The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 28, 1932, Page 2

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a S55 Shen So Adonase ‘im bie S01 pth rhe ap) ich EP uSaBade = Ae SOs | 2 ~ URGES TWO-FOLD RELIEF PROGRAM Immediate Aid and Permanent Provision For Future Rec- ommended By Green Cincinnati, ©., Nov. 28—(P}—A “two-fold unemployment relief pro- gram” was outlined and recom- mended Monday by President wWil- Mam Green of the American Federa- tion of Labor as the organization's convention entered its second week of sessions here. | Green said one phase of the pro- gtam concerns immediate relief; the | other permanent provision for the; unemployed. | As a “short term” policy, Green explained, the federation’s executive ; council has recommended appropria- | tions for unemployment relief by! federal and state agencies; increased | development of public works pro- grams and the five-day work week and six-hour day. In accordance with the council's “long term” planning, he continued, unemployment insurance adminis- tered “through state agencies backed; by federal enactmnts,” and setting up of a national economic council likely will be advocated. | “The shorter work week and work day,” he added, might well be in- cluded in the long term planning, too.” It was with various aspects of this subject that the delegates chief- ly were concerned Monday. The unemployment ‘surance plan is yet to come before the convention for approval. Secretary of Labor Doak was to address the convention Monday, and it was expected he would outline the government's view on labor prob- lems. | The fraternal iottery case, scheduled’ for re-trial Monday, may cost James J. Davis, right, his senate seat, though he won the contest which arose over his election. Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania has indicated that he will certify the election of Davis, but will ask the senate to deny him his seat because of his connection with the alleged Moose lottery. Conrad H. Mann, upper left, Kansas City, director of the Eagles, also will face charges of lottery violation with Frank E. Hering of South Bend, Ind., editor of the Eagles’ Magazine, lower left, Fields Will Return r i. aaa To Ring This Week|, Weather Report _ | —_——- OO New York, Nov. 28.—P)—National boxing interest centers on San Fran- FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinit: cloudy tonight and Tuesday; ———_— | CONTINUED from page one’ Property Levies $2,582,231 Lower Than Year Before for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1931, follow: general property levies: State, rate according to budget re- quirements, $3,212,311, 897 per cent of the total of all taxes. Local divisions, rate according to budget requirements, $27,185,482, 75.92 per cent of total. Special property taxes: Grain tax, bushel tax on grain, 1-8 to 1-2 cent per bushel, included in general property tax levies. Mutual telephone property tax, 50 cents per phone, included in general property tax levies. Poll taxes: School per capita tax, $1, $297,937. .80 per cent. Road polls, $1.50, $114,585, 32 per cent. Dog tax, $1, not operative in 1931. Privilege or franchise taxes: (in Meu of general property tax) Car line companies, 6 per cent of gross receipts, $40,327, .11 per cent. Express companies, 3-4 per cent of gross receipts, $16,947, .05 per cent. License tax in lieu of general prop- erty tax: Motor vehicle license, graduated scale based on weight of passenger car and capacity of truck, $1,826,467; $.10 per cent. Collect Occupational Taxes License tax on special businesses or occupations: Cigarette and snuff license tax, $12.50 flat license fee, $39,275; .11 per cent. Special sales taxes on specific articles: Motor vehicle fuel tax, 3 cents per gallon, $1,960,000; 5.47 per cent. Cigarette stamp tax—graduated Scale, $306,314; .86 per cent. change in temper- ature. For North Da- cisco this week as Jackie Fields, wel- | terweight champion of the world, makes his first ring appearance in east portion, cold- er tonight and Tuesday southwest Unsettled tonight The Far West also offers Ace Hud- kins in a come-back test. The one- time Nebraska Wildcat meets Wesley Ketchell, Portland, Ore., lightheavy- weight, in a 10-rounder at Los Ange- les Tuesday night. Tommy Paul, of Buffalo, recognized as featherweight champion by the Cloudy portion. For and Tuesday, probably rain northwest Montana: Portion; somewhat colder Tuesday and northwest portion tonight. For Minnesota: Partly cloudy to kota: Partly Lessard cloudy tonight and His fistic future threatened for a Tuesday: ‘some-| time by an eye ailment that since has what colder Tues- Tesponded to treatment, Fields will day north portion. tune up his repertoire of punches for For South Da- more important tests soon to come in kota: Partly a 10-round overweight match against cloudy tonight and Tommy Herman of Chicago at San oe unk Francisco Thursday night. het ent National Boxing association, faces young Geno, of La Salle, Ill., in a 10- round non-title bout at Chicago the | cloudy tonight and.Tuesday; slightly | warmer tonight and in extreme south- WILL RETURN N. D. YOUTH 70 CHICAGO Merle Lowman and Ben Herr, Both of North Dakota, Suspects in Slaying Chicago, Nov. 28.—(/P)— Sergeant James Sullivan of the homicide squad was to leave for Gering, Neb., Mon- Gay to return Merle Lowman, 18, as a suspect in the slaying here of Henry Shoop, Wibaux, Mont., cattleman. Another suspect, Ben Herr, was ar-| rested in Pennsylvania and returned here. Shoop was beaten to death Oct. 31 in a hotel after bringing a load of cattle to market. Police said Herr and Lowman ac- companied Shoop to Chicago. Herr. they said, admitted being in the room at the time of the killing but said he was asleep. Lowman confessed rob- bing Shoop of $29, police said, but ac- cused Herr of striking Shoop. Police said Herr later said he and Lowman had gone to Shoop’s room to collect a $4 debt. He said they had an argument and Shoop struck him. knocking his unconscious. When he came to, he said, Shoop was lying on the floor and Lowman told him they had “better beat it.” He denied striking Shoop. Lowman is a resident of Wester- heim, Golden Valley county, North Dakota, while Herr is a resident of McClusky, N. D. j | ° TIce-Wagon Horses | Refuse Humiliation pirates th Burlington, N. J., Nov. 28—(?) —A team of carrot-fed ice-wagon horses, pulling an old-time steam fire engine, were receiving the plaudits of Burlington Saturday because they refused to occupy a “set-up” role in a test race with a motor fire truck. As “fixed” for the benefit of a {| motion picture camera, the | horses were to be quickly outdis- tanced in a block-long brush that was to demonstrate the superior- ity of modern fire-fighting equip- ment. But the two animals, display- ing a spirit worthy of the great fire horses of the past, galloped away at the sound of the alarm and held their lead for the en- tire block. It was necessary to extend the race another block for the benefit of the photographers. William Vandergrift, Sr., own- er of the horses, said he fed them | on a diet of carrots to put them in top form for this clash of the gay '90s against the machine age. ‘| ative of the federal veterans service. | | east Tuesday; somewhat colder Tues- | in ex rthwest. some night. day in extreme northwest. Kid Chocolate’s last tune-up bout | before his important engagement with Fidel LaBarba at Madison Square GENERAL CONDITIONS hour period have changed very little, Garden Dec. 9 sends the Cuban Negro| the Low over Canada has become out against Johnny Alba, Filipino} deeper (Edmonton, Alb. 29.50) with lightweight, at the Jamaica arena here | High pressure over the United States, Tuesday night. jexcept for the North Pacific Coast, {the High is centered over the Lower ) Lakes. Temperatures have continued to moderate and are now above the Only Six Elevens y | normal except for the Lake region and jSouthern Plateau. The weather is Unbeaten, Untied " HEE ' generally fair with only light precip- New York, Nov. 28—(P)—The select | itation having fallen on the North Pa- | cific Coast, pei ok College football teams neither’ ° “picmarek station barometer, inches: | : with all but a few final returns al-| 7822 Reduced to sea level, 30.04. ready in the records. ' Colgate in the East, Auburn in the! South, Jefferson university in the Southwest, Michigan and Valparaiso | BISMARCK, clear . NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 7 30 30 in the Midwest and Southern Califor-| Devils Lake. peldy 30 30 nia in the Far West are the sole re-| Fargo-Moorhead, cl 32 «30 maining elevens with perfect records. | Williston, cldy. er ae Of these only Southern California and | Grand Forks, pc! 29 29 Auburn have not yet finished their | Jamestown, clear ieee) regular schedules, Valley City, clear 30-28 Eight other teams have escaped de- feat but have been tied. Of these on- OUT OF STATE POINTS ly Tennessee still has a regularly 7 Oleomargarine tax, 10 c wr} Scheduled game to play. | aon Lone oui ba. ents per) "Texas Christian leads the unde- Amarillo. Tex, clear.... 35 34 00 Income tax: feated list in scoring with 283 points Gnlgisy, Alta, cleartsc, a0 98+ 300) Individual, graduated scale on net | 8nd Colgate and St. John's of Minne- | Gniary> Tit. coear 24 100 income, $226,439; corporation, 3 per|S0ta lead defensively with uncrossed | Denver, Colo., clear 40 ‘00 cent of net income, $206,854; 1.21 per |S0al lines. Des Moines, Ia., clear... 22 00 cent. Dodge City, Kan., clear 34 34 .00 Incorporation tax, authorized capi- DICKINSON CAGERS WORK Edmonton, Alta., clear.. 40. 34 .00 tal stock, $25 for first $25,000, etc.| Dickinson, N. D., Noy. 28.—(4)—! Havre, Mont., clear 38 «632 =«00 $6,565; .018 per cent. Twenty-seven basketball candidates,| Helena, Mont., cldy. 40 38.00 Inheritance tax, appraised value ot| including four lettermen, are in| Huron, S. D., peldy. -... 34 32 00 Property transferred, graduated scale| training at the Dickinson state| Kamloops, B. ©. clear. 46 42.00 1 to 7 per cent, $19,703; .055 per cent.| teachers college. Lettermen report-| Tander, Wyo, clear... 28 28 00 Figures for Last Year ing to Coach Harry Wienbergen are| Medicine Hat, A, clear 42 38 .00 ‘Taxes collected, the rate and the| Eastgate and Fredericks, forwards,/ wiles City, Mont. clear 34 32 00 percentage of the total provided by| Md Gruelke and Maule, guards. | Modena, Utah, clear ... 26 26 .00 each source in the fiscal year end- | No, Platte, Neb. clear.. 24 24 .00 ing June 30, 1932, follow: DENVER CAPTAIN DIES Oklahoma, City, O., cldy. 36 36 .00 General property levies: Denver, Nov. 28.—()—John Panek,| Pierre, 8. D., cldy....... 38 36 .00 State, $3,328.036; 10.08 per cent. | 28, captain of the Denver university | Prince Albert, 8. peldy. 12 10 00 Local, $24,603,251; 74.40 per cent.|f00tball team which won the Colo- | Qu’Appelle, S., Conte rs 3 Do Special’ property taxes: rado state championship, died Satur-| Rapid City, S. D. cldy... G2 40 00 Grain tax, included in general/@@y from influenza and general in- | SOOUC" Myo.” clear... 28 28.00 property levies fection. He was ill a week. | St; Paul,’Minn., peldy... 30 28 00 lutual telephone property tax, een _ ke City, U., clear 48 46 .00 $26,540; .08 per cent. TO MAKE OPERA DEBUT eek eee ‘Mich’ cldy. 30 24 .00 Poll taxes: | New York, Nov. 28—(?)—All day Seattle, Wash., peldy.... 52 48 OL School per capita tax, $293,004; .¢9|Monday Rose Bampton had to keep| Sheridan, Wyo., clear... 34 34 .00 per cent. resisting an impulse to reach out and } Sioux City, Ia., cldy. 30 «300 «00 Road polls, none. |knock on wood. Here it was only her ; Spokane. Wash., cldy... 46 “ = Dog tax, $69,417; .21 per cent. |23rd birthday, and Monday night she pate. curren B. Peldy. a fe Privilege or franchise taxes: |is to make her debut at the Metropol- TO\ndo ‘Ohio clear 26 24 .00 Car line companies, $39,457; .12|itan opera house. The tall brown-|winnemucca’ Nev, clear 30 .00 per cent. haired contralto, who was born in|winnipeg, Man, clear.. 30 28 00 Express companies, July, 1932. Foreign insurance companies, $314,- 64; .95 per cent. Mutual domestic fire insurance companies, $1,626; .005 per cent. Motor vehicle license—$1,828,399; collected in Cleveland and grew up in Buffalo, said she felt “so humble.” She was thinking of all the great men and women who have sung at the “Met.” | GOULD TO RENT CASINOS Nice. France, Nov. 28.—(#)—Frank J. Gould Monday announced negoti- ations were under way to lease his Riviera Casinos and hotels to a syn- dicate for 2,000,000 francs (about CAN'T KICK POLICEMAN | Jersey City, Nov. 28—(P)—A cow; 6.53 per cent. Cigarette and snuff license tax, $27,938; .08 per cent. Oleomargarine tax, none. Income tax: Individual, $105,000; 32 per cent. Corporation, $112,285; 34 per cent. ane tax—$4,225; 013 per ceuheritance tax—$16,044; 05 per Of all taxes the amount collectible by county treasurers was $30,800,315 {nm 1931, or 86.01 per cent, and $28,- 420,248 in 1932 or 85.64 per cent. EVELYN THAW ILL New York, Nov. 28.—(?)—Evelyn Nesbit Thaw believes she has made hher last appearance as a night club cannot kick a policeman and get away with it.” After police squads had; worked two hours Sunday extricating a cow from a railroad cut into which the animal had fallen, she became ex- cited and kicked an officer. The en- raged officer tied the cow to a pole and unlimbered his pistol. The pros- pects for beef steak for policemen Monday were very, very bright. IRELAND FACES STRIKE Dublin, Irish Free State, Nov. 28— (®)—The Irish Free State Monday faced the prospect of a railway strike: ‘as the outgrowth of an announcement | ($80,000) annually. It was said Gould would not be responsible for uncol- lected notes representing losses at tne gaming tables at his various re- sorts. (Dispatches from Nice asearly as 1929 told of losses amounting to $800,000 in the first five months of that year.) Rainbows may mean the approach of either good or bad weather. Tired Ks Nervous entertainer. Taken ill eight months appearing at a St. Louis tf soothed. She banished that “dead tired” feel- CUSTOMS OFFICIALS 28. P)—Bix The weather conditions over the 24 Great Northern Train Derailed in Montana Whitefish, Mont. Nov. 28—(?)— The engine and one car of Great Northern mail train 28 were derailed near Hidden Lake, east of here, Sat- urday night, after an eight-ton rock rolled onto the main line tracks, Traffic was resumed at 3:30 p. m., Sunday. Train 28, east-bound, had been held at Nyack, at the southern border of Glacier National Park, for 16 hours, while Train 27, west-bound, was five hours late arriving here. A mail clerk and two cooks on pri- vate cars were slightly injured in the derailment. The private cars were those of J. 8. O'Neill of Seattle, gen- ~| eral manager of lines west of St. Paul. and H. H. Brown, of St. Paul, vice president of the traffic department. Sixth District Vets To Meet at Belfield Belfield, N. D., Nov. 28.—Members of the American Legion in the sixth judicial district. will meet here Dec- || Kidneys tenalil sane? wBladder infogularities | Are you bothered with blad- der irregularities, getting up at night and nagging backache? Heed promptly these symp- toms. They may warn of some disordered kidney or bladder condition. Users everywhere rely on Doan’s Pills. Praised for 50 years the country over. Sold all druggists. | ember 14, according to announce- j ment Monday by John Neukoop, commander of William C. Blair which will be host to the gathering. Problems affecting Legionnaires and Legion posts in ‘this area will be dis- cussed with State Commander H. 8. Kreidler, Wahpeton; State Adjutant Jack Williams, Fargo, and others, including .T. O. Kraabel, state re- habilitation officer and a represent- All World and Spanish-American war veterans in this area have been invited by the Belfield post to at- tend the meeting. Air-Express Rates Slashed Sharply Taking cognizance not only of in- creased volume of air-express traf- fic, but of a constantly ascending scale of weight averages of shipments service, which embraces 11,266 miles of operation over the major air- routes of the United States. The rate revision, ranging from 15 to 30 per cent, is the fourth to be issued by the Railway Express sys- tem since the inauguration of its air- express service six years ago. MIGHTY NIMROD Stockton, Cal.—Either the deer Frank Sylva, Sonora hunter, shot at was adept at dodging bullets, or it had a charmed life—anyhow, Frank brought a deer home recently. He declared that it was the same deer he had shot 37 times during the past few weeks. His 38th bullet brought it down, ‘ QUICKER THAN A WINK Boston—“Quick as a wink” is pret- ty fast, but not too fast for the new high-speed camera that was describ- by air, the Railway Express Agency, |Ine., Monday announced nation-wide reductions in tariff rates, to become effective December 1 and applying upon business over its air-express The Home Newspa) 222 Fourth Street: ed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology recently. Members of the institution, by means of the camera,| urged calculated the wink of an eye to be ‘one-fortieth of a second. THATCHER COLT used it to solve the MYSTERY of GERALDINE Beginning on Tuesday, Nov. 29 Subscribe Today and Receive All the Installments THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE per in Bismarck, Burleigh County and the Missouri Slope | earaerarengreeneeneenmacesssea Teena Alberta Farmers ‘Consider Strike Calgary, Alta., Nov. 28—(?)—After debating a. general wheat strike pro- posal from farmers of the Rumsey district, 100 miles northeast of here, delegates to.the annual meeting of the Alberta wheat pool prepared to resume discussion on a dozen prob- Jems Monday, and probably tackle the strike proposals again before the meeting closes. Pressed by delegates from the Rumsey district, the call for all farm- ers in western Canada to produce only sufficient for their own needs in 1933 was thrown into the pool dis- cussions Saturday behind closed doors. Officials merely said “a farm strike” proposal had been discussed. While not taking any definite stand, the convention discussed the strike proposals from all angles, it ‘was learned. Many of the 70 dele- ‘HUNGER STRIKE’ REPORTED Calgary, Nov. 28—Calgary city po lice and Royal Canadian Fa pope lice investigated reports of a pro) “hunger march” to Edmonton by job. less from all parts of Alberta. Police information said the jobless, under direction of Communists, planned to gather in Calgary Dec. 6 and walk the 200 miles from here to Edmonton. GOOD NEWS MOTHERS ‘Two-thirds less school days lost due to colds—with Vicks Colds-Control Plan. You have Vicks VapoRub for treating colds. Now get Vicks Nose Drops—the new aid in pre- col gates, representing 42,300 members, support of the strike as a pro- test against present wheat and other HE instrument pictured above is Tt is actually and successfully used today known as “the lie-detector.” in the questioning of suspects. It regis- ters in wavy lines on a tape, not unlike stock-ticker tape, the action of the heart and the lungs when answering questions. Thatcher Colt, the modern successor of Sherlock Holmes in detec- tive fiction, used it when he was Police Commissioner of New York, in solving that most baffling case, the murder of that prétty girl, Geraldine Foster, whose picture filled the papers not so long ago. a rf . Bismarck, N. Dak.

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