The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 27, 1934, Page 7

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‘Sweet Clover Rate _ but increased revenues. . from severe injuries: HOPKINS SPEEDING WORK OF REVISING | CIVIL WORK SET-UP Army Engineers Lined Up to Succeed Civilians in Numer- ous Positions seton, Jan. 27.—()}—Army ore lined up Saturday to partial direction of the emi: | civil works program follow- ing an administration decision to pnswer protests with a touch of mil- itary discipline. Receiving more objections and a few resignations even as he acted, admin- istrator Harry L. Hopkins nevertheless went ahead with his proposal to in- stall military engiaecrs in several key cities. ah Asked if the move was taken be- cause of charges of graft and political davoritism that have been received trom 45 states, Hopkins replied this was not the complete basis for the action. He added to newsmen, how- ever, that it would be a “fair assump- tion” that army men would be placed at some points “where there is an in- vestigation.” Immediately there were repercus- sions. Following disclosure that Lieut. Col. Dan R. Sultan, Chicago district engineer, would take charge in Cook county, Illinois, there came a blanket resignation from civilian directors of state and county civil works. Speeding New Line-up “Hopkins expected to complete his army line-up by Monday. He explained that some cities had no one now di- rectly in charge, and that some of the military men would be named to those places. The CWA, with its army of 4,000,000 workers, in the last week or so has * been the center of more objections than any other agency or activity of the administration. Finding jts money coffers nearly cmpty, officials cut work hours arastically and ordered around 270,000 amen released immediately. Mr. Roosevelt is awaiting only word from Capitol Hill as to whether he should send up piecemeal or entire an emergency budget request for $1,116,000,000 before acting to give the CWA more funds. Hopkins announced that he had approved allotments of $13,000,000 to be used to purchase materials in var- jous states. These included: Towa $250,000; Minnesota $40,000; Montana $150,000; North Dakota $140,- 000; South Dakota $100,000; Wiscon- 8in_ $520,000. The $140,000 alloted to North Da- kota for materials is not an additional allotment to the state but rather one 10 cover purchases of materials al- ready approved by the state CWA set- up, John E. Williams, secretary of the state set-up said Saturday. Recently the state committee was asked for an estimate on how much hac been approved here for materials, and the $140,000 figure was presented. Williams said it apparently was an- nounced merely to keep the record étraight on money spent for materials and sums spent for actual salaries. Williams also said he~doubted if any army engineers will be sent to! assist in North Dakota, though he said Harris Robinson, state CWA engincer, is swamped with work. DOCTORS ANNOUNCE HYLAND NEAR DEATH | Only Matter of Hours, Say Phy-/ sicians at Bedside in St. Paul Hospital 8t. Paul. Jan. 27—(?)—Physicians attending Frank Hyland, former Heut- enant governor of North Dakota, Saturday said his death appeared to be a “matter of a few hours.” . Hyland is being treated in a local hospital for heart diseasc. His wife, a brother and a sister are a&t his bedside. His physician said Mr. Hyland does not appear to be in pain but is rest- Jess and has had delirious spells. Reduced by I. C. C. A favorable decision by the Inter- state Commerce Commission gives North Dakota growers and shippers of sweet clover seed a freight rate based on the flaxseed basis, resulting in a material reduction from this state to eastern and southern desti- nations, the state board of railroad commissioners reported Saturday. The North Dakota railroad commis- sion, in conjunction with the traffic dsnartment of the Fargo Chamber of Commerce, took an active part in this case to secure rate cuts on shipments from North Dakota to destinations throughout the western trunk line territory which includes Iowa, Mis- curl, Wisconsin, Tllinois, and certain other states. Northwest Railroads Have Better Incomes St. Paul, Jan. 27.—(#)—Four rail- roads operating in the northwest had an increase of more than $25,000,000 in net operating income for 1933 over 1932, a tabulation showed Saturday. The railroads and their income in- creases are the Chicago, Milwaukee and 8t. Paul, $9,115,584; the Northern Pacific $3,985,584; the Great Northern, $10,519,675, and the Omaha $1,548,636. Officials said the increases reflect not only cuts in operating expenses | | Bird cone eucis as es sieve: Sixty such shelters have been placed are saving ves of thousands of | birds in Burleigh and Morton coun- 0 Be rere eons same ties, according to John C. Spare, head 'Burnt and Apple creeks in Burleigh) of the Bismarck American Legion |COunty and in territories frequented | committee which erected them. jby game birds in Morton county. After the holidays Spare, R. J.;| The hoppers, as shown above, arc | Dohn and George Hecktner, members | constructed of nail kegs with a cone of the committee, collected Christmas jot roofing paper placed inside to keep trees from private homes in this vi- | the feed to the outside. The feed runs cinity for the construction of the bird | automatically through holes bored refuges. Nail kegs were supplied by | about two inches from the bottom of hardware concerns. the keg. Hill. Colo.) oe Representative Taylor (Dem., | Mystery Surrounds complained again Saturday his district, and objected bitterly | Underwood Workers >—_—_—————________—__¢ that they (the sheep) “don't use dis- The city of Underwood, in Mc- _ “retion.” Lean county, Wie the ccone ofa |. “They eat up the grass on top and mystery Saturday. then pull out the roots.” he asserted. It centers about the activities | "There's nothing left to grow any of eight men who have rented a | ™O0Fe grass, so the land stays bare.” house there and who are said to, , Both Secretaries Ickes and Wallace j Want 5 give the interior be making a topographical survey | Scretary the right to charge"Yoes for where the proposed Garrison dam [grazing on public lands. Both asked across the Missouri river would be | the Public lands committee, last ses- located. | Sion of congress, to approve a bill to The men declined to talk about jthat end. The committee pigeon- themselves or to say if they are | holed the bill. federal engineers. All that is known about them definitely is that they have rented a house and hired a cook. They go out each | morning; come back each night. Persons interested in the dam development Saturday had just about proved that they were fed- eral engineers—that is they had Proved it to their own satisfac- tion—when along came an Associ- ated Press dispatch from Wash- ington saying the Mississippi Valley commission, which has charge of investigations for the project, knew nothing about any federal engineers being assigned to the Garrison project. _The army engineer's office in St. Paul made ‘State Insurance Moratorium Lifted North Dakota's moratorium re- ‘stricting payment of loan and surren- | der values by life insurance companies to policy holders has been lifted. Improved financial conditions makes | the moratorium no longer necessary, {state insurance commissioner 8. A. | Olsness said. | The restrictions were imposed last \March 31 throughout the nation as an {emergency measure to prevent undue | demands being made on cash reserves of insurance companies. This was | done in the interest of the companies & similar report. ‘and policyholders alike, Olsness said. ‘AS a result the mystery is deeper The insurance commissioner modi- than ever. fied the restrictions October 16, 1933, pt AN Ce aE oe sree improved, and his final order lifts tl trictions Cattle-Sheep Feud cniialy: een 7 i “The department belicves,” Olsness Revived mm Senate , Said, “this will be greeted as a happy Washington, Jan. 27.—()—Recol- termination of a necessary evil. The lections of the old “‘say-it-with-bul- improved bank credits and financial lets” arguments between cattlemen | conditions gencrally makes further and sheep herders are stirring again Testrictions on life insurance com- in the capital and indications are | Panies no longer necessary.” that President Roosevelt ma; ore pa EEA OR Rg hand. ake 8 | "THE POT AND THE KETTLE Two. cabinet members Are already |New Orleans, Jan. 27—()—Senator involved and it was stated authorita-| Huey P. Long, Saturday met a city tively Saturday that Roosevelt is hell investigation into state payrolls looking over a proposition that would with a retaliatory state investigation affect 173,000,000 acres of Western into city hall payroll and alleged open land. overation of gambling houses There is activity also on Capitol! throughout the city: Flood Roars Baby’s First Lullaby Almont Man Severely Injured in Accident Axel Peterson, 54-year-old Almont man, is in 8 local hospital suffering ved Fridey afternoon when a coal truck ran over him at Almont. : and an injury head. His condition was fair Satur- day afternoon, his doctor said. Peterson was brought here shortly after 3 o'slock Fridey afternoon. Her first teeble cries drowned by the roar of flood waters, Baby Lueille Sharp, shown above with her mother, came into the world a violent storm raged around her marooned home in La Crescenta, A fire engine, rushed to aid of the mother, was halted a halt wey, and firemen carried a tubful of water over storm wreck- ago and mud to the house for the baby's first bath. FEDERAL RULE OVER STOCK EXCHANGE IS URGED ON CONGRESS Report of President's Survey Committee Sees Need for Definite Action Washington, Jan. 27.—(#)—Strict federal regulation of the nation’s stock exchanges through & license President Roosevelt's mental committee in a report made | public Saturday by the senate bank- ing committee. } letter from Secretary Roper, chair-| man of the committee, recommend- | ing the regulatory legislation to the! president. Fletcher did not make public the a large part of the responsibility for the depression at the door of the exchanges and the speculation yee took place on them. He said the report did not recom- mend any legislation with regard to commodity exchanges, but that this arate report by Secretary of Agticul- ture Wallace. Roper outlined the major recom- “1, To require that exchanges shall receive federal license as a condition | permitting the use of the mails and, Qf interstate commerce instrumental- ities for transmitting their quotations in all communications respecting sales and other transactions on such | exchanges. Ask Discretionary Power “2. There should be established an administrative authority with broad discretionary powers to require the exchanges to adopt and enforce rules | and regulations in a form satisfac- tory to the administrative agency and of such character as to establish a minimum standard of fair dealing on) such exchanges. | “3. The adoption of satisfactory) rules and regulations which, in the event of violation, would give the federal agency authority either to de- prive such an exchange of its license or to suspend it or fine it, or to re- |quire a change in its governing per- sonnel. “4, The study recommends that the form and content of stock exchange margin trading, specialists, | selling, listing requirements, retailing methods, reports and accounting, shall not be set forth in detail in the statute, but shall be left to be pre- |scribed by the administrative agency in accordance with the broad stan- dards of the statute and above a certain minimum requirement. “5. In relation to the recommend- ation set forth on the preceding point, it is therefore proposed to require |the suggested administrative agency |\to engage in the full and adequate collection of statistics upon which to, that sheep were being brought into |base its rules and regulations, with a |flexible power to alter these from |time to time .as a fuller knowledge jmay require.” | We Revise Communications communications under rigid federal regulation also were recommended by the committee. While the report merely recom- mended “some further extension of permission to merge existing com- panies,” a minority believed all do- mestic communications should be merged. All but one of the commit- tee members favored a unified wire telegraph service. Regulation, the committee said, should be an independent commis- sion or @ bureau of an existing ext cutive department, and not under the Interstate Commerce commission, al- ready burdened with other duties. Benefits accruing from regulation, in the opinion of the committee, would be reduced rates, prevention of discrimination, speculative manage- ment and “watering” of stocks; ex- tension of service, maintenance of depreciation charges, and contro! of contracts made with foreign coun- tries, hotels and railroads. ——_—__—___—__+ | CWA Men Unearth | | Another Skeleton | Burleigh county CWA workers have uncovered another skeleton, according to M. H. Chernich, Burleigh county surveyor, who has charge of much of the CWA work, The skeleton of a man was un- earthed in a gravel pit near Wing, Chefnich said. Whether the skeleton was that of an In- dian or a white man was. not known. Chernich reported the incident to W. E. Perry, Bureligh county coroner, and arrangements are being made for re-interment of the remains. ‘A short time ago the grave of a small girl was unearthed by CWA workers within the city limits of Bismarck. 2 ‘ Coeds Resent Male | | Intrusion at Prom | Valley Cjty, N. D., Jan. 27.—(?)— A near riot was incited here by a male student Friday night when he “crashed” the yale City State o ° Harding to Attend Billings Conference Fay Harding, member of the North Dakota railroad commission and re- gional vice president ‘of the North Central group of state aviation offi- cials, will attend @ conference at Bil- lings Jan. 30> regarding a regional aviation officials convention to be held there the first week in Ma: system and a federal administrator | Roosevelt and his program, regardless was recommended to congress bY ition, inte one united body.” interdepart- | Chairman Fletcher gave out the| William Moore School detailed report itself, but said it laid |S#es. two of which already have been | subject would be dealt with in a sep-|the fund is large enough to care for |! three tables went to Mrs. Bertha | mendations as follows: i rules covering such matters as pools, PAY given Friday evening at the Pat-: Broadway avenue, received consola- | ter to pour easily and stir into prune | short | = | , Private ownership and operation of | cr ry t hotel the Support President’ | Aixiiaryta nonpertioan Cub ei i |. From 8:30 to 8:45 o'clock the guests Club Planning Rally listened to the address on “Current (Tribune Special Service) Bela ae, YR by Aton, » N. D., Jan. 27.—Residents ney General P. 0, Sathre.” The radio from throughout Benson county have | "¢Y General P. O. re. io |been invited to a giant Roosevelt rally | “2S installed through the courtesy of here Monday evening by the Leeds | | the Gamble Stores, Inc. “Support the President Club.” Louis Auerbach and Miss Estelle A. L, Arneson is president of the ters of America at St. Mary’s school /mon. Add lemon juice and turn auditorium. After the card aur Te- APPLE DUMPLINGS 4 apples 2 cups flour 4 tablespoons shortening % teaspoon salt | 4 teaspoons baking powder | 2 tablespoons butter 1 cup sugar Birlea O. Ward, 200 Avenue C; Mrs. | Mathys; Mrs. W. J. Devlin, 422 Tenth | S8t.; Miss Catherine R. Helbling, Per- son Court, and Mrs. Dave Baskfield, 801 Fifth St. — Sl A Meetings of Clubs | (ete yong high aed aa in Jelub, belleved to be the first organi-|OTidse. Whist players receiving hie! ‘ation of its kind established in North {Score Prizes, were Adam Lefor and | \Dakota, Other officers are Mrs. John | MIS. Car! A. Vogle. | 5 ie committee which arranged the Y Cinnamon, water Bong, fiat, viee president; PJ. card ‘party ait terved the iumeneon|| And Social Groups |: oven “vemperarut, 875 depse-: imyr, second president; Mrs-lincludes Mrs. Frank Smith, Mrs. E./@ -—--——@ |Fahrenheit. Baking time: 45 min- Cella M. Wardrope, secretary; and! ‘Batley, Mrs, Ethel Mills, Mrs. Melda | Maddox, Mrs. Stephen Ter Horst and) The Woman's club will meet Mon- jutes. Servings: 4. C._A. Granrud, treasure: day evening at 8 o'clock with Mrs. de!" Mix and sift fiour, satt and beking | The purpose of the “Support the C. Peltier, 312 Park 8t. | ter {President Club,” which clai | Miss Esther Greenshields. . . ‘ | Powder. Rub in shortening (butter tically Wil Gt tis Aedes nee am | kkk ** * and lard mixed) with pastry blender Mrs. F. A. Lahr, 100 Avenue B, west, ‘or two knives. Cut in water to make will entertain the Monday club at her's soft dough just stiff enough to home at 8 o'clock Monday evening. handle. Roll lightly on a floured Mrs. B. E. Jones, 519 First St., will) molding board into a sheet about lead the program. fone-half inch thick. Cut in four ee * squares. Pare and core apples. Piace steadily. |The modern novel study group of/an apple in cach square of dough. x *k * |the Bismarck branch, American As- /fill cavity with bit of butter, sprinkle Miss Emma King. Menoken, a soph- | 0ciation of University Women, will /generously with sugar and cinnamon omore at Jamestown college, was pre-|meet Monday evening from 7 to 8{and bring up corners of dough, fit- sented in a general recital given by| ved with Mrs. Rade D. are lea sid together sae apples Ae s | the students of the music department |Logan apartments. The meeting will | completely covered. Place on a shal- Has Purchased Radio n'voornces chapel Jan. 1 King/ start promptly at 7 o'clock and the/low pan. Baste while baking with sang two numbers, “Dawn” by Curran,| members will go from there to the |syrup made by dissolving sugar in With a special fund earned by the'and “Thou Art Lovely as a Flower”) open forum at the World War Memo- | *«-cup boiling water. Ten minutes jPupils through a series of candy| by Schumann. | rial building. before removing from oven, after the kk OK | ese | last basting, put 1 teaspoon butter conducted, William Moore school of The Rebekah Busy Bee sewing so-; The anniversary banquet of the/on each dumpling and eprinkle with Bismarck has purchased a radio. | ciety gave the second of a series of/ Pan-Attic club, which was to have |Sugar and cinnamon. Serve warm The radio was obtained so that| bridge parties Friday afternoon with| been held Saturday evening, has been | with sugar and cream. pupils might listen in on the weekly | Mrs. J. A. Erickson, 221 Eleventh 8t.,| postponed for one week due to the | ¢&——————________ig Walter Damrosch music hour over! and Mrs. A. L. Brevig, 916 Eighth 8t.,| illness of club members. Sees Wife Only as the NBC network. as hostesses at Mrs. Erickson’s home. | —————________ The candy sales will continue until | Honors in the auction games played| City and County | | Former Schoolmate . C—O FE. A. Rudquist, manager of the | Terrell, Tex. Jan. 27—(P)— Fargo district of the Standard Oil) Mrs. J. J. Truax, wife of J. J. ‘company, came Thursday to spend a Truax. Minneapolis attorney, jfew days attending to business here. amnesia, victim discovered here, ee accompanied by her brother-in- law, R. N. Leuthold, a merchant of Kasson, Minn., arrived Satur- day. Truax, accompanied by Deputy Sheriff Zeb Henry, met them at the bus station but could only recall their given names. Recognizing his wife, said: “Why, you are Cora Beavers. 1 believe I went to school with you.” Cora Beavers was the maiden name of Mrs. Truex. Continuing, Truax inquired: “And is it true that you are my wife?” Mrs, Truax assured him it was, but Truax could not recall ever having married her. Mrs, Truax readily identified the man as her husband. Truax was highly nervous and at times broke into tears. Mrs. Truax went to a state hospital here to confer with physicians as to the advisability of taking her husband home with her. its i | Mrs, W. L, Pierce, Valley City, came De RUD. is ito unite the peo-|tnis week and is staying at the Pat- | ‘a in President | terson hotel while Mr. Pierce is being| treated for pleurisy at the Bismarck Evangelical hospital. Mr. Pierce, who became ill in Bismatck, is improving of their past political or state affilia- Plans for expansion of the club/ idea throughout the state will be dis-| cussed at the meeting here. |the expense of both the radio and| {the golden jubilee program conduct- {ed at the school last month, | \Former Dakotan Is Truax Elness, 410 Third St. and Mrs. A. ‘W. Snow, 911 Eighth 8t. Luncheon followed the cards. ** * e Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dickman and | daughters, Patricia Jane and Mary JO.) Dr, Fannie Dunn Quain of 518 Sentenced for Life) 0 27t've Monday trom Fargo, t0) avenue A has returned to her home —_— ‘Dickman has been development sup-| from St. Alexius hospital, where for | Willmar, Minn., Jan. 27.—(P\—Ly-'ervisor for the Provident Life In-| ‘the last 10 days she has been receiv- man Salmonson, 31, former filing sta-' surance company and in Bismarck | "8 treatment. peeks steed en vale | will be affiliated with the home office | g%——_____-__ | Y | cf the compan: f agen- | 9, A ! |1n district court here today to a charge | eis; Mr. pony oats. Ditkinkn are tor. | | Today Ss Recipe | tN Ee aT ordi, Gaacn |mer Bismarck residents, leaving here | eed v of Ruby Haug, 18, a} high school student here,” |to go to Fargo two years ago. / SPICED PRUNE PUDDI He had previously entered a plea of Harold Perry, son of Dr. and Mrs.! 3 Sita cand Wier ; not guilty, but at his request was!H. T. Perry, 116 Avenue B, celebrate 3/4 cup sugar. cones sulle Saturday morning | his eighth birthday anniversary with; 1 inch stick cinnamon. saihots friends. After games were played.! 2 tablespoons lemon juice. ’ Additi “Snntnda | Mrs. Perry served a supper, which had! Mixing time: 30 minutes. Chilling itional Society | icr its most important feature a birth- time: 2 hours. Servings: 6. j 9 | ray cake lighted with eight candles., Pick over and wash prunes. Put/ 200 Cc ‘d Pi The decorations carried out a valen-| into cold water gnd let stand one ar layers at tine theme. our. Cook in same waver until ten: i *e | ‘kee der. Remove stones from prunes an Benefit Party Fr IdaY' carence G. Mathys, 512 Avenue E,| cut’ meat in small pleces, Add to < and Miss Mae Maasen received -high | water with sugar, cinnamon and boil- Two hundred guests played auction Di- bridge and whist at the benefit bridge |score gifts and Mrs. J. C. Anderson, |ing water. Simmer 10 minutes. 514 Eighth St., and John Maasen, 714 | !ute cornstarch with enough cold wa- | | The Bismarck Tribune North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper Bismarck, North Dakota OFFERS sy Jo Its Readers AOTORTRTIRCTY LEA BRICES Tas gC A ON LEADING MAGAZINES CLUB No. Review, 1 Yr. jd Magasine, 1 Yr. $5:49 All Seven tor | $5.50 | $5.85 Delineator. 1 Yr. Offers are not} 7, city of Ris. Metter Homes. @.Caphene..2 | faarek, at prices ig A The Country Home, 1 Yr. oer eenens aan lemare! ‘ribume, 1: Year Tribune, ¥ Value $8.85, You save $3.08 | (! ts f add $1.00 to | Value $10.00, You save $4.00 All Six for All Six for $5.80 | $6.00 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE $4.00 And Your Choice of Any 3 of These Famous Magazines Mark an “X” before the 3 magazines you desire. coupon below. All subscriptions are for one e-x-¢-e-p-t as otherwise shown. Needlecraft, 2 years () Open Road (boys), 2 years Parents’ Magazine, 6 Mos. Pathfinder (Wkly.) 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