The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 14, 1935, Page 1

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” The Weather \"ga2) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SSS SSS 0000500500500 ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1985 PRICE FIVE CENTS |. Hauptmann Gets Death Penalty; ‘+ Prepares Appeal to High Court _~ NAVY BOARD OPENS [SeitHias Hones j/FIRST DETACHMENT || :: Sentenced to Death Trenchard Sets INVESTIGATION OF | OF ITALIAN TROOPS T_HAGIN SEA CRASH LEAVES FOR AFRICA March 22 As Day | Wey Of Electrocution Commander Wiley ‘Has Ideas’ Mussolini Confers With Grand ° r But Declines to Discuss Council to Determine In- Them vasion Policy Mother of Convicted Killer to Ask President to Pardon Son; Reilly Proposes Subscription ‘Defense Fund’ to Carry on Fight CREW TELLS vivio STORY ETHIOPIAN NOTE DEFIANT Know Only That Vital Gas Cells Suddenly Were Ripped Open Official Spokesman Declares Move Shows Mobiliza- tion No Bluff MORE THAN 11 HOURS REQUIRED TO REACH VERDICT Decision Characterized as ‘Miscarriage of Justice’; Several Claim $25,000 Reward for Information Leading to Alien’s Arrest (Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press) Rome, Feb. 14.—The first detach- ment of Italy’s African expeditionary force will leave Sicily for Eritrea and Italian Somaliland Saturday, a gov- ernment spokesman announced ‘Thursday. Sen Francisco, Feb. 14—(#)—The cause of the “shudder” which meant a\ és, death to two nen and the sensation- ¢ al end of the giant dirigible Macon was sought Thursday by a naval court of inquiry in the first of a ser- ies of promised governmental invest- Flemington, N. J., Feb. 14.—(AP)—Bruno Richard Haupt- woke from a fitful sleep Thursday, a man condemned to die in the electric chair for the murder of Baby Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. a 4 igations. ‘This information was divulged as ] : q ._, Edward J. Reilly, chief of his defense counsel, character- . \ Even the surviving 81 officers and Premier Mussolini prepared to confer ized the conviction and sentence a “miscarriage of justice.” He men of the silver sky queen which F with the Fascist grand council to de- : and his three associates prepared to ask a stay of sentence and crashed and c:nk in the Pacific ~~ ¥ | epttlge ttl titled ted cr : : ; start the machinery of appeal. = fiant communication sent him by i : ¢ The sheriff ocean Tuesday night were not sure : King Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. e sheriff of Hunterdon county announced he would move what caused that quiver to run the! [J a} ‘The official spokesman said other ’ : his notorious prisoner to the death house in the state prison at length of the Macon and subse- expeditionary contingents would fol- ' ‘ Trenton Saturday. Mrs. Anna Hauptmann continued a mourn- quently rip away two of her vital gas * llow the first unit on Sunday and : f ful routine of life behind drawn shades in the yellow frame ny MBS. HAUPTMANN succeeding days. . a : house in which she has been staying. She was not allowed to Lieut. Commander H. V. Wiley, sur-} With tears rolling down her | He emphasized this move does not visit her condemned husband. cheeks as her husband went si- [necessarily presage war, but the Mother to Ask for His Pard lently back to his cell after hear- |troops are being dispatched to re- : : “ Or His jon - ing the jury's verdict of “guilty in |inforce colonial garrisons and ob- , : ' Hauptmann’s mother in Kamenz, Germany, asked: “Is the first degree,” Anna Haupt- |viate the danger of further Ethiopian : ue there no God in heaven?” and sat down to write an appeal to mann cried, “There is nothing attacks. . President Roosevelt—who has no veto power over a sentence left for me.” As she left the The number of troops scheduled to 3 : meted out by a sovereign state. courtroom by the back door, how- leave was not disclosed, but it was : fe rf 5 , rs " 5 ever, she murmured, “I am not |learned 15,000 will be on their way : = : 8 Reilly and his associates, confident the state will have to afraid. I still have hope.” before the end of next week. oe help finance an appeal, planned to plead to the public for a ______| “This shows definitely our mobil- ’ . : “Hauptmann defense fund” to carry on the fight. ization was not merely @ bluff,” the : Shortly before noon members of the jury left the Union WORK-RELIEF BILL farses ~~ 5 Saag ee. hotel for their homes under police escort: ee ee eee : te é Several Bid for $25,000 Reward ins pee ee, anceant sebeian : : The several persons who figured in Hauptmann’s arrest FACING BATTLE ON to have been effected at Addis Ababa, awaited their rewards. Indications were they would have to lor, about reports of a new Ethiopian : = : ea aan any appeal was finally lost. The state offered attack. 5, " tion to King Selas- : : 000. FLOOR OF SEN ATE Pies Kedieomergtiep the ne otticial ee The $14,000 ransom cache found ist spokesman said, is that it is “ridicu- lous.” Hauptmann’s garage belongs to Cole MOE IN DOUBTS onel Lindbergh, who paid $50,000 rane : som. He is not likely to get it bacie arent : “The Ethiopians said they could not : : | : Survivors told the dramatic story| Administration Forces See Stiff! nave oenerered “ eee : a oe need i asvneeotng nee tua * cause tl ord read a nn of the air queen’s end and their Con to Keep Measure uated it, but that they, however, did STATE MAY ENT ER laden eee the mathe i25 test eer uated it, owen ’ March 22 as the tentative date for Francisco Hauptmann’s electrocution. He was sentenced to “suffer death” the week of March 18, and Friday is doomsday in the death house at Tren- Washington, Feb, 140-Roose-| Central Cooperative ‘ Com-|velt leaders, carrying the vast work! Finds Annual Meeting 1: e mander Wiley related, “When s short|and relief program to the floor of the! — BRUNO RICHARD HAUPTMANN senate Thursday, foresaw som ton. te Thursday, foresaw some furi- , Paul, Feb. 14.—()—Restriction Assistant Attorne: neral to| Edward J. Reilly said an appeal jous debate but hoped to pass the ot ail and livestock imports, direct] Flemington, N. J., Feb. 14—(?) “It’s all right, Annie,” he said. to Trenton wi:! he be permitted to y Genera would be carried to the United &tates to| Measure within a week. packer buying and pecker feeding of! _ Bruno Hauptmann, manacled But in the loneliness, the | see his wife again. Issue Opinion on Proposals {supreme court if necessary. 4,600 feet, her nose sticking at a] Finally extracted Wednesday from|caitie, were asked Wednesday night and listening to his doom, was | péeudo-privacy of prison which ‘When the foreman stuttered out 5 Fs The first tribunal expected to hear by Legislature the ples, the state court of errors and a appeals, meets for its next term late Assistant Attorney General George |in May. The court of pardons will propriations committee where|in resolutions adopted by has been his lot for five months, the verdict, Hauptmann swayed had sought to change it be-|Cooperative Associative stockholders| silent. he mumbled unintelligible Ger- slightly. That was his only sign Tecognition, the bill bore nearly|in the final session of @ two-day an- Bruno Hauptmann went back man phrases. of recognition. When the jurors of alterations, most of them /nual meeting here. to his cell in the Hunterdon coun- Under state law, he will be held were polled, one by one, he appar- H. Moeliring said Thursday he would |2°t hear it before October. lered comparatively minor. ‘The Central association handled 34) ps rs here at least until 11 p. m., Fri- ently heard none of them. _ The jurors who sentenced him critics sought reinforcements!per cent of total carload business} ‘Y Jail, broke down wens. he Twice he turned to nod to his |1ssue an opinion declaring it “ex-|snowed more emotion than did senate at large in an attempt|arriving in South St. Paul in 1934, N. Hearing jury and judge order wife. tremely doubtful” if the state could|Hauptmann as he stood before them tinue their fight. Administra-|J, Carnes, its general manager, said) him put to death as the killer of removal was issued, he may be Then came the sentence, directly enter the liquor business. | at 10:45 p. m. Wednesday. forces. a the Lindbergh baby, the Bronx taken to the death house at Tren- Hauptmann’s features still firm carpenter spoke only to comfort ton. as steel. his wife. Not until Hauptmann is taken “It's all right,” he said. Justice, said he based his opinion on |) wife and said: an interpretation of Section 187 of| “It’s all right, Annie.” i¢—__________@| Article 12 of the state constitution, Rage on his ela of the gaze of 4 | rm Weather | |¢®*ling the state to engage in “any| (> » AERBPEEBADN ess: Ante winning over “security wages.” Arrive at Glasgow TWO HELD HERE ON | Says Wa industry, enterprise or business not)’ ‘Tne jurors required more then 11 | Set No New Records | |proniuitea by Article 20 of the con-|hours is seach wae’ more t Glasgow, Mont. Feb. 14—(#)— hl ce i gg GIS GN SMa attitude shall be. Senat Lieut. Earl EB. Partridge and Paul M. Tt takes a lot of weather to , the Republican leader, said . Jacobs, flying in advance of 17 army set a record in Bismarck. confer with minority men Planes now on winter maneuvers Such was the comment Thurs- landed here Wednesday and continued Alleged Attempt to Intimidate| 44y of F. J. Bavendick, in tem- to Great Falls. Federal Judge Results in More Arrests ive i i L i i Fe i if Re iy ii ie E if E E i & FE] : g EE by : ij 5 E tain intact the broad discretion-| minnesota, Wisconsin, fon President ‘Roovevele: and. to [shun members as wel | Advance Army Fliers on lent elt, 10,929 individual as well. it the “prevailing wage” idea; ae handled more than 13 million : F ei : “ 4 r Ht! 83 i I E : He j 2F [ [ i : i A a i i il gE i 3 uF & [ : i i g ¥ d a5 I i iw % i 5 fi Be (Continued on Page Two) z I New Jersey the lat would not affect the right of |@eTe: ‘4 it 5 the state to levy and collect taxes rustied inthis membhee he vds ee for sale of lquor in the state nor|sianced at the paper with unseeing would it prevent sale of liquor by/eves in pretense of consulting it. erbers ban. the sae, aad A few strides away stood Haupt- ruling, z aig oid mann, jaw set, face so pale and hag- gard it was ghastly in the electric light. Sharply erect, he tottered slightly as he heard the foremans + fl a : i i Ei i 3 i i i i 5 5 g ff ; poet i es ctame Jo phere tel A state wholesale lquor busi-|W- summer, Bavendick said, except - | tence. for the fact that it hasn't work- |Dses. selling directly to privately own-|tence. oo ed out that way in the last few |o¢.fetall Uquor stores. The latzer bill Fonts. During the crouth period, is being prepared by sub-committee [nap trail he said, winter temperatures have |! the 1, 1932, when been above the average but so over the lonely have those for the summers, The on which Col. average excess of temperature for uns tas hes, the last four years is 334 de- bos Pca oad grees. The normal ts 40.7 de- Les iad grad grees but in 1931 it was 463; in Teatean thane the 1992 it was 418, in 1933 it was eesane oes eta ee 43.3 and in 1934, 45.6, ‘of the month, sedge “*Letar Walton action| BARRED FROM GRAIN PITs oo ee alleged letters of . angiaen. HUE ae , Ha 7 i

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