The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 26, 1936, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

cst § _(=£2] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS George D. Mann, Tribune Publisher, Dies in Florida TXPUNSSHORN Hoffman Visits at | | Took Leading Part OF MAJOR FEATURE Hauptmann Home tre 98 In Building City SUGGESTED BY FDR d mn Spends Almost Five Hours - Subcommittee Accepts In Ful Aid Car Thrift Cheeking Evidence Introduc- Had Been Resident of Bismarck Since 1914 and Publisher of Only Presidential Request Pee rare ed by State at Trial Tribune Since 1917; Took Initiative in Many for Windfall Levy fly transportation problem with s | (Copyright, 3908, ii Movements to Improve Community street car pass and s homing | New York, March 26—(P)—Gov. ‘Kubat rides to work on the pass, | Harold G. Hoffman spent almost five taking his pigeon along. Then {hours in Bruno Richard Hauptmann’s pass under the {Bronx hom> Thursday, checking evi- dence connecting the convicted Lind- bergh kidnap killer with the kidnap » The examination was not conclusive, the governor said. to Mrs. Kubat who uses “We have been looking at the wood and no conclusion can be drawn un- ioc and his |til we make further tests,” he de- SCORN PROCESSING TAXES RECURRENCE OF OLD HEART AILMENT IS FATAL Had Been Ill Most of Winter at Home Here But Had Gone to Florida in Effort to Recuperate; Mrs, Mann to Arrive Home With Body Sunday Night Also Change Roosevelt’s: Idea for Assessments on Corpor- ation Reserve Funds Urban, who is 19, George D. Mann, publisher of The Bismarck Tribune and ean accaee Facies change the| fsther have to pay eee ber shetetlaad bead SHRWUaRAS ‘ia for many years a leading figure in the civic affairs of Bismarck tax worked out by a subcom- phan hry nels Poet zal Mee of the and of North Dakota, died at 5 a. m. Thursday at Orlando, Fla. He was 56 years old. Death was caused by heart disease, from which he had suffered for the last three years. 4 AIMOSTINPOSSBLE. Sess" feature mann’s home. The governor had the rail placed tos the tax caer . on the beams on which the state With him at his death was Mrs. Mann. E. A. Hughes of, income harged it was originally fastened, Bismarck, a friend of many years, also was at Orlando, havin; a | TASK FAGINGPEAGE | ae a CeInatel tance bene tone sarectity. had the nailholes checked gone there to be with Mr. Mann in his illness. i mittee eat said one would Second Appeal Pending i , Information as to funeral arrangements had not been re- Heals ew esp on rhecah pee al ‘This news came while poet ceived here Thursday but will be announced in The Tribune as ii f perhaps eon oe ~ Se, inkl toe soon as they are determined. Mrs. Mann and Mr. Hughes will ‘A subcommittee that worked three erg Gai Gat foe hla execution return here with the body, leaving Orlando at 1 p. m., Thursday, bee on the [eoegennheen ly $792,-| eden Places Bulk of Responsi- |only five days away. and arriving in Bismarck Saturday evening. es bap sevens finally came : ‘The governor, it was understood. Seriously ill at various times during the last three years, 4 bat conte aren by 87, aOnaee ans may/ — bility Upon Germany and —_| wanted the test completed edd the Mr. Mann was kept to his home here during much of the winter in full only a» presidential pdoecetoee France in Speech [sae thst crn polled court veo) but in February was able to leave for Florida. Upon his arrival for a “windfall” tax to recapture part second appeal creer al toe 'cotn= there he suffered a relapse. At first his condition was not of the unpaid or refunded AAA pro-| | don, March 26—(?)}—Anthony|mutation of his death sentence to thought to be serious but as he grew worse he was taken to a hospital. iEfforts to save his life failed and the end came Thursday morning, Had Thousands of Friends in State life imprisonment. The‘ court, if it Eden, foreign secretary, warned the | oii to: Heke the appeal, will house of commons Thursday that UN-lprobably meet either Saturday or less Germany immediately contrib-|Monday. uted “toward easing the situation”| Should the court turn thumbs down BB e ! Change Third on the convicted Lindbergh kidnaper, ‘The news brought grief to his thousands of friends in Bis- 4 A third suggestion of the president,| the negotiators for peace in Europe} a. i aia two and @ half months ago, ; oe i H for graduated taxes on the portions| would face an “almost impossible” | hiaicsa7 i ht marck:and. North Dakota where Mr. Mann, by his foresight and of which do not “ - energy, established himself as a leader. Telegrams of task, only hope and appeared remote. He said the joint made |" atternes General David.E, Wilents’| ...... ehd'Ttaly allayed the prospect of to percentages. of protts|an immediate war but, he said: “T/ (at, tts satus bas not changed end condolence poured in from all.parts of the state and elsewhere in the northwest, Many newspapers paid editorial tribute to his achievements and high standing in the newspaper profession, Teserves. : view ature George Douglas Mann was born June 8, 1879, at Goderich, Ontario, ae with the composition taé| neat” eerie page oe ee , Canada, the son of Frederick Richard and Mary Woodsworth Mann, ‘would be the lifting of the exemption| At the same time he suggested that Failure in the court of pardons and * i. barf of Mes aah par doesn ry issialy castes eaten cea isa ot te of from the Paul, Minn., where his father engaged | Dakota's capit iv many hormal income tax. Burtaxce which |p must cooperate to find a fea-| failure to convince Supreme Court, te in the contracting business, With|civic and cultural improvements were eiteally: apply4o tbh Aipeee Wonk ee ne een cue Justice Thomas W. Trenchard, trial the seven other children in his|to be due to his leadership and that continue. Riad tpicdoseiplehe sted mise a they have ae 3 father’s family, George Mann at-jof the newspaper which had become From the new corporation tex and ota! ees eplrey er creat amar tended the grade and high school at|an intregal pert of his life, ig tnsdtaa ctabencen at the |zrance and Germany, Eden declare: Hauptmann will probably die. é St. Paul and in 1903 graduated from Led Many Movements eg | ements ah aio om See ee 1,000,000. . The net gain would ‘ ” “ f o ; e distinguished himself as a diligent/lic improvement, he was the origins only. ”"#001,000,000, “however, "because | "8é forelgn country. Pee coerce maeerner senile: OHIO COMMUNITIES student despite the fact that he had| tor of many activities which now are $1,000,000,000 would be lost by quick Calls tor Open Mind Nevertheless, he sald, he had faith 1smarc rieves ee eeenaa ze no lmey, amebyed A Om RenCrIAS. repeal of present corporation income} after demanding that France have| the ar with @ part of his expenses. Among these were the juvenile band, levies and eventual repeal of excess perdi ie eege ppennan rae While in school he had worked at| long an integral part of the city’s cule fits and capital stock taxes. renga) eirpe peer or cam epeaicagrtdl bey! ag oar cope ogee tl : Jodd times for the St. Paul Pioneer| tural life, and the state com show the had ales ABs Tim es te any 30 Ae ccnes (culled i there be) “a -contse- Press and upon leaving college ob-|which annually focuses the attention tion thx of $0a0,000000, to neomae | CeTMANY, how can we hope to enter| sion of euch s nature as would make ea Oo ee eels Geass ets Dae eae $501000,000 annually for the net furan |%, Deeoeations with pubs anger bres mpage ype eon] RIVER RISING AGAIN reporter. the clty of Bismarck, program and: $120,000,000 yearly until] Smetnne to “silay the vanziety in| there be other important develop- ‘A flair for political reporting and| As s director of the Association of NY tae meres co See ontarecciamar "| hens ee Townsend Collected __| Friends in All Walks of Life See) interpretation soon became evident | Commerce be was among the fist te feared was news- - trans, iuboommittee agreed. though,| would “torpedo” ca erat a ee eet ionin'the death howse| stream Experts Do Not Expect; $43,295 in 10 Months| His Passing as Loss to paper's star political commentator, | tivities of operon ey ly 4 for + eee pare ance agreement of the Locarno pow-|Wednesday in the presence of his) New Crest to Equal Last a eaareenl ma Community heing sent by Xt to cover many set | Miamarck he was arnong tie firs, to ers Rhineland crisis Thureday| counsel, ©. Lloyd Fisher, fashington, March 26.—(P)—" j heel tons particulary email ones, o build |S "Tstusng to. abolish” sanctions| wife, Anna Week's Devastation mony thatthe Townsend old age pen-| = - aaa (STaenOr MeDaetance Jn the. Morktc | eet easy, acres Uae being compelled to ‘consparati against Italy. Consult en Hearing ston organization had. an income heard hand Came the medium of his » Bub high taxee for the priviege of doing|, Premier Mussolint, French officals| | ‘The governor, an ex-officio mem- (By the Associated Press) $43,205 during the first ten months of|Tyrcer ‘an news of the deste at| In 1906 me to State in 100 or the| always his efforts were effective, Bise 20. To make that provision the yield | #44, refused firmly to accept the ac-|ber of the pardons court and its pre-! me danger of renewed widespread | its existence was given s ¥ ‘D, Mann at Orlando, Fis., in which poured into the|marck’s population grew and its citle hed to be trimmed to an estimated |COTd by which Britain and Italy would siding judge, will consult Chancellor/ n.o4 devastation along the Ohio river | al. in eee rain geeen Gren Dinara seek. wen ein Onten tron Noth Dekote. ana | 08 ; $591,000,000. aswure military aid to France and| Luther A. Campbell Thursday on te) sunsided Thureday. by Robert E. Clements, na-|whom he had. worked in building elaccepted an offer to become editor of Aided Capital Fight ‘The subcommittee decided that if a| Belgium, unless the League of Nations | advisability of @ hearing on Haupt") now, the valley from Pittsburgh | tional. secretary. ‘The co-founder of|pigger and better city and his friends|the minot Optic, a predecessor of the| The last great fight in which he processor had failed to pay his AAA|tfted the Ethiopian war penalties, | man’s appeal for clemency, WhiC#) ine Ohio was rising. But rivermen | the organisation was still on the wit-lin all walks of life ook his passing|present Minot Daily News. Trey on behail of Biesnarck was that Processing taxes or obtained refunds Unwilling te Forget tence to life imprisonment. ness stand when the committee re-/as » personal loss. Tt was at this period that he home- from the courts, he should be com-| den told French Minister of Btate| ‘The court may deny the spplica- cessed for lunch, Here are some of the comments by|steaded s farm in Ward county, liv-|iivolving the proposal to move the Beck to the eorernment. Otherwise | 2° Eanden Wednesday, the officiais| dovige to have sthearing ax it did en M’Kenzie Man F: eo oo oer eis nevepaper| activities played an important pert 4 ave & as property time it was contended, processors who did/saia, thet Britain was unwilling t0| Jan. 11 when it rejected Hauptmann’s enzle in Paces in winning for Bismarck the rousing F i z i g g & 58 § i Q 3 make the tax payments would be vic-|«paraon” Italy for its East Africian| first plea for mercy. pi al campaign of conquest. ‘The governor, who- believes the y ‘The officials said Eden declared fur-| rindbergh crime has not been com- ther that Britain would not consider| pletely solved and whose agents are the virtual military alliance of the! still investigating the case, will con- Locarno powers, proposed after Ger-| fer with Attorney General Wilentz many occupied the Rhineland as/Thursday in the hope of arranging MODIFICATION SEEN binding until Italy gave formal rati-| an interview with Dr-John P. (Jafsie) ean. Condon, ransom negotiator. i z z Hs ‘Thursday, into the south- Meniat autioaes = ema the kinson of McKenzie|successful businessman and ® good|Minot. This business was not suc: concoction, The ||ceny, Carl Dicl mn ~ ue , |heedless of his physical condition, he first two (inches) layers were || Wednesday waived examination in|citizen, and I have lost a good neigh-|cessful and in 1910 he returned to 8t./ took the lead Rates the federal white. Then the wind shifted to || justice court and then pleaded guilty|bor. I shall miss his kindly smile and/Paul as political editor of The Dis-|covernment to retain in Bismarck. the south, adding a chocolate cov- || before District Judge Fred Jansonius|cheery ‘good morning.’” patch. In 1913 he was appointed city | certain offices which it had been proe ered touch to the three top (in- |/to the theft of a considerable amount # * % editor of that newspaper, being the/ nosed to move elsewhere, Their paye ches) layers. Mankato and Fair- || of household goods from Mr. and Mrs. Col, €. B. Little, once ye man ever to hold this posi-|rolls were an important item in the mont also had yellow snow, James Swanick, formerly of McKen-| Mann’s employer and his long- tion in its long history. commercial prosperity of Bismarck Arrested on a charge of grand lar-|of George Mann Bismarck has lost a|into the wholesale paper business in|?" >" ioncer ago than last summer, prehension lest. the entire Locarno} will not accept Jafsie’s terms to see zie but now of Fargo. Sentence was| time friend—“I shall him To Bismarck in 1914 and Mr, Mann risked his slready ime crisis, including France's demands for | him in his Bronx home in the pres- deferred pending:the recovery of the| very much. I rejoiced at his suc- ia owners of The|paired health to make personal re] Liberalization Will Enable 10,-|action against Germany unless the| ence of Wilentz, nor is he willing to|said its crest would be far below the | property, which, Dickinson said, he| cess, and I grieve at his death, ae ee eee “nim. the|fesentetions to government a3 000 N. D. Farmers to Ob- | Rhineland was demilitarized again,| submit to Dr. Condon a list of ques-| disastrous levels reached last week. |had stored in a deserted farm north} He was @ fine man in every sense | caitorship of North Dakota’s oldest| that they might be kept here. icy ‘bog down into a controversy over the| tions in writing. As rehabilitation work was pushed | of McKenzie. of the word; = great citizen hich he accepted, com-| Last fall he accepted the honorary tain Funds meaning and obligations of the ac- steadily throughout the desolated ——_—_—_- worthy @¢ every trust.” ee tis Ae the outbreak of|chairmanship of the Will Rogers cords of the four other signatories of ‘Sit Down’ Strik ri eastern areas, the death toll from CREATES .NEW JOB ‘ +* & i ld War. memorial commission in North Dae Nogsnins apie prom | anys DY memes by Ge] SE Ag to A bitrate in the east, south and’ west mounted | ames'Pr hilipa 25 is & standey-ta 2, Mootle yleen, eve-| immediatly he encountered, the |koia and gave beth time and money yf. e r a james F. ips, 25, is a si -in- |paperman and now WPA handicaps of operating 2 run-down 'to that effort. He was @ personal Washington to modify crop and seed gre to 201, liner. With the deadline on automo-jtor for North Dakota—“George i eearaner reupeciy: His first day 85| friend of the great humorist and the 8g Pp D. Joan regulations that would permit i March (?)—Oper-| _ The threat of new destruction slong | bile tags near and a long queue of/Mann was my friend for more than hectic because the type fund was to aid suffer= 10,000 farmers in North Dakota, Experts Winning War Pr sss. ia a ‘Thursday | the Ohio came from the rise in the | waiting applicants outside the county|30 years. I remember him as # news- eee A not contain enough E's to Hepa aprecttaa his interest. under present regulations, to} With Canada "Hoppers fy tne 5''n. cine company wooden-| Monongahela above Pittsburgh. But | clerk's office, Phillips makes 50 cents|paper reporter in St. Paul and as one | set the necessary headlines. Overcame Reverses Th — ware factory after 300 workers who|the crest of the “little flood” surged | a trip by saving places in line for busy |of the publishers of the Minot Daily} whereupon the new editor ordered| The Tribune grew and 5 bey pany a ora | Ottawa, March 26—()—The de-|had engaged in » “sit down strike” (Continued on Page Two) buyers, Optic. He was s splendid newspaper | the first of @ long series of changeS|with the city. A fire the a a Tesponse req pericet partment of agriculture Thursday re-|in protesting discharge of a worker man, whose citizenship was splendid-/| and improvements which were, even- | Tribune plant in 1920 but with the cone ministeator, that a modified plar Ported the best outlook for three | had agreed to arbitrate differences. q ly construgtive wherever he lived in| tually, to give The Tribune one of the | suming energy which was Worked ous, ‘Welford was told that Wien tuoatee acautee liek cee aie uae asin Bismarck Kiddies ee ee donee Ok Hees Hs | Pr riont eokata Aik oo oe boo moet Taal Cea Cae ee C2 scourge. iv i energy, @ . 1 an 3 conferences are now being held at!conciusions based on # recent survey |cards and engaging in other forms of : efficient printing plants. He directed | never missed a day of publication, that the headlines, which theretofore} Prom the ashes of the old Tribune had Bene eee Uae Pe aa on &| building Mr. Mann created the mode ti e. type-se a ‘The action was prophetic of others} During this period he turned his abe to come, for George D, Mann was to| tention to the commercial printing ine become a leader in the movement to/qustry. Hand processes then were ve prices 3 ry & 5 & gee i ee & i it { i ¢ changes to liberalize the federal pro-|ares threatened with grasshopper in-|charged worker, be reinstated and loved to have them about him, cedure. festation this year is 12,000,000 acres|payments made to him for time lost. r@) aunc. Owl? who know him best know ‘Under present regulations of both jiess than the area affected last year.| ‘The basis for settlement was arrived rf at following @ conference between J. istrations approximately 10,000 farm- ITALIAN FLIERS ACTIVE R Clark, president, and the executive/. xgore ers in the state who have received! Rome, March 26.—(?)—Marshal|committee of Furniture Workers} kiddies and teen age girls will inaugu-| this year by modeling of riding habits. the resettle-| Pietro Badoglio, commander of the| Union No, 1,850. rate the perade of spring and sum- Misses agency would be ineligible to/Italian forces in ment Ethiopia, reported obtain FCA seed loans and would re-/ Thursday that the Italian armies in MACKOFF IS TREASURER light of the 1996 from the resettlement! the north were conducting intense! St. Paul, March 26.—(P)—Marvin Biyle show, a shout 8 o'clock Th ses. | nothing noteworthy happening on the urer of District No. 6, of the Nattone’ ditorium. show egaparerac I as | southern front. A.Z.A, organizetion during the com-| Special entertainment features which | Gold shop and the Lucas company.| marck—“In the passing CAPITALIZES ON FLOOD ———— ing year, it was announced Tuesday | will run in 6 26. — () — TO GET NEW ORGAN pat the] London.—(?)—Westminister Abbey TOUHY are|is to have s new organ at a cost of: St. Paul, March 26.—()—Attarney ag i z i é 2 s i Fy é & E : : $ i i z ? g t a g ef 5 reduce the cost of printing in North |the were Dakota that business might have the | Mann early saw that lower benefits of its wider use, printing would enlarge the demand so = 3 i Al : i i Fg & | E z 3 é tr i £ & 5 i aN i al é FE

Other pages from this issue: