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‘(E===] THE! BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1878 ‘ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1935 Mi’Carran Relief Clause Beaten 2,000 Held After Nation-Wide Crime Drive MORGENTHAU HINTS OF NEW OFFENSIVE: ON ILLICIT TRADES Millions of Dollars in Contra- band Seized by 12,000 Agents in Campaign ARRESTS MAY TOTAL 2,600 Giant Lottery Ring Operating In Northwest States Smash- ed in Raids iti int site | Flier Attempting Cross-Country Stratosphere Flight Lands At Cleveland New York, March 16.—(?)—Wiley| down at Cleveland Fri ry FOR WAGNER LABOR BILL | ——, Unies the Wagner labor bill Is passed, William Green told senate labor committee, the in Federation of Labor which he heads will cease counseling “patience” to workers. (Associated Press Photo) f'Touch of Spring Followed by Snow - In Monthly Summary by Federal Reserve Bank Bismarck received 10 of an inch precipitation in the’ wet IN BREWING CASES Missouri Judge Predicts Su- preme Court Will Say Powers Are Authorized Washington, March 16.—(#)—The codes, felt better Saturday sampling two beer cases. Two recent federal court actions lconcerning the brewing code were re- ported to President Roosevelt Friday after i fi Fe u Z F : & 3 s Prosecution here for Kansas City to enter the next in the conviction of William former A f le i ‘ E E i f a4 if ik 3 i il fa PEEE & TWO POISON DEATHS IN MEDINA FAMILY ARE BEING PROBED WN. D. A. C. Officials Investigate Cause of Carter Children’s Fatal lliness 3 OTHERS SERIOUSLY ILL Sister Is Stricken While Attend- ing Funeral of Nine-Year- Old Brother Jamestown, N. D., March 16—(?)}— Deaths of a sister and brother and serious illness of three others of the same family, probably due to food poisoning, were being in Ostensibly to test carefully guarded flying equipment recently developed, “mystery plane” (top), with a crew of four, made severaifiights from the rtmet Pacifie ocean. A new radio compass was tested and attempts were beacon. Left to right, below, are Eugene Vidal, director of the depai |, the department ef commerce’s Oakland, Cal., airport over the contact the Honolulu radio ‘to nt’s bureau of aerondutics; Capt Clayton Bissell, pict of the big ship; Chester Snow, in charge of the tests, and Capt. Albert Hegenberger, wi Associated Press Photos) Flood Peril Strikes New Area; 600 Families in Missouri Flee FOR COOPERATION Aim of Local Authorities Is to Maintain Good Order And Decorum Following a precedent established last year, Bismarck high school au- thorities this week solicited the co- operation of officials of all schools entering teams in the state basketball "| tournament in the task of maintain- Feetcahe Tall F pbbg? i 5 ; i f | iH | Hl i tr F ag | ; i Fe 3 Hi g | i i l H Fee a it isk g I mi s ing order and decorum during the contests here next week-end. Last year, because of a cooperative ote cae Dare ot aceo) mien, Sake rans Faron se OQLONTAL CHIEF OF Through Levees Near | Kennett, Mo. Waters Subside in Illinois; Resi- dents Return to Saline County Homes (By the Associated Press) Flood waters rolled across new areas of southern Missouri and eastern Arkansas Saturday herding more than 600 families from menaced homes as Mississippi river tributaries battered down weakened levees. ‘The raging Si. Francis river surged through the levee at three places near Kennett, Mo., and a fourth break was expected momentarily. Caught be- tween breaks, 25 men were rescued from the midst of the flood as water swept the mile-wide area. Workers hastily sand-bagged levees in northeastern Arkansas and farm- ers evacuated territory west of Blytheville, endangered by Big Lake. Hundreds of acres were covered by ‘|the White river after the levee crum- bled at Newport. ‘The Ohio river continued to rise, and West Portsmouth, O., was isolat- ed by the Ohio and Scioto rivers. At Maysville, Ky., 50 miles east of Cin- | cinnati, residents of the lower part of King’s Saviors Fear Wrath of Mohammed Mecca, Saudi Arabia, Mar. 16—(P) —The frenzied prayers of 200,000 pil- of. Islam's faithful tidy Hl if ag Eee F-fereat eqgeee bee a B i the city sought higher land. At Cin- cinnati, a 25-foot crest was feared. Elsewhere the flood picture bright- ened, with a forecast of week-end CONTINUES TO RISE FRENCH AFRICA LOST IN CONGOAN JUNGLE Governor-General Renard, Wife, Five Others Believed to Have Perished Brazzaville, Middle Congo, March 16.—()—Down in an airplane some- where in the Congo's swampy can- nibal infested jungles, Governor-Gen- eral Edouard Renard of French Equa- torial Africa, with his wife and five French companions, were feared Sat- urday to have perished. Madame Renard, a native Hol- lander, was the widow of Michael Winburn, wealthy American soap and philanthropist, @ long sir tour of inspection. In addition to the aerial search, a tug steamed along the Congo river banks, joining the hunt. Slight hope ‘was maintained that the plane might | have landed in an isolated clearing. was under water. Though the Ohio menaced the countryside, Shawnee- danger. BY ASSEMBLY LOST 2: Measure Prohibiting Beer lor Dancing Mysteriously Disappears Two measures passed > mysteriously disappeared. and may not become laws, it was re- vealed Saturday. Legislative sleuths wrinkled their Beside Renard and his wife, whom he married in October, 1933, with Police Prefect Jean Chiappe as wit- ‘ness, there in the plane were Major ‘Bonninbue, chief of Renard’s military Hit by Dust Storm: March 16. bs choking dust storm, borne by March winds, left the plains states deep in grime and sand Saturday. ROOSEVELT FORGES SEE VICTORY AHEAD FOR GIGANTIC BIL! Senate Vote Friday Night De- feats Prevailing Wage Plan 50 to 38 PASS COMPROMISE 83 TO 2 Administration Confident of Sending Measure to White House Next Week BULLETIN fashington, March 16—(#}—The senate Saturday approved an amend- ment to the $4,880,000,000 relief bill jextending the emergency relief ad- ministration until June 30, 1936, but action on a proposal to extend the administration until June 30, 1937, was deferred until | Monday. We Washington, March 16. — (®) — Elated over the defeat of the McCar- ran prevailing wage men, the Roose- velt forces in the senate sought Sat- urday to turn back a bi-partisan at- tempt to chop the $4.880,000,000 work and relief bill down to a fraction of | its present size. ; To maintain the momentum of Fri- day night's drive, in which they beat the McCarran amendment 50 to 38, land passed an administration com- Promise, 83 to 2, the leaders sum- ~ | moned the senate to its first Saturday meeting since this congress began. They were intent on sweeping the iglant bill, center of a debate which \has delayed the whole Roosevelt pro- gram, to the White House in s form, | acceptable to the president. ; | NORTHWEST SENATORS’ VOTE ON WAGE CLAUSE | Washington, March 16—(?)— || Vote of northwest senators on the || McCarran amendment: || For the amendment: || _ Minnesota — Schall ® end Shipstead_(F.-L.) North Dakota—Frazier and Nye, i Republicans. q || Montana—Wheeler (D). Against the amendment: | South Dakota—Bulow (D). Wisconsin—Duffy (D); La Fels || lette cP). |] Norbeck, (R-8D), paired against || the amendment. Administration Confident ‘They were confident they could this, though @ final vote is not Pected until the middle of next block of Democrats were ready to tempt to cut the bill, Senator Byrd (Dem., Va.), and (Dem.. Colo.), want to slash it to $1, pecreiged and $2,880,000,000 respec: ively. The Democratic leaders were de- scribed as confident smaller appropriation. Other attempts to change the meas- ure lay ahead. Senator LaFollette (Continued on Page Three) HITLER DENOUNCES VERSAILLES TREATY German Cabinet Decrees Army Of 480,000 Men; Pact Al- lows Only 100,000 compelled to take fate in hand.