The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 8, 1932, Page 1

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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 fi HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday; slightly warmer tonight, cooler Saturday. Powers Solve War Debt Ta erican Airmen Fo Missin BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS Am ngle und in Russia |REPARATIONS PACT wa be eo e e . . } 8 ! ————_—_—__—______—__¢ “ae Wins Senate Prima il Ki CONTROLS FAIL 10)-_Wit He Rm? "| Relief Compromise “A, [Oil King Ts 93’ rl ‘ —-—- P : j 3 WORK PROPERLY AND | Spurned by Garner DIFFERIN APPROACH France and Germany Settle Dis TWO CR | FOR VOTERS’ RAVOR agreement; Teutons to ASH IN BOG | Senate Democrats Ask Speaker] AR BUBBLES GIVE Pay $750,000,000 ia isha OLD SITUATION IS ENDED Landing is Made Near Borisov Money Measure HOPE FOR MEN IN ‘Don’t Rock Boat’ Is Republican on Polish-Russian Borders | Plea; ‘Let’s do Something’ Preamble to Pact Says New Era Plane Wrecked FINAL ACTION IS DELAYED Say Democrats sbi Based on Reciprocal Con- FLIERS ESCAPE INJURY Party Lines Break in House G. 0. P. APPEALS TO EAST fidence Has Begun < > | Which Approved Bill Over Salvage Vessels Find Telephone Li rat . 2 Lausanne, Switzerland, July 8—(®) Suffer Only. 5! ight erases. Hoover Protest Buoy, But Are Unable to Rivals to Seek Votes in West; —Europe put an end to World War Landing; Continue to Mos- - Talk With Men in Ship Roosevelt Plans Trip to which calls pete world to rally cow by Train Washington, July 8.—()—Speaker California to the cause of peace. * Garner and senate Democrats reached| Cherbourg, France, July 8.—()}— diaere hese eee to a close | Moscow, July 8—(/?)—James Mat- ino agreement at a conference Friday Salvage vessels hovering above the = rai teens parations and war debts con- ' tern and Bennett Griffin, American jon the $2,100,000,000 unemployment Reante Hon THna oe LAM toed Washington, July 8—(P)—What- JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER on. all’ points: between Panes apt | Swe ‘THubsiay hear Bolle Sima SENATOR BORAH tito itll bubbles on the surface Friday after- A Ge an Mose SE Cag Eh Be aia fiemans. for whom compromise was Same ene Bed ptcsadl died Senator William Borah, veteran! A committee of senate Democrats! noon, TROT TE Fe (decisive days to come, the presiden- the most difficult. Tass Agency said Friday, when the|RePublican Progressive, is in the,conferred with Gamer for almost two] They also found the Promethes's; robert’, Rayrolds tatove), ant [tee Hier wares rarepatite eh ea ROCKER ELLER SAYS treaty ald a preamble & ae abe controls of their plane ceased to work limelight just now pending is, tirs| ours to work out an sgreement on|felephene buoy but there the wire | Prohlvitionist, overwhelmed the vet. |tirely different approach, for onee, | ment, “do not claim that the ackome ees _ bai Sicbiiean MinvieA toe 8e te Pronieition perky 6 TILT POPE Be eee oe Sih wabinarine, qth ae tthe 60 Ml alte eds Senator Cam. ,to the affections of the American leet at Lausanne, which will ' ey came down at a peat bog, hav- | 'y to; - sth ts ron Morrison, dry champion, to | voter. s completely put } ing mistaken the lights of Borisov for|Pecome its presidential candidate. viduals should stay in the bill in the |Men aboard, I'v in 245 feet of water.| win ene democratic nomination tor |The Republicans, putting their! ROSP ERITY WILL can by iteelf anpure thay Ott a one « { » Moscom. \He denen, atdent dry and recently |face of opposition from President masaeee deen Need Bent senator In North Carolina. jfaith in a don't-rock-the-boat appeal, which all nations desire.» °* PCM? Neither of the fliers was seriously /COMdemned the submission plank in| Hoover. s 8 bad spot, with treacherous are making their plans on the theory “But they do hope for an assurance hurt, the reports reaching here said,|the G. O. P. platform. | Another conference was planned in| °urrents and an uneven bottom. ‘The ‘that the public, in times of stress, is! that all these aims of such deep Huesiiie: plane Was. Wrebesd and “they | jan effort to decide whether the bill|Prevailing impression ashore was that {inclined to swing toward conservat- significance will be understood ang td aR abandoned the flight. | eee —s ead eben uate ee Wee eee MAY PRESENT MORE lism and try no experiments. | appreciated by all pacific elements tn " 2] Present form or modified. ask. i | ring i { The report said they were forced] |teport, scheduled for Friday in the|authorities did Friday morhing when ibanking on the nation's readiness to| Retired Oil King, 93 Friday, Ex- arduously attained, will be fellowes | a aida, hs, (THUPSMAYi eight jSenate, was postponed until Satur-|the hull was located was to call for reject sprecedents “anti enek "a new| i Belief W by fresh achievements." °° *uewed | MOH utters es EIGER or tae BOR AH WILL ACCEPT |day to allow the Democrats to decide |help from the Italian salvage vessel [pathway out of trouble. | abs crputiiet Ls ee “Under the agreement, Germany's time they had apparently covered | OR Te ena ee \Tt is a matter of dispute among Poisons System |final reparations payment is timed ap more than half the 950 miles between | } ‘Aperoved By House” i | Ea l eit nee I caboliecerao oat) ate gold’ marks Berlin and Moscow. | | ‘The huge bill was approved by the| FRENCH GOVERNMENT | | iarret ed erd MI be te onag Ponds for that Borisov is considerably south of the! 9 house Thursday at the Gohast of TO GIVE ALL DETAILS | eeeines Losier eit ieh Nuptse ai New York, July 8—(#—John D. bara aps be issued at a price of 90 - 5 E ‘S servatives ans rails” in e 0! :] i}, | When re} v's it ale de) air LH preen iy rt Speaker Garner and despite President | Paris, July 8—(P)\—Minister of lRepmoans per Damoethte. De- | Rockefeller, who has lived through} The iene 4 ee Permits. cities. however, a PI "| Hoover's objecti Thirty-fi .|Marine Leygues promised the French Chieftains Admit Pre-: .. i seven major depressions and has e agreement de- was they were drawn out of thelr ' lon. rty-five Re. ie tocar tis raven | Taxpayer Chieftains Admit Pre-| velopments since the Chicago conven- clares that reparations are finally ‘ course by the improperly functioning | Lay Plans For National Cam-/Publicans Beli noe Err eiafes re Tore Vaan wlll be iden: tom phen liminary Moves at Fargo {tions have deepened the belief of|reached the conclusion that worryjended and that a new effort im mn . ‘sing up a = id d ad i vy 7 ” ’ Fy { controls. paign, Subject to Change | 187 vote for the eure concerning the loss of the submarine ; | maybe! in the ee @ division |poisons the system, was 93 years old Leo lerapiag nations is commenced on { Minsk is near the Polish-Russian ‘ Then it went to the senate. Many|Promethee Thursday. Meeting y Baltes Goeervalied Friday. He says: ae is of reciprocal confidence. i border. if Senator Runs Democrats there, dissatis{i »| The minister's statement was made PPE Eel oh Sey ! 7 ? “Prosperity has always returned nouncement that an accord had It was evident they would not con- Garter lites ot letting roegedbities Lad after reports to the Havas News! fareo, N. D. July 8—North Da- Pye prereye of Heater Jette SSeS been reached was made while Premier tinue the flight. for with the plane — \ thor een lt hed 1 sing 13 = Seis Se Gs SR el mith and his principal support-|and w Herriot of France was holding a final g ; bg ‘tion corporation lend gency reached here saying the posi-) kota may vote on more initiated tax- | ; vativi % * 5 » Ntecked and the flight already mote! sigisnanotis, July 8UP—Leaders!sceminnn ne abated hee Dean see Sion Of the aubiaariniovwas Ieeated end er measures in the general elec. (CTS i the usually conservative east-| At his 8,000-acre estate at Tarry- conference with Prime Minister Ram- “ * than 24 hours behind the record of ¢ pol july 8.1 th y rr : nie ee that it was lying in about 245 feet of ae seatngatey ern centers announced they will SUP | tour Rockefeller assiduously applied |S2’ MacDonald of Great Britain in 4 ey we it eir vice % © ,;Port Gov. Roosevelt. How many of 4 ivi the latt a Post and Gatty the prospect of beat-|0f the Prohibition party formulated they would go along w water, Followin; meeting of four of the |” 4 s¢ himself to the business of living to be |the latter's chamber. wiped out. The news that they had landed served to quell the fears for their safety which had arisen here. When the second 24 hours after their take- off from Berlin began Thursday night and approached the 36-hour! date. mark without word Friday, even those who kept in mind the slowness of communication in some of the areas|/house of representatives as a Demo- | veto soon that they worked on a sub- they might have landed in began to doubt. The bureau of aviation had con- and vice president—plans subject to change if the national dry organiza- tions succeed in persuading. Senator William E. Borah or another ou‘- standing figure to become a candi- a William D. Upshaw of Georgia, who |served four terms in the nationa! crat, was nominated for the presi- idency at the Prohibition party's con- vention which ended Thursday. Frank said, “for the public has a right to know.” The French navy. refusing to give Up hope that the-66- men who went down with its new submarine were alive, decided to call for help upon |Italian divers whose doggedness re- cently was successful in recovering golden treasure from the sea, Officials of the Maritime Prefec- jture said they were still unable t jform any definite opinion as to th cause of the sudden sinking. {to tangle the measure in another ;Parliamentary snarl that would fur- ither delay adjournment, had decided jto let the measure go to the white jhouse without any particular cam- {paigning against senate passage. H Work on Substitute So certain were some of Hoover's ‘stitute. This, like the Garner-Wagner bill, they expected, would include $300,000,000 for emergency loans to of the North Dakota Taxpayers as- sociation here, it was said that new initiative proposals were considered. | No definite action will be taken, how- jever, until a meeting of the full board is arranged. will do likewise remains conjectural. Roosevelt's friends believe he will jive his major attention to the Re- ‘publican west, traveling all the way \to California to attend the Olympic |Sames and to speak and confer en} route. | Conversely, the Republicans are | icone 4 | preparing to strike first at the east. | tion in salaries of state officials. A Secretary Ogden Mills, a New York-| jsimilar bill for the primary election | i ’ t y er, will open the campaign next Mon- fell by the wayside when the state! Gay" nicht, speaking at Boston. In upreme court held it invalid because ‘the west, S aotnerNrrsoi |* it had no enacting clause. |the west, Senator Norris has gone A measure likely to be initiated is! one providing for a 20 per cent reduc- he gave up, 21 years ago, control of about seven-eighths of the oil indus- try of the country. j. During the last year, noticing his visitors from the outside world have been preoccupied with the outlook, Rockefeller's favorite hymn has be- come: “Be Ye Not Dismayed. What- ever May Betide.” The retired oil king's annual birth- affirm my belief in the fundamental principles upon which this country day statement said “I desire to re-| the accord will be made Jate Priday. ‘War Guilt’ Not Mentioned ;. The “war guilt” controversy which jis so irritating to Germany is not mentioned nor is the Versailles treaty named, but the agreement implies that the post-war reparations chap- jter is relegated to history. !_A resolution asking the United jStates to attend a world economic | conference, where the Lausanne con- ;vention would be woven into “a uni- versal accord” was expected to be sidered the possibility of sending ou:/S. Regan of Rockford, Ill., became tie an aerial searching party to try taj vice Presidential nominee. locate the fliers but it decided it was; Both agreed to withdraw if there useless to do so until there was som:/should be an alignment of dry groups means of locating more definitely|to form a large third party. Upshaa where they might have come down. jtelegraphed Borah, “our leaders de- : voutly hope you will accept nomina- {tion of forthcoming nation-wide ARDS |gathering of the mbral forces of the country. If you do accept, my nom- OCOURTR 0 nation will be gladly laid at your states and $132,000,000 for highway | construction. | There was no unanimous agreement. jas yet, however, on these or on the ibiggest end of the Garner - Wagner jbill; the provision adding $1,500,009,- 000 to the reconstruction corporation j besides the $300,000,000 for state loans. | Many Republicans and Democrats ex-! Pected too. to discard the $190,000,000 the present measure would include for Public construction. Commander Du Mesnil said he was {not able to explain the accident. Leaky oil tanks and possibly poor jfunctioning of the submarine’s ex- hausts or a maladroit maneuver by jone of the civilians aboard were given unofficially as probable causes of the submarine’s sudden dive. | adopted Saturday. | If such a bill is passed in Novem-| completely over to the Democratic ber, it’ will present. problem. jticket; Senator Johnson and others ' the officers affected had been elects 2° : anos the co DmnaHon of ed, though it would go into operation |sooq things ‘about’ Iiis ‘Denney pes anrenre pe ae time such! cpponent. The Seattle Times, an in- lelective officials may not be changed |°°P Neth Aes ROHL a |dlpinguthe (oarseels peas tinh auanror! | which left the fold in 1896 to support. | during the pe: Bryan, has come out for Roosevelt. ficials are elected. The question of How the prohibition issue will fit ° 12 Low Bidders Given whether the salary cut would affect’ into the picture cannot be forecast ithe new officers would arise. luntil the current series of dry meet- Printing Contracts; Some idea as to the probable initia-; ings has been concluded. itive program considered by the tax-! Dry Folk Displeased | Payers directors may be gleaned from} 4s expected, the prohibition party a study of recommendations made at|convention at Indianapolis found the recent annual meetin; has been founded—liberty, unselfish | (The Ui oy nited States government re- devotion: ie the common geod and be- | ontiy announced tte willingness to at- f . : i. | tend a world economic conference, but ‘AS & aus docking peoualy _ our|vetoed several plans which would past where it has been noble, and rec-| nave linked that conference with the ognizing with humility our mistakes Lausanne meeting.) of extravagance, selfishness and in- Chancellor Franz Von Papen of Allference, Jeb ts, with’ faith, in God Germany cleared. the way for beaks in ourselves and in humanity, go for- ing the deadlock with France Thurs- ward, courageously resolved to play] qay, night by giving up Germany's in- our part Worthily in bulding a better istence on eliminating the effect of world.” : secti iNles The birthday plans include a drive core guilt section of the Versailles ee ane ian temeic’| _ The concession ‘by Germany-on tive poets ven the seatate) And BIChOAY | ac cuilt demand. had been tierce dinner for members of the immediat2 pee netso ela feet.” The national prohibition board of! Passage of the Garner-Wagner bill! strategy and the national conference |by the house Thursday ended heated | jof organizations supporting the|debate arraigning speaker and presi- jeighteenth amendment, will meet atident for their positions Represent- Washington next week. Four North Dakota firms awarded printing contracts by the ;State publication and printing com- were Prohibitiow |ative Rainey of Illinois. the majority ~ / \of the husband of Aimee Semple Mc- AS LOVE SUIT ENDS Judge Hearing Heart-Balm Ac- tion Gets Message Threat- ening Bloodshed Los Angeles, July 8.—(4)—Addition- 81 deputy sheriffs were ordered Fri- day to guard the courtroom where Myrtle Joan St. Pierre's $200,000 breach of promise suit against David Hutton is nearing: an end. Superior Judge Lester Roth asked for the guard after finding a threat- ening letter in his chambers. He said the letter, printed roughly in pencil and having suspended from one cor- ner a bullet, demanded he instruct the jury to return a verdict in favor Pherson, evangelist. The note read: “Dear Judge, please see the jury gets instructions for a Hutton verdict. If you don’t through no fault of ours, that black-mailing schemer gets one of these. You save bloodshed if you follow instructions.” * With testimony completed, argu- ments in the case were to be made Friday and the case was exepected to reach the jury by Saturday. Miss St. Pierre became hysterical when she testified in rebuttal Thurs- day in an attempt to show Hutton betrayed her under promise of mar- riage before he married the evangel- ist. z “My character is being ruined!" shouted Miss St. Pierre. “Please give me a chance to tell the real situa- tion.” Not all the events connected with the trial were centered in the court- room. In the corridors of the court- house, there was a disturbance be- tween Roy Watkins, Hutton’s private investigator, and one of a number of women claiming to be associated with Angelus Temple, of which Mrs. Hut- ton 1s pastor. The women. who recently presented Miss St. Pierre with a basket of flow- ers, sought entrance to the court- recom and were blocked by Watkins. One of the group, Mrs. Orma Law- rence screamed, “He says I don’t be- long to Angelus Temple, just because I gave Miss St. Pierre flowers and be-| yn, lieve her instead of Dave!” Watkins was ordered by the court party leaders have expresed belief the Idaho senator will enter the presi. dential race if he is assured unified dry support, a belief contrary to thot of his friends in Washington. ° | | Female Track Star | '| Rejects Citizenship Cleveland, July 8.—(?)—Stella Walsh, fastest of feminine track stars, Thursday declined to accept naturalization as a citizen of the United States and may run under the colors of her native Poland in the coming Olympic games. If she clings to her decision, the United States has lost virtually certain points in the women’s dashes. Miss Walsh announced her plans when she appeared in fed- eral court Friday for a special hearing at which she was to have been granted her citizenship pa- pers. She exhibited a cablegram from Poland. written in Polish, which she refused to translate but she said it contained information which “might affect my entire future life.” Say No Ransom Paid To St. Paul Kidnapers St. Paul, July 8—(#)—No ransom was paid for the freedom of Haskell Bohn, his father said. ” Mak'1g his announcement after a conference wi‘: police, the wealthy parent, G. C, Bohn, said he believed kidnapers released the boy Wednes- day night without payment “because they became frightened.” The youth, 20, was abducted near his home a week ago by two men who left a note demanding $35,000. Later, in ° telephonic conversation, the fam-/ ily was told $5,000 would be satisfac- tory: i Oc elder Bohn saic he doubted his son could identify positively any of the three or four men he said held him captive in a basement on the outskirts of Minneapolis. Earlier M. F. Kinkead, county at- torney, said young Bohn assured him e could. ¢ | | ? STORMS KILL TWO clerk not to attempt to keep the women from the court room. Mrs, Hutton, recuperating from an illness, denied rumors she and Hut- ton, a choir singer. in her temple, had reached @ parting of the ways.) y Cleveland, July 8.—)—Tornadic winds, lightning and heavy rainfall, which swept over parts of Ohio and: mission late Thursday for work to be done during the 1:33-34 biennium. First class printing was let to the Quick Print, Inc., Bismarck, for pub- lication of legislative bills; second! class to the Bismarck Tribune Co., for} publication of.the legislative journals; | third class to the Knight Printing Co.,! Fargo, for publication of the publicity {pamphlet and miscellaneous booklets; (fourth class to Holt Printing Co.,! Grand Forks, session laws; Fifth class, Bismarck Tribune Co., general state jleader. insisted the president is, “the stubborn man” since he would not yield despite an agreement between {house and senate conferees. including ‘all the participating Republicans {save one — Representative Treadway jf Massachusetts. | Representative Snell of New York, ithe Republican leader. said his party jWwas “opposed to unbalancing the |budget, toward which this entire ses- ;Sion has striven.” Treadway drew the ‘conclusion that Garner “insists on rinting. sticking by a sinking ship in an effort | ™ ‘Al De toate were let to the low-! |to have his own way.” est bidder. | The house roll call on the confer- ence report included: For the bill—Sinclair, North Da- Regent Youth Bound | Over on Theft Count’ Against—Burtness and Hall, North Dakota. North Dakota Woman Is Stricken in Water Shoreham, Minn. July 8&—(P)— Mrs. H. H. Steele, wife of a former North Dakota state senator from New England, N. D., July 8—. Henry Lutz, farm youth residing near! Regent, was bound over to district! court in Hettinger county on a charge | of having stolen about $35 from the cash drawer of the Milwaukee depot! at Regent July 2. Roy Van Dyne, relief agent for the} railroad, at the hearing before Jus- jganization at Devils ig Of the or- Lake. These recommendations included: Road building: Abolishing prop- erty tax for county highways, using funds derived from gas and vehicle tax only. Printing: ot delinquent property tax lists. Elections: Abolishing presidential preference primary. Providing for Gistribution of election supplies by mail, instead of by sheriffs. Counties: Providing for method of consolidating counties, providing for jconsolidation of offices of clerk of court and judge in counties of less than 20,000 population. In view of the fact that petitions must be filed 90 days ahead of the election, the association officials have {only @ limited time in which to pre- pare the draft of their proposed acts, and to circulate the petitions, and obtain the required number of signa- tures, Meeting at the call of G. F. Lamb, Michigan, association president and executive committee chairman, were Harrison Garnett, St. Thomas, vice president; Harold B. Nelson, Rugby, Ward county and a form+r resident of Bismarck, lost her life Thursday in Lake Melissa when she was stricken apparently. with a heart ailment, as she went for a din about 6 p. m. tice G. E. Person, New England, said that Lutz was left alone in the depot! office for a half-hour. Later the loss of the money was discovered. secretary-treasurer, and R. R. Hogue, Linton. Absent were Andrew John- son, Watford City;: P. J. Bottem \Sheyenne, and J. W. Evans, Carson. She had been in the water less than 10 minutes when her body was dis-/ covered floating in the shallow water in front of her cottage by Arthur Peterson, Buffalo, N. D., banker ani @ neighbor in an adjoining cottage. Efforts to revive Mrs. Steele proved futile although artificial respiration: was resorted to and a pulmotor was brought from Detroit Lakes. One daughter, Jean, about 20. was with her mother at the lake wher. death struck. Her husband. H. H. Steele, a former banker at Mohall, 1s in North Dakota traveling on busi- ness. The daughter was prostrate with grief.. Another daughter, Helen, is a‘ Minneapolis where the family has made its: home for the last several years. Chicago, July 8—()—Out of the kingdom of the blind Friday came a story of love and death. It was the old story of the eternal triangle. But it was new because it came from the realm of the sightless. As the Warren Avenue police told it, two blind men — friends because they plied the same pro- fession of begging pennies on the streets—fell in love with the same woman. The woman, Mrs, Richard Rob- erts, blind in one eye, marrieda man who is 57 and who can see very dimly from one eye. He is in jail —accused of killing his totally blind friend, Harry Gruber, 35. Roberts denies the accusation. Gruber died of a fractured skull. Exactly how he died may never be known. but this is the story as it was pieced together by The Stecle family lived at Bis- marck where Mr. Steele was one of the organizers and the first president of ‘the Provident Insurance company Mrs. Steele was one of the leaders it: the social life of the city. . About 10 years ago, the family moved to Minneapolis. Steele was in Bismarck Thursday leaving for Minot in the evening. He| Indiena Thursday, killed two pe-sons, injured more than 20 others, and did heavy damage to property. was finallv located there after efforu: to reach him by phone at Bismarck were unsuccessful. the police after they talked to Mre. Roberts. Two years ago she deserted Strange Story of Love and Death is Provided by Triangle of Blind Folk Roberts for the younger man. Then followed a long period of search by Roberts for the man he blamed for taking his wife. Tapping his way along the pavements, he sought in all quar- ters where he thought he might find them. Last July 4 he suc- ceeded. He found the couple in a lodg- ing house. commanded his wife to She refused. Tuesday Roberts came tapping along again with his eane. His wife saw him go in, she told the police. When he came out he said he had left Gruber “lying in a pool of blood.” Did the sightless men fight it out to the death? The police are not sure. Later on a jury may be called upon to say. Meanwhile Roberts oresses his face against the bars of a cell— seeing practically nothing and de- nying he is a killer. leave. Abolishing publication 4 jboth the Republican submission ;Plank and the Democratic repeal |unsatisfactory. Opinions differ as to ithe effect of the prohibitionists’ deci- sion to nominate a Georgia Demo- crat, William D. Upshaw, for presi- lent. Southern speakers at the Democra- tic convention declared the repeal Proposal would make several southern states doubtful, but other southern- ers denied it. It is possible Upshaw lmay attract dissatisfied Democrats ; who might otherwise go to Hoover. | Far greater interest attaches, how- jever, to the ultimate decision of Sen- \ator Borah, who declined the pro- hibition party nomination with the Suggestion that further dry confer- jences be awaited. Few politicians be- lieve Borah actually will go the jJength of running on an independent j ticket. If he does, a good many of the present calculations as to the prohibition split-up, north, south and west, may have to be revised. |North Dakotan Kills | Himself in Montana Great Falls, Mont., July 8—(P)— ;Hugh A. Foard, 42, who officials be- lieve, has relatives in North Dakota. jshot and killed himself Thursday night in a one-room house where he i lived. Acquaintances said he was unem- ployed. His army discharge showed he enlisted in the medical detachment aa hake army at Langdon, N. D., in {1918. i | WAS SON OF PIONEER PARENTS NEAR WEAVER Weaver, N. D., July 8—(#)—Hugh A. Foard who shot and killed himself at Great Falls, Mont., Thursday nignt is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Foard, pioneer farmers near here. He is survived by his parents, four sisters in Canada, a sister and two brothers at home. Funeral arrangements have not been made. He had been ir Great Falls for about three years. —_—_____________-» * Dempsey Would Like | Fight With Sharkey | * San Francisco, July 8.—(P}— Jack Dempsey says he wants to fight Jack Sharkey world’s . |August 1°, family, with Rockefeller cutting the cake, Beach Woman Dies In Hospital Here Mrs. Anna Hoeck, resident of Beach for the last 19 years, died in a local hospital shortly after 1 o'clock Fri- day morning. Death was caused by cancer, from which she had suffered for the last year and a half. She had been in the hospital since June 15. She was 65 years old. Mrs. Hoeck was born in Germany 1867, and came to this country as a girl with her parents. The Hoecks lived in the vicinity of Dell Rapids, S. D., before moving to Beach. Mr. Hoeck died a few years ago. Suir. Hoeck leaves three sons and three daughters. They are George Hoeck, Theodore Hoeck, Mrs. Ole Thoreson and Mrs. E. A. Ernest, all of Beach; William Hoeck, Colorado Springs, Colo.; and Mrs. E. A. Miller, Jamestown. George, Theodore, and Mrs. Miller were here when their mother died. Funeral services will be conducted from St. Paul's German Lutheran church at Beach with Rev. H. J. Trinklein officiating, and burial will be made in the cemetery at Beach. No time for the last rites had been arranged F ‘iay forenoon. | Makes Appeal for Bedridden Invalid a Who has a wheelchair which they would like to dispose of and, at the same time, aid a bedrid- den woman? ‘This question was addressed to The Tribune Friday by Mrs. Wil- Mam Kehn, Goodrich, who said she is trying to find such a chair for a woman neighbor. She ask- ed that anyone having a wheel chair communicate with her. Whether she was willing to pay for.the chair or how much she did not say. The neighbor is bedridden and @ wheelchair would do much to make her days more pleasant, Mrs. Kehn said. MENTALITY OF CHILDREN _——— heavyweight boxing champion. But the former champion, after expressing the wish for a 15- round title bout, added the time was not ripe for such a fight, with boxing at a low ebb. | search of the Training School at Vineland, N. J., recently reported|caused side roads and that as many as four per cent of|roads to be rough, primary school children are mental-' weekly road condition ly deficient, stubborn obstacle to an agreement. In some quarters the German an- nouncement was interpreted as a complete capitulation by Chancellor Von Papen. In others it was said that, recognizing the firmness of the French refusal to make concessions on war-guilt and other political ques- tions, he had given ground in order to save the conference from failure. HERE ARE BACKGROUND AND HISTORY OF CASE The agreement reached at Lausanne to put an end to reparations by ac- cepting three-quarters of a billion dollars from Germany as final pay- (Continued on page nine) Local Woman’s Horse Places in Minot Race Minot. N. D., July 8.—(#)—Regret, owned by Mrs. C. K. Bryan of Bis- marck, captured second honors in each heat of the 2:14 pacing event in harness races at the Northwest State Fair here Thursday. Otsie, owned and driven by Ray Reeves, won first place. Floyd Hearnley, owned by C. H. Parker of Minot and Harold Traux of Minneapolis and driven by Billy ‘Smith, took the three-year-old pacing event. First money in the 2:18 event went to Allie B. Directmar, second to Anna Wilson, third te High Test, and fourth to Peter Casco. Ohioan Is Clawed to Death by Huge Bear Cleveland, July 8. — (®) — Fifteen minutes after he lost his job as an animal keeper Friday, Thomas Eari, 56, walked into a pen at the Brooksid> Zoo, locked the gate behind and was clawed to death by a 900-pound Rus- sian brown bear. Earl was trying to force the bear, named Sunshine because of an ori:- narily docile disposition, into a pit when the animal in a sudden rage turned on him. ‘superin- Captain Curley Wilson, tendent of the zoo had two keepers kill the bear with revolvers. ‘Wilson revealed that shortly before the tragedy “Earl got kind of smart fired him.” Dr. Edgar A. Doll, director of re-| UNGRAVELED ROADS ROUGH Heavy rain over the last week-end ungray according to od the state highway department Friday.

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