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Oldest Newspaper Wet Paints Sordid Dry Picture FOES OF DRY LAWS ——E—— Minnesota Farm Bureau Okays Nye Probe FRDERATION BACKS | NEIGHBOR SENATOR State ‘Many Wonder if Grain Trade Is Gaining Too Great Influence’ WWVESTIGATION WELCOMED 30,000 Farmers in Group Feel North Dakota Solon Should » Push Probe St. Paul, Mar. 4—(?)—The Minne- sota farm bureau federation, through its president, today wired to Senate Gerald P. Nye at Washington its ap- proval of his resolution calling for inquiry into the federal farm board’s affairs and investigation of the al- leged grain trade efforts to defeat and discredit the board's program. ‘The state federation, composed of more than 30,000 Minnesota farmers, has maintained a watchful in respect to the activities of Snooty? Sure—for Weltona Frizetto of Wildoaks, shown above, was chosen as best of all the canine competitors at the Eastern Dog club show held in Boston. A female wire-haired terrier, she is one and a half years old and was bought at the age of seven months for $3,500. The prizewinning dog is owned by Mrs. R. C. Bondy of Goldens Bridge, N. Y. 700 NORTH AND SOUTH DAKOTA BOYS CAN ATTEND 1930 CAMPS North Dakota Quota for Citi- zens’ Military Training Camps Set at 352 Policy the federal farm board until today, according to A. J. Olson, president, who sent the telegram to the North Dakota senator. “The Minnesota farm bureau has been in sympathy with the farm board in its efforts to stabilize the price of farm commodities,” Olson said. “While it is not ready to admit the farm board policy the government could pursue in granting real farm relief, it feels it is the best thing that has been done to date to give agriculture parity with ———— Pope Flays Young People and Press OS Vatican City, Mar. 4.—(#)—Pope Pius, receiving 200 Lenten in consistorial hall today, called their | |FORT LINCOLN TO SEEK 300 “The farm bureau, urged at all times the farm board be given the heartiest of cooperation by farmers. Recent actions of the board, however, have served to confuse ob- servers of the board’s policy. Its many recent changes in courses of action in respect to the marketing of of confidence on the part and others. ate it ooh gaizing too great aati an, fluence over the farm board. ‘There: fore, we believe an investigation by would be welcomed at this time.” ‘The telegram sent by President Ol- “Your investigation of grain mar- keting affairs should go on. Farmers are very much confused with farm board reversal of policy. Confidence Bismarck Camp Will Be Held From June 15 to July 14, quota of 300 candi- set for the year’s Citi-| the less used the better and better Military Training Lincoln, June 15 to July 14, it has announced by Lieut. Col. Wil- lam A. Alfonte, commandant at the Bismarck post, who will have charge of the boys’ encampment here. Lieut. Col. Alfonte, however, ex- pects that many more will be assigned | that here ultimately because the post can | take care of a greater number. There were 350 youths here in 1928 and 250 North Dakota’s quota for entrants in C. M. T. camps in the northwest has baer eaesien iso 352 while South allot 347, to directions from the Beventh Ce Burleigh county candidat SET IN FIVE TOWNS ;County Agent and> Specialist! Thyssel Trying to Start Burleigh Program program Many actual farmers fell outside forces not favorable to federal board have influenced this action.” _——————— REQUEST FOR PROBE IS DEFERRED |=. Agriculture Committee Post-/ Mandan pones Action at Request of Secretary Hyde Seed, alfalfa, sweet clover, poultry and club work will be topics taken up at community hall meetings set for the remaining days of this week at McKenzie, Wednesday, Dris- Magazine Honors State The March issue of “The Clover Leaf,” official publication of the 88th Division (North Dakota, Minnesota, and Iowa), and edited by Col. E. M.|- Norton, chief of staff, is dedicated to A photograph of Lieut. Col. Alfonte is printed on the cover. Among ar- les in the magazine the coming Fort Lincoln C. . camp are some written by Lt. Col. (Continued on page nine) Pool Hall Owner on Trial for Murder of Former Slope Woman Helena, Mont., Mar. 4.—(?)—Nick set for Monday at Regan was _post- action on a resolution by Senator Nye, Republican, North Dakota, calling for investigation of federal farm board Chairman McNary and Chairman board probably before the committee acted. Tesolution proposes inquiry “whether the federal farm board has | | ITLE CHANGE SEEN IN TAFT'S CONDITION =<: Physi ger Indefinitely Uniess Ar- teries Harden would be questioned ty. Kelly woman was born at Garri- json, North Dakota, and her family later moved to Marmarth. STEELE LIONS BACK COMMUNITY GENTE Indorse Proposed Building of $8,000 Hall on Visit of Zone Governor — | Mar. 4.—()—William | ; i i a ] BE PEE) i i I i : i | R geek il : itl HH a mat tons from g 5 id “al Hl H : & g PROHIBITION ISSUE TS SULLIVAN TOPIC AT KIWANIS LUNCH Mandan Attorney Argues Dry Question From Viewpoint of Temperance MADE NATIONAL RELIGION! RUSSIAN PILOTS FOLLOWED Would Have Regulation Turned | Aerial Cortege to Proceed as Soon as Possible to Fair- banks for Services Back to States and Church Divorced From Politics The national prohibition poll being taken by the Literary Digest led to @ talk on the subject by John F. Sul- livan, Mandan attorney, before the Kiwanis luncheon, at noon, in which temperance was exalted, congress was called on to pass the matter over to the states for regulation and the BODIES OF EIELSON AND BORLAND TAKEN T0 TELLER, ALASKA Heroes’ Remains Carried Across Bering Sea by Plane From Fur Ship Nanuk Mar. 4.—(P)—The bodies of Carl Ben Eielson and Earl Arctic flyers, rested on American soil today after having been brought across the Bering sea by air- plane from the motorship Nanuk, icebound near North Cape, Siberia. churches were urged to get out of The two bodies were flown to Tel- BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1930 Healthiest Boy and Girl Visit THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Politics and, for their own welfare.| ter, Alaska, yesterday in a plane | Harold Deatline of Martinsville, Ind., and Florence Smock of Eustis, Fia., Preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and | piioted by Ed Young. Pilot Joe Cros- | adjudged the nation’s healthiest boy and girl in national 4-H club contest in Chicago, met when Deatline attended community celebration at Eustis. abstinence. Mr. Sullivan said prohibition had got so far away from economic con- cept into the sphere of morals that national religion. He decried this in- terference with the spirit of the na- tion and the constitution. He gave many reasons. Ingrained In Race Mr. Sullivan emphasized temper- ance quor problem. For the reason, as saw it, that the Caucasian race had through thousands of generations used alcohol as a stimulant and had of narcotics. Prohibition, he assert- when temperance was gaining ground as the real regulator of the use of | alcoholic beverages. Mr. Sulliyan disposed of -amy. ? that liquor Js good for the individual by a swee] statement it was not, yet, none at all, But its use is sacred 'to a very large portion of the people as an inalienable right, he said. He cited the adoption by states of the Prohibition principle between 1914 land national prohibition as evidence \ of the growing tide of temperance in period. Warps Constitution He Feels Springing of the issue at a time lized in military service, he thought was hardly the time to pass on the matter, as a matter of a square deal to those thus deprived of being heard. ‘Taking a constitutional view, he Corps| said the prohibition amendment was| petroit, Mar. 4—(@)—Ten young ve mt the winter Temainder of the constitution, as it | Persons sho, have Spett toe tee was the first case in which that in-| fioor at East Detroit were sleeping today under the care of physicians ‘The sheriff of MaComb county has warrants to hail them into court on charges of disorderly conduct but has announced they must spend 48 hours in bed before they will be allowed , ‘The sheriff of MaComb county has warrants to hail them into court on charges of disorderly conduct but has they must spend bed before they will be allowed to not in keeping with the spirit of the strument reached down across state, county and municipal lines to lay up- on the Individual a command as to what ‘his personal habits should be. (Continued on page six) BEER RACKETEER IS HELD FOR MURDERS inal With Killing Two on Bronx Street New York, Mar. 4—(4)—Vincent of @ long criminal record, was held today for the murder on Feb. 13 of May Smith, dance hall hostess, and Joseph Barrelli, gambler and rack- eteer. Miss Smith, former Wilkes-Barre, cinity of’a Bronx ice plant. lice arrived they recognized Coll and: son and Mechanic Sam MaCauley av! Mavrick Slipenov | HAWLEY-SMOOT TARIFF BILL NEARS DISPOSAL BY SENATE passengers. ators, Commander the prohibltionists had made it the| fir Mesban ‘plane uowee Eielson and Borland, who lost their lives while flying from Alaska to the Nanuk last November, were engaged in removing passengers and furs from the ice-locked ship when | disaster | Chairman of Finance Committee oe na fourid only after months of searching. Three Nations Hunted Flyers of alii Kean ar arch, was ham} built up a resistance in its blood e sativa pain blizzards aneane {stream that made its use seem N0/ Jong Arctic nights. wrong at all, but a personal right,| wit] be here to participate in honors while it had avoided the oriental’s use} or Rielson, who with George Hubert ‘Wilkins, made a flight across the top ed, had presumed violently to take|o¢ the world from Point Barrow to away this right and et a time too, | snitzbergen in 1928. The aerial cortege will continue as soon as possible its fight to Fairbanks, where Ole Eielson, father of tie coast (Continued on page nine) TEN YOUNG PERSONS IN CARE OF DOCTORS when 5,000,000 Americans were mobl-| Marathon Dancers, After 48 Hours Rest, to Face Disor- derly Conduct Charges ‘The 10 were the survivors of the Park marathon dance which began last Nov. 16 and ended shortly after midnight today with the New York Police Charge Crim-; orderly conduct warrants. sey, promoter of the marat! Coll, 21, known to the police as &| ed that the dance was over beer racketeer and possessor} the officers walked out on t! being | floor. EEE a FL E 2 8 i K g Fe | Confident It Will Pass Without Trouble —_—_ || Governor Receives 1] ° German in Pajamas New Orleans, Mar. 4.—(?)—The COALITIONISTS DOUBTFUL , DS, s**t, colonel. Seymour Weiss, apol Export Debenture Amendment ceived Commander Lothar Von Arn- ault Del La Periere, commander of the vessel, in pajamas, lounging robes and slippers when the naval officer | Paid an official call Sunday. len, — ‘in the harbor for the Mardi eran | | and Flexible Provision May Cause Controversy logized yesterday for having re- According to the paper, after the PRICE FIVE CENTS COMPLETE HEARING BEFORE COMMITTEE Senator Linthicum Cites Statis- tics of America Under Eigh- teenth Amendment |LIGGETT ANSWERS KANSAS Former North Dakota News- paper Man Says ‘Mother of Orys’ Backs Statements ‘Washington, Mar. 4—()}—A sum- mation of testimony given congress by anti-prohibitionists in asking a change in the dry laws was under- taken today before the house judi- ciary committee by the field marshal of the wet forces who argued it dis- closed a picture of corruption in gov- ernment; an increase in arrests. crowded court dockets; packed jails; more speakeasies than there had been saloons in the old days, and more than a thousand persons killed as a result of the activities of en- forcement officers. The man speaking was Representa- | Times-Picayune today said that Gov- | tive Linthicum of Maryiand, a Dem- ernor Huey P. Long, accompanied by | ocrat. As head of the house wet bloc (Continued on page six) HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR | GIRL SHOOTS WOMAN i Washington, Mar. 4—()—The end | governor's visit the incident was of the long and rocky road of the Closed when the Emden fired a salute | Wounded Victim ‘Took My Fath- Hawley-Smoot tariff bill was believed | to be just around the corner. veteran Republican | rs 21 guns. The governor went aboard | the cruiser in formal dress while | by senate Republican leaders today ‘Colonel Weiss was in full staff re- | | galia. er Away From Me,’ Pistol Wielder Says Senator Smoot, TPE RDN RET | — lenapea a the Bee etna ene NW ORLE ‘ANS OPENS | Alamo, Ga.. Mar. 4.-(?)-Miss Grace eld the optimistic opinion that the 4 i measure could be brought to final , ESHER paR ER T disposition tonight or tomorrow, but chieftains of the coalition forces of Democrats and Republican Indepe! dents, who have been generally su cessful in reducing the rates appro’ ed by the house last May, were i clined to be a little doubtful. Much depended, they said, on the | length of time spent on attempts to; overturn previous votes which denied | @ higher sugar tariff and rejected proposals for levies on hides, leathers | and 6@10es, now on the free list but serious condition in a hospital today Miss Marion Bullard, 18, high school ANNUAL MARDI GRAS st" Spirit of Revelry Holds Sway |“took my father away from me.” Until Lenten Piety Is Ush- ered in Tonight New Orleans, Mar. 4.—(?)—The made dutiable in the house measure. | Spirit of Harlequin and Columbine to- Expect Bill Today |day swayed New Orleans in the gen- Smoot looked for the bill to be re- | eral masking, costuming and revelery ported back to the senate today from | of the annual Mardi Gras. At what is known in parliamentary on every Mardi Gras day, terms as “committee of the whole.” It |so tragition has it, a figure clothed (Continued on page nine.) {in cap and bells, runs down the cen- i ter of Broad Canal street, the city’s principal thoroughfare, calling on AUTORBGISTRATIONS ise 'soe une Seu garb of revelry for the day of play With what the older French in- nival” the noon parade of rex, king EXCEED 1929 SO FAR nize ote ca of the celebration was formed. The lord of the revelry had a seat on a { Burleigh County, With Regis-|throne atop a gorgeous float heading i trar's Office Here, Makes Worst Showing of @ score of equally a elaborate floats. At the city hall the city’s keys awaited him. Tonight the carnival closes with the parade of the knights and the Despite highway conditions which |priliant and formal balls of the courts compare unfavorably with last year.|o¢ rex and comus. At midnight all automobile registrations for the first | reveiry ceases, and the city figurative- two months of 1930 exceed those for |iy bows its head in Lenton piety. the same period in 1929 by $169,053.95, | according to W. 8. Graham, registrar. | Total receipts up to March 1 this | year are $709,320.15 as compared to! $546,266.20 for g last year. | So far 54,612 passenger cars and 11,000 | trucks have been licensed. increases | of 9,228 and 4,334, respectively, over last year. Richland county leads all other PENNILESS INVENTOR COLLECTS FORTUNES counties in the percentage of regis- Refining Companies Paying trations, having licensed two-thirds of | registrations in 1929. | , Graham said, Burleigh | took him into custody. Coll denied all knowledge of the Smith and Barrelli slayings. Plane Search Awaits x é 7 ; Z FE i E : | iH uy i é E i [ B Always Going to Himself But Never intl I | z i , in which the registrar's office Royalties to Man Who Invented Furnace * nior, who was said by authorities to have declared the wounded woman “You'll never get an opportunity to wreck another home,” the officers iquoted her as saying after the shoot- ing last night. Miss Bullard’s father and mother have been separated for more than a year. A divorce suit is 4 Miss McDaniels was taken to Dub- lin, Ga., hospital for treatment of a bullet wound just below the heart. Physicians said they were unable as yet to determine the gravity of her wound. The shooting occurred at a filling station by F. I. Bullard, the girl's father, who stood within a few feet of Miss McDaniels at the time she was shot. After the shooting, Sheriff H. N. Sears said, Miss Bullard walked over to the car, looked at Miss Mc- car Daniels, then walked to her own Miss Bullard’s mother operates a hotel here. The sheriff allowed Miss Bullard go home without placing charges PHANTONES FACE NEW SALEM FIVE IN FINAL Bismarck Team Trounces New Salem Eagles 81 to 14 in Semi-Finals Today (Tribune Special Service) New Salem, N. D. March 4— > | fi P4