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| [Teepe | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [iva ; Partly cloudy tonight _) 2200 CNP Serie Ae North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper and wearer \ SSE EE —— —==— colder. ESTABLISHED 1878 : ; _BISMARCK, N. D., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Chinese Troops Retreat From Shanghai; Russo-Japanese Rupture Believed Near; BOTH NATIONS ADD (Feehan Will Give : NEW- FORGED CHAN City’s Fall Comes — TO POTENT ARMIES rmisti ENCIRGLING RUSSIA ~ a OSE ce eee mamas iine) “fter 88 Days of | Grow Out of Strengthened for Veterans Soviet May Break Off Relations Bloody Fighting Anti-Red Pact With oan ‘las 48 | Metropolis Sleeps as Orderly Retreat to ‘Winter, REPORT ANTI-JAPANISM Line’ Protecting Nanking Is Made; Millions Are Bottled Up Soviets Said Encouraging Scorn EDEN, DAVIS, TO CONFER | for Nipponese With Slog- ——_. REFUGEES STORM FOREIGN SECTORS} France Maneuvers Closer to ans, Resolutions Moscow, London; U. s. | Heavily-Mined War Area Closed to Visitors; Might Be Involved Chinese Casualties Said to More Than Double Japanese Dead, Wounded (By the Associated Press) London, Nov. 9.—The underlying By JAMES A. MILLS Legion, Shanghai, Nov. 9.—(AP)—Shanghai fell into Japanese W. F. KOCH &. 8, SHEPARD b tional rivalries Tuesday all around an| hands Tuesday, with the retreat of Generalissimo Chiang Kai- Appointment of W. 8 Koch, assist-| ‘The branch at Mankato to which acture, ty sing- | siready war-ridden world. Shek’s Chinese warriors who had held out 88 days against com- § ant manager here, as assistant mana- |he has been assigned has enjoyed this strained diplomatic Father Feehan The week-end conclusion of the su-| bined Japanese army, navy and air forces. : ger of the branch at Mankato, Minn,,|Ye#" & near-record volume of business. eee perficlally simple accord whereby The city was asleep and unaware of its fate when, shortly and appointment of R. 8. Shepard to| eon” asia eae Dae ee eae after midnight, Chinese forces began an orderly, quiet retreat ison die incall branch wistadnbanbed ares FIRST GOLD EXPORT Japan for joint pane on “neceasary| toward their “winter line” protecting Nanking, the nation’s ‘Tuesday by the International Harves- capital. tional Communism, brought an omi- Japanese, apparently, did not learn of the retreat until 8 a. nous series of repercussions. m. (7p. m. Eastern Standard Time, Monday). . j e withdrawal enabled Japan to place a ring of steel around China’s greatest port, cutting off the metropolis from the rest of the nation and bottling up three million Chinese residents, one million refugees and many thousands of Ameri- Pany for 20 years. once. cans and other foreigners. ilroads and highways in all directions were cut or blocked by Japanese, leaving only a few foreign and Japanese vessels as the sole connection with the outside world, American and f communities breathed more easily, as if s long siege suddenly had been lifted. The plight of Chinese inhabitants and war refugees was considered tragic, however, as they have no means of Range-Building Plan Announced =“ ear, iti oli. aera cet || Sees dewtlopet: ees Pee = SOLVE PROBLEMS OF P= YOUTH IN AMBRIGA), zn.retis. te sxsitnn Great Delta lands of the west of Shanghai where State Treasurer Gray Says All |several so-called Hinden! lines reach back Youth Needs Is ‘a Real Changahu, ca at me | defense measures” against interna- LITVINOFF DESERTS NINE-POWER PARLEY Brussels, Nov. 9.—(?)—Foreign Minister Maxim Litvinoff, Rus- sian-delegate to the Brussels con- ference seeking an end to the Chinese-Japanese war announced suddenly Tuesday that he is leav- ing for Moscow tonight. strengthening of the has Ed esgend here two from ears Taylor, who recently retired as man- 4 d = ae BOUGHT BY FRANCE ‘ Armis' Siberia, $10,500,000 Shipment Pur- chased for Stabilization Fund; to Counteract Outflow E s-swea AAA Payments on N, D. Land to Be 3 Cente an Acre; 75 Cents an Animal Unit E E R j i i ake i & i F ‘3 ! F i K program etal. payments to participating ranchers in ‘ Simultaneously, however, the San Ly siates toe obeerane seaee, tlenevye Fa Ss Bat Francisco chamber of commerce re- or conserving practices. ni sure jace on Bal- ‘The total amount of payments will Wonelte : i depend on the ame of range Pauls , lot; Seek Separate Edu- Chance’ ing allowance for each ranch, State japanese counsul general i committees will determine practices cational Board omtble,t applicable to each state. usual, i Asserting that the “default of youth |and casualties of the two belligerents, ts, in all too many instances, the de- jreutral observers summarised cost of fault of older men and women, State |the conflict in the Shanghai and North John Gray Money nish ‘China areas thus far as, roughly: the state-wide vance Expenditures: Chin : : 2 education week by calling on the peo- | Japanese, '$600,000,000; pf $260,000,000, It will be effective in Arizona, Cali- Yellow Plates Ordered to insist that youth be given a real fornia, Colorado, Idsho, Kanéag, Mon- LAUNCHED IN (I | y Sreree Lakas for an “intellectual arm- North “Dakote, Oklahoma,” Oregot vite : fstle” that the problem of youth— South Dakota, fixes, Utah, Washing- pete Heer patscly nad fa the Ibe ore ton and Wyoming. i : Dakota . mguase A The AAS sald batter distribution of Results of Preliminary Drive Are to Bb cdink races econ iiay, be Called Satisfactory by tlantic. to gobo appleasaer ves to get into a rut— grazing i in, super- 5 the g Lei gical have not Pes erly covered withholding land from solicit carried come harde’ perhaps actually at grazing, were extended to cover the ; id L ot meauaiely ne Chine army Tew : entire baka i equirements | from ite western sector and the Japan=1 rasing ese forces started taking over the ter-' Payments will be withheld wherever ritory, tens of thousands of 1 5 A six-man game and fish commts- . Chinese : ferred grazing t opened. —— ‘ pl peters ‘were sandwiched between the cent of the range ballding allowance, Pecmies tive ligacengd s set 4 ith wo forces. a substantial increase in most areas, eestions made at ry Ay S ey but additional requirements will be| the State Taxpayers’ sssociation con. Discuss Work Tonight DI E i IN ST p AU specified. tion, possible measures from — 5 Practices and rates of payment will /stoup are for:. x. Ways of bringing the work and pur- ell Fes ea tae sunerios and rodent control will be required |in the state treasury. of Commerce. which will be taken in Bismarck this ———— 5 th. smaller, well-mechanized and well- on many ranches as part of the de-| Elimination of state regulatory de- month to the attention of all fam- Charles A. Klaus Is Heart Dis- organized army. sa ferred grazing practice, AAA officials|partment except for certain foot,|psign, @ com-|ities of the city will be discussed at a reported As in the Italian conquest of Eth- practice will make such work possible.| Prohibition of legislator office-hoid- mittee in the Associa’ f Com- Part in Shanghai operations. Japan- The AAA said a change in the |ing. merce rooms at 8 p. mires The state penitentiary tag plant. in Fraternal Work te |e also used numbers of -tanks, ar- method of computing the range bulld- (Continued on Page Two) paign thee, FRENCH PLAvaiGuT pins ——— mored cars, heavy guns, and warships, a ‘Except for some changes which AAA For years gold has poured into this officials said should result in a more country from other ations, building equitable distribution of payments, j ER AL, 6 ‘AMP AGN fol epee ee the program follows generally the GEN if the dire pay ‘world. 130,000 Sets of Black-on- provisions in effect this year. E i 28 lem of be about the same as in 1937. Fencing| “Jackpotting” of all state revenues poses of the unemployment census said, and increased payments for the|paint and gasoline work. p .| meeting of the Bismarck census com ease Victim; Was Active fopia, the airplane played a decisive ing allowance will be a “distinct im- ——— ge St. Paul, Nov. 9.—()—Charles A.lor » generation since—we have made|_, 1¢ Was largely a case of flesh against provement” over former prograi s governmental agencies in the city, French playright|i9us, pest president of the North-|our eae aeeaeat, big national poor. |2tel,” said one American officer. “It BY, basing the allowance on both was appointed by Mayor Obert A. Ol- Ree ete smorieiaan 804 house,” Remap eel oot oo doce aa ages tea Brazing caperliy/ of Hho rane an last_week. prominent vernal circles for] + hatever the number of acres, officials said, hospital at Neuilly. ‘Concentration camps, by wl y of ” many years, died at St. Joseph's hos-|name, are not the answer, however pecoxticia pital Monday night after ® two-year needed and however well they serve 19/1075 ‘cut off on all sides by advancing ugar Content of Loca a He waslthe emergency. The dole and bread- | 7%, coy Off Oe At Sle Oy eee lands where the grazing capacity is low will be entitled to receive a the ase in i936 and i937, oe ge by whatever multitude of titles a line, Elaus was owner and operator of the}i¢ hes been in operation, is not the e Gladstone hotel in Jamestown, N. D.,/answer. Nor have been the varied | concesston. Beets on for 40 years. He retired in 1927 and/and fantastic experiments, mostly NY | er moved to St. Paul, in 1920. He was 8/ abandoned, slong other lines, the an- nephew of Anton Klaus, who w85/swer in the effort to rehabilitate the frequently referred to as the “father” |economic balance of our land. erent one Tene na sareneiown py VitHie- of the part “and, to my mind, the economic Peige sunshine. of the! maladjustment ravaging the netion Southeast Attorneys Demand Investigation of Alleged Improper Processes Late-Planted, Early-Harvested Vegetables Rival Those sugar company experts ex- . todsy is the problem we must handle. qressed belief, in a letter to William born in Green , Wis., S Saturday Men that sogeiy "Bs W.C. Vv. . Grown, at Sidney . Farmer, agronomist for the state AS 8 pang tan sl eeopene The Mepertnrds ee ones that the beets x where he was|the very life of our Republic.” ft » A had Oppeses ‘Mental Peace’ of Challenging those who prefer “com- fortable mental peace” to a frank fac- improper of law by certain North DARE and dae it meine Bugar beets raised in this part of Avestan ge Kersargeecen| Lares the Missouri valley are comparable proceedings for disbarment. + Dr, vs Sage et ee Heaps The illegal and improper practices areas, lustry are the outgrowth of attorneys’ ee ee s. of cl ics tests Girl, 19, and Baby : Die in Kerosene Fire made by the Holly Sugar company, at la and splitting fees contrary ‘0 ical’ practs Blue Earth, Minn., Nov. 9. — UP) — its plant in Sidney, Mont., of beets on the bottoms south of Bis- ethical practice. John rrettee of Fargo, of the conciliation North Dakota under the Frasier- Lemke bill, explained the measure and also what part the attorney plays in its administration. About 50 lawyers from southeast- barring potatoes c ern North Dakota attended. C. G. jo. 2 from interstate shipment Bangert is president. The group re- fused the resignation of Harold W Bangert as secretary. The yc Bangert has moved to the district. ze i ly ki i H 5 bE zee z g eb i is i au d HI ¥sH8 Ay Br i é. E i fly i 5 é FE Fe