The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 7, 1928, Page 1

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NORTH DAKOTA'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ESTABLISHED 1873 TRIBUNE COOK . SCHOOL GIFTS. ‘ON EXHIBITION Include Electric Range, Per-| : colater, Toaster and Articles of Food WILL OPEN WEDNESDAY Oven Dinner Cooked Daily and Served Students at End of Program More than 100 ed to be given away during the three days of The Tribune in the High sc’ 2:80 p. m. next We are on exhibition in the show win- = of the Hughes Electric Co. re- il store. They include a case’ of assorted Minneopa canned goods and two cans of Princess Patt coffee, given by the Bismarck Grocery and 24 cans of Del Monte canned goods and one can of coffee given by the Finch- Nifhe Hughes Electric Co. i giving e Hughes 0. is away an electric range, percolator ne toaster with two aluminum uten- sus. Logan’s will ive the canned goods used in the el 1 refrigerator demonstrations and Gussner’s Market furnishes the meats used in the cooking demonstra- tion. “The Tribune's cooking school brings to Bismarck one of the na- tion’s most famous cooks in Miss Naoma Rice, home economist widely-known lecturer on domestic science topics. Purpose of The Tribune cooking school is to demonstrate to Bismarck women how to get the best results from their electric ranges and results in cooking food upon them. Other electricai household appliances will be demonstrated. School Opens Wednesdsy The cooking school will be con- ducted next Wednesday, Thursday and Friday beginning at 2:30 p. m. each Miss Rice will give lectures at each session. She will show those attending the school how to get the best results from electric cookery an modern. cooked will ‘be ing the school each day at the close’ of the program. Fach day a comvlete oven dinner will be prepared in addition to a rember of extra dishes. The dinner will consist of beef rolls, lemon jelly salad, rhubarb pudding, chow mein done in a thrift cooker, angel par- fait in an electric refrigerator. broiled sirloin steak and grapenut orange muffins. ‘There will alxo be a demonstra- tion of cake and wastry baking and fich cooking. A Tribune cook book will be presented to all who attend the school. Students in the cooking schoo! will he interested in knowing that the first electric range was built in Bis- marck in 1910 hy Edmond A. Hughes. Tater the Hughes Electric Company, the General Electric Co. and the ing is 812 per BALKE WAIVES FIRST HEARING AR. " through Waddell’ narrowly missing AL ASKS JIM REED T0 HELP New: York, July_7—(AP)—Gov- ernor Smith has called on is chiet ; He Chicage to Ten minutes after the resignation of Chancellor Marx and his ministers of the'German Reichstag, the Social- ist wing named Hermann Mueller, their ‘party leader, as the new chan- cellor. Herr Mueller, above, is the ninth man to hold the post since the establishment of the German republic. WOMEN RESIST DALLAS JUDGE Miss Second Injunction Issued to|{ Stop Feminine Carpenters from Working best Brsonnd) Tex., July 7.—()—Wom- ‘well as men were threatened with arrest here today’ should they attempt to continue work oh a Baptist Tabernacle, con- struction of which has caused the issuance of two temporary injunc- tions and left a pastor in jail. A second injunction was issued when deputy sheriffs who attempted to disperse a crew of women workers, were informed the first injunction only ordered “men” to cease their activities. While the officers Gig eae to court for added been con. in ition of city ordin- ances. DURATION MARK SET BY FLYERS Dessau, Germany, July 7.—(AP) rises German aviators Risticz and ‘s for a duration flight a 8:48 o'clock this after- the s hour mark they had athe record es- June 5 of 59 1-2 hours f dowhtful recognition since Belgian plane had been re- autcu wane af Slight. i G00D NAMED HOOVER AIDE ple qikington, July 7—Wm)—James|Monday Last Day for Fiting |oran to leave headquarters, HUMAN FLY VISITOR TODAY = AMUNDSEN IN DEATH'S GRIP Little Hope Held Explorer Or His Five Companions Are Still Alive SEAPLANES ROAM COAST Airmen Struggle to Rescue Members of Italia Crew from Ice Prison "s Bay, Spitzbergen, July 7.— (®)—Roald Amundsen was 19 days overdue at Ki Bay today. All search for him and his five companions has been fruitless. They have been swallowed up as completely by the arctic as have nine members of the crew of the Italia and scant hope is held that nd of them will ever be found ve. Captain Ravazzioni, flying a large Italian seaplane, searched the wa- ters and islands off the Norway coast for traces of the Amundsen ex- pedition without succes. He flew from Tromsce, where indsen started on June 18, past . Landing at Hammer- fest, the lian airman questioned fishermen concerning the report that a fishing vessel found Amund- sen’s body. He found no one who knew of such Einar - Paal jwedish flyer, rescued shared the fate of five Italia cast- 24, there was hope be taken off soon Shyberg, another Swedish airman, is understood to have effected the rescue by landing in open water not far from where the marooned men are encamped. The cepa ice si ageoed al was making slow 0- werdtee cantare today after hav- ing been blocked by pack ice. FARGO BRIDGE STEPS TAKEN State Highway Commissién Takes Formal Action To- ' ward Construction. Formal steps to begin work on the construction of the proposed bridge between Fargo and Moorhead aie taken by the state highway commis- sion ve. cay. ise tieiasateeve arcecom oF ion declai lor @ program 0: three means to be con across the Red River between the two cities. The resolution provides that the first shall connect first go, with the street on the Moorhead side and the third to connect North- ern Pacific , avenue, Fargo, with Central avenue, Moorhead. ke Ge of Fig? Pgh lag will borne dl way part- ments of the two states. The reso- lution provides that the order of construction of the three . The two de- as to the third bridges will be started BOND PETITION FAILS 10 SHOW E i j i el s it i rf ® F : [ BS ES 7 i if EF i} sr il sft igt L ! if . Rumors that BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1928 SHERIFF BIDDEN TO RENDEZVOUS WITH DEATH ARCTIC HOLDS BLIND MAN AND. SOLDIER T0 GET KILLER REWARD Money Offered for Arrest of D’Autremont Brothers Totals $15,900 WOMAN HAS HER SHARE Six Steubenville, Ohio, Police- men Are Also to Participate in Award Spokane, Wash., July 7—(?)—Re- ward money cffered for the arrest of the three D’Autremont Brothers, who killed four men in a mail train robbery in the Siskiyou mountains in Southern Oregon on October 11, 1928, is to be paid at once, Charles Riddiford, district chief of United State: stoffice inspectors, has an- noun The government offered $6,000 and the Southern Pacific company, the express companies and the state of Oregon posted additional rewards making the total $15,900. Thomas Reynolds, soldier, living at San Francisco, is to $5,300, including one-third of the amount offered by the government for causing the ar- rest of Hugh D’Autremont, one ot syste sti ynolds saw Hugh’s photograph oa poster in San Francisco. Tn February, 1927, he recognized D’Autremont while the two were sta- tioned with the army at Los Banos, P. I, near Manila. Albert Collingsworth of New Bos< ton, O., is to receive $4,150. Col- ree og who is ation net iy in one eye, oy ai ‘> the other two brothers, as workers in a factory in Steubenville, O. M: Emma L. Maynard, Portsmouth, | ated Preface ies metho in by Col ingsworth, wi-: get same amount. Six Steubenville policemen who par- ticipated in the arrest will get re- wards from the government and een) concerns, the amount yet to fixed. The D'Autremonts are serving sentences in the Oregon penitentiary at Salem. AUTO PLUNGE KILIS WOMEN Nice, France, July 7.—(AP)—Bar- oness Heckscher, 85, Born Paddie Manuel of Newark, N. J., and her English companion, Mrs. Annie Sconia, were killed last night when their automobile fell 350 feet into @ ravine near Apremont. Sidney Rusinow, of Fredricksburg, Ohio, the driver, was seriously hurt, but is expected to recover. He was trying to turn on a narrow foothill road when the rear tire burst and he lost control of the car. CHEATS DEATH ON ROCK PERCH Washington, July 7.—(AP)— Herbert Lugenbeel, marooned upon a rock in the Potomac River rapids ‘when his canoe overturned yesterday afternoon was rescued today after having spent more than 12 hours clinging to his uncomfortable perch. Cast upon Se coe “2 four p. m. yesterday Lugen! clung to it until after 5 o'clock this morning. taken off he was apparently none the worse for his experience, going directly home and to ted. MONK KILLING NOT CRUELTY Hicksville, N. ¥., July 7—@)—A butler who shot and killed 2 monkey stood acquitted of a charge of to animals. Fel Eolonaa who was employcd at the Brookville summer home Mr. and Mrs. Verner Reed of Den- ver, killed the animal on June 28 after it had escaped from en nage: jess, of |chief e iTHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . Textile Strikers Picket Bedford Mills This scene at the New Bedford, Mass., textile strike, the largest that has occured in New England in six shows why the attempt to open this mill failed. Seven thousand strikin; et lines surrounding all the mills. A few non-union workers were fF textile workers moved along taken by motor car into this plant, the Nonquitt, but the plan soon was abandoned. SEA SEARCHED FOR BODY OF LOWENSTEI N Airplane Door Tests Disprove Accidental Fall Theory; May Be Alive 7.—(AP) — Discus- ry of Captain Al- Lowenstein’s death by a fall lane into the sea went on_apace . Efforts to find his body at the point where the crew of his plane and its other occupants assert he fell into the English channel through accidentally opening the exit door. net e the plane have been futil ilot a spot in a tug in a fruit Pests made at Le the s search. Bourget air- drome, Franee, to determine wheth- er it was possible to open the door of a plane in flight showed it was not easy to do etn § a plane which Lowen: the motor running at full mechanics ilar to that from disappeared with force found that the air pressure was 80 great that the combined strength of the. two men was st sufficient to open the door wide enough to per- mit one of them to pass tl Yet friends that he often opened the door of ugh it. of Lowenstein maintain his plane to look out over the sea and the landscape. Rumors that the whole affair was - gigantic joax were circulated in 0 ers’ office: ind other concerns 1B interested in dealings of the stock exchanges of London, Pa and Brussels. One su; that Lowenstein never HOOVER QUITS CABINET POS io) Berlin mn wi fee Croydon. T July iLing tare] : tt, | vices to the Associated Press. from the cabinet, effective ident Coolidge’s pleasure, was ceived at the summer re- White House Ina telegram dispatched to the commerce today, President to land west to Alto, Calif. e Mr. Coolidge extended his invitation following receipt of a letter from Mr. in which the latter indicated that he would appre- to call on the way west. x ition =" HOOVER WANTS Cribbage Board Used as Weapon of Escape Superior, Wis. July 7—(AP)— Wisconsin and Minnesota police day were searching for three fu; tives who escaped from the Douglas jai after overpowering night. The three in and David Cooley of St. Paul, and Lloyd Smith of ‘Eau Claire, : 8 Peter Nadolsky, night jailer, who knocked unconscious by the men, that one of the prisoners threat- ened him with a gun while the others beat him with a heavy cribbage SUICIDE JUMP FROM VESSEL 1S FRUSTRATED Prominent Society Man Res- cued After Leap from Ocean Liner in Fog New York, July 7.—(AP)—The steamship Rochambeau, due here Monday from Havre, has among other passengers, Morton Hoyt, member of a socially prominent Washington family, who jumped overboard off the Grand Banks andj ¢ was rescued in 20 minutes. At 8 o'clock last night when the ship was plowing its way through a dense fog, the cry “man over- board” was raised and it was learned that Hoyt had plunged into the Atlantic. é The vessel immediately turned in a complete circle and started back along its course with Captain Leon Rollin directing the search from the bridge. Within 20 minutes Mr. Hoyt was located and heard crying for help. A lifeboat was lowered and he was picked up completely exhausted from his struggle with the waves. ae He said he regretted jumping overboard and asked that he be allowed to sleep. The jump and the rescue were described in io ad- Mr. Hoyt is the son of the late Henry M. Hoyt, who served as solicitor general of the United States in the Taft administration. Eleanor Hoyt Bennet and Nancy Hoyt Wynne, are his sisters. Mr Hoyt .married —Jea inkhead, Gaughter of the late Senator Bank- of Alabama. A brother, Henry M. Hoyt, Ji rtrait painter, committed suicide in New York in 1920, GENERAL RAINS ARE REPORTED Light showers in most North Da- kota towns and cities and a heavy downpour at Dickinson were report- ed the 24-hour period ending ‘B o'clock Se Pa gainrrn a places ported clour weather ear! this ee ‘illiston it was bay raining at 8 ge as preci reported fol- lows: Pera 17; Bismarck .18; Dunn Center .' ndale Washitgton, July 7.— (AP) —|Fainfall of more than an inch. — from eastarn states were| Jack Pickford Rallies National Chairman . from Bad Heart STAGE DIVORCE SUITS THROWN OUT OF COURTS Bright Lights’ Folk Will Not Change Chicago Into Reno, Judges Say Chicago, July 7.—)—Chicago is not to become a Rialto Reno if Cir- cuit Judges Lynch and Sabath can prevent it. In the courtroom of each of these judges yesterday an actress’ suit for divorce was dismissed. The pe- tition of Miss Au Maple of “Sunny Days” was ruled out for want of equity when Judge Lynch found that the actress was not a legal resident of INi Mrs. Helen Cressman Carr’s peti- tion to divorce Alexander Carr, who was featured ‘n the “Potash and Perlmutter” plays, was dismissed on her own motio~. Judge Sabath had withheld action in the case pending an investigation to learn if Mrs. Carr was entitled by a year’s resi- dence in Illinois to sue here. In her etition Mr: arr, who now is in lew York, claimed to have lived in Cook county (Chicago) four years. Miss Maple’s action against George E. Griffiths, New York broker, charged desertion. formerly a film and bathin, asked a divorce on the same NEGRO PORTER ASSAULTS GIRL Spokane, Wash., July 7.—(AP)— Ellis _ Williams, negro | charged with having attempted an attack upon a young white woman Northern Pacific passenger yesterday, was lodged safely in jail at Ritzville, Wash., today. ports to the Chronicle that a mob of 500 were storming the jail in an effort to lynch the negro were denied by Sheriff Shafer, of Adams county. The sheriff said there had been no disturbance. LAKE CARRIERS ADJUST RATES New York, July 7—()—A com- promise agreement been reached by official# of northern and| th TWO SLAIN AS RIFLES BARK IN FEUD WAR Night Call Rouses Officers from Bed to Ride Into Hills Ambush POSSES SEEK KILLERS Slain Men, Who Were Active Against Moonshiners, Are Found Shot in Back Harlan, Ky. July 7—(AP)— Rifles barked near here today and when the echo of the last shot had faded away in the heart of Ken- tucky’s mountains, famous as the scene of countless feuds, two men lay dead and a third was missing and believed killed. The dead are: Floyd Ball, 32, Sheriff of Harlan county and father of six children. John Hensley, 45, a deputy sheriff. Tom Holes, 48, a deputy sheriff, is missing. The sheriff received an anony- mous telephone message late last night at his home here reporting that a man was terrorizing passers- by on the Mayo trail, 12 miles west of Harlan. Sheriff Ball had Hens- ley and Holes join him and left to investigate. ‘At 3 o'clock this mornit - sons residing near the pees ot the tragedy heard a fusillade of shots. Investigation revealed the bodies of Ball and Hensley. Each had been shot three times in the back. A large posse was nized here Hel sore lle of the night. Several yun men were scouri the mountains for the layers. The slain officers had been active against moonshiners. INSECT HORDE BESETS TOWN Mosquitoes Annoy Petting Parties, Chase Picnickers, Halt Camp Meetings The good old summer time has brought to Bismarck and all the country along the Missouri river from Fort Benton to Jefferson Bar- racks, St. Louis, a pest of unbidden e they he Culex Pur ey are the Culex family, better known as mosquiteen: Millions are here and other millions are on the wa Daily showers and daily sunshine over a two weeks’ period have propa- gated billions more in the stagnant waters and marsh land along the en Muddy. losquitoes made of the recent Chautauqua here a time of torture. Petting parties have been driven from the parks. Picnics seek the winds of the I c ire protection agai amp meetings have been ‘abandoned. P _Hundreds of deer are driven nightly to the river to escape their torture. Fishermen wear Stanley insect nets. Guards mounted at Fort Lincoln go on duty with helmets draped with mosquito The somiitien fe - excessive rains and favorable conditions for breeding. It will be abated with cooler weather and high winds. WORLD FLYERS LEAVE MOSCOW Moscow, July 7.—(AP)—Eseorted by two Soviet Fas abe H. Mears and Charles A ee a on 28 record, took off pte about 430 cargo carriers on aj mile southern 35 cent differential as freight rates on lake cargo trom northern and southern bitumin- ous fields, it became known today. Northern roads had fought for 45 cents differential while southern carriers had held out for 25 cents. The recent rate cut by northern carriers increased the differential from 25 ents to 45 cents after the rate war lasting sever:! weeks, and will expire at close of the year. At that time, or after the suj court rules on the legality of hy southern songs Jere serine 18 ace the order cf the Interstate cal cut }80n, ADDRESSDATE Puperiot, wise day. Toe juest a linnesot sc oo preparing to deli short ten pee at Cannon Falls, tee 25 . The occasion will be the naveiling

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