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~ i { | quae ua Sathre, Gronna At UBEL' IN ADRESS | “Odds Over Ball PENN CUPL Odds Over Ba ots Praises Landon for Showing ‘Broad, Sympathetic View of Farm Problem’ URGES “WELFARE REVISION : Governor Favors Civil. Service|. System for. State High- way Department Men Down'900 Feet to In- “ gtant Death in Idaho ly sf E fu ral it i ne E i gil tii ee HE BR i zs i 2 / és g i i { if 3 i A i 7 ‘i It i! | i d f EE if f H A £ 3 5 g i tee . AEE Hl HH Tt .Prowler in Kitchen Proves to Be Fish gent Lines Are Tightened, ‘Columns United HEE eae I Lieietee H i i il it | | Af i i ! q Hg EEE = ues Gelpeel Disagreement Develops Positions of Individual Nominations Colurins | Speeche: LABOR FAVORS NEW. DBAL, UNION LEADER INFORMS PRESIDENT SCORE BY INNINGS - 1.2 38 4.5 67 8 910:1112 RHE Giants William Green Reports ‘90 Per| BATTERIES— YANKESS—Gomez, Murphy and Dickey. GIANTS—Fitzsimmons, Castleman, Coffman, Gumbert and Mancuso. Cent’ of Working Men Favor Roosevelt - WESTERN TOUR PLANNED t Chicago and De- troit’ Scheduled; Others " Under Consideration Washington, Oct. 6,—(7)—Settling | himself at the White House for 8 t tf [ i g 5 RF ft gE ie LE AL Wy He ve Ed Eigse B &3 ¥ 4 Point in Hills for Palestine i i ales zg okt ! a Le All four-day stay, President Roosevelt Tuesday tackled a mass of state busi- Ness and gave thought to the final de- tails of a campaign dash into the west him from Hyde Park, N. Y., where he spent an extended week-end, a state- ment by William Green that both or- ganized and unorganized labor was “90 per cent for him.” Green, American Federation of Labor president, gave him the assur- ances at a Hyde Park conference Mon- day. At the same conference Frank Murphy, Democratic candidate for governor of Michigan, said he told the chief executive he had a good chance tw win that state's 1¢ electoral votes. Werk Out Details Presidential aides had hoped to an- nounce the western campaign itiner- ‘ry Monday night, but deferred it to ite details. FRENCH OFFIIALS DEFER PUNISHING FASGIST LEADERS Cabinet Bans Partisan Demon- strations and Meetings in Paris Region Paris, Oct. 6.—(?)—Nervous French have organized street disorders. Cabinet ministers, summoned by Premier Leon Blum to conferences, approved ban on partisan demon- strations and meetings in the Paris region ‘but discarded, “for the pres- ent,” plans for criminal action against Rightist chieftains. Two charges were considered for French social party which Leftists as- sert is really the dissolved Croix de Feu league of nationalists. De la Recquc Blamed One was reported to have alleged “reconstitution” of the league ordered disbanded by the government while to| another was declared to have blamed Green told newspapermen his per- sonal contacts and study of reports from the field showed labor was 90 per cent for. Roosevelt “throughout Mra. Anna Spangberg, 82, Wilton, Succumbs v= 5 & 8 Pepa ty He wil apes eg. aj te i De la Rocque with “organizing street disorders” Sunday between Fascists Simons Is Chosen as Officer of State AP Grand Forks, Oct. 6.—(#)—Thomas E.. Nugent, managing editor of the Valley City Times Record, Tuesday was the new president of the North Dakota Associated Press. Yass MERE DUORDEEEE GE BODDRORTOEES BHO ILANDON SAYS NEW DEAL I$ CENSORING Nugent was elected at the semi-an- nual meeting Monday. Kenneth Simons, managing editor of the Bis- marck Tribune, was named vice presi- gent and R. E. Anderson, state Assoc- lated Press correspondent, at Bis- marck, was re-elected secretary. The spring meeting will be held at Devils Lake, with the Devils Lake Journal as host. "TIGER BOY’ CRIES | WHENTAKEN AWAY 7-Year-Old Attacker of Infant Shows First Emotion on Leaving Home ' Bellingham, Wash., Oct. 6—(P)—A seven-year-old “tiger boy” who, police said, “seemed pleased” with his at- tempt to kill a baby with an iron bar: cried when he learned he was to be taken from his parents Tuesday. It was the first emotional break- down of the second grade school boy who had shown no remorse for his al- most fatal assault upon 22-month-old Roland Smith, . attempt .to remove the brain. His skull was fractured :]| Because he has savage, homicidal ten- "| Federal Agents Probe Tuesday they tiga “hundreds “and hundreds” of cases in which Flier Starts Sea Hop; Baroness: Left Behind New’ York, Oct. €—(M)—Facing) wanted to make the fight solo, and Nine Persons Plead denies.” Reed said the boy told him he had taken off one of the Smith child’s shoes intending to “cut his (the baby’s) toes. off.” COMMUNTY CHEST MEETING TONIGHT New Members of Board of Di- rectors Will Be Chosen at Annual Election Reminder that the annual meeting firms,|of the Bismarck Community Chest, with the election of members to the board of directors, will be tonight, was i. P. didates for the eight vacancies com- ing up on the board. Four members ‘will be elected for two year terms and four for one year terms. All contributors to the chest are Asserts WPA Records Being Covered Up Because of Fear of Publicity Topeka, Kas., Oct. 6.—(#)—Gov. Alf M. Landon said Tuesday the New Deal was employing a “censorship of the scurce of news” which he said was “Just as bad as the censorship of news” itself. “Harry L. Hopkins has shut off the source of news,” the presidential nom- inee added to a press conference in reply to questions concerning {he WPA administrator's statement that relief records were open “to anybody who has a legitimate reason to see them.” Landon said he thought WPA cost records and payrolls “is a public busi- ness and the information should be made available to any newspaper.” “I view newspaper publicity as a legitimate purpose,” the Republican candidate said. “All public records, of any kind or description, should be open to the newspapers. “To what do you account this?” he asked. with a delegation from the national seaway council. “I told them I hadn't changed by attitude on the St. Lawrence seaway,” Landon later told reporters. “I'd al- Ways been friendly to it—had been committed to it before.” With the election four weeks from eligible to attend the meeting and ts, Darticipate in the voting, “Goddard Foard Tuesday. Nominated for the board are: A. M. ae ea Fez ti rT E i Ti i de Fs it ie i i : J t ~ ‘3 He Ei 13-5, IN SLUGREST Take First All-Manhattan Clas- sic in Thirteen Years, Four Games to Two 38,427 ATTEND FINAL TILT Climax Day and Series by Scor- ing Seven Runs in Wild Ninth Inning Polo Grounds, New York, Oct. rex sees a ee ae simmons, stout-hearted righthander | of the National League champions. | Victory for the Giants would extend | the series to the limit of seven games. . Skies clouded over and it looked threatening as the field was cleared — for the sixth chapter of baseball's latest serial thriller. The crowd was disappointingly small and. undoubtedly at the low point of the series. It appeared no more than 35,000 spectators were in the stands when Al Schacht put on pre-game comedy, while workmen smoothed out the infield, and umpires conferred with rival captains, ileeiiteh grounded out sharply on the first pitch, Lasseri to Gehrig. Two runs, 000th Mile of Transport Flying Over Ocean TET ae HH fe fi