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h situa. m to ine na. 8, fruits, © Brans overtime tin cy uy and falling %, Inc.) fices? busi- e Pitts. , driver, t. Prob- 80 that suit all *» Inc.) I of a © wish iving.— nitions Wash. racic. scient ~ e par- binson, nson. to ex- glielmo teleg- PSdaesecsts 8 BS Teese a HOME CITY ACCORDS YOUTHFUL PIANIST ROUSING RECEPTION Miss Jeanette Weinstein Given, Ovation at Close of Con. cert Here Wednesday Miss Jeanette Weinstein, 16-year-! London, 'S awaiting Bent. 20, cht race. “They take Serious over scems by the papers t here, bad Sportsmanship was ceaee Writers and not hae They are talking about “ng an ammunition selling London Of the y, Yeeht racing by the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, -THURSDAY, INSANE KILLER 1S OBJECT OF SEARCH George Hoffman, 22, Confessed Slayer of Father, Escapes Jamestown Asylum ber, 1932, He and his sis:er were the only children in the family. The fathet was a prominent farm- jer, considered in comfortable finan- telal circumstances. The boy was re- |garded by authorities as “slow think- ing.” He had finished grade school. THROUGHOUT STATE tons Beach Banait Held at Grand Forks, | Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 20.—(?)— | |Harold R. Lohr, 22-year-old deserter | from the United States navy, arrest- ed here Thursday, confessed to the single handed robbery March 8 of a SEPTEMBER 20, 1984 INDIAN COLONY AT DEVILS LAKE SEEN Proposal Discussed as One of Government's Subsist- ence Projects Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 20—(P\—! An Indian colony may be a suburb of; cral government of which $2,500,000 ‘child paid in @ futile effort to ran-| gasoline recently with a $10 bill later Was sei aside for the Indian service. | Five of these Indian communities al- ready have been designated. | Options on land within a two-mile | radius of Devils Lake are now being | surveyed and if twenty of the 72 In- dian families, numbering 382 Indians, | are favorable to the plan, it is prob- albe that the Indian commissioner will designate Devils Lake as a sub-'| sistence homestead community. oid daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William! imumyettiom over here now. Ame |branch of the Bank of America at som his baby. Baby Taken March 1, 1932 The baby was taken from his crib in the then new home of the Lind- berghs near Hopewell, N. J., on the blustery night of March 1, 1932. An intensive search was started im- mediately that night and one day less than @ month later Dr. John F. Con- | don, later to become prominent in the (ease as “Jafsie,” threw $50,000 in ran- ;Som money over a wall of St. Ray- mond’s cemetery in the Bronx to a supposed emissary of the kidnapers, The following May 12, the body of the baby was found in a shallow grave found to be one of the ransom Bills, | Apparently this man was Hauptmann. Ths report said that the proprietor jof the gasoline filling station notified police, that the bill was checked and when it was found to bear a number \listed in the ransom bills, the man jwas picked up and taken, with his wife, to the Greenwich street police Station, More than 700,000 plant specimens are contained in the herbarium of tag Field Museum of Natural History i Chicago. weinstein, was warmly received )y/ », large audience when she played a benefit coneert Wednesday evening at the Bismarck city auditorium under auspices of the Thursday Mus- ical club. Promises of the musical treat in store, which may have seemed a bii extravagant, were justified by the performance which the young artist gave. Miss Weinstein, who has won the praise of directors and instruc-! tors at Curtis Institute, Philadeipnia, Pa., where she is @ scholarship pupil, was received with equal enthusiasm jn her home city. Bismarck may well pe proud to have such a talented young Woman as @ native daughter and to sponsor her career in what measure it can. The superb confidence and the echnical mastery which this young pianist has somehow achieved in a few short years were apparent as soon ag she opened her program with ihe very difficult Liszt arrangement 000 dyers would be i of “Fantasia and Fugue, G Minor,” af intricate even for Bach. Balance and contrast were unerringly carried out br jn every phrase and the composition’ a showed to advantage the splendid de- industry was on, velopment of Miss Weinstein’s left eon chairman of thority, hand. Plays Chopin Group ly The caressing touch employed in the Chopin nocturne, which opened, the second group, brought out the, full sweetness and delicacy of line typical of the composer. The rapid tempo of the Chopin etude, and the valse which followed, provided an ex- hibition of the technic which is Miss ‘Weinstein’s forte. The valse, as she; interpreted it, was a shower of cry- stal clear notes, full of spontaneity. In the etude, which closed the Chopin group, the left hand again shone. In the Paganini-Liszt “La Campanel- Ja,” her fingers raced over the key- board effecting octave jumps and trills with agility and without loss of precision and perfection of rhythm. The brilliant crashing chords and) the delicate traceries and elaborations, lightning changes in tempo and the clear line of melody maintined through , pt, is about the only export 20 Wars Ought to be awful for they all use the same ae ammunition. Best Nn London is a rt 7 isa col show from Harlem, sis Yours, —Will Rogers, CONTINUE D from Page one Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 20.—(P)— \life prison term for the murder of his father, has escaped from the state hospital for the insane to which he recently was transferred from the \Penitentiary, county authorities re- | Hoffman, a Bordulac farm youth, jescaped early Tuesday night by jclimbing down a scaffold used by P; i jcarpenters who are converting a resident to Hear Porch of the hospital into living M di ‘ Quarters to relieve crowded condi- ediators Report tions at the institution, Dr. J. D. On T til «,_ |Carr, superintendent, said. extile Strike, 4 ‘search was begun immediately — jatter the youth escaped and has been report /Catried on since, Dr. Carr declared. made public.” | Hoffman had slipped onto the porch ‘ment, however, and disappeared. His absence was t board's report Noticed shortly afterward. be performed thr through th unless and until it Ie maa At the labor departs it was said the Winant strike had not | on the causes of the | _ Believes Hoffman “Harmless” be: leas’ been completed, but wa: qi Ss be within the next day or pae’s “| Dr. Carr said he regarded Hoffman George Hoffman, 22, sentenced to 8, ivealed Thursday. ee to California. Gorman said a strike order to 20,- enon issued Thursday New York—A congert ve reak the strike in the ails, as nd synthetic fabrics branches of the said Peter Van the silk code au- Sloan Is Optimistic |as “harmless,” and that he expected |him to give no trouble while being jat large. Hoffman was transferred to the jinsane hospital because he indicated jhe planned committing suicide at the |State prison, Carr said. ; The youth had written letters to One hundred mills in near-|Télatives, while he was at the prison, |9¢ the North Dakota Agricultural col- all operating sections were being |Setting the date on which he planned | thrown open, |to take his own life, Carr disclosed. The prison warden recommended he | ficers who said the workers were plot- New York—George A. Sloan, presi-'be transferred to the Jamestown in- dent of the Cotton Textile Institute, stitution where an effort has been said 10 more mills have opened in| made to cure him of delusions that the south, returning to jobs about 66 he must take his own life. Der cent of the 299,000 who were em-| Carr sait he believed Hoffman ployed in southern mills before the Would be apprehended soon. walkout, “He is harmless,” Dr. Carr said, Little Falls, N. Y—Tear gas and|“and will give no trouble. He may Rater were employed to repulse a Attempt to kill himself, but I am ‘lying squadron of strikers who clashed |Sure he will not attempt any violence with workers at the Little a bapedal he Ll ened cel Le Manufacturing company, tient here and caused no trouble. He Macon, Ga—A meeting of textile! WePt @ great deal as the result of Workers was broken up with tear gas |i delusions.’ and gun fire Wednesday night by of-|_ He was committed to the state . aes at Bismarck following his plea ting “trouble.” tye! a lof guilty to charges of first degree to fall ThiPey four wereitGKED | ardor -ftg ieaital seoeiaitiont re deemed such as to make Waterville, Me—A Howitzer unit of |COMtY, was the 103rd Infantry, Maine national |‘, *¢Visable to remove him to the in- the infinite variations of the Concert guard, moved in from Portland, add- Arabesques on “The Beautiful Blue ing its 63 man complement to the} Danube,” Weinstein. She graciously gave an encore and was called back for bows. | ju Wins Prolonged Applause of Rubinstein’s “Concerto in D Minor,” | ne for which Miss Belle Mehus played the orchestral part at the second piano, with measures of crashing chords, applause matching by Strauss-Schulz-Evler,| troops already on guard in this Ken-| won a huge wave of applause for Miss nebec valley city after the third flare-| Was found dead January 4, and his’ up of textile strike violence. Ad- tant General James W. Hanson, however, said at Augusta, “there's torney general, As she closed the First Movement| nothing to be alarmed at. We just ed more man power.” Nearly 900 militia men are on pa- trol duty in various sections of Maine, | but except for a brief mass picketing|son late in January. their | attempt at Lewiston, quiet prevailed! strength swept through the auditor- |in all textile centers. ium. Miss Weinstein played three en- | cores before she was allowed to go. their patrol through two communities of flowers were presented |in the Carolinas, as troops and pick- mein y ets faced each other on the textile | strike front: At the little town of Belmont, a vig-|ner as to indicate suicide. Tacks’ to the artist during her concert, which was the first she has played in Bis- marek since she was nine years old. jsane asylum here. | Confessed to Killing John Hoffman, father of the youth, |Son Was arrested. He later confessed to John A. Heder, assistant state at- that he killed his | then sought to make it appear his father had committed suicide. He was committed to the state pri- John Hoffman, a Bordulac farmer, was shot as he was returning to his Charlotte, N. C.—Vigilantes spread/home after a visit at his brother's place near by. His son, posted in a box car, fired at him, and then placed the gun over the body of his father in such a man- Miss Weinstein appeared in a girlish |ilante committee of several hundred | found in the box car from which the model of pink taffeta and silk net, elaborately ruffled at the slight train line in back, and gold sandles. Her hands are strong, graceful and white ee Strike in the two states. and she made a lovely picture at the | piano, Her manner is marked by the |antes functioned was Greenville, S.| hich \C., where thirty mills are operating | ans Peete ais taser Ot ee |under the protecting bayonets of troops. instrument. When she is playing she | apparently is obvious to her audience, Jost in the world of beauty of which her music is a part. Prominent among the sponsors the concert were Mrs. M. W.. Roan and Miss Mehus of the musical club| and Mrs, Al Rosen, who assisted as | chairman of the ticket sales. Massachusetts Picks jin ot | Avoid Embarrassment of you eat, talk, laugh sprinkle a little The other community where vigil- FALSE TEETH Dropping or Slipping | again by hav- ip or drop when Tr sneeze, Just FASTEETH on your Don't be embarra x your false teeth plates. This new, extremely fine pow- Democratic Nominees ji.r ci \fort and securit Boston, Sept. 20.—(?)—Interest was | taste or fe 7 a ‘a wonderful sense of com= No gummy, gooey Get FASTEETH to- rug store.—Advertise- at its highest pitch here Thursday in | me the Democratic primaries, with James | eee M. Curley, the original “Roosevelt for | President” man of New England. op-/ posing Gen. Charles H. Cole, for the ip gubernatorial nomination. i More than 100,000 people are strick- | en with lobar pneumonia every year in the United States. “Worlds Fair Visito 5. 100 LATE TO CLASSIFY R, $3.30 Calirornia combina- need pain two for $5.50 com- plete with trim and set. and fingerwave 50c. Wave Nook. 102-3rd St. 782. Phone / ‘BUS FARE 10¢ 0. = CONVENIENCE... COMFORT... ECON¢ WONDERFUL GER MAN COOKING On the main traffic ortery toand from the Worlds Fair Grounds thing wort! Close to every: hwhile in Chicago Write today for “y CENTURY OF PROGRESS, the Worlds Fair descriptive booklet WORLD'S Ernest Roessler HOTE 200CAR GARAGE Owned by the Hote! = free on request. FAIR RESERVATIONS "ACCEPTED wow! OWNER bata Teich CLARK ST. NEAR JACKSON BLVD Shampoo | California | farmers, merchants and others circu-| shots were fired caused authorities to lated through the street while hun- he waist- |dreds of strikers and sympathizers! See ee crecentd candle ‘gathered to bury the ninth victim of discount the suicide theory. . The boy’s mother died in Septem- father after a series of quarrels and! North Long Beach, Calif. He said he} took $8,000. ;_ The arrest came after Police Cheif Ed Hough had recognized Lohr from @ photograph in a detective bulletin. Lohr confessed after a two and a half hour grilling, and waived ex- His confession tallied with de- tails of the robbery obtained from Long Beach authorities. | Under the name of Harry Stan- {nard, Lohr bought a grocery store jhere in April, paying $2,250 cash and |turning in a car, which he said he {bought while renting a farm near Oral, 8. D. He purchased « bakery lin Northwood, N, D., about a week {@g0, but returned here Thursday |morning and was arrested. Hough |got‘in touch with the confessed rob- ber in a dicker to buy the store. Arrested with Lohr was a woman ,who gave her name as Hilda Ferfes, jbut claimed to be his wife. She came |with him from California. |Registration Sets New Mark at NDAC Fargo, Sept. 20.—()—Registration lege Wednesday surpassed the first | Week total registration figures for 1919, |the peak attendance ‘year at the in- stitution, announced A. H. Parrott, registrar. | A total of 529 freshmen students had enrolled as compared with 386 in | a first year class in 1933 and 512 in | The college enrollment was set at | 1.241 by Parrott for 1934 as compared | With 1,146 in 1933 and 1,215 in 1929. WASH OUT 15 MILES OF ‘KIDNEY TUBES Win Back Pep... Vigor ... 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Outing Flannel, heavy weight, ma... 10c, 14c besides a road not far from the Lind- Devils Lake if plans now under way} Alleged Receiver Dergh estate. ‘|| rgh estate. reach completion and are approved by} Of $50,000 Ransom There was an unconfirmed report | the Indian commissioner of the inter- s. for department at Washington, D. C./ Taken In New York |tnat $22,000 of the ransom money had ! The proposal was discussed here| |been found beneath the floor of a Schilling | tg Wednesday by Indian residents of|sic” emissary of the Lindberghs, was |house in the Bronx, a mile or two) (fy H y Sens ae GN Oo. Cle a from the place where Dr. Condon | NY ungarian ray, Indian| taken to police headquarters. handed the money over the cemetery ih agent of the Fort Totten reservation, ' foover, Fay Sehr "4 ” Telative to forming a settlement on| onyan, X and Schwatz- tence to a man a ig Ransom Bill Paid for Gus the outskirts of the city where Indians |Kopf met at the police headquarters will farm optioned land, run their own! shortly before Dr. Condon’s arrival.’ Another report was that the gath- governmental affairs and have their’ Attention of authorities has cen- ering of leaders of the investigation own schooling facilities, tered upon the appearance from time | into the kidnaping had resulted from The proposal is an outgrowth of the to time of bills of various denomin- department of justice agents Thurs- subsistence homestead act for which ations making up the $50,000 sum jday morning picking u> a man who! $15,000,000 was allotted by the fed- which the noted aviator father of the was alleged to have paid for some j R . 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