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isin Ona seus a! roe cam SAnmeannsnno —2 SEVEN KNOWN DEAD AS SPANISH VOTERS TURN TOWARD RIGHT Incomplete Returns Indicate Na- tion’s Radicals Suffered Severe Reverses Madrid, Nov. 20.—(#)—With seven/| already known dead and 300 injured, Faith Rewarded further outbreaks were feared Monday as @ result of Spain's first constitu-| tional election. Incomplete returns, from Sunday's balloting indicated al sweeping rightist triumph. Far fewer disorders than had been| anticipated developed, but extreme) watchfulness was continued because | of fears there might be some dissen-| sion on the part of troops headed by; leftist officers. | Troops in Madrid, Barcelona and| Seville were ordered held in readiness for any emergency, it was learned on} reliable authority. 1 In the first national election in which women ever had participated, | approximatey 12,500,000 voters were qualified to ballot to select 473 dep- uties for the first regular congress of the second republic. It will convene Dec. 8. ‘The first congress merely drew up a constitution. It was indicated that the next con- gress would include at least five or six communists, and four or five con- gressmen with definite fascist inclina- | nations, | Much-Beaten Auburn Defeats Georgians Columbus, Ga., Nov. 20.—(7)—Au- burn made a place on the mourners’ bench for the University of Georgia's) national championship contenders by) defeating the Bulldogs, 14 to 6, Sat-| urday before 12,000 fans. | Auburn, beaten three times this season, and granted only a feather-| weight’s chance against the rushing; Athens Bulldogs, conqucrors of Yale| and six other rivals, outpointed the Georgians from the outset. They| tallied an early touchdown, saw! Georgia draw close, and then rolled up another to protect their margin. Although Georgia made 13 first @owns to Auburn's 11, the Plainsmen | far outgained Georgia in net yardage, | accumulated 310 yards to 182. Auburn | clicked twice with long passes, one go- | ing for a touchdown. | Eee eee | Weather Report || — | | FORECAST | For Bismarck and _ vicinity: Snow flurries and colder tonight; Tuesday Ltn cloudy and kota: Snow flur- ries and colder to- night; Tuesday Partly cloudy and ) colder, much cold- er_east portion. For South Da- kota: Partly cloudy, colder west rtion tonight; ursday probably ae and decidedly colder. For Montana: SNOW Unsettled and colder tonight, snow extreme east portion; Tuesday gener- ally fair, colder extreme east portion. | Minnesota—Cloudy, probably some, rain in north and extreme east por- tions tonight, changing to snow flur- ries in extreme east portion Tuesday. Much colder Tuesday and in north | portion late tonight. | | GENERAL CONDITIONS | A deep low pressure area is center- ed over Saskatchewan (Qu'Appelle| 29.32) while a high pressure area over- | Nes the Pacific coast states (Rose- burg 30.24). Light precipitation has occurred in the Great Lakes region, in the western | Canadian Provinces | and in Washington and Oregon. The | weather is generally fair from the/| Mississippi Valley westward to the ‘western ky Mountain states. Mod- erate temperatures prevail in all sec- tions. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 1.4 ft. Sunday, 1.4 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 27.74. Reduced to sea level, 29.54. | PRECIPITATION i For Bismarck station: Total this month to date ..... Normal, this month to date . Total, January Ist to date . Normal, January 1st to date . Accumulated deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 7 Low- ECONOMIC PROBLEMS |Eastern and economic problems were Three years of agonized waiting has brought a double reward to Maj. Charles A. Shepard, Denver hospital physician—virtual vindi- in Murder Case 800 HEAR TOWNLEY lid OUTLINE PROPOSAL FOR NEW PROGRAM Langer and Frazier Fail to Ap- pear; Aides Claim News- papers Untruthful Eight hundred persons assembled in the city auditorium here Saturday night to hear A. C. Townley outline his state industries program and also praise Governor William Langer and attack newspapers unfavorable to the executive. ip Governor William Langer, originally scheduled to appear on the speaking platform here with Townley, were not present. Frazier, it was explained, suffered shock in an accident a few days ago in which State Senator D. H. Hamil- ton was injured. No mention was made of Langer’s non-appearance. R. H. Walker, chairman of the workmen's compensation bureau, pre- sided at the program and speakers in- cluded James Mulloy, secretary of the industrial commission, State Highway Commissioner Frank A. Vogel, State Representative W. J. Godwin of Man- dan, and Townley, “Governor Langer dominated the recent conference of governors of agri- cultural states,” said Mulloy, who ac- cation of murder and the hand in marriage of the woman who has | companied th tive to the con- Kept faith in bim. Shepard 1s shown here with his wite, formerly | ercbes et bes Sache ioe son Soe Mrs, Allce Watt, rich Denver widow, after he had received news that | during the governors’ visit with Press the U. S. supreme court had reversed his 1930 conviction of slaying ident Roosevelt in Washington. his former wife in 1929. With the reversal, Shepard and his bride revealed they were married secretly in July while he was under Ife sentence, ‘Langer Wrote Program’ Langer, he said, wrote the program which was submitted to Roosevelt for (friendship would be “for the preser- | vation «the peace of the world.” agricultural relief and pointed the way for the governors’ procedure through- out. Several times during his talk Mul- loy called attention of “reporters” to his statements. | DECLARE NEW TREATY WILL STRENGTHEN PEACE | Moscow, Nov. 20—(P)—Establish-| Before attacking Fargo and Bis- ment of normal relations between the|marck newspapers for what he called United States and Russia, the news-| misleading and untrue inferences in - |paper Izvestia said Monday, “will /their columns about Governor Langer, oe {strengthen peace and help decide| yogel told his listeners to get up their nany urgent problems.” “spunk” and demand relief. It added, however, that “relations| North Dakotans are “starving” he Appointment of Trade Expert] between the U. S. 8. R. and the|said, and hundreds of rural children as Soviet Ambassador Is U. S. A. will develop on a basis of/are unable to attend schools because mutual interest and esteem, without|they have not sufficient clothing. |interference in each other's domestic] The only way to get relief, he said, Held Significant jaffairs by either country and on alis to rise up in numbers and demand Washington, Nov. 20.—(?)— Far thrust forward Monday as issues of major concern in the new Russo- American accord as Maxim Litvinoff entered new conferences on debis and claims, Moscow's appointment and state department approval of Alexander Antonovich Trovanovsky as the first| Bullitt as American ambassador to Moscow had been formally approved by the Soviet government, word went out that the name of the Soviet am- bassador to Washington had been submitted to the American state de-|/0¥ to say nothing in reply to the partment. Soviet ambassador immediately stressed two factors: Trovanoysky is fully conversant with the Japanese situation in Man- churia, having completed a five-year ambassadorship to Tokyo only last January. He is trained in Russia's commer- cial needs through service as presi- | dent of the board of directors of the State Trading corporation and as a member of the collegium of the peo- ple’s commissariat for foreign trade. Litvinoff turned Monday to work remaining before his departure. Debts, | claims and counter-claims were scheduled for discussion at the state! department, but further ccnferences | were expected between Litvinoff and Acting Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr., of the treasury, on trade rela-| tions. Trovanoysky's intimacy with such} subjects prompted the impression in | some quarters that detailed trade | talks may be left for him. 4 His selection also added promi-| nence to the Manchurian-Siberian | difficulties and to some recalled the expression employed both by Presi- dent Roosevelt and Litvinoff in their recognition letters—that the new} Poni Ne ee “Find Small Fortune basis of independent policy by both | 4t, sides.” He charged Fargo and Bismarck Although high Soviet officials have| newspapers with maliciously mislead- refused to comment at length onjing their readers through untrue American recognition, N. N. Krest-|statements and headlines. insky said, too, that the move “would! “Representative Godwin's brief talk, reduce the possibility of conflict inlin which he lauded Townley for his the Far East.” state industries prdposal, was brought Krestinsky is acting commissar of to an abrupt tl when an auditor in foreign affairs in the absence at “a Washington of Maxim Litvinoft, __|‘H@ audience shouted “Tell us about As it was learned that William ©,|%°Ur peer bill Bil’ beer bill, which was passed at the last session of the legislature but defeated when referred to the voters, but sat down when advised by Vogel and Mul- questioner. (The name was officially withheld|, A short time later the man who in Moscow, but it was disclosed in|had asked Godwin about the beer bill Washington that Alexander Trovan-|W@8 escorted from the auditorium by ovsky, former Soviet ambassador to|Dell Patterson, warden of the state Japan, had been appointed ambassa- | Penitentiary. ‘YouJust Dare!’ U. 8. Senator Lynn J. Frazier and | Gun toting i8 no fad for Mar- garct Hise, University of Iowa She’s in dead earnest, ready for the extortionist who has written several notes to her, one demanding $19,000. Miss Hise, a West Liberty, Ia., co-ed, is shown in her sorority house room, as she loads her revolver before leaving for the class- operated tanneries, cheese factories woolen mills, machine factories and Wants Federal Money “We can’t get the money for them from you people,” he said, “because you haven't got it.” ‘ His plan is to get the money from the federal government, charged recently advanced the Soviet Russian government billions when recognition of that country was agreed upon by the United States. “Well take Governor Langer and a hundred fighting Swedes to Washing- ton to demand the money from the federal government,” “If that doesn’t work we'll send 100 Russians from North Dakota with Governor Langer.” North Dakota should be able to get. some money for its own Russians, he said, if the government can advance money to Russiang in Europe. Townley said the state industries Program could be started out in a modest way, with just a few plants throughout the state, but predicted that the program eventually would mean hundreds of plants. At the conclusion of the meeting, jthose attending were given what | Townley called “resolutions” to cireu- late for signatures. The “resolutions” call upon the federal government to advance North Dakota enough money Townley said. dor.) Townley made an oratorical plea for his proposed program of state-" under way. “ f “I HUNTED all day ¢ long...and just knocked In Mountain Shack Heelna, Nov. 20.—(AP)—With $7,269 cached in his squalid cabin in the Helena hills, James M. Clark, 79, polished gentleman of the gay nineties, died in the Lewis and Clark county poorhouse. The one-time traveler, prosecu- tor and student passed away last September, apparently in poverty, Finding of the money secreted in the abandoned log house was an- nounced by Miss F, C. Elsge, pub- lic administrator. CONTRACT BRID @ the GE EXPERTS PLAV IT a | SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM By Wm. E. MCKENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League a.m. est. Pct.| What is the most favorable trump Grand Forks, clear .... 29 29 .00 Valley City, clear - 31 22-00 WEATHER IN THE NATION Low- High- it est: Pct. 56 66 50 60 54 68 00 64 00 46 100 72 00 04 Edmonton, ‘Alta, “snow. 32 Havre, Mont., clear..... 42 Helena, Mont., cl wees 26 Alta., rain 36 — Medicine Hat, % 28 Miles oi Mont., cldy. 32 66 a | Feonesncts, Mino. clear 32 0 Mode: , cle uAppetis, ‘clay. Report 7, 8. D. Ore., foggy.. 10 Be tea 3 Beatie Wi a 28) Sioux ‘00 00 00 20 | distribution—to hold five trump your- | self and have your partner hold three, Jor to hold four and find your part- | mer with four? | The four-four distribution is by far 00 | the best because, when you and your 90 | partner each hold four cards of a suit, | \this suit has no value for discards as Ja side suit. Jf it is not trump it will |win only its high card tricks, | With a four-four distribution, gen- | lerally, three rounds will pick up all Duplicate—Both sides Vul. Opening lead—@ K. South West North East 39 ~~ Pass 5@ Pass Pass 20 outstanding trump and you then have r = ® trump left in each hand so that you may get @ ruff both ways. With ® five-three distribution, however, it Therefore, if your bidding indicates that you hold a four and a five-card major suit, your partner should sup- port your four-card suit if he holds 3 25 z & z z 3 g : 3 Today’s Contract Problem South plays the folowing hand at four hearts. He can make five, even though West opens with a spade and forces South to ruff a spade every time West gets in. It looks as though South must lose one club and two diamonds. How can he make five hearts? @A1094 Solution in next issué. West’s diamond bid shows a very fine hand. When South then goes to three spades, showing @ second suit (after partner has asked, by his three-heart bid, for a bid of either four hearts or pve no trump); this becomes a slam North knows by the bidding that South holds more hearts than spades and, holding six hearts himself, it is natural that he should figure his part- ner for five hearts and four spades. However, in jumping to five spades over West's bid of four clubs he very optimistic, because there are on- ly two outstanding hearts and both of them may be in the West hand, in & which case West can open which East immediately will ruff and quickly defeat the contract. However, when the hand was play- ed, several tables arrived at a slam | ’ contrast, but only one table played it at spades, and to get the state industries program ery { Strange But True | nd | Novgitome of Day | (J ‘The Associated aa eonalicilly SON FINDS FATHER Joliet, Ti.—After looking for his father for 34 years, Arthur Fisch- backa, a high school teacher, found him living one block away. The father, Philip M. Fischbacker, sn engineer, came to Joliet to supet- intend the reconstruction of a brew- ery. panes GARTERS PROVIDE CLUE ‘Chicago—The police figured this must be the height of auto thievery, Someone stole “Black Maria” auto patrol of the Damen Avenue station. It was later recovered, but the culprits left only one clew—a pair of garters, SAVES TIME-MONEY Omaha—Time-saving and penny- saving is the invention of Stephen H. Ayer, local high school journalism in- structor, * Ayer has designed a postcard- check with which he pays his bills, On the message side is a check form. He merely fills in the amount, sticks @ One-cent stamp on the back and throws the “check” in the nearest mail box, COPS GET HEAVY JOB Chicago—When Mrs, Thelma Ames fell out of bed Sunday night six husky policemen couldn't get her back in again. So they called for reinforcements and with the aid of three more officers. suc- ceeded, Breaks Into Barber Shop Sunday Night A man who gave his name as Gyle Johnson and who said he was @ sol- dier in Company K at Fort Lin- coln, arrested by policemen after he allegedly broke into a Bismarck bar- ber shop Sunday night, was held in Jail Mon Captain George R. Conner, adjut- ant at Fort Lincoln, said eruit since he knew nothing of him. The man was arersted by Policeman Wetmore in the Fred K. Ohde bar- ber shop under Finney's drug store at the corner of Broadway avenue and Fourth 8t. Police were called by persons who said they saw the man break @ win- LIFE PROTECTION — TERTIFICATE FOR ONLY $1 To Age 55—No Medical Exam For only $1 The El Dorado Mutual Life Tnsurance tion, Dept. Pershing Square Bldg., Los Angéles, is issuing to men, women and children be- tween the ages of 10 a Life Protection Certificate which pays $1,000 for death from natural causes, and $2, to_ $3,000 for accidental death. Send just your name, age, and beneficiary's name. and a Life Ce ite will be sent you ABSOLUTELY FREE, for twenty days’ inspection. No doctor or agent will call. Later, if satis- fied, send only 81 to Et your pro- iection in force for days—then about 3 cents a day. If not satis- fied you owe nothing. Write today. *em cold. “I smoke Chesterfields all the time and I'll tell the world...they’re milder!” este the cigarette that's MILDER the cigarette that TASTES BETTER Policeman Reid said the man had taken nothing of value when appre- hended. Dassageways ted a cl would be} plored in Kentucky's Mammoth Cave, ae ta St SIN tt | ae tS day. Independent Editor Succumbs in Kansas peka State Journal and a former director of the Associated Press, died at his home Saturday night from a heart-attack. In a state famous for its small town town newspaper editors and in a city where politics was a chief industry. Frank Pitts MacLennan stood out be- fore the public as an exponent of in- eer aie editorial policy. ion : nea “1s to be a good reporter, A good re-|““TUIMIS Sie nearuura, Oty 1 on the south side of the building porter is the salvation of the news- enter. paper.” @ longer than three or four days, ac- cording to records. What SHE TOLD P. MacLennan, 76, editor of the To-| WORN-OUT HUSBAND Although more-than 150 miles of already have been exe Heat waves in England seldom last Bismarck - Chicago. . .$48.00 Bismarck - New York $134.31 (Return limit 10 days) Entire trip by air Fly Twin Cities....4% hours Fly New York....1414 hours ) 8,000,000 Miles of Flying Equal to 33 1/3 Times to Moon ; : Heated Cabins 72° In All Northwest Planes Summer comfort on your winter trips ‘There is no finer mode of travel—wear regular clothes—enjoy hotel comfort in fast transport air liners NOVEMBER FARES : Special 7th Anniversary Offer Round Trip F Bismarck -. Twin Cities—$27.50 OITY TICKET OFFICE—Prince Hotel—Tel. 800 AIRPORT OFFICE—Tel. £26 Planes East 1:10 P. M. Planes West 12:40 P.M. Thru connections te De- trolt and Washington Scenic trips — comfortable —fast—safe. Every con- venience and all safety features, No dirt, dust or -