The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 28, 1935, Page 1

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The Weather gi] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [.222. 95 Arraigned in Fargo Riots ‘State Sees Hauptmann Breakdown Comings ism ...<—_ —. BARRAGE H NOTEBOOK SKETCHES THREE BUILDINGS IN Empty Lifeboat Tells of Sea Disaster; First Survivors Land rit ARTER.. OF WINDOW, LADDER DOWNTOWN GRAFTON =o : (0 INTO EVIDENCE DESTROYED BY FIRE Disturbance Begins When Un- ionists Interfere With Riv- er Ice Cutting ti ‘ Loss Estimated at $75,000; Admits Withholding . ‘Discovery’ je % of $14,000 in Ransom Heavy Damage Done Tel: Notes From His Wife ephone Property CAUSE NOT DETERMINED Flames Finally Brought Under Control; Other Structures Out of Danger Crazed Pair Kill Relief Workers 300 CITIZENS DEPUTIZED President of Labor Organiza- tion and Two Officers Among Those Held QUIZZED ON HANDWRITING Fargo, N. D., Jan. 28.—(?)—Ninety- five men are to be arraigned in Cass county court Monday afternoon on charges of rioting and resisting an of- ficer as an aftermath of a tear gas Alien Kept Account of Small Items But Not of Big Fisch Transaction Grafton, N. D., Jan. 28—()—The " : : : : ‘ i “y Negpctia three parece) as the heart noon. BULLETIN : fe business londay and : ¢ : ‘ \¢ - (Copyright, 1935, By the Associated mr ap télephone service to the north, ’ : ‘ led bee mc serrate rivers Press) i oe bac theta 1 at $75,000 in % . Union, which declared « coal, ice and Flemington, N. J., Jan. 28.—Bruno — transfer strike last Tuesday, rioted Richard Hauptmann’s smoldering re- we addition to damage to telephone for several days but had apparently sentinent ot Merciless cross-examina- ] : sah capi eosin: \ settled into a calm Friday and Satur- ate pte Tedeered him int ‘ Sells and Tollack furniture stock, { Se rhibes held were charged in @ war~ re damaging admissions. . between $12,000 and $15,000; building | / : rant with rioting and inelting to “Stop that! stop that!” he cried st : : : owned by G. M. Baer, Chicago, stock ! riot. The raid on headquarters fol- > ) Attorney General David T. Wilentz. : : eS ‘ covered by insurance. : ; lowed a disturbance earlier when a ‘Worn down by # day of sharp ques- : James Maher Bakery. new equip- i : group of about 30 men went to the tions, the German carpenter accused | : : 8 = Ment, estimated loss between $10,000 { Fargo-Detroit Tce company on the by kidnaping and murdering Baby : 0 : and $15,000; building owned by Oliver : Red River where » number of men < ae a 5 Winch, $12,000 covered in- Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. was con-| 'R, W. Arden, 27, former instructor at the North Dakota Agricul- re aad ee jtiano Hse at him his recorded answers in a = ‘The loss to the Northwestern Bell ‘Three hundred special police and previous examination .which were at paces and Telephone company could not be de- ; members of a “Citizens” committee variance with his answers in his trial. Bi <a “thorough check responded to a riot signal when strik- ers interferred ‘vith ice cutting opera- (Copyright, 1935, ~~ Associated tions. The raid on headquarters followed the disturbance at the river. Officers said the attackers tried to halt the ice cutting by throwing toole in the river. When the special police arrived some of the invaders fled but nearly a score were teken into custody and lodged in the county jail. Then the officers went to strike headquarters in the downtown district and asked that those inside surrender. They refused and tear gas bombs were thrown through the window. About 60 men surrendered. Flemington, N. J. Jan. 28.—Note- rok utens of macew wnt "| Tax, Liquor Issues Face ured in the abduction and murder of baby Cares 4 Lindberth. | Solons in Fourth Week Hauptmann Monday as a prosecutor subjected him to « withering fie of TTT ap nanT nmnnC its nocteat amar alen:ateniiied ital HOUSE RESOLUTIONS New Legislation Necessary to he withheld from his wife his “dis- Provide Revenue for Next covery” that a box which he said the dead Isador Fisch gave him contained R VEST CONTINUED Two-Year Period $14,600 in Lindbergh ransom gold cer- ge aie niture Co. A dozen women and children went tificates. The prosecutor, Attorney lignes through the tear gas barrage after General David T. Wilents, alert to | § AD FOR STATE ‘With prospects of controversial | hours the eee ware eidaantfebrignt = pes Lenestbetrint pages i a We liquor and tax issues to come before | flames eae bie 7 meres from his notebook, and into the record soles aso ee are mane | Ob After the headquarters had beea | into its fourth week Monday. : 7 th mn Ww marched be found In'the 1d Lindbergh ‘ransom [APPFove $24,446 for Public| Facing the members sill is the big- 5. tween the deyutite to the county Seif notes—among these “HG” for “GH” e 00 | ses problem of the session—that of ire They offered no resistance. Among pote ehT ad NG" for “GN” in| Mealth Laboratories; $9,3 formulating a new tax system, held by ca cremnner Se ighoot those held was William Cruden, presie “4 » many necessary if the state is to = 5 5 t Creeac rica cemeteries isin “17 ae swe amaaie = liscomne foe >the siete 81s Z 3 a otticers, WW. religion ans oR shown, he had written “senvety” for two-year period, Ailes gig nller te "' Resolutions memorializing co gress é . 2 Rea walde. inne, ineape Hauptmann Still Calm to pve ‘old ey pension legislation, Several broad tax proposals are ex- a ined ‘ olis, a union organizer, also was Hauptman gave his answers in &lto continue federal aid to the state's! Pected to come before the solons. samned: in the warrant, but he was not low, colorless tone. He was still calm istressed distr! Those embracing a 50-per cent slice as “luncheon recess interrupted the rene a ree ervees lt The coal, lo and transfer drivers cross-examination. 34 Z went on si more than a week ago, He admitted that he had seen in|pakota house of representatives. tee meetings. peared after the eo ‘nthe They sought recognition of the union Germany the three interlocking circles| also approved were a resolution|, Members of education committees ‘an explosion oo and reinstatement of two discharged used a8 a symbol by the Krupp Com-|tavoring the Great Lakes-St. Law-|i both houses have determined on a union men. Several conferences have pany, gunmakers. Three interlock-|rence Waterway and house bills ap- joint course of action, aimed at the : ss failed to bring about a settlement, ing circles were used as symbols in| propriating $24,446 for expenses of |S0al of presenting bills embracing, as : all the Lindbergh ransom notes, which | public health laboratories and $9,300' far as possible, the best demands made GOVERNOR ASKS U. 8. TO handwriting experts have said Haupt-|for administration of child welfare |>Y various proponents. a . ACT IN FARGO STRIKE mann wrote. laws. ape sl eneeceraliine bill, his 3 4 Serene Thomas - moose’ Mor ‘He would not admit the drawings in agreeme! - | woul referred, its supporters feel, ’ lay sent telegrams to fe offici the notebook. versial lepiatctisa ta sause unmet te is scheduled to hit the floor of the o at Washington asking that arbitra- He admitted he did not count the|members had gone home for the| house soon. It has been drawn along tion moves in the Fargo coal strike be gold certificates in the box until two] week-end, operated to keep the house | the general lines of the Minnesota law, expedited. weeks after his “discovery.” on routine business. including local option and “on-sale” The communications went to Fran- ‘Wilentz shouted that it was be-] New legislation presented included | 4nd “off-sale” retail licenses. ces Perkins, secretary of labor, and to cause he already knew how much it|a resolution urging establishment of| _ A total of 158 bills have been intro- the national labor relations board. was, but Hauptmann denied it and/a nationally-owned bank and eight duced in house and senate with 88 in 8 He urged the national labor rela- offered the explanation that the money | bills, one of them amending the stat- | he house and 70 in the senate. . tions board to expedite on an emer- ‘was wet and had to be dried. utes to provide for a non-medical] During the past week Senator A. F. 3 gency basis action which would com- Baby Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr., for | superintendent and medical and chi-|Bonzer's proposal for establishment - Pel submission of the issues in the whose murder Hauptmann 1s being|ropractic assistants at the state hospi- |Of @ one-house legislature was intro- City Commissioners Memoralize strike to arbitration. tried, was stolen on March 1, 1932,/tal for the insane, Jamestown. Dr.|duced in the senate, together with Coal deliveries were made last week from the crib of his nursery in Hope-|J, D. Carr is present’ superintendent. |tWo legal moratorium bills, a proposal Le“ Chief of Department Many of those rescued in the Mohawk disaster were in critical con- __|to Fargo consumers, once through a well, N. J. The state charges he was Cleared by House oe for a tax survey commission, and a in Resolution dition from exposure as indicated in the above picture showing some one day truce, and at other times de- carried out the window and down #/ Already passed by the senate, the {Proposed constitutional amendment of the survivors being removed from the coast guard cutter Champ- spite minor disturbances. ladder which broke and caused his|resolutions memorializing congress to| Which would pave the way for a new Jain at Staten Island, N. J. Below (right) an aerial view shows a Adjutant General Earl Sarles was federal aid to the school|12 per cent utilities tax law. coast guard launch approaching one of the Mohawk’s empty life- in Fargo as a personal representative Leading up to the sketches, Attorney {districts and urging congress to con-| In the ces for Harry A.| boats in which many of the 40 or more missing persons are believed | of the governor in an attempt to ar- General David T. Wilents asked|tinue federal relief grants to North ‘Thompson, to have been lost. The map shows the location of two spectacular bitrate differences between the strike Dakota until revision of the state. struck Ward line ship wrecks. The Morro Castle caught fire where the factions. i i circle is drawn; the cross shows where the Mohawk sank. Episcopal church with Rev. Walter| Nine Women Charged *s2— = | F neumonia Fatal to Tue church was filed with tends] With Poisoning Mates | a ——e | Beulah Man Monday, Debreczen, Hungary, Jan. 28.—(P)}— oe Joseph Mauch of Beulah died at 6 |. m., Monday at a local hospital from Amazing scenes were enacted here Chicago, Jan. Se errneres Ppepmonis following a two-week ill- Monday when nine women charged | ¢nough cake in the city to 2 with polsoning their husbands and| feed ® small army—and in one | adenoma) "aes “Guten eetey other relatives in order to get their} Piece, too. church at Beulah with Reverend Dan- property were placed on trial for their! | The one-ton delicacy, which |iel Klein officiating. Burial will be ris | required 3,161 eggs, 155 pounds of | made in the Beulah cemetery. d i butter, 153 quarts of milk, six Born in Russia in 1894, Mr. Mauch Among the state’s evidence were 16 pounds of salt and four pints of | came to the United States with his pa- exhumed bodies as well as many phials) Vania, was mixed by ten men |rents when he was eight years old, of poison and Capper ae or- | and baked for ten hours in a 155- | He lived at Goodwin, N. D., for two gans zich made ghastly exhibits in| foot oven. years after coming to America and the court ge aetendi intl Mayor Kelly will auction it off, |then moved to Manhaven where he Some of the defendants, especially | tice by slice, as 4 preliminary of |remained until 1912. In 1929 he moved. : i i Truckers Ask Permits To Operate in State Hearings were being conducted here i i i Ee ge H 2g i Ri ef i Hy 2 t “But this is the fact about the|/house and now go to the senate. dates, isn’t it—July, 1930 to August,| Indefinitely postponed on commit- 1932, you kept no accounts that’s true,|tee recommendation was the house|1, isn’t it?” bill to require school and township’ “I can't remember the day when Ijofficials be United States citizens, stopped.” electors and freeholders in the sub- Wilentz brought up Hauptmann’s|division in which they are to serve. notebook, ‘Two measures by Representative “There are some drawings there,”|Thomas J. Burke of Burleigh county ‘i Propose ition of $1,750 to pay rent due for offices occupied by state officers before the capitol was ready i: ask SEeee HH “ee E i! s ag >’ Fo Ky F Lay " of certain lots adjoining the capitol 7 aggy queue Sh n, ©. W. Leifur, the 72-year-old alleged leader of the! : aranathen Ant onite tt nay be a window?” Haupt-|Wuildings at Bismarck by the statel Narcotic Agents Hold igen, 2d. Mon husband poisoners, Mrs. John Hagy,| Qnicsgos Participation in Presi- | to Beulsh and has recently been em- were dressed in widow's weeds 85) birthday party. lance man. though lamenting the deaths of the Ma lentes. bis widow, bus tathel lai ca of having mur- Daughter Arrested in | Js:Ph Maven, St. Bureks, 8. D 4 four children, Harold, Marvin, Vi “J sare decked ho pleasure from ‘trang ‘urd ‘and Leslie, all at home; and 11 oten oe niaith mere : 0: ving . er Case ee osm, San Brahe , or . a 4 re “I don't know what it is.” : omy Should 1) | Laurel, Mise an: 27M The | John of Los Angeles, Mrs. J. C. Becke: story of a 30-year-old Laurel woman 5. that she carried the hacked legs of of Radlab, Mix, Je 0, Mineme ane 302. “. ‘Anderson “magic medicine woman” who obtain- a white woman to the lonely spotlars” yohn Lebedoff and Mrs. Olaf Polson from Te where they were found by a Negro # HYDE rabbit hunter served Monday to, <Vesne of Pullerton, 8. D. Petty Larceny Draws of foun Mussipp!s strangest mur-| Minot Child, Struck $100 Fine and Costs “5."Sining were the fro, arms, By Car, Severely Hurt John Transberder was fined $100 and costs by City Magistrate Edward 8. Allen on conviction of @ petty lar- ceny charge in justice court here Mon- day morning. He was arrested Sa‘ . urday and accused of taking merchan 1 and steeple ps poo ine AW. Lucas Co., depart- i Cogent, 98. Fae 7%) Five in St. Paul Raid fi af FE fils ’ i HH i G i fe fs th F ie ite Ht ts Hi | i rc hy iff if i g

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