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erm = ‘ lose MANDAN NEWS = P. S. Chaffe, Beulah Banker, and Mercer Prominent, Dead|""y, i cscs to siten Heart and Kidney Disease Fatal to Western North Dakotan in Mandan Today ‘Pearl S. Chaffee, 52, Beulah bank- er and a leading citizen of Mercer county for years, died in the Mandan Deaconess hospital at 3:30 o'clock this morning from heart and disease. Mr. Chaffee, a native of Troy, Vt., came to- North Dakota in 1895 and engaged in the general merchandise business at Carrington. In 1907 he established a bank at Expansion, Mer- cer county, and in 1916 established the German State Bank of Beulah, of which he was president -t the time Everett, Wash., and Mrs. E. A. Allbee, Springfield, Mass., ignorant of his serious illness, had arrived in Mandan yesterday planning to visit the Beulah man for a few days. They were at his bedside when death came and re- mained in Mandan today to assist in making funeral asrangements. They. were on @ trip from Washington to Massachusetts. Chaffee was prominent as a leader in community affairs throughout Mercer county. He demonstrated his Eo i sear as eye com- munity by building residences there. He also played a great-paft in establishing the Mercer county fair association. He owned large holdings in farm and ranch property in the county at the time of his death. ‘A Mason, Chaffee was a member of the Blue Lodge at Hazen and the Knights Templar at Mandan. He also was a member of the Maccabees and the A. O. U. W. at Beulah. Definite funeral arrangements have not yet been made but it is probable that rites will be corducted at Beulah Friday. Mr. Chaffe leaves his widow, one daughter, three brovhers, and one sister. Other brothers are Rev. H. H. Chaffee, Sadler, Tex., and George B. Chaffee, Keene, N. H. CLOVERDALES GRAB BARLY D-BALL LEAD Toman Tailors, Arch Rivals, Are Beaten in Extra-inning Opening Contest Championship of the second as well as thet round in the Mandan Dia- mondball Rague program loomed to- day tor the Cloverdale kittenball team following their extra inning victory over the Toman Tailors last evening. The Ice Cream boys won a 10 to 9 verdict over their greatest rivals in eight innings in the first contest on the second round program. Thé Cloverdales defeated ‘the ‘Tomans in the deciding game of the first round also. The victory’ has made Cloverdales favorites to cop the sec- charge of services. Burial will be made in the Northwood cemetery. He leaves his widow and five chil- dren. Other children are Henry Han- lexandria, Minn.; and John, and Mrs. Charles Orvick, all of ‘Northwood. TRAIN MISHAP FATAL TO MINNEAPOLIS MAN Harry Lambert, 45, Minneapo- lis, Fell Under Freight Train Near Hebron Harry Lambert, 45, Minneapolis la- borer, died in the Mandan Deaconess ‘elock this mi from loas of blood suffered after his severed by a Northern Pacific near Hebron yesterday was “bumming” his way westward on the freight and appar- ently fell between two cars ta the tracks. A wheel amputated Ye left leg between knee and ankle. The man waa rushed to Mandan and the hospital on pas- senger train No. 4 but little could be done to save his life as shock and loss of blood had weakened his re- sistance greatly. He failed rapidly eZicr being brought to the hospital. of Lambert, a ‘man Irish descent, resided at 1522 East 22nd street, Min: noapolis, and was the'son of Wi lism Lambert, also living in Mi neapolis, 1t was announced this morn- ing by John K. Kennelly, Morton county coroner. Mr. Kennelly was attempting to communicate. with the man’s rela- tives this morning and no funeral ar- Tangements were made. Declaring Lambert apparently fell to his fatal injury accidentally, the coroner said no inquest would be held. Sadness prevailed today in the Carl E. Bagley home at 510 East Main street, Mandan, for intense heat yes- terday afternoon took the life of the Bagley canary, a great favorite of the family. HANDTMANNS AT FLASHER Henry R. Handtmann and John Handtmann, Jr., Morton county sher- iff and deputy respectfully, were in Flasher on a business trip today. Warrant Issued in Kentucky Slaying duly 9—(P)— today had a war- rant for Nat Helton, deputy constable of Wilton, following the fatal shoot- ing ye of Omer Mackey, 35- year. farmer, during a raid on the farm of Mackey’s father-in-law. ‘The warrant was sworn to last the |night by Joe Mackey, a relative of thé. slain man, ond section championship. Increased power through an altered lineup was exhibited last evening'in another game by the. Kennelly-Royal Cleaners combination as they wal- loped the Cummins-Pioneer entrant prohibition agent and three deputy sheriffs, stgged the raid 1a pa Sides of the house, he said. As they minutes later. Wolf Point, Mont. July 9—()— 000 Conquest of the Missouri, long a bar to overland traffic between southern KOU OPERATOR WILL NOV 70 AKRON, OHO g here. The steel span, provid- crossing in 300 miles be- nm Fort Menton, Mont., D., was completed just as caused abandonment of which provided the only means i i 5. i Norman R. Hood Will Have Charge of City Fire and Po- lice Radio Department 4 e Norman R. Hood, radio operator station KGCU at Mandan, has appointed director of the Akron. Ohio, city fire and police radio department, it was announced at Mandan today. f a radio system ie . Bie 1 be anid! Facing Jury Trial Recently Hood approved & $500,000, = project for the installation of a radio system to be operated in conjunction with the police and fire department at Akron. Before coming to Mandan, Hood was in charge of the Goodyear Rub- ber company short wave station at Akron, established by the company to communicate with its rubber planta- counts, The perjury gated in connection with, Capone's tions in South America. y testimony in a false arrest case brought pe fiers attorneys against the FATHER OF MRS. H, | ieastes era, ja Ads completed his tour of all city, state in Dade county “| iL, was burn THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1930 - : : 2 . | AMERICAN HEIRESS ‘MAKES BIG SPLURGE Maysie Gasque to British Barrister in London London, July 9.—()—Maysie Gas- que, 20-year-old, American heiress, daughter of the late Clarence W. Gas- que, director of Woolworth’s in Eng- land, today became the bride of John Roland Robinson, a British barrister, at fashionable St. Margaret’s church. The bride wore the longest train and had the largest bridal retinue of any bride married in recent years at St, Margaret's. The baggage, sent in advance of the couple to Paris, was all labeled with large red hearts and the legend “Jack and Maysie” in large letters. The bridal attendants came from five different countties: The United States, England, Italy, Germany and Russia. Among the more than 1,000 guests were men and women from nearly cll European countries as well as from America, RADIO COMMISSION SWAMPED BY WORK Takes Summer Breathing Spell Before Resuming Struggle to Keep Pace ‘Washington, July 9.—(4)—Swamped by applications and tangled in a maze of litigation, the federal raido com- mission is taking a summer breathing spell before renewing its struggle to keep pace with the conflicting de- mands for use of the ether. The commission has discontinued its hearings in Washington untii Sep- tember 2. Routine business is being carried on as usual, however, and Commissioner Sykes is conducting hearings on the Pacific coast. - Although the commission two years ago hung out the “standing room only” sign, applications for new sta- tions, for more power, for changes in wave lengths and other concessions have been coming in at the rate of 100 to 150 a week with slight indica- tions of the demand ever slowing down. When the commission resumes hearings in September, there will be more than 300 cases on its docket and about 20 cases pending in the court of appeals of the District of Colum- bia. Last year the commission per- sortally reviewed and passed upon 6,972 applications. This year’s total is expected to approach 8,000, Wisconsin Girl Burns To Death in Wreckage Chicago, July 9—(?)—Not much change was reported today in the condition of Miss Mary Kettlesen, 19, and C.‘C. Willits of Soughton, Wis., who were seriously injured in an au- tomobile crash last night in which Miss Albertta Nelson, 18, of Wheeler Prairie, Wis., was burned to death and of Arlington Heights, and cut. Authorities at the Palatine hospi- tal said Miss Kettlesen was partially conscious at times today. She is suf- fering from a fractured skull and severe burns, : Willitts, Fox farm owner, who was burned and injured internally, was reported still semi-conscious. Landscape Expert Is Edwin gonna | Mon saiemais Dedicate Surveying Bad Lands Missouri River Spano Vinz cnet iandscabe arcntoct of the United States national park serv- ice, is making a survey of the pro- Posed Roosev: & national park in the ‘Bad Lands of ¥ stern North Dakota. An itine:es¢ has been planned by Congressm: @ J. H. Sinclair, Carl B. Olsen of Medora, and Vint which will cover the entire park area as thoroughly as it is physically possible to do in a few days. Governor George F. Shafer today interpreted the visit of Thomas C, Vint, chief landscape architect of the federal park service, as a forward step toward converting a section of the Bad Lands into a national park. He stated that efforts are being made to obtain the support of the United States national park service in establishing the park, and that the survey being made by Vint is an indi- cation of stimulated interest on the part of federal authorities. Because many states are seeking establishment of national parks, the competition has Caused a set-back to North Dakota's proposal, Governor Shafer said. He felt, hcwever, that with the support of the park serv.ce, congress would give the matter serious consideration. At the last session of the state leg- islature, legislation was passed provid- ing for turning..over to the federal - | government tt land in the Bad Lends country. English people drink less than one pound of coffee per capita; in Scandi- navian countries the consumption is over ten pounds for each person. Seeks Congress Seat € K. JENSEN IS DEAD == er Keeps Nightly Vigil Besides Wife’s Body Pittsburgh, July 9.—()—A story of @ nightly. vigil for more than a week beside the body of his wife who died after he had struck her was told today by Kim McNab, 54, as he lay ps P. G. Hanson,’ Former State Legislator, Had Been at Northwood Since 1879 P. G. Hanson, Northwood, for many “For more than five hours I held her unconscious in my arms until ene ied,” he stated. ‘The woman's body was found by a Notified police. In neighbor who . Athe Lutheran church at Northwood. searching the house, the officers ites_will he conducted Satur-| found the injured man and removed h Rev, P. G. Sonnack in| him to the hospital. _|Halt Search for fe for the house of representa- tives from the eighth Kansas dix trict t | seriously wounded as he attempted to |name, and its owner and port of reg-| south of ia ee, here, was killed when his) One Man Wounded [escape a: ie bide have not yet been 5 car crashed with another machine| gana reid by sete were turned over to/ about seven miles sauth of town Mon- In Raid on Yacht 6 ‘The prisoners : re federal prohibition authorities. Ossining, N. ¥., July 9—(7)—A 60- | was unloading the liquor, consisting senger yacht, {ts cargo of liquors with |largely of whiskeys and gin, into the | (19), urg Youth a Fargo hospital. John and Ray Se- ‘ trom, also in the car, were not seri- ~ Killed in Crash} tured foot value of $250, @ motor boat, five |motorboat, which was to take it trucks, Galesburg, N. D., July 9- Dance at Glen-Echo Wednes- two » and 12 prisoners | ashore. seized today by state troopers; As the raiders swarmed onto the —P)— Lewis Satrom, 20, son of Mr. and| day night, July 9th. Music by, Mrs, J. T. Satrom, residing four miles! Harmony Four. [ Long-Distance Sight | Is Aided by Mirage Cleveland, July 9.—()—Cleveland- ers who turned their eyes northward were able to view the Wotchist mountains, between 450 and 500 miles away across Lake Erie and the south- ern tip of Ontario, for more than an hour yesterday, it was reported by the Reverend Father F. L. Odenbach, siesmologist. and astronomer of John Carroll university. ‘ Pather Odenbach said a mirage made the mountains, in the Georgian Bay territory, easily visible to the naked eye here, He said there was no doubt that he had seen the moun- tains and believed he saw boats on the Georgian Bay. MINEWORKERS” CHIR 1S HELD IN CONTENT Master in Chancery Rules Union Officials Violated Illinois Court Order ri at , N. ¥., a mile | board 40 cases of whiskey which police south of Sing Sing prison, |were preparing to recover from the ne he were and Briarcliff police on the Hudson | yacht, the rum runners threw over- ver Searsborough O1 sq |Shallow water. prisoners was shot The yacht bore no BISMARCK TRIBUNE = Mailed to Your CHHFOFWARNES Wf Des KMRL! = Vacation Address Major General Wendell C. Nev- ille Succumbs to Heart Disease Washington, July 9.—()—Major General Wendell C. Neville, a veteran of many hard-fought battles, who rose to the position of commandant of the marine corps, is dead. Heart disease ended the career of the famous soldier late yesterday at the summer home of his daughter, Mrs, John P. W. West, at Edgewater Beach, Maryland. He had been in poor health for several months. Acting Secretary Jahncke of the Ben H. Puller acting commandant of the corps. He had served as assistant commandant under General Neville. Brigadier General Smedley D. Butler became ranking afficer of ines upon General Nevilié'’s deai General Neville graduated from the naval academy a few years before the Spanish-American war. As a young officer, he took part in the Cuban campaign and served in China dur- ing the boxer rebellion. In 1914 he commanded the . second regiment when it participated in the seizure and occupation of Vera Cruz. In France, he commanded the fa- mous fifth marines and the equally well-known fourth regiment in the Springfield, Mi., July 9.—()—John L. Lewis, international president of the United States Mine Workers of America, and other union officials, today were held guilty of violating an injunction issued by the county circuit court, to restrain them from interfering with activities of the Illinois mine workers, in an_ opinion by Master in Chancery Frank Trutter. It was regarded as 2 hollow victory for the Illinois mine workers, inas- much as no punishment was provided for. The opinion held that the Lewis followers, excepting A. T. Pace of Herrin and former State Senator Wil- Nam Sneed of Herrin, had been shown guilty, but inasmuch as they had intended no “contempt of court” No matter where you go, The Bismarck Tri- bune will be sent you without extra charge. No bother to you, just mail or telephone your va- cation address to the Circulation Department. If folks remain at home it is a good plan to con- tinue your subscription at home and order an- other to be sent to your vacation address. campaigns of Soissons, St. Mihiel, the Champagne and the Meuse-Argonne. In these operations he acquired the ‘sobriquet of “Follow Me Neville.” His decorations and awards were numerous and came from many na- tions. His own country honored him with the distinguished service medals of the army and navy. He also re- . ceived the Legion of Honor, six Croix de Guerre awards, the French Fouraseene, and many other decora- ions, Recall Campaign Is Opened in Detroit Detroit, Juy 9.—(P)—For the first time in the city’s history a mayoralty recall campaign was under way in Detroit today. The sudden ending of Mayor Charl¢s Bowles’ efforts to prevent a recald election by court actions yester- day was followed within a few min- utes by the setting of July 22 as the date for voting on the question and some three hours later the mayor was campaigning over the radio. In opening his campaign last night the mayor charged the: newspapers, the Detroit News and the Free Press, sought to remove him from office be- cause “I won't play their game and because I will not allow them to ex- ploit the city and the taxpayers as they have done many times in the past.” Directors of Wheat Coop Are Reelected ‘Grdnd Forks, N. D., July 9—(P— Members of the North Dakota-Mon- As all subscriptions entered on the mailing list are payable in advance it will avoid delay if you send a sufficient remittance to pay your subscription for the time you are going to be away. 1 year (in North Dakota) .....$5.00; 6 months (in North Dakota) ... 2.50; 8 months (in North Dakota) ... 1.25; by carrier in Bismarck .......$7.20 by carrier in Bismarck, 6 mos... 3.60 by carrier in Bismarck, 3 mos. . 1.80 SUBSCRIPTION BLANK The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. Dak. , Enclosed find .......for which send me the Daily MPIDUNE LON soc... a s0ss sss. AMOMOMD 0.12 0ecces nace cee es IEBINO 2 65 3 els a eegiocale Gichen cs aisok eee Congo dead AaN cae Postoffice Address ................. Stat@.....eccem PLEASE WRITE PLAINLY TO AVOID MISTAKES S. D. Bank Bandits waeareeees Lake Preston, 8. D., July 9.—(P)— Search for bandits who robbed the Community State bank here yester- Cut out this coupon—Fill in and mail to the circulation department of : The Bismarck Tribune BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA in ef different meke than that in which they fied trom Lake Preston. ae |