The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 25, 1934, Page 1

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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1934 & State Money Spent for Political Activity BXPENSE ACCOUNTS | Smiles at Death [PRESIDENT REPLIES VANMETER HIDEOUT || President Leaving for Summer White House | i 48 PAID POR | foeces Chamber | TOSCHALL CHARGES | SOUGHT FOR CLUES | = ted | ea} | ONCENSORED PRESS) OF LAST GANGSTER ‘ Roosevelt Asked Facts, Receiv-; Woman in Case Held in Hope page pe sod oT ed Stinging Reply from Of Learning Whereabouts wants be ahi : Minn. Senator Of ‘Baby Face’ SAYS ‘INCIDENT CLOSED’|HAMILTON BELIEVED DEAD MORE SIFTS TO FOLLOW Allegation Is That Administra-|St. Paul Police Link Slain tion Plans Controlled News Mobster With $427,000 And Radio Brooklyn Robbery ‘Calling on Patrolmen,’ ‘Can- vassing Tioga,’ Listed on Paid Vouchers Washington, Aug. 25—(?)—Presi-| St. Paul, Aug. 25—()—The “wom- dent Roosevelt Saturday told Senator |an in the case” Saturday was = cen- Schall, (Rep. Minn.), that the lat-|tral figure around which revolved ef- ter had failed to substantiate his/forts of police to locate the hideaway charges seine foe ated et of the slain mobster, Homer Van agency was : t the incident is closed.” Meter, and to learn about recent! Eighteen highway maint en in the Williston division of Death in Arizona's lethal gas chamber Aug. 31 faces Louis 8. Dougiass, former Ni York xi driver, unless a stay is granted to permit his wife, now ill in Astoria, L. 1, to ‘visit him. Douglass, shown here in a cheerful mood in his death cell, was convicted of slaying Raiph Hart, Yunia, Ariz., prow pector. ==" CAR BALLOT WIL Sse DETERMINE FRENCH Washington, Aug. 25. Park, N. Y., home (above). He will establish there a summer White House and remain for an indefinite Period. With the White House executive offices here undergoing reconstruction, it is probable Roose- velt will stay in New York until late in September. His special train will reach Hyde Park early Sun- day. The president devoted Saturday to cleaning up odds and ends and to last-minute talks with re- (®)—President Roosevelt cleared his desk to leave late Saturday night for his Hyde covery aides. > BUSINESS ON WHOLE LOOKING BETTER IS ROOSEVELT VIEW “KATHERINE LY ONS CLAIMED SUDDENLY BY DEATH FRIDAY | Highway Workers | Are Seeing Snakes North Dakota has the snakes, bad—rattlesnakes, too. It’s all on account of the drouth, though—take any one of a num. ber of old-time highway workers’ word for it. Desperate for water, rattle- m ri OR GERMAN LOY ALTY —— and in a prove Anon Funeral Services for Deputy| snakes in the southwestern por- {President Also Takes Occasion shot—and tions of the state are crawling } ts ae i ro — ces County Auditor Set at 9 over highways and eaba seeking To Reassure Merchant Mar- Cullen haga cs Ponds and creeks, reports to i prod: | Calpe ane ee misnnernedige noe A. M., Monday state highway department de- Ine of Backing 200° Traine Roll, Into Section rea Although Chief Quien Tefused to bree rattlers customarily isin | Washington, Aug. 35 —()}—Pres- From Germanys Chanoelior | oicts ‘are under 100 8 ee Ee eee te tine tora ot | | Miss~ Kathérlie’” Tyons,~depiity| quiet during the months of duly Hdent Rooseveit-aays be believes Am- Hitler to Talk national press service to take the|Psut police character seen here fre-| County auditor and life-long resident] and August, when they shed their |erican business on the whole looks re lace of the Associated | Press. the quently with Van Meter in the past/of Bismarck, died suddenly at 7p. m,| {kine This year, the opposite is |Promising. = | Ane Hearst News rgobinay and rere two weeks, in the hes ape Gis-| Friday from internal hemorrhages| highway division inspector. Men |better than he had expected, the ‘ ost Soar) maligow= what. connestions Dillinger | following treatment at a local hos-| have reported seeing numerous president also took occasion Friday be in a position to pital for kidney disorders. snakes moving ceaselessly across |to reassure a specific branch of com- ss i yy Acting upon doctor’s advice, Miss. Lyons made arrangements to stay overnight at the hospital following 3 her treatment. The hemorrhages set in and she died suddenly and without warning. Funeral services will be held at 9 merce—the merchant marine. Both the chief executive and Sec- retary of Agriculture Wallace said they favored maintaining the mer- chant marine. This was by way of reply to critics of a recent pronounce- the arid county—in search of one good swig. N. D. WAR VETERANS replaced with T. The Weather Fair, with frost tonight; Sunday partly cloudy warmer, PRICE FIVE CENTS FINE THING AS RAR: ASTT GOES, LEADER OF NEW DEAL SAYS President Implies Organization Puts Property Above Human Rights FALLS NINE-TENTHS SHORT Chief Executive's Thesis Is That Group Covers Only Part Of Need Washington, Aug. 25.—(?)—Presi- dent Roosevelt's faint praise of the American Liberty League—with Bib- lical reservations—may hasten an answer to the question: “Are the New Deal and the League in for a knock-down, dragout scrap?” The president left no doubt how he views the new Non-partisan or- ganization, in implying late Friday that property is its God as against the emphasis he placed upon human rights. President Jouett Shouse of the League, now on Cape Cod, has in- sisted repeatedly that it aims not to hamstring the administration but to help. That he soon will amplify this Position, in the light of shortcomings the White House attributed to the League, is expected. The Roosevelt position is that the League is a fine thing, so far as it goes; but it falls some nine-tenths Short. In the dusk of the historic blue room the president painstakjngly—and not without flashes of smiling irony—de- veloped his thesis that the League's announced purposes cover only a part of the 10 commandments. He read these purposes slowly to the 150 or so reporters present: —“to teach the necessity of respect for the rights of persons and property +++” and “to teach the duty of the government to protect individual and group initiative...” » AR organization should go.the-whole: hog, he said, not just pick out “love thy God” and “love thy neighbor.” With that, he gayly remarked that a humorous friend had defined the League commandments as “love thy God (property being God in this case)” and “ignore thy neighbor.” As examples of important govern- mental “commandments” that he be- ven the Leaguers had ignored, he c The duty of providing jobs for those RANT 22PER CENT. |= GUT IN $00 TAXES Railroad Gets. Third Reduction In as Many Years by Judge Miller's Order ment of Wallace, in which he ques- tioned whether further extension of ship subsidies would be a good thing. President Roosevelt said that since getting back from his trip to Hawaii, he had received reports from banks, industry, transportation and business. These, he said, shaped up better than he expected. Secretary Wallace's statement about subsidies, made in a recent letter to Representative Bland of Virginia, had raised something of a storm. He had suggested that if other countries were given more of a chance at trans- Porting American ocean-borne com- auerees they would money to uy. a. m., Monday at the St. Mary's pro- cathedral. Rev. Father Robert Fee- han will sing requeim high mass. Burial will be made at the St. Mary’s cemetery. The body will lie in state at the home, 200 Mandan Ave., Sun- day evening. Pallbearers will be Everett wua- France, Clair Derby, Harry Homan, -| Paul Cook, Lawrence Bair and Paul Halloran. Born and raised in North Dakota, Miss Lyons has been very active in community work. She was a mem- ber of the Burleigh County Pioneers’ association and the Women’s Bene- fit_ association. but pressed Meter’s hideout in the | could be learned there. PAID EIGHT MILLION IN BONUSES SINCE 1920 Records Show 3,800 Ex-Serv- ice Men in North Dakota Filed No Claims hope something "a loyalty Fargo, N. D., Aug. 25.—()—For the/ signed to foreshadow the march third time in as many years the 800/German sovereignty into the Saar. line railroad has been granted @ re-| The Reich's ponderous duction in its taxes by the federal| machinery, which just urt. E i é More than $8,000,000 in state bo- % position A well-known figure in county af-| nuses have been paid to North Da-| Both the president and Wallace “Your fairs, Miss Lyons, known affection-| kota World war veterans of army,| greed that while this economic prob- the ately by her friends as “Kate,” has/navy and marine service since 1920,]1em_must be weighed, there are other te been employed at the county audi-| reports by Capt. H. A. Brocopp, as-|factors, such as national defense. tor’s office for over 16 years. She was a member of the St. Mary's Cath- olic church and active in church work. Miss Lyons was born Aug. 1, 1877, at the old Fort Lincoln, on the Man- dan side of the Missouri river. Her father, a soldier in the United States army, moved to Bismarck when Miss, was two months old. ved her education at the Mary's school here and upon graduation served in stenographic po- sitions for several years before be- ginning her service in the county auditor's office. sistant adjutant general, Saturday. Since April 5, 1920, date of first bonus payment, 24,204 claims have been paid out of 30,275 applications received. Records show 3,800 World war veterans within the state have filed no claim for bonus. Seventy-six claims, valid as far as service is concerned, have been escheated, because no issue or rela- tive of the veteran within the statu- tory limitation lives. Of North Dakota's representation in the World war, 3,709 were regular) | She leaves to mourn her loss two! army men; 3,946 national guards- * | sisters and one brother. With her! men; 19,234 national army men; 293 sister, Mrs. Margaret Moriarity, she] enlisted reserve corps; 1,939 navy has been making her home at 200/ men; 444 marines; 178 army nurses; +! 143 in Canadian army service. Fifteen North Dakotans served in RY RA tat the World war in the Polish army; a Sas Se Joran of Bismarck. Is ‘Frost Saturday : Officials said there was not neces- sarily any conflict between the pres- ident's views on business and the monthly survey of the federal re- serve board. TEXTILE LEADERS PERFECTING PLANS ‘Supreme Court’ of Labor Dis- putes Appears Helpless to Avert Strike figure set by the state board revealed eq jualization. ‘The order was based on @ stipuls- tion entered by the attorneys for the railroad and the ctate. Under Judge Miller’s orders, taxes of the will be decreased from approximate! $440,099 to $349,505.41, the tax to be installment HETTNGER OPENS COURTHOUSE BIDS aH Ey E # H = by EE ES E g Washington, At 25—(?)—The “supreme court” of labor disputes strove to maintain peace Saturday as chiefs of the United Textile workers gathered to perfect plans for a na- one in the French army; three in the Russian railroad corps; 10 in Siberia. North Dakota men who served in France total 15,457, while those who} served their wartime “bit” in this country total 14,825. involve 600,000 workers. Strike leaders were called into , "; Sunday Partly |Kidnap Plot Against 5 ogi mete cei — and et ' ’ Detroit Man Probed| Genevieve Parsons Is _| iti xc. and in Mascachunevts and Rhode Island—and they apparently were bent on calling the workers out next week unless demands strike has been set Local esa Secretary of Board Miss Genevieve Parsons, Detroit, Aug. 25—(#)—A purported plot to kidnap Robert Oakman, De- financier 58 He af “, H # 3 [ Fy Ee s i vt BE Es iil era; & igh | willing to work and of protecting the community from those who would ex- Ploit it to their financial advantage. The president said he had not been invited to sign up with the Leaguc. That, he said with a chuckle, must have been an oversight. MAN'S BODY FOUND JAMMED IN TRUNK Gruesome Find Made at Home In Fashionable New York Residential Section New York, Aug. 25—(#)—The body of a man was found in a trunk Sat- urday in the areaway of General Louis W. Stotesbury’s home and later was identified through fingerprints as that of Bernard McMahon, 41, an ex-convict. Police said that McMahon, who was also known as “Dalton” and “Mur- Tay,” had been arrested six times since 1914, the last time in 1933 for examiner, said dead for about 72 hours. Police theorized that McMahon perhaps had not met death in the tional strike which they say will | Norris. F i t af ity E i § Ht } Ee H tt i : i y BEs 4 ef t 10 ef sa a FE ii i i i i i i if ely I mt:

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