Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LOYALISTS’ FORGES. | FALL BACK BEFORE REBELS’ ONSLAUGHT sits Franco's Armies Are Gradually Closing in on Government Stronghold (By the Associated Press) Spanish government troops north- east of Madrid fell back Wednesday before an insurgent force which gov- ernment commanders said consisted of “15,000 Italians and Spaniards.” ‘The insurgent headquarters at Avila reported the advancing army had shattered government opposition elong the Guadalajara-Zaragoza highway and reached a point less than 60 miles from Madrid, moving up 15 Government accounts, admitting Madrid’s soldiers had yielded some- what in heavy fighting against a mechanized insurgent army, did not give the distance of the insurgent force from Madrid. Hold on Government defense forces held doggedly to their positions along the Aragon highway against terrific m- surgent fire and, in two undisclosed sectors of the new front, were re- ported withstanding the attacks, They found themselves - battling against heavily armored, mechanized infantry using tanks, airplanes and— until now unseen in this war—ma- chine guns mounted on swift, highly mobile motorcycles. Government Scommnariee sree Franco, Seat | Covers Finest C New heavyweight cloth. Give hest service, Full coverage! Form shaped. For all cars including 1937 Models, Full line of fibre covers Replaces tubes. Air-pressure tested under water. For Chevro- let. 1929-30 $3.25 Exch. moter 325 For Ford 4 cyl. 1928-34. For Chev. 29-31 On the third side of the predicted “nut-cracker” close-in, El Pardo, north of the city, a calm was believed to be the lull before the storm. Joseph A. Lundy, 81, Bottineau pau Man, Dies Minot, N. D., Mar. 10—()—Joseph A. Lundy, 81, farmer near Bottineau for 58 years and a pioneer resident of North Dakota, died in a Minot hospital Tuesday night of cancer. He was born in Canada July 1, 1856. He had homesteaded near Bottineau in Il He is surviyed by his widow, who is living with a son near Bottineau; two sons, William and Joseph, of Bottineau; daughter, Mrs. Paul Erdmann, Minot; three brothers, a) sister and six grandchildren, Lidgerwood Man Hurt ‘Internally by Cave-in Lidgerwood, N. D., Mar. 10—(7)}— N. R. Geressek, foreman of WPA projects in Lidgerwood, was injured internally when he was struck by 8 mass of frozen gravel in a pit cave- in north of here. He is in a serious condition. the “Escala Espiritual de San Juan Climaco”; no copies are known to be in existence. Liberal Trade-In Allowance 1, Extra—Center Traction Tread. Mini- mizes xtra—=Liquid Rubber Di Cords. 5 Eite—Dovbletaistated Cartées.” WRITTEN GUARANTEE kased SE ee ea Toiah: Weeds Against everything that can] Resists wear, heat, 9 happen to a tire in service. 5. Exta—Fatig Cords. Re- yee odseereBig Broad Ft Teed More 5 rubber surface for SAFETY. Pl otection— WITHOUT LIMIT of months or miles. 100% Pure Pennsylvania OIL Standard Quality 12:° Plus tax Every drop refined from 100% pure Pennsylvania crude! Gives complete lubrication protection in Soret frit Te: Generator 9c Set. V8, 1933-34... Seattcheveen, 32¢ ae Points lle 7. Exta—Shoulder Traction. From Rode Out of Town on ¢ of Town on Rail After Strike Failed Back in his temper one day in 1904 and kuocked down the check-wheighman at a coal senate in -Westmoreland spec Pennsylvania. miners’ strike that followed was sr eed by hunger four weeks later and young Philip Murray was 2 jade him ace or- ganizer for the ‘Committee for In- dustrial Organization—it was Mur- ray who was able to announce union recognition by the giant Carnegie- Illinois. Steel company. And alfead le such huge objectives as the coal miners’ wage conference and the or- ' ganization of the nation’s industrial workers. His ambition, he. says, is to see every worker in mass production industry organized into industrial! unions; that is, one big union for all workers of each industry. He has approached his task by methods directly opposite from those of his chief, John L. Lewis, Lewis charges at capital bellig- erently. Murray, resembling a quiet gray-haired school teacher, prevails with calm logic. Took Correspondence Course Born in Lanarkshire, Scotland, he recalls the day in his sixth year that New! 45 full size heavy duty plates instead of usual 39! 30% more power than even SAE ‘New! Spark Plug ax 45°, ae og Hotter spent zoe 2-piece construc- Equals ANY stand- ae plug selling up to Champion sor Plu; . .59c each WIPER BLADE Rex-Hidebal- 29c loon type Wipes clean. Can’t rust! MONTGOM E RY WARD 300 FOURTH STREET TELEPHONE 475 Philip Murray his father came home from the mine and announced s strike had been settled. The men had ‘been granted a 12 cents a day increase, which brought their daily wage to $1.65. Ten years later William Francis Murray brought his family of 10 children to America, to begin a new life in a coal mining community near Irwin, Pa. ‘While young Phil worked in the mines, he took a correspondence cramming his head with mathematics, economics, mining, grammar ‘and labor relations. Then came the fight. Murray talks about these things in He started work again in Brough- ton and within a year was elected president of the United Mine Workers local union in Washington county. \ In 1912 he was elected a member of the union’s international executive board and turned down an offer of $5,000 a year to become assistant manager of @ coal company. | Bills Passed 8. B. 1—Appropriating $265,250 for Valley City No 8. B. Sc arecopriaiing $128,837 for Normal, Merrile B. 2 Apseopelaling $8,000 for tor special sion {—Appropeiating $80,000" for Rostleg tuberculosis indemnity beter 8, B. 5—Providing for taxation of individual incomes on a basis of 1933 rates and corporation net incomes at a rate ranging from 3 to 6 per cent, House Bills Passed H. B. 1—Appropriating $50,000 for bovine tuberculosis indemnity fund. BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, armen MARCH 10, 1937 FIRE ABOARD “FREIGHTER GHTER QUELLED == itrate-Laden Laden Ship: Tt Threatens Son Bends Steel CIO's Ys Way f Took Correspondence Courses While He Was Working ers’ enmity so successfully. Loyal to Lewis, Murray has won the UMWA president's confidence in- creasingly since his own election in 1920 as vice president of the interna- tional union. Murray's activity has not been con- fined to his union. President Wilson tion committee in 1917-1918, when he also served on the national war labor board. President Harding asked him to in- tercede in 1921 when West Virginia was embattled over @ coal dispute. Fa invited representatives of opposing sides to meet across his desk and a few hours later left the meeting with & peace settlement. Declined Pay Raise Murray also assisted in the prep- aration of the original Davis-Kelly coal bill in 1930 (for regulation of 1919, He lives quietly with his wife and one son in a comfortable middle class home in Pittsburgh's south hills section. He works because he likes his job nd turned down the mine union's recent vote to double his $9,000 yearly ary. son of Renville, Peterson of Rich- Semerad, Shurr of petrachera Solberg, Sticke, Stray, Thom » Thoreson, Treffry, Tuff, ean Urschel, | White, Williams, Wolf, Mr. Speaker. Against—(35)—Beasley, Benre, Absent, not voting —(2)— Fitch, Wendland. A ‘The house voted in House Bill 2, the drivers’ ose dig fol- lows: For—(57)—Adam, Anderson, Beggs, Billigmeter, Bjornson, Brown, Brus- —] " H. B, 2—Establishing a state drivers’ McLean, | Ucense and motor patrol law. H. B. 3—Establishing a te in- come tax law with s corporations tax ranging up to 7% per cent. How They Voted { (By the Amociated Press) ‘The senate vote Tuesday on the mo- tion to refer house bill 3, the lower chamber income tax proposal, to the committee on taxes and tax laws in- stead of indefinitely postponing the bill, follows: For—(25)—Aase, Bilden, Brostuen, Ettestad, Fine, Greene, Johnson, Kam- rath, Kolpin, Lavik, Lemke, Lian, Morrison,‘Mutchier, Nelson of Barnes, Olson, Owings,| Skarvold, Streibel, Stucke, Thatcher, Thorson, Vinje, wil- liams, Wog. ‘Against—(21)—Blaisdel, Cain, Cof- fey, Crandall, Drew, Fowler, Fredrick- gon, Gilbertson, Gronvold, Guenther, Guthrie, Kroeber, Lowe, Lynn, Magof- fin, McGillic, Nelson of Grand Forks, 8trehlow, ag Watt, Whelan. Abeent, not voting—(3)—Hulteng, Trout, Y¢ i Sigered ‘aye’ on this motion,” said ‘Senator Aasen in explaining his vote, ‘not because I would support the bill, but to.be sure that we will have an in- come tax bill to work on.” “I want to explain my vote, and I don’t do that very often,” said Sena- tor Thatcher. “We are here to pass an income tax law and I don’t believe rush law passed here, I vote ‘aye’.” ‘The final house vote on the house bill 3 income tax measure, follows: For—(76)—Adam, Akland, Ander- on, Anfinson, Beaton, Beggs, Biber- dorf, Bieloh, Billigmeier, Bjornson, Brown, Brusseau, Caddell, Frazier, Godwin, Greiser, Freitag, Gessner, Hagen, Haines, Holm, eemegibpal Polina. Hultstrand, Huseby, Ire- LIVER Bite. ii nile ee Ni i He ‘Thompson, WAKE UP YOUR | Semerad, Sticka, , Tref- @| tty, Trydal, Tweten, Twichell, Ur- s Symington, Tuff, White, Wick, wil- Hams. Absent, not voting—(8)—Anfinson, Dittmer, Frey, Hofstrand, Norheim, Savre, Shurr of Bottinaeu, Wendland. Halvor Garberg, 66, Ryder Farmer, Dead aboart the alizeie and mugercdaden freighter Laila—marked by a series of] ahip's forward plates buickied like tls- pecans corr Licay aah x wl inch sue, WRhin #9 Bour the elite fore trol Wednesday after tiraggle by seu ahd tend te npitee formed into s blackened hulk to the Risking rrOnly one injury was immediacy |expioien, fou managed to 6 burned on tream, / Boston Waterfront Before | tae and hands in one of the explo-| flames Tames tareading seni thereon raed Being Controiled waterfront, So hot was the blaze as the burning} Longshoremen who had been un- ‘Mar. 10—(®)—A fierce blaze nitrate poured out @ column of acrid| loading ..the .vessel- reported that black and yellow smoke that the|everyone on board had escaped. WHAT TOP-RUN MEANS ‘OU meet a friendly whiskey when you . sample Crab Orchard. It’s TOP-RUN whiskey, and it’s real Kentucky bourbon all the way through. And it’s now aged 18 months—rich and mellow. Taste TOP-RUN—it’s welcome news to tongue and throat, and to pocketbooks, too! WATIONAL BISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK ‘ron' ee! . Fifth St. phone 590 Northwest Beverages, Inc. Phone 22s6 @ Now you can have the kind of a range eis peoad to show aalipce doar terre, make excuses to your three-way thrift. They save money, ti Ti tock Vou owe es teacal co koe, these most modern of home conveniences. perform such miracles. Come in todsy sad SEE THESE FEATURES | i THE DORCHESTER—Hoespeiat’s 1937 clesric rouge, Medera ia style. Modest in prict, : North Dakota Power. & Light Co. .