The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1928, Page 8

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HOOVER GIVES LABOR SPEECH Delivers First of Three Ad- ' dresses Tonight in Smith [Gene Goin sure BISMARCK WILL Washington, Sept. 17.—(4)—Her- bért Hoover takes his campaign into the east today as his Democratic op- nent, Alfred E. Smith, makes his tirst visit to the west. The Republican presidential can- s to Newark to deliver the first of three addresses he will make on the ground where, admittedly, he He will speak tonight at Newark, delivering his third pre- pared address, in which he will dis- Tomorrow Hoover will visit half a dozen cities in eastern New Jersey. Hoover plans two other speeches in the east, one in New York on Oc- tober 17, and the other at Boston at a date yet to be determined. Before he goes to New England he will visit the south, speaking at Elizabethton, Tenn., on October 6. It is estimated that in his New Jersey tour Hoover will be seen by half a million people, while millions will hear him expound his views on labor at Newark tonight. radio hook-up has been arranged, which will carry the candidate's words to the country. The program incidental to his address will begin at 8:30 o'clock, Eastern standard SHAFER TALKS ECE" ENTERTAIN PTA. \ a 7! State Meeting Here October 19th and 20th; 100 Dele- niversary of Inauguration _— North Dakota. adoption ‘of the supreme Jaw of the continue through Saturday, October state pee! eau) ‘ut 20. Preceding the annt conven- # The consti tion, a meeting of the state execu- States is 141 years old this weel rive ip Bismarck today for distribu- oe het Nl i held Thursday ‘ while Mr. Shafer explained or- |tion to farmers in the district. ni r ae : jans are now be’ completed in detai it] for the event, acridine to Pts hae oe Madge Rurey, county superinten- é a? s in to note,” said the County agent. Washburn, state president, saying that the programs would soon be ready for distribution. It has already been announced that Mrs. Hugh Bradford, of Den- ver, Colorado, a national representa- tive of the organization, would at- j strength of the supreme law, rather Officers of the organization are: distribution of the ani dent; Mrs. Snyder, Fargo, D. E. Shipley,.chairman of the en- | those di: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _ ____ MONDAY, 17, 1928 | ‘CONSTITUTION’ EWE SHIPMENT gates to Attend of Supreme Law Firat Half of 1,500 More Sheep Bismarck next month will. enter- : > Lions at their weekly luncheon to-| Expected for Burleigh Dis- Eucigenescners, esnotistian, “ot ‘ : : day appropriately commemorated the trict Farmers The annual meeting will convene é United States by hearing an address! Between 700 and 800 Rambouillet here Friday, October 19, and willl ; on “Constitution”. by George Shafer, |ewes, the tiret halt of a fall ship- yy ion of the United |ment of 1500, were expected to ar- This announcement was made this ‘morning by A. R. Miesen, Burleigh dent, who recently was in receipt speaker than 2,000] The sheep ipped to of a letter from A. E. Thompson, ‘ gues a mendments during the 141 | Bismarck ‘rom the Billings district, tend the state meeting. ; than changed its" form and. pur-|Kensie., Mleven will stperviae Pose.’ A. E. aon eee Washburn, _presi- At the beginning of the meeting jers who have purchased them in first vice president; George L. : itertainment . committee, reported’] Of the four that - Hempstead, Jamestown, treasurer; ; that there had been some question a8 |pected at the pe of Suan, two Thomas J. Johnson, Kildeer, audi. to the feasibility of Ladies’ Night | will go to tor; Beatrice Johnstone, "Grand ee 2 on September 24, in of the Hal- | and Se ert Sie tone ts Bis: Forks, corresponding secretary, and : * |lowe’en celebration about a month |marck. Lt-Com, John Philip Sousa, who will appear with his famous band at A. pom rents calanaies aan F eae decided’ to postpone toShipments, ghis week bri i k auditori October 1, is lebrati: is golden jubilee anni- . + it, into istrict (ebuscse ie ks been’ 0 years sine = pated cordpoae® began his| all sections of the state will be here. : Attention of Lions was called by |year to 3,000. Fifteen enteea wore musical career in a theater in Washington. REPARATIONS IS power, gas or sewers were in opera-| ‘The Red Cross local organiza-| tion is functioning and has estab-| lished a relief station in the tele- REDMILL HELD IN LINTON JAIL Coventry Satisfied Youth Had No Part in Charles Gontka NEAR SOLUTION United States to Be Asked to :: Participate in Rhineland ; Deliberations ; Gerieva, Sept. 17.—(”)—The belief {tates would undoubt~dly be asked to participate in the deliberations of the commigsion of experts that will ‘work for a complete and definite séttlement of the reparations prob- After a series of conversations, Italy, Belgium and Ja ed agreement to name the commission and-an accord in principle for special official negotiations looking to evac- uation of the Rhineland. In some circles the opinion was held that discussion of reparations would lead to a discussion of war debts in general. Disclaimers were issued, however, had any wish to drag the United States into the repara- Nevertheless, the William Langer and Charles Cov- prosecutor respectively in the Inez Gontka murder trial, have settled! down to detail work for the coming| trial after the preliminary hearing which was held at Napoleon last k. Inez Gontka, 17-year-old self-con-} fessed patricide, will be tried before; an Emmons county jury at Linton in regular session during December. Langer did not ask for a change of venue for the case. Howard Redmill, 18-year-old farm hand, is being held as a material witness in the case. He is being held in the Emmons county jail at Linton in lieu of $2,000 bond set at the juvenile hearing at Napoleon before Judge George W. McKenna, of the third judicial district. The state’s attorney is satisfied, he says, that the youth had no ac- tual part in the slaying of Charles Gontka, 60-year-old farmer, Labor Day, but he said that if released, the boy might leave the district and might not be found to appear in the trial of the girl. Inez was released on $5,000 bonds furnished by her mother and friends and is now at the Gontka home a few miles southwest of Hazelton. Langer returned to Bismarck late Friday after the Napoleon hearing, left immediately for Valley City, and was in Fargo early today. EMMONS COUNTY SCHOOLS OPENED Several schools in Emmons county are opening today, according to word received from Linton. Twenty-four of 40 county insti- tutions opened their doors a week or two ago, the remaining 16 open- ing today or next: Monday. Seven- month term schools open October 8. Names of 83 instructors in Em- mons county schools follow: Cherry Grove—Lucille Bauer, O. R, Bauer, Grace Lilliboe, Elroy John- son, Bruno Schneider, Myrtle D. Ol- st on. Danbury — Ethel Kielin, Dorothy tions pero ee general opinion in political appeared to b: that nothing sound, complete or final could be achieved without the cdllaboration of Ameri- ‘ca either through representatives or financiers who would reflect Washington’: When delegates of 50 nations to the assembly of the League of Na- tions heard of the accord, the opin- ion was voiced that statesmen have begun to write the last chapter on liquidation of the consequences of Not only represent- atives of European governments but those from lands beyond the seas as well saw in the preliminary sgree- ment, a-solid basis for effective col- laboration between governments and les, for a general solvtion uf the problems left by the war, und par- ‘ticularly of all financial arising from fixation of German reparations on a basis of Germany’s capacity to pay. DEATH, DAMAGE RADIOED FROM PALM BEACHES (Continued from the meager reports ‘beavy winds swept thc area, The weather bureau wille 90 miles north of Fort rce, had reported hurricane winds ae the east with the barometer at “.. Estimates of damage were impos- sible, ny New Orleans, Sept. 17—(?)—Gen- from Pampano to the in Florida from the hurricane was reported today by Leyshon, news editor of the Miami Daily News, in a dispatch to the Associated Press by the tropical radio. * Palm Beach, the exclusive winter resort, was reported cut off from all ‘communication with the since the storm struck and a check ‘on casualties there was impossible i Despite persist- ‘police at. West ‘esived no notice of any deaths at wi this morning. fest’ Palm Beach was reported only one store on street escaping serious Hii i ¥ 4 Baestrom, Agnes Zirnhelt, Dorothy | uled. Brown. Highland—Edna Zirnhelt, Ruth Pickering, Mrs. Bert Hiom. McCulley—Bess Kaufman, Emma Sometime after the-first of the year, according to the rumor in Holly- to be held in St. Paul Friday, Oct. |fact bein, later. cia Visitors today were: H. L. Halvor- Sebo. eel sda SES Hel 7 ‘intyre—Josephine Sandness, Hel- a wood, the former Mrs. Charles Chaplin (Lita Grey) will become the bride en Stensland, Blanche Stewart. Maddock in Grand Forks To-|of Roy D'Arcy, well-known character. actor-of the movies. D'Arcy, Harding—John Nieuwsma, Violet divorced about six month: attest veait wks Mas aioe bed A Reng, Catharina Schatz, Leonard| day; Will Name Own Cam- decree becomes ffetve, Here they Pele fiat Sindibced Secure ema. 3 *. they’ ai S, “Bakker — Ella Odegaard, Arnold paign Committee thing now.” D'Arcy is shown as he appeared in “La Boheme. Christians, Cornelius Lieh, Alice Compaan, Edith Pitcher, Mrs. Elmer} Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 17:—(P) in ieee en oe ion Odegaard, Nancy Parry. —Governor Walter Malidock will - Ll with Burleigh pasty schools, was Union— Elmer Odegaard, Ella/name his own committee to’ manage appointed head of the rural depart- Boschker, Eva Putnam, Mrs Edd | his campaign for election as, gover. AL WILL T A LK ment of Minot Teachers college. . 3 nor, he said here today. ing rmer a Hague—J. V. Connelly, Anna Roth, |the’ appointment of this cbmmittee, ciperintantindt of "Pieces county, a Margaret Roth. Liberty—LeOra Turner, Gerhard which will be made sometime during th t week, he has no state- : Jonkman, Edna Fransen, Mrs, James ment to make regarding noe, a cairo Telephone Calls _ . paign plans, he said. at 0} lere h Hampton—Dorothy sedi tee - Asked definitely regarding his po- i a sad Show Prosperity M arity. da is Lillian ‘Sta ae sition in the national campaign and Sept. 26 iidaipslp op ce eame ys vant, Feckla Froemming, Edna Stur.|%® % whether, he would ‘support — ae Date abd tie thet oot bus, ants FWittmeioe, Bess: Putnam, |Hoover or Smith or neither, Gover-| srembers of the executive commit- jakota and the fact that bus- San te Obsre, Hulda Mi 4. |Nor Maddock declined to make any|\tee appointed to take charge of the iness conditions in the state are age =e statement at the present time, but| reception of Al Smith here Sept: 26 Poa EI Ti eda bos ecole Strasburg—Clara Zeltinger, The- added that he would probably make| are still entettaining the hope.that| more than teed rf pe ¢ es resa Hoffact a public statement on the occasion| Smith may be induced to give al calls handled in Nec red ‘Wells—Herbert Folson. of Governor Smith’s visit to Bis-| speech in Bismarck. Govng the eet eee Omio—Florence R. Rielly, Lois F.|™arck next week, ‘i Definite word that Smith had de-|“"Figures’ just received by F. H. Simkins, Blanche Buck, Mrs. Rose Gere ‘ eens PN Ne sige ee = sive an ans is-| Waldo, manager of the Telephone jaurer. -| marck but would make a Com: Sand’ Creek — Valeria Rimnac, |Stther with Senator D. H. Hamilton, | stop here Sept. 26, was received by Soe. are, show ie more long Mary Brodhead. chairman of the senate fact finding| 0, Hellstrom from J. Nelson pha Emmonsburg—Katie Thomas, Cora |committee. C. U. Sommers of the] Kelly, national committeeman, Sat- Peerneniaes ics me syte| Shepard, Velma Corner, Phyllis |Pauity company also was here to’! urday afternoon. the history of the company. During BOM soae gore bone (Coe cepts te Sis ar Be | bate dre gzeptin were sl Rega hat yar spongy jincoln. john ionkman, nes in eld wu) a} ing further " eae Margerst Gee Hees cotter Mit chat for the R. B. M he . of a. within malig - ivona— Willar leinbecker, As h ‘ return of R. B. Murphy, chairman. crease during Augus payin; c tenth company Nellie Goughnour, Luella Sheperd, |Present his plans in relation to the/ the committee, who is expected in| cf'more thas ssiabo al distance sf PTalted ‘States pe on — Grace Matthews. state plant were merely along the| the city tonight, conversations, Linton Speciai—L. D. Berg, Wm. |line of “popularizing” it among the| ‘The executive. committee meets tf 4 For Sale by : Gusencr, ‘Wendla Andersons” Desa [People of North Dakota and secur-| tonight to consider the situation.|1y 12,000 long distance "calls. "wers P.C. REMINGTON & SON © Slettgren, Mabel Anderson, Helen |m& more members for the terminal| Members of the committee are R. B.| placed by. the people of Bismarck “The Pioneer Investment House” . Witte, Anne Kielland, Vella Barth- |¢xchange, especially cooperative or-| Murphy, chairman; P. E. Byrne, i Oe sees ean. Firiey aie, [ganizations and. other companies | secretary; William Breen, tveasurer; | Auet aiiek tein ce ee, abeth Nichols, Ruth Cripps. who were friendly to such organiza-| F. . Hellstrom, and Chris Bertsch.| barometer of the local business and FIRE DAMAGES tions. He also conferred this morn-| The revised schedule for Governor} social activities. padeegis aa number of local Demo-/ Smith’s western speaking tour from 22a TEER cratic leaders. Denver to end of trip includes:-Wed- pens, Sept. 26, arrive Mandan, N.| Duck Hunters Number : A Police Look for ee ei Cent ume;| Between 800 and 900 CLEANING , Mandan 96 Pair of. Alleged — | arrive Bismarck, N. Do: 41:80'8. 7531" “petween eight and nine hundred . : it Baby Abandoners| (eee Nob: sas fin. leave| Burleigh county hunters took to the _ GOLDEN WEST LAUNDRY. Jamestown, 4 p. m.; arrive Valley| fields yesterday morning as the sea-|9 eg. 7. 3. Logan Manda, N. D. Fargo, N. D., Set. 17.—()—Fire| Warrants for the arrest .| City, N..D., 5:05 p. m.; leave Valley|son for hunting geese and ducks lof undetermined origin Sunday de- |liam Har: Damnit and et ot Gity, 5:45 p. Serve Fargo, 6:50|opened throughout the state. stroyed a large section of the Mar-|son, who is said to be Dimit’s wife, | P. m., leave 7:50 p.m. Early reports of s plentiful sup- mon Sales Agency building, burning |‘otint’ Biareaan? Peinint: Wate |" Thureday, Sept, 27—Arrive Min-|ply this season had.not been over- beyond repair 12 automobiles and|been issued at Graceville, Minn., in| neapolis and’St. Paul, 5:50 exaggerated accordi = 48 damaging a number of other ma-|connection with the abandoning of = day. Most hunters andesite . chines stored in the building. a week-old infant on a doorstep inj New Demonstration in sing. their. ; “ FERS TS —_———- the Minnesota city last. week. Teacher for Burle huing heme. sey aS . “IN- MINNEAPOLIS” is announcement was made to- igh ‘arm: hunters was se TRAIN: BILAS'S day by Chris Martineson, chief of ae lie ably lessened by h xan Saturday camer Elkhorn, Wis, Sept. 17.—(P—|Police, ofter he had received a mes-| Burleigh county’ stra Te ineiey. or Five persons, ces of a vaude- are from the chief of police at Geeta Mise Sara sees of INE ticenes at the attice of the ville troupe, were killed today when raceville. Pierce county, will assume her duties|}.44 been anticipated. ner pubenabiias sraaned into the with about September 25. pop sey busy th PI edhe ye] re ota Ned ace: Mr. and Mra. |birthmarks on the child born to the _Miss Guss is the teacher appointed | inst week, however, issuing the li- i , Julia Lat , cou le in a local hospital a couple of a censes. firthur Heeger andor blataie| Weeks ago. She’s Prettiest In spite of the tact that the fields all of Chicago. Articles purchased from the Serv- —4 were crowded with hunters ae q ; . ice drug store, Bismarck, were found many of them bei 4 Our N t Se. in the infant's blankets, The couple bal no hunting ‘ Son Cle ME EWES a Queen Graceville. shor peti the famous isine and Service Unexcelled et Qu ville shortly before th ; — , gas was abandoned negon said. 3 § Flame Room ‘Moderate Prices ~-- é Jews Conclude New 500 Rooms a, 4 Year Celebration Mrs. Ina Stark, who has been manager of the Robertson store in Jamestown for some time, will come to Bismarck this week to be in urday Sunday. charge of the new store which Rob- : m The celebration ended at 9 o'clock ertsons will open here. " here with services in Patterson hall. H |These services were Charles Gobel, Gobel Disbrow: John White and Willers Ankenmann hr of Beste ck Se : to MPa re ae ae ery Bae ie es ; en ’ mar f ty ; ». pe Scott C: : f the pear im the Jewish religion Neore nent, Mamet a nee + Leave airport, Minot, at 8:20 Kerive airport, Bismarck at 9:20°. 0.” Election of officers for the. school i President F. B. Strauss to \- ance to the organization, are sched- . ’ : trict Lions International, which is|larger rapidly, Miesen says, this Z lenced when th 19. Delegates are to be announced | souri Slope District Wool Pool asso- its wool in July for word from headquarters and the|ed within the state, making an in- Public Utility Investments, Cities Service Co.

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