The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1936, Page 3

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\Gr € we r q s a WELPORD ATTACKS TAX POGTTIONS OF -RVALS'FOR POST Statement Defends Proposal to Reduce or Eliminate Gen- eral Fund Levy and Langer, endorsed as an independent candidate, Governor Welford further Gefended his proposed action to re- duce of eliminate the general state levy this year in a statement issued Friday. [2a toe Beleanry oamipalen sy found, , ®@ former governor campaigning on tax issues,” Welford said in referring to Langer. “His entire campaign, ex- cept for the whispering and vilifica- tlon,, vituperation and slander, was based on his tax record as gained through vetoed and slashed appropri- ations. He -held himself up as the saviour of the state by cutting taxes $5,000,000. , Bun ‘ Down “As & result of slashes, our state in- stitutions were crippled and run dow: to the extent that the last legislature had to arrange -$1,000,000 of new buildings to house our insane, tuber- cular and feeble minded wards, as well as our soldier home. The people. of the state thought the legislature did right and apparently thought the former. governor’ was wrong as. they rejected him at the primary. ... “He had slashed appropriations in order to build himself up with the "tbs ei ng aoa a ca een ee |e oe criticizes the ‘contemplated tax cut. these interests now, It also did then,”| .. 14,18, Peculiar Pa EF ee both of whom now say it is wrong to Big City Machines Play Leading . +. Now times have changed. With/ aq and by doing it cut the state tax- the state institutions well cared for 8,” Welford said-in his statement. BUTTE FARMER DIES Minot, N. D., Sept. 18.—(#}—Char- say this because if a tax cut favors Welford said. ‘Now Times Have C! .. With other expenses cut; with a surplus over the specified appropri- ations of the legislature, it is possible to announce that the levy for state -_THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1936_ Cheating Death cher Dizzy Heights of ‘Gate’ Bridge th takes a holiday for steel workers on the gigantic bridge spanning the Golden Gate at San the stee] framework of the bridge, it Part in Democratic Cam- paign Plans By BYRON PRICE yurposes will be reduced or| les G. Norberg, 57-year-old. farmer | (Chief ef Bureau, the Associated Press, general possibly even eliminated. “Tt is now claimed by political op-|.pneumonia: Friday at a Minot hos- ponents that there is something] pital. Funeral services will be wrong. of the Butte community, Some special interest is be-| Monday at Butte. Good Feed assures you of Prime Turkeys... They bring a Premium Price... Use Dakota Muid Feeds and play safe! vour DAKOTA MAID DEALER WILL TAKE CARE OF YOU—EXPLAIN TERMS! Drouth in North Dakota makes a serious feeding © problem for you raisers of the 800,000 turkeys i in the state! In cooperation with the State Industrial Com- mission and 2,000 North Dakota merchants, your State Mill and Elevator has worked out « plan which assures you of quality feed for your turkeys on liberal credit terms. * This will be good news to poultry. raisers who have hesitated to use make-shift feeds. No need now tb risk a lower price by using inferior: feed. Make sure you top the market by using’ Dakota Maid Mashesand Dakota Maid Finishers. Quality ‘guaranteed by your State Mill. Correct proportions. Rich'in the necessary minerals and vitamins. Visit your Dakota Maid Dealer today. He will ex-- plaintheplan tosee youthroughtoTurkey Pay Day! STATE MILL & ELEVATOR A..F. Bonser, General Manager + Grand Forks, N. Dakota’ ‘ Under auspices of the State Industrial Commission See your nearest dealer ‘—or— W. E. WELDY, distributor BISMARCK : Newly re! " building. APARTMENT FOR RENT Available Now finished, living roo! itchen, bath; Mies iockte aml laundey privile spel with ye vy, now lars ee: trie rigerator, new kitchen cabinets. : Water and city heat: furnished. $45.00 Per Month “ Wrile ‘Tribune Advertisement No. 17057 died of Washingten) One little publicized aspect of the held | presidential campaign is the great reliance placed by the Democratic field marshals on the big city political machines. In some respects the situation is anomalous. In the public mind the Roosevelt administration has been identified with idealism and the brain trust. Its vocal following is made up largely of those interested in “a cause.” Daily it is indicted by the opposition on a charge of having elevated theo- rists, novices and impractical zealots to places of high responsibility. In the quieter precincts where the political war plans are made, how- ever, sit very practical men indeed. At several of the most important salients the tower of Democratic hope i» @ political organization of long experience and definite determination. Tt is not entirely inconceivable that the outcome in these particular sali- ents may spell national defeat or vic- tory, regardless of the noise and fury isewhere. Will Tammany deliver in New York? ‘Will Hague come across in New Jer- sey? Can Guffey swing Pennsylvania? How is Pendergast doing in Missouri? Will Kelly provide the needed majority in Tilinois? Very, very eagerly will the Demo- cratic managers at headquarters watch for the answers to these ques- tions when the returns begin to trickle in on election night. Could Swing Election The five states mentioned have, among them, 143 electoral votes. Added to the solid south, they would be more | 4 than sufficient to elect a president. In all of them, the rural sections nor- are Republican; they ko Demo- cratic only when the Democratic or- ganization rolls up an overbalancing majority in the cities. It is worth noting also that each pn the five organizations named has doing very well for itself re- cently, In 1935 Tammany made tremendous gains in New York City. In the same years, in Chicago, the Kellyites carried the city by the unprecedented majority cf 630,000, and Frank Hague establish- ed a new high for Democratic plurali- in his urban bailiwick in northern New Jersey. The Guffey organization in Penn- rd had its latest test in 1934, when it Rrra both a governor and a sena that traditional Repub- lican friricn sein As late as Aug. 4, 1936, the sealers oie machine in Mis- intra-] : won one of the most impressive ra-party primary victories in its history. All of these five states are hotly- leaders would dispute that if all five are pushed into the Democratic column by the strength of their five power- Homecoming Chairmen Named at University Grand Forks, Sept Sept. 18. Er tee Haas of Minot, chairman homecoming committee at the uni- versity, announced “the members of his group. His chief assistants will be Robert Kunkel of Fessenden, Robert McCleod of Cando and Phyllis Traynor of Dev- ils Lake. Other committee chairmen include Bruce Westley, Cooperstown; Carlton Nelson of Grand Forks, Robert Baker of Bismarck, Donald Roney of Oakes, Harriet Miller of Crookston, Minn., Winston Olson of Mniot and Peter Hoehl of Melrose, Minn. 2 Minot Men Hurt in Train-Truck Collision Minot, N. D., Sept. 18.—()—Axel Omer, Minot cattle buyer and butcher, and an employe, K, Harrison, are patients at a local hospital Friday as the result of a train-truck crash near Burlington Thursday, A spinal in- jury has resulted in partial paralysis for Omer, and Harrison was cut about the head. The injuries were pronounced serious by their physt- cian, Their cattle truck was struck by the Boo line passenger train No. 3 at a private crossing one-half mile south of Burlington, leading into a farm. The truck was badly damaged. There were no witnesses to report how the collision took place. - Agents in Corn-Seed Loan Program Confer Washington, Sept. 18.—()—Repre- sentatives of state warehouse super- visory aencies in several northwest and middlewest states have been in-; vited to attend a conference of state and federal officials Friday and Sat- urday at Omaha to work out details of | the new $10,000,000 seed-corn loan pee am, it was announced by the , About 800 kinds of wood are known IR. D. R. 10 ADDRESS to the timber trade. TERCENTENARY FETE President Indicates Plans for Expanded Stumping Tour During Campaign ee route with President Roosevelt —dieranige 9 Mass., Sept. 18.—(7)— Roosevelt traveled north Fray to Join leaders of education, science and business in celebrating; the 300th anniversary of his alma mater, Harvard. Ahead of him was a university city alive with jostling groups of students sedate assemblies of learned with discourse of the new and old) ideas in scence, literature and life. Before these hopeful youngsters and world-wise elders, the president planned to speak at 2:10 o'clock, EST, Friday afternoon in the mammoth tercentenary theater. As a member of the class of 1904, the president addresses them as one of a long line of Harvard men stretching back to the 17th century. Aboard the presidential train which | left the capital late Thursday night | were James A. Farley, Democratic na- tional chairman, who planned to! leave it at New York; Secretary of} Labor Perkins and Admiral William | ive Standley, chief of naval opera- ions, Thursday the president devoted himself to a busy round of confer- ences, with several of his callers in- dicating later that he plans an ex- panded stumping tour in his cam- paign for re-election, Farley and James A. Cox, who ran for president in 1920 with Mr. Roose- the} velt as his running mate, were all House dinner guests. A presidential trip into Oklahoma, | Nebraska and other states was hinted by two Oklahoma Democrats who talked with the president. From Harvard the president will! go to his Hyde Park, N. Y., home to: remain until about the end of the/ month. Then he will give a political speech to the New York Democratic state convention at Syracuse on Sept. 29; return to Washington for: one day, and-go to Elkins, W. Va., Pittsburgh, Pa., and Jersey City, N. J., each stop promising a speech. Famed Woman Flyer Coming to Bismarck Mrs. Phoebe Omlie of Memphis, | Tenn., famed woman aviator and | widow of Vernon Omlle, formerly of Grafton, killed in a transport crash recently, will maye a flying tour of North Dakota in the interests of the Democratic campaign, She will make ; oen stop here, | Announcement of Mrs. Omlie’s im- | pending visit was made here Friday! by J. C. Eaton, Fargo, North Dakota | chairman of the Democratic party. Mrs. Omlle will arrive in Fargo, / Oct, 4, and Oct. 5, will visit James- | town. She also will visit Grand Forks, Devils Lake and Minot. Warrants Called for Payment by Elness) Announcement that he is calling | $8,041.61 in Burleigh county warrants, numbered 11,301 to 11,500 and all reg- | istered prior to Dec. 4, 1935, was made | Friday by County Treasurer Ernest Elness. The warrants are payable at once at the county treasurer's office. With this payment on’ warrents Bur- leigh county is now nine months and , 21 days away from @ cash basis, ‘The central-western district of the | U. 8. secret service in New York has | been shifted from Syracuse to Buf- falo. Tonight °: rat titling 7 to 9 o’Clock Here’s your chance to browse around in Wards Complete Hardware Store! It’s the biggest night of our big Fall Fair! There'll be no selling, but plenty of interesting demonsérations and work-them-yourself displays of the newest Fall merchandise—sporting goods, auto acceso- ries, tools, hardware and many other lines. Remember, it’s tonight, the biggest night of Wards Great Hardware Fair Bring your Wife, too — She'll want to see the new Fall Kitchen Need Exhibits! COMMANDER MOTOR OIL Certified Kalsomine 5 hs. tr DRE 39c value! All you need to finish an entire room! IONTGOM,MERY WARD , 300 Fourth Street Telephone 475 smite A'T® Steel Tape. 6 Ft. Flexible, rigid tape. Polished steel case. Buy now! MOTOR plus 1c On qt. Fed. Tax Bulk price. Same quality that sells for 20c-25c qt. at Stations! Bism arck “In flreptost too much of a strain on these troubles to apply the pressure for Roosevelt in. 1936? Until Fe i df i iH é ; : t #3 ptt i { i ...for tobacco cut right to smoke right "There's a right way to carve a chicken or slice a ham. And there’s a right way to cut tobacco. ve shinlhy aopgggh reat, Sagudpbeny nea i burns even and smooth. . . it smokes better, Sh

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