Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1935 The Weather Local_thundershowers tonight or ye Friday; cooler. Frida} PRICE FIVE CENTS - Harvest Labor Shortage Looms in N. D. Tugwell Seeks Harvest Loans from Relief Funds SENATORS APPEAL |New Moffit Swimming Pool FOR ROOSEVELT 10 ALLOCATE: MONIE Nye Points Out That Both Farmers and Former Cred- itors Are Helpless RRD WOULD HANDLE LOANS Would Take Care of Those Out- side Classes Already Provided for g ul i 4 E 8 Z Fa S a : il a i i 3 i HT i $8 iH ee & i | i rH A i i i Fe E i : Will Be Dedicated hel FARMERS DEMAND FURTHER EASING OF vzza| DEBT OBLIGATIONS Farm Holiday Association Asks Welford to Restore General Moratorium URGE FREE SCHOOL TEXTS Ball Games, Water Pageant, Swim Contests Planned for Celebration Program Moftit will dedicate its new swim- at a big celebration pro- constructed b; ing contests, airplane flying will feature the full day’s cele- bration program being prepared by & committee of Moffit citizens, headed by Mrs. Faust, in cooperation with \Ben Jacobson, county recreational di- ” Pool Has Natural Slope Riprapped on three sides with stone concrete Want to Work Out Seed and Feed Loans on Highway Relief Projects Demands for further relaxation of farm debt obligations closed the North Dakota Farm Holiday associa- tion convention Wednesday. Acting ford to reestablish the general mora- torium. Resolutions also expressed confi- dence in Governor Welford and re- quested the next legislature to set up a state printing plant to turn out free school texts and state books and forms. Earlier, E. H. Everson of 8t. Charles, 8. D., president of the Na- tional Farmers union, attacked the at least a year’s supply of feed and seed without debt withdrawals, Reimbursement for farmers of. the difference in purchase price and “ac- Some of Teams Entered in Baseball Classic Here tual value” of cattle bought by the| [fh reynment, 4 A investigation of the method of selecting grand and petit juries in North Dakota federal dis- trict court. An opportunity for debtor farmers Ey 7 ce é E 5 a] i | g jee EE gee § il i BE BBE g 3 Hl wEBs k gs if rE fg i g8 f h ‘ E ee af ge County, City Budgets Approved at Hearings Hearings on the preliminary coun- ‘The convention also demanded that “selief be divorced from politics.” The convention turned down sey- the insurgent group led by Jasper Haaland of Grandin, Communist candidate for governor last November, New Rockford as the convention city next June. The recommendation will be acted on by the officers who will also later fix the date. Burnstad Resident Is Taken by Death John C, Reich, 37, Burnstad, died in a local hospital at 10 p. m. Wed- nesday of stomach trouble. Re & Fis Exposing Veterans’ Fraud Washington, July 25—()}—The *G- cént of the war risk insurance claims ISSSTANT ROUSING CHER SUCCUMBS 10 HEART ATTACK HERE Paul Bibow, Stricken Early Thursday, Apparently Re- covers, Then Dies Paul Bibow, 51, president of the Farmers’ State bank of Anamoose and since Nov. 1 executive assistant of the federal housing administration state headquarters here, died at 8:20 +} a.m. in @ local hotel. Seized with a heart attack about 5a.m., Mr. Bibow called a local physi- cian who administered aid. He ap- peared to have recovered when the left at 6 a, m.. but friends dead two hours later. { Never Naturalized But He Gets License | Fairmont, W. Va., July 25.—(P) —8. Lloyd Ganoe, the man who issues fishing licenses asked the applicant if he had ever been nat- uralized. The applicant said “no.” Ganoe said he was sorry he couldn’t issue a license, “I'm more of an American than you are,” the applicant challenged. He was, too—a full-blooded In- 1,000 DROWN IN FLOODED YANGTZE Thousands of Destitute Refu- gees Face Death From Plague, Bandits oo Nanking, China, July 25.—(P)— Urgent appeals for relief descended on the national government Thurs- day from thousands of destitute flood refugees in central and north China, facing death unless aid was forth- coming immediately. | Gov. Chang Chung of Hupeh, hard- est hit of all the Yangtze river prov- inees, reported 46,000 square miles “|was affected by the floods, William -E. Glotzbach, Anamoose, Democratic National committeeman for North Dakota, who happend to be visiting in Bismarck Thursday, was & life-long friend of the dead man. He sald Mr. Bibow was born in Spirit Lake, Ia., but came to North Dakota of the school district there. Besides his wife he leaves two children, Paul, Jr., of St. Paul, and Raphael, 10 years old. He also leaves one brother, Carl Bibow of Fargo, and .|@ sister living near Dickinson. Glotzbach said Mr. Bibow had suf- bor, |fered several heart attacks in recent .|months but had. not sttached any Pegticular significance to them. Plagues and banditry added to the woes of that province of 28,000,000 people. Although semi-official quarters es- timated Hupeh’s dead at 200,000, for- estimate, asserting this figure prob- ably would cover the loss of life in the entire Yangtze river valley. INVITE STRATO FLIGHT Rapid City, 8. D., July 25.—(?)— Rapid City has decided to invite the | National Geographic Society and the army air corps to base another stra- tosphere expedition here this fall. Of- |ficials assured proper financial sup- port. 1 eee PREMIER’S NEMESIS TO WED Edmonton, Alta., July 25.—(4)—The Edmonton Journal states Vivian Mac- Millan, who sued former premier J. E. Brownlee of Alberta for seduction a year ago, will be married Aug. 7.to | zeae Sorenson, Danish-Canadian storekeeper, eign relief workers discounted this! T/SUNDAHL LEADS 2 UP AT END OF 27 HOLES IN MINOT TOURNEY Paul Cook Posts 147 as He Qualifies for Pine-to-Palm Honors Sundahl was 3 up with 4 to go at 3 p.m. | Paul Cook, five times North Dakota golf champion, posted a qualifying score of 70-77—147 in the Pine to Palm tournament at Detroit Lakes, Minn., Thursday to qualify for the championship flight, the Associated Press reported. Earlier in the week Cook defaulted to Tom Lawless of Bismarck in the first round of play over the Minot Country Club links where the 1935 state championship was being decided ‘Thursday afternoon. At the end of the first 27 holes of the Minot tourney, Billy Sundahl of Jamestown, northeastern North Da- kota champion, was 2 up on Martin “Toodles” Everson of Fargo. Through- out the play Sundahl had maintained @ two to three hole advantage. The Detroit Lakes Country Club has | allowed North Dakota tournament players to use the same qualifying scores in the Pine to Palm because of the conflict in dates. Other notables qualifying Thursday included D. N. ; Tallman and Edgar Bolstad. coast. une. Hunt has buried his own attempted to weigh the merit or Pictured above are four of the eight Junior American Legion baseball teams which will take part in the state tournament, opening here at 9 a. m, Friday. At the top left is the Bismarck team and at the top right is Har- vey’s entry. The Jamestown team is shown in the strip while immediately below it is Enderlin. The teams from Fargo, Minot, Grand Forks and New Eng- land are not shown here. Members of the respective teams shown in the pictures are: Bismarck, left to right: Front row— Pete Fischer and John Entringer; sec- ond row—Douglas Stratton, Jack Bowers and Donald Larson; third row—Herbert Asselstine, John Abbott, Maynerd Entringer and Gregory Dahlen; back row—Ronald Erickson, Bud Beall, Bob Peterson, Andy Gar- ness, Jim Burckhardt and Myron H. Anderson, team manager. Coach T. E, Simle and Kenneth Johnson, an- other player, are not shown in the picture. Members of the Harvey team shown, left to right, are: Front row— Clark, Leintz, Hamer, Vogel, Thorn- ton and Cook. Seated in front is Mascot Crawford. Back row—Coach Sheaf, Myklethun, Roberts, Boyum, Kuntz, Waydeman and Manager Her- Andy Peterson are not shown in the picture. Jamestown, left to right—George Griffin, manager; Alving Vessy, as- sistant manager; Homouth, Brugman, Hinspurger, Butts, Vessy, Clark, Baker (Capt.); Bekken, Schmidt, Lidstrand, Callings, Steele, Ruddy, Deery, Krue- ger and Coach Ernest Gates. Enderlin, left to right, front row— L, Janz, R. Henkel, E. English, C. Bell. Standing — Coach P. Sandell; B. Scheie, L. Flynn, Delbert Muth, M. Putnam, W. Sly, R. Oyen, Delvin Muth, V. Bolstad, R. Peffer, H. Hem- sing and L. Molland. {Dollar Is Still 4 | Lucky in Court | New York, July 25.—(#)—Wil- lam Hartigan was fined $3 for a traffic violation. He had just $3 with him—two paper dollars and an old silver dollar. “I hate to part with this,” he said as he drew the money forth. | “This silver dollar has brought me good luck for many years.” Magistrate Aurelio was sympa- thetic enough to reduce the fine to $2. Daniel Shanks, Early Hannah Settler, Dies Hannah, N. D., July 25.—()—Dan- jel Shanks, 77, early settler in Cava- Mer county, died Wednesday at his ;home here following a long illness. ; Born in Canada, he homesteaded here in 1883.’ Later he operated a livery stable and more recently work- ed for an oil concern. Funeral services were held Thurs- day and burial was in the cemetery here. Survivors include a son, Shanks of Fargo. 33 DIE IN MINE BLAST Calcutta, India, July 25.—()— Thirty-three persons were killed and 43 injured Thursday in a mine dis- aster near here. R. G. You’re Missing Something--- If you haven’t been reading Frazier Hunt’s series of articles entitled “Listening to America,” you should be. They represent the unbiased findings of a trained and famous reporter assigned to make an impartial survey of what he sees and hears in all walks of life during a rambling 14,000-mile tour from coast to ‘These articles are presented at their face value and do not reflect the beliefs or editorial opinion of The Bismarck Trib- views. He has not, for instance, lack of merit of various New Deal enterprises but has given @ broad picture of the average citizen’s reactions to them. The fourth of Hunt's series of 12 articles ap- pears on page 3 today. He takes you to the Land of the LeFol- lettes. Tomorrow he visits Minnesota, our sister state. zog.- Coach James Clark and Player | labor. LABOR DEMANDS IN VALLEY HEAVY AND DIFFICULT T0 FILL If Alt Relief Clients Get Jobs Dearth of Workers May Be Eased EXPECTED TO ACCEPT WORK Officials Anticipate Farmers Will Pay Prevailing Wages in Fields Prospect of a shortage of harvest labor looms in North Dakota, even with the closing down of FERA work relief projects to release men for work in the fields. ‘This was the general opinion ex- pressed Wednesday at a conference of government re-employment and relief leaders with Gov. Walter Welford and Commissioner uf Agriculture and La- bor Theodore Martell. Already the labor demand in the Red River valley is heavy and hard to fill, Fay Hunter, associate federal director of re-employment, told the meeting, and che prospect is that the need for help will develop rapidly in the western part of the state during the next week or 10 days. Anticipation of this situation led recently to the announcement by E. A. Willson, FERA administrator, that all work-relief projects would be shut down Aug. 2, with the exception of white-collar, canning, sewing and gardening enterprises, to release men for work in the harvest fields, May Solve Problem It was estimated at the conference that, if all men now on relief get har< vesting jobs, the labor situation will be considerably ameliorated if not solved entirely. Willson Thursday supplemented his recent announcement with the state- ment that all able-bodied men re- leased from relief work will be ex- pected to accept private employment it offered them and that any who re- fuse offers of farm work will be re- moved from the relief rolls and fed- eral relief denied them. In cases where farmers lack cash to hire. help until part of the crop is marketed, Willson, said, the relief administration will provide for the e- borers and their families until they can be paid and support their families through their own earnings. Acc Prevailing Wage Willson said it must be understood, however, that farmers will pay the “prevailing wages” for harvest and threshing help and that relief clients are not expected to accept employ- ment at less than the prevailing wage. What the prevailing wage is or will be, however, was not stated at the conference. This will be revealed by further developments, such as thé volume of work and the demand for Hunter said many relief clients al- ready have registered with the Na- tional Re-employment service and that all others are invited to do so. Such registrations should be made with the agents of the re-employment service in their respective counties. The service is free to both laborers and employers und farmers are asked to file their requests for help with the bureau as soon as they know what they will be. TWO GYPSY GIRLS HELD FOR ROBBERY Pair Arrested at Herreid, Af- ter Robbery in Parke Store at Sterling Two gypsy girls, who late Wednes- day are alleged to have robbed the Parke general store at Sterling and performed some neat sleight-of-hand to extract several bills from Mile’s Parke’s wallet, were arrested at Her< ried, 8. D., early Thursday morning and brought to Bismarck to stand trial. Recovering his bill fold after it hao been snatched from his pocket as he stooped over to get some merchandise, Parke said he ordered the girls out of the store only to discover that several bills had been taken from his wallet and an additional sum was missing from the cash register, Parke set out in pursuit of the gyp- sies, who were traveling in two cars, after a hurried check revealed ap- proximately $51 missing. The gypsies eluded Parke somewhere between Sterling and Hazelton, Notified of the robbery by Sidney Parke, owner of the store, Burleigh county authorities in the Bearsh whieh came t'an ard st Her rele Young Parke identified the twe NANCY CARROLL IN RENO Reno, Nev. July 25.—(%)—Nancy Carroll, motion picture actress, was at a Reno hotel Thursday with the announced purpose of establishing a residence for a divorce from Thomas Mallory, former’ magazine editor, WALLACE ASKS SUPPORT