The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 26, 1933, Page 3

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1933 YOUTHBEATENUPIN | Editor Named |EDITORS ATTACKED j SERIOUS CONDITION 19-Year-Old Receives Severe Injuri Conflict With His Cousin u b ‘Warren, Minn, June 26.—(7}— Harold Donahaue, 19-year-old Grand Forks county youth, is in a critical condition in a hospital here, the re- sult of a beating he received at Oslo, Minn., at the hands of his first cou- sin, Lawrence Hutton, also 19, ac- cording to Sheriff J. B. Bordewick of Marshall county. Donahaue’s. skull is fractured, his nose smashed, his cheek bones broken and his upper jaw torn loose, but un- Jess infection sets in his chances for Tecovery are considered good by phy- sicians, the sheriff said. a Hutton is being held in the county |” jail on a charge of assault, pending his cousin’s condition. Both youths live on farms along the Red river, east of Manvel. There had been bitter grudge of long standing between them, the sheriff earned, and Donahaue previously had given Hutton a beating. | The fight in which Donahaue was injured occurred Thursday night, after the midsummer festival dance at Oslo. Physicans declared some hard ob- Ject_must have been used to batter in Donahaue’s face, but Bordewick could find no evidence of that kind, nor could he verify reports that Hut- ton had used brass knuckles and had two of his friends hold Donahaue while he struck him. Dickinson Youth Is Tourney Medalist Dickinson, N. D., June 26,—(P}— William Kostelecky, Jr., Dickinson, won medalist honors over a field of 42 entered in the ninth annual invi- tation tournament of the Dickinson Town and Country Golf club Sun- day. The championship and flight winners were to be decided in the Play-off Monday. K. Simes of Mott won the ap- proaching and putting contest. Wil- lam Kostelecky, Jr., won the driving contest with a total of 788 yards for three balls. Contestants in the championship flight and their scores in the quali- fying round were as follows: ‘William Kostelecky, Jr., Dickinson, J. Kostelecky, Dickinson, 82. William Kostelecky, Sr., Dickin- son, 83. M HH. Huston, Glendive, Mont., 80. G. A. Clarke, Dickinson, 81. A. Kostelecky, Dickinson, 83. T. L. Stangebye, New England, 83. J. O. Brown, Glendive, Mont., 79. Senior Life-Saving Class Is Organized Organization of a class in senior Red Cross life saving at the Bismarck swimming pool was announced Mon- day by A. C. Van Wyk, pool man- ager. Classes will start at 3 p. m., ‘Wednesday and will continue at that time, daily except Sunday, until the course is completed, which will be about 10 days, Van Wyk said. Both men and women 17 years of + age and over are eligible and are in- Ny vited to enroll, Van Wyk said. The) xin, pool will not be closed to other bathers during the instruction period, Van Wyk said. The pool did a rushing business Sunday, about 700 persons using its facilities. Receipts passed the $1,250 mark as compared with $1,800 for all of last year. In view of the record to date Van Wyk expects the pool to set a new record for receipts this sea- son, Fritz Johnson of Regan Dies in City Fritz Johnson, 48, of Regan died early Monday morning in a Bismarck hospital of a lung disorder. Johnson was vorn Dec. 14, 1884, in Sweden. He came to America when a small boy, coming to St. Pag!, which was his home for many years. Funeral arrangements have been delayed pending the arrival of John- son's brother, Gottfried, of St. Paul. » Mrs, Anna Erickson Dies at Farm Home Funeral services for Mrs. Anna B. Erickson were held at 1:00 p.m. Mon- day at her home in Christiania town- + ship. The body will be taken to Fer- To U.S. Post Tulsa above, editor and publisher, has been named by President Roosevelt ® member of the International Joint Commission of the United Eugene Lorton, Statez and Canada. Unusual Services | Hinted in Germany | a Berlin, June 26—(?)—Protestant church services in Germany will be short and snappy with martial music if Dr. Ludwig Mueller should become Reichs bishop and takes as a norm for divine serv- ices the service he himself con- ducted Sunday. Preaching in the ancient Koenigsberg Schlosskirche, built in 1257, Dr. Mueller limited his sermon to 15 minutes, during which he described the Nazi re- volution as God’s hour for the German people. A uniformed storm troopers’ band played martial airs The en- tire service took less than an hour. Twenty-nine Protestant groups elected Dr. Friedrich von Bodel- schwingh, a non-political candi- date, to the post of bishop last May 27. The German Christians, @ Nazi group, sought the election of Dr. Mueller and refused to ac- cept the vote. Dr. Von Bodel- schwngh has returned his com- mission because of the Nazi gov- ernment’s appointment of a church commissioner. Sentences Soldier For Stealing Auto Herbert G. Smyth, private in Com- pany K, U. 8S. Army, at Fort Lincoln, Saturday was sentenced to two years in the state training school at Man-! dan for auto theft by District Judge Fred Jansonius. Smyth was arrested Wednesday on information furnished by two young Mandan men and their girl compan- ions, who were found by police in possession of the stolen car. The quartet claimed that Smyth had taken the car and turned it over to them. The car, which had been driven off from its parking place at the corner of Fourth St. and Broad- way avenue, belonged to A. D, Mc- non. Smyth pleaded guilty to a grand larceny count. Subsequent to his arrest, Smyth admitted theft of another machine, that of Dan Hall, 404 Rosser avenue west, which was taken last January, according to ,C. J. Martineson, chief of police. HAll’s car later was found wrecked at a roadside near Fort Lin- coln, Mandan Is Host to State A. P. Meeting Editors and publishers of the state’s daily newspapers convened at Man- dan Monday for the semi-annual meeting of the North Dakota Asso- ciated Press, with E. A. Tostevin, Mandan, president, presiding. Newspapers in the group are the Minot Daily News, Bismarck Tribune, Mandan Pioneer, Grand Forks Herald, Fargo Forum, Jamestown Sun, Valley City Times-Record, and Devils Lake Journal. Those present included P. R. Trub- shaw, Valley City; H. D. Paulson and N. D. Black, Fargo; K. W. Simons, Bismarck; H. 8. Davies, Minot; E. A. Tostevin and Earl H. Tostevin, Man- dan; G. T. McConville, St. Paul, As- sociated Press regional correspondent; and E. E. Makiesky, state correspond- IN LANGER SPEBCH Harry Thompson of Coopers- town and Nels Simonson of Finley Assailed Cooperstown, N. D., June 26.—(?)— A raking fire of criticism was di- rected at two of North Dakota’s lead- ing weekly newspapers in their ter- titory by Governor William Langer in an address at Lake Jessie, north- West of here, Sunday. The meeting was sponsored by the Holy Name Society of the St. Lawrence Catholic church of Jessie. The newspapers, the Griggs Coun- ty Sentinel Courier, Cooperstown, published by Harry Thompson, and the Steele County Farmers Press, Finley, published by Senator Nels Simonson, have both supported the Nonpartisan League but have de- nounced Langer on various occasions recently. Declaring the state had to raise $9,000,000 in the next two years, Langer said: “It's very easy for a newspaperman in Cooperstown or Finley or any- where to criticize how we must do this.” And regarding his appropriations vetoes: “There are a couple of editors around here—my, what a bellyache they've had. A creamery man even ran a big ad in a paper telling how I was robbing the dairy commis- ‘stoner. “Every Nonpartisan League sena- tor except that one at Finley (Si- monson) voted to cut down the in- spection work.” Frank A. Vogel, state highway com- jmissioner, promised the gathering a | Stretch of 10 miles of state highway |through Jessie connecting highway |No. 1 at Binford with highway 45 egiht miles north of Cooperstown. | Langer was introduced to the crowd of about 1,000 by Monsignor John Baker of Valley City. Senator |O. E. Erickson of Kidder county, publisher of the projected North Da- kota Leader, spoke briefly. No ref- {erence to the San Haven episode was made by him or the governor. The party also spoke at Lake Tobiason, west of Hatton in Steele county, Sunday night. Says Bank Closing Aimed at Henry Ford Detroit, June 26.—(#)—Herbert R. Wilkin, Detroit banker. told the one- man grand jury investigating the closing of two national banks here Monday that “the sole reason for the closing of the banks, was, in my opin- ion, to ‘get’ Henry Fora.” Wilkin, former executive vice presi- dent of the Guardian Detroit Union Group, Inc., holding company for a number of banks, declared he was of the opinion that “Wall Street believed it had a chance, by tying up Ford’s |eposits in the banks, to so deplete his working capital that he must deal with them or go broke.” Ford, he said. had’ more than $65,000,000 on deposit, “in Detroit banks at that time. Just before he made the statement regarding Ford, Wilkins had startled the open grand jury session by de- claring more than $4,000,000 had been cleared through the Detroit clearing house between the time of the actual declaration of the state banking holi- day, Tuesday, Feb. 14, and the follow- ing Thursday. Withdawals, he said. were made on behalf of Mrs. James Couzens, wife of the Michigan senator, and the second National Bank of Houston, Texas, Convict Kenneth Buck In M’Math Kidnaping Barnstable, Mass. June 26—(7)— Prison doors at Boston opened Mon- day for Kenneth Buck, under sentence of 24 years for the kidnaping of. Mar- garet (Peggy) McMath. Kenneth was convicted Saturday night. The same jury that found him guilty returned an acquittal for his brother, Cyril, who had been tried on a similar charge. The state had ;charged Cyril was the contact man in |the negotiations between the parents jof the kidnaped girl and her abduc- | tors. Counsel for Kenneth Buck indicated | 8n appeal might be taken on the basis jof newly-found evidence which, he |Said, came into his possession shortly before the jury returned its verdict. FAIRBANKS HAS PNEUMONIA New York, June 26.—(?)—Suffering from pneumonia, Douglas Fairbanks, Takes Helm of /MARTIN GAINING IN U.S. Land Bank Albert S. Goss, above is the new commissioner of the Federal Land Bank, appointed by Presi- dent Roosevelt to succeed Paul Bestor, resigned Mr. Goss is an authority on farm financing and Co-operative marketing. g His home is in Seattle. Charges Department Held Up Prosecution New York, June 26.—(?)—U. 8, At- torney George Z. Medalie told a sen- ate sub-committee Monday he follow- ed “the suggestion or direction” of the department of justice in delaying prosecution of alleged violations of law in the conduct of the Harriman National Bank and Trust company. Medalie was the first witness at a hearing conducted by the committee, which was directed by senate resolu- tion to “investigate the reported fail- ure on the part of the department of justice to prosecute promptly alleged violations of law by the Harriman Na- tional Bank, New York City, or the of- ficers or directors thereof.” ‘While the hearing was in progress in another room in the federal build- ing, Federal Judge William Bondy ad- journed until Wednesday the fixing of a trial date for Joseph W. Harriman, former head of the bank. He had been scheduled to go on trial Monday on an indictment charging him with causing false entries to be made in the books of the bank. KILLS BABY AND HERSELF Bertha, Minn., June 26.—(#)—In ill- health since the birth of a boy five weeks ago, Mrs. George Wendel, wife of a farmer living west of Henning shot the infant to death and then killed herself Sunday. The tragedy ‘occurred about 6 p. m. while the young mother was alone in the farm home, She shot the child through the chest and then shot herself in the abdomen and head. VETERANS CONTEST | = # Committee Backing Local Man Announces Many Posts Instruct For Him Reports that posts in the central district of the North Dakota American Legion had voted nine to one to sup- Port Jack Williams for state adjutant were denied by the Martin for ad- jJutant committee here Monday. Milton Rue, chairman of the Martin for adjutant group, said unofficial in- formation received here is that only two of the 10 posts represented at the meeting had voted at the time the meeting was held a week ago at Red Willow Lake, one of these, Aneta, go- ing for Martin and the other Fessen- den, for Williams. Delegates from the post at Good- Tich were uninstructed, he said, and most of the other posts have not yet voiced their attitude on the subject. Posts announced by Martin head- quarters Monday as having been Pledged to support him in the Willis- ton convention were New Rockford, which also is in the central district; Hankinson, Milnor, Van Hook and Larimore. The vote in the latter post was unanimous, according to a let- ter from Oscar G. Hanson, post com- mander. Rue said indications are that Mart- in will have a majority of delegates from posts in the Red River Valley. Russia and England Might Resume Trade London, June 26.—(?)—The foreign ministers of Great Britain and So- viet Russia Monday started negotia- tions looking toward the resumption of trade between the two nations, which was broken off as the result of the controversy growing out of the trial in Moscow last April of a group of British engineers charged with espionage and sabotage. The negotiations took place at the British foreign office, where Maxim Litvinoff, Soviet commissar for for- eign affairs, called on Foreign Sec- retary Sir John Simon. Litvinoff emerged several hours later. “We made clear to one an- other the position of our respective governments and the present ob- stacles to renewal of Anglo-Soviet trading negotiations,” he said. BULGARIA SEEKS HOODLUMS Sofia, Bulgaria, June 26—()—Strict military surveillance of suspected hoodlums continued Monday as an aftermath of a period of martial law invoked to rid Bulgaria of Macedon- jan gunmen. Nearly 120 persons not possessing identification papers were detained. SUSPENDS BRUNO BETZEL Chicago, June 26—()—Bruno Bret- zel, manager of the Louisville club of the American Association, was indefi- nitely suspended Monday by President Hickey for his actions during the Louisville-Indianapolis game Sunday, in which spectators tossed cushions at umpire Eddie McLaughlin. ‘give him just the information he needs CONTRACT & XPEDTS PLAY Tea | CAPITOL ==THEATRE => By WM. E. McCKENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League Are you too quick with your, doubles? Since the bonus for making a doubled contract has been removed, many players are under the impres- sion that it is not costly to double. They feel that if the ‘declarer does make his contract he only receives about 100 additional points, while if] they do manage to set him one—or! especially two—tricks, they receive aj handsome reward. But have you ever thought of this angle? Doubling locates high cards! for the @eclarer, and your double may @A-7-3 WA-5-4 @A-5 Hh A-K-J-9-3 i to make his contract. The following hand was played in| a duplicate match and the only pair} to make six no trump was the pair! that was doubled. | The Bidding The bidding at most tables was as| follows: i South and West passed and North bid one club. You will notice that although North holds 150 aces, he does not bid no trump as he does not have a no trump playing hand. | South jumped to two no trump and! in most cases North plunged into six! no trump, which one East player un-| wisely doubled. I think the better bid! is for North to try four no trump and} leave it to South as to whether or not} he wishes to go further. The Play The jack of hearts was opened. East | won with the king and returned a small heart, which was won in dum-| my with the ace. At the tables where | the contract was not doubled, South tried to finesse the diamond, but at the table where the contract was doubled, the declarer knew the loca- tion of the king of diamonds and} therefore decided that his only chance to make the hand was to try for a} squeeze. He returned a small heart, East echoed in diamonds, and declarer won | with the queen. He led the queen of diamonds and went right up with the ace in dummy. The club suit was now started and four straight club tricks were taken. | On the fourth club East discarded a/| diamond as did the declarer. ' The last club was led and East was squeezed. If he dropped a small spade declarer's four spades would | Wool Growers’ association, announced jciety meeting at Ottertail when he be good, while if he let go the king Last Times Tonight of diamonas, tne declarer’s jack was | Matinee 25c, Evening 3} the declarer was able to locate the ; g abe good. | Not a difficult squeeze, when “te high cards, | (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) | “THRILLS MONTANANS HOLD WOOL BEYOND Helena, Mont., June 26.—(P)—Ray } “a Stebbins, secretary of the Montana) BELIEF Monday approximately 1,000,000! pounds of the 1933 clip for the state} had been shipped. This is about on | half of the amount shipped at this time last year, Stebbins said, ex-| Plaining many growers are holding} their wool awaiting word from the government to consign it or in the! belief the price will continue to rise. | HEAT INDUCES DEATH Pelican Rapids, Minn., June 26.—(?) —C. O. Bysven, 70, local assessor, died | | Sunday of a heart attack superinduc- ed by the heat. He was returning) from a meeting of the Historical So- complained of feeling ill. He got out of the car and expired shortly after seating himself on the running board. The California Wave Nook, 102 Third Street, Bismarck, specializes in com- bination permanents at $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 complete. Our patrons send their friends. Phone 782 YOUR HAIR, comes down dripping wet, from a REAL STEAM SUPER- CURLINE PERMANENT. Every wave an oil wave. Special to Sep- tember Ist, $3.50 Harrington's. Od Ee THe MAJOR BEHIND CLYDE BEATTY and his wild Hurry! Last Day! You'll always regret it if you miss this most exciting picture! Coming! Tues. & Wed. A Rousing, Roaring, Happy Show “Professional Sweetheart” A Private Life of a Radio Star with GINGER ROGERS NORMAN FOSTER ZASU PITTS FRANK McHUGH Imagine going away on vacation| and leaving Major Hoople behind!) It just isn't done! Every day readers} are calling up the circulation depart- | ment (Phone 32), to request that The} Bismarck Tribune be sent to them) while they're aw: We suggest you; do the same! j Al Cigarettes are not Nlike Different Kinds of 'Tobaccos Make a Difference in Taste and Aroma +.» Lake Chester- fields, for Instance tile, Minn., her former home, for bur- VALLEY CITY GOLFERS WIN Valley City, N. D. June 26.—(7)— Valley City’s Country club defeated Jamestown 13 to 0 in an inter-club golf match here Sunday. Al Shriner and K. 8. Fangen, both of Valley City, with 80 and 81 respectively, were low scorers for 18 holes. Billy Sun- dahl, youthful Jamestown star, turned in an 85. Perfume dabbed on the clothes or behind the ear will not last as long as it will if sprayed on the hair. No other way.” This is a direct Cook Electrically 8 of a series of interesting facts about electric cooking—This is the last number in this series. A complete set will be furnished free on your request— “Meats shrink in weight when cooked, but meats cooked in an electric range oven lose less weight than when cooked in any North Dakota Power & Light Co. ent for North Dakota. P.M. Hansen, |Jr., former husband of Joan Crawford, editor of the Jamestown Sun, is vice|was said to be in a serious condition president. ss ¥ Monday at Doctors hospital to which he was admitted over the week-end. VOLIVA TO START ANEW When he arrived from Europe Friday Zion, Ill, June 26.—()—Wilbur he was suffering from a bad cold Glenn Voliva says he is going to strike which later became more serious. out anew, and build another colony! elsewhere. The religious overseer of | BANDIT KILLS CASHIER Zion, who contends the earth is flat,| LaCrosse, Ind., June 26.—()—Wil- and against whom a petition in bank-| liam E. Tennel, cashier of the La- Tuptcy was filed last May, made this’ Crosse State bank, was killed here announcement Sunday night. “With | Monday morning by one of five bang- 50 cents in the palm of my hand to its who attempted to rob the bank. start with, in 12 months’ time I'll build | Tennel was slain when the bandit be- @ bigger and better Zion City than came angered because the safe was ever before,” he said. locked with a time lock. saving made by use ef an electric range OME cigarettes are made out of only one kind of tobacco ... while others are made from several different kinds. And everyone can understand that different tobaccos make a dif- ference in taste and aroma. Chest- erfields are a good example of this difference. You see it’s not easy to make Chesterfield’s milder taste. It takes three distinct kinds of Domestic tobaccos. Then these must be sea- soned with the right amount of Turkish. And they must be blend- ed and cross-blended until their flavors are welded together... to make a cigarette that has character and yet is not too strong... to make a cigarette that’s milder, a cigarette that tastes better. warehouses these. ChoiceTurkish Tobaccos come to Chesterfield in bales like Hogsheads of Domestic Tobaccos stored away for curing. ‘Wherever you buy ‘Chesterfields,youget them just as fresh as if you came by our factory door

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