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PAGE TWO Heeceer Hoovee, AN UNCLE, HE woeKED lOWA BLACKSMITH WAS OROHANED GEFORE. HE. WAS TEN EAI ‘23 OLD THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 1! - BECAME A WORLD FAMOUS, WA “THE FOOD SUPPLY FOR MILLIONS MINING ENGINEERUT — WTHE WORLD HE CONTROLLED “TODAY “TE Two ORPHANS . "0, STAND ELECTED PRESIDENT HE WAS CHOSEN “THE REPUBLICAN AND VICE PRESIDENT OF LEADER INTHE U.S. SENATE — THE UNITED STATES — STODIED LAW WHILE. A HACK DRIVER IN TOPEKA, KANSAS AS CURTIS GREW OLDER CHARLES CURTIS, ALSO AN ORPHAN,WAS HEGECAME A JOCKE? REARED ON AN INDIAN RESERVATION BY HIS MOTHER'S INDIAN RELATIVES _ On Se eee HOOVER SHOWS SOUTH DAKOTA THREE WOMEN — |V. A. ASSURED OF HOUSE CONTROL; FiRST ACOUNT? HE WAS LATER ELECTED IO CONGRESS VERMONT GIVES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 548,177, of which he had 279,619 anc ELECTION SERVICE Smith 252,068. Democratic strength was largely — een ceaies CONFIDENCE AS COUNT IS MADE Republican Presidential Can-| didate Watches Weather Re- ports With Interest | RETURNS ARF WATCHED Count Is Charted from Na- tional Radio Hookup in Cali- | fornia Home | By W. B. RAGSDALE (Associated Press Staff Writer) | Palo Alto, Cal., Nov. 7.—(P)— Resting his cause in the hands of the American people at the polls, -Herbert Hoover waited to see if it| is their will that he should become the nation’s chief executive. | After exercising hjs own right of | ballot, the Republican presidential | candidate spent Tuesday in the quiet comfort of his home atop San Juan hill on the Stanford University cam: pus, surrounded by members of his family and a few personal friends. The confidence that he has ex- Pressed several times during the past several weeks appeared undi- | inished the day dragged past, but he watched with interest the weather reports from the middle west and upstate New York and| read with avidity the returns that | slowly began to trickle into his home over the wires of the Associated Press. Casts His Ballot | He made but two brief excursions | from his home _ yesterday, the | first to go with the four other voting | members of his family to a polli Precinct on the Stanford Univ campus. There, while university students scrambled for a view and cameras clicked, the nomince faced a| battery of Kleig lights to vote. Hoover came first under the glare of the lights, recording his name and marking his ballot in the privacy of a canvas booth. Mrs. Hoover followed and behind them in order came Mrs, Herbert Hoover Jr., her husband, and Allan Hoover. Al- though the last of the family to enter the booth, Allan dropped his first ballot in the box immedi lately after his father had deposited the yellow sheet in the container. Leaving the polling booth, the family reentered their automobiles to be driven back to their homes, but immediately afterward the nom- inee and his wife, accompanied by their elder son and his wife, de. ported for a short automobile ri ito the hills. Although the skies were overcast early in the day, before the Hoovers returned from the two automo- bile excursions which filled their morning the clouds had disappeared and the sun was shining brightly. Several friends, including George Barr Baker and Lewis T. Straus of New York, who accompanied the candidate on the journey to the coast, were guests of the Hoovers at luncheon. Watches Returns * He spent mu@ of the afternoon in his study, watching the early re- turns with interest, but a little later ated two Pisceneesds set up in wn gold living room. fter dint if | There, | Emmons county ‘| BACKS HOOVER GAIN CONGRESS Republican from One-fourth Returns; Bulow Anxious Sioux Falls, S. D., No Herbert Hoover held a le: proximately 22,000 i Dakota when unofficial returns were in from nearly one-fourth of the state’s 1,923 precincts. Governor Bulow led his Republican opponent, Attorney General Buell F, Jones by ny erred 3,000 votes from virtually the same proportion of the state’s precincts, Hoover's vote from 470 precincts as 61,85 ainst Smith's total of ,755, Bulow’s vote from 415 pre- returns so far tabulated had come in from the more thickly populated first and second congress districts. Incumbent Republican congress- men from the three South Dakota districts held substantial majorities in the second distri . Johnson had 4,324 and Fred H. Hildebrandt, Democrat, 2,419 in 81 precincts. There are 735 precincts in this district. In the first district the race was closer with Congressman C. A ee gotta leading with 1,40! hile Steensland, Democrat, had 1,219, in ecincts. In the third district, returns from two precincts gave Congressman | William Williamson 34 and Arthur | W. Atwood, Democrat, 25 votes. Hoover has led in South Dakota since the tabulation of the first un- official returns. As additional returns came in from the first and second districts his early majority gained. Governor Bulow held an early lead over his Republican opponent, only to lose it when returns came in from the West River country, and Black Hills territ but regained his lead with additional reports from the! first and second districts. It is estimated that South Da- kota’s electorate cast more than 250,- 000 votes. In 1924 slightly more than 200,000 votes were cast. CORN SHOW OPENS TODAY (Continued fiom page one) show today except placing of ex- hibits, many of the residents of Bur- leigh county and the vicinity near Bismarck were expected to visit the show today to escape the crowds eet have marked the shows in the past. Corn experts from the county were arriving today and will prob- ably stay near the ex! 8 explain the various classi tions and methods of growing to visitors. The offical judges of the show, P. J. O! and O. Q. Churchill, both experts at the state agricultural col- lege at Fargo, will arrive in Bis- marek tonight and will take charge of the judging. It is probable that other experts from the state college and from the federal experiment station at Mandan will also be at the show tomorrow. Emmons county has returned the State Corn Show Cup to officials of the show and is making extensive arrangements in an. effort ‘o keep the cup in the county for a second year. The cup, which has. been awarded to one county winner at the show each year, was won by year, Sargent how officials de- located F i z : | i = i ES H he ef EF i " Has 22,000 Lead Daughters of Hanna, Bryan and Victor Over Democrat i | Are Winners | | es (By The Associated Press: When th: arresting rap-1 f the |resentatives at the opening of the |Tist congress, the higher pitched | voices of women will sound more {frequently than of old. There will -be three additions to |the feminine ranks of the house — jall three, curiously enough, Ruths, {and all with names well known be- cause of their accomplishments or connections before they received this latest honor. They are ifirs. Ruth Hanna Mc- Cormick, daughter of Mark Hanna, herself a leader in Republican party affairs; Mrs. Ruth Pratt, first wom- jan sent to congress from New York, |and Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, daugh- jter of William Jennings Bryan. | Mrs. McCormick, who will repre- ‘sent Illinois as a representative-at- large, is a stalwart Republican like her father. Mrs. Owen, who wi |have one of the Florida seats, is as | might be expected, a Democrat by ithe teachings of the commoner. \.|Mrs. Pratt is a Republican who h: |had as her school of experience se1 j ice on the board of alderman in the Empire state’s first city. Mrs. Pratt’s was in a way the greatest achievement because she ousted a Democrat to get her post. A_member of this growing group is Mrs. Katherina Langley who was reelected in her district in Kentucky. She will take her place on the Re- |Publican side of the house of repre- sentatives. Two other Republican women who succeeded their husbands in the house, Mrs, Edith Nourse Rogers, of | Massachusetts, and Mrs. Florence P. | Kahn of San Franicsco, also were re- elected, as was Mrs. Mary T. Norton \of New Jersey, a Democrat. ‘HOOVER CAUSES ‘ Spectacular Ascension in Stock Prices Response to Re- publican Win New York, Nov. 7.—()—A spec- tacular rally in stock prices was Wall street’s response at the openin; of today’s market to the election o: to! Herbert Hoover as president of the United States. Curtiss aaciglane opened with a block of 5,000 res at $144.75, a gain of $10, and Tim- ken Roller Bearing, Missouri Pacific, cpr beg yi Boo, and Besnard il of New Jersey 0} gains of $2 to $4 a share. A tremendous accumulation of buying orders had poured into the market over election day. Blocks of 5,000 to 20,000 shares appeared on the tape at frequent intervals. Near- ly every active stock opened $1 to $5 a share higher. Standard Oil of New Jersey, which ordinarily moves within 4 narrow limits, opened with a bloc of 20,000 shares at $52.50, up $2.50 and a new high record. General Motors, which was heav- the market on Monday, opened with a block of 8,000 shares at $224.50, a gain of $3.50 and duplicating the years’ high record. Atlantic Refin- ing new stock) opened with a block ra eae shares at $59.87%, up Indiana for Hoover by 300,000 Majority Pe have Rey gavel is heard in the house of rep-| MARKET RALLY ily sold just’ before the close of | ¢ SENATE CONTROL RESTS WITH VOTERS ii Senate Rule Hinges on Out-) Indications Point to Good In- come of Race in Question- able Districts Fargo, N. D., Nov. 7:-—(#)—There were only cight contests for seats in the state Senate in the election that were held on Tuesday and in three of these rested the question of whether the Senate would be con- | trolled by the Independents or by | the Nonpai ns. ‘Ihe three ques- tionable 's were in western Walsh, in ey, and in Hettinger, Adams arid Sioux counties. Seventeen senators were elected without opposition, and in the three districts Where the outcome is re- garded as melee Piibenitrd were too meagre during the night to in- dicate © results—the Independents must win two in order to gain a Senate majority of one, assuming that the other contested places go the dope indicated they would. In the third district, western Walsh, John Elvestad, an Indepen- dent on the Democratic ticket, op- posed George Hoople, Nonpartisan, with the Republican nomination. In Dickey county, A. S. Marshall, In- dependent Democrat, opposed H. S. Rusco, Nonpartisan on the Repub. lican ballot. In the Hettinger, Sioux and Slope district John P. Jungers, Indepen- dent on the Democratic ticket, op- posed Herman Thoreson, Nonparti: |'san on the Republican ticket. The other contested places were in Barnes where Frank FE. Ployhar, Independent on the Republican tic- dependent Margin in House Fargo, N. D., Nov. 7.—There'were|’ ° but 21 contests in the House of Rép- jresentatives in North Dakota at. the election Tuesday. Control of the house by the Inde- pendents was definitely assured, with prospects that the total _mem- bership with Independent: :backing would be between 61 and 65 with 57 necessary to control. Those elected without opposition follow: Second district—J. H. Burkhart, Republican, Nonpartisan. Th ird district—Knute Boe, Adams, Republican Independent; Aaron Le- vin, Park River, Repul Non- partisan, Fourth district—Andrew Johnston, Forest River, Republican Independ- ent. Fifth district—David _Steedsman, Kempton, Republican Independent. Sixth district—C. Vernon Free- man, Grand. Forks, Republican. Inde-, pendent. Seventh district—E. E. Veiton, Emerado, Republican Independent. Eighth district—Philip Bohnsacl Hillsboro, Republican Independent Carl H. Brunsdale, Mayville, Repul lican Independent; Carl E. Johnson, i Independent. Ninth district—H. F. Horner, Far- go, Republican Independent; J. A. Jardine, Fargo, Republican Inde- pendent; L. L. Twichell, Fargo, Re- ket, was opposed by J. A. Heiling, in [publican Independent. Ramsey, where Frank E. Pyland, In- dependent Repubijcan, was opposed by Herbert McMurray. In the 29th district where Walter. Bond, Inde- pendent Republican, opposes G. S. Wooledge, Nonpartisan Democrat in Stark where two Independent, Starke, Republican, and J. P. Cai Democrat, are opposed, and in Pem. bina, where William Renewick, In- dependent Republican, is opposed by R. J. Moore, Democrat. The Senators elected without op- Position, andstheir factional desig- nation, follow: Eastgate, Larimore, Republican can- didate. Seventh district J. P. Poupore, and Forks, Republican Indepen- lent, Ninth district Arthur W. Fowler, Fargo, Republican Independent. Seventeenth district.L. O. Fred- erickson, Pekin, Republican Nonpar- tisan. Ninteenth district Joseph Renauld, Thorne, Republican Nonpartisan. Twenty-third district, Alfred Steele, Jamestown, Republican In- dependent. Twenty-seventh district Lynn Sperry, Bismarck, Republican Inde- isan, F. Bonzer Jr., rwood, Republi Independent. a inth district, Gus Wog, Belfield, Republican Nonpartisan. Forty-first district-J. K. Brostuen, Alexander, Republican. Forty-third district G. Patterson, Ponnyfroo » Republican Nonpar- in. p Forty-fifth district Ole Ettestad, Balfour, Republican Nonpartisan. Forty-seventh district, William Kamrath, Leith, Republican Nonpar- isan. Hoover Given Margin ‘ifth district J. E.|E. in G. 0. P. Stronghold well ahead Tennessee and lissouri, the Republican idential ticket appeared early y to have made a clean sweep of this border group of states for the first time in 1 election. Hie rested Tenth district—W. J. Bell, Cassel- ton, Republican Independent; John G. Plath, Davenport, Republican In- dependent. Eleventh district — William -L. Plath, Woods, Republican Independ+ H. | ent; F. Paul Smith, Amenia, Repub lican Independent. Thirteenth district—O. C. Ander- son, Rutland, Republican Nonparti- san; A. N. Lavik, Milnor, Republi- can Nonpartisan. Fourteenth district—A. E. Carter, Venlo, Republican Independent; Fred . Mau, Enderlin, Republican Inde- pende: Sixteenth district—E. E. Iverson, Binford, Republican Nonpartisan; I W. Standley, Hope, Republican I dependent;-C. F. Carlson, Hope, Re- publican Nonpartisan. Seventeenth district—R. E. Ham- ilton, Dahlen, Republican Independ- ent; John D. Johnson, Aneta, Repub-| lican Independent. Nineteenth district—James_Mc- Manus, St. John, Republican Non- partisan; Carl Anfinson, Mylo, Re- publican Nonpartisan. Twentieth distriet—Minnie _D. Craig, Esmond, Republican Non- partisan; A, M. Erickson, ewau- kan, Republican Nonpartisan. fh Twenty-first district—F. H. Hen- derson, Lawton, Republican Inde- pendent; W. A. Hausmann, Churchs Ferry, Republican Independent; Ed- win Traynor, Starkweather, Repub- lican Independent. Twenty-second district—R. R. Gibbons, Cando, Republican Ind pendent; Alex Currier, Cando, Dem- ocrat, ‘Twenty-third district—Frank M. Brown, Montpelier, Republican Ind pendent: ae G. Farres 5 Re ves own, sg ican Independent; Ar- thur J, Rulon, Jamestown, Republi: can I dent; E. A. Watt, Wood- 1, Republican Independent. Twenty-foutth district—C. H. 0; dahl, Marion, Republican No: rei: san; L. H. Steen, Kulm, Republi jon 5 Trenty-eizth district—O. E.. ickson, Tappen, Republican ni) lican | > 8. Kraft, Strausbur, isan; A. Republican Nonpartisan; Anton Lar- Highest son, \Temwvik, Republican Nonpartt san; Carl Larviek, Temvik, Repub can I B. Cox, Diemer, wits Inde- net M. J. Olson, Jr., Driscoll, ae, Wilton, Repebllean Tage: Pendent. Hoover and Curtis __ Are Congratulated by Vice President Evanston, Ile, Nov. T.—WP)—Vice HOOVER MARGIK Native State of Calvin Cool-| idge Retains, Name as Re- | ‘publican ‘Stronghold Adams... Barnes Benson : Bottineau . Bowman .. Burke Burleigh. Dass Cavalier i Montpelier, Vt., Nov. 7—()—Her- | Dick bert Hoover swept Vermont in the presidential election yesterday by a vote of more than 2 to 1 over Gov- eI nominee 59,831 votes ‘to 26,519 opponent when returns from 202 of the 248 precincts in the state were tabulated last night. Smith made a strong contest in this state which went Republican by a vote of 5 tp 1 in the presidential ¢lection four years ago. He carried, Rutland, secobd largest city in the state 00 votes, be: ing by a small margin in St. Albans. [OWA CROWDS. ~ CHEER HOOVER Des Moines, Iowa, Nov. 7.—(P)— | Bands were playing, Republicans parading, whistles blowing and bells ringing in Iowa today. A native son of the state of tall corn was conceded to be the next president of the United States. .- And Iowa herself, with approximately half of the vates of the state counted, was giving Herbert Hoover a majority appar- ently in excess of the normal Repub- lican majority in the state. West Branch, Hoover birthplace, unwilling to wait. for Democratic leaders to, concéde defeat, began early ldst ‘evenifig its claborately planned celebration. Spencer, Iowa, and Clay county in which Charles Curtis, . Republican vice presidential nominee, was sup- posed to have done irreparable dam- age to his ‘ticket by his much adver- tised: retort to his heckler, “You're too damn dumb fo. understand” had iled up a two to one vote for the Hoover: Curtis ticket with only a few precincts to be heard from. ’* Crowds Jam Streets f Crowds jammed the streets in Des Moines, the capital city, cheer- ing radio and newspaper announce- ments that Hoover was sweeping the nation ard ‘that:‘he had carried into office in ‘his riatal state the whole Republican state ticket with one ex- ception, a woman Democrat, Carolyn C. Hendray of Jackson county, first woman to be elected to the house of representatives. They cheered also the announce- ment that the “pull Iowa out of the mud” campaign, involving a $100,- 000,000. bond issue for paved primary roads, was sure of success, the sup- porters of the bond issue outnumber- ing the opponents three to one. | Representative returns from nine tenths of the Iowa counties indicated at a late hour last night that Iowa would probably send completely Re- publican delegation to congress. al- though in the third district, T. J. B. Robinson of Hampton was’ being hard pressed by Leo F. Tierney of Dubuque, and, in the fourth district, ilbert N. Haugen, co-sponsor of the epee Hata. bill ™ not com- letely out ot r. Haugen’s op- pepe is Erwin Tersen of Charles ‘ity. : : —- | Weather Report — . WEATHER FORECAST © For Bismarck and Vicinity: Fair tonight and Thursday. Not much akota: Fair tonight and Thursday. Not much change in temperature. ir his Democratic |1 WEATHER CONDITIONS . -Low pressure areas are centered over Iowa and over the southwest, and preci mn occurred in the valley and in a narrow atrip from South Dakota westward to Idaho. Warm weather prevails over the southern tered | town: Renville °.. Richland .. Rolette ... 50 31 30 Steele .... Stutsman . Totals .2197 816 65792 38985 ;McCURDY _AND DAVIES SEEM “BEATEN TODAY (Continued from page one) struction, 47 precincts: Palmer 2,300; Pickles 1,251. For county auditor, 47 precincts: Best; 1,170; Isaminger 2,016, Derby, Van Hook Close For .county treasurer, 47 pre- cincts: Derby 1,648; Van Hook 1,797. For coroner, 46 precincts: Gobel 1,905; Perry 1/356. For county commissioner of sec- ond district, complete: Bliss 315; Swanson 404, s For county commissioner of fifth district, 6 precincts: Ebeling 235; Moynier 451, ‘ For justices of the peace, 45 pre- cincts: Beer 1,777; Casselman 1,259; Crane 1,814; Riley 1,760; Schantz 1,113; Shipp 1,823, For constablés, 44 _precihcts: Brennise 1,518; Hanson 2,075; Kim- ble 1,773; Koon 1,850; Roop 1, Official newspaper, 54 Bismarck Capital 2,845; Tribune 3,250. Arkansas for Smith But State Candidates Increase Is Slashed Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 7.—(P)— The national Democratic ticket, on which was a native son of the state, Senator.Joe .T. ‘Robinson, vice presi- dential nominee, had a two-to-one lead in. Arkansas today, but was trailing: the. state ticket, with indi- cations it would fall far short of the normal: Democratic majority. - . , Reports from 684 out of 2,018. pre- | cincts. gave Smith 45,638 and Hoo- ver. 24,872...°.~ -* . The returns showed many Demo- crats scratched the national -candi- pe fast their Sea for pd mocratic nominees. Governor Har- vey Parnell was: leading his Repyb- lican opponent; -M;‘D, Bowers, 33,282 to 9,113 in returns from 461 pre- cincts, . 4 “All Democratic nominees for con- gress apparently were elected, al- though Sdm Ceeil, Republican, was running an unusual race against precincts: Bismarck Glaude Fuller in the Third district, | 2 Republican Loyalty Puts Connecticut in Hoover Victory Fil New Haven, Conn., Nov. 7.—(#)— Loyalty of Republicans in the small ad Damperetic votes for Governor Al- Ie a yesterday, the state’s seven electoral vote, to Hoover’ carried ‘the state by a lurality of 44,041 in a total poll of 5| to be a mem in the cities. The entire Republican state ticket and the five congressmen were car- ried through by margins close to |that given for Mr. Hoover. Governor John H. Trumbull was reelected by 43,662 plurality over Charles G. Mor- tis. The vote was 295,780 to 252,118, BAD BOY MAYOR BEATEN IN RACK ° Newburyport, Mass., Nov. (AP)—The handicap of having to spend most of his waking hours turning a wringer in the laundry room of the Salem jail proved too great an obstacle for this city’s “bad boy” Mayor, Andrew J. Gillis, to surmount in yesterday's election and in consequence his aspirations r of the next state legislature received a severe jolt. Gillis directed a spirited ‘sticker campaigh from the jail but got only 4,454 votes while his opponent W. J. Boardman carers the eighteenth Essex distri 6,061. The “bad boy” is doing a 60 day term for operating a gasoline service station in a restricted area of the , city... y 100,000 Margin Given Republican Leaders by Missouri Voters St. Louis, Nov. 7—(P)—Herbert Hoover carried Missouri by a wide margin in Tuesday’s election and apparently swept the Republican nominees for United States senator, the governor along to victory with im, With three-fourths of the state’s vote tabulated today,.the Republi- can presidential nominee’s lead over Governor Alfred E. Smith stood at 96,848, with indications it would, easily exceed 100,000. % Hoover piled up an overwhelming lead of 108,730 votes out-state and Smith failed to get the lead in St. Louis his supporters expected, the. * New York governor leading by only 11,882 votes with 572 of the 640 St. Louis precincts in. The vote, with 3,123 precincts of the 4,293 in the state tabulated, was Hoover 572,886; Smith 476,038. Roscoe C. Patterson, Republican nominee for U. S. senator, apparent- ly had won also, having a lead of 28,1382 votes with 3,087 precincts tabulated. . Henry S. Caulfield, Republican gubernatorial candidate, was 20,821 votes ahead of his opponent, Francis M. Wilson, Democrat. Crane’s Body to Be _ Cremated in France Nice, France, Nov. 7.—(AP)—The ody of Dr. Frank Crane, American writer who died here yesterday, was taken to Marseilles today for crema- tion. Death was due to a cerebral hemorrhage. Mrs. Crane and her adopted daughter Katreen Crane will accom- pany the ashes to America on Nov. 14.. The party was ona world cruise and. expected to leave for Japan this month, Walla May Receive Hearing Tomorrow Eugene Merritt Walla, held in the county jail here on a charge of em- bezzling ‘$8,308.52 from the Patter- son hotel, will probably be given a preliminary hearing’ tomorrow, ac- coring to Roland H. Crane, justice o the peace. 5 harging Walla with +3 Statements ¢l embezzlement were sworn to Oct, 20 by Edward G. Patterson, ; Oo the- hotel. Walla id not "Crane, acting in the ca ity. af deputy sheriff, brought “Walls back ok Wyoming last week-end. “RING OUT TRE BELLS! ,. London.—London’s Big Ren is have a rival * Nosanenate : ,. Green gooseberry sawflies are ing reared at Manchester, Ei with. a view to fuller know! their life history and t— , Ses wces aemen tt mn