The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 22, 1934, Page 1

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| £223] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE = Gs ESTABLISHED 1873 ~ PRESIDENT SEEKS TO RESTORE PEACE BY GETTING FACTS May Appoint Committee to Pry Into Relations Between Employers, Workers EASTMAN HEARS TWO SIDES Railroad Coordinator May Have ™ Plan of His Own to Sug- gest Later Washington, March 22.—)—Union labor leaders went into with President Roosevelt here Thurs- day with the prospect that Roosevelt may ask appointment of a committee to pass upon charges of anti-union discrimination by manufacturers, as @ part of his plan to restore peace to the motor industry. This was disclosed at a preliminary! Eleven months ago, when laborers conference between the labor men and Hugh Johnson, NRA adminis- trator. It was indicated that both the accuracy made by union men that they had brotherhood spokesman. He said he may have something to propose later. Has Pian Tt is regarded as likely that East- man will propose an adjustment of ‘. wages in the lower brackets with a continuance of the present scales for the higher brackets, such as engineers and conductors. A dispute between the Delaware & Hudson railroad and the brother- hoods was settled at Albany, N. Y., averting a strike. A y strike started at and laundry workers are on strike. ‘There is a strike of match workers *. dn Barberton and rubber workers in|four men driving an automobile with Ashtabula. A strike at the Bower roller beuring/ ci employes, started an uproar plant in Detroit continued. Scattered CWA strikes continued in Pennsylvania and New York state, some having been settled by wage in- creases, An A. F. of L. union will decide ‘Thursday night whether to call a|Parlor. strike on the E. G. Budd Manufac- turing company in Philadelphia. The|head and neighboring cities had pa- company makes automobile bodies. |trolled streets and At Pittsburg, Calif. employes of | hours armed with the Columbia Steel company, a sub-|guns watching for the appearance of union. A taxicab strike York city, with violence ‘Wednesday night and Thursday. Union Leaders at Capital | rae fee ei The watched Thursday other developments on the labor |r. manages. of the. Bank front. Becre! | ; £ F | : é Egle i aE Ee BERe8 “f E Aid & é oe Ss) Ee i ! ; 3 : i i H i ! cE ! % | reported | prietor, court. 3 t i 2 i E i i BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1984 Auto, Style Show Opens |.Committee May Review Motor Wage War Labor Mediator | (650 KNOWNKILLED ] AS FLAMES RAVAGE BiG JAPANESE CITY Witnesses Describe ‘Living Hell’ ‘as Fire Roars Through Frame Structures REPORT 150,000 HOMELESS Entire Nation Rallies to Aid Vic- tims After Tragedy at Hakodate JOSEPH B. EASTMAN To Joseph B. Eastman, tor of transportation, has signed the task of settling the Toad wage controversy. ‘and managers failed to agree, the president summoned them to Wash- ington and told Eastman to settle cs 1934. It is this agreement which the} and spread death and destruction ag tora to| President now urges be continued in| into the suburbs. adjust a wage controversy between jt#fect another year. A preliminary check, reported to employers and workers, spent the day STAT IAN |the minister of communications, in- listening. In the morning he heard dicated that 25,000 buildings—three- the railroad managers for two hours. fourths of the city—were burned. and in the afternoon listened to the a Hakodate's population was 213,000. ROUSED AS FARGO (ekvereessnenoee POLICE NAB FOUR Thoughts of Dillinger Fill Offi- cial Minds After Incident ‘~~ at Beer Parlor eg iu i. 26? & a at a Dilworth night club in which | Hi b if fe a3 Indiana license plates engaged with | fering was ; E ef Hl i Ik which spread to peace officers all over from many i HF i ii g & ef H taken into custody in a Moorhead beer 7 z i i i i Meanwhile officers of Fargo, Moor- i EF t i i ighways several and machine robbery, club pro- were dismissed in night police The quartet, Ed Fahlsing, Paul Cullinan and Grant Eastman, N. D., and Chester Beyer, ile Hs g = 3 2 ttac! F iH FEp H i i i 8 f E L rl i i g : if! Fy aE HH l i : died at E L E i i i E Hf re i if ag : ge Bes t [ | iq HI i bee ae i i ti : i | Be a i h i | i fi ti i | ‘i i i H a eg Hi a : i i ; | 5 i E 2 i i l | E HW a i g ; | 2 é Ey r & é i e I : z s ‘i 2 e Z i i il! tai : : | E'e Sede i 3 g s H 8 | | i 5 fe Bure H i 4 i i 3 = i z rt ef it ag § 7 d i é f i | Will Start DENTIFY BODY OF CANGLAND VICTIM. Man Whose Bullet-Riddled Corpse Was Found in Gut- ter Was Noted Criminal Chicago, March 22—(P)}—-A man whose body was found full of lead in 8 Cicero, Ill, gutter Tuesday was identified Thursday as a criminal long hunted for some of the nation’s most sensational cold-blooded crimes. Except for his fingerprints the man might have concealed in death, as he ‘successfully did in life, his true iden- tity—Fred Goetz, 37, college-educated Gangster and “brains” of as deadly a suspected participant only in the St. Valentine's Day sacre of seven George sters, but in the machine i i i li ag j Fg aull fe gag ge 4 ish Ae 852° gre a R52 F He g° ‘ : " Ky i E id 5; i E ze g85z see g.8 CG 44 E® tf i A i if —Bunice: Dean, 4 old, dead, the victim of « ferocious at- tack of two terriers, BREWERY AGENT DIES Williston, N. D., March 23.—(?)—V. D. Evans, 58, wholesale representative in the Williston territory of a brewing company, died suddenly at his home here following a heart attack. Man Sentenced to Memory As Allen suffered Davenport has ij Se i Z j ge wf E = & | | Es i Ly g I E H lr 8 E gre ak 5. F F i il #2 ; i i 4 Fe E : i Ee ul He i Relief Work Here Monday Wage Scale for Men to Be Employed on Projects AS FAMOUS CROOK] RATE oF Pav ummPontant Main Thing Is to See That Needs of All Families Are Met, Says Chief Relief work will be started in Bur- leigh county next Monday, March 26, KIDDER EMBROILED INNEWSPAPER WAR AS LANGERITES ACT Steele Ozone’s Board of Direc- tors Orders Editor to Sup- port Governor SHERMAN OPPOSED ACTION Chairman of Board Resigns; May Carry Issue to Stock- holders in Property Steele, N. D., March 22.—Decision by its board of directors to have the Steele Ozone and Kidder County Farmers Press support Governor Wil- Mam Langer for re-election has placed Kidder county in the midst of a “newspaper war.” ‘The action was taken Saturday et & meeting of the five directors, led by Oscar E. Erickson, state senator +|from Kidder county, employe of the given according to the aget Bank of North Dakota and putlisher of The Leader, Langer newspaper supported by five-per-cent collections from state employes. Others voting for the proposal were Dave Ritchie, employed as a highway maintainer; Robert Wage, whose son is said to be an employe of the ad- ministration in Bismarck and Faunce Luyben. Opposing the move was John Sher- man, former county auditor and long- time Nonpartisan, who was chairman of the board. Stockholders May Act After the vote was taken Sherman tesigned from the board, sold his stock to Erickson and then announced that he would ask the stockholders of the newspaper to review the ac- tion of the board at a meeting to be held soon. He turned over his stock | after being accused of seeking to use it to change the action of the news- allowed after an thves-|Peper's board of saying" he believed the other stockholders would insist on a fair and news- paper. Sherman's demand is that the newspaper be the mouthpiece for no h | Person or political platform but give gE aypere Al speae H fee i E Si78z hi gett ibe eR tfesis i Jail for Loss 0} Begins New Poli fore him for drunkenness, they have been drinking Fae fr I | : fe is SHEE ity aie I i H i iH fr ] E H fe § i E i F 8 : F 8 3 8 igF i | fi ity [F ss ig leg the news fairly and without bias. Some stockholders who are personally favorable to Langer desire to keep ,|the newspaper on an independent ba- sis, he said. Records show the newspaper to be @ valuable property, never having paid less than 12 per cent dividends and paying 30 per cent last year. One reason for this, it was explained, is that its capitalization is unusually low, considering the actual value of the property, which has only about editorial policy. However,‘a majority of the board determined otherwise, whereupon the writer disposed of his stock and resigned from the board ef directors. e | Quits Editorial Job o ALFRED E. SMITH New York, March 22.—(P)—A schism over the air mail controversy is re- ported to have prompted Alfred E Smith's resignation as editor of the New Outlook. ‘The resignation of the former gov- ernor from the magazine post he had held since the fall of 1932 be- came known Wednesday night. It was confirmed by Frank A. Tichenor, publisher of the magazine, without comment. Although Tichenor, who is interest- ed in aviation, has been a vigorous critic of the government's cancella- tion of the air mail contracts, New Outlook, with Smith at the helm, has been silent on the subject. ‘The New York Times said the un- derlying reason for the resignation is believed to lie in a difference of opin- ion between Smith and Tichenor over the air mail. Aero Digest, which Tich- enor also publishes, carried in its last issue an attack on the Roosevelt ad- ministration and Postmaster General Farley for the cancellation of the WELL KNOWN TENVIK MAN DIES WEDNESDAY George Zoller, Emmons County Farmer Succumbs After Long Iliness George Zoller, 61, resident of Tem- vik, Emmons county, died at 1:30 p. m., Wednesday at a local hospital af- ter an illness of several months. He was brought to the hospital here Feb- Tuary 21st suffering from a complica- tion of diseases. He was born in Russia and came to the United States 33 years ago, locating near Temvik where he op- erated one of the largest farms in Emmons county. He leaves his wife, four sons and Kidder|three daughters: They are William, George, Otto and Reuben of Temvik; Mrs. Herman Whitehorn, Carson; Emma and Phyllis, of Temvik. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 Pp. m. Sunday from the Evangelical church at Temvik, with Rev. William Butschart, officiating. Burial will be ia the cemetery at Temvik. pol-|Conferees Approve Big Navy Measure Washington, March 22—(?)}—The yee i i use H g 888 & : ni ARE j iY peesepil i ih i i : Fi Ee i [ R g i g | & HH i i Hi fs i PRICE FIVE CENTS . GREATEST DISPLAY IN CITY'S HISTORY LAUNCHED THURSDAY Three-Day Affair Is Expected to Attract Record Crowd to View Exhibits STYLE SHOW IS FEATURE Many Local Women to Model Gowns; Bathing Beauties to Stage Parade Style Show opened Thursday morn- ing at the World War building with the greatest motor cars ever shown west of the Twin Cities and with more tionary changes in style struction in the cars themsel has ever been the case in a season's history of the automobile in- dustry. The show will end Saturday night. The large gymnasium and auditor- different in color, also much to the general effect. The cars themselves are @ variety of styles and new streamlining effects conservative to the radical, finish, style and upholstering of new models are in many cases si ling in their change f heretofore been accepted as . The models run from the low priced to those much higher, though a striking fact it that the cars of today cost less than half what relatively in- ferior ones sold for a few years ago. “All Makes Represented Several of the cars on display here this week have come direct from Minneapolis Automobile show which closed last week and new models there are numerous booths surround- ing it that will attract almost equal attention. In these are frigerators, Entertainment and Style Show— P. A. Copelin, Philip Webb and 8. W. ! f i i Publicity —C. R. Roberteon, R. Bergeson, W. 8. Ayres, and’. M. Dav Booths and Space—J. A. Fleck, D. R, Yeater, bss ‘Theodore Quanrud and N.

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