The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 8, 1931, Page 1

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North Dakota’s ESTABLISHED 1873 Officials Legion Ritual WILLBEPACKED FOR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA. THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1981 Formally Inaugurated to Be F | ollowed in Dedication VENORAL BIN INT, B.. Black, Fargo Forum Publisher, Dies) STRINWTRM The Weather ey PRICE FIVE CENTS GOVERNOR SHAFER peti: Olsness, Kitchen, Palmer, | Boy Explorer] STATE 10 COLLECT Birth Control Is Scored VETERAN HAD BEEN [Will Be WedSoon_| Byrne, Steen, Baker, Morris, CAPITOLINSURANGE |_ 42 Pope Pius’ Encyclical|y woop yoy Principal Address. of Evening] Will Be Delivered by Gov- “ernor Shafer LEGIONNAIRES ARE HOSTS Friday Affair Begins at 8 P.M.; Dancing in Order From 9:30 to 11:30 ‘This Boy Scout is golng to have more Fea eae wilderness than e @ dozen Scout troops. He is cn enon, Ge a Two of 14 Planes Virtually De- g sz ae later was. suppl tributions b; tee Legion ted ts y on in constructing the Elected to Succeed C..W. Mo- Donnell; Duties of Mem- bers Remain Same stroyed; Dead and Injured Renowned Fliers pletion of the and celebration of Italy’s “Bephany,” second Christmas, not be marred. ‘Two of the planes, one piloted by aptain Recagno, crashed from & height of 100 feet. The sergeant me- chanic, Luigi Fols, was killed and the two pilots and the Woman in Chicago Is '* Strangled to Death + Chicago Jan, 8—(#)—Police Thurs day were seeking Willlam Moor, s f mer lover,as the formerly i i g 5 i 3 i A af ik at a5 : E 3 * 5 s ‘4 F if ] 5 8 TOTALING $736,000 Adjustment Made at Confer- ence With Insurers’ Representatives - PROPERTY HELD TOTAL LOSS Olsness Forces Administration Board to Withdrow ‘Out- sider’ From Deal Arrangements for the state to col- lect $738,000 in insurahce on the state capitol building and its contents were completed by the state insurance de- partment Wednesday. Proofs of loss were signed by Nel- son Sauvain, chairman of the state board of administration, which has general charge of state property, and representatives of the 70 odd insur- ance companies which carried the in- surance said the payment would be made soon. The building was insured for $430,- 000 and was declared a total loss. The contents were insured for $298,000 and likewise were declared a total loss, although considerable office fur- niture and material was saved. The ee Great Salt Lake , Not Frozen Over —_—_—<$<$—$$————— iy Salt Lake City, Jan. 8—(#)—\ Great Salt Lake, one of the salts} test bodies of water in the worl A SHAFER URGES NEW CAPITOL AND OFFIGE BUILDING FOR STATE Governor States Views on Po- litical Issues in Message to Solons Economy in the operation of the | God. state government, an addition of one cent to the state gasoline tax, con- struction of a new capitol building in the near future and revision of taxes Shafer’s Message _./ On Pages.12 and 13 lature will be found on Pages 12 and 13 of today’s issue of the Bismarck Tribune. ate are controlled by the I. V. A. fac- tion of which he is the titular lead- er. Steering shy of many questions of Political import, the governor made no statement of his position on eith- er or legislative reap- (Continued on page fifteen) TRADEWIND REPAIRS CAUSE FLIGHT DELAY Mrs. Hart and Lieut. MacLaren Plan to Make Second Leg Today Hamilton, Bermuda, Jan. 8—(P)— their original inten‘ion to of tion : th Although no vote had been taken on the matter, a member of the board said today, a letter had been given to H. T. Murphy, Weather conditions were unfavor- esday | able for for- ‘of Mrs, Jane | ! 2 = flying also. Oil trouble developed during the Shortly after ton Roads, Va., at daybreak Wednes- day, Lieutenant MacLaren said, Sterilization of Unfit’ Also Scored as Against Law of ‘God and Nature’ CITES IMMORALITY TREND FOR HALE CENTURY Helped Draw Up Rotary Inter- national Constitution and By-Laws in 1921 Reaffirms and Emphasizes Ro- man Catholic Doctrines of Marriage and Divorce LIVED IN FARGO SINCE 1917 Began Publication Work When 16 Years Old on Eagle at Marinette, Wis. Vatican City, Roman Catholic and emphasized” in an encyclical Thursday by Pope Pius XI. Among practices of frustration which he reggae condemned was birth con- Referring to birth control, which Fargo, N. D., Jan. 8—(?)—Norman B. Black, 65, publisher of the Fargo Forum since 1917, died suddenly at his home early Thursday. Mr. Black had been engaged in newspaper work for nearly half a century, “growing up,” as he often last summer, the pontiff condemns | Century. Rie “atencaptisr’ all such practices as “against the law ” ” of a print shop in my nortrils.’ pS and pent ‘When he was 19 years old, he and of | 2, brother leased a weekly newspaper | 3¢ Merrill, Wis. Later he took over another weekly, The Eagle, at Marin- Shafer Says Black Death Loss to N. D. The death of Norman B. Black, publisher of the Fargo Forum, is 8 loss to North Dakota of one of its most public spirited citizens, Gov. George F. Shafer said in a message of condolence to Mr. Black's newspaper colleagues. ‘The message, sent to the Fargo Forum,read: 7 :+“The news of Mr. Black's death is a great shock to me and I am sure to many thousands of others in the Northwest. In his passing North Dakota loses one of its most public spirited citizers, a staunch friend of generous im- pulses and high ideals of human service, whose clear vision and good judgment has long been a great asset to his city and state. His memory will always remain dear in the thoughts of his fellow citizens.” ette, Wis. In the late 90s he was a member of the Republican state cen- tral committee of Wisconsin and dur- ing the administration of Gov. Ed- ward Schofield he was attached to the bureau of labor and agricultural stadietire, being stationed at Milwau- ee. He left Milwaukee in 1903, going to Minneapolis and later to Grand Forks, N. D. In 1917 he became pub- Usher of the Fargo Forum. Mr. Black was active in affairs of Rotary International. In 1921 he was @ member of Rotary’s constitution committee which drew up a new con- stitution and by-laws for the interna- tional organization. Was Curler, Singer Curling and singing were his hob- bies. He had a baritone voice and at one time studied music with operatic aspirations, only to give it up for newspaper work. It was in Merrill, Wis. that he married Miss Jennie Christenson, Oshkosh, Wis., in 1886. Norman B. Black, besides being publisher of the Fargo Forum, was President of the Minot Daily News company. - His death came at 12:45 a, m. with little warning, though he had been more or less indisposed for family, saying the religious and civil | several days. should cooperate Inflammatory rheumatism, coupled He was at the office last Saturday, leaving at noon on that day, and did “(Continued on page three) Robbers.Kidnap Two Filmland Notables New York, Jan. &—(P)—The kid- naping of Lita Grey Chaplin and Georges Carpentier .as they left a theater puzzled police Thursday. Mrs. Chaplin said she was robbed of money and jewels. So Marcelline Day, film aciress, will soon become the bride of Arthur J. Klein, rich Los Angeles business man. Announcing her engagement, Miss Day said the wedding would take Place “not too soon and not too late.” SOLUTION OF LINGL MURDER MYSTERY | CLAIMED BY POLICE Leo Brothers, St. Louis Gang-| ““ster, Said Identified as Reporter's Killer Chicago, Jan. 8—(#)—The mystery of the murder of Alfred E. Lingle, Chicago Tribune reporter, has been solved, auhorities claimed Thursday, with the arrest of Leo Brothers, a St. Louis gangster who was identified by several witnesses, they said, as the man who shot and killed Lingle last June 9. The identification, they said, ‘was positive. Brothers, it was revealed by Patrick Roche, chief investigator for the state attorney's office, was arrested three detectives last Dec. 21 in a Chi- cago apartment after he had been trailed to 12 different cities. He was known in Chicago as Louis “Buster” Bader. He denied he killed Lingle, but admitted, Roche said, he was wanted in St. Louis for the slaying of John De Blasi, a service car driver. Roche Is Confident “This man will sit in the electric chair for the murder of Alfred E. Lingle,” Roche told newspapermen. “Til stake my official reputation on that. If he is not the killer, then Lingle still is alive.” Neither Roche or State’s Attorney John A. Swanson, however, would re- veal if they had uncovered the an- swer to “Why was Lingle killed?” ‘There was an unofficial report the investigators have been working on McDonnell in Group SWEAR TO OATH PUBLICLY Program Is Conducted in Pres- ence of Joint Session of House and Senate Governor George F. Shafer and eight other state officials were for- mally inducted into new terms of of- fice at a ceremony this afternoon in the Bismarck city auditorium which is serving as the house cham- ber at this session of the k railroad commission are holdovers, since members of that body have year terms. All other officers augurated today serve two-year The ceremony today was nature of a formality, since all Officers had filed their oaths the secretary of state as required the constitution. They had, fore, complied with the constitu requirements before the oath publicly administered to them Chief Justice A. M. Christianson the state supreme court. Joint Session Held In accordance with custom, the ceremony involved a joint session of the house and senate. Many flowers were in evidence, the tribute of their friends to the incoming state officers and musical numbers were < spersed with the formal features. These included the singing America by the audience, } Bismarck mixed quartet, a the quartet and a solo by Mrs. Barnes, accompanied by Mrs, Morris. Mrs. Morris also ac! accompanist for the quartet. ie bers of the quartet are Mrs. G. E. Wingreene, Mrs. F. J. Bavendick, Henry Halvorson and George Hump- | hreys, Carr Is Chairman Lieutenant Governor John Carr, who is president of the senate, pre- sided over the joint session. On mo tion of Representative Karl H. Bruns- dale, Portland, the lieutenant gover- PR age piste by Sree ore Representatives Bruns- and Minnie D. Craig, Esmond, and Senator J. K. Brostuen, Alexan- der, as a committee to escort state Officials to the rostrum. Senator Dell Patterson, Donny- brook, moved for the appointment of a joint committee of three to escort Chief Justice Christianson and the associate justices of the , Presiding named Senator Murphy, and Repre- sentative H. F. Swett ‘Tuttle, and Matt Growley, Hebron. The various commit members in singing “America,” followed by the chaplain’s prayer. 5 : After a song by the quartet, the de- gcvernor was introduced by Lieuten- ant Governor Carr. The chief execu~ (Continued on page fifteen) »-|Bismarck Tribune by Jence, hope and dismay for the state, tcuched even by comedy at times. wanted to avoid the wounding or kill- ing of his own men or the suspect. He wished to question Brothers. Kept Constant Watch Constant surveillance was kept while awaiting a favorable chance to take him. On Dec. 19 Roche learned Brothers was visiting a downtown Offers World Map and geographical data which accompany it will be to the average person a revelation as to how little he really knows about the

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