The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1923, Page 3

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- (+. SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1923 GIRL SHOOTS RICH SUITOR IN HIS OFFICE Discovery That He Was Mar- ried Said to Have Led to The Tragedy Yew Y i an Byethe etate re i e tw kotas, the dead man tual agreement of the Washington | ready to. present witnes: whose | New York, May. 31.—Frederick W.| shown by the state prison record is | the two Dakotas, t ! agreement of the Washington ly x divine a ra cane socially, | as follows: CEE BLN GG) SUA and Tokio governmen Pt DRO De Ld ie It TONIGHT financially and profesionally prom-| He was born in Copenhagen, Den- | agency in South “Dako : . : iv Ulsposing of tHe. fieroomant ne iene ded ale vestaraay) the victim} mark, waé born on the 28th day of | Born in Quebec. Mr. aren mbault | “Lave Ad” Marriage Objeeted jand substituting for it the prin- et the state rested its SRLS TELS SEIS EOE aes , Acree ae ‘ ave been 37 years | came Jorma in 1861, working i c ek sterday the of 3 he hands of Miss Hel-| April and would have been 37 years }eame to Vermont in 1861, ' v 9 x ciples of the document subscribed | } phd : & pia even 26; daughter of a well. | on next April 28, He had a common |his way west to Ohio, Wisconsin, To By Boy’s Mother ito by the nine powers —the United | Uses. most WILSON in............ BROAD DAYLIGHT” to-do Riverside drive family, who | school education, had belonged to]and Iowa. He filled a contract for simnietee States, Japan, China, Great Brit. | ies living in the vieinity of the | killed herself after having mortally | the Lutheran church, and was a] making ties for a railroad that w eerae Tie Mia SUL Mla tot ae italy, Bortugal, The |, Whe charged the guards with | —~ os TAC HISTSHH ye : y | pushing 0 om Clinton te Des DD SUL 7 vs ugal, various offen i yeaeenl Dee ant ee ENENHEE ive eet oak M ice on From etinton to PS Taral authorities to bring Geo “and Belgium —~the |“'"°"* ° Monday and Tuesday The tragedy is believed to havet living on April 28, 1916. Te was 5| After this he joined a group of | Géidd, 30 years old, and Mrs, John Vian Meee eat aos occurred when the girl’s discovery, | feet 7 inches ta He gave the] pioncers going to the northwest, and | Ha f Baker, Nv D., was to be |i C44 as i a He y of interest after x U-years friendship with | name of his father as Fred Hamme- | landed in Sioux «City, Towa, in the | asked today by Mrs, Vietor Risk of | aq hina and at the same time do Burnham, that the contractor was | ken. He lived with his parents un-| fal) of 1864. The ney spring he fi); An il Gatti; Ati, jaway with ¢ pement that was married. til he was 18 years old. He had} came up the Missouri river to thes city, said. Geidd, “Mra. fa sour y from the Miss Ziegler @alled at Burnham’s| been si in North Dakota be-| vicinity of Fort Sully, returning to] Risk said, been “camped” 1 nounced. office in the Grand Central terminal | fore he was arrested. ‘He was of | Sioux City on the last boat down | Mrs. Haney, whose husband was kill- a esterday but he was too busy to| Medium-dark complexion, medium | river in 1865. ed in an automobile here Loot Recovered.‘ see her. She returned two hours | chestnut hair, big blue eyes, and his] He felt the same lure that had [urday as the resylt of later and obtained access to the of-| mouth was rather large. He gave }drawn a relative on the famous }inserted in newspapers, according [Other articles valued at upwards of fice while a nd, Miss Ida Murphy,| #8 his nearest relative, Everett, at! Manuel Lisa expedition which w to the woman remained outside. Miss Ziegler was inside 15 min- . 1812-18, and who was killed by and advertised for “a nice girl who utes when Henry Coxe, an employe | from Minot, on a plea of guilty to 4 | dians. Hence 1866 saw him would like to frm.” His j who admitted her, and Miss Mur-| charge of assault with a deadly |iishea asa settler on the Grand | brother, John, who is in phy heard two shots. Miss Murphy | Weapon with’ intent to kill. The! river in South Dakota. kota got a wife through | ran away and disappeared. Coxe] Sentence was for a period of three To N. D. in. 1875 i journal Mes i 1 summoned M. E, Ames of Yonkers,|¥ca's and six months, having been! ty 1875 he came to Fort Yates, in | Haney answer { one of Bernham's superintendents, | Siven by Judge K.E. eighton. R. A-| what is North Dakota. ‘The | and told him , } who had left the office a short time ent a eet Salen following year he homest already to go west with him. { shee OL BRE ats [eisai VERT oui Aa aaoy Beaver creek in Emmons || They went to get married a they found Miss Ziegler dead, a| The ‘ aU Se “J county. He built a toll bridge | Devils Lake, N. D. pistol wound in her right temple. PR eNResaeleGn Ce sFEPeneE across Beaver creek and later the | After the pair had gone to North DIED EARLY TODAY. ee eS Lee bridge to Emmons county. For 13|Dakota it was learned that Mrs. Miss Ziegler had a pistol wound in| 2+ 1918. aes years he was postmaster m-| Haney's husband was — still living / her right temple. Burnham was! 44 AD HLCheTEC roy prison | Monsbure, and was keenly interest- here. He also became interested in | found with a wound in his right tem-|, “ bis He ed_in_ polities. the rth and was about to start | ple but’ still breathing. He died{ "ete, Heneckeyk remained in Bis-| Returning to South Dakota in 1893] in pursuit of his wife, when he was He saw the crew ut Bellevue hospital at 1 o'clock this} ™@%K.. Ha had a sign painting shop | afy, umbault settled on the | killed. Nauisti morning without having regained con-! oui Seong ass aig 1 | Grand river at a point known ‘ a ' ae ciousness. | pte avas, frequently seen around | spotted Horn Bull camp, and ranch. | @*=———————___.__ig hi loveatek: ae ivit leader at! the, police station, had done some | of°there several years. tn isi! he || THE WEATHER UG? Gao Tey oie re, ra ry PAU 2 IN CAGE, ati painting there and often accompan- atte t Th rae ore s.D. i weakling when Prias took the Dobbs Ferty, where she and her hus-| ied Jim Jenson, might officer, on ss ale ine det SO the hardware, |S ——__———« wheel. . . . He was not liv- hand live on their estate, Riverview | rounds two or three years ago. MRSIRGSE ROI Th aoaniwwan eyed oe x +f ing up to the family motto: Manor, and an active member of the! Chief of Police Martison declared | PUSiness: : ‘i ‘ or twenty-four~hours ending at/ ‘ Christian Science church there, and! that Haneckeyk never wore a police |, He Was married three times, his [noon tod if | erita were notified last wife having died in 1904, Seven | Temperature at 7 a, m the girl's pa The of the tragedy was re- 1 ilies, Burnham, they said, met ) ler about the time of his marriage. » Burnham frequently resided at one of his Manhattan clubs for several days At a time and they accepted his tale that he was a bachelor. Wife Learned of It. Mrs. Ziegler said she had advised Relene not to marry him, as she as-} serted he had asked her, because he dra continue his affair with Miss Ziegler.) pottowing the. inquest Inte today | #b0ve named defendants: and unusually low temperatu He told men friends that his wife! yiss Albertson's body will be taken | YU are hereby summoned to an-| reported in_ the . had learned of their relationship and|¢9 Baldwin for burial beside the |SWer to the complaint in the above}and Great Lakes region. shad declared he must renounce the! afenerinotier! entitled action which is filed in the|tures have risen sligh girl or his family. a ‘OOK GUNS TO BARN AFTER HE KILLED GIRL (Contitued from Page 1) und then seeing her body lying » floor. “George has done it,” imed he said here. Stupefied moment he stood stock still. He saw the guns were gone and Han- was not im the house. A lit- ° dispatched to au- thorities in Bismarck late in the af- ternoon it was presumed that Han- had taken the guns for ins protection and fled, It half hour or so after-the neighbors came + in that Haneckeyk’s body was found in the hayloft. Feeling Ran High. The bodies were brought to Bis- marek last night on a Soo train. Feel- ing was high among the neigh- hors, who were prepared to spread a net over the country in search for the slayer, before his body was found. A neighbor farmer brought a second buggy to the farm so that the body of . ‘the girl and the man would not be taken to the station at Baldwin in the same conveyance. Haneckeyk had been at the Albert- son home since last fall, helping Al- bertson at times but being sort of a guest without particular invitation, the father said. A small man, with a slight accent—he was Danish by birth and had lived in Sweden before coming to this/country—he was not , inclined to talk much, except at times, Was Morose. Recently, Mr. Albertson said, he would sit for two or three hours at a time, saying nothing, but staring into space. He also declined to eat meals with the family, saying he was not hungry, but later would ask for food. Mr. Albertson declared Han- cckeyk was a woman hater, having had an unsuccessful love affair in weden many years ago. His girl, he id, did not like to have Haneckeyk but declared that he had made no ad- Yances to her. He also complained at times he was sick, and ‘would be morose and almost sullen. Reports came from -the neighbor- hood that Haneckeyk had annoyed the girl, Haneckeyk had been invited to stay at the place this winter, Mr. Albert- son said, The man had been in Wil- ,ton. He had been at the Albertson hore since the harvest. He left Bis- marck about a year. or year and a half ago, going to Wilton. He was employed there at times as a special policeman by Marshall Jim Jenson, formerly on the Bismarck police force. His trade was that of a painter. Jenson declared’ Haneckeyk was a woman hater and believed that he committed the act while tempor- arily insane. Tragery has stalked the Albertson Glass has posi- roof that he is al cure tubercu- losis by , inhalation, in. climate. “Dr, isthe. origina- to1 this treatment, having discovered in the year Glass: d by acquaintances of both fam-! k. Recently Burnham attempted to dis-| home in the past. Two sons perish- {ed while rescuing their father from ja well some years ago. His wife ‘died about.a year ago. The Albert- |sons, one of the best known and re- spected families in the Baldwin neigh- borhood, have lived on their present farm near Baldwin for about seven years. Previously they lived near |W Iton, There are surviving in the jfamily the father, two sons, Alfred, ‘working in Washburn; Erick, in Mich: igan, and Miss Dagmar, working and worked in Bismarck, The Served Prison Term history of Hanekceyk as Tacoma, Washington. He was sentenced on May 22, 1916, {star He said Me hnd served as a | special policeman on one of two oc- casions when large crowds were in | town, particularly on “Wilson day | here when many men were sworn in | for police duty. He declared that i Haneckeyk was told a year and a ‘half ago to stay away from the po- ‘lice station, and that after that he left Bismarck. He also declared Haneckeyk never answered the po lice phone and never made an ar- rest | neckeyk, he said, came up on Lone oceasion and helped night offi- feors when they were attacked, Funeral In Baldwin | Brave An effort was being made to lo- EARLY SETTLER CLOSES CAREER H. A. Archambault Came to Dakota Territory in 1866 hault, 8%, closed th of one of the éarl tered near the site of Fort Yate sons, two daughters, earthly st pion 42 gri Jattending sch6ol in Bismarck. Ellen| fort Yates, N. D» March 31, Albertson, the slain girl, had also) puviat here of Hermidas A, Archam career eers of ndenil- dren ang 10 great grandchildren sur- vive. Afthrong of people attended the funeral here and old settlers of section acted as pall hearers 7 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- ty of Burleigh. In District Court,|¢ Fourth Ju George H. W Hi fendants. The state of North office of th | evenin N) —— ——————— HOOEUCUOUONAOEUASAOAOUATLALAOAU ALAA Summons, dicial District. r, Pla he clerk of of this tiff, vs. C. O. sen and Carolina Hansen, De- Dakota to the the district High erm Lowest 1 The son went est pitatio Highest wind vi WE For Bismarck and cloudy tonigh WEATHER CONDITION: The cold high pressure are centered 0 ns northwest wher case of your failure.to appear or an- swer judgment will you by default for the relief demand- ed in the complaint. Dated at Washburn, North Dakota, this Ist day of Mareh A. D. WILLIAMS & TELLEFSON. Attorneys for Plaintif: Office and Postoffiee Addr Washburn, N. 3-24-31-4-7-14-2 WOULD RETURN COUPLEIN N. D. to Temperature at noon Nighest ye HER F r the Mi States and in the extreme Ventaetleticon duteeineumieres: court of Burleigh counts, North Da po reais Seer kota, and to serve a copy of your|hay appeared. The w i answer upon the sabseriber My fair in all seeti ee at Patterson Hall § within thirty days a fow stutions along the I ednesday and Saturday) corvice of this summons ORRIS be taken against ssissippi V Mississippi a low pres: W. ROBER JAPAN AND U.S. 1923. D, Nullified arch Washington, \ -—The ; Which the United Stat ‘recognized Japan's spee North Dakota out into new fields. based on the study of portray life and cha human and artisti Partly cloudy rmer tonight. ; Temp ly in the north- “Peg he ns ¢ ne at is f fi ) Meteorologist. | QA TONY SARG’ MARIONETTES Monday Afternoon and Evening APRIL 2, 1923 AT BISMARCK AUDITORIUM Afternoon Performance at 3 p. m. FTAA TTTTTETATOTTTLT TTT ET The only picture ever ene, REACH AGCORD ' Famous Lansing-Ishi Pact Is! cele- * brated Lansing-Ishi agreement by es in 1917 I interest in China has been canceled by mu- These words at this time have more than ordinary significance to the theatre patron. stand on the threshold of a new cra. e breaking away from the beaten paths and striking The new motion pictures will be transferred to the silver sheet as really worth while achie ments of this type we offer. the following: eart” with Laurette Taylor. “The Flirt” by Booth Tarkington. “THE FAMOUS MRS. FAIR” by James Forbes. “DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS” The outstanding picture sensation of New York. “SLIM S featuring Irene Castle. “TRIFLING WOMEN” with Barbara La Marr. “TOLL OF THE SEA” “THE THIRD ALARM” eu PAGE THREE | ANNOUNCEMENT $20 which were stolen from the Smith | grocery on Fifth street a few days | a Having announced by can- didacy for reelection to the TOO LATE TO cLassiFy | FOR SALE—Dres Also washing m ago. The loot was traced and found hidden near a building on the south er, good as new chine and wringer isl Boys were responsible, police| in very good condition, 214 11th. Office of Police Magistrate in i gags alae aoe WANTED TO ECY Modern six or] the election of April 3rd, 1 ACCUSE GUARDS seven-room hose, in good loca-| will appreciate your support. tion. t.ctial cash payment,! My platform is a fair and im- balarce in st. ed or monthly pay- partial enforcement of all city OF COMPANY Marion, Ill, Mar, 31.—On a foun- dation of testimony that © accused guards of the Sguthern Mlino Company's intimidati se in the second the Herrin riot trials today | ment What have you? Call ordinances and state laws. Ww. C. CASHMAN. === Phone 298, between 9 and5 o'clock. Last Time Motion Pictures Producers human nature itself and. will cter stripped of veneer and with a touch both with—— LON CHANEY and BILLIE DORE SSMU mM HERE ARE THE McKENZIE HOTEL FIVE o My! They play for the dances at Patterson’s Hall every Wednesday and Saturday nights. Rates for in city $5 an Hour, outside of city same Rate Plus railroad fare and Hotel expense. HOULDERS” 2A ATTACKER | TONIGHT | SATURDAY filmed in true natural colors. Milton Sills John Bowers UVUUOV ATENEO RETA RIP VAN WINKLE (Schools close at Recess to enable Children to attend) Prices — Children under 12 years, Twenty-Five Cents. All above 12 years, Forty Cents. Adults, Fifty afid Seventy-Five Cents. Evening Performance at 8 p. m. DON QUIXOTE Prices—Children under 12, 25 cents. Over 12 and under” 18 years, 40’cents. All adults 50 and 75 cents. reservations. Procure your tickets at Aud before performances. Given under auspices of Women’s Community for Benefit of Girl’s Recreational Work. . Help Boost This Worthy Movement. ONLY TWO PERFORMANCES \ No itorium Council NN tt A drama of pure heart interest. “HEARTS AFLAME” by Reginal Barker. THE WORLD'S A STAGE with Dorothy Phillips. WHERE THE PAVEMENT ENDS by Rex Ingram. “BEN HUR” and others to follow. po THE —— Capitol Theatre Marguerite de la Motte PATHE NEWS AESOP FABLE COMEDY F Monday F KATHERINE MacDONALD, BRYANT WASHBURN: MITCHELL LEWIS, JUNE ELYIDGE in “The Woman Conquers” Tuesday, - Wednesday - Thursday LEWIS STONE/and BEBE DANIELS in “The World’s Applause” BVSTER KEATON ‘in “The Blacksmith” /

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