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“T? {Democrats ‘North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ai The Weather tonight; siinday pari ane and er, ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS Continue Bickering | Conferees Pitch into Muddle Over Relief Bill AV. LENGTHY STRUGGLE. |Bonzer Launches Attack on Jones) GRASSHOPPERFIGHT i} ! ) ON CONTROVERSIAL MEASURE FORECAST Final Adjournment of Congress Expected to Come About End of Next Week PRESIDENTIAL VETO LOOMS ever form it finally might leave the conference. Democratic Leader Rob- inson of the senate still maintained not only that the senate’s bill was not “pork barrel,” but that the presi- dent would sign it even though dis- approving of the measure in part. President Hoover's criticism ap- plied not only to the bond issues and the non-self-sustaining character of projects that would be built under them, but also to apportionment of the $300,000,000 fund for relief loans to the states on a basis of population instead of need. States in distress, he said, would not get what they should, while states. able to meet their own relief requirements would be free to help themselves at the expense of the federal government. He said this was “disheartening.” With nothing to do until the sen- ate catches up on the secondary leg- islation before it, the house took Sat- urday off. No immediate progress was in sight on the economy bill's conference report, which the senate Friday rejected. BRIGHT-EYED BOYS » AND GIRLS RULE AT PATTERSON DENIES LEAGUE SUPPORTING MORATORIUM PLAN ligations that you have legalized your- selves to do, do you believe that you can clear yourselves? Do you be- lieve that you can give an explanation to the people now and years from now as to why you would do that? “Do you think that you can give an saying now, by an initiative law, that you are not going to do for five years what you have legally already prom- jised to do? There’s a Principle “Now there's a principle. regardless of the depression. regardless of the prices of different,commodities that we're buying, regardless of the pricz of the different lines of merchandise that we buy and the commodities tha: we sell, always bear in mind that there is a principle to take into con- sideration. “Do you believe, as some claim that if you are allowed to go without paying your taxes, paying your gro- cery bill, paying your doctor, paying your dentist, paying your undertaker and a lot of others that you can keeo your schools going, your highways up and a thousand and one things going acording to standards that meet your approval? “As some say, it will ruin for many years to come the credit of North Da- explanation that will justify you in| | Solon From Lidgerwood Urges Recall of Senator in 48th . District WOULD RESTORE SINCERITY Says Westerner Ignored Prom- expenses in his campaign against Jones and in making it as his con- tribution to an effort to restore sin- cerity to state politics and the state | government. ‘The speaker asserted that political ‘officeholders and managers are of two types, one the “beaver” type which works for the up-building of the community and supports its in- ficial to it, the other the “rodent” type which seeks to live on the fat of the land at the expense of others. In the latter classification he group- ed Jones, Governor George F. Shafer. manager, asserting that they have best interests of the state and have listened to counsel inimical to the welfare of the people. Mentions Campaign Finances In citing votes by Jones against grain storage bills which, he said, were in the farmers interests and would save him money, and his votes on oth- er measyres, Bonzer said it was pos- sible tha¥ the finances for the I. V. A. campaign may have been obtained as @ result of the defeat of the bills against which Jones voted. Supporting the Frazier bill, Bonzer pointed out that six state legislatures have asked congress to enact it into \terests and the things which are bene-/ consistently refused to support the} QUESTION OF AID IN | AGAIN UP 10 HOUSE Senate Still Holds to Claim Federal Government Should | Help Farmers NYE SAYS HYDE TO BLAME L. Marlatt, chief of the bureau of entomology, show grasshopper in- festation of crops in some South Da- per cent. saying the grasshopper threat in the middlewest has been materially re- duced by heavy rains throughout the jsouthern part of the infested area. jkilled by unusually damp weather which has provided luxuriant weed {and grass growth on uncultivated jground to occupy the attention of the millions surviving while small and L. L, Twicnell, 1. V. A. campaign! grains have made sufficient headway | |to withstand attacks before harvest. Marlatt said: “In the northern jPart of the area threatened—North ;Dakota and Minnesota—the story is different. Here until recently the Weather has been hot and dry and jthe Srasshoppers are fast reaching jthe winged stage when they may be jexpected to spread over a wide area, damage.” BANK OF N. D. WILL AID ’HOPPER FIGHT Fargo, N. D., June 25.—Arrange- ments whereby the Bank of North Dakota will assist counties in finan- cing the war on grasshoppers wer? and unless controlled, cause serious Ozark Smile Girl | | The letter was addressed to C. A.} Mall, superintendent, and J. E.; | O'Neill, general manager of the Amer- | {kota counties to range from 30 to 50/ican Railway Express agency at St.}page at a Democratic national con- |Paul, and to F. R. Bartles, assistant | The department quoted him as / general manager of the Northern Pa-/ the only previous convention he has| ‘cific at St. Paul. | Text of Letter | The text of the letter follows: i | “I have in my possession two let-| The pests were said to have been ters signed by H. C. Dahf, Northern | from North Dakota from 1900 to 1904. Pacific and Express Agent at Buch-/| anan, North Dakota. In one, a pro- | paganda letter, written on railroad) letterhead and enclosed in railroad | lenvelope, addressed to “Fellow Em- ;ployees” he states, among other things, that he was a lobbyist during | {the entire 1931 session of the legisla- | {ture. The other letter, written on) j Railway Express Agency letterhead, | jrequests agents of other railroads to; |send several hundred railroad en-| velopes to be used for the following | purpose: ‘ “‘We want to get out a last-min- ute appeal to all the boys in the state for Tom Johnson for Rail- road Commissioner, and it takes a lot of envelopes. . . .” ' “[ discussed the matter with the ‘agent of the Northern Pacific at Bis- | marck, who stated that Mr. Dahl was {representing Organized Labor. I im- | mediately got in touch with Labor of- | ‘for representative in the 31st district jon the Democratic ticket. | jtive in several political campaigns. | She taught school in North Dakota! jstaffs of the Great Falls, Mont., Trib- Bombast, Ballyhoo | Reaching N.D. DELEGATES 10 DEMOCRAT MEETING LEAVE FOR CHICAGO | | | | | | For Jonathan C. Eaton of Fargo, his attendance at the convention will | recall the days when he acted as a} vention. That was in 1904 and was) attended. His father was a delegate | to the 1896 convention when William Jennings Bryan was nominated, and} served as national committeeman J. E. Garvey, Cavalier, a lawyer, was a candidate on the Democratic ticket for congressman in the first district in 1930. At the 1932 state convention he was advanced as a candidate for congress again, but withdrew. He has been a member of the Cavalier school board, was city attorney and mayor. Dickinson Man Goes A. C. Pagenkopf, Dickinson, was aj Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor in 1926 and for state audi- tor in 1930. He is now a candidate The only woman delegate, Miss Gertrude Dwire, Minot, has been ac- for two years, worked on the editorial une and the Minot Daily News, and now devotes her time to the manage-) Crescendo State Campaign Nears Close; and Voters Prepare to Give Verdict at Polls FRAZIER BILL IS EXCITING| Attracts More Attention From tendencies of the I. V. A. regime will influence the voters. Such a situa- tion defeated Senator Brookhart, not the fact that he insurged against Hoover, as those behind Shafer’s can- didacy for senator seek to infer. In} these days of economic stringency and; unemployment the spectacle of a pub-| lic office filled with members of the same family irks more than under normal conditions. A few years ago, when jobs were plentiful, little atten- tion was paid to such a condition. ee # There has been much said about! bond sales by the I. V. A. campaign orators and strategists. Here again no point has been made out. The Nonpartisan insurance commissioner has declared that the Bank of North; Dakota closed its doors to him when he sought to buy state bonds. He) Pointed also to the fact that the workmen's compensation board, domi- nated by the I. V. A. party, handles its bond transactions exactly as the insurance commissioner does. In fact, the League has refrained from call- ing up certain bond sales under a former I. V. A. administration which make present bond transactions pink tea affairs. It is just as well to leave that late unpleasantness in darkness. R. A. Nestos has almost retired from ANTI-ROOSEVELT MEN STAGE FURIOUS DRIVE FOR DELEGATE VOTES New Yorker’s Manager Refuses Compromise Offered by Senator Harrison | DEBATE PROHIBITION PLANK Farley Says Campaign Against Two-Thirds Rule Will go = Nonpartisan Asks Voters if| ‘se and Interests of Vot- i Voters Than Any Other | Ahead Unabated Nine Will Support Roosevelt and y | House and Senate Hope to They Think Five-Year ers Last Session ap cesar of Agriculture En- 10th Will Support Alfalfa | Single Issue | i i i \ BULLETIN + Patch up Differences on Plan is Justified Jepinustaasums nits | _ tomologists Say Situation Bill Murray Chicago, June 25.—(P}—A flat . , ‘ e une ti ‘i q ” | » ; $2,300,000,000. Bill — te } | in N. D. Serious Only a few more days of bombast; and final declaration of inten- » ‘i Hazen, N. D., June 25.—Political Na and ballyhoo! tion to carry through the fight fF j inot, N. a tee ila dynamite was touched off here Fri- (By the Associated Press) Then, quietly, some 200,000 Nort! against the two-thirds rule was Washington, June 25.—()—Under|IN8 ® Sorry stale of affairs, with ajday night with the appearance of A-| Washington, June 25.—(#)—The North Dakota's 10 delegates to the|Dakotans will go to the polls to vote| Voiced by Roosevelt leaders Sat- dential criticism which deq|“ebt situation unparalleled in the|F. Bonzer, Jr. state senator from) question of whether federal funds Democratic national convention were| their convictions in what has been a| Urday in a convention city al- Presidential criticism which sounded] ot ito we the ti Richland county, to join in the effort m3 Chicago-bound Saturday, ni | relatively col ready resounding with threats of much like a veto threat, conferees of [State's history, e five-year mora-| + recall E. W. Jones, Killdeer, as sen-|Will be sent to northwestern states | ago-bound Saturday, nine of|relatively colorless campaign. iy 4 ; torium measure should be approved ‘oa: - . | them ready to give their unqualified; Generally speaking, the political @ coalition that would bolt any the house and senate pitched in Sat- PPI ator from the 48th legislative district,|to rid them of grasshoppers again jsupport to Governor Franklin D.| meetings have not been well attended.| nominee named by fewer than urday to harmonize the widely dif- Rae Tasbdies Cael Bat next comprising Dunn, Mercer and Oliver | Saturday was put by the senate oe Apsocates rene phate |Roosevelt of New York. |More voters have attended the rallies| two thirds of the delegates. enn detects woos ereon cl uarely up to the house, which three eraldine Fitzgerald, 18, of e 10th delegate, George T. Mur-|under Nonpartisan league auspices a ee respective io Donnybrook, in an address in Mi- ie vies SU a eae ro one red eda ‘Seapine | Joplin, Mo. has been chosen the |ray of Berthold, N.'D.. is pledged toj than have Wathered at ‘those stased| Chicago, June 25—UP—A situation Indications pointed to a long strug-|"¢ Friday evening, asked voters) ¥ ith an address at Center and spoke : tion of Chairman} 0st winsome girl in the Ozarks jhis brother, Governor William (Alfalfa | by the I. V. A. and Real Republicans. | tense with uncertainty Saturday * % sie, delaying final adjournment at|Whether, if they approve the pro- again at Beulah at 6 p.m. Senator) Acting on the motion of Cha‘ and will be this year’s official | Bill) Murray of Oklahoma. ‘The voters have not been aroused | Provoked a furious drive for delegates Teast to the end of next week. ‘The|P0Sal, they will be able to justify|Jones attended the Beulah meeting |mcNary (Rep., Ore.) of the agricul-| “Ozark smile girl. | All of the state's delegates are ex-!on any of the issues propounded.| bY opposing leaders in Franklin D. house group obviously intended to|thelr action in future years. ut refused Bonzer’s invitation to take lire committee, the senate Friday re- |pected to be in Chicago by Sunday|They have gotten more excited and|Roosevelt’s momentous battle for the <B Y stick out for everything it could get|. Senator Patterson, long a leader in|the Platform and defend his record a8/-4 +5 vieid its contention the gov- and in the evening will hold an or-|have shown more interest in the Fra-|Democratic presidential nomination. of the ortzinal Garner plan, includ-|the Nonpartisan League, emphasized |Bonzer read it to the audience. | He in conmeina the ganization meeting at which a chair-|zier farm bill than any other single| With accredited convention vot- n, that the measure is not sponsored by announced, however, that Mrs. John jernment should aid in controlling |man will be selected, issue. It has been hard for th to |ers arriving hourly, chieftains in the ing a $1,200,000,000 public works pro- B. Cooley and Senator J. P. Cain, i 5 en hard for them ram financed by a bond issue. |the league. a & the ais: | Pests Several of the delegates have par-| follow Governor Shafer's eulogies of |Tival camps were doing their utmost Equally, the senators were commit.| The senator said he recalled an oid|Dickinson, would come into the dis-| In: approving a partial conference \ticipated in previous national con-| President Hoover and regular Repub- |to line up ballots and obtain some ac- Equally, the ‘senators, were commit-|saying that he read as a schoolboy,|ttict Monday and Tuesday to defend| report on the remaining disputed sec- ventions. licanism. Reports have come that|curate tabulation with which to smalier construction program involy- (something like this: ae tions of the $175,000,000 agriculture | R. B. Murphy, Bismarck, attended |some farmers have actually bolted |%8uge the doubtful outcome of three ing: only’ $50,090,000 ‘of bonds. The| “O. N. More went away, owing more|. Addressing approximately 150 per-|department appropriation bill, the the San Francisco convention in 1920, |Shafer meetings as the governor has|Vital pending disputes. frail total of both bills is the than he could pay. ©. N. More came |Sns here Friday night, Bonzer again} senate instructed its conferees to in and represented the state on the plat-|defended the policies of the white| These involved: The first pri of £2 500,000 000. Om bills 1s the same! ick one day, owing more than when|c*lled on Jones to defend his record. !sis; on the bill carrying funds for form committee. He served as na-|house. next week's gathering—the nomina- To this internal discord was added|he went away.” but the incumbent failed to do so. IN jgrasshopper control. tional committeeman for North Da-| Second to the Frazier bill, the farm-|tion; the fight to lay aside the vene- President Hoover's outspoken opposi-| “And I'm under the impression thac/ 40 exchange after the meeting, Jones) This isthe only provisions on |kota from 1924 to 1928, when he re-jers have become deeply interested in |Table two-thirds rule; and the bitter tion to both esis ‘The “pork |if you go away. for five years ani|cc™manded to know if Bonser d/which they now are disagreed. AS ————_ tired to work for a United States|tax reduction, Discussion of the mil-|COtroversy over whether the perma- barrel” label he binued on the Geener|don't look after your already legal ob- |", 8% affidavit stating the things/approved by the senate the bill car- . delegation to the national convention | lions of bonded indebtedness saddled |"ent convention chairmanship shall Tatas ste es Jes) = ae aeeuona, fieenaaily, nid tome beck (toe Bonzer had said on the plat- tries $1,450,000 to fight grasshopners./ Larkin Says Letterheads Used |to support Former Governor Al Smith.|upon North Dakota by I. V. A. re- |8© to Senator Walsh of Montana, a ane pa ikon cole et an dak ie eive ‘péanasthGal sow, “YORI RS ows form. Bonzer's reply was that he!put the senate and sponsors in both int Mi Cc 4 |Murphy is an indorsee of the state |gimes to perfect their great political [Roosevelt supporter, or Jouett Shouse ference Friday, to cover both bills. ing more than you ean pay,” Senator) “ould sign s million. houses are ready to compromise for} in Last-Minute Campaign —{Hemocratic convention for one of the| machine, has been another significant |, anti-Roosevelt leader. His express tite” Chie: ctaiteyeas | Catiorson aAlc.. oa Six state employes, all adherents | about half that sum. For Opponent two nominations for congressman. |trend of the campaign. It has not| All were quick to express confid- would “rechone stiveeesbond eprnanedle ‘Asks About Scalawags sai Tee co aiaree iteanerantiees The bill, and grasshopper section, . From 1922 to 1931 he was a member |been hard to keep the record clear|@mee their particular cause would tions, which he said would unbalance| Senator Patterson wondered wheth- | from Bismarck took notes on Bonger's|Twie, the approval of both Rowse Pe on of the state board of administration. and place the responsibility for high Fear tent on Serena ate cS phe budget all over again and do farter, if the measure is approved, there jaddress. Bonzer called attention t0/ident Hoover before the money can| park River, N. D., June 25--B. C.| P. W. Lanier, Jamestown, the Dem-|longs. the blame Pe-!many cases men espousing the same more harm than good. ‘would be a lot of scalawags takinz|them and suggested that they “prob-| pe set aside for use. i H "s ¢ ved side could not agree as to how man; The congressional outlook did not | adv: f it, rotec ” be Larkin, chairman of the state rail-|ocratic party's indorsee for U. 8. sen-| The campaign has most certainly ei! iy favor his hope. ‘The makeup of the|intendee init for t nent peels and elas iol oe aeaiiohedk Meanwhile, Secretary Hyde, Jho|road board and a candidate for re-|ator, will attend his second national /established that point beyond doubt | ots thelr faction controlled. 4 | # recently agree sl $600,- | election, Saturday called upon offi-|convention. In 1928 he wa: dele- vi ere was. joreover, a genera! coe ree committee Showed anjusing it to defend themsleves from|up on traveling expenses incurred by|qo9 fund urged by house sponsors, cjais of the Northern Pacific railroad |gate and was hamed a member of the|° Wwerotiem in all:tts ugly ant unter | eae the Tie cageenelte Nae oe Poe STINE aemtiment forthe |tulfilingobligations which are right, |state departments during June; cars| ania entomologists reported the/and the American Railway express national platform committee. Lanler,|ramifications has been developed by|the Situation would not come until i ; i a I. ; - : ‘ 7 the chairman- tire relief program, and the concern jexpressed as to whether the law is|the I. V. A. organization to finance | Rrecno pen TeCUne company to see if they are sponsor-|a Tennessean by birth, served in the|the opposition to the administration | TUeSday's roll call on 7 1 pore bere e. ae Se sponsibility forhouse refusal to} ing eleventh hour propaganda against |lower house of the legislature of his i ship. their owh dittervacee in Uisteease SR eels caewe tw ins wate eneltfcfor rare te eg ee placed | nin which is being spread by two of|native state in 1911 and 1012, He louise have oot abterapied 0 SO Simecumipteers oo: e “D on Hyde by ve . N. D.) | their employes. came to North Dakota in 1923 to prac- le war' at a peak 0: o ney any shee there: qwae'a widesrecad fey cat acer coat ff yout pean politica! pxtepones. lin senate debate, and McNary said “it He asked that they reply by wire/Ttice law and has been active in Dems | semters ey ee eon ratios cious | temness, Senator Harrison, guardian q aisposiiion to put the bond issue| tes gr legalizing you to take the oer ine Own Expenses is own| © hoped the house will recede.” {in order that the public might know |ocratic politics. In 1990 he was acan-|to the same I. V. A. payroll. ot Taeaceteiio poate in conerenn. aie matter up to the president in what- wiht ond One of the reports, filed by Dr. C.!the truth. |didate for congress. ‘No one can tell how far the nepotic Posed @ compromise. only to have it rejected by Roosevelt managers and spokesmen for the combination of candidates opposing the New Yorker. Predicting Roosevelt's nomination on the first ballot, he urged the gov- ernor's followers to abandon their campaign for elimination of the two- thirds rule in the interest of party harmony, and that Shouse be given an opportunity to make a “ringing speech” with Walsh thereafter tak- ing over the chairmanship. Almost immediately, James A. Far- tey,, chief Roosevelt tactician, an- nounced the fight against the two- thirds rule would go on with undim- inished intensity. “When we make a move we go straight through,” he said. Alfred E, Smith was adamant in turning down the Harrison proposi- tion. He said he would go onto the convention floor, take off his coat and fight if necessary to retain the two-thirds rule. The anti-Roosevelt camp contends the New York governor broke faith in attempting to make Walsh chair- man. It claims that Roosevelt agreed upon Shouse for this post as part of @ compromise making Senator Bark- ley of Kentucky keynoter. However, doubtful Roosevelt's hold upon the convention may be, his fol- lowers are in firm control of the con- « } kota. If you believe that, do you ment of property she owns in Minot. | the litical sta; although he lifts nl think it wise to pass it? I'm asking|!8W, including that ay Hilo. ie announced Saturday by B. E. Groom | ficials in various parts of the state! pr R, H. Leavitt, who practices! nis peat oe vee i ede ‘of his|Yention committees. They demon- ” lists many lawyers and ba! of the Greater North Dakota associ-/ and without exception they disclaim- M strated this early Friday evening by | you to use your Judgment. membership. Despite this fact, he|ation, |edhaving anything to do with it, re-|mecicine at Carson, was a delegate|old allies from time to time. | tentatively seating Roosevelt deleza | ATHOLIC MEETING : ; said, Governor Shafer and Senator! The announcement said the bank| pudiated Mr. Dahl and his campaign,|s¢ has béen prominently identified On the bond issue se any Fates tions from Louisiana, Minnesota and | Economic Distress Jones opposed it on the ground that) will honor certificates of indebtedness | and advised that if Labor sends out witn Democratic polities In North Da- | minded voter must give the round £0) Porto Rico, over the objections of j Cc d Si R Ht rs not economically sound. He de-lissued by counties to finance bran |any propaganda it will be from its|/iota and is a member of the state | hie laren Fae neared |STOUPS opposing the governor and | aused Slam evo manded to sn ou Aches, ban Ep riees. joffices and on its own stationery. | central committee. fie how Stes isle gis ot pet pstninn oes leealy ceremns, the 12 ‘i . *, % qi fi imself as . At the came time it was announced; “It is a fact that from every order ihdepns! & mocrats 01 e two states ai \f Children’s Day at Dublin's Euch-) paris gune 25—UP—The chief|"‘Bonzer also clarified his pollticallinat steps have been texen te pre-|made by the Railroad Commission, | ,.7he other members of the slate/ mission or omission are much less Se-| island dependency. | aristic Congress Provides _|cause of the revolt at Bangkok, Siam.| position. He said he is not and heS!vent speculators from increasing the | either party may appeal to the courts | °° -4°,"tne hotel business there, and | !OU> Committee Behind Doors 4 which overthrew the absolute rule of/not been a member of the I. V. A.lprice of bran. Groom said Minneap- | if they feel the evidence in the case |S0e"d ‘ine hore, Musiness tele Oo) In its more general aspects, the) The Roosevelt-controlled subcom- } Pageantry King Prajadhipok and Queen Rarbai faction, although technically listed *5lolis millers have taken steps to as-|does not justify the findings. During Hae campaign now ending has had mony mittee appointed to draft, the plat- bagel As a distress, reports fen ne Jee - pe crit one LA We penne down rare ie Has the He at tare pean. on ie some. Miss Nellie Dougherty, Minot, na- teetaes ot 2 pussliiie cature and make Paved at work behind closed doors Dublin, June 25.—(#)—A shrill Cas-| The king has been powerless to cope dependent Republican Who balleves 25 ling. si (Continued on page eleven) Sean ORR Oe da ielbans foe, the peared pole | eee teniative prohinition de cade of starch and bright eyes—white| With the economic crisis, a Havas the princi interests which have of the first two women representa-| going to be. i th i News Agency report said, and he de-|with the party interes! ti it in the North Dakota state going ie concensus of the all-star cast of dresses and white ribbons and white] stroveq failed ke it responsive to the in- TE ves to sit in the Not ‘ota si Two contests hold the spotlight.| party leaders on the lutions 4 sashes—spilled into the majestic, col-|stternating almost divine presley ltereata of the people. He pointed ott WE ASK YOUR VO legislature. | The one for the United States sena- inittse the plank “would Be erences orful pageant of the Eucharistic con-|dilatory methods, and by consulting|that the Republican party which Every two years The Tribune offers its candidacy to the people SS (Continued on page two) concise assertion in tavern of aati wens Gairdas with his subjects. elected Lincoln was a new party!| of Burleigh county for election as official newspaper. It does so ||| Late Bulletins \|\¢* + | ting to the states a repeal amend= w ig aa re ‘The report said there also had been| which had revolted against the WhigS.|/ again this year and it asks your vote at the primary election June 29 || ¢__—-__-_______-___#|| Widow of Custer —_| | ment. From allover Ineland—and some|Twnors, Of court extravagance and! Oo", fi nanagement of the|| afd again at the final election in November. Fresh Meadow. county clud,|/ Turns Back Pages || tempt ot smitn ts pledge the porty from far lands away—they came, a|maladminisiration of pubic | twter(state’s affairs, had made everything It dées 50 in the hope that every voter will make careful analysis || murhing, N. ¥.-Phil Perkins of New | ng lig tngcr of. tinea’ Wie Ate ae be ipa Cn treble aa a ae tailed ‘to balance, it said, it was neces- | Subservient to his digi police smn of the facts involved and cast his ballot in accord with his own best eae teak a gerne! Jone ior pi zak, ae go Ryy ama spokesmen from all sections said the stood in orderly groups before ‘ . tions and branded as “calumny ‘ity. > the U. 8. open golf championship |-year-ol low _ of nt submission declaration is the limit. white high altar in Phoenix park. |S&°Y to resort to increased taxation the Red Cross” the statement that iatitente aaa Shope oF ee cppmrnenthy. ’s candidacy is ||Saturday by negotiating the fourth} George A. Custer Saturday ob- At least that was the view of the By 10.a.m—an hour before the|and then to drastic economies, which /(at ei" od'the Red Cross saved the The main argument in support of The Tribune's ell round in 70, posting a 72-hole total of| served in the seclusion of the | dominant Roosevelt Sr eee solemn Pontifical high mass began—|Proved the last straw. people in the drouth section last|| that it ts, has been, and proposes to be at all times in the future a i f apartment on Lower Park ave- |torves of the New York governon tone Dublin seemed city of children and| | The newspaper te Matin heard @| sear" real newspaper. It has given'the news fairly and impartially and oe nue the Séth anniversary of the Jover full command of the platform the ‘aronue lending to the park was|cmllsed by the king last week aa a| ‘Continued on page fifteen) in the beliet that its first obligation Is to its readers, It has striven patites BAUSCH wins || marmero of her husband and 297 | writing eubeommitiee, |") YO ; motor filled result of the economy drive. ie to give them all sides of all questions without attempting to influ- g » An . McAdoo, 's oe oe. Bare eae ith them. |""rrhe king recently convoked a meet-|Senators Order Cut ence any decisions which they may make on public questions. That a eee page ag gel Sra oe ie pope's represintative at the congress, |ing of officers of the army in an at- Board Mone: is a newspaper's true function and The Tribune has tried to meet the final trial for places on the - posing appointment of the subcom- celebrated the mass, and before that|tempt to dnelity om icy cots. and In Farm a y that obligation in every issue published. ; decathlon squad of the Ameri- ete 2 sang hymn ‘al b ssasongaesd « "Boul of My saviour” ‘ed bya choir eee eae credited with being the| Washington, June 25.—(?)—A sharp : The Tribune has a vastly greater circulation in Burleigh county a polo Jae peti yo campant jon, yi not eding | up Re of 500 children. reason for the revolutionary congpir-|cut in operating funds of the farm than any other newspaper, regardless of where published. It carries |/ ihe 10-event test by 47.05 points. d ties fie mass ie ‘Spann moved|acy. A “poops ail was a Board was approved Saturday by the the news of Burleigh county and the people buy it for that reason. = amonj miniat ttalions which |ized to carry ou' movement - jsenate. vastly great citizens will be reached GOLFERS IN DEADLOCK Rss stood stiffly in thelr places until he|formation reaching here indicated. | dt eliminated from the independent || A vastly greater number of a oe than through Copies Suk, Cxnia Clty @ returned to the altar. Then a blast, offices supply bill an appropriation || by official notices and proceedings wy, ||two masters of golf from Dallas, Gus of trumpets dismissed them. DICKINSON LIONS ELECT of $1,000,000 for the board, substitut- other medium. It costs no more to insert these notices in The Moreland and David Goldman, Sunday the congress will end with| °Dickinson, N. D., June 25—(?)—At| ing permission to use up to $600,000 Tribune than it would cost in s newspaper of much less circulation. wound up in a deadlock Saturday at @ Pontifical high mass which 1,000,000! regular meeting of the Dickinson}of its uncxpired surplus from the The Tribune is owned and operated by Burleigh county people, the halfway mark of weir 36-hole persons are expected to attend. After| Lions club, H. A. Diedrich was chosen |current fiscal year. re ‘the Burleigh county viewpeint and interested in this county’s match for the Trans-Mississipppi the mass the congregation will march president for the ensuing year. He} Senator Nye (Rep., N. D.), opposing ving 4 ” championship. in procession and a blessing will be| succeeds E. W. Tobin. Other officers|the cut, read @ letter from Chairman development. pr ea ae G. N. PASSES DIVIDEND given on O'Connell bridge in the heart |elected include H. A. Mackoff, first/stone of the board saying it would Not only the institution itself but many of its employes are FARMER'S PICNIC St. Paul, Minn., June 25.—(P)—The of Dublin. ‘president; Lynden Rader, second necessitate dismissal of about 50 per taxpayers in Burleigh county. Elgin, N. D., June 25.—Grant County jexecutive committee of the Great’ ‘The Americans here for the con- president; W. D. Robertson, third | cent. of its employes, or 160 to 175 ‘The le of the county are entitled to have, as their of- Farmers’ Union will hold its annual|Northern railway board of directors ‘attended # Pontifical high mass Henry Brown, secre- plus a furlough for all re- peer 4 7 icnic Sunday, June 26, at the Loren- persons, P lay, 5 met Friday but took no action on th: the Church of St. Andrew Satur- 4 .| maining, including board members, in ficial newspaper, one which is home-owned, home-operated and zen grove south of here. C. C. Tal-|semi-annual dividend due at this morning. a A nc take office | addition to the furlough contemplated home-edited. They get just that in The Tribune. bott, Jamestown, will be the speaker. |time. This is equivalent to the pass- Bishop Joseph Schrembs of ; in the pending economy bill, The Carson band will play, ing of the dividend. 5 o