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| €==] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1984 PRICE FIVE CENTS ‘Nine Die in Weather Mishaps .Last Hope of Escape Vanishes for Insull poe FUGITIVE WEEPS AS New Link Opened in a Waterway [CHT VOTES CAST | THREE TRAINMEN Steals March on Baby Stars aca || STRIKE NORTHWEST LAW'S HAND CLOSES g Man te Vit Wyoming Man Is Victim When Car Skids From Slippery Road in Snowstorm UPON HIS SHOULDER Alleged Utilities Embezzler Is Refused Appeal From | IN MANY CITIES BY MUNICIPAL VOTERS In Many Cases Incumbents Are Unopposed and Citizens KILLED AS ENGINE LEAPS FROM TRACK Washout in Roadbed of Omaha Line Near Hudson, Wis., ATLANTIC COAST IS WARM | Decision of Court Fail to Ballot Blamed for Accident Weather Man Plays Queer —_—__— , Drawing Variegat= OTHER TOWNS VOTING TODAY | ALL BODIES ARE RECOVERED ag sirens. intron EXTRADITION IS ARRANGED United States Need Only Send iu Man to Istanbul to Bring i Home Prisoner Istanbul, April 3—()—The last door to the possible escape of Samuel Insull from extradition to the United States was slammed shut Tuesday. 4 The white-haired fugitive was re- fused the right of appeal from the 4 decision of the third penal tribunal upon which the Turkish cabinet’s de- cision to extradite him was based. First craft to go through the $1,700,000 lock from the Mis: Orleans, the steamer Capito! is shown here with 1500 celebr: of the intracoastal waterway now finished from New Orleans to the Sabine ‘river in Texas, the final Unk between Chicago and Texas by inland waterway, and the part under construction to Corpus ppt Christi, Tex,. er to the Harvey canal at New its aboard. The map shows the stretch fa Thus it was determined definitely q that he must remain here until he is transferred to the custody of United States government agents. ‘ M. Kena, public prosecutor, ex- Plained that the third tribunal’s de- cision that he could legally be ex- tradited constituted merely a state- ment of fact and was not a verdict. Hence, he said, no appeal could be entertained. The announcement was made amid an extraordinary mobilization of legal strength for a finish fight in Insull’s behalf. Greek lawyers rushed here from Athens, others were retained in DEMOCRATS GATHER [? AT MINOT 0 NAME °c ze” STATE CANDDATES Party Looks Forward with New W. H. Payne Almost | Captures Burglar || school had an ex- ce with @ prowler Sunday night that probably ended luckily for the would-be buglar. Payne lives at the home of A. C. Van Wyck, 801 Mandan avenue, i SEVEN CCC CAMPS ALLOTTED TO STATE FOR THIRD PERIOD 1,400 of North Dakota's 1,650 Wahpeton Mayor Is Unseated in Nip-and-Tuck Race With Civic Leader Municipal elections, held Monday in North Dakota cities with the coun- cilmanic form of government, were generally dull affairs and many vot- ers remained away from the polls. Here and there, however, there were spirited contests and some close runs Geveloped as local issues were given airings. In many cases, incumbents were Unopposed, while in others new as- pirants had no opposition as the in- cumbents failed to seek return to their posts. One of the biggest upsets was at Wahpeton where Frank Vertin, fur- niture dealer, defeated Dr. H. H. Pfis- ter, dentist, in the mayoralty race, 640 to 633. Pfister had served four terms. Some cities operating under the commission form of government were voting Tuesday, among them being Mandan, Grand Forks, Ray, Velva, Washburn and Langdon. Eleven can- didates were seeking the five posts in Mandan while 18 were aspirants for Victims Are Crushed as Locomo- tive and 12 Cars Pile Up in Ditch Hudson, Wis, April 3—()—Three Omaha railroad trainmen were killed here Tuesday when a train was de- Tailed because of a washout. The dead are: Jesse Utter, Min- neapolis, engineer; C. F. Lange, St. Paul, fireman; Glen Parle, Minneapo- lis, brakeman. Freight train No. 89 left the rails about 2:45 a. m. Tuesday and plunged over @ grade embankment one mile out of Hudson. The engine and 12 cars piled up in the ditch, crushing the men. The bodies of the three men were ee from the wreck early Tues- MA The wreck followed one of the heav- jest rains in the history of Hudson. Starting early Monday night, the downpour continued for several hours, washing out sections of streets and sidewalks and damaging the western approach to the toll bridge. The rain flooded basements and cut deep ra- vines in the areas above the St. Croix river. Wampas Baby Star stole a march on the 13 w' ners of the coveted honor, Jean Chatburn, above, being the first of the nominees to get a film contract. The Hanover, Mich., girl signed for seven years with an independent producer, start- ing at $50 a week, increasing to $7650 the last year. BATTLE OF BALLOTS (By The Associated Press) Nine persons were dead, floods were raging in Minnesota, Wisconsin and parts of New England, heavy snow covered Montana, Wyoming and other Parts of the west and Atlantic coast cities were enjoying unseasonably high temperatures as the weather man put or. a real show Tuesday. All of the dead were residents of the northwest and west. Three trainmen were killed when en engine was derailed at Hudson, Wis., as the result of a washout. A girl was drowned and a young man was missing when an automo- bile plunged through @ weakened bridge into a swollen Wisconsir streamstream. Two farm men and two farm women were drowned and @ Wyoming resident was killed when his car overturned on a slippery pave- ment. The dead are: Jess Utter and Glen Parle, Minneapolis, and C. F. Lange, &t. Paul, members of the train crew. Myrtle Rowe, drowned at Eau Ciaire, Wis., K. Kent Kinniburgh, sec- retary of the chamber of commerce at Casper, Wyo. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Franson and Hope as Result of Politi- crawl through the window of his Man Quota to Find Em- three . The wreck occurred on a curve White Hall, Minn. i" the apparently insurmoun- si room. He leaped out of bed and pe Seiler ae as| While the through freight, westbound Leonard Apel, farmer, drowned at- table odds, they had prepared to bat- cal Developments — y i ee! cert but ployment Here compiled by The Associated Press, eae “ cainese te = Ful, was bana 10 TEST POPULARITY beret li cross @ creek near Spring ; both man rom the window ——— ‘ollow: "{ing downer: int ludson. A . ane ot tae sieeplnirleeagoan: held and escaped. , St. Thomas—Aldermen elected here |® Pilot locomotive ahead to help pick Missing was Warren Jackson, who, Washington, April 3.—(#)—North up speed after a scheduled stop two like Miss Rowe, was a student at esa hospital room of the a were Stanley Ganssle, second ward; Touse of “detention under ‘what’ is|Dakota Democrats looked back at 20| lest two weeks that a night prow- |akote will have seven civilian con.| eS Krueger, third, ‘and Ar w./miles to the cast, the train. struck OF NEW DE AL DE ‘AS Stout Institute, Menominie, Wis, called “house arrest,” and his actual|lean years in srase Dciition ee, taey ler has wecnpenee nS the servation camps during the third en-|Grandt, first ward. ea ewe ashes rah eee abit x hare oe, extradit 5 marshalled their forces here Tuesday northwest part 2 ae oder ring jlizzard raged over aiemine sAithsbactiaapiean for what promises tobe the largest ——_——_ rollment period, started April 1 and Pa Re erty son was {Tbe Pilot locomative got over the eee - Wroming Tuesday int condisions mere | It was not known what arrange-|state convention in the party's his- running to October 1, according to an- . washout but was pulled from the Republi Hi Off-Year Tide | ™eroving. ments the American government was|tory. nouncement made Monday by Robert Renate diss er a tracks when the heavier main engine| Republicans Hope The United Air Lines resumed op- H making to speed Insull’s return.| Among the advance guard hopes are Fechner, emergency conservation work Mean siid from the ra : f Will Strengthen Them in erations on the coast to, const route, American Minister Robert P. Skin-jhigh that the ticket indorsed at ses- director. Hatton—Elmer Osking was elected Boer had om tocomntlvs ae c a army: aeild @ ner has requested instructions from|sions opening Wednesday will carry Five private camps, near Bismarck,| mayor here over O. T. Ofstehage, in- Pat Mc Mar at. Paul, geass ree a jongress ground a ‘Washington concerning sending In-|sufficient weight to put Democrats in 1» L _ | Mott, Valley City, Park River and| cumbent. ca Leet aie temas —___ ; aiaee an peinacri crag — sull to America, state office for the first time since Stanley will work on soil erosion pro-| Bathgate—J. A. Bennett, mayor for | AUSUSt ae the wreck came when| Washington, April 3—(P)—A_ na-|""Geooral rains gave South Dakote Rew ae Te esi aie ican John Burke retired as governor in jects. The other two will work on/2¢ years, resigned, and will be suc- tionwide ballot box test of the “new American ey mi = ys putized to act as @ special police of- ficer to take Insull back to Mlinois REFRIGERATOR CAR state property, at international peace garden state park at Kelvin, and Roosevelt state park, at Medora. ceeded by A. Slagerman, who re- ceived 40 votes to 37 for Harry Ever- ett. Martin walked into Hudson at 3:15 a.m. A wrecker was trying to clear the deal” will start a week from Tuesday. Illinois voters, lining up for the first of the primaries of the national additional welcome moisture Tuesday, the precipitation ranging from a trace to more than a half inch at Yankton. Sa ce eunmeglt bing oe i ghey het am te ue A oust wie |fing pt ming nom, Sells ata Vw Bunty mares On the other hand, a possibility! first-hand information on the party's| Pocket Book Bearing Mercer] ii ‘be established in late April or the rails, ‘Traffic on the main line,|sctivities | that on) ie, every state, |,22 New York the weather man offer- was seen that it might be necessary for Turkish officials to hold the weary traveler here for from 10 days to two weeks until American authorities ar- tive. After Insull had been lodged in a Aittle one-windowed cell, the Ameri- can government was invited Monday night, in effect, to “come and get” him. The national assembly of Turkey had removed the last aj it ob- Insull wept openly as they took him away from the hotel in which he had been held under police survei ~ after his formal arrest Monday. ; fe I g &E : 2 zk 8 é i 5 5 $000 seals aboard. What Was Capitol’s Death-Injury Tell? E Stutsman county each send groups of pic, as it has been since the Demo- Man's Name May Furnish Clue to Identity tempting to ascertain the identity of & man, about 23 years old, who was found dead in a railroad car here at a. m. E | g 3 i | i i é z Bi FREES! : i i | E E F i H e j i Bey i E | | E if E Re ag i ge? i 8 8 i : early May. Fechner said approximately 1,400 of the state’s quot of 1,650 CCC work- ers would work on state projects and the balance would be sent to other states. He estimated $340,806 had been sent home to dependents by workers in the North Dakota CCC camps since the program was launch- ed. The sum, he said, represented about five-sixths of the total pay of the camp workers. ; Two Indicted for Dillinger’s Escape tir Crown Point, Ind., April 3—(?)}— Ernest Blunk, fingerprint expert, and ii i Faye | uf ge it Lee, A. M. Christianson and Joe C. Bilden. Grafton — Casting an extremely light vote, residents here re-elected Henry L. Sieg mayor Monday by a majority of 10 votes over Paul Ander- son. W. H. Williams was elected by ® majority of 10 votes over Frank Votava for first ward alderman, while Hugo K. Kutz was re-elected alder- man of the third ward with 137 votes : E i B Hi bs Z i ul f i at-large were elected. G. E. An- , incumbent, with a vote of 64; Taylor, incumbent, with 58; and i RPS re (Continued on Page Two) r Bits of News From ALA He i ; : peat Ri = ii meanwhile, was halted. Handwriting Is Clue In Dillinger Search St. Paul, April 3—(?)—A handwrit- ing specimen gave federal men an- other clue Tuesday in their quest for the identity of the new “mob” which John Dillinger has gathered about him. A Minnesota state driver's license, addressed to the apartment from which Dillinger and another man and woman fled after a gun fight Saturday, was intercepted by authorities. It bore the signature of the applicant. While the name was believed fictitious, the handwriting specimen was regard- ed as a valuable clue. The name of Tommy Carroll, sought in connection with several bank rob- beries, was injected into the case by Minneapolis police along with that of Dillinger's chief lieutenant, John Hamilton, who escaped with him. The theory is that Carroll left the apartment with two women compan- ions shortly before two department of Justice agents and a St. Paul detec- tive raided it and attempted to halt Dillinger’s flight. While numerous clues and tips were .| being checked, bankers, apprehensive over Dillinger’s presence, posted ad- ditional guards about their institu- Seek Buried Evidence In Counterfeit Case 3 E pegs i if November will finish the election of 35 senators, about the same number of governors, and the entire house. Republicans are voicing openly the hope that the usual off-year tide will restore them to many offices they lost in the Roosevelt landslide of 1932. Democrats predict that gains in the senate will offset an immaterial loss of seats in the house. The Illinois primaries next week will mark the start, but will give lit- tle indication of the outcome of the whole race. There is neither a guber- natorial nor a senatorial contest in that state this year. Speaker Rainey brought the White House angle strongly into the picture, however, when he reported advices from his frends that financial inter- ests in New York were planning to donate in an effort to defeat him be- cause of his stand for Rooseveltian measures, Battle Starts in May ‘The battling will get under way in earnest next month, with primaries in six states. The first come May 1, in South Dakota and Alabama, where governorships are at stake in addition to house seats. The first senatorial contest will be reached in Indiana May 8, with Sen- ator Robinson, Republican incumbent, fighting for re-election. Oregon's primary on May 18, with no senate or governorship at stake, ed odds that Tuesday would break the all-time high for April 3—73.4 de- Brees, set in 1892. That should be cheering to the citizens of Montana and Wyoming as they dig themselves out of 10-foot snowdrifts piled up by @ storm Monday night. The thermometer reached 75 in New York Monday, while Washington re- Ported 84 and Boston 72. Motor Traffic Blocked A storm that raged over Utah and - southern Idaho brought three inches of snow to Salt Lake City. Seven inches was reported at Logan, Utah. Motor traffic out of Great Falls, Mont., was brought to a virtual standstill when drifts blocked the highways. Torrential rains which fell Monday night and early Tuesday in east cen- tral Minnesota and adjacent Wiscon- sin, ranged up to nearly four inches and caused heavy damage to private their homes to escape flood waters. At Glenwood City, Wis., railway and (Continued on Page 5) Billings Organization Seeks Custer Relics Billings, Mont., April 3.—(?)—Stir- ports of a movement to