The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 28, 1932, Page 2

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2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1932 ROOSEVELT SPEEDS | © TO NEBRASKA FOR VISIT WITH NORRIS Republican Senator Cutting Sits on Speaking Platform With Democrat Roosevelt Special, En Route to Mc- Cook, Neb, Sept. 28.—(?)—Refresheu by a night “ashore” in the resort cen- ter of Colorado Springs, at the foo® of Pike's Peak, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic presidential candidate, Wednesday was en route to a meeting with the Republican In- dependents’ leader, U. S. Senator George Norris af McCook. The meeting with Norris, who has; turned his back on President Hoovei to espouse the Roosevelt candidacy, will come a day after another Repub lican Independent, Senator Bronson Cutting of New Mexico, appeared on a platform at Lamy Junction with Roosevelt. \ Roosevelt was greeted by a large| crowd at Colorado Springs Tuesday night when he arrived from Williams, Ariz. Another crowd awaited him ‘a hotel, where the New York gover: and his party spent the night. Flank ed by Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana; Key Pittman of Nevada; John S. Cohen of Georgia, and Colo- rado’s new senator, Walter Walker. Roosevelt appeared on the balcony 01 «, the hotel and addressed the crowd. Fight Against Leadership Roosevelt repeated a declaration he has made several times during the} campaign that he was not “directing| the fight against the rank and file of the Republicans but against the leac-! ership.” | “There has been more clean, solid} American thinking during this cam-) paign than ever before,” he conclud- | ed, “which ever way the election goes | ‘on Noy. 8 I am sure it will be an in- telligent election.” | Moving east from Denver, the Roosevelt special was to stop at Brush, Akron, and Wray, Colo., before reaching McCook, in southwestern 3 Nebraska. After his speech at Mc-} Cook, about 5 p. m, the nominee’s| special will go on to Omaha, via Has- tings and Lincoln. Omaha will be reached Thursday morning for a stop of more than two hours. From Omaha the nominee will go up the Missouri river to Sioux City, where the fourth of his major speech- es on this trip will be delivered. The others were at Topeka, Salt Lake City, and Portland. The Iowa city, across the Missouri river from South Dakota, will be! reached Thursday evening. The time of the speech will be about 8 p. m. After it is finished, Roosevelt will en- train for Milwaukee and the week- end at Chicago. Made Platform Appearances In his trip across New Mexico ‘Tuesday Roosevelt made platform ap- pearances at Albuquerque and Las Vegas, N. M., and La Junta, Trinidad ‘and Pueblo, Colo. Crowds of severai thousand were waiting at each place. Trinidad, center of a coal mining in- dustry, was not a scheduled stop, but rather than disappoint the throng, the candidate stopped his train two minutes. ‘At Lamy Junction, a few miles from the old Spanish-founded city and capital, Santa Fe, Roosevelt left his car, but only for a few feet, to speak from a platform built beside the track. ‘At Lamy Roosevelt said, “I am be- coming convinced that there is not room in this country for two parties —both conservative.” The Demo- cratic party, he added, is the party of liberalism. Under the tentative plan for the southern campaign trip, which begins ‘Oct. 12, Roosevelt is to appear at Bal- timore Oct. 13, Raleigh, N. C., Oct. 14 and the next four days will be spent at Warm Springs, Ga. ‘On the 19th he will be in Atlanta and perhaps will stop at Philadelphia on the return journey to Albany. How many speeches and where they will be made has not been deter- mined. Says U. S. in Need Of Safe Bank Plan Fargo, Sept. 28—(P)—Judge Charles F. Amidon, retired federal judge of the North Dakota district, believes one of the greatest problems facing) the U. S. is the building of a bank system safe from failures. | “England and Canada were as hard hit by the depression as was the U. S., yet they have gone through it without a single bank failure,” said Judge Amidon. “Compare that with the tragic situation in this country, where thou- sands of banks failed, bringing ruin to great masses of people,” he said. Judge Amidon thinks the banking situation is one demanding the best thought of the leaders of American public opinion and urges the press keep constantly urging for a solution. The judge stopped here while en route from: his summer home at ‘Westport, Conn., to Ingleside, Calif., to spend the winter. He plans to leave here Oct. 4. Mandan. Publisher Is Named A. P. President Fargo, N. D., ‘pt. 28.—(?)—Edwin A. Tostevin, publisher of the Mandan Daily Pioneer, was elected president of the North Dakota Associated Press | Honeymooning at 86 and 70 Romance came again to Philetus W. Parish, 86, and Mrs. Emma Eliza- beth Shaffer, 70, so today they are honeymooning at Shelby, Mich. It is Parish’s third marriage, his bride's second. The new Mrs. Paris, a grandmother, celebrated her golden wedding anniversary a few months be- fore her first husband died a year ago. The Parishes are shown above. BRITISH CABINET — 2 | Weather Report | FORECASTS \ For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair MEMBERS RESIGN tonight and ———S C3.) Thursday; slightly ———— warmer Thursday. Light frost to- § night. N For North Da- kota: Fair tonight | and Thursday; M slightly warmer Thursday and’ northwest tonight. | local frost tonight,, London, a — Q mostiy Tight, | n, Sept. 28—(#)—Three of For South Da- | the important Liberal and Labor kota: Fair tonight ;members of Prime Minister Ramsay ann Peeters Sday;|MacDonald’s 11-month-old national + Tght cabinet resigned Wednesday following For Montana: Fair tonight ae disagreement over the tariff pro- | EE aa extreme east por-| posals approved at the recent imper- For Minnesota: Fair tonight wal] rar enneel @note Serine Thursday; cooler tonight, light ‘to} mena Same, usd heavy frost; warmer Thursday in west |Count Snowden of ckornshaw, Lord and north portions. | Privy Seal, former Labor party lead- er, who followed his colleague, the GENERAL CONDITIONS prime minister, into the national cab- The weather map changed little in inet last November, and two noted the last 24 hours, the High being cen-| Liberals, Sir Herbert Samuel, home tered over western North Dakota,| secretary, and Sir Archibald Sin- (Williston, 30.46); while the Low is | clair, secretary for Scotland. over the Lower Lake Region. The st-| The resignations marked the first precipitation has cov-| 1 ,ea; in the national government ered much of the Ohio Valley and the | *ro°on from all three 1 ace eaten Lake region, Temperatures are lower Chosen from all three leading Parties from nerthern North Dakota north|to meet the financial crisis whiea and westward over Canada and also|Great Britain faced last October. over the Lake region, with freezing’ The Liberal leaders and Viscount temperatures reported from a num- Snowden objected to the tariff pro- ber of northern stations. ‘posals as incompatible with their free . ‘trade principles. North mae Re-| The cabinet met in a tense special & session at 11 a. m., for final consider- For the week ending Sept. 27, 1932.’ tion of the threatened break, which Heavy to killing frosts on 22nd kill- ed tender vegetation. Corn husking ,as been forscen for several days. The The prime made excellent progress, but due to Session lasted two hours. dry ground fall plowing, seeding of minister and a majority of the cabi- winter rye and potato digging were /net members declared the free trad- somewhat delayed. Livestock ranged ‘ers’ proposal to delay presentation of freely on pastures and harvested the Ottawa agreements “impracti- fields and are mostly in good condi- cable.” tion, | ‘The three members immediately re- Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.1 ft. | <j 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Senedd SAicto as Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.59. Reduced to sea level, 30.41. | Disagreement Over Tariff Pro- posals Approved at Ot- tawa Is Cause slightly warmer frost tonight east portion. TEMPERATURE | C ONTINUE D Richest "yesterday : 8 ie eres Lowest last night . i 38 250 in Attendance mt, 24 yPRECIEITATION | At Dinner Opening mt. . |. Mm. 00! 4 3 Total this month to date. ' — Baptist Convention Normal, this month to date .... 1.13} ee 1203! the lives of whole tribes and classes, 14.18 the secularized, materialized and me- ichanized attitude toward life which 2.15'corrodes and destroys its finer and |higher values and a militant, crusad- NORTH DAKOTA POINTS jing Communism which seeks to sweep High Low Ins.| Christianity off the world’s map.” . Pre.| Added to these were “alarming re- .00 | strictions of religious belief” and mis- sionary activity imposed by govern- 00 ments in Turkey, Persia, Eretreia, the Congo, China and Russia and the de- 26 100 pression which slashes the income of 34 (99/mission boards everywhere, bringing 33 00; about a wholesale reductton in mis: 65 33 .00!sionary forces. 00. Cites Brighter Side 68 34 .00; The brighter side was the tremend- 64 34 .00'ous results obtained by those in the 00 field and the response to Christianity 00 by the peoples in far places. Every- where, he said, significant Christian Total, Jan. 1 to date ... Normal, Jan. 1 to date . Accumulated deficiency since Jan. 1 .... BISMARCK, clear Amenia, clear . Beach, clear Bottineau, clear . Carrington, clear . Crosby, clear ... Devils Lake, clear Dickinson, clear Drake, clear .......- Dunn Center, clear . Ellendale, clear Fessenden, clear Grand Forks, clear . Hankinson, clear . Jamestown, clear . Larimore, clear . 6 36 ! i 00' movements are pressing forward de- een oe Cec spite difficulties and handicaps. He spoke particularly of the need 3 8 ggeess Minot, clea: 67 31 Napoleon, cle: 68 32 for rural evangelism everywhere and Oakes, clear ™ 35 the fact that the indigenous Christian churches springing up in mission ‘fields are giving themselves whole- heartedly to the task of bringing the gospel to rural peoples. This is of {vast importance, Dr. Axling said, be- GENERAL cause “as goes the world’s rural life High Low Ins.|and civilization so goes the world. Other Stations— ‘Temprs. Pre.| The cities have always recruited their Boise, Idaho, clear. 50 .00'men and women of brain and brawn Calgary, Alta., clear .00' and moral stamina from the farms.” 44 30, Discussing “the way out” of the 46 00 problems facing the world, Dr. Axling 44 .00/ said there will be no return to the Pembina, clear . Williston, clear . Wishek, clear Moorhead, Minn., ¢! 48 09 \«good old days” but that God is giv- 44 90 30g us @ fresh chance, a chance to 44 ‘90 (Start anew. He is challenging us to take Jesus seriously and actually put ‘00 | His teachings to the test in our indi- {00 | vidual lives, in social and industrial Helena, Mont., clear. Huron, 8. D., clear. Kansas City, Mo., cl Miles City, Mont., clear 72 retary. ‘The members accepted the invita- tion of F. E. Murphy, publisher of the Minnespolis, Tribune, to-hold their meeting at the Murphy summer a at Battle Lake, Minn. —————_ as AUTOMATIC 5S. O. 8. Berlin —German a clfcles P Armour Cream-| No. Platte, Neb., clear.. 72 42 .00/relations and in solution of national Okabe Osco: 7H i ms and international problems. Rapid City, 8. D., clear. 68 48 00; Paeeaa ot seer tee St. Louis, Mo., clear... 72 52 02 ' the masses from intolerable condi- St. Paul, Minn., clear... 52 42 .00' tions, | tions. Salt Lake City, U. clear 7% 36 ‘pp| Indeed it must do more. Tt can, how. Sheridan, Wyo. clear .. 68 34 .00/eVer, realize its goal only by making Sioux Cliy da, clear... 68 44 00|the proclamation of the gospel central Spokane, Wash., clear.. 50 00'in its work and in so presenting Swift Current, 8., cle 32 (00|Christ to men as to compel them to ‘The Pas, Man., clear 28 .00 face the challenge of full surrender ‘Toledo, ; i 48 ‘48 to Him and His way of life. Man's innipeg, Man., clear. 40 00 powers have miserably failed. In ab- solute obedience to Christ and MILK SUICIDE |way alone can be found the solution Los. Angeles.—Police were puzzled'for such major problems as social as to the cause of the death of Jack| wrongs, economic injustices, racial Burchfield, barber—until they found | hatred, class strife and war.” that he had been drinking heavily. He | fie eo ede ical with mle! new’ Sek, gave OT wi New York, Sept. 28—(P)—The 10- instead, Burchfield shot himself. round 'non-title fight between Tony | Canzoneri, lightweight champion, Weather reports from various parts: Tew Kirsch, scheduled for ‘Tuesday of the country indicate that the rain- | 2 inight at the Queensboro Stadium, W®| istic effort than ever before. fest time of day is late afternoon and postponed to Thursday evening, \rain and cold weather. More than 80 per cent of the 100,000; annual cases of diphtheria in this eries, Bismarck. MTS. APPEALS BRIEF Or | Difficult to Interest Settlers; Declares Litigation Should Not, Officials Wouldn't Live Be Handled By Secretary Here of Agriculture (By The Associated Press) | Beginning with the establishment of Chicago, Sept. 28—(#)—Striking | the first territorial capital at Yankton again at a federal commission which |in April, 1862, when 20 armed soldiers said it must either admit the Farm-|were necessary to preserve order, all ers’ National Grain Corporation or | that has had to do with the successive close for 60 days, the Chicago board | capitals of Dakota has been dramatic. of trade filed in the U. 8. court of |The cornerstone laying of North Da- cae ‘a brief denying the commis-|kota’s new capital building Oct. 8 at sioft had jurisdiction. Bismarck again will provide one of ‘The brief, filed Tuesday to support | the most brilliant events the territory the board’s appeal from the closing|or state has ever known. order, said the litigation should be| Early Dakotans always were on the handied by a “court of competent defensive; they had to be, for the ex- jurisdiction” instead of the secretary | pressions, “great American desert” of agriculture,-who is e party to the|and “our barren lands”ewere used in- action. |discriminately by states to the east- ‘Under rules of the board of trade,| ward to keep immigrants from going the brief said, full membership and | farther on. clearing privileges by any corporation| In 1869 an Ohio congressman tried are prohibited, adding that the|to abolish the struggling new terri- Farmers National purchased the Up-| tory entirely, alleging that the coun- dike Grain Corporation as a trading | try was worthless for agriculture, arid, agency to circumvent this rule. Later | and grasshopper-ridden and that it the board of trade suspended clear-| must for a century at least be Indian ing privileges of the Updike concern. | land. The brief also alleged that the’ Farm-| Territorial officers were appointed ers’ National was not entitled to | who seldom consulted the home folks; membership in the clearing corpora- | ignorant of western conditions, indif- tion under the grain futures act be-‘ferent often to the wishes of their cause “it was not shown to be @ law-| constituents, they made the Dakota fully conducted cooperative.” row even harder to hoe. “It dealt,” the brief sgid, “in the| It was not surprising that the first products of non-members to an/territorial law-makers jumped into amount greater in value than suchythe fray upon the slightest provoca- as are handled by it for members’ | tion. 3 contrary to the Capper-Volstead act.” ‘The secretary of agriculture, the secretary of commerce and the at- Wouldn’t Live Here There was much feeling for years because so few of the officers brought torney general of the U. S. composed | their families and established homes the commission which issued the|in Dakota; many of them, in fact, (TRADE BOARD FILES. N. D. Has Had Hard Fight, Defensive Continually matter of admission as a state or di- vision and admission pushed the wedge still farther in. Each convention brought from the belligerent newspapers accusation of northern rings, nefarious southern combinations, infamous intrigues, plots, boodle gangs, and all that. Straws here and there indicated that a gale was impending. Then, with the neglécted north yearning to try its spurs, they all met in Yankton for the famous legislative session of '83 when the greatest political coup of Dakota history was perpetrated. | | (The next article in this series will appear Friday.) ' Use the Want Ads closing order, which, however, is not|paid their board in Iowa and spent not effective so long as the case is pend-|so much as $200 in the territory that ing in the courts. paid their salaries, Finally President Oral arguments before the appe-j Lincoln issued an edict that if they late court are to be heard Oct. 21. wanted their pay checks, they must —_— ae stay at home and report each quarter how often and for how long they had Mrs. V are F aces | been out of the territory. That helped and when the officers began to ac- Stumblin g Bl 0 ck quire property in Yankton, things In Toronto Woman went more smoothly, although the whole country soon thronged with car- pet-baggers who were none too wel- come. Between ’61 and '83, when the capi- tal was removed to Bismarck, only one of Dakota's governors, Newton Ed- munds, came from the territory he served. During the Indian outbreaks of ’62 when the perpetrators of the Minnesota massacres fled into Dakota land refugees crowded into Yankton, \the territorial officials were said to be conspicuous by their absence. Moses K. Armstrong, vivid historian of those days, said that small boys could have played marbles on their coat-tails, so swiftly did they fly. ‘When the second legislature con- vened, Armstrong and Picotte had en- terprisingly constructed @ new capitol building, putting it up in seven weeks and providing for all three depart- ments of the government. But it was 17 days before the assembly could or- ganize because of certain disputed delegations. One house met on the hill and another on the levee and Glenna Must Beat Canadian Star to Continue Quest For Sixth Title Peabody, Mass., Sept. 28.—(#)—Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare, who has domi- nated women's golf for the last dec- ade, Wednesday found a sturdy stum- bling block in the path leading to her sixth national championship. This brilliant competitor, consider- ed unbeatable until a year ago when Helen Hicks removed her crown at Buffalo, drew Mrs. C. 8. Eddis of To- ronto as her second-round opponent in the match play at the Salem Coun- try club. The Canadian Tuesday de- feated Dorothy Hunter, one of the heres ues Pea district's younger | neither would give in. ‘The governor, Aer eral was/the jonty one nie the| 2 mUernnony: Re Tt retusa iil 32 qualifiers capable of perfect golf in| ‘he contr ME ecented to the two the opening match play. She match- a see oine nema Finally a ed par by using 63 strokes during the| 0" *smise was effected by which 15 holes against Mrs, Karl F. Scheidt | COMP ’oC Cates were and of Norristown, Pa., to win by 7 and 5. Virginia Van Wie of Chicago, co- Armstrong became spot — medalist and one of the favored! nivorces at that time were granted group, was pitted against Edith Quier legislature and many bills Aa pi lee rea yap shat for reading, most of them pable of giving her the stiffest sort of or eee evo oe Sompetition, Miss Van Wie had a|{5'minutes, "Women from, other states walkaway with Mrs. B. P. Mechley Of} ico sought relief in Dakota and Arm- Sr PE ee oe clea |St7ODE vouched for the oa isiening between long-hitting Charlotte Glut-| to the reading of the journal to make ne eae and Bernice | sure that they hed not been divorced fall, Oshkosh, also was expected to . Bea a ee ete tsearpied on euct| RRETo (revan bisa, wace wigs noted veterans as Mary K. Browne] open, red hot and mighty interesting.” pie Die. Ling = mae ne Paver featured by spread-eagle speeches, fife shen, be they had to do it on| ang drum corps, “many bottles, auch ¥s in e '-breed j= Maureen Orcutt, medalist in the crete throwing of ballot boxes British title play last May, was not! ¢rom “windows, and rough-and-tum- expected to be greatly extended by | ble fights everywhere. Mrs. Leo Federman of Lakeville, N.| qt was difficult and expensive tor Y. Peggy Wattles, young Buffalo girl,| candidates to visit the distant Red who shocked the old guard with her | River settlements which most of them 19-hole victory over Mrs. Dorothy] oniy half believed in anyhow. They Campbell Hurd of Philadelphia, was| qid not like the Red River carts which down to match strokes with Mrs. C. F.| often threw them off into bramble Eaton of Wellesley. bushes; still less, they learned later, did they care for the votes that came in, months late, often changing the result of the election. Until Arm- strong visited St. Joe years later, he and his friends already regatded the Red River elections as a joke if not & fraud. Dakotans did not know each other. ‘The two parts of the great territory, whose extent many could not compre- hend, had Itttle in common save the Missouri river steamboats. Geography fought against unity and nobody j cared. They had poor mail service, no railroads north and south and none at all for a long time; no long-distance telephones, few and ex- pensive telegraph connections, no men’s or women’s organizations to cement friendship. Had Politics Aplenty But polities they had, and over every inch of convention. ground bat- tles were fought, There was patron- age to quarrel over and as the "108 advanced and the country settled, the Last (By The Associated Press) Los Angeles—Tommy Herman, Chicago, outpointed Freddie Steele, Tacoma (4). BEULAH PROSPECTS GOOD Stanton, N. D., Sept. 28.—(?)—Beu- lah defeated Stanton 34 to 0 in a foot- pall game here. Beulah has won its first two contests this season, after going through the 1931 campaign un- defeated. Coach Thomas Plant be- lieves his prospects for the season are very good with a veteran line intact except for the center position. Cash in With a Tribune Want Ad Christianity must do no less.| Bernie Bierman Returns to Min- fis|sity of Minnesota campus as its first SeH your live poultry and he ages of cream now to Armour Cream-|neir to one high calibre ball-cagri i OLD GRAD COACH HAS GREAT FULLBACK IN JACK MANDERS es Ai cg hee Sag ee ‘Besides 200 pounds of speed ability to avoid injury and a talent for burst- ing off tackle for long gains, Man- ders is back for his third year fired with an ambition to plange his way to an All-America recognition. He is for his best season, spurred on by the hope of being ranked with Minnesota’s most famous _fullbacks, Herb Joesting and Bronko Ni 5 Around Manders and a sophomore halfback, Francis (Pug) Lund, Bier- man’s own find, an offense is being built which will show for the first time Saturday against South Dakota State. Lund is the only man who meets Bierman’s requirement. for fast starting and he is developing him into a triple-threat player to take over du- ties dropped by My Ubl, halfback who may be out @ month with an injury. ‘There will be more variety on the Gopher attack this year, a greater change of offensive pace and more de- ception. Captain Walter Hass, quar- terback, Brad Robinson and Dillner, and a midget back, er, Champlain, are dependables who will , figure in the new scheme of play. nesota After Success At Tulane Minneapolis, Sept. 28.—(P)—An old grad who came back to the Univer- alumni football coach has set about blasting a tradition that Gopher teams must be big, burly but slow. Speed and more spegd has replaced the theory that there #plenty of time in the new book of tactics. Modern successors of the “Giants of the north” find that physical power is not enougn. that the style of the new chief, Bernie Bierman, calls for fas- tet starting and more all around ath- Bierman left his Tulane green wave and three years of southern supremacy to inherit a hard schedule and a squad with few experienced men, but he fell | veteran ends, the Giant fullback, Jack Manders, HEAT CAN’T STOP LAW Sale Lake City.—My, it was hot in the offices of Justice of the Peace Herman Gygi, but the heat didn’t stop the preliminary examination of ‘William Connell, 22, on ® third de- gree burglary charge. After all the collars of attorneys and spectators VICKS Nose &Throat QUICK DRoPS RELIEF .» at home or at work— for discomforts of “stuffy” head colds and nasal catarrh fed cod nd al oath FOR A CLEAR HEAD | Used Car Bargains Buy or Sell had wilted under the intense heat in the courtroom, Justice Gygi removed the court to the front shade trees. yard under Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant Vacuum Cleaner, paint the castings, inspect the grates and smoke pipes, all for $3. All Repairs at Reasonable Prices - Phone 141 French & Welch Hdwe. Co. ...apartment seekers and apartment owners get sure results by using our classified advertising columns. ... and when it comes to Used Cars the want-ad columns of The Bismarck Tribune can’t be beat. If you want prompt results— Furniture Bargains Buy or Sell ... women find so many uses for the want-ads. Selling old furniture, getting household help, apartment hunting. Business is business ... and it’s at its very best in the want-ad section of this paper. Profit by that fact. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Home Newspaper for Bismarck and the Missouri Slope Bismarck, N. Dak. 222 Fourth Street

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