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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 Union War Ma 100 Launch Quest for Golden Gloves Titles Tonight Colors in Golden Gloves Meet ALL BUT 82 WILL - [Hear Scott Quits’ BEEUMINATEDIN | As Mill Manager FIRST DAY BOUTS) wen CROP CONTROL BILL "atoms: or” WILL, BE READY FOR UPPER HOUSE MONDAY Filibuster Continues as Work Is Speeded on ‘Give-and- Take’ Measure Washington, Nov. 18 —(?)— Near- agreement in the senate agriculture committee on farm control legislation brought promise Thursday of a break in aimless debate which hes dominated the special congressional Senator Bailey (Dem.-N.C.) carried on the southern filibuster against auti-lynching legislation in the senate. But Chairman Smith (Dem.-8.0.) told reporters an “ever-normal gran- ary” farm bili—patterned after ad- Cream of State’s Amateur Fight- ers Begins Gathering for. Annual Event TO START AT 7 P.M. Langer to Talk at Opening; Buffalo Meat Banquet Sched- uled at Noon Today ai cP g 3 i + E i F 4 i decided to ask that marketing quotes and a processing tax of 20 cents 8 bushel for wheat be written into the acministration’s new farm bill. Members of the house corn sub- committee sald they virtually had decided on marketing quotas for corn, opposed to a processing i 5 ? i a it i li a * won their crowns in the state tourney, @ practice inaugurated this year to eliminate danger of false title-claim- ants popping up later. i throughout the state. Twenty-four counties will be represented, the num- ‘ber having been increased by seven ‘Thursday morning with the arrival of new entry lists. iekire i = tiations Break Down; Man Is Bound Over In Fort Yates Death BISMARCK, N. D., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1937 SEA COMMERCE ARE | SHARPLY LOWERED| Japan, France Deny Arms. ‘Ultimatum’ North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper The Weather Partly cloudy tonight, Friday; little change in temperature, PRICE FIVE CENTS y Figure in Murder MILL CITY LABOR - They'll Carry Local U.S., Britain May Sign Trade Pact HIGH COURT SEEKS — [>i woe, Pave MORE INFORMATION ON TAX LEVY CASE ica Now Favored Washington, Nov. 18 —(P)— The Order Follows ‘Reply Brief’ Presented by Taxpayers United States and Great Britain Seeking to Lower Rate (By the Associated. Press) War risk rates on international maritime commerce—one barometer of war tension—were reduced sharply ‘Thursday on cargoes for. the Orient and the Western Mediterranean. don by British marine insurance un- derwriters was believed due to three An apparent end of “piracy” which outgrowth jpanish war: An easier political situation in agreed Thursday to negotiate for a 3 reciprocal trade pact, a decision fraught with far-reaching economic and political implications. It was the first formal step toward ‘au Objective long sought by the Roo- sevelt administration as an indis- pensable feature of its program for Kiberalisation of world commerce. ‘The state court Wednes-| Actual start of the negotiations, ex- at teesoaa pected within = few weeks, will day night requested additional in- te t Don, Nal pore cean © Teer ct explore ing both sides in’ the case of seven! There appeared good reason to be- Fo te earn ne ena| probably consented to consider grant= mr to consider = force a reduction of 21 mills in the Probes Be ee aete teoat- ment equal to that which it now ac- cords goods from the British dom- frions under “empire preference.” ‘The United Kingdom long has been the United States’ largest foreign market, while this country is second only to Canada in the purchase of British goods. .| For many years the balance of trade between the two countries has been 848,000,000. ports from the United King- dom in 1936 were valued at $200,385,- 00, representing about eight per cent of this, country’s purchases from all countries. This compared with $155,- roe in 1935, and $329,751,000 in May Dismiss Cases BB [ 5 Bi 3 Egses 5 | Against Oil Firms) Wis., Nov. 18.—(?)—Fed- | BOSS FOUND DEAD, BULLET IN BRAIN Columnist Questioned About 9- Day Old Prediction . of Foul Play $11,000 REWARD OFFERED Seek Two Men Known to Have Previously Attacked Team- ster Secretary Minneapolis, Nov. °8 ~~ A hint police believed labor trou- bles might provide a clue in the assassination of Patrick J. Cor- coran, 45-year-old Minneapolis labor leader, was given Thursday when they questioned Meyer Lewis, representative of William he knew anything about reporte a labor war was brewing in Min- neapolis. They quoted Lewis as saying he knew nothing of such reports. Minneapolis, Nov. 18.—()—Police began a search Thursday for two men known to have previously attacked Labor Leader Patrick J. Corcoran, slain Wednesday night near his home, and Gov. Elmer A. Benson offered a personal reward of $500 for arrest and conviction of his slayers. Police Captain James Mullen an- nounced at noon that one man was held at the north side station for questioning, but declined to give the ™man‘s name or divulge whether any information had been obtained. The Teamster's joint council, of which Corcoran was bo urer, offered a reward of $10,000 “the arrest and conviction” of his Minneapolis Daily Star offered reward, bringing the total to The @ $500 {CONTINUE HUNT FOR THIRD KIDNAPER; 2 IN SEPARATE CHLLS Perey Geary Leaps From Bath- roem Window as Pals Are. Taken, Is Still at Large Syracuse, N. Y., Nov. 18—(?)—Het ily guarded, two recaptured members of a gang convicted of the 1988 O'Con- nell kidnaping were lodged Thursday in: separate cells while state and city officers continued their hunt for the third ‘The pair, y “Red” Orowley, who said he “liked his freedom like anyone else” were moved |Wednesday from Syracuse police sta- tion to the detention quarters in the |Onondaga county court building to await prosecution on escape charges. The third, Percy Geary, was still at large following his leap from a ‘bathroom window of a Syracuse room- ing house where Oley and Crowley meekly surrendered Wednesday to of- ficers who were directed there by @ janitor—Ivan Whitford. Whitford earlier had walked into headquarters, drew Patrolman Harold Kelley aside and casually remarked, “Do you want to catch the kidnapers?” Oley and Crowley were seized al- most 36 hours after they escaped from the Onondaga county penitentiary at Jamesville, N. Y., with the aid of Geary who cut their way through cell bars to truss the prison guard staff of six and escape in a stolen car. The janitor said that the men sent him out frequently for food and liquor. It was on one of these food missions that Whitford decided to “turn them in” to share in the $6,000 reward post- ed for their capture. a “clean professional job.” “It is a great shock to me,” said Meyer Lewis, representative here of William Green, Federation lof Labor president. “I hate to be- lieve that there is anything to the story that it is a fight between the CIO and AFL.” He did not elaborate on the last part of his statement. J. Corcoran, early Sunday attacked his father that a shot was fired during the (Continued on Page Two) Would Pave Way for Bridge on Red River; Washington, Nov. 18.—()—A bill to give authorities of Minnesota and ‘North Dakota power of condemna- tion in connection with construction of an interstate bridge by the two states was introduced in congress by Rep. William H. Lemke, Fargo, N. D. ‘The free highway structure would span the Red River between Caledonia, N. D. and Shelly, Minn. The President Has It Pulled Washington, Nov. 18—(P)— President Roosevelt had his ab- cessed tooth extracted Thursday after his dentist discovered the infection could not otherwise be cured. Captain Ross T. McIntire, the president's physician, said his pa- tient still had a half a degree of fever but predicted that with the tooth out the temperature would down. McIntire said the president's condition had been complicated by an upset stomach, but that this cleared