The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 14, 1933, Page 3

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oaRoPS STTS. TESS TRSRSESERZS BOERE LANGER NEWSPAPER FINANCED BY’ FUNDS OF WORKERS ISSUED ‘Avowed Intention Is to Tell Story as Administration Wants It Told First_copies of the North Dakota Teader, new weekly newspaper of the Langer administration financed by money obtained from state job-hold- ers, rolled off the presses Friday ing, State employes have been compelled by the administration to give five per cent of their annual salaries toward financing the new publication. State Senator O. E. Erickson of ‘Tappen is publisher of the Leader, Oscar J. Buttedahl is editor and O. J. Chaput business manager. Ten thousand copies of the first edition were printed, Buttedahl said. The editor added that he expects the circulation to increase weekly and forecast a circulation of “at least 50,000". in the near future. Employes who donated funds to- ward the venture were given a corre- sponding number of subscriptions to dispose of. They may keep any money they may receive in payment for these subscriptions. The first edition is labelled “Volume 2, Number 12.” Takes Over ‘Progressive’ Buttedahl explained this in saying that the Leader is a continuation un- der a new title of the North Dakota Progressive, which the Leader man- agement purchased from State Treas- urer Alfred 8. Dale. The Leader is being published at the Capital Publishing company. A front-page editorial in the first edition said “With the establishment of The Leader, the people of North Dakota and their state administration sign a new Declaration of Indepen- dence—a declaration of independence from the warped news columns of the antagonistic press. “At a time when North Dakota is facing the most critical time in her history;” the editorial said, “when all about us is chaos, unrest, and confu- sion; at a time when united action, cooperation, and harmony are most desired for a rebuilding of faith and confidence; at such a time, these op- Position newspapers, refusing to ac- cept the mandate of the people given at the polls, launch against the ad- ministration a campaign of vilifica- tion and misinformation so bitter, never-ending and abusive that. it has seldom had its equal.” During the advance solicitation for subscriptions at state institutions, eight workers at the state tuberculosis sanatorium were discharged for fail- ure to subscribe but subsequently were reinstated. Later the board of ad- ministration announced that it did not approve of the attempted coercion of state employes. t the same time the executive committee of the Nonpartisan League dwisavowed any connection with the enterprise, thus branding it as the ovgan of an individual rather than of ESCAPED CONVICT KILLED BY BANKER Deadly Aim of Kansas Cashier Accounts for Two Who Fled from Prison Parsons, Kans., July 14.—(7)—Fir- ing with deadly aim while his wife was being held as a shield by a bank robber, Isaac McCarthy, 35-year-old cashier of the Labette County State Bank at Altamont, shot and killed the man with a rifle Friday after serious- ly wounded the robber’s companion with a shotgun charge, The slain man was identified as Kenneth Conn and the wounded man as Alva Payton. Both were partici- pants in the Memorial Day prison break from the Kansas penitentiary when 11 convicts escaped by kid- naping the warden, Kirk Prather. Standing on the bank’s vault con- cealed by a curtain, McCarthy drop- ped Payton with a blast from a shot- gun as the two men started to leave the bank after robbing it. Six of the eleven convicts who pars ticipated in the Memorial Day prison break now are accounted for, but the leaders, Harvey Bailey and Wilbur Underhill, are at liberty. Bailey and Underhill are among those sought in connection with the slaying of four officers and convict Frank Nash at the Union Station plaza in Kansas City June 17. Girl Given Million In Legacy by Boss Chicago, July 14—(#)—A fortune estimated at $1,000,000 is understood to be the legacy of the late Theodore G. Dickinson, Marquette Cement company founder, to his secretary, Miss Bertha Evans, the Chicago Daily News reported today. Dickinson, 77, when he died, was divorced from his wife in 1925 and by terms of that decree gave her $500,000 Following formal dedication ceremonies in which both President Roosevelt and ex-President Hoover \Participated, work has begun on the $75,000,000 San Francisco-Oakland bridge, greatest in the world, which eventually will give employment to 12,000 persons. Photo show the scene of the project, with San Francisco in the foreground, Yerba Buena Island in the center and Oakland fn the distance. Hoover broke ground at Yerba Buena Island with a golden | apede, while Roosevelt pressed a telegraph key in Washington that set off dynamite blasts that start- n 50 Arrested by City Police During June Fifty persons were arrested in Bis- marck during June, according to the monthly report of Police Chief C. J. Martineson to the city commission. Of those arrested 28 faced charges of drunkenness while nine others were charged with being drunk and disorderly. Other counts included fornication 2, assault and battery 1, auto larceny 3, disorderly conduct 1, vagrancy 2, reckless driving 1, violation of U. 8. Postal laws 2, and maintaining a pub- lic_nuisance 1. Twenty-nine persons were lodged overnight in the city jail during the period. Elliott Roosevelt Asking for Divorce; Minden, Nev., July 14.—(?)—Elliott Roosevelt, second son of the president, | filed suit here today for a divorce from Elizabeth Donner Roosevelt of Philadelphia. His complaint charged " extreme cruelty. Although filed Friday, the case will not be heard before Monday when Mrs. Roosevelt is expected to enter a cross-complaint and ask that the de- cree be awarded to her. In that event Elliott will present.no evidence in support of his complaint, while his wife's testimony will be read into the record from a deposition that is to be dispatched from Philadelphia by airmail Friday. Roosevelt will be the only witness and he will testify only as to his resi- dence in Nevada. ~He and the former Miss Donner, who is the daughter of William H. Donner, retired millionaire steel exec- utive, married at Villa Nova, near Philadelphia, on January 16, 1932, and have an infant son. Young Democrats in Dunn Elect Officers Killdeer, N. D., July 14.—()—Dave Riley of Dunn Center was elected president of the Dunn County Young Democratic Club at an organization meeting here, conducted by Donald M. Murtha, state director. More than 60 members were enrolled. Other officers named were Mrs. I. L. Aaser, Killdeer, vice president; Eleanore Murphy, Oakdale, secretary; Norman Peterson, Killdeer, treasurer; and Anton Kinzel, Killdeer, chairman, of the organization committee. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Date July 14. . 1 dark northern » 1 northern ... . 1 mixed durum . 1 red durum Oats .. Dark hard winter wheat in cash and securities. HIS AD IS WORTH $6.01 FREE! SATURDAY ONLY 10 A.M. TO3 P.M. DIRECT FROM FACTORY SALE ‘This pen is equal to any regardless of price. Ideal for business office, school or wherever a perfect pen is required. To introduce sne new arsveier Peather-Touch Balanced lium peint—$2.00 Pencil te LIFETIME ing these hor reserved. jliam McMurrick, superintendent, will 9 | begin at 10:30 o'clock, with O. G.| '34| at 10 a. m., with Roy Lewis as sup- ed excavation at all three places, Se ‘Game and Fish Chief| a OO Thoralf Swenson of Northwood, game and fish commissioner, is the youngest North Dakota department head appointed under the Langer ad- ministration. He is 32 years old. Swenson suc- ceeded Burnie W. Maurek to the of- fice early this year. The game commissioner is a native of North Dakota, a son of Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Swenson, pioneer farmers in Grand Forks county. The elder Mr. Swenson was a prominent figure in the Nonpartisan League when that Political faction was organized. Swenson is married and has one son, Ralph Duane Swenson, four months old. Mr. and Mrs. Swenson and their son reside at 821 Fourth St., Bismarck. The young commissioner was edu- cated in the schools at Northwood He is a member of the Bismarck Lions club. Plan Regular Sunday Services in Country Regular Sunday services will be conducted in the Presbyterian churches at Glencoe, Stewartsdale and Baldwin this week-end, accord- ing to a letter from H. M. Gulson, pas- tor of the three congregations. Rev. and Mrs. Gulson have been on a vacation trip, they wrote from Far- go, but will return home this week- end. At Glencoe the preaching service will be held at 10 a. m. and Sunday School, under direction of Mrs. Wil- | begin at 11 a. m. | Sunday school at Stewartsdale will| Davenport as superintendent. The preaching service will begin at 11:30 o'clock. Baldwin’s Sunday School will begin erintendent. Children’s and young people's services will be held at 7 p. m, and the preaching service at 8 p. m. Preaching services at Baldwin are held every other Sunday. Railroad Boss Would Cut Officials’ Pay Washington, July 14—(7)—Rail- road executives were informed by Jo- seph B. Eastman, coordinator of Friday that the administration believes many of their salaries should be re- duced. The statement opened a conference with regional coordinating groups elected by the carriers to cooperate with Eastman under the law passed by the last congress for a study of The above diagram and aerial || Weston of Mandan and five Capital " {City men, Fred Svaren, Ralph Tru- week, with minimum wages of 40 cents HARROUN FUNERAL PLANNED SUNDAY Rites Will Be Conducted at Presbyterian Church at 2:30 o'Clock Funeral services for Leon W. Har- roun, 59-year-old Bismarck photog- rapher who died suddenly Thursday afternoon at the Harroun Home Stu- dio, will be conducted from the Pres- byterian church here at 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon. ‘The body will be buried in the fam- ily plot at Fairview cemetery. During services Ralph Truman of Bismarck will play a violin solo ‘‘Ase’s Death,” from “Peer Gynt.” Pallbearers will include Dr. D. T. man, Andreas Risem, Adolph Engel- hardt and E. A. Kiser. Harroun was born July 29, 1873, in| Pennsylvania. Before coming to Bis-| marck prior to 1920, he had been in the photograph business at Rugby for 15 years. He was associated with the Virginia Butler Studio when he first came here. In 1926 he moved to Mi- not and in the fall on 1931 he return- ed to Bismarck, taking over the Vir- ginia Butler Studio and changing its} name to the Harroun Home Studio. | He was a member of the Yeomen’s lodge. Harroun leaves his widow and one son, Ira, both living in Bismarck. He also leaves five sisters and one broth- er, Charles Harroun of Cleveland, O. Sisters are Mrs, Hazel Taft of 1302 Avenue B, Bismarck; Mrs. R. E. Ir- win and Mrs. Walter Davenport of Medville, Pa.; Mrs. Frances Sostrom of Riverton, Wyo.; and Mrs. Albert Maurer of Seattle, Wash. Harroun died unexpectedly about 1:30 o'clock while at work. His death was caused by heart disease. He had suffered from bronchial asthma for many years. The body will lie in state at Webb's Funeral Parlors up until the time of the funeral. |vailed during JULY 14, 1933 40-HOUR WEEK FOR PRINTERS PROPOSED Shop Proprietors Meet at Chi- cago to Discuss Trade Pact For Industry Chicago, July 14.—()—A forty-hour an hour for men and 30 cents for wo- men, was adopted by printing shop Proprietors meeting to draw a recov- ery act code for their business Friday. The employers decided the terms would cover “all printing plants which sell printing,” and all plants operated Ra federal, state or municipal author- es. The printers voted down a sugges- tion to include planograph, offset and multigraph work in their code. The forty-hour week, the code pro- vides, can be relaxed in emergencies on the approval of a zone executive committee, but only upon such condi- tions as make it certain no employe will work more than 1,040 hours in six months. i The minimum pay adopted for men was 10 cents higher than a minimum rate which code committee had ad- vocated for unskilled labor. The com- mittee's recommendations ranged from 30 cent an hour for unskilled workers to $1.32 an hour as the mini- mum for rotary pressmen in higher- Priced districts. The National Editorial association was drafting a separate code. While the print shop code would not cover companies engaged solely in printing newspapers, it would, if sponsored by the recovery administration, affect smaller newspapers which offer job Printing as a sideline. Employes of the two groups, mean- while, were represented in another dis- cussion of wages and hours being con- ducted by the International Allied Printing Trades association. It was indicated they would advocate a 32 or 30 hour week. JUNE UNFAVORABLE TON. D. LIVESTOCK Cattle and Calves Have Held Up Well, However, Agri- culturist Says ‘With temperatures running about eight degrees above normal and rain- fall far below normal, June weather was not favorable to the North Da- kota livestock industry, according to Ben Kienholz, federal agricultural statistician at Fargo. Accumulated deficiency in moisture from Jan. 1 to July 1 was 2.45 inches. The calf crop appears to be about five per cent smaller than a year ago, according to Kienholz’s report, while the lamb crop will be a little larger than last year’s. Ideal weather pre- lambing time, with warm weather and ample grass and almost a total absence of cold rains. There are about three per cent less dry ewes than a year ago. Fleeces are lighter than a year ago, the average weight estimated at 83 pounds com- pared to 8.6 a year ago. Conditions are not as favorable for late summer and fall pasture as they were @ month ago and prospects for next winter's hay supplies are not as good as they were a year ago, when unusual hay growth took place before duly 1. Range conditions fell off sharply last month, dropping from 87 per cent a month ago to 73 per cent July 1, compared with 92 per cent a year ago) |i and 87 per cent, the 10-year average. North Dakota’s cattle and calves |i} have held up well in the last month. Their condition is 84 per cent of|} normal, compared with 82 a month ago and 87 per cent a year ago. Sheep in the state held even for June with a condition of 85 per cent of normal as compared to 87 a year . ‘ 2 | 280. FARM WAGES RISING Washington, July 14--()}—Farmers, more optimistic with the rise farm prices, are boosting the pay of their hired hands. The bureau of agricultural eco- nomics said Friday wages for farm labor have been increased approxi- mately 7 per cent in the last three months. Wages per day, without board, on July 1 ranged from 55 cents 1 Bane Carolina to $2.35 in Rhode Buy Now! Prices Are Going Up SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY _ | LADIES’ MESH HOSE | Regular $1.00 seller. Sizes 8 ¥Y, to 101. Special while they last, per pair .............. 29c New Shipment of Ladies’ Undies at Special | Low Prices 4 Pajamas, Slips, Gowns, Dance Sets, ranging in price from $1.98 to $2.98 ui, specu... $1.00 49c CHILDRE Heck ey yelling 1:4 Children’s Combination Rayon stot .29c 2t8... BROADCLOTH SHIRTS Regular $1.39 Value—Special, $1.00 Men’s Broadcolth Shirts, Reg. value 89e—now 59¢ means of reducing railroad expenses. Postage match. Latest GUARANTEE. 3, send or leave With This Ad PROPOSE BUTTER PACT i Washington, July 14—(?)—Mini- | | mum butter prices would be fixed! M.L.AZAR STORE Panties, pure silk, lace trim pure silk ..............5 *S WEAR Children’s Dresses, sizes British Doubles Team Defeats Aussie Pair Wimbledon, Eng., July 14—(AP)— Great Britain's doubles team of George Patrick Hughes and Fred Per- ty defeated the Australians, Adrian Quist and Don Hurnbull, 7-5, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, Friday to give the mother coun- try a lead of two matches to one in the European zone Davis Cup finals. The victory gave Great Britain a ‘commanding lead in the battle for the right to face the United States in the inter-zone finals at Autelull next week-end. Brockton, Mass. July 14—()— George W. Lawson of St. Paul, secre- tary of the Minnesota Federation of Labor, was named Friday as the rep- resentative of labor in the drafting of @ code for the shoe industry under the national recovery act. He will go to Washington next week. AUTHOR WEDS NOBILITY London, July 14.—(#)—Lady Honor Guiness, eldest daughter of the earl and countess of Iveagh, and Henry Channon, of Chicago, young Ameri- can author, were married today. To Gain, a Child must Mattern Determined To Continue Flight Chicago, July 14.—(#)—Despite in- juries and exposure caused when he was forced to land in an unsettled section of Siberia, Jimmie Mattern de-| termined today to complete alone his flight around the world. He did so in @ message. ' ie ae eel | | City and County |. | Mr. and Mrs. Lacy Roberts of Mott are parents of a boy born at St. Alex- jus hospital at 1:15 o'clock Friday morning. Harry Weisenberger, 17-year-old Bismarck youth who suffered a frac- tured leg and dislocated hip in an automobile accident Thursday, was reported in good condition Friday morning at a local hospital. Rt. Rev. Vincent Wehrle, bishop of the Bismarck diocese of the Catholic church, Friday left for Richardton, | where he will be a guest at Assump- tion Abbey. | Cash in With a Tribune Want Ads Mothers, it is not the stomach, but a bowel condition that keeps so many children from eating. Parents shouldn't coax a child to eat. Nature knows best. Healthy children are hungry. If pale, listless, and without appetite, they have stasis, Not to correct this sluggish- ness is inexcusable. Read what the “California treatment” is doing for ailing, sickly children all over the United States! The only “medicine” required is some pure California syrup of figs and elixir of senna. The senna stimulates a sluggish child’s colon muscles and has no effect whatever on the twenty feet of intestines which strong purgatives paralyze. Start this wonderful treatment today. Any druggist has. California syrup of figs, all bottled, with full firections. Use enough at first to cleanse the clogged colon of every bit of poison and hard waste. Then just a little twice a week until the child’s appetite! color, weight, and spirits tell you the stasis is gone. It may take four weeks if a child is all tun down, but isn’t it well worth it, to have constipation conquered? CAUTION Some stores will try to sell a substitute. Be sure you get the real California Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, 8 qt. Pressure Cooker $ 6.95 10 qt. Pressure Cooker 12 qt. Pressure Cooker 19 qt. Pressure 25 qt. Pressure Cool TRIBUNE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS About 43,000 pounds of paint are mixed when the dome of the Capitol in Washington is painted and it takes |35 men three months to complete the asl task, LAST TIMES , TONIGHT Where champagne is as free as love. It blows the lid off New York's MADGE EVANS STARTING TOMORROW YES! PD DO IT ALL OVER AGAIN! YD BURY MY PAST— hazard my future—lose my friends—for the love of this one woman! HER LOVE FILLED MY heart and stole my senses. I wooed her — won her—took her from the arms of my best friend! And, for her, I'd do it all over again! HE WOMAN I STOLE Starring JACK HOLT FAY WRAY NOAH BEERY As Mr. and Mrs. Hathaway, of Ward’s Cooking School, by Pop- ular request, are remaining all day on Saturday and Saturday evening. This is your last chance to get a pressure cooker and cast ware at these special low prices as listed below. oe Heavy Day Cast Roaster $2.39 Coffee Maker eocceweeues 2.69 Tea Kettles ...:.......... 2.79 Triplicate Set Omelet Pan . «- 3.79 ooee 1.50 4 qt. Sauce Pan with cover 1.69 3 qt. Sauce Pan with cover 1.49 2 qt. Sauce Pan with cover, special ...-...cieeseees 89 Double Griddle 6 Special Chicken Fryer with cover 98 Deep Fat Fryer, complete with insets 8.95 10.95 12.25 14.45 er er Dutch, 6 qt. .... Special Skillet .......... secccereees 249 sossees 189 39 These special prices will end when the Cooking School closes Saturday night. Montcomery Warp « Co. | weekly for the nation’s principal mar- | kets under a proposed trade agree- ment which butter interests said Fri- | day they would submit to farm ad- j ministrators within the next 10 days. HALL’S DRUG STORE 122 THIRD ST, BISMARCK, N. D. BUY FOR SCHOOL NOW Imported Linens 300 Fourth St. Phone Bismarck, N. D. Novelties 318 Main Street 475 a= nt, ita, Ladies’ Negligees ies’ Hosiery Bismarek, North Dakots Lad!

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