Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LIONS CLUB PLANS — Glider Pilot Loops | ‘ACTIVITY PROGRAM is | Craft Four Times ; OO ; WITHBASEBALL ONE Chicago, Jan. 6.—(*)}—The claim was made today by Edward B. Heath, aviator, that his feat of looping the loop in a glider yesterday was the first of its kind on record. Heath, towed by an reached a height of 1,200 feet before airplane, WITH DEATHIN |? __THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, JANUARY. 6, 1980 BULLETINS || Moorhead Man Killed — Rockford, Mil, Jan. 6—(?}—Al river accmentatty suot | South Dakota Forest Fire Is Under Control} 1 tunctionai Biadder trritation | HUGE GRAIN BIN WON i | Trapped Seven Hours, Minne-| apolis Man Is Finally Saved By Firemen HOOVER NAMES MINISTER Washington, Jan. 6.—(AP) —Charles C. Eberhardt of Kan- sas, was nominated today by President Hoover to be minister i | A’s Schedule 33 Games | _ Philadelphia, Jan. 6.—()— | Stepping in Car’s Path | ncitteny, 2, of ‘Brainerd, Minn, an | j When he was struck by an automobile aviator, was accidentally shot ena) —— Carlton, Minn., Jan. 6.—(P}—Hanis | Wounded in the chin, when @ con-| Hot Springs, S. D., Jan. 6—(#)—A|ing or itching Sensation, Back Hanson, about 45 years old, of Moor- | Stable’s gun fell to the floor in a fill-| rorest tire which burned approxi-|ache, Leg Pains, or muscular aches head, Minn, was killed Sunday night | 198 Station. mately 5,000 acres of good timber |maling yon tee) FE Spee eehgge | land south of here was brought under | ¢ ¢ NIAGARA SWIMMER Dies | Control this: morning when a light | CUSteX 4 Hout Tess | Dow wire a London, Jan. 6.—(7)—Sir Montague | snow came to the aid of fire fighters. | ca. gor yourself how quickly it works Sherman, who swam the Niagara/ ‘The blaze, of unknown origin, broke 7 . river below the falls when he was 24 out on the Seven Sisters, a range of Sud what it does, Money back if i E z driven by Gilbert Locken, of Superior, while walking on state highway No. 1, near here. Hanson received a frac- disturbs your sleep, or causes Burn- ~ aa i s| his glider was released. He made New Set Of Committees Named; four loops before the glider settled to | To Play Dickinson Chal- | the field a short distance from the 3 lenge Basketball starting place. ecw is a neces «| SHAKESPEARE GIVEN ® year of activity on the lines of the Association of Commerce. New com-! mittees have been appointed and the | GLORY DUE 10 BAC members are asked to make out lists of what they consider proper major! activities to be undertaken, a com- . rt mittee then to formulate a’ schedule {American Investigator Says He out of these. baseball received a big boost at the| as Proof Bard of Avon Was noon luncheon today from Zone Gov- | Colossal Fraud ernor D. E. Shipley, who announced that one of the best activities the club | Sacramento, Calif.. Jan. 6—(P— could set out on at this time was to/| c start steps for the location of a team ; After a year of investigation in Eng- here this summer. This, he suggested, |!and, J. Edward Morgan, until recent- could be taken up in the joint meet- ;!v proprietor of a printshop in Oak- ings of the Bismarck service clubs |land, has arrived at the conclusion which have been proposed but not /that glory rightfully due Francis Ba- held so far. He said baseball could be con has been thrown to William made a twin city affair between Bis-|Shakespeare by English scholastic marck and Mandan. Good games [circles because of royal politics and a could do much for the prestige of the | prudish antipathy for a man of ille- two cities in many ways, he reminded |sitimate birth. ‘the club. | Morgan, it was announced yester- Dickinson Challenges |day in Stratford-on-Avon, the home A challenge was received from the |of Shakespeare, is returning to the! Dickinson club to play a basketball | United States with what he believes | game in this city at some date still is conclusive proof that Bacon has Minneapolis, Jan. 6.—(?)—William E. Nelson was alive today because | | firemen and policemen won & race | with death in a huge steel grain bin. | Trapped in the bin when a convey- or sucked him into the grain, Nelson ' remained sunk in the wheat for seven | j hours. Rescuers first attempted to ;@ig him out as they dammed the i grain from his body with planks. } The wheat, however, sifted through | between the cracks and rescuers were | forced finally, to cut a hole through ithe side of the elevator to extricate | {him. Wheat was allowed to flow ; through the hole and gradually the ‘level about Nelson's shoulders dropped | jto his waist and firemen succeeded | jin pulling him out. | But during that time, from 4 p. m.,} until 11 p. m., yesterday, when he was held fast by the grain, Nelson once | | almost gave up hope. “I'm afraid | you can’t make it boys,” he said. as the wheat crushed its weight against | his body. | | But they did and he smoked cigar- | jets and ate several sandwiches while | j his rescuers fought to bring him ou ! alive. He felt no ill effects, he sai | today. The world’s champion Athletics will play thirty-three exhibition games this spring before the reg- ular major league baseball season tured skull. An inquest is to be held this afternoon. | It was reported Hanson walked in | front of the machine. | ‘ime. Locken was not held. | years old, died today, here . He had been in ill health for ti | burn through Sundar aged 62.} mountains five miles south of here, sotfie | Saturday afternoon and continued to; satisfy you completely. Only 60c. Hall’s Drug Store. opens The Athletics’ training | base will be Fort Myers AS FOR MANDAMUS Washington, Jan. 6.—(AP) —Ralph B. Bradford, of Gary. Ind., asked the supreme court today for permission to bring mandamus proceedings against Federai_ Judge Thomas ’. Slick of the northern Indiana district, to compel him to re- instate the ezse brought by, Bradford against Senator Wat- son of Indiana and others. REPARATIONS FAIL The Hague, Netherla‘ads, Jan. 6. —(?)—Priyate negotiations at the reparations conference which have been going on between the Austrians and the smaller repara- tions creditors thus far have been a failure. Chancellor Schcber of Austria told the non-German reparations committee the nego- tiations had been unavailing be- cause Austria could not possibly pay the sums expected from her. Democrat Leadership For Agriculture Not to be set. The challenge was accepted and Russel Barneck, E. B. Klein and C. D. Dursema were appointed a com- mittee to enlis: a team and arrange :4. for the gaine. A special committee to assist the American Legion in planning for the state convention of the veterans here ‘was named, A. 1. Fosteson, William Schantz and Capt. H. A. Brocopp, al! Legionnaires, being designate It was announced that the Wash- burn club is all set to reccive a visit from the Bismarck Lions next Mon- day evening, procecdings to start there at 6:30 p. m. A considerable portion of the lunch- fon was given over to songs by the McClellan brothers, Alex, Alfred and James. They sang a lot of Scotch songs, with some sentimental ones thrown in as melodic ginger ale. ~ nounced with the result embers in good He then named that th standi: club had 55 on its roll. the ne committees for thi ‘ear, to serve until July 1, as follow Program—C. D. Dursema, A. M. Fisher and D. E. Shipicy ception—Robt. Whirland, R. S Enge and Gerald Richholt Applications for membership—Bas- sett, Archie Johnson and Joc Spies. Membership contest—Abe Tolchin- sky, J. W. Murphy, Waiter Jensen yersus Sofus Robertson, E. J. Gobel and R. L. Melville. Major projects— evson and A. ik Fleck, Fred lliam Couch, id welfare—-F. E. Mc Isaminger and A. W jon work—Dr. PF. B. Strauss, O Olson, , Harry G y Adolph Englehardt and R. A. Mason Education and school relations—W. E. Parsons, E. C. Pickles, A. L. Foste- son and H. A. Brocopp. Publicity and Jester—J. H. Gibbons, Leif Fugeiso and R. H. Crano. Parks and playgrounds—Ray Staur, 3. Thompson, Joe Tschumperlin and J. Zimmerman. City affairs—Albin Hedstrom, Art Hedstrom and G. P. Laney. Auditors—William Schantz, M. Rue and E. R. Prachel. Al Wilde was introduced as a Lion cub and Senator James Cain, of Dick- inson, and C. B. Dickinson, of the Indian school, as guests. Fred Peterson spoke a tearful fare- well to Dr. Strauss and Joe Spies, who this week will depart for the land of palms and movie stars, to be away several months. Dr. Strauss was Presented with’ a handsome Glad- stone bag in which to bring back souvenirs for the members, these to consist of trophies won in a bridge tour in which he and Lion Spies will be playmates. : Barker Baking Unit Of Western Baking Co. : Moves to New Plant The Barker Baking unit of the hew Western Baking company moved ‘out of the old Third street plant and Store, Saturday night, to the new ‘plant at 1600 Main avenue. No baking has been done so far at the new bakery and it will be several * days before operations will be started, John Hoffman announced today. In the meantime the output all will be baked at the old Perfection plant at ‘Mandan. Jamestown Aviator Takes Alaskan Work Jamestown, N. D., Jan. 6—()}— Captain Arthur W. Johnson, army 3, flyer during the World war, an- nounced todey that he had accepted ® position with the aviation corpora- - tion in Alaska. He expects to leave “= \with his family for Fairbanks within the next two weeks. The company is the same which employed Ben Eiel- s0n, lost arctic aviator. Priests rerevigi pee Pe PeeET SEEDED Soe aeons been made the scapegoat of a gigantic |literary fraud. | A not unknown writer of verse him- |self, Morgan has for years been n-| jterested in the theory of the Bacon- |ian authorship of the plays attributed |to the Bard of Avon, and his culm- {inating investigation of the specula- | |tion led him to sell his printshop to} jobtain funds | | Morgan has obtained enlarged | | Photographs of the bindings and! |pages of the original folios, and as-| {serts that in the very decorations, | pictures and letterings of the script \Bacon wrote his name many times | | over. | His son, Walter Morgan of Sacra-j; {mento, chief of the division of re- {search and statistics of the state de-| partment of education, in California, ‘said today that his father believes | Bacon's illegitimate birth was the |cause of his denial of literary recog- | Senator Dill Charges '‘Obscene Language’ Is : | Broadcast fromK WKH | Washington, Jan. 6.—(P)—The Fed- ‘eral Radio Commission and the Attor- ney General were asked in the Senate | |today by Senator Dill of Washington ‘to stop the broadcasting of “obscene | language” by station KWKH at Shre- | veport. La. Dill had read a telegram from L. J. |Watrus of Minneapoiis, Minn., in {which a complaint against the sta-| jtion was made, and the expressed {opinion that if the radio commission lieved it had no authority to prose- ute, the attorney general hed such “| power under the penal provisions of | the radio act. “It would seem,” the Washington Senator said, “that public interest alone would justify the stopping of | | this broadcasting. The law makes it; a crime to use profanity on the air.” | The station is operated by W. | Henderson, who is an outspoken op- ponent of chain stores. | | Unidentified Man Is | Suicide Victim Says Coroner After Probe Minneapolis, Jan. 6.—()—A verdict of suicide today was returned by Dr. Gilbert Seashore, Hennepin county | coroner, completing his investigation | into the death of an unidentified ;man, found strapped to a chair in \an illuminating gas filled room Sun- day night. A rubber tubing had been connect- ed with a gas plate, then inserted in his mouth. The man was tied to the chair with rope. He died while an inhalator squad was working over| him. The name “Alec Olson, Mesaba, Minn.,” and the name of “A. Holst, Mesaba, Minn.,” appeared on a dic- tionary found in the room. Police telegraphed to the town, hoping to identify the man. Seek Mirrors for | West Point Cadets Washington, Jan. 6.—(AP)—West | Point cadets would be provided with mirrors to show them how they look on horseback under a request} to the house war department ap-j | dor | ner voted together against the farm- lers emergency tariff law, he cannot jSystem. When flushing of the mains Wanted, Strong Says Washington, Jan. 6.—(?)—Reiterat- ing that “Democratic leadership fot agriculture was not wanted,” Repre- sentative Strong. Republican, Kansas, today renewed his attack on the pro- posal of Representative Garner, of Texas, the minority leader, for a coal- Republicans in the house to work for aceptance of the rate schedules of the senate tariff bill. Replying to a recent criticism of his position on the tariff measure by re- presentative McDuifie, of Alabama, the democratic whip, the Kansan in formal statement said “the record’ shows that the Democratic party has not been a friend to the farmer in the formation of tariff legislation. . strong’ and says I do not vote as I talk,” Strong said. “Of course as he not remember that he and Gar- be criticised for failing to remember the way a republican from an agri- cural district votes.” | Means of Eliminating Auto Gas Discovered Baltimore, Md., Jan. 6.—(?)--A practical means of eliminating car- bon monoxide, the gas that takes an annual toll of hundreds of lives when | automobile engines are left running in closed garages, is claimed in the discovery of a Johns Hopkins univer- sity professor announced today. Dr. J. C. W. Frazer, the B. N. Bak- | er profess y at the uni- | versity, made the announcement that is had shown a motor equipped | with his device could run indefinite- \ly in a ciosed garage without liber- ating carbon monoxide. Offensive odors from automobile exhausts, | Which abound in heavy traffic can be | suppressed by the chemical action and smoke also will be entirely consumed, Professor Frazer added. The scien- tists’ discovery is a chemical catalyst which, when the exhaust vapors pass over it mixed with air converts the monoxide to harmless carbon dioxide. Dr. Fraser's discovery resulted in- directly from his work in the chemi- cal warfare service during the World war to protect men operating guns in closed turrets. Repairing of Intake Expected to Remedy Forks’ Water Problem Grand Forks, Jan. 6—(%)—City water was expected to return to nor- malcy here today with completion of fitting a steel jacket about a leak in the intake pipe which allowed muddy river water to enter the city’s water is completed, engineers expect the taint, noticeable in city water during the past week, to disappear. i Captain H. H Thompson, Duluth diver who discovered the leak, has been working on the intake pipe since early Saturday and expects to com- plete repairs by tonight. Health authorities said the city wa- ter has at no time endangered the community's health as _ sufficient chemicals have been used to remove {all possibilities of bacteria infection. Father of Six Is Shot propriations subcommittee, Major General William R. Smith, superintendent of the academy, asked for funds to install mirrors in the riding hall to enable the ca- det “to see what he looks like on his horse, and get an idea of what he is doing.” “Sometimes,” he added, “you can tell him about it but he cannot sce it himself very well.” By Chicago Gangsters Chicago, Jan. 6.—()—Louis Anton- ucei, 40, father o° six children, was shot four times and probably fatally wounded today by gunmen. Authorities were investigating the possibility that he was shot because he failed to accede to demands of an extortion ring. 12 Men Escape Death In Collapse of Mall St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 6—(4)—Twelve ition of Democrats and Independent | “Whip McDuffie dubs me as ‘farmer | (CHINESE ALLEGED 70 “HAVEKILLED TAYLOR Murder Of Movie Director Has | New Clues In Information’ Developed In Chicago | Chicago, Jan. 6.—(P)—Details of a conversation in a Los Angeles jail | between two cellmates—one a chinese —that may have a connection with the murder of William Desmond Tay- jlor, movie director, were sent to Los Angeles police today by Coroner Her- man N. Bundesen. Recently a Chicago business man disclosed to the coroner that one of | \his empioyes was the cellmate of the| |chinese. He gave the employe's state- jment to the coroner; ii read: “The chinese was called out for questioning and when he returned he was rel: d. He said he thought the |Police were going to question him about the Taylor murder, but they only asked him about being caught, ‘carrying a revolver. He told me he had been planted in Taylor's home to | kill him because Taylor had difficul- | ties with the narcotic interests. The ; chinese said he was paid $1,000 to kill Taylor.” The employe, who was in jail on a |liquor charge at the time, said he be- jlieved the name of the chinese was | Harry Lee, alias Harry Young and said jhe has heard since that Lee was in ; the San Quentin penitentiary. | Coroner Bundesen said he sent the | information for what it is worth in the investigation into the Tayior slay- ing, still a mystery after several years ' American Missionary | | In Africa Is Murdered | Nairobi, Kenya Colony, Jan. 6.—(P) | Kenya colony police today pressed in- vestigation of the death of Miss Hul- da Stumpf, American missionary whose body was found in a house on the Africa inland mission station at Kijabe, 50 miles away. She is be- lieved to have been murdered. There was evidence the woman had been assaulted. Authorities said she apparently had suffocated after the attack. They believe her assail- ;ant to have been a native. Search for {him in nearby villages has been In- | stituted. Her age was given here as 63. Frederick Lanning, business man- ager of the Africa inland mission in New York, said Miss Stumpf had done secretarial work for the director of the mission. He said he had known her personally and that she was a valuable and efficient worker. ‘She was last home on furlough in ; 1925,” he said. “I believe she had a {sister in Florida. I am almost sure ‘she was not over 53 years of age.” RADIO COMISH ERRED Washington, Jan. 6.—(?)—The Dis- trict of Columbia court of appeals to- day ruled the federal radio commis- sion had erred in its allotment of time for stations WLS and WENR operating in the Chicago district, and ordered an equal division of broad- casting time between them. —_—_—_—_—_____.___ / Take Grove’s Laxative BROMO QUININE. The dependability of this well balanced formuls is your safeguard. Its merit as a remedy for colds is recognized the world over. It has alarger sale than | all other cold remedics combined. $192 to $342 NOW *1225 0° 23% “ VALUES . . « too big to be matched any- where else this season! Burly, warm overcoats in the style you want. Man-O-Fashion Suits, SatisFashion Suits tailored in styles ranging Early from the two-button single breasted Quantities model to smart double breasted models. Limited Coe Handsome woolen fabrics of the finer qualities that STAY good looking after months of wear. SAVE ON MEN'S SUITS ¢ OVERCOATS You hard-to-please fellows . . . Here's the group for you! The style your good taste demands at savings your good sense won't let you pass up. Heavy weights, midweights, all warm, all smart. Topcoats in the styles and fab- rics that are always right. And Suits! Get this . . . Hand Tailored Suits with the custom tailored look! Man-O-Fashion Suits, SatisFashion Suits. You'll say they’re what you've waited for. Wait no longer! Come in _ today! Boys, Your Overcoats! | Parents, Your Price! Overcoats with the yo ) a woolens can be and with the stamina that at such low prices you parents can easily afford the GOOD overcoat you want your boy to have. Boys’ Suits—Collegiate Styles Long trouser suits, knicker suits and suits with one pair of long trousers and one pair of knickers. The tailoring boys in ' school prefer. Rich, all wool fabrics that will stand the strain of school yard play. Now is an excellent time to buy. The styles will be good next Speing and think of the savings you make! maar ss —— x