The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 21, 1937, Page 9

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nuck ion hop sale suf. ters mo- PALESTINE AROUSES JEWISH OPPOSITION American Contributors to New Homeland Project See Move as Betrayal 5 (By William McGaffin) New York, July 21—()—To Amer- |" ican Jews, ‘who have put up a fifth of the $40,000,000 ‘stake for the Palestine homeland project, just what does the proposed partition of Palestine mean? I tried to find out by talking with Dr. Stephen 8, Wise and other lead- ers of Jewry in New York—some of those who have been most active in the project. Most American Jews, they told me, feel their race has been cast again in the age-old role of the persecuted. See Race Betrayed Just as they were getting a national home nicely started in Palestine, the British came along with the proposal to cleave the country. in three—about a third for the Jews, two-thirds for the Arabs, and a small portion for British rule. That is Britain’s “out” for conflitting promises given Arabs and Jews, enemies of long standing, in World war days. It makes no difference to the Jews that the proposed Jewish sovereign state is expected by experts to ac- commodate between two and three million persons—not much less than the three million eventual capacity of Palestine under the present ar- rangement. They still feel they have been betrayed. ‘Then why not go somewhere else .and start another home? The idea is not new. Birobidjan, a small .Rus- sian Jewish colony on the Siberian- Manchukuoan border, and Mada- gascar have been suggested as likely spots. But most Jews reject them completely — just. as they turned| thumbs down on Uganda, in Africa 30/ years ago. “A home,” gays Dr. Wise, “is not a national home unless it bears within itself the memories, traditions, lang- uage and climate which made its in- habitants @ national group.” That means to the Jews there can be no other national home than that on the | Mediterranean. 10,000 Americans There Contribution. of. American Jews. to the re-creation,-as they pyt it, of the When the summer's heat boils Hot For Adjournment of Congress down Wi THE BISMARCK s_ lawmakers grow impatient for ‘ashing’ cooler climes and shady nooks, and Representative John J. O’Connor of New York. pictured sweltering in humid discomfort despite the fan and open collar, was among the first to rebel. “It’s hotter here than on the equator,” said Democrat O'Connor He proposed that under the “present intolerable weather conditions” the House adjourn quickly, regardless of the Senate tangle over the Supreme New Program of Crop Control Is Proposed Washington, July 21—()—Chair- man Jones (Dem., Tex.) of the house agriculture committee proposed Tues- day a new general farm bill embracing the “ever-normal” and crop Production control features. The bill, which Jones introduced when the house convened, would use the present soil conservation benefit payments and penalty processing texes as to effect. crop control. It would give the secretary of-agri- culture authority to establish a mar- keting quota for all producers of such products as corn, wheat, cotton, to- bacco and rice, Farmers who sold ;}more than-their quota would be denied soil conservation benefit payments, which last year totaled approximately national ‘home’ has been more of | £100,000, 000. financial. than .a. physical one. Spared of the: baiting which has forced many’ Centtal European Jews into exile, only. some 10,000 American Jews have gone to Palestine, which now has a Jewish population of about | 400,000. Most of the Americans have gone because of their desire to lend hand in the nationalistic and cultural revival. Some have gone for spiritual If the Jéws refuse to seek a haven elsewhere, what will they do? That will be answered at the World Zionist congress at Zurich, Switzer- jand, in August. ra , American Jewish leaders planning to attend say the congress will do one of three things: 1, Unequivocally reject the British 1. posal. 2. Accept it out of hand. 3, Enter upon a course of negotia- tions with Great Britain and the League of Nations. Many Jews declare Britain has never enforced the mandate which the League of Nations gave it in 1922. If it had been enforced, they say, the Jews and Arabs would not have fought as they have, there would be ro need to divide up the country. ” Fight’s Brewing But why can’t the Arabs and Jews | wood. get along together? Some say because Britain failed to.clamp down on the Arabs for attacking the Jews. This leniency they attribute to Britain's desire to avoid offending the 50 mil- lion Mohammedans in India. Others lay the friction to Arab landowners’ resentment at 4 raised standard of living brought on by Jewish enterprise, to Arab propa- ganda that the Jews intend to rule the country; to religious fanaticism that made the Arabs susceptible to wild rumors that the Jews had desecrated Arab holy places. Although pessimistic, American Jews say the matter is far from closed. There is still time to put up @ fight before the League of Nations council casts the final vote. The Jews aa determined to make it a good ‘ight. ittsburg! tional labor relations board issued a complaint Wednesday against the Na- tional Electric Products company of ployes into joining a union affiliated with the American Federation of La- Travel ty TRAIN! FOR COMFORT— ECONOMY |. ONE WAY 2 CENTS A MILE in coachess also in tourist sleeping cars west of the Twin Cities. Space in tourist sleeping cars extra. 1 3 CENTS A MILE in slecping or parlor cars. Space extra. |, ROUND TRIP 1 Li CENTS A MILE cach way in coaches; also in tourist sleep- ing cars west of the Twin Cities. Space in tourist sleeping cars extra. Return limit 30 days. 2 CENTS A MILE cach way in snares limit 30 days. | When the granary threatened: to joverflow, the secretary would -have/ north of McClusky. authority to establish procpesing taxes on the products of ich theré was an oversupply, 2 ‘The tax would be as follows: Cotton, two cents a pound; wheat, ten cents a bushel; rice, ten cents a bushel, and 25 cents a hundred pounds on hogs ‘| \:hen there was an oversupply of hogs. Bostrom Again Named Church Group Officer St. Peter, Minn., July 21.—Rev. Eskil Bostrom of the Gustaf Adojf Lutheran. t church of Gwinner, N. B., was re elected vice president of the Minne- sota Conference of the Augustana sy- nod at the annual cbnvention here. Miss Ruth Swanson of Valley Cit worker in the Bismarck district, was | one of the principal speakers talking on the topic “The Greatest Thrill in | Life—Obedience.” In addition to Rev.. Bostrom and | Miss Swanson, other delegates from North Dakota were Rev. G. Adolph Johns, Bismarck; Mrs. Bostrom, Iver Staupl, Kenneth Ristuben, Orlando Dahil, Bud Warn and Delbert Leaf, all of Gwinner; Gertrude Hayes, ‘Anna | Larson and Esther Paulson of Valley City; Jacqueline Hundstad of Under- wood. JURY AQUITS PAIR International Falls, Minn., July 21. —()—A jury in disrict court Tuesady night acquitted Charles Venviek and Sam Hawkins, charged With the mur- der of Otto Ottoson, STORIES IN STAMPS BY I. S. KLEIN { | Snow Workers Get | Five-Cent Checks 0 eee |) Fairmont, Minn., July 21—(?)}— The men who helped shovel snow- Grifts off Northwestern railroad tracks last winter received their -final checks, but they probably ‘won't cash them. Forty of the snow shoveling crew received checks from the railroad for two cents each—the social security tax that had been deducted from their wages. ~ The bank’s charge to cash a check is 5 cents. Sheridan Farmer Dies in Bismarck Jens Jensen, 72, died at a local hos- pital early Tuesday afternoon. His home was in Sheridan county, 13 miles Jensen died leaving no known rela- tives, Funeral services will be held Thursday at McClusky. The body is at Webb's funeral home. The Engel-Rausch Furni to cordially invite all of finish. Upholstering in (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) 2. Fikewe English linen back brocatelle, at only Court reorganization plan. Fellow House members chi 24 New Books Added To Library Shelves The Bismarck public library reports that 24 new fiction titles have been added to its stacks recently. Included are “Young Robert,” Albee; “South of the Rio Grande,” Brand; “Judge Priest Turns Detective,” Cobb; “The Son of Marietta,” Fabricius; “Harvard Has a Homicide,” Fuller; “Mysteries,” Hamsun; “Return Not Again,” Heard; “Shining Scabbard,” Hutchinson; “Jordanstown,” Joseph- ine Johnson; “I Was a Probationer,” Kern; “Years Are So Long,” Law- Tenet tories of Three Decades,” Mann; and “Try and Hold Me,” Pat- \ terson. “Lucifer in Pine Lake,” Rogers; “The Earth Trembles,” Romains: “Madame Toussaint’s Wedding Day, |St. Martin; “Bread and Wine,” Silone; ; “Crucible,” Williams, lar the Salmon,” Williamson; “Mort- gage Your Heart,” Winther; and “Thé Ye ” Woolf. ture Co. takes this opportunity the people in this trade area to Another Masterpiece by Charles LOUIS XV LIVING ROOM SUITE—Fit to grace the very finest l®ing room. Finished in the new French walnut an imported $268.00 Reflector Floor Lamps $5.95 Ught. As sketched at left. Complete with thade. Several styles, TABLE LAMPS AS LOW AS $1.49 JUNIOR FLOOR Coffee, Lamp and End Tables. Smokers Amazingly Low Prices 5 RR AMADA ATONE EBT IRE LE IT RE LPT WEDNESDAY, PRIVATE SERVICES Widow Kneels at Bier of Famed HELD FOR MARCONI Husband as State Rites Are Arranged Rome, July 21—()—The grief- stricken Marchesa Guglielmo Marcon! knelt in private services beside the me of her world-famous husband ednesday as Rome prepared solemn Inst rites for the genfus who invent- ed wireless telegraphy. An intimate mass for members of guards. As the Marchesa in deep mourning arrived at the academy, throngs gath- ered along streets the funeral cortege was to pass on the way to state funer- al services in the Church of St. Mary of The Angels. The inventor's widow was accom- panied by her mother, Countess Bezzi Scali, and by her step-daughter, Gioia Marconi, the 17-year-old daugh- ter of the inventor by a previous mar- riage. Others attending were Prince Tor- lonia, husband of the Infanta Bea- triz of Spain, the governor of Rome, academy officials and high-ranking Fascists. Arrangements were made for Mar- cont’s body to lie-in state an addition- al day after the state funeral services in order that more may add their tribute t6 those expressed by thou- pande who have filed silently by the er. The body will lie in state tonight and Thursday, and then will be borne by train to Bologna for burial Friday morning. HITLER TALKS WITH RUSSIAN Berlin, July 21—()—Adolf Hitler interrupted a holiday at his Berch- tesgaden estate in the Bavarian rem LOADS rt $5 or $50 in 5 Minutes A new plan for Salaried Persons LET US HELP YOU People’s Finance Co. (Over Dah! Clothing Store) 41014 Main Avenue Phone 1504 ENGEL-RAUSCH FURNITURE CO. Corner Broadway and $rd Street, Bismarck, N. D. THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ~ JULY 22-23-24 personally selected for you direct from Twin Cities, Chi- cago and New York markets. store. They also invite you to come in to inspect this completely new stock of furniture, floor coverings, rugs, _ attend the grand opening of this new, modern, furniture lamps, refrigerators, washers, shades, and gift novelties FREE AWARDS 1—KING KOIL MATTRESS—$39.50 1—MERSCHMAN COFFEE TABLE, $14.50 1—BARODA BEDROOM RUG 1—9 x 12 GOLD SEAL RUG 1—INDIRECT FLOOR LAMP Be sure to register at our store for these attendance ‘SOLID OAK BREAKFAST SET Five Beautiful Pieces Made for the breakfast room or dining room in ment. Heavily constructed for durability! ..... Dees eus Don’t forget to register. Fill in card, drop in box at our store and receive an award. JULY 21, 1987 mountains Wednesday to receive Rus- |Jurenew, aiid the sia’s new ambassador, Constantine {to new speculations as to Occasional Chair In fine ‘mohair and tapestry meetthg Mr. O’Cleary that rans the big Turtle Creek mill shaking our hand Ite a real fancy club at Turtle Creek, but the men belonging to it never mind our cutting across on our way to the fishing hole, Harry E. Wilken Real tony folks have taken up drinking Our Family’s Whiskey now! SN You can’t hardly set your foot inside Sy of a store but what you hear folks asking for Our Family’s Whiskey, and commenting on how mild anf tasty it is, But here’s a funny thing. Some way or another I never saw the real tony folks asking for it up until only just lately. Tom says they couldn’t help but of heard how this > is the personal recipe of our Family Z ‘and how we've been a family of dis- tillers since way back in the early days. But Tom says maybe they had their mind set on paying a lot for their whiskey, and Our Family’s Whiskey didn’t cost therm enough. Well any- ‘ways, they’ve caught on now— and Tsay the more the merrier! Copr. 1937, The Wilken Family, Inc., Aladdin, Pa. Executive offices: N. Y.C. The Wilken Family Blended Whiskey—90 proof—the straight whiskies in this product are 20 menths or more old, 25% straight whis- kies ; 75% grain neutral spirits; 20% straight whiskey 20 months old; 5% straight whiskey 4 years old. Gold Seal Rug, INLAID 9x12......$6.95 LINOLEUM By the yard ....88c per ft. 98c an $ 1 15 er ft. Felt-based Rug, 9x12... $5.95 By the yard ....26¢ per ft. Patterns are blocked through to the burlap back. A wealth of de- CHARMING 18TH CENTURY DINING SUITE— Table, Buffet and 115.00 6 chairs at ........ . Studio Couch In assorted cov- ers and styles. Price range from a small aa anime (er | $29.95 {SS | a | | es || | SS A |e covers, at only $6.95 STYLE QUALITY AND PRICES— Price range from ..

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