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PRLS WHY TRUCK | BUSINESS HASN'T Tells Northwest Shippers Advi- | sory Board Suitable Regu- lations Are Lacking | Grand Forks, D., Oct. 26. P)— Railroads have not gone extensively into the operation of motor trucks be- cause safe-guarding r practically lacking : vice president and general manager of the Omaha road, told members of the Northwest Advisory board at the fall g He said a few roads had trucks, but with the ex few eastern ca gested terri short and h improved, the ope with little success Gray cited the why the railroads had don the trucking busi: A total on interstate truck Lack of uniform regulations trastate trucking Almost total so-called stock hau Inability of ca their train serv trains and tse t Ks o Joint Rates had met reasons | little in wing al regulation of in-| of regulation of} | rs to readjt Lack of o} tion in through rate between railorads and “Railroads today ope pletely under the lations and law,” Gray ant to step out motor truck trar e so ¢ on, regu- by 1 the new rail operatior rail line with the same basi common carr it field, is everybody's ined that in the Omaha | ion of a truck service had | not been an adequa arn on the | investment. E. J. Grim president of the! neap- » boar com- vice olis, in s bet pletion of the St. Lawrence si pi nine-foot channel much benefit to the n producers, because it sible to reduce costs much low those now enjoyed on the Lakes. Grime { plight of railroads was one for grave na- the rail- cried by | as mpts to place transportation under empts | tional concern. A\ roads to raise r: Grimes, as well other forms of | regulation the same as inflicted on} the railroads. He said there should be less instead of more ation. “Reports received from the vice chairman of the board showed that | practically all of Minnesota's crops yielded in abundance, that North Da- | kota’s grain crop Was not up to ex-} pectations but that hay and alfalfa production was good a generally was in good condition, feed grains in South Dakota higher than the five-year avera but that corn was below the average. The joint grain transportation com- | mittee reported that only per cent } of the normal flow of grain is moving into the terminals due to low prites | and a consequent desire on the part | of the farmer to hold off his mar- keting. id that stock that Eight Plead Guilty t | from THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WE _I| Not a bit of it. mous operatic s Ei she isn't even in love! So declared Rosa . When she returned to New York from al this with ropean trip and posed lik “Whiskers.” The shaggy pup is| nee very best friend, said the singer, while denying the rumors of a romance eldest ——____—¢ | Weather Report { FORECASTS ‘ck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight ae Thursday; litt change in emper ature. For ko For Bism a: Partly Thursday; —some- colder east portion tonight. For South Da- kota: fair tonight and Thursday: much ightly warmer in extr : in northwest tonigh artly cloudy, e east AL CONDITIONS A deep low pressur the Great Lak erate to heavy pret Oklahoma an. Light many plac Plains Pacific coast and gene southwes' dropped sissippi Valle tral Rocky ¥ region and mod- northeastward to precipitation oc- from the north- westward to the High pressure fair weather covers the states. Temperatures nat in the middle Mis- and rose over the cen- ntain states. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.7 ft. 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches 28.02. Reduced to sea level, 29.83. NORTH DAKOTA _ a m Low Pct BISMARCK, cidy. ., 37 00 Devils Lake, cldy. . 34 18 Fa rg0- Moorhead, raining 38 16 ‘00 Amarillo, Tex., clear. . | Boise, Idaho, peldy ‘Calg : Chicago, Til ‘84 Denver, 00 Des Moine: 1 Dodge Cit | cloudy tonight and | Generally | | | temperature. For na: Generally fair to-| {night hursday; colder east of Div tonight. Minnesota: Cloudy, showers home it; somewhat colder licins said, nit a is centered ; P PAROLED CONVICT ADMITS SLAYING North Da-| Wife of Ohio Prison Chief Rec- ord Clerk Beaten to Death At Her Home Columbus, O., Oct. 26.—()—An| » paroled from one murder} , confessed to Prosecutor} the slaying of a second victim, Mrs. Daniel J. Bonzo, 44, wifé of the chief record clerk at Ohio penitentiary. Mrs. Bonzo, beaten ta death at her Tuesday, had befriended the former convict, John Downing, 44, and his confession as related by Hos- he's been like a mother ‘to me. I don't know why I did it.” Downing was paroled from the entiary Oct. 6, last year, after rving about se n years of a life pitation occurred | term for the slaying of Mrs. Allean Williams, 38, of Cincinnati, in 1925. Arrested less than fiv> hours from the time the body of Mrs, Bonzo was; ound in the basement of her home Tuesday. Downing signed the con- ion, ‘d with a pistol stolen from Bonzo residence and __ blood- ned clothing found in his room. The body of Mrs. Bonzo, her head crushed, was discovered by her son, Daniel, Jr, when he returned from school with his sister, Edna, 16. A small card found in. the basement and bearing the address of Down- ing’s rooming house led to his ar- rest. | Congregationalists | | | Elect Pingree Man Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 26.—(P)}— Donald F. Wanner of Pingree was elected moderator of the Southeastern | Association of the Congressional ; church Tuesday to succeed Rev. W. M. Osborne of Sanborn at the clos- § session of the annual convention | here. |F. M. Wanner Rev. Nathaniel Hass of Pingree was elected assistant moderator. Rev. Glen Lindiy was elected chair- man of the business committee: Mrs. of Jamestown and Claude Lusk of Fargo, members; Rev. |T. E. Nugent of Valley City, chairman |ard of Fargo and Rev. of the committee on education and credentials, Rev. George M. Thomas of Jamestown and Miss Mary Cusa- tor of Jamestown, members; Mrs. W. | M. Osborne of Sanborn, chairman of the committee on missions, Rev. Hass nd Mrs. Nugent, members; Rev. R. D. Hall, chairman of the committee on Evangelism, Mrs. D. J. Jones of Forman and Mrs. J. R. Jones of Hankinson, members. Mrs. P. W. Farnham of Valley City, Rev. Nugent and Rey. John Lanhenes of Forman are delegates to the na- tional council and general council. Al- ternates are Rev. Lindley, W. N. Leon- Thomas of | Jamestown. Edmonton, Alta, clear. . o1 On Federal Charges # Havre, Mont., clear ‘01 Fargo.’ N. D, Oct. 26—(P) ee Bee a aliens pleaded re Judge | Kamloops, B. C., cld\ 18 Andrew Miller in fed t Tues-| Kansas Ci 24 @ay and were sentenced to 10 da Lander, W: 00 each in the Cass county jail. | Medicine Ha 00 James Jackson pieaded guilty to| Miles City. ‘1 atroducing liquor on the Fort Totten | Modena, Utah, clear . 00 Indian reservation and Walter Bal- No. Platte, Neb., clear. : lew to a charge of violating the Dyer | Diihowa City, O.. cles one They need Wednes-' Prince Albert, S., cldy... 30 3 y |Qu’Appelle, S., snowing 30 30 John Erko of Pembina pleaded not/Rapit City © D. clear’. 40 3800 guilty to a c gling 683 | Roseburg, Ore., 2 40 00 pints of Cani into the Unit- | f 2 40 210 ed States, He is iy 'St. Paul, Minn, clear... 30 30.00 The aliens sent i ordon H.!| Salt. Lake Ci U., eldy. 40 38 = =©.00 Alleyne. Bordreau, |S. S. Marie, M., raining 44 44.78 Finiig. 0. Bordr P. O'Ma- | Seattle, Wash. cldy..... 54 54 04 i: saat sharles | Sheridan, Wyo., snowing 34 32 42 ener pearee Dye pmllleand: Charles! sicux Olty, ta, lea 343400 ee Spokane, Wash., cldy.... 40 40 00 i F: | Swift Current, S., peldy, 30 30 ‘01 S pq |The Pas, Man., snowing 30 30 00! Arguments in AFZO |roieds, Ohio, raining. 64 ot ‘02 Assessor Case End winnemucca’ Nev., clear 22 22 00! | Winnipeg, Man,, cidy.... 32 30.00! Oral arguments w d lage fore the supreme co! at a| re-hearing of an action resulting from the Fargo city commission's order for} removal of John G. Ness as city as-} sessor. : | The court took the case under ad- | visement, after granting permission for the filing of a brief by Torger Sinness, city attorney of Devils Lake, who will represent the Notih Dakota| league of municipalities in support of | the city of Fargo’s case. Case Against “Fargo | Is Under Advisement The state supreme court Tuesday took funder advisement an_ action brought against the city of Fargo as an outgrowth of the opening of 12th Street North in the old North Fargo village. Arguments. which began Monday, were completed Tuesday morning: by counsel for the city and for Mrs. Marie R. Williams, who seeks dam- ‘ages on the ground that the value of her home was lessened by the open- ing of the street. In a previous deci- sion, the state supreme court granted Mrs, Williams a new trial after the Cass county district court held against her. A re-hearing, however, was granted on petition of the city and new argu- ments presented before the higher court. DIES AT NEW ROCKFORD Minneapolis, Oct. 26.—(4)—Funeral services for P. E. Olson, 59, vice presi- dent of the Keystone Grain com- pany, ‘will be conducted at 2 p. m. ‘Thursday at the Messiah Lutheran) church. Olson, who was associated with the Keystone Grain company for 35 years, died Monday of a heart attack at New Rockford, N. D. Left are hig widow and four daughters. es War Insurance Case Is Started at Fargo) Fargo, N. D., Oct. 26.—(#)—Trial| of an action in which Mrs. Jessie McKenzie, widow of the late Dr. Ross McKenzie of Carrington, seeks $10,000 from the federal government | cn a war risk insurance policy began| before Judge Andrew Miller in fed- | eral court Tuesday. Mrs. McKenzie alleges her husband | died from cancer of the throat, a di-| rect result of his being gassed in the| World war. The policy upon which the suit is based expired in 1920 and Dr. Mc- Kenzie died April 6, 1928. Dr. Charles MacLachlan of New Rockford, superintendent of the San Haven Sanitarium, Dunseith, witness for the plaintiff, testified regarding the condition of Dr. McKenzie from the’ time he returned from France until 1924. He said he had examined Dr. McKenzie on several occasions and that there was a throat irrita- tion. He testified upon his request Dr. McKenzie was examined by other specialists who diagnosed his case as cancer of the throat. It was in 1924, Dr. MacLachlan said, that specialists Pronounced Dr. incurable. J. M. Hanley of Mandan is counsel | for the plaintiff and George Garrity, chief attorney for the U. S. veterans’ bureau here, and P. O. Sathre, spe- | cial assistant U. 8. district attorney. are representing the government. More than 8 per cent of the 13,- 000,000 foreign-born inhabitants of the United States are unable to speak English. Sell your live poultry and! cream now to Armour Cream-| eries, Bismarck. McKenzie's case as) | Resolutions passed included one urging “retention of the prohibition clause in our state constitution.” KINGFISH LIKES TAMALES Pittsburgh, Kas. Oct. 26—(@)— Corn pone and pot likker have lost {at least some of their appeal for Sen- ator Huey Long of Louisiana. Enter- ing a cafe following a political ad- | dress here Tuesday nigh,, he ordered “chili and tamales, my new loves.” WANTED: A MAN WITH GRIT To Earn $100 a Week Full Time, $40 a Week Part Time offers you a y to build a mi uninens of mechanical entirely new an amazing new any stoker in world. matic carefree operation, Lasts life thne—simple—for requires no expens Any handy man understai irst glance, on your part, -— et —_ me ee ew ee Name ......... Street..... City State Hoskins said, when he was; SHERIDAN COUNTY Corn Crop ss Wrncenly Good ‘tie! Year and Much of It Will Be Fed to Stock { McClusky, N. D., Oct. 26—Farmers| {of Sheridan county will face the com- jing winter with no qualms in so far as the supply of feed for livestock | jand poultry is concerned. The supply of feed on farms of this country, gen- erally, is sufficient for the winter; carry-over. Naturally there are a few who do/| not have enough feed at this time to winter their stock. Grain fields on jsome farms north of McClusky were | hailed out last summer, and in other sections grain was so badly damaged (by drought that very little remained |for harvest. Windstorms and cut- worms caused severe damage to corn fields on a number of farms, Considering conditions during the growing season, corn was unusually {good for both fodder and grain. | Yields of corn in some instances ex- \eeeded 25 bushels per acre, good for |this season. Feed grain, such as bar- ley and oats, yielded better than 20 bushels per acre on a number of | farms. The experience of the past two} years, especially 1931, proved the |worth of a good supply of feed, and jconsequently a greater acreage was |devoted to the growing of feed grain this year. As a result there is a sur- plus of feed on a number of farms. The crop of prairie and slough hay was short, but a fairly good supply was put up this year. Hundreds of head of livestock, cat- tle, hogs, sheep and horses will be fattened in corn fields this year.} | Those who have silos have them fill- |ed, with a few exceptions where the jcrop was badly damaged. Some of} these farmers have a few acres of} }corn standing for hogging off. Those who have no silos cut part of their |corn and stacked it, husked part of cattle and hogs. Livestock is in fairl Capital Police Head y good condition, Inspector Ernest W. Brown (above) was appointed superintend- ent of Washington police. He suc- ceeds Brigadier General Glassford, who resigned. (Associated Press Photo) » No. See aeenreted by ute Highway Commission in the sof the rtment of State ck, N. Dak., not November , at which place and time they rb opened and read, osals must be mailed © deposited with the State Highways at Bis: and shall be sealed 1 for construct Bismarck-East No. 244 Re (Pt) . tom bond in the full um bid, must 2. The to or oth Departmen n nd endor 1 hig e Bente, High (Federal Aid Proje in Burleigh County 2. A certified che gether with a bidde mount of th pl consists of 1.56 miles of 1 improve- ment Paving volving approxim: ) Lin. Fe, 6" x 12" ! Tons Asphaitic Concrete. 5. ‘Copies of the Proposal blanks may. be obtained from the Department of State Highways at Bismarck, Dak, Plans and speci file in the Division Offi Y nt of State Highw: m N. Dak., and the office of the Department of’ State Hignways at Bismarc Dak., and also at the office of the County Auditor in the County wherein the project or pro- Jets are located, All lers are Invited to be ay ini at the opening of the propos- = 8. 7. The right is reserved to reject y to waive tech- such as may efor the best inter- ests of the County and State. 8 Bidders must bid on all items contained in the proposal blank, Any bid or bids received for any number ot items less than those contained in the proposal will be considered as irregular and rejected as such, 9. The minimum wage paid for skilled labor shall be fifty ($0.50) per hour and common labor forty ($0.40) per hour on this project. Where hoard is furnished by the contractor a in this rate may be made 1 cost of board, I jct labor shall be directly employed except those on probation or parole, Also so far as practicable no individual employed (except those in executive, administrative and su- pervisory positions) shall he per- mitted to work more than thirty (30) hours in any one week, and, in the employment of labor, preference shall be given where they are qualified, ex-service men with dependents, Maze imum employment of local labor con- sistent with reasonable peanamy of on will be requires HIGHWAY D' igned) A. D. iet Highway Dated October 6 1932. 10-12-19 NT OF THE INTERIOR OFFICE at Bismarck, ty October 12 chy given t the person and Patrick Madison, Township ieipal Meridian, ‘hg ice of iniention to make Final Year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Charles G. Boise, Register U: S$. Land Office, at Bismarck, North Dakota, on 1 day of December, 19 aimant names ax witnesses: + Paul Linssen, Pau! Hapel, Robert Dohn and Wayne Gish, ali of Bis- marek, North Da cH BOISE, Register. HAS PLENTY FEED. and ; sible, jit and left the remainder for their |), change “in| Donald J. Hoskins early Wednesday| ass the LXPEDTS ° STOBER 26, 1932 ‘CONTRACT e) DLAY | T McKENNEV = BY WM. E. MCKENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League The majority of original bids at contract bridge are suit bids of one. At auction bridge we, in reality, bid against our opponents endeavoring to buy the contract as cheaply as pos- while at contract bridge we just bid for our partner, so that par- tisanship bidding may progress on a constructive basis and thereby safe- ly reach the correct final contract. There was an old established prin- ciple at auction bridge that dealer and second hand could open with less | strength than that required for a third or fourth hand opening bid, and this principle was carried over into contract for a short time. | Today, however, after we have had | an opportunity jo study contract} bridge thoroughly, this bidding prin- ciple is completely changed in the one| over one system of bidding. ee * To open with a first or second hana] bid is laying the foundation for a game or slam contract. The require- ments for an original suit bid of _) first or second hand are: 1st. Two and one-half to fives high card tricks. In other words, you! assure partner that even though “your | side does not win the final contract, your hand will be able to take from two to three tricks defensively. 2d. Your hand must contain a bid-} dable suit. A suit, to be considered | biddable, should be as strong as the following: (a) Any six-card suit. (b) Any five-card suit headed by jack ten or better. A five-card suit headed only by the ace, king jack,! or jack ten, should not be re-bid un-/ less supported by partner. { (c) Any four-card suit headed by ace, jack, 9 or king queen. There are times when a king jack ten x suit! may be bid, especially when the hand does not quite meet the requirements for an original no trump bid, but con- tains too many high card tricks to} These requirements for a biddable} suit are entirely for original bids. | There are times when, on the second round of bidding, weaker suits may be shown. 3d. Not only must the hand con- tain two and one-half to three high card tricks and a biddable suit iy pe order to open first or second hand,; but in addition the hand must con- pea tain a re-bid. In other words, the original bid-} der must be in a position to handle! any bid that partner may make—| either by re-bidding his own suit, supporting partner’s suit, showing a second suit, or bidding no trump. If! unable to meet these requirements, | first or second hand must not open i Liecare & Mvans “onncce OO ¥ the biddihg, but may enter the bid- ding on the next round. * * * Taking into consideration the espe- cially high requirements for high card tricks, you will realize the great strength required for first and sec- ond hand opening bids in the one over one system. This is one of the most important factors in the system and must be strictly adhered to. It is only by strong original bids that a sound foundation can be laid for game and slam contracts. When the bidding is opened first or second hand, partner, with any strength at all, will attempt to ar- rive at a game-going declaration, and unless the original bidder's hand con- | tains a foundation for partner to work on, intelligent progressive bid- ding cannot be accomplished. | (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) NTINUED from page one Roosevelt’s Last ~ Campaign Journey Draws Near Close horsemen of destruction, delay, deceit, despair.” “The horseman of deceit was cer- tainly riding high.” he said, “when the Republican leaders were trying to make up their minds about the 18th amendment.” ‘Deceiving No One’ The Republican prohibition plank, he said, was “intended to sound wet to the wets and dry to the drys” but “ended by deceiving no one.” “And so after a month and a half of keeping his ear to the ground,” he continued, “the presidential candidate attempted to correct it. He added new jelements of confusion. He promised to work for the repeal of the 18th amendment with some very important reservations. “Everything went well, but suddenly the vice president was heard from. He attempted to make provision for a dry interpretation of what the president meant as an appeal to the wets. Thus it looked as if the ticket was facing both ways. . . “No honest wet and no honest dry can approve of such [edhe tactics. STAINLESS Same formula. . same price, Ia original form, too, if you prefer CKS The hesterfield It is the most palpable attempt to de- | fraud the American people that we | have seen in our day and generation.” The governor ended on a note of confidence: “And so, my friends, I am going | back, back to do a little state work, at Albany after an inspiring trip through a dozen states and from what I see and from what I know, I know that we Americans shall rise; from destruction. We ‘Americans | shall conquer despair. We are fac-! ing new things and with confidence | we accept the promise of a new deal.” Attacks Administration The Democratic presidential nomi-, nee again accused the administra- tion of failing to curb the 1929 boom, undermining prosperity through the/ Hawley-Smoot tariff, waiting until! two years too late to call for a bal-| anced budget, failing to bring about. governmental reorganization in the, interest of economy, and withholding | federal aid from the needy. At the start of his address, the Bovernor’s voice showed the effects) of a sudden. hoarseness which came} on him Tuesday morning in North | Carolina when he greeted crowds| around the observation platform of his train at various points along the route. It improved as the speech Progressed, however, and the gover- nor smilingly expressed his confi- dence. it would last two weeks more. Ahead of him is a somewhat in- definite schedule of speeches in Bos- tem, New York, and perhaps other cities of that important area. As he left the south, the governor carried with him the assertions of leading members of his party in that section that Dixie would be solid for NOMINATE @ Overwhelming demand nominates the Gillette BLUE BLADE as the nation’s first choice. These are the reasons; glass-hard edges of amazing sharpness — easy flexing, slotted center for adjustability —secret-processed steel. Learn how comfortable shaving can be. Try the Gillette Blue Blade. SAME PRICE today AS 42 YEARS AGO 25 ounces for25¢ BAKING POWDER ECONOMICAL AND rete ate Double Tested/ Double Action! MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR COVERNMENT Rubber Stamps We Make Them Commercial Service, Inc. Hoskins Block Phone 400 BLACE Taace ARK a | V Vhat on earth are you up to now? — things out, smarty! I thought I'd ex- amine the tobacco in a cigarette. “Look here...this isChesterfield tobacco. Notice its lighter color...you don’t see any dark heavy types, do you? I guess that’s why Chesterfields are milder. “Tm told that uniformly lighter color is due to cross-blending. It sort of welds all the tobaccos into one. “‘And here’s something else. Notice that these long shreds are all cut the same width. It stands to rea- son they burn smoother and cooler. “I don’t pretend to be an expert but it looks to me as if they make Chesterfields right. “Here, light one. That’s the best test after all. They Satisfy.” Cigarette thot's MILDER and TASTES BETTER be <y NS 4 : 4 ow . 3