The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 10, 1931, Page 3

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” | i] i MEN OF PROMINENCE ASSEMBLE FOR LAST RITES OF N.B, BLACK Tribute Paid to Fargo Publisher as Friend, Rotarian, Pub- lic Worker MURDER CONFESSION WRITTEN IN DETAIL BY.CHARLES BANNON 22-Year-Old Who -Old Who Killed Haven Family at Watford City | Asks for Privilege Fargo, N. D., san, 10.—(7)—Fargo paused Friday, its civic and business life stilled for an hour, to pay final homage to Norman B. Black. all sections of North Dakota, from the Twin Cities, Chicago and Winni- beg, from the state's legislative halls, and a great throng of his fellow townsmen. Services were held in the new First Presbyterian church of which Mr. Black was a member and to which he and Mrs. Black had donated a pipe organ, whose chimes, as his body was borne from the edifice, pealed “The Bells of St. Mary's,” his favorite song. Pays Personal Tribute Dr. Arthur W. Ratz, pastor, of- ficiated, delivering a personal tribute to the man responsible for Dr. Rat2’s | coming here. “The passing of Mr. Black means a very personal loss to me, for he was’ the connecting link between my life and this community,” said Dr. Ratz. “It was my privilege to call him a friend for a decade and one of the happy anticipations of my coming here was the more vital and intimate associations I might have with him. “You can therefore realize the shock to my own heart, when, on the very night that I became his pastor,| that association was severed by death. “I met him through Rotary associa- tions through which our friend had REV. WATSON ARGUE “Hit the Devil with Anything Handy” says Rev. Watson Argue, evangelist who is conducting @ series of revival meetings at the Gospel Tabernacle, Eleventh St. and -Rosser avenue. He suits the action to the word, as illustrated in the photograph. above, and crashes a chair down upon the head of the luckless demon. Rev. Argue is only 26 years old but has béen doing ‘evangelistic work since he was 16, having been ordain- ed at that age, he said. He began a three-week campaign last Sunday become known throughout the world.| night. May I say that Norman Black was a Rotarian, not as some men join «ubs, Rotary wasn’t a club to Mr. Black. It was a great shining ideal, it was the reign of the author of the Golden Rule, and thus it captivated his| by imagination and his loyalty and his active and unstinted service. Supported Good Causes “Mr, Black gave himself without stint to every good cause of our com- munity and state and church, Crip-| Areu pled boys and girls who never saw him found his sympathy and active noe This church will never forget Mr. Black’s remains were laid to rest in a niche in the memorial mausoleum at Riverside cemetery here. Floral tributes came from hundreds of individuals, Rotary clubs, publish- ing groups and other fraternal or- ganizations with which Mr. Black had been affiliated or associated, in- cluding a magnificent floral design from Rotary international, of which he had been a director, and one from the Fargo typographical union, bear- ing simply the newspaperman’s uni- ran accepted symbol of finis,' Battle Looms on State Employment Of Married Women (Continued from page one) son Sauvain, chairman of the board, voted to rescind the retroactive clause, while R. B. Murphy and. W. J. Church voted against rescinding it. Davis Favored Ruling When the ruling was originally made last May, J. E. Davis, former chairman of the board, Church, Mur- phy and Miss Palmer voted for the motibn, according to the minutes of that meeting, while Kitchen voted against it. Miss Palmer at tne time, however, opposed the inclusion of the retroactive clause, but voted with the majority when members refused to strike out that part of the motion. She said today that her vote on re- scinding the clause conformed with her attitude at the time the previous motion was considered. i There are about 12 married women employed in state institutions, ac- cording to board members. Miss Palmer said that, although she is recorded in the minutes of the May meeting as voting for the motion, this apparently was due to a misun- derstanding. She said she recalled that at the time of the meeting, she was called away and left the board before a vote was taken on the mo- tion. Other board members, recalling tcaat this was the fact, said that she had instructed the secretary to record her as voting for the motion, however. Claims Misunderstan Miss Palmer declared that when she yf.ed to rescind the retroactive claust at last week’s meeting, she was taking the same stand she had taken at the May meeting. Reconsideration of the motion :ame about, Miss Palmer said, by notice served by a married woman employed at one of the state institutions that she was offered a position in anoth- er state. Miss Palmer declared that the employe was considered valuable to the institutton and the board de- cided to rescind the retroactive clause 80 that she could be retained, along with other married women hoiding special positions. Miss Palmer said she was opposed to married women being empivyed where unmarried women could re- Place them, but that.in the work of State educational institutions there weye certalit positions best filled by married women. She sald that in her own office there were no maitied | women employed, as she considered the unmarried woman should be giv- en, preference where the position could be filled equally as well. : FIREMEN ARE OVERCOME Minneapolis, Jan. 10.—(7)—Nearly & score of firemen were overcome by smoke while Ki dua fo a weet blaze in ® sub-basement at S. Donald- son department ae. E pitveen tee quired first aid bad a lansisaes before being released: + TOO LATE 1 TO CLASSIFY TO LOOK your peat have that per- manent . wave now. - Guaranteed waves $5,00 and $6.50 at the Cal- ifornia Wave ee 102 Third St, Bismarck, His subject Sunday night will be “Were You at the Cross?” At the Sunday afternoon service he will speak on “Life,'Death and the Here- after.” This service will be broadcast KFYR. Additional services will be held each night next week. The young evangelist is assisted by his wife as Pianist and young people’s leader and his brother Elwin, a cornetist, Mrs. ie has organized a “Sunshine Choir” of 60 children which sings each Friday night. Rev. Argue said attendance at the services is increasing and that dele- gations have come from many nearby Sie one person having come 400 At 1:20 p. m., Monday Rev. Argue will speak to the students of Mandan High schocl. At 3:15 p. m., he will address the students of: Bismarck High school. Machado Suppresses Havana a Newspapers Havana, Jan. 10— 10—()—Only three Havana newspapers appeared on the streets Saturday—The Heraldo de Cuba, government organ, and the English papers, The Havana Post and legram. Havana Te! All other papers, peer’ them El Mundo, El Pais, Diario de La Marina, Informacion, The Havana American were suspended Friday by President Machado in a decree charging “ex- aggerated and distorted” accounts of recent disorders. PAINTERS ELECT BRAATEN Minot, N. D., Jan. 10—@)—L. M. Braaten, Fargo, was chosen president | urday. of the Master Painters’ Association of North and South Dakota at the clos- ing meeting of the group's eleventh annual convention. Aberdeen, S. D., was chosen as the 1932 convention city. Three vice presidents were chosen, R. S. Pixley, Fargo; John Hauge, Aberdeen, and Peder Hatland, Minot. Robbers Shoot Hotel Clerk in Minnesota Bemidji, Minn., Jan. 10.—()—John | Davis, night clerk at the Markham hotel here, was shot and seriously wounded early Saturday when he re- | sisted efforts of two masked bandits to rob him while he was alone in the office. Physicians said he will re- cover, After he had been wounded in the side, Davis was successful in wrest- ing the gun from one of the bandits. They escaped with approximately $65. ie suspects were in custody Sat- MID SEASON MEDICINE Somenine FRESH AND DIFFERENT IS NECESSARY . TO PEP UP TWE OLD WARDROBE THOSE OROOPING MONTHS iN _MID-WINTER AND SPRING. JACKET FRONT WITH A PLAIN BACK AS THE ‘TRICKY NOTE OF THE GREEN WOOL ROMA FROCK AT THE RIGHT. ~ THE VESTEE IS OF WHITE CANTON: SCARF DOT TAFFETA WILL BRIGHTEN UP THE BLACK FROCK WITH A V-NECK. Onn GARDENIAS ACROSS THE BACK OFA ‘SMALL BLACK FELT BONNET 100k CUTE AND , ‘SPRINGLIKE. OF POLKA @- YOU'RE TIRED OF BLACK AND WHITE, TRY BROWN AND WHITE, ‘A COMBINATION THAT'S NEW AND THe FROCK AT THE LEFT USES Eco— “SHELL FAILLE ANO GOLDEN BROWN VELVET. wencTWE PLEATEO FLOYNCE, STARTING AT THE KNEE (S A DECIDED RELIEF : FROM EVERYTHING ) > CIRCULAR. & al cAMBER JEWELRY iS. we LOVELY. WITH THESE- DISTINCTIVE. Williston, N. D., Jan. 10.—?)}— Charles Bannon, 22-year-old farm| hand, Saturday wrote ‘a confession in his own hand telling how he killed the six: members of the A. E. Haven family last February. Bannon related that the rifle with’ which he says he slew six. members of the Haven family was ‘roken by him when he crashed it against the head of one of his victims, and that) he hid it. He told officers where it could be found. It was a disconnected statement in’ some respects, differing somewhat from stories he previously had told,} but still assuming full responsibility) for the slayings himself. \ Bannon’s father, James F. Ban- non, also is in jail here charged with murder, but his son reiterates| his parent is innogent. Charles, who has been in. jail at Stanley, was brought here Friday by i Sheriff O. N. Lee, of Williams coun-; ty, at the request’ of McKenzie county Officials who were contemplating ar- raigning. the father and son before @ justice of peace. However, after questiqning of the} son had produced some new details,; plans for arraignments were tempor-' arily abandoned and Charles- under- went a grilling. As authorities continued to pry Bannon with questions, he finally made # request that he ‘be’ allewed to write his story of the slayings. Officials said he told them he had lied so many times about the man- ner in which the Havens met death that it was difficult for him. to recite the true story without spending some time in relating it. Paper and pencil were provided to Bannon and, apparently greatly un- nerved, he began to write. Tells Associated Press Photo | Mrs. James H. Sullivan, Cham- paign, Ill, admitted fatally shooting her husband, 65, according to State’s Attorney Roy Cline, and charged him with two unsolved murders. She said she shot in self-defense. ~~ Rebel Leader “Associated, Press “Photo Followers: of Augustino Sandino, | Nicaraguan rebel leader, ambushed @ patrol of United States marines, killing eight and wounding two. Sandino is reported again in active charge of insurgents in northern Nicaragua, * Best Headache _ Associated Proms Photo Theoddre . Roberts, 23, | Lake Géneva, Itl.,.got the Job at the Uni- versity of Illinois Medical college the most perfect mi- ino headache out of hundreds'of Associated Press Photo The house in Webster Groves, a St. Louis suburb, where Adolphus Busch Orthwein, 13. son of Percy J. Orthwein and grandson of August A. Busch, waa held for 18 hours befcre he was released unharmed. The automobile in which the boy was abducted is shown by the house. Police sought Charlies Abernathy kidnaper. . (inset), 28-year-old negro, as the Grandson of State | Official Is Dead) pone Robert Dale Harding, six-month- old son of Mr, and Mrs. Forrest Q. Harding died Friday at the Lome of his parents at Rapid City, S. D. The child, a grandson of Fay Harding, state railroad commissioner, had been ill for some time. | The body is being brought to Bis- | marck or burial. Funeral announcements are being withheld pending the arrival of rel- atives in Bismarck. Unfilled Steel Orders Increase in December New York, Jan. 10.—(#)—Unifilled : orders of the United States Steel cor- poration increased 303,960 tons in De- cember to a total of 3,943,596 tons Dec. 31. In November an increase of 157,873 tons was reported. ‘The backlog as of November 30 was 3,639,636 tons, Oct. 31, unfilled orders aggregated 3,481,763 tons. On Sept. 30 the total unfilled tonnage was 3,424,338 tons and Dec. 31, 1929, un- filled orders amounted to 4,417,193 tons. U.N. D. Debaters to Face’ Mayville Pair}; Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 10.—(?)— University of North Dakota debaters meet Mayville State Teachers col- lege here Jan. 18 in their opening contest of the year. The .wo members of the local team are Harold Cram, Minot, and Kermit. Johnson, Warwick. They will, de- bate adoption -of a world-wide policy | of free trade. Hebron Man Pinned iB | ° ivi |. 8:30 — Your e's fello b Under Auto; Lives),.02° 1 ug meres fileretie ie Hebron, N. D., Jan. 10.—G. E. Mc- Connell, Hebron rural mail carrier, is happy there wasn’t a fire-bug in the! air when he was in a predicament a | ;_, short time ago. McConnell was pinned beneath his overturned car, saturated with gaso- line for several hours before aid reached him. He received only slight bruises in the accident. BANDITS GET $7,000 Chicago, Jan. 10.—()—Five bandits held up the State Bank of Franklin Park Saturday, escaping with $7,000 | cash and $15,000 in non- negotiable | bonds. letters. Handy Letter Writer. . o Ono0000000g0nb& OTHER HELPFUL BOOKLE cyte Press Photo i Harmodio Ari | Junta which rep! eas the Arose- | mena government in Panai will | head the country until Ricardo J. H iro, minister to Washington, | can return and assume the presi- | dency. r of the ' PRESBYTEN Floyd 9.30—Nursery, ‘ SERVICES Logee, minister, Kindergarten, _pri- | Fiinents' of the Sunday church 0 30—Morning service of worship, adcast over KFYR. Organ prelude, .. Bavendic God Back Hom gan postlude, | (Heller). Sermon, “Bringing Floyd B. Logee. Or- stlude in D, Minor” inet, meeting 6:20-—Sentor societ Be Christians at Hom 1 “How Can We Intermediate fan hurch Member.” |Organ prelude, “ nee |Grace Duryee’ Morris, Anthem, d That Madest Earth and Hi (Vail). Offerto: antilene Nup' Prindle Scott). | on, “Who Is Logee. Organ postlude, en, Ser- —Floyd litary Hypocrite Postlude” (Schuler). Sharon Mote of the Indian school will tell of some of his interesting experi-| encés in government service. Monday — 6:15 p.m., scoutmasters' dinner. Tuesday. P.m., trustees’ meet- Wednesday — 7:30 p.m., midweek prayer service; 9 p.m., choir practice. junior, intermediate and senior | | 6:30—Intermediate department cab-, (Hayes)— | ce Thursday—7:80 p.m. primary teach= org conference, pat Friday. WC. ing; Tao, Benton ‘department party | NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Oliver Lundquist, Deceased ‘4 Notice 1s hereby given by the un- dersigned, Gertrude ist, the ad- mninistratelx of the | of Olive: Lundquist late of clty of Bis mares, In the County of Burlelgh anc State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons hav- aime against the eatate of said ed, to exhibit. with the youshers, within six months Jatter the first publication of thie nor jtice, to suid administratrix at the A. |W. ‘Lucas & Company's Store in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, or to the Judge of the County Court of Burleigh County, North Dakota, at his office in thé Burleigh county, North Dakota Court House in the city of Bismarck, Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, ou are hereby further notified that Hon, LG Davies, Judge oF the Counts Court ‘within and for the County of Burleigh, and State of North, Dakotu, has fixed the 28th day of July, A. D! 11931, at the hour of 10 o'clock’ inthe forenoon of wald day, at the Court Rooms of said Court, In the said Court House in the city of Bismarck, in Bur- lefgh County, North Dakota, an the time und place for hearing ‘and ud- justing all claims against the estate of the sald Oliver Lundquist, De- ceased, which have been duly und Cy presented us hereinbefore | provided. |. Dated January 8th, A. D. 1931. | Gertrude Lundquist, the ud- ministratrix of the estate of Oliver Lundquist, Deceased. | Geo. M. Register, Att'y. of sald admin- istratrix, Bisniarck, | First publication on t January, AnD 1/10-17-24 10th day of 931. CACKLE! CACKLE: Chicago News: City Friend—Your |ehicken farm looks very quiet and peaceful. Suburbanite—Huh! The place has turned out to be a regular broiler eae The largest collection of American theatrical photographs is sald to be jowned by Albert Davis, of Brooklyn, Should |N. Y, Flax is cultivated in India solely |for its seed, the country being the |third largest producer of linseed ! The trapdoor spider constructs his jhome so that the door ts closed by ‘gravity when he goes in or out Co-operation gets results. Observe the beautiful teamwork of the stork land the wolf.: Another way to have your face lift- ed is to read that your favorit: stock has gone up five points. Bart’ Opposite Custom-Made Suits This means made for yourself—Styled to suit your pervonality— ‘and tailored to sult your body. $25.00 to $60.00. 's Shop G. P. Hotel “JUST WHAT I WANTED! “Every form of letter, announcement, invitation, acceptance, regret, and thank you I shall need in connection with my engagement and wedding. I don’t know what I'd do without it!” ne Many people otherwise well informed do not know the fundamentals of correct letter writing, but they all write Spare Yourself Embarrassment! Remember you are judged by your letters as well as by your appearance and by your conversation. A New Offering of ss, social, and love letters. need can be found instantly. And just as it meets the needs of the young woman about to be married, the HANDY LETTER WRITER The Bismarck Tribune —is a Practical Help to Everybody It covers the entire field of correspondence, with sug- gestions and the correct forms to be used for all busi- It is indexed so that an example for any specific A Copy of This Booklet Should Be in Every Home and on Every Desk Millions of ‘letters and packages go to the Dead Letter Office every year because writers do not even know how to address an envelope correctly. Save Time by Knowing How! Don’t wait until an emergency booklet and keep it at hand as When Yeu Take Your Pen in Hand, Be Prepared! Fill out this coupon and be sure and send Check Booklets Wanted Do It ‘edn Your Order Today. your letter to W: prompt service. Information Bureau, Washington. D.C. (or coin), for which lets marked on this Now. The Bismarck Tribune Frederic J. Haskia, Disecter, Enclosed please find... Mame cvcccssceroccovesesoenes Addrems .cccorsescossocces Cy... cecrcccsccceneres State. arises. * * * Study this 2 ready reference. ashington, D. C., for .. tents im stamps please send me the beok- list, =

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