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._~ ANDASTE SEARCHERS | HINDERED BY STORM Freighter Thought to Have Gone Down Monday With Crew of 25 Persons | i Grand Haven, Mich., Sept. 14.—() | —Heavy weather today held searchers ; in the harbor here from a wreckage | strewn spot about 14 miles out from | Ottawa Beach and 12 miles southwest of Holland where the freighter An- daste is believed to have gone down in last Monday night's storm, carrying to death her crew, 24 men and a boy. Unable to set out in the face of the rough water today were two tugs, the Liberty and the Freedom of the Con- struction Materials company in whose service the Andaste was when she left here last Monday night for Chi- cago with a cargo of gravel. The Andaste, which was a steel | whe | was given a 90-day jail sentence. | Stolen Onions Will | | Make Moorhead Man | | Weep for 3 Months | | _ e Moorhead. Minn., Sept. 14—(P}— Plenty of time to cry over it was gi Frank Schwatke, transient, he pleaded guilty to stealing onions, valued <t $1.50, before Judge E. U. Wade here today. Schwatka CONNIE MAGK WINS AMBRICAN PENNANT Sox, While the Yankees Lose to St. Louis Philadelphia, Sept. 14.—(# — The semi-whale back, a type of freighter | philadelphia Athletics today clinched seldom seen now because ‘unsuited to the rough weather of the Great Lakes, cleared from here for Chicago at 9:10 p. m., Monday, loaded with gravel. Scamen believe the cargo shifted in the storm which swept southern Lake Michigan a short time later, and caused the ship to break up and sink. Earl Harrington, a cottager living 10 miles north of Ottawa Beach har- bor, told coast guards today of having seen a ship apparently in distress a few miles off shore Monday night. Wreckage identified as part of the Andaste was washed ashore Wednes- day. Captain George Van Hall of the fishing tug Bertha G., reported find- ing wreckage strewn for several miles, about 14 miles out from Ottawa Beach. The Bertha G. cruised through the wreckage searching for bodies but found none. Coast guardsmen put out from Ottawa Beach and Grand Haven last night to search for bodies and were joined today by Freedom and Liberty of the Materials Construction company. Capt. Albest Anderson, Sturgeon Bay, Wis., was in command of the Andaste. TELLURIDE BANKER FACES U. §. COUNT U. S. District Attorney Will Ask for Indictment Charging Mail Fraud New York, Sept. 14—()—An in- dictment charging mail fraud against Charles D. Waggoner, Telluride, Colo., banker in connection with the man- nipulations by whcih he secured $500,- 000 credit from New York banks will be asked of the federal grand jury Monday, United States Attorney Charles H. Tuttle said today. The Colorado banker announced at Nowcastle, Wyo., that he would waive preliminary hearing and make no at- tempt to furnish bond. Earl Schoel, deputy United States marshal, plan- ned to start to Cheyenne, Wyo., with Waggoner late today. The officer said the prisoner would be placed in irons for the trip. he Squeaky Phonograph No ‘Talkie’; Folks Throw Rotten Eggs Courtenay, N. D, Sept. 14.—Court- enay people received their first “Vitaphone” show With a shower of eggs when a movie advertised as Al Jolson in “The Singing Fool” put on by a traveling show turned out to be short strips of comedy, history and new sketches while a squeaky phono- graph ground out an accompaniment. Two hundred people paid admis- sions to the show, sitting on narrow planks in a leaky tent. Most of them were ready to be good natured about being “taken in” but when a few resentful customers collected eggs and began throwing them at the show people the whole tent joined in a noisy demonstration. Darts of Cupid Hit Man, 73,and Woman, 61 Minot, N. D.; Sept. 14.—Age is no barrier to Cupid's darts. Mythical little Dan, it was learned today, has punctured the hearts of Henry Wilson, 73, and Jennie Ogg, 61, both of Minot. The couple was married this week by County Judge William Murray. * All Flyers Pass Tests And Win Air Licenses field. C. E. Clark took a limited test and Walter Strom, a private license test. ‘The two latter men are from Wil- the American League pennant by de- feating Chicago 6 to 0 while St. Louis won the first game of a double- header at New York. George Earnshaw pitched the de- cisive contest for the Macks, making his twenty-first victory. DALY INDICTED ON DOZEN OVERT ACTS Former Customs Collector at Duluth Charged With Conspiracies St. Paul, Sept. 14—(#)—Twelve the tugs | Vert acts are cited in an indictment returned by the federal grand jury here charging Oscar Dahly, former collector of customs at Duluth, and three others with “conspiracy to re- ceive money for using their influence in a case in which the United States government was interested.” ‘The men indicted with Dahly on this charge are Thomas F. Hoban, former customs inspector on Dahly’s | staff; E. W. Beaton, former chief special customs agent in St. Paul, and E. A. Peters, Duluth, former employe of Dahly in a drug store. The 12 overt acts contained in the | indictments were made public today. | De All the charges against Dehly are in connection with the investigation of the case of E. A. Smith, Duluth druggist, arrested by narcotic agents for illegal sale of drugs. Federal au- thorities. claim the fot men _con- spired to receive money from Smith for services “by their influence as of- ficers, by persuasion, and by their enlisting the influence of United | States Senator Thomas D. Schall.” Dahly, Hoban and Beaton were named in a second indictment charg- ing they received money from Smith. ‘The indictments also charge the four men endeavored to induce L. L. Drill, United States district attorney here, to either dismiss the charge against Smith, and discontinue furth- er proceedings in the case, or to rec- ommend to the court a sentence not involving imprisonment. STAGE STOCK SHOW The first state livestock show ever to be held in the state of Nevada will be staged jointly with the Elko county fair in Elko September 12 to 15. Ex- hibits are expected from most of the western states. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1929 IMAN ELECTROCUTED IN SHOPS AT FORKS Dominick Schiele, 30, Boiler- maker in the G. N. Rounds » | house, Dies Today Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 14—(?— Dominick Schiele, 30, boiler maker | for the Great Northern railroad. was | electrocuted in the roundhouse here | about 11 o'clock this forenoon when he came in contact with a high volt- age wire. Schiele came to Grand Forks from Devils Lake in May, 1928, and has lived in Grand Forks since that time. | He leaves his widow and three children. Mrs. Smith’s Funeral Largely Attended; Many Floral Tokens! Funeral services for Mrs. Clara Smith at St. Mary's church, this morning, were largely attended and jthere were many floral tokens of es- teem from friends of this pioneer) woman of the Bismarck country. The pallbearers all were associates of William Smith, a son, being mem- bers of Company A, in which the son is a licutenant. They were James} |Meiser, Harold Carlson, Francis Rockey, Ervin Cervinski, Clare Reg- | ister and G. W. Cass. Father J. A. H.! Slag officiated. The interment was in St. Mary's! cemetery. | Prairie Fire Sweeps Southwest of Minot Minot, N. D., Sept. 14.—(4—Prairie fire, swept along at a rapid speed by a southwest wind, is raging 13 miles southwest of Minot this afternoon. Several quarters of farm land have been burned over. Volunteers from Minot answered an appeal from farm- ers for assistance. Tractors and horses hitched to plows are throwing up fresh earth in an attempt to halt the flames. Ruling on Dormitory Law Is Expected Soon | Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 14.—()— sion by the supreme court in the } | case instituted to test the dormitcry law passed at the last state legisla- tive session is likely to be forthcom- | ing in a short time, in the opinion of W. A. McIntyre, who argued the | case for the opponents of the law at Bismarck this week. The suit is a friendly one instituted to determine the constitutionality of the law and in order that several state educational institutions may pro- ; cced with the erection cf dormitories | g without delay, in the event that it is | held constitutional. Chicago White Sox | Seeking Art Shires) | Philadelphia, Sept. 14—(2)—Art | Shives, first: baseman of the Chicago White Sox, who was suspended as a | result of a fist fight here last night, and who was “checked out” of the Ben Franklin hotel by the manage- ment, could not be located today. Secretary Lou Barbour enlisted the services of the other ball players in which they were all riding at a cross- | idriver was unable to stop. | eggs, | Here’s a Man Who Is Satisfied With | Being Underweight | —¢ ea Canton, Il., Sept. 14—(4)— Law- rence W. Richards of Memphis, Mo., in the Canton jail on a,bad check charge, spread the bars on his second floor cell today and squeezed through and escaped. He weighed only 90 pounds. | Frank Berium of Champaign, also | on a bad check charge, tried to fol- ; low him but got stuck. In jumping from the second floor, Richards broke telephone wires con- nected with the fire gong, and roused ; all the firemen. His escape, however, ‘was not discovered for two hours. 3 Killed, Five Are Seriously Injured In Train-Car Crash Peru, Ti., Sept. 14.—()—One man and two children were killed, a third child is dying, and a mother and three other children were scriously injured today when a New York Cen-/ tral locomotive hit an automobile in ing near McNabb, south of here. Something apparently went wrong; with the brakes on the auto and the HELPS THE NEWLYWEDS | Washington, Sept. 14.—It’s a cinch | for newlyweds in this city. ‘There's | absolutely no excuse for hubby to complain about his eggs being too soft or too hard. For traffic lights regulate the time an egg is boiled in homes along city streets. The in- terval required for the lights to} change from green to amber to red is exactly the time to cook soft-boiled the housewives have found. if City-County Briefs i Sofus Robertson, of the R. T. Grocery, Fifth street near Broadway, arrived home Friday night from Al- | den, Minnesota, where he had been called by the serious illness of his father, on a return from a vacation trip to the Black Hills and the South- west recently. The father’s condition | i | | 1 | I will pay $25.00 in cash as a reward to any person causing the conviction and punishment pre- scribed by law for the following stolen articles, Officers of the law excluded. These articles have been stole: in past few months: 1K. W. Magneto 1 6-Volt Battery 4 sacks of cement 100 Ib. keg of nails 1 aluminum level 1 cable hoist 2 carburetors 2 truck and car lamps Copper tubing taken out of ra- diator apparently for sale of cop- per. Anybody wishing to cooperate with us in stopping such mali- cious stealing or who thinks they might have reason for suspicions. kindly write to Box 218, Bis- marck, No. Dak. an effort to find Shires and get him on a train to Chicago. luxurious riding walities—their ; and red behavior— - Thousands are saying “HERE IS A REAL AUTOMOBILE fe range had the agree Bo irae eS wanted, but Oldsmobile had all. It looks like more value to me. plenty of leg room in front and rear of sedan. some of the It has wide doors and HOW A BEAUTIFUL ORPHAN GIRL BECAME== “THE INNOCENT CHEAT” A Thrilling: Story:of Romance, Adventure And In‘rigue i Two Men Influenced the Life of Helen Page. One Was an Audacious. Crook, the Other a Handsome Young Lawyer. 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