The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 4, 1936, Page 2

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FR. FAVORS TVA SETUP FOR VALLEY Daughter, Mr. and Mrs | Hertz, Temvik, 9:17 p. ne iT j he al k hospit Conservation Projects, Sewage|«'.' ma aaa es Plants Would Go to Red Raye River District &t. Paul, Sept. Roosevelt at the drouth conference in Des Moines Thursday night stated he favors creation of a federal authority conservation similar to the TVA for the Red River Valley water conserva- | tion program, L, P. Zimmerman, state relief administrator disclosed on his return Friday. The announcement that the Minne- sota congressional delegation will be; asked to further passage of an act creating the Red River Valley au- thority was made by Administrator | Zimmerman under authorization by] Gov. Hjalmar Petersen who had not; returned to the capital this afternoon. | Plans for legislative action in Min-| nesota, North and South Dakota to| J create a tri-state authority for main- tenance principally of Red River Val-| ley water conservation improvements | will be continued it was announced. | ‘The present program for the Red Riv-| er which stresses work for an ade-| quate water supply involves an ex- penditure of $12,000,000. Expansion of this program through construction of | sewage disposal plants at an addition- | i B wi al cost of several million dollars is| probable, said Zimmerman. Gov. Petersen received assurance from the president that work on the! Red Lake water conservation project to provide an adequate water supply for communities in the Thief River Falls district will be started at an) early date, farmer Thursday, Barneck, 612 Ninth St., Camp Ripley, Minn., where he will be for a period before returning versity of North Dakota, Grand Forks, for his senior year in the school of commerce. paroled convict, squad secking the slayer of policeman Daniel Gilbert as confessing. | apartment ac: Policeman Frost's yesterday and that Meyer, cornered after Frost followed in a commandeered automobile, shot the officer through the heart. Manchukuan Situation Lapeer snare sears Births Deaths Jake Heidrich, sun of Max Heidrich near as m. ata | Harold Tait, son of Mrs. William has left for two-week military training to the Uni- Sept. 4—/—A youthful trapped by a police Chicago, in B. Frost of suburban Lombard, ‘as quoted Friday by Police Capt. Held with the suspect, Walter Meyer of Chicago, was Miss Dorothy ergholz, 19, found with him when he as seized last night in a Chicago Capt. Gilbert said Miss Bergholz companied Meyer when he stole patrol car early Alarming to Russia SS . _, /$a8 governor and the president sat side Young Paroled Convict; Admits Killing Officer CONTINUE from page ems Rival Aspirants For Presidency Discuss Drouth the president invited the governors of Wisconsin and Minnesota to the cone ference after the death of War Secre- tary George Dern made it impossible for him to tour those states. Herring of Iowa, Cochran of Ne- braska, Park of Missouri and Marland of Oklahoma are Dem: its. Peters sen of Minnesota is a Farmer-Labor- ite and Phil La Follette is a Progres- sive. Landon was the third governor closeted with President Roosevelt in Gov. Herring's walnut-paneled pri- vate office. His aides said the Kan- by side at the desk as they talked of “every aspect of the drouth probiem from immediate to long range needs. But, they added, “they reached no decisions.” Governor Landon told reporters he| left a “memorandum” on drouth re- hef with the president, but said he would not disclose its contents. Ideas Well Reccived He said his “suggestions were very well received.’ “I had a very pleasant time, a very pleasant visit with the president,” re- ported the Kansas governor selected by his party to war with Roosevelt for the nation’s highest office. rt he left with Presi- as largely covered con said the re} cent Roosevelt vas an exchange of views; that always is helpful.” Governors, senators and others said Roosevelt took an active part in the ee cas i fs Weather Report hy the president's own line of inquiry.”| For Bismarck and vicinity: Unset- He termed the conference “produc- us and somewhat Hay Aonight; aturday gener: showers southeast this Mrs. Lela Hall (above), blue-eyed, 119-pound resident of Strasburg, Mo, retained her national clay*tar. get championship when che broke 196 of 200 targets from the 16-yard line at the Grand American trap: shoot at Vandalia, O. (Associated Press Kasia) WEATHER FORECASTS fa! For North Dakota: unsettled east and Bate northwest, south, thunder- afternoon or cooler west and Saturday generally tonight; somewhat north tonight; fair NTINUE from page ene: Communist Body, Now at Helm, Is Di Led by Extremist; the world’s spiritual ills and a French Communist move to form a_ united front with Socialists against France’s Policy of neutrality. The Communists want Socialist France to aid Socialist Madrid be- cause, they contend, other European countries are arming the rebels. Trun, almost another “Verdun,” fell after nearly seven full weeks of siege, and the Fascist captors pressed on toward the Biscay Bay resort of San Sebastian, eight miles to the west. Renew Peace Efforts Meanwhile, pressing anxiously for neutrality, Great Britain and France renewed efforts to have Germany and Portugal sit on an international non- intervention committee. Lisbon and Berlin were assured the committee does not intend to medi- ate the Spanish civil war. Two columns converged’on San Sebastian at the double quick. Be- hind them, in hard-defended Irun, they left a city strewn with the bodies of their foes—killed in their tracks or shot summarily upon their capture. Socialists claimed some of the gov- ernment troops were mutilated by Moors. Fire spread through the rain- drenched town. The defenders fought. desperately in house-to-house conflict, until their ammunition ran short. French Volunteers Killed Rebels scized the international bridgehead from France and, some reports said, killed a score of French volunteers‘ who were fighting in the Trun defense. Government militiamen recaptured control of the bridgehead later but it a united European front on Spanish| him. | Zz THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1936 ees D Retains Target Title C 0) reels pe renewed their at-|midji. They finally reached safety when the craft floated to shore at 2 a. m. Friday. 1 The four were Clarence Plotts, his Prison Inmate to Be two children, Paul, 9, and Beverely, 8, | Buried Beside Mother and F Plotts’ father-in-law. boat overturned about 4 p. m. The body of ‘Leroy Wilson, prison rennaey when, Plotts said, a gust of inmate who died Tuesday, was taken] wind struck as he was attempting to Friday to Wison’s old home at Edge-| come about. All four were thrown in- ley, N. D., where he will be buried|/to the icy water. The two men beside his mother in a femily plot in} grabbed the struggling children and {the Edgeley cemetery. Wilson's broth-| pushed them to the slippery bottom er, Douglas, of Ada, Minn., his father,! of the boat. , W. Wilson, of Tioga, and family! As the waves subsided with night- friends, Mr. and Mrs. Nels Olson of| fall, the men were able to climb upon Ray, came Bismarck Friday to ac-| the vessel. They took turns at shout- company the body to Edgeley and to/ ing for help but none of the cottages attend funeral services there, which! on the distant shore hear them. will be ‘held at 2:30 p.-m. Saturday with the pastor of the Methodist church officiating. Wilson left two children, two brothers, one sister and his father. His wife had died before Four Survive When Sailboat Overturns Bemidji, Minn., Sept. 4—(?)—Wet and cold, four persons, including two small children, spent most of Thurs- day night clinging to the bottom of an_ overturned sailboat in Lake Be- ———————eESESE President ON DISPLAY A new line of ladies’ and gentlemen’s watch bracelets and wedding rings. C. M. Walker Wosdinlanese Stationery I &lso do watch and jewelry repairing at reasonable prices. All EXTRA! Now Showing —at the— PARAMOUNT Theatre Visits Bismarck See the President — See the Crowds — See Bismarck in the Paramount News Today \English Woman ae | Off in Flight to N. Abingdon, England, Sept. 4.—(— Mrs, Beryl Markham, blonde English society woman, took off Friday on an attempted nonstop flight to New York. Flying alone, the tall, 33-year-old matron lifted Lsthpers weeny “The Messenger,” into the al British SUMIMEr time (11:50 a. m. CST). Only a few friends saw Mrs. Mark- ham, woe is the mother of a 7-year- old boy, take off from the Royal Air Force field here. She seeks to be the first woman to make the westward Atlantic crossing alone. Roosevelt Harlem drouth discussions and that the sub-| (For ject matter covered WPA funds for farmers, water conservation projects, South Dakota: howers east, Saturday fair west, partly clou- Partly cloudy cooler west to- Moscow, Sept work guaranteed. sia sharply warned Japan Friday it 4.—(P)—Soviet Rus- appeared they could not long hold their position for superior forces of Gas TRUCK BURNS Blue Jackets Lancaster, Minn., Sept. 4.—\P/—A | considers continuation of the present gas truck belonging to the Bernstrom situation on the Soviet-Manchukuan jena aes ied at one Teduced ekot, Montana: | Fain tonight and Chicago Orchestra & Lindquist Oil Co., burned together | border “intolerable” and dangerous to| freight rates for drouth-stricken areas. | Saturday; little change in tempera- Will Entertain at with a cargo of 500 gallons of gasoline | the cause of peace. heriesident Roosevelt left, Des Moines). sinnesota: Showers tonight | seakvay Uetween Stephen and Argyle. The fe Sovie yoposes imme-| bearing estimates that 320,000 farm | anq‘in cast and south portions Satur- | ime Soviet union proposes imme- | fois, ta tne seven staves will need |ANe, Recere ar sano Uoniepe eset | MISS FLORENCE FRIT H Coman Court ver escaped in driver escaped inj urday; somewhat warmer along Lake} Superior tonight. | WEATHER CONDITIONS |federal assistance this winter as a result of drouth wrecked crops. Re- ports of governors showed 63,700 now are getting federal aid. Roosevelt Enjoys Day Pianist and Teacher of Weight Technique MISS TECHLA KNOLL Teacher of Singing The finest Night Club in the Northwest, starting Saturday Night, Sept. 5 iet - Japanese - Manchukuan commis- sion to inquire into the many indi- dents on the desolate frontier. At the same time, Moscow pointed jout that the Japanese government GENERAL Marie, 30.24, while a "Low" from ‘the central Canadian Provinces TODAY - FRI. - SAT. had consented officially to establish- ment of such a commission last Feb 14, and contended delay in its cre- ation was “entirely” the fault of | jreturned to his special car after the President Roosevelt told an inquirer in the crowd which cheered him as he conferences that he had enjoyed a southward southwestward Arizona and v Mexico, Manitoba, Showers have curred throughout the Plains State: and over the Far West. but the weath- announce Their Fall Term, Beginning the Week of September 7, for Beginners and Advanced Students We'll Meet You at Tokyo. |"grand day.” He declined to make any speeches throughout Thursday, but he waved —Registration Now—— Studios at 304% Main Ave. er is generally fair in the Great Lakes region and Mississippi Valley. Tem- peratures are moderate in all sections. | COMAN COURT Telephone 1635 At Windsor Castle, England, an of-| SS eS | fi i Heroic ... dramatic ... romantic ... is this nerve-tingling story of those fearless policemen of the plains who formed “The Texas Rangers.” They took the law in- to their own hands at a time when the man with quickest trig- ger was king! ... A He-Man's Picture for the Whole Family! PATSY KELLY COMEDY SOUND NEWS NEXT ATTRACTION STARTS SUNDAY The Year's Most Impressive Cast in the Strangest, Strongest, Greatest of All Dramas: No Cover || Capiro Ol scnité cial rat catcher is employed. Comfortably Cool L Last Times Today Wagon trains and scout en- campments, Indian settle- ments and trading posts are faithfully reproduced in this stirring story of the United States’ expansion of domain from coast to coast. SAT. - SUN. - MON. AS HE MADE HER BLOOD STAINED UNIFORM THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE, OF THE RED CROSS NURSE? ‘They have done it The producers of "The Story of Louis Pasteur” bring another gallant end famous life-story ‘eculously to the sereea? I R NCIS The White Slngel IVNTIE NEE his hat and smiled right and left as cheering throngs along Des Moines Streets hailed him on his way both to and from the state house. Cheers followed Sandon, too, as he drove along the streets. At the statehouse luncheon, the president and Landon sat two places from each other, but at the presi- aent’s dinner for the governors Lan- don sat at the president's left, Gov. Herring at his right. The dinner went on for an hour and 2 half and as Landon stepped from the president's car, enjoying a cigaret, ie told reporters: “We visited about everything—t great many times, lots of things.” Car With Dead Man At Wheel Kills One New York, Sept. 4.—(4—An auto- mobile with a dead man at the wheel plunged across a crowded midtown sidewalk on Eighth Avenue Thursday night, killing one pedestrian and in- juring three others. The dead man was Isidore Mosson, 56, identified from papers in his pocket @s an executive of a New York lumber company. A city hospital doctor said he died of natural causes. State 11 100K 3 YEARS TO MAKE! 2 HOURS « SEE! FRI. - SAT. SUN. 11 TAKES 10 IT WOULD TAKE A CENTURY TO LIVE! IT WILL TAKE AN ETER NITY TO FORGET! News — Fighting Marines | Wonders you'll never live to see! Salary Loam Company ARE YOUR PRESENT CAR PAYMENTS TOO LARGE? SALARY Bea $5 to $50 AUTO Her $25 to $200 Beer 10c. oR Aye STS ice eae Out-ef-Town Loans Made by Mai SALARY LOAN CO. Dekete Natl. Bank & Co. Bi fever Bismarck. Bismarck station barometer Inches: 28.00, Reduced to sea level, 29.7. Missouri River stage at 7 24 hour change -0.1 ft. Sunrixe 6:06 a, m. Sunset 7:18 p. PRECIP! ON For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to dat Total, January Ist to date Normal, January Ist to date Accumulated deficiency to date ft, WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA t Drake, SOUTH DAROTS POINTS Huron, Havre, cld 80 58.00 Helena, cld: 64 52 OL Miles City, 84 64 © 00 WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS High- Low- est Pet. Amarillo, Tex., peldy. . of i 100 3 00 2 rlez 80 200 Des Moines, Iowa, peldy. 89 109 Duluth ..... Ey a) Dodge City, Kans. 46 Edmonton, ‘Alta, 00 Kamloops, B. ( 200 Kansas City, 3 109 Los Angele 9 Modena, 00 Miami 00. New Oriea 00 New York 00 No. Platte, 5 26 Okla. City, Okla., cldy. 00: Phoenix, Ariz.. 00 Pr. Albert, S., 00 Qu'Appelle, 00 Roseburg, Ore. 00 M 00 on 9 X 00 Seattle, Wash., cli 00 Sheridan, Wyo: 09 Sioux City, 00 Spokat ash. p 00 Swift Current, § 09 The Pas, Man. ¢! 200 Winnemucca 66 Winnipeg, M 00 CONTINUE from pege one D F. O. Olson, Fargo, Elected President Of Cities’ League ways and streets; 2.1 buildings; 10.6 vecreational; 2.4 flood and water con- servation; 5,7, sewers; 7.1 airports and transportation; 2.3 education; 5.5 | sanitation; 8.0 professional and cleri- jcal; 13.1 sewing and tannery; and 3.9 unclassified. The WPA having expanded its rolls | approximately 45,000 under the drouth program, a total of $1,900,000 |was spent by the WPA of N. D. in the month of August, Moodie reported. | Motion pictures of WPA projects in | North Dakota wete shown by Paul 8. Bliss, administrative assistant. “Do you like short skirts, Mike?” Naw, they get lipstick on me shoit, Per Glass when I dance wit them.” peldy 00. Dunn Center, ¢ 00 | Garrison, Clear . Jamestown, cldy 00 Max, clea 200, Minot, clear 00 Parshall, clear 100 Sanish, clear 09 Williston, clear 200 EASTERN NORTH DAKO! High- Lov est Pct. Devils Li 64 1.40 Grand F 67.0 Hankinson, 5901 Lishon, eldy 64.06 Naoleon, cid, 64.00 Oakes, cldy. 65.10 MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. Minneapolis, clear $4 «62.00 Moorhead, rain 86 66 «00 at the peak of its Matchless Flavor HETHER in billiards or in brewing, Precise Con- trol is essential for perfect results. flavor and bouquet. SCHLITZ DISTRIBUTED BY Nature created Enzymes—placed them in fruits, vege- tables and grains...to cause them to ripen. SCHLITZ controls enzyme action in brewing...stops it at the peak of perfection... to make SCHLITZ always uniform, healthful, digestible... to give it its tangy, matchless The Beer with Sunshine Vitamin D* Also in SCHLITZ you enjoy the important health bene- fits of SUNSHINE VITAMIN D. Aids summer vitslity .+.helps keep you cool and fit... SCHILTZ, the beer with SUNSHINE VITAMIN D, has the same old-time SCHLITZ flavor and bouquet... and at no increase in price. It refreshes ... invigorates. Beer is good for you, but SCHLITZ is extra good for you. For health...for refresh- ment... drink SCHLITZ daily. Jos. ScHLITZ BREWING COMPANY, Mitwavkes, Wise. At Schlitz Palm Garden In Downtown Bismarck SCHLITZ developed PRECISE ENZYME CONTROL to give you SCHLITZ always at the peak of its mellow, ripe perfection and deliciousness. The Beer That Made Milwaukee Famous Pasion every night except Sunday a 1783 for Reservations * Back 12-onnce bottle or can of SCHLITZ contains 100 U.S. P.X. Units of Sunshine Vitemia D. SCHLITZ brewer's yeast conteins the bre-vitemta D which is activated directly by the ultra-violet reys of the sun te form Vitemin D. (Protected by U. S. Letters Patent.) Our light luncheons, hot and cold sand- wiches, refreshments and beverages are the finest in the city. You will like the music and atmosphere provided. Managed idee ART eb eee

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