The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 6, 1935, Page 1

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vic.| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 Senator Cutting Dies in Plane Crash Millions Honor King George at Silver Jubilee BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, MAY 6, 1935 LOYAL SUBJECTS IN |Last Chapter Written |(RASSROOTERS OF ALL PARTS OF VAST} In ‘American Tragedy’) MIDWEST SET DATE EMPIRE PARTICIPATE Monarch Kneels In Prayers of Thanksgiving for Comple- tion of 25-Year Reign CROWDS CHEER PROCESSION Colorful Pageant Opens With March From Palace to St. Paul’s Cathedral (Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press) London, May 6—While millions of loyal subjects throughout the British empire celebrate? his silver jubilee in mingled carnival and solemnity, King George V knelt in prayers of thanks- giving "Monday for completion of 25 years on the throne. Both the king and Queen Mary were plainly thrilled by the nation’s fervent outpouring of love and devo- tion as they entered St. Paul's catte- dral to worship amid scenes of medie- val pageantry. Outside the ancient edifice, cheer- ing thousands, many of whom had stood all nignt for the opportunity to pay tribute to their sovereign, jam- med the route of the royal procession from Buckingham palace to St. Paul’s. Red Incident Mars March A single untoward incident marred the triumphal march. Midway @ ing until Monday night when it will be placed on top of » huge bonfire Hyde park to be ignited when the presses an electric switch in Bucking- ham palace.; Loyal and devoted aarsaipeoe of King George filled London to overflowing to honor their monarch on the com- pletion of @ quarter century of his the day warm, with the city bathed in mellow sunsbine. By 8 a. m. the main thoroughfares and side streets along the route of the royal procession were packed trom shopfronts to the curbs. A carnival spirit pervaded the multitude, inter- mingled with a deeper, more solemn note of reverential loyalty. Fourteen thousand soldiers, sailors and members of the royal air force and 12,000 police struggled to keep the crowd within bounds. Scotland ‘Yard put 9,000 uniformed men on the streets in addition to nearly 1,000 plainclothesmen. In the city of London, where 8t. Paul's is situated, the regular force of 1,100 police was augmented by 500 Peps officers from the provinces and 500 special constables. Seventy wel trains poured an estimated 25,000 additional celebrants into the Peeing in the early morning. wearing (Continued on Page Three) Evangelical Meeting At Mankato ( Concluded convention, opening April 28. appointments for the com- AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY i erste: sitet H Hy A. Edwards. Dies Potinsylvania Electric Chair for Slaying of Girl Rockview Prison, Bellefonte, Pa., May 6.—(®)—Robert Allen Edwards, playboy of the anthracite fields, walk- resed in Mississippi Fri- the black cap fell over his head. day Told to Court steadfastly into the house at 12:30 a. m. (EST) and ute later the first contact was 2:34 a, m. Dr. J. C. Weixel. said: “ Robert Allen Edwards ze H H i ff Eg ge E an f i I & & 8 E g i ie E young $e Shake <aeneriand Atha. AP: RAMEY Mee eee vetient came. in tne “jcourse of an address to 130 other German pilgrims. He expressed the hope that they would receive “better treatment” than youthful Return Here Tuesday w. J. Pansies, state highway and Frayne Baker, were expected to re- FOR BIG OFFENSIVE Call on ‘Aroused America’ to Give Vigorous Battle to ‘New Deal’ WILL MAP 1936 PROGRAM Roosevelt Charged With Fan- tastic Experiments Re- tarding Recovery Chicago, May 6.—(#)—Republican leaders from nine midwestern states Monday set June 10 and 11 for the “grass roots” party conference at {Springfield, Ill, in a call for an “aroused America” to give vigorous battle to the Roosevelt “New Deal.” “The battle is not only to end the depression,” said the call, “but also to preserve our very institutions.” Charging the Roosevelt administra- tion had created conditions “so in- tolerable and so serious as to be be- yond mere partisan politics,” the com- mittee laid out for the conference a two-fold task of formulating plans for rejuvenating the Republican party nationally and proposing a “construc- tive” program for the 1936 presiden- tial campaign. President Roosevelt was charged with having plunged the nation “into 8 series of fantastic and experimental The, small company, minus Russell, entered the yellow, unpre- schemes, the zesult of which has been and disappeared. The End. ROBERT A. EDWARDS BREMER préseribed by the signers of the call FOR GANG, from the respective states, provided they are “unselfish Republicans” who to retard recovery and mire the coun- try more deeply into despair.” Charge Promises Broken ‘The conference at the shrine of Lincoln, the committee said, - will —|have nothing to do with candidacies, “nor the personal ambitions of gny. men or set of men.” Selection “of conference delegat \J waa: aut thorized in a manner to be are “in accord with the purpose and principles of this announcement.” The Republican leaders declared every major promise made by Presi- dent Roosevelt tad been “broken and shamelessly repudiated” and said his Part Played by Gangster Ar-| record “presents such political perfidy as to shock the conscience and rock the very foundations of democracy.” situation has received the serious thought of Republicans everywhere. problems have been carefully consid- ered. The unanimous decision has bese to immediately give vigorous bat- ‘The call did ot fix a quota of del- egates, leaving to leaders in the par- ticipating states the selection “within reasonable limitations as to numbers.” Tt has been suggested that each state send 15 delegates for each congres- sional district. Appointment of Sveinbjorn Johnson, One-Time Resident of Bismarck, Is Announced ‘Former \- fending fer Eleutherlos Venizelos, exiled lead- | member of the state board of canvass- er of the ill-destined Greek revolt,jers in 1920. He is a member of the was under sentence of death Monday |North Dakota and American Bar as- for the part he played in the. upris- ing. ‘ Honored on Twenty-fifth Anniversary of Reign BY, The Weather Partly cloudy it and Tues- Gay; cooler A PRICE FIVE CENTS THREE OTHERS LOSE LIVES AS BIG SHIP FALLS IN MISSOURI Nine Passengers, Six of Them Members of Motion Picture Unit, Seriously Hurt BOTH PILOTS ARE VICTIMS Huge Transport Flies Helplessly in Heavy Fog Attempting to Find Field Atlanta, Mo., May 6—( Bronson M. Cutting of New Mexico and three others were carried to their deaths in a fog-bound TWA trans- port plane near here Monday morn- ing. Nine passengers, six of them mem- bers of a motion picture production unit eastbound to make a film at Annapolis, were injured rent taken to @ Macon, Mo., hospital, 15 miles from the scene of the crash. The dead: U. 8S. Senator Bronson M, Cutting, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Pilot Sake — Kansas City. CO tet TI 7, KING GEORGE QUEEN MARY Entire Railroad Retirement Act Held Unconstitutional PRESIDENT SET FOR ENDURANCE CONTEST WITH CONGRESSMEN Executive ‘Indicates F He Has No Objection If Session Lasts “The Democratic party, as it has been known by ne history, eae and declarations ceased to exist,” BULLETIN said the announcement. “It has com- &t. Paul, May 6.—(4)—On motion of pletely and abjectly ignored its obli- the government, the charges of con- gations and abdicated in favor of Mr. spiracy to kidnap Edward G. Bremer | Roosevelt, and his retainers.” against Mrs. Edna Murray, known as the “kissing bandit” and Jess Doyle, Nine States Represented self-confessed bank robber, were dis- missed. After moving for the dismis-|of national committeemen and wom- sal, the government rested its case.jen and state chairmen and vice-chair- Mrs. Murray will be returned to the;men from Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, ‘Missouri prison from which she es-|Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebras- caped while serving a 25-year term|ka, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin, head- for robbery while Doyle is to be held|ed by Harrison E. Spangler, Iowa na- Jon charges of participation in the/ tional committeeman. Third Northwestern National Bank} “For several months,” it said, “the robbery at Minneapo! St. Paul, May 6—(?)—Harry Saw-|In these prairie states numerous arrested in Mississippi Friday | meetings have been held and the 5 to 4 Decision, Read by Justice Buildin i , g Section Roberts, Upholds Lower Starts in Tribune Starting with this edition, The Bismarck Tribune offers a new weekly feature—a building, hous- ing and real estate section. Through the building season, this building feature will appear in Monday editions of The Tribune. It is the hope of the editors that these pages will be of immeasur- able value to home owners who plan to modernize their hofises. Each Monday The Tribune will carry stories on suggested im- provements, with recommendations for materials, etc. This also affords builders and mate- rials dealers an opportunity to get. their messages before prospective The building feature appears on Pages 6 and 7 of this edition. ‘The call was issued by a committee CARRIERS SAVED BILLIONS Directed Especially at Section Including Employes Not in Interstate Work ‘Washington, May 6—()—The entire railroad retirement act affecting more than a million employes Monday was held unconstitutional by the supreme Washington, May 6.—()—The leg- islative situation was being pictured in terms of an endurance contest Monday as congress entered another week with the Roosevelt program still The word was circulated on Capitol Hill that President Roosevelt had in- dicated he had no objection to con- gress staying in session all summer, if that was necessary to get his pro- The decision was 5 to 4. Justice Hughes wrote a dissenting opinion in which Justices Brandeis, Stone and Cardozo joined. The decision was read by Justice Roberts. It upheld a lower court rul- ing which declared the act invalid. ruling was directed especially at that section of the act| stam which made it apply to all employes of interstate carriers including em- ployes not directly engaged in inter- state commerce Invalid Phases Inse| Justice Roberts, in delivering the opinion, stated the invalid features of the act could not be separated and that it was necessary to declare the whole act invalid. He said the law, in addition, was not a regulation of interstate com- merce, and was invalid also for that passed. With a smile, he was said to have remarked that the White House had an air-cooling system as well as the capitol, and that he would be as cot fortable in the hot weather as » The Democratic chiefs said the White House had indicated @ belief that the situation is not one to necessitate any compromise in the president’s program. Almost any day now, nature may begin to turn on the heat in Wash- ington. When that happens a con- gressman’s fancy usually turns to home. Whether hot weather would prompt congress to speed up its work on the president’s program this year remained to be seen. The big show Monday was in the senate, where legislators said all signs pointed to an administration defeat on the bonus. The senate seemed intent on passing, perhaps on Wed- nesday, the Vinson or Patman bills for full and immediate payment, de- spite threats of a veto. ‘The house droned along with minor legislation, expecting to take up on ‘Wednesday the omnibus banking bill which would increase the govern- ment’s control over ‘The word is said to have gone from Capitol Hill to the White House that after the bonus is out of the way, the president's proposal to extend NRA for two years was likely to win over the senate finance committee plan to lop the eagle's wings considerably and prolong its life only until next spring. The senate finance committee be- gan considering the president's social security bill in executive session Mon-| graph company officials said the Former State Jurist Is Illinois Relief Director The opinion also specifically men- tioned sections of the law under which retirement annuities were to be commuted 1n part by including the time spent in the service by the present employe prior to the enact- ment of the statute and by which for- mer employes who withdrew from the service within one year prior to its enactment were included among those entitled to the law's benefits. The District of Columbia supreme ||court, to which carriers took their objections to the law, also had held Justice Roberts delivered the court's decision without reading the printed opinion which he stated was long. He declared principal features of the act were designed to promote the advantages of certain classes of em- ployes and not to regulate interstate Gives Dissenting Opinion In a vigorous dissenting opinion, Chief Justice Hughes said the ma- jority decision was a “departure from sound principles and places an un-) day. warranted limitation upon the com- merce clause of the constitution.” He said the conclusion that con- gress could not enact pension legisla- | tion is “of such serious and f (Continued @n Fage SVEINBJORN JOHNSON by Frank C. Walker, executive direc- tor of the council. Johnson succeeds John E, Cassidy, who resigned to re- turn to private business. FARM EXPORTS DROP MORE Washington—A further decline farm exports for March: was reported Monday by the agriculture depart- ment. Exports in March, the bureau said, were 45 per cent of the pre-war volume, compared to 75 per cent in March, 1934, and 67 per cent in March, MRS DIONNE, 26 Callander, Ont., May 6—(P)—Mrs. | peal to listeners to demand defeat of Oiliva iDonne, mother of 10 children,| American adhere’ “ \ World nom are world renowned, | Court. At that cel, degrame Monday observed her 28th huthaps- j Poured in. \ BRONSON CUTTING tnNea: chest eee dios, critically injured, jaw and lef’ leg crushed, severe loss of blood. William Kaplan, West Los Angeles, Cal., assistant to producer of Paras mount studios, broken leg, condition reported favorable. Mrs, Kaplan, with fractured back, paralyzed from waist down. Henry Sharpe, Los Angeles, Parse mount cameraman, superficial cuts and bruises. Mrs, Dora Metzger, of Los Angeles and Port Washington, Long Island, N. Y., fracture of right leg and face and body cuts. Baby Metzger, 15-month-old daughe ter of Mrs. Metzger, fracture of left lpgrandouta about: ie t40e ane am Mrs. D. L. Mesker, Kansas City, wife of a TWA pilot, slight injuries, Hurrying Back to Capital Senator Cutting was hurrying to ‘Washington from New Mexico to vote Monday on the bonus bill. His body was identified by a billfold in his pocket, News of the prominent pro- gressive Republican’s death caused a shock in his home state and in the national capital. All in the hospital were ‘seriously injured except Kaplan, whose hurts were described as The accident occurred about six miles west of here in caaped cons: country where emergency landing conditions had been rendered hazardous by re- cent rains. ship over the Kansas City airport at 2:56 (Continued on Page Three) Late News Bulletins (By The Associated Press) FLANDIN ENDORSED Paris—Endorsement of the gov- ernment of Premier Pierre- Etienne Flandin was indicated on returns received Monday from Sunday’s municipal elections. HUGH JOHNSON TO SPEAK Mayfield, Ky.—Western Kentucky awaited expectantly the arrival of General Hugh 8. Johnson, the princi- pal speaker at a political rally here Monday night sponsored by the young men’s Democratic clubs of eight west- ern Kentucky counties. Arrange- ments had not been completed for a broadcast of the speech, as had been announced. CANNON PROTESTS ARREST Washington — Representative Raymond J. Cannon, Democrat, of Wisconsin, protested to the su- perintendent of capital police at having been held incommunicado for three hours in a police cell early Monday after having been booked with companion on charges of drunkenness and dis- orderly conduct. BONUS WIRES SWAMP SENATORS ‘Washington — ‘unprecedented deluge of telegrams landed on the desks of senators in response to Sun- day’s radio plea of Father Charles E. Coughlin of Detroit, urging support for the Patman cash bonus bill. Tele- number of messages exceeded the vol- ume which descended on the senate as the result of the radio priest's ap-

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