The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1929, Page 3

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| WILTONITE CRUSHED | BY COAL CHUNK HAS | MANY BROKEN BONES) Five Accident Victims in Local Hospitals Show Improve- ment, Doctors Say Crushed under a falling chunk of coal late yesterday, August Nelson, 67, Wilton miner, was brought to a local hospital last night suffering severe injuries. Nelson received a fractured left hip, broken left wrist, and his right leg was broken in two places below the knee. He also suffered several severe hoad and neck wounds. The man at noon today was re- covering from shock and resting casier, according to his attending physician. Five other persons in local hospitals as a result of accidents were re} at noon by attending physicians to be making progress toward recovery, though it is slow in some instances. Henry Brock, injured in an al mobile accident near Steele Monday night, is still weak but is recovering slowly. He suffered a badly lacerated check and a fracture of the skull. Willard Germain, who was injured in the same accident, has recovered rapidly and will be able to leave the hospital soon. Sigurd Frostad, Minot man who suffered a badly lacerated hand when his eutomobile overturned near) Judge H. E. Kemp of Crown Point, Ind., not only marries them but | Underwood Monday night, had re-| sells them rings, as shown by the boxes around him. Beatrice Kemmett | covered sufficiently yesterday to be| Debus of Chicago (inset) learned after a frolicsome evening she had | been married at Crown Point, and she regrets it greatly. thinks right. Rudolph Valentino, one of Crown Point's celebrated customers, thought it worth $50. It’s not hard to get married in Chi- cago. Then why Crown Point? they're so polite,” ‘whoopec bride” said, explaining that they didn’t ask embarrassing ques- “They even have rings all but will remain in the hospital for | Mean. Sometimes they can’t even re- | ready, all sizes.” But when they come out of the gauze many of the girls wish it hadn't been so easy. Chicago's latest and Most spectacular Beatrice Kennett Debus, wishes that "eine Olson, Beulah youth who sut Jake Olson, youth who suf- fered’ severe and extensive burns| Crown Point, Ind—(#)—The royal Monday when the boiler which he ;T0ad to romance takes a detour here was repairing exploded, was “much j ‘0 the divorce courts. : more comfortable” this morning. He| Crown Point, only 40 swift miles will be in the hospital a long tim away as Cupid flies, is Chicago's Marvin Welliver, Bismarck boy who |Gretna Green. = i suffered a lacerated scalp and an| Thousands of “whoopee brides injured arm when a tool cabinet fell elope here yearly and take solemn on him Saturday night, is recovering | VOWS that they later decide they didn't several more days. member the words. ‘Wayne Olson, six-year-old son of | Then they scamper for the court of, Henry Olson, Sterling, has been taken | domestic relations to weep and have home following the amputation of | it declared no contest. his fingers, which were mashed inj Maybe they wed on a dare, maybe the mechanism of a gasoline aoe pc pans = : Mi often ae vill oopec sal epicoecrmamtar: That's why they're given the sobri- : quet, “whoopee brides.” a ; The marriage license bureau is 1n Former North Dakota important industry here, and has been ‘arm for years. One ju Tet as early Ly a er Who ‘“~ ee jo 1915 with a Sun taiae os i 000. He had married more than Killed Priest, Freed|# ee we Winona, Minn., Sept. 18.—(”)—The ycoirtera cetesmaiggt nes ran case against John Gira, retired farmer — rplakt cord eelpeeeie = a held for the slaying of Rev. Nicholas | 19-1, flor.” just meres the Brommenschenkel, & Roman Catholic | Tarr ten ea eer ee aes the priest, was dismissed when the grand |)... fesued without quibbling and failed to indict him. pacsgresgovoecn! out lm ing i Gire. following the slaying, beat his |® eaudy “certificate” urged upon the wife with a club. She finally succecd- ome abet eae ee 4 sands of ti -1 5, CO- ed in snatching up @ gun and shot coons that have hatched many a mat- summoned and he was arrested. weddi ing rings. He told’ authorities his wife spent Kemp has done well at $5 a mar- much time in the priest's room and he shot ‘him after she had been in the |#6e. oF whatever the bridegroom room two hours giving Brommen- schenkel, as she told, an alcohol rub. » o { Gira, a retired farmer, said he had Woman ‘Weeps at | planned the slaying ft veral weeks. | Gira farmed for years in North Dead Boy’s Grave | For $25 Reward | 2 Dakota. Chi Border Russo Chinese Chicago, Sept. 18.—(#)—For $25, which she never received. Mrs. Jennie | | eo Costs China Millions Shanghai, China, Sept. 18—(P— Colburn wept over the grave of a 12-) estimates glamage to Chinese proper- | who, she admitted today. was not. ty from Russian raids on Manchurian| The lad, run down by a locomotive, border points at $25,000,000, wore a boy scout button and boy in Chicago one ‘whoopee bride,” Beatrice went on a gay party June 27. She woke up on the morning of ot 4 to find a strange young man hat’s the big idea?” she asked. guess I got a right to beat you— T'm your husband,” the strange young He showed her a marriage certifi- cate, tore it into shrecis and threw them in her face, then ducked, and hasn't been seen since. Beatrice pieced the shreds together and found she was Mrs. Debus, mar- ried at Crown Point, which was news to her. Friends told her she met Henry Lewis Debus on the party and after a few drinks announced she was go- ing to marry him. Then they hed him through the leg. Police were | sinonial venture. They used to hold! more drinks. During the ceremony, 's, She had to be held up. New she's asking Chicago courts to annul her marriage. tablishing his claimed the body for nearly a month, Mrs. Colourn appeared at the morgue shortly after the funeral and said the body was that of her son who disappeared six months before, She told police she had been prompted by her husband to make the identification so they might get a $25 reward offered by a newspaper. She/ meal, police said. said she never got the money. ‘The Chinese Nationalist government | year-old boy she said was her son but | was held for a coroner's investigation No one Portuguese is the official language to = Muomin semi-official news!scouts interested themselves in cs- agency dispatch. For three months the 2,000 mile Russo-Chinese border between Man- churia and Siberia has been the scene of sporadic fighting, the trouble start- ing over Chinese seizure of the Chinese Eastern railway administra- tion from the authority of the Soviet Huge Railway Merger In East Is Proposed » 18.—(P)—A pro- dollar railroad merce Put forward L. FP. Loree, presi- dent of the ware and Hudson who has ABUT of A Shir Ap. Skier She THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 1929 ‘Whoopee’ Marriage Mill Grinds Tears | Movie imams | Bismarck Aviator ——————e STATE SELLS SLOT stove Ramune MACHINES sae Attorney General's Office by Chance Finds Buyer in | Chicago Firm i if Sale of approximately 30 slot ma- | chines which have been confiscated in | recent years by the law enforcement | division of the attorney general's of- fice has been effected by W. C. Mor- ton, assistant attorney general in charge of the work. They brought $800. The slot machines had accumulated until it became a problem to find storage for them. Use of the ma- chines is illegal in many states and the market for them was limited. The average machine cost $60 when new, but Morton had nearly decided to break them up and sell them for junk when a Chicago firm made an offer. After some negotiations it was ac-| cepted, Fred Lehr of Gackle Is Victim of Cancer) Gackle, N. D. Sept. 18—Fred Lehr.! of Gackle, one of the pioneer farm-| ers and landholders of that vicinity \died at Trinity hospital after being a patient only a few days, his death! being due to cancer of the stomach. Mr. Lehr came to Gackle when there was no village there and has raised his family in that vicinity on a farm. He is survived by his wife and five daughters and three sons. | Funeral services will be held at! Gackle this afternoon. Burial will) be made in the cemetery there. | $3,000,000 California Blaze Under Control |: though to enter the building, but changed his mind. Santa Paula, Calif., Sept. 18. —-(m—| The fire situation in Ventura county where 25,000 acres have been swept by flames. was reported improved to- | day by the county fire warden's office here. The Santa Paula corner of the tri- angular burned area still was giving fire fighters in that district consider- | able trouble, but on all other fronts the battle against the flames which | have rolled up a damage bill of more | than $3,000,000 was progressing favor- \ ably. | rich Ventura avenue oil field. Unless | unforeseen complications arise it was | believed that all danger to the ficld had passed. { Cops Comb ‘Jungles,’ 23 Drunks Picked Up There was plenty of material for numerous stories on “why men shouldn't start drinking.” Twenty-three drunks, the result of a cleanup of hobo paradise, “the jungles,” faced Police Magistrate F. A. Leonard. from canned heat, the most potent of all illegal beverages, to extracts and enough money to pay $5 fine, another had a job and promised to send his fine to the judge. Had the rest of them tossed their entire belongings into a sack pot there wouldn't have been cnough cash to buy a square Nineteen of the men were given five day suspended sentences on the condition that they leave the city be- fore noon. ° cessive nights The fire warden’s report relieved | anxiety which had been felt for the | They had been drinking eer Janet Gaynor, motion picture actress, and Lydell Peck of Oakland, Calif., will spend their honeymoon in Hono- lulu after their wedding in Hollywood. ——_—————_____ Conscience Struck | Absconder Gives Up | ° Chicago, Sept. 18.—(7)—A man walked up and down for three suc- in front of the detec- bureau. Several times he started Last night he walked in. “Tam William Thal,” he said. “I came to Chicago a week ago on a va- cation. I'm cashier and accountant for the J. G. Grill Insurance com- pany, 131 William strect, New York. I took $14,000 of their money. They don't know it yet. I can’t go on. Send me back.” He said thé money was gone, a sad commentary on his judgment of race horses. Deaf Mutes Burned to Death in Armory Fire Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 18—(4)—The caretaker of the state armory and his | wife, botlf deaf mutes, were burned \to death carly today in a fire which destroyed the structure and an ad- Joining building, and swept a por- tion of the Western Union's plant. Eifas A. Wills, 54, armory caretaker Fargo, N. D., Sept. 18.—Press agents 4nd his wife, apparently were suffo- for the W. C. T. U. should have been | jat the Fargo police station yesterday. cated in their quarters. ‘Land of the Soviets’ Ready to Hop Pacific Nilolayevsk-on-Amur, Siberia, Sept. 18.—(#)—The Russian airplane “Land of the Soviets,” bound from Moscow to New York, landed safely today at Petropeviovsk, principal town of the Kamchatka peninsula. After a flight hair tonic. Three of the men had/over the sea of Okhotsk from Shfar, Siberinn city. Tire next stage of the flight of Commander Semyon Shesta- kov ard three other Russian air aces is from Kamchatka across the Pa- cific to Alaska. World Series Games’ Broadcast Planned Chicago, Sept. 18—(?—Four Chi- cago stations and two national chain Woman Violates Dry _| systems have been granted permits to Law; Freed on Bond Minot, N. D., Sept. 18.—Elizabeth Kelly, charged with selling liquor, waived preliminary hearing and fur- nished bonds of $1,500 before United States Commissioner Thomas B. Murphy. She is the cighth woman to be ar- rested during fe court at Fargo, following a visit made to the city in June and July by two prohibition agents who allege that they made a large number of pur- chases of liquor. Four men also face liquor selling charges. Other defendants for whom war- rants have been issued are being sought by members of the United States marshal's force, but are be- lieved to have fled from the city. A preliminary hearing is scheduled to be held today before Mr. Mur- phy for Leona McCauley and Leone Watson, arrest- ed on liquor law violation charges. The trio was taken into custody by officers while they were searching for aeteogen's for whom they had war- rants. . Mr. and Mrs. Jack Calvin of Car- mel, Calif., paddied in a canoe from ish., to Juneau, Alaska, in i i I : 3 5 E z i F & i : i i art ! 3 FE I i il Bigi tf M. Johnson, Don! J. broadcast details of the world series games if played on Wrigley Field, home of the Cubs. ‘The chain systems are the National Broadcasting company and the Co- lumbia Broadcasting system while the Chicago stations are WBBM, WGN, WMAQ and WCFL. Each sta- tion will have a separate booth in the press box. Sanborn Man Elected Principals’ President Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 18.—M. D. Willenar, of Sanborn, was elected president of the Principals’ associa- tion of Barnes county at the meeting of school teachers held at the court- house. Other officers named include Mrs. ; Miss Gussie White, secretary. Members of Peterson, Dazey; A. M. Johnson, . C. Thorup, Leal; Walter Rustand, Baldwin; Cornelius Schroed- er, Noltimier, and of the athletic com- mittee are F.V. Sudder, Grand Prairie; A. L. Magnusson, Wimbledon; A. J. Steidl, Fingal. More than 60 airplanes clear the Cleveland airport daily, carrying an average eg oo Passengers and 5,500 FE i e 2 oe @ i » Catches Train for Late Chicago Man | | ° When Eugene Quay, Chicago attor- ney, missed his train in Bismarck, he | Was distressed. {| The mental anguish lasted until he | had a bright idea and employed Harry | Potter, local aviator. to assist him in | keeping an important appointment in | Chicago today. Hopping into Potter's plane, they | arrived at Jamestown three minutes ‘after the train had left there. Con- i tinuing the chase, they arrived at | Fargo in time for Quay to board the |train which he had missed at Bis- marck by an hour. The flying time from Bismarck to Fargo was two hours. London Denies Asking 5 Power Naval Parley London, Sept. 18—()—High British official quarters today heard with surprise reports printed in London and New York that Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald had invited Japan, France and Italy through their respective embassies to parti- cipate in a five-power naval confer- ence in London in January. It was stated the report is untrue and that no decision has been taken to issue such invitations at present. University to Raze Portable Classrooms Grand Forks. N. D.. Sept. 18—(#— Special ceremonies will mark the raz- ing of the portable classroom build- ing on the University of North Da- kota campus. The structure was built to meet the need for additional classrooms, but additional facilities are provided by the new liberal arts build- ing and the temporary structure no longer is needed. STREET ROW FATA Mexico City, Sept. 18.—(4)—Reports from Torreon say one man has been i \ | ° 8 street shooting scrape, the result of political differences. Pisst=ia the dough ‘Thea ia the oven Same Price for over 38 years 25 eunces ter 25¢ Use less than of higk priced brands MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR GOVERNMENT DELIVERS THAT ONLY BUICK BUILDS Dots Helped Win _ | °o “| North Dakota Flyers Win Aviation Awards Sioux Falls, 8. D., Sept. 18.—— Florence Klingensmith, Fargo, N. D., finished fourth im the deadstick land- ing contest staged in conjunction with the air races of Sioux Falls’ first annual air fair, judges anounced yes- terday. Eddie Canfield, Williston, N. D., was third. Beauty Contest | THEATRE Last Time Tonight Have You Had Your Laugh Today? Then HEAR, SEE, ENJOY Perhaps the dots on her cheeks helped. They are quite different. Any’ Miss Rosie Grinnell, above, a Pottawatomie Indian maiden from Topeka, Kan.. was adjudged “Most Beautiful Indian Girl” at the four- day fair at Mayetta, Kan, given by the Pottawatomie Indians. She's a Haskell graduate—and possestes | brains as well as beauty. ST. PAULITE HEADS BARBERS Indianapolis, Sept. 18.—(7)—Her- man Wenzel, city commissioner of | parks and playgrounds of St. Paul, Minn., was nominated unanimously for secretary-treasurer of the jour- neymen barbers international union of America, and is expected to resign If you've never be- fore, you will wna 70 see “The Sophomore”—it's won- derful—it's great—you'll re- gret missing it. killed there and another wounded tn | | | | | | his city council post. Thursday and Friday Ina Claire G of th in NOTICE Sor great Bresdwureanllll The Pilmoor Sign Co. “THE AWFUL TRUTH” An All-Dialogue Picture. You'll enjoy it hugely. Skyline Express Schedule Minot Bismarck Leaves 10:30 a. m. Arrives 11:45 a. m. Arrives 2:30 p. m. Leaves 1:15 p. m. Operating under the Department of Commerce Regulations. INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS Minot, North Dakota : 57 TAXI Biemarck Reoresentatives moved across the street 613 Broadway. sunt w sulce mere to offer than supreme performance Into the Marquette, Baick hes built on extra margin of every quolity thet mokes an outstanding {leader. On the road the brilliont performance of this swift, smart new six Is unmatched by thot of any other car of comporable price. Nowhere in the thousend-doller field can you find such thrilling response, such effortiess speed, such big reserves of power. Only Marquette with its priceless beck- ground of Buick craftsmenship can offer such superlative performance at moderate cost. Only Marquette in the thousand- dollar class has an engine of 212.8 cubic Inch piston'displacement. Marquette alone provides the extra endurance end ex- treordinary economy of operation thet Buick ‘clone knows how to build, And this handsome new six hes even ‘end economy! In its cless, Marquette is the only cer with the remarkable new woterproof, dustproof, wearproof upholstery and the wonderful new non-glore windshield. A host of other exceptional fectures contributes to its completeness: Dustproof, tilt-ray head- lights. Four Lovejoy hydraulic shock Here Is one of the smartest cors en the | BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIOAN Canadien Factories Division of Generel Meters Bullders 6? MeLough!in-Buich,Oshawa, Ont. Corporation Ruteh end Marquatie Meter Cos $965 to 1035 Sar

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