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| &===] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Fair tonight and Tuesday; little change in temperature. ESTABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS TEST CONDUCTED BY PHYSICIANS ON TWO CONVICTS SUCCEEDS Governor of Colcrado Prepares to Ask Pardons’ for In- mates Who Risked Lives IMMUNIZED BY DISCOVERY Pair Allowed Themselves to Be Inoculated With Thousands “of Live Bacilli Denver, Dec. 10—7}—A cautious statement by Gov. Ed C. Johnson in- with thousands of live tu- bacilli after they were given. the serum. : a Demand Replacement of Capi- talistic System With One of Public Ownership re St. Paul, Dec. 10.—(7}—A group of midwest liberals, bound by ties of SECURITIES ACT 10 sau weet sone eee )EMAND EXECUTIVES DISCLOSE SALARIES Move Is Part of Government Plan to Protect Public From Poor Investments Washington, Dec. 10.—(?)—Salaries of executives of big corporations were shown Monday in registration state- ments filed with the securities and commission to have Maggie national program of that through a class movement of rep- i I 3 é i i E g F TT ide F l s3 i i 8 ae 3 | if i I i E E _ Ladder Rung May Convict Hauptmann. Ward Farmers Union Elects Christenson Minot, N. D., De. 8.—(?)—The Ward county Farmers Union at the close of the annual convention in Minot late Friday re-elected Elvin P. Chris- tenson, Minot, as president and named six other persons to serve as directors, Those elected directors are: Ernest Pierson, Makoti; Andrew Meland, Kenmare; Mrs. Nellie Erickson, Minot; W. F. Blume, Glenburn; Bert Solberg, Minot; and Albert Mork, Des Lacs, Miss Viola Davy, Des Lacs, was chosen as junior leader, suc- Mrs. L. D. Hight. resolution BY U. 8. TOTAL 794 Commissioner Predicts 95 Per Cent of Those Held Will Be Convicted in Courts .” Anslinger said. “They will mostly be follow-up cases.” . Anslinger said there was no evi- wa i Seek yee BB s # eF* fie i g z Bees ; 1d 8 5 8 i f rl i d § & F E g ‘ RECOVERY SPENDING TOTALS OVER POUR BILLIONS IN 1934 ‘Emergency’ Expenditures Out- side of Regular Yearly Out- lay for Government RELIEF TAKES BIG SLICE $4,348,947,418 Advanced Up to Dec. 1 to Care for Needy, Aid Business 10.—(#)—Unele Christmastide pproaches this with the knowledge that since the first of the year he has passed out more than four and a quarter bil- lion dollars in his gigantic emergency Grive to assist business, the farmer and the needy. Treasury figures show that $4,348,- 947,418 was advanced from Jan. 1 to Dec. 1, to care for the needy and Soppede nial public enterprise. sum, government expects to get back less than one-fifth. expel poses amounted to $7,361,815,007, Compared with $,385,307,974 for the same period last year. Emergency expenditures for the 11 months of 1933 wer> $1,480,562,210, but treasury officials say this does not afford a basis of comparison with 1934 because last year many emer- Gency expenditures were made from money available for general purposes and therefore did not appear in the Tecords as emergency spending. Relief in manifold forms has taken $1,948,179,269, the largest slice of the treasury’s 1034 spending. MOODIE TO FIGHT ELECTION CONTEST IN COURT TUESDAY dansonius to Preside in Action Testing Governor-Elect’s Right to Office Eyes of North Dakota turned to- ward Bismarck Monday, es legal ad- Tense relations between Hungary ‘and Yugoslavia were heightened when Yugoslavian troops, a typic- al group of which is shown at top, crossed the frontier into Hungary near Szeged almost simultaneous- ly with Yugoslavia’s expulsion of thousands of Hungarians. The and Yugoslavia. The League of Nations council was warned by Dr. Eduard Benes, Czechslovakia’s foreign minister, that war would result if anyone struck a blow at the unity of the Little Entente Yugo- visers prepared to attack and defend i i i F rf i i “$ Ze | ef ene f is i i Hi i i I i E Li | £ rel fe 3a i ; I i E | i fe [ E | H q I = 3 e | i < : 2 8 ef it : i iz it z i EE: 5 g eH Hand Down Ruling in Test Case on Measure Little Rock, Ark., Dec. 10—(?)— Federal Distric: Judges John E. Mar- tineau and Heartsill Ragon Saturday upheld the constitutionality of the Federal Frasier-Lemke Farm Mort- gage Act. the | forensic and other organizations. PRAZIER-LEMKE ACT AGAIN HELD LEGAL Two Federal District Judges ‘Their ruling was handed down in a test case in which interested attorneys from over a wide area offered argu- »| Of the city school system. TWO SEVERELY HURT': concurs in this hold-| juries received in a double automo- Discover Serum to Prevent Tuberculosis TROOP MOVEMENTS INCREASE TENSITY IN BALKANS BOGOLJUB YEVTITCH To Lay Cornerstone Of New High School Ceremonies incident to the laying of the cornerstone of Bismarck’s new high school building were held Monday morning at the school. During assembly at 10:45 a. m., George F. Will, school board presi- dent, addressed the students and Miss Elizabeth Jones, history teacher and veteran of the instruction staff made a short talk. The president of each class read the class roll and placed it in the metal box which will go inside the cornerstone as did the captains of the school athletic teams, musical, The box was sealed at noon and will be placed in the cornerstone at 3:20 p. m., without any ceremony other than the attendance of school board members and students, accord- ing to H. O. Saxvik, superintendent IN MISHAP SUNDAY frances Plaggmeier, New Sal- em Instructor, Suffers Skull Fracture Two persons were in # Mandan hospital Monday recovering from in- bile crash on the Bismarck-Man- dan highway Sunday. Frances Plaggmeier of Werner, instructor in the New Salem schools, suffered a fractured skull. Physi- clans said that she had. recovered consciousness Monday afternoon and reported her condition as “favorable.” Larry Ryan, driver of the car which ‘crashed into another automobile parked on the side of the highwi suffered cuts and lacerations. bruises were received Grace Farr, William Russell and Wurde: man, all of Mendan, passengers in the Ryan ‘machine, und Leroy Ben son of Bismrck. Benson, in whose car Miss Plagg- meler was riding, crashed into a truck parked on the highway. P. J. Erbele of Mandan stopped to assist Benson parking his car on the shoulder of road. the glare of were given.as dent. Slippery wement and oh Hing headlights use of the, acci- drive against shady lawyers. 3. have their engineer. Minor |ing at the Johns Hopkins university, A EDUARD BENES CUMMINGS T0 OPEN CRIME CONFERENCE Roosevelt Leads Drive on Un- derworld as Over 750 Are Held for Dope Smuggling Washington, Dec. 10.—(?)—Presi- dent Roosevelt assumed Monday the leadership in the nation’s drive jainst the underworld. ‘As more than 750 persons seized in “big push” against the narcotic evil aited hearings from coast to coast, the president wrote a speech on the crime situation for the opening of Attorney General Cummings’ crime country more law-abiding. Many suggestions were heard, in- cluding: 1. H. J. Anslinger, chief of the treasury’s narcotic bureau, said the week-end raids in which the govern- ment seized » addicts, nar- cotics, equipment and automobiles, showed the need for more drastic laws against the evil. At present, the treasury acts under its taxing powers, 2. The conference may chart s Treasury officials would like to police authority against broadened. Th ent Sunday that arrests in the narcotics raids totaled 587 men and 178 women. of electrical Baltimore, said here that deaths due to electrical accidents had increased. ;He gave the rate as one death per 100,000 persons a year. EXPERIMENT WITH PIGS Kazan, U. 8. R. R., (®}—Wild boars have been crossed with domesticated cows in the Kazan Zoo and 31 of the crossbreeds are being studied to deter- mine whether they Giseases of domestic swine which do not attack wild hogs. Entente Offers Olive Branch LEAGUE SUGCESTS TERRORISM PROBE 10 PACIFY SERBS Threaten to Act Independently Unless Immediate Action Is Taken YEVTITCH ACCEPTS PLAN Rumanian Foreign Minister Flays Hungary's Attitude To- ward Neighbor Nation BULLETIN Geneva, Dec, 10.—(?)—Leaders of the League of Nations said Monday night that Yugoslavia and Hungary had reached an accord in principle for the settlement of their dispute. Geneva, Dec. 10.—(#}—Nicholas Ti- tulescu, foreign minister of Rumania, poured oil on the troubled waters of Hungarian-Yugoslav relations Monday by telling the League of Nations coun- cil that Yugoslavia's appeal against Hungary in no way questioned the national honor of Hungary. Since Titulescu is a recognized lead- er in the Little Entente of Yugoslavia, Rumania and Czechslovakia, his words were regarded as in the,nature of an official olive branch. Speech Brings Laughter The statesmen present in the coun- cil chamber were hopeful that Hun- gary would follow Yugoslavia’s lead in accepting a league plan for settle- ment of the dispute between Yugo- slavia and Hungary. Titulescu, in his speech, delivered an ironic indictment of Hungary in general terms, often evoking laughter from the public galleries. President Vasconcellos demanded silence. The Rumanian foreign minister scourged Hungary for not preventing the military drill of terrorists and ac- cused Hungarian authorities of “in- difference and negligence.” He critic- ized Hungary for refusing to partic- ipate in @ movement for “moral dis- armament.” Then he rendered homage to the great Hungarian statesman Apponyi, saying sadly that the discussions at Geneva had changed in tone since his death. “Today,” he said, “courtesy is replaced by provocation.” France introduced a draft of a treaty providing for the creation of an international criminal court for the repression of terrorism. It would be permanent and would consist of five members. ‘The new league plan was described 8 @ compromise prepared in such a form that statesmen had every hope Hungary would accept it. It was reported to involve an in- vitation to Hungary to conduct a rigid Alexander of Yugoslavia at Marseille and to punish anyone found guilty of connection with the crime, ‘This proposal was first made by Pierre Laval, French foreign minister, in @ speech to the council of the League of Nations. Provisions of the plan have been ac- cepted by Bogoljub Yevtitch, Yugoslav foreign minister, who is being pressed hard by his government to get con- crete action in Yugoslavia’s complaint against Hungary. Yevtitch told leaders of the major European powers he preferred to withdraw the matter from the hands of the league snd deal directly with Hungary rather than accept a mere “platonic” condemnation of terrorism. “Our moderation has mistakenly been conceived to be weakness,” he asserted. May ‘Act on Her Own’ The cessation of deportations of Hungarians from Yugoslavia has help- ed relax a situation which was so se- rious that Laval told a colleague “this conflict should be settled and must be settled to maintain the peace of Europe.” Hungarian spokesmen here say Yugoslavia has threatened to “act on her own” if she fails to receive satis- tactory treatment from the League of Nations. Yugoslavia's charge that Hungary was responsible for the assassination cf King Alexander at Marseille two months ago because she (Hungary) fostered terrorists, is before the league. Rumania and Czechoslovakia, the other members of the Little Entente, are supporting Yugoslavia’s conten- tion. France has aligned her support with the Entente. Italy has sided with H ‘Captain Anthony Eden, British lord privy seal, was entrusted Monday with the responsibility of presenting the powers’ compromise plan for peace to Hungary and the Little En- tente. ‘Acting as go-betweens for Yugo- slavia are Pierre Laval, French foreign and Eduard Benes, foreign are immune to/K Pompeo Aloisi, Italian delegate to th: league, is representing Hungary. DEPORTATIONS CALLED OFF See teats et , , Dec. 10. Yugoslavia ended the mass deporta- tion of Hungarians abruptly Monday. apparently averting the possibility of ent. Unofficial reports said Yugosjavia (Cont ‘on Page Three)’