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York: 20 heurs late, with reports of a) “Roosevel., from New York, reached “Gibbs aboard the ship was injured. _THE BISMARCK_TRIBUNE. MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1929 WINDS OF HURRIGANE FORCE STILL SWEEP OVER BRITISH SLES: Say Death Toll Will Mount Over 100 When Check Can Be Made of Disasters | London, Dec. 9—(4—Winds of hurricane force still swept across the Critish Isles today leaving death and CHARGES DISMISSED Six Members of Schmidt Family Face Assault and Battery Count Today A charge of grand larceny against MANDAN NEWS WETSCH AND BERGE Commissioner, Chief | Convinced Girl Will || |. Not Claim Her Skirt | | The Mandan girl who early Thurs- | day morning lost her skirt on Main | avenue, Mandan, ev:¢ently had more [than one frock, according to the | theories of Thomas Stebner, street | commissioner who found the garment, } and Charles Reynolds, Mandan chief of police. | The two men, who are interested in tiestruction both on lake and sea 11! Jacob Wetsch, St. Anthony farmer, | returning the black satin skirt to its thejr wake. There were indications there would be no cessation for many hours. The week-end was the wildest in the history of British weather bu- reau records. Night steamship services were sus- pended, all airplane service stopped, and hotels and ports were crowded with passengers waiting to cross to the continent. Wireless distress sig- | nals from the seas told of more than 50 vessels in dire need. At least 65 lives have been lost in | the gales, and it is possible that the death list will number more than & hundred when all the reports have been received. These figures include 16 lives lost in the sinking of the steamer Frances Duncan on Thursday. Twenty-one Jost with the sinking of the steamer Radyr on Saturday with all hands, seven men washed overboard from) vessels along the English, Dutch and Danish coasts, and a-score of per- sons killed in land accidents due to the oxe. | Alaunia Aids Tynedridge { ‘The Cunard steamer Alaunia, from | New York, went out of its course to! assist the steamer Tynebridge, which | was in distress in the channel 24 tiles west of Bishop's Rock. Its) radio said three men were injured. i ne British steamer Britannic | went ashore between Linney Head and Saint Gowans, Pembroke, Wales. | The Homeric arrived from New strenuous two days at sea in Se the waves smashed windows on the promenade deck, 60 feet above load line. The American liner President outh, efter battling wind exceed- ee a0 miles an hour. George Stop- | fer, German, was lost overboard but | it was believed he might have been & cide. ere members of the crew of oe destroyer Walpole were washed over- hoard) and drowned. Lieutenant and the destroyer itself was forced | back into Portsmouth. The Italian | cargo boat Alfri about 100 miles off Bordeaux, with six of its crew, drowning. . Cut By Flying Glass ‘The Biue Star liner Andalucia ar- rived at Falmouth with some of its! passengers cut by flying glass sent | rough the air when mountainous | s truck the ship while they were | at dinner. Some said the ship at | times had a list of 40 degrees and | they expected it to sink. | ships reporting varying de- | of distress were the Danish boat Helen, whose first mate | caret and a sailor were swept overboard: | tew freighter Galdames 'y7,. ye, i Hendsson, Mantan:| ne Spanish aground just outside Brest Roads | with two of the crew drowned; the ; British ship Essex Heath, water- | logged and reported sinking between | fs t and Brest. “tone three masted schooner Notre | © de Bonne Nouvelle and the oner Berthe both foundered near t Light but the crews were . 1 A further sinking of a steamer was ; reported today by the steamship Manchester regiment which picked up | 45 kailcrs. One lifeboat was lost 8 Ne rescue, ane was some doubt as to the identily of the vessel, which was | abandoned, although it was peleret | to be the Volumnie, en route from the Britisn Isles for Philadelphia. 95 IMMIGRANTS GO| BACK AS 100 REMAIN was dismissed in justice court this morning by James E. Campbell, Man- dan police magistrate, who ruled that evidence presented did not warrant carrying the case over ta district court. Wetsch was accused of stealing 20 turkeys, -sorth $60, from John Brigl, another St. Anthony farmer, Nov. 4. The Timmer “Name's Day” assault and battery case was to come before Judge Campbell this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Schmidt and their four sons, George, Frank, Marcus, and Mike, are charged with assaulting M. 8. Barth, also of Timmer, Dec. 3 at the home of Franz Peter Schmidt. Sheriff Henry R. Handtmann and his deputy, John Handtmann, Jr., left tor Timmer this morning to bring the complaining witness, defendants and witnesses to Mandan for the hearing. The case in which John Bergen, Glen Ullin undertaker, was charged with malicious mischief was settled out of court Saturday afternoon, it was announced this morning by Louis | H. Connolly, Morton county state's attorney. Mary Buchholz, former wife ot Bergen and one-time Bismarck milli- ner, had brought the charges against the Glen Ullin man, claiming that he damaged her property soon after | their divorce. Bergen paid his for- the charge was dropped. 8 NOVENBER BABIES ARE BORNIN MAND Death Takes Four During Same Period, Auditor's Statis- tics Show Eight children, including only one girl, were born in Mandan during November and four persons died in ithe Morton county city during she ‘same period, according to vital statis- tics for the month forwarded to the state health department by W. H. Seitz, Mandan, auditor. Six of the children were born to Mandan parents. Only one of the persons deceased was a regular resi- dent of the city, according to Mr. Seitz. Births and deaths for the pe- riod follow: Births Nov. 1—Mr. and Mrs. Anton A. vart, Mandan, daughter; Mr. and son. Nov. 16—Mr. and Mrs. Anton Ress- ler, St. Anthony, son. Nov, 17—Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Ressler, Timmer, son; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pecody, Mandan, son. Nov. 21— Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brant, Mandan, son. Nov. 22—Mr. and Mrs. Peter Joh- ner, Mandan, son; Mr. and Mrs. Li- borious Dahl, Mandan, son. Deaths Nov. 4—W. C. Brown,. 77, Custer Flats. Nov. 8—R. E. Gibson. 78, Mandan. Nov. 23—Sarah M. McWhirk, 19, / Lewiston, Mont. Nov. 30—Mrs. Rose Heck, 79, Har- mon, rs, Amy E. Hamilton Dies at Beulah Home Mrs. Amy Etta Hamilton, 44, wife of Rudolph T. Hamilton, general super- intendent of the North Dakota Power Nearly Half Million Americans | {#24 ‘ere Have Gone Abroad to Live in Twelve Years Washington, Dec. 9.— P) — Nearly half a million American citizens have left the United States to take up resi- | dence abroad during the last 12 years. Of these, 435,000 were native-born, | while 62,000 were naturalized; and the labor department, in its annual report, says they had sought “permanent, or at least extended,” places of living in| and other lands. ‘The figures, which were compiled by the commissioner general = i. migration, said that during the eye nearly 4,000,000 resident SF eee ae ito taimerents tor the whole 22 years.” Traffic Patrolman Is: Killed in Gun Battle 8 o'clock. He escaped injury. Coming toward - Bismarck Mandan his automobile, in whieh he the lone it, across the saad ge eee en rightful owner, have not encountered ‘any skirtless maidens in Mandan ; Since the finding and that mysterious | black satin apparel still hangs from ; @ hook in the office of Chief Reyn- 1 ol !owner will not reclaim it. CHOIR SINGS DURING ~ SERVICES AT SCHOOL, Rev. Paul Neussendorfer and 21 Singers Give Program at S. T. S. Twenty-one members of the choir Jot St. Joseph's Roman Catholic church, Mandan, under the direction | of Ralph D. Zaw, gave a musical pro- ; gram before an audience of state | training school students during re- ligious services conducted yesterday | Priest of the Mandan parish. the school, according to Mr. } terday follow: Soprano—Mrs. : Law, Misses Coletta Hess, Clementine Wirtz, Barbara Herman, Juanita Tavis, Mrs. Paul Bennett, and Miss Schafer; alto—Mesdames Paul Shan- non and K. 7). Law, and Misses Anna Tavis, Helen oman, Catherine , Boehm, and Ermina_ Fredericks; } tenor—Lawrence M. Tavis, Paul Ben- nett, Peter Fett, and Lawrence F. Tavis; bass—E. L. Tavis, Carl Shea, Anton Knoll, and Philip Helbling. Numbers sung py the choir were: “Exultate Domino,” Haydn's “Salve Regina,” “O Mar: “Silver Threads Among the Gold,’ “When You and I were Young. Maggie,” “Love's Old Sweet Song,” | and “Star Spangled Banner.” Anton Knoll sang a solo, “Lone- some Road.” from “Showboat,” and Lawrence F. Tavis and E. L. Tavis sang a duet, “Mother Machree.” Frayne Baker Speaker H ‘h no telephone calls received in | ,Tegard to the matter, the two menj ; are just about convinced that the | “Old Black Joe,” | , | rector Leonard C. McMahan this | morning. “I have given candidates | Scrimmage so far, having worked them in the fundamentals of the game all last week, and haven't the slightest idea of who will start or even who will make the trip,” Mc- Mahan said. The Brave coach has but two vet- erans on his squad, Lillibridge and | Lloyd Spielman. | Dickinson Pair Pays $20 for Night’s Fun Jack Jones and H. J. Church, Dick- little | | last night, had an arugment, and had | Their fun cost them $10 apiece. { magistrate, this morning. ,derly conduct. again. ——_—_ —_____¢ Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity , { | i le Mrs. Toman Is Elected Degree of Honor Head Mrs. Hattie Toman was named president of the Mandan Degree of Honor at their election Friday eve- ining. She succeeds Mrs. Clara Leekly. | Other officers elected were: Mrs. vice president; Bernice Goodale, second vice |president; Mrs. Mollie Richardson, j afternoon by Rev. Paul Neussendorfer, ; treasurer; Mrs. Maude Arthur, finan- jclal secretary; Mrs. Pauline Mathel- It was the choir's first atta th at | son, usher; Miss Rose Brucker, assist- Ww. ant usher; Mrs. Elizabeth Puller; in- mer wife $175 to settle the affair and | Members of the cnoir who sang yes- | side watch; Mrs. Ellen Swanson. out- H. D. | side watch; Mrs. Nora Skjod, pianist. ;Philomena Meyers, Mrs. | * * * | Mr. and Mrs. J. M. McLeod have as their guest Mr. McLeod's sister, Mrs. Ruth Ellickson of Regent. | se & ,. Mr. and Mrs, R. O. Rea have gone | to Minneapolis where they will visit for a time with friends. ee * | Lionesses will be guests of the | members of the Mandan Lion's club | at a dinner and enteriainment Wed- | nesday evening. * * * Charles Winters left last evening for Minneapolis to join Mrs. Winters who has been spending several wecks there, sek * Mrs. G. T. Langley, Dickinson, and Mrs. Elmer Carlson, Mandan, are | new patients at the Mandan Dea- ' coness hospital. | * * | Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Robertson, jome of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Griffin For Mandan Rotarians) vatey City. who were quests at the y ii Frayne Baker, Bismarck, will dis- | cuss the practicability of diversion oi be Missouri river betore members | of the Mandan Rotary club at their; {regular weekly luncheon Thursday. This was announced today by A. W. | Furness, who is in charge of programs for the club. Baker, a student of the river, at present is employed in revetment work on the Big Muddy by the fed- | eral government. j tell the Rotarians how the river and | the water supplies of cities and towns | diversion plans now being discussed ' Staring Mandan Five Mystery to McMahan Just who will start for Mandan high school in its first basketbai | game of the season at Almont Friday | night was a mystery to Athletic Di meeting | He is expected to | last week, have returned to their { home. zs* & The annual Catholic bazaar will be held Tuesday and Wednesday in the | Hudson hall. ner will be served each evening at St. Joseph's eee ss been a guest at the home of Mr. and father before returning | on the river will be affected by the | Me tn ne \ Social affairs were git Lanterman during her stay. them a luncheon Friday at the Lewis and Clark hotel, given by Mmes. R. Griffin, G. H. Spielman, Pierce. Last evening Mr. John Sullivan, Mr. and Dr. and makes ’em pay. Bismarck, N. D. | Special—This Week Only To make you acquainted with Purina eo Chow, the profitable laying mash; we offer this special low price—for this po only. Lay Chow makes ’em lay— “The Store with the Checkerboard Sign’”” The Occident Elevator Co. A. W. SNOW, Mar. Phone 11 S inson, had a few drinks in Mandan 1a “nice fight” at the termination of their spree in the Lewis and Clark | being listed for jury trial and 37 as- hotel about 1:30 o'clock this morning. |signed for hearing by Judge W. G. They were arrested by Night Police- man J. H. Tinsen and brought before |criminal cases on the docket. James E. Campbell, Mandan police | “Ten dol- | Prosecutor Register and Attorney E. lars apiece,” was the judge's order after the two men had pleaded guilty to charges of drunkenness and disor- | After they paid their |court ordered. Hinckley's bond is to fines they left the court friends Articles suitable for | gifts will be for sale. A chicken din- { Mrs. E. R. Lanterman, who has if DISTRICT CALENDAR REVEALS TOTAL OF {16 CASES FOR TRIAL Four Criminal Charges to Be Heard; Change of Venue Is Asked in One Calling of the calendar in district court which occupied the entire morning session, resulted in 75 cases j McFarland, while State's Attorney George Register, jr., announced four Just before adjournment at noon, 8. Allen agreed to have the case of Paul Hinckley, charged with abduc- tion, go over for the term, which the be continued meanwhile. The case of Ostrander versus the North Dakota Trust company, which was not on the calendar, was brought up by Attorneys Arthur Fowler and F. O. Hellstrom on a motion for con- jtinuance, and argument on that was made at 1:30 this afternoo:. Attorney William Langer gave no- @ tice of a motion for a change of venue in the case of Howard Curtis and that will be argued later. Cur- tis, Eddie Eisenbiesz and Albert Bos- sert are up on criminal charges brought by women, while Fred Kaiser is accused of assault with a danger- ous weapon, these being the four criminal cases to be heard. The calendar as called contained 122 separate cases. Fourteen were added to this number by various at- torneys. Many of the cases on the calendar are near a settling status and these were assigned to the foot of the trial Jury trial and the 37 for hearing by the court. There may be some shifting as the session continues, to make the summoning of witnesses from a distance as convenient as pos- sible. In addition, the Potter retrial motion will be argued in the supreme court next week. which will require the presence of several attorneys there ard thus interfere with their presence in the district court cases in which they are to appear as counsel. More than 18,000 bath tubs, valued at $600,000, were shipped to 60 for- eign countries in 1928. \ list, in addition to the 7% listed for! | Year's Salary Is Gift | To Broker’s Employes |New York, Dec. 9.—(P—As a Christmas bonus 200 employes of Goldman-Sachs, Wall street broker- ge house, are to receive a year's sal- ry, the same as last year. The total will exceed $500,000. NAVY MORALE HIGH, "SAYS HEAD SKIPPER 2 | Secretary Adams Reviews Per- | sonal Inspections of Self and Department Aids wie | Washington, Dec. 9. (4) — Charles Francis Adams, the yachting skip- per, Ernest Lee Jahneke, the ship- | builder, and David S. Ingalls, the avi- | ator, have covered a lot of territory |CXtreme care of herself. {to Crown Prince Humbert of Italy. wall and Alaska. He made a sub-! TWIN DAUGHTERS j Merged trip in the V-4, and flew on} London, Dec. 8 —() — and off the aircraft carrier Lexington. | Hanbury Williams, formerly | Mr. Ingalls inspected everything in zess Zenaida Cant n the navay establishment which af-| granddaughter of General fected aviation, and watched the! gave birth to twin daughters | Progress of aircraft development in} don Friday. the commercial world. The findings of | these three fast-traveling naval ad- ministrators were summed up: “The morale of the navy is high, the ! health of the personnel excellent, the | condition of reenlistments extremely satisfactory, and the number of de-/ sertions comparatively small.” jan Queen Warn Against Overexertion Brussels, Dec. 9.—(4)—Queen Eliza- beth, ill with influenza for two weeks, has been warned she must be careful of her health in view of the coming ceremonies attendant to the marriage of her daughter Princess Marie Jose, It costs twice as much for to replace the ties as the ADVERTISEMENT. ANNOUNCEMENT R STOMACH SU Stomach sufferers in Bism 'y will be glad to leaf Liug Store, a been aj ro for ‘undet’s hich have guined an envi tation througeent the Uniti in the relief of mtomach dif Have Mr. 0 or write F. H. Ptund Nicollet Avenue, ‘The court physician told her to take He empha- sized her condition was not alarming. in all sorts of conveyances since they took over the job of running the navy jdepartment for the |. The secretary, Mr. Adams, outlined | his own activities and those of his two | assistants at the very beginning of | his annual report, just submitted to | the president, detailing trips by bat- | , tleship, submarine, dirigible, airplane, | : automobile and other methods which | j have been made in the course of their | duties, { First, the president was advised that | ; Mr. Adams took office at 2:35 p.m. | March 5, that Mr. Ingalls followed }at 9 a.m. March 16, and that Mr. Jahncke came next at 2:30 p. m. April 10. Then the secretary told of personal | inspections of navy yards and other [shore activities, his observation of battle practice in southern waters, his j Attendance at the launching of ves- | sels, his study first-hand of scouting fleet movements, and winding up with | this sentence : } “On October 10, 1929, the secretary | visited Lakehurst and made a short | flight on the Los Angeles.” | It was shown that Mr. Johneke had | traveled by airplane, steamship or de- | |stroyer to almost every spot where | the navy had interests, including Ha- ts inteed torclieve ltchis Blind, Bleeding or Proteudiage Dilea or money will be refi A Tip Andrew Carnegie Asked to explain his phenomenal success, Andrew Car- negie blandly attributed it to his ability to get men to work for him who knew more than he did. : Do you do the same in the intricate business of run- ning your home and taking care of your family? You can, quite easily. ° You can employ specialists in diet; you can serve the master dishes of famous chefs; you can have the advice of style authorities in selecting your clothes, of whole electrical laboratories in buying household appliances, s by reading the advertisements. All the newest knowled; dollars and years of effort have won—is contained in the advertisements, If you will use the advertisements in this newspaper as Andrew Carnegie used men who knew more than he did, every dollar you spend will be spent wisely, economi- cally, and will return full measure of satisfaction. That’s the way to be a success in the greatest business in the world—making a home. It pays to read the advertisements Hoover admin. {felt at her condition and it was felt | | istration. ‘eertain she would be in excellent And that’s a formula for success. really successful does all the work himself. He employs other people’s minds and efforts. Other quarters said no anxiety was health at the time of the wedding { ceremony next month. The queen is 53 years old. For years she has been susceptible to ' Take the recog- nized atandatd remedy for Atall “Our Money Back” gu: tee is an insurance with every sack. From Nobody who is ge—knowledge millions of