The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 7, 1934, Page 1

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4 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Unsettied and slightly cooler Wednesday partly cloudy and ESTABLISHED 1873 Roosevelt Pled BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS ges N. D. Aid U.S.Hatching Big Farm Loan Program Hindenburg’s Bier Set Up at Scene of Greatest Victory WIFE PACES MURDER CONTROL OF SUPPLY WOULD BE LEFT IN HANDS OF PRODUCER This Season’s Corn, Cotton Plan to Serve as Model for New Venture INTEND TO PEG PRICES Experiment Thus Far Declared to Be Success as Aid to Agriculture (Copyright 1934 by the Associated Press) Washington, Aug 7—(?)—A gigan- loan which would 1935 supplies in the .who grow them is farm administration. after if ! g2g8 [lee Fe en bist Hee | il Fu il Hid cH | 4 di H [set sbEE ea *g ? 3 i a : EE Bg il ze i i i } itl itt itt Traill County Has Best Crop in State, Says N. D. A.C. Authority information here Tuesday. Protein content of the crop is ex- ceptionally high—perhaps the highest in recent years, to early pt bY ge eo showing per cent or- dinary years it runs around 12. Test weight, it was said, is running from 35 62 pounds with most of the crop going into the No. 1 dark north- 8 2 : 4 | i £ s hel : i : i Bes F AT E Th COUNT IN POURING LYE OVER HUSBAND Froid, Mont. Shoemaker Dies of Burns at Williston Hospi- tal Tuesday WOMAN CONFESSES CRIME Did Not Realize It Would Do Such Serious Injury to Him, She Says The place where President Paul von Hindenburg scored his greatest victory as a soldier—Tannenherg, near his country estate at Neudeck, East Prussia—has become the mourning mecca of all Germany. There, on the battlefield on which his troops stopped the advance of the Russians in 1914, the soldier-states- man’s body was laid at rest under the great arch of the memorial (shown above) which commemorates jail at Wolf Point, Mont., near here, Hindenburg Takes Last Ride = [22S EFE To Memorial at Tannenberg 22.22.2723. lye over her husband while he slept at their home Friday night because Hindenburg Wished ||Brief But Inspiring Services|'“sne said she did mot realize it would Williston, N. D., Aug. 7—(#)—A vic- tim of scalding lye which Montana ‘authorities charge his wife poured r him while he slept, Frank Ska- der, 55, Froid, Mont., a shoemaker, @ied at a hospital here Tuesday. His ‘Wife is held in the Roosevelt county Body of Late German President Taken to Scene of World Only Simple Rites || Conducted by Hitler and |) ,sueh serious iniury." tog War Victory poe bond on charges of assault with » caustic chemical with intent to do bodily harm. Authorities said murder charges may be preferred. THOUSANDS ATTEND RITES| stsiander sutfered four days of agony from the effects of caustic burns. Tannenberg, Germany, Aug. 7. Army Chaplain von Hindenburg’ schicscnnpiiba MARCH 60 MILES TO BIER ‘attoo Sounds for Famous 86- T Der Fuehrer Declares Dead] Neighbors were aroused early Fri- Mrs, Skalander’s Year-Old Warrior; All Statesman Was Man Who |scram, and tne burning of Skiand- er’s automol . Nation Mourns Opened Door to Naziism - On arrival of the fire department, Skalander was found in a bed room, blinded and his night clothes Tannenberg, Germany, Aug. 7.—()|dremched.with the chemical. First aid —Germany buried Paul von Hinden.| Was given him, and he was treated for burg in a shrine it holds sacred: Tues- lye burns, on the head, arms, chest and day after Adolf Hitler in an emo-|“stmeuon ne was conscious most of tional eulogy at the bier said the|the time, Skalander’s mouth and late president “opened the door” to| throat were so badly seared he was Nasiism. unable to give any information re- Brief and simple was the funeral,| garding his injuries. as the old warrior-statesman had| After an investigation, Mrs. Ska- wished, but thousands of uniforms|lander was reported to have confessed gave it a military atmosphere. that she poured the lye on her hus- The body of the 86-year-old leader|band, that she took $125 from his was placed to rest in one of the tow-| pockets as he groped blindly about the ASKS NYE 1 GIVE jose te he a erected on the scehe of von Hinden-| because he had refused to take her to burg’s great triumph over the Rus-|Fort Peck. sian army in 1914. Authorities said she admitted mix- Thousands of mourners were turn-| ing a “fresh solution for Frank,” using lye water prepared for cleaning 5 : luring the clothes. She was quoted as saying she Junior Senator May—or May/tarewell tribute to its revered leader.|did not expect the burns to prove N Appear Before Lan- pee pln eerie a ese fatal. ger-Controlled Body i BE oY oF itt i il hi j 45 3 é eo in glowing terms the man whose power eporimerces, § SBBKS TRADE ‘The line for U. 8. Senator Gerald P, Nye may—| Von Hindenburg, said Hitler, his march capers or may not—appear before the sub-| voice srerabllng with Lescerint eet TRE ATY WITH sp AIN at his | the door the representatives” the ae out committee appointed at the recent conan. “special session” of the etate house of i i Commerce Between Two Na- tions Improving; Expect Further Increases | i i i § F F the Nazi storm troops, the picked -|Schuts Staffel guards and the Stahl- hy i Z i i i riage, drawn by f ! i E § Z i it 5 s GE EETIPIUAT SHUT feet Sea iat Hat tdi 2 § gE Be i FE he inapited that army to ubseampled oc |e deaplred army to unexampled| oom, women. and a “The unfortunate end of the war| ‘ted’ qyogentt on the Pacific ican under no circumstances be charged| mer home vessel with its}against him. It merely passes judg-|° rn iI) health June 24 ‘was re-| ment on the inability of the politic-| tne former ‘States consulate Hians of that day. relapes shout “When, in 1935, the German people| heat, This was ¢ anip Keats [Could find no better man than the|ny his son-in-law, sland ‘ueat | nation. his elsction constituted the | wu0 sald earlier the Cree /iast triumph of the great army 0f the ‘are suffered forid War. passed away “Our field-marshal has gone into| conclusion of the brief but HE i a PRESIDENT MOTORS AROUND LAKE, SEES DROUTH AT WORST Diversion Not Certainty But Conference to Be Called, Says Executive for’35 I MILL CITY STRIKE. FACTION AWATTING COURT TEST DECREE Deferred Until Thursday at 9 A.M. ‘}GREETED BY HUGE THRONG Leaves Devils Lake Late Tues- day for Journey to Ro- chester, Minn. 3,200 TRUCKS OPERATING Firms Charge Interference With Constitutional Rights in Complaint Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 7.—(#)—To & dust-covered but cheering throng here Tuesday, President Roosevelt Promised his best efforts to find a solution to the devastating problem of drouth. The president and his party ar- rived shortly after 10 a. m. and pro- ceeded immediately on a motor trip Young Roosevelts Pass Through City Two young Roosevelts, Frank- lin Jr., and Jameg stepped from a Plane for a few moments here Monday afternoon en route to cl Minneapolis, Aug. 7.—()—The de. cision of the United States district court on whether Gov. Floyd B. Olson will be enjoined from continuing mili. tary rule in Minneapolis during the truck drivers strike, will be deferred until Thursday at 9 a. m. aay eon bed for 2 p. ihn y, the hearing on application for &) an occasional drink—of ice water— temporary restraining order and then|/nas been the only relief from torrid © permanent injunction against theltemperatures for President Franklin Governor and the national guard de-!n, Roosevelt during the last few days manded by ten employers, was Post-|or nis trip to view western reclama- coe & day at the governor's re-|tion projects. The heat as showed He will accompany President Roose- AMMCate Ne pasty radio he velt to Rochester Wednesday and/ nevis Lake to inspect the site of the would b- unable to attend the hear- proposed Missouri diversion project. ing, he advised Federal Judges Gun. a ee wd ames et 2 RELIBF FROM HEAT Sonally attend the hearing. rieesumnas etoareenc/MEEN IN FORECAST cz was illegal since it was placed on a’ After a 50-mile ride over dust blown desk and in military headquarters. road around the edges of the dying Meanwhile, permits had been issued BY WE ATHER BURE Al Devils lake, the president spoke from for 3,200 trucks at pone ahead of per —ivetay a ee that ber 200 el lo 5 5 sting sn mere paint inet Bose Plan for settling the strike. ; “one whose leadership end friendship Strike leaders threatened <enewal in Prospect means so much to the people of the They left President Roosevelt's special train, bound tor Washing- ton, at Glacier National Park, drove 125 miles to Glendive, Mont., and took the plane. They will spend a day at the World's Fair in Chicago. around Devils lake, site of the pro- posed Missouri river diversion. A huge crowd greeted the president at Cooling Winds of ting to forcibly stop trucks i 2 ni northwest.” Besa the federal court rule the Tuesday Night; Cloudy and Pledges Best Efforts troops are in the city without legal “My friends,” said the president, “I Cooler Wednesday authority and employers again at- can't say my heart is happy today be- tempt to move vehicles before peace- cause I have been seeing with my ably terminating the walkout. Relief by nightfall from the op-|Own eyes what I have been reading The ten firms demanded an injunc-| pressive heat which has blanketed|#bout for so long. It is a problem tion to restrain the governor from/| Bismarck and most of the nation for|and I wouldn't try to fool you by say- keeping armed troops in the city, al-/the last week was promised Tuesday. |ing that I knew the solution.” leging deprivation of constitutional! The official forecast was for cooler; The president added he did not rights in the restriction on truck/ weather Tuesday night with Wednes-|know the solution “but if it is pos- movements. day partly cloudy and cooler. sible to do something about it we are ‘The firms charged interference with) ‘The news was welcome to every-|going to do it.” the constitutional rights of citizens,/one who sweltered through Monday; As for the Missouri: diversion that there was no necessity of martial/ night when the lowest point reached |scheme, he said the engineers were rule, issuance of military permits for| was 75 degrees. Many went to their/not yet certain that a dam could be trucks is unconsgitutional, that the/cellars while others risked the at-/safely built but he assured a confer- right of truck owners to use public/tacks of mosquitoes, now gettingjence would be called within a few streets for transportation has been| troublesome, by placing their beds on| weeks at Washington to analyse the invaded and that citizens’ rights are/the grass. studies already made. invaded with orders preventing cer-| That the brunt of the heat wave; The president spoke to an estimated tain businesses from operating. had moved southward, however, was|35,000 persons who jammed Devils Truck owners subscribing to the/indicated by a comparison of the|Lake streets and heard their chief Haas-Dunnigan plan agreed to pay|maximum reached here Monday with| executive speak of the “courage and @ specific wage and reinstate em-|those reported from other sections.|faith of the northwest” and urged Ployes without discrimination, terms) The highest mark recorded in Bis-|them to keep up that courage and which the employers’ advisory com-|marck was 96, whereas St Louis, Mo.,|faith until relief comes. mittee have rejected. The strikers) Oklahoma City and Miles City, Mont.,| The president, with Sivert W. have insisted upon settlement slong|each had 100; Dodge City, Kan., had/Thompson, president of the Missouri these lines. 106 and Kansas City, Mo. was the/River Diversion association, and Sec- The advisory committee offered set-| nation’s hot spot with 110. retary of War Dern riding with him in tlement provided they could reinstate} In North Dakota, Napoleon was the/an open car, toured the Devils Lake employes to be selected from a “pre-|only point to report 100 degrees Of /pasin where he viewed what he term- ferred” list to be made up by the|heat and Grand Forks was low with!eq an “alarming condition.” employers. This, strike 93. Jokester’s Sign Gets Laugh claimed, ignored their demands for The president drew an outburst of seniority rights in re-employment. reports from three Catiadian points |jaughter when he told of seeing a sign At s mass meeting Monday night,|where Prince Albert, Sask., reported|on the highway near Devils Lake William Brown, president of the truck|® comf< had | reading “You Gave Us Beer, Now Give drivers union, and other pike leoders, 70 and Edmonton, Alta., 72. - a; Us Water.” urged ® consumers boycott on all busi.| Showers were promised for He said beer was easily obtained, ness firms that refuse to sign the eastern part of North Dakota Tuesday|put that the water ee in this Haas-Dunnigan agreement. night but none was indicated for the | section was extremely difficult to Center, Grand Forks and San-| The force of nature and the problem Waltonville, 11, Aug. .——Train| Transients in Camps _|tor over year ever since conferences and mail train, crashed into a dyna- = hint of cooler weather came in an inch Monday with Beach, Crosby,| He said the real two problems are: Cause of Train Wreck|% reporting lighter precipitation. “Ive been studying this proposal railroad, a mixed freight, passenger Bismarck area. Dickinson had .34 of| solve, Dynamited Bridge Is of man to control these forces. No. 72 of the Burlington and Quincy Denied Vote Privilege of delegates from northwest states Family Reunions Cost Papa Plenty °

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