The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 26, 1928, Page 7

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IG—No. 36 |ARRIETT—Ne. 37 |WIN ! H friyt iSB iss ii | innnnn SBBSR SSSSS i" cumertit 2 U «.!l « “ je oe _— ———— BEES eon 33 i i i 19: 14 31 HAZEL GROVE—No. 47 BISMARCK list Ward, 1st Precinct—No. 48 , 2nd Precinct—No. 53 IRICHMOND—Ne. 89 ICANFIELD—No. 40 \ESTHERVILLE—No. 41 GRASS LAKE—Ne. 42 |WILSON—No. 43 ISTEIBER—No. 44 ISUMMIT—No. 45 FLORENCE LAKE—No. 46 2nd Ward, 2nd Precinet—No. 49 2nd Ward, 1st Precinct—No. 50 2nd Ward, 2nd Precinct—No. 51 Ward, 1st Precinct—No. 52 rd Ward, 4th Ward—No. 54 3rd 20 20 20 20 20 38 38 38 38 38 220 aS a8 i & Ll ess 1 i } i i iSeveee sasses i se leeens vesese | |] [Et] ses ae Bo | SRVBE S.RRBE — a 2 Re GEORGE F. WILL, C CRE, ard D 4th DIST. ‘A. C. ISAMINGER, County Auditor. MARCK TRIRUNE 8 & 8 e. 8 go Fs eee (fo Se ries Bo ae ices 8 8 iS 8 & i 4 8 ES s Gl te fe 4 See oo z i} wep. Be 8 GJ 3 s 2 ee. eee 3 5 4 <£ pS LI aR Sen mes) 134 144 28 51 134 144 28 51 134 144 28 61 134 144 28 51 134 144 28 61 222 25 29 222 25 29 222 25 29 222 26 29 222 25 25 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 107 233 17 197 124 197 188 156 218 108 221 227 100 106 215 98 197 130 200 86 231 306 119 117 142 205 180 159 259 219° (27 139 168 161 245 201 105 116 203 67 250 105 217 54 * 267 252 250 219 213 137 15 106 220 162 ¢ 302 150 241 101 154 194 122 228 105 234 216 122 218 143 186 148 County Commissioners. 9 30 16 41 14 34 6 43, 17 34 8 45 37 36 39 46 43 30 24 8 24 34 31 41 23 46 10 21 36 28 29 26 29 21 30 23 87 29 24 55 17 44 53 64 57 58 il TOTAL VOTES ~ |SLAYER SEARCH |* Gasoline ciares, | Man, Pearly Gates | ? |Woman Victim of Hatchet Maniac Wants to See Jailed Suspect Again Omaha, Neb., Nov. 26.—(?)—In- vestigation into Omaha’s three hatchet slayings and two attacks, presumably by the same “hatchet maniac,” was at a standstill today, while improvement in the condition of Mrs. Harold Stribling, the latest victim, was watched. Jake Bird, negro suspect held at the state prison at Lnicoln for safe keeping, will again be brought be- fore Mrs. Stribling as soon as her condition warrants. Hhe has de- clared that Bird “looked like” the hatchet slayer, but expressed a de- sire to see him again before making a positive statement, Mr. and Mrs. Stribling saw each other yesterday afternoon for the first time since they were attacked. Stribling, former high school foot- ball star, was struck on the head by the man while he lay asleep. His condition has been serious, but im- Proved to the extent that doctors now say he will recover. No mention of the attack was made when the couple met yesterday in the hospital, on request of attending physicians. Additional palm prints were taken of Bird yesterday at the prison, but results of comparison of these with prints found on a chair in the Strib- ling home, where the attacker sat and talked to Mrs. Stribling after striking her, have not been divulged. MENDEZ ENDS HAVANA JUMP Colombia Pilot Rests Prepara- tory to 800-Mile Flight to Guatemala Havana, Nov. 26,—(AP)—With more than a third of his flight _be- hind him, Lieutenant Benjamin Men- dez, Colombian army aviator flyi: from New York to Bogota, r today and prepared for his next hop. He plans to leave Havana Harbor at dawn tomorrow in his seaplane for Puerto Barrios, Guatemala, 800 miles distant. Lieytenant Mendez completed a 600 mile jump from Jacksonville, Fla., in 5 hours and 32 minutes. He said flying conditions were fairly good despite cross winds which made going a bit rough at times. He was accompanie! by his mechanic, John Tod Hunter, an American. From Puerto Barrios he will fly 1,000 miles to Colon, Panama, and pen 1,300 miles to Bogota, Colom- ia, aR BEVY OF RECORDS London, Nov. 26.—Badwell Ash Hall, West Suffolk, boasts an un- usual combination of records. A brother and sister were successive owners, who died aged 91 and a cook who cooked 59 Christmas = ners; a housemaid who served for over 40 years, and two horsemen with lifelong service, both over 80, THIEF 26.—There’s champion pole sitters, weiner eaters and coffee quaffers, but the undis- puted “meanest thief” title goes to Dave Weiner. Weiner, with $250 in his pockets, was caught by Detec- tive J. Stanley after he had snatched a battered purse, containing 51 cents, from an 81-year-old woman, KILLER DIES IN CHAIR Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 26.—(AP)— Charles Lovell, convicted of slaying John P. Drake, a laborer, at Mt. Union, Pa., April 6 last was electro- cuted at Rockview penitentiary this morning. No motive for the shoot- ing of Drake was brought out at the trial except that Lovell, who was accompanied by a young woman, was. in a belligerent mood when he hap- pened to see Drake. GERMAN PROFESSOR DEAD Minneapolis, Nov. 26.—(AP)— Prof. Carl Schlenker, head of _the department of German of the Uni- versity of Minnesota for 13 years, died today after a brief illness. He was 59 years old, and acknowledged as one of the most outstanding scho- lars in his field. His widow sur- vives. FUEL AND HIS MONEY Meriden, Conn., Nov. 26.—Charles Sampson, local baggagemaster, wonders dolefully why the govern- ment couldn’t have used asbestos in making its paper money. After fir- ing the furnace at the depot, he opened the door just in time to see the remains of his pocketbook and $120 in bills devoured by the flames. HOW DOES HE DO IT? London, Nov. 26.—An automobile accident here recently revealed that Charles Knapp had been driving automobiles and motorcycles for 28 years, despite the fact that he is 76 yeurs old and paralyzed in both legs. The court stopped Knapp with a $10 fine and a 12-month license suspen- sion. PROBABLY HAD A DATE Tonia, Mich., Nov. 26,—Charles Witiems, 22, a trusty at the Ionia Reformatory, is rather forgetful. A violinist, he donned his Tuxedo in preparation for a concert. Just be- fore time to leave for the concert, he walked out without seking Tr mission of the pri icials. When last seen, Witiem: walk- in, long a highway toward Grand Rapids. HERE, KITTY, KITTY London, Nov. 26.—An uninvited guest nearly caused a stam) at J. Siddall, smoking a cigaret, opened the hood of his car last night to in- vestigate engine trouble. He was burned to death by flames that ig- nited his clothes, the car and the garage. Burned Trousseau Is Evanston, Ill, Nov. 26.—(AP)— Even though the trousseau of his | bride-elect has beey destroyed by fire, Tom Stidham, freshman foot- ball coach at Northwestern Univer- sity, is to be marriej tonight. Stidham, who was named on sev- eral all-American football teams. j When he played tackle with the Haskell Indians, attended a theatre with Miss Georgia Hallman, his bride-to-be. During their absence fire swept ling her wedding wardrobe. |ern suggested that red blankets be substituted for the destroyed trous- seau. “Ded blanket” is the Indian name by which Stidham was known at Haskell, STILL VERY YOUNG (Advertisement) No Delay to Marriage | Miss Hallman’s apartment, destroy-| { Coach Dick Hanley of Northwest-| Kind Old Lady: How old are you, | my little man? Young Hopeful: I don’t know. Mother was 26 when I was born, but now she's only 24.—Excelsior, Mex- ico City. PAGE SEVEN y CORMAN NAVAL WAR HERO DIES | Commander of Kaiser’s Fleat at Battle of Jutland Dead at Age of 65 Berlin, Nov. 26.—(P)— Admiral Reinhard Scheer, who directed the shots LURES ae of Jutland on May 31, 1916, against a superior English fleet, died today at the age of 65, His death occurred as he was traveling from Dresden to Mann- heim. Promoted to the chief command of the imperial German fleet in Febru- ary, 1916, Admiral Scheer conducted the historic battle so creditably that in July, 1916, he succeeded Admiral Von Holtzendorf as chief of the ad- miralty fleet. Scheer was born on September 30, 1863, at Oberkirchen, Hesse-Ntssau. He joined the navy, and in the ’80s distinguished himself as a lieuten- ant in skirmishes against the na- times of Cameroon, After service in various departments of the imperial navy he became chief of the high seas fleet in 1910, with the rank of rear admiral. In 1915 he was placed in command of the third squadron of the imperial fleet. A new glass has been invented that withstands pressure, heat acid better than any yet known. (Advertisement) CINCINNATI, 0., Nov “As an American citizen I protes' )!the mo: ELECTION CALUMNIES SCORED BY ‘ARCHBISHOP M’NICHOLAS red thing we have in life. We live in our holy religion, against the insinuation that may |and we shall die in it with the hoy Church, because of a Catholic candi- | date or for any other reason what- give me the slightest indication as to how I any other Catholic citizen of my jurisdiction should vote, Archbishop John T. Nicholas, 0. P., speaking at the mass meeting in Music Hall Sunday night, whic! marked the public opening of th convention, “I wish, as a Catholic bishop, in the interest of religion, to protest be the beneficiary of attacks on any man’s religion. God forbid that I were attacked and if our Catholic eople were asked not to vote for bi Wecasee atv Wia vali iouai helices? continued Archbishop McNicholas. religion is attacked. Any party is & seeks to gain votes through atta on réligion, or, by remaining passi is willing to be beneficiary of them,” Archbishop MeNicholas said: “We love the Church because she is our spiritual mother, and because she is the living bond between our- selves and God. We love the material home in which we live. We love our country, which gives us protection and guarantees to us opportunity and freedom, with a love which in crucial times knows no bounds. Recent Crises Recalled deepened and rendere« because of a recent her fair name has been foully black. ened. The Catholic Church his been held up to men as an v.., hated and feared. Christ, the epitome of all evil. She has been scorned as an alien, in- capable of assimilating American ideals, and as awaiting only the op- portunity to effect the destruction of American institutions. No clean- could any decent man give expression to some’ef the things that have been broadcast about our sweet and ten- der mother. “I speak for the priests and for the Catholics of this diocese when I say that I know the Catholic Church to be a most ennobling and super- naturalizing influence, incapable, as a corporate entity, of directing men to do wrong. Any individual member of the Church may sin and may mis- lead others, but we challenge the whole world to prove that the Cath- olic Church is a teacher of evil, that she leads men away from God, or that she directs her members in any other way than those of truth and love, “Never Has Existed” “The Catholic Church that men to- day scorn and ridicule and hate does not exist. It never has existed, It is but the degenerate creation of a perverted imagination and of a judg- ment that is not informed. All would be compelled to hate the Church if she were in truth what she has recently been represented to be. “I speak with no bitterness, but only with the deepest grief that our loving and most tender mother should have been slandered so malig- nantly, I ask every priest and every Catholi: man of this jurisdic- tion to be calm and patient under this orde: Let no intemperate words pass our lips. Let no unchar- itable judgment find lodgment in our minds. “I speak officially when I say that the Catholic Church in Cincinnati is interested in no political party nor in political candidates of any party. It experiences no disappointment be- cause of the defeat of one party, nor does it rejoice in the victory of the other. The Church is committed to no form of government, but willingly lives under every form, and as a duty supports all legitimate civil author- ity, by whatever party it is exer- cised. “In our form of government the choice of the people means for us a representative and agencies endowed by God with divine authority in the civil order, to which we owe un- @ recent reception of the Drapes’ swerving loyalty. To the president- 8 ge. Chamber of Trade at soe It was a mouse, which a self-appointed committee of me: DEATH IN KNIFE SLIP elect of the United States, to the insisted on| governor-elect of this state, and to running around the feet of female Be ofher erties oe the city, state » The hen | and nation, I can Tigelteppointed commitees ot men |ance. thet the Catholic citizens. of put a cat on the little fellow’s trail. (sd jurisdiction will show a eepect for the divine authority vest them which will be surpassed by Nov. 26.—A knife, which | no other London, iy hile he was carving a piece eg ‘caused the death et a|test with all the power at com- butcher’s assistant at Southend. |mand against the attack The point of the blade pierced an| the religion which tontrol artery in his thigh and he bled to aid | National Council of Catholic Men's | against any party that is willing to | “Nor can I remain silent when my | worthy of condemnation which cither | “Our love of the Church has been | “She has been described as Anti- | minded man could think, much less | ive; the assur- up. “Asa Dishop of this diocese, I pro- could be | That ie erate ‘id rel is us than si a any sadly a of an eternal reward. Those who wantonly attack it, those who know- soever, in any way attempted to con- | ingly misrepresent and calumniate trol my political affiliations or to it, are guilty of an infamy which de- bases their minds and hearts to the lowest depths of degradation. “T protest especially, as a Catholic Bishop and as an American citizen, against making the United States mail an agency to attack my religion. Some way ought to be found to pre- vent the use of the United States mail for the purpose of attacking any man’s religion, and this espe- cially during political campaigns, when unprincipled politicians of all parties are willing to make use of any means, however infamous, to should ever be silent in this com- | gain votes. munity if any man not of my faith | “As an American citizen I protest against the insinuation made that my church, because of a Catholic candidate, or for any other reason whatseever, in any way attempted to control my political affiliations or to give me the slightest indication s to how I or any other Catholic citizen of my jurisdiction should vote. This is not the province of the Church. It is not her affair. “I wish as a Catholic bishop, in the interest of religion, to protest against any party that is willing to | be the beneficiary of attacks on any man’s religion. God forbid that I should ever be silent in this com- munity if the religion of any man not of my faith were attacked, and if our Catholic people were asked not to vote for him because of his religious belief. ‘Nor can I remain silent when my religion is attacked. Any party is worthy of condemnation which either seeks to gain votes through attacks on religion, or, by remaining passive, . to be |i8 willing to be the beneficiary of them. Newspapers Are Praised “I feel it a duty in the name of the priests and people of this juris- diction to express our great sense of gratitude to the thousands of news- papers which in their editorial col- umns have condemned all attacks on religion in the recent political cam- paign. It is most consoling to Cath- olics to know that ten to eleven mil- jion or more non-Catholic voters gave evidence at the polls of their refusal to believe the calumnies so freely circulated against the Cath- olic Church. I say it again, that it is a matter of little or no interest whether or not a Catholic be presi- dent of the United States. But it is most outrageous that the candidacy of a Catholic should bring about such a vicious attack upon his re- ligion, “I venture to think that 95 per cent of this outburst of intolerance is due to ignorance. I like to think that perhaps not one per cent of those who in our section of the country took an active part in the campaign against the Catholig Church did so out of pure malice, _ “As a representative body of Catholic men, are we not responsible in a large measure for the ignorance of our fellow citizens regarding our religion? May I put this pointed question: i “How many hundreds—not to thousands—of Catholic men in this jurisdiction have tried seriously to inform those who ridicule and scorn and hate the Catholic Church in this diocese? Let us blame ourselves for much of the ignorance which is the prolific source of bigotry, and 8 help, let us promise, with God’ the result of this convention to make amends for our indifference and our neglect of our opportunities, “In conclusion, let me thank the tens of thousands of non-Catholies “}] of this community who in @ sense of justice have refused to without investigation their lic fellow citizens or the Church whie is their inspiration. Let commend the priests and the p of the Church of Cincinnati h great temperance and restraint they } have shown under such provocation, Let us continue in this spirit, but let us resolve that the Catholic Chi shall be known, not as some her to be, not as she has been scribed by her defamers, but is in reality. This is a work impos- ing a great res} ibility upon ey words ‘temperate’ ostion Medi words, em] “. thought and endless patience.” ———eEeEEEEEE jothere that religion is

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