The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 10, 1934, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

2 NEWTON D. BAKER ~ TAKES POST LINDY DECLINED 10 FILL Former Cabinet Member Will Serve on Air Corps Inves- tigating Group ‘Washington, April 10—(4)—Newton D. Baker, war-time secretary of war, Tuesday accepted appointment as chairman of the army's air corps in- vestigating committee upon which Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh de- clined to serve. Secretary Dern, announcing the ac- eeptances of five other civilians to aid army generals in making the military aviation inquiry, said the first meeting would be held here late this week or early next. The secretary of war said the fol- lowing civilians in addition to Baker had accepted places on the commit- tee of 11: Dr. Karl Taylor Compton, presi- | dent of Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Dr. George W. Lewis, director of aeronautical research for the nation- al advisory committee on aeronau- tics; Clarence D. Chamberlin, transatlantic flyer. Major James H. (“Jimmie”) Doo- little, widely-known flier and aero- nautical engineer; Edgar S, Gorrell, president, Stutz Motor Car Co. The military members of the com- mittee, who already compose the “Drum beard” for continuous study of the air corps needs, are headed by Major General Hugh A. Drum, as- sistant chief of staff, who will serve as vice chairman, and includes Major General Benjamin D. Foulois, chief of air corps, and others. When Dern made his first an-}; nouncement of the committee three weeks ago he invited Lindbergh and Orville Wright in addition to Cham- berlin to serve as members. Lindbergh refused, sending two telegrams in which he bitterly at- tacked President Roosevelt's action in cancelling commercial air mail con- tracts and designating the air corps to carry the mail. Wright, co-inventor of the airplane, also declined to serve because of ill- ness. noted THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1934 Claims Dr. Wirt Was Victim of Joke eH # * ae % | ‘BY SOME OF THE BOYS’ ee * * * * # | Roosevelt Pictured As Kerensky Princeton, N. J., April 10.—(P}—j| “I've just heard the inside story on Adolph Aberle, Jr, New York City that terrible or EBraw ee a eos i | was at a party with some e boys chamberlain, in an interview publizh-| tno are connected with things down ed in Monday's issue of the Daily in Washington. Wirt started asking Princetonian, said that charges of a'a few questions about the Roosevelt |Red plot to overthrow the government revolution he was hearing so much were the result of a joke played on /about. Dr. William A. Wirt “by some of the) “They were all in pretty good spirits, boys.” and relished kidding the credulous old “The boys” were not identified in duffer. Confiding that Roosevelt was the Princeton undergraduate publica- |a Kerensky, they said that he was just tion, but otherwise, Aberle told what waiting for the right time to start his he described as the inside story “of revolution, After two years, there the terrible scandal.” | would be a Stalin, who would take over The interview follows in part: the government. ‘Yes,’ they contin- “The brain trust? Let's explode ued, ‘the country is going to the dogs.’ that myth right now. There is no, “‘But who is to be the Stalin?’ the such thing. doctor pressed. So having led him “Between the 1932 national election thus far,” Aberle smiled, “they decided and President Roosevelt's inaugura- to take him for a good long ride and tion, Hugh Johnson, Raymond Moley, | said solemnly, ‘Rexford G. Tugwell is Charley Taussig, Rex Tugwell and|the man.’ Thus introduced, the doc- myself were dubbed the ‘brain trust.’|tor wanted to know why Tugwell was “But since there is no place in our | slated for the job. ‘Oh, that's because government for a kitchen cabinet, we|we all call him Rex,’ they gaily re- five broke up the night before inaug- | plicd. uration. We have not been in the | “Now that story is absolutely on the same room together since. | level.” yh | $200,000 by the joint work of himself | Flannigan; Harold Hopton, candidate | for insurance commissioner, who told how the hail insurance department |has been run since 1919; Flannigan, | Who spoke of the work of the legis- | lature of which he was a member and ‘who is a candidate for re-election, Langer Says He Has Not Taken and R. A. Hammersteadt, house of rep- = | resentative candidate. Orders From Railroads jane Courletiny band played before . e speaking began and the high or Chain Banks | school mixed chorus under the direc~ | tion of Miss Ruth Rosholt sang sev- eral selections. Courtenay, N. D., April 10.—(@)— Two checks for relief work totalling exhibited by Gov. William Langer during an address here before an audience of 1,000 persons here Satur- day. “You have heard so much about my being fired from relief work and after I came up here on the stage I was handed two checks made out to Gov. William Langer, one for $1,000,- 000 and the other for $1,426,350 from the federal government for me to in- :dorse,” declared Langer. “No matter what happens to me at the grand jury term you will always remember that you have had 15 months administration in which your governor did not take his orders from more than two million dollars were| Couzens’ Recovery railroads, chain bankers or insurance companies, Minneapolis or Chicago,” said Langer, referring to the grand jury which meets in Fargo next week. James Brastrup, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Brastrup of Courtenay, a 16-year-old high school student, presided at the meeting and intro- duced Langer and the following speakers: The Modern Barber Shop Cor. 5th & Bdwy., Downstairs Is equipped to render its patrons expert and sani- tary service. A clean, sterilized comb for each Washington, April 10.—4)—Sena- | tor Couzens’ suggestion for a one- jYear recovery tax ran into stormy | Weather Tuesday. Strong opposition | Plan Hits Trouble!* JOHN DILLINGER 1S POISON TO FRIENDS Several Have Run Into Death or Trouble in Effort -to Help Leader Chicago, April 10—(—John Dil- linger may be a great fellow for John Dillinger but for his friends he is Polson. A fine example of the misfortune that follows those befriending the notorious outlaw 1s a death sentence handed two men who killed a sheriff “springing” their chief from jail. Then there is the negro who es- caped with Dillinger from Crown Point, Ind., only to fall a victim to Police guns a few days later. Dillinger's pal, Eugene Green, stood by his side helping him fight off officers who had trapped the pair with a woman in a St. Paul apart- ment. The trio escaped, but a few days later Green upheld the tradition of bad luck that follows Dillinger’s friends. When federal officers turn- ed a machine gun on a suspect it was Green, not Dillinger who happened to be in front of the gun. CONTRACT = cypipis PLAY IT _- | Solution to Previous Contract Problem, | ar | By WM. E. McKENNEY | (Secretary, American Bridge League) Are you always on the alert to miake the most of your opponents’ mistakes? Or to play a hand for the extra trick after receiving a favorable opening? That is where the real fun |’ comes in bridge. ; There really isn’t a great deal of fun in just playing a laydown hand. Of course, the first thing you must do is to make sure of your Contract, but if you then can make an extra trick, while the number of points gained may not be many, they build up on your spirit and break down the morale of your opponents. James Cross of Erie, Pa., shows us a neat triple squeeze play in today’s hand to make seven odd, after re- ceiving a favorable opening. The bidding is an example of slow and deliberate exchange of informa- tion which North requires to arrive at his rather optimistic contract of six no trump. ‘Today’s Contract Problem West is declarer at two clubs doubled. North opens @ heart, which West wins. He returns a club, winning with the queen. Can you, in North position, stop West from making his contract? Here's a tip—you might have to trump your partner's ace. small diamond and finessed the ten, which held, Here are a few of Dillinger’s friends! and what happened to them: | Harry Pierpont and Charles Mak-, ley, awaiting execution in Ohio for slaying Sheriff Jess Sarber while free-: ing Dillinger from the Lima, O,, jail. Russell Clark, serving a life woul for his part in the Sarber murder. | Herbert Youngblood, negro who es-| caped with Dillinger from the Crown > Point, Ind., “escape-proof” jail with | the aid of a wooden gun, killed by officers at Port Huron, Mich., March 16, a few days after the escape. Eugene Green, reported dying in a St. Paul hospital from machine gun bullets. TT | Weather Report OO FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Cloudy tonight; Wednesday peadialy . fair; colder tonight. For North kota: Cloudy, | has developed in the senate. | The Michigan Republican suggest- ed placing an additional 10 per cent levy on all individual income tax re- turns. As the senate prepared for the fifth day of debate on the revenue bill, it appeared there had been a dis- | tinct change in the prospects for the | Couzens suggestion. | LEHMAN SCORES VICTORY Albany, N. Y., April 10.—()—Gov- ernor Herbert H. Lehman, swinging a | big stick, has turned a defeat into a | victory in his efforts to put across his | public utilities program. The senate, | reversing itself early Tuesday, passed his two key measures—a bill permit- ting municipalities to own and ope- rate power plants and another re- customer; clean, steril- ized towel for each shave. Corner Fifth & Broadway Under Tavis Music Store J. W. Anderson, Benson county,| quiring utilities to pay a share of the candidate for superintendent of pub-| costs of rate investigation. lic instruction, who talked on educa-! oe tional matters; Frank Vogel, high-; According to records, quicksands| way commissioner, who told of cut-| swallowed 13 warships one night in ting expenses in highway department | 1703. “I get hetter than 19 miles to the gallon!” “PTAHEY built astonishing economy into that brilliant engine new 1934 Dictator,” says Studebaker owner George E. Hickman. “I give a car punishme: trips and drive fast. And that the 5,000 miles I covered in my new Dictator the first month didn’t mean even five minutes ‘time out’ for an adjustment, you'll realize what a truly bile this new Studebaker is. “It has the style a 1934 car should have— attractive, not freakish, streamlining. Aad it handles easily under all conditions.” You too will be thrilled by the perform- anceand value of the new Dictator. Whatever your plans or price ideas about a new. car, that powers my FINEST OF ALL STUDEBAKERS Streamlined skyway style bod- ies of steel reinforced by steel ++ quadripoise suspension that cradles the action of all wheels, not just the front wheels... high-powered, sensationally economical engines...uncanay “mechanical brains” that leave you little to do but sos stamina derived from years of triumphs in stock car and In- dianapolis Speedway racing..« better cars than the Studebakers which sold for $180 to $700 more last year. nt. I take long when I tell you superb automo- make sure you take a Studebaker trial drive. Distributor WILDE MOTORS, INC. 5 Phone 1500 304-306 Fourth St. Bismarck, N. D. Dealers: MOTT MOTOR CO., Mott, N. D.; D. E. TAYLOR MER- Wa N. D. SCHULZ, Washburn, D. M. HEL colder west Won. tion tonight; Wed- — generally Mont Generally fair to- The ten of hearts was led from which Duplicate—E. and W. vul. Opening lead—@ 4. gure which would outlaw employer- dominated company unions, never- theless held to the view that the leg- Uislation had a fine chance of enact- ment, Granted New Trial in Liquor Traffic Case Herbert G. Lindeman, convicted in Grand Forks county on a charge of engaging in the liquor traffic, has been granted a new trial by the state ‘supreme court, which held it was & prejudicial error to allow alcohol, of- fered in evidence and excluded by the trial judge, to be included among the exhibits retained by the jury. Lindeman was sentenced by Judge Daniel B. Holt at Grand Forks to serve five months in jail and pay & fine of $200. He appealed on the ground that a box of bottles containing alcohol, of- fered in evidence by the state and | The Play | A heart opening will hold the hand to six odd. against Cross. East’s jack forced his queen. He immediately returned a SENTENCES AUTO THIEF | Moorhead, Minn. April 10—(P)— .|Pleading guilty to a charge of car r|theft, Edward Haataja, 27, Paavola, Mich., was sentenced to serve not to exceed five years in the St. Cloud ,]reformatory by Judge Anton Thomp- "json when the spring term of Clay county district court opened here Clo tonight; Wedn y gen- mid fair; colder tonight. night, except unsettled southeast por- tion; colder; Wednesday fair, colder extreme east portion. Minnesota: Cloudy, rain or snow in north and rain in south por- ie tonight and pomaibly in extreme east portion esday morning; colder in southwest and extreme west portions Wednesday. GENERAL CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is low from the eastern Rocky over the upper Great Lakes nena (Williston 29.56). nelly, fair over the western states. weather Nredeey over the upper Mississippi Valley and the Red River Valley, but elsewhere temperatures are moderate. 27.78. Reduced to sea level, 29.56. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 19 ft. 24 hour change, 0.5 ft. ECIPITATION Normal, January 1st to di ‘ Accumulated deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 7 Low- Jamestown, clear in Walstrom, Hitterdal youth, charged with second-degree assault in connection with a dance hall brawl hear Hitterdal, which is alleged to here caused George Braseth, Ulen, to lose the sighfof an eye. ain Not guilty was the plea of However, a diamond was opened |the nine of hearts, and one over-trick. FIRE IN MINNEAPOLIS Minneapolis, April 10—(#)—Fire which started shortly before mid- ‘night destroyed the Cleveland Wreck- ing Co. warehouses here and early kept firemen busy checking Lindeman. The prosecution said the alcohol had been inadvertently in- cluded among the exhibits turned over to the jury. U. N. D. Band Leaves On Its Annual Trip Grand Forks, N. D., April 10.—(7)— x concert band of the Uni- North Dakota, Howard, left Tuesday ba ie Wis., Scturday, and the Southmoor hotel Chicago, next Monday evening. Forsyth, » April 10—>)— ‘unconscious Monday in her au- which WOULD AMEND GRAIN ACT Ottawa, April 10—(F)—A bill to the Canada grain act, brought into the house of commons Monday by Hon. H. Stevens, minister of trade and commerce, would give , directed by}. Tuesday roof fires which started on @ score of/the government authority to order ° dry-cleaner, is peeved. enjoys a reputation as & hai several roperty and the resulting confu- Loe ive Dresher a mild case of the jitters as he ruminated, “— and me a dry cleaner— nudists, phooey.” HE'S A WISE JUDGE Chicago—The bailiff pounded on a gavel in Judge Matthew Hartigan’s court Monday and said: “There is order in the court, your honor, and lipstick on | your face.” The judge explained before the court: “My wife's good- bye kiss. ‘The evidence is con- clusive, and I am flattered by that smudge of red. It shows my wife loves me enough to kiss me and to make her lips attractive for that kiss.” At least 150 deposits of various minerals are contained in a strip land 200 miles long and 15 to 60 miles wide in the Katanga district of the Belgian Congo. Why Liquid Laxatives Do You No Harm a The dose of a liquid laxative can be measured. The action can thus be regulated to suit individual need. It forms no habit; you need not take a “double dose” a day or two later. Nor will a mild liquid laxative irritate the kidneys. “ The right liquid laxative will bring a perfect movement, and with no discomfort at the time, or The wrong cathartic may often do more harm than good. An approved liquid laxative (one which is most widely used for both adults and children) is Dr. Caldwell’s dwellings in the vicinity. WAGNER CONFIDENT ANYWAY ‘Washington, April 10.—()—Demo- cratic leaders held privately Tuesday that the chances for enacting the con- troversial Wagner labor board bill at this session were slim. Senator Wag- ner (Dem., N. Y.) author of the mea- special grading was { of garnet wheat. A flock of hens produce, in egg — 137 pounds of chalk an- nually. A railroad train sank in near Pueblo, Colo., in 1875, and never Syrup Pepsin, a based on senna—a The bowels will not become do in the case of cat ing mineral drugs. for Dr. perfectly safe. Its laxative action is depend- ent on this form of help, as they may Mountain slope to|' the Great Lakes region. with centers || and over western North Dakota and], Bismarck station barometer, inches: || WEATHER IN THE NAT! a et est es BISMARCK, N. D., cldy. 38 48 Amarillo, Tex., clea 86 Boise, Idaho, clear. 68 52 4 aee38 peeebeebohnsebecseBBeeseseeeesaessszeses SASASLSRSLSsaecAssRuhaeSSAasSSSosRa: " MG cldy... 28 DILLINGER COHORT DYING St. Paul, April 10—()—Eugene Green, wounded member of John Dil- f © All Ways kind to your throat “Tt’s toasted” 20 We like to tell about the finer to- baccos in Luckies—the choicest ‘Turkish and domestic, and only the mild, clean center leaves—they taste better—then ‘‘It’s toasted” —for throat protection. But we're just as oi d. 50 firm, so fully packed! . — Lose ends nae proud ofthe way Luckles are made, ‘They're 90 round and firm, 90 free * fromloose ends. That’s why Luckies always ‘‘keep in condition”: not dry out. Luckies are always in gll-waye!—kind to your throat.

Other pages from this issue: