Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Census Result “AIDS REPUBLIGANS ~IN-BLECTION FIGHT Normally Republican States! Gain Electoral Votes as ‘Washington, Aug. 9—(P)—Reappor- Hone Ot aot ole epublica gain {effort to balance the federal budget. of 12 votes in the new electoral col- REAPPORTIONHENT | UNCLE SAM'S NEW TAXES WHERE THEY HIT YOU-—AND HOW! Editor's Note: This is the 13th | of 20 dally articles explaining the ; new federal taxes. | (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) | Both beer and wine are illegal in the United States, but Uncle Sam is overlooking no bets when it comes to ‘collecting taxes from home-brewers land amateur wine-makers in his big Home-brewers and basement wine- | makers are counted on to add a large |share of an estimated yield of $82,- lege. This big shift in the voting strength of 32 states may have unusual bearing on the outcome of the approaching presidential election. It was brought about by the trans- fer of 27 congressional seats from 21 to 11 states through reapportionment | on the basis of the 1930 census. Thirteen normally states lost 15 seats but seven gained 21 increasing their total by six. Eight normally Democratic ates lost twelve and four gained six, decreasing their total by six. That leaves a net Republican gain of twelve. With this apparent gain and under ordinary political conditions, the Re- publican would be at an advantage in @ close contest between President Hoo- ver and Governor Franklin D. Roose- Republican | 000,000 from the new federal tax on manufacturers of brewers’ wort, malt syrup, etc, and grape concentrate. }And if one had rather drink water he will pay on that, too—for mineral j water is also taxed. In many cases the tax is hidden in |an increased retail price of the prod- | uct. | The tax on brewers’ wort is 15 cents a gallon and the tax on malt syrup, etc., is 3 cents a pound. Oddly enough, the law says that malt syrup, etc., is SAYS DOLLAR WHEAT result might be thrown into dispute when the house and senate convene on the second Wednesday of next February to poll the electoral college votes. They number 531, representing the 435 house and 96 senate seats. Need Majority to Elect Under the constitution, congress is required to reapportion the represen- tatives every 10 years on the basis of Population and each state receives as many electoral votes as it has repre- sentatives and senators. A majority of the various states’ electoral votes elects a president. ‘The Republicans gained nine votes in President Hoover's normal Repub- lican state of California; four in Michigan; two each in New Jerscy, New York, and Ohio, and one each in Connecticut and Washington. But in some staunch Republican states they suffered, losing two each in Iowa and Pennsylvania, and ane each in In-/with the usual discount for lower} diana, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Nebraska, Island, North and South Dakota, Ver- mont, and Wisconsin. Democratic gains included three in Texas and one each in North Caro- lina, Oklahoma, and Florida. Their! losses included three in Missouri, two each in Georgia and Kentucky, and) one each in Alabama, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. The congress that will be elected under the reapportionment in Novem- ber does not come into being until March 4, and it is the lame duck ses- sion of the present congress that will pass upon the electoral votes of the new college. Arkansas Democrats In Bitter Election Little Rock, Ark., August 9.—(P)— Arkansas Democrats voted Tuesday on a seven-cornered fight for sover- nor and a similar contest over the senatorial nomination in which the ubiquitous Huey P. Long of Louis- jana campaigned for the incumbent, Mrs. Hattie W. Caraway, America’s only woman senator. Hot races for district and county nominations were eclipsed by the two major battles, both of them bitter. The Democratic nomination in Ar- kansas is considered equivalent to election. In the senatorial campaign, Mrs. Caraway who succeeded her husband, the late Thaddeus W. Caraway, sought renomination on her record. Her opponents were former Gov- ernor Charles H. Brough, former Senator W. F. Kirby, O. L. Boden-' Coffin, R. E. Anderson and John!| hamer, former national commander of the American Legion; Melbourne M. Martin, attorney; Vincent M. Miles, Democratic national commit teeman; and former Sheriff W. G. Hutton of Little Rock. NAME NEW GAME WARDEN L. D. Snell of Devils Lake has been appointed a game warden for the Devils Lake district, it was announced Tuesday by Burnie Maurek, state game and fish commissioner. W.C.B. ANNOUNCES PUBLIC. HEARINGS Conditions of Women “Workers Will Be Discussed in Bis- marck Aug. 15 to 19 ‘The Workmen's Compensation Bu- reau (Minimum Wage Department) will hold hearings at the office of the bureau located on the second floor of the Bank of North Dakota build-| ing, city of Bismarck, North Dakota, | on the following dates (hours: 10 to Rhode | \Dell Willis, Sponsor of Move- ment, Tells of Progress | in Speech Here North Dakota's “dollar wheat” cam- | paign has farmers in the state solidly | behind it, Dell Willis, who conceived the plan at Tolna a short time ago, said in an address here Monday night. | The object of the drive is to push | the price of wheat up to $1 a bushel by holding it off the market. Resolutions being signed by persons in every township in North Dakota and left in the office of the township board will set the minimum price on wheat for the 1932 crop, having as its basis the Winnipeg price plus tariff, grades, Willis declared. North Dakota is almost solidly be- hind it while South Dakota is working |on the same plan and work is being |done to foster it in Minnesota, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Kansas, j Texas, Oklahoma and Nebraska, Willis | said. Willis returned Monday from a tour {through Montana, where he said the plan was received with enthusiasm. Thursday he plans to open a cam- paign in Minnesota and next week will |tour South Dakota. Signers of the resolution agree not |to sell their wheat for less than the j price agreed upon and when there is a demand at the price, Willis, stated, will not sell more than 10 per cent in any one month. Willis said this leaves ‘the surplus, on the farm to be fed to | livestock. This resolution, Willis reported, has ‘been adopted by nearly all commercial ‘clubs in North Dakota as presenting a workable solution to the problem |confronting farmers. It will go into effect Aug. 15, he said. Trousdale Funeral | Conducted Monday! Funeral services for Harvey E. | Trousdale, Halliday farmer who died in a local hospital last Saturday, were feonducted from the Webb Funeral | Parlors at 2 p. m. Monday. | Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of McCabe Methodist Episcopal church, officiated and the body was interred lat St. Mary’s cemetery. | Pallbearers were Christ Martinson, | Albin Hedstrom, John Sloan, Jacob Gussner. : |. Trousdale, who had been a grain buyer and farmer in western North Dakota for the last 26 years, was the father of Mrs. Bert H. Korupp; 522 Klee, 422 Avenue C West, Bismarc | George Trousdale, also of Bismar: is a brother of the dead man. | Mrs. N. Feigel, Halliday, and Elaine | Trousdale, who lives with her mother at Halliday, are other children left | by Trousdale. He was 56 years old. ° —————___——_+ Menoken Farmer Is First to Pay | 3s, ipes eee oeeee Arnold Neugebauer, Menoken, is believed to be the first Bur- leigh county farmer to pay up his 1932 seed loan, H. O. Putnam, county agricultural agent, said Tuesday. Though payment of the loan is not due until next Nov. 30, Neugebauer Monday brought a check for $215, full payment of the loan, to the county agent, who forwarded it to the seed loan of- fice at Minneapolis. The Menoken farmer obtained the money through marketing some of his 1932 wheat. He ob- tained the loan last spring. 12 and 2 to 4): August 15th to 19th,! Putnam said he doubted if any both dates inclusive. other farmer in the county has | Testimony will be received from! yet paid up his loan in full. employers, employees, and the public from Mandan and Bismarck concern- ing living conditions of women work- ers as they affect the present rules tions. gtizenk i E I i 8 i 3 ul i : itnesses. at H ! af eee regula’ is suggested that employers per- ir women employees to select their own number those who appear as witnesses, but that two such employees y one concern; that lect one or two em- occupation in the that such of the terested select not to of representatives of “|Minister Indicted Wolverines Will cross bats with the Colored Wolver- ines, barnstorming Negro baseball troupe, in a game scheduled to get under way at the city park at 6:30 tonight. Seventeenth St., and Mrs. Nicholas J. } Meet Local Team Bismarck’s Capital City nine will | i exempt from the tax if it is sold for! such legal purposes as to a baker for: making bread, to a manufacturer of; malted milk, to a manufacturer of jmedicinal products or textiles. But if; it is sold for other purposes (home- | brewing) the product is taxable. The tax on grape concentrate, etc., 20 cents a gallon. Oddly enough, | ; the law exempts from this tax any such products “which contain suffi- ‘client preservative to prevent fermen- {tation when diluted.” | A good home-brew drinker and his friends can get away with a five-gal- jJon “batch” of home-brew weekly. A | three-pound can of malt makes a i“batch.” At 3 cents a pound, that is \a tax of 9 cents a week or about $5 a year for the home-brewer. And if you prefer neither home- {brew, wine or near-beer and would rather drink water, there is a tax on ; that, too, for mineral waters and ta- ble waters selling at over 12%% cents a gallon are taxed at 2 cents per gal- Jon. WALKER READY 10 FIGHT FOR HS JOB New York Mayor Will Battle For ! Political Life at Albany Thursday New York, August 9.- )—Mayor Walker—‘Jimmy” to the seven mil- lion—is going up the Hudson to Al- bany Thursday to fight for his po- litical life. Governor Roosevelt, against whose |nomination for the presidency Mayor | Walker voted at Chicago to the last, | will be his judge. | The final official word before the |hearing begins was before the gov- }ernor Tuesday—a brief sur-rebuttal | filed by the mayor Monday night. | assails the attack upon him by Sam- |uel Seabury as “blatant hypocrisy.” Seabury, once an anti-Tammany candidate for governor, a jurist and | more recently the chief counsel to the | legislative committee out of whose in- against the mayor, had no comment upon the mayor's latest brief. Voluminous “conclusions” charges are on file with Governor Roosevelt. They attack Walker's ke- havior over a period of years as ma- yor of New York and call upon the governor to remove him from office. In essence, the Mayor Walker case jis a local affair. It has been given national political significance, how- ever, by the mayor's wide personal ' popularity and by the Tammany ties that bind it to the national political Picture. The mayor, in his sur-rebuttal made mention of Tammany, though not by name. He referred to it as | “the political organization of which I jam a member,” The mayor asked that he be given a “trial” rather than a hearing. Gov- |ernor Roosevelt had not indicated | what answer he would make to this | request. |Change Directed in Order of Sacraments Vatican City, Aug. 9. — (P) — The | Congregation of Sacraments of the |Catholic church issued a decree Tues- |day providing that confirmation must |Precede first Holy Communion. Is- |Suance of the decree was announced by Monsignor Arturo Mazzoni, under- \secretary of the congregation. | The decree will be effective in the ‘United States. Confirming what was reported Monday, Monsignor Mazzoni said: | “This decree is designed to make ithe order of these sacraments uniform throughout the world. “In the United States, the chief idifficulty heretofore has been the large size of the dioceses which has prevented the bishop from getting around frequently to the parishes to administer confirmation.” “The decree now states that con- firmation must be given as soon a3 the child reaches ‘age of religion,’ that is, about seven or possibly six jand one-half years. Then the first communion follows.” COOUB NANOS IORONB ke | U.S. Entries Have Big Olympic Lead J ON (By The Association Press) American athletes have built up a commanding lead for the U. S. in the Olympic games, ac- cording to unofficial standings Tuesday. The U. S. was far ahead of the rest of the nations with a total of 434 points. France was in second place with 154 points while Italy was third with 126%. Finland had 120 points, Sweden | 119, Germany 108%, and Great | Britain 87. 2 FARGO TEACHER INJURED Cooperstown, N. D., August 9.—(P) |—Miss Florence Peterson of Alexan- |dria, Minn., was injured seriously when the automobile in which she was riding turned over five miles east of here Monday afternoon due to a tire blowout. Miss Peterson was tak- She is a teacher in the Fargo schools. Cash in With a Tribune Want Ad Themar (Smiley) Simle is slated for the pitching assignment for Bis- marck while Meansi is expected to take the mound for the invaders. The game will mark the second ap- pearance of the Wolverines here this season, the club having dropped a 5 to 4 decision to Bismarck June 29. |- On Murder Charge Muskogee, Okla., Aug. 9.—(4)—The Rev. 8. A. Berrie was indicted Tues-| gPeg TA FE ae I I THE CALIFORNIA WAVE NOOK FOR RENT—Bismarck’s newest and HARRINGTON’S, only Bari TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY specializes in combination waves, spiral tops with ringlet ends, Com- plete, $3.75 and $5.00. 102 3rd St. Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 1762. all modern three and four room apartments. Equipped with new light fixtures, new Frigidaire, new gas stoves, private bath in each apartment and priced to rent at sight. Call at Nicola’s Apartments 106 Main Ave. . ty Shop entered in Popularity contest. ularity 4 finger vere ed oe $1.00, | at Terms For Business It} vestigation have grown the charges; and| en to St. Luke's hospital at Fargo.| WEALTH FACE OPEN RIFT AT TRADE CONFERENCE Encounter Difficulty in Arriving} Agreements Ottawa, Ont. Aug. 9—(P)—A rift between the Canadian and British delegations over terms for trade agreements cast a shadow over thc} imperial parley here Tuesday and sent the British into conferences with the Australians. Malcolm MacDonald, son of the British prime minister and press Mason officer for the delegation, is- sued an announcement Monday night, however, emphasizing that the differences which had arisen were not such as to threaten a deadlock such Prof. La Rose The Hindu Seer Clairvoyant - Palmist The Great, Only and Origial LA ROSE. Always Consult the Best. Absolutely Re- liable. PRIVATE RECEPTION ROOM FOR EACH CALLER Prof. La Rose has just returned from two years spent in India, where the highest possible honors were conferred upon him. This wonderfully gifted man is a member of the world-famous Mystic Brotherhood. He can bring to bear on your case the fullest irresistible power of this mighty organization. A CLAIRVOYANT WITH POWER You to Be Full Judge “BEST BEYOND QUESTION” The Hindu Seer KNOWN THE WORLD OVER FOR HIS REMARKABLE CLAIRVOYANT POWERS AND HEALING PROF. LA ROSE is familiarly known as the medium “who has never failed to complete a case,” and rightly so, as his work has even baf- fled the foremost mediums of Europe and America. PROF. LA ROSE METHODS His methods have been eagerly sought and copied, but La Rose to- day stands as supreme in the field of clairvoyancy as he always has— AT THE TOP. HE TELLS YOU ALL, DEAR READER Every phase of your life is as a sparkling crystal to him; he un- ravels the most difficult threads of human misery and misfortune. He points the way for you to SUCCESS and WEALTH, LOVE and HAPPINESS AND SUCCEEDS IN EVERY INSTANCE Your whole career may depend up- on some unforeseen obstacle that lies in your path and which you are un- able to overcome, or the PROPER ADVICE given before it is too late may bring you your wish and enable you to become successful. Do you realize that— PROF. LA ROSE Has brought sunshine, happiness and to many clients who had despaired of ever getting out of the Tut of the downward path and whose testimonials pertaining to the above would convince the most skeptical that to obtain your every wish, your every desire, you MUST CONSULT THE WONDER OF WONDERS, PROF. LA ROSE As a last word to you: TO OBTAIN YOUR HEART'S DE- SIRE, CONSULT THE WONDER. Private Studio: Upstairs over Logan’s Grocery Store, 118% Third St. Bismarck, N. Dak. Office Hours 10 s. m. to $ p, m Daily and Sunday votes. Any $1.00 cash purchase, 100 votes. Boost your favorite by going to Harrington's. Phone 130. he will read in the Prince Hetel, Absolute Privacy Assured Each a THE BISMARCY TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST CUNADIANSBRITIGH (ssainse— From the beginning the negotia- tions between Canada and Great Britain have been the most important phase of the conference and the two delegations have made no secret of the fact that they were out to drive the best bargain possible. The British have had to consider the effect of empire preferences on Britain’s isolated position, the possi- ble political consequences of arrange- {ments which would cause higher food prices at home and also British trade 1982 relations with Russia, where there is & population of 200,000,000 to sell to compare with Canada’s population of 10,000,000. | Canada, also, has had to keep in mind the interests of its own manu- facturers in seeking deals to permit the entry of British factory = | in exchange for deals to sell Canadian goods in Britain. Beginning conversations with the Australians Tuesday, the British wen: down the list of proposals which are in conflict. Adela Morales Canadian Gas Well _ Aflame; Runs Wild Calgary, Alta, August 9.—(P)— Aiding a new complication to the troubled afafirs of the Turner Val- ley oil field, Hylo No. 1 well, a power- ful geyser of wet gas, was wild Tuesday. The well exploded and the fire that followed destroyed the derrick and caused loss estimated at $15,000. Officials of the Hylo company blamed the explosion on the closing Robin Hood— that’s The charm of high romance in the border country, with - a night-rider who copies in of the well by the Turner Valley conservation board during conéerv- ation tests. The well had been held down to 1,000 pounds pressure and the explosion occurred when the board ordered the gas released. —_— QUAKE SHAKES AFRICA Capetown, Union of South Africa, Aug. 9.—(P)—A severe earthquake shook the eastern part of the Cape area early Tuesday. Early reports said nothing of loss of life or property damage. TTT tt mm nn mn What a Love Story! Love that faced guerilla bullets and the fierce feuds of the Great Southwest — k GAY BANDIT of the BORDER The Man Behind the Mask plays Cupid to Adela Morales and Ted Radcliffe in this thrilling story ~ by Tom GILL Dont Miss This Stirring Romance For the benefit of those who wish to consult Pref. La Rose after 8 p. m. Beginning $ ‘ August 11th -In- The Bismarck Tribune {WVONAROO AAO UUULLOIHULLV EAR UII OULU AUGER AULA i |