The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1929, Page 1

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Nortli Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 FOUL PLAY SPECT Charl FUNERAL SERVICES FOR 1873 SETTLER WILL BE HELD HERE Native of Prussia Came to Bis- marck as a Trooper in Custer’s Seventh HAD BLACK HILLS STAGE Adventurous Career of Soldier, Pioneer, Stage Driver and Grocer Is Ended Pioneer, soldier and early big busi- Bellingham. “ith his death passed from Bellingham said the body will arrive here on No. 4 Sunday evening, to lie in state at the ieki sbRa i é - & i : B i A 8 i 3 5 2 8 5 : E ges WH rel TRE re lik: ageige | f i E i i # § Hit oll HT rf THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1929 RE LOOMS IN New Speed King {NATION'S EXECUTIVE MIGHT DECIDE DOLLY GANN'S SOCIAL SEAT Ramsay MacDonald's Visit Here: Puts Herbert Hoover ‘Un- der Gun’ on Affair MUST ENTERTAIN CURTIS! President Will Be Host to Eng- lish Premier and Invite Highest Officials By RODNEY DUTCHER ‘Washington, Sept. 13—(NEA)—Pre- mier Ramsay MacDonald's visit in the interests of peace on earth prob- ably will reopen the cannonade in ‘Washington's social war. And Mr. Herbert Hoover will be right under the gun. The summer armistice in the Gann- struggle for precedence is nearly over. Sooner or later this precious little package is bound to be left right on the White House doorstep. And the British prime minister's visit here is .,| altogether likely to precipitate that unhappy day. Formal Dinner Looms Mr. Hoover, by all the rules of the game, must give a formal dinner in of the distinguished guest. honor a He must invite the highest officials of our it, and experts on Tlie Weather. | Fair tonight and Saturday. Cocles , tonight with probably frost, PRICE FIVE CENTS KENNY HAS HAIR CUT TO HELP BARBER LAND IN Millionaire Contractor’s Tonso- rialist Forgot to Get His Passports PHONED ACROSS ATLANTIC Al Snfith’s Bald-Headed Friend ‘Hadn't Had a Decent * Trim in Europe’ Southampton, Eng., Sept. 13.—(4)— Louis Arico, globe-trotting barber for William F. Kenny, New York mil- Monaire contractor was given permis- ston by immigration authorities to land from the liner Leviathan and came ashore this afternoon. Arico, for whom Mr. Kenny had telephoned to supervise his haircut, had been held on the Leviathan because he for- got his passports. British barbers produced such a storm of protest over Kenny's send- ing for Arico, that the New York mil- Monaire had his hair cut to allay what Britishers took as a reflection on their tonsorial ability. Arico left New York in response to @ transoceanic telephone call from Kenny, whom he had shaved and at- tended in New York, to come across on the Leviathan and give him a haireut. Kenny told the lower Man- hattan barber he had not had a de- cent haircut since he came to Eur- Published accounts of the trip lity. Friends of the millionaire termed the whole affair “much ado about Ittle” since he is almost bald and has only a fringe of hair about the back of his head. ¥ Arico, walking about the deck oe tainly do not intend to do now during the four days I hope to be in England. “Mr. Kenny invited me over to have a real holiday and I hope even I shall be able to land and not be en- tirely disappointed.” WISCONSIN BANK IS Bismarck Man Is Member of Executive Committee; Far- goan Is President E / | , i i i I R Gg i E i fir ty E i 3 i 4 ty i i i # fF i if ul | SEBE 0g f i it i £ 5 z g 1 ge Mj i Ht eke I 4 f i i | f E [ i i, 5 he ii i HHI A if af Hd | i q i i ba ot i ' i i ib i IF 3335 § Two Bandits Scoop Up Cage Cash, Lock Three Persons in Vault to Escape , Wis. Sept. 13.—) ‘Weyerhauser, Wi ~— aor two employes @ customer the vault, bandits today held up He i gf i é [ i E é i i i i 3 : : il h H : 4 : li [ | : i te if ist aa 7, = = = g | ar e i f ! I : i a : : 28 gee i | 3% nas E # ] ! F | il rif re i I i 5 g ll ia LOOTED OF $2,400 *Former Bismarckian | Lays Record Claims GRY NATION | | e M. W. Hutchinson, resident of Bis- /Marck from 1886 to 1910, claims the distinction of having been an employe of the U. 8. Land office longer than @ny other man in the country. He completed his 44th consecutive | year of service in the department at Great Falls, Moft., last week. Mr. Hutchinson entered the land office department here Sept. 6, 1886, at the age of 19. Bismarck then was in what was known as the Dakota Territory. He was transferred to the Havre, Mont., land office in 1910 and remained there until the office was {closed in 1925. He has served the department at Great Falls since. oO Y rn | Late News Bulletin | COMMUNISTS RIOT New York, Sept. 13.—)—Police reserves were called out, and 20 arrests were made in the garment district today in the second com- manist riet in New York city in a Nttle more than 12 hours. DAHTY, TWICE INDICTED ul, 1 | cd ‘TARIFF IS HYPOCRISY’ jashington, Sept. 13.—(7)—The pending Republican tariff bill was described as a ‘NICK CARTER’ DEAD Auburn, N. Y., Sept. 13.—7)— Charies Jenki, the man stories Dick rif oF fh li reel | E i i 35 j ii f 8 2 = $ 5 i iy # ft +h it i i | | Tm HH Hi i i E i 2 i i 3 Hi a& ii hi | | CHARGED WITH TREASON Shariette. N. C., Sept. yap oe y iH lis i Hl Hi i iB ri 4 Pb | i Hl es Kupitz, 84, Bismarck Pioneer, Dies RUSSIA'S COMMUNISM |WILL BRING MISERY, (CONVERT ANNOUNCES! M. Paul Marion, French Come! have $10,000 worth of jewelry. That was before he went home to dinner munist, Changes His Mind last night and was met outside the door by two men with pistols. These After Studying in Russia men persuaded him to take them in- CASTE DICTATORSHIP BUILT Excruciated Exes Execrate Exciter Chicago, Sept. 13—(7\—This is to advise concerning the Ex robbers. j Not, please, the ex-robbers; just the ‘side the house where they were pre- sented to Madame Ex as two friends Ex had brought home for dinner. About that time the bandits decided to postpone dinner, preferring to loot. When the Ex jewels had become ex-ed jewels, the robbers put the Exes in a cedar closet. “You will not suffocate,” said one of them. “Give us the phone number of a friend, and in 10 minutes we will call him so that you may be excised.” That was how the Exes exited from the closet. Sudden Change of Mind of Propagandist Is a Severe Blow to Political Plan By MINOTT SAUNDERS Paris, Sept. 13.— (NEA) — Moscow {Communism means “economic and| Ex. “I fear that Exes would have moral misery.” marked the spot, and all that sort of This is not the old “capitalistic” | thing.” \viewpoint of affairs in Russia under GOVE PNORS SHAFER the present regime, but the studied conclusion of M. Paul Marion, former French chief of Communist propa- ganda here, who has returned to France after a visit of 15 months in Soviet Russia, only to present his unequivocal resignation from the Communist party. As an hitherto trusted servant, he has given French !Communism one of the most severe (blows it has ever received. WILL LAUD SORE | Q M. seek Andictment came at aj Memorial Bridge Honoring Late ime when the leaders of “capitalis- 7 tic” states were scratching their | Governor Will Be Dedi- heads and burning the midnight oil at The Hague and Geneva in order to cated Saturday ‘bring some semblance of peace and ——— jeconomic prosperity, out of the late] Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 13—(7)— war. Extremists here and abroad |Governors George F. Shafer of North were contributing only ridicule and} Dakota and Theodore Christianson of |I-told-you-sos. M. Marion has rather; Minnesota will be the principal spoiled some of those Soviet smiles.! speakers at the ceremonfes Saturday He said: afternoon which will mark dedication “After months in Russia, when Ijof the Sorlie Memorial Bridge across spoke directly with the workers and|the Red River, here. the common people there, it is appar-| The structure is dedicated to the ent to me—and the more clearly so}memory of the late Governor A. G. because I conducted my inquest in |Sorlie of North Dakota who died in the very cradle of Soviet society— office in August, 1928. ‘that, behind the well-composed| In addition to the governors, the facade, ‘dictation of the proletariat | speakers list includes Mayors A. and construction of Socialism,’ there | Sullivan, East Grand Forks, and John lies the most cruel and most desolate | L. Hulteng, Grand Forks; M. J. Hoff- reality. This is the domination of a|man, bridge engineer for the Minne- caste of some millions of all kinds |s0ta highway department; Congress- and sizes, from Stalin to his lowest/man O. B. Burtness, Grand Forks, village representative, on a country|and C. G. Selvig, Crookston, Minn., that it holds in ecomonic and moral |@nd North Dakota Highway Commis- misery by its mad policy and abso-/sioners J. A. Dinnie, Grand Forks, “If they hadn't telephoned,” said | AND CHRISTIANSON | jlute dictation. The restlessness and inquisition only augment with the years.” Admits Change of Mind M. Marion freely aamits that at first he let himself freely to be taken in by those doctrines that he now de- nounces so strenuously. He added: “I have seen workers, former mem- bers of the party, combatants and revolutionaries in October, 1917, who ‘11 years later considered as the great- est stupidity of their life the fact that they fought for ‘power.’ I have seen technicians who were charged to ,’ ashamed of the sta- tistics and prognostications that they were ordered to make. They said that ‘with the continued divorce here be- tween industry and agriculture the city and the town, it is not to social- ( FOREST PRS CLAM TWO MEN ORB Flaming, Toppling Tree Crushes One; Blaze Survey In- duces Heart Attack Portland. Ore., Sept. 13.—(#)—For- est fires continued to spread in west- | ¢, ern Oregon after they had directly or indirectly claimed two lives and caused injury to seven others in the state. J. H. McCubbins of Eugene. was killed and four others were injured last night when a tree fell upon them flames near Mable. and I. J. Moe. Valley City. The dedicatory program will be held at the center of the bridge and amplifiers will carry the speeches to the outer edges of the crowd. Mayors Sullivan and Hulteng will entertain visiting officials at a luncheon to be held at a Grand Forks hotel prior to the ceremonies. NAVAL ACCORD SEEN IN MACDONALD VISIT to Land in New York on October 4 London, Sept. 13.—()—An impend- ing visit of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald to the United States was j accepted generally here today as sig- nifying the London and Washington governments were very near an a cord on naval limitation, Mr. MacDonald will leave England September 28 aboard the Berengaria, arriving in New York October 4. His visit probably will be of short dur- ation, possibly a week or more. Announcement of the impending visit was made at 10 Downing street, home of the British premiers, yester- States Ambassador Charles G. Dawes, latest note relating to the naval re- duction negotiations to Mr. Mac- Negro Speaker Starts Riot in Jewish Section Scotch Premier of Great Britain! —————<=—Xm—mn—SSSES-_| KVALE'S DEATH ‘STICKS OR DYNAMITE, BOUGHT DAY BEFORE DEATH ARE MISSING Reopen Investigation Into Trag- edy That Ended Minne- sota Solon’s Life FIRST CALLED AN ACCIDENT, Minneapolis County Attorney Pushes Probe Into Mystes { rious Occurrence \ \ Fergus Falls, Minn., Sept. 13—(®}—< Congressman O. J. Kvale, whose body was found in the ruins of his burned cottage 28 miles from here Wednes« day, purchased 10 sticks of dynamite the day before his death, county authorities learned today. i The congressman told a clerk at @ hardware store here, where he pure chased the dynamite, he intended te “blow stumps” on his farm. Otter Tail County officials, after reopening an investigation into the death of the congressman, late Thurse_ y announced they were convinced Kvale’s death was due to an accie' \dent. The body was then released by’ authorities and sent to Benson, Mr. , Kvale’s home, for burial. Floyd B. Olson of Minneapolis, Hens: {nepin county attorney, a close frien@! of the congressman, is aiding in the) investigation. i Authorities today sought to learm: what became of the dynamite pure, chased by Mr. Kvale. : Olson detailed Andrew J. Crummy,; former inspector of the y Police department, and Melvin ) solt, both on the staff of the county, { attorney, to aid in the investigation, i Friends of the congressman, secords}| |ing to Olson's statement to County: Attorney Townley, feel Mr. Kvale'’s ‘death might be due to foul play. ¢ | Told of the report that Mr. Kval@ had purchased the dynamite, Dr. J. (G. Vigen, Otter Tail county coroner, said he would make an informal ine quiry into the report, He added, how- ever, that he was reasonably con- jvinced Kvale met his death throug! {an accident. GIRLS AIDED BANKER IN $500,000 FRAUD Unwittingly Sent Eight Fake Messages to Bunco New York Banks Cheyenne, Recom: C. D. Waggoner, Telluride, Cole, banker, held in jail at New Castle, Wyo., for swindling New Yerk banks out of $500,000, be eet at $100,000 was made today by Albert D. Walton, United States district attorney. Wyo., Sept 13.—(P)— tion that bend fer Newcastle, Wyo. Sept. 13.—(P)— Two young women. who he said he “paid liberal for their services, sent eight fake le messages purporting to come from Denver financial ine stitutions and which enabled him to establish $500,000 credit with six New. York banks, C. D. Waggoner, Presie dent of the Bank of Telluride, Colog told the Associated Press today from his jail cell here. . Waggoner said the two girls acted unwitting! The 5 eight messages ; Were placed in sealed envelopes and, numbered, he said, being sent in the order they were numbered. BILLY PETROLLE T0 who, it was understood, conveyed the | ;, i Bais ilar : u s i F 5 5

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