The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 8, 1929, Page 6

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MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1928 PAGE SIX MINOT MAN STATES BOYS FROM FARMS Gotham Has Hottest April Day on Record New York, April 8.—(7)—The un- | | Seasonable warm wave which struck | the metropolis yesterday continued today. At midforenoon the mercury j was nearing the 88 degree mark. | American Ends Round Trip Flight in Britain |z- Croydon, Eng., April 8.—(#)—Van Lear Black, American aviation en- thusiast, today completed a round trip flight of Cape Town, South Africa. He reached here in a French |= EMPLOYMENT CURE INTERESTS HOOVER zZ 2 ~ MAKE BEST SCOUTS North Dakota Executive Only Man in U. S. Having More Lads From Country St. Paul, April 8—(?)—Farm boys make the best Boy Scouts, H. H. Pres- cott, scout executive for the Minot. | N. D., area council told the scout} school which began a three day ses- sion at the University farm school to- day. Nr. Prescott is the only executive in the United States who has more ‘NEGRO SAVED 4TH Weather bureau sharps said there would be a gradual rise in tempera- ture until late today, when showers would cause a drop. The mercury yesterday touched 86 degrees, the hottest April 7 on record here. TIME BY INSANITY David Shanks Will Die in Elec- | farm boys in his troops than city boys. In his 18,000 square miles domain in| the northwestern corner of North Da- kota, 57 per cent of the scouts come from farms or from villages of less than 500 population. “Rural boys are a hardier lot,” he said, “and can take care of themselves | where the town boy cannot. Scouting | in the country cannot get along, how- ever, without financial help from the outside.” Thirty executives from North ani South Dakota, Minnesota and Sup: tor, Wis., are here for the meeting. i RECOMMEND INDIAN AS COMMISSIONER: i Representative From Minnesota | Urges Appointment of Red Man as Bureau Head | tric Chair if He Becomes Sane Again Chicago, April 8. \—David Shanks, negro, thrice ed from the electric chair by st ~s of exe- cution, was committed to the Chester asylum for the criminal insane today by Judge Robert E. Gentzel. He was under sentence of death for the mur- der last summer of Jennie Meta Con- | stance, Peoria (IL) + ticator and} vaduate student at Northwestern | niver whom he clubbed to death ; in Evanston. | Shanks was fast asleep in his chair | when the verdict of insanity, reached by 2 jury Saturday night, was read in court. He exhibited no emotion at| the pronguncement rescuing him a} fourth time from death. He was to have died in the electric y at mid- night tonight. Counsel for the negro slayer told the jury last week he had become in- sane since the trial when he was con- victed and declared sane. In the event Shanks regains his sanity he will be | Maine Governor Tells President United States Is 10 Years Behind Others Washington, April 8.— (4) — Means of counteracting periods of unem- ployment were discussed with Pre: dent Hoover today by Former Gov erncr Ralph O. Brewster of Main who declared that American methods | of keeping employment statistics are 10 years behind those of other na- { | | | . Brewster called on behalf of the conference of governors, which ; met at New Orleans in December and tock up the question of balancing periods o! unemployment with con- struction of government works, as ad- vocated by Mr. Hoover in his cam- paign speeches. The principal question at this time, Brewster said, is in keeping an ade- quate check on the extent of unem- ployment. He declared that the states are better agencies for the develop- ment of this data than would be a centralized federal bureau. This, he declared, was proved a year ago by the unemployment report of the de: partment of labor in response to a senate resolution asking for statistics « unemployment. GIVES TARIFF VIEW Washington, April 8—(?)—Organ- | ized labor's views on revision and ad- passenger plane from Le Bourget. The Baltimore publisher, after al- most finishing the long trip in his own plane, came to grief in northern Italy last week in a forced landing near Ventemiglia. He started his tour on February 11. ‘AVIATION ACCESSORY { ‘GIANT FIRM PLANNED | Several Large Companies to Be United in the Corporation, Wall Street Learns New York, April 8.— (AP) — Wall street heard today that the organiza tion of $140,000,000 aviation accessory corporation to unite the aviation in- terests of several large companies was to be announced soon. It wil] take the form of holding company which will own the Bendix corporation Stromberg Carburetor company of America, Scintilla Magneto company, and a new corporation now being jformed to take over developments of Delco Remy, a General Motors sub- | jsidiary making aircraft airplanes. The nucleus of the proposed organ- ization, it is understood, will be the Bindix corporation. General Motors will hold 25 per cent of the new com- pany’s stock. The undertaking will invalve no public financing, as it is proposed to acquire the individual units through an exchange of stock. to th leath sentence. ; Ss ix corporation will f shies pupae eda : | ministration of the tariff were Pre- | he perabeheeeteetest vs a 2-for-1 ‘ Washington, April 8.—-.)—The ap- | fj sented President Hoover today by @lbasis, ‘stockholders retaining one pointment of an Indian as commis- | delegation renresenting the American snare in the present corporation and sioner of the bureau of Indian af- J Federation of Labor, ‘the other share for onc in the new fairs in the departmetn of the inter- Adoption of the American valuation | company. jor was recommended to President principle in determining tariff sched- | ~ pe stromberg company will be ac- hi Hoover today by Representative! ules was urged as a more effective quired on the basis of one and one * Knutson, Republican, of Minnesota | ad means of fixing duties and one which | fifth shares of the new company for (Mr. Knutson suggested E. L. Rogers, LNG RA es the! cach share of Stromberg. ¢ of Walker, Minnesota, as qualified tor; yyemont, Ohio, April 8.—(P—The GRA Sinis: principle tne prios sot i the post. |small boat which was occupied yes- |i ported commodities in American | 7 % He also discussed the vacancies in| terday by three Fremont men fishing | "cots. rather than the cost of pro-| the governor gencralship of | the |in Sandusky bay, was found carly to- duction abroad, is the basic factor, : = f Seen vate eteethe 4 ue pe ce day overturned and empty, floating | "rise president's attention was called {9 Y ETHEL” s L I ls h . commissioner of the pension bureau, 1 2 ri | a ents a 0 | . ‘ Sar aata he made no recommendations ae aaa a a cst [tthe provisions of existing laws pro- RELIGIOUS REVOLT means a great deal. It is the signature of Ethel os sitions. onan rom f a ii hibiting the importation of articles ‘ : stampa guardsmen from “Marblehead, who | emuractured Uy. convict labor. atd Hays, greatest ‘of all. wornen newspaper artists. FES rp rer ee a COAST GUARD CADET | night. ‘The coast guards said the three fishermen must have lost their lives, as the small fishing raf’ id its occu- ‘ciple be extended to bar products of the delegation urged that this prin- foreign child labor. It was pointed | out that America has placed restric- | bor while the for- M ico City, April 8—@)—Myster- | ious maneuvers of General Plutarco | Elias Calles—almost startling in thelr | Her clever. and sprightly Cig Fanny” greets millions of teaders with a smile every day. Her larger drawings, generally . EXAMS SET IN JUNE pants were about two miles off shore San See eae eo lates tees ts oleae tee ete ee = Bate vicdis ee ee SmI i facture s 2 ibe aim: Es = . os 5 {eae ena cuddeny struc, the lake {Make Use of juvenile employes religious rebellion in South Gentral | = commenting on a new feminine foible, appear regularly throughout Competitive examination for ap- | pointment of cadets to the United States Coast Guard Academy at New London, Conn., has been set for June | 26-28 by officials of the Coast Guard, | one of the military services of the | United States afloat and ashore. The age limits for appointment of | cadets are 18 to 22 years. An appli- cant who has passed his twenty-sec- ond birthday is ineligible for appoint- ment. Detail particulars of the examina- tion may be secured from the Com- mandant, U. S. Coast Guard, Wash- ington, D. C. Cadets are trained and cducated at the Coast Guard Academy, New Lon- | don; Conn., and cach suntmer are | taken on an extended practice cruise. Cadets receive the same pay and al- lowances as midshipmen in the navy ($780 per annum and one ration per day—80 cents). Upon graduation, after three years at’ the Academy, a cadet is eligible to be commissioner an ensign. Com- missioned officers in the Coast Guard rank with officers in the army, navy, and marine corps, and reccive cor- responding pay and allowances, grade for grade. Educational examination for cadets precedes the physical and takes two days. Applicants for cadetship of the required moral character who present satisfactory certificates that they have completed the equivalent of a four year high school course and have received fourteen credits in subjects , prescribed by Coast Guard heacquar- vers are required to take a written ex- amination in mathematics (algebra and geometry), history and English. A high school graduate should be able fo pass the examination. The examination is strictly com- petitive and is open to young men Who possess the qualifications with fespect to age, education and char- | her former pastor here, by her desire and bay. C. J. Not- | store owner and mem- ber of the civil service commission; Earl Fought, 27, ¢ ail carrier, and Carl Graves, 29, a salesman, all of Fremont. Goehring Funeral Largely Attended At Baptist Church The funeral services for Mrs. Adam Goehring at the First Presbyterian church at 1:30 Sunday afternoon were | largely attended. The services were preceded by a brief ‘ice at her home, 424 Eleventh street, after which the body was taken to the church, ac- companied by the family funeral party. The Rev. Gustav Eichlar of Linton, expressed during her illness conducted the services. The pallbearers included George Janke. Fred Hochalter, Peter Klein, Jacob Hildebrand, Fred Hasse and Jacob Kleii. Interment was in Fairview ceme- tery. Girl Carillon Player Is Only 16 Years Old Winchester, Mass., April 8—(?)— Each week the chimes of the Win- chester Unitarian church peal forth with solemn hymns or brave, patriotic tunes. But few of the listeners know that the hands that operate the sniloe are those of a 16-year-old girl. Marjorie Hayden, a high school junior, is thought to be the youngest carillon player in America. She plays Saturday afternoons, Sunday morn- ings and Sunday afternoons. The delegation also asked consid- eration of the law providing for the registration of trade-marks under which, it said, it is possible for a manufacturer to register his trade- mark in this country, produce abroad and still have the protection of the American government. Canadians Must Have Visas to Cross Line Washington, April 8—(4)—The su- preme court today ruled that natural- ized Canadians and other quota im- migrants were prohibited from cross- ing the border to work or search for employment without presenting un- expired consular immigration visas. Naturalized Canadians were de- clared not entitled under the Jay treaty of 1794 to cross the border freely regardle:s of immigration re- striction. The controversy did not involve the status of native born Canadians who are exempt from the quota provisions. School Children Will Pay Honor to Herrick Cleveland, ,O., April 8—()—More than 140,000 school children of Cleve- land will pause five minutes from their studies next Monday to pay a final tribute during funeral services for the late Myron T. Herrick, am- bassador to France. Appropriate ex- ercises for the occasion were being prepared by school officials today, following announcement of the tribute by Superintendent R. G. Jones. Rollin A. Wilbur, vice president of the Herrick company, said today that the train carrying the body of the late ambassador is expected to arrive in Cleveland Sunday morning, but Mexico. Dispatches from Aguascalientes, in the heart of the country of the “Cris- teros,” as the religious insurgents are called, told of the arrival of the fed- eral generalissimo with three train- loads of picked soldiers. It was not known where the troops and their leader were to go but movement fur- ther south into the state of Jalisco was presumed to be the purpose of | Calles, Other troops of General Saturnino Cedillo, charged by General Calles to wage a war of “extermination” | against the religious insurgents, were already in Jalisco and neighboring Guanajuato and there was 8 tend- ency here to take the appearance of Calles at Aguascalientes as evidence of his determination to rid the gov- ernment of elements which have troubled it for two years, although until now usually held in check to prevent serious advances by local garrisons in the affected states. Lacking official information re- garding the maneuver of General Calles some were inclined to think it represented an attempt to reach the scene -of operations on the west coast before an expected decisive bat- tle takes place there. It was believed such a battle may be the last impor- tant clash in the present revolt. 15 Tugs and High Tide Float Grounded Liner New York, April 8—(?)—The liner Paris was speeding toward Havre to- day in an attempt to make up some of the 36 hours spent on the mud flats in New York harbor. The ship ran aground in a heavy fog on her way out early Saturday. morning. It took 15 tugs and a high tide to float her after tons of fuel oil had been lightered. There were 1,000 passen- gers aboard. . the week and are regarded as masterpieces. Ethel Hays has a host of imitators, but there is only one Ethel. Send for a Trial Subscription Here is an offer by which you can secure the World’s important events through The Tribune leased wires of the Associated Press, the daily market ‘ reports, and the following comics daily: The daily Gumps, Freckles and His Friends, Mom’n Pop. Salesman Sam, Boots and Her Buddies, Our Board- ing House and Out Our Way. In addition. to these you get an 8-page comic section every Saturday of the Sunday Gumps, Harold Teen, Smithy, Win- nie Winkle, Moon Mullins, Little Orphan Annie, Kids, and Gasoline Alley. - Fill out and mail the blank below enclosing the amount as listed for subscription you desire. : l year (in North Dakota) . ... .$5.00; 6 months (in North Dakota )°.. 2.50; 8 months (in North Dakota) ... 1.25; by carrier in Bismarck. ...... .87.20 by carrier in Bismarck, 6 mos. . 3.60 by carrier in Bismarck, 8 mos. . 1.80 seas tamination wil be held 3] O41 Fields of Mexico |e cite ent” wil be made the cravat n Sorssmibt nat fitease’| Shown in New Cinema rn 2='z——~4, | Operatives Wall ye ibe sueeml exndtis who ae| was inom, Sinn AS pee er . SUBSCRIPTION BLANK tendered appointments will be or-| cates nem, APril 8—)—An edu- Up in Philippines| charitte, w. , april a—(AP—A ‘ dered to report to the superintendent of the Coast Guard Academy on or about September 1, 1929. They will picture called “Through the Oil Fields of Mexico” has been prepared by the department Manila, April 8—(*)—The Philip- Pines imported heavily of iron and | ¥! partial walkout of operatives at the Chadwick-Hoskin mill No. 5 at Pine- ille, N. C., occurred this morning The Bismarck Tribune, aaquuannsuncnguanannacnsancnnsansnsesasandossocccoceavansonatsic: a | . of commerce in cooperation with the United States bureau of mines and a large oil company. One scene in southern Mexico shows a new gusher .exploding with such force that two tons of drilling toois were hurled into the air and the top of the derrick destroyed. There are also views of the famous “hill of tar” where oil seeping through the ground gave the first hint of Mex- ico's petroleum possibilities. French Academicians Favor Woman’s Vote be allowed five cents per mile to cov- er travel expenses from the place of appointment to the academy. Upon arrival at the academy a cadet will be to deposit the sum of $200.00 to be applied to the purchase ‘ of necessary uniforms and equipment. allowances received are Pay and Popa to curt all expenses while Exams for 17 Civil Service Jobs Set steel products in 1928, the total value | following an employes’ meeting last of the principal items alone being | night which was addressed by Fred close to $15,500,000, an increase of 30 | Erwin Beal, organizer for the Nation- per cent over the value of the same |@! Textile union, and other labor or- items for 1927. ganizers. In addition to these principal items] The plant started work with only a of demand, there was an increase of | Small force, while pickets were posted | © approximately $700,000 in the value of | Outside. At other plants where the fron and steel products grouped to- |employes have been urged $0: strike, gether under the heading ‘‘all other,” |both mill officials and workers were which is estimated to total $7,853,000, |unwilling to talk. Conditions re- The United States supplied 30 per |mained quiet at Castonia where the cent of the iron and steel products {first North Carolina strike was imported to the Philippines in 1928|launched last week, and five Nationa) as compared with 77 per cent during | Guard compahies remained on duty. Bismarck; N.D.: Enclosed find. .... “ for which send me the Daily Tribune for 3 * loo cc cee cviccscccccerseeeseresoewesvoees eoece Name. Postoffice Address a © ete on © ose ere ore 0 0 0 0 0x “eerecccoceene .—(P)—Women’ ry . C. Bakken, formerly , many warm pried ee Hoover Tossing First of Thompson, . 4 tied ‘ oN stronghold of conservatism, the French Academy. Ir. fact a majority of the 40 immortals expressed them- selves heartily favorable when asked by Madame La Vert Chotard, presi- Gent of the French National Wom- en's Union. - emis as [ Old Calico Prints °o Blegen Ball to Be Broadcast | Farse,, has, located yah bat Pade agp llty dind Col- umbia broadcasting syst an- | rooms, nounced today it would broadcast the | 1. ple elias ceremonies at Washington on April | of figures in 16, when President Hoover throws out the first ball at the opening game of the American League season there. BROTHERS ABE SENTENCED Cut Out This Couvon-Fill in and ais ' + Stamped on Silks | ag g SEER

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