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-- Gi co mat ANON wosasta eR me AR RNR wwanones FDR ceases pte tio pics: WORLD'S LARGEST DISTILLERY GUTTED BY EXPLOSION, FIRE One Missing, 12 Injured as Peoria Suffers $2,700,- 000 Building Loss Peoria, IN, July 23.—(?)—Fire which swept the $6,500,000 Hiram Walker distillery following a terrific explosion was under control Tuesday after causing damage estimated by rompany officials at $2,700,000. Twelve men were injured in the blaze and searchers were seeking John Barton, an employe, missing since the blast in the rackhouse where he was working. Another worker, William Hulsebus, was found after being reported miss- ing earlier. He said he crawled to safety through a hole in a fence. Six million gallons of whiskey were set fire, sending greenish-yellow flames into the sky. The force of the explosion was felt throughout the city. Falls to Pieces Rackhouse number 3, where the blast occurred, was destroyed. The ll-story steel building fell to pieces under the intense heat. Although the fire was under control, firemen said it would be some time before the whiskey burned itself out. Other structures in the plant—said to be the largest distillery in the world—were damaged, but production was continued in unharmed portions ‘Tuesday morning while salvage work- ers attacked the damaged buildings. ‘The cause of the explosion was un- determined. Frank Dornberger, an employe, himself was blown 20 feet from the doorway of the rackhouse into an ex- cavation 20 feet from the blazing building. Originating at rackhouse No. 3, where newly-made liquor was stored for aging, the flames destroyed the building—11 stories high-and 150 by 180 feet in size—then they spread to the cooperage shop and threatened another rackhouse. ¢ ° | Weather Report | » FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- erally fair tonight and Wednesday; slightly warmer | ‘Wednesday, For North Da- \kota: Generally fair tonight and Wed.; slightly warmer Wednes- ay. For South Da- kota: Generally fair tonight and Wed.; lightly warmer fednes- day extreme west portion. For Montana: Generally fair east, occasional thundershowers west portion tonight and probably Wed- nesday; warmer east portion tonight, cooler west portion Wednesday. For Minnesota: Partly cloudy to- night and Wednesday, local thunder- storms this afternoon or tonight in southeast portion; little change in temperature. GENERAL CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is low in all sections, but with the greatest de- ression over the upper Mississippi ‘alley, Canadian ‘ovinces and along the western Rocky Mountain slope (Spokane 29.72). Precipitation has occurred in the upper Mississippi Valley and in the northern Great Plains. Very heavy showers fell in arts of North Dakota. Seasonable emperatures prevail in all sections. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.11. Reduced to sea level, 29.86, Missouri river stage at 7 a. m., 7.0 ‘t, 24 hour change, -0.1 ft. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: ‘Total this month to date ..... 5.43 Normal, this month to date .. 1.63 ‘Total, January 1st to date .... 14.85 Normal, January ist to date .. 10.60 Accumulated excess to date .. 4.25 WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA High- Low- est est Pct. BISMARCK, peldy. ... 87 63 82 Beach, foggy ... 17 56 00 Carrington, pcldy. 94 50 «76 Crosby, cldy. . 72 59 72 Dickinson, cldy. 84 58 00 Drake, cldy. ... 82 58 3.33 Garrison, cldy. . 84 58 «53 Jamestown, pcld: 89 64 12 Max, foggy 81 57 1.75 ‘Minot, cldy. TM 57 3.15 Parshall, clear 55 1.10 Sanish, cldy. 5436. Williston, cldy. 60 74 Devils Lake, clear Grand Forks, pcld Hankinson, cldy. eee flapoleon, c Oake: , cldy. ‘Wishek, cldy. . et at Bet es! Minneapolis, cid; 88 J Moorhead, cldy. a 12 Huron, peldy. .. Rapid chy, Clear MONTANA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. Havre, clear 58.00 Helena, peldy. 82 58 = .00 Miles City, clear 82 60 00 WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS High- Low- est est Pet. Amarillo, Tex., peldy. . 88 68 .00 Boise, Idaho, pela. '. 4 72 (& Calgary, Alb., clear 82 52 00 Chicago, Tll., cldy. 88 76 «00 Denver. Colo., pcldy. 84 58 = .00 Bes Motnes, lows, fain 88 10 38 y, Kans., clear 70 «00 Edmonton, Alb., clear 86 3 a Kansas City, Mo., peldy. 100 .80 .00 os Angeles, Cal., cldy. 76 “60 [00 p Utah, clear . 88 50 .00 No, Platte, Neb, rain.. 92 68 40 Okla. City, O., cldy. 1 00 Phoenix, i» Clear 80 00 Pr. Albert, &., clear 56.00 Qu’Appelle, 8. clear . 72 54 26 q » cldy. . 88 62 00 Bt. Mo., cldy. .. 78 72 32 Balt Lake City, clear .. 94 70 .00 Ganta Fe, N. Mex., clear 84 54 .00 8. 8, Marie, Mich., clear 84 58 00 Geattle, Wash. cldy. .. 86 58 00 Sheridan, Wyo, clear . 84 52 .00 Spokane, wasn’ cist a oe ip Swift Current, 8, peldy. 80 58 .04 Winnemicen i Cat 90 32 00 ‘Winnipeg, Man., by oad Bh 64 00 West Virgin Old and New Mine Communi- ties Contrasted by Hunt After Visit What are Americans every- where thinking, saying, doing in these tremendous times? World- famed Correspondent Frazier Hunt, on special assignment from The Bismarck Tribune and NEA Service, has traveled from coast to coast to find out the answer to this question by the simple, direct means of talking to every- various states to their humblest fellow citizens, The second of 12 arresting articles in Hunt's series, “Listening to America,” follows: By FRAZIER HUNT (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) A mile or two out of Morgantown, West Virginia, lies a narrow draw running for some 10 miles along a reddish-yellow creek that empties into the beautiful Monongahela. Along its brown and scarred hillsides are scat- tered tiny villages of unpainted wooden shacks, filled tg over- flowing with half-hungry, half- clothed, hopeless and helpless bu- man beings. Many are foreign born —others are Negroes. The rest are! the poorest of the poor native whites. } They are the cast-offs of a stranded mining community. A woman stood in the doorway of a crude shack in a settlement boasting the’ name of Jere in this ill-starred Scott's Run. She was tall and gaunt and had no upper teeth. She invited me in, and leaned against | the board wall, papered with news- papers, while I sat in a rickety chair. “My man’s got a bad leg and can’t work any more in the mines,” she ex- plained in a tired monotone. “He gets eight days a month work relief. He gets $2.40 a day, and we get some food from the wagon every two weeks. I got six children but none of ’em are workin’, Times is hard but there don’t seem to be nothin’ we kin do about it.” * * A Study in Contrast Fifteen miles away lies another community. Here in a sweet rolling country new white homes surrounded by green acres dot the countryside. In the center are the community buildings. Its formal name is Artnur- dale Homesteads but it is generally known as Reedsville. A half century of time separates this experiment in living from the drab awfulness of Scott’s Run. It is the distance be- tween the Past and the Future. Here in one of the first houses built in this initial attempt at creat- ing subsistence homes for broken and defeated human beings I talked with @ woman about the same age as the Mrs. Menear I had met in Jere. The chair I sat on was made in the com- munity work shop and was of hickory and mountaineer craftsmanship. The sitting room was bright and checry, and my hostess was neatly dressed and there was an air of pride and confidence about her. “My husband used to be a miner,” she told me. “We lived in Scott’s Run. It didn’t look then like there was any hope for us. Then we got this chance to come here to Arthur- dale and get a home of our own and five acres of land... . It just don't seem possible that we got a home of our own. My! I'd be willing to live here in a barn if I could always send my children to the kind of a school we got here.” And fifteen miles away her old neighbors were existing on charity and living in poverty and ignorance and disease and the defeat that comes with permanent unemployment. ‘Civilized Folks’ “We have to pay $20.55 a month for the next 20 years—that’s $4,500 in all —but jest think what we get for that,” she went on. “We can live like civilized folks, And when that elec- tric carpet sweeper factory gets fin- ished buildin’ my husband will have six months’ work a year. The rest of the time he can spend on the land. Goodness sake! We can’t never eat all the truck we can grow in our gar- den. And we'll have chickens and a cow. Why it’s almost like heaven.” She wasn’t worried that some critics and economists find fault because the homesteads will cost around $4,500 in- stead of, say, $2,500, which they be- lieve is all that these new pioneers in freedom can possibly pay. She only knew that she had been saved from the body and soul starvation of | Scott’s Run, Here at Arthurdale Homesteads .|Were already 88 familes of the total of 190 that will be given a new start 03 |in life when the building is complet- ed. Each of the families had been robbed of all hope when they came. And now for the first time these bat- | tered men and women were learning how to live together in some security and decency. As they work on the new homes or on the roads or com- 06|™unity buildings they are being edu- cated in cooperation and in the lost art of living without greed or fear. The human erosion that was washing away their gentle innate qualities as ;|Swiftly and surely as water erosion was washing away the soil from their old hillsides, has been checked. They aere discovering the way to a new le, Pioneers of Today The next day I rode at 50 miles an hour down the same road my great- grandfather nad driven his horses and @ covered wagon over 135 years before. He was the old pioneer going forth to broad acres and fortune. These men and women back at Ar- thurdale were the new pioneers searching for a tiny home on a bit of ground. They wanted land to live on. They had no thought of fortune. In those 135 years covered wag- ons had become motor cars and mud trails hard roads. But in the same period the wooded slopes and green valley of Scott’s Run had become a hideous scar where human beings lived and thought like animals, Water and human erosion had done their worst. Fifteen miles away some- what the same hope for opportunity that had filled the heart of my beard- ed ancestor was being transmitted to defeated miners of today's America, New worlds are discovered only by seekers, Wednesday: A view of the na- tion from J. A. Kern's grocery store in Ridgefarm, Mll.—and from elsewhere in Illinois and Indiana. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1935 ia Homesteads JOB DODGERS WILL | LOSE FERA RELIEF Supply of Labor for Harvest Ample With Wages $1.41 to $2.25 a Day Washington, July 23.—()—The re- \lief administration Tuesday pursued body from the governors of the j its plan to strike from the relief rolls all persons who turn thumbs down jon jobs. “Any person on relief who refuses a job,” said Lawrence Westbrook, as- |sistant relief administrator, “will be cut off immediately.” The decision was announced after complaints were heard that at Win- chester, Va., and in counties nearby, at by loafers at stores and filling sta- tions, who say they are on relief.” said that while a slight harvest labor shortage was possible in some states “ample.” A “marked increase” in demand for department of agriculture, which an- nounced a survey showed harvest average of $1.41 a day, with a top of $2.25. workers in nearly 20 counties and advised them to go to the fields. North cialized projects. * Farm Holiday Unit Condemns Armory the national administration would “hold back” expenditure of the five the campaign is on.” Gray Urges Unity a day when ail crops would be in- sured. He urged the farm delegates differences,” and unite in an organ- ized movement. Bonzer, Jr., manager of the state mill and elevator, were unable to be pres- Harry Schumacher, secretary to Congressman Burdick, and W. J. Aus- speakers at Monday afternoon's ses- sion, attending the sessions as well as scores of members. from page ons: D Rains Are Seen as In Most Sections bursting. Estimates that flax will further damage, are common and many farmers now expect it to be bilities of record production. Corn Develeps Rapidly well under the high temperatures of the last week. Late at first, it has proaching normalcy for this season. Fear that additional rain would farmers offer jobs and “are laughed Agriculture department officials the supply throughout the country is farm help was reported by the federal hands were offered a country wide Towa stopped ald for able bodied Dakota stopped work on all but spe- from page one ‘ Building Program billion dollar relief works funds “until Gray said he “looked forward” to to “get together” and settle “personal Acting Governor Welford and A. F. ent. tin, assistant attorney general, were More than 200 official delegates are CONTINUE Benefit to Wheat make 20 bushels to the acre, barring their major cash crop with the possi- Corn is in the tassel and has done developed rapidly and now is ap- cause some lodging of wheat were not {realized in this area, a cursory check showed Tuesday. There was not enough wind with Monday’s rains to create that condition. In the Red River valley, however, there was some lodging last week be- cause of wind and rain, This condition could easily be created this year because rust has weakened the straw. In the northern part of the state, Hope Is Born Again Among AMPLE FOOD AND FEED RAISED IN 1994 DROUTH BELT Remarkable Comeback From Disaster Staged; Relief Rolls Drop Washington, July 23—(7)—A re- markable comeback from 1934’s dis- astrous drouth was reported Tuesday by the AAA. Officials said the na- tion practically has recovered from the calamity. A year ago Tuesday, the headlines were telling of scorched plains, dam- aged crops, government purchasing of cattle to prevent them from starv- ie: Now conditions are much bet- er, ‘Thousands of families who depend- ed on government relief for the ne- cessities of life have returned to a self-sustaining bisis, officials said. In addition, the resettlement adminis- tration reports that 290,155 farm fam- ilies have been taken off the relief rolls to be placed in the rural re- habilitation classification. On Feb. 1, 1935, the government’s charts showed a drouth area cov- ering 1,480 counties in 26 states. Now the area has been narrowed to 131 counties in five states—south- western Kansas, eastern Colorado, northwestern Oklahoma, the Texas Panhandle and New Mexico. From June 1, 1934, when the cat- tle buying program of the AAA was begun as a relief measure for drouth areas, until Feb. 1, 1935, the end of the program, the government bought 8,279,000 head of cattle from 696,000 farms in 24 states. Cost of the cattle was $111,541,000, or $13.40 per head, Those cattle found edible were killed and canned with the exception of about 1,000,000 head still held in pastures and ranges. Abundant rains in the spring, good growing conditions, and prospects for ample food and feed crops this year have resulted in predictions by AAA officials that there will be no danger of a food or feed shortage this fall and winter. However, the rural problem is not solved. For example, resettlement total of 825,000 rural families still on relief rolls. ‘ 12,000 NEEDY 10 BE GIVEN WORK BY WPA 90 Per Cent of Persons Work- ing Must Have Been on Relief in May Expenditure of approximately $6,- 000,000 and employment of 12,000 per- sons for works progress projects in North Dakota during the next year is contemplated by the federal gov- ernment, members of the Bismarck Kiwanis club were told Tuesday noon by Dr. Irving Lvine, personnel di- rector for the state WPA. North Dakota tentatively has been allotted a total of $17,000,000 under the emergency relief act of 1935, Dr. Lavine said, but out of this must come funds for the CCC and Bureau of Public Roads, etc, leaving only $6,000,000 for works progress projects. With 12,000 persons sharing in the $6,000,000, the speaker said, the aver- age salary for the. works progress workers will be only $40 per month or $480 per year. This will make it necessary for the sponsors of the va- rious projects proposed to bear at least 95 per cent of the cost of ma- terials to be used in the projects. Relief Requirements Ninety per cent of persons to be employed on WPA projects must 'have been on the federal reltef rolls during last May, Dr... Lavine said, while the ‘other 10 per cent may be unemployed persons not on relief last May. Only one member of each family where inroads of rust have not been as severe as in the southern sections and where the crop still is in the growing stage, the possibility existed that the rain might result in marked improvement of the wheat crop. Drake received the most rain Mon- day with 3.33 inches. Other points receiving more than an inch were Minot 3:15; Max 1.75; Parshall 1.10 and Napoleon 1.05. Bismarck was next in line with .82, No Rain at Beach Only the western edge of the state reported no rain, none having fallen at Beach or Dickinson. Along the eastern border, Fargo received only 12, Parts of Minot residential sections Tuesday are digging out of the mud which was washed upon pavements Monday afternoon by the third heav- iest downpour in the city’s history, is eligible to secure employment on WPA projects at a time, but he also may have other work at the same time, a situation which was not per- mitted under FERA. Ten per cent of workers may be in the “supervisory” class and entitled to receive the pre- of work in their respective districts, Dr. Lavine said. ‘The objective of the relief admin- istration is to spread the work on rather than hurrying the work to finish speedily. Goes Into Detail Dr. Lavine explained the WPA set- up throughout the nation in some de- tail as well as the steps necessary for tain approval of proposed projects through district offices. Dr. Lavine was introduced by A. P. 3.15 inches of rain having been reg- istered during the day. Hundreds of wood paving blocks were washed through downtown streets when the paving swelled and buckled during the deluge. The state golf tournament was interrupted by the near cloudburst. The Mouse river Tose several feet during the afternoon a6 night but still is far below. flood stage. Southwestern Minnesota received an inch of rain and farmers opened shocks of harvested wheat to let them dry. That area reported a bumper crop with wheat shocks so thick in the field a man could jump from one to the other. Told in ‘Polite Way’ To Go Drown Himself Worcester, Mass., Seventeen-year old Esther Magill, designated by authorities as the “un- conscious reason” for a wife murder and absolved of blame, said she told to go drown himself. Sherman, a fellow in the death of his wife, was quoted as answering: will.” urdey night. Assistant District July 23.—(P)— employe in 8/29, a textile machinery factory who is held|pays an expected visit there. “I won't, but maybe someone else Sherman's wife, Alice, was drown-| Dickinson, ed in Lake Singleary at Sutton Sat-|¥. Kurke of Fargo will be the architect Ate taney ite ont id for the new Starke county courthouse, sae See biad cart ot 180.000. Lenhart, who acted as program ch-ir- man, James W. Guthrie, club presi- dent, presided. Carl Russ of Wilton was the club’s visitor. Italy Goes Off Gold To Meet Urgent Debts Rome, July 23.—(#)—Italy went. off {ts old gold coverage requirements Tuesday to meet the “necessity and urgency for procuring means for pay- ea abroad of an exceptional na- -A Yoyal decree, published in the official gazette Monday night, sus- pended a clause in the stabilization law of 1927 fixing the gold coverage of notes and deposits of the bank of Italy and authorized the drop below the legal 40 per cent. TOWNSENDITES TO MEET Fargo, July 23.—(#) — Townsend clubs in North Dakota, Mrs. ©. J. Whempner of Fargo announced Newell P, Sherman, “in # polite way,” | Tuesday, will hold their first state-| sheriff's wide convention at Devils Lake July day after Dr. F. E. Townsend Dr. Prank Dyer, director of the region, will be principal speaker. KURKE GETS CONTRACT » N. D., July 23. Ww. to be constructed of local brick and vailing wage scale for the same type G projects over # 12-month period] Fr sponsors (civil sub-divisions) to ob-|q.0, U. 8. Davis Cup Team Leads Germans, 2-1 Wimbledon, Eng. July 23.—(P)— Wilmer Allison, of Austin, Tex., and Johnny Van Ryn of Philadelphia, de- feated Baron Gottfried von Cramm and Kay Lund of Germany in five sets, 3-6, 6-3, 5-7, 9-7, 8-6 Tuesday in @ Davis cup inter-zone tennis dou- bles match and gave the United States a 2-1 lead over Germany in the international series. The victory gives the American in- ternationalists a decided edge for the final session of the series Wednesday to devermine England’s opponent in the challenge round. Uncle Sam’s forces need only one more victory to advance to the challenge round, FRANCE WOULD GIVE TO ITALY ECONOMIC REIGN IN ETHIOPIA Italian Minister Refuses to At- tend Emperor Selassie’s 44th Birthday (By the Associated Press) Authoritative French quarters dis- closed that France seeks a treaty giv- ing Italy economic domination over Ethiopia in return for a promise by Italy that Ethiopia can have nominal independence. Parisian circles said they visualized this step as the only preventive for war between Italy and Ethiopia. LAWLESS STILL IN RUNNING FOR N. D, GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP Gallaher of Fargo Only Former Titlist Left; Kostelecky Eliminated Minot, N. D., July 23—(P)— Martin “Toodles” Everson gained the quarter-final round Tuesday afternoon, removing James Slat- tery of Minot, 4 and.3. The Fargoan, first of the 16 shot- makers in the second round to complete his match, was aided by an Eagle 2 on the sixth hole, sinking his approach shot, from @ distance of more than 100 yards. Minot, N. D., July 23.—(#)—Five Minoters, four Fargoans, one each from Grand Forks, Bismarck, Devils Lake, Jamestown, Rugby, Sanish and New Rockford went into the second round of play this afternoon at the Minot Country club for the North Dakota state golf championship. Still in the running for the title re- Unquished by Paul Cook, Bismarck, are Tom Lawless, Bismarck; O. Hauge, Rugby; Fred Cummer, Fargo; Don Slayton, Fargo; Herman Dahl, Mi- not; Dr. W. C. Robinson, Minot; James Slattery, Minot; Martin Ever- son, Fargo; Billy Sundahl, James- town; Ray Holt, Sanish; Lane Sco- field, Minot; William Gallagher, Dev- ils Lake; Vern Gallaher, Fargo; Louis Anderson, New Rockford; Raymond C. Dobson, Minot, and Kenneth Rolf, A royal birthday celebration threat- ened a further disruption of the al- ready strained relations between Italy and Ethiopia. The Italian minister to Addis Ababa refused to attend Emperor Haile Sel- assie’s reception matking his 44th anniversary and the Ethiopians inter- Preted this as a slight. At the same time, the public in the Ethiopian capital waved American flags and cheered the United States diplomat who attended the reception. ie pone’ en the report that sever: ous: former Ethiopian slaves would fight for Italy in case of war. Government bonds fell sharply in the Rome stock exchange following former gold coverage requirements to meet the “necessity and urgency for procuring means for payment of an exceptional nature.” France and Great Britain looked to the League of Nations for a solution of. the Italo-Ethiopian problem. Dip- Jomats of both nations conferred as to a course of action at Geneva. Great Britain massed a strong, fast naval fleet ::n the Medit b called ‘in British: women and children with the missionaries in Ethiopia. The missionaries themselves were ordered to concentrate at the Ethiopian cap- ital. VOTERS IN RURAL AREAPAVORED LEVY Complete Returns From Sales Tax Election Show Big Margin in Burleigh Rural Burleigh county gave the state sales tax @ majority of 817 votes in: the special election last Monday, according to data compiled by Coun- ty Auditor Claire Derby. Of the 2,057 votes cast in country precincts, 1,434 were for the sales tax and 617 were against it, The vote by precincts follows, the complete city vote having been pub- lished in The Tribune last Tuesday: Precinct Yes No Sibley Buite Christlania, Grand Forks. Barrett Defaults Of the remaining contestants only Gallaher of Fargo is a former state champion, having held the title in 1933. James Barrett, Devils Lake, another former state champion, de- faulted Tuesday at the midway. mark in his 18-hole match with William Gallagher, his fellow townsman. Scofield sprang a surprise in the forenoon initial round when he elim- inated William Kostelecky, Jr., Dick- inson, twice winner of the state med- al, by & margin of one up. Meeting in the second round this afternoon are: Lawless Meets Hauge . Lawless and Hauge; Cummer and administration officials reported a government action taking Italy off its | Slayton; Dahl and Dr. . Robinson; Slattery and Everson; Sundahl and Holt; Scofield and Gallagher; Gal- oe and Anderson; and Dobson and In the first flight William Kos- telecky, Sr., Dickinson, won from Bob Larson, Fargo, 4 and 3; Henry Hoff- man won from Dr. R. W. Henderson, Bismarck, 2 up. In the second flight Dr. H. J. Weir, Dickinson, won from W,.P. Ridley, and | Pargo,..4 and 3; .0..¢, Croonquist, Bismarck, won from O. b. Short, Val- ley City, by default. Postal Organizations Meet at Fargo in 1936 Jamestown, N. D., July 23—(®)}— Fargo was chosen for the 1935 meet- ings of the North Dakota Rural Let- ter Carriers association and auxiliary, the North Dakota State Association of Letter Carriers and the National League of District Postmasters at Tuesday morning’s sessions of the four organizations. John Swanson, McVille, was elected president of the postmasfers and suc- ceeds H. D. Mack of Dickey while Miss Carol Campion of Willow City was elected secretary-treasurer to suc- ceed D. J. Holt of LaMoure, in the only elections held this morning. Mr. Mack and B. 8. Otis of Wyndmere were named delegates to the national convention. : Visits Hoover; Calls Administration Insane San Francisco, July 23.—(#)—A de- mand for reduced taxes and govern- ment economies “so that the indus- tries, particularly the smaller ones, may survive” was voiced here by Gov. Harry W. Nice of Maryland after & conference with former President Hoover. Governor Nice termed the Democratic national administration “totally insane” and pleaded for a “return to national sanity.” EN ROUTE TO PRISON Tacoma, Wash., July 23.—(?)—Mrs. Yargaret Waley, 19, the girl the gov- ernment convicted of kidnaping 9- year-old George Weyerhaeuser was speeding across the country Tuesday to the federal women’s prison at Mi- lan, Mich., to serve a 20-year sen- tence. NOTICE OF MEETING OF BOARD OF BUDGET REVIEW at the fol- North Dakota: City of Park District of th it: marek, Board of City of Bismarck, Beard of Budget Review will hi fiabllc Rearing em euch, of, sald iminary budget: the hour of two City Hall of said city. M. H. ATKINSON, Clerk, Board of Budget Review, City of Bismarck, Wing—Village .. Totals . a7 ot/§ Arrested in Fargo Campaign on ‘Hotels’ Fargo, N. D., July 23.—()—Con- tinuing their drive against disorderly houses in upstairs hotels, Fargo po- lice and members of the Cass county department raided two places early Tuesday, arresting three men and five women on charges of operat- ing or being inmates of disorderly houses. The raid was the third within two weeks. North Dakota. Obliteration of Roads, New Car Bridge, Planned for North River Grounds Planned projects for the civilian conservation corps camp stationed at Riverside Park have been announced by James W. Guthrie, Jr., park su- perintendent. Embarked on the summer program last week after details of organiza~ tion and setting up camp had been completed, the state parks camp with a strength of 180 men is expected to remain here until October when it doubtless be transferred to a perma- nent winter camp, probably at James- town. Work will be done at Riverside and Pioneer Parks, where work of beau- tifying and opening up the grounds for picnickers was begun last year, Guthrie said. Pioneer park on the north Mis- souri river road will be the scene of the greatest activity, according to present plans which await confirma- tion from the headquarters at Omaha. The obliteration of roads which lead through the park, the construction of @ new automobile bridge over Burnt Creek which will lead to » segregated | parking space for cars, and the con- struction of about 15 picnic units, consisting of a fireplace and a table, are chief among the present plans for the summer's program. ‘Will Obliterate Roads Present roads which lead :through the park will be entirely cut off, Guthrie said. Parking areas for cars will be provided at both ends, leaving the park proper for the picknickers. The new automobile bridge is to be constructed at the site of the pre- sent foot bridge at the north end of the park and space will be left on the west side of the creek for the parking area and an athletic field. A second major item in the planned .Men’s and Young Men's All-Wool Worsted Suits Single and Double-Breasted $19.50 Alex Rosen and Bro. Bismarck a¢ a Mile and Ke? Nas” Pioneer, Riverside Parks Are Center of CCC Work. Frojects will be the back-sloping and sedding of the ditches and the rip~ rapping of the drain gutters beside the roads to prevent erosion. by wa- ter. Ditches which border the roads «. will be sloped off to conform to the contour of the adjacent hills and these slopes will be sodded as com- pletely as possible to give the ap< against further erosion. At the top of the hills which over< look the river, guard rails will be con- structed and regular parking areac provided for the automobiles of ‘sight- S. Palisade Wiil Be Rebuilt The palisade, wooden fence which) once surrounded the Indian mounds) will be entirely rebuilt around the req constructed Indian homes at the top cf the hill at the north end of the park. Bastians, projections in the fence on which Indians used to stand when fighting off enemy tribes, will be spaced at regular intervals. Bismarck’s park service camp is be- ing one of eight stationed in North Dakota, the others being: two at Wat- ford City and one each at Mandan,,, ee Fargo, Larimore and Dun- Working in cooperation with the parks service on the eight major pro= jects is the state historical society with Russell Reid acting as state pro- curement officer for the eight camps. Captain William Bailey is in com- mand of the park service camp, which is unit, No. 2 of the state group, Assisting him are First Lieut. W. A, Moore, camp surgeion, and Second ‘Lieutenants D: A. Lind and Donald Johnston. Schilling "Nianilla C Abs delicate flavor Less in the New AIR-CONDITIONED COACHES |. Now in Service on the North Coast Limited ~ Cool—Clean—No Dust—No Dirt new, de luxe coaches on the COMPLETELY air-conditioned North Coast Limited provide $00. STOCK YARDS, BISMARCK, N. D. ll have our regular sale of all kinds of live stock, stock wil be sold on commission for farmers and ranchers, reply buyers here for good horses and colts, as well as dairy cows and stocker cattle. Bring in any surplus stock you have. You are certain to recei' the highest market prices. eer THE LIVE STOCK MARKET : L. E. Heaton, Jr. the “last word” in travel comfort and luxury at low cost. Form-fitting reclining chairs, ladies’ lounge and dressing room, smoking compartment —every refinement for your pleasure! If you plan a trip anywhere, see Pacific - your ‘Northern Pacific agent. Co ast T. P. Allen in these NEW Bismarck, North Dakota COACHES c tandard Rest While You Ride—Travel by Train Ss ‘BINDER TWINE $4.05 per bale at Warehouse 121 So. Fifth St. ’ Saturday, July 27 Stock Auction Wachter Transfer Corporation Bismarck, N. D. eee pearance of natural slope and insure ;,