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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 New Em THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1933 France, England May Reoccupy Rhineland MAILED FIST SEEN | Linder Roooasts Kidnap Traced) | AS ALLIED ANSWER TO HITLER ACTION: Indications Are World War Foes. Will Enforce Treaty If Necessary FRENCH STATE POSITION! Foreign Minister Sees Support! Of Policy in Hailsham Statement { Paris, May 13.—(?}—France and) Great Britain were united Saturday | to face a disquieting situation created by the armament aspirations of} Chancellor Hitler of Germany. Indications that these anttiie! were ready to send their armies back | into the Rhineland if Germany seeks greater armaments than permitted; under the Versailles treaty raised the | question of whether the United States | would be willing to resume its mili-! tary posts on the Rhine river. t Foreign Minister Paul-Bonc our} made clear in his statement Friday | that France and Great Britain are; ready to return to the sanctions of | the Versailles treaty if forced to. He saw in the speech of Lord Hail- | sham, British secretary of war, a vin-| ication of the policy France has been | pursuing patiently for months. Lord: Hailsham said any rearmament by} Germany would bring the ied ¥ sanctions into operation. “You must know how to wait and hold firmly to plans, regardless alike ; of impatience and attacks,” | Paul-Boncour. He pointed to the deci- | sion of the disarmament conference, | in which the French viewpoint that| German militant organizations counted as soldiers was roar ri HITLER WILL STATE POSITION TO REICHSTAG Berlin, May 13.—()— Chancellor ; Hitler conferred Saturday with Nazi party leaders in Munich ‘ona speech he will deliver next Wednesday in-/ tended to be a declaration to the! World of Germany's side of the dis- armament crisis. ‘This, it was learned, is the reason | he issued the unexpected order to.con- vene the reichstag on that date. The chancellor also will give his| views of where the blame must rest; uf the disarmament conference fails. It was authoritatively stated he would | not announce German withdrawal trom the conference but would seek to prepare the world for any such emerg- | ency. A Nazi party spokesman intimated | the chancellor will request the rest of the world to keep its hands off Ger- many’s internal policies. Hitler’s answer to the rising tide of criticism of Germany's stand on arm-/ aments will be made before a group dominated by his party followers. He chose the reichstag for his proclama- tion rather than the world conference hall in Geneva. The reichstag members will be per- mitted time for remarks they may wish to make, it was indicated, but approval of Hitler's Peanauncemen’ is @ foregone conclusion. The German delegation’s report on the disarmament deadlock at Geneva ‘was presented to President von Hin- ¢enburg Friday before the cabinet) made the surprising move of calling; the reichstag into session. When the Hitler government was granted dic- tatorial powers for four years after! the March election, the reichstag was) given an indefinite vacation. Semi-officially it was said: “It is regretted that England is ranged with our opponents. It is par-| ticularly painful that the British minister of war should resurrect an utimative tone.” Will Speed Up Work Of U.S. Forest Army Washington, May 13.—(7)—A pro- gram to speed up establishment of! conservation work camps was drawn: Saturday by Robert Fechner, director! of emergency conseravtion work. Unable to achieve its first goal, the enrollment'of 250,000 by May 15, the) new program calls for. placing 275.000 men, and possibly 300,000, by June 1. There are now 8,000 men in work: camps and 43,500 in army condition-/| ing camps; and for the next month/ it is planned that the army will re-j ceive men at the rate of 8,500 men daily. ‘The labor department reported that | state, 165,000 men have been selected for en- rollment and that the remainder will be selected by June 1. In addition to 250,000 men, between the ages of 18 and 25, Fechner said, about 25,000 experienced woodsmen are being re- cruited from areas near the work camps. A place for 25,000 World war veterans nas oeen set aside and @ group of Indians is being recruited for work on Indian lands. ‘Big Four’ at Wheat Parley See New Pact Geneva, Swtizerland, May 13—(#)— The “big Your” nations at the wheat | conference made considerable pro- gress Saturday in working out an agreement to limit production by re- THREE Serer Wd t The screment would cover two years. The United States, Canada, Argentina and Australia are partic- ipating in the conference. ! i } Concealing his emotion, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh told again the grim story of the kidnaping and murder of his son at the extortion plot trial of Gaston B. Means and Norman B. Whitaker in Washington, D.C. Here is Lindbergh (right) entering the courtroom with John Clarkson, deputy marshal. 50 NATIONS ASKED HERE IS STATUS OF TO JOIN TRUCE IN ROOSEVELT PROGRAM ~ WORLD TARIFF WAR BEFORE LAWMAKERS Passed; Numerous Others In Various Stages posal to Countries: Through- out Globe | London, May 13.—(#)—Fifty nations | Washington, May 13.—(7}—The | were called upon Saturday to join status of the Roosevelt emergency ‘the immediate tariff truce now ac- legislative program and other major, jeepted by eight leading countries. | bills as acted upon by congress at the | Prime Minister MacDonald, chair- end of the ninth full week of the ;man of the world economic confer- | SPecial Geese ae a5 ‘ence, is seeking universal adherence | Economy. |to the American proposal by present- | Beer-taxation. jing the agreement reached here Fri-/ 5 ¢ f. day to all the other countries in-; Brnereeney,panking relist, yited to theioonferencel Reforestation unemployment relief. |_The eight originating Sianiet ce ee ne —the United States, Great Britain, % |France, Italy, Japan, Germany, Nor-' |e eee Les gponionn.ono aisest |way and Belgium—were conceded e ai in Conference \technical and minor reservations; securities regulation without sacrifice of any of the prin- | District of Columbia supp!: siplee in tip AtieHoaD. olan. Muscle Shoals and ‘Tennessee basin The section of the truce addressed to other nations says: [ Geeeonment d electricity tax and “The said governments ... agree’, Gasoline and e Ps and strongly urge all other govern- PORES "eee appropriations, ments participating in the conference! “patteg pos ae anne in Senate to agree that they will not, before Peg ore4 “ june 12 nor during the proceedings of | ; agree- ene conference, adopt any new initia-| ea Hawzenre power Tavis: tives which might increase the many 3 | varieties of difficulties now ‘arresting; HOme mortgage refinancing. |Mnternational commerce.” ae isc taiiiaicaiaiad The conference is expected to last Se louse | Passed By Senate, Pending in Hi Ee June 12 until late this year. Fletcher proposal to help insurance | companies. ‘Indorse Martin for — | Black 30-nour week bill (sidetrack- State 1 gion P ‘ost ed in house pending white house ac- tion). ! Decision to Present the name of {Charles F. Martin, Bismarck, as a Bills in Committees Railroad reorganization-economy. Glass-Steagall banking reform. ‘The adjutant is the executive of-| candidate for state adjutant of the Bills To Be Submitted American Legion at the Williston con- Public works-employment relief-in- {the Bismarck Legion post Friday’ Reciprocal tariff. night . ‘ Federal supervision of petroleum erans’ organization for many years.| was given the unanimous indorsement | W7j]] Pay Premium formed to work for his election asad-- |For Bond Renewals jutant. Milton Rue was named chair- was named secretary. ‘St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba The tentative slogan adopted in railroad consolidated mortgage bonds, jthe American Legion” and “return ;ment of $38.10 on each $1,000 bond {control of the Legion to the average upon their acceptance of the plan statement of Martin's platform would , With a five per cent coupon, it was’ |be made later. ‘learned Friday. tant, has held this post since the vet- the Great Northern Railway Co., earns’ group was organized in the which controls the Manitoba system. of 5% per cent yield to maturity on ficer of the Legion. the extended issue. Statutory Crime | For Giving Bad Check Against Daughter! Minneapolis, May 13—()—H. J. {vention was reached at a meeting of dustrial control. Martin, an active worker in the vet- j Producten (probably). of the local post and a committee was | man of this group and John Bowers’ new york, May 13.—(?)—Holders of Martin's behalf was “a new deal in que July 1, next, will receive pay- jmember.” His backers said a detailed for a 10-year extension of maturity Jack Williams, Fargo, present adju-| The epee eae will be made by The cash will provide the equivalent Man Charged With Jail Former Dakotan | Chadwick, iormer North Dakota in- tory crime against his 13-year-old|days in the workhouse by District daughter, Eber Baty, 47-year-old Bis-| Judge Mathias Baldwin Friday after marck man, was in the Burleigh|pleading guilty to checking on a county jail Saturday awaiting trial! bank without sufficient funds. in district court. | Chadwick said he would be able to ‘The complaint was signed by his make restitution on several checks : daughter. jbut the court refused a request for Baty, who is ill, has not lived with he would consider an application for the family for more than a year. parole after Chadwick had served ‘| The defendant waived preliminary, days. examination Saturday noon before; The county probation officer said | Justice of the Peace A. E. Shipp and Chadwick lived at Jamestown several} was bound to district court. of $2.000 bonds. he was ordered to jail. headquarters. Baty resides at 306 Ninth St., south.’ since January. McDonald Sends American Pro- Six Major Measures Already| | Charged with committing a status | surance agent, was sentenced to 90/ Baty has two other children. Mrs.' probation. The Judge said, however,- In leu years while workirig with Fargo 8 /| ing about the southeast edge of Tulsa, He has lived here!a storm Saturday left five dead and Veight known injured, FARMERS STRIKE IS. | CALLED OFF; CHIERS | WAIT FEDERAL ACTS Holiday Association Leaders| Reassured by Reosevelt’s Plea for Patience | OLSON TAKES HAND IN DEAL| Minnesota Governor, Ill in Hos- pital, Advises Reno to Change Course jfrom St. Paul. 12:01 a. m. was the time set for the strike to start Saturday, but the holi- day leaders decided instead to give the Roosevelt administration an “op- portunity to fulfill pre-election pled- }ges to the farmer.” | Governor Floyd B. Olson of Min- j nesota, lying on a hospital bed, fol- lowing an operation for appendicitis, urged Milo Reno, president of the | Holiday group to defer action until {the president's farm plans show re- sults. ithe Holiday association would meet in Des Moines soon to discuss Presi- dent Roosevelt's statement and farm Program. Despite the decision, announced by | Reno, dairy farmers in Wisconsin and jin northern Illinois decided they would go through with their strike iplan anyway. Sense Public Disapproval In a statement at St. Paul, Milo Reno, president of the holiday asso- ciation, said: “The national officers and repre- sentatives of the holiday association in the northwest are suspending the strike order until the request by the President is more fully understood and the effect of his farm relief pro- gram is known. “Telegrams will be sent out imme- diately to all state presidents ex- Plaining our reasons for this suspen- sion. The president's statement, which in effect, is a command under the powers granted him, should be respected by governors and courts. “It becomes a patriotic duty and is a patriotic duty of the National Farmers Holiday association to see that it is respected. We have, in deciding to extend the time of de- claring the national holiday, in no way receded from our fundamental demand for production costs. “This action was taken out of re- spect to the chief executive of the United States and a regard for the opinion of the general public, believ- ing that public sentiment is in favor of giving the administration an op- portunity to fulfill pre-election | Pledges to the farmer.” i STATE ORDER CLOSES WISCONSIN MILK PLANTS { Milwaukee, Wis, May 13.—(P)—| Dairy plants in 22 Wisconsin coun- ties were idle Saturday by state order while the Wisconsin Cooperative Milk Pool, claiming a membership of more j milk aisike lines after a three-month | ag | ] ’ List Developments | | On Economic Front ————— i (By The Associated Press) H | | { { ° (By The Associated Press) i surance of production costs for the; farmer was announced Friday night Reno said officers and directors of | than 14,000 farmers, reorganized its) a | New Financial Chief : The farm strike is off—temporarily | at least—except for milk strikes in Wisconsin and northern Illinois. Reassured by President Roosevelt’s| statement urging leniency in farm {mortgage foreclosures and in eon financial claims against the farmers, ; leaders of the Farmers’ Holiday as- sociation, sponsors of the movement, decided to abandon the project before it began. The decision to postpone any gen- eral attempt to withhold foodstuff from the American dinner table for} the time being in an effort to win as- EUGENE R. BLACK Named as governor of the federal reserve board is Eugene R. Black of Atlanta, Ga., one of the south’s lead- ing financiers. He succeeds Eugene Meyer, Hoover appointee, in this im- portant post. HUGE PROJECT FOR RIVER DEVELOPMENT IS URGED AT PIERRE South Dakotans Would Have ! Government Spend $155,- 000,000 on 21 Dams Pierre, 8. D., May 13.—(?)—A pro- posal for inclusion of a vast Missouri jriver control project, costing perhaps $155,000,000 in the projected federal President Roosevelt Friday by the Upper Missouri Valley Development association. ‘The plan contemplates creation of a stretch of 855 miles of “flat water” vy a series of locks and dams in the Missouri between Yankton, 8. D., and the mouth of the Yellowstone river near the Montana line. Benefits vis- ualized include navigation, flood con- trol, power development, irrigation and water conservation. Details of the proposal were given in a prospectus prepared by the as- sociation’s president, W. G. Robinson, of Pierre. Copies were mailed to the president and to members of South Dakota's delegation in congress. Robinson said theoretical benefits from flood control, navigation and power would total about $150,000,000 while potential benefits would be worth $20,000,000 more. Detailed fig- ures were presented in support of these contentions. There would be 12 dams and locks in South Dakota and nine in North Dakota. The 6,000 word prospectus con- cluded that development of the Mis- souri along the line suggested would be feasible and would be self-Itquidat- ang because of savings in costs of shipping, flood control and power. BISMARCK DEBATERS | REACH FINAL ROUND, Will Meet Winner of Larimore- Bisbee Match for N. D. Championship Winning by unanimous decision over the Minnewaukan trio in a con- test here Friday evening, Bismarck high school’s debate team advanced} to the final round for the North Da- kota championship. The Capital City team, which is 1, Secretary Wallace, plunging into task of administering new farm relief law, promises “definite accomplishments” within 30 days. {| 2. Fifty nations are invited to join tariff truce to which the United States and seven other | countries agreed yesterday. i 3. Proposals for new taxes are | studied as means of paying in- terest and sinking fun charges on | @ $3,300,000,000 public works bond | issue, planned as a remedy for un- employment. 4. Leading industrialists are called in to examine administra- tion’s industrial co-operation plan, | to which the public works measure is linked. Combined measure ex- pected to go to congress next week. 5. French ambassador, Andre de Laboulaye, is understood to have laid French overture on the war debts before President Roose- velt in a qonference late Friday. 6. National farm strike, cailed for Saturday, is postponed but Wisconsin dairy leaders and some in northern Illinois refuse to halt | milk strike. | 7. Dun and Bradstreet report j{ declares business upswing is con- tinuing past normal season of ex- | pansion. | STORM KILLS FIVE Tulsa, Okla., May 13.—(?)—Twist- coached by Miss Pearl Bryant, late; H month will meet the winner of | lie Larimore-Bisbee semi-final en- | scheduled to face trial at the term are correspondence and development of jgagement for premier honors, Where the final match will be held: ‘has not been determined, Miss Bryant | isaid. Bismarck’s team this year is the \same trio which last year advanced to the semi-final round, being eliminat- ed by Leonard. The team includes Miss Frances Cox, Junior Birdzell and Lioyd Ode. The Capitol City group Friday night upheld the affirmative of the ques- tion “Resolved: That at least one- half of all state and local revenue should be derived from sources other than tangible property.” Members of the Minnewaukan team, coached by J. Herbert Bamford, were Eunice Plummer, Jean Salisbury and Cleora Scheidt. Judges were J. C. Gould, superin- tendent of Mandan yublic schools; Supreme Court Justice A. M. Chris- tilanson and Sharon R. Mote, super-/| intendent of the U. 8. Indian schoo. here. CALL IT TITLE FIGHT Lansing, Mich., May 13—(#)}—James M. (Bingo) Brown, president of the National Boxing association, an- nounced Saturday that members of the organization have voted to recog- nize the Young Corbett and Jimmy McLarnin bout scheduled at Wrigley field, Los Angeles, May 20, as for the world’s title in the welterweight divi- sian ! ETIMINNESOTAN NAMED |, TO IMPORTANT JOB IN FARMING SET-UP Charges J. Brand Given Post of Co-Administration of Big Relief Bill MORGENTHAU ALSO ACTIVE Prepares to Make First Farm Loans Monday from Big Emergency Fund ; Washington, May 13.—(#)—Secre- “Heads Scout Camp || ppenbeshetdiahteshehaiiet eka A jtary Wallace Saturday formally an- nounced appointment of Charles J. Brand of Washington, D. C., a native| Gunnar H. Berg, national director of Minnesotan, as co-administrator of | volunteer training of the Boy Scouts, the farm relief act. was in Bismarck Saturday to open a | Brand will be the principal assist-|four-day regional camp leaders’ ant of George N. Peek of Moline, Ill.,| training course here. Forty scout chief administrator. Another co-ad-| leaders from throughout North Da- ministrator is to be appointed, prob-| kota and eastern Montana were ex- ably Chester Davis, former Montana | Pected to enroll in the novel school. wMisrg c= re 72 BOY SCOUT LBADERS Wallace told reporters the problem of bringing about a program of acre- age reduction this year has era np plicated by the delay Weather Report Generally fair tonight and Sund: not much change in temperature, me PRICE FIVE CENTS ployment Bill Drafted ] INDUSTRIAL CHIEF'S ‘TENTATIVELY FAVOR ROOSEVELT PROPOSAL United Offensive Against Idle- ness to Be Launched on All Fronts | SPECIAL TAX IS PLANNED Levy Will Finance Huge Bond Issue Aimed at Putting Millions to Work Washington, May 13.—(#)—The ad- ministration’s carefully-planned of- fensive against unemployment moved closer to a definite launching Satur- Cay, with industrial leaders being called in for a final check on their part of the joint campaign. Linking public works construction Projects with industrial cooperation. the sweeping program 1s now virtually complete and will go to congress early next week, barring some unforeseen Crafting difficulties. President Roose- velt gave his approval Friday. A re-employment tax of between 1 and 11% per cent on the output of all industry has been agreed upon by the committee as a means of paying in- terest and providing a maturity fund for the government securities to be public works program was sent to; in the farm relief act and the 1 Tania ie vance of planting in the last month. Practically all of the wheat has now been sown and he said there is a pos- sibility no acreage curtailment pro- gram for the crop will be undertaken until next fall when winter wheat is sown for harvest the following year. Wallace said he will proceed with measures to help the producers of other basic commodities in the bill— cotton, corn, hogs, rice, tobacco and dairy products—as soon as possible. pected by him. within 30 days.” Heartened by the decision of mid- west leaders to call off the national farm strike, scheduled to begin Sat- urday, Wallace plunged into the intri- cate job of bringing back good times te an industry which has been in the grip of deflationary influences for 13 years, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., who will administer mortgage refinancing pro- visions of the sweeping farm-relief and inflation act, signed Friday by President Roosevelt, prepared to make the first loans to farmers available Monday. These loans will be from @ $200,000,000 fund to help out farm- ers recently foreclosed or facing such action soon. Refinancing mortgages up to a limit of $2,000,000,000 will begin in about 10 days. Wallace pinned his first hopes of success in restoring farm prices on efforts to bring producers, handlers and processors into trade agreements. Through adjusting the supply of farm commodities to domestic needs and greatly reduced foreign demand, believes he can build up the purchas- ing power of the farmer to its pre- | war place. ‘NEXT JURY TERM T0 | BEGIN HERE JUNE 6 Two Former State Officials Are | Scheduled to Face Trial j During Session Burleigh county’s next jury term of {district court—at which two former |state officials are scheduled to face trial—will begin at 10 a. m. Tuesday, {June 6, it was ordered Saturday by Judge Fred Jansonius. Judge Jansonius said he will in- \struct county officiais to draw 38 ve- niremen in the near future for service jat the term. ;, The judge had hoped to have the jterm either in March or April, but the |banking holiday and late seeding pre- ;vented this and the regular June term jopening date was decided upon after a conference with attorneys. Former state officials who are iJohn Gammons, former secretary “¢ ithe industrial and state securities ‘commissions, charged with embezzle- {ment of state funds, and G. Angus |Fraser, former adjutant general. charged with obtaining money under false pretenses in connection with his expense and payroll accounts. In another criminal case, Royal Thomas is charged with larceny of livestock following an alleged horse- Stealing episode south of Bismarck. Clerk of Court Charles Fisher does not expect the civil calendar to be heavy. ————EEE *Lowly Porker Makes | Comeback on Market | Pas Chicago, May 13.—(#)—The | lowly porker staged a comeback | Saturday with another 15 to 25- | cent jump to reach $5 a hundred + pounds. | “The boost in the price of hogs, | known in the trade as “finished | corn,” was in sympathy with the rise in that grain. Corn prices were almost double the lows for this year. The farmer figures seven bushels of corn fed to hogs increases their weight 100 pounds. At the cheapest prices this year hogs sold for $3.10. Satur- day's quotation represents an in- crease of about 67 per cent. “Definite accomplishments,” are ex- | ASSEMBLE HERE FOR COURSE IN CAMPING Will Sleep Under Canvas on Capitol Hill and Cook Own Meals in Open issued for financing the constructior. program. It was said the draft to be placed before the president would specify neither bonds nor short-term securi- ties for obtaining $3,300,000,000 for the Program but would leave the door open either for bonds or short-term borrowing as seemed best to fit the fi- nancialesituation. A delegation of manufacturers led by Robert L. Lund, president of the {National Association of Manufactur- lers, studied the bill at length Satur- {day with Lewis Douglas director of the budget; Senator Wagner of New York, Forty Boy Scout leaders from and Donald Richberg, representative Montana were assembling here Satur- | day for the opening of a four-day re- gional camp leaders’ training course. ; ‘The school, which was to open at! noon with a weiner roast, will be con-; ducted on the grounds of the state ‘capitol building. The men came here prepared to sleep under canvas and cook their own meals in the open during the| course. In charge of the school is Gunnar H. Berg, national director of volunteer training, New York City. He will be executive staff, Paul H. Love, H. H. Prescott and L. D. Cornell, all of St. Paul, and Dr. Sanford, Rochester, Minn., who is chairman of the region- ‘al camp committee. Bismarck Men Enroll Bismarck men enrolled in the hejschool include Secretary of State Rob- ert Byrne, Robert Ritterbush, Richard Schmidt, John W. Reel and W. G. Fulton, executive of the Missouri Slope Area Council, who made local) arrangements for the novel session. The intensive camp program, in- cluding subjects in all branches of out-of-door camping, will be climaxed ‘Tuesday noon when scoutleaders here will be featured guests at a joint meeting of Bismarck’s three service clubs at the World War Memorial building. Berg, who will be the principal! speaker on the luncheon program, is! ® native of Norway, having come to, the United States when nine years old. Has Master's Degree Following 10 years as a logger in, Washington, he attended high school and was graduated from the Univer- sity of Washington. After graduation spending his vacations at the state university completing requirements for his master’s degree. He later taught at Washington state normal school at Bellingham, Berg first became interested in scouting when he began his teaching work. After serving as president of the Boy Scout council at Bellingham he was invited to join the national staff in June, 1927. | In his national position, he handles | training courses for volunteers ithoughout the country and also is as- sociated with the national training school for scout executives. Japanese Continue Attack on Peiping Tsientsin, China, May 13.—(P)—A Japanese airplane carrier arrived Sat- urday off Tangku, 35 miles east of Tientsin. A half dozen of the 40 air- planes carried were reported making Teconnaisance flights in this vicinity. Fears of an attack on Tientsin from that direction increased as it became more apparent the Japanese forces about 90 miles northeast of the city were headed for Peiping. INVADERS SAY DEFENSE LINES ARE SHATTERED Tokyo, May 13.—(?)—The Chinese defense line was reported by the Ja- panese Saturday to have been thrown ‘of Peiping, by a smashing Japanese ' attack. { LYNCH GEORGIA NEGRO Warrenton, Ga., mob abducted a wounded Negro Fri- day night after a gun battle in which his brother and a white planter were killed and early Saturday his body was found at a roadside just outside Ithe city. throughout North Dakota and eastern| assisted by members of the regional | he served three years as a high school | principal in the suburbs of Spokane | back to Miyun, only 40 miles north} May 13—()—A) of labor. It was said the plan met \with their approval in principle. | Industry to Cooperate | Industrial leaders have promised ithe full cooperation of industry in iputting men to work. They have ap- {proved and submitted to 56,000 yeni of the association a plan for re-employing 3,000,000 men on a \specitied date. ‘This would be supple~ mentary to the administration's en- ecmpassing program. | With congress enjoying a week-end rest, leaders took stock Saturday of two record-making months of activity land planned a drive to close shop in another four weeks. Behind was the probably outstand- ing job of the special session—the jfarm relief, mortgage aid and infla- tion law. Ahead a dwindling list of |Strictly administration measures. | The signing Friday of the farm and ; $50,000,000 relief bills marked another milestone in administartion efforts which already had put the emergency banking, economy, beer and forest camp laws on the statute books. Two others—federal securities regu- lation and development of the Ten- nessee valley—were almost ready for the white house. Both were in the conference stage at the capitol and conferees hoped to reach a Muscle Shoals agreement Saturday. HOSPITAL HAS NEW BUSINESS MANAGER Rev. H. W. Graunke Comes Here {| From Worthington, Minn., For New Position | | Rev. H. W. Graunke, formerly pas- |tor of the Evangelical church at | Worthington, Minn., has moved to Bismarck to become business man- ager and minisger of the Bismarck | Evangelical hospital. Rev. Graunke has been a minister for the last 14 years and was in busi- ness for nine years before that. For three years he was manager of the welfare department of the Firestone Rubber and Tire company at Akron, {Ohio, which he organized. For six | years he was associated with the Per- {fection Stove company of Cleveland, ; Ohio, as credit and financial man- jager for the northwest area, with headquarters at Des Moines and St. Paul. He will be in charge of the busi- ness affairs of the hospital here, while Miss Susan Sheaffer, superintendent, will be in charge of all professional services. Rev. Graunke arrived here last week and immediately took over hic new duties. His family will move here when the school term at Worthins- ton is completed. Rev. and Mrs. Graunke have three daughters and one son. The son, Lloyd, is 15 years old and a student in high school. Ge (daughter, Verna, is 17 years old and {will graduate from high school this year. Two older daughters are reg- jistered nurses. They are Mrs. Stanley Roth, Faribault, Minn. and Miss Merle Graunke, who will come here with her family to work as @ nurse. } Rey. Graunke and his family will | move into the residence at 606 Thay- jer avenue now occupied by Rev. A. H. Ermel, pastor of the German Evangelical church here. The Evang- jelical Conference, meeting a week | from Sunday at McClusky, is expect- ed to transfer Rev. Ermel away from | Bismarck. The place to which he wili ite assigned will be determined then,