The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 10, 1932, Page 2

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VON GRONAU'S HOP Steamer After Sending S. O. S. Messages Manila, Oct. Wolfgang von Gronau and turned to their assistance Monday. A cryptic radio message from theigenerally fair and warmer. German flier received at 4.11 this afternoon (3:11 a. m. E. 8. T.) said: “Steamship Karagola comes our! Sorry | rescue. Thanks your help. could not finish our program.” The globe-encircling plane had} been forced down earlier in the day| 200 miles south of Rangoon by a} broken water pump. Besides Captain von Gronau the} plane carried Gert von Roth, second pilot: Fritz Albrecht, radio operator, and Franz Hack, mechanic. The fliers radioed they planned to proceed to Heanzay Bay, Burma, if they could get their plane started. They said they were down near ship lanes. Their flight in the “Greenland Wal” started from Isle of Sylt Ger- many July 22. They were to com- plete the world circuit in Berlin the latter part of this month. They were on the last third of their trip when forced down, Young Woman Claims Priest Kidnaped Her Streator, Ill, Oct. 10.—(7)—Colette Haley, rural school teacher, missisg since Sept. 6, back home Monday with a story accused a Catholic priest, long a friend of the family, of kidnaping her. Welter said Miss Haley told him the priest, Rev. Father William Courtney, 42, of Alexis, Ill., invaded her Eagle Township school near here shortly af- ter a noon recess on Sept. 6, pointed a revolver at her, and forced her to ac- company him. Courtney, she said, and four of his friends, kept her prisoner at Chicago, Grand Rapids, Mich. and St. Louis until last Wednesday, when she es- caped and hitch-hiked to Chicago. The girl called her mother from Chicago Saturday night, stating she Was unharmed. A few hours after Miss Haley's dis- appearance, a warrant charging kid- naping against Courtney was obtain- ed by her brother, James F. Haley. Ap- parently no trace of the clergyman has been found. Fatal Rioting in Germany Resumed Leipsig, Germany, Oct. 10.—()— Reports of renewed fatal political rioting appeared in German newspa- pers Monday as the supreme court prepared to consider the legality of the dictatorship established in Prus-| sia July 20 by Chancellor Franz von Papen. One man was killed and three were, wounded at Luhrsdorf in a riot con-{ nected with the campaign for next month’s general elections and five were wounded in three clashes in Berlin, The arguments before the court here on the dictatorship question are expected to continue for two or three days. One of the most imposing ar- rays of legal counsel ever gathered together in Germany will participate in the hearing. The appeal against the dictator- ship was filed by the states of Prus- sia, Baden and Bavaria. The legal- ity of the action was questioned by} the states, in spite of the fact the chancellor acted under a special de- cree signed by President Paul von Hindenburg. Herr von Papen contended the change was necessary to preserve order and to provide safety for the| people, > ———________+| Say Father Swung | I His Baby by Heels Beamon ene On? rene Okemah, Okla., Oct. 10—(P)—A young farmer who allegedly seized his six-month-old daughter from. the arms of his estranged wife and swung it by the heels against the ground, causing a probably fatal concussion, was sought by Okfuskee county authorities Monday. The man, H. A. Hall, summon- ed his wife from a rural church | Saturday night. Her brother, Al- vin Jackson, 16, told officers they quarreled and that he saw Hall seize the infant. Grain Man Victim | Of Carbon Monoxide} Minneapolis, Oct. 10—(P)—C. C. Wyman, president of the C. C. Wy- man & Co., grain commission firm, and a pioneer Minneapolis grain brok- er _was found dead early Sunday. {| The body was discovered at the wheel of his car in the garage in the rear of his home. Wyman was a victim of carbon monoxide poisoning according to the death certificate signed by Dr. C. A. Hobbs, deputy~Hennepin county cor- oner. | Hunting Tragedy | Takes Two Lives | ner Se eee & International Falls, Minn., Oct. 10.—()—Carl Lang, 17, Indus, Minn., shot and killed himself with a rifle in remorse after ac- cidentally Amos Snyder, 20, also of Indus, while the two were hunting in the woods on the Minnesota side of the border near Emo, Ont., Sunday. Snyder was shot through the heart at a distance of 90 feet when Lang fired into the brush at a bird. Colin Kennedy, 18, another member of the party, went to a nearby farm to summon a phy- sician, and when he returned with the doctor they found Lang lying across the body of Snyder. He had shot himself in the fore- head. Cash in With a HALTED BY MISHAP; Quartet Picked Up By British 10.—(AP)—Captain three companions abandoned efforts to re-; pair the disabled engine of their globe-girdling airplane, forced down] on rough seas of the Indian Ocean| when the British steamship Karagola | | Hoover will make a campaign speech \' Weather R | Weather Report and Wines cohia FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: te day; warme Tuesday. { portions tonight tions. er night; colder east of Divide Tuesday. For Minnesota: in south portion tonight; 4 GENERAL CONDITIONS A high pressure area is centered jcold weather prevails throughout the Plains States and the immediate sur- rounding territory. Low pressure, ac- companied by considerably warmer weather, prevails over the western Canadian Provinces. Light precipi- tation occurred at most places in the northern and central districts, with and Missouri. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.1 ft. 24 hour change, -0.2 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.44. Reduced to sea level, 30.29. NORTH DAKOTA wala s BISMARCK, cldy. . 00 Devils Lake, peldy ‘00 Fargo-Moorhead, clear. 24 22 .00 Williston, clear ........ 28 28 .00 {Grand Forks, peldy. - 18.00 Valley City, clear 15.00 Jamestown, clear . 22.00 | OUT OF STATE POINTS 7 Amarillo, Tex., pcldy. Boise, Idaho, peldy. Chicago, Ill., raining. Denver, Colo., clear .... 32 30 Des Moines, Ia., snowing 34 32 10 Dodge City, Kans., peldy.32 32 00} 34 30 = =.00; Havre, Mont., cldy. 18 00 Helena, Mont., cldy. 28.00 Huron, 8. D., peldy. .... 30 30 04 Kamloops, B. C., raining 44 42 02 Kansas City, M., raining 36 36 1.14 Lander, Wyo., clear .... 20 20 .00! Medicine Hat, Alta., cldy. 34 28 .00 Miles City, Mont., peldy. 24 24 01 Modena, Utah, clear ... 34 32 00 No. Platte, Neb., cld 30 «02 Oklahoma City, 42 00 Pierre, 8. D., cid; 30 12 Prince Albert, S., cld 24 00 Qu’Appelle, Sask., pcldy. 20 18 .00! Rapid City, S.D., clear. 14 14 06) Roseburg, Ore., clear... 42 42 .00) St. Louis, Mo., clay. 62 ‘02! St. Paul, Minn., peldy. .. 34 32.10 Salt Lake City, U., clear 38 36 10 8. 8. Marie, Mich., cldy. 36 34 22 Seattle, Wash., raining.. 54 48 (02 Sheridan, Wyo., peldy...18 18 .00/ Sioux City, Ia., cldy.... 32 32 .00 Spokane, Wash.. cldy. .. 38 36 .00 Swift Current, S., peldy. 26 29 .00/ The Pas, Man., peldy... 24 20 00} Toledo, Ohio, cid: 58.00! Winnemucca, Ne’ 28.00} Winnipeg, Man. 16.00 \ Warns N. D. Citizens Against Psittacosis| Health officers of the state have| been asked by Dr. A. A. Whittemore, | state health officer, to inspect par-| Tots coming into the state as a pre- caution against psittacosis, or parrot fever. Dr. Whittemore said two or three suspicious cases have been reported to the health department, but lack confirmation. No bird of the parrot family should be allowed to enter the state unless accompanied by a certificate of health as is required by the inter- state quarantine regulation, the health officer said. He called attention to an amend-| ment to the federal interstate quar-| antine regulations prohibiting per- sons or firms from offering for ship- ment in interstate traffic or the ac- ceptance by common carriers of any Parrot, parrakeet, love bird, macaw, cockatoo, lory, lorikeet, or any other birds of the parrot or psittacine fam- ily, unless accompanied by a certifi- cate of health, Hoover to Speak in Cleveland Oct. 15 Washington, Oct. 10.—()—President Oct. 15 in the Cleveland auditorium, the white house made known Monday. NEGROES MAKE APPEAL =| Washington. Oct. 10.—()—Seven Negroes, convicted of assaulting two white girls near Scottsboro, Alabama. Monday asked the supreme court to set aside their death sentences. Their appeal, charging ap unfair trial, was among the first set for oral argu- ment after the court had overhauled its docket, sifting out of nearly 400 cases those judged worthy of review. Monday's was the second session of the court's fall term. BAR GROUPS ASSEMBLE Washington, Oct. 10.—()—Full pub- licity concerning the affairs of Public Utility companies to bring about more effective regulation was advocated Monday by George Otis Smith, chair- man of the power commission. He addressed the Public Utility law sec- tion of the American Bar association. It was one of the many groups meet- ing Monday and Tuesday, preliminary to the association's 55th annual meet- ing in general session Wednesday, which President Hoover will address, GUARD GANGSTER'S CORPSE Chicago, Oct. 10—(?)—Frank Mc- Erlane, known as Chicago's “cruelest, killer” was guarded in death Mon- day, even as he was in life—against enemies who might to do injury to his body. When his body was placed in an automobile Sunday it was guarded by men, armed with pistols. They rode in automobiles which pre- ceded and followed the body all the! way from Beardstown, Ill., where Mc- Erlane died Saturday of pneumonia in @ hospital. The wake Sunday night was under police surveillance. BOMBING IS FATAL Schenectady, N. Y., Oct. 10—(#)}— Two men were killed and another probably fatally hurt in an explosiion early Monday in a frame house in the suburban village of Niskayuna. Police ° ny s Fair onight and Tues- For North Da-! kota: Fair, warm- | er north and east | Tuesday generally fair, warmer east and south por- For South Da- kota: Fair, warm- | extreme west Portion tonight; and Tuesday; warmer east and south portions to- Generally fair, not so cold in north portion, heavy frost ‘Tuesday | over southwestern South Dakota and heavy showers in parts in of Ilinois | of Starkweather, Forks Building é& Loan association, $1,584.50. cent since 1920. Sweat Box Trial r | Solomon Higginbotham, one of two former prison guards accused of killing Arthir Malllefert, a con- vict, by slow torture in a sweat box, is shown en route to court during trial tn Jacksonville, Fla, (Associ ated Press Photo) BANKS INSTATETO GBT RFC WANS Beach, Danzig and Van Hook Institutions Included Approved List Washington, Oct. 10.—(?)—Funds were on tap Saturday at four agri- cultural credit corporations for loans to farmers and stockmen. The Reconstruction Finance cor- Poration, which established these re- gional agricultural agencies, said $12,000,000 was in the treasury sub- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1982 OUT OUR WAY MEET TO CONSIDER LIVESTOCK LOANS Bankers, Businessmen and Farmers of Traill County At Hillsboro OH, HOU WORRY — Hillsboro, N. D., Oct. 10—A se- lected list of bankers, businessmen and farmers from Traill county ‘as- sembled here Monday to organize this county preparatory to filing ap- DONT NEEDA ITS A RAG, AWRIGHT? I VWuow iTS Now! RAGS 1S os a\ 1 SUST WANT To SEE WHAT IT WAS BEFORE YOU CANE IN. WEEPING YOU IN| RAGS. A RAG, N KEEPING y Williams | —_—_—_—_—_ —— WRESTLER IS DEFENDANT New York, Oct. 10.—(P)—Stanislaue Zbyszko, three times wrestling cham- pion of the world, is named in @ $100,- 000 breach of promise action filed in supreme court. Miss Gladys Buszek, music teacher of Winnipeg, Canada, said she spent the better part of three years preparing a trousseau only to jJearn the matman already was mar- ried. Zybszko made a general denial REAL pti A plications for livestock féeder loans from the newly created regional ag- ricultural credit corporation. B. E. Groom, chairman of the agricultural committee of the Greater North Da- omplexion Curse’ gf kota association and a director on She thought she called on her Ocoee savctaed ne tnacaier Baty the board of the new corporation, representing this state, came here to (ter. But no one admires pimply, blemished skin, More and more women are that pimples anc organize the county. Cass county Friday, Richland Thursday, and Groom will proceed at ence to perfect groups in all other north, east and north central coun- ties. The livestock feeder loan is the first type for which authority has been granted, but other types are to follow. It is expected that the gen- eral livestock loan will be accepted shortly. A committee of Fargo busi- nessmen and bankers, who have been working with the Greater North Da- kota association in outlining the needed types of loans, have also rec- ommended that loans be made for purchase of livestock equipment, for breeding stock, for grain stored on farms, and for amortization of delin- quent feed and seed loan accounts, F. D. McCartney, Oakes, a director of the Greater North Dakota asso- ciation, is the other director for AEG. U.S. PAT. OFF. WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY. ees Se nae SS X / STARA NW TRMWILLIAMS © 1092 BY NEA SERVICE, NC. 70-70 North Dakota on the board of the new corporation. He is proceeding at once to organize the counties in his section of the state. Other directors, in this federal land bank district, including North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, are W. 8. Moscrip, prominent Lake Elmo, Minn., farmer, who is president of the Twin City Milk Producers’ asso- ciation which organization has 6,075 farmer members within a 40-mile ra- dius of Minneapolis; and N. Carnes, South St. Paul, Central Co- operative Livestock Shipping associa- tion, another farmer cooperative body with 125,000 farmer members in the Dakotas, Montana, Minnesota and Wisconsin. “These feeder loans are to be made} on @ basis of 100 per cent valuation, plus transportation, with a flat in- terest rate of 7 per cent being charged. This covers all inspection costs,” Groom advised the local group. “Every effort will be made to assist the really deserving stock man, who has sufficient feed, but is not able to finance the purchase of feeder cattle or lambs through other sources. The board feels that this will prove a highly satisfactory type of loan for knowledge of the feeding game.” BARNES FARMERS ORGANIZE very township of the county. Marion, and John P. Anderson, San- born, board of directors. PLAN AIRCRAFT INSPECTIONS Inspections of aircraft examination of airmen and other departmental business will be conducted at six North Dakota cities during the month of October. An aeronautical inspector from the U. 8. department of commerce will be in charge of the inspections and examinations at Fargo, Oct. 13; Wahpeton, Oct. 15; Bismarck, Oct. 24; Minot, Oct. 26; Grand Forks, Oct. 28, and Fargo, Oct. 31. ject to drafts up to $3,000,000 each by the credit corporations at Sioux City,; Salt Lake City, Spokane and Colum-| bus. | In announcing money now was available for the four agricultural) agencies, Ford Hovey, who directs this work for the finance corporation, | said first loans would be made im-| mediately. States were authorized to borrow a total of $13,931,669 for relief pur- Poses. They included: North Dakota—Beach, Farmers’) and Merchants’ bank, $12.0 Dan-} zig, Farmers’ State bank, $4,500; Pe- tersburg, Citizens’ State Bank of Pe- tersburg, $5,850; Van Hook, First Na- tional Bank of Van Hook (receiver), $15,400; Starkweather, Farmers’ Bank! $10,000; Grand| i ponent Se i Population of the Netherland East/ Indies has increased about 23 per It is now about 1,000,000, Watch Your Kidneys/ Dont Neglect Kidney and Bladder Irregularities If bothered with bladder ir- regularities, getting up at night and nagging backache, heed promptly these symptoms.. They may warn of some dis- ordered kidney or bladder con- dition. For 50 years grateful users have relied upon Doan’s Pills. Praised the country over. old by all druggists. arena ft on A HOTEL with a Homelike Atmosphere Lenates in the heart of ov jing in Minneapolis, this modern hostelry $s you every joy and comfort of home-—commodious rooms— spacious lounge — excellent food—ideal environment. The Leamington is conduct ed on the European plan. RATES: Chief William H. Funston of this city said he believed the victims were en- | gaged in the manufacture of a new; Tribune Want Ad type of bomb to be used in aartna| incendiary fires. Single, $2.00 and up Double, $3.00 and up OY mte or wire for reservations ‘WARD S$. MORSE, Mar. the North Dakota producer who has You might think that a two-fisted fellow like the steel jack in the picture would like his tobacco strong. Not at all. He wants his cigarettes mild and that’s why he picks Chesterfields. Mildness doesn’t mean a smoke that’s weak or flat or insipid or anything like that. In fact it’s just the reverse. Two- fisted fellows as well as anyone else— men and women—want a cigarette that’s mild...one that satisfies—and that’s Chesterfield. We believe that every smoker is look- ing for a cigarette without any “bite” or bitterness, and a cigarette that has a pleasing taste—and that’s Chesterfield. ease tipks | Chesterfield Radio m Every night except Sunday, Columbia Coast-to-Coast Network. THEY'RE MILDER the feed, and who has acquired any Valley City, N. D. Oct. 10.—(7)— Following organization of a Barnes County Holiday association here Sat- urday, @ drive was under way Mon- {haven here after state police had day to extend the movement into ficers of the organization are oo P. Enerson, Valley City, president; Carl Manstrom, Litchville, vice president; Byron Metcalf, Valley City, secre-| Neff of Los Angeles, have cleared four tary-treasurer, and William Jones, Waterbury, Md., Oct. 10.—?)—Six members of the Bonus Expeditionary Army, who returned to the proposed moved out the early settlers, Monday faced eviction at the order of Mrs. Maud Edgell, original donor of the land. The six veterans, headed by Fred acres of land in six weeks, cut 30 ‘cords of wood, stacking it along the road, and built a cabin. Neff said they have been promised 25 per cen’ of the profit for the sale of the wood kut none had been sold. Wayland Kern, member of W. W. Waters’ staff during the B. E. F. en- campment in Washington, took charge for a short time but later re- turned to Cantonville, where Mrs. Edgell has a nursing home. He noti- ifed Neff he had resigned as com- mander of the camp here. Last week, Milton Dashiell, attorney for Mrs. Edgell, informed the en- camped veterans they must sign a IB. E. F. Members Face Eviction from Haven isfactory, or consider the registered letter notice to vacate. BRITAIN DENIES REPORT London, Oct. 10.—(#}—An empha- tic official denial was made by Downing Street Monday of a report from Geneva printed in a London pledged her support to Germany's claims for equality in armaments. Fewer School Days Lost Due to Colds Two-thirds of the time lost from school because of colds can be saved! |contract, which Neff said was unsat-| § newspaper saying Great Britain had j- dependable, all- table tre Atall drag: gists’—only 25c, “TUMS” Cp for acid rite - This was proved last winter with Vicks Plan for better Control-of- Colds. Mothers and teachers alike welcome this practical Plan—fully ex- plained in each package of Vicks VapoRub and the new Vicks Nose & Throat Drops.—Advertisement.

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