The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 21, 1932, Page 1

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ay , BOY, GL BLADE «; _ IN BOMB OUTRAGE Police Seek James ‘Fur’ Sam- speeches of his 8,900-mile journey : | through 21 states. jeuss public utilities. Tuesday night at Seattle, Roose- | velt made a brief speech to an audi- ; | torlum crowd that filled every seat, Chicazo, Sept. 21.—()—A hoy and! 1, both 16,.were in a hospital Wed-| an North Dakota's Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 LaFollette Defeated In Primary CHOOSES FARM BELT FOR FIRST DIRECT APPEAL TO VOTERS Hoover Will Make Trip to lowa and Back Without Any Stops En Route SPEAKING PLAN IS SHAPING Expected to Answer Address Which Roosevelt Deliver- ed at Topeka Washington, Sept. 21—(@)—A city} in the heart of the farm belt—Des Moines, Iowa—Wednesday was chosen for President Hoover's first direct ap- peal to voters for reelection. The Republican candidate will; speak there on Tuesday evening, Oct. 4, traveling to and from Iowa's capital without making any other ad- dresses en route. The announcement of President Hoover's first campaign speech was made by Everett Sanders, chairman of the Republican national commit- tee. It came after a week of confer- ences that began with the Maine election and included a statement by Sanders on the white house steps Sunday night that “the most vigor- ous possible speaking campaign” was planned. Sanders’ announcement said: “President Hoover will make his first speech of the campaign at Des Moines, Iowa, on the evening of Tuesday, Oct. 4. Arrangements for a nation-wide radio hook-up are be- ing made. “The president will return immed- fately to Washington after his! speech. He will make no other ad- dresses en route. Time and place of/ other addresses by the president have not yet been arranged.” Hoover's trip west will coincide with Governor Roosevelt's return to} |40 Foreign Nations Have Se Up ‘Defenses, Candidate Albany. It is expected in official quarters the president will discuss the farm problem, subject af the Topeka, Kansas, address of his De- mocratic opponent, during Roose: | velt’s present western swing. So far as official announcements j are concerned, the president's speak- ing plans still contemplate two ad- Secretaries Stimson, and Hyde—more extensive tours are being planned by the Republican committee. mons After Explosion at Judge's Home day, mangled and probably blind- } @d for life, as the result of an under- “ground attempt to bomb the home of Superior Court Judge John P. Mc- Goorty. *. Meanwhile, police were searching the hidden retreats of gangland for James “Fur” Sammons, ex-convict, ‘public enemy, and reputed machine inner‘ for the Capone syndicate ‘Who was sent back to the penitentiary Yn 1931 by Judge McGoorty only to be sed on a writ of habeas corpus another judge. Judge McGoorty. and members o: e family escaped injury, although bomb, tossed last night from + iy moving automobile, shattered fndows in his house, tore a hole in sidewalk, and shook the neigh- 100d. hood. The injured boy and girl, Lee W. ppen and Ada Moyer, were strol- ig in the neighborhood of Judge “"McGoorty’s home on the south side ‘Tuesday night. The bombers’ car Passed them as they neared the jur- ist's home. They did not see the oc- cupants toss out the bomb which, po- lice conjectured, hit a fence in front of Judge McGoorty’s house and unded back onto the sidewalk. As Koeppen and the girl walked the McGoorty residence the sburning package on the sid: walk, He/ ‘boy and girl were hurled -to one side, yblinded and mangled. ’ They were rushed to a hospital by fers at it. The bomb exploded. The * Minnesotan Killed In Train-Car Crash Valley City, N. D., Sept. 21.—()—8. Johnson, 46, of Benson, Minn., was killed when his car was struck by the Great Northern Empire Builder near! Hannaford Tuesday afternoon. Johnson, who was a collector for the International Harvester company. was taken to Hannaford for medical assistance but died en route. The body will be taken to Minneapolis for burial.’ VON GRONAU AT KAGOSHIMA Kagoshima, Japan. Sept. 21.—(P)— Capt. Wolfgang von Gronau. German filer who is on his way around the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1932 4b President Will Speak at Des Moi nes Oct, 4ivorstunoom Judges at the American Legion Portland, Ore. se. lected Joseph Hathaway of Chicago as the best of the snare drummers in the competing bands. (Associated ROOSEVELT ASSAILS ‘GRUNDY'S TARIFF’ IN Aboard Roosevelt Special, En Route | maids and kitchen help and waitre: dresses in the west and one in the t© Portland, Sept. 21.—()—Leaving | es and counter girls, and deleting the | east. For his supporters—including | behind a promise for “a new deal in| Provision, “no employer shall employ Mills, Hurley; the restoration of foreign trade” and encouraged by cheering crowds in northwest Washington, Gov. Frank- lin D. Roosevelt Wednesday moved; is presidential campaign into the ' normally Republican state of Ore- gon, the home of an administration leader, U. S. Senator Charles C. Mc- ie Democratic nominee Wednes- day night will speak at Portland, de- |livering the third of the major Roosevelt will dis- ing. There were 12,000 in the audi- torium and an estimated 14,000 in Attacks Present Tariff Rep. Willis C. “That tariff, as you in Washing- ton will know,” the Democratic can- didate continued, “had the inevitable result of bringing about retaliations by other nations. Forty of them set up tariff defenses.” Among the commodities of the Pa- cific northwest, which Roosevelt said had been injured by retaliatory tar- ifs, were peaches, vegetables, apples, condensed milk, hay and salmon, “To remedy this,” asserted Roose- to advocate a tariff policy based in part upon the simple prin- ciple of profitable exchange arrived at through negotiated tariffs with benefits to each nation. judge of conditions, this policy will be initiated-next March 4. Supports Homer Bone Roosevelt's comment on the Demo- j cratic senatorial candidacy of Homer T. Bone, a Republican office-seeker four years ago, was interpreted as a further bid. for Republican and Pro- gressive support. ‘The fight this year is Sinoere. leaders in ‘Washington, re leaders rashington, not against the rank and file of the Pepabiicnn party. Bone has paid me great compliment of responding jto the invitation that I extended in my acceptance parties and political belief to join me in this ae for a new deal. Roosevelt's auditorium speech. cli- ‘s maxed a tumultuous and busy day~ Erlandson. Evanston’s dog catch- Police estimated more than 100,000 persons jammed the streets when the Democratic nominee drove from his Along the 25-mile route to the western Washington fair at Puyallup, crowds had gathered in lage and 5,000 heard him briefly talk at the fair grounds. Re- turning, he visited Tacoma, where the to men of all train to a hotel, world, landed here Wednesday after a flight from Nagoya. , sas crowd all but engulfed his motor car in which members bal was waiting at the pound door Snare Drum Champ [BOARD RECOMMENDS) REDUCTIONS IN WAGE SCALES FOR WOMEN Final Action Will Be Taken Fol- lowing Public Hearing Here Oct. 17 EMPLOYERS ASKED ACTION Public Housekeeping, Laundry and Mercantile Occupa- tions Affected Reports by three separate confer- ences on public housekeeping, laundry and mercantile occupations recom- mending general reductions in the minimum wage scales for women have been approved by the workmen's com- pensation bureau, R. E. Wenzel, chair- | man, announced Wednesday. Public hearings for the three occu: Pations will be held in the office o: the workmen's compensation bureau Oct. 17, at which time persons inter- ested may appear in favor of, or in opposition to, the recommendations | of the conference, Wenzel said. ! ‘The recommended changes in the/ minimum weekly wages are: | Public housekeeping, waitresses 01 counter girls reduced from $14.90, to} $13.41, with board, from $8.90 to $8.16; | chambermaid or kitchen help from $14.20 to $12.78; with board from $8.25 to $7.53. Where room also is furnish- ed, not more than $2 per week may be deducted. | Laundry: Experienced women changed from $14 to $12.60, with laun- dry privileges $13.50 to $12.10; first! Period of apprenticeship $11 to $9.90; | }second period of apprenticeship, $12.50 | to $11.25; no deduction to be made for |changed from $14.50 to $13, the maxi- | mum length of apprenticeship term; lor women in mercantile establish- ents set at one year at a minimum! | weexly wage of $10.80. Permit Night Work Other recommendations in the re- Ports of the three conferences include | | striking from the present order sched- ules of apprentices covering chamber. {any woman in any public housekeep- | jing establishment in the State of| {North Dakota between the hours. of ! Figures in Wisconsin Election | The four men pictured above took the leading roles Tuesday in Wiscon- sin’s primary election, in which the voters of that state voted down a La Follette for the first time since 1892. left) was defeated by former Governor Walter Kohler (top right) in the race for the Republican gubernatorial nomina-ion by a substantial mar- Senator John J. Blaine (below Chapple (below right) in the senatorial battle. are Progressives while Kohler and Chapple are Conservatives. New Farmers’.Campaign Under Way in Midwest Nearly Two Million Producers Asked to Withhold Goods From Market Governor Philip La Follette ‘top behind John B. La Follette and Blaine ARM BOARD HIT BY 1 and 5 a. m.” The conferences on mercantile and; public housekeeping occupations also {adopted the following recommenda- } “Every woman employed in this oc- | cupation, whether regularly or on; part time, shall be paid one forty-, eighth of the weekly wage for each, hour worked, provided, however, that | such employee is a part-time work- ; jer the employer shall so arrange con- | secutive hours of continuous emp!o! worker is an apprentice the basis shall | wage and if she is an experienced 'worker the basis shall be one-forty- “may render such an order as may be Ushing an average minimum wage of | cupations. wage schedules, public hearings were Testimony offered for laundry, mer- cantile and public housekeeping oc- | cupations was presented to a separate > l occupations to the bureau.” Three em- | ployers, three employees and three citizens representing the public con- | stituted each conference. Pound Attractive | | To Runaway Dog | — — — @ Evanston, Ii., Sept. 21.—(7)— When # dog runs away from a happy home and applies for re- admittance to the city dog pound it must prove something, William er, believes. “It shows,” he said, “that I treat them better than their own- ers do.” To substantiate his claim he to the case of “Butter- pound, where it remained for a few days before its owner claimed it. Tuesday. however. the dog | begging to get in again. COOPERATIVE HEAD A new drive to keep farmers of 11 midwestern states from selling non- ke bog products was under way tion: {Cain Charges Government Is Campaigning Against Farm Groups of the Farmers’ Holiday association, sponsors of the non-sell- designed to bring higher prices for producers, said they had asked nearly two million farm- ers to join in the strike. Agriculturists in Minnesota, North Nebraska and have agreed to participate, leaders said, while farmers in Ohio, South Dakota, Illin have “shown interest. The new strike order marked the beginning of the second “war” for The order carried an edict from leaders against the vio- lence and picketing that character- ized the first drive started more than a month ago. At Sioux City, focal point of the strike, little activity had been seen in several days. At Worthington, Minn., only a few pickets were left on the highways to challenge trucks. Approximately 400 were on duty Monday. Peaceful methods were advocated in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area as well as those in Okla- hema and Iowa. At Oakes, N. D., more than 890 farmers gathered Tuesday night to lay the groundwork for a Farmers’ Holiday association in Dickey county. With the addition of Dickey county, 31 of North Dakota's 53 counties will have formed Holiday associations. Ushez L. Burdick, Fargo, said steps were being taken to perfect a state- | Wide organization as quickly as pos- ing movement Prench Lick, Ind.. Sept. 21.—?)-- ; Thomas R. Cain of Bloomington. 111. iment so that such employee may have |in an address prepared for the final a fair opportunity for securing such , Session of the grain and feed dealers other employment as will enable her national association mecting to earn a full week's wage.” | Wednesday charged a deliberate cam- Added to the hourly wage recom-;paign by the federal farm board to mendation of the mercantile confer- | destroy farmer-owned and farmer- ence was the provision that if a|controlled cooperatives. Cain is president of the Farmers’ be one forty-eighth of the apprentice | National Grain Dealers’ association. Agriculture cannot survive with the death hand of government control ocferring to the Hawley-Gmoot “oF leighth of the experienced worker's | clutching at its throat,” he said. the nominee said, “President Hoover | ¥#8° should have known that this tariff would raise havoc with any plans | that he might have had to stimulate foreign markets.” Hawley, Republican co-author with Senator Reed Smoot of Utah, of the Hawley-Smoot act, is an Oregon con- higher prices. !the time the farm board entered its Final Action Next Month campaign of destruction it also built Final action on these recommenda- up with taxpayers’ money a monopoly tions, according to the minimum wage | under law, will be taken following the hear-; brought the ings next month when the bureau} prices ever known. An adequate tariff which would proper or necessary.” Such order will; shut out millions of dollars worth of become effective 60 days after it is!commodities that are sold in compe- made and rendered. ‘tition with American farm products Minimum wage regulations, in ef-|would supply one of the greatest fect now, stand as made in 1922, Wen- ineeds of agriculture. Cain declared. zel said. In 1922 minimum wage|He denied agriculture has over-pro- schedules were adopted covering wom- | duced, en employed in public housekeeping, | wheat, corn, oats, barley and rye in| manufacturing, mercantile, laundry,’ 1930, which he said were 13 million and telephone occupations, and estab-! bushels less than those of 1913. The dealers Tuesday night heart approximately $14 per week for ex-| Col. Robert R. McCormick, publisher perienced women workers in those 0¢-/of the Chicago Tribune, declare the | is ts of employers in var. return to prosperity depends on tax) “] At the requests of e ‘~ | reduction, and say the need is to send’ felt, | chave adropeted and oansiane fous parts of the state for adjustments }t 9 Washington men who will “undo downward in the present minimum /the misdeeds of the last congress.” They applauded ais attack on the held to permit presentation of test-/ tnterstate Commerce mony relating to changes in the cost! and his reference to expenditures o!| of living. | the federal farm board. lowest level of farm citing harvest figures for “Farmers in La Moyre, Cass, and Richland counties will organize coun- ty units within the next few days. Academy cadet amused himself by | successfully running the picket lines with a truck loaded with two pigs. He hired both truck and pigs. tying an unloaded shotgun the youth would dismount each time groups of | Picketers were passed. His cadet | uniform led them to believe he was | an officer of the state police. World’s Most Famous Hangman Kills Self After ‘ Brooding Over His Work, woman's husband. She had to be dragged to the scaffold and this. with his previous worries over his job, was too much for HUNGARIAN PREMIER QUITS 4 Budapest, Sept. 21.—()—Count Ju- conference for each occupation. which jius Karolyi resigned Wednesday as made the recommendations on these | premier of Hungary. world’s most widely known hang- man was dead Wednesday by his own hand, a victim of years of brooding over having sent more murderers to death than any other living man. He was John Ellis, who dur- ing 22 years as public hangman than 200 crim- inals. His nerves began to fail him in 1924, when he resigned. He was found dead, his throat He retired the following year but could not shake off the hor- rors that haunted him. On Aug. he spent a sleepless night and was found next day, gravely wounded. with a revolver He recovered, how- ever, and promised a magistrate executed more NEBRASKA ELECTORS MAY BOLT G. 0. P. 10 SUPPORT ROOSEVELT Democrats Say They Need Only One Hand to Wipe Out Re- publican Majorities. |WHOLE STATE IN REVOLT { Democratic Candidate’s Speech} At Topeka Pleased Husk- er Farmers - By GEORGE D. MANN i LincdIn, Neb., Sept. 19.—D*:braska Democrats believe this year they can jlick the national Republican ticket with one hand tied behind their jbacks. All they need is the voting hand to wipe out the normal Repub- | lican majorities, they say. This state first strayed from Repub- lican allegiance in 1896 when the voters followed William Jennings Bryan in his 16-to-1 crusade. Ne- braska, in most national eampaigns, has been tariff-minded and with the exception of 1896, 1908, 1912 and 1916, it has elected to trust national issues! to Republican auspices. But Nebraska, like Iowa, the Da- kotas and Kansas, is in revolt. Frank- | lin D, Roosevelt's Topeka speech has pleased the farmers here. You hear that on all sides. Deliberately, Mr.| Roosevelt kept away from specifics but his generalizations on agricultural problems have been more in line with what the farm leaders want. They jare already hailing him as the new | Moses who may lead agriculture out ! of bondage. | Earnest farm leaders here declare} {that Roosevelt was much more defi- {nite in his six-point farm plan than the Republican apologists give him jeredit for being. Republican cam- 'paign strategy dismisses Roosevelt's farm commitments as so much airy * persiflage. They say bluntly the New hat. ; Not so the farmers, They liked his | Topeka address. His attitude toward the railroads given at the Salt Lake tabernacle Saturday evening refutes janother charge that Roosevelt is a second Bryan and that the campaign of 1932 is but an echo of 1896. Of jcourse that charge would not terrify | | Nebraska farmers during these stormy times. 1 Demand Currency Reforms | | Her farmers, in mass meetings as- sembled, are demanding currency re- {forms., Milo Reno of Des Moines, na- jtional president of the Farmers’ Holi- day movement, has been in Nebraska. {He is advocating currency inflation. | Roosevelt is soon to discuss currency jneeds. It is anticipated that his com-| mitments on that issue will naturally ‘follow in progressive tone the princi- |ples as laid down in his Kansas ad- | dress of last week. | Republican leaders are learning to} their sorrow that the old tariff bally- {hoo no longer sefves as bait for the jfarmers of this great breadbasket. probably the most fertile basin in the j world, Tariff is no longer the rural {fetish it once was. Democrats as a \party have abandoned free trade. | Roosevelt, at Topeka, carefully and | judiciously handled the tariff issu. | His pronouncements did not scare the farmers to whom tariff walls are no ‘longer the sine qua non of their ex- | istence. The so-called quota plan as applied jto the marketing of corn and wheat | is meeting with favor in these corn belt states, While not committing himself to any specific plan of quotas | for wheat, farm leaders: know that is what Roosevelt has in mind and was promising his support provided the farmers, through their own coopera- tives rather than a federal bureau, could work out a plan. Some legis- lation would be necessary, farmers say, but the machinery could be handled by farm organizations much fore effectively than by a government ‘farm bureau. They don't want the j (Continued on page e:ght) |German Political - Storm Subsides Berlin, Sept. 21—(4)—The possibil- lity of a fight between the federal government and the Prussian Diet re- ceded Wednesday when the National Socialists in the Diet withdrew their cupport from a Communist demand that the present Prussian dictator- ship be abolished. Thes demand was embodied in 2 Communist bill passed last month with the aid of the Nazis. President von Hindenburg served notice that he expected repeal of that bill, and for a time it looked as though the Diet might defy him. Wednesday afternoon, while the Communists jeered and _ shouted, ‘right about, face!” The Nazi spokes- man presented another resolution. It was to the effect that so long as the present government of Prussia observes the constitution, it ds the Cuty of lesser officials and Diet mem- bers likewise to observe it. A vote on that motion will be taken Thursday and then the Diet probably will ad- journ until after the Reichstag elec- tion Nov. 6, The Diet subsequently defeated a Communist motion for dissolution. he would not commit suicide. But the horror continued. For a brief period in 1927 Ellis went on the stage as a hang- man, but it proved too much for slashed and a razor by his side. Jan. 9, 1923, he put to death the notorious Mrs. Edith Thomp- son, who with young Frsderick Bywaters was condemned to death for the murder of the insistent bien niu orsahennubenienanaenenespeiaeaiaanaaanemenant AGREES TO MOCK RAID Vatican City, Sept. 21—(#)—The ° Cae. It’s a Boy ——- Add to your list of moviedom's mothers, June Collyer, above. A seveh-pound son now graces the Hollywood home of the Stuart | York governor is talking through his’ Vatican agreed Wednesday to cooper- WILL USE NATURAL GAS 10 HEAT CITY HALL AND LIBRARY Representatives of Coal Con- cerns Present Arguments Before Board Decision to use natural gas-to heat! the city hall and library during the coming winter was reached by the , Bismarck city commission in session /Part in many of Tuesday night. The board accepted a trial offer of both sides. the Montana-Dakota Power company to heat the buildings, claimed to be the most economical of several meth- ods proposed. Acceptance of the company's bid was prefaced by a brisk discussion in which representatives of coal dealers, |Close to predict the outcome a mechanical heating equipment com- pany, and officials of the North D kota Power and Light and Knife River Coal mining companies present-|@ Republican in the 39th New York ed arguments in favor of other heat- district without opposition. ing methods. T. L. Hayes, representative of the Montana-Dakota Power company. presented the arguments for nati gas, claiming natural gas would hea.|ial nomination in early returns. F. the buildings at a saving of $211 or/Ryan Duffy was unopposed for the 20.7 per cent annually. The first 2000,000 cubic feet per month will be 30-cents per thousand feet, the ser- ond 200,000 will cost 25 cents, while all over 400,000 feet will cost 22 1-2 cents. Complete installation of gas hert- ing eqcipment will cost approximate- ly $495, firm officials said. Under} the terms of the company offer. the city will not be required to pay any costs until the end of the heating season. If, this time, the board decides to retain the system, a 10 per cent cash discount will be allow- ed. Rental of the equipment at $2 per month also was offered, should the gas system be kept. Tf, on the other hand, the city decides not to continue using natural gas, the company has agreed to re- move gas fixtures and replace coal- burning equipment without cost. The only charge under this arrange- ment would be for gas actually con- sumed. The saving through the use of natural gas will pay for the gas fix- tures within two and one-half years, the gas company asserted. C. C. Larson presented a proposal to increase the efficiency of fuel- burning apparatus in the two build- ings by the installation of mechan- ical equipment. He said that such equipment could be installed fér $862 and that it soon would pay for itself in reducing fuel blils. W. T. Kraft, sales manager of the Knife River Coal Mining company, claimed that coal could be used more economically than gas. particularly if efficiency equipment were to be installed. M. G. ‘Blackstun, general manager of the North Dakota Power and Light company. also advanced arguments in favor of the use of coal, 8s well as city steam heat. The commission voted to re-adver- tise for bids on coal for other build- ings in the hope of securing lower geeroce: ‘The new bids will be due The board recommended that the county commission accept an offer of L. V. Morris. 215 South Second St. to purchase two lots on the east side of Fourteenth St. between Front and. Sweet avenues. ate with the Italian government in| Angelus Temple will its plan to stage mock The Weather Fair tonight and Thursday; tly, cooler tonight, with probably light frost; warmer Thursday. PRICE FIVE CENTS FAMED NAME FIRST TIME IN 40 YEARS Conservative Walter J. Kohler Nominated By Wisconsin Republicans BLAINE ALSO IS SUBMERGED Veteran U. S. Senator Is 21,134 Votes Behind Editor John Chapple (By The Associated Press) ‘A conservative Repubiican's defeat of Governor Philip LaFollette, expon- ent of the family progressive policies s0 long victorious in Wisconsin, Wed- nesday overshadowed prohibition bat- tles in New York and Massachusetts party primaries, Walter J. Kohler. whom LaFollette defeated for renomination two years ago by a 127,000 majority, Wednesday 95,000 votes, with less than 200 pr 2.765 precincts gave Kohler 398,393; LaFollette 303,151. Also trailing in Tuesday's p was another LaFollette s candidate, Senator John J. B the race for the Republican nomination John B. Chapp editor. topped him by 338, 192, with 2,658 of the precincts reported. . Massachusetts Rep ently chose Lieuten ‘iam S. Youngman alg ; torial nominee over} | vin, chairman ef commission, r complete, Governer Je had no oppo 'but thepe | Democratic: governor. all but two of Mistricts indicatea hen seeking renom- Henry Cabot Tnamesake of the Ssachusetts, be- footsteps gressional races, with Incumbents were wel every district—except the the contest between Repre Gale H. Stalker, Republican. of prohibition and W. Sterling who favored resubmission, Former Senator James W. Wads- worth, long an opponent of prohibi- ‘ion, was nominated for congress as | Schmedeman Is Ahead | Wisconsin Democrats put Mayor A. ‘G. Schmedeman of Madison ahead in the race for the party's gubernator- Democratic senatorial nomination. ! Returns indicated that the Repub- lican candidates for Wisconsin’s 10 congressional seats at the November election will be three Conservatives, three Progressives and possibly ar. even division among the remaining four. 2 Kohler is a wealthy manufacturer who lives in a little village that em- braces his large factories and bears his name. He was introduced to poli- tics in 1928 when elected a delegate at large to the Republican national convention. The governorship is the only public office he has ever held and he occupied that from 1928 to 11930. | Just two years ago the present gov- ernor, embarking upon a high politi- cal career with only an experience as district attorney of Dane county be- hind him, overwhelmed Kohler by a Plurality of 127,000. It was the first time since 1892 the LaFollette name has been voted down. In that year the governor's father, the late Senator Robert M. La- Follette, was beaten in a congression- al race. Philip LaFollette is 35 years old. What his future plans are has not been announced. In advance of the primary rumors said if renomination (Continued on Page Seven) Stock Market Rally Sends Prices Higher New York, Sept. 21—(7—With a vigor that matched its best perform- ances of the summer rally. the stock market swept upward Wednesday. Net gains of $5 were numerous in shares, more than triple Hig The market. strong from

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