The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 8, 1931, Page 1

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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE See eee ee —————e—eeeEeEeeeeeeEEEEooeEEeEEIeEEESESoSoaoaooooo—Ee—————EESE——————————— BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1931 Set All-Time Heat Ma Re-elect Hinkle Labor Fi “OTHER OFFICERS ALSO RE-NAMED AT CONVENTION HERE Minot Selected As 1932 Con- vention City At Business Session Monday ENTERTAINMENT IS GIVEN Many Are Quests of Workmen's Organization At All-Day Celebration selected as the 1932 convention city at the 20th annual meeting of the Minot, third vice president; Kenm ourth federation of labor at the closing ses- cnt een ahehids viel sion of its convention here Monday. Hg rite i: eR Hi a & 85 & ~ ge a Bf se Ff ail i re il | F | i i it 1 Ae : 8 gE e 8 i | E i H g i | i i Af BB FF Ht] il 5 tae a iH Pr g i a i s 3 a ti a i atE i ef i | ceeded, 33 U.S. AVIATOR SETS NEW SPEED RECORD CHANGE IN AGES OF Fewer Youngsters and More Old i Folks Noted Since | 1920 Count NEARLY HALF UNDER 19 Total of Persons Under Age Is 47,608,991 or 38.8 Per Cent Washington, : |to be in the United States than were counted a decade. ago, although 47,- 608,991 children of 19 or under formed 38.8 per cent of the total population. Persons between 25 and 44 were de- ecribed as in the most productive pe- riod of life. Betweeri these Jimits ‘were found in 1930, 36,152,869, divided into 32.8 per cent of the urban popu- IN NATIONAL RAGES Averages 236 Miles Per Hour At Cleveland 5 Fe|af Rev. W. E. Vater Talks on Com- bining Religion With All Types of Labor the Bismarck meet Lions club erically, there were more n and 14—the “under five” class of 1920 —as the 1930 census showed, 12,004,877 against 10,641,137, but this age group romed 10.1 per cent in 1920, ‘inst 9.8 it f. PROBES REVOLUTIO Fate of Mutineers Who Con- trolled Naval Bases Has Not Been Decided ment. \Nevadan Admits He Drove Death Auto H | Sept. &—(P)—Fewer! ‘youngsters and more old people were [American Fliers deration President - Sheriff; Is Slain NATION'S RESIDENTS BISMARCK GIRL AND Mexican Fires on Official Who WISCONSIN MAN ARE | ACCIDENT VI Winegar, Wis., Man in Au- tomobile Collision mediately. ‘Though her condition was not re- Girch' was thrown through the Farmed, "aude suffered lacerations ss end-he ® ooh abdut the head. Bes ease ‘His two companions’ and the. tev- eral young men in the Lach machine jescaped injuries. WILKINS BACK ARTER TRIP UNDER ICE PACK jSubmarine Nautilus Damaged During Hazardous Voyage In Frozen North hazardous voyage. ts The Nautilus started her ward the north Aug. 18 ‘His return at this time follows the advice of many friends who warned proceeding further at this time E-THCHERCEE Sought to Arrest Him Near Granada, Minn. HIDES BEHIND BARRICADE Tear Gas Used to Finally Dis- lodge Slayer; Bullets Spell His End a hospital for treatment im- riques, 40, waving his t assemblage, ataggered hide- Saeers aie oii ead the, Mewiean e a1 dropped to the ground. He was killed instantly. 9.575 ARE ENROLLED INGITY SCHOOLS AS is NEW TERM IS BEGUN Last Year's Total Enrollment Expected to Be Passed in Next Few Weeks be- af teh ih is to preside at & Sheriff's Staff Transports Booze ‘Members of the Burleigh coun- ty aheriff’s staff were “transport- ing lquor” Tuesday morning. About 200 quarts of beer s . A. Allen (above) and ‘Don Moyle] (below) Tuesday were winging their way westward over the Pacific ocean in an effort to fly from Japan to Seattle, Wash. SEEK SUSPENSION OF MINOT OFFICIAL s/Charges Against Commissiorier Nap La Fleur Are Filed With Governor {sion trom office of City Commissioner |Nap La Fleur, head of the Minot po- \lee department, pending a formal | hearing on the question of permanent |removal, ig asked of Governor George |F. Shafer in s complaint filed with ‘The charges against La Fleur, listed in the complaint, pertain to alleged liquor traffic, it being alleged that he “did fail and refuse and neglect to to| instruct” the police officers to appre- hend liquor law violators. ~ An allegation is made in the com- plaint that Commissioner La Fleur, at a meeting of the commission on July 27, “did allege and declare that the citizens of Minot who desired, could manufacture arid sell intoxicat- iing lquor, to-wit, beer, for the pur- pose of making s living and did in- struct the police officers not to inter- fere therein... .” Another allegation in the complaint lis that while acting as police commis- sioner, La Fleur “did conduct a hard- ware store... and did have on dis- play and dispose within said store jand- did sell various apparatus and para) beer and ja for the manufacture of other intoxicating bever- Accompanying the complaint laid before the governor were several affi- davits. GERMANY ARRANGES Conclude Contract To Purchase 200,000 Tons From Fed- eral Farm Board organization pod accept deliveries the government de- signated the Deutsche Gertreide Handels Gesellschaft. Federal Jury Will Convene in Fargo TB OVER 4,465 MILES OF WATERY TRAIL Plane Being Used Has Twice Failed Other Aviators In Similar Attempts HAVE HEAVY LOAD OF FUEL Make 110 Miles in First Hour of Flight; Trip to Require 39 to 44 Hours Tokyo, Sept. 8—(?)—Trying to fly non-stop 4465 miles across the Pa- cific from Japan to Seattle in a plane which had failed other aviators twice in similar attempts, Don Moyle, mo- toreycle salesman, and C. A. ,Allen, former purveyor of washing ma- chines, presumably were well on their undertakings. An hour and ten minutes after the DEDICATED MONDAY Speakers Say Landing Field Is First of International Char- acter in World ‘ Pembina, N. D., Sept. 8—()—Ofti- cials representing the United States end Canada joined hands with chiefs of the Northwest Airways, Inc., in iting Fort here Monday. It was designated by several eyes skyward ness an aerial demonstration in which 52 planes participated. Beach Station Man Beaten by Robbers Beach, N. D., Sept. 8.—()—Because did not know the combination of the Northern Pacific ticket office safe here Monday night, two robbers beat hap severe kknock- HEAL ATHLETIC BREACH St. Paul, Sept. 8—(?)—Athletic re- lations between St. Thomas and St. Olaf colleges have been resumed, it was learned Tuesdey following a meeting of of the schools with Endre B. Anderson, secre- tary of the Minnesota intercollegiat conference. Difficulties which caused the schools federal | to terminate athletic competition two years ago were patched up Monday at 8 conference. takeoff they were sighted off Point The Weather Generally fair and cooler tonight and Wednesday. PRICE FIVE CENTS rks TEMPERATURE HITS 105. IN- BISMARCK MONDAY APTERNOON All Other Points in State Report Similar Peaks; Three Cities Tied For High FORECAST IS PROMISING Weather Bureau Says Fair But Cooler Weather Is In Prospect Soon , Heat records fell all over the state trend as North experienced e hottest September in its re- corded history sad be mercury rose to 105 degrees in Bismarck while temperatures of 107 degrees were reported by Drake, Jamestown and Napoleon, and it was 106 at Fessenden and Max. Only seven weather bureaus in the Sa aes , the lowest maximum day being a 94 a = fair and cooler weather tonight an Wednesday throughout North me kota. However, O. W. Roberts, fed- eral meteorologist here, predicted Aid Sane ie would be in the generally throughout late this afternoon, pie The former September heat tecord for Bismarck wa) 102 degrees, regis- tered Sept. 7, 1897, and Sept. according to Roberts, Minot Man in Elks Labor Day Boxing Card Sighbege ° Sex through the improvised, ropes’ that failed to keep them in the ring. | afey bee rea 82, E :

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