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q ; i via ESTABLISHED 1873 e: BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1935 Yi] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; rising temperature. PRICE FIVE CENTS Hauptmann Pleads for Freedom | Legislators to Center Attention On Liquor, Taxes Three Hard Drink Proposals Being Considered; Solons Agree Some Form of Legislation Will Be Submitted and Adopted by Assembly QUESTION OF LOCAL OPTION WILL BE STORM CENTER Measures Gain Support as Means of Raising Much-Needed State Revenues; Two Per Cent Sales Tax Patterned After lowa’s Given Committee Favor Liquor and taxes Monday centered the attention of North Leite solons, as they plunged into their second month of law-making. Out of the senate and house appeared three liquor-control law proposals, with the possibility one or more of them may come onto the floor of either house in bill form by Thursday. Both senators and representatives were agreed that some form of liquor-legalization would be submitted and adopted by legisla believed it SETHPARR WH (Sees seen RING GONE ANS sien” SOS Sends British Warship Again to Scene; Calls May profit as wholesaler distributing Be Publicity Hoax Senate subcommittees were study- fiat Sac ss Soma: es , while sul San Prancisco, Feb. 11.—()—An present time, the SOS call from the American “adven-| favored, at ture ship,” Seth Parker, sent the gray | Proposal to British cruiser, H. M. 8. Australia, /Séling agency. through a gathering South Sea storm Local Option Storm early Monday to the rescue of the bat-| ‘The question of local option—eit tered old schi municipal similar errand of mercy. The United ‘States navy also went into action. The naval radio station at Honolulu said a|vided—a second proposal would navy tug had been ordered to leave/up a county distribution system, with the base at Samoa at 6:30 a. m. Hono-| state-owned liquor stores operating lulu time (noon, eastern standard/in each county seat. time) for the stricken craft. Members of the house temperance The SOS climaxed a day of mystery | committee have expressed opposition and skepticism concerning the schoon- | both er’s condition. count * At dawn Sunday, the cruiser came|posal of setting up state-owned ll- quor report the Parker's trouble. The SOS came} house about 14 hours later. sted on the basis of the 808 Propose Centralized ¥ Estimated on ¢ flashing 14 hours after the two veseels| uc’Pe""warcnousce by "the coats parted company, the cruiser should] yericue not take Jonger than 10 to 12 hours tO} state, trom which liquor would be Tet course. Chief claim to fame of the adven-|‘'spensed to retail stores, A state liquor stamp, for the purposes of eae ag mo tae its master, protecting the public against tam- yen + sate fet ge yanewn Pered packages would be posted on the fe “Seth Parker” in his presen-| °#¢h bottle or other container at the tation. : “ - Details of all bills still remain to Lord Monday wirelessed ships listen- : ing in he Wee discontinuing his 808 |%® completed; it was held possible because of the Australia’s help. How-|5Y ever, he asked them to leave the Jower| be ironed out in committees, with one frequency on the end of their radio|mbined bill presented. bands clear. ; z f i z See eee iaiands, The Aarcala A bill calling for a two per cent ‘was approximately miles away|S#les tax patterned after a retail when it turned about. pag eg Jame .wne Severed fay ib mee taxes and tax laws. a by Mutuat in| The committee will determine Mon- Bt tte haus setraia| with "a recommendation for pesage. after the At out paar tee his] It was estimated the proposal would new trouble messages. bring the stave approximately $3,- ‘Then came the SOS at 1 a. m. (east-| 000,000 annuslly. Fifi ern standard time) Monday. “Seth|the income would go to the state Parker in distress and requests assist-| equalization fund and 50 per cent ance,” read the 806, “Rigging gone|to the real estate bond interest fund. and leaking badly.” Both the liquor proposals and sales ‘Seconds later the Australia answered |tax are expected to be presented at it was on the wa: another meeting of the legislative Af E ] 3 | f ; i aH (aE Hy i [ i i ; i eee 2 ag Hi HE CASS FARMER DIES Casselton, N. D., et te(O- George Schonverger, Sr., 68-year-old | hospit Cee ee tenes aed father of| Phygicians had give! E e E iy + i j i Fe 2 He E i ; : : i ly. 8 reported im- mn wa. e next ib, 5 day, Feb, 18, as the it date for day ater 6 uingring nes The proved, tna he was given © chance ‘ol iow and tues chidren wureve, [verde Dre: | eight-year term. Wilentz and Reilly in Final Oratorical Battle to Determine ‘Hauptmann’s Fate oe KANSAS CITY GIRL, {7 Storks Timing tor | Family Is Perfect BELIEVED KIDNAPED, |"~ ree ne, mera MERELY TOOK TRIP} <ee\ssteone: seach were born on the same day of the year. Telegraphs Father She's Safe| _ Gaylia June, 2, the oldest one, at Springfield, IIl.; Abduct- Darlene Joy was born on Feb. 10, ed Two Years Ago Kansas City, Feb. 11.—(?)— Miss artes ns = PRASDENT CONFERS telegraphed her father from Spring- eat areca oem | WOT AE ORT, ON ‘would be sent to Springfield to return “aio ance ane «| CODE DIFFICULTIES) last night,” she told police. “I was nervous and restless. I said goodnight to father and went d to play Lai gaa ca Conference Monday Afternoon “Then I took a taxicab to the Pick- to Iron Ou pute wick bus station and bought a ticket ies csi for Chicago. The bus left about 11 NRA Regulations Pp. m. After it got under way I dis- covered I had only 20 cents remaining in my purse. Washington, . W—)—The “I telegraphed my father when 1). iis: watched ae see if the arrived at Springfield, Til., that I was ” Roosevelt administration and the American Federation of Labor leader- Springfield police notified Kansas|ship would close their breach at a City authorities they would hold Miss|conference called for the afternoon. ‘McElroy until the arrival of her! ‘The executive council of the A. F. father. of L., comprising the heads of various “I was worrying so much about the |tederation unions, gathered to go into case I must have lost my head,” police! an important cession with the presi- here quoted Miss McElroy. “I was) dent at the White House about 3 p. m. especially upset over the thought that! ‘There was no announcement as to my testimony was to be instrumental! what subjects would be discussed but in sending Walter H. McGee, one Of! it was generally believed that the auto the men who kidnaped me; to hisland cigarette codes, with both of Tam not sorry that I testified as T “Tam sorry did, however. It was the only thing I pelo ye ge area could do and those men deserve to be |traught with possible significance for Aci under sealed orders, police were mobilized for a widespread search lenders. ane Se siminieratien. f londay after members of the * family had failed to locate the miss- eeareiee come Une. slanecibo Breeden ing girl, Word of her disappearance | hour week with some exceptions and roe sibibeld Cor several Lots at the | minimum wages ranging from 25 to 40 Father Finds Her Gone a Fifteen or 20 minutes later Judge| Roosevelt sald Sunday night, “the McElroy descended to the first floor. code is & fering some on Holiday While Mar- kets Are Closed Richardton Resident Dies Monday Morning Maory B. Gli Mt Michartion ced lane toteeines oh aia een ae ital titi FEF He 2 j f [ E i f I a i +f 4 : . drinking poison in his home FTALIANS MOBILIZE TROOPS FOR ACTION ONETHIOPIAN FRONT 250,000 Soldiers to Be Ready for Service Press) “ Rome, Feb. 11.—Premier Mussolini | Committee Votes to Reconsider ling Wage Clause After Threat Monday mobilized 250,000 soldiers, ‘The air fleet, which E i grand council meeting Thursday. The called to the colors to assist in trans- Dortation of troops to Eritrea and Italian Somaliland. Class of 1911 Called ‘The soldiers called out include the complete military class of 1911—num- bering 225,000 men—and two divisions numbering about 8,000 men each. Another squadron of airplanes will leave the Italian mainland soon to replace those sent from Cyrenaica. It is estimated that the Italian mili- tary forces already have 30 planes in Italian Somaliland and 30 more in Eritrea, The two divisions mobilized have already landed at Siracusa, Sicily, on their way south. Diplomatic sources Monday said that Premier Mussolini undoubtedly had decided on the present mobiliza- tion as a result of the clarification of the European situation following the conversations in Rome between himself and Pierre Laval, French for- eign minister, and in London between Laval, Premier Plerre-Etienne Flan- din of France, and Prime Minister J. Ramsay MacDonald and Sir John Pere foreign secretary of Great army divisions had been instructed to gather at their concentration points - jand the class of 1911 had been recalled to service “for measures of a precau- tionary nature.” : ‘The text of the communique fol- i @ measure of precautionary na- ture, two divisions of the Pleoritana and the Cavinana have been mobil- ized between the tenth and 11th in- fantry. “Operations of recall of the con- tingents of the class of 1911 have been conducted with greatest order.” Dakota Pioneer, 92, Dies in Minneapolis if ft i it ae 35 I 4 g fost FF 2 [ f iH day when the two attorneys give their summations of the case. Above are camera close-ups of the two principals in the opposing baby with the aid of “disloyal ser- Official Communique Calls for! ing $4,880,000,000 relief bill, but deferred @ final vote on it until later in the Chairman Glass (D-Va.) announced three marine classes have been! Senator McAdoo (D-Calif.), who voted for the amendment last week requir- | his ing payment of prevailing wages on public works, moved the reconsidera- tion and presented certain “facts and figures” to show the change would substantially increase the cost of the ‘The committee’s action followed a hint that President Roosevelt would veto the works relief bill if it is en- acted with major changes including the prevailing wage amendment. One senator reid the president “ht intimated that he would not approve @ Measure that will not permit him to carry out his program.” Another legislator, Chairman Glass (D-Va.) of the senate appropriations committee, was requested by the presi- dent to inform the revolters that in- DEFENSE ADVANCES INSIDE J0B THEORY FOR KIDNAP-MURDER Betty Gow, Dead Lindbergh Butler Accused by Reilly in Summing Up Case: HITS PARENT’S TESTIMONY Jury Probably Will Get Case Late Tuesday After State Summation (Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press) Flemington, N. J., February 11.— The final defense plea for Bruno Richard Hauptmann Monday turned into utterance of charges against Betty Gow and the dead Ollie Whate- ley and denunciation of the aged Dr. John F. (Jafsie) Condon. “Condon stands behind something in this case that is unholy,” Edward J. Reilly, chief of the defense, told the jury which is trying Hauptmann for his life as the kidnaper and mur- derer of baby Charles A. Lindbergh. Jr. Dr. Condon was the ransom inter- mediary for Colonel Charles A. Lind- ‘The clash of legal skill and wit between opposing counsel in the trial bergh, father of the slain child. He of Bruno Richard Hauptmann at Flemington, N. J., for the murder testified he paid $50,000 to Haupt- of Charles A, Lindbergh, Jr., reaches its climax Monday and Tues- mann in a Bronx graveyard. Reilly declared a gang kidnaped the legal batteries—David Wilentz (left), dark, dapper attorney general vants,” and in this connection he of New Jersey, and Edward J. Reilly (right), ruddy-faced, some- named the nursemaid, Miss Gow, and pugnacious veteran of many a murder trial, who is deter- then Whateley, the late Lindbergh minedly fighting for the life of the German carpenter. In the cen- butler. ter is a picture taken at an intermission in the trial when Wilentz and Reilly posed together on the steps of the Hunterdon county lated Press Photos. PRESIDENT HINTS ‘ Also Names ‘Red’ Johnson He also brought in the name of “Red” Johnson, the Norwegian sailor friend of Miss Gow, because Dr. r Condon had said he believed “Red” Johnson was innocent, Reilly said. “Why should Condon come to the 3) the baby’s thumbguard which Betty Gow said she found a month efter Dictator Must Either Accept) ‘he argh ie ae ee Anglo-French Proposals or “This thumbguard, exposed té the elements, is picked up by Betty Arm for Trouble as clean as the day # came out of factory—a little bit bent. I sul that is to show somebody walked matin eel eran |i Wy, epee ae = case Pl faced with the alternative of cooperat: planted against this defendant.” ing with her former world war ene- He devoted some attention to mies in the cause of European peace |onel Lindbergh's identification of or rearming against the possibility of | voice of Hauptmann es that of the another war, stood at the crossroads|man he heard in the cemetery rane of her foreign relations policy Monday. |som rendezvous. While Reichsfuehrer Hitler studied Hits Colonel's course, observers wondered} “Colonel, I say to you is % impos- whether he would accept the Anglo-jsible that you, having lived for years French proposals for mutual defense|in airplanes, with the hum of the or turn toward a program of armed | motor in your ears for years, with the isolation. - noise of the motor and the change of Reliable sources said Hitler had re- i climatic conditions that you have liv- ceived unmistakable representations|eq under since you made your won- from the French and British ambassa-|derful flight, to say with any degree dors that only by his acceptance of|of stability that you can ever remem- the London proposals could he hope to/ ber the voice of a man two and a avert Germany's encirclement by @/nait or three years afterwards, a Ting of unfriendly powers. — voice you never heard before and nev- The Fuehrer's ultimate decision may | or heard since?” hinge to a large extent on his attitude} r can't conceive of any father in toward the eastern Locarno past spon-/the world,” Reilly went on, “whose sored by Russia and France. If he/chiid has been missing for days, who should feel compelled to repeat the|is about to come in contact with the opposition he expressed toward east-|nerson who is going to receive the ern Locarno last September, Germany| money that wouldn't be there on the Probably would consider it necessary] spot and killed the dog as he took 1 28 Bes sistence on a change they already have written into the bill will wreck his plan to end the dole. With the house of representatives in recess Monday because no business was in shape for debate, the senate vened to consider the farm credit Tire Shop Manager Hit by Passing Car Europe |, William A. Clarey, manager of the 805 Tire Shop, was struck by a pass- ing automobile late Saturday while repairing a tire on s car parked at the curb in front of his shop at 213 X-rays to show the exact nature of his injuries had not been develop- ed Monday afternoon but physicians believe that he has several fractured ribs and possible other internal in- Clarey was thrown under a truck parked just ahead of the automobile on which he was working when hit. A second man was also struck but received only :ninor bruises. The identity of the driver of the automo- bile has not been made known. I! I i Fal f aE fed if f ag apbiyei ae rte HHL ete RE E g eg) a g q PS i iin i 33 os : fi ii to take extra military precautions|the money out of Condon’s hands. against possible Soviet attack. 'd have torn him limb from limb. Sources close to the Reichswehr ra (standing army) said a decision to|" <The man of iron who holds his adopt a course of non-cooperation |griet within his heart, who tries and ‘with the London program would entail tries and tries not to crack and sees Germany's equipping herself with of-|pefore him a man charged with the fensive as well as defensive weapons.|crime can unconsciously and subcon- It also would undoubtedly involve,|sciously make a mistake of judgment, these sources said, immediate adop-|and that, Colonel Lindbergh, I think peo 8 eps foe wavered easy you have done in this case.” Gerad #8 Dale "om Kennamer Trial for _| House Bill Proposes Fatal Shooting Opens} Socialized Medicine Pawnee, Okla., Feb. 11—()—Social| 4 pill proposing socialization of Tegisterites of oil wealthy Tulsa rubbed | medicine, Surgery and hospitel care, shoulders with Indians in blankets| was introduced in the North Dakota and miata tase. MeOiay a ei house Monday afternoon. r, 19-1 -old | The proposal is sponsored by Rep- eral judge went on trial for the fatal Ben Fed; iam: shooting of his friend, John F. Gorrell. plata pe pS ee “Jelly Bean” Center, gathering place| Counties would be authorized to of Tulsa’s weathy sons and daughters, | teyy a tax under the bill for medical contributed a large share of witnesses | services and hospital care for resi- in the case which has had the self-| dents, County commissioners would ead oe apie lagi elie apad be authorized to foster maternity ment since son of eral Judge | ig id provid ft Franklin E. Kennamer was psa carats x ealg or etoete two months ago. The case was trans-| ‘The proposal also would establish ferred here on a change of venue. a rate of fees to be paid by the coun- i PA 6eons, chiropractors and osteopaths.” Roosevelt Facing Crucial Test te Se As Second Half of Term Begins ir ircans' = = enn, Jang oo ioe ry 8 tm which moves propenad ty the Treasurer Calls 400 teeenuecee bys 6 more page As the second half-term starts, county tax warrants num- Portions of the New Deal are from 4,000 to 5,000, totaling ‘undergoing tests in two crucibles. $17,081.31, have been called for pay- Gold clause abrogation, a vital |ment Thursday by Ernest Eines, part of the administration's mone- |county treasurer. This is the second tary policy, is awaiting @ verdict [call of warrants to be made this by the supreme court. Soon NRA |month, the previous one being made ' and other experiments will have jon February 1 when all warrants their turn, numbered from 4,200 to 4600 were Just now, aleo, the president's jcalled. Of the toial of $390,460.19 in 94,290,000,000 work and relief bill registered : Alt B iti i ise _ Fit