The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1934, Page 3

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3 > L b J oe es ee LYNCH CANDIDACY HIGHLY QUALIFIED Democratic Endorsee for Con- gress Elected to Office 7 Times in La Moure ‘Thoroughly imbued with a know- edge of government and law is Wil- liam D. Lynch of LaMoure, Demo- cratic candidate for congress. +. Mr. Lynch is 53 years old. He was ‘orn in Chilton, Wis. in 1880, the son of Daniel and Harriet A. Lynch. He moved with his parents in 1885 te Andover, Dakota Territory, in what is now South Dakota. A year , later, the Lynches moved to Oakes, In Oakes Mr. Lynch grew to man- hood. There he attended the public schools and was graduated from the high school with the class of 1898. During his school days he spent summers working on a farm and dur- ng the school year he earned his way by working in a hotel and restaurant. For three terms, Mr. Lynch taught in rural schools of LaMoure county and during the winter of 1902 taught in the Verona schools, Three sum- mers he spent with the late Congress- man C. F. Marshall making surveys ix, northwestern North Dakota. Mr. Lynch also had some railway experience, being employed by both the Northern Pacific and North- western railways for two years. His parents owned and operated a hotel, restaurant and bakery at Oakes. He this business from 1900 to 1903 and then moved to Verona where he engaged in the general merchandise business with his mother, now dead, and his brother, L. D. Lynch, who now lives in Jamestown where he is a con- ductor for the Northern Pacific rail- Gets Degree in Law ‘Under the tutelage and inspiration of ~ Congressman Marshall, Mr. 4 Lynch determined to study He enrolled at the Universities of Wis- consin and Minnesota, graduating from the University of Minnesota. He pursued his law studies further by studying in the office of Frank Nye of Minneapolis and with Green, Vroman, Fairchild, North and Parker at Green Bay, Wis. Admitted to the bar in 1906, he opened practice at Verona. Two years later he was elected LaMoure county judge which office he held until 1916 when he resigned to be- come a partner of W. H. Hutchinson in LaMoure. This partnership con- tinued until 1929 when Mr. Hutchin- son was appointed to the district judgeship. Mr. Lynch was the first prohibition director for North Dakota, serving under the Wilson administration. He was ® member of the LaMoure school board from 1911 through 1918. Steadfastly a Democrat, Mr. Lynch seven times has been elected to pub- Uc office from LaMoure county, which kote: Generally fair, sige warmer west. north portions to- night; Sunday unsettled. For South Da- “The usher was right, dear. always has been overwhelmingly Re- publican. Blected to the state senate in 1923, he has been continuously - re-elected since that time. He is a member of the State Judicial council, city attor- ney at LaMoure, a member of the na- tional, state, district and county bar associations. In the state legislature, Mr. Lynch has been marked apart as one of its leaders. He has been chairman of the senate judiciary, banking and bridge committees, and has always served on the public affairs commit- tee. Mr. Lynch was clairman of the Joint legislative committee on inter- state bridges which met in St. Paul in 1925 and which was composed of legislative committees from Wiscon- sin, Iowa, Minnesota, North and South Dakota. Appointed by Nestos Appointed by Gov. R. A. Nestos in 1925, he served as chairman of the educational survey commission, and was chairman of the joint legislative committee that investigated the higi- way commission in 1923, In 1910. Mr. Lynch married Anna C. Cruden of LaMoure. They had three sons, Thomas and David, attending the University of North Dakota law school, and John, who graduated from LaMoure, high school the past June. Mr. Lynch married a second time in 1926. The present Mrs. Lynch was Miss Agnes Dougherty, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dougherty of Forman. They have one daughter, Mary Ann, 6. A great lover and companion of children, Mr. Lynch defends today’s youth against criticism he regards as unwarranted. He believes every hur- dle set for the downfall of youth was Placed there by adults. Having gone through all the vicis- situdes of North Dakota farm and business life, Mr. Lynch’s faith in the state grows with the years. He is a tans: | great believer in the future of North Dakota. Praternally Mr. Lynch is a member, of the Knights of Columbus, the Mod- ern Woodman and the A. O. U. W. He is a communicant of the Catholic church, T 6. 14.44 7189 {3 Beeseeuenel ~ By MRS. JOHN STEWART A large crowd attended the P. T. A. day evening. The next meeting will be held in schoo! No. 3, October 26. At the Missionarly meeting held at the home of Mrs. Bert Buckley last week, plans were made for the annual chicken supper to be held in the base- teh of the Glencoe church, October Bernetta Fields visited with Naomi and Correne Buckley Sunday. Malcom Bruce of Jamestown spent THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1984 Additional Sports OS - Z @ 990 1s Mtousmrcep. 6 There’s only one seat here.” ‘several days last week visiting at the Don Nicholson home. The 4-H Poultry club met at the home of Mrs. B. Fields last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Reed and daughter Roberta and son Warren, visited at the Wm. McMurrich home Sunday evening. Courtroom Piled High With Insull Documents Chicago, Oct. 6.—(#)—Stacks of documents by which the government hopes to convict Samuel Insull and his |#0red by a Civic Club organized by associates for mail fraud were piled high in the federal court Saturday, while the trial itself stood adjourned over the week-end. The material offered as evidence by the prosecution in Friday’s session consisted of gray and green ledgers land brokers’ accounts, brought into the courtroom by the truckload and were supposed to contain the laboratory ‘company was allegedly produced. All the records showed on their face elaborate method the government em- Ployed in its attempt to convict In- sull and his 16 co-defendants on a charge of having used the mails to| defraud stock investors out of some $100,000,000. o——___________- | Try By MRS. GEORGE NELSON Katie Bower and son of Wilton are visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Schlepp and family. Ila Folmer, who teaches school No. 1 in Trygg, spent the week-end visit- ing friends. Mr. and Mrs. Gust Solmenson of Parshall came this week-end to visit Bismarck Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wanttaja and family motored to Bismarck Saturday where Willys had medical attention. Jessie Pettis, who teaches school at Hazelton, spent the week-end visiting friends and relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Olson are visit- ing at Glover, N. D., this week with relatives. Harry Hogug of Baldwin and Dunc- an McGillis of smarck were visitors Sunday at the Emil Hogue home. Fred Anstrom and Carl Scott of Bismarck were callers in this com- munity Sunday. Etta Jenkins and Emil Hogue mo- tored to Bismarck Saturday on busi- ness and visited with Mrs. Jenkins’ Bismarck hospital. The next Homemakers’ club meeting will be Oct. 10 at the home of Mrs. George Nelson. By William | This CURIOUS WORLD "Yuemse MANDAN DEFEATED BY DICKINSON, 7-2; Midgets March 69 Yards for Lone Touchdown to Avenge 1933 Beating game played in swept dense clouds of dust across the line. Eddie Agre, right half, tossed a long forward to Harold Reslock, behind the opposi- tion line. De Lange completely trick- ed the university's Brown and Gold 4|t© Plunge through for the convert. Deans and Rowe Dominate World Series Situation If Cards Win Saturday It Will Be ‘Dizzy’ Against ‘School- boy’ Sunday St. Louis, Oct. 6—()—The world field, at times obscuring players from Series scoreboard Saturday reading view, Dickinson Midgets gained re-| “Deans 2, Rowe 1,” signalizes the ex- venge for their only defeat of last|tent to which the greatest set of young year by beating Mandan high, 7-2,!right-nanders in baseball has taken ry. Dickinson’s touchdown came. early in the third quarter when the Midgets over control of the situation. If the St. Louis Cardinals win Satur- took @ Mandan punt on their own 31-/day it will be the great Dissy Dean yard line and marched for 69 yards.| against Schoolboy Rowe, the towering Except for one short pass, Robertson|Tiger ace, with the outcome of the to Kunde, the march was made on|World championship at stake, in the Powerhouse plays and wide sweeps|fifth game on Sunday at Sportsman's @round end. Tavis, half, carried the ball over the park, Win or lose Saturday, in fact, Man- final stripe. Robertson, quarter, went|@8er Mickey Cochrane of the Tigers over for the extra point. will have to use Rowe tomorrow rather - | Mandan’s safety was made late in/than gamble with Al Crowder if he the fourth, when the Midgets after re-| hopes to come back with the boy won- pulsing a savage attack on the goal|der for a possible third start. This is line, took the ball on downs and-punt-jthe supposition that the Tigers will ed. The wind took the punt back of |Tally sufficiently to carry the issue to the goal for an automatic safety. Small N. D. Village a seventh and deciding game. All hands aboard the world series bandwagon anticipated the prospect of a Rowe-Dizzy Dean duel. Dizzy has had about twice as much Erects Floodlights)major teague experience as Rowe, jwhich is another way of saying the Buffalo Springs, N. D., Oct. 6—j€lder Dean has just completed three Buffalo Springs village of some 40/full seasons in the big show as com- inhabitants, is probably the only vil-/Pared to Rowe's approximate season lage in North Dakota which is pro-|4nd a half, but most baseball observers gressive enough to have floodlights think it’s sufficient to give J. Herman for the playing of night kittenball. Under the guidance of M. B. Inge- the edge. “Give him another year and Paul britsen, s kittenball league was form- Dean will be better than elther Dizzy from! or Ror Sarmctuding 10 communities | from rises to remark, “The younger Dean Marmarth to Gascoyne. close student of the game played two rounds of ‘kittenkell the {nas more stuff right now and a better past summer season. The first round | ‘was won by Buffalo Springs, the sec- ond round by Scranton. hop on his fast one than either of the others.” It’s always relatively easy to favor Promoted by Ingebritsen ‘and spon-|the winning team but Bob Quinn, who has covered a major share of the base- the Buffalo Springs business men, ball map between St. Louis and Bos- Reuled’ trom’ Exaleke, Mont, ‘and/iym, thinks the Cardinals are the from Ekalaka, Mont., ton, with a stop-over now in Brook- other material was rushed to com-'standout team of the game because plete the project. On Friday evening games were played to lights for playing. Oct. 7, at 8 p. m. preliminary adjust the ‘The formal opening will be Sunday, Keil the ‘ing niger an records of the manner in which the|Kittenball on openi ight are. stock of the Corporation Securities [to ton vs. Star and Stillwater vs. their lineup carries so many players of the fighting, aggressive type. Toronto Maple Leafs Defeat Red Birds, 6-4 Columbus, O., Oct. 6.—(#)—The Co- lumbus Red Birds and the Toronto Ingebriteen hails from Waterloo,|yrante Leafs took w day off Saturday was an immense number of stock |10WS, 1s ® graduate of the Iowa State/rrom little world series activties, the transactions but they indicated the|Teachers college, at Cedar Falls, Ia. nirds spending the day trying to fig- and is at present superintendent of| 12 out just what Harry Hilcher had schools at Buffalo Springs, Hall Stars as Jimmies Defeat Manitoba, 27-0 on the ball Friday night, the Leafs resting up from the strenuous efforts which brought them a 6-4 victory in the fifth contest. Hilcher, calléd into the box in the first frame with two runs in, men on second and third and none out, set the Birds down with three hits the rest of the way. Manager Boone of the Leafs assist- of play under American rules, They ed his hurler in putting Toronto back outshone the northern students injin the series, which now stands 3-2 every department of play, in the ex- hibition game. Don Hail, right end, gave Winnipeg fandom @ fine show as he scurried around left on two spectacular plays for Columbus, by cracking out three singles and a triple. ‘ KENMARE DEFEATS RAY Kenmare, N. D., Oct. 6.—(#)—Ken- first quarter to score two trys, mare high school defeated Ray’s foot- jas converted by Ken- On the eighth play, yards to cross the forward from Al to Eric Peterson went for a of 18 and again Hall car- equal distance to jscore. The Toban’s ball team by a 33 to 6 score for its third straight win this season. See Buy your underwear for the whole family at the People’s Department Store and save. COLD WEATHER IS COMING Devils Lake Trounces Blue Jay Eleven, 20-6 Devils Lake, Oct. 6—(7}—An improved Devils Lake team played alert football to trounce Jamestown, 20 to 6, Friday night, breaking a string of 15 consecutive Blue Jay victories. After Gordie Dennis had galloped 32 yards to a touchdown in the opening beriod the Satans kept play deep in Jamestown terzitory. N. D. Jockey Brings Home Three Winners New York, Oct. 6.—(#)—Maurice Peters, 17-year-old Brantford, D. rider who passed Dublin Taylor for jockey honors, boosted his total num- ber of winners for the year to 180 Fri- day when he brought home three win- ners at Rockingham Park for his ond straight triple. The triple gave him a lead of five over Taylor, who is in a slump. Minot Teachers Crush Crookston Team, 57-0 Minot, N. D., Oct. 6.—()—Coach J. W. Coleman’s Minot Teachers col- lege gridders opened the home sea- son here Friday night by crushing the inexperienced Crookston, Minn. Ag- ies by a score of 59 to 0. With the first string reeling off long gains on off tackle dashes and end sweeps, the score mounted to 28 before the Beaver mentor inserted his reserves, Co-Captain Howard Dunnell, quarterback, and Melly Johnsen, halfback, set the ball carry- ing pace for Minot. The second team scored three touchdowns in the third period, with Dean Stevens, quarterback, and Ted Anderson, fullback, pounding the line pear slicing off tackle for consistent gains, My dear madam, your teeth are placed in your mouth to clamp your tongue down.—Justice John F. Carew of New York, berating witness in Gloria Vanderbilt custody tri: RUMMAGE SALE Sponsored by Jewish Ladies’ Aid TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY In former office of Wachter Transfer Corp. at 209 Fifth St. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. D. Butterfat Sales Off But Price Is Better Washington, Oct. 6.—(?)—Farmers of six drouth-stricken midwest states pocketed nearly $2,000,000 more for their butter fat in the first seven months of this yea? than for a like | period of 1933 despite a falling off in sales for the period of 48,000,000 pounds, The states were Wisconsin, Minne- sota, North and South Dakota, Ne- braska and Iowa. Likewise, the market value of butter fab sold to creameries in these jduring this year of drouth exceeded by about $10,000,000 the same period of 1932 when deliveries of butter fat to creameries exceeded this year by about 24 million pounds. Unofficial reports of the departmen‘ of agriculture showed the 1934 butter fat deliveries in these states to be 411,000,000 pounds valued at $92,900.- 000. This was from Jan. 1 to Aug. Some 459,000,000 pounds were market- ed in the corresponding period of 1933 at @ value of about $91,100,000, while the 1932 sales to creameries were shown to be approximately 435,000,000 pounds for the a months, valued CAPITOL THEATRE Bismarck Statement of The Bank of North Dakota Bismarck, N. Dak. September 29, 1934 RESOURCES U. S. Treasury Notes and Certificates ......$8,500,000.00 U.’S. Treasury Bonds ...... +e 1,708,050.00 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation and Home Owners Loan Corporation Bonds........ 346,517.75 Cash and Due from Reserve Bank & Trust Companies s+eeeee 5,195,240.09 $15,749,807.84 Short Term State of North Dakota Bonds.... 4,001,172.06 Other State of North Dakota Bonds ........ 3,012,523.80 Certificates of Indebtedness, School, County, State and Municipal Bonds . s Warrants and Claims ......... Pete ee Real Estate Loans Assigned to State Treasurer Bills Receivable: Loans to Operating Banks ....... Loans to Farm Loan Department Loans to Collection Department . Loans to State Institutions . Home Builders Contracts Other Collateral Loans ..... Loans to Operating Banks now Closed...... Receiver’s Certificates of Proof of Claim.... Depositors Guaranty Fund Certificates 7,018,695.86 2,704,143.12 90,424.84 850.11 3,743.67 291,190.76 900,000.00 500,600.00 32,975.11 202,341.37 68,616.38 17,495.41 16,932.13 1,930,850.91 103,043.92 42,635.40 94,918.78 57,622.23 $27,787,993.01 Furniture and Fixtures ...... Bank Building ...... Real Estate Sold on Contr: Other Real Estate - 17,988.79 39,633.44 $ 2,000,000.00 125,000.00 568,303.81 TUDE DIA ae siren eects Reserve ... Undivided Profits ... Deposits: ‘i ‘ Certificates of Deposit Public Funds Certificates of Deposit Individual Cashier’s Checks .... + 1,390,463.24 33,250.15 1,077.65 +» 870,584.13 + _ 804,391.23 . 2,086,025.81 818,093.96 199,580.56 524,886.77 1,301,752.16 ++ 5,717,423.65 ++++ 2,465,882.20 25,094,689.20 $27,787,998.01 The Bank of North Dakota is owned, operated and con- trolled by the State of North Dakota under the supervision of the Industrial Commission. Theo. W. Sette, Auditor Certified Checks .. Individual Accounts . mans Depositary Banks, Reserve Be County Treasurers ....... County Treasurers, Custodian . City urers ... Township Treasurers School Treasurers ... State Treasurer ... State Institutions ... Get the kind of coal you want, before the winter’s big demand starts. Clean coal of every size and type. Low prices. \ MORE HEAT FOR YOUR MONEY : WHEN YOU USE COAL It’s a fact! Coal, good coal, gives more heat per dol- lar than any other fuel. And your opportunity to fill your coal bin with good coal is no further away than your telephone— Call 453 WE SELL TRUAX-TRAER WILTON LIGNITE Washburn Coal Co. 901 Broadway Avenue Bismarck A BRIDGE IS STRONGER WITH THE TRUSSING ‘THAI LOUD. SBBBRERERERS REESE SESEEss' SOUTH, THE SPEED 15 LESSENED/ AT THE R. M. Stangler, Manager. BRBVASKSR VRS SSRsooseRaRawsesnasacsseesseassssasey, Pett ttiti tty

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