The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1937, Page 4

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Ome Sem ee THE BISMARCK TRIB = “AMBASSADOR SAYS - | BIJONAIRE READY ~TOBAGK DICTATOR Senators Warned by Dodd to Be on Guard Against Break- up of Party Berlin, May 11.—(?)—United States Ambasador William E. Dodd disclosed Tuesday he had written to certain Democratic leaders in the United States that he had been told a man “who owns nearly a billion dollars,” ‘was ready to support “and of course control” an American dictatorship. He did not name the billionaire, but said his information was confidential, from personal friends. His letter concluded: “, .. I have studied our history for 40 years and cannot help feeling that. all of us who believe in our system must do what we can to éupport our president, even if we wish to amend some of his reform measures.” Dodd's letter was to Senator Rob- ert J, Bulkley (Dem., Ohio), with copies to Senator Carter Glass (Dem., Va.), and others. It sought to warn these leaders against what the ambassador foresaw as the danger of dictatorship “if the party breaks up,” and bespoke Dodd's belief that there was a tendency of “certain individuals of great wealth” to promote the establishment of such 8 dictatorship. Medical Association Meeting Here Tonight Members of the Sixth District Med- ical association will meet for a din- ner lecture session tonight at the Grand Pacific hotel. Following the cinner in the private dining room a symposium on cancer of the gastro- intestinal tract will be held with Dr. M. W. Roan discussing cancer of the stomach and Dr. N. O. Ramstad pre- senting new facts on cancer of the in- testines. This will be followed by a Power as Corporations .Have, He Says Washington, May 11.—(#)--zabor and farm groups, in the expressed opinion of Secretary Wallace, “should not rest until they get bargaining power equivalent to that enjoyed by the corporations.” Voicing this belief recently, the chief of the agriculture department said he gain such power eventually through organization. When that happens, he predicted, industrial corporations, workers and motion picture showing surgical technique in operations for cancer of the intestinés. A business session will close the meetings. TRACK WORKERS KILLED Chicago, May 11—()—Two Chi- cago and Northwestern railroad track maintenance men were killed Tues- day when struck by a suburban pas- farmers will be compelled to join forces, probably under governmental direction. “It seems to me,” Wallace said, “that corporations must more and more be prepared to accept the doc- trine that capital and management have received from government a grant of power which entitled them vo make profits on condition that cer- senger train. The men, James Bar- bas, 53, and Peter Yiatras, 48, were huritd ‘20 feet along the elevatea right-of-way. ASnaware of the acci- dent, Engineer Harry Wright contin- ued on to the Elmhurst station, Schilling pepper season @ million steaks tonight tain rules of the game are observed with respect to production, prices, Wages and savings.” Tracing the history of corporate en- FARM-LABOR UNION URGED BY WALLACE Organization Will Bring Same Pictured above are 25 of the 43 leaders of the Bismarck Scouts. Back row, left to right: The Misses Bowers, the Misses Wilma Larson and G! Ruth Wheeler, Ruth Curry, Miriam Jarvis, Aletha Devitt and Evelyn Quill. Front row: The Misses Margaret Lang and Marion Little, Mmes. T. E. Simle and H. P, Rosenberger, Miss Evelyn Grace Hermann and Mmes. W. A. Martin, O. W. LaVine and C. W. Leifur. Lou Thompson, Tena Toftner and Arlene McBain, Mrs. T. G. Rue, Mmes, 8. L, Liliehaugen and W. H. England and Miss Second row: The Misses Caroline Lakin and Marion Morton, Mrs. E. C. Bailey, and the Misses Beth E, TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1937 Bismarck ‘Girl Scout Leaders Not included in the picture are Mmes. ©, A. Cranna, T. W. Buckingham, F. F. Griebenow, R. W. Hen- derson, Paul Netland, William Payne and the ‘Misses Dorothy Lennox, Clara Hultberg, Dorothea, Thomp- son, Pat Butler, Dorothy Lucille Isaminger, port Plan for Benefit of Sick Children In a little more than a month, June 19, 20 and 21, Camp Grassick will open its doors to the children of North Dakota who need special supervision to build up undernourished and run down bodies, For the last nine years the state has taken the camp as a matter of course, but this year a new ccndition has arisen that may mate- tially cut the attendance unless the people of North Dakota show, by their co-operation and support, that they want the institution to be @ perma- terprise the secretary of agriculture/nent and none-political one. Miss said it has become an important factor | Helen Katen, secretary of the North in national life since the Civil war Dakota Tuberculosis association, said “and especially since 1900.” He declared corporation lawyers have built “a myth that there is some divine right of corporations to exer- cise powers and that legislatures and courts have no right'to call them back cr curb their use.” Two Will Stand Trial Jaffa, Palestine, May 11.—(#)—Reu- ben Schenzvit, central figure in an international spy mystery, and his Arab employe, Abdul Kader, were committed to the Assizes Tuesday to stand trial on charges of slaying Jacob Zwanger, former Soviet vice- = {commissar of harbors, Mar. 10. THING ON YOUR CAR IS THE BEST TIRES YOU CAN British intelligence officers, investi- gating Zwanger’s death, declared they found a powerful radio station : in Schenzvit’s home and evidence of ac- tivity in an international arms smug- gling-ring. They said the arms were apparently for the Hagonah, secret Jewish defense society. Abdul Kader admitted killing the Russian, detectives asserted, and al-! Jeged that he did it under orders from &chenzvit, a former South American agent for the late Sir Basil Zahar- off, Europe’s munitions merchant. The sun has a temperature of more than 10,000 degrees F. It costs no more to store your FURS with reliable furriers Phone 496 STATE FUR CO. For Russian’s Murder Tuesday. The condition that has arisen, cut- ting the funds usually available for the camp, is the fact that tuberculin testing and re-checking of old cases has increased to such an extent in the last three years that the fund from the Christmas seals is unablb to support both. Tuberculin testing alone increased almost 600_per cent. in the year from 1934 to 1935, she explained. Plan Service Guild A Camp Grassick Service Guild is in the process of organization: Lists of persons thought to be interested have been sent to the central Red Cross office, and cards, bearing places for five dimes, have been mailed out to them. These cards were sent out two weeks ago. For a 50-cent contri. bution each person may have a mem- bership in the guild and for that small amount may insure a place in the camp for some child in his com- munity badly in“need of attention such as Camp Grassick offers. A fund built up in such a way will serve to extend a child’s time at the camp, or provide for a child who comes from a community unable to support him at camp, but who, never- theless, is seriously in need of physical buildup to avoid illness, Eight from Bismarck Bismarck, alone, last year sent eight children to the camp. Its quota, on the basis of population, was only three. To date, guild contributions from interested persons in Bismarck have equalled $124.85. This amount will almost take care of its quota of children, the expenses’ of whom are estimated by the camp committee at $127.50. These contributions have come in within the last 10 days. It is important to every family in the state that the camp be continued, It is a means of protection for every ONE OF THE WORLDS GREAT GINS ree as GOOD DRINKS BEGIN WITH GIDBEY’S GIN FOR NEARLY A CENTURY Cilbey's Distilled London Dry Gin ts made Fargo Warehouse ‘805 Front Street ‘ Phone 590 DISTRIBUTED BY Northwest Beverages, Inc. Bismarck Warehouse 121 So. Fifth St. Phone 2266 Cervinski, Margaret Will and Laura Kelley, Beatrice Miracle, Dorothy Moses, Arlene Wagner, Elsworth. Guild Proposal to Aid Camp Grassick': thought farmers and workers would} Citizens of State Asked to Sup-|child needing it. No child with tu- is admitted. Rigid tests must be undergone before the child enters the camp to prove that he has no active disease of any sort. The treatment there is preventive in nature. Children come who are undernourished, who are rundown as @ result of an operation, or who have been weakened from colds they seem unable to combat. * Instruction Is Valuable Often they come to the camp with little thought or ability to know what they should do, themselves, to build up their small . Within five weeks they leave the camp different children. They have formed new food habits. They no longer want.a diet of cake and candy simply be- cause they like them, «They want carrots, potatoes, green salads, be- cause in five short weeks they have found out what those things can do for their bodies and how much more energy they have, and so. they, them- selves, set about the business of in- | di telligently managing their diet. The is far-reaching because small brothers and sisters, too, are told what is good for them. They learn how to play to good ad- vantage. The child with a slightly weak heart learns that it is hot neces- and often more fun in them than the rowdy ones he has been used to. Learn Good Citizenship Then, too, they learn good citizen- ship at camp. Two people, either a next door in such a way that the two get along together. Every type of handicraft is taught, or rather, the children are aided and advised in any sort that they wish to do. There is no direct teaching at camp in the usual method. It is really @ progressive school thing from the sun baths, the long rest periods, the excellent food and People throughout the state endorse the regime to such an extent that the schedule is often used. in Private homes to good advantage. ‘ From All Sections He au an ey gs A Bes Zz ao Hi g fi Teds launching will prove conclusively interest the people of North Dakota come self-supporting. It will be the one thing of its sort in the state that will belong entirely to the people of the state. A fifty-cent contribution will be pledge on the part of each citizen making it that he is interested in the health-building project as a protec- tion for his own and others’ children, And such a small donation as this will insure the success Of the camp project this summer. To Open Camp in June For the session beginning June 19, Before the camp opens, from June 5 to 12, the Girl Scout troop of Mott, Robbins Brothers Bringing Big Show Here on That Day for Two Performances | i i 4 ¥ HE: fie i é : i H z x ; 4-5 E 5 i ii HEE § i ry a ae i ag PEE q 2 g a § 2 F : A pair of fobins raise two broods of four to six young each year. DELIVERED AT DETROIT Including 1039 is such a wise Let's talk over the plain facts about the new in La Salle V-8—20 you can sce for yourself why it One look and one ride—and you'll know the it. Monthly terms And after you have car, at its ecomoasy. ‘Not oaly is many will be amased gasoline and oil Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. 100 West Broadway Biemarck, N. Dak. nts end Lace! Saieo Tae, Opionel Larimore Chief ‘Believes He Is Oldest Active Department Head in N. D. apeeeg ee tor of Fargo high sc! c Bankers Name Foley Regional President secretary-treasurer. CHURCH WORKERS MEET K. Preus, Minneapolis, educational ' FA LAHR | INSURANCE **° BONDS 7 POss PHONE 1660 CONSULT YOUR AGENT OR BROKER AS YOU WOULD YOUR DOCTOR OR LAwrer Boys of Holland and other European countries have less Telephones ere much more common in the United States then in Europe. The average American boy kaows that his telephone line leads to his play- mates, to his father’s office, to the stores, and to homes of friends and relatives near and far sway. * Ig the United States you can Minot, N. D, May 11.—(#)—F. A. Foley, Rolla, was elected president of group 3 of the North Dakote Bankers’ associat B the executive council for a one-year: term, and O. A. Refling, Drake, mem- ber of the council for a two-year ~ | term, W. E. Tolley, Minot, was elected ARTHUR BRIDGEFORD DUKE IN SECLUSION AT CHATEAU CANDE Tries to Turn Spotlight of Pub- licity Entirely Upon His Brother Monts, France, May 11.—(#)—The Duke of Windsor, who would have been crowned King of England Wed- nesday had he not abdicated for love of Mrs, Wallis Warfield, withdrew into strictest seclusion Tuesday 80 no shadow would fall on the coronation of his brother-successor, King George VI. English correspondents were in- formed by their London offices the duke had appealed to them to omit his name as much as possible from the reports of the coronation events. At the Chateau de Cande, near here, where he is visiting with his finance he declined to pose for photographs. Windsor’s earnest desire to see his brother's coronation @ full success was understood to have caused his decis- ion. He spent some time Monday night it was reported, composing a special coronation message of good wishes and loyalty to King George, once his subject, now his sovereign. Announcement of the wedding plans of Windsor and Mrs. Warfield is be- ing withheld until May 17, when it is generally expected Windsor will make known their future. Now, Jane, you take good care of Fargo, N. D., May 11.—(#)—Dr. J. C. director of the Norwegian Lutheran Church of America, met with circuit representatives from all over the state in Fargo, Monday to outline a Sunday school teachers training course this fall. the children. I simply must see the new Women’s Wear Shoppe at 117 Sth Street Waarheen gaat dit? ( WHERE DOES THIS GO? ) torn ous ruse coma of che highest quality at low cost.

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