The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 28, 1931, Page 1

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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspape_ ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1931 Two Nations Discard Gold Basis The Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Tues- day; not much change in temp. PRICE FIVE CE Auto NORTH DAKOTAN IS AMONG FIVE OTHERS INJURED IN MISHAP Private Tillman D. Berg, 18, Flaxton, Is Not Hurt Ser- iously, However TWO MINNEAPOLITANS HELD Accident Occurs Near Fort Snelling; Motorists Accus- . ed of Qrinking Hits §S Fort Snelling, Minn., Sept. 28—() —Three privates of the Third Infan-, try, U. 8. A, stationed here, were William M. Baxter, Jr., manager of killed and five others injured Satur | the baled coe as fei Amer! failing to induce the League of Na- !day for an all-day meeting with re- |Mef organization representatives from ‘119 counties relative to plan for poor The dead: Henry L. Dodson; Wal-: relief in the Missouri Slope area this a aa winter, Baxter has been conducting| ‘similar meetings in North Dakota day when a speeding automobile ran into a squad of soldiers marching on @ highway at the fort. ter J. Rasmussen, and Lester E. Rus- sell. Dodgson and Rasmussen were, killed instantly and Russell died in a} hospital. | Of the injured, Privates Albert B.! Dunlap and R. L. Exceen, are not ex- | pected to recover. Private Tillman D.| Berg, 18, Flaxton, N. D., was hurt but not seriously. ‘Two men who gave their names asi J. C. Tansey, the driver, and O. M./ Herring, both of Minneapolis, were | arrested and placed in the guard-| house. Fort authorities said the men | had been drinking. They are held: without charge. i The squad of soldiers had been sent’ out to look for a man reported lost on | the reservation. | SILVER PROSPECTS AROUSE COLORADO England’s Renunciation of Gold i: Standard Gives New Life to ‘Ghost Camps’ Denver, Colo., Sept. 28.—()—With | more at stake than any other Amer- ican state, Colorado is striving might- ily to have something done about the; Savora was questioned for several jhours Saturday afternoon and night. ; Dozens of. ghost cities, abandoned iafter officers found a pair of his silver situation. and ruined, testify to the once poured from Colorado’s mines; end Coloradoans are hoping and) working for the day when silver again tay be mined profitably. England’s temporary renunciation! of the gold standard has given new life to the ghost camps which lie deep within the mounfains. a! i monetize silver, Colorado merchants; ‘Cow War’ in Iowa | Apparently Ended! Tipton, Iowa, Sept. 28.—(7)—Iowa’s “cow war” appeared to be over Mon- day. : One-fourth of the 1,500 or more members of the state militia, recently sent into Cedar county to help veter- inarians enforce the state law for, testing cattle for tuberculosis, iad) been ordered withdrawn after meet: ing little or no resistance from farm- ers who objected to the tests. puties to help veterinarians enforce the law, resulting in an order for troops by Governor Dan ’ Turner. Man Drops Dead in Physician’s. Office Funeral services for Charles Car- Dawson. | interests also are under foreign reg- W. M. BAXTER, JR. and Montana. MAN HELD IN MINOT CONTINUES TO DENY MURDERING WOMAN Which Admits Trousers on Traces of Blood Were Found Belonged to Him Minot, N. f Will Visit Here ., Sept. 28-—(P)—Stead- \neressitated by attempts of the Chin- caer assérting cieiielegeie rapt ecg military to destroy a bridge of \Korchenko, found dead in Minot last Wednesday slashed’ “IGHINESE MINISTER SERIOUSLY INJURED: BY STUDENT GROUP Blame N. T. Wang for Failure of League of Nations to Act in Controversy IS RESCUED BY SERVANTS President Chiang Kai-Shek Sends Personal Bodyguard to Protect Statesman Nanking, Sept. 28.—(#)—Foreign Minister N. T. Wang was attacked and seriously injured Monday by a ;mob of students who blamed him for tions to intervene in Manchurian, controversy between China and | Japan. But for the intervention of a group servants, Dr. Wang probably would not have escaped alive. The mob, using clubs and ink pots, rain- ed blows on his head, smashed win- dows and furniture and reduced Wang's office to wreckage. Dr. Wang was found to have three serious wounds. President Chiang Kai-Shek sent a detachment of his personal bodyguard to Dr. Wang's home to protect it against any at- tacks. The guard was instructed to shoot to kill if Dr. Wang was threat- ened again. ‘The government announced despite foreign policy with which Nanking was seething, that course would be continued. The Chinese government appealed’ after the occupation by Japanese troops last week of several cities in southern Manchuria. Japan an- nounced the occupation had becn ithe Japanese-operated south Man- churian railway. near Mukden and: by threats against the life and property uad of fs squad of soldtei the agitation against Dr. Wang's; to the League of Nations shortly! morning with a |throat, William Savora, 45, remained in the.county jail here Monday while Officers checked. over their evidence to reach @ decision as to whether they jof its nationals elsewhere in corre crokyo government’ disclaimed|© Minot from Grand Forks, was any territorial designs upon Man- sentative Wright Patman, would charge him with murder. All persons knowing anything about the case were summoned Mon- day to appear before State’s Attorney) Paul Campbell this afternoon so he could obtain written statements from them. Wealth that | trousers in his rooming house, which, | yy, when they said, revealed bloodstains chemical tests were made. last Sunday. came to be there. The officers also said Monday they had found a person who declared that jhe saw Savora in downtown Minot Tuesday evening. Savora hes repeat- edly told officers that he was not away from his home that night. Savora also stuck by his story to officers that he had not recently| owned a jackknife. A burned jackknife ; was found in the ashes of a stove in the kitchen of the Savora rooming TEXAN HOPES To IMPEACH MELLO Representative Patman Says He Man Will Start Proceedings in December Washington, Sept. 28.—(#}—Repre- Democrat Savora, jsaid they were his trousers but said that the last time he wore them was If there was blood on them, he said he did not know how it churia and announced troops would be withdrawn when the situation permitted. Japan took the position \the two countries. PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT IS SET UP IN MANCHURIA Tokyo, Sept. news agency report from Mukden londay said a provisional govern- ment for Kirin province, Manchuria, had been formed there with General Hsi Sia, former chief of staff of the Kirin provincial army, as governor. | In Mukden, the report said, the /people’s association organized with |the slogan “Manchuria for Manchur- jJans” with the aim of making the entire state independent of China’ Proper and having a parliamentary form of government. HONGKONG SWEPT BY ANTI-JAP DISORDERS Hongkong, China, Sept. 28—#)— Policemen, armed with riot guns and bearing orders to “shoot without warning if necessary” Monday pa- trolled the streets of Hongkong and Kowloon, on the mainland opposite this British port, as the result of anti- Japanese riots and demonstrations. The known casualties stood at nin dead and dozens injured. Six of the deaths were in one family, when a mob of infuriated Chinese stormed the residence of Shimiziro Yashishita, Japanese. Dies Following Scuffle in Montana Glasgow, nt, _§ Mont., Sept. 28—(P)— John Nelion, about 28, a former resi- dent of Hawley, Minn., died Sunday that the dispute was one involving: 28—(P)—A _Rengo} JOHN CROWDER John Crowder and Harry ©. Wimbley NAN CHARGED WITH ATTACKING WOMAN IN MINOT RESIDENCE | Victim Escapes From His Grasp and Jumps Through Second- Floor Window Minot, N. D., Sept. 28—(7)—A man jadmitted to a home in Minot Monday forenoon when he asked to be fed seized.@ young woman who was the only occupant and who escaped from his grasp and jumped through a sec- ond-floor window. . Earl Morris, 22, who says his home is in New York State and who came caught and turned over to the police iby Dr. E. C. Stone, who heard the young woman's screams. Morris appeared at the Dr. H. J. Nedrud home and asked to be fed. He was admitted by Miss Evelyn Lock- rem, a sister of Mrs. Nedrud, and a registered nurse in Minot. Morris asked to be directed to the washroom so he could clean himself, and when Miss Lockrem did s0, he seized her. She escaped from him and ran downstairs, and he caught her and started carrying her upstairs when she again broke loose and ran to a bedroom window, jumped through @ screen window, landing on a roof a few feet below, and fell about 10 feet to the ground. Miss Lockrem was bruised and cut; in crashing through the screen and in the fall, but her injuries are not serious. She was suffering from ner- vousness Monday afternoon, however. Dr. Stone, who lives across the street, saw the young woman coming | through the window and heard her cries for help. He ran to the house and seized Morsis. A neighbor, Mrs. Raymond C. Dobson, also heard the screams for assistance and had sum- moned the police. When a search of Morris’ person was made at the police station, it was found that considerable jewelry from the Nedrud home had been taken by him. Potatoes Are P-*-g_— Gathered for Relief Fargo, N. D., Sept. 28—(P}—Immed- iate and favorable response is being given the appeal for concentration of carloads of potatoes and other vege- tables in Cass county to be given | Jn Death Picnic’ Probe who are investigating the drowning of Wimbley’s wife, Mrs. Elizabeth ‘Wimbley, and her daughter Wilma, four. Police are working on a theory that the dead woman and child were taken on a “death picnic” and pur- posely drowned by persons who hoped to benefit by their $11,800 insurance. ‘Dissension Crops Out in Probe of Pirate Slaying [Not until Monday did it become jed, was occasioned by his strong dis- t | HARRY C. WIMBLEY are held by Washington, D. ©., police Dr. Limits His Testimony at Coroner’s Inquest in De- fiance to officials Huntington, N. Y¥., Sept. 28.—(P)—, | With the strange killing of Benjamin |P. Collings on Long Island Sound at midnight, Sept. 9, still unsolved, a |Tipple of dissension Monday began to jdisturb the heretofore unified forces of the investigation.into the mysteri- ous slaying. The first inkling of a clash within the ranks of the investigators came Saturday during the coroner's in- jquest when Dr. Otto H. Schultze was’ called to the stand to tell of his autopsy on Collings’ body. Defies Two Officials Dr. Schultze defied the coroner and district attorney of Suffolk county, rattled off a baffling list of numerical symbols, declared they definitely proved Collings’ death was caused by drowning, and abruptly left the inquest room. He declined to go into a complete report of his findings, indicating that hinder justice. known what lay behind Dr. Schultze’s action in the inquest room and the curious list of symbols he read. The doctor’s attitude, it was learn- approval of the manner in which the investigation was proceeding. He had to be served with a compulsory subpoena before he appeared. Merely Gave Conclusion When he did appear, he merely gave his perfunctory conclusion about’ the cause of Collings’ death, recited six symbols, and refused to answer questions about the evidence of blows! found on Collings’ head and believed: to have been struck before the man was bound hand and foot and tossed from his cabin cruiser into Long Island Sound. Dr. Schultze’s refusal to go into his findings about the incidental blows on Collings’ head, it was learned Monday, was due to his belief that) the coroner's inquest was entitled to! that other details of the autopsy| which may prove important to ef-! forts to solve the crime should not be made public there. The symbols were merely labels for varying quantities of salt. MBS. COLLINGS’ STORY SUBSTANTIATED FURTHER | New York, Se 28.—(P) — Mrs. | to make it public at this time might! know merely the cause of death and| Worth. drought North Dakota, reports victims in northwestern | Morton Page, pt. Benjamin P. Collings’ oft-repeated | story of her husband’s murder by two act. "| Simmons, a farmer, opened poisoning Texas, Monday said he would insti- tute impeachment proceedings against Secretary Mellon as soon as congress convenes in December. private business. Patman said that while Mr. Mellon is not a member of the board of di-| | rectors of the Aluminum corporation, ‘he is a stockholder and as a stock- | holder has @ voice in election of di- rectors. The Texan also said he will show Mellon is a large stockholder in the Koppers corporation, which he said is erecting a $200,000,000 iron and steel plant in the Ural mountains for the Soviet. He also said he would disclose a number of ships operated by Mellon istry so they can escape the American Merchant Marine Seamen Benefits Trial of Woman on Poison Count Opens Lebanon, Ind., Sept. 28,—(P)—Trial | of Mrs. Carrie Simmons, wife of John; charge of her ti on a of ;WO | daughters, Virginia, 14, and Alice; Jean, 10. | Mrs. Simmons is alleged to have) Placed poison in chicken sandwiches at a family reunion here last June. Several other persons besides the two igirls were made ill but recovered. Blindness Fails t,!tram a fractured skull received in & seuffle. Nelson, a mechanic at a garage here, and several friends who’had just ined dance at Hinsdale The Texan intends to base the pro-|trwared tn the . (ceedings on charges the treasury sec- jiretary has violated obligations of his -|office by maintaining an interest in aged in the scuffle. During the tussle his head struck a curb. No arrest was made. An inquest was to be held today. ‘2 To Stop U Dean ie soe cone —¢ Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 28.— (®)—Many men bare been physi- cally handicapped from and still made a success of their later life, but there are few who have suffered a grave misfortune in later years and erturned to ac- tive public service. ‘Such, however, is the record of Roger W. Cooley, 72-year-old dean of the School of Law at the Daokta. Fargo, directing food concentration for the Cass county chapter of the} Red Cross. Having named 28 community chair-| men to organize food concentration | about the county, Page already has received assurances from four that ac- tivities are under way. i R. C. Lindsey, Page, said farmers; there have promised at least a car- load, possibly two, as soon as the; ground dries. The Page Commercial ! club will pay pickers and haulers and the farmers are donating the crop. | Grandin, Casselton and west Far- jects, chairmen at those points re- ported. Knox Man Is Killed — When Hit by Train Knox, N. D., Sept. 28.—(7)—Otto Deardorff, who resided on the edge; of this town, was killed when struck by the west-bound Great Northern, Oriental Limited Saturday. i He was walking on the track and! apparently did not hear the train; His wife, at her home a few rods} away, was the first person to reach) his side. He was about 60 years old. | TACKLE LANDS HIM JOB i New York, Sept. 28—(?)}—Loui:| Crawford has landed @ job with a flying tackle, Hearing the cry, “Stop; Thief,” he chased a man who ran! by, tackled him neatly and turned him over to police. Grateful detec-| tives asked htm how they could show go also are undertaking similar pro- | poa! men, who boarded their cruiser onj Long Island Sound was further sub- stantiated Monday by the finding of two pairs of trousers and a bathing suit in the waters of Cove Neck. Deputy Sheriff Kehlendeck found) the articles Sunday. They were cov- ered with seaweed and sand, indicat- ing they had been in the water some weeks. Collings, a Stamford, Conn., engineer, drowned Sept. 9. Mrs. Collings told Suffolk officials} that two men, one about 40, the other} about 18, threw her husband into the sour and took her away in a sma Confession Frees ‘Lifer’ in Mlinois | o Chester, Ill, Sept. 28—(P)— Jesse Lucas, who spent almost half of his 50 years of life in the Menard state prison here for a murder he always said he did not commit, was enjoying freedom again Monday as the result of a death-bed confession of another man. . | George R. Pond, a farmer who | lived near Decker, Ind., dying, confessed he killed Clyde Showal- {| ter, a young stock buyer 26 years | ago, and this brought release for Lucas Sunday, after 23 years as | prisoner No. 401. The Illinois board of pardons and paroles paroled Lucas to | Mayor T. B. Wright of Mt. Car- | mel, TIL, who said he would give their appreciation. “Get me a job,” | seid Crawford. He got one. i him a job and the freed man |ian troops occupying Fort Zamaclay STATESMEN CONFER ON ECONOMIC PLANS ‘Premier Laval and Foreign Minister Briand Attend Meeting in Berlin ARE AGREED ON COMMITTEE Awarding of Structural Con- tracts to German Concerns Is One Suggestion Berlin, Sept. 28—(P}—A Franco- German commission to smooth out economic relations between the two countries Monday occupied Premier Laval and Foreign Minister Briand in their conferences with German states- men. They already have reached an agreement in principle with Chancel- lor Bruening and Foreign Minister Curtius on @ non-political, consulta- tive committee, composed of state of- ficials, industrial leaders and em- Ployes, which would seek to iron out salient differences in viewpoint on trade matters. ‘When M. Laval and M. Briand ar- rived Sunday night they received a striking ovation from a crowd of well- wishers. Nevertheless, they were pro- tected by the strongest police guard in years to prevent possible unfriendly manifestations. memories of the past and face the future in peace if Europe was to be saved from economic ruin. The parley was understood to re- volve around the question as to whether Franco-German economic cooperation was possible on a large scale by the financing of Germany's surplus labor with France’s surplus capital. . One suggestion advanced was to award bridge building end other structural contracts in French colon- jies to German concerns. Another Suggestion was to provide French credits. for specific German concerns strictly on a business basis. The in- dustries mentioned chiefly were coal, iron, electrical and chemical. Creation of a Franco-German jeconomic commission to devise means Of cooperation was announced in a EIGHT PLEAD GUILTY 10 FEDERAL COUNTS Judge Andrew Miller Sentences Group After Hearing Pleas in Fargo Court Fargo, N. D., Sept. 28—(7)—Bight Persons indicted by a federal grand jury which ended deliberations in Fargo Friday pleaded gulity before Federal Judge Andrew Miller and were sentenced. Alan Cathcart. Winnipeg, charged with bringing 523 pints of beer, 22 quarts of gin, and 24 quarts of whisky into the United States, was senten- ced to @ year and a day in Leaven- Arthur Gould and bottles of beer, 15 bottles of whisky and 12 pints of brandy, were senten- ced to serve two years each. John Sharek, Winnipeg, charged with illegally entering the United States a second time, was sentenced to 90 days in jail. Douglas Marsden, Bertrand Rolfe, Floyd Gordon, Phillip; Mann and Katzemer Psyblsky, all! illegal entry, were sen-/| teneed to 10 days each in jail. Valentine Herman, brought to Far- go Friday from Texas on a charge of violation of the Dyer act, was senten- ced to three years in an institution to be designated by the U. 8. attorney general. He was charged with trans- porting @ stolen car from Minot to! ‘Wausa, Neb. Because three conventions are scheduled for Devils Lake the week beginning Oct. 12, a term of federal court scheduled to begin there has been postponed and the Grand Forks; term has been set for that date. | Paraguay-Bolivia Breach Is Widened Bolivian soldiers in a clash in the Gran Chaco region further strained! the relations of the two countries Monday. The ministry of war issued a com- munique saying four Bolivian casual- ties had occurred Saturday when a Paraguayan patrol discovered Boliv- in the disputed territory and drove them. out. Returning to their base, the patrol encountered a company of Bolivian infantry, supported by ® squadron of cavalry, and participated in a sharp conflict, losing eight men. HANNAFORD BOY DIES Valley City, N. D., Sept. 23—()— Seven-year-old Harvey Benson, Han- Chancellor ning said at a din- ner for the visitors in the chancellary Germany and France must bury communique issued after the confer-! Soldiers and Kills Three ||FRENCH AND GERMAN | —e Peachy! Here's a pretty fair reason why pip- pins are peaches in Utah. She is Lois Grant, 17 and blonde, who ts Queen of Peaches following her sel- ection as ruler of the Box Elder county beach show at Brigham City. BOARD ALTERS RULE REGARDING COLLEGE DORMITORIES INN. D. Students May Room Wherever They Please With Approval of Presidents, Deans A motion giving to the presidents and deans of men and women sole. Jurisdiction over regulations pertain- ing to health, moral, and environment conditions governing the approval of Places in which students at colleges and normal schools may reside was passed by the state board of admin- istration, Nelson Sauvain, chairman, {announced Monday. The board’s action repealed a regu- jlation adopted last spring which held that the dormitories must be filled to capecity before students can reside elsewhere, Sauvain said. He termed this regulation as drastic and said that although only a certain per- centage of the students could stay at the dormitories the rule kept the oth- ers from securing lodging until after the dormitories had been filled. Affecting college dormitories at Minot, Fargo, and one being con- structed at Dickinson, which were erected not by appropriation of the legislature but by holding companies which issued bonds to defray the cost, the motion also sanctions similar regulations at other colleges. ‘The board of administration agreed with such holdings companies to use, manage, operate, and maintain and conduct the buildings and to use its best efforts to keep the dormitories fully occupied and rented and to re- tire the bonds with the rental fees, Sauvain said. The motion allows the students to reside wherever they wish except for such regulations as the presidents and deans of such colleges may make in the interest of the students’ health, moral and environment conditions. Man Found Dead in Gravel Pit at Rugby Rugby, N. D., Sept. 28.—(4)—His boay” almost completely buried by gravel, John Job, 24, farmer near here, was found dead in a gravel pit near his home Saturday. The body was in a crouching posi- tion, gravel two feet deep on his back, his face covered by about eight inch- es. A coroner's jury said death was due to suffocation. Job, a candidate last year for coun- ty register of deeds, had gone to the pit to cement down a new scale. His body was discovered by a sister, Mary, who resides on the home farm] ‘as does another sister, Elizabeth, and; @ brother, William. The funeral will be in Balta. Would Bar A. P. News Minot, N. D., Sept. 28.—(#)—Mem- bers of the North Dakota Associated Press meeting in Minot Monday, unanimously adopted a resolution recommending to the Associated Press board of directors that they prohibit broadcasting of Associated Press news| over any radio station. i The meeting is to end late Monday. een ee Old-Time Fiddler | | Champion Succumbs; °° Lewiston, Me., Sept. 28.—(?)— Alanson Mellen “Mellie” Dun- ham, 78, Maine's old-time fiddler champion who achieved national prominence when he was invited to play for Henry Ford at De- =troit, died Sunday after he failed to rally from an operation. He had been ill two weeks. naford, died here Sunday following a two-day illness of erysipelas which “can make my home his home.” developed from a sty in his eye. Fa Uy Mellie attracted Ford’s atten- SWEDEN, NORWAY BAN EXPORTATION OF YELLOW META. Denmark Also Considering Same Action Following Leadership of Britain DISCOUNT RATES RAISED Action of Scandinavian Coun- tries Regarded as One of Caution, Not Need London, Sept. 28.—(7)—Sweden and |Norway today followed Great Britain by seven days in suspending the gold standard and prohibiting the expor- tation of gold. The Danish cabinet is considering the same action. Dispatches from Stockholm and Oslo said the two governments had decided temporarily to abandon pay- ments in gold because of the affilia- tion of the krona and the krone with the pound sterling and the close con- nection of their finances with those of Great Britain. The Swedish state council decided to drop the gold standard until Nov. 30, unless conditions should change before that date, and to increase the national bank discount rate from ¢@ per cent to 8 per cent. The exporta- tion of gold was prohibited except by the Riksbank, or by foregin national banks. Minister of Finance Felix Hamrin said Sweden would restore the gold standard as soon as financial affairs Permitted and that the suspension should not be regarded as a sign of weakness in the treasury. The people must buy more Swedish goods in or- der to improve the balance of trade, he said, and the government would eae discuss measures to that en The commissioners of the Riksbank said there had been heavy demands on Sweden for gold after Great Britain’s action and that foreign currency and the Riksbank’s gold re- serve had been reduced last week by 100,000,000 ‘krona ($25,000,000) while hope of obtaining foreign credit suf- ficient to assure the supply of foreign currency had not been fulfilled. Norway's withdrawal from the gold standard and placing of an embargo on gold exports were decreed for an indefinite period by the cabinet. The discount rate of the Bank of Norway free saieed from 5 per cent to 8 per cent At the same time the central banks of Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland announced they had decided on joint measures to maintain the ;Parity of their respective currencies while the suspension was in effect. The two countries’ move was inter- preted in financial circles as an act of caution rather than of need be- cause it was felt that both were in comparatively sound positions. BLAMES PUBLIC FOR ECONOMIC TROUBLE Walter Gifford Says Consumer Buying Must Precede Solu- tion of Depression Washington, Sept. 28 —()—The public, by failure to spend its money. is blamed by Walter 8. Gifford for much of the unemployment distress. Consumer buying, the man en- trusted by President Hoover with caring for the suffering of the jobless believes, must precede solution of the problem. “If the public buys neither work nor goods, it is the public that is in- directly discharging men,” he said Sunday night in a radio address over m relief. both national networks. He enumerated a four-point pro- gram for coping with unemployment distress. It concluded: 1, Appointment of a statewide committee of leading citizens by the governor. 2. Organization of an emergency committee in needy communities, 3. Determination by this commit- tee of the probable unemployment load and the development of ways to eet it by providing employment or 4. Reports to the state committees on plans of the local groups. He said 6,000,000 was the estimate From Radio Programs) -mose “generally mentioned” for the number of unemployed. Describing the employment situa- tion as temporary, he said simila: emergencies in this country occur sc seldom “there is not and probably ought not be permanent organization to cope with it.” Golden Valley Youth Dies of Heart Disease Herbert John Hinsz, 18-year-old Golden Valley farm youth, died here early Sunday, a victim of heart dis- ease. ‘Taken il] about three weeks ago, he had been in Bismarck for the last week undergoing medical treatment. Funeral services will be held Thurs- day at 2 p. m. from the German Lu- theran church at Golden Valley. In- terment will be in the Golden Valles cemetery. Hinsz leaves his parents, Mr. and Rudolph Hinsz, @ brother Emil, tion when he won the state “title’ at @ local contest and two sisters, Edna and Ella, all of whom live at the farm home. Fl

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