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North Dakota’ 's Oldest Ni | ESTABLISHED 1873 BO00 FANS SEE MAJOR LEAGUES -—INGLASSIG CANE Warneke and Mungo Blasted Off Mound by Cronin’s Savage Batsmen SIXTH FRAME TELLS STORY Young Harder Holds Befuddied Terryers Scoreless in Last Fhree Innings SCORE BY INNINGS as* Head 18 inti sEE? aa Jail Door to Get Victim Monday Night il iff Killed young an under: af it white girl. Three hundred men hanged from the limb of courthouse -square here} istice. EE i f EF Bee is i F Fie FEE i it BE EF ‘ By i i / ARTER CONFESSING | FOR STRIKE TRUCE TO ATTACK ON GIRL| AS TENSION GROWS Louisiana Mob Batters Down| Gunfire Adds Seventh Victim to Strife List; Deputy Sher- | San Francisco, July 10.—(#)—An- , lynch-| other death and increasing general strike threats in three cities drew the _an attempted at-| pacific coast maritime dispute ra- Pidly toward a new crisis Tuesday as/g: &@ federal board pleaded for an arm- Guntire added the seventh victim SELECTION OF NEXT ND. COMMANDER IS PROBLEM OF LEGION Formulating 1935 Policy Oc- cupies Attention of De- partment Convention ASK UNIVERSAL DRAFT LAW Advocate Compensation Solely for War Disabled With Hospitalization Fargo, N. D., July 10—()—With se- lection of a new state commander, committeemen and delegates to the national convention the principal bus- iness ahead of them, delegates to the North Dakota department convention them to bend every éffort to into Legion membership every man who served in the World War. ‘William Langer commended the for their active citizen- ip and pledged his faith in the or- ganization and cooperation in its re- habilitation and patriotic programs. W. F. Burnett, state commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and Jerman Leonhard, state commander of the D. A. V., brought greetings from their kindred units. 8am Reynolds, national committee- i parade Legionna! to be rivalled only by the competition tonight on Dacotah Field at the North Dakota Agricultural college of Bank Receivership Held ‘On Way Out’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1934 BELIEVE DILLINGER ON RAMPAGE AGAIN THROUGH WISCONSIN Wild Gun Battle Between Sher- iffs and Gangsters Leads to Rumor Fond du Lac, Wis. July 10—(7)— A wild gun battle between Deputy; sheriffs and a band of gunmen rid- ing in a large automobile led to rumors John Dillinger was on another rampage, and sent Wisconsin peace officers on an extensive manhunt Tuesday. One of the gunmen was believed to have been wounded. The fight, which occurred on a high- way near here Monday, left a maze of conflicting details but no tangible evidence that the elusive Indiana bad man was involved. The finding of a bullet-punctured| small automobile (a Ford) abandon- ed in a ravine, preceded the gunplay. While the deputies were driving the bullet-scarred ymachine to Fond du Lac, a large gray car approached, and as it drew near the officers, its occupants opened fire with a machine gun and sped away. The deputies; answered the volley with shots from their shotguns and pistols. Officers 2 Trail No trace of the gray machine was obtained until Monday night when Earl Rasch of Fond di Lac told Sher- iff George Foreund that it narrowly missed hitting him when it cut out in front of him on a main street of Fond du Lac. “There was a man in the ba -: seat |} -¥ith-his shirt-torn and. blood running down his arm,” he said. Federal officials were rushed to the scene by Melvin Purvis, chief of the Chicago bureau, on reports that Dil- linger might have been involved. Previously a report was circulated) that the driver of the small car found in the ravine had been shot by the occupants of another machine who} then drove away with their victim, but it proved unfounded. The investigat- ors said the police at Kaukauna ac- counted for the bullet holes in the car when they announced that two youths had confessed to having shot, at a stolen automobile which they left near Fond du Lac. They spatter- ed the car with bullets, they said, to make their deed seem spectacular and then stole another car from Fond du Lac doctor and drove to Kau- kauna. BUSINESS COLLEGE Sale of Land Will Write Final Chapter in State’s Finan- cial Debacle GOVERNMENT GIVING HELP Land Bank and Home Owners Loan Corporation Return- ing to Homes Editor's Note: This is the sec- ond of a series of articles on va- rious operations of the state gov- ernment as they are affected by the national rehabilitation pian and as they affect the individual North Dakota citizen. AS soon as the state receiver of closed banks can sell some 1,500 quarter sections of North Dakota land which have come into his hands from insolvent banks, he will be ready to close up shop and write finis to his efforts, which will have seen the Uquidation of $00 insolvent state! inks, There are other details to be ad- justed, of course, but disposition of the land is the biggest’ remaining Job, according to Receiver L. R. Baird, and by the time it is fin- ished the other matters should be out of the way. Meantime, it was revealed, the re- ceiver is putting back on the land many farmers who lost their farms through foreclosure of mortgages given to banks in return for loans. The method used is the same as that by which the Bank of North Dakota is taking itself out of the land-loan- ing business, transfer of the obliga- tions to the federal land bank. Back into their former homes, also, have gone many city and village re- sidents who had lost property by rea- son of foreclosure. This has been Federal Home Owners Loan corpora- tion, which has given splendid co- operation in each case. Such deals, like those with the land bank, have been profitable for depositors in closed banks. It has enabled the re- ceiver to get their money out of “frozen” assets. Will Pay $14,000,000 When it finally locks its doors the receiver's office will have paid out approximately $14,000,000 in divi- dends on bank assets which were listed at the time of closing at a total of $54,126,556.36, or roughly 26 per cent. The fact that the assets were not worth the amounts listed,) of course, is what caused the banks to close. Had they been worth the amounts stated the banks could have liquidated voluntarily or still would be in business. At. time most banks closed, their assets were generally of two major Classes, mortgages on farm chattels and mortgages on farm land. When the borrowers couldn't pay and de- Positors wanted their money the banks closed and the receiver was drum ad bugle corps vieing for the championship of the department. Dark skies unloosed heavy spatter- raindrops. mes Pp. m, with clouds heavy over- & gracious sun smiled the TEACHER DIES HERE Otto Niesner to Be Buried at Dawson; Was Well Known in Banking Circles called in to liquidate its affairs. The job has been difficult and has taken too long, according to Baird, because of the difficulty of making collections, the same difficulty which Dog Once Dead Still Is Alive Scientists may scoff to their hearts’ content, but Lazarus 1V is alive and appears to know what it's all about, as he sits | here with his master, Dr. Robert E. Cornish, who brought the an’ mal back from the dead in a sen- sational California experiment, | more than two months ago. The | dog's brain is dead, savants de clare, UNREST GROWS IN | GERMANY AS FOOD SHORTAGE I$ FELT Hitler Returns From Alps; Re-/ ported Planning Vacation | on Baltic Sea Berlin, July 10.—(?)—Chancellor | Hitler turned back to the capital of} Nazi Germany Tuesday to face new unrest, heightened by a food short- age. Apprehension spread because of a serious shortage in potatoes—the chief staple food of all Germans— limited sharply by the drouth and early frosts. An increase was ordered in the po- tato import quotas from Belgium. Holland and Italy, to meet the emer- gency. While the return of Hitler from a week-end in the Bavarian Alps was awaited, interest centered about his reported plans for a vacation cruise | every other creditor has been having in recent years. Many of the chattel mortgages Probably would remain to be collect- ed were it not for the government loaning program. Like going banks, the receiver took : bE i Ei. i : i Hy te , 5 Li [ , age EF gt i i gs PG z 5 F I i : l 3 g 3 | BERR af ri ak 8s 235 E alt giisé 125 Youths Enter One-Month ‘Schoot of the Soldier’; Program Outlined te i t é [ i i I [ 4 sd “EE “ee ili fil elt i i é if i i i | sf ie HE HT H e | li ales rik : F Hi | : fl li u ! if I at ull ly HT i o—_+ aRs I pietoeeeeea FES : fi # if i/@8 i i E nF is g bee i H i il 4 i i 5g : 75 ih ge s, rn ti i FE " 5 tile | fi advantage of the barnyard loans granted late in the Hoover administration, getting his money out wherever possible. b. il 3 Bee fH tj il i if The} powerful of their oratorical big guns. this summer on the Baltic sea. Hitler Prepares to Flee Should the occasion arise, it was remarked widely, he would thus be ready for a quick flight from Ger- many. To batter down opposition to their wholesale executions, the Nazis roll- ed forward Tuesday one of the most Paul Joseph Goebbels, dynamic minister of propaganda and spokes- man for Hitler, was scheduled to de- liver a half hour address Tuesday night on “how other countries regard the June 30 cleansing.” Goebbels was expected to develop the theme that the world, as mirror- ed in the press, already understands and approves the bloody second Nazi faroluaan, and the aims of Hitler- His efforts convoked the reichstag, or national parliament, for Friday to listen to a speech by him concerning the recent second revo- the un-| in PRICE FIVE CENTS Fear Burch Met Foul Play American All-Stars Whi Nationals 9 to 7)aate nrms CONCERN OVER LONG DELAY IN RETURN Absence From Bismarck Over Three Weeks Leads to Worry of Family LAST SEEN HERE JUNE 15 Minneapolis Police Take Up Search at Request of His Family Here Minneapolis police, at the request of his family here, Tuesday took up the search for T. M. Burch, Bismarck tire dealer, missing from his home here since June 15 when he boarded a bus en route to the Twin Cities on a business trip. Fear that Burch had met with foul play was expressed by his wife who disclosed that he carried in the neighborhood of $250 in currency with which he expected to purchase the balance of a shipment of tires that he had contracted for on an earlier visit to Minneapolis. Burch left Bismarck by bus and the driver recalled that he arrived in Fargo but a change of drivers oc- curred there and Burch’s movements from that point are unknown. Inquiries by Minneapolis police disclosed that two tire firms, the La- Salle Tire company and the Fifth Av- enue Tire company, were holding quantities of tires purchased by him sometime ago. Officials of the two companies said they had not seen the man since his last visit there two months ago. May Be in Chicago The possibility that Burch went on to Chicago was expressed by his wife but a checkup at the local bus depot revealed that on June 15 there were no tickets sold to the Illinois city. Tickets were sold to Minneapolis. however. As his wife understood him, he Planned to hire a truck at Minneap- olis to bring back the tires and in- tended to return here with the mer- chandise. Prior to leaving the city Burch sold his truck in order to secure cash for the tires, according to his wife. A portion of the cash he left with her, telling her not to pay bills with the money, as he would return soon. On his person he carried creden- tial letters from several prominent men, including Governor Langer and Major A. P. Lenhart, which he had used to secure credit at the Twin City tire firms on his earlier trip. Burch is a man about six feet tall weighing in the neighborhood of 200 pounds. He is 39 years old and is Slightly bald with light sandy hair, hazel eyes and a ruddy complexion. When last seen he wore a navy blue suit, a panama hat and a white shirt. FOUR ARE INJURED IN FREIGHT WRECK Chicago, Minneapolis and Oma- ha Train Upset in Washout Near Belle Plaine Belle Plaine, Minn., July 10.—(?)— Four trainmen were injured when a fast Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha freight train was wreck- ed as it ran into a washout one mile west of Belle Plaine shortly before midnight Monday. The injured are Joseph Ginther, St. Paul, engineer; William Howard, North St. Paul, fireman; Walter Miller, St. James, brakeman; and Robert Gurney, St. Paul, brakeman. The railroad men were not hurt seriously, their injuries being con- fined chiefly to face, head and body bruises, although one suffered sev- eral broken ribs, His name was not obtainable since he left with two others for St. Paul on a passenger Stock Association