolis chairman. FATALLY WOUNDED, Clarence Toste, 28, Pleasant: (COTTON PROGRAM IS. LAUNCHED FOR 1936 ne Control Plan Aims’ at Pro- duction of 11,000,000 Bales During Year Washington, Dec, 3.—(AP)—The AAA’s determination. to push. for long-time control of major crops de- spite pending controversy over the farm act’s constitutionality was em- phasized Tuesday by publicasion cf a new, four-year cotton program. It aims at production sof 11,000,000 to 12,000,000 bales in 1936, The AAA now has, in revid suc- cession, launched four-year control | programs for wheat, tobacco, rye and tcottcn, A two-year contract has been prepared for corn-hog producers. Officials predicted some method of, continuing crop control would be 'found, regardless of the supreme court’s ruling on the agricultural ad- justment act. Contract signers will reduce acre- age 30 to 45 per cent, for 1936, com- pared to 25 to~85 per cent for 1935 and 35 to 45 per cent for 1934. One benefit payment will be made at the rate of five cents a pound, | (approximately $8.60 an acre). ‘Three payments were provided in the 1935 contract. on two bases, totaling 4% cents a pound. ‘Farmer Under Arrest Neillsville, Wis. Dec. 3.—(?)—Ira Radtke, 22-year-old Greenwood farm- er, was under arrest in a hospital here Tuesday, charged with being the robber who escaped after his com- panion was shot down by an elderly jfarmer Sunday night. Sheriff Hal Richardson said he arrested Radtke at his home in bed with a bullet wound in his thigh Monday night. ‘The sheriff removed Radtke to a hos- | pital where a guard was placed in his room, Paroled Convict Gets 5 Years for Assault Devils Lake, Dec. 3.—(#)—Lester (Slim) Hamel, Devils Lake, paroled |North Dakota prison convict, Monday was sentenced to serve five years in the state penitentiary by Judge G. Grimson after pleading guilty to as- sault with a dangerous weapon. Hamel was arrested the night of the hammer attack upon Ike Edelman, Devils Lake merchant, but at that time denied any implication in the case. Edelman, ‘from “his hospital bed, had identified Hamel as the assailant. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUFSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1935 : In Wisconsin Hospital/ Infectious Laugher ; Gets Theater Pass Boston, Dec. 3.—()—Herbert L. Ohrenberger of Dedham thought the picture was funny—and his hearty laugh boomed out in a news-reel theater. ‘The rest of the patrons follow- ed suit. * Afterward the manager gave Ohrenberger a life pass, saying he has “the most infectious laugh and we appreciate your being in the audience.” Gladstone Defeats Assumption Abbey Gladstone, N. D., Dec. 3. — Glad- stone's high school basketball team defeated Richardton’s Assumption Abbey quint, 23 to 11, here Friday. The Abbey team featured a fast breaking offense but the locals waited for their opportunities and generally counted when the opportunities came. Ray Helbling, Gladstone guard, dis- played a nice defensive and floor game, . —— LANDSUDE BURES | ECUADOR VILLAGE 50 Persons Instantly Killed as Mass Slides Over Two- Mile Front oa Guayaquil, Ecuador, Dec. 3—(P)—Al tandslide buried the village of Verde Cocha early Tuesday, ee its 50 inhabitants in an instant. No one was left alive to tell whether any of the inhabitants of the village, set in the Andes, were awakened be- fore the slide hit at 3:15 a.m. The) jt makes other mass of rocks and dirt slid over a front of nearly two miles. The Ecuadorean government 1s sending relief workers into the area, for the railroad line was not caught by the slide. "Not only was Verde Cocha erased from the nap, but large portions of! two widely-known ranches were wiped away. Large number of cattle were destroyed. How to Keep Colds UNDER 4% CONTROL Cateh ling Cold?.. . Vicks Va-tro-nol helps Prevent many Colds At the first warning nasal irrita- + tion, sniffle or sneeze, use Vicks Va-tro-nol—just a few drops up each nostril. Va-tro-nol is especially designed for the nose and upper it—where most colds start. It lates Nature’s own functions —in the nose—to help prevent colds, and to throw off colds in their early stages. Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps avoid many colds, Fe Strangled Dead By Folding Bed ——————_— ‘San Diego, Calif. Dec. 3—(#}— Frank Mathews, 41, was strangled to death Monday by a folding bed he was repairing in a hotel apart ment, Heavy sprig Spuara had clamped the footrail ae his neck, forcing his face into the bed linens. Try This Sauce to Make a Meal Perfect Serve It with all meats, hot or cold. Use It in ie lads, 3 rhe hengih box cake. Whenever cran' ee much Ten-Minute brent sree 1 pound or quart (4 cups) cran| 2 ae water 134 to 2 cups suger Method: Boil sugar and water together 5 minutes, add cranberries and boil with- out stirring (5 minutes is usually sufficient) until all the skins pop open. Remove the fire when the popping stops, end allow the sauce to remain in vessel undis- turbed until cool. nee iin Anew, beautifully col recipe will be mailed free. Send postal to Dept. AMERICAN CRANBERRY EXCHANGE 90 West Broadway, New York City Caught a Cold?.. Vicks VapoRub helps End a Cold Sooner If a cold has developed, rub Vicks VapoRub on throat and chest at bedtime. VapoRub acts direct—two ways at once: (1) By stimulation through the skin like a poultice or plaster; (2) By inhalation of its medicated vapors direct to inflamed air-passages. Through the night, this combined vapor-poultice ac- tion loosens phlegm, soothes irri- tation, helps break congestion. Follow Vicks Plan for Better Control of Colds A helpfull guide to fewer colds and shorter colds. Developed by Vicks Chemists and "Medical Staff; tested in extensive clinics by prac- ticing ph; further lions. Pho'Pian to fully caplained in each Vicks Open House: with Grace Moore eery Monday 9:30 ¥. u. (8. 8. T.) NBC coast-to-coast 17s Million Vick Aids Used ¥ in y home use by mile package. ‘early for Better Control of Colds Eatmor Cranberries youre poyc little dewnenda Atle each month, with smelt carrying charge, on any tema ‘of merchandise sold in the ‘etore when the purchase fe $20 or more, Pay for gifts ovt oF income! MONTGOMERY WARD & Co. | 4-Tube Electric Radi The proof of | the cigarette is in the smoking --.and it always will be Smokers— both men and women— \ want a cigarette to be mild—yet not flat or insipid. At the same time they want a cigarette that gives them taste—taste they can enjoy. Chesterfields are outstanding for mild- ness—outstanding for better taste: You can find that out by smoking them. (] ly - Chesterfields are what they say ‘1 Copelin Motor _ BISMARCK - - they are (© 1955, Lacozrr & Myms Tosscco Co, Co. | N. D. «as

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