The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 5, 1937, Page 2

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» WEATHER FORECASTS 2 RECALL CAMPAIGN PURORE OVER A. G22 ss, ms: sae cooler Friday. Dakota: Fair tonight ‘ooler west and north Leaders of Movement Refuse to : Comment; Petition Filing Soon Indicated Generally fair to- night and F: in temperature. For Minneso ay Fair south, prob- ably fair in north portion tonight and Friday; cooler hwest Friday. Proponents of a recall election GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS ‘Thursday agreed that activity has|, been stimulated by recent actions of the board of administration in ef- fecting changes at the North Da. kota Agricultural college in Fargo. | e Neither Howard Wood, provisional | mi candidate for the governorship, nor/ 1 C Liebert Crum, one of the leaders, a the Region the weather is would indicate just what course “the | genera fair. Temperatures are increased activity” was taking. |Mear the seasonal normal in all sec- Unsubstantiated rumors are cur- 2 rent that petitions sufficient to re- quire ordering a recall election will} be filed with the secretary of state sometime prior to Oct. 1. Crawford Silent { Dr. John C. Crawford of New Rockford, former political associate of Gov. William Langer, is under-! 5 Stood to have assumed active man- agement of the campaign but re- fuses to make any statements. ie Alumni of the North Dakota Ag- ricultural college in Bismarck, asked i they were taking any part in the tecall campaign, asserted that no action, official or unofficial, had been taken by any organized alumni groups but admitted they “had heard” | p, that some individaul alumni might become active if the seven persons Gismissed from the college staff were | sf not re-instated. Re-instatements Demanded Alumni and former students of the N.DAC. Wednesday at Fargo de- iW manded that Governor Langer secure | c; the prompt reinstatement of the dis-; Hankinson, missed college staff members ‘and/ Lisbon. clear requested an immediate statement |; te of “his position,” the Associated Press ea high ntered over the nis fall! pi Valley somewhat unsettled over Canadan Provinces Else- Tr, inches: 71, a.m. 4.0 PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Statio: POINTS | igh-Low- | est Pet. @ est BISMARCK, clear Beach, clear 100 | 51 100} ‘00 00 53:00 0 47 0 | Cees 38. CS 69 200) iriiet aesocia(oesfoea ths telegram MIBREEOTA FON oghre to Langer: est est Pct, “Because of the widespread feeling | Moorhead, clear ...... 94 «60 «400 over the state that grave injustice has been done to individual mem- bers of the agricultural college faculty and because a fatal blow has been struck against the best interests of | !! the institutions of higher learning of North Dakota, we hereby demand that you secure the prompt rein- statement of all members of the ag- Ticultural college staff sum: dismissed by recent action of the board of administration. We respect- fully request an immediate state- ment of your position.” sOUTH DAKOTA FOUNEs e, clear .. Glendive a » Berd Miles City, cl 5 WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS Uses of Chemicals, High-Low: Gasses Discouraged |smerig,tersy.,cie 1m ts 38 eesti Caigary, Alta., eld $4 54.00 ‘fashington, Aug. 5.—(#)—Presi-| Casper, Wyo., cle: 9 f, dent Roosevelt said in a veto message |SoicAE% Ill, clean... 78 88 Of ee the senate Wedherday that he was Des Moines, dows, Clear 30 $4.00 joing everything power to “dis-| Dodge City, 7 urage gases ther| Dudois, Idéno, 48 00 cigrucals toy er herrea te Edmonion, i Raye. 30 86 (00 a 10} . C., g 5 tions.” Kansai Pci be. cleat a 00 s , Cal. peldy. change the "name ‘of the ghemical|Mocete tuk Mgceee 42 TE rT af warfare service to’ the “chemical| No. 68° .00 corps.” He said he hoped the time ie en would come when the chemical war- bert, 8, peldy. .. 64:00 fare service could be abolished en-|Qu’Appelle, S, clear... 92 56 :00 tirely. Roseburg, ‘Ore, clear . 92 f4 00 “To signify this service by calling| Sait Lake é2 “00 it the ‘chemical corps’ is, in my judg- Sante F ie $ 102 ment, contrary to a sound public/S. 8. Ma: Bs bu} policy,” he wrote. si 46 00 WPA Head Declares Bwitt Carre & te eo oO s Drouth Area ‘Small’| Winsemice 52.00 Winnipeg, 62 100 Washington, Aug. 5—(?)}—Aubrey Williams, assistant works _progress| Unemployment Bureau administrator, ted to President Roosevelt Wednesday he had wey| Intake Nears $190,000 the current drouth confined to a rel- —— atively small area, but very intense,| Nearly $190,000 has been collected Particularly in Northeastern Mon-|by the North Dakote unemployment tana and Northwestern North Da-|Compensation bureau from 518 eligi- ble employers for the first six months kota. Williams has just returned from an|0f the Mentegts Purcell, director, y- When all contributions under the inspection of labor and drouth con-| said Thi ditions in nine western states. He said employment had picked up| #x-month summary contribution re- and the people were in better spirits| port have been made approximately compared with last year. 42,000 North Dakota employes will be covered by the unemployment act, Purcell said. About 1,300 employers have been declared liable under the two per cent payroll tax. Purcell repre- sentatives of railroads operating in the state to discuss a uniform system ce aogounting and procedure under Kysar’s Jewelry Store 205 Broadway Starting Aug. 1, 1937 Any Watch Repaired for $2.50 office of the Natiooal Labor Relstions board issued « formal complaint against the Goodyear Tire & Rubber “all work guaranteed 1 year” Gadsden, New Expert Watchmaker not much change | x, / mostly white-turbaned Moors, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1937 INSURGENT MOORS ” REPORTED ROUTED | NSAVAGEBATTL | Field Strewn With Bodies After Hand-to-Hand Combat for Vital Position Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Aug. 5. — @) — An insurgent force, was | reported Thursdcy to have been shat- | tered in hand-to-hand combat on the | a section of the | Javalon mountains about 10 miles southwest of Generalissimo Francisco | Franco's lower Aragon base at Teruel, | was strewn with the bodies of Moors, | @ government communique declared. After the government troops swept | their foe from heights in this combat | Wednesday in the Punta] Lazaro sec- | tor, field gums were dragged into | place and heavy fire was turned on | the insurgent position near Arroyo) tT Frio, a small stream winding through | | tch of the eastern “bad- ‘The contest for heights from which the government's physicians report- “Milicianos” hoped to check part of| ed the girl had not been attacked. | the insurgent drive further south-! ©) ward into Cuenca province and to-/ ward the Madrid-Valencia highway 33. 109, Was viewed by government comman-| Gers as illustrating how the resistance to Franco’s three-week offensive has been stiffened. Rey & government force near Cuero [y; which it said more than §00 bodies were left on the battlefield. | "| Threat of Strike of 2X"! R. R. Employes Fades) marck, Wednesday. a strike of more than a million rail- toad employes diminished Thursday. A five cents an hour wage increase announced in Washington brought ct. | peace between the nation's carriers) rasota, ploneer Golden Valley ranch- and 800,000 non-operating employes, o| since ratification was held only a formality. Still confronting the railroads, how- ever, was the vote of 350,000 members of five operating brotherhoods, au- thorizing a strike to enforce demands for 20 per cent raises, Settlement of the dispute with non- operating brotherhoods, such as clerks and shopmen, was announced Wed- nesday night by the national medi- ized early this week a strike if their demands were rejected . Otto 8. Beyer of the board said the raise represented an increase of be- tween 8% to 8% per cent. The non- operating employes, like the operating employes, had demanded 20 per cent increases. «| Bill to Repay Indians For Lands Approved Washington, Aug. 5—(P)— A bill approved by the house Indian af- fairs committee Wednesday would authorize the government to advance spproximately $410,000 to. Indians in six states where lands of tribesmen have been sold or opened to home- stead by white persons and the time for payments extended by congress from time to time. The bill, by Rep. Francis Case of Custer, 8. D., would place the money in the tribal funds and permits dis- tribution now to the Indians who are ensiles to it. jounts of unpaid principal and jinterest due, Case said, would go to the Cheyenne river and Standing Rock reservations in South Dakota; Shoshones of Wyoming; Colville reservation, Washington; Cheyenne river and Standing Rock, Pine Ridge and Rosebud of South Dakota; Standing Rock and Fort Berthold of North Dakota and Fort Peck, Mon- tans, among others. Whalen Removes Self New York, Aug. 5 —()— With- drawal of Grover A. Whalen, urbane anti-Tammany candidate, clarified New York City’s tangled mayoralty situation Thursday, but other com- plications remained to confuse Goth- am’s voting millions in the pre-pri- mary campaign. as the Demo- Replacing Whalen cratic bearer of the New Deal ban- tus Mahoney, president of the Ama- teur Athletic Union and bitter foe of oe Present leadership of Tammany WHEN YOU BUY THE nardecorore @ Some people enjoy putting money on hores taces—but it’s no fun to risk good money cn unknown rasor blades! Buy a known quality ‘blade—made by the world’s largest blade maker —and play safe. Probak Jr.. selling et 4 for 10¢, te automatically ground, honed and stropped to make short work of the ‘toughest beard, without smast or uritation. Buy 8 package of Probak Jr. today. @ CRODUET OF INE WORLE'E LASOEST GLADE MAKERS Opposed to him for the Democratic Domination Sept. 16 was United States Sensi Three Nominated for N. D. Veterans’ Post ae Individual conferences with each of the three candidates, nominated for the post of veterans’ service com- missioner for North Dakota, have been scheduled for Friday by Gov.) # William Langer. The governor asked for the indi- mitted to him by department com- manders of four veterans’ organiza- tions and Adj. Gen. Heber L. Ed- wards. Men proposed for the vacated by T._O. Kraabel, cH eed were Ben Meland, Williston; Downey, Devils Lake, and Flaten, Edinburg. Emilie Getting Along Well, Declares Doctor H J. Joseph the _strategic| porting on the Asturian front, in| ®| Northern Spain, an insurgent com- munique claimed s decisive defeat of} i 20, Garrison, Cleveland, Aug. 5—(P—Threats of. ST. so *Seanesday, local hospital. ation board. These 1¢ crafts author-|! From Mayoralty Race) xen i |s bal as | of. car. Coroner's Grand jetel Arnold Lee, Philip Zimel ‘ahriing and Theodore w York City; Mr. and ausch, Elgin. David ‘ahriin Mrs. ac Marriage Licenses Mary Agnes Geiermann and esiey Wilmot, both of Bis- of Deaths Mrs. Oscar Bauch, Ober Kobs, Northern’ Pacific agent here, left Wednesday night for Beach at 9 a. m. Friday in St. Joseph's Cath- olic church, Mandan, for Mrs. Philip Aughnay, pioneer resident. Rev. Hildebrand Eickoff, pastor, will offi- Ciate. Interment will be in the Cath- olic cemetery. Mrs. Mary Garnier, Burleigh county pioneer mother. Burial was in the family lot in St. Mary’s cemetery. Alvina Weber, who has been man- ager of the Dotty Dunn Hat since February, is leaving for City, 8. D. where she will be charge of a shop for the same pany. Mrs. H. B. Horton, Forks, has arrived in Bismarck will have charge of the local for the coming season. ‘ Funeral services for Mrs. Aughnay, 70, pioneer resident of Man- dan who died at the home of her Gaughter, Mrs. E. L. Pope in Man- peste HB morning at 8t. dun church. 5 Waiving examination at a prelim: inary hearing before Justice H. Bonny Tuesday, Earl - Dixon, Bismarck, was bound over to the term of district court on a charge grand larncey. Dixon is accused Stealing brass and other metal Francis Jastkowiak, Bismarck driller, and selling it to a local hide and fur company. Senate Democrats to Hold Harmony Meeting anbd nl m3 : i 4 E E charge of larceny. He was jalied in ‘oteit of $1,000 bond. 1 Heid in Death STATE MAY EMPLOY day the state highway department has authority to employ fieldmen to check up on motor vehicle owners violating license and traffic laws and to pay expenses from ceeds derived from licenses and reg- istration fees. carry out provisions of the act, he| said. | | registration fees,” he Co Responsibility Is similar acts will be permitted. “We wholeheartedly support the} ber with cooler weather. {tural College Alumni association and | congratulate it upon the very cour-/| ageous position it has taken. Alumni) must unite in aggressive action to maintain the security and standing voice our approval of their objectives and offer our full co-operation to them.” to attend funeral services for Alex Highway Department er. es Opens Equipment Bids Funeral services will be roneieee ‘State highway department engi- neers were studying bids Thursday on approximately $65,000 of maintenance Sarees gl maintenance engineer, said. { being purchased to comply with U.8. bureau of public roads ener rec- dan Wednesday, will be held Friday | 40 was killed ; tining manufacturing plant and shook ut fil Bj pany of Indiana were conferring in hotel on various or ‘Thursday evening with body will Puneral home. “Codfish, Ib... 22C HIGHWAY FIELDMEN jathre Makes Ruling in Answer to Query From Commis- sioner M'Gurren Atty. Gen. P. O. Sathre ruled Thurs- their pro- In answer to a request by Highway H. McGurren, That would necessarily include laries or expenses of such employes may be necessary to enforce and “It follows therefore that expenses collection and administration he- incurred may be paid out) NTINUE from page ene D N UBS N EWS Laid to Executive peeiMstisercs By Gate City Men | HOTEL REGISTRATIONS | proper steps give assurances that no| ‘tion of the North Dakota Agricul-/ id friends of all state institutions lof these institutions. We heartily Bids of 17 firms were opened and Gurvin explained the equipment was blocks around. Ba fF A PE i j ii 5 g Officials of the Standard Oil com- ‘Tuesday at the Patterson new developments company. John L. Enright, 515 Third St., will | the body a} morning. Until the departure of the train the | Me in state at the Calnan Cheese, Ib... 20c Cottage Cheese, Ib. .... 6¢ after. Theater Cashier Is Minot Beauty Queen Minot, N. D. Aug. 5.—(®)— Blonde, 20-year-old Ruth Schroe- » crowned Minot’s beauty queen by the Minot Junior Asso- represent this city ip the queen contest of the North Dakota Region city Thursday morning, airport here shortly after 9 o'clock. The beauty queen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Schroepfer, is cashier at a theater here. was graduated from Minot high Bhe id LaMoure. it Chemistry WILD WILD WOMAN She swung her ro- mange with the greatest of ease— kept after her man till he took to the trees. Whackie? It'll keep you in stitches. It’s so ga-ga with--- gags you'll pant with laughter for hours Woman Chases Man: with MIRIAM HOPKINS - JOEL McCREA ALWAYS COOL AND COMFORTABLE TODAY AND FRIDAY Social Security Outfits “after deduction of cost of admin!- ae stration and collections,” 1s broad in| "0°! *2 its score and Soe cles at oe , pacers obete: ots achnunieten : the miter venicle registration act. "| N> D. Horses Seized department. jWhen ventilated thoroughly, keeps its quality better. of fire from spontaneous Good ventilation is especially desir- able if the hay is not well cured. leged participation in an attack Wed. naa noon on two officials of the Independent Association of Employes, whose claims of 26,000 bers are disputed by the United mobile Workers. CAPITOL Last Times Today WHEAT MARKETED LIGHT IN WEIGHT Prices One and Two Cents Off in Last Week; Five Loads All of. Ceres Variety i First Performance at 6 Big 2 Features —NO. 1— RERy it By ‘Blind Staggers’ |o #2 brought $1.1 of proceeds derived from licenses and| caused serious losses in the vicinity id. | of Fergus Falls, Minn., have come to | the veterinary department at the North Dakota Agricultural college from some North Dakota communi- ties, it is reported by Dr. Lee M.| Thursday | Roderick, head of the Just back from his vacation, Dr. Roderick found reports of the disease have come from Christine, Ellendale | is a warm weather disease, us-| Detroit, Aug. ually making its appearance in June, and dying out in October and Novem: Better ventilation of hay stored in heating. You Need These THESE LABOR-SAVING SYSTEMS ON SALE AT Bismarck Tribune Co. FRIDAY & SATURDAY ARE TRAPPED MINERS STILL ALIVE Herole Here are the Rules 1, Hunting restricted to women between 14 and 84. 2. Men under 17 and over 70 are “out of season.” 3. You must have s hunting Mense—from any Justice of the Peace. 4..No biting, scratching, or eye-gouging in the clinches. 5. Aside from this—anything goes. Youll learn a pile of new tricks about man-hunting in vas side-splitting, hysterical farce. sees iteeath Bettie IMPRISONED dey t-sriovles LOOSE LEAF Complete with Forms Adopted by Accountants Everywhere $400 ‘each Outfits fi larger patil Information fer proportion Secial Security ately priced Recerds STATIONERY DEPARTMENT fl e-2y vycrse poe ope

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