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ue ESTABLISHED 1873 PRELIMINARY BUDGET SHOWS NO INCREASE IN LOGAL TAX LEVY 1934 Report Totals $101,400, According to Figures Re- leased by City Auditor POOR RELIEF FUND OUT JULY REPORTS GIVE RAINS AS CAUSE OF FAVORABLE CHANGES Government Cattle Buying Greatly Relieved Feed and Water Situation ‘ Threatens City Tieup in Strike CALF CROP IS SMALLER Swimming Pool, Library Ap- propriations Increased; Bonded Debt Reduced Winter Feed Shortage Is Gen- eral Prospect for State, Reports Reveal rill i ranges. In the southern part and some of the negthern counties, h ge et E ri i ie HE ae HH ee E 3 3 i Proposed changes be considered and the annual tax levy Miles Below Memorial " shes ppsti Bridge, Summon Sheriff a <sipiaa é rs i 7 i Es £3 Es H ate Sy i : i i re BE g i a8 ae rf i oe 5 3 i cA H g : : He ibsgeeste oft! E : 5 ae pe et Fs Hf z dis sete EE if ogre i ie Ee 5 z ; ; é i Hi BEE : i if | : é E il i | [ E i au u pel if 4 | | | ¥ 2 | | ! E J [ i E 8 8F 58 : E F : i if ize ife g : ae rs; i ui lag ll ieee iF EE iit z E Bee i il rH £ i |e ea [i g i i i 3 i | ii i é g i ga 5 ye | ‘| | iF it 44 il ! : E ie 5s BE ! z | H : , t i i £ i on GF tt ii ! | g a 2. ge rel Bi afi! il ent itt ; t i} 5k Bloodhounds ranged through neigh- BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather hat unsettled tonight and Tues- Say, oatitiy eineerg aaa oie: PRICE FIVE CENTS ‘Strikes Loom on Wide Front Livestock in N orth Dakota Shows I mprovement LABOR DISPUTES ARE e COURT DECISION IN OUSTER HEARING IS | Missing Bobby J Connors Special Session If Given Authority ‘JQUICK ACTION Without Jurisdiction; Leg- islature Supreme chief executive. leaders of all factions. vested with executive authority. Speedy Decision *| Langer is disqualified. would use national preme court Monday morning, bring- ing to a close arguments in the ouster In his opening brief, the attorney general contended: ‘The court is without jurisdiction to issue an original writ of quo warranto for reasons that: ‘The legislative assemblies have sole jurisdiction to impeach for crimes and corrupt conduct. IN HUNT FOR LOST. OR KIDNAPED CHILD Woodlands Near Suburb Home viction of a felony in the state of Bobby Connors Expect- conntitation sea tae conviction ed to Give Clue of a felony under laws of the United States. Judgement of conviction of felony is suspended upon appeal. Sathre asked demurrers to the ac- tion be sustained “because no cause of action exists to disqualify for convic- tion of a felony.” He also maintained no cause of action of right to relief had been shown by the plea of Lieut. Gov. Ole H. Olson, plaintiff in the action, and claimant to the governor's chai ir. Contends Legislature Supreme In his arguments supporting his Hartedale, N. Y., July 16—(P)— (Continued on Page 5) CCC DROUTH CAMPS -|Flood and Erosion Work to Have Prominent Part in N. D. Program , duly 16,—()—Loca- 178 civilian conserva- fe neta ih fist gue ANXIOUSLY AWAITED Olson Ready to Revoke Call for IMPERATIVE Langer Briefs Contend Court Speculative eyes turned toward the sombre chambers of North Dakota’s supreme court Monday, as the state ‘awaited the hard-fought decision on ‘William Langer’s right to continue as Whether Langer’s ship of state would strike the rock of adverse de- cision, bringing with it a new govern- ment, and a revocation of his call for & special session of the legislature, was the question in minds of political Lieutenant Gov. Ole H. Olson, plain- tiff, who seeks the governorship on the ground Langer's conviction in fed-| eral court disqualifies him, was ready to revoke a proclamation by Langer convening the legislature in special session if the court holds Olson is now Urged ‘With the special session called for Thursday, Olson’s attorney, H. G. Full- 808P | er, Fargo, has urged the court to give @ speedy decision to enable the lieu- -| tenant governor to revoke the call if Fuller argued that unless a decision were handed down quickly, Langer guardsmen to re- sist the court order, should it hold : he is disqualified. ‘Attorney General P. ©. Sathre {1164 seven briefs with the state su- WEEK-END MISHAPS TAKE BIG TOLL IN | Other Forms of Violence Take 15 Lives Going to Rescue of Girl in Reservoir St. Paul, July 16—(#)—Traffic ac- cidents, drownings and other forms 15 persons in the northwest over the week-end. ‘The dead: Jean Haugen, 11, Des Lacs, N. D., drowned in Great Northern reservoir at Des Lacs, Mrs, Steffen Aldahl, 41, Des Lacs, drowned in an attempt to rescue the Haugen girl. James Murphy, Braddock, N. D., about 50, drowned in the IMis- souri river. Charles Flynn, 52, Red Wing, Minn., alderman, killed when car crashed in- to tree after plunging over embank- ment. Tony Olson, 24, of Milton, Wis., killed when car left road on a curve. Lawrence Johnson, 6, St. Paul, fa- tally hurt when run down by car driven by Walter Hagen, internation- ally known golfer. James W. Brown, St. Paul American Association baseball player, killed when car turned over on a hill in South St. Paul. ' Mary Adeline Barnum, 17, Minne- apolis, injured fatally in head-on au- tomobile collision. Ethel Giffin, 19, St. Charles, killed when car went into ditch and over- turned. John Alvin Glirbas, 8, drownec! in Sioux Falls, 8. D., municipal swim- ming pool, believed seized with cramps, Theodore Meyers, 35, St. Paul, stepped off drop-off and drowned in Lake Nokomis, Minneapolis. Kenneth Wenner, 24, Minneapolis, fell into concrete mixer and was fa- tally hurt. Glenn Eriksen, 23, Owatonna, drowned when injured head in dive from 15 foot bank into gravel pit swimming pool, Owatonna. Leon Nelson, 36, Clayton, Wis., trapped in burning home and killed when structure collapsed. Eskil Westberg, 34, Union, Wis., drowned in Chippewa river. WIND STORMS COST HIGHWAYS $500,000 ORTHWEST STATES Traffic Accidents, Drownings, THREE ARE DROWNED IN N. D. Des Lacs Woman Meets Death of violence resulted in the death of GROWING MENACE 0 NATION'S COMMERCE ‘Frisco, Houston, Alabama, Min- neapolis, Kohler in Grip of Controversies Chosen to Head St. Paul Police COAST CRISIS APPROACHING “Mill City Truckmen Will Renew Walkout Unless Agree- ment Is Reached (By The Associated Press) Strikes threatened to paralyze busi- ness over a wide area of the nation Monday with the Pacific Coast, Ala- bama and the Middlewes* as the prin- cipal centers of labor controversies. The “siege of San Francisco”—a general strike intended by union labor to paralyze the entire metropolitan area of 1,300,000 persons—was ordered begun at 8 a. m. Pacific Coast time Monday. The strike, involving an estimated 100,000 workmen, is aimed to assist 27,000 Pacific coast longshoremen and marine workers who have been on strike for two months seeking changed working conditions. Four thousand national guardsmen are on guard, 2,000 additional men having been ordered out late Sunday night. Food supplies are low. Some com- modities are exhausted. There is a |Shortage of fuel for motorcars. Extra [police have been sworn in to meet the emezgency. Plans are being pushed “with all | Possible haste” for a general strike in Portland, Ore. Frisco Man Bayonetted A man was bayonetted at San Fran- cisco Sunday by a national guards- man, and may die. Three negroes were killed, three others wounded and a white man was shot as guns blazed in Houston, Tex., where there is longshoremen-employer trouble. The President of the Alabama Cot- ton Manufacturers association said that a general strike in the industry there, as proposed by 42 locals of the Union Textile Workers of America, would probably mean sn indefinite AGAINST NAZIS IS iti: i istrike speakers at a labor meeting to Political Demonstrations Over; have truck drivers cancel a strike set Week-End Result in for midnight Monday were howled Four Deaths Alexander G. Jamie, shown here in a new picture, famed as a director of Chicago's “Secret Six,” crime-fighting organiza- tion during the Capone reign and as a federal agent, has been nominated for police chief in St. Paul, Minn., where the Police long have been a target of gangster link accusations. City council yet must confirm the appointment. DOLLFUSS CAMPAIGN down. Picket lines were ordered Monday at Kohler, Wis., called the “model in- {dustrial village.” Twelve hundred employes are demanding the right of collective bargaining, union leaders explained. The San Francisco metropolitan area with a population of more than 1,300,000 persons was completely par- alyzed by the general strike. All business and traffic ceased and the national guard moved swiftly to Prevent violence. Tanks, Artillery Held Ready Tanks were enroute to the city, bearing machine guns and one pounder guns. A field artillery ‘unit got under way from Salinas with 75 millimeter Vienna, July 16.—(*)—Death and dynamite wrote a grim answer Mon- day to Chancellor Dollfuss’ rigid campaign to suppress Nazis. Political violence brought four deaths, widespread bomb damage and @ wave of terror over the week-end. Cities were thrown into darkness as defiant opponents of the Dollfuss regime renewed their activity. Trans- Portation services were crippled; dy- namite wrecked telephone booths, mail boxes and public places. Socialists, under cover since the Drifting Sands, Results of, Drouth, Choke Drainage Ditches in Many Places ALLOTTED 10 STATE =z ebegeeaet | aa fos i ies the Socialists in several provinces, bloody civil war of February, appar- ently have started another offensive against the government. Republican Guardists attempted to hold a meeting in the Vienna woods near Kaltenleutgeben Sunday, with nearly 1,000 Socialists on hand. Two Fascists tipped off gendarmes and their appearance on the scene brought on fighting. ‘Three Socialists were killed. A Nazi was killed Saturday in Vienna. A government communique charged guns. The national guard force here was increased to 4,000 men, 2,000 troopers being moved quickly into the city. Violence broke out here and in the transbay region. Police said a mob o nearly 1,500 men tsormed atd looted a grocery store at 2rd and Mission streets. At Hayward 50 men raided an al- leged communistic headquarters, dragged the furniture to a nearby lot and set it afire. Pickets warned pedestrians not to go to work. Thousands of persons trudged miles to their offices. through the Republican Guard, caus- ed the disorders in commemoration of the anniversary of the burning of the Vienna palace seven years ago Sunday. Seven Killed Sunday In Airplane Crashes (By The Associated Press) Airplane disasters killed seven per- sens Sunday. An aerial vacation of three Lincoln, Neb., men—D. H. Campbell and Alva ‘H. Andrews, insurance executives, and Dr. F. W. Ryman, a dentist—ended in crash near Glasgow, Mont. All were force of strikers and outlined a pro- gram to control necessities with sup- Ply depots to ration food. Automobiles were left in garages. All car lines had stopped operating. In the face of threats they would lose all civil service benefits muni- cipal carmen ran their trams into barns. Telephone service, electric power, light and gas were assured. Federal, state, city and union officials = ised San Franciscans would not starve despite the blockade that has warehouses