The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 7, 1936, Page 2

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OME AND MILLER ~ PRAISE ROOSEVELT * ~-Aviatrix and Actress, on Air- plane Speaking Tour, Ad- dress Luncheon Guests cen a Re a A ‘ { A message of loyalty and support for the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt was brought to Bismarck Wednesday by Mrs. Phoebe Fairbanks Omille, the aviatrix, and Mrs. Azetta Jewel Miller, well-known actress, two ot the most colorful personalities to visit the Capital City within recent weeks. The two women, making some 100 appearances in behalf of Roosevelt's candidacy, were guests at a luncheon given by the Bismarck Government Study, club.in the Prince hotel. Despite @ crowded social calendar, 32 Bis- marck and Mandan men and women attended. There was a group of spectators at the airport as, Mrs. Omlie landed the small blue airplane at the municipal airport promptly at 12 o'clock noon. The machine has been loaned her for U. 8. Naval Aireraft Carrier Launched the trip, and “Roosevelt Fliers” in gold letters. . At the. luncheon, Mrs, Omlie spoke only briefly due to a heavy cold. She told of what Roosevelt has done in encouraging and helping flying and particularly in making flying safe. Mrs, Miller centered her remerks around the two great goals of the Roosevelt administration, peace and the second security for the home. These two goals can be traced through the lifetime of the president and through the successive stages of Kils political career, she declared. Mrs. Miller said that the Roosevelt con- sideration for women, children, the aged and unemployed leads to security for the home and has grown in part from the great amount of thought which he could give to social and economic problems during seven years in the depths of ill health. She paid @ glowing tribute to Mrs. Roosevelt for her devotion to her husband and to his ideals, The campaign of her party's speak- ing bureay has been constructive rather than dealing in personalities and it is hoped to keep it that way, Mrs. Miller concluded. After the luncheon, most of the Guests went to the airport to watch the speakers take off for engagements in South Dakota. Asters in shades of purple and rose and Talisman roses were in the bouquets used on the tables. People’s Forum (Editor's Note)—The Tribune wel- play will be returned to the writ- ers. jetters MUST be signed. If you wish to use lotters as may be necessery to conform to this policy and to , ypublivation of a -writer’s Whe1e justice and fair play make it gdvisuble. All letters mudt U6 Neited to not more thes wo! NO ORCHIDS FOR LEMKE a Baldwin, N. D., Oct. 2, 1936. Editor, Tribune: In your daily issue of Sept. 30, ap- pears an article “Lemke says F. R.'s Gefeat main thing.” Of course as an American citizen, I am as much in- terested in the welfare of our country as Mr. Lemke. Did he not tell us when he was boosting the N. P. L. of North Da- kota that we would get flour at cost of production? He, as a lawyer, should have known that under the “Sherman Anti-Trust Law” it could not be done, and now we have the state mill and elevator in North Da- kota. Are you getting North Dakota made flour cheaper than other flour of the same grade? Would some of his followers answer me this in the Forum. Yours truly, Julius Meyer. SAYS LANDON KNOX Kintyre, N. Dak. Sept. 30, 1936. Editor, Tribune: Every so often I bubble up and boil over and the forthcoming mess falls on the Forum. Politics? Well, if such remains, To forewarn readers, I will say that I do not favor the New Deal only in a few things, and not wholly in them. My vote had nothing to do with putting it in, nor in keeping it out. However, I believe in giving the devil his due. I have heard and read a great deal of ballyhoo, most of it Republican. Now, it seems to me that the main thing wrong with the Republican ma- chine is that Landon Knox. I got a belly laugh outa his Des Moines specch: Telling the people about being renters and not owning their homes, their farms. His speech implied they lost their farms under and because of the New Deal. Really, how many Iowa farmers owned their farms when F. D. R. took the chair? One in ten? I doubt it. is emblazoned with the first aircraft carrier Enterprise was tit that squawks the loudest every time any of the alphabet pups start digging? He promises to keep making pay- ments to farmers, but advocates full production. (Wasn't the cutting of production a Republican idea?) He promises that no one shall starve, but that he will take the graft from re- lief. (Is he telling us that all Re- publicans are honest?) Then, he prom- ises a balanced budget, reduction of taxes and prosperity. taxes and balances the budget, how will he pay the farmers and fced the hungry? I hate the New Deal's way of do- ing things—men with pick and shovel building dams and roads and disin- clinations to work—and many of them stink to heaven, but what do the Re- publicans offer? In my opinion, they vation, revolt (massed murder of the hungry) and Fascism. dumb! Yet two things keep bobbing into my mind (?): Ail elephants are bulls and Landon Knox. Yours with due apologies, Kernel A. Numbskull. MICKEY O'CONNOR Bismarck, N. Dak., Oct. 1, 1936. Editor, Tribune: In the busy rush of the struggle to make a living and the cares of the many little things that go to make up our daily lives, we ofttimes lose sight of the steady and irresistible march of time. But every so often we are rudely awakened from our forgetful- ness by the death of someone near “dear to us. Who would have dreamed a few weeks ago that Mickey O'Connor would be dead today? It seems that he must still be among us somewhere, at his busy post at the capitol, or at his well known farm down in the woods. But alas, that silent unseen reaper “whose name is ever. any individual as being more a part than was Mickey O'Connor. boy he was a part of the old Bis-, marck, coming here with his parents in the year of the Custer massacre, when Bismarck was a struggling vil- lage. His life thus became closely in-{ terwoven into the very life and fabric of the community, His people were among the early Sent down the ways in ceremonies at which Mrs. Claude Swanson, wife of the secretary of the navy, officiated, the $19,000,000 naval News, Va. Above, the new If he reduces! olfer the conditions of '29-'33, or star- | I wonder: Am I dumb, or am I} successfully launched at Newport warship slips down the ways. slaughter and wound the fowl, tear down signs and fences, leave gates open, shoot in the direction of build- ings and livestock and generally raise hell? Most people who can afford'to make a hunting trip do not need the game for food, shooting them for sheer “sport.” This should not be tolerat- ed, especially when wild fowl are as j scarce as at present. Truly yours, H James E. Carter. | P. 8. I would be pleased if Mr. {John C. Spare would see fit to spare | the poor birds. i Editor's Note: Mr. Carter may not know it, | but John Spare is as bitterly op- | posed to unsportsmanlike conduct | as is Mr. Carter—and both men j are right. | The fact that some so-called | “sportsmen” violate the law has | nothing to do with this situation. They would do it anyway. | Through the personal efforts of Mr, Spare and a few associates, feed has been provided for many birds in this area during the hard winters. If Mr. Carter and Mr. Spare could get together they probably would find they are | really birds of a feather and in { Close agreement on the funda- {| mentals of conservation and real | sportsmanship. Local Nurses Attend ' State Board Meeting Bismarck members attending the North Dakota Nurses’ association} { board of directors in session at Fargo: |-Wednesday were Sister Maximine and ,; the Misses Esther Teichmann and Pearl Voge. The group is discussing association business and reports for the nurses’ | annual meeting which opens in Fargo Death” has taken-him from us for- | Thursday and continues through Sat- It would be hard to imagine| urday. Other members are Miss Mabel of the community in which he lived} Hertsgaard of- Fargo, president; Miss) +7 As a| Mildred L. Isakson of Dunseith, Miss Mildred Clark of Devils Lake, Miss Lucille Paulson of Grand Forks and Amended Moratorium Law Held Unconstitutional in U.S. Circuit Court See Ea Richmond, Va., Oct. 7.—()—Af- at Harrisonburg and Roanoxe,. the became the second federal circuit court ‘Tuesday to hold the- amended Frasier-Lemke act unconstitutional.: The opinion declaring the amended Haw. invalid was written by Judge John J. Parker of Charlotte, N. C.; and re- sulted from six appeals filed from the western district of Virginia:-<° _” Farmers were permitted under the|" amended act to obtain moratoriums of as much as three years on.their mortgages by, going to federai courts. Judge Parker held that the act; failed to preserve to the “secured creditor the right of immediate fore- closure on default which is given him by the law of Virginia.” The opinion continued: as to the control of the property pre- ceding foreclosure, an examination of the statute discloses that, instead ut providing for possession by a rerviver with application of rents and profits to the mortgage debt, the debtor is, permitted to retain possession, tipon such rent as the court may determine, to be applied first to taxes upon the upkeep of the property, i, e, in a manner which will be for the benefit of the debtor. whether the creditor wishes such application or not.” Judge Parker held that this was » violation of the creditor's rights. firming decisions of the lower comt U.-8. fourth circuit court of appeals Weather Report] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1936 a er BILL ROLED INVA ae aes iH 7 Grocery Plants Reopsn; 300 Truck Drivers NTINUE]) from page one: Co * 62: DONATE BLOOD. IN DISEASE FIGHT Infantile Paralysis Victims From All Walks of Life at Mlinois Clinic East St. Louis, Il, Oct. 7.—— HR FORECAST ck and vicinity; Gen- might and Thursday; not tonight; somewhat cooler w For Bis erally fair 80 cool Generally fair 3 not so cool tonight ‘Thursday. For South Dakota: Falr tonight and Thursday; warmer tonight and extreme southeast portion Thursday. For Montana: Generally’ fair’ to- night and Thursday; colder northeast tonight and east portion Thursday. For Minnesota: Generally fair in ttled “in north 3 Mot.so cof] to- night, except, in, extreme . squtheasi rising temperature in extreme sout poolen in extreme northwest: Thure- jay. WEATHER CONDITIONS A high pressure area. overlies th Rocky Mountain region and the cen t Plains States, Denver, 30, inches, while a low’ pressure area centered over northern Manitoba, s, 29.72 Inches, Precipitation urred from the Great Lakes region to the southern Plains States, but the weather 1s generally fair from Minnesota westward and southwes' ward to the Pacific coast. are somewhat higher kota and Montana northward over the Canadian Provinces, Bismarck station barometer, inches: e Reduced to sea level, 30.13. qeotiggourl i r stage at 7'a. m, 3.4 OA ft. i ‘For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to date Total, Janu Ist to date Normal, January Ist to date .. Accumulated deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- High- it est Pct. BISMARCK, c! 3 ak oO! Devils Lake, cl 64 00%, 66.00. Valley C WEATHER AT-OTHER POINTS Low-Migh- | Sister. Aquinas and Miss Minnie Jeu- sen of Fargo. Pet. | 200 0. Des Moines, lowa, cle city, KK 1 pioneer families of Bismarck, and h2; had all of the kindliness and ready friendship of the traditional old tim- ers. The ability to make and retain! many friends through life is a ri gift, but to him it was a natural part) of his every day life. He was too busy making friends tostop to criticize others, and had few, if any, enemies. | To quote from the great poet: “The} elements were so mixed in him, that all the world might have stood up and } said—here was a man.” | But now the thousands of friends; who knew and loved Mickey O’Con- nor—must say goodbye, for his brave | spirit has left the sunlit prairies and winding rivers of his native land and Passed on into the dim and shadowy | mountains at the end of the long.| long trail. ‘ H Joseph Coghlan. WOULD PROTECT BIRDS { Bismarck, N. D., October 2, 1936. Editor, Tribune: The following is in answer to the! letter of John C. Spare. He said the season is not to be; opened on grouse. He was quite cor- ; rect but he neglected to mention that} ® great many hunters do not care where, what, nor how, they hunt. Consequently a number of grouse are killed each year. Also, there have been many birds ; killed out of season and on game; refuges and posted land. One hunter | went so far as to use a dog to hunt; gg?s Fi ie reeds Mi Lester Paul Casey, Bismarck, and Miss Priscilla Elizabeth Gjers, a ward Pfau, Jr. Minnewaukan, and Miss Lois. Marjorie Ulsrud, Bis- marek, Births ughter, Mr, and Mrs, Frank Beulah, at 1:20 a, m. Wednes- . Alexius hospital. T Mr. and Mrs. Don Adams of Man- dan have returned from Phoenix, Ariz., where they attended funeral .services for Mrs. Adams’ sister: law, Mrs. George Peck. The late Mrs. Peck and,her husband visited af Mandan late in August. 14 on the application of the Montana- Dakota Utilities company, Minneapo- lis, to construct approximately six and a half miles of transmission line to serve Northgate and a distribution system for that town, the state board 0: railroad commissioners announced Wednesday. Senator Aguelli is repitzd to be the richest of Italy’s. 15,000 million- aires, Salary Loans $5 to $50 Ne Security Ne Co-Signers AUTO LOANS $25 to $200 TEACHERS Teachers will he Interested te our apecial loan service. Borrow by Mall SALARY LOAN CO. Wak, Nott hack wid. os ant. Bienes Reg- | K 8 Hearing will be held here October Minneapolis, Modena, Utah, Moorhead, Minr iMrs. Al Smith, Jr., jAl Smith, Jr, wife of the son of Persons from all walks of life, whose only common bond is that they have suffered from infantile paralysis, are giving blood to combat the spread of that disease in Illinois. Husky sheet-metal workers, girls of| high school age, housewives and pro-| fessional men were among blood donors at a clinic ‘held here Tuesday by state health department officials. ‘Each gave from a half pint to's pint of blood, ‘furnishes to those suffering from in-} fantile paralysis. i The health department ‘announced the disease, reported from 21 coun- tles, is at its highest prevalence level in Mllinois since 1917. Seventy new cases were reported last week. R. Winston H. Tucker of the health department, who was in charge of the clinic here, said a number of the donors refused the $10 which the state offers for each half pint of blood suitable for the serum. Canadian Carryover ‘Wheat to Be Small Ottawa, Oct. 71—()—Beilef the Canadian carryover of wheat would be pesligible at. the end of next crop ilyear Wednesday in the. face of es‘showing the visible supply on HEE e oct 2 ‘was about 83,000,000 bushels fewer than a year ago. Storage figures. released by the ‘dominion bureau of statistics showed & visible supply’ of 162,710,340 bushels on Oct. 2 compared with 161,833,953 at the end of the previous week and 246,108,638 the corresponding date last year. Winnipeg: reports that 1,000,000 i bushels were sold Tuesday for export and expectations that many European countries would be forced to buy in the Canadian market added to belief the burdensome carryover would be virtually wiped out before the crop year ends next Jan. 31. Seeking Separation Syracuse, N. Y., Oct. 1.—()—Mrs. former Gov. Alfred E, Smith, left with Supreme Court Justice James T. Cross Wednesday a charge that young Al, dr., threatened to kill her on two occasiol She seeks a legal separa- 0 | tion and separate maintenance. N , Neb. Okla, City, Okl. Phoenix, Ariz., clea: Ly Br Albert, § Ky ely. 0 u’Appelle, Sas! ly. ; Rapid City, 8. D,, ‘clear 100 Roseburg, 0: clear.. 00 St Louis, - 62 12 Salt Lake 7, U, 00 Mrs. Smith testified that the inci- dents she referred ta took place while she and her husband were living at 33 Fifth Avenue, New York City, in I +s Spokane, Wash.. 00 Swift Current, 100 The Pas, Mai 7 00 Winnemucca. 5 72. 100 Winnipeg, 00 R objected to his drinking. Rummage Sale Thursday and Friday. Episcopal parish house on Third street. FRED ALLEN KFYR..8 P. M. the | Lashed together sash cord.and menaced and bayonets, p Balin ite) war are ane recente, ty rebel rr. Valley City Burglar . Enters Penitentiary Valley City, N. D., Oct. 7.—(7)— Pueading guilty to of the John Zaun house here in September, Donald Davis, transient, was sen- tenced to 10 years in the state peni- tentiary when arraigned before Judge| missiles. M. J. Englert Tuesday. In custody of FIRE COST IN U. 8. Speaker Urges Bismarck Ro- tarians to ‘Sell Selves on i . Prevention’ Emphasizing the great loss America and Americans suffer each year either directly or indirectly as a result of fire, © 48, &chollander, Fargo, president of the North Dakota Fire Underwriters association, urged Bismarck Rotarians at their weekly meeting Wednesday morning to “sell themselves on the idea of fire prevention.” e fisiigarear ad Pointed out that the t cost to. long run, he said, it is the e1 that loses through fire des: though the individual loser is pro- tected ‘by insurance. Every 60 days, the speaker stated, the fire loss in the United States equals the value of, all farm crops produced in North Dakota Jast year. ow | A. R. ‘Tavis, vice president, presid- ed at-the meeting in the absence of Mote, t mittee, introduced the speaker. Guests Rotary roundup which will be held in Minot Monday, Oct. 19, More than 200 Rotarians are expected to be present at the round- ‘up. Pennsylvania was not founder, William Penn, //, IA LUPINO - HUGH HERBERT Cartersville, Ga., hundred-foot death plunge ended a middle aged Negro’s 16-hour vigil atop ® smokestack after meeting rescue ef- forts with defiance and bricks. ered. Tuesday lying on the 10-inch rim of a 102-foot ‘winpperenty he had climbed: « lnd- Apparently @ lad- der inside the. chimney. shout HAPPY GO GOOD 100-Foot Plunge Ends - Negro’s 16-Hour Vigil TPA Oct. “I can't hang on much longer,” he cailed and fell before help could reach him. : PUR NOTHING ---AND LADY LUCK A iW MS LAP! WALLACE ERIC LINDEN Cecilia PARKER LUCKY’ BEERY OLD HUTCH CAPITOL aptain, Crew Taken -Off Sinking Schooner. New York, Oct. 7.—(?)—Kerosene- Soaked blankets flaring from ‘the masts of sinking schooner brought last minute rescue to its captain and crew and enabled the American mer- chant liner Américan to bring them into port Wednesday. Captain Alex Rodney, rescued with sailors, said his coal-laden acHooner Mabel A. Frye was wallowing helplessly in the driving seas, after being battered for five days, when the ner hove in sight off the Newfound- larid coast Saturday night. 3 Lanopin N b., Oct, See oal A. Nel E |, regional Resettlement Admin- director, INVESTMENT TRUSTS By the Asseciated Press) (Over the counter in New York.) ‘uw 10.15; 10.98, MINNEAPOLIS Minneapolis, Oct, close: First Bank Stock 14%. Northwest Banco 9%, Last Times Tonight The. SIX STAR SPECIAL “Secret Agent” with Robert Young and Madeleine Carrol by the master writer Somerset Maugham PLUS NEWS AND COMEDY OPENS TOMORROW The “Cuckoos” Darkest F STARTING SATURDAY KAY FRANCIS -in- “Give Me Your Heart”

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