The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 27, 1937, Page 2

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MEDICAL SCHOOL AT STATE UNIVERSITY | GETS MONEY BOOST ed by House Committee at , Wednesday Meeting After increasing the appropriation to $30,000 for genera! maintenance of the university school of medicine, the house appropriations committee Wed- nesday recommended the bill for pass- eThis vote followed the action Tues- day night of the house group in recommending other appropriation bills of the University of North Da- kota and State Agricultural college for passage. The increase in the medicine bill, amounting to approxi- mately $4,000, came when it was dis- covered error had been made in subtracting appropriations for the school of medicine in the regular uni- versity appropriation from the special bill. Drop Building Plan Deleted by the budget board before the bill reached the legislature was the university request of $123,000, in- cluding money for a new building unit to house the medical school. President J. C. West of the univer- sity, told the house committee the medical school had lost its accredited rating with the American Medical as- sociation. With the special appropriation, Dr. West said, he and the state board ot administration would make every ef- fort to bring this school to a satis- factory standard. Roofs of North Dakota public build- ings are causing more trouble than any other item of repair, members of legislative appropriations committees were told Wednesday as hearings were conducted - on: budgets:for normal! schools at Dickinson and Mayville. H. O. Pippin, president of the Dick- inson school, askéd for $1,500 for re-| pair the roof of Stickney Hall. J. D. rig, chairman of the board of administration, supported his request and added that similar conditions prevailed in other institutions, Guarantees Mean Little Despite guarantees by roofing com- panies, which built present roofs, Har- ris asserted there had been “no suc- cess in getting anything done about it.’, Harris and L, O. Frederickson, state budget board member, told the sen- ate committee they had climbed through trap doors and up ladders to make close examination of the roofs on most of North Dakota’s public buildings. They found need for re- Pair was quite general, House bill 33, which would make the atate dairy division regulations the laws of North Dakota, was held up in the committee on agriculture pend- ing # determination of its constitu- tionality. ‘The committee voted to delay action ‘on the bill at the suggestion of John N. Hagen, commissioner of agriculture Bad Break for 18 Hurt in Wreck A broken rail was blamed for the derailment of two day coaches and three Pullmans of the Florida tourist train at Odes- sa, Fla., resulting in the injury of 18 persons. Motorists from the nearby highway examine the wreckage above, NUE: NEZS Births Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Clark, Bismarck route 2, at 10:30 a. m., Tuesday, St. Alexius hospital. Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin G. Sailer, Stanton, at 4:05 a. m,, Wed- nesday, St. Alexius hospital. and labor, following a claim of C. W. Bangert, legal advisor for the Non- partisan League caucus, that the bill 1s unconspitutional, Commistioner Hagen urged that the Proposal be amended to make it con-; stitutional. ‘ _ Cut Budget Slightly The committee Tuesday night de- cided to recommend $671,365 as the university appropriation, compared with the $674,966 suggested by the budget board, and lopped $36,387 from the board’s agricultural college ‘appropriation of $385,012, reducing that figure to $348,625. It increased the experiment station appropriation recommendation of $68,559 to $94,234, however, including $16,807 in salary raises, and $8,868 for a swine build-|° The action included allowance of a three-per-cent salary boost at both institutions during the next two years, falling in line with a similar raise voted by the senate appropria- tions group. ‘The $47,240 recommendation for the extension division at the Fargo ‘institution was cut $5.000. Increase Is $103,676 ‘The wumiversity total represents a $103,676 increase over allowances for the present two years period granted in 1935, while the net total budget for all agricultural college activities in 1935-37 was $473,854 or $11,245 less than recommended for the next two years,: . The senate committee took action e school of forestry at Bottineau. The Bottineau school figure of $66,137 recommended by the budget board, which included a 10 per cent salary increase, was dropped to $64,307. Recommended appropriations of $287,025 for the Minot institution were Teduced to $260,731 by the senate com- mittee, which included reduction of salary increase of $22,420 or 10 per cent, to $6,726 or three per cent. Payrolls Up $63,380 In voting for three per cent salary 2 at all state educational institutions, the two committees esti- it would boost present payrolls for the next biennium. action was first taken by the committee, where « fight de- any increase. At the Senator W. Watt of Proposed five per cent Qppropriations measures onal institutions will reach Moots of both houses with a Major P. M. Hansen of Jamestown was in Bismarck Tuesday. -Monday he: inspected Battery E, 185th Field Aftillery of the North Dakota Nation: Guard, at Mandan. Miss Dolores Bonzer of the state training school staff left Tuesday for Lidgerwood to attendfuneral services for her grandmother who died Mon- day. Miss Bonzer will return to Man- dan late this week. | Weather Report | 7. WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Cloudy tonight and Thursday, with snow to- night; much colder, with severe Cold Wave, For North’ Dakota: Cloudy, tonight and probably east Thursday morning; much colder; Se- vere Cold Wave west portion tonight and east and-south portions Thurs- day For South Dakota: Cloudy, snow tonight and extreme east Thurs morning; much colder nigh! Thursday; severe Cold Wave; northerly winds. * For Montana: Snow tonight and Thursday; colder tonight; continued cold Thursday, For Minnesota: snow tion it and trong: Snow tonight and Thursday somewhat warmer ex- treme east: Colder west portion to- night; much colder Thursday with severe Cold Wave west portion. WEATHER CONDITIONS Low pressure areas are centered over Colorado, Denv 9. inch and over the north Seattle pressure to Alber The weather ts generally the Great Lakes region ward to Callfornia, but #1 ing over the ‘thwest this morning. Temperatures higher throughout the Mississ ey and Plains States, but readings are considerably lower over the northern Rocky Moun- in region. marck station barometer, inches: Reduced to sea level, 30.11, » 8114 a. me. Sunset, 6:38 p. m. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to dai Total, January 1st to date Normal, January ist to da Accumulated excess to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS rx col while a high ‘ea extends from Montana 8. BISMARCK, snowing Devils Lake, Amarillo, Texas, Boise, Idaho, cldy. Calgary, Alta., cldy Chicago, lll., cles el 00 200 the of the Roberts McNab com- Jamestown, N. D., to increase its install new equipment. KRMC ii share night power with KVOX | @ 1310 wave-length with 100 watts we (PAINTERS NAME SCHENEKER eet 2 ? of Mitchell, 8. D., ‘president of the North Dakota council of the Inter- Denver, Colo., cl Des Moines, Tow: Dodge City, Kans., cl Edmonton, ‘Ali Havre, Mont., Helena, Mon’ Huron, 8. Da Kamloops, B. C. Kai G ¢ A Moorhead, Minn., snow No, Platte, Nebr., cldy. Okla. City, Okla., clear Ariz, clear . Pierre, S. D., clear .... Pr. Albert, Sasi Qu’Appelle, S. Rapid City, 8. D., Roseburg, Ore., cldy, . 3: St. Louis, Mo., clear .. Salt Lake City, U., cld; Santa Fe, N. Mex., clea: (®) —R. A!3. 8. Marie, Mich., cld: was and| Sheridan, Wyo Seattle, Wash., cldy. . Sioux City, Io Spokane, Was: “Boclety of Master Painters | Swift Current, Decorators at a meeting here night. ‘The Pas, Mai Winnipeg, Mai | the official language of North Dakota CONTINUE Patronage Ban Is Rejected in House By Narrow Margin quested the commissioner of insur- ance to supply copies of a pamphlet Whelan said was titted “Apparent, Irregularities in the Hail Insurance Department.” The action followed re- quested submission of a hail insur- ance department special audit report Lieut. Gov. T. H. H. Thoresen warned the senators to speed up action on bills in committees. ‘ A proposal to suspend the rules ani pass a resolution sponsored by ator W. A. Thatcher of Bottineau which would designate as “American” instead of “English,” was voted down in the senate and the resolution was sent to the senate committee on education. Would Cut Interest A house bill reducing the interest on county warrants from seven to four per cent annually was passed and sent to the senate. Provisions for dentistry regulation, containing strict codes of “ethics,” were advanced in bills introduced in both the house and senate. Re-referred to committee after 8 strenuous battle Monday, the bill to stop legislators from taking state jobs came into the house Tuesday, with & divided report, the majority of the ways and means committee favoring indefinite postponement and the mi- nority offering an amendment to the bill. Rep. Godwin opened the fight to keep the bill from going onto the cal- endar for final passage, declaring the proposal was not introduced in “good faith.” Rep. A. J. Kapaun of Cass said he was “wondering if some legislators might not sponsor things for their own benefit, favoring a department where they might get a job.” Rep. John Magill of Ransom like- wise spoke in favor of the bill. Twichell Favored It That legislators are “urged to vote for a bill and held in line by .the Promise of a job,” was the reason given by Rep. L. L. Twichell for his stand in favor of the bill. After the bill was indefinitely post- poned a “clincher motion” requiring @ two-thirds vote of the assembly to reconsider the vote, was moved by Gus Schauss of Morton, and adopted by the house. Consolidation of counties would be possible only upon approval by 60 per cent of the electors under a proposal Pct, /00 Of Griggs: offered in the house by Rep. D. 8. Blair of Towner. A majority is suffi- cient under present statues. Representatives Robert Rait and Roy Frazier both of Burke-Divide counties, introduced a bill to make it easier for counties to issue seed or feed warrants. ‘Their bili seeks to repeal the re- quirement that at least 60 per cent of all previous bonds, warrants and certificates of indebtedness issued by @ county must be paid before issuance of the feed-seed warrants. Naturopathy Up Again House bill 211 providing for estab- lishment of a board of/ naturopathic examiners and defining: practice of naturopathy in the state, was ad- vanced to the house calendar for fi- nal passage, Rep. Targie Trydahl of Grand Forks, attacked the measure as being “vicious and in the extreme.” An amendment was attached on motion of Rep. Arlo Beggs of Mc- Lean that all applicants for license must have passed “satisfactory exam- ination.” Additional bills dealing with tax- ation were thrown into the senate hopper, including a proposed which would permit the counties to apply to courts for appointment of receivers to operate property on which taxes are delinquent for more than a year, until such taxes have been paid. The committee on taxes and tax laws sponsored the bill, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY 27, 1931 FDR CHARTS POWER |G ow raNvE Dp EXPANSION DUE. 1 |AusPersons Within 50 COURT INJUNCTION walled island city where the and Private Projects in Ohio pours into +4 Tennessee Dropped As the rected the labors hio’s crest. dent Roosevelt shaped a tentative!“ rieut, Col. Eugene Reybold, district apa Wednesday toward expanded Sulit 9 2 aoe ocean ae pul ownership of electric power by |area below Cairo, who Tuesday pre- breaking off negotiations to pool gov- | lloted ® “super flood,” declared oon- ernment and private power in the : Tennessee valley. He took the action, he said, because 19 utility companies obtained a/jand in “sweeping preliminary injunction” |to keep them in that against the Tennessee Valley author-| water is producing ity. below the Cairo 5 Explaining this precluded a trans-| At Memphis, the Mississippi rose mission agreement, he wrote 14 gov-|43 feet on the gauge, within two ernment and private conferees Tues-/of an all-time day that meetings would be discon- peo tinued. Utility Protests $790,000, The Commonwealth and Southern/of human utility company protested the action. |national capitol ‘Wendell Willkie, its president, said in| The Red Cross New York: $5,000,000 relief temporary injunction precludes either Louisville ie poole es Gener the eg Louisville fough' ig of the various problems arising out|egse with three- of the TVA operations or the out of a permanent solution. “The dismissal of the lawsuit or the dissolution of the injunction would place our property at the mercy of the uncontrolled discretion of the TVA.” Contract Expiring filled with patients, indirect victims Mr, Roosevelt said at a press confer-| of the flood, and Mayor Neville Mill- ence the decision to end the power/er said “there is the constant threat pool conferences would not affect] of disease and epidemic.” negotiations to renew the -| Louisville's exhausted force wealth and Southern contract to buy igained a respite when Miller government power from the Tennessee |announced the conflict over jurisdic- Valley authority. The contract expires | tion between local and federal author- next Wednesday. ities had been settled. He said 200 In the background of the entire sit-/federal troops who arrived Tuesday uation is the fencing between Chair-|night would share police duties with man Arthur E. Morgan of TVA, and |patrolmen sent to Louisville by air- Director David Lillienthal for leader-|piane and special train from other ship of the administration’s first |cities in response to his hurried radio regional planning experiment. appeal Tuesday night. Most observers agreed Morgan could take little comfort from the president's decision, coming within two weeks of the former educator's proposal for a nationwide truce with private utilities. CONTINUED from page one plants, spread fire, privation and the threat of disease. The water supply was rationed and citizens carried it from “water stations” in pails, jars and bottles. Some drinking water came from other cities by tank car. T. R. Atkinson, Former) "‘Sias movements of refugses trom flood-stricken cities in Indiana gained State Engineer, Dies) focd-stricken cities in Tndlene gained the construction of waterworks and Landen Soler! Perl Bs eer sewer systems at Killdeer, Noonan, |than 75,000 had been driven from their McClusky, Goodrich, Regent, Elgin|homes and cold, hunger and sickness and Richardton, many of which were |added to the suffering of those who only recently completed. stuck to their posts. Timothy Ralph Atkinson was born} Already the estimates of homeless Feb, 9, 1868 at North Anson, Maine of |and property damage exceeded the English ancestry. He was educated |1027 Mississippi river disaster and lent at North Anson academy and receiy- {credence to the statement of Dr. Cary ed his professional training in civil|Grayson, Red Cross chairman, ts described the present flood as Sringrrng at the University Of | sreatest emergency the nation and the Are Ordered Out paused in their four-day rise to record- the Mississippi—di- of 1,000 volunteers For several years after his gradua- tion he was engaged as a. civil/en- gineer in railroad construction “work in New England and on Nov. 25, 1894 he married Emma Hilton of Wiscas- set, Maine. Mrs. Atkinson died in June 1934, Member of Engineering Society He was a memoer of the American Society of Civil Engineers and of the Bismarck Rotary club and for many years has been senior warden of the St. George's Episcopal church. He leaves one son, Myron H, Atkin- son, 510 Rosser Ave. West; two daugh- ters, Mrs, Gordon V. Cox, 612 Thay- er Ave, West; and Mrs. Harry F. Henson, Jr., of Roanoka, Va.; a sister, Mrs, Lena Barbour of Portland, » Maine and five grandchil- dren. ‘ Senator J. W. Guthrie of Burleigh added a bill which would pervent di- version of special taxes on motor ve- hicle transportation by directing they be used for highway purposes only. A bill by Senator E. Magoffin of Dickey county, would require uniform: price listing and be aimed against price slashing in connection with sales of commodities in the course of trade or commerce. How They Voted The vote on the bill to ban patron- age follows: (57) Adam, Akland, An- Anfinson, Beaton, Beggs, 'Biberdorf, Bieloh, Billingmeier, Bjorn- son, Brusseau, Caddell, Dittmer, Frazier, Freitag, Godwin, Greise: Hagen, Haines, Hofstrand, Holmquist, Hulstrand, Jensen, Knitson, Krank, Levin, Livingston, McIntee, Myers, Nelson, Obach, Odegard, Olson of Mc- Lean, Olson of Adams, Peterson of Band, tray, Th ‘Treffry, Tuff, Tweten, Urgchel, Whit Wolf, Dahl. (51) Beasley, Beeno, $|Biack, Blair, Brown, Byrne, Dalgell, Dullea, Fitch, Frey, Frosaker, Gess- ner, Gilberg, Goodlaxon, Graham, ‘Holm, Holthusen, Huseby, Ireland, Johnson, Jury, Just, Kapaun, Knud- -Bteele, Krai 5 Mor! +) Niewoehner, O'Brien, Oglesby, Olson of Billings, Olson of Sargent, Page, 7 | Peterson of Richland, Peterson of Ren- ville, Sandness, Saumur, Severson, Shure, Solberg, Symington, Thompson, Trydahl, Twichell, Wendland. Absent and not voting (5) Traynor, Norheim, Jones, Burgum, Day. 1—SALARY LOANS $5 TO $50 No Co-Makers No Endorsers 2—AUTO LOANS $25 to $400 3—AUTO REFINANCING If You Need Money for Taxes or Aute license See Us Borrow by Mai} SALARY LOAN CO. Geo, Stevens, Mgt Dak. Nat'l, Bank Bids. Bilamarck, N. D. San Mr. Atkinson's home here is located at 422 Main St. North Sea Gale Sinks Ships With 46 Aboard Oslo, Jan. 27.—(#)—Wireless mes- sages from British ships reported Wed- nesday a gale sweeping the North sea sank two trawlers with a total loss of 46 lives. The French trawler Lorette was said to have gone down with 30 men, while the Amethyst, a British vessel, was lost with 16, A search has been under way since Sunday for the Amethyst, last heard from when it flashed an “SOS” con- cluding “skipper doesn’t think any lifeboat will get through to us.” Hirohito Backs Ugaki Against Army Clique Tokio, Jan. 27.()—Emperor Hiro- hito was reported Wedensday to have ordered Gen. Kazushige the face of adamant opposition from the army. As Ugaki tried to slip quietly into his headquarters through a back door, three extremists broke through a police cordon into the house in an effort to present him with a petition demanding he cease his ef- forts to form a cabinet. PARAMOUNT Starts Tomorrow (Thursday) The most beautiful of stars in a story as thrilling as her beauty! Glamorous MERLE OBERON -in- “Beloved 99 Enemy with BRIAN AHERNE DAVID NIVEN Powerful drama vividly por- trayed by the enchanting star of “Dark Angel.” ® brother, Joseph Atkinson |), Red Cross have faced since the world : 4 New dynamite blasts widened the gap in the Birds Point-New Madrid fioodway below Cairo through which the turbulent flood waters poured into @ man-created basin covering more than 200 square miles. ‘Warned to Flee Residents of Tiptonville, Tenn., and New Madrid, Mo., two riverside towns near the floodway, were warned by George Myers, Red Cross national disaster director, to flee lest “they drown like rats in a trap.” The levees are sure to said, Other cities their doors to exiles from the led areas. Colt bus, O., prepared to shelter 5,000, and Charlestown, Mo., doubled its 3,800 population overnight with 2,500 , cokl and homeless refugees arriving from Southeastern Missouri. Preparations were made at Memphis, Tenn., to accommodate 50,000 as the exodus from the surrounding country proceeded apace. Mayor H. R. of Parkers- » W. Va. appealed for conserva- tion of food in the face of shortening supplies. JAMESTOWN PIONEER DIES Jamestown, N. D., Jan. 27.—()— Mrs, G. A. Lieber, Jamestown jeer | resident, died at noon Ws fol- lowing # stroke of apoplexy suffered teberger, representa tive of Carl von Ossleteky, collected the $37,000 Nobel peacé prize for the invalid German pacifist. Wednesday. Tonight at 8:15 is your night fer LOVE! For THRILLS! For Entertainment Perfection! “Romeo and ” Juliet with the greatest cast of featured Players ever assembled! Reserved seats arb available at box office. PARAMOUNT THEATRE “Romeo and Juliet” is acclaimed unanimously by critics as the ultimate in entertainment. Prices fer this attraction Ste, 15e & $100 Nete: This picture will net play im Bismarck again this seasen! ROOSEVELT SCORES SLOAN NEW LABOR Standards by Law in Gen- eral Motors Picture prot ‘of enforcing lal poe into the deadlocked General strike picture. He told suggestions to curb the supreme court's authority were not considered. | _FLOODLIGHTS Cairo, Wednesday to aid the evacuation of this flood-threatened area. The Ohio inched downward slong LEGISLATION SEEN Problem of Enforcing Work Maybe Mae May ‘CONFESSIONS Be Best in U.S. JAPAN WN PLOT 10 OVERTHROW STALIN Former Soviet Railway Chief Tells of Wrecking ‘Thou- sands’ of Trains “Mr. X” of planning to infect Russian troop trains with deadly He E Hl : ig3 il M4 ln 5 ? i a j i E ul i i 0, spring 60 1 k northern Lit the 60-foot seawall here, showing. the | } shadow of a victory in the desperate fight to keep the swollen confluence 4 of the two rivers out of Cairo. The stage Wednesday was 58 feet y here, about a six-inch fall since en- gineers bombed a Mississippi levee to the south, releasing the pent-up flood into @ 131,000-acre spillway in Mis- souri and easing the pressure here. Cincinnati, Ohio, Jan. 27.—(7)— Cincinnati saw the angry Ohio river sprawling over one-fifth of the city Wednesday and took new hope that its homes soon would be lighted, its water faucets responsive to the touch and its 30,000 homeless happy again at their firesides. By fractions of an inch the destruc- tive stream receded reluctantly from the high which blotted out most of the city’s lights, halted its power and water plants and spread fire, privation and the threat of dis- ease along its streets. W. C. Devereaux held out hope that the crest of the flood waters was! Oat: reached when his gauges read 79.99 feet Tuesday. There was a possibility that river conditions would bring & second crest exceeding 80 feet, Jackson, Ohio, Jan. 27.—(7)—State Highway Patrolmen F. E. Radcliffe and F. D. Bolia appealed to superiors ‘Wednesday for some more dangerous and thrilling assignments in the flood area. Assigned to a relief camp here, they reported they had spent the night walking the floor with crying Tefugee babies. Washington, Jan. 27.—(#)—The Red Cross passed the $1,000,000 mark Wed- nesday in its drive to raise $10,000,000 for flood sufferers. St. Paul, Jan. 27.—(#)—Four more detachments from Fort Snelling, to- taling 220 men, were ordered to leave | CAPITOL LAST TIMES TODAY Big Double Feature Program Feature No Charles Starrett and the new singing sensation, DONALD GRAYSON. STARTING TOMORROW DEVILS PLAYGROUND kd No. 1 northern eer Ni 60 60; No, 2, 59 Ibs, 52; "No. 3, 5 No. 1 red duru: ax! No, 102 Former Kaiser Is 78; Celebrates Indoors Doorn, The Netherlands, Jan, 27— (ny the Asoc! Coa a ‘Former Kaiser Wilhelm of Ger- Treasury 4%’s 120.10. Treasury i? WINNIPEG CASH GRAIN Winntpes, | Jan. 27.— (P) wheat No. 1 ‘northern 1.20; No. northern 1.18%; No. 3 northern 1.15%. ats No. 2 white 5344; No. 3 white fee. Northern railway Tuesday ri 51%; No. 1 mi estimated reported net income for 1936 of $9,- 918,812, which includes dividends from ‘the: Burlington $3,320,716. i a AMERICANS LEAVE MALAGA cl STOCK: . New York, 27.—()}—Curb: amounting to American Gen. 11%, Cities Service 4%. Elec, Bond & Share 25%. Fisk Rub, 13, INVESTMENT TRUSTS (By the Associated Press) (Over the counter in New York) Maryland Fund, 10.28; 11.23, Quart. Inc. Sh. 18.72; 20.50. Bel, Inc. Sh, 5. “THIS IS THE LIFE” SAYS WILLIE JONES "since we got a heater that. minds its own business” ETTY soft for Willie— for Mother and Dad, too. No more shivering expedi- tions to the basement. No coal to carry in, no ashes to carry out. When the Estate Gas Heatrola comes in, that's the end of heating work — the beginning of worklees warmth! Light it in the Fall—forget it until Spring! Estate Gas Heatrola keeps every room at June temperature — with- out poking or coaxing. The automatic remote heat con- trol looks after everything — the rooms are filled with moist, healthful, circulating ‘warmth — constant and un- varying—all winter long. Safe warmth, too, For Gas Heatrola is fame-tight, odor- tight. Come in—let, us dem- onstrate; or telephone and in- vite us to call at your home. Iitastrated in the circle fe Mote! No. 161— ‘2 clrovlating heater thet alee ovade forth a radient glow. This model ie woualty in- (tailed in frost of « Sreplece, Hiontana-Dakota Utilities Co, Bismarck - Mandan - Hebron - Dickinson

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