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| North Dakota’s ; : Weather Report Oldest’ Newspaper , Shy Sadar Onaee ane eae ‘ ‘ change in temperature, prem pe a ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, JULY 22, 1933 PRICE FIVE CENTS Wiley Post Crosses Manitoba said it was requested by other ex- changes to give clerical staffs oppor- tunity to catch up with the huge vol-/ ume of earlier in the week business. | Kansas City, Minneapolis and Du-4 president that “we are not giving up.! ‘We're ready to start all over again.”| The count in 1,123 precincts of 1,787) gave the federal prohibition repeal: , Yes 93,185; No 51,367. \ Repeal of state prohibition: Yes; Detroit Lakes, Minn.. July 23.—()}— Virgil Roby of the Minneapolis Golf club and Paul Cook of Bismarck, North Dakota state amateur golf the dignity of his cranial nudity. He's the third ring in the circus so he tells them his department is short of funds and has no jobs. It hurts, Steve tells ‘em, but what can he do, even though it breaks his heart to turn them down? i The applicant goes away wondering just what happened to him. Meantime the governor is busy making speeches defending the interests BY PARDON BOARD Four men whom Lee said were North Dakotans remained on the job Saturday. Lee gave their names as Howard Spooner, Fargo; men named Nichols and Benton from Minot, and ¥ ‘ e : Oc xcnange ortens Orking Hours EAE EMONTON ee. * ——— SS POR NEW YORK ON ; Held as Kidnaper BEGIN SELECTI | , TURNING: THE SEARCHLIGHT 2... Aa Of Aged Banker | jccen ats HL BEEEND THE CURE TTHLI + ROUND-WORLD HOP | INSTEAD OF 10 A.M. 600 EHIND THE CURRENT SCENE) TOTALING $173,395 oo . EMPLOYMENT DRIVE SSH! SSH! DONT QUOTE ME R R Hl HW AY allant Pilot Hopes to Make oS Beginning with this issue The Tribune presents a new column designed | Last 2,100-Mile Flight in M Shs to give its readers an insight into the situation as it exists in state and One H ! F nation, Everything will be grist which comes to the mill and the column je Hop : will be operated without fear or favor. It may be embarrassing to some : : Move Made to Give Employes Unprecedented Peace-Time| peopie but, if so, that will be thelr fault, Highway Commission Also HAS 20-HOUR ADVANTAGE The column will conform to ighest ethics of the newspaper busi- J Relief, Board of Directors Program Put Into Force | jess ena ir any errors are made or injustices done they will be gladly eor-| AWards Contracts for Struc- A Throughout U. S. rected. We may even print some alibis if they are offered to us. tural Work innounces Much of the material will be the kind of thing that people talk about Refuses to Sleep at Canadiai but. usually wind up by saying: “Ssh! Ssh! Don’t quote me.” ‘i : nm n PRESSURE OF WEEK GREAT ROOSEVELT, JOHNSON BUSY] —4”4 £0 saying, here goes. TO BE FINISHED BY DEC. 1 City and Complains of Headachi SCANDAL IN THE WIND eadache " . If you hear talk of a suit against an ultra-prominent public office- ” " : ‘Operating Limitations Similar National Recovery Administra-| noider don't be surprised. ‘There is something to it, Work Will Be Done With Un- BULLETIN tion Poster: H i A local lawyer has been carrying papers around in his pocket and Winnipeg, Man., July 22.—()— To Those of Huge Market jon Posters Will Be Given | naaity managed to get them aerveds ‘The cise involves an ineurenss cone | expended Balance and Un- An airplane believed to be Wiley In 1929 Employers pany and its payment of a large sum of money to a Burleigh county boy obligated Aid Post’s Winnie Mae, in which he is 3 in on an accident policy. The insurance company claims it paid the claim making the final Edmonton-New H in full but the suit alleges that the boy did not get his full share of the York leg of his round-the-world | Washington, July 22.—()—Presi-| money. It may come to light through the regular channels one of these Contracts were let by the state high- flight, passed north of this city at New York, July 22—(#)—The New cent Roosevelt and Hugh 8. Johnsan| days and when it does the story will be “a honey.” way commission Friday for == 1:21 p. m. (C. S. T.) Saturday. e York stock exchange announced Sat- Saturday began selecting 600 lieuten- Most folks who know think it will be fixed up; that it never will find mately 110 miles of ron co nn ti The ship was going fast toward urday that beginning Monday it ants to impel toward victory their un-| a place on the district court docket and the public will never have an op- eatatlaals tt the southeast. Winnipe? is 750 y it would to cost $173,295.88. Contracts also were Precedented peace-time program for | portunity to learn the truth. let for $14,763.11 worth of structural miles from Edmonton. If the : a at ee aes sates kaieeel putting at least 6,000,000 idle to work —— ork. ‘hes — Lewes an ae was Post’s he had le exchange open Sat-| Identified, federal agents claim, | by September. GYPPING THE NEW DEAL _ - |Mrs. .| Made the flight in 4 hours 40 urday. as one of the Kidnapers of | Both were sald to be highly pleased) President Roosevelt has little opportunity to give special consideration | .,prieare' barntone oe nausea | apolls scclatte eed eden ee aan=| minutes. ‘ August Luer, aged Alton, 11. by first public reaction toward their} to North Dakota but if a condition reported here is general in the farm belt : — » An announcement by the board of i» TL, | year’s emergency federal aid and un-|tomobile manufacturer Fred 8. Due-| Eamonton, Ji ‘i! governors, made half an hour before; banker, Percy Michael Fitz- |scheme, under which around 5,000,000| both the president and the average farmer had better get busy and stop obligated regular federal aid and must |senberg, has been sued for $100,000 mn, July 22.— (>) —Wiley i ; ;| Serald, above, ex-convict, is held |employers would sign agreements| the bootlegging of flour. ¥ ope | post: Oklahoma round-the-world flier, | opening time Saturday morning, said; ‘Borin’ athe “walll thei er competitors with boot-|€ completed by Dec. 1 under federal heart balm by Mrs. Maude A. Hop-| hopped off for New York on thi ‘ “Due to the sustained pressure un-| {2 St. Louis, Mo., charged with |with the president to increase pay le stat ers are cl ing their smaller competitors ~ | regulations, Kins, wife of Julian Hopkins, Indian-|teg of his tri ; on the last der which members and employes of] Violation of the federal kidnap- and put more people to work by short-| legging grain and flour to evade the processing tax of 30 cents a bushel. From 10 to 20 bidders submitted bids |«polis insurance executive. Mrs. Hop- g of his trip at 8:41 a. m. (C.8.T.) their firms and of the stock-clearing ing ae He a ore to be [ening the hours of those now em- Ty say they eee Ho at night! and selling He to taraiers daievery prolece ich cava Her Hisand's: athections eae ee ee urn over to authorities in Ployed. and even merchants under cover o! he an vantage of a “ a on only one | Cotmiderable time “and patieuieris| Ulinois where kidnaping for |" A further molding of public opinion| about $1.40 a barrel, since tt takes about 46 bushels of grain to make a Romennets were awarded to: | _jwere alinented | by the attractive | nour and 34 minutes to refuel his ship, | in the last few days, the governing] ®2#0m 8 punishable by death. (behind the plan is looked for when| barrel of flour, more if the grain is light. pany, Fargo, 18298 mates surtact : the Winnie Mae, and to get a brief \ hed go) President Roosevelt on Monday night One of the millers says: “I was a good Democrat two weeks ago but | Ban: UOTE. 1. Surfacing on | ——___ .—______— rest after flying overnight from Fair- | committee of the New York stock ex- outlines it to the nation. if Roosevelt doesn’t hurry up and enforce the process tax law all around,|S: R. 17, Walsh county; Park River banks, Alaska. change, by resolution this morning, ‘The next immediate step, which be-| I'll be turning Republican in # short time.” west, $11,107.61. When he left Edmonton he was 20 H have determined that beginning with Saran is th ceil 7 W. H. Noel company, Jamestown, hours and 12 minutes ahead of the Monday, July 24, and until further jean lay, le selection of re- 12.008 miles surfacing on S. R. 17, record he set with Harold Gatty i : notice the exchange will open at 12 jeovery boards of seven in each of the! HOLD YOUR HORSES. YOU MAY VOTE YET Walsh county, Adams west, $15,360.71. 1921, Their elapsed time tosccher SOOH Snibead Se Ae: 10 o’lok ee shall ‘ jeommerce department's 24 districts} ‘The “beer boys” are almost in ® cold fury about the failure of Governor | "Northwestern Construction company : ane aa business days, and furthermore the and of additional boards of nine in} Langer to call a special election on their initiated measure which would | 16611 miles surfacing, Billings county, eg governing committee will determine 5 leach state. These units will advise| permit legal sale of the beverage in North Dakota. U. 8. 85 between Belfield and Gressy MATTERN STILL AT NOME next week, provided the present great ifederal headquarters on progress, and They say the: governor promised them to call a special election and| Butte, $14,027.13. Nome, Alaska, July 22—(R}— {help the campaign. there are in existence eight or more affidavits in which reputable citizens} ny y, While the Soviet flires who activity continues, whether or not the ig! oel Company, two projects in Cass flew j exchange will be closed next Satur- Johnson meanwhile said he plans) say they heard him make the promise. These are being saved for use at] county, surfacing 7.807 miles on U. 8. from the Black Sea in southern q day.” no exhaustive set of regulations gov-| the proper time if it becomes necessary to apply more “steam” to the exeou-| No, 10 Casselton west, and 13.395 miles| pone eae aeee ee aN Russia to go to the aid of Jimmie The New York curb exchange de- erning application of the presidential] tive anatomy. on U. 8, 10, Buffalo east and west, Mattern were resting and being : agreements which will reach every But indications are that the governor is making up his mind and the % i Pp T entertained here Saturday, Mate cided on the same restricted schedule. ‘ $25,796.98. Union Pressure Proves Too Ys ‘The exchanges made similar oper-| Pacific Northwestern State Is/cmployer through the mails on July| report is out that he has decided to call a special election early in Septem-|" Win Coman, Goodrich, surfacing tern awaited word from his back- ating limitations during the huge} 20th to Gi inst [7th ber. ‘The grapevine report fixes the date as the seventh. 18.525 miles in Grant and Morton| Much for Contractor; North || ers on whether he should com- 4 Seatnekvoriioaa _ to Go Agains National recovery administration] ‘Those interested might just as well bet on that date as any. counties, on 8. R. 31, Raleigh north plete the world flight alone, 1 Enormous volumes of the last three Prohibition leet: paras deat icin ea = ee and south, $35,415.01." SEES th) days have imposed a crushing burden 4 ‘R IN THE WIND inland Construction company, Oma- on the bookkeeping facilities of, com- given every employer volunteering to| | ‘Reports from the hinterland, where the governor. spends most of his|ha, grading 8.590 miles on U, 8. 85, MASEL Ce mission houses and have worn down| Portland, Ore., July 22—(P)—Ore- |Day the minimum wages and employ’ time these days, are that the executive has turned @ moistened finger to|Stady south Grant county $22070.70,'|_ Workmen who have been placing| ass, f) minutes. | His the physical endurance of brokerage /g0n, on the basis’of incomplete but’ the maximum work, week. the wind to see how it blows. The inforthation so obtained is discouraging} ‘Win Coman, grading 12.890 miles on| metal lath in the new capitol build- Determined On Attompe employes. Many of them have work-|conclusive returns, Saturday was| Consumers may sign pledges to sup-/ to his procrastination. U. 8. 85 Watford City south, McKen-|ing were forced off the job Thursday] He was determined to do the ed long stretches of over-time in an|listed as the 20th state to vote for re-|POrt employers who have signed the At @ recent appearance at Rice Lake, near Minot, Langer had one of | zie county, $35,589.96. as the result of pressure brought | miles to New York in one h a4 effort to clean up the tremendous/peal of the 18th amendment. agreementa. his henchmen feel out the crowd. Noel company, two projects in can make it.” id business done Wednesday, Thureday| Repeal organizations, although say-| , His Plans moved swiftly while more) “Ail those in favor of holding a special election (on the beer issue) | Barnes near Berea, 1.53% and 1.230|20%nst them by union members and) AA make He and Friday. ing they never had reason to doubt ;Geliberate consideration continued on| raise their hands” was the request. The response was hearty, indeed. Only| miles $14,926.78. the status of the job was in doubt! with tn vlecs whore rests de pa the outcome, expressed much satisfac- |€laborate fair competition cone aes & few indicated opposition, Metal culvert contracts were award- | Saturday. “I just want to get going,” hé said. GRAIN FUTURES TRADE tion with the balloting. The Anti-|Pay and haurs for whole industries, The governor thought of doing the same thing out at Gladstone but led to the North Dakota Metal Culvert| Indications are that work will be| Informed he might omecss aie CONTINUES SUSPENDED aces changed his mind when someone suggested that country is pretty wet. company, Fargo, on the Barnes coun- ind all th i iment hibition in this : Tesumed with union men as soon as} Wind all the way to New York, a dise (By The Associated Press) 1 COLORADO-TO VOTE There is no indication of a change in sentiment on prohibition ty Job for $250.20, and structural work tance of 2,100 miles, the flier remark. For the second successive day fu-;/ at least 36 states will h ‘PAUL ; State and the governor may be expected to recover from the jittery attacks|/on the McKenzie county job to Carl|® Wage scale can be negotiated. The ed, “I can stand it” r = tures trading in grains at the Chica-/| passed on the prohibiti se a he now suffers every time the subject is mentioned. He'll have to, because | Lindberg, Jamestown, for $7,973.43, _|union men, led by George Moore, first| He hoped to be back i N é go, Minneapolis, Duluth, and Kansas!| Proposal before ‘the end of the he's going to hear a lot about it from now on, according to the boys with| Concrete culverts were awarded to|vice president of the international| by midnight, (EBT ye ee TOE City boards was barred Saturday. The|| year, according to an Associated the blowtorch. the Concrete Section Culverts com-|union, are asking $1.25 an hour. “I'm not certain I can make it in “J suspension action followed a spectac-!! Press dispatch Friday. The gover- Pany, Fargo, on the Cass county job} Forced off the work Thursday were] one hop, but that is sure ‘inte: ular decline of stock prices on the!| nor of Calorade hee decided po el RING AROUND THE ROSY for $427.16, and on the McKenzie|M. H. Hennings, LaCrosse, Wis. whol tion,” he said a a New York exchange in a 9,592,570-|| a special legislative session to pro- Everything considered, Governor Langer is getting away pretty good| county job to the North Dakota Con-|had taken a contract for the lathing| Post made a deft lan / share day that brought back memories|| vide for a° vote on prohibition ou those promises of jobs made before the election. Ring around the rosy|crete Products company, Bismarck,|from P. J. Holmes, Cleveland, sub-|the Winnie Mae Paar of 1929, Sept. 5. | Defeats Fritz Carman of Detroit) does it and here's how the system works. for $6,112.32. contractor for the lathing and plas-| Field in a driving rain and came to The decision to suspend trading for | at Hl s i When an applicant reminds the executive he was promised a job he is pea ocd tering. With him went Thomas Dan-| halt a tow fect fae eee t2 & another day was reached by directors | | Lakes; Faces Minneapolis referred to Vogel, high pooh-bah of the highway department. zek, LaCrosse, Edward Lee and Pat|with gaschne Tucks waiting of the Chicago board after a five-hour | Liquor League, formerly the Anti- Star There they are told the department already is over-manned and sent DENIED CLEMENCY Popple, Rochester, Minn. employed! For three minutes after he stopped F%, conference, Peter B. Carey, president, | Saloon League, stated through its| a over to the regulatory department, where Stephen Ter Horst presides in all las workman, he sat in the cockpit, his hand clapped. over his white eye patch. Then he clamored out, saying he had a splitting headache, Still holding his head, he fell into the arms of a waiting official and was Guy Burke, LaMoure. guided through 3,000 cheering people. 97,846; No 51,615 of the common people and telling them i luth, spon followed with similar ac- tion. Two-hour trading in cotton and se- curities was permitted in Chicago} Saturday and both there and at Kan-| sas City 15-minute periods were ,set | aside for the holders of weekly privi-; leges. In New York the present high speed ticker machine fell as much as 43 minutes behind for a new late record Friday and when it was all over a net loss of $7.40 a share was shown by the | Associated Press-standard statistics. | Just before the close a rally set in,! which came too late to do much good | in New York, but its price-lifting re- | {slowest in years. Succeeding tabula- been dispensed with as an economy! imeasure, the ballot counting was the! tions, however, only emphasized the | growing wave of wet votes. 1 Only four of the state’s 36 counties! remained in the dry columns on early ' tabulations. i The constitutional convention to. ratify the voters’ decision, will be, called by the governor next month.‘ Each candidate was required by the: state to sign a pledge to vote in the | convention, wet or dry, as his county; Because doubie election boards ‘had | finals of the annual Pine to Palm golf |champion, won their way into the tournament Saturday. Roby triumphed over William Kos- telecky, Jr., of Dickinson, N. D., 5 and 4, while Cook nosed Fritz Carman of Detroit Lakes, 1 up. Cook made the turn 2 up on Car- man. Carman squared the match on the 17th hole, when he shot a birdie three. Cook dubbed his drive on this hole and needed a five. On the 18th hole both were on the green in two. Carman missed a 15- foot putt by inches, and Cook sank his 12-footer to take the hole and the mate! moratorium gesture. for non-performance. for a lot of things he did not do. The board of administration got Langer. how he helped them through his ’ \ The peculiar part of it is that Vogel, the middle-man, is getting blamed Sentiment against him is being built up. confidentially telling his friends he doesn’t like it, that»he is being blamed ‘Vogel is JUST A LITTLE SHADOW BOXING around to appointing Dell Patterson as warden of the penitentiary on Friday but still is shadow boxing on sev- eral other appointments, notably those of heads for the Minot state normal school and the state training school at Mandan. ‘Who may get the Minot job if McFarland leaves after years of educa- tional service is uncertain, but the grapevine has it that Lee Nichols, Mor- ton county auditor, has been promised the training school job by Governor Charles Simpson and Francis Tucker Fail in Efforts For Freedom j The state pardon board Friday de- nied clemency to Charles Simpson, Minot Negro, and Francis Tucker, Verona, serving life terms at the pen- itentiary for murder, and began hear- ing the case of William Gummer, Fargo, also a “lifer.” Arguments in behalf of Simpson and. Tucker were presented to the board Thursday. Both maintain their Their status if and when the job is unionized remains to be deter- mined. Moore said he doubted that Burke is a North Dakotan but the status of Benton and Nichols as North Dakota men is unquestionable. Involved in the discussion is in- terpretation and enforcement by the state capitol commission of that sec- tion of the capitol building law which requires preference for North Dakota ‘workmen. The difficulty lies in the fact that Holmes is what is known as a union contractor and the labor organization Attendants hurried about, tuning up the plane and loading gasoline aboard. Meanwhile Post sat at a table in the airport building, rest } He was deaf from the roar mate ma- chine. A batch of telegrams was handed to him, and he checked them over. The last half of the leg from Fair- banks was complicated by bad weath- er which, Post said, provided him with @ “big worry.” He remarked that the robot pilot, with which he had difficulty earlier in the flight, had “worked okay” on the Fairbanks-Edmonton hop, ‘i voted in the election. ; te What worries the board is the fact that such appointments are its own « ion ii sults were felt in San Franicaco, A ala 453 445 345—37| Tesponsibility, not that of the governor, and both McFarland and W. F. inapoetite, as does Gummer. mu Se aenien in another,” STOCKS MAKE GAINS San Haven Cottage pts 553 494 31435 McClelland, superintendent at, Mandan, have large circles of friends as| Tucker, sentenced from LaMoure|-Te Die #9 roore (lL, CONSERY, ATIO IN RALLY NEAR END 544 454 444—39/ Well as good records in their jobs. vember, This means that Holmes must put New York, July 22.—()—Stocks closed with a rally Saturday after two strenuous hours in which fluc- A donation of $5,500 for construc-| Gift of Organization | Coo 443 545 345—37! 544 455 44439 344 434 444—34 Carman Par in and has served continuously since. clearly be due to politics and nothing McClelland was appointed under the Frazier administration in 1920 “Retirement” of either man would else. 1927, while Simpson was committed in December, 1929. Gummer, convicted of murder for the death of a girl in a Fargo hotel the union to work on the capitol (Continued on Page Seven) SCHEME IN EFFECT though extremely erratic, Meantime their friends are directing a hot attack on the board in an " tore much narrower’ than’ those ‘of {ign of, cottage at. the San Haven| COOK <--.. + HG 383 dau—aa| effort ta keep them in offie, ‘Thats why the board ges the jitters when Where he was clerk, has been sering| American Net Team Friday. ‘acce] Roby .. . 354 43 anyone brings up the subject. mune. 3 e k in R *. lvue-raseereeerred bove pted by the state board of ad- 'y Charles Lycke, Grand Forks, open. 's Back in Running | Presi Final prices were mostly al ministration from the - Degree of |Kostelecky .... . 368 53 ed the case in behalf of Gummer. He zg ident Already Has Taken Friday's close and shares that showed net losses were well above their lows Honor lodges of North Dakota. | The cottage will be known as the! Degree of Honor cottage, but will be| Cook and Roby were to start their championship match at 2 p. m. Accidents Last Week New Warden Member was followed by William C. Green, 8t. Paul, who at the time of the Gum- Roland Garros Stadium, Auteuil, France, July 22—()—The American Steps to Halt ‘Bootleg’ » of mid-morning setheck. The mar- Claimed 12 in State] of Legislature 16 Years} mer case was a special assistant at- doubles team of George Martin Lott, Practices ket had a number of $1-to-$3 ad- given to the sanatorium to be used i torney general to prosecute the 4 vances. without restrictions, Nelson Sauvain,| | YOUN Roosevelt Viowmnt daatha da 7: th Dakote last| Appointment of Dell Patterson as|F@"e0 youth. Green, who told the oe Sod Jahn. Van Fan ceeraey Bue Washington, July 22—(}—The ad. : ning. prices a *. lolent deat 101 las' 7 3 2 i - sump dater when fresh waves of| chairman of the board of adminis-| Ready for Wedding | jweek totaled 10, a tabulasion of | warden brings to the state peniten. | C02 he came here at his own ex- |zone Davis cup tennis battle with Eng-|ministration already has taken sd- Mquidation from impaired margin ac-| ‘tation, said Saturday. \¢—___—___— 4 | drownings and automobile accidents pense, analyzed the evidence which !iang by defeating Fred Perry and|vantage of the power given to Presi- 4 santa tolled onto the stock ex- ‘Three members of the board of, Ae tiary another man who has served the| led to the conviction of Gummer. H. George Patrick Hughes in straight|dent Roosevelt in the recovery act to be Ba ting orders caught | #¢ministration, Sauvain, R. M. Rish-/ Burlington, Ia., July 22—(P)— | state as a member of the legislature.| W. Swenson, Devils Lake attorney| sets 8.6, 6-4, 6-1. help preserve for future generations fhe lesdere and quotations stiffened ote oot er eee Ciara, ai Wedding bells were to ring again Dios pa BOG Ent Soot The Renville county man served 16 Agta yeery Gummer, willl’ Tt was the first victory for the Am-|the nation’s irreplaceable and rapid- confer at San Haven Monday Saturday for Elliott Roosevelt, 22 jaturday =n! ericans, who dropped both singles|ly-diminishing oil resources. in the final quarter hour. Mrs. Frankie Lyman,eCando. state week. years as lawmaker, being elected to) completion of Green’ tion | Cicans, Mrs. 5 i year-old son of the president. P reen’s presenta matches Friday, leaving England with| States were unable to cope 5 Piss Sty peony ngas president of the Degre of Honor, and} ~ The young aviation enthusiast Auto Deaths the house in 1916 as a Democrat. He| of the prosecution: ‘8 case, Hn Haat cae nee wk Mezal—"bootieg” nce Cotton closed at gains ranging from | With Dr. Charles MacLachlan, super-} who was divorced earlier in the | Ben Ygnotowiz, Dickinson. voted consistently with the Nonpars| ee en cole. Mi athe C886! ‘The British still need only one more duction of oil by men who took more 15 to 70 cents a bale after having| ™lendent of the sanatorium. week at Minden, Nev., from the | Erick Larson, Park River. tisan League in the 1917 session and | te eee eee inter ee reecen” jpoint to clinch the series while the lout of their wells than state laws per- qf SRomm earlet lates of more than 83],0 the ination in ew of overs| fmMtaphitte ag a aerngt [igkret Nal Hansen’ near Cate: ene pert your was re-elected as 8 Non-| OSH? eons hat nonupeed [Ameren files Victims of Prgays|mitied and "hen shipped it acres . s i a by ud pal in a ai . debacle, wo! ines anc er | SI for ie. » ome exchange transactions were |CToWded conditions and long waiting} ton from Chicago by automobile | Dorris Yeater, Hazelton. He was re-elected regularly unti!|(eclsion. Hearing on the application |Aiiton” must defeat both Perry and| The producing state, of course, naa the largest for a Safarday since May| NS. Sauvain sald. Steps will be, inte Friday night and went im- | Jack Phillips, Dunn Center. 1924, when he switched over to the| Of Clarence Orton, sentenced for|trenry Ww. (Bunny) Austin Sunday to/nothing to say about the sale of the 21 when. 431140 shares changed) gre", {ONOmne tne conference at/ mediately to the home of Mr. and | Jack A. Johnson, Helmdahl. senate to succeed the late Bert F.li7'"io15 “will follow. the Gummer (Perch victory on the American ban-|oll in another state, nor could it pre- ‘ hands. Se ble 0 ae to have the Mrs. George C. Swiler, uncle and Mrs. Theodore Delzer, Venturia. | Baker, serving in the upper house rane ’ ner. vent its shipment into another com- pi eines” Essar Ate og cog| Sunt of the bride-to-be—Miss Fourteen-month-old daughter of] in the sessions of 1925, 27, 29 and 31. The winner plays France in the|monwealth. WINNIPEG LOSSES CUT weather sets in, Sauvain said. Ruth Googins, 23-year-old Fort | Mr. and Mrs. D, Riggan, Brinsmade. | He. failed to stand for re-election {challenge round next week. The result was that millions of bar- BY RALLY NEAR CLOSE 2 Worth, Texas, society girl. Drownings jin 1932, having accepted a job as! Washburn Farmer Lott's dynamic all-around play and |rels went into an already glutted mar- Winnipeg, July 22—(?)—Supported Only members of the immedi- | Michael Kunz in Salt Lake near deputy United States marshal. sensational service featureed the|ket and drove prices in some cases as by generous purchases from oversess,| Mayville, Lavertie ate family and close friends were | Jamestown. Other recent wardens who saw les-| Run Over by Wagon|american come-back. Generally re-|low as 10 cents a barrel, below pro- wheat snapped out of the early-ses- ? ° invited to attend the ceremony, Florence Royal, Babe Lockrem and_|islative service were Claude Turner, garded as one of the world’s greatest duction costs in many instances. r sion pyrotechnics with a broad and Cooperstown Win| which was to ke performed some [Ruth Breslin in Missouri river near|/whom Patterson will succeed, John] Chris Strecker, well-known farmer {doubles players, Lott rose to superb| So congress wrote into the recovery active rally Saturday. The gain, time Saturda; “afternoon at the /Sanish. | Lee, who died in office, and the late} o¢ Washburn, was seriously injured jheights as he rallied his team-matejlaw a provision giving the president while not a complete recovery from] Mayville, N. D., July 22.—(%)—May-| Swiler home by Dr. Naboth Os- Deaths ‘since Jan. 1 from automo- | L. L, Stair, speaker of the house in| Friday afternoon when he was run|from a bad start and went on to blast |power to prevent interstate shipment an opening decline of 11% cents, was| ville defeated Clifford 14 to 3, Han-| borne, former pastor of the First. | bile accidents total 41 compared with | 1919. over by a hay wagon. the British off the court in the final!of oil produced in violation of state decidedly cheering. The close found} naford swamped Laverne 27 to 2 and| Congregational church of Burl- |21 at the same time a year ago. Patterson was born at Greenfield.) He was brought to a local hospital, |set, laws, prices resting 4%-4% cents lower|Cooperstown won a forfeited game; ington. Immediately afterward Mo., Feb, 22, 1874 and was educated! where his injuries were reported to The president already has signed a than Friday's close. from Galesburg in the first round| the newlyweds planned to start STEAL DIAMOND RINGS jin the common schools of Missouri.|be serious. He is suffering from MANDAN FAIR SEPT. 4-6 lan executive order making that pro- games of the second district Ameri-| westward on their honeymoon. St. Paul, July 22.—(}—Four youths ' In 1893 he moved to Minnesota and in| shock and internal injuries, the ex-! The annual Missouri Slope fair will|vision effective. And Secretary Ickes 4 The Eiffel Tower in Paris is built|can Legion junior baseball tourna- | Prior to his departure from |held up H. C. Hendrickson, two em-|1902 to North Dakota. He acted as|tent of which could not be determined | be held at Mandan Sept. 4 to 6, direc-/has issued regulations which for the 4 entirely of iron which rests on a ma-!ment here Saturday. | Chicago, young Roosevelt declined | ployes and a friend in Hendrickson’s| justice of the peace at Donnybrook|as an X-ray examination cannot be/|tors of the fair association announced 'first time bring producers, refiners sonry foundation; glass is used toen-| Fargo and Nome were playing in to discuss the wedding. and he | tewelry store Saturday and fled with| 19 years and served as a member of| made until his condition improves. Saturday following appeintment of|and shippers of petroleum and its close certain. rooms which are re-jthe other first round tilt this after-| was no mo: clined to talk upen | 51 diemond rings he valued at $12,000/ schoo! and elevater boards for a num- Attending physicians believe that | various committees'charged with ar-|products under some federal super- served for special purposes. noon, | his arrival here. ‘and $75 in cash. of years. ranging for the exposition. he kas 9 good chance for recovery. vision. pa