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2 EDITOR OF WATFORD PAPER, LANGER FOE, RETAINED BY BOARD Directors Decide to Maintain Neutral Policy Until After Elections Dave Larin, longtime Nonpartisan League editor, but bitter foe of ousted Governor William Langer, will retain his position as editor of the McKenzie County Farmer, but the newspaper, until the November election at least, will pursue a neu- tral course in state politics. The story of an unsuccessful at- tempt by one of the newspaper's board of directors to remove Larin, appearing in the Minot Daily News ‘Wednesday, is reprinted here. The decision to retain Larin was reached at a meeting of directors at Watford City Tuesday. A motion for his removal, by one of the directors, failed when it did not receive a sec- ond. Sanford Makes Motion Three of the five members of the board were regarded as supporters of Langer. The motion, which failed to receive a second, was made by I. Sanford, chairman of the board, and until recently an employe of the state Tegulatory department, having been dismissed from service not long after Ole H. Olson became acting gover- nor. Larin, in last Week's issue of the newspaper, again editorially assailed | against Political decency; that he/ He has | helped himself to $19,000 of his pa-| edited League newspapers at Botti-|per’s funds and tried to cop off an-| the Langer administration. neau, Garrison, Wahpeton, Stanley and Minot. “I’m still 8 member of the Nonpar- tisan League, but I'm not for Langer,” Larin explained today. Larin, in his editorial last week, said in plain language wouldn't worship at the Langer shrine, and made it known that he would not resign until a majority of the board of directors forced him to do so. After telling in his editorial that he had replied in substance to San- “WHAT'S KEEP- ING HER NOW? SHE'S ALWAYS LATE!” “SORRY DEAR... THIS BOTTLE OF BLUE RIBBON WILL CALM YOU” ford that Sanford could “go jump in the lake” when it was suggested that Larin resign, the editorial continued | in part: Sees Sentiment Changed “Till lately an appointee under the is naturally predisposed in favor of the late governor. He also harbors the hallucination the primary elec- tion was a manifestation of the pop- ular will in McKenzie county, and of jcourse it was—on that day. Having jbeen absent from the county since q tae: i. Sanford is not aware of the | changing sentiment existent here as elsewnere over the state, Further- visits he mingles with and hears only |redhotters who have personal incen- | tive for adherence. If he would bet- iter inform himself of what is going jon, keep his ear to the ground, he | could discern the swelling tide of op- Position to Langer and a perpetua- | tion of Langerism. | “Whether the present editor 1s forced off this job or not will not imake an iota of difference in the ground swell of anti -Langerism. Whether a successor devotes all the columns of this paper to adulation of Langer will not change the situa- tion a particle. ‘Trath Will Prevail’ “Pretense, deceit and corruption ,;may win a temporary victory, but always truth prevails in the long run, particularly in a_ state North Dakota where, we have before said and reiterate, its people are law- abiding, moral, even religious. Any person can be deceived or surrender to an emotional outburst, but always {a return to sanity, reflection and self-analysis will reveal its error. | “We defy Mr. Sanford or any other person, if impartial or unprejudiced. to show Langer did not receive a fair trial and conviction for an offense |other $3,500 illegally of state mill monies (Attorney General Sathre is our authority for this assertion); that his use of two thousand road main- tainers, good honest farmers without | thought or intent of wrongdoing, as a that he political weapon ts chicanery without | parallel in the history of the state; that his call of a spectal session of the legislature for the sole purpose of Langer’s extenuation and refusal of his legislative satellites to receive Senator Nye's testimony of graft and corruption in the Langer administra: Langer administration, Mr. Sanford | more, on occasion of his infrequent | the plaints of Langer payrollers, the | like tered over the St. Lawrence Valley THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1934 tion is palpable admission of what has been going on and to be re- vealed later, for Mr. Nye is quoted | as saying he will air his charges un- ‘less the committee accepts his testi- | mony in an open hearing.” il ——_—____—__—_—______—_--@ Weather Report | ge ee eee FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Un- settled and cooler tonight; Friday \partly cloudy and cooler. For North Da. kota: and night; partly cooler south portions. For South Da. kota: Cloudy and cooler, scattered showers south por- tion tonight; #ri- | day partly cloudy | and cooler. | For Montana: { night ai H |cooler tonight east of Divide. fase ‘Minnesota: Cloudy, scattered show- ers in east portion Thursday and pos- jee eriuey morning; warmer in ex. ‘eme east portion; ne: it portion Friday. ane ere i GENERAL CONDITIONS | A low pressure area overlies the jnorthern Plains States (Huron 29.76) while high pressure areas are cen- |and the western Canadian Provinces (Edmonton 30.18). The weather is |somewhat unsettled over the West and scattered showers have ocourred from the upper Mississippi Valley westward and northwestward to the eastern Rocky Mountain slope. North Platte, Nebraska reported a rainfall of 1.14 inches during the past 24 hours. Cool Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.03. Reduced to sea level, 29.76. Missouri River stage at 7 a. m, -2.2 24 hour change 0.1 ft. i * PRECIPITATION For Bismarck station: {Total this month to date 4 | jormal. this month to di 4 Total, January Ist to date 5.93 | Normal, January 1st to date | Accumulated deficiency to date . NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. 8 65 00 00 00 ft. 02 | BISMARCK, cld, | Beach, cldy .... |Carrington, cidy ’: |{Crosby, cldy . Devils Lake, cldy ‘Dickinson, cldy . Drake, cldy . Dunn Center, peldy . Grand Forks, cldy .. Hankinson, cldy Jamestown, cldy . Lisbon, cldy Max, cldy | Minot, peldy . | Napoleon. cldy | Oakes, cldy .. Parshall, cldy | Sanish, cldy | Williston. peldy | Wishek, cldy - ‘00! ‘00 | ‘00 | seeeeeeee | penne | SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low. | Huron, cldy ..... | Rapid City, cldy | | Minneapolis. cldy | Moorhead, cldy | WEATHER IN OTHER STATES | ‘High: | Amarillo. Tex., cldy Boise, Idaho, clear Calgary, Alta, cldy Chicago, Ill., clear Denver, Colo., clear Des Moines, Ia., rai Dodge City, Kans., cl Edmonton, Alta., rain . Havre, Mont., cldy ..... 82 Helena, Mont., peldy .. Kamloops, B. C., clear . Kansas City, Mo., clear Lander, Wyo., clear .... Medicine Hat, A., cldy .. Miles City, Mont., peldy Modena, Utah, clear ... No. Platte, Neb.. peldy . Oklahoma City, 0., palsy: Pr. Albert, Sask., cldy . | Qu’Appelle, Sas., paldy és Roseburg, Ore., cldy ... {St. Louis, Mo., peldy ... Salt Lake City, U., clear |S. 8. Marie, Mich., clear Seattle, Wash., rain Sheridan, Wyo., cldy Sioux City. Ia., cldy Spokane, Wa: dy Swift Current, 8.. pcldy The Pas, Man., clear .. Toledo, Ohio, clear .... ‘Winnemucca, Nev., clear 2333 838388885888 States westward fo the Pacite cae| Warns Against Poor 1298] year Tire & Rubber Co. Death has broken up the Loomis Sisters’ act that created a sensation when introduced to Broadway two years ago. News of the death of Virginia Loomis (right) 21, was kept from 18-year-old Maxine who is dangerously ill herself. Virginia had signed a movie contract just before going to the hospital for an appendectomy. lated with proper air pressure. ‘However, just putting air in the | tires is not enough in many cases. Tires Abel Holiday | Motorists will start out on their holi- | day trip on tires that are worn thin A lot of otherwise careful motor-| 3nd a double hazard immediately ists are going to havé their holiday | presents itself. Of course, many folks automobile trips ruined by having) drive a little faster on a trip of this to change tires, in the opinion of S./sott in order to reach the destina- W. Corwin of Corwin-Churchill Mo- | tion; and heat, being the enemy of | tors, Inc., local dealer for the Good: | tire life, often takes its toll in the \form of a blowout, especially when “Holiday trips are planned and, the|the roads are hot and dry. , day before, the motorist takes his car! the roads are wet and slippery, dan- to the filling station, has the tank! ger of skidding is great on tires worn filled with gasoline, the oil checked, | thin and smooth. the battery looked after and tires, “The best insurance against trouble oma Death Ends Sister Act when tires are worn thin and smooth, is new tires, tires with traction in the center of the tread, such as pos- sessed by the new Goodyear G-3, The G-3 gives 43 per cent more non. skid mileage, has two pounds more rubber in the tread and has a wider, flatter tread, giving it greater contact with the road,” Corwin concluded. BARRETT 10 HEAD COMMUNIST TICKET marck Names Sanish Man For Governorship Race P. J. Barrett, Sanish, as candidate for governor, will head a partial ticket [endorsed by the nominating conven- tion of the North Dakota Communist Party which concluded sessions with @ mass meeting here Wednesday. With Barrett, on the Communist | Slate, will be Arvo Husa of Belden for United States senator; Jasper Holland ;of Grandin and Miss Effie Kjorstad ‘of Williston for congress; B. J. Hel- land of Forbes for leutenant-gover- nor; Harry Juul of Bismarck for | commissioner of agriculture and labor jand Ashbel Ingerson of Flaxton for | railroad and warehouse commissioner. | A complete 10-point platform advo- jeating national and state legislation {was drawn up by the 38 voting dele- gates of the convention. Planks in \the program contained attacks on | Roosevelt's “New Deal,” including de- ; mands for the immediate repeal of the | NRA; against the capitalist “terror;” jrace discrimination; Imperialist wars, the sales tax and all anti-hitch hiking and vagrancy laws. Advocated in the platform were a |Farmers Emergency Relief bill, the | Workers Unemployment Insurance [measure (H. R. 7598), full schooi |terms with higher wages for teachers, \a steeply graduated income tax, social |insurance for unemployed, a system of. (insurance to replace the old-age pen- jsion laws and the right to strike and |organize labor unions, |. Approximately 200 persons attended ;the mass meeting Wednesday night at jwhich candidates presented the Com- munist program. Six state organiza- | Nominating Convention at Bis- RASA eT | Held for Second Double Murder ———_— Facing an accusation of double murder for the second time in his life, J. J. Mendenhall, 64, above, is held in Jacksonville, Fla., jail, charged with killing Mrs. Laura Green, 84, and her daughter, Mrs. Mary Anderson, 60, his fiancee, with a hammer and a knife. Mendenhall served 15 years for the first crime. He at one time was known as a Florida “citrus king.” tions which had regularly qualified delegates were the United Farmers League, the Farmers Holiday Associ- ation of Williams county, Unemployed ‘Councils, the Finnish Workers clubs, the Young Communist league and the Communist party. Lefor Will Attend Examiners’ Meeting fo discuss problems surrounding building and home loans, Adam A. Lefor, state bank examiner, Friday will leave for Seattle, Wash., to attend @ three-day conference of state bank superintendents of Pacific Coast and middle-western states. ‘The conference is to open Septem- ber 5, according to the call sent out by ‘Howard H. Hansen, Washington state superintendent of banks. Officials of the national adminis- tration will be leading speakers at the conference at which banking and loan conditions in the various states will be discussed. Dahl Sisters Wiii Vie for Golf Title - Valley City, N. D., Aug. 30—@— ‘Two sisters well known in state golf- ing circles will battle it out for the ‘women’s golf championship of the Valley City Country club. The Misses Alice and Margaret Dahl reached the finals as the result of de- feating Mrs. C. J. Meredith, 1 up in 10, and Inez , 2 up, respec- tively. ‘There are 20,000,000 widows in | Win Back Pep... Vigor... Vitality Medical authorities agree that your kid- gays contain 16 MILES of tny sabes of ‘which help to purify the bleed ead ‘you health you have A If trouble with too frequent Md ‘with scanty il 4 i td E this Fall and Winter! -K-I-D-D-I-N-G!—do you realize that’s the big risk you take on bald old tires? More accidents—5% times more!—are caused by skids than by blowouts or punctures. Those are insurance records! For the little mileage left in old tires, is it worth the danger? On your Labor Day trip you'd feel much better on safe new Goodyears—wouldn’t youP—and you’d be all set for the slippery driving months ahead! Obey that impulse — get your “G-3’s” now — at present low prices—and throw a load off your mind. Look what this sensational tire gives you — Wider flatter All-Weather Tread and have REAL Non-Skid Protection For Little Money Here's a Lotof Tire! LIFETIME GUARANTEED wt Winnipeg, Man., peldy . Boston . GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY A value that’s possible because Goodyear Dealers sell the most tires—by mil- : lions! Tough, thick Center Traction Tread. Full Oversize. Blowout pro- tected in EVERY oly by Super- twist Cord. Come see it! * —gives more road contact - More non-skid blocks —give quicker-stopping safety Thicker heavier tread —average of 2 lbs. more rubber — give smooth travel,easy steering Patented Supertwist Cord —blowout protection in EVERY ply —and it all adds up to 43% More Miles of Real Non-Skid Protection —at no extra cost to you! BARNEY OLOFIELD CEVERLY MILLS, CALIFORNIA ghe2seszeseeei SSSSS*SERSSSSRSSRASKSSESLERLES |New York | Miami Angust 1, 1934 8 Mr. P. W. Litchfield, President The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. Akron, Ohio Dear Mr. Litchfield: You know that I know tires...I have to know tires...my life depends upon them. At no time during my 32 years of professional driving have I made such extreme demands upon tires as I now make, continuously, at the Chrysler sand pits and test track on the Century of Progress grounds in Chicago. ‘The track is one-fourth mile long. Its surface is highly abrasive and its turns are unusually severe. Unless my tires grip doggedly ... unless they are 20 carcass a8 to withstand terrific friction heat and pile ..»my daily exhibitions would be impossible. And that’s why I am exclusively using the famous Goodyear G3 All-Weathere. Since the very beginning of automobile racing, no tires have been called upon to withstand such cztreme punishment. Bat those G3’s can take it... not a tire failure so far this soason! And they're strictly stock tires...exactly the same tires the general public buys from lyear jers... whereas tires used in races such es the Memorial Day 500 mile classic and similar events are especially constructed and not sold to or suitable for the general motoring public. I sincerely congratulate Goodyear upon having developed this teally sensational new tire. Stoke-on-Trent is England's foggiest spot, having had 126 days of smoke haze in the period between October, 1932, and March, 1933, One scrambled ostrich egg is enough to serve six persons. “THAT DID THE TRICK, JANE... 'M OKAY NOW.” ed of 3, 2 The flavor ver blows ash 8" (- Jingers longer because its PuRE Vanilla S chilling TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY AUGUST Special—Our regular $5.00 oll tonic permanent complete with shampoo, trim and fingerwave, $3.50 this month. California Wave Nook, 102-3rd St. Phone 782. Wierertu wives know that “terrible tempers” are often the result of overwork or worry. When your husband gets that way, do this: Serve him a deliciously cold bottle of Blue Ribbon . . . (one for yourself, of course) «and see how quickly its satisfying coolness soothes and relaxes him. It works like a charm! (You'll feel better, too!) Don’t spoil your remedy with ordinary beer. Insist on Blue Ribbon; . pure and full-fla- vored ... with a distinctive taste that mokes it America's first choice. Always keep a few bottles in your refrigerator. Another tip to wives: A bottle of Blue Ribbon helps you through a busy day. When you've been going since early morning, rest a minute. Treat yourself to a cool, refreshing bottle of Blue Ribbon. See how it relaxes you. Fela BLUE RIBBON BEER (1984, Promter-Dadea Coop: SIZE 4.50 x 21 PRICE 4.75219 ......0055 5,30 5.00Z19 ......66. 5.65 5.25x18 . 6.40 5.25x21 . 6.90 all subject to change prices without notice. State sales tax, if any, BARNEY OLDF You know me, " (Bx Fev Oldsela P.8. Naturally I have ipped the cars driven by * Mra, Oidtaid and pie my daughter, with G3’s. Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Bismarck, N. Dak. Goodyear Warehouse D says G-3- Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optom ‘ries Offices Oppositi: the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. D. Distributed by Gamble-Robinson Company