The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1931, Page 2

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2 COST OF BUSINESS {8 ONLY FACTOR IN | WORKMEN INSURANCE Wenzel Says New Rate-Making Plan Not Responsible for Withholding Jump WROMT CYCLONE ENGINE 680 MP AT 2100 RPM | Assertion that the new rate-making Plan adopted by the state workmen's compensation bureau is not responsi- ble for the failure of that body to make substantial increases in prem- ijums to be charged this year, as might have been inferred from an_article appearing in The Tribune Tuesday, was made Wednesday by R. E. Wen- zel, bureau chairman. “The new rate-making plan has nothing to do with the general level of rates,” Wenzel said. “It has to do only with the distribution of losses; the fixing of premiums in individual classifications. It does establish a system where before there was none and it will produce a more reliable, a more stabilized and a more satisfac- tory rate structure. But there is only one thing that determines the general level of rates and that is the total cost of proved claims. METAL FLOAT OVIDED INTO 5. rue OME ERE “4 soe THE BISMAR' ‘K TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1981 TRANSPARENT SLIDING HATCHES. RADIO RECEVER 20 T1080 METERS, INSTRUMENT RADIO TRANSMITTER’ 22.6 TO 900 METERS 1 TANKS IN BOTH FLOATS TOTAL 300GALLONS, LINDY’S PLANE FOR FLIGHT TO JAPAN MAKES HIS ‘SPIRIT OF ST. LOUIS’ LOOK LIKE TOY L/NDBER DOOR FOR ACEESS TO LUGGAGE SPACE STORAGE SPACE LIFE PRESERVER RAFT — > STABILIZER SPIRIT OF $7. LOWS. WING 6PAN (6 FEET: HIGH SPRED 135 MPH. GROSS WEIGHT 6000 POUNDS Te Compared to his huge new Lockheed “Sirus” seaplane in which he and his wife are soon to fly to Japan, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh’s famous Ryan plane—the Spirit of St. Louis, in which he flew from New York to Paris—looks like # toy. These charts, reproduced by courtesy of The Acro Digest, show the difference between his two ships. His powerful orange and black Lockheed has a wing span of 42 feet 10 Grand Forks Man Named Commander By Legionnaires (Continued from page one) question arises as to how far you can place a burden on the treasury to ald your comrades of the World war. You must consider the policies adopted will be in the long run to the best welfare of your country and the Le- Becomes More Acute “The problem will become more and more acute as time goes on. Ad- fusted compensation legislation sug- gests wht involves cart ways will be wo and Loa and to ntiment,” re A. G. Porter, Edgeley, was elected president of the state Aux- iliary at the final meeting of the 11th annual convention. She succeeds Mrs, A. A. Kjelland, Hatton. ‘The Auxiliary endorsed Mrs. rth while to stop, look take stock of public James Other northwestern states are expected to support her and her election at the national con- vention. Mrs, J. A. Kasper, Mandan, was named vice president; Mrs. R. M. Depuy, Jametown, secretary; Mrs. W- J. Curtis, Fargo, treasurer, and Mrs. Nellie Gilmore, Wilton, historian. Mrs. Kijelland was elected nationas com- mittee woman. do we go from here? It careful consideration, It al-| Morris, Bismarck, for a national vice | alternate. District tes and alternates to the national convention were chosen as follows: First district, Mrs, Muriel Crpder- man, Grafton, and Mrs. J. B. - man, Grand Forks, alternate: second. district, Mrs, bg yor ae Stoffel, Fairme - fates th trict, Mrs. Arthur Knauf, Jamestown, and Mrs. L. E. Koeppen, Linton, alternate; fourth district, Mrs. E. Phillips, Drake, and Mrs, E. Tollund, Drake, alternate; fifth district, Mrs, J. D. Stenson, ‘Wil- liston, and Mrs. N. H. Gilmore, wil- ton, alternate; sixth district, Mrs, J. la. Kaspar, Mandan, and Mrs. E. W. | Tobin, Dickinson. pines University of California scientists have found that X-rays increase the | poisonous effect of certain poisons as | much as 25 per cent. —_——_——_—- | TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | <a | WANTED —Gravel trucks; require | Starge trucks with dual wheels, In- quire of Hector Construction Co., 8 miles north of Wilton. FOR SALE—Practically new Cogswell | chair with stool, and Simmons steel day bed, one gd Call Mildred r. Phone 1335. | ror RENT—Attractively furnished | room in new modern home. | Large airy and pleasant. Suitable | for two ladies. Or if preferred, suite of two adjoining rooms. Phone 832. A. Y. Hoglund, 305 W. Rosser Ave. “ . v ‘The reason the general level of Resolutions adopted by the women | inches, and its length is 29 feet 11 inches. It stands 11 feet 4 inches tall. rates is not raised this year, notwith- standing the recommendation of our consulting actuary, is not because we Its top speed is around 170 miles an hour, but it cruises at about 125. Gasoline consumption at that specd is about $2 gallons an hour, or a 12-hour range of about 1500 miles. Colonel and Mrs. Lindberg are shown here with a photo of their new seaplane. included one recommending an an-| have adopted a new scheme of rate- making but because we do not want to place an additional burden upon North Dakota people at a time when they are already overburdened, and} because we feel that we have suffi-| cient surplus on hand to take care of the extraordinary and unusual in- roads which the depression is making here as well as elsewhere and because there will be another opportunity to| make such general increase next year | in the event that the depression’s ef- fects should continue over into Aug-) ust or September of 1932.” | ‘At the beginning of the fiscal year iy ABS ss the bureau had a surplus of approxi-| , Fare. July. 15-4 den dershigia mately $137,000. Board members are | 34) ‘and fire which caused $20,000 hopeful that factors affecting the bU-| 2", % ‘to the Isensee Motor com- reau’s business will improve before it) yany sy nity “nearly ac Gah apo. is exhausted and that it will last at/ Teast until next year when the next| Wesley 1. Isensee, president of the concern, was arrested by the Cass period for setting rates arrives. lcounty sheriff Wednesday. Bond was set at $7,500, which he is at- Temperatures Soar tempting to raise. | The warrant was issued on a com- Toward Heights IM {plaint of Frank Barnes, Bismarck, Mi f ; Deputy state fire marshal. Investi- Middlewest States gation of the fire was begun by Mr. ‘Barnes in cooperation with members s Neral ea peas reali (of the Fargo fire department a short BERRAL Pg Mai —— pare | time after the blaze of July 23, 1930. Of North Dalota cities, Beach re-|, Starting with a terrific explosion, ported 101 degrees for Tuesday and Delleved, laden igo nies Laan was the only one above the century | (ee yt ie eaten tent es mark, Bismarck, Ellendale and Wil-| ‘he first floor were blasted and 85 . stored in the building, mostly : | cars liston tied for second with 98, Isecond hand, were heavily damaged by the flames which followed. In the lower middle west, however, | Springfield, TL, and North tte, eee ae anos. paid losses of | | $13,000 on the cars and $7,000 on the Neb., each reported 102, while Huron, jbuilding. Tenants of an adjoining, FARGO AUTOFIRM HEAD IS ARRESTED Wesley L. Isensee Charged With Arson in Connection With Garage Fire S. D., recorded 104 and Miles City, Mont., registered 108 to take the day's record for the entire country. Cloudy weather in Montana, Wyo- qWarters by the smoke. ming and Idaho aided fire-fighters! ii Ree who were battling numerous blazes ini University Mining Head Will Resign the woods of those states. Philadelphia had a severe electrical storm which caused one death and | rooming house were driven from their | J within » few days and would leave | here this fall. President Kane is out of the city at present and no infor- mation was available regarding choosing a successor to Dr. Gauger. FEDERAL MAN FOUND DEAD Washington, July 15.—(AP)— Robert G. Hand, commissioner of | accounts and deposits of the treas- -y department, was found dead in his closed garage Wednesday with the motor of his automobile run: ning. A certificate of suicide was | issued. He had been treated for a nervous disorder. RUDY’S MOTHER DIES Westbrook, July 15,—(AP)—Mrs. Charles A. Vallee, 61, mother of Rudy Valicc, died Wednesday at her home here. Members of the family, | including the radio crooner and his brother William, were with her at the end. URGES SPECIAL SESSION ¥ Wis., July 15.—(AP)— | session of congress to consider modification of the na- tional prohibition laws was advo- cated Wednesday by Congressman Gerald J. Boileau, Wausau, in a telegram sent to President Hoover. “The depression has reached such proportions that some firm action must be taken” the telegram said. BULL KILLS FARMER Moorhead, Minn., July 15—(AP) | —Battered and gored by en angry bull on_his farm Tuesday night, ames H. Smith, farmer about five miles south of Moorhead, died at his home early Wednesday. He was driving cattle from a pasture to a barn late Tuesday when the bull turned on him. damage estimated at more than $1,- 000,000. It was accompanied by a 57-| mile-an-hour wind and by rain which flooded parts of the city. Valley City reported Wednesday! that the temperature had risen 12} degrees in three hours and was still University of North Dakota aivision of mines and mining experiments for the last five years, Wednesday an- nounced he would resign to accept a Grand Forks, N. D., July 15—(4)— | Dr. A. W. Gauger, director of the) eee at the Pennsylvania State col-| lege. | Dr. Gauger came to the university | in September, 1926, to take charge of | work principally in liginte coal experi- | mentation. At the Pennsylvania col- lege he will be professor of field) technology and director of research in the college school of mineral in- dustries. He said he would present his resig- nation to President Thomas F. Kane/| climbing. The reading there, at 10) a. m., was 92. Grand Forks reported 84, Fargo 87 and Devils Lake 81. German Banks Will Open Thursday for Mid-Month Payroll (Continued from page one) Europe loomed on the political hori- zon Wednesday. One was that on a signal from) Arthur Henderson, British foreign! secretary, who is in Paris, Chancellor) Bruening might depart hurriedly for Paris for a heart-to-heart talk with Premier Laval and possibly for a four- cornered conference between Secre- tary Stimson, Laval, Henderson and himself. The other was that Prime Minister MacDonald of Great Britain and Bruening might start from Berlin immediately after their conference in an attempt to bring about a Franco- German understanding, which was] considered indispensable for restor-| ing peace in Europe. German official circles believed they see an inclination in Paris to forget about political conditions re- garding credits, and rather to wel- come a conference of peers with no advance strings attached. The Wilhelmstrasse has let Paris, as well as other important capitals, such as London and Washington, know that the present government an command the situation provided nothing 1s done to undermine its Present unquestioned authority. So far as the Hitlerites are con- cerned the official feeling is that’ Adolf Hitler's only hope at present is that France may give him an op- portunity which the domestic situ- ation fails to give. At the same time government circles admitted they con- sider the National Socialist danger greater at the moment than the Communists. Washburn won the first prize for the best unit history in competition in which 108 Auxiliary units were en- tered. Second prize went to the Oakes unit and third place to Edge- ley. Mott and Mandan received hon- orable mention. i ! Essex Super-Siz 7-Pass. Seden for years, They are the ine fineness, THREE POWERS DON’T EXPECT PAYMENTS DUE Washington, July 15.—(#)—The American government has been ad- vised officially the bank for interna- tional settlements, under the Hoover plan, has received natices from Great Britain, France and Italy that they do not expect July 15 reparations payments which otherwise would be due, Some of the unconditional payments, schedules, because they is always ready to go a car’s performance, its out endurance, and low operating cost. Germany, but they will be loaned to Germany immediately. INVESTMENT TRUSTS (By the Associated Press) You'll find Essex owners are folks that like to tour. They think nothing of thousand-mile trips that call for two-day Hence, they are the most severe critics of ‘They expect and get a lot in Essex. And thus it is important that those who are SANDIN-WILDE MOTORS, INC. GOLFERS AT DETROIT LAKES Detroit Lakes, Minn., July 15.—(?) —Many golfers from all parts of the , State were here ready to start play in the first annual Pine to Palm tourna- ment opening at the Country club course. More than 100 golfers are expected to compete. DICKINSON MAN DIES Dickinson, N. D., July 15.—(#)— Nicholas Rohr, 66, a resident of Stark county for 21 years, died from cere- bral hemorrhage at his farm home near Gladstone. Rohr had been em- ployed at Dickinson high school eight years. Left are the widow, three sons and a daughter. Funeral serv-| ices will be held Wednesday. Al Capone Henchman | Found Shot to Death Chicago, July 15.—(AP)—Edgar | A. Smith, bodyguard of Danny! Stanton and one of Al Capone’s henchmen, was found shot to death | in an automobile Wednesday. | Police received a report Tuesday night that a man riding in an auto- | mobile with two companions had been shot. Smith and Stanton had been or- dered extradited to Wisconsin to be tried for the murder last August of Jack Zuta, vice lord. For months, however, they have resisted the Wisconsin authorities with habeas | corpus proceedings and their case is | tefore te st TO WELCOME DRUM CORPS Grand Forks, N. D., July 15.—()}— | |Grand Forks was preparing to wel- | come its American Legion drum and | bugle corps, four times winner of the | state championship. The corps will! |Join with the municipal band in an! outdoor perforance tonight. Mayor | John L. Hulteng and Congressman O. B. Burtness will speak. | LIGHTNING KILLS GIRU Belle Fourche, S. D., July 15.—(@)— Doris Marty, 15, Slim Buttes, was killed by lightning. A pony she was riding also was killed. Her brother. riding nearby, was not injured, al though he was thrown from his horse and forced to walk several miles to the ranch. DIVE FATAL TO N. D. MAN . Royalton, N. D., July 15.—(#—J. J. Fiest, Zeeland, N. D., was killed when he dove into the Platte river near here. Fiest struck piling a few inches; below the water as he dove and died | instantly. He was visiting here with his mother-in-law, Mrs. John Ke- drowski. | | i FIXING CRACKED STOVE A crack in the iron casing of a stove can be fixed by filling the crack | with stove putty or iron-repair) cement made by mixing iron filings! with water glass, using enough of) the filings to form a th’#: paste. | —_——— | Boyce Brooks, 4-H club boy of Duplin county, N. C., grew vegetables ESSEX Owners are at the Greater Value of the New Super-Six Selective FREE WHEELING is but one of its many Improvements The New Essex Super-Six, which now includes Selective Free Wheeling, excites the enthusiasm of all. But its strongest appeal is to those who have owned Essex enthusiastic over ones best quali- fied to judge it. And their spontaneous approval is convincing proof of its genu- ity and ability? know that Essex when they are. , Coach or Business year in and year Dealers Hudson-Essex Genuine Parts and Authorized Service Selective Free Wheeling. They say:“We didn’t think it possible to make Essex finer or better—but you've certairily done it!” Doesn't this loyalty to Essex stand as your most convincing proof of Essex qual- drive the new Essex Super-Six and ex- perience its brilliant, nimble and smooth performance, made even more luxuri- ous because of Selective Free Wheeling, dan $695, Sport Roadster $725, Town Sedan $735, Touring Sedan $775, Special Sedan $855, 7-Pass. Sedan (long wheelbase) $895 — Selectiv® Free Wheeling $35 additional. All prices f.0.b, Detroit—special equipment extra. ued at $945 in three yea Surprised the New Super-Six with If you want final proof, s Coupe $595, Standard Se ‘ nual essay cotest in high schools on the principles involved in a national] J)K, AF—READ THIS defense program be sponsored, “in recognition of the necessity for vigil-| cecum ance in counteracting influences) viBRAPHONES, jwhich are undermining besriotie inet fit snugly in the ears, \ at a ehowup Tuesday night, the po- lice reported. BISHOP TYLER HONORED Fargo, July 15—()—A final tribute Dont be handicapped by deafness. IRAPHONES, small_sitver devices are help- Chicagoans Held For Crime Series Chicago, July 15—(#)—Nine. men who, police said, have confessed the |t0 the work of Bishop John Poyntz slaying of one man, the shooting of | Tyler was paid in Fargo Wednesday four cthers, and participation in more | When hundreds of persons from his than 200 robberies of gasoline sta- congregation and scores of others tions, grocery and drug stores, were | from out of the city attended the fu- under arrest Wednesday. neral services for him in Gethsemane They were identified by 75 victims | Cathedral. | Sesate oe the ‘netion.” ing thousands, VIBRAPHONES have no wires, head bands, or batteries to Mandan Woman Named annoy you. They are so inconspicu- Gus that even your friends will gel r Delegates at large to the national 60% 00% get out of ordersand no auxiliary convention are Mrs. W. G.|,dditional expense. This ix what the Curtis, Fargo, and Mrs. William Eng- | h: lish, Casselton, alternate; Mrs. B. S. Nickerson, Mandan, and Mrs. D. J. d of hearing have long been look- for, “Write for our booklet. ‘The Gumb, Hope, alternate; Mrs. W. C. Vibraphone Company, Station 1782, Central Nat'l, Bank Bldg. St. Louis, Mo.—Advertisement. “Red Line” Standard Form Legal Blanks The Most Complete and Up-to-date Send for the New 1931 Legal Blank Catalogue—Just Out This new catalog contains a revised list of “Red Line” legal blanks, comprehen- sively arranged in two different forms for the convenience of our customers. For thirty years The Bismarck Tribune’s “Red Line” series of blanks has been recog- nized as standard. Every blank put out under our trade-marks has been carefully examined and passed on by the best legal talent of North Dakota. New forms will be added and old ones discarded from time to time as the passing or repealing of laws make necessary. Special forms will be designed and printed for attorneys, con- veyors, abstractors, real estate men and others, when desired. Orders for single blanks, dozens or several dozens will be promptly filled, carefully packed and sent by mail or express. The prices in this catalog are per dozen, except where otherwise specified. Prices on larger quantities cheerfully given. Order by number. USE THE COUPON BELOW The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. Dak. Gentlemen:- Kindly send me by return mail your latest legal blank catalogue. Yours very truly, NOIAG ce Fas acai se tbeitves scncueee State . Cor cervcccccoee PLEASE WRITE FLAIMNIA 1H AVOID MISTAKES The Bismarck Tribune Co. Publishers of North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper PRINTERS, STATIONERS AND DEALERS IN ART Baur METAL STEEL OFFICE \ Phone 1500

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