The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 5, 1935, Page 2

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Quain’s River Trip Ends; Returns to Buenos Aires|z* park service with labor by the Civilian Conservation Corps. Plans call for|Local Traveler Learns Some- cabins, riding trails, camping sites and a hotel concession to accommo- thing of South American date visitors. . Supported by McDonald lowed. Hie further claimed that Mepous re thes eh he required a num- had assured acting. governor he (Olson) had cooperated with the ber of employes of the department 10 federal department in maintenance of |perform work outside eae Bi ging highways in the state. ‘duties, and which interfere te woreda erartice for [had een asked Oy the | ural rehabl- o : ay tation Kae aid in securing E said—nothing. stock formation. phan ot es existing aystem ‘Olson admitted sending out “a few i x if f Tequesting such information.” TT TT landing area “ for the :—This is another Hos by partids interested in securing po-|He declared he felt he “acted for the Weather Report |) Pour Noeimus u sneer tor and psc conte oftheir cea |Bn naa of te eh eet jen. « 71 Por Bismarck and vicinity: fama ‘and without bloodshed. ‘Olson sald he conferred with the at-| He claimed he believed “itis right Althgugh the $4,000,000,000 works probable tonight and Saturday; slight- On the dock we bid “Glucklige itorney generat regarding salaries paldjand proper, 10 only ered fund was earmarked for eight broad : ly warmer ¢ Reise” to the German mother and lite to employes of the department. Wel-|all public officials shou! or od - divisions of work projects, the presi- % North 5 tle Carlos. His blue eyes were always |ford alleged in his removal proceed-| fully to the end the people and the dent could increase the allotment to posay ae 3 as’ if in. anticipation of|ings that Olson had exceeded the| property might be preserved and con- any of these groups by $800,000,000 5 under a flexible clause giving him a t statut salary =| tinue to exist.” wae vet of the information was & 20 per cent transfer power. Earmaking of Sums Obtaining On February 11, of this year, Olson| proper function to insure an adequate said he wrote'a letter to the aitorney supply of feed for horses used in ‘The earmarking section provided that the following sums should Remains to Speed Act to President Be to repay the PWA and other agen- etes for loans made to the relief ad- ition while congress debated the bill. By E. P. QUAIN March 15th (Friday): e2, general regarding ‘salaries to be| NRWR road work, Olson claimed. paid various cates, “Total cost of said letters and secur s Answers Salary Charge ing said information was $4.55,” Olson board at every river port. 3 t acting governor, “and prior to Sata Ge |viit” “aetians "nose ci as |W appearance, . eral - urday; a mustaches and goatees. From news- ted. ae Heo ‘ tagae taid such sum to the state high- reau of public roads, department of Me oxi Leche papers it is learned that these men both t| Way department.” agriculture, and state highway de- : : i night and extreme sot probably are going to Buenos Aires |dresig Tage nach Bremen!” —— ew partments, in accordance with the 2 was Saturday, cooler Saturday extreme |in the service of their country. They You will have Germs have been found 13,000 feet existing federal-aid law, but without : 4 = west ‘ion. are said to be politicians by profes- and above the earth by English scientists. matching by the states.) : For Montana: Snow tonight, cold-|sion. We gather that there is much 2. Rural rehabilitation and relief! : S S nd southeast portion; ‘Batur- | political commotion in Buenos Aires in stricken agricultural areas, trriga- * 3 : Sp eereraily sale |these days and the men are tion, reclamation, water conservation : — its ony yocigudy Fri; thereto exercise thelr civil, and and transmountain water division, te . ‘ casic perhaps, soldierly duties and rights Homes ene, rin ecu aru tote er ditt CON TLN U E r - P it Mm} v m 1 electrification, $100,000, : * tle oo— seine quarrel but it seems that there are froth page one: 4 Housing, ¢400,000000. A high catents from|c"Tot of good men ait of office, For| Counsel for. Olson 5. Assistance to educational, pro- the good of the country, purely and : li fessional and clerical persons, $200 Marie simply, the latter have been urged to Attacks. Legality 7 " - interfere, readjust, or, ey woul Swale Seen beO 00. (Aiss a peo: be so kind end sacrificing, reverse vision to pay CCC men since March ‘The wildeat gusher, shown In action here, was brought In on a Mont. 1 tne are soe the seule: trten thie 31, when the CCC act expired, and| calm county, Michigan, farm, northeast of Grand Rapids, and esti- ut super-heated Spanish editorials is extend the corps for two years.) mated by oll workers to be flowing at from 15,000 to 24,000 barre! day. almost like reading the news from 7. Loans and grants or both for carina viacaran mi aig Arline fed and there was a wild scramble Bismarck station barometer, ? | home.) Projects of states, territories, = lor leases in the section. jated Press Photo) ‘ - on Re ietading’ subdivisions and) —— cs Germans Settle Along River euporess grade crossing elimination, $800,000,- 000. (To be spent through the bi ety rs wt 18 WAVE 24 ~ thereof, municipalities and the District of Columbia, and self- Uquidating projects of public bodies thereof, where, in the determination of the president, not less than 25 per cent of the loan or grant or the ag- gregate thereof, is to be expended for work under each particular project, ‘$900,000.00. 8. Sanitation, prevention of soil and seacoast erosion and stream pol- lution, reforestation, forestation, flood control, rivers and harbors, and mis- Persons on relief rolls would be paid so-called “security” wages except where wage rates in private industry ‘were affected adversely by this policy. Officials have estimated the “sect ity” wages would be about $50 month. On permanent public build- ing projects the prevailing wage would be required and this would have to be determined in advance. CULBERTSON LEAD CUT New York, April 5.(7)—Ely Cul- berteon made dire threats Friday egainst a white rabbit which has be- come pert of the Sims-Culbertson bridge clash. The rabbit was given to Hal and Dorothy Sims as a gond Juck token in their 150-rubber match with Culbertson and his wife, Joseph- ine. It brought continued good for- tune to the Simses and at the end of the 80th rubber Thursday night they had reduced the Culbertson lead to 7,180 points. Daniel Defoe wrote “Robinson Crusoe” at Tooting Hall, Tooting, England. ‘TR’ Would HaveA pproved Roosevelt Park Projec Cowboy President Loved Bad- lands’ Beauty; Lost Heavily in Ranching Venture (By the Associated Press) A huge park, created under federal supervision, will be established in the Badlands of western North Dakota in_ honor of America’s late rough- ae and president—Theodore Roose- velt. The living monument will rise in the country where Roosevelt once hunted big game and punched cows to regain top health, where he shot his first buffalo and acted as dep- uty sheriff—on the wind-swept, bar- ren Badlands with its myriad colored formations, its buttes, coulees and sage brush. The two-fold project, aimed not enly as a conservation measure but wo aid stricken settlers as well—would undoubtedly have met with the ap- Proval of “T.R.” were he still alive. Roosevelt, whose name is revered by the old time settlers who remem- bered him here and handed down their reverence to their children, came to the Badlands in 1883 to hunt, and remained to punch cattle and} ranch, Ranch Home Now Here The man who was later to win fame as a rough-rider and president, shot his first buffalo Sept. 17, 1883, in the Badlands country then teem- ing with buffalo, antelope, elk, bear and deer. Today the little log cabin in which be spent those years of his life he never forgot—the bleak cold winters | stands alongside the modern 18-story capitol at Bismarck, a memory of the vigorous sportsman. ‘The handful of western North Da- kota pioneers who were neighbors of the 24-year-old New Yorker when he undertook his Maltese Cross ranching | Ci venture can still remember the severe drouth of 1886 and the subsequent | Devils winter blizzards which saw Roosevelt along with all other pioneer cattle- men of this vicinity take crushing losses. More than 2,000 head of cattle bore the Maltese Cross brand in the fall of 1886. They represented an invest- ment reputedly of $60,000. In the|M&x. spring, young Roosevelt and his share-partners were able to round up |Oal only a small fraction of the herd. The others lay dead, starved and |Sanish, frozen to death, buried in the snow. ‘Bluer Than Indigo’ “I am bluer than indigo,” he wrote his sister, Corrine. “It is even worse than I feared. I wish I was sure I would lose no more than half the |Huron, cl money I had invested out here. I am planning how to get out of it.” Today, a half century later, ranch- ers and farmers of the Badlands country can echo the sentiment ex- only winter's rigors but a much more severe drouth than that experienced in 1886, has forced the Badlands ranchers to take staggering losses. Most of them were forced to sell the larger part of their herds last fall|Boise, 1 when the government cattle buying ic program came to their rescue. Since Roosevelt's day, however, con- ditions in the “prob! " area havi become more acute due to the for. mer government program of parcel- I:ng out homestead sites in the area. ‘Minneapolis, cldy. pressed by Theodore Roosevelt. Not |M WEATHER IN OTHER STATES High- Low- 10, cldy."* - Des Moines, Iowa, cldy, There gre several German colon- tes, or settlements, along the Parana. ‘They have been formed during the past 10 years by means of conces- 06 |sions from the Argentine govern- wnt ‘Dandie th distribution of the [department require which hi le the e : '86|land. We passed several such colon- |in the spring, summer or ‘Unsatisfactory roads, he said, jes. One of them alone consisted of lover 8,000 German settlers. The neat and orderly appearance of the build- ings, gardens, fields, etc., among these Gjimmigrants was very noticeable. There was a note of efficiency at the river landing places which had not ‘German newcomers, steamers and at Iguazu where the hotel personnel was 50 per cent Ger- man. Most of these people seemed to be satisfied with their lot but some products are mainly mate, tobacco, fruit, stock, and poultry. Their two chief complaints are too hot climate and too low prices on their March 16th (Saturday): Today we are again the political turmoil in the Aires. last three more days; be in Chile and outside of a South America. dy “existed in employes has been delegated large- 117 Fifth St. various dep ental conditions rile (ood light wes seer so coup lw ol soda wth theun goed laps end ered eyes, Service Electric Shop John B. Kottsick, Prop. Phone ‘We give prompt attention te wiring and electrical repair jobs py 2B EO wee 42aOshetgowoeseanvesy dewrresescons 832842 eueovomue® nds 2Geavaecu and dazzling summers and fall—|These represent small farms where Girt farming has been tried and {uil- ed. Instead of a few ranchers to re- move, the government will have to arrange for the transfer of some hundred farm families. To Get Better Lands Farmers on the land contemplated | Modena, for the park project will be moved to more fertile lands but disposition of the problem has not been definite- ly settled. Two sizeable tracts are to be pur- chased by the relief administration for the project, Harry L. Hopkins, ad- ministrator, has announced. Options already have been obtained on 42,145 of the 47,000 acres desired in Billings and McKenzie counties. A scenic drive, following the twist- ing route of the Little Missouri river, 1s being built to connect the two|The Pas, Man., areas. Work on this phase of the/Toledo, Ohio, cldy. ya program began early last summer be irmeengas ea cldy. under the supervision of the national | Winnipeg, . fog .. 34 ——————| Welford Has Plan to Makes Old Cars Run || Mark Historic Spots Governor Welford ad matte ee, ak a Yes, the marvelous new K-w ||* ants Graphite Motor Lubricant ac- || the atric cmone tans em in tually makes your car run better and better with use, due to its scientific colloidal graphite pro- tection. It reduces friction and gives perfect protection to all bearing parts. It forms a hard, new pol- -ished. graphoid surface that is far smoother, and more wear re- sistant than any metal could be. Actual tests prove it gives motors 40% more life, increased pep, power and economy. : Ask Your Dealer K-W Graphite Corporation eB. digheai 5 i Hi “Well, efter all, is E proclaiming ening term in office. Dock at Buenos Aires March 17th (Sunday): “Ciudad de up to the dock at Buenos . Although we had gone to and returned on Are BESASLLSSSSSSSoSRS SSSS SANSLS Rw SRSSSS SE: Ey BEBBRBBRESSERSSSBS SeBBss8esReSSRSESEE38 $ os on ee se i 8 FLASH! to Budget-watchers! 3 pairs of HOLEPROOF KNEE-HIGH outwear 4 to 5 of ordinary stockings !* An actual test among scores of business women proved this emazing economy feature! So when you. try Hi KNEE-HIGH's you may find that they last even longer: Because HOLEPROOF KNEE-HIGH’s do away with knee-strain, the chief cause of “burst” knees and leg-runs. In addition to their wonderful wearing qualities, KNEE- HIGH's are cool . : . comfortable . : . and highly . f UE g ae | ope to the mechanism first—it well a refrigerator will serve you. ‘The performance of the refrigerator you buy outweighs ia value all A Buyer's Guide ssk“How Abvese gk a long will it last?’ For year after year, rate the values of 2 this ecies 10% for styl-. ing; 10% for features; 5% for special gad- § FEF i tA pproved by the Better Fabrics Testing Bureau. . .$1.00 Fro el i a wows $92.50 ‘Melville lectric Shop | G. P. Hotel Building on Broadway, i F : Hi t E H it il Bismarck, N, D, i Py I

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