The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 27, 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)

‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY JULY 27, 1934 Matthaei Assigned thael Assigned | Tree Belt 10 Miles Wide, Canada to Panhandle, Reclamation Vision TEP BY STEP AS DILLINGER WENT TO HIS DEATH Washington, July 2-—w. EB} { = == — a sss ae . cee - i : Matthael, North Dakota state sena- = tor who recently joined the legai staft A maxnificent belt of forest trees, 100 | of the federal trade commission, has > miles wide, and extending from the Cana- boa been assigned to the commission’s = = 4} dian border to the Texas Panhandle— Chicago office. eee aE Pepe that im the vast conception now being Matthaei recently refused to recog- = studied by the Forest Service. It would nize as legal the special session of er STAT aim at providing work es drouth relief. the North Dakota legislature called : Class aa BS : at reducing erosion, floods, and dust by deposed Gov. Langer and declined A : storms and at increasing rainfall The to attend. treex wonld be planted in 100-yard Tt was reported here Matthaei north-and-south strips. with farm lands he Probably would resign one or the! between,*making a xhelter belt 100 miles other of his posts. wide It would take 10 or 12 years to OO complete the planting. and cost at least | Weather Report $75,000,000 Land for the 1200-mile for- | ws ER raha ett teen: est would be either bought outright or Ka rented with an option to buy later. FORECAST _ For Bismarck ‘and vicinity: erally fair tonight and slightl Saturday. For North Da-/ kota: Generally fair tonight and Saturday; slight- ly cooler extreme southeast tonight; slightl; warmer Saturday. For South Da- kota: Generally fair .tonight and Saturday; not much change in temperature. For Montana: Fair tonight and Saturday; little change in temperature. Minnesota: Generally fair Friday and Saturday; cooler Friday night, extreme north and extreme south portions. Gen- turday) warm er By NEA Service | would create a forested area 100 miles wide, enough, Washington, July 26.—All the tree planting done | it is felt, to influence weather and drainage condi- by the CCC thus far, and all the forestry projects of —_ the states, would look like a brier thicket compared | COST NEAR $75,000,000 with the grandiose plan now being considered by the | The forested areas would have to be fenced, to Forest Service. , keep out cattle and sheep while the trees were grow- This is no less than the planting of a magnificent | ing, and this work, with the planting itself, would belt of forest trees, 100 miles wide, all the way from/ be expected to furnish a ‘great deal of needed em- the Canadian border to the Texas Panhandle. | ployment to farmers of the region who have been im- F. A. Silcox, chief forester, is studying the plan.| poverished by drouth conditions. It is believed that such a shelter belt of trees would | It is estimated that from 10 to 12 years would be help bring more rainfall, reduce dust storms which | required to finish the job, and the cost would be at have ruined s0 many midwest farms, help check | least $75,000,000. Part of this money could come out erosion and floods, give employment relief to present | of drouth relief funds already appropriated. A great drouth sufferers, and of course provide valuable tim- | part of the millions of fence posts needed could be ber later. | cut on forest projects where thinning of timber is in STUDY OLD WORLD PLANS Brees NO EQUAL IN WORLD 2 The plan has not yet been approved, but study is being given to two very old similar programs in Such a belt of forest trees, 1300 miles long and France and Russia. That in Russia was launched | 100 miles wide, would have no equal in the world. some 70 years ago in Czarist days to reclaim some of | The size of the undertaking is indicated by Charles the worn-out prairie lands, ; Lathrop Pack, president of the American Tree asso- That in France is 150 years old, and is said to, ciation, who estimates that 260,000 miles of fencing sce have made a splendid pine forest out of a useless | would be required to encircle the new woodlands, and NORTH DAKOTA POINTS sandy waste. So there is nothing particularly new| that 200,000,000 fence posts would be needed. Hich- Low- about the shelter belt proposal except its tremendous | The land would either be bought from farmers est est Pct.| size. ! whose ground lies in the path of the proposed belt, 59.03 The plan involves either renting or buying land! or immediately leased, with option to buy the wooded al in strips perhaps 100 yards wide. running north and | sections later. At least six, and probably more, huge ‘99; South. The area between would be cultivated just nurseries would have to be established, and vast | as at present. But the alternate strips of woodland | quantities of seeds and seedlings provided. GENERAL CONDITIONS A high pressure area extends from Saskatchewan southward to New Mexico (Prince Albert 30.28) while low pressure areas are centered over the western Rocky Mountain slope (Boise 29.98) and over the middle ep Valley (St. Louis 29.92). Scattered showers have occurred from the Plains States eastward to the Great Lakes region. The showers were light, except at Kansas City where 1.02 inches fell. Temperatures have moderated somewhat in the cen- tral districts, but warmer weather revails over the western lountain slope. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.39. Reduced to sea level, 30.16. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. -1.0 ft. 24 hour change, -0.1 ft. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck station: Total this month to date Normal. this month to date . Totai, January 1st to date . Normal, January 1st to date .. Accumulated deficiency to date The thrill-filled last moments of John ‘Dillinger’s hectic career are sketched here, on an actual picture of the scene, as the outlaw went to his death by federal bullets. (1) Dillinger leaves film theater, followed by two women. With a Piercing look, he passes Melvig Purvis (2), Department of Justice investigator, waiting in front of an adjacent beer tavern to spring the trap; then (3) the womes believed to have led the outiaw to his doom fall back, and flee (4) as the cordon closes in on the quarry. (5) Bullets thud into the body of the gangster and he plunges dying into the alley. Grim Mementoes of Killer | Where Crimson Trail Ended | 112/ the skirmish at Kollerschlag. | 00; From Salzburg came word that a 00:new battle betwen the Nazis and 99 | s<vernment forces had broken out! Stupidity of Daladier ‘to |Eriday morning for tie possession of ee os ** + gece meen AROUSES PUBLIC IRE ‘ 1 **_* & * * * * Austria. so # Large forces were said to be en-| ‘Bloody Tuesday’ Is Near | | gaged. } Execution Rumors Denied es Reports that eight of the Nazis | ———__—_ SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS |who participated in the “putsch” in By FULTON THATCHER GRANT High- Low- which Dollfuss was assassinated had, fo) est est Pet. | eins ooldy: «.: sage ee been killed without trial, and that! Rapid C . J France, had been indefinitely post- ‘HAPTER NINE Poned. It was to have taken place on So much for the purely political|Tuesday, February 6, but the clear- 30 more were to be hanged Friday aspect of those days. seeing management noticed a shadow jafternoon brought this announce-; But there is another facet to the overhanging the country. It was pos- MINNESOTA POINTS ;Ment from the official Austrian news diamond of Franc:, the human sidejsible that Tuesday night would be High- Low- | agency: : | of things. I have not mentioned what difficult, to avoid a stronger word, : est estPct.| “We have no information of any | was going on while Daladier, Frot and|for ladies in gold and silver cloth. Minneapolis. clear ..... os os execution of the Nazi putschists.” —_| Cot were being “vite et fort.” Do ncs;A straight case of clairvoyance. Moorhead, cldy. : Government offices were supplied! suppose that the people of France; That night Chiappe was made a WEATHER IN OTHER STATES ean atiernecn with packages of sat back and waited for the miracle burnt offering to Moloch Blum. High- Low- |candles, apparently as a precaution |to happen, Do not suppose that even Chiappe Becumes Hero His blood-streaked face as hard and merciless in death as in life, John Dillinger here lies dead in the “cooler” of the Cook county morgue in Chicago, his lurid career ended by federal agents’ bullets. No con- tortion of pain or fear marks his features, on which a plastic surgeon Grim memento of an arch-bandit’s violent end, the straw hat which John Dillinger wore when he was est est Pet.|against the cutting off of Vienna’s|the National Lottery, which Amarillo, Tex., clei 94 70 00; Boise. peas 04 00) 00; a R23 | | | ig . 68 Edmonton, Alta.. peldy. ‘ Havre, Mont. clear .. ie Landier, Wyo., clear . Medicine Hat, A., peldy. 88 82 96 Ssessk3888e3838338' St. Louis, Salt Lake City, 8. S. Marie, Mic! Spokane. Swift Current. S., pe! The Pas, Man.. clear . Toledo, Ohio, clear Winnemucca. Nev., clear 100 Mi 80 seesskheeeseseee3 co from page one D Heimwehr Prepares For Nazis’ Attack Upon Capital City Also peniainiene 10. ag! gontunicn were bridge dynamiting, rrupting traffic and Socialist and Communist leaflets inciting Left Radicals to wait an opportune moment to “crush all Fascism.” ‘Von Papen, a non-Nazi and a con- servative, was appointed by Chan- cellor Adolf Hitler of Germany as Nazi clergyman aa 5. At ‘xollerehian the leader of a ‘ il eenll ; if el electric supply. i Fighting broke out Friday between government forces and Nazis close to the Italian border, millionaires over night, once a month, was enough to draw these excited peo- ple out of themselves and to make them forget why they had been curs- The battle was for possession of!ing the men who had, somehow, in- Hsiakyted Villach, a town barely half|sinuated themselves into the power ar. hour's journey from the along which Italy has concentrated 48,000 troops and many airplanes. A Nazi victory was reported early Friday in the occupation of Goisern,| @ town in upper Austria not far from Salzburg. This, and other reports, indicate! that the revolt is spreading. The government is moving energet-: lically to put down the Nazi uprising. | Tioops are reported enroute to the Murgtal valley. The Fascist regime. headed by Prince Ernst von Starhem- berg, successor to the siain Dollfuss,! appears, however, to be having its hands full as the revolt spreads. Un- tu late Thursday the uprising had| border jof the land. On February 1 Paris was quiet— but watchful. The provinces were disturbed and there were unimpor- tant manifestations, chiefly in Bor. deaux. On February 2 the staid old Journal des Debats wrote: If the Cabinet deceives the waiting people it will fall, because evidently it has no strength aside from that which the country gives it. M. Daladier is going to have an experience, an adventure. He has six days to create a new world; one day less than the biblical Genesis, As if to prove the cynical attitude been confined principally to the prov-|of the public echoed in this, there ince of Styria. was some small rioting in the Saint- Communications with many of the;Quen quarters where Left-minded provinces has been cut off, making it workmen have a sort of common- impossible to compile uny accurate | wealth. figures on the number of casualties in the fighting between government forees and the Nazis. Estimates be- lieved conservative are that 300 persons have been killed. Government Claims Victories There has been fightit.g near Stveit. The government expected to retake the town Priday. Trocps also have been massed for an assault on Feld- kirch. ‘The government claims important victories elsewhere on tre Carinthian front. Nazis in the upper Drau val- ley, according to government state- ments, have been routed. On February 3 Paris learned that the Ball of the Little White Beds, the Greatest of all social functions in t jccnfirmation. Rumors that Italian troops have crossed the border are denied, Dollfuss, remains a minister without Portfolio in the. new (Chancellor Hitler, by occupied it. One hundred and eighty Nazis were ‘ain in Styria. men, Rintelen, of bullet g if ry tt flat from Leoben afters heavy ment but were believed counter-attack. Ba olf getitene: aati gebRE EEcE TEE Ht a] aH nl ir tr Belei EY 1 : i E . lil 55g ‘| SE Sree a On February 4 there was an “at- mosphere de crise,” as the papers said. The same public which had de- manded Chiappe’s death was cal for his canonization. He was a public hero, @ martyr. And the public was torn between ironical laughter at flatfoot Thome sitting in his Codemie Francaise, holding the hand of the ‘Muse, and indignant tears for Chi- appe, the tailor-made hero from Cor- sica. That night Bonnefoy - Sibour, neat and new in his police job, had to learn how to put down a dangerous manifestation. Around the statue of “Tiger” Clemenceau on the Champs- Elysees 300 men told their fallen com- rade, the Unknown Soldier, what they thought of the stupidity of the gov- ernment, pledging themselves over his tomb and by the light of the ever- burning flame at the Arc de Triomphe to see that justice was done in France, that they would stand by Marianne, his mistress for whom he had laid down his life. That same evening the U.N. C. (Union Nationale des Com- battants) published = manifesto, re- Pudiating the Cabinet, accusing Frot of treachery and dirty sportsmanship, and announcing that three million quent cen in France would see to it ince was governed decent ee ‘ ; lecently by the streets that eve: there were gatherings of the sane Ce ‘Resign, resign! “Vive Chiappe!” they cried. One hundred and seventy-five ar- rests were made—175 more heroes! oe February 5 there was real trou- “Vite et fort!” Minister Prot, under this motto, caused s parade of ma- chine-gunners with thelr significant sinister weapons, RUE Ha: sage z of souvenir hunters at the death scene. | His Signal Ended Dillinger | Mg ll E i i" Soe E g z zs SUA HH: ese Bey Siaggek th nile fe # ree had used his art cleverly to erase a telltale scar. Policemen and cor- oner’s aides are viewing the body. HoT DES RMU BOUE Stierenichsow ose ioc Le tel ne and their military medals were pel of the troops of the Army of ; nce, backbone of France. city councillors, doctors of medicine, ministers of God, serious students who should have been studying for their examinations, tradesmen with large families at home—men like that do not answer the threat of ma- chine guns lightly. Men who faced the German guns at Verdun, at Chemin des Dames, at Belleau, at the Marne, do not lightly answer the Daladier’s cabinet was going to pre- | sent its case, and it was taking no changes of interruption by the mere People of France. And at three o'clock, nervously, and under the strained presidence of Fer- nand Buisson, the session opened to the obligato of the distant roar of Paris, like the cry of wolves outside. It was @ memorable session, a violent one. I shall reproduce it in another of upstart politicians. There! cha} it Daladier was a, to the to liv Hae Peay aire ULES Fs pieRBeack i E st soni eee i B Heel ae H g Hi Hl F ; ft Z gee eee ie el if i (Copyright, McClure Newspaper Syn- dicate.) Plan Mass Funeral For Eight Children Shelton, Conn., July 27.—()—Griet- sricken parents of eight children who ;|Were killed by @ meat train contem- Plated a mass funeral Friday. The youngsters, seven boys and a gizl, were playing cards on the New ‘ Hay Fever We Guarantee Relief ‘Take treatment now before your hay fever gets worse. The Joha F. Class Health Service 26 Main Avenue -

Other pages from this issue: