The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 3, 1930, Page 7

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) | AMERICAN LEGION'S MEMBERSHIP DRIVE MOVING FAVORABLY, 's Far Ahead of Last Year's! Drive at This Time, Of- ficials Declare Fargo, N. D., Dec. 3—()—With all of North Dakota’s principal American Legion officials assisting, the annual state membership campaign, launch- ed recently, 1s producing results far ahead of any‘previous year, according to reports at the state legion head- Quarters here today. Shooting at a goal of 10,000 mem- bers in the state, a healthy increase over last year, commanders of the various posts have so far reported un- officially about 4,000 members. Of this number 2,600 have actually mail- ed their cards to the state headquar- ters, R. J. Kamplin, state commander, Bismarck, and Jack Williams, adju- tant, T. O. Kraabel, state veterans’ service commissioner, and C. T. Hov- erson, regional manager of the veter- ans’ bureau, left to attend the first | Post meeting during the campaign at | Dickinson Monday night. New Sal- em was visited Tuesday night and the quartet will go to Steele tonight. In Fargo Thursday Thursday night the group will; come to Fargo for the regular meeting of Gilbert C. Grafton post, and Mr. Kamplin will give the principal ad- dress at installation services for new officers of the local organization. Reports will be made at the local meeting bringing up to date results in the Fargo membership campaign. To date, 464 “members have been signed, considerably above the num- ber who had signed at this time last year. A goal of 1,000 was set for Fargo. Committee reports also will be given at the meeting. The membership campaigners will move Friday night to Willow City, where the new Bottineau county war memorial will be dedicated. Portal will be visited Saturday night and Monday the four, together with Roy Stranahan, grand chef de Gare of the North Dakota 40 and 8, will go to Kenmare, American Legion convention. Prizes Are Offered Minot will be visited Dec. 9; Wil- liston Dec. 10; Rugby, Dec. 11 and Devils Lake, Dec. 12. William Stern, Fargo, national le- gion committeeman, will give a gold American Legion button to the post Bt commanders who put their organi- zations over 100 per cent in the drive, he has announced here. So far eight commanders have qualified for the button. They are William Poppie, Adams; A. D. Mc- Kinnon, Bismarck; B. P. Orthma: Hazelton; Lawrence Warness, Wat- ford City; H. D. Miller, Willow City; H. G. per eagles ‘Thomas Engdahl, Max; an R. Manning, Donnybrook. URGE $25,000,000 . FOR FARMER LOANS Department of Agriculture Rec- between Bolama, capital z anid leukemia so fer has baffled | science. He On the most ambitious group flight yet attempted by an near Rome, about Dec. 15, f shows the route and the points at which stops who will lead the group; below, DISEASE, DESCRIBED next site of the state|Ailment, More Dangerous Than Cancer, So Far Has Baf- fled Science —_— Los Angeles, Dec. 3-—(7)—Leukemia, characterized ith. Dr. Roy G. Giles, Temple, Tex., ommends Appropriation Chronic dyspepsia. may be the to Help Situation Maurice Dwver of Beatie Speaking — of the source of much human woe ‘Washington, Dec. 3—(P)—The de-|in the stomach, he warned against partment of agriculture today recom- | late diagnosis disorders, @ppropriation of $60,- 000.000 for seed and feed loans. ROTARY TO GIVE PARTY FOR TOTS (Continued trom page one» in North ‘Dakota, Mr. usin seid.” in Dakota, Mrs. 5 Describing a Christmas dinner which her father, the late J. P. Dunn, enjoyed with friends in 1872, Mrs. ® proposal for relief loans in storm | sourcefulness stricken states, leaving it for applica-| Noneer days, Mrs, qaain told of an pla t states only. He also! old woman who lived alone at the eliminated & feature of the bill which | edge of town. She was kneading would have allowed loans to farmers bread facing a window when the win- for food. He said this might have | dow pane was darkened and she look- conflicted with unemployment rellef | eq out to see two Indians staring a Bl her. ae She was alone in the house and November Weather frightened but had a bright idea, She Normal on Slope| teeth arop on the board in front of — her. Despite ‘some sizable snow drifts] The Indians gave a frightened the si on ie Missoatt 1 oe zhoop and diseppeared, Mrs. Quain vi lovem- ak te “uc, rari oo | REN “Se Ey “Old Sol,” “Mr, Pluvius” et al have of turned in a performance which was|Reno’s command were brought more about average, records at the local| than 1,000 miles down the Missouri weather bureau show. tiver by Captain Grant Marsh in 51 There were 14 clear days as against | hourg: ‘Phis, she said, is believed to 16 cloudy and partly cloudy. Of the| be an all-time reeord for boating on 98 inches precipitation during the| the river. 2 month .70 inches fell on the 20th.| John Peterson and Hal Dobler The highest recorded temperature] Were named to represent the club on was 68 on the third and the lowest 4|& “good fellows” committee to be or- degrees below zero on the twenty. | ganised by the Association of Com- sixth, There was a variation of 2 degrees in temperature on ihe ninth, the greatest during the period. Six and one-half inches of snow remained at the end of the month} Heart Trouble Victim which is @ little less than one-half of — the total fall of 13.1 inches. The| argo, N. D., Dec. 3.—()—-I) for weather continues a little several years, W. E. , 68, a ma- than normal with an average of 1.9/ chinist in the above the mean. cific roundhouse, died in a Fargo doc- On one November day 57 years ago / tor's offide today. the records show that Miller had come to the doctor's of- dropped from 73 above to 28 below. GET'S Soren. RECOMMEN- TION Richmond, Va., Dec. 3.—()—Asked about an applicant for a job, Gover- nor Pollard, named by the applicant as his last employer, hes replied truthfully, to the effect that the man did not miss @ day's work in two years. The applicant was a pardoned ja forger. of Portuguese Guinea, and Porto Natal, LEUKEMIA, DREADED Krilenko, +) testify in the trial of eight Soviet Ing. sum as a “commission” for authenti- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1930 12-PLANE. FLEET TO HOP ATLANTIC General Italo Balb: vantage of the full moon. y nation, 12 Italian military seaplanes will hop off from for a flight to South America, terminating at Rio de Janeiro. This meso will be made. Above is Major Umberto Maddalena, Italy's famous 0, Italy’s minister of aeronautics, who will pilot one of the planes. The flyers plan to travel by easy stages and make the 1,800-mile hop across the south Atlantic— Brazil—about Jan. 1 in order to get the ad- | MARLAND SPEEDS | TRIAL OF ACTIONS Disposes of Two Cases and Lists | 16 Others for Trial in | Next Few Days | ' | | Burleigh county's legal machinery {Was operating in high gear today. Opening the December court term | esterday, Judge R. G. McFarland,’ |Jamestown, asked the lawyers to ex-! |Pedite matters as much as possible in jorder to reduce the expense to the) taxpayers as much as possible. Trial) of cases to the court rather than to| Juries also was recommended, in. or-| [der to effect economy. Judgment for the plaintiff was ‘given in the case of J. G. Wallace vs. |Side Howard and A. Boutrous on anj| {action to collect on a promissory note. | A jury was called in the case but was jdismissed before evidence was pre- |Sented and the case tried to the court | iinstead. The state workmen's compensation |bureau was given judgment in an ac- ition against Ed Wyttenbach to collect |Workmen’s compensation assessments. ‘Another case, that of the compensa- jtion bureau against the Lehigh Bri- |quetting company, was scheduled for trial to the court. Judge McFarland listed 16 cases for trial immediately when called by the jcourt. All of them are jury cases in- |volving small matters and Judge Mc- | Farland said he expects to dispose of. |all of them within the next few days. | Harold Serumgard to Succeed His Father Devils Lake, N. D., Dec. 3—()— Harold Serumgard, son of the late Ole Serumgard, was elected manager of the Farmers Grain company of Devils Lake Tuesday, succeeding his |footbait squad, suffered a fracture of the leg early in the season. A week ago blood poisoning set in. RUSSIAN SABOTAGE DESCRIBED IN TRIAL ‘Industrialist Tells of Spending Huge Sums on Building in Marsh Moscow, Dec. 3.—(#)—Details of well planned sabotage intended to wreck the Soviet regime have been drawn by the public prosecutor, N. B. , from called to engineers charged with plotting the overthrow of the Moscow government. | The imprisoned men have told of their attempts to wreck the govern- ment which sprang up to replace the old czarist autocracy and its white | Russian successor. Valerian Sirotsinsky testified that @ site for a large chemical plant was carefully selected on marshy land and @ large sum of money spent there before it was found necessary to con- struct a dike around the building. “Even now,” he said, “it is not sure father. Hans Mikkelson was named assist- ant manager and vice president. Other officers elected were Pete Bot-! tolfson, president; Mikkelson, vice president; Serumgard, treasurer; and Al Sorenson, secretary. Serumgard also is director of the DOAK RECOMMENDED AS LABOR SECRETARY Name Heads List of 200 Nom- inations Sent to Senate by President Washington, Dec. 3—(#)—The name | of William N. Doak, of Virgina, to be secretary of labor today headed the} list of more than 200 nominations which President Hoover sent to the senate. J. Reuben Clark, Utah, was named ambassador to Mexico; Hoffman | Philip of New York was selected to/ represent the United States in Nor-| way; Nicholas Roosevelt of New York | to be minister to Hungary, and J.! Butler Wright of Wyoming to be min-! ister to Uruguay. D. J. Lomen was named district | judge for the District of Alaska.| Other nominations were to be min-{ ister resident and consul general to Liberia, Charles E. Mitchell,’ West | Virginia; to be member of the federal reserve board, Eugene Meyer New York. Samuel E. Winslow was reappointc¢ & member of the board of mediation. whether the building will not event- ually be a loss.” | He also told of another big plant | which was selected three miles from | water. Sirotsinsky is a member of the in- | dustrial party and himself will face trial for counter-revolutionary activ- jities shortly. He was imprisoned two months ago. i 8. Michaelenko, a civil engineer, | told how his group had obtained gov- }@rmment approval for swamps along the Russian border, the conspirators hoping thus to remove @ barrier to foreign invasion. Two localities, near Leningrad, and in White Russia, were mentioned as the | locale of these efforts despite a court iad that no places must be speci- | POSE a na PRESS | Devils Lake Man | Doesn’t Know How i To Celebrate Day —? a reasons. Reason No, 1—It is Mr. Gra- ham's A Reason No. 2—It is the birthday of his mother, Mrs, Jane Graham. Reason No. 3—It is the 25th birthday of the Journal. Mr. Graham hasn't indicated what he is going to do about it all. \ Archduke on Trial j — up |sard of Utah and Lincoln Dixon of | Charles D. Mahaffie, who has been . serving under a recess appointment, was nominated to the interestate | commerce commission and Frank Mc- | Manamy, present chairman of the, commission was reappointed. i Floyd R. Harrison was reappointed | to the federal farm loan board. Henry P. Fletcher, Pennsylvania, Thomas Page of Virginia, John Lee! Coulter of North Dakota, Alfred P.! Dennis of Maryland, Edgar B. Bros- Indiana were nominated to be mem- bers of the United States tariff com- mission. i On World Flight Associated Prees Photo Barclay H. Warburton, jr., son of | a former mayor of Palm Beach, Fia., | took off from Roosevelt fie'd. N. Y. on @ flight around the world. He | wit first fly to the west coast via | alm shown as he appeared in court during his trial in New York. A jeweler ob- tained the necklace, RE 5 | Leopold | alleged to have received $20,000 of the cating it. An ol in J sitter froma Pile but the pi leeding pi Pithin tee to satisty pletely and be worth 100 times back, Capital Funeral Parlors 208 Main Avenue Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day or Night—22 Jos. W. Tschumperlin Prop. lorthwest Grain association. His her was manager of the Farmers Grain company from 1915 until his death last minth. The company is comprised of a chain of elevators in north and eastern North Dakota. SPEECH DISAPPOINTS FARMERS UNION MAN Cc. C. Talbott Says Hoover | Should Have Recommend- ed Farm Remedies St. Paul, Dec. 3.—(#)—Two north. west farm leaders—J. S. Jones, secre tary of the Minnesota farm bureau federation, and C. C. Talbott, presi- dent of the North Dakota Farmers’ Union—today expressed disappoint- ment with the message of President Hoovey to congress for what they termed its failure to provide any rem- edy for present agricultural condi- tions. President Hoover in his message, Jones said. “offered nothing con- crete in the way of a remedy for Present conditions in agriculture. He suggested nothing in the way of a solution, the solution that agriculture is waiting for and crying to work out.” Talbott, who was in the Twin Cities today, was more emphatic in his statement. “Where we need steak for strength- ening food now,” he said, “the presi- dent’s message gives us nothing but soup. The views expressed by Presi- dent Hoover certainly were along the tight lines, but his recommendations Were not strong enough.” Two Men Killed in Wyoming Plane Crash Casper, Wyo, Dec. 3—(P)—A burned airplane, containing the bodies of Leonard Clark, Hot Springs, S. D., and Jesse Nelms, Casper, was found 20 miles southwest of here today. td had been missing since yester- Y. The crash occurred after the men left the Davidson ranch near Alcova, 35 miles from here, on a flight to Casper. ; mi ; $272,312 for the Davis-Brown prima! | May. NYE DECLARES HE ~—HASNEW MATERIAL North Dakota Senator Says! Davis-Brown Expenses $272,312 Greater calendar of the court term opening there next week. He also will try « few court cases and hear a few mo- tions before returning home, he said. Scotch Bishop Denies Hollywood Is Corrupt Glasgow, Scotland, Dec. 3.—(#)—It | took the bishop of Aberdeen and Ork- Iney to give the le to all those vile —_— jcamrads about Hollywood, the movie Washington, , Dec. 3.—(4)—Chair- | capital. “Why,” said he to the Ro- man Nye of the senate campaign ta: ry club here today, “it’s more re- ‘funds committee said today his com-!spectable than Kelvinside in the ittee had uncovered expenditures of’ Glasgow suburbs, and it has more ry hard working, God fearing and good- ticket in Pennsylvania over the $368,-| living people.” 962 reported to the committee tast As for the Mormons in Utah, whom he also visited, he said, “I always Nye read the total of $641,274 ex-\ thought they were rather dissoluic the ticket headed by Senator Davis| and Francis Stenk Brown, guberna-' torial candidate. - A total of $19,500, he said, rep- resented funds reported by county campaign treasurers as having been! received from the Davis-Brown com- mittee headed by Samuel Vauclain, but for which no accounting had been | made by the latter in reports either! to the secretary of state for Pennsyl- vania or the Nye committee. Hoover Recommends | | Park Fund Decrease Washington, Dec. 3—(#)}—Appro- Priations totalling $8,187,780, a de- crease of $1,911,568, for the national parks service during the fiscal year of 1982 were recommended to con- gress today by President Hoover. The largest items were $564,580 for Yel- lowstone Park and $429,040 for Yose- inite. Of the total, $5,000,000 would | be spent on roads and trdils and in for forest and fire protec- Other recommendations included:. | Glacier, Montana, $257,240; Grand | Teton, Wyoming, $26,870; Wind Cave, | 8. D., $25,380; Wyoming, $564,580. An | appropriation of $5,000,000 for roads | and trails was also urged. | District Judge Fred Jansonius left today for Jamestown to arrange the any Gifts in One for the Family To the son or daughter away to college; to a friend who was a former resident of Bismarck or this vicinity, to anyone, why not a gift of A Subscription to The Bismarck Tribune SUBSCRIBE NOW 1 year (in North Dakota) .....$5.00; 6 months (in North Dakota) ... 2.50 3 months (in North Dakota) ... 1.25; by carrier in Bismarck ; by carrier in Bismarck by carrier in Bismarck SUBSCRIPTION BLANK The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. Enclosed find The Bismarck Tribune for ........ Name Postoffice Dak. for Your truly, Name .. Address long since become penditures in concluding a session of | and strove to emulate King Yolomon. his committee to delve further into! 1 was surprised to find that they had {Yeports of discrepancies in the ac-| counting of campaign funds spent for| ourselves.” as monogamous as You SAVE IN BUYING BAKING POWDER You save in using KC. Use LESS then of high priced brands. weeee 81.20 sis isc s eee i vieveian 1880 which send .months to PLEASE WRITE OR PRINT NAME PLAINLY TO AVOID MISTAKES THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA

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