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apan BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1936 +, Landon to Expand Denunciation of Reciprocal Treaties CRITICISM OF TRADE AGREEMENTS 10 BE MADE AT MILL CITY GOP Nominee Compliments ‘Wallace on Having Done ‘Some Good Things’ CONFERS WITH IOWA CHIEFS Rear-Platform: Appearances in Agricultural States Sched- : uled During Trip Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 24.—(}—Gov. Alf M, Landon. carried his campaign north Thursday with an expanded denunciation of the New Deal's re- ciprocal trade treaties in his. pocket. The Republican nontinee, leaving Des Moines, at 9:30 a.m. (CST). will deliver his second major speech of his. midwestern swing at 8:30 p. m. in Minneapolis. Aides said it would be an amplification of the party plat. form and. his previous criticisms of the admintstration’s tariff agree- ment ; 7 Te Will bo his last speech on ‘the iene situation—et Jeast for the pres- ent Continuing hig drive through the ‘ Landon planned eight large number of telegrams commend- ing his farm speech. Columbia System to : Broadcast Address ._Announceme! Thursday by J. P. Cain, in charge of the atate headquarters of the Compliments Wallace Landon departed after two busy days in which he ited his farm program to the nation, conferred with Towa leaders and George N. Peek, former New Deal AAA administrator. ‘and complimented President Roose- velt’s secretary of agriculture, Henry having done “some speech, in which he hit administra: tion tariff policies and promised. that if elected “our farmers will receive an FLAMES RAZE TWO STORES, COMMUNITY HALL AT BALDWIN Damage, Estimated at $15,000, Is Only Partially Covered by Insurance OTHER STRUCTURES SAVED Mrs. Charles Gray, 206 Thir- Forget-Me-Nof{ to be sold in Welford’s coat lapel while her ray and her daughter are two the Forget-Me-Nots Saturday, Community Chest Drive Set Oct. 21 SALES TAX EFFECT ON CINES WILL. BE TESTED IN COURTS Involves Decision as to Whether Municipalities Can Be Compelled to Pay viet ety J. C. Taylor to Direct Campaign; Other Committees Chosen by Board Announcement that the annual Bis- marck munity Chest drive will be launched Oct. 21 was made Thursday ganize and direct this year’s drive. bir tad the coming campaign were gotten under ‘We night, when committees to presi set as the: probable mates te @- pro! }. for fiscal year, which will extend ‘action |from: Oct, 1 until Sept. 30, 1937. That pay retail sales tax and if so, whether city must also pay the: tax or ma- terials purchased with federal money. The attorney general’s, office con- tends that cities are obligated to pay the tax the same as, an individual, while the city considers itself ex- empt.. $8,000 Tax Involved Approximately $8,000 in sales taxes | ing on materials for various contracts are in question, but the particular suit started by the state involves only abolit $800 in sales tax monies, Joined in the action as a defendant, is the Northern Construction Com- pany of Grand Forks. The action was filed in Grand Forks county dis- trict court. In the complaint, the atorney gen- eral calls attention to two contracts awarded in May, 1935, to the North- ern Construction company by the city of Grand Forks for street improve- ments, one for $30,291.09 involving e | materials valued at $15,553.15 and the FE yi ge eg ih ee Hi i : d BL i i : Ey iy Ky g : i E Ht tt if i a MH F iu rf spill [ rit Mil il ii Chilson 4 ie ; el 3 | other for $53,476.41, including $2¢,- terials. AR5E,F E j is approximately the same sim as Bismarck Fire Truck Rushed to Assistance of Bucket Brigades, Water Tanks Fire Thursday destroyed two stores and the community hall at Baldwin with damage estimated at $15,000, only partially covered. by 5 The flames were discovered about 10:15 a. m., in a small room in the SOCIALIST ATTACKS TEMPORARILY HALT DRIVE ON CAPITAL Assault on Split Insurgent Lines Disrupts Fascist March on Madrid MUST CONSOLIDATE FORCES Rebels Start New Plan to Take y Seat of Government's Mil- itary Operations “pinching” movement by forces of the Spanish government, the Madrid high command announced Thursday, has boxed in Fascist armies pressing on the capital. i ‘Stubborn defense near Santa Cruz diy | de! Retamar was combined with an through that place and into the Rupp Brothers general store nearby. From. there it spread to the community hall. All three structures were gutted and other buildings in the town were saved only by the heroic efforts of the townsfolk, aided bythe Bismarck fire department, which sent its small truck to Baldwin to aid in the fight against the flames. It was manned by Police Chief Ryder Hamro and Jerry Elsemann Elevaters, Section House Saved Fear was felt for two elevators west * lof the stores but the wind was from the south and they were saved. A Soo Line - section house, 2,000 feet from the -blase, was ignited by flying sparks, however. It was saved with- out difficulty. The entire community rallied to assault which split insurgent lines behind Talavera de la Reina, the government declared. Fascist communications in the Tal- avera sector were wrecked by aerial attacks, the announcement continued. If the government claims were true—and they appéared borne out at sJeast in one respect by official in- éurgent reports indicating the Fas- cists had been slowed down near Santa Cruz, 38 miles west of the capital on the Maqueda-Madrid high- way—the attackers would be forced to Pause and consolidate their rear, Claims Conflict Unofficial insurgent radio broad- casts Wednesday reported the Fas- cist. vanguard had reached Navalcar- nero, 18 miles from Madrid, or half- way. between the ci Teport was not borne out by Thursday's dispatches from insur- gent headquarters. However’the Fascists announced another line of campaign in the Madrid sector.. The crash of cannon in the Guad- | arrama mountains, northwest of the made'up the budget during the fiscal | p, year just ending, according to H. P. rd, secretary of the Bismarck tion of Commerce. the Community Chest, are: Chairman J. ©. Taylor, H. A, Brandes, H. J. Duemeland, W. L: Nuessle, J.P. Wag- ner, O. A. Kobs, D. D. Prust and Frank Milhollan. Committees Are Named Named by this group were five campaign. Canna; chain stores committee, Chair- man C. Kirkwood, D. D. Prust, Clifford Palmer and C. D. Roe; com- mittee to secure solicitors, Chairman T. G. Plomasen, A. V. Hart! and Miss Viletia Roche. directors at a recent meeting was a nominating committse which nominate ing committee were the preside: the three luricheon clubs, J. L. Barth Cause of the’ flames, according to Gehrke, was @ small stove in back room of his store which he had lighted to take the off the chill. It became overheated and the room was. in flames when he discovered the blaze. All of the buildings destroyed were of frame construction. The com- munity hall was about 25x80 feet. \ It was understood that the Rupps had some insurance and Burgols had signaled a combined artil- capital, a at two points, The northern nts planned to meet & south- ern column, marching.due north from Maqueda, which is 45 miles south- west of Madrid. Forces Augmented One force of mountain fighters hoped to join the southerners at San Martin de Valdeigiesias, about 40 miles due west of Madrid. The government rear guard attack, Madrid commanders said, was led by General Julio Mangadi Surprised, the insurg men, the government announced. The attack, Madrid contended, may have frustrated plans for carly as- saults on both Madrid and Toledo. As for the latter city, where the government's dynamite throwers struggled to snuff out the last flame of resistance in the crumbled Alcazar, unconfirmed insurgent reports said attacking forces were at Toledo's gates. Relief Is Promised The Fascist forces, marching south from Maqueda and Torrijob, prom- ised relief to the surviving men, women and children in the Alcazar Feature Homemaking Event Will Be Held Next Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday Bismarck’s greatest cooking school, sponsored by The Bismarck Tribune in cooperation with the Capital City’s leading merchants, will be conducted in the World War Memorial building next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs- day, Sept. 29 and 30 and Oct. 1. Four sessions of the school will be held, 2 o'clock each afternoon and at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, it was announced Thursday by The Tribune management. Men are ex- tended a special invitation to attend the Wednesday evening session. Demonstrator for the first city-wide cooking school of its kind will be Mrs. Olga V. Hanscomb of the Twin City|’ Cooking schools. Director of the Betty Service department of the St. Paul Daily News, Mrs. Hanscomb is said to be known personally by more northwest homemakers than any other expert in her line, Endeared to Thousands Radio personality, newspaper fea- ture writer and platform personality with few if any superiors, she has en- deared herself to thousands of women who have had the opportunity to hear her throughout the northwest states in the last decade. Ten years of cooking school work in the Twin Cities and throughout the northwest, two years of radio broad- casting and answering more than 000 questions sent to her each ye form the background which is the basis of her uncanny ability to solve any problem on foods or homemaking which may be presented to her. “Contrary to the impression the name ‘cooking school’ conveys,” Mrs. Hanscomb says, “it is not the object of a cooking school to teach women to cook. If this were the object, you wouldn't find these gatherings crowd- ed with eager listeners. Most of the poor cooks do not care: to attend cook- ing schools, or if they do attend, the results never show in their cooking. ‘Every, Jeoturet from -s cooking. school platform knows in’ advance that the women she faces in her audiences are good cooks, at least 90 per cent of them, because the good cooks in the community are those who are inter- ested in attending the school Principal objectives of a cooking school, according to Mrs. Hanscomb, are to explain cooking problems which arise in every household, to demon- strate the latest in utensils and the best in labor-saving equipment and to bring out new recipes and combina- tions of food. These will be her mai objectives at the Bismarck cooking school, Dozens of Surprises Dozens of surprises have been ar- ranged for next week's frolic of cooks and homemakers, details of which will not be divulged until the school opens and from the cooking stage. Among features which already have been announced will be a short, in- formal style show at each session, during which the latest in household and ou frocks and garments will be ited by living mannequins. Another feature will be exhibits of the latest implements of cooking, re- 'frigeration, washing, ironing, clean- ing, etc., which are being arranged in the spacious auditorium of the Me- morial building by local cooperating Houséwives are instructed to watch ‘The Bismarck Tribune daily for fur- ther details of this inaugural school. saicersl BPRORTS 10 SAVE =2s| Legionnaires Acclaitn Colmery Commander fe €-eRee i i i BABY’S LIFE FAILS). Malformed Julian Tafel Finds Mercy in Death Following Major Operation Chicago, Sept. 24.—(7)—Baby Julian Ee tisk ge foc i E; MBS. OLGA Y. HANSCOMB Mrs. Hanscomb will be homemaker- in-chief in Bismarck next Tuesday, Wednésday and Thursday, when she presides at Bismarck’s greatest cook- ing school, which will be sponsored by The Bismarck Tribune, in coopera- tion with Capital City merchants, at the World War Memorial Building. Sessions will be held at 2 o'clock each afternoon, with men especially invited to attend with their wives a special session at 8 p. m., Wednesday. DEMOCRATIC CHIERS GATHER AT SUMMER ~ WHITE HOUSE MEET Presidential Speeches, Finances and General Party Strategy to Be Planned Hyde Park, N. Y., Sept. 24—(P}— Fifteen men high in Democratic councils converged on the summer White House Thursday to discuss with President Roosevelt every angle of the New Deal re-election drive. Vice President Garner and three cabinet officers—Secretaries Hull and Roper and Attorney General Cum- mings—headed the group summoned here for the late afternoon discussion’ of presidential speech-making, fi- rances and general party strategy. Others scheduled -to participate were Senators Robinson of Arkansas, Byrnes of South Carolina, O'Mahoney of Wyoming and Donahey of Ohio; Representatives Boland of Pennsyl- vania and Drewry of Virginia. Chairman James A. Farley, W. Forbes Morgan, Frank C. Walker, James W. Gerard, and L. W. Robert represented the Democratic national committee. rese Curtly Reject Chinese Protests NPPONESE MARINES ‘a ~~ | PATROL SHANGHAPS Tribune’s Cooking | SEIMEMENT AREA School Announced | Cooking Expert ‘Self-Defense’ Measures Follow Killing of Bluecoat, Wound- ing Others ' PLACE HEAVILY GUARDED Investigation of Shooting Cen- * ters Around Story of Oné Eyewitness (Copyright, 1938, Associated Press) ~ Shanghai, Sept. 24—()—Japanese Officials, backed by armed marines patrolling a large area under martial Jaw, rejected curtly Thursday Chinese protests against invasion of the Chi- nese settlement and warned the en- tire city to “keep its head cool.” Strong forces of blue-coated Jap- anese in tanks and armored cars and on motorcycles drew taut lines around @ large area of the international set- tlement in “self-defense” meastires resulting from the killing of one ma- rine and the wounding of two others. The spot where the marine died was heavily guarded by squads with fixed bayonets. Military authorities continued their investigation of the slaying but releaséd one Chinese, held as a suspect. Situation in Control “We are well in control of the sit- uation,” asserted Rear Admiral Eijiro Kondo, commander of special Jap- anese forces in Shanghai. “We are taking every necessary measure to Protect Japanese lives and property.” The protest against Japanese entry into the’ Chinese-controlled area north of the international settlement ied ee to Sepaneee, military author= les, ey, however, immediately re- Jected it without deigning to answer. The official investigation of the shooting centered around the story told by a Japanese eyewitness. ‘Through his testimony, the innocence of the Chinese suspect was estab- lished. Investigators said he was merely a passerby who was picked up in the excitement. Gunman Staged Attack The Japanese witness was reported to have declared the attack on the . three marines was staged by one Chi- whey nese gutiman. Excitement over the Istest attack on Japanese nationals continued high within the Japanese community, The two wounded marines were reported improving. WHEELS AGAIN HUM IN TWIN CITY MILLS Two Big Firms Reopen Plante Despite Strike; Negotia- tions Continuing reopened ‘Thursday the result of a labor dispute in the Appeals to Legic Topping off a day of political and | S0cery business conferences, Mr. Roosevelt in a radio address Thursday night in the New York Herald-Tribune's cur- rent problems: forum, appealed for logic, calm deliberation and calm thinking in determining questions bearing on the “future” of the coun- ‘At “the same lime, summer house of ment of two more to bring it up to authorised strength, is composed of Rear Admiral Henry A. Wiley, retired naval officer of Haverford, Pa.; Rear G. Hamlet, of Chevy commandant of it # é 5 i z [ ic it cdaet i i | i i i is | t i it gg" rat i | i & E