The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 17, 1933, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1933 2 POLICE GUARDS ARE PROTECTINGFACTOR FROM GANG ATTACK Fear Kidnapers May Attempt Vengeance For His Part in Official Trap Chicago, Aug. 17—(P)—A heavy guard Thursday protected John Fac- tor, millionaire market plunger, from gang vengeance for his involuntary Part in a police effort to entrap his kidnapers—which failed. Sixty selected Chicago officers, armed with federal commissions to make their search an interstate affair, scoured the southern Wisconsin re- sort region—haunt of the Touhy gangsters—for trace of the extortion- ists who slipped out of their dragnet near suburban La Grange Tuesday. A death threat telephoned the spec- ulator, who already reportedly has | yielded more than $100,000 to kidnap- \ers who seized first his son, Jerome, and then himself, brought the police detail to his door, While Factor, frightened by the turn of events after failure of 300 po- lice aided by airplanes and elaborate planning to nab his kidnapers, pro- tested police “horned in” on the final pay off, the Wisconsin search proceed- ed without aid from local authorities. The squads swept through a dozen resort towns spurred by belief their quarries, lost at La Grange, might seek refuge there and hopes that ad- ditional suspects in the kidnapings of William Hamm, Jr., St. Paul brewer, ‘and Charles Urschel, Oklahoma City oil millionaire, might be apprehended. Though chagrined over the fiasco which attended elaborate plans to nab the kidnapers, chief of detectives Wil- liam Schoemaker said his men who handed over a bogus ransom package to the suspects recognized them as gangsters. The pair fled, it was learned, with about $100 in marked money from Factor. —— Weather Report FORECAST : For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair tonight; Friday somewhat unsettled and warmer. For North Da- kota: Fair, slightly cooler extreme southeast, not so cool extreme northwest tonight; Friday somewhat unsettled and warmer. For South Da- > kota: Fair, slight- i/| ly cooler extreme lll NM southeast tonight; on Friday somewhat unsettled, warmer west and north. For Montana: Generally fair to- night and Friday; warmer east por- lon. For Minnesota: Fair tonight and Friday; cooler tonight; somewhat warmer Friday in extreme northwest. GENERAL CONDITIONS A low pressure area, accompanied by light precipitation, covers the Great Lakes region and upper Mississippi - Valley while a high pressure area, at- tended by fair weather, is centered over the Plains States and Rocky Mountain region. Temperatures are moderate from the eastern Rocky Mountain slope to the Great Lakes region, but high temperatures accom- any the depression centered over the far western states. river stage at 7 a. m. 0.0 ft, 24 hour change, 0.4 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.32, Reduced to sea level, 30.08, PRECIPITATION REPORT For Bismarck station: ‘Total this month to date ...... Normal, this month to date . Total, January Ist to date .... 7.73 Normal, January ist to date .. 12.17 Accumulated deficiency to date 4.44 NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High- ‘WARMER. Low- est est Pet. BISMARCK, clear 52.00 Beach, clear .. 49.00 Carrington, cl 44 00 Crosby, clear . 46 «00 Devils Lake, clear . 46.00 Dickinson, clear 47 (01 Drake, clear .... . 46 00 Dunn Center, clear .... 85 44 .00 Grand Forks, clear . Hankinson, clear ... Jamestown, clear . Huron, clear ... Rapid City, clear MINNESOTA POINTS est est Pet. Minneapolis, peldy. 84 62 «22 Moorhead, clear . 82 56 «06 OUT OF STATE POINTS Maat est Pet est Pet. Amarillo, Tex. clear .. 88 68 00 Boise, Idaho, cldy. ..... 98 68 00 Calgary, Alta., Reiss 84 48 100 Chicago Ill, cldy. . 68 02 ver, Colo., clear .... 58.00 Des Moines, Ia., clear.. 62.00 Dodge City, Kans., clear 86 66 100 Edmonton, » Clear.. 76 52 .00 Havre, 56 OL 60.00 60 = .00 38 to Medicine Hat, A., clear 52.00 Miles Oty, Mont., clear 90 60 .00 Modena, Utah, peldy. ...92 58 00 No, Platte, Neb. clear.. 88 58 00 Okla. City, O., clear. 70 00 Pr. Albert, S., clear. 44.00 Qu’Appelle, S., clear. 38 = 00 Roseburg, Ore., 64 «00 a 68 00 City 66.00 64 28 58.00 a 0 Spokane, Wash. 64 = .00 Swift Current, 8, clear 80 42 00 Toede One clear... PA S 10 0, pee ‘00 Winnemucca, N,, cidy.. 102 68 00 » Man., peldy... 80 52 02 ‘Two supervisors, 44 regular teachers nd an auxiliary teacher carry on the work of speech improvement in Phil- adelphia’s schools, If food is too salty, place a wet cloth over the top of the vessel which 4% cooking. The steam will draw the Galt into the cloth, 1 Pneumatic Tires on Farm Machines Pneumatic tire efficiency provided | tor tractors last year now has been/| extended to farm machinery, accord- | ing to Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc.,/ Goodyear dealer in Bismarck. For years farm machines have jolt- ed slowly over rough fields, limited | in speed by the steel wheels with which they are equipped; but intros) duction of a new combine harvester, which cuts and threshes grain in one operation and is designed for use with Goodyear tires, forecasts a revolution in farm machinery design. The low pressure tires on which the combine is mounted minimize shocks to such an extent that the old speed for harvesting machinery is stepped up considerably and the ca- pacity of the machine is increased, ac- cording to engineers of, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber company. In addi- tion to increasing the speed of the machine, use of pneumatic tires play- ed an important part in reducing its cost to a figure appreciably lower than that of larger combines. The new combine weighs but 2,400 Pounds, a light load for a tractor to pull on pneumatic tires, and is smaller and more compact than previous large machines. Due to the speed made possible by the pneumatic tires, how- ever, it can do as much work in a given time as larger combines. An innovation is increasing width of the threshing cylinder to equal that of the cutter bar. The stalks of grain go directly into the cylinder head first, and the width of the straw stream always is the same width as the swath cut by the sickle—an ideal long sought by all designers of threshing machinery. LEITH PREPARES FOR | GRANT COUNTY FAIR Event Will Be Staged Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Aug. 31-Sept. 2 (Tribune Special Service) Leith, N. D., Aug. 17.—()—Prep- arations rapidly are nearing comple- tion for the 16th annual Grant Coun- ty Fair, which will be staged here Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Aug. 31 and Sept. 1 and 2, according to R. 4. Wrucke, secretary. The first day will be set aside for entries only, while full programs are arranged for the last two days. | Special features will include a large carnival, free attractions, free display of fireworks on Friday evening, rac- ing, airplanes, sports, special shows and dances. Liberal premiums are offered for all agricultural exhibits, according to Wrucke, Governor William Langer is sched- uled to speak at 1:30 p. m., Sept. 1. Other officers of the fair associa- tion include J. W. Wahl of Leith, pres- ident; James Glavkee of Leith, vice president; Carl Rivinits of Elgin, treasurer; J. H. Emch, G. W. Gebhard, W. F. Wessel and E. T. Saunders of ner of Leith, swine and sheep; Martin Dahl of Leith, grain and grasses; Irv- ing McCatty of Carson, vegetables; and Wilda Sebastian of Carson, edu- cation, In charge of women's exhibits will be Mrs. William Kamrath of Leith and Mrs. Otto Reinke and Mrs. J. R. Nixson of Elgin. August Johnson, J. A. Rock, Mar- ris Challgren, James Glavkee, Carl Rivinius and J. H. Emch, all of Leith, will be in charge of grounds, police and privileges. A premium list and further infor- mation on the fair may be obtained by communicating with Wrucke. HOW WOMEN CAN WIN MEN AND MEN WIN The Favor of Other Men Unless two pints of bile juice fl from fonstipated. You get yellow ton low skin, Dimples dull eyes, So teats taste, gas, dizzin headache. You have become an ugly-lool ng Cas Everybody wants mr il ison In 5: one mild vegetable medicine which starts wide area early this month but that the complete total will never be known. To add to the misfortune, bandits have appeared in the submerged areas in Honan Province north of here and are plundering towns and villages. 00,000 DIE WHEN FLOOD DEVASTATES ployed along the southern edges of the flooded district with orders to shoot anyone caught looting. In Honan, the river, called “China’s Sorrow,” was reported as having ceased rising, but in Shantung Prov- ince, farther to the northeast, the wa- ters continue to rise. Dozens of towns and villages in y, western Shantung were destroyed Ch ae rorince {Central /Thursday as the flood waters moved ina), Aug. 17. — ()— Widespi jslowly toward the river's mouth, floods of the Yellow river in northern |_ Thousands were made homeless. China were said Thursday to have Many, clinging to treetops when the caused 50,000 deaths in the last few cikes broke, were swept to thelr death, days, All crops in an area 50 miles long Officials of the Kinkow-Hankow |<nd 20 wide in western Shantung were railway, in giving this estimate, said| destroyed, missionaries from Tsao- many more undoubtedly had perished | chowfu reported. since dikes began breaking over a| Near Kaifeng, a city of 175,000, in Bandits Appear in Submerged Areas To Loot and Kill Surviving Peasants (100% PURE LIQUID RUBBER | Honan provincial authorities have sent an armored train as far north as| Possible and troops have been de- Honan Province, 1,000 peasants drowned. The flood of the Yellow is consider- ed the worst of several scourges in| central and northern China this sum- jmer. Earlier this month 10,000 per- sons drowned in floods of the Chiang jtiver in north central areas. Two hundred villages were destroyed, Famine, floods, heat, cholera, rats, locusts, and other natural forces, said officials, of the Nanking government, afflicted 12 of the 18 provinces of China proper, with 100,000,000 persons affected. —_—— -—_____¢ Strange But True | | || News Items of Day | (By The Associated Press) BOTH WERE AFRAID St. Charles, Ill, Aug. 17—()—Mrs. Lester J. Norris, heiress of the John W. Gates’ millions, had a bad night ride from Chicago to her home here. Fearful of kidnap attempts against her children, she finally stopped at, |Eimhurst and telephoned on that an-| lother car seemed to be seeking to overtake her. St. Charles police stop- ped the other machine and learned its driver, a salesman from Morris, Il, had thought, from the way the Norris car was being driven that gangsters were attempting to waylay him. BIRDS OF A FEATHER Chicago—There’s kinship be- tween: monkeys and bad children Dr. J. A. Campbell, zoo veterinar- ian at Toronto, Canada, believes, but not in the Darwinian sense. He told the veterinarian associa- tion that of all animals, monkeys sre the hardest to deal with in giving medicine. “Often I have to put medicine in fruit and then pretend to eat it,” said Dr. Campbell. “As soon as I lay it down and turn my back the monkey will grab it and gulp it down before he has time to get the bad taste.” A wet umbrella should be closed and stood with the handle down. This Prevents rusting of the point where the ribs join, and also prevents stretching of the cloth. Urge Speedy Program To Relieve Milk Men Chicago, Aug. 17.—()—Thirty rep- resentatives of dairymen left for Washington Wednesday to ask that the government speed up its relief Program for milk producers, They said they would ask a shake- up in the relief administration per- sonnel, “less red tape” and immedi- ate action in bringing about milk marketing codes for the various mar- kets. W. Holman, Chicago, secre- tary of the National Cooperative Milk Producers’ Federation, said “the farmers are desperate. Feed prices are rising, but the dairymen find themselves without protection for the price of their own products. Only one marketing agreement has been signed, while a hundred milk mar- ee are clamoring to be set in or- ler.” A smooth safety pin for thin or lacy material makes an excellent bob- kin. - The pin, holds the material se- curely, DE TIRES ) LATEX WELDED CORDS which ‘prevent Cord Separation . . the-cause of blowouts Leith, Peter Ferguson of Raleigh and) fi{iee flow, of your bile Juice is Carter's William Prosise of Carson, directors.| In\Garter's, Hal Np lone apes Superintendents of departments in-| setmety Af you, would. brine beck Zour horses: Rlins Weatherby, of Leith, | Serate iia User Pile accortine to | jorses; Elias Simpson of Brisbane, oir ghiper ee ag x cattle; M. Kallestad and Verne Davi-| maygrive,loonentathi ose int ok At Son of Leith, poultry; Gustav Haf-| fo Carter's, Little \d get what you as! SCHOOL OPENING SALE A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF STATIONERY AT VERY LOW PRICES Pen and Pencil Tablets - Inks - Crayons Notebook Filler Paper - Pencils and Erasers rect Liver Pills by nam i for. ©1983, EM Co, Girls’ All Wool French Beret »........20€ [shirts and’ Blower Shiris and Blouses... 99C Children’s Real Leather Shoes & Oxfords Complete Assortment of sizes and styles; $1.19 pair .. . Girls’ R: ¥ Non-Run Bloomers... 29 | Cotion Hose, pair... 29C SPECIAL VALUES ON SALE SATURDAY FRESH SUGAR WAFERS, 2 lbs. .. PEANUT BUTTER.KISSES, Ib. ... LADIES’ NEW FALL PURSES, each . QUALITY TOILET SOAP, 3 bars..... Children’s Vat Dye Wash Dresses Steet to 162. 29 Ladies’ Fine Gauge RAYON HOSE, pair,. 29C Boys’ Fancy GOLF HOSE, Ladies’ Full Fashioned Priced for Quick Sale Silk Hose Voile and Batiste New Fall Shades Fancy Prints Chiffon and Full width, vat 9 BED SPREADS, 79 | Guinn Or ADE The Burg Co. Is Pleased to Cooperate With the President Under the N. R. A. and Will Operate In Accordance With a Code for the Association of Limited tee Variety Stores—Now Awaiting Its Hearing in Wash- . on. Service, pair .. dyes, yard ..... 117 FOURTH ST. \ MON Do you know this? An average size tire goes round 395 times every minute at only 35 miles an hour! Think what happens when you drive at this speed—or faster! Friction develops scorching heat inside your tires! In many tires other than Riversides this heat sepa- rates cords! It weakens the tire, forms internal blisters! When you hit a rock ora bump . . . BANG! A blowout! on one of America's finest Tires Prices as low as 3 4-Ply Rambler. (6 plies under treed) 30x4,50-21 .. $4.25 28x4.75-19 .. 4.65 29x5.00-19 .. 4.95 32x6.00-20 0% 11.55 26x5.25-18 .. 5.60 31x6.50-19 00 13.15 Other sizes priced similarty low FREE TIRE MOUNTING TGOME RAMBLER 6-Ply Mate (8 plies under treed) 28x4.75-19 . $ 7.65 28x5.50-18 .. 10.20 You neea the added protection Riversides give you! Riversides’ Cords—the heart of the tire—are made from extra strong, long staple, premium cotton. Every cord in every ply is dipped in LATEX—100% pure, liquid, virgin rubber. This welds the cords into a super strong unit! It gives Riversides the strongest tire carcass made! It prevents cord separation . . . the cause of blowouts! Why We Save You Money Of coutee Riversides are made in one of America’s largest aud best tire factories. BUT— they come direct to us—minus the manufacturer’s selling and general overhead expense. That’s a saving. The second saving comes from Wards low cost method of distribution. These two reasons explain why we cell high quality tires for less. It’s simple to figure out for yourself why River- sides are better in quality, mileage, and safety than any other tire at the same price. *RIVERSIDE TIRES will not blow out under normal road condi- tione during the life of the tread if they are kept property inflated in accordance with the Specified air pressures. hs For your protection every single Riverside tire is guaranteed by Wards to give service that is satisfac- tory to you. No time limit! No mileage limit! A tire’ has to be extra good—has to be extra safe to be backed by the strongest tire guarantee ever written! Cie -

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