The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 19, 1928, Page 10

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PAGE TEN BANDITS GET. $20,000 HAUL Rob Father and Son of Unset | Diamonds and Rings on | Highway 1 ( | Big Lake, Minn, June 19—?)--| Three bandits held up J. W. Mark| and his son, Charles, of St. Paul} Monday afternoon and escaped with | jewelry worth $20,000 while the men were driving on a highway between | here and Clear Lake. | According to the elder Mark, no| insurance was carried on the) jewelry, which con dof unset} diamonds and rings. | The two were driving west, en! route to Fargo, when three men in| another automobile held the | at the point of guns. 0 men leaped to the M and forced them int while the former the jewelry men’: The men thre over their victin and, while | one thrust reve inst their | sides, a second urned their} automobile around and headed to-| wards Anoka, wh third bandit | drove Mark's anto When three mil the band whether they had jewelry on the persons. When they replied “No they searched the automobile of St. Paul men and found sev small pouches. Then they searc the elder Mark and took another | 4,, pouch from him. ln Before removing the blanket from! [4 the men, the bandits parked thei own automobile in f: i car so that the licens on the Brule river near Su summer vacation. Mrs. Cool left V Coolidges Reach Pine Island Here is pictured the arrival of President and Mrs. Coolidge at Pine Island rior, Wis., where they will spend lidge, who had been ill before the ington, was reported improved upon reaching Pine but was warned’ by physicians to rest. ployes are shown with the President and Mrs. Coolidge, ig the rustic bridge that leads to the island. Secret service men and not be noticeable. Then they for the two Marks, at the point of gu to walk towards Crooked LL: where the men telephoned Sheri U. S. Pratt of Anoka county at Anoka. The bandits headed towards the Twin Cities. Detroit, June 19.—(#)—Intimida- tion of the courts and robbery were a the possible motives sug- gested today for the bombing of the county court building yesterday which caused injury to 14 persons and damage to the building corridor. Inspector John Boyle of the po- lice ho.nicide squad believed the bomb was intended for the munici- pal courts building several blocks away where nine men are on trial charged with extortion in connection BANKER BACKS | THEA RASCHE New York, June 19.—(#)-—} Thea Rasche, German aviatri: obtained the backing of Mrs. J | A. Stillman for a flight to Germany | which she hopes to start within the next few days. eee monoplane ee ecu tar,” has been purchased for her| the bomb and probably ‘mistook the by the banke’s wife. Miss Rasche| county building for the city courts expects to begin her ocean flight) py; g,” the inspector said. from the long smooth beach at Old] ‘Aftcr an inspection of the rem- Orchard, Me., as soon as the weather | nants of the bomb Inspector Boyle conditions are favorable. | said that if it had not been thrown She will be accompanied by Al-| into the corridor from the rest room Brecht Koenemann, German flyer! where it was found by building and mechanic, who will be her navi- men, it would have resulted in gator and relief pilot. Miss Rasche loss of life. is 23 years old and has been flying! “The homb was a powerful one. for five years. If it had exploded in the confined Mr. and Mrs. Stillman, both of| space of the rest room instead of whom have flown with the German|the court girl, plan to remain with her in Old Orchard until the take-off for Berlin Miss Rasche hoped to fly to Old Orchard today with Mr. and Mrs. Stillman following in an.ther plane. “I will do everything possible to help Miss Rasche fulfill her ambi- tion,” Mrs. Stillman said. “She is a wonderful flyer and should make a great flight.” with a cleanerS and dyers war. Of the injured, none was seriou: ly hurt. Police arrested last night, Charles Havasy, Michael Schlanart, and Joseph Kovacs. The bomb was discovered in a by Constable hurriedly picked it up and threw it into the areaway. moment later. Drouth Alleviator’ Is Name Given Dairy- Poultry Exposition Fordville, N. D., June 18. Despite a continuous rain t tendance at the dairy poult train meeting at Fillmore, L Lake and Fordville reached a total! of 1,200 yesterday. ‘The speciai h weather during the and is referred to zs a ‘ Missing Harvard Man Stonington, Conn., June 19.—(AP) sistant manager crey | seen alive two weeks ago. leviator.” | death due to a broken Epennetion of tiv eff apparently a suicide. poultry and eggs body was discovered in thick rapidly in this c to figures annouc Value of the pred here last year was pared to $125,242 th A further evidence o development of this c the construction of a nderbr father, capacity potato war: i Albert Miller & Comp hed been ee cago. ae Hasting Pudding Rotary Serves World, + and belt had served of a noose, President Sapp Says I Minneapolis, June 19.—(P—Ro-| tary has developed from an inspira-| tional organization into one with a tam_ of world — usefuln ur H. Sapp, Huntington, Ind.,| president, told members at the 19th! annual International convention here today. Making the keynote address at the first general business session, President Sapp asserted that Ro-| tary emphasise on service through vocation has had district effect on! present day civilization. | No greater service can be done for the world than by Rotarians! constantly emphasizing higher stan-| dards of business practice, he said.! Boys work and activity in behalf of corned children alone have jus- | } tified the time and effort expanded during the 23 1-2 years of Rotary’s existence, he said. FARGO MAN HONORE! 9.4 | Xperience, quipmenty reci ; T. R. Sloan, Fargo, | " treasurer; and W. T.! Nickels, Dickinson, director. i BAPTISTS NAME HARRIS June’ 19—)—A. M.! i Be secretes of shor Pectlot Home Misise astety, —_———_— 42, investment » missing since near Robbins- sogked cloths over three suspects | men’s rest room on the main floor Frank Stalpa who It exploded a Found Hanging to Tree —The mystery surrounding the dis- ''/ appearance of William Wayne Neff, 'S|of Chicago, Harvard student and as- of the Harvard has been solved with the find- ing of his body hanging from a tree two miles from where he was last Officials h 100 yards off the coun- read and two miles from Cap- ’s Inn, where Neff had he arrived here two way to join the at Red Top where it Nettleton North Dakota Dems Join Special Train in St. Paul Saturday Arrangements have been made by North Dakota delegates to the Dem- ocratic National convention to meet {at St. Paul Saturday and join the {Minnesota delegation which will travel on a special train to Houston, Texas, National Committeeman, R. B. Murphy, said today. . Murphy will attend a meeting of the Democratic national committee which has been called for next Mon- day at Houston by Chairman, Clem Shaver. GOLF BATILE BEGINS “Some stranger was hired to plant? Dallas, Tex. June 19.—#)—The {battle for the 1928 golf crown of Dixie begins here today with ap- proximately 200 link stars entered for the qualifying round of the twenty-sixth annual southern golf championship. RITCHIE FAVORS SMITH Baltimore, June 19.—)—Gover- nor Albert Ritchie of Maryland, withdrew as Democratic presidential candidate and said k~ would instruct Maryland delegation to cast_ its I believe it would; ¥otes for Governor Smith of New have wreccked the building an@#York. killed many people.” ————— This sketch was made from an actual photograph. Brick structures are ruined, too. Stores, manufacturing plants and other properties built of brick are likely to be damaged by windstorms. Hundreds of such buildings are ruined every year. They should be insured. This agency of the Hart- ford Fire Insurance com- pany will see that you are protected against wind- storm losses. Call, write or phone today. MURPHY The Man Who Knows Insarance” 218 Breadway Phone 577 BISMARCK, XD. Dignity marks our Service at all times. Experience hi taught us how serve in such a way to relieve the sit- Wationgof all confu- sion and misunder- standing. ‘We Understané. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bismarck Orator Shakes Hands FARM FIGHT WILL GO ON Kinzer Declares Western States Are More Unit Than Ever in Demands Declaring it was a great show which added impetus to the fight for farm equality, roused new inter- est in it and sent farmers home more militant in their own interest than ever before, R. A. Einzer, Bis- marck delegate to the Kepublican National convention, yesterday re- turned home from sas City. Minimizing talk of a third party, he said that the high spect of the convention was the talk of Robert M. La Follette for the adoption of the minority report on the farm lank of the platform, cslled the eynote speech of Senator Fess an ordinary effort and pronounced Chairman *foses among the finest steam roller engineers who has ever presided. at any convention. “One result of the convention,” said Kinzer, “is that it has brought western agricultural states closer together in their own interests than ever before. The sentiment is gen- eral everywhere in the grain grow- ing states and some of the southern states that the fight for farm equal- ity must go on. The farmers have Congressman L. J. Dickinson of Slemp, a Hoover leader, (right) mammoth Fourth of July celebration, shakes hands with C. Dickinson, a farm bloc champion, seems pleased t Kansas, has been chosen as Hoover's running mate. of the farmers, so why shouldn't the Iowa farm equ: TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1928 Ut vised a system for markin, the 20,000,000 eggs product land and Wales every day. Every egg is to bear a brand, containing the initials of the society and the personal mark of the farmer. The brand won’t come off in boiling, Harding Sits in Grain Rate Hearing has been sitting with the Interstate Commerce Commission for four weeks in the case involving freight rates on grain, Railroad Corhmis- sioner Fay Harding expressed the opinion that testimony given there had no adverse effect on the North Dakota grain rate structure. Harding is sitting in the case as a member of the cooperative com- mittee of state railroad commission- ers which will be consulted the Interstate Commerce Commission Towa, who speaks at the Capital City’s Bascom at the national aie convention. at Senator Curtis, Curtis is a friend ality proponent smile? | not quit. “They made an effective demon- I stration at Kansas City. They had| gathering had been a valuable an audience with Andrew Mellon.| fluence in coordinating the fa He received them cordially but he| influence and that it will make promised them nothing. To my mind the best speech made in Kan- sas City that I heard upon the farm question was by Frank W. Murphy, of Wheaton, veteran leader in the EAGLE ATTACKS MAN voting and declared the convention | when the bird attacked him while self felt in the coming campaign. Bar Harbor, Me.—An American} before he finally subdued the bird. sea eagle is being mounted at Ban- in-|he was driving a truck on the high, rmjroad near here. According to! it-|Hanscom’s story, the bird alighted on the windshield and attacked him when he tried to dislodge it. Hans- com’s face was severely lacerated farm fight. Both before the com-|gor for the Lafayette National BRITAIN BRANDS EGGS mittee of resolutions and on the|Park. It killed with an ax by} London, Jun P)—John Bull convention floor Murphy and Young| Raymond scom of Hull Cove,|is going to know his eggs. The Na- Bob La Folette qualified as able advocates of the farmer. a “There was some third party talk. G It centered about such leadership as Gifford Pinchot and Senator Nor- ris. There is a disposition, how- ever, to wait for Hoover to commit Until you have used FLY-TOX, himself anew on the farm equality issue in the light of the demonstra- tion made at the convention and the third party talk is not taken ser-| iously at this time. “Many farmers left the gathering declaring they will go to the Demo- cratic group if the Houston conven- tion presents a satisfactory plat- form on the farm issue.” John Henkel, of Tuttle, farmer who was among the demonstrators at Kansas City, passed through Bis- marck yestet returning to his home. Henkel declared that the treatment given the farmers at Kansas City had sent every farmer there home more determined than ever to fight on in the cause of farm equality. He predicted their attitude would be indicated in their pride, satisfaction and glorious comfort there is in a house frec from ies and other bugs and insects. Trial sp-cyer free. Fiv=FOx <—— DEVELOPED AT MELLON INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH BY REX RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP you cen ecarcely realize the qa now holds all official endurance and speed records for ‘fully- equipped stock cars—a world’s champion in each of 4 price classes! Here is proof of amazing stopping ability as well— World-Championship speed and stamina proved by heroic, self-imposed tests under official scrutiny and sanction! 514 Main Ave. : Fe Sumgeiee ccey: Be D. Saat Bismarck Motor Com STUDEBAKER The Great Independent _ Safeguards Champion Speed with Super. R BAKER. st a Feet. Safety proved by brake equipment more than twice as efficient as accepted stand- ards demand! ‘4 Studebaker engineering genius has gone still further—for Studebaker’s brake system, even if you were to smash it at vital points, would still continue to serve you . . . Steel bodies, low center of gravity, clear vision, and twin beam headlights are other Studebaker factors of safety. % As a cesult of the combination of quality tions and engineering genius, you can drive any Studebaker or Erskine car 40 miles an hour even when NEW. ‘The oil in Studebaker- Chris Bertsch, Mgr. Sma s Returning form Seattle, where he | GI built cars need be changed but once in 2500 miles. pany Poultry society has de-| before the decision with reference to each of|grain rates in western trunk line in Eng- | terri itory is ann Lindy Takes to Air in Mystery Hop Madison, Wi oo: ine 0} rom La wile President and Mrs. lestination, 33 rs lenn Frank of the University of Wisconsin were at the port to up him leave. Lindbergh was their guest during his stay here to re- ceive an honorary degree from the state school. Get Your Reserved Grand- stand Seats now for Bis- marck’s Big Race and Rodeo beginning tomorrow, Thurs- day, and Friday. Phone 1100 or call at 107 Fifth Street. ' Now Playing AUDITORIUM TONIGHT - 8:30 COMPANY'S OWN TRAVELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF 20 “WINGS” AP Pict ALL SEATS RESERVED Evenings. 50c + $1.10 - $1.65 Tuesday Matinee: 50c - 75c - $1.10 Buy them in advance! BRAKES - APPLIED AT 45 MILES + PER HOUR Pa) >

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