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* EXPLORATION TRIP y ESTABLISHED 1873 OF SOUTHERN ROUTE + BEING CONSIDERED! ® , Lone Eagle and Wife Forced Down By Fog At Village on Spanish Coast IS EN ROUTE TO LISBON) Contemplated Ocean Hop Would Be Via Azores Islands and Bermuda Caldelis de Tuy, Spain, Nov. 14—| (®)—Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh said Tuesday he is thinking of mak-} ing an exploration tour across the Atlantic ocean by the southern route, | similar to his recent stage-by-stage flight of the North Atlantic, and has no thought of a non-stop flight. Colonel Lindbergh, who with Mrs. Lindbergh stayed aboard their sea- plane Monday night after they were, forced down by fog on a flight from Santona, Spain, to Lisbon, was taken ashore Tuesday by the launch of the Spanish gunboat Pradera and he and Mrs. Lindbergh were entertained by village authorities. They said the prevailing fog and coastal storm would keep them here until Wednesday at which time they hoped to continue their trip to Lis- bon toward which they set out from Geneva Saturday. The forthcoming Lindbergh trans- atlantic flight, according to aviation officials, is the one originally mapped by the late Captain Allen Winslow of Pan-American Airways, in whose in- terests the Lindberghs are making their present serial survey. i The Winslow route included halts at Bermuda and the Azores. It was this route which Italo Balbo, former minister of aviation of Italy, and his great air armada followed on their return from Chicago this sum- mer. Similarly, both Lindbergh and Balbo followed closely parallel routes in their crossings of the North At- lantic earlier in the year by way of Greenland and Iceland. Thus aviation authorities feel this year will have seen a thorough check of flying conditions in both direc- tions across the northern and south-; ern routes over the North Atlantic) } SENATE COMMITTEE. BITERLY ATTACKED FOR BRING “YELLOW Investigator for Group Charges! North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ;which elcsed duting the embargo. ond place winner Nebraskan Beats Tattoo of Triumph in Fifty thousand clamor‘ng fans cheered 18 cornfield aces as they beat a machine gun tattoo against bangboards in the annua! cornhusking “world series” at West Point. minute contest, Sherman Henriksen, stalwart Lancaster county Nebraskan, emerged victor, shucking 27.624 bushels. Weary but still smiling, Henriksen is shown at the right with Harry Brown, s2c- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | MARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1983 é The Weather bo! cle and colder tonight; generally fair. PRICE FIVE CENTS Corn ‘Derby’ Neb. Out of the gruelling 80- FARM STRIKE FURY BBBS IN THREE Bic MIDWESTEN STATES a Holiday Adherents Attempt to Revive Flagging Interest in Movement North Dakotan Wins | Job in ne Fargo, Nov. 14—()—Andrew J.; leram, for 14 years a district court, rtepozter in North Dakota, has taken} a position as court reporter for Dis-| trict Judge E. F. Waite, Minneapolis, ia Hennepin county district court. | Loram was one of 17 applicants for! j the job. Loram was court reporter for the tate Judge A. T. Cole in the first ju-| ‘iicial district for many years and la-| tar became court reporter for Judge: Dainel B. Holt. Loram resigned this | position Aug. 31. (By the Associated Press) | : The farm strike simmered in three , REDERAL FIN ANGIN ¢ H staged in protest against what they described as “further degradation” of peaceful picketing, if any. Diyided opinion was being shown announced later this week, Walter the seventh federal farm credit ad- Singler, president of the state milk | Ministration district, i midwest states Tuesday. <4 Directors of the South Dakota Farmers Holiday association an-j nounced plans for continuation of; the embargo and designated Satur- day as “justice for agriculture” aay. | ‘They said demonstrations will be! IN NORTHWEST AREA farming. i Representatives -of eight southern; a ee sian ted voted to support | Production Credit Corporation the so-cal national non-l ing. | non-selling movement and advocated | and Bank for Cooperates Set Up At St. Paul Wi Wi ee on the auonioe ot epethec the airike | St. Paul Nov. 14—)—Hleads of the| Se eine. Fetes fF ottany | and the bank for cooperatives were headquarters where. the result will be|¢lected Monday by the directors of pool, said. i ‘The institutions will serve Wiscon-{ In South Dakota. the Holadayers nn Michigan, North Dakota and have asked creameries and processors Nee chissiia ot sinssapntio wae to reopen for what little produce the elected president of the production farmers must sell and urged meM= | credit ‘corporation. E. C. Johnson of bers to patronize those institutions | 5+” Paul was made vice ‘president, a Facts in Louisiana Probe ’ Covered Up i New Orleans, Nov. 14—()—An in-! vestigator for the United States sen-' ate committee looking into the elec- tion of Senator John H. Overton, has! stolen some of the oratorical thunder | of Louisiana's “kingfish”, Senator; Huey P. Long. ! The investigator, John G. Holland. unloosed a bitter denunciation of the committee's activities Monday as the investigation was resumed. | He said he would “blow the lid off this investigation” and accused the committee of “covering up for the; rat from Louisiana who sent Senator, ‘Towell to his grave.” Holland turned | toward Long when he made the last: statement. The committee, represented by Sen- ators Logan. Kentucky. and Thomas, Utah, both Democrats, was augmented ‘Tuesday by the chairman. Senator! Tom Conally (Dem., Tex.) who was | accused of being “yellow” by Investi- gator Holland. ‘In Austin last night Senator Con-! ally sald Holland's charges were; ‘The hearing Monday ended with! Senator Long on the stand and he was expected to resume his testimony + Tussday. ig Senator Logan was charged by Hol- land with attempting to close the in- vestigation without, looking into the | testimony ow Holland and his staff had gathered. Howell, Republican, Ne- Lege Pehalrman of genate. ei | California Hit by Summer Heat Wave nelsco, Nov. 14.—()—More pee iy heat” was forecatt by the weather bureau for ‘Tues- + Any to match high temperaures that have already disturbed Tec- ords. Two deaths were indirectly attribut- ed to dry winds and a biasing ‘sun wich drove the mercury up to.tecord marks in Los Angeles and San Fran- cisco Mondey, Jo Angeles had 96) jsumption of picketing was indicated! jlast week but reopened Monday. | FARMERS CO) . Elliott of Marion, Mic! and John Farrell, Jr., St. Paul, assistant secretary. | Hutzel Metzger of Fargo, N. D., was selected president of the bank for cooperatives, with Walter Obey of Detroit Lakes, Minn., vice presi- dent and treasurer and C. F. Monroe of. Fargo as secretary. In addition, the district directors elected Harry Olmstead of Lansing, Mich., vice president of the federal intermediate credit bank. Susens now is secretary of the Min-j nesota Bankers association while; Metager now is with the farm credit administration. Olmstead now is con- servator for two Michigan banks. All the district institutions have or) will have headquarters here. NORTH DAKOTAN ASKS FOR LEAVE OF ABSENCE St. Paul, Nov. 14.—(#)—C. F. Mon- and other states were quiet. for Wisconsin Monday. HOLIDAY LEADER {Ss RELEASED FROM JAIL Big Stone City, 8. D. Nov. 14.—(>) | —J. 8. Dobak, president of the Big/ Stone County, Minn., Farmers Holi- day association and four others were released by the sheriff late Monday after being detuined more than three hours. Dobak and the other strike leaders were seized after & group of Holiday Association members stopped a truck of the local cooperative creamery here and took the keys from the driver. ‘The group then descended on the creamery but was unsuccessful in an attempt to force suspension of opera- tions. The creamery was closed all MMITTEE one-year leave of absence from his i a gas ae ee [please grape eyed neg from Wisconsin, Iowa and the north-|ssiq aire} collage. be west began arriving in Chicago Tues- day ir der for the opening Wednesday of | college for a one-year leave so that I their second national conference Un-|mey sssume’my new duties,” Monroe " Bead national committee for action. Pe ARE De SMSO. EY Tea is ce oe ie Be ee comi tive secretary of the commétize: swid!! Canadian Growers | resenting the militant farm organ- ization as at She comerven rs groups would prepa! map 8 rene ‘| program of action for farm- ers of America. John Hetts of Colby, Wis, anid) fave, taken sdvantage of the farm strikers were send- shipping their products here. ing about 80 delegates representing said the Farmers’ Holiday association, the| _ Grain men ‘Tuesday that, Farmere’ Union, the milk pool, and| With only a limited amount of the United y League. durum needed, the wants will be, ‘said he had been informed| Supplied soon by Canadian du- that a truck cavalcade was-en route] rum so that when the North . farmers from northwest of that state, Sn recat tee wie Lg "| bulk of durum ralsed in the Unit- pee ae Paine NT OF SA 9 MINNESOTA FARMERS OPPOSED TO VIOLENCE Prices of durum in Minneap- Canby, Minn. Nov, 14—()—Sup.| lis, which have risen from ap- port was solicited Tuesday following ‘ly 87 cents in the mid- organization of the community law of October to $1.09 and $1.10 ind order league by 700 persons most] Mate aan farmers tO pay ly laroate, ‘opposed e aod il ot te i resolution e: nhecessity for their product than ie higher Deca usa law and grr nipes. where the price 1s around ust be maintained. cents. tion n'a message to President Roo- The H,.H. King Milling com. sevelt, indorsed his recovery program.| pany of Minneapolis has pur- Be a wae wa] eel SPE ee and cald roads and ma: mt prea noes ae \ - | nothing had been heard from the kid- | roe of Fargo, N. D., has requested a |/98. here Tuesday: “I-have asked the president of the} | Grab Durum Market |*Wvo rr CALIFORNIA FAMILY HOPES FOR RETURN OF KIDNAPED YOUTH \Offers to Deal With Abductors| wards a mysterious telephone call was and Pledges to Observe Strict Secrecy San Jose, Calif, Nov. 14.—(P)— Hopes for the retum of Brooke L. Hart were dimmed by his parents hére’ Tuesday on a public appeal to his kid- Aapers to establish contact. Only one condition, that the kid- napers give proof they have the 22- year-old store executive, was imposed in the appeal issued at the Hart home Monday night. In copies handed to newspapermen, the parents over their signatures, Alex J. Hart and Nettie B. Hart, gave their pledge that all negotiations will be confidential and that no “outside luterference” will be allowed. | The father, owner of the depart-/ ment store in which the son was re-/| cently made a junior executive, said | napers since Thursday night, shortly after young Hart vanished. The one contact, made by a telephone call to the Hart home and later traced to a San Francisco hotel, brought a $40,-| 000 ransom demand but made no ar-; tangemenis for payment. A telegram to a member of the Hart | family, saying “give up—sell for twen- ty thousand,” was quickly traced to James Neali friend of the family in Sacramento, Nealis explained his mly purpose was to advise the Harts v offer the kidnapers $20,000. Burr W. Poole, a ptinter, was ar- rested in Oakland after two anony-! mous telephone calls to police were traced to him. Notes found on his jverson mentioned the Hart case and Jack Klutas, named by Chicago police | ss head of a kidnap gang. Though | Poole was held, authorities said in- vestigation disclosed he had recently been in a psychopathic ward and that they were convinced he had no con- nection with the kidnaping. Local Firm Awarded Contract at Capitol Webb Brothers of Bismarck have keen awarded the contract for window shades in the new state capitol build- ‘The Bismarck firm's bid of $4,192.20 was the lowest of six offered for win- dow shades on the east, south and |witnesses were paraded before a Cass istand for the state testified to inci- TWO CHICAGO MEN - ARE IDENTIFIED IN HANI KIDNAP CASE! St. Paul Dentist Points Finger| At Touhy as Man Who .. Entered Drug Store { TIME KEEPER TESTIFIES Thea | Says Willie Sharkey ‘Resembles' Man Who Drove Automobile for Abductors St. Paul, Nov. 14.—(P)—Two Chi- cago men, including Roger Touhy, were partially identified Tuesday by witnesses ‘testifying for the govern- ment in the $100,000 William Hamm, Jr., kidnaping case in federal court. Stepping down from the witness) stand, Dr. C. C. Labissoniere, local; dentist, pointed a finger at Roger| Touhy as he sat behind another de. fendant, Gustav Schaefer. “Did you see any one here who re-| sembies the man who entered the Thomas Drug Store last June?” Joseph B. Keenan, special govern- ment prosecutor, asked Labissoniere. “Yes, I do.” Then, at Keenan's invitation, La- bissoniere hurried down, thrust his arm over Schrefer’s shoulder and pointed directly at Touhy’s face. Arthur Kleifgen, clerk in the C. J. Thomas drug store, previously testi- fled a stranger entered the store late on June 16 and five minutes after- received that led to discovery of a {ransom letter in the store. Previously Willie Sharkey, another of the four defendants, had been {pointed out as the man “resembling” \the driver of the automobile in which the millionaire brewer was spirited away and held somewhere in Wiscon- sin for ransom. Rush, 25-year-old time keeper, who saw Hamm a moment before he was seized. Labissoniere later said Touhy’s fea- tures were “identical”. with those of the stranger he saw last June 16. 12 Are Witnesses in Fargo Liquor Trial Fargo, N. D., Nov. 14—(2)—Twelve county district court jury Monday as the state began to weave its chain of evidence by which it hopes to convict Arthur (Chief) Barenson, Fargo, on a charge of ownership of a freight car- load of alcohol shipped into Fargo last March 14. With the exception of two witness- es, all of the persons who took the dents surrounding the seizure of a truck containing 18 drums of alcohol in Fargo shortly after it is alleged to have been loaded from the freight car on @ spur track, seizure later in the! day of 29 drums of alcohol on a farm near Harwood, N. D., and seizure of 36 drums of alcohol, 450 gallon tins of alcohol and a quantity of whiskey and “cutting” equipment on the Joe Schmidt farm southwest of Mapleton. Up to the time court adjourned no attempt had been made by the state to connect Barenson with the alcohol but A. R. Bergesen, states attorney, informed the court the connection | would be made later. Churches of Germany To Abandon Crucifix Berlin, Nov. 14.—(?)—The crucifix will disappear from , Protestant churehes in Germany, if Doctor Rein- hold Krause, chief of the Berlin sec- tion of the Nazi German Christians, has his way. | Addressing a mass meeting Monday | night, he declared “the crucifix is to be discarded. Everything that sprang from the alien spirit must be removed from the German people's church—be it ever so old and appar- venerable.” —_—_————_—_——_° | 11-Year-Old Girl Is | Freed from Husband| —_— "That testimony was given by Daniel | “"Y, Gunmen Attack Local Cafe Lindbergh Plans New Crossing of Atlantic MYSTERY RAIDERS ITALY WILL LAUNGH SYSTEM 10 CONTROL INDUSTRY OF NATION Chamber of Deputies to Be Abolished for Council of Corporations It DUCE SPONSORING IDEA; —- | Comments That Present Legis- lative Body of Country Nev- er Has Pleased Him Rome. Nov. 14.—(#)—Premier Mus- | solini said Tuesday the chamber of deputies of Italy, which does not please him, is to be replaced by the National Council of Corporations. He said this transformation of the legislative body would not be accom- plished immediately but that when the new chamber meets next year it yall be called upon at once “to decide its fate.” Tl Duce made this announcement in a speech before the convention of the National Council of Corporations und said the council, as the chief body of the powerful corporative system, must become a substitute for the cnamber. He commented in his speech that vhe chambey never had pleased him, The reason the proposed reform will not be made immediately is, he said, that there is insufficient time before the election in March which, therefore, will take place in the cus- tomary fashion. Mussolini termed the rise of the corporative state as “coincident with the decadence of Socialism.” Says Socialism Declining The new system, he said, was adapt- able also to introduction into foreign countries but that its adoption must ne conditioned on three facts. )~ The -oceurrence of revoltuion- ideas. (2) The existence of a humanitar- ian form of government. (3) The existence of a period of high tension. : Europe, he stated, in referring to the present difficult economic and po- iitical situation, “could still progress if it would display even the least pos- sible quantity of cooperation among its component nations.” Mussolini said the new corporative system, “an instrument under the “vegis of the state, will actuate the in- tegral, organic and single discipline of Productive forces with a view to the developments of wealth and political power and the well-being of the Ital- ian people.” Briefly, it was known, the system vontemplates establishment of so- called category corporations, or guilds representing employing and employed classes in agriculture, industry, trade and perhaps in other fields. ROOSEVELT REVIEWS RECOVERY PROGRAM Calls Executive Council to Study Status of Various Employment Projects Washington, Nov. 14.—(#)—Presi- dent Roosevelt called his executive council together late Tuesday to re- view the status of various recovery nrogram aspects, bulking large among which were those recent projects hav- ing to do with employment and relief fur the jobless. Data was being collected for presen- tation Wednesday to the meeting of governors, mayors, public engineers and social workers who will discuss the “civil works” plan, for which $400,000,000 has been allotted. Officials hope this plan will give regular work to 2,000,000 men now on work relief and assure the subsequent absorption of 2,000,000 others now un- employed. There was discussion, too, of means of caring for those who will vontinue to need aid, In-the east room of the White It vepresentatives. how to get part $100,000,000 the public works admin- istration plans to allot each ey ge i iff BE i Fe if “ielisteyi,§ Lier a cal ide i here} Shag” Se quel as F was, Los: Angeles f SHATTER WINDOWS BY SHOTGUN FIRE Police Baffled by Burst of Shooting From Moving Auto in Downtown Area | Will Speak Here OO SPEED QUICKLY FROM VIEW Police Blame ‘Alcohol Crazed Fool’, Doubt Connection With Burning Cross Bismarck police Tuesday were in- vestigating several angles to a myste- Tious attack on Thorberg’s Cafe early Tuesday morning in which three shots fired from an automobile speed- ing eastward on Broadway avenue shattered four windows in the front of the business establishment. The shots apparently were fired from @ .12-gauge automatic shotgun, the slugs being the small type -used in hunting game birds. Thorberg’s Cafe and Confectionery, located at 508 Broadway avenue. is operated by Eric A. Thorberg. The building is owned by A. P. Lenhart, President of the city commission. The attack occurred a few minutes after 2 o'clock Tuesday morning, ac- cording to Night Patrolman Peter Reid, who was in another restaurant less than a block away and who heard the shots. . Shots Were Rapid The rapidity of the shots, Reid said, indicated that it was an automatic gun. Direct hits were scored two of the windows while the two were broken by ricocheting shots, Thorberg said. Policeman Ryder Hamro sped east- ward in an automobile on Broadway avenue shortly after the attack, after witness some distance away said he saw the mystery automobile speed eastward, but found no trace of the assailants. Inability of Thorberg to find a mo- tive for the attack led Reid to ex- press the belief that it must have been “some crazed fools full of al- cohol.” Beer Parlor Next Door Police were inclined to doubt that the foray had any connection with the burning of a large cross last Sat- urday night in front of the William Weinstein beer parlor and amuse- ment hall here, but advanced the theory that the assailants might have intended their attack for a beer parlor next door to Thorberg’s estab- Ushment. Reid discounted this theory, how- ever, declaring that street lights il- luminated the scene so that it would have been easy to distinguish between the two places. Thorberg doubts that robbery was the motive because the holes in the windows were too high to permit en- trance to the cafe. No one was in the cafe at the time of the attack and all lights were ex- tinguished, the establishment being Closed at the time. James FE. Van Zandt of Altoona, Pa., commander-in-chief of the Vet-/| erans of Foreign Wars, on a tour of the nation, will speak in Bismarck at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening. The public is invited to hear him in the dining room of the World War Me-| morial building. V. FW. COMMANDER WILL SPEAK IN CITY WEDNESDAY EVENING Public Invited to Meeting in World War Memorial Build- ing At 8 P. M. Described as one of the most force- ful leaders in veterans’ work, James E. Van Zandt of Altoona, Pa., com- mander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, will visit Bismarck Wednesday evening. Commander Van Zandt will stop here while on a tour of the nation. He will arrive here at 7:45 o'clock and 15 minutes later will give an ad- dress in the dining room of the World War Memorial building here. Part of his address will be broadcast from station KFYR here. All exservicemen, members of pa- triotic organizations, leading state, county and city officials, and mem- bers of service clubs are particularly invited to attend the meeting though everyone interested is invited to at- tend, it 1s announced by the commit- tee in charge. Commander Van Zandt’s reputation as a student of veteran welfare prob- Jems and a champion in behalf of the disabled veteran and his dependents is known throughout veteran and po- litical circles. As head of America’s largest group of overseas veterans Van Zandt is a staunch advocate for re- peal of the economy act and restora- tion of the benefits to which disabled veterans were entitled before last March 20, the date on which the econ- omy measure was enacted by congress. BOWMAN VOTERS 10 | DECIDE ON PROJECT Bensions for widows and. of | Only 22 Eligible to Cast Ballots World War veterans on an i east taee ith bape on Million Dollar Irriga- | tion Plan of previous wars. In a recent visit to the white House, the V. F. W. commander presented a Program of legislation to President Roosevelt based up on the theory that the responsibility for the care and welfare of disabled World War veter- ans and their dependents primarily is an obligation that belongs to the fed- eral government. Commander Van Zandt is a sup- porter of the campaign for immediate cash payment of adjusted service cer- tificates for World War veterans. “The nation is suffering from a lack of money in the hands of the people who actually need the every-day necessities of life,” he says. Saskatchewan Group Supports Wheat Pact Regina, Sask. Nov. 14—(P}—Ex- Bowman, N. D., Nov. 14.—()—At & meeting here Monday, members of the board of Bowman county com- missioners set December 2 as the date for an election at which electors will determine whether to go ahead with the Bowman irrigation project. Contemplated since 1908, the proj- ect under consideration is a dam that 7 i Fa Fe g ae 3 Ei iit i i i “aly