The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1932, Page 3

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weet ‘ef ip: * THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY OCTOBER 25, 1932 EXPECT LOADING OF GRAIN T0 BE TWICE THAT OF LAST YEAR} Shippers Advisory Board Pre- dicts 53,000 Cars Will Be Shipped This Fall Grand Forks, N. D., Oct 25.—(P)}— A rail movement of grain during the last three months of this year nearly twice as large as the movement dur- ing the same period a year ago was forecast Tuesday by the grain com- mittee of the Northwest Shippers’ ae Board at its fall meeting ere. It predicted that 53,000 cars of grain will be shipped compared with 28,538 during the last three months of 1931. Of this year's car require- ments, it was estimated that 31,000 would be needed for wheat, rye and flax shipped into terminal markets. Ten thousand cars are needed for feed grain shipped into terminal markets and 12,000 cars for grain shipped out of terminals. Its esti- mate was based in part on the gov- ernment crop report of Oct. 1, show- ing that the grain crop this year is about twice that of last and the esti- mate that there is a carry-over of jast year's crop of about three times the size of the carryover shown in 1931. While grain marketing has been on a scale nearly double that of 1931, the rate of marketing this year has been very slow due to the low prices, according: to the report of the com- mittee, prepared by P. F. Scheune- mann, chairman, and O. 8. Powell, head of its research group. An outlook for shipments on a scale either equal or less than those for the final quarter of last year was! reported by most of the committees. ‘The group studying requirements for canned foods, groceries and food products, reported that market con- ditions are a little better than last year but that rail shipments are be- ing reduced by increased use of trucks, The agricultural implement com- mittee reported that there will be about a 60 per cent drop in its re- quirements for cars in the board's territory consisting of Minnesota, the Dakotas and Montana. The commit- tee said that until there is an im- provement in the value of farm pro- duce it does not look for a material increase in shipping. P. J. Coleman of Minneapolis, dis- trict manager for the board, said that no complaints have been re- ceived bearing on transportation in the area during the last three months outside of a request for more rigid inspection of cattle cars to elim- inate protruding nails, laths, and other materials which may bruise cattle. Continue Work in Jail Robbery Case Crookston, Minn., Oct. 25—(P}— While Sheriff Ira L, Haavan sought clues in the Twin Cities for trace of two or more men suspected of raiding the Polk county jail Satur- day, Deputy Sheriff Godfred Stor- vern and County Attorney George Hagen “cruised” through Polk and adjoining counties picking threads which they hope to weave around the gang which perpetrated the raid. Four men were held _ without charge. They are Pete and “Hilly” Droes of Red Lake Falls and “Col- onel” Savard and Ray Savard, farm- ers living near Dorothy, Minn. Seventeen of the slot machines re- covered were found near the Savard farm, where it was learned they had been taken, smashed, and then re- moved to a secluded spot and cov- ered with canvas. Several members of the gang left the farm after the slot machines were smashed and hidden, it is be- lieved. This led officers to believe that the gang apparently was after; a machine gun in the county jail. This, together with a number of} vifles, revolvers and about $500 cash, still are missing. LaFollette Pinch Hits for Nebraskan Springfield, Ill., Oct. 25.—(4)—Wis- consin’s governor took the place of Nebraska's senior senator Monday night in advocating to central Illinois the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt as president. Gov. Philip LaFollette, nominally a Progressive Republican, substituted for Senator George W. Norris, also listed as a Progressive Republican, who was confined to a hospital here with a cold, unable to deliver his scheduled address. A telephone call to Madison, Wis., brought assurances from Gov. LaFollette that he would make a hur- was accompanied by his wife, a sister of Madame Chiang Kai-Shek. “The military party of Japan brought about the Mukden incident of September a year ago with the aim of testing world opinion,” Dr. Kung said. “They called it a local affair. If the Japanese are successful in holding to that part of Manchuria which is now in their hands, this will be used by ward world domination.” Strange But True News Items of Day (By The Associated Press) Historic Ship Firewood Erie, Pa—Workmen are dismant- ling the Niagara, Commodore Perry's | historic flagship, preparatory to its reconstruction. Wood, discarded in the wrecking operations, will be turned over to the poor for fuel. Or Maybe John D. Oklahoma City.—A roadside bonanza is reported to have yielded more than $1,000 to dig- gers since a boy found a pack- age of dimes 10 days ago. The only explanation of the strike so far advanced is that fleeing bank robbers may have tossed them there. What a Mistake! San Francisco—George Stocking, a barber, identified a woman fatally injured in an automobile accident as his wife; rode in the ambulance to an emergency hospital and wept over the body. Then he went sadly home and found his wife, Mrs. Maud Stock- ing, waiting supper. With Mother-in-Law Chicago—That old jest about the married man not caring for his mother-in-law may not apply in the case of Ted Pawlowski. His wife, Lillian, charged in di- vorce court that her husband had eloped with her mother. The court withheld final action. Nevertheless, "Tis Odd Tiffin, O~Peter Eckert has a new fish story. He caught a two-pound bass and a 14-pound carp at the same time, with only one hook on the line. The bass took the hook and in trying to get away, wound the line around the carp’s head. Eckert's companions endorsed his story. RANK POLLUTED AIR AS HEALTH MENACE Shutting Off of Sunlight More Serious Than Realized, Doctors Declare Washington, Oct. 25.—(4)—Polluted air, preventing human beings from receiving their due share of ultra- violet rays, Tuesday was ranked with polluted milk and water as a health menace. Dr. Fred C. Tonney of the Chicago health department told the public health association meeting here that ill effects on health of shutting off the sun's ultra-violet light by smoke, soot, dust, fogs and other impurities are more serious and widespread than generally realized. Dr. Haven Emerson of Columbia university reported there are even indications that it may be a contrib- uting factor in causing rheumatic fever that results in illness and death of many children. The amount of heart disease in children caused by rheumatic fever falls off steadily from Boston south to Atlanta, he said, seeming to correspond to the increas- ing amount of sunshine as one moves south. Decreased sunshine may in- crease activity of the rheumatic fe- ver virus. There is no rheumatic fe- ver in Puerto Rico, Dr. Emerson said, which has plentiful sunshine. Dr. Tonney explained that smoke palls hanging over some cities, espe- cially in winter, often have such far- reaching and unsuspected effects as making teeth more liable to decay, endangering health of mothers be fore and after childbirth, and lower- ing resistance to disease. BELIEVES ROBINS ALIVE St. Petersburg, Fla., Oct. 25.—(P)— Mrs. Raymond Robins, wife of the missing Brooksville and New York dry leader, says she has changed her earlier belief that Colonel Robins was “put on the spot by Florida rum run- ners.” Mrs. Robins now believes her husband, missing since Sept. 3, when he left his New York club for a con- ference with President Hoover in Washington, is alive and will be found. {my Republican friends will vote for | corporation ‘that spends billions, and LYNCH APPEALS FOR REPUBLICAN VOTES State Senator W. S. Whitman Praises Democrat in In- troductory Talk Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 25.—(?)— W. D. Lynch of LaMoure, Democratic candidate for congress, asked voters | to use the same care in selecting pub-/ llc officers that they would in hiring! employes for private business at a) Democratic meeting here Monday} night. Lynch was introduced by W. 8. Whitman, state senator of Grand Forks, who said, “I am a Republican, but I’m here in the interests of my} old friend and colleague in the North Dakota senate, Bill Lynch, and I'm speaking in the hopes that some of} him. He always has worked for the best interests of North Dakota and he will continue to do that if he is sent to Washington.” Describing the nation as a business the state one that spends millions, | Lynch claimed that people shotld in- quire into the qualifications of the gantic businesses and not solely on} what party label they wear. j He declared he was not a free- trader. “I don't believe in anything; that has been proposed for the bene- fit of the farmer,” he said. “I am body. I want a lower tariff wall so look over it. I believe that the sugar industry should be protected and that the lignite coal industry should have protection. I do not believe in} cheap money. I believe in sound} money.” Replying to the charge that he had! voted against the legislature's reso- lution memorializing congress to pass the Frazier farm refinancing bill, Lynch said he did not vote against the present bill. | IN FORKS ADDRESS; militarists as part of their scheme to- i men they elect to manage these gi-| Ws made through chilling autumn 1a deputation which demanded among | that the plaintiff paid the hail taxes for the farmer just as much as any-|™men when they arrive. the man in the foreign country can} generally, free coal and shoes, reduced HAIL TAX REFUND LAW IS ATTACKED IN COURT APPEAL Insurance Department Counsel Has Three-Point Answer to Plaintiff's Claim oO | Girl Born After | Mother Succumbs Chicago, Oct. 25.—(P)—A baby girl born a half minute after the death of her mother was alive Tuesday in a hospital incubator. Four physicians made strenuous efforts to save the mother, Mrs. Pauline Fitzharris, 32, who col- lapsed while in a doctor's office. She suffered chronic heart dis- ease. When her respiration fail- ed rapidly, the consulting physi- cians were summoned and at the moment the mother died an oper- ation was performed swiftly, and minutes later the efforts to start the child's respiration were suc- cessful. The infant, brought to life two months prematurely, was hurried to an incubator and was expected to live. Constitutionality of a 1931 legisla- tive act providing for certain refunds on hail indemnity tax payments is at- tacked in an appeal to the state su- preme court of a case involving half a million dollars in refunds. A test case was brought in Burleigh county district court by the Old Line Life Insurance Company of America against S. A. Olsness, state insurance commissioner. Judge Fred Jansonius, in dismissing the action, said one of the reasons for the dismissal order Getting Near London! (x, to'cnabie the plaintiff to lay ite case before the state supreme court. London, Oct. 25—(P)—Members of! ‘The action involves chapter 171 of a “jobless army” estimated to number ‘the 1931 session laws providing for ® 2,000 persons, recruited from many refund to hail tax purchasers and parts of Great Britain, continued to persons paying hail taxes for which Press on the capital Tuesday. ‘they were not liable and designates The dozen or so groups which have ‘the funds from which payments shail been marching—and some of them! be made. riding, of late—to protest their plight! The plaintiff is asking for a refund to parliament, will begin to arrive /on payments of hail taxes on property Wednesday. The rest are expected on which the Old Line Life Insurance ‘Thursday. company held mortagages and fore- Monday's progress to outlying towns | closed. ; Counsel for the insurance depart- rains, and the weather man held out! ment claims that the plaintiff suf- no better prospects for Tuesday. fered no loses through the hail taxes The “army” was represented before | since these sums were included on the London county council Monday by | their bids in the foreclosure actions; Army of Jobless Is other things accommodations for the | yoluntarily and “not under compul- sion” and that there are no funds! unemployed | trom which to make the refunds. | | Attorney General James Morris and| and |r. B. Cox, Bismarck, special assistart | | attorney general in the case, allege | that chapter 171 is unconstitutional | and void, in that it does not set aside or appropriate any definite or ascer- tainable sum for paying claims for! ‘hail indemnity tax refunds, nor fix| jany limit above which Ureedetitg can- * ~ not be made, nor fix the number anc Den EN eee ee ernor mount of claims which may be paid| George F. Shafer of North Dakota | Under the act. \ In the name of the rents, free milk for children, abandonment of the “means test” were demanded. The means test is invoked after 26 weeks of the dole, and places the receiver of the dole in local rather than government charge until his means have been investi- gated. He claimed the measure had been changed since that time, reducing; addressed the Arapahoe Club of Den- errr ae co Say British to Drop the issue of currency from approxi-|Hoover-Curtis campaign and started | mately 16 million dollars in the orig- | immediately after luncheon for a tour inal bill to about two million at the;of northwestern Colorado. In_ his} ver Monday in the interests of the Disarmament Parley, i} Present time. He charged his op-| Ponents with knowing this and mis-| representing his stand. speech before the Arapahoe, Governor! London, Oct. 2: }—Disarmament Shafer said the Republican protective negotiations appeared Tuesday to have tariff should be retained. ; taken a new turn with a growing con- Mary Jane O'Sullivan of Okla. homa university wae crowned a college queen at the all-college | ball in Dallas, Tex. With the honor | g0es the title of the most beautiful | Girl In the southwest. (Associated | Press Photo) viction in informed circles that the | plan for a preliminary fou conference at London or Geneva,| Proposed by the British government, will be dropped. There was comment Tuesday morn- ing that Germany seems determined not to be drawn back into negotia- tions at Geneva whether four powers | or many powers are participating, and | that there is little chance that the meeting will be held elsewhere. Invitations extended by the British government, have not yet been with- | {drawn however, Sel! your live poultry and| cream now to Armour Cream-| eries, Bismarck. | ‘VICKS COUGH DROP | ... All you've hoped for in a Cough Drop= medicated with ingredients of VISKS CUT EXPRESS RATES ON DRESSED POULTRY 25 Per Cent Reduction Will Be Effective Nov. 10, It Is Announced Reductions averaging about 25 per cent in express rates on dressed poul- try have been published by the rail- roads, effective Noy. 10, on shipments from North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota to Chicago, it was an- nounced Tuesday by the state railroad commission. | that it is issued to meet mofor truck | competition and also carries an ex- piration date of April 30, 1933, unless | sooner canceled. changed or extended | The reductions from strategic North |Daketa cities range from 68 to 90 4 | conts per 100 pounds, as shown in thy ¥ | following table on shipments to Chi- j cago: | Old New 1 From— Rate Rate Bismarck . $3.30 $2.47 Jamestown .. 3.07 2.32] 274 2.06 341 2f3 3.60 3.52 3.22 3.11 3.60 De C power | Bi Hettinger Infant Succumbs From Pneumonia Gerald White Bea . 14 months old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew White Bear of Nishu, died in Bismarck Mon- COMING SOON! 1932's MOST SENSATIONAL ENTERTAINMENT SMASH! iG BIG BROADGST STUART ERWIN KATE SMITH BING CROSBY MILLS BROTHERS LEILA HYAMS VINCENT LOPEZ CAB CALLOWAY BOSWELL SISTERS The new tariff carries the notatioa; day at 7 p. m. from pneumonia, fol lowing an illness of two weeks. He was brought here last week fo: treatment. He leaves his parents and a six- year-old brother, Matthew. Funeral services will be conductec jfrom the Nishu Catholic church at |2:30 p. m. Wednesday, Rev. Father | Rhinehart officiating. Burial will be in the Catholic ceme. tery at Nishu. { ENROLLMENT GROWING | Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 25.—(#)—En- rollment at the State Teachers col- \lege at Dickinson for the fall quarte: soared to a new high this year, ac- cording to registrar Jessie A. Lonbak- en, who announced that a@ total of 46¢ students have registered for the term. a gain of 61 over last year. Fall quar- ter registrations have shown a steady increase during the 15 years since the school was established in 1918. —_—_— didn't have an apartment \} on Park Avenue ... She || didn't have a Rolls-Royce +». She didn’t have evena diamond or a bracelet... She was not without honor, not without pride, not without LOVE... Try to deny her a place among the real wives and swe hearts of men! BURNS ZALLEN STREET SINGER PARAMOUNT THE FALL OF TICONDEROGA. “Nature in the Raw”—as por- trayed by F.C. Yohn ... in- spired by that horror-filled dawn when the bloodthirsty savages fell on Ethan Allan’s gallant ‘‘Green Mountain Boys” of Fort Ticonder- oga fame. “Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild”—and raw tobaccos (RENE DUNNE JOHN BOLES The Greatest Human Document Ever Filmed Al0 tesa LAUREL-HARDY Comedy IGHT AND WEDNESD. | 2:30 - 7:00 - CAPITOL —zs= THEATRE = ried trip to Springfield to appear in the place of the man he calls “Uncle George” and regards as the dearest friend of his late father, Senator Robert LaFollette. “There is a fundamental conflict in this campaign,” the Wisconsin gover- nor declared. “If this were a narrow issue of partisanship I would not be here tonight. We Progressives believe prosperity is founded not on the su- per-rich but on the working man. The president has been a conservative of the first-water. When Jeffersonian Democrats and Lincolnian Republi- cans face the supreme issue we can bury the infinitessimal differences in our belief. We have a reactionary and a Progressive to choose between and to my mind there is no question of choice.” . as in poor W health “T was in poor health from fe- troubles. I heard diffe Sino-Japanese War Seen as Possibility Washington, Oct. 25.—()—War be- tween China and Japan was viewed as @ possibility Tuesday by Dr. H. H. Kung, member of the Chinese Na- tionalist state council, should the League of Nations fail to solve the Manchurian problem. | “We always have had great hopes; in the nine-power pact and the Kel- logg anti-war treaty, but if peaceful means fail to protect China’s sover- eign rights the Japanese will have to reckon with our four hundred mil- lions,” Dr. Kung said in an inter- view. The former nationalist minister of commerce and labor was here as chiet of a Chinese industrial investigation commission. Dr. Kung was é¢ducated in this country and on this mission} \ 38 out of 100 Women REPORT BENEEEE | Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ‘Tobacco Co. buy the finest, the finest tobaccos in all the : world—but that does not explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest ciga- rette. The fact is, we never over- look the truth that “Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild” —so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are have no place in cigarettes. No raw tobaccos in Luckies —that’s why they’re so mild very then given the cigarettes. Lucky Strike purifying proc- ess, described by the words— “It’s toasted”. That’s why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild “It’s toasted” That package of mild Luckies = And you will find that it is just as easy to get quick, reliable, accurate informa- benefit of that tion regarding insurance by telephoning us as it is to call a taxi. You can have confidence in this insurance agency. We represent the Hartford Fire Insurance Company. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 218 Broadway BISMARCK Phone 577

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