The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 5, 1928, Page 1

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* HALF MILLION NORTH DAKOTA'S THE BIS Bismarck Has Good Start Toward Million Dollar Building Year Anois HAN. ) Id TA PASSES AWAY Several Lives Lost in |[crandoidMan Dies’ ar Southern States’ Storms , ca su aa ee Altonte Has Brilliant ——: : BIG BATTLES OF CAMPAIGN ‘Will Come Here Late in July to Také“Command of Fort Lincoln |Tornadoes and Severe Rain Storms Do Great Amount of Damage — Northern Okla- homa, Kansas and Arkansas Hard “Hit—Rising Streams Cause Worry | Construction Already Under| | ‘ Way Will Cost Approxi- || mately $256,125 MANY PERMITS ISSUED Several New Residences Now IN SERVICE SINCE 1899 Kansas City, April 8—(AP)— Being Built — Business Tornadoes climaxed a general wind and rain storm that caused at ‘least Structures Planned Increased building in Bismarck is ‘Has Been Member of War De- een’ ant pneu) alae at agent office etd oe >, : partment General Staff : lely separated points in the my tne : ior pa vg : southwest yesterday. ks. a Approsimately $200,120 is being Since July, 1925 | First reported in couthern Kan e at the present time on arity twere southeast into Maines buildings in the process of erection! [BM Lieutenant Colonel William A. Al- where a tornado in Washington or stzuctures on which work wilt : fonte, who succeeds Lt. Col. Thomas / | county devastated a large area. One begin in the near future. “ : Indications point. to 0) IN Be | W. Browo 2 commander of Fort) Ge ateurtmen Sane "withthe posibiity. that sumer, bag hed 29 yours of afm | ] | one “ot “the twisters destroyed or summer, at ye : ol more than $1,000,000 will be spent) {cut Col. William A. Alfonte of| Service marked by a rise from the é B] | partially wrecked more than a dozen before the close of a ait ass to ‘command ranks and a brilliant World war ildings at Banks. No one was in- wit cong borage) today| Third Battalion, Fourth Infantry, | Tecord. aecar| ee Another struck near be ect cee Seals Motor pom witi| at. Fort Lincoln, succeeding Liei At the present time a member o! nna, injuring two persons. Tor- Saat a Col. Thomas W. Brown, who will go| the General Staff Corps in Wash- rential rains and hail fell in the erect a one-story fireproof garage!+, Washington to enter the war col-| ington, D. C., Colonel Alfonte will Abilene district, causing consider- at G22 Broadway: | Estimated cost (S| lege. Coloned Alfonte will probably| be relleved.from his present assizn- P/AaT) \sble property damage. p arrive here the latter part of July.) ment and duty in the office of the Hundreds Driven From Homes by 100 feet. Work on the improve- a ment will commence almost at once: Chief of Staff on June 30. He ex: One man perished and hundreds pects to take a leave of abatnce driv f fining June 30 and will not repert| Mrs. Allmand M. Blow of Tulsa,|51° inches of vain fell in half a bang Pro rem et the ; y Okla., daughter of Senator on & Visine s “ -¥- =. } to Fort Lincoln until late in July, -» daughter of re hour at Shawnee, Okls., last night. amount, $26, being spent on the WILKINS MAY accord S. Deneen of ‘Illinois, has been} #7, 4 x? . construction of @ 14-room fireproof ing to word received’ from! clacted regional president, for the| Tat atten by a high wind sscom- him. pani addition to the Prince hotel and One of the first members of the} southwest district of the national fs and bi . | $20,000 will be the cost of one H AVE ST ARTED Anweticen Expeditionary forces, | Junior League. She is a society | °Waana, creaking windows. tory brick garage, . Colonel Alfonte went to France in| leader and past president of the/tess than an hour, water rose to a which is to be built on second { June, 1917, as supply officer of the Tulsa Junior League. height of: five feet in ‘some sections street, as a bus depot for the Inter- yj ee infantry in the now historic - of the city, was houses from state Transportation company. § first division. He was ordered to foundations and fil the streets The Red Trail Oil company will : sii the French front in the vicinity of with debris. One body was: recov- erecta: warehouse on the ‘S00 line Clermont-Verdun in August, 1917, ered and identified: as that of a where he studied the French system mamed Lewis, A Mrs. Campbe! of supply of trapps in the front baby were missing. A torrent three lines, . blocks wide raged in the‘ heart of Was Seriously Gassed | the city. Losses were placed at right-of-way: at- 1101 Broadway at ighting through the | battles of more 000. obit brn eaves AisanaMaree; St. page le J. H. Litt red @ permit t M constinct a. fumily hotel oat Sit cates Take-off ith street at an estimated ex- ture of 96,000, It will have} Seward, Alaske; “April '5.—(#) Lack of news from Pvint Barrow, | yf NGELES pen te cen Work in Several ‘Towathipa vets|msenie cwgeeeeeoey] HAS ANOTHER | ""Snocency (Sa Bere.| Sorets the topict tke world to Opened ‘May 1 was K an estimated cost of $2,000. Lack of News to the Contrary ‘Family Hotel Planned From Point Barrow Indi- J Kansas -oc- ourred. in .the Green- ,and-Butler counties. The wind: estiniated velocity. rage, $100; Spitzbergen, 2,100 miles away, be- B péka when she was buried under the Eieo; feel mei . dwelling, inning at 6 o'clock this. morning KID N A P | NG Bid: d iing:-in-aeverad wae port ate bce pe Se tedden, dwelling a Ww A A fl tg ln Me tent townships will be opened. by the|from numerous points in the south- raven, dwelling, "$4,500; phen) Ae as. known hares Orly, Savarese Burleigh county commissioners on “Tecumseh, a village near raven, a weather would prevent the take-off. eo Tuesday, May 1, it was decided | Shawnee, Okla., also was hard hit 2. $4 Nelo ineilings $5,200; Thomas J.| “tn 9 wooden monoplane piloted by Fiel earege, $160: *faton Rae, ae pepe erie oh ek . sioagneroee i Pare advertiond for will include n is, where more than 50 he tee dwelling, $6,000; Christina Flury,| Pation on two previous arctic ex'| May Have Been That of Boy | grading between sections 3 and 10,| persons were killed in a tornado| fav, dwelling, $475. Siege Sterling township; between sections | April 12, last. Communication lines SE ON WHONS secadees cf the dtretie aeons. Hie Missing a Month 4 and 6,8 and 9, and 16 and 21,| were crippled, but damage in Rock HOUSE ON WRONG LOT h i : Clear Lake township; and between | SP! was light. One building +1,| hopes to find tho fabled lost con- —— r 4 Atlanta, April 5.—A house built “ .—(AP)—The] sections 34 and 35, Lien township. on-the wrong’ lot remains the prop-| fineit, Which most arte ae eee of k nine-year-old Los| Bids will also be asked on the|Were unroofed by \a gale at Las erty of the builder, and must has never been platting ‘Aeasles. bot almost a month ago,i construction of a bridge and the peo gr N. M,, where a severe san considered in any action taken: by Hes Trouble With Radio coupled with reports of a mysteri- gtading of approaches thereto be- | storm. developed. the owner of the lot. | The Georgia! witkins planned to radio his take-|ous automobile bearing the news, tween sections 8 and 17, Estherville! , py aweas WAN KILLED AND Court of A) so ruled in the! off and report the progress of his| paper. body of @ boy about township 5 MEMBERS OF FAMILY HURT wrapped a case of Sikes. The meter radio treet 1 it Work must be commenced by May a court, beld in favor of decision in] DySing'iis I7-dsy stay at Barrow, | to what ee tear tales ia 15 and completed before July 1. Fayetteville, Ark., Apri: 5.—(AP) ard f e tions. cr | teat down two ‘TRIBUNE === : BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1928 HAUNCEY M.DEPEW SUCCUMBS TO PNEUM Today in Congress Senate takes up .McNary- Haugen bill-while Newton pro- posal to permit formation buy- ing pools to combat foreign monopolies comes before house. Senate finance committee continues closed sessions on new tax bill. Cotton and grain heariv proceed before senate agricul- ture-committees, House ioe berm vomecear flood contro! - cultural and immi ration be hl posals, REAL BATTLE ON TAX REDUCTION PRICE FIVE CENTS ONIA Contracted Illness Less Than “Week Ago on Return From Southland NEARLY 94 YEARS OF AGE Served Two Terms in U. S. Senate—Was Once Presi- dential Aspirant New York, April 5.—(AP)— Chauncey M. Depew, pi ie grand old man, who entered polit before Lincoln was mentioned for the presidency and for more than 70 years was famed as an after dinner “Jeet ony at van ™m. ond at is home of bronchial pneumoni : ae ha Le Leal iw wip me dit po a rs week and wou! ve ears Chauncey, M. Depew _ old on April 23. He continned an Chauncey M. Depew, famous poli-|active career until the end, serving tician and after-diner speaker,| as chairman of the board of the New passed y early this morning| York Central railroad. He intended after less than a week's illness with|to attend “he Republican national bronchial penumonia. convention in Kansas City in June. With the exception of the 1924 con- ISIN PROSPECT BADGER STATESeeseecetas Democratic Members of Com- mittee Want Slash of at Least $300,000,000 Washington, April 5.— (AP) —A real row on tax reduction was as- jaured today with the announcement by Democratic members of the sen- ate eee committee that they; would seek a total slash of at least | , Wis. 7 5.— $800,000,000 as opposed to the $200, | Milwaukee, Wis., Apri’ 5.—(AP) On Sunday he was stricken 000,000 maximum proposal by Sec- retary Mellon. Senator Simmons of North Caro- king Democrat on the com- mittee, carried this program to the committee room today upon instruc- tions of a conference of minority members last night, but he faced an tly fatile fight with the Re- Aires of 0 | ining up balay lina, ran po ah its demand $290, down to $200,000,000. Attempts to cut the 13% per.cent corporation tax to 11 per cent. and 11% per cent— accepted be house— by the of Mr. a 12 per cent rate. An early decision -is due in the fevallowed."Obeirmoen Staoot, tend. . allowed. an ‘Smoot, - was demolished and several houses | 9. o¢ the Republican majority, has endorsed the $200,000,000 treasury limitation and his party is expected to ‘support him ij seat the Democratic demand for 000,000. Democrats also have decided to ask for brief hearings to permit the lican ‘majority showed | * terday -in -turning lead Democratic proposals which would have (se a crimp in the lelion that the publicans in in the committee ich fe the i — Counting its losses at one superior court, ee eee sing. uch difficul-|kidnaping coup, executed for the pit? Bey, Dipping Tank tthe |andcat least 10 injured, five serioun- satomobile manufacturers fe saree $8500 for the house or receiving Yesterday police announced they ' next naa a ei ippin; F tank | 13° srounlegton coy seat, began ithat only manufacturers were be- $6500 for the'lot from the builder. tor had been given a letter, mitten by which wil be Tocated ae Stern ‘. Seek ae Propert a Series 2) in hind the propagen i” for, fapeet ict = ee 5 ans and 8) cations are on | three G WwW ther "| stations sending on his wave length. | boy, in Folsom prison, to his wife | at the coainte Andie a office. pied with [earl =, — veale permit others interested in the ea Report — {| "“For these reatons it was admitted-|here, suggesting that enmity. might |" William Josephson was appointed | sine» yvict, Hentan, and. Carroll cost. | bill to come before the committee, —— = ly conceivable that word of his take-| have provoked the kidnaping of the appraiser for 5 Sizer horse taken concern, includ: the chamber of commerce 7 1 ‘7 95 | off might not be rece until the; youth, Walter Collins. up by Klemens Leuske of McKenzie, |“ The tornado, following on the trail of the United States, which has op- Tenure use at 7 a. m. a1 | slow arctic communications systems| Why the youth or his mother) and Emil Long was named appraiser of torrential rains which saved Posed the treasury. ig! yesterday . carry out the word. News from be victimized was not re-| for o stray mare and colt taken up Continued on page two) Sidtt SERVELSATAL, P, tation to7a.m... 4 Barrow, under favorable conditions, | vealed. The elder Collins is serving by, HR right of Sterlin; ( Highest wind velocity ........ 22 0} will reach the outside in about aa long sentence in Folsom prison for 10, 11 and 12, block 11, Gov- * month. c cs robbery. i ernor Pierce addition to Bismarck, The plane in which the avietors| An automobile service station op-| was sold to Frank Evarts for $25 tops 2» A over the top of the world | erator reported to the police that'a| per lot, subject to the approval of is PI g with skiis for making and woman stopped at his place | the city commission. ; : landings on the arctic ice. In the s and he saw the newspa-| ‘Tax adjustments requested by = event the pair are forced to aban- -wrapped body in the car. He) tsabel 8. Little, burn. Lignite don their plane they are equipped | fu four numerals of the li-! Coal company, J. P. Jackson and | | to live off the country indefinitely. |cense number. Mary 1. Mokes.- seeks approved: | ‘CLUB PROGRAM | st Percipitation in State of " Highest we: i Those requested Fred Plienes, | gree} ; Ben McClosky, E. L. Elofson and i # § 3/COOLIDGE REGRETS APPEARANCE OR |i wow sita” 81 20 .05 ' Assessors Named University of Georgia Parad- The board named W. B. Falco @ {<2 INTRUSION OF U.S. GOVERNMENT INTO | 2x. is 38 roe Srp wma she ! POLITICAL CAMPAIGN ‘CHICAGO township. ” - garbed: Group # # 3 : - IN aa fede fellow 33, et pperg : ice and federal of- for Phocnix townshig: Jacob Hi Athens, Ge., April 5.— (AP) — A Le 3 President Gives Personal :At-| tion between police and age Pa Hlcimend townahp: ge Sandee fer wellydirected of eggs, hurled 8 tention Polit Aspect Two announce! verview ix Fr io 07 te’ Political and one local, pa ng peony for Lincoln townshi ‘and. Charles bee 42 22 0 Involved: in -Recent Shooting | of inadequate official protection at |S for Fort Rice township. 48 23 0 ag ba - Chicago polling places next Tuesday, commissioners voted to ai 8 bstmy yon engmaaliad Ly Lng PK oy gh A Federal Dry Agent down the request of, United, States | loa é Ba 24 0 : —_—_ Marshal Palmer Anderson for 500 62 a April 5.—(P)—The Her- | additional deputies to the ald: and Examiner. that | polls. In'the other, Police Commis- President Coo y his aes z al a ie “ members of, St. Paul, April 5.—()—Four a family were burned, one fatally, when kerosene poured into a coal stove caused an explo- sion in the two-room home of Ma- lin Jacobs at Robinsdale this morn- ing. Jacobs was burned about the chest and face, hours afterw: . Changes Says duced house comm: materia! ago by: Alstinet end scticaly .| dies” for the farm situation. made,” and died several NEW FARM AID BILL PROVIDES TWO At the 1888 convention he 99 votes for the presidential nomin- NTROI ation, but withdrew in favor of ‘Benjamin Harrison. His wit in rous- ing political speeches was a feature of conventions and caused him in early days to be known ag “the peach.” tiehta mile servc! two terms as Edge, But Race Is Ex- ni 8 senator, from 1899 to Mr. Depew suffered a chill whil tremely Close coming to New York ast week from —_— Served in U. 8. Senate La Follette Forces Hold Slight 1911, a five weeks’ vacation in St. Peters- Control of the Wisconsin delega- | wi cold and on the advice of Dr. tion to the Kansas City Republican|H. Lyman Hooker, he remained in conventionstill swayedinthe balance|bed at his home here. Monday he between the regular Republicans and| became unconscious and medical the La Follette forces when 80 per'consultants were called in. Tues- cent of the precincts in Wisconsin|dav he improved and regained con- eer rare yatrtng ciaety |e Rtiee a choodilae eda in twelve of the twenty-six con- r & £0 y yesterday, Mr. testa the regular Republicans were | Depew began to decline at 7 Sielock Jeading. Although the La Follette | last night. Members of his family forces held a slight edge, as their} were summoned to the bedside. candidates forged to the front in 14| These included Mrs. Depew, @ s0n, contests, the race was so close that | Chauncey M. Depew, Jr., arid'a niece, change of a few poaeds ee un \Miss Anne Depew Paulding. > a a might displace the An Incurable Optimist It appeared probable on the face | advanced age, Mr. Depew of returns that 14 La Follette dele- 's viewed life ‘oung mai house bill. be pared| #8tes would go to the convention | viewpoint and was an incurable op- ledged to Norris. Of the 12 regu-|timist. J far publicans now holding leads,| Qn his 93rd ee he agreed two are pledged to Lowden, one to|to join the New York Young Repub- Hoover, and nine uninstructed. tican club, because he felt that con- Governor Al Smith had easy sail-| {act with young men was the only ing in the Democratic vote, making | Way to keep in touch with the world’s a clean sweep of the entire state mee RS delegation of 26. le expres: e ef he . would live to be 100 years old. “Useful or not,” he said, “ a P urchase Appeal to body has a right to yeaa tere na Be he can, for me, I am to do Heard by Judge my best to set a escort Conamats Fred Jansonius Here] ing on an announcement of the fed- eral public health bureau service Hearing in the case of George, that man’s spén of life had been in- Purchase, former state’s attorney|creased 15 years since 1870, to 56, of Sioux county who is appealing; Mr. Depew said he believed “com- from a removal order issued by|mon sense rather than monkey Sorlie some time!glands is what is lengthening the ago, begin before Judge Fred | span of life.” Jansonius a: tbe Burleigh county as one stver-innes, a ee iv courthouse Monday morning. veal e Trial.ef the case. had been sched- ‘Continued on page two) uled to start at Napoleon yesterday, 4 but attorneys for both Purchase and the state appeared in court there and stipulated that the case should be transferred to Judge Jansonius’ court here. T0 T AKE OFF AT A HEFTY VOLUME Tokia.—The emperor of Japan has listened to 600 lectures in the | past six , delivered by emi- nent Japanese and distinguished foreigners. He has now orde! that they all be published in book! Fuel Tanks Are Filled—Wet Field: Precludes Chance of Start Before Friday. Washington, April &—(AP)—Th w MeNtary’- {ht yneeoe yest today in from that it changes Made in Measure Meet in Large Part Objec- tions Expressed. by Coolidge When He Vetoed Former Bul, Committee Chairman was described to the @ formal re by of .its ture | ¢, ittee as a-measure differing that.vetoed a year Coolidge now proposes “two separable reme- which have from recent rains and authorities dies—first, loans to cooperative said there was little chance of the sociations at a low rate of inte: heavily laden plane able to as frequently suggested by the sec-|take off for New York fore to- retary of agriculture, Mr. Jardine, | morrow. second, in case of failure of the first] The gas tanks in the wings were remedy to accomplish the purposes | filled with benzo! primed of the act, the avail ol marketing | upon ee) the agreements providing that cost carry them lonees on trantactions authorised te ae the agreements wou! paid by the commodity: whose producers re-| Bremen of a8 to tn es ods Se dlsectat tee fed pane | PN for more than # was moting orderly mar! , | hours ve @ flying radius and, ih the case of tariff-protected 4,500 miles. commodities, making the tariff ef- The, report, drafted by the Iowa Republican by the direction of the agriculture committee and concurred in by 15 of its 21 members, is ex- ed to be followed in a few days one or more mise reports pposing the bill. Mr. Hauges declared that if any restrain the proposed

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