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

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“y North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Increasing cloudiness and not so cold night; Wednesday cloudy, warmer. ESTABLISHED 1878 Oil Struck Near Ma TUBE THEY DESIRE TO DICTATE WILLS Rescue Workers Believe They Are Close to ‘Tomb’ in Rock-Bearing Gold REPLACE WEARY RESCUERS Dr. Robertson Has Cold and Scadding Suffering With “Trench Feet’ (Copyright, 1936, Associated Press) Moose River, N. 8., April 21—Two men entombed for more than eight days in the Moose River gold mine indicated Tuesday they desired to dic- tate their wills through a 100-foot tube from the surface to the cavern in which they were imprisoned. Goes to Madison BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1936 13-Year-Old Sanish Girl’s Gun Knocked Aside in Abor- tive Holdup lodged in the county jail. Disguised with a mask cut from a| Minnewaukan, N. D., April 21—(#) sweater, the girl, whose parents re-|—A $50,000 fire destroyed three build- side on @ farm 11 miles southwest of | ings, damaged another, endangered a’ THREE BUILDINGS LEVELED ‘Hotel, Depot and Elevator Des- troyed, Two Other Struc- iness District tures Damaged the entire business district Monday night before firemen from five cities brought it under control after a sev- en-hour battle, MINNEWAUKAN FIRE | WPA WORKERS, NOT TAKES $50,000 TOLL | CCC, CUTTING TREES BEFORE QUENCHING! IN BADLANDS’ PARK Firemen From Five Cities Battle Flames Threatening Bus- Cedars Felled to Provide Fence Posts for Grazing Areas of RRA MANY WILL BE REPLACED Nursery Being Established to Reforest and Reclaim Na- tural Beauties ‘WPA workers and not OCC en- The net results of the government's activities probably will be more trees in this area despite the cutting of i 6,000 trees during the last win- r. Uncle David’s Note Mollifies Girl Who May Be Queen of Eng- land Some Day Observes Her 10th Birthday London, April 21.—(#)—“Uncle David” sent a note of apology Tues- day to soften the disappointment of little Princess Elizabeth, second in succession to the British throne, who had expected the wearer of the crown bes Britain to attend her 10th birth- lay party. The note said “Uncle David,” other- wise known as King Edward VIII, ‘was prevented by state affairs from attending his niece's party. The princess drew some consolation from the opening of hundreds of pres- ents from all parts of the world. Due to a family rule she may not keep many gifts sent by persons un- the royal family. member of British royalty the Viscountess Lascelles. PRICE FIVE CENTS rmarth, N. D. Two Mine-Trapped Men Lose Hope in ‘Dungeon INDICATE THROUGH [Dakota Maid, No. 1 Hard, Is Thwarted > BLACK GOLD FOUND FOR FIRST TIME AT 6,770-FOOT DEPTH Princess Montana-Dakota Well Capped After Strike Monday Just Over Montana Line DAKOTA TOWN GOES WILD Strike 19 Miles Southwest of Marmarth Starts Boom Scenes in Territory (Special te The Tribune) Marmarth, N. D., April 21—Mar- marth was a scene of wild festivities and boom-time excitement Tuesday for @ dream had at last come true. Dreams of things that might be changed to exhilirating talk of the things that are Tuesday as the Mon- tana-Dakota Power company formal- ly announced that it had struck oil in merchantable quantities in a well just over the state line. Gas lines have run from this terri- tory to parts of Montana and Dakota for more than three years and there bas been much talk of oil but none This was disclosed Tuesday when The Tribune investigated charges that the beauty of the Badlands area is ‘With desperate rescue workers still uncertain as to when they would be able to break through to the under- ground pit, Dr. D. E. Robertson asked that his brother-in-law, Charles Ivey of London, Ont., come toe the tube to . take down instructions. A doctor’s bulletin from Leeds said that Princess Mary was suffering from measles, and the complaint was “tak- ing its normal course.” Other guests who did attend, how- ever, and whom the princess served with generous slices of a birthday had ever been struck until Monday when @ gusher was brought in at a depth of 6,770 feet. The well was immediately capped and preparations were begun to bring in storage tanks so that it might ® HARRY A. STUHLDREHER + # VILLANOVA COACH T0 GUIDE DESTINIES OR (2225-2 sie = ment on the work has attributed the tree cutting to the OCC but this, ac- be pivced in production. Initial tests girl into custody and lodged her in| withstood the flames although the! cording to Russell Reid, superintend- 5 ‘Those ins ‘were Tee “what |, superi cake baked by the king’s own chef, showed the oil to be of 35 gravity. a pihiets unk ee pablo lubes the county jail. She steadfastly re-| windows and roof were ent of the State Historical society, is|included her parents, the Duke and good quality for a mid-continent field, definitely an error. As things now stand, most of the Badlands area is either owned by the government outright or is in posses- sion of the government by reason of Duchess of York. ADVERTISING GAINS Chicago, April 21.—(AP) — Aided somewhat by the fact that Easter The possibilities of production will not be determined until storage is avaiable. Then, if local dreams come true, Marmarth will be the center of cue crew fatled'to reach the tomb in time. Fire departments from Devils Lake, @ vast and important new industry. ental sped ae ne and, although pace, ry cu lack ee options which have been taken on/came earlier this year than last, re- Alicady wildcat promoters are nego- aah a . the night competi bra = iyreete the land. tail advertising linage in newspapers tiating for land in this vicinity in the Badgers Call One of Notre Dame's Famed Four Horse- men to Directorship Madison, Wis, April 21.— (>) — Harry A. Stuhidreher, head fs CALLED BACKBONE 2.2. OF YOUTHS? DRIVE Education to Counteract Red Propaganda Urged by Some 60,000 acres have been desig- nated as North and South Roosevelt parks. Large areas have been ac- quired by the National Park Service around Watford City and Medora corresponding week of 1935, Advertising Age reports. PRINCESS ELIZABETH Wishek Juveniles o Tour Bismarck hope that the oil-bearing area will spread. The gas pressure is heaviest on the North Dakota side of the line, al- though much of the gas has been taken from the Montana, side of the geologic anticline. J. H. Kramer, Marmarth postmaster, said he had been informed that a small jet had been placed in the cap of the well and that it was shooting out oil which anyone might see, The. event precipitated.@ wild cele~ bration here as citizens from the at the-surface that he and Scadding Cae of the Pak Petes Legion Commander, : = accents countryside gathered to talk over the had just enjoyed two hours sleep and men ef Motre Dame, will come to the ‘ . “Tri Capital news and celebrate the event which were “feeling fine.” University May 1 to take over the po-| Backbone of the youth movement in Educational “Trip-to Capital they envision as adding greatly to ‘The two survivors were fed through | sitions formerly held by Director|the United States today is the junior|to watch the fire. City Fast Displacing their wealth and to the prosperity of the 100-foot bore made by a diamund| Walter E. Meanwell and Coach Clar-| chamber of commerce movement, now| Minnewaukan )] ‘ing ‘Skip’ ere denise ree Nl fs about 19 Grill, and it was believed they could| ence W. Spears. ca foes ge atenar| Be cate peboteeegh appr LINKED WITH ROME'S Spring ‘Skip’ Day ‘The location of the well is about, be kept alive at least 24 hours more.! Megnwell and Spears were dis-| Walter W. Finke, re- GV—_—___—"—— qoertaneca tale oe inaprsnee side Eight volunteers arrived from |charged by the regents last February | gional vice president, before the April| about 500. Devils Lake, the closest ‘The first of @ large number of | Wuarter of a mile on Goldenville, a nearby town in this/after a blowup in the athletic depart-| meeting of the As-| large city, is 20 miles distant. from all t|° “i gold field of Nova Scotia, in response|ment which brought about official) sociation of Commerce Monday night. SE Juvenile delegations trom all parts o to an appeal for experienced men,| investigations both by the regents and| Tracing the growth of the organ- North Dakota will visit Bismarck Fri- willing to risk their|the athletic board. ization that now has more than 300 day when the members of the Junior if lives in the effort. to save the two Reger sey nore ses units pmany ales ca ehilgren A Weekly club of Wishek come here for 4 men. unt a in the pointed out ti Spell Weary Workers will have no official duties. Spears| the greatest growth has eae during instructions, according to Reid, were | ©Xpected Capture of Addis Aba-|an all-day outing. AT ARRISON They went to the dangerous Rey-/|is now at Toledo University where he|the depression years, a mushrooming to cut only dead, dying or mature ba Fails to Materialize, In charge of the group will be Paul nolds shaft, believed to lead to the/accepted @ position as director and|that has the men who timber, y. " J. Wishek, club director, who has spot where Dr. Robertson and Scad- shortly . | founded the organization in St. Louis Meanwhile, Reid said, the OOO has Badoglio Reports planned the one-day vacation in order ding were held, to replace # simi- Just 90 years ago. si County Physicians to ais s)nbimem bers many ave.s Pesier Early Bismarck Resident and Jar number of weary workers who had| Invite to “Unless the local junior associa-| S!ope y y' (By the Associated Press) knowledge of their Capital City and y ba correla coe lose 6 fy Con st xpe serene samaty See yloeoncsr eg Hear Three Doctors at Man- ‘Thousands of Romans stood cheer-| pave, OPPO aa een ane rae Mother of Western Writ- measured perenne that it smight He E rt wave said, “they have no prem veel dan Meeting Today ing in the square in front of Premier] ments as interest them. er Was 76 be hours before a hole was hacked! worth Dakota physicians and the movement. The primary purpose usoln ‘4 eee TUNAY, ast me The group will be met at the state + eee btn rescue crew trom the 1-/ scons, interested in plastic sey and further the interests of their own| Medical sclence’s latest achievements bration of the founding of Rone that |Reouts amd ofheitest ie narcniancs | ainot, NoDe Ape ai-im)—Mrs ie the 141-/are invited to hear Dr. Arthur E.| Soe sumer t in reducing the perils of motherhood “our ship has arrived in Rome with|/o¢ Commerce. Their first act will be| Nellie Bigelow Neal, 76, of Garrison, ee at the surface said Dr Leer ioclnlge ad prep petal cy he Need Mere Associations will be the subjects of three talks to all sails spread. to ascertain where the visitors want/| early resident of Bismarck, where her Robertson was suffering from @ cvld]the fesse td Dental) precreied Asserting that more North Dakota 9 even ie Oe eieregy ores a” celebration, corresponding a to 0 ‘and then arrange to take them husband, ihe date anv &. Beal act; and that Scadding had “trench fect."|in Bismarck at 3 p.m, May 7, Dr.| sswooiations should be formed and)si ft SeSCoe Ot Ne ewis and TM os Can nome ie al ae assitatunn otsGominetcaniaast (Meee Mee eiciet Mal ie ak id had (aad hie 2s Oe Ags E a Re ciaipret et renmgyppcton lag “lin the state—-Bismarck, and|Clark hotel at Mandan today at 6 new check on the advance in Italy|up a system for entertaining such|Garrison Wednesday. : the mine head where his wife wa‘ted, gi ao both = doctor-of medicine | Grand Forks—now are affiliated with|P. m. (mountain en coe since the Fascist advent to power. delegations and piloting them to points A ant ee tee he methes oft ne ae Greading that she might finally re-|and dental surgery, has chosen as his|*he national organization, Finks urged| Arranged by the North Dakota Mea: The expected capture of Addis) of interest in Bismarck and vicinity.|1ow Neal, author 0 spenan stories ceive the same word that sent Mrs.|topic “Reconstructive Plastic and| ‘Be local membership to sponsor|ical society's committee on Nonseenet Ababa had not materialized, though 4 8roup of the more mature Boy Scouts and of H. Siasion, hae eee , broken-hearted, back to her|Oral Surgery” which he will ilustrate| chambers in cities, populous enough | Poses 6 hes tian, the pro- the commander-in-chiet of ‘the Was-{0f she, CW, as, been, trained 1 at tort te Portion Mc, Press Herald two small children in Giga ie medon oe pany Dr. Smith wit|Dekote should have at least one di-|eram is oopree ie be ghey pa Pietro Badoglio, reported a new ad-|the various delegations, fore a I as nae ‘How ‘They , , d racine! ysiclans - 4 d psit da regist “How long?” was the question/llustrate are rebuilding of deformed| ** 7) ne packer a Ree pd Missouri valley counties. vance by the southern army after its Some Take Two Days at the Bismarck land offices after which came repeatedly over the tele- | Doses with carved cartilage taken from| 1100 the nation’s men can| Dr. P. W. Freise of Bismarck will Tecent victory over the Ethiopians in} Because there are so many places to| North Dakota became a state, was de- hone wire dropped to the two men|Fibs; removal of parotid gland for| Weves the nation’s young men can}, of 0° Mae Maternal Mortality Ogaden province. go and things to see it is practically puty sheriff under Alexander McKen- Through the hole that bored carcinoma; rebuilding of the! i-'or evils that exist in the na-|Rate in North Dakota”; Dr. E. M. In Geneva, delegates to the League|impossible for a visiting group to see | zie, and later served as North Dakota's down to their level. face with skin and adipose from pode tie, ‘correcting the|Ransom of Minot on “Toxemiss of | Butte reported 1,500 trees were cut |°f Nations council departed, after the/all the things which Bismarck hes to| first immigration commissioner and ‘The answer depended on what new|the abdominal wall; closure of cleft opel bea, pole ‘civil service and|Pregnancy” and Dr. Moore on “Safer |from “land optioned by him to the |*xecutive body of the league dropped |offer within the single day usually al-| as senator from McLean county. obstacles the underground workers|lip: removal of the upper Jaw and) Tcving’ government careers attrac-| Motherhood.” governtnent during the last winter.|!t8 efforts to begin negotiatious for/lotted to such trips. Last year, how- ¢ President of the district society. is Dr. L. G. Eastman of Hazen. Secre- tary is Dr. L. W. Larson of Bismarck. He said many of them were live trees and all were cut without his consent. peace between the warring nations, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, warned the League that if ever, several groups made a two-day affair of it. One place which everyone wants to Basketball Banquet ' Speakers Announced Tebuilding of ; removal of scars , Moore, ed at noon, was measures were not adopted to halt the|see is the capitol and this usually in- pee ee ne before the| .n4 birthmarks and . | Party. ae eee ee eet the Guan aod} Two Marmarth School |fax Atrican confit, his government| clades n° ey os ne ee aeually in- sacl: A Wein and conan In a dramatic conversvtion with his . ee With a desk piled high with doc-|Ramsted clinic at its regular staff} Won Resign Positions pe ee i eal , means of safe- pour. Pict eat are pene Harley Robertson and Glenn Jarrett, brother-in-law, Charles Ivey, Dr. Rob- MeMillan Accepts wrnentary m 5. Boise, | meeting Tyesisy: —_— The Franco-German situation re-|tentiary, the airport, the city water-|@ll of Minot; Principal C. W. Leifur, ertson described the terrible experi- Post at Ellendale| 2°" Cer eye ot he Marmarth, N. D., April 21—Resig-l|ceived = new jolt Tuesday with the|works, the Bismarck Baking company's | George Will, member of the board of Be ine 18, Shae eee Nee PE om © arperipen Legon. of the pe ae pet Japanese Execute 4 1 " 7 report of a Paris newspaper of tve|plant, KFYR, local greenhouses and plcatien, ane Pee ae roo! % ici beginning of construction of forts by|the Bismarck Tribune plant, ‘ “There were heavy crashes and| J.C. McMillan of Wahpeton an-|by which Russia is attempting to Traitorous Officials y basketball banquet to be given at 6:30 another rush of an Dr. Robertson | nounced Tuesday following a confer- doctrine of Communism Germany in the demilitarized Rhine-| Then there are old Fort Abraham member-at-large, and William Mc- Gillivry, third ward. ¥ announcement that the United States will not boost its armaments unless other nations make such a step necessary. MRS. DANIEL MUIR DIES Grand Forks, N. D., : | i 5 id 2 i e ga gE : Bot in i [ 5 E RE fH i P | v f Ft ty Me Tokyo, April 21. — (®) — A Domel (Japanese) from Sheng, former governor of Hsingan news agency dispatch said Maj. Gen. Ling Jaffa Take 19 Lives » A 21.—(P)—Arab- Jerusalem, pril Jewish riots at Jaffa and Tel-Aviv left juries. The fighting, leaving 15 Jews Arabs dead and a total of fa uta land zone. ‘The newspaper Excelsior, in a dis- patch from its correspondent at Wiesbaden, said a belt of fortresses, de-| similar to those in the Maginot line other teachers were re-elected for an- other year. Million Dollar Fire Is Halted at Sharon [) 5 Al 21.—(P)—A $1,- COnpen fine ined’ cut Sharon's main section ‘Tuesday BURGUM TALK SLATED Jamestown, N. D., April 21.—()— on France's western frontier, had been started, extending from the Dutch to the Swiss border. Northwest Planners Meeting at Aberdeen Aberdeen, 8. D., April 21—()—Rep- and consultants of seven secure greater cooperation and effec- tiveness in advancing mutual inter- ests. Robert H. Randall, consultant HOUSTON CELEBRATING Texas, April 21.—(?)— Houston was jammed with visitors obese: Lincoln, Fort McKean, the Slant In- dian village, the Great Plains field station and the State Training School, all on the west side of the river. Visits to Bismarck have proved Popular with school officials as well as students, according to H. P. God- dard, secretary of the Association of ‘Commerce, because it takes care of the problem presented by “Skip Day”, a tradition in many schools. This always comes toward the end of the school year when, with spirits running high and Spring in their blood, students of graduating classes feel called upon to assert their bud- ding independence by failing to at- tend school on a given day. In the past this has led to trouble in many communities but in later years it has come to be ‘regarded in many places as a students’ prerogative. For the students it has always been @ festive occasion and many school authorities now are joining in making it one to be remembered by joining in planning for the event. In other schools the trip is in the nature of a treat for the members of the graduating class. A precedent was established last year when one school superintendent induced his board of education to dis- pense with an elaborate graduation ceremony and spend the money which it would cost on giving the students a p. m., tonight at the capitol lunch- room. Members of Minot’s state cham- pionship cage squad will be honored guests. Others present will include the Demon and Imp squads from the local high school, members of the board of education and male mem- bers of ie iced and senior high school fact ° Musical numbers will be furnished by the boys’ quartet composed of Chester Johnson, Jack Mote, Earl Benesh and Harold Smith, Coach Glenn A, Hanna will act as toast- master, Bonus Deliveries to Begin About June 15 Fargo, N. D., April 21—(?)}—Deliv- ery of soldiers’ bonus bonds and checks will be made by registered mail beginning June 15 and it is esti- mated will be practically cleaned up by July 15, according to word receiv- ed Tuesday from Washington by Jack Williams, North Dakota Americar Legion department adjutant. SOVIET BRAIDS WALLETS Moscow, April 21—(7)—The Soviet government directed ail industrial en- terprises Monday to set cent of their ordinary net profit fund to improve living conditions of the workers, * »

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