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eet cy THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Chinese Demand Declaration of War State Wage Acts Totter in Wake of Court’s Ruling #wuirn ‘SCOMMONWEALTES (T= Fo=m[|MARMARTH SHAKIN [AVERAGEPATIENTS | Western North Dakota Not Yet | raytnen AFFECTED BY DEATH | [7 || LETHARGY OF DYING) UNDER NEW AAATO) =Knocked Out by Spring Drouth apo: OF NEW YORK’S LAW TOWN OF OLD WEST! BE $7.04 PER AGRE} sis ovo: may pus second! BELGIUM'S ROYAL FAMILY, Upon Nanking to Order : Hottest Has Agricultural i: - North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper Mobilization CIVIL CONFLICT ALSO LOOMS Oil Fever Stimulates Revival of| Burleigh County Rate as Set yg they e yg < sh Dreams It Once Held in Under Conservation Act Slightly Groggy venenatis: 101 aANnkin; e Make Contracts’ aches ween RAIN CAN STILL SAVE CROP ig and Canton Hie Huge Armies Poised for Battle BATTLES AGAIN WITH BAKER|CASS COUNTY LEADS STATE FOUR OF JUSTICES DISSENT Pastures Constitute Serious ERE TET SPL ST North. Dakota Community Has/Figures for Individual Farfns Problem With Stock Sub- ' Shanghai, June 2—()—Japanese North Dakota Minimum. Pa: ; hori ounct "Tuesd i bebe y Opportunity of Becoming May Vary Considerably sisting on '35 Grass . 1 : : BiBEE et dee honor cing phoning Act Patterned After Inval- idated Aid to Women Metropolis From Average - ment at Canton had declared war be heenate North hewn bey ‘a a ig against the national Chinese govern- —_—__—_—- —_—_—_ not yet been knoc! out e . a ment demanding the latter order a 3 i | Editor’s Note: Fargo, N. D., June 2—(#)—North | drouth but it is getting groggy and is 5 : = war against Japan. , June 2.—(/)—Hurried { This is the third and last of | Dakota’s average county payments in| wide open for a finishing wallop. E By The Japanese, who earlier said they sonferences and swift legal moves to ; a series of stories on the pros- | the 1936 federal soil conservation pro-| This was the view of O. W. Roberts, " i understood the Canton government patch up some state minimum wage | Pective oil development in south- gram, announced by the state agricul-| federal weather forecaster after a trip j q had declared war against Japan, re- Jaws came Tuesday in the wake of the 7a | | Western North Dakota and south- {tural soll conservation committee,/of 180 miles around the countryside ceived further advices from Canton supreme court's invalidation of New i eastern Montana. show a top of $8.60 for Cass county, | Monday. : saying that instead of declaring war York’s statute governing the miin!- — a low of $6 for McHenry county and| Condi ited, Roberts said, ' vernm: a pineal ECT eek 18 By KENNETH W.SIMONS — | state average of $7.04, ‘The Bur-| put the grain ie sieivellng up in many Sect ite tM eect r trite aed “re asa bert \ 'G. Hoff 6 - This is the story of the present con- | leigh county rate will be $6.50. places and rain must come soon if : = This manifesto denounced Jap- “delight,” the St split decision ruled| his criticism of the Lindbergh kid- dition and future prospects of two savas biped tone is heared either the grain crops or pastures are : — anese aggression in North China and out the empire state’s 1933 law on the citles—Marmarth, N. D., and Baker, adverse sadieoes prevatting in| 2h, seved. : demanded an immediate declaration many ‘This condition results from the third 4 of war against Japan on the part of ground it violated “the right to make Mont, this state in the last decade,” saysjariest May on record, Roberts said. j oS the national government at Nanking. contracts.” en as su Let us begin with Marmarth. Dr. J. T. E. Dinwoodle, secretary Of] The precipitation last month was .12 : . 2 In this latter announcement, the ‘Whether their own laws would stand . | the committee. 04 in ee or fall became an immediate question organised tort North Dekotans have not real; | Rates for individual farms may ir plang ree laadalilas : : declared’ vee asians Manviigey 172 of importance to officials in many of the Slope county town has become | Vy considerably from the county av- Second Hottest May bi j ‘Tw. secre the 16 states where statute Books con-| Bg a ee eee eputy wa aaa lelmost a ghost community. Tt has slid erage, the committee says, as they! rt was also the second hottest May : i i his geperiee Galt tain at least some of the provisions warzkopf’s deputy, was named cocoate tac end uo fect that only | Will be determined by productivity of|on ‘record, the average temperature 4 ca, E reEnerd a proclamation sd na at lala the pales dovedinge tia jiccicped 8 shred of its former greatness is left. a ates farm. oy being 63 as compared with the all- 2 Pr peers pods potibedesoreaerae rc te arrest, senviotion and execu- | Marmarth was located in the valley|gste for farmers to get work sheets any en Pa ellis ethane : : was imminent, The South Chins Bruno. nt uae coe filed for their farms. af rain comes soon, Roberts said, f [abated concerned are Kwantung berling supervised the execu- | came one of the biggest towns in south | , Foowing are the average soll con-|much of the grain crop can still be Ge: ~ : The dramatic South Chins develop- tion. Western North Dakota when the rail- | SchViné rates which have been estab |eaved as it has withstood the drouth : ments are regarded as the result of Toad located its division offices and Ushed for each county in North Da-|in excellent condition to date, when} |g a : Nanking’s mobilization of 35,000 sol- kota and which will guide county com-|tne jack of rain and the heat are : Q rina shoe fish booming and | mittees in setting up rates for indi-| Considered. & : ey ane vor foe patie of ‘ But there was no farming to speak ame : cette aly : : a. poised for a thrust ‘againat the South of. Only a little ranching in the nearby |County _Rate of County _Rafe of | Was cut with a header last year is in —< . — : Chins regime, headed by Gen. Chang =f Payment Payment | better condition than grain on new é . i Chai-To: military leader. hills. Marmarth reached a population PerAcre ____— Per Acre | plowing of corn land because the : . ‘The: Japanese sources claimed: the sonped. But it was a comfortable lk- | Sarses ; stubble held the snow and started e - g£ : alleged’ double declaration of war r tle place and getting along quite well : Deine ier oer ductal Pe : : | was designed to beat the national 62 101 VOTE until calamity struck it in the late e ¥ If rain comes at once, the drouth The orphaned Crown Prince Baudoin and Princess Josephine Char. government forces to the draw.” "20's, lotte cee etl a ee wits the oh ublic ape, bE The Ler ee ee eon ag or or 7 alaameaiateauinent <8" + About 19” years ago raflread urleten ‘since er, Queen Astrid. The occasion was the traditional “coronation” of their entire military strength for ision. Vandenberg’s Effort to’ Break | sound they could operate locomotives | ca ea ef the statue of Our Lady of Laeken near the Royal Palace at ja campaign into Southern Kwangsi ‘The Ohio law, designed to guarant Up WPA ‘Set-Up Voted successfully over routes twice as long eee ken, The children performed fair wages and working hours, tottered p et-Up Voter as they had been using. The result was 30 Richland also. Down, 57 to 14 the elimination of many division Study 8. D. Law points and one of these was Mar- South Dakota’s law will have to be marth. Another town to suffer from dent movement in South China and studied further, said B. D, Mintener,| Washington, June 2—(#)—Emer-|the same development was Dickinson. superintendent of the state justice de- triumphantly from the senate branded the Japanese report as “propaganda.” Chinese authorities !2 Shanghai the crowning ceremony. : Hunan partment, before it could be decided to 14 vote of approval, s from : section. whether to halt its enforcement. f and deficiency appropria- 5 Ay stated the relations at the present ‘While bill sped Tuesday into a confer-|and no one came to take their places. | Kidder ...-- $30 owa a O a time between Canton and Nanking i in which senators Bduorng to| Houses stood vacant or could be had/; 2.1, . 1.00 W eeding, particularly had “never been better.” ’ icIntos! . are ly own, jemocra’ ain ‘en, as So fast did the senate amend and | place well could be without passing principal sustenance coming from the % = the: bill Republican Votes Decrease into oblivion. ene ees sl res » according to Hous "hy the score ees: the Associated ‘Press, the feed short- in Primary See WUpOERORPOOLE cee ece| SUT PORWHDNESDAY) re. UBL WL VE different location would have been moving their animals. Flax Lester J. Dickinson, bitter new deal po! baiter, and Gov. Clyde L. Herring, fast. Explains valuable. Taxes remained unpaid and Coroner’s Jury Calls Man’s/ardent new deal champion, won sen- during the last six years several score is atorial nomination in Monday’s Iowa Death on Track Unavoid- primary on the basis of reports avail- WEDNESD AY NIGHT able Tuesday. of houses have been purchased and moved out into the country or knocked down and the wood taken away. ashington, June 2.—(P)—The Fell to 400 Persons the northern able Accident ‘There still was a slight question as senate vote on the relief deficiency |} ‘The history of any town is the his-|13 of 15 Arrested Terrorists to whether Dickinson would maintain bill included: Funeral services for George Bolton, sufficient lead over five opponents to]Board and Faculty Members Undergo Examination in sel lor */gain the 35 per cent majority neces- Pp; |24, killed Sunday when struck by 8] cary to keen the nomination from di Will Receive Visitors From Detroit Northern Pacific passenger train, will | (itn ‘by a Remabie oe Co- be held at 2 p. m., Wednesday, at the | ‘50 an party conven- 7 to 10 o'Clock e E ‘Webb Funeral parlors. = ° Nye, absent, Detroit, June 2—(#)—Testimony .| Two-thirds of the state’s 2,442 pre- pine etal Sal ame Tare Yoiae 108 Sie ene) Cats Methodist Episcopal church, wii [(iMe%S gave Dickinson 72,802 votes,| Class night exercises Tuesday and For: Duffy and La ois as have charge of the services and inter-| oo ber,cent of the total poll, Iowa the dedicatorial open house of the 2 39, mocra: erring 51, otes, |new high sc! ding We Hunt Man Who Didn’t ee Sacre pit gs family lot/515 per cent of the total. Former are niahlighte for the next peal Keep Suicide Promise Pallbearers will be Joe Desiderato,| Senator Smith W. Brookhart trailed | of the commencement season in Bis posi , ‘Axel Leary, Mike Goetz, Harold Mass- | Dickinson with 38.006 igeyae PO a scstas putas 5 falter Mohn, terhook Geis PI attend Peace officers were searching the Kip with the Bismarck base-| Congressman Hubert Utterback, one|of these events and also the com- records here Tuesday for a John Wil- i; ball of Herring's two opponents, polled |mencement exercises Thursday. The allegedly a resident of Bismarck, Ruled Accident 36,610 votes. The other was hopeless-| class night and graduation programs ; ly distanced. will start at 8 p. m., and both will be who from all reports, failed to keep ‘An inquest into the cause of death |Y veicon'G, ‘Kraschel baltor z . dD, 5 , now Heutenant|held in the auditorium of the new his entiounced “rendesvous with yas held Monday night by Dr. t W-(governor, won nomination as the | building. Larson, county Beancas x ae 5 ‘ tement Engineer Tom andid: governor.| Tradition governs to a large extent Faimer, Jamestown, and & few other | e0tee Wilson, state senator and Re-|the class night program. ‘The im- witnesses, the coroner’s jury returned | Publican leader, gained the Republi- | pressive of a verdict of death by unavoidable ac-|°*" Subernatorial nomination, down of tfle peace pl cident. Under Iowa election law, a candi- Examination of the body showed) (nie Must gain 35 per cent, of ‘the that the impact had so snapped the ination coger yw . state convention of his party. No Delegates Named ,| Iowans did not vote Monday on Presidential preference. Delegates to i Party national conventions were sel- the lett side of the engine cab and] écted at party conventions held earlier ton, whereas Farmer spring. a ee Fee ine tineine aan b00| Nelther Republican delegates (22), feet away he saw the youth on the Pe ane atin on eer : ventions, however. On the basis of returns so far, Re- publicans showed a alight loss in total Re gE tf I i i sh Oct. 21-24 Tentative \ N. D. Corn Show Dates Orhciee: 31-06 ee heer selected #4) i LE ofeifie Ha dl E i tii & g rE il be people FS at i