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RS 8 a rat be ee) SOE REEV ULEL asa ERA SET ee ae = Oe ee ee ee eee ee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1986 ae ~MIRIPLE ALLIANCE IN - MAKING AS GERMANY STARTS OVERTURES Italy Sees Way to Forestall Sanctions by Link With Hitler and Austria (Copyright, 1936, Associated Press) Rome, Feb. 20. — Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler, rather than Premier Miuissolini, is taking the initiative in intense Italo-German diplomatic ex- changes, authoritative German circles said Thursday, in an effort to bring about a complete rapprochement. Suvich returned to Rome Thurs- Gay to report to Premier Mussolini personally on the progress of the ne- goliations. A spokesman for German quarters said Hitler had realized the third reich was isolated in Europe by the Franco-Soviet mutual assistant pact and by Franco-British military con- versations. Italy Isolated He realized ‘hat Italy also was iso- Jated by the operations of sanctions, being applied by the League of Na- tions as punishment for the Fascist | warfare in Ethiopia, this source said. The Hitler initiative in resuming the pourparlers with Italy followed a similar initiative by Il Duce several weeks ago in atten-pting to better re- lations between their two countries. Diplomatic sources attached signi- | ficance to the fact that the Polish ambassador, Alfredo Wysocki, left Thursday morning for his capital to recount to the Warsaw foreign min- ister his latest conversation with II Duce. Strengthens Defense The conversations between Fulvio Suvich, Italian undersecretary, and Egon Berger-Waldenegg, Austrian foreign minister, at Florence Wednes- day, while Ulrich von Hassell, Ger- man ambassador to Italy, made a fiying visit to Berlin, were interpreted in informed circles as @ move by Italy to strengthen its defenses against sanctionist nations. Rome diplomatic sources said they regarded prospects for an Italo-Ger- ™man accord as a particularly effective weapon against the sanctions being imposed on Italy by the League of Nations for the warfare in Ethiopia. NTINUE oe ONTINVED N. D. Near Normalcy As Communications Are Being Restored of a little over three miles. Death was attributed to severe cold and heart trouble. ‘Transportation delay because of the blocked roads contributed Thurs- day to the death of Edward Boeckler, 16-year-old farm youth of Karlsrhue community, who died of peritonitis following a ruptured appendix. He becgme ill on Monday but could not be taken to a Minot hospital imme- diately. Pekin Bachelor Dies Another death attributed indirectly to the cold was that of Jens H. Jen- sen, 76, who was found dead in his bachelor shack near Pekin in Nelson county.-The neighbor who found the body said there was plenty of coal in the shatk’ but that it was a flimsy, single-board affair and hard to keep warm. There was no telling how Jong the man had been dead. From South Dakota came a report of tragedy at Cedar Canyon. It was brought in by Clyde Ice, aviator who QUESTIONED IN | McGURN SLAYING McGurn, former Capone gangster, c: Press Photos) The remark “Well, they got him” attributed by Chicago police to Miss Mary Dickinson (right), shortly after gunmen slew “Machine Gun Jack” aused police to question her and her roommate, Miss Margaret Swift (left), about the slaying. (Associated Emancipator Faced Constitu- tional Fight That Almost Ended His Career Editors’ Note—Abraham Lin- coln faced a constitutional prob- lem not unlike those of today. What it was and how it was solved is told here by Charles A. Beard, dean of American histor- ians and political scientists. By CHARLES A. BEARD As the fifth decade of the nine- ham Lincoln sprang into fame on a constitutional issue. In 1856 the Republican party launched a national campaign on the proposition that slavery should be prohibited by congress in the ter- ritories of the United States. To this proposition Lincoln gave his approval. But the very next year the supreme court of the United States, in the Dred Scott case, declared that con- gress had no power to prohibit slav- ery. in the territories. This was a staggering blow to the Republican Party. By a single stroke the court had blotted out the principal plank in its platform, had destroyed its chief rea- son for existence. The party was seeking: te capture the federal ee ernment and proclaim freedom throughout the territories. The court had said in effect: Un- der the constitution this action can- not be taken by federal authorities. Why not amend the constitution and give congress the power which Republicans proposed to exercise? That sounded well in theory, but it was impossible in practice. No amendment can be made with- out approval of three-fourths of the states. Given the number of slave states in 1857, an amendment against slavery in the territories was out of the question. For Republicans who respected the supreme court and the constitution that was a challenge. It was a “hot had been flying the West Missouri country on missions of mercy and for whom a search was launched several Gays ago when he failed to return. Finds Lone Woman Ice landed at Cedar Canyon to find that a 65-year-old woman postmistress was the only living resident of the town and that she had been cut off from communication with the outside ‘world for more than a month. The only other resident of the town ‘when the storm broke was J. M. Ham- dltoh, 74, a retired missionary. The ‘woman awoke one morning to fina Hamilton's home had burned during the night and that he had perished in the flames. She was unable to in- form the outside world because the telephone line was out of order. Three North Dakota persons, miss- ing since Sunday on a trip from Minot to Parshall, were found safe in a farm house. They were Rev. George Gesell Herman Wenzel and the latter's daughter, Louise. Highway Patrol- men Emil Lundquist found them in ® farm house and notified friends . that they were safe. Residents of Platte, Lake Andes Geddes, Wagner, Scotland, Spring- field, Menno and Armour, 8. D., had bread Thursday for the first time in Several days. Bakers had no yeast until Pilot Al Jaster of Sioux Falls roared over them and dropped a box for the baker in each place. Montana's death list rose to 10 when Patricia Rice, 6, succumbed as her parents were taking her on a bobsled trom Lodge Grass, Mont., to Sheridan, ‘Wyo., for hospital treatment. K. C. Supreme Agent Visits Fargo Sunday Robert W. MacKenzie of New Hav- en, Conn, a supreme agent of the Knights of Columbus order, will ad- dress. two meetings of members in the club rooms of the Fargo Council eat Lincoln Meets Challenge Abraham Lincoln dared to pick it up and declare his principles and pro- gram. He said that he would obey the decision of the supreme court in the Dred Scott case. That was an obligation resting on every citizen. But he added that the supreme court had often reversed itself and that he and his supporters would seek to have it reverse the interpreta- tion made in the Dred Scott case. “will he appeal to a mob?” cried Stephen A. Douglas. To questions of this kind Lincoln replied simply, in substance: We think the Dred Scott decision wrong and we shall appeal to the people of the United States. In time, new judges could be ap- pointed by the president and the sen- ate, and a majority obtained tor a different view of the constitutiot Since an amendment was not th possible, a change in the member- ship of the court was the only way out for the Republicans. Appeals to Voters “Tampering with the judiciary,” screamed horrified Democrats, but Lincoln and the Republicans demand- ed another interpretation of the con- ituts | Hi stitution by a supreme court differ: plunged into a ditch, will be held ently constituted. On this point Lincoln was as firm as steel, and in strong words he ap- pealed to the voters for support. “Familiarize yourself with the chains of bondage,” he said, “and you prepare your limbs to wear them. Accustomed to trample on the rights of others, you have lost the genius of your own independence and become the fit subjects of the first cunning tyrant who rises among you. “And let me tell you that all these things are prepared for you by the teachings of history, if the elections shall promise that the next Dred Scott decision and all future decisions will be quietly acquiesced in by the people.” Without condemning the supreme court decision expressly, the Repub- ‘62 Bungay afternoon and evening.|lican platform of 1860 declared the mccording to C. H. Mergens, deputy, who will attend. Mr. Mergens has aided in securing services of Mr. MacKenzie, who is gated at key cities in several states gonferences connected with in- senecing. the Catholic activity pro- gtam of the supreme council. Matters to be given attention are member- ship, insurance, coordination of coun- cil activities and interchange of state doctrine laid down in the opinion to be contrary to the constitution, “re- volutionary in its tendency, and sub- versive of the peace and harmony of the country.” On this platform, Abraham Lincoln was elected presi- dent of the United States. Peril to People’s Rule In his first inaugural, President Lincoln paid his respects to the su- preme court. Its rulings in particular cases were to be obeyed so far as those cases ran, But he continued, “If the policy of the government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the supreme court the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rul- ers, having to that extent practically teenth century drew to a close, Abra-| Lincoln Obeyed Court’s Ruling Then Won Fight For Anti-Sl avery Laws resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.” What President Lincoln and the Republican party would have done about this constitutional issue if war had not come, nobody knows or can ever know. What they did do amid the war is a matter of record. In 1862 they pushed through con- gress ‘and enacted into law a bill prohibiting slavery “in the present territories of the United States and in any that shall hereafter be ac- quired.” Law Is Overriden The constitution was unchanged. The Dred Scott decision stood. Chief Justice Taney still lived. It was written in the law books that congress had no power to prohibit slavery in the territories. Yet con- gress and the president prohibited slavery in the territories. Not content with this defiance of the past, Lincoln decided to strike a mortal blow at slavery in the states. Under the constitution only, each state acting alone, “within its own sphere,” could vote slavery up or down. Neither the president nor con- gress, nor both combined, could touch “the peculiar institution” in any state. But war created “an emergency.” President Lincoln was commander- in-chief of the armed forces of the Union, And under the sanction: of the war power, Lincoln, by mere proclamation, emancipated slaves in the states and districts then in arms against the authority of the United States. For this fateful stroke of state there was no express warrant in the con- stitution. Yet Lincoln made a broad interpretation to justify his action. Amendment Is Ratified At best this was a “war measure.” Could the Proclamation of Emancipa- tion be enforced on the return of peace? On this constitutional point there were grave doubts. Besides, slavery was still in effect in the states and districts not in arms against the Union. To finish the work thus started, Lincoln took the final step. He spon- sored and congress passed an amerid- ment to the constitution abolishing slavery throughout the United States. By skillful maneuvering, Lincoln and Republican managers were able to win the approval of three-fourths of the states. The amendment was ratified. The constitution drawn by the Fathers was changed to meet the sett and circumstances of the new e, Thus a great public policy, both moral and economic in nature, was written down in the constitution of the United States. The leader who had dared to take up that policy when it was “dangerous,” who drama- lifted into immortality, for all ages, for all climes, for all humanity. Those who imagine that the con- stitution is a mere theme for hair- splitting by “great constitutional lawyers” may well ponder and remem- ber the life and labor of Lincoln, the Emancipator. CARLSON RITES SET Minn., here Friday. North Dakota had 513 farmers’ co- operative marketing and supply buy- ing assoications in operation in 1935. The total membership of these groups was estimated 87,630. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ‘REO. U. 5. PAT. OFF. | i You can’t hold the whip when you're roaring with hand anger, 600 Children Ill of Mysterious Disease GUESSING CAMPAIGN OR WHO WILL BE GOP NOMINEE I$ BOILING Pendergast, Kansas City ‘Boss,’ Picks Landon; Vanden- berg Has Booster Coshocton, O., Feb. 20.—()—A mys- terious disease left 600 children ill Thursday. Coshocton schools were closed as health officials sought to determine the exact nature of the dis- ease, said by some physicians to be intestinal influenza. ¥’Clusky Father of 6 Crushed to Death Minneapolis, Feb. 20.—()—William Gardiner, 45, garage mechanic, was crushed to death Wednesday under a car he was repairing. A cable snapped and the auto, hoisted for repairs, fell on him. The widow and six children of McClusky, N. D., survive. CONTINUE Washington, Feb. 20.—(#)—Demo- cratic guesses as to who will be the GOP presidential nominee were heard Thursday along with an anti- New Dealer's suggestion to “throw the bunglers out.” Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas was Blas ‘by a aa from page one Tom Pendergast, Kansas . gw, eee i fh to win the Crippled by Crash, but lose the 7 election to. President. Roosevelt, Redfern Is Captive Senator Vandenberg of Michigan ‘God’ of Wild Tribe however, would be the choice of Char- les Michelson, Democratic publicity director, if he were “making a book” on the nomination. Neither Vandenberg nor Landon has entered any state primary. Re- publican primary activity has been greatest so far in Illinois, where both Senator Borah of Idaho and Col. Frank Knox of Chicago will test their strength. Senator Dickinson of Iowa, who has disclosed presidential aspirations but said he will not enter any primaries, told the New York Republican club Wednesday night that the New Deai had failed to solve the basic prob- lems of recovery. His idea, he said was to “throw the bunglers out.” “The spending spree grows in mo- mentum,” Dickinson declared. On the Democratic front, in New York and elsewhere, there was con- siderable speculation about the signit- icance of Alfred E. Smith’s presence among the Tammany delegates to the Philadelphia convention in June. Representative Fish (Rep., N. Y.), @ supporter of Borah, remained angry over what he called the “steam roller’ toid by Tom Roch, German-American explorer, two years ago. Harred’s story, in substance, 28 published by the Banier and reported in Georgetown, follows: “art Williams (U. 8. pilot), two In- dians and I took off in a plane Feb. 6. After a couple of hours we landed on a tributary southwest of the main Amazon stream and started to trek across Tumac Humac mountains in @ southerly direction, fully supplied with provisions for the journey as i well as for Redfern’s return. Found Indian Village “After several days we came to a village where all Indians were com- pletely nude. We saw an airplane } caught in the branches of a big tree. A few hours later we met Redfern. He was dressed in a ragged singlet and underpants. “By his hair and beard on his shoulders and chest, he looked like a man over 40, hobbling on rude crutches made of tree branches and) jana. “He found difficulty at first speak- ing English, but evidently he had tized it, who gave his life for it, was ‘Ac been expecting to be found. Williams gave him a biscuit and some tinned meat. i “After tie ated Abed Tae anes — OO On F | the language of the Indians, em City and County | |not to narm us, he told us he had ——_—_—_ been forced down by a leak in the Mr, and Mrs. Peter Schmidkunz.| gas tank, and had been forced to land Bismarck rural, are the parents of a|on the tree, being unable to reach girl born at 8 p. m., Wednesday at St. the river. His legs and arms were Alexius hospital. broken in the crash, but medicine men cured Pate dhe iu Aldyth Trygg of the Gibbs school | well, refusing tot cl e plane, be- was a of the Burleigh county rura;|lieving it was a ‘great spirit. school students who passed the final Married Indian Woman state examinations and will receive} “Paul said he was in as good health an eighth grade diploma, according to| 8S could be expected. He had mar- Miss Marie Huber, county superin- ried an Indian woman and has a son tendent. who looks very much like him. Weather Report | intended to take Paul away they threatened us with poisonous spears WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: tactics of the “old guard” in his state’s organization. and arrows and on Paul’s advice we withdrew, leaving him with provisions and clothes. “We hung about the district four .,| days, but the Indians seemed to be- Fair | come more hostile so we left with the eotild ee iid continued cold. Intention of returning. ‘It must be realized that any restue must mean the use of force with probable death of Redfern since the ‘ 4a eee WS Indians will kill him before we could ‘ota: enera! et to him, or if he succeeds in get- fair tonight and fi & ay except ly ting away safely, it would mean the sacrificing of his native wife and child, and Paul seems to care a lot for the boy. “The chief immediate difficulty is Paul’s crippled condition.” Pilots Boat Williams has been flying a five-seat flying boat carrying supplies for the last few months to the Dutch Guiana For Minnesota: Fair tonight and|boundary commission. Friday; colder in east and extreme] He has been using the numerous south tonight. rivers running Lag h the Legros try area where the comm! ‘WEATHER CONDITIONS A high pressure area is centered|Working as landing ports. His work over Saskatchewan, Qu’Appelle, 30.36,|/has been financed by Edward Sill. Lp rd ane fay er? fe Georgetown merchant. west 0c! oun: slope, Sant Harred said that, in order to reach Fe, 20.78, Seattle, 29.90. Temperatures | Redfern, he and Williams had to hike pare aceon sey Perera several days on foot from the plane. below zero in the northern Border} Williams helped teach Redfern to states and in the Canadian Provinces. | fly. Peaioe greed heme all sections and sca: = tion has occurred in the” western Took Off in 1927 eters Perlis bk Sat cia Paul Rinaldo Redfern of Savannah. marck station barometer, inches: |Ga., was 25 years old when he took agar Reduced ee le Sagal ae ‘from Brunawick, | Gn. ane. 3 junrise today 7:39 a. on an attempt ly nons 0 Sunset today 6:15 p. m. Rio de Janeiro. His plane was last sighted on the EECA TON following day 300 miles east of the 29] Bahamas, 32] Redfern’s wife, who lives with her $5| parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hilde- Ti|brand, in Toledo, ©. long has be- “| Meved that her husband still is alive. Tom Roch, the first explorer to teil the story which Alfred Harred told NOFTH DAKOTA WEATHER Low- ae den’s unit included besides himself a doctor and a wireless operator. Still another expedition, which Roach made up with G. Pacht, left Paramaribo soon after the Williams party set out with the promise to re- turn “with Redfern within 100 days.” FATHER PROMISED RESCUE AID BY BRAZIL Columbia, 8. C., Feb. 20.—()—Dr. Frederick Redfern, elderly professor whose missing aviator son, Paul, was reported located Thursday, said he had permission from the Brazilian government to take steps to rescue him. time he wished. The other asked that Dr. John F. Condon be brought into the deathhouse for a talk with the prisoner. “I can prove to him,” Hauptmann wrote to Condon, the “Jafsie” of the ransom negotiations, “that I am not the man he dealt with. Kimberling said he planned to do nothing about the request, since Con- don is out of the country on a south- ern cruise. Hauptmann, Leibowitz said, “under- stands very clearly that his last card has been played and he has lost.” Hauptmann’s date of execution was set for the week of March 30, Want Full Story - “His only salvation as matters stand now lies in his making a clean breast of whatever guilty part he may have had in the crime.” Concerning C. Lloyd Fisher, chief defense counsel, who is remaining in that capacity, Leibowitz said: “Lloyd Fisher today has been more than cooperative. We've brought home ; to Bruno Richard Hauptmann at the death house in unmistakable language the plight which confronts him. “He understands that at the present moment there is not available that newly discovered evidence which the law demands before any court of this state will grant him a new trial. “Both Mr. Fisher and I have told him there is little further any lawyer can do for him.” Fisher, who has fought to save Hauptmann in the expressed belief that he is innocent, said: “It must be admitted that the out- look is dark.” Has Three Faint Hopes With his execution only six weeks away Hauptmann has these possibill- ties on which to hang his dying hopes: That Gov. Harold G. Hoffman, who granted him a 30-day reprieve and ordered the New Jersey state police CAPITOL Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. Matinee AGAIN...he’s back alive! from the peril- oi jungle with rw to reopen their investigation, will sign . @ second reprieve. That he will call another session of the court of pardons, the bady which rejected Hauptmann’s appeal for clemency Jan. 11. ‘That new evidence will be discov- ered, Governor Hoffman, who has held to the belief that Hauptmann had ac- complices, and with whom Leibowitz has conferred, said Wednesday “there was nothing concrete” in the two weekly reports made to him by Col.j, H. Norman Schwarzkopf, state police superintendent, and “as yet there has been no reply to my queries as to the Participation of others in the crime.” Third and fourth generation Amer- icans always have darker hair color- ing than their ancestors. The elder Redfern said he was un- certain whether his son was on Bra- ailian territory, but had been assured |of the cooperation of the Brazilian boundary commission, now working in approximately the territory where the young filer was reported found, and would take action through the state department to enlist the co- operation of any other nations neces- sary. Dr. Redfern said he had “never giv- en up hope” in the eight and a half years that Paul has been missing. “We are ready to have him back at any cost,” he said, “crippled or ‘sound, as long as he's alive, that is what mat- ters.” Mrs, A. J. Bedenbaugh, sister of Paul Redfern, said their father, had received a letter from one of the searchers recently saying the approx- imate place that the aviator disap- peared had been located. The letter from Art Williams relat- ed experiences of the jungle hunt for Redfern, and gave details of informa- tion which led the party to believe his rescue was near at hand. STATE DEPARTMENT ORDERS INVESTIGATION Washington, Feb. 20.—()—The state department Thursday cabled in- structions to the American consul at Trinidad, British West Indies, -to in- vestigate the statement by Alfred Harred at Georgetown, British Guiana, that he had seen and talked to Paul Redfern, missing American aviator. The department: acted on the basis of Associated Press reports. It asked the consul at Trinidad, the nearest place of American represen- tation, to seek further information from Harred, whose story. was the first report that any outsider actually had contacted the missing flier. Coincidentally, the state department made public a report from Ambassa- dor Hugh Gibson at Rio De Janeiro Gated Feb. 3, asserting the Brazilian foreign office was working through its boundary commission along the Brit- ish Guiana border to establish the au- bess ttied of the report Redfern was ve. TODAY and FRI. It’s Paddy’s Party! BEGORRA, SHE'LL BEWITCH YOU! She whoops it up, with songs and jigs and This lonely tit- tle orphan WIFE WONDERS HOW TRUE HARRED’S STORY IS Cleveland, Feb. 20.—()—Mrs. Paul Redfern exclaimed Thursday “Oh, I hope it’s true.” Reached by telephone at the Foote- Burt company, a machine manufac- turing concern, Mrs. Redfern inquir- ed eagerly for details of Alfred Har- red’s story. “It is a fantastic story,” she ob- served, “I wonder how true it is. I would rather wait for further infor- mation before placing much faith in the story. There have been so many like it in late years.” C ONTINUE D from page one- Bruno’s Last Hopes Fade When Gotham Lawyer Quits Case PINKY TOMLIN ITA CANSINO JANE DARWELL GEORGE Givot Enveetive Prodecer S41 M. Wertsei A Fox Pietro FROM THE LAND OF TEN TON BEASTS! You'll talk about till the day you die! Produced by the VAN BEUREN, She's a singing, dancing little “divvil”! Added Enjoyment WALT DISNEY’S “WHO KILLED COCK ROBIN?” A COLOR SENSATION Thelma Todd, Patsy Kelly RKO-RADIOSE PICTURE —Added— Comedy - News - Cartoon change his story on them or any | other phases of the case one bit.” Sat. Night - Sun. - Mon. | “Hot Money” Wrote Three Numbers ’ A FUN PANIC “Leibowitz tore several sheets of Uveula Parrott e | paper into 100 pieces and asked SOUND NEWS STORY! Hauptmann to write numbers on three of them. Hauptmann wrote the numbers 2, 40 and 80 on three pieces and Leibowitz then mixed them with the others. “He then asked Hauptmann to try and draw out of a hat the pieces on which he had written. Hauptmann drew out three blanks. “‘That’s how much chance there is of finding three persons in this coun- try who would misspell the same way,’ Leibowitz said.” The source continued: “Just before the lawyers left, Hauptmann, who |; had lost and regained his composure repeatedly throughout the interview, appealed to Leibowitz to come back. “Leibowitz did not say that he would... Leibowits’s Hardest Job “As the lawyers put on their coats and walked to the door of the death house, Leibowitz adjusted his tie, wiped his dripping forehead, and said to Fisher: ‘Telling that man that he had to die was the hardest job I’ve ever done.” It was disclosed Hauptmann had written two notes which Leibowitz delivered to Col. Mark O. Kimberling, principal keeper at the state prison where Hauptmann is confined. In one note the prisoner asked that Leibowitz be allowed to see him any- BEST % COMING SAT. FRANCHOT TONE Stuart Erwin Madge Evans margaret SULLAVAN inher most glorious triumph EAT TTI A Ursula Parrott's best. Live” est est Pct.|Thursday, has presented several affi- 1 HR 8 AB ldavits to United States consular of- ‘118 0 00 | ficials in South America and Panama cas 1 op | declaring his story is true. i aaa ee, ‘00 A third searching party, headed by -26 -4 00 | 4. Van Leyden. leader of the Nether- -22 -6 99 | ands section of a boundary commis- ? sion, was reported in dispatches from T Paramaribo to have entered the bush WEATHES 43 onions Highs sometime last December. Van Ley- est esi rillo, Texas, cldy. . 14 Boise, Idaho, snowing. Calgary, Alta., cldy. ... -20 Chicago, Ill., cldy. 2 Colo., clay: -. 26 Des Moines, Towa, cldy. i Los ee » cldy, 52 Miles City, Mont., clear -12 Minneapolis, M., clear.. 0 Modena, Utah, clear .. 30 Moor! clear -1i No. Phoenie, “Arie. clay." a8 joenix, a mee » Clear -34 clear .. -28 D., cldy. -10 forgy .. 42 opbehbbhesebeeseeseeeeReeeeesees® SE SPLoBSVSaSSstowaBsSohaalTESohosFoSo0ES GRANT RICHARDS DIES Jamestown, N. D., Feb. 20.—(P)— Grant Richards, 72, died Thursday after a lingering illness. He has lived in Jamestown and county 30 years. He is survived by his widow and four children. No fu- neral arrangements have been made. Twenty per cent of Iceland’s popu- lation is engaged in fishing. THE SHOW THAT SHOWS TONIGHT The Romanoff Troupe, Pickard’s Seals, Harrison’s Animal Circus Adm. 25c MATINEE SATURDAY 2:30—Children 10c — DOORS OPEN AT ONE There's a big “do” about our Mary going Mike! ; << broadcast. ing from Pickfair among the poignant memories of yesterday 3... This story's got a bit of “inside” most folks don’t know. Don’t miss this new radio story about Mary Pickford—the glamor- ous Queen Mary of Hollywood ... in this week’s Radio Guide. MAJOR BOWES THE INSIDE STORY OF THE AMATEUR HOUR ALSO IN THIS BIG ISSUE: The Gespel Singer, Edward MacHugh...Calling all Cars ... Glory Hallelujah ... Hew @ Smert Girl Gets on the Air +++ The Men Roxy Forget... and many other absorbing feetures. MOST COMPLETE RADIO PROGRAM LISTINGS Biggest 10 cents’ worth in radio. 14 pages of program listings MORE ABOUT marc —the whole week’s programs in advaoce—for all your favori ae . Se ee peotrie Goceiee PELL Tha Host com: lete radio program ion pul 22—GREAT ACTS—22 Rewsaad spor brosdcasts-..Advanceshor pee wave programs ... about radio stars... Many other big features and stories < FS “The Greatest Show Ever” RotogravarePlcar Seton... A pew ia a Say Thousands your radio enjoyment. Buy it every week. Doors Open 7'p. m. 10c—AT ALL NEWSSTANDS Come early.