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HOPE OF LOGALIZING SPAIN CIVIL WAR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 1987 Some Duplication ARMY OPPOSITION FOILS FORMATION BURDICK PROPOSES INFLATION SCHEME Collar revolving fund to loan money to local governments; 50 million for labor department; 20 billion revolving fund for real estate loans; 10 billion for the war department; 25 billion revolving fund for loans to industry, ‘and $10,050,000,000 for the department of agriculture which would fix prices and buy. or build warehouses for use In Schools Is Cut! Suggests Issuing Billions Bas-|in attempting to control the flow of SEEN IN ROME ACTS OF JAPAN CABINET Board of Administration Re-| Brought to Trial ; ing Dollar Value on One | eval Cantsr) Araet® ‘hus reducing 2 Germany and Italy Promise to} _ports It Has Carried Out as Mother-Slayer Former Governor General o Hour of Labor Infant Child Taken Embargo Volunteers If Others do Likewise foreign volunteers to the Spanish “little world war” as soon as other powers take like measures. The flow of foreigners to Spain, Legislature Orders General elimination of unneces- sary duplication work at state edu- cational institutions and retrench- ‘ments, ordered by the 1933 legislature over a three year period, have been made by the state board of adminis- tration, the legislature .was informed one that has made the civil conflict | from @ melange of European nationalities, would be halted when all powers con- cerned concur and effective means of control are decided upon, the notes said in conciliatory tones, Long awaited by diplomats seeking to localize the Spanish war, the two Fascist nations, acting in harmony apparently achieved through long conferences between Premier Musso- Uni and Nazi Air Minister Wilhelm Goering in Rome last week, left action up to the London non- intervention committee, Two Have Acted Britain and France already have acted. A long-standing statute was invoked to prevent British enlist- ments, while France adopted a meas- ure to keep Frenchmen out of the conflict. Soviet Russia has declared she would participate in a general check on volunteers, but not in “unilateral | Ped neutrality.” ‘What measures the non-interven- tion committee could invoke to con- Korea Obeys Emperor ’in Seeking New Government Tokyo, Jan. 25.—(®)—Efforts of Gen. Kasushige Ugaki to form a new cabinet and end Japan’s grave politi- cal situation were reported Monday to be blocketl by army opposition. The @apanese press declared the army was refused to name a war minister for the Ugaki government, automatically creating a deadlock. Japanese law requires a general of- ficer on the active list must hold that cabinet post. The 68-year-old former governor general of Korea accepted his em- peror’s command to form.& govern- ment after a dramatic midnight ride from his home at Nagaoka. Once a peddler of vegetables, Ugak! is now regarded among the empire's most brilliant administrators. He always has been understood to be friendly toward the political parties whose bitter attacks on the army have brought the present crisis to a head. Ugaki, striving to avert failure, scheduled a meeting with Gen. Count Juichi Terauchi, minister of war in the resigned cabinet of Premier Koki Hirota. Terauchi led the militarist attack against the parliamentary parties in the heated diet debate that finally forced the downfall of the Hirota uvernment. The stock market, which declined sharply on Hirota’s resignation, re- covered appreciably. DR. A. F. HUNSAKER OF FARGO IS DEAD Christian Church Minister and Longtime Teacher Suc- cumbs at Rochester fine the Spanish war to Spaniards, the Italo-German communications. Gid not suggest concretely, but Ger- many promised to make participation of Germans a penal offense. music teacher-training, home econ- omics and Smith-Hughes agriculture have been eliminated. The elimina- tions have left the school two years of professional work in forestry and greenhouse and the junior college *, | work, including electives in commerce, paaate sea telling Adolf Hitler the “Th Ses cael of arlene was re- issue European peace or war was up to him, The British foreign of- duced to a trade school, with junior fice approved Blum’s frank stand. However, Blum only further illu- strated the divergence between France, insisting on a general settle- ment of all European problems, and Germany, which demands separate negotiations on economic and political issues with each power. Rain washed out the violent insur- gent bombardment of government Madrid, and the defense justa an- nounced it had succeeded in evacuat- ing 450,000 non-combatants from the city. —— ns | Faso, N. D., Jan. 25.—(#}—Dr. Tanned sa Andrew F. Hunsaker, 56, professor of was ig and py ooking nen ste social and economic sciences at the slaying of her mother, Gladys | North Dakota Agricultural college, MacKnight, 17-year-old athlete, | since 1919, died Sunday at Rochester, appears pale and wan above as | Minn. He had been in ill health a goes from her cell to court | month. : for trial in Jersey City, N.J. Her He received his B. A. and Ph. D. de- sweetheart, Donald Wightman, | grees at the University of Illinois and also accused, has attempted to | was an ordained minister in the take blame for the killing on the | Christian church, having received his ANBROSE C. MILLER DIES OF PNEUMONIA Garage Operator Had Been Il! science. Seven Weeks, Leaves Wi- dow, Three Children Ambrose ©. Miller, 52 a resident of Bismarck the last 17 years, died at 2:30 p. m., Saturday, in @ local hos- pital after a seven-weeks illness with lobar pneumonia. Mr. Miller, who for 11 years was employed by the Corwin-Churchill Motors corporation as & garage mechanic, had been operating @ gar- age of his own at 1921 Main Ave., for the last two years, His home was at 21 years, having worked in Morton county before coming to Bismarck. ‘He was educated in the public schools at St. Anthony. On June 4, 1928, Mr. ‘Miss Elizabeth Amann at Richardton, N. D. Besides his widow he leaves three children, Aaron 7, Deloris 5, and Donald 4. He also leaves the following broth- ers and sisters: Mrs. Carl Dybdal, Missoula, Mont.; Mrs. Anton Grunen- felder and Miss Caroline Miller, Man- dan; Andrew, Joseph end Paul Miller, 8t. Anthony; Mrs, Emil Stoltz, Man- dan, and Mrs. Max Weigel, Selfridge. Funeral services will be held at 9 Reff, Ben Steiner, Val Bitz, Sylves- ter Schneider and Ernest Vail. The body will le in state at the Calnan Funeral parlors until 6 p. m., Monday, when it will be taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Steiner, 507 Fourteenth St. to remain until time for the funeral. Mrs. Steiner is Mrs, Miller's mother. — Payroll Tax Payment Time in N. D. Extended Fargo, N. D., Jan. 25.—(#)—An ex- tension of time has been granted to those employers of eight or more per- sons, who were to have paid one per cent of their annual payroll for 1936 to the federal government by Jan. 31, under the unemployment phase of the social security act, it is reported by Leo J. McDonald, chief of the social security tax division for North Dakota, Under the new ruling em- ployers will have until April 1 to make this payment. This regulation affects only those who were required to fill out “form 940”, McDonald said, and only to the extent that instead the payment on or before it be made on or before of Jan. 31, April 1. Proposed Rate Slash On Potatoes Delayed Washington, Jan. 25.—(?)—The in- originally Jan. 25, will be held in abeyance until dered. TE) NOTICE! | Wants Butter for | —_—__—____—__ ground of self-defense. .| brothers and three sisters, omics given at the university shall be limited to service courses and shall not aim to provide professional prep- aration or major in that field of work, (6) That giving courses for small groups should be avoided as unecon- . An enrollment of 10 should fically the original intention of the school in being an industrial school and nothing else. Certain normal courses are taught there but are abridged as much as possible. The four year course has been discon- tinued.” Fargo Boy Named as West Point Candidate Washington, Jan. 25.—(7)—Rep. William Lemke of Fargo, N. D., has named Frank Mumm, Fargo, as a can- didate for U. 8. Military academy. Alternates are Alton Dalager, Noonan, and Wallace Bjornson, Devils Lake. TAKE UP TAX BILL St. Paul, Jan. 25.—()—Considera- tion by the house tax committee of the state legislature begins the fourth week of its regular 1937 session with both houses meeting at 2 p. m. Mon- day. Prisoners’ Bread Waterloo, N. ¥., Jan. 25.—(P)}— Influenza-Pneumonia Claim Tuttle Girl, 11 Influenza and pneumonia Saturday the life of 11-year-old Martha ‘Wetsel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Edward Wetzel, who live near Tuttle. ‘The girl was brought to a local hos- pital at 10:50 a. m. and died at 12:15 p. m. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at the German Lutheran church at Tuttle and interment will be made in the cemetery there, She was born Feb. 24, 1925, at Tuttle and was attending the Tuttle school. Be- sides her parents she leaves four ; astic fraternity, and vice president of the theological training at the University Place Christian Church’ foundation, Urbana, Ill. From 1910 to 1914 he was an instructor at the University of} > North Dakota, Grand Forks, For sev- eral years after coming to Fargo he had supplied the pulpit in various churches in the vicinity including Amenia, N. D., in addition to his col-| !78.) lege duties. He took an interest in Religious and sociological work at the college, was head of the discipline committee and a member of Phi Kappa Phi, national honorary schol- Fargo Rotary club. Mrs, Hunsaker, two sons, Richard )and Robert, at home, and a daughter, Gretchen, teacher at McIntosh, 8. D., survive. Funeral arrangements are in- complete. license. wars where not borne otherwise, and appropriating $500, Resolutions Adopted Bills Introduced 8. B. 81 — (Appropriations) — Au- thorizing $10,000 for the Lutheran Welfare Society of North Dakota for child welfare. 8. B. 82 — (Thorson) — Exempting farming and ranching land from taxes exceeding 20 per cent of previous five-year average yearly cash rental value. (Tax and tax laws.) 8. B. 83—(Cain, Young, Thatcher) —Extending until July 1, 1939, pro- risious of Tegal moratorium act. (Ju- jary). 8. B. 84—(Brostuen by request)— Giving lien of assessments in irriga- tion districts the same equality as liens with general taxes. (Tax and tax laws.) = 8. B. 85—(Strehlow) — Making it legal for banking, insurance and other concerns to invest their funds in notes or bonds secured by mort- gage or deed of trust and in securi- ties or debentures issued by federal housing administration or national mortgage associations. banking. in horses and mules. (Agriculture.) House House Bills Passed . H. B. 14—Establishing rules and regulations governing drilling, casing aa abandonment of oil and gas wells. H. B. 3—Appropriating $1,800 for clerk hire and expense of North Da- kote procurement officer. Bills Introduced H. B. 71—(Anderson and Livings- ton)—Defining usury as more than five per cent annually in interest. (Banks and banking.) H. B. 72—(Tax and tax laws com- mittee)—Reducing mileage of county officials to five cents per mile except sheriffs to eight cents a mile within Ee state and five cents per mile out- le. H. B. 73—(Tax and tax laws com- mittee)—Reducing mileage of state officials to five cents. #H, B. 74—(Livingston and Ander- son)—Fixing legal rate of interest at two per, cent annually. (Banks and H. B. 7%—(Anderson and Livings- ton)—Limiting interest on judgments at two per cent annually without compound interest, (Banks and bank- ¥. B, (76)—(Sand)—Appropriating $70,498.65 for operation of motor ve- hicle department to June 30, 1937. H. B, 77—(Appropriations commit- tee)—Appropriating $047.10 to pay Knight Printing company, Fargo, for Printing of 1933-34 pyblic document. Appropriations.) H. B. 78 — (Godwin - Bergum- Twichell)—Providing for registration of public contractors and fixing a (State affairs.) Camels are made from finer MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS Turkish and Domestic than any other popular brand Carctinn (Cuprright, 1981, R. 3, Reynoite Tebeces Company, "Paotea-Solem, Mert see them “Skiing Takes Good Digestion,” says Skiing Wizard— “AND A HEALTHY set of nerves too,” continues Sig Buchmayr, shown executing 2 jump turn (eft), and enjoying Camels during & hearty meal (rigb#). “I smoke Camels a lot. I know they don’t get on my nerves. And they help my digestion. Camels set me right!” Vigorous people count on healthy nerves and proper nutrition to ‘When you smoke Camels, the flow of digestive fluids—alkaline digestive fluids—speeds up. And you have a sense of digestive well-being. Camels are milder—betver for steady smoking. VETERAN TEST DRIVER, Ciyde Freemas {right}, absorbs hours of punishment in a test car. He says: “‘For digestion’s sake—smokeCamels’iss good idea. Camels set me right.” The marriage of Ada Leonard (above), former Chicago burlesque ying in a New York disclosed in Chicago torney announced he would file suit for her divorce from Edward Brady, electrical engineer of Shreveport, La. (Associated Press Photo) NAZARENES 10 HOLD ZONE RALLY FRIDAY Program to Be Given in World War Memorial Building Is Announced Program of the central zone rally of the Nazarene churches at the World War Memorial building here Friday was announced Monday by Rev. H. V. Sorenson, pastor of the local congregation. Devotions in charge of the Tuttle) church will open the program at 10 a. m., to be followed by @ sermon, “Communism, an Outrage to God and Man” to be given by the members of the Jamestown church. “Who Is the Lord” will be the topic dealt with by the New Rockford church and & song service by the Edmunds church end a sermon by Rev. 8. C. Taylor of Jamestown will bring the morning Program to a close. _ A business meeting will be held after devotions by the Denhoff church at the opening of the afternoon pro- gtam. The rest of the afternoon pro- gram will consist of a duet by Rev. “Resolved, That Our Men in Our Dis- trict Organize an M. M. M.,” to be led by Mrs, Soderholm of New Rock- ford; a song service by the Jamestown church; and a sermon by Rev. F. J. Cannon of Tuttle. ‘The evening's session will begin at 7:15 p. m., with @ prayer and praise service under the direction of the Bis- marck church followed by an evang- elistic service with Rev. T. H. Ova of Dickinson in charge. Resolutions Introduced H. Conc. Res. J—(Fitch)—Providing| for constitutional amendment requir- ing filing of all proposed laws with secretary of state 25 days before leg- islature convenes. Washington, Jan, 25.—()—Rest- ing in congress’ files, awaiting some fture action, is a vast inflation scheme described by its author, Rep. Usher L. Burdick of Williston, as a “utopian dream.” Burdick proposed in a bill to issue billions in new money basing the value of the dollar on one hour of labor; make it mandatory for the govern- ment to give everyone a job who wants one, stabilize farm products prices, and authorize the government to loan money on real estate to its citizens, local governments and industry. Unskilled labor would be valued at $1 an hour, the basis for the new money, which under Burdick’s plan, would entail discontinuance of the present currency except for coins. The army engineers would be di- rected to plan emergency work to supply jobs if federal employment of- fices to be organized in every county in the nation were unable to find jobs for men and women in private indus- try. If no work, either federal or pri- vate, was available, persons would be paid anyway. The bill also provides for a 25 billion By Pneumonia Plague Funeral services were held Satur- day afternoon at St. Mary’s proca- thedral for Wayne Clement Pfleiger, 2-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Pfleiger, living east of Bis- marck. Rev, Father Joseph FP. Schmidt officiated. The child died at 7 a. m., Friday, at the home of its grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Val Brown, 221 8, Ninth St. He was born Nov. 24, 1936. Death was caused by bronchial pneumonia, In addition to his parents and grandparents the child leaves two brothers, Robert, 7, and Raymond, 4. eee]... s.r... dren's Colds Yield quicker to - double action of VICKS Cs STAINLESS LIG AND BE CONVINCED: 901 Broadway BURLEIGH f ANOTHER TRUAX-TRAER CHAMPION PAYS THE LOWEST FREIGHT RATE! Truax-Traer puts quality above everything else ; ; ; and yet, because of the low freight rate that it enjoys, Burleigh Lignite actually costs you less than the few so-called qual- ity lignites, presented at times as substitutes for it... and. 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