The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 16, 1933, Page 1

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“the ee North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper . ESTABLISHED 1873 AREER ATE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 1933 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Weather Report — Partly cloudy t; Tuesday gen- erally fair, with ising’ temp, PRICE FIVE CENTS Snowstorm Hampers Traffic Senate Would Limit Farm [_Calls to Prayer ]i\Committee Favors | 'N. D. Capitol Probe SENATE FILBU CONTINUES AS FOES SURPLUS PRODUCTS WOULD BE FAVORED BY SOME SENATORS Sentiment Is Growing to Make Allotment Applicable to Only Few Things WOULD BAR SEVERAL ITEMS Peanuts and Butter Fat Among Things Scheduled to Go If Idea Prevails Mt Neteitig He atueutn ment for the of the domestic allotment plan to such commodities as have an exportable surplus sprang up Monday in the sen- ate agricultural committee. Such action would exclude peanuts and dairy products from the scope of the measure, While this view was being express. ed by some members of the commit- prot should be put into effect on two com- modities—wheat and cotton—to de- termine its feasibility before trying it out on the other five commodities now embraced by it. A further farm-aid measure was in sight through announcement of chairman Steagall of the house bank. ing committee that Wednesday or ‘Thursday his committee would work on a temporary farm mortgage re- lief bill, designed to cut interest rates and give direct aid in some cases to foreclosure. halt 5 Steagall to Sponsor It Steagall plans to introduce the measure and start hearings on it and on @ measure to expand the currency, about the middle of the week. It would set up a national farm finance corporation with $1,400,000,000 for loans to farmers through the federal reserve bank sys- tem. The drastic rewriting of the allot- ment plan bill, passed by the house and now in the senate agriculture committee, was held up while senator Smith (Dem. 8. C.), caught a train for New York to consult with Presi- dent-elect Roosevelt. After a brief general discussion, the committee recessed until Tuesday morning. Since the bill the house last week by @ vote of 203 to 151 the meas- ure has found luke-warm reception among some Democrats of the senate. As now written, the bill has failed to satisfy such Independent Repub- lcan farm belt senators as Frasier (Rep., N. D.), who said Monday, “I it il suet i g H 8 i i! ii E F § senate s motion to cut em- salaries 20 cent pre- by Senator end Sen. Motthaci's for! per cent cut carried, j a ie International Complication May Result; Say Safe Passage Guaranteed aE it [ i rae FERe E z | i : F | | é ; i if z | : | i : iy i i 5 RFE Ie i ete H i Fi i i a f S52 E : i ¢. i afl ee i EF? 32 it it E 5 i d E ‘ i | | i | i thst; Wi sli cpell “tl al. i Hl fi F i : : i if ir f i i , E [ i at was found shot to death hey Saray "te “corwoee 16 years ago Ball had been s grower, : SEEK Long-Winded Talkers Enter Makes No Changes in Resolu- tion Carrying $7,500 to Finance Investigation CLOTURER Fifth Day of Effort to Beat BPs efe; F z g 4 valid i A | | i i ih i E i He ne aE Rea ee 5 President- Aaa ibs ‘ a i Banking Bill | ! a5 i IS URGED ON F. R. Men Will Best Serve in Present Crisis | I i HF s be gee. eHiste FE i § & g i 5 rE i 2 a Elect Told Young H sell Pray & is 5 sf eg a 8 Hl i Fa | eye of its existence, EXECUTIVE SESSION HELD Chairman George A. Bangs Outlines Methods and Work of Building Group ‘The senate state affairs committee, after a hearing on the resolution to investigate the capitol building com- ‘The hearing, being conducted be- ich |fore the senate state affairs commit- tee, with members of the house state she ih Sst Mie 5 ngs ex} activities of the commission. Mr. and Mrs. Fowler McCormick, shown above, were visitors in Bis- marck over the week-end, Mr. Mc- Cormick having come here to confer with J. C. Taylor of the International the | Harvester company. An heir to har- vester millions, he is one of the chief vig- executives of that corporation. (..0.P. FORCES RALLY FOR FIGHT T0 RULE czziPARTY'S CONCLAVES unanimously. The three members of the commis- sion—Bangs, G. A. Fraser of Fargo and F. L. Conklin of Bismarck—wers In opening the hearing, Hamilton declared “this is not an investigation,” but @ hearing to determine the merit ry |4. Hoover's friends, however, Fowler interjected questions, ton warned again that the busi- before the committee was a hear- Bangs declared 110 formal meetings in the 21 from one tg 10 he said, was $5,400, oot | ing o¢ | talking about having the present Hoover and Old-Guard Ready For Battle Over Commit- tee Chairmanship ‘Washington, Jan. 16.—()—Rumb- lings among Republican forces fore- cast a stirring contest soon between the old guard and followers of Pres- ident Hoover for control of the party organization. Already a move has been started to resist any effort by Hoover's friends to have him retain the titu- lar chieftainship of the party after he retires from the presidency. Indications are that the struggle, now being waged behind the scenes, will break into the open after March appear vv that he =O have little dif- ity in holding reins. That Hoover desires to continue as the dominating factor in the ofgan- ization with a view either of seeking the presidential nomination in 1936 or dictating the nominee, is the belief generally held by Republicans on Capitol Hill. But members of the old guard, who themselves slighted dur- Hoover administration, are party set up “cleaned up from top to bottom” and a new organization LOCAL TREASURERS THROUGHOUT STATE Measure Introduced By Pierce County Solon Would Place Duties on One Man PROVIDES BUSINESS METHOD Counter-Signed Warrants Would Be Necessary to Pay Out Public Money Abolition of treasurers of townships, villages and of cities and school dis- tricts having a population under 4,000 4s sought in the bill presented to the North Dakota house Saturday by D. L. Peters, Pierce county. His bill proposes the work of these Officials be transferred to the county treasurer and the bond required by each be applied to the county official ‘a8 ex-officio treasurer of each munici- ality. Peters provides the method of pro- cedure for payment of obligations of the school districts and municipalities, requiring a counter-signed warrant drawn by the clerk or auditor of each upon the county treasurer. The bill was referred to the com- mittee on cities and municipalities. Rep. Peters seeks a two-year closed season on grouse, prairie chickens and Partridges, in another bill, referred to the game and fish committee. A bill by H. N. Henrickson, McHenry county, would require hospitals to set apart or supply a room for preparing bodies for burial. C. N. Jodock, Ben Fedje and H. R. Solberg, Williams county, would pro- hibit “pretended buying and selling of grain, pork, lard, or any mercantile or agricultural. product on margins, without any intention of future de- livery.’ Provides Heavy Penalty The bill makes futures trading un- lawful and provides a $200 fine or 30- day jail term or both for violation. It was sent to the grain and grain-trad- ing committee. Dan R. Jones, Richland county, pro- vides for disposition of unclaimed es- tates valued at less than $500 in a bill referred to the state affairs commit- i tee, Efforts of L. J. Wehe, Bismarok at jtorney, to obtain payment of $300 ;which he claims due for legal serv- ices rendered in the state library in- vestigation in 1919, were renewed with the presentation of a bill by Wm. B Falconer of Burleigh county asking for [an appropriation in that amount. In several previous sessions a simi- lar bill had beén presented but failed to pass. It was referred to the appro- Priations committee. Three house bills passed were ap- |propriation measures allowing $70,000 for payment of insurance tax to fire departments in the state, $300 for burial of prison and state training school inmates and $50 to erect head- stones over graves of ex-servicemen. They were sent to the senate. ‘The bad check bill introduced Fri- day was withdrawn after R. E. Swend- seid, Mountrail county, informed mem- bers a similar bill had been presented in the senate. LEMMON HARD EIT BY $150,000 FIRE South Dakota City’s Business District Suffers Damage From Blaze Sunday Lemmon, 8. D., Jan. 16.—(%)— |Fanned by ® 40-mile gale, fire wiped jout eight buildings in the business dis- trict here Sunday night. Loss was es- timated at $150,000. The blaze, originating in the Brod- esky meat market, presumably from an overheated furnace, swept almost "| the entire side of one block, consum- The cluded the Brodesky market, | Grocery, Theroux Confectionery, J. C. Penney Company, Red Ow! Stores, ,;Schoyen Music store, office of A. E. Yager, lawyer, and Aristo confection- ery. Relief Measure {Visor ir )BILL WOULD ABOLISH | OO [Operation Is Fatal 4 MRS. JESSIE WILSON SAYRE WILSON'S DAUGHTER UNABLE 10 SURVIVE OPERATIONS SHOCK Dies Sunday in Boston Hospi- tal; Was Active Peace and Political Worker Cambridge, Mass, Jan. 16—(7}— Mrs. Jessie Wilson Sayre, daughter of President Woodrow Wilson and life- long worker in social service and the cause of world peace, died late Sunday night. She was 45. Mrs. Sayre, wife of Professor Francis B. Sayre, newly appointed state commissioner of correction and @ member of the Harvard law school faculty, succumbed to the effects of @ gall-bladder operation performed Saturday morning in the Cambridge hospital. Of late years Mrs. Sayre, who was married in the white house in 1913; during her father’s first term as president, had been active in Demo- cratic national and state politics. She (MOTORISTS WARNED TOSTAY OFF ROADS THROUGHOUT STATE No Loss of Human Life or Live- stock or Property Dam- age Is Reported SEVEN INCHES FALLS HERE Biggest Storm This Winter Brings End to Month of Mild Weather North Dakota motorists were warned te stay off the roads Monday by state highway officials following the biggest énowstorm this winter. No loss of human life or livestock or extreme property damage was report- ed in the Bismarck district or the State Monday forenoon, when a check- up was begun as the storm's severity subsided. Seven inches of snow fell in the Bis- marck district Sunday and during the night and was whipped into consider- able drifts by a gale from the north- west, which reached a maximum ve- locity of 20 miles per hour about 10 o'clock Sunday night, vo 'W. Roberts, federal meteorologist here. Snow flurries will continue through- out the remainder of the day, Roberts said, but the forecast for Tuesday is generally fair, with slowly-rising tem- Perature. Mercury sank to eight degrees be- low zero here during the night and Roberts said it will go still lower to- night and Tuesday morning. Issued Warning Saturday He broadcast storm warnings by telegraph and radio throughout the state Saturday nigh+, he said, and for that reason believes that farmers in most sections had their resid under cover before the T. G. Plomasen, maintenance engi- neer of the state highway department, said he had received few reports blocked roads but that he expected to receive many during the day, Monday forenoon he had reports of blocked roads bet rison Corners and Minot and in the northeastern section of tending from Langdon, Pembina westward to eastern edge of the Turtle Roads west of Mandan jblocked. The state road Bismarck to Minot was re] from here as far north as No snow plows will be clear main highways until the jists, since poor visibility might cause Massachusetts in 1908 ard eeu er head-on collisions with the plows. self boomed for United States sena-| tor in 1930 until she withdrew be- cause of her devotion to her husband | and children. She was vice-chairman | of the Democratic state committee during the recent campaign. When Woodrow Wilson was elected George E. Hanson, Bismarck divi- sion engineer for the state highway department, said three scout have been sent out in all directions from the Capital City for road inspec- tion and that plows would not be sent cut until the scouts report on condi- President, she became one of the tions. white house family and there, in No- vember, 1913, married Francis Bowes Sayre of Bethlehem, Pa., son of Rob- ert Heysham Sayre, who built the Le- high Valley Railroad. ‘The Wilson-Sayre wedding, was the | first. in the white house since Miss) Alice Roosevelt married Representa- tive Nicholas Longworth, Besides Professor Sayre, Mrs. Sayre is survived by her three children, Francis, Jr., Elinor, ‘Wilson Sayre. and Woodrow The funeral will be held in Christ Church here on Wednesday. Inter- ment will be at Bethlehem, ‘Thursday. Plant Turns Teeth | = Black, Halts Decay ————_______. Pa., wi » Jan. 16—@)—Im-* fashington, agine jet-black teeth! Well, they might become the style if a new- ly-found South American plant, said to prevent tooth decay, lives upto its reputation, and people took to chewing its leaves. Decay can be prevented by Wires Escape Damage J. E. Beaudoin of the American Tel- chewing the plant, which forms a Protective film over the teeth, ac- cording to reports brought by Dr. W. A. Archer to the Smithsonian Institution and announced Mon- day. He found the plant in the jungles. of Colombia. But along with its reputed protection the Plant turns the teeth as black as coal.

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