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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1936 Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1878 PRICE FIVE CENTS’ } Four Nines Battle in Legion Semifinals 4. Make Tentative Plans for Roosevelt Visit Here wtt,wsauas gprs | PERRE AND SEATTLE PECAL RANT) | RESORT PRMARES, WAR [HANDS-OESPANN gus Dex New Minne ective | DRE RAY |e OEE, pn comer | AEE THE pigeon BE bum 25, WFour Men and One Girls| STAGE IN POUT) MORE SOLD FOR D. Champions in Clash Begin New Serial Today Mississippi, South Carolina,| Germany, France, and Great With Seattle FINAL GAME TUESDAY California to Ballot in Britain Agree to Neutral- Primaries ity Proposals Nebraska and California Crews LANDON AT CHAUTAUQUA|ITALY* HAS RESERVATIONS Secret Service Man, Charged With Executive’s Safety, to Check Details WILL BE HERE TUESDAY Travel Bureau Employe, Engineer, Playboy and Married Man Make Ann Hamilton’s Vaca- tion Exciting, Romantic Meet in Second Monday Encounter Roosevelt to Remain on Car for Conferences; No Set Speech Contemplated President Franklin D. Roosevelt will arrive in Bismarck on a special train at 12:15 p, m., Thursday, and will remain here until early Friday morning, according to tentative plans worked out Monday for the visit of the nation’s chief executive to North Dakota’s capital. Definite arrangements will not be made until Tuesday when Col. Spar- ling. chief of the secret service detail) mire some brown suits and yellow sweaters. “For travel,” a card said. There was a profusion of travel advertisements and booklets in the dis- cials who are making local arrange-|Play. Vacation in the Adirondacks. Dude ranch charged with protecting the life of the president, will confer with the committee of state and federal offi- ments. The tentative plan is for the presi-|I.es Cotes D’Azur. dent ‘to remain in his private car while here and the retinue of clerks, stenographers, government officials and newspapermen who will accom- + pany him also is expected to remain on the train. Plans No Set Speech So far as could be learned Monday, President Roosevelt will make no set speech here, If he addresses the crowd at all it will be a brief and impromptu affair. He will, however, go for a drive around Bismarck and Mandan in order to greet the people and probably will be taken for a drive into the country to view conditions and to inspect the activities of federal agencies. Tentative plans have been made to take him to Center where water is eral years ago by FERA and now being completed by WPA. It is the project. selected .. by: ... WPA. ..Adminiatzator. Thomas H. Moodie as one best typify- conservation program. Moodie said Monday that water be- gan backing up behind the dam last November and since then the level of water in wells at Center has been raised approximately two feet. - May Talk With Folks The President may wish to check on this condition with residents of Center. In any event he will be given opportunity to do so. After returning from his inspection trip, according to the best informa- tion, now available, President Roose- velt will entertain Governor Welford of North Dakota end Governor Elmer Holt of Montana at dinner on his private car. Conferences probably will occupy the evening and will be sandwiched in with his activities in the afternoon. It appeared Monday that the presi- dent’s special train would leave Bis- marck early Tuesday morning for Jamestown and that from there the town to Aberdeen by train or by auto- mobile was uncertain but indications mobile since the railroad connections are by branch lines and a circuliwus route. Farmers Send Invitations Since it was announced that Presi- dent Roosevelt would come here nu- merous letters have been received by Governor Welford from farmers sug- gesting that he be brought out to their farms. The president will be inform- being held in a reservoir begun sev-|: CHAPTER I Ann Hamilton held herself erect as she walked down the avenue. There was new life in the air, reflected in the quick- ened step and eager eye of every passerby. The boys and girls, strolling during their lunch hour, were well- x dressed and confident. The summer heat had not; . yet begun. Under the cloudless blue overhead’ the colors were gay. Life was words had a lilt to them. She sto; before a sho days. The Minnesota lakes. JOSEPH DIGKMAN LEAVES BISMARCK Provident Life Announces Tem- porary Transfer of Agency Manager to Seattle ‘Temporary transfer of Joseph Dick: man, agency. manager of the Provi dent Life insurance company, from the company’s home office in Bis: ck to Seattle, Wash. was an: ry His transfer comes as a result of the company’s decision to enter business in Idaho and Oregon. The Provident has applied ‘to enter Idaho, and ex- | Pects to enter Oregon within a short time. Ini view of the fact that the major Part of organizatic lon and development work will be on the west coast, Mr. out of Seattle. Dickman, operating will confine his whole attention to the company’s new territory. ‘There is no change in Mr. Dick- man’s official duties as agency man- ager nor in his responsibilities, ex- cept that his personal supervision will be temporarily concentrated on the company’s new western territory and will extend to the Montana and Washington agencies. ‘ The Provident Life Insurauce com- ‘pany’s record continues to show a 21 percent increase in new business over 1935 as against. a decline of 5.6 per president would go to Aberdeen, 8. D.| cent for all companies during the + . Whether he would go from James-, same period. Company officials said Monday they expected that the opening and vig- were that he would travel by auto-| orous development of the new coast territory would enable the Provi- dent to continue its upward record. COUNTY REGISTERS MEET AT MEDORA Election of Officers, Discussions Occupy Delegates Monday Afternoon .. ,, ‘Spring on Silk Stocking avenue in any city in the world!” Ann thought, with a sensation of, joy. She felt like singing this refrain. The Monday. Mr. Dickman lett | ing the constructive results of a water no for Seattle Sunday morn-j Couzens, Michigan Republican, Comes Out in Favor of New Deal Program Washington, Aug. 24.—(#)—A week of activity of vast import to many election camapigners opened Monday on a broad front. Major addresses end primary vot- ing for national and state offices fill- ed the week's political bill. While President’ Roosevelt traveled back to the capital from Hyde Park before starting out on his tour of the drouth states, which he has said will not be of a political nature, his Re- publican opponent, Gov. Alf M. Lan- don, moved on to Chautauqua, N. Y., for the second address of his east- ern campaign to defeat the New Deal. gay. p window to ad- The Catskills. uth Carolina commanded na- Pe Wanye at the attractive posters tonal atietine, In Mississippi Sen- &i 5 ator Each year in July she looked at!nance committee and a staunch New travel advertisements and sighed just! Dealer, seeks « fourth term nomina- jin way. What person doesn’t, she|tion. He is opposed by the combined thought, look ahead longingly to a ee Sanit forces of former Governor Sennett Conner, who seeks his seat, and Ann's secretarial job kept her busy | Senator Bilbo. 3 all year. Her annual vacation kept} In ith Carolina Senator Byrnes, her keen on living, and brought her inose administration stalwart, is ere back eager for|opposed for renomination by Thomes ' the job again.|p. gtoney, former mayor of Charles- | And each year|ton, and Col. William C. Harllee, for- she seemed to live| mer marine officer. her vacation | intensely, both in| __ California, Delaware to Vote her dreams, and| Nominations also will be made in reality. She | Tuesday in California for the nation- was 26, and she|&! house and the state legislature. had made her|Delaware Republicans on Thursday own way in the|Will make a senatorial nomination and, despite Benatoe,. Baxings. Ae, nounceniem’ that he “Hot “run again, there has been talk of drafting him. ..| After his chautauqua address Mon- aml bs, Aer day night, Gov. Landon will go on to Bill Ware her dark good | Buffalo for conferences Tuesday with looks and trim figure, she saw a| State Republican leaders, Col. Frank young man looking at the travel fold- | Knox, his running mate, will resume ers, almost over her shoulder. his campaign work Friday et Hamp- She noticed that he wore soft, ex-|t0n Beach, N. H., and in the days fol- polo coat over his arm. His collar | states. Was snug and high, The very crush|, In the fast-moving campaign activ- in his hat was redolent of good taste |!ties the announcement of Senator and luxury. He had brown hair and| Couzens (Rep.-Mich.) that he would blue eyes; his face was pale, and he |Support President Roosevelt for re- looked tired. election, brought swift reaction. When he moved away from the Opponent Scores Stand window, swinging along gracefully.) Couzens is a candidate for re- Ann started after him with faint/ nomination. His opponent, former recognition; she had seen his like-| Governor Wilber M. Brucker, said ness somewhere—perhaps in a roto-|Couzens’ stand “will have the. im- mediate effect of solidfying all those gravure section. Ann didn’t quite realise what she| forces in opposition to the New Deal.” was doing, but she found herself fol-| Senator Vandenberg (Rep.-Mich.) de- lowing the course the young manlclared that he disagreed “with my took. He walked a few blocks and /| distinguished "s_ conclusions,” entered the arcade of the tallest|puyt “I commend him for his usual building in the city. candor.” s* 8 Democrats expressed gratification. Just as he went into the smart], The future attitude of the Parmer are bimesa.. which -oreupied Dall New Deal. remained unannouncet of the ground floor she remembered after the death of Gov. Floyd B. who be was. He was Jaime Laird. @ Olson. Several days before his dealh races from Hialeah to Santa Anite, ro| ©ls00 pledged his personal support to Saratoga again, Ann thought that|Mr. Roosevelt. Whether ome he must have been ill, for a man who Serna ebies meee Se 2 followed the sun all the time as a paler, Tomaioe test vocation should have a tan com- e: plexion. ~ Ohio, Sunday heard the Rev. This was the travel office in which | Dus Olle, Seaey Betnat a world Ann Hamilton Primaries Tuesday in Mississippi Harrison, chairman of the fi- pensive woolens and carried a downy |!owing will enter other New England | peat ‘Townsendites at » rally in Colum- | sisted Loyalist President, Fearing Re- bel Drive, Ships Private Belongings (By the Associated Press) An international “hands-off-Spain” @greement assumed near-concrete form Monday. Nazi Germany, although stressing she had not yet received “satisfac- tion” from Socialist Madrid for in- cidents she considers anti-German, agreed to an immediate embargo on arms and airplanes to the civil war zone. France and Great Britain already have taken such action; Italy has agreed to similar neutrality proposals, with reservations, and Moscow Mon- day expressed willingness to stop Spanish war exports as soon as Ger- ieee and Portugal formally do like- wise, Uncensored dispatches from Ma- drid, meanwhile, said that President Manuel Azana, apparently fearing success of a southern rebel drive, had dispatched truckloads of luggage to the port of Valencia. French, British Cheered, France, hailing the German neu- trality action with enthusiasm, ex- pressed no official perturbation over the announcement of Spanish Fascist rebels that they had killed five French volunteers who were fighting with the Madrid forces. London also was cheered by the Hitler embargo move. Furthermore, Officials said apologies from the com- mander of a Spanish government warship had closed the incident creat- ed. by. h ofa British steamer be- tween Gibraltar and Spanish Morocco Sunday. As for the slain French volunteers, the rebels warned that others who ei for Madrid may expect the same late. That appeared a serious matter, since the question of permitting for- eign volunteers to aid either side in the Spanish war has been raised re- tedly in the neutrality negotiations, particularly by Italy and Germany. France Disclaims Part France, however, officially disclaim- ed any governmental part in the ser- vice of the volunteers, and one spokes- man, commerfting on the reported ex- ecutions, declared any French vol- unteer fighting in another country must run such “risks of war.” He said the French government could not prevent “adventurers” from enlisting abroad. Nevertheless, Germany, for one, has indicated she feels such volunteers could be kept at home. It was felt, also, that popular French opinion, largely sympathetic with the Madrid government, might FLOYD B. OLSON Minnesota Chief Executive to Be Buried Wednesday in Lakewood Cemetery St. Paul, Aug. 24.—()—Party lead- ers were on the alert Monday for any Political reactions to the death of Gov. Floyd B. Olson, the nation’s only Farmer-Laborite chief executive, as @ shakeup loomed on the Farmer- where Olson was the United States senatorial nominee. prepared to bring the governor's body to St. Paul Mon- day from Rochester, where he died Seturday night from a malignant stomach disorder. ‘The Farmer-Labor party’s state central committee will meet soon after the governor’s funeral Wednes- day to disduss the organization's fu- ture plans following its leader's death, and to name his suc- cessor on the November election bal- | sex, his birthplace. Representative Ernest Lundeen of | Minneapolis, now serving his second | term in the national lower house, was mentioned in party circles as the leading candidate for the senatorial post to oppose Rep. Theodore Chris- tlanson, Republican, and Patrick J. Delaney, Democrat, next fall. Ardent Olson Supporter Lundeen has been a supporter of Olson’s liberal policies in legislative matters. Should Lundeen be chosen to run for the senate, the central would have to name a candidate for representative in con- gress, as Lundeen was seeking re- Others mentioned as possible sena- torial choices of the committee in- cluded Harry H. Peterson, state at- torney general, who has polled heavy votes in several recent elections, and John P. Devaney, chief justice of the state supreme court, who was &p- Pointed to the bench by his close personal friend, Gov. Olson. react angrily to the execution report. In the northern Spanish sector 1q|about the Bay of Biscay, gleaming new rebel planes emptied bomb car- goes on Irun. Fighting raged on other fronts, too. Rebel headquarters at Pamplona announced the executed Frenchmen had been captured in a battle near The Oyarzun. Spanish Fascists in- despite French denials that ‘a fleet of 15 French planes had bombed Navalpearl and other points. Bomb Madrid Airports Insurgents also asserted that a 21- plane armada had bombed Roosevelt May Outline Drouth. Program Here The senatorial post now is held by Elmer A. Benson, Farmer-Laborite named by Olson to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Thomas D. Schall, Republican. Benson now is the Farmer-Labor nominee for gov- ernor. Party leaders had hoped Olson would indicate before his death his choice for senator, but no word was Although the governor was stricken last December and went to Rochester for two operations, the belief until the be well enough to cam- himself. Peterson Takes Helm Hjalmar Petersen, Danish emigrant and country editor, was. administered the oath of office as Minnesota's 23rd governor Monday. Chief Justice John P. Devaney ad- ministered the oath in the governor's reception room of the capitol while a small group of friends, relatives and Petersen's family, looked In a brief statement afterward, HJALMER PETERSON * * & * & & Olson’s Death Places F-L Leaders on Alert GOV. LANDON TAKES CAMPAIGN 0 FOE'S STAMPING GROUNDS Republican Nominee to Give First of Two New York Talks Tonight New Castle, Pa., Aug. 24.—(4)—Gov. Alf M. Landon drove his presidential campaign into the home state of President Roosevelt Monday after @ sabbath interlude during “which ‘he attended chureh and visited old | friends and neighbors at West Middle- Tonight the Republican nominee will deliver at Chautauqua, N. Y., the first of two speeches in his opponent's state before closing his initial tour of the eastern voting sector. The other speech will be given at Buffalo, Wed- nesday night. Boarding the special train which brought him across country from La Salle, Colo., the Kansan headed for Ripley, N. Y., and from there for a short motor drive to Chautauqua where at 8 p.m. (eastern daylight time) he will start . speaking on the topic of “Education.” Fourth Candidate to Speak Landon will be the fourth presi- dential candidate to speak there since August 1. President Roosevelt spoke August 14, Norman Thomas, Socialist nominee, August 20, and Dr. D. Leigh Colvin, prohibition party, on August 1. The candidate opened his eastern campaign to wrest the government from the New Deal with a speech be- fore a throng on Tam O'Shanter golf course, near West Middlesex, Satur- | &me! day afternoon. After the talk he came here to at- tend a dinner conference of Pennsyl- vania, Ohio and West Virginia Re- publicans. Outlining his social philosophy be- fore a Mahoning industrial valley crowd at West Middlesex, which coun- ty Chairman Roger Rowland said police estimated at 110,000, the nom- inee said the “American way of life is being challenged.” Pledges to Protect Heritage After defining “American” as an “attitude of heart and mind” that “means not only deep love of liberty and justice, but courage to face the and bilities that go dangers with liberty,” Landon said: “I pledge myself so far as it lies within my power to protect for Amer- ica our heritage of freedom and op- portunity.” The candidate motored back to West Middlesex Sunday morning to worship at the 100-year old red brick Los Angeles and Omaha joined Pierre and Seattle in the semifinals of the Western Sectional Junior Le- gion baseball tournament here Mone day with victories over Holdenville, eae: and Louisville, Colo. respece ively. ‘The score in the Los Angeles contest was 8-5, while Omaha’s margin of vice tory was 5-2, od The Pierre club, backed by 500 fans who made the trip here to watch their team in action, met the fast Seattle outfit in the first semifinal game this afternoon. Omaha and Los Angeles were to clash in the second contest. First round play in the upper bracket was completed Sunday afters noon. Pierre eliminated Salt Lake oo 14-6, and Seattle walloped Butte, The Los Angeles-Holdenville contest was hard fought until the seventh inning when the Californians put five runs across home plate as the result of four hits and an equal number of errors, Morjoseph Is Star Morjoseph, Los Angeles, was the star of the first game, lining out a home run, a double, and a single in five times at bat. He was also credited with five assists and two putouts. Ernie James, Omaha fastball artist, hurled a great game for the Nebraska nine, striking out 14 Louisville batters, = peor the meron for the logers, also pi good , getting eight strikeouts. Title Game Tuesday Monday afternoon's winners will clash Tuesday at 2 p. m., for the western title and the right to meet the winner of the East-Southeast breil for the national champion- p. spiel Attendance at the first tournament games Sunday fully came up to Le- gion officials’ expectations. At least 2,000 fans filled the grandstand, bleachers, and overflowed onto the diamond to witness the two contests, Of these more than 500 were resi- dents of Pierre, here to cheer the championship team of the Dakotas in the opening fray. Many of them were staying over for the Pierre- They arrived Sunday in a caravan of approximately 90 eutomobiles which formed in line near the state Penitentiary and made a formal entry into the city. They also staged an impromptu automobile parade around the residential district as a demon- stration of South Dekote spirit. Tournament Manager Harry Rosen- thal Monday asked all Bismarck merchants who could to close their shops during the title contest so that employes could attend. Mayor A. P, Lenhart, in a pro- clamation, urged that “merchants and other employers in the city are range hours of work insofar as pos- sible to permit employes to attend the 5.” " State Employes Excused All state employes who wish to at- (Continued on Page Two) SHRINE GIRCUS TO OPEN HERE TONIGHT Doors to Open at 7:30 With Performance of Thrilis Starting Hour Later “y church where his grandfather, the With the goodwill and cooperation | Fay WH. Mossman, was pastor when Landon was born in the village 40 years ago. Langer Decides to Séek Governorship to St. Paul from Rochester, — Monday escorted by National Guardsmen and| William Langer, former governor, } and (By Kenneth W. Simons) the business meeting, @| “ann’s adventurous spirit fell; she pexmanen’ ve representative from the attorney . ring drouths in the northwest may ‘ Phil Hoghaug Heads General's office was scheduled to ad- Ee, santas. Se announced here by ‘ Young Republicans) *e ‘ sathering and » question box on problems relating to their work was to be conducted by. the dele- pte il E ef ae Bier & ial i 8.8 ae 4 pie Hi a5 i " i FF el i Fe gl s 3 s § : i 8. i i s 8 i fi them. ‘moved away from the young Corey A pil i ry BE Hi i