The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 8, 1935, Page 1

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Z1 “sa + YOYAUSTS LAUNCH ==3ae A Fee : 3 BIG OFFENSIVE IN BASTERN MACEDONIA Insurgents to Shell City Unless Premier Tsaldaris Re- signs at Once - GOVERNMENT IS CONFIDENT Claim Intercepted Note Indi- cates Rebel Chieftains Ready to Surrender BULLETIN Athens, March 8—()—Pormer Premier Eleutherios Veniselos was THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE a I | i | [ Hit tie hi i 5 i i | E [ “HAVANA TRARFIC IS ase tor of Wilton Presbyter- jan Church Friday & é : i ui & i 8 3 | i i i £ | i ae i aH i E i i a8 | 1 i i s. itil if 5 F ale i ~ TIED UP BY STRIKE Street Railway Workers Join Ranks of Mendieta’s Mil- itant Opponents I i I z 2 ee E i ae HH 2 E £ 8 g a 8 : : 1 i a i i i : i i i t BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1935 Legislature Approves Legal Moratorium Bill Act Contains Emergency Clause, to Become Law as Soon as Signed by Governor; Effort to Make Compulsory Hail Measure Effective at Once Fails i i i EE, if ff it i To Meet Deadline Twelve bills and innumerable committee. reports i Lf | I if i Ey ae F i af I H i 5 g j 2 g E A i A rn Elst ig i I gs fl g 2 ry é i g ti tf Fs E i : f A JAMES WPCORMICK KILLED WHEN CAR TS HIT BY-TRAIN Employe of Regulatory Depart- ment Dies Hour After Ac- cident at Carpio Minot, March 8—(?)—James Mc- killed at Carpio late Thursday when the car he was driving was struck by & train at the Soo Line crossing in geet Eeetal Eg LIVESTOCK GRADING, JULY SESSION BILLS BEATEN IN SENATE Final Approval ts Given Act Permitting Municipally- Owned Liquor Stores AMEND, REPASS HAIL BILL Erickson's Resolution Asks Committee Created to Study School Closing Two controversial bills, one appro- mrt econ ee te ag ygees SRRE bitte kelly Se E & £. Be 7 g8 : i i é i (nr i F] Person. Voted down a bill creating a poul- try improwement board with state regulation of poultry by 25 to 22 vote. Passed bill providing $300 annually and $25 monthly maximum pension for blind. Passed bill prohibiting administer- liquor "|vote of municipalities, and providing for a tax with revenue to go into ‘maximum of permanent surplus fund at $3,000,000 instead of $4,000,000, sending bill back to house where amendment was accepted. Sent to state affairs committee re- quest from Governor Welford for con- firmation of reappointment of Adam Lefor as state bank examiner. WARNS NRA DELAYS SLOWING RECOVERY s|Richberg Defends Work of Set- pending her arrival. ‘The McCormick's had no children. Widow of One-Time Gold King Dies In Lonely Colorado Mining Sha Leadville, Colo. March &—UP) ‘if gill i ‘ t Up Under Cross-Examina- tion by Committee Eg mittee’s entire membership. He put squarely on congress job cutting down the elake ce j Ei i | B et < : i ! if g it Unleashing a eral Hugh 8. J celebrating publication of ! Wants Dogs Tagged | Coming and Goi Representative Ben Fedje Williams wants his dogs labeled —and no fooling about it, either. He announced his stand Thurs- day night during debate on the “I move,” Fedje shouted, “that all dogs in the state be required to wear two licenses—one around their neck and one at the end of their tail—just like an automobile —& license front and rear.” Fedje’s motion lost, and a few minutes later, the bill itself was TWO FOREST AREAS PURCHASED IN ND One Unit in McHenry, Bottineau and Pierce Counties Con- tains 200,000 Acres (®) —Two new national forest purchase units were established in North Dakota Thursday by the forest reservation | Commission. One contains 200,000 acres in Mc- Henry, Bottineau and Pierce counties. The other consists of 60,000 acres on. the watershed of the Red river in would be aided through part-time la- bor in restoring the areas. When the larger of the two new North Dakota purchase units is ac- quired, it is proposed to plant most of the area to such trees as ponderosa pine, red cedar, cottonwood, aspen, hackberry and white elm. f Egg cere 's Athenians Flee at Threat of Bombardment Coughlin and Senator Huey Long, former lohneon, pictured as he spoke at a dinner in N tatorship impended if the 80 million “pied 4 «| THIRD PARTY DRIVE, ourt Upholds School Aid Feouvery plan. KINGFISH LAUNCHES BLASTING NEW DEAL General Johnson's Only Com- ment Is ‘It’s a Great Joke’; Saving His Fire Washington, March 8—(?)—The Democratic high command with which Huey P. Long is at war met with frigid silence Friday his latest on- slaught on the Roosevelt administra- | n. | Observers noted that, after assail-| ing the New Deal as a “St. Vitus dance” and Hugh 8. Johnson as a general who ‘never smelled powder or heard a cap snap,” the Louisiana dictator seized the opportunity to tempt, before his huge radio audi- ence, to hammer his “share the wealth” ideas. ‘They wondered if that were not an see the possibility of a third party Of the men who have struck at ‘Long in the past few days, only Johnson had any immediate com- ment on Thursday night's speech. The former Blue Eagle chief who is on gre The Weather t and Satur- PRICE FIVE CENTS Bill TO GET $1,000,000 UNDER PROVISIONS Four of Five Judges Hold Sec- tion One of Measure Is Constitutional JUSTICE BURR DISSENTS Money Is Provided by Transfer From Permanent Surplus of Hail Fund Constitutionality of house bill 339 providing for transfer of more than $1,000,000 to the state equalization fund from the state hail insurance surplus fund was upheld Friday by the state supreme court. The court upheld section one of the bill as constitutional. The sectios up- held was one of three alternative methods proposed in the house meas- ure, The opinion was handed down by four of the five justices with Justice A. G. Burr dissenting. ‘Under the section upheld, the per- manent surplus of the state hail in- surance fund was set at $3,000,000. The section also directs transfer of $1,038,865 remaining surplus to the state equalization fund for the aid of public schools. Complaint Not Sufficient In the percuriam opinion of the court signed by four of the five jus- tices, it is held “that house bill No. 339 and the provisions thereof direct- ting the transfer of said $1,038,885.41 surplus from the state hail insurance fund to the state equalization fund do not contravene sections 175, 177, 185, or article 24 of the amendments the constitution of North Dakota. “It follows therefore that the trial court was correct in holding that the complaint does not state facts suffi- cient to constitute a cause of action against any of the defendants. The order appealed from is therefore af- firmed and the trial court is directed to dismiss the action. “An opinion will be filed later eet- ting forth the grounds on which this conclusion and judgment is based.” Signing the opinion were Justices A. M. Christianson, Chief Justice John Burke, W. L. Nuessle, and James Mor- Tis. The measure which the court up- \held Friday was one of the speediest pieces of legislation passed at this session. It began as a house proposal sponsored by Representative Edwin Traynor, Ed Hill and L. C. Odegard, Passed by the house, the bill was re- written in the senate to include pro= visions desired by seantors and the | state insurance department, Provides Direct Transfer As the bill came back to the house from the senate it represented a com- Promise agreement. Article one of the bill, which provides for the direct. transfer of funds from the state equalization fund, is a senate proposal The three house members sponsored a plan by which the more than $1,000,- 000 surplus would be returned to the Payment by the counties of the flat hail tax. Shortly after Governor Walter Wel- Court Given Soldier's Burial ar gthEERy j ci gl E i g é it

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