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POLITICAL EYES ARE TURNED UPON VOTING IN KEYSTONE STATE Roosevelt Meets First Statewide Primary Opposition in Pennsylvania , 1s running unopposed. Pennsylvania, with its large block of electoral college votes, was one of the six states tha8 went against the New Deal in 1932. Its electorate voted 1,653,540 for Mr. Hoover and 1,295,948 for Mr. Roosevelt. Watch Winning Vote The vote in the mining areas was closely observed because John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine ‘Workers, and an organizer of “Labor’s Nonpartisan League,” had pledged mine union support to President Roosevelt. This new league, the other organ- dzers of which were George L. Berry, president of the Printing Pressmen, and Sidney Hillman, president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, was the object of an attack Tuesday by THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1936 ALICE FAYE GOES MUSICAL It’s spring, Tra! lal So Alice Faye, singing film actress, blossomed out with a musica, rat, made of beige felt, banded and edged in black. (Aseociated Press Photo) SAVED FROM NOOSE, NEGRO IS SHOT DEAD Farmer's Body Found Near Scene of His Alleged At- tack on Two Girls Royston, Ga., April 28.—(4)—Lint Shaw, Negro farmer once saved from lynching through the pleas of an aged judge, was shot to death by a mob of 40 men, eight hours before he was to go to trial on a charge of attempted criminal assault. His body was found at dawn Tues- day, tied to a pine tree in a creck bottom near Colbert, Ga., his home. Pierced by shotgun, pistol and rifle bullets, he died at the scene where two white girls reported he attempted to attack them after their motor car broke down on April 10. The mob, climaxing a series of demonstrations aginst the 40-year-old Negro which once required the inter- vention of national guardsmen, broke into Royston’s one-story jail about midnight, cornered Night Chief of Police W. A. Dickerson and smashed @ lock on the prisoner’s cell. DOGS SPOIL PLAN Rappahannock, Va., April 8—e— Dogs spoiled a modernization plan here. Strolling canines put so many’ pawprints in the wet concrete that sidewalk plans were abandoned. GUNFIGHTERS DENY ND, BANK RADDINGS Former Convicts Taken to Little Falls, Minn., to Face Charges Three men held in Minnesota fol- lowing a gunfight with a deputy sheriff have denied any connection with robberies of banks at Zap and Denhoff in North Dakota, C. A. Miller, head of the state bureau of criminal Aluminum killet + Reg. $1.191 CLOTHES BASKET identification, said he had been in- formed Tuesday. The three were questioned in Min- nesota by Melvin C. Passolt, head of that state’s crime bureau, after they had been arrested following a gun- fight with an Anoka county deputy sheriff. Held are Alvin Walter, Wahpeton, N. D., William Helgeson, Pelican Rapids, Minn., and Chester Kopp, who said he came from Denver, Colo. Passolt informed Miller the trio denied any connection with the North Dakota bank robberies. They were taken to Little Falls to face trial on burglary charges; they are wanted at Wahpeton by county authorities on automobile theft charges. Bismarck, the old Iron Chancellor of Germany, had a curious sense of humor. To awaken late sleeping guests, he frequently shot out win: dows in their rooms. = 2 More Days Don’t Miss this Big Shoe Value! Special Purchase! Special Price for Ward Week Only?! Chairman Henry P. Fletcher of the Republican national committee. There was activity also in the camps of Gov. Alf. M. Landon of Kansas and Col. Frank Knox of Chicago. resolution pledging the state’s four delegates-at-large to work for the Landon nomination. The pledging of these four gives the Kansan 20 in- structed delegates from the state. Six- teen ly had been chosen by district conventions. The state has 30 + votes in the national convention. Knox was given the support of the Cook county (Chicago) convention which will have 881 delegates to the state convention at Peoria May 22. ‘The delegates were instructed to work for the selection of Knox men as the atate’s eight delegates at large who will supplement the 49 elected in the primary April 14. Massachusetts also was holding a presidential primary Tuesday. In both parties voters had an opportunity to express their presidential preference, though the result will not bind either the Democratic or Republican conven- tion delegates. FURTHER REVISION IN SED LOANS MADE RRA May Lend Clients Money for Planting But Will With- draw Other Aid ‘Washington, April 28—(7)—A bloc of northwestern senators heard Tues- day the government had made fur- ther revisions in its seed loan policy but still failed to provide what they said would be adequate aid for farm- ers on relief rolls. Senator Burton K. Wheeler (Dem., Mont.), a spokesman, said he under- stood the Resettlement administration had agreed to lend seed money to farmers on its active rolls but at the same time would withdraw other di- rect relief aid. “That arrangement would be en- tirely unsatisfactory,” Wheeler said, declaring that to grant seed loans on one hand and withdraw other relief benefits on the other, would not “ease the situation at all.” ‘The northwestern group postponed ® conference it had sought with of- ficials of the Farm Credit and Reset- tlement administrations in an effort to obtain broader revisions of rules governing distribution of seed loans. ‘Wheeler said the officials were unable to attend. “It is almost too late now to help those farmers who are ineligible for loans because they are active relief clients of the Resettlement adminis- tration,” Wheeler said. “Their crops should have been planted by this Wheeler did not say what the group's future plan would be. Sinclair Dealers CANADA SEEDING BEGINS Winnipeg, April MRS, KULUMALA, 84, CLAIMED BY DEATH Rites for Aged Burleigh County Woman to Be Held Thurs- day at Wing Mrs. Sophie Kulumala, 84, mother of Mrs. William Josephson of Wing and grandmother of Sadie Josephson of Bismarck, died at 4 p. m., Monday in a local hospital. Physicians gave apoplexy as the cause of death. The aged woman, who has been making her home at the Josephson farm near Wing, has been ill for some time. She entered the hospital on April 17. Mrs. Kulumala was born March 6, 1862, in Finland. She has resided in Burleigh county for many years. Her husband preceded her in death. Be- sides her sister and daughter she leaves one son in Finland and five grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Sun- day afternoon at Wing. Interment will be made there. She was a mem- ber of the Finnish Lutheran church. YOU'D START TOO! Chattanooga, Tenn., April 28—(7)\— A near-collision with an elephant on @ Nofth Georgia highway gave Hoyt Zilen, TVA employe, a start and a sudden stop. The pachyderm was a wanderer fron: a circus caravan. es. Dafoe and Dionnes | | On Outs Over Diets i Pht aretha Callander, Ont., April 28.—(>)}— A difference of opinion over diet divided again Tuesday the none- too-cordial camps of Dr. Allan R. DaFoe and the parents of the famed Dionne quintuplets. Wordy battles of the past over the care and custody of the cele- brated little girls threatened to revive as Mrs. Oliva Dionne as- serted “greenish mush,” should be discarded in favor of meatier fare. Dr. DaFoe countered with the declaration the children received ample food, but their weight was being kept down purposely to help them resist possible disease. The “greenish mush” Dr. Da- Foe described as mashed fresh fruit and oatmeal. New Manager Takes Over Beauty Parlor Announcement was made Tuesday that Miss Bertice McKirdy, recently employed at the Pollyanna Beauty Shoppe, has taken over the manage- ment of the California Wave Nook. Miss McKirdy has had several years’ experience as an operator in Bismarck and Dickinson. Laura Aase, proprie- tor of the Wave Nook shop, has also recently purchased Van's Beauty par- lor, 212 Rosser Ave., from Mrs. Bruce Furness. Low operating cost is one of the many reasons for Studebaker's sen- sational and swiftly growing sales pace! 24.27 miles per gallon official A.A.A. record! Distinctive Helen Dryden styl- ing! World's strongest all-steel body! Only car with Automatic Hill Holder! Finest feather-touch hydraulic brakes. $950 NEW LOW DOWN PAYMENT which may be covered by the trade-in value of your present car, delivers a a complet. ped month St. Re paid? et 1936 Studebaker Sedan in Bismarck. New T. 6% financing charges all it oor Finest bleach. willow. Strong han. dies. 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Month bey Aa Charge 28—()—Seeding ‘wheat across western Canada’s prairie farm belt will be in full swing within Gitions in ie eeeciine te ‘ntor- a years, mation from provincial departments ef agriculture. Bismarck, N. D. Wilde Motors Co., Inc. MONTGOMERY WARD 304 Fourth St.