The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 12, 1934, Page 1

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ESTABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1984 The Weather "Friany ‘partly “cloudy” and’ warner PRICE FIVE CENTS Indict M’Donald, Two Kinzers Link Dillinger Gang With Desperate Crimes . ATLEASTAOMMINR \Boy Thinks He Will PARTICIPANTS ARE| Get ‘Couple Years INVOLVED IN GROUP Issue Warrants for Hamilton and Woman for Harbor- Ing Dillinger LOOT TOTALED HALF MILLION Many Crimes in Minnesota, In- cluding Bremer Kidnap- ing, Involved St. Paul, April 12—(/)—Warrants charging two members of criminal bana with harboring s fugitive from justice were issued Thursday i 5 i geile i re 8 ge ; E E Hy ] i i Named Weirton |13-vear-0ld Faces Sanity Test Prosecutor ———————- Attorney Frank K. Nebeker, above, is the choice of Attorney General Homer 8. Cummings to direct the government’s case against the Weirton Steel Com- pany, involving defiance of NRA in company Nebeker recently represented defendants in airmail contempt cases and won their acquittal. i i g Ba E die i i ii After Two-Year-Old Girl Captive Dies INDICTMENT WILL BE ASKED Asked If He Ever Cried, Boy Says ‘I'm Too Smart to Do That Any More’ Chicago, April 12.—()}—George Ro- Galski, held for murder at the age of 13 years, thinks he ought to get “a couple of years” for kidnaping little Dorette Zeitlow. The child, two and a half years old, what you're charged wi ie, > OF murder, I ain't sure which.” cried, the I was a baby, twill Rie cee of the char- itors A Noted Entertainet Is Entertained + W4 They've been linked together in Mrs. Fay Webb Vallee’s suit for di- ve but that didn’t seem to trouble Rudy Vallee and pretty Alice Faye, film actress, when this picture was taken in a New York night club. Miss Faye had just returned from Hollywood, where Fox named her on its own list.of 1934 baby stars. Six More Remain Stranded On Ice Pack in Bering Sea CANADA WITNESSE Never Before Has Country Be- held, so Many Efforts by | _ ~ Lawmakers Ottawa, April 12.—()—The cry, “regulation for recovery!” rings from . | West to east in the legislative halls of Canada. fuses to Consider Fugi- tive's Appeal Istanbul, April 12—()—The Turk- ish court of appeals refused to con- i hy. E be 2a i Tinek cf i he BRy ‘in Never before in any one year has the country beheld so many efforts by lawmakers to put industry, finance business generally and under govern- ment supervision. Some observers have drawn a com- if 22 More Rescued by Daring Russian Fliers; Otto Schmidt at Nome Moscow, April 12—(#)—The gov- ernment rescue commission an- nounced that 22 more Russians, stranded since Feb. 13 on a drifting ice pack in the Bering sea, were res- cued by airplane Thursday. Only six The brilliant rescue flights, exe- cuted under hazardous conditions in the Far North, brought the total of those flown to the mainland at Cape we Siberia, within two days An original party of more than 100 was cast away on the ice when the steamer Cheliuskin sank on the re- turn trip from a scientific expedition to Wrangel Island. Flights to save the six remaining men were planned Thursday or Thursday night if the weather re- mained favorable. phic first-hand account of the A gral .| perilous situation facing the cast- rounded > .| Cheliuskiners were living in heated Fee BF ee, z z t aways when huge crushed into their pack was given by the gov- ernment rescue commission. Reporting by radio from Cape Van Karem, M. Ushakov, who is direct- ing relief operations and who flew to the camp April 7—the day on which the first five men were taken off, 3 “When I arrived at the camp, sur- by floating ice blocks, the and lighted log barracks. But de- spite their reasonably comfortable quarters, they existed as if on the slope of a volcano. On Apel 6 drifting 4 bore down on the camp with a tre mendous noise, crashing ice and FIRST LADY GIVEN SUPPORT IN FIGHT OVER WIRT CHARGE West Virginia Democrat Com- pliments Mrs. Roosevelt for Answer HAS MOUNTAINEER SUPPORT Republicans and Democrats Continue to Battle Over ‘Red’ Claim Washington, April 12.—(#)—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt drew support Thursday for the comeback she made at Dr. William A. Wirt for calling her pet subsistence homestead plans “a Communistic effort.” Representative Randolph, a West Virginia Democrat, sent the First Lady a telegram early Thursday complimenting her “courageous an- swer” to the man whose charges of Communist plotting within the ad- ministration have started an inter- party row. Referring to the Reedsville, W. Va., subsistence homestead project in which Mrs, Roosevelt has been inter- ested, Randolph said she was helping mountaineers who “have been down for the count of nine.” He promised her support by the hill people. There were few signs of abatement of the bitter feeling between Repub- licans and Democrats aroused by Dr. Wirt's “Red plot” charges. Capitol Hill waited for some devel- opment on the counter-charges’ by Chairman Bulwinkle of the special Wirt investigating committee that the Gary, Ind., educator was jailed during the war for “pro-German activities.” Representative McGugin (Rep., Kan.), another committee member who has cried “whitewash” at the Democratic investigators, immediately replied’ that "Dr. “Wits attérhey, Former Senator James A. Reed, had oe him to say this was un- e. There was continued speculation here over the statement of William F. Hodges, mayor of Gary during the war, that “Dr. Wirt is OK.” Hodges denied a statement previ- ously attributed to him that Bul- winkle's charge was a vicious lie, ex- ae “that statement was gar- EXTORTIONISTS BEAT AND ROB ANOKA MAN Milk-Driver, Acting as Go-Be- tween, Left Unconscious _ in Cemetery Minneapolis, April 12—(7)—In an alleged extortion plot at Anoka Wed- nesday night, the representative of the intended kidnap victim was beat- stroying the barracks and a moto:-|woulg boat. “They wrecked a landing field un- der the airplane of the flier Slephey— who had damaged a strut in landing two days before. The plane moved safely, however, to a new landing field.” “The whole party displayed cour- age and fortitude,” Ushakov reported, “ ite that crushing of ice, at 2 a. m., confronting with the greatest Cheliuskin sank, and the day.” Praising the aviators for partici- pating in rescue efforts, Ushakov said “under changing weather conditions gach "unsuccessful flight may mean unless he paid $1,500. Fawcett, fear- ing a kidnaping, notified federal Leads Campaign For U.S. Lottery A lottery bill designed to net the U, S. treasury @ billion dol- lars a year ‘is sponsored by Rep. Edward A. Kenney (Dem., N. 8. The lottery conducted by the vetérans’ administration, to pay soldier compensation and pen- sions, and, says Kenney, to bring tax relief. © FARM HOLIDAY BODY REVERSES ORDER AND VICTS N. D. FARMER' Leader Declares Richland Coun- ty Man Disregarded Pre- vious Agreement Fargo, N. D., April 12—(4)—Be- lieved to be the first incident of its: kind in the movement's history, mem- bere of the Farmers Holiday associa- tion Wednesday evicted tenant from a Richland county farm, the farm being the property of an in- surance company. H. R. Morgan, Walcott, president of the Richland County Farmers Holi- day association, in Fargo, Wednes- day night said William House, tenant on a farm four miles west and two miles south of Walcott in Richland JURY CONTINUES ITS PROBE INTO AFFAIRS OF LANGER'S PAPER Five-Per-Cent Solicitor, Father and Son Facing Federal Charges TO FACE TRIAL IN BISMARCK No Indication Given by Secret Body How Far Investiga- tion Will Go Fargo, N. D., April 12—(@)—The federal investigation into political contributions in North Dakota Wed- nesday night had resulted in the in- dictment and arrest of three persons, with no indications how far up the line the action would be pursued by the federal grand jury in session here. Arrested thus far are: R. A. Kinzer of Valley City, for- merly secretary of the federal re-- lief set-up in North Dakota. His son, J. A. Kinzer, formerly employed in the federal emerg- waa department at Bis- marc Harold McDonald of Bismarck, who went over the state solicit é subscriptions to “The . The grand jury its inquiry Tuesday. Federal began it officials had indie county, property of an insurance com-| were pany for which M. E. Kremer of Sykes- ton, N. D., is agent, was evicted from the farm by an assemblage of some 700 Farmers Holiday men for failure eli i A; i i i at

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