The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1936, Page 2

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os Sasa ae eae ARE MOST CARELESS Europeans Much More Careful in Fire Prevention, Speak- er Tells Kiwanians World leaders in many branches of activity, the Americans also are the world’s most notoriously careless peo- ple, members of the Bismarck Kiwanis club were told Tuesday noon by O. H. Schollander, president of the North Dakota Fire Underwriters association. Where the annual per capita fire loss in France is 29 cents, in Germany 23 cents and Holland 11 cents, Schol- lander said. the annual per capita loss in the United States ranges from 83 to $4. Every 60 days, the speaker said, the American fire loss is equivalent to the value of all crops produced in North Dakota last year. America’s annual fire debt is $350,- 000,000 in actual loss and about the samo in indirect loss, running the bill | a to $700,000,000. not to mention the loss ot life and injury, the Kiwanians were told. 15,000 Die Each Year “Fifteen thousand persons are “burn- ed at the stake” each year in the \ United States, a cause for national shame, with 80 per cent of the vic- tims being women and children. Cleaning with gasoline in the home annually takes the lives of 1,000 wo- mien in the country, Schollander said, remarking that if his talk induced une man to convince his wife of the gas- oline cleaning danger he would teel that his*time was well spent. Schollander explained that though having insurance protects the victim directly, the nation as a whole is the loser, with all citizens paying the debt in increased premiums. He urged members of the club to coopesate with officials in stamping out incendiarism and arson. Describes Tragedies To show how “small things” can} 2 cause great tragedies, the speaker des- cribed two fire disasters which occur- red since the turn of the cantury. One was @ Cleveland school fire, in which ® careless janitor who failed to un- lock a fire escape door and the fact that another door swung inward in-| * stead of outward caused the deaths of 174 children and two teachers. The other was the Iroquois theatre fire in ‘Chicago, in which a silly wiring mis- ie caused a blaze which claimed 572 ives, . The speaker emphasized the dangers ot tampering with fuse boxes, which he described as “safety valves,” and warned against using coins for fuse contacts in emergencies. Schollander was introduced by Joseph Byrne, program chairman. Guests at the luncheon included T. Melvin Lee, Valley City Kiwanian who has not missed a meeting of his club in 13 years, and J. H. Melton, former member of the Bismarck club. Group singing was led by Ralph W. Soule, with Clarion E. Larson play- ing accompaniments. PARDON BOARD ACTS ON FOUR PETITIONS i: Defer Action of Petition From] Grand Forks Residents Protesting Decision The state pardon board acted upon| S: four applications at an emergency | %. meeting Tuesday. Action on 10 other vequests was deferred until the De- vember session of the board A fine placed against Frances Wal- ton, an elderly Foster county woman convicted of engaging in the liquor traffic eight years ago, was remitted by the board to allow her to provide for her needs. She told the board if the fine were remitted by the board, she would be able to sell her property and provide for her own needs and medical treat- ment. The board remitted Uhe fine, costs and judgment. Restore Citizenship Citizenship was restored to two former inmates, Lorenzo Gadaire, sentenced in Cavalier county to one year for engaging in the liquor traf- fic, and John K. Martin, sentenced to three years from Sheridan county in 1921 for perjury. The parole of Clement Lundquist, sentenced in Cass county to 18 months for carrying a concealed weapon, was revoked by the board as the result of his committing a similar offerse since leaving the prison. Defer Action on Petition Among deferred cases was consider- ation of a petition from Grand Forks residents protesting the action of the pardon board which commuted the sentence of Nicholas Tovar, Grand Forks county, serving a seven year term for manslaughter, to expiré Jan. 1, 1937. Tovar was convicted March 10, 1938, for the fatal stabbing of William Vollert of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., in a fight at Meckinock. He was charged with first degree murder but the hte returned a manslaughter ver- Form Morton County Sportsmen’s League Fifty sportsmen from New Salem, CLAMS AMERICANS Lemke Raps Foreign , PS ase Investments of U. S.) PLAN EXPOSITION Daughter, 20 West fos ‘tuesday, St. Ale! Marriage License Lester F. Festerling and Miss Hazel Marie Clark, both of Bismarck. C. A. Miller, head of the’ bureau of, criminal identification who has been ill at a Rochester, Minn., hospital, was back at his duties in the capitol building Tuesday. Weather Report WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck a tonight and Wednesday; tonight; rising temperature Wednes- ay. for North Duketa: © Fair. tonight jand Wednesday; not #0 cool west and north tonight; ' rising temperature Wednesday, For South Dakota: Fair tonight and Wednesday; cooler extreme southeast tonight; rising temperature exday, Montana: Falr Vednesday; warmer west portion Lo- night and east portion Wednesday. For Minnesota: Fair tonight and Wednesday; colder in east and éx- treme south tonight, probabiy with tonight and Rocky Mountain States, . Reduced to sea level, 30.26. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 3 ft. 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. e For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date .. Normal, this month to dati Total, january ist to date 5. Normal, January ist to date .. 14. Accumulated deficiency to date 9. NORTH DAKOTA POINTS ivelt is hatching “cuckoo eggs” Com- appeals to youth “because it knows] Gomes bounced to Fit Roadway Also Finished at ‘Historical Site = - " "| te “4 Rew York ‘w 5. Left on eta. {New York (A) 11, Lidl : BASES, . es From Text Charging Spencer Boise Heads Commits F. R. Is Hatching ‘Cuckoo toes Preparing for Scouts’ Eggs’ of Reds Annual Camp Show Fargo, N. D., Oct. 6.-()—Deviat- ing from his prepared text in which he had charged that President Roose. as intel four pitched balls, filling @zove the ball ; ‘WPA laborers have completed iden- {nnings; Coffman 3| ¢jrication markings of the Huff Indian runs, 3 hits in 0 inning (none out in] village, one of the old landmarks in mocrat h); Guinbert. 4 runs, 2 hits 18/this section, for benefit of tourists munists have laid in “his Dei te . a ; Go 8 hits in Russell Reid, superiniondey the cnt, ~ ’ . scministrator Thomas H. Moodie § eign war. Asked later why he had eliminated his reference to the “Communistic cuckoo eggs,” Lemke said he hadn't eliminated it. “I couldn't get around to it,” he said. “I didn’t have time.” He criticised the administration for what he called “regimentation,” for the “internationalist viewpoint,” which, he maintained, is “a threat to the American system of democfacy.” Refers to Subversive Elements Instead of referring directly at one point to Socialists and Communists candidate for president, in an ad-| , =f Gomez. Losing pitcher- Tuesday. - North “ana South spabota. critica Umpires—Geisel, Magerkurth, Sum-| ‘The Huff village, one of five state Secretary Morgenthau. for what mers, Pfirman. Time—2:50. historical marking projects, is located Lemke calisd employing Américan ie on the bank of the Missouri river a funds “to gamble in foreign securi- mile south of Huff, Reid stated that ties.” the erase! fencing and he Lemke charged such activity held 5 tering been finished every possibility of bringing: about y this site. WPA workers are now work- American involvement in another for- ‘on second. Gehrig | ing. at the old movecamment sozeloes with the count three and two, at Fort Rice, The site of block- house and palisades have been identi- SSE ED fied and designated. ‘Workers will also mark: the Double Ditch Indian village, 12 miles north. of Bismarck; Molander. Indian village, Selkirk filed deép to! Commodities Distributed as Re- ipple, retiring the side after th = ‘Yankees set a new World setlea scor- lief Range From Canned Beef to Clothes two and a half miles north of Price; - Fort Clark, 60 miles’ north of Bis- marck, including the Indian village and trading post at this point; and i nity wel- | Fort Dilts in Slope county, northwesi grounded out to Gehrig unassist- a ved ren ee 10 an- |of Rhame. ._No runs, no hits, no errors, none! nounced ‘Tuesday by A. W. Quast, = | qe eestor 4 rector of commodity distribution. a official box score: The commodities, ranging from ing record for the ninth irining. Seven runs, five hits, one error, three Distribution of commodities valued f + ist Wed day, | as eehe inte damptrsiare, Westostiy ache hed in bis prepared manuscript odttt, vOre (AL) ABR HO A] ogunea beet to stockings and sweat WEATHER CONDITIONS Rolfe, 3b 6 1 3-3 2{ ers, are donated for relief purposes A high-pressure area is. centered | ments, if our internationally-minded ‘cele, “of He : sictual cash igh pressure area {: t DiMaggio, cf 6 1.3 2 0| without the transaction of actut over the northern Rocky Mountain re-| Wish to call this Fascism, let them out | Gehrig, Ws z 5 1 110 0} and serve to supplement other relief Sion. Sheridan, 30.44 Inches, and gen-| make the most of it and continue to Terry Sy end + 5 2.0 3 0| measures, IT ENDS TODAY sei Betalgteahe prev art ety ts [sing “The Internationale! * ‘ail on | SelB, st $ 2°23 9) “impenditures in connection with the Pacific coast, A low pressure| Again, predicting the Union party threw | Powell, if 5 3°3 3 0} the distribution of the materials over area ts centered over the southern |can win, he declared: the Lasseri, 2b 42335 486 of which Fin ates, Obtatime Cuz, |e ll win because me represent ma run | Gomes, p RG tet yep ater vails trom the Great. Lakes region |the common and commoh sense ped-. sharp| MUEDAY, 21100 vile ibe orks progress edministra- southwestward to the southern Rocky | ple, and there are more of them than grounder id PGBs Say Mountain region. Light, scattered] o¢ the coupon-cll We will win 45 18 17 tion paid $6,361.74, Quast reported. Precipitation has occurred from the pon-clippers. Bis: third straig! it | “From these figures it is found the Great Lakes region westward to the] because the Union party is a union of dead ABRH state asa whole received $37.64 in 2 3g § the farmer, the laborer, the veteran, 8 5 e ¢ F *!the youth and the aged—a union of g ed grounde: and the liberals of America, who know 0) N T I N U E was tossed one |’ that in this great struggle only the C D hit, no errors, dullard accepts the yi the from page end: ? TANTS: the coward and the slave surrenders his (ng uederers’ Row’ ft fleld line and item among the com-|] sue, golowr liberty and the liberty of his chil- dren in exchange for regiméntation, Communism and a dole.” Appeals to Youth The Union party, born June 18, 1936, itself “a youngster,” said Lemke, Ry i The biggest modities for August was wow has the honer to eg5 z Witis Sixth Game, 18-5, in Slugfest bounced a single past Jackeon.| who) i tel pounds of |) SINCLAIR 17.26; 167,- EE j i i i i ; f i Lasveri Zz : ebagei: al coooccoc ecco oct, © | coor cor coccomoomee Rl eoccocesvomecaacng 8 al cacomosowccocconne> © Low-High-| | /the problems of youth and 1s not BISMARCK, clear .... 3% 66 .00) handicapped by political chicanery | tossed Ott walked on four straight balls. Farge, clay. Te oan ees eas born,” be, dald; “Pookie of He was plied by a rabinenter 3 po paned yd orks b es doo “It was born,” he , “t a " we tee ‘° Gigunowaniciear: is Bo) the broken pledges and’ promises of Johnny Murphy. Gain Leste, who has| #—Hatted fot idancum in men... uted were baby garments, coats, cover. Minot, clear © 60 :00| both the reactionary Republican and | already ted a pinch-hitting maces fF Castleman in Sth. | shoes, akirts,, stockings, underclothes, Williston, clear. WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS ees High- Des Moines, Towa, rain 58 78 Dodge City, Kans, cldy. 48 82 Edmonton, Alta, 2 Havre, Mont, si Helena, Mont., clear Huron, §, Dak., clear Kamloops, B. C., cli Kansas City, 3 Los Angeles, Ca! Miaml. Rapid City, S. Roseburg, Ore. Sheridan, Wyo. Sioux City, Io: Spokane, Wash Swift Current, ‘The Pas, Winnem ¢ 7 Winnipeg, BS CAR REGISTRATIONS HIGHER THAN IN 3) seo Licenses Sold Months Nearly Equal Last Year's Total North Dakota motor vehicle regis- trations for the first nine months of this year have exceeded the figure) for the same period of 1935 and near- ly equal the total for all of last year, the state registrar's office announced Tuesday. L. H. McCoy, state motor vehicle registrar, predicted registrations for this year will surpass the figure for 1935, marking the second consecutive year that increases have been record- ed. Registrations for the first nine) months of this year total 164,095 while 165,210 license plates were issued for the entire year of 1935, and 157,177 in 1934, he said. The motor vehicle department listed the registrations as 3,747 ahead for; the period January 1 to September 30, compared with the same period in 1935. Receipts of $1,372,135.95 also First Meeting Tonight Appointment of standing commit tees and He tid 02 |the etandpat Democratic parties and est Pct'\hampered with ah inferior foreign ‘oo | complex. It does not believe in our < : sean Precidenta policy of selling the Amer- ‘Mark Koenig Two base hits—Ott, Bartell. Three| the United States are illiterate. $s) oh }ican farmer and American labor fanned, 68 22 |in foreign market places. It does not seeking foreign concessions—in , | eevee! 0 /articles produced by human slavery 46 .00|means labor unions, in First Nine) (this nation in refinancing existing 5 Fa ss = q Errote—Rolfe, DiMaggio, Danning. | blankets, mattresses, rugs and sheets. Runs batted in—Ott 3, Powell 4, Gehrig, Gomez, Rolfe 2, Terry, Lazseri| Almost a million and a half of the Moore, Murphy, Crosetti, DiMaggio.| 13% million foreign-born people in 5 3 5 3 g party leaders. and one. Terry li “It is an American party. It is not iftted to DiMaggio. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left... Third U i z au ge 2 i % ip Hf gE Ei Zz 2 5 a] g Dy believe in the president's policy of chas- ing the elusive rainbow, the will-e- ‘the-wisp of international trade. “We have restricted immigration . . to protect our American standard of ving. But.we-import, under trade ment and » hundreds of millions of dollars worth of manufac- tured articles from Asiatic nations, CAPITOL This is YOUR Story .. . yours because it tells of hu- man experiences ... of lové +. of hates ... of life! SEE This Throbbing. Drama Today Today and Wed. ET] : il ; Hi; i and human misery. ‘Werk of Madmen’ Hi “ mit this is the work Murphy called third M -In e Plus Vincent Lopes and benedmens Meee ae tes strike with the count . vetery * latriga b His Band in "Mt Isevident that we cannot borrow Shes Ee bases, Rife Romance in Somerset Knock-Knock ston. ae cn sore Seah One run, hits, no errors, three sta teg 2 Greatest Who's, There? dnd’ manufactured products . from - @ Davis lifted a high fly to hla me ew cece eee other nations which our own people Powell loote hit » home run against, . - Bary ata alr ooy ean lifted s Right one to Lesser, ‘Tetty TOMORROW Be 4 0 e s In! party fa’ a ‘out . to Ge e ‘One . 3§ ‘bolannual wage for the laborer. That Legge gir gens Seat ee en WEDNESDAY not company | in unions or governmental regimenta- tion. It means collective bargaining for labor.” Lemke reaffirmed the party stand on old age pensions, and on agricul- ture. He said: “The Union party believes in cost i You SCREAM WITH UNCONTROL- LED DELIGHT AT THE FROTHIEST AND MOST SPARKLING, ROMAN- TIC COMEDY YOU'VE EVER ENJOYED! He for the farmers’ jucts consumed within the United States. It believes in using pert of the money and credit i farm indebtedness and in refinancing the mortgaged homes of the people in cities and towns at = low fate of in- terest on the amortization plan.” Co -D ik NTINUE from page one Charges ‘Slander, Libel’ in Address Opening Campaign FRANCES LEDERER homesteads as compared with estate which produces revenue. Declared that if the sales tax continued the revenues should be used to provide for the welfare of citizens whether it be fh old age pension, Declared made by the state board of tion “it will be the smallest GLASS ; Get Your Storm Sash Made at Home ¥ inspect your sash, replace your broken glass recmiilichil ape ie red , all loose and broken putty, take off screens and put én storm win- , dows at reasonable rates, : __AUNE CARPENTER & GLASS SHOP 4 Manufacturers of Fine Cabinets _ @14 Broadway Bismerck, N. Dak. Phene 205 IDA LUPING «. ‘“Maniqve Polerin” whe teceived one Iitle kis In the derk ond hed al! Ports tn on wpreer! 2 HUGH HERBERT «. “Tele”. been of “Philippe” end bie edviser In the effeins the hourtt : i HH fail eb ns i i i i i ri tk | | My

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