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2 = SENATE 10 GIVE GOVERNOR INDUSTRIAL POWER Many I. V. A.’s Join Nonparti- sans in Vote; Bonzer Senses ‘Dynamite’ Measures giving the governor veto! powers over the acts of the industrial commission, of which he is chairman end placing the state mill and eleva- tor under the commission's supervi- sion, North Dakota senate Saturday by overwhelming votes. The bills, which now go to the house, passed with emergency clauses which would make them effective im- mediately after enactment. There was no debate on the meas- ‘ures, with the mill and elevator pro- posal passing 42 to 7, and the veto Power measure, 32 to 10. On the veto power bill a number of I. V. A. members joined with the Non- partisan League senators in favoring the bill, while a few Nonpartisans Joined the opposition. Senator A. F. Bonzer, Jr., Richland county, explaining his vote against the bill, told the senate: “There must be something wrong. I can't quite con- ceive or understand why this ultra- conservative body, which since 1919 has been fighting this same bill, is favoring it now. There must be a package of dynamite in it, so I am going to vote ‘No.’” Others opposing the measure were Senators Drew, Eastgate, Fredrickson, Gronvold, Handley, Plath, Simonson, ‘Trovatten and Watt. The remaining members, except Sen. Lynch, who was absent, voted for the measure. Requires Governor's Presence ‘The proposal also provides that the governor must be present at indus- trial commission meetings to consti- tute a quorum. Besides the governor the attorney general and commission- er of agriculture and labor are mem- bers of the commission. Under the mill and elevator meas- ure, the three-man commission created by the 1931 legislature to di- rect the state-owned enterprise is abolished, and its affairs are transfer- red to the industrial commission. Sen. Nels Magnuson, who introd- uced the two measures. offered a third Proposal, setting forth that acts of the Bank of North Dakota shall be | acts of the state, functioning as the state itself. This bill passed with only two dissenting votes. The provision contained in the measure is incorpor-/ ated in the other two bills, to declare | the acts of the industrial commission | and mill and elevator association the; ects of the state. H Lack of a constitutional majority caused the defeat of Sen. Bonzer's bill providing for one publication of the delinquent tax sales notice, with @ 15-cent charge against each des- eription. ‘The vote was 24 to 21 for! passage, but 25 votes are necessary to declare a measure passed. ! ‘The measure proposed to amend} the initiated law adopted in the fall election, abolishing publication of the delinquent tax list. Favor County Consolidation The senate passed a bill providing for consolidation of counties and| parts of counties, sending the pro-) posal to the house. By a vote of 46 to 3, the senate! passed Sen. W. E. Matthaei’s mea- sure to revise the hail insurance jaws. Matthaei, explaining the bill said| that under it the overhead expenses of the department are cut $26,000. Other features of the measure in- clude reducing the indemnity to $7} and $3 an acre, reducing the amount} of interest from six to five per cent where warrants are registered, and) making the hail indemnity tax lien a prior lien. County auditors would be permit- ted to write hail insurance, starting June 1, and a change in the proced- ure of arbitration of claims is pro- vided for. The measure also carries a 10-per cent deductible clause on indemnity. A bill to prohibit loans to officers and directors of insurance compan- ies passed 45 to 2. It was sponsored by Sen. Nels Magnuson. Legislative Calendar SENATE Bills Introduced (Delayed Bills Committee) 8. B. 327—Reduces fee for beaver tags from $1 to 25 cents. 8. B. 238—Permits U.-S. secretary of agriculture to take seed lien for loans to farmers for 1933 crop pro- duction. 8. B. 329—Permits payment of real estate taxes in installments, 8. B. 330—Repeals law creating governmental survey commission. 8. B, 331—Repeals law creating in- survey commission, Passed 8. B. 143—Revises hail insurance law. 8. B. 194—Places mill anti elevator under industrial commission. &. B. 195—Gives governor veto pow- er over acts of industrial commis- — North Dakota acts of state. 8. B, 221—Provides for consolida- ~~ Swift and Best Rheumatic Prescription 85 Cents Pain—Agony Starts to Leave in 24 Hours Just ask for Allenru—With- in 24 hours after you start to take this safe yet. powerful medicine excess uric acid and to leave your body. In 48 hours pain, agony and swell- are usually gone—we guarantee FAVORS BILL | received the approval of the} THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1933 liam Sinnott, New York detective Critically injured by Giuseppe Zan- | gara’s plot to kill President-elect Roosevelt was Mrs. Joseph H. Gill (above) of Miami, wife of the president of the Florida Power and Light company, who was shot through the abdomen. tion of counties. Bills Defeated ‘ S. B. 272—Provides for one publi-; cation of delinquent tax sales no-) tice. i Sigurd Hagen heirs for accident. 8. state training school accident. Indefinitely Posponed college. meals or lodging for profit. patients. S. B. 260—Increases from $25 fee for $10 to tory, or cream station. | sons entitled to poor relief. | service of process. S. B. 173—Provides for removal of ot residence. register of deeds to absorb increased Postage rates. with register of deeds. machinery three months to discover defects. t professional certificate and two years’ teaching in rural schools. HOUSE Bills Passed j S. B. 4—Repeals all dog tax laws. | council with each 10,000 inhabitants | or major fraction thereof where pop- ulation exceeds 15,000. H. B. 180—Repeals tree bounty law. Bills Introduced (Delayed Bills Committee) H. B. 346—Solberg, Sandlie, Nelson | of Ward: Provides license for manu. facturers and distributors of conden: sed milk. H. B. 347—Nelson of Ward: Exempts unemployed relief cooperative associa. tions from license fees. ‘H, B. 348—Patterson: Changes spe-| cial assessment commission to be | made up of city auditor, engineer and | city assessor. H. B. 349—Agricultural committee: Limits amount of statistics to be gath- ered by assessors. H. B. 350—Fitch: Limits number of publications for school land lease no-| tices, Indefinitely Postponed H. B. 115—Providing for a $40,000 appropriation to build a bridge over the Red river at Drayton. H. B, 118—Amending law on pro-| cess exemptions to include husband or wife instead of merely “head of family.’ H. B. 140—Providing for license of chain stores. i. B. 302—Extending power of rail-| road commissioners to include juris- | diction over gasoline and oll compan-| ‘H. B. 324—Repealing law providing | H. B. 327—Eliminating portion of| requirements for registering pharm.-|free of charge, in acists without examination. H. B. 334—Permitting confidential positions to give evidence in certain trials. | H. B. 327—Relating to publication | in| ments and initiated measures in coun- pers. < Pe 243—Prohibiting rebating by Resting comfortably after being wounded in the assassination plot of Guiseppe Zangara are (left) Wil- Margare' who was aiding to guard President-elect Roosevelt, and Miss t Kruis (right) of Newark, N. J. They are shown at a Miami hospital where the injuries were found to be not serious. EMBARGO MEASURE RAPPED AS SPAWN OF SOVIET RUSSIA M'Henry Legislator Loses Fight! to Kill Bill Now Before Lower House the BY WM. E. McKENNEY i 3 i = Ege Tectt #58 z i iu Charging that the proposed em- bargo bill for Nc Dakota reeked with the taint of Russia, embodied of “tyranny,’ F. Niewoehner, farmer-legislator of McHenry county, led an unsuccessful fight Saturday to kill the measure. Supporters of the proposal voted against indefinite postponement, 54 to 50, and the measure was again EzZaE i e i as the bill came up for final passage. The bill would permit the governor to declare an embargo against ricultural shipments out of the state and would empower him to use the militia to carry out his orders. “I am not willing to surrender my right as @ citizen,” Niewoehner de- clared, as he threw down a verbal barrage against the measure. “Such ‘ atten or Fae, I 1 oppaed a citizen am this kind of tyranny.” Rushing to the support ‘|woehner, Peters said, “I-! Insulin, a diabetes remedy, has, here in this legislature for been found to be # good tonic and! and never have I seen @ measure weight builder. this one. I hope I will never see other one. This is not Russia the governor is not Stalin and I & intend to support a measure of this sort.” Author Defends It The author of the bill, O. C. Olson fended his South opened the bidding with one diamond, West passed and North overcalled with one heart. You will notice that while North holds three quick tricks he need not jump the de- CONTRACT The Bidding North and South were vulnerablejer East and West not vulnerable.|the average city family. = TXPEDTS PLAY IL 324 f Al ee i 8 t i } make a spade cue { , was confronted making that iden- inviting a slam, and/ of finding out if his diamond suit was solid. he made another construc- bid of four diamonds, South bid diamonds and North lost no time i cy z - bem Aad ens gd Irregularities A persistent with bladder irregularities and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling ‘warn of some dis- ordered or bladder con- i tf EE : eaa piety! F eRe f§ farm family lives long- | and accumulates more wealth than! Quick ACTION Use the Want Ads i operating creamery, rulers. cheese, renovating, or ice cream fac- Chicago. Their paths met Wednesday night In the hands of one was an eight dollar pistol. In his heart, S. B. 134—Makes secretary of state by his own words, was the assassination agent of non-resident motorists for of the President-elect of the United States. In Calabria, Italy, probably under non-resident poor persons to places the guidance of his father, the young Giuseppe became a stonemason and When he reached Amer- ica through the port of Philadelphia i 10 years ago, he soon found that he S. B. 240—Requires filing of origi- could make good money at his trade. nal or duplicate originals of deeds He took out papers of naturaliza- tion; put his savings in the Postal 8. B. 308—Allows purchaser of farm gavings Bank. S. B, 223—Defines residence of per- at Miami. S. B. 184—Increases fee charged by bricklayer. provisions children, President-elect Roosevelt is Russell Caldwell of Cocoanut Grove, Fia., shown above in his hospital bed suffering from a slight flesh wound in Zangara’s History Discloses He Made Good Money as Bricklayer New York, Feb. 20.—(?)—He was i the kind of fellow who cursed the 5. ._310—-Anpropriates | #21000) to rimient anid ithion anim availa gov- . B. 280—Appropriates $2,500 to €mment's Postal Savings Bank with Philamena Beck for disability in his money for safekeeping. That was the philosophy—if it philosophy—of Giuseppe Zangara who S. B.—Abolishes compulsory mili- from a cheap pistol fired at Miami tary training at N. D. Agricultural Wednesday night five shots that threatened to write red pages of S. B 298—Taxes places furnishing American history. | He came to America, an immigrant | S. B. 304—Permits use of School in 1923 from Italy. Many years before of Forestry for housing tubercular another immigrant had come from, {Bohemia. He was Anton Cermak. The one hated government and The other became mayor Had ‘Political’ Ideas Zangara always indicated definite S. B. 317—Requires county school political ideas, yet federal agents superintendents to have first-grade’ seeking to trace his career in America jhave failed to find any connection be- jtween him and any anarchistic or janti-government group. S. B. 139—Permits cities under city vehicle registration with county audi- council form of government to add to tors. H. B. 296—Permitting city councils to use available funds for unusual de- mand for poor relief. H. B. 238—Extending liens on crops to include aid advanced by counties for purchase of feed, gas, oll or re- pairs on farm equipment. Still managing to smile after stopping one of the bullets intended suit you fellows, wait awhile. be lower if we don’t have something of this sort.” ‘W. J. Godwin, Morton county, told the house the governor had paigned on a promise such as con- tained in the bill. “This is a life and death struggle and you farmers of this legislature,” he added, “have a chance to yourselves in an enviable position by Passing a bill to aid the farmers.” A Burleigh county representative, J. M. Thompson, favoring indefinite Postponement, asked the bill if it would stop him from selling cattle he was about to put on ri market because he was out of feed. believe it would and I am against it,” he added. W. 8. Place, Billings-Bowman- Slope-Golden Valley county, said, “We'll be worse than Russia if we don't have this embargo,” with Wm. Falconer, another Burleigh county member of the house, declaring that “right or wrong, the bill offers a rem- edy to conditions no others have been able to remedy and I am for it.” Speaking for the first time, Mrs. Mary -H. Rathbun, Pembina county, calmly told the house her sympathy with the farmer—being a farmer her- self—“but the bill should be post- poned until after March 4 and then we won't need it.” Mrs. Rathbun is a Democrat. Ole Ettestad, from Niewoehner’s| county, said the bill would give too much power to the governor and he was opposed to it. Four words tell the story of the world’s great worries today; arma- ment, war, destruction, debt.—U. 8. Senator James E. Watson (Rep., Ind), majority floor leader. for the head. Zangara laid bricks well. His ac- count in the Postal Savings Bank was said to be more than $800, and there ‘were balances in excess of $2,000 in be New Jersey banks. In mid-August of 1931 Zangara withdrew his money from the banks. What he did with it has not been de- termined. The assumption is that he preferred to guard it himself, for there has been no evidence of any ex- travagances. His monthly rent for a considerable part of his time was around $20. Once, in Italy, Zangara said he made an attempt upon the life of the king, so his hatred of rulers traces beyond his arrival in America; but the attempt, if indeed there were an attempt, is not recalled in Rome. In April, 1932, a Joseph Zangara registered at a Miami hotel, and clerks there said he was the same man now held. He appeared to have plenty of money. Frequent packages and let- ters arrived for him. He said they were special treatments for a stomach disorder which seems to have given him much trouble for several years. “Sometimes,” he is quoted as saying, “I get big pain in the stomach. ‘Then | I want to kill these presidents who oppress th eworking man.” A good bricklayer, he turned his trowel to assassination, and builded himself a cell. New Hazen Pastor Visitor in Capital! | Rey. Louis Hagen, who became pas- tor of the English Lutheran church at Hazen three weeks ago, was a visitor in Bismarck Monday. He also is pastor of the English Lutheran Union church at Stanton. Rev. Hagen was installed in the Hazen pastorate Feb. 12, with Rt. Rev. David Stoeve, Fargo, district presi- of The trouble with you men from the other side of the aisle is you drink dry and vote wet.—Assemblyman John J. Cooney, of Brooklyn, in New York legislature. About 80 per cent of our drinking water is treated with liquid chlorine harmful bacteria. H. B. 162—Providing for securing|dent of the Norwegian Lutheran the state in criminal cases. . B. 116—Protec' from forced sale for attendance of witnesses from out Of/ church of America, officiating. to North Dakota from He came homesteads) sand Point, Idaho. His family, Mrs. H. B. 193—Providing for stricter| will move to Hazen later on in the in caring for illegitimate! spring when roads permit them to drive here by automobile. H. B. 226—Lowering fee for articles} Rev, Hagen succeeds Rev. E. 8. Tol- of incorporation. ‘lefson, who has taken over a pastor: H. B. 228—Providing for making i-| ate at Stanley. With . B. 255—Prohibiting employment ties salesmen on commission, is, monia, H. B. 267—Prohibiting banks and|;.. and loan companies from buildin, engaging in H. B. 272—Prohibiting publication |of debt lusts. H. B, 273—Pixing school transpor- | Sait S rother tation fees. H. B. 303—1 Eliminating personal sureties for deposits of public funds. to aid, es- H. B, 311—Requiring judges tates under $1,500. H. B. 317—Setting time limit (filing of appeal from an order over- | demi ruling a jurrer. H. B. 319—Extending requirements other circulating poisons start|ot notices on constitutional amend- on concentra‘ linquent personal property taxes. Hi. B. 332—Providing for prescription—if one bottle of Al-|insurance agents and giving stock in ed income tax. back. Hall's Drug Store. —Advertise- ment. . lenru doesn’t do as stated—money ‘insurance companies with sales of po- | lectes. H. B. 306—Placing work of motor H. B. 341—Eitminating court stenographer! ‘oral instructions to » pot| Arena Farm Woman commercial feeds. jin Arena township at 2 o'clock ‘Tues- | H. B. 321—Lowering penalty on de-|day afternoon, with Rev. John Fisch- ‘eraduat- re in transcribing Juries. expect to remain a day or two. Succumbs in City Mrs. John Melhoff, Arena farm woman, died in a local hospital at 4 yjo'clock Sunday morning, She was 46 years old.* Her death was caused by pneu: » from which she had suffered local hospital since Jan. 21. Mrs. Melhoff was born in Russia April 16, 1886, and came to the United States when a young woman. She Jeaves her husband, six children, two and six grandchil- dren. The sons and daughters are John Melhoff, Jr., Mrs. Lena Schock, and Lydia, Martha, Albert and Esther Melhoff, all living near Arena. Kate and Mrs. for | South Russia, are her sisters and John Hollwerger. Arvilla, is her brother. Funeral scrvices will be conducted from the German SAME PRICE today ‘4 Leer figprergvonnt Her body cag I ain't afraid of anything except le. Senat Long, A AS 42 YEARS 1 Xero) for ~ q VICKS ANTISEPTIC Technocratically _ Speaking. The ironing in every home should be done with one of new press type ironers. by hand is just plain hard work.. Why not let machine do the labor, saving time and energy for the i i ioe ana bamaiartill Z iN Consti tion Drove Her Wild Seber This new portable model = > Only $49.95 North Dakota Power & Light ‘ Company q Announcing Change in Schedule | Effective February 15th ! East-Bound West-Bound Read Down Read Up Pe} P.M. Leave Bismarck Arrive 12:41 P, M. 2:03 P.M. Leave Jamestown Leave 11:40 A, M. M. Leave Valley City 15 A. M. 3:10 P.M. Leave Fargo 35 A. M. 10 P.M. Arrive 10 A. M. P.M. Arrive St. Paul 300 A. M. ¥ 1:25 P.M. Leave 355 Pi 10:20 P.M. Leave Milweukec Leave 1:50 i bd { 11:15 P.M. 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