The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 20, 1932, Page 3

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LA pot THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 20, 1932 SPOTLIGHT CENTERS ON WISCONSIN VOTE IN PRIMARY BALLOTS Power of La Folette Brothers Challenged; Dry Law Is Eastern Issue (By The Associated Press) Voters in New York, Massachusetts and Wisconsin Tuesday are choosing party candidates for November's election, with the number of ballots cast sharing interest nationally with the issues and personalities involved. In Wisconsin, a challenge to the power of the La Follette brothers: and hotly contested economic issues hold the spotlight. In the two east- ern states, prohibition is a major is- sue in a number of the congressional primaries, Except for a few state conventions and run-off primaries, Tuesday's out- come closes the Democratic and Re- publican lists of 1932 candidates. Governor Philip La Follette of Wis- consin is seeking renomination on the Republican ticket in a strenu- ously-fought campaign against for- mer Governor Walter J. Kohler, ‘Tax eee are prominent in the con- est. Blaine Seeks Renomination Supported by the La Follette fac- tion, Senator John J. Blaine is standing for the Republican seno- torial nomination against John B. Chapple, Ashland editor, who has charged Blaine with radicalism. ¥. Ryan Duffy is unopposed as the De- mocratic senatorial choice but three are seeking the party's gubernatorial nomination. New York's senatorial and guber- natorial candidates will be selected by October party conventions, but 17 of 45 seats in the next house are at issue Tuesday. Massachusetts is deciding contests Se i, | Weather Report | -— a & FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Prob- ably local showers tonight or Wed- SHOW nesday; warmer SHOWERS tonight; somewhat sooler Wednesday. For North Da- kota: Probably lo: cal showers t night or Wednes- day, except cloudy Wednesday ex- treme west, warm- er ‘tonight east and central por- tions; somewhat cooler Wednesday. For South Da- kota: Partly cloudy or cloudy tonight and Wednes- day, probably local showers west and north, warmer tonight, cooler Wed- nesday extreme west. For Montana: Unsettled slightly cooler northeast, frost north and extreme west portions; Wednes- day fair. For Minnesota: Fair, with increas- ing cloudiness, Warmer in central and west portions tonight; Wednesday mostly cloudy, show in north, warmer in extreme east and extreme south. GENERAL CONDITIONS Low pressure areas over the Great Lakes region and over the northern Rocky Mountain region .While higher pressure prevails over the eastern states, the middle Mis- souri Valley and over the extreme western states. Precipitation oc- curred in the Great Lakes region and in the Mississippi Valley and the weather is somewhat unsettled in the northern border states and in the Canadian Provinces. Temperatures dropped considerably in the Missis: sippi Valley and northern Plains States while elsewhere changes have been slight. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.2 ft. 24 hour change, 0.1 ft, Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.141. Reduced to sea level, 29.93. TEMPERATURE At 7 BM. fc, 38 Highest yesterday 53 Lowest last night . 37 PRECIPITATION | Amt. 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m. 00) ‘Total this month to date . 17 ‘Normal, this month to date 89 Total, Jan. 1 to date . 11.87 Normal, Jan. 1 to date . ++ 13.94 Accumulated deficiengy since Jan. 1 ...... 2.07 NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High Low Ins. Temprs. Pre. BISMARCK, cldy. 37.00 Amenia, clear 35.00 Beach, cldy. . 33.00 Bot 30.00 o 28 «00 35.00 36 «00 32 = 00 34 = -.00; 32. CS 33 = 00 Fessenden, peldy. . 35 «(00 Grand Forks, peldy. ... 60 36 .00 Hankinson, clear +» 63 37 00 Jamestown, cldy. - 62 34 .00 Larimore, clear . 56 36 00 Lisbon, clear .. +. 67 33° 00 Max, cldy. - 50 31 00 . Minot, cldy. . - 60 32 00 Napoleon, cldy. . 57 30 00} Oakes, clear . - 69 31 .00 Pembina, cldy 57 35 00 . 00 00 Ins. Other Stations— Temprs. Pre. Boise, Idaho, peldy. - 66 52 00 Calgary, Alta., peldy. .. 52 34 .00 Chicago, Ill, rain ..... 88 66 02 Denver, Colo., peldy. .. 70 48 .00 Des Moines, Ta., clear.. 86 50 .84) Edmonton, Alta. cldy... 52 36 .00 Havre Mont., pcldy. . 56 42 00 Helena, Mont., rain .... 56 46 .00 Huron, 8. D., clear .... 64 38 .00 Kansas City, Mo., cldy.. 88 62 .00 Miles City, Mont., peldy. 58 45 .00 No. Platte, Neb. clear.. 68 40 .00 Oklahoma City, O., clear 88 68 00 Pierre, S. D., clear ..... 66 38 .00 Rapid City, S. D., peldy. 64 36 .00 St. Louis, Mo., cldy..... 82 64 .12 St. Paul, Minn. clear .. 68 42 16 Salt Lake City, U., clear 66 50 .00 Beattle, Wash., cldy.... 56 50 .08 Sheridan, Wyo., pck . 60 34 .00 Sioux City, Ia., clear... 66 40 .00 Spokane, Wash., clear .. 50 40 .00 Swift Current, S., peldy. 48 40 .00 ‘The Pas, Man., clear... 54 26 .00 Toledo, Ohio, rain 88 6A C12 Winnipeg, Man., peldy.. 54 32 .02 Tonight tonight, | are centered} | in eight congressional districts. The State’s Democrats are renominating } Governor Joseph B. Ely without op-! | position, i Prominent among eastern congres- sional races are contests for renom- jinations by Representative Robert | Luce of the ninth Massachusetts dis- M. Davenport, in New York's 33rd. Both are Republicans. Luce, stand- ! ing on his party's national prohibi- | tion plank, 1s opposed by a repeal- jist, and Davenport, a prohibitionist, + is opposed by an anti-prohibitionist. Former Senator James W. Wads- worth, a repealist, is without opposi- tion for the Republican nomination for the house in the 39h New York district. CONTINUED Political Leaders Spoke Frankly to Secretary Hurley from federal jobholders are as salt in their wounds, They resent it ;warmly and Hurley's admonition at Huron that they agree among them- selves first and then come to the Re- Publican party with their plan, if it were constitutional, is regarded here- abouts as adaing an insult to a real) injury. Hurley was told to impress upon | Hoover that his cabinet members jcould not win the fight for him, but | that the titular head of the party in jthis emergency must speak out boldly Bet hit out squarely from the shoul- der. ek OK Within a fortnight, Gov. Franklin iD. Roosevelt invades this district, ‘torn by unrest over ruinous prices of- ‘fered for farm products. No one iseems to know why this enterprising and friendly little city of 80,000 popu- lation has been selected in which to] apply the Holiday plan of the North- west farmers. It is one of the great primary markets for grain and live- | Stock, together with Omaha, a few |miles away. The.Democratic party \naturally is attempting to capitalize this condition just as the Republicans | would do were the situation reversed !and as they did during the Wilson re- gime. Favor Roosevelt Plan | Roosevelt's six-point farm plan fits jin with the Holiday scheme in part jonly, but his offers of assistance come so much closer to farmer demands jthan Republican aloofness that all signs point to a thunderous reception | as Roosevelt sweeps through Nebraska | jand into this city, around which! |the farmers have drawn a blockade. | This gesture has cut down trade and Production t@ an alarming extent. Businessmen, tired of picketed high- |ways and other demonstrations, have appealed for state aid to put down | the revolt. Gov. Turner refuses to or- ‘BUSINESSMEN ARE trict and Representative ate | | jlabor unions. NAMED AS LEADERS. I'RACKETEERING Chicagoan Says Organized La- bor, Criminals and Politi- cians Also Participate Washington, Sept. 20.—()—Rack- eteering by business men, leaders of organized labor, criminals and poli- ticlans was charged Tuesday by Gor- don L. Hostetter of Chicago with causing a stupendous economic loss annually to the American public. ! Hostetter is executive director of; the Employers’ Association of Chica- | go. In an address before the national conference on government he assert- | ed: “Racketeering is an inside job and a native American product, for which business itself is too greatly respon- sible. . . . The cost of the racket is incalculable.” He said a federal judge has assert-| ed the crime cost annually in the/| United States was between $11,000,-; 000,000 and $13,000,000,000. Hostetter estimated racketeering costs in Chi- cago aione amount to $145,000,000 a year. Racketeering has undergone 4 change for the worse in the last two years, he said, adding: “Whereas several years ago organ- ization of business men and organzied labor were principally responsible. with the criminal acting merely as a} tool or an agent, the criminal is now; gaining the ascendency.” } “What is more alarming, organized | criminality is directing its efforts to- ward the control of business and la-! bor as a means of perpetuating it- self — when, as, and if, and possibly regardless of whether, its peculiar field of activity is destroyed by repeal or modification of the eighteenth amendment. Hostetter said the “true racket 1s comprised of four elements” and list- ed them as: “1. The business man, business group, or association of business men. “2. The lIé¢ader or leaders of or- ganized labor. “3, The criminal underworld. “4. The politician. “The collective purpose and sole intent of this conspiracy, obviously. } is exploitation of the public. .. . | “It is not my intention to indict the whole field of either business or, There are high ethical; Standards in both, but there is also a betrayal of the public by both.” Say Michigan Voters j der. ‘ut the national guard and doubt- less wisely, for a false step now might | |give rise to serious conditions. Coming from Yankton to Iowa over Highway No. 77, we ran into the pick- feters outside of Sioux City, Ia. They ‘hailed our North Dakota license in} }good humor. A large American fla; fluttered over a big sign which read: | | “Stop—Farmers’ Holiday.” About 20! :farmers in blue denim stood about, alert for trucks carrying grain or live- stock, Perishable products without resistance. City Seeks Friendship At this writing many farmers are on trial in the police courts of Sioux . City for alleged acts of violence. Most of them are being turned loose. This ‘city is striving hard to keep the | friendship of the farmers and the ad- vice of the hot-heads is not being fol-| lowed. The process is irritating to! the residents, however, who say why! Pick on us? What have we done to| deserve all this? The farmers believe , ; that Sioux City and Omaha are good | j Places to try out the latest agricul- tural defensive wrinkle. ; .The Holiday movement is growing, | j although leaders are seeking to dis- courage picketing and acts of vio- lence, The Sioux City fracas, how- {ever, has attracted Communist lead- fers to this city with offers of aid to ‘the farmers. Their interference is} resented by the farmers who use the stars and stripes, not the red flag, at | their headquarters. | Communists stormed the mayor's office here Friday with excessive de- | mands, They waved their hands wild- jly and defied the proposed decree of | martial law. “Let him send them,” cried one; Communist, “and we'll see whether the guns will be turned on the picxets or the state capitol. Go down to those picket lines and help hold the | blockade.” | Only a few paid any attention to ;the Communist demonstration on the jcity hall steps. This city is taking the ; farmers’ revolt coolly and the situa- tion seems well in hand but it has} imany elements of danger unless it is skillfully directed. Authorities _be- | lieve that plans are in the making/ i which will lift the blockade shortly, |unless a faux pas is committed. ee Over in Nebraska, the farmers have j taken up the Holiday movement most | vigorously. Trade lanes at this writ- jing are not picketed in Nebraska. {Farm leaders are seeking to avoid such a move by persuading their fel- ilows not to market any staple farm product. ‘When 1,600 farmers, representing 17 Nebraska counties met last Thursday at Fremont and organized a Nebraska division of the Farmers’ Holiday as- sociation, they voted “to do just as near right as we know how, but to go through.” Their program briefly is: Cost of production for farm prod- jucts plus an amount which will in- sure a decent standard of living. Moratorium on mortgages and in- terest for poor farmers until prosper- ity returns. Cancellation of federal feed and seed loans. : Tax exemption for heavily mort- gaged farms. Moratorium on farm rents until ‘prices exceed cost of production and i give fair return to agriculture. |” No farm evictions, ‘ Emergency farm relief congress at Washington next December where farmers can get same consideration as bankers, railroads and insurance companies already have had. Use the Want Ads passed | | Regains Speed Title | hha case ach > i GAR WOOD Algonac, Mich., Sept. 20—(?)—Gar Wood, America’s premier speedboat Pilot, drove his Miss America X over a measured mile in the St. Clair river Tuesday at a speed of 124.91 miles an hour to recapture from Kaye Don, British pilot, the world's hydroplane speed record. Don, who failed a fortnight ago in an attempt to take the Harmsworth trophy from Wood and his Miss America X, established the record at 119.75 on Loch Lomond, Scotland, July 18 last. Wood went after the record Tues- day morning with little preliminary tuning up. Despite a drizzle of rain he brought the big 48-cylinder brown-hulled Miss America out to roar upstream on the first official trial against the record. Swinging around. he shot the craft downstream even faster, the official timers announced the average for) the two trials had set the world's record at 124.91 miles an hour, exact- ly 5.16 miles an hour faster than the old mark. The first run, upstream, had been clocked at_a speed of 124.41 miles an hour. Downstream, the big craft shot over the course at 125.42 miles an hour. ASKS FOR MIDWEST CLAIMS Springfield, Ill., Sept. 20.—(4)—Fed- eral Judge Charles G. Briggle has is- sued notice to all persons having claims against the Midwest Utilities Co., to file them before Jan. 1, 1933, Minneapolis Man Is Given Credit Office Minneapolis, Sept. 20.—)—David J. Murphy, Minneapolis, first vice | president of the Minnesota Agricul- tural Society and a permanent figure for many years in the farm imple- |ment business of the northwest, was appointed Monday as secretary and | treasurer of the Agricultural Credit | corporation of the northwest, it was announced by John W. Barton, re- cently appointed manager. | Murphy will be in charge of per- sonnel and employment and will rank next to Barton in the executive staff of the new credit agency. In recent years he has been manager of the Northwest Division of the Rock |Island Plow company and prior to |that managed the sale of other lines of farm machinery in Minnesota and the Dakotas. Murphy owns and operates his farm ‘near Hutchinson, Minn., he is presi- dent of the Fairview Farm and Stock ‘company of Scobey, Mont. He is a member of the board of directors of the Minnesota Livestock Breeders as- sociation and is serving a second term as vice president of the State Fair. ,300 Men Given Jobs On Cass Paving Work ' Fargo, N. D., Sept. 20.—()—With Paving work on U. S. Highway No. 10 between Mapleton and Casselton well under way, part time employ- ment has been furnished to approxi- mately 300 men, according to John L. McCormick, Fargo, who has the con- tract. Laying the concrete strip began Saturday. Completion of the job is expected before the first snow. St. Paul Man Found Dead After Quarrel St. Paul, Sept. 20.—(4)—Summoned by neighbors who said there was a \“family quarrel” in progress, police Monday night found a man dead and {a woman unconscious, victims of a |struggle in which a heavy mechanics 77 MILES ON 1 GALLON | Gas Saver Laboratories, B-254 St.. | Wheaton, Illinois, has brought out a new auto Gas Saver—Oiler that saves \up to 50% of gas and OILS inside of engine at same time. THERE IS NOTHING ELSE LIKE IT. It fits all Cars. Easy to put on. LOW PRICE. Sold on 10 days money-back guarantee. They want Users, Boost- lers, Agents everywhere to earn up to ‘$1,000 a month helping introduce it. 266°; profits. THEY OFFER ONE Will Support Hoover with receivers Edward N. Hurley and FREE TO START. Send your Ad- Washington, Sept. 20.—(?)—Con-; idence that Michigan voters will} verwhelmingly” indorse adminis- tration policies was the expressed | view Tuesday of a group of the state’s newspaper editors after a per- sonal conference with President Hoo- ver. This statement was made after aj two-hour discussion Monday night in the white house. It was issued on behalf of the visiting editors by George R. Averill, editor of the Lir- mingham (Mich.) Eccentric, and said: “We have had a discussion with the president of the social, political and economic problems of the U. S. and the world and we are going home cheerful as to the outcome. We are confident that Michigan will vote overwhelmingly for continuation of President Hoover's policies.” Hoover did most of the talking. Following the customary practices of his press conferences, the editcrs submitted several score questions in writing and the president ran! through them, answering and inter-| | preting. : RUSSIANS EXPEL WRITER Moscow, Sept. 20.—(?)—Rhea Cly- man, a Toronto, Canada, correspond- ent here for the London Daily Ex- press and the Toronto Mail and Em- pire was ordered expelled from Rus- sia Tuesday on a charge of writing false news about the country. Sell your live poultry andj cream now to Armour Cream- eries, Bismarck. Good looks aren’t always luck Sparkling eyes and a smooth complexion depend on good health. The beautiful woman guards against constipation. She knows this condition can cause headaches, sallow skin, dull eyes, pimples, Premature aging. Protect yourself from constipa- tion by eating a delicious cereal. Tests show Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN provides “bulk” to exercise the in- testines, and Vitamin B to tone the intestinal tract. In addition, ALI- Bran furnishes blood-building iron. The “bulk” in ALL-BRAN is similar to that of lettuce. Within the body, it forms a soft mass, which gently clears the intestines of wastes. How much safer than pills and drugs — so often habit-forming. Two tablespoonfuls daily—in serious cases, with every me: will correct most types of constipa- tion. If your trouble is not relieved . in this way, see your doctor. “Serve asa cereal, with milk or cream, kage. Kellogg. in re Creek HELPS KEEP YOU FIT | The At Dome else forfeit them. {Charles A. McCulloch at Chicago, or | dress and Name of Car by Postal or HURRY.—Advertisement. letter. that | hammer and a razor had been wield-| ed in a home here. |in May and had been unable to work George Szhandarofsky, 43, said by|since that time. About a week ago Police to have been-a bootlegger re- | he became critically ill and was taken cently released from jail after serving to a hospital for treatment. @ term under another name, was! Besides his widow he leaves three found dead from a blow on the head| sons, Richard, Robert and Harland, and numerous cuts. and two daughters, Mrs. Mike Dohn The woman, Mrs. Helen Sklar, 55.)and Elaine Hugelman. All live at at whose home the slaying occurred, | 305 Third St. was revived at Ancker hospital and| Funeral arrangements have not admitted, according to police, she| been completed, relatives said. struck and slashed Szhandarofsky in| sa Seaaiie= | Western Grain Men Local Man Victim Would Sell to China Of Heart Disease; Spokangg Wash. Sept 20, — UF) — |More thars300 representatives of 6- George Hugelman, 50, 305 Third St., | 000 cooperative growers in Montana, a resident of Bismarck for the last | Idaho, Oregon and Washington de- 14 years, died at 12:30 a. m. Tuesday,;manded Monday that the recon- @ victim of heart disease. {struction finance corporation finance An employee of a local filling sta-!a sale of 20,000,000 bushels of north- tion, Hugelman was taken ill early| west wheat to the Chinese govern- ment. The farmers represented nearly every local cooperative affiliated with North Pacific Grain Growers, northwest regional market unit. 30c Qt. The Original Home Made Ice Cream | Witty, They are not present in Luckies .. the mildest cigarette you ever smoked E buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world—but does not explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never overlook the truth that “Nature in “If a man write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a better mouse-trap than bis meighber, the be build bis house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path Does not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike? - ‘SIGHTS YOU'VE NEVER SEEN! .. . THRILLS RKO-RADIO PICTURE TONIGHT, TOMORROW Matinee 25c; Evening 35c Capitol Theatre —and have no place in cigarettes With the “Home Made” fla- vor. You are bound to be pleased. Thorberg’s Finney’s Sweet Shop Corner Grocery Owens Grocery Broadway Food Store A white-fang drama of the wilds .. filmed the heart f the jungle! and THURSDAY Daily at 2:30 -7-9 WEBB BROS. Funeral Directors Phone 50 THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE Nature in the Raw” —as por- trayed by Thomas Webb... in- spired by the savage slaughter of 5000 Christian defenders— at the hands of the vengeful, " barbaric horde of 250,000 + men under the ruthless ; Mohammed II—1453! raw tobaccos the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are then given the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described by the words—‘‘It’s toasted”. That's why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such 9 ~ mild cigarettes. 66 40 bis door."’—RALPH WALDO EMERSON. s PAUL TREMAINE and His Columbia Recording Band Admissio Gents 40c; Ladies 25c Next Satu

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