The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1927, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE HAGEN FREED | se et ~TBISMARCK MAN FROM PRISON: . “(> DIES THURSDAY Former Head of Fargo Bank | Services for. “Matt Pillon, In- ly Be Released Aug. 15 Because | jured in aay of Poor Health ¢ masts wit “FRIDAY; AUGUST 19; 1987 Only at Our Curb —Will you find a modern BOWSER, : accurate. | meagure pats, in Bismarck. We paid twice as much’ for these pumps as the ordinary “eye measuring” pump would cost, because-we wanted to serve you accurately, as well as promptly. ‘ Shell 400 “Extra Dry” Gasoline Served. through this MODERN EQUIPMENT, curb, by men “Johnny on the spot” to wait: o1 night, méans a SERVICE you'll like. Shell 400 “Extra Dry” Gasoline costs more to .produce, but the price to you remains “ae same. Change to Shell. Lahr Motor Sales Co. |Williston* and Minot, which had 72. Bismarck had a maximum of 69. jLangdon, Dunn Center and Bottineau, {with the mereury standing at 67, were jthe coolest places in the state. Alleged Swindler to Return to Iowa Fargo, N. D., Aug. 19.— (#)—De- tails of the gigantic swindle scheme alleged to have. been. conducted in Towa by Ivan.@. Lond Wednesday, night. here, were told today Waterloo, lowa, the H. J. Hagen, former president of the Scandinavian-American bank of Fargo and sentenced to two and one half years in the state penitent for accepting deposits in an insol bank, is free He was released from the prison here August 15 on order state pardon board. A_ physicians report that he is in poor mental an physical condition, coupled wit! fact that his wife recently suffe a paralytic stroke and were said responsible for his In June the board refused , but Matt Pillon, 58, who suffered a fractured skull when he fell from a near: Beulah a week ago, died y afternoon at St. Alexius’ Where. He had heen a resi- Bismarek for 21 years. Mr. Plllon was born in Germany December 11, 1869. sides his widow, 3. A. Lundberg of Spokane, 8. Bussélmeier, North Be . Frank Gilrain and Mrs yde Bush of Sacramento, Cal; Mes. nes Larson of Mandan; Herman | Pilon of Rapid City, SDs and Mar- | ion and Car! Pillon of Bismarck. He | also leaves a brother and a pr in Minnesota. Funeral, serviees are to b¢. held Sunday afternoon at 2:30 from Webb :Brothers funeral parlors. Mr, Pillon was prominent in work | of the Odd Fellows lodge, having been at one time noble grand and| having held other offices. He was also active in the work of the Bis- marck Trades and Labor Union, Oshkosh Girl Will. Meet Californian in Tourney Finals t our accessible you, day and History of Case Pardon of Hagen closes a case that | was begun in May, 1922, when he was | indicted on a charge of accepting di posits in the Scandinavian-Amer ne when it was cl insolvent. February, ide by Judge | of Napoleon. Hagen was re in a remark from the bench, never gives interviews. Hello, Bill:—The Elks club is open for you every evel | after 6 o'clock. Come up a make it + your hei headquarters. i Try Our r Modern High Pres: sure Greasing Service For All Cars, — Prices Reasonable. Short Stop Station... Londergan admitted his identity. He had been registered at a Fargo hotel under the name of “G, G. Logan.” : The, postoffice inspectors called upon him at his room in the hotel, saying they wished to talk to him. When they informed him that they were federal officials, « Londergan said, “I thought that was it.” He made no resistance to arrest. Easy Divorce at $5 Cost Is Judge’s Idea Chicago, Aug. the had closed indictment George M. McK On Nov. 13, 1923, indicted on the same charge by a Cass county grand jury. He was tried in Muy of the next year and sentenced to two and one-half r in the state penitentiary by J W. J. Kneeshaw, June 2, 1924. Aj peal was taken and a stay of ceedings entered. The appeal not been effected in May, 1925 the state moved the supreme court for its dismissal. defendant then presented uffidavits tending to show the ‘loss during the preceding He Lake Geneva, Wis., Aug. 19.—(P)— Bernice Wall of Oshkosh and Mrs. Harry Pressler of Los Angeles will’ meet here tomorrow in the finals of the women’s western golf champion- ship. Miss Wall entered the finals by de- feating Mrs. Elaine Kosgnthal Rein- hart of Dallas, while Mrs. Pressler February of a portion of the sten ographer’s notes of testimony taken at the trial. The supreme court denied the mo- ' disposedwt Mrs. Dave Gaut, Memphis, | two and one. \Spector who has been tracing Londer- gan throughout the country. Londergan, who was ‘arrested un- der an Jowa indictment charging him 19.—(AP)—Quick divorces obtamed at a $5 rate might be as equitable to everyohe concerned as the present method of court hear- ings, in the opinion of Judge Joseph Capital Funeral Parlors ~ 216. Main Ave. Embalmer Phone ‘Day ot Night——22-W Jos. W. Tschamperiin | Druggist Arrested with using the mails to defraud, in- dicated today that he would furnish bond of $8,000 when he reached Iowa. Papers ordering his removal to that state were to be prepared today by As Sequel to Death of College Student Inited States court officials here. Londergan probably will be taken to — Chicago, Aug. 19.—()—As a sequel to the death of John Harper, 21-year. |/owa some eascdtienbstbans: dt ald college student attributed to! Sai poison liquor, Matthew McAnany, a/"" Wien he was arrested hy Postot druggist, at whose store the liquor] ¢, 'y ice Inspector M. I. Ryat, St. Cloud, was alleged to have been purchased. | His, peatty| nee yesterday was held to the fede grand jury on charges of violating the prohibition laws. Seven: others, including employes of McAnany, also were held in con- nection with ale of the liquor. Charges agai John Huck, son of former. Congress Woman Mason Huck, who clerked in of McAnany’s stores, were di Young Harper died during a liquor | party several weeks ago. | |Fair and Warmer’ Still Prediction | | What ho! the sun is out again to give; To fill each heart with glee. concerts in \Portugal, and was $0| *No more must one plod home successful that it has received other! through ‘rain ‘ " requests from abroad, among them| OF ftomt the dark clouds flee, — | from as far away as Boenos: Aires} The band, etd tion and allowed more time for the defense to prepare a statement of the case. In July, 1925, the defendant made a motion in the Grand Forks district court for new trial on the grounds of loss of the reporter’s notes at. the first trial. The motion was denied. In May, 1926, the state again moved for dismissal of the appeal and this motion was granted July 1926. Restraining Grder Granted The attorney general's office then net Sept. 10, 1926, as the dute for re- sentencing. Hagen instituted suit in Ward county district court and pro- cured from Judge John C. Lowe of Minot, an order attempting to re- strain the attorney general and the clerk and sheriff of Grand Forks county. ds well as the warden of the! penitentiary from further proceedings in the matter. The attorney general's office then applied to the supreme court for a writ vacating and annulling the Ward yelggcounty district court proceedings. he writ was granted and Hagen was sentenced to serve two years fe months, in the penitentiary, Oct. > 19 Daredevil Bulldog Plays Among Griders Atlanta, Aug: 19 19.—(AP)—A pet B. David of the Chicago — superior court. | ‘ “A ji hears 40 or 60 cases ‘a dig.” ons Judge David. “‘He, can’t § ei ebagbe in all of them. The situa- should fix it so that two people who are tired of ate together can go to the county clerk, pay $6 and get a divorce, Judge David expressed his opinton| ———— Auto Supplies We are ‘offering, ‘beBinning Saturday, : 100, carburetors for Fords, each ,...-.-., $i 95 Get yours while they last, TIRES and TUBES 29x4.40 Tires ee 6.00. and up . 30x4.95 Tires ...... 1240 and. up 31x5.25 Tires ........ 14.40 and up 30x31% Grey ttibes ..:....,...-.$1.40. 30x34 Red tubes .../../...... 1.70 BISMARCK ACCESSORY & TIRE CO. Next to First Guaranty Bahk PHONE 944 PHONE. . North Dakota We Change Tires Anywhere, , Baldwin, President Coolidge, with his ten-gallon hat and buckskin gloves, is shown here on his favorite mount, Mistletoe, just before starting on a gallop over the Black Hills of South Dakota. The president rode! to Mt. Rushmore the other day for the ceremony marking the beginning: of work on the Jefferson-Lincoln- | Reosevelt Memorial, which is to be executed out of ‘ative rock by Gutzon Borglum. This excellent NEA photo is one cf the few ever taken of President Coolidge on horseback. | they do, or do not, owe the govern-! among the city’s institutions to be Every Grad | MAYAN | Fecsiinocs moneys Mat at Adee Go| loved bg Absccattaane After Fifty’ Years) not. |" Recently it was invited A number already have been! Montpelier, Vt. Aug, 19.—(AP)—, mailed. Several protests have been | Seminary has unearthed! received from taxpayers who ob- | js in connection with its jected to what they regarded as an| mmencement. | t they had rendered | One is that of the class Others, however, | years ago, graduated in 1877. e balldog is always beside F. H.) a single member of the class is dead, Ked the bureau for the no: Brockman, Birmingham, Ala., fore-|so far as can be ascertained, man of a structural steel gang,! though all are in the vicinity while he works daily on the high| three ‘score and ten. skeleton of an Atlanta skyscraper.| . The other record is supplied by “Babe,” Brockman’s dog, not only | ‘he W. H. Nelson family of Ry goes to work with her master and accompanies him to the heights of the structure, but also does dare- devil stunts. The crowds that watch the workmen from below} ™may see the dog running along narrow steel paths scores of feet above. ground, or scampering across the chains of the huge cranes which swing the girders into place. “I took Babe up first when ane ‘was a pup,” Brockman says. took to high altitudes and ‘danger. ous girders like a duck to water. She enjoys it, and I like her com- panionship. I wouldn’t sell'her for agency ec up on your Wsur needs. . ‘MURPHY A slow rise in the temperature to- {night and Saturday ‘is the latest tid-| ing of Joptimism put forth by the federal’ Weather bureau, and it is a forecast which is greeted with joy by | Bismarckans. Marking a welcome change from the damp weather which: prevaited earlier ‘in the week, reports to the weather bureau this morning showed that every point had clear weather, with no rain, The highest tempera- tures were reported at Pembina,) 88 pieces, has been, cond ’ Professor Ricardo Villa.! It has given more than 2,000 concerts in the various parks of Madrid, and the sight of the uniforms of the play- ers always attracts large crowds. The | musicians are carefully chosen, in! competitive examinations and re-, | ceive salaries ranging from 3000 to 5000 pesetas annuall: of tices, which leave them assured that] i -|no error has been or will be found. “ot And the scheme saves the bureau em- | ployes a lot of cori dence. ‘Editor P Plans Hunt in Remote Siberia! valedic:'| Hastings, Neb. Aug. 19. ar)—| torian of her nether) Adam Breede, editor and publisher of | ictorian this ‘ears the Nelsc ecg and a {tion. In 1924 Effi \Stage Group Quits s have sent four ‘on fo the institn- y Notice Attar 16 years of Shoe Re- on Broadway, the | Bismarck, Biamarck Shoe Hospital has to Third street, op- posite the Bismarck Bank building. HENRY BURMAN - * 407 .Third Street 216 Broadway. . Phone 577 BISMARCK, N. D. | the former brewery, which is to be! | converted into a theater seating 250! | spectators, with classrooms, work- | shops and executive offices. _The “laboratory theater’ is de-| ithis year it was the brothe: »j ventured in most of the world’s r New York, Aug. 19.—(AP)—Prohi-| and the fourth sister, Edna, is presi-} mote corners, plans a trip to north-| bition is a real boon to the American | bear, | ment in the theater, had its most Breede has followed his ¢globe-| successful season last year in an Scare Honest Payers; hobby for yew houses his newspaper contain more) forth in a remodeled brewery. Washington, Auge 19.—(AP)—Many! than 100 big game specimens brought| The beer hall is coming down to ——_——_—_. |a start of apprehension this sum- $250 Oil Painting mer when they receive franked en-| Madrid Band Scores Found Worth Fort World Wide — 9 OFTUNE | contain the bad news have been found in the ‘word of a critic that a ‘payers will be notified, as soon as| r he hased for $250 ete their 1926 returns are examined, that| Madrid, where it is virtually alone, * aod times that much. work of Eugene Delacroix, early nineteen century French artist, ,000, - Saffron obtained the painting a New York agent, and he Saloon For Brewery sister, Alice Loni t honors | the Hastings Tribune, who has ad-| | dent of the class of 1929. western Siberia to hunt the rare| Laboratory Theater. The four-year- epee black fox and the White Russian old or; ition, dedicated to experi- Income Tax Notices crotting and his auditorium which was once an old home here and the building that beer hall. This season it is to hold y a of the 3,500,000 a vers! y fj make way for a movie house, and) all the money in the world.’ | may—but shouldn' subjected to} + Bey thastrs has leased for years | velopes from. the bureau. They will recipients’| Madrid, Aug. 1 St. Louis, Aug. 19. (AP)—Max | tax returns, | band of Madrid, Saffron, St. Louis art dealer, has; Under a new procedure, all tax: the from a handed to a thous- Maurice Goldblatt, ed ty art cfitic, holds the canvas to be the ey it has been lost for years. ee ie value at between i and $250, that at the time neither felt it } much value. It is entitled “A fed 2 Before the Temple in Jeru- ” and shows Christ surround- et *his disciples, SE oe scores of Women, soldiers and slaves ig a si flagged court. tt said the style is un- bly that of See gigs NNINGHAM E

Other pages from this issue: