The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 14, 1936, Page 1

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED: 1878 Ago ps ey oh BISMARCK, NORTH.DAKUTA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 14,1986 PRICE FIVE Cl | 4 Killed i d -Head-on Auto Crasl kk & x *« * xk * *¥ * we *& x «xk * x &* * x & * kk * ‘| Western N. D. Farmers THROWN | Conference, Dee 19 BISMARCK, DEC. 19 Tentative program for the Itrigation Conference to be held in the World War. Memorial building here, be- Speeches Few; Experts Will Be \/ FOR EAR AILMBNT Dealt sea + ginning at 10 a. m. on Saturday, Dec. 19, was announced || Duke of Windsor Enjoying His FORCE IS GUT BUT STATE HAIL TAXES > on Hand'to Answer Farm: : Patterson, warden of the state Pe gan HOUSING OFFICES RULED PRIOR LIENS Monday as follows: 5 SPEAKERS Citi ere? Questions Dell Patterson, warden of the state cog and Hie ‘in ae 7 a a | ERE armen owns arose ee) WIL REMANGERE 232-2222) 1 AL MORTCAGES SURVEYS ARE NECESSARY!) "7X J. Sylvester, Mandan farmer and realtor, who |/Official Austria Welcomes —— Join tae niin of Ommmciniee a Premier Taken Captive to Force Government to Conflict With Japan Father of Youngsters and Two Men in Other Car Not Seriously Hurt HAPPENED NEAR MANVEL —————_ tried irrigation last summer iim Many Items Will Be Subject of C. V. Danielson and Math Binsfield, Wilton, who also Former King as Tourist, /Only Supervisory Work to Be| "rns" aiotator-general, Second Supreme Court Action) Autos Smash Together oft imprisoned Sat with 20 of his subordinates Also Affects All Federal Transfered to Regional jurday A sudden : IE | Farm Loans poy, Austria, Des 14-—0P-—the eeeeee was deflaitely reported live at Blan: aU ERs & ol indsor, close! & REE ana Barren Shensi. Dakota chateau where he started life anew| Offices of the Federal Housing ad- walle troop euine Teiisd weet- | Mastiay anded aoe aoa important Monday as a private citizen, made an| ministration will continue to be lo- ward over the Lungha! railway, last- | decisions involving federal farm |i appointment to consult a Viennal cated in Bismarck after Jan. 1 and Attraction Stretch of Straight High- way Near Forks " have been irrigating, A. G: picid manager of the Cartwright irriga- te et a A. Madsen, Burlington, N. D., who will speak on the Burlington subsistence homesteads roject. - George F. Will and Louis Garske, Bismarck, who Debate and Study in Meet- ing Saturday Support is coming -! all quar- . fl ters to the Bismarck Tribune's irri- gation conference, set for next Satur-|] - 2 Ui) oats : plan an irrigation project. +e) specialist about a long-standing ear jot euinay eee collision . i funda: near Manvel, 12 miles Any other farmers who are interested in irrigation. pier bas . who] the same basis as in the pas means northwest of here. CONSULTANTS came to Austria Sunday night after) This announcenent was made here H. F. McColley, engineer at the North Dakota Agri- giving up his throne for Mrs, Wallis| Monday by Guy Harvoy, regional FHA p Simpson, was expected tq call at the/administrator from Sioux Falls, 8. took effe March, , cae ee aa ar th ub ou 4. || Vienna clint of Prof. Heinrich Neih|D. and set at rust reports that the| pert, Honan, Province fecual MEAN a » dean e agric college ani mann late in the day after all other| FHA office nera wou': be closed and Chang, In another decision, believed the head of its experiment stations. patients had left, attendants said, [all of its speca‘ions transferred to) sore one of the dictator's first of its kind in the country, the B. J. Thomas, state engineer. Tt was noted the fogner sovereign | Sioux Falls. sociates. supreme court recognized as binding, Charles A. Larson, superintendent, the Otter Tail |j held his hand over hif car when he) | Work under Title I of the housing Situation Is Critical signed agreements obtained by the was driven from the Vienna station|#ct, providing for modernisation Federal Land bank and Farm Mort- Power Co., Washburn. ‘ to the country estate of Baron Eu-|loans, will cea:e when that portion} Indicating the critical nature of| gage corporation from creditors in Paul 8. Bliss, Works Progress Administration. geno de Rothschild near here after a|f the law expires next April 1, Her-| the situation, Yen Hal-Shan, pacifl-| certain instances who agreed to reduce Iver A, Acker, lawyer and assistant Resettlement trip from ‘England through Brance|Vey said, and indications are that it/cation commissioner of neighboring | indebtedness of a farmer obtaining a ednitniateator and Switeerland. . will not be renewed. As @ result, all/Shansi and Suiyuan Provinces, teler | federal loans. ae ar aid faeces z ‘ Allment Secret of the employes in the local office ed Ni 5 that pun- Involved Foreclosure M. O. Ryan, secretary, state planning board. Heuniann Matnattes Ge nintatial-| nbolace werking’on baat clear et bis: | Sie pene: sees ae mutinous| In the first case, the Federal Farm|ant professor of marketing at the PURPOSES OF CONFERENCE lence concerning the nature of the| {ness will be dismissed at that time.| Chang be withheld. Mortgage corporation brought action| University of North Dakota; Mae - 1, To obtain data on the experience of farmers who _ || Duke's ear trouble, but it was learned) | Only the suvervisory work will be Marybal Chang, formerly | to _forscloen a mortage, siven Ms.|ionaren of Brot dL. Sayre have tried irrigation with a statement of the productio: from the attendants and other phys- | transferred from x to Sloux| war-lord of 260,000 Manchurian sol-|and Mrs. Falk, Stul laren of Prot J. of the btained and thalt costs; Where’auch data are available, || cane iuss,thesrentments he wal un; |S rion tne Dunbar o€ er plores | ee ne CAE Cee ea eats cliand the eis fa _ 0 Bt. Daichael’s hogpital with ie o an costs, w! such data are available. || dergo consist of X-ray, light ray and } loyes | hostage to force the national govern- Ys juries said by. physicians tolbe aat get an the local office from 14 to 7. prior right to first collect $128 due 2.. To devise workable means of helping other ries the janet ear. the themer| Since the FHA has been ost up as ment to declare war on Japen, the | Pr d hail indemnity tax for 1935, rious are Professor Sayre, and Math specialist confined himself to a state-| operations from receipts, he.sald, the » {state could not claim s prior right : both of Greenbush, Minn. ek deen suitable areas to start irrigation if they wish ecumann has tented ype former! , “business snd must, finanoe” ‘1s The federal agency” claimed the| Barto, 22, and Clarence Staufteneker a) local office tal the hail indemnity tax ot Barto and Stuffmaker were ocr laibie tte By seeing engineering avai i Pds- Ment ‘thet the ear trouble was aot Peer Se en ee eee tae mith the y ot the we a (bo) ‘By providing a central sotirce: of information The concensus in Vienna was the Hi d demnity «first len. violated two pro- as to equipment and other details, 4 -- Austria’ G visions of the federal constitution, Pi » (a); By reviewing present laws to see what gssist- cm sg | Damo ; : contract, ra est eee tae ance. they-offer farmers in starting irMigstion. « . party i : taking of property without due process _(e)_: By arranging for the introduction and support Vienna to the estate, 25 miles from| of law. of laws intended to increase such assistance. : the capital, After he passed the Vi-| 2.0) : , ‘The high court pointed out that the (f) ‘By enlisting such help as federal agencies can || ¢hns city limite, police blocked off the pedis ta i ys is Seat eco give under existing rules. Duke Is Happy ment in effect an insurance rece The Duke was ins happy frame of Pelping dispatches stated the re-/tevy rather than a tax, and that in iff tk iy i i & fx ei j bellious chieftain had concentrated! making the tt two divisions on ‘Tungkwan, eastern- | Contract with faemers taking out the most city of the province, to oppose | state insurance, it did not violate any ; ' decision O en Heart Plans oe Peal i anc | pits fon tr 4 th, Eng., he pedition into Hensi. Future Action Is Question ; : Chang is estimated to have direct-| whet action the Federal Farm ly under his command, or closely al- Hed with him, upwards of 100,000 men, or which 75,000 are armed s0l- Reds Behind Chang Behind Chang's legions as potential ‘WUC OOMNG EEE SeeeS! iN Ieee OFBANK AT LGNITE| = Institution Declared Insolvent and Closed Voluntarily, ‘simpson. z Lefor Says Official Austria welcomed him as a j 5 Eske & ie Boulogne, France, a few Hours after ‘Battle of Music’ ERae.:sS a2S Big Charity Dance to Be Given DEPOSITORS SAVED Across the Alps at Cannes. France,| tact with the situation here, he Saturday Night; KFYR Gives Assistance i i Es : ERE affects every farm loan granted since! ments to co! Grand Forks. math, as. Bed eae agency re- at Bes quires joans ave prior right to| ENGEBRETSON RITES all other loans, ARE SET FOR TUESDAY It is possible an appeal may be car- Dee. 14. tied to the United States supreme court by the federal agency for final decision. . In affirming federal creditors’ agreements, the high court held A. F. Fir, cashier of the Nome State bank, could not collect on a $1,179.50 chat- tel mortgage obtained by him from Rudolph Koslofsky, a farmer, because Fir had signed a federal loan agree- ment that he would reduce a $1,600 debt Koslofsky owed the bank, to $750 as “full payment” for the claim. Lien Att ty authorities announced no inquest will be held. Justices Fail to Announce If They Plan to Assume minent civil conflict, i It was generally considered the durisdiction gravest crisis in the history of China’s nationalist movement. CREATION OF SAFETY DEPARTMENT URGED Peace Officers Discuss Propos- + ed Act to Create New Gov- @rnmental Agency 67,297 Minnesotans Paid Tax on Incomes tl Washington, Dec. 14.—(P)—Income tax returns for 1934 were made by 67,297 Minnesotans, 2.57 per cent of the state's population, the internal Tevenue bureau reported. Minnesota's | total payments for that year were $5,- 257,595; North Dakota payments were $183,955 and South Dakota $225,380. STUTSMAN PIONEER DIES Jamestown, N. D., Dec. 14.—()— ry HEL ce vi g EE i Cash Donations to Open Heart $411.25 Me ition--will take on future loans in the state was not in- . mediately ascertained. The decision] resided there since, pending atrange- & F Eg & L gs ay ui E EBei Mrs. Carrie Anderberg, 77, Stuteman county pioneer woman, died Sunday. Funeral services will be Tuesday with . burial in Lime Springs, Iowa. RE RE A Visit From St. Nicholas By Clement Clarke Moore i EEie fg # i g Q lal Ee. * ment of the board is accepted ‘The bank had de yliragy surplus of $2100 avd was Nctocered F i rf A afi “Santa Visits Tiny Tots - Doomed to Death Soon So in Oma ; i

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