The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 15, 1935, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a i \ \ i al } ESTABLISHED 1878 . |: Death House Cell Prepared for Hauptmann 1 CONVICTED KIER’ [President Will Insist [7 On Pledge by Vet 1) SAVE HS UIFE}sm vaste wt vol GQ.OPERATIVE FARH , | Claims to New Pensions If Cannot Confess, Told Every-| Present Bill Is Signed LOBBY PROPOSAL iN } thing on Stand, Bronx Carpenter Insists SEEKS ‘MORAL’ DETERRENT PASSED BY SENATE ' en DENY ACCOMPLICE REPORT |Adopte Attitude With Eye on Federal ‘Authorities Have No ase seg 100 ee aa Evidence of Second Man itbescski deporibsccs! : ‘Class Legislation’ in Crime, Hoover Says ‘Washington, Feb. 1 Leaders ‘cctnenanennmmentiamisits Sine nected Dae onsen ee Flemington, N. J., Feb. 15.—()— | tans press for Paymen: Bruno Richard Hauptmann, awaiting |the $2,100,000,000 bonus, President his removal to the death house, placed | Roosevelt plans to insist that they in the public Friday his hope of a suc- | Yield all claims to new pension bene- cessful appeal against his conviction |fits in the future. for the Lindbergh baby slaying. ‘The leaders, who declined to be quot- “T haven't a dollar,” the condemned |€4 by name at present, said the presi- man told his counsel, “and must de- | dent remarked that even though such | was 9.11, i pend on the public.” a bargain might not actually be bind- oe In his only interview during four |ing in the future it would constitute Jenged the constitu ity of the months in the Hunterdon county |@t least @ “moral” deterrent to new declaring it was “class leg- jail, the Bronx carpenter was asked |demands. islation” and greene late Thursday whether he could not| , It was emphasized that the presi-| ro ors already have several strong “possibly name persons connected with |dent would not willingly see congress organisations representing them.” ‘ the kidnaping of the Lindbergh baby.”/Pass & bonus bill even under that | "EES otic OL Cio he measure, “AS God is my Judge,” was the Te te Se ne te ere ike | Herman ‘Thorson of Adams, E. E. ply, “I cannot confess, for there is|What will happen to the bonus bills Greene of Stuteman and G. . Drew Sell ad Baril divided. Bonus advocates Pre-| or Ramsey, argued in support of “If T had any confession ‘to make, 1/dict victory; some administration] 1, Sessile with mating 3 would have made it months ago and |leaders say the drive will be beaten, hook-up” would be cre- saved my wife and child all this worry, | While others foresee s possible com-| O0..° Do ee tates to work out “r told everything, on my word of|, One leader said that the president, Raw ' honor. ‘That is, I mean T have not |in adopting his attitude on pensions, | entation to congress, tried to cover up anybody.” has an eye on one of the largest po- Act on 23 Measures shown below. (Associated Press Hauptmann will go to the death|tential expenditures in the future, in-| Geared for high speed, the legis- house of the state prison some time|Volving more than $100,000,000 & year. | tative machinery in the upper cham- wetness te a [Yan tte eg pe | wt saws wo, eas TTALIAN INVASION [Senate Report Favors A Te au- ~ | measures, feat one, thorities had evidence of an sccom.|sions as veterans, though the presi- three, and passing 16 bills plice-was denied in Ws by|dent has estimated that in the flscal| and three resolutions. J. Edgar Hoover, head of the depart- | year 1935 $34,679,524 must be spent for! among senate resolutions adopted UNI E ment of justice's division of investi-|pensions to survivors of dead World| by the senate group was concurrent 5 gation. War veterans, $5,182,252 as compen-| resolition R, petitioning congress ‘Tho district attoeney-of the, eons, AA O° Cocpeanaticn to senrenn | een Sa quell the Bank of ETHIOPIAN EMPEROR |: aginmernennegacmaiat cg | pst Wetial seutne where, Hauptmann = indicted for et a North Dakota to pl pate in factll- {Valentine Touches |) Mayville, Ellendale, Valley City, » Saag rey o> ar ‘was | $2,951,000 as retired pay to emergency | tor issuing currency in the name of Judge to Leniency | ie ime. officers. bank. ‘ud: Edward J. Reilly, Hauptmann's de-| These sums total $243,808,300. As yg by Senator John Mik-| Hig Country Never Has Taken|¢-———_—___ fense chief, said he hadn't heard the | time goes on, they will increase. But | ietnun of Barnes, the resolution. Police had ever worked on an ao-|they do not include s plain pension | noses similar system to thet used| Aggressive Position, Haile Joliet, Til, Feb. 16.—(#)—Police complice angle, and added that even-|granted to ® man for the pure and/ iy the national banks of the country, ‘Magistrate John N. Nicholson was trally the police might find truth in|simple reason that he served in the| slowing the bank to place’as secur- Selassie Declares touched. ; his own theory that the kidnaping | World War. ity the bonds of the bank in greater Frank Awe, 2 transient, was and murder was the work of a gang sees amount than allowed the national! Rome, Feb, 15—(P)—Emperor Haile| Pere, clm, accused of drinking mee Seti sieacrecee ROOSEVELT FORCES pomapsil rea ia sane i Selassie declared Friday in a message “But,” said the accused, “I've Sheriff John H. Curtiss of Hunter- be-cr pergedion ekorsgioy stat money.” to the press of the world that Italian) got something for you.” He pro- don county said he planned to re- + |mobilization “is not justified by any} duced @ big red heart which said move the condemned man some time See No Benefit in Lobby military measure on the part of) something about “won't you be after daylight Saturday under a guard William Watt of Cass set off the | Ethiopia.’ my valentine.” 2 ee aici dae (erp Cage trier) cae was made Male napnoeh ane eons pagenynlerg ‘troop- an exp! . y oe earictaimemsinienss the bill and declaring he “saw no/his charge d'affaires, Negardes Yesus,| no prisoner ever gave me @ valen- As he detailed this plan briefly he benefit from it for the f a who said he also was communicating| tine before.” exhibited Hauptmann’s death war- “The proposal,” said Senator Thor- it to the Italian foreign office. —_——— rant, signed by Justice Thomas W. __ son, “creates a legislative hookup of| ‘~The news of the mobilization of Trenchard, Prosecutor Anthony M. a Hi Send surplus-producing states in the north- | two Italian divisions,” the monarch Hauck and Court Clerk C. Lloyd Fell.| 8i-Partisan Bloc Hopes to west so that whenever five states |said, “is not of a kind to maintain an The New York Daily News said} Bij1| Back to Committee for | have accepted the hookup, they may | aj of confidence necessary in a copyright article Friday that not organize and cooperatively work out/to the satisfactory conduct of negoti- only were two men involved in the More Alterations the main needs of agriculture with | ations now underway, preliminary to ; $50,000 ransom fraud—Hauptmann other agricultural organizations. the establishment of = commission was identified as the actual recipient rt In the past, he said, trouble was/of conciliation and arbitration for the ¢ —but that police knew the identity of| Washington. Feb. 15—(—Opening | encountered with the farm organt-| solution of Italo-Ethiopien differ-| Veteran N. D. Publisher Is Bur- the second and sought to trap him, |® new Republican attack on the sd-| zations being disagreed they lences, This man, the News said, was the ror pig race er relief fee] reach Mt Washington and “didn’t knOW | wpne security of Italian Somali-| ied at Fairview Cemetery Kerchiet and “peered. into “Colone]|the senate Friday was “a Hank g the bill provides for an|land as mot | been | menaced by Friday 1 & Charles A. Lindbergh's automobile |Check for the biggest sum of money} “agricultural lobby”, Mee Pe eee ete atet that hile While the father of the slain baby|ever Dased in ® single transaction” /thun sald “this might | country never had taken. an s-| Funeral services for Walter F. Cush- awaited his ransom emissary, Dr. J. F.|and was calculated to Sretard re-! get something—it is a mighty good |& fy 1 “orl tana Hp rly Gay Condon. The mystery man moved on |covery, if we guess correctly what the | pi.” Leg iglec nf Oy oelpierrnd rt Fee ts Ges. ee and dropped his handkerchief, appar- | edministratioin | contemplates.” Ty 18 fame .* shouted | trated the border conten |Peld here ‘Friday afternoon at the re. i =~ liga B slgual lo She FAMiNms 60> sone Urine ran J Ped S " A. ——a i nia tions Ttallan sources said, however, that |Masonio “remple. conducted by the ¥ Initial efforts to reach District At-|history of this or sny other democ-| enough,” he said, adding the legis. |More than 150 armed Reopen | Rime. Ces -Senree of ‘gotten Bite tomey Foley of the Bronx and other|racy,”.and then sarcastically 6Ug-| lature “is not making any sppropri-|Nave cupled the villgae of liar. |Meons, | natery officers for confirmation of the ar-|gested the whole bill could be sim-| ations for attorneys, medical men, or | 50 tenrary. beside his wit ticle were fruitless. Plified by substituting two simple ” sources said the occupation took sa sae At New York police sections: ‘ket. Monier Commieion, Place Jan. 29 and was believed to COANE, WDOa pearly. 38. seert however, the Lindbergh filling} “1.—Congress another” commission, |nlve b#e® 8 pert of the Afdub attsir, /old, died at » hospital bere veces four cabinets, was closed and |#4,880,000,000 to the president to Use! and we have enough commissions | uch, brought shout strained rela- ye LR ge oll stored away in the it. as he pleases. now—we're being lobbied to death,”|" premier fat si-| Surviving are three daughters and bly protesting who doesn’t lke 1¢ 18) concluded Jones. A. F. Bonser, 3. | tence concerning the nd his fu-|® ¢ Death. Gell Prepared Would Limit to One Yer | been the bill was /ture policy. He conterred with meta. , 1 {it Ehave to 69 to the electro chais,| _vandenberg spoke after Chairman (Continued on Page Two) | bers of the Fascist grand council. |'Trial of 18 Rioters “4 @ man.” Glass (Dem., Va. Hy . im ms bis atlorneys he delegnied the [tons commie, in charge of th bil Two Dynamitings in | Relief Worker Faces Under Way at Fargo ‘ Continued on Page Two |x neentttee to the house text, bt; ©ennsylvania Strike) Federal Charge Here rite, Feb 15S—(er—Trial of 18 from pas- ge patos charge: ‘ ‘Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Feb. 15. — (®) — with the Fargo coal strike got under- in its present form. Howard Peterson, relief worker, was State Mill, Elevator is , ot ee aeta ec wtrake of United | arfested here Thursday by G. H. Trim-|Way im Cass county court Thursday. by Board |cons agreed to fight for lime dl pleot Fargo, U. 8. deputy , Cl ey lg : 8 ference Anthracite Miners of Pennsylvania, af. moll as States Attorney A. R. Bei — bill to one year as against | +2. turbulent 24 hours in which two |°harsed with making « fraudulent |tin’ th Oto 10 ‘introduce » plece of Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 15.—()—|two from next June. men were shot dead and two others|Orde® 00 & relief check. He is being |ten, sttempisd ko inmuctoe & Disks Ot General P. O. Sathre, Theo- leaders faced an at- seriously wounded. held at the Burleigh county jail pend- | Yt) 8 So" neen used as @ club in an dore Martell, State of] tempt by Re-|""rrhe blasts, both in South-wilkes- | 98 ® Preliminary hearing. alleged attempt to force an ice crew Agriculture and Labor, and ©. 1.| publican senstors to toss the bill back | parre, ripped away porches and front], commodore Halvorson of Minne-|/, Ti To’? eres attorneys ob- Orvedal, secretary of the state indus-| into the hands of s committee with | Goor5’ of homes of miners who are|*P0lls was taken into custody upon). ah Win snipe ) instructions At there, | members of a rival union, the United |"meeags "my cma, Mate penibenaary ee of the state mill and elevator Thurs-| A bi-partisan bloc hoped thane | Mine Workers of America, police re- Aawtrom’ ands Beng ned for Be Governor Walter Welford, Sathre| committes to alice the measure uP | PSS ce was injured, police said, but Pepi county authori and Martell constitute the industrial| into its two component perte $4 | sera, James Martin, wife of one of the |murninry charge at seimnecpeln’ He board, which has charge of the mill. | 000,000,000 for public works and $880,- | miners, was treated for shock at her| waived extradition ted ie bene held [| | Welford was detained in Bismarck by| 000,000 for relief — and report the | nome, ‘The other explosion was st| 2: the county jail. ie Board members said no changes in Both men are employed by the Glen | the mill's personnel would be made at| | The ides, they said, is to pess the| aigen Coal Company, whose collieries | Supreme Court Quiet Farmers of North Dakote, | present, The commission members| $880,000,000 quickly so relief needs! are attected by the strike, police said. On Gold Case Ruling) m2‘ ,ct, 4, seating destruc: ’ will return in March for an official ghia hy bg fg Hon by last Aa ad \ on works part, which con- — paring to raise a new “crop” NEW DIESEL MARK president preme court noon Priday ‘Harris Robinson, state FERA Dette bene Fa, Foe Relief Administrator Harry L. Hop- Washington Service| pte orate ote is the told engineer, said Friday farmers —Dave Evans, Indianapolis race driv-| kins, who places the total number “ sites of the cases. The sessions Friday will be throughout the state are propar- er, set & new world record for Diesel now receiving rellef from the federal | A joint, commit ‘ ‘tn tatse|the last the couft will hold this week. ing widual irrigation proj- motored cars Friday, averaging 126.-| government at 20,000,000, said he Fuego Ry ‘Unless the decision is handed down! ects, by which they hope to be 065 miles an hour for two runs| didn’t know where relief money was | residing of the lwo assem |Iater Friday, it could not come down) able to obtain crops even though through the measured mile of the| going to come from after $100,000,000 j bites to Prepare services for the anni-|a¢ @ regular session until Monday. | the state may be struck by con- ; course where Sir Malcolm Campbell | allotted for February was exhausted. |versary of George Washington's birth- tinued dry spells. : hopes to lift the sutomobile speed (Continued on Page Two) day, February 22. REPRESENTS TAYLOR In the western part of the state, record to 300 miles an hour. Members of the committee ap-| Taylor, N. D., Feb. 15.—Miss Lyls| some farmers have reported to him, ROUT CALIFORNIA STRIKERS {pointed by Speaker William Crockett/Tammen will represent the Taylor] Robinson said, that they : DOUG AND ‘LADY’ SAIL Jackson, Calif, Feb. 15—(?)—Two|are Representatives L. L. Twichell of| schools in the Slope declamation con- RNG SAD i Casi London, Feb. 15. — (©) — Dougias| hundred armed deputies Priday burn-|Cass, Ben Fedje of Williams and R.|test to be held at Richardton. She water is close to the sur- Fairbanks, Sr., and Sylvia, Lady Ash-|ed and demolished the field head-/R. Scholl of McLean. President pro|will present the reading, “Blue For-| face, with distribution to/be ob- ley sailed from Southampton Friday |quarters of striking mine pickets at|tem A. 8. Marshall, appointed Sen-|get-me-nots.” The winner in the] tained by pumping, over contigu- on the East Asiatic Liner Europa for|Kennedy flat in California's historic {ators 8. 8. McDonald of Burleigh,|Slope contest will go to the county] ous areas. the Virgin Islands and the start of a|mother lode country, after first scat-|Thomas Whelan of Pembina and O.|event and the county winner will be Through irrigation, which . has world jachting cruise. tering come 120 pickets-and strikers. B. Erickson of Kidder, : to the sinte- sranpatioms been attempted succreatully bar | ¥e=| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1935 NEUTRAL ZONE MAY ADJUST ITALO-ETHIOPIAN CRISIS Possibility of adjustment of differences between Italy and Ethiopia after both governments had mobilized troops In a new war scare arose when it was reported a neutral zone between Ethiopia and the Italian colonies of Somaliland and Eritrea would tog established. The dis- puted boundary between Ethiopia and Italian Somaliland is circled by heavy biack line on the map. Emperor Haile Selassie (left) 1,000,000 Ethiopian troops ready to ney, any Italian invasion. Troops, similar to those mobilized under orders of Premier | | reputedly had Mussolini (right), are Closing Four Schools | Bottineau Institutions Hit by Move i |SEE SAVING OF $831,720 | Buildings Would Be Utilized for) | | i | Other Essential Purposes of State Closing of four state schools of North Dakota, which it was claimed | would effect a saving of $831,720 over {the next biennium, was recommended Friday by the senate sub-committee f the committee on taxes and tax laws. The report recommends the closing ‘of the Valley City and Mayville nor- mal schools, the Ellendale normal and industrial school and the Bot- ‘ tineau School of Forestry. | In addition, the committee recom- mended the Ellendale school build- ‘ings and property be turned over to | the state training school at Mandan {and converted into a girls reforma- Might Be Deeded to U. S, Two recommendations were made in connection with the School of Forestry at Bottineau. The first pro- posal of the sub-committee was that the school be discontinued and build- ings and property turned over to the San Haven tuberculosis sanatorium, or in the event this plan be deemed inadvisable, the school be closed and buildings and grounds be deeded to the U. 8. government as an addition to the Northern Great Plains Field Station, near Mandan. The Valley City normal school also would be closed under the recommen- dations and its buildings would be turned over to the state hospital for the insane. Mayville normal school would be closed, if the plan is carried out, dur- jing the biennium, and the buildings |used to care for the overflow from the Grafton state school for the feeble-minded. ; Students at Valley City normal would be transferred to normal schools at Dickinson and Minot, to the state university and to the agri- cultural college. The change at the Valley City normal school was rec- (Continued on Page Two) Irrigation Being Taken Seriously As Farmers Battle to Beat Drouth thing! ommended because “the situation at|Men giving their names as J. J. Bug- the insane hospital is deplorable. It/ran of Remer, Minn., and H. G. Han- HHTLER WILLING 10 DISCUSS PROPOSED EUROPEAN AR PACT i ' iParley Among Nations May! Lead to Other Agreements | on Non-Aggression Berlin, Feb. 15.—(\—Nazi official- |dom sees in the Anglo-French pro- | posals for a western European air pact possible solution of the conti- nent’s gravest. problems. This attitude was manifest Friday as Reichsfuehrer Hitler assured the! | French and British ambassadors he | was ready to discuss the Proposed | pact. ‘These discussions, official quarters believe, may lead to other agreements of a military and non-aggression | character, likely not only to relieve} | European tension. but also to break down the wall of pacts threatening the Reich's borders and answer the | Jong-puzzling question of Germany's} armament status. | This view was outlined in Deutsch | Diplomatische Korrespondenz, which | generally is regarded as reflecting the government's opinion. “The utterances of government of- ficials, during the last months re- garding the points raised in the Lon- ; don communique.” the mouthpiece | said, “show Germany's attitude is; positive in an attempt to forestall an | armaments race and the danger of | war, i “The London communique contains suggestions which are not, to be ac- cepted or rejected, but about which all interested powers can confer. Some Problems like security in eastern and southeastern Europe already have been widely discussed.” While Germany conceded its will- ingness to discuss the proposed serial defense pacts, 1t, showed little interest in the suggestions advanced in Lon- don that she contemplated her return to the League of Nations, join a French - sponsored eastern security agreement and adhere to the proposed central European non - interference pact. ‘Death Trap’ Trailer | Driver Under Arrest Wor ton, Minn., Feb. 15.—(?)— son of Perth, N. D., were held Friday as driver and helper of a “death trap” trailer that nearly caused the deaths i Bugran’s car with the trailer behind stalled on the fog covered highway Thursday and one of the poles on the trailer was Trader tonights Bakurday alts The Weather PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S.Curb on Red Menace Asked LAWS 10 PROTECT NATION FROM PLOTS OF ALIENS ADVISED Committee on ‘Un-American’ Activities Uncovers For- eign Propaganda TONS OF NAZI LITERATURE Charge Soviets With Violating Pledge by Harboring Revolt Groups Washington, Feb. 15.—( = lation to protect the United’ States from foreign “pt da” and re- volutionary activity was recommended to congress Friday by a house com- mittee which spent more than « year investigating “un-American” activie ties. In its unanimous report to the house, the committee, headed by Rep. McCormack (Dem. Mass.), charged in effect that Soviet Russia has vio- lated its pledge -egainst harboring .|8toups which advocate the overthrow of this government. It reported that tons of Nazi prop- aganda have been smuggled into this country. and complimented “twenty- odd-million Americans of German birth or descent” for resisting efforts “to bring them into the Nazi pro- gram.” Legislation Recommended These recommendations for legis- lation were made: 1. That all publicity, propagands or public relations agents of foreign governments, foreign political parties or foreign commercial firms be re- quired to register with the secretary of state. 2. That the secretary of state be empowered to shorten or end the stay in this country of a temporarily ad- mitted foreigner if he disseminates Propaganda or engages in “political” ork. 3. That the United States nego- iate treaties with other nations for deportation of undesirable aliens to their native lands. 4. That it be made unlawful ¢@ advise soldiers, sailors or reserves tq aisobey their laws or regulations, Outlaw Rebellion Plots 5. That United States attorneys be empowered to prosecute persons wha refuse to testify before congressional committees. 6. That is be made unlawful “ta advocate changes in a manner thag incites to the overthrow or destruce tion, by force and violence, of the gove ernment of the United States” or any state. In the 15,000-word, 24-page report the investigators repeated some of the testimony obtained in hearings throughout the country, and presente ed separate summaries dealing with Naziism, Fascism, Communism, the “Silver Shirts”—which they said were Patterned after the storm troops of Germany—and other organizations, HIGHWAY PATROL IS PROPOSED FOR N. D. Bonzer to Introduce Bill in Sen- ate; Calls for Person- nel of 10 to 50 A bill to establish a state highway patrol in North Dakota with a per- sonnel of from 10 to 50 men was ready for introduction in the senate Friday by Senator A. F. Bonzer, of Richland. The proposal calls for appointment of a superintendent of the state high- way patrol by the attorney general, who is made supervising head of the department. Consent of the governor to the ap- Pointment must be first obtained, under provisions of the bill. The superintendent would be removable at the pleasure of the governor. The bill also authorizes the attorney gen- eral to select, with the consent of the governor, an assistant superintendent. of the patrol, also removable at the governor's will. Bonzer said he would introduce at the same time a companion bill to set ‘up a system of drivers’ licenses in the state. Each license under the bill s

Other pages from this issue: