The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 10, 1933, Page 2

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2 PRESIDENT SEEKING FEDERAL CONTROL OF NEW LIQUOR TRAFFIC Production and Distribution Would Be Ruled By Gov- we Nov. 10.—(#)—Presi- Gent Roosevelt wants firm federal control of liquor when prohibition ends December 5. He plans to keep taxes down to, make bootlegging unprofitable and he intends to bring the industry un-/| der the government’s program of con- | trol of production and distribution | that applies to other industries. This plan developed from a white | house parley Thursday and was be- ing rushed into final form Friday by | @ special cabinet committee and a group of experts. | To assure a supply and prevent profiteering, the president will sanc- tion a relaxation in the embargo ad Uquor imports before Decem- | 5. He also is approving a policy of liberal licensing of distillers so they | may manufacture, liquor to be held in bond until legal sales are permissable. Attorney General Cummings, the government’s law enforcement of-/ ficial, put the administration policy | in these words: | Want Decent Procedure “The spirit is to have orderly, de-| cent procedure under terms which will discourage and make unprofitable the activities of bootleggers and law) breakers. “The thought is not to make the taxes too high, for that is an open in- ‘vitation to bootleggers.” No material boost above the $1.10 levy on each gallon of whiskey is in immediate prospect, administration sources said. ‘The attorney general made it plain | FH that the government is going to ex- ercise its authority under the nation- al recovery act and the agriculture ad- justment administration to control Production and distribution of liquor. Meanwhile, the justice department will focus its attention upon big time racketeers and “real criminals.” With the law already voted dead, Attorney General Cummings wishes to conserve his funds for prosecution of the “big boys.” It is estimated about 250,000 gallons of medicinal liquor may be allowed to be imported between now and Decem- ber 5. Here Are High Spots ‘The high spots of President Roose- ‘velt’s program for “after repeal.” Elimination of bootlegging and Tacketeering by taking the profit out! of illicit liquor through moderate taxes, Control of domestic production and distribution through the NRA and) the agricultural adjustment admin- istration. Protection Sg federal laws ‘and supply con- Deer listens te drinking as against hard liquors comparatively lighter taxes. Agreement between federal and itate governments on taxes. ‘The president's plans, until repeal 4s effective, include: Liberal licensing of distillers to per- mit manufacture of lquor in bond | ‘o meet expected demand. | Permission for importation of med- | Ieinal supplies, possibly up to 250,000 yallons. | Severe prosecution of big-time Weather Report re and possible yarmer if vicinity: Snow Saturday morn- by B east, colder ex- treme west portion tonight; Saturday unsettled and colder. Montana: Unsettled tonight, or snow northeast and extreme east portions, colder east of Divide; Saturday generally fair, colder ex- treme east portion. For Minnesota: Unsettled, snow bly in north and extreme east tonight and Saturday; warm- ae colder in west portion Sat- by GENERAL CONDITIONS area is centered over Bismarck barometer, inches: 28.26. Reduced to sea level, 30.13, PRECIPITATION station: ernment Under Plan | and | @n exceptionally fine example of plan- v Yarmouth, Eng. Minot, peldy. . Valley City, eld: . 3 00! . 12 19 12 ON | Ship Tossed Aground Like Toy by Raging Waves Giant waves tossed this fishing vessel aground ke a toy, when it was caught in a storm at Great The raging seas periled the lives of the ten members of the crew of the Olive, who wero sescued with great difficulty. above the five per cent limit of 00 assessed valuation on city property. Although both measures received a WEATUER IN eee gts |majority vote, they lacked the neces- est est Pct, /Sary two-thirds majority. BISMARCK, N. D. peldy 18 23 60! The vote on the bond issue was 273 Amarillo, Tex. clear ... 34 62 .00 in favor and 143 against. Boise, Idaho, clear .... 36 60 .00 On the measure to extend the tax Galgary, HiteeGiey: -:2 $4 88 £0 rate, 246 voted in favor and 171 Des Moines, Ia., ci 30.00 against. eet a clear . HH a rH evils Lake, 4s LN eee Dodge City, Kan, clear 38 52 .00 Edmonton, ‘Alta, ‘rain. 38 42 08 ‘Modern Enoch Arden # 1! Is Back Home Again CLR, bl puss ts wv 46.00 Seattle, Nov. 10. — () —Seven- i a td a teen years of wandering ended, a les 'y lont., clei A Minneapolis, M, snow, 18 24 00 Years which saw him in the Modena, Utah, clear.... 22. 58 .00; World war, interned in a Russian 20 .00/ prison camp and exiled to Siberia; 54 00) escape, and more wandering—are $8 901 over for Fred H. Jacobs, 26 (00 But back “home” he finds his 48 .00| Old world has passed away. His 58 .00| wife has divorced him, believing a AY him long dead, and since that 4 time has remarried three times. Sean ae sae 18 28 121 His three soris are grown and with Sheridan, Wyo., cle 52 00; Children of their own. There is a Sioux City, Ia., clear. 32 .00| daughter, not his. Spokane, Wash., foggy. 34 46 .00) His aged mother still is living. Swift Current, S., pcldy. 34 40 .00! In 1916, Jacobs walked out of The Pas Man. cidy..... 0 20 08 his home without a word, A long Toledo, Ohio, clear .... 24 34 02] t vil , N. D., chdy... 22 30 co, Search failed to reveal trace of Winnemucca, Nev., peldy. 22 62 .00| him. Then, last Tuesday, he re- Winnipeg, Man., cldy... 2 16 .00} turned. . Salesmen Sentenced For False Pretenses Sioux Falls, 8. D., Nov. 10—(?}— Pleading guilty to a charge of obtain- ing money under false pretenses, Ferdinand R. Forth, Minneapolis salesman, was sentenced to two years in the South Dakota penitenitary Thursday. Officers said Forth’s receipt books showed he did business of $834 in| Minnesota, North Dakota and South! Dakota in the last three months,| selling advertising in amounts from $2 to $20. He claimed to be a representative of the Northwestern Chronicle, a pub- lication in Milwaukee, and sold adver- tising to appear in a special edition. | Glen Ullin Voters Defeat Bond Issue Glen Ullin, N. D., Nov. 10—()— Voters of Glen Ullin at a special election Thursday defeated a pro- posal for a $14,000 bond issue for a community auditorium and a measure to extend tax rates three per cent “I sought him for a time,” his wife said. “I had to make a liv- ing for my three children. I kept a little store. I waited. I believ- ed that he had deserted us and was dead. I got a divorce and married again.” Sathre Moves to Halt Violation of Embargo Attorney General P. O. Sathre per- sonally has taken steps to halt vio- lations of North Dakota's wheat em- bargo. Report of wheat being shipped out by warehouse men at Langdon, Park River, Norma, and Easby brought warnings from Sathre that his oiffice would take action to cancel warehouse licenses of elevators violating the em- bargo. The shipments prepared for movement out of those points were reported stopped following the attor- ney general's order. ee WOULD PROSECUTE FLIERS Moscow, Nov. 10.—()}—A request for the prosecution of those responsible for a reported flight of Japanese army jPlanes over Soviet territory was be- fore the Tokyo government Friday. Solution to Previous Contract Problem | BY WM. E. McKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) | The most important thing in con- tract bidding today is to find the safe- | ty of the hand. There are many hands | in which you hold a great number of | high-card tricks, but, due to the fact | that your and your partner's hands do not fit, it meets with a disastrous result. ‘Therefore, in your bidding, always | look for the safety of the hand. Tj believe today’s hand, submitted to me by R. Earl Bryan of Cleveland, gives ning the safety of the hand. Rubber bridge— All Vul. Opening lead—y 3 th West North East Pass 26 Pass Pass Pass CONTRACT E =" CXPERTS PLAY IT__S2a Today’s Contract Problem C. F. Waltman, member of the executive committee of the eastern Pennsylvania cham- pionship tournament recently held at Reading, made a grand slam in spades with the fol- lowing hand, East opening with the three of hearts. And there was no misplay by the opponents. How did he do it? @AKQ1086¢ 8 Jamestown Is Voting On Municipal nt Jamestown, N. D., Nov. 10—(P)— A near record vote is expected in a special election here Friday to deter- mine whether a municipal electric light and power plant should be erect- ed. A vigorous two-weeks campaign hag been staged with Mayor Oscar Zim- merman and 10 of 12 alderman lead- ing in the fight for a city-owned plant. Some kind of a record was claimed by the Jamestown Sun because an extra edition Thursday night was de- livered personally by Mayor Zimmer- man, several members of the city council and prominent businessmen. ‘The paper carried a plea for approval of the proposal for the municipal electric light plant. Minnesota to Press Conservation Plans Bt. Paul, Nov. 10—(?)—An addi- tional federal emergency conservation project under which probably 12,000 men in Minnesota will be put to work in the forestry and erosion camps was torwarded to Washington Friday by E. V. Willard, state conservation com- aissioner. The men would be put to work as part of 500,000 expected to be added to the present emergency camp work- ers as a result of President Roosevelt's latest public works program under which he expects to put 4,000,000 un- employed to work. The program, as outlined by Will- ‘ard, calls for further soil erosion work in ‘southeastern Minnesota, improve- ment of forests, clearing of rights of way along highways, location of town- ship and fgrest roads and cleaning up of water channels, —_—_— ! Additional Churches | OO Maria Lutheran Church, Braddock G. Adolph Johns, pastor. Sunday, Nov. 12.—22nd Sunday af- ter Trinity. 2:00 p. m.—Sunday school. 3:00 p. m—Church worship. An- them by the choir. Sermon on the Gospel lesson for the day, Mark 4321-25. Thursday, Nov. 16, at 8 p. m— practice, “HAD CONSTIPATION | ‘SINCE BIRTH OF MY FIRST CHILD” | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 TT-YEAR-OD. WOMAN DIES IN BISMARCK Mrs. B. B. Patterson of Strool, S. D., Is Victim of Can- cer Friday Mrs. B. B. Patterson, 77-year-old Strool, 8. D., woman, died in a local hospital at 6 o'clock Friday morting following a long illness. She had been in the hospital since last May 13, suffering from cancer. Mrs. Patterson, who was Miss Edith Herring before her marriage, was born at Tioga, Pa., March 14, 1856, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Herring. She moved with her parents to Del- avan, Wis., when a small girl and re- ceived most of her education there. She was married to Braisted B. Pat- terson at Cresco, Ia., June 8, 1875; Besides her husband, who alsohas been a@ patient in a local hospital for the last month, suffering from hernia, Mrs. Patterson leaves one son, Clayton Patterson of Strool, who is on his way here, and one brother, James Herring of Medford, Ore. Funeral services will be conducted from the Methodist Episcopal church at Strool, probably Sunday afternoon. The body will be interred in the Strool cemetery. Mrs. Patterson’s remains will lie in state from 5 o'clock to 6 o'clock Fri- day afternoon at the Calnan Funeral parlors here. Nebraskan Is Winner In Husking Contest I West Point, Neb. Nov. 10.—(P)— After tucking the national cornhusk- ing championship under his belt, Sherman Henriksen Friday returned to his farm 11 miles from Lincoln to shuck corn on 70 acres of his land. Proud of his victory Thursday in the annual contest on the Ben Stalp farm near here, Henriksen told friends “you've got to be a good: husker to support a wife and five children on 320 acres of rented land nowadays.” The 38-year-old farmer shucked 27.62 bushels of corn in 80 minutes to be the first Nebraskan to win the national title and the $100 first award. Champion huskers from nine cornbelt states competed. A neighbor of Stalp’s, Harry Brown, won second honors with 25.27-bushels. Third place went to Ernest Rehn of Putnam county, Illinois, with 25.26 bushels and fourth to Lawrence Pitzer, of Fountaine cotnty, Indiana, with 25.17 bushels. Fifth was won by Ted Balko of Redwood Falls, Minn. Approximately 45,000 farmers saw the all-American event. Our 148 national forests contain more than 2,000 public camp grounds. There’s Victory in This Smile The smile that only perfect faith in victory can summon lights-up the face of Mrs. Frank- lin D, Roosevelt in this striking picture, taken at the opening of the 1933 Mobfiization for Hus man Needs campaign in Chicago. Seek Indian Bosses _ To Direct Tribesmen Washington, Nov. 10.—(4)—In line with the Indian bureau policy of giv- ing Indians more freedom in manage- ment of their affairs, Robert Fech- ner, director of emergency conserva- tion work, announced Friday Indians would be placed in charge of conser- vation camps on Indian reservations as rapidly as qualified men are found. EPIDEMIC UNDER CONTROL Chicago, Nov. 10.—()—The Chicago! board of health Friday gave assurance that an outbreak of amebic dysentery recently discovered here, to which 15 deaths had been attributed, is under control. Students on Warpath As Grid Team Loses Bpringtield, O., Nov. 10.—(?}—More than half the student body of Wit- Policy. . The contentions of approximately 400 of Wittenberg’s 700 lu- President Rees Edgar Tulloss, are: “We are entirely dissatisfied wil awe ben record in Stobbs’ five . In his third year $& ‘Wittenberg was undefeated. ‘the six-team Buckeye Confer- the Lutheran school is at the bottom of the standings. PLAN TALK AT VATICAN Vatican City, Nov. 10.—(P)—Cath- olie prelates said Friday that a Ger- man representative will come to Rome immediately after the German elec- tions Sunday to conclude negotiations at the Vatican looking to settlement © of difficulties still existing over the treatment of Catholic associations. EGGS FOR GANDHI Bombay, Nov. 10—(#)—The Evening News of India said Friday that eggs were hurled at s platform on which the Mahatma Gandhi, Indian leader, was seated during a public meeting .|at Nagpur, The incident was regard- ed as the first of its kind in Gandhi's public life. - WARNING to EXPECTANT MOTHERS | If you have ever been a patient in any hospital, you are probably familiar with the advantages of a liquid laxative. All doctors know the value of the laxative whose dose can be measured, and whose action can be controlled. The public, too, is fast returning to the use of liquid laxatives. People have now learned that a properly Prepared liquid laxative brings a Perfect movement without dis- comfort at the time, or after. Dr. Caldwell’s long experience with mothers and babies, and his re- markable record of nearly three thousand births without the loss of one mother or child, should give anybody complete confidence in any prescription which he wrote! But most important of all, a gentle liquid laxative does not cause bowel strain to the most delicate system, and this is of the utmost importance to expectant mothers and to every child. Expectant mothers are urged to try gentle regulation of bowels with Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup ‘Pepsin. It is a delightful tasting laxative of delightful action, made of fresh herbs, pure pepsin and active senna. Not a single mineral drug to be absorbed by the system, or irritate the kidneys. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is an approved preparation and kept ready for use by all druggists. “Turn know. ably a few of yo Then Mrs. King Discovered | ALL-BRAN ‘We quote from her voluntary | = - z i H i “Turn to have something any of a hundred pert help.” to the WANT-AD SECTION” “Most everybody But there are prob- not have discovered what all these others know—that my want-ad section is filled with bargains and opportunities.” them Now” “And don’t forget to use this valuable section when’ YOU have lost something or for ‘poses. When you want to place an ad just phone 32 and my ad-taker will give you ex- ME does, I u who may to sell or other pur- THE BISMARCK ._ WANT-A ’ m7 »

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