The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 17, 1933, Page 1

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a“ 4 Weather Report ct THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ===" Pre SENATE AND HOUSE ARE AT ODDS OVER ALCOHOLIC CONTENT Hope to Settle Differences, However, So Distribution Can Begin Next Month N. D. STATUS IS DOUBTFUL Governor Indicates He Will ‘Not: Sign Beer Bill But May Withhold Veto 284 ? eeett git] i E Ad eFEgE if tie s] A i ag E E iE Ed S i j ry i age Hy iL i ih of Legal Beer by April 4 | ___ Where the Brewers’ Big Horees Will Haul the Big Wagons ||FARMHELP SCHEME Bangs Is Caustic in SEEKS TO RESTORE |Comment on Charges BUYING BY FARMER NEW COUNTY RELI AT JOINT MEE \, Raise Prices Distribution of R. F.C. Funds Resumed in Burleigh Coun- ty Thursday Night | saya Work Should Be Stopped At Once If Contracts Are Illegal As Charged WILL BE GLAD TO TESTIFY Accepts Service of Removal Or- der and Will Appear At Hearing March 29 PROVIDES GRANT OF POWER President and Secretary Would Have Wide Authority Un- der Its Terms Grand Forks, N. D., March 17.—(?) All work on the new North Dakota capitol should be stopped immediate- ly if the charges in the complaint night under a new county emergency relief committee appointed at a joint |®eainst two of the members of the of the board of Burleigh|commission are seriously made, county commissioners and the state|George A. Bangs, president of the emergency relief committee. board said Friday morning, after pa- More than 100 applicants were|pers had been served on him in the granted aid Thursday evening and |ouster action directed against him and the courthouse lobby was crowded all|Fred Conklin, members of the capitol . by Governor William Papers in the ouster action were Relief fund distribution was re- sumed in Burleigh county Thuraday Washington, March 17.—()—Prin- Bismarck, |included a complaint by the attorney an of the/general to the governor, an order of be in charge of field | suspension and a notice that a hear- w set-up. ing will be held before John E. Wil- aries E. McClou-|liams, special commissioner named by . south, have been|the governor, in the courthouse at ppointed special investigators to aid} Bismarck at 10 o'clock a. m. March 29, bring curtailment about. the committee in determining who| after going over the papers Bangs Defines wheat, cotton, corn, hogs, said he would be glad to present his “4 was side of the capitol case under oath at izers of the Bismarck Unemployment /the hearing, a privilege which was de- , | Council. ni legislative capitol ano A en cm nae county du: re) April has been loaned to the state by lait” ee the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion. This money will be made avail- able in weekly installments. A total Gives secretary of agriculture power to provide for reduced acreage or pro- duction of any basic agricultural com- modity through agreements with pro- ducers and to provide for rental or benefit payments to the farmers to ed in paragraphs 6 and 7 of the com- plaint by the attorney general. This sel mar Hit Highway Department Ltgashi tee ibe pore Pars necessarily mean that there are no understood, so that it might have a|Contracts. more direct control over distribution f funds, pointing out that a law passed at the recent legislative ses- sion makes the county commission no legally done and no further payments [mre be legally aoe. New contracts responsible for relief work. ent must be entered into if the 1 Distribution of relief funds was at|#ttorney general is correct. & standstill Thursday pending ar-| “The grounds upon which the pres- Tangements to be made by the joint |¢nt contract are assailed would forbid commissioners and|equally entering into new contracts . at the present, and until after new ND. CAPITOL BODY i |Sauvain Selected as Vice Chair- man At Organization Meeting Thursday As the first step in plans for sweep- ing changes in the personnel of the state highway department, Frank Vo- gel, newly-appointed Sonmenene ee I Friday several execu 's build- Officials in the commission have been Pg rm emcee po gga of dismissal, effective \. of . A. Myhre, assistant chief engi- neer, Arvid Backlund, chief drafts- man, and Raphael Van Neste, resi- ae g28 Ey ef ; a ga i g & ] if i 5 | Presentation of Measure to President Delayed By Sen- ate Adjournment iy Segs 7 i s il quarters of the motor vehicle z E ? ; 4 Es i E Te fe i a iH | ) q Sto the federal saserve agen. [oat head of Plan Rites Saturday Bo Series: Dt Tan Sencaen a5 $n | HA the re- For Burleigh Woman to tea hs cont te Waskinnee tee rd to the png has been pointed cut thet © einer] ain Bi with E services for Mrs. Peter A. could be published or turned over to| T'o V3 serv- | [ t St. Patrick’s Parade| n> “ New York, March 17.—(#)—New i ee fi is ly 2 f ee 8 [left i | ae is csittel lilt 4 ef F i | ] i il i 4 tor Friday house ae er "ae er OS a represent were} - ee re the railroads supply time. orders among the 19 who voted against en-| pe! sgonte, Cal. be nyscintg nokia the the 266th ‘Trigh) actment of the bill in the house |-two descendants of whom had thetr own Diets soouse. the} ment 10 lead, as PTR: soars Johnson, Laan | S00, Sazetlies were tton Ig | roeds spotted 112 freight Jove and atfec-, Tanks upon, ranks deen and Biceecber’ Zapnsce, Lan: | ward an Hawaiian different sections of the ‘and charge that| Order of Hibernians, and , oll day. Miss Maude Hill, Plea ‘them to the homeless. Levee, Pairbanks’ Parmer-Laborites and Lemke, North | of James J. Hill, opened a peel clubs. Dakota, Republican. - Peavey, Wiscon-|and Laurence ri others, coerced rq ‘were sin Republican and Kvale, Minnesota | son of the origina’ ‘Thurs- REPORT GERMAN with imprisonment Farmer-Laborite, did not vote. press and founder e0t- ]One the film actor. All others from Minnesota, the Da-| Nevada railroad, one compelled him to pane . attorney's office, Test ! i zi F i i 4 z ‘ F z it i : Er pare for Farm Plan Battle May Permit Sale of | BEFORE ENACTMENT | BY SENATE-HOUSE House Agriculture Committec Ready to Act But Upper Branch May Balk row FORECAST SENSE HOSTILE FEELING Some Solons Assert They Are Going to Halt ‘Rubber Stamping Procedure’ ‘Washington, March 17.—(?)—Presi- dent Roosevelt's bold prescription for the nation’s agricultural ills Friday taced a rougher road than any of the three previous proposals for emer- gency action sent to congress in the last eight days. The others, now that beer is about through, appear to have been triple Plays, white house to congress to the law books. The farm program faces troubles midway along that path, in the senate where there were signs of @ rebellion in Democratic ranks. A possibility existed that the house would pass the bill before the end of the day and that, at the latest, it ‘They|would complete action before ad- journment Saturday. Its agriculture committee gave quick consideration to the measure. Friends of the a “The first actual charge is contain- in keting association and the National committee of farm organizations.

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