The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 24, 1936, Page 8

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)

' near the convention hall. - t r 4 x M SHESEESSSOBR ReKee wewe wn Gl a8" RESROETAR BURUEARSEE.. 1 vol hig da; ™ ea sal ery we spr pee = i of the delegates were “‘Knox men.” OPEN AIR CEREMONY PLANNED FOR FDR'S "ACCEPTANCE SPEECH! Democratic Leaders Eelieve 100,000 Persons Will Hear Him in Philadelphia ‘Washington, April 24—(?)—Demo- cratic leaders arranging June con- vention plans Friday considered the idea of holding a giant open air cere- mony at Franklin Field, Philadel- phia, to notify President Roosvelt of his renomination. Leaders of the party estimated that around 100,000 persons could watch the ceremony and hear the president's speech of acceptance in the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania Athletic Field While New Deal chieftains traveled to Saturday's meeting in Philadel- phia to complete arrangements for the June convention, there were develop- ments also in the opposition camps. Senator Borah of Idaho, candidate for the Republican nomination, sent a telegram to Col. Frank Knox of Chicago, another candidate, saying that efforts were being made to per- suade delegates to “disregard the wishes of the ‘pedple.” The senator asked Colonel Knox if he approved of such efforts... . Borah said friends of Knox were trying to get votes for the publisher from delegates in districts carried by the Idaho senator in the primary April 14. Knox, in New York, satd he had not yet received the telegram. Borah’s campaign managers have claimed 26 of the Illinois 59 district delegates. Knox hes said all but one Addressing the Kansas society of New York Thursday night, Henry Justin Allen, publisher of the Topeka State Journal, described Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas as “the outstand- ing figure in the American political scene today.” Allen declared the Republicans “will win with Landon” in November. ‘MORE TRUE BILLS IN WENDEL'S CASE SEEN Five Men Indicted for Kidnaping and Assault on Disbarred N. J. Lawyer Brooklyn, N. Y., April 24.—(7;—The possibility of additional indictments was indicated Friday in the kidnap- ing of Paul H. Wendel whose repud- iated confession of the Lindbergh kid- naping caused a three-day delay in the execution of Bruno Richard Hauptmann. With five men named in true bills Thursday, District Attorney William YP. X. Geoghan said the additional in- dictments might be forthcoming against “persons not within the jur- isdiction of Kings county (Brooklyn).” The indictments, charging kidnap- ing and second degree assault, were against Ellis H. Parker, Jr., son of a ‘New Jersey detective who had been prominent in certain phases of the Lindbergh case; Martin Schlossman and Harry Bleefeld, now in custody in Brooklyn; and Harry Weiss and Murray Bleefeld who have not been located despite a search in several tates. Detectives deliverd a warrant for the arrest of the younger Parker to ‘New Jersey state police Thursday night. Harry Bleefeld is the owner of the. Brooklyn house.in which Wendel said @ gang of men held him a prisoner for 10 days and tortured him until hhe signed the “confession,” Minnesota Corporate Excess Tax Is Invalid St. Paul, April 24—(?)—The state supreme court Friday ruled Minne- sota’s corporate excess tax law in- valid, affirming a.district court order handed down in a test case instituted by the Bemis Bros., Bag company of &t. Louis, and the 8.H.Clausin & Co., Minneapolis wholesale jewelers. ‘The two corporations brought ac- tion against the state tax commission and the Hennepin county auditor and Minneapolis city assessor after the commission had instructed the latter two to make levies for 1933 under the 57-year old corporate excess law. ‘The high court upheld the plain- tiffs contention the law was invalid implied repeal in subsequent statutes. The law, enacted in 1879, defined corporate excess as the amount left when the total value of real and per- sonal property and money and cre@its ‘was subtracted from the total value of ® corporation’s stocks and bonds. Kidnaper Declares ‘I Was Alone in It’ When F. R.’s Away, So's His A The boss isn't the only person at the White House who can enjoy a vacation. Here Gra Tully, secretary to Preside: Roosevelt for eight years, shown as she absorbed a little Florida sunshine, taking a rest at Coral Gables while the pres- ident enjoyed his fishing trip ce nt is fp ee RRC OFFERS FUNDS TO AID RRA INN. D. Corporation’s Offer Will Enable Expansion of Aid for Needy Farmers Two million dollars in Rural Reha-|_ bilitation corporation funds have been made available to the state resettle- ACCIDENT WILL COST TEACHER'S EYESIGHT Antler Man’s Glasses Broken as He Walks Into Corner of Building in Dark Minot, N. D., April 24.—(4)—Run- ning into the corner of a building in the dark and shattering a lens in his eye glasses will cost the sight of the left eye of John Page, 30, teacher in a consolidated school near Antler, Minot physicians said Friday. He is @ patient at a hospital here where he was brought after the accident Wed- nesday night. Page was walking from the school- house to the nearby teacherage when he struck his face upon a corner of the building he was about to enter. Page's glasses were broken and a fragment of a lens entered his left eye, piercing the eyeball. This is Page's first year of instruc- tion at Antler. He formerly lived at Maxbass. 1937 Class to Raise Prom Funds With Play Proceeds from staging “Mignonette” in the city auditorium Wednesday, April 27, by the Bismarck high school class of 1937 will be used to defray expenses of the annual Junior prom which will be held Monday. At this time the juniors will entertain the graduating class, “Mignonette” is a romantic drama written by Arthur Jearue, author of “Garden of the Moon,” “The Charm Shop” and other stage successes. The play being given here has been pre- sented in more than 500 high schools since it was written four years ago. The author preserved the spirit of the old South in the play. Action opens in the parlor of the Deardon home in Frankfort, Ky., that has changed but little. from 1861, in Sep- tember of 1931. Act two shows the same setting in 1861, while the last soene returns to the present. The cast, which is working under the direction of Miss Judith Skoger- boe, includes Isabelle LaRue, Florence Wilson, Ruth Coghlan, Mary Louise Finney, Sara Bashara, Arlene Ruder, Mary See, Evelyn Larson, Douglas Stratton, Robert Penner, Robert Ta- vis, Paul Kenyon, Howard Nelson, Henry Koch, Ted Boutrous and Ben Jones. | Frazier Going on Junket to Alaska Washington, April 24.—(4)—Senator Thomas (Dem., Okla.) disclosed Fri- day he and four other members of the senate Indian committee would go to Alaska this summer to investigate reports of injustices against the In- dians of that territory. Thomas said he and Senators Wheeler (Dem., Mont.), Frazier (Rep., N. D.), Dona- hey (Dem., Ohio), and LaFollette (FP. L., Wis.) probably would leave Se- attle in July. FRANCE WILL TALK Paris, April 24—(4)—France agreed Friday to discuss with other signers of the Lausanne treaty Turkey's re- Allentown, Pa. April 24—(7)—A aan who police said confessed he kid- naped 10-year-old Henry T. Koch Friday insisted “I was alone in it” in replying to all questions suggesting he might have had an accomplice in a@ ransom plot that the youthful vic- tim himself defeated. ‘The prisoner, against whom was served a warrant charging “Richard D. Taylor, Akron, O.,” about 43, with Kidnaping, underwent careful ques- tioning by investigators after his ar- rest Thursday on the edge of Allen- Henry's efforts at escape from the bonds of tape freed himself and saved his father, H. T. Koch, Sr., from an attempt to collect $20,000 in ransom. A good firm seed bed will be of much help in the early establishment of the young. plants produced from lightweight shriveled seed. Such light seed carries much less food and con- ®equently is more dependent upon a seed bed that will put the icles in close contact with the of a tend- to dry out if the 7 is likewise less g zB as e i i end after ‘and manage: it is ment. 3 Bf Ss i ; | of poultry is first a that a quest for permission to fortify the Dardanelles. less flavor, oven- freshness and value of Kellogg’s. Ask your grocer for them by name. Farmer Charged With Killing Two Guarded Baton Rouge, La., April 24—(P)— Walter Johnson, 45-year old farmer, twice spirited away from threatening crowds after he was wounded in a gun battle that led to his capture, denied Friday he killed two officers to prevent cattle dipping. Johnson: was shot and slightly wounded at his home near Colfax Thursday night after he had been hunted for two days for the slaying of Sheriff W. L. Nugent and Dep- uty D. L. Brunson. A mob formed quickly near the scene of the capture. Officers hurried their prisoner to a hospital at Alex- andria, 30 miles away. Another crowd gathered at the hospital so Johnson again was carried from his bed to an automobile and rushed. to this capital city another 100 miles to the south- east for safekeeping. SWEDEN TO CELEBRATE Willmar, Minn., April 24—(®)—A great All-Lutheran festival commem- orating the 300th anniversary of the landing of the first Swedes in Amer- ica will be held in Minneapolis in 1938 by the Lutheran Minnesota con- ference. ment administration to raise the num- ber of farm cases cared for by the latter organization to approximately 6,100, Iver Acker, assistant state di- rector of resettlement, said Friday. Acker pointed out there were ap- proximately 6,000 standard farm plan cases in the office of which approxi- mately 3,500 could be cared for with resettlement funds. Acker said he did not think loans could be made in time for seeding for “farm plans have to be prepared for these cases and loans must be ap- proved. “It would be a physical impossibi- lity to handle this number of cases in time for seeding,” he stated. “In ad- dition all resettlement funds must first be exhausted before rehabilita- tion funds may be used.” Acker said he expected some loans would be made for seed although he did not anticipate there would be any | S**! great number. For the most part, he explained, loans from the $2,000,- 000 fund will be for rehabilitation goods and in the fall for harvest ex-;messages from Poona said Friday penses.” The average loan, Acker asserted, would run approximately $400. New forms must be prepared for each of these cases under the rehabilitation corporation for monies will come from that corporation and not from the resettlement administration, he em- phasized. Mandan K. C. Council To Receive 45 Sunday &. Thomas More council of the Knights of Columbus, Mandan, has extended a special invitation to members of Bismarck Council 1604 to attend exercises Sunday at which the first three degrees of the order will be conferred upon 45 candidaces. Carl Dorfler, grand knight of the Mandan council, announces that members fram all over the state will be present. Candidates to be initiat- ed are from Glen Ullin, Center, Flasher and Mandan. The day will start with members and candidates attending 7 o'clock mass at St. Joseph’s church and re- ceiving communion in a body. At 9 a. m., the members and candidates will gather at Hudson hall for regis- tration. Work in the first degree will start at 10 a. m., that of the second and third degrees at 1:30 p. m. B. C. B. Tighe, Fargo high school principal, will be the main speaker at @ 6:30 o'clock banquet closing the program, which is to be served in the high school gymnasium. C. F. Kelsch will be toastmaster. MINNEOPA AMMONIA, 16 ox boite ..... LTC MINNEOPA -BLUING, 8-02. bottle, per bottle . per cat enna LC bottle. 29e FAIRCO WHITE CORN, roaeenaner Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Dinner, 72-0z. pkgs., 2 for .........;....25€ BIG 4 SOAP CHIPS, yee pkg. Strawberries, New Potatoes, New Cabbage, Cauliflower, Green Onions, Fresh Carrots, Head Lettuce, Ripe Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Asparagus, Green Peppers, Sweet Potatoes, Dry Onions, Rutabagas. Garden Seeds Coffee, Red “A” per pound ..... 1 at special Pork Roast, Shoulder, per Ib. 1 7c Fancy Beef Pot 1 6c Roast, per Ib... 27c Lard, pure white, 2 Ibs. for ...... SPEAKS GROCERY 216 Broadway—Earl Speaks, Prop-—Phone 611 SPECIALS Phones 1208-1209 Fresh Meats, Fruits and Vegetables CRACKERS, 2 Ib, box ........- PINS, : LIQUID VENEER, 4-0z. bottle ...... 19c a ih CAPKOTA CUT GREEN Fe 3 ten 2ter:.. 200 ee. ee SUNEEITE CLEANSER, , Rhubarb, Fresh Pineapple, ion Sets 423 Third Street ...17e .11e Wheaties, per package .. See our complete line of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables low prices Swift’s RING BOLOGNA, per Ib. ... .15c Beef Ribs, per pound ..13¢ blade peamente YP Fresh Killed Chickens We Carry a Complete Line of Fresh and Cold Meats ——See I.G.A. ad for more saving specials—— We Deliver: all orders free to all parts of the city rm Imports Trade i Fa Minnesota Youth Buries Own Ghost f Increased Last Year ‘Washington, April 24—(7)—A heavy increase in the American import trade, including a wide range of agri- cultural products, was reported Fri- day by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States in a review of this branch of trade for 1935. The foreign commerce section of the chamber at= tributed the increases to “non-resort by this country to wide arbitrary con- trols of import trade; returning do- mestic industrial activity, and the scarcity and high price levels of some foodstuffs.” LOOT WIMBLEDON OFFICE Wimbledon, N. D., April 24—(7)— Robbers looted the safe in the Wim- bledon postoffice of $400. The dis- covery of the robbery was made Thursday when postoffice came to work. Leads His Italians to Daring Success EADING one H of the most dificult ven- tures of the Ethiopian war, Gen _ Achille Starace, Fascist party secretary- general, led 5000 = Ktalian building roads as they went through the mountains, to capture Gon- dar, near Lake Tana. Montana Beet Field Labor Supply Probed Helena, Mont., April 24.—(®)—Gov. Elmer Holt of Montana ordered an investigation Friday of the Montana sugar beet field labor supply to “make sure” the crop is planted and “Mon- tana labor is used to do the work.” The governor said he called for the PAPER'S CONVICTION REVERSED BY COURT Contempt of Court Charge Is Tossed Out by South Da- kota Supreme Jurists The youth, whose “bones” were dug for in the cellar of a farm- house near here by deputy sher- iffs recently after Mrs. Joe Ertz, his mother, reported she saw his “ghost,” wrote her a letter stat- ing he was—“alive and well.” He had disappeared from home five years ago. Confirming his letter was another written Sheriff J. C. Henkes by his employer, Henry Anderson of Garske, N. D. Starace Galveston, Tex., originated the com- mission form «f government in the United States as an emergency mess- Te following’ te flood disaster of tor, who pleaded guilty to forgery. Hasse was sentenced to six months in jail and fined $300, with the jail sentence suspended. The American News, contending a heavier sentence was justified, edit called Judge torially bes gpd ae ie lars the back,” remar! ab“ Honorable imported. Montana does not intend to let other states shift their relief \qucee, should doff his regal robes, loads to us by dumping some of the! sackcloth and sit in the ashes) until his penitence is complete.” persons on their relief rolls into our! Contempt. action was brought by members of the County Bar associa- investigation “after receiving reports that beet field workers were being paRK FOOD SToR, “Where ‘There’s Room to Park” WE DELIVER Phone 2040 85 HURT IN RIOTS and the editor, Howard O” Anderson” Tomat nH Campbells Bombay, April 24.—()—Telephone| were fined $200 each and sentenced oma 0 uice No. 10 Tin to 30 days in jail. The jail sentences were suspended, troops have been called out following communal rioting between Hindus ‘and Moslems in which 85 persons were reported injured. however. Greece requires all its canned goods to bear the date of packing. 18K, Halves or Sliced in heavy syrup Peaches Shrimp Quaker Puffed Wet or Dry Regular size tins 9c lle Don’t Miss the 1c Sale Appearing in IGA Ad Peanut Butter .%".. 29¢ Select Your Vegetables Here Free Toy Balloon with each loaf of PAN-DANDY BREAD Regular Loaf at Regular Price When better bread is baked— it will be a PAN-DANDY LOAF Your Grocer Has Pan-Dandy Bread Fresh Pastries and Rolls of all kinds Quaker Puffed Rice ... ‘ Baked by Mandan Baking Co. Carl’s Grocery @ Phone 371 “Dependable” © We Deliver CORES ; Firm Fruits Krisp Vegetables “ane ee Maxwell House Coffee, 1 Ib. ....... IGA Tomato Soup, 5 cans .......... * Both for 36c FRESH ; HAMBURGER fe", .16c POT ROASTS, tender, Ib.....15c, 19¢ BACON S2rsfw LITTLE PIG SAUSAGES, Small IGA Salad Dressing, 32 oz. 18K French Dressing, 4 oz. Grape-Nuts Flakes . “IGA Cake Flour ....... 3c links, Ib. ee bulk, quart . ‘ IGA Lemon Extracts 1 a, bottle Bothtor De LAMBSTEW Me ean. 13 Wheatied, per pkg. ......+- LIVER SAUSAGE Frey ...............13¢ peda nn COTTAGE CHEESE "°°" 17¢ Dawn Toilet Paper, 6 rolls; IGA Paper Towel, 1 roll; IGA Towel Rack, 1 rack All for 5le IGA Laundry Soap, reg. size, 8 bars .. Cookies, fancy frosted, per Ib. ......... FINNANHADDIE 2%. .......... . FRESHEST FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Saas, FRESH, CRISP ASPARAGUS, pound ... Grapefruit -.19¢ Oranges Fancy, Juicy Sweet, Juicy STRAWBERRIES, MUSHROOMS, GREEN BEETS, TURNIPS, FRESH TOMATOES, ay ort oan PEAS, SPINACH, FRESHEST FRUITS AND VEGETABLES SEs WHEATKRISPIES Siri"? 21c FRANCO-AMERICAN SPAGHETTI C. J. Tullberg, Prop. The Corner Groce A. BOUTROUS, Owner 500 Third Street 19c | Fria? ver cas. Phone 1059 We Deliver SPAGHETTI, Franco- American, 2 cans for.. OVALTINE, .20C OXYDOL, i SUNBRITE to ec 29G | Pi peda, on... SOC CLEANSER 2. 6. 25¢ a eee ||| ee mee Corn . for c OUR FAMILY MACARONI, SPAGHETTI, W. K., 2 cans.fer....... VERMICELLL, two 8 oz. pkgs... .-2+0.+.- 9 SLICED DELUXE PEACHES Dal PLUMS VIENNA SAUSAGE, . 19c CORN, Geld Bar. 29c Pe No 2% size tins | No. 2% size tins Red Seal, 2 cans for... hp agageemner’ = 2 for 43¢ CARROTS, LIBBY’s sere ro eee DILLPICKLES %3* 19¢ Asparagus Style, LIPTON’S Krafts, 2 for ..........4 1-Ib. cans, 2 for seh Qe 2 Nec 2 cane ere JAPANTEA 324, .. LIBBY’sS CORNED BEEF HASH [,' . 32c 2 tr 23C POT ROAST, per Ib. PORK STEAK, per SHORT RIBS OF per Ib. ..

Other pages from this issue: