The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1935, Page 1

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, 9 | North Dakota’s | Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 2 Killed THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1935 N.W. to BIWARCK'S HAVEN OF NERCY FOUNDED JUST 50 YEARS ACO Leading Catholic Ciergymen to Participate in Golden An-' niversary Sept. 19 TO HONOR SISTER BONIFACE Highest Prelate of Church in Northwest, Archbishop Mur- ray, to Take Part Bismarck and all of western North Dakotas will join next Thursday in celebrating the 50th anniversary of St. Alexius hospital, grown from a humble institution with only a few beds to one of the largest havens of mercy in the state. Leading clergymen of the Catholic church and laity will take part in the all-day program ar- ranged by a local committee. But the real guest of honor will be Sister M. Boniface, superintendent of the hospital for the last 42 years and the moving spirit in its development. Representing the state of North Dakota will be Gov. Walter Welford, scheduled to appear in Minot that day, but who will make a hurried trip back to Bismarck to appear on the 8t. Alexius anniversary program. Representing the Catholic church, under whose auspices the hospital was founded, will be His Excellency, Most Rev. John Gregory Murray, archbishop of St. Paul and the lead- ing prelate of the Catholic church in the northwest. Wehrle to Participate Most Rev. Vincent Wehrle, bishop of Bismarck, and other church dig- hitaries also will participate. : The celebration will begin formal- ly at Ow: th; Sept: I> 8l high Mass in 8t. Mary's cathedral with Bishop Wehrle as cele- brant. Archbishop Murray will preach the sermon. PB At noon there will be a joint meet- ing of all Bismarck service clubs and of Bismarck’s business and profes- sional men and women at luncheon {in the World War Memorial building when Archbishop Murray again will be the speaker. Sister Boniface and the hospital staff will hold open house from 2 to 5 p. m., at the hospital and invite all of their friends and friends of the institution to attend. Music for the reception will be furnished by the Bismarck high school orchestra un- der the direction of Clarion E. Lar- yon, Public Me Set : The celebration close with a public meeting at the city auditorium at which Archbishop Murray again | Rose, chairman of the board; a vocal solo by James Guthrie, Justice state supréme court, and the arch- The meeting singing of “Auld Characteristic Style to Be at Philadelphian = {continued or deferred 20 Further Evidence in Story That Clouting Californian Rallies in| board Leading Figures in St: Alexius Golden Anniversary Fete MOST REV. JOHN GREGORY MURRAY Thousands of friends and ad- mirers throughout the northwest next Thursday will pay tribute to Sister M. Boniface, for 42 years superintendent of St. Alexius hospital, North Dakota's oldest asylum of mercy and at the time of its establishment the only hos- pital between Bismarck and Min- neapolis. Archbishop Murray of St. Paul, highest prelate of the Catholic church in the northwest, will speak three times at various affairs in connection with the golden anniversary of the hos- pital’s establishment, and Bishop Wehrle of the Bismarck diocese will celebrate the pontifical high mass which will inaugurate the festivities. . SISTER M. BONIFACE Three Injured As G..N. {MINNEAPOLIS TORCH SINGER SHOT Mt Held After Violent Death of Evelyn Hoey Freight Rams Second HIS RELIEF PROGRAM Blinded by Light Hopkins Appears to Have Edge Over Ickes in Launching Employment Drive DEAD IN BENATIONS WILL NOT SANCTION FORGE IN ACQUIRING LAND Netherlands, Sweden, Belgium Minot, N. D., Sept. 12.—(#)—Two men are in hospitals here and a third has bruises as the result of a train wreck which occurred on the Great Northern railroad about: one mile west of Minoi shortly before 10 p. m. Wednesday. A branch line local freight train of 49 loaded cars coming toward Minot crashed into the rear end of a main line local freight on a long siding. a. itenson, fireman, has & fractured pelvis, and R. Giffen, brake- has his left leg fractured in two (Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press) Downingtown, Pa., Sept. 12.—Eve- ——— e lyn Hoey, 25, singer -of sore songs Hyde Park, N. Y., Sept. 12—(7)—|to Broadway, Paris ani ndon,| p| uy Prelecat Raneevels Tempped his gi-| was found shot to desth early Thurs. | Pledge Support to Covenant, gantic works relief program Thurs-| day on the floor of a bedroom of the’ Back British Policy day to meet declared rots pearl country place of Henry Huddleston ¥ tions:at a conference with \- | Rogers, Jf. cipal leutenants. At her feet lay # pistol. On the (By the Associated Press) ‘All chiefs, including the two oppo-|bed was another.. And in a cormer| A group of Europe's most powerful nents—Secretary Ickes, public works 2 of the room, leaning ; small nations came out unequivocally administrator, and Harry L. Hopkins, against the wall, was|in the league of nations assembly a sawed-off shot gun.| Thursday against the employment of works progress aainipitea te eee a ae Sg Ape The girl is a native|/force as a means of acquiring the of Minneapolis, territory of others. ’ ence table. The president adh realy to ead that the prime ne ity. just now Rogers, 29-year-old| Statesmen of The Netherlands, Bel- making jobs quickly through the four gium and Sweden—the last under- ;| billion dollar fund with the constant stood to represent all the Scandin- idea of turning over workers to pri- avian countries—pledged their na- tions’ loyal support to the league of nations covenant, thereby backing the vate industry as business picks up. policy pronounced Wednesday Therefore, it looked like Hopkins, advocate of temporary work, had the Bri by Meee Hoare, Great Britain’s foreign secretary. edge over Secretary Ickes, champion Support of the league, in the face of permanent public works. Frocsevell. nes told Devaepene he prefers see permanent pul improvements but nevertheless he re- by Fe ae ee gards it necessary to. provide quick C. De Graeff, foreign isospin’ Jobs under the works legislation of Netherlands ote E ral van <a lum, and by Richard These quick jobs he apparently Sandler, forel ter of Bw Force was added to Sandler's dec- does not believe can be satisfied by lice said Rogers had been drinking fhe Doe pene laration by the fact that he under the care of Ickes, because of ga the tragedy occurred after He is aiming at removing 3,500,000! Ory was the sta nt of - persons from relief rolls to work by|tin, a farmer employed by Rogers, nm, : ag ROGERS who died last July, was brought to jail here for question- ing and was held on a technical charge of suspicion of murder. With him, and held as a material witness, was Willian J. Kelly of Union City, New Jersey. Rogers Drinking: Both Rogers and Kelly said the girl had killed herself after a violent quarrel with Rogers. She had been @ house guest for about a week. Po- brought the injured to hespitals. GUNMMER’S APPEAL - DBOIION DELAYED Sathre Heard in Texas Re- quested by Board Incomplete evidence Thursday de- layed a decision of the state board of pardons over the appeal of William Gummer, convicted murderer of Ma- November and has set a deadline for|Who was in the house. He said that | Rogers and Kelly never left the couch ho gaa Bote ine en | find. 9 in the living room until after they heard the shot upstairs. : On the other hand the authorities Colonel Lindbergh considered the following remark of the cl eur, 10, Baffled Reporters in answer to a question: St, Paul, Sept. 12—(P)—Star local| « gont see how she could have reporters, sorely perplexed about the ‘snot herself. still I can’t express my. whereabouts of Col. Charles Lind-|ooinion, because I don't know.” | h on his recent visit to Minne-; ; 2 sota, now hope that the ace flyer will have nothing to say in his memolys about slipping into their offices and using their typewriters. "ihe newspeper offices: he. visited a girl in @ Fargo hotel in 1921. Bet renteeet lates here. decided it wished further sup-|" ‘rt develops that the colonel spent much of the time during the to Le uted fi jester of 13, ng of Black Widow Spider Captured at Amidon ‘pardon, i yur merman, how on parole after his con’ for the “torture. robbery” a, : MOST REV. VINCENT WEHRLE Long’s Slayer Chosen By Lot, Friends Think |berry, expressed conviction that the ts|friends and foes of the “dictator” ‘clergyman and national organizer of x an- ee ie ieee ~ Congressional Inquiry Asked as! Louisiana Prepares to Bury Huey Today Baton Rouge, La., Sept. 12.—(#) —Thousands paid silent tribute Thursday to Senator Huey P. Long, as one source indicated Gov.. Eugene Talmadge of Geor- gia might be invited by Long’s -“share-the-wealth” clubs to run for president in 1936. (Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press) Baton Rouge, La., Sept. 12—(P)— Leaders of the thousands who loved Huey Long proceeded Thursday to bury the slain senator and then de- termine whether he had been assassi- nated as the result of a conspiracy. The Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith, chosen to deliver the funeral oration, first called for a congressional in- vestigation. He said Wednesday night he believed disclosure of the facts behind the killing would “shake the nation.” Long’s secretary, Earl Christen- senator’s assassin, Dr. Carl Austin Weiss, had been chosen by lot. “I believe they drew straws and Weiss lost,” he said. Promises Investigation The district attorney promised a thorough investigation. While two grayediggers spaded into the moist soil of a sunken garden ad- joining the skyscraper capitol that Long built, while thousands filed past his bier in the rotunda of that cap- itol and more thousands swarmed in- to Baton Rouge for the funeral, drew up their lines to battle for con- trol of the state. - Gov. O. K. Allen as titular, head of the Long machine is pledged to carry on the doctrines of the dictator; his enemies have declared they will fight. Smith Asks Probe Mr. Smith, former Shreveport Long's share-our-wealth clubs, nounced he had called on Joseph W. Byrns, speaker of the national house of representatives, to order the con- gressional inquiry. Byrns recently designated a com- mittee with authority to inquire into Louisiana politics to determine whether “republican form of gov- ernment” was not destroyed by Long’s dominance and legislation. ‘His action was in conformity with & house resolution, generally intended to permit inquiry into congressional elections, but so broadly worded that is provided for a Louisiana investi- gation. The funeral was set for 4 p. m. Ritual Is Simple 4 : : a 8 ; [ : i id i i i F i E i i i in Minneapolis Riot Fete St. Alexius Hospital at Celebration Three Near Death; 30 Others Nursing Wounds Declares Human Life Warfare Shot Through Heart as He Flees Gas Minneapolis, Sept. 12.—()—Bark- ing guns of last night's riot numbered among the victims Eugene Casper, 18, orphan formerly of Devils Lake, N. D., shot as he fled the danger zone. Casper, son of the late George Cas- per, plumbing shop owner at Devils Lake who died last year, went to the trouble scene at the Iron Works Wednesday night with a group of friends. Suddenly tear gas drove them | away with thousands of others. Guns boomed, and Casper fell, shot through the heart, a block and a half from the plant. An ambulance took the body to General hospital. His companions apparently escaped un- harmed. “He was just a spectator, with friends, when the police threw tear Gas,” said his sorrowing cousin, Mar- cella Anderson. “Naturally, he ran. He was shot in the middle of the street.” Henry Anderson, uncle of Eugene, planned to attend the autopsy Thurs- day. He was uncertain as to demand- ing an investigation. “If I thought I could do anything about it, I certainly would ask for one,” Anderson. said. “I know a fel- low who claims he was standing right beside a policeman he said fired the shot.” Casper, who recently left high school to enter a vocational school for a commercial course, lived here with his aunt and uncle and a grandmother, Mrs. Bertha Lambrecht. Close Works or I Will, Olson Says St. Paul, Sept. 12.—(?)—Gov. Floyd |B. Olson announced at noon Thurs- {Gay that if Minneapolis police fail in an attempt to halt strike rioting by closing the Flour City Ornamental Iron Works, he will declare martial law in that area, and force evacua- tion of the plant. A large detachment of Minneapolis Police acting under special orders of Mayor Thomas E. Latimer, was re- Ported moving early this afternoon to evacuate and close the factory. Mayor Latimer informed Gov. Olson by tele- Phone that the movement was being started immediately. If the attempt should fail or if court action to prevent police closing the plant should be taken, then state See beta be imaarred An, che goreinor, Adjutant General E. A. Walsh, and his staff were prepared to move a battalion or more into the strike area within less than three hours’ notice. Olson to Investigate ‘The governor will make a personal investigation of the scene of the strike, “Saving human life is more impor- tant than saving property,” he said Thursday morning. “There is one That is by clearing out the plant and sealing it.” Three persons are in what physi- cians described as “extremely critical condition.” They are Fred, Walter Hager, 50; Oliver Glass, and Frank Vinette, 32. (Continued on Page Two) OFFICIALS’ COUNSEL WILL PROBE REPORT Attorneys for Kelley, Helgeson Ask More Time to Study Alleged Shortages A request that further time for Scott Cameron, his attorney, here Thursday. John F. Sullivan, Mandan, appear- ing for A. H. Helgeson, deputy sher- oda Kelley’s regime, joined in £5, i E j i li ki 3 & i B it Governor Olson Considers Military Rule as He Saving Property; May Close Firm Devils Lake Orphan Watching | Pelting Rocks Convert Scene of sure way of remedying’ the trouble.) tne sir, PRICE FIVE CENTS of Battle More Valuable Than Peaceful Picketing Into Bloody Battlefield Forestal sald “we closed the in another of bloody strike rioting. inj sntie ‘Thirty persons were injured third successive flare of violence at area firing tear gas guns wherever knots of persons gathered on the streets. Two hours before—at 11 p. m.— their peak and followed with shouts of “let ‘em have it.” Many persons were beaten, others shot. As police charged the fleeing fig-

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