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— THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1936 _ CE TROTZKY OFFERED REFUGE IN MEXICO WITHOUT QUIBBLE Government Defies Workers in Extending Welcome to Stalin's Enemy ~ LONDONERS’. FIRST NEWS OF KING’S RO} Veterans Entertain New England Group New England, N. D., Dec. 7.—Mem- bers of Anton Ulijohn post, American Legion, were hosts to 53 businessmen at their annual party here. Follow- ing a progressive whist tournament the veterans served roast pork with apple sauce and gravy, celery, rolls and coffee. Talks were made by County Com- missioners Theodore Monke, William Lembke and E. O. Starks, County Aud- itor W. F. Griswold, Acting Mayor Frank Sattler, Lions Club President MOTOR MASSACRE NOW A NATIONAL DISGRA Boing masons’ DAs Meee Ee | eteinet erie pont tlonal disgrace and @ personal men- nce that ace to every person who drives or ee en eee rides in.a car. The chief causes of iz this slaughter are excessive speed,| when rear wheels were over-confidence, carelessness, and in-| with Weed American tet difference to safeguards like the us| ‘Tire Chains the test car of Tire Chains when streets are slip-| in 45.8% less distance Pery from ice or snow. chains were*used, and Official Test No. 3143, conducted/ distance when chains were used G@ ROUTINE COSTS OF GOVERNMENT MAY EXCERD SIX BILLION PWA, HOLC, RFC and FHA Must Justify Proposed Ex- penses for First Time ‘Washington, Dec. 7.—(/P)}—Amid de- mands foreconomy and administra- tion budget balancing plans, congres- Sional committees begin this week to review. executive estimates of the pil- lions needed to finance the govern- ment for: the coming fiscal year. Apart from emergency appropria- tions for relief, the men who hold the federal purse strings will be asked to approve routine governmental ex- penditures which, informed sources Said, may exceed $6,000,000,000. Relief appropriations and the $: 237,000,000 soldiers’ bonus shoved ai thoriaztions of the last session above $10,000,000,000, Set Closed Hearings Closed hearings on the budgetary demands of independent agencies of the government were called Monday by a house appropriations sub-com- mittee headed by Rep. Woodrum (Dem., Va.). Many temporary agencies will be re- Quired to appear for the first time fore Woodrum's sub-committee to jus tify their proposed expenditures for administrative purposes. Among them will be the Public Works administra- tion, the Home Owners’ Loan corpor: ation, the Reocnstruction Finance cor. Poration and the Federal Housing ad- ministration. Deficit Expected Although a balanced budget by 1938-39 has been predicted in admin: istration quarters, the treasury’s re- cent financial operations have pointea toward a deficit of $2,500,000,000 for) this fiscal year. The deficit on Dec. 3 was $1,265,000,000 against $1,696,- 000,000 at the same time last year. Because of heavy drains on the treasury for drouth relief Secretary Morgenthau said upward revision of borrowing estimates would be neces- sary, He placed the additional re- quirements tentatively at $500,000,000, which would! mean a public debt of $34,600,000,000 by next June 3. NEW ENGLAND FOLK UNHURT IN MISHAPS Truck Sunfishes and Unload Hay; Others Have Narrow Escapes in Accidents New England, N. D., Dec. 7—Riding an overloaded truck can be as bad as riding a buckimg broncho, according to Peter Rettinger, living near here. Rettinger loaded his truck with a Jarge quantity of hay but as he started up a hill on the New England-Amidon road the front wheels were lifted into the air, the hay slid off the back end of the truck and the vehicle “sun- fished.” It came down with its front wheels in the ditch, then rolled over on its back. Rettinger was merely shaken and the truck was only slightly damaged. In another accident near here a car in which Paul Silsand, Joe Tingstad and the latter's father, all living near Bucyrus, were riding did a flip-flop and a barrel roll when it failed to ne- gotiate a corner near New England. ‘The occupants were scratched and bruised and only a few hours were needed to repair the car. Another mishap here was due to the cold weather frosting the windshield of a car driven by Acting Mayor Frank Sattler. Sattler, with five others in the car with him, crashed into an electric light pole. The pole was broken off and the front of the car was smashed but the occupants es- caped with scratches. Warroad Mayor Shot Fatally in His Home Warroad, Minn., Dec, 7.—(7)—E. A. Harloff, mayor of Warroad and Great Northern station agent here, was shot three times and fatally wounded Sun- day night. Alton Obeson, 42, of Roseau, surrendered after the shoot- ing, which occurred in Harloff’s home. County authorities were checking as to @ motive for the slaying. TRY OUT FOR RIFLE TEAM Fargo, N. D., Dec. 7.—Among 200 candidates for positions on the North Dakota Agricultural college rifle team are Dale Hellickson of Medora and David Bbeltoft of Dunn Center. * = — The Bismarck Tribune Job Department Telopheno 33 Biemrack, N. D.- King Edward VIII and Mrs. Wally Simpson and the crisis it provoked in-British government. was told, for the first time, by a newspaper, of the romance of ‘Thousands of Britons who never had heard of the ex-Baltimore beauty thus were astounded, when the tabloid Lon- don Daily Mirror splashed the story across its front page, as shown in this radiophoto. In addition to the king’s picture, the Mirror carried a picture of Mrs, Simpson. London newspapers previously had not men- tioned the name of the monarch’s friend in their stories, giving only vague information of a “grave issue” being discussed by the king and the cabinet. FOUR MILLIONS § ASDE BY U, S. FOR HIGHWAYS IN N. D. Fund Made Available Will Not Have to Be Matched by | North Dakota Approval of nearly four million dol- lars of federal aid money for high- way purposes in North Dakota by the secretary of agriculture was an- nounced Monday by the state high- way department. The announcement followed word from A. E. Palen of the U. 8. bureau of public roads, St. Paul, that the secretary of agriculture had approved the department's request that the un- obligated balance of 1936 and all of the 1937 regular federal aid made available without matching by the state. The works program for 1937-has been submitted to the federal of- ficials but no word has been received as to its acceptability, highway of- ficials declared. i From W. J. Flannigan, state high- way commissioner, who is attending a national convention of highway of- ficials in San Francisco, word was re- ceived regarding dissatisfaction with highway maintenance conditions in North Dakota. - “A letter from the head of the bu- reau of roads in Washington relative to maintenance..wes for guidance in my legislative recommendations to the governor so as to insure future co- operation with the bureau,” Flanni- gan said, He planned to confer with federal roads officials attending the conven- tion over the future road program and federal aid prospects. ° Four in Family Killed In Crossing Collision Cairo, Ill, Dec. 7.—(P)}—A family |” of four was killed when a Big Four freight train struck their truck at a grade crossing near Karnak, Ill., Sun- day. The dead: Tony Metcalf, 45, Joppa, Ill., grocer; his wife, Adele, 41, and their daughters, Adele Jenine, 4, and Carol Sue, 6. | \ MENTHOLATU Gives COMFORT Daily BEULAH LIGNITE ‘ECONOMY Premier Aberhart’s Party in Ballot Test Edmonton, Alberta, Dec. 7.—(P)— Premier Aberhart’s social credit party underwent its first test of strength; Monday since it was swept into power in August, 1935. While the only re- sult of the by-election in the far- ernment’s strength in the house, at- tention was focused on the balloting as an indication of public reaction. BERRY IS SUPPLICANT Washington, Dec. 7.—(7)—Gov. Tom Berry of South Dakota arrived here Monday to join in a plea for increased federal funds for western states in which 250,000 drouth farmers are be- northern constituency. of grouard ing dropped from Works Progress ad- will be a relative change in the gov-| ministration rolls. FIREPROOF HEAT PAD lated by switch. cover. | psn Cord Included tes. Sti ted milks, mayon- rine Gio bowl, convenient gait (1448 133889 ‘ga’ COIS Hedy Motes Waffles, to, Tarnlhe eet chrome plete botelite 3-CELL FLASHLIGHT Ward Valve! ‘shack absorber dondle. Mexico City, Dec. 7.—(P)—Mexico’s government opened its doors Monday to Leon Trotzky, the modern man without @ country, Granting asylum to the oft-exiled former Bolishevist leader was “in line with Mexico's traditional policy of giving refuge, without questions, to all political refugees,” Eduardo Hay, Mexican foreign minister, declared. Tt had no political significance, Hay said, confirming reports current here for 10 days that friends of Trotzky, who soon must leave his exile in Norway, had sought permis- sion for him to live in Mexico. Asylum for Trotzky, Hay asserted, did not “presuppose, of itself, affinity of thought, of purposes, or of ten- dencies between the country which concedes it and the individual who benefits by it.” By granting @ haven to Trotzky the government disregarded the powerful Confederation of Workers of Mexico, openly sympathetic with the regime of Joseph Stalin in Russia. Trotzky was deported from Russia seven years ago by Stalin, secretary general of the Communist party and 8 bitter opponent of Trotzky’s tenets. Excluded by all European countries and nearing the end of the period of grace allowed him in Norway, a statement issued by Hay said, Trotzky would have faced the necessity of re- turning to Russia, whose government. W. L. Gardner and Legion Coms-|by the Contest Board of the Amer-|all four wheels, mander E. T. Molzahn. Members of the Legion committee in charge were Adjutant J. L. Boucher, J. W. Grasl, J. J. Zimmerman, A. M. Hammes, Dr. T. L, Stangebye, Ing- vald Oakland and Tom Gallup. NAB $40,000 IN GEMS New York, Dec. 7.—(#)—Three armed bandits stole jewelry valued at $40,000 from Mrs. Jeanne E. Kerbs, 983 Park Avenue, when she returned home from a night club, at four a. m., Mon- day, she told police. England's Grand Union Canal car- ried 52,703 more tons of shipping dur- ing 1935 than it did in 1933, The Morning AfterTaking 4s hostile to him. Carter’ Little Liver Pills Nickel with a socket and ring ‘CURLING IRON... VALUE ‘this price! 9-CUP PERCOLATOR Aluminum modern design with cool handle in black, Smart +» bargaial ~~ Rubber cord and plug. Ni- . chrome ayers call unusvol ot 3 Food Mixer SAVES WORK What better gift than something that will make kitchen tasks easier. lectric food mixer and juicer, with o remov- able motor so that it can be used at the stove. All attach ments included at this low i BIG IRON, BIG VALUE -Chrome, with inch rome, 6Y, inch grecse- fess aluminum grids, hond!: Underwriters approved! Mica element just like expensive trons, Save! price! SB 95 Toaster IT’S A BIG VALUE always success wher Oe Le ricoh e euch goed 3 59 one, that ts chrome-plated with « black ; Visit Wards Household Gift Shop, ond see all the valves that will save you money on your Christmas Budget GOMERY WARD Phone 475 | UR. .. this gives you More Miles of Safety at a lower price..... @ Bars of steel double-welded across cross chains give greater traction and twice the thickness of metal to be worn through—double mileage—double safety. with venta / We WEED CHAINS The motoring public is alarmed by the terrible toll of driving accidents. Many who have been indif- ferent to tire chains in the past have decided to protect themselves this winter. Dealers who serve automobile owners can perform no greater service than to remind customers of Weed American Bar- Reinforced Tire Chains before they are caught in a jam. For now, more than ever, Weed Chains are the most necessary accessory. a WEED American Bar-Reinforced Tire Chains are made from Weedalloy, a tougher harder metal. WEED Patented Lever-Lock End Hooks hold ~ _ chains securely, make them easy to put on, remove, _ and adjust. Electric welded, case hardened, heavier WEED American Bar-Reinforced Tire Chains are the best buy. They remove “skid worry” —give greater traction—last longer. Ask for them at responsible accessory stores, garages, and service