The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1930, Page 3

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ts a) ad A ees een THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1980 wi! ims | COME, J. HAM LEWIS DECLARES TO DEMS Illinois Senatorial Nominee As- serts All Ills of Nation Are Due to Prohitfition Springfield, Ill., Aug. 20—()}—James Hamilton Lewis, candidate for United States Senator, delivering the keynote address before the Democratic state convention, today urged modification or repeal of the Volstead act or the 18th amendment “or any portion of. either of these, which cannot run concurrently ‘with right and privilege |- of the state.” In his first speech of any length since-being nominated to run against Ruth Hanna McCormick for the sen- ate, Lewis blamed prohibition for offi- cial corruption, economic ills and de- Spair of farmers. He said the farmer should again be permitted “to profit from the medical and mechanical uses of the juice of his grain.” ~ Lewis, a former senator, summoned the citizens to “bring back this gov- ernment to its people” and demanded a state “free of theft and murder by national prohibition highwaymen.” Near Civil Riot “For the immediate action of our countrymen,” said Lewis, “‘we call to attgntion that in the pursuit of riches in ‘the maladministration of the na- tional prohibition law—the enriched bandits, who under the name of law, infest the republic—have brought this United States near to open civil riot and revolution, than our country has ever known since the rebellion on the alien and sedition laws of President John Adams. “The new masters x x x now de- mand the subserviency of man and woman, family and factory, street and roadside, home and church—to bow to the decree of dictation as to all their business and commerce, their finances and agriculture, their food and drink, schools and religion.” The result, Lewis declared, is “farms bending beneath mortgages”, “the ravaging of nine hundred millions of earned money to pay for tribunals of punishment”, “the expense of five billions each year to administer the national government, to give it force and officials to deprive the states of home rule” and “the snatching from the states and cities of five hun- dred millions of revenue.” Sees Reign of Teror The citizen, he said, “beholds busi- ness driven to desperation, capital to terror and sees ejected from employ- ment millions and millions of toilers.” He warned that “in their helplessness these burdened and abandoned Amer- icans become fit for communism and peril their own land with threats of danger. “There must be,” he said, “a liberali- zation, qualification or repeal of the Volstead act, or of the 18th amend- ment, or any portion of either of these which cannot run concurrently with the right and privilege of the state. or which stands as an obstruc- tion to this program of a righteous morality in the government of each state and home.” Predictions were current the adop- tion of the platform today would find downstate and Cook county Demo- crats agreed on a demand for a “blanket repeal” of the prohibition amendment and its supporting legis- lation. Sun Assurance Firm Opening Office Here Announcement that he has opened an office here as agent for the Sun Life Assurance company, one of the largest insurance and investment companies in the world, was made to- day by R. R. Rust, formerly develop- ment supervisor with the Provident Life Insurance company. The office here, located in the Lit- tle Building at Broadway and Third street, marks the entrance of the Sun company into North Dakota. The company specializes in an- nuities as well as all forms of life insurance and has approximately $3,- 000,000 of annuity policies in force for Bismarck residents; Rust said. He said the Sun company is the world’s largest investor and the fifth largest insurance company in the world. Its headuqarters are at Montreal, Can- ada, although it has offices in the principal cities of the United States. The use of the word Assurance in the name instead of Insurance, more commonly used in America, is due to the British connections of the firm, Rust said. H. D. Cunningham, also a former employe of the Provident Life, will is associated with Rust in the local office. To Hold Soldier’s Funeral Services Funeral services for Technical Ser- geant Howard Lane Ewan, who died at Fort Lincoln, will be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the post gymnasium. Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl will conduct the services and the body will be accorded full military honors. The body will be sent to Key West, Florida, for burial at the home of Mrs. Ewan’s parents. Mrs. Ewan and her 17-year-old daughter will acoompany the body. Sergeant Ewan, a veteran of the regular army, also was a veteran of the world war and representatives of the local American Legion were to attend the funeral eetioe Bavarian Cabinet _ Quits -After Defeats Munich, Bavaria, Aug. 20.—(?)—The Bavarian cabinet resigned today after the defeat in the landtag of a bill which proposed to levy a special tax of one cent a pound on slaughtered livestock. Cattle raising is one of the chief occupations of Bavaria, the census of 1928 showing 3,824,972 head. The tax proposed would have placed a duty on every head killed. FINAL CLOSING OUT SALE. Friday and. Saturday, Aug. 22nd and 23rd, on felt and velvet, fall hats, also large show case, cabinet with a 4x6 foot mirror and one mirror. Sale to be held at the Master Cleaners & Dyers, MBS. A. 8. NIELSEN Across the United States in 12 hours and 25 minutes! And above, its pro- ed it at Curtiss airport, Long Island, at the end of a breakfast-to-supper flight from Los Angeles. His title of cross-country speed champion regain- ed, Capt. Hawks is pictured at the left after he had lowered Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh's west- east record by 2 hours and 20 minutes. Capt. Hawks has announced he may attempt to better his own mark next fall. RAIN IMPROVES STATE HIGHWAYS Causes Earth to Pack Down and Removes Maintenace Diffi- culty of Recent Weeks Highways throughout North Dakota will be materially benefited by Tues- day’s rain, officials of the state high- way department said today. Extreme dry weather of recent weeks has caused difficulty in main- {the same time ordered M. L. Harney, taining the roads. Blading the high- ways did little good, since the earth disturbed -by the blades merely be- came dust and did not pack down. in all directions from Bis- marck were in good condition today, although ungraveled side roads were still muddy. : U. 8. highway No. 10 is -in good condition west to Glen Ullin. Between Glen Ullin and Antelope, highway district officers said, gravel construc- Three Men Absolved Of Recent Robberies Minot, N..D., Aug. 20—(?)—Three men, taken into custody yesterday for investigation concerning recent bank robberies in North Dakota, were absolved of any connection with the holdups at Bismarck and Hurdsfield, when victims of those robberies failed to identify them. J. P. Wagner, cashier of the Da- kota National Bank and Trust com- pany, Bismarck, and A. T. Giltner, cashier of the Farmers and Mer- the men and said they were not the robbers. Edward Benshoff, Hurds- field barber, who also saw the Hurds- field bandits and who was shot at by them, also declared the three sus- Pects were not the robbers. Fingerprints of the three men, who gave their names as H. G. Swanson, 44; L. D. Lowrey, 33, and A. B. Huff, 43, all of Sioux City, Iowa, were taken and Sheriff W. E. Slaybaugh, Minot, said he would hold the trio until he ascertains whether they are wanted elsewhere. New Flying Machine Goes Without Wings New York, Aug. 20.—(?)}—The sec- who are developing the craft on a barge on Lond Island ‘Walter P. Chrysler and Harold Talbott, jr. are said to ‘be back of the venture. The machine is based on the prin- ciple used in the celebrated Flettner Towa Livestock Men Prepare to Operate Chicago, Aug. 20.—(?)—Its petition for membership in the government- sponsored National Livestock associa- tion accepted, the Iowa Livestock: association was today Planning -extension of operations. as! rapidly as practical. f The application of the Iowa group, Presented yesterday by C. E. Heart,| Nile C. Kennick and J. N. Holicher | ‘was unanimously approved by the na- tional , body engaged in livestock marketing under the federal farm board plan. Applications for mem- bereship in the national order and buying company also were accepted. Five units of the new state organ- ization have been proposed following & survey conducted by the farm boardjof Kenmare; Nicolls and Schoening in 20 eastern Iowa counties, and one jof New Leipzig, to operate in the vi- of the units is ready to market live- jeinity of New Leizpig; and Joe Stev- stock. Some 400 cars are under con- ens to operate freight service in the tract, it was announced. vicinity of Kathryn, N. D. The freight permit of the Farr Transfer company, Fargo, was can- Object to Seizure 5 celed for failure to file insurance Of Malt Supplies |potices. Minneapolis, Aug 20.—(#—A tem-| At home porary restraining order preventing | the federal prohibition department} from selling malt and other liquor| making supplies seized by federal) operatives in raids on Minneapolis; malt stores July 16 was issued in, federal district court yesterday by| Judge Joseph W. Molyneaux, who at or away Feen-a-mint is the ideal summertime laxative. Pleasant and convenient. Gentle but thorough in its action. Check summer upsets with Feen-a- mint at home or away. northwest prohibition administrator, | to appear Sept. 8 to show cause why the order should not be made perma-, nent. The order was issued on the; request of Samuel H. Maslon, attor- monoplane that accomplished the feat | running brooks?” is shown as Capt. Frank Hawks land- | Sald. 2 HAWKS SETS RECORD NEW YORK PUP ILS THINK ALL STARS Nature Lovers Declare Children Should Be Educated in Facts of Outdoor Life New York, Aug. 20.—New York City is having a big laugh at its own ex- pense—and trying the same time to remedy the cause. “Stars” mean movie actors to its children. A rose is a “tulip”. The “Milky Way” is found in candy shops. Urban schools are so lacking in facilities for training their children in the ways of nature that about half of 1200 pupils who were examined in nature study gave the name of ‘any star’ as John. Gilbert, Mary Pickford or Janet Gaynor, according to Van Evrie Kilpatrick, director of nature garden work in the New York City Schools, as reported in The New York Evening Sun. “Can children be educated, not pellers still whirling, the sleek, swift | Knowing the grass in the field, or the birds in the treetops, or the fish in the Mr. Kilpatrick “This denuding the city child of the major part of his nature heri- tage has led to a woeful ignorance on the part of the simplest common- Places of the natural world. “A twelve-year-old boy called a rose he was wearing ‘a tulip.” Twenty-one Pupils out of a sixth year class of thirty-three pupils reported that the About fifty per cent of the 1200 chil- dren examined in nature gave the name of ‘any star’ as John Gilbert, or Mary Pickford or Janet Gaynor. Less than three per cent of the same group of children could tell what was the most intelligent animal.” Mr. Kilpatrick, lamenting the dis- advantage the city child labors under in regard to Nature, is directing the work of 244 gardens conducted by as many schools, and is constantly add- ing more gardens to care for the needs of more children. Pi “The school garden trains children ney for a group of Minneapolis malt dealers. HORTICULTURISTS TO MEET Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 20.—(P)—! The North Dakota State Horticultural society will hold its annual meeting ‘Thursday and Friday, Max Kannow- ski, secretary of the park board, an-; nounced. Speakers will be Professor, - A. G. Leonard of the University of North Dakota and Dr. E. T. Barber of Grand Forks. THREE PERMITS GRANTED Three freight permits have been granted operators by the State Board of Railroad commissioners. Those who obtained permits are F. W. Schultz to operate in the vicinity Det beste De kan kjépe for penger —but the way it is said in the United States and Can- ada is “the best can buy.” Budweiser Barley- Malt { Syrup stand: out a parallel ag ap oe malt making—bec: it is guaranteed free itutes, adulterants, fillers, artificial flavors or artificial coloring. . . . Itis100 per cent pure. That’s why it yields more satisfaction than brands of ea ects Barley-Malt Syrup LIGHT OR DARK ~ RICH IN BODY ~ NOT BITTER STONE-ORDEAN-WELLS CO. Distributors Mandan, North Dakota ANHEUSER-BUSCH — ST. LOUIS Also Mekers of Busch Extra Dry Ginger dle ~. 8M-136 °sFIRST IN TH For quick service use cir mail ARE MOVIE ACTORS ‘Milky Way’ was found in candy shops. | YY. | 52.24 _ Sales increase 1929 over 1928 lin the most basic of the industrial | arts—agriculture, which brings them |into a further knowledge of > > cial and industrial world,” M | Patrick declared. | Soviet Prepares to Export Much Grain | Moscow, Aug. 20.—(>)—Large ex- 'ports of soviet wheat, rye and oats jare expected early next month, it was |made known today, although up to | the present time only small shipments \of rye, have been reported. | The government has declined to give out figures of exports and the ; time of shipments, on the ground that to do so might affect the market. |The majority of rye crops alreas have been harvested in the Ukraine, | of which the government has pur- chased about 25 per cent. The amount is reported much below the government's -expectations, although it is thought that purchases of fall and spring rye will be greatly in- ‘creased soon. Labor Asks Mexican ‘Invasion’ Inquiry Duluth, Aug. 20.—(#—The Minne- sota Federation of Labor has gone on survey to determine just how serious is the so-called “Mexican invasion” into the labor fields of the state. After a rather heated debate late Tuesday afternoon at the federation’s annual convention here, the dele- grates by an almost unanimous vote, approved a motion calling for officers of the organization to make the sur- Minneapolis was slated to be se- lected as the 1931 convention city, with Red Wing also putting in a bid. | Charges that Mexicans are being brought into Minnesota “by trusts” to work in the sugar beet fields at Chaska and in the pea-canning in- dustries of southern Minnesota were made by those seeking the survey. The few delegates that opposed the motion asserted the federation would be “undertaking a dangerous pro- cedure,” pointing out that “there should be no race or religious preju- ices inducted into labor movements.” It’s faster winter or record favoring an investigation and | WwHy? It’s smoother It’s more powerful It starts on the instant A gripping speed- packed ride, with to- v's younger gen- eration, challenging tradition. An amazing im- passe that made a father give his son to the law. You'll be wild about wild company Matinees Daily 2:30 Evenings 7:00 - 9:00 Adults 35c until 7:30 It “knoeks out that knock” It’s superior to any auto mobile motor fuel ever offered for sale Especially made for high compres- lon motors end it recreates the veterans of the road. Every day more people cre demanding New Red Crown Ethyl Gesoline. Better try it tedey. Its performance in yeur car will support’ all we say. Fill up wherever Crown Sign. E FIELD-:: you see the Red TODAY and THURSDAY Capitol Theatre Ask attendant fer free reed mep FRANK ALBERTSON H. B. WARNER SHARON LYNN JOYCE COMPTON Also All Talking Comedy “Beauties” Grantland Rice Sportlite “Hooked” AMAZING ACCEPTANCE NEW RED CROWN ETHYL GASOLINE -— ao 80,94 | STANDARD OIL CO. (INDIANA)

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