The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 10, 1930, Page 1

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North Dakota’s T The Weather N Oldest Newspaper Mostly fair tonight and Wednesday. Not much change in temperature. ESTABLISHED 1878 : BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS ——————EEEE SS — —_— a _< HEARERS decors | Walton League Delegates Open State Meeting em | ee CLOSED AND POLICE REMINGTONURGES | Tote Ny BRITISH PROBLEM | Hoover Gets Grayer | MAJORD.B, GRAFTON OHIO BANK CLOSED BY HUGE SHAKR- UP ORDERED j | A . | Late News | a i cpt e H ees fe | F |Every Law-Enforcement Agency 4 IN SIMON REPORT |Agent for Public Utilities Firm WICKERSHAM FAVORS: il { ald. EUs | | Joins in Hunt for Report- ‘ | : \ Is Charged With Em- aia Murders | | seo WHEAT OM MAREE : | DRY LAW EDUCATION: | Organization President Says} _ Kansas city, June 10—“?)—The Recommendations by Investi- \Will Act as Temporary Com- bezzlement aan first carload of the 1930 wheat | aa harvested in the southwest was | gators to Be Presented ina mander of Fort Li | | ACCUSE LEFT-HANDED MAN Pollution of Red River | sett camel Lincoln INVESTIGATORS AT WORK Head of Law Observance Com- sete Is ‘Crime’ record for early: marketing. Supplementary Document During the Summer | — | mission Decries the Use of (Dragnet Thrown Out for ex- ) — Sate ee Gane ieee | = SS |Heavy Losses in Stock Market! Force to Stop Drinking Convict Believed Impli- RAPS FARGO-GRAND FORKS] Frank Mudra, s2 years old, died SAY ENGLAND SYMPATHIZES | M'NAMARA GETS VACATION; Blamed for Actions of Do- ea ves IPR cated in Crime fractur- — m, june —(/ rol Aon pene ing hs wea oye he froma. | | \ —_— | herty Employe enforcement agencies could find “co- moving pasenger train. He fail- Social and E ic Cust | ae gent suggestion” in the experience of | Chicago, June 10—(P\—A_ pol . He fail- Social and Economic | | | lenct ye oune 10 ice -« Bays Stream Now Is impassable) ed to regain consciousness. j meee! [eat eradistetiet Gu wa Cincinnati, June 10.—()—Th | England and Wales of better methods | shakeup, a thorough roundup, of to Fish B of S ‘aie in Orient Held Cause of Not Come to Bismarck 4 : lof attaining the object in the 18th ‘ish Because eW- | MOVES NEW TARIFF CONFER- Cosmopolitan Bank and Trust com-! amendment than those pursued dur- criminals, a general exodus of gang- age Dumped Into It ENCE Much Difficulty Until September pany was closed today by ©. C. Gray,| ing the last decade, in the opinion | Sters and the tight closing of nearly Maine 8 erence en aa state superintendent of banks, after = ans ae Nabe te wile te eGo te, ie isalhd appeared Recomm: e to wa ca | 1 ional commission on law y e the immediate result of Izaak Walton League goals were| ‘conference wes moved in the sen sare June uk (P) — Great Freer Meclhecr eh le ol tettoee of from $575,000 to $590,-| observance and enforcement. the slaying yesterday of Alfred “Jake” elevated to the very preservation of| ate today by Senator Blaine, Re. | >Titain’s Problem in India was before not arrive here to suc-| 000 was found in the bank accounts| A general proces of education “into | Lingle, veteran Chicago Tribune re. virile Americanism at the opening of| publican, Independent, Wisconsin. (‘Ne empire today in as complete a ceed Lieut. Col. W. A. Alfonte and| of the Henry L. Doherty company's| the evils of excessive drinking and the | porter. ae the state meeting this forenoon in ai in {statement and as exhaustive a form Major A. K. Kupfer until after they| : , advantages of other forms of inno-| Every agency of law enforcement 1 Elks hall, when President Hugo P.| ADJUST GERMAN CLAIMS. |*5!t has even been presented. For have had vacations ranging trom a| Cincinnati branch, cent amusement” have been credited | Cook county was joined in the hunt Remington, Lisbon, made his address Wi June 10. OPE AN * jrecommendations of the investigators month and a half to three months,| Scores of depositors swarmed) in jarge part with marked decreases | for the man who fired a bullet rr as retiring’ president and summoned| award of $74243,000 to Germany | £0 Solution of that problem it will ‘be according to word received at the| around the bank at the time the in-| in drunkenness in those countries, he | the back of Lingle’s head in the the league chapters to think in terms| for vessels seized by the United |ecessary to wait until June 24. oi stitution was scheduled to open. A! said here last night in addressing | crowded pedestrians’ subway under embracing more then fish, fur and) States in Ameriean ports at the aise cogeeney Sitoira Heme bg BEE TELS ISSO CRIT ORT ETE eTa, | DEIBS was DObted ERY LEA Bae ee earn eee et AHA each agency Med caine thers. break 5 * . sO ear , America must be preserved some- nance today by “he German. |John Simon, will publish the second will not arrive until September 15, He | Would remain closed. anes jtheors. pee what in the old natural status, he| American mixed claims commis- Volume of the report of their two- has been granted @ leave of absence| County Prosecutor Nelson Schwab| Quoting British authorities, he cited| | Police Commissioner Russell, close argued, as in the days when a man,|° sion. and-one-half years inquiry. The first at Syracuse, N. Y., for three months. | Sent a corps of investigators to assist| other factors, including improved | friend of the slain reporter, was con- dissatisfied with his lot in the settled 5 res volume of the report d with the As Major A. K. Kupfer is leaving | State bank examiners audit the books.| housing conditions and cultural ad-| vinced gangsters had no part in the * portion of the country could go West UNCONSCIOUS 104 HOURS situation being that which was made for Knoxville, Tennessee, on June 17,| A. W. Shafer, former district man-| vantages, certain restrictions in hours | slaying and was inclined to believe with a rifle on his shoulder and build Grand Forks, N. D., June 10.— | Public today. the command at the fort in the in-|®ger here for the Henry L. Doherty] of sale of liquors and higher liquor|the killer had a personal grudge life anew in the rich wilderness of| (?)—After 104 hours of uncons- There was, in the final paragraph \terim between his leaving and Lieut. |COmpany, New York, was scheduled to | cost. against his victim. prairie and stream and lake.’ Indus-| clouness, caused when he was |0f today’s offering, perhaps, a prom- Col. McNamara’s arrival will be dele-|e arraigned today on a charge of| In an address devoted in large part| Chief investigator Patrick Roche try in the East, he said, is breaking| thrown from » horse and received ise of what the second volume —of gated to Major Denham B. Grafton, | *mbezzlement of $10,162.50. to the problem of law enforcement, | for the state's attorney's office had down the physical stamina of the| injuries to the head early Friday recommendations—will contain. The now on duty at the Eighty -eighth|, The Doherty company was one of | Mr. Wickersham spoke specifically of his aides scouring the city for a left- dwellers there. In time it will bring] morning, Donald Cash, 14-year- |commisioners, concluding, declare: division headquarters at Minneapolis. | the bank’s largest depositors and the | the national prohibition law. handed ex-convict, who, he said an effete tinge to the Northwest] old Mapes boy, showed no im- |“The British people, so long accus- Major Grafton will arrive here| bank's affairs were investigated after! He declared no attempts at educa-jelther did the slaying himself or * Gweller. Here is the new field for the| Provement late today. tomed to self-government, are bound ‘Thursday, June 12, and relieve Major | it Was discovered yesterday that @| tion as to its merits have been made | knows the man who did. Izaak Walton League to move into to sympathize with this movement Kupfer. Major Gratton thus will be| Shortage existed in Shafer’s books. | since its enactment, temperance work| The majority of Lingle's many dd occupy he urged—to keep the COMMITTEE CONSIDERS _| (Indian nationalism) post and citizens training camp com-| _, Shafer was arrested late yesterday |has been abandoned and dependence | friends trom all walks of life main- OCHRE in that AHiTel CoeIGBEA RESOLUTION “We are pledged to help India 1927 mander, the latter authority to be| Snortly, after New York officials of for enforcement has been placed upon tained he was “put on the spot” by which is conductive to the physical Wi , June 10—(7}— |along her way and constructive ef-) added to his other post duties in the ata rolenpaennd epee red in| the power of the government to im- | gangsters because he knew too much vigor and virility of its people. ‘The senate foreign relations com- | fort is needed. * ° * In our view the| The burden of the presidency has|camp period from June 16 to July 15.) nounced his dismissal because of soe cel lente tte about recent gang slayings. Condemns Sewage in Red River mittee today considered a resolu- | most formidable of the evils from| visibly grayed President Hoover, as Camp Enrolls 434 regularities.” use of “ir-} “No process of education < ae Still another theory being closely President Remington also pleadea| tion forth the contention’ | which ‘India is suffering have their| these pictures show. The lower photo| Major Francis A. Byrne, who has| ghafer, according to information tempted education of the public in Hradec was the possibility that ‘, tn favor of Missouri river diversion| f its right to the secret papers. |roots in social and economic customs.| was taken in November, 1927, when |been recently assigned to permanent i i the value of prohibition to accom-| Lingle may have paid with his life 0 obtained by officials of the company | plish the maximum of temperance in | for tracking down eight of nine ve in tarot conservation of the-eastern| concerning the London naval’ | “We-desire to see the forces of pub-| Mr. Hoover was secretary of com-|duty st Fort Lincoln from his present| and detectives, suffered heavy losses | t ity was attempted during | bers who cight raced th part of the state in natural resources| ‘reaty, which the administral Me opinion which eixst in India con-| Merce, a short time prior to his resig- | station at Howard university, Wash-| in the stock market collapse and at- mopar €. be f_asihue Wi Cutten, pean ‘Gnd industrial assets. He also in-| has refused to turn over. centrated and strengthened tor the) nation to run for the presidency. The ington, has been granted & month | tempted to recoup by “kiting” checks, fsa he eo eo far caraeati| enugeadstater Co Se dorsed the posal for a one-man are practical work of reform.” upI one of latest, taken | and 15 days leave of absence and will “ ¥ game and ‘sh commission as a mat- 2,000 AT EDINBURG FETE The report is an exhaustive com- just ® few days ago. not report at the post until the mid- tape ea ee rears tre a sauieghy tkatitonern cctere 5 ter of economy and of business sy Aa ep. June eee wl pendium of facts, ranging from dis- dle of September. 10 PLAY IN than penalties should be emphasized. | suffocate. They were rescued by a tem. lial feresegek Prospect of hegt {cussion of population, racial, and re- Captain Bird Little, widhac- Isympathy and helpfulness, rather | servant who wriggled free from bonds. In arguing for the preservation of Senator Geraid P. Nye speak, |iigious factors, to treatment of possi- ordered to permanent’ duty at Pt than the rod, the cel! and the stone | Cutten vowed to spare no expense to the Red and Sheyenne rivers by di- peed ielyrrgh | covrsive oerkprerg bilities of “dyarchy,” the name given Lincoln from the U. 8. disciplinary pile, should be tried in order that| capture the gang. Lingle did the version of the water that now flows! ca ‘by ode forms under which the British rule. ; |barracks at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. ‘jawlessness he reduced to the lowest | tracking for him with the result that past Bismarck, sometimes—as in the) Gay, 5 ahs The report brings out that India has been granted a month and 20} point.” eight of the robbers were sent to pris- flood season—too plentifully, he took . address sched- /nhas about 320,000,000 population. H |days leave of absence and will not re- | Quoting testimony before a royal| on for long terms. The ninth still is ' occasion to condemn the policy of Fargo and Grand Forks to defoul the Red river with raw sewage. This is something which is not to be toler- ated, he said, and worse yet, neither city seems to have any plan for rem- edying the crime they are commit- ting. The Red river used to be ro- manticaly historic, the main artery of Hudson Bay Fur company trans- portation and a highway up which great hordes of fish made their way from Canada. Now it is impassible to fish, he said, because of the pollu- tion inflicted on it by the sewage of the main cities of the state He urged that the resolutions committee condemn the pollution of the river as a scandal against the state. What use to divert the Missouri if Grand Forks and Fargo do nothing, (Continued on page nine) PLAN DEDICATION OF WILTON CHURCH bet Edinburg will be played at 6 p..m. PIONEER WOMAN OF BISMARCK IS DEAD Mrs. Cornelius Mahoney, Victim! of Pneumonia, Had Lived Here Fifty Years Mrs. Cornelius Mahoney, 67, a resi- dent of Bismarck for 50 years died at 3:15 o'clock yesterday afternoon at her home at 315 Thirteenth street. Death was caused by pneumonia. Mrs, Mahoney had been weak since she fractured her-hip in an accident two. months-ago. Mrs, Mahoney came to Bismarck in 1880. She was born in Hazel Green, NATIVE PRESS SAYS REPORT IS INSULT Bombay, June 10.—()—The atti- tude of the Swarajist Press today to the report of the Simon commission on Indian statutory reform was illus- trated by the headline in the Bombay chronicle: “Simon commission insults India.” The newspaper an organ of the India national congress says: “The report is infinitely worse than its critics feared.” | Burns by Electricity | Force Amputation of Foot of Oakes Man! Gerald Schwandt, of near Oakes, was operated on at a local hospital this morning. His right foot was re- moved. Schwandt's operation was compelled | by injuries received when the foot} was burned four months ago, through contact with 40,000 volts of electricity. In Five Months Ending May 31 City Has Issued:39 Permits, Large and Small Building permits issued by M. E. Atkinson as city building inspector during the five-month period term- inating May 31 aggregated an invest- ment of $420,675, according to a re- port to the city commission, Monday evening. The permits were classified as five for business houses, estimated invest- ment, $104,000, these being the Wach- ter warehouse, the new Penney store, ® warehouse being built on the N. P. right-of-way by Theodore Tosterude. a building by Herman Lasken at Main and Fifth streets and a build- ing by Richard Zerr, on Thayer av- enue midway between Seventh and Eigth; three public and semi-public structures, the community building, port for duty there until the. latter, part of July. Captain Harold E. Stow has been| ordered to permanent duty at the; post from his present station at the ‘University of Iowa, Iowa City. | According to Major Kupfer, 434 C. | |M. T. C. candidates have been order- | ed to report for training at the fort camp, which begins June 16. Of | these 434, 288 were appointed from |North Dakota, 118 from Soutn Da- 'kota, nine from Arizona, nine Mis- \souri, two from Iowa, one from Ne- jbraska, and seven from Minnesota. The C. M. T. camp has been set up and at the present time fatigue de- tails are drawing clothing, rifles and equipment and placing beds in the tents in preparation for the arrival of the candidates on Monday, June 16. A complete plan of processing, which will take care of the candidates from the moment they arrive at the station in Bismarck until they are presented to their company commander for their first duty, is now in readiness. Local Golfing Wizard to Repre-| sent State College in Na- | { tional Contest | | Fargo, N. D., June 10.—)—Paul Cook of Bismarck, state amateur golf champion, will represent the North Dakota Agricultural college in the national intercollegiate golf tour- nament at Oakmount, near Pitts- burgh, June 23 to 28, it was an- nounced here today. Cook will leave Friday with Ralph Kingsrud, professional at the Edge- wood club, for St. Paul where they will play in the qualifying round for the national open tournament Mon- day at the Town and Country club. Bill Fowler of Fargo, former North Dakota amateur champion and a member of the University of Minne- sota golf team, will not compete in the intercollegiate tournament but will play in the qualifying tourna- ment at St. Paul next week. commission on the decrease in drunk- enness in England and Wales, Wick- ersham said: “One magistrate said the decline in drunkenn:ss had been so steady during the post-war years that he/| had suggested to the chief superin- tendent of police that it was rather unkind to bring an offender into the police court; he ought to be taken to @ museum.” Customs Officials Probe Sardine Trust New York, June 10.—(?)—Customs agents today were in possession of 5,000 cases of Norwegian sardines, seized in a department of justice pro- cedure against what the government charges is a conspiracy in restraint of trade among Norwegian packers. The sardines were seized in the warehouse of Bjelland and Company, Inc., importers, which is accused of being a party to an agreement en- tered into by packers of Norwegian sardines to fix prices and regulate the at large. In the police net for suspects today were 22 gangsters and criminals of all sorts. Rewards Total $30,000 Rewards totaling $30,000 were posted $25,000 by the Tribune and $5,000 by the Chicago Evening Post. | The Press club of chicago issued a statement it stood ready to post an | additional $10,000. | Two hundred or more persons were within a few feet of Lingle when he was shot down yesterday, yet the slayer not only escaped but left wit- | nesses with a confusion cf stories as to just what happened. There were many witnesses, and al- most as many different stories of what happened. Several, however, | tentatively identified rogue gallery | pictures of Sam Hunt, Capone gun- | man, as closely resembling the man | who killed Lingle. Lingle is the first newspaperman, | the Tribune pointed out, to be mur- | dered since Don R. Mellett, Canton, O., editor, was slain in July, 1926, (Continued on page nine) Wis... Aug. 18, 1862 She was married the Trinity Lutheran church and the| Advertising Help to - ‘ 5 the United States. . r ig, uaon, ties Three Aephyxiated [pm wtiton ce wate ct|” U.S, Trade Says Peer Business Revival Is, | ite utes ra: ne ret gut Wisconsin G. . P to Bismarck and Mandan Presby-|marck the following year. By Chicago Woman | these’ being $236000; 18 residences,| | so. sun T0cim-tord_Rid Forecast by Banker | Semin ant-trust low end the | “Consider Chain Plank " Though. | tely arranged, - estimated cost $70,000; ai mis- Z — (PI Z sed of the terian Pastors to Assist at |runeral services probably will be held | Ciicaso, june 10—-(#)—Unusua! (cellaneous permits totaling invest-|dell, chairman of the British News-| Biloxi, Miss, June 10—U7)—Awak- invoked becous? Yond the jurisdiction | Oskosh, Wis, June 10.—(P—A Ceremony Sunday (Tribune Special Service) at St. Mary's Catholic church Thurs- day morning. Interment will be made in’ the Catholic cemetery here. Mrs. Mahoriey leaves her husband, circumstances surrounding the deaths | probably last Friday, of a family of | three, all asphyxiated in their bed- ment of $8,375; a total of 39 permits and $420,675 investment. ‘The residences included in the list paper Proprietors association told | delegates to the Imperial Press con- | ference here today that in his opin- |fon increase in America’s foreign |in food distribution and in the radio, ening of renewed activity in building enterprise, in electrical development, cinema and automobile fields ts fore- | of the American courts. Search Is Made for | Stand against chain banks and stores loomed as a major plank as conserva- tive Republicans met today to select candidates and form a platform for ° 4 7 rooms, con’ -{are being or were built by Frank | Wilton, N. D., June 10.—Wilton’s|two éons, one brother, a sister. and carefully converted into exe- | : trade was due largely to that coun- new $13,000 Presbyterian church will two grandsons. ‘The sons are Jobn, | uiion, chambers, led police today i ienere es 8, Dich tre advertising. SE Ae, cr une canal Bank and Bootlegger-Slayer |the a cancion No Maryn ere By | teaiteion lve lives ta the aite, aed a i efor De ger: John Danrot, 809 Avenue cor taie | Hane maniac one | Trust company. He told the Nation-| aiiias calif, June 10.—(P}—| GOV. Walter J. Kohler would be nom= g 5 lives e city, and! ‘The dead were James J. Cross, 55,|Peter Dietrich, 419 Tenth; Basil and abroad, declaring: “It gives one |! Association of Building owners and ' 5,-.0. searched in the mountain wilds ain wanoue opposition to succeed Rev. Fred W. Christ. pastor. the grandchildren are Patrick and & retired saloonkeeper; his wife, North, 425 Thirteenth; the Associ: a pang to look at overseas managers he believed the return to | of Modoc county today for Rodney It is expected that Rev. W. C.| James Joyce, both living here. Peter ; > snider, Fargo, state executive of the 3 . Mary J. 65, and their daughter, |ed Investors, 831 Thirteenth; R. Del- colonial newspapers and see ‘the | normal business would be achieved Selby, 35, suspected bootlegger, ac- 2 —__—_ Presbylerian church, and Rev. F, Hal; See ee oe eee =e Mayo siccooisea lata (Mee AR RE George Humph-| preponderance of American ad- | within six months, used of slaying Federal, Prohibition Rain Dampens Ardor sey ‘Ambrose, pastor of e Grand| mrs. John O'Brien, Mrs. o agedy was | ¢ 4 i »| yertising. I love Americans but B Fy Agen’ . Brown an A Forks, will assist in the dedicatory John O’Brien, Mrs. Mahoney's | last night by a son, James Cross, who 1010 Ninth: Chris Delzer, 230 Avenue | Son want to see the world amer- Detroit Will Keep Agent Abpert Davis when they sought | Of Shrine Delegates program. Rev. Floyd Logee. Bis- marck, and Rev. Gilbert W. Stewart, Mandan, also will take part. Services are arranged for 11 a. m., 2:30 p. m., and 8 p. m. The Wilton congregation has about 100 members and many visitors are expected. Venizelos Supports Balkan Union Idea Athens, Greece, June 10.—(?)—Pre- mier Venizelos, speaking to the cham- jsister, arrived in Bismarck Sunday evening from Missoula, Mont., after she had learned of her sisters’ seri- Bismarck pioneer, having left here in 1893. Woman Who Pos Minneapolis, June 10—(?)—A wom- Years Unmasked in Minneapolis his parents. | had tried for three.days to telephone |C west; Julia B. Leach, Rosser avenue | \ 4 nizeq.” Missouri river; F. G. Leibole. 622) ‘ The son told police his mother had | Second and 115 Avenue E; and Theo- | ous illness. Mrs. O’Brien also is | been brooding over financial difficul- |dore Tosterud, 901 Eighth. | ties for some time and also over the | illness of the daughter. ed as Man for 40) in Mankato in 1800. “I became a at Fees collected by the inspector on supplementary permits totaled $160, these representing 16 for plumbing, | | 40 for street excavation, 29 for elec- trical wiring. Brooklyn Terminal Builder Remarried Reno, Nevada, June 10—(P)—Go-| Plan to Release Wahpeton Suspect, | | Wahpeton, N. D., June 10.—()—A | hearing will be held here Wednesday | for J. M. Smace, alias Jack Smith, \held as a suspect following the rob- | bery of a local bank May 29. | Richland county officials have been | unable to connect him with the rob- | bery and said today they expected to! release him. Fourth City Ranking | Detroit, June 10.—(?)—Enough ‘of counted and tabulated to insure the | city’s retention of its place as the fourth largest in the United States. | Incomplete figures announced today | show a total of 1,330,000 with an esti- | mated 200,000 to be added when the: count is completed. In 1920 Detroit's | Population was 993,678, and in the | 1910 it was 465,766. The population of “Greater De- troit,” including the numerous sub- to arrest him yesterday in his service station at Indian Springs, 32 miles west of here. Selby, whom Davis named as the Detroit's population already has been | killer, fled after the shooting and was/ apparently hiding. Davis said Selby warning. ee 19 SEEK TEXAS GOVERNORSHIP Austin, Tex., June 18.—(P)—A field of 19 candidates fo~ governor of Tex- as, today were certified for the July 26 primaries as the result of state com- mittee meetings marked by Repub- lican harmony and Democratic verbal fired without | Toronto, June 10.—()—Rain caused | postponement today of the parade of |the Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, and the grand opening of the International Shrine convention. More than 10,000 nobles, garbed in jcolorful uniforms and patrol trap- pings, were prepared to participate when the decision was reached to |postpone the march. The parade up Lake Shore boulevard was advanced to tomorrow morning and all other outdoor events scheduled for the day were tentatively cancelled. ber of deputies today, expressed warm|a@n who has passed as @ man for|/man for economic reasons,” she said.|ing directly to his prospective bride's Z ethers sympathy Balka: “I found there apartment from the court room, urbs, is expected to be close to| combat. Fourteen of the cai S| Conclusion of the international Doss cae in| nearly a quarter of # century admit-| i /ouna,(pere was more work and) Stott econd wife, Mrs Maud #./GOld Star Mothers | 2,000,000. are Republican, § Democrats. automobile races, boat races on Lake federation looking to consolidation of peace in the Balkan countries. LABOR CONFERENCE OPENS Geneva, June 10.—(7)—The four- ted the masquerade today. During that time she has worked at men’s jobs and been accepted by nearly everybody with whom she as- She worked as a cook, painter, in- terior decorator, and even at such | manual jobs as ditch digger. In 1916! she and another lis woman Bush had been granted a divorce, Irving T. Bush, creator of the Brook- lyn terminal, yesterday was married |to Miss Marion Spore of New York. To Embark for Home Paris, June 10—()—The fourth Tom Mix, Cowboy Hero, Fails to Ontario and a track meet had been scheduled at the exposition grounds, dubbed the Rameses Oriental gardens, for the shrine convention, during the afternoon. ere ri id star mothers teenth session of the international |s0ciated as # man. The marriage,| were married. The bride had been/ group of American go! ° $ conference here police said admitted, ‘one en-| wooed and deserted ‘The| . ry to visit the graves of their war dead A massed band concert, with 3,000 bared three ane pas piMboned tered into yl compensate 108 a shat marriage was Be te the tos Legionnaires Will in Prng® sale their vd top 18 aug ter $ opement ponarag tagetpreiae s ioenees namely: Forced labor, hours of work | ‘ered romance. women to give @ home to a baby. Select Delegates) (2°3s7"tney ‘will embark on the e 10—WF)—| day she h a boxing and wrestling bout were work in coal mines. = WILL INVITE HOOVER ” Victoria, B. C., June 10.—(?)—Pre- mier 8. F. Tolmie said today the gov- ernment of British Columbia will in- vite President Hoover to visit the province on his forthcoming Pacific northwest tour. SIGN FRIENDSHIP PACT Istanbul, Turkey, June 10.—\)}—A treaty of friendship between Turkey ‘and Greece was signed today. 40, who has been working as “Donald E. Hoatling.” Her taentity was re-! |vealed by ® man who was held for | questioning in the Dorothy Aune {murder case. E. J. Goff, assistant | Hennepin county attorney, and H. A. Paradeau, captain of police detectives, question her today to ascertain what she might know about the man de- tained. The woman, of medium build and good looking. said she siarted to wear men's clothes and posed as man when jshe was 16 years old. She was born and the bride succumbed in 1921, In this same year the woman who had posed as a man was nearly un- masked. She became ill and had to go to hospital. Their her identity as @ woman was revealed. She begged hospital authorities to keep her secret and they acquiesced. | The woman weighs about 130) pounds and has closely bobbed hair. | Hard. work has given her the mus- cular arm of a man. don't habits. drink,” she remarked of her) i Members of Lloyd Spetz Post No. 1, American Legion, will elect delegates from the local post to the state con- vention at their regular meeting ‘Wednesday night in the A. O. U. W. hall. SUB CREWS HONORED Kiel, Germany, June 10—(7)—A monument commemorating deeds of German submarine crews during the banks of the Kiel bight with selemn ceremony. this evening. the screen has pursued many villains Census Returns || —+ jek | | Elizabeth City, N. C., 10,030, in-j| | crease 1,105 or 12.3 per cent. i many times, always with success, started 20 minutes too late to pursue his eloping daughter, Ruth Jane Mix, and today she was Mrs. Douglas Gil- more. The 17-year-old bride and her actor | had been married before and for other reasons, but that she would “help make the best of it.” The lopment became known through a note Miss Mix left in the traditional fashion before she depart- ed for Arizona with Gilmore about 1 a.m, The Mix family lawyer was in- | Winston Salem, N. C., 75,272, in-| husband were expected here today | formed and he telephoned Sheriff J.C. | crease 26,877 or 55.5 per cent. | Portsmouth, Ohio, 42,536, increase | married yesterday. Mrs. Oliv Stokes | ceremony. “I smoke, but I, World war was unveiled today on the 9,525 or 28.9 per cent. Port. Arthur, Tex., 49,107, increase | 26,856 or 120.6 per cent, from Yuma, Ariz. where they were! Mix, the girl's mother and Tom’ Mix’ divorced wife, was waiting to Hunter of Yuma county to stop the Hunter found the couple ‘They displayed their cer- informed him at a hotel. tifteate of marriage and give them her blessing. She said to-| he was ‘too late.” RAIL EXECUTIVE DEAD Baltimore, June 10.—(#)—Archibald Fries, 66, for the past 10 years vice president in charge of traffic and commercial development of the Balti- more and Ohio railroad, died sud- denly last night. i BRITISH PEER DIES | London, June 10.—(?)—Sir William Lamond Allardyce, 69, who was gov- lernor of Newfoundland from 1923 to 41928, died today.

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