The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1934, Page 1

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rd is, Zl 7) ~ | party's Victory in Tuesday's — | North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Unsettled tonight; Friday cloudy; warmer tonight; colder Friday. - ESTABLISHED 18738 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1984 PRICE FIVE CENTS Burr, xe xk lk wk * PRESIDENT, BACK IN WASHINGTON, PUSHES NEW DEAL PROGRAM Election Becomes More Emphatic MARYLAND REJECTS RITCHIE ‘Young Bob’ LaFollette, Wis- consin Senate Winner, Is White House Guest Moodie Expresses Appreciation; Ready to Tackle Big Task Ahead Fargo, N. D., Nov. 8—(AP)—Thomas Moodie, gov- ernor-elect of North Dakota, issued the following state- fanty Wednesday night when his election became a cer- “The people of North Dakota have won a real victory. They have intelligently and positively interpreted their interest in good government. It is their victory, and I am sure I express the sentiment of my party when I say that the Democratic party and its leaders are most happy to have been the medium through which they expressed themselves. This is a personal victory for such fine public leaders as Senator Gerald P. Nye, Gov. Ole H. Olson, For- mer Gov. George F. Shafer, T. H. H. Thoresen and thou- sands of others who were not of the Democratic faith, as well as a victory for the Democrats and a most heartening compliment to the president. “The Democrats deeply appreciate the responsibility conferred and are proud of the state organization which pi ‘as President FB herd Kaha led them from a position of forlorn hope to outstanding * to the White House to bag Deal through its second phase. “It is time to forget any bitterness which may have ‘As the happy chief executive developed in the campaign. It is time for North Dakotans SS ate Pieced to get together and understand the problems of their state total in the senate to record: and work together for their solution. ing @9 and the party “I thank the people and all the. good friends who the house to 320. worked to bring about the result indicated. Let us strive ‘With one senate and to understand. There is a big task ahead. May I ask the poorer bee cooperation of all our people to the end that it may be dis- pried ripen tingiernn charged honestly, fearlessly and in the interests of the ‘The latest figures on the a man, : sional lineup were: ey . “Tam deeply grateful to the newspaper friends over Senate: Democrats, 0; the state for their confidence, support and the constant cans 2¢; Parmer- Labor 1; inspiration they contributed throughout the long cam- tive 1; missing 1. paign.” House: Democrats 320; ‘ cans 103; Progressives 17; be 33 peccerge > oul oiwoaue mens |Burleigh Vote Follows Progressives 1, and Farmer. Gener. ge a al Trend of State ration from the defeat of Mary! Democratic governor, Three. Democratic State Legislators Named; Anstrom Wins Ree Ritahie has aot et Heated. Battle. for: Sheriff; Chernioh Incum- warm in his reception. of Jofea! vem in in) ns eave bency Defeated by Atkinson bee bed Roorevelt silent but: most overwhelming ‘Thomas Moodie, Democratic candidete f ernor, carried Burl Bee eran the Federalists county with an approximate 2,300 majority ae irs. iyaia.tanger, ciot ground to pieces by the lican ‘opponent, unofficial returns from 62 out of 63 county precincts, showed 182 years ago, had & luncheon en-| TOV. viet figures gave Moodle 5868, Mrs, Langer 3592 and gagement ‘Thursday with rett 33. gave 5 » Langer 3,592 Bar- Feary leet Tavollatte wt. Democratic candidates for the house of representatives from the twenty- sin while his district were swept in on the wave which gave eevee roa turing — three judges endorsed The ‘Thomas J. Burke, J. M. Thompson tion’ and William M. Schantz, were given The majorities over their Republican op- thet ponents for seats in the house. Un- the official returns gave Burke 5,206, The + mand, whi not stay the lines Of the day, the complete licans 6, Farmer-! ressives, one each. 24 Democratic Governors Of the $3 governorship the latest count was Democrats Republicans 7, and Progressives Parmer-Laborites 1 apiece. ‘There was some shifting in gover- norships. Democrats lost one to ‘Wis- consin Progressives and three to Re- publicans in Michigan, Maryland and New Jersey. The Democrats picked up in Oregon, Pennsylvania, PARADE WILL MARK LOCAL OBSERVANCE OF ARMISTICE DAY; Plans Announced for Formal Observance Monday; Big Turnout Expected VETERANS TO BE IN LINE Demonstration to Precede Fiel- stad's Address at City Auditorium Plans for the annual Armistice Day parade, to be staged here on Monday, Nov. 12, were announced Thursday by Major Harold Sorenson, chairman of the American Legion committee in charge. In addition to the city’s military organizations and patriotic societies, all civic groups have been invited to take.part and « large turnout is ex- pected. As usual, the parade has been or- ganized in four sections with the mil- itary units and the veterans groups at their head. Heading the parade will be a squad- ron of police to clear the way and di- fect traffic, and after it will come Sorenson, as grand marshal of the parade, and his aides. They are Ma- Thomas 8. Smith, Captain H. A. ] and Lieut. Ferris Cordner. | Three-day Fete Is Planned by Legion Although the formal observance | of Armistice Day has been set for Monday, Nov. 12, in view of the fact that the anniversary falls on » Sunday, the celebration will oc- - Cupy a three-day span this year. On Saturday night the annnal armistice day dance will be | given under the auspices of the | American Legion at the Dome with Leonard Dahl and his 11- piece orchestra furnishing the music. The public is invited. On Sunday afternoon at 5:30 p. m., an Armistice Day broadcast will be sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary. The parace and annual Armis- and the ban- quet for ex-service men of Bur- leigh county will be held at 6:30 O'clock Monday evening. thee Day services will be held Monday morning Next in order will come Lieut. Col. Be og lh i Miss C. G. Derby and of 265,000 | ceived ‘county audit automobiles, 305,903) "hile A. C. Isaminger got 3,029. yrs 902) "A “confidence” vote of 7,827 was ac-|ine Civil Wer corded Ernest Elness who was unop- se 280,018 | posed for the office of county treas- |/"'5) Jag reer earatee "for clerk of district | the sections 128, lor ~_ 125000 court. Piaher received 6,081 votes; Maode morning se inllowe «38,588,252 | Mrs. Schafer, 3,794. south ee, Fred Swenson received 6,261 votes |s¥s2, wii ee ete nore who poled 3008 Second votes. “George 8. Register was return. |'"6_ south with | led to the office of state's attorney getting 6,261 votes while F. E. Mc- Curdy received 2,860. County I. C. Davies polled 5,120 votes juire @ de: we Larson had pk - : no ts 7. Manomier 96 Seema fense” against the charge that he|county coroner. Minton ‘of Tndlane, and George W.Itaty, ve Se Radcliffe of Maryland. * Justices peace four Senator Arthur 1, Vandenberg of| The state has thie man in Jell/to be elected Nell Cameron Michigan, who differed from his con- nothing in the way of 8/5903, H. R. Bonny 5,136, A. E. servative colleagues on some New Deal {formal charge lodged against him,”)5'79 and G. E Peterson 5,363 legislation, came through with flying | tis counsel seid. constables Clarence Hanson polled zolors. Senator Hiram W. Johnson] 4 demand for s full bill of per-|so7e; W. R. Lundquist 4,009, Ole F. A. § of California, backed by the Roose- | ticulars trom the state will be drafted| Roberts 3,853, Gustav Jacobson 3,711, | Broadway to Fifth 8t., north on Pith velt administration; Praiser of North|Thureday by Edward J. Reilly of/G. E Brennise 3,169 and C. A. Our/to Rosser, east on Rosser to Ninth 8t., Dakota, both Independent Republi- |Brooklyn, chief defense attorney, ané|2,729, The first four were elected. {south on Ninth to Brosdway and cans; LaFollette of Wisconsin, who|his New Jersey associate, Lloyd ‘William Falconer, with 59 votes, de-|west on Broadway to the city audi- dropped the G. O. P. label to head the | Fisher. “We want a specification of] feated Dwight Ferris, with 38 votes,/torium where the annual Armistice Progegasive ticket, won out while old|exactly what Hauptmann ig charged] for assessor, first district, while Elmer |Day\services will be held. §Cantinued on Page Three) with,” Fisher said. (Continued on Page Three) (Continued on Page Three) xk * Non-Political Jurists Endorsed | JAMES MORRIS The three judicial candidates violently opposed by the Langer organization were elected on their “non-political” platform, returns from all but a few precincts re- vealed late Wednesday. Judges Burr and Nuessle are incumbents. James Morris is a former attorney general of North Dakota. ARREST OF ROBLES KIDNAPING SUSPECT | MAY CLEAR UP CASE Night Club Operator Held Un- der $50,000 Bail; Arrested By U.S. Agents ‘As Counties Voted | For N. D. Governor eee Fargo, N. D., Nov. 8—(?)— Pets 'to| Sends of persons smashed W. L. NUESSLE PARIS AGAIN-SCENE OF FIERCE RIOTING AS CABINET FORMS ‘Thousands Smash Through Po- lice Lines, Shouting ‘Down With Deputies’ Paris, Nov. 8.—(?)—Shouting thou- through Police lines in front of the Opera .| Thursday night as many in the throng cried: uties!” Authorities, who feared disorders would ensue following the resignation Thursday of Premier Gaston Doum- ergue and nis cabinet, had drawn up the police in troop forination. The mascing of police was made in an effort to overaws the crowd but the throng broke the dark blue ranks. “Down with the dep- Scores of the demonstrators were arrested. ‘Thousands of persons swarmed the houlevards. The square in front of the opera—the Place de L'Opera— was packed with the crowd. Mobile guards on horseback, their carbines swung across their should- ers, were ordered into action. They trotted into the square and lined up against the buildings along the boulevard. Before the advance of the horse- 2643] men the crowd thinned, its members. moving quickly out of the way. Fresh Paris riots were predicted following the appointment earlier Thursday of Etienne Flandin to be- come premier and organize a cabinet t» succeed Doumergue’s fallen gov- ernment. The premiership was pre- viously offered to—and rejected by— Pierre Laval, chief neutral in French politics. Doumergue's resignation, forced as it was by the refusal of Edouard Her- 2604) riot, minister without portfolio and SBSHeRESEE | euagsegetecsuage 4 g 8 S = leader of the radical Socialists, and five other ministers affiliated with him to cooperate, left the veteran ‘statesman disillusioned and disheart- ened. . He immediately issued a brief ap- peal to the people in an effort to pre- serve the peace of the country. The tenseness of the political situ- ation and the party hatreds were il- lustrated in the chamber of deputies where, as a brief session was adjourn- ing, Communist deputies leaving their benches shouted: “Down with .the assassins! Soviets everywhere!” ‘The deputies of the Right shouted back: “Long live Doumergue; long live the Republic!” Nobel Prize Is Won By Italian Author Stockholm, Nov. 8—(#)—The Nobel prize in’ literature was awarded ‘Thursday to the Italian author, Luigi Pirandello. HOLT CONGRATULATES FRAZIEB sations. Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 8.—(?)— Henry Holt, Democratic candidate for}comment until a complete study is United States senator in Tuesday’s|made of the plan, press reports from election congratulated United States|Tokyo indicated there was consider- Senator Lynn J. Frazie: Thursday on'sble opposition because the entire u:ked his sup- the campaign. his re-election and, porters for their ai Morris, Nuessle Elected x * kek ‘| Democrats Collect 320 Seats in House, 69 in Senate Non-Political Trio Holds Safe Lead In Late Returns Senator Frazier Piles Up Lead of 129,795 to 88,085 Over Holt on Returns From 1908 Out of 2242 Precincts; Sinclair Is Beaten LEMKE AND BURDICK WIN IN CONGRESSIONAL RACE Thompson Returned as Superintendent of Public Instruction; Repeal of Prohibition Laws Defeated; Sunday Movies Has Chance The Latest Returns For Senator: 1,908 of 2,242 precincts in North Dakota gave—Frazier 129,795; Holt 88,035. For Representative in Congress: 1,910 precincts gave—Lemke 122,210; Burdick 96,521; Lynch 72,156; Lamb 67,513; Sinclair 34,518. For Governor: 2,141 precincts gave — Moodie 137,461; Langer 119,463. ‘or Lieutenant Governor: 1,841 precincts gave— Welford 99,843; Costello 96,191; Helland 1,037. For Secretary of State: 1,795 precincts gave— Gronna 111,242; Pulscher 89,334. For State Auditor: 1;793 precincts gave—Baker 116,034; McDonald 88,940. For Attorney General: 1,792 precincts gave— Sathre 103,908; Moses 95,959. For Insurance Commissioner: 1,855 precincts gave—Hopton 105,052; Jungers 93,255. For Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor: Martell 104,221; Klindworth 90,930. For Railroad Commissioner: Cart 98,945; Ken- nedy 90,075. For State Treasurer: Gray 103,648; Nygaard 99,325. NO-PARTY BALLOT For Judges of the Supreme Coyrt: 2,173 preeinets gave—Burr 129,081; Morris 128,691; Nuessle 118,665; Moellring 111,617; Fraser 111,153; Bangert 100,085. For Superintendent of Public Instruction: 1,771 precincts gave—Thompson 105,192; Anderson 90,676. INITIATIVE BALLOT For Repeal of the Liquor Laws: 1,495 preeinets gave—Yes 78,063; No. 92,988. To Permit Sunday Movies: 1,771 precincts gave— Yes 111,178; No 106,043. Fargo, N. D., Nov. 8—(AP)—Three candidates for the North Dakota state supreme court, against whom deposed Gov. William Langer’s political organization conducted a vigorous fight, were elected in Tuesday’s election along with Thomas Moodie, Democratic candidate for governor, ‘unofficial tabula- tions of nearly complete returns showed Thursday. W. L. Nuessle, incumbent, held a sufficient majority to assure him third place in the race for three seats on the bench, Tabulations Thursday showed: The initiated measure to repeal state prohibition laws was defeated. The proposal to permit Sunday motion pictures was in the lead by a narrow margin, with the final outcome doubtful but the trend of the vote favoring the measure. Re-election of Arthur E. Thompson, superintendent of pub- lic instruction, over the Langer-endorsed candidate. Re-election of U. S. Senator Lynn J. Frazier and Congress- man William Lemke by sizeable majorities; election of U. L. Burdick, their running mate on the Republican ticket, by a nar- row majority. ‘ Election of the Republican state party ticket with the ex- ception of Moodie, whose victory was conceded by his opponent, Mrs, Lydia Langer. ldieno tine SY ‘Meyer Gets Ride | On Moodie’s Win | ° Al Meyer Thursday rode to the state capitol on the crest of the Moodie victory. * He rode on a wheelbarrow, as a matter of fact, but it was Moodie’s successful candidacy for governor which gave him the ride. Meyer bet Herbert Holmes a wheelbarrow ride, from Fifth St. and Main Avenue to the state capitol, that Moodie would win. Thursday morning, sharply at 9 a. m., he collected. Holmes, pushing his wheelbar- row, arrived on time. Meyers seated himself and the ride began. Before the eyes of scores of as- tounded pedestrians, Holmes paid his bet, taking Sixth street as the route. Perspiring freely, the 140- pound Holmes arrived with the 190-pound frame of Meyer at the state capitol a half-hour later. Over 100 persons lined the cap- itol steps when the two arrived, among them Ernest Elsness, county treasurer, who revived the somewhat worn Holmes, as well as other members of the group, with pie and coffee st the capitol restaurant. Compromise Seen in Powers’ Naval Parley London, Nov. 8.—(?)—Naval circles expressed the kelief Thursday a Brit- ish compromise jal is not likely to meet the full approval of the Jap- anese delegates to the naval conver- Nuessle Clings to Lead Judge Nuessle held to his modest majority throughout the late tabula- tions and with returns tabulated from all but 100 precincts in the state he led his nearest competitior, Judge George H. Moellring, by about 7,000. Judge Burr topped the field with Morris slightly behind him, Nuessle was third, Moellring fourth, R. L. Fra- ser fifth and C. G. Bangert last. The voters in electing the three “non political” candidates returned to the court two judges—Burr and Nuessle—who had joined in the ma- jority opinion of the court holding jLanger disqualified to hold office be- | cause of his convictions of a felony. Defeat of Moellring will remove |from the court a judge who was ap- |pointed by Langer to fill a vanacy |ereated by resignation of L. E. Bird- |zell, Moellring, endorsed by the Lan- \ger group, was-the only judge of the |five on the supreme court bench to | dissent from the majority Langer Jopinion. Morris will succeed him pJan. 1. ‘Under a new constitutional amend- ment, the highest man in the court race receives a ten-year term, the sec- ond eight years and the third six years. In subsequent elections the judges will be named for ten year terms. Congressman William Lemke, Re- publican, was re-elected, leading the field in the race for two seats in the lower house U. L. Burdick, Repub- lican, was assured of election. W. D. Lynch and G. F. Lamb, Democrats, were defeated by substan- tial majorities. Representative J. H. Sinclair, veteran congressman, de- renomination in June, ‘failed in an attempted comeback as an independent candi- date. He was in fifth place. w (Continued Zi Page Three): While the Japanese declined to program of the Japanese was not ac- cepted as presented

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