The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 30, 1937, Page 3

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SOIL CONSERVATION PLAN WILL REQUIRE FARMERS’ ATTENTION Diversion Payments in Burleigh County to Be $3.90 Per Acre, Says Putnam Close personal attention of all op- erators will be required for the. conservation program in Burleigh county, opined County Agent Henry ©. Putnam, following a meeting of the county committee here Wednesday during which details of the new plan were di 5 Committeemen will be elected at district meetings to be held as soon as weather and road conditions make such gatherings practical. A com- plete explanation of the program will be made at the meetings, Putnam FS Must Reduce 15 Per Cent Similar to last year, a reduction of 15 per cent of the total soll de- pleting base acreage is required as in 1936, Putnam explained. The soll Weather Report | KARL RADEK'S LIFE erally fair tonight and Sunday; con- tinued . For North Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Sunday; much colder ex- treme southeast tonight; continued cold Sunday. For South Dako! rr ‘air tonight and Sunda: it portion to night; cont inday. ‘or Monti led and Sunday; not so cold north-central and north “tonight tonight slowly yy Ir tonight Sunday: except cloudy east to- it and much cold th north Pacific coast, with readings 30 degree: low zero in northern Mon- tana. Precipitation occurred throughout the Mis: Valley id at scattered pli the stward to the Paci- depleting base for 1937 will be based} Gen, on the allowance granted under last year’s program and no change will be made to members who signed the 1936 Program as far as acreage is con- lower. lak fair, followed b Wednesday or T' mostly near or be! cerned unless there is too large or| /’ too small a base. “Operators will have to convince the county or district committees that the acreage on their farms was ‘wrong or there will be no changes in| P1: the base acreage,” Putnam asserted, | Fi pointing out that the county is al- loted a definite acreage and must stay within that limit . Farms that were not signed up in 1996 or on which no work sheet was placed last year will be eligible for a y fair, Portion about in about Friday or temperatures mostly near or below norma! PRECIPITATION Fof Bismarck Station Total nd month to date . except some base to be established in 1937, Such | 2° operators will file a work sheet and later make application for payment and an additional allotment will be made to cover this arceare. Either the tenant or landlord may make such] ® application. Payments $3.90 Per Acre Acreage removed from the soil de- pleting base is spoken of as the di- verted soil depleting base and the/at 7 payment for such diversion ts called @ diversion payment, Putnam ex- plained. The allowance for diversion payment in Burleigh county is $3.90 per acre. Any farmer may receive his diversion payment by simply remov- ing 15 per cent of his soil depleting base and leaving it idle or he may sow grasses or legumes this acre- age and receive additional payments. Additional payments, depending on the past practices on the farm and the method of handling the land in 1937, will range up to $ per acre,| K Putnam concluded. James Gaffney, 71, Found Dead in Hotel Devils Lake, N. D., Jan. 30.—(P}— dames Gaffney, 71, operktor of an NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- High- t est Pe “4 ding 7 a. m., except Minot and Jamestown which cover 24 hours.) WEATHER AT rahe POINTS Amarillo, Texas, cl Boise, Idaho, Calgary, Al Chicago, Il. Denver, Col Des Moines, Dodge City, Edmonton, Havre, Mon Helena, Mo: Huron, 8 wy clay . “4 City, Mont., cidy’ -20 Minneapolis, snow 10 Modena, Utah, cl Moorhead, Minn. No. Platte, Neb., cldy Oklahoma ‘City, ‘clay Phoenix, Aris,, ‘cld: employment agency here nearly 20 Be years, was found dead in a local hotel toom Friday. Death was believed caused by @ brain he: thage. It is thought he had been dead for several Gays when his body was discovered by a friend. And at the G. P. you always get a Great Plenty FOR Sunday Dinner A splendid array of satisfying foods. TUREEY ....... DOC 65c STEAKS, CHOPS, Served from 11:30 a. m. till 8:30 p. m. Grand Pacific Restaurant Bring in All Your RABBITS and RABBIT SKINS and CATTLE BONES. Inquire about our carlcad rates for everything. We also sell fish from Cana- dian » Pickerel, Herring, Salmon and Halibut. “Northern” Hide and Fur Co, Shoot of ] Rifle Club Guy Smith retained his position as the No. 1 marksman of the Bismarck Announcing our special ¢@) Sunday - Dinner features 11a. m. to 9 p. m. 80c 60c PLANK TENDERLOIN STEAK TURKEY DINNER CHICKEN DINNER SWEET SHOP 50c avast 7 SC A score of ether delicious dinners to select frem, all served with = pleasing variety of side dishes. Enjey your Sunday Dinner at our peaceful balceny dining room. THE NEW Sweet Shop THE BISMARCK TRI Legislative _ Sidelights Govern EBA SPARED BY STALIN; 13 10 FACE DEATH Commentators Value to Soviet as Diplomat Brings Judges’ Leniency ‘The legislature and ger were requested by executive director of the owned property by gency Relief administration for tran- sients. ‘The bulldings were turned over to the welfare board when the FERA SEAL SALE HEADS DISCUSS PROGRAM .| Rural School Leaders Hear Au- thorities on Tuberculosis Prevention Work County school superintendents who completed a three-day session here Friday remained to attend a confer- ence Saturday morning conducted by Miss Helen K. Katen, executive sec- retary of the North Dakota Anti- ‘Willson | Tuberculosis association. The superintendents served a8 delphia National League outfielder, said robbed her of jewelry valued at $6,000 and $100 in money. NYE BLOCKS NOMINATIONS We tor Gerald Nye blocked senate confirmation Sat: urday of two nominations for pos! ONTINUED IO Secrdusiers || NBBS= NEWS |Hitler Withdraws Reich’s Signature Marriage License From Paris Treaty) q.22°5 ceri With birthday of Nazi power—remilitarised the broad Rhineland in violation of Beene the treaty of Versailles. $ Contrasts Governments The North Dakota, board of em- Der Fuehrer, declaring that his|balmers have granted three embalm- Nazi movement “is the most beautiful ers licenses to Truman Dahle, Carpio; and most democratic,” shouted that, C. Olson, Fargo, and Mabel McCoy, Births Mr. and Mi Tenth St., at 1 Saturday, Bismarck hospit: George 52 p.m, Pp. by contrast, 170,000 deaths were the! Campbell, Minn. “achievements of the splendid Dem- ocratic revolutionaries in Spain.” In a setting’ of wildly enthusiastic Legislation Explained master in North Dakota. The senator | nasi re-dedication, the German Fue- said he had not been given 8M Oppor-| rer hailed the work of his own re- At Townsend Meeting declared Saturday, so his testimony might be used at future trials, The fiery Radek, who refused to Moscow, Jan. 30.—/?)—Karl i CAMP! the use to which the county funds chairmen of the rural 1936 seal sale drives. The meeting was held to dis- cuss problems relating to the sale and tunity to pass on the nominees, Joseph E. DeMers at St. John and Hulde E. Hezel at Zeeland. gime, belittied “Democratic world citi-! gen, bens” and cried out that the most | state ielsineume beat toons ween “exalted” task of the third reich was! resented at th Townsend club rally years; and V. V. Arnold, who had said he was once an American citi- and veteran of two enlistments ‘United States army, was im- for eight years. CONTINUED from page one: Legal Mortgage Moratorium Bill Is Passed by Senate until the permanent surplus reaches $4,000,000 is asked in the new insur- ance bill. Would Levy Tax An indemnity tax to meet hail loss payments and department operation costs not to exceed 10 per cent of the total risk carried, would also be levied under the proposal. Representatives Oscar Hagen of McKenzie and C. P. Ritter of McIntosh-Logan, introduced the measure, Action was deferred on five money bills forthe activities at the univer- sity, state agricultural college and two minor appropriation measures. Moving inte action against the first appropriation bill to come up for con- sideration before the house, Rep. Ole Stray of Mountrail county, Langer sup- porter, who Thuraday proclaimed his Cissatisfaction with increased bills ap- crease This statement came when the house, acting as a committee of the whole began consideration of the ap- Propriation for general maintenance of the state agricultural college, cut by the appropriations committee from $385,012 to $348,279 but containing an increase for salary “adjustment.” Stray Urges Cut Stating the appropriation is in ad- dition to $368,972 income the college obtains, Stray asserted the appropria- tion should be “cut down a lot.” Rep. Paul Sand of Pierce county, chairman of the appropriations com- mittee, moved that action be deferred. As subsequent appropriations bills for the agricultural college extension div- came and -referred to the appropria- tions committee. Acting on final passage, appropria- tion bills, including those for the uni- versity and the university school of medicine, were relegated to the foot of the calendar. On motion of Stray, the proposal for a civil service commission com- posed of the state industrial commis- sion was indefinitely postponed with- out a record vote, Stray declared it was “class legislation” and would to raise the basis of taxa- tion 50 to 100 per cent as the house accepted a recommendation of the tax laws committee for passage of an alternative measure which would in- railroads and utilities at 65 per cent of their true value instead of 60 per cent as at present. A series of bills introduced by Rep. W. J. Godwin of Morton county up- on recommendation of the state tax minded and tubercular between state and counties. Under these proposals the state would pay 75 per cent of the cost and the counties 25 per cent, relieving counties of approximately 10 per cent in ite schools to “prevent loss of experienced men and women.” A sim- nication McIntosh county officials sent the senate a communication protesting against an initiated, measure approved June 29, 1932, regulating salaries of county officials and requesting legis- lation providing an equal salary basis. Rep. Ole Stray’s humor provided a laugh for the legislators on the con- stitution. ‘The question was on reducing mile- age for state officials from 7 to 5 cents. Rep. W. J. Godwin asked if they real- ized they would be cutting their own mileage also. There was quiet for # considerable time as the chairman asked what the bill urged Rep. James Caddell of Sioux to comment that “if we dally around like we have the law won't ever affect any one.” Reps. L. L. Twichell and H, R. Frei- tag then pointed out the constitution sets the mileage for legislators and ‘could not be touched by the present bi ill. “That's fine; the constitution stands by us,” smiled Stray. “And I'll stand by the constitution.” ‘The bill was passed and another re- ducing mileage of county officials also and sent to the senate with an amendment including county superintendents of schools in the same class with sheriffs who would get eight cents a mile, Others are cut to five cents, John F. Sullivan, Mandan attorney and tax expert, appeared at a hearing of the senate committee on taxes and tax laws, in behalf of Senate Bill 82, which would limit to 20 per cent of the cash rental value on a five year average the amount of taxes which coud be levied on farming and ranch- ing land. ‘The bill was introduced by, Senator Herman Thorson of Adams county with Tax Commissioner J. K. Murray, the author. Sullivan asserted that the intro- duction of the bill was the “first time” since organization of the Nonpartisan League that “an attempt was being made to actually do something for Mr. | John Q. Farmer.” Sullivan was asked by Senator. Ole Ettestad of McHenry, if it “were not at eas Serer peewee oe Nonpartisan e.” “Yes, it is a fact,” Sullivan said, “and I think I have been consistent for I am stilt opposed to the Non- partisan League.” Commissioner Murray claimed a tax law of this kind “would prevent con- fiscation” of property for taxation. He stated that the bill woula provide legal recourse for any “wrongfully” assessed. ' UE ‘CONTINUE D | Heavy Ticket Sale For Birthday Ball Is Reported Here local committee and’30 per cent will go to the national organization. Members of Boy Scout Troop No. 2, sponsored by the Kiwanis club, will the dance tonight in uniform Jones 5 number sent exceed 1,000. A total of 703 had been sold before noon Saturday, most of them at the capitol building. ‘The dance will begin with a grand march st 9:30 p. m. The festivities will be interrupted at 10:25 that the crowd may listen to the president's birthday address, to be broadcast at that time. Reports from Washington seid Capt. Ross T. McIntyre, the presi- dent’s physician, had pronounced him in excellent health and that he will entertain at dinner tonight his “birthday gang,” consisting of news- papermen who were assigned to the Navy department when he was assist- ant secretary during the war and others who traveled with him when he ran for vice president in 1920. BURRESON RESIGNING Aneta, N. D., Jan. 30.—(7)—B. J. Burreson, Nelson county superintend- ‘ent of schools, submitted his resigna- tion to the county board, effective Feb. 6. He was recently re-elected for a third term. McCabe Methodist Episcopal Church Corner of Fifth Street and Thayer Avenue Walter E. Vater, Paster Sunday, January 31, 1937 Morning Worship 10:30 2. m. Sermon Subject: “What Shall We Believe About Man?” (Third of series on “What Shall We Believe?”) Evening Worship 7:30 p. m. Sermon Subject: “When Men Weaken” (Is Modesty Extinct?) Banctity of the Home.” Special music at beth services. Attend evening service early to insure a goed seat. A Hearty Welcome Awaits You. throughout the state will be used during 1937. The conference was addressed by Miss Grace DeLong of the North Da- kota Agricultural college extension division,: who described the project which the nutrition service is plan- ning in rural areas. Dr. John Cowan, epidemiologist from the state health department, discussed problems relating to the prevalence and available means of security funds, relating particularly to county health service and provid- ing much needed nursing service. An open forum discussion was hel on plans for concentrating available funds on the checkup of the 15 to 25 year age group in which tuberculosis Mein: i heaviest toll. lays Means of strengthening the Camp Grassick free bed fund 50 that in 1937 care of needy children Bie ar inee ton oes ee ate caa! Pe ven thout depending upon the ability of the section to help pay serv- ice costs were suggested. One of the major problems, Miss Katen pointed out, is the relegating of more local funds for tuberculin tests, chest X-rays and follow-up of cases, contacts and suspects in the county without neglecting mal-nour- ished and low vitality children for whom reserve building services are imperative. About 60 persons attended the con- ference, which was held in the World War Memorial building. Coury’ D eas © ns Mississippi Dike . System Is Facing Its Supreme Test ease and the mammoth job of restor- ation became the concern of many cities and towns. 13 On Rafl » Week Two brothers and their families, totaling 13, told of riding a crude raft for a week, driven out of their share- cropper homes. Mrs. Sally Jackson ‘and Mrs. Nida Jackson related how their husbands fashioned a crude cabin and set it on logs as the water advanced. “We had food and everything seemed all right until the engineers started dynamiting the levee,” said Mrs. Nida Jackson. “That let in so much water in the spillway all at once it set up ie big current. Our raft started toss- ing.” “And that isn’t all,” put in Mrs. Sally Jackson. “When the boats picked us off we didn’t have a bit of fuod left.” The children were suffering from colds when taken to East Prairie, Missouri. One Has Had Enough In Charleston, Mo., a refugee share- cropper named H. M, Davis—one of 5,000 farmers routed from their homes in the Birds Point basin—stared out at the wide vista of watery desolation and muttered: “I'll never go back. This is the sec- ond time I've been driven out of my home by the river. Its enough for me.” Near Peter's Landing, Ark. an old man sat on the river bank, amid a clutter of his belongings, and said defiantly: “I won't move a step if I can't take my mule. I got ploughin’ to do—soon a8 this dang water lets up at my ‘And there was grizzled old Mose Akers, 60, who calmly rowed into East Pratrle, Mo, with a hog trough for a it. a you been, Grandad?” some- one shouted. “Oh, I been out there in my house TIGERS MAUL TRAINER the preservation “of a race based on Los Angeles.—Capt. Roman Proske | blood—ss God gave it to us.” ' was recovering Saturday from a maul-| The reichstag voted to extend ing administered by two Bengal tigers | Hitler's dictatorial powers for an ad-" during a vaudeville performance in a/ ditional four years as Der Puehrer | theatre Friday night. opened Nazidom’s fourth birthday | BUT IT WAS LOADED x5 saa ala rptionciey ae: By acclamation, the parliament ap- Taughed Friday night and sald, “go! Interior Wilhelm Prick shortly ieee ahead, Put it to my forehead and not loaded.” Rudolph | Der Fuehrer mounted the rostrim pulled .the trigger and | for.a declaration on the future course of national socialism. Place Goering in Chair UBS RAIDED Hib BREA Ate eeittisrataged Quickly and without debate, the raids by state revenue agents stripped |teichstag assembled, devoted five eight night clubs of extensive gamb-| Minutes to election of officers and ling equipment and dampened galety | Placed Col. Gen. Hermann Wilhelm in this famous health resort Saturday. | Goering, the chancellor’s chief assis- — tant, in the chair. : PRINCE HAS RELAPSE Fifteen minutes after the gavel fell, Florence, Italy—Rumanian and/ Hitler walked to the reading stand, Italian Royal physicians watched| surveyed the packed chamber and carefully Saturday over 15-year-old | launched into his address. Crown Prince Mihai after the ailing/ “It is impossible within the limits heir to the Rumanian throne suf-/of this short meeting to enumerate all fered a relapse. that might be put down as remark- —_ able achievements in this most sur- FIRE CAUSES SHORTAGE prising epoch in the life of our peo- Eau Claire, ‘Wis—A water short-| ple,” he began. age, caused by fire which swept the; “Who can deny that during the city’s central pumping station, forced| four years now past a revolution of the temporary shutdown of several|the most powerful extent swept over Fau Claire industrie! plants Saturday. | Germany? “This national socialist revolution LOUIS GETS $87,814.40 s first and foremost a revolution of New York—Gate Mi railorg at Het revolutions, were more than factory al concerned parties of the Bob Pastor-| ,_ ‘Lacked’ Usual Features Joe Louis fight at Madison Square] “By that, I mean that hitherto it Garden Friday night. Louis’ share was | ¥85 Sonsidsres a characteristic feat- y "gs $18,917.20,| Ure of every true revolution that it SUES 00 os estas Enver # 91821730 must consist of bloody annthiliation —_——————————— F | of previous incumbents of power and | FLOODLIGHTS in connection therewith, destruction — $$ / f public and private institutions and rty.”” 60 MILLION TONS OF WATER |. The Nazi ministerial party, headed Washington, Jan. 30.—(P)—A 0v-|by Goering and Dr. Paul Joseph ernment expert described the mid-|Goebbels, minister of propaganda, west floods Saturday as 60 million | tiled into the cabinet section shortly tons of water trying to reach & lower | before 1 p. m. perel Oh eeead a of the cll-| For the first time since Hitler came crops division to r four years ® radio net- weather bureau, estimated this deluge | work was extended to most mean had fallen on the first 25 days of this! countries and also was rebroadcast in month over an area 100 miles wide| Asis, Africa and the American conti- and about 550 miles long. nents. Turning to events of the first four- New Cumberland, W. Va., Jan. 20.|200t Petiod of his chancellorship, —@—A fire ‘which started while] ~ «. Nasi’. revélition’“Yossarsed| workmen were drying out flood waters practically without bloodshed. ” from the Duraloy foundry destroyed ere Offh Sarcastic Toward British the building Saturday. icials placed the loss at around $150,000 and Hitler then referred sarcastically to: approximately 75 men were thrown |Pritish citizens who have tried to in- | out of work. tervene with him on behalf of a per-' ——— son he called “one of the most crim- PRIZE CALLS THESE inal of Moscow's subjects in German | Louisville, Ky., Jan. 30.—(7)—To a|concentration camps.” He did not! staff receiving and sending pleas over | further identify him. station WHAS, came two calls Satur-| Insisting that national Socialism is day that those whose minds are not|“the most beautiful and most perfect too weary to remember are prizing. |democracy,” the chancellor declared \ A heavy male voice requested:| “I, the Fuehrer, called by the con-: “Please send a boat at once to—Oak | fidence of the people, came from the street and tell the occupants to go to/ people.” the second floor of my home and wa-| The Fuehrer then launched into a ter my canaries.” review of the accomplishments of his And then: regime. “Hello, I'm in the highlands, but I] Justice, he said, has been placed know some people who had to evac- ‘an entirely new basis, uate. They forgot their dog. Will] The number of unemployed has you send a rescue party boat? ‘Tell|been reduced, he declared. the boatman to go into the kitchen| The farmer has been saved from ‘and get the meat out of the oven for/ruin, Hitler added. the dog ... and please don’t make a} The only loss which the state can- not stand economically,” Hitler told his audience, is “the loss of 12,000, mess. Germans Forbidden — |p, nots ee annually” | To Take Peace Prize ee os Berlin, Jan. 90—()}—Nasi Germany Pope Pius Decides to Saturday forbade any German hence-| Hold Usual Audiences forth to accept the Nobel peace prize. —e Gen. Hermann Wilhelm Goering,| Vatican City, Jan. 30.—()}—Pope closing his reichstag speech, announc-|Pius decided to begin holding his ed the decree designed to vent | usual audiences Saturday as local dis- future Nazi “humiliation” turbances from his ailments contin- all the time that water was comin’ jaward of the international prise to s ued to diminish in intensity. up the basin,” Mose said. “And I'd person who has be there yet, by grannies—but I ran cut of tobaccer.” CAPITOL THRILL HIT OF THE YEAR! Dynamic drama as the mighty men of the fleet battle“ been confined in prison for allegedly tréasonable ut- terances. PARAMOUNT LAST TIMES TODAY the most shocking of disasters! Titanic story of sunken sul and the he- roic divers who risk hor- rible death to save their trapped comrades! Devil’s Playground STARTING TOMORROW (SUNDAY) The man who made Theodora go wild tampers with a modern blonde MELVYN —ina— the play that rocked Broadway Women of Glamour REGINALD DENNY - - PERT KELTON COMEDY — NEWS — CARTOON —Plus— 4 SHOWS SUNDAY AT 2-4-7-9 Richard Dix Dolores Del Rio Chester Morris FRED GLADYS VIRGINIA Bruce WALTZ with JACK OAKIE WEL ©. Zand YOLANDA held Friday evening. The meeting, called by Mrs. J. H. Sleight, district supervisor, was held to acquainf the general public and the lawmakers with the legislative Program of the old age pension or- ganization. Speakers included T. H. H. Thoresen, leutenant governor; Paul Campbell, Minot; T. A. Craw- ford, Velva; Rep. George Bjornson, Williams county; L. L. Rudrud, Grand Forks, and Z. Viesoff, Beach Glenn Williams, radio entertainer, gave several vocal selections. In tribute to the late R. A, Mid- daugh, chairman of the Capital City Townsend club, who died Jan. 1, the audience sang “Abide With Me,” and observed @ moment of silence, A program and dancing party to be Sponsored by the club were announced for Monday, Feb. 8, in the World War Memorial building dining room, Harlow and Taylor Eat at White House Washington, Jan. 30.—#)—Jean Harlow and Robert Taylor, film stars, ate lunch at the White House Satur- day. They are in the capital for seven elaborate birthday balls for the president. Other entertainers who lunched with Mrs. Roosevelt were Mitzi Green and Marsha Hunt of the movies, Frederick Jagel, Metropolitan opera tenor, and Maria Gamerelli, Italian soprano and dancer. LUMBERMEN TO MEET Fargo, N. D., Jan. 30.—(?)—About 300 retail lumbermen and 250 lum- ber sales representatives Saturday were expected to attend the 30th an- nual convention of the North Dakota Retail Lumbermen’s association, Feb. 9-10, Floyd Lavelle, Fargo, secretary, announced. PARAMOUNT COMING WEDNESDAY The Color Screen at It's Greatest! cops COUNTRY i] AND THE WOMAN 22 GEORGE BRENT BEVERLY ROBERTS oni THEATRE FRL - SAT. - SUN. YOUR NEWEST THRILLER! ALSO COMEDY, NEWS and TAILSPIN TOMMY T and 9 P. M. - - 10c and 21¢ ENDS TODAY MERLE OBERON in “BELOVED ENEMY” STARTS TOMORROW (SUNDAY) SUNDAY SHOWS 2-4-7-9 a TWO HEARTS IN SWING TIME! LET YOURSELF MacMURRAY (Rita 1937 RHYTHM! SWARTHOUT Champagne Io AS GAY AND SPARKLING AS A CHAMPAGNE COCKTAIL! PLUS POPEYE CARTOON AND NEWS Prices—Matinees 25c; Evenings 25 to 7: children 10c anytime

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