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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 22, 1933 TRUESTORY’ ABOUT. |Brother’s Screams Balk Kidnaping MOONEY CASE MAY APPEAR IN RECORD Famous Convict Awaits Su- Preme Court Ruling on Proposed Second Trial San Francisco, May 22.—(?)—An- other “true story” of the 1916 San Francisco Preparedness Day bombing Grew attention as Tom Mooney, con- victed with Warren K. Billings of the crime, waited_a California supreme court decision here Monday on his second trial. The story, which was greeted with skepticism by Mooney himself, though he admitted willingness to have it in- vestigated, was told by John P. Emer- son, @ former private detective. Emerson, whose name has figured before in connection with the 17-year- old bomb case, declared he was pre- pared to appear at the trial and sup- REICH UNIFICATION of Denver Child By Nudist Couple! pprccry BY HITLER Denver, May 22.—(#)—Piercing screams of a brother thwarted the kidnaping of eight-year-old Betty Lee O’Dell by a woman de- scribed by the children as nearly nude and a man entirely un- clad. Continuing their investigation of the abduction, reported at- tempted early Sunday morning while the parents of the children were assertedly away at a party, officers said they believed the woman was mentally unbalanced or the leader of a nudist cult. Elwood, 14, told police he was awakened by someone tearing a screen from a window. He arose and went into a hallway where he said he saw & woman, clad only in bloomers and with black hair in disorder hanging about her shoulders, creeping toward his sister's room. Too frightened to cry aloud, he watched until the woman, with the child clasped to her breast, left by a rear door. Then he screamed. As he ran to the door, he re- ported he saw the woman and a nude man flee down an alley, leaving the girl on the ground. Police summoned by neighbors aroused by the youth's cries, found no trace of the pair but reported finding prints of bare feet in the yard. the awaited supreme court decision on a petition by John O’Gara, law pro- pee ene ere oreo eemecren Weather Report | fessor and a former assistant district|q___- i? attorney, asking that the trial, now set for Tuesday, be stopped. port his claim Mooney and Billings were victims of a “plot” which mis- carried, ‘The explosion, which killed 10 per. sons and injured 40, Emerson told Mrs. Rena Mooney, wife of the prisoner, ‘nd others connected with the de- tense, was an accident. He asserted the bomb was aban- doned by two men at Steuart and Market streets, where it exploded after they discovered acid leaking from it. ‘They had been hired to “plant” it in Mooney’s room by an enemy of the former radical labor leader, the story added. Emerson's claim shared interest in No Slack Filling Leonomical- Efficient. SAME PRICE toclay AS 42 YEARS AGO MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED OUR COVERNMENT for Coach Travel SINGLE FARE ) PLUS 28 CENTS for First Class Excursion Tickets Honored in Sleeping or Parlor Cars Between All Stations on SOO LINE GO—May 28, 27, 28, 29 or 30 RETURN to Reach Home by Midnight, dune 2nd REDUCED RATES for Sleeping Car Accommodations 1933 rs | | Probe Old Mystery | ¢— Ontonagon, Mich., May 22.—() —County authorities Monday sought to learn who cut the em- balmed body of a woman into 30 pieces, packed it into a trunk and left it in the basement of a hospital at Mass City which was abandoned 13 years ago. Prosecutor John Bennett and Sheriff J. J. Schon were of the opinion the corpse was discarded by a hospital interne who had dissected it for experimental purposes. Children playing in the frame building that was once a hospital and which soon is to become a Finnish Lutheran church, found the trunk. Investigators found a record slip bearing the name of a Chi- cago hospital. There was a date, “March 19, 1889,” and some clin- ical data which Prosecutor Ben- nett said might indicate the wo- man was taken to the hospital for an operation. Big Drop in Wealth Of Nation Reported New York, May 22.(?)—The na- tional wealth of the United States fell $115,000,000,000 from 1929 to 1933, ac- cording to the appraisal of the nation- al industrial conference board, made public Monday. In 1932 the national wealth was $247,000,000,000; in 1929 it was $362,- 000,000,000. National wealth means the dollar value of the country’s physical assets—land, factories, and other tan- gible goods. The national wealth reached its peak in 1920 at $488,700,000,000, or $4,~ 587 per capita. In 1931 it fell to $280,- 300,000,000. Production of eggs in the United States is usually highest in April, May and June, when nearly 40 per cent of the year’s total is produced. Home-Towners Praise 'SEIBERLING AIR COOLED TIRES SUMMONS, STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh. IN DISTRICT COURT, Fourth Ju- dicial District. Marie Eder, Plaintift, vs. ward Eder, Defendant. of North Dakota to the amed defendant: You are hereby summoned to an- Swer the complaint in this action which is filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court of Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, and to Serve a copy of your answer upon the subscriber at his office in the city cf Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, within thirty days af- ter the service of this summons up- on you, exclusive of the day of serv- le on against you by default for the re- “et demanded in the complaint. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, on this 22nd day of April, A. D. 1933. George S. Register, nd post-office address, Rorth Dakota, I: Se we ANEAS i UT-PERFORMS any other tire ever built! Ask home- town users—they’ll tell you that no other tire compares in Safety, Comfort and Mileage with Seiberling Air Cooled tires. » » » Investigate — find out how little these far better tires will cost you. Full trade- {n value for your present tires TIRES Phone 356 Volds Tire Service 216 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. bison eid aiceieh eee Police of Michigan | FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Showers probably tonight and Tuesday; cool- cooler extreme ion to- ; cooler Tuesday. For South Da- kota: Showers probable tonight and Tuesday; cooler Tuesday. For Montana: Showers tonight cooler tonight south- nd Tuesday; e rt extreme od ued ee ape ant east! rtion . For N Minnesota: ‘Scattered showers, warmer in east portion tonight; show- ers Tuesday, with cooler in extreme west portion. GENERAL CONDITIONS A well developed low pressure area is centered over southeastern Wyom- ing and the weather is unsettled in all sections. Sled occurred in the middle ippi Valley and at most places in the northern Great Plains and northeastern Rocky Mountain slope. Generous showers fell from central North Da- kota southeastward to the Red River Valley. Moderate temperatures pre- vail in all sections, Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 3.8 ft. Sunday, 3.7 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches 27.83. Reduced to sea level, 29.56. PRECIPITATION REPORT For Bismarck station: Total this month to date ... Normal, this month to date Total, January Ist to date .. Normal, January 1st to date Accumulated deficiency to dat NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. 12 46 1.05 148 3.51 127 Dickinson, clear Drake, peldy. Dunn Center, pc! Fessenden, cldy. Grand Forks, cl UNDER NEW POWERS German Chancellor Makes Vas- sals of States, Rubber Stamps of Lawmakers By LOUIS P. LOCHNER (Copyright, 1933, by the Associated Press.) Berlin, May 22.—(#)—President von Hankinson, cldy. Jamestown, rain . Kenmare, clear Larimore, rain . Lisbon, rain . Max, clear Minot, cldy. . be eeagenl cldy. Oakes, rain .. Parshall, clear Pembina, cldy. | Williston, clear Wishek, cldy. BRESShESBLERESBASBRE SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. Huron, cldy. . + 7% 48 Y Pierre, clear . 84 56 18 Rapid City, peldy. ..... 68 50 1.28 MINNESOTA POINTS Moorhead, cldy. St. Paul, cldy. For 48 hours, OUT OF STATE POINTS High-Low- est est Pi Amarillo, Tex., cldy. ... 66 Boise, Idaho, beldy. 64 ill., cldy. Denver, Colo., clear Des Moines, Ia., cla; Dodge City, Kan., peldy. Edmonton, Alta, peldy.. | Helena, Mont., ra! Kamloops, B. C., ; Kansas City, Mo., cl Lander, Wyo., clear Medicine Hat, ol Miles City, Mont., clear & Modena, Utah, ral g, Ore., rain. St. Louis, Mo., clear. 82 Salt Lake ee U., cldy. 8. 8. Marie, ‘peldy. 54 Seattle, Wash., Sheridan, 0. Sioux City, Ta. Spokane, Swift Current, The Pas, Man., cldy. Toledo, Ohio, Roldy: os Winnipeg, Many clay... 14 , Man., Cl For af hours. Beeeusssssahshsssrsueekassssesssss BOLT CAUSES FIRE Burlington, Vt, May 22.—(>)— | y lightning set fire to a stable at Fort Fru Allen, -Loss was estimated at The farm value of the potato crop in the United States during the past, five years has averaged 300 million dollars. In North Dakota the farm value has averaged about four million dollars. Found ANSWER TO UGLY PIMPLES Hindenburg, at the suggestion of the Federal cabinet, has just decreed that the so-called “Statthalters”—mean- ing the vice-regents of the state gov- ernors—sshall be entitled to use the seal of the Reich. This privilege, insignificant in it- self, symbolized what Germans con- sider to be one of the most outstand- ing achievements of the Nationalist revolution, namely, the unification of Germany. The accession of Hitler to power threw state’s rights into the dustbin. Separate States Subdued Under the impact of the Nazi revo- lution, Hitler was able to go much farther than the most sanguine had dared to dream. Politically speak- ing, Prussia, Bavaria, and other once- proud kingdoms have ceased to lead an independent existence. One will—that of Hitler—now ex tends Berlin to the farthest corners of the reich. No longer can Prussia thwart the purpose of the federal gov- ernment, as it often did before Jan- uary 30, when Hitler came to power. No longer can Bavaria threaten to re-erect her throne unless the reich respects her special wishes. No longer can the South-German states plan to secede and form a separation nation south of the river Main. Passports hitherto issued by the states now can be obtained as reich passports only. Hitler, at the helm of the federal government, now appoints the “Statt- halters,” a term literally meaning “holders in his stead.” Rubber-Stamp Parliaments Each “Statthalter” in turn nomin- ates the state premier, who appoints & state cabinet responsible no to the Parliament but to the premier himself. The state parliaments become rubber- stamps. Their principal purpose is to furnish a forum for occasional dra- matic appeals to the populace. Translated into American terms, one must imagine President Roosevelt re- moving all state governors and other 78 | important state officials and then ap- pointing 48 vice-regents, solely respon- sible to himself. They in turn, with- out consulting the electorate or the legislature, would appoint governors’ with authority to pick their own co- workers. Besides unifying Germany, Hitler's “Statthalter” scheme saves the coun- try many millions. Hitler, like Roose- velt, was able to weed out thousands of government officials who duplicat. ed work, and often, in fact, threw monkey wrenches into each other's machinery. Vast sums also are saved by call- ing the reichstag and the legislatures together for only a day or two at a time at great intervals. Complete Plans for Chess Tourney Here Preparations have been completed for the annual state tournament of the North Dakota Chess association to be held here in the World War Memorial building next Monday and Tuesday. Playing will begin about 1:30 p. m. Monday, with chess players expected from all parts of the state. Players from Grand Forks, Fargo, Dickinson, Valley City, and other points are to .| participate. Arrangements have been made for 00] three classifications of players, the championship class, major class and amateur class. A registration fee of $1 will admit the holder to all tour- nament games and the banquet sched~- uled for 6:30 p. m. Tuesday. C. E. Pickles, state secretary, urged players to bring their chess men with them and to notify him of reserva- tions. Prof. F. Smith of Dickinson is president of the state chess associa- tion, and M. M. Ruder, Bismarck, vice president. “The World War Memorial building is the best place in the state for an indoor meeting as it is well lighted, large and cool,” Pickles said. “We would like to have all clubs represent- ed as well as individual players who may not belong to a club.” Sheep should be dipped for ticks im- mediately after shearing. Any good commercial dip prepared and applied according to directions will give satis- factory results. INCREASE wOUTPUT o STEEL INGOTS APRIL 19335 1790-Rhode Island ap Proves the Constituti ie roves 18th uote eee to Constitution | Strange But True | News Items of Day | (By The Associated Press) BREAKS ARM 11 TIMES Hazleton, Pa.—Seven-year-old Ber- nard Lamont fell off his bicycle and broke his left arm. That makes 11 times he’s fractured the same arm, BOYS AND RIFLES Greensburg, Pa.— Eleven-year- old Mason Christner, Waler Apple, 13, and a crowd of other young- sters invented a game with crabs and a .22 rifle. They threw the crabs on the shore of a creek and tried to shoot them before they reached the water. A large crab fell on its back and couldn’t crawl. Christner said it wouldn’t be sporting to take ad- vantage of it, and stooped to set it right side up. A rifle cracked and Christner was killed. Apple said the gun discharged accidentally. COLORADO VOLCANO SETS FOREST APIRE Peak Belches Flames and Gas, Covers Countryside With Smoke Blanket Durango, Colo., May 22.—(#)—Car- bon Mountain, Colorado's pseudo vol- cano, has ignited a forest. Belching flames and gas, the Rocky Mountain peak which has attracted both curious and scientific by its dis- integration over a veriod of months, belched forth flames and gas and cov- ered the countryside under a heavy blanket of smoke. The pyrothechnical display of the peak started Sunday night after Tumblings and a loud explosion were heard in the depths of the big black mountain. Soon after the explosion the gas) started issuing from @ fissure 315 feet wide near the top of the peak and flames were seen. The nearby forest quickly caught fire. The blast also started new aval- anches and thousands of tons of dirt and boulders crashed down the peak into the valley. The timber fire was on private ground and authorities said they did not believe it would cause extensive damage. Geologists said the mountain prob- ably is resting on a huge bed of coal which caught fire and that the entire mountain eventually may crumble! and burn. Joseph Smith of Sterling Dies Here Joseph Smith, 57-year-old Sterling man, died at a local hospital about :30 o'clock Monday morning. He had been in the hospital since April 24. Smith’s death was caused by stom- ach ulcers. He was born in Poland, the son of Anton Smith, who lives in the Hazel- ton vicinity. He was a common la- borer. TWO PASTORS WILL RETAIN POSTS IN BISMARCK DISTRICT Heidinger and Herzberg Remain Here; Rev. Ermel Assign- ed to Lehr McClisky, N. D., May 22—(?)—The North Dakota Conference of the Evangelical church closed its sessions here Sunday with the reading of ap- pointments by Bishop G. E. Epp of Cleveland, Ohio. Kulm was selected for next yearg annual conference, to be held May 19. Rev. W. W. White of Drake was elected director of the student-aid fund for five years; Rev. H. C. Lehner ‘was chosen editor and publisher of the conference journal and Rev. C. A. Bremer was elected secretary of trans- ‘portation. Rev. T. C. Meckel, Cleveland, Ohio, editor of one of the church pa) discussed temperance before a {ath- ering of about 500 persons. The tem- perance committee, in its report, said “even though the 18th amendment has || been declared a failure, we believe that the only ultimate solution to the drink evil is to brand it strictly il- legal,” and urged the conference to “stand behind the 18th amendment, both state and national.” Rev. O. F. Strutz, Jamestown, was chosen conference representative to the Anti-Saloon League. Appointments Listed Appointments announced are: Bismarck district: district superin- tendent, A. W. Heidinger; Ashley, F. G. Knuth; Balfour-Drake, W. W. White; Beulah, R. Bloedau; Bismarck First Evangelical church, Ira E. Herz- berg; Chaseley, O. R. Breaw; Elgin, C. E. Bach; Hazen, William Lemke; He- bron, to be supplied by R. Bloedau; Kulm, Otto Felberg; Lehr, E. H. Er- mel; Linton, William Butschat; Mar- tin-Anamoose, H, C. Lehner; McClus- ky, G. C. Thiele; Streeter, A. Gehring; Tuttle, John Fischer; Wishek, Karl Hirning; Napoleon, E. K. Heimer; Tappen-Dawson, R. E. Strutz. Mem- bers of the quarterly conference: Elgin, F. Loewen; Bismarck, H. E. Bergland; Balfour-Drake, H. C. Knuth. : Fargo district: district superinten- dent, C. A. Bremer; Alice, J. H. Schaeffer; Bantry, G. H. Mittag; Bowbells-Coteau, G. H. Moritz; Chaf- fee, W. L. Hoy; Cavalier, E. J. Schroe- der; Des Lacs, to be supplied by G. H. Mittag; Donaldson, to be supplied by J. J. Schroeder; Ellendale, J. W. Schindler; Fargo, Robert Bechtle; ‘and Forks, Charles Whelchel; Great Bend, R. R. Strutz; Holmes, G. H. Bruns; Jamestown, C. F. Strutz; Langdon, William Brieher; Marion, Floyd Breaw; Walcott, August Mar- tin; field secretary of the Florence Crittenden Home, E. J. Bechtel. Mem- bers of the quarterly conference: Far- go, E, J. Bechtel; Ellendale, F. W. Agte; Jamestown, R. E. Strutz. The star Alpha Orionis sends the most heat to the earth of all the stars. THE ARENS FAMILY, 7125 ING8 are looking up for the Arens family. Mr. Arens’ new bottle-cap is selling fast. And out at the curb is the new Standard Plymouth. Is there a thrill in that? The , boys and Mrs. Arens are both keen as they can be about it. Drive the Standard Plymouth awhile and you forget it is priced as low as the lowest, Patented Floating Power en- ginemountingsend vibration for- ever. Hydraulic brakes are sure. N: PAULINA ST., CHICAGO, ILL. safe. Bodies are big and roomy withRigid-X,double-drop frames and safety-steel construction. See the Standard Plymouth. See how Plymouth matches com- on value. And remember . . « Standard Plymouth 4-door sedan is the lowest-priced 4-door six. STANDARD PLYMOUTH SIX $ Floating Power engine mount- 445 sec f. ©. B. DETROIT slight extra cost. Standard Plymouth Sis, Four-DeoorSedan..108-inch wheelbase.,$510 F.0.B, Promotion System For C. C. C. Planned Washington, May 22.—()—A pro- motion system which will carry pay increases as rewards for meritorious Service in the civilian conservation corps has been worked out at head- quarters and will become effective on June 1, ‘The plan, which was approved sev- eral days ago by President Roosevelt, ‘was worked out as an incentive for the young men in the camps. Under it, 10 group leaders will be selected in each camp to receive $45 monthly. Sixteen lieutenants in each camp will receive $36 monthly. For the remainder, the same $30 rate of Pay will continue. which will be required to accommo- date the 275,000 forestry workers will make its own selection of leaders. ‘The conservation corps has nearly 80,000 members and may reach the 275,000 goal set by President Roose- velt for July 1. ‘The men are ent condition camps at the rate of eight to ten thousand a day. FLEE FROM FLOOD Memphis, Tenn., May 22—(P)—A sea of muddy water swept over the fl southeast Missouri border Monday, driving farm families and animals before it and drowning out crops that were planted behind the perilous pro- tection of soggy levees. One-half the workers of the world are engaged in agriculture. FOR RENT Attractive 5-room modern bun- DeLUXE steam ofl combination wat the painless permanent, $5.00. Of tonic combination wave $4.00, Cal ifornia combination wave, $3.50. California Wave Nook, 106-3rd St. Phone 782. THE JUNE GRADUATE would be Pleased with a STEAM SUPERCUR-~ LINE permanent. Wonderful ring< lets, natural waves. Special, $3.50 complete. Shampoo and finger wave 50c, Harrington’s, Phone 130. Never Fails and Conkey’s Chick Starter ‘Teated and recommended by hundreds of North Dakota Farmers See your dealer or the DACOTAH SEED COMPANY Manufacturers of good feed, built to fit your needs. On Highway 10, Bismarck, N. Dak. Cuicaco's Wonrtp's Fair ~ “Once In A Lifetime” VER again will you have such an opportunity for entertain- ment, adventure and educa- tion. Chicago’s “A Century of Progress” Exposition this summer is termed the greatest spectacle of all time. . Plan to go! SUCH LOW RAIL FARES! Northern Pacific excursions make a trip to Chicago, or anywhere East, surprisingly, inexpensive. Ask for details.” THE OAKES FAMILY, 9 W.MELROSE ST., CHEVY CHASE, MD. "ARGARET OAKES is learn- ing to drive. She'll want Plymouth. The heavy car makes Mrs, Oakes nervous. She likes Plymouth, too. But Mr. Oakes drives to his office. Plymouth Question: Who gets the car? another. Transmission is all si- lent and automatic clutch is only $8 extra. Springs never need oiling ... valves go 30,000 miles without grinding... windshields are Duplate Safety plate glass. Plymouth has the edge on other sixes in 30 places! It would be smart to see it today! DELUXE PLYMOUTH SIX It doesn’t take long to convert a “heavy car” owner to the De Luxe Plymouth. It’s the big- gest six in the low-priced field. Free Wheeling is one thrill. fF. ©. B. DETROIT livered prices. ae en mountings. Small down payment... convenient DeLuxe Plymouth Six, Four-DoorSedan..112-inch whéelbase..$375F.0.B, TWO NEW PLYMOUTH SIXES SOLD BY DODGE, DE SOTO AND CHRYSLER DEALERS - ste PLYMOUTH AT CHRYSLER MOTORS BUJLDING, CHICAGO CENTURY OF PROORESS i eee ee