The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 22, 1931, Page 7

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—e SUITS AGAINST FILM COMPANY DISMISSED BY FEDERAL JUDGE 64 Defendants on Liquor Law Charges Arraigned Here Tues- day and Wednesday — Two damage suits for $50,000 each brought against the Fox Film com- pany by Mabel H. Christian and E. A. Anderson, Steele, as the result of an automobile accident were dismissed without prejudice.in..federal court here .Wednesday by Judge Andrew Miller. The two plaintiffs brought the ac- tion as the result of their automobile colliding with one ‘driven by R. E. eereee film company represent tive. . Sentences were meted out to several Jiquor law violators. Frank Roth- Schiller, Mandan, was sentenced to six months in jail and Tom Morrill 60 days. Al Welch, of Morton county, was fined $500; Gottlieb Dobler, As! Jey, $100; Gottfried Dobler, Ashley, $50, a Jacob Franz, McIntosh'coun- ty, $10. Liquor law violators whose sen- tences were deferred until the next term of court were Joe Waggonhoffer, Richardton; Matt Dutke, Belfield; Christ Zimmerman and Henry Nor- ton. The case against Mrs. Henry Norton was dismissed, as was a@ charge against Arthur Wentz. Edward A. Holmes, Mandan, plead- ed guilty to a chatge of using “the mails to defraud. He will be sen- tenced later, as will John Stozek, who pleaded guilty to a liquor traffic charge. Bert Palmer, Phil Schlosser, Jacob Mehrer and J. E. Lough, Man- dan, all pleaded not guilty to liquor charges, Arraignments of alleged liquor law violators occupied the attention of the federal court Wednesday morn- ing when Judge Miller heard pleas of nine defendants, bringing the total arraignments during the first day and a half of the term to 64. Court attaches indicated that sev- eral cases on the civil calendar would be tried before the criminal calendar will be resumed. * Fifty-five defendants, among them 47 charged with liquor law viovations, were arraigned in federal court before Judge Miller Tuesday. Besides the liquor cases four were arraigned for violating péstal regula- tions ‘and four for crimes committed on an Indian reservation. Pleading guilty were V. C. Boyle, Van Hook, to violating the postal laws; Gottfried Dobler and Gottlieb Dobler, Ashley; Emil Geier, Fiasher; Matt Dutke, Belfield; William Meck- ler, Dickinson; Jacob Franz, McIn- tosh county Joe Waggouhoffer, Richardton; Stephen Detrich, Glen Ullin; John Murphy, Mandan; Al Welch, Mandan; and Jacob Wehland, Medina, to violating the liquor laws. Many of those not pleading guilty Tuesday were expected to alter their Pleas later. Sentences and fines also will be imposed later. Others arraigned on liquor charges were Mike Gress, Jack’ Sweigert, Al- bert Koetke, Fred Landies, John Fleck, Johnnie Schlosser, Pete Senty, Frank Brucker, J. E. Lough, Vernon Gardner, Jack Jackson, W. R. Mc- Cormick, and Henry E. Smith, all of Mandan; Jacob Kuntz, Solen; John Heider, Sioux count John ilillius, Gackle; Oscar Schneider, Bismarck; Martin Berzel, Stark county; Julius Bearshield, Fort Yates; John Stroh, Logan county; Joe Osterlynch, Stan- ton; John Manenger, Hettinger coun- ty; Jake Jordan, Fort Yates; James Gayton, Cannon Ball; Adam Schu- macher, Lake Williams; Henry Ver- nowsky,. Beulah; Henry Bushman, Reeder; Calvin C. Kelley, Fort Wates; Thomas Crownerklace, Fort Yates; James Tobermam Jr., Stark ‘county; Mike Sherick, Richardton; © Curtis Pierce, Bismarck; Jess Jones, Bis- marck; John Seidl and Louie Siedl, Sioux county, and Henry - Wilkins, New Salem. Mrs. George J. Scharf, “Vishek; Ar- thur Wentz, Halliday, and Edward A. Holmes, Mandan, all pleaded not guilty to violating the postal laws. Pleas of not guilty were entered by Radford Turner, F. C. Turner and Mrs. Radford Turner, all of Sioux county, to charges of stealing fencing. Radford Turner, F. C. Turncr and Edwin Turner also were arraigned on charges of cutting timber on the Standing Rock Indian reservation. ‘The following are serving as venire- men during the term: I. W. Gerlich, Ward Johnson and William Dickin- son, of Dickinson; Vivian Morgan, Walcott; F. ©. Johnson, Tolley; Philip Saumer, Grand Forks; Hans Westergard, Robert Taft, Alex Emslie, and M, Glickson, Devils Lake; Wil- liam Harrison, Bismarck; Einar Et- narson, Upham;' E. C. Krueger. Fre- donia; Frank Pearson and John ‘E. ‘Wood, Fargo; A. C, Christianson, Ber- thold; Ben Iverson, McGregor; Anten Heurauf, South Heart; J. C. Stone, Mooretown; J. Harvey Dodds. New Rockford; G. 8. Stephson, Emera William Handley, Stirum; Albrecht, Flasher; Hamar; J. QO. Hendricks, Underwood; John Dalzer, Danzig; Sten Samdahl, Milton; John Tavis, Mandan; Knudt Strand, Forbes; E. A. Birgen, Rugby; John B, Tweeten, Washburn; George Rudolph, Rankin; Maurice Long, Fin- ley; Christ Hemsing, Tioga, and J. L. Greiti, Napoleon. PLAN RABBI'S FUNERAL Fargo, N. D., April 22.—(?)}—Rabbi Simon, St. Paul, will officiate at a fu- neral here Wednesday in the Jewish synagog for Rev. David Lesk, Ql, senior minister of the Fargo Hebrew congregation who died here ‘Monday. Burial will be in the Fargo Jewish cemetery. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY GUARANTEED croquindleg or spiral Permanent waves, $5.00. Lustrous, natural looking waves given by ex- Bishan, Phove 1a. Bi - Phone 762. : FOR SALE—Small gas engine garden tractor with complete cultivating attachments. Bought new last year. Gost $300.00, Sell for $200.00 on payments, Box 601, Bismarck, N. ‘WANTED—Painting Phone 129-W. T. C. Shultz. FIVE ROOMS, modern. Large yard, ‘Write Tribune Ad. No, 60. : FOR RENT-‘Room in modern home. Phone 853-J, and’ decorating. | ° x day to stp Eytt i iz F i Haug Bes f MANDAN NEWS MANDAN MAN WIL DIRECT AMERIC LEGION, CONTEST L. G. Thompson Appointed to Supervise State Drum and Bugle Corps Affair L. G. Thompson, principal of the Mandgn high school, has been ap- pointed by R. J. Kamplin, state Le- gion commander, as director of the state drum and bugle corps contest at Valley City, Thompson announced Wednesday following an Associated Press despatch Tuesday. Thompson was notified of his se- lection Tuesday night by Kamplin, Thompson stated. The contest will be a feature of the state convention to be held July 12,13 and 14, Thompson said. Approximately 12 North Dakota municipalities will be represented in the contest, including Bismarck, Fargo, Grand Forks, Devils Lake, Rugby, Minot, Williston, Dickinson, Belfield, Jamestown, Valley City and ‘Wahpeton. ‘Thompson plans to hold a confer- ence with Kamplin this week to ai range for judges, schedule of con. Hagel et publicity correspondence, he i: ~ Mandan Group to Give Class Play on Friday Dorothea Sylvester and Sidney Bjornson will take the leads in the “Whole Town's Talking,” Mandan high school senior class play to be given Friday at the Palace theatre. Under the direction of Mabel Frey, the members of the cast have been Practicing daily for the last four weeks. Final rehearsal of the group will take place Thursday evening. Ticket sales for the production were begun the latter part of last week when each member of the class was given an allotment to sell. George Murphy, senior class advisor, is in general charge of business details of the enterprise. Members of the cast in addition to the two leading roles are Robert Lar- son, Catherine Carey, Lucille Dah- ners, Joan McCarthy, Magne Sytrud, Peggy Pierce, Patsy. Parsons, Louise Lyman, Esther Smith and William McGinnis, « Identify Hogs Stolen By Confessed Thief Nine hogs in @ group of 12 were identified Tuesday by Oscar Smith, Seneca, 8...D., as being his property and as those which were stolen from Press dispatch from Jamestown. After the hogs had been stolen a piece of paper bearing the name, Art Loe, was found in the yards. When the arrest of Loe was announced by Claude Lackey, sheriff of Grant county, Smith got in touch with Rus- sell Chase, state's attorney of Stuts- Iman county, and Oscar Nygaard, ; Sheriff. The hogs identified by Smith had Fargo April 13, and were identified before they were unloaded. The hogs have been brought back to James- town. Mr. Chase and Mr. Nygaard will go to Mandan where Loe is being held, as soon as they return from St. Paul. Burned Mandan Girl Some improvement was shown in the condition of Mary Broderick, five, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Brod- erick, 209 Seventh Avenue northwest, Mandan, according to her attendants at.the Mandan Deaconess hospital. Mary was badly burned about the >} neck, chest and thighs Tuesday as she was trying to light a gasoline stove, The accident occurred abou! 5p. m. LEAVES HOSPITAL Mrs. Victor LaDuke, and daughter, Fort Rice, were discharged from the Mandan Deaconess hospital Wednes- day, according to hospital attendants. Expect 30 at Meeting Of Slope Garage Firms; About 30 parts and service manag- ers of Missouri Slope garage firms jare expected to ‘attend the first of @ series of meetings to be held at the Grind Paaihe, hotel: Dire, Teyaomany at 6 p. m. F. L. Collins, Fargo, the .jené. In the mouth. been shipped out of Jamestown for |, Shows Improvement, it next Wednesday night. CLUBMEN TOLD-OF Panels for Structure; Reid Talks on History Detailed explanation of the mural paintings being done by Clell G. Gan- non for the new Burleigh county court house and of their historical signific- ance was given to members of the Rotary club Wednesday by Gan- non and Russell Reid, superinten- dent of thie state historical society. Murais fall into three different Classifications and there are four dif- ferent methods of applying them, Gannon said. The classifications are historical, allegorical and fanciful and specimens will the history of Burleigh county. In adopting mural decoration (Gannon said, Burleigh county is suj Porting the: first known form of art and one now widely practiced. the tombs of the 5 With the introduction of the Gothic style of architecture into! northern Europe, he said, mural Painting declined in that area but stained glass windows were introduced to give the same effect. The French are the leaders in the art now, he said, and nearly every public building in France contains examples of mufal. painting. BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, ‘APRIL: 22, 1981 Fargoan ‘Absolved In Burglary Case WINNERS IN PIRAN Music; Turtle Lake Wins Oratorical Contest The first real mural paintings done in the] yay ‘United States, he said, were produced at Boston in 1876 and since that time the practice of using these decora- tions has spread rapidly and now many private as well as public bulld- ings are so decorated. Fresco Is Difficult with. paint, mixed with water, is a difficult form of mural decoration but is coming back into use now, Gannon said. He mentioned Rapheel’s paint- ings in the Vatican at Rome as the outstanding examples of this work. A type known as “Tempore” is done with paint mixed with honey or other sticky substance. It is difficult to do and may peel from the wall. Acostic painting, he said, is done on a surface prepared with wax and has few advantages. The commonest mural decorations, are oil paintings, the speaker -assert- ed, and it is this type which will be used in the courthouse. They can be done by the artist in his studio and put in place later. The 13 paintings for the courthouse Ese be done largely in zinc-yellow, ‘blue, chrome-yellow and crimson, or mixtures of these colors. Ten of them have been completed and the other three will be ready for placement in the next few weeks. They depict the history of Burleigh county. The effort to obtain historical ac- curracy has caused him some anxious moments, Gannon said. He thought yokes were plated “against the ‘shoul- ders of oxen and so. pictured them until George F. Will told him, differs @: horse: he painted a new-style ‘but’ Tater changed ft for a more ancient model. Hard to Get Accuracy Picturing Custer riding in the strects of Bismarck, he left out. the dogs which usually accompanied that historic figure. After. he had added them to the picture he found he had pictured the wrong breed, and‘had to that. - ot The subjects of the 13 pictures, as listed by Reid, were: 1, Burleigh county before the white man came. 2. Pierre Verendyre meets the Man- dan Indians. 3. A Dakota Indian camp. 4. The coming of Lewis and Clark. 5. The arrival of the Fur Traders. Fresco work, done on wet plaster] pur, Piano solos, Jean Lierboe, Turtle Lake; Eleanor Hemelvesky, Max; Helen Robinson, Garrison; Violet Washburn; piano duets, manson and Sayler, Underwood; Klein and. Bickert, Washburn; Lier- boe and Brenk, Turtle Lake; Robin- son and Priess, Garrison; violin solos, Leo Beaty, Garrison, James Jacobson, Max; clarinet solos, Genevieve Nel- son, Coleharbor; Peter Hallan, Turtle Lake; saxophone solos, Edward Legg, Underwood; Wade Robinson, son; baritone solos, Oscar Hclzhau- sen, Garrison; Ernest Ellis, Colehar- bor; Albert Klein, Mercer; Lorell Monson, Max. . Brass instruments solos, Norman Scholl, Garrison; Buel Henricks, Un- derwood; Carlyle Chapman, Turtle Lake; tenor solos, Arlo Beggs, ‘Turtle Lake; Dorald Freitag, Max; Marvin Landgran, Underwood; sopran? solos, Agnes Preiss, Garrison; Rosabelle Westmiller, Washburn; Elizabeth Borg, Turtle Lake; contralto oe. Hilda Eslinger, Turtle Lake; Kittelson, Butte; ‘Bernicé Ten:anson, rwood ; jaret Fix, Garrison. INOTHER BROSSART " HELD AT NAPOLEON Brother of Man Arrested in Edgeley Bank Ambush Is Fac- ing Burglary Count Napoleon, N. D., April 22—)— Charged with the theft of a small vault from the Konrad Schervinski home in Gackle on Christmas eve, Henry Brossart of near Merricourt, N. D,, was held in the Logan county jail Wednesday charged with burglary. Brossart is claimed to have taken the vault to his home near Merri- court and there smashed it and re- 6. The steamboat landing at Bis- marck in the early eighties. 7. General Sibley’s campaign of 863. 8. The coming of the railroad. 9. A street scene in Bismarck in, the seventies. 10. Ox trains on their way to the Black Hills. ‘x 11, Settlers getting corn from the) Indians. 12. The laying of the capitol corner- e. 13. The old Burleigh county court jOusC. Sharon R. Mote, superintendent of the Bismarck Indian school, invited clubmen and their wives to attend the showing motion picture showing only Indian actors at the school auditorium. N. O. Churchill that 12 reported Rotarians will make the trip to Ro-| fatally chester, Minn., to attend the district Rotary convention, leaving Bismarck Myron Atkinson introduced M. C. Blackston, an executive of the North Dakota @ new member of the club. Guests at the luncheon were L. R. Baird, Dickinson; C. R. Robertson, ‘Power and Light company, as| 2! moved valuable papers. Logan au- thorities claim to have found the vault in a search of the Brossart farm of “The Silent Enemy,” aj Rickey grant At the time of the January arrest, Roy Mickelson, Twin Cities boxer, was wounded in a scuffle with B. ‘W. Crandell, Dickey county sheriff. FRED BROSSART IS CONTESTS LISTED ¥. Garrison Schools Place First in , Garri-| pat TRS. DESTINATION. Ser"eas mets airplane Wotnesday for a 20-foot night. Royal Couple Will Rest at Ophir) Keeg was overdue in his ‘Tuesday, KING AND QUEENOF "Gn ake Michigan sloop, in which William Keeg, Chi. Hall, Country Estate at ,, but friends ia net SIAM HAVE REACHED | .ossee srs32-soaos a. cago insurance inspector, Purchase, N.Y. jeago river and Jackson Park Actress Sues Negro ’. Husband for Divorce Los Angeles, April 22.—(#)—Helen Lee Worthing, stage and screen act- ress who once was described by Har- rison Fisher, the artist, as possessing the most beautiful profile in America, \ ag filed suit to divorce Dr. Eugene nally on April 14 of this year. ais | Scholar Selected hed) U.S. Ambassador | > For New Republic (Continued from page one) Ruls (writes under pseudonym “Agorin.”); Chile, Luis Jimnez Asua; Havana, America Castro; Lisbon, Dr. ,| Miguel Unamuno; and Rome, Luis Zulueta. Ministers plenipotentiary: Berne, Leopoldo Palacios; Athens, Luis Ara- quistain; Prague, Alvarez del Vayo; Stockholm, Diego Hidalgo; Mexico City, Gordon Ordaz; Montevideo, An- tonio Jaen; Lima, Andres Overjero; RYEE E Tunnel Fire Cause Ruled ‘Undetermined’ Ef re Chicago, April 32—(P)—A coron- er’s jury verdict that fire of an “un- determined origin” took the lives of 11 men in the sanitary district tun- nel April 13 was on file Wednesday with 21 suggestions for the avoidance of future fires under similar circum- stances. Carbon monoxide gas was ua McFarland Presides |“. dations of the jury | cF arian St ‘The recommendations of the jury In District Court) parmen of pubic warts. Man Acquitted of Slaying Montanan He is sitting for Judge Thomas H-| rancaster, Pa. April 22.—(#)—Wil- Eugh, Diekingon, who hes bess Se. “Indian Bill” Craig, 35, ‘Tuesday " Ws acquitted in county court of the ° . | murder of Jack McNeal, 37, Whitefish, Man Facing Trial {Mont., who was shot at Safe Harbor 1 s | Jan. 10. 4 For Killing Sister Craig’s attorney was Miss M. Edna _ Hurst, believed by local lawyers the Minneapolis, April 22,—4)—Testi- | first woman appointed by a Pennsyl- mony was to open late Wednesday Judge R. G. McParland, James- town, arrived in Bismarck, Wednes- day to preside over a number,0f cases in district court. vania court as defendant's counsel in in the trial of Forrest’. Gent on @/a murder trial. charge of murdering his sister, Miss} Craig and McNeal were laborers on Gay Gent, at her farm home near|the Safe Harbor hy lectric dam Rockford last Dec. 9. Six jurors were | project. accepted Tuesday aga a the — Pa es oor Afie Gent wes found | Verona Is Struck on the morning of Dec. 10 with a By $30,000-Blaze wound throygh the head and the, autopsy also'disclosed she had suffer- ed a blow on the side of the head which had fractured the skull. before it burned itself out. Poultrymen Urged urned itself Out, To Use Precaution) .jimatea at $30,000 with $2300 in- é surance believed to have been in force against the destroyed properties. we Verona, N. D., April 22.—(%—Fire which broke out here at 4:30 a. m. Wednesday destroyed a hotel, an im- plement house and a hardware store To keep poultry flocks free from disease is perticularly difficult dur-| “Lack of water handicapped ing the spring of the year because of | work of the LaMoure and Verona fire the moisture that is usually present, | fighters. Origin of the fire is not according to H. O. Putnam, county | known. t. agent UNA Oa are os ‘ineagaite ave’ ually | Show Girl Plunges ‘22 Stories to Death taining disease- New York, April 22.—()—Lillian bacteria and the eggs of parasites. | Page Greer, Chicago, a show girl who ‘According to Putnam, flock own- | made her last appearance in “Show- ers often wonder why trouble is ex- | boat,” plunged to death from 3 win- nerienced with disease and parasites | cpalesgport ae eo aad aig ie cine atan Te ont ‘Two friends, also show girls, called =_— oo; a or} rons DICK Saxe BUTTER, 2 Ib. roll .................49c ORANGES, Sunkist, sweet juicy, 2doz. 55 {Plat snos'e., SOC| per me... LYE MALT SYRUP, PEACHES. Baar 1. GA, 3 cans... p> haroalas .49c i a mest part of city given as the direct cause of the men’s | CHALLENGES RGHT OF NYE BODY TO PROBE HBS CASE Action Unconstitutional Are Made Public Washington, April 22—(7)—The senate campesign funds committee ‘Wednesday made public letters from Bishop James Cannon Jr., of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, challenging its authority to investi- oy his ‘campaign expenditures in ‘The churchman contended the con- stitutionality of the senate commit- et Alfred ith, the Democratic presiden- tial candidate, in Virginia was “open to very serious question.” Bishop Cannon said the resolution introduced by Senator Glass, Dem- ocrat, Virginia, under which the committee has been proceeding, at- tempted to make the senate group “assume the functions of a grand The committee also made public correspondence of Chairman Nye, Bishop Cannon and the bishop's phy- sician, Dr. R. L. Sexton, concerning thé churchman’s physical condition, and his ability to appear before the committee. In a letter to Dr. Sexton, Chairman Nye pointed out newspaper reports of Bishop Cannon’s appearance be- ahd various church organizations and “These things tend to make it ap- Sport of the committee.” Bishop Cannon, in his reply, said his physician advised him he would endanger his life’by doing the pre- liminary work necessary to an ap- pearance before the committee for cross-examination in connection with his bank accounts showing how he expended the funds. The bishop said his activity as pre- | ing siding officer of his church’s general missionary conference in New Orleans to which Nye had made reference, was “purely perfunctory.” In a later letter, Bishop Cannon said if the committee decided to con- pear the bishop is merely making | ge i : . 4 : Re T #2 § auRE? i g g i FF TRAIN HITS INDIAN'S AUTO; NO ONE HUF John Smith, Recently Mad ‘Wealthy,’ Celebrates With Family in Minot Minot, N. D., April 22.—()—Whit man’s firewater brought red mai @ public place, as a c being struck by Great Northern tz No. 1 near this city Smith parted with $1! by the judge but this his bankroll, fattened in e bonus money from from the Indians many years ago. Smith, his wife, two children ai another Indian boy who works him on a farm near Van Hook, ma tored to Minot Tuesday in their ne the stores, John went other p! Ania he says, he does not The homeward trip was begun, less than a mile from Minot the ct stopped or was stopped by Smith wit the front end too close to the Gre: Northern tracks for the train to by. The pilot of the engine cf the car and tipped it over. The Indians, including John, the train coming, had hopp out. Sheriff R. W. Kennard took hin in custody when he arrived at the cident scene. Even weeds have their us their uses. Dan delion greens ‘ly prepared 1 tinue its investigation despite his challenge of its authority he would proper! the best kind of spring tonic lagging appetites. Castoria! IVE million modern tell you that children DO cry for Fletcher's-Castoria. For mothers always give a few drops of this pure vegetable preparation when a child has any of the symptoms that tell of sluggish bowels, colic, or other upsets. When tim tongues are coated arfd breath is . When a child is restless; irritable. Always - soothing and comforting to an infant— yet it is effective for children in their teens. You never have to coax children to take Castoria; they love its taste. Be ready for the next case of sour stomach, constipation, or other need for When buying look for the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher on wrapper. CITIES SERVICE COMPANY Stocks and Bonds We have a direct connection with Henry L. Doherty & Company of New York, for ‘the sale of the above securities. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! P. C. REMINGTON & SON mothers will

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