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Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1878 Hitler Begins Rule in Reic!l DEGREES WILL NOT ‘ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1933 _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Senate Begins Fight on Roosevelt Farm Bill PREPARED 10 OFFER MANY AMENDMENTS Southern Chairman of Agricul- ture Committee Offers Substitute Measure Livestock Representatives Want Mention of Cattle, Sheep Eliminated Washington, : March 4—1e)—The| senate drive for drastic rewriting of i the administration farm bill was ¢ THO: mo launched Friday ‘at a closed meeting ee areas of the senate agriculture committee, |, Coneress ls expected to receive soon but Secretary Wallace said he had/| Huston Thompson to protect investors rot yet yet given approval to any sub-jagainst “blue sky” stocks and bonds. “ES mn omc, a DBFENGE CAMPAIGN POR SALES TAX IS BEGUN BY HIGHWAY man of the committee, presented a substitute bill, making material modi- Hear 30,000 Letters Sent Out on Subject; Vogel, How- fications which earlier he had pre- dicted would prove acceptable to the administration. Wallace, however, said the proposed changes would be gone over later in the day at a ses- ever, Denies Report Roosevelt’ Plan for a world-wide .agreement to curtail wheat production, to bring it in line with consumption. Call From After receiving the Smith plan the senate committee called in for brief hearings John A. Simpson, president of the Farmers’ Union, and George Peek, of Moline, 7 nag Skates After hearing a " committee members hope to be able to set about full discussion of the pro- te i ed cag attitude of most, Senpod “In my opinion,. we. definitely what form the bill will until after we have heard a? BES it ieft Bi reported campaign ie pence. Se: RRR Se Phillip, G. Mueller Expires Thursday Night; Under- 1] Party Steering Committee Wi wenthlenia Ghacanan Bar Further Rushing of i af i pean Hii hy tind DR. WILLIAM C. JUDD | CALLED 10 TESTIFY IN BEHALF OF Physician to Appear Privately Before Arizona Pardon and Parole Board ! Breweries in More Than m2 States Deluged With Orders By Thirsty of Nation | ADVERTISEMENTS PRINTED For First Time in 13 Years Pub- lications Lend Selves to Brew Sale (By The Associated Press) In more than a dozen states vats were bubbling Friday in preparation for putting legal 3.2 beer on sale April 7. Breweries reported they were del- uged with orders. Beer advertisements appeared in newspapers for the first time in 13 years, heralding the date on which sale will be permitted. An informal ruling by Attorney General Cum- ee Stage of River Here Is Falling; Danger of Gorges Still Exists, However i E ~ an ne it E eb shay tiissate 3 & $f ae ments were not of the Ie Slaps zones. "°K bill passed ly by the Beer by Mail Held To Be a Possibility Although the federal postoffice |/ department has ruled that the new legal beer may be sent through the mails, the question of whether it could be delivered in North Da- kota or other dry states remained unanswered Friday. ‘The postoffice department has been swamped with requests for rulings in view of the new law. The one made Friday permits transport through dry states. Others still pending, in addition to that of delivery in dry states, pertain te-the circulation-of news- Pepers and magazines containing beer advertisements in states where such material is barred: by law. An informal opinion has been given that there can be no interference with such publications when sent by mail. ing for repeal of the 18th—before lic quor again may be sold legally in this country, ron 4 sae with conventions al- provided for are Arizona, Idaho, Indiana, Oregon, Utah, Ws West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, New Mexico and Ohio. : tl already - vention dates: woe” Asses Wyoming, 5 Hs h ! i == RAYMOND W. STEVENS ‘in ‘Tilinois Life Insurance DYNASTY DESTROYED, | CHIEF IS OPPOSED | TO FORESTRY BILL | Says Roosevelt Unemployment | Plan Smacks of Fascism, Hitlerism, Communism I | Fears FOR WAGE LEVELS Also Dislikes ‘Regimentation’ of Workers; ‘Draft Act’ Charge Denied | Washington, March 24.—()—Wil- {liam Green, president of the Ameri- ean Federation of Labor, called the Roosevelt reforestation plan one smacking “of Fascism, Hitlerism and ;% form of Sovietism” Friday in as- ‘serting he had deep apprehension of ‘its effect on wage levels. to a “temporary stop order” by the administration to save funds to fi- ILLINOIS INSURANCE "sis MAN KILLS HIMSELF Tragedy Marks Closing Chap- ters of Big Business Ro- mance For Stevensés another son and brother, . Stevens, on charges of em- failure of the $150,000,000 Illinois Life Insurance company of which they uh ei ¥ H »|men that the house will that sort of military organization and control. Asserting that the proposal was “highly objectionable to labor,” Green. said it “violates the very spirit of = and freedom of personal Monday it will be taken up then, with passage in both houses confidently predicted. The senate and house were in re- cess Friday, awaiting new legislation to work on. Representative Byrns, the Demo- cratic leader, inf Pass the bill Monday or Tuesday. AUTO-STYLE SHOW TO BE STAGED IN ‘FLOWER GARDEN’ |= Will Use Carnations, Daffodils, Smilax and Shrubs in Decorations [Dies With Dynasty {LABOR FEDERATION |[—U-5: Beer Bose _{ POBS OF PLAN ARE {{ Rave Sreciistons || Beer Vats Bubbling As Sale Date Nears; DR. JAMES M. DORAN Engulfed with applications for beer permits, Dr. James M. Doran, Com- missioner of Industrial Alcohol, is one of the busiest men in Washington. Here you see him at his desk in the Prohibition Bureau, untangling the i morning mail. MISSISSIPPI RIVER POINTS FACE FLOOD FROM SWOLLEN OHIO Prepare For Trouble As Up- Stream Points Dig Them- selves From Mud Louisville, Ky. March 24—(®)— Residents of up-river points Friday made preparations to dig their aban- doned out of the mud while dwellers on down-river lowlands rises in communities where the crest had been reached, weather bureau observers State Banks to Get Aid From Government Washington, March 24.—()—Presi. dent Roosevelt's signature was all that was needed Friday to make law a bill giving state non-member banks the right to borrow from federal reserve banks during the banking emergency. Congressional action was completed Thuraday, and Vice President Garner Weather Report '_. PRICE FIVE CENTS ¢ NEED SIGNATURE OF NATIONS PRESDENT Chancellor Has Absolute Power Under Enactment Passed By Reichstag LEGISLATURES SUSPENDED Prejudice Against Eastern Jews Indicated By Order on Bank Withdrawals Berlin, March 24.—(P)—Adolf Hit- ler’s legalized four-year term as dic- tator began Friday. ‘The legislative bodies of both the German reich and its greatest unit, Prussia, have been indefinitely sus- pended. The signature of President Paul von Hindenburg to the decrees which Hitler may desire to enact is no longer necessary as a result of the reichstag’s action Thursday in grant- ing absolute power to the chancellor. The Hitler government's commis- sioner in the Palatinate, a state lying between the Rhine and the French frontier, was ordered that no bank or postal funds be delivered to eastern Jews. The ban was invoked until all Nazi tion, verting the Hitler government. |Ward County Farmer git stee bile if z g i i i B gk7 Hg 5 3 i Be $ i