The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1932, Page 1

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a - North Dakota’s Oldest. Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 1932 The Weather PRICE FIVE CENTS Strikers Move on Des Moines Roose ASSERTS PLATFORM INSHARP CONTRAST TOG. 0. P. POSITION: Methods Adopted to Achieve Temperance Are Complete and Tragic Failure RAPS HOOVER DECLARATION Likens Republican Attitude to Circus Stunt of Riding Two Horses Y ff Seagirt, N. J., Aug. 27.—()—Declar- ing the Democratic platform and the candidates have “fairly and squarely met” the prohibition issue, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Democratic presidential nomince, asserted Satur- day that President, Hoover and the | Republican leadership “stand convict- ed of trying to evade and confuse the | issue.” | “The methods adopted since the} great war with the purpose of achiev- ing a greater temperance by prohibi- tion have been accompanied, he said, Oslo, Norway, Aug. 27.—(?)}—Morn- ing dawned without relief of anxiety Missing on Flight Over Atlantic “in"most parts of the country by com- plete and tragic failure.” a Roogevelt was the guest of a Demo- cratic rally arranged by Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City and other state leaders. The nominee’s speech was the second in his road campaign. The first was at Columbus, Ohio, last Sat- urday. With him Saturday were Mrs. Roosevelt, and their two younger sons, Franklin, Jr., and John, both school boys. felt for the missing Atlantic fliers, Clyde Lee (right above) and John Bochkon (left), unreported since they hopped off at 5:02 a. m, (E3.T) Thursday, from Harbor Grace, N. F. But the major airports continued itheir vigil, especially along the coast. Authorities held to a fading hop: the fliers might have been delayed, and yet had enough fuel to land in} some isolated spot. However, if they flew continuously, their fuel could not have lasted, by any stretch of the imagination, be- yond 1 a. m., (7 p. m., eastern stan- dand time last night). NEW LEADER COMES Saturday from the pinnacle position in the Bismarck merchants’ popular- '\N.D. Highway Commission of President Hoover and Vice Presi- Referring to the acceptance eat | Rejects Many Road Bids dent Curtis. relative to prohibition, | Roosevelt alluded to the 1930 guber- | natorial election in New York State. | He was reelected to a second term that year. Like Circus Stunt In that year, he declared, was a party that tried to ride two horses at the same time. The Repub- lican party had one foot—its candi- date for governor—on the wet horse! and the other foot—the candidate for} lieutenant governor—on the dry} FROM DUCK DISEASE and the party fell to the ground be-: Epidemic Which Has Cost Lives tween them. 4 This year, he added, “the Republi- of Thousands of Birds Said to Be Waning FEWER FOWLS DYING “there can national leaders have tried the; same circus stunt. The answer of | the voters throughout the nation will! be precisely the same.” i The present Republican leadership,/ An epidemic which has caused the Roosevelt asserted, “stands convicted | death of several thousand wild ducks lesan Prices Offered Are Too ' High; Jobs Totaling i $800,000 Awarded i | High prices suomitted by contractors {for road construction projects result- led in wholesale rejection of bids by the state highway commission Satur- day. The commission let contracts for approximately $800,000 of construction work, Other bids, aggregating an-} other $890,000 for the remainder of the | projects, were rejected on the ground i that they were double the amount; considered reasonable by the com- mission. The rejected bids, including all oil-mix projects, will be readver- tised. sue. The honest dry will honor more the honest wet than the shifty dry, and the anti-prohibitionist prefers the four-square dry to the uncertain wet,” he said. “All will join in con- demning a fearful and timid practice | of evasion.” ‘The Democratic presidential aspir- ant declared Hoover's acceptance speech “proceeds deliberately to mis: represent the position of the Demo: cratic farty. He says ‘our opponents pledge the members of their party to destroy every vestige of constitutional and effective federal control of the (liquor) traffic.’ “I have the right to assume that the president read the Democratic platform and, on that assumption, charge that this statement was made to mislead the people of the country | and I assert a mere reading of the plain, unequivocal provisions of the Democratic platform will sustain that charge.” Opposes Saloon’s Return ‘The Democratic platform, he said, “expressly and unequivocally opposes the return of the saloon, and with equal emphasis it demands that there be federal control of the liquor traf- fic to protect dry states.” Roosevelt likened the Republican convention to the ancient oracle of Delphi who, when partially stupitied by the gasses from a volcanic crevice, uttered strange and incoherent words which the high priests interpreted. “In June, the Republican oracle sat in Chicago,” he said. “There was & fume of heated oratory . . . and when the convention was over the people ‘asked the high priests of the party what it all meant. “The secretary of state (Mr. Stim- son) explained in the choicest phrases of Republican diplomacy. Senator Borah spoke out in forthright fashion ‘and said it sounded wet to him; Pres- ident Butler (of Columbia university) id the words were dry. “I suspect that those who wrote the plank thought. it would sound dry to he drys and wet to the wets. But the consternation of the high sts it sounded dry to the wets ind wet to the drys. “The Democratic convention,” the of trying to evade and confuse the is- jin the brackish waters of Long Lake, - Illinois Miners to ‘A. D. McKinnon, chief highway | commissioner, said the contracts let run about 20 per cent above the pre- vailing prices. The commission took into consideration, he said, that con- tractors must meet a minimum wage and hour scale, required by the fed- eral government on work carried out; under the federal emergency aid by which nearly $2,000,000 was made; available to North Dakota for high- way construction. The rejected contracts, however, ran; generally double the prices the com-| mission has been paying, McKinnon said. Low bids for oil mix prejects; jumped from $5,000 to $8,000 a mile. The gravel and grading bids rejected were practically double the prevailing | prices. In distributing the emergency aid projects over the state, McKinnon said, the commission seeks to cover every county in the state on a basis of mileage of roads, population and area, which is the basis used by the lfederal government in allotting aid to states. Gravel contracts let: Eddy county—7.052 miles on 8. R. 20, north of McHenry, Martin Joyce, Brandon, 8. D., $6,974.31. Morton county—9.712 miles on 8. R. 25, southeast of Yucca to U. 8. 10, Win Coman, Goodrich, $26,291. Dickey and Sargent counties—3.878 on 8. R. 22, Oakes east, Dickey coun- ty, and 12.244 on 8. R. 11, east of 35 miles southeast of Bismarck is | diminishing, James Guthrie, president | of the Bismarck chapter of the Izaak | Walton league, said Saturday. The epidemic has been checked ithrough efforts of volunteers who \have been engaged in rescue work for the last few days, and by the fact that the surface area of the water rapidly is diminishing as the lake | dries up. The epdidemic is caused by a virus which found its way into the lake this year, Guthrie said. The organ- ism causes the birds to become par- alyzed and, if they are permitted to stay in the lake, eventually to die. The germs thrive in warm stagnant water, Guthrie said, and relatively ccol weather for two days this week apparently has made them less active. Ducks taken sick in the last few days have not been so badly poisoned as those affected when the weather was warmer earlier in the week, he said Break Up Camp Boy scouts and volunteer sportsmen from Burleigh and Kidder counties, who have been engaged in rescue work, broke camp Friday convinced that they had done all in their power to save wildfowl in the district. They are prepared to return, however, if a serious return of the epidemic seems imminent, Guthrie said. E. R. Kalmbach of Denver, repre- sentative of the federal biological survey commission, has been directing the rescue work and will remain here in an effort to prevent a serious re- turn of the outbreak. Representatives of the state game and fish depart- ment-also have been cooperating in an effort to save the birds. Approximately 500 sick fowl were taken from Long Lake and revived in the fresh water of a reservoir near (Continued on page five) ‘Sheriff Recovers ‘Stolen’ Prisoner 9 Minneapolis, Aug. 27.—(P)— John Jacobinski, whose trip from ed from the tainted water and many thousands were prevented from de: scending into Long Lake through ef- fort of volunteers. Kalmbach will lecture on diseases of wildfowl and the Long Lake epi- demic before members of the Izaak Walton League following a dinner at the Grand Pacific hotel Monday eve- . The dinner has been set for 6 p. m., and Guthrie urges all mem- \bers of the organization to attend. Edward Reindl of Menominee, Mich., resumed his journey Fri- day night, again in the custody | oe, velt Outlines Stand 10 FRONT IN LOCAL ELECTION SATURDAY Katherine Andrist Receives 32,- | 000 Votes Thursday to Pace the Field A new leader surveyed the field; ity election. She was Catherine Andrist, who| polled 32,000 votes Friday to jump| from third to first place with a total of 331.200 votes. Betty Leach occu-} pled second place with 317.700. Frances Slattery and Ruby Jacob- | son, who were tied for the ieadership Friday, were in the third and fourth with 314,700 votes. Miss Jacobson | was 5,100 ballots behind her with a) total of 309,600. Alice Lee, Ernestine Carufel and Alice Marsh remained in fifth, sixth and seventh positions with totals of 250,800, 207,900 and 120,600 respec- tively. Esther Watson of McKenzie con- tinued to lead in the eleciton for girls in the Bismarck trade territory with 116,300 votes but Luella Tollefson of | Menoken was only 2,300 behind her with a total of 114,000. Other leaders in the contest were: Veronica Werstlein, Bismarck, 75,600; Ethel Fisher, Bismarck, 65.400; June Boardman, Bismarck, 61,800; Madeline Hall, Bismarck, 48,000; Marian Yea- ter, Bismarck, 47,000; Aldeen Paris, Bismarck, 36,600; Betty Haagenson, Bismarck, 85,300; Irene Britton, Bis: marck, 31,700; Kathleen Brown, Bis- (Continued on page three) Cotton and Wheat Score Ad- vances and Show Way For Financial Market TRADERS TAKING PROFITS) Some Stocks Lose Early Gains Under Selling Pressure But Close Is Strong | New York, Aug. 27.—(?)—Commod- ities again took the lead from secur- ities in another wave of buying in Saturday's markets. Public utility stocks held up well. closing with many gains of $1 to $3 a share, but other classifications of stocks lost most of their earlier gains when profit-taking appeared. Cotton had one of its most vigor-| ous upturns of the year, advancing $2.50 a bale or more. Wheat was up around 2 cents a bushel. } Stocks surged up $1 to more than $4 a share early, with the public util- ities taking the lead . Trading again reached a feverish pace, with a turn- ever for the two-hour week-end ses- {positions, with Miss Slattery leading | "97 of about two million shares. Many issues reached new high levels for the recovery but fell baci later. The market as a whole main- tained a strong tone. Cotton had one of its most vigor- cus advances of the movement, reaching new high levels for more than a year, well above 9 cents a pound. The bond market, which in recent since May, steadied, and a number of issues worked higher. sessions had its sharpest setback! {Commodities Take Lead and Gains Occur on All Markets PROGRAM ADOPTED THROUGHOUT NATION Six Points Are Stressed at Con- «ference to Unite All Agen- cies in Battle Washington, Aug. 27.—(4)—Amer- ica’s business chieftains, prompted to new efforts, carried to the nation's four corners Saturday a definte pro- gram for stimulating its economic life. In no uncertain terms. President Hoover and Democratic leaders such as Owen D. Young, of New York: Atleee Pomerlene of Ohio; and Wilson McCarthy, of Salt Lake City, have reminded the business generals the time has come for a new drive toward more employment. Response by the unusual gathering of financial and industrial leaders was immediate in the creation of a central committee, headed by Henry M. Robinson, Los Angeles banker, to steer a six-point program of economic betterment to conclusion. Action followed multiplied expres- sions of confidence from government. and business pilots to the assembled members of banking and industral committees of the 12 federal reserve TO HELP BUSINESS The copper stocks held up well,| districts. American Smelting and Anaconda gaining $1 a share each to $21.25 and After hearing President Hoover's conviction that the “major financia! $12.25, respectively. Kennecott moved |ctisis” has been overcome. the admin- up $1.25 to $15. North American Elsie| featured the utilities, soaring $4 a share to $40, American & Foreign Power and Consolidated were up around $2 a share and American Power & Light gained $3 to $14. After going to above $49 a share, U. S. Steel reacted to $48.37, for a net gain on was up $1.62 a share to $61.62 and BEULAH CHILD DIES | Tragedy Occurs as Children Are! taying Around Blazing | Bonfire | Hilda Schleckenmayer, seven-year- cld Beulah child, died from burns; here Friday night, six hours after her | clothing caught fire while she was ati lay. e The girl, a daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Samuel Schleckenmayer, was | a bonfire near her home when the tragedy occurred. Her clothing caught fire when she | came too close to the flames and her skirt became ignited. Terrified, the child ran screaming and when companions finally suc- ceeded in catching her, she was 50 badly burned that little hope was held out for her recovery. She was given emergency treatment at Beulah and then rushed to Bis- marck by automobile, arriving at & local hospital at about 4:30 p. m. After an examination, local phy- sicians said the girl was so severely | burned that she could net possibly recover. Hilda was one of several children | in the Schleckenmayer family and a sister was with her when the acci- dent occurred. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at Beulah. Burial will be in the cemetery there. Former Stage Star Lying Near Death Hollywood, Calif. Aug. 27.—(?)— Separated from her fortune and in a | 30, | critical: condition as the - result of months of illness, Eva Tanguay, fam- Barnes—12.356 miles on 8. R. 26.;0us stage and vaudeville artist of spars S00. is under the care of her sis- re. Tanguay had a sinking spell which brought her almost to the point of death but since then has rallied. Her condition Saturday still ‘was critical, however. She is suffer- Bright's Sun funds to employ a night hurse. of the Michigan officer. Chief of Police William J. Meehan of Minneapolis, who had held Jacobinski in the city jai) since it, sure Launch New Attack Gillespée, Ill, Aug. 27.—(?)—Strik- ing Illinois miners Saturday mapped Plans of strategy for a second offen- 943. miles on 8S. R. 14, Wing north, Bur- south of Denhoff, Sheridan county, 730.83, sive against operating mines in south- ern Tilinois, warnings of Franklin Oakes, Sargent county, W. H. Noel Barieigh and Sheridan — 13.327 leigh, and 6.346 miles on S. R. 14, Wilder and Wilder, Kenmare, $24,- Benson—8.713 miles on S. R. county thors no invasion would Construction Co., Jamestown, $30,- Maddock south, J. J. Ruse, $12,812. miners’ central’ the death of Gordon D. Wilson Chicz:> salesman, shot here re- sisting a day-light holdup, | Brass Band Greets Walker in New York New York, Aug. 27.—(?)—Hailed by @ brass band, Mayor James J. Walker playing with other children around | Assistant Secretary of War i International Harvester, after an early gain of $2.25 a share, closed at $31.37, up 62 cents. The weekly carloading statement was somewhat disappointing to those who had hoped for a large increase. The grain was about 6,200 cars over OF BURNS RECEIVED sls The week closed with no sharp jgains in production reported by the | | steel industry but increases were re-! In prospect. | ported it Dow, Jones & Co. estimated that operations of steel mills in the Youngstown district would be stepped up to 14 per cent of capacity at the start of next week against only 10 Per cent last Monday. 'LEGIONNAIRES HSS SPEECH BY DAVISON deered As He Tells Veter- ans of ‘Red’ Menace New York, Aug. 27—()—Hisses and Jeers greeted F. Trubee Davison, as- sistant secretary of war, Saturday as he appeared before the New York state convention of the American Le- gion to charge that Communists for- | ged discharge papers for many mem- bers of the Washington bonus army. Following Davison's speech the Le- gion voted 499 to 138 in favor of im- mediate payment of the bonus. Davison, candidate for the Repub- lican gubernatorial nomination, de- fended the president's use of troops to expel the bonus army and then de- clared he had proof that many of the discharge papers presented by bonus army members had been produced by “Communist-owned diploma mills.” Immediately there were cries of “Go back to Washington!” and “We want Waters!” Davison stopped speaking amidst the din of jeers and booes and waited while the sergeant- ;at-arms threatened to call the police to reestablish order. Walter W. Wa- ters, commander of the bonus army, Sat in the galleries as a spectator. The secretary resumed speaking when the uproar subsided and re- ceived applause from somie¢ séctions of the day of 62 cents. Case Threshing | istration’s national conference was advised of a move for a 60-day mora- torium in foreclosure proceedings on all mortgages in closed banks. Also revealed was a reconstruction program for railroads, sponsored by jthe reconstruction corporation and |designed to put 50,000 men to work. United Ladership Ready As members turned homeward. it was the firm conviction of Washing- \ton, certainly of Secretary Mills and Mr. Young who fostered the idea, that (Continued on page three) EXPECT ROOSEVELT | INSEAGIRT TALK Democratic Candidate to Make Second Step in Campaign Saturday New York, Aug. 27.—(#)—Gover- nor Franklin D. Roosevelt, taking the second major step in his campaign for the presidency, turned toward Sea- girt, N. J., Saturday to speak on pro- hibition before a gathering which |New Jersey supporters said would be one of the largest in that state's his- tory. Accommodation for at least 200,000 persons was complete. From all parts of the state and from outside the trek to the beach resort was on at an early hour for the rally which has become a fixture in Democratic presidential campaigns. Seventy-thousand persons, New Jersey party leaders said, were ex- pected to attend from Hudson coun- ty, the stronghold of Frank Hague, the Jersey City mayor. The governor, here from Albany after long days of presiding over Mayor James J. Walker's hearing on removal charges, ordered his own car to be ready so that he could depart from his town house here. Trains, busses, and automobiles were pre- pared to carry his listeners, the Pennsylvania railroad arranged to run 32 special trains out of Jersey City and others were to operate from other points. The governor will speake from the lawn of the “little white house,” the summer home of the New Jersey gov- ernor. Accompanied by his two sons, Franklin, Jr., and John, he was to arrive in time to have luncheon with Governor A. Harry Moore before the speaking program began. the audience at the conclusion. e Asks 15 Governors To Attend Meeting *“quren, 8. D, Aug 71h Governor Warren E. Green an; nounced here Saturday he will ask ’s plan was en- dorsed by directors of the South Dakota Farm Holiday association, who Friday adopted a plan to start an anti-marketing movement in this state 5, provided other middie western states agree on that date. Representatives. of Farm Holiday associations also will be asked to attend the pro- posed Sioux City conference. z The opinion was expressed in po- States invited to participate are litical circles the hearing before Gov.| Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota, Franklin D. Roosevelt at Albany| Nebraska, Wisconsin, Illinois, Kan- would end next week. The governor| sas, Montane, Oklahoma, Indiana, adjourned the hearing Friday night| Ohio, Colorado, Idaho, Missouri, until Monday. and South Dakote. Colorado Senator Is Dead at Washington Washington, Aug. 27.— (®) — Senator Charles W. Waterman, 71, of Colorado died at his home here early today from ® lingering illness that has lasted two years. Waterman, TO ATTACK DRY LAW n Prohibition e ——~ | Conference Leader Utero thr | ! OWEN D. YOUNG Owen D. Young, industrialist and business leader, was one of the prin- cipals in the conference to find ways of aiding business held Friday at Washington. It was he who lent a Strong bi-partisan flavor to the meet- ing for he is a leading Democrat. GARNER ACCEPTANCE LETTER TAKES RAP AT G. 0. P. LEADERS Says Chiefs Failed to Meet Crisis; Sets Low Record Cost For Ceremony | New York, Aug. 27.—(7)—With the jlast of the formal acceptances on the record and Speaker John Nance Gar- ner assailing what he termed the “failure of Republican leadership,” the Democrats Saturday were ready for action on all fronts. The Garner acceptance of the vice presidential nomination, accompanied by no more ceremony than it takes to drop a letter in a post box, was made public Friday. He charged Republi- can leaders in Washington with fail- ing to act courageously when the slump came or to take adequate relief measures and he laid “nearly all our civic troubles” to “government's de- Parture from its legitimate functions.” His notification and acceptance set a new low in the matter of expendi- ture. Senator Alben W. Barkley, tem- porary chairman of the national con- vention, sent him a letter from Wash- ington, in which he praised the speaker highly, and Garner answered jin another letter dated from his home at Uvalde, Tex. It had been estimated the notifica- tion would cost six cents, but the ex- pense was a trifle more because of the postage required to mail copies to {the national committee, which releas- ed them here. Assails Tariff Bill Garner assailed the Hawley-Smoot tariff as causing a great decline in trade, attacked what he called the steady encroachment of the federal government on the rights and duties of the states. Regarding prohibition he declared that, unlike the Repub- lican plank, the Democratic plank made no attempt to be equivocal. “No other constructive solution of the problems of the 18th amendment brought upon the country has been offered,” he said. “Return of control and supervision to the states, where it rightfully belongs, should be wel- comed by all who realized the growth of the evils which followed placing of this power in the hands of the fed- eral government.” Concerning the aims of government, he said: “It is not the business of govern- ment to make individuals rich, though too often has government been bent to that purpose. Nor is it a function of an administration to direct the personal affairs of mankind, except insofar as it places a bar against such things as involve injury, loss or discomfort on others. Raps G. O. P. Leadership ‘The speaker wrote that “the failure to meet the depression emergency courageously at its inception and the enactment of the Hawley-Smoot tariff in the face of an almost universal protest are, to my mind, the most naked evidences of the failure of the Republican leadership to realize its responsibilities and live up to its obligations.” Declaring the major causes of the “distress which prevails” can be found “in the record of national legis- lation and the national policies for which the Republican leaders .” he went on to demagogy emanating from the white house greeted every effort to enact a bill HIGHWAYS T0 OWA CAPITAL BLOCKED -| BY FARM PICKETS Steadily Increasing Forces Tighten Cordon; Truck Drivers Warned ‘BROWN SHIRTS’ JOIN MOVE New Organization Is Said to Be Connected With Washing- ton Bonus Army Des Moines, Iowa, Aug. 27.—(P)— This city became the third major ob- jective in the fight for higher farm prices Saturday as picket camps were being established on important high- ways in Polk county. Steadily increasing forces were posted on the roads as the blockade tightened about the city. Early activities of the pickets were confined largely to warning to truck drivers that Saturday’s trips with farm produce would be the last and that in the future they would be turned back. Aiding in enforcing the blockade were groups of the khaki shirts of America, an organization formed re- cently under the leadership of Ly- man Cook, Burlington attorney, who said he was a member of the staff of W. W. Waters with the Washing- ton bonus army. A half dozen of the 29 important roads into Des Moines were being watched by pickets and new camps were being established on others. Milk was the principal item of pro- duce coming into Des Moines Satur- day, week-end supplies of other farm products having been sent in Friday and earlier in the week. Large Trucks .Are Stopped Small produce trucks were being passed through the picket lines un- molested, but the pickets said they were ready to begin stopping larger trucks at once. All drivers were be- ing halted and warned that they would be turned back the next time. Several of the pickets were wear- ing uniforms of the khaki shirts or- ganization. A transport van bearing Ohio lic- ense plates was the first halted on U. 8. No. 65. The driver was forced to open the van to satisfy the pickets that it was loaded with tires. Small produce dealers coming in to sell their products at the city market were not molested. A. T. Lynch, dairy farmer and one of the county holiday organizers, said that a few milk trucks were being al- lowed to pass his picket camp on U. S. 60 to supply the League of Un- employed. Other trucks will be halt- ed, he said. “No barriers will be placed on the highways,” Lynch said, adding that “we will conduct our picketing in a peaceful manner. Decision to establish blockades about Des Moines was made at a meeting of 100 Holiday Association members at Arising Sun Friday night COUNCIL BLUFFS AND SIOUX CITY ARE QUIET Council Bluffs, Iowa, Aug. 27.—() —Peace settled on the Council Bluffs and Sioux City sectors of the farm- ers’ war for higher prices Saturday. Picketing continued on three of the four main highways leading into Council Bluffs, Sheriff P. A. Lainson reported, but was without violence of any kind. He expressed opinion the strike movement was “fading out.” A settlement of the milk price war at Sioux City Friaay night served to relieve the tension of the situation. An agreement was signed to give producers $1.80 per hundredweight for their product. The previous top was $1.40. Immediately the producers agreed to lift their at- tempted blockade of the city. Threats of picketing at Shenan- doah, about 60 miles southeast of here, vanished when holiday leaders agreed with business men and duce dealers to use radio in a suasion campaign for Pickets were withdra’ holiday leaders left the cast daily on three five-i riods over the local stations. In Nebraska pickets were tained at Blair on the princi leading into Omaha from east part of the state. mitted truckers to go day with a warning “This is Litt Bridge Blockade The blockade was lifted at braska end of the interstate leading into Yankton, 8. D. The movement met with little cess in two other Nebraska cities. At Pender, C. J. Schultz, Plymouth eoun- ty, Iowa, farmer, addressed 500 ness men and farmers but said the pe gi gave little encouragement to- ward picketing. At Norfolk farmers agreed to make : g ili 2 g s F 3 3 i z f : i ¢ Ef g FF 2 § |

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