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Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday, possibly thundershowera, ESTABLISHED 1878 LANGER AND FARGO MAN HURT AS AUTO IS SHOVED IN DITGH ‘ © Buffers Slight Concussion, Dis- , located Shoulder and Inter- hal Injuries; Improves Fast HAPPENED SOUTH OF ANETA (ruck Forces Machine Off High- way; Victims in Valley City Hospital } J ‘was resting comfortably in a Valley City hospital at 3 p. m. Monday, a lit- tle more than 12 hours after ‘he had been in an automobile accident 10 miles south of Aneta. His companion, ©. W. Litten, Fargo securities sales- man, escaped with minor injuries. Medical examination early Monday revealed Langer’s right shoulder dislocated, his head badly bruised accident and left immediately for Valley City. After a telephone conversation with GRAND FORKS BOY IS ORITICALLY INJURED COOK DEFAULTS AS crowned in Minot Thursday, for Paul Cook of at Monday BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1935 But He Will Carry 40 States, Says Scribe After Long Trip New Deal Will Weather '36 Political Storms, Frazier Hunt Declares; Court Reverses Do Little Harm to Administration A world-famous writer has been “Listening to America.” Trav- 33 representative states on assignment from The Bis- ‘Tribune and NEA Service, Frasier Hunt has heard and faith- recorded the voice of the nation. The 12 daily articles which or this newspaper afford an epic, enlightening word- gether dee tored Americans everywhere thinking, saying and doing in eS times. Here is first article in this important ser! - By FRAZIER HUNT (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) bag for 1936. pe enn eee ee eee ce Huey Long has lost two-thirds of his strength the past six months. The magic that was Father Coughlin is greatly lessened. The threat or promise of « strong third party in ‘36 ® myth. ~ g ef quarters of the farmers affected by the crop a reduction are for AAA. ‘The average citizen feels the Republican party has neither a cause nor a leader. The unreasonable bitterness against Hoover still persists. Se Salle a Bard ro ch Roose- vel The “Haves” are turning against Roosevelt on aes of the prospect of higher and higher taxes, but | agree, the “Have Nots” are Labor feels that it has been sold down the river on —— Frasier Hunt of | & boat called Recovery, but it only partly blames the president. Vets Are Calmer eer Veterans’ resentment against the bonus veto is already lessening and Lene by election time will largely disappear. Except for certain sections of the south and a few city areas the relief has been handled with little graft or inefficiency. ‘The four billion eight hundred mil- lion public works and relief fund creates, even with the best of, inten- tions, a great reservoir of political The ‘advancing machine constantly checks the most determined efforts to end unemployment. America is faced with the perman:. ent problem of giving federal and state work and aid to from three to five million people. For the great mass of common cit- izens Roosevelt no longer has wings but they still look upon him as the one man who js daring to try to help them all. The Voice of America ‘That, in a few sentences, gives my round | impressions of what America is think- ing, based on 14,000 miles of rambling by motor through 33 states. I have talked to literally hundreds of people of every kind and status, ranging from the president of the United States to colored bootblacks. I was just starting from W! on this long trek when I hailed a friend in the department of agricul- ture who had only that day returned from a study of the dust storm coun- oy I asked him how things really “The only real trouble with America is Washington itself,” he answered with a broad grin. “Congress and all the hangers-on here are worse than an old ladies’ sewing circle.” I started westward with that partic- ular voice ringing in my ears. Faith in the Future TOM LAWLESS GETS CHAMPION 3 DOWN ~Croonquist “Also Defaults as Fred Cummer Shoots Par Golf Minot, N. D., July 22—(7)—A new state golf champion will be Cook, five times state champion in the last six years, conceded the match to Lawless at a time when it ap- peared the would win the llth hole and add another hole to his over the defending title- Blinding rain, which at 2:30 p. m. than two inches, halted tourney Monday after- | We & late start was made experienced social worker, deep in the tragedy of these sub-marginal lands, said to me with a look in her 5 eyes: “I have great faith in Amer- san met ANE pas Kenneth Rolf of Grand Forks, run- {a's future. If we have the courage o Mi ing when the bicycle (Der; UP for the medal, took out Charles | 15 make haste slowly, we can build he was riding crashed into the side |Ande"#0" Of Minot, one up, in nine |nere « beautiful new civilization that | of an automobile on = downtown | holes, st which point the Minoter de-|can challenge all the dictatorships in 5 . oi Q the world.” % a Tent dias ot Nae can ee Lawless, conqueror of Cook, has re- |" as an oil station in @ cross roads & Albert Gislason of Roseau, Minn.,| Sided in Bismarck for s year, having on the Lincoln highway in [| When Gislason turned a corner. ‘The | moved ‘0 she Capital City srom Gouts | middie Ohio a bright young man about + Barletta fang nts been porns Bu | Rd Wr ceo = Rech by a physician |Daxota and several times has been -fR i disclosed a broken leg, broken arm/ northern South Dakota cham relief but they're making it harder |; and severe lacerations on his face and Sete hols tisteh war, eseavicted |f0F, em all the time. ‘You otta hear jh REE ctieiotf oo-|anaay morning before henry ran [SEAT co aaah ered following an earller shower that left !¢ fata ies Wek Lee toe fairways and greens in a sodden con- |i. sti pienty hard but I don't know dition, hated ae ore Roosevelt can do, Reckon Blattery of Minot defeated R. Blath- | What more Huossrer® © < . erwick of Van Hook, 5 and 3, to ad- a bactern irtisa a eciaceener i vance to the second Tuesday cided hs his views: “L ee "DENIED NEW ‘TRIAL |S# ees unmount “au iene Billy Sundah! of Jamestown, south- EN ED NE ag ere be te tet mathe Repub Lead “ ure {ould do him much good. Way 1 size at the ninth hole. Vern Gallaher of | VOU C0 ott ris that only # miracl Napoleon, N. D,, July 22—(@)—| Fargo, 1933 champion, was four up in| OP “ae esto" estdent,” Counsel for Mrs, Giadys Gibson, con-|his match with H. Allen of Grand |©#” delet Te Pitsp cee, victed of husband murder and sen-| Forks; Lane Scofield of Minot was ‘Thirty miles north of Madison, Wis- tenced to 15 years in the state prison, | leading William Kostelecky, Jr, of] 31, master farmer said to me: Monday contemplated an appeal to| Dickinson, medalist for two succes- |Tv ror Hoover—and the LaFol- the supreme court after District Judge | 8ive years, by one hole; James Bar- latite’ but T acct o¢ AtER’O Tots tar George McKenna’s denial of a new|Fett of Devils Lake was one up on| iri Out to. He's doing every- trial. Mrs. Gibeon is out on bond, | William Gallaher of Devils Lake; Rev. that he ean with tough Joo” pending the sppeal. N. E. Hanson of Minot had Louis An- one ie aime eee a _ fl derson of New Rockford three down; | | Tn Minneapdlls She & of s farm Martin Everson of Fargo was two up | Peper made plete lig hos in his battle with Herman Nitsch of |MOrs more or ve slong Minot; E. O. North of Grand Forks|!2 order to get their share of the wo holes federal money. ... When F. D. R. is was two to the good in his eu a4 match with Dr. Ward Robinson of |°f the air he & preacher w! Minot; Don Slayton of Fargo was|St0Ps Deople stop be- ‘Winnle Lee of Minot; C. L. |Iieving in him so ardently. “Aged fessor in the Holler of Minot and O. H. Auge of| At Ames, Iowa, # professor Rugby were tied; and Ray Power of | College of agriculture, who goes about Portland was one hole ahead of Ray-|this pivotal state, said: “Right now I mond Banish; and would say that 80 per cent of the ee j ob G. Towa are behind the 3 A’ Power of Minot was four up in his/fatmers of are ‘3 match with Herman Dahl, also of|@d consequently behind Roosevelt Minot. and Wallace.” .—(?)—Saturday’s|nominate an Eastern conservative it Soioed | RI Be toes pus oe Boe Bt ie Party. Their platform must definitely hel ‘state that the budget must be balanced (Continued on Page Six) At Morgantown, West Virginia, an/ N.D. FARM HOLIDAY BISMARCK MEETING Militant Organization to Con- sider Steps to Aid Dis- tressed Farmer FEAR FORECLOSURE FLOOD Reno, ‘Everson, Bonzer, Hopton Will Address Three-Day Convention North Dakota farmers, some 1,500 strong, are expected in Bismarck Monday for the annual convention of ciation. Sessions will open at 3 p. m., in the World War Memorial building with Harry Peterson of Plaza, first vice president, as chairman in the absence of President Usher L, Burdick. Questions of primary import that will confront the convention, accord- ing to H. R. Morgan of Walcott, state manager, are largely those of finan- cial distress the farmer of North Da- kota faces. It is certain, convention leaders agree, that the group will adopt reso- lutions similar to those passed at a five-state conference if St. Paul June 20 asking the federal government to allow farmers to repay their seed loans bushel for bushel. And, anticipating a flood of mort- gage foreclosure actions this fall de- spite the legal moratorium, the con- vention undoubtedly will adopt a res- olution asking congress to pass some law that will protect the mortgaged farmer against over-aggressive cred- itors. Predicts ‘Hell to Pay’ “There will pe hell to pay this fall,” oné prominent holiday leader said, “if grasping creditors attempt to fore- Close-mortgages ‘wajustly. “The hi day association believes in fustioe for both creditor and debtor and will at- tempt to arbitrate peaceably any foreclosure actions called to its at- tention.” Presence of a group of members of the United Farmers league.from the northwestern part of the state, an organization of farmers with Com- munistic beliefs, foreboded trouble too, a leader Geclared. “‘It, is no secret,” this man said, “that the United Farmers faction is attempting to seize control of the holiday asso- ciation.” Featuring the speaking program Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday will be Milo Reno, president of the na- tional association; E. H. Everson, ni tional president of the Farmers Union; A. F. Bonzer, Jr., manager of the state mill and elevator, and Har- old Hopton, state insurance commis- sioner, Resolutions, legislative, by-laws, auditing and finance committees will be named by the convention before Mayor A. P. Lenhart welcomes the group to Bismarck. Morgan will give the response. (Continued on Page Six) the North Dakota Farm Holiday asso- |. PRICE FIVE CENTS 40 Hurt in Bloody Strike Battle at Sioux Falls Plant TRANSIENT INJURED, DOWN JAILED AFTER BEER TAVERN BRAWL Bismarck Man Held on $1,500 Bonds Awaiting Hearing on Assault Charge One man was in the transient bu- reau hospital and another was lodged in the Burleigh county jail Monday as the result of a brawl at the Fin- layson beer tavern on the south side jate Saturday-night:— Conrad Dohn was being held at tiie county jail on $1,500 bonds for an alleged attack on Martin Luyben, a transient, who was knocked uncon- scious in the battle and received se- vere gashes about his head and neck. Preliminary hearing for Dohn, set for Monday, will be continued until later in the week because of the seri- ous nature of Luybens injuries, H. R. Bonny, justice of the peace, said. At- tending physicians stated that Luyben would not be in condition to appear in court until late this week or early next week. According to reports of witnesses, made to local police, Dohn hit Luyben during a heated argument and the transient fell to the ground, striking his head on the sidewalk, Called to the scene, police found Luyben lying unconscious where he had fallen and took him to the tran- sient hospital. Dohn was placed un- (Continued on Page Six) 11 DROWN IN SINKING Allenstein, Germany, July 22—(7)— Eleven passengers drowned Sunday when a ferryboat sank in the Dare- thener lake, east Prussia. Ten passen- gers survived, Should a girl give up a job she en- joys, that is well-paid and offers pleasant surroundings because her fiance insists upon it? Or should she give up the fiance? Jo Darien, heroine of “Sun-Tan,” the new serial Jo, who is 19 and just finishing her first year in college, learns that her small marine supply store, aoe oS of $10 2 week, mite summer serial. Likes Her Work But Jealous «|Fiance Insists She Give It Up JO DARIEN return. Two days later she sets out for Crest Lake Inn. Whet happens there, where Peter Fragonet, movie actor, appears on the scene, where Douglas Marsh’s eccen- tric mother makes troublc, and where Jo almost loses her life in an over- turned sailboat makes “Sun-Tan” one of the most exciting serials ever writ- ten, Jo is a thoroughly likeable, under- standable heroine. Nineteen years old, with blond hair and clear olue - ;eyes, she has a happy disposition and refuses to be downed by i ga “Sun-Tan” is in every sense sas to page 3 Det jand begin reading it-today, The strike of workers of the Morrell Packing Plant at Sioux Falls, 8. D., reached a climax when strikers and non-strikers engaged in a pitched battle out- side the plant gates. Fists of iron and missiles of stone were hurled as heads cracked and bones were broken. This picture shows groups of the opposing fac- tions engaging one another in hand-to-hand combat. It was estimated that upwards of 40 per- sons, including two union leaders, were injured before order was re- stored.—(Associated Press Photo.) Late News Bulletins (By the Associated Press) Washington.— Chester C. Da- vis, the AAA administrator, said today that mounting court actions against processing taxes would not affect crop control programs now in effect or those for next year. POSTS STILL GROUNDED Los Angeles, July 22—()—Although Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Post had planned to leave Monday on their Alaskan- Siberian flight, they may not get away until later this week. Williston, N. D.—News of the death of David Calvin Campbell, 83-year-old Texan and former Prominent North Dakota rancher, was received here. Campbell sold out his ranch, the Long X, located south of here, in 1897. Washington—North Dakota's school districts Number 110, Wheatfield township, today was allotted $2,045 for a school building as one of 15 non- federal relief projects for $893,470 ap- proved Monday by President Roose- velt. Belfast, Northern Ireland—A reign of terror arising from anti- Catholic riots in northern Ireland and resulting in violent anti- Protestant reprisals in the Free State, threatened Monday to plunge all Ireland into religious strife. Washington—The Warren po- tato control bill was added by the senate Monday to the ad- ministration’s AAA amendments. Berlin—Wilhelm Frick, minister of the interior, ordered all Ger- man state governments Monday to forbid all organizations of confes- sional (Lutheran and Roman Catholic) youth to wear distinctive garb or insignia, or to march to- gether. 102 RESCUED New London, Conn., July 22.—()— The little steamer Yanree, a hole stove in her starboard hull, was towed to a pier early Monday after her 102 passengers were rescued in the dark and fog from the rocks of New Lon- don harbor, The steamship ran hard aground Sunday night. SENATE VOTES FOR VALIDATING OF CROP CONTROL CONTRACTS Also Favors Permitting Presi- dent to Place Quotas on Farm Imports eres ‘Washington, July 22.—(#)—Moving ;to protect the administration’s farm {Program against court attacks, the senate Monday voted to validate crop jcontrol contracts between the agricul- ture department and farmers. ,of the AAA bill the last vestige of price fixing provisions by adopting an amendment by Senator Byrd (Dem., Va.). Another amendment was attached by Byrd requiring that no marketing : agreement may be entered into among handlers without the consent of two- thirds of the producers. Prompted By Ruling ‘The amendment to validate crop control contracts, under which the government has agreed to pay farmers an additional $700,000,000 was pro- posed by AAA officials. They said it was prompted by the decision of the circuit court of appeals at Boston, which held the contracts involved too great a delegation of authority to the secretary of agriculture. ‘The price fixing provision stricken out of the bill would have permitted the secretary, as part of a market agreement, to prescribe the minimum price at which handlers should pur- chase certain commodities from farm- ers. The commodities, which are yet sub- Ject in the bill to other phases of the marketing agreement program, in- cluded: Milk, pecans, walnuts, tobacco, vege- tables (except beans), soybeans, naval stores and fruits. To Impose Restrictions By a vote of 60 to 17, the senate today adopted an amendment by Sen- ator LaFollette (Prog., Wis.) permit- ting the president to impose quota re- strictions on agricultural imports to preserve price gains achieved by the domestic farm program. Senators Frazier and Nye of North Dakota and Schall and Shipstead of Minnesota all voted for the amend- ment. Under the LaFollette amendment, the president would be empowered, after an investigation by the tariff commission, to impose quotas on farm Products of any nation. Any country which voluntarily restricted its ship- ments to this country to 50 per cent of the 1928-1933 average would not be subject to the quota restriction, how- ever. DIZZY IS SORRY 8t. Paul, July 22—(7)—Dizzy Dean| tha: is sorry. In a letter today to George Edmond, sports editor of the St. Paul Dispatch, Dizzy said he “made a big mistake” on his recent appearance here with the St. Louis Cardinals when he refused to pitch or even “take a bow” in an exhibition game ‘with the St. Paul team of the Ameri- can Association. Soviet Ship’s Hop Over Roof Of World Veiled in Mystery Moscow, July 22.—(#)}—The when and where of a@ flight by a Soviet “mystery” plane over the roof of the world—from Moscow across the North Pole to San Francisco—became mys- teries in their own right Monday. A military air field commander an- nounced Sunday night that the ship would take off on the spectacular 6,250-mile non-stop flight at 7 a. m. Monday, 11 p. m., Sunday, (central standard time), but today all efforts to obtain information concerning the n|projected departure proved fruitless. Not only the plans for the take-off, but even the whergsbouts of the plang were kept strictly secret, government officials asserting merely that the de- fate 6 ‘the Gaacvure would Be she nounced at the proper time. ‘Ambassador William C. Bullitt, who has been given to understand that he will be notified in advance of the take-off so that he may be pres- ent, said he has received no notice of an early flight. The only clue to the disappearing | day ship came from a watchman at the Shelokova Military field, 25 miles | me Rae Fins eo sais Be saw 18 tabs to the air Sunday morning. plane has been making ae Nights at different Uelds, Quickly the senate then struck out | Borah succeed Frazier-Lemke Act Hopes Revived Former Governor Not Seriously Injured in Car Crash Roosevelt Losing Strength 4,500 EXPECTED AT BORAH'S INFLUENCE NOW BELIEVED BACK OF REFINANCE ACT Democratic Leaders Do Not Think Proposed Lawg ; Will Be Acted On il SEE ADJOURNMENT AUG. 15 Backers Lack Seven Names to Force House Vote on Farm Debt Plan Washington, July 22.—()—Demo- cratic leaders Monday refused to take seriously the statement by Senator Borah that inflationary groups behind the Patman bonus and Frazier-Lemke farm mortgage refinancing bills would combine to attach these $5,000,000,000 Proposals to the administration tax bra and keep congress here until Nov. * anaes Robinson, the party leader, said he did not believe these measures could be disposed of this session. He and Senator Barkley (Dem., Ky.) stuck to their previous statements that congress should adjourn by Aug. 15. Saying “I do not think these meas- ures should be attached to any bill as amendments,” Robertson added: Treat “If they are to be considered they should be treated separately and I do not see how they can be taken up and disposed of this session.” Barkley said: “I think there is not the slightest likelihood that congress will be in session until Nov, 1. Prac- tically every important measure has either passed one or both houses and ppeetner ahead cieateredivers ottn realizes it is the desire of to adjourn as soon as pos- sible and I can see no reason why i should be in session later than Aug. 16.” ‘The announcement of Senator Borah this question in the minds of many “Will the Roosevell tam be scrapped for this session % the beck- plan to issue up to $8,000,000,000 in new money to refinance farm indebted- ness at low interest and the Patman plan, already defeated once this ses- sion, to pay the bonus in about $2,- 000,000,000 worth of new currency. The statement was interpreted as placing Borah in the forefront of the leadership for the two measures. Since many administration leaders were out of town or unavailable during the week-end, observers trying to figure out what action the administration might take had to depend on past utterances. President Critical They recalled that in vetoing the Patman bill earlier this session Presi- dent Roosevelt spoke critically of “printing press money.” In the furore over other measures, the quiet but flerce struggle over the Frazier-Lemke bill has received com- paratively little attention. This bill is distinct from @ mortgage moratorium measure of the same name which the supreme court ruled unconstitutional. It would buy up outstanding farm mortgages and reissue them to farm- ers in the form of 47-year amortization loans. The payments on these loans would be one and a half per cent a year interest, and one and a half per cent on the principal. With the bill pigeon-holed by the house rules committee, its backers have been struggling to get 216 sig- Hog Slaughter Will Be Smallest in Years Washington, Suly 2: 22.—()—The de- peraint of agriculture said Monday that inspected hog slaug! for current marketing year be smallest in 25 years and indications are that slat iglee i é Period in than 30 years, it added. Kidnaping Thought Intimidation Move effort to force him to modify the state's anti-church laws. Gunmen Loot Nudist Colony, Get $7,000