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~ PARISH CHURCHES ON | Friend Par reine FRONTIER CROWDED BY PRAYING FRENCH ‘This Time We Are Prepared’ Mumble Peasants as They Recall 1914 (Copyright, 1936, Associated Press) Strasi » France, March 10.— Praying women and children, stirred by reports that resurrected regiments of Kaiser Wilhelm are on the march in the Rhineland, crowded the parish churches of these French frontier Provinces Tuesday. As France poured new thousands of fighting men into the Maginot line of fortifications and manned great anti-aircraft guns along the frontier hills from Bélgium to Switzerland, the people of Strasbourg heard rumors that old imperial regiments, stationed in Alsace before 1914, have been re- vived in Adolph Hitler's Rhineland army. Parish churches in villages such as Drusenheim, north of Strasbourg, were crowded with prayerful folk. Many peasants, gazing at mile-long columns of troop-laden trucks rumbl- ing through their placid villages, con- tented themselves with the blunt com- ment: “This time we are prepared!” Tension heightened overnight upon reports that a Nazi airplane had flown over the French fortress at Thionville. The plane, with French pursuit craft 07 its tail, roared back over the border, authorities at Metz were told. How many new troops had joined the 100,000 already in the Maginot line remained a secret at Paris headquart- ers. But French officers said 30,000 of Nazi Germany's fighting men had Ge the rearmed Rhineland Mon- lay. An equal number of Nasi “green police” had been absorbed into the Reichswehr, these officers claimed, al- though the German government failed to report such additions. 1,000 FEET OF NEW FIRE HOSE BOUGHT Local Man, Chicago Concern Awarded Contracts by City Commissioners One thowsand feet of new fire hose were purchased by the city commis- sioners at the regular meeting of the board here Monday night. Bernard Thompson of Bismarck was awarded the contract to furnish 500 feet of the new hose and the Bi- Lateral Fire Hose company of Chi- cago was awarded the contract to furnish a like amount. Bids for new fire fighting equip- ment were submitted by 11 compan- fes, many. of which had local rep- reséntatives present at the meeting. Second reading was given to the taxicab ordinance amendment, requir- ing the companies to insure each automobile for liability and property damage before a license to operate is granted, and the amendment was Fel bruary reports of City Weigh- master McCormick and Chief of Po- lice Ebeling were read and approved. The city weighmaster. reported $324.40 collected during the month, chiefly from the weighing of eoal of which there were 3,218 loads. Lumber Dealer Slain Trying to Foil Holdup North Lake, Wis. March 10.—(P)— A North Lake lumber dealer was slain and, Deputy Sheriff Theodore Stef- fens said, his slayer was captured early Tuesday by others menaced in an attempted holdup of a tavern here. The victim was Herbert W. Brown, 44, who lunged at one of two young robbers when they entered the Guy Rose tavern Monday night. Captured by the others who grap- pled with him and threw him to the floor was Shufard Swearingen, 23, of North Lake, who Steffens said, fired the shotgun blast that killed Brown. The sheriff apprehended another youth suspected of being the second robber who dashed from the tavern and fled in an automobile. St. Cloud Prison Life Is Once Again Normal 8t. Cloud, Minn., March 10.—()— Activities at the St. Cloud reforma- tory, interrupted a week ago when 950 of the 1,156 convicts revolted against reformatory regulations, were resumed on a normal basis Tuesday. Inmates were divided into two groups and marched into the mess hall. The 30 ringleaders locked in solitary con- finement have been returned to theic tespective cells. Seed Loan Increase Of $300 Is Requested Washington, March 10.—(#)—Rep. Fred H. Hildebrandt of Watertown, 8. D., appealed to President Roosevelt Tuesday to increase the limit on emergency seed loans to individual|_ farmers from $200 to $500. Hilde- brandt wrote the president that the Aberdeen, 8. D.; Civic association in- formed him a critical situation con- fronted farmers in thet vicinity, with one-half of them in “desperate need” of assistance. No Immediate Danger Of War in Europe Seen Washington, March 10.—(#)—The general European situation was can- vassed Tuesday by state department officials in a series of conf with Robert W. Bingham, American ambassador to Great Britain; now on Jeave in the United States. Bingham told newsmen he did not believe there was danger of immediate war in Europe, ALLEN ON COMMISSION Valley City, N. D., March 10.—()}— Dr. C. B. Allen, president of the Val- ley City State Teachers colelge, has been appointed consultant ex officio of the educational policies commis- sion. Once @ $1,200 a week star in the days of silent movies, Alice Lake (above) was unable to pay a fine for intoxication in Los An and was sentenced to jail. A friend finally effected her release by pay. ing the fine. (Associated Press Photo) GUTTEN IS CHARGED WITH TAX EVASION Famous Grain Trader's Former Federal Adviser Also Un- der Indictment Petee ane renee | Chicago, March 10.—(7)—An in- dictment charging Arthur W. Cut- ten, famous grain trader, with the “willful attempt to defeat and evade [an income tax” for 1928, amounting to $414,525.54, was returned by the federal grand jury. The indictment also named William | E. Gatewood, tormerly an _ internal revenue agent, charging he aided Cut- ten in the alleged tax dodging. Cutten, self-styled “speculator” was! called “the nation's biggest grain | trader” in hearings before the grain futures administration, which a year | ago issued an order disbarring him} from American grain pits. Monday the supreme court of the! United States agreed to hear the gov- | jernment’s appeal from a decision of | the United States court of appeals which stayed the disbarment. Judge Woodward set a bond at $35,000 for Cuttert and $10,000 forj Gatewood. He then issued benth war-, rants for their arrest. | Cutten was in a hospital, said by | his attorneys to be “lying at death's! door.” | Given Life Sentence For Killing His Wife, Bay City, Mich. March 10.—(4)— Julius Dingfelder, 44, was sentenced | Tuesday to life imprisonment at hard! labor in the southern Michigan _pri-{ son, 24 hours after he pleaded guilty to killing his wife in their home here.) How well is your home guarded? Every dollar that goes into your home and its fur- nishings should be safe- guarded. You buy and fur- nish a house, yet only ade- quate and dependable insur- ance can make this invest- ment permanent. Our experience in help- ing other home owners means that we can give you expert counsel about your property and its insurance. Ask us any time. MURPHY “The Man Whe Knows Insurance” Bismarck 218 Broadway Phone 577 and is needeu obligates us to do everything es near- ly pertect as possible. You can rely upon us WEBB BROS. Phone 5 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _TIJESDAY, MARCH 10, 1986 COMMANDERS BEGIN FIRST INSPECTION OF RHINELAND’S ARMIES Observers Believe Germany Has 30,000 Troops Stationed in Cologne Area (Copyright, 1936, Associated Press) Cologne, Germany, March 10.—Ger- man troops commanders began their first inspection of troops in the re- occu Rhineland Tuesday as con- fi ion emerged gradually that the Reich’s army ‘on the Rhine was more than @ mere assemblage of toys: One Cologne newspaper published a photograph of a battery of heavy ar- tillery, being kept in a slaughterhouse yard of a Cologne suburb. These guns were not drawn throygh the city, and the disclosure of their presence lent strength to statements by foreign residents here that Ger- many’s had come ptepared to put up a si defensive fight if called upon to do so. How many more batteries were brought into the Rhineland zone, de- militarized by the Locarno Pact and the Versailles Treaty, could not be | determined because of th official sec- recy. One machine gun compahy was known to be garrisoned at Bonn, the city on the Rhine above Cologne. The Cologne suburbs, as well as the City itself, were housing troops, it de- veloped. The troops are garrisoned in empty factories, buildings and school houses. { The populace waited in anticipa- tion of an eventual visit from Reischs- fuehrer Adolph Hitler himself. The actual strength of the German army now in the Rhineland was be- lieved by foreign residents to be near- er 30,000 than 20,000. They quoted army officers as say- ing a strong force was necessary for | tactical reasons, because the possibil- | |} ity of a French or Belgian attack as a result of the reoccupation could not be overlooked, however remote it might be. | Dempsey’s Daughter Under Guard of G-Men New York, March 10.—(4}—Joan Hannah Dempsey, 19 months old, with a smile very much like her father’s, was back in New York Tues- day after a week-end trip to Atlantic | ff City Near her crib was stationed an agent of the department of justice’s bureau of investigation. Her father, Jack, the former heavy- weight boxing champion, expressed a contempt for kidnapers, real or imagined, with whom the baby was reported to have been threatened in a series of letters. He announced he had received three threatening letters, but had kept the news from his wife for three months. at the Hotel Patterson Delicious French Doughnuts and Coffee in the Main Dining Room, Silver Grill and Coffee Shop. Coffee—Piping Hot and al- ways the same at any hour of the day or night. Make Your Correspondence STAND OUT! Let us submit Letterhead Ideas! Tt right kind of design and careful choice of type face make your business or professional stationery much more impressive. We are spe- cialists in making up suitable letterheads, invoices, and printed forms of all types. Call on us to submit ideas to fit your requirements. just telephone—no obligation. te Ask about thes convenient com tasner we use for delsvering letter- heeds prented on Caslon Bond. Bismarck Tribune Co.|]} Stationery Dept. Phone 32 a erences In Danger Zone Or. Leonard Wilbur (above), nephew of Ray Lyman Wilbur, ident of Stanford university, thought to be one of 34 mis: ities in the path of 10,000 Chi. munists reported threaten. 9 yuan, capital of 8 i prev. ince. ¢Asgociated Press Photo) GET COAL ACT BRIEFS Washington, March 10—(?}—Addi-! tional briefs attacking and defending the Guffey coal act were received by the supreme court Tuesday as it pre- pared to hear arguments on validity of another New Deal law—the 1933 “truth in securities” att. This illustrates the beautiful big volume—Style A—Divinity Circuit binding—Gilt Edges—Colored Maps which contains the Special Features ALL THE WORDS AND SAYINGS OF CHRIST distinguished from the context.by soiet ratel'aj"as coming of Cores with a Star. Ail the difficult cl fade so ora ounce le ptures LANDON'S BIG PUSH | WILL BE DIRECTED BY FLETCHER AIDE Primary Contests in New Eng- State Borah-for-President committee, | headed by W. Kingsland Macy, filed a certificate of incorporation. The Idahoan also entered the Pennsylvania presidential preference | pimary and laid plans to take to the hustings soon in Ohio and Illinois. Georgia Votes Wednesday | Supporters of the president and his foe, Gov. Eugenie Talmadge of Geo- gia, will lock horns again Wednesday in another presidential primary test. | The forthcoming vote in Barrow} county, Ga., follows recent balloting SOLON WILL NAME AMATEUR SLEUTHS HOFFMAN CREATED New Jersey Legislator Says 8| Reserve Group Holds Dinner Meeting Here Major J. M. Hanley of Mandan was the principal speaker at the dinner meeting of the Missouri Slope Reserve Officers school and the Bismarck- Mandan Chapter of the National Re- serve Officers association held here Monday night. Second Lieut, Albert V. Hartl, commander of ‘the local gtoup, presided at the meéting. words made Concordance of the Holy Berl in Seminole county, where the presi- | dent fefeated Talmadge by a 5 to 1) margin. In Pennsylvania the president will be pitted against Col. Henry Breckin- ridge, Anti-New Deal Democrat, in the primary next month, In the New Hampshire primaries the president has the pledged support of the majority of candidates to the Democratic convention, while Col. Frank Knox, Chicago and Manches- ter publisher, commands support of most of the unpledged Republicans. Gov. Fale LaFollette, Wiscohsin Progressive, told a Boston audience Monday night that he would rather support President Roosevelt for re- election than “Herbert Hoover or Hoover's half-brother dressed as a Progressive.” land and Georgia Watch- ed by Politicians Motor Vehicle Workers Act | i An organization known as Air Cen- as Detectives ter has been formed in Sydney, Aus- tralia, to promote all branches of civil aviation, 2 Ee You get Top Hat luncheons at the Prince: But not Top Price. : | | Trenton, N. J., March 10.—(P)—A Monmouth county Republican as- semblyman, opposed to Gov. Harold G. Hoffman’s activities in the Bruno Hauptmann case, said Tuesday he would name “at least eight members of the motor vehicle department who have turned detectives to investigate the Lindbergh kidnap-slaying. Basil Bruno, anti-Hoffman member of the house, and sponsor of a resolu- tion to inquire into the operation of the department, said he would name the men Wednesday night when he calls for a vote on his resolution. The governor, Bruno said, is using the taxpayers’ money without author- |ization to investigate a case already pe Grae 13,959 CCC Members _| settied in the courts. Governor Hoffman, meanwhile, car- | Accept Private Jobs ried on his investigation of the Lind- | pation certificates.” —- |bergh crime, although by his own Hamilton Resigns Washington, March 10.—(4)—Rob-| statement he has no reprieve powers Hamilton, executive assistant to ert Fechner, director of the civilian| beyond Thursday night. Hauptmann, | Fletcher, announced his resignation | Conservation corps, announced Tues-| convicted at Flemington Feb, 13, 1935, | from that post Monday in order to| day that 13,959 members of the corps) is under sentence to dle the week of tour the nation for Landon, Kansas| left during January to accept private| March 30. | governor, | employment as compared to 7,981 in| Hamilton, who will remain in oftice | that month a year ago. GERMAN FOUND GUILTY | 83 the committee’s general counsel, | London, March 10.—(#)—Dr. Her- Was one of the first Landon-pledged mann Gortz, German lawyer, was found guilty by a jury Monday of delegates from his home state of Kansas, violating the official secrets act by making a sketch of an army flying field. He was sentenced to four years in prison. ¥ The Bismarck Tribune | Bible Distribution | Washington, March 10.—()—The beginning of a big push for Gov. Alf M. Landon—with red-haired John D. M. Hamilton in the role of field marshal—Tuesday added interest to the race for the Republican presiden- tial nomination. ‘The political scene also was enliv- ened by the first statewide primary— being held Tuesday in New Hamp- shire—to select national convention| delegates —and pre-primary activity elsewhere by members of both major parties. Chairman Henry P. Fletcher of the Republican national committee is out te get $1,000,000 from 1,000,000 Amer- | teans to help finance the forthcoming weet against President Roose. velt. i The committee will sell $1 “partici-: For Expert Plumbing Call 0. H. HAGEN 813 Thayer Ave. Phone 589-3 We tearne: where ur tra plumbing was a profess! For County Treasurer I hereby announce myself as @ candidate for the Bur. June primary election. I have paid Burleigh if elected, ee a Your vote and support will be much appreciated, ‘Theodore R. Taylor, Painted Woods Twp. ‘Wilton, N. D. (Political Advertisement.) OKAY ASSAY OFFICE | Washington, March 10.—(?)—The senate appropriations committee ap- The supporters of Senator Borah of | proved Monday an item of $22,000 for Idaho also were hastening their pre-| re-establishing a federal assay office convention strategy. The New ‘York | at Helena, Mont. Following the most distressing period of unrest the world has ever known, comes a world-wide revival of Bible reading, which must tend to ameliorate. the unrestful conditions of mankind, To encourage such an end, leading news- papers throughout this country have joined forces to promote the distribution of the great Book of Books, and have adopted a plan that should readily, place the Bible in the hands of every reader. Two exclusive editions have been chosen for this purpose—first, the famous large print Red Letter Bible, illustrated herein, and a beautiful plain print, medium large type edition that will be distributed for a nominal sum. The Question of the Universe This Bible—this miraculous Bible—this Book of All Books—luminous with the light that dwelleth not on land or sea—this noblest and most beautiful Thing in all the world—what is it—whence cometh it—what means it? It has made.and unmade Nations. It has up- Only ignorance scoffs at the Bible! The great- rooted Kingdoms and Empires. It has di- est rulers—the greatest statesmen—the verted the mighty tides of History. It has greatest scholare—writers—orators—eciene _ crumpled ancient Faiths and Superstitions. tists—soldiers—and the, untold millions of - Because of it fell Pagan Rome. The antique the Common People, whose collective gene Systems of India and the Far East have ius outweighs them all—have thrilled to its bowed their heads to its enlightened sway. Divine Wisdom. China and the Orient now first awaken from Its lyrics of unfathomable tenderness—its ora ‘their sleep of thrice a thousand years, and tions of compelling potency—its contempla- follow their sister nations of the Occident— tive prose of preternatural grandeur—have whose feet are guided by one sole lamp— _ never been equalled. Its emotional depths the sacred flame of which was kindled by _—and its intellectual heights:make it the the inspired Hebrew Prophets, and fed for one and only Book of Books, vouchsafed for all time by the Lord and Master of the the guidance of mankind throughout the Golden Rule. ages. 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