The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1928, Page 10

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‘One was a large heart, done in| Li Lo age accumulated in his accounts was! While the home mission board|hopeless condition of agriculture, @ 4 red. flowers, Attached'was. the eopold and eb ready for submission today to al was preparing to show a grand jury half hour to prohibitionists, and the | Goblenz found 4 card: “Al Capone.” The lettering Start Fifth Year) crana jury investigating Carnes’| that Carnes kept purported specula-| remainder of a two-hour talk to en- in the center of the heart was: “My affairs. tions over a period of years fromjdorsement of Al Smith for presi- PAGE TEN —_ - the earnings of Miss Sonia Nordlie ing the farmer he described as“plainlorder of Administrator Alexander|patient at Dudley Hospital here. leceit.’ FUNERAL HELD AMID FLOWERS ‘Scarface’ Al Capone Attends Lombardo Funeral With | Death Calls Owner | of Piano Box Home | pte koelatide keto Rockford, Minn., Sept. 11.—“)— The ramshackle piano box home of “old” Jeff Kissler is for rent. The body of Kissler was found Sunday lying in his “home,” the place he chose to live in when there was no CARNES BACKED MOVIE CAREERS Missing Baptist Treasurer Furnished Two Girls With and Miss Lois Griffin. The con- tract was made through Mrs. Louise Pope, formerly of Atlanta. he receiver said he was told the girls were with Mrs. Pope in Holly- wood, attending a school for motion picture actresses. In response to appeals from Mrs. Pope for funds, Scott said he had wired her that Carnes had disappeared and that no DARROW TALKS FARM EQUALITY Famous Chicago Criminal Lawyer Says Agriculture’s “Compare the miserable, side- stepping statement of Hoover with the brave speech of acceptance Al Smith, where he told what he thought upon every question,” the speaker urged. “He tells them the truth. The Democratic convention nominated him upon a dry platform., What did more money would be forthcoming. he do before they adjourned? He Bodyguard Place to go except the poor farm. Hollyw Upkee; Scott’s inspectoin showed that es: sent them word he was wet and he yeu wa teyran away from his county home PArhorst UBL) Carnes had invested nearly $12,000 sdb! Bho ec) believed the Volstead act should be last March to live on the banks of in the talent of the two girls over oe modified—which it should—or gotten Chicago, pt. 11.—(#)—Great|the Crow river in his piano box,| Atlanta, Ga. Sept. 11—(AP)—| a period of 22 months, Miss Nordlie| Rapid City, S. D., Sept. 11—(AP) | rid of—which is better still.” floral pieces, one of which spelled in foot-high letters the name of the deceased—“T. Lombardo”—filled the home and yard of the slain gang chief today as his funeral was held. .”" ‘The entire front of the Cicero ome into which Lombardo, his wife and their two children moved three months ago, was all but concealed by the flowers and wreaths. Capone, himself a man marked for death, police believe, planned to at- tend the funer: He paid his re- spects to his sociate yesterday by calling at the Lombardo home. lalf a dozen men, with right hands concealed in ccat pockets as though ready to balk any attempt on Ca- pone’s life, accompanied him. From sources close to gangland lice learned of a new move by ne to effect an armistice in the underworld feuds which have result- ed in any assassinations. Capone, po- lice heard, was willing to make im- it concessions to the Aiello rothers, leaders of the gang which has provided the most persistent op- position to Capone’s gangland pow- er. HOOVER JERSEY SPEECH READY Washington, Sept. 11.—(#)—Her- Hoover has approved a program of whirlwind personal campaigning for his two-day visit in New Jersey early next week. Arriving early Monday afternoon at Newark, where that night he will deliver the third prepared speech of is campaign for the presidency, the ublican candidate will make a ‘motor trip through Orange, East Orange, South Orange and a half dozen smaller towns in the vicinity. At Newark the nominee’s address swill be broadcast over a nationwide chain of radio stations and will re- quire probably three quarters of an hour for delivery. The program will in at eight o'clock eastern day- light saving time. turning to Washington, Hoover ‘will remain here until early October cooking his meals outdoors. He had lived here since that time, and lately iia his seventy-seventh birth- lay. Joliet, Ill., Sere 11.—(AP)—Rich- ard Loeb and Nathan Leopold today began the fifth year of their life sen- tences for the murder of Bobbie Franks, Both have secretarial jobs in the state penitentiary. Leopold is sec- retary to the Rev. William Frye, protestant chaplain, and Loeb is sec- retary to Deputy Warden William Barrowman. Formerly the youths worked in the prison factories, Local Delegation to Attend S. D. Corn Show A delegation of Bismarck busi- ness men will attend the Mitchell Corn Show at Mitchell, South Da- kota, if present plans of the As- tested of Commerce are carried out. Secretary H. P. Goddard said to- day that efforts would be made to have a group of representative business men on hand when the show opens on Monday, September 24. Attendance of such a commit- tee would create @ better business feeling between the two states, as the local men would be thrown into contact with representatives from all sections. The show lasts through- out the week of September 24. GIRL YOUNGEST LAWYER Atlanta, Ga—Irma Von Nunes, 18, is the youngest member of the Georgia bar. She is licensed to prac- tice in all state courts and the Su- perior Court of the United States. She has never attended law school, but studied with her father, Tillou Von Nunes, Atlanta attorney. Vigor when he will go south to speak at G ids di Elizabethton, Tennessee. Later he peril deeerercapiory ‘will visit New York and Boston and vee Tr then start for his California home. tones up the system. Try, this pleasing tonic. At 21 Students Enroll in Hospital School Twenty-one students have en- tolled in the September class of the all drug stores, Evidence that Clinton S. Carnes, missing treasurer of the Southern Baptist Home Mission board, spon- sored the moving picture careers of two girls while a $1,000,000 short- s B. Scott, receiver for properties, announced yes- that not only had Carnes kept an accurate record of his pat- ronage, but that there was found in his private papers a contract be- tween him and the youn women. This agreement, Scott said, provided that Carnes was to receive a part of having received $3,721.62, Miss Grif- fin $5,188.61 and Mrs. Pope $3,044. In return for the advance sums the girls were to give him part of their earnings later. the eyes of church officials and aud- itors, the United States Fidelity and Bonding company of Baltimore launched a nation-wide search for him backed by a reward. Forty-one per cent of American corporations normally show a deficit at the end of the year. Clarence Darrow, Chicago criminal lawyer, making his first speech of the present campaign here Monday night, devoted an hour and 18 min- utes to what he described as the dent. “There is just one way to help the farmer, and that is to pay a bounty,” he said, and attacked Hoover's pro- posals as consisting of “promising hypothetical canals, built in the im- possible future.” The tariff protects industry, he said, and talk of the tariff protect- CHAMPAGNE IN RIVER Berlin, Sept. 11—German wine smugglers lost some of their stock- in-trade recently when bathers at several cases of jpagne in the Rhine. Po- lice believe that the wine was smug- gled from France and hidden in the river pending an opportunity to take it into the city. IT WAS AGED, TOO Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 11.—Beer, aged more than a year pending liti- gation, has been dest by Chief Henry Bradford and his agents on by |zled by the sewer when the last McCampbell at Buffalo. The “par-|The patient had ty” was at Zett’s Brewery and more | bedridden for two 60,000 ibtsgenl ang Mager ea ywer of movement is restored has gone back to his work on rel was smashed. farm. Wheat Averages in Burleigh Holding Up Moved to Wheat yields continue to a twelve to thirteen -bushels to sere. in een county, according New Location Mee tection. ik sniee 314 Broadway res! was leted. day on the farm oft Senator L. WwW. Room 4, Upstairs over Sperry, 10 miles north of Bismarck. KFYR fe reported his yield averaging 12 1-2 bushels of wheat to the acre. ha pty are also coming in from the Mott vet) where threshing is just getting underway. inte ‘are good, averaging 15 and 18 bushels, according to J. P. Wagner, cashier of the First Guar- anty Bank. OX BONE MENDS SPINE Birmingham, Eng., Sept. 11.—A 10-inch: es of ox "bone was used to repair the tubercular spine of a LET LEBARRON INSURE IT Bismarck, N. D. training school for nurses at St. Alexius hospital, Sister Maxine, superintendent of nurses, an- noul today. First instruction in the three years training course began today. The following havo matriculated: Alma Reidlinger, Linton; Marie Krueger, Linton; Doris Hoke, Mo- hall; Hildegarde Roith, St. Paul, Minn.; Irene Czeczok, Van Hook; Margaret Gilfoy, Garrison; Fae Newman, Wilton; Emma McKon. key, Glendive; Alma Gentz, Ash; Eva Gallagher, Taylor; ginia Klein, Mandan; Hattie Heyer- & man, Linton; Doris Fogle, Linton; )-* Vivian Wagher, Pronounced Gwah-stee s? Linton; Marie ¥ Rauchwater, Fort Ric Elaine z Kusske, Wibaux, Mont.; Mary | Kwako, Glen Ullin; Martha Seyfert, h Mercer; Kathryn Klein, Mandan; g Alice Pelle, Melrose, Minn.; Vivian «Burbage, Livona. Montana Newspapers _ Join Hands as Daily Eipeciay prepared by IsalianVeneyard Co. Sereabi lBewond ae 1685 Viseyerds GUASTI, CAL, Offices LOS ANGELES i» Sept. 11—(AP)— Five county seat newspapers are in- volved in a merger to be known as the United Publishers, heads of the firm announced here Monday. State. Senator John Survant and T. F. Rucker of Malta, Harry Brooks and E. T. Richards of Chinook; Dan Whetstone of Cutbank, and Harry E. Polk of Williston, N. D., are the _incorporators. ie pers. consolidated are the Cutbank joneer Press, the Chinook Opin- fon, the Phillips County News, the County Leader, and the Herald. A daily news. paper will be established at Havre. ° TARGET BULLET FATAL e ‘Waseca, Minn., Sept. 11.—(AP)— * Robert Witter, 61, died from a wound @ received when two youths fired at a target with a .22-caliber rifle. Branches: New York, Chicago, New Orleans __—_—_——— Call 577 You call the market for your daily supplies because it is conven- ient. But often you wait for someone to call on you before you i on wo vital pout secul proper in- protection. surance You can call 577 with assurance and confi- dence. . . at your con- venience. We make a of prompt, Drain and Fill with _ o-Vis Today! ts and at Most Garages at Won't Wear Out! Have’ your crank case filled with Iso=Vis. Drive for a thousand miles without having the oil drained. Then examine it. You’ll find that Iso=Vis does not thin: out,. break down or dilute. That’s why you hear people talking about Iso=Vis. It’s the oil that’s different. It wears and wears and wears! )- , North Dakota oer

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