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BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1983 | Roosevelt Gains Edge in Farm - CATTLE, SHEEP, FLAX [BISMARCK GOES 10. AND PEANUTS TAKEN OUT BY COMMITTEE} ‘Other Parts of Measure to Be About Same As Came From White House New Auditor —— POLLS TUESDAY FOR | MUNICIPAL ELECTION Record-Breaking Field of 18 Men and One Woman Seek- ing Six Positions |” SUBSTITUTE IS WITHDRAWN INCUMBENTS RUNNING AGAIN| | Citizens May Cast Ballots at 13 Balloting Places from 9 A. M. to 7 P. M. Chairman of Senate Farin Group Decides Not to Press His Pet Proposal Clair G. Derby, who has been Bur- Washington, April 1—()—Cattle,|ieign county treasurer for the last cheep, flax and peanuts were cut out four years, will become county auditor pina semi ber arate tedhid ianingee next they san serve as mola one : ale treasurer and Ernest Elness, elected members then agreed on the general jiast November, will begin his two-year civil Solo thecal hte PP ei fie the administration relief; was appointed by the com- per colt {missioners to fill the vacancy in the treasgurer’s office for the month's in- term. Statutes call for the auditor \to take office April 1 and the treas- urer to assume his duties a month LLOWANCES GVEN AMERICAN VETERANS CUT BY ROOSEVEL: Bismarck voters will go to the polis from 9 a. m. until 7 p. m. next Tues- day to elect six persons from a record- breaking field of 19 candidates for city ofifces, The field of candidates, including '18 men and one woman, is the in the history of the Capital City for a municipal electiori. The city this year will elect a prest- cent of the city commission, two members of the city board, one mem- ber of the park board for a regular six-year term and another member to complete the remaining two years of the unexpjred term of the late Very Rev. John A. H. Slag, and one justice of the peace to complete the remain- ing two years of the unexpired term of Harry Mutchler, who resigned. 10 For Commission Ten have entered race and three each in the other three contests. _ : Mrs. Mary E. Owens, -the only woman candidate, will seek a regu! reported to the only native relief. plan the so-called Simp- gon production ocst guaranty proposal. After discussing the matter with committee members and in view of ‘the conference with President Roose- ‘velt late Friday, Smith said, he with- drew his proposed, substitute for the administration bill, which would have tripped away broad powers for Sec- retary Wallace to cope with the farm problem. ‘The Simpson plan, advocated by John A. Simpson, president of the Here is the first picture of the famous Libby Holman Reynolds baby, taken r¢ the “blues” singer and her heir to Reynolds tokacco millions Jeft.a Pxiladelphia hospital. When born Jan. 10, baby Smith Reynolds weighed three pounds. Today he tips the scales at seven. term on the park board. 8. W. Cor- tional Farmers’ Union, would in- 7 2 cure te farmer te as o producti | President Signe Order Reducing |Tesi.tton' vy 2 Largest, Most Beautiful re hecnttoerrboab cag nd federai| This Item By Approximately | Park | price fixing. ; Would Be Alternative ‘With some modifications, as yet un: be added to the; Washington, April 1.—(#)—Presi- gg en mms Ler ye gelier rH gS hrsmgesin scion only retary Of sr esaep were elimidated on |*#liNg approximately $400,000,000. nn ae Sees ean ck Using the extraordinary power vest- assistant Democraticjed in him by the economy act, the 2.9 to 6 vote. Two other/chie¢ executive signed the order Kendrick earlier in, the | dratted by, Lewis Douglas, director of Se ESECK the budget, and Frank T. Hines, vet- uts came out wil it | erans administrator, who were present when he signed. ‘ The reduced rates are effective $400,000,000 |Auto Show Here Forecast ASSUMES RULE OF ALL N. D, INSURANCE FIRMS | Proclamation Gives Commis- sioner Control of Assets Of Such Companies "|Expect. Hundreds from Slope Area in City Next Week- End for Spectacle Perry Spohn, having served only two years, will continue in of: for two more years. ’ The three incumbents are running on a common platform. Three other candidates, also run- ning on a common platform, are L. V. Miller, for president, and Joseph Schneider and Russell A. Young, fort commissioners. | 36 i ] é z j end to hundreds of persons from ; i E } All other candidates have individual platforms. — The list of candidates follows: President 4 Jana to take. advantage of special spring bargain sales to be offered by i E i g 5 j A i . | Avenue B West. L. V. Miller, 825 Eighth St. Obert A. Olson, 514 Thayer Avenue A. ‘P. Lenhart (incumbent), 106] | spectacle. The show will be staged Friday Saturday, April 7 and’8, in the spa- : Hy Governor William Langer has issued 2 proclamation giving the commis- ‘sioner of insurance “full control and supervision of the assets “of insur- ance companies, associations and fraternal benefit societies.” ‘The proclamation was filed late Fri- day with the secretary of state and made public Saturday. Declaring that a public emergency exists as a result of present economic conditions, the governor authorized and directed the commissioner of in- surance “to make, rescind, alter and amend such rules and regulations as may be deemed necessary respecting the payment of premiums to, with- drawals of funds from, and payment of funds by all insurance companies, associations and fraternal benefit so- s eve a to do with veterans benefits, I do not want any veteran to feel that he and his comrades are being singled out to "| make sacrifices. Are Part of Program “On the contrary, I want them to: know that the regulations issued are but an integral part of our economy Commission F. E. Diehl, 809 Sixth St. George T. Humphreys (incumbent), 930 Eighth 8t. C. J. Myers, 709 First St. H. W. Richholt, 223% Seventh St. Ernest Schneider, 914 Seventh St. Joseph Schneider, 316 Twelfth St. south. J. B. Smith, 608 Fifth st. rage A. Wachter (incumbent), 822 fl é i with a profusion of pink carnations, 4 shrubbery. On display in the auditorium will} be the proud aristocrats of motordom sehy 2 bution. “them. to appreciate:that|_U. J. Wehe, 224 Thayer Avenue Russell A. Young, 515 First St. Park Board ‘lowest prices in the hsitory of auto- mobile manufacture. To See Beutiful Women fs A. galaxy of loge ced beauti- ful young women | mannequins for the style revue, which will be staged at 8 o'clock each evening on a giant runaway, banked with flow- ers, extending across the auditorium. ing. “Attorneys Confer With Trunk Slayer Condemned to Die special exhibit booths, in which mer- chants will display special goods which they are featuring this year. affected by any rule or regulation under the authority of this proclama- tion in which relief is asked contrary and regulation.” Violation of the rules proclaimed by the commission would make com- panies subject to revocation of their certificates, the proclamation says. ranged. iigee ate 9 H A battery of committees, represent- ing automobile, accessories, ready-to- wear, haberdashery and other mer- chants of the city, has been working tor weeks in preparation for the oe Corvin genefal . 5 chairman, in an announcement Saturday, forecast | hat this year’s event will | ise min sir ra fi i fits & z i 2 & aE z Hear J ese _« Takes \ eto ‘Shihmenchal, a city i ese Coles creer, ot 230 8. m. 3-1—Cook’s 3-2—High B Ghihmenchal is at the convergence | ies and East of center, line of branch rallways north of Chin-|ministrator. . center line of Tenth, St \eouth of the extremity of the}. - GIVEN | school, le papegenrenenecyren dill Sidmor, rorth of “Gaturday: : ed gulty ‘ St. and south i i *s : ‘Four Items Cut From Fart Reliet Fight Lib Holman and Habe Powe for Gamers LANGER ACTS ARE {x= ees | ATTACKED AT RARM UNION CONVENTION Three ‘Deplores’ to One ‘Com- mend’ Voiced by Group in Jamestown Session STATE HEAD IS SPEAKER: National Chieftain Urges Trek To Washington to Defend Interests for the dairy department. “We commend the governor for pro- |latter two pursuits tection against ard tsheearacs fit this year because of farm property, but deplore his act! He also has two daughters. Rev. Ha- in vetoing the bill giving judges dis-jney was born at Alva, Miss, and re-|!"- Then it nicked the southwest- cretionary power in foreclosure pro-jceived his higher education at Sim-/|€m corner of Arkansas and drove full ceedii “We also deplore his veto of the bill Providing for state licensing of live- stock buyers and the weighing and Brading of livestock.” Principai speaker before the Union was C. C. Talbott of Jamestown, presi- dent of the State Farmers Union. He also presided at the meeting. ‘Come at Once’ John Simpson, national president of the farmers union, in a read by Talbott, members be sta at once and be kept coming for the next two weeks. Admonishing the members to or- ganize and declaring the reason farm- ers.did not have more influence is be- cause they have failed to organize their strength, Talbott said “if the farmers had their normal buying Power, then factories would be wide open and there would not be 14,000,- . |000 unemployed persons.” Be ne wee] ne riplsiny saeuciaidon acneall resolutions calling for an immediate throughout the Missouri Slope area boycott on purchase of all re-pos- who will assemble here to attend the sane oe for aeriviegern eons show |2nd pledging suppor - RABE SRT SR eH kota labor, asking the same courtesy Jamestown, N. D., April 1—Three resolutions “deploring” actions by Gov- ernor William -Langer and one com- mending him were adopted by mem- bers of the Stutsman County Farmers |COnvention, when members of the Union and Farm Holiday association in conventions at Jamestown Friday.|/Saskatchewan will The resolutions giving their opin-|Rev. Haney is a Baptist minister al ions of the erent tr oar ‘Sioux Falls and chaplain of the South “We deplore the action o! gov-| Dakota penitentiary. His spare time ernor in vetoing the appropriation |is divided between Lionism, hunting | Winds moved northeastward. ed that treks of to Washington for Holiday association members. Resolutions of a drastic nature, Frazier bill,” said the resolutions “we cious auditorium of the World War | wish to commend our junior congress- Memorial building, which will be eat gp See ee nes luction of a lor est ig of a eee a este ONO sy of ihe “United Baten; ‘we. are utterly opposed to further issuing of daffodils, wild smilax and huckleberry | tax-free bonds, either national, state er municipal. “We can no longer pay interest to Private banking monopol fore we insist that the federal gov- = {ermment repeal the federal reserve act, national bank act, and assume obligation provided for under the con- stitution, to issue money and, regu-| Ket places, Nazi brass bands made th late its value. Michigan to Ballot Pd é Hi merchants in connection with the}cording to the membership, from April 1.—(@)—The first di-|tain residence streets, where Jewish | Ports a fective vote by the electors | lawyers and physicians were known oe ko Soreness has a Encircling the show arena will be |! & state on national constitutional |to reside, became targets of special /® seized freight cars to Man of more than two-score|Prohibition will come in Michigan| Nazi attention. ukuo. Monday. The voters on that day will elect! Kaiserallee and Kurfuerstendamm,|been withdra: delegates to 8 state convention of 100| for instance, picketers warned against | Chinese | é 3 E i Z lies, there- On. Dry Law Repeal|* " Entertainment galore is being ar- members to consider ratification of PRICE FIVE LEAVES | Convention Leader WRECKAGE IN W AKR Area from Texas to Alabama Counts Toll; Mississippi Is Hardest Hit m COMMUNICATION LINES CUT Many Villages and Towns Feel’ Full Force of Winds; Floods Threaten (By the Associated Press) A mai spring storm which for twa days battered the south from Texa: Rev. Newton Leon Haney, district governor of the Lions for South Da- re Passed by both sessions, part of which ana | Were identical. “We reaffirm our support of the kota, will be in Bismarck next June 6, 7 and 8 to attend the Lions’ district service club from North and South 2 Minnesota, Manitoba and} Mounted steadily Friday night as re- assemble here.| ports trickled in from communities tjcut off by tangled communication lines and flooded highways and the and fishing, but he has relegated the} The storm broke in east Texas to his two sons| Thursday, whipping the prairies like the convention.| flail, killing, injuring and wreck- mons University, Abilene, Tex. BOYCOTT OF GERMAN JEWS BEGINS; WILL LAST ONLY ONE DAY Nazis Go Mad ‘As Oppression Ages Rule Is Enforced; ‘Some Citizens Disagree Berlin, April 1—(?)—Many Jewish stores remained open after the na- tionwide one-day boycott on their business began at 10 a. m. Saturday despite anti-Semitic signs pasied on their windows by enthusiastic young Nazi storm troops. H Ten big Berlin department stores and the Tietz chain stores, which alone employ 48,00 persons through- out Germany, remained closed, how- ever. The great majority of Tietz employes are gentiles. That even among the Christian Population the boycott measure does not meet with unqualified approval was indicated by excited groups as-| sembling before many stores, debating the issue. Stores like Wertheim’s and Kem- Pinski’s were more crowded late Fri- day than during the Christmas sea- son by persons laying in stock for) 9): boycott days they feared would come. ‘ed one life Brown-shirted Nazis busily moved |“ waiter to and fro, pasting signs of identifica- drowned tion on Jewish stores, standing guard or picketing before shops and driving the through streets in motor cars, dis- playing boycott signs. On many public squares and mar- force up the Mississippi valley with. tornadic winds and a deluge of rain that blew in horizontal sheets. into Mississippi with a steadily in- creasing tax of death and damage. air reverberate with snappy military marches, The Nazi swastika and im- Perial flags were displayed on all ut cer-| Tokyo, April 1.—Ge)—Japanese_re- Not only business streets cer: said Saturday surrender- Before numerous residences along mar Suen te cenert. said. Ba from. invoking Jewish legal amendment to the fed-| aid. Ancient Ce H | | - i | vl if g | Pe 5 3 b PS Ee ste 3 FE “ i ql I it i ; dg of "tal at i & remony at St. Peters Marks Pope’s Holy Year Opening il aE @mendment and providing for the|court buildings to prevent Jewish Protection of dry states. st one week ater the election, wil just one week el a be a mere formality as its action will|/burned the Republican flag as & sounded @ blast guards on silver trumpets. The people, ] } E f state prison here, was kidnaped the chanted a ee eee oe vot wen teleanee wahereed suse Uday, Kansas, half an hour later. Then his holiness struck the Landis ‘returning from door with the gold hammer an- worth where fe had sone, $0 Finally his holiness gave the | “sae Eustis ats third and strongest blow, break- daughter, the thin marble cross. Lg! ‘When the tens of thousands jbad driven gathered on the other side of the | mobile, door, that is, within the cathedral her Proper, saw the door crash and ;