The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 6, 1929, Page 1

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Nortti Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Me fair ht and Wednesday ie aa be in temperature, ESTABLISHED 1873 ! BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS Paul Cook Shatters Record KILLING OF CHINESE RENEWS THREAT OF TONG WAR OUTBREAK Five Orientals Are Dead and Several More Wounded in Seoret Society Feuds DEPORTATION THREATENED After Leaders Assure Officials Slayings Would End Other Chinese Are Shot New York, Aug. 6.—(?)—Prospects of one of the bloodiest Tong wars in years were scen today by additional killings both in this city and Boston, bringing the dead to five in two days in addition to several wounded. A few hours after U. 8. Attorney Charles H. Tuttle and Samuel Sung Young, Chinese consul general, had warned Tong leaders here that no violence would be tolerated pending & peace conference today, « Harlem laundryman was shot and killed at his ironing board. Similarly in Boston two Chinese were shot and killed within a few hours after Tong leaders had the police there would be no Tong warfare in that city, Police officials sald it was the first time Tong lead- ers had deliberately deceived them and expressed belief the killings would result in the bloodiest Tong war ever seen in New England. In Chicago and Newark, N. J., where the killings started with one death each on Sunday, a tense quict prevailed. Police maintained close watch on the Chinese sections but no attempts at violence occurred. The cause of the renewed Tong outbreak retained in mystery. One theory upon which New York police were working was that it was over the liquor trade. At Newark it was thought the war might be over the opium trade. ‘After a conference yesterday with Young and representatives of the rival Tongs, Mr. Tuttle let it be known that if the warfare was not em in New York at once wholesal s of Chinese would result. GUNMAN 18 CAUGHT, REVOLVER IN HAND 5 Chicago, Aug. 6—(7)—Chin Bing, & Chinese gunman, was captured in & police ambush early today as he storage and to arrange for more many bushels of Inspector Boards Yacht and After Struggle Is Thrown Into Detroit River PATROLMAN STILL MISSING Owner of Boat Speeds Out of | Range of Possible Gun- fire After Fight Detroit, Aug. 6.—()—Object of an intensive three-day search over the entire region of the Great Lakes and faced with a possible federal charge of murder on the high seas, John M. ‘Heath, elevator mechanic and his wit » Maxine Heath, were ex- ‘to surrender to federal au- thorities today for questioning in connection with the disappearance early Saturday of Richard D. Sand- lands, customs who boarded crept, revolver in hand, toward the home of Willie Lee, # director of the On Leong Tong and president of the Chinese and American Citizens alll- ance. Bing later was identified as the assailant of Kay Leong Wong, & member of the On Leong Tong who was shot and seriously wounded Sun- night supposedly in_ retaliation for the slaying of a Hip Sing Tongs- man. < TONGS IN TWIN CITIES REQUEST iON inspector their cabin crylser because of viola- tion of navigation laws. Heath communicated with federal officers through his attorney last night and admitted he left the cus- toms agent floundering in the swift current of the Detroit river after a the water from the deck of Heath's boat. Heath swam back to his craft, the “Maxine,” he said and he saw no more of Sandlands. A report made to Walter 8. Petty, act St. Paul, Aug. 6.—(#)—Request for police protection was made by repre- sentatives of both the On Leong and the Hip Sing Tongs in St. Paul and lis le of the polis today. me aes t aiffic ities e they did nqt expect any ul arise in the Twin Cities, but if any violence did occur ‘it would be a re- sult of outside Chinese in retaliation shootings in other cities.” Hy cite tt ‘AGzD FARGODOCTOR 1S ADDGED INSANE Practitioner Who Was Gonvict- ** ed of Second Degree Mur- _ dér Goes to Hospital’ orderly marketing. The wheat stored in a field. CUSTOMS AGENT OVERBOARD; ELEVATOR ENGINEER FACES A FEDERAL CHARGE OF MURDER fight during which both men fell into} which will involve the erection of new commercial NEW BAKERY; NEW STORE FOR PENNEY Baking Company Acquires Lahr | Motor Sales Warehouse on Main for Its Location PENNEY SITE NEAR OLD ONE| New Commercial Structure I!s/| to Displace Bootery and Harris-Woodmansee Several big ‘business shifts here buildings have reached . | the stage where the projectors are able to make the preliminary an- shows | Nouncement of plans, and the prin- cipal ones will lead to the erection of @ large new bakery by the Barker Bakery and Candy company and of | {His Own Talkie | \. Enough for Billy | ° Pitman, "N. J., Aug. 6.—(#)—No “talkies” for Rev. Billy Sunday. He announced at a camp meeting that an offer of $1,000,000 was not suffi- cient to lure him when “the church has its back to the wall.” Changing the subject, somewhat, he expressed the opinion that Jack Dempsey could “knock the block off” of Schmeling, German title-hope. FORECASTERS POINT TOCLAUDIUS HUSTON Although Others Are Mentioned for Post, Tennessee Man Ap- pears to Have Edge chairman. Scranton of Scranton, national com- mittéewoman for Pennsylvania, is prominently mentioned to take over Bae AE ROR A oI a Kee ye Fraud Is Charged Totali More Than $500,000; Shares Kiwanis Club Picnic Is Set for 6:30 This Evening at Play Park & mercantile Brothers, to house the J. C. Penney stor ASG. 0. P. CHAIRMAN] = will chinery. Whether the bakery woul continue retailing at its present quar- _ | ters was also a.matter to be decided definitely later, FACT Refvbm, the manager G building by Webb re. These will be added to a building year which bas seen the erection of | the Chevrolet and Durant garages on | opposite corners of First and Broad- | tebe and will later result in the erec: house the Firestone and the Goodrich tire businesses. The building of the Chevrolet garage has permitted the De Soto car distribu‘ing business to move into the old armory, Second | and Broadway. Another of commercial structures Shift Four Years Off There has been rumor of another big store shifting location, but that is @ premature report, as plans call for the change four years hence. The building of the new home for the Penney store will involve the moving of the Richmond Bootery and the Harris and Woodmansee stationery and news shop to a new location, but Webb Brothers expect to be able to take care of both of these tenants in new quarters. The Barker bakery company has bought the Lahr Motor Sales ware- house on Main at Sixteenth street and will remodel it and add a main addition. The warehouse is 75 by 90 feet in ground dimensions. With the main building to be eerotes! the plant . i said today that ) feet by formulated all their jwo-story building equipped with all modern they said. The pany shortly expects to have its plans fully developed for announce- Penney to Plan Store ‘The new home of the Penney store is not definitely planned. It is next spring, the Webbs . the site of the one- building row housing the Rich- and the Harris-Wood- of business. It will be brick building 50 by 140 feet in @imensions. Just how many it will consist of is to be de- demand for space in it. demand justifies the builders, be a three-story structure. section will be built ac- ney plans drawn ‘to requirements of the busi- store will occupy the 50 140 basement and the street floor have a high ceiling permitting extension of a merchandising the room, said B. O. The show will be deeper than usual and the store office will be over these. MYSTERY SEAPLANE TO TRY FOR RECORD ‘Mercury Racer’ Is Declared Ca- pable of Developing Speed of 400 Miles an Hour TEMPORARY BURIAL IN TRENCH FORCED Receiving Vaults Are Crowded at Calvary Cemetery Be- cause of Strike LAW DEMANDS TIME LIMIT Efforts to Arbitrate Walkout Caused by Discharge of Chauffeur Under Way New York, Aug. 6.—(#)—Temporary burial of the dead in trenches, rem- today at Calvary cemetery, in Queens, where a week-old strike of grave dig- gers resulted in an accumulation of 600 bodies. Since the start of the strike bodies have been placed in the cemetery's temporary receiving vaults, which have accommodation for nearly 1,000 bodies. Under the law. however, a body must be buried within four days after death, and over the week-end men were placed at work digging three long trenches. It was announced that after settle- {ment of the strike the bodies would be reburied in the family plots. Efforts to arbitrate the strike, which | started shortly after the discharge of a chauffeur, were under way today between the strikers and members of the cemetery board of trustees. Be- tween 766 and 700 men are involved. ‘They have demanded recognition of their union and an increase in wages of the senatorial campaigns next year, a day, with double time on Sunday. DEMOCRATIC HOSTS SEEK CHAMPION TO OUST REPUBLICANS |Factional Differences Are Ab- “sent Today in. Virginia Bourbon Primary Richmond, Va., Aug. 6.—(?)—Vir- ginia’s embattled Democratic hosts were choosing a champion today to lead them in an effort to drive the Republicans beyond the Potomac. Factional differences, characteristic of southern states in which Demo- cratic nomination is equivalent to election, was conspicuous by its ab- sence in the Democratic primary campaign that closed last night. the three candidates for the nomination for governor calling upon the voters to participate in today’s primary re- gardiess of their choice for party nominee. John Garland Pollard. © William and Mary professor, G. Walter Mapp, former state senator, and Roswell Page, brother of the late Thomas Nelson Page, were the candidates for the gubernatorial nomination. James H. Price for lieutenant governor and John R. Saunders for renomination as attorney general, had no oppo- STATESMEN MEET IN ATTENPT TO APPLY "REPARATIONS PLAN Delegates From 12 Countries Favorable Toward ‘United States of Europe’ The Fiagne, Netherlands, Aug. 6 —(AP)—Statesmen of 12 count fincluding Great Britain, Germany and Japan, met today to ee lat d_ to liqui ‘oung rej ions plan an iqui- date the last outstanding problems of the World war. The conference is to put into ef- fect the recommendations made by the recent rations conference repar! under the chairmanship of Owen. D. You Bel Bookland, a eral dele, tes ind thelr ine! sal ir rt linates. 2 iniscent of war times, was resorted to! DEPUTIES SEEK DRUG ADDICTS WHO EFFECTED ESCAPE IN RIOT | Sis cactacee Five Are Captured Short i BY GRAVE DIGGERS ive Are Capture ly ag ) atee el Men Make Break From Narcotic Hospital FORCED TO CALL FOR AID Director Says Those Who Led Patients Were Felons Who Had Drug Habit Los Angeles, Calif, Aug. 6—(?}— | Deputy sheriffs and other peace of- ficers were making an extensive search today for 11 of 16 narcotic ad- dicts who escaped from a state hos- pital at Spadra, near here, during a: Mot Sunday night. Three were in the county jail and another was in the custody of his father, while the fifth was captured in @ road near the hospital shortly after the inmates, outnumbering the unarmed guards, forced the doors of their dormitories, surmounted a ten- foot wire fence, and escaped. The outbreak started soon after the order of “lights out” for the night had been given. The rioting spread from ward to ward until hospital “ria were forced to call for ip. Deputy sheriffs responded and soon quieted the rioters. The outbreak was said to have been caused by the in- tense craving for narcotics by the ringleaders. They failed to break into the ‘hospital stores, however, it was re- Ported. The rioting climaxed a bad week at the hospital, J. G. Knox, chief parole officer in charge of the guards, said. “There had been an undercurrent of discontent, but we did not expect violence,” he declared. Earl E. Jensen, director of the in- stitution, said the main trouble was caused by the fact that the courts sentenced felons who had the drug habit to the institution instead of to the penitentiaries, “where they should {be sent.” Jensen declared those who escaped were Persons and not the type who wanted to rid themselves of | the drug habit. “Patients of this type should be put in penitentiaries, not in honor insti- { tutions where patients are desirous of i relieving themselves of the craving for i Jensen asserted. ; FAKE LICENSE MLL "FOUND IN CHICAGO $000 BISINESS Men Who Wished to Pactice Without Training Had to Pay for Privilege Chicago. Aug. (®) — The inside story of how a diploma and license mill printed spurious certificates and {state seals was told last night by a man who admitted, state's attorney's investigators said, that he hed made Photostatic copies of the original for counterfeit plates. The story, Patrick Roche, chief in- vestigator, said, would result in new arrests and indictments immediately. | wi Several Chicago printing and engrav- ing firms were said to have been le ° | President Hoover is reported to have selected Claudius H. Huston, above, Chattanooga, Tenn., manufacturer, as new chairman of the National Re- publican Committee. He'll succeed Dr. Hubert Work, whose resignation becomes effective in September. LEADERS POINT FOR SENATORS BATTLE IN 1930 CAMPAIGN Nineteen Republicans and 13 Democrats Must Stand for Reelection Next Year i LINES ARE CLOSELY DIVIDED i Several States Appear to Be | Balanced, With a Chance of Either Side Winning — ) — Party think seriously from an average of $24.20 a week to $7 in which one-third of the senate | Membership—19 Republicans and 13 Democrats—must stand for reelection if they desire to remain in office. ‘The Republicans already have se- lected a special committee to help j Senators in their party seeking re- | election, and the Democrats have been ; discussing their chances of capturing Senator Moses of New Hampshire has been select@i to head the Repub- lican senatorial campaign committee. Senator Tydings of Maryland is the jchairman of the Democratic commit- tee, and, while. next year's organiza appointment. ‘The states in which the Democrats believe they have the best chance to OO college.|' Who Wants a Date? | France, ls of applying the|~ all the Chaplain | Out at Encampment | i ° t’s a far cry from a church puipit park bench in Lovers’ Lane for the ordinary minister. Not so with Chaplain Vern T. Suddeth of the Citizens Military Training camp at Fort Lincotn, how- ever. Chaplain Suddeth has announced that he will gladly arrange “dates” for any of the bove in camp with Bismarck girls. Not, because the chaplair’s hobby is matchmaking but because it hap- be in his duty 2s of all camp entc:tainment which, in- cludes the Saturday night dan Some of the boys have vouchsafed the opinion that their handsome chaplain should be a “great little fixer. BISMARCK GOLFING AGE SHOOTS 96 10. BREAK OWN RECRD Is 6 Up on Youthful Grand Forks Star at End of First Nine Holes PREVIOUSLY BEAT DONAHUE Bismarck Youngster Duplicates Saturday Feat; Takes Medal Honors Paul Cook broke the Devils Lake Country club course record early this afternoon by shooting @ sensational 36 in his second match in the play for the North Dakota amateur golf champion- ship. Cook was playing Art Gilbreath at the time and was six up on the Grand Forks star at the end of the first nine holes of their 18- hole match. Cook shot a birdie 3 on the fourth and a birdie 4 om the ninth and took one over par on the sixth, a par four hole, accord- i i i & a i | iF ii : i i 5 i i i i ia util F i hi! the Holy Grail of North Dakota golfdom. Cook leads the cavalcade of 16 knights of the fairway by virtue of a medal score of 161 strokes scored after a joust with 36 holes of the Devils Lake Country club Monday. For three years Cook has been training himself. In 1927 he earned his spurs in a passage at arms with Old Man Par on the Fargo club course when he c! and /a great field with a sensational 146 honors. strokes to win medal George Warner Looms Flinging down the gage of battle to . {the Western North Dakota and Mis- souri Slope defender is George War- ner, 19-year-old 11 tournaments are also treading the path of golfing glory. Jimmy Barrett Ii ae Ea

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