The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1936, Page 1

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cules 2 gees Re il FERELRSES eerie bt gi be an ey i 3 & = anal i 5 § EE il fl E st Hh bi Le it is 3 Ee ij : Ly i cf aT g i i i i a 5 g E 5 ay - B s g i 5 g é 6 mam nee pet te pom in a way that gifts Hen es ter ii THA ‘TRIBUNE (2 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1936 to Carry Battle to Enemy ord Challenges Critics of Political Record LADONSAYSGCCS [TiIness Is Fatal to AMNSTRATIN S (Planning Boards STATED FREE FROM | SLIME Cornshucker Finds Senators Frazier and Nye Urge |; Own Way to Field Reelection of Present Chief Executive away. But Ingle didn’t want the WELFORD SAID BIG ISSUE ahucker and notified the railroad Nonpartisan League Leaders From Various State Coun- ‘| road car, tore through a fence and NATION FROM WAR, OUTLINED BY NYE Embargo on U. S. Products Cit- ed as One Method in Talk +. to dunior Association Hifgaiigi BES ooe4°s lilt TG Hi Ba § ge 3 5 7 § i i Be i ie 5 Hee gee i E fe Es ZEy i well as “human are ne RE E 5 g 5 QF g [ i EF Hi 5 ator Nye said “as Progressives Ae chiding Wy asm econ Comers nor. Welford is .receit ‘the support pag regular of the : (Continued: on Page’ Tyo! Upland Game Seaso ; i aes Par Leiter "| authorities may pass judgment on | honesty” in the administration's fiscal Tuesday U. 8. ts! oe a pie | of the public in its financial officials, Launch Sessions Water Conservation Program, _ Works Inventory Is Being ’ Discussed Here Representatives of state and fed- eral agencies met with members of tee/LOS ANGELES TALK SLATED Burleigh county courthouse here Tuesday afternoon for a regional planning conference. The conference is being conducted by the state planning board and members of the planning boards of! five counties were to take part. To be represented at the meeting were Burleigh, Emmons, McLean, Kidder and Sheridan counties. The Bismarck city planning board will attend the conference, Myron Atkinson, city auditor, said Tuesday. Members of the city planning board ate J. P. French, chairman, T. C. Casey, Dr. H. A.’ Brandes, R. B. Webb, A. R. Tavis, and T. R. At- kinson, city engineer, A. P, Lenhart, mayor, and C. L. Foster, city attorney. The conference has been divided into two sections, at the first of which & second annual state wide inventory of work projects is to be composed. This program is to contemplate all public works to be constructed or which ,it would be desirable to con- struct in the state within the next six years. i The second part of the conference will embrace a of a long time program of water conservation. Thus far, the program has been the work of the state planning board staff, and it is now desired that local the plans. MORGENTHAU DENIES ACCOUNT “JUGGLING Says Reports. ‘Yot Based Upon ‘Any Partisan Political Consideration’ ‘Washington, Oct. tary Morgenthau, replying to Herbert Hoover's charge of “intellectual dis- bookkeeping, ‘on record with a denial and a statement that accounts “are not based upon partisan political considerations.” Morgenthau’s statement followed Hoover's address at Philadelphia Fri-|trade day in which the former president as- |. serted that the New Deal had intro- duced an “entirely new system of Gouble bookkeeping” to separate emer- gency and general, or routine, gov- ernment expenditures. If permitted to go unchallenged, Morgenthau said, Hoover's remarks might “tend to impair the confidence with consequent detrimental effect on the federal credit.” Referring to Hoover's assertion that Present methods are motivated by “in- BD ic ORIGNAL PURPOSES FORGOTTENBY F., Promises to Remove ‘Politici Local Lumber Dealer Succumbs Tuesday; Was Active in Who Have Taken Over Community Affairs istrat J Admini tive Jobs Otto &. Anderson, 80, lumber deal- er and for many years a leader in Bismarck’s business community, died Mr. Anderaon had been in poor health for the last month and a week ago was taken to the hospital. He failed to respond to treatment of the ailment with which he had been af- flicted for the last 10 years, Born at Broden, Sweden, Aug. 5, 1877, he was the youngest son of sev- en in the Benget Anderson family, in which there also were two daughters. ‘Whey Mr. Anderson was two years old he moved with his perents to Litchfield, Minn., and when he was 14 years old he went to work in the Espey lumber yard there, where he learned the lumber business under the tutelage of a man who remained his friend throughout the years, at GOP Nominee Opens Personal Drive for California's 22 Electoral Votes Aboard Landon Special en route to Los Angeles, Oct. 20.—(P)—Gov. Alf ‘M. Landon opened his personal drive for California's 22 presidential elec- toral votes Tuesday with praise for the Civilian Conservation Corps and @ pledge to remove “the politicians (who) have taken over the administra- tive jobs.’ Declaring “the present administra- tion has forgotten the original purpuse of the CCC,” the Republican nominee asserted “it is threatening to lead the several hundred thousand young Americans comprising the corps down @ blind alley.” Landon said the CCC could be made “far more effective” by adoption of an educational fitting the members for “places and by giving advancement” under the merit sys- tem to “the CCC boys themselves.” ‘His first speech in California was at Barstow. Heads For Les Angeles An operating stop at San dino (at 11:40 a, m. PST) was only other scheduled before the ° didate’s arrival in Los Angeles at 2 P. M, for the first major address of his final coast-to-coast campaign swing. He is scheduled to speak tonight in When he was only 19 years old he ‘was appointed manager of a lumber yard at Barlow, N. D., and later was Manager of the McGregor Brothers Lumber yard at Buffalo Lake, Minn. He held this position at the time of his marriage to Anna Cayo in 1903. After serving a5 manager of a lum- ber yard at Benson, Minn., for five years, Mr. Anderson and his family came to Bismarck in 1912 when he became manager of the Norts Broth- ers lumber yard here. Six years later he resigned to ac- cept an appointment from President Harding as registrar of the U. 8. Land Office, a position which he five years. After leaving the land office he es- yard, of which he was the manager and sole owner. Always active in community af- "| fairs, Mr, Anderson was one of the scorn show and’ was ofter referred to as the “Daddy” of that public enterprise. Mré'Anderson was a member of the Masonic Blue Lodge, of the Modern Woodmen lodge and of McCabe Methodist Episcopal church, Remembered Always Others Always thoughtful of others, Mr. Anderson received a bouquet while at the hospital only two days before his death. When he heard that Vener- the able Sister Boniface, hospital supere , also was ill, he had his nurse pur- chase a similar bouquet for her. In addition to his widow, Mr. An- \deraon leaves two daughters, Mrs. A. Mi. Brazerol and Mrs. Harold Carlson, both of Bismarck. He also leaves five grandchildren, Robert, Richard, Rus- sell, Patricia Ann and John Braserol; four brothers and two sisters. The brothers are P. B. Anderson, Cut Bank, Mont.; Joseph Anderson, Alta, Al- berta, Can.; August Anderson, Hector, ‘Minn.,.and John Anderson, Litchfield, . ‘The sisters are Mrs. John Rik, eld, and Mrs. Hasselburg, Min- Mrs, Rik and P. B. Ander- xpected to attend the funer- ming here for the services Fred Hoppensdedt, Gay- lord, Minn., a sister of Mrs. Anderson. (Continued on Page Two) R. G. Duncan, Judson, warfare into actual hostilities,” Lan- don said: ‘ “Now, I would like to ask the presi- dent whether his policies are those of the Democratic party which has tra- erally stood for international e. “Are they not, in fact, those of a strange new party which has captured the federal government in the name of the party of Jefferson, Cleveland and Wilson?” FD. R’S CAMPAIGN EA TERA en aare eae Drive Into New England This| went out oie ares going through a“ Week to Precede Final ‘ Foray Before Election R. G. Duncan, Judson, hurt in an automobile accident at Richardton Saturday «night, was in a Bismarck hospital Tuesday where physicians ee may be suffering a fractured nec! Richardton hospital before being re- moved to for treatment. X-Ray pictures were to be made here ag be a i 3 ft | i : ‘th i F fat [i i HI fl : i f i i ih il itits | i lal] i E i u i ARREST DETECTIVE, | SON IN CONNECTION WITH WENDEL CASE Pair Picked Up After Being In- dicted by Newark Federal tablished the O. E. Anderson lumber | if men were released pearance before a f in Trenton, October 27. No specific charges were cited warrants. ‘True Bills Kept 5 Prt i tia Pe attorney. Wendel charged he was a! ducted in Manhattan, taken to Brook. lyn and tortured into making a false confeasion in the Lindbergh baby kid- naping case, and then brought to New Jersey. A Mercer county (Trenton) stand jury's investigation of the “con- feasion” delayed for three days the electrocution of Bruno Richard Haupt- mann, Detective Parker, who contended Hurt in Auto Mishap |tc'tn Aged Advisers of King Emmanuel Die in Italy STIRS WOMEN BTO O. E. Anderson samen vente. cist Odective on Weat- @F Wa Fron: AZAMA RALLIES TROOPS President co Rema i Cupieal Asserts » Asserseted Frew: frenzied appeal Uy tie * cannon. heart plaitmir Us streets, bandreds ef * workers were gitar err! and pr sed inte num sered sagt Monts to m te « jas! GCeeperane gee jeer it on thet vesiegers now 27 kn Be Miles of Ma trié on the seen ame wert. }aternatio: al development: team London pressing Berlin, Rr oe Ligon ‘for tier replies to Mim jchinges of 1 cvtrality breeches whi Pronee streagtivened bet Spenash frevtier gua t and protested to in- surgent offic als over firing scram the border. Pas vagers Executed Jive passe: gers taken from «a Span- ish governme 1: steamer in che Bay of ted besieged capital, Officials said tte trip was the ' gst of a “vertes of tours” to rally gov rome: dominated ser- Jan ‘indefinit dy,” ine Uaternatio al The gover: mer: cinim! & hee Tepised atticks on Aranuer and had. conducte7 & victoriows comnter- assualt due ves. of the capital (the Pastists deniad this), inter note of inter ationa! ’ Through (tse Socia! newspaper Clar dad, it a served 2.500 tons of mu- nitions had come to the Fascists, threagh Por vgal, from "azi-domi- nated Danzig aud the Polen port of Gdyrua. Wth Moscow believed om ‘he brink of Wreaking. «way from the mterne tons] conin ervention pact o of yack of section o: te changes against italy, Germany and Portugs! ah ee HH fa iH ieif

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