The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1930, Page 1

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7 sseucaed wamepneteme ere cemmeenannes meen a NRSNE SOAR ESTE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE me = Nortli Dakota’s The Weatlier ~ | Oldest Newspaper von eeay Comtiiied eG Ter ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NQRTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS f Hoover Presents Law Report | 35 Die As Terrific Storm Sweeps England iw SF SARELOST ABOARD |Death Stalks Winter’s Wake /steaning worses Xo’ LAW HALES MILLER |FORT LINCOLN PRISONERS BEAT | Drum Was Cracked by transmitting the first Unmet report of the law enforce- Treatment nt to commission congress toda: ee this message: o st aes: Congress of the United in my previous messages I have requested the attention of the con- gress to the urgent situation which has grown up in the matter of en- forcement of federal criminal laws. After exhaustive examination of the subject, the commission on law ob- servance and enforcement, and the Officials of the department of justice and the treasury department unite in the conclusion that increasing enact- ment of federal criminal Jaws over Past 20 years, as to which vio- lation of the prohibition laws com- prises rather more than one-half of the total arrests, has finally culmi- nated in a burden upon the federal courts of a character for which they are ill-designed, and in many cases entirely beyond their capacity. i upon the far west k-end, leaving in its fees S| OFBALAAM AND ASS ae ars S-_-| 10 DESCRIBE CROUP hi Bitter the deaths—two in Arizona and one in Washington. Heavy snow fell in many places in California. Fresno received its first le snow in 20 years, and San Francisco its first measurable fall in 8 years. ‘The hill country of southern Cali- fornia received its heaviest snow in 25 _years. In Arizona, Timothy Kirkpatrick, 35, stage company manager of Jerome, and David King, 32, truck driver, were found frozen to death fare here yesterday when a battalion of armed Fort Lincoln soldiers! swarmed into the city in search of; son’s Blows; Fear Sec- ond Hurricane . Up and Down Pacific’s Coast */ TO COURT ASHEALER | GUARD, ESCAPE, ARE RETAKEN NAVY TUG; GALE HAS Coast) ee on —— ©. Fi ; 4 and | one-half year old son ie ‘dal . Bitton ; hone aiid i ¢| Reorganization, Concentration, 4 F VELOCITY OF 10 PER rae 7 Y esiehareenpclcrcbaniinatl';°-,~*ye mhaatahioned ENGAGED TLLEGALLY /®sttston Reoaptures Arm New Senator || conecltation of Lagat ( iis [s Smoke, Not Ladies | Snow Blankets ‘Sunny’ “ree hore Duo in Bottoms After Five- . lemiunieil - a igencies Urge | | Falling Trees Responsible for 12] go" you ininx ot indie who smoke?” California Old Battle Against Naturopaths Hour Manhunt plod cia 2 was @ question asked of Rev. William aed Transferred From Legis- ASKS ADEQUATE MACHINERY ( | Deaths on Disrupted 4 BOBSLED CRASH IS FATAL sicaiee peal ATTACK GUARD WITH PISTOL “ibid ‘ ning. aati : jature to Benc! E i ls Highways serene ee et ee Te: | ntib: Adlienatey Thieir 3000 ‘ont ‘Muvver, look at the horses — Corporal Hilliard Is a Veritable pages LONDON ISOLATED BY WIRE! |The : a NE USES PARA iE SE che, ‘Chnig i ee pre : uge in Sierras ARAB oar pee | Havoc Most Destructive of Sea- fies ovatus aan kc coe Harriet, S. D., Girl Avers Ear licalaar tad irae woes he caneae ode Jan. 13.—()—Presi- } — two armed doughboy fugitives—and | J. H, Miller, practicing a system of | the usual serenity of a Sunday in the | curing termed naturopathy at 722/Capital City was destroyed by the Fifth street, was held under bond of ieee Se Onur see + $500, for district court, Saturday aft- AR hell alle tt esc Mab Pictures Braying ‘Jackass’ | ernoon, by Justice J. W. Riley on a Pra okt Nak goad salah up- Bosses as Riding Party to any ae Suane Reals vba cone ae after 2 p.m. vag ae 7 near the l= Certain Disaster section 463, compiled laws of North |Tn°tnod tecnvanter harine knocked aida Aner iethed dedi ed Peach @ guard unconscious with a blow on New York, Jan. 13.—()—The par- | Practitioners Uoemsed. AWS the head and made a getaway about of North Dakota do not recognize |9:49 o'clock in the morning. able of Balaam and his ass was used} the naturopathic school and the last |" G Sutfers Wound last night by Senator Nye, of North Leen tefused Met ees for i The sup aee uae O. Bor on 0 censing Practitioners. e case is 2 4 1. St. Dakota, ot the Iabor temple here to |p flare-up of the old battle of test |Paul, and Charles W. McCart, who western Republicans of the party in| Winter in the legislature, where the jenlisted a month ago at Fort Snell- old schools of medicine oppoged ‘li- [!ng,-Minn., for service here, prisoners censing the naturopaths. in the fort guard-house, were working ‘The complaining witness was Em- |0n an ash cart a ghort distance west ma Hahne, a young woman of Har- {of the post under guard of Private above, until re- John M. Robsion, cently a congressman, has been ap- pointed United States senator from Kentucky, succeeding Senator Fred- | LOST FOR WERK, ARE. SARE INUNALAKLEET Forced Down by Storms, Ca- nadian Flyers Get Back to Civilization Safely erick M. Sacket. President Hoover recently appointed Senator Sackett United States ambassador to Ger- many. ARMY PLANES LEAVE, ei Ff Ben Eielson of Hatton, N. D., and Earl : riet, 8. D. She alleged that she spent five weeks at Miller’s “rest home” in the fall of 1928—the period extend- ing over October—and that he treat- (Continued on page eleven) Lynn R. Adams. Suddenly the pris- oners rushed the guard and overpow- ered him, taking his overcoat and pis- tol. After binding his hands and feet with a leather strap they hit the guard on the head with the butt of MINOT FOR GLASGOW AFTER SEVERE TEST Defeats Justice and Law The result is to delay civil cases, ‘and of even more importance, the de- feat of both justice and law enforce- ment agencies and often times re- Sults in ineffective action. ‘Walle, the pistol and fled into the Missouri While some sections’ of the Amer- Borland were safe at lsrare el middle-aged WALTER G PRECKEL the pistol and fled into the Missourl | Crumpled Ski and Broken Jeans people any fons ane ae of day pi having been death, adios. A severe ain Jeceration when aruck, Crankcase Delay Flight merits of some of the questions in- world: for a week. * . Short! ter their getaway, Lueut. na comet ty William Bleakney took chase on of Two Ships GRANT 12 LICENSES One Woman and 11 Men Admit-| cris that upon which thou and bene Fargo "aimed ace asin cess RACE WITH DISEASE ted to Practice of Medicine | thine has grown plump and comfort- | and finished csaaamaaiieee |p DEATH UNDER AUTO “One plane crumpled a ski this fore- In 19) commercial oo North Dakota Police and Surgery in N. D. To Broadcast Crimes doctor Fathers Still Seeking Gorge Honeymooners (Continued on page eleven) Death Wins Despite | Frustrated Suicide | Hammond, Ind., Jan. 13—(?)—Po- i B SUCCEEDS M’DONALD Fargo. Preseman-Appointed- to, Workmen's Compensation Bureau Post ‘SBF zee Walter C. Preckel, Fargo newspaper Pressman, will succeed S. 8. McDon- ald as labor's representative in the state workmen’s compensation bureau January 20. Announcement of the appointment 3 Assistant's Union . He entered the news- id in 1915 and with the i 2 ile Be’ Raymond Davidson to horseback but the fugitives had too great a start and the officer aban- doned pursuit. Sleuthing of Corporal Sherman E. ‘Hilliard was ible for the searchers finding the trail of the men again. Details of military police searched the river bottoms without result until Hilliard picked up their trail in newly fallen snow and tracked them to Bismarck. Later, the same corporal learned that two men in army clothes had asked a motorist in Bismarck to take them to Mandan. Too Tired to Fight Hilliard again picked up their trail leading toward the river bottoms and ‘was in hot pursuit, in company with Liedt. Bleakney, when the pair ran into a patrol headed by Lieut. Carroll ey. Prunty. Both pursued and pur. suers were too tired to do any fight- ing after their cross country adven- tures and the fugitives surrendered (Continued on page eleven) Entangled in Robes and Blan- kets in Overturned Car; One Escapes Fate Osseo, Minn., Jan. 13.—()—Three persons en route to a dance were kill-| ed when their automobile skidded off Glasgow, Mont., Jan. 13.—(#)—The first five planes of the army's Arctic flight, bound from Selfridge field, Mich., to Spokane, Wash., landed here ernoon to Great Falls, Mont. | ‘A low ceiling compelled the ships} to fly at an altitude of about 100 feet | and the temperature here was 10 de- grees below zero, with a light fog over the field. Preparations have been made for an emergency landing at Havre, in case flying conditions interrupt the trip at Great Falls, where the sched- ule calls for a night stop. Fifteen pursuit ships had left the Minot airport at noon today. Two other pursuit ships, one of which had experienced a leaky Pi plane | had been wheeled into a hangar, hav- ing sustained a broken crankcase Sunday in attempts to start it. o transport planes, one @ Ford | Tw THREE SMOTHER 0 =sessers eee Se ing plans to depart this and wheels were attached, with which it experienced no difficulty in taking off in the flight of three. The 16th and 17th pursuit planes left a few minutes afternoon, leav- ing only the two. transport ships at the local field. PHONOGRAPH CROONS The development of the facts shows the necessity for certain important and evident administrative reforms in the enforcement and judicial ma- : hinery, concrete proposals for which at 10:35 a. m. today from Minot,..N. | % y (1D. The planes will continue this aft-| 87° #vallable from government de- partments. They are in the main: Cites Needed Reforms 1, Reorganization of the federal court structure so as to give reliel from congestion. es aor neter ee of responsibility letection Prosecution of i. hibition violations. ee 3. tion of the various agencies engaged in of smuggling of liquor, narcotics, other merchandise and aliens over our frontiers, 4. Provisions of adequate court and prosecuting officials. 5. Expansion of federal prisons (Continued on page eleven) ACTERIOLOGISTS IN Parrot Fever Claims Third Death as Additional Cases Are Found in Nation New York, Jan. 13.—(/P)—While Enter Plea in Murder |Siiver was found Uunhurt when, the q Nhe death of Mra, Wiliam abled, y vi ity, N. D., Jan. 13.—(#)— Sassine wes Ceorrmed | — . of Freeport, Pa, was described to ‘oi Raymond Davidson, 20, charged wich {my vesterday by other motorists. || Dallas, ‘Texas, Jan. 18—UP)—While i @ phonograph crooned a lullaby, Brice L, Adsie, S. slashed the Sons oe himself and his, 3-year-old son, Billy, at the homé of his sister here. Both| daughter is seriously ill with = mal- died in an ambulance. An inquest |#dy similar to that which caused indicated Adams was depressed by an|™Other’s death. estrangement from his wife. e| Demand for Teachers ‘ ’ ? Bridge Builder Is Fargo, N. D., Jan. 13.—()—Lemuel Beaton, 84, a resident of North Da- died here today. i i i te oe a : “ fi EE yee ay fi a "a lides for 6 Hours to Claim American Mark Be if i E i for 6 hours, 19 mintues and } seconds. He had previously stayed Lc i loc a aa that was : i i Kg : F i Hi ti l i i i Hf & f = 7 : i i 5 i Fl il ii : ab F z & fe qiul 4 I g

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