Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘ABLISHED 1873 North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1934 The Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; somewhat warmer Friday. PRICE FIVE CENTS Detroit Wins in Twelfth, 3-2 Urged to Resist ‘Approaching War’ Labor “LITTLE CHANCE OF COMPROMISE WITH BUILDERS IS SEEN Executive Council of A. F. of L. to Take Up Controversy Thursday PERMANENT PEACE SOUGHT Green Tells Convention It Is Up to Workers to Avoid Fu- ture Conflict San Francisco, Oct. 4—(%)—The storm brewing in the building trades department came to a head Thurs- day, casting a shadow over the Am- bee Federation of Labor conven- ion. The executive council of the A. F. of L. decided to take up the contro- versy late Thursday in a last-minute effort to keep it from the floor of the convention. Leaders of both, factions said they saw little likelihood of a compromise. The dispute involved the refusal of the building trades department—re- versing the recommendation of its own executive council—to seat dele- gates from the carpenters, bricklayers and electrical workers’ international unions. While the delegates watched anx- fously the developments in this in- ternal dispute, the words of President, William Green still were fresh in their minds that workers of the world must unite in the interests of international peace. Asserting it is the “purpose and spirit of the workers of the world to’ see that war never occurs again,” Green said labor must move solidly “to prevent what seems to be an ap- proaching war.” Green’s remarks were made in in- troducing John Stokes of London, fra- ternal delegate to the convention from: the British Trade Unions congress. In introducing William Dunn of) ! Scores Gehringer “Goose” Goulin Detroit fans went wud when “Goose” Goslin singled in the 12th to score Charley for the winning Tun in the hectic second game of the world seri@ at Navin field Thuraday. DEVILS LAKE RIGHT TO ESTABLISH CITY RRC ORGANIZED AS FERA REPLACEMENT FOR NORTH DAKOTA Three-Fold Plan of Rural-Reha- bilitation Advanced Un- der New Setup ORGANIZATION PERMANENT Program Intended to Aid Farm- ers, Laborers ‘and State in General Out of a gathering of directing heads of federal forces Thursday emerged preliminary plans for for- mation of the first great step of re- construction in North Dakota—the LIGHT PLANT UPHELD Supreme Court Rules R. R. Commission Without Pow- er to Regulate Rates The right of the city of ‘Toronto, fraternal delegate from the! Payer. Canadian Trade Union congress, Green pointed out no frontier “in the usual sense of the word,” separates the Do- minion from the United States and the border has “‘no evidence of war- fare or instruments of warfare.” In its study of the building trades department dispute, the A. F. of L., executive council is expected to con- sider the warning President Green gave the department that its action in refusing to seat the delegates of the three “outside” unions was illegal. ‘The department’s executive council recommended unanimously last June to accept the reaffiliations of the dis- Puted organizations. Spokesmen for the “outcast” groups admitted they planned an attempt to replace President M. J. McDonough, charging his leadership lacks suffi- cient aggressiveness. MOELLRING FILES OPINION ON OUSTER Disagrees With Majority Order on Vogel for Same Reason as in Langer Case In an 18-word statement, State Su- preme Court Justice George H. Moell- ring late Wednesday dissented in a Stanton, N. D., Oct. 4.—Mercer ccunty received its first lot of 195 checks for Corn-Hog reduction con- tracts, totalling $11,221.45 on Octo- ber 1, O. Cline, county agent reports. The checks range in size from $354.90 to $10.00. check going to Harry Houser, Beu- George Buchfinck, Stanton, North Dakota, was the first contract signer te receive his check. Eis first pay- ment for Corn-Hog reduction totaled A spend by the city commission- efs to the original complaint filed by Thomas was sustained by the dis- trict court of Ramsey county, and the ruling of the lower court was af-/ firmed in Judge Moellring’s decision. In the decision, Judge Moellring held, “a proposition submitted to the electors of a city, under section two, chapter 172, laws of 1929, as to wheth- er a city should purchase, acquire, build or establish an electric plant and distributing system not to exceed @ stated maximum expenditure, and issue special obligation bonds there- fore, payable from net earnings only, is not invalid for duality. “Where the governing board of elty is authorized by the electors therefor to purchase or procure an electric plant . . . the cost to be paid from net earnings of plant only, it is not necessary as a condition pre- cedent, to secure a certificate of con- venience Authorizes Purchase ‘Where a city is authorized by the electors to purchase or procure an electric plant and distributing system for the use of the city, its inhabitants and industries, the cost to be paid from net earnings only, the board of railroad commissioners has no author- ity to determine, supervise or regu- late the rates or charges fixed by the city to the users of electrical energy.” Similarly, under like conditions, Judge Moellring held, the consent or approval of the railroad commission is not necessary before the city can Sent ERE AOE. 8 SRE OF TE into s contract with reference there- to with deferred obligations,” he held. further such a plant under such circum- stances, not a general Siigaton of Tural rehabilitation corporation. Pointed toward the eventual wind- up of the emergency machinery— FERA—the new corporation, to be definitely formed in the near future, will assume the task of re-establish- ing morale and confidence among farmers and others who have been erp eret by the twins of drouth depression. A three-fold plan has been advanc- ed to be carried out by the RRC, E. F. Graff, regional adviser of rural rehabilitation said, embracing farm- ers, industrial workers on relief, and work of benefit to the state at large. it, the FERA in the latter’s direct relief work, the RRC will follow the origin- al federal setup in the state as a per- manent organization. To be organized under articles of incorporation which are now await- ing approval in Washington, it will be a non-profit “business structure,” of Graff said. Investigations are to be undertak- en, out of which groups of farmers who have shown themselves in the past to be good credit risks will be poration funds with which to repair farm buildings, purchase livestock and poultry, seed, or to make repairs The second step in the plan is es- tablishment in the state of organized centers similar to subsistence home- steads, on which families partially on relief may become self-supporting through “loaned” aid. The third step will be purchase of sub-marginal lands for grazing pur- poses, other lands for Indian develop- ment, the construction of dams and similar work which will benefit the state generally, Graff said. Loans to Individuals Punds will be allocated month by month to the corporation, which will make the loans to individuals. “It is the intent of the plan to take the people from relief rolls, and to establish them once more as inde- pendent spirits,” Graff said. “No one is going to receive relief in the sense that it is now being given. Loans given will be repaid, over @ period of time sufficient to create no hardship ey the Tepayment, Iisa reconstruction measure.” E. A. Willson, federal relief admin- istrator, the end of FERA in the state @ year hence “if weather conditions are such as to permit pay- ing crops again. Although articles of— incorporation have not yet been approved, Graff said he expected the plan to begin functioning probably within the next two months. The program outlined by Graff is to operate over & period of six months, he said, with repayments from loans to form a revolving fund from which girls’ club leaders, and directors of other emergency relief projects. Chair Installations To Complete Capitol Chairs and rostrums in the senate, house and supreme court chambers will be installed, thereby finally com- pleting furnishing of the new $2,000,- 000 state capitol, yA Nov. 15, Nelson administration in pigskin; in upholstery will be of blue leather, to harmonize with the sky-blue of the ceiling. Steel opera chairs are to be in- ‘| stalled in the observers’ galleries of both houses. o mocratic Women HAUPTMANN’ MAP OF HOPEWELL ROAD LOCATED BY POLICE Psychiatrists Will Continue Their Study of Suspect Thursday CASE TO BE TRIED OCT. 11 Theater Cashier Identifies Alien as Man Who Passed Bill to Her, Nov. 26 New York, Oct. bmi Attorney Samuel J. Foley Thursday that investigators had an toa in Bruno Hauptmann’s trunk road maps of the Sourland Mountain sec- tion of New Jersey, where the estate Ke yg Charles A. Lindbergh is lo- “Foley also stated that Hauptmann “is able to reproduce certain sections of the Hopewell (N. J.) territory from memory, even down to the smallest in- used /rollowing a meeting of the Permanent Although not designed to succeed | ¢ draw maps of the Jersey “remarkable accuracy.” also are able to show that Hauptmann fished there also.” Five psychiatrists, after subjecting the Lindbergh case prisoner to a sanity test for more than two hours, the examination had not been com- pleted and that it would be resumed on necessary farm machinery, he said. | Friday. A witness to the examination in a windowless room of the Bronx county courthouse said Hauptmann maintained his sullen silence and in- Hauptmann went before the psy- chiatrists Wednesday, soon after he tad gone before Judge James M. Barrett and had heard his trial set for one week from Thursday. A special panel of 150 talesmen was ordered drawn Thursday, from which a jury will be chosen for the trial of the German former soldier and stoic in Bronx county on charges of extorting $50,000 in ran- som ,from Col. Charles A. Lind- Trial Set For Oct. 11 Attorney Samuel J. Foley, Organize in Mercer|“** Jamestown Bandits Loot Store of Guns Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 4—(— itely $500 12345678 90112 Louls PBR OODDOONND +t Detrot DOODDODNHD SCORE BY INNINGS. TIGERS CONE FR COME FROM BEHIND 10 EVEN UP SERIES WITH CARDS <== 6 RHE Batteries: St. Louis—Hallahan, Walker and Delancey. Detroit—Rowe and Cochrane. Wins Hectic 12-Inning Contest COMMUNITY CHEST CAMPAIGN WILL BE LAUNCHED OCT. 28 Goal of Drive Set at $11,000; Committees Named at Meeting Wednesday Bismarck’s Community Chest Fund campaign will be launched October 23, with the goal of the drive set for $11,000, it was announced Thursday general campaign committee called by J. C. Taylor, chairman. ‘The $11,000 goal set by the commit- tee is the same figure that was reached in the 1933 drive. A decision to con- duct the campaign along the lines of the past successful drives, namely, through city-wide solicitation, was reached by the general committee. Groups named to handle separate divisions of the: solicitation program were announced as follows: Allotment Committee—H. J, Dueme- land, chairman; J. C. Taylor. Advance Gifts Committee—C.. R. Robertson, chairman, W. E. Doty and F. M. Davis. Chain Stores and Concerns Having their Headquarters Outside of the City—A. M. Christianson, chairman B, O. Refvem, J. C. Taylor and H. Niles. Committee to secure Solicitors—L. K. Thompson, chairman, and 8. 8. left him with the announcement that | Boise. Publicity Committee—J. C. Taylor, chairman; W. 8. Moeller, F. W. Hun- ter and Charles Goodwin. Solicitation at Capitol—J. N. Roh- erty, chairman. Committee members to be selected by Roherty. ‘The general campaign committee which met Wednesday to make pians for the campaign is made up of Tay- lor, Dr. H. A. Brandes, J. P. Wagner, L. K. Thompson, C. L. Foster and Burt Finney. None of the agencies supported by the Community Chest Fund are elig- ible for federal relief, H. P. Goddard, secretary of the Association of Com- merce, pointed out. They must be by the Chest Fund or they will die out, he said. Eight years ago a plan was inaug- urated to combine all of the separate campaign drives under one head and since then there has never been a year ape the results fell below the quota set. Civic welfare movements and state institutions supported by the Com- munity Chest Fund are the Bismarck Boy Scouts, Bismarck Girl Scouts’ marck Community Christmas. President Plans No Cattle Quota Boost Washington, Oct. 4.—(#) — Presi- dent Roosevelt does not plan an in- crease of cattle purchases in the drouth areas beyond the original pro- gram which called for the buying of 7,000,000 head. He said Thursday a report to the pure! up to Sept. 2¢ in the drouth regions, leav- ing less than a million still to be added he did not be- | | | LYNWOOD (SCHOOLBOY) ROWE AGENTS FRUSTRATE KIDNAPERS’ PLOT Two Arrested, Admit Conspir- acy to Abduct Daughter of Tobacco Man Wheeling, W. Va., Oct. 4.—(P)— Frustration of a plot to kidnap Betty Bloch, 24-year old daughter of a wealthy Wheeling tobacco manufac- turer, and arrest of two men for the conspiracy was announced Thursday by department of justice agents. ‘The men under arrest are Harry Thornton, clerk in a haberdashery, and Thurman Bowen, a semi-profes- sional football player. J. J. Waters, chief agent for the department of justice in the Pitts: burgh district, announced both mei .|had admitted they conspired to kid ably would fall under the head of emergency relief instead of drouth. Name Glen Ullin Man To Conciliator Post 8. E. Halpern, Glen Ullin attorney, ited conciliator for BuERE a i nap Miss Bloch and hold her for $25,000 ransom. Miss Bloch, whose father heads the Bloch Brothers Tobacco Co., is to be married Saturday. Gladstone Woman Accidentally Killed | Iona and Durtrice McKirdy, two Gladstone girls employed here, were -| called to their home Thursday by the | news that their mother, Mrs. Dagmar | McKirdy, 46, had been killed by a shot from an accidentally discharged | gun at her home Wednesday. According to information received here, Mrs. McKirdy'’s husband was unloading the gun in the kitchen of their home. One shell stuck and was fired, the charge striking Mrs. Mc- Kirdy in the back. Coroner Arthur Davis of Stark county declared the shooting acci- dental and announced no inquest would be. necessary. Two two daughters left immediate- ly for Gladstone. RUGBY BEATS HARVEY Harvey, N. D., Oct. 4.—(P)—In a high school fc 11 game here, Rugby defeated Barvey 7 to 6. CORN-HOG RAISERS - lowa Tops List in Benefit Pay- ments; Burleigh Re- ceives $82,826 Washington, Oct. 4.—(#)--The farm| administration said Thursday $1 000,000 has been dispensed as initia benefit payments to corn and hog | producers. | The payments represent about 75 | per cent of the total first payment of $130,000,000 due farmers who re- |duced their corn and hog production inder the agricultural adjustment act. The second payments, representing | lone-fifth of the hog benefit and the} \last half of the corn payment, will be} |due Nov. 15, and the third and final | instalment will be paid Feb. 1, 1935. | Dr. A. G. Black, corn-hog chief, said ‘that 1,300,000 corn-hog contracts, nearly 90 per cent of the expected total, have been received for approvi Towa tops the list in benefit pay- ments through Sept. 28, having re- ceived $27,859,627. 2 North Dakota: Benson county $8,644; Billings $8,841; Bottineau | $4,512; Burke $3,582; Burleigh $82,826; |Cass $107,715; Cavalier $5,944; Dickey | $11,764; Divide $3,605; Dunn $14,899; |Eddy $5,389; Foster $7,959; Griggs |$5,692; Kidder $10,408; Mercer $11,221; |McHenry $10,869; Mountrail $3,152; |Nelson $4,957; Pembina $3,250; Ram- sey $3,518; Ransom $241; Renville |$3,487; Richland $4,560; Sargent $69,- \00¥; Sheridan $6,607; Sioux $12,494; | Steele $4,968; Walsh $6,033; Ward $4,028; Wells $16,016; total $446,364. SERVICES CONTINUE The Gospel Trio is continuing evan- gelistic services at the Bismarck Gos- | pet Tabernacle Thursday and Friday nights. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to come and hear them play, sing, and preach. Services open at 8 o'clock. | base line, scoring Delancey. GIVEN 100 MILLION | Schoolboy Rowe Holds Heavy- Hitting St. Louis Club to Seven Scattered Hits |GOSLIN BREAKS DEADLOCK |Gehringer Comes Home With Winning Tally as ‘Goose’ Singles Navin Field, Detroit. Oct. 4—(P— Coming from behind to tie the score in the ninth inning, Detroit's Tigers scored the winning run in the 12th to even the world series with the St. Louis Cardinals at one game each. The score was 3 to 2. Lynwood (Schoolboy) sational young pitcher, and Goose Goslin, veteran outfielder, shared honors for the victors, the former holding St. Louis to two runs and the latter driving home Charley Gehringer with the winning run. The Detroit infield, which kicked the ball all over the place Wednes- day, was entirely different in the sec- ond game, turning in a number of sensational fielding plays. Chief among them was a sensational stop by Billy Rogell, which pulled Rowe out of a nasty hole. Play by play: First Inning Cardinals—Martin lined to White on the first pitch. Rothrock ground- ed out, Gehringer to Greenberg. Frisch hit sharply down the third Rowe, sen- jbase line for a scratch single, Owen stopping the ball but being unable to handle it. Medwick fanned on called third strike. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Tigers—White grounded sharply to {Collins and was out at first, Collins to Hallahan, on a pretty play, Coch- rane grounded to Collins, who made the putout unassisted. Gehringer grounded to Collins and was safe at jfirst when Hallahan fumbled the first baseman’s throw for an error. Greenberg grounded to Martin and was thrown out at first on a close play. No runs, no hits, one error, one left, ing Cardinals—Collins drove a long fly to White, who made the catch in deep center field. Delancy grounded sharply to Gehringer and was safe at first when the ball glanced off the Tiger second baseman’s knee into right field. It was scored as a base hit. Orsatti tripled down the third The ball rolled to the extreme corner of left field. Orsatti was shaken up sliding into third but quickly recov- ered. Durocher popped to Green- berg. Hallahan lined out to Fox in short right field. One run, two hits, no errors, one left. Tigers—Goslin bounced a hit over second base. Frisch stopped the ball but had no time for a throw to first. Rogell fouled out to Delancey. Owen fanned on a called third strike. Fox ! lifted a high foul that Delancey j caught in front of the boxes behind | the plate. | No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. | Third Inning Cardinals—Martin lashed a single through the infield. Gehringer made la futile attempt to stop the ball. Rowe tossed to first and almost nip- ped Martin as he slid back into the bag. Rothrock broke his bat and went back to the dugout for another stick. Rothrock bunted to Rowe and was thrown out at first, Martin ad- vancing to second on the sacrifice. Frisch lifted a high fly to White and Martin was stopped from making a break for third base. Medwick smashed a single past Rogell, scoring Martin. Medwick | galloped to second on the throw-in. It was the Cardinal outfielder's fifth hit of the series. Collins poked @ ingle over Rogell’s head and Med- | wick was thrown out trying to score, Goslin to Cochrane, on a fine play One run, three hits, no errors. one left. Tigers— Rowe fanned. swinging. White grounded out. Frisch to Col- lins, Cochrane walked, the fourth ball being low and outside. Gehr- inger drove a long single over Frisch's head, sending Cochrane to third. Greenberg fanned, swinging at a high, hard one and missing by half a foot. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left. Fourth Inning Cardinals—DeLancey flied out to Goslin. Orsatti bunted to Greenberg and was out unassisted. Durocher .| grounded sharply to Owen, who jug- gled the ball but got his man at first on a close play. Greenberg had to stretch to catch the throw. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Tigers—Goslin grounded out, Du- rocher to Collins, a3 the Cardinal shortstop made a sensational stop over second base. Hallahan got an assist as the ball glanced off his leg. Rogell lifted a high fly that Orsatti mis- judged and the Tiger shortstop reached second. It was scored as a two-buse hit inasmuch as Orsatti just failed to get his hands on the ball. Owen grounded out Frisch to Col- lins, at Rogell ran to third. Fox hit sharply along the left field line for a double, scoring Rogell. It was a close decision as the ball crossed the foul line as it bounded over the bag at third base and the Cardinals put up a big protest. Rowe fanned, swinging. One run, two hits, no errors, one left. (Continued, on Page 7)