The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 11, 1936, Page 2

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! q eae 2 ii PUBLIC GETS FIRST WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and y Part- jly cloudy tonight and Thursday; little ] d changeslarcemparalite: 1 For North Dakota: Partly cloudy * [tonight and Thursday; somewhat warmer northeast portion Thursday afternoon For South Dakota Motordom’s Newest Models Are | tontsnt Unveiled at Automobile somewhat ntral por- tana: 5 le Shows; Trailers Popular se Fal Thursday ANCL ee naten =e ae New York, Nov. 11.—(4)—Dazzling. | ss " burnished until a lady could powder) 2i#ht and Thurs her nose using the hoods for mirrors, | ternoon the 1937 motor car models were un- veiled at the national automobile show | Wednesday with great ado about over- | ,,,7 arives, hypoid gears, recessed buttuns | |, on the instrument panel and other things which tempt a man to part with | ‘ his money. 3 There is more power in proportion ; to weight, more room in the interiors, rubber covers for running boards tint- ed to match the body and, in one manufacturer's output, a system of | “floating” the body on the chassis | with rubber cushions. | Trailers Attract Crowds Byt the part of the show where the j customers stood three-deep was the | T° portion * pressur ricts, Winnipeg 1 ox, ne weather Is ge 1 temperatures are mod- 24 hour Sunrine, rek Sta x month to date ... this month to date . fourth floor trailer exhibit. Home | , WiAte dette Bete ce sweet home has been put on a ball» nuary Ist to date . bearing-and-rubber foundation. The} ed deficiency to date more ambitious of the 24 manufactur- | ers exhibiting free-wheeling cottages | have produced parlor, bedroom, kit- | chen and bath for the motor nomads. ; Here 1s a glimpse of the machines, in _the lowest price ranges: | Flymouth—tThe front seat measures 48 inches. Five different kinds of in- sulation are used to reduce noise such | as the familiar “drumming” of the | steel bedy. The body is mounted on} rubber “outriggers” attached to the! frame, an adaptation of the Chrysler |! “floating power” engine mounting. Willys—The makers advertise up to, 35 miles on a gallon of gasoline. he | car is smaller than the others in the | lowest price class, but it has remark- | able roominess. The car is priced to} t sell well under the Ford, Plymouth, and Chevrolet. Styled After Zephyr | Ford—Styled generally after the! Lincoln Zephyr, the 1937 Ford offers | motors of two horsepowers,- 60 and 3%: The newcomer, of course, is the 60 h, and the car so powered will sell well under the regular 85 h.p. models. Two other new features charactrize the | | 1937 Fords, the one-pioce, all-steel top and a cable-and-conduit braking sys- tem. ih Chevrolet—Geod-looking bodies are longer and, with the use of a hypoid rear axle, lower. She manufacturer announces a completely new engine | s with the compression ratio boosted to 6.25 to 1. NORTH DAKOTA POLYTS Low- High- Low- Texas, clear dy. Duluth Edmonton, Kansas City, Low Angele: Miami Milos City, represent , 22 of Ameri- can manufacture, and seven brands of commercial vehicles. Vets Again Examine | Mrs. Roosevelt Urges Notices of Deaths! Arms Propaganda Ban | on sD Bae zs Ewe | Minneapolis, Nov. 11.—(?)—Mrs wat residents and one former! 5... i) resident, observed Armistice day Wed-|/Tanklin D. Roosevelt, asserting we nesday by examining again official! “Must Not Go to Sleep” on thé ques- war department notices of their|tion of war or peace, said regulation Goethe Je action. } |of the munitions manufacturer and inspected LTD IN a ve in clurbing the propagandist are two ma- France with his name on the wooden’ Jor moves which would aid in remain- cross marking it. ing aloof from conflict. Dixon, reported killed in action July 22, 1918, is a truck driver here. | ; Robert Clinefelter, reported killed: Peace,’ Mrs. Roosevelt, said there Aug. 4, 1918, lives now in Omaha, Neb,| Must be a realization of the role the Roy Fellers of Coldwater. reported | munitions-makers play in the war- killed Oct. 17, 1918, is a baker | peace question. eee “I believe one of the safeguards Unidentified Baby Is | will be the taking over of all making ot munitions by the governments of Snatched From Dog |"; world,” she said. The president's wife asserted fur- | Pearl Harbor. La.. Nov. 11.-(~)—A/ ther “we must know enough so that 2-day-old baby boy snatched from the! We won't be taken in by propaganda. mouth of a dog had this rural settle- | Knowledge of the means used by | ment excited Wednesday. | propagandists she termed part of the Mrs. Louis Crawford first noticed | ‘Positive equipment” for maintenance the dog running with a white bundle | Of peace. in his mouth. ! She seized the bundic. Mrs, Crawford said scores of per-) Need Money: Briefly ... Here's Our Loan Plan sons visited her to see the eight-/ pound child, “in the best of health,” and about 50 people already want to; adopt it.” i “We're going to call it Moses be- cause it was found by a miracle,” Mrs. Crawford said. Schilling Toasted TCA | Toasting « tea leaf | | | 1—85 to $400 loaned, and you get the entire amount in cash, Repaid ments. install- in monthly 3—Loans made to single persons or married couples on their own signatures, or automobile collateral. develops extra flavor- delicious delicate flavors you otherwise ‘would never Phone, Write or Call Out-of-town loans made everywhere Salary Loan Co. Geo, Stevens, Mgr. Dak. Natl. Bank Bidg. Phone 405 Bismarck Get The Habit Ship or Bring in and get the HIGHEST MARKET price for your SKUNKS, WOLVES, WEASELS and MINKS. Also Hides, Wool, Sheep Pelts, Horse. Tail Hair, Cop- per, Aluminum, Brass, Babbitt, Radiators and all me- tals, Rags, and Cotton Mattresses. Scrap Iron and Bones in Carloads and Small Lots. BISMARCK HIDE & FUR CO. é CHARLES RIGLER, Manager Cor, th & Front in Frame Bids. Across trom Oceident Elevater gPhone 334 BISMARCK, N. D. Write P. O. Bex 463 nerally fair} ‘| Quins’ Doctor Takes Defeated in Invasion of | Chahar Province Peiping, Nov. 11.— (7 —Suiyuan provincial forces, resisting an invasion - | from Chahar province, repulsed an at- ck of 30,000 .Manchukuoan and : |Mongol troops Wednesday. The invaders were driven back afies they had attempted to pentrate into the far northern province with fight- ing planes, armored cars and tanks. First reports did not detail casual- 6, © | ties of the fierce battle. Chinese reports declared the fight+ ing occurred in the vicinity of Taolin, where two combat ships, alleged to be of Japanese manufacture, were forced : |down, (Advices from Kalgan, Chahar, de- clared residents of Sulyuan view the pressure from the east as tantamount to extension of the Japanese-spon- sored state of Manchukuo westward). Whirl at Night Life Chicago, Nov. 11.—(#)—Canada’s widely known physician, Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, who ushered the Dionne quintuplets into the world, slept late Wednesday after a whirl at Chicago's night life. Through @ cloud of smoke. from his corncob pipe the country doctor last night gazed sleepily at 25 scantily- clad chorus girls as they performed a “mirror” dance at a popular near North Side night club. Seated at a table fronting on the dance floor, he commented in an aside to his fellow guests: “It’s been an exciting night and I've enjoyed it all. I've seen a great show. Everybody seems happy. It gives one a ‘hellish’ feeling.” Hull Holds Informal Confabs Aboard Ship Aboard the S. 8. American Legion, at sea, Nov. 11.—(#)—Secretary~ of State Cordell Hull, already a welcome conferee to Latin-American diplomats CONTINUE from page ene’ Agriculture Said Stabilizer During Times of Upheaval! words, as human beings. with our in- @ new realization that the gospel of have not kept pace with the march of scientific and mechanical develop- ment.” Summarizes Dangers The outstanding dangers to the Re- public were summarized as the four horsemen of Monopoly, Bureaucracy. Fascism and Communism. The sober- ing thought should come to all, he said, that “isms” thrive only in the cause of discontent. Hunger, despair, ignorance, injustice, lost hope and stifled ambition are forces that have driven Communism forward in other lands. May we accept the warning and escape the doom. Espousing the basic traditions of America, Taber said: “Our nation will endure, provided there comes into the life of industry, capital and finance & new realization that the gospel of the Golden-Rule must become s part of the unwritten law of the land. After |i America’s ‘most priceless posses- D sion is not {ts men of great wealth, its unsurpassed industries, but rather the fact that we preserve to all our citizens &n opportunity to live a self-respect- ad life and enjoy the fruits of their “Our depression came from many causes, but primarily through the failure to distribute properly the wealth that we as'a nation create, To those who see cléarly, there should be no conflict in’ the apparont paradoxies of this age of speed and progress, plenty and want. There must be moro of brotherhood and hu- manity, less of ambition and selfish- hess. Human values must rise above the dollar sign. We can preserve tor our children’s children the American way of living. We can prevent the forces of destruction from gaining a foothold on our soil only by preserving and maintaining the great middle class of our national life, Neither the very rich nor the very poor can make a civilization that can endure.” Warns Farmers Turning to the problems of farmers, he said they should be warned not to become too enthusiastic at the prospect of immediate profit or to repeat in 1937. the mistake that we have some- times made of greatly increasing pro- duction. because of his informality, invited} The history of agriculture in Amer- them Wednesday to join him in une {ica, he said, is dominated by new and seremonious “deck chair diplomacy.” |free land until récently. As a result, Hull, as head of the United States |he said, the government en delegation to the inter-American con- | bad farm practice by continually open- ference which begins Dec. 1 at Buenos jing gew fertility and new opportunity [St Alexius hosp! Speaking in the municipal auditor- | ium Tuesday night on the subject | Aires, asked other delegations aboard ship to meet him for frank chats on mutual problems. The entire Haitian group responded immediately and spent several hours with him in discussions 0. Pan-Ameri- can problems, particularly a proposed agreement to enforce neutrality in the western world, NUS = NEWS Births Son, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fischer! 701 Front’ Street, at 6:10 pm, Tuesday, Mrs. Lillian Wurdeman of Mandan left Tuesday for Grand Forks, sum- moned by the death of her sister-in- jlaw, Mrs. Sarah Wurdeman. The fu- | neral services are being held Wednes- day afternoon, t» the tillers of the soil. Both expan- sion and economic pressure prevented farmers fron) giving proper attention to soll conservation, he said, but they must do so now if rural America is to survive. 5 Asserting. that: the farmer wants justice and economic: equality rather than subsidy he assertec that, until the government removes special favors it has granted other groups, or until the farmers handicaps are lessened, government assistanée will be required. Asserting that labor will be bene- fited by increased farm production, Taber’ emphasized that the farmers iave no desire to grow two pounds of fiber or two bushels of grain “just jto enable other groups to make the | additional profit. or to give employ- ment in the handling of his products.” Opposes Standardization Opposing standardization to equalize rates in the various methods of trans- portation,’ Taber algo condemned di- | | —at All Phones 34 We Deliver Cocoa Malt, j 16-oz. tin ” . 43¢ Argo Corn or Gloss Starch, 16-0z. pkg. 9c Ar mbassador Tis- sue, 4 rolls .. " 17c Pilchard’s Sardines, beanie 3 34 Minneopa Salad Dressing, qt. jar. Libby’s Spinach 2%, tin 2 for 35c Yeu'll ke spinach the-way Libby prepares it. Armistice Dance Music by Abbie Andrews and his Orchestra __ : of Fargo : Dome Pavilion Tonight Grocery Specials Nov. 11th to Nov. 17th All Seasonable Fruits and Vegetables cial Spe cay 2414-lb. sack ..........$1.23 49-lb. sack Frait Peels Pineapple Marshmallows Cc or Sliced 8-oz. pkg. 2 tte” 2 for 37c: 2 for 17c . the— Diamond Wax Paper, 40-ft. roll ..... Pork and Beans, 16-oz. tins, 4 for. age 2ilc —<$<—— MAX FLOUR Minneopa Kidney Beans, No. .2.tins, 2 for 2.5 Minneopa Pancak Flour, 3%-Ib, uae 23¢ French’s Black Pep- per, 4-oz. tin....... 9c Libby’s Pumpkin 2% tin 2 for 33c Even better than home made and ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1936 Weather Report | REGULARS REPULSE ARES wa, MONGOL, INVADERS 30,000 Manchukuoan Troops version of highway revenues for other {than highway purposet 5. Although he did not condemn the reciprocal tariff treaties, Taber rec- ommended that the tariff free list must be reduced “so we will have something to trade.” He demanded the removal of the “most-favored-na- tion” clause from such treaties and that they be approved by the senate. He said farmers insist that they not be “traded off” in these treaties and that a portion of tariff revenues should be set aside to equalize production costs for agriculture and that the p: ciple of the debenture be utilized to give justice to basic producers. * Branding ignorance and lawlessness as the highest tax payments, he urged farmers to band together to eliminate waste, graft and spoils from public life. Calls For Honest Dollar Calling for an honest dollar, he told farmers the present program for in- ternational monetary stabilization is a challenge to us to see to it that our finances are adjusted with the wel- fare of agriculture, the nation and our own prosperity in mind rather than that of international bankers and foreign trade. Crop insurance, he said, can be worked out and should be adopted but on a basis where every farm stands on its own base and that those living nespecially hazardous territory should be treated exactly the same way that @ like risk in fire insurance, work- men’s compensation or liability insur- ance is handled. In the event of war, he said, agri- culture must make a sacrifice along with industry to maintain neutrality because cotton, wheat and fats are as essential to war as are gunpowder, steel and munitions because trade with warring nations leads to trouble and “we must maintain that type of neu- trality which will leave fighting and turmoil over there and America’s fine young manhood over here,” DIES IN CAR CRASH St. Paul, Nov. 11.—(4}—William Or- laski, 25, was killed early Wednesday and three companions seriously in- jured when a blowout threw their car into a pole. COMING At Reduced Road Show Prices 3-M's SHOW OF SHOWS Willian POWELL LOY RAINER Paramount Theatre Nov. 19-20-21-22 (GREEN SUMMONED BY MINE WORKERS is Part in sion From jon Asked to Explain Union's Susper Fede Washington, Nov. 11. — () — The United’ Mine Workers said Wednes- day William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, had been summoned to appear before the mine workers executive board to ex- plain his part.in the mine union's suspension from the federation.. U. M. W. officials made public a summons’ which it said had been served on Green, informing him the executive board would meet here Nov. 16 to review Green’s “participation in conspiracy to suspend the United Mine Workers of America from mem- bership in the American Federation of Labor,” his “failure to adhere and conform to the policies of the United Mine Workers,” continuance of “asso- ciation and fraternalism with avowed ‘enemies of the United Mine Workers” Subsequent to its suspension by the federation end “distortion and mis- Tepresentation of aims and objec- tives,” of the mine union. Green is a member of the mine workers, or which John L. Lewis, is President, . Lewis is head of the committee for Heres your ticket for Ne og nee Action scenes actually filmed in the famous Rose Bow! stadium. industrial organization which 1s seek-| Furness Post No. 40. ‘The “Babylonia deity of Ea, of Sumerian origin, also is known a Enki and Ae. a CAPITOL TODAY AND THURSDAY ing to orgentee-alt workers ir each big industry into one-big union. As 8 result of this activity, the mine workers and nine other unions con- rected with the C. I. O., were sus- pended by the federation, the leaders of which favor organization of work- ers by crafts. The mine workers summons direct- ed Green to appear. hére either in : or be represented by counsel on Nov. 18. At that time the Federa- tion of Labor wili be holding its an- nual convention in-Tampa, Fla, : — ma | Crowd in Theatre Unaware of Fire New York, Nov. 11.—(#)—The protested vigorously when the pe vi ‘when the pic- tures flickered and the playhouse went dark. They stamped, whist- led, hooted— ‘Then ushers announced the show - would not go on, and would the eudience please pass out quietly, getting tickets for another perfor- mance on the way. The 150 spectators complied, grumbling, . It was only affer they were all outside that some one noticed smoke coming from the projection booth where theater employes were stamping qut.a fire. The annual American Legion Armistice Day dance will be held at Hudson Hall, Mandan, tonight. Sponsored by G. S. Musical - News Color Cartoon FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HERBERT MARSHAL u fifty yard line seut for the biggest Gadiron Romance! 14 FUN-PACKED - - THRILL-PACKED! Fast Romantic College Romance! Entertainment for one OE CHRYSLER ROVAL AN ENTIRELY NEW CHRYSLER INVADES LOW- PRICED FIELD priced field! A brand-new Chrysler Royal! . si style from bumper to bumper! + a .at touring speeds. A low-priced fine car. . . a big, roomy car! . . power-packed economy car! Chrysler engineers have cre- ated an amazing new engine... «+ + 93 horse- with the highest compression for its bore the the Gold Seal power... world has yet seen. Then . . . new car style... new roominess ... new riding ease .. . all at a new low price. GOLD SEAL PRINCIPLE GIVES NEW POWER WITH ECONOMY Gold Seal—Chrysler’s new © economy engine —is dynamite under complete-and velvety con- trol . . . super-high compression ... new larger exhaust valves of Austenitic steel . . . uses erdi- nary gasoline. Gold Seal gives y Cunvsrer invades the low- 122 Main Avenue DOLLAR FO THE GC three or four. more miles per gallon than many cars of much less horsepower. With Automatic Overdrivet it gives even greater economy WORLDS OF ROOM! Chrysler Royal is: lithe, sleek, dashing . . . a wonder for room. +.» « 4346 inches wide at the windshield . . . $3 inches at the center pillars .. . $4% inches at rear pillars . . . worlds of leg room, head room, elbow room «» spacious, level tonneau floors. Amazing new Aero Hydraulic Shock Absorbers .. . built like the tending mectanie of an airplane. ey combine with Airflow weight distribution and Amola steel springs to give such a ride as no other low-priced car ever gave before. Positively regal trim! Superb upholstery and appointments! Every famous Chrysler engi- . REATE THE EIGHTS ! . CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, INC.” GERTRUDE: MICHAEL MARGOT GRAHAME the Whole Famil: AMERICAS MOST MODERN MOTOR CAR / R DOLLAR OF neering feature + +» Valve-Seat He Pad THE cane Inserts...Floating Power...time- say cavers Bove re Soret tested, genuine Hydraulic Brakes . . » Safety All-Sizel Bodies... _ finger-touch, shockless steering. at Chrysler dealer showrooms. ty CHRYSLER ROYAL. . . 93 horse- jeans 199-inch overcall length. Ten y NEW 1937 IMPERIAL... pd $715 and up. Four-Door AND NEW 1937 AIRFLOW - or CHRYSLER SS In the field of luxury cars, Chry- horsepower, 204-inch over-all length. Ssiee types. $925 Kn] up. Four- sler presents two beautiful-new ‘Touring Sedan $995. masterpieces. In the thousand 4 CHRYSLER CUSTOM IMPERIAL dollar range... the big, powerful —_. . - 130 horsepower, 223-inch over-all Imperial . . . with the comforts length. Twobody types. a is of length and size, the beauty ff Sorower, 213cinen over length. of long, sweeping lines, the fin- Two types, $1475. est of appointments, magnificent — ¢armatic Oreririre is sundard on Chrys Ale i performance from-110 hore. Gr unteinalor | power. AML prices lst ot factory, Detroit. Hao be | In the 1937 Airflow... sang ly cadany ss reo! H ‘America’s most modern’ mo- Y tor car. With new beauty, new longer, lower lines, new $ . interiors . . « with exclusive ad- vantages of room, riding com- fort and safety made possible by Phone 700

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