The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1935, Page 7

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| a TINE CONVICTED; Smile Plays Over Emasculation Slayer's Face as Jury Returns Verdict Chicago, Oct. 1 0) —Mandevitte|. ‘W. -Zenze, convicted of the emascula- tion°*¢laying of the man who married his sehool day sweetheart, preserved hia .characteristic inscrutability Sat- urdsy as he faced the prospect of life imprisonment. A giant smile played over Zenge’s tage when he heard a criminal court Jury's verdict of guilty with a recom- mendation. of a life sentence Friday night. Court gttaches said he was even lesx emotional than at any other time during the trial. Joseph Green, counsel for Zenge,! announced the verdict would be ap- , Judge Cornelius J. Harring: fon set, Oct. 25, for hearing on a new trial. ‘The reserve which neither the po- ce nor his former sweetheart, Louise Ghigffer, could break down appeared almost indifference as Zenge -heard| the penalty demanded for the crime which caused the death of Dr. Walter J. ‘Bauer, 38-year-old professor at Kirksville, Mo, After the verdict was! delivered Zenge walked with his/ guards in the rapid, jerky manner, ee = and shoulders back, with | hich courtroom spectators had be- came familiar during the nine day The 23-year-old widow of the slain teather—Mrs. Louise Shaffer Bauer, ‘was not present, Nor was Mrs. Alice Zenge, the defendant's mother. tavading Italian __News Photo) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, ¢ OCTOBER 19, 1935 | HEAVY, GUNS PROTECT ITALIANS IN -ADUWA ADVANCE “PAGES LIFE TERM, ring the advance on Aduwa, rees moved forward into Ethiopia upder the protection of he: one, shown belng moved up by a tractor . bs Sie oharar _ made In the war zone, after hostilities tl This picture was one of the firat started, to reach the United States. (Associated Press—Paramount Dotor Has Little Snack Of Plate Glass in. Court! | Weather Report |) css ve, ow, »<@Sa joa eaimted se tal entered ‘WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Increas: tnpe cloudiness tonight and Sunday; . somewhat warmer Sunday. | k cloudiness tonight | A Sunday; femevtat warmer Por ‘E ‘South Rhy kota: General) feir tonight and! Sunday; Aelita igh and ex-} treme east por- tion ee hae J For Mont Unsettled tonight, feier. east portion; Sunday general- tobe a2 Sundey; iain some whet, warmer Sun dey. WEATHER CO! CONDITIONS A jag ure area is centered over t Lakes region, 8, 8.! Stetie 28: 72, ettite high pressure areas overlis the southern Rocky Mounts tain | and pale aren Pre princes Cal ihibareat weath| some iia unsettled, in the north- Border states, Canadian Provinces and alon the Pacific ¢ coast, but else- where skies are. mostly clear, Mode-) rate sseepeio oo in all me rometer, inch- ce fpeduned hy sea, sea level, 30.07. lssouri river mage, £ lg a. m.: 3.2! ft. a hour change. 0. Sunrise today 10 As ” mm, Sunset today 5:49 5:49 p. m. Weather Outlook os on Period oan 1 to 26: For ti lon of the Great Lakes: | ba prscl tion likely first part o! not : hee sy auch change in tempera- por the ‘set and low- per Mississippi ex Missowut Valleys: Some preci oa badle first part of wee! 5 portion. generally {air other- wige; temperatures near normal. the ner nerthesn and central Great plains: Genseally fair weather; near nogmal temperature: PRECIPITATION k Station: te ; tiated excess to to date NORTH DAKOTA SrearEe -- “Pct. | 00 porting his testimony that a small) jamount of glass can be eatert without danger, Dr. Mosby G. Perrow, Lynch- burg director of public welfare, calm- ly chewed and swallowed a fragment ‘of plate glass before astonished jurors; 7 and spectators in corporation court. He had been called as a defense witness In @ suit for $5,000 damages brought by Mrs. Bertie C, Conn ‘against the W. T. Grant Co., Inc. Mra. fragments of glass while eating pea- nuts purchased from the company's store here, and had suffered injury. The physician testified that some jot the harder glass used in chemical laboratoires might prove harmful to diners, but that the usual sort can be chewed and swallowed without in- jury. The defendant company won the Jury's verdict. CONTINUED Italy, Engiand d and France Discussing Misunderstandings the act of enforcing sanctions voted by the league, refusing to follow the {prin blindly. Laval'’s stroke was considered & mas- terpiece by his friends, for it was hoped that Italy would approve of it. London, however, continued openly Dessimistic about peace in Africa and announced reorganization of the Brit- ish army high command. Apparently oblivious to the momen- tous events in European diplomatic cireles, bayonets continued to bristle on two Ethiopian fronts while Em- peror Halse Selassise’s warriors and the Italian northern army pointed jall their energies toward a probably decisive battle—the first of the war— at strategically situated Makale, some 60 miles southeast of Aduwa. Ethiopians Def A delayed dispatch from Asmari Eritrea, told of a sharp clash nea of | Omager last Tuesday when Ethiopian forces attempted to invade the Italian colony. The Ethipoians suffered heavy losses as they were repulsed. in'The fight occurred along the Setit river, marking the western end of the Eritrean frontier. Many Ethi- pple chieftains and their followers in the Omager region were reported to have surrendered to Italian autho- ities. At Geneva the League’s sub-com- mittee on sanctions was reported to 3 have approved the British-sponsored move for an embargo | against _ impor- \square miles of Ethiopian territory, tations by League states from Italy in an effort to force Italy to abandon \its invasion of Ethiopia. Coupled jwith this sanction was one to place; Somaliland to a junction at Harar, some 230 miles in an airlane east and slightly north of Addis Ababa. Terrain Is Hazardous Military men believe the Fascist armies have chosen to operate in some of the world’s worst terrain. The entire interior area is knifed by deep ravines and studded with mountain peaks which will tax the brains and physical energies of the Italian forces. The general Ethiopian communication. From Rome came word that Gugll- elmo Marconi, inventor of the wire- Jess, will sail soon for East Africa to give his country the benefit of his in communicating between the front and Rome with a secret genius radiophone, his latest invention. \Sharply Increased {an embargo on all key products. The |general sanctions committee of 52 members, representing the member- ship of the League, may these two moves before. th the end of the day. domestic situation which, in the event of failure, might have split France| politically. Britain Gets Message Laval’s reply to Britain was expect- ed to satisfy both the left and right groups. Not expected to be delivered to Downing street until Monday, it was shot across the English channel] Friday night on the eve of the sena- torial elections Sunday, when Laval will stand for re-election. Whether the note would satisfy Britain was another question, French officials agreed. Today, as the war is in its third week, the Italians occupy about 4,200 an area 60 miles deep and, roughly, 70 miles wide. The announced ob- Jective of the Italian command, heed- ed by Gen. Emilio de Bono, is Makale. Ethiopian chieftains, sald Addis! Ababa dispatches, are sanguine of the outcome of a clash in that area on account of the difficult terrain. The southern Italian army, anxious to proceed from Italian Somaliland, has been plagued by rain, but advices from Asmara said the Itelans were about to occupy Gorahel, on the march northward. The general Italian offensive plan! of campaign is to push southward/ program {from Eritrea and northward from} Hog Raising Planned| Washington, Oct, 19.—()—Sharply epprove | increased hog production, up to the maximum under the corn-hog pro- Back of Laval negotiations was a/6tam, may be permitted by the AAA next season. ‘To meet a shortage of hog supplies, arm administration officials have in nae a@ plan whereby production would be boosted to the so-called base period figures. base period quotas, Regently, Secretary Wallace fixed a 30 per cent increase in pork next year as the goal of the farm administra- The bureau of agricultural that there will be a 25 per cent increase | tion. economics estimated, however, without a control program, Wald Named Acting Zeeland Postmaster Washington, Oct. 19.—()—Conrad | A. Wald has been appointed acting postmaster at Zeeland, N. D., accord- ing to Postmaster General Farley. i City and County 8, H. Albert of Washington, D. C., representative of the underwriters section of the federal housing admin- istration, was in Bismarck Saturday going over special phases of the FHA in North Dakota with Ray Reichert, state director. ETHIOPIAN ‘MACHINE.GUNNER TRAINS HIS SIGHTS sel picture, yr In ep eypmeegey region vss Briere as Itallan forces in their invasion of the coun. Selassie ensconced ra 8 cactus-hidden machine-gun plan of campaign is to draw the enemy into the interior, away from his lines of In the past, reduc- faons have been ordered from these TRANSIENT BUREAU POPULATION is LESS) Declines from Peak Registra-| tion of 4,106 in August to 899 Sept, 21 North Dakota's transient bureau population decreased by more than 450 persons between Sept. 16-21 when registrations were closed, leaving 899 persons on the latter date, C. A. {Narum, state director, announced. Since registration closed and mov- ing of men to work camps at Botti- neau and Bismarck began, more than 150 men have checked out leaving a transient population of approximately | ¢, 720 in North Dakota camps and bu- reaus now. This will be further de- creased by an enrollment of approxi- mately 40. transients in the CCC, Narum said, The decrease is in line with the na- tional trend, Narum reported, as 2 Washington survey shows a decrease in 32 states against an increase in 17 during this five-day period. The greatest decrease was in California where 2,000 less persons were regis- tered. North Dakota’s transient popula- tort reached its peak in: August, 1935, when 4,108 persons were registered. Of this number a large percentage were young people wandering around dur- ing summer vacations. Of those transients in North Takota now 107 are unemployables for whom both na- tional and state officials are trying to work out some plan of care, as ail em- ployables are being transferred to work camps at Bottineau and Bis- marck. Narum expects the Bottinean camp to be finished by Nov. 1, Transients there will then start work landscap- ing @ quarter section of land near the camp overlooking Lake Metigoshe for @ park, Between three and four years will be required for this work, the sald. Housing facilities at the Bis- marck camp will be finished about. Nov. 15 or Dec. 1, although the camp won't be ready until February. How- ever, at least one shelter will be kept ‘open in Bismarck to house the sick, Narum said. CONTINUED from page one’ Scores Injured as 60th Tremor Rocks Montana’s Capital by slipping masses of rock along -a fractured zone deep in the earth. CANADIAN POINTS SHAKEN BY TEMBLORS Calgary, Alta. Oct. 19.—()—In- creased reports of earth tremors at the same time Helena, Mont., was rocked by an earthquake came from several Canadian points Saturday. A tremor was felt distinctly on the upper floors of Calgary buildings and in houses on hills surrounding the city. Several persons reported the higher buildings swayed slightly for two or three minutes.: Slight tremors also were reported from Milx River, 10 miles north of the international boundary, and Pin- jcher Creek, 40 miles north of the ,beundary in the southern Alberta | foothills. QUAKE EVIDENCE ; OF MOUNTAIN BUILDING Pasadena, Calif., Oct. 19.—()—The Montana earthquake is just another jevidence that mountain building is i going on in the Rockies of that re- gion, the seismological station of the Carnegie institution of Washington here reports. “Until 1925 Montana was not re- garded as an earthquake. region,” said Dr. Charles Richeter, seismologist, “then the major shock of June 25, 1925, occurred. That gave evidence that it was a region of strong seismic disturbance and seismological stations were established, “While it is the general story of | mountain building, and it is evident the center of Friday night’s shock was not far distant from Montana, the precise mechanism is not yet deter- mined.” AIRLINE STATION DISABLED BY QUAKE Billings, Mont., Oct. 19.—(#)—North- west Airlines, Inc., announced its Helena station was disabled by the earthquake. Company officials said they ordered a westbound transport plane, due in Helena early Saturday, not to land there if the airport is not illuminated. \Labor Officers Guard Employment Figures Washington, Oct. 19.—()—While the American Federation of Labor complained that lengthened work hours were hindering re-employment, administration officials kept close guard Saturday on statistics upon which President Roosevelt will base his decision whether to recommend new NRA legislation. The statistics, showing to what ex- tent industry has abandoned wage and hour standerds of the deceased codes, were flowing in from 700 field workers all over the country, but no disclosed was ae its “monthly survey of business this week, the Federation said pro- duction had increased 8 per cent this year over last, but employment and workers’ income had not been raised. ce BS Asmara, Eritrea.—Count Galeaszo Ciano, aviator soh-in-jaw of Premier Mussolini, says seven Italian planes have cracked up in landing due to the rarefied atmosphere. New York.—Shouting “Duce!” about 300 Italian volunteers sailed Saturday on the linet Rex to join Mussolini's army. A cheering crowd estimated by police at 4,000 bade them farewell. Toronto—Paul LeDuc, Ontario min- ister of mines, Friday announced « gold discovery appearing “favorable for prospecting,” in the northwest! corner of the province. Midway Island—Rising easily from the base channel water, the 19-ton | lit Pan American clipper seaplane de- parted for Honolulu Saturday on the semi-final hop of her round-trip jaunt from Alameda, Calif, to Gaum. Washington—A decline in building activity during September was re- ported Saturday by the bureau of la- bor statistics, but the month’s con- struction work still exceeded that of ® year ago by 88 per cent. Rome — A proclamation issued by Gen. Emilio de Bono, commander in chief of the Fascist forces in East Africa, at Italian army headquarters on the northern front, said Saturday, slavery was abolished and all slaves freed in Ethiopian territory con- quered by the Italians, Chicago—Lead poisoning from va- Pors created by the use of discarded battery cases for stove fuel was blamed Saturday by Dr. David A. Koransky of the Cook county hospital for the deaths of Shirley Widick, 3, and her sister, Irene 5. London—Great Britain intends to maintain. her battle fleet in the Med- iterranean, authoritative sources said Saturday, despite an easing of the Italo-British tension and a definite understanding with France. Asmara, Eritrea—Itallan sources were advised the Ethiopians south of the area now held by the Italian ex- Peditionary force are preparing ac- tively for a counter-offensive. Scores of automobiles loaded with munitions are said to have arrived from Addis Ababt at Harar, 160 miles inland from Djibouti. Racine, Wis.—The first fatality of the hunting season which opened Saturday was reported Saturdey morning near North Cape, Wis. Henry Carrington, 52-year-old farmer, died instantly of wounds suffered when he was accidentally shot in the back by a hunting companion. Minneapolis—Carl H. Fredlund Sat- urday pleaded not guilty to a charge of perjury in his trial for third de- gree murder growing out of the death of Mrs. Walter P. Busch, in a colli- sion. St. Louis—James E. Boyle, profes- sor of rural economy at Cornell uni- versity, branded the policies of the AAA as “economic insanity” Saturday at the convention of the International Association of Milk Dealers. St. Paul—A statutory board of ap- peals Saturday ordered reinstatement of Police Patrolman Arthur F. Haes- sig, dismissed Aug, 1 on charges of misconduct and neglect of duty. The board held evidence did not sustain the charges, which alleged specifical- ly receiving bribes for protection of slot machines. Twin Hills Golf Course, Oklahoma an City, Oklahoma City—Scoring amazing upset, Alvin Krueger of loit, Wis. defeated . Gene Sarazet ee | em LICENSES PUT ON SALE HERE Skunk, Badger, Mink, W and Fox May Be Taken During Winter Season Trappers’ Ucense for taking skunk, badger, mink, weasel and fox hai been received at the offices of County Auditor C. G. Derby and are available to Burleigh county Only North residents may get the litenses. The fee is $1, and two other state residents must wit- ness the application. Traders’ licenses are also available for buyers, traders or travelling buy- jers of furs or pelts. Resident buyers’ licenses cost $5, a non-resident license $25 and a travelling resident buyers’ bay. & INSsed fo A, WAKE en abot during open season on his farm with ND, YOUTH ADVISERS TO MEET IN CAPITOL Committee Represents Agrioul- ture, Business, Labor and Education Members of the newly appointed the exception of beaver in which case state advisory committee for the Na- ideied peaean, tonal Youth administration will be there is a permanently nest Sunk and badger may be taken WEA witee Hons on muskrat and raccoon closed this year and the oar ab and beaver seasons are permanently closed. Furbearing animals may be trapped or shot by farmers when they become pests, but the pelts may not be sold. In this connection, beaver may be trapped and the hides sold after the landowner receives a license from the state game and fish commissioner. Livestock Holds Own Despite Range Losses Ranges and pastures in North Da- kota deteriorated slightly during Sep- tember but little change occurred in the condition of livestock, according to the Oct. 1 range and livestock re- port of the federal government. Moisture reserves, depleted by last year’s drouth, were low despite ace cumulated excesses since Jan. 1 with the result that growth was retarded during the last month. Feed is abun- dant in the state and winter range Prospects are good, however. Cattle and sheep ere in better con- dition than they have been since 1928, and ideal feeding conditions have resulted in remarkable gains in/ weight. Financial circumstances may| force many sales of cows and old ewes which otherwise would be held report said. Youth Walks Without Aid to Electric Chair Michigan City, Ind., Oct. 19—(#)— Twenty-che-year-old Richard Chap- man walked unassisted to the electric chair in the state prison a few min- utes after midnight Saturday morns ing, and paid with his life for the murder of an Ainsworth, Ind., farmer, He was convicted of killing Henry Igoite during a robbery on New Year's Eve, 1933. He was the second young- est person to be executed here. Nolte because the farmer had wronged his childhood sweetheart. He also told other versions of the crime. New museums have been built at the rate of one every 15 days, during the last 12 years in this country. ranking favorite, 2 and 1 in the sec- tournament here Saturday. | Marshall, Minn—Shot in the eye 15 minutes after the season opened at noon today, Chad Ogden, Chamber ‘of Commerce building, Minneapolis, was the first hunting casualty here- bouts. for building and replacing herds, the ‘s Chapman once claimed he killed! with 1 tablespoon cold ond round of the P. G. A. national) Representing labor, education and youth the North Dakota committee of seven members includes Senator John K. Alexander: Marks, Harry Rilling, Fargo; Arthur Themp- son and Russel Young, Bismarck; Clarence Klusmann, New Salem and Mrs. E, 0. regen Enderlin. is a prominent McKensie county farmer, a state senator, and if youth. Thompson, state superinten- dent of public instruction, has devot- ed his life to young people and served es county superintendent of ii in crumbs, dip in egg TUL Prohibition enforcement cost the United States almost $1,000000 monthly. IMPORTANT AZMSADP US AZPoOr MrPAzonamyv EQUITY REQUIRED Steady employment in Bismarck essential. ‘$500 Balance—Net Cost—1 Year. .$28.00 $400 Balance—Net Cost—1 Year.. 23.00 $250 Balance—Net Cost—1 Year. . NOTICE It is not necessary to seleet your automobile be- fore you arrange to pay for it—with cash. Co-makers not required on automobile loans, BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA meer Is Here! Churchill Motors, Inc. 14.50 AZPw OP ZOKK>Z dome mm

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