The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 3, 1936, Page 2

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MIXING COCKTAILS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY. APRIL 8, 1986 -- ort ||MERCURY TOUCHES CONTINUE from page one WITH HORSES GIVES RANCHER “WILLIES’ WEATHER FORECAS' tonight. For North Da- Increasing cloudiness tonight and Saturday; not kota: iT For Bismarck and _ vicinity: creasing cloudiness tonight and Sat- urday; not so cold Weather Report In- “(4 AT PARSHALL Temperature Here Coldest Af- ter April 2 in 65-Year His- Attorneys Make Desperate Fight For Mercy Move quoted recently as saying that in such jan event he would ask the attorney genera] ‘for a ruling, and that he would be guided by that advice. ‘Wendel, and he spent more then three ours telling his story. Wednel’s tale of torture geting! him, he said, to confess which he now says h had ‘5 entre he gun in Manhattan; Was taken to a house on avenue in Brooklyn and kept emg there by four men for 10 days. Tied By Thambs Was chained to the wall, tied SARG MARIONETTES PLEASE AUDIENCES Children and Adults Give Hearty Reception to Second Pro- Business | Picks ‘Up To Levels of (1930 Nvuss = ov Nee New York, ‘April 3.—(%)—Spring shopping combined with a rebound of consumer demand in the flood affect- ed areas lifted the past week’s retail business above the comparative totals back to 1930, the Dun & Bradstreet ‘Weekly Trade Review said Friday. Buying at wholesale was reported to be at the best rate since last fall, re- Rollen Rae Tolliver, 3, Bismarck, Tuesday. Births Daughter, Dr. and Mrs. R. B. Radl, 1025 Fifth S8t., at 5 a. Friday, St. Thinks ‘Dudes’ Go West Just to 80 cold tonight. tory of Bureau gram Here ~ Alexius hospital. Necting in part incomplete stocks and Get Away From Such So- ciety Habits St. Paul, April 3.—(?)—The idea of mixing cocktails with horses does nut eppeal to Charles Murphy, stock rancher and dude ranch owner from near Emigrant, Mont. who stopped off in St. Paul Friday enroute east. The Montanan commented on a re- cent newspaper story to the effect western dude ranchers were plan- ning to adopt the 4 o'clock cocktail hour at their establishments. When he and a friend read the Murphy said, the friend com- ted “Imagine Bones More or Slim nyder announcing, ‘it’s four o'clock folks, get off your horses and don the black and white for cocktail hour.” It is to get away from the cocktaii hour habits that many dudes adopt the great out of doors, Murphy said Continue Hunt for Aged Emmons Man Linton, N. D., April 3.—()—A three- day hunt by a 46-man_ searching party Friday failed to disclose any trace of Barney Bishop, 76, miss- ing since Tuesday afternoon. ‘The posse organized hy Sheriff Louis Langeliers of Emmons county continued to “beat the brush” along the Missouri river 45 miles northwest of here in an effort to find Bishop. ‘Wednesday morning friends report- ed him missing to Burleigh county authorities who vised Emmons county off: the search be- fan immed y 's Attorney Robert Chesrown reported. Foot tracks were reported seen in the river vicinity Tuesday, but snow ‘Tuesday night covered up the prints, Somewhat unsettled weather pre’ For South Da- kota: Increasing cloudiness, not so cold, possibly snow southwest portion tonight; Saturday unsettled, prob- ably snow south- west; rising tem- perature east and south portions. For Montana: Unsettled tonight and Saturday; probably light snow southwest portion little change in temperature, For Minnesota: Fair, not so cold tonight; Saturday increasing cloud- a rising temperature in south por- ion. WEATHER CONDITIONS The barometric pressure is high throughout the Great Plains region, Oklahoma City, 30.38, The Pas, 30.22, | while a low pressure area is center- ed over the far western states, Rose- | burg, 29.58. Temperatures are some- what higher over the western states, but readings are still unusually low from the Great Lakes region w: ward to the Rocky Mountain re; MILDER in the Great Lakes region and Far Western States, but the weather is generally fair from the Mississippi Valley to the Rocky Mountain region. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.22, Reduced .to sea level, 30.10. Missouri river stage at id a. m., 5.7 ft. 24 hour change, -0. Sunrise 6:18 a. m. Sunset 7:15 p. m. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to date .... Total, January Ist to date .... Normal, January Ist to date .. Accumulated excess to date .... WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA High- Low- BISMARCK, clear .... Beach, clear ... pt Carrington, clear . Crosby, pcldy. 04 1) 1 q 00} 2 When the temperature dropped to 14 degrees below zero at Parshall) Friday morning it came within eight points of equalling the all-time cold record for North Dakota during the ° month of April, according to officials | at the federal weather bureau here. The coldest temperature ever re- corded in the state in April was when the mercury hit a minus 22 at Wil- low City in 1899. Several state weath- | er bureau stations recorded’ tempera- tures below -14 that year, but only twice in April since 1900 has the mer- cury dropped below the reading tak- en at Parshall Friday. On April 6, 1906 at White Earth, was -19 and on April 1, 1923 at wile! low City it was -15. Since 1923 there have been no readings approaching |the -14 mark, Nine other state points had below | zero minimums during the while Bismarck with a low tempera- s|ture of three degrees above was the coldest it has ever been after April 2 in the 65-year history of the local weather bureau. A break in the sub-normal tem- peratures was expected tonight with the forecast for increasing cloudiness tonight and Saturday, not so cold tonight. The station at Sanish, near Par- shall, reported a minimum of minus 10, while other sub-zero temperatures were Crosby -6, Garrison and Napo- Beach and Dickinson -4, Minot and Williston -2, with others | ranging from zero to nine above. Mercury in all state thermometers remained below the freezing point throughout the 24 hour period end-i leon -5, ing Friday morning. MAPLE LEAFS WIN night, Reprieve May Fail If that shouid prove to be the case, jthen even a reprieve would fail to save Hauptmann. The proceedings of the grand jury, of course, were secret, but several things pointed to the possibility tha: the jurors would make a study of ie full facts céncerning Wendel’s alleged “kidnaping”. and his story that he was “tortured and beaten” by men forcing him to write the “confess sions” as they dictated them, A source close to the Hauptmann prosecutioh had this to say about ‘Hauptmann: “Colonel Kimberling has a war- rant for Hauptmann’s execution dur- jing the week of March 30. He alone cannot halt the execution.” “As a general proposition,” the counsel, C. Lloyd Fisher, said, “a jury isn’t finished with a-case until it ree turns an indictment or a ‘no bill’.” Parker Also ih Detective Ellis Parker commented ‘on the jury's action: “I've done all I can. I turned over the results of my work to the Mercer county officials, and if they do not ‘see fit to act, there’s nothing I can jdo about it. I will positively not take any further action in the case.” The president of Princeton univer- sity, the mayor of Princeton and 32 citizens of that city Thursday signed @ petition to the legislature asking 1: “to investigate whether attempts have been made by public officials or other persons to annul” the “orderly pro- cesses of law” in the Hauptmann case. President Harold W. Dodds of the {university and Mayor Charles R, Erd- ity jmann, Jr., headed the list of signers. Another “last day” found Haupt- mann cheered by the assurances of his wife, Anna, Thursday that she he said. Bishop had been living with Lem Ferguson, farmer in the extreme northwest tip of Emmons county, just west of Glencoe, which is in Bur- Jeigh. Max, Dickinson, clear . Drake, clear Dunn Center, clear . Garrison, clear Jamestown, clea: clear Minot, peldy. Parshall, clear Sanish, clear . New York, April 3—(#}—The To- ronto Maple Leafs, the comeback kids 00 of the National Hockey League, have barged into the final of the Stanley cup playoffs with a chance to retain that mug for the land where nearly all top-flight hockey players are born. They laid it on the line in the last ‘was confident he would not die; that he would escape the chair again as, he has thrice before. Can Still Confess There have been repeated sugges- tions that the former German ma- chine-gunner could avoid the black Parole Violator Is Back in N. D. Prison Ray Nelson, 27, parole violator, was back in the North Dakota state pen- itentiary Friday to serve the re- meinder of a three-year term. Arrested by Chicago police at the Tequest of North Dakota officials who said he had violated his parole by Jeaving the state, Nelson was returned here by Curtis Thornton, penitentiary employe. Sentenced to three years for thirc degree burglary in Wells county Aug. 26, 1930, Nelson was paroled Dec. 19, 1931. He must serve over a year as @ result of hjs parole violation, offi- cials said. | Nationally Known STETSON HATS for men, sold exclusively by Alex Rosen & Bro. TONIGHT The Throwback Rustlers! Horses! Guns! Posses! Fights! Races! = ADDED - CARTOON MUSICAL NEWS. Saturday, en Monday yh mya nay re" Ve) Uy “Or prs! LOMBARD “an FAITH BALOWIN'S: featuring PRESTON FOSTER CAPITOL Williston, clear . EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA High- Low- est est Pct. Devils Lake, clear . 4 00 Grand Forks, clear cl Hankinson, clear o aoa Gee tee a , clear Oakes 00 clear ... 00 period Thursday night, Americans had tied the score at 1-1 in the first, and won 3: WAR VETERAN DEAD Fargo, N. D., April 3.—()—arthur Borheim, 42, Barnesville, Minn® died |!ong ago as February, 1935, when in Thursday in the U. 8. Veterans hos- (his bitter summation at Flemington pital here. after the leather mask of the death chair—the tightly-clamped leg electrode, the skullcap that carries lethal lightning into his body—by a last minute con- fession. ‘Attorney General Wilentz was the first to suggest such a possibility as he said: Pitre he hears that switch —then he will talk. MINNESOTA | roms High- Low- est est Pet. Minneapolis, clear 2 18 Moorhead, clear . » 22 8 SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est a Huron, clear ... » 22 6 00 Rapid City, clear » 14-2 00 MONTANA sities High- Low- ae ~ bi 00 Havre, peldy. Helena, Mont., eldy. Miles City, clear . WEATHER AT hed POINTS ie - Low= est Pet. 28.00 34 8 Amarillo, Tex., Boise, Idaho, 24 20 Santa Fe, S. 3. Marie, ae play: Sheridan, Wyo Sioux City, Spokane, Swift Current, S. Des Moines, Iowa, clear 00 | Dodge City, Edmonton, Kamloops, B. Kansas City, Mo., clear Los Angeles, Cal., cldy. Modena, Utah, cldy. .. No, Platte, Neb., clear . Okla. City, o., peldy. Phoenix, Pr. Albert, 8. Kans., clear ‘Alb., cldy. &, clear Ariz., eldy,. ep: “cldy QuAppelle, cles Roseburg, Ore., cldy. St. Louis, Mo., clear Salt Lake City, U., cldy. N. ‘Mex., eldy. lowa, clear ‘ash., cldy. . clear The Pas, Man., cid: Winnemucca, peldy. 4 Winnipeg, ‘Man., Buy. If he should “tal,” that in itself 00 might be considered sufficient reason ‘99 {oF interrupting the execution. But ‘99 Hauptmann in the letter “of a dying jo1;man” to Governor Hoffman last 00 ; Tuesday reiterated his willingness but Fa helplessness to give any information 00 that might solve the crime. my If he dies Friday night, then he has /Seen his wife, Anna, for the last time. | She visited him Thursday. When she left she said: “Goodby, Richard I will see you again.” She will—if “something” intervenes before the fateful 8 o'clock. If not, then she will see him only after he has been taken from the little death house morgue. May See Body Only If that be Hauptmann’s destiny, Anna Hauptmann’s husband will come back to her in a cheap, ill-fitting suit of clothes, taken from the same Seeeesesesse Then Hell ‘Adolph Zukor presents (A Premecst Pitre with JOAN BENNE Today and Sat. Daily 2:30-7-9 seine 300 MILES AN HOUR! JP Hours Thrill-A-Second-Action Aboard a Giant Air-Liner! 10,000-Feet Above the World and Out of Control! An April ‘ Jubilee Hit! -AND *,, "e, %, Breaks Looe aboard...and © wise-cracking pilot who boast: he con handle any emergency! by AIR’ FRED MacMURRAY TT e Pitts + John Howard prison shelves where clothes of par- joled prisoners are kept; and on his jhe the small, tell-tate/ amount ‘shaven spot where the death hood iit. Mrs. Hauptmann left Trenton |'Thursday for a brief visit in’ New j¥ork with ‘her small son, | At the grand jury hearing Thurs day night the final witness was Paul It’s Contagious! The Town Will Be Quaran- tined With Laughter! 4 Shows Sunday at %-4-7-9 Three ‘Way -Inn 116 Second Street bergh baby murder; Finally wrote and signed the “con- fessions” after which he was taken by automobile to Mt. Holly and let out near the home of Detective Ellis Parker; Spent the night at the Parker home and later was taken to the state colony for the feeble minded at New Lisbon ; And that on last’ Saturday he was turned over to Mercer county author- ities and placed in jail here on a mus- der charge. BRUNO BOLSTERS HIS MOTHER'S HOPES ,Kamenz, Germany, April 3.—(7)— ‘Bruno Richar’ Hauptmann bolstered his mother’s hopes that her son might yet live Friday with a letter declar- ing two witnesses who testified against him at his trial for the Lindbergh kidnap-slaying committed perjury. Condemned to die in the electric chair Friday night at Trenton, N. he assured the aged Frau Pauli! ‘Hauptmann that he believed the ex- ecution ‘never would be performed. If the state actually persisted in arrying out his execution, he said I am not afraid of it.” NEW DEALERS PUSH TAX PLAN DESPIT BUSINESS ATTACK Friends Say Those Who De- manded Balanced Budget Now Are Doing Aboutface enue, Appearing for the American Fin- ance conference, which he said repre- gam represents ad and unsound national CONTINUE D Golden Glove Champs To Be Crowned Tonight trants, will battle it out for the ban- } Additional Markets CHICAGO STOCKS (By the Pregs) close: Great Northern 7's of 1996, 101%. GOVERNMENT BONDS new Yon York, April 3.—(%)—Govern- ment Treasury 4%'s: 117.26, F RIDAY NIGHT Tony Sarg’s marionettes and four puppeteers performing Mark Twain's “A Connecticut Yankee in King Ar- thur’s Court” Thursday afternoon and evening in the city auditorium con- tributed a bright spot to the spring entertainment bill of the Capital City The children’s matinee drew a ca- pacity house of delighted youngsters and the grown-up audience in the evening also fell under the spell of the unique little actors and actresses and gave evidence of its approval with much laughter and applause. Is Financial Success The Sarg marionettes were brought here Thursday for the second time by the Bismarck chapter, American As- sociation of University Women, and the financial success with which the venture met practically assures future Performances if the troupe should a be routed though North Da- cota. Remarkable illusion is attained in the presentation which in this case involved eight elaborately staged scenes making up three acts and a Prologue. Perhaps the best puppet was that of Mark Twain in the prolouge which also brought glimpses of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, who achieved @ dance with guitar accompaniment, not an easy accomplishment for real actors. Merlin, the magician, the Connecticut Yankee, the dog and the horse and donkey puppets were other favorites. All of the little figures were beautifully attired in keeping with the sixth century. Four People Operate Puppets Talking and pulling the strings Manipulating nearly 20° characters, some of which weigh eight pounds and have 40 strings controlling their movements and projecting their voices so that they seemed to come from the puppets they are imperson- ating is a skilled art and the me- Jean Louis Brunelle, Mandan, and Miss Violet Ethel Bowen, Bismarck. Edward William Reycraft, Fort Lin- coln, and Miss Lucille Holmes, Bis- marck. Son, Mr, and Mrs. Homer Ritchie, 359 West Rosser, at 2:49 p. m., Thurs- | porte day, Bismarck hi Baptismal services -vices. for infants and children will be held at 10:30 a. m., Sunday, at the McCabe Methodist Episcopal church, instead of 10 a. m., as previously Late tt Melvin Danielson, 91 911 Sixth St., was taken to a local hospital Thursday with several external bruises and pos- sible internal injuries received when a piano, which he was helping a friend move, fell, pinning him underneath. North Dakota's state board of rail- road commissioners Monday will ap- pear before an Interstate Commerce Commission hearing at Minneapolis to protest against proposed increased rail rates on sweet clover, sorghum, cane, millet and sudan seed. Members of the state board of the North Dakota Piremen’s association dates for the state convention to be held at Oakes. State officers Mike Heidt of Mandan, president, H. L. Reade of Bismarck, secretary, and trustees comprise the board. Two months after he had entered growing delivery delays. Car Loadings Exceed Previous Week’s Mark Washington, April 3 S Roro As: porge of American Ra: freight for the week ending last Sat- urday totaled 600,487 cars. This was an increase of 33,679 cars, or 5.9 per cent, compared with the preceding week; a decrease of 16,033 or 2.6 per cent, compared with a year ago, and @ decrease of 9,703 or 16 per cent, compared with two years ago, Californian Freed Of Murder Charge arte Jose, Calif, Apr April 3. mocha Lamson were dismissed Friday and he was ordered liberated pronase VOONT mss mm The Music You Love on the PITTSBURGH SYMPHONIC PROGRAM KFYR @ 9:00 P. M. Piet PITTSBURGH BURGH prison to serve a 15-months term for | « obtaining money under false preten- ses, Marcus Fautsch Friday was par- oled by the state board of pardons on recommendation of District Judge R. G. McFarland. Fautsch was sentenced from Eddy county Feb. 3, U. 8. Department of Commerce figures show that 1,797,380 patents {were issued in this country from the It for the time records first were kept until 1982, Se Satisfied diners have built a bigger business at the Prince. : NEW SPRING STETSON HATS $5.0 al ALEX ROSEN & BRO. TMRILG eet RY FILLING from Hollywood the golden voice of lovely to the story ot how ea] she won her glorious new figure with Ry-Krisp Whole Rye Wate -KRISP i209 BUT NOT FATTENING RYE WAFER Appliance Clearance Sale Used Washers and Floor Samples Reconditioned. Was $165. Now..... Fleor sample. Was $69.50. Now.... Stratton engine. Was $119.50. Now.... Used Kelvinator Refrig- erater, 4-ft. cone . $39.50 Westinghouse Ironer $49.50 Easy Farm Washer Floor sample. 6-sheet capaci ity. Briggs $99.50 One Minute Washer Completely overhauled, reconditioned and repainted. Easy Was $165. Now Floor samp! Now ..... Easy Was $79.50. Westinghouse Washer Washer. Was osneee .... $25.00 Dryer Washer Completely reconditioned. $59.80 le. Double tub DeLuxe $79.50 Farm Washer Floor sample. 5-sheet capacity, Bri Stratton engine. + $69.50 Now .... REFRIGERATORS Used Frigidaire . $44.50 ;, $59. 50 xcellent Used Ice Boxes—$5 an SALE LASTS SATURDAY ONLY! | LIGNITE Free Home Deseonstration CASH PRIZES ! to Winning Amateurs Soleaene S08 to arranee for reservations. COMBUSTION to ble ENGINEERING 304 MAIN AVE. _ Convenient Time Payments CORP. Ironers, Lignite Stokers, Westinghouse Refrigerators No Cover Charge

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