The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 28, 1937, Page 1

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Telephone : . THE ESTABLISHED 1873 BIS North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper BISMARCK, N. D., SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1937 MARCK TRIBUNE PRICE FIVE CENTS . The Weather Cloudy tonight and Sunday, possibly local showers; cooler. 200 Non-Combatants Die in Air Raid Unification of Relief Agencies Under One Head Sought mt suai Injury Arouses Britain WATER COMMISSION ASKS PRESIDENT 10 INSPECT CONDITIONS Wants Son James to Check on Reports of Misery in State’s Drouth Areas THOUSANDS SAID UNDERFED Geeks Work Program on Water Conservation Projects, Grants on Need Basis ing reports of widespread distress and efter groups of farmers and business- men from Northwestern North Dakota seported that thousands of men, ‘women and chijdren are underfed and without clothes, rsonal representative to, check up 25 the truth re paseo made. aver i dilaga | Slayer Convicted Albert Dyer, 32-year-old former school crossing guard, is shown at the moment when a Los Angeles jury an- nounced its verdict finding him guilty of first degree murder for the attack- slaying of three little Inglewood girls. The verdict carried ® mandatory death penalty. NEW YORK CITY IS THREATENED WITH FEVER OUTBREAK 1,000 Passengers on Typhoid- Ridden German Ship Disem- rk by Mistake in trying to protect. the public from | the the discharge infection as a result of of nearly 1,000 passengers from & German liner, of which 24 crewmen were ill with » fever. pratique”—t tine stop is waived if the ship's phy- sician certifies there is no quaran- tinable disease aboard. ks Commissioner John L. Rice said it appeared there had been a “definite violation” of the radio pratique agree- ment “on the part of the steamsh| company.” Dr.’ Charles V. Akin, physician in charge of the quarantine station, sald that although neither typhold paratyphold—the diseases from which the seamen were suffering—is quar- antinable, the ship's physician would th | “be relieved of eligibility” to obtain ring the proposed cg-operat! effort. Judge A. M. Chritsianson rep- wesented the Rehabilitation corpora- —_—_————————— radio pratiques. The physician was Dr. H. Grieshaber. WEATHER RETARDS SEARCH FOR FLYERS New York Pilot on Way to AGREEMENT WITH FORD BY JAN. 4 TIS GOAL OF UAW May Campaign to Organize 125,000 Employes; Ford Spokesman Says ‘Never’ HAVE $400,000 FUND Compromise Sought in Unity- Progressive Factional Strife at Convention Milwa' » Aug. 28—()—The United Automobile Workers of Amer- ica mapped Saturday a “vigorous and continuous” campaign to organize campaign in order that the UAW “will be able to sign an agreement with the Ford Motor company by the first of the year.” The resolution authorised a $1-a- member special assessment. A few hours earlier the delegates Pretty Girl, 23, ‘Shooting’ War wearing shorts py akon) throught China’s war-churhed mud. . in high heels, Joy Lacks, special GREATER SANITARY CONTROL [5 NEEDED FOR TCE’ PRODU High Bacteria Count, Low Fat Content, Misbranding Pre- valent in North Dakota Greater senitary control in manu- zacture of ice cream and products of a similar nature is indicated in North Dakota by analyses of 90 samples of Nearly one-half the samples ex- amined contained excessive bacteria counts, states Culver 8, Ladd, state food commissioner and chemist, in his report. Some of the reasons for {this “dirty” and “dangerous” situa- electing Richard R. J. Thomas as additional vice-pres- idents. President Homer Martin meantime explained the compromise to his Pro- gressive faction friends in another MAN iS HELD FOR KIDNAPINGFARGOAN St. Paul Mah Seized in Vermont on Charge of Abducting 16-Year-Old Girl Montpelier, Vt, Aug. 28.—()—A Darling of St. tion are shipment of mix without provision to maintain temperatures below 50 de- grees Fahrenheit, and holding mix too long after pasteurization and before freezing. Thirty-nine samples were not labeled. as required by law. All ice cream packages, whether pint, quart W applies factory and those packed by counter freezer operators, Forty-one samples showed bacteria turning jeyunts in excess of the 100,000 bac- teria per cc. limit. Samples gathered and/at Fargo, Wahpeton and Jamestown showed the greatest bacteria counts. POSTPONE DECISION OND, PARM LAND VALUES:T0 SEPT. 8 Board of Equalization Changes Personal Property Valua- tions Little VACCINE CAUSED ANTHRAX DEATHS Two Instances of; Fatal Home, Innoculation Cited by State Veterinarian ‘Twenty-four samples failed to meet | sul the minimum fat requirement. One Bismarck firm’s adulterated product was among the 24, Six samples fell in the “imitation” class due to excessive overrun and low weight per gallon. | One sherbet was too low in acidity. | break in Frosted malted milks were found to be particularly high in bacteria counts and low in fat content. Bulletins (By The Asseciated Pres GRAND FORKS CHILD KILLED Grand Forks—Fanchon Lou Pierce, 22-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Pierce of Grand Forks, died Saturday morning from injuries received when she was struck by @ car at 7 a.m. The accident occurred as Plerce backed his car out.of the driveway at home. The child suf- fered a fractured skull and died al- most immediately. Funeral arrange-| yo. ments were not announced. MILEY LEADS JAMESON St. Paul—Rallying the ge undeclared Sino-Japanese war loomed | his Japanese aviators of Sir Hughe Mandan Bank Is n IN “TERROR’ ATTACK 16 Japanese Planes Rain Death in Stricken City’s South- ern Sector BATTLE SHIFTS INLAND Nippon Infantry Take Lotien in Fierce Charge; Wounded Ambassador Better Shanghai, Aug. 28.—(?)—More than 600 Chinese non-combatants were killed or wounded and the whole of Shanghai plunged into fresh terror Saturday by Japanese bombing squad- Mayor O. K. Yui announced 200 explosives into the humanity- packed Nanteo quarter, adjoining the French soaneeeion on the southern side of the ie The attackers, divided into squad- rons of four ships each, swept over the sector several times, leaving field of death and destruction a half- mile square. ‘Widespread fires quickly licked the debris spread by the bombs and many of those who escaped the hurtling projectiles were burned to death. - Shrieks of Chinese rushing wildly Granted Charter Centenarian Likes His Pipe, Liquor —_——— DISMISS 2 MORE HIGHWAY OFFICIALS McGurren Removes Hanson, Ray Robinson, Im- portant Engineers cut off in recent days. “- “Et ts. part of my reorganization plan,” declared Commissioner Mc- Gurren who just before Thursday's Represents Consolidation Hebron and Glen Ullin of PROMISED STATE Cas ./onets through a hail of machine gun ‘Thousands May Be Accompanied by Rain; | 908 Friday to seize Lotien. killed. Mercury Soars to 107 at Sanish Friday hich above 90 degrees in North Dakota) bag tions and at Sanish reached a mark of 107,|triple-line defense of the American degrees. sector. Possibly local showers or thunder-| Twenty-five hundred American cit- i storms this afternoon or tonight in |izens, 700 of them women, were still in ior Game Wardens western and northern portions of |Shanghal, looking to the marines for mvene Here Sunday |the state was forecast. The prediction tion. also contained moisture possibilities for the southeast area tonight or Pe atreacher ervasl promise Sr muck el A weather au DI of mi Omahs, Neb., led Ray Billows, Pough- keepsie, N. Y., by two holes at the ‘Commissioner [Cooler tonight in North Dakota was | orm close of the first 18-hole stretch of . W. welcomed, especially in the west where their 36-hole final match for the temperatures generally were in the amateur golf championship of the late 90's and hit 104 at Dunn Center, United States. Will Extend Drouth Feed Freight Rates Alaska to Join Hunt for Rus- sian Airmen i Barrow, Alaska, Aug. 28. Heavy weather’ along the Arctic rim prevented extensive search for the six missing Soviet transpolar fiyers ii i Agreement in Minneapolis Tie- up Reached in Governor course taken by Sigism __—_ effisky and his fi ” Rift Seen tsky ve companions on 8] End to Three-Months' ee se ee Ae! Mt) in Papal Official’s Call at MAROONED as tg Prag Deer) natiak Me Att, Ze Bome NDAC Staff Approved; 7 Vacancies Unfilled Pelee: Dune never , peace negotiations would forget that mo- partial ‘settled. : ment when the yacht for thet the Pa epepegavenrd He sald representatives of both em- Chinook suddenly roared ployers.and strikers had met in the ‘ay from its berings governor's office and signed an agree- ‘The agreement provided for return to work without discrimination of au- tomobile mechanics who had to cross salesmen’s picket lines, re- turn to their jobs without discrimi1a- i r{ tion of the salesmen and tment Nye, Moodie Will Vie | #9. Cer id isolated Madman’s land. - Someone had boarded the Chinook in her absence. Was it the madman? Never has a Victims Aid Fight —_|Sat.eer On Illinois Epidemic importance in 9 lomatic relations between the Vai City Commissioners more exciting serial been i thing Beauties) sacsmen's representatives. The written than th story of With Bai ning fen, sald. Gy irk’ bongo Tate three girls whose gay va- “The Chicago Halliday, N. D., Aug. 28,—U. 8. Sen- | employers . rh se turned into ve repudi- | stor Gerald P. Nye and WPA Admin- | a weird adventure. Read pred trator Thomas H. Moodle le are balled swimming 2 <= zits : é pu "ge series meters. also asi conte nines hich, Ithough |‘ay t a ee Sen meee stains testy 7 an ani which, a lay brothers as “ ty” ti a auty Beginning Monday in, |'t wit ect prevent the disease, often | utended to discredit the whole clergy |cuntest, baseball game, tug-of-war Saturday held ry werts- sis if administered injior the acts of s very few wrong-jand water polo game. The Halliday | presented for The Bismarck Tribunejics. sa band | 4 a te will play. tige” he ,

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