The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 3, 1930, Page 6

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= 8 PREME COURT REVIEW LIQUOR CASE LUNKING PURCHASER a hehe RM aren Bovernmont Socks to Find if} psarnpienn aterm te Conspiracy Exists Between Buyer and Seller 1S NOT QUESTION OF GUILT Problem of Ilogal Transporta- tion Is Point That Noods Interpretation Washington, Mar, 3 anted a review today | to test. wheth~ by the supreme er the purche that the order Involves Hlegal trans- | portation, Is guilty of conspiracy with ver to violate the federal prohibition law, fn ‘ et for hearing April The government ino requesting the yeview said it did not involve whether wR purehascr of liquor guilty with the bootleeger yalse the question of whether the man ho placed the order had conspired With the seller, has been the tragic lot of Mr: Orphaned, then widowed, known Meanty. picture with her late hu ra and former Annapolis football s denih from a window of thelr fashior ng her with a blow when ’ ago Mrs, Jones’ faher killed himself on his wife's grave inf Emphasizes Importance Is shown in wt ‘The Importance of the controversy as emphasized by, the government in reas stacking 50 2 question In the case of _ 1 jew York bank- had not been set lzation corporations With Joel D. Kerper of Philade ‘rhe government contended that No tis knew that in so doing the qucs- tion of ilegal transportation: would ed MeNary if the original | lief act did not give the nagri-| eltural committee pow investigation on Its ow replied that the offered evidence owed that on hike or a received from Phil adelphia several illegal shipments of The government put that he was opposed to “starting out on a fishing expedi- tion on our ewn account.” Tn introducing the resolution Nj asserted that conference held Satu day in Chicago had The federal district court at Phil- rdeiphia declared (he mere purchase of Hquor was not an offense under the prohibition law and that where there was nothing the purchaser wi “destroyed con-! He made this statement after reading a telegram received last Thursday from (he Farmet but a simple sale not guilty of con er to make the | A. “Jack” West of the farm board had "proved Iim- self a champion of the farmer and an American statesman,” No Conspiracy Possible Ti also said that “there transporta. | dion was reanired by the agreement.” @} fore the Bism: sted for conspir 4 is contemplat ply the delivery of the Ching he cfreuit court of appeals held | institutions which were secking his) eight times the fect the delivery to the purchaser, | dioes Not subject. the purchaser and | Pyy seller to an indictment for conspiracy | here said that under | the prohibiiton law the purchase of | Nauor was not an offense. These decisions, the government in- Kisted, narrowed the | spiracy siatute to to make if fnapplicable to a number of eases in which conspiracy {o violate other laws than the prohi- Ditton aet were charged, Nodak the last two years and has won \the championship of the North Cen- One Farm Becomes Six tral conference both y | ope of the con such an extent as ‘| Mother and Fg Die of Burns After Rescuing 3 Children} tne root sy Unemployment. Is Basis for Attack On Administ ration (Continued fram page one) is at} further from the president in regard Fess to Make Reply Wagner concluded bis) unemployment, mi, Ohio, announced he omorrew on the Fees, Republi publican, California, asked “when, ever, are We going fo get back on the and the debate ended ag the red scare” Sen-| Cin Notte said the Amer Federation of Labor has stood @ solid phalanx ag: “But,” he add ‘Oak Park Seeks for Missing Magistrate nat communism.” ihe surest way to Break this phaianx is to brand as yeds the men and women seeking em- ployment and to meet orderiv demon- | strations hy them with billies and ‘orthwest Railroads Win Hearing on Rates Veterans in Distress Senator Couzens. Republican, Mich- fean, said “hundreds of thousands” of World war veterans wie in distress and he susgested that the senate pass | : @ bil by Senator Brookhar! wan, Towa, providing for pavment of bonuses to veterans, ot Courons added Urat he received tn- | pa; Tormation from a high administration | gom putting into effect reduced rates | ¢ fonree that 3.100 persons were knows | on petroleum and other products. : x The Niehest court announeed today Repudlican, Utah, | rnat Poderal Judges Pray and Bour- faterrapted to suggest that the Dest | quin in Montana had complied with thing the senate could do would be 69 | its ord pass the tariff Ol consideration of | statutory court, which had been held ap by the une) : employment debate, fied itself that a proper wa ren to the complaint | and Pacific and other |< s seeking to prevent Montana | s ¥o be aut of work, Senator Smoc Four Men and Boy Are) yosy or oscar Bs Lost on ’Frisco Bay for creation of a three-judge ‘The measure was ad objection, Senator Wheeler said he Couzens vetoried that “hours and | cunderstood” that the Standard O11 Jhours of time had been spent in ir-| company was fixing prices in the yelevent discussion of high tatiff rates | state and that Independent companies Which were entirely unjustified.” Smoot durine the argument pro- | p uced an estimate of the number of attorney general Wvesticating Doth | taken up in the Congressional | corporations and associations. by each side in the tariff con-} . Te showed, Smoot said, that | | were “forced to follow suit” ‘The resolution requested that ¢ Oakland Bstu: to land 2 inneapolis Hospital Fights Fire in Chute Minneapolis, Mar. 3.—> interes and nurses moved 30 patients LS. Br and stood by t hoist eight of them | from a ward to the sircet when fire ed in an old wing of the Swedish boat were J. ¥. Bro- Gepartment | Cotton, Corn, Livestock Added by Wontines* fom perce ener tend to depress the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MARCH Suicides Shadow Life of Widowed Society ! (GOSPEL OF ALFALFA IS JUSTIFIED BY $00 LINE EXHIBIT CARS Value as Feed for Producing} Milk or Flesh on Stock Is | Presented in City Aiming to attack the weed evil from 4a new angle, improve crop rotation at the same time and make possible an expansion of livestock raising, the Soo Line alfalfa and sweet clover demonstration cars spent Saturaay night and Sunday in the yards here and then continued their four-state tour, this morning, by heading for Washburn and Wilton. ‘The cars are in charge of Howard McNutt, agricultural agent of the road on this division, and Jens | Uhrenholdt, also of the agricultural department, ‘They have been in the southern part of the state since start- ing the tour at Oak dd they have been presenting their gospel of great- | er hay supply to crowds averaging 200 at the various towns on the line on the way here. They will extend the tour through the remainder of the state, then carry their message to | Minnesota, Wisconsin a id Michigan. Use Film and Exhibits. 'The party is presenting the subject of alfalfa and sweet clover through the medium of a film and shown in Louise | one car by means of an exhibit sot Here she] wp in another. ‘The film shows the nd, Richard H. Jones, oll} methods of preparing the soil and ar, who leaped | arifing in the seed, which gives best apartment | yesults owed eight pounds to the a als ows methods of to pr ve the greatest percentage of the alfalfa leaves, in | which there is 65 per cent of the feed A value and which constitute 48 per cent of the stalk. If the handling is reless, from 10 to 50 per cent of the “Ave Jost. pasy for Cow ‘The exhibit car has striking dem- onstrations of the value of alfalfa and sweet clover. One is a balance on Nodak Athletic Director Believes | one side of which rests an 80-pound Flickertail School Has Good Future bale of oats straw, while on the other is a 10-pound bale of alfalfa, Each contains the same amount of proteins, 1,04 pounds, and the exhibit is in- tended to set forth the economy of Because he {s satisfied the Univer-| feeding the compact alfalfa, thus y of North Dakota holds a brilliant | multiplying results in butter fat by Athletic Director 0 signed a con-] greater amount of proteins in the jtract to remain at the Plickertail in- concentrated feed. stitution three more years, J. FE. Davis, Other exhibits chairman of the state board of ad-| tests showing gain in flesh in lve= ministration, said ina short talk. be- | rek-Mandan University of North Dakota Alumni club Satur-| fold by feeding alfalfs .| making possible the absorption of a give the results of stock fed on alfalfa diet with some ain, Milk has been increased four- as compared with timothy hay, One table of re- ened for| sults indicated returns of $47.34 an t he had| acre from alfalfa u: larger salaries at other | Sweet clover w s hog pasture. red to have rying capacity of the best native grass as forage or pas- ture. ‘To avoid bloat the feeding of some straw with it was advocated, ‘The soil enriching nature of clover also was discussed, Plowed under it lis said to equal 14 tons of rotted ma- | ure per acre, as fertilizer. Tt then | will increase the moisture-carrying capacity of the soil four times. | Another advantage of alfalfa ts in em. They will penetrate | six depths of soil as compared with Mr.! the penetration of timothy or grain. a. The argument based on this is put three | in the form of a question, Why not | thus farm six farms? The exhibits include corn and flax farmers are urged especial: to go into the growing of more of the hiatter crop. ‘They are warned to be variety and to be sure to s Is Fatal in Chicago | ¢ T Chicago, Mar. 3.—(?)—Arthur Dol- an was killed for being a peacemaker. He was standing at the curb when two automobiles crashed yesterday, and he observed the quarrel that en- sued between the two drivers, both negroes, He sought to settle things 3, 1930 * Being Peacemaker {|'PRIESTENS FOUND GUILTY OF THEFT IN CALIFORNIA COURTS Mouse River Federal WRECKAGE OF LOST Survey Fund Passes wa, > ccus PLANE DISCOVERED authorizing a federal appropriation | of $15,000 for a survey of the Mouse | river in the Minot vicinity, with @ view of preparing plans, ‘specifica- tions, and estimates for a federal project of flood control, was favor- pedals taste by the house of repre) wissing Tri-Motored Craft Be- by giving his eye-witness version to | Religious Cult Leader That Pre- the disputants. An autorhobile jack handle crashed down on his head, and the ‘negro who high priestess of the Divine order of CENSORSHIP ) ANGER the Royal Arm of the great eleven, @ religious cult, today awaited sen- tence on eight counts of grand theft. ‘The woman, whose “concord” in | She Aid Roland cee Se eal " ney has not revealed ther he wi Dr. Louis L. Mann Says It Ad-| appeal the case, but he was ordered vertises, Popularizes Un- 122 eee a tisuey piuies te fortunate Books may wish to make before Wednesday, Mann,’ rabbi of the Chicago Sinai | for each count. congregation, weighed liberty against | , The high priestess received the ver- and rendered this verdict. “If I had to choose between the two | wept. extremes—-a rigid censorship on the Was To Finance Book with it poisons, and impurities. Na-| leader had bilked him out ¢f $40,000. Rabbi Marin addressed the anual} Gabriel and Michael. row, has been conducting a campaign | mineral deposits. He regarded social control as es- | crets of the book to him three years “We must realize,” he said, “the importance of creating the proper en- Saw Angels On Stand healthy-mindedness, and the effect |the witness stand. The occult and the young, whose behavior patterns | threaded the testimony throughout have not yet been fixed.” fortunate books,” Rabbi Mann said, | Mountains, near here. Dabney, Mrs. Blackburn testified, gave her funds Fargo in Reparations her candidate for the “Second Mes- ) siah”, whom tl It ‘lect af- Work After Season’s | 22%, "hom the cult was tose at 3reg Dabney made his complaint to tht Greatest Snow Storm district attorney Tast October. An of winter as residents of Fargo and|ieneath the floor of her foster par- greatest snow storm. Officials of state and county high- way depariments were clearing roads, ee Se eeciate Se ee telephone and telegraph crews were | resuit in her resu! r pease slowly bringing communication back | "Hits “Rnode's body Wa : to normalcy, busses again were oper- | with ice, salt. and part bed peeeerva ating, and city streets were being | were found the bodies of eres | opened. "Toll iines of the Northwestern Bell | SUmbolizing the seven notes of Ga- Telephone company in all directions gain were operating today, although . . ‘iil under difficulties. Seventy-tive| U. S. Grain Corporation men are at work in territory adjacent |to Fargo. Communication also has Off of St. Paul Floor | been re-established with Valley City land Jamestown. Minneapolis, Mar. 3.—(?)—M. W. Thatcher, general manager of the XY oe sae. q Farmers Union Terminal association Counterfeiting Ring | of'st'Pau, today announced that the seed on soil ‘ed to growing flax. Jso is Necessary to sow flax as a tion crop. Several land owners of the c after the lectures to di ard MeNutt sted r bottoms. ‘Kenmare Man Named Lewis Kn of the stat was eo and county, coeds the late Walter G not — »- Barrett Funeral Will 4 *e immense snow banks, Pierce Fargo, N . the federal farm board as one of the ty people are having difficulties | means of solving the wheat surplus ott oee ee ater waister of deeds in S! getting in te Rugby for betgersi | and obtaining better prices a Ne ° Se ees aude farm business conference which |r the grain. and highway robbery against Irene an in tiie cages is scheduled to open this morning. | | for the el ae een Dague © has been Brows : Farm men and women Grifted in| gmparrassment by the appearance highway patrolman, were to be laid on funeral services will be hek a {of a casual guest at meal time may] before the Lawrence county grand | ery hj at 2 pm vied tmmediately after noon with {we svoided if the housewife keeps a i por Members of the Joh: > % {well stocked emergency shelf and aj The grand jury will be asked to) for pes of Wea. AF xs ‘list of emergency recipes on hand. | indict the pair for Slaying of | alton the ss ea for four yoars in the Civil Farm population as of Jan. 1, 1929, | 27. \wrence county als =| ‘t was estimated at 27,511,000 as com- Mrs. a a pared with 32,076,960 according to the' g0 on trial “2h Merchants Will Meet ss ee ee ee srs and ¢ ters of | a = a be \ 2 ! “ - DI jis evidence that the drift of popula- for the de- | On Trade Week Plan) ‘Will be tried | bol | ts his son} TRE mevting to consider the sds: | estat ae a ie te Be cin Socpenel Peal | cet cake hers, G. B. and | ability holding a trade week TOO SSIF O ‘with | x nd Beware Menatien, | Bistnarck wil be held at the Assoc: LATE TO CLASSIFY 9 in the food budget it is a good Arizona deputy | Universal stancand | ation of Commerce at 7:30 this eve- | $123 WHEAT! jplan to look into the possibilities of fatally ina) Temedy for colds. \hing. All merchants interesied are WE BELIEVE that wheat prices are DUying in large quantities, capture of | = = Gesired present, so that the proposal! on the up-inend. We will accept | 2 ct i om j Normal Business Rate | : In 2 Months Forecast such trade promotion weeks, Tigers are not allowed to eat fat. Backache ; i | pinay sits BH g i i — ed the exhibition and remained | | venturing As Taylor Successor “Secerat persons, who have acquired | further, buring of cash wheat at the need today by Governor George F \Be Conducted at Fargo i — may Teoeive adequate disousmon.| siorage tigkets at a fixed price of | in and Yeopards in captivity fe i i i : ; s Ky National Grain corporation is defi- Is Exposed by Arrest nitely out of the local cash grain market, at ‘least for the present, but will trade in futures whenever it is necessary to support prices. Mr. Thatcher, whose association is - "<{one of the recognized cooperative Stats acne aterm, | Marketing groups, said the Farmers ha an. alleged oper Union would accept any cash grain ative of a Twin Cities counterfeiting ee a elage = eee . Was to be arraigned later today | before W. 5 ‘i * bushel. After these transactions are before W. T. Goddard, United States | completed, he said, there will sn St. Paul, Mar, 3.—(?)—-A complaint and passing — counterfeit was issued today by the loan price from anyone. ‘The grain stabilization corpor- ation,” Mr. Thatcher said, “will con- tinue to give its entire support to the market, however, through purchase of futures, whenever that support is needed.” Wheat futures declined two cents or nk C. Reilly, north- federal secret service chief said. identified Cittadino as the man Whom they received the bogus | i | i and federal au-| 's Were seeking the cache in! members of the ring are re-} ably reported sentatives in Washington this fore- : noon, accordirig to word received by “You were wrong,” he sald to one| + served Body of Young Girl banyoe As J. eT . The, bal driver, concillatingly. Is Convicted by eek tee Foe ee ee <i 70) PER CENT RATIO AGREEMENT IS NEAR , Fe oor niverste aes Sotey. United States and Japan Plan- ning Tentative Agreement ‘London, -Mar. 3A tentative ween the United States the’ Japanese demand t ratio was said to be looming large as a possibility today. dict with 1 Vee | ue hoes made in von vstions be: | Hfe a ’ ict, compressed lips. ler | have been made conversa = 4 soci! control and censorship today; | daughter, Mrs, Ruth Wieland-Rizzo, | tween Senator David A. Reed, Ameri- and Mrs. Blackburn's aged father,|can delegate, and Ambassador Matsu- daira of the pi raeraie’ Syme ta re se two old frien re one hand, and no censorship on the} ‘The grand theft charges grew out aucune the Japanese-American A rainstorm was sweeping the Ciher Tt would unhesitatingly choose | of teommisint by ‘Gifford Dabney, | problems informally in private, and| fotineccs.tnitey of the canyon iN no censorship, even though it carried | wealthy oil operator, that the cult | their talks will continue this week. the date set for sentencing. The | agreement bet penalty under California law is from |and Japan on. Chicago, Mar. 3—(#)—Dr. Louis L.] one to 14 years in the penitentiary |for a 70 per cen! of salacious and obscene literature on|Teference to divine manifestations can-Japanese conversations. the six weeks of trial as witnesses re- Leet akithade ts Satbing ten clear: Nevertheless, he believed that cen- | Vealed the beliefs and practices of the fnantoniet rpsctal's stipe “ay Paced sorship is fraught with great dangers. | Cult, which had its headquarters in| on agreement and its report has gone “It advertises and popularizes un- | 8 isolated section of Santa Susana | +, the printers. when she assured him he would be} Counterfeit American Money Found in Mexico Francisco; Charged With Mexico | City, press published warning today that vargo, ND. Mar, 3—@)—The | H&ial inqulry into the activities of the | great quantities of counterfeit Amer- ete eee ee srr conriaiauce of oK Ot, cody | Cay Ree IUImIOed intly ane a ee a ee Verda hd otter here op lp hd repla vic In the overy of the ly of a| Mexico. replaced the vicious thrusts of king | young priestess, Willa Rhodes, buried | five, 10, 20, 50 and 100 dollars. 3.—(P)—The The denominations were of Oil company, more a bushel today on the local grain exchange. port t have planted $60,000 in dogus bills. Snowstorm Prevents f Farm Facts Many from Attending |* mgby, N. D., Maz. 3—vP—With! pecreased acreage in durum and d main and side roads blocked |nard spring wheat is recommended by i i | ' | EY Di . Pierce Farm Meeting) xn Dakota Arrcaltaral cotese |Blonde Bandit Faces Murder, Theft Count vis Ls} ett AN | | any | 4m our stock. We have a large as- Stfuction and equipment add to the i sortment, and suggest that you get | Possibilities of making milk clean. | in touch with us at once if you are basa .. | interested im a car or trock this) No matter how beautifaj or durable spring. ‘tars may de, they must have proper STEEN MARMON CO. care to give the best service. Avoid Tustribators Marmon and Roosevelt Unnecessary strain on furs have them automobies, Breet, |Cleaned by a reliable furrier, keep them away from strong light and heat, and keep furs in cold storage @uring the summer. —— ‘To insure better and larger litters ie i t lieved to Have Killed Oc- cupants in Crash Los Angeles, Mar. 3.—(®)—J. T. Barber, a rancher living in the San Bernardino mountains today report- ed to the Western Air Express discov- ery of the wreckage of an airplane 20 miles northeast of Lake Arrowhead in the deep box canyon. C. C. Cole, superintendent of oper- ations of the Western Air Express expressed belief the wreckage was that of the tri-motored monoplane, piloted by James E. Doles which has been misisng for a week. ‘Three men, Doles, A. W. Bieber, co- pilot and John W. Slaton, steward were in the transport when it dis- Saw No Sign Of Life Barber reported he discovered the wreck with field glasses and one wing appeared burned. He say no sign of A posse was sent out by Sheriff Walter Shay of San Bernardino im- mediately. Superintendent Cole left here for the scene by automobile. the inaccessibility of the canyon in- dicated it would be some time before It was understood the conversations ture hag sway" of expelling” these. | se"testified. she obtained the money [have been along lines of exploration | S*Fehers Comte foeeh Bie, spot. ‘Too much censorship plays into the | from him to finance the writing of @/of the whole field of possibilities, ~nongeanbiongtin scone hand of the fanatic,” even. as ‘no| tree tobe known os “The Oreat [especially the possible increase of |,or'aia the fuselage of the wrecked censorship plays into the hands of the | Sixth Seal,” which she toid him was| Japan's ratio in submarines as com- De eet Soca unaerioe ot ene, Mbertine.” Boe eee othe Archangel (pared. with. capital ahips under the | Blane Was sec, tie Coir te The rancher said the plane had Washington treaty. They also are mecting of the Illinois Vigilance,asso-| “Dabney testified Mrs. Biackburn | trying te Gain a0 Saneina whereby bahar oll Rueceere yee Tation® anticviee organization whose | tole’ himy that the book would reveal |the Gate of laying down of cruisers by|turticg up ns eee te superintendent, the Rev. Phillip Yar-| sources of uutold wealth in oil and|one country would control the right) qe re jo tanto | wintgne: ie ah against the sale of obscene literatu of the other country to construct ad=| panved is in a wild section of the : te re.| Upon her promige to reveal the se- | ditional cruisers. ng wild section of the mountain range, into which there are i 7 The United States has now become sential avocating a “pure food Iaw”| before it was distributed to the pub- | prime mover in the negotiations with See Dieuare at eae the for the mind. lic, he said, he agreed to finance it. | Japan while Great Britain is await-| scene from their Bat ‘at taka ay vironment to influence the life of the| , Mrs. Wieland-Rizzo testified that|+enaing two or three weeks are said individual, the necessity of something ; She often had seen angels and that|+, nave resulted in @ complete dead- parallel to the pure food law for | Me approached her while she was On| iocx” ‘The British are being kept in- aoe of the progress of the Ameri- DESERTER AT FORT night before they would be able to make their way in and out again. Charles Rosen Found at San Raising $1.84 to $294 Benny Rubin, alias Charles Rosen, a deserter from Fort Lincoln wanted here for the passing of a check raised c The workmanship was said to be Moorhead territory began repairing | °t"home® ‘The gifl had been dead | well done that tt was difricult for any | 20m 81-04 to $204 and then passed on the damage caused by the year’s) three years, but the body was not|but an expert to recognize coun- buried until 1929, as Mrs. Blackburn | terfeits. hes a8 Notwithstanding Jury Judgment Is Demanded | pickea up in San Francisco after the ‘The check was passed about Jan- uary 3 and then Rosen, as he was listed on the rolls of Company K, at the fort, disappeared. Recently he was police, the sheriff's office, detectives Minot, N. D., Mar. 3.—()—A mo-|and the army had made a wide tion for judgment notwitpstanding the verdict of a district court jury| The check which Rosen is accused of will be filed by the Montana-Dakota | raising was from the Veterans bureau. defendant in a suit; The fact that it was a government brought by L. E. Shores of Tolley.| check made its passing easy..as there Shores contended that he had re-| Was no question of its genuineness. ceived no consideration for 8,075| Close examination, however, revealed shares of stock which he transferred | that the $1.84 in typewritten figures to the company and asked $42,000 in| had been exased and new figures for payment. The jury gave him $8,075 | $294 typed in. with interest. search for him. Rosen chose the hour just before the banks close to pass the check. It was taken to the First National bank at D. H. Lawrence, Noted once, to make the change due on the British Novelist, Dies] chs of the wate, and it was only when the Veterans bureau called attention to the raising of the amount Nice, France, Mar. 3—(?)—D. H.) that this chi st Lawrence, noted British novelist, died | “"p Garepelemeernant here today after a lengthy illness. Rosen, it is understood. will be. tricd vi lerbert Lawrence was re-| ge, Vi ind partment will do has not been indi- garded as one of the most powerful | cated. It may be that trial on the inence ahortly before the Wi jo prom-| charge of desertion will be ordered ‘orld war.) atter the federal court gets through Although police prosecution of his novel, “The Rainbow,” in 1915 seemed | "2" him on the check charge. for a time to have checked his fer- Y tty, he eubsequentiy became Known | satatina Scala. $99 isabeth street eee ure coches novels | Hazelwood station, Pittsburgh, Pa. is eo essays, MANY | seeking traces of her uncle, Nocola in federal court here. What the war CLE Damato, who was last heard from in Some of these later works also! North Dakota, She has written the Prosecuted. In the summer of Association of Commerce, being anx- somes ot bis Paintings and books | ious to know whether he is still living Hl re ae @ raid at a public ex-| or whether He has died, | hibition in England, and the exhi- 2 | —__—_____— | bitors were forced to promise to dis- U peures and fo dewey tour af tre| Chest Colds. Rub well over throat and chest t

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