The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 26, 1934, Page 3

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)

ae te he 28, he le ne ‘w abled yachts, missing on the At- TREASURE-HUNTING GREW OF 15 FOUND NEAR PUERTO RIGO) ==, Family of Four Taken From Ketch Fayaway by Coast Guard Cutter New York, Nov. 26.—(7)—Two dis- lantic with 15 persons abroad, were found early Monday. The schooner White Cloud, its steering gear disabled on a scientific and treasure-hunting éxpedition to the Spanish Main, was located 300 miles northeast of Puerto Rico by the 8. 8. Rangitata. The steamer, which wirelessed coast guards that it wag standing by, gave no details. Eleven men are on the White Cloud. Creeping shoreward with only a staysail, the ketch Fayaway was found by the coast guard cutter Mas- coutin 35 miles off reed light vessel, near Norfolk, Va. A family of four was aboard. Five navy and two coast guard air- planes drilled back and forth off the New Jersey coast Sunday, look- ing for the ketch which had been disabled when last heard from, three days before. The Mascoutin and four other cutters from Norfolk searched farther south. Arthur Harris, brother of George Harris, leader of the scientific ex- Pedition, had chartered a plane in New York to hunt for the White Cloud if it were not reported safe soon, Two duck hunters are missing in @ small boat on Barnegat bay, near Barnegat City, N. J. and coast guards fear their craft was swamped. They are John Faust and James’ Vert, both of Lakehurst, N. J. Motorist Held After Hitting F Pedestrian Fargo, N. D., Nov. 26.—()—Clar- ence Larson, Fargo, is held in the Cass county jail pending developments ‘n the condition of Andrew Makarchuk, Northern Pacific section man, who suffered a deptessed fractured skull when a car driven by Larson struck him at a down town corner Sunday. Makarchuk was taken to the North- ern Pacific hospital in St. Paul. His physician in Fargo reports his condi- tion as good, although there is a chance he may lose the sight of one eye, RAILROAD PIONEER DIES Helena, Mont., Nov. 26.— (®) — Charles D. Greenfield, Sr., 77, once a development agent for the Great Northern Railway Co., died Sunday. Greenfield also did newspaper work in Denver and Helena, and in the late "90's reported the last of the Indian uprisings on the Montana-Wyoming boundary for the Chicago Tribune. a i Weather Report — cna nl For Bismarck and vicinity: Mostly unsettled tonight and Tuesday; colder tonight, , inc! 27.98. conined to see Ieval, ‘2981. 7&. m. -06 ft 2 hour change’ 8.0 tt U.S. October Exports Show Large Increase This increaséd foreign trade gave the United States a fav- rable balance of $76,723,000 for October. The commerce department said Monday last month’s figure ie a ‘with $193,069,000 for Octo- Imports during the month were $129,629,000 as compared with $150,- 867,000 in October, 1933. Exports of gold during October were $2,173,000 against $34,046,000 for the same month a year ago. Im- Lot ‘were-$13,010,000 against $1,696,- Blver exports amounted to wih on 000 in October as compared with $2,- 281,000 a year ago. Tererte” $14,425,000 against 84,106,000. LOS ANGELES CARS MOVE UNDER GUARD 26 Injured as Street Cars Col- lide When Waylaid by Pickets Sunday Los Angeles, Nov. 26.—(#}—Accom- Penied sporadic outbursts of violence, street cars moved virtually on schedule Monday in Los Angeles carrying the peak load of Monday workers and shoppers while in the Office of Mayor Frank L. Shaw a; conference was summoned between | traction officials and leaders of the striking car operators. Mayor Shaw announced he will seek to bring about the naming of @ board of arbitration to which botn sides of the dispute, which has caused 36 injuries in three days, wil: submit their case. Violence, marked by numerous beatings, the collision of three eet t cars that had been waylaid by ts, and injuries sending 26 persons to hospitals, was charged to the strike. Shots were fired into street cars and brickbats were thrown, shatter- ELECTRIC INDUSTRY FIGHTS ROOSEVELT Launch Attack on Administra- tion’s Program as Being Unconstitutional New York, Nov. 26.—(7)—The elec- tric power industry, charging @ ‘of attack” is levelled against it by “various federal agen- Ctes,” has declared war on the ad- ministration’s Program, Planning to fight in the courts, the Edison Electric Institute—an as- sociation representing 80 per cent of the nation’s electric power interests —authorized its executives to take were; any steps necessary to determine. whether there are limits under the constitution beyond which govern- ment may not go in using public funds to destroy by competitive con- struction and operating the existing investments of private capital. Thomas N. McCarter, president of the institute and head of the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey, said in announcing the move Sunday that the Tennessee Valley project, foremost federal power development, has been found “palpably unconstit- tutional” in a legal opinion by New- ton D. Baker of Cleveland and James M. Beck of Philadelphia. Schall Has Plan to End Unemployment Minneapolis, Nov. 26.—()—Senator Thomas D. Schall, Republican, Min- yesota, in a letter today to President Roosevelt offered a program which he said would put 10,000,000 unem- Ployed to work in six months. Half of them would be at work in 90 days and 2,000,000 in 30 days, Schall said, “by the simple process of producing what we consume in this country in the United States.” This is the way Senator Schall out- lined his plan: Remove the limitations on produc- tion of sugar in the United States. That will put 2,000,000 men to work and require erection of 200 sugar re- fineries. Place a duty on blackstrap Molasses. That, said the senator, ing glass and forcing riders to the| would create a demand for corn, driv- floor for safety Sunday night. Several|ing its price to $1 a bushel and em- car crews were beaten. A score of passengers was injured, Ploy 2,000,000. Raise duties on textiles, canned some of them seriously, as a car/fish, glass, pottery, meat, milk, fresh plowed into two others that had been! vegetables, shoes, electric globes, iron stalled at Vermont and Florence Ave- nues by strike sympathizers. CONTINUED Veterans’ Will B Buy Building Equipment With Carnival Fund should be available to stimulate the interest of boys and girls and, at the same time, permit of adequate phy- sical training. “AS @ result, your committee re- commends that a portion of the pro- bonus eh the minstrel and carnival ed $1,000 of its funds to the con- struction of the balconies, the Amer- jean Legion Auxiliary also making @ major donation of $1,500 for the same purpose. “In view of the history of the en- terprise we regard it as one of the q| Legion's duties to see that our com- Legion carnival committee, indicated and steel, copper and coal and var- ious other manufactured goods, and 3,000,000 persons will be employed. Employment of these 7,000,000, in turn, will create such demand for products that it will take 3,000,000 more to produce them. Program for World Recovery Proposed Hipecel York, Nov. 26.—(?)—A program to promote world recovery and peace was presented to the American public Monday by the Hutchins commission on international economic relations. » the commission's report advises the United States government to take the lead in furthering foreign trade “jand relieving “the distrust and ten- sion now prevailing in the world.” Its Picea ge id Proposals—some of them drastic departures from present eco- nomic and political policy—include removal of tariffs where there would be no serious addition to unemploy- ment, immediate settlement of war del \dherence to the world court, non. inatory Oriental immi- gration, and repeal of the Johnson act at Saag loans to countries in de- fai WALLACE TO MEXICO Minot, N. D., Nov. 26.—(?}—Irving | “Speed” Wallace, of Minot, leaving here late Saturday, announced that} toll, Louisville he was going to Mexico City to at- tend the inauguration of General Lazaro Cardenas as president of Mexico. The cere onies will take Place December 1. State May Call 50 In Hauptmann Case Flemington, N. J., Nov. 26.—(}— An indication of the state's deter- mination to convict Bruno Richard Hauptmann of the Lindbergh kidnap- murder Monday was revealed in a Prosecutor's promise to call “as many as 50 witnesses” to prove a single There are “more than 70 discrep- ancies,” Hunterdon County Prosecutor Anthony M. Hauck, Jr., said Sunday in the stories Hauptmann has told of- ficiais since his arrest. Hauck declared the state would call half a hundred witnesses, if neces- sary, to disprove Hauptmann’s asser- tion that he was working on the con- struction of the Hotel Majesic in New York on March 1, 1932, the day that two-year-old Charles A. Lindbergh, dr, was stolen from his Hopewell The state will show, Hauck said, that Hauptmann did not begin work At the Majestic hotel until lste in March, Only 7 of 19 A, F. of L. Unions at Conclave Washington, Nov. 26—()—Indicat- ing that past differences are still in dispute, only seven of 19 unions in the American Federation of Labor building trades department showed up Monday for a convention. ‘William Green, federation presi- dent, called the meeting after the federation’s general convention had ruled the department's previous titted this year and all its actiozs y previous department conven- tion refused to seat delegates from the carpenters, electricians, and bricklayers unions after leaders of those three organizations openly avowed they were out to oust the department's officers. Delegates from the carpenters. bricklayers, electricians, marble workers, hod carriers, stationary engineers and teamsters presented their credentials Monday morning. No representatives appeared from the other unions. It was understood Green would at- tempt to bring the other unions in- to the convention. Last of Notorious Robber Gang Nabbed Miami, Okla., Nov. 26—(#)—The Oklahoma and Kansas officers Mon- day held in custody three men they said were the last of the Brady-Un- derhill gang of bank robbers. Evan Bass, Vian; Hunter Cotner, Stilwell and Ira Clark, Crowder, were arrested Saturday. Bass will go to Arkansas to answer of robbery of the Bank of Gravette; Clark, a paroled life termer from the Oklahoma penitentiary goes to Kansas to answer charges of rob- bing the Hunnewell, Kas., bank and Cotner will go to Windom, Kas., to face bank robbery charges there. Hermit-Embezzler to Get Prison Sentence Chicago, Nov. 26.—(?)—Nicholas A. Schwall, Wilmette banker who confessed embezzling $56,000 after hiding alone in northern Wisconsin more than two years, was confront- ed with a possible penitentiary sen- tence Monday. _ Pleaded guilty to the embezzlement charge, and sentence was deferred to permit him to assist the bank receiver in untang- ling the institution's affairs. Robson’s Handwriting Identified | by Expert Washington, Nov. 26.—(P)—A re- port that Thomas H. Robinson, Jr., alleged kidnaper of Mrs. Alice Speed as Monday by J. Edgar Hoover, inves- ping chief “tor the department of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1934 WPKINNON PRAISES N.D, CC PROGRAM Federal Purchase of Materials Greatly Aids Work, Tech-. nician Tells Lions Federal authorization to purchase materials for use in the construction of dams and other projects under the civilian conservation corps’ program have added greatly to the practica- bility of the CCC and resulted in in- creased benefits to the state, A. D. McKinnon, state technician, told Lions club members Monday. Handicapped in the first year by the difficulty of obtaining the sup- Plies, the CCC did not come into its own until 1934 and has since then made rapid strides, he said. McKin- non pointed out the use of the money which flows through the CCC setup and the results of the work done by the 23 camps in the state, nine of which are under the park system and the balance under the forest service. The state technician also spoke on the grading and re-surfacing of High- way No. 10 which runs from coast to Coast. All except 40 miles of the highway has been re-graded in North Dakota. and only 140 miles remains without the oil or concrete surfacing. McKinnon described the desirable qualities of good roads advocating & 36-foot width and emphasizing the elimination of all hazards. Fred Peterson was program chair- man. Named to the program commit- tee for next Monday were Joe Spies and Dr. Frederick B. Strauss. An- nouncement was made that the De- cember 10 meeting of the club would be set aside to study the new set of by-laws as submitted for approval by the Lions International. An invitation was read from the Washburn Lions to attend a special club meeting there some time in De- cember and negotiations were started to arrange a suitable date. The Lions club quartet sang two numbers. E. H. Burquist of Chicago was a guest. Blood-Stained Auto Clue in Weiss Hunt Philadelphia, Nov. 26.—()—Discov- ery of a blood-stained automobile in which William Weiss, night life char- acter who disappeared a month ago, may have been “taken for a ride,” was disclgsed Monday by police and United States justice department agents. Where the car was found was not revealed. The interior of the car showed signs of a struggle, and there were in- dications that efforts had been made to remove the blood sources close to R. George Harvey, chief of the justice department’s bureau of investigation here, said. Three men are believed to have ab- ducted Weiss from the driveway of his home in Overbrook Hills Oct. 25 and later demanded $100,000 ransom. SOUTH DAKOTAN KILLED Bozeman, Mont. Nov. 26.—()— Jack Crawford, 27, native of Rapid City, 8. D., died here Sunday of in- juries he suffered in an automobile accident. His windpipe was severed. Crawford, an aviator, came here from Rapid City last June to look for employment, Schilling Liquid Food Colors add appetizing tints to; arUADe AER ghUCES We take this opportunity to thank our customers, both old and new for the business and friendship SL ly, Robinson, Jr., Rumor Said ‘Bedtime Story’ Phoenix, Ariz, Nov. 26.—(AP)— Charles A. Appel, department of justice handwriting expert, testified Monday extortion notes in the June Robles kidnaping and specimens of Oscar H. Robsors handwriting in- troduced by the government at Rob- son’s preliminary hearing “were writ- ten by the same perso. ” Dismissed Employes Lose Fight for Jobs Washington, Nov. 26.—()—Nine hundred employes of the alcohol tax unit facing removal December 1, Monday lost the first move in their legal fight to keep their jobs. Chief Justice Wheat in District of Columbia supreme court denied a temporary injunction to restrain Secretary Morgenthau from dismiss- ing them. Transferred to the treasury from the old prohibition unit in the jus- tice department, they were required to qualify anew for their positions by a competitive civil service exam- ination. All failed in the tests which they contended were suited more for recent college graduates. % oS o Soe re Choose Now Pay Later it cctererri for you to choose S35 to get Christmas A small deposit holds your items un- til you want them Ooo wee Oo 0% Foose’ : WARDS FOR ‘Uf TWO TEXAS POLICE KIDNAPED BY PAIR Paris Officers Still Unheard From Seven Hours After Abduction Paris, Tex., Nov. 26.—(#)—Two Paris policemen were kidnaped Mon- day by two men who sped away with the officers in their own patrol car. Although officers here had no way of definitely identifying the abduc- tors, northeast Texas officers were notified to be on a close lookout for Raymond Hamilton, outlaw who es- caped from the Huntsville, Tex., prison death row last July. The policemen—Newt Baker and H. R. Marks—had gone to a filling station to investigate a car. The men in the car covered the officers with guns, transferred shotguns, rifles and Pistols to the police car, and fled north. Bedding, ammunition, food and narcotics were found in the aban- doned car. At 10:30 a. m. (central standard time) approximately seven hours after they were abducted, no trace had been found of the policemen or their ab- ductors, Holdenville, Okla., officers said the description of the abductors fitted Ambrose Nix and Arthur Gooch, who broke jail at Holdenville Oct. 25, Hit-Run Driver Seen In Drowning of Trio Bardwell, Ky., Nov. 26—(P)—The bodies of two women and a man were found in an automobile in four feet of water @ mile from here Mon- day. Marks suggested their car was knocked off the road by another ves Ricle which drove off, leaving them to die in the creek, RAILROAD PIONEER DIES Lewistown, Mont., Nov. 26.—(7)— D. J. “Pickhandie” Burke, widely known Montanan, builder of rail- roads and former legislator from Fergus county, died early Monday at St. Joseph’s hospital. Mothers ! In treating VT ‘colds, don’t take ICKS VaroRus chances..use Ake: Three Cars of Latest Design! Same as the train that broke the coast-to-coast record! Streamlined! Electric headlight. Transformer; 24-in. track. 27-in. long. See it! ats Fire Bell and Siren Clear PRECIPITATION For station: they have given us during the past ion i ORD i die year and — your future patronage. Accumiisted detciency to"dai is, twill beam A BEAUTIFUL SOUVENIR GIVEN AWAY FREE TO EACH TEMPERATURES | jut cf & doe ill entite each CUTOMER DURING THIS SALE. cs strel and carnival. Dogs be reg- e q beoue Keucw. # £ gl tccte aie cates -Specials for Tuesday and Wednesday |f|* EY 8 Seat Ai Grand 4:30 p.m. Doge also tay be NOVEMBER 27TH AND 28TH Bedspreads Make Smart Gifts Denver’ Colo Pacey lager Ornate ln penon AD— Especially lustrous rayon-and-cot- Duluth pound ........... ee MORE ines eteece K 1 2c yap all Soften Jacouares fs [49 piles ie aoe, Seer Gide aii POTATO 9 6 | PoupaiR tates" 1S big #016 ie, walled toot Gaba Forks WD: cldy Cie frouR. 2 Pues DATES— 23 Pu BARING CHOCOLATE, ,32c PURE VANILLA 17 Yy-po} nd cake onneesss--+- LAC Ron, bottle acini Cc p agg .35c¢ | tea 2lc BY — sU FANCY CHOCOLATE CO’ ne ERED CHERRIES, 1-1b. pkg... Bown SUGAR— 18¢c FRESH Fi FIG BAR COOKIES—o 5c see seereeee un r sto President Roosevelt follow oa vors, 19c:| 4 OUR’S —-29¢ Marie 4 Cc! \ eerreree rrr eee per pound . teem eee eeeee ah tne Gar tee ae es MIRACLE WHiP SALAD 30 COCOANUT—Fancy ‘sired, 2 5 pint tn unbroken le fom | DRESSING—Quart jar ......9UC | per pound ............. c Men’s DurallumBike that « transaretic strait does not ex- Cranberries, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Specially Priced. $39.95 $ ntouny " “overwhelmed by ce, to be sure, bul We have a full line of Xmas Candy and Nuts now on display. pe paula e are ORE: Phone 1613 G01 10th Street [HI/S% America’s new bike sensation! TIS Lighter, Falls City, Nebe Nor 26. — (2) — B | Mepseoiet! tires! TWILLING GROCERY millionaire, pelign eerie nay inane _FREE DELIVERY SERVICE Monday were en route east by train after a picturesque wedding ceremony at the bride's home here. * MONTGOMERY 300 Fourth Street Phone 475 SSRUROSRHSSHSSLVSNNSSHSTRSSERSSSAURS RENSNSASreasy besecssenkebbseessabseesteeseeteesse RebbRareeeekes

Other pages from this issue: