The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1932, Page 3

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es. arent i | ry THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1982 FARMER CONTINUES TO DENY HS GUILT Henry Frazon En Route to Bis- marck to Serve Life Term For Murder Minot, N. D., Oct. 6—()—“r'll live until I die, so what's the use of worrying?” That's what Henry Frazon, 47-year- old Burke county farmer, thinks about. the life sentence to prison imposed upon him Wednesday by District Judge John C. Lowe at Bowbells. The sentence was imposed after a jury had found Frazon guilty of the first-degree murder of George Keup, mayor of ard and former banker, Sept. Frazon, his eyes still a bit red from Weeping after the jury pronounced him guilty, but his spirits rising, was brought to the Ward county jail in Minot Wednesday night and Thurs- day he was to be taken to the state Penitentiary at Bismarck. Strangely, Frazon says that the re- volver offered in the murder trial as the weapon thought to have been used to kill Keup, looks like a revol- ver which he had until a few months ago, and which he says he lost after taking it to Columbus one day sev- eral weeks ago to obtain some shells for it. He talks freely of business difficul- ties he had had with Keup, and in- dicates he was bitter over their out- come; he says he was in Keup's of- fice a short time before Keup was found shot, but denies he ever had any intention of harming Keup or that he shot him. Frazon sniffs contemptuously at any suggestion he might have been insane and slain Keup. “I had a toothache and headache in Columbus that day, but I remem- ber everything that happened,” says Frazon. CERTIFICATE IS GRANTED A certificate to operate motor freight service between Elbowoods and Garrison has been granted the Elbowoods freight line by the state railroad commission. Charles Blo¢k- er, Elbowoods, is operator of the line. WE OFFER A *GENUI | Report Shooting in Mine Strike District Kincaid, Ill, Oct. 6—()—Christian county emerged Thursday as the Scene of the latest violence in the Illinois coal miners’ wage war as au- thorities investigated the reported fir- ing of several shots on national guardsmen patrolling mine \areas re, Capt. Carl Meacham, in charge of troops in the county, refused to deny or verify the firing of shots but citi- zens said several shots were fired on the guardsmen Wednesday night. No one was injured, reports said. The Sheriff's office at nearby Taylorville refused to make-a statement. The firing was reported shortly af- ter parents of striking high school students concluded a meeting to dis- cuss the possible return of their chil- dren to school. The students walked out of classes Monday to protest the Purchase of coAl by the school board from the Langleville mines, operat- ing under the $5 basic wage scale ap- Proved by the United Mine Workers union. Strikers oppose the new scale supplanting the $6.10 basic wage ter- minated last March, Tension increased in Fulton county. Authorities said they had evidence of a Plot to terrorize working miners and additional troops were rushed to the city of Canton Wednesday night. ARCHBISHOP CROSSES BORDER Laredo, Texas, Oct. 6.—()—An exile from his native land for the second time, Archbishop Leopoldo Ruiz ¥ Flores, aged Catholic prelate, crossed the international boundary into the United States early Thursday. The Papal delegate was expelled from Mexico by order of President Abelardo Rodriguez as a “pernicious foreigner” {as an outgrowth of his comments on jthe recent enclyclical by Pope Pius XI which discussed the situation of the church in Mexico. APPEALS TO R. F. C. St. Paul, Oct. 6—()—Advised by the regional Agricultural Credit Cor- Poration that it has no authority to grant loans to cooperative marketing organizations, R. A. Trovatten, state commissioner of agriculture, appealed Thursday to the Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation for financial aid to Minnesota potato growers.’ CAPITOL —== THEATRE ==—. This Program 25c until 7:30 LAST TIME TONIGHT r SUPER POWER (Two Cylinders Instead ef One) AND MA GREATER FOOD SPACE in the same sized cabinet Soronly DELIVERED, INSTALLED AND FEDERAL TAX PAID * WARNING—This is the genuine, Super-Powered, two- cylinder Frigidaire—a luct of General Motors. It gives the same fast freezing, lower oper- ating cost, and dependability— plus 4 greater food space. You are cautioned against ac- cepting a cheap, underpow- ered or poorly constructed refrigerator under the impres- sion you are getting a genuine Frigidaire. Such a refrigerator is expensive at any price. The standards of Frigidaire have not been lowered to make the new price possible. Look for thé Frigidaire name-plate—found only on the gensine Frigidaire. DAHNERS-TAVIS MUSIC CO. Bismarck - Mandan Frigidaire Dealers Everywhere The Original Ice Cream vor. You are bound to be pleased. Thorberg’s Finney’s Sweet Shop Corner Grocery Owens Grocery Broadway Food Store 2-893 30c Qt. Home Made With the “Home Made” fla- ZaSu Pres Lucien Littlefield Clara Blandick e A modem-eyed view of a girl's moral struggle to be as good as she Tomorrow and Saturday RICHARD DIX in “HELL’S HIGHWAY” | PAIN DEADENED CHEST COLDS LOOSENED WITHOUT DRUGS Tt doesn’t blister or stain. ‘ati ie sinks Dain, Blenty of ip ot Freaks up se 6 eae Sree “sdeaten” pain or loosen ® te dees gp {eee copes nat ah are imi- is why are ‘That gate hitr er antec ashe NYE HAS SCHEDULE | OF 45 ADDRESSES Making Trip Around State in Seeking Reelection to U.* S. Senate A schedule of 45 speeches in his campaign for reelection will occupy U. S, Senator Gerald P. Nye up to the Nov. 8 election. The senator opened his campaign at Wahpeton Tuesday night and spoke at Gackle and Linton the fol- lowing day. He was scheduled for an <a address at Selfridge Thurs- lay. For the week beginning Oct. 12 he will go to Minnesota to speak for Floyd B. Olson, who seeks reelection as governor on the Farmer-Labor ticket. The senator's North Dakota speak- ing schedule, which ends at Fargo the night of Nov. 7, follows, with the first city listed a 2 p. m. address and the second an 8 p. m. speech: Oct. 7—Mott and Hettinger. Oct. 8—Amidon and Beach, 10—Dickinson 8 p. m. 11—Dunn Center and Hebron. 18—Bismarck 8 p, m. 19—McClusky and Garrison. 20—Ryder and Parshall. 21.—Watford City and Willis- 22—Crosby and Kenmare. 24—Stanley and Minot. 25—Lansford and Towner. » 26—Rolette and Bottineau. , 27—Rugby and Harvey. » 28—Carrington and New Rock. Oct. 29—Cavalier and Park River. Oct. 31—Cando and Devils Lake. Nov. 1—Langdon and Pembina. Nov. 2—Grafton and Grand Forks. Nov. 3—Larimore and Hope. Nov. 4—Hillsboro and Jamestown. Nov. 5—Enderlin and Valley City. Nov. 7—Fargo 8 p. m. Public Is Invited to Attend Band Concert Preparations were complete Thurs- day for the band concert Friday night at the city auditorium which will be a preliminary to the capitol cornerstone laying Saturday. The concert will be given by the 164th regimental band, crack outfit of the North Dakota National Guard from Lisbon, and will begin at 8 p. m. Admission is free to the public and all are invited to attend. The pro- gram will start promptly at 8 p. m., and all persons are asked to be in their seats by that time. Proclaims Next Week Fire Prevention Week 367 Automobiles Sold In N. D. Last Month Automobiles sold in North Dakota during September totaled 367, ac- cording to figures compiled from the state motor vehicle registrations by Commercial Service, Inc., Bismarck, which showed that 273 passenger cars and 94 commercial vehicles were purchased. The passenger car sales compare with 450 sold during the same month last year and bring to 3,626 the num- ber of cars sold to late this year as compared with 6,912 for the same period of 1931. Commercial vehicles sold brought to 698 the cars sold to date this year compared with 1,251 the same period last year. Cass county, with 54 sales, was high for passenger cars during the month. Burleigh had 24, Ward 20, Grand Forks 17 and Stutsman 13. Thirteen commercial vehicles were sold in Grand Forks and 12 in Cass. IN POLITICAL SCRAPS Granite Falls, Minn., Oct. 6—(?)— A 66-year-old man was knocked un- conscious and his right eye badly cut in an altercation involving him and F. M. Shoemaker, Red Wing, Farm- er-Labor candidate for congress. The incident occurred while Shoemaker was making a street address at Clarkfield near here. Shoemaker was charged with assault and the other man, Matt Quist, manager of a Clarkfield lumber yard. was charged with disturbing a lawful and peace- ful meeting. Special Municipal Judge L. M. Marcuson dismissed the charges against Shoemaker and Quist. OREGON HOPES FOR RAIN Portiand, Ore., Oct. 6.—(?)—Great clouds rolling in from the sea to mingle with a fog-thick cover of smoke bore promise Thursday of the rain that would end the unprecedent- ed series of forest fires visiting de struction upon western Oregon and southwestern Washington. One life has been lost. Damage was estimated at $3,000,000 or more. Sell your live poultry and cream now to Armour Cream- eries, Bismarck. Merchants Asked to Bid Crowds Welcome Request that Bismarck business Places put out their flags Saturday and place thelr “Welcome to Bis- marck” signs in their store windows was made Thursday by the Associa- tion of Commerce. At the same time the request that merchants close their stores at 12:45 Pp. m., Saturday for the parade and exercises attending the cornerstone |laying was renewed by the associa- tion. | President’s Speech Attacked by Garner Washington, Oct. 6.—(?)—President | Hoover's Fowa speech was assailed by ; John N. Garner, speaker of the house jand vice presidential candidate of the ‘Democrats, Thursday. | Garner issued a statement attack- ing the address and saying “broken promises cannot be explained away.” | He charged the president with dis- playing “the inconsistency that has characterized his entire administra- tion” in the statement that he was using his good offices to prevail on mortgage companies not to foreclose on homes and farms. “The president,” he said, “vetoed the measure that would have assured farmers the credit necessary to pre- vent foreclosure. He asserted at that time it would make the government a pawnbroker, and insisted that loans be extended only to a select clientele. After extending the loans he states that he now is endeavoring to induce those who have secured the millions of government credit to be lenient with the farmers and home owners whose mortgages they hold.” ELECT MINNESOTA MAN Minneapolis, Oct. 6—(P)—-W. 8. Moscrip of Lake Elmo, Minn., was elected president by directors of the Seventh District Agricultural Credit Corporation at their first meeting Wednesday. Those present included: B. E. Groom, Fargo, agricultural di- rector, Greater North Dakota associa- tion; and Fred D. McCartney, vice president, First National bank, Oakes, N. D. Blanket Invitation Issued to Pioneers separate invitations to kota pioneers, the rangements for the itol cornerstone has invitation for them to . “Unfortunately we could not remem - ber everyone,” said C. V. Freeman, chairman of the committee, “but we pioneers will be seated in the bleach- ers, Which will accommodate about 2,000 persons. APPLIES FOR PERMIT An application for authority to operate motor freight service betweer: Carrington and Fargo, via Coopers- town and Valley City, has been filed with the state railroad commission by the Turtle Lake Transfer Line. A hearing has been set for Oct. 17 at Carrington. THEY CONVINCED ME THIS 1S THE SAFEST TIRE EVER BUILT A proclamation urging that Oct. 9 to 15 be observed as fire prevention week was issued Thursday by Gover- George F. Shafer. ‘The governor called attention to the loss of life by fire, and the de- struction of property. He called on citizens to make a special effort to effect at least a 50 per cent reduc- tion in the present rate of fire de- struction. FIVE TO TRAINING SCHOOL Williston, N. D., Oct. 6.—(#)—Five boys were ordered sent to the state training school at Mandan as a result of police investigations into petty thievery committed in various parts of the city from homes, stores and parked automobiles. Authorities found about 20 youths participated in one or more of the thefts. Hearings have not been completed, and other com- mitments to the Mandan institution may follow, officials said. ABSOLVED OF BLAME Fargo, N. D., Oct. 6.—(4#)—Irene Es- tergren, Fargo, driver of the auto which struck and killed James Van Pelt, 86-year-old Fargoan at a busy intersection Monday night, was cleared of any blame for the accident by a coroner’s jury Wednesday. The jury held that the accident was unavoid- able. JUROR PAYS FINE New York, Oct. 6—(?)—Henry F. Moore, the juror who caused a mis- trial in the lottery trial of United States Senator James J. Davis, Wed- nesday paid a fine of $100 for con- tempt of court. He had told defense counsel another member of the jury was attempting to prejudice the panel against the Pennsylvania legislator. URGES EXPENDITURES SLASH Toronto, Ont., » 6.—(P)—AN $800,000,000 reduction in U. 8. expen- ditures, including a $400,000,000 cut in veteran benefit costs, was ad- vocated Thursday by John J. O'Con- nor, manager of the finance depart- ment of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States in an address. REPORT BUSINESS BOOST Washington, Oct. 6.—(#)—Moderate improvement in business activity since late in August, marked by “rapid gains in the textile industry,” was reported Wednesday, by the commerce depart- ment in its October survey of current business, Sell your live poultry and cream now to Armour Cream- eries, Bismarck. It’s a Long Time Since John Had Rheumatism RHEUMATISM - As long as you have an excess of uric acid in the joints, blood and tis- | ¢ sues you are going to have rheuma- tic pains, aches, twinges and joint swellings—you can’t help but have them. sara tae it as a te Bt your annoying rheumatic troubles— Just ask Hall's store or any {druggist for one 85 cent bottle of Al- jlenru—a sensible scientific formula ‘free from opiates or nerve deadening } { drugs—it drives out pain and agony hours—or money back. Excess uric acid poison starts to ave body in 24 hours—the same guarantee holds good for Sciatica, ‘Neuritis and Lumbago—why not start to get well today —Advertisement. 3 THOSE TIRE TESTERS put your old headline hunter on the spot. That car on Safety Silvertowns went around thet sharp corner at 42 miles an hour. But those tires clutched that wet, asphalt surface like they were running in a groove. They didn’t skid an inch . . . l asked them whether they were testing Goodrich or Gibbons, ELLO EVERYBODY— Floyd Gibbons speaking. I’ve just seen a most wonderful demon- stration of progress. I think it is BIG news, and I’ll tell FC) Yo. I'M FOR THIS LEAGUE, ‘TOO! Here's something: The ‘Silvertown Safety League. It tives me driving rules to follow —for safety. It gives me an Just before it reached me, going at that speed, the driver turned suddenly. Just missed me by inches. They said it wouldn't skid. I had to believe them. It did not skid. But, boy, what a test! I asked them if they were testing Goodrich or Gibbons, That car on Safety Silvertowns went around that sharp corner at 42 miles an | forced like a prison cell, and blow it up to 200 hour. Not a curve arp cormer— | pounds pressure before it burst. sharper than a right angle. But those tires :j clutched that wet, asphalt surface like they | Test, test — improve, improve! That's were running in a groove. what it’s all about. They’re at it 24 hours wicked-looking metal prong—like a guil- lotine—on an inflated tire. Forty—fifty— sixty feet they dropped it. Then, at 75 feet, the tire gave way. It didn’t burst—the air came out like a sigh, ‘That's one way they find out whether their tires are safe against blow-outs. I saw them place a tire in a chamber rein- emblem for my car. I joined up! Any Goodrich dealer will enroll you, they tell me. No cost. you why: 34,400 were killed in auto- mobile accidents in this country last year. Almost a million—997,600—were injured. These figures overwhelm me. What do you think? If a way has been found to make tires that will prevent some of these tragedies— isn’t that BIG news? T leave it to you. I stopped at the Goodrich plant in Akron. I heard they were making a safer tire—the safest tire ever built. They call it the Trade Your Used Tires on SAFETY Silvertown. THEY DIDN'T SKID AN INCH. | $,0¢7_ 7170S to And weak spots in tires ail Seomnecn They convinced me. They showed me a | | If they had skidded—well, some other | House Gang. That's how they prove it's VERTOWNS test that was a sock-dologer. boy’d be writing this copy instead of me. | the safest tire ever built! To help cut down the toll of acci- These Goodrich tire testers put your old headline hunter on the spot. That spot was right in the middle of a street intersection. And the street was wet. They drove a car with these new safety tires on it—drove it straight at me at the epeed of 42 miles an hour, When I got my breath back, I wanted to know how such a tire could be made. I mean, I wanted to see the works. ‘They showed me a plant so big I wore my legs out—and only hit the high spots. One place, I stood in a shaft eight or ten stories high, and watched them drop a heavy, They told me these Safety Silvertowns sell dente to get the “Death ‘Tires’? for the price of any standard tire. Not a cent more, With thousands smashed up or killed in skidding accidents every year, I'm willing to pay something extra to save my neck. Maybe they're making it too easy for us. Goodrich 524% Silvertown old, unsafe tireson all Silvertowns. Copyright, 1982, The B, F, Goodrich Rubber Company M. B. GILMAN CO. : Retail - Wholes ale Distributors BISMARCK, N. DAK. PERRY FUNERAL HOME Second and Broadway Ship or Bring in Your Poultry Now. Highest Cash Live Poultry "sx te= 5 ALSO FOR HIDES AND FURS, JUNK AND WOOL “NORTHERN” HIDE & FUR CO. BISMARCK, N. DAK. Ful-vuc Latest Style Frames Only $5.50 Expert Eye Service at Lowest Prices in the Northwest Dr. T. M. MacLachlan Dr. A. S. Anderson Offers We now have our entire herd of Beef Cattle on full Keepin Oo mae Convenience grain feed and are in the market for feed barley. GUSSNER’S Phone 1060 oh Bismarck the Everything in Been py car. Some of the Messier toapeter cars we are now wrecking. - | enaleis — 1930 Pontiac 1925 Master CONVERT'S 208 Fifth St. , Phone 687 1927 Pontiac anes Carrie OE UNERAL SERVICE ‘AService forALL. regardless otfinancial circumstances =, PHONE 304 Tribune Want Ads Bring Results ' We are in the market for cars te wreck. BISMARCK AUTO. PARTS... 1011 East Main Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone Use the Want Ads —————

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