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WEATHER PORECAST Cloudy tonight and Thursday. Probably local showers tonight. ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1927 CK TRIBUNE FINAL EDITION | | PRICE FIVE CENTS. | \ NEW YORK STILL § NTERTAINING FOR LINDBERGH Famous Flyer to. Attend Luncheon, Boxing Bout and Two Shows Today WISHES TO GET PLANE Introduced at Dinner By May- or Walker as ‘World’s Out- standing Figure’ a long’ schedule of more receptions | und ainyers to its hero pilot the other shaif of the fiying team of “wee” today called to Colonel Charles! A, Lindbergh. Baiked by inctement weather in attempt to fly to ,Washington terday to get his “Spirit of SI Louis,” the youthful colonel on thi the third day of a fiv in New York, honed to steal, if pos- sible, a few hours from ‘his program for a flight to the capital and r union witn the craft that carried him to international glory. After a day during which he played truant to “try the air” above Mitchel viccd and a night during which he He Got $25,000 | Brody Plus | Rector’s Speech ‘Cannot Rev. Lewis Claims an : Reandives; June 15. tional congress of the Episcopal church by — Rev. s. rector of St, Andrew's {eration to indulge in | gates reviewed the speech, Declaring his contact recognize “unmarried unions.” The speech created a congress. The Right Rev. \ DEFENDS MODERN YOUTH | ! Presu>pose Fixed' - Moral Code For All Ages;’ —P)—F ion to an address before the, na- Protestant | enry Ann | , Arbor, Mich. in which he defended | tne tendency tmong the younger sen- “sex experi-! | ments” was expeeted today as dele- | with the younger generation “makes me proud | of it,” Rev. Lewis debated whether | the ehurch might not do better a sensation, | coming at the very opening of the| John G. | j | Thus Ended the Big Day was L.v.ome, and attended the his program today called for a..nce from noon until after mid- Wants Own Plane Ma dsk craft to New York today, he cunno. answer that definitely. first viane up.” Lindbergh buried his thoughts of his plane, in the hands of 3 in a strange hangar at Bolling Field, while the city continued its of honors upon him last night. While he escaped the thundering cheers of strect crowds when he secretly visit- ed Mitchel. Field early in the morn- ing, the roars at the dinner and at the’ theatre party that followed were proportionately equal to, the unpre- honored by 3,500 guests ut a municipal banquet in the Hotel Com- ed if he planned to bri agement is at’ 12:30 p. m. Abelieve, and that would leave say SIX nuuis iree in the? morning. %@ the pro,ram permits and nothing else prevents J should like to bring the theatre, his ap- the sald: “1 My if trangers shower cedented demonstration when he ar: rived Monday. He was introduced at the dinner ‘by Mayor Walker, as “the outstand- ing figure in the civilized afte sat with Governor. Smith, Evans Hughes, of almogt every calling, whi world.” Char! les Cardinal Hayes, anes op Manning, and other ‘ il her hou: sands in the streets outside the hotel in the lobby an in the three ball rooms where the dinner was served yelled their greetings. Wants More Air Ports * Long ovations preceded and follow- ed the typically brief address—de- voted young hero. of air ports in order that pa plane service might be devel : , “What a speaker,” \ by a guest. “The governor and Mr. i dressed the gathering. “found a place,” (Contun at 7 a. m, tod Temperature at7 a, m. . Highest yesterday s er 8 i Lowest last night. . 53| of Rodman Wanamaker.” @ Precipitation to 7 a. m. j2| maker is the backer of the flight. Highest wind velogity “BISMARCK *Bottineau Crosby . Devils Lake . Dickinson Dunn Center Ellenda Fei ch oe 0 oO r) Moorhead, ‘Minn, . walls Bo As ‘or Bisi cig tonight ‘and ‘Thuredey loci tanh fend Thursday. an cal pina ers, except most day west portion. . Nob in_ temperature. (GENERAL WEATHER Low PrSenees showers, covers ponlige this morning while fair weather ik it ley cook weet er Rocky Mountain’ ee a thy al entirely to aviation—of the assen; ped. ‘ou on page ¢ three) *“"Westhes Raaat Weather Report Weather conditions at North Da- kota points for the 26 hours ending P ee Clouay Cloudy Clear 44 48 10 P Cldy. 47 £ Cloudy P Clady. PCldy. Clear Cloudy Cloudy Partly Prob: ly lo- urs- the Rocky over Missis- |: tr continues ries | He pleaded for the gstablishment ; “I never expected to get so Raymond Or- for my money, said ‘teig, the man whose $25,000 named hotel man. went to the fly’ men assembled war began. been an aviation fan. \has been in the air, but onc BYRD HAS VERY ELASTIC. PLANS. SAYS NY. PAPER Might Even cr 0 Pacific Ocean Before In_ 1909, visits to his French He Ends Flight New York, June 15. er! York Evening Post says today that Cheering guests climbed chairs and} Commander Richard E. Byrd, who is tables as the youth ended his ad-{ expected to hop off soon for a trans- 1, | Atlantic flight, has such elastic plans ‘was one remark| ¢,. guiding his Fokker monoplane ad-| after if leaves American shores that ave | he: may even cross Europe and the aid the governor! Pacific ocean before he ends his trip. the paper says it was in- formed’ by hint, “will not consider his —______ he lands at Le Bourget Field. He may hop across ito South America, and thence back to the United States, or make a series of flights across Europe and Asia to Tokyo, flying the lonolulu, “All these plans, however,” the pa‘ re subject, to >, phe approval Mr. Wana- “Byrd,” task ended when pausé’ at Pacific TUCKER TRIAL “10 BE HELD IN CASS COUNTY Defendant Demands Change of Venue—Case May Be Heard Late in June Fargo, Francis N. D. Tucker, N, D., June La Moure, hi Judge George M. McKenna, ding at a district court term defense counsel. ‘McKenna, region; | re temperatures moder: ' eee oo | response to an change application for a change of venue from La Moure county and to a court jan Judge McKenna’s, filed by Fargo, counsel for| Heat Cass uae has not named the iudee the case and probably ‘make any decision for sev- to much prize offer started all this Atlantic flying vogue and which, as the whole world knows, was won by a young fellow Charlie Lindbergh. pictured here with his wife as they returned from Europe, is a wealthy on one of his} homeland, he ng field at. Rheims and got areal thrill out of the air- ‘there as the From that, day he Orteig himself Orteig, great has Europe and (?)—The New with a 15.—(#)-- N. D., charged by a special grand jury in district court at La murder of Hans C. Bione, Verona, bank cashier on March 1. last, will be tried in Fargo possibly at the next term of Cass county district court, as (a result of action taken in La Moure’ Tuesday, on application of Moure with the ‘Murphy of Maryland, presiding bish- | op of the Episcopal church, followed | it immediately with an impassioned defense of “the sanctity of the home.” Others Take Issue Bishop Edward L. Parsons of Calif- ornia and two bther clergymen also took issue with Rev. Mr. Lewis, one of the latter, however, remarking that the Ann Arbor rector “deserved the | congressional medal for his frank- ness.” Many delegates, on the other hand, were quoted as approving Rev. Mr. Lewis’ statements. The loyalty of modern youth to its ideals, whatever they may be, counted as the principal factor with Rev. Mr. Lewis. ““The boys and girls are in | with life,” Lewis asserted. “They d cuss sex, they try experiments, but! here is the chief point—they live by what they think is right, not by code. “We cannot presuppose a fixed and invariable moral code by which the men of all ages and all ‘degrees of civilization are to be tried and con- victed or acquitted, “You can no more try this age by the standards of the Victorian era than you, can try Christian standards by the lives of the Old Testament; patriarchs. Called “Utter Folly” The speaker declared that “if tol sanctify unmarried unions would do away, as some urge it would, with promiscuity and the double standard, « and better protect the children of ; legal marriages, then to keep on fuss- ing with rules about divorce and the idea that all marriages are made in heaven is utter folly.” He also said that science had created an entirely new moral situa- tion and made a plea for an “intel- ligent use of birth control, at least in families where the economic situu- tion is poor.” Another speaker at the opening ses- sion, Rev. Robert B, Gooden, head master of Harvard school, Los An- geles, also commenced youth's frank and ‘questioning attitude toward moral standards. The question mark, rather*than the dollar sign, is, he declared, the sym- bol of. today. e HEATON CASE APPEAL BASIS Challenges Right of ‘hiaeacy General's Aide to Go Be- fore Grand Jury Challenging the right of an assist- ant attorney general or of the attor- ney general himself to appear before a grand jury, as well as citing num- erous alleged errors occurring at the trial, Frank C. Heagon, sentenced to a ind one-half year term in At.the end of his first day back in career, Colonel Lindbergh retires shelter of the hcme of the president-of the United States. have them (left to right Presiden aornise , at the door of the temporary white hous rs. ieeead Mrs, America, the s from the wv econd greatest of his coming crowds to the Here you Li uae and Lindy. CROWDS |COOLIDGE IS WELCOMED T0 SOUTH DAKOTA Scnator Norbeck and Delega-, tion of State’s Citizens, Beard Train AT STATIONS President and Mrs: Coolidge | cn Rear Platform to | Wave Greetings Pre: en route to Black 15.—(P) Hills, the As the state wav from Elkton, Dakota. Hills. spe soon fier sunri first stati ing at the other, small dent Coolidge’s spe its greeting to the 1 n ‘imilar greetings were wait- train, President Coolidge was wel- tcomed into South Dakota tod after he crossed the state lin journey to his summer residence in train sned into the | crowd ewiaent | ‘outh | towns and| shortly after breakfast Senator Nor- | beck of South Dak ‘ain to extend the welcome, A n of more than 30 ¢ and boa first offic a dele zens from | ded | jal | ier than usual, both the | president and Mrs. Coolidge were out rear platform th the Minnesota At Huron, to me was made and here again the was jammed by those of the city ountryside who wished to see | * FEWER BANKS IN OPERATION WOULD MAKE FEWER CLOSINGS, BANKER SAYS/" Committee Chairman Praises Recent Law Authorizing State Board to Exercise Discretion in Granting Ad- ditional Charters—Encour- ages Concolidations, . He Says Jamestown, N. D., June 13.—(?) —The twenty-fifth annual con- vention of the North Dakota Bankers association was called to order here by President H. T. Graves at 10 o'clock this morn- ing. The sessions will continue through Thursday afternoon. The. invocation hy Dt.’ B, H. Kroze, president of Jamestown College, followed immediately after the opening session was called to order, Early registrations indicate that the present convention will be the most largely attended meeting in the association’s his: tory, according to Secretary W. C, MacFadden, who is completing his 24th term as secretary of the state organization. In his annual address, Presi- dent Graves reviewed briefly the history of the bankers’ organiza- tion and outlined the present day problems of the bank of the »giate, both gp individuals and as organization, Jamestown, .N. D,, June 15.—(P)— Many of the bank closings of recent | i years could have been avoided there had been fewer banks in opera- tion, B, MeMillan of Hannah, chairman of the legislative commit- tee of the North Dakota Bankers As- sociation, told that body in a report p, today. Commenting on this phase of. the banking situation, McMillan said he believes that the law passed at tne last session authorizing the state banking board to refuse to grant ad- ditional bank charters if such tion appears to it to be justifi will result in much good to be the various communities by preventing The effect of the law ovarsbanking already being felt in that it has encouraged numerous bank consoli- dations, he said. ree ra state penitentiary for e statements and false entries, bs the books of the _Scandinavii making American Bank Fargo, pealed his case to the court. The appeal is taken from the dis- trict eae of Grand Forks county where Heaton was convicted, the case having been taken from Cass to Grand Forks county on a change of venu Bangs Appeared Bef The appeal recites the Phil that George A. Bangs, special istant pitarney general prosecuting the ase, appeared before thg grand jury A which "Heatort was indicted, and leges that the law makes no pro- vision for the appearance of the at- tovney his aides before has ap- supreme of the attorney gen to advising the state's attorney charge of a ge pe and assist- ing him at the trial of any gases in which the attorney gene: es ae an active part. reme court: recently re- varatk toon peeig Ger nm the that a apecial prosecutor, hired by the board of county com- missi had ily appeared ral are limited for Hea-| te erm ih the law aimee ie ey conan see ‘sal when made, New Laws Beneficial Other laws which Mr. McMillan ex- pects to have a beneficial effect up- on the banking business were: requiring banks to set aside 50 per cent of their earnings as surplus until the surplus equals the capi- tal to make banks safer and to strength-| en them generally. The provisions| exem| ting the p soreey from taxation is fair, id, inasmuch as the money rout! a be taxed anyway if! it were paid to the. stockholders as dividends, ‘money and credits not being taxable under the law. The companion bill which that ane t es sorriis Incre percentage capital which may be loaned to individual shall decsea: plained: by the: pointed sey eae it does not ude Lees af ready made. or other loans, whic! were within the lawful be ea, cates ine, a A e law permitti rest at no higher rate than the lawful contract rate, upon. interest... provided for in the’jcontracts, turns the law on that subject, to where it was she apid.. adnetier aon lew sewing Een, and surplus peat | caress in atte poseidon sine eee This, he said, should operate} Wilton Man Thomas Morvinski, 48, Mine “Employe, Blows Head Off With Shotgun With the top of his head blown off, the body of Thomas Morvinski, 48, miner living near Wilton, v | found Tuesday evening in a des house near there and evidence nee he had committed suicide. Morvinski left the home of George! j Pfeffer, two miles northeast of Wil- ton, where .he roomed, Sunday eve ‘ning and said he was going for walk. When he did not return, Pfet- fer started a search Tuesday evening and the body was found. The suicide apparently uttached a string to the foot of the bed, and tied the other end to the trigger {with his head toward the gun, ac cording to Coroner E. J. Gobel. He then apparently ‘pulled the gun to- ward him, blowing off the top of his head, Feared Persecution Morvingki had had delusions of per- secution for several weeks, Pfeffer said. He had claimed that “some- one” was “after” him. A note written in Polish left near Morvinski’s body stated that he had enough money in the bank to be gi en burial. Sixty dollars in travelers’ checks were found in his clothes, He {had recently returned from a trip to j Oregon. Morvinski had been ein- +} ployed at the Washburn coal mine for several years. County Coroner Gobel and Sheriff Rollin Welch, who were called this jmerning to the scene of the suicide, decided no inquest was necessary. The body is being held at Wilton pending word from a brother, Frank Morvinski, of OE Chlcage. Last Minute - Bulletins ——_—-— St. Louis, ne 15.—(AP)— John J. McGraw, manager of the New York Giants, announced here today that Rogers Hornsby. former manager of the St. Louis Ps veg ll and now captain of the ints. would become active _ 4 in;, 1928. McGraw said hi was getting tired of traveling and would turn over his duties to Hortsby. Grand Forks. N. D., June 15.— (AP)—Master barbers of North | Dakota will wind up their two - day Soar emnien here ths Bthee: i convention city on ol made. sight seeing . various points in the city wilt be. made following adjoarament. New Orleans, Ju June 15.—(AP) A. Conky os: —Dr, Frederick and ofl promoter, must look the supreme court or the United ea le board for his re- Tease from Leavenworth prison ‘as a result of 2 dec! inded United ‘of Venice boat. eriments “ahow that mever get Kills Self lying! nearby the president. Another delegation train h Norbeck In each instance the boarded under the care of Senator s the first group piled ou citizens et the | rain left the last of | cities on the route. | rst Stop at Huron the first extended stop | | station | and! the ja who | vot on the trdin were escorted to M Coolidge’s car and _At one stop in Minn t asked a fe crops w an automobi to walk a Mrs. Coolidge leaned over the howe’ and asked “How's body and we hope you are. [itself to the president his summer residence ills. Sees Vast Farms A touch of the prgiries unfolded he as ived by him ota, the presi in the crowd He replied he was e salesman and turned somewhat confused. 1 ind he turned to reply * in the He sat with Mrs, Coolidge rear car of his long spécial train and ff hori- saw stretching into the zon rolling fields sown cn and corn, country where the those were embodied _ in ary-Haugen bill. the Shortly after will be noon he host this sum received un offi 1 Bulo} j president, Mrs. large party detrained at trip to then a drive me lodge, y resi ing at a steady, the night thyougl corner of wis po¥tion of Minnesota ness fell last night. along. Over 30 Ohio livestock feeders and farmers are to stop off at Bismarck— their only stop in North Dakota—o a tour of the western range cou July 30, according to word, received fa recently The president wa traveling through the heart o folks he hose desire for firm vetoed so me cia Rapid ide} of Meets Governor Bulow . sunrise, the ident’s train entered the jit, its capital, Pierre, from Gover and other state officials. Coolidge nd brief tour of the city and the capitol i grounds, After the reception at Pie 200-mile uhead, City la y motor to the which will be the; pid the president’s train passed during} © southwestern | nd the greater | Before dark- large eame to see the president, gnd fre- quently he and Mrs. Coolidge waved hurried greetings as the train sped OHIO DAIRYMEN TO VISIT HERE’ Group, Touring. West, Will! Make Bismarck Only Stop in North Dakota today by the Association of merce, The group is traveling in special chartered. Pufimans, sponsored by the lines. Biprtina, from Columbus, O., July farmers are to swin¢# south 17, the to St. Louis, Kansas Ci Tex., Raton, N. M., through Colorado ‘Springs, Cheyenne and Thermopolis, Wyo., Bill and Fort Collins, Col., Bismarck and St, Paul. The group is to be tuken on a tour| of farms surrounding Bismarck and | will also be shown points of interest} here. / Count de Janze Is Granted Divorce Paris, June 15()—Count Fred- eric de Janze hag been granted a di- Miss Alice vorce’ from the Silverthorne of Chicago. The judgment pines. | furnished ‘the It‘was while sayin: statioh to Raymon av ford, a yout ‘and herself. abe charge uf assault i: against the Led Smeg ‘Traffor declined ‘ormer The dt * custody of their child to.the father, but makes ‘no mention of the -drama at Gare du Nord on March 26, which se for the di goodbye at the ‘incent de Traf- Englishman, that the countess shot and wounded both him Reports were that De “#8 the more Tinton bed announced his intention breaking off his. aad with her. still pending “Ohio Farmer’ magazine and the New York Central y, Amarillo, he igs, altho rre ow | e neared Black in thy in leome their} for aj 1 pace, crowds | | Com- ur north | Denver Mont.,! the vorce, | out 1 $440 STEPS URGED TO PREVENT OUTBREAK OF WAR ' PASTOR'S TALK | — AT FRISCO MEET IS STARTLING | | Much Discussion Expected as) Result of Ann Arbor, Mich., a STATESMEN AT LEAGUE MEET ~ WANT ACTION | Reported Attitude of Soviet | Russia Inspires Fear of Another War } {i sl || |MAY CALL SPECIAL MEET |Another Session of Locarno Treaty Powers Said to Be Probable Geneva, Switzerland, June 14 | — Statesmen attending the League of Nations council meeting here are re- ported increasingly convinced | thab the time has imperatively arrived to + take preventive steps to avert an outbreak of war in Europ Fear of such an eventuality i | by the reported ttit | Russia following the (A) breaking of diplomatic relations by Great Britain and the assassination of the soviet minjster to Poland. In southern Eur. Ope another situation presents itsel through the bi la tween Jugo Sla The Associated Press learns tl Germany has virtually been brought over to the camp of those powers. favor warning Russia against ¢ jtinuance of her alleged propaganda | abroad and terrorism at home. Her husband (below) threatened to} kill her unless she poisoned Clifford Cox, her first cousin, Mrs. Dorothea Ww Pane related ina d cout bair- Nature of Warning If this warning is delivered jointly by the powe: hich is a possibility, rded as a menace to but will be drafted om he viewpoint that Europe can- . another war and that the powe sare united in the sense that any agressor is the enemy of all. Reports of a possible international conference, to con the mou id boy's a the bov died of ne Walser home, | sider Russian | problem, with Soviet delegates in- vited to attend, are unconfirmed, but a German spokesman said this morn- ing that another meeting of the La- carno treaty powers between now and the September session of the league assembly was within the range of probability, provided today’s second meeting of the foreign ministers did not attain a complete agreement. The object of this special meeting would be another and more general review of the European political situation. NEW TERROR IN RUSSIA 1S RUMORED IN LONDON London, June 15.—{?)—Rumors of yp? new terror in Russia, with numer- FLYERS ALIVE Quebec, June 15.—(By Canadign Press).—It is J unofficially reported here today that the French ous summary executions, wholesale pobsticwx E drastic military prepara- aviators, Nungesser and an impending declartion of Coli, have been found Ht I Me and cane of socal re “jet a crs fleeing from Moscow, are curren alive. The information London. They emanate from War- came frem the River |{saw, Riga and other centers which are’ notoriously given to circulation of anti-soviet’ reports, and whether they are based on facts eould not be substantiated from an independent reliable source. It is said that a posed on all tel Bend district through an employe named Balir in the district north of the Saguenay River, and was contained in a telephone trict censorship ms from Rus: : . accounts for the inability to con- message to the man’s m the sensational stories, which mother, who lives in among other things, of “mass Quebec. utions,” in many parts of the ion of ‘soviet socialist republics, including Vladivostok, the Caspian region, the republics of south Rus- |sia and Moscow and Leningrad. DEMS REJOICE People Panic Stricken seribed as panic stricken, with re- rvists being called: to the colors. According to a Warsaw dispatch to il the Daily M these preparations are due to “expected war with Po- land.” | Among other reports of alleged \terror is one from Helsingfors, Fin- land, which asserts that the Finnish general Elvengren, one of the 20 whose execution was announced of- |ficially at Moscow several days ago, | after the assussination at Warsaw of the Russian Envoy Voikoff, was ac- tually put to death sometime ago, |after undergoing a scries of tor- tures, from which he became insane, It is impossible to obtain yerifi- cation of this and similar stories. A dispatch from Riga to the Daily Mail tells of the shooting at Moscow All Republican Officials Oust-! ed in Louisville By Ap- peals Court Decision Louisville, Ky., June Democrats of Louisville son county, who fo have not had the opportuni ister other emotions than that ‘ora appeintment, staged a ” cele- bration here last night day as a result of the decision of the|armies and says that more than 100 Kentucky court of appeals which in| persons have been shot in reprisal effect ousts 58 Republican city and|for the assassination of M. Voikoff. county office-holders from their} “This new terror,” the correspond- chairs. jent adds, “has more than doubled Hundreds Parade the number of suicides in Moscow, Hundreds paraded from Democratic |where there now are from 10 to 15 boadaiarens past the city hall, where | daily.” Xhey howled their glee while automo- * hile sirens and horns sounded. The| ‘REIGN OF TERROR’ din throughout the downtown sec-| REPORTS ARE DENIED tion was deafening and the streets! Moscow, Russia, Junel5—(P)—Dis- were densely packed with celebrants, patches from Warsaw and other cen- and onlookers. |ters published abroad reporting a In 10 days Louisviile will have| reign of terror in Russia were char- for the first time in as many. years| acterized by official soviet circles to- a full slate of Democratic office hold-| day as “sensationalism and rot.” ers. Although there are less than! There is some tension here due to 100 elective offices affected, the ap-| the continual war talk indulged in by Pointment of the successors to those| the press; otherwise things are nor- ousted will involve several thousand | mal. ee * Decembor,.° 101%) both Boys Smuggle Three Aliens Across River branehes of the government, city and county, have been in the hands of | the Republicans, , Gavermnr to, Name. Maroc Grand Forks, N, D., June 15. —()— Juvenile competition kicked the bot- j tom out of alien smuggling mar- ket and the price reached a record Governor W. J. Fields, Demoerat, will appoint a mayor and 44. other! low at International Falls, Min: United States-Canadian border officers and:a county judge and two port of entry, Foon y, when two 13-year- 15.— and Jef vote en in a/special election to be held in November. The court of appeals muling re- versed a circuit court decision in the! election contest on the grounds of “insidious ¢onspiracy,’ in the 1925 magistrates. These officers will serve until their successors are chos- old Canadian boys ro' three aliens. across the river from Canada ports, | Two of the al aT aS ein? t~ Justice Court Kelly Whitaker was sentenced to serve 30 days in jail and pay ss sar of $50 and costs by Justice Peace Roland H. Crane Tetisy ‘after he: had been found boys Canada third lie was @ citizen of Canada, All three are being held by United States immigration authorities and will be deported. The two yo smugglers are being held, but up to the present time no mr iyggebiienst of ugh De Teeovering from his wound, prosecute, their case has been made, Paty guilty of fornication. He pleade4| to information issued trom pee lsswwlgration district nct guilty when arraigned and de- manded a trial. i” fice of today. This price was $1 per election. ors Bee TE wee seer fo re ve broukktia By the to.