The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 16, 1932, Page 1

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hf et North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 French _ Deaths Mount as ; {New os —] OY $000 AGAIN MIDDLEWEST AND EAST BEAR BRUNT OF COLD ATTACK Fires Add to Suffering Caused THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1932 Troubles Aggravate Winter Continues Its Reign Nation’s Cash Crops Cut Sharply in 1932 Sorry She Bared Fugitive’s Secret “4 TO SOLICIT AID FOR ‘OPENHEART’ DRIVE Will Visit Bismarck Homes Sat- Production of Wheat, Cotton, Tobacco and Rice Fell to Low Level Chicago, Dec. 16.—(#)—Two women, once rivals for the af- |ROUSE 10 VOTE ON | ee nea ° 8.2 BEER MEASURE BEFORE CHRISTMAS; Collier Bill Revised By Commit- tee For Presentation Next so His Words! Weather Report — cl it and y PRICE FIVE CENTS CHAUTEMPS FAILS IN HIS ATTEMPTS TO FORM CABINE? Tells President He Cannot Sat: isfy Both Herriot and Chamber of Deputies UNABLE TO FIND FORMULA By Weather At Chicago urday; Housewives Asked fection’ of Robert Elliott. Burns, et Fugitive from a Chain to Have Gifts Ready FEED CROP WAS INCREASED) Gn, tome, had ex sor- Tuesday Convinced Uneasiness Between and Milwaukee PACIFIC COAST WARMS UP MANY FAMILIES ARE HELPED Agriculture Department Says row Friday on his latest arrest in Newark, N. J. The one, Miss Emilia Pino, for- mer wife of the man who was ELIMINATE WINE PROVISION France and U. S. Should » Be Terminated Ae Larger Total Acreage Was rei ge twice a hte ina feted chain "he " larvested gang and who just as often es- H i Navigation Hazardous on Great Several Hundred Children to Re: Harveste: Bang, Aedmitted she was srry f0F Senate Judiciary Vessels Senemenie Lakes; Phoenix, Ariz., ceive New Clothes as Cash pees revealed his identity in Moves For Protection of Paris, Dec. 16.—()—Camille Is Contributed Washington, Dec. 16—(#)}—The n8-| That was when Burns, then h Dry States Chautemps told President Lebrun Reports Snow alle tion’s farmers in 1932 harvested ®| nusband, Semen hie nian: y Friday night he had been unable larger total acreage than the previous tions fo ere Salo br to Lcd cy baer was im- Bismarck Boy Scouts will start out year but their production of wheat, wanted Miss Pino to free him Washington, Dec. 16.—(P)—A vote — J (By The Associated Press) because he could not find a -for- Tha thy igfip OF Hinler’s udvanch kt ngite Satetday serine to complete cotton, tobacco and rice was sharply| ‘at he might irae eee he tented pet ack ee be- mala on the debt question which ‘ the solicitation of Bismarck homes |reduced. Instead, Bi id, she caused re Christmas was de! ly in pros- wot satisfy th the chamber f tack held firm! Jarge secti instead, Burns said, she caus the nation so Pd bx the sareepon ‘Thomas J. Courtney, above, is the | for donations to the American Le-| The agriculture department’s final] his arrest and ultimate return to |Pect Friday as Democratic leaders rs bebo and erg morte i) . young and vigorous state’s attorney |gion's “Open Your Heart” campaign. checkup of the year’s crop production the gang. Thursday night she |formed their les to insure its pass- e retiring premier. He he \ the great plain states of the middle- hom Chicago is pinning its faith said she hoped he wouldn’t be sent . was convinced that the interna- a | vvectrii fia tais ett ce ‘is entbe’| cororcemmued orrrdrassinae recksteeti:| vive. unk wrarezrec ar boys, will|Thursday showed these leading cash) bo" ocain She sald B age. tional uneasiness between France SA ; Ing the brunt of the suffer-/in a renewed drive against racketeers.| 1151+ nomes in those sections of the crops, of which’ there is normally % trial i . She sal ae ‘The house ways and means commit- and the U. 8. should not be per- FA ing it entailed. A newly-formed “hoodlum squad” has} | surplus for export, fell off most of all. ked her when they were mar- tee approved modification of the Vol-| -———————————=—=—=—==-|__ mitted to go on, but in spite of already brought in ® haul of tough|city not previously covered. House-| «Production of several other cash| ried, as she charged him with stead act Thursday to permit the|If you had started the wordy 1uore} his efforts he felt himself having wed another Chicago wo- |manutacture and sale of beer of 3.2|that Wilfred J. Funk did, you would) obliged to give up his ides of ‘Temperatures ranging all the way from just above zero to 15 below were common throughout the middlewest In Chicago, where four persons were reported dead, squatters and other homeless were hard hit. and emerg- ency welfare workers were spurred on to greater efforts to bring relief to the jobless. Fires added to the discomforts of the elements. In Chicago 15 unpaid firemen were overcome by smoke ‘Thursday night in fighting a fire in @ brick storehouse in the stockyards district, while at Milwaukee 14 in- mates of a home for the aged were driven by fire into the streets, where the thermometer reading was five be- rackel characters, and Courtney has pealed to business men to help get the goods on bese and WFARLAND RULES SALARY SLASH LAW I CNSTIUMIONAL Plaintiffs Will Appeal to Su- ap- when the boys call. gratifying, ilies sorely in ne Charity Cash Fund Takes Jump Upward Cash for use by the “Open Your Heart” committee in buying shoes wives are asked to prepare packages him|of whatever material they can give labor jto the fund and have them ready Response to appeals of the “Open Your Heart” committee has been most L. V. Miller, campaign chairman, said Friday, and the or- ganization is giving aid to many fam- ed. Lists of children who will be unable to continue in school unless they get clothing are being checked and the committee ex- crops, such as flaxseed, rye, beans and buckwheat, also was low,” it was re- bitery “due chiefly to acreage reduc- ons.” The report in general told a story lof substantially lower production of crops raised for sale and substantially heavier production of feed crops than in either of the last two years. In area, harvested, 1932, with its to- tal of 352,825,000 acres, exceeded the previous year by about 1 per cent but fell slightly below the figures for the two preceding years. “The production of fruits,” the gen- eral review prepared by the crop re- porting board said, “was substantially below the average due to weather conditions. Feed Grains Plentiful man four years before. As for Miss Salo she said she certainly was sorry and hoped it wouldn’t go too hard on him this time if he is forced to return to the chain gang which he de- scribed vividly in a recent story and motion picture. MILLERS PROTEST AGAINST PROPOSED ALLOTMENT SYSTEM per cent alcoholic content by weight, and Chairman Collier planned to in- troduce his revised measure Friday for a vote Tuesday. oo The committee Friday disapproved the Lea bill to legalize wine. The vote was 14 to 9 against a mo- tion to report the bill to the house for action, as had been done Thursday with the Collier bill to allow 3.2 per cent beer. ‘The committee agreed Thursday to consider the wine measure, which was sponsored by Representative Lea (Dem., Cal.). ‘The committee action will not pre- vent wine proponents from seeking to amend the beer bill in the house to — light wines, along with the smile also. Funk, who is eminent not only as a New York publisher but as @ poet too, recently named what he termed the 10 most beautiful words in the English language—and im- mediately became the target for at- tacks from other writers and linguists who have their own favorite words. Here are Funk's 10 choices: Dawn,| Hush, Lullaby, Murmuring, Tranqtil, Mist, Luminous, Chimes, Golden, Melody. * (GRONNA ANNOUNCES SHAFT WILL BE ONE forming a ministry. Paris, Dec. 16.—()}—A momentous conference to find a solution in the American debt crisis was to be held in the foreign ministry Friday with Edouard Herriot, overthrown premier, really presiding and plugging with all his might to find some means of se- curing reconsideration by the cham- ber of its decision to postpone pay- ment. It included Premier - Designate Camille Chautemps, Louis Germain- Martin, finance minister under Her- riot, Georges Bonnet, former minister of commerce, and others. Herriot continued his inflexible de- {termination not to enter a new Chau- |temps cabinet unless France follows low. Ice blocks in the Great Lakes made preme Court For Final = hazard e “The production of feed grains 5 ° Se ae amit an tie ARREINE Decision on Issue for school children yas ener now || (corm. oats, barley, and grain sorgh _chalzman Coller told reporters the in tine his draft of a text to Wash- iY rie, Pa. Thursday night, after an stands at $2460. New donors and’ uma combined) was the largest snes | Declare Plan Would Impose | 2t°.se0t7s "ane notte content in na OF HS ASSIST ANTS ington and honors i signature pend- ice-bre: made the amount! ven are: \- Se erm to: aafely of ice. |, Constitutionality of the salery-re-| a Friend ae #100 || Produced per unit of grain consuming| Sales Tax That Would Urey certs wre pied Mths | ‘The significance of the presence of bound fishermen. The crew escaped duction law enacted by the voters in|| pF Peters .. 3.00 |{@nimals on farms was about 10 pec . aa" spirit o! treasury officials—Louis Escallier and i, bound es November was upheld by Judge R. G.|| Commercial Service, In 230 ||cent above the average for the last 10 Double Price of Flour Mio tie sbbtis tatveca ten ial Rolla, Mandan and Finley Men | Scoees Bizot—was that the leaders \ "The oll-burning Steam Mascot had | McFarland in Burleigh county district |! Cosmopolitan Club. 10.00 || ears. ih Lee ene as nae pens pov pet z jwere stu problem of : to put back to port at Sandusky, O.. ‘court Thursday. An alternative writ!) irs, B. H. Duerhing 1.00 “The hay crop was larger than vrittee xeviead the original Collier ill Named as Other Attorney the chai to authorize after making a futile attempt to plow fel mandamus against the state audit- Frank 8, Henry, Minneapolis 5.00 ene of i last ire. years, though | Washington, Dec, 1a aa ‘which had-cafled for 5 te beer, to eo General Aides ‘ een through the Lake Erie with 10 board wes : A Friend + 200 }|* low the ‘usual 4 men for the flour milling indus ‘ 2 at : passengers bolnd for +e. wtpay|,, Scott Cameron, Bismarck, who st- || Gilbert Semings 29) ||" Estimating winter wheat production |told the house agriculture committee seperti acral ial | It was understood Herriot an@ Piand with @ Christmas cargo. ‘The|‘ecked the law, said De will take the|| alex Rosen and Brother Soo ||at_ 462,151,000 bushels compered with|Friday the domestic allotment farm) “Counter estimate tl se the brew is| Minot, N. D., Dec. 16—(P)—Attor- Chautemps are actively communicate passengers were discharged near San-|*2¢ to the state supreme court. ig? 00 ||| 787,893,000 in 1931, the board ascribed |relfef plan would impose an exorbit- | egatized $175,000,000 in dell ity} Peep ee UD A TOA aS jing with Ambassador Paul Claudel to dusky. Attorney General James Morris, ee Taitterence to “decreased plant-\ant sales tax that would double the |i sited annual isonet (ete median hur J. Gronns/ determine whether the Washington Slight moderation in temperatures who defended the auditing board at) ings, especially in the’ north central} price of flour to the consumer. <a a oP - re ve ge SE boon artes government was able to help Prance eee Tr ceasmectionaiot toa hy Mans ance etre ene writ ings, especie er yields in all ateas|” Pred J. Lingham, of Lockport, N. ¥..| "ete jas ag exist. Brew exon sists) Rae ee ine iad ill be| in snatching the problem from the €x~ Sey in onicaes An Kaaeed nce eae be issued, except the far western states.” chpirman of the legislative committee |State laws as exist. Beceors leton |y, en he assumes office the first of isting deadlock. } Ties tne ore anciine ial ihevimete | ce that while some parts cept the fer mn crop was given 85 lof the millers national federation, said| Were ingrmses Thom, Ct ota on ARUMTY: sn tal Atinenen onacios| Coe politicians saw a lessening of , Ce eerout tna teat menanyivania lte teen penne while some Part | pects to provide several hundred with | 2.998,045,000 bushels, or 13 per cent|the demand for bread under present | a $50 annual fee imposed on| ‘The aides will be Attorneys Charles| tension and a desire to have the ques~ ghou! enst. nsylvania|?he nection attacked in the present| assistance. Generous contributions by larger than 1931 and 41 per cent|iow prices was so reduced many bak- wholesale and $20 on retailers. Verret, Rolla, Milton K. Higgins, Man-|tion reopened. im reported Gagtiery peur of 2 to 20] case is constitutional. local business houses as well a8 by! above the short crop of 1930. ens have been forced out of business.| _ Representative Rainey of Illinois,|dan, and Harold D. Shaft, Minot. P| walter E. Edge, the American am~ am edt Ldeouere pred se JS ction was instituted by John| individuals are making this possible.) Cotton production was fixed at 12-| “If you double the ut of Mnrough|Democratic floor leader, .said the|O. Sathre, Finley, now assistant] parcader, continued to maintain his ttt the movement was downward. Gammons, secretary of the state se-| Another load of toys was sent to| 727,000 bales compared to 17,096,000 in | this sales tax I don't know what they | eneit ‘would be taken’ up in the| United States district attorney, has! policy of “hands off.” yw + Kentucky had its coldest ther in curities commission, who sought to|the penitentiary Friday to be repaired | 1931. would do,” he said. jouse next Tuesday. been invited to take the other position" Chautemps sought @ formula to - weather in|Compel the auditing board to allow ‘by prisoners theye, but Miller said) A tobacco production less than two-| | “We regard a Ha. tax on foods on| But opposition appeared in a notice of assistant but Gronna as Yet has)reconeile conflicting attitudes in Re Unless | thirds as large as in 1931 was ascrib-|any such basis as this as fundament- by Representative Hawley of Oregon not sepelved an scoeptance te ee Chamber of deputies toward the late at prese! an ass! int at- government and to permit the re- sumption of negotiations with Wash- ington and the return of Edouard Herriot to the foreign office to con~ duct them. Chautemps’ friends indicated they hoped for some official expression from Washington giving assurance & debt conference would be called in there is still need for toys. they are contributed, he said, many children will suffer the disappoint- ranking Republican on the committee, that he would file a minority report because he believed the bill unconstt- tutional. Making rapid progress in framing four years with four above at Louis- ville, while Indiana reported records of three years’ standing had been. broken. In Ohio, where near-zero and below zero brought the coldest weather of the season, three persons ‘were in mishaps attributed to the cold his full salary for December. The board allowed him 80 per cent of the pay he has been receiving, contend- ing the measure under which salaries }ment on Christmas morning which of state officials and employees is only a child’s heart can know when reduced 20 per cent became effective |he realizes that Santa Claus has for- Dec. 8. . gotten him. The case was designed as a test ed almost entirely to “a shift from/ally wrong. He believes it would be cash to feed and food crops required |so obnoxious it soon would be repeal- by economic conditions.” ed.” Productions Listed It was Lingham’s second day on the Production this year, with revised|stand. Preceding him, Frederick Lee, figures of last year’s production, fol- | spokesman for organized farm groups, ® prohibition repeal resofution, a sen- rs had urged the voluntary allotment|ate judiciary subcommittee Friday Corn, 2,908,045,000 bushels, compar-|plan for wheat, cotton, tobacco and|agreed on a provision to prevent im- portation of liquor into dry states. torney general, having served with! Attorney General James Morris dur- ing the four years he has held the office. In announcing that he is pleased to have Shaft remain as an assistant, Gronna said he regards him as a law- yer of outstanding ability and an as- Meanwhile, operations at the head- quarters continue in full blast. Be- shape. with a view to taking it to the state ‘The Pacitic coast states, however | supreme court for final determination, |tween 40 and 45 members ‘of the Le-| ed with 2,567,306,000 bushels last year; |hogs. Under his recommendations, were getting relief with moderating|Gemeron argued the act violated sev- gion are devoting their spare time) winter wheat, 482,151,000 and 787.393, |the producer would be paid a bounty| After two days of discussion, the |set to the office. the early future, which would help subcommittee tentatively appoved the| All of those chosen for assistants | him materially. out of a processing tax sufficient to raise the purchasing power of these |following language to protect states which want to remain dry: farm commodities to their pre-war “The transportation or importation level. Lingham testified the proposed tax|into any state, territory or possession on milling “would make flour boot-|of the United States for delivery or legging.one of the most profitable in-|use therein, of intoxicating liquors, in dustries in the United States.” violation of the laws thereof, is here- “We believe that unless there Was|by prohibited.” 000; durum wheat, 39,868,000,000 and 20,712,000; other spring wheat, 224,- 812,000 and 92,114,000; all wheat, 726,831,000 and 900,219,000; oats, 1,- 242,437,000 and 1,117,970,000; barley, 299,950,500 and 198,389,000; rye, 39,- 855,000 and 32,026,000; buckwheat, 6,- 844,000 and 8,690,000; flaxseed, 11,841,- 000 and 11,798,000; rice, 39,356,000 and to the enterprise and every section of the work is functioning in high gear. “To the average individual some of the stuff which we give away would seem of little value,” Miller comment- ed, “but it is much better than noth- ing and it is surprising what use can be made of things which people in Upon the success of finding the formula depended the acceptance by Chautemps of appointment as pre- mier, for he regards the inclusion of his former chief, Herriot, in the cabinet as indispensable. have been given the approval of the executive committee of the Nonpar- tisan League, the attorney general- elect said. Gronna was returning to his home at Williston, after visiting with Attor- ney General Morris, when he passed through Minot Thursday. He spent ‘Wednesday in the attorney general's temperatures, but in the southwest the residents still were ‘shivering. Phoenix, Ariz. had snow Thursday “for the first time in 25 years, but it melted as rapidly as it fell. Hoovers Planning eral sections of the state constitution, {0 JAPANESE DIE | SPECTACULAR FIRE WASHINGTON AWAITS Vacation in South / ashington; Deo 16—Ue)-—Prel eens betier reumstancee noone ee oe: 3D ic TzTAGO vaes| mil’ there woul. be Wiliesing of te a” wi » be .- le 7 in 000; cot 1» 12, mi re wol Ht Sf! 4 tt int some ‘ € dent Hoover ee Oe aeciaea | Victims Jump, Crowds Press, or repaired ‘and placed in, much | bet and 17,006,000 gteseed, 5,659,000 flour,” Lingham said. ie Senate Changes Mind |‘f"t. Seat ne operation of the PR aa Re Pri ; vacatit - than al 602,000; hay tame) 69,-! He esti that for every a +} % been invited by day upon a, Christmas ion| Planes Fly, Troops Fix Bay: tons and 7,602,000; ni tps all hay, becrel tax on flour there would be a On Independence Bill ote, having recen tly been y ture ot war aha Haida, a ig and economic some applicants for help now are ‘wearing. We emphasize again that no gift is too small and, of ‘course, none is too large.” which has thrown @ vast question mark across the international horizon. ‘With five nations in default on De- He will return to Bismarck imme- diately after Christmas to spend the remainder of the time until the first of the new year, familiarizing himselt one-cent increase on the price of the average loaf of bread. Representative Flannigan (Dem., Va.), asked why it would be neces- 81,788,000 tons and 73,436,000; beans (dry edible) 10,095,000 bags of 100 Tbs. ‘and 12,662,000; soybeans, 16,953,000 ‘Washington, Dec. 16.—(?)—The sen- ate Friday reversed itself and reject: ed @ proposal to free the Philippines trip to Florida, leaving the capital a day or two before Christmas and spending at least a week in the south onets, Animals Scream ‘tra boat and automobile. veling by t ‘itty tl ess} Tokyo, De. Ne Penons ; aumerous reels ee ald hate bushels, and 19,241,000; fen testified, to|1n elght years, might not adjourn for the customary | Were killed » jured | been received by rom varlous | 403,050,000 pounds, an , sary, as Lingham had testified, \ 4 with the attorney general's office. cember payments and two others pay- Frere Killed ‘abectacular fire in the| parts of the county, Miller sald. These | potatoes, 356,859,000 bushels, and 31S,-|charge $7 = barrel for flows St $t ane Rime Niesnentars ese fo |"Gronna has rented a house at Bis- in reconsideration, every ign marck, and Mrs. Gronna and thei: two children, Anne, aged six, and Su- zanne, aged four, will move to Bis- marck the first of the year. Cutting Offers New wheat when before the war $1 wheat was making flour that sold from $4.36 to $5 a barrel. Lingham said that the difference would be in the by-products, arguing that very low prices on the by-prod- ucts today would force the price of poi efforts by the foreign debtors to ease their obligations before the next in- stallments became due in June. Official Washington, over the $98,685,910 collected Thursday out of the $124,000,000 due this govern- it, Hoover 10-day recess over the holidays, or the occurrence of some entirely unexpect- ed crisis in national or international fairs, stand in the way of a final at decisidn. ° Senator Broussard (Dem. La.), and paved the way for a vote of the Hawes-cutting compromise to grant independence in 14 years instead of 18 or 19 as originally provided. Some senators had contended the requests are being investigated and the committee is doing what it can to extend aid, since its purpose {s not | pounds, and 1,604,226,000; sugar beets, to limit its activity to the city of | 8,991,000 tons, and 7,903,000; sugar Bismarck but to serve everyone in|cane (La) 3,401,000 tons, and 2,717,- Burleigh county as much as possible. broom corn,’33,000 tons, and 44,- hops, 24,120,000 pounds, and 26,- big Shirokiya Department store. Tt originated in Christmas tree and spread rapidly through large Stocks of celluloid toys. ‘The fire broke out before many customers had arrived but it was es- 63,043,000; 000; 000; Ghristrras |B Ps Tw Teall net ual eepne ina wanncaty vos is ata aece'a 4 , Of Wi or mostly | need for nearly evel - | 410,000; a] , 139,156,000 bushels, | flour high. Tus sales gitls—were trapped on upper|able,” Miller said, “but we have to sO on Ave peaches, 46,267,000] He insisted that holding out a misapprehension, and that many of Crop Loan Measure — \ Customs floors at first. UPPSr | eatrict our giving to the things which | and 76,586,000; pears, 21,981,000 and| bounty would increase | production those answering the roll call did not = | In the panic, a few jumped and|are donated to us. We have to keep |23,346,000; grapes, 2,162,000 tons andj despite the in the bill re-|Tealize the amendment not only reduc: Washington, Dec. 16—(P)}—Crop; hor the teal ‘tom FOREIGN LAN were killed. Others were suffocated |in mind that our primary object this | 1,622,000; oranges (7 states) 48,788,000 | quiring a 20 per cent reduction to|ed the probation period but eliminated | production loans through 1933 from poe Bi yen, He ‘with the de. before firemen began a series of spec-| year is to keep children in school by |boxes, and 49,734,000; srapetrutt (4 make the plan effective. > et Legorep eens be ee nS nearer balances ot tbe aoe aad rove states) 13,221,000 boxes and 15,147,000;| “It would be impossib! to get administered by cr Hoover will submit, probably next Philippine bonded indebtedness. dey nt were called for Friday in Monday, his con the satan tacular rescues. Hundreds were tak- | seeing that they are properly clothed.” ‘en off the baloony of the 6,000,000 wheat farmers to act con- fifth Friday’s vote against the Broussard ja bill by Senator Cutting (Rep. N. M.). of the war debts. This is 4 lemons (Calif.) 7,000,000 boxes and 7,- cranberries, floor by ladders, ropes and canvas chutes. 4 x % iderately in increasing their out- owe ‘army airplanes assisted by Sharp Veteran Cuts eran 026,00 Rise. 008 put” en oe amendment was 45 to 31. ‘The measure would provide that all) +, oa: dropping Ia Proposed by Hines of the money made available to the pated Bh ts Seen eo ‘A battalion of troops, with fixed ; pil Pee . . Mandan Treasurer agriculture department from the re- 4 s sa fd or ke pee: |, annem, oe, on reeet-|Last Outpost of Civilization in Offers Resignati See Spates ing fire lines and blocking traffic | sion of disability allowances to all vet- ers signa’ on att ary sue ws alee eee ceeesece| Minnesota Woods R Wilds! neice 21 7,2,,zemerer. of J. A. b ‘The seven-story building was lett |Ore cy or. tines, veter d esota eturns to 0 etieOReacurer of Mandan was pre- |t!o0 6 trator, with an estimate the - sented to the city commission after a| The, loam H In a menagerie on the roof garden,| ment ‘would save $51,344,000 the first six-hour conference that ran until 1|same tem two lions, two bears, and several m6n- | year, Deer River, Minn., Dec. 16.—(7) stretches of tall timber to gold 8. m. Friday. appl ey keys were roaring and screaming, 844- |" "The recommendation, made to a| —“Ghost” towns, relics of and fame. The resignation was not accepted, plage ‘this ing to the panic. All of them sur-| joint congressional committee study-| the days when ’s north- ‘Here was genuine frontier life pending completion of an audit that |Top failure this year. / vived since the fire did not penetrate |ing'economies in veterans costs, start-| land was one big pine forest, dot centering a he has been carried on in the treasurer's " the Oot, . eotimated-unotticially 04,® Rested argument with 4, sare | the big woods, but Oralgville is | assortment of humanity—French- office for the last month, Man Who Frightened yo t Robinson (Rep. Ind.), an advocate of first among the last remnants of trappers of the old Hud- ‘Allegations of discrepanci@s in the| at about 20,000,000 yen (about $4,000,- |iiheral treatment of’ veterans, who} the once thriving industry. son Bay company, gawky axmen, |city treasurer's office were made at Solons Is 000). challenged the equity of the proposal. Its frame shacks sagging and swaggering teams! ‘who snapped the conference, and members of the — J ‘ Hines sald it would remove 356,555 creaking in the stinging north wicked whips over six-team log- {commission plan to make a claim ‘Dec. 16.—(P)—Mariin Canadian Wheat Crop {persons trom disability rolls. : wind, the mirth, laughter and song | sing. rigs Professional gamblers, | against the state bonding fund. ‘The proposal followed a recommen- of the gay old frontier days seem- crooks, bulging bartenders ‘Timmerman has been city treasur- | tempted Valued at 133 ON |astion that the retroactive period for} ing to echo from the wooded and the other habitues that made er since 1923. the house — the payment of veterans awards or| background, Craigville Friday has the place the mecca of the back- point of ® Ottawa, Ont., Dec. " be by half. Just absorbed the meanest blow. ‘woods folk. 5 SHAW HAS SOLUTION jury action Dominion bureau of statistics has es- ‘Hines said the retroactive ‘The 60-mile rail connection, Then the forests dwindled; London, Dec. 16.-—-(P)--Bernard|sault with a timated the total value of the 1922| would save $15,000,000 annually. linking the old logging center Craigville withered ‘and now the Shaw's farewell jest to London as he} Judge Gus wheat crop at $133,866,000, ° ‘would affect 146,000] with the outside world since 1680 snow on Main street, once aglow |left Thursday with Mrs. Shaw, en| Kemmerer ‘with $117,800,000 in 1981 and }- | former service hag been removed. with the light of kerosene lamps, route to the south of France to join | meanwhile. 000 in 1990. another saving of Built just south of the Caziadian shining through frosted windows, | round-the-world liner, was “give| The charge total of field ¢ $3,640,000 a year by transferring veter-| border, Craigville in the early is trampled under the feet of Ireland to the United States and ll-|plaint of E. J. the tab ged quidete all the war debts.” ‘The | honing. eeeenres India, ver Hi I

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