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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper The Weather Mostly cloudy tonight and Wednes- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ¥ day; not much change in temperature ” ESTABLISHED 1878 Hitler Faces Internal C BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1934 “I LEAD 10 IDENTITIES . Holt, faces a » te constitutional ' al INMYSTERY DEATHS TRACED BY POLICE Philadelphian Views Photo, De- -clares Victims Are Hughes Family CULT THEORY DISCOUNTED Larry Carney Tells of Living With Group of Five Six Years Ago BULLETIN San Francisco, Nov. 27.—(#)—Hor- ‘ace Hughes, whose identity was at- tached in Duncansville, Pa., to a man in ave a 85287 Hid O. P. Claims Precedent Against Seating Rush D. Holt; Legal Age 30 ———— of Springfield, Washington, Nov. 27—()—West Vir- | day as a fugitive ginia’s 29-year-old senator-elect, Rush} Warrants probable ity reaches constitutional age of 30 |, Petore taking his seat DEATH MYSTERY "a pusaling little girle on a ral SET UP PARTY FAILS Farmer-Labor Candidate Re- ceived Only 3,460 Votes; Needed 13,000 ficial complete returns revealed Tues- day. Candidate for U. 8. senator on the SREgE SE Deak hh jit, fifa Pras i i | g& 5 in Bank Swindle Chicago, Nov. 27. — (®) — Gustav Lindquist, missing president of the ‘Abraham Lincoln Life Insurance Co., Tl, was sought Tues- from justice. conspiracy to challenge of jembezzle were issued Monday against of bis election, /rindquist, Joseph not he waits until he/ganders, treasurer of Baiata, the insurance ; Abraham Kerats, former attorney, and W. W. Ehl- i ‘Minneapolis the records of old elec-jers, associate of Baiata. j mystery followed: the discovery of the a hatter barre near Carlisle, Pa., and ecanaville, Pa, Top picture shows the scene of thé finding of the girls, and below are John E. Clark (left) and Clark Jardine, care- “akers of an estate, who made the discovery. (Associated Prese Phote) sss DALE'S ATTEMPT 10 PUZZLES POLICE ? bodies of thi ball near Dun-- of the bodies Princess and Duke Rehearse Ceremony Seven high-stepping Windsor Greys went through their paces in ®@ practice jaunt for Thursday's Demonstrations at Czecho- Slovak Legation Broken Up by Police Vienna, Nov. 27.—(?)— Austrian students the DEFENSE BUDGET OF | FRANCE GIVES ARMY AND NAVY Bla SUMS Appropriations for Next Year Total Approximately $732,073,000 PLAN HUGE AIR ARMADA Danger of Enemy Raids Brings Reorganization of Fac- tory Centers (Copyright, 1934, By The Associated Press) Paris, Nov. 27—The French cham- ber of deputies Tuesday completed its approval of a defense budget for next = totaling approximately $732,073,- Tt quickly agreed to navy and avia- tion government advocate plans for in- creased aviation developments as a — e. the chamber approved an army budget of 5,689,215,895 francs (approximately aatinssH toggle an emergency new ‘army equipment of 800,000,000 francs (approximately $52,640,000). barking upon .a three-year plan for reorganizing aviation manufacture. reorganize the industry and scatter it over the country as Germany already MONETARY REFORM SPIT CHEERS FOB Senators Adams and King Dis-/ agree Over Present Sil- ver Situation ’Frisco Family Believed Slaying V + Garbo Humbled i The myth of the Great Garbo has been shattered. No longer can she stand aloof from the crowd, for she has met her master and bowed to him. ‘He's ‘W. 8. ‘Van Dyke, film director, who talks to her and orders her about just as he would the merest chorus girl. And. tlie Great Garbo likes it! Both are shown here in their latest pictures, "VETERANS ENLIST BEST HOME TALENT FOR BIG MINSTREL Large Male Chorus to Feature Annual Presentation Be- ginning Thursday One of the best minstrel and vocal Promised by local Legionnsires in connection with their annual carni- val and minstrel which will open Thursday evening in the World War voices in the city will be heard in the solo numbers and the. male chorus. posed of Al Lowry at the piano, Elsie Nelson, clarinetist; Guy Larson, sax- i F Hy it i a PRIEST SLAIN WITH {7-YEAR-OLD GIRL BY JEALOUS GROOM Joseph L. Steinmetz, 22, Held on Double Charge of Homi- cide in New York MARRIED THREE WEEKS AGO Diocese Issues Statement; Father Leonard ‘Suffered Mental Depression’ New York, Nov. 27.—(#)—Dishev- eled and apparently on the verge of complete collapse, Joseph Lieb Stein- metz, youthful theological student, was arraigned in homicide court ‘Tuesday on the charge that he shot to death his 17-year-old bride and the Rev. Joseph J. Leonard, Catholic the priest for several days. “I don't want to go into that now,” Gan On Steinmetz gave this account of the shooting and events preceding it. Machlis relayed it. He and his wife met the priest, who was chaplain of a home for the aged in Lawrenceville, N. J., Sunday night in the Knights of Columbus hotel. Monday morning the three had three rounds of highballs. The Priest paid for them. Steinmetz, never a “heavy drink- er,” he explained, “got very drunk.” Embarrassing Situation Machlis said that Steinmetz “re- membered the priest inviting his wife to his (the priest's) room,” and he followed them 10 or 15 minutes Steinmetz found his wife and the cleric “in an embarrassing situation,” said the attorney. Detective Robert aT i : ti! #4 alate Rouge, La., Nov. 27—(#)— “The Reveille,” Louis- Pare cle ictim Crime Editorial Is Verified e Unexpectedly Henry Goddard Leach, editor of The Forum, and president of the Poetry Society of America, received verification of crime conditions in New York which a few hours before he had deplored vigorously in writing an editorial. Thugs beat him and took $40 and his fh. = Mr. Leach’s blackened eyes are pic- tured here. SEAWAY’S APPROVAL BY CONCLAVE ASKED BY SHCRETARY DERN Tells Closing Session of Mis- issippi Valley Group Route Is Vital St. Louis, Nov. 27.—(#)—The possi- bility of an about-face on their stand in opposition to the St. Lawrence Seaway treaty faced delegates Tues- day at the closing sessions of the Mississippi Valley Association con- vention here. Controversies over the associations adverse stand on the pact, which broke out early in the convention, were climaxed in an address by Se- cretary of War George Dern, in which he for ratification of the treaty which failed of adoption in the last congress. Earlier U. 5. Senator Bennett ©. Clark of Missouri had rei- terated his opposition to the plan. Last year the association lodged on objection against the proposed treaty ‘on the contention it did not provide for a sufficient diversion of water from Lake Michigan into the Illinois river at Chicago. The resolutions committee will report late Tuesday and is expected to voice an opinion on the Seaway proposal. Secretary Dern said the Mississippi river and the Great Lakes constitute nature's endowment in waterways sys- tems to the interior of the United Btates. Need Both Routes “The need of the fullest utilization of both routes is so obvious as to re- quire no discussion,” he said, “those of you who are from the upper Mis- the Great Lakes-8t. Lawrence Sea- way and the development of the Mis- sissippi system. “Those of you who are from other sections of the valley are directly in- in the Mississippi system, but you have likewise an interest, indi- rect though it may be, in the St. Lawrence Seaway. These two water- ways are supplementary rather than competitive. It is in the interest of the people of the Mississippi Valley that both be completed. Both are essential parts of the president's re- covery program.” The Fort Peck dam, under construc- tion in Montana, was pictured by former Gov. Arthur J. Weaver of Ne- braska as the long-awaited boon to Missouri valley agriculture, industry and shipping. Weaver, who heads the Missouri River Navigation association, outlined the anticipated benefits of the Fort Peck development to the association delegates. “As Muscle Shoals is the keystone valley,” he said, “Fort Peck will be (Continued on Page Nine) Fargo Milk Strike Charges ! Dismissed in their cells Tuesday while officers Alabams | PRICE FIVE CENTS risis BAD BLOOD EVIDENT BETWEEN ARMY AND NAZI HOME GUARDS . Forces Operating Under Virtual Declaration of State of Emergency jALL FURLOUGHS CANCELLED Domestic Situation Responsi- ble; Foreign War Scare Is mized (Copyright, 1934, by the Associatec Press) Berlin, Nov. 27.—(?)—The German jarmy and the nation’s police forces jare operating under a virtual dec- ljaration of a state of emergency, re- |liable sources disclosed Tuesday. All Christmas furloughs for mem- bers of the reichswehr (army) and military police have been suspended. Drilling of Nazi storm troops has been intensified, it was reported. ‘ The domestic situation apparently was responsible for the order. Its possible significance in relation to the foreign situation was minimized. Fears that a smouldering feud be. tween the reichswehr and the Schutz Staffel (picked Nazi guards) might burst in flame at any time are held in some quarters to be chiefly respon- sible for the measure. The step indicated that Chancellor Hitler, as he did during the blood “purge” of Nazi ranks June 30, is again dépending upon those consid- ered “reactionary” by his own men. since the army is not fundamentally & political organization. Discontent has been rumored in jranks of the Nazi storm troops, whose leaders were summarily executed dur- ing the “purge.” A spokesman for the propagands ministry flatly denied the emergency report, saying “we are quite ignorant of it” and “I cannot imagine such an eventuality.” It was learned, nevertheless, the measure is being enforced so vigor- ously that all marriages of army.men, or police, irrespective of their rank, have been postponed. Christmas is a popular wedding time for military men in Germany. Baron Werner von Fritsch, chief of the reichswehr, in # memorandum to Hitler, said plainly in discussing Nazi jsuppressive methods that unless & {More liberal spirit prevailed the gov- ernment would face opposition from ‘all sides in case of war. = He told Hitler something must be done about the bad blood between the 8. 8. and the reichswehr. SECRETARY’ SOUGHT IN BARREL MURDER Suspect Believed to Have Been Hitch-Hiker Gem Auction- eer Befriended | Cincinnati, O., Nov. 27.—(P)—Alvin A. Brunner, the itinerant gem auc- tioneer of Brooklyn, N. Y., whose body was found stuffed into a bar- rel here Monday, had no fear of the man he picked up casually as a hitch-hiker and made his “secre- \ tary.” Police Tuesday had a letter writ- [ten by Brunner less than 48 hours before his death as they turned to the open road in a search for his slayer. The body was brought from Co- lumbus, where Brunner was slain, in a barrel which had been taken from ® restaurant near the jewelry store of Reinhard Merz, who be- friended the auctioneer. Police at once sought J. S. Ber- man, or Burns, known in Columbus as his “secretary,” but who, accord- ing to a letter written a week ago to friends in Shelbyville, Ky., Brun- ner admitted having picked up as 2 hiteh-hiker, at Hamilton, O., only a week ago Monday. Police, viewing the “hitch-hiking” angle, were bolstered in their initial supposition in linking Berman not only with the slaying but with the disappearance of a package purport- edly containing some $20,000 in dia- monds, given by Brunner into the care of Merz when the two contract- ed with him to auction off his stock of jewelry. Distribution of Seed Awaits Price Fixing Purchase of 18,000,000 bushels of seed grain at Minneapolis for distri- bution in the northwest next spring has been completed and orders for the seed will be taken soon after the announcements have been made by federal officials, Henry O. Putnam, state director in charge of the seed and feed distribution, announced here Tuesday. Seed purchased by the federal gov- ernment includes hard wheat, amber durum, barley, oats and flax. All seed will be cleaned before shipment from the Twin Cities, Putnam said. Ne announcements have been made Federal officials are expected ‘to de- cide in the near future the price at which the seed will be sold. Putnam at present is setting up. the county organizations which will handle the seed distribution. ’