The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 10, 1928, Page 3

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1928 'HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE NTIS wat tins 5 SS MAN'S MURDER ISGHARGED T0 TWO CARROLLS Grand Jury Says Farm Hand Was Beaten to Death With Baseball Bat ' Tuscola, Il, Nov. 10.—(AP)— Frank Emil Carroll, a professional baseball pitcher formerly with the American Association, and his brother, William Carroll Jr., At- wod farmer, were indicted today by the Douglas county grand jury on a charge of murder in connection with the death of Walter McAlister, 52, Emil Carroll’s farm hand for many years. McAlister was found dead October 12 after an automobile in which he was riding with Emil Carroll was struck by an Illinois Central freight train. The indictment, containing 20 counts, charged the brothers indi- vidually and collectively with M Alister’s death, charged that Ei Carroll beat the farm to death while his brother was present and assisted him, and then made similar charges against William Carroll. Other counts related that Emil killed Me- Alister with William not present, but aiding and abetting the act, and then .made similar charges against William. A baseball bat belonging to Emil Carroll and found near the spot where McAlister was killed, also was brought into the indictment in_other counts. McAlister’s body was found after the train struck the automobile in which he was riding with Emil Car- roll, who was driving. Emil said that he jumped from the car and was injured but McAlister did not have time to jump. McAlister was buried but the body was exhumed when it was learned that insurance policies totaling more than $16,000 recently had been taken} Above is Chateau T' out on McAlister’s life, naming Emil] dimly seen in the or his wife as beneficiaries. Mem- bers of the train crew said McAlis- ter’s body was wrapped in a blanket. A coroner’s physician said McAlis- ter’s skull was fractured in a dozen places, injuries which he said could only be inflicted by repeated blows of some blunt instrument. Handwriting experts said that some of the signatures on the in- surance poli were not genuine. Emil Carroll was given a tryout with the Cincinnati Reds in 1923 as a pitcher, going to their Mobile, Ala., training camp. Later he was farmed out to a Wausau team, then went to Racine, Wis., and still later to the Kansas City American Asso- ciation club. Lately he had pitched for central Illinois semi-professional teams. STATE BUREAU RULED LIABLE Where Disease Is Aggravated by Injury Compensation Applies Is Ruling In cases where a disease is ag- Chateau T' rry—And the Spot Where Its Defenders Sleep disclosed the bell, then in use on a logging locomotive. It was _recov- ered, engraved in script, and, in suit- able ceremonies attended by Mr. Hutton, it was formally presented September 17, 1921, and mounted ac- cording to his request. The bell to- day still is in service at. the Hut- | ton settlement. SCOUTS ATTEND Troup No. 3 Banqueted by Mothers; Other Meetings | Are Planned | “Boy, how I would like to have a | ‘feed’ like that every week ” |. This was the statement_made by |32 members of Bismarck Boy Scout troop No. 3, who were given a ban- quet at McCabe Mcthodist church at 6:30 o'clock last night by 3 of their moth A short play, “Lily of the Alley,” given by the boys, a short talk on the work of the Boy Scouts by W. G. Fulton, scout executive, and sev- a | CHURCH DINNER: LINDY HOPS TO MEXICOCITY IN _ SURPRISE VISIT |Swoops Down on Valbuena | | Flying Field After 800-Mile | Flight | | Me: City, Nov. 10.—(AP)— | Colonel Charles A, Lindbergh rested | today in the first capital that he} | conquered almost a year ago in hi } Rood will tour of Central America | and the West Indies. " | Just as darkness was descending | ‘over Valbuena flying field the air- | man swooped down upon it from the north where he had been hunting at | Terrenates ranch in the state of; Chihuahua. i Flying with Colonel Alexander J. | MacNab, military attache of the! United States Embassy, as his pass- jenger, Colonel Lindbergh completed | a flight of some 800 miles in 8 hours | and 20 minutes. i Gas Tax Amendment _|eascline ta St. Paul, Nov, 10—(®)—-Canvass- | cincts amendment No. 1 had 516.973 ing board corre: tions for the proposed state amend- | y, s ments cost amendment No. 1, the | error in hievry as it looks today, with the fama ; Below is burial grounds in France for Amer |eral songs by the group made up the; ‘heir departure had become program. 'known in the capital only a short | The banquet room was decorated | time before their arrival. There-; s “Hill 204” snes Cemcte ory of many details. relief, or for suppo engaged in the age-old race o: and effective measures to net Today as we review our ex and methods had changed, th jay and in Hannibal's day in the final test of physi So in our celebration of victory, let us pay respect to those all-important attributes which are the enduring qua our national strength: loyalty, ness—the indispensable char: victory to our cause ten years ago. ARMISTICE DAY By MAJOR GENERAL CHARLES P, SUMMERALL (Chief of Staff) As we look back to 1918 we find that time has dulled the’ mem- Our concern for ammunition, for rati ns, for is less vivid. We recall le: the discomforts and the restrictions, W ver, are the patriotism, the valor, the fortitude, and the spi of self-sacrifice which characterized our citizens and our soldier clearly the hard- at do stand out, When we entered the war science and human ingenuity were f producing new weapons of offense utralize them. Our countrymen, despite shortages in new weapons and lack of experience in new methvc rose to the emergency through a fervor which counterbalanced handicaps. The characteristic of indivi the measure of the strength of ear nation, lual initiative again proved periences we see that though weapons e one thing which remained as it was the human element—the encounter spelled victory patriotism, courage, and unselfish- acteristics in our citizens which brought gaya, byan_nsury the s'ste! ROMANTIC LIFE STORY IS REVEALED liable, the state supreme court held today in the case of R. A. Pfeiffer vs. the compensation bureau, ap- pealed by the latter from the district court of Barnes county. ATH OF PIONEER: RAILROADER she was unable to identify. There} Pfeiffer presented a claim for to-|they robbed her of $75 in cash, but | Former Railroad Fireman, Spo- tal disability on the ground that an|she saved several diamond rings b injury, suffered while working in a| hiding them in her shoes. garage, had caused him to go blind.|a pearl necklace in her dress and| r said the bandits bent a $4,000 di: the claim on the grounds that he|mond and platinum bracelet while | ‘was going blind anyhow and that the trying to rip it from her wrist. “O Madre!” murmured by u d t actress while she was being beaten, | jn to be rejected “simply because thelwas given credit by Miss Pickford The compensation bureau contested injury had nothing to do with it. The court held that a claim is not medical profession can only specu- late on the origin of the affliction itself,” and that “even though the origin of the affliction may not be known, if the affliction be in exist- ence at the time of the accident and 5 + accelerated thereby the claimant Court Sends Trio to Morton County Jail) may recover. The claimant contended that an eye condition from which he was suffering was aggravated by a blow that no other cause of blindness was shown, Lottie Pickford, Mary’s Sister, and’ Companion Report Attack Los Angeles, Nov. 19.—(*P\— Having but one slender clue to the identity of four men who wu. .--} ported to have beaten, robbed and kidnaped Miss Lottie Pickford, screen actress and sister of Mary Pickford, after . blackjacking her companion, police today sought to pick up their trail by a study of fingerprints. Officers were put on the trail yesterday after Miss Pickford had reported that the four men accosted her and her escort, Jack Daugherty, former husband of the late Barbara Ja Marr, early yesterday. She said the men used a blackjack on Daugh- erty, robbed them both of a small amount of cash and then carried her. off. She was freed after she had pleaded with her captors in Spanish. » Fingerprints found on Miss Pick- ford’s automobile, in which she and Daugherty had been riding, were checked with police records. ts The actress and Daugherty said they, spent part of Thursday night in a night club, departing some time after 2 a.m. Miss Pickford said she and Daugherty had stop) to ask directions ‘to Hollywood as they| “Medal of the Congress of the Unit- drove home. They made inquiry of| ed States . four men on a street in the district bath of progress by Sa they said, but instead of pointing it the way, the four proceeded to| resolution of co! Rashes Sey es wal be ious. . n ai . k ickford said, ‘are ted the men | whi ndeere« 1.1 ec? xd, holding | partment for “he celeb blackjack Kicked lier, Miss Pi The actress er prisoner, drove tv 4 point which y | She hid| the: But old 109’s bell still is perform- for pity shown her by the leader of | the band. The men return-d her to} the spot where Daugherty had been [left and then disappeared, she saia. committing for liquor | i: For an entire year he tolled the Government Medal to Edison Ms | 1887. It was at that time that he »| the Coeur d’Alenes. For 10 years the mine paid nothing and it meant | illuminated the his inventions.” authorized bya 38 which was er 20 to Thomas on at Orange, N. J. ictured both sides of the award, was struck by the treasury de- kane Philanthropist, Foun- der of Orphange The bellringer on old 109 is gone. ing a faithful duty at a half mile |lion dollar institution’ which re- mains today as a monument to the memory of its old ringer. The bellringer was Levi W. Hut- jton and 109 was an early day loco- motive on the Northern Paci Hutton, according to inform ceived at the. Northern Pacific gen- eral headquarters last night, died \@ few days ago at Spokane, Wash., o = Three men who pleaded guilty to! after a few days’ illness. received when he dropped a hammer| criminal charges before Frank T.! upon himself while working under|Lembke, sixth district, were each | t a an automobile and the court agreed| sentenced to serve six months in| Httton’s experience: the Morton county jail recently. admitted| an uncle at Batav: gery in the second| Was 18 years old, when he went to Employees all over the system know the romantic story of Levi Left an or- » he lived with | phan at the age of si | Portland. He took work on a steam- Salem, was} boat for a year and in 1884 took a |Job as fireman on engine No. 109 | on the Northern Pacific at Missoula, with a dangerous weapon. Albert Heinz, Mandan, pleaded| Mont. guilty to engaging in traffic. | bell on this locomotive. Two and one half years after he went to work for | the railroad he was an engineer, re- |maining for 20 years, having been | | transferred to Wallace, Idaho, in became interested in the Hercules Mine, which was then the joke of continued assessments on Mr. Hut- ton and his associates, to whom he had given small interests. Mr. Hut- ton, after finishing his run, would [3 into the mine and work a shift to eep up his end. His associates also worked in the mine. . Strikes Ore But in 1901 ore was struck, It was so rich that they were able to carry it out on their backs in sacks |to get enough money to install ma- chinery. One of the associates in 1905 sold his interest of 1-256th for $15,628. Mr. Hutton realized more than $1,000,000 for his interest, and bate syravmente doubled this ring his lifetime, he gave than half of it away. f tiie Himself an orphan, Mr. Hutton, after he quit his job, went to Spo- Kane, determined to make. life hap- pier for orphans. He established there a 240-acre institution with adequate buildings, known as the Hutton settlement for orphans. Since 1906, hundreds of orphans have been at this institution,’ where education, outdoor work and play are provided, He has spent more than $500,000 and his will provides amply for the in- stitution inthe future. i : Asks for Old Bell , In,1919 Mr. Hutton made his life- time’s only request for assistance, He asked the Northern Pacific to give him the bell from old No. 109, which he proposed to mount in the Hutton settlement administration building, Eighteen months’ scarch jabout Thanksgiving time and an- one of the} | J. We | 0. A. Barto: | husbandry, and Don M » Iowa, until he | in white and yellow, and was lighted | fore there were only a fe: persons | by tall tapering candles. | present in contrast to the hundred | The mothers conducted all ar-/ thousand who had crowded the same | tangements. They are planning | field on December 14, 1927, whe similar banquets .in the future, one | Colonel Lindbergh completed a no | stop flight from Washington in 27: hours. | Know Field Vertectly | couts of their | As Colonel Lindbergh taxied his congregations. | plane to a spot near the hangar he} The mothers this morning ex. | showed perfect familiarity with the | pressed their appreciation for the | field as a result of his former visit | aid given them by Bismarck mer-| He vlimbed out of the cockpit and} chants in arranging the function last | calmly began tinkering with a tire} night. land going over his machine without | William Smith, scoutmaster, Lor-! paying attention to anyone. It was! ‘aine Thornton, istant scoutma: only when a representative of Presi- | ter, W. G. Fulton, and Rev. Walter | dent Calles and sccretaries of the | E. Vater were present at the ban-| United States Embassy crowded up | | other shortly churches are also p) banquets for the Boy quet. lto shake hands and congratulate A regular troop mecting was con-| him that he left his airpla Dwight W. Mor ducted after the dinner. ador, was not pre at the capital out of respect i 1 Farm Experts Advise (ii desire of Colonel Lindbergh | Selection of Turkeys)‘ mate this vi | Unit esent, —re- and to avoid Turkey breeding stock should be) {ier yeahs selected in the fall before large! the field, however numbers have been sold for Thanks- | giving and Christmas markets, in Wore Hunting Clothes the belief of farm experts at the} Both Colonel Lindbergh and Col-| state agricultural college at Fargo. | onel MacNab w hunting clothes Early selection of birds gives a! Colonel Lindbergh laid aside his hel- choice from a large number of bet-| met and put on an old slouch ha n government at | ee? enue birds, according to O.| hefore entering a limousine from the | eisner, field agent in poultry, United States emba: n, professor of poultry Emilio Portes Gil, provis onal | agent in veterinary science. |honor at a dinner at the . United An ideal breeder is a rangy bird,! states Embas |The back should be’ broad, especial- ly at the shoulders, and the breadth should be carried well back toward the tail. The body should be deep, with full rounded” shoulders, ‘The | breast bone or keel should be long | and straight, carrying the flesh well to the rear. The legs should be strong in bone and set well apart. The experts stressed the point that breeders should be judged by their] London, Nov. 10.—(AP)—-“High vigorousness. Treason,” pley by Noel Pemberton : —_—___. Billing, former member of parlia |Honey Shippers Rates ment, has for a theme a pri i | Pt ister trying to start a war Reduced by Railroad] ing foiled" by ‘a bishop who an. nounces over the radio that the Honey shippers of North Dakota|crisis is over. Whereupon the min- will hereafter pay a shipping charge|ister_ attacks the bishop with a 11 cents per i the cabinet and other prominent per: that the aviator was co i ity, but it will g im an op- to meet the next president Fargo to Duluth and the Twin| Propaganda for peace. ies, according to an announcement reece sent J. A. Munro of the state agri-| Patterson Hotel Sunday Din- cultural college by the Northern Pa-| ner - 75¢. Roast Turkey, Roast Chicken and Tenderloin Steak. cific railway. The reduction is equivalent to $35) per carload of honey. W. H. Magill, chairman of the traffic rate committee of the North Dakota Beekeepers association, and N. E, Williams, traffic commissioner of the Fargo Commercial Club, were instrumental in obtaining the de- crease. a Checks Cut Majority | checked today. N In 3,641 of the state’s 3,762 pre- ffirmative votes, with 324,839 agail i 1 correction "a y, where an transmission had given the ns in the tabula- | PAGE THREE mendment, a net loss! amendment 2,000 more votes than it of 1,100 votes in the 20 counties | received, Amendment No. would limit stockholders’ liability, had 465,- 732 affirmative votes in 3,555 cincts, and 206,942 votes against it. Extra salesman wanted ai Bergeson’: ‘Mahan, field) president-clect, will be the guest of | : ed y on Monday night at| | With a large frame, they _believe.! which Colonel Lindbergh, members of | sons will be present. ‘The dinner had | been arranged before it was known| iz to Mex. | undred pounds less|Shovel and the bishop shoots the | than was the case before, on hauls}Minister. The play is intended as} fi TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED AT ONC men for North Dakota_ tert SATURDAY Permanent position. $80 weekly to hold position. Write | ~ Ad, No. 20, in care of Tribune. prevents, WANTED—Three salesmen with! ell a nationally advert :| CApyr oh THEATRE | y on long time pa ments. Unlimited possibilities. Call or phone Chas. Kenney, Grand Pa- cific Hotel, Sunday and Monday. ; Convincing - Proof ‘OTHING more convinc- ing can be said about the quality of the Grebe Synchrophase A-C Six than that it is the creation of a company that for nineteen fags has set a standard by whichevery type of rata reception s been judged. A-C Operation —No Batteries Thrilling Action—Suspense —Rugged Romance How a wise Westerner out- tricked a band of bank rob- . bers. “The. Collegians” Station Phone 243 112 Second Street FOX NEWS Joseph lM. Schenck. presents ees = in The Crities melas ane: Said: An absorbing ° dra- plendid Film: pres H eG sc with nore at Best ments. come out of Holly- LOUIS WOLHEIM wood this season. drama. A _magnifi- Barrymore's acting rymore’s cent picture, one of the finest that has finest ever gi YOU WILL SEE—YOU WILL PRAISE ye screen America’s Most Distinguished Actor in his ‘Tempest’ oS rreatest screen effort. victorious.” —Post. a masterpiece .+ ++ excellent enter- taipment.”— N.Y. Camilla Horn, beautiful new screen sensa- Louis Wolkeim in his funniest role. “The finest. m genuine motion pi The Red Day ture John Barry- —Daring—Vivid. A Tremendous Eye Spec- more ever made. tack One of the mos Bele “ee glowing film dra- A love drama surpassing in heart interest ments of mas which have dome out of: thie and stirring intensity the great heart West.” —World. dramas of book, stage or screen. MATINEE MONDAY AT 2:30 3 Days Starting Monday November 12th Evenings at 7 Captiol Theatre | | MATINEE ADMISSION: 10 and 25c E = AMONG ALL SIXES OF ITS PRICE ¢ _— Coe by Fisher! To Pontiac continues to enjoy. : j motor car Owrcre But bodies by Fisher repre- “Genet Na 4, srrermnere rs ee sent only one of the mony newest style, the greatest lux- sclvaniemee Al by today’s ury, the finest construction c ui peeubic ince known to automotive body ore han fy peated cane building. Yet only Pontiac | tetor—the 'AC fuel pump— among all sixes of its price th redaie wich offers bodies by Fisher. And ie dlisics in their long, low, smartlines, thermostatic control—the their deep-seated comfort and famous G-MR cy durable rdwood and mel o48 Il these ts construction, you will find the lvancements greatshareofthetre- ‘by Pontiac and by no other ome Sema which _ six selling for as little as $745. 2-Door Sedan; $745; Coupes $7453 Roadster, $745; Phase $775: i Sedan, 9875. Cabriolet, $795; 4-Door Sedan, $825; Sport Landau i * Koadling charges. General Motors Time Payment Plan = minimum rate. Stair Motor Co. roadway at Seventh ASSOCIATE, DEALERS Bismarck, N. D. Bawten—iteaae ictet co. Meverrmerver Meter cs Witteswitten ‘Machine Shey. Goedrich—Rrerneiner @ Haus bert Tatas: p, Eenendhempter Eres, “Commands atten- tion... Most com- pelling.”—“limes, “Powerful, Mr. Bar- screen performance. : “Should brin tion. tempestuous rus) Times, movie lovers to the box office and reap a rich harvest of f Imperial Russia. Thrilling shekels.” - Telegraph nas the ele- + +e. One Of rymore’s best photo- plays.”—Sun, :15 and 9 p. m, Evening admission - 20c and 40c DNTIAT |

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