The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 18, 1936, Page 1

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v | ESTABLISHED 1873 5 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS , Attack Drouth Problem on Broad Front \ Relief-Deficiency Appropriation Bill Sent to President xvupins ine + MASECARING |= NGAD TOLD [Heavyweight Fight [MUST ISHOT [Leaxerws eve wig Amn ~~ $2375,000,000-15. | FINALLY APPROVED Congressional Action Completed When Florida Ship Canal Is Stricken Out $1,425,000,000 FOR RELIEF Only Tax Bill Now Stands in Way of Congress Adjourn- FROM FASGS ALY "in tets”| Late News Announces Policy REPRESENTS ‘ABOUT FACE’ Bulletins (By the Acsecinted Pras) Labor Members Laugh at Dec- laration that ‘the League SAYS LEAGUE HAS FAILED REHOVIN: SARTINS| I. Delayed by Rain Louis and Schmeling to Clash Friday Night in New York Promoter Says New York, June 18. — (#) — Rain Thursday caused postponement of the Louis-Schmeling 15-round heavy- weight bout at the Yankee stadium until Friday night. A steady rain and weather bureau Predictions that showers would con- tinue throughout the day and night led Promoter Mike Jacobs to ane FOR IRRIGATION IN NORTHWEST SECTION Turns Envious Eyes Toward Yellowstone Valley Where Farms Produce RECALLS FORMER EPISODE Once Had Federal Project But Good Years for Prairie Farmers Ruined It Welford Calls Conference of Northwest Governors Meet- ing Here June 29 FEDERAL AGENCIES AWAKE Roosevelt to Discuss Matter With State Executive in Washington Monday ‘Developments came thick and fast ‘Thursday as North Dakota and other northwestern states moved to combat London—Prime Minister Baldwin | Nounce the postponement. Originally told the house of commons that col- |*he bout was to have been held ment by Saturday Must Go On’ the effects of devastating drouth, Important events were: 1, Governor Walter Welford called a conference of the gover- nors of the two Dakotas, Minne- sota, Montana and Wyoming to meet here June 29 and outline a Program covering this entire area. 2. County commissioners from ‘Thursday night. Ps Note: This is t . eer a tive security has failed and that Editor's Note: This is the sec: London, June 18.—(P}—Opposition England should enter into s peace | ,,The postponement came a few min-| ond of a series of articles on the gress complet ion jursday on fhe $2,375,000,000 rellef-deficiency. ap- propagandists in’ Russia, ‘Maxim lahouted “suamel reclga!™ at Porelon been weighed in. Louis, at 198) Dakota Propriation bill and sent it to the /Gorky, died Thursday in Moscow. |Secretary Anthony Eden Thursday| WANTS COMPULSORY LAW Pall in'the weights, PoWnd advantage) ‘The next will follow in an early House. es when he announced Great Britain! s+ Paui—edward A. O'Neal, | Jacobs said that in the event or| {Ue * Congression: the long- |, fought casenure: eabeytig ISURSE00RE Would lead a move for the lifting of! president of the American Farm | further rain Friday he would try to } 000 for relief was completed when =| ; MAXIM GORKY Best known among the writers and|members of the house of commons|alliance with France and Germany.|Utes after Schmeling and Louis had! prospect for irrigation in North League of Nations’ sanctions from Bureau Federation said produc- |hold the fight Saturday, possibly in By KENNETH W. SIMONS f senate agreed to elimination of its (ee e| IN MOSCOW AT 68 . canal. The balance of the conference re- 5 | right direction, port on the big appropriation bill the house. “will never work as long as com- | Eden himself assumed much of the Cj -~ : hte oe by the senate with lit- W, AS NOTED WRITER responsibility for the government's| Pllance is voluntary. debate. about-face on the question of ! Final action on the relief measure : 1 MUST USE BONUS FIRST «4° ‘Yeft only the tax bill standing in the cae vent Italy eonquest at Ethiopie” | St. Paul—The state relief admin- ly. Now both farmers and city folks |tne “veteran” Senator Duncan | tend the conference here, he said, ! way of congressional adjournment | R494 Erom Obscurity to Become| The storm of shouts burst out af- |!tration announced that World War are red hot for irrigation in that area. /metcher of Florida, chairman of the ny he will be in the east at 7 Saturday night. -|ter Eden had announced: veterans must use up their bonus The answer to why the initial proj-| senate banking and currency com- ne ie raisiti Leaders long have planned to end| Leading Novelist and Prop- ‘His majesty's government, after |money before they will get any more ect failed and why they seek irriga-|mittee, placed Glass in line for this set Ns eae bien! bis epael cei agandist of Nation mature consideration on advice which |help from the state, Se opener ‘suraniot tne fait chairmanship, in some ways the most} government *otticials have © & were o I, as foreign secretary, thought it my . . - important on Capitol hill. _ th 3 ee - duty to give, has come to the con- STRIKE WAR IN OHIO Mrs. Edward Jehowski, 63, Dies per eee De ie eniliicie Tt was still uncertain Thursday Eats pointy pearl the house's refusal to accept 8! seoscow, June 18. — (#) — Maxim|clusion there is no longer any utility; | Kent, O. — Five men were ughlin worked on whether Glass would accept the po- amendment for reviving the canal| Gory, gg, most famous of contem-|in continuing these measures as a| Wounded in an outburst of labor in Hospital After Auto |!rrigation project when it was install | ition, but in view of his life-long in-| {#¢lng and would help to work ed and knows that it violated some of out a solution. porary Russian writers, died Thurs-|means of pressure on Italy.” trouble at the Decker and Black and Bus Crash the prinel terest in banking and fiscal affairs ‘ iples which have since been Expect Good Representation day. Electric company plant here. proved true. An attempt was made|™ost, observers believed that he) sow many governors will attend y. Face Grows Red Gorky, leading Russian novelist | sen recited the occasions upon} Striking Machinist's Union men to lift the water too high and the the meeting here is not certain Ut ROOSEVELT 10 GET and the Soviet’s chief propagandist, |wnich Great Britain had previously said strike-breakers attacked An inquest was to be held Thursday project was too big. Thus the project ‘Welford said all of them have agreed ‘would. was personally a revolutionist from tf -| them with tear gas and they re- | into an automobile-bus collision four | +. techni \- emsselt send ect ection Hay Lepthteina ae tle the. Ttalo-Bthiopt hl panvwar ct sald taliated with rifle fire. aie of New Salem Wednesday neering handicaps.” oe MISSISSIPPI VALLEY Teesciaten ech were sucl ess in wi one person was injured fat- PARTY NOMINATION revolted against the social order ag that, since the league seemed to be si nereains Not Irrigation Minded ‘The meeting will follow by nine . WITHOUT CONTEST ‘ —_——. SENATOR CARTER GLASS That was the slogan which W. W.| A critic of some phases of the New| ‘he drouth area in South Dakota were meeting at Pierre to dis- came a little loyal cheering, but the McLaughlin and his party heard at/peal but a supporter of President fours of “shamnel" created tarmoll in| couservation law Se at MONTAN A WOMAN iN Williston when they inspected pro-|Roosevelt, Senator Carter Glass of| USS the situation caused by Italy. to “Irrigate or emigrate.” B government benches there lien bli ag A the afternoon if that can be arranged. posed irrigation sites near that city—| virginia will get new power in con- drouth and grasshoppers. Gov- and therein lies a curious fact. gress with his elevation to the chair-| ¢T0r Berry will go to Washing- are at betel bepnecdan id manship of the senate finance com- ie ‘hele, tie thle: eee on eral irrigation pro; mittee, - KILLED IN ACCIDENT North Dakota. It failed ignominious-| ‘The sudden death Wednesday of ment. He will be unable to ate Project. perplexed, the British government| ASKS ARMS NATIONALIZATION | ally. But worse than this bar to considered it to be’ its duty to take| Washington—Four members of the| | Mrs. Peter Jehowski, 63, Corinth, | success was the fact that the people pence ce mass meetings = out. state at which delegates to a the lead again. senate munitions committee Thurs-|Mont., died in a hospital soon after | wore not irrigation minded. They FARMERS WORRIED statewide drouth conference will be Ambassador Dino Grandi of Italy |4@y recommended nationalization of|the accident. Mr. and Mrs. George didn’t like partes around in rubber ee chosen. members on the floor. 14, 1862, at Nijni Nov-| Eden flushed under the barrage of | Nvé (Rep. N. D.), led the majority. 4 i “heckling and once retorted angrily: CORES % rae Pitas orphenat|"The honorable members are making| WANT BETTER TRUST LAW five, His grandfather |Cheap gibes!” ‘Washington — Asserting that ozs 5 oa fact, matic gallery and |naval shipbuilding and government cit ~ ‘taking-case- Sei . “The- govetnibr -witl’ speak aie ree Beard’ tie torelgn eareisey's feet c ‘of vertain “arms “ised “Dy 3 a vt tienes The old ne of bonanza KS MERCURY RISES este hookup ‘at 4 p, ane Procedure Is Outlined by Par- ‘which was constantly interrupted by | ‘ie army and navy. two, members wheat farming still were firmly im- day and Sunday will leave for - bedded in the minds of farmers in that Washington to confer with President locality. They wanted the fruits but Roosevelt. He will carry with him not the labors. There was no real) Southeastern Seaboard Also Af-|jrecommendations by the state plan- enthusiasm on the part of the people fected; Record 100 De- nine ee a ®& program of cO- > ordinat evelopment. liamentarian; G. 0. P. Leader Confident : : i 5 2: who had to do the work. ‘Washington, 18—(P)—A pre-| _« "t live| The labor members ldughed deris-| many trust officers have put the Then came a succession of good Nye predicted funds would be diction that bb Denes would ‘ ino the workdt™ ively when Eden said “the govern-| welfare of their institution above years, About the time the project grees in Alaska made available for drouth relief soon m most boys have few |ment is determined the league should| ‘hat of investors, the Securities than ready the al-|go on.” j and Exchange commission asked became a ragpicker. Sanctionist Effort Fails congress to pass stringent laws ‘an apprentice to a me-| The lobbies of the house of com-| Covering the subject. was well under way North ee TS from the relief-deficienc: passed harvested its banner wheat crop of} Kansas City, June 18.—(?)—An Op-| Thursday. Lic 1916, matured under conditions which | pressive blanket of early heat, ex-| He said federal relief agencies, such wi were ideal. The man who planted/tending from Alaska to Florida,|as the works progress administra- draughtsman, an assistant/mons were the scene Wednesday ER crops on the open prairie got as much | brought new omens Thursday to warn |tion, resettlement administration an¢ win overwhelmingly in November. | cook on # Volga steamer, a clerk to a|night of a desperate, last-minute ef- VOTE FOR WAR PLANS as the man who was farming in the| farmers of an old enemy—drouth. | the ‘surplus control board of the de- Representative Cannon (Dem.-Mo.),| lawyer, a tramp on the steppes, and a |fort by sanctionist advocates to turn| Washington—The senate approved} All passengers on the bus were |!Tigated area. Sneeringly they ask-| Along with the threat of a dry se8-|nartment, of agriculture had been laborer. the tide against the government. ® conference report lifting the num-| severely shaken up but none were ed the question “why irrigate?” and | son are more reports of its companion working in the direction of “this one League circles at Geneva viewed |ber of effective airplanes in the army | seriously injured. the men on the irrigated tract, none | scourge, grasshoppers, preying on large works program.” He said the the sanctions-dropping proposal as a from 1,800 to 2,320. The house has According to Ruth Davis, Fargo; E. too enthusiastic to begin with, found | midwestern crops and giving rise to amount of money involved had not . digested Practical political measure but also Still to act. ©. Wischow, Plainview, Minn.; A. P.|NO answer. They declined to pay the | calls for outside aid. 2 est tem-|DeeN determined. Roosevelt without the formality of ®| could get hold of. This indefatigable |unfortunate for the league's prestige. — Susimski, Long Island, New York, and | Water rents and, one by one, they left.| Reports of the season's hig! me peas Other States Seek Help ballotothe first man s0 honored| reading and his own kaldoscopic ex-| Elimination of the penalties FARM INCOME RISING Jack Whitton, Chicago, all passengers |The project fell into disrepair and | peratures were numerous, with the) seanwhile, another agent’ of de- since Grover Cleveland in 1888. perlences gave him the background |against the Fascist nation would) — Washington—The bureau of ag- | in the bus, the accident occurred when |disuse. Today it is the remnant of | mercury hitting well above the ceN~| struction — grasshoppers — menaced Procedure Is Outlined for his future books. likely remove dangerous political .un-| ricultural economics announced | the Fry machine swung out to passan-|dream that might have made Willis-| tury mark. “the land of the| the grain fields of six other central Cannon ssid he had confidence the| At the age of 15 he went.to the uni-|jrest in Europe, it was said, although | that farm income from principal jother car and ran head-on into the|ton a much bigger and better city,| From Alaska, “the . and western states where officials é opponents believed such an act would| products for the first four months | bus coming east. brought prosperity to an entire region. | frozen north,” came reports of an un-| 1 Looe to check the most ominous < aggression. of this year was $200,000,000 above | The Montana car was en route Now Facing the Facts gificlal reading of 110 degrees at) swarms since the plagues of 1831 and = nominations: ingness to study were the sole quall- figures for the same period in |from that state to Milwaukee, It was| | But now, faced with » longer suc~ blips oc 1932, The insects were invading l- “ ” ce le 30 tet the Zou! by, states with | fications one needed to enter the unl- |i cannot “take or ahare” the leader- | 1835. Was driver of the bus; '” *°*R|Cther section of the state, northwest-| A crop-killing drouth created an Senin net ae arate CRIaniSS ing speech. lals said ‘Thursday, although it will CROWLEY TO RESIGN Mrs. Jehowski and Mr. and Mrs, |r North Dakota is facing the facts./emergency in the Dakotas and Mon-/ “xo and south Dakota observers 2. Motion to suspend the rules for the British’ at Gemevs.| De ae Fry were rushed to a Mandan hos-|Businessmen say “irrigate or emi- ta of Wyoming, Indiana,| Noted little change in the crop out- support the move a. Pere, -Wis—Leo T. Crowley, pital by Albert Moltzen of New |State” from bitter observation. Many | also in of T 2| look, made gloomy by dearth of rain, 3. Call of roll by states for vice gellar i—Se chairman of the Federal Deposit In- | Astem, a passing motorist, after re- |farmers already have left the country | Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia and the | os, made gloomy by dearth predict nomination with five ‘the Landon and Family to | france, corporation, announced that celving. first ald treatment from Dr. and others will do so unless action is | Carolinas, Livesioce was belng moved) eq" for ‘both. states ‘Thursday, but 2. ry Wo el 4 Begin Vacation Soon | clection to return to his private busi-|0,6. Sachs of New Sater «to show|titude in Williston is that farming | shortage. spring wheat flelds in the stricken ness at Madison. improvement Thursday morning and|has failed in what is essentially a ship in lifting sanctions, Paris offi- began regions already were reported lost. Typical of the insect-infested re B. W. Snow, crop expert at Chi- cago, estimated that spring wheat aa ans said they will recover. range country. ‘gions wi tions of Mi victory from WATER BILL APPROVED physic - th in ‘Dak ere sections jontana where publican John D. Funeral arrangements for Mrs, Je-|/ But Williston’s ideas are more ad-|losses from droutl the tas |G : M. Hamiston, and Washington—The house passed | nowski have not been completed, vanced on this score than is generally |and Montana have already aggregat- page Jodaral pany, said for G Alf’ and sent to the White House a play true elsewhere in western North Da- | ed 52,000,000 bushels. crickets had pate d fie In M. Landon, , plays, in Colorado, returning July 6 for a) senate approved bill to authorize / CARBURETOR FIXER ‘The reason {s that » few miles| His figure, he said, was based on pped some fields. Oklahoma the ‘hoppers were laying tifee states ene took into sonsidees Sakis PRUNES, EERIT, SORE DLINEY OD, tion scattered showers received up to ots ant coan: the end of last week. to 1986 TO PLAY AT DICKINSON Montana and Wyoming to enter |BURNED BY BACKFIRING west of Williston in the Yellowstone an agreement for the division of Desincon, N. D,, June 18.—(#)—| Valley, lies an irrigation project which waters of the Yellowstone river. Mike Dolajek, farmer south of here,|@5 proved successful. It has had ‘its is recovering in » local hospital trom | full owe. of es. npingenehn severe ‘Tuesdi work assure the Eastern Star Elects Burns. Saltese ay. when. skittles| “The crop collapse is similar to that . his clothes caught fire when his|than life isn’t all beer and e ! Two Slope Residents automobile back fired while he was|{0r them. Not by a jugful. experienced in 1934,” said Snow, “and ee cleaning the carburetor of the motor.| But some advantages stand out like jis due to absence of subsoil moisture Dolajek rolled in mud before the|® lighthouse on @ stormy shore. The jat seeding time and to drouth condi- flames were extinguished and was Tevet burden hasn't been heavy there |tions during May and June to date.” —only per burned about the face and hands. been, ia noni gated a i ost tne OLD TIMERS MEET ° ve in | comfortel jormity with federal requirements. Valley City, N. D., June 18—(e)—| homes, much better on the average -. Old settlers of Barnes county gather-| 414 SAYS YOUTH DAMAGED . »/ed in Chautauqua park here Thurs- . q and 5 day for the annual Pioneer Club pic- . modern feecial session of the Kansas legis- ure, : tic Chairman J: A. Farley ussian tne date and place f his formal ocra\ james .” OF Wealth,” received te lor no- i “will have to do some picking to name fettty ee He wollowed this |tification of his selection association, will be mane ager of the event. , 3 3 i z i F Z ition to enable the legislature to social ‘security legislation in| ing Hl th: ‘abandonment has taken place. said “thousands of acres of seed have never come up” sufficiently to ma- ture. Avery Hoyt, acting chief of the bu- ae Sane cree ure no funds available which might be 1 é Halted In Lynching Effort at Wharton and City only 300 Armed Persons Search Two totus the intended ‘victhas Jails: in Vain for‘ Nine | names'tt wes not decided im a Ea Eg FE i seg $ Z deri: ETE ae Z F E 558 EE i 4 3 the Tand they always get 8 ing company of Bismarck, Wed- who have seen this nesday telegraphed ee would like that kind of Pioneer Days Festival committee: men in the McLaughlin “Tired of explaining reason little politics 4 Hip gen eak ii awarded a technical knockout in en See

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