The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 21, 1936, Page 1

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| (=u] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE -==— | Bismarck-Minot to Vie for Title ‘Floods Pour More Death, Ruin | ta sin . } 300,000 Homeless _| Today's Tribune | MACICANS FAVORED | BOTTOMS ; il | Shiver Miserabl et | QVERDEMONS AFTER REMOVED BY FORCE ee MORNING'S SHOWING fleieletiees vee After Snow Falls ——— Vagrancy Charge in Order to Championship Tilt at 8:30 P. uM. Protect His Life Death Toll in 18 States Rizes to 167 with|DANGER OR SEVERE | ts Preceded by rargo, vat D Estimated at $300,000,000; * ‘ pg ers recente Taken FLOOD IN MISSOURI and snow intensifying the suffering over the Pittsburgh-Johns- HACKETT FINALLY GIVES IN ley City Clash BEGINNING 10 PASS town-Wheeling areas, the Connecticut river wrought the most Tarra ea Had Only Loaf of Bread, Spuds TICKETS SELL AT PREMIUM widespread havoc Saturday as it surged with devastating and| "iver Falls Along Course North and Sowbelly for Battle With Gigantic. ‘Tournament Ball’ inj Old Man River High School Gym to Climax ainsi Activities Here ceaseless fury over the populous business and industrial cities} | from Sibley Gorge Which of Hartford and Middletown, : Still Holds batty today. The death list stood at 167; but as rescue and rehabilita- Tonight in the World War tion work was rushed in 18 eastern states—after the worst Danger of @ severe flood in the| Memorial building Bismarck floods in history in many localities—officials feared the. toll] missouri ‘river bottoms continued to|and Minot high schools will would mount. . i lessen somewhat Saturday but per-/clash for the championship of The number of homeless approached 300,000 persons. The aitotiel in the bottoms were ad-| North Dakota. damage estimates hovered about $300,000,000. capes tee pelted jog Hered The game is scheduled to be« (Copyright, 1936, Associated Press) With storm warnings flying along the North Atlantic coast Bismarck became basketball Tournament Facts Place—World War Memorial Building. Time—Morning games start at 10 a. m.; afternoon games at 3 p. m.; evening games at 7:30 p. m. Championship Bismarck vs. Minot at 8:30 p.m. -Runnersup Final Valley City vs. Fargo at 7:20 p.m. ee New $470,000,00 i i uiex : E . ce ieatly ee crest of be Ohio Sane as it ihr of ice. 3 on at 8:30 p. uae : towbo i lown the bri valley toward Huntington, W. Va., reaching| The level at 7 a, m. ‘ans are warned to get their sepiand tie cnae thoes vf) sasckapeatcera al vous prochiedd pittsburgh as flood raters ross Pomeroy and Point Pleasant, W. Va., and Gallipolis, Onis. > 7 eh seats early as even standing high a e str Fea RA Es Uttle child closely But on down ane river, lowland wee — flooded from |7* held this stage at 2 p. m. —— expected to = ata ler, as ‘he watched wonder maths fore him. you e center 9 Marietta to Cincinnati. Residents of Proctorville; 0., opposite premium as the greatest Demon oe prot their clnblepltacil pee Pianities tn Pivebareniwere /eeeen Huntington, awoke Saturday to find themselves on an island. i jams, as/quintet in years makes its bid = A ferry boat hastily carried them across the river to higher |‘t did in 1029, the water would rise/ for the title against the classy iy ground. Tapidly in the bottoms. Magicians. DAT OR N DAUGHTER Hartford and Middletown were the hardest hit by the Con-| penoris tomtenvines paints indl= deme F Siheccomminn tic mibome:tecgteoe nt eattind tly |end a Iewening of the danger there, mare baits tn ding, Waboe- or two by iver ai ‘ord apparen' @ lesset o! e danger -Iton, Dickinson and Vi City in THROWS DOUBT UPON had reached its crest, with « record high level of 87.5 feet at| The level is faling at all points, al-lder, the odds fevor the Magicians, mid-morning. National Guardsmen patrolled the streets throughout the night after electric power failed. The cities of Hartford and Middletown were without elec- tric:power.' Rain fell in sheets Saturday. as whole families of | 5 yee residents were rescued, In Hartford, alone, more than Sister of Late Mrs. Mordoff| 2,000 were oe The rains dashed hopes for quick reces- ; 3 sion of the river. toy Tae : Arwested for Accusing Girl A dam on-the Quinebaug, near Danielson, Conn., was threat- of Lying ened-by the ew rains. j , A Rivers ptevened attacked ha bredelt Foam nerens jonny Masch 21. —)— 11-| other New streams began to recede. e Merrimack eas ‘adopted. jae ag pr.| was the only. one of consequence—besides the Connecticut— on Mordoff testified Gaturday| Which rushed on un hed, Three inches,of soggy snow fell over the devastated west- 4] te EES 3 there lieve that Dr. Mordof!' r : e presen righ have ciara ern Pennsylvania area, from Johnstown to Wheeling, W. Va., fencagd Farm Pp an Be n to have custody of “Sonny Boy,”|hogging down relief efforts and further crippling transpor- f Bis-|nughting the vistors, The peppy j Ma TOR IGdML. cf occa atitotore | 0 ‘ ania evenly matched and the “breaks” were saint Superior Judge Rudolph Desort. The snow hampered clean-up and reclamation work in the | ter, __pusmare : r Slammare Pittsburgh-Johnstown area. |Farmers Participating to Get AUTOMOBILE SHOW feat hee temelone for if brite Some 25,000 WPA workers were mobilized in Pittsburgh Average of $10 Per Acre : who is disputing possession of the/ and 6,000 in Johnstown. There was no heat in Johnstown and ; child with Mrs. Margeret Mann! many of the 6,000 -destitute there were ill. WiLL BE oT AGED N ee aces qi oineteagcory & gs Wheeling,: betweeri 8,000 and 10,000 homeless shivered had TROPIC AL, cRTTIN throughout the day in temporary nable to return to thelr quarters. Above Pittsburgh, the Allegheny, while near normal, was a ee cutting a new channel around a giant waterway lock. Engi- GERMANY BITTERLY Ineers strove with stones and bags of cement to keep the river ; - : in its course. ; ‘ " : Bismarck’s Annual Exposition ievgeptomber, 1982, aan Aside from the Connecticut and the Southern Ohio, rivers to Open Doors in Memorial Accuses Girl ef Lying generally throughout the east were either receding steadily or e were back in their banks. Building Thursday Is Experienced ‘at deting when the annual “Bismarck | "inns ie gong to cost you put qr) | One Arm Driving | jesse, centzal part of New York state| Believe Hitler Will Attempt to| third quarter but two long shots pub Automobile show opens its doors at! tne court told Mrs. Fairchild. “If you | 9 the visitors ahead again at its close. Aa ding . also began a rehabilitation program. 7 4 fei oeae ecg on: Dar-TeuieOLe ee Bt, Louls, Mo., March 21—()— | Punic seperts from Washington were} Negotiate Rather Than When the gun cracked to end the ‘The decorations committee, headed cai a sed wasn't (ee ie - fe aay ahead a Face Sanctions tgs ball mae teatro ane by 8. W. Corwin, has shipped in a full! ‘The physician’s round was expected| fining James Sullivan for driving FDR Delays ‘Trip _ |toss from mid-floor and it didn’t even carload of material to set the stage|to end a court battle that has been| 3g miles an hour with one arm wreak ames de-| (Copyright, 1936, Associated Press) | touched the rim of the hoop. i 5 at the end of the first q to 13 at the half time and PROTESTS DE the end of the third quarter, Valley City set Bismarck back its heels at the start and threatened to make the game a walk-away but the Demons, nine points behind at A one stage of the game, got going late in the second quarter. They continued their spurt into the . Mary 5 ene the late Mrs. Mordoff, accused the Latest creations of America’s motor | cir} witness of lying after she had makers will be shown in a tropical| jer: the stand. it r fetes ehecioriey plement fay | aeprnge aneagr ps poe : this vacation to continue in per-| Berlin, March 21—Germany raised Demons Guard Brilliantly, | , the history of Bismarck. Desort: : . a bitter protest Saturday against the! teaq again in the last stanza and, E The committee began its work by PaO - badbia decisions of the other Locarno nations agi All Important Question 4 to settle the Rhineland crisis, the four-| With two mintues left to go, tried to creating a background of black and| “tg, the chubby youngster Reginald : Z .{stall, This effort failed as Valley, gold on the walls of the huge audi- | arthur Mann, berm out of wedlock to| N. D. Seeks Recovery power proposals falling into Adolf Hit- | ci.” rougnt desperately for the ball, torium. Panels of black velvet and|24-year-old Margaret Mann, or Gor- Of $36,195 in Grain| 2: i Maine 8; ler camp with © completely URex-thut the Hi-Liners were unable to get don Mordaff III, borne by Mrs. Madge .|an open shot at the basket, The en- the ear-old obstetrician’ — Connecticut, Foreign office officials winced un- mae inte wifer” i die '5) inneapolis, ‘March 21.—(e)—The Serie ay one ot cep monals foe Ger- exhibition a sacs, guarding as ugust Beisig!, First Cattle Margaret and her husband of a|state of North Dakota,’as trustees for 3 . pene Mibvaission of the reich’s|D8S rarely been seen in high school receipt holders of the - insolvent Mall edted arguments against the Franco-Soviet circles, Southey Grain: company, Garrison, N.| at Hartford, where the Connecticut |pact to the world court and for the| ,, Tose last two minutes were doge Dies at Lakeside, Calif. . Curtain Balcanies Fletcher sald he knew Miss Mann |r weiday brought sult in district |river raged unabated at a record high. calling of an international peace con- | sieht as 10 active bays setguied, foe before wey ware Ona. court here for recovery of 42 carloads|The city was nearly isolated, with Ec aeee ARE ball and it was thrilling to watch. i! “We Gecsied ta ge married. be seid, of grain shipped by the Southey Wer rer had been dealt “a blow below the | 7" Clg mnder sripeik Sena no fhe Ue Sie nies avernet aOany memes ‘and only relatively small|belt,” declaring British and Italian |*hrougnout those last manutes, X Boy’ te Aas..we aod Baye, &. - telephone lines were in|assurances of support to France and Sine |e cone 8000 RNIB IAY ‘ oa Belgium in caso Germany declined to] * ai + Geo Ggin o of accept the four-power plan carried st Se: 1g 0: far-reaching consequences. i | eee DORAN RT craw in Grain Is Reported ||! to the seclusion where an ae ae So her good conscience,” ler Seeding of grain has begun on ‘an apartment building. asserted in a speech Friday night at} the Missouri Slope. Connecticut river also created | Hamberg. In a report to The Tribune Sate | Rancher at Grassy Butte, rir mer Alfred Fletcher, testified hi sf fi od ‘ Middleton, May Negotiate urday G, A. Bardsley, one of ita enlive tn- ate with 1,000 watts and unlimited |shipm: : : , ; 3 west of time on s frequency of 1300 kilocycles. |1 and Nov. 14, 1990, First impressions indicated, how-| circulation agents, said that V. R. ever, that he would attempt to ne- near Elgin gotiate away some of the sharpest Sees, Uns besa seeding ole ' H $ ‘ points, rather than reject the whole} rank Ackerman of Hell began Papa Dionne Calls Movie ' Progen atiy "and tac the conue| jovlg ante i Farmers everywhere said the would exceed $10,000,000 in |sanctions threatened by Britain and] 1.4. ‘into the 4 in as Portrayal of Self ‘Crazy tlong the Merrimack river--| ‘The third reich, under the spell of pe sunke Ad 8 COE Lowell, Lawrence and Haver-|Der Fuehrer’s patriotism, made it eeeert all a i E i ge E EF will be needed display p th At the same time George Gray of cars, but merchants of the cit lll, "Mass. — remained flood - pound. |clear Germany does not want forelgM| or Witton observed that either the will have special displays of season- Lawrence was without electricity, as|troops on her soil, as proposed in ly evidences of spring have Bike eats Be thate diares in seongnt: was Locarno powers’ suggestion for an in-| arly evidences Of Spring tom 46 the large uigiber ef vise In Maine ternational force to patrol s “butter oS eee ae id who,cotme here for this event. wholly or zone” pending a new security ye Pee canasuia eee ienty in ane state| also are distributors it is expected Pi Mees ie shee eer eee i made| wil be held during the show. A sched: thany other ieee ceund in she "wien ule of these will be announced later. ee 8, aren and that pussywillows are * EMPORTS EXCEED EX! bursting into a if ql Hi et ; ! { f fp £& ¢

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