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HUTCHINSON TELLS ATTORNEYS OF DUTY TO PROTECT PUBLIC Says Any Lack of Confidence in Bar Is Caused By Law- yers Themselves Minot, N. D., Aug. 21.—(?)—Mem- bers of the North Dakota State Bar association, opening their annual convention in Minot Monday, were told by their president, District Judge W. H. Hutchinson, LaMoure, that if lawyers have failed to hold the con- fidence of the public they themselves are to blame, and that any lawyer can have right to expect public confidence only after he has attained a high conception of public duty. “We hear a great deal about the lack of public confidence in the law- yer,” Judge Hutchinson said. “If this is true, has not the lawyer him- self brought about this condition? Many lawyers, when appearing in court, hold up the opposing counsel as a rascal and as cunning and adroit, and in my opinion it is this that has alienated confidence.” Judge Hutchinson outlined the dif- ficulties confronting the bar at this time, particularly with regard to a ig the standards of the profes- sion, In discussing the matter of judicial appointments, he stated that the bar associations of the country should have a greater influence in the se- lection of judges. “Professional indorsement rather than political indorsement should have the greater weight in these ap- pointments,” the judge said. “Until the bar associations have more to say in the matter of appointments, the standards and efficiency of our courts will not improve.” “Another complaint we hear con- cerns the lack of power possessed judges and the short length of their terms,” the jurist continued. “We can remedy this by selecting judges worthy of power and long terms.” MINOT YOUTH WINS HORSESHOE GROWN Defeats Veterans in Contest For State Title At Magic City Sunday Minot, N. D., Aug. 21—(?)—Ernolf ‘Red” Roland, 15-year-old Minot southpaw horseshoe pitcher, Sunday won the state championship in the 15th annual state horseshoe tourna- ment. In six games for the cham- pionship Roland suffered only one de- feat, that by Herold Bomstad, Minot. The new titlist scored 288 points, had 155 ringers and 31 double ringers in the six games. Art Engebretson, Fargo, the defend- ing champion, failed to get into the select group of four which played for the state title when he was defeated by Art West, Minot, in an elimina- tion. The elimination took place be- tween the high eight in qualifying play and was a battle royal until the last game. When six games had been piayed, five contestants had won four games and-lost two. It was in the seventh game that West defeated Engebretson. Others in the playoff besides Ro- land and West were Otto Loseth, Havana, and N. O. Hammer, Minot, Loseth, runner-up to Engebretson last year, also took second place this year by winning three games and losing three in the play-off. West and Ham- mer each won two and lost four. Young Roland held all but one of the individual records in the Minot horseshoe league when the season was recently completed and shared in the other with Hammer. He had beaten Engbretson in the northwest tourna- ment which was held in Minot during the northwest fair in July. In the first flight, D. Welliver and ©. N. Nordlund, both of Bismarck, €ach won six games and lost one but Welliver had a higher point total to win first place. In ‘the second flight, another tie existed between W. McConn, Minot, and Jack Benton, also of this city. McConn had the high point total, Placing first, In the third flight, William Bredy of Bismarck won six games and lost none to place first and John Under- dahl of Minot placed second. Winnipeg Band to Give Concert Sept. 3 A number of talented musicians comprise the membership of the Win- nipeg Citadel Band, which comes to Bismarck Sunday. Sept. 3, for a ser- jes of concerts, according to Adjutant Herbert Smith of the Salvation Army, who is in charge of general arrange- ments for the appearance of the band here. Among the soloists of outstanding merit are Deputy-bandmaster George Weir, cornet soloist; Ernie Parr, so- Prano cornet soloist; Bennie Merritt, trombone soloist; and William Dick- ens, horn soloist and late of the Chalk Farm band in England. Percy Merritt, composer of marches and many other Pieces, is the euphonium soloist. A feature of all programs, Smith says, is the band’s singing, since every man is a member of the male chorus. ‘There also is a male voice party, with George Weir directing both groups. Bandmaster Henry G. Merritt is the leader of the Winnipeg Citadel band ‘nd under his direction the band has achieved an enviable reputation as a musical organization of high order. Members of the band will be lodged in private homes for the one night (Sunday) they are here. Persons hav- ing rooms available are asked to Phone Mrs, J. L. Kelley at 809 or Mrs, Herbert Smith at 521, Adjutant Smith announces. Fargo Girl Drowns At Detroit Lakes Detroit Lakes, Minn., Aug. 21.—(7)— Miss Leone Krassin, 25, Fargo, N. D., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Krassin of Barney, N. D., drowned late Sunday in Long Lake, three miles weat of Detroit Lakes. The body was recovered four hours later. ,| bis wife, Ora Shannon; his son, Ar- Acclaimed by Cubans for his work as mediator and his present effort! in helping the new government get Ambassador Sumner Welles (indicated by arrow) is pictured recei ing the cheers and plaudits of a crowd of natives as he leaves the American Embassy in Havana. ae ere al THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1933 Havana: Acclaims U. S. Mediator DECKS ARE CLEARED off to a steady start, United Stat (Lonely Heart Gets 15 Days in Jail for Good Measure New York. Aug. 22.--(7)—-Dan Flynn, a lonely heart, craved at- tention and got it. His meliowness was tinged by melancholy as he stood on a street corner before dawn Sunday. Here he was, he thought, 32 years of age, getting along in iife, but not making much of a splash. Suddenly he straightened his shoulders and decided to do some- thing about it. He strode to a fire alarm box and turned the handle. Then he strode to another and another and another—five in all. All the firemen in the midtown district dashed to the scene. There Attention and was Dan, perched on a freight FOR JUNIOR LEGION BASEBALL ENTRIES Six Teams Open Eastern Meet Tuesday; Western Section Begins Friday Springfield, Ohio, Aug. 21.—(P)— Six teams will compete in the eastern region American Legion Junior Base- ball tournament, starting here Tues- day. They will represent Reading, Pa.; Springfield, Ohio; Trenton, N. J.; Lewiston, Maine; Gastonia, N. C., and Greenville, Ga. Four of the six teams which will Play for the western sectional cham- pionship at Topeka, Aug. 25-27, were selected over the week-end. The two other contestants were to be determined Monday at Spring- field, Mo., and North Platte, Neb. Chi- cago was leading Kansas City, 4 to 0,|" Sunday when rain halted the region- al final at Springfield. Neligh, Neb., and Louisville, Colo., meet for the regional title at North Platte. These two were the only ones which appear- ed for the regional meet and each has one game in the three-game ser- jes. The longest final game in the west- ern area took place at Pocatello, Idaho, where Woodburn, Wash., de- feated Pocatello, 4 to 3, in 15 innings. Bevens, who went the route for the winners, striick out 23 men. Other teams which won their final games were Stockton, Calif., which beat Phoenix, Ariz, 4 to 1; Fargo, which triumphed over St. Paul, 7 to 2, and Ada, Okla., which eliminated Little Rock. The western sectional winner will meet the eastern sectional winner for the junior world championship at New Orleans. CS | Sioux City Good; Play at 6 Tonight Bismarck will play the Sioux City Stockyards team at the local ball park at 6 o'clock this eve- train, snitching a ride. To the magistrate, he said: “It's this way, judge. I never get any attention. I go to see friends of mine go off on liners and boats, and I hear the crowds all cheering, but nobody ever cheers for me. “So, judge, I thought I'd like to hear a few cheers for myself. Something that I'd done myself, you know.” “Ah, yes,” said the magistrate, in a tone of sympathy mixed with sadness. “Ah, yes, Fifteen days in jail.” Austria Seeking to ! Repel Nazi Threat Paris, Aug. 21.—(?)—Austria is un- derstood to be sounding out the gov- ernments about a plan to increase her army by 8,000 men to the treaty tigure of 30,000. ‘The present Austrian army is 22,- 000, but before increasing the number | to treaty strength the nation prefers to have the approval of France, Great Britain and Italy. The additional men, to be used as gendarmes to guard the frontiers against German Nazi activities would t be only temporary. PREMIER HURRIES TO CONFERENCE IN ITALY Vienna, Aug. 21.—(?)—Political cir- cles, taking cognizance of Chancellor Englebert Dollfuss’ hurried visit to Italy for a conference with Premier Mussolini, inclined to the belief Mon- day that the chancellor has aban- doned his policy of friendship with Germany. Rather, these quarters think, Doll- fuss is trying to win the Italian pre- mier to concerted action by big European powers against what the Austrian government characterizes as German interference through broad- casts with Austrian internal political affairs. Stations in Munich, Stuttgart, and Breslau on Saturday sent out a lec- ture comparing the Austrian and German situations. One former mem- ber of the outlawed Austrian Nazi party said the Austrian economic sta- tus grew more desperate each day. The present Austro-German situa- tion arose because of the banning of the Nazi party in Austria, retaliatory visas by both countries, the broad- casts, and the arrest in Vienna and Berlin of newspapermen and diploma- tic attaches of the other country. Obtain Confessions In Urschel Kidnaping Dallas, Tex., Aug. 21.—()—State- ments obtained from suspects held in Dallas for the kidnaping of Charles F. Urschel, Oklahoma oil millionaire, were sealed Monday for the eyes of a grand jury alone—for the protection of the signers themselves. Frank Blake, department of justice agent, in disclosing “several confes- sions” had been obtained from among the five persons held here, refused flatly, for fear of reprisals, to reveal just how many had been made and just what they contained. | The confessions, Blake said, would be in the hands of federal authorities | in Oklahoma City when thé grand | jury convenes there Wednesday to go into the Urschel case. ‘Those held here are R. G. Shannon, mon Shannon, Armon Shannon's wife and Harvey J. Bailey, a despe- rado wanted for a long string of capi- tal crimes, It was on the Shannon “farm” near Paradise, Texas, that Urschel was held while ransom nego- tiations went forward. Joseph Chase, Dodge Dies Here Saturday Joseph Chase, 30, of Dodge, N. D.,! died in St. Alexius hospital here Sat- urday afternoon following an opera- tion for a ruptured appendix. He leaves his wife, five children, his| mother, three brothers and three sis- | ters. Funeral services will be held from the family home 14 miles north of Dodge at 2:30 o'clock Wednesday aft- ernoon with Rey. Eagle of the Church | of God, Dodge, in charge , Little Brown Jug Is Back in Competition Ann Arbor, Mich., Aug. 21.—(P)— The little brown jug, long the prize of victory between Michigan and Min- nesota football teams, missing since just before the Wolverine-Gopher game of 1931, has been found. In a clump of bushes near the med- ical building at the university the gridiron trophy was retrieved Monday by Al Thomas a brother of Lorenzo Thomas, grounds keeper at Ferry field. The jug apparently was placed in he bushes within the last few days. When the demijohn, its sides carry- ing the scores of numerous Michigan- Minnesota grid contests, disappeared two years ago, various “accusations” Were passed back and forth, but it re- mained in hiding. It will be the prize again when the Gophers and Wolverines meet here November 18, —_—_—_—____ Notice to Traveling Salesmen When in Steele—for home com- fort, headquarter ata good, clean, modern hotel. Rates very reason- able. GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL E. A. Anderson, Prop. Steele, N. D. The last of 5 trainloads of tires at close-out prices. What’s left of 200,000 Pharis Roadgrippers. 4.40- 21, $3.98; 4.50-21, $4.69. All sizes.—Gamble Stores. ee peer er ‘a AT ITS BEST ! Special Round Trip Excursion Rates for Month of August Bismarck-Chicago $58.50 Eastbound 2:10 pm Iv. Bis. 6:35pmar. Mpls. Westbound ar. 12:50 pm lv. 8:10am 7:25pm iv. Mi ar.6:05am 11:15 pmar. Chicago lv. 2:00am 10-Day Return Limit If you plan to attend the World's Fair, include the added pleasure of making the trip by AIR. NORTHWEST AIRWAYS, INC. Telephone 800 or 826 ning. The Sioux City club is probably the best all around team that has appeared here this season. They recently took second place in the Denver tournament where the fastest semi-professional teams in the country compete annually for a first prize of $5,000. They were beaten by the Jamestown team Sunday by a score of 1 to 0 in one of the most exciting games ever played in that city. The stock- yards team used their second best pitcher against Jamestown and will use their star twirler in the game here tonight. Paige and Troupe will be the battery for Bismarck and one of the biggest crowds of the season was expected to be in attendance as the game promises to be one of the best of the season. bearing in New York. A Federal crime bureau to co-ordinate efforts of local authorities 11 combatting racketeering was sug- gested to the Senate subcommittee on racketeering when, as shown here, it met for its first regional Among the 50 noted criminologists and police executives in attendance were (1) New York’s Police Commissioner James S.-Bolan; (2) Senator Royal S. Copeland of New York, chairman of the committee; (3) Joseph B. Keenan of Cleveland, special assistant to the Attorney Gen- eral; (4) Former New York Police Commissioner Edward P. Mulrooney, and (5) Assistant Secretary of State Raymond Moley, recently assigned by President Roosevelt to advise on the Administration’s anti-racket campaign. As Senate Racketeering Comniitee Opened Probe | Qiandings AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Pet. Washington 670 New York Cleveland ea 2 2 430 367 NATIONAL New York .. Pittsburgh Boston ... {St. Louis ... Chicago .. Philadelphia Brooklyn . Cincinnati 6 544 543 53 429 409 379 AMERICAN A Columbus ... Minneapolis copes sie indianapol jToledo ... Louisville . Milwaukee . Kansas City 659 552 11 504 481 AT3 439 383 (Prison Doors Yawn. For Fewer Persons Washington, Aug. 21—(#)—The cen- sus bureau finds that for the first mitted to prisons. Its summary of reports. from 44) “596 | time since 1926 there was a decrease | last year in the number of men com-/les A. Wales, Van Hook, editor and on his campaign for the Untouchable | States and the district of Columbia— showed, too, that the number of wo- men in prison had dropped, but that had been the tendency for the last three years. The 1932 total commitments were 66,384 compared with 69,483 in 1931; male prisoners committed dropped from 68,483 to 63,71; female from | 3,037 to 2,913. The bureau made no attempt to ex- [plain why the drop. |Sioux City Club Is | Beaten at Jamestown | Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 21.—(?)— Playing errorless baseball behind Wild Bill Freeman Sunday afternoon, the | Jamestown baseball club shut out the Sioux City Stockyards team of Iowa 1 to 0. | The game lasted only one hour and | four minutes. Only 29 men faced each | pitcher, , | Next Sunday Bismarck will play | Jamestown here in their third meet- ‘ing this season. Jamestown won the tirst game 1 to 0 and the second went to Bismarck 3 to 2. Jamestown . Sioux City ..... 000 000 000-0 5 1 Battries: Freeman and Hancock; Hemingway and Wilson. Van Hook Editor to Head District Body Stanley, N. D., Aug. 21—()—Char- | publisher of the Van Hook Reporter, was elected president of the third dis- © 1933, Licasrt & Myaas Tosacca Co, he trict organization of the North Da- kota State Press association, at the annual meeting held here Saturday. He succeeds C. A. Pickering, Sanish, who has served during the past year. | O. M. Kilen, Stanley, editor and publisher of the Mountrail County Promoter, was elected vice president and Edward Sullivan, Mohall, editor and publisher of the Renville County Farmer, was chosen secretary. The newly elected officers will choose the city where the 1934 con- ;Vention will be held. Hunts for Brother Missing 47 Years Richard. ix 3 the civil hospital, still in custody be- cause of his one-year jail sentence for vivil disobedience, It was believed an acute attack of kidney trouble brought about the removal. He now weighs 93% pounds, DIES IN JAMESTOWN Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 21.—(7)— Mrs. J. H. McKinley of New York City, died here Monday from a stroke of apoplexy. With her husband, who has been an outstanding clubman and musician in the east, and a close friend, Miss Mary Foster, she had been touring the west. The body will be sent to New York City for burial, CAPITOL —== THEATRE ==— Daily 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 | Last Times Tonite| This high pressure ad man wanted’ ith ELIZABETH ALLAW } Pursuing a search for her missing |brother which has extended over a{ |period of 47 years, Mrs. William C.| Rees of Spring City, Pa., Monday ask- jed The Tribune to aid her in locating | David Lowell Sprague who now would be 74 years old. | Mrs. Rees said she believes. her brother may be “somewhere in the mining regions of North Dakota” and | |asked anyone with news of him to| | write to her. ++ 100 000 00x—1 5 0) / |Gandhi Is Weaker | Sixth Day of Fast Poona, India, Aug. 21—(#)—The Mahatma Gandhi grew weaker Mon- day during the sixth day of his fast in ‘protest against the government's re- fusal to grant him privileges to carry cass, He was taken from Yeroda jail to DORIS KENYON ALAN DINEHART Laurel and Hardy in “ME AND MY PAL” Cartoon - Pathe Review Tomorrow BILL BOYD in \ “EMERGENCY CALL” An outstanding disclosure of the hospital racket with WYNNE GIBSON WILLIAM GARGAN BETTY FURNESS You're always saying Chesterfields taste better — | wish you'd tell me why Weu, I’ve worked in tobacco; I’ve manu- factured cigarettes ... and I'll tell you why Chesterfields taste better. For a cigarette to have a good taste, it must have first the right kind of Domestic tobacco. This means ripe, mellow, sweet tobacco, filled with Southern sunshine. Then, blended and ¢ross-blended with this tobacco there must be the right quantity of the right kinds of aromatic Turkish to- bacco . . . tobacco that has a pleasing flavor and aroma. Aroma, as you know, adds to the taste. It’s just like the pleasing aroma from certain foods. It’s appetizing. It makes the food taste better. It makes the cigarette taste better. Then again, for a cigarette to have a good taste, it must be made right. The size, the cigarette paper, everything about it must be right. Just try Chesterfields. hesterfield the ctgarelle thal MILDER e the ctgarelle thal tastes BETTER