The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1928, Page 6

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Pa PAGE SIX" ‘THE BISMAKUK POLICY MURDER PROBE STARTED Farm Hand’s Body to Be Ex- humed in Endeavor to Dis- entangle Mystery Tuscola, Ill., Oct. 19.—(AP)—The| death of Walter McAllister became the subject of renewed study today when a coroner’s jury was recon- vened to disentangle, if possible, the hreads of mystery surrounding the ‘m hand’s death. accident last week. Emil Carroll, icAllister’s employer, said his hired man was killed when a train struck the car in which the pair were rid- ing. Carroll’s wife, named as ciary in five policies of made out to McAllister, said she knew nothing of them. Most of the policies, which totaled $15,000, were taken out since June of this year. A baseball bat, found near the spot where the car was: wrecked in| accident, was identified as McAllister was ready to jump from the car on the crossing, but train- men and a doctor said the hand’s legs were bound in a blanket. An inner tube had been twisted around McAllister’s leg, Coroner Gillogly said, It was pointed out that Carroll’s car was enclosed in side curtains at the time of the accident, although the weather was unusually warm. The accident occurred at a grade crossing at midnight. The train crew found McAllister dead in the rear seat. ~ The engineer testified he had to pull down the blanket wrapped around McAllister’s body in order to see his face. Emil Carroll, was found just west of the crossing, apparently uncon- scious. An examination, however, did not reveal any serious injuries. He was scratched. He said he elled to McAllister to “get out of | ere,” when the motor stalled on the crossing with the locomotive only 250 feet away. Carroll said he dived Bid the curtains at the driver's seat. It was found that McAllister’s skull was badly crushed at the base but his body “was otherwise un- marked except for a black eye. Bismarck Building Continues Despite Approaching Winter That the approaching winter weather has failed to discourage Bismarck home builders is evidenced by the fact that permits to build 18 homes in the city have been se- cured since October 1, This information was released to- day by Myron H, Atkinson, city Buditor, The 18 buildings represent an in- vestment of about $75,000, Atkinson said. Basements will be constructed is fall and the finishing work will be completed during the winter or spring months, he said. The permits average about $4,000 for each building. Glass Water Pitcher Hurled at Speaker Brooksville, Fla., Oct. 19.—(P)— When Leon Whitehurst arose to de- fend the Knights of Columbus at an anti-Smith political meeting here last night he was struck with a glass water pitcher alleged to have been hurled by former Pree ty ie S. Sim- mons. He was only slightly injured, Whitehurst arose ‘after the Rect LN. Aldrich, who conducted the meeting, had invited expressions from the audience. He did not com- plete his statement. Still Operatives to Be Removed to Fargo , The four men arrested in connec- tion with the confiscation of North Dakota’s largest alcohol still in Ol- iver county a week ago will be taken to the Cass county jail at Fargo to- night or tomorrow, according to John N. Hagen, prohibition admit istrator in North Dakota. four men, who will give no {information concerning the “powers behind” the still, are Fred Peters, Freda; Lawrence Golden, Min Clarence Augberg, Chicago; and Al Kaufman, transient. They have been held in the Bur- leigh county jail since being arrested { otherwise we should have all been ‘by the seven federal agents. Hagen expects a United States marshal from Fargo to take custody of the rtet. Bonds remained fixed at $5,000 each after they waived a prelim- inary hearing before United States Commissioner J. K. Doran here yes- A Louis H. Connolly, Mandan, and William C. Green, St. Paul, have ‘been retained as legal counsel for the four men. Nick Allen Quits as Manager of St. Paul St. Paul; Oct. 19.—(?)—Resigna- tion of Nick Allen, manager of the Bt. Paul baseball club of the Amer- The Tanager has vera severa! major clubs as said that he will not Allister’s body was to be ex-| humed in an attempt to ascertain} how he was killed in a grade crossing | benefi-| surance | Carroll has claimed that | farm| —ETHEL— COOLIDGE TRACES PROSPERITY TO UNION PRESERVED on her own war activities, with no President Dedicates Fred- | i ericksburg and Spotsylvania Battlefields Fredericksburg, Va., Oct. 19.—(P) American prosperity and standards of living have reached levels “never before experienced by any people in human history,” President Coolidge said here today, in dedicating the | Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania county battlefields. The chief executive traced this prosperity to the union which the Civil war preserved, and saw in to- | day’s ceremony a sign that resent- ment between north and south was being forgotten and “reconciliation | BY CIVIL WAR internal economic disruption. “These are some of the facts which indicate the progress and prosperity | of the United States,” Mr. Coolidge said. of our people become particip. ‘ of their merit in oyr material re- sources, and come lines which have fallen behind, we have striven to keep the door of opportunity open to all our inhabitants.” | Nebraska Man Counts “While there are still some ) have not yet 3 to the extent Grandparents Galore Grand Island, Neb. Oct, 19.—(P) is becoming complete.” ‘The whole | Although Charles Keown of this city nation, he said, could join in cele- | '' is only 6 years old, theoretically he brating the battles fought in this Ca" boast of having nine living vicinity expiation our common country has | been greatly blessed.” because “out of a common | 8fandparents. Each of his four grandparents has married again after divorces, and a “In these advantages, as it has | &teat-grandmother is living. slowly risen from its prostration the | south has more than amply partici. pated,” Mr. Coolidge said. “Since 1900 that progress has been most | marked. In the southern states alone | the wealth, the manufactures, the mineral and the farm products, the banking resources, and the exports, are of about the same value today that they were in the whole United States in 1900.” Is National Occasion “This day, hawever, is not to mark @ local or sectional occasion,” Mr. Coolidge continued. “It is to mark a national occasion, The great ques- tions which were at issue on these battlefields were national questions. Out of the decision to which they were finally brought there has been @ common advantage and a common Progress which has accrued to the whole nation. Had the decision been robbed of a great part of the pride which we all feel today in our coun- try. Her achievements of the past years would have been divested of much of their value and her pros- pects for the future would have been devoid of much of their hope. In- stead of one great country enjoying domestic peace and progress, holdin; @ commanding position in the world, we should have been a region of hos- tile factions, impotent at home and despised abroad. The service which we did for the cause of humanity in 1898, the world crisis in which we successfully performed our part in 1917, would all have been impossible. Long since our common heritage would have been dissipated, our | glory would have departed.” | Referring to the country’s prog- | said: he| “Many different elements have ress since 1860, President Coolidge contributed to this development, but they all rest on the fundamental fact that we are a large country furnish- ing a large market able to consume the output of mass production.” “This situation has encouraged the introduction of labor-saving machin- ery,” he added. Cites Industri! Revolution Mechanical power in the United States th) “is His parents also have been di- orced and remarried. His mother » Bernyce Smith of Grand ind and his father is Joseph Keown of La Grande, Ore. In Unique Suit Rey, William H, Helen Brumley here CITY DESIRES | AIRMAIL STOP | Goddard Communicating With Postal Department Regard- ing Service ty | A movement has been make Bismarck a regular stop for air mail planes when Pacific coast service is offered, according to H. P. Goddard, secretary of the Asso- ion of Commerce. Air mail service between St. Paul and Seattle may be established in the next year or two, Goddard said, and the local association is eager to have Bismarck included in the route. The postal service will choose be- tween several routes between St. Paul and the west coast, he pointed out. Goddard is eager to have the route run from SI through Bismarck, Butte or Great Falls, Mont. Author- ities may send the planes from Fargo to Minot to Great Falls, or from St, Paul to Aberdeen, S. D., to Butte. The secretary wrote to the postal department October 11, requesting that Bismarck be considered for a stopping point when the service is inaugurated. A reply in which it was stated that Bismarck would be considered was received from Chase C. Gove, acting assistant to the pastmaster general, today. Ford Moves Tractor Factory to Ireland Detroit, Oct. 19.—(AP)—The Ford Motor company plans to move its main Fordson tractor plant to Cork, Ireland, it was learned today. Machinery now is being moved from the present Fordson plant near Detroit and’ si to the com- pany’s plant at Cork to be re- assembled and put into operation by January 1, it was announced. Manufacture of the tractor at Fordson was discontinued about a year ago to allow more space for tne manufacture of the new model A Ford car. Buenos Aires Protects Customers of Cabarets Buenos Aires, Oct. 19.—(?)—Pa- trons of cabarets in Buenos Aires have the right to argue long and loudly over their bills, without fear of police intervention, under an order just issued by the chief of police. “The charge of fraud,” says the order, “cannot be levelled against Persons accused by cabaret proprie- tors of refusing to pay their bills, but only agai persons who run up a bill with the deliberate and premeditated intention of refusing to pay it.” i At the Movies ELTINGE THEATRE Tinsel and glitter under the foot- lights, that hides drab existence: heart breaking work, bitter disap- pointment and the one great ideal to which every member of the strange rofession looks as the Mohammedan looks toward Mecca—this is the life of the small-time vaudeville pe: former, who, in a world apart, so far as the unknowing public is con- cerned, works out his strange des- tiny or fails in the attempt. A graphic picture of the life every minor vaudeville player knows so well is contained in “Excess Bag- gage,” John McGowan’s famous play of vaudeville life, in which William FAME OF SARGON SPREADS OVER ENTIRE NATION New Scientific Medicine Pro- claimed by Tens of Thou- sands Who Have Taken It as Greatest Medicine of All Time ci Never before, perhaps, in all his- tory has the demand for a proprie- tary medicine ever ap) Sead the wonderful record that is now being ‘|made by Sargon, the new scientific formula which has been accom- plishing such remarkable results throughout this section. Its fame has spread over the entire country and no matter where you go, Sargon is the most talked of medicine in the country today. Nothing like it has ever been seen before. * Sargon was first placed on the market just a little over six months ago. Its success was immediateand people everywhere were quick to rec- ognize in it a new and epoch-making Product—a medicine of L prent power and extraordinary me! In each PI fore sinaled in the history of the wuntless thousands of men and ing with stomac! troubles, some of ing; as well as thin, nervous men and parently, on the verge of collapse ve voluntaril; testified that t have been fully Strength and weight by it : ngth and wei use. ‘Sa a seemed fairly well, yet rep with in its worst f dys- pepsia, breat IBUN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1928 Haines comes. It is a story of small-time vaudeville with the brief joys, its bitter disappointments, and its odd customs; its comedy is tem- pered with heart throbs in an in- tensely human document. Haines. plays a vaudeville per- former, a tight-rope walker, in the new picture, and his love, his mar- riage, piel ged paths tegplmey he couple apart when success gives her rewards to of or the other, are the central motives. Traveling from town to town, on “one night stands” generally, the vaudeville people form a world of their own, as they know no outsiders. Their lives are hidden within their own close circle. Josephine Dunn, Ricardo Cortez, Kathleen Clifford and Cyril Chad. wick are other players in the cast. WiN be shown today and Saturday at the Eltinge. AT THE CAPITOL One of the highlights of the sen- sational drama, “Honor Bound,” which comes to the Capitol theatre | for today (Friday) and Saturday, is | the excellent characterization and | acting of George O'Brien in the stel- r role. Cast as John Ogletree, the | convict, in the motion picture taken | from Jack Bethea’s compelling novel, | O’Brien again gives a worthy per- | formance. O'Brien pits himself against fate and proves himself the master of every situation. Estelle Taylor, who shares stellar honors with O'Brien, gives an inspir- ing and difficult performance in the |role of the woman who loved and \lost through her own folly. In the | dramatic climax Miss Taylor wrings sympathy from the audience as the | woman who repents and risks all to Save the man she loves for another ‘woman. Others who give excellent por- teyals are Tom Santschi and Sam lyams, whose refreshing beauty al- ways is pleasing; and Al Hart as rasse as the coal baron and) rison warden, respectively; Leila | the old convict mountaineer O'Brien's buddy. [Giy-Comaty Bees | Mrs. H. E. Hermanson, McKenzie, | was a visitor in Bismarck today. A. R. Miesen, county agent, is in Moffit today on business interests. | Mr. and Mrs. Gus Thoresal, Devils Lake, were Bismarck visitors today. S. L. Jordahl, Regan, was a busi- ness visitor here today. Mrs. John Reule of New Salem was a business caller in Bismarck Thursday. W. S. Ayers of the A. W. Lucas company and R. lagel of Cor- win- Churchill Motors Inc. are in{ Jerry Ray~ wealth sounds well.” Alester Carstairs sonality But when he proposed riage. Jerry Ray had been con- vinced by a life of poverty that happiness was to be found only in marrying for Love was a pretty word, she thought, but “you might as weil marry for stardust, or roses, or anything else that Alester Carstairs He had wealth, social po: i: tion and_a pleasing per- thing made Jerry. hesitate Oe My to could some- Mar- You Will Meet These , Characters In Myrtle Crane, roommate, believed in mar- riage for love, Alester’s imported roadster Leontine’s roadhouse wasn’t to be compared to a ride George’s flivver to the hot dog stand in which he was a silent partner. Ruth Dewey Groves’ Newest Serial Beginning Oct. 29th e In Crane Jerry’s A tour in exclusive in pilot plane when state. By carrier in Bismarck $1.80. evenneenneeeenenorausseasvoaconnnceoeeneesucacevuueenu ecvanacceeveecenegcetsscetveeceanecve rat iene Leontine Lebaudy was in the background of Alester Carstairs‘ life accepted the luxuries he lavished upon her... And Alester never could under- stand why Jerry wouldn't, Dan Harvey was a dia- mond-in-the-rough and the dislike the way thoughts of Dan crept into her mind joy Alester’s company, The Bismarck Tribune Send for a Trial Subscription Fill out and mail the blank below enclosing $1.25 for three months’ subscription to The Bismarck Daily Trib- une in North Dakota or $1.50 if residing outside the ‘Duluth, Minn, this week-end on business. Mrs. L, Nye anddaughter, Martha, |of Hazen have returned home after spending a few days here. Mrs. Elmer Robinson of Dickinson is attending the North Dakota P. T, A. meeting here this week. Emma Bauer Golden, former Bis- | marck resident and former state or- ! ganizer for the Parent-Teacher asso- ciation, is a candidate for county su- rintendent of schools at Leola, S. bs .. it was announced here today. SCHUMANN-HEINK GUILTY San Diego, Cal., Oct. 19.—(Ay— Henry Schuttan-Hoink, son of Mine, Ernestine Schumann -Heink, the singer, was found guilty of grand larceny by a jury here. Gingham is a Malayan word. She eee of Alester Carstairs’ ... ‘Jerry grew to she was trying to en- SUBSCRIPTION BLANK The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck,N.D. > Enclosed find...smefor which send me the Daily Tribune for 0° 070 Z0Te" oe tores ape Laie 9 Ine, en PI0! ewe 101030-0)0,0/0.0T LON NQMC ose ose oxo 036:0°0 coe eae ese ee pereore 0105, ane tel ome Pere oTore ame 1970; eno [oLeTOiWi0.0;0' 0 Postoffice Address Deda nisie manicenty pines State... nails ane ABO {OE AS Oe tORAT0 0200; ape :950: ame {0701034,0.0:0 ©

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