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2 TUGWELL T0 PROBE DIVERSION PROJECT’ Scheduled to Arrive He: 2; Outlines Tour of souri River Area duly ‘Undersecretary of Agriculture Rex- ford G. Tugwell and a party of other ‘Washington men will arrive in Bis- marck Monday on a tour that will take them over the course of the pro- posed Missouri river diversion in North Dakota. The Chamber of Commerce of this city is cooperating with the Greater North Dakota association in setting up plans for the reception of the party made up of Tugwell, Dr. E. N. Bressman, his assistant; and Paul Porter of the publicity department of the AAA. The undersecretary of agriculture will study the general conditions of agriculture in the state and investi- gate the progress being made in inaugurating the new federal work relief program under the FERA, in addition to checking on the diversion Toute. . Secretary Tugwell will spend the night of June 30 in Fargo, after a brief rest at Battle Lake, Minn, as a lake guest of F. E. Murphy, Minne- apolis. Officers of the G. N. D. A. will escort him from Fargo to James- town and Devils Lake July 1. He will meet there with 8S. W. Thomp- son and other officers of the Mis- souri River Diversion association at a luncheon that evening. ‘The following day he will be driven to New Rockford, Garrison, and to Bismarck and Mandan. He will board a train at Mandan for the west the game night. > | Weather Report eS SS 5 FORECAST For Bismarck and_vicinitv: Gen- erally fair tonight oo a Teatghe if cooler 3 North Da- kota: General ly fair tonight and Thursday; cooler portions tonight. Portions tonight. For South Da- and Thursday; cooler tonight. For Montana: Fair tonight and Thursday; ler ora portion tonight. For Minnesota: Showers in east, cooler in west and south, warmer near iu) r tonight; Thursday gen- erally fair, cooler in southeast, warm- er near Lake Superior. a gestae epee ‘ low pressure area exten rom the Plains States northward | over Saskatchewan (Prince Albert 29.56) while high pressure areas are cen- tered over the Great Lakes ri COOLER ion and over the western Roc! fountain slope (Boise 30.18). tered - tation fell in the northern districts, mien heavy showers in Saskatchewan ier surrounding tory. Generally fair weather in the central and southern cts. Ee atid continue high in the MH Valley and Plains States. Corn and Wheat gion Summary For the week ending June 26, 1934. temperature and sunshine prevailed in Penne but. west portion. Early wheat headed short with usually por stand west and central portions. Late planted small grains have improved growin an . Corn made good eularatios is well advanced. Pas- tures and ranges afford considerable = and livestock is in better condi- tion. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.01. Reduced to sea level, 29.74. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 41 ft. 24 hour change, -0.2 ft. PRECIPITATION 39 its old statutory 16 to 1 ratio with 00 |make that equivalent to 4,000,000,000 ;home economics association was told ilar as it did the gold dollar. The ee * ee * 7 ® 2. o 3 & 5 3 Z = < 5 ® “Brave leader of our people in a time of peril . . . you have brought high intelligence and compiete devotion to the service of the nation.” This was the tribute paid President Roosevelt when Yale conferred on him the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws at colorful ceremonies in New Haven. The president, a Harvard graduate, is shown being greeted on his arrival at New Haven by Governor Wilbur Cross of Connecticut, Wife-Bossed Marriages Go on Rocks se 30-50 KIND NOT GOOD, EITHER **# 4 Campaign Ends in Burst of Speeches At Meetings Here proof, he pointed to the fact that there have been more foreclosure sales and more forced sales in North Da- kota, with the moratorium, than have! occurred in some other agricultural states which had no moratorium. As proof of his statement he pointed to 13 foreclosure notices in the May 3 issue of the McLean County Inde- pendent, edited by L. J. Siljan, Lan- get campaign manager. Asking if the embargo on grain were intended to benefit the farmers or the gamblers in grain futures, “including Governor William Langer,” Nye said many good people are supporting Langer because they do not know the facts. Because of the times, he said, they have no radio and they get no newspapers other than the “Leader” which comes to them free. Injecting a practical political con- sideration into the situation, Nye praised the government's program for the relief of the destitute and needy and asserted it was difficult for the State’s representatives in Wi to obtain proper consideration for it when its state government was under suspicion of levying political tribute upon funds intended to help the poor. Tried to Warn League Saying that he had broached the matter in the senate in an effort to make the Valley City Nonpartisan convention investigate the charges and find out for itself if they were t:ue, Nye recalled that he had sug- gested an investigation of the “Lead- er” records but that this had been Genied. At that time, he said, he subsequently received a telegram from Senator A. F. Bonzer. Jr., now records,” The records would have shown, he said “the grossest betrayal” the people have ever known through the use of So Says Family Relations Expert New York, June 27.—()—Mar- riages in which the wife is boss go on the rocks more frequently than those the man dominates, the American Wednesday. And 50-50 marriages—in which the husband and wife are equal partners —are, in America now, “an almost unrealizable ideal even for most col- lege people.” These findings were given to the association convention Wednesday by Dr. Paul Popenoe, director-of the in- stitute of family relations, after a sur- vey of 3,000 marriages in various parts of the United States. Partnerships in which the husband | and wife reach a “50.50 basis,” have, he said, the best chance of succeas— they turn out well 87 per cent of the time. Of the man-bossed marriages stud- ied, 61 per cent were happy. The felicity score fell to 47 per cent where woman ruled the household. All the marriages surveyed were contracted by college-trained persons. Dr. Popenoe said faulty preparation for marriage is the cause of failure to achieve domestic partnership. The problem is complicated, he said by the fact that many wives “never can make up their mind how they want to be treated”—whether they want to share or be bossed. SILVER ADVOCATES | PLAN DOLLAR MOVE 5 Devaluation Profits Would Be Used to Reduce U.S. | Debt, Say Sponsors j Washington, June 27.—()—Silver | advocates in congress laid plans Wed- nesday to force the administration next session to devalue the silver dol- | Profit would be used to reduce the} government's debt. Representative Dies (D. Texas) au- thor of the only two silver bills to! pass the house last session, said/ that as soon as congress convened he would introduce legislation to re- duce the silver in the silver dollar from 412.5 to 206 grains. Predicting that at least two thirds of the house would favor this move, Dies said it would restore silver to gold instead of the 27 to 1 ration now existing as a result of gold dollar de- valuation. Dies said that under his silver pur- chase plan recently enacted the treas- ury would have 2,000,000,000 ounces of | silver by January. Devaluation would ounce: It’s New Way. to Park Car ‘WEATHER IN OTHER STATES High- Low- my & g weer SSSASSKVSERSILSS’ SSIVSSSNMsesasssresesaesssssssesssssssess " BRRRERReRERHSERRBRELLeBEEbeeReeEEsEeias’ sssas eezazunsssazed 18a Here's a new idea in parking that @roused great interest in Kansas City, Mo., but isn’t Ikely to Prove popular with motorists. CANFIELD BOYS TO BE BURIED FRIDAY Two Other Children, Victims of Mother's Madness, Show Improvement Funeral services for Donald and George Canfield, killed by their mether in an outbreak of madness, will be conducted at the Presbyterian jchurch of Dawson Friday afternoon at2p.m. No inquest into the deaths of the two children will be held, Coroner M. 3. Ness announced. Their bodies lie in state here at the Webb Funeral chapel. Insanity charges planned against Mrs. John Canfield, the mother, by States Attorney Arne Vinje of Kid- der county, will not be filed until after the funeral, While funeral arrangements for the two slain boys were completed, two other children, Margaret, 12, and Jack, 14, were reported definitely improv- ing at Mandan hospitai. They were also shot and seriously wounded their mother. Margaret was shot through the head. A bullet which pierce Jack's right lung, was removed by physicians at & Mandan hospital Tuesday. The boy stood the operation well, the physi- cians said. His sister, Margaret, is still in serious condition but was said to be showing improvement Wednes- cay. She was shot through the head. Mrs. Canfield shot and killed of the children and wounded the other peir early Monday in their farm home. She told authorities she was worried about Jack’s mental condition and feared “the rest would be the same.” ———— ' Prince of Wales | Romance Rumored ee London, June 27.—(#)—Matchmak- ers who have been worrying about the single state of the Prince of Wales had something new to talk about Wednesday. o——_e Princess Juliana of Holland, who in London for the £ uson. The prince and the princess, who 25, have been linked in The car owner, hunting for auto on @ parking lot, found that the brakes bad slipped, the car rolling down an incline to become wedged, on end. between Gm areaway wall and ap epart- “Leader” money in an effort to pro- mote the sales tax last fall and in Paying Langer’s traveling expenses and hiring a secretary for him. All this, he said, was in addition to thou- sands diverted to his own pocket. Pointing out that no Nonpartisan tieaniea ra pk hd heard of the mn owing Langer money, Nye said it had not even been given chance to invoke the moratorium. Asserting that North Dakota would see a lot more of “this sort of thing” unless the Langer machine is de- stroyed, Nye said the only offense of the anti-Langer candidates is that pend Abiged to bow before a machine en iat Langer is. trying to dis- cipline Frazier, Lemke and Sinclair for their refusal to support him. Neither Lemke nor Frazier, endorsed by both the Langerites and their foes. bave taken part in the current fac- tional strife within the League. Raise ‘Persecution’ Cry Cries of “persecution” and refer- ences to the “injustice” of the method of selecting North Dakota federal jur- jes marked the talks of the nine speakers who appeared with Langer at the World War Memorial building. The speakers included Usher L. Burdick, candidate for congress; James D. candidate for secre- tary of state; John Gray, candidate for state treasurer; J. M. Anderson, candidate for superintendent of pub- jllc instruction; Harold Hopton, can- didate for commissioner of insurance; Henry T. Owens, Grand Forks; Mrs. Charles G. Boise, Bismarck; W. J. Flannigan, chairman of the Langer executive committee and W. B. Fal- coner, state representative from Bur- leigh county, who acted as chairman. After the series of preliminary talks, declaring “the people of North Dako- ta didn’t make a mistake when they me.” “I know the issues at stake, prob- ably better than anyone else, and if it is necessary I'll go to jail to protect the common people of North Dakota. The most they can give me is two years and @ $10,000 fine and I want you to know I will go into court next Friday with en unfaltering heart, knowing that I have kept faith with the common people.” Just a Baseball Game “But I want you to know,” he add- ed, “that I expect to be governor for a long long time yet. That trial was like a baseball game. There is nine innings, three in district court, three the circuit court and three in the ipreme court and it isn’t over yet. e're going to fight all the way through.” He alluded to the Independent Re- publican organization as “half ele- and i BRE iu cis embargo. went up to 72 cents, and i letter il f- ul au i Fa H ee Hi i el i asf Hie Hitlety g ROE eReEs Hi How to Write a WANT AD that will do what you Tribune Want-Ads give advertisers a certain and easy means of keeping in touch with the wants of the entire community. Both. readers and the advertisers in this want it to do valuable section can turn their “wants” into ready cash. Your main object in placing a want-ad is to get responses. The observance of a few simple rules will increase the pulling power of your ad many times over. Give the complete facts of your proposition, with an extra point or two in description and you will draw replies from unthought of sources. rectly ta your prospect. action. Pick out important points and emphasize them sufficiently to make your meaning clear to your readers. Write as though you were talking di- An additional word or two will draw a half a dozen additional replies. Here are a few suggestions which will get instant Tell More and Sell More Farms— Real Estate— Location of rty, buildings and Frontage? Location? Size of improvements?” Water supply? ‘(t?._ Fully modern? Finish and Frail 2 Und hat floors? How many rooms? Con- ment? ruit trees? Under crops—w: struction Garage? Grounds? tires? kind? Near railroad, road, school? Reason for selling? Date of pos- Church and town? Stock and ma- Personal property? chinery? Prices and terms? Farm Produce— Hay, feed, ete.? Vegetables? Livestock— Breed? Grade or purebred? Pro- duction records? Number? Poultry— Eggs for hatching? Baby chicks? Breed? Strain? Ask yourself what you would want to know about someone else’s proposition. And above all—make it easy for your prospect to respond, use both your address and phone number. If out-of-town replies are desired, use name in addition. If your want isn’t satisfied the first time, keep at it. All your prospects don’t act session? Price and terms? Rooms— Location? Furnished, unfurnish- ed? North, east, south or west cooms? Private or family? Mod- ern home? Ladies or gentlemen? Heat and water? Convenience? Board if desired? Other roomers? Nature of work? Experience nec- Rental? essary? Opportunities? Temeerary, remanent? or cot jon House and Apartments— Location? How many rooms? Cash i or terms? Furnished, unfurnish- Miscellaneous— ed? Convenience? Modern? Heat “Name of article? Type or model? and water? Near school, church, Description? How old? ete.? Monthly rental? - in a day. Watch the want-ad column daily. Try a WANT AD-the cost is small Rates will be found at the head of the daily want-ad columns. Write your ad here and mail it today. ’ Date Name . Telephone No, .....0:+0+++ Re F. Ds ...0+000++ BOX NO. .svvccececcene THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Please print the following ............ times. I enclose check for $...ccccccee Copy for ad: Peeper eer ce ceed sere sceeeeeseeeeee ses soeccleconreceseseeeereeoeeee Sewer cree cccccowe sec ccewesseseen senses cell secmeceessce co ere cece cnwwe cece cee sees ee Sole soemee eles cece eeeeees Perec reer eer ecesen eres ee rccsees een ees ree eU¥eeem Automobiles— Make or model? How long driven? Position Wanted— As what? Married or single? time? Salary desired? Help Wanted— vw Open or closed? Extra equip- Condition of body, motor, Age and experience ” Part or full tion? Selling points? Price? “