Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ENTHAU TAKES OVER TREASURY AS. WOODIN QUITS 408; President Accepts Resignation! Tendered Because of . Persistent Illness Monday elevated = thau to the portfolio of secretary of , he treasury after the president ac- vepted the resignation of William H. ‘Woodin. Morgenthau had been act- ing secretary several weeks while Woodin was on leave attempting to regain his health. In a letter to the President, dated around the middle of last month, however, Woodin said he]and Plated no change of policy. No hint was immediately forthcoming as to ‘who might be named to Morgenthau’s Post of under- “opening at 4 bar gold in ; ounce. program continued in open Pioneer Turtle Lake Resident Succumbs August A. Slettum, pioneer farmer end varage man at Turtle Lake, died ‘&t his home last Thi A Death of the 65-year-old man was Caused by pneumonia, with which he had been ill about « week. Slettum was born in Norway and ore moving to North Dakota lived Lake vicinity since about he homesteaded there. years he' had operated Turtle bbe. He Istdves his widow and Mehvin and Albert, all of Tur 4 Funeral services were 1:30 o'clck Sunday afternoon from St. Paul's Lutheran church Lake, with Rev. W. H. Soret ficia The body was int the Turtle Lake cemetery. ° “sun down’? Build up your resistance this ter with vitamins and minerals! Have fewer colds, eat better, sleep better— feel fit! Get the health-building vi- tamins of cod liver oll by. taking Mo- KESSON’S VITAMIN CONCEN- TRATE TABLETS OF COD LIVER) IL. Chocolate-coated. No {fishy 3 tablets equal in vitamin er oil. N TRESSON'S are the ONLY rita- min concentrate tablets to bring you valuable minerals (calcium and phos- phorus) as well as vitamins. Don't overlook .this important advantage. Vitamins alone are not enough! Ask your druggist—Advertisement, Capitol Lunch Room eset se & Barber Shop ‘What to do about @ lunch room at North Dakota’s new state capitol building, to accommodate employes of But, Sauvain explains, the board has no appropriation for equipping the new lunch room. An expenditure of between $6,000 and $8,000 would be re- quired for equipment, Sauvain esti- mates. Several prospective operators of the unch room offer to equip the kitchen lunch room if they are given a O MONEY FOR Runs Into Snag EQUIPMENT eae in New Structure ‘Out’ ren ants al ry gent to the board indicated that the board the state legislat may be given authority to make some permanent arrangement. Sauvain Tuesday announced that there “absolutely will not be a barber shop in the new capitol.” The chair- man said the board has received sev- eral regarding a propose ber shop in the new structure but said no barber shop was contemplated in the original plans and that none is contemplated by the board. NRA Chairman Points To President’s Order In 8 statement issued Tuesday by Russell A. Young, chairman of the local NRA compliance board, atten- tion of Bismarck merchants was called to an executive order recently issued by President Roosevelt con- tinuing the president’s reemployment agreement to April 30, 1934, As indicated by information re- fore Jan. 1, 1934, and who is not op- erating under an approved code of fair competition, may accept the of- fer of extension by a continued dis- Play of the Blue Eagle on or after Jan. 1. It also is stated that all sub- stitutions and exemptions approved and all extensions granted to part!cu- employers before Jan. 1 will apply the agreement as so extended. Minnesota authorities are seeking to have him tried in the state courts for bank robbery. Daughter of Bishop Is Reported Missing Omaha, Neb., Jan. 2—(?)—Missing from her home since Sunday after- noon, the whereabouts-of Mrs. Marion C. Heath, 32, daughter of Bishop Ern- est V. Shayler of the Episcopal dio- cese of Nebraska, was still unknown to members of the family Tuesday. Marital trouble was blamed for Mrs. Heath's disappearance. Her estranged husband, an Omaha insur- ance man from whom she has been separated since September, visited her at her home Sunday afternoon. She had recently instituted a divorce suit in district court here, Mrs. Heath left her home shortly after a visit from her physician, who ‘Young has been informed that this|/had been called by one of her three display of the Blue Eagle on or after|daughters after Heath had left the Jan. 1 by an employer who shall have|house. Police were asked to make a signed the agreement prior to Jan. 1,|Quiet search but had found no trace shall be deemed an acceptance of the|<f her Tuesday. extension offer and any employer so governin, the employer's trade has received the final approval of the president. Bandit Sentenced To Life in Prison Sisseton, 8. D., Jan. 2—(7}—Arthur Bahmer, 27-year-old St. Paul youth, Tuesday is serving a life sentence in the South Dakota penitentiary ‘for . participation in the holdup of the First State Bank of Stockholm on Novem- he was questioned by Melvin Passolt, superintendent of the state bureau of connection we » Bahmer’s companion, confessed to Superintendent Passolt he participated in nine holdups, in- cluding six in Minnesota and three in ‘South Dakota. Wooldridge is held in jail at St. Paul trial for the theft of 10 machine from national ill decision of|man was killed and federal authorities whether he will be thought a second may have lost his} send this policy on 10 days’ FREE in- taken to Wahpeton, N. D. to stand :ife in a fire at the Russell Petroleum ;Spection. No examination is required. guns Company's No. 1 Reno oil well in the! This offer is limited, so write the guard armory. Oklahoma City field Tuesday. au Reject Blood Test t In Parentage Case | Pierre, 8. D., Jan. 2.—(?)}—The old adage blood will tell was re- Jected Friday by the South Da- kota supreme court as it set legal precedent by refusing to recognize blood tests as proof of parentage. Holding that medical science is not sufficiently agreed upon the transmissibility of blood charac. teristics, the court affirmed the conviction of Clement Damm, who sought by blood tests to dis- prove a charge that he was the father of an adopted daughter's child. The high court upheld the action of a circuit court judge who refused Damm’s request for @ test. Although blood test evidence in paternity casés has been accept- ed in continental countries, the South Dakota court said it found “no record of the question being passed upon by any courts of last resort in the United States.” OIL WELL TAKES FIRE Oklahoma City, Jan. 2.—(7)—One investigators d bar-| the Wilsor Is Appointed , To Manage Phillies INYENAED ON BODY TO REBUILD . 0. Py, 7 cently North Dakota Serator One of wien £ manager to orcad Burt Committee to Direct Cam- cert atontaedred barat paign This Year The announcement said Shotton is party since the overwhelming defeat |Shotton may go to the Cincinnat! of 1932, Senator McNary, senate lead-| Reds. er, Tuesday named a committee of nine to conduct the campaign tor|/£WO Big Minneapolis 4 clection of Republican senators next} Banks Consolidated all, ; Senator Hastings of Delaware was) assinnes: appointed to head the committee./dation of the Northwestern National closely balanced between the COM-|pank and the Minnesota Loan and Servative and progressive factions of | Trust company became effective with receipt of authorization from the United States comptroller of currency, ‘The new institution will be known party. McNary made a bid for a united front with the announcement that the committee would support all Re- tine what faction they represented. Senator Dickinson of Iowa, one of the Republicans who has been most pager Stee criticism of bien Demo- cratic administration, was as — re vice chairman of ‘the committee oa Ga) ka Others named were: Capper of Kan- 4 sss, Norbeck of South Dakota, Whit Ow) AW of Maine, Nye of North Dakota, Bar- bour of New Jersey, Steiwer of Ore- gon and Carey of Wyoming. The senatorial campaign commit- tee is expected to play an influ- ential part in this year’s election be- cause of the financial impotence of the national committee. a ap digt Hastings, the chairman, is regarded by his colleagues as more conserva- tive than some of the other commit- tee_members, Norbeck nd Nye have been assoclat- ect more or less closely with the west- ern independent faction of the sen- ate group, while Capper, Stelwer and Carey have voted with them at times. Barbour and White, though eastern- ers, are not known as dyed-in-the- wool conservatives. To Examine Chicago Election Machinery Chicago, Jan. 2—(7)—In what was described as “a momentous attempt to clean up election machinery in Chicago and Cook county,” a group of citizens started action Tuesday for @ general recount of the 1932 elec- tions, A recent election contest that re- sulted in the unseating of Erwin J. Hasten and placing of Samuel Heller on the municipal court bench was cited in the petition. Inaccuracies and fraud are alleged to have been discovered in the investigation. j A CLOSET full of clothes, shoes,-and hats represents a lot of money. How far would your insurance cov- er the amount you would have to spend—even at to- day’s low prices—in buy- ing a complete new outfit? Ask us to insure your household goods and per- sonal belongings in the Hartford. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck 218 Broadway Phone 57% ONE CENT A DAY PAYS UP TO $100 A MONTH ‘The Postal Life & Casualty Insur- ‘as the Northwestern National Bank) ?, Trust company of Minneapulis|* and will have deposits in excess of $90,000,000, Stockholders of both institutions GRAIN SUPPLY CHANGES New York, Jan. 2—(?)—The visible supply of American grain shows the following in bushels: ‘Wheat decreased 1,037,000; corn in- MAN’S HEART STOPPED, STOMACH GAS CAUSE W. L. Adams was bloated so with gas that his heart often missed beats @fter eating. Adlerika rid him of all gas, and now he eats anything and feels fine. Hall's Drug Store—Ad- A new location, Gamble Stores—508 Broadway, Bis- marck, N. D. Special Flashlight Batteries, 4c. Shotgun Shells, 12 Ga., 59c. Was Worrled and Rundown “I worked in a hotel which was very hard work. Then I got laid off and I was terribly worried and rua down. My mother told me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound to build me up again and be- live me I am grateful to her. I feel like anew gitl_cow, always full LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S Vegetable Compound 98 out of 100 Women Report Bengfit Sa ance Co., 4983 Postal Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo., is offering a new acci- dent policy that pays up to $100 a month for 24 months for disability and $1,000.000 for deaths—costs less than Ic a day—$3.50 a year. More than 150,000 have already bought this Policy. Men, women and children eligible. Send no money. Simply send name, address, age, beneficiary's name and relationship and they will (company today.—Advertisement, with Knee-Action Whee Is ... the Greatest Advance in Riding Ever Accomplished As a climax to its thirty years of fine car building, as further fulfillment of its pledge, “When better automobiles are built, Buick will build them,” Buick now offers for your consideration its finest achievement—the MOTOR Stream Styling Draft Ventilation. We cordially invite you to come to our showroom today, this new Buick motor car. Your own judg- ment will tell you that again there is a better automobile, and building it. ° It brings you Complete Automatic Starting. Also exquisite new Bodies by Fisher in 19 beautiful models, with advanced Wind- pmeeg t and improved Fisher No and examine and ride in again Buick is Inc FOR RENT One unfurnished apartment. City heat. Electric refrigerator. Electric stove. Fireproof building. Available at once. Rent reasonable. Inquire at the ‘Bismarck Tribune Office 50,000,000 in Gold | Is Purchased Abroad | purchases, Chairman Washington, Jan. 2.—(P)—The Re- Now for Final January Clearance that bring savings to careful buyers and, remember, they are always gar- ments of quality. Dress Reductions AT $Q75 Our $15.00 Dresses The last big cut on coats is here. Buy now for next winter. | January Coat . Clearance Prices 1 19° 99° 30°