The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 14, 1935, Page 3

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YOUNG LEAGUERS 70 | FORM ORGANIZATION INSTATE SATURDAY Chairman Declares New Group to Support Endorsees of 1936 Convention —______. Marking the first sizeable political ‘gathering of its kind in North Dakota this year, approximately 500 young men are expected to meet at James- town, Oct. 19, to organize the State Young Nonpartisan’s league. Formation of the state organiza- tion at the meeting will be the first time such a movement has been at- tempted in the state, its leaders * State and national political leaders have been asked to appear as speak- ers at the conference, to which have been summoned 36 recently-appointed county chairmen, representing young nonpartisan groups én various com- munities. ‘The conference has been called by James L, Brastrup of Courtenay, chairman. A complete slate of state Officers will be elected .at the con- ference. Welford to Speak Governor Walter Welford will be one of the speakers. Other state officials also scheduled to address the organ- ization are: W. J. Flannigan, state highway commissioner, who will speak on “Organization Work”; Harold Hop- ton, state insurance commissioner, on. The comradeship which long has existed between Hollywood's famed boy star. Freddie Barthol mew, and his guardian-aunt, Miss Millicent Bartholomew. as revealed in this intimate studio lunch scene, was threatened by reports that the lad’s regain his custody. Miss Bartholomew has announced she will seek permanent custody of Freddie, 11, for whom was barents in England may move to ie has cared since he TEDDY ROOSEVELT IS) AT ODDS WITH BORAH ON CAMPAIGN ISSUE Does Not Think 1936 GOP: Stand Should Be Based on ‘Trust Busting’ | New York, Oct. 14.—()—Col. Theo- dore Roosevelt disagrees with Senator William E. Borah that the 1936 Re- publican presidential campaign should ‘be based on a “trust-bugting issue.” “There are others that will over- shadow it,” wrote the prominent east- ern Republican to the Idaho senator. His statement was in response to a that the “question of monopoly lies if the base” of campaign issue-mak- 1g. See Borah ‘Feeler’ Some political quarters in Wash- ington were quick to read into the exchange of correspondence a desire of the senator, not an avowed candi- date for the Republican presidential eastern party leaders. Tam a firm believer in the established “I believe that the Republican party Calcium Chloride to Protect N. D. Traffic Calcium chloride-treated gravel .will be spread on icy pavements of North |Dakote this winter to aid in reducing danger to moving traffic, ‘W. J. Flan- nigan, state highway commissioner, announced Monday. The compound is being prepared at Valley City and Fargo for distribution Milwaukee Priest Will Be One jon dangerous curves and hills. The of Youngest Bishops in United States chemical reaction melts ice. The department plans also call for use of the chloride mixture in clay and gravel to make future roads dust- less, The chloride absorbs moisture Milwaukee, Oct. 14—(?)—Members |from the air and acts as # binder. woe letter from Senator Borah suggesting nomination, to learn the views of “I entirely agree that monopolies are evil,” Colonel Roosevelt said, “for County officials at Harrison Mich., said Mrs. Elizabeth Rowlanc (above) had confessed she assist ed her husband, Ferrin, in plotting the death by drowning of her twc little daughters because they “marred our nappiness.” Rowland charged with the slayings, hanged himself in his jail cell at Pontiac American principle of competition. . .| Mich. (Associated Press Photo) of the Catholic hierarchy began ar- riving Monday for the first consecra- tion of a bishop here in 30 years. Tuesday the most Rev. Aloysius 8. Muench of Milwaukee will be elevated to Bishop of Fargo, N. D., to succeed the late Bishop James O'Reilly. Rector of the seminary of St. Francis de Sales here for the last six years, | Bishop-Designate Muench is 46 and | will be one of the youngest men of that rank in the United States. . Two archbishops, four abbots, 19/ bishops and 600 other religious lead- ers were expected to join in the color- ful ancient rites led by his excellency, the most Rev. Amleto Giovanni Cic- ognani, apostolic delegate to the Unit- | ed States and representative of Pope Pius. His excellency will be co-celebrant with Bishop-Designate Muench at the pontifical mass at which Archbishop | Samuel A. Stritch of Milwaukee will | Hopton to Seek Adviser 72 sewer ou «JTILIMES ASK OKAY will be tHe major issue of the cam- preach, | Co-consecrators with the apostolic , delegate will be Bishops Christian H. Winkelmann of St. Louis, and William R. Griffin of La Crosse. Ding Darling Fights Phonograph Decoys Kansas City, Oct. 14—(#)—Federal court prepared to hear argument Monday whether J. N. (Ding) Darl- ing, biological survey chief, has @ right to ban the use of phonographs as decoys for duck hunters. The plaintiffs, Earnest A. Schroer and Robert C. Stocker, demand $4,- 000 damages from Darling and a tem- porary order to prevent the arrest of Mothers ! me boner children’s colds, lon ake Vicks chances..use NERATIONS PROVED BY 2 WINDOW AND AUTO GLASS Cold Weather Is Here! panes now. Reglaze your whole Your saving in heat will more than pay for your glass work. Workmanship guaranteed. Vantine Paint & Glass Co. 313 Main Phone 544 We call for and deliver One-day Service Oh, what fun to go to school with a brand new Bike—Balloon Tires, Dou- ble Spring Saddle, Coaster Brake and other features, $24.95 — Boy’s or girl's. New Streamline Trikes, $4.25 — Coaster Wagon, $1.24. Gamble Stores. | _ ATE BROTHER FINK DIES ‘Aesaouinens ftw ene ®|ROe Distressed Schools azsmuyss.: “What the Youth of Today is Facing,” he called the “scandalous waste” of 8t. Boniface, Man., Oct. 14—(P)— and Theodore Martell, commissioner ' public funds, charged “the administra- acini pales hdc atte fl ts) eee . 1 of St. Boniface collegiate here, | of agriculture and labor. ie; tion has attempted to fog by borrow- bien In addition, Congressmen William |'fons Out Difficulties in Pem~ LABOR 10 FIGHT FOR ing the money instead of squarely |Fargo, Grand Forks and Minot] %°¢ Sundey- Lemke and Usher L. Burdick and U. bina by Arranging for facing the issue and attempting to Consumers Would Bene- DOYON FARMERS DIES 8. Senator Lynn J. Frazier will speak raise it by taxation.” Devils Lake, Oct. 14.—(?)—Mike | on the national politi t. Debt Slashin; | “The attempts to subvert the gov- , , » 1. | Political aspec 4 . .” Roosevelt said, “were iilus- fit by Cuts Bardy, pioneer farmer of Doyon, died trated clearly when the NRA sought Brastrup declared the organization at his home Sunday following a two! aaa cepa } — vention” in the coming 1936 state| Halla, Hopton, anno ccommend| ¢ Use Economic and Political well as the judicial.” in the cities of Fargo, Grand Forks Forks Sunday that he will recommend i Senator Borah, who call 1 sl to Governor Welford the appoint-| Strength on Congress to aosevelei'thetecn af the italy tan and Minot, to effect approximate to- Cut Hours ‘The organization, composed princl-|ment of a state official or the nam- tal savings of $1 who ever ini ted al savings of $145,000 to consumers pay corto men whose bere Sre/ing a state department to assist state against DIOHODOLY in a Seong twas announced Monday by the state rend ae parent organization—the | <chool districts in financial distress. said in Boise, Idaho, that he had no | board of railroad commissioners, ‘ota Nonpartisan League—| ‘The announcement was made after) Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 14—()— comment on the reply. The rates, subject to approval of peptide nt Leberg sections! Hopton had assisted the Pembina|The American Federation of Labor| penne the commission, were filed &y the Red . school board in an arrangement|convention voted unanimously Mon- ‘ River Power company for Grand y N. D. Ring Rules Copy |Forks, the union Light, Heat and ~ 36 Chairmen Called made Saturday night to scale the/day to fight for a 30-hour work week ‘The 36 county chairmen who he sald | indebtedness from $23,080.35 to $9,-|through American business and in-| Qf New York’s Laws) Pov, company at Fargo and the pir attend the meeting are: Robert | 271.31, and to continue the school | dust: 1 late States Power company at ledge, Williston, Williams county:|work there. The board has issued| “We're going out of here and fight! Minot. ‘ Roy A. Hold, Grand Forks, Grand | warrants in excess of the uncollected |for this asianitiege never fought Best Fargo, N. D., Oct. 14.—(P)—The| The three companies also filed new Forks county; Carl Christianson, Cor-| taxes and was faced with closing the fore,” shouted William Green, federa- patie Dakota boxing commission ap-! iowered municipal rates for power to inth, Divide county; William Vase-| schools unless some help was obtain-|tion’ president, just before the con-'Proved rules governing the sport ati be supplied to sewage disposal and * chek, Brockett, Walsh county; Arthur |ed, vention approved the shorter work'itS meeting here Sunday. The rules, | fiitration plants in the cities. Lanseth, Brantford, Foster county; Hopton said the Pembina situation! week committee's report that the fed- |Patterned after those of the New os C. W. McDowell, member of the L. Daniels, Cogswell, Sargent coun-|undoubtedly will be repeated many|eration should use both its economic|CO™mission, with revisions to meet/ board of railroad commissioners, said ty; Kenneth McGurren, Minot, Ward | times in the state in the near future. |strength and its influence in congress |1°#! Situations, will soon be in issued | the rates for Grand Forks probably county; Mike Zako, Kief, McHenry|He explained the situation was not/to reduce working hours. in booklet form. would be approved soon, together with county; A. J. Kleudt, Bismarck, Bur-|the fault of the present board, that| tf there's anyone who opposes this,| ,,Fresent at the meeting were James| approval of the rates for Fargo and leigh county; Alvin Skubinna, Han-|had threatened to resign and’ close |jet him get out of the way because | ran of Minot, secretary, Dr. Frank | Minot, nover, Oliver county. the schools if some adjustment was!the American Federation of Labor|%,De%toW of Fargo and = Theodore SRE | Alfred Lutgen, LaMoure, LaMoure|not made. will not tolerate a slacker.” ieee a eee of 18] Roosevelt to Angle county; Henry T. Meyer, Bisbee, Lost Money in Bank |. ‘This last remark followed a ques-| Or pnd agriculture an ati aaalik P ij ‘Towner county; William E. Eichhorst,! Most of the troubles he said were jtion from the floor by W. R. Trotter,|""° . In Panama’s Waters Killdeer, Dunn county; J. Bernard/due to the fact that with the buii3-jdelegate from International Typo-} ya. ere see Smith, Selfridge, Sioux County; Gar-|ing of a new schoolhouse about $20-|graphical union, as to whether the ad-| Minnesota Dry Chief, | xn Route with President Roose- field Olson, Cooperstown, Griggs coun- | 000 worth of warrants had been issued | vocates of the 30-hour week could de-| F; k Pet Di velt on the Pacific, Oct. 14—(P)— ty; Russell Stuart, Bucyrus, Adams/| followed by the loss of money in ajpend on “at least neutrality from ran. €terson, VIES} President Roosevelt, deeply tanned from a tropical vacation, approached Moorhead, Minn., Oct. 14—(#)—|the Gulf of Panama Monday on the i Accept only the Jayson Shirt for Complete Satisfaction county. bank failure. those members of the executive coun- . A. K. Isackson, Wimbledon, Barnes} The board agreed to a proposal byjcil who do not support this.” county; Fred Brooks, Jamestown, Stutsman county; John Ford, Cassel- ton, Cass county; Howard Crockett, ‘Wales, Cavalier county; Helmer Hal- vorson, » Benson county; Ed. “Kounovsky, Hillsboro, Traill county; Phil Hoghaug, Devils Lake, county; Arne Dahl, Hazelton, Em- mons county; Elroy Gulbro, Pekin, Nelson county; Milbourn Glendenen, Sims, Slope county; Gene Guldemann, Steele, Kidder. county. Others Attending Iver Iverson, Watford City, McKen- zie county; Elmer Marlock, Denhoff, Sheridan county; Walter 8. Martin, Fessenden, Wells county; Charles Johnson, Almont, Grant county; Lee H. Summers, Beach, Golden Valley county; Joseph Finnell, Portland, Steele county; Anthony Herold, Mott, Hettinger county; Christ J. Ehli, Rug- by, Pierce county, and George Kelsh, Napoleon, Logan county. The executive committee of the Nonpartisan league will attend the meeting as an advisory body. The committee includes Fred Keitzman, Elwood Eck, and Harry Peterson, chairman. VANILLA STILL POPULAR 8&t. Louis, Oct. 14—()—Vanilla ice cream still is the nation’s favorite. But chocolate is a close second, say representatives of the international association of ice cream manufactur- ers here for their annual convention. Twenty years after the Mexican volcano, Mount Jorullo, erupted, a cigar could be lighted from the lava 8 few inches below the surface. If you suffer from Getting Up Nights, rvousness, Leg Pains, Swollen Joints, es, Loss of Burn- K, Itching Acidity due to Honel Kidney oF Bladder Eepiies, try the Doctor’s guaranteed prescription Cystex (Sies-tex}. ‘Must Dring new vitality in 48 hours, and satisfy completely in 8 days or money back. rant costs only 3c @ dose at druggists, BEULAH LIGNITE Dependable FUEL Winter days you need a Hopton which included the cancel'a- tion of interest amounting $968.89 on warrants of $841.60 held by the state fire and tornado fund and the scil- ing’ of the principal 30 per cenit. Other indebtedness will be similarly reduced and a new certificate of ii debtedness will be issued to the Bank of North Dakota which, Hopton said, $9,300 to maintain the schools. Adopt Budget A budget of $8,861 for the next eight months was drawn up and adopted which with expected income from all sources will permit the dis- trict to close the year with a credit, balance of $555 if all taxes are col- lected for the-current year. Hopton said several other school districts are in trouble and the officer or state department should be named to.assist them so that schools may be kept open in the state and teachers may be assured of pay for services. Federal Truck Check Will Not Be ‘Rigid’ Chicago, Oct. 14—()—Joseph B. Eastman, federal coordinator of trans- portation, today promised the na- tion’s truckers that federal regula- tion of the motor carrier industry, which goes into effect Tuesday, will not be “stiff-necked and rigid.” Eastman explained the regulatory functions of the motor carrier act, recently passed by congress, to ap- proximately 1,000 members of the. American Trucking association at the coming of its three-day convention re. Control of interstate bus and truck operations will be adapted to the needs of little operators, he said. Truckers have estimated that at least 250,000 individual operators will be affected by the new law. Zenge Linked Up With Emasculation Victim Chicago, Oct. 14—(#)—The name Dr. John Bauer gasped out as he lay dying of a brutal operation was hung in court Monday on: Mandeyille W. Zenge, charged with murdering Bauer because the doctor married Zenge’s pretty sweetheart. Norman Jedele, clerk of the Jen- nings hotel at Ann Arbor, Mich., iden- tified Zenge as the mysterious “T. 8. Je ” who. pecan, Wh. retary operation on a south side lot. Legal Moves Made coal-like BEULAH — Less — Lots of HEAT— To Save Hauptmann Jersey City, N.-J., Oct. 14—(7)—Eg- bert The committee reported the execu-| Frank H. Peterson, former state sen- tive council should be directed to bend|Ator, author of Minnesota's county every effort toward securing enact-jPtion law, and practicing attorney ment of the Black-Connery 30-hour | here 54 years, died of heart disease in week bill. The center of the unemployment | Prominent in state Republican circles problem, it said, was the recent in-; until in recent years, he had been crease in workers’ productive capac-| President of the Clay county bar as- ity and, with NRA’s collapse, a wide-| sociation and head of the Clay Coun- a Fargo hospital here early Monday. had agreed to advance to the district |spread lengthening of working hours.|ty Allied Drys. cruiser Houston for another fishing excursion. The Houston headed for Perlas island, where arrangements were made for Mr. Roosevelt to send and receive mail as he continues his of- | ficial duties. The president will turn northward for home late in the week after crossing the Panama Canal. $1.95 - $2.45 - $2.95 Bergeson’S Men’s Shop Opposite the Postoffice — Bismarck, N. Dak. _ me”, WATCHING FOOTBALL Br T MR.MEEHAN, MY SISTER BETTY WANTS SOME INSIDE DOPE ON FOOTBALL / T'LL BE GLAO TO OBLIGE-COME UP IN THE STANDS AND WELL WATCH THIS PRACTICE GAME WHAT BETTY SAW — AND WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED ips ON — ls: IT TOOK ELEVEN MEN TO MAKE THAT PASS PERFECT! NOW WATCH THIS PUNT FROM THE This FORMATION / TDIONT KNOW BAGH MAN HAD SUCH A DEFINITE JoB J / (Oem Sta, snes nena RUNS OOwU Fie, Snes Ge LS TACKLE ~(BD aoc AND $i ©1D=@D ners BLOCK, SWERVE Ait” G8 stocks exp FARES Bude, Swen, niet Te Samoa arama FADES BACK PUNT: g TACKLE OR END—GNG © ‘THAT GAME WAS J a THRILLER J + HERE, HAVE { WeLL,BETTS, DID You). LEARN SOMETHING? | WATCH THE FLOW OF ENERGY WHEN I NEED (TAND THEY NEVER GET ON MY NERVES 3 WHAT A SPLENDID RUN = —— BUT 6000 BLOCKING YouRE AN EXPERT with fewer ashes. MADE IT possiBLe! NOW= THANKS TO We Recommend It . 7 " CHICK MEEHAN? MJ Wachter Transfer J] xi? pe tomers are conor os v Dealer 121 Fifth St. So. Phone 62 I NEED one! so MANY THRILLS USE UPA LOT OF ENERGY

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