The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 6, 1933, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

N | : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1933 | | i (——$ ———_--_..-.._.._ 4 | will go slow about prosecuting for | q. Wednesday by O. W. Roberts, fed-|bridge at Miles City, Mont., Tuesday WESTERN POTATO | Heads Printers FARGO . MINOT BUS / People’s Forum Will go slow! about prosecuting fe; |St. Paul Daily News — | {ir"etcorclogist ‘Here, said the laccording to advioes reoelved here. ; regarded as such. Only where & Purchased by Rival] vestner was characterized by: tem-| Vogel, who came here last sprim (Editor's Note)—The Tribune wel- farmer manifestly and deliber- satiny peratures considerably above thenor-/from Hawaii, had left the fort Sun. comes letters on subjects of inter- ately misrepresents the facts will mal and with little or no precipita-|day on a week-end pass, officials at : est. Letters dealing with contro- || perjury charges be considered. St. Paul, Minn. Sept. 6—(P—| tion, the fort ‘His auto was found in versial religious subjects, which Purchase of the St. Paul Daily News, Threshing made excellent progress| front of a Miles City hotel. attack individuals unfairly, or an evening and Sunday newspaper,|nut with general! Ids, Rob- board a which offend good taste and fair by the St. Paul Dispatch-Pioneer |°Ut generally poor yields, A of } play will be returned to the writ- y . ‘Tuesday by Leo| tts, Said. Much corn was shocked |ieft for Miles \ sign the pseudonym first and your f ’ peli Was general: with poor results, he will t to ier speeraenersenenae ws wales || IMAGINARY? [AWS crusisatin ot ene mau wows win | “the” ground, moberis reported, |" Pet i North Dakota Potato Producers Will Travel Via Carrington; the right to delete such be continued as in the past, there| mostly ‘too dry for fall plowing or Kee letters as may be being no change in its independent seeding, and pastures and ranges are int Emergency Rates Other Certificates Issued, conform to this ‘k . hen © i et ead Se uence dry, rain being badly needed. Made Perm: " ssistant Attorney Genera continue under the | ‘The weather forecast Wednesda} i Leds Some Cancelled INDICTS ALLOTMENT PLAN pair pil ner Tection of Howard Kahn, the an-|was for increasing cloudiness in North ys Many Beliefs Not nouncement said. | The Daily News| Dakota, followed by showers and ' An effort to have freight rates to ‘The Checker Transportation com-| waiter, Tribune: Supported By Statute lishers of the Daily News are N. W.| weet portion Wednesday Might “ ‘Texas and other southwestern potato pany of Fargo has been granted au-| The wheat allotment plan, as we ———— Reay and C. D. Bertolet. pent rence rad j markets adjusted permanently so that thority to operate motor, passenger junderstand it, is the most unfair and) | Many laws with which we are fa: Find Local Soldier growers in western North Dakota can service Lata a and Rd discriminatory scheme all the way ye or ane believe bad Temperatures Last H 4 F “ find Carrington, announced -|through thi hay r heard of.) have no fount in the tut + SAE HIS aA RErEA oemeeaa nesday by the state railroad commis- flaca, while have no foundation in the statutes) Week Above Normal) Hanging From Bridge being made by officials of the North Dakota Potato Growers’ association, who are in Bismarck conferring with the state railroad commission, ai 500 carloads of certified seed : potat are shipped in normal yeat from neethweleerh MOF Delete, RUSRELL A. YOUNG according to E. M. Gillig, state seed] Russell Young of Bisma: commissioner. At present these po-| reelected pours at ‘North De tatoes are bringing a premium of 54/kota phical Conference at Sane ey ase Sere on potatoes!Grand Forks age 3; Other officials s! rom the eastern part] elected ‘were Minot, of the state and from Minnesota on litmuten: vie al oer a dents, /tificates to operate motor freight tbe remembered and the|law providing a penalty against a i a tivignt tees aia oat Carl A. Maynard, Fargo; Joe Hughes,| service were granted. exons of dockage sald wheat con-|person striking another wearing Grand Forks; and L. J, Maimin, Devils commission issued an amended|tained, how much was used for home| glasses. No specific penalty is pro- FROM cents a hundred pounds in favor of| Lake, Red River Valley points. This con- dition is what the North Dakota Po- tato Growers’ association is attempt- ing to change. Last March railroad companies in this territory granted a temporary rate reduction to shippers from west- ern North Dakota to Texas points. ‘They have extended it to apply to the present shipping season. Last year Colorado and Nebraska railroads granted a rate reduction in favor of DONATES $500 70 DIVERSION PLAN tiokly excluded North Dakota’ pos ee Tn 2 bred beeen after drought, hail and pests have io Recipe marr ot hae a nh Rail to this Expo- Go Life, Love, e cl ing of el ic rates, & toll! And, if they can't] not legal, but y are. per- Si Gieatrraniae: fuerte lle ad Will Assist in Getting Project! reduction in lighting and power rates, me suena eqns ‘aiistment, | haps better that they should be} sition of the Cea-] ANY DAY DURING Leughter those states but a further reduction Presented Before Nation- filed by the Otter Tail Power com-|they should refuse to join until the| Signed in ink, because it makes docu- tury ... fast, safe, = Will Us Hecemanty tb Corlibe-s pany applicable at St. Thomas, was|pig” wigs in Washington wake up! | ments harder to forge, but there is no reveatibraie SEPTEMBER a a ae ee al Authorities ee eerig scx tina user WAG Terrace Gage eer itonranls rhests of the club incliied W. F. chsebionetity y . on Mette cash is given the whol hu . F. more economical imi aay oe peenrinted bd So aad citizens requesting the underpass west Sune: wills the Ltd tenant is|Kurke, Fargo; Sidney Hoffman, Bis- dan driving your Return Limit Cee Ne Hager of Witterd” Cite | Burleigh county appropriated $600 |0f the 800 Line depot at Wabek be/only given a share of the.allotment|marck, and William Larson, Roland, ving y 25 DAYS president of the association, 1 nvi't:| wednesday to assist the Missourt riv-|condemned and a new grade crossing |tee, This is unfair because the share| Ja. President George M. Constans car. Avoid the haz- Porking with Gillig on the ‘rate re-|er diversion project, after P, B, Sulli-|be constructed will be held there Sept: |tenant 1s going to have to pay for called attention of members and ards of the high- GOOD IN COACHES duction case. “This comes from the| Van of Devils Lake had appeared be- | !2 every acre taken out of wheat and put |Suests to the baseball game Wed-' weve'and dilcul> and fact that they can ship by boat. To|fore the board of county commission- the crops for home consumption in|nesday evening between Bismarck , y TOURIST SLEEPERS meet this situation, growers in states|¢€tS and asked.a donation to assist in farther south secured rate reductions | Paying the expense of getting the pro- that enabled them to compete on aj Ject before the president and the pub- more equal basis. We are hopeful| lic works commission at Washington. that with the support of Red River}, In order to have the necessity for Valley shippers we can secure emer. ;the Project presented properly to the gency rate reductions that will enable ! authorities it was necessary to employ us to market our potatoes at a profit|two firms of consulting engineers of this year. Even a small concession ‘National reputation and to pay the to[expenses of a geologist and other tists to prove that the project was more than @ dream, Sullivan told the the state,” he said. 88,112 Tons of Coal I BURLEIGH COUNTY — js Shipped in August Lignite statistics for the four weeks ended Aug. 19 show shipments of 5,151 tons interstate and 32,961 tons intrastate, or a total of 38,112 tons, the state railroad commission an- nounced Wednesday. These figures compare with 7,393 interstate, 31,361 intrastate and a to- tal of 38,754 for the same period a year ago. Rubbing gently with a dry, soft cloth will remove perspiration stains from delicate silks. TF YOU OWN A PLYMOUTH You may have been one of the lucky owners last year who -bye to anti-freeze ‘worries. jousands put in Ever- Prestone when cold weather worked as an engineer on similar pro- various parts of the world, favor of the project, he said, and he believed that the chances for getting the project started were better now than at any time in the ‘The project, {f approved, will em- Ploy 20,000 men and would solve the long and in places 12 miles wide north of Garrison,” he said. The diversion project is being sup- Ported by nearly every county board 80 far approached, Sullivan said. He believes that the project will be ap- Proved en the next 30 days by the Plan Special Train For Jamestown Game} tne points, the commission said, Cancellation of special certificates issued to August Bosche, Zeeland, and to Oscar Weig, Sheldon, for failure to file the proper insurance policies, al- 80 Was announced. Applications of Charles Edwards and Wayne Warren, both of Bismarck, for interstate cer- order in the application of the North- erm ation company, Minot, to furnish motor passenger, freight express service between and Watford City, providing the com- pany may not handle any freight be: tween Minot and Sanish and int mediate points under the present cer- tificate, unless the freight shall o¥i- ginate at Minot and intermediate points and destined to points west of Sanish, or originating at Watford City and points intermediate to San- MRS. M. ANDERSON SUCCUMBS TUESDAY Former Bismarck Woman Dies At Home of Brother in Mandan ‘W. Murphy, regional director works and Captain R. A. 1 inspector, who has Mrs. Mattie Anderson, 57, died Tues- day evening at the home of her broth- er, Fred Mitchell, at Mandan. Death was caused by cancer. Mrs. Anderson was the widow of R. L. Anderson, who died here March 1. She had conducted a rooming house at 114 Main St., Bismarck, until re- cently, being compelled to retire on account of ill health. She had lived at Underwood for a number of years before moving to Bismarck four years ago. She was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary of Bismarck and two , |years ago made a trip overseas to visit the grave of a stepson who died in service. The Bismarck Auxiliary will attend the funeral in a body. Mrs. Anderson leaves her mother, Mrs. Mary Merrill, 1102 First St. northwest, Mandan, and four broth- ers, Fred Mitchell, Mandan; John Mitchell, Van Hook; Levi Mitchell, who lives in Montana, and Bruce Merrill, a half-brother of Seattle, ‘Wash. Funeral services will be held: from Mandan Methodist Episcopal church at 1 o'clock Friday afternoon. In the first place, while we are told the most impossible for a farmer to ° ply with the various rules and regula- tions. And, while it may be fair to Very few farmers know to a cer- tainty how much wheat they produc- ed in any certain year. When to this is added the demand that various » ete. it is easy to see what the farmer is up against. Gross discrimination is running rampent all through the scheme. The fact that each county is limited to its actual production during the base per- jod, and no allowance of any kind made for unfavorable conditions will work a hardship on many. Farmers should demand an allotment based on what their farms are capable of pro- ducing in favorable years, and not merely that part of the crop left them addition to losing a good part of his allotment fee. Believe me, we know. ‘As yet we haven't learned whether or not the man who is buying on crop payments will have to give half the allotment to his mortgagee or not, but the chances are he will, and if so, this would also be unfair in the ex- treme. Anyone who is trying to buy @ farm on the half crop plan knows it is practically impossible to pay out. ‘The mortgagee gets one half the crop free of all expense and it just about takes the other half to pay expenses. ‘Those farms which were rented on a cash basis during part of the basic Milton K. Higgins told members of the Rotary club Wednesday. Higgins, who spoke on “Laws We All Know, Although Imaginary,” cited many instances of laws that are Reviewing weather and crops for the last seven days, the weekly corn and wheat region summary issued ; Gustav C. Vogel, staff sergeant in s \quartermaster’s corps at Fort Lincoln {was found hanging from a railroad presumed to exist but do not exist in fact. Among them, he said, was the idea that a tenant could not be evicted during the winter months. There is no such law on the statute books, he declared. Another is the idea that there is a ‘16 vided in such cases other than the ; Seneral one for assault. ; Certain types of contracts, made in writing and providing for no consid- eration, sucn as the payment of a dollar or other considerations to make them binding, are legal, though many persons believe they are not.! | Most contracts are legal whether a a is shown or not, he said. Some persons believe that checks or other documents signed with a Make your trip by and Dickinson. Fred A. Copelin; programt chairman, introduced As- sistant Attorney General Milton K. Higgins. FIND YOUNG MAN DEAD Great Falls, Mont., Sept. 6.—(P)— ‘The body of Lyman Wiggin, 22, a bullet through the heart, was found ‘Wednesday in a south side rooming house. Police said it apparently was @ case of suicide. Wiggin was a son of A. E. Wiggin, state manager of re- ductions works for the Anaconda Cop- ver Mining company. Officers said! they found no notes. ties in parking. to $12.75 for fi Services. ROUND TRIP BISMARCK TO THE Chicago Worlds Fair PLEASE INQUIRE ABOUT ALL-EXPENSE FAIR TOURS Minimum rates ranging from $4.00 for one day including Hotel Accommodations, Admissions to the Fair and other ASK THE AGENT FOR THE (upon payment for space used) ve days in Chicago Daily 2:30-7-9 Admission Until 7:30—25c After 7:30—35e Matinee 25 TONIGHT Sparkling With The Spirit of period and the tenant has moved to ‘an uncertain address will have tohave| The Arctic and Antarctic Oceans, 1933 which are cold and not very salty, their allotments figured on an entire- are vivid green in color. ly different basis, if they are to take part in the plan. Already’ there is a jot of complaint of unfairness and in- equality by those farmers who have taken preliminary steps to join the} scheme. And there will be lots more. ‘A farmer is in danger of being prosecuted for perjury if he signs a contract, unless he is absolutely cer- tain he has given correct data in every ular, But when a farmer does | his own threshing who is to know the truth? Any plan that expects farm- ers in any given community to act the part of snoop and inspector on | their neighbors is bound to have a/ rude awakening. And certainly such tactics do not make for harmony in a farming community. : Mighty few farmers are going to! squeal on their neighbors when they see the big town farmers, all the landlords in the country and the fel- Jow who farms fifty thousand acres get the same allotment in proportion as the poor devil who depends on his NLY THE CENTER LEAVES ARE USED by She forgot thelr for livelihood. roubles for" the aed of the winter. | train renner ot aie pe anecial : heh Boos widely heralded At today’s price of $2.95 a gal- | the baseball game Pande iin ost World Pedestrians ae see solely paler “ 2 ° 7 not Jon, Eveready Prestone is your | was made Wednesday by an Ameri. Visit in Bismarck |{2,"fchows and, as the Tribune told most : can Legion committee. The fare of us a few days ago, the small farmer Here's why. It won't eva) $1.00 for the round trip will be the] ares rambert ‘Vanzi, granddaughter | will probably not care to join and it Seeded, a1 will aoe 4 foe gens pty for the ex-|o¢ John Ogden, who served North be more profitable for the big EPtosting Power” Plymouth down | will leave Mandan at fra: im, mean | Dakota as superintendent of public|fafmer to join the plan. | S to sero, For other nd | tain Biemerck ng TOUR” | instruction from 1891 to 1893, arrived| But our guess is the fellow is sealeee, nee your desisc's chact. Pat | genial standard at 10:16,| ere Wednesday in the initial stages| the very one who needs help most, and Hein and deve all through the wine | turn tr time. On the re-/of"s round-world hiking trip which|since the government is taking no fee without care on our mipd: |T50 pom ne nnn | wil abe er and er hunand, San nand Sh Sere ors market You've got safe, sure, protection | Stops will be made, both going and|FTanciten, nevspaperman, approxi-|“aily, wiping out every cent of profit eur chanel proved M eclh Beee, McRensie, Ster-| "sr, and Mrs. Vanzi came here from jhe hoped to make, while at the same by ah pr gps tony Fully Mie management a an Ashley where they visited with Mrs. ime esees are being ore by the gov- National Carbon | baseball club has reserved half the|Vanzi's uncle, : farmer is being grossly aig ao es Y. Grand stand for visitors from Bis- Ry aloe ies. a a ck samen Oe pe on every hand. sq inet ce ae reer annnay ate: tar going to Sweden by Boat they, wil, And the IDeSIOnE yer wo Merck by Sept 20th. Put in Eveready | Manhattan contains more than|begin s tour of Europe, Northern Afri. | ,ot-24 tor any reason ing Prestone now—and ‘be sate, 1,000 office buildings. ca and Asia, during, W . Vanst|eerellotment plan. A simple. state- sereral to pal is Make This Model at Home THE LATEST IN COLLARS Los Angeles. ee ‘Mrs. Vanzi served with the govern- ment nursing service in Alaska and it ae to join the plan but we don’t was there that she met her husband. sued fc ry.” PATTERN 1596 After their marriage they took a ge Ben) the ee any honeymoon trip above the Arctlc| <cneme that will give the farmers & by Ohone circle. few needed dollars is going to be a big ‘The newest fashion story is told in poly ts ee Wreneginend black and white black satin anq|Former Local Man Is _ [cannot produce the desired informs white bengaline reveal the secret off Preaching Here Now| Farmers and former organizations, the charm of this chic model. Its as well as the business men in the oe reece Dare guage towns and cities, owe it to themselves lect. all-occasion frock ... the to see that rulings and regulations of smart bodice closing, the pleated col- this plan are made less severe. They lar so youthful and flattering, sleeves must do all they can by writing their joined at drop shoulders and skirt, tatives in congress to have vold of seaming to keep the hips tome of allthis re tape at aside and slender. and impartial rules used a HRT sale oe ee en ones and 40, Sise 16 takes 3% yards 29- much as they desire to. And with mil- ics tines Oaepeee inch fabric and % yard 36-inch con- lions of farmers outside the plan pro- can y ng i eReeRe rs S| © ndash clipumemn theses Send FIFTEEN CENTS (i5c) in 2 ote the sm cl x egy cot rtrd, ft behind it to take out of production nny ess ne this. Anne Adams pattern. | Write mien Ak Cal Coe the center leaves. We don’t use the harsh Pigg, Mae gg Nd must cooperate with ny | and top leaves of the plant—or the coarse bot- : eaee Glas beatae ce appenl to the farmer as being fair tom leaves. Only the few choice center : ton of afternoon, sports, golf, ten- bo ia ala A Farmer, leaves—no stem—no stalk. And every ; is nis dresses, jumpers, ‘house iro, Minneapolis, Sent, 6-—(9—Two Ne- Bismarck, North’ Dakota, ee eh ope rag pote ALWAYS the finest tobaccos: special ‘ styles | 9: Wednesday as their car, ; — ucky is fully packed wit ese choice ; p for Juniors, and lovely cl for|an attempt to pass @ streetcar on s ‘5 Note: TAX'S y s roungsias, and intrutiong for mab lorage, skidded, rived sway 80 feet! "rhe ‘rabune dost not recall tobaccos. Round, firm—free from loose ALwars the finest i . 106 FIFTEEN. GENTS, CATALOG tinal ae dell Miller 8 The Mille farmer would or would not ends. That's why Luckies always please." Atwars Luchics please! ‘ 2 were: Wel 26, allotment . Informa- : agi: a ee AND FATTER TOGETMER| Howard Gilver, 22, both of Minne-| tion at ‘hand te thai those in soph bah dy Ses i apolis. 3 : charge of administering the al- “« : : ae Address orders to The Bismarck Trib- f : " : ‘ dee"gucereevuremt Sb Wel vere arf Mion in val-| ‘aemin Nh es hae co _ itr toasted * ee Lith Btreet, New York City. estine and ofily {75.000 Jew, = _ | plate ecords for the base period; / ad ‘

Other pages from this issue: