The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 17, 1936, Page 7

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j + answers special questions about Mexico's frst automobile show will wers no special a gar PS automotive vehieles in England at be held next November in ‘Mesico DisGracep for pa pre J.P. owed AIMEE GETS EXTORTION NOTES Vicrory fal, douphnuts snd ether breek- TREASURER were combining their efforts with fast pastries are ready to be * Father Coughlin’s national union for nent een served to you quickly and fresh (Burleigh County) WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1936 LEMKE MENTIONED | sh ui ASCANDDATE POR PRESENT OF US North Dakota Congressman| Seen as Possible Candi- date of Third Party aren meinen HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THOUSANDS GREET ROOSEVELT AT HOOSIER MEMORIAL WOLF FACTION WINS ‘ties DEMOCRAT CONTROL IN GOPHER VOTING Candidates. Backed by National Com mitteeman Show Strength in Balloting St. Paul, June 17.—(#)—Control of the Democratic party in Minnesota by the faction headed by Joseph Wolf, national committeeman, seemed as- sured Wednesday on the basis of re- turns from Monday's state primary. Candidates backed by the Wolf group were nominated for nine state and national offices decided in the party’s primary ballot. The faction headed by Congressman Elmer J. Ryan and Joseph Noonan, state chair- man, succeeded in nominating seven candidates, Both the Wolf and Ryan factions have selected two delegations to the national convention at Philadelphia next week, and the outcome of the Minnesota Democratic primary was expected by party leaders to go a long way in the convention to decide which to recognize. Fred A. Curtis, South St. Paul, Wolf endorsee, led Dr. F. E. Novak, New Prague, Ryan endorsee, by 4,000 votes for governor. The gubernatorial nom- ination was the major prize, since the candidate, by tradition, will name the party's state central committee chair- man for the next two years. Wolf, with a majority of candidates nomin- ated, also will control the com- mittee. Except for a few scattered minor offices, virtually every issue in other party races had been decided. The nominees for the principal offices New York, June 17.—(#)—Puzzle- ment over the consequences of @ pos- sible third party campaign for the presidency—as well as curiosity as to the concealed identity of a potential candidate—nourished a quick growth of political conjecture Wednesday. The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, who brought the third party possibility to light but shied from naming names, contented himself, for the present, by ! asserting: | “If this man (the possible third . party nominee) runs, Landon will run 7 & poor third.” | Sheriff Otto Ray of Indianapolis The Detroit raido priest, who came| said 14-year-old Betty Ray Cole to the New York headquarters of his| (above) confessed stabbing to National Union for Social Justice to; with ates HRSA Eee ahaa at pai climax Give’ teers aromas Te of an argument in the back yard of her home while she was cleaning whether a third party drive could un- | ‘Assoc! seat the Roosevelt administration, | “edetables. (Associated Press Photo) Makes Optimistic Forecast. Demonstration Soil The possible candidate's platform, Control Area Planned however, he said, “will engage the at- tention and merit the support of at least 25,000,000 voters.” Fargo, N. D., June 17.—(4)—Similar Almost coincidentally in Chicago,|to the project under way at Park the Rey. Gerald L. K. Smith, holding | River, a demonstration soil control the reins of the late Senator Huey P.|area was designated Wednesday by the Long's share-the-wealth clubs, pro-| advisory committee of the North Da- claimed a “loose working agreement” | kota soil conservation service for de- velopment in southeastern Bottineau county. with the followers of Dr. Francis E. The area will embrace 25,000 acres Townsend, Father Coughlin’s union and the forces of representative Wil- liam Lemke (Rep., N. D.), co-sponsor} in southern parts of Elysia, Oak of the $3,000,000,000 Frazier-Lemke | Creek and Stone Creek townships, ex- farm moratorium bill, defeated in the| tending eastward into Willow Vale house last May. township. The area comprises 49,000 Father Coughlin, picturing the po-| ®cres with development of the entire tential third party nominee as al-| Section contemplated over a long time ready the author of a tentative plat-| Period, M. O. Ryan, secretary of the form, admitted it was possible that] fomunlttes and the state planning ;Dr. Townsend and Mr. Smith had J 5 discussed the mystery candidate's een SaGE eRe Re sltd peti} merits but said there was no connec- lapels Bees be used to develop the project under SCS supervision. Farmers owning the land would be cooperators in the were: U. 8, Senator: Farmer-Labor, Gov. Floyd B. Olson, Republican, Congress- man Theodore Christianson; Demo- crat, Patrick J/ Delaney. Governor: Farmer-Labor, Senator Elmer A. Benson; Republican, Martin A. Nelson; Democrat, Fred A. Curtis. Based on the gubernatorial race, the Republicans polled the largest vote Monday. With 2,998 of 3,724 precincts heard from, the total gubernatorial vote showed: Republican, 178,104; Far- ‘These pictures show (top) President Roceevelt as he waved a greeting to the crowd (below) estimated at 20,- 000 persons which turned out to hear him at Vincennes, Ind., where ledicated a memorial to George Rogers Clark, northwest Revolutionary war hero. At President’s left on Gov. Paul V. McNutt of Indiana, and ‘Mrs. Roosevelt. In lower picture part of the crowd i¢ shewn on Memorial bridge over the Wabash river, (GROSS PUBLIC DEBT NEW FACES APPEAR Reduced Coal Rates Approved by Board tion between the Union for Social Justice, the Townsendites and the mer-Labor, 163,631, and Democratic, | Rare | Share-the-Wealthers. project, as at Park River. Several political observers consid- 4 Federal Agents Ma ——_——— tion of the Northern Pacific Railway —_———_— ered Lemke himself might become the | M¢Kinnon said. company for authority to establish re- | third-party leader. Lemke's name, in| to srey emeauate Program would be Probe Flogging Case|Now Members Comprise More lauced rates to meet truck compett-|All-Time High of $34,331,335,- [ince party leader. Lemke's name, in ONRSEH Er Cone OGY carbs Sie interview Tuesday but drew no verl- fication from him. Others mentioned included: Alfred E. Smith, former New York MPR a RCE STET A eST BERR eT governor, who proposed to “take a Topeka, Kas., June 17.—(?)—A circle jreduction that the proposed rates| Washington, June 17—()—The na-| walk” from the coming convention of of new faces appeared Wednesday |were granted by the railway to “elim- | tion’s gross public debt jumped $2,643,- | Democrats in Philadelphia. peared in the making Wednesday. = |) 14, inate certain discriminations” in |008,000 to a new all-time high of $34,-| senator William E. Borah of Idaho ‘At the same time, one of the al-|® e controls as the Republican }881,355,867 Wednesday as the govern- a of Q m for the Landon- % defeated by Governor Alf M. Landon leged victims, the Rev. Claude Wil-|party reorganized for ment’s largest peacetime financial |for the Republic ination. Hams, a Little Rock, Ark. preacher, |Knox campaign. transaction was recorded on the daily| Governo Bure “cient ada t urged prosecution of six men he said| New members formed more than statement of the treasury’s position. sepanrot ene: ene 2m abducted and beat him and Miss|half of the executive committce that The spending figure for the year | C°°'s!2 frequent critic of the Roose- Willie Sue Blagden with brass-|continued campaign-charting confer- beginning last July 1 through June 15 |"€lt administration, studded leather strap near Earle,jences with the nominees for president was put at $8492,474,029 and pulled Former Governor Joseph B. Ely of Ark., Monday night. and vice president. the deficit for the period to $4,684,940,- ‘Massachusetts, who nominated Smth The clergyman and Miss Blagden,| Seven new members took their 227 si for the presidency in the 1932 Demo- a 29-year-old social worker, reported|places on the executive committee, cratic convention. they had gone to Earle to investigate| With seven reappointed, besides the Repeatedly, during the questioning the rumored slaying of a Negro|/new chairman, John D. M. Hamilton, along these lines, Father Coughlin re- sharecropper. and’ the new treasurer, C. B, Good: plied “I won't tell. .. I won't tell you Roy Morelock, 35, a Parkin, Ark.,|Speed, Chicago. anything about him. .. It’s up to him sharecropper, reported Tuesday he| Gov. Alf M. Landon and his run: to announce his candidecy.” was the victim of another flogging |ning mate, Col. Frank Knox, head- If the third party candidate finally near Earle-Monday. ed into another huddle with the consents to run on an “acceptable Mr. Williams, who is 41, said he /Committee without announcing details platform,” the priest added, he will was struck a score of times with a/Of the opening session Tuesday. urge his election in the Friday (9:45 strap and warned never to return to| Knox planned to remain with Lan- p. m., E. 8. T., CBS) address. Crittenden county. He is a licensed|on several days more. Hamilton's Mr. Smith's Chicago announce- Presbyterian minister. schedule called for a trip to New York ment came on the eve of a joint ce by plane to talk about raising money. speaking tour with Dr. Townsend. T d d Ai id In the reorganization, Hamilton ownsend an iae traded jobs with Henry P. Fletcher, H the retiring national chairman, who Opposing Roosevelt took over the Landon leader's former ane | post as counsel for the committee. Besides Hamilton, Goodspeed and Fletcher, the other committee officers are vice chairmen—a man and a wo- man from the east and a man and a woman from the west: Ralph E. Williams, Oregon; J. Henry Roraback, Connecticut; Mrs. John E. Hillman, Colorado, and Mrs. Worth- ington Scranton, Pennsylvania. Announcement of plans for notifica- tion of the nominees, Hamilton said “ought to be made within a few days.” Soviet Russia was the largest single purchaser of French aviation pro- duets in 19365. tion on lignite coal to the New Rock- ford area and to stations south of Linton, effective July 1. The board stated in granting the Than Half of Party's Exe- cutive Committee northwestern North Dakota for a demonstrational project, Ryan sald, is located just north of Bowbells in Burke county. TWO FALL TO DEATH Norfolk, Va., June 17.—(?)—Lieu- tenant Charles E. Mallory, 27, of Bethesda, Md., and Radioman W. C. Gray of Wharton, Texas, were burned to death Wednesday when their plane crashed from 100 feet shortly after taking off from the naval air station. 867 Registered in State- ment by Treasury Memphis, Tenn., June 17.—(?)—A United States department of justice investigation of the asserted flogging of a Presbyterian minister and a young woman in the eastern Arkan- sas sharecroppers’ strike zone ap- { = rates to which objection had ‘been raised, and said the proposal was ares approved by shippers and receivers affected. The new rates contemplate reduc- tions of 40 cents @ ton from Northern Pacific lines to points on the Oberon- Esmond branch, with lesser reduc tions to points south on the James- town-Oberon line, Attempted Jailbreak Causes Guard’s Death Richmond, Va., June 17.—(®)—Vir- ginia state penitentiary officials launched a probe Wednesday into the abortive attempt by eight long-term convicts to break out of the peniten- tiary grounds Tuesday night, result- ing in the death of a guard, wounding of another guard and five convicts. Powhatan D. Bass, 46, a guard, who was seized by the convicts as a host- age in the attempted break, was killed by machine gun bullets fired by C. H. ‘Smith, another guard, in halting the break. WOOL MARKET CLOSED Boston, June 17.—(#)—The wool market here was closed Wednesday for Bunker Hill day. Mexico averages two motor vehicles for every kilometer of highways in service. YALE HONORS LEWIS New Haven, Conn., June 17.—()— Yale awarded one of its highest hon- ors Wednesday to Sinclair Lewis, con- ferring on the author an honorary degree of doctor of letters. But the transactions on June 15 also lifted the treasury’s cash balance by $1,119,397,160 over the previous day to leave $3,434,653,537 in ready cash on hand, Involved in the June 15 turnover of cash and securities was a new bor- rowing of $1,106,000,000; an issuance of $1,025,000,000 in securities to retire ma- turing obligations; the issuance of $50 bonds for payment of the soldier bonus in the approximate amount of $1,600,- 000,000; the payment of interest on the public debt amounting to $70,000,000, jand other routine treasury transactions involving receipts and expenditures of about $65,000,000. Treasury officials said the amount of the public debt will decrease stead- ily as veterans’ bonds are redeemed. Payments would be made out of the large cash balance. There are only 7300 licensed planes in the United States, and these in- clude army and navy units. ——>k[@eF=e=E=E=E_=Ee==es=e _ Dancing at Dome tonight to Watts’ 8-piece band. Milwaukee, June 17—(#)—Dr. Fran- cis E. Townsend and the Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith moved on Wednesday to Flint, Mich., the next battlefield of their nationwide speaking attack on conditions af Washington, such as persecution, investigations, dictator- ship and communistic tendencies. Mr. Smith, leader of the Huey Long share the wealth movement, and now &@ member of the Townsend national executive board, said there would be 8 series of attacks on all congressional “persecutions” and that “the war has not even begun.” , The old age pension plan proponent. and the clergyman said they could Only 2 per cent of the Indians liv- ing in America have incomes exceed- ing $500 a year. It’s Convenient to stop for Breakfast at O'Brien's Cafe Town Talk Lunch eToRee IN STAMPS By L.S. Klein tractors are becoming increasingly popular both in the U. 8. and sbroad. Pneumatic tires for seen Estimates place the 1936 product! social justice, the Frazier-Lemke group and the Farmers Union for a “united front against the Farley dic- tatorship.” Barns Blown Down by Storm in Minnesota from the oven. And be assured of efficiency, honesty and courtesy. (Pol. Adv.) Strawberry Rolls New - Different - Delicious GO Prussia and Italy, in 1866. Off the island of Lissa, in the Adriatic, Vice Admiral Wile helm von Tegetthof led his small, ancient fleet toward an Italian are mada three times the size of his. ‘The proud, ironclad “Re d'Italia” BY TRAIN- ECONOMICALLY COMFORTABL ¥ stood out from all Italy’s ships, a ESAFELY when Austria’s wooden vessel, the sete ee 3 “Ferdinand Rex.” rammed head- ee on into her. The “Re d'Italia” sank, and so did many of her sis- ter ships, while the rest fied for Atul “oni night, Admiral Tegetthof To~ Fe - gore gt gave a victory dinner to his ofi- i‘ W. one cers. He praised his men for their Dickinson -2 9th ry} < =. & 16.33 tions begun i Jamestown o- 2 Office in Vienna heard of this and o- °- ie in took it as an affront. When the Heel 7:28 pat ducted. Reund Trip Summer Fares to - Tecoma ~~ - +--+ == - $9.70 . Les wearer cecee - A. C. Isaminger fires 2222552225528 portrait appears ‘These fow Candidate for on one of Aue: ow teow to all paisa Bak van Ns Eek, ie — tria’s stamps TP. County Auditor ply te “Folens sued in 1985 in | honor of her | démanding $1 pie eee rec les mea note sent to her in Los Angel ‘Your support solicited. lishing an alleged. pleture of Ker and a friend in the s ; : Feat we 4 cals sald a Ggtgal cripple giving ns name of ; iMipe is pleture. “¢ SCOUT REGISTRATION FEE PAD 0 ITASCA Scottish Rite to Send One Man From Each Missouri Coun- cll District Registration fees to the Region 10 University of Scouting at Itasca park July 27 to August 1 will be paid for one Scouter from each of the eight districts in the Missouri Valley Area council, it was announced here Wed- nesday. Opportunity for the Scouters to at- tend the training school was made possible by the Scottish Rite bodies of Bismarck and Mandan, which have agreed to contribute the $13 entry fee |for each man. Letters were mailed from Bismarck this week inviting the eight district jchairmen to select an active scout leader to make use of the opportunity of attending the school. The scouters chosen need only to furnish their own transportation and bedding. C. W. Leifur, chairman of the leadership and training committee, urged each district chairman to pick sen nn ER State Board Opposes. Change in Rail Rate The North Dakota board of railroad commissioners Wednesday notified rates would result North Dakota points imately $3.50 to $5.00 a ton, $85 to $125 @ load. In its communication to the ICC, the board stated North Dakota munt- cipalities and others users of cast iron pipe had “waited long to secure a @ reasonable adjustment of rates” and urged it should not be “further de- layed.” 2 The number of men required to make one car @ week was originally 55; today it is seven. Dancing at Dome tonight to Watts’ 8-piece band. the man who in their opinion would make the best use of the training when he returns to his home dis- trict. Districts in the council and the! chairmen of each are: Bismarck dis- | trict, Worth Lumry; Brush Lake dis- | trict, A. N. Finstad, McClusky; Chris- tianson district, Dr. O. J. Benson, Glen Ullin; West river district, Willie Olson, Bucyrus; Grand River dis- trict, L. B. Borman, Lemmon, 8. D.; Cannonball district, O. D. Sprecher, New Leipzig; Mandan district. Henry Schulte, Mandan, and Saxvik district, R. W. Cornell, Scranton. Cellulose forms the greatest part of the framework of all plant life. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calome!—And You'll Jump Out of Bed to the Morning Reria’ to Go The Itver should All Phones 34 We Deliver ALL SEASONABLE FRU! Ambassador Tissue, ore ..19¢ Shrimp, wet or dry, 5-or. tins, 2 for ........ .. dade Pork and Beans 28-02, tall tins No. 1 tins, 2 for 25c Eohest' Whole Wheat Biscuits, 23 CRISCO, 3-Ib. tin ... IR yourself a drink of Pabst TAPaCan from your own personal non-tefill- a friendly drink. You will agree with millions of beer ety geodness—here's flavor better than any you ever tasted before. 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