The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 6, 1928, Page 2

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“PAGE TWO Davis Recommends Further Restriction #78 INDUSTRIAL | WOMEN CAN BE SUCCESSFUL IN THE STOCK MARKET BECAUSE OF INSTINCT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1928 bushel” in production costs in favo: of the Argentine grower, Asserting that tremendous increase the present tariff by 50 per |auguration of any treatment which cent. If this were done, Ogg told sion “that there would still be a difference of 83 cents per might heal him. F The testimony of L, E. Hankins | that he heard a shot fired near the Potter home while he was standing with a of Alien Immigration Airmail Pilot Plays Hide And Seek With Fog Death raised and of Liberty ahead,” Smith says. “I swung to the north, got my bearings and swept past to- ward the open sea and the Jersey coast, waving a farewell to the God- dess as I passed. I was én my irl friend a block away and that, following the shot, jhe heard a man say “go on in the nouse or I'll kill you,” accompanied by an oath and then heard another man say “call a doctor Mary, I am shot,’ were the high lights of the morn- ing’s testimony. Much of the ses-j sion was taken up with the testi- | mony,of medical witnesses. everyone who desires to buy his or {her securities intelligently. Just the same as one consults an archi- tect in whom one has confidence, when one wishes to build a house, a | lawyer to handle a legal situation, a doctor when one is ill—so does one secure the proper fundamentals in investments. In this way only are you assured course again and the rest of the journey rasseit without incident.” On another occasion while still flying the New York-Washington route, Smith lost the ground soon after he left Baltimore, heading north for New York. For three hours, he flew blind through clouds and snow flurries, bound for the DISPUTES AIDED Feminine Urge ‘to Shop’ Causes BY LABOR BODY * Them to Exercise Greater : : | Care portations of flaxseed have had aj detrimental effect on the domestic growers, Ogg said United States’ export trade in flaxsecd has been “extinguished.” Despite increased consumption | during the last 20 years, he said the crop of the United Statcs has been declining. Tribune Offers Readers New Aviation Series Crammed With Red-Blooded Thrills About Veteran Navigators of the Ether Carrying Uncle Sam’s Mail Mexican Quota Would Be Cut + from 80,000 to 7,000 by Editor's Note: In this, the last of three articles dealing HURTLING PLANE ALMOST HIT STATUE OF LIBERTY with the wild rise of the stock : * Legislation ABOR MARKET CROWDED | Rarriers Erected to Prevent Coming of Unlimited Labor market, is described the part that women can and do play in finance. The author is a woman who herself has attained an ex- ceptionally high place in ex- change activities. She is Mrs. C. G. Wyckoff, president and publisher of the Magazine of Wall Street, who writes this of the proper foundation for the in- vestment of your funds, and avoid- ance of those heartbreaking losses which are caused by haphazard gambling on tips and propaganda, Buying securities on a business basis is the only sound, intelligent way to stock market success, and is simple of attainment for women as FATHER STATES DYING SON SAID ‘WAS ACCIDEN' (Continved from nage one) {witness for the defense is sick in testimony of the witnesses at the article exclusively for The Trib- | well as men. coroner's inquest in some detail. Potter appeared to be less nerv- ous today than he was when the trial opened yesterday and was not so pale. ‘ Attorneys said the most important a hospital and may be unable to testify. In that event, they said, her deposition will be taken and the tes- timony read to the jury. Provision is made in the law for the taking of EDITOR'S NOT! the airmail lanes, pla: the How Brave Flyers ‘Get the Mail Through at Any Cost’ Told by Pilot Who Has Flown Distance Equal to 20 Times Around World in Long Aviation Career Every day, every night death rides in hide and seek amon ring pilots who whisk your letter throug! the clouds with the skies for a Newark, N. J., field, then the north- ern terminus of the route. Know Towns by Smelis But he overestimated the strength of a head wind and when he found a hole in the clouds and dove down to land he found himself in country covered with snow. He was at Orange, Conn., straight on his oe ae he had overshot Newark ‘| a ry les. Here is the first of. five stories in “Such “blind” flying is part of the airmail pilot’s business today. He will battle fog and storms for hours on his course, if only he is assured of an even chance to land his plane at the end of the journey. Their instruments keep them fly- ing level and at a safe altitude, even though the fogs hem them in like a blanket. Some times they find their way home by the smells of the towns they are headed for. Many an air- mail pilot has found the Chicago field by the smell of the stockyards. They know by the pungent odor of the oil refineries when they are passing Baltimore. 4 NEXT: Eight thousand feet up in a flaming plane. testimony in this manner. Choosing of 12 jurors was the only work completed yesterday. _ Less trouble than was anticipated was encountered in the choosing of the jury. Allowed 20 peremptory challenges each, F. E. McCurdy, state’s attorney, challenged only six and Scott Cameron and Louis H. Connolly, counsel for the defense, | challenged only eight jurors in the panel. Two were disqualified by the court. The following were chosen for the jury: Alfred Arneson, Arena; Frank C. Holmberg, Wing; Tebo Harms, Menoken; M. I. Sawyer, Driscoll; A. L. Marvel, Brittin; and Theodore Quanrud, Alex Asbridge, George Hedrix, Harry Schonert, Robert Solberg, W. H. Morris, and W. Jahnke, all of Bismarck : fei ‘ five-cent postage stamp. : He ge aks ate which Major Wesley L. Smith, superintendent of the New York- : to-Chicago division of the transcontinental airmail ser’ tells of the dangers faced by the flyers. In the airmail service, him- self, since 1919, Major Smith has flown a haf million miles, or a distance of 20 times around the earth, Stresses Cursing Claim He particularly stressed the claim that Potter, in telephone con- | versations overheard by the maid in the Potter home, had’ apparently been displeased; that he cursed Webb at the time of the shooting, asserting that Webb could not “get away with that on me” and that Mr. and Mrs. Potter, after the shooting of Webb, walked away and left Webb lying helpless in the street. Judge Coffey interrupted the proceedings to suggest that persons attending the trial come early and be seated when the trial opens, He warned against whispering in the try show, to be held in Bismarck |audience or passing in and out dur- January 3 to 7, will be started Fri-|ing the sessions, pointing out that day morning, when a dozen solicitors | it is an important case and he did| will canvass the city business men |not wish interruptions from the au-! for funds, Secretary H. P. Goddard, | dience. of the Association of Commerce, an-| Dr. L. W. Larsen was the first nounced this morning. j witness. He performed the autopsy | By MRS. C. G. WYCKOFF (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) New York, Dec. 6.—Can women be successful in the stock market? All things being equal, I believe they can. From my observation up to a few years ago, the average man approached Wall Street merely with the idea of “beating the game.” Women, at the same time, were ap- proaching the “Street” through male members of their family and friends, not directly. However, the war changed all this, | the government employ-| together with many other things. vice, while its agents of| Women went into business like the | eonciliation, directed by Hugh L.|male members of their family, and | Kerwin, have intervencd in 478 in- | found that it was not the complicated | disputes during the year,| affair which they had anticipated, | eeking to terminate disputes that | and that in place of technical knowl- disturbed payrolls on which 350,000 | edge, common sense was a very good Morkers are counted. substitute. * Work of the bureaus engaged in Women Want Facts ‘POULTRY SHOW OUT FOR FUNDS Canvass of City Friday Will Seek $800 to $1,000 for Purchasing Coops Washington, Dee. 6.—()—Ex- | tensive revamping of the immigra- tion laws with the purpose of fur- ther 1 ting the flow of aliens} Mhto the United States is recom- mended by Secretary Davis of the! Labor Department in his annual re- port. Dealing with other phases of the department's activity, the document i that more than 1,400,000 e men, women and children, Yave been placed in jobs during the Death rides the air lanes where the airmail wings its way. His fingers clutch from the fog, the storms, the lightning, the ice clouds. His score is 49 of the finest pilots America has trained in this new science of riding the skies. But the times he has clutched at. empty air are legion, for the daring youths who fly the skies have learned through grim experience to outwit their foe and outguess his moods. 3 Battling the fogs, the storms and the ice has become their business. Squeezing their planes between clouds and moun- tain tops, riding high, or roaring up valleys between the hills, are all part of the day’s work, | A drive to finance the purchase of coops for the Missouri Slope Poul- The first establishment of lace manufacture in England is said to be due to some refugees from Danger rides with them. Gambling with death is the spice which sea- sons the monotony of the long rides alone through the skies, under blazing suns, through blanket-like fogs, or riding high above the beacon lights which pick out the course at night. r or vicinity. : ‘ Following the choosing of the jury, court was adjourned by Judge James &pecial service for women and chil- dren, for the supervision of natural- iZation of aliens, and the statistical study of wages. prices, and industrial | economics are likewise reviewed and ese final word expresses isfaction with existing in- dustrial conditions, and optimism for even further betterment in the fu- thre. = Cut Down Mexicans The chief effect of the immigra- tion legislation Secretary Davis ap- proved would be to cut the immigra- tion from Mexico, now running at | | plished other jobs, they began to strike out on their own, in the han- more careful than men, and not hav- ling been accustomed to the posses- sion of large sums, they, on the whole, approached the security mar- ket with a desire to know more about. the actual facts surrounding the securities in which they interested themselves, Woman has a natural shopping instinct and, when interested in buy- ing anything, she is willing to spend Having undertaken and accom-| dling of their savings as well. Being | _To equip the show with a suf-|on Webb’s body and related his ficient number of coops, $800 to findings, reading from his records. $1000 may be needed, said Secretary |He said Webb had been killed by a soddard. The use of the Interna-/ gunshot wound, the shot passing tional truck show room has been ob-|through the abdomen from right to |tained for the exhibition of the |left. The larger organs of the body | slope’s feathered aristocracy, but | were untouched, but the intestines! cee for caging the birds is were riddled, Larsen said. He told lacking. ‘of finding eleven buckshot on the The show committee of the Associ-|left side of the body but said he| ation of Cominerce met Wednesday | didn’t know if he had found all the , and decided on the canvass for the shot which entered Webb’s body: coop funds. This committee consists |He found the shot wadding in the of Carl Nelson, chairman, P, W.| wound on the left side, he said. Starkle and J. L. Kelly. They se-| Dr. Larsen identified the buckshot | lected nine others to A. Coffey. Two jurors dismissed were L, K. ‘ Thompson and Carl Bredy, both of| death and the high degree of cour- Bismarck; jurors challenged by the| age with which they battle their prosecutors | follow: J. J. Brose:| old time foe is alost an epic. And Arena; J. W. Beyer, Driscoll; and : jor Wesley L. Smith W. B.’ Couch, Fred kK. Ode, Steve| the story of Major Wesley L. Smith, Morris, and Price Owens, all of Bis-| one of the original airmail flyers marck. Jurors challenged by the| and now superintendent of the east- defense counsel “ollow: Paul Eddie,| ern division of National Air Trans- J, W. Riley, B. K. Skeels, S. F. Hol-| port company, is typical of them all, lingsworth, Walter Knott, Jr., all of| le is in charge of airmail opera: Bismarck; Philip Schuh, Regan; C.1 tions on the New York-Chicago divi. R. Crawford, Moffit; and Lloyd} sion of the transcontinental airmail Gosney, Braddock. route. His headquarters are at The story of their brushes with! with the mail might have been his last. Lost in the Fog That was in the days of the ori- ginal lw York-Washington air- mail route. He had left the Bel- mont Park, N. Y., terminal headed | for Washington, with bad weather ahead, planning to follow the Long) Island shore, hop the bay to the Jersey coast and then strike inland to Washington. a It was his first experience with bad weather flying. He set his ship Flanders, who settled in the village of Cranfield, west of the county of a) adjoining Buckingham- shire, i A high school chamber of com- merce has been organized by New Bern, N. C., students, The Children at Christmas Time join with them |taken from Webb's body. Witnesses subpoenaed by the state] Cleveland, O. 's, Those named were a 80,000 yea o sli c i gy ; i , Potter do- " nearly &0 per ycar, to slightly | the necessary time and energy to get follow: Susie Boehm, Pot de 5000 Hours in Air in the can’ above 7,000, while leaving undis-) on its course, plowing through fog exactly what she wants. LW. banks and showers of rain. When turbed the movement from other countries of the western hemisphere. However, it would also compromise the dispute between the “quota” and i i methods of de- termining admissibility to the United States, and would relieve some of | the handicaps now imposed on aliens who are admitted. He recommended a compromise be- tween the quota and national origins methods of determining admissible numbers and indorsed the proposals to fix a quota limit to immigration from North and South American countries, which now have no quota. “Following the slowing down of immigration from Europe, there was a large increase i Mexicans entering the country e secretary continued. “They took and are continuing to take the places formerly filled by south and east Europeans. Under existing law they can continue to come in increasing numbers, as they undoubtedly will do, in increasing numbers, thus de- feating one of the main purposes for which quota laws were enacted, namely, to prevent further over- crowding of our labor mark Barriers Are Beneficial “I want to say emphatically that T entertain no prejudice against the people of any country, but being ab- solutely convinced that the barriers that have been erected to prevent the coming of unlimited European labor have proven to be highly bene- ficial, it is -impossible to avoid the The majority of women up to a| D. Gallup, B. O. Ward, S. G. v Severtson, L. K. Thompson, William ‘ears ago confined themselves | Noggle, Worth Lumry, O. A. Olson, mainly to the better types of secur- | Richard Scrr and County Agent A. ities. Their fear of losses kept them | R. Miesen. from taking speculative risks, How-| The city has been districted by ever, with the improvement in their | Secretary Goddard and the twelve incomes and the growing of their in- | solicitors will start from the Asso- vestment funds, their courage in- | ciation of Commerce rooms at 9, Fri. creased and many women of this | day morning, interviewing the busi class have done exceedingly well in| ness people for contributions to the the market. The great mass of! fund. women, just as the great mass of| Secretary Goddard was enthusi- men, however, rely on tips as in the | astic over the prospects of the poul- past. Actually, of course, sex has/|try show from responses so far re- nothing to do with intelligence. ceived from poultrymen. He expects Advantage of Patience \a fine turkey display. The show, he As far as women are concerned, Said, will consist. of exhibits of a few $|they have a great advantage: they | Seneral range of breeds, with no emphasis on any special strain of chickens. By buying the equipment of coops, he said, not only will the coming show be well housed, but the equipment will be on hand in fu- ture years for other shows. TARIFF BOOST FIGURES GIVEN know they have a lot to learn about | securities, and so usually apply to the most conservative sources for their information, And because | woman is more patient and less | headstrong, and is willing to wait and bide her time, she should do very well. Patience is one of the greatest assets that a man or woman can have in dealing with the stock market. The function of the stock market. is really very simple in its technique; it is nothing more nor less than market-place for the buying and sell- ing of securities. The broker is there to execute your orders, and stocks are nothing but pieces of paper which certify to your partnership in a corporation. The selection of the security itself Would Still Give Argentina Advantage Increasing Duty 50 Per Cent Objection Sustained The court sustained the defense lobjection to a question regarding | whether Webb had suffered a se- ;Yere external hemorrhage. The de- fense contended an examination |several hours after death would not show this. i Taking up the cross-cxamination, L. H. Connolly asked only a few questions. Larsen said he found no |clothing fabric in the wound and no powder marks. The cross-examina- tion was brief. Willard B. Pierce testified to the |same things as Dr. Larsen. He said jhe assisted at the autopsy. There {was no cross-examination. Dr. C. O. Hansen, hospital interne, treated Webb upon his arrival at the hos- pital after the shooting. He de- scribed Webb’s condition at that time and said it was obvious that the wound would be fatal. He told of giving Webb a stiynu- lant and of treating his wound. Webb had a bad internal hemor- rhage, he said, although there was little external bleeding. He identi- fied the clothes’ which Webb wore when he was brought to the hos- pital. Gave Webb Stimulant The coat, showing the hole made by the buckshot, was exhibited to the jury. Dr. Hansen said he dressed the wound and gave Webb a stimulant and other medicine to relieve the pain. mestic at the time of the shooting; a eco ‘1 Alfred Thal and Charles Rigler,|’ Smith is a war-trained pilot, a nearby residents, who lifted the] veteran of 5000 hours in the air, wounded man into the automobile;|during which he has flown the Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bartley, Pot-| equivalent of 20 times the distance ter Saturday night visitors; Donald| around the world. i Snyder, Potter visitor who was to| For eight years he flew the air- be a member of the planned hunting| mail, first on the original New trip; Mrs. Donald Snyder, Potter vis-| York-Washington route and then itor; L. E. Hankins, Fort Lincoln| on the “hell stretch” over the Penn- soldier, who was a block away from| sylvanid mountain leg of the trans- the scene of the shooting when it] continental route, the worst stretch happened; Linda Clausnitzer, domes-| of flying country in the United tic of Charles Rigler, who was a| States. Still flies it, in fact, if the block :.way at the time of the shoot-| emergency arises and he is needed. ing; Drs. E. P. Quain, L. W. Larson,| He has crashed his plane on moun- and W..B. Pierce, who performed the| tain tops, fought through the ice post-mortem; W. I, Franklin, police-j clouds to the clear air above where iman called to the residence; Finlay| the stars kept him company; fought Baker, who accompanied the police|fire more than a mile high and to the Potter home after the shoot;| brought his ship down safely—and ing; Henry Potter, son of the de*| lives to tell the story. A tale the fendant; Bert Wetmore, Mrs. Delia| fictionists couldn’t imagine if they Krueger, sister of Mrs. Potter; P.| tried, yet a true tale of the dangers B. Webb, father of Oliver Webb; E.| and the heroism of the men who fly J. Gobel, county coroner; L. Kleppe,| the airmail. ; Otto Dirlam, gunsmith, who ex-| Smith, who attended the Univer- amined the gun from which the fatal| sity of California, was a war-trained shot was fired; Dr. W. S. Koller, who] flyer and a veteran of a summer of: examined the body of the dead man| aerial barnstorming whem he joined after the shooting; Cyrus Hanson,| the airmail service. His first flight and Daisy Pugh, Potter domestic be- he had been on his way 30 minutes, he looked below hoping to sight the | bay. There was nothing below but) fog. ‘Then housetops and church spires began to flash by, too close below for comfort or safety. He was off his course, flying over the house- tops of Brooklyn. “There. was nothing to do but lunge on, dodging the high build- ings if I could,” Smith says. “Luck was with me. I found myself over the river 2:.d headed down the bay. “The air was a soup of ap Be- low I could hear the whistles of tugs and far away the clatter of the ‘L’ trains over the bridg My goal was the Statue of Liberty. If I could find that, I could point my way down the bay and to the Jersey coast.” ’ Dodges Statue of Liberty The statue looms up large on Bedloe’s Island on a clear day. It is a different matter to find it from the air, when the air is full of fog and rain and you can’t see where you're headed. Father John’s Medicine Keeps Them “Streng and Free From Colds “My four children are strong and 1 healthy and I get lots of compli- ments on them,” writes Mrs, John Mayes of Port Austin, Michigan, “I always give them Father John’s Medicine. When my boy was seven he seemed to get coughs and colds | very oftén and Father John’s Medi- “Suddenly, I saw the long up-j cine proved very effective.”—-Adv. fore Miss Clausnitzer. Defense attorneys said yesterday that they did not know whom they would call to the witness stand. Three defendants, who pleaded not guilty to charges during the after- noon session, follow: Carl Miller, operating a motor vehicle while in- toxicated; Herbert Pierey, statutory is the important factor in the situ- ation. How important this is, is evidenced by the fact that all insti- tutions and experienced investors make their purchases only after the , Washington, Dec. 6.—(/P)—Statis- tics intended to show ‘that increase of the flaxseed tariff by 50 per cent | would yet leave Argentina exporters an advantage over domestic pro- The prosecution objected to cross-examination as to the con- versation between Webb and Dr. Hansen, saying that the conversa- tion is a part of the defense and conviction that the industrial situ- ation ought to be guarded against the difficulties and dangers which + will almost certainly follow the un- limited immigration of workers from charge, and Mrs. Claude Rossen, en- gaging in the liquor traffic. John Sullivan, Mandan attorney, has been retained by the state’s at- torney to aid the prosecution. Rob- A Pleasing Gift | . every once in’é ‘while. toth another source.” To prevent the separation of fam- ilies, the measure indorses sugges- tions that heads of families be not allowed to enter the United States until passports under the quota were also available for the wife and chil- dren, but proposes to let the mem- bers of now separated families be reunited under less onerous delay. Secretary Davis also questions the operation of the law favoring immi- gration of agricultural labor, as hav- ing failed to attain effectiveness, and Suggested alterations. ecent court decisions by which aliens resident in Canada have ob- tained permission to cross the border into the United States were most Tegretted in the report. County Junior Red Cross Drive Begun Efforts are being made to enroll 'y child in Burleigh county’s rural schools in the Junior Red Cross, ac- cording to Miss Madge Runey, county superintendent of schools, Miss Runey has recently been ap- pointed chairman of the Junior Red Cross work in the county. Membership in the organization is obtained for §.50 by each schoolroom group. The county has 125 school- Toom groups in 100 schools, Miss Runey said. Membership in the organization entitles each schoolroom to a sub- scription to the Junior Red Cross News. a magazine, and the Junior Red Cross calendar. VINEGAR RUB Give your furniture a vinegar rub * To do this in gar, wrin, the furniture with ie most careful kind of analysis. Sound investment principles, based on years of experience of the most successful ae investors, present an excellent asi ducers were submitted today in the tariff commission’s investigation, by W. R. Ogg, of the American Farm Bureau federation. _ The present flaxseed import duty lis 40 cents a bushel, and the com- mission Essentials of Selection The three essentials of selecting a well-managed company in a sound industry with increasing earning power, should be the basis for every investment that 2 woman makes. Avenues for securing this funda- mental information are open to protect domestic growers from for- eign competition, keenest competitor for the market. Mar ie flexible provision of the tari is sceking to determine whether this should be increased to Argentina is the should be brought out by direct ex- ination. The objection was sus- tained. Several other questions cross-examination. cal witness. then a dying man. oust sit RIGHT THERE ,UNCLE, SAMES , AND TLL GET THE CAKES AND SAUSAGE READY WHILE YOU'RE EATING YOUR GRAPE FRUIT. tre oe. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams ||) Cpek Ghaots Haw ' a | m an ee' Pi el Sacer, AEROES ARE PADCE-NOT GORN . were barred on the same basis and the defense made no further effort at Dr. E. P. Quain was the last medi- He said he was called to treat Webb and that Webb was He described Webb's condition in detail, saying law President Coolidge could | he was too-near death to permit in- ert Webb, cousin of the slain man, attended both morning aut afternoon sessions yesterday and held frequent consultations with the prosecuting attorneys regarding the qualifica- tions of jurors. P. B. Webb, father of Oliver Webb, attended the after- noon session. Henry Stevens and L. H. Stevens pleaded not guilty to charges of un- lawfully removing mortgaged prop- erty from the county. They were in- dicted on the charges by the grand jury. 3} Atlanta, Ga., Dec, 6.—(AP)—G. Hall Davis, automobile dealer, was shot and killed on a downtown street here today by W.L. Shippey, a warehouse clerk, who surrendered to the police with the statement that Davis’ attentions to Mra. Shippey was the cause. A few minutes afte? thé shooting Shippey accosted two policemen in front of police headquarters and an- nounced he wished to report the killing of a man, “Are you sure you killed some one?” he was asked. “T hope so,” was the rejoinder. “I shoe him through the head five ‘imes.” NOTICE To The Stockholders of. the Depositors’ Holding Co.: The annual meeting of the steckhelders of the Depositers’ Holding Company will be held jat the Elks Hall in the city of Bismarck, North Dakota, on Tuesday, December 11th, 1928, at 3:00: p. mr..: : At this ‘meeting there’ are five directors to be elected, and such other business as may be properly” brought before the meeting. : It is. desired that you attend this meeting if possible, but in the event you are unable to be present, and in order that a majority of the stock may be represented, we ask that you | send your proxy to someone eat is going to be present or to the secretary. . I. ROOP, Secy. Dated November 28, 1928. © : or MEN SPECIAL HOLIDAY WRAPPED PACKAGES AT ALL GOOD CIGAR DEALERS teh, hh Ge OBO OBE Sly OOe oGe Th OOF CER eGe eee one oon

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