The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1931, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCLUBER 5, 1931 ‘RELIEF DRIVE FOR |2#insret Show and LABOR FEDERATION GITY AND COUNTY | Nearing Completion’ CONVENTION OPENS Seer oe — TO START OCT, 20 act to permit 2.75 per cent beer, pri- | | 3 will do all kinds of cleaning work with modern equipment. The laundry wil’ call for and deliver clothing. Two experienced persons are em- ployed in the laundry at present an¢ Kafer said he expects to increase the staff as business permits, School of Forestry Ties Minot Normal tenance, ‘work assurance. prohibition of child labor, industrial stabiliza- tion, especially in seasonal industries. and balance of production to equalize CAMPAIGN FUNDS | Woman, 70, Takes First Airplane Ride A 70-year-old woman took off on her first airplane ride here Saturday. She was Mrs. R. E. Wright, who | SHEN AS THREAT 7 W. B. Couch, and her sister, Mrs. “ABORER IS KILLED DURING ARGUMENT canadian Dies From Gun Shot Wounds Inflicted by East Grand Forks Man Final arrangements for the three- day American Legion minstrel show and carnival, which will open in the ‘World War Memorial building and city auditorium Thursday, were be- gun Monday, according to Charles F. vate and community unemployment relief work and comprehensive plan- ning to prevent future depressions, with “national economic conferences Demands Private Industry Fur- nish More Jobs or Pay Penalty in Taxes Nye Says ‘Ever Growing List of | ‘Mrs. Wright boarded a mail- sald. The 5ist annual gathering of the Howe, resident of Burleigh county, during an argument with August/in the game and the closely contested Do lk campaign funds for elections and con- in Bismarck and Burleigh county Oct.!""he 49 and 8 chapter will stage a|American Federation of Labor was since 1886 who died in her home in| Licktelg of East Grand Forks during | battle was fought mostly in midfield. ny tinued violations of Corrupt Practices 20 by the Bismarck Community | m in the basement of the me-|SUmmoned, President William Green Bismarck Friday evening, were con-| 4 dispute over who should water the) In the fourth period, the Lumber- 4 Act eventually will strike down de-) \Chest and Burleigh county chapter of | otal building, while the carmival |S3id, to present to the nation practical ducted from the Lutheran church in | horses Sunday morning. jacks uncorked a running and pass- mocracy,Senator Gerald. P. Nye of |the Red Cross. ‘| will be set up in the main auditorium |methods, both temporary and perma. | Ecklund township at 2:30 p.m. Mon-| An inquest has been called for late|ing attack which netted considerable North Dakota said Seturday in an | The date was set Saturday at aj or the memorial building. nent, of relieving unemployment and! day. | today. yardage but fell short of a touchdown. SS e junc 5 “ i in | depression. jal was made e cemetery | y } address to the Saturday lunch club. meeting of the committee in charge|" A bowery dance will be held in |depi Burial de in th rm Ival had been working intermit- Violations’ Will Break Heart of America Minneapolis, Oct. &§ —(?)— Huge Assailing forces he said are insist- ent in their demands from the gov- ernment and contribute the funds for campaigns, Senator Nye declared con- gress will have to amend the Cor- rupt Practices Act to curb “an ever growing list of violations.” Amendment of the law to require greater publicity and smaller amounts alloted to candidates will be pushed at the next session, he said. Cites Nebraska Case . Senator Nye, citing instances such as that in Nebraska where a grocery clerk with the same name as Senator George W. Norris was induced to file: for Republican nomination, voting of persons who had been dead for years in Tennessee, and a number of oth- ers, asserted that unless drastic ac- tion is_taken, “representative gov- ernment in the United States will no) longer be responsive to the will of the people.” As chairman of the senate investi- gating committee, Senator Nye de- clared he had uncovered astounding evidence of corrupt practices all over the country and declared rich men furnish the bulk of the campaign: funds so they can control legislation. ‘The income tax reduction bill of 1926, he charged, was obtained “as pay- ment for campaign contributions.” “The whole situation,” he sald, “is ‘based on greed and selfishness and it is going to break the heart of de- meocracy unless these elements can be removed from politics. Wants Filipino Independence Senator Nye also urged granting of independence to the Philippines by the United States, asserting at the time the government took them over a pledge was made that they would be given their freedom “in a few years.” Senator Nye also advocated gov- ernment fixing of prices on all staple farm products as a remedy for the depression. “In the past the government has always delegated to the bankers the. power of fixing the value of the dol- lar,” sald Senator Nye. “I am in- clined to believe that the govern- ment may have to take over this function. “The present emergency of agri- culture could be relieved, I believe, if congress would pass legislation fixing the price to be paid for every staple) product of agriculture. That would enable farmers to buy goods and this would stimulate industrial prosper- ity.” Asked why the government should not fix the prices on merchandise as well as farm products and whether this would not involve monetization of silver, Senator Nye replied: “I am ® bi-metalist.” Air Inspector Comes To Bismarck Oct. 21 An aeronautical inspector from the U. 8S. Department of Commerce will visit four North Dakota cities this; month, according to the announce- ment by the state railroad commis- sion. The schedule is as follows: Oct. 9 and 19, airport at Fargo; Oct. 21, Prince Hotel in Bismarck; Oct. 23, Le- Passenger plane here Saturday | afternoon for a hop to Minneap- olis, en route to her home in Wis- msin, LION CLUB MENBERS i Frank Paris here. | | | | Asks Club to Observe Fire! Prevention Week; District | Meeting Set For Monday | Twenty-five deaths were caused in! North Dakota by fires last year, Henry L. Reade, state fire marshal, told members of the Bismarck Lions ‘club Monday noon. The marshal said property valued at more than $570,000,000 is destroyed in the United States annually. Last year, he said, farm property fire dam- age was estimated at $15,000,000. Calling attention to Governor George F. Shafer's proclamation des- igating this week as Fire Prevention Week. W. H. Payne, principal of Bismarck high school, gave a short talk on foot- ball in the local school and urged the club to support the Capital City eleven. He called attention to the at- tractive home schedule. It was announced at the luncheon that a district conference of the club will be held at Hebron next Monday evening at 6:30 o'clock (M.S.T.) A Joint meeting of the Mandan and Bis- marck Lions clubs will be held at: noon next Monday, it is planned. Attending the meetings here and at) Hebron will be M. Murray Allan,| Grand Forks, district. governor. BOURGOIS LOW BIDDER City, Mo., Oct. 5.—(?}—Ir- vin Bourgois, Bismarck, N. D., entered the low bid of $39,919 for the con-| struction of 3,000 linear feet of stan- dard revetment in the Missouri river at eo Bend, north of Bis- marek, Thompson, famous British biologist. advise you about Miriam Approximately $26,000 to Be Raised For Red Cross and Community Chest ' —__—_ | | |g, combined drive for approximately | Boise in the elty auditorium, Martin | $26,000 in relief funds will be launched of the Community Chest campaign, according to H. P. Goddard, secretary. Burleigh county’s quota for the Red Cross roll call has been set at $13,300 by William M. Baxter, Jr., manager |of the midwestern area of the Redj | Cross. ‘The budget board of the Commun- ity Chest has not yet set @ definite quota figure, but Goddard said the Martin, chairman of the committee in charge. | More than 40 men will take part in | the minstrel show, which wiil be} staged under the direction of Spencer 1 | connection with the carnival each evening, according to Martin. Among new attractions in the carnival are ping pong contests and many novelty side shows. A newspaper 150 years old also will be on exhibit, the chair- man said. The exposition ends Saturday night. goa! probably will be slightly lest then Two Stills Raided that of last year, which was $13,000. The campaign will be similar this year to those of past years, with the city being districted and canvassed by committees representing the relief or-| ganizations. The Bismarck drive will be later than other drives in North Dakota and Montana. In these two states the Red Cross drives have been set for Oct. 11, which has been designated “Red Oros Sunday.” » Members of the Community Chest campaign committee are James E. Taylor, chairman, J. E. Davis, B. O. Refvem, H. J. Duemeland. E. B. Cox, and Supreme Court Justice A. M. Christianson. Community Chest To Elect Tuesday Night Four new directors of the Bismarck Community Chest will be elected for two-year terms at a meeting of Com- munity Chest members in the Asso- ciation of Commerce office in the World War Memorial building at 8 p. m. Tuesday. All contributors to the Community , Chest are eligible to vote, according to H. P. Goddard, secretary. Nominees for the four posts are Dr. H. A. Brandes, Supreme Court Jus- tice A. M. Christianson, J. 8. Fevold, ‘To safeguard your life, fall in love.|H. J. Duemeland, B. F. Lawyer, B. O. |That’s the advice of. Sir Arthur|Refvem, H. O. Saxvik, and J. P. Wag- ner. By Federal Dry Men Fargo, N. D., Oct. 5—()—Two stills | were confiscated and one auto taken ‘during a federal raids last week in Stark and Dunn counties, John N. Hagan, federal prohibition adminis- trator for this district, said. {One of the stills had a capacity of 200 gallons. It was found in a coulee about 15 miles northeast of Dickin- son. Although there were indications officers were unable to find any per- son in the vicinity. Near Richardton in Stark county, two agents and Hagan, said they found a still on property owned by Clifford Dixson, who was taken into custody. The still had a capacity of the still had been operating recently, Vancouver, B. C., Oct. 5—(P)—| America’s representatives of organ-| ized labor convened today demanding | Private industry furnish more jobs or) Pay the penalty of higher taxes, 1 Its first official duty, after being called to order, was acceptances of welcomes to be tendered by W. A. Mac-| kenzie, minister of labor and mines, | Nels Lougheed, minister of mines| and other officials of British Colum- | bia, which custom decreed that! President Green must answer. | Outlining his views on labor's attit-/ Outlining his views on labor's atti-! tion, Green said: “Americans are all one family, and we must approach the problem in that light. A family without enough jobs to support all its members, would not Push several of them out in the cold to starve because they had no jobs. Instead, the family would divide the work between all its members and let each do something. All would sacri- fice but all would live.” 3 So capital must share the burdens! of labor, he said, and help apportion the jobs available. He said industry, chief beneficiary of the machine age, must aid by maintaining the Amer- ican wage standard by allowing short- er working hours and through work insurance, First actual work before the dele- gates was presentation of the execu- tive’s report, recommending a nation- al conference on work apportionment, about ten gallons. A small amount of @lleged moonshine and beer were found on the premises, Hagan said. At Killdeer, Dunn county, officers) nabbed David J. Green, charged him with violating the prohibition law and seized about forty gallons of al- leged moonshine and an automobile being used to transport the cargo. Dixson was released on his own re- bond. pile to rot. There is no fertilizer or plant food that will take the place of humus (decayed vegetable matter) for the lawn and garden. ross knitwear! She will be | Miriam Gross’ Representative Is Here From the national headquarters of Miriam Gross comes Miss Alma Erickson to present in the Sarah Gold Shop all today and Tuesday. We invite you to meet her! This Is the ‘Diagonal Froc By Miriam Gross cognizance and Green furnished Why burn leaves? Put them in a shorter hours, wage standard main- to show the way. Hold Funeral Rites For Mrs. John Howe Funeral services for Mrs, John near the Lutheran church there. Rev. E. L. Jackson, pastor of the First Gee church in Bismarck, offici- ated. Mrs. Howe was born at Steele Dec. 15, 1883, and moved to a farm in Ecklund township with her parents in 1886. Married to Mr. Howe in 1915, they moved to Canfield a year later. They moved to Bismarck a year ago. She leaves her husband, two sons, two daughters, a sister, and four brothers. Infant Girl Dies Saturday Evening’ Caroline May Watson, four and one-half months old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Watson, 302 South Seventh St. died in @ loal hospital Saturday evening. Death was caused by infectious diarrhea. Funeral arrangements were not completed Monday noon but it is probable the child will be buried in afternoon. The infant, only child of Mr. and Mrs. Watson, had been ill only a short time. She was born last May 15. | | ee ; East Grand Forks, Minn., Oct. 5.— | (®\—George Ival, 43, Canadian la- borer, died Monday morning in a ; Grand Forks hospitel from the ef- | fects of a gunshot wound inflicted ‘tently for Lickteig for the last three years. Sunday, shortly after 8 a, m., | Lickteig woke Ival, who was sleeping jin the barn, and told him to feed | the horses. Lickteig says that Ival, | who had been drinking, began an | argument with him and then grabbed | him by the neck. Ival then dragged Lickteig from the barn and began choking him. Sid Bateman, a neigh- | bor, saw the affair and dragged Ival off of Lickteig. Ival then picked up an axe and swung at Bateman strik- ing him on the arm, according to the report. Bateman fled around the barn with Ival pursuing and Lickteig ran to the house for a 12-gauge shotgun. He fired from a distance of about 30 feet and the charge struck Ival in the shoulder. | Lickteig is held without charge at the city jail. New Service Laundry Opened in Bismarck The New Service Laundry, managed Mary’s cemetery at 2 o'clock Tues- | by E. M. Kafer, former Burleigh coun-/ name and relationship and they will |ty deputy sheriff, opened in Bismarck | Monday. | It is located at 409% Fifth St. Kafer announced that ‘he laundry Bottineau, N. D., Oct. 5—(#)—The North Dakota School of Forestry up- set the dope Saturday in holding Mi- jnot State teachers’ college football team to a scoreless tie, Minot’s powerful eleven was unable to get within scoring range until late Dahlias, Cannas and Gladioi should now be lifted and allowed to dry outdoors. Then store in a frost- Proof cellar where they will remain ary, but will not overheat. The fall planting time is here. Bulbs and perennials can be safely Planted at any time from now untii the ground is frozen. The Incas of Peru have a tradition of men flying centuries ago. ONE CENT A DAY PAYS UP TO $100 A MONTR The Postal Life & Casualty Insur- ance Co., 11108 Dierks Building, Kan. sas City, Mo., is offering a new acci. dent policy that pays up to $100 a month for 24 months for disability and $1,000.00 for deaths—costs less than lc a day—$3.50 a year. Over 86,000 already have this protection. Men, women and children, ages 10 to 70, leligible. Send no money. Simply |send name, address, age, beneficiary's send this policy on 10 days’ FREE in- svection. No examination is required. This offer is limited, so write them to- ‘day.—Advertisement. —= e e ‘ \ land 3 Oct. 24, land otal in Minot and New and Different in Ge meg eens * ! 0! oe conducted by one or more inspectors Knitwear! at 10 a. m. each day on the schedule. Dickey Dedicates Methodist Church $ 00 Dickey, N. D., Oct. 5—UP)—Their t twelve-year goal reached, Methodists here dedicated their new church at Oras eet easterly, opened at el . °. 10 a. m, by Rev. W. 8. Brown, bishop It will not sag, stretch or shrink. it} st ste Helena area, Nal Decechea the pi 1 2 I cat le a } eg MN aise, superin It will not fade or lose its fitted shape. Poe | It is famous for durability and chic. Los Vme 2 veer ary coer ee Of course it’s exclusive with Sarah Gold’s Shop! It’s Sasso, referred to in reports to the new this season, made of fine zephyr yarns, and bril- BAG aie pal tary ie S| liantly colored! Two-piece style—in New Green, Glen derworld, was shot and critically | Red, Cannes Blue, Heliotrope, Navy, Brown and Black. wounded by an unidentified assailant | ee | in e 2 Sizes 14 to 44 In Court Fight : ' Accessories Accessories by contrast! Miriam Gross Handbags can be matched to Miriam Gross Hats and Scarfs... in contrasting frock colors you achieve perfect smartness. 2 Miriam Gross Handbags, iri Gi Triml a made from the same firm age a Se fe ae “Miriam Gross Scarfs .. < spun pane in perfectly oe toh J in “Knit $1 95 mate! Fr cane? ° colors .... $4.95 ed .....646 $3.50 Wear’ colors Fur prices have come down to rock-bottom! And, Albrecht’s “Budget Furs” afford you the finest opportunity of saving money by buying NOW, for when these coats are sold most of them cannot be duplicated at nearly as low prices. Exclusive at the Sarah Gold 312 Main Avenue BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Tssociuted Press Photo Lindgren, In private life Mra. ul brought $160,000 suit against Otto H. Kah: iNew York banker and music patron, charging Kahn broke greement ito relmburse her for that sum spent jon an operatic career Shop Bismarck, N. Dak. Style Without Extravagance

Other pages from this issue: