The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1931, Page 3

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WILL BE THROUGH WITHIN 100 DAYS " Several Speakers Are Heard in Regard to Coming Investi- gation of Gotham’ New York, March 31.—()}—Mayor Walker is given 100 days by John ‘Haynes Holmes to enjoy his return to the city. “Then he will have tome to his ‘Waterloo and will have started upon his Ca said Dottie bt at an over: mass meet at Ca: hall Monday night. are ‘The mayor is due from Catifornia Saturday. The meeting was called by the city affairs committee, which has pre- ferred charges with Governor Roose- velt against Mayor Walker. Speakers were Mr. Holmes, chairman of the city affairs committee; Norman ‘Thomas, Socialist leader; Heywood Broun, columnist; Dr. Sidney E. Goldstein, associate rabbi of the La Synagogue, and Paul Bla! ecutive director of the city affairs committee. More than 3,000 persons cheered indictments of Tammany. Denunci- ations were mingled with demands for federal, state ‘and city action to relieve unemployment. “Everything that has happened since the city affairs committee be- gan its agitation against the Walker administration has been a confession of guilt on toe part of Tammany,” said Mr. Holmes. “Laugning at its enemies, sneering, scoffing, wise-cracking, the Tammany hall gang now is terrified, and is hoping by confession of guilt and promise of reform to secure “The administration when charged with corruption, repudiated the charge and defied the legislature tc investigate. Now that an investiga- tion has been ordered, Tammany sud- denly becomes good and starts clean- ing house of its own accord.” WOMAN RESIDENT OF WING STRICKEN Mrs. Susanna Gylden Dies With- in 48 Hours After Suffer- ing Paralysis Stroke (Tribune Special Service) Wing, N. D., March 31.—Mrs. Su- sanna Gylden, a resident of this vi- cinity for the last 18 years, died Sun- day at her home here following a paralytic stroke. She had been in Poor health for the last year but was not seriously ill until she was stricken Friday. Besides her husband, John Gylden, Mrs. Gylden leaves 11 children, five Sons and six daughters. They are Seth R. Gylden, Plummer, Minn. Ceveri J. Gylden, Marion, N. D.; Sivert H., Sulo R. and pores G., all living at home; Mrs. D. ‘Wing; Mrs. 8. Minkle ion Mrs. R. France, March 31.—(7}— With Marcel Kahn, Amietto Ba- tisti, Michael Robins and Nicholas Zographos all playing open-bank baccarat despite the government's new two per. cent extra tax on inet ea itt hee ialect dea a some most spectacular gambling that has ever taken tice ain wihing ichael an Eng- shman, fails to buy the bank he bucks ‘it. At the Nice Casino he won $80,000 bucking the bank over a period of two days. The led banker surrendered® disgruntic Ouuety DME Ee Gh ony iptly bought and only Banded over this batik to another after he had won an additional Bat sti, of Uruguay, who holds the bank at Gould's Casino De La THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1981 PREDICTS WALKER [Four Big Gamblers Continue Efforts _ (CHAIRMAN OF HOUSE ee Extra Tax a oo Winnings APPROPRIATING BODY first fortnight he 000. If it is true has. least $5,000 in state taxes for that privilege. No one ever knows how Marcel DEVICE FOR STUDY — |TWOCHARGED WITH. OF HYDROGEN ION IS ‘SHOWN'T0 CHEMISTS Higher Mathematics for Chem- ical Workers Declared Need for This Country Indianapolis, March 31.—(7)—A “blackboard” of the new higher mathematics—a rubber sheet in a wooden frame—was shown the American Chemical society Tuesday. Sticking a pencil upright under the rubber to raise its middle tent-like, Prof. Harold C. Urey of Columbia university, demonstrated the hydro- gen ion. Laymen know hydrogen icns, not by name, but every time they taste acid. The ions are the distinctive taste. To scientists they are hydro- gen atoms which have lost one elec- tron each. Professor Urey’s rubber sheet eluci- dated what the new mathematics of wave motion and of “probability” have shown about formation of this ion. | N The upright pencil illustrated the height of wave motion in the atom. ® motion that never ceases even in solid matter. In this wave lies the ion’s electrical power, the thing that chemists have to know. ‘His queer blackboard was the show booth in a mathematics symposium in which American chemistry was warned it must go back to school to learn a new arithmetic. “It is like moving into a said Dr. Urey, “where the la entirely different from what agine from our large scale exper! ments. To take care of = nomena, chemists and physicists advanced mathematics. which were developed by pure mathematicians with no object of applying them to any practical use whatever. owe do not know what atoms and molecules look like. We only know that if we follow through certain mathematical manipulations we can tell how they behave in large quantt- Wallace, Minneapolis; Sadie M., Se- | ties.” lina E,, and Sallie T., all living at home. She also leaves one sister, Mrs. William Harju, McKenzie, N. D. Mrs. Gylden was born in Finland, | proj the daughter of Jacob and Marie | versit Kallio, coming to this country with her parents when a girl. On Janu- ary 16, 1897, she was married to Mr. Gylden at Calumet, Mich. and in 1913 moved to North Dakota, settling near Wing. Mrs. Gylden was a member of the Evangelical Lutheran church and | ica; funeral services will be held from that church at 2 p. m., April 1, with Rev. fer. Kaivumaki officiating. Pua will take place in Ahola cemeter in Ahola cemetery. TEXTILES PROMISE TO MAKE COMEBACK Cotton, Wool, Silk and Rayon Family Was First to Re- cover in 1921 New York, March 31.—()—In the $8,000,000,000 Royal Nouse of Tex- tiles there has been fanily trouble, as in nearly all American industrial | 1905. He was the houses. King Cotton’s huge domain has produced too many of the white puffs that give him power. Prince Wool has seen the coats shéared from his kingdom of sheep, remain merely as wool fibres—not coats and suits that bring cash. Queen Silk, always a sensible per- son and never making too many pret- ty dresses, nonetheless had not sold nearly as much of her product as she'd like. And Count Rayon, the Pagtender, whose cloth comes from vats, needs more parece ‘te is to usurp the textile throne. But this royal family was the first to recover from industrial troubles back in 1921 during another depres- } ¢,.. sion, and now, 10 years later, it may again be foreshowing a general re- covery. In the first place, there are goods to sell. And unfilled ‘were 395,802,000 the highest since De- cember 1929, Meanwhile, sales of 326,691,000 yards were the highest since last September—which is eight Per cent more than the three-year average, and definitely more than seasonal, ‘Army Engineer Chief Will Visit in Minot fewer vey aut $15,000 was pinto Rene A Washington state fall pig yield was five per cent larger than same period in 1929, * “Unless American chemists become hetter trained in these higher mathe- ae said the symposium chairman, f. Farrington Daniels of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin, “we shall be compat outcased by our ebemica friends in Europe. “Here is a ‘ypical problem. ‘There are — 300,000,000,000,000,000,000 .mole- cules in @ cubic inch of air. Each molecule emits thousands of different wave lengths of light, each wave in- dicating some different property. Find out why the wave lengths “Tt seems academic. Yet knowledge clothes, Dies in Church Jamestown, N. D., March 31—(7)— Puneral services for Levi Dalley who fell dead at the Baptist church here came to Jamestown . J. in 1884 near here. Jamestown city since last member of Six Seek Posts on Nodak k Newspaper |ssss Grand Forks, N. N. D. 31— Five students at the University of North Dakota have filed applications as candidates for editor of the a4 kota Student, university panes. ad N. homestead his March the office 3; > Ethel Reinoehl, | on Hal! og MURDER IN DULUTH Alleged Gangsters Held in M phis, Tenn., in Connection, With Slaying Duluth, March 31. ch 31—()—Pirst-de- gree murder warrants against two of | ®! three alleged gangsters held at Mem- phis, Tenn., as suspects of the fatal shooting of a railroad guard at Proc- tor during a payroll robbery May 14, 1929, were issued Tuesday by Mason M. Forbes, St. Louis county attorney. Mr. Forbes also was ex- tradition papers to be taken to Gov- ernor Floyd B. Olson of Minnesota to sign to take to the governor of Ten- nessee to bring the two to Duluth to Stand trial. The murder warrants were issued against Harry Grizelle, 32, and George Reilley, 23, both alleged gang- sters of East St. Louis, Il. No war. rant was issued it a third su- spect held in Memphis, Forbes said. The two men are charged in the warrant with killing Bruce Palmer, eee ee eee aint bee aaa while he SUrtiee. two hank clerks pedir) $4,800 to the First National bank from the Proctor railroad station, After killing Palmer, thé bandits held -up ne two bank clerks and escaped with CONFLICTING TALES OF SHOOTING TOLD) xr Californian Is in Hosptial Nurs- ing Bullet Wound in His Trench Foot Beware Athiete’s ost pease wsacaiog ars eee ing, “ te itm sto} ttch esi Sa iy Fok! ee your skin or OPPOSES TAX RAISE ‘|Representative Woo ntative Wood Scores Farm Board, Equalization Fee and Debenture ‘Washington, 31) — Further federal ‘roa on the tax- Payer’s pocketbook Tuesday seemed Jess likely. ‘Those who propose a tax increase because of the expected $700,000,000 deficit were ‘faced with the opposi- cussions. Chairman of the house ap- propriations committee—which group must pass on all government expendi- tures—he proposed other remedies. Back from Panama, he seid he thought a decrease in appropriations | ;, and an already apparent improve- ment of business ought to solve the StWodd expressed a belief tax in a a Lo crease: would “hurt business instead of helping it.” “T think that by the time congress gets here business conditions will be very much better than they are to- day,” he said. As one i ataaitt of govern- bel expenses he halting ppropriations for the farm’ board until “it has proved it has done some “I thought the farm board might hhave some good psychological effect,” he said, “but you can’t get around the law of supply and demand. The farm board was a flash in the pan; the equalization fee has no virtue and the debenture scheme is worse.” Another Republican regular—Sen- ator Reed of Pennsylvania—has op- Posed a tax raise. He advocated “handouts to soldiers and farmers” and was assailed by Senator Norbeck, independent Republican of South Dakota, for suggesting the farm board be abolished. Norbeck did not mention taxes, but Senator Welsh, Democrat, Montana, has said he looked with disfavor on increased levy proposals. ‘On the other side of the fence were at least four independent Republi- cans; Senators Norris of Nebraska, and Borah of Idaho, and Represent- ative Laguardia of New York,’ and of Wisconsin. Senator Hull of Tennessee, and aeiereiea oa Collier of Mississippi, New Fargo-to-Grand Forks Bus Service To Begin Wednesday Grand Forks, N. D., March 31.—(7) —The Canadian-American Transpor- tation company Wednesday will in- augurate twice dally passenger bus service between Grand Forks and Fargo, with one bus going north to Grafton and intermediate points and another operating through Grand Forks on a route between Crookston and Warren. One bus will leave Fargo leave Fargo at 4 p. m, and will reach Grand Forks at 6:30 p. m. Southbound busses will leave Grand Forks at 9:30 a. Ce riving in Fargo at noon p.m, respectively. All intermediate towns will be served ‘by both north and southbound lines. Farmers Will Get Free Gopher Poison Announcement that gopher poison being mixed by Grant Satter and will be available for distribution to farmers throughout Burleigh county County Agent ». The poison consists si Load mixed with oats, Put- nat ill be given to farmers free, on application to township officials. The Masao ord and the county will divide the cost of the poison, held to be at best means of preventing damage to crops by rodents, Putnam said. Greetings To add splendor and beauty to this Spring Gala Day send Flow- ers to Sweetheart or Friend. They speak each message the heart would convey. Cut flowers here are fresh and lovely. We Telegraph: Flowers Oscar H. Will & Co. Treat your scalp — ‘dress your hair—in one operation. Keeps hair in place, adds luster. BHAIR ROOT OIL Free Shampoo with a Mar- cell or Finger Wave - MODERN BARBER and BEAUTY SHOPPE Downstairs Nicola Bidg. Broadway Entrance eae pe snd ct for Men, This sketch was made from an actual photograph A windstorm that killed ten people The “blow” that tore this brick building apart killed ten, injured fifty and wrecked a half million dol- lars’ worth of property. A windstorm may strike any- where, any time. Have you enough insurance? This agency. of the :Hartford Fire Insur- ance company will see that you are protected against’ windstorm ‘losses. Call, write or Phone today. ‘MURPHY “The Man Whe Knows lewerance” 218 Breadway Phene 57? Flowerphone 784 319 Third St. Bismarck, N. D. ‘LAWYERS’ BILL’ IS FAVORED BY HOUSE Minnesotans Would Restrict Bankers and Others From Legal Practices St. Paul March 31.—(@%)—The No. 2’s per bushel, 75c. Ohios and Triumphs. These potatoes are in very good condition. Phone 686-W. Louis J. Garske Recommend and Offer Northwestern Public Service Co., 6% Preferred Middle West Utilities Co. Common For immediate investment Dividends Payable Quarterly W. G. Worner, c-o N. D. Power & Light Co. Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 222 or 853-M Please tell me why you recommend the above. Easter Hams Small hams weighing from 8 to 12 Ibs. Same can be baked at a small additional cost. Orders must be in not later than Thursday. All Phones 211 118 Third Street, Logan’s “We Thank You” DORIC The Newest MAGIC CHEF HARMONIZES WITH ANY KITCHEN IS IN LINE WITH ANY INCOME ‘AVE YOU THOUGRT you coulda’e afford 2 Magic Chef? A new, lower ipeicer ssodel. miakes. shia Lovely, gts snqye available to every woman. ‘The smartly styled Doric Model charms all who see it. It offers practically everything formerly found oaly.in higher priced stoves —modern design—hsrmonious colors— efficiency — economy of operation —and, while compact, has ample cooking capacity for ten people. The famous Red Wheel Oven Heat Regulator cooks Whole Meals to per- fection while you go out and enjoy yourself. If we didn’t tell you, you'd guess the price of this beautiful range at considerably more then it really is. With all steel construction, Ivory porcelain enamel finish with green crackled enamel trim, porcelain enameled linings, cool bakelite handles and numerous other attractive features, this model is sure to please you. We cordially invite you to see it— anytime, You'll be as enthusiastic about it as we are. Montana-Dakota Power Co. CAPITOL THEATRE Last Times Tonight ‘SUPERLATIVE! ... HAS FEW EQUALS? LOWELL SHERMAN MARY ASTOR Nance O'Neil Hugh Trevor George Sidney and Charlie Murray in a riotous comedy PATHE NEWS Coming! Wednesday & Thursday THE BOUDOIR DIPLOMAT The Affairs of a Master Lover with BETTY COMPSON

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