The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 2, 1937, Page 3

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JUNIOR CHAMBERS TO HOLD MEETING SUNDAY IN MANDAN Bismarck Unit Is Co-Operating in Sponsoring District Conference Junior chambers of commerce of ‘Western North Dakota will hold a dis- trict meeting in Mandan Sunday to stimulate greater interest in national! end state-wide activities, Donald Moore, president of the Mandan unit, announced Thursday. Co-operating with the Mandan unit ‘m sponsoring the meeting will oe tke Bismarck junior association under the leadership of Ober Kobs, national director, and Dr. R. F. Krause, local president. Directors of the Bismarck-Mandan units, meeting Wednesday night, de- cided that open forums would be held cr_a number of subjects. R. H. Berry, Bismarck, will open discussion of policy; James M. Han- ley, Jr, Mandan, will launch a sur- vey of activities’ and Helge A. Zeth- ren, Bismarck, will speak on how to stimulate interest in meetings. There will be a recess following the discussions during which time an en- tertainment program is being plan- red, Following the recess Kobs will tell of business transacted by the netional directors at a recent meeting in St. Louis, and Moore and Dr Krause will speak. A Dutch lunch will be served. More than 100 are expected to at- tend the meeting with 30 being pres- ent from Mandan; 40 to 50 from Bis- marck; 10 from Beach, and delega- tions from Minot, Jamestown and Possibly Fargo. 2 The conference will commence in the basement of the World War Me- torial building at 2 p. m. (CST.) {4 SCOUTS HONORED ATMPCLUSKY COURT H. 0. Saxvik, Council President, Is Speaker; One Eagle Badge Awarded McClusky, N. D., Dec. 2,—Merit badges and advancement awards were Presented to 14 Scouts at the fall court of honor of the Brush Lake district of the Boy Scouts of America here, at which H. O. Saxvik of Bismarck, president of the Missouri River valley council, was the principal speaker. Only Eagle badge awarded was to ‘Warren Kludt of McClusky’s troop 56. Twenty-eight merit badges, one Life Scout and one first class badge were awarded. Presentation of 15 Denhoff boys as candidates for ® new troop there was made. Superintendent of Schools Henry Slater of Denhoff will be scoutmaster of the troop, it was an-| nounced. J. R. Doering of Goodrich presided as chairman of the court of honor and F, W. Perry of McClusky, dis- trict commissioner, presented the can- Gidates for advancement. W. E. Kurth merit badges and Mr. Troyer of Good- rich the Life badge. Saxvik gave Kludt the Eagle Scout badge in the Rose ceremony. E. N. Finstad of McClusky, district chairman. presided over the prelim- inary program at which the McClusky high school band played and Mc- ed and Goodrich Scouts put on stunts. The following awards were made: First class—Troop 56, McClusky— Neil Finstad. Merit badges—Troop 15, Goodrich— Bill Buechler, personal health; Troop 56, McClusky—Warren Kludt, bird study, civics, zoology; Donald Hamilton, woodwork; Roy Swendsen, personal health, agriculture, civics; Sam Skaff, automobiling, salesm: NEW SECURITIES Washington, Dec. 2—(?)—Secretary Morgenthau announced Thursday the treasury will confine its December financing to amounts necessary for refunding maturing securities. He said a new issue of $450,000,000 worth of government securities will be offered to the public Monday. Holders of $277,000,000 worth of 2% SUSPECT CAUSE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1937 Farmer Offers Free De Basil Regarded As Savior of Ballet Miss Florence Fritch who is sponsoring the appearance here Saturday night of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo announced Thursday she had received a tele- ebted Colonel de Basil gave a few eve- nings of ballet in the middle of his opera season. In 1932 he formed the company of Russian Ballet which today is known as de Basil's Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. Why did he succeed where others, assailed with misgivings, trembled on the brink? First, he followed the daring principle that to save ballet as an art, a whole generation must be skipped. He avoided doing the ob- vious thing: he did not gather up the fragments left behind by the colossal Diaghileff, thus trading on the magic of a name. Instead, he created, and created skilfully. He built something new in which fresh youth had a chance under the guidance of » great tradition, so that classicism was revived as wide demand for ballet, finding a@ fresh public for every chore- ographer of note: Fokine, Mas- sine, Balanchine, Nijinska. Boldly he followed another line, one German, and one Japanese. have been assimilated into ave FE E thing that seemed moribund and gave it vigor so that today hun- dreds of thousands of people in different parts of the world thrill to this high but universal art. The de Basil Ballet Russe is the only ballet of its magnitude that has ever existed without heavy state or private subsidies. FORD, UAWA, WILL BATTLE IN COURT St Louis Plant Seeks Injunction to Prevent Picketing; NLRB Issues Complaint St. Louls, Dec. 2—(#)—The. Ford Motor company and the CIO's United Automobile Workers of America pre- pared Thursday for legal skirmishes as the UAWA strike called at the St. Louis assembly plant entered its. sec- ond week. The company late Wednesday amended its original suit asking for an injunction to prevent picket! at its plant, naming 92 additional de- fendants.. The new defendants, to- geher with the 29 named in the first petition, were ordered by Judge Rob- ert J. Kirkwood to show cause in cir- ‘cuit court Friday why an order should not be issued. Earlier Wednesday, the National Labor Relations board cited the com- pany to appear at a hearing Dec. 16 to answer allegations of unfair labor practices. ELKS MEET FRIDAY A special program will feature the regular meeting of the Bismarck Elks lodge Friday evening, Exalted Ruler Herman Leonhard announced Thurs- day. Lunch will be served after the business session. Visiting Elks are in- vited and members are urged to bring other Elks living in this vicinity. PROTEST RATE BOOST Washington, Dec. 2—(#)—The Mon- tana railroad and public utilities commission filed Thursday with the Interstate Commerce Commission a Protest against a 15 per cent freight rate increase asked by the railroads. GCC Acousticon Institute of Bismarck ‘ and Hearing Aids, Parts BONHAM BROTHERS 110 Fourth St, Bismarck Service to Asylum Ed Staib, farmer residing 14 miles south of Cleveland, who since 1923 has cunducted a more-or-less continuous ‘Thuraday preparing to make a unique offer to the board of administration. Staib contends that conditions at the hospital are deplorable, have been deplorable for 15 years or more and have no relation to any of the various state administrations. He charges that patients do not have sufficient food, srieiter, clothing and medical atten- lon, Ang | The Cleveland man, who was & guard at the hospital for 3% months in the winter of 1922-23 and who as- he has nothing but a friendly in the welfare of the hospi- tal’s patients as a state taxpayer, board of administration to as a temporary relief at- the hospital for one month the board of administration to bring about a correction of the conditions he asserts exist there. “A more efficient system of admin- istration is necessary. at Jamestown to ‘assure the patients of protection from physical abuse and the other ill treat- ment they are forced to undergo there because the state is not handling mat- ters the way it should,” Staib says. Staib does not place blame for the hospital conditions on any one per- son employed there or in the service of the state in the present adminis- New Comfort for Those Who Wear FALSE TEETH No longer does any wearer of false teeth need to be uncomfortable. FAS- TEETH, a new, greatly improved powder, rinkled on upper or lower plates, ‘holds them firm and comfort- Il day. No gummy, gooey, pasty or feeling because it's alkaline, Deodorises. Get FASTEETH today at any good drug store. Accept no’ sub- stitute.—Ady. tration or past administrations. He (asserts the hospital troubles are an ac- jeumulation of years of inefficiency, lack of knowledge, lack of hospital ‘staff personnel and lack of funds. tal,” Staib says, “is entirely too high. The general public is not familiar with the high death rate because it receives Uttle publicity. The death rate is hushed up.” “Every time the state conducts an investigation at the hospital condi- tions improve for the time being, but as soon as public interest wanes the same, old story is repeated,” he charges. Seldom has an elephant been. known to reach 100 years old and 70 would be a much more accurate ex- e death rate at the state hospi-' pectation of life for the beasts. Anticipate 200 for Fraternal Congress Grand Forks, N. D., Dec. tend the eighth annual session of the North Dakota Fraternal congress here Friday. Business meetings and addresses by lodge dignataries during the day, fol- lowed by a banquet and entertaiment program Friday Program. Mrs, Josephine Fargo, president, will preside, MR, MATTINGLY: “Come to the tavern on the green— I think you know the one I mean. ey MR. MOORE: “You bet I do—you mean, ahem— The bar thai t features M & M!” eae A blend of straight whishies—W proof Gur. ILL step up To Mattingly & Moore AT YOUR FAVORITE BAR OR TAVERN... 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