The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 18, 1931, Page 6

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: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1981 J REORGANIZATION OF U.S.EMPLOY MENT SERVICE IS PLANNED Doak Says There Will Be 48 State Services Under Seven Special Divisions Washington, April 18.—(?)—Secre-!said he was born in Iowa, 2 tary Doak Saturday announce com-j|he did not know where. He 1 plete reorganization of the United: |revoiver ending the affair. lican strength but to “the apathy of | he immediately became active ‘n the the Monarchists.” pursuit of his profession. “The situation is not desperate yet,”| Later he became associated with he said, “but my fear is that there/the Weaver Lumber company serving {will be a rupture between the Repub-|in the capacity of estimator, crafts- licans and the Socialists, with com-/| man, and architect. After seveti years’ jmunism interfering and then God {save my country.” 'Shoot One in Arm | And Capture Two More at Edgeley (Continued from pave one) of Hillsboro, with which he wa: asso- ciated for two yearm Returned to Bismarck Returning to Bismarck, he sct up} an independent business as an archi-| tect and also operated as a builder! and contractor. In the pericd from {1902 to 1907 he was architect s:d su- directed bullet of Dr. Green’s service | perintendent of buildings at tue state penitentiary and in this peiiod he was concerned with the ere:tion of though | the penitentiary twine plant, .ospita! been | building, warden’s residewce and sev- in this community for the last year|eral minor buildings. 1 and a half. | Van Horn designed and became Jennings gave his age as 2% and States emloyment service. The secretary announced would be 48 state employment bu-! reaus and one for the District of Co-| lumbia to be operated under seven special divisions to cover various trades. | There will be a supervising cirector to which post John R. Alpine, New York, has been appointed. Director General Francis I. Jones will be retained in that position with A. D. Lewis, Lllinois, as assistant di- sector general. Lewis also will be su- perintendent of the mining ivision of the service. Besides the supervising director and director general, the secreta:y an- nounced state directors would include Roland A. Ottweiler, Grand Forks, N. D.; Stephen Ely, Helena, Mont.;; Richard T. Jones, Minneapolis Minn. | Secretary Doak announced unat the officials already selected wou! meet in Washington Monday to outline a} general plan of activities tow:1d co-/ ordinating employment service. In the meantime, he said, a com- mittee is being assembled to study technological employment and survey the general employment situation. ‘The seven special divisions into which the services will be divided are the building trades, mining and quar- rying, manufacturing, transportation, clothing, mercantile, and marine sea- men. The veterans’ service will be nation- wide in its scope and the farm em- ployment services will be expanded. There also will be a director of in- formation. HEARING DECISION | EXPECTED MONDAY of Preliminary Examination Former S. D. Bank Head Completed Friday | Pierre, S. D., April 18.—(?)—Fred R. Smith, former South Dakota super- there |respected and pioneer Dickey county Brossart, a member of a iighiy-} proprietor of the Van Horn hotel, which he conducted under his super- family, gave his age us 31. vision for 10 years. | Roth, who is about 45, has been al At the time of his death Van Horn resident of Edgeley for a numer of} was senior partner in the tirm of years. ;Van Horn and Ritterbush. local — larchitectural firm. BROSSART WAS UNDER | Im 1892 at Hillsboro he riarried BOND IN DICKEY COUNTY jMiss Jessle McKinney, who died a Ellendale, N. D., April 18.—()-—| number of years later. In 1905 hej Fred Brossart. Merricourt, said to be; married Harriet Rohrer Kaufiman at | the driver of the car used in the at- | Bismarck. i tempted robbery of the Security Na-| In addition to his widow he leaves! tional bank of Edgeley early Satur-|q daughter. Josephine, by his first | day. at Uberty in Dickey. county | wife and five stepchildren. They are under $2,500 bond on a charge of} Adele Kauffman, Bismarck; Earl| grand larceny. Kauffman, Houston, Texas; Roy) Brossart, together with his brothers.| Kauffman, Los Angeles; Ralph David and Henry, and John Ellingson,! Kauffman, Florida and Mrs Ruth} were arrested last Jan. 11, charged | with robbery of a store at Merricourt | in which merchandise valued at $500 | was stolen. Peeves, Fargo. 3 Secretary of Association Van Horn was a member cf the - , |Knights of Pythias, Aacient Order of oe bhatt) noe ae pees ea | United Workmen and was a :nember! fatally wounded by: Sheriff B: W.|oncernt ite anes om catiee. MIeeOE Crandell, of Dickey. in & scuffle i /of the North Dakota State Architects’ aan ene MIMIC, a coroners. jury | #:S0Ciation and at his death had been veo Sala ReRTR ES {its secretary for a number of years. claiming it a justifiable homicide. | | He formerly maintained membership | Miltngaen Were and Can the in the American Institute of Archi- | June term of Barnes county district | PU" eset ot New York @ onenos Coa eee ee ag ico aseine the | 0zieal society. and was active in the sheriff here thwarted efforts at a fair |Sffairs of the Sons of the American trial Revolution. Liquor charges were placed against | ————— two members of the party and an- | Monarch to Enter he vi harged with receiving ‘ cen acer eed WH receNin’ | This Country Late Sunday at Portal (Continued from page one) board the train here prepared to ex- tend official greetings and welcome to the royal couple in the morning. Of this town's population of 512, ISN'T SURE HE SHOT WHERE HE WAS LOOKING Edgeley, N. D.. April 18.—(?)—Dr. L. B. Greene not only got his man early Saturday morning when he wounded Henry Roth during an Bt | it ye still tempted bank ropberys yt Ne tl many plan to meet the train in the Roth is a patient in the doctor's | hope of obtaining ® glimpse at roy” hospital here and his condition is| ty. _H. W. Gill, customs official “not at all serious,” the doctor said, _ | here, will be in charge of clearing the | | train through customs, which will be A .38-caliber bullet passed through | .erely a formality because of the the upper part of Roth's arm. | n eae ed his | Tank of the visitors. The doctor denies he learned his | fron Vanoouver BRO: ipiil “ yhere King marksmanship in the army. “If I .. where King had. Td have probably missed him,” | Prapedhipok and his young queen, he says. | Rambai. disembarked Friday, a spe- ROKE aGetORAsh'E cial train will bring the royal .party ure that he “shot | intendent of banks, will learn Mon- day whether he will be tried on/ charges of embezzlement filed against | him by Attorney General M. Q.} Sharpe. i If County Judge D. W. March, who | presided at the eight-day preliminary | hearing, refuses to dismiss the charges, Smith will be held for trial in circuit court. After the prosecution rested its | case Friday, T. M. Bailey, one of Smith's four attorneys, moved that the action be dismissed because the “state had failed to show that any public offense had been committed or that the defendant was guilty of any public offense.” The defense presented no witnesses during the hearing. P. J. Benthin, examiner in charge | of the closed Farmers State bank at Piatte, Friday sought to show the Platte bank, owned by Smith's rela- tives, was insolvent at the time it re- | <eived large amounts of public funds. | | ' Safe Crackers Get $1,500 in Wisconsin! Arena, Wis., April 18.—(4:—Three men blew open the safe of the Arena State bank Saturday, wrecking the vank and taking about $1,500 in cash. ‘Waltez Hankerson, the village fire | chief. awakened by the first of the four blasts which wrecked the bank, found the telephone wires cut when | he attempted to sound an alarm. Ted Hankerson, son of the fire chief, and the trio exchanged shots in the darkness but the yeggmen es- caped. So far as is known, no one Wes wounded. They had cut the elec- tric light wires of the town in addi- tion to every wire at the telephone exchange. Monarchists May Be Prosecuted by Spanish Republic) «Continued from page one) night wrung from the Catalonian| president, Colonel Francisco Macia, a} pledge to submit separatist demands and demands for political autonomy to the projected constitutional conven- tion, meanwhile cooperating with Madrid. Fight Against Propaganda Maura has instructed newly ap- pointed provincial governors to report to the government any cases in which priests used their churches for spreading political propaganda. There is no formal law forbidding preaching | of politics in the churches, but the government feels it wise to restrain | Revolutionary war. ] ‘ ef to Portal, where a stop of about half that’s all whe on an hour is scheduled. The train then | “I just shot, | { service he accepted a similar nosition | | with the Beidler-Robinson compan; | by the royal pair in preference to dence at the home of Darz former ambassador to Japan. Twenty rooms, @ large conservatory, and an art gallery will be at the disposal of the visitors. The Siamese garb will be discarded Occidental dress. The monarch will { appear in civilian garb, and members of his retinue will dress similarly even at'the white house function. Wears Patisien Clothes Queen Rambai, although she wears Siamese native costume in her own country, is carrying with her many trunks of Pairis creations. Numerous frocks, for occasions ranging from formal functions to golfing, are in- cluded in her majesty’s wardrobe. King Prajadhipok rules over what is known as the “only absoulte and independent monarchy in the Far East.” He is absolute monarch of a country nearly as large as the state of Texas, and located back on the peninsula of Indo-China. The present king, during the World war, declared war on and Austria in 1917, and became one of the Allies. Siam, with Bankkok as the capitol, represents a combination of western and eastern civilization. It is the only country in southern Asia which always has maintained complete in- dependence of foreign control, and is the only Buddhist state now in exist- ence. The people are practically all of that religion, with the king the head of the church. One of the oldest absolute mon- | archies of the world, Siam contains an area of approximately 225,000 square miles, or nearly the same area as Spain and Portugal combined. It lies entirely in the tropics, and is bounded on the east by French Indo- China, on the north and west by British Burma, and on the south by British Malaya. It has a sea coast on the Gulf of Siam and the south China Sea of a tr€usand miles, and on the Indian ocean of over 300 miles. Hilly and Mountainous More than half of the country’s area is composed of hills and moun- tains still largely covered with forest and jungle, while*the balance is chiefly alluvial plain, intersected by rivers and canals. In these plains, | the bulk of the population dwells. From the plains come the principal wealth of the country out of the nat- ural rice fields of great fertility. Foremost of the country’s natural wealth is its agricultural resources, the great bulk of the people being farmers and the chief product rice. Its forest products are of outstanding value, while tin has been mined in southern Siam for centuries, one- sixth of the world’s production of this commodity coming from that country. The country’s population is set at 11,500,000 of which between 9,000,000 and 10,000,000 are of the Siamese race. The balance is composed chiefly of Chinese and Malays, while Europeans and Americans number less than 3,000. The Siamese call themselves the “Thai,” which means “the free,” and their country is known to the natives as Muang-Thai” which means “the land of the free.” The words “Siam” and “Siamese” are purely European terms. Of Mongolian Stock The race is of Mongolian stock and originated in the plains of central Asia. ay Bangkok is the only large city in Siam. It has a population of over half a million and is the gateway for 90 per cent of the trade and com- merce of the country. The city con- tains numerous temples and palaces of Siamese architecture and also many buildings of European style. It has a well developed water system, street cars and electric lights, as well as wide and well paved streets on which may be seen automobiles, rick- shaws and bullock carts. Originally there were no roads in Bangkok and all transportation was by water. Many canals criss-cross the city and on them much of the old picturesque | water life of Siam still goes on. Siam was the first country in the Far East to establish treaty relations with the United States. This took place in 1833, 10 years before treaty of the 40 and 8. Washington. Heart Disease Is his call on President Hoover, has! state. He was architect for all school seek to have himself regarded as an Born in New Jersey Princess Sukhodaya. This incogniti, many of their descendants have tj; and the entire cabinet plan to who served with distinction in the social events of official Washington. learned the carpenter's irade under of New York, for the sale of the al Institute in the evenings, where he During’ 1929 Dr. Greene, vss slate] Where the monarch will make a more commander of the North Dakota unit | ost ended stop before continuing on to | Asks Quiet Reception The king, whose chief concern will be his eye examination at Johns Hop- | Fatal to Man Ill kins hospital in Baltimore following For Three Weeks asked that his reception in this coun- ‘ raat | ry remain unostentatious. He will (Continued from page one) dispense with the royal pomp and buildings in the western part of the | SoP"Gor of his oriental court, and buildings built in Bismarck since 1907, | Orainary visitor. as well as supervisor of the construt The 28-year-old monarch and his tion of the William Moore school in ; 54 scar-old queen will travel incog- 1883 one of the city’s first schcols. | nito in this country as the Prince and Born at Hackensack, N. J. March joweyor, will be dropped during the | 16, 1860, Van Horn came of s:aunch | two-day visit in Washington, but lat- | colonial’ Dutch stock. His torbears ¢r will be resumed. came to this country in 1634 and | "rh washington, Vice President Cur- | achieved distinction in New York and | welcome the royal visitors at the sta- New Jersey, Van Horn was ancuthusi- tion. A state banquet at the white asile geneadlogist and had traced the | jouse for the monarch and his con- | exploits of several of his ancestors! ort will be one of the outstanding He was educated in the Capital Cit king in the public schools of Hackensack | and was graduated from the high school at Paterson, N. J.. in 1378. He the tutelage of his father. tn 1881 and 1882 he worked as a contractor and builder in New York City Dur- ing that period he attended Cooper studied architecture. He also aug-/ mented this training by studying un- der private iutors. He came to Bismarck in 1883 where | such procedure for the present. The governors were told to remain neutral in questions relating to the church and not to attend ceremonies in their official capacities, adding that maxi- Gibraltar, April 18—()—Monarch- {st refugees from Spain continued to being _ crowd into this city Saturday, one of agreat ALL-ROUN PERFORMER .. 100 West Broadway ; DRIVE THE NEW OLDSMOBILE --./#s sw Fleck Motor Sales, In 2 Cc. Phone 55 IN CITIES SERVICE COMPANY Stocks and Bonds * We have a direct connection with Henry L. Doherty & Company bove securities. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! P. C. REMINGTON & SON The Pioneer Investment House D jand his suite will make thelr rest-|relations with China, and 20 Anderson, before such relations with Japan. In early days, all foreign trade in Siam was a monopoly of the king’s and therefore all buying and selling could be carried on only through the King’s officials, Foreigners desired the right to trade without such re- strictions and also the right to reside and acquire property generally throughout the kingdom. Until the succession to the throne, in 1851, of King Mongkhut, the grandfather of the present king, such rights were re- fused. The modern development of Siam dates from the reign of Mong- khut. King Mongkhut died in 1868, and his son, Chulalongkorn, then 16 years old, inherited the throne. Chula- Jongkorn died in 1910, and the throne passed to Rama VI, who died in 1925. Became King When 33 His brother, the present king, ac- ceeded to the throne, at the age of 33. Seven years before he became the ruling monarch, King Prajadhi- pok—then the Prince of Sukhothai— married the Princess Rambai Barni, daughter of his uncle. Since their coronation the royal couple have lived quietly. They have no children. ‘When his majesty places foot on American soil, it will not be the first time that he has visited this country. King Prajadhipok, a year before his accession, in 1925, visited the United States. He is a tennis and golf en- thusiast, and is interested in pho- tography. He is carrying with him his photographic equipment and his golf clubs. Plans already have been made to have Dr. John Wheeler, New York eye specialist, perform an operation on the king for cataracts. The mon- arch will rest, after the operation, on Long Island before touring Canada. American Citizens Leaving Dangerous Nicaragua Sections (Continued from page one) er, 100 miles below New Orleans, shortly after 8 o’clock Saturday. The Cefalu was boarded at Quar- antine by a doctor, a special customs inspector, and newspapermen. She was expected to dock at New Orleans al 5 p.m. Thirty refugees were reported aboard ship together with the bodies of Captain Harlen Pefley, of the United States marine corps, a native of Idaho, and William L, Selser, an employe of the Standard Fruit and Steamship company, who registered from Jackson, Miss. These men lost their lives in the fighting with ban- dits at Logtown last week. Capitol Body to Open Offices in Memorial Buliding (Continued from page one? is not ready to announce its plans on that point. Anders, who at least has assumed the obligation of getting the work started, is one of the state’s best- known citizens. He won the congres- sional medal of honor for bravery in the Philippine war and at present is a member of the Fargo city com- mission. Friends here said he is re- puted to be “comfortably fixed.” Western North Dakotans will be interested in his affiliation with the commission because of the fact that he was born at Old Fort Lincoln, south of Mandan on the west bank ef the Missouri river. —— i= BANNON HEARING IS EXPECTED SOON Faces Murder Charge in Con- nection With Slaying of* A. E. Haven Family Minot, N. D., April 18.—()—A pre- Mminary hearing for James F. Ban- non, 55, charged with complicity in the murder of the A, E. Haven family of six persons near Schafer in Feb- ruary, 1930, will be held within the next 10 days, his attorney, W. A. Ja- cobson, announced here Saturday. Jacobson said that McKenzie coun- ty authorities contemplated discuss- ing with the adjutant general of the in the same jail. Funeral Is Held years. Mr. Keedy pneumonia, in the family plot there. oF Qave +700 ecco and get this finest performing mest modern, low-priced WILLYS-KNIGHT w There is no longer a high price barricr to owning a car powered by the patented double f . sleeve-valve engine . . . This smooth, quiet motor reaches its. most advanced development 1005 . to @1195 f a ae peg ee Le in the new Willys-Knight —a car larger and — : e faster than. last year’s model, yet. priced A BIG SIX, priced Uke = tour : AFOWERIOL SOBT -. + - $700 less . . . There are no valves to grind. 4 2 NEW WILLYS TRUCKS .. f if e ‘Willys Siz . » « » 9486009850 ‘Willys Eight Willys ton chasslel. . -.. 395 ‘Willys 1¥rten chassio AE prtoes £. « & Tolstoy @ Sandin W : $04 Fourth Indian Retains His Lawrence, Kas., April 18.—(?)—Wil- son (Buster) Charles, National A. A. U. decathlon champion, successfully | 22.03. defended his Kansas relays decathlon Decathlon Hi Avbausch of the Kansas Olly athe < § rs} A. Bausch of yy Athe ~ © cathion MONOrs| tc els by a narrow margin ‘ Point totals for the 10 events gave Charels 7744.1205 and Bausch 7666.- PLANNING | On Refinancing Your MORTGAGE? If you have a loan on your home ma- turing this year, let us refinance it for you with one of our easy monthly payment loans. The Plan That Gets You Out of Debt! «+ SS) SAFETY CLASS IN ilde Motors, Inc. Bismarck, N. Dak. state'the question of providing suf- . al mane moma *| | The Price Owens Company inon’s , Charles, confessed the Haven aarti’ ane po Bismarck, North Dakota solved his father, was lynched at’ Schafer in January, but the mob did not molest the father, in another cell An auction sale on the Havens’ per- sonal property was held Friday at the “murder farm” two miles north of Schafer, having been arranged by the Soa joes et ate Ww: ns al sale, e Jacobson hu ellent during the weekcend, arning The ordinance prohibiting driving over rm fire hose when laid in the streets will here- For Miriot Pastor after be strictly enforced. Any and all viola- Minot, N. D., ve It with, parishioners aide Bemsidemeranl tors will be severely dealt wit! Congrega’ church { Saturday afternoon for the funeral of EDWARD S. ALLEN, Rev. E. E. Keedy, who had been the Congregational pastor here for 12 Police Magistrate died Thursday afternoon following a brief illness of Sunday morning the body will be taken to Keedysville, Md., for burial s ' ‘To Our Farmer Union Members Due to the change in railroad tariffs which went in effect the 23rd’ ot March, we are opening Monday a branch buying and assembling substation of the Mandan Farmers Union Livestock Marketing association. . This station will buy or ship all classes of livestock. All coast hogs will go west the same as Mandan. Cattle, sheep and eastern hogs will be shipped to the Farmers Union at South St. Paul. For further informa- tion call 51 or 12-F-3, Mandan, or our field manager, R. S. Morris, will give the assistance you wish. For your convenience on local phone calls, we have arranged for tem- porary use of the Bismarck Auto Parts, phone No, 154. f Because our concentration points are Mandan and Miles Ctiy, we are using the N. P. stockyards in connection with our other points, Martin Whitmer, who is in charge of this station, is operating under the directions of R. P. Rippel, manager of the Mandan concentration point. Announcements of the opening of this station will be made over KFYR, Bismarck, and KGCU, Mandan, ALL WINDOWS AT SLIGHT EXTRA COST ¥ Phone 1500 C po “

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