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HOE RA OER SI shade SEE Ie ee WALTER J. BRANDT Assistant Manager GUSTAV MAUSER Assistant Editor THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1931 DER STAATS-ANZEIGER CELE3RATES 25TH ANNIVERSARY FRANK L. BRANDT Editor and Manager ALBERT R. BRANDT Assistant Manager Cc. J. HAAG Assistant Editor With its issue of today, Der Staats-Anzeiger, German language newspaper printed semi-weekly in Bismarck, celebrated its 25th anniversary. Frank L. Brandt, who has been at the helm of the publication since shortly after its establishment, and others connected with the institution are shown above. * Ok Ok German Language Newspaper * * x OK Ox {plan is “another example of Ameri- ca’s dumb diplomacy.” The Michigan senator stopped here last night. Predicting President Hoover “un- }“But I doubt if this moratorium ac- Celebrates 25th Anniversay e220 eters: F. L. Brandt Has Edited der Staats-Anzeiger Continu- | ously Since 1906 With its issue of today Der Staats- * Anzeiger, German language news- paper published semi-weekly in Bis- marck, celebrated its 25th anniver- sary. Frank L. Brandt, present editor and manager, has been at the helm of the Publication continuously since soon after its establishment. Der Staats-Anzeiger was founded in July, 1906, in Rugby by Anderson and Stager at the instance of Rugby’s leading business firms and several hundred German-reading farmers, mostly new settlers in the Rugby area, Mr. Brandt became editor of. the newspaper a few weeks after it was established. Later he acquired stock in the enterprise and eventually be- came its sole owner. Growth of the publication began immediately and today Der Staats- Anzeiger is the only German lan- guage newspaper with circulation blanketing both North and South Da- | wota and is the only semi-weekly German language newspaper in the! Northwest. Moved Here in 1912 Expanding circulation and business | made it necessary that the seat of publication be a more centrally lo- cated city with better railway facil-| ities and the institution was moved to| Bismarck, the first issue here being Published May 2, 1912. | Der Staats-Anzeiger, upon being) moved here, was established in the Gussner building on Main avenue. Later, outgrowing these quarters, the | plant was moved to the present home | of the publication at 112,Sixth St., a/ modern brick structure of two ‘stories and a basement. The paper was changed from a weekly to a semi- weekly publication in October, 1915, and has been operated on that basis since. Mr. Brandt has served as an editor and printer for the last 48 years. He began his career in Nebraska, editing both American and German language newspapers at Grand Island, Lincoln, and Cmaha. He also was employed on the reportorial staffs of the old Daily Omaha Herald, now the Daily World-Herald, and the Daily Omaha Bee, now the Bee-News. The veteran editor now is spending his 26th year in North Dakota. Besides being well known to the newspaper fraternity, Mr. Brandt also enjoys prominence in political eircles, having received several ap-| pointments. In 1912 he was nomi- nated by the Democrats for lieuten- | ant governor. During the last term of Governor John Burke, when the | Board of Control of State Institu- tions was created by legislative action, Mr. Brandt was chosen the first sec- retary of the new board and served one term. Appointed by Wilson Later he was appointed Receiver of the U. 8. Land Office here by Presi- dent Woodrow Wilson and served in that capacity for six years. Mr. Brandt is married and has three children, Albert R. and Walter J., who are associated with their father in the Staats-Anzeiger pub- lishing and printing business, and Mrs. J. O. Lyngstad, who resides in Bismarck. The family has resided in Bismarck more than 19 years. Congratulations today were pour- Foot Itch ‘committee would have to solve would} | many and warns the German people ing into Der Staats-Anzeiger office Hoover’ year may solve the world’s | ing the delz from correspondents, subscribers, and economic troubles, but asserts i | tion will hel him. In fact, consider- 's that have developed, I that | believe it will react against him.” personal friends of Mr. Brandt, as if that hope is to be realized, cooper- well as from leading business firms in ation of all the nations is impera- tive. the city. Today's issue of Der Staats-An- zeiger is No. 1 of the 26th volume of the publication. Decision Follows Long Dispute Over (Continued from page one) which must be clarified before the! plan can go into actual operation. The first and most impor these details deals with the ir problem of payment of reparations in goods. a Castle said a conservative estimate of the separate problems which the! be 1,000. Many of these, howe: of minor importance. | Negotiations already are under way Pr, are | ITALIAN GOVERNMENT IN SYMPATHETIC ACCORD Rome, government is in sympathetic accord with the Franco-American settlement * reached at Paris concerning Presi- Details of Scheme ¢ent “Hoover's ; ,and is ready to approve it if called j upon to do so. “Italy accepted the Hoover proposal whole nt of jspokesman said, “and wiil ac: the tricate | Paris ‘agreement in the ‘same spirit.” TOMORROW July 7.—()—The Italian Take a Casca ret moratorium proposal heartedly.” a government “THEY WORK . WHIIE YOU SLEEP . Republic: the Hoover moratorium for a meeting of experts to work out the technical issues involved in the} protocol. Pierre Flandin, minister of finance, said that one significant feature of} the agreement signed Monday night! is the evidence it provides that the/ United States can not isolate herself; from the rest of the world even} should she wish to do so. The Hoover proposal, he said, came! as a surprise to the French people,! who did not realize the extreme grav-| ity of Germany's financial situation.; ( | ENGLISH INVITATION TO MEETING IS RENEWED London, July 7—(?)—Prime Minis-| ter Ramsay MacDonald announced in}; the house of commons today that the British government has renewed its! invitation to the powers chie‘ly con- | cerned in carrying out the Hoover) moratorium plan for a conference at) London. The purpose of such a meeting would be discussion of the points re-! quiring consideration following. the! agreement between the United State: and France. | GERMAN PROCLAMATION PLEDGES COOPERATION Berlin, July 7—(—In an official proclamation issued Tuesday the) German government promises the! world that the money released b~ the! Hoover moratorium will be u: without exception for the countr: economic recovery. | The terse document expresses Ger-: many’'s gratitude to the United States, acknowledges the sacrifices vhich} other nations must make to help Ger- that they must economize now as} never before. It expresses the that the| hope Millions Have Athlete's Foot Why suffer from the queer skin causing severe itching of toes disease | and feet, cracking, peeling skin. blis- ters, Ringworm, Trench Foot or Hand Itch, when you can avoid in- fection and quickly heal your skin Dr. Nixon’s Nixoderm? 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Drainand refilltoday. <i> PURE PETROLEUM PRODUCTS : Cities Service Oil Company ks Srecpencts Prawn S'prhas Seer oowear 3? stations on BG eoned, 4 Alumnus and Phi Beta Ehret imson of Yale and Harvard. Kappa Sti ie his record as an overseas officer dur- Ls ing the world war will be of value to Likes Informality _||in¢: See a eas suiourn. re ot tle “ TUatcr cities two elect "The college of erty as decided that : ‘ A protege’of those two elder states- |iana State university ag decided Haat ; : men? Blin, Root and Charles Evans | gravel roads are not economical when Hughes, and a friend of Roosevelt and | vehicular traffic re Taft, he has been ee strata” /aday. lays. nye Sa Reiersiy Biteoon of Washing- Seventy-five-year-old, . Late a ton, Colonel Stimson of the Army, near Denison, ne ae ts Lawyer Stimson of New York, Neigh- | grind meal for confede bor Stimson of Long Island and Dis- ie be operated age ACID (SECRETARY STIMSON ‘UNCOMFORTABLE IN DIPLOMATIC ATTIRE Cabinet Officer Would Prefer to Wear Informal Clothing If Proper mill | { { | Washington, July 7.—(@—Wwhen Henry Lewis Stimson puts on his morning coat some hot day this sum- mer for a call on statesmen, i European probably he will wish he were getting jinto fishing clothes or riding togs. al It isn't that the secretary of state rere a Pe delicate diplomatic due to Acid ‘ job ahead of him. Rather it is, his associates say, that he has no en- causes sou stows s , thusiasm for diplomatic ‘attire. |,, He wears the garb merely because it is the thing to do. { An Outdoor Man ;_ For him—“one of Roosevelt's New York boys who made good”—the out- {doors has an irresistible attraction, {But he is easing up a little now, at 65. He has climbed the Matterhorn, shot bear and caribou in the Ameri- jcan wilds, battled the barracuda in Headaches Waren there’s too much acid in your stomach, you must force your- self to work, and even pleasures are too great an effort. Appetite Take a little whenever heartburm, sick headaches, nausea, flatulence, indigestion or biliousness show the igestive system is becoming too the south Pacific and hunted stag in Europe. He plays deck tennis and bowls on the green of his own Woodley, his- toric state of 18 acres on the edge of Rock Creek park in Washington. Riding Chief Recreation Horseback riding, however, is his chief recreation, and occasionally he plays golf. Colonel Stimson has been called the ;man of war turned peace worker. He still is a reserve officer. Twenty years ago he was secretary of war under chords. 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