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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper The Weather cme arta a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS Nation Will Go to Polls Tuesday VOTERS REQUESTED PRESIDENT HOOVER | ROOSEVELT PLANS On the No-Party Ballot a When you go to the polls tomorrow—and everyone should Escapes Bandits TO STUDY RECORDS ONDINE ATER INTENSE CAMPAIGNS President Hoover and Candidate Roosevelt Still in Quest of Votes OF DEPUY-LANGER Cameron Sums Up Case For Democrats in Address; Covers State Issues RECALLS 1928 BOND DEAL Says Langer Sought Million Dollar Fee From Pockets of Taxpayers Pointing to the known records of the rival candidates for governor of North Dakota, Scott Cameron, Bis- marck, Democratic candidate for at- torney general, Saturday summed up the case for the Democrats in an ad- dress here. He asserted that H. C. DePuy, Democratic gubernatorial candidate, has made no promises of any kind whereas Langer has promised jobs to an army of workers in the event of his election, As a result, Cameron said, Langer would find it more dif- ficult to reduce state expenses than would DePuy because Langer’s prom- ises would be fulfilled only at the expense of the taxpayers. Commenting on Langer’s proposal to take administration of closed state banks away from the state supreme court, Cameron pointed to the fact that Langer sponsored a $25,000,000 bond issue in 1928 to pay off the de- positors in closed banks. Many of them lived outside the state, Cam- eron said, and Langer represented approximately $6,000,000 in such claims. Had the people accepted the proposal, he pointed out, Langer would have collected a fee in excess of a million dollars and the money would have come from the pockets of North Dakota taxpayers. Text of Address The text of Cameron's address fol- lows: Realizing that the air has been congested with discussions on politic- > al subjects, it is with considerable timidity that I ask your indulgence for a few moments to discuss the questions and issues of our state campaign. I will take none of your time on national issues, as those are being discussed by individuals of both par- ties much better prepared and inform. ed than I am. As you perhaps know at this date, I am a candidate of the Democratic party for attorney general. That of- fice is important only as the attor- ney general can assist the governor in the administration of the state. It is vitally important to whoever is elected governor that he have asso- ciated with him as state officials in- dividuals who are in sympathy with him and in harmony with his prin- ciples and if you see fit to vote for Mr. DePuy, the Democratic candidate for governor at the coming election, we feel that you would be seriously hampering him, if elected, if you would not elect with him the other members of the state Democratic ticket, to the end that he could carry out the policies and uphold the prin- ciples for which he stands and which he expects to carry out if elected. The state of North Dakota is more than a state. It is the largest busi- ness enterprise within the boundaries of our state. It employs more in- dividuals and collects and disburses more money than any other business (Continued on Page Two) Favorable Balance In Trade Encouraging Washington, Nov. 7.—(?)—The Unit- ed States in September had a favor- ~# able balance in foreign trade of $33,- 578,305, compared with $5,843,806 in September last year. The value of exports in September, announced Monday by the commerce department, was $132,026,055, while imports were $98,447,750. ‘The nine-month period ending with September showed a favorable trade balance of $173,171,352 as compared with a favorable balance of $223,100,- 438 for the same period last year. WON’T WELCOME PRINCE Belfast, Northern Ireland, Nov. 7. —(P)—The 14 nationalists in the Ul- ter parliament issued a manifesto Monday declining to participate in the coming welcome to the Prince of Wales, who will arrive soon to open the new parliament house here. You're Invited To Our Party Every resident of Bismarck, Bur- leigh county and western North Da- kota is invited to attend the big elec- tion party to be given Tuesday night at the World War Memorial building by the American Legion and The Tribune. Returns from the national, state and local contests will be flashed on @ huge screen 60 as not to interfere with the dance which will be staged and managed by the American Le- CiMtimission to the balconies will be “Y ‘tree and every balcony seat will com- mand, @ good view of the curtain on which returns will be shown. A small charge will be made for admission to the dance floor and for each dance. Chairs will be provided for use between dances or for those who do not care to dance. Come and learn who will be the next president, who the next governor and ‘how your friends on other tickets ran. You are invited to be the guest of Bismarck war veterans and North Da- kota’s oldest newspaper, Miss Leona Burr of Mitchell, 8. ©. a church missionary on duty near Foochow, China, traveled more than 100 miles alone as she fled Chinese bandits to Join other refugees, (Associated Press Photo) ANOTHER TRIAL FOR NEGROES 1S ORDERED BY SUPREME COURT Find Seven Accused of Attack- ing White Girls Didn’t Get Fair Trial Washington, Nov. 7.—(?)—The su- preme court Monday set aside the death sentences imposed on seven Negroes at Scottsboro, Ala. ‘The ruling by the court means that the cases will go back to Alabama courts for a new trial. Highest court upheld the conten- tion of counsel for the Negroes, con- victed of assaulting two white girls, that they had not had a fair trial. \The decision by Justice Sutherland reviewed in detail the charges and the grounds on which the appeal was taken. He said it was necessary in deciding the case to consider only whether the rights of the men to have counsel was denied and whether this infringed the due process clause of the 14th amendment. Justice Sutherland said that the men from the time of their arraign- ment to the beginning of trial had been substantially denied counsel at a time such representation was of vital importance in properly preserv- ing the rights of the defendants. He suggested the cases had been forced to trial without proper prep- arations by counsel, All other grounds for seeking to have the conviction set aside were passed over by the justice as of no material weight. Justices Butler and McReynolds dissented from the majority opinion. ‘The decision came shortly after 13 persons were arrested and an officer sent to a hospital as the result of a brisk clash on the capitol grounds between a group of demonstrators demanding freedom for the Negroes) and police, ‘The group, comprising about 100, marched up Capitol Hill toward the supreme court after being told they would not be allowed to parade. There was a short but sharp strug- gle. Night sticks rose and fell. In a few minutes most of the marchers were headed back the way they came. Permit Insull to Remain in Hospital Athens, Greece, Nov. 7.—()—The minister of justice Monday confirmed an order permitting Samuel Insull to Temain in a hospital under guard Pending American extradition pro- ceedings. Thus the former Chicago utilities operator, who is under indictment for embezzlement and larceny in the col- lapse of the vast Middle West Utili- ties company, probably will remain for some weeks in a hospital where he was taken Sunday. ‘The former Chicagoan was told by hospital physicians Monday he must smoke fewer cigars, and he was given @ string of Oriental beads to keep his hands occupied. The idea was to re- Heve him of nervousness, Policemen were guarding the Ameri- can in four-hour shifts, but the pris- oner looked better Sunday evening than he had for some time. He re- ceived newspapermen, and admitted he: felt better but that he “needed to take care” of himself. Big Meteor Display Expected Wednesday Towa City, Ia., Nov. 7—(?)—The Possibility of a big meteor or two bursting into view in daylight Wed- nesday forenoon, Nov. 16, is forecast r of the point in space where the earth tersects their orbit each November, GROSSES COUNTRY TO CAST HIS VOTE} Special Train Carrying Repub- lican Candidate Heads For California MAKES SPEECHES EN ROUTE Will Deliver His Final Pre-Elec- tion Words At Elko, Ne- vada, Tonight Presidential Special, En Route to Palo Alto, Calif., Nov. 7.—(?)—Speed- ing swiftly westward to his home to vote and rest, President Hoover Mon- day stood ready to place before the nation’s voters his final plea for re- election. The chief executive headed across Wyoming to Salt Lake City, where his next-to-final address of the cam- paign was to be given shortly after noon in the Mormon tabernacle. Mon- day night, while crossing Nevada, he will deliver his final pre-election words at Elko, in an address describ- ed by his closest aids as more non- partisan in character than any other of his campaign speeches. As his train made a short stop Sun- day night in Denver, the president de- livered a Sunday non-political address in which he spoke of a “guarantee by the government that none shall be hungry or cold” this winter, and at the same time issued a formal but unspoken statement attacking a Dem- ocratic proposal concerning the Phil- ippines and its sugar industry. Colo- rado is the center of the sugar beet industry. Confidence Crystallized The president carried with him Monday a feeling described by an authoritative administration source as a crystallized belief the Republican campaign has brought a definite turn in the political tide in the East and Midwest. Hoover was said to have based his feeling on late surveys of the interior sections of the nation and upon the size and reactions of the crowds that have met him along his campaign trail. A telegram from Republican leaders in the East was read Sunday to news- Paper correspondents by the presi- dent, telling of a “sharp advance in industrial activity in New England” since the summer months. As his special train moved across Nebraska and into Colorado Sunday, Hoover spoke formally before a throng at Omaha estimated by members of his party as 15,000 and again at Den- ver before a press of people estimated by police at 25,000. In both addresses, as in other brief rear platform speeches en route, he foyeswore direct political talk. At Denver from a platform in front of the station he said: Not Proper On Sabbath “It would not be proper on this Sabbath day to enter upon a discus- sion of political issues. Sunday is provided as a day of rest. I have certainly been engaged in hard la- bor and I am thankful for the Sab- bath day.” At Cheyenne a crowd estimated by Police at 5,000, met the presidential train with a band and cheered when Hoover appeared and waved. During the day Sunday white house aids distributed a formal text of words the chief executive added to his address at St. Paul Saturday night after he had concluded his prepared manuscript. At Salt Lake City Hoover spoke directly to his Utah audience in say- ing he believed the nation should “restore silver to greater use,” and in Promising “immediate relief to the beet sugar grower.” He spoke directly to his Utah au- dience in saying he belicved the na- be sure to go—you will receive Ust the candidates of all political parties, another will list the constitutional amendment and which the voters must decide, offices which the people have decided should be filled without regard to partisan politics. The latter is the No-Party ballot and the names placed upon it are there because of their past service or their potential ability to serve, «They are there because the people have delib- erately tried to remove these offices from partisan politics. At the bottom of that ballot you may mark your choice for the official newspaper of Burleigh county. The Tribune, a heavy taxpayer in Burleigh county, owned and operated by Burleigh county people and meeting each week the largest non-governmental payroll in western North Dakota, offers itself as a candidate to continue the service which it now is rendering to Burleigh county as in the past and we take this past elections. privilege of citizenship, It is a fearless and progressive newspaper which has con- stantly fought the battle of the people’s interests, It has printed the news which the people expect an honest newspaper to print, We submit The Tribune’s candidacy with the pledge that we will continue to serve the interests of the people in the future for the sturdy support which has been given The Tribune in However you vote—be sure to vote. It is the first duty and @ number of ballots. One will the initiated measures upon and still another will list those residents, means of extending our thanks North Dakotans Urged To Go to Polls Tuesday NAZI FORCES TAKE DECISIVE BEATING INSUNDAY ELECTION Get Only 33 Per Cent of Popu- lar Vote and Lose 35 Seats in Reichstag Berlin, Nov. 7.—(?)—German voters threw Adolf Hitler and his Fascists for a decisive loss in Sunday’s generai election, but at the same time their ballots failed to lift the huge political question mark that has hung over five such elections this year. Whereas Hitler commanded 230 seats in the Reichstag chosen on July 31, he failed to muster more than 195 Sunday, a drop of 35. His percentage of the popular vote suffered accord- ingly, going down from 37.3 to 33. ‘What little drift there was went to the extreme left or to the extreme right, the Communists winning 100] seats against their previous 89, and the Nationalists taking 51 against their former 73. But the Junker chancelior, Franz) von Papen, remained at the helm with the support of the veteran President von Hindenburg. The Na- tionalist gains were as nothing toward! controlling the Reichstag, but left) him the hope he might bargain for a/ Reischstag-tolerated government. | Almost 35,500,000 of Germany's 44,-| 500,000 qualified voters went to the polls, but the total was measureably under the vote mustered July 31. Sunday only enough voters to make a Reichstag of 582 seats came out, while in July the electorate set up 608 seats, | on the basis under German law of| one seat to each 60,000 votes. The Communists made consistent gains throughout the nation. i There were few serious disorders Sunday, with Berlin authorities re- porting 91 arrests for the 24-hour pe- riod ending at midnight. Hitler at Munich declared war anew Monday on Chancellor Von Papen and other opponents, and an- nounced his determination to remain in opposition to the chancellor until the feud was won for the Nazis. In three appeals to his followers, the brown-shirted leader rejected “compromiseg or reconciliations with these elements,” and demanded “reckless continuation of the fight until opponents of all shades are completely wrecked.” tion should “restore silver to greater use,” and in promising “immediate relief to the beet sugar grower.” To World Affairs Then he turned to world affairs, declaring that he had used every means within his power for the| “maintenance of peace amongst the nations,” the chief executive said he had held to the sole reservation that, “we will join no movement that pro- Poses to use military or economic force in its attempts to prevent war.” “And if it shall be the nation,” he said, “that for another four years I shall continue to lead the execution of their purposes, they may be as- sured both by the pledge of past en- deavor and by my solemn pledge for future endeavor, and by the further knowledge of my personal convic- tions and deep emotion upon this Subject, that then for yet another four years this nation shall continue to advance in leadership toward the precious goal of world-wide and en- during peace.” He asserted “the Democratic cam- paign has been exploded.” After fur- ther outlining his ideas of Demo- cratic campaign strategy, de- clared “their failure will be the re- buke. of an honest-minded and| bei electorate.” At ae | rane of his address, Hoo- ver spoke of the governmental prin- ciples which he said had forméd a. basis for his administration. “We have in no way countenanced the curtailment of public or private Uberties,” he said. “Thus we shall find when this emergency is past, our Rergceriel, tata and eco- nomic structure as before. And even at polltical eset to ourselves we must preserve those Precious forces which have builded up this republic over 150 years,” LINDBERGH HOAXER IS FREED BY JUDGE John Hughes Curtis Drops Ap- peal From Conviction and Pays $1,000 Fine , Flemington, N. J., Nov. 7.—(P)— John Hughes Curtis, who was convict- ed of obstructing justice in the Lind- bergh kidnap case, was freed Monday, Judge Adam O. Robbins suspending operation of his one-year sentence. ‘When the prison term was suspend- ed Curtis paid the $1,000 fine impos- ed on his conviction and walked from court with all charges against him lifted. He had been out on bail pend- ing appeal from the original sentence. Sere roioese tes te Ger a @ prom! pai - Bane § announcing that he was in touch with the kidnapers and nego- tiating with them for return of the infant son of Col. Charles A. Lind- rgh. He directed Col. Lindbergh and police on numerous efforts to make contact with the kidnapers and Col. Leaders of Republican and Democratic Campaigns Are Equally Confident (By The Associated Press) Last-hour pleas for support, and appeals to “get out the vote” resound- ed throughout North Dakota Monday as candidates went through their fi- nal paces of what has been a strenu- ous campaign. Signs of victory are seen by heads of the opposing political groups, but the last word goes to the voters whose verdict will be given Tuesday. Granted fair weather, a record vote that may run as high as 250,000 is re- garded as likely by campaigners who believe more than normal interest has been displayed in a campaign in which the presidential contest, a hot gubernatorial race, and proposed ini- tiated measures have been outstand- ing topics for many months. John Nystul, Fargo, head of the League headquarters, called on voters to not only exercise their own fran- chise, but to make it their duty to see Fair Weather for Tuesday Forecast (By The Associated Press) Fair weather was the forecast for Tuesday, election day, while precipitation was reported at four North Dakota communities Mon- day. It snowed at Bismarck Monday forenoon. Rain was reported at Fargo and Grand Forks. Cloudy weather prevailed at Valley City and Williston where .03 and .02- inch precipitation, respectively, was recorded. A trace of precipita- tion was received at Jamestown. Moderate temperatures prevailed throughout the state with colder weather forecast for Monday night. that friends and relatives also make an appearance at the polls. Fred W. McLean, Grand Forks, head of the Democratic campaign, said, “no man or woman should neg- lect his or her constitutional right to use the ballot,” and admonished the voters that “your country’s leaders depend upon your expression of opin- ion to guide them.” From William Langer, Republican candidate for governor, came a state- ment that on the eve of election “I gladly and eonfidently place my can- didacy in the hands of the people of this state.” If elected, he said, “it is my solemn intention to carry out ev- ery pledge I have made.” He also made a last minute appeal to send into state office all candidates who are with him on the state ticket, so that they will provide a “cooperating and harmonious state government for the next administration.” Nystul described the Republican state ticket as offering candidates of “extraordinary strength both in char- acter of the candidates selected and in their fitness for the various offices to which they aspire.” No Presidential Choice “We make no recommendations in the selection of a president,” Nystul said. McLean said “it must be conceded by every unprejudiced observer that North Dakota is safely in the Roose- velt_ column.” He expressed belief that the only (Continued on page three) 5,000 Criminais in Italy Get Amnesty Rome, Nov. heal te iat usatra prisoners "s jails— and criminal—have been am- amnesties, the document as signed by ‘Victor Emanuel during the week-end, gives freedom to all pris- oners of the state who are serving Lindbergh was on one such errand when word came that the child had been found dead. WITHOUT GAS SERVICE Albert Lea, Minn., Nov. 7—()—Al-| freed. Most of the principal political/ died in Bismarck at 2 p. m., Sunday, Rochester, Austin and/ offenders in recent years have re-|from anemia following an illness of Owatonna again had no natural gas|ceived longer terms than five years.|several weeks. bert Lea, Monday after the explosion Sunday of the main feeder pipe leading from. Texas, The explosion occurred seven miles south of Albert Lea. terms of less than five years, but with restrictions. what disappointed, since none serv- ing more than a five-year term is yer are deducted of from five to 10 years from sentences of more than 10 years, Tlserving the sentence here Monday. AUTOMOBILE TRIP IN HUDSON VALLEY With Appeal For Presi- dential Favor 1S CONFIDENT HE WILL WIN Superstitious Democrat Guards Favorite Campaign Hat With Care Hyde Park, N. Y., Nov. 71—(P)— Twenty-two years ago, Franklin D. Roosevelt, known chiefly as a young man with an interest in politics, chug- ged down the Hudson river valley in a none too reliable automobile to make his first campaign speech at Beacon. Few Democrats and no Republicans believed he would be elected to the office he sought, a seat in the state senate. The district which included his home County of Dutchess always had been overwhelmingly Republican. Monday he visited Beacon again, the Democratic candidate for the presidency. Tuesday the voters of the nation weigh that candidacy at the polls. Beacon is one of several Hudson valley cities he was to visit on a motor trip. He was to speak in the Beacon public square, the scene of his maiden effort as a campaigner. He was to cross the river on the ferry at Beacon to Newburgh, on the west bank of the river. He was to stop also at Kingston before re-cross- ing the river at Rhinebeck, Roosevelt will speak Monday night | at Columbus hall in Poughkeepsie. He has been speaking regularly in Co- lumbus hall on the night before elec- tion for more than two decades. It will be the candidate's last public utterance of the campaign. Tuesday afternoon, after voting at the frame meeting place in Hyde Park which once was a church, Roosevelt will drive to New York to receive election re- turns at national headquarters in the Biltmore hotel. Sunday, after returning from Krum Elbow from a week-end in New York City, Roosevelt appeared more con- jcerned with the safety of his well- jworn gray felt hat than with the mo- | mentous events ahead of him. |. “Take that old campaign hat and lock it in the safe,” he instructed Mc- | Duffie, his negro valet. The old hat jhas been with him throughout the jcampaign. He has refused to replace it, admitting changing hats is his one superstition. Souvenir hunters repeatedly have tried to possess it, several of them boldly attempting to snatch it from Roosevelt as he rode {through crowded streets waving it to the audiences. Hundreds of motorcycle enthusiasts visited Roosevelt at Hyde Park Sun- day, they converged on the candi- date’s home from many cities, chiefly, however, from New York. Roosevelt answered the cheers of the riders with a confession that he once attempted to ride a motorcycle without knowing how to stop it. AS he streaked around the grounds of his house he snatched at various levers, stopping, however, only when the fuel supply was exhausted. The end of his campaign finds Roosevelt confident he will be elected. “It’s been grand; I'm sorry we aren't starting out,” he remarked. In the four months since his nom- ination he has traveled in 37 states and made hundreds of speeches. Mar- vin McIntyre, his trip manager, esti- | mated more than 6,000,000 persons had seen him since he left Albany by air- plane July 2 to make the acceptance speech to the Chicago convention, Thomas to Wind Up Drive at Milwaukee New York, Nov. 7.—(?)—Norman ‘Thomas, having said his last word in the East, will wind up Monday night in Milwaukee what he calls the most successful campaign ever conducted by the Socialist party. In a campaign address in Brooklyn Sunday night, he assailed Democrats jand Republicans as “puppet parties” and declared the size of the Socialist vote “will be the most important fac- tor in compelling decent government action” this winter. “The complete lack of any construc- tive program by either of the old Parties points the way toward Fas- cism, which many of our leaders open- ly desire,” he said. | Merry Begins Term At Penitentiary Here Cc. F. Merry of Dickinson and formerly of Stanley who was sen- tenced by Judge George H. Moel- Tring in trail county to serve one year in the state penitentiary for vio- lation of the state securities act began He is 74 years old. was convicted in connection with the sale of stocks for construc- tion of a railroad without permission of the securities commission. Tappen Merchant Dies in Bismarck J. A. Kress, 31, Tappen merchant, Climaxes 22 Years in Politics; Rumors that the engagement of Princess Ingrid, 22, of Sweden to Prince George or the Prince of Wales will be announced In London on November 11 were,.openty die cussed In Stockholm newspapers. (Associated Press Photo) YOUNG TRIO KILLED WHEN THEIR PLANE CRASHES T0 GROUND Pilot Had Been Executing Series of Difficult Maneuvers Before Mishap Randolph, Mass., Nov. 7.—(P)— Three young aviators, all socially prominent, were killed during a Sun- day afternoon plane ride after exe- cuting a series of hazardous stunts. They were Frederick Lothrop Ames, 29, of Boston and Newport, R. I, widely known yachtsman and presi- dent of Skyways, Inc., a Boston avia- tion company; Miss Frances Bur- nett, 22, of Southboro, daughter of the founder of the Burnett Vanilla Extract company, and Frank Pen- rose Sproul of Pittsburgh, Pa, a grandson of a former governor of Pennsylvania. The three left East Boston airport and headed for the North Easton estate of the Ames family. After landing at North Easton they had planned to fly to Newport, R. I. Pilots at the airport said Ames’ monoplane executed a number of stunts as it left the port. The Sky- ways official narrowly avoided a plane in the air and then swooped under another plane and as he dove he came so low that spectators scat- tered, airport workers said. As the Ames plane neared Ran- dolph it twisted, jerked and rolled through the sky in a number of dif- ficult maneuvers, according to spec- tators. | Fred Lakewitz of Holbrook, himself an aviator and first to apprise the| airport of the accident, described the | crash. “After he'd done six flat tail-spins, I began to be afraid he couldn't get out. I counted nine and then lost sight of the falling plane behind the trees. I jumped into the house andj telephoned over to the airport and told them one of their planes had cracked up.” | Ames was found in the forward) part of the cockpit and his passen- gers in the rear. All were dead, TROPIGAL STORM HITS CARIBBEAN) One Vessel Destroyed and Fate; of Another Hidden Fol- lowing Hurricane (By The Associated Press) A tropical hurricane destroyed one vessel and hid the fate of another Monday as it snaked its way up the Caribbean toward Cuba. The American schooner Abundance was wrecked off eastern Jamaica by high winds apparently attending the storm Sunday but its crew of six was saved. The Blue Funnel freighter Phemius was not so fortunate. She radioed east of Cape Gracias A Dios, Nicara- gua. The liner Ariguani went to the rescue but could not find the Phemius in the position given. The national observatory at Ha- vana in its midnight bulletin said the hurricane was 100 miles northeast of Cape Gracias A Dios moving north- westward toward Yucatan Channel. Considering the time of year and meteorological tions, MAJOR SPEECHES ENDED Senate, Congressional and State Contests Also Will Be Decided Washington, Nov. 7.—()—America’s voting millions relaxed from @ bedlam of political debate Monday to await the writing of the final chapter of a@ precedent-shattering campaign— Tuesday's choice at the ballot box of the nation’s next president. Both sides expressed confidence in the outcome. They were campaigning to the very last, President Hoover while en route to his home state of California to vote and Franklin D. Roosevelt in New York state just prior to his final appeal for national sup- Port from Poughkeepsie. Quadrennial election eves usually find the Republican and Democratic nominees making exhortations to the People to vote—normally 15 per cent of the eligibles fail to do so—but few campaigns have witnessed candi- dates on the road the day before elec- tion carrying on the fight. With an assertion at St. Paul Sat- urday night that @ Democratic vic- tory Tuesday would mean “four Many Voters to Need Umbrellas Washington, Nov. 7.—(4)—Voters tn most of the East may need um- orellas Tuesday, but fair weather was the general forecast west of the Mississippi river. Except for a narrow belt along the Atlantic coast extending from North Carolina to Connecticut, tain was the prediction for the en- tire South, New England, and the i ohn extending to the Missis- ippi. It was said, however, that steady, all-day rains were unlikely in any section. In the west, Washington and Oregon and Minnesota and Wis- consin were threatened with bad Weather, with a possibility that aed would fall in the latter two states, whole months in which there can be no definition of national policy” and a year before the Democrats could “validate their promises and their new deal,” President Hoover entrained for the Pacific coast. But two more speeches still were ahead, one around noon Monday at Salt Lake City, Utah, and the other Monday night at Elko, Nevada. On the same program Mon- day night will be Former President Coolidge, speaking from his home at Northampton, Mass. Plans Automobile Tour Governor Roosevelt chose for Mon- day an automobile tour and a few brief talks in his native Hudson river valley. He made his last major Speech Saturday night at Madison Square Garden where, reunited with his old political ally, Alfred E. Smith, he asserted the program he had out- ned in his thousands of miles of travels was the “spontaneous expres- sion of the aspirations of millions of individual men and women.” Whatever the outcome of Tuesday's Great march to the polls, here are Some of the leaders’ forecasts or statements: President Hoover: “I have fixed my faith upon the logical conclusions of a thoughtful people.” Governor of Every sign points to that ” Norman Thomas—“The vote will go down in history as marking the first Breat definite trend to Socialism in this country.” Vice President Curtis— is fine. We'll carry the country.” Speaker Garner—“The the country she was struck by the storm 150 miles | Pres He was brought to Bismarck for treatment Oct. 12. Positions might be reached. oli