The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1930, Page 1

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an 4 Women?’ a oad Ys] & baal North Dakota's Oldest Newspaper . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Fair tonight and ‘Wednes- day. Cooler with light frost tonight, ESTABLISHED 1873 7 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1930 LAWRENCE MORK ADMITS SHOOTING DURING DSPUT is Held in Jail Without Charge Pending Outcome of Pre- J liminary Investigation DEAD MAN SHOT IN BACK Officials Say Accused Farmer Has Virtually Confessed_ Deed During Conversations s i Fl g aes ee i i if g 5 g é i 2 ge i sE Hi ile 3 Be i sf F I i é [ E z a E . Hl | fe | : i E tote iy gfe iy ali ke au fi i ' . es g Ef t g & z $ 3 “ 5 Z i f H EE i 4 i i i [ i i i r | BFRgE nt belt fig! | ieee ¢ é ad Rg il a i g R & : Hi Bas i I 3 ete [ § 3 8 | Aa i HL Deserted Career as Teacher to Reach Zenith Among Mo- tion Picture Players WAS STRICKEN E AT PLAY Cause of Death Diagnosed as Heart Disease; Appeared in Two-Fisted Roles Los Angeles, Sept. 16.—(AP)— Milton Sills, who deserted a career l ysician present when Sills died, the death certificate was unsigned. Coroner Frank Mance took charge of the body and said an autopsy might be performed. SEEK SECOND MAN -INMURDER AT RAY And Alleged Companion Hunted by Authorities Rahiine, Logan, ex-convict’ Dakota penitentiary was previously peen Johns, alias George ea- z Washington, four g to six per cent in hog Se SREY Ip sow ned a nee net ey | Song Writer King | | To Have New Home MORE LETTERS ON SCHIELE CASE ARE IN TRIBUNE MAIL ;|Readers Respond to Editor's Former North Dakota Convict Request That They Give Views on. Matter tl orable life since his escape and now has a wife and four children. Sept. 16.—()—A- re-4 should be ert has paid the mental suffering. the the | And for the reason that he ha: himse! Begging to remain yours truly, . W. Noon and Family. Judson, _N. Sept. is, 1930. You asked for letters regarding Dear Sir: Peter Schiele’s imprisonment. To any think - given freedom, fag es . heeaee to cite . ed in Beka tend lowest poin' spring state (wi ‘partment and increased prices for |and county commissioners condemned are antici-|a gravel pit on agricul- purposes at $150. deep and paid others lf ba Fargo, N. D., Sept. 16.—()—Gover- Shafer of North Da- nor George F. | ° is. crime in Inthe fear of apprehension and suffering of his loved ones, were truth known. and family believe that he price of hi D.,| The ing person’s mind he farm for road an acre 15 feet around us 25 I appeslied to the but they sent a contractor in 2 HACK EFFORT CAUSES SHOOTING AT LOCAL GARAGE Oscar Schneider, Local Taxi Driver, Wounded Twice in Leg; Bullet Grazes Head SOUGHT ALCOHOL TRUCK Four Strangers Appear to De- fend Liquor-Laden Vehicle and Battle Ensues Oscar Schneider, local tax! driver, was shot in the legs and a bullet: grazed his cheekbone during an al- garage at 6 o'clock this morning. strangers, said to be owners of the truck, appeared to defend their prop- The contents of the Surgeons State, National Banks At Ashley Consolidate [ Gaze Cat Meat Sold | Disguised as Rabbit | Discov leged hijacking attempt at a local) [Guest ofBimarek MORNING SESSION Sa MRS. JOHN F. SIPPEL ‘Mrs. John F. Sippel, Baltimore, ly ‘The battle developed when fourlpresident of the general federation of [of cfedentials was disposed of early ‘women’s clubs, is a guest in Bismarck today. She is attending the state convention of the North Dakota Fed- eration of Women’s clubs, in session IS TAKEN UP WITH COMMITTEE REPORTS State President and Other Of- ficials Outline Work Done During Year THREE-MINUTE TALKS GIVEN ,|Various Phases of Club Activ- ities Are Discussed by State Leaders: Delegates to the state federation of women’s clubs, who opened their thir- ty-fourth annual convention here last Lai got down to work in earnest to- y. Registration and the presentation this morning, the work starting at 8:30. ‘The of Mrs. A. E. Jones, Lisbon, state president, and other state officers, constituted the princi- pal business at the morning session. = CONNECTION TH PROBE ESPIONAGE CHARGED TO NYE Attorney General of Illinois Says Committee Chairman Knew of Spying Chicago, Sept. 16—(#)—That Sen- ator Gerald P. Nye had direct con- nection with espionage upon Con- McCormick gresswoman Ruth Hanna ‘Those presenting accounts of their work during the last year, in addition to Mrs. Jones, were Mrs. E. C. Haag- enson, Grand Forks, vice president; Mrs. O. A. Stevens, Fargo, recording secretary; Mrs. W. 8. Parker, Lisbon, corresponding secretary; Mrs. John Keohane, Beach, treasurer; Mrs. C. A. Cross, Dawson, auditor; and Miss Nace J, Nielson, Valley City, his- Mrs. Haagenson presided at that part of the meeting during which district presidents presented their re- ports. These were given by districts : First district—Mrs. R. A. —Mrs. J. trict—Mrs. P. P. Canipbell, Fourth district—Mrs. J. H. Movius, Lidgerwood; Fifth district—Mrs. Frank Ployhar, Valley City; Sixth district—Mrs, D. W. Crabtree, Ellen- was charged today in a statement by General Oscar strom | @ale; Seventh district—Mrs. H. Rob- aoe =e (Continued on page Eleven) The statement was de- aoe eae hei se aE EXPERTS EXAMINE vestigating campaign expenditures, but ‘was barred. Carlstrom, nevertheless, released it to the press. After reviewing the espionage to which he said Mrs. McCormick was subjected, including several cases of wire tapping, Carlstrom said David 8. Groh paid money to Kenneth Wilson, an operative of the W. C. Dannen- berg Detective agency, to procure in- formation on the activities: of the em- agency. Mrs, McCormick had ployed the agency to shadow Nye. Says Committee Tricked “Mr. Wilson gave to Mr. Groh, as & means of checking on his activities, false information as to the names of three persons who he told Mr. Groh were employes of the Dannenberg agency,” the statement said. “The connection of Mr. Groh with the chairman of this committee (Nye) be- came immediately evident when these » gave him a number of vestigation, yellow information slips, purporting to waste pti areenig pejt Z 3 i F 3 ier Ll & z e A ie FRANKEL RELIS The sealer Isbjoern, bearing what are believed to be the remains of the body of Knut Frankel, third member of the Andree expedition, arrived today escorted by the government steamer Michael Sars and the Swedish gun- boat Svenskund. ‘The coffin containing the bones be- Meved to be those of Frankel was im- taken to a nearby hospital Follette, whose father founded the Progressive movement. Kohler represents the “conservative” element within the majority party. which favors @ renewed alignment administration. with the national |. La- Follette speaks for his father in re- effirming the fundamental causes ee about @ split never Transocean Efforts Halted by Bromley Ominato, Japan, Sept. 16—(P— it, Harold Bromley tonight shen require one month, Bromley saio, and it would be too late to attempt the flight this season. He plans to Jane in Yokohama during PRICE FIVE CENTS Sanborn Man Is Slain by Sterling Farmer MILTON SILLS, FAMOUS ON SCREEN, DIES IN CALIFORNIA Light Frost Tonight Flower, tomato, and other ten- der plants should be covered to- night, it was announced today by weather officials here. A light frost, the first of the season, has been predicted for to- night. ‘Temperature last night to 46 degrees above sero. {8 HELD AFTER DARING ROBERY IN INEAPOUS Two Men, Wearing Masks, Hold Up Hardware Firm and Fifty Persons; Flee With Payroll Minneapolis, Sept. 16.—()—Thir- teen men were in the city jail early today as police detectives were or- dered to round up every suspicious character in the city in an effort to capture the bandits who held up nearly 50 persons in the Simmons Hardware company, in a daylight raid late Monday and escaped with the company’s payroll of $4,300. More than 20 customers and 30 em- loyes were in the hardware store rhen two men wearing masks enter- ed. A third bandit waited outside at the wheel of a small sedan. T. 8. Lyngdal, manager, was in the cashier’s cage with Lillian Hynder, making out the company pay en- velopes. Clara Sampson was at the telephone switchboard. One man walked directly to the cashier’s cage. The second stepped up to the switchboard and addressed Miss Sampson: “All right, dearie,” > | he said, “just turn your head around and don’t let any calls go in or out.” The first man addressed “Hand over that dough.” The second bandit, meanwhile, cov- ered all customers and employes with his weapon. Lyngdal was slow in obeying the command and the bandit shoved his up pay envelopes and threw them into a canvas bag. He opened up several drawers, searched them and found’ $500 more. The $4,300 represented two weeks wages for employes of the ‘Tromsce, Norway, Sept. 16.—(#)— | concern. “All right,” the leader cried and the two backed out of the store, keep- ing all the victims covered until they reached the door. They jumped into their automobile and sped away. THIRD OF YACHT RACES POSTPONED Thick Fog and Light Wind Cause Committee to Call Off Today's Contest U. 8. 8. Kane, Newport Harbor, Sept. 16.—(#)—The third race of the series for the America’s cup, sched- was called off at uled for today, 10:26 a. m. A pea soup fog, which had given signs of lifting, settled down again shortly after 10 o'clock and the com- mittee decided that a race today was impossible. The fog made navigation difficult. Two large yachts identity of which was not learned, collided in the har- bor but with little apparent damage to either. Only a faint southwesterly breeze hardly sufficient -for was blowing, racing and much too light to drive away the fog. Injured Man and Boy Brought to Hospital Two accident victims, a boy and a man with injuries which are not ser- ious, were brought to a local hospital last evening. Arthur Stephenson, six year old son of Andrew Bte; Robinson, 27| was brought to Bismarck at 6 o'clock with his left arm fractured just above noon into a deep hole by one of his play- mates. John Rule, New Salem, suffered a severe laceration below the ankle and a broken bone in the right leg when a coal stove exploded in the kitchen his home early last evening. Sev- of stove g8 “Millionaire’s Wife ] + Stockbridge, Mass., Sept. 16.—(7)— Friends have disclosed Mrs. Cyrus play, of Dorothy Willard and played the part of a princess. She brought costumes from China and others were made in this country under her | direction. On Stage ‘Incognito’ s Clubs Open Session FEDERATION HEAD OUTLINES WORK OF U8, WOMEN'S CLUBS Mrs. John F. Sippel Is Principal Speaker at Session in House Chamber CITES MOVEMENT’S START Points Out That Things for | Which Club Workers Contend- ed Are Becoming Realities North Dakota club women were given a new conception of the work which the -national federation of women’s clubs is doing when Mrs. John F. Sippel, Baltimore, Maryland, reviewed its achievements in an address here last night. Touching on the economic situa- tion, Mrs. Sippel said North Dakota and that part of the west which she visited on her way to Bismarck, seemed to be in better shape than some of the drought-stricken east- ern states, where, she said, some crops have literally burned up and where cattle have died for lack of feed and water. Going back to a national conven- tion of women’s clubs at Denver in 1908, Mrs. Sippel said many of the things for which the women then were contending have since become realities and that the duty of the present day club woman is to carry on to higher and better things. The first woman’s club in the United States, she said, was organ- ized in 1868 at New York as the re- sult of a dinner given for Charles Dickens, the English author, Women who h.J assisted in preparations for the dinner wanted to remain and hear him speak, she said, but were denied the privilege because the con- ventions of the times did not permit of such a thing, since the dinner was billed as a men’s affair. 7 These women, she said, later | formed a club which was ridiculed at first but which grew in numbers and influence and soon there were num- erous clubs throughout the country. National Meeting in 1889 In 1889, a general meeting of club women was held in New York and North Dakota, admitted-as a state that same year, was represented. The next year a meeting was held in ‘Chicago and the movement, quick- ly taking root, grew until today 2,000 of the 3,000 counties in the United States have one or more women’s clubs and there are 72 affi- liated clubs overseas. The primary aim of the club move- ment, Mrs. Sippel said, is improve- ment of the American home and of the youth of the nation—to help Ameri- can women be better mothers and wives and better citizens. She asserted that the aim of club- work is to help women realize their capabilities more fully and to de- velop their powers on a broader scale than has been conceived possible in the past. Stressing the relation of the club to the home, she said club women today are not mere house- keepers but home makers and that every movement of the general fed- eration and its allied units either has had its inspiration in the home or has enter.d the home in some manner. Spirituality Is Needed “A need of the present,” said Mrs. Sippel, “is to inject more spirituality into life. If we are to be true to our duty as mothers and to our nation as citizens, we must preserve the heritage which has been handed down to us by our fathers. We must as- ‘sist our children to develop that re- gard for law and order and for the religious penis which are the foundation of all Christianity, which constitute a part of the heritage of every true American.” She urged that parents, fathers as well as mothers, be encouraged to give their children personal guidance in that the dreams of parenthood might be fulfilled. Reviewing the work of the various federation departments, Mrs. Sippel made, perticulariy in the department made, particularly in the of American homes and that, as @ result of agitation ty ee ‘women, many homes now are equipped than formerly, giving the wives and mothers more leisure time in which to cultivate the finer things of life. The development of interest in rural Bemek and Seed organization Figs clubs has en especial ray said, and the work mie song for- ward by leaps and bounds. She asked that North Dakota club women, because of the rural character of this state, take a special interest in this project. i Mrs. Sippel expressed pride that the women’s clubs federation always has stood four-square for prohibi- tion and for its strict enforcement. The volume of this sup for the dry enactment, she said, may be gauged from the fact that only 12 women opposed it at the recent con- vention in Denver while more than Touching on the relations of wom- en’s clubs to the public at large and to other organizations, Mrs. pel said the main object, in the final analysis, is the enrichment of through a better adjustment of hu- man relations. Mrs. Sippel was the sixth speaker on the opening convention bee aL egg yd at i cal build: s e ‘4 Attorney General Tames Morris, who welcomed the hae for the state; Mayor A. P. who spoke for the city; Dr. Fannie Dunn Quain,- speaking f clubs of Bismarck, "aed a. Peet 5. wweleomed of the clubs oo pepe sewn Cooper. Courtenay, who the visitors on (Continued

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