The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1931, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 65, 1931 SAY BABY KILLER HELD IN NEW YORK J Vincent Coll, Known as Leader| of ‘Mob’ Is Accused of Slaying New York, Oct. 5 —(P)— Vincent/ Coll and four members of his gang, arrested in a roundup in Mafihattan,! all have been identified as the gun- men who occupied the automobile from which bullets swept a Harlem street July 28, killing one child and wounding four others, Inspector John J. Sullivan announced Monday. ‘nese prisoners are the baby kill- ers,” Inspector Sullivan said, as the five mounted the brightly lighted platform in the police lineup. “They are responsible for the shoot- ing in East 107th Street. We have information each and every one of them was in the automobile at the time of the killing. Police Are Secretive Police refused to say where they got their information because of dan- ger to the informant. Frank Giordano actually did the shooting, Inspector Sullivan said. Giorando was arrested in an apart- ment Sunday several hours before Coll and Dominick Odierno were captured with two girls in a West & Author Is Dea —(QOUNTY BASKETBALL TOURNAMENTS ARE PLANNED BY BOARD | Consolidated High School League Adopts New System At Minot Meeting Minot, N. D., Oct. 5.—(#)—Inaugur- ation of county basketball tourna- ments to pick contesting teams for district meets, the winners of which would go into a state tournament, was decided upon by the board of control of the Consolidated High ‘School League, meeting in Minot Sat- urday and Sunday. The board, composed of Superin- tendent E. R. Hilde, Van Hook, presi- dent; pila er Osman, Nome, vice president; . K. Cline, ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON Sherwood, secretary-treasurer, in de- Louisville, Ky., Oct. 5.—(#—Mrs, |Ciding to authorize the holding of Annie Fellows Johnston, 68, author,|county tournaments, followed out the died at her home in Pewee Valley,|recommendations made by the con- near here, Monday after an illness of |stitution committee last spring. several months. In each county, Consolidated High A child once underwent a major|School League members will elect a operation without an anaesthetic up-j|set of officers consisting of president, on being promised a set of “Little|vice president and secretary. These Colonel” books, works of Mrs. John- |officers will constitute a county board ston, who wrpte a series of juvenile! which will serve as a connectling link stories. between the state board and local Mrs. Johnston was born in Evans-|teams. The county board will encour- Side hotel. ville, Ind:, May 15, 1863. Her parents/age league membership, act on mat- In raids here and at Averill Park,! were the Rev. and Mrs. Albion Fel- ton of Siigibitity, atid PMS county N. Y., in which 300 policemen ar-liows, After attending the Evansville |tournaments. ticipated, the entire Coll mob—known | public schools she studied at the Uni-| County superintendents throughout to police as a crew of racketeers, mus-| versity of Iowa in 1881-1882. She was the state are to be asked to call the. clemen and rowdies—was captured.) married to William L. Johnston in The gangsters at Averill Park resist-|1888. Her husband died in 1892, leav- ed arrest with firearms but were sub-jing three children, John, Mary, and dued without casualties. Coll, a 23-year-old desperado blamed|one of them, Mary, survived for many crimes but consistently] Johnston. elusive, offered no resistance when detectives surprised him at a hotel first meeting of interested school of- ficials at the earliest convenient time. Values of the new county tourna- frs,|™ment plan, as seen by the board of control, are: - Greater accessibility to tournament PREDSANE centers; permanent boudaries of sub- districts; a permanent county organi- Rena, by a former marriage. Only where he was registered under al1|thusiast, said Monday Clyde Pang-|zation set-up to handle local matters alias. His brown hair had been dyed/born and Hugh Herndon, who suc-/and to cooperate with the state black and he had grown a mustache.{cessfully completed a flight from Ja-|board; better attendance and greater When the formal charge of mur-lpan to Wenatchee, Wash., could “fly| financial returns to teams; and fair- dering five-year-old Michael Ven-lin some other direction”—that they|er competition for small schools of galli last July 28 was read to him at} would not be eligible for the $25,000|any clase. the police station, he denied it. Hc|prize he offered for a Japan-to-Dallas| The board of control set tourna: said he had been out of town alllfignt. summer, returning only Friday. ment dates as follows: “They cabled me from Tokyo ask-| County: February 19 and 20; dis- Police Commissioner Mulrooney,!ing about my offer, while I was at-|trict, February 26 and 27. The state hhowever, said there was no mistake.|tending the American Legion conven-|tournament probably will be held a Witnesses, he said, had identified Coll|tion in Detroiti,” he said, “and I re-|week after the district meets, the Positively as one of the men in the!plied that ‘Texas will pick its own|Place to be selected later. futomobile from which poured bullets |aviators, that we are interested in| A membership schedule of costs al- that raked the “Little Italy” street on’ fights for the advancement of avia-|s0 was drawn by the board as fol- Which children were at play. The|tion not in stunts. I will have to be|lows: Vengalli boy was killed and four of|the judge of the plane and of the| Two dollars if entered before Octo- his playmates were wounded. One of |aviators in such an attempt.” them was tumbled from a baby car- ber 15; four dollars before November 15; six dollars before December 15; riage. The gunfire was meant for a eight dollars before January 15, none man lounging in a doorway. Though later. 60 shots were fired, the man was un- A tournament entry schedule as hurt. Coll had $4,600 in his pocket. Sev- eral other members of his gang each had $1,000 or more in currency. The murder Friday of Joe Mullins— “Dutch” Schultz gangster—and the ‘bombing of a garage a few hours later provided the clue which snared Coll. The number on the license plates of the car used by Mullins’ slayers and on the car used by the garage bombers was obtained. Thus it was discovered the same machine was used in both crimes. M’Donald May Run as adopted is: Two dollars before Jan- LOT OF UNEMPLOYED uary 30; four dollars before February | and vamoose. 15. None later. The envelope post- ae decides the place in the sched- Schools may not plan to take Two years of continued business/liam J. Bryan, was to start out now| buy on time. He has overlooked the|was a good man; all feel, or should success followed, then on Sept. 30,/preaching a larger volume of money,|fact that we have exhausted our| feel, 1927, the banker became ambassador;some of these poor deluded creat-| security as well as our money. to Mexico, first resigning his ‘part-/ures—like those who fought him then nership in the Morgan concern. He left: Mexico Sept. 17, 1930. After a brief rest, Morrow plunged into the senatorial election campaign in New Jersey. He had been selected for the republican nomination months before at a primary which’ saw him roll up @ plurality of more | than . 400,000 votes over two oppon- ents, the big victory being attributed mainly to his stand against continu- ation of the prohibition experiment in the United States. : Foe of Prohibition In that pronouncement he sdvo- cated repeal of the 18th amendment. He also proposed that control of the liquor business should be entrusted’ to the individual states. The popular response to this platform had im- mediate repercussions in all parts of the country, and was so overwhelm- ing that it aroused hopes abroad of an early return of America to the world’s liquor market list. Morrow's election in Nov. 1390, en- titled him to add the description, “statesman” to the list of “lawyer, banker, diplomat” which had epitom- ized his earlier be sgh by! & majority of nearly 5 a democratic year and again focussed probable, presidential timber," whish lent , had started after his primary suc- vess, was revived, but he never took it seriously. Elizabeth, Anne, enki a = Constance were born to Mr. ai Morrow. Anne is the wife of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh. People’s Forum te—The Tribune wel- m lotters on subjects of "in- it. Letters Cd with eon- troversial religious subjects, which fairly, or weer cfond, ee taste ‘and fair which ies S returned to the ‘MUST be signed. to use a pseudonym, donym first and your h it. We will re- ts, We r) ma: conform 7 be nec to this pol WANTS MORE MONEY Steele, N. D., Sept. 29, 1931. ‘We are constantly confronted with the statement that there is on de- posit in the banks of the United States, from 38 to 52 billions of dol- lars and that, of course, demon- strates beyond doubt that there is no words, 80 much money in the banks, should dispell any and all hallucina- tions about being hungry or cold. all-gone feeling in the pit of the stomach and goose-flesh from cold will immediately disappear, vanish, and especially the one that would go] Plano grain bi abroad. I may be poorly constituted] bought, the writer was informed by and not well equipped in my up-jone who knew that it cost $37.75 to per story, but if I am touchy about;make a Deering grain binder, all one about the locality of my dollar when} At that time this binder cost at re- I want it. ae rg woe tail, $125. with it like I am with my 4 en herman Retained I call him I would much prefer that Sarin sad ‘Now bear in mind this was before he come up gently wagging his tail than to hear that he had just gone| the day, of the great efficlency of the to Europe. vagwaboagonl Labor, A very intelligent gentleman who] put I do leve writes for the Saturday Evening Post| difference in the price of thee wrote an article last week in which| material that went into he practically said that all we can/tion of the machine; so that I be- do to help business along is to believe, taking into consideration the more exacting in our tastes in dif-| tact that the International ferent designs and models. In other! company has so much better eq words, not to use the same auto too| ment for making such machines long, but to buy oftener; and then/that it can make them so mi he went on to decry overproduction | cheaper now than then. I do not in all lines and wondered why it was!iieve it costs them any more that, while the banks were fairly/to make a binder than it did groaning from fullness, the manu- Despite facturers had on hand two-thirds of) quired their output. binder. and Would you believe that, simple as|fact some are asking that the com- is the writer, he can see through that/ing congress repeal the problem. There is so little real money | antl: it in the country—most of it being over in Europe blessed gold standard—and the prices of all manufactured goods so high,|of these combines, for the courts that by the time the consumer has| usually find it is necessary for great- bought one-third of the manufac-|er efficiency that the combine be tured goods he is out of money and| made. the manufacturer has all the money| God forbid that the day will ever: Phone 179 and two-thirds of his goods. Yet he|come when we are at the mercy of is so dense th:t he wonders why he|such a bunch of land pirates. All has no more customers. Isn’t that|mankind is possessed of so much sel- easy? Could the blind man, though/fishness that no man, or body of & fool, make any greater mistake?|men, can be trusted with the power. But, says the manufacturer, you can|that a monopoly confers, My father reer Hoover Committee Sifts Sug- gestions For Meeting Problem in Nation ‘Washington, Oct. 5—(#)—Ways best to soften winter's blows on jobless and homeless Americans formed Monday's, special problem of President Hoov- Independent Laborite| ers reuet organization. A committee headed by Fred that Prime Minister Ramsay Mac-|how to administer relief which have Donald would campaign as an inde-| deluged headquarters since Walter 8. pendent labor candidate from his|Gifford was named to cope with un- Present constituency dominated dis-|employment difficulties. cussion Monday of the impending general election. Outstanding among proposals was the farm board’s offer to release Two branches of the Seaham har-| from its huge holdings all the wheat bor labor party—Murton miners’|and cotton needed to feed and clothe Lodge and Murton—have decided to|the needy. Cash at market prices or re-nominate Mr. MacDonald from deferred payments were decreed ac-| to that division, accepting the prime|ceptable terms from relief agencies. minister's offer to run if invited and Next, the millers’ national federa- challenging the local executive's in-| tion volunteered to id such wheat tention to support another candidate. | at cost. Lia Sir John Simon, new convert to free trade, widened the breach in the ‘Though the president’s organiza- tion handles no funds and does not) Uberal party over the week-end by| dispense relief directly, it 1s support- issuing a manifesto which said his group in parliament, numbering about 25 members, was forming a new or- ganization to support the prime min- ister on any basis. It was understood he would head ® new party to be known probably as “the national liberals’ party” and would start active campaigning in a few days. Montero Is Elected ing and co-ordinating national ag- encies which do. From the United States Chamber of Commerce came assurances that “funds for adequate care of all such cases of distress will be forthgom- ing.” This business organization had. just submitted for approval of its na- tion-wide membership a committee report on means of business and employment stability. Senator Robert M. La Follette of day, that congress would make some President of Chile] ey wnat congas nt be sald, Sun- Santiago, Chile, Oct. 5—(?)}—Juan Esteban Montero, middle-aged new- comer to politics, succeeded Monday ‘to the presidency of Chile in an elec- tion attended by disorders and mark- ed by at least five deaths. Montero decisively defeated his radical opponent, Arturo Alessandri, receiving 183,428 votes to Alessandri’s 100,000. This was a plurality of ap- proximately 64 per cent. To be elect- ed, @ candidate must receive at last 60 per cent of the votes. Official figures showed that five Persons were killed in yesterday's election disorders, all in Santiago. Unofficial reports said at least 10 lost their lives. Sixty persons were injured in countrywide rioting, and @pproximately 300 arrests were made. Pangborn-Herndon Complete Air Trip Over Perilous Sea (Continued from page one) Pass 10:55 a. m.,” said a message broadcast by the St. Paul Island naval radio station. “Plane not sighted due heavy fog, but sound of motor indicated on right course.” Pangborn and Herndon said they would fly to Dallas, Texas, nonstop from here, to win an additional $25,- 000 prize which they said is offered by a wealthy Texan for the first. flight from Japan to that city with only one stop en route. Need Sleep Badly Pangborn and Herndon went di-, rectly from the field to a hotel for a| much needed sleep. | They said the fact their barograph was not functioning was one reason | provision for federal unemployment, relief at its next session. “Opposition to the federal relief,” he said, “on the grounds that it con- stitutes the dole does not alter the situation, The fact is that millions, willing to work, can not find jobs. County and municipal treasuries are now carrying more of a load than they can bear.” ©. London, Oct. 5.—()—The possibility | Croxton sifted the suggestions on; Bottomley, on a high bounder down/ month by asking for it—they comes in both the consolidated high school | have extorted their wealth from the league tournaments and the state/ oppressed or have inherited it, for high school tourneys, under the board| we know but few of them ever earned of control’s ruling. Grimes Holds A’s .. If anyone To Two Lone Hits guired in writing to the secretary of In Scoring Victory|p"c\ ani asting for © copy of stat gi i oni obtain it by eimply asking f (Continued from page one) may, too, have it aent to Pt i Ath first base line. Cochrane grounded|that all of the money ever out, Gelbert to Bottomley. Simmons] coined, or printed since grounded out, Gelbert to Bottomley|_ medium of exchange and it was the seventh hitless inning} will not amount to nine for the world champions. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left, Eighth I hi inning Cardinals—Dykes speared Hafey’s line drive with a sensational diving catch. Martin grounded out, Foxx. Wilson bunted down third base line for a hit. He the Athletics’ flat footed was no attempt to throw to Gelbert singled to left, Wilson Ping at second. Grimes got a big as he came to the plate. Grimes the out to Simmons. No runs, two no errors, two left. ‘were, Athletics—Foxx walked for the hae ond time in a row. Miller singled center field, Foxx holding second. crowd roared as the champions their first hit. As Dykes came Grimes and Wilson conferred box with Captain Frisch. eee ctrig ‘Wilson. Stark argued about dirtying ball. A new one was thrown in. Simmons came out to give Dykes his orders. Dykes popped to Flow: ers. ‘Williams flied out to Hafey. Roger Cramer batted for Grove. Frisch made a spectacular catch of Cramer's short drive, falling back- ward as he grabbed the ball. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left. Ninth Inning Cardinals—Mahaffey went to the box in place of Grove. Flowers walk- ed. Roettger bunted to Mahaffey and Flowers was forced at second Mahaf- 7 z aE i cite ine itr ¢ i EER : eerie tei e fe fa ; et Ae bast Bagi i efighy uu geet ig ageeegeed i EF BS g& Hu zak Fj [ 3 i Eo a5 88 Fa HEe EEE FY elt rerecEitds an eed E aus ref a pete a*- BSEs i etal E Bismarck Man and fey to Williams. Roettger was re- Berlin Woman i ef o i : i £ é i Killed in Mishaps|f",uue “°° st (Continued from page one) ficials regarding the Mooreton acci- dent, Bernard Seigel, of Zell, 8. D., said that there were lights on his truck and that he believed Thorne| **. Hoover had been blinded by lights of a car he was meeting as the Thorne car crashed into the truck. | Legion’s Ghanian: | i they did not continue in an attempt} | to break the Boardman-Polando dis- | tance record. i The fliers said they would need a new landing gear and a new propeller before they can continue to Texas. They expected it would be about 10 save before they would be able to| eave. ‘TEXAS MILIAONAIRE BACKS UP ON OFFER Dallas, Tex., Oct. 5.—(4#—Col. W. E. Easterwood, Jr, Dallas aviation en-| Associated Press Phozo The R Fr. H, A, Darache of | Watkins scored on Bottomley’s double | spe; all \Dwight W. Mor- A e H i : g iy : ‘Watkins went to second on the play. | dofiars, ge EF g3 ge age 7 B against the score board in right cen- ter, Hafey flied to Simmons. Balen One run, one hit, no errors, one | cg, Athletics—Bishop grounded out t0/one word is said about making those Bottomley, unassisted. Haas ground-| who have extorted all the money and ed out, Gelbert to Bottomley. Grimes securities of this country disgorge one deflected the drive to Gelbert and ap-| cent of that. said Ne jParently his hand was hurt as the! about having the congress enact laws Cardinals gathered around him for) for creating a larger volume of the an inspection of the damage. Frisch | circulating medium, as was done in worked on the pitcher's fingers and/the days of the Civil war, and put- Burleigh went back to the box. Coch-/ting it in circulation in a way rane walked. Cochrane was re-/it could not be retired. only as the placed by a pinch runner, MCcNair.| people themselves saw fit to lay i! Simmons hit a home run over the/ away for a wet day. ‘right fleld wall, scoring McNair ahead Raps ‘Gold-Gods’ im. Foxx fanned. Two runs, one hit,! No, of all the comments on the 10 errors, none left. present depression, as they ii the bottom of this trouble and, at roy a ‘ood the same time, antagonize the gold (Continued from page one) God knows that we them that he was worth $60 a shonth| have some who will never go to con- to start. Six years later he was aj gress—even he could tell you that member and nine years after that in|the cause of our recent drouth was 1914, he transferred his allegiance to/a lack of water; and yet he would reason he could not buy enough to eat or wear was that he did not have It was President Coolidge’s knowl-| any money. No, sir. If you ask some edge of Morrow's talents as a concil-/of that type why these hard times, iator that prompted him to appoint|they will say it is overproduction; the banker in 19125 as chairman of|that people are starving because they the board which studied the dispute| have too much to eat. and will freeze Bradley, U1. wi lected national chaplain of the American Legion at its Detroit convention, over airplane defense between Gen-|this winter because they are eral William, Mitchell and high army| warm with extra clothes. And officials. = some conscientious fellow like Wil: more than another it isjready for the farmer to hitch to. oul we E Ct 2 ae Begs’ Money Is in Europe then I will guess. Despit Fi if we trying to establish the LaMatanheed combines? This la as “Red Line” Standard Form Legal Blanks The Most Complete and Up-to-date Send for the New 1931 Legal Blank Catalogue—Just Out This new catalog contains a revised list of “Red Line” legal blanks, comprehen- sively arranged in two different forms for the convenience of our customers. For thirty years The Bismarck Tribune’s “Red Line” series of blanks has been recog- nized as standard. Every blank put out under our trade-marks has been carefully examined and passed on by the best legal talent of North Dakota. New forms will be added and old ones discarded from time to time as the passing or repealing of laws make necessary. Special forms will be designed and printed for attorneys, con- veyors, abstractors, real estate men and others, when desired. Orders for single blanks, dozens or several dozens will be promptly filled, carefully packed and sent by mail or express. The prices in this catalog are per dozen, except where otherwise specified. Prices on larger quantities cheerfully given. Order by number. USE: THE COUPON BELOW The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. Dak. Gentlemen ‘- Kindly send me by return mail your latest legal blank catalogue. PLEASE WRITE PLAINLY TO AVOID MISTAKES The Bismarck Tribune Co. Publishers of North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper PRINTERS, STATIONERS AND Dee IN ART METAL STEEL OFFICE IPMENT MAKES IT NICE FOR COACH For the first time in several years It we must get along with @ per capita] ing today and owned all the coal in|Coach will not be handicapped th:: —with so many patches on their] of $36, then let the manufacturer) this clothes that one could not tell what/and jobber put his prices down to/be well taken care of, but God pity color the original cloth was—would| where we can buy all the yéar around] the oth go out and work overtime, yelling| for that $36. their heads off for good honest} In 1903, long before the Interna- money, and the gold standard and, above all else, a dollar that would go! abroad. Well, I guess they got it,] Deering, McCormick, Milwaukee and/ protection facilities in the Olympic] Cancer took the inders wi 100, fall by the fact that most of his vet- Don’t Let it Endanger Your Home Melville Electric Shop 406%, Broadway seoccee, LOBL \ A Ye x | | | |

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