The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 16, 1929, Page 7

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4 ra) “ARST AD COURSE OF RED CROSS AND SCOUTS OUTLINE ‘Nill Cover 11 Weeks of Monday | Night Meetings Under Dr. Welch at ! “gh Gym ; Madame Marie-Blanche Blano, 63, and Her Son, 33, Both Strang'‘ed to Death aris ‘Gangsters’ Hinted In Mother and Son Murder \no MOTIVES ARE FOUND Bismarck Scouters will meet Mon- day night for the opening session on) i the principles of first aid, which will! Mother Had Associated With THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1929 [CROWN PRINCESS OF MONACO IS BOASTING OF BIGGEST KILLIN? ‘Charlotte Doesn't Gamble, but Effects Truce Between Prince and People Monte Carlo, Nov. 16.—(NEA)— {Women have always had a hand inj — || Wealthiest Coachman’ — WITHIN TWO MONTHS WOMAN CRIPPLED IN CRASH OF CARS Mandan Farmer and Sweet « Washington, Nov. 16.—(@— nomination of Nelson T. Oklahoma, at present assistant sf retary of state, to be minister China, was sent to the sena’g toc by President Hoover. GLENDON HAS APPENDICITIS Slackening of Shipments From: Argentina and the Danube \ cialization certificate in first aid. : Coalition Activities - Hawes, be given by the local chapter of the; American Red Cross and the Boy; Scouts of America. Dr. Welch will be the instructor in the course. He is a certified Red Cross instructor and has given this course several times before. | It will run over a period of 11 weeks, | meeting on Monday nights at the; Bismarck High school gym. The first meeting will be preceded | by a meeting with the patrol leaders | for the course, during which the job of a Red Cross first aid team cap- tain will be discussed. On Monday evening the session wit! open at 7:30 with an organization of the scouters into patrols. Dr. Welch will talk on the “Place and purpose of first aid,” and also on “General anatomy for first aid students.” After this lecture, the scouters will discuss and practice what was given them by the instructor. The American Red Cross textbook on first aid will be the chief textbook of the course. A general outline of the remaining meetings follows: ! Second: Kinds and uses of band- ages. ‘Third: Injuries in which the skin is not pierced or broken. Fourth: Injuries in which the skin is pierced or broken. Fifth: Bleeding; heat or cold. i Sixth: Suffocation, artificial respi- | ration, electric shock, gas poisoning, | hanging. | Seventh: First examination, stu- cents who complete this with a grade of 75 per cent will receive the stand- ard Red Cross first aid certificate. Eighth: Carrying, and home prep- aration for, sick and injured. Ninth: The play way of teaching; first aid. i Tenth: The place and functicn of | first aid in scouting. Eleventh: Final examinations. All) those who receive a grade of 75 pet cent in this examination -will receive | a Red Cross advanced course first aid certificate and a scoutmaster’s spe- injuries due to The course, although intended pri- marily for scouters is open to any man 18 years of age or older who might wish to enroll. " Anyone inter- | ested shculd: get in touch with W. G. Fulton, scout executive at 1157-LJ or 285; or just show up at the opening mecting on Monday night, November 18. ‘ Deputy U.S. Marshal Here in Liquor Case; Takes Two to Fargo R. H. Walker, United States deputy ! marshal, was in Bismarck Thursday evening with Henry Vernofsky, a fed- cral prisoner charged with selling ‘liquor to an Indian. Marshal Walker was before United States Commission- er J. K. Doran for a mittimus to hold Vernofsky in the Burleiga county jail until he could go up into the Fort Berthold reservation for another pris- ener, and then to take the two to Fargo on a bench warrant, which he aid Friday evening. Said Responsible for Market Disturbances Washington, Nov. 16.—()—Chair- man Caraway of the senate Jobby committee, announced in senate to- day that Fred I. Kent, of the Bank- ers’ Trust Company of New York, would be summoned for questioning regarding @ statement attributed to him that the senate coalition activi- ties on the tariff were responsible for the stock market disturbances. Caraway's statement was in re- sponse to a demand -by Senator Democrat, Missouri, that . Kens be summoned to ascertain where he obtained his informatton. The chairman did not say when Kent would be asked to appsar. Reeder Farm Girl Killed in Aceident Reeder, N. D., Nov. 16.—(?)—Ruth Lee, 10-year old daughter of G. P, Lee, farmer living near here, was in- stantly killed Friday night when an automobile in which she was riding overturned souti of Reeder. Pipe Line Company piles. nosepantion Maxbass; Lake; Chariss O. Anderson, Warwick; and H. B. Senn and Joe Falk, Rugby. FACES IMPERSONATION CHARGE Nov. 16.—(P)—Edward Gor- of an officcr, ts alleged to have writ- ten letters: to for cash to “shut up.” ‘BRITONS , the play at this celebrated center of ; Country Is Big Help Washington, Nov. 16—(4)—In its | monthly review of the price situa- | tion the department of agriculture | Briar Couple in Collision; Arm and Ribs Broken New York, Nov. 16.—(}—Richard Glendon, head crew coach of Colut bia university, was stricken with pendicitis last night while on the w ; from his home at Chatham, ‘Reds’; Son Dealt With Unscrupulous Ones Paris, Nov. 16—(NEA)—Two mur- ders, with mother and son as vic- tims, committed nader similiar and mysterious circumstances within a period of five months, have given the French police a problem in crime that suggests the most sinister ram- ifications. Detcctives have a theory that a secret sect, rivaling in method the gangsters of New York and Chicago, condemned thenr and deliberately ex- @cuted the two for some breach of faith. i Last April Madame Maric-Blanche lanc, 63, was found dead in her uris apartment. She had been strangled with a cord and no trace of her slayer has been found. Her Frederic Auguste Rigaudin, 33, accountant, was among those questioned by the police, but, al- though he could give no clue as to the motive of the crime and he was not placed under arrest. Body Found in Trunk The murder was practically for- gambling, and while some have made |@ killing, the honor of the biggest |Win must go to the beautdéful Char- |lotte, Crown Princess of Monaco. { Instead of sitting at the green cloth table and watching the wheel go around, Charlotte sat in council with duly appointed representatives of the principality and, as mediator, succeeded ii: adjusting the serious differences between the people and {her father, Louis, the reigning prince. | The sympathy, diplomacy and wise council of this very modern woman of royal blood has probably safeguarded for Monaco, not alone its economic | state and political position. but its ro- |mance. If she had failed in her {negotiations the proud people of the | principality surely would have arisen | against the reigning house and pro- jclaimed a republic, aligned with France. And no one who has loved |Monte Carlo could imagine it 2 reg- ular republic, stripped of i.s regal trappings and majestic sv: An Old-Styie Monar Prince Louis II has tecn in bad with his people for a long time be- cause he has royally refused to grant them certain concessions which they considered necessary for the pros- ! Mass., Mrs. Frank W. Blaich, Sweet Briar,| attend a testimonial dinner to has three broken ribs and a broken | 1929 crew at the Columbia Univers! arm as the result of a collision be- | Club in this city. tween cars driven by her husband and Alex Ferderer, Mandan farmer, last COFFEY OPENS OFFICE night. Jamestown, Nov. 16.—()—J. Each driver blamed the other tor} Coffey, who for 18 years was a jud the accident. The Blaich car turned of the district court, announced tod is opening of a law office here. ! Blaich received minor bruises, while pg eae) Ferderer escaped uninjured. NOTICE > a Your lawn is now frozen ai Among Asiatics it is still a popular should be covered lightly belief that earthquakes are duc to the = skippings and breathings of a huge | fertilizer. Wachter Transf/ _ company. has reported “the outlook for wheat Prices is for some advance within the next two months.” After asserting the world crop was about 530,000,000 bushels short of last year the report said the “total supply of wheat available for the season is about 360,000,000 bushels short of last , year.” over twice in rolling off the grad Relief from the present depres- sion appears to be in sight,” the sum- mary said, “following a slackening of shipments from Argentina and the Danube country and a slackening of marketings in Europe, the United States and Canada.” “This reduction in world supply.” | the report added. “would ordinarily increase the average price in world markets about 35 cents a bushel over | | frog. . the average of th s i | arcane ct me pat exon “ies Quinn Shepherdson & Co, ! oe shemee as eee ce einen ¢. GREAT i only about 25c a bushel.” % DULUTH es Grain “—" . SPOKANE WILLISTON * [FLYING 10 SISTER, Futures - Consignments - Track Bids gotten when attendants in the rai way station of Lille, investigating cheap wicker trunk, discovered. in the body of a man. The body was mutilated, but death had been due to strangulation, because a stout piece of tarred cord had been drawn about the neck. In the pockets of the dead man were the private papers. including | the automobile driver's license, of | IN ATR Frederic Rigaudin. The features were so broken that identification by this means was impossible and at first the police suspected Rigau- din of the crime, and as a ruse of placing his own clothes and peeer? | on the body of his victim. But later finger print examination in Paris; proved beyond a doubt. that the vic- tim.was Rigaudin himself. Rigaudin was a thin-faced, cold and secretive little man of whom his neighbors knew very little. protec Bais Pogo phd apie be pier Sat Chicago, Nov. 18.—(/P)}—Optimism at “I have a great fcar that I, too,; Washington over the prospect for am under the sentence of death.” At the time of the death of Mme. Blanc, the police found in the 1 A few months after the murder in Paris of Madame Marie-Blanche | Blanc, above, the body of her son, Frederic Rigaudin, below, was found in a trunk. Both had been killed by strangulation. Possibility of 25 Cents Advance in Two Months’ Runs the Prices to Week's Peak Port business in North American IN HIGHEST LEVELS; | higher grain prices and a thriving ex- | Perity of Monaco. Louis is very much | ” of the white-plumed, bristling-mous- | Keeping alive a family tradition, tached ruler of the good old days| William H. Vanderbilt appeared in when a king could do no wrong. —_| this garb at the National Horse Show While he sat serene in his pic-}in New York to drive his famous turesque palace overlooking the Medi- {coach and four. It's in the outfit terranean, his interests were repre-/ he’s shown wearing—light top hat, sented, by concession, by the Socicte| wing collar, ascot tie, frock coat, ides Bain de Mer, which controlled | checkered trousers, spats and coach- jthe Casino, the Sporting Club, the| man’s apron—that Vanderbilts of Opcra and other amusement centers; | other years often drove their own in short, the gambling and the life | coaches, ‘of the resort, upon which the pcople of the principality largely depend for | their prosperity. | Monte Carlo has not been doing so | well during the past few seasons and | the people have blamed the combine |behind the Societe for neglect, lack lof enterprise and selfishness. Louis | Was satisfied, because he was getting | F j his, but when his people complained snouts he refused to negotiate. Finally '‘Damn the Laws!’ One of the | things got too hot, with threats of a |referendum anda republic, and Louis | Defendants Is Declared to Have Said | took up more or less stable residence {in_Paris, ; In the crisis the fairy princess, , Charlotte, so becoming to Monaco, | stepped in. She studied the griev- Marion. N. C., Nov. 16. NOT KNOWING DEATH Bourgois Brothers Start for; Kansas City Just Before News of Demise Is Wired Here While two brothers were flying from here for Kansas City, today, a telegram from there to Mr. and Mrs. Martin BourXois. 807 Rosser avenue, informed them that their daughter, Mrs. Frank (Emma) Parrish, had died Friday night. i The telegram stated that the hus- , band had started for here with the body this morning. The brothers had left here about 4 o'clock in Vincent | Cavasino's plane, several hours before | the arrival of the death message. | Immediately efforts were made to head off the brothers, Paul and Al- | bert Bourgois, on their way to Kansas | City, messages being wired to Sioux City and other points where the | plane might touch. Up to this after- hoon nothing had been heard from | Bismarck Office - Room 11, Eltinge Bldg. J. E. Larkin, Local Manager. Phone 1690 ~ 2 Ome Beulah Lignite Montana Bear Creek Lehigh Briquettes Cotton Wood Pine Slab Wood Birch and Oak Blocks brary of the seemingly respectable widow dozens of suppressed revolu- tionary books. They discovered that she and her son had associated with anarchists known to the police, The doubtful associations of the two lead the police now to believe that they were prescribed by some band of criminal or political operators and slain as conveniently as possible. Rigaudin’s questionable busine: affairs have added to the myste It has been discovered that he had shady dealings with unscrupulous persons. But behind the fate of Rigaudin is the equally sinister tragedy of his {wheat buoyed up prices on the Chi- |cago market’ today, amd wheat reached its best levels of the week. The close iwas 4 to 4'. cents a bushel higher than yesterday. March wheat, having advanced to an extreme gain of 4% cents during the session. Final wheat quotations j cember $1.277. to $1.31; Mar }to $1.28; May 1.31': to $1.31 | $1.32. A hint from the department of ag- {riculture that wheat within the next |two months might advance 25 cents @ bushel gave the traders confidence {at the start. and further bullish news jeame from foreign markets through ances of the people and became con- vinced that there was much justice in their case. She took up their cause and convinced her father, who is devoted to her, that much might be done by negotiation. So he named her as his representative. Answered People’s Demands After discussion between Princess Charlotte and representatives of the National Council and the Communal | Council, she met Louis at Marseilles and laid the case before him, offer- ing suggestion and advice. He drew | Up and entrusted with her a letter in | answer to the demands of the people. mony showing that continued threats | had been made against the officers j by the textile mill sirikers here was introduced today in the trial of five |men charged with insurrection and rebellion. “Damn the laws!” Dell Lewis, one of the defendants, was quoted as say- jing. “We are going to show them (the : Officers) that we are going to run | this end of town. We ran them off jonce. and if they come back here ; again we won't give them a chance to go.” The witness, Ben: Hendley, deputy sheriff and jailer, testified that this statement was made after a crowd the air travelers. H Mrs. Parrish had recently under- gone an operation and apparently Pneumonia had set in. She was 26 years of age. Besides the husband, Mrs. Parrish leaves her parents and four brothers and four sisters. The brothers in- clude Emil and Ervin. the latter being {with his sister at the time of death; the sisters are Mrs. John Bechill, of Phone 62 Wachter Transfer Co. mother and her association with Red‘ the day. Black rust damage was re- agitators. It is recalled that at the! ported in the Argentine wheat fields. time of her murder Rigaudii ; Wheat reserves on German farms peared very reticent about giving in-| were said to be greatly depleted and formation and the police now believe ; 30,000,000 bushels less than a year ago. that he was actuated by feur. It At the same time, export demand for has been remarked that in their do-| North American wheat was strong. mestic life both mother and son were’! The optimism at Washington was mild-mannered, seemingly devoted to; based on a department of agriculture each other, and neighbors never sus-; survey estimating the world wheat Returning to Monte Carlo, Princess |had gathered and had forced the j Charlotte was taken ill and her con- | deputies to stop ejecting workers from dition was reported as grave, but she | the houses of the Clinchfield mill. quickly rallied and, although still’ The deputy sheriff also testified weak, she read the reply to a delega- | that on July 17, when an attempt was tion consisting of the Mayor of! made to open the gates of the Marion Monaco and two members of the Na- | mill, Lewis, after expressing disdain tional Council. | for the law. shouted: | In his letter, the Prince, after con-| ~The gates are not going to open.” gratulating the Princess for her s--- tir. enother defendant, spontaneous meditation, declared that presently came up to him, Hendley EVERY modern improvement _ in this superb SCREEN GRID console! tat could bering them both to such's then i msm” 000% Buses legs ragic end. os Prince of Wales and | Added Bands imansed Brother Are Knitting! 1" Amount of $10,000 London, Nov. 16—(@—The Prince of Wales and his brother, Prince George, have taken up knitting and crocheting—a pastime that is, becom- ing inereasingly popular among the nobility and the gentlemen of the select upper social circles in Great Britain. Their first efforts consisted of three scarves .each exhibited today at Queen Mary's needle work guild. The guild secretary remarked that Prince always sent articles to the ex- hibition but that this was the first time he had contributed his own per- sonal efforts. “They are exceeding- ly well done,” said the secretary. National Illiteracy Committee Is Named to cerve one state penitentiary. years, respectively, in the | In Linton Liquor Case Recent federal liquor charges were here this week, when Joseph | J. Fettig and Andrew Feist of Linton \were required to enter additional bonds of $10,000 each before John: K. Doran, U. 8. commissioner, a count of conspiracy and setting up a still being | Preferred. The conspiracy charge is based on aljeged intent to defraud the govern- the | Ment out of internal revenue. Each | naa previously given $1,500 bonds on manufacturing and selling charges. Peter Sper entered a $1,500 bond ‘on a charge of violatiig the prohibi- j ton law. Ballots Goin Out For A. of C. Election and Veterans to Receive * $7,000,000 Dividends , Nov. 116. — i) — Pay-| Of Five Directors! he had decided to adopt the sugges- tions for reform advanced by his sub- jects. He promised that a permanent superior council would be established to collaborate with him in all ques- tions of importance concerning the welfare of the Principality of Monaco. The question of defining the exact extent of state domains and the pri- vate domains of the ruling house is also to be settled by arbitration. Crisis at an End The reply of the Prince is satis- factory, and it is believed that the crisis may be considered now, thanks to the initiative of Princess. Prince Louis ended letter with the assurance of “affectionate solicitude” for his sub- jects and with an expression of earnest desire to restore tranquili with a “happy reconciliation.” So only knitted brows to be found here now are seen around the green tables. The roulette wheels that continucd meena tic marriage the throne. Count de Polignac, now known as | Prince Peter of Monaco, and they have a son and # daughter, Irish Farmer Bound To Telegraph Pole. After ‘Army’ Trial London. Nov. 16.—()—People going . She is the offspring of a| contracted by wy Maes ~vhere’s that Ben : Hendley down here, the yellow scab! | His old pistol hasn't got any nerve in j the handle of it. He ought to be run SOKOLNIKOV BRITISH AMBAS- SADOR | Mescow, Russia, Nov. 16.—()—Of- ficial announcement was made today ithat Gregory Sokolnikov, former soviet commissioner cf finance, and now president of the Naptha syndi- cate, has been appointed soviet am- bassador to Great Britain. | Oil Filter Cartridge Every 10,000 Miles filter which takes efficient the dirt out of your enginc’r oil only needs attention once ir UNTIL ou have seen and heard this new Crosley 42-S, you’ll have no idea of what modern radiocan mean. Examine it thoroughly, test it critically—compare prices. ly then you will realize all its wonderful qualities. A handsome piece of furniture, first of all.: Finished in satiny walnut veneer and rare matched woods, it takes its among the finest of furnishings. And Screen Grid, of course—with a genuine Neut: ne circuit, a feature of all Crosley models. Every other modern feature, too, such as Power Detection, phono- graph pick-up connection and ilt-in Dynacoil speaker. Arrange for a free trial of Crosley 42-S in your home. There’s no obligation! You’re There with «

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