The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 27, 1935, Page 3

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Ys much change ag ee South Da- kota: eee clou- tonight ae + Sporn in temperatire q bee Fair tonight Bees h portion ferent ont and Tr Tues- change in te Minnesota: Generally. vrai in south and central, probably showers in extreme north portions tonight and a little change in tempera- jure, littre f Additional Sports :| Owens May Tackle ;| Quarter - Mile Run Spectacular Negro Sets Three World Marks, Ties Another in Big Ten Meet Chicago, May. 27.—(7)—Now they are begining to wonder if Jesse Owens, Ohio State's great negro track star, couldn't do some dam- ‘age to Ben Eastman’s world quarter- mile record. Hardly had he completed his aston- ishing assault on the 100 and 220 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 27, 1985 ‘@ | year because I didn’t want to go stale on it, and I haven't practice the low hurdles because I didn't want to get hurt. Iam going to confine myself to practing starts, so I can run the 100 yard dash in 9.3 seconds.” Gophers Lead Big Ten Conference Title Race Chicago, May 27.—(7)—Minnesota, the new leader of the Western Con- ference baseball championship race, will defind its position this week in two games with Iowa at Iowa City. The Gophers took over first place last week by defeating Purdue twice, 5-2 and 11-1, after Illinois lost to Pur- due, 5-2, while Chicago bowed to Northwestern, 1-4. The Mafoons came back Saturday, squaring their account with Northwestern, 2-1, to yard dash, broad jump and hurdles records in the annual western con- ference meet Saturday at Ann Arbor, HETTINGER OFFIGIAL SHOT THROUGH LUNG Henry Barry of Mott, 62, in Ser- ious Condition at Dickin- son Hospital Dickinson, N. D., May 27.—(P)— Henry Barry of Mott, 62, clerk of court of Hettinger county for more than 15 years, was in serious condi- tion in @ hospital here Monday suf- tering from a bullet wound through '@ lung. Baary’s wound was inflicted by a bullet from a .22 rifle last Thursday. Details of how the shooting occurred were withheld by the family. The veteran official is married and has cne son, —— Mich,, before talk of a better than t yg SONDITIONS eg |te-second quarter-mile started. over Manitoba (Winnipeg 2962) and| Major John L. Griffith, Big Ten over the Southwest ee 29.66) jathletic commissioner, cera! Sn high e area is centered! would give Eastman’s great mark of orth Pacific coast (Kam-|4¢4 atten ‘8 beating. 0|C ONTINUE cco Section Three of Recovery Act Held and Roseburg 30.08). Precipi- ion has occurred in the » Mississi Valley and Biates ialen But tne ther ts ‘generally at e weather is gene: Far West. Cool weather een over the Northwest; — else- where temperatures are moderate. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.10. Reduced to sea level, 29.87. Missourl river stage ab 7's. m, 5.2 ft. 24 hour PRECIPITATION Station: ‘The spectacular Owens, in his first year of college competition, is a can- didate for three worlds records, chief of them a stunning 26 feet 8% inches in the broad jump, and a share of another, for his unparalleled performance of Saturday. Here ‘they are: The 100 yard dash in 9.4 seconds, equalling the world record establish- ed by Frank Wykoff of Southern California, in 1930, His 26 feet 8% inches in the broad six and one-eighth inches farther than the world record es- tablished by the great Japanese 32 jumper, Chuhei Nambu. The 220 yard dash in 20.3 seconds, three tenths of a second faster than Pct.!Roland Locke’s accepted standard, 3 accomplished in 1926. The 220 yard low hurdles in 22.3 a seconds: The- accepted record is 23 seconds, established in 1924. 20/ Necro STAR WANTS NEW a M4 28 34 Williston, a EASTERN NORTH Pid Devils Lake, pcldy. : Grand Forks, pel ” arene En RECORD IN 100-YARD DASH Cleveland, May 27. — (#) — Jesse Owens says he is planning to with- draw temporarily at least, from run- ining the low hurdles, one of the three events in which he shattered world records Saturday at Ann Arbor, Mich. “I don’t think I am going to run 2 the low hurdles any more this yeur,” he said. “Four events make it a pretty hard day and, besides, I would ri like to concentrate now on breaking y] the -100-yard record.” Minneapolis, clear Voorhesd, clear . SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- = = Pet. Huron, clear .. 10 Rapid City, cld: MONTANA gay Havre, clear .. Helena, cldy. Miles City, clear; The above record: fg Amarillo, Tex. clear .. aoe Idaho, eldy. uf saike ee “Al Chicago, Ill., vain Denver, Colo, 70 Des ‘Maines, Towa,’ clay. Duluth 52 Dodge City, Kans., peldy. Eamonton, Alb, clear . Kamloops, B, io clear 83 ard Feit y, Mo., cldy. 7 Los Angeles, Cal Eats 4 Gu r 00 Spokane,” W: Seite Current, 'The 9 Winnipeg, Man., Owens, who faces a hard schedule in the next month, said he intended to do little practing for the next two ip, | Weeks: except in the 100-yard dash. New York ... No. Platte, Nel Okla." City; ©0., Salt Lake GyPt a velay. 80 Santa-Fe, N. Mex., cldy. 8. S. Marie, Mich., rain Seattle, Wash., clear .. Pas, Man., cldy. Winnemucca, N., clear rain . BRESSSSSSSSSSSSSAASSBas When Bugene Scott was married, 08’ Bengal tiger looked on. Scott, an animal trainer, s' his wedding in the tiger's cage so their friends would long remember the ceremony. Suse mansa80% $1,600,000 in RRC direct seed aid through loans made by the RRC, and an additional 8,000 ob- tained feed since February 1, through RRC loans. Seed loans principally were for grains and corn although a consider- able amount included loans for pur- chase of seed potatoes. The cash sales by the RRC were Unconstitutional Other Features Voided ouea invalidated the president's code making authority, the court al- it sub- dent too much power to regulate transportation of oil, the chief jus- tice held the “range of discretion” was the important thing. He said congress had set up the trade commission to determine what are unfair methods of competition and to regulate them. Section one of the recovery act, he declared, was much broader, adding that section three authorized machinery for car- rying out the purposes of section one. Cannot Delegate Powers Mr. Hughes said this “authorized new and controlling prohibitions * * * to bring about rehabilitation of in- dustry” and correction of abuses. ‘He asked if congress could dele- gate to business groups the power to enact laws they deemed advisable. The answer was no, he asserted. Congress, Mr. Hughes emphasized, can not delegate to the president the right to do whatever he thinks de- sirable. He said congress had not specified adequate restraints on the President’s power, ‘and held: “The president in approving a code may add to or subtract from the pro- visions. Section three is without Precedent. It sets up no standards aside from general aims.” The code making authority con- ferred he ruled, is an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority. CONTINUED Senate to Act on Proposed Changes In Triple -A Bill scion” chiefly in the form of add- Chief of the provisions are: 1—To increase the secretary of ‘agriculture’s licensing power over the businesses of handling and process- ing agricultural products. 2—Give him authority to keep an “ever normal granary” by taking up surpluses in good years and dealing .jthem out to farmers in bad years in ‘Both sat about 10 feet before Hughes. Ruling = Complete Defeat In other government circles, it was said, the decision was “a complete y | defeat.” Truck Line Hearings Set for Wednesday Hearings on eight applications for certificates to furnish motor freight service in North Dakota have been set for Wednesday, the state rail- toad commission said Monday. Hearings will be held at Wishek on two applications of the Pfeifle Trans- fer company of Wishek, one for au- thority to furnish interstate service and the other for the vicinity of Wishek. Two other hearings to be held at Wishek are on the applications of Sam 8. , Danzig, to furnish freight service in that vicinity and “I want to read it over and see where it leaves us,” was all Richberg would say to reporters. Conferences were called downtown to see what the administration should ‘The house ways and means commit- tee met to read the decision, man Doughton saying “we can’t tell what to do until we have studied it.” Speaker Byrns expressed the same opinion, and Rep. Cooper (Dem., Tenn.) jocularly remarked that the be epetgae was holding a “post mor- mises from the committee room of those who heard the decison, ‘oom Jacob and Art Krause, Lehr, in thelr | mented community. Other applicants for special certi- ficates and sites of hearings: Kinney Motor Transport, Dickinson; John V. Kuhn, Richardton; Nick Kauts- man, New Salem, and Paul Gordon, Berlin. State Pardon Board To Meet on June 4 The state board of pardons will 02; meet at the state prison June 4, Miss Genevieve Parsons, secretary of the board, announced. Previously the meeting had been scheduled for June 3. A heavy calendar faces the board, which is expected to hear appeals of 16 murderers for freedom. LOWEST PRICES ~ RIVERSIDE GUARANTEED SERVICE Come in... let us tell you ABOUT WARDS NEW LIBERAL CONVENIENT PAYMENT PLAN . Why let badly worn tires spell your DecorationDay MetorTrip? When Guaranteed Riverside Service Costs As Little As 35 America’s Best Bottom Priced Tire “It was no surprise to me.” ‘The court declared congress had not provided sufficient restrictions reagent yd Les sed to guide the president in approving codes. It ruled section $ of the act pro- viding for codes of fair competition was an illegal delegation of power by congress. In the oil cases in which the court held congress had given the presi- the form of benefit payments in kind rather than in cash. $8—Give him one third of the cus- toms receipts, a sum estimated at $100,000,000 a year, to finance mar- keting surpluses abroad and to im- prove the domestic market. 4—Permit him to use part of the $100,000,000 to buy up and retire mar- ginal lands. 5—Presidential imposition of quota restrictions on tariffs on imports in event imports of agricultural commo- dities interfere with the program. Most disputed of the proposed ‘amendments are those to expand the secretary's licensing power. Lembke Names Boards For 3 Slope Counties Hettinger, N. D., 27.) — Personnel of county debt adjustment boards for Adams, Bowman and Slope counties was named by Sixth District Judge F. T. Lembke of Het- Ordered created under a law passed by the last legislature, the boards, composed of members who serve without compensation, named by Judge -Lembke are: Adams—J. B. Baisley, Haynes; Hans Lauritzen, Hettinger; E. A. Safne, Reeder. Bowman—Emil. H. Dahl, Rhame; Otto Schade, pomman; Albert C. An- | ‘Slope Robert, “Rotring, New Eng-|men in’ a tan sedan watching the and; Walter Hill, Bowman, and Johan | school for four or five days. Anderson, Scranton. CONTINUE State and Nation Give AAA Program Overwhelming ‘Yes’ ance of the wheat program are those who expect to be its beneficiaries.” Senator Capper (R-Kans.) said the vote “ought to convince congress that the wheat program has been Relpful and that the wheat farmers undoubtedly are for if.” Rep. Hope of Kansas, ranking Republican mem- ber of the house agricultural com- mittee, saw “no political effect” in the referendum in his state. New Program Four Years AAA officials emphasized that, al- though the new program will be. for four years, a national referendum on it would be called at the end of any year if 25 per cent of the growers in any dhs area petitioned for such a ane the four-year program, the secretary of agriculture would deter- mine the required adjustment—in- crease or decrease in acreage—each year, not to exceed 25 per cent of the base acreage. Benefit payments would be determined at the beginning of each marketing year. The contract would provide for varying a producers’ base acreage to permit adjustment in line with his approved crop rotation and summer- fallow practice, and the contract would permit, within a county, minor adjustments in acreage to encourage sound farming practices. Planting of next year’s wheat crop, officials said, will begin in Aug- ust, and the new contracts must be in the hands of the county commit- tees by July 1. CONTINUED 21 Demands" Listed In Letter Received By Parents of Boy of reaching you” because of “pub- licity beyond our control.” The army of federal, state, county and city authorities seeking the boy’s safe return meanwhile relaxed its Policy of “lying low” until the ab-, ductors release the young member of the Haha ‘Weyerhaeuser lumber famil Post Office Watched Detectives grimly passed through the Tacoma post office in the hope that “the egoist” who sent his first ransom demand by a special delivery letter, might again use this means to communicate with the parents. Two federal agents took up sta- tions in the office of Detective Cap- tain Cliff Osborne to advise on courses of action relating to “tips” in the case, which has aroused the entire Pacific northwest. Late Sunday night, all lights in the square white Weyerhaeuser home overlooking Commencement Bay, were out except in one room on the second story. L. H. Burnett, prominent Tacoma Jeweler, reported he saw @ man in a parked tan colored sedan with Cali- fornia license plates near the Lowell school last Friday, tMe-day the lad disappeared as he was on his way home frorn the school for lunch. Girl Sav Tan Sedan Previously 16-year-old Jean Con- fort, daughter of a Tacoma business jman, had disclosed she saw three In response to directions from “the egoist.” the Weyerhaeusers inserted two notes in the Seattle Post-Intelli- gencer. The first read: “Expect to be ready to come Monday. Answer. Percy Minnie.” This was taken to mean the ransom would be ready or an intermediary would meet the kid- naper or kidnapers. Then the second asking for a new method of communication was in- serted. One police official surmised the hideout of the abductors was at least 100 miles away because the ransom note was not mailed until six hours after the lad disappeared, allowing time to drive to some isolated spot in the mountainous, wooded sections of this area and then return, Part of the kidnap note was report- ed by reliable sources to read: “Slip will mean a slip, we don’t want to hurt anyone.” BASEBALL TU URGED BY SHAPER Local Games Compare Favor- ably With Big League Con- tests, Lions Are Told George F. Shafer, in a talk before the Lions club Monday urging sup- Port for the local baseball team, drew @ favorable comparison between the games seen here in the past three years and those played in the major leagues. Admitting that he was no author- Governor Will Speak At Valley City, Finley ity on fine points of the national pas- time, Shafer quoted critics and point- ed out incidents to strengthen his Gov. Walter Welford will speak to ‘business men of Valley City and Fin- ley Tuesday on current problems of the state government. He will address business men of Valley City at noon Tuesday, and will appear at the Finley chamber of commerce meeting Tuesday at 8 p. m. The following day Welford is sched- uled to appear before business men of Bottineau, as guest of the local chamber of commerce. Steele Woman’s Son Invents New Device Herbert E. Bump, son of Mrs. James Beckwith, Steele, N. D., has invented a new type radio serial which will be manufactured in Fargo, to information received here. The advantage of the new de- vice is said to be its small size and the fact that it cannot get out of or- der. It is only nine inches long, two jinches high and two inches wide. It iso is claimed to eliminate static, prevent distortion and improve long- distance reception. The device consists of a ‘wooden ‘block, wound with wire coils in series and the whole shielded in metal. It needs no “ground” connection. Game Officials Ask Use of ‘Flushing Bar’ “A flushing bar on every mower” is the goal of the state game and fish department in its drive to con- serve wild life. A flushing bar is a device fastened onto the neckyoke of a mowing ma- chine to frighten game birds away from the path of the sickle bar. Sportsmen were urged to construct these bars and ask farmer friends to attach them to their mowers this season and to enlist hardware and implement dealers in the campaign. The bars may be made by fasten- ing-two or three pieces of burlap or twine sacks ‘with a light weight in the bottom to light poles about nine feet long, officials of the department explained. ATTACK GRANTS TO CITIES St. Paul, May 27—(7)—Two cases attacking the government's right to provement scheduled to be heard by the United States circuit court of a] here. Federal grants involved in the two; 7, cases total about $90,000. The plain- | tiffs are Insull operating companies. Nearly every jewel known has been found in the United States. arguments. “Baseball should be as much a pari of the city’s athletic program as bas- ketball, football, kittenball or any other sport,” Shafer said after point- ing out the advantages of a well- rounded athletic program. Continued good teams in the popu- lar summer sport will soon stamp Bismarck as the baseball capital of North Dakota, he predicted. Base- ball should be put on a permanent basis here, he concluded. Shafer was introduced by Jack MacLaughlin, program chairman. The Lions club quartet, composed of Al Simon, Arthur Bauer, Ed Klein and George ——, sang two selec- tions. Several members signified their in- tentions of attending the zone con- ference beginning at 6:30 p.m. (Moun- tain time) next Wednesday at Hebron, ‘the report of the nominating com- mittee, read at the Stag party last week, was re-read. Guests of the club were H. H. Spet+ ton, Wilton; Bigelow Neal and Daniel V. Barnes, Garrison, and Miss Struta of Jamestown, sister of Alvin Struts of this city. The red squirrel is equipped with a set of sensitive nerve bristles, which help guide its step. Some are on the forefeet, some on the stomach, and some on the cheeks, TONY AND GUS! RADIO’S NEW “HIGH SPOT” KFYR 9:15 P.M. (CST). Every night except Seturdey end Sunday Never before has radio offered such 8 combination . . . the magnificent sioging voice of Mario Chamlee, fa- pera star, as cieey pe the human, homely comedy Peer Frame Brown's laughable, lovab! Ferd 'Gus—the Swedish Tornado!” TONIGHT. Brought to you by POST TOASTIES ano POST'S 40% BRAN pene When a cigarette is milder and tastes better —and stays that way pack after pack buy “re-treads” or other infesior quality tires when you can get r- anteed Riverside service and satisfac- tion at Wards low prices!. With Vite- lized tread rubber; center traction grad dij four f tread; Latex cords; plies: 28 2 breaker ard and other quality ALL WARD TIRES MOUNTED FREE! Other Sizes et Similar Sevines! 440-21 = $4.35 475-19 - 5.10 5.00-20- 5.65 450-20 - 460 4.75-20 - 525 525-18 - 6.10 485 5.00-19- 545 5.25-21- 6.70 *x MONTGOMERY WARD 300 Fourth St. Phone 475 Bismarck, N.'D. : 1935, Lieosrr & Bvsas Tosacco Coy.

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