The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 1, 1928, Page 1

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4 : BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1928 ESTABLISHED 1873 | ZEPPELIN SAFE IN HANGAR WITH NEW RECORD - TRIBUNE The Weather Gene: fair tonight and Somewhat warmer Wedge 7 PRICE FIVE CENTS ‘ Corn Show Final Plans Near Fruition as Exhibits Arrive TAKES 11 HOURS Wifey for Hoover; Witey tor Hoover: || SMITH ATTACKS | She Wins Argument || HOOVER SPEECH agnaonaryiize ixtars| ON PROSPERITY J) LHL GARAGE ARRANGED FOR - HUGE DISPLAY ’ Silver Cups and Cash Pre- miums Attracting State- «A HOOVER LEAVES FOR ADDRESSES AND PALO ALTO his home for his favorite iden. tial candidate was mado basis on which Mrs. Bertie M. Lynch won @ decree of divorce yesterday. “My band is a Democrat and thinks that Alfred E. Smith is the |- Mrs. Lynch Says Rival ‘Exaggerated’ in Declaration Labor Wages Are Better * Wide Exhibits tertified, “T Renta' Republican’ and harbend Thought Hoover waa the | STATES G, 0. P. IN ‘PANIC TO PLACE TRAYS MONDAY aoe he got angry, ay hed salt dhe To Stress Farm Relief and In- ae Knuckles on my head, attempting to|Care of Exportable Surplus land Waterways at St. Louis Goddard Advertises Show| ier thance my vote imentions "| Crops Is Basis of Farm Re- Tomorrow a Throughout State, Montana pote ng can Tits, Et to sp lef,’He Says PENIS, mag ae and Canada judge signed the divorce decree. BISMARCK FAIR bert Hoover sets out today for Ca! fornia to await in the quiet of home on Stanford university campus the decision of the people of the United States as to whether they will crown his career with the presi- the hope of victory, the in his last public utterance in Washington, delivered to news- papermen who have been with him throughout the paign, said Re- blican success was assured “if who believe with us go to the polls.” . 1] As Hoover leaves here at 5 p.m. on the 3,000-mile campaign swing across the continent he will carry i] | with him the best wishes of President Cool » members of the cabinet, and a host of Washington friends in and out New York, Nov. 1—(AP)—With a-dash into New Jersey where he Final steps in arrangements for the sixth annual State Corn Show to be held here November 7 to 10 will get under way Saturday when the committee in charge begins arrang- ing the building for the show. im ie new garage of the Interna- tional Harvester company, located at Mandan and Broadway has been pro- for the occasion, and worl men will be sent to the building Sat urday to begin placing racks to: hold i the exhibits. The state corn show county cup will again be “pore! it the exhibi- tion as the principal H. Goddard, secretary of the | ciation of commerce which ing of the people” on all the big juestions of the bn Governor Smith has wound up his campaign away from home. Speeches in Brooklyn tomorrow night on state issues and in New AS STORMS HI? before lai campai Blizzards Sweep Nebraska and| He will maka « radio 7 suite in the Hotel ifmore on lection eve after Herbert Hoover nd to the voters from Palo Alto, Calif. Last night Smith spoke at the 118th regiment armory, Newark, af- Bismarck today was a summer i blic life. 1 ree ae sain anes ise compared with the raging|ter having been acclaimed by thou- of publ ‘isa The cup will go to the courfty mak- Bireande, record-breaking snow|sands of torch-bearing well-wishers | lis tiecicon ihe. ee he which oe ing the highest number of points for|falls and icy northern winds that|during. his trip by automobile Oca wtonsaswcaiacrationcaasdicected corn, Ged [odes awarded for one are being reported from all parts of|through Hoboken, Jersey Ci the vast army carrying the message 3o'bs Dermancntly coned veers |the United States. y other points en route. He tore into of Republicanism to the people the to be permanently owned. storm, sweeping westward | the Republican campaigners in || presidential candidate had arranged to call on President Coolidge at the white house and to say good-bye to those who have labored in Republi- can national headquarters near by. Has Just Begun Fight Before he comes to the end of the ti this, his greatest ad- venture in a long career marked by adventures in many climes, Hoover ihas some hard days and nights of campaigning ahea his determined that there shall be ht until the very voters will reg- No county has won * any two years since awarded, In } it was taken by Burleigh count 1926, Sargeant county and Emmons county captured it last Pay Besi rizes given for regu- fell lar exhi iI total approx. imately $800, feature prizes will be awarded. The the prize onitrom the Rock; y Mountain ion it has been|and south from . Keness bt it rey of the coldest days on record for the first day of No- vember. sarcastic fashion, particularly as to| |} their arguments on labor and farm relief. Assails Borah, He attacked Hoover's speec! in the same armory several weeks ago and assailed Charles Evans Hughes and Senator Borah, the mention of whose names brought audience. : few flakes of snow » yesterday, it. was not heavy mnough to be recorded-at the weath- in where snow fell. and fae thal Other|:. The. lowest temperature recorded rizes, all of which wit be given-te|at. Bismarck was-at -7.2, m. today, flour place winners, follow: when the temperature ‘hovered at 19 For the most unusual shaped ear] degrees, changing only a few points » ty, 0£,corn—$10, \ ‘warmer. for, several . hours;~ The’ . ) "For the best buridle of 12 stalks|highest temperature during the last of unhusked corn—$11. Maturity,|24 hours was recodred at 3 p. m. and soundness, - adaptability yesterday when. the thermometer fodder quality will be the basis showed 83 Judging. « Low Wind Recorded ts Larest bundle of 12 stalks of un-| The wind velocit; Best bushel of corn sila; ‘a | pameeraped six -mi ) Ds 8) f Actual placing of the exhibits will] while the velocity. at other North tr 4 5 Been candidate for president instead Hoover Heceuss he “doing oe to elect the Republican president sai loover made an e: pr ated statement, when he declared in Newark that “ H a FE Efe 4 fi tH E val California home he ey ae Message as a candi ition, speaking for 15 minutes 10 a microphone in his study, with to every corner of land over a nation-wide chain PERE eer dart any simi Period in the his. luring any similar, in - bal f of the country.” ‘Credit for a conditions given to Wood- eS marck yesterday A FF pore in a manner permitting the ingest number of persons to view/the second in the Rocky Muontain corn. ion this season. eg Fes Je at the ets, Isbyet| Rocky M nal sires barr r fountain regions, be utilised, Bird said. The build-| air mail traffic, made highways by 75 feet, has dis- placed facing the windows so tHat peeeasing to an Associated Press Persons passing by can see them. pate Heavy in Rockies yes te Reports reaching Denver, which the show, @ i FS be sta Mond: accordii to lower, Wilson by the Democrati - —_——_——- of stations. GartgniDIni, whovsimumeniaiteiac |i tee ire cn cate teow | toe if permite ‘The address at Cumberland will Fangements for building. ‘ets iter, challenging figures from| ‘Frank Threw Me Down,’ Mum- YOU INJURED he mA 15 oypnerd duration and will used in shows sm] w le livered in ie town square near will be brought ‘o the building and ment ‘and assailing the, Republi bled on Deathbed May Be the railroad station. Ww. plank on labor injunctions, Smith said his own program called for the “necessary appropriation to @he de- ent of labor” to enable it to ll be a stop at Keyser, i ht, but the candidate in to make any addresses ove he will oro night, passing into lo ae Louisville, where lore noon tomorrow he will his second address in front Jefferson county court house. Speech Friday principal address of the swing, and the one to the preparation of loover has given many long hours, will be delivered at St. i Clue to Mystery aF i E : IN SHAFT FALL The unconscious murmurings of El-| Wenderlin Schneider Fractures frieda Kanaak, attractive 30-year-old * girl who has declared she attempted | Skull is Tumble Down Eleva- to burn herself in a furnace to prove tor Shaft toda: ided a possible i + 's confessed said. if. pane wer | Falling nearly 20 feet to the foot rew me down, Frank, of an elevator shaft in the Oscar H. f ee i in. publicans in ‘Panic’ As for farm relief, he said the Re- publicans were i prove ior McMullen, braska and Senator Borah had ag Care ¥ city received its first snow of the Business Prospects Good Clemens’ Surve TO SET MARK IN y Shows| 4,000 ) MILE HOP Liquidation of Mortgage In-|Boisterous Crowd Breaks debtness Small Due to Grain Prices Increased Volume of Retail Sales Counteracts Bank De- posits’ Drop Good prospects for retail trade and fewer business and farm fail- ures are in prospect for North Da- kota during the next few months, according to P. W. Clemens, presi- dent of the Northern and Dakota Trust company, in his monthly re- view of North Dakota business con- ditions written for the Associated Press and its member newspapers. The review follows: By P. W. Clemens Good prospects for retail trade throughout the winter months, and a continued lull in collections and fewer business and farm failures are the recent outstanding develop- ments, according to our October bus- iness survey. On the reverse side of the picture is the general sentiment that liqui- dation of mortgage indebtedness will be small and slow, due to the very unsatisfactory grain prices and the unwillingness of the farmers to sell their wheat at prices that would have been considered low even in the pre-war years, Retail Sales Larger Bank clearings at Fargo and Grand Forks for September were slightly under those of a year ago, $14,579,252 and $14,169,632 respec- tively. Some cities of the state show an increase. During most of October the relation has been the seme. Retail sales throughout the state, however, are exceeding those of last year. For example, 23 J. C. Penny stores in North Dakota report an increase of 20.11 per cent in their business over that of a year ago, the increased business for this state being larger than the average for the United States for this organ- ization. “ Many factors are contributing to- ward an increased volume of retail sales. One is the constant trend to- ward improved standards of living, 80 noticeable among the farming population of North Dakota and the United States during the past five years. Hardly a season rolls by but that some luxury becomes generally accepted as a necessity, with no re- verse or compensating change in classification. Livestock Is Factor The greatly increased volume of livestock yzoduction is probably the most important cause of increased retail sales. “Cream, butter, eggs and poultry are bringing good prices and this section produces a large amount of thi sfarm produce,” declares Fred (Continued on page two) ATHEIST WON'T threw me down,” she moaned last arehouse yesterday, night, as her life ebbed away on a payne rt poem men in a Lake Forest hospital, where | °° 4 ssa gress to deal with this question. she was taken Tuesday after being | is in s Bismarck hospital today with % e care of Py tigg toon a om i oe paaaeesrt cece Lake Lipase piaieeaes recoverying. His lus crops,” sai ie governor, luff city arms | skull v in| the saareiying, fundamental ques-| and legs burned to the’ bone. " tion behind constructive farm relief, and Mr. Hoover is unalterably op- Doolittle Posed to that.’ ‘i tioning of whom, the sheriff hoped, “Let us devote just a few minutes to this question of prohibition,” the| might reveal: some definite motive for the fantastic story which governor said. “If ever there was a deliberate ad : ted vi a ‘or ty, season last.night, said that a severe 50 deet cansbe storm was raging im the high Col- orado Rockies, and that snow was 25 by used if the first room is found to be too small. No decoration work will be neces- Miesen, sary, county who is assisting in the work. ing, seoary erected, has not, yet been cooat ied and no painting or ning necessary. While the work for to Washington to “plead” with Moo- ver to favor an extra session of con- ways development, and the non@ inee’s friends believe that it will ued on page two) “| ATION YEGGS =) ARE SENTENCED Ben Carroll and Robert White | Must Spend 2 to 5 Years in Prison FLAMES STRIK THRIG IN DAY Halloween Fires Keep Depart- ment Busy) Estimated Dam- age Is Small « Montana and (eri in which to exhibit f selecting ‘corn ways of sel hibits from the field. Show Advertised their “Haste smaakes : 'S a accor¢ 0 Foulus, fourth district judge, and {ae J. Martineson, Bismarck’s po- chief. *-Ben Carroll and Robert White yes- terday started serving indeterminate sentences of from two to five years in the state penitentiary fter leading gaity to charges of first robbery. te” doesn’ Fate played a little Halloween terday, forcing ther to answer orc! he five calls in the 24-hour age totaled about has made any 5 did suggest was to take the leadership of the Amer- ican le for the of try- ing fo tind a solution of that a THRILL KILLERS ery, HELD FOR "SHOOTING BOY to . these was found to be to the Lake Bluff village hall, but it was not com; . Re that one of the girl’s arms was broken were denied fy doctors. PLEAD INSANITY Atlanta, Nov, 1.— () — Insanii rane probable tie te defone of Richard Gallogly, coll students who were arrested on a farm by a mmarck policeman Tuesday night and brought to the city. Yes- y they waived preliminary hearings s06 upieades guilty to the it trict court before Judge Jansoniuy at 5 p.m. Janson- fu abate te ce F iit i : : 7 it ef t LF ca will rubbish eee Bl QUIT HOSPITAL Unknown Pays Anti-Evolution- ist’s Fine; Smith Indignant at Action Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 1—(AP) —Indignant because a person whose identity was not disclosed had paid the remainder of his fine, Charles Smith, hunger-striking New York atheist leader, today was prepared to resist release from the hospital “unless ejected.” i Smith, convicted in police court and fined $25 for displaying alleged illegal literature, refused to pay his fine and shortly after confinement in the city jail began a hunger strike. He was removed to a hospital be- cause of his weakened condition. The fine was paid yesterday, ac- cording to Circuit Judge Abner Mc-| di Gehee, and eliminated the necessity for a habeas corpus hearing on a petiti iled in Smith’s behalf. Physi is announced last night that Smith would be released today if his temperature is normal. Smith came here to oppose an anti-evolution referendum. CHICAGO RIOTS ON HALLOWEEN Chicago, Nov. 1.— (AP) — Hal loween observance in Chicago neither as safe nor as sane as Fourth of July celebration, the po- lice annow here today after checking up the 2 Two shootings, two stabbings, one of them fatal, a near-riot when the police clashed with merrymakers and several hundred arrests besides thousands of dollars worth of dam-| unde: age to property all were attributed} be to last night’s celebration. October Auto Deaths Chicago, Nov. 1—(P)—A record number of dente in one month from utomobile accidents, Police Lines to Get Glimpse of Stowaway TERHUNE SPIRITED AWAY Loud Cheers Greet Appearancd of American Woman Pas- senger at Hangar Friedrichshafen, Nov. 1.—(?)— Having landed passengers and @ stowaway from America, the Graf Zeppelin, huge airliner, was safe in her hangar today with a new record for transatlantic flight by airship to her credit. The dirigible completed the first round trip commercial flight over the Atlantic today when she was landed at Friedrichshafen at 7:06 a. m. (1:06 a. m. eastern standard time). She had covered more than 10,000 miles since starting from Friedrichshafen on October 11 for, Lakehurst, N. J. Since leaving Lakehurst at 1:54 a.m. eastern standard time on Monday the aire ship had covered slightly more than 4,000 miles and was landed after being in the air 71 hours and 17 minutes. The British dirigible R-34 ° had the best previous record, being in the air 75 hours, before landing at her airdrome in England in July, 1919, and completing a flight from Roosevelt field, N. Y. Actually the Graf Zeppelin got home in 68 hours and 56 minutes. She first appeared over the aire drome at 4:50 a. m. (10:50 p. m. eastern standard time). For more than two hours the airship cruised around waiting for dawn to break, the lighting facilities being inade- quate for a landing at night. A boisterous crowd which broke through police lines was eager to catch a glimpse of Clarence Ter- hune, the 19-year-old caddy, whose daring in stowing away aboard the airship had captured their imagina- tion. Want to See Terhune “Where’s Terhune?” . They kept yelling. “Let him come out,” they implored. But what had happened to the youth was a mystery to the crowd that watched the arrival. Soon after customs officials had boarded the air liner, the official ‘reception committee, of whom John F. Kehl, United States consul at Stuttgart, was a member, ente ed the hangar. Kehl boarded the Zep- pelin to meet Terhune, who was seen at the window of the airship’s kitchen wearing an overcoat with the collar turned up. A few min- utes later a German official handed Terhune a document which the stow- away was seen reading with the as- sistance of Kehl. Later Terhune ap- parently was spirited out of the hangar by a side door to the disap- pointment of the crowd. When the custom officials entered the door of the cabin Mrs. Clara Adams of Tannersville, Pa., the only woman aboard, was standing framed in the doorway. She was greeted with loud cheers. A few minutes afterwards the score of TS aboard, some of whom made the trip to America and return by the in Chicago Total 116| =" (Continued on page two) PRANKSCAUSE LITTLE DAMAGE Halloween Celebrators Resist Tear Bomb Attack Made by Police Police Chief Chris J. Martineson smiled this nealing when he an- nounced that, though the children of the city were busy in mischief last night, they avoided doing any great lamage in executing their annual Halloween tricks. Members of the mob who were «| doing their work at the highschool . must have had clothespins on their noses, according to Patrolman Wil- liam Franklin. Franklin released several tear bombs in a vain effort to disperse the crowd. ‘ Business houses with large win- , dows, automobile owners, and the schoolhouses in the city were great- est sufferers as the young syste- maticglly went about the execution of their stunts. Garbage cans, oil cans, cream cans, old wrecked rpc barrels, youngsters was moved in the city last night, most of it ane deposited in front of the high schoo! doors. Citizens were marveling this: morning at the ability of the PB cverny the large for so great a in some cases, but commented that children cestge pc trom me

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