The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 17, 1932, Page 2

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YN THE BISMARCK TRIBU E. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1982 GLAIMS TARIFS AND = ‘WPOSSBLE’ DEBTS STRANGLING TRADE. | Thomas W. Lamont Believes| War Reparations ‘Just? | But ‘Unnatural’ ' EXCORIATES TARIFF WARS! Says Economic Fight Has Fol-| lowed Military Battles of World War i New York, Nov. 17.—(—Two stranglers of worid trade, in the opin- ion of Thomas W. Lamont, are tariff barriers and an “unnatural stream” | of war debt payments. He called the war debts “perfectly just” but “im- possible.” Lamont, partner in J. P. Morgan Wednesday discussed | jor causes of present- | day conditions,” telling the conference of universities that “the single under- | lying world-shaking cause” was the} World War and “the unwisdom of man, who permitted that w: After the armistice, he said, the war was transferred from the military to the economic field “Here America has been o leaders in the economic w clared. “In the two dr increases of 1922’ and 1930 she set standards for the strangulation trade which other weaker nations felt compelled to emulate. “Thus, the four years’ & company, ‘some of the m war on the battlefields of France hss al4y been continued b; ie war on a wa ie front.” The “alibi” of some Americans that our troubles were due to the panic + rs’ econom- For Bismarck and vicini eeslatla tonight and Frid: S local snow; cold tonight. For North Da- kota: Mostly un- settled tonight and Friday, prob-, ably local snows; | not so cold to- night northeast and south-central portions; colder Friday northwest | portion, i For oe Ca kota: Unsettl Unsettled = tonight and Fri- day, probably local rain or snow: slightly warmer tonight central and east portions. For Montana: Unsettled tonight and Friday; snow southeast portion tonight; somewhat colder tonight southwest and south-central portions. For Minnesota: Mostly cloudy to- night and Friday, possibly some snow in north portion; not so cold tonight in south and Friday in southeast. Mostly robably not so GENERAL CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is high over the eastern and far western states and a slight depression is cen- tered over the Rocky Mountain states. The weather is somewhat unsettled in all sections and light precipitation oc- curred at most places over the North- west. Temperatures are below the seasonal normal from the Plains States eastward to the New England states. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.26. Reduced to sea level, 30.15. NORTH DAKOTA POINTS am Low Pet. BISMARCK, pcidy ee 5 00 Devils Lake. peldy. 6 4 00 Fargo-Moorhead, cld 20 16 00 2 Williston, snowing Grand Forks, peldy Minot, clear \.. Jamestown, clea: “1 0 Valley City, clear 5.00] OUT OF STATE POINTS i 7 am Low Pet. | Amarillo, Tex., clear 24 00 Boise. Idaho, raining... 38 34 c » Alta. clear.... 2 00 00 00 00 04 10 Havre, Mont., 00 Helena, Moni 00! Huron, S. D., pe 00 Kamloops, B. y 52 Kansas City, Mo.. cldy. 00 Lander, Wyo., clear .... 3 00 Medicine Hat. Alta., . eld. 12 00 Miles City, Mont., 02 Modena, Utah, clear... 2 00 No. Platte, Neb., clay... 20 00 Okia. City, O., cldy../.. 28 00 Pierre, S. D.. cldy 26 00 Prince Albert, S., snow'g 2 04} Qu’Appelle, Sask., cldy.. 4 08 Rapid City, S. D., raining 32 00 Roseburg, Ore., cldy. 6 00 St. Louis, Mo., peldy 00 St. Paul, Minn., cldy 00 Salt. Lake City, U., cid: 18 8. S. Marie, Mich.. eld; Seattle, Wash., raining. 56 ‘14 Sheridan, Wyo., raining 36 ‘01 Sioux City, Ia., cldy.. 22 00 Spoxane, ‘Wash raining 42 34 Swift Current, S., peldy. 8 8 04 The Pas, Man., clay. 0 -14 00 Toledo, Ohio, cldy: 20 18 .24| * Winnemucca, Nev, pads: 50 48 «00 Winnipeg, Man., cldy....10 6 00 Tired .. Nervous Se TESTE NTO 00 | tions a percentage of credit against ' | OUT OUR WAY WELL, OF ALL THE ALLS! LAYIN' THOSE PooR CHILOREN ON THAT COLO mm Teg Born THIRTY YEARS Too SOON By Williams | THEY'RE LockXs/ GRONNA PROPOSES would have had better success.” sidering the problems of control “LABORER DIES TWO they spent ‘in criticizing public of- ficials, it is my opinion that they Ne +] |driven into 15-degrees-above-zero | weather by the fire. | It is thought probable Burns was \ heating coffee over a kerosene stove |and that the fluid had boiled over, | extinguishing the flames. Fire de- 2 DONT DROP 'EM ON THE HARD stone! my ARMS ARE PARALYZED! TL Tew you 1M GOIN’ To GET A HORSE AND BUGGY ONE OF THESE DAYS, WHEN HAY AND OATS ComE Down. THIS 1S NO FUN! ii iT [ POT ey 1932 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. in foreign countries, he said, was hard to sustain, since “Europe's crisis in a still different scapegoat. gress, and behind congress the Ameri- can people, which for years have in- ted upon the foreign governments aying us the perfectly just—perfect- st, I say—but impossible war | debis.” Lamont held that the remedy for present economic conditions was in| WI. re-bullding the capitalistic system and | _ Although in seeking economic as well as poli- tical peace, not in changing to social- ism or communism. from St. Paul to Chicago. juries received Nov. 12 when the senator's Nye Is Silent Upon Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Da- kota continued his journey to Wash- ington Wednesday after a night trip Senator Nye is recovering from in- his au- tomobile was wrecked near Hudson. injuries He struck a note of cheer in de- (Private car until he was moved to his claring that things are beginning to | Compartment for the trip to the cap- “straighten themselves out.” Northwest Business Volume Decreased} Minneapolis, Nov. 17.—(}—Despite | increased grain marketings, the vol- St. Paul, Nov. \ oN Chicago doctor visited the senator |during his stay here and it was indi-| cated Nye would enter a hospital |when he reaches Washington. He} | was accompanied by Mrs. Nye. ROB ST. PAUL CONCERN 11.—(#|—Two band- ume of business in the ninth federal |its, each carrying two guns and em- reserve district during October was|Phasizing their commands with fre-| smaller than in the same month last |“uent threats to “plug” their victims. | year, the Minneapolis Federal Reserve |held up the Schwartz Brothers Laun- | jbank reported Thursday. |ery Wednesday Preight car-loadings 20 per cent smaller in October, 1932,|Griven by a third man. The bandits | than in October, 1931, although there |forced S. A. Schwartz, president of | were small increases in coal, coke and |the concern, and four employes to line grain products, the report said. Total | marketings of grain were much great- | er than a year ago, when extremely | small crops were harvested in the district, but shipments of flour and} other manufactured grain products | showed a decrease which practically offset the increase in grain market-! ings. i Estimated cash value of major farm products marketed in October was smaller than the 1932 high point es. tablished last month. All grain prices and all important livestock prices, as well as prices of butter, milk, eggs, poultry and potatoes were lower than | in October, 1931. } PAIN DEADENED LOOSENED CHEST COLDS i WOULD REDUCE DEBTS i WITHOUT DRUGS Winston-Salem, N. C., Nov. 17.—(?) —The national grange has endorsed , Get quick relief from neuralgia pain, sciatica pain, neuritis pain, rheumatic pain, proposals that the war debt situation | fnd° chest’ calde Ke ruiimeache; SEAN be alleviated by allowing debtor na~| faume Benrue (pronounced Ben-Gay) on the spot. It doesn’t blister or si the debts on all purchases by them of American agricultural products. KING NEVER MARRIED Rub in’ till it sinks down and. soothes the dened rare m4 gt Jeaitetlons, — your : for. Baume. Den ome quensland has had only one king \calfed “Ren-Gay” in English). There are 0 grew to manhood and who never; many analgesic baumes, mostly cheap imi- married. He was William Rufus, or tatlons of Ben-Gay made out of is also why they ai William II, son and successor of Wil-) | Ben-Gay and you will liam the Conqueror. SIDE GLANCES - - wet re or wear glasses.” By Gestion Clark “Why don’t you try a new personality on him. Let your hair grow, ayntheti tiga. ‘That ts why they are chease That ie Insist on resulta, » the spring of 1931 came 18 months Arrival at Chicago} . after the American collapse of Octo- coe C ai ber, 1929.” 1 MI “Others,” he continued, “have.found |, Chicago, Nov. 17.—P)—Brought to Ti is con, his train in a wheel-chair U. S were reported to be more painful than | ;Serious, he denied himself to inter- |viewers here. He remained abed in a night obtained ap-, were nearly |Proximately $1,200 and fled in a car up against the wall while a fifth em- estranged, by this unreasonable and ploye was ordered to open the safe They got more than $1,000 froni the |safe and then took about $150 from | Schwartz and the employes. Native of Wahpeton Is Dead at St. Paul) St. Paul, Nov. 16—(?}—Arthur R. Barnes, 47, St. Paul real estate deal- er who helped colonize western land, | “| was to be buried here Thursday. Born in Wahpeton, N. D., the son | of the late Rev. and Mrs. G. B. Barnes, he attended the University of Minne- sota, graduating in 1906, after which he entered the Minnesota Land Col- onization company. With this company he helped es- tablish colonists on untenanted land, principally in Minnesota and Califor- nia. estate himself, continuing in this bus- | iness until his death. He died Mon- |day night at his home of heart dis- ease. Subsequently he dealt in real Left are his widow and two broth- ers, George B., of St. Paul, and Fred, of Wahpeton. RAGE UNBRIDLED TO ENFORCE STATE PROHIBITION LAW Attorney General-Elect Says | Law Not Affected By i Amendment's Repeal Williston, N. D., Nov. 17.—(@)—Re- peal of the state's constitutional pro- {vision for prohibition will have no ef- |fect on the prosecution of those who |sell liquor in North Dakota, according jto A. J. Gronna, Williams county state's attorney and attorney general- elect. | He said as long as the 18th amend- ment to the federal constitution re- mains in force he proposes to enforce the state's liquor laws regardless of the constitutional provision. The en- forcement statutes of the state, he Said, are fully as applicable to the federal law as they are to the state constitution and they are in no way impaired by the repeal of the consti- tutional provision. “AS @ prosecuting officer,” said Gronna, “I am quite familiar with the problems of liquor law enforcement. The drys may blame themselves for the overwhelming majority by which constitutional prohibition ‘was repeal- ed. They were constant, and I regret |to say, all too often unfair critics of |law enforcement officers, of whose; jproblems they apparently had but {slight understanding. “Too many of them took the atti-) jtude that every candidate of the ; Nonpartisan League was wet. They unwarranted attitude, much support that they would otherwise have a cured. “Beer isn't coming back in legal form in North Dakota, in my opinion, for quite some time. Control of the {illicit liquor problem still remains » |duty for every enforcement officer. It lis @ knotty problem and strict law en- forcement is too largely a thankless task for the officers of the law. | “The state has repealed constitu- |tional prohibition. It has not re- {pealed its state prohibition law nor any of the machinery set up for its enforcement. I personally am op- posed to such repeal until the 18th) amendment is repealed. | “The bootlegger is just as much ot| a problem today as he was the day before election. Control of the illicit liquor business is just as much of a problem. If anything, the bootlegger is more of # menace now than he was before the election. The dry law re- peal will make control more difficult, but we must retain such control as we have. | “If those fighting for a dry North Al Watrous Carries Off Golfing Honors Pinehurst, N. C., Nov. 17.—()—Al Watrous, Detroit, carried the lion’s share of gold and glory out of Pine- hurst Thursday after two days of play by professional golf's winter troupers. Watrous was a member of the win- ning feam in the best ball preliminary and tied with Al Houghton of Wash- ington, and Henry Picard of Charles- ton, 8. C., for first place in the 36- hole mid-south open. He received: $500 in prize money. | Punts and Passes se (By The Associated Press) Chicago—On the theory that turn about is fair play, the University of Chicago football squad is going to give “Doc” Spears, Wisconsin coach, “going away” present before Satur- day's game. Chicago's last three op- ponents, Illinois, Purdue and Michi- gan, have honored A. A. Stagg, Ma- roon coach; with such gifts and Chi- heard Wisconsin intended to continue the custom the players decided they must give Spears something to even ‘up on the jinx. Cambridge, Mass. — Old Man Depression has proved entirely too tough for one of Harvard's old football customs, that of burning the tackling dummy before the last game. Instead of being con- signed to the flames, the dummy went into storage Wednesday. ;It would be extravagant with &t- tendance falling off the way it has,” athletic association officials Lafayette, Ind—The Purdue foot- |ball players aren't the only ones who are working hard in preparation for the Indiana game Saturday. A shovel squad started in Wednesday to re- move seven inches of snow from the tarpaulin that covers the field. South Bend, Ind.—The Army and Navy games are just about enough to make the difference between financial success and failure in Notre Dame's gridiron season. The “Irish” are expecting @ crowd of 80,000 for Saturday's game with Navy at Cleveland and as many more at the Army game in New York. AL BROWN IMPROVES Paris, Nov. 17—(?)—Panama Al Brown, bantamweight champion who was taken to a hospital Monday night with influenza following his second- round knockout of Spider Pladner, Wednesday was reported recovering and was expected to leave the hos- | Dakota had spent as much time con- pital Thursday. cago lost all three games. When they | ture. explained. | OTHERS RESCUED AS FARGO HOTEL BURNS James Burns, About 55, Is Vic- tim of Burns and Suffoca- tion in Basement Fargo, N. D., Nov. 17.—(#)—One per- son, @ laborer, was killed and two other persons were rescued with lad-| ders Wednesday night during a fire in the De Volne hotel, one of Fargo's| oldest buildings. The dead man was James Burns, about 55, a section crew worker for the Northern Pacific railway. He was found dead in the basement of the building, of burns and suffocation. ‘The fire, which did only minor dam- age to the building itself, is believed to have started in Burns’ room in the) northeast corner of the basement. The building is a three-story frame struc- Carried to safety by firemen were ‘Dan Hauserman, who lived on the| second floor, and Mrs. May Squires, who was taken from the third floor. G. M. Brock, who for 12 years has operated the hotel, said he was call-| ed to Burns’ room about 8:30 p. m.| Burns is believed to have shouted/ warning of the fire. Then he at-| tempted to make his way through the smoke filled building to the front of the structure. He was found dead in front of the furnace. Nine other families, with an un- reported number of individuals, were | partment officials ordered the hotel vacated pending an investigation. ADMITS MANDAN ROBBERIES Walter Romer, Mandan youth, has confessed to robbing a grocery store where he was employed as a@ clerk, Morton county authorities announced, He previously had admitted | two gasoline filling stations and mer= cantile establishments. The grocery store was robbed of $350 several weeks ago. The other robberies occurred Saturday night.- BRIDGE WORK PROGRESSES Concrete and grading work on the interstate bridge over the Red river near Halstad, Minn., is nearing coms pletion and structural work soon will \get under way, the state highway de- partment said. The bridge, with an cverall span of 308 feet, is scheduled. for completion July 1. Roughly, from 150 to 200 gallons of oil are required to replace the fuel value of a ton of coal. GUTS COSTS of COLDS Reports from thousands of families prove that the num- ber, duration and costs of - colds can be reduced by half with the new Vicks Colds- Control Plan. Prove it for ‘yourself, as directed in each Vicks package. VICKS Nose & Throat new tires Established 1914 BISMAR\ smooth tires are dangerous on s-l-i-p-p-e-r-y roads MAYBE you've gotten by on smooth tires while roads were mostly dry. But look out now! Slippery driving days are ahead. Your risks are multiplied. Better change at once to sure-gripping They'll protect you all winter, save you money on repairs and delays, and still be like new for spring and summer. So trade in your smooth Center Traction Means Safety Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Goodyear All-Weathers. this week! ‘CK, N. DAK. Phone 700 “Nature in the Raw”—as por- trayed bythefamous animal paint- er, Paul Bransom... inspired bythe fierce battle between wild mustang stallions on the western ranges... fighting to the death with flashing teeth and slashing hoofs. “‘Nature in. theRawisSeldomMild”- —andraw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes. No raw tobaccos in Luckies —that’s why they’re so mild uy the finest, the very 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 then given the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described by the words—“It’s toasted”. That’s why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild cigarettes, “It’s toasted” ‘That package of mild Luckies CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, INC. Wholesale Distributors t | | oy \r

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