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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 Suspected Bank Ye - THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1929 MINOT HOTEL MAN MURDERED BY SNEAK THIEF Arrested KUM PETER AGS [seen he aan ve Gtr OTOL SOCIETY CHARGE OF DOUGLAS HOLDUP AND LOOTING Captured in Fleld Near Garrison After Car Ran into Fence During Pursuit FIREARMS AND MONEY FOUND Victims Identify Him as Bandit; Auto Seen Near Scene of i Daylight Robbery Minot, N. D., Nov. 23.—(%)—John peters, 33, is held in the Ward county charged with ‘The delegation to the London naval conferen Hugh 8. Gibeon ‘below, left), ambassador to Belgium, 1 : iy E agd iu Guardia Promises to Agitate/ Until Relief If Obtained; l i i F ive i : neapolis, having C He tg if ga bet i i iat Hd le a if g i i ooth declared ‘that Peters aandit, according to Sheriff oaugh. Peters denies the accusation. FIVE DIRECTORS OF A.C. ARE E Bell, Davis, Quanrud, Wachte' and Ward to Take Office g tg Fa. iu : ir e $ i i ve ; i i | a | | od é i F i i i z if i [ F i g i i é t 4 a Fil L i . [ ve | ‘ i t 7 i [ : al 5 Fi § fe i ¢ [ E F i i i ge £ i : li i § HH ti i Hi i re =! FR i ll ie i Hi i | | B iff i j rf E 3 aici : 1s in it j ; i i ite Hl i if i i i l unl ri i LE 8 f E i 5 BF i & American ce was completed with the appointment of Morrow (above, left), ambassador to Mexico; Charles G. Dawes (above, right), ambassador to Great nd Charles F. Adams navy. Henry L. Stimson (center), secretary of state, had previously been designated as: NORTH DAKOTA MAY ENGAGE ALL-STARS ONNEW YEAR'S DAY i “ u & g Ly i | Gc ASKS CRAWRORD FOR RESIGNATION TODA Board of Directors and Superin- tendent Not in Harmony as to Policy RUSSELL REID MAY GET JOB Shafer, Birdzell and Little Probe Results in Demand for Vacating Post Resignation of L. F. Crawford as superintendent of the state historical (below. right), secretary of the chairman of the delegation. TAL WAVE DEATH TOLL IS ESTIMATED 22 AFTER SURVEYS Priest Describes How Speeding Water Washed Houses to by the board and the prospect is that Lind place may temporarily go un- En th 2: 3 ford has been superintendent Ristorical society since 1923. that he was secretary of the ge ag fe i i E i i i i i I li i H is err # iti Hi 4 iH ge » ss el tt i LH 238 ul i 8B i E } point in the opposite direction. ' {the chief executive conferred with After Chase HOOVER PLEA FOR CONFIDENCE INCLUDES AMERICAN CITIZENS Economic Future | ASKED TO SHARE HIS BELIEF | ie Wage-Earners Hold Vital Place in President’s Plans for Can Not See Hard Times and Unemployment in Wake of | Stock Market Crash Mina. 1 Oi Washington, Nov. 23.—#—To the | Wis. | great rank and file of American citi- | zenry as much as to the mighty lead- | 1 ers of economic enterprise is directed | President Hoover's plea for confi- | Har, dence in national business conditions ; and assistance in sustaining and in- creasing the country’s prosperity. Yale He has called to his side the men who guide the destinies of industry, | transportation and finance, but the | wage earners, the small salaried men | in short, the nation’s great consum- ing mass—hold an equally vital place in the chief executive's plans for, America's economic future. H These, Mr. Hoover asks to share his own belief in the fundamental sound- ness of business conditions, and his own confidence that neither hard) times ner unemployment are to fol- low the recent stock market collapse. | ‘The indications, he tells them, all | Ohio Encourages Optimism \ ‘Two aporoaches—the psychological and the practical—are considered have been the outstanding character- ‘During the week which ends today, spokesmen for the leading ferm or- ganizations and public utility compa- nies. Gets Assurance of Support Out of the conferences have come CLEMENCEAU NEARS END DESPITE BRAVE BATTLE WITH POISON g 5 bt | : Doctors Marvel at Vitality That Keeps ‘Tiger’ Alive Under Acute Suffering Paris, Nov. 23—(Pi—At 5:30 o'clock this evening former Pre- mier Clemenceau was still holding death off although it was not ex- pected that he would survive the next 24 hours. Paris, Nov. 23.—(#)--Former Pre- mier Georges Clemenceau, veteran French statesman, was making a vali- ant fight against death today but the end did not seem far off. When Dr. De Gennes visited him equip- | shortly after noon today he found his jpatient “sleeping like a child” and marveled at the vitality that kept the of Tiger alive after such a long crisis {and such acute suffering. prospective formulation of a continu- ing committee, under the auspices of cp Hn ae i ‘ | bee li i ih a an | 3 i it i A Ht il a | ; il t : ih ll b E Me fair tonight and Sunday. one quite so cold Sunday. PRICE FIVE CENTS TROUSERS-SNATCHER PURSUED T0 STREET KILLS LLOYD HANDY Arrested Colored Man Accused ' by Another of Leaving a | Pistol in His Room SHELLS OF “SAME CALIBER Dead Man Just Back From Dev- ils Lake Under Sentence for Dry Law Violation Minot, N. D.. Nov. 23.—()—Lloyd Handy, 49, proprietor of the Home hotel in Minot, was slairy about 5 o'clock this morning by a person ; Who had entered his bedroom and stolen his trousers. Handy pursued the man into the street and was shot several times, dying instantly. A short time later police detained O. E. Simpson, 37, a negro, and ques- tioned nim concerning the slaying. Another negro was found who {teld police that Simpson came {into his place about the time of the slaying and had left an automatic pistol with him. Empty shells found at the scene of the slaying were of the same caliber as the gun found, ice said. Simpson at first said he had not had a gun for more than a month, but later changed his story and said another negro had come into his room early today and left the gun with him. He said he didn't want the weapon and took it next door to leave it with another negro. Handy returned to Minot a few days ago from Devils Lake, where he had been sentenced to serve a year in the Ramsey county jail for viola- tion of the liquor laws. Members of his family said he had paid the fine imposed and the jail sentence was suspended. DIGKINSON YOUTH INJURED IN BLAST August Zinn, 19, Suffers Eye, Face and Arm Hurts * in Accident | (Tribune Special Service) Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 23.—August Zinn, 19, was seriously injured by a dynamite blast in the mines of the Lehigh Briquetting company this morning. He is in a local hospital. Both eyes are closed, his face is torn, and his right arm is bruised and broken. Ex- tent of his injuries has not yet been determined by attending physicians. Ralph Wetzstein, the only other man near the blast, was knocked un- conscious by the blast but recovered consciousness in @ short time. Wetzstein believes Zinn may have loaded load of dynamite in the lighted the fuse. He had just tolc Zinn to go one way while he started the other way to warn other miners of the firing when the unexpected blast came. POISON POTION KILLS PROMINENT BROKER John F. Betts, Member of New York and St. Louis Ex- j 5 i i se | HT ! 3 Had i 1 | i | bi i i 4 2 1 } i } i | H