The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 14, 1923, Page 8

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PAGEEIGHT __ SECOND DEATH OF STUDENTS Claimed That Northwestern Boy Killed by Auto Was Victim of Hazing GRAND JURY MEETS Co-cds at University to be Questioned in Mount Case For First Time hicago, May 14.—Reconvening today tie. grand jury will resume its investigation into the death of on Mount, Northwestern uni- freshmen, For the first n y time since the grand jury be its probe, co-eds at the univers will be questioned, nding of a skelton under 2 pier in nston, believed to be Mount, has remained a mystery in- far as to how and when it came to its resting place. Scores of wit- nesses, according to reports, have o throw any light on Mount's dis parance © state’s atiovaey’s offire bas velved into the death of Lous Aa- bert, Northwestern university freshman, who was killed apout three weeks ago in an autompiale accident, and announced thet today it is prepared to ask the grand jury for manslughter indictments in connection with his death. Assistant States Attorney Scar- boro said he had evidence that Au- bert's death occurred during a haz- ing episode when the car in w the student was riding was deltb- itely driven at anothe rstudent’s vr for the puropse of ramming Roecoe Conklin Fitch, son of the tor of Mason county, Lud- Mich. n da former room- vf Mou among the wit- ne: to go before the grand jury and repeat his story, that has drawn the attention of the state’s ney’s office since he first: was ned Saturday night. h, the states attorney’s staff, tol dthem he ‘knew all about :e Mount case” but later became hystterical, repudiated that state- ment and said he referred to Au- bet’s death. An admission that he was sponsor a movement to ush up” the talk of the Mount case among the univer: students pr ingte terson, athl and president of the senior class. He said he con- sulted officials at the university in ard to the plan and received their approval, it is reported. ASK KENZIE BSTATETOPAY $40,000 CLAIM Tacoma, Washington, Attorney | on His Way East to File | The Claim | Is FOR A _ SsTEP-SON! | A claim of $40,000 against the | tate of the second Mrs, Alexander | McKenzie will be filed, according! to a printed in the St Paul vhich said that Stan- | ley Warburton, Tacoma, Washington | attorney s gone east to take up| tter with McKenzie heirs. | 3 cting in the interest of Roy Tyler, formerly of Bismarck and now of Tacoma, Wash., son of the second Mrs, McKenzie. He based contention o% the ground that! McKenzie had arranged to set aside a large group of bonds of the Bismarck Water Supply company for the benefit of his step-son, The Pioneer-Press story contin- ues: In the settlement of Mr. MeKen zie’s estate here, his children wai ed claim to $50,000 which he had willed to his wife although technic- | ally this belonged to the estate as| she died a month before her husband j although he did not learn of it un- til three days before his beath. It is from the three children of | the second wife, Mrs, Elva Tyler| McKenzie, a former Bismarck, N. D., resident, who died a citizen of Yon-) kers, N. Y., and Attorney Warbur- | ton is attempting to recover thej claim of Mr. Tyler he said, | Marriage Secret 30 Years The McKenzie estate became com- plicated when the existence of his second wife was discgvered , his marriage having been kept a secret from even his most intimate friends for thirty ‘years. The North Dakota political lead- er was an intimaze friend of the Tyler family for many years, assoc- iates said. He married Mrs, Tyler aftcr her divorce and established a home for her in New York. ‘The McKenzie estate outside of the legacy tq his second wife is not involved in this development, attor- neys said, It affects the three New, York children, Alex McKenzie, Thom- | as Oaks McKenzie and Jeannette McKenzie, all of Yonkers, but does, not concern the children of his first! marriage. Mrs. Mary B. Foster and) Mrs. Ann McDonald of Canada, | TYPEWRITERS # All Makes sold~ and. | North | other Canadian lines from partici-} ‘day had deserted a construction | imtimidation they had forced many; ‘ i” hg Prince All , Duke of York and ter of the Earl of Str: phot den altar in Westminster Abbey. To the Wales. Viscount Lascelles and) Princ hot marry he may renounce the record of the elevation of “Lady Letty MAKE PROTEST | AT ACTION OF U.S, SHIP BOARD Elimination of Canadian Lines on Great Lakes Is Argued Before Board y 14.—The ship- ping board was charge with lend- d (9 creation of a monopoly p of citiz other group” in a brief filed to with the Interstate Commerce | Commission, Northwestern and New England shippers using Great Lukes transportation lines. Under provisions of the me chant marine act ship-owners ha ing vessels under United States] by registr® in Great Lakes have been |~ arguing for elimination of tie Navigation Company and Washington, M pation in traffie from between points in the United States and the | shipping board at commerce hear: | ings supported their contention. The New England traffic a soci- ation and Chambers of Commerce in Boston, Duluth, Minneapolis and other cities declared taat the ship- ping board had appeared “in a pacity that to us is most surpris- ing.” i The Amerjcan shippers in the west are unanimous in demanding stablished rights of the Northern vigation and other Canadian to participate in the business ; parts, [.W.W. DESERT LUMBER CAMP lini between Ame for Protest Against Conditions | affairs. They Say Resulted in Death Portland, Ore.. May 14.—Th teen hundred and fifty employe; the Hurley-Mason Construction company, most of whom were sai to be members of the I. W. V camp on the Clackaman_ river where they were employed, in | protest against conditions which | they alleged caused the shooting; and death Friday night of E. A.| Smith, time-keeper, by C. A. Phelps. | A statement made by an I. W. W., organizer to I. W. W. headquar- ters said that from 15 to 100 arm- ed guards had been imported into! the camp and that by threats and! men to flee. MAJOR PINGER THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, MAY 14, 1928 4. "DUKE -Lyon, daugh- j vi ere pronounced man and wifs at the historie gol king and queen, the queen mother, the Prince of! in Berlin. Wales does! A bs Hence this picture may be the | Warsaw where the matter of obta the royal family. to a queendom. The Duke of York ham Palace immediate! tumu!tuoas thro: FLEE HOUSE OF DAVID CULT the state in an invest This plane was on a practjse flight for the opening of the Berlin- London passenger service when it crashed at Tempelhofer Field, Ber- i It was completely wrecked. y [to carry through in spite of want . | and oppression. Between Moscow and Kharkoff the | [forests had gradually thinned out, | und in the 48 hours journey from Kharkoff to Odessa nothing was to be seen but rolling cultivated fi when no snow was on the ground, | and black earth unbroken by fence, ; ae tree, or hill, stretches away as far Describes Conditions of POov-j as cye can reach. A barren prospect, : «except for occasional villages clus: erty Found in Arduous Trip | tered or strung out in shallow de- To Odes: | pressions, or sloping ravines. It was Be teat ¢asy to note that all life in that re- -———— gion is dependent upon a favorable ’ growing season, and subsequent good MANY INSPECTIONS harvest. | Mr. Rothschiller is now in Odessa, {where in conjunction with the Ger- man Red Cross, to whom he says he ‘ is particularly indebted for timely President of j aid and influence rendered through- zen's Relist | out his entire trip, he is busy ar- ia, reports a| tanging the speedy distribution of i lb | food, clothing and money; the for 'The Ukraine is wholly an agri | tural state, or desert as it appeared | to be from car windows in a season In a letter giving account of th final stage of his journey to Rus- | sia, Jacob Rothchiller, the North Dakota asseciation for Ru: successful arrival in Odessa, where | mer’ having " ake charge of the distribu-| three days preceeding him. The Rus- 1 cf food and clothing sent for-| sian officials and private citizens d by ship from Hamburg, Ger-| With whom Mr, Rothschiller has ny. His journey overland which | has come in contact have treated consumed a d of five weeks was | him with every ‘consideration and not, how without its misha ys; Courtesy. Certainly all appearances and aelaye. “| point toward a rapid recovery of the | He left Vienna’ the forepart of| Russian people to a normal, estab- February bound for the Polish bor-| lished order, he declares. der at Podwoloc: via Ctacow | and Lemberg. riving there, ne was retained by the Polish military a es five days, before offici- arrived by ship only he spute the validity af his passport s, which had been previously prepared by the German Red Cross] Peking, China, May 14. — An k trip was necessitated to| Peking government and leaders of \ em the bandits holding a number of | ing further permission to cross was | foreigners was effected at Linching [taken up with the American depart-/on Saturday night and immediate | ment and the central Polish author- | release of some of the captives is expected momentarily. | ities. After a preliminary delay of Under the agreement troops will five days, during which time due to| |total impossibility to obtain room-| ne withdrawn ond the bandits later | ine accommodations he was obliged enrolled in the national army. As to share those of a Cunard repre-| Soon as the agreement fas been sentative, he was notified of a final’| Carried out by the government. all refusal to permit crossing of the Polish border into Russian. , Reason Vue eect: et pag clpanen\ by inee the United States irae ae aes | DEVILS LAKE |there be occasioned _responsib: IS CHOSEN FOR ese in rendering aid’ jf s: BAR MEETING | Poles Make Strides. i Seana | The Poles have made rapid strides | Minot, May 14.—Devils Lake was jin internal organization, have plenty | Chosen ‘at the 1923 meeting place i tocatand drink, and evidence a seem|of the State Bar Association and ing industry and prosperity. The|the date set at July 19-20 at a con- ally being denied permission to cross. The Russians were favorably inclin- , but the Poles found | a agreement between agents of the| GETS NEW OFFER | Many Hurt in rang, Church Collapse igewood, May> 14.—Nineteet persons were injured and about 100 men and women were preci- pated in the basemen twhen the first floor of the partially com- pleted Methodist Episcopal churc! south, collapsed during service: The meeting was to celebrate lay ing of the corner-stone. As the jservices were about to start the ame. PASS ANTI-LASH GILL The banning of all form poral punishment of prisoner state at least for two y measure secmed a certainty whe the senate, receding another step in i ttitude, passed, 16 to 11, bill by Senator Turnbull that would ban whipping 0 fcounty convicts fopever and abolish it in the handling of state convicts for two years. The house passed a bill to abolish ail whipping of convicts. ' Ralph E. Williams of Portland Ore., Republican National Commit- tee vice-chairman, who recently declined appointment as secretary of the treasury, has been tendered the post of assistant secretary of commerce by Secretary Hoover. \ ference of the executive commit- tee held in Minot Saturday after- noon. All members of the com- mittee were present except C. L. |Young of Bismarck, who is en route to Washington, D. C. The | committee went on record con- {demning the names of use of | patriots in commercial fdvertis-, ing, | | | FOR SALE BY /” Dry Cteaning, Pressing. DOD De RS GUL Dyeing, Repairing. Call 58. CORWIN MOTOR Co. spirit of nationalism is very strong, and every effort is being made to ‘prevent their country rehabiliated from suffering, at the hands of plunderers, the subjugations of the past, acccrding to Mr. Rothschiller. ‘ A further retreat to Berlin was | . : 4 ey _ | then necessary, where transit visaes | for over Lithuania and Lettland were and the new duchess on the balcony of Bucking-| obtained, and a new route laid out after their marriage ceremony, being greeted | by of Riga, Moscow. A two- |days ride to Riga through a finely | wooded agricultural region visibly @ marked by the influence of the Ger-, man econemie occupation. was unin- | 4 terrupted save by the changing of | trains three times, currency twice, | y and passing through personal lug- gage inspection four times. A day’s After a day and night's journey | through a heavily timbered section, ithe Lettish-Russian border was reached. The Lettish reviewing au-| thorities inspected briefly, but on the other side the Russians exer- cised a courteous rigid control. Spe- cial attention is given to literature | of every description. Newspapers and periodicals are irrevocably bar- dense forests continued and weli, too, for cord wood is the sole engine Berlin on a warm sunshiny day and no snow, he arrived in Moscow in the folds of a heavy snow storm, and no signs of winter’s abatement. ¢ The most important items of a per- gons pessessions in Russia are his proclaiming documents and creden- tials, therefore, Mr. Rothschiller made an enforced four days stop in Moscow, the capitol of the Soviet Republic, where he registered his! Pa presence and mission at several gov- ernmental bureaus, received letters of recommendation and recognition, and secured passage on a special courier to Knarkoff. Moscow, a ¥apidly growing city ot an estimated population of two mil- lions, is at present a bustling com- mercial center. Featurely, the city * is scattered over an immense uneven area, has many unique, imposing government buildings, includes the famous Kremlin section, and is no- table for its collection of 450 col- ored, picturesque churches. The next point on Mr. Rohtschil- lers journey was Kharkoff, the capi- tol of the Ukraine, two nights and a day distant. Another halt of five days occurred permitting time neces- sary to secure an extension of the | Ukrainian visae for one month, per- DISASTER AFTER A CLEAR JUMP 3 f Plashy Jake, veteran timber topper, cleared a.jump.at Belmont Major R. N. Pinger was one Of| New York, with plenty to spare. Then while running on the flat he|ger and cold still ‘not appéesed, yct the Americans taken by the Shan-| stumbled and broke his neck, his rider tung bandits in China. over tie horse’s head. Park, ‘hardship and ruin experienced, hun- yniniured. when-thrown | also a spirit of: perseverence-and’ en- |’ mission’ to receive ‘ and distribute goods as a charitable undertaking, an order to enable bringing the goods thréugh the customs without delay, | a special allowance to cross the Rou- manian frontier on the return jour- ney, registration with the police au- thorities, and finally passage on a | Special train to Odegsa. Ki Displays Poverty. - . Kharkoff, also a city swollen by a newly acquired citizenry, displays | poverty more ‘accentuated than in Moscow. Three hundred miles to the §' * South and in. March, the spring thaw | had arrived with all its dirt and slush. Three hundred thousand peo- ple live there in too crowded quar- ters, famine attracts population to; centers. ‘Kharkoff is now an over-|{ grown trading hub. It lacks build- | A ings requisite to the housing -of its governmental assemblies, hotels and large residences. have betn. requi- sitioned to meet the demand. The people pvesented an appearance of ‘| durance, which, ines to be going | Eagle Tailoring. : py "THE Standard Oil Company (Indiana) Service Station jj with its modern conveniences, economical operation, scientific , management and quick, cour- | teous attendants, is the last link in that complete chain of ser- vice, whose first link’ is the halt in Riga enabled the catching of | se derrick in the oil fields. a special courier train running be-| 4 ‘i ‘ : i cpenitiiect\ anid eMoscow ‘twles vers) The Service Station visualizes week, the thrift, the attention to detail, care in handling products and avoidance of waste, which are conspicuous in every branch of the Company’s activities in preinciag, shipping, | refining ut: red, as well ax other reading, mate- and distributing. These methods ! diiron) the berder te Moleow chal f insure rigid economy in oper- ation, thus enabling the Com- ny to maintain a low price : tuel, an actual fact, which ac. e : : iy . counts in great part for slow time ! paid and frequent stops in which steam or its products. is ‘i is raised. A marked contrast in t iH 4 4 min Hill and Mrg Lillian Hannaford, witnesses | weather had. also developed, for The Service Station is the one ation beirig conducted into the colony’s | while Mr. Rothschiller had departed link in the long chain which the motorist sees. It is the point of contact between the Company and the motoring public. In locating these stations, ex- treme care is taken to see that they are so placed as-to meet the convenience of the motorist. 4 ; That this care is appreciated’ is made manifest by the increas- ing demand for extension of these facilities. It isthe ambition of this Com- pany to have a Service Station so located that you can secure your’ requirements of its prod- ucts, when and where you need them. The next time you drive up ¢ to a Standard Oil Company . (Indiana) Service Station, ob- ' serve carefully the way it is k arranged, the facilities offered “ / for your convenience, the high type ‘of men acting as attend- ants, and the care and thorough- ness with which they serve you. ‘By doing this you will be able to visualize that intangible fac- tor — the’ ideals of servicé ani- mating the 27,000 men and women who ig make up the personnel of Company. a, m { ’ {

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