The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 19, 1936, Page 1

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[22] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [==] eee ESTABLISHED 1878 ; BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS —eVUea=—qOl“la“"laaeeeee— rs Fire Destroys Armour Plant Here Democrats Ask Four-Point Agricultural Program muon isin SECRET ARY W ALLACR Worms Menace Canadian Crop ) ® oO n diti re) n of U~. S, Executed Under Lindbergh Kidnap Law : “i y ; Ms pat AND PARTY LEADERS Crops Is Declining} 4 Re GR | Entire Property Except Hatch- OUTLINING PRO PROGRAM RITISH CABINET T0 Special Quer vs Federal 1 “eat aa Crop Production Control With- in Constitutional Limits R ACE BITTER FIGHT Board Reveals Much of + wens ara one MAE ae OMIA | ON SANCTIONS SUE Goil Conservation, Reciprocal Trade and Commodity Loans Are Features ALARM SOUNDS AT 7:45 A. M. ‘Washington, June 19.—(#)—A spe- cial statement by the federal crop re- porting board, containing no actual estimates, said Friday that prospects for spring grains and hay crops de- clined during the first half of June. 4 BOF : 4 Bismarck’s biggest fire since the The statement did not mention i : . ~ state capitol was destroyed Dec. 30, specifically the spring wheat crop E © ‘ 1930 caused damage estimated at $135,- perate Efforts by Firemen Keep Blaze From Igniting Oil Tanks Nearby Storm of Public Protest Follows Announcement of Retreat From Former Stand : " f 3 “WwW 000 to the plant of the Armour Cream- .¥ : : F lepartments except the hand of welcome to the advance » ho LABOR LEADERS ARE BITTER “Crops are in critical condition,” " " were gutted within 30 minutes after guard of Democrats. Friday wiiile k ' . ———— bcd ana sc alah went Low 5 the alarm was turned in as the flames, speculation’ over the platform to be <a ‘ ‘ ote an and in east- ‘ spread by a northwest wind, swept adopted by the party's national con- i . \ See Latest Diplomatic Move as ern Montana. In northeastern Wyo- i ‘ : : through the wooden interior. intensified. ‘Greatest Betrayal’ of ming, crops have had only partial : oe : oe Destroyed were the poultry house, League of Nations barat ; : foller foom an Armour atliarieae wing “Part of the southeastern area, . F 4 2 of policy on : i 3 s a Ee paiieichinsiaciiiialliaa stretching from central Georgia into u ian car partially loaded with butter, and such controversial issues as farm aid, London, June 19—()—Embittered|Kentucky and Virginia, which was casi . 8 a i @ freight car of the Northern Pacific money, and relief. While American farmers are concerned about drouth and grasshop- lsanctionists sought Friday to loose »|seriously dry on June 1, has had suf- 2 : railway. The hatchery, a separate ‘There was no authoritative indica-| pers, their Canadian brothers are fighting a plague of caterpillars [storm of public protest “against the| ficient rain to germinate planted corn } § : bullding on the southeast area of the tion as to the planks to be submitted which have devastated 8,000 acres in northern Ontario and which government's decision to back sus-|and cotton, and to permit the setting 4 2 Armour property, was saved as fire- on some of these issues, but word still are rolling forward in a relentless tide. Railroad engines have pension of Italian sanctions. . lof tobacco and the preparation of s : men poured two streams of water on it. from the capital said Secretary Wal-| been equipped with steam jets to blow the bugs off the track so they Four labor leaders, who called the |land for late crops, such as cow peas, = : : To Open Temporary Office 4» lace may seek to have the conven- can proceed. Without this equipment the rails get slip; and the pirhsd ° ni uts. Par! is ay 3 : & ‘Tem; uarters will . recommendation “the great betrayal” |soybeans and pean ts of thi : porary qi be estabs { tion’s resolutions committee approve engines stall. The picture above shows the bugs clim! up and of the League of Nations, led a move-jarea, however, are still seriously dry. " aoe - lished, announced Carl Nelson, man- * Waal plank embracing four fea- over a house at Lake Penage, Ont. ment for a nation-wide series of cam- ¥ LAteoibey. Arthur Gooch (peering through bars) and Rich Owen, veteran yet 7 Horst cay “ ec business 5 . Ohio Valley executioner, former! e it which ‘The plank would include: barr opposition, pointing| “Prospects for the oat and hay| McAlester, Okla., June 19.—(@)—Arthur Gooch, 37, convicted kidnaper|Was located on the south side of the ‘The present AAA soll conservation toward a parliamentary censure de-|CTOPS have been declining rather} of two Texas officers, was hanged at the state prison here Friday—the first |Northern Pacific right-of-way at Front Program with subsidy payments to bate Tuesday, followed the same lines|"@Pidly in the Ohio valley area and| person executed for kidnaping under the federal Lindbergh law. avenue and Tenth St. 8. farmers. as the public storm created against |¢tY conditions prevail in most of the The gallows trap was sprung at 5:06 a.m. by Rich Owen, who has elec-| Every piece of apparatus in the Bis- ounce rire of tee Production COUNTY MEETING iN the stillborn Hoare-Laval proposal to ee, = seeeriter tee esrirs trocuted 53 men but who never before witnessed a hanging. presen iprocal tradi = lew York and sout m The “ eves tonal limits. a end the Italo-Ethiopian war. Gooch walked without ald to the gallows and up the steps. southward to central Georgia and the} — Clasping the hand of the prison chaplain, Gooch stepped upon the trap, | turned in at 7:45 a. m. Six lines of e At the head of the parade of pro- seukten: Clem house |Fio Grande river. adjusted the lapels of his pocketless black coat and stood for the placing of |0se were played constantly on the SENT OUT BY DAVIES of ieinieatie aber waaee 2 peg sig-| “Corn, although threatened in some the mask over his head and the adjusting of the noose. roaring inferno as the wind whipped nified his intention to ask a vote of areas, does not appear to have suf- Fifteen minutes after the trap was sprung Gooch was pronounced dead. |5P&rks and burning pieces of wood wide area. criticism fered as yet, and prospects for most A crowd estimated at more than 350 persons, including eight women, |OVer & (By the Associated Press) Stanley Baldwin's government. field crops have probably improved | Witnessed the execution. bie Minette seperti the city Farmers, Business Folk Asked ‘They took their cues from the fiery|in the far northwest, in much of the| _ The condemned man’s death-cell farewell to his six-year-old son, Billy ment policy. Pecos tai timeta re: feat farmers. ‘The question in th minds of some administra! David Lioyd Gi pines e|southwest, where rainfall was heavy| J°e, was, “Don’t get into any trouble, son.” The boy had pleaded with to Make Recommendations FAIR WEATHER FOR FIGHT {minister who led the attack against during May, and in parts of other] death-row guards, "Don hang daddy” | = 4 on Drouth Situation New York—The sun broke through |Baldwin and his ministers Thuraday |states, chisly, Wissoten Michie: | ofticers, RN, Baker and H, R. Marks, and bringing them into Oklahoma, jouncement: One of the officers was shoved through a show case and injured during a ‘Thege they sit—the cowards!” as he bri where rainfall has been ade-| soutne. thus making: ‘penalty applicable, pot egenat pointed scorntuny “at the rth Fuse, “Bo far, however, [AU Rsooevele Thursday declined to intercede for the secon tbe, CLAIM ZIONCHECK INSANE Already national labor and national “Os power to modii sentence imposed would dustrial uses for farm products. and professional men to work| | Washington — Asserting that |liberal members were threatening to|the drouth areas.” to ‘gees eapcoort maae, eeraiy coneieeeai the congress and designed ‘What form the suggestion for en-|0Ut ® practical program for the aid of} Rep. Marion Zioncheck is mnsane, |break away from the government over ‘Seine to meet ® national need.” dorsement of production control| Producers now faced with eminent) the commissioners of the District {the sanctions issue. Their warnings Pastures Are Bec ohcoa might take, no one would say. Re-| destruction of crops due to the drouth) of Columbia asked that he be- |handed to their respective leaders—|,,7h¢ board said that since June < ore cently Wallace and other AAA offi- | Conditions. confined in hospital for mental {Ramsay MacDonald and Sir John|tne condition of pastures has de; cials have spoken about s “48 state| The meeting, one. of 53 being held| and nervous disease. Hearing |simon—the delicate task of attempt- | ‘lined < sins 3 eres: irst or ern act Cc compact” for crop control when the was set for June 26. be oag vg Save tag os per 5 soil conservation program is put into ihe, INJURIES PROVE FATAL ‘Tennessee to northern New York. We apees eee ees nee :35 Pp. Grand ¥orks—Charles E, Gilleland, | oy — ome improvement in pastures was Engine Is Coming Here BONE W PUSH R ls 29, injured when his motorcycle Leeanicene priate oad of the lake ‘Welford, at whose call the meetings |crashed into an automobile, died in a the Tegion an e west. iE ¥ - | hospital here. The condition of pastures was re- fe ‘+. a city block away from the c: Ill fore! (pT Rep ve ex | Beae the cabinet’ decision Gn the sanctions {ported “still materially better than in FORKC, AST FEDERAL ‘Minnetonka’ and Its Pioneer |flames as the heat threatened to blis- he views them, explaining the facili-| |New London, Conn.—Franklin 1934” but was said to be about as low fiat ctoueuReanaon ter their faces, singe their hair. ties available for immediate ald and| D. Roosevelt, Jr., lost his shirt as at this season in the outstanding je Potential trouble was saved the fire- the steps that have been taken for} when the Harvard Junior Varsity Grouth years of 1933 and 1911. July 3, 4 and 5 men by the speed with which the : . future relief. crew lost to Yale on the Thames Newspapers in Lead flames razed the wooden section. Chiet aon Minnaeee | in @ boat race. Hamro Washington Senator Says It ‘Will Canvass Situation chee give their rests to the With U.S. Advertisers One of the star “performers” at the jinstance the high wind was a bless- § The purpose of the state-wide] victors and Young Roosevelt was Would Make Nation Gon No, 6 in the Harvard crew. The | Harvard freshmen beat the Yale yearlings. The Harvard+Yale nelly scene mnll:be, oped sate in movements bore more heavily to by the formal adoption of resolutions ‘the, day. aiamaat the brisk side this week as pre- suggesting the different phases of the LANDON NAMES ADVISORS ‘. parations for broadening activi- relief program considered feasible and|Topeka—Gov. Alf M. Landon dis-| The survey, based on a study of the) ties during the summer months, of | the selection of a committee of three |ciosed that Charles P. Taft, 11, of |®dvertising budgets of 387 companies,| the weekly review of Dun & to attend a state meeting to be held/Onio; Earl H. Taylor, former asso- |hows their:combined expenditures of] Bradstreet, Inc., said Friday. at 3 p. m., Thursday, June 25, at the! ciate editor of the Country Gentle- $231,107,048 in the three principal Retail business widened the capitol here. man, and Ralph West Robey, econom-|™edia—newspapers, magazines snd) rate of gains over 1935, with most “If these meetings are made prop ist on the staff of Columbia Univer- seasonal lines expanding. Better Important News of { | American Business to participate in the Pioneer Days Buildings 50 Years Old Festival, July 3, 4 and 5. Part of the plant was more than 50 lowa Senator Confers With| Jt is the first Northern Pacific lo- | years oid. Originally it was used as storage plant for baled shipped President, Expects Alloca- y out of ‘ here for the three-day event by the|The main “portion conserved ee tion of Relief Money Northern Pacific railway. Announces | stout brick walls but a wood interior, mene was hae as Northern Pa-/ was about 35 years old. ' cific agent 3 Nelson estimated the major dam: Washington, June 19.—(®)—Federal|” During the Chicago exposition the | resulted trom the destnnton oemee ald for drouth-seared and grasshop-| Minnetonka was seen by millions of | ished products and valuable machin per infested areas of the central/persons in the “Wing of a Century” ery. He figured there was from $45,- Progress Chicago’s |ing as it speeded the destruction of th IN STRICKEN AREA World's rate will come. a eee old wood timbers eninge, sida scious of Peace Issue TRADE IS BROADENING New York, June 19.—(?)—Trade erly representative, then we will have! campaign = shopping weather gave consumer northwest was forecast Friday by an 000 to $50,000 worth of marketable recommendation of an] a, bare Doan on es ani be lo- | _Newspapers—$134,440,000 or 58.2 per} buying its chief list, the survey |assurance from the White House and Fred produce in storage. The machinery cent. found. passage of the relief measure in con- was valued at about $40,000. pois : pan Fer, peeants election, Asked if they would con- stitute a “brain trust” the governor] Chain rT jis imaucincan entered an emphatic denial. ee MINCE AETHID <0 18 TALMADGE COMES TO TIME Atlanta, Ga.—Governor Eugene Talmadge, southern foe of the New Deal, said he would do all of his fighting within the party and would support the candidates for president nominated at Phila- delphi. ee compared with a year ago, Chicagoarciie ” Williaa, _ Call ee ne eee ae ago— fe the nelghbor-|fornia speedster, hung up a new |0ld \ pao in the state and the best minds in the state and/cated here most of the time until the Magasines4010u3208 or 368 per cen! CAR LOADINGS DROP Senator Murphy (Dem., Iowa), pre: Washington, June 19—(%)— ‘The Association of American Railroads reported Friday load- ings of revenue freight for the AeEe TS ask, ending jess Aabirday.toteles Northern Pacific coach built in 1883, a ae id one of the modern new coaches This was a decrease of 9,033 Federal relief agencies awaited ar- we els Pail cars, or 13 per cent, compared |rival Monday of Gov. Walter Welford Ceckinnntl lee cial Fae fall beta. : exhibit will vividly contrast the pio- Woman and Paramour Must Die for Murder Nye Planning Hurried Speaking Trip to N. D. Nye (Rep., N. D.), as designed to keep world record for the quarter mile in RAILROAD INCOME UP the crop fatlure victims from direct ‘public |. F&760, June 19—(P}—United States Matthew because 19. relief rolls, ’ Senator Gerald P. went|the National A. A. track and field se Sgt ries nent ‘ Ny ‘aljchampionship meet here Friday. His omieent Races to. ask for|time was 40.1 seconds, come of class one railroads was sumnceed. 3 iS und Cy PASS SUBSIDY BILL - E commission there was a “pretty thorough $41,547,644, compared with $34,- standing” in Washington of the 708,718 for the same month a year m. He predicted a satisfactory ago. solution would be worked sfactor 5 For the four months ended with worked out next week. SR North and} April, the figure was $146,112,623 discussed “the matter| Lemke Mentioned as conmpeered. wit SiR HiGaes Sie fe = Coughlin Candidate a Indi lean ced sa a Grain Prices Skyrocket As Crops Deteriorate Throughout Nation the way for disclosure of a third party , June 19.—()}—Includ- Don’t let anj spoil your|*0#, _ miscellaneous tion. ‘You ca Fond“ Waal aetna p00 “Tubbs” by. having|*™ your . vacation address. | m. to 7:80 p.m. daily except | pig Tribune office ‘is Sunday,

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