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« = a [| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. - ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS . Tigers Presid x *k * xk * x * * | FIRST CHAMPIONSHIP IN SLUGGING BATTLE Goose Goslin Drives Mickey Cochrane Home With Win- ning Run in Ninth TOOK FOUR OF SIX GAMES Lead See-Saws Throughout Tilt; Both Clubs Pound Out 12 Hits Cause of Accident Undetermin- ed as Ship Reported Ex- cellent Flying Weather WRECKAGE FOUND AT DAWN msiee ty ue JAS EXPLOSION RENDS BUILDING IN CHICAGO i Navin Field, Detroit, Oct. 7—(7)— ” Detroit’s Tigers won their. first world baseball championship Monday, beat- ing the Chicago Cubs, 4 to 3, in the deciding sixth game, a slugging duel with the lead changing half a dozen times before a howling, thrill-soaked crowd of 48,420. The Tigers won the serles by four games to two as the veteran Goose Goslin drove home Mickey Cochrane with the deciding run in the ninth inning. The tide shifted back and forth, finally settling with the dogged Tig- ers as Larry French, Chicago south- paw, and Tommy Bridges, curve ball righthander who had already pitched one victory, locked in the deciding duel under almost perfect weather conditions, and before the greatest crowd in Detroit’s baseball history. Surging Sheet of Flame Puffs: Out Walls Like Paper, Trappihg 40 Persons Calif., co-pilot, Alameda, Calif. Cheyenne, Wyo., Oct. 7.—(AP)— Twelve persons aboard an eastbound United Air Lines mail plane crashed to their death about 15 miles west of Cheyenne early Monday morning, it was announced at the air lines offices at 7:30 a. m. The dead included nine passengers and Pilot H. A. Collison, of Salt Lake City, Co-Pilot George Batty of Den- The issue was always in doubt up!Ver and Miss Leona Mason of Salt to the ninth and starting that ine |Lake City, stewardess. ning the Cubs had « tremendous! The following passengers were kill- and fon = ts eeibe into Gar Bi lorce the’ ito & final sev- enth game tomorrow. 7°" |” a Saae baseball forces. re- C. H. Mathews, Jr., Pittsburgh. turned to Detroit to find near balmy John F, Cushing, Evanston, Ill., weather and a capacity of 48,000 on] president of the Great Lakes hand for the sixth world series game.| Dredge and Dock company of Tigers Rely on Bridges Chicago. The Tigers, leading by 3 games to Roy R. Dane, en route from Salt Lake City to Chicago. 2, relied on Tommy Bridges, slim Vincent Butler of San Fran- cisco. Chicago, Oct. 7.—()—Six persons were known to be dead and 28 injured in a roaring explosion at the Glidden Soya products company on Chicago's west side Monday. A surging sheet of flame enveloped the structure, puffed out the walls like paper and within a few minutes re- duced most of the building to a pile of smoking ashes. ‘ The probable death list was given first as 25, as it was not known how many employes were in the building. Later it was established that probably 40 were in the building at the time. Screaming ambulance and police sirens, the shouts of panic-stricken mothers, and the moans of the hurt caused a scene of indescribable con- William F. Dozier, a laundry truck driver, said he was knocked to the ground three blocks away by the force of the explosion. The blast rocked a territory almost a mile square, Freight cars on a sid- ing adjoining the building were blown right-hander, to pitch them into the championship with a revamped line- ‘up. With Larry French, a southpaw, picked to hurl for the Cubs, Detroit benched the light-hitting Jo-Jo- White, center fielder, in favor of Ger- ald Walker, a right-handed bats- man, Herman (Flea) Clifton, substitute third baseman, was moved to the Jead- off spot in the Tiger batting order, with Walker batting sixth, just be- hind Pete Fox. e Big Hank Greenberg, who had hoped to return to the game despite the fact this is Yom Kippur, the day of atonement for the Orthodox He- brew race, found that his arm was not fully recovered from the injury he suffered in the second game here. Greenberg appeared in practice but Marvin Owen remained at first base for the home team. In Lineup Big Chuck Klein, whose home run provided the margin of victary for the | ficials. Chicagoans Sunday, was again in the Cub lineup, with Freddie Lindstrom on the bench. Lindstrom hurt a fin- ger in the fourth game. The weather was much warmer but skies were slightly overcast. e The appearance of the umpires and the announcement of George. Mor- Miss Juliet Hillman of Pitts- burgh. Walter B. Crandall, Associat- 9 ed Oll Co., San Francisco. Helen Warren of Chicago. second floor of an adjoining building, was knocked down and dazed by the blast, as he clambered to his feet he said he saw screaming, blood-covered men staggering from the building. He said he saw one man lying on the ground with a one-ton fly wheel on Reports at 2:17 A. M. x * Fake Labels and Revenue Stamps Used by Ring Oper- ating Out of Fargo Mike Guon, Mandan resort opera- tor, is one of 24 persons in an alleged liquor ring named in federal indict- ments accusing them of violating the federal internal revenue laws, it was made known at Fargo late Saturday. Harry Lashkowitz, assistant U. 8. district attorney, said the alleged rum ring was one of the largest ever uncovered in the northwest and that trial of the persons indicted will be in Bismarck here, probably in Novem- ber. Names of only 10 of the 24 persons indicted were made known. Identity of the other 14 will not be made public until they have been arrested, federal officials said. All told, five indictments were re- turned. One of them covers all 2¢ defendants. The others apply to les- ser numbers and involve specific off- enses, Used Fake Labels Guon, in an addition to being ac- cused in the general conspiracy, is charged with conspiring to remove untaxed from the warehouse of the ring in Cass county to the Bis- marck area. It is alleged large quan- tities of illegal Mquor were made or rectified at the plant in the Fargo area and that fake labels and revenue stamps were used on the product which was widely distributed through- out North Dakota. Heading the alleged syndicate is Arthur A. Barenson of Fargo, already serving a term in the North Dakota prison here on a liquor charge. Others accused are Maurice Weiner, Henry Thoe, Elmer Augustad and Ralph (lim) Nelson, all of Devils Lake; Harvey Erickson, McIntosh, Andy Milkes of Fargo and Minnea: polis; Ted Cowan and Tony Perrone, Fargo, and Lyle Roth. The latter is in Leavenworth on a liquor charge. All of the men named are either in custody or have been arrested and released on bond. Five Operated Piant The rectifying plant, which appar- revolt to a conference at which he imps * kk *& nt Orders Arms Embar x * * '.*Two Armies Mass for Major Battle DETROIT CAPTURES |12 Persons Crash To Death In Liner West of Cheyenne Mandan Man Among 24 Indicted As Rum Barons xk tk TRAVELERS WARNED | 10 KEEP OFF SHIPS OR ITALY, ETHIOPIA Persons Doing Business With) Belligerents ‘Do So At Their Own Risk’ Council Accuses Duce of Breaking League Obligation 75,000 Italians Occupy Aduwa Without Fight; Selassie Rallies Tribal Warriors 20 Miles From Rome’s Legion GOES BEYOND LEGISLATION Mussolini’s Columns Also Advancing Into Ethi- opia From South; Emperor Leaves for Front; War Fears Spread in Europe Geneva, Oct. 7—(#)—It was reported in League circles that Baron Pompeo Aloisi, Italian representative at the League of Na- tions, had rejected a plea by Premier Laval, of France, that Italy immediately cease hostilities against Ethiopia. Proclamation Marks Distinct Reversal of America’s Policy in Past Washington, Oct. 7.—(?)—The Unit- ed States was fully embarked Monday ‘upon a precedent-shattering neutral- ity policy capped by a formal proclam- ation by President Roosevelt admon- ishing American travelers to keep off vessels of Italy and Ethiopia. As the 17,000 men of the coast guard and customs service took up the task of preventing any shipments of Amer- ican arms and munitions to the two embattled nations, diplomats in the world’s capitals were busy studying the president’s triple move over the week-end, Besides proclaiming the embargo and the warning to travelers—two steps provided for in the recent neu- trality legislation adopted by con- gress—the president went beyond the text of that legislation in another move. He declared in a statement that Americans who engage in “trans- actions of any character” with‘either of the belligerents will “do so at their own risk.” This marked a distinct reversal of policy. In the past the United States has argued for the right of neutral citizens and commerce to “freedom of the seas.” The warning to travelers was is- sued Sunday night after the presi- dent had made his other two moves late Saturday night. Since Ethiopia has no merchant marine, the latest proclamation affects only the ships of Italy. The effect of this proclamation on the ships of Italy has yet to be cal- culated. Dispatches from New York quoted shipping men as saying that the effect of the Italo-Ethiopian quarrel already had been felt on previous trips of the Italian line’s two big express liners, the Rex and Conte de Savoi. First class cabin lists on those trips were described as smaller than usual. Paris, Oct. 7—(#)—A favorable French reply to the British re- quest for military cooperation in the Mediterranean “under » condi- tion of reciprocity” was made public by the French foreign ministry Monday. (By the Associated Press) To halt the Italian advance, Emperor Haile Selassie massed his tribal warriors in the north and south of Ethiopia Monday, coincident with the action of the committee of six of the coun- cil of the League of Nations in declaring Il Duce the aggressor. The committee reported Mussolini resorted to war in dis- regard of his obligations under the covenant of the League. The council met to consider the report and discuss the imposi- tion of sanctions against Italy, probably of an economic and financial nature at the outset. This decision followed the completion by President Roose- velt of the precedent-shattering neutrality policy of the United States. In Ethiopia, the first major battle of the war—a war with- out the benefit of a declaration of war on either side—was in the making. ‘ Aduwa has fallen. The main Italian army of 75,000 on the northern front occupied this northern metropolis Sunday. It was here that, 40 years ago, the Ethiopian warriors slaughtered the Italians. BURDICK CHARGES | While consolidating their position about Aduwa—on the plateau along the rim of a vast mountainous area— the Italians were prepared to meet main column of Haile Selas- sie’s warriors. The Ethiopians were some 20 miles away. The battle may come at Ma- kale, 20 miles to the south and east of Aduwa. The Italian army in the north was divided. The right column was en- trenched about Aduwa. The left held Adigrat, to the east, which also fell to the Mussolini legions. RERUTED BY KOTHS ‘Made to Obtain Votes,’ Sioux County Man Says, An- swering Congressman ROOSEVELT SATISFIED WITH PROCLAMATIONS En Route With President Roose- velt on the Pacific, Oct. 7—(#)—Pres- ident Roosevelt was represented Mon- day as being satisfied his proclama: tions had sealed the United States’ neutrality in the Italo-Ethiopian con- flict. Heavy swells on the Pacific put the CORRESPONDENT DIES Addis Ababa, Oct. 7.—(?)—The body of Wilfred Barber, corre- spondent of the Chicago Tribune and first American casualty in the will be buried Fort Yates, N. D., Oct. 71—(P)— Charges of Congressman Usher L. Burdick that Fort Yates Indians are starving, are “greatly exaggerated and made to obtain Indian votes,” State's Attorney Irving Koths said Monday. No Indians are starving, although many are receiving federal aid, Koths said, adding he had made a personal investigation of the charges made by Burdick. “He goes too far when he makes statements like thi Barber died Sunday of malaria and complications. Other American newspapermen selected for his grave a quiet grove on the summit of the Eucalyptus clad mountains around the capi- tal. Say Province iarty’s name through the loudspeak- , | referring to Burdick’s assertions. Occupied apparently is making them to obtain) An Italian communique, distributed ers was @ signal for an outburst of Indian votes. Indians needing food|in leaflets dropped from airplanes, booing by the Detroit.crowd despite and clothing receive aid at the fed- {declared the northern Tigre province, the fact that the arbiter’s arguments eral reservation office.” of which Aduwa is the metropolis, 1. C. Lippert, superintendent of the} had been lost to the Ethioplans. Fort Yates reservation is away on a| From all indications, Mussolini’s plan is to join Eritrea with Italian Officer Dies Subduing Drunks in Auto Seat 5 Sioux Falls, 8. D., Oct. 7.—(P}—A police captain was dead, one man was| 5 in @ hospital. and two men and « woman were being held here Monday apart. The explosion flattened out sageway leading from that building Mrs. Cathcart of Portland, Ore. |” Richard Bourgerie, working on the until the department of commerce * | top of him, dying. Henry Horner called leaders of the The first battle of the strike occur- lot nearby, destroyed an aerial pas- three small nearby brick buildings, be'determined, company officials said, At » Harold Crary, vice president of tion administered last rites to the Horner Intervenes in Chicago, Oct. 7.—(#)—While fresh milk shed producers’ strike, Gov.! D. Carbary of Kane county caused the sded his orders against milk wagons. Surrenders to: Police Moorhead, Minn., Oct. 7.—(#)—Po- automobile from Guelph, N. Aberdeen, 8. D. All will be Henry Saunders pleaded not guilty to charges of unlawful entry into the United States. DRAYTON BEATS ST. THOMAS as the aftermath of a hand to fight when two officers men late Sunday on charges en driving. Police Capt. G. A. Saville, 47, in the rear seat of a patrol car attempting to subdue two of the af cg fusion. several dozen automobiles parked in a to several others and wrecked at least The cause of the accident cannot completes its investigation. it . A chaplain from a nearby fire sta- Illinois Milk Strike violence blazed Monday in the Chicago arrest of 20 pickets when they al- legedly disregar further violence and attacked retail £ é t 5 Guild Favors Uniting With U. S. Labor Body St. Paul, Oct. 7—()—The Twin .— Cities unit of the American newspa-| Washington, Oct. 7.—-(#)—CCO per guild Sunday announced its ref-|cials Sunday announced October erendum on guild affiliation with the D including both Federation of Labor ‘fav-|ried recruits and World War were 3,360 in Minnesota, 864 in Bismarck Launches $12,000 Community Chest Campaign trip, and subordinates declined to comment in his absence. BURDICK ASSERTS DISTRESS IS WIDESPREAD Charging that actual starvation ex- ists among Indians on the Standing Rock reservation, Congressman Usher L. Burdick Monday appealed to fed- eral officials to relieve what he as- serted to be widespread distress. In telegrams to President Roose- velt, Indian Commissioner John Col- lier, Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes, and Relief Director Harry Hop- kins Burdick said a coroner's jury at Fort Yates recently held that two Indian women had died of starvation jand exposure. Work relief set-ups make no provi- Somaliland. Between the two, on the coast, are French and British Somali- land. To unite them, the Italians would have to take a strip of Ethiopia from the south to the north along the eastern border. The Italian column in the south (in the desert province of Ogaden), was approaching from Italian Somaliland Monday. The Ethiopian warriors were also massing in the desert province. 10,621 Through Septem- ber, Figures Show INDIANS STARVING Win World Series, 4-3 gO * on Ethiopian Terrain ASHINGTON AYRARING DAKOTANS IN CAPITAL LONG FOR NATIVE HEATH Washington, D. C.—North Dako- tans living in the nation’s capital rec- ognize the manifest advantages of their residence here—but they also long for the air of their native state and the benefits enjoyed by those who live there. Salaries are high in Washington. Stenographers often start at $125 a month and few of any competence get less. The pay for other posi- tions is in proportion. Uncle Sam is @ good employer. But the cost of living is high, too. Washington never really had a de- pression, All the folks there know about it is what they experienced when they were back home or what they read about it in the newspa- pers. Curiously enough, the item upon which expatriates comment most is the food. They miss the succulent vegetables of their native heath; the chickens and turkeys with that in- imitable North Dakota flavor. “North Dakotans never realize what wonderful vegetables our state pro- duces until they come down here,” comments Judge E. T. Burke, former justice of the state supreme court and now an attorney in the depart- ment of justice. “We have excellent sea food but many of the other items are not up to the North Dakota standard.” . Judge Burke, though a Republican, still retains his office. At one time there was a that a good party man might his place but the New Deal, among other things, re- quired men with specialized experi- ence in land titles and land acquisi- tion. Judge Burke had it, As a re- sult there has been assigned to him much of the legal work involving such things as the acquisition of land for waterfowl refuges and other proj- ects, That constituted the major law business when he was actively prac- ticing in his home state and he knows the game inside out. Acquiring the right of way for @ highway or a rail- Toad, such as that built at the Fort Peck dam, might stick many a lawyer but it is old stuff to Judge Burke. * * * BENSONS MISS PRAIRIE TURKEYS Mrs. George Benson, wife of the Minneapolis Journal's Washington correspondent, comments that chick- ens and turkeys grown in Virginia and Maryland are inclined .to be tough and stringy. The Bensons look forward to the Thanksgiving turkey which has been sent to. them every year by James Milloy, organizer of the Greater North Dakota association and for many years its guiding gen- ius, They like it in Washington but always get a little homesick when they sit down to that well-browned bird which reminds them of the glories of their native prairies, Benson, by the way, is regarded as one of the best-informed newspaper correspondents in Washington, an ex- pert on the mistakes, vagaries and ex- travagances of the multifarious New Deal agencies. A Hoover partisan, he insists that Hoover will not be the Republican nominee for president in 1936, sees Senator Vandenberg of Michigan as a potential candidate with many assets which the Repub- licans could use to advantage. * * * SOIL LIGHTER THAN BIG MUDDY’s One explanation of the rather poor quality of vegetables raised in the District of Columbia is the character of the soil. It is of a lighter yellow than the Missouri river in flood time, more like clay than the black earth common in North Dakota. Looking over the gardens at Mount Vernon, the home of George Washington, one