The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 11, 1934, Page 1

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The Weather _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ABLISHED 1873 | f ; BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Prices Soar After Crop Report ut nm |Dollfuss Pushes Attack Against Nazis smsan ws BY LOWEST FIGURES soe eg patel PASTURES GREATLY IN OVER 30 YRARS}/Z<##2z Commander | WILLSON SUCCEEDS |[ state PRA Head {/BOMBING QUTRAGES ||__Dos Condemned t Die for Murder ||“ opauon py pan Aggregate Will Fall 460,000,- NUDGE CHRISTIANSON 10 BE STOPPED BY Reports Grasses 33 Per Cent as 000 Bushels Below Last AS N. D FERA HEAD SEVERE ME ASURES Compared With 15 for Year’s Production — Previous Month Jurist Leaves Job of Own Voli- Chancellor Organizes New Aus- tion Because of Supreme ‘ ; ’ Court Duties trian are Miklas FORECAST IS SENSATIONAL GRAINS FAR BELOW NORMAL Wheat Jumps 5 Cents, Extreme Gain Permitted in One Day’s Trading Wheat Production Indicated as 5,022,000 Bushels; 29 Per Cent Normal MINISTRATION IS PRAISED GIVES HIMSELF MORE POWER New Administrator Declared “Man of Highest Ability * and Honesty” Chicago, July 11—(P)}—A spectacu- Jar wave of buying, greeting the gov- ernment’s unexpected forecast of the All Military and Police Control Concentrated in Dicta- Fargo, N. D., July 11—(@)—Vast improvement in the condition of pas- tures in North Dakota was the out- mr . tor’s Hands standing development of June, declar- ed Ben Kienholz, federal crop statis- trading pits Wednesday, whipping , July 11.—()}—Resigna- E. A. WILLSON tician stationed in Fargo, in a monthly Prices for wheat and corn up five and four cents respectively, the al- lowable limits under trading rules. ‘Wheat and corn prices were pushed to peak limits permitted at the open- f ing and the pits became a bediam as brokers sought to execute the flood! of buying orders. There were a few reactions as holders realized profits, but at the close quotations were at the ceiling and trading was virtually’ at a standstill, all offerings having been absorbed. Every grain on the board was forced report issued Tuesday on conditions as of July 1. He set the condition of pastures at 33 per cent as compared with 15 per cent last month. Acreage figures for North Dakota also were announced. Following 1s the federal estimate for the state: Durum wheat, 837,000 acres, indicat- ed production of 5,022,000 bushels; condition 29 per cent of normal. Other spring wheat: 3,370,000 acres, 20,515,000 bushels, 25 per cent. Corn 1,361,000 acres, 19,734,000 bush- ‘Washington, roe = tion of Judge A. M. Christianson 83) aubrey Williams, acting federal re-| Vienna, July 11—()—Engelbert! Nortit Davota and appointment of his| el administrator, Wednesday 8n- /ollfuss, Austria's fighting —utele Geputy, E. A. Willson, to succeed him,| wrinson as North Dakota administra-|CD@ncellor, announced a huge new was announced here ‘Tuesday by Au- al lief | drive against Nazis Wednesday after federal relier| ‘Or of the federal emergency re bof Williams, acting program, He succeeds Judge A M.| concentrating in his own hands all inistrator. Christianson who resigned OWN the military and police r of the acc iGse Christianson, who hee been voution because of the press of su-lnetion. preme court duties, The death penalty wiil be dealt out ition, resigned for the mere possession of explosives, Dollfuss announced, in an effort to At the same time Williams an- A stop widespread bombing outrages. In a cabinet shakeup Dollfuss pre- up to the permissible limits before the sented the resignation of the whole els, 55 per cent. close, September wheat closed at f appointed by group to President Wilhelm Miklas} A playmate for children in the Zvonik home in Merrick, L. I., since Oats 1,277,000 acres; 12,770,000 bush- 93%, corn at 62, oats Gov. Cooney to succeed T. C. Spauld- and then submitted a new list for puppyhood, Buddy, four-year-old police dog, was no longer a family els, 32 per cent. ing. Miklas’ approval. pet when this picture was taken—but a murderer. Maddened by the | Potatoes: 144,000 acres, 9,360,000 720%, up five cents and barley. at ‘Williams paid high tribute to Judge Dollfuss appeared determined to heat, the dog attacked and fatally injured 17-month-old Charles bushels, 62 per cent. 56%, almost a five cent gain. Christianson in a statement in which stamp out the whole Nazi movement| Zvonik. Here you see the howling dog in his cage—awaiting the gas Tame hay: 1,157,000 acres, 578,000 Midwest reaction to the startling in Austzia. chamber execution ordered by health officials. tons, 28 per cent. government forecast, one of amaze- Taking a leaf from the notebook of Barley: 1,556,000 acres 14,004,000 skepticism at Jurists to Decide Thursday fp oa enn siete gee 210.0. MOBIUDES POSTAL DEPARTMENT 2 em Benito Mussolini, Dollfuss will | ye: Sy acres remai ig for Fargo Attorney Succeeds W. H.| everai cabinet portfolios to his active) We Va Is | |arvest, 1.164.000 bushels, 16 per cent. duties. | lax: 361,000 acres, 1,264,008 bushels, Johnson as Head of N. Tiss aera |43 per cent. D. Department He will be chancellor, foreign min- | |" Rye, Flax Sharply Reduced ister, minister of defense, public secur- | | U. S. department of agriculture ity and agriculture. | | crop estimates for 1934, made public Fargo, July 11—(#)—Lynn U. Stam-| All military and police power in CAMP AIGN BAT TLE SURPLUS FOR YE AR t=: disclosed the drouth had teat. Bargs eee is the new| Austria will be concentrated in his | Vi, sharply reduced the prospective yield Whether or Not They Will Take Jurisdiction command orth Dakota de-| hands through the defense and se- of flax and rye to the two leading coe tang fica Tesion | SUR posts producing states, Minnesota and * North Dakota. elected to succeed W. H.-Jobrnsor, Mi-| <4. ommuniaue asserted the sig Was! eo1 Theodore Roosevelt, Jr./Farley Mints Service Out of Red| Not? Dakota not newspaperman, at the closing busi-| + wine out “the last vestiges of trea- which produced ali | H 7 4 more than a third of the national ness session Tuesday of the annual akodgeatanesre Sounds Keynes Assailing | for First Time in Over yield of flax in the 1927-31 period, reorliee lialag Fred Mann, Jr., of] aimost daily bombings and other ‘New. Deal’ Kinsman 15 Years was expected to produce less than ‘Unanimously, William Stern of Far-| °CtS of terrorism have kept the got he jone fifth of the total crop this year. ernment nervous for months. Aus- The crop was estimated at 1,266,000 go was re-elected national Legion! trian Nazis were blamed by Dollfuss Chicago, July 11—()—Young Re-| Washington, July 11—()—Up the| bushels as against 7,351,000 for the pool adjoin inant - Loire} Grand Farka eae rat pakola. _.|supporters. They are bitter foes be-| mubiicans throughout the nation were |amoie aleve ‘or rosunacre cone itive year average. ‘The figure was See enei nee aE ae of . vention city for 1935, the dates to be eauinn tthe tianeellog’s nTesenAIAS | cullen ‘sey tieir= partywloaders Welt |e amas ari is biden |sligntiy, below last year's crop of 1,- - . opposition to a union wi TMANY-!nesday to fight “as we have never - | 677,000 bushels. att ubes ie ee " 9 oe weepmng Foneepd ee | In remaking the a eee Bells focght telore” against the “colossal| A hush-hush atmosphere surrounds| The estimate showed Minnesota 9 Seas Gage pores Named vice pas ie is E. L,| 148s cripplec the power of the Fascist! bureaucracies” of the Democratic ad-|Post office clerks as they bend their|would raise more than half of the to- heimwehr, or home guard, which! ministration. heads over tables of figures showing|tal flax crop for this year, with 3,- zona of yarns sa eased am gained government favor by yeoman} co) ‘Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., sound- | how the mail service panned out in| 306,000 bushels of a total of 5,599,000. ies fee at J men Lisbon was| Work during the bloody Socialist revo-| 4 the keynote of the drive, assailing |the fiscal year just ended. The 1934 total, however, will be more lution in February, although previous- ft his ki President | Observers are busy guessing. Some|than a million bushels below last as 61% cents @ bushel for December ressiented a Reales ant ly no great lover of Dollfuss. eee nae aadeena 'tiestas, Wed foresee an announcement that, leav-jyear when the yield was 4,365,000. delivery, 3 ail chaplain, The — for fehl ‘The heimwehr leaders, Prince Ernst young Republican leaders from 19|{n€ such things as subsidies and|Minnesota had a five year average of 4 aainely faifiemel ean be aectatnanion, von Starhemberg, vice chancellor and) states, franked mail out of the picture, the|6,241,000 bushels between 1927 and Loan for State-Owned ‘Jot ie ‘der, was| Major Emil Fey, minister 0: public)" «you he said, “will pay the piper | Postal service has got out of the red| 1931, unanimously chose! security, will remain in the govern-| tor the follies of the Democratic ad-| for the first time in 15 years. The rye report, showed a similar to the rattocal senveneee Nt ment but Hey will surrender power. ministration for you will pay the|, Harry L. Slattery, comptroller of downward trend in the two states, the vote on the command- eee paren 1 by disturban,| debts they insure. You and your|the department, predicted recently/which between them produced half ership, Mann voted the election of| °° we ce ge rgeeretes n.| children will struggle under the laws | 8? actual service surplus of around|the national crop between 1927 and Stambaugh be made unanimous, and age Lacan . is cesar they make and you should have a say | $5,800,000 oe ee Presi for aa 1931. Adjutant Jack Williams cast a unani-| ier against the heimmohr, whose |12,the party councils. year ie que ore be # roe had) ‘From a total five year average of mous ballot for the Fargo man. Stam-| Dicition since the revolution has been| “These are grave times. Our lib-| Slipped in the surprise party Plans.) 13,759,000 bushels, North Dakota was baugh’s vote was 160% to 63% for| Position since the tevolution fas beettlerties are being violated, cast aside | f0F as soon as rley heard this, he! expected to slump to 1,164,000, a drop Mann. Piecscnirmoceny eae and disregarded. Free speech and a| issued @ statainent. pepo ne of from one third to one seventeenth New England es rinses Reslenaiion ‘Accepted free press are threatened, as well as ments rua. be available at least until! of the national output. Last year the Posts which have made outstand-| prince Schonberg-Hartenstein, who] the very spirit of the bill of rights. My, ata aitet neral himseit | S#te raised 3,712,000 bushels. ing. records the last year in various the only high ranking army man| “What does this colossal govern- | |. 76 te ota nee re ae ee The anticipated Minnesota decline branches of Legion endeavor were| i" tne cabinet ‘drops out altogether,|™mental regimentation mean? tt / 5! speculation that the stamP| was not so decided, yet the state's awarded department trophies. To the having declined to accept a : means the forfeiting of everything for|#94 envelope business is healthy | ve crop for 1934 was predicted to be Industries Is Doomed Washington, July 11.—(#)—North Dak Post Cited in. He said in a recent speech: New England post went the Mack pees which the country has stood. It|®ain. about one half of the five year aver- Traynor trophy for the post show-|'2 the new hag gph ter Dollft rig | means a country frozen in classes and|, “During the past 83 years there were| 26 ‘The estimated yield for this year ing the largest increase in member-|‘"e, ministry of defense, to Mal re-|directed by an olgarchy. Colossal ut, ten, years in which the People| was piaced at 3.256.000 bushels against ship; to the Bismarck post for the] pcm Otto Ender and Richard Sch-| bureaucracies have always been the | © ry aoe ee Ms Aanoors the ae third time went the Kamplin trophy| mits’ minister without portfolio, are|#®me—tigid, tending to corruption, pete Gebcctovsnt. While tax wan Tare 200102 for the post with tr: best record of missing in the new alignment. and by their very strides perpetuating ene ei oon prea years less, but The law of weather averages and a After the clashes between the home there was a gradual growth until in| Senerous Carryover from a payer guards and soldiers Fey hastened to the fiscal year 1932 the amount you|St@nary probably will ena e Graz to confer with heimwehr officers 6,269,000 for 1927 to 1931 and 3,638,000 B ; themselves. We should fight against them as we have never fought be- fre.” -|to leave its acreage production un- e 000, L The application, ‘Townley and a group of his colleagues, se & 8 Ey | H FE HE if i H Seen ee E E and General Schonberg-Hartenstein i g i 8 a sooth: P. Fletcher, national chairman, who Figures in 30 Y splracy with. Langer. Maidlene, Went 0 Gras to soothe the) ia the delegates the party may set °C, hope to be able to report to the| This was made clear by high agri- He Denes She legality of 1 Pi In commenting on Chancellor Hit-| UP a “brain trust’ stats ON. sives,*| President and the people at the end|culture department officials Wednes- court| ler’s “purging,” in Germany, Dollfuss _ §,”" | of «this fiscal year that it has been|day after they had studied figures of said “does not the light at last dawn| Fletcher said, “but must work within | wine out pears and that the|the crop reporting board that show- upon us that one cannot make framework of the constitution. I postal service is self-sustaining.” ed an estimated production for 1934 g i BE E E F 4 it people ‘a! with violent methods?”|am afraid that the country otherwise fe Scalia lower than any in the past 30 years. 44 irmly determined that|might have to pay for security by BLIMP IS CONDEMNED | (Continued on Page Two) bid only as the government di-} washington, July 11.—(P)—Secre-| Grand Forks Vote to gay thatthe arp te Anges ad BIRDS IMPERILLED Decide School Levy Grand Forks, N..D., July 11.—(®)—, The sont Pe board of Papo Tuesday t called a special election Usel: ainst Grassh ers. August 2 on a proposal to increase the i seless Ag: oppers, 18-mill levy allowed by the state law Tribune Observes for school purposes, ‘Under the law, voters of any dis- Pye Baye Pe Doar to raise the eid pe etch eee por ownt by © 0) Der cont sabe. Bat Bird life in North Dakota is threat the amount of the increase to be ask- a of ed here was not decide. A by spreading of arsenic: A t of was adopted, thursday, the’ tear | Which exceeds the amount that can be tansuccessful ef- raised by the 18-mill levy for general purposes. The sinking fund budget | Was set at $48,655. tion| Mississippi Defeats Prohibition Repea! HL E 5 : i i li it Fy PR st BH FE | ‘i ail cH F Hs 3 er flight. It has been designated on- ly for experimental use in its han- gar and around a mooring mast at Lakehurst, N. J. i : i i San Francisco, July 11—(#)—The menace of a general strike hung over Oakland i i i ; i PH I i a Hg Portland, and San Francisco Wednesday as the president’s labor disputes board sought to break the .| deadlock between embattled long- shoremeri of the western seaboard and the face of a threatened walk- of San Francisco al Oakland e : if i Killing Wild Life, Swen- son Declares A | ! i i F i E x 5 is Get Cleanliness Warnin — of his visit,|ident to f z E i 5 ix 8 it i Li

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