The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 27, 1932, Page 3

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Pe } sive though not listed on President SURVEY GROUP WILL URGE N. D. T0:DROP PRIMARY IN MARCH Would Ask Legislature to Decide on Substitute For Presi- dential Election A tentative decision has been made by the governmental survey commis- sion to recommend that the presiden- tial primary law be repealed, John B. Cooley, Grand Forks, secretary of the commission, said Friday. The legislature would be asked to decide what machinery, if any, shall be legally set up to take the place of the primary held in March during presidential years, Cooley said. He called attention to the $134,633 spent for the primary last March. Recommendation probably will be made, Cooley said, to repeal the pres- ent law requiring that cities hold two registration days at each precinct prior to each election. The expendi- tures for registration officials under the present system is regarded by the commission as out of proportion to the benefits derived. As a substitute, the commission is contemplating suggesting that voters’ lists be prepared under the direction of the various city auditors, based on the lists of the last previous elec- tion. A certain period would be set during which new voters or those who have changed their registration since the last election, might have their names placed on the voting lists. The cost of balloting in the March presidential primary averaged 68 cents a vote, figures compiled by Cooley show. A total of 197,546 votes were cast. The following figures show the cost 3 the last March primary by coun- Jes: Cost} pointments when instructors retired. Vote Per {The department of Scandinavian County Expense Cast Vote |languages gave up a half-time instruc- Adams . -$ 1,892 2,055 $ Q2/tor last year. Barnes . + 3,702 5,974 63 Benson . 2,433 4,081 59) Li rm Billings 940 684 1.37 Linton Fa Boy . | Bottineau 2957 4223 70 Succumbs in City Bowman 1892 2,055 92 ee oy pie At ry Max Paul, nine-year-old son of Mr. Cass ... : 5870 12995 .45;8"d Mrs. Peter Paul, farmers living Cavalier .. 2,520 3900 .64/24 miles west of Linton, died in a Dickey 2,743 3,344 82; Jocal hospital at 10:15 o’clock Thurs- Divide 2,220 2,649 ° 84laay night. Rady. Ties zane Sg) The boy had been in the hospital Emmons 2,260 3,347 67/10 days. ae cee i 2,300 .67| Max leaves his parents, who have phd tei A 1418 64) lived in the Linton vicinity for 30 Grand Forks 5,400 10,000 .54/years, and three sisters. The sis-| Grant 3,072 3,221 = 95/ters are Elizabeth 12, Barbara 10,| Griges 1,531 1,686 90) and Katherine 5. | sirega . 2,581 2,735 +94) Funeral services will be conducted | = hoa 2,310 2.404 96! from St. Bernard’s Catholic church, | eae 2.50% | 3.522 .72|two miles from the Paul farm, with ae 1,565 2,202 68 Rev. Father Benjamin Eicher offic- ee 3,222 4.751 68 |iating. Interment probably will be aabeneie 1730 2381 -72/made in St. Bernard's cemetery Sun- sacteant ar aan ee day afternoon, with funeral services Mercer 1450 2665 54 bee conducted some morning next orton . 5,094 6,642 76!" Feilow-pupils of Max in a rural hee 3,008 3,826.78) school which he attended near the alee rH 1,924 1.12! Paul farm will be pallbearers. painting iaer aan) 82) Mr. and Mrs, Paul were at his bed-| Bisiee 1999 251377 side here when death occurred. Ramsey 3,073 4,410 89 Ransom 2,184 3,202 68 Renville 1,830 1,224 82 Richland 3,225 5,916 54 Rolette 1,805 1,931 93 Sargent 1,429 2,532 62 Sheridan 1,907 2,162 88 Sioux . 1,241 1,297 ST Slope 1,454 1,320 1.10 Stark 2,531 4,356 58 Steele 1,619 2,759 93 Stutsman 4,794 9,056 53 Towner 2,024 2,500 81 Traill 1,962 3,128 62 Walsh 3,072 5,322 57 Ward . 5,156 9,473 54 Wells 2,445 3,859 3 Williams . 3,500 3,519 87 $134,633 197,546 “$68 C from page one D Student Body Puts Heat on Board for University Policy voice in this cut which affects us as voters in this state as much as anyone, is pleading that men of this type be kept and those who can be easily replaced later be the ones to go. We urge that, in making this re- duction in the staff that the Board look into this matter of the value of the instructor to the school and con- sult student opinion on it in order to get that view, as well as looking at the man through the eyes of those who have conferred honors and fame upon him. “Examples of the type of men which it is rumored are to be cut are Mr. Jones, a man who has won the recognition of both the students and the other faculty members as know- ing more English than all the rest of the department put together. Dean Smiley is another man who, through his student contacts, though not par- ticularly pleasant because of his office of Dean of Men, has won a place in the hearts of the students because of his efficiency, breadth of learning, fairness and good judg- ment. Dr. Hult has gained national fame Sato h his dearelaGon of Peer Gynt is poetry as well as an instructor. Dr. Forsyth and Dr. Geiger are other examples of those who have done much for us and the University, and who are, it is rumor- ed, going 0 leave. This is just a few of type which we wish to keep and we urge that the Board look for these charactéristics in the men be. sre they decide to let them go and if they have those, things then let’s keep them and get rid of those who have not dorie so well.” 22 Departments Affected” Twenty-two departments of the uni- versity will be affected: by changes in personnel as the result of the 20 cent slash in maintenance costs cently ordered by the board of ministration, according to the state- ment of partial readjustments by. President Kane. 4 eee tors will be dropped fessors an ructors or work on a part-time schedule, the revisions showed. ae still English, the junior dean division and: Journalism. No_ stat Departments in which tement in these departments was per re- ad- are controversial include Kane's statersent, Superintendent M. E. Nugent-of university high school stated he had definitely been inform- ed the school will be abolished. next fall. Practice teaching for the School of Education will be conducted at Grand Forks Central high school by special arrangements. Dean E. F. Chandler of the College of Engineering was named dean emer- itus and Prof. L. C. Harrington, di- rector of the Division of: Mines, will serve as acting dean of the college. Dean Emeritus Joseph Kennedy will take a light teaching schedule for next year. He now is completing his 40th year at the university, Lists Other Arrangements Other arrangements announced by President Kane are: Prof. Jerome Hall of the law school, Prof, E. G. Blough of the commerce school, H. J. Humpstone, professor of psychology, A. G. Ronhovde, instruc- tor in political science, and Prof. J. J. Rellahan of the department of econ- omics and a member of the home economics staff will be absent on leaves next year. ‘The department of industrial arts and the department of shops and me- chanical engineering will be combin- ed into a new unit known as the de- partment of shops, with Prof. E. W. Bollinger in charge. The work in drawing in industrial arts, the department of engineering drawing and the department of arch- itectural engineering will be combined under the direction of P. W. Kilpa- trick as acting head. Prof. C. C. Schmidt, professor of school administration, will be on a part-time schedule as will Dr. Gott- fried Hult, head of the classical lan- guage department. Clarence W. Moberg, instructor in physiology and pharmacology, will re- tire because of the budget cut to con- tinue his medical course at Rush Med- ical college in Chicago. In the department of chemistry, three graduate assistants have been taken out. One instructor was eliminated in the Division of Mines. ie departments of romance lan- guages and sociology in the College of Liberal Arts anticipated the reduction in staff last year by not making ap- Placerville, Calif, May 27.—(”) —Reconciliation—not, abduction— was the explanation given Friday by Alfred C. Read, Jr., for bring- ing his estranged wife, Mrs. Mar- ian Y. Read, here from Oakland. In the Eldorado county jail, the , broker, whose young and attrac- tive wife has sued Claire Windsor, , actress, for alienation of affections and Read for divorce, denied he abducted his wife at the point of & gun. He protested he did not force her to accompany him on a wild motor car ride to this moun- tain town. In a nearby hotel, Mrs, Read rested before returning to her par- ents’ home in Oakland. She in- sisted her husband “kidnaped” her and declared he was aided by friends. i Mrs. Read vanished from in front of the Oakland home of J. 'W. Decker, an automobile sales- man, Wednesday night. She drove into Placerville yesterday in an automobile she told authorities was used by her husband in Capitol Plans to Be Mailed Out June 11 Grand Forks, N. D., May 27—(?)— Plans and specifications of the new North Dakota capitol will be mailed from the office of the Capitol Com- mission June 11 to contractors re- questing them and to the builders ex- changes at Grand Forks, Fargo, Minot, Duluth, St. Paul and Minneapolis, George A. Bangs, chairman of the commission, announced Thursday. The commission will meet in Bis- marck June 4 to approve the plans and specification and advertisements for the bids will be authorized at that time. Contractors must file applica- tions with the commission if they de- sire copies, Bangs said. Copies of the plans also will be on file at the offices of the commission in Bismarck and the architects, Joseph Bell De Remer of Grand Forks, W. F. Kurke of Fargo and Holabird and Root of Chicago. Contractors associations have asked about six weeks to prepare proposals, Bangs said, and bids will be opened in the offcie of the commission be- tween July 21 and 28, according to the: present plans. Charges Sexy Films Affected Hawaiians 8t. Paul, May 27.—(#)—Sexy mo- tion pictures have given Hawaiians a “bad picture of American woman- hood,” Seth W. Richardson, assistart federal attorney general, former North Dakotan, said here Thursday. Richardson, who came here to dis- cuss official matters with federal court officials, recently completed a six weeks’ investigation of Hawaliar. conditions. He said the natives see pictures “in which American women are shown leading dissolute lives.” He contended “there are more cases of assault on women in Long Beach. Calif., than in all of Hawaii. White women seldom are bothered by na- jtives'on the islands. Groups like that which attacked Mrs. Thalia Massie are made up of Husband Abducts Estranged Wife in Effort to Effect Reconciliation; Fails “carrying her off.” She said she escaped from Read and a man companion, Stewart Trumbauer, as they. slept by the mountain jen Trumbauer also is in The two men were arrested by Sheriff Charles F. Wood at the request of Oakland authorities. He found the men, weary and gaa walking towards Placer- e. Sheriff Wood sald Read was carrying a pistol and admitted hd his wife to accompany “He said he thought if he could get her up here away from every- thing,” Sheriff Wood added, “he fae talk her out of divorcifig Mrs. Read told officers her hus- band tried “his sales talk” on her in an attempt to persuade her to drop a $100,000 alienation suit against Miss Windsor and her di- vorce suit, in which she named the actress as correspondent. She declared she would do neither. woe men, Richardson assert- e Nonpartisans Plan Grand Forks Rally) Grand Forks, N. D., May 27.—()--| Grand Forks county Nonpartisaa League members will open their stat primary election campaign at a rally here next Thursday, D. C. MacDonld. county secretary, announced. William Langer, indorsed by the state convention at Bismarck as the | candidate for governor, will be the/| principal speaker. Others on the program will be Mayor A. T. Lynner of Fargo, Mrs Berta Baker, candidate for state au- ditor, and A. J. Gronna, candidate for attorney general. Peter Morgan of the Grand Forks Trades and Labor Assembly will be chairman of the meeting. Suspends Broker for His Bear Activities! | New York, May 27.—(#)-The New York stock exchange took its most drastic action Thursday against a member for bear activity thus far ia the 2%-year decline. Daniel Manning McKeon, a private | floor trader, was suspended for onc! year under. provisions of the constitu- tion forbidding the offering of stock in a manner designed to demoralize the market. HAND, OR FOOT? London—On whether a monkey's Paws are feet or hands hinges wheth- er or not duty shall be paid for their importation at Folkstone. There is no duty on quadrupeds, and the railway importing the monkeys claim they are in this classification. Customs offi- cials, however, think the monkeys have no feet, but four hands, and are dutiable. The casé may require court action, : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1932 | To Dedicate Selfridge Church June 19, i ikea am ee Pictured above is the new St. Philom | fridge, which will be dedicated June 19 with an appropriate program. Rev. | Father Boniface Simmen, O. 8. B., ena Roman Catholic church at Sel- pastor of the parish, spent several | years in gathering funds for its construction. "* e s-* * To Dedicate New Church | At Selfridge Next Month Program Being Arranged by Rev. Father Simmen, St. Philomena Pastor (Tribune Special Service) Selfridge, N. D., May 27.—Romani Catholics from throughout the Mis-| souri Slope area will assemble = June 19 to participate in the dedica- tion of Selfridge’s new St. Philomena church. A colorful dedicatory program is be- ing arranged by Rev. Father Boni- face Simmen, ©. S. B., who has been pastor of the St. Philomena parish Since 1924. Completion of the new church building last year climaxed several jYears of effort by Rev. Father Sim- }men in securing funds for the con- struction. Most of the money expended for the building was donated by wealthy per- sons in eastern states. .Rev. Father |Simmen scent 100,000 letters of appea: for funds to persons outside the state. Several Donations Large Among the benefactors were Girard Berry, of Ohio, through whose gener- osity the church basement was built in 1929; John E. Quinn, Boston, Mass., who donated $1,200 for the purchase! of most of the vestments, some furni- ture and a large bell; and Mrs. James Kerns and her children, Brooklyn, N..| Y., who gave $500 for the purchase of the Stations of the Cross and also do- nated the light plant and furnace, The parish and new church are named for St. Philomena, a young (Martyr of the early church, at the request of the late Sister Philomena, Chicago, who donated the frame building church used by the parish! for many years. | St. Philomena’s is a young parish, having been established in 1916 by Rev. Father Bernard,.O. 8. B., of Fort Yates, when Selfridge had only two small buildings. Rev. Father Bernard Buy or Sell Through The Tribune Want Ads celebrated mass in the Goose Camp district that year. It was in 1916 that the railroad was extended through Belfridge. | Frame Church in 1918 | In 1918 Rev. Father Vincent Frech, | O. S. B., took charge of the parish and | held services once a month in the schoolhouse. Rev. Father Frech built the frame church, funds for which were donated by Sister Philomena. In September, 1919, Rev. Father Othmar, O. S. B., became pastor, com- ing from Fort Yates once a month to; conduct services. In 1922 he moved to! Selfridge. Rev. Father Gregory Her- minger headed the pastorate from the fall of 1923 until the spring of 1924, Rev. Father Boniface coming in. March, 1924. The basement was blessed upon its completion Nov. 17, 1929, and the cor- | nerstone was blessed by Rev. Father Bernard, with the assistance of sev-| eral priests, during the Feast of the Pentecost, May 24, 1931. Thoresen Announces | Candidacy for Bench; Grand Forks, N. D., May 27.—()— | © T. H. H. Thoresen, Grand Forks at-| torney, announced his candidacy for | judge of the first district court Thurs- | day and said he had mailed nominat: ing petitions to the secretary of state at Bismarck. Present judges in the district are | sizes 1 a $2.95 value only i i y ou went right to our factory door every — Can you |draw this sign? M. J: Englert of Valley City, Swenson of Grand Forks and |B. Holt of Fargo. Thoresen came to Grand Forks aft- er having served as state tax commis- sioner for four years and a‘half. He is a former state's attorney of Dunn county. LARGEST FOUNDATION The largest endowment foundation in the United States is the Carnegie Foundation of New York, with a capi- tal of $19,860,783. The second largest is the Rockefeller Foundation, with 8 capital of $147,373,921. Bismarck - Mandan Voiture 40 & 8 Benefit Drum & Bugle Corps Dance, Dome, Mon. Eve., May 30th. Music by Leonard Dahl's 8-piece orchestra. Sure you can! And it will be worth your while, for you and 7,499 other motorists can win the Quaker State Insured Guarantee and “*Roll-o-Miles”—a combination which protects Quaker State users from the cost of replacing burned- out bearings. 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