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Senate Committee Lewis Orders Strike in Steel Company Mines For They're Jolly Good Bellows 5400 MINERS DROP [Flood Drives Five IN’ PENNSYLVANIA Aational Labor Relations Board Calls on Steel Firm to Answer Charges Just a Different Matter of Charge Salt Lake City, June 14.—(7)}— Policeman Leo Jensen answered the telephone. “Are you full up?” a voice asked. “No, we still have room for sev- MONROE MEETING IS QUIET But Michigan City Worries .as CIO Leader Utters Vague Threat of Return Jensen asked. “Isn't this the hotel?” asked the voice. “Mister,” said Jensen, “this is the police station.” MAD HEAD HUNTER CREDITED WITH 13 (By the Associated Press) fe oe - of trike’ Fey ee. FR é si E it i cody ? E Ends Reign of Terror of Berserk Tribesman é EE ety ge f EE ; EE fa ate g i Pel i Some Troops Reported in City's Suburbs i F Be3 F i if a “it ees gs H i : f! i E ig F | i E 3 e Hi 3,2 Hh BBS H eg ge 5° i | : I i | | = Succeeds to Office Held by Dr. A. M. Fisher in Election Held Monday ie. , i KILLINGS CAPTURED Fearless ‘Filipino Constable “North .| “precautionary steps’ To Safety on Roof Dog ‘Tooth Creek at Raleigh Goes on Rampage and Over- flows Into Village Raleigh, N. D. June 14—(?)—Mr. Leonard WATER SUPPLY BY —i Tong of Arsenio Compound Is Washed Into Yellowstone River at Billings Dakota health officials took ” Monday - to safeguard citisens whose Missourl river water supply may’ become ‘con- taminated by five tons of sodium ar- senite and 800 gallons of arsenite 20- lution which washed into the Yel- Jowstone river near Billings, Mont., Saturday. Dr. Maysil Williams, director of the state health department, said a chemical laboratory was established iF i i tad glipgae Bain z Free Biss sgese North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper BISMARCK, N. DAK., Mi STATE HIGHWAYS AND BRIDGES HIT BY CLOUDBURSTS | What Proves Grief to Tourists 1s Boon to Drouth-Ridden Western N. D. BISMARCK RAIN GENEROBS Badlands Area Bears Brunt of Waters Ripping Way Down Draws and Courses Rain of torrential power ripped holes through highways and tore out bridges over a wide area of the west river country in North and South Dakota over the week-end. Thousands of tourists traveling east and west on the federal highways leading to and from national parks Beach recorded the greatest precipitation with 2.66 inches recorded there in 48 hours. Other heavy readings were. Dickinson 1.78; Dunn Center 1.14; Garrison 141; Henkinson 115; Napoleon 2.56. In South Dakota 2.28 inches fell ae: 4M at Plerre,;..30 at Glendive, just across the border from. Beach, registered 2.44 inches. .Other Montana readings were Miles City 1.01; Lewiston 25; Helena 50; Havre 87. Forecast for Bismarck and North Dakota was fair Monday night, Tues- day partly’ cloudy and somewhat warmer. . P, E. Gurvin, highway maintenance engineer, said a detour between Bel- field and Medora on U, 8. No. 10 was passable for “automobiles only.” Crews finished Sunday repairing 200 feet of earth fill which was washed out Saturday. Gurvin said workmen had repaired & bridge on Highway 22 south of Dickinson and travel had been re- sumed. Crews were working with portable shovels at four other bridges and normal traffic will be restored on the system Tuesday, Gurvin declared. He reported # bridge washed out on Highway 83 north of Hazelton and flagmen were re-routing traffic over No. 3 until s short cetonr: can be omen: damaged, lepnaiig baling traffic are Highway 6 south of Selfridge on the South Dakota line and two on Highway 31 north of Raleigh and near Wade on Cedar creek. (Continued on Page Two) SON OF PAUL SAND DROWNS AT BALTA Mrs. Roosevelt Pays Her Taxes, She Says FakSE * OFSOCEY Grleved Husband Issues Second JONDAY, June 14, 1987 The Weather Fair tonight; Tuesday partly cloudy, some- PRICE FIVECENTS' . MYSTERY DEEPENS LEADER & Appeal to Supposed Kid- napers of Wife e! River, superintendent of the Walsh owed their lives Monday to a “lof Crosby, died Sunday in a hospital | Voight said then. “Eh, la bas” screams Rep. Bob Mouton (right) of Louisiana, re- hearsing for a contest with Rep. Otha Wearin of Iowa in which the bayou bellow will be pitted against “sooie,” Jowa’s hog call. EUROPEAN ‘NATIONS, France and Great Britain Want to Resume Discussions But POR PRESIDENCY OF |"steneo ND.A.C.BY ALUMI! sccoe—rerse es wi debt installments totaling $1,500,000 5) fall due Bacon from 13 European Kolb, Taeusch, Taintor, Din-|countries, but pesldeb ple dpagiath pred * woodie Recommended to ae : Seiden Board at Meeting Here f announced its intention of paying promptly as usual. All the other coun- hericutural aiimni| Recent. expressions in Prance and ff ni Fae ante agrestis daceess- |Gfeat Britain—the largest, debtors— ors for President J. H. SHepperd of of hope that something might be done the college, resigned, ati q meeting about a possible settlement of the with the board of administration in|WAr debt problem have not been fol- lowed as yet by any official action. Bismarck. The United States has voiced its willingness to consider any refunding Proposal, Of Tuesday's total bill, $205,338,754 is the regular semi-annual installment and $1,314,821,109 represents pay- ments in arrears. The debt represents advances by this government for the purchase here of munitions, clothing and food by . . E,| the various countries during and after County Agricultural school; J.T. E11) ‘world war. It will amount 0 Dinwoodie, Fargo, executive secretary $22,000,000,000 with accumulated in- of the agricultural conservtion pro- terest and Principal at fhe end of the orm. -year per! payments established Cook declared the alumn' group! in the original funding agreements: was “not for any one man” but in the interest of aiding the board to get == POSTOFFICE STRIKE alumni association believed the ap- pointment should not be delayed sev- eral months. ‘The four names were recommended Glenn Cook, president of the agri- cultural - College Alumnt associa- tion, placed the recommendations be- fore the board. They are: John Harrison Kolb, Madison, Wis., professor of rural sociology; Carl Frederick Taeusch, Washington, D. C., educator; E. J. Taintor, Park DERAULT’ ON DEBTS Ses after study by the alumni, the agri- cultural college faculty and with the approval of Dr. Shepperd, Cook said. ‘With Cook as representatives of the alumni association are C. A. Williams of Fargo and Dr. A. Hallenberg, also of Fargo. Representatives of other associa- tions here in connection with the presidency conference include Ken- neth McGregor, Page, president, North Dakota Livestock association; WOUNDS BROTHER’ = pres ss Crosby, N. D., June 14.—(?)—Carl Benson, 15-year-old son of Mr. and ‘Mrs, Martin Benson, nine miles east at Noonan, where he was taken for treatment of an accidental rifle wound suffered Saturday. &@ brother, Harry, were hen the ac- was about IN BISHARGK ENDED Union's Demands Are Met by Contractor, According to La- bor Assembly Secretary Strikers who dropped their tools Saturday at the Bismarck postoffice returned to work Monday after con- tractors “agreed to three union de- mands,” Adam Voight, chairman of labor ployed on the $210,000 job. one of them joined the union ‘king Postoffice job; all men out on strike and, in proven cases where job in a “sympathy” demonstration, Boy Starves to Death 50 Yards from Home what warmer. Flays Court Act PRESIDENTS BILL BRANDED NEEDLESS, FUTILE, DANGEROUS Seven Democrats and Three Republicans Recommend Rejection of Measure FINALLY REACHES FLOOR Opponents Threaten Filibuster If Proponents Attempt to Modify Act Washington, June 14 —()— Tht senate judiciary committee recom- mended rejection of the Roosevelt court bill in blistering language Thursday, branding it “a needless, futile, and utterly dangerous aban- donment of constitutional principle.” “It should be so emphatically re- Jected that its parallel will never again be presented to the free repre- sentatives of the free people of Am- erica,” said the report, signed by seven Democrats and three Repub- licans. ‘The 10,000-word report echoed vir- tually all the objections raised to the measure in seven weeks of hearings. It said the bill would not accom- plish its purpose, would destroy the independence of the judiciary, and would make the government “one of men rather than one of law.” Fear Cent “It contains,” the majority said, “the germ of a system of centralized administration of law that would en- able an executive so minded to send his judges into every judicial district in the land to sit in judgment op controversies between the govern: ment and the citizen.” As the controversial measure fi- nally reached the senate after of nationwide rimary reasons”: “The bill does not accomplish one of the objectives for which it was originally offered. “Ay force’ “It applies force to the judiciary and in its initial and ultimate effect would undermine the independence of the courts. for the future. “It tends to centralize the federal district judiciary by the power of as- signing judges from one district to another at will... .” Attacking President Roosevelt's message recommending the bill, the senators said: “It should be pointed out here that