The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 3, 1927, Page 1

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MARUK TRIBUNE TF BLAST MAY PROVE FATAL T0 GOV AL SMITH MUCH REMAINS TO BE Republicans Expect to Organize SWEETHEART IS BELIEVER OF Congress. Without Opposition) UNDER ARREST enseerrme Pare ra Te Ls - laws and an; ‘ENFORCING LAW| "7 x ; Holds Citizens Should Not Be Condemned, However, For Expressing Views TALKS TO WOMEN VOTERS Hates Part of State Constitu- tion, But Will Keep Oath to N Sustain It - Albany, N. Y., Dec. 3.—(?)—Gov- ernor Smith sees no reason why any. citizen or group of citizens should be conlemned for expressing Farmers Increased Efficiency — Op- poses Idea of: Government Entering Into Agricultural Busineds — Washington, Dee. 8—(AP)—The tion of the farmer will ‘cease to @ problem. “While farmers thethesives are position to the 18h amendment and|ducing their costs of the Volstead act. But he is for en- forcement of laws and he regards the Volstead act as part of New York state law notwithstanding re- peal of the state enforcement act. Breaking the silence which has characterized his attitude on mat- ters of national importance since he has been prominently mentioned for th@ Democratic nomination for nee vernor last night told the New York state league of ‘women voters that he had not de- viated in the slightest from~ his] bargaini: earlier opposition to the federal prohibition statutes. Tn maintaining that opposition, he a PP he was not showing a lack of respect for the law but was mere! exercising the right of Am in citizens “to oppose any rt of the constitu- tion with whic! in harmony.” Referring to the many times he had taken the oath to uphold the they are not N.Y, CLOTHIER PACES DEATH FOR MURDER Joseph Lefkowitz: Is ‘Convicted of Drowning Partner sto New York, Dec. 8.—(AP)—A 42- Year-old lower east side clothier faced the electric chair today after heing convicted of drowning his 22- n” Mr. should oduetion to Also, eff should be diminish waste, to lesstn ae producers’ andcon- sume ces, reduce transporta- tion and distribution costs, and to leasen the farmer’s overhead charges by lowerin, burdens an tural credit rmers should be encouraged to “sin open their inin, through cooper- ative marketing, and the res; - bility of the lic in helping to re- price fluctuations due to un- through increased Jardine said, “public Sit ee ‘with them aa er adjustment of mand, made to mai is feerally but opinions differ as to means getting it, the id. ‘Some As Johnston 8 Jol sped #3 i g Li i : F if ie i iy i : FF s DOZEN ORFER 10 PART WITH LEFT BAR | Chicago, Dec. 8.— (AP) — The t,” | market for left ears was bullish to- young day as a d ise farm a year-old business partner on whose | nical life he had placed a $70,000 insur- snce policy, naming himself ‘as ben- éficlary. Joseph Lefkowitz, merchant who was accused of conspiracy with/has Harry Greenberg, 17, and Irving Rubinzahl, 20, to bringing about the disappearance of Benjamin Gold- wtein, was found guilty last night of murder in the first degree. A dary in Brooklyn deliberated seven hours. Greenberg was acquitted and Rubinzahl, who turned state’s evidence, was held for Jrial, He ‘will probably be permitted to plead guilty to a lesser charge. * Pushed Out of Boat Goldstein was drowned in Grave- send bay last August 26, when he was pushefl by Rubinzah! out of a boat in: which Greenberg also rode. Rubinzahl, in this confession, said that he was paid $260 for the crime by Letkowits. contended that Gold- collected. Rubin- , he sald, overstepped bounds of the plot and drowned Goldstein in order to obtain a large ‘ ghare of the money by blackmailing) the beneficiary. rig ar a a 1°, : Greenberg upheld Rubinsahl's 3°F 2¢ aut ¢ ts many of the proposals the} made were fundamentally unsound. ‘The study and discussion devoted to the. question, however, he fee hea i 3 ie tt al ctf ft i 4 L. ge { citi AUT E i i ite REFEREE E ‘Give Once But Enou ; PEOPLE rt ie E & Bee [ hi urned soviet ‘Ruma tad suffered a detent in selection of the date for the next Ri wanted the commission to meet agzin January 10, but the com- mission decided on March 5. Russia, however, will not bolt the disarmament discussio. “Certainly we shall retirn to Ge- neva,” Maxim Litvinoff, tle Rus- sian delegate, saii.* -“We have suid we shall always at- tend. meetings , which ‘ise to bring about disarmament. We are for disarmament first, last and for- ver. Russia had battled to have the disarmament commission meet again January 10 on the ground that the sooner the conference meets the bet- ter. Count von Bernstorff, the Ger- man delegate, supported this posi- tion but wit’. 1: nsistence, In declaring adjournment, Pres- # i ty ident Louden warned that disarma- ment must be built n | on dreams, STATES BANK MAKES PROFIT IN EAST YEAR Bank of North Dakota Audit Shows Net Gain of $336,- 757.10—Deficit Reduced $835,757.10 were real- Bank of North and Profits of the on the capital investment of $2,000,000. Even after deducting $100,000 in interest due on the| bonds issued to finance the bank, @ balance gpg is left to appl: deficit previously state-owned institu- rH Es report, which does not in- clude figures on the bank’s $26,000,- - farm loan business, will be printed so. that copies may be avail- able for members of the legislature when they meet here sion Ji 10, The audit of the farm irtment has not been completed, Lund said, but will make lds material in the finan- showing of the itution. Deficit Is Reduced As listed in the report, last poets. reduced the deficit 3 g aoe mi i Lund points out, represents a return of 16 3-4 per in special ses- eee * * © What the Community. Chest Is ‘Thompson, 8. G. Severtson and R. W. jority in the House—No In- dications That Independents senate, comnfertable mmalorigs with noe & com: » no in- dication, that the in its or insurgents in their ranks are at all inclined to: upset the orderly pre. gram as they were able to do four the hey mate publicans ie ho ve @ paper majori| ly one, with a well organised independent group within their fold, but there is No disposition.on the part of the Democrats to un ‘ke a seizure of the reins in pre-presidential campaign session, Longworth to be Speaker Nicholas “Longworth of Ohio again will be elected speaker of the house and will carry into of- fice with him those who directed the destinies of the party in that body during the last session. George Moses of New Hampshire will succeed himself @s_ president pro tempore of the senate, with all other Republican officers likewise reelected, through the aid, if neces- sary, of a vow 7 Be President rigid the constitutional presiding officer. Once the formalities of organize- tion are out of way, the senate Republican unity come to an end. There will be wide gulfs on practically all of the major issues which will come before the, twa houses and on which a part of the record for the 1928 presidential con- test will be written. rete Une in Senate While the Republican majority in the house is sufficient to insure speedy and favorable action on ad- ministration measures there, it is so slim in the senate that extremely aaah ee will be eerie ee Pract iy every proposal aring the administration imprint. a ized . grou] blican _ indepen: ince of power in the When this same situation ob- tained in the senate four years ago, the independents almost invariably voted with the solid Democratic group to bring about the defeat of many measures and to put under way several investigations which gy Pec oar leaders 0) the inde; ts side with neither Republicans nor Demq- crats, the latter with their’ ranks hol intact would be able to put their own legislative pro- gram. Democratic leaders assert em- phaticaliy that they will undertake make no alliance with the in- — Sawationac Republicans foresee no: difficulty in organizing the seventieth congress. In the senate they will have, if needed, th vote of Vice President Dawes (upper left) in naming George H. Moses (lower right), president pro tem. The Republican progressives, hea by W. E. Borah (lower left), have indicated no integt, however, to balk Republican control. Nicholas| y Longworth (upper right) is destined to bécome speaker of the house again, WESTERN SENATORS DEMAND VOTE ON THREE BIG QUESTIONS THIS SESSION WILLIS BEACH CLAIMS ‘ALIBI Witness Says. He. Was. at Her Home on Day He Is Alleged to Have Confessed Mays Landing, N. J., Dec. 3.—' (AP)—Willis Beach could not have confessed to the murder of Dr. A. WiHiam Lilliendah! October 1 in Baltimore as he was in Marcus Hook, Pa., all that day, a defense witness testified today. A state witness had previously told of the alleged confession in Baltimore. Beac hand Mrs. Lilliendahl are jointly charged with the murder of the woman's aged husband on Sep- and| tember 1! ship of aod Borah of Idaho contemplate no move looking to any such alliance. A. scheme is being considered for the entire city of Rey- kiavik, capital of Iceland, by water from subterranean hot springs. There are 29 volcances on the land, 7 of them still active, includ- ing the famous geyser. ‘The largest halibut ever landed. on the English coast was brought into Fleetwood recently. It weigh- ed 829 pounds, ee gh-for A fense is an alibi and jahl: asserts that the done in her presence by two negroes who robbed her hus-/ howe band. : : Mrs. Helen Parker of Lynwood Heights, near Marcus Hook, testi- fled tod4y that: Beach, whom she called “Uncle Bill,” wai house October 1. This was the day Samuel Bark, circus man, had said Beach confessed: the murder to him in Baltimore. Beach came to the Parker home on September 27, and stayed until October 5, and ‘during that time he never left the house oe #8 each of partici; agencies ; c Fateh ee state- the past two years Independents Stipulate Farm Relief Bill Must ; Be Based on. MeNary-Haugen Mega- ure—Atso Want Courts’ Jur-' isdiction Limited and Ad- , ministration’s Policy in Cen- tral and South America In- vestigated ~ Washington, Dec. 3—(AP)—Tak- ing advantage of their power to de- feat the organization plans of old guard leaders, members of the sen- ate’s western independent Republi- can bloc stood pat today on their demands for assurance that the coming session would bring to a vote three questions which they re- gard as particularly important. Foremost among these was argri- cultural relief. The westerners, ver, did. not content themselves with asking in a general way for farm legislation. On the other i Jai that the bill, which at her| be measure which was passed houses of congress at the last ses- sion, only to encounter the barrier of a presidential veto. The second issue upon which as- surance of action was demanded was @ bill designed to limit the jeiaiie tion of federal courts in the issuance of injunctions; and the third, a res- olution calling for a thorough goit investigation of the administration's icy in Central and South Amer- Tax Bill Nea Meanwhile, the Lamry.| and ; together | a ticipated revenues and expenditures for for which such moneys. will be FOR BOMBING Little Hope Held For Recovery of . 28-year-old . Iitinolg wr ee es vs re a: STOVE BLOWN TO PIECES Man Admits Putting Explesive 9 in Stove. Because, Gist In- sisted on Welding Ottawa, Ill, Dec. 8.—U—While: 2] Tola Bradford, 28-year-old ; school teacher, lay near déath day, moaning in her momenta’. half consciousness the war being held was md of on cl ii ih eet UE 7 HE yl le it & ! i is 5 igs a el E i | Hi Fi FF Le Rg é a if | il} it Hl A i all it BR B is if se ibrek i FE Fr ¥ rf : I

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