The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 1, 1937, Page 1

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NYE KEEPS HANDS. + OFF MOVEMENT'TO RECALL GOVERNOR) Senator Won't Aid Signature Drive; Opens Office in Prince Hotel U. 5. Senator Gerald P. Nye em- 7] tered with but little more than a third of} di the vote cast in the November elec- Bismarck girl and boy bicycle owners flocked to the city hall in Plece as peered goodbye forever. Pa: Fred Harvey (center) records Livenuediny while E. A. Green- Wood (left) issues registration Bea Patrolman Bill Franklin had the job of reporting the oes number on each = GHICAGO SCHOOLS OPENING DELAYED infantile Paralysis ‘Rapidly Ap- proaching Epidemic Stage’ in That City — Chicago, Sept. 1—(#)—The summer Monier of Chicago's 619,000 public and parochial school children was prolonged ‘indefinitely Wednesday as Precautionary step aaginst an epi- demic of infantile paralysis. Delay in the opening of all schools, scheduled for next Tuesday, was or- dered by the board of health Tuesday night after 109 cases were reported during August, as compared with 99 in August, 1916, the previous all-time tion, should be displeasure with that| high, two-thirds of the electorate which permitted a minority to control,” the @enator said. Pointedly avoiding any aed re- Be EEE 5 » i sigeeee A r] & De. Herman N. Bundesen, board president, said the disease wi Pidly Spproaching an an epidemle stage.” MILWAUKEE SCHOOLS under seven from attend- o at any pub- | organisation until Sept. 20, because of McGurren said. Earthquakes Jiggle HIGHWAY FOREMAN “RESIGNS: SEVESC NPCURREN CONFER|E= Roy Frazier Gives No Reason for Action; Wyoming En- gineer Asks $6,000 Salary Resignation of Roy W. Frasier, general foreman in the state, high- y department, was the only de- by Z. EB. Sevison, Cheyenne, Wyo., whether to accept the post of chief engineer, marked time for the return oh Gor Rane cepted merly in charge of equipment and representative in the 1937 legislature. “No reason was given,” declared McGurren. Frasier could not be reached for comment on his resigna- tion which followed the dismissal of ny veteran highway officials under a Treorescleaaon plan” by the com- aperet on salary terms was apparently all that remained for con- sideration after McGurren snd Sevi- son conferred Tuesday on the offer made to the Cheyenne city engineer North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper BISMARCK, N. D., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1987 GOVERNMENT DENEES ADVANCE HALTED BY INSURGENT ATTACK Belchite’s Fall Would Aid Loyal- ists’ Attempt to Split Aragon Salient COMMUNIQUES CONFLICT Rebels Claim Franco’s Men Have Broken ‘All Resist- ence’ in Counter-Drive Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Sept. 1—(%)—Using messed planes for the first time against the Span- ish government’s big push on the Aragon front, the insurgents were re- Wednesday to have made 13 separate attacks from the air to crack the slege ring around Belchite. Government forces reported the aerial counter-thrusts failed to halt their steady advance. The fall of Belchite would facilitate the government's attempts to drive a edge through the long Aragon sa- lient, splitting off thousands of insur- gent troops and hundreds of square miles of insurgent territory in the lower end from which Franco's forces for weeks have threatened the life- line roadway link between Madrid and Valencia. A Valencia ministry of defense communique related that the forces below Teruel at the southern tip of the Aragon front had captured sev- eral dominant positions. An entire squadron of insurgent cavalry was reported wiped out by artillery fire on the road between Torremocha and Celajas, northwest of Teruel, after government troops had been dislodged from a hill at front. An insurgent radio said 13,500 government had been killed in the Aragon push. Nearly the icons riliiber had jean ‘takent hris08? er, it was said. SOUTH WILL GET TENANCY DOLLARS Tentative’ Estimate of N. D.'s Share of $10,000,000 Is $105,225 genet win weekia oly) by ni le ry of its dollars over midwest states in ite first effort to curtail farm tenancy. but a virtual rain of federal funds will hit the south, where tenancy more prevalent. The’ #1090610 set apiee Dy, fee lor purpose has Mlocated yet, Secretary Wallace has said he will announce the adminis- trative board on tenancy soon, pos- sibly next week. Funds will be allotted to states on the basis of farm population and the the | prevalence of tenancy.’ Tentative es- McGurren said he was confident Sevison. would take the post when the salary question has been “straight- ,;ened out.” The appointee has asked annual salary. They planned a apparently was satisfied with the re- plan as outlined to him, Non-Nazi Rotarians Facing D Dissolution Southern California rat Veit roe areas | feet 1 Com sits paratively mild juakes Southern California Weanesiay. timates on this basis would give Min- nestoa, $216,292, Wisconsin $133,147 and North Dakota $105,225. Each of the three states—Minnesote, Wisconsin, North Dakota—has more than 500,000 acres of land which the resettlement administration believes peccap sd eolcca to uses other than North Dakote’s submarginal land FR Vetoes Indian Land Purchase Bill we Chicago Baby Given To Foster Parents | ior and more than a score injured at a road intersection near Goshen, transcontinental bus and an automobile. Judge’s Blacklist Feared by Culprits ee a ee Police Court Judge Edward 8. ‘Allen baliovas te ae a aes org And here is a typical conver- sation between the judge and a candidate for the black list. Weil, 2 iinet pu zou.on be ae you'll disgrace me!” ‘I couldn't do that. You've done that too well “But, judge, I won't drink any more. I swear I won't.” “Well, then it won't make any citron if your name is on the le gosh, judge, I’m such an old timer, why—” “This should be nothing to a man with all your experience.” “But judge, won’t you think it over again?” “No. I've given. my sentence. And if you come in here drunk now, I'll give you thirty days on hard labor to contemplate the idea.” Two new names added to the list last week raised the total to 21. HUNGRY LAD SEIZED WITH STOLEN AUTO °! Chicago Run-Away Has Good Cry After Police Nab Him and Satisfy His Hunger county aes Re eee tod, Bimarek effcer bed'tim hinted ‘& good Ave unite overired be Gh ee ee ae B was instantly killed. Ship Bombed from 150 Feet, Says Commander deck, some looking through tele-| dren Kobe, Japan, Sept. 1—(#)—The Dol- lar liner President Hoover, badly by a Chinese air raid at sea, brought her dead and wounded into this harbor Wednesday. ‘The President Hoover was on her way to Shanghai Monday when a squadron of four Cninese bombers dove low over her and attacked. Fragments pierced her hull, wrecked parts of her interior, killed mess ste- ward Lloyd Haskell of Baltimore, Md., and wounded passengers and seamen. United States naval authorities or- dered her to turn gbout and cross the China sea to Japan rather than risk the danger of other attacks. George W. Yardley, commander of the 21,900-ton liner, said one of the Chinese planes loosed its bombs from ® height of no more than 150 feet. “The President Hoover was riding at anchor. It was tea time und the majority of the passengers were on ee a a y saw plane approaching. It circled over the ident Hoover twice and then, without warning, dropped the first bomb from a height of no more than 150 feet. “The passengers were thrown into @ terrible fright but there was no panic. They responded in orderly sane to my orders to vacate the pin; “The first and second bombs missed, but the third bomb struck. “Following the explosion, the plane ascended and-dropped a fourth which also missed. There was a ferrific ex- plosion, nevertheless. The ship rolled heavily and her clocks stopped. “Heavy damage was done to her funnels, boat deck and nine first class cabins. “Within a half hour Japanese war- ships were alongside, offering every medical and other aid.” Charlie M’Carthy | Ends Engagement | ——<—_|__—__—_—_—__+ ‘1G? PROTECTORS SHOWN NO MERCY dudge Allen Cracks Down on Drunks Who Insist on Shielding Bootleggers Warning that men arrested on charges of drunkenness who shield “bind pig” operators will get no len- fency in his court, Police Magistrate E. 8. Allen Wednesday sentenced Wil- Car, Gets Leg Broken emer sentence Allen decreed that Millett must ieee Seearecls soe ok nerve Lae remand 2 dave of 830 Herman Selinger, day term suspended when eee ee warned that all men who are The Weather Cloudy tonight and Thursday, probably thundershowers, —| DEFENDERS GREAT PRES ROAR IN GITY tnvaders’ Threats to Close Whangpoo May Force Use of Naval Convoy I$ ONLY OUTLET TO SEA Japan Announces Intention of Extending Air Attacks to All China Shanghai, Sept. 1—(P)—A terrify- ing series of great new fires roared in Shanghai tonight, kindled by the opening naval guns and aerial bom! of Japan’s big offensive against all of Chins. The blazes, one of them in the Soochow creek area feeling the Amer. fcan-defended sector of the interna- tional settlement, formed a magnifi- cent and awful background f military drama. Twenty-one Japanese destroyers and cruisers pumped shells into the WANTS U. 8. FORCES WITHDRAWN FROM CHINA velopments in China, Rep. Harold Knutson (Rep., Minn.) telegraphed Frederick J. Libby of the National Council for the Prevention of War at Washington Wednesday urging that United States forces be with- drawn from China. “We should take all our armed forces out of China and place absolute embargo on all to both countries,” he “The present policy into the war. We England's game now. three men still in congress who voted against American entry into the World War in 1017. pel and Kiwangwan Shanghai's north end. Japanese ware Ee Chinese posi- possibility of uniting their protec- Live Sashes $0: Seep s 802 ae Ships Warned Away “ Japanese cog haley authorities had warned all foreign shipping to steer the Yangtze estuary, the to the open sea and safety dreds of American women marnooed in United States river for American and British ships rushing refugees in-chief of the United States Asiatic fleet, with wide discretionary powers in the crisis, it was thought the plan would be referred to President Roose- jVelt before being put into effect. Might Step Arms Shipment The Japanese naval authorities fur- ther announced that developments might compel their fleet to take stringent action to stop shipments of arms and munitions to China from foreign nations. q Heavy fighting swept the Whang- poo’s banks from the northern edge international settlement. Chinese ade mitted heavy bere and were with- (| ied merit) ya peerered # further inland. jung proper and the city of Faoshan, «few miles up the Yangten been captured. vis oe ene er te gaa lines were broken in Chinese habitual drunkerd “black list” | “The objectives of wn into jail when found Business Houses Will Be Closed Labor Day (Continued Washington, Sept Bismarck business places will be ferstate Comins recommended Fieve all day Monday, Labor Day, H. | iner . Goddard, secretary of the Associa- tion of Commerce, reminded Wednes- days after birth, the|day. Labor Dey is one of the six of- eel Pas holidays regularly set aside ee ae earch

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