Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
North Dakota’s Oldest: Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 - } THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE j BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1931 The Weather Fair and cooler, possible frost to- night; Thursday fair and warmer. PRICE FIVE CENTS Pacific Fliers Are Found Alive Board to Act on Walla Walla Plan Farm MAY SELL WHEAT TO FARMERS WHO REDUCE ACREAGE Latter Would Market Grain When Price Rises as Pro- duction Falls SOLONS FORCE DECISION Two Congressmen Active in Washington in Presenting Scheme to Officials Men and Women From Seven Counties Take Training in Community Recreation Forty-six men and women, repre- ! Frost Warning Is Issued Here A warning that frost may occur in the Bismarck area tonight and Thursday morning was issued Wednesday by federal weather officials here. The forecast was for fair and cooler weather, with possibly frost, on low ground tonight; Thursday generally fair and warmer. Retain Hope for Missing Aviators New York, Sept. 10 en and watch for trace of the missing mono- plane, Esa, missing on a flight from Lisbon, Portugal, to New York. It was sighted twice on its trip’ ty. | west, once at the Azores and later . Reel, tivity in Bismarck. The project is designed to train Jeaders in planning community recre- Classes are held plane had but 1,100 miles of its 3,700- by the Pennland 80 miles off Cape Race, Newfoundland, and 395 miles from Halifax. *| Costa Viega, Portuguese {ran out of fuel. + |and confining troops to bararcks, The BB wey eaeHEE FEAR NEW REVOLT Lisbon, Portugal, Sept. fears of another revolution today by taking unusual military precautions cabinet was in emergency session | thoughout last night. In Wells county there is a man, his finger on the trigger, ready vorcee who alleges that he made love to her, betrayed her and then forgot her. Breach of Promise Suit Mars Aimee’s Honeymoon by the steamship Pennland. The air- goon’ the notice, “one can’t dodge ee . mile journey left when it was seen! suit pasts “and we don’t intend to disturb them. | Troms {0 be the fashion ‘now. that seems be now Aviators expressed hope the three/when a man gets married his silent Christian | admirers must bring suit against him ;| Johanssen, Germans, and Fernando /for breach of promise. sportsman, might have come down in some re-/that last January mote spot in Canada, when they|to-her, promised to marry and betrayed her. Her attorney last night announced he would accept 2 settlement out of court. It brought 16.—(P}—|no response from Hutton. ihe Portuguese government revealed — James Muller, 5, was killed when he} fell under a dray on which he was ae :| Asks Immunity From Punishment Should He Shoot Turkey Thieves} ss CONTINUES 10 RISE IN HONDURAN CITY Estimate Now Is Placed by Navy Physicians at Between 1,500 and 2,000 NEARLY 1,000 ARE BURNED Huge Funeral Pyres Light Town; Doctors Fight Ty- phoid Plague Threat Belize, British Honduras, Sept. 16.— ()—Plans for rehabilitation of Be- lize remained at a standstill Wednes- day while residents sought recovery from the shock of the hurricane that brought death and disaster to the city last Thursday. The death toll was officially esti- mated by navy doctors at 1,500 to 2,000. Nearly 1,000 bodies have been burned on five huge funeral pyres. Whether the city will be rebuilt depends upon the problematic success in cleaning up the wreckage of the frame buildings that housed Belize’s 13,600 residents. No organized plan of relief was under way, although arrival of the British gunboat Danae was ex- pected to bring some sort of rehabili- Prison crews tossed body after body into the five pyres where the city’s dead were burned without identifica- tion or ceremony. With the funeral fires burning for the fourth consecu- tive day, accurate count of the was abandoned. Divorces Says Evangelist’s Husband: Loved, Wronged, and Forgot Her Los Angeles, Sept. 16.—(7}—A $200,- lo- 000 breach of promise suit hovered in the background of Aimee Semple Mc- Pherson-Hutton’s combination honey- moon trip and revival campaign Wed- nesday, but she vowed she would not permit it to becloud her happiness. ‘The honeymoon trip, with David L. ‘Hutton, her jovial choir singer, as/ her third husband, got under way last s few hours after Hutton had ime in ruins of diately upon the discovery. [Fase Heavily for ° Fargo, N. D., Sept. 16—(7)—It wasn’t a pay station telephone but Hag Floyd Ssbynski plenty to . | “Take it, dear,” the evangelist said when Hutton appeared hesitant about things.’ The evangelist took the news of the | philosophically. “Our are our own,” she said, Mrs. Anderson Rites To Be Held Thursday Funeral services for Mrs. Anna Anderson, resident of Burleigh Kidder counties for 51 years who died Tuesday, will be conducted from the Swedish Lutheran church in Eck- lund township at 2:30 o'clock Thurs- day afternoon. Rev. Emil Benzon, pastor of the First Lutheran church, Bismarck, will officiate. Burial will be made a the cemetery in Ecklund town- ip. Pallbearers will be A. F. Anderson, M. ©. Anderson, Victor Coleman, Harry Toplin, Amond Thor, and John Engstrom. Mrs. Anderson, 77 years-old at the time of her death in a Capital City hospital from a complication of dis- eases, was a native of Sweden. She married to August Anderson in Bismarck in 1880. Later they lived at Sterling and Dawson and then settled on a farm south of Still, in northern Burleigh county, they remained until the fall of 1929, |when they moved to Wing to live ‘Mrs, St. Plerre charged in her sult Hutton made love; to her soon, KILLED UNDER DRAY White Lake, 8. D., Sept. 16—()— | ‘Whenever the penalty is greater i Four Men Die in Mail Plane Blaze Oakland, Calif, Sept. 16—(?)—A passenger-mail plane of the Pacific Air Transport air lines caught fire and plunged into San Francisco Bay ‘Wednesday, carrying its pilot and three passengers to death. | Shortly after taking off for Port- land, the plane evidently caught fire and its pilot, Ray Boudraux, of Med- ford, Ore., turned back toward the) airport. He was attempting to ef- fect a safe landing when flames en- veloped the ship and it dived several hundred feet. church. | church ruins were burned imme-; eo | Talk on Telephone J where| © Body of Pira PASTURES IMPROVED THROUGHOUT STATE BY OVERNIGHT RAINS | Soil in Good Condition for Fall \ Plowing; Northern Minne- sota Fires Put Out “a | Pastures were improved and ground was in good condition for fall plowing throughout North Dakota Wednes- day following a general rainfall over {the state during the 24-hour period ending Wednesday morning. Rain in northern Minnesota in the last 24 hours extinguished grass, for- est, and heat fires in that region. Only five weather bureau stations in North Dakota failed to report pre- cipitation to the federal bureau here ‘Wednesday morning. Nearly an inch was recorded localities, Devils Lake, Larimore, and Bottineau reporting 98 of an inch Pembina had 80, Minot .45, and Carrington .42, while Bismarck, Grand Forks, and Fessenden had between .30 and .40 of an inch of precipitation. Fargo, Amenia, Crosby, Ellendale, and Lis- bon reported no rainfall. ‘Warning that frost may develop on iow ground in the Bismarck ares and throughout the state tonight and Thursday morning was issued by weather officials here. The forecast weather to- degrees. A searching party in Northern Min- nesota reported no trace of the body of Ole Larson, 70-year-old home- steader, believed the fourth victim of the fires, Matt Myrold, whose son, Marvin Myrold, perished in the fire that raged near Grygla, suffered & relapse in Thief River Falls hospl- tal and was near death, but the oth- Says Electricity Represents Waste London, Sept. 16.—(/?)—Mahat- ma Ghoahte ae reads and works © gress, he said, “I don’t care, itsa ruinous extravagance just the same.” Minneapolis Banker Admits Embezzlement ach $320,000. ‘They said Smith, 46, admitted tak- ing. money over a 10-year period, from cash drawers and changing rec- | Shortages by auditors Tuesday during a periodical examination ‘of the association's books. Pictured above are Benjamin P. Collings, victim of pirates on Long Island Wednesday morning and his wife, widowed by the pirate outrage. Mrs. Collings and set her adritt in a leaky motorboat before abandoning the Collings cabin crulser with the|;"d,zelayed 0, northern | division Collings’ five-year-old daughter as the only living thing aboard. One Pirate Victim and His Widow whose body was recovered The two men who killed Collings assaulted Sound, tes’ Victim Is Found in Long Island Sound; Mystery Deepens Missing Engineer Had Been Bound, Hand and Foot, and Cast Into Water ST. LOUIS CAPTURES PENNAN New York, Sept. 16—(7)—The St. Louls Cardinals automatical- ! Oyster Bay, N. Y., Sept. 16—()}—| The body of Benjamin P, Collings, Stamford, Conn., retired engineer, floated to the surface at Lloyd's Neck, Long Island, at 6:20 a. m. Wed- nesday. His hands and feet were bound. There was an injury to his! head. Inspector Harold King, command- ing Nassau detectives, announced the An immediate general alarm was sent out for two men, one about 50 yeras of age, the other a youth of 18, who, Mrs. Collings said, had thrown her husband into the water. The finding of the body evidently Pe nadaey nig story ee she had told through days of cons; i ; ‘fant Found in Same Place Collings’ body floated to the sur- face at the exect spot where four boatmen found the cruiser Penguin Prilonad pein daensretas Collings’ Ive-year-0l r, Barbara, aboard. on c Mrs. Collings, who for six days had been questioned about the mysteri- ous disappearance of her husband, sald he had been tossed into the water by two strange men, who boarded the yacht. Police said the finding of his body backed that theery. ‘@e Collings tragedy was revealed last Thursday moming when Mrs. Collings was found marooned on a motorboat in Oyster Bay, clad only in a thin house dress but protected from the chill of dawn by blankets. {9:YEAR-OLD GIRL KILLED BY GUNFIRE Minnesota Miss Slain by Posse- men Who Were Seeking Highway Robber Hanley Falls, Minn,, Sept. 16.—(?)— A posse, hunting for a filling station robber, fired on an automobile when an 18-year-old girl near here shortly before last midnight. The girl is Arlawaine. Kittleson, daughter of, Mrs. Emil Kittelson, Han- ley Falls. The girl was riding with Clarence Jacoby, Wood Lake, when the posse, encountering the car a half mile north of here, called on the driver to halt. When he failed to stop, the posse opened fire with rifles. At least two shots penetrated the machine and the girl was struck in the face. Who fired the bullets which killed the girl has not been determined. County Coroner O. M. Olson of Granite Falls was notified and spent the night investigating. No one was held. An inquest was to be held Wed- nesday. The posse was organized immedi- ately after Arthur Gustafson, filling station attendant at Hanley Falls, was robbed about 11 p. m. Grief-stricken and scarcely able to talk of the tragedy, Jacoby, at his home, said he thought someone was playing a joke on him when they commanded him to stop. Oregon Scientist Finds Ordinary Gelatine Is Full of Small Holes Eugene, Oregon, Sept. 16.—(P)}— Gelatin is full of holes so fine that from 800 million to 4,800 mil- Non of them could be drilled side by side to form a line of open- ings only one inch long. Measurements of these tiny di- ameters for the first time in the scientific world is announced at the University of Oregon where the work was done by Dr. Leo Friedman. Eash hole is the open- ing of # pore of about the same diam She told an amazing story of piracy. Late Wednesday night, she said, two men in a canoe boarded the anchored Collings cabin cruiser Pen- guin, bound her husband and threw him overboard, abducted her, and abandoned five-yeag-old Barbara) Collings on the Pengiin. Mrs. Collings said the “pirates” were an elderly man and a youth| of about 17. The elder man, she said, | offered her indignities in the canoe. | ‘When the body, laying face down- | beach, was turned over | Collings had been | met death. | Throat Was Slashed in the head about the left eyebrow across the throat. Finding of the body on the beach Marshall Field estate seemed (Continued on page three) which were small enough to roll through the gelatine holes. These pellets were the mole- cules of sugar, glycerine and urea. All these substances, when dis- solved, soak through gelatine if given sufficient time. Scientifical- ly the process is named diffusion. It amounts to much the same thing as rolling timy balls through the holes. By computing the time required for diffusion Dr. Fried- man obtained the, diameters of the pores, The possibilities of new edibles lies in finding out more about the emulsifying or “sticking together” properties of gelatine. Emulsifi- cation is one method of Binding mix readily. The gelatines exam- ined at, Oregon are quite similar to those used on the dining table for desserts, salads and cold con- sommes. In their natural state the pores frequently are filled with water. eter. Outside the scientific values, the measurements promise possi- bilities of preparing foods in new ways, by finding better mixing methods for such ordinarily an- tagonistic substance as oil and water. No miscroscope detects holes as small as these, but in nature Dr. Friedman found some sub-micro- scopic pellets of known diameter | the driver refused to stop and killed REPORTS INDICATE MOYLE AND ALLEN SARE ON STEAMER Details of Rescue Lacking; Two Airmen Landed on Unin- habited Island COAST GUARDS GET WORD Message From Russian Vessel Is Relayed by Radio From St. Paul Island Seattle, Sept. 16—()—A week after they had been given up as lost on their nonstop flight attempt from Japan to America, Cecil A. Allen and Don Moyle, California aviators, were reported Wednesday by three Soviet vessels to be safe in Olyutorski gulf, northern Kamchatka. The messages said the fliers landed on an uninhabited island and were “safe and well” and would be home soon. The messages were ini by the United States naval rage st. Paul island in Bering sea and by the United States coast guard cutter It- asca of the Bering sea patrol. The messages received by the Itasca said the fliers were aboard the soviet steamer Pialy Krabalobe, another soviet vessel, the steamer Esquimos at Penjensk bar, radioed the Pialy was a gulf on Kamchatka pen- a. ‘The naval radio at St. Paul island | received a message from the soviet steamer Buriat which aided in Miss Frances Bresson, gets in Riverside, Cal. message to Miss Bresson 3 “Landed on uninhabited ey Ever; all right. Have Frank put Pee ete ne a 208) Will be in BRITISH TARS WIN REVIEW OF PAY UT Government Will Re-Examine Proposal as Result of Non- Violent Mutiny London, Sept. 16.—()—Bluejackets of the British navy’s Atlantic fleet, through a series of demonstrations against cuts in pay, obtained from the admiralty Wednesday s promise of re-examination of the new rates with a view to alleviation of such hardships as might be revealed. Announcement was made in the House of Commons~by Sir Austen ; Chamberlain, first lord of the ad- imiralty, that ships of the Atlantic fleet had been ordered to proceed to their home ports immediately. The government had authorized the admiralty, he added, to propose measures for alleviating hardships in those classes of cases in which “the reductions press exceptionally.” He gave no details of the origin of the trouble nor of the course it had taken among the men of the fleet who were reported to have staged sort of non-violent mutiny in protest against tive pay cuts. What he said, however, made it clear that the government had capitulated at least to the extent of investigating the complaints with a view to remedying whatever hard- ships might be found. A Labor member tried to open de- bate on what he called the “urgent and definite matter abandoning the Atlantic fleet exercises,” but the speaker ruled this out of order. BLAST KILLS THREE Port Jervis, N. Y., Sept. 16—()— Three men were, killed and three cthers seriously scalded Wednesday by a boiler explosion on ® pusher locomotive helping a 100-car freight train up ® steep Erie railroad grade at Graham, four miles from rere.