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ni i ms “PAIL TO DETERMINE North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE (22: ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1933 PRICE FIVE CENTS LInay REASON FOR DEMISE OF MANDAN WOMAN’ Male Companion Admits Girl * Had Been Drinking; Chemists Called in QUIZ ORCHESTRA MEMBER Tee EE | Girl Unconscious When Entered at Local Hospital Monday, Officials Say | S| i} Unable to find a definite cause for | the sudden death of Miss Marie Fer- derer, 20-year-old Mandan woman, in tneir preliminary post-mortem work “here Monday afternoon, two Bismarck doctors planned further examination ot the young woman's organs Tuesday, sncording to W. E. Perry, Burleigh Y Completes Jungle Hop e. o Takes Peek’s Post ——————_* CHESTER C. DAVIS Chester C. Davis, former agriculture commissioner in Montana, has taken over the job of federal farm admin- istrator, vacated by George N. Peek who accepted an appointment as head of the organization to promote sale of American products abroad. Davis has been Peek’s first assistant. WALLACE AND PEEK URGE SUPPORT FOR PRESENT PROGRAM Would Observe Adjustment Act Pending Adoption of Long-Time Plan CONCEDE NEED FOR CHANGE) ASK ADVANCE OF $310,940| FOR NEW SCHOOL IS APPROVED BY BOARD Application Will Be Forwarded to Washington Offices { Immediately Administrator Raps Liber: a $203,000 Weuld Be Loan While Who Would Eliminate the Profit Motive Chicago, Dec. 12—()—Strict ad-/ Remaining $107,940 Would Be Gift Bismarck’s request for a public herence to the Agricultural Adjust-| works advance of $310,940 to assist ment Act, with possibly some modi- fications, until a long-time farm pro- gram can be agreed upon was asked Tuesday by Secretary Wallace in speech for the American Farm Bu- reau Federation convention. Following George N. Peek, who is taking another job outside the agri- culture department Because of dis- in construction of a proposed $350,000 high school here was approved Tues- a|day forenoon by the state public works board after a conference with members of the Capital City school board, architects and other officials. The request for the advance, with JAMES A. LA RUE Chicago, Dec. 12.—(—James A. La |livestock commission of Minnesota, Rue, Florida chain gang fugitive, was; without the aid of his greatest bene-| factor Tuesday in his fight to evade CAME 100 LATE 10 HAVE GOOD EFFECT Olson Says Action Was Justified | But Was Not Taken At Proper Time FARMERS GRAIN WAS SOLD Statement Made at Farmers Union Livestock Meeting; Fine Is Re-Elected St. Paul, Dec. 12-(@}—Cooperative | ownership of packing houses as a re- covery aid to the farmer was advocat- ed Monday by Charles D. Egley of St. Paul, manager of the Farmers Union North Dakota, Wisconsin and Mon- tana, at the organization’s annual 4 Local Doctors Puzzled by Mystery Deaths noo BISMARCK REQUEST j{ ties to Benefactor {/SAYS WHEAT ORDER ——— =, ARTER DARING TRP Gales Gevore_. QVER WILD TERRAIN | Passed Only One Village in 900- Mile Trip From Manaos to Port of Spain ANNE REPORTS VIA RADIO Reports Weather Good and Visi« bility Unlimited During Much of Journey Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, Dec. 12.— | )—Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lind- |bergh arrived here Tuesday after- noon after a flight of more than 900 miles from Manaos, Brazil. | The colonel set the big red hydro monoplane down in the harbor here at 2:27 p. m., E. S. T. He had taken it off from the Amazon river in the tion in declaring an embargo on|interior of Brazil at 4:48 a. m., E. 8. T. wheat came too late to be of any! Throughout the long overland hop, good effect. In effect he labelled the|Mrs. Lindbergh had operated the governor's action a mere gesture. | Wireless set in the monoplane, keep- ing in cinstant communication with OLE H. OLSON At a meeting of the Farmers Union Livestock commission Monday in St. Paul, Lieut. Gov. Ole H. Olson, New Rockford, said Governor Langer's ac- i i ! being returned to the South to com-|meeting here. plete a five-year prison sentence. Egley asserted that if the profits ed break beni bentaiand et it Med jof the various commission companies Altred O. Erickson, to say he was |™uieh are owned collectively by the washing his hands of the whole affair |farmers, were allowed to accumulate county coroner. agreement over policy with some of Wallace's aides, the secretary, like Peek, asked that support be given the present program. Conceding that some changes in the act might be needed, among them the approval of the state board, will be sent to Washington immediately, Henry Holt of Grand Forks, member of the state board, said following { uae the Pan-American Airways wireless | Sauer na ee a, stations. Miss Ferderer, daughter of Mr. and/ }| | ‘They encountered a few rain squalls Mrs, Andrew J. Ferderer of 107 Sixth venue, northeast, Mandan. died in a; Jocal hospital at 1:40 o'clock Monday ; afternoon. She was taken from an apartment at 100 Avenue B, to the hospital in an embulance at 11:30 a. m. Monday.! She was in a coma when he first ex-| amined her, according to Dr..C. E. Stackhouse, and did not regain con- 1 sciousness. ‘ ‘The autopsy is being conducted by Dr. Stackhouse and Dr. L. W. Larson. Contents of the young woman's stomach were to be examined by chemists at the state regulatory de- partment Tuesday to determine if poison caused the death, Kelley Holds Bottle Sheriff Joseph L. Kelley said he is holding a bottle of alcoholic liquor, cuntents of which the woman is al- leged to have. drank Sunday evening, avhich he obtained at the apartment ‘where the woman had spent the night. Kenneth Filbach, member of the Bunny Paynther and His Serenaders orchestra, was questioned Monday af- __ ternoon by officials, according to ‘State's Attorney George 8S. Register. Filbach, according to Register, salt he was Miss Ferderer’s partner at a varty Sunday night and that she had imbibed of liquor. ‘The musician lives at 100 Avenue B, RADICAL REBELLION AFTER 94 ARE SLAIN Threatened General Strike Halt- ed and Peace Returns to - Strife-Torn Area Madrid, Dec. 12.—(#)—Authorities throughout Spain announced Tuesday that the anarchist uprisings in which 94 have been slain and hurdreds wounded in four days of violence had been put down. Further, they said a threatened general revolutionary strike had fail- led. It was believed the government now will find it unnecessary to de- clare a state of martial law. Breaking out last Friday in a series of bombings and riotous demonstra- tions, the revolt spread quickly) & substitution for the processing tax | as a means of raising money for benefits, Wallace held that the whole farm problem is one of planning. “Debate that will rage with great intensity this winter” was urged by the secretary in the formulation of a new and permanent program. But he pleaded that the debate not be “re- duced to petty, personal interests or small local issues.” Must Decide Big Point One thing that must be decided, he said, is whether the permanent pro- gram shall be simply national or in- ternational. Until that decision is the as- i | the made, Wallace continued, sumption must be that the plan - because there is ob- viously Very little foreign purchasing the parley. 8. J. Doyle of Fargo, another mem- ber, also was here but Thomas H. Moodie of Williston, the third mem- ber, was not present. Of the $310,940 asked, $203,000 would be a loan and $107,940 would be a gift from the government. The city school district last fall in a spe- cial election approved a bond issue for re-payment of the $203,000 to the federal government. s Board Has $68,701 In a financial report presented to the state board it was shown that city school board now has $68,701 in its special building fund wi could be used for the new structure, powr for our wheat and lard at the/ Making the total available, if the present time, nor is any material change concéivable within a year or two.” He warned against huge loans to/ call foreign countries to buy American products until the United States is ready for the “acceptance of large amounts of goods from abroad.” ‘After suggesting support of the/have plans and specifications pre-; current hog-corn plan, Wallace said| pared until then, he said. Construc-; grant is made, $379,641. In the event of final approval, the school board will be in position to for construction bids next March, according to H. O. Saxvik, city superintendent of schools. Bids cannot be called for before next March because the architects will not after once promising to give the man “every break” possible to win him! his freedom. “La Rue lied to me,” said the} judge. “He abused my confidence and now I wash my hands of the whole affair. While I think that the punishment in his case is too severe,; I believe that all law violators should be punished and be made to pay a just penalty for their crimes.” ‘The authorities said that La Rue's criminal record, brought to light Monday, disclosed that he had been arrested on charges of automobile theft and for carrying concealed wea- pons, and he admitted he had once/ served a term in the federal re- formatory at Chillicothe, O. Gov. Henry. Horner of Illinois has ordered | his extradition to Florida. A Florida court sentenced La Rue to five years on the chain gang for breaking into an uninhabited house. Negro Attorney Will Attack Jury System! Leesburg, Va., Dec. 12—(}—Coun- instead of giving them out as patron- age dividends, the cooperative pack- ing plants cogld be constructed. Lieutenant Governor Ole Olson of North Dakota, commenting on Gov- ernor William Langer’s embargo cn wheat, stated it had been put into effect too late to have any desirable results. “The governor was justified in his methods,” said Lieut. Gov. Olson, “but, he put them into effect when the farmer's wheat was gone and the price was in the neighborhood of 50c @ bushel.” C. W. Fine of Sheyenne, N. D.. was re-elected chairman of the board of directors. Fred Harding, Montevideo, Minn., ‘was named first vice chairman; J. T. Kelly, Castagne, Mont., second vice chairman; and Kenneth Hones, Col- fax, Wis. secretary-treasurer. LANGER CARRIES IDEAS TO MISSOURI AUDIENCE Richmond, Mo., Dec. 12.—(#)—Gov. Langer of North Dakota “carried the message” of the five-governor con- ference at Des Moines to two Mis- souri audiences Monday in an effort to enlist the whole Mississippi valley las they reached the low-lying coast jof Venezuela, according to her re- ' Ports, but most of the trip was made in perfect flying weather. She constantly reported “unlimited 10 GRIP BIG A E A visibility” beneath a sky “heavily overcast” with clouds. }and dangerous Brazil territory car- 4 jried them 190 miles up the river Moderation Forecast for Middle|Nesro, 190 miles along the river m ranco, 370 miles along the river Cot- West But East Will Keep ingo and then 186 miles farther. to the on Shivering | Brazilian frontier. | There their course near the mountain Roraime, at an altitude of (By The Associated Press) | 10,215 feet, before heading toward Below normal temperatures, snow. |Georgetown and Trinidad. ice and freezing winds, combined} Two hundred anc forty miles up Tuesday to prolong winter's premat-|the river Blanco they flew over ure grip on much of the nation. la series of world famed cataracts While moderation was forecast for and 56 miles beyond the cataracts Law some parts of the middlewest, the|Boavista, the northernmost and only East, already hard-hit vy-frigid tem-|Grazilian village “ir the entire dis= peratures and snow, was due to keeP|tance of the vast Brazilian grazing on shivering. The weatherman pre-ijand found in the region. seri eae be generally! In the territory live the Indian colder in at area. Several deaths directly attributed|t7ibes of Caripunas, Carshyabls and to the cold snap have already been! reported in the east, where the mer-/| cury sank as low as 24 below zero | Monday. That was at Owls Head, New York. | Milwaukee reported that zero tem- peratures Monday resulted in frost [sel for George Crawford prepared to tian coud noes party Leer contest the Negro defendant's trial amen @ proposed agricultural pro- ‘The school board at present is mak. (before a white Jury Tuesday on an in-/®TA7 i an audience at Platts ! ing an effort toward a saving of be-| iciment, Charing int een ese | burg. the governor said “North Da- | Am chan; recom! jtween $5,000 and $6,000 in excavation 2 1 =| kota alone cannot it = Fee ee erate only’ & few sent. | Yarious groupe, Wallace enced OY expenditures, axvik sald, ‘The pub- (Woman, at her Middleburg, Va., ROME largo program,” ites, ut inere Ghordere’ during the (Substitution of something for the lic works board has been requested to|om Jan. 18, 1032, i He referred to an embargo on wheat ere iw the | rocessing tax and the ‘licensing of transfer the excavation part of the! The challenge to the 104 white) and beef, intended to lift prices. a the movement was officially every plowed field, and the inaugura- project to the civil works administra-|Veniremen summoned for jury service!" “we need the whole Mississipp! believed to have been suppressed, ean, | ton of marketing farm products on tion, which would give the school {Ss to be made by Charles H. Houston, rous! tr ‘ortheastern|that “the time is coming when we ae ieauaioa amici shall have to reconsider many of the ‘Violence reached its peak Monday | devices employed in the adjustment in bitter clashes between government | act from where Miss Ferderer was taken to the hospital. She spent the night at the apartment house in another woman's apartment, Register quoted Filbach as saying. The state’s attorney and coroner said an inquest into the death is prob- able, but that it would not be held be- fore Wednesday, if decided upon. bites to 15 C. W. A. employes, who| were treated at hospitals. It was the coldest Dec. 11 Milwaukee had ex-| perienced since 1876. | Nine dead in floods in the Pacific; northwest, four in a train and auto- AGAIN IS HEARD IN ~ BUROPEAN CAPITALS ed tovdeath at Hampden, Me., while| !nterest Centers in London and valley.” @ woman apparently was in good health Miss Ferderer had been employed as a maid at the home of J. H. Noakes, 203 Eighth avenue, northwest, 24andan. Noakes said the young when she left his home Sunday after- noon. Miss Ferderer was born at Mandan in 1913 and graduated from Mandan high school in 1930. She leaves her parents, a brother were taken to give relief to the fam- ilies of men slain in the clashes. i} Precautions against disorders were planned, with troops; relieving the guards who have pa- trolled the affected regions. KNUDTSON RECALLED: @ quota system.” One change in the act likely to be ble new {Made by the coming session of con- | gress, Wallace asserted, is the in-| sertion of beef cattle and sugar as basic commodities. Be Sure of Your Step board free labor for excavation work. Appearing in behalf of the Bis- marck proposal were Saxvik; mem- bers of the school board, George M. Register, George F. Will, E. B. Cox. Burt Finney and Dr. W. E. Cole; City Auditor Myron H. Atkinson; Richard Penwarden, clerk of the school board; He urged his listeners “to defend/ and 0. W. Roberts, head of a city the Agricultural Adjustment Act with | committee appointed last spring to every power at your command until investigate public works possibilities Washington Negro attorney, immedi- ately after the December term of the Loudoun county circuit court opens’ Wednesday before Judge McLemore. This course was announced by Houston after conferring with com- monwealth’s Attorney Galleher.| Houston said he was prepared to plead that Negroes had been exclud- ed from jury service in Loudoun jcounty and thus discriminated against He voiced an invitation for Gov. Park of Missouri to attend the next agricultural conference of governors, to.be held probably either at Des Moines or Madison, Wis. Langer said he and the other four governors carrying on the campaign were doing their best’“to help the president.” He declared it was North Dakota's intention of keeping out needless importations of grain. He also advocated a lower rate of a blizzard was raging, helped to swell | H ian Of. the total of fatalities directly or in- | Berlin Where Italian Of directly attributed to the elements. fers Plan Says Court Can Rule Gi aewacaeal On Montana Troubles) European capitals hummed Tues- a iday with talk of disarmament and 12.—()—The | the possibility of reshaping the League of Nations. Interest centered in Lon- con and Berlin. Italian under-secretary of state Helena, Mont., Dec. courts alone can determine what leg- islation by the special Montana Relief session was germane to Gov. Cooney’s Fulvio Suvich faced at least two bril- liant social events in connection with his visit to Berlin. They were offi- interest on farm loans, larger loans per acre to farmers and payment of the soldiers’ bonus in currency. call, Speaker Dellow ruled in the house of representatives Monday. ‘Thus deciding, the speaker declined eg Lae sure you can get something | here, and denied their constitutional rights. FOR FURTHER A Liberals who talk about federal, Acsniocts AsiMicant | ‘ from St. Joseph’s Catholic church at | | Rough plans for a three-story| Two Farmers Facing \Mandan at 9.8. m., Thursday, with | control of private business and the! building with basement were describ-; Game Law Charges > |methods of some farm strike leaders! i “ , Hildebrant Eickhoff officiating. | ‘icism Tuesday trom Pee! jed to the board by R. A. and C. W. Langer will speak in St. Louis|to consider a point of order asked by cial dinners at which President Paul ne pula tg IN WENZEL HEARING agi at ‘about to mes farm % ._ [Ritterbush, of Ritterbush Brothers, —_— Tuesday. Rep. White of Judith Basin county on/Von Hindenburg and Chancellor ministrator as a result of a dispute |**chitectural firm here. Two Burleigh county farmers were la measure introduced by Rep. Phil| Adolf Hitler were to preside. Judge Returns Here Tith agriculture department liberals |, 4 delegation from Hettinger coun- at liberty under bonds Tuesday, charg- HOLIDAY LEADERS WILL |Goodwin of Butte, which would apply; In this manner the way was to be ‘and take a new job at the head of an ty followed the Bismarck group be-!ed with shooting deer out of season. JOIN IN DEMONSTRATION \@ stamp tax on all liquor sales in the | Paved for brass-tacks talks: what con- 2 To Continue Court Judge R. G. McFarland of James- cown arrived in Bismarck Tuesday noon to reopen the December term of issued @ peremptory order for attor- neys in 13 elvil cases to be ready for|T" trial this week. order after to get « ing that: they ship Him who had been born king of the Jews, having seen his star in the east, Herod was greatly troubled and all Jerusalem with Stenographer Also Examin About ‘Bureau’s Methods of Doing Business Purther questioning about the man- record reau was resumed day in the R..E. Wenzel ouster hear- ing before special ‘Thomas J. Clifford of Langdon. Carl Knutson, who spent all day ‘don bureau. ‘The state seeks to show that the method used in making motions and resolutions by me! of the com- which Wenzel is agency that will try to find ways of | fore the state board. disposing of agricultural surpluses. After saying he believed the export Hettinger county is requesting funds for a memorial building at New England, field would reward “a very careful|memorial bridge at Regent, court- | wold, about the government taking | ove, |Monke and E. O. Starks, county com- n over the; Mott. ‘this country as a proper | morning. indi Rg apeeteeks house at Mott and machine shed at lott. In this delegation were W. F. Gris- county auditor; Theodore missioners; Harvey Miller, mayor of '|New England; Joe Pechtel, New Eng- land councilman; and R. M. Van er. A delegation from Glen Ullin, ask- ing funds for 5 community building, was to be Tuesday afternoon. ‘The board expects to be in Bis- marek for part of Wednesday at least. Holt and Doyle expect to open a ser- of hearings in the federal build- inot at 10 o'clock Thursday Quiescent Reichstag Assembles: in Berlin Berlin, Dec, 12.—(}—The German Patten of Mott, temporary county ‘They were Amos Robidou and Pau!) jHapel, farmers living several miles jsoutheast of Bismarck. | ; ‘The pair appeared before Justice| lof the Peace H. R. Bonny voluntarily | Tuesday forenoon when they learned | ‘warrants for their arrest had been! | issued. | ‘They were released under bonds of ; |$500 each, with Dan McDonald,| neighbor farmer, the bondsmen in both cases. | The case will be transferred from Bonny's court to that of Justice of; the Peace D. H. Houser. It is expected | @ hearing will be held later this week. Expect Farm Bureau To Support Roosevelt Chicago, Dec. 12—(#)—The Amer- jean Farm Bureau Federation, in farmer from |woman bank employe, Minneapolis, Dec, 12.—(4)—Milo Reno, president, and John Bosch, vice president, respectively, of the Nation- al Farm Holiday association, confer- red here Monday on plans for sending representatives of the organization with a group of northwest governors who plan to present a legislative pro- gram to congress next month. Morton Boys Held on Robbery Accusation Mandan, N. D., Dec. 12.—(7)—Ken- neth Walker and his 16-year-old brother, Frank, waived preliminary hearing and were bound over to dis- trict court when arraigned before a Justice of the peace here on charges of robbing a Glen Ullin store last Fri- day. Authorities said the youths con- fessed to robbing the store of $11. The youths claim they used a pipe in the robbery. L. H. Wilson, proprietor, and several customers in the store at the time of the robbery, told police the boys carried a gun. The two boys fled from Glen Ullin in a rented automobile which was abandoned at Almont, according to authorities. When arrested here the two were driving a truck, said by po- lice to have been stolen from Oscar Lein of Almont. MAMA NEEDS A FUR COAT Bay City, Mich., Dec, 12.—(#)—Four armed men robbed a National Bank of Bay City branch of an estimated $15,000 few minutes after it opened “my needs a fur Goat and she's going to tor. leet tt ACCUSED OF KIDNAPING state. cessions Germany would demand if “It is not within the province of|She re-entered the League of Na- the speaker, the house nor the sen-|tions; just what the Nazis want as ate to determine what comes within|@ basis for a world accord on dis- the scope of the governor's relief armament. call,” said Speaker Dellow. “Such a| Busy Signor Suvich hoped to finish question is for the courts to decide.| with Il Duce’s business in Berlin ‘The legislative body may make such |s0on. It was said in Rome that he disposal of any bill introduced as it! might hurry on to England. sees fit. If such bill or bills should; Premier Mussolini, it was said, pass and be approved by the governor, would like to have his ideas on re- it would be for the supreme court of | forming the league presented in both the state to determine whether the|London and Berlin before his repre- same was within the scope of the sentative returns to Rome for Christ- governor's message.” | Pioneer Resident of Emmons County Dies Linton, Dec. 12. — Maurice Ven Soest, Sr., 85, for nearly 50 years a resident of Emmons county, died at Kursawe in Strasburg, Saturday Dec. 2 Van Soest played a prominent part in settling Emmons county in the) early eighties. Born in Holland, he was one of the leaders in the Hol- landers’ settlement in southern North Dakota. He was a member of the hoard of directors of the First State Bank of Strasburg. He leaves nine children, 41 grandchildren and 3 great grandchildren, services were conciliatory ne cts erestnny Reformed | atin america, Avenue of Escape For Insull Closed Washington, 3a mas. France looked to Berlin Tuesday for |further details of the answer to the questions put to Hitler by the French ambassador, Andre Francois-Poncet M londay. While Hitler was receiving the French envoy, foreign minister Joseph Paul-Boncour discussed Franco-Ger- man affairs with Roland Koester, German ambassador to Paris. The outcome was not made known. TO SIGN COLOMBIAN TREATY Washington, Dec. 12.—(#)—Thr2: months of negotiations were expec ed to bear fruit Tuesday in the sig: ing of a reciprocal commercial treaty between the United States and Colombia, the first concrete mani- festation of the administration's new, policy toward OPPOSES LABOR BOARD Pittsburgh, Dec. 12.—(@}—A serious test of the powers of the national la~ bor board loomed Tuesday as Ernest i