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2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE RUTH BRYAN OWEN IN NORTH DAKOTA 10 AID ROOSEVELT Spoke Saturday Afternoon At La Moure; Cancels Ap- pearance Here LaMoure, N. D., Oct. 3.—About 2,000 persons greeted Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen in LaMoure Saturday as the! Florida congresswoman flew into the state to campaign for Gov. Franklin | D. Roosevelt. i The daughter of the late William| Jennings Bryan will make seven) speeches in the state before carrying | a campaign to Minneapolis Wedne: lay. | - Mrs, Owen urged the election of] every Democratic candidate for office, nationally and in the state, declaring it was imperative that Democratic government officials have the cocper- ation of members of their own party, that they might all pull together in bringing prosperity back. She deciared the Democratic party, if put in power, will cut national ex pense 25 per cent without endanger- ing defense of the nation, without cir-! cumscribing care of deserving war vet- | erans, without hampering the na-| tional child welfare program. | Reestablishment of the national in- | come by restoration of income to in- dustry and agriculture through more! equitable tariffs is the aim of the; Democratic party, Mrs. Owen said. She stressed the Roosevelt refores- tation policy as a measure to relieve unemployment, a policy she said} which would pay for itself over aj number of years. Turning to the loan of federal money to banks and corporations, she asserted, the benefits derived by the banks should be passed on to their patrons through loans at smailer rates of inter Mrs. Owen reveiewed the qualifica- tions of Roosevelt and John N. Gar- ner, vice presidential candidate, de- claring they were well fitted, because of their long years of governmental service, to direct the affairs of the nation. Other speakers were R. B. Murphy, Bismarck, candidate for congress, and John Magill, Verona, candidate for commissioner of agriculture and labor. They urged the electorate to vote a straight Democratic ticket. W. D. Lynch of LaMoure, candidate for congress, was chairman of the meeting. Miss Nell Dougherty, Mi- not, Democratic national committee- woman, and Mrs. Mary Ness, Grand Forks, director of Democratic women's activities, were introduced. A scheduled speech at Bismarck UT OUR WAY = EVERY TIME HE CONDESCENDS TO ISN'T THAT JUST LIKE A MAN 2 \{ LEAVE HIS OFFICE,TO GO SHOPPING WITH ME , EVERYTHING IS HURRY, HURRY, HURRY ! J DONT EVEN DARE TAKE TIME TO PICK OUT WHAT I REALLY WANT=~BUT WHEN | HE MEETS A FRIEND ON THE STREET, \ ICAN WAIT, WAIT, WAIT ¢ AND THEN \\"He'LL GE IMPATIENT BECAUSE T HAVE MORE SHOPPING TO vO. __WHY MOTHERS GET GRA Brooklyn Eleven Appears Strong New York, Oct. 3—(#)}—The Brook- lyn Dodgers, led by Benny Fried- man, may develop into an unexpect- edly formidable factor in t! year's race for the National Professional Football League championship. The Dodgers, victorious over Sta- pleton in their first start, made it two in a row Sunday by trouncing the Boston Braves, 14 to 0, and gain- ed undisputed possession of first place. Both Dodger touchdowns came on passes from Friedman to Jack Grossman, former star at Rut- gers. Green Bay, which had won its first game from the Chicago Cardinals and tied its second with the Chicago Bears, moved into second place by handing the New York Giants their second straight defeat, 13 to 0. Portsmouth’s Spartans fell into PLAN DRY MEETING. | POR DEC, 15 10 18 Opposition to Modification or) Repeal of 18th Amend- ment Is Object | Washington, Oct. 3—()—Formula- tion of definite plans in opposition to | Modification or repeal of the 18th} | amendment and preparation of a “dry | ‘legislative program” Monday were purposes of a national convention) called here by the Anti-Saloon League for Dec. 15 to 18. The league's executive committee said in a statement Sunday a formal) call had been issued to all state su-| perintendents and other league offi- |clals and added: When federal dry agents raided a speakeasy here the proprietor, Felix Dimitchellie, protested that the pro- hibition law had been repealed. As evidence he produced a newspaper clipping of the Democratic party's repeal plank. They arrested him | and seized his stock, nevertheless. Local Man’s Father Dies at Farm Home Rev. A. H. Herzberg, 68, retired minister of the German Evangelical church and father of Rev. Ira E. Herzberg of Bismarck, died from a heart attack at his farm six miles northeast of Sheldon at 5 p. m. Sat- urday. Rev. Herzberg had been suffering | from heart disease for some time. He had been working in a potato field and was returning to his home when stricken. A native of Iowa, Rev. Herzberg came to Sheldon 20 years ago to DAY, OCTOBER 3, 1932 By Williams ||Many Prominents Were Here for 1883 Program Emissary and Other Not- ables Attended Editors Note: This is the fourth of a series of articles deal- ing with North Dakota history, recalled by the construction of the new state capitol building and the cornerstone laying set for Oct. 8. (By The Associated Press) Pacific. Only by holding the lavish train of four sections. Ex-President Grant; the representa- tive of the government was H. M. Teller, secretary of the interior, whose Dakota territory. Also present were senators from Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Vermont; the governors of Mon- tana, Minnesota, and Wisconsin; the mayors of Minneapolis, St. Paul, and Chicago; assistant secretaries of state and of the treasury, the president of army officers; the Hon. L. Sackville West, British minister, his daughter and her maid; Count Lippe-Weissen- feld of Austria-Hungary; Varon Von | Eisendecher, Imperial German min-' ister, and representatives of the Dan- ish and Norwegian-Swedish lega- tions, as well as a large number of German capitalists. Prominent Names Listed Names that were to loom large in th affairs of the northwest and in the | nation were written on that roster, among them Joseph Pulitzer of the, New York World, Joseph Medill of the Chicago Tribune, Thomas Lowery and J. 8. Pillsbury of Minneapolis, George M. Pullman of Chicago, James J. Hill, Marshall Field, Noah Brooks of the! New York Times, and Carl Schurz of: New York. i All along the way through northern | Dakota elaborate agricultural displays | had been arranged for there had been { a bumper crop; the whole countryside! smiled as the long trains rolled by.! Fargo had used five carloads of ever-| greens and 45 acres of wheat and pe in arranging the archways and other Ex-President Grant, German “Two mammoth shows under one tent” was the way in which the Bis- marck Tribune advertised the corner- stone laying of the old territorial cap- itol Sept. 5, 1883, for the distinguished Villard railroad party which attend- ed was en route to Montana for the “Golden Spike” ceremony that would mark the completion of the chee s- marck celebration at 8 o'clock in the morning had it been possible to se- cure the presence of the government, state, and railroad officials, the for- eign dignitaries, and the host of news- papermen who were traveling in the Prominent in the delegation was brother at that time was secretary of see greater evidence of enterprise in your city and prosperity in your coun- try than I had anticipated.” Between Fargo and Jamestown, the great wheat belt, every little settle- ment had prepared an exhibit of grain and vegetables; the huge bonanza farms had lined up their threshing outfits on either side of the tracks, allowing the golden chaff to belch forth in spectacular fashion as the equally golden grains of No. 1 hard fell into the bins. Th party stopped off here and there for speech-making; it was said that so many champagne bottles were left on a hill two miles east of Tower City that it was for years known as Crystal Knoll. At Sanborn a whole exposition had been arranged on one side, with two threshers at work on the other. Speeches called attention to Dakota’s possibilities and performances. There was no reception when the party arrived in Bismarck, for it was late at night and the parade was scheduled to move at 7:30 the next morning and the special trains to go on west at 9:00. Procession Was Colorful Promptly at the hour set, the car- jriages moved toward Capitol Hill, the decorations of the foreigners vieing with the uniforms of the bandsmen and the paint and feathers of the Sioux from Standing Rock reservation in the grand procession. Flags waved, banners streamed, cannons boomed forth the governor's salute of 17 guns and, following an address of welcome by Governor N. G. Ordway and a re- sponse’ by Henry Villard, president of the railroad, the cornerstone of the territory capitol was laid. Prayer the Chicago Board of Trade, several! and the benediction were pronounced by Rev. Father I. 0. Sloan, well- known throughout Dakota for his missionary endeavors. An adi was presented to the representative of Prince Bismarck of Germany by the citizens of the town named in his hon- or, the German responded, and Alex- lander Hughes of Yankton and Bis- imarck, president of the capitol com- ission, gave the closing speech. mit took, nothing from the enthus- iasm of the occasion when it was dis- coverd later that the gold spike used where the two sections of the rall- road came together was not a gold spike at all! A railroad tle was care- fully finished, coated with shellac, painted red on both ends, and an or- dinary spike driven in. Although the wish had been ex- pressed that the cornerstone so aus- piciously placed should remain where it was until Gabriel’s trumpet blew, it was removd after the fire of De- cember, 1930, which destroyed the old building and, together with its his- toric contents now is in the keeping of the State Historical Society. Pre- parations are under way for placing articles of similar interest in the new stone, which is to be laid Oct. 8 in the presence of Charles Curtis, vice president of the United States, and representatives of many neighboring states and Canadian Provinces. MINOT WOMEN INJURED Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 3—(?)— \Mrs. Ray Belford and Mrs. Rose Marie Fuller, Minot women, who were injured in an automobile acci- dent west of Grand Forks Saturday]; night, were reported improved Mon- day by attendants at the hospital where they were taken following the| accident. CONSTABLE IS ARRESTED Baltimore, Oct. 3—(?)—Earl Black- well, constable at Capitol Heights, Md., and leader in many dry raids in that section during his seven years in office, was under arrest here Mon- day “for possessing and selling liquor.” SORRY | KEPT YOU WAITING, HELEN~BUT DISHWASHING 1S SUCH A SLOW, NASTY JOB NOT WITH RINSO! IT LOOSENS GREASE IN A FLASH, ALUYOU NEED ‘TO 00 IS RINSE—ANO LET YOUR DISHES DRY Millions use Rinso in | England has a new floating crane dress | that can lift loads weighing as much as 150 tons and weight them while in the air. she learned miserable — an NR Tablets (Nature’s Remedy). Now she gets along fine with everybody. This safe, depend- able, all-vegetable laxative brought quick relief and quiet neryes because it cleared her system of poisonous wastes—madc bowel action NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE WHEREAS, Default has been made in the terms and conditions of that certain mortgage hercinafter | des- cribed by the non-payment of the three amortization installments of Fifty-two and no-100 Dollars ($52.00) due August 5, 1931, February 5, . and August 5, 1932, and ‘the further sum of One Hundred Fitty- six and 52/100 Dollars ($156.52) paid taxes for the years 1929, 1930 and SW, THEREFORE, NOTICE 1S YY GIVEN, That that certain ge executed and delivered by Jakob Matson, her ‘ors, to the Federal int Paul, a body cor- porate, of the City of St. Paul, County of Ramsey, State of Minnesota, mort~ gagee, Dated August 5, 1919, and filed for record in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of Burleizh County, North Dakota, on August 13, 1919, and recorded in book 161 of Mortgages, at Page 275, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bismarck, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock P, M. on the 7th day of No- Yember, 1932, to satisfy. the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale, for said defaulted indebted- ness. Said sale is to be made sub- ject and inferior to the unpaid princi- pal of the aforesaid mortgage to The Federal Land Bank of Saint | Paut amounting to Thirteen Hundred One and 96/109 Dollars ($1301.96). The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the me are situated in the County of urleigh, and State of North Dakota, vand described as follows: South Half of the Northeast Quarter (S%NE%) and Lots One (1) and Two (2) of Section Six (6), Township One Hundred For- ty-one (141) North, Range Seven- y-five (75) West, containing One Hundred Sixty-three and 20/100 (163.20) acres, more or less, _ac- cording to the Government sur- vey thereof. There will be due on said mortgage at the date of sale for said defaulted Three Hundred Twenty-six and 99/100 Dollars ($326.99), together with cost of foreclosure as provided by law, aspated this 17th day of September, “ THE FEDERAL LAND BANK jinstallments and taxes the sum of CONTROL-OF -COLDS | WARD S. MORSE, Mgr. © 1922, Licosrr & Myms Tosicco Co, Sunday was canceled. Mrs. Owen was third place in the standings when| “Delegates will be invited to repre-| farm. He was a candidate for Ran- | features of their display, drawing from | A OF SALNT PAUL. ) to speak Monday at 1:30 p. m. at Heel gained no better than a 7-7|sent all church and temperance groups|som county treasurer in the June|General Grant the remark that “I tub, washer and dishpan 0 agee. Harvey, at 8 p. m. in Minot. Tuesday | tie With the Cardinals. : | opposed to the liquor traffic. primaries. came out here to be impressed but I 9-19-26 10-3 nesota, she will be at Devils Lake at 1:30) The Bears, for the second time in| “The coming convention was called| Besides his widow, he leaves two cannes p. m. and at Grand Forks at 8 p. m. tn phy games, were held to a score-!for the special purpose of making aj Sons, Rev. Ira of Bismarck, and Noble; re timats Following her appearance here, Mrs, | €SS tie, this time by Stapleton. definite nation-wide appraisal of elec-| Of Washington, D. C., and two Owen left by car for Valley Cit; " . tion returns and to formulate the| daughters, Mrs. Henry Krueger, Ans- where she addressed a dinner a Michigan Has Power Anti-Saloon League program in op-| lem, and Mrs. Herb Nohr, Sheldon. ranged by the Democratic women of a Position to modification or repeal of| Funeral services will be conducted Barnes county under the direction of In Defeating State | the isth amendment or the legaliza-| Tuesday at the Evangelical church in Mrs. Charles K. Otto, chairman. — tion of beer.” Sheldon. —_—. es —¢{| Ann Arbor, Mich. Oct. 3—(~)—|_ The statement quoted Dr. F. Scott eo and Mrs. Ira Herzberg and Loosing unexpected power, the 1932 | McBride, general superintendent of| son, Robert, left Bismarck Sunday - | Weather Report {| tiveniy' st Michigan football ma- |the league, as saying: morning for Sheldon. e °——______---—--—- chine Saturday rode over the “iron| “We expect the aggressive fight now ——_—__—_ FORECASTS man” team of Michigan iN being made by the drys in the present VETERAN PHARMACIST DIES ‘ gan State college For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly} for a 26-to-0 victory. ‘senatorial and congressional cam-| Chicago, Oct. 3—(#)—Dr. W. A. | cloudy and somewhat cooler, probably} “Rated on even terms before the con- | Pigns will keep the 18th amendment | Puckner, 66, for 26 years secretary of CLOUDY light a -| test, Michigan unleashed a powerful | fom being changed by the next con-|the council on pharmacy and chem- = Fede es ae offense, both in the air and on the | Stes. istry of the American Medical asso- es = hepato ground, that kept the Spartans con-|_ “J” 1934 . . . look for a campaign ciation is dead. He died Saturday in cote il 1s stantly in the shadow of their own |%04 election that will decisively stop|@ hospital after an illness of three For North Da-| §0al posts. Only frequent substitu- sent depression-prompted. drive months, kota: Partly|tions by Michigan's coach, Harry ets to regain legalized liquor.’ Pot a cloudy and some~ roa kept the score from mounting | T fM ere \\ what cooler, prob-| higher. | | ably light frost to- Harry Newman, Michigan's passing | eS o . ercer j night; ‘Tuesday| expert, and Johnny Regeczi, siarting; Favor Sliding Scale) P generally feel his first Big Ten game at fullback, | { nerat a ing tem-|were at the head of the Wolverine at- | Beulah, N. D., Oct. 3—Indorsement 5 ¢ For South Da- tack, with Capt. Williamson and Ev- jof a plan to pay state officials and| ; , kota: Mostly erhardus exhibiting brilliant play. 'employes a sliding scale based on the} { cloudy, cooler east and central por- meen iprice of wheat was voiced by the tions tonight; Tuesday probably fair.| Shafer and Green Mercer County Taxpayers’ association | ld rising temperature west and C fi t Chi ‘at a meeting here Thursday. ‘ north portions. 0) Members of a committee appointed i ae pLonane Unsettled apd ooo) meet Icago |. promote interest in Me law) er tonight; rain or snow south, frost) pj, | y Ole Ss c Chicago, Oct. 3.—()—Gov. throughout the state and to see that { or freezing temperature extreme east| = Green’ of Solith Dakota Sunday | Re suggestion ts presented to the leg | warmer east portion. / *|had an “informal” conference here| ‘lature Rudolf Sailer, Zap; J. FP.) For Minnesota: Cloudy, cooler in| With Gov. George F. Shafer of North | Link, Golden Valley and J. B. Field, south, possibly showers near Lake Su-| Dakota, at which the farmers’ strike | Beulah. ‘ 1G pecior tonight; Tuesday; partly| was discussed. Speakers reviewed the financial A 4 cloudy, somewhat warmer in north} Governor Green said he h juation of the state government an s Portion. statement to make Soren the| the plight of the taxpayer, predicting Enough Turkish coe if ee discussions. He said published state- | taxpayers’ strike unless the cost of} b NERS ‘DITIONS ments that he was here to attend a/80Vvernment is reduced. i Are you bothered with blad- A low pressure area, accompanied |conference of midwestern governors| It was asserted that the cost of} oyun ibothesed avith Bis ut not too much BK : der irregularities; burning, by warmer weather, is centered over|relative to the farm market situa- | Salaries would be reduced 40 per cent! | Sconty or too frequent c the Great Lakes region while a high| tion were erroneous. if the sliding scale is adopted. The| | Scanty of Henares Noi auniaweke neat pee geod and colder AEE The governor said one of the par-| meeting also discussed the possibility rai es cients epASENED pa is over the northeastern Rocky| ticular attractions of i |of scaling down all debts in order to . } Mountain slope. Light precipitation | trp to Chicago was ie vod ee, jfind some basis for retiring obliga | They may warn of some dis- of Chesterfields...andnever ErOW. ' ooeuved in ihe nort thern Great Plains He said he expected to attend politi. | tions. \ See Deere ae tired of the taste. That’s partly . Png "e}cal conferences Monday. oe ae il na j Mountain slope but elsewhere the Bie | QUAKE TOLL AT 232 on Dyseigen Besmmmended because Chesterfield uses just the sas Missouri river stag _m. 04 ft. 5 ; Athens, Oct. 3.—(P)—Latest fig- years. everywhere. . = By hour change stage at 7a. m. 04 ft.) Rebel Collapse Ends | ures compiled ‘here Monday placed | right amount of Turkish tobacco arck station barometer, inches: i ivi the number of dead in the recent; ee ” * 28.02, Reduced to sea level, 29.79. Brazil’s Civil War | Grcian earthquakes at 232 and the | to “season” the mild, sweet Do- bongs Jama; at $2,200,000. i GENERAL ip De iancire (Oct ori: or TCA eee ee staan eee | mestic tobacco. rs “ zil’s three-month-old civil war ended | sight shocks w xt inday. A} kish make aaa Se age High Ins") Monday with the complete collapse totel of 3,000 ane Can reported | ase muon Tur ee & Amari, Tex, cleix.... 58 18 0 of Be Sao Paulo cebeles’ command. | collapsed or uninhabitable. | A Diuretic heavy-smoking cigarette. . . too Boise i : 00! 4 . | ———— | ‘o , A sry, Alta, cles 36 0s|Republican guard, assumed power m| WAS GROSSLY MISINFORMED | Kidneys little fakes something away from 80 .10!the rebel city as representatives of| East Chicago, Ind., Oct. 3.—(P)— 80 .00|General Goes Deo Monteiro, federal taste and aroma. Just enough of 86 © .00| ermy commander. sa 4 A . ‘sg Lake, ND. eidy. 40 88 02) | Reports reaching here said General the right kinds of Turkish to- “ff Dodge y, Kans., cldy. -00| Bertholdo Klinger, wh« = ' Edmonton, ‘Alta. cldy... 30 69 00] sumed the a ner ates ee al bacco—that’s one reason why lavre, Mont., cldy....... -10/ lapse of the Paulista civilian govern-| 7 Pap A is a ment, was a prisoner at the disposal | Chesterfields SATISFY! 4 Kamloops, B.C, clear.. 50 74 00| 0f the federal commander. ' Kansas City, Mo., peldy. 62 80 00 Caner Klinger’s fall was a result °% Lander, Wyo., cld: 78 .00| Of the failure of peace negotiations, ic pai Medicine Hat, Alta, cldy. 42 58 06| which ended when his emissaries re- heterfele Radi Prgre aS Every | Miles City, Mont,, peldy. 46 72 12] fused to accept the federal terms. | 3 P lay, Columbia Coast- Modena, Utah, clear.... 44 72 01 —_———_. f to-Coast Network. Moorhead, Minn., cldy... 40 74 .00 S. COURT CONVENES { No. Platte, Neb., cldy... 58 88 .00 Washington, Oct. 3.—()—Justices | Oklahoma City, O., cldy. 64 82 .00/ of the U. 8. supreme court convened pee D. Figs 52 8) 02) in black-robed austerity Monday Qu’Apt ae S edad 40 64 19| After four months of mingled rest Rapid city, 8D eee 46 80 04| 8Rd work. Monday's only business Roseburg, Ore. clear... 52 82 .00| 95 recelving motions, with @ court- | St. Louis, Mo. clear.... 60 80 .00| SY call to the white house also | St. Paul, Minn. pcldy.. 54 78 .00| Scheduled. | Salt Lake City, U., clear 54 74 .00 $ 8. 8. Marie, Mich., cldy. 54 62 ye Seattle, Wash. clear... 58 70 .00! e the {7 Y aint 9 | Spokane, Wash., clear.. 54 82 .00) | Z eam i aw ak Swift Current, S., cldy.. 38 64 00) HOTE Pas, Man., raining.. 34 44 14! ! L Toledo, Ohio, cldy.. 60 74 00} : 4 ‘ Williston, N. D., cldy.... 44 66 12, At the first sign of “Catching psu : \ ‘Winnemucca, Nev., clear 40 82 .00, Cold” use Vicks Nose Drops, | 4 . ' . q ‘Winnipeg, Man., raining 38 64 .00 the new aid in preventing Conveniently located, the Leamington Ho; ' !: the center point a | Ds designed by | of theaters, shops, office buildings and things of interest in | of Vicks Va; ft i i ii i i pe Pet, | makers pagel pebah for Misseepols, Trity an ideal hotel with all conveniences and e Bismarck-Mandan, cldy. 47 46 .04; throat — where aie colds co s ome. Devils Lake, cldy."...-.. 40 40 021 tare ree RATES: r l y Moor! , eldy. 40 00} | ingle, $2. ai sf Slo, “cy i 4 “4 a mae act of the New | Migie, $2.00 Ane He, dr ise 164 98h Bol $7.00 and up Grand clay. 3 00, eke 2) ite ér servatis Minot, rain ... 4030 104 Detter.