The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 14, 1932, Page 2

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night. Ballots in the postoffice at | that time, if there were any, will not be counted in the final tabulations. The final week of the contest has occasioned an unprecedented flood of ballots, according to officials. Huge stacks of votes were polled Tuesday, making {it necessary for a crew of accountants to work far in- to the night, In anticipation of a deluge of bal- lots Thursday, a battery of experts | will be on hand at the close of the race for the final tabulation work. Customers are urged to make all ‘cash payments possible ‘Thursday in _f FORMER LOCAL MAN TAKES B. E. F. SIDE William 0. Skeels Attacks Ad- ministration For Forci- ble Eviction Washington, D. C., Sept. 14.—Tak- ing a prominent part in denunciation of the administration for using armed forces to evict members of the Bonus ‘| final support of their candidates. Expeditionary Force from the nation’s Payments of bills and making of capital last July 26 1s Willlam O. purchases for the near future are Bkeels, formerly of Bismarck, N. D.| recommended or the clos! ay Oo! Skeels, an attorney, supported his! the idee, or SiR El sar oree pa : statement by quoting from the stat-| ment, merchants participating in the utes and the code of law governing | contest will present the the District of Columbla, under which | with 100 ballots upon request. ned the various bonus camps! ‘Tuesday Totals Listed | Himself one of the 4,000,000 soldiers} ‘Tuesday's tabulations follow: in the U. 8. Army during the World| Arllys Anderson, Bismarck War, Skeels attacked statements of | Dorothy Atwood, Bismarck the Department of Justice alleging the Jane Byrne, Bismarck department had enough evidence to}Catherine Andrist, Bisn present to a grand jury and that arms Natalie Barbie, Bismarck and dynamite were concealed in the|June Boardman, Bismar. bonus camps for unlawful and violent | Veronica Brown, Bismarck ck. .1287200 | 8 900 8700 | 300 customer | 7, Weather ‘Report FORECASTS: For Bismarck and vicinity: Some- | what unsettled tonight and Thursday; | slightly warmer tonight; cooler Whursday. RQ kota: Somewhat unsettled tonight and Thursday; slightly warmer tonight south por- tion; cooler Thursday. kota: Generally fair tonight and Thursday; warm- er. tonight cen- ral and east portions; cooler Thurs- r Montana: Generally fair to- cooler northwest and immedi- 'y east of Divide; Thursday fair, t cooler east portion. For Minnesota: Generally fair in south, somewhat unsettled in north tonight and Thursday; night warmer to- and in extreme ay; cooler Thursday in west and extreme north. NERAL CONDITIONS A low pressure area is centered over | and §& atchewan . Manitoba purposes. Irene Britton, Bismarck 1700 | Taking records of the metropolitan | Katherine Brown, Bismaré 99 2 Isis Rae oe ate police department, he said camps wer Hinmarexs,..., GODO| Pees, Wentaen | SEHLES: eta ere, cece. And repulaely, | menestine Ci , Bismarck. .1191400 | sippi Valley eastward but warmer | k 600 w. re making {t practically impossible for are! the veterans to store explosives. {Ethel Fisher, Bismarck B. E. F, headquart e that ret Fortune, Bismar the organization expects to have Isabelle Gordon, Bismarck membership of 70,000 men by Sept.! Elinor Green, Bismarck 15. A few days ago its membership | Magdalene Gondringer. Bismarck.1700| totaled 40,000, including 2,500 exser-! Ruth Gordon, Bismarck . . 5000 vicemen in North Dakota. Betty Haagensen, Bismarck. Skeels 1s defense counsel in two of|Caroline Hall, Bismare': the most prominent Hultberg, Bisma: yn Hannaford, Bismarck His clients are George Lone Wolf, In-| Ruby Jacobson, Bismarck. dian charged with manslaughter, and| Dorothy Johnson, Bismar Pedro Lacuestra, native Filipino, in-|Ruth M. EB. Jordan, Bismarck. dicted for first-degree murder. Katherine Kositzky, Bi hel Childs + 67800 | +. 9000 600 forthe aaa Irene Lambertus, Bismarck... Alice Lee, Bismarck . + 1501900 | { Alleged Offenders Marial Lehr, Bismarck. 200 y! Are Held at Carson Jackie Malek, Bismarck’: sca Alice Marsh, Bismarck. . Carson, N. D., Sept. 14.—(7)—Want- | Marian Morton, Bismarck . ed on several erInInAL charges in| Luby Miller, Bismarck North Dakota, two men were in the | Elsie Nelson, Bismarck Grant county jail here ‘Tuesday fol- | EI iza ale, p, Bism lowing their apprehension by a South | Nadine O'Leary, Bismarck Dakota garageman, |Lila Olson, Bismarck. . ‘The men, giving the names of Max |Betty Orluck, Bismarck Stewart, of Oklahoma and Fred Fleet- | Betty Manning, Bismar ham of Minneapolis, returned | Aldeen Paris, Bismarck. . here from Lemmon, 8. D., where they| Marlon Paxman, Bismarck. were held after their arrest. at Buf-| Dorothy Parsons, Bismarck falo. Harry Baclinger, Buffalo gar-|Jessie Phillips, Bismarck. ... ageman, became suspicious of the Hazel Rhines, Bismarck men when they came to his garage. | Audrey Rohrer, Bismarck . At the point of a gun he detained |Margaret Schneider, Bismarck. . 2402 | them and bound the pair with rope Frances Slattery, Bismarck until authorities arrived. | Viola Sundland, Bismare! 100, -14400 . 54600 | 2 5000 | re charged with stealing | Pay Smith, Bismarck .. » 12500 nee at Fairview, Mont, and are|Patty Whittey, Bismarck a008| wanted in connection with burglaries |Grace Williams, Bismarck ...... 100 |Marian Worner, Bismarck +4500 at Dunn Center, and Dodge, N. D. ner, : Authorities said the men had in their | Veronica Werstlein, Bismarck. .176,000 | ; 1 urticles |Alma Walth, Bismarck 200?| BISMARCK, peldy. .... 75 51.00 ~ ; Esther Anderson, Mandan .... 1200| Beach, clear . : { oe Se ee WALES ata 1200 | Bottineau, cleat “2B Mt 99 . Mand Car cldy 78 36. | Baclinger had heard the discription |Emma Fix, Mandan . oo ? 00 broadcast by Sheriff Claude Lackey | Kitty Gallagher, Mandan ms of Grant county and when he observ- | Betty Mackin, Mani 31 00 ed the articles in the men’s car he held | Norma Peterson, Mand 39 00 them Dorothy Seitz, Mandan.. 37 00 ‘ are to be arraigned {Cecelia Swanson, Mandan 400| Filendale, clear . 1 42 00 a eater to Grace Valder, Mandan... 17200 | Fessenden, clear 75 36 00 : farion Vogelpohl, Mandan 500|Grand Forks, eldy. 6... 71 43 00 5 Stella Zwar! Mandan ...... 1700/ Hankinson, glear . » 71 44 00 NS ORTS | aaa ceaaree ranged (a@)— 'Gertrude Ankarberg, Stanton. ..16100) J tt a od Bolivian troops at Fort Boqueron, in | Carol Deis, Carson = ou son seid 69 4300 the Chaco region, were holding fast /E™ma Barth, Timmer ++ 5600 | Lis Laer tale} to their original positions, an official !va Burnstad, Burnstad, N. D... 1500) yrindt, pel 14 39 00 communique Wednesday said, as the Blanche Cla Dickinson ..... 100) Napoleon, pe 75 49 «00 battle with the Paraguayan forces! Tyne Eckholm, Wing. .......... 1700/ Oakes, clear 75 42 00 around the fort entered its sixth day, Emma Claridge, RFD, Bismarck. -1200/ Pembina, cldy. 7 44 00 e |Alice Glovitch, Killdeer .23209| Williston, peldy, : 78 52 00 |Emma King, Menoken.. 3200 | Wishek, clear . 46 00 NTINUE D 2 Leavitt, Carson . 800 | Moorhead, Minn., ‘00 Gladys Ness, Sterling .. Valera Saldin, Coleharbor . Madeline Schmidt, Richardton Luella Tollefson, Menoken Esther Watson, McKenzie. Monica Weigum, Golden Valley | Helen Bumann, Judson Florence West, Sweet Briar. be in The Tribune office by mid-| Ella Hart, Cleveland Cc 0 from page one Leaders Sprinting Down Last Stretch In Popularity Race LARGEST SEA 1.21300/ In the . 21400 | Plair 7900 | North Dakota «1254300 | NOTk, pr 300 | made. 3300 pastures and ranges; 500 | feeding 77000 1509 | Amt. 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m. 9300 | Total this month to date . Normal, this month to date | Total, Jan, 1 to date . 1148400 | Normal, Jan. 1 to date’. | Boise, Idaho, ¢ 170109 | Calgary, Alta., cldy. ,800 | Chicago, Til, clear’. 2000 | Denver, Colo., clea prevails from the northern | ates W stward to the north s region, ‘southern ies and in northern Mani- ‘oba. \ n and Wheat Re-/ gion Summary For the week ending Sept. 13, 1932.! Favorable weather for fall farm| led in all sections. Corn| ocking and silo filling are nearing | ‘completion, The ground is mostly} » dry for fall plowing and winter seeding, and little progress was No frosts reported as yet. Po- ato harvesting is under way with Rain is needed for livestock are considerably on harvested ields poor to fair. jelds, Missourt river stage, 7 a. m. 0.6 ft. ‘4 hour change, -0.1 ft. Bismarck ion barometer, inches: Reduced to sea level, inches: TEMPERATURE 5 51 Highest yesterday % | 09 | Lowest: last night 51 PRECIPITATION Accumulated deficiency since” Jan, 1 NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High Low Ins. ‘Temprs. Pre. 7 MAMMAL EVER a CAPTURED" FRIDAY, SEPT. 16 SATURDAY, SEPT. 17 At N. P. ‘New Reduced Prices DEPOT Children, 10 cents Adults, 20 cents For North Da-, For South Da-; southeast | while | = { | 62 00 56.00 52 00 Kansas City, Mo., cle 64 00 Miles City, Mont., clear 78 50 .00 No. Platte, Neb., clear.. 80 56 .00 Oklahoma City, O., cldy.92 66 .00 Pierre, 8. D., clear .. 78 52 00 Rapid City, 8. D., clear. 80 56 00 St. Louis, Mo., clear 82 64 = 00 St. Paul, Minn., clear.. 70 46 .00 Salt Lake City, U., clear 78 56 « Seattle, Wash., clear. 4 58 Sheridan, Wyo., peld; 78 40 Sioux City, Ia. peldy... 72 54 Spokane, Wash., clear .. 80 58 Swift Current, S., peldy. 74 46 The Pas, Man., pcldy. .. 68 50 | Toledo, Ohio, clear. 80 60 «10 Winnipeg, Man., peldy. 70 52 .00 E = | Huron Prepares to Hear Hurley Speech is Sioux City, Ia. the nerve center of the Farmers’ Holiday movement. Secretar.” Hurley probably will hear ‘Thursday afternoon some echoes from that source. Just 20 years ago, the writer at- tended the keynote speech at Huron of another prominent Republican ca- binet member, long since gone to his reward. It was in the early spring of 1912 when the Republican party was torn asunder by the Taft- Roosevelt feud. Roosevelt workers were busy lining up delegates in the corn belt for “Teddy.” It was as cold a spring as the middlewest ever had. The mercury went below zero and few places can get colder than Huron. Taft managers picked Secretary of Agriculture Wilson to carry the mes- sage to farmers embittered over the Payne-Aldrich tariff measure as they are today over the Hawley-Smoot bill. Twin City papers were deeply interested in the event and this wri- ter, then political correspondent for the St. Paul Dispatch, was sent to cover" the speech. It was received coldly by a small crowd. South Da- kota, in the fall of 1912, registered | electoral votes for Theodore Roose- j velt. { Roosevelt Casts Shadow Now across the path of the Repub- | lican party another Roosevelt, herald- ‘ed as a man of destiny, casts a deep {shadow of most distressing propor- tions. There is both glooth and keen depression throughout the corn belt. Whether Hoover is to blame or not 00 00 My few stop to reason, and most farmers ‘00 | want a change. There is a real grudge 0 | against the “Ins” and hope of better 00 {times if they are retired. Maine elections have given the corn jbelt farmers fresh hope. Democrats of this state are preparing for an in- tensive campaign and thousands of Dakotans will attend the great Roose- velt rally planned within the next two weeks at Sioux City, Ia. Repub- licans on the other hand are caution- ing farmers not “to swap horses in the middle of stream.” That phrase ‘was never more generally used in any campaign before. In discussing editorially Hurley and South Dakota, the Mitchell Gazette says in part: “There will be many thousands of farmers in Huron who will want to hear the secretary. A majority of them will be Republicans, because this is a Republican state, but that does not mean that they are going to vote the Republican ticket in their usual large majorities unless convinced that such a vote is going to help bring them out of the depression. “Republicans of South Dakota hope | Secretary Hurley will not deal in gen- eralities when he discusses the farm problems.” DECLARE BANCO DIVIDEND Minneapolis, Sept. 14.—(#)—Direc- | tors of the Northwest Bancorporation | Tuesday voted a quarterly dividend of 15 cents per share, compared with 25 cents in each of the two preceding !quarters. Before that 45 cents was paid. F. was unopposed for renom- Tistoa i this state where the Demo- cratic nomination usually means election. | Ten Georgia congressional seats jalso were at stake. Half a dosen contestants sought the gubernator- ial eee t A Rs sativa in Mississippi fount present Robert 8. Hall leading W. M. Colmer for the Democratic nomination in a runoff contest. |coxtixvED Political Leaders Scan Returns from Primary Elections B. Adams in the senatorial race on the face of early returns. Here, too, the veteran George W. P. Hunt for the gubernatorial nomination, ex- pected to be tantamount to election. J.C. Kinney was ahead in the Repub- lican contest for the same office. The gubernatorial primary in Michigan gave Governor Wilbur Brucker an increasing margin in the Republican race and William R. Comstock a Democratic margin. Michael J. Hart, the state's only Democratic representative in con- gress, was renamed without opposi- tion. Vermont G. 0. P. Solid | Vermont Republicans again named Stanley C. Wilson for the governor's chair and Ernest W. Gibson for con- gress. Gibson favored resubmission of the prohibition question against @ repealist opponent. Across the line in New Hampshire, Democrats selected Fred H. Brown jto oppose Senator Moses in Novem- ber. Representative William N. Rog- ers, a Democrat, was renominated and will be opposed by William P. Straw, Republican. i Wednesday in the south, Rep-; resentative Charles P. Crisp, legis- | lative veteran, sought the Democra- | tice senatorial nomination. He was opposed by the youthful governor, Richard B. Russell. Senator Walter at the label—16 ounces instead of 12 ounces. Clicquot Club GINGER ‘ALE ‘Be 2 | “Colossus,” the mammoth whale which will be exhibited here this week-end, is shown above in the Pa- cific waters off the California coast just after he was struck by a whaler’s harpoon and drawn along- side the boat. | The whale, said to be the greatest} exhibition of marine life ever to be Presented in inland cities, will be shown in Bismarck next Friday and! Saturday on a railroad car near the! Northern Pacific depot. The monster mammal was cap- tured last December and is in a per- fect state of preservation, more than 3,000 barrels of enbalming fluid hav- ing been used in its preparation. The exhibit will be shown under the auspices of the educational de- partment of the Pacific Whaling company of Long Beach, Cal., and is accompanied by Captain George Clarke, veteran whaling master, and & crew of 10 whalers. Southwest Teachers Arrange for Meeting Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 14—(P)— Members fo the executive committee of the southwest division of the North Dakota Education association met here Monday to make fmal ar- rangements for the 13th annual meeting of the organization to be held here Oct. 13 and 14, The southwest division of state educators includes about 1,500 mem- bers. E. J. Shrum of Hebron is presi- dent and L. R. Hiatt of Dickinson is secretary-treasurer. Other members of the executive group are H. O. Pip- pin, Stark county superintendent of schools, P. 8. Berg, superintendent of Dickinson high school, and C. L. Kjerstad, president of the Dickinson state teachers college. ' Good Coffee! Fragrant bracer for the day! So be sure | it IS good—good to begin with. Try Schilling! Schilling is the one coffee roaster in America who specializes in making fine coffee exclusively. Schilling coffee SUFFERS OPERATION Paris, Sept. 14—(7)—Mrs. Gene Tunney, wife of the rétired heavy- weight champion, underwent an operation for a mastoid at the Amer- ican hospital here Wednesday. Doc- tors said her condition was very satisfactory. wr bertey eee ‘wear? ap FLORENZ ZIEGFELD said...“ consider Ruth Etting the greatest singer of songs that I have managed in my forty years in the theater.” ON WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS... Music in the air... bewitching music. “Blues” or ballads . . . sad songs, glad songs . . . old favorites or latest hits . . . Chesterfield’s Girl of Song sings them all. Hear UTH ETTING | in Chesterfield’s Radio Program, “Music that Satisfies,” every Wednés- day and Saturday night—Columbia coast-to-coast Network. * * x* Chesterfield Radio Program—Every night ane Sunday, Columbia coast-to-coast ( “‘hesterfiel ——THE cioarerte tuars AZZ, : THE CIGARETTE THAT Lailes Bettsy « 2 ~ I

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