The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 11, 1935, Page 7

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Additional oclety ‘Missionary Society Committees Selected A new Sauvain, president of the First Pres- byterlan Women’s Missionary society, vwhen the group met Thursday after- noon with Mrs, H. L. Wheeler and Mrs. Sauvain as hostesses at the ‘Wheeler home, 715 Sixth St. Mrs. F. E. McCurdy was named on the nominating committee to take the felch, the committee ‘Mrs. Logee and a review of “Orientals in American Life” by Albert W. Palm- er given by Mrs. McCurdy, the hostess- es served luncheon. ee * Peggy Jane Skeels Is New Rainbow Adviser Miss Peggy Jane Skeels was named worthy adviser of the Order of Rain- bow Girls when the quarterly elec- tion of officers occurred evening during a regular meeting held at the Masonic temple. The new Rainbow advisory board also met and retary. Mrs. Bergeson also is chair- man of the board. Rainbow officers named to serve With Miss Skeels are: Miss Marian Pederson, worthy associate adviser; Miss Mary Louise Nuessle, Charity; Miss Lillian Hedstrom, Hope; Miss Donna Jean Davis, Faith; Miss Beth Wheeler, recorder, and Miss Phyllis Olson, treasurer. The recorder and treasurer hold their offices for one year while the others are elected for only four months. Elective and ap- pointive officers of the chapter and the advisory board will be formally installed at the January 24 meeting. Mrs. Albin ‘Hedstrom Installs D.U.V. Heads Mrs. Albin Hedstrom, past depart- ment president of the Daughters of ‘Union Veterans of the Civil War, acted as installing officer when Tir- zah Ann Barclay Tent No. 3 installed its leaders for 1935 Thursday evening at the Business ani Professional ‘Women’s club room, World War Me- morial building. Mrs. C. W. Porter, first president of the tent, was in- stalling guide. Officers who took their chairs were: Earl a vice dent; Mrs. G. D. Bell, junior vice it; Mrs, Thomas W. Sanders, chaplain; Mrs. J. W. Guthrie, treas- urer; Mrs. J. ©. Peltier, Mrs. R. E. Carlander and Mrs. Anna Roberts, council members; Miss Ruth Hed- instructor; Mrs. ‘W. D. Hughes, Mandan, 3 Mrs. Peltier, musi- . Hedst Program for Children Given by Music Group A children’s hour program was pre- of ‘Thursday ing, were guests to attend 2 Masonic meet- at the home of Mr. Hollywood’s Perfect Pair |C ° THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1935 NTINUE from page one D Divorced After 14 Years Suspect's Script Supper appointments were in and green with the lighted birthday cake as an important feature of the decorations. Each guest was pre- sented with a favor. ’ eek ci i a add J Church Societies | Wilder MnttechtetA McCabe M. E. Harris Hustlers The Harris Hustlers class of the McCabe Methodist Episcopal church will meet at 8 o'clock Monday eve- ning with Mrs. Walter E. Vater, 407 Sixth St., who will be assisted in en- tertaining by Miss Antoniette Morton. Miss Anne Rodewald has been as- evening's program is being planned by the Misses Ruth Rowley, Ruby ‘Wilmot and Charlotte Schmidt. ese * Slope Weddings } Hummell- Braun Miss Mercedith Hummell and George Braun, both of New England, by) er in Hollywood Miss Christina Schwartz, Tepee Butte, and Bennett Grudem, Have- Pink’ Mary Pickford Granted Decree in Action Charging Men- tally Cruelty, Neglect Los Angeles, Jan. 11.—()—Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford were a world apart Friday, their marriage of 14-years dissolved. The swashbuckling screen hero, whose desire to travel was one of the reasons his actress-wife gave in asking the divorce which she obtained here Thursday, was in Saint Moritz, Switz- erland, He was there when Miss Pickford filed suit in December & year ago. Also there on both occasions was Lady Ashley of the English stage, whose husband recently divorced her, {naming the actor as co-respondent. Each has declined to say whether they would marry again. Ne former orchestra leader, is making a motion picture, came reports of a pos- sible romance between him and Miss Pickford. They had appeared togeth- in the picture “My Best Girl,” and the film colony knew them as good friends. Fairbanks did not contest his wife's suit, which was called for hearing without prior court announcement. Superior Judge Ben B. Lindsey, for- .{mer juvenile and domestic relations jurist of Denver, who had just taken Office here, disposed of the case in three minutes. Appearing in a gay dress, gray fur coat, black pumps and a small gray hat with a red feather perched jau- tily on the crown, “America’s sweet- heart,” kept her emotions under con- trol until Judge Lindsey, looking up over his spectacles, said clearly: “Gentlemen, I have read the com- "|plaint and s decree will be granted.” tle Hips & : ge Ht eis at Tn 8 Christmas day wedding cere- and Mrs, Carl J. Tullberg, 1021 Fourth |mony, Miss Ida Horning. daughter of ese * aH i f a hin Mr. and Mrs. John Horning, Stanton, was married to William Mul i i iat On the witness stand, three “yes's” sufficied after she had answered the routine questions as to her true name and length of residence here. Charges Mentaly Cruelty “Has a fair, just and equitable prop- erty settlement been made?” asked ‘Wright, “Yes,” Miss Pickford’s voice was s Death Warrant, Wilentz Contends other, and I found that they were in seven or eight different ways.” His voice was loud and he explain- ed to the court that he was hard of hearing. Mrs. Anna Hauptmann, wife of the prisoner and mother of his own small son, flushed deeply when she heard Qsborn say her husband wrote the Court recessed for luncheon at 12:30 P. m. after Osborn had testified: “They (the notes) were connected with each other, in my opinion, by the language contained in them, the use of words, spelling, peculiar spell- ing, by the statement in the latter letters of the amount of the ransom mentioned in the first letter; by the statement in the latter letters relat- ing to the subject of not reporting to the police, and mainly, and perhaps most positively, the ransom notes were connected with each other by a pe- culiar and ingenious device that ap- peared on the lower right hand cor- ner. Photography Revealing “I hold in my hand the reproduc- tion of printing, photograph of print- ing, of various parts of these letters which in my opinion indicate that the letters came from the same source. I refer to the language and Led statement, the ideas, in the let- Ts. letter that was left in the room when the kidnaping occurred, what has been referred to and is referred to in the notes themselves as the ransom ‘That letter says, ‘we warn you for making anyding,’ intended for any- thing,—‘public or for notify the po- lice’; and then in the lower left hand corner of that first page are the words ‘indication.’ I think the word is indication. It is rather illegible. the word, peculiar word, ‘signature’ that the words, ‘and three holes’; and appears this peculiar device which is made by imprinting two overlapping circles with ordinary printers ink— I mean ordinary writing ink—and I think the impression was made not by @ rubber stamp but some instrument which didn’t take ink well, so that the impressions are not good. It is @ crude device in certain ways. Agent Testifies government, testified he had no no- tice of any Lindbergh ransom cur- rency appearing after the arrest of Bruno Richard Hauptmann. Wilson testified that he, as agent in charge of the intelligence department. of the United States department of internal revenue, directed the prepar- ation of the ransom money, which Dr. John F. (Jafsie) Condon charged he paid to Hauptmann in a Bronx ceme- He described graphically the elabor- ate plans laid for subsequent capture of the kidnaper by carefully noting the serial numbers of each piece of currency—numbers which were later printed on 250,000 circulars and sent to banks throughout the United States and in many foreign countries. The money, $70,000, was counted out and noted at the J. P. Morgan company. Only $50,000 was paid by ‘Condon to the man he then knew only as “John.” The witness also identi- fied the $14,600 found in Haupt- mann’s garage in the Bronx as part of the money. As the trial turned from its spec- “Have you read the complaint” tt |C? charged mental cruelty, indifference and neglect. “Yes.” “Are the charges true?” “Yes,” ‘The marriage, which Hollywood for ‘@ long time had regarded as ideal, began with a secret ceremony here on March 28, 1920. Miss Pickford had Just .obtained a Nevada divorce from Owen Moore, of the screen. A year before Fairbanks and Ann Beth Sully had been divorced. Pickfair, the Beverly Hills mansion, pone the property of Miss Pick- Forks. They are at home at Grand Forks where Mr. Shipley represents an office specialties company. He graduated from the Steele high school and attended the University of North Dakota, see 4 f Today’s Recipe | Date Marshmallow Whip 2-3 cup sliced dates 1-3 cup nutmeats § i eas abe the jovial appearance of Dr. John F. Condon—into more technical terri- tory, the crowds still formed a moving background. All Notes on Same Paper Other features of the ransom notes were outlined as New Jersey contin- ued its efforts to link the Hauptmann house in the Bronx with the Lind- ‘a |{the members of this assembly, and, torD Ihe disproved with utmost speed liephe ee “For example, the first-one is the! ‘Indication for all letters are,’ then) |—8-I-N-G-N-A-T-U-R-E, and below | then to the right and in the corner; thrown on the floor as a surprise to anti-administration followers. Twichell’s move blocked a vote on the resolution, which was expected to be debated in majority caucus, in Preparation for the vote. Gilbertson, |in support of his mo- tion, cited newspaper reports that the majority group planned day-to-day f&djournment until the Moodie case was finally determined. He called !on house members to study the ¢ommunication received from the state supreme court, in which representatives were told the case was being determined as speed- ily as possible. “You will still have a day or two to think the communication over,” Gilbertson declared. “Are we going into next week and do the same things we have been doing here?” E. J. Marks, of Burke, declared, “I came here to transact business—but I want to say I’m not going to be guided by newspaper talk.” Godwin Urges Action Grockett clamped down on the; argument with his ruling that Gil- bertson’s motion was “out of order at this time.” Godwin, before Crockett ruled, had | offered a substitute motion, his “gen- tlemen’s agreement.” “Some members have already gone home,” he pointed out. “Others have stated to me that it is necessary for them to go home to straighten out affairs they were unable to arrange before they came here. Two years ago, it was the seventeenth day be- fore bills were introduced. Four years ago it took eight or ten days to select committees—I move we enter into a gentlemen’s agreement that there be no controversial legislation or sub- ject introduced until Monday com- ing.” Twichell was on his feet immedi- ately. “A controversial subject is one | on which there is a difference of) opinion, isn’t it?” he demanded. Godwin ‘admitted Twichell right. “Then you can’t do anything in this house, under that agreement until Monday—you can’t introduce anything in this house without a dif- ference of opinion—so we'd just sit here and draw our pay, and not do anything else.” Thomas .Burke, young Democratic floor leader from Burleigh county, challenged the binding effect of the agreement on minority members, who was said, “the book was not taken out by John Condon but by John Condax. The state has positive proof, the na- | ture of which even the defense will not dare question, that the man who ‘ook out the book was John Condax.” The attorney general also declared jthat the book in question was not a | book on symbols as Reilly hinted, but |a work on the murals of Diego Rivera. Condax, a Philadelphian, is now at a Trenton hotel as is Dr. Condon, it was learned, and is ready to testify in {rebuttal if necessary, if | C ONTINUE D from page one Unanimous Consent Given Motion for Citizenship Proof A proposal to notify the governor that the house was ready to hear his inaugural address, similar to the one defeated in Wednesday's session, was Tuled out of order. Shortly after- ward the house adjourned, in line with plans of the majority caucus to transact no legislative business until the Moodie case is decided. Although no debate met the God- win resolution, strife broke out on the floor of the house a few minutes later, when a proposal to notify the governor the house was ready to hear his inaugural message was offered. Ben Gilbertson, of Stutsman, whose similar motion Wednesday brought the strength of majority bloc against him, for the second time proposed & committee of three members be ap- Pointed to notify the governor the jhouse would hear his inaugural ad- dress Saturday after 2 p.m. Speaker William Crockett halted the tur- moil with a ruling that Gilbertson’s motion was out of order. Godwin’s Motion Fails Crockett followed his Gilbertson ruling a short time later, ruling God- win off the floor when the latter at- tempted to organize a “gentlemen's agreement” that no controversial sub- jects would be introduced by members intil Monday. Godwin, Crockett tuled, was also out of order. A minority attack on Godwin’s pro- Posal was halted by a motion to ad- |journ by Howard Parkinson of Bot- tineau. The move to adjourn caught leaders of minority and majority groups unaware less than an hour after the house had opened. Governor Moodie said he possessed “complete, positive proof that I am a citizen, which I am willing to ex- hibit to any person—or any group of Persons, including members of the house. I am a citizen, and the su- Frank Wilson, special agent for the |Preme court record will bear out my {contention.” In the record before the state si {preme court, in the action testing Moodie’s qualification for governor, P. O. Sathre, attorney general, told the court he was “satisfied Moodie was a citizen” and asked withdrawal of the claim. Welford, likewise had little to say, except to observe “so they're putting {me in a hole, too.” Citizenship Resolution The house resolution, embodying the attack on Moodie and Welford, declared, “Whereas, in the normal jPursuit of state business under the laws and the constitution of the State of North Dakota, both of you gentlemen will from time to time be Tequired to authenticate state doc- uments or to transact business for and in the name of the state by vir- tue of holding or attempting to hold Offices of the state and “Whereas, in the past many laws and legislative enactments have been declared unconstitutional or to have been illegally or improperly enacted through some technical or actual fault in enactment and, “Whereas, rumors charge and pub- lic statements are being freely broad- cast throughout the state to the ef- fect that both of you gentlemen were born on foreign soil, and as sub- Jects of a foreign monarch and that neither of you have complied with the laws of the United States relating to the naturalization of the foreign born, and, “Whereas, if the rumors and state- ments are true as circulated and charged then you are not properly au-/ thorized under the constitution of the State of North Dakota to hold the offices to which you now claim to be elected and which you are at- tempting to hold, thereby creating @ state of uncertainty in the minds of “Whereas, it is the opinion of this would not agree to the proposal. Burke maintained a unanimous vote must be given the agreement or it would fail, while Godwin main- tained only a majority vote was necessary. Twichell| came to the support of Burke with the contention, “we can’t sit here and say nothing with some- thing like this hanging in the air— you need! unanimous consent—you know you! can’t get unanimous con- sent.” “Well—I’ll rule that Mr. Godwin is out of order with his motion,” Crockett announced, breaking into the floor squabble. As Crockett announced his decision, Parkinson stepped into the moment's quiet with a move for adjournment. Several | attempted to halt the ad- journment, with a call of the house, and similar motions, but failed. | my EGGS, strictly fresh, Food Market 408 Broadway TOILET TISSUE, IGA, 3|for ........+++- . BISQUICK, BEANS, 5 Ibs. ........++ T-Bone, Round Steak, Sirloin, per Ib. BEEF POT ROAST, known to have been rustled and are listed as strays, Tindall said. fore the reported thefts occurred, | federal grand juries will act on evi- FREE DELIVERY SERVICE should they be untrue. this body with the least practicable delay due proof of your citizenship to the end that such information may be made public to the people of Stl the state forthwith.” Move Is Surprise The resoiution was looked upon as a test of strength of the majority Group, and was reported to have been U.S. Will Prosecute | “=zz,2 N. D. Cattle Rustlers Federal prosecution faces a number of North Dakotans alleged to have stolen cattle purchased by the drouth relief service during the first and sec- ond cattle buying programs, M. E. Tindall, supervisor of cattle ship- ments, said Friday. ‘Tindall declared the federal depart- ment of justice has been working on @ number of cases of reported thefts of government cattle in 10 counties ia evidence pointed directly to theft. Of the approximately one mill head of cattle purchased in the i ~~ RICHHOLT’S —~ MEATS - FRUITS - VEGETABLES and GROCERIES Phone 631 Free Delivery * Phone 631 LETTUCE Bip Si tee ees esss cesses 17¢ GRAPEFRUIT, Med. size, 6 for .....23¢ BANANAS, Nice and yellow, 3 lbs. ..23¢ SWEET POTATOES, 4 Ibs. .........25¢ Fresh Tomatoes Celery Cabbage Green Onions SUG. A Fine Granulated, 52c 10 1b, Kraft bag . CORN, Golden bantam, 2 No.2 cans 27¢ 17¢ CRACKERS $3710 =e COFFE GWE is csscsasssisssreseteseess Chase & Sanborn, 1 Wb, bag 2... esscevwe ertse coee: MILK, 3 tall cans ............---0--17e¢ CHEESE, Mild American, lb. ........-2l¢ GREEN BEANS, No. 2 can .......--10¢ MATCHES ter carton =. secsesanee 6 box cartom ...........06 . PEANUT BUTTER, 1 Ib. jar _.19¢ SPINACH, No. 2¥, can, 2 for ........35¢ SYRUP, Dark, 10 Ib. pail ...........55¢ GRAPE JAM, Pure, 4 Ib. jar ........49¢ MEAT SPECIALS Round Steak Fancy Fat Steer Beef T-Bone Steak per Sirloin Steak ih 1 5c Beef Pot Roast, per lb. ............-12¢ Hamburger, pure ground beef, 3 lbs. 25¢ Bring Us Your Relief Order LEO PAYSENO, PROP. »G/= SATURDAY SPECIALS GRAPEFRUIT Size, doz, | Texas sweet seedless, dozen .. 33c Case $3.10 — 1; Case $1.58 Good Med. CABBAGE 9 beg eereesss DOC Winesaps Winter ..... 9158 40 Ib. box Figs, cooking, sone Oe 2 Ibs. ooking» 25¢ peucious APPLES f'n: ....$1.68 No.2 tins, 2 for. .20C Roane ll 2 trl 9c Asparaaye, Stokely’s, No.l tin ROS 14c i... sae Sweet Corn, yellow, No, 2 tin, Peas, Monarch, Early Nez in .... 16c APPLES large bon only .. SOC neietit ten e2ec ln 5c pire HE i] a oHE ; ane ae =f s| FE Regessere eM pames rae egieeee r I i i

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