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The Weather Cloudy to partly cloudy tonight an@ Sunday; little change in temperature, [2] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA; SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1986 PRICE FIVE CENTS ‘Road Crashes Leave 9 Fatherless North Dakota Farmers Co Roosevelt Speaks In Gotham Tonight! *! Own Wallet Goes Watching Another CHARGE MEN ON WPA PROJECTS REFUSING SPRING JOB OFFERS Federat Agency Directors Warn Clients Scorning Work Will Be Cut Off WPA SLASHING PAYROLLS Roosevelt Reported Working Out Plan to Care for Farm- PHYSICIANS HOPE 70 sus DAVE CRIPPLED FEET afer ptt 8 Fs & Hii farm hands referred to | : i : E i ay i ee if a Fil of En i rf il i E 7 i 8 i E5 i ; ut | 4 } i i i g 5 OF N.S, MINE VICTIM ‘Glass Boot’ Employed to Pump Fresh Blood Into Gangren- ous Flesh Halifax, N. 8., April 25.—(?)— lsicians Saturday based their hope of Ohio, general hospi- greets cet me ie 10 wracking days and nights in the old ‘Moose River gold mine, was suffer- “trench feet,” which gave Because They Exceeded Engineer Estimates Episcopal Pastor Is Kill Will Be One of Last Speeches He Will Make Before June i Conventions mplain of Labor Scarcity BOOMLET ENOYED [MAP PLAN FOR GIY/Mussolini Lashes STOCK MARKET AS LAMBS RUSH IN Professional Traders Leery as Happy Daze Again Come to Walt Street ast LATER ‘ADJUSTMENT’ SEEN velt prepared Saturday New York City to address the Na- tional Democratic clubs there Satur- day night. Many state and national leaders, Tammany chiefs and others will be in the audience to hear the speech, which will be broadcast at 9:30 p. m., central standard time. Other party leaders at Philadelphia plunged into the work of planning for their national convention there in June. . The Republicans issued an eight- page rotogravure described as “a pice torial review of the Roosevelt record.” On the front page was a picture of the president and Chairman James A. Farley. Neither was smiling. Over the picture was the caption “worried?” and below were the questions, “where is the $20,000,000,000 smile? Are they thinking of November?” Combination of Optimism and Credit Inflation Regarded as Factors (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) New York, April 25. — Who and what brought Cock Robin back to fe? Of course the general impression that recovery is setting in is sufficient of itself to give an impetus to stock prices. But as already pointed out, a mere 18 per cent rise in business ac- tivity would not be a sound basis for @ 48 per cent rise in stocks. Beyond the general notion that recovery is under way—a very uncertain and not at all fixed conviction—there would have to be a belief either way that recovery was going to continue for a long period or that some other factor was going to move stocks up for @ while. What could this other fac- + | tor be? .jnating impression of QUESTION FORMER ND. CONVICTS ABOUT Unquestionably it is the feeling that some kind of inflation is under way and that it will continue for a while Combination of Factors The force making for higher prices is a combination of these two forces plus one other. The vague yet domi- recovery is spread out among what renee which buys for the long pull. more professional elements in market do not share this view. sion is @ fertile soil to do business But TWO BANK LOOTINGS}: Third Man Captured in Gunfight Near Anoka Served Time at Mandan &t. Paul, April 25—(4)—Two agents men captured after a gunfight with an Anoka county deputy sheriff Fri- He about two recent bank burglaries i i a £ BR x 9 z i i Z i 5 g i : F 9 ayn ire 2Ee ieee i [ fr & I i ; fu gh aff Hi Art zie igs ; F g Ee i ge EE & s z g aue HE A i F 3 money or give away large money to the people in the tinue. The president has still left over five billion dollars in unexpended granted him to 38 4 8 f puseeree eH MRGH ES d Bs i Het rail i E ie : i i &s H | SF on CLEAN-UP, PAINT-UP WEEK HERE MAY 2-9 Boy Scouts to Make Only One Check at Close of Beautifica- tion Drive PETERSON OUTLINES AIMS Riddance of Unsightly, Hazard- ous Refuse Is Sought in Lions’ Campaign Bismarck will also be the health and cleanliness capital of North Da- kota if objectives of the annual Clean-Up and Paint-Up Week, which ig to be launched May 2, are reached. ‘Under a program sponsored yearly by the Lions club in cooperation with city officials and the Boys Scouts, one week is set aside in the spring during which Capital City citizens are urged to clean up all rubbish piles, elim- inate fire hazards and put their lawns and gardens in order. Fred Peterson, chairman of the Lions club committee in charge, spoke on the aims of this year’s pro- gtam at a meeting of Scout leaders and city and county officers Friday evening. Depart From Old Form One departure from the plan fol- lowed in the last two years was out- lined at the Thursday meeing. In- stead of having the Scouts making two checks of the city as in the past, only one will be made this year. ‘The Scout check will be on Satur- TWO NORTH DAKOTA FARMERS KILLED IN HIGHWAY ACCIDENTS Out At Sanctions Courtenay Man, Harry Hooper, Black Shirt Armies Occupy Lake Tana Area; Press on Towards Addis Ababa (By the Associated Press) Premier Mussolini heaped further criticism Saturday upon economic and financial sanctions against his Fascist nation as Black Shirt troops were officially reported to have com- pleted their occupation of the Lake Tana region in Ethiopia. Tl Duce called attention that Sat- urday:is the 160th day of sanctions against Italy as he inaugurated that new town of Aprilia on the reclaimed Pontine marshes. “We give proof we shall remain al- ways methodical, tenacious and in- domitable.” he said. The official daily report from Mar- shal Pietro Badoglio declared an Italian column had occupied Bardar Giyorgis at the southern extremity of Lake Tana and that a battle had be- gun Friday on the Somaliland front near Sasa Baneh. Six Red Cross trucks, one British ambulance, and one Ethiopian am- bulance left Addis Ababa on the road to Dessye to give treatment to “a great many wounded Ethiopians who need care.” Two Italian planes circled the Ethiopian capital and vicinity. At Geneva, the International Red Cross committee told the League of Nations again it could n.t turn over evidence in its possession concerning alleged violations of war conventions in Ethiopia. ‘The northern army, which announc- ed occupation of Uorra Ilu, 38 miles south of Dessye, was believed to have taken that important position Thurs- day and to be some distance ahead now on the 165-mile march from Dessye to Addis Ababa. The Stefani (Italian) news agency reported the “unexplained disappear- ance” of Emperor Haile Selassie. was ‘wild rumors {n Addis Ababa, all the king of kings had not abdicated, ‘JNO FOUL PLAY SEEN IN BISHOP'S DEATH Eagle | Aged Emmons’ Farmer Thought the advantages of a well- Bigeye rman of the rates soeyice Jul A general check of the entire busi- ness district will be made by Fire Chief Ryder Hamro and all business houses will be ordered to get rid of any unsightly refuse on the to Have Died Naturally While Lost on Walk by Burleigh county youth, failed to dis- "| close any indication of injury or foul Lions club Clean-Up and Paint-Up Week committee. SEARCH FOR MAHAN TURNS 10 WYOMING Weyerhaeuser Kidnaper's Fin- gerprints Reported Found by S. D. Officers Dr. Larson planned coroner’s jury Saturday to establish the cause of death, which is believed to have occurred March 31, the night on which Bishop wandered away from the Lem Ferguson farm in northern Emmons county. Bishop's body was found by Robert McLean, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alex- ander McLean, in a pasture about four miles from the Ferguson farm. It was easily identified by his neigh- bors and Deputy Sheriff Joe Kohler, who was called to the scene. When found the body was resting in a natural reclining position which lent further credence to the theory that the aged man became lost while walking and lay down to rest. His wearing apparel, with the exception of one mitten which lay nearby, was undisturbed. Mr. Bishop was born Feb. 26, 1860, at Hessen-Nassau, . He emigrated to the United States in the early ‘eighties and settled in Emmons county about 53 years ago. He homesteaded the farm which is now being managed by Ferguson and recently had been living on it with the Ferguson family. He was un- married. Funeral services will be held at 10 &. m., (MST) Monday, at St. Martin’s church at Huff, of which he was a ,,| member. Rev. Father J. G. Sailer will officiate. Interment will be made in the St. Martin’s cemetery. Mr. Bishop leaves no known relatives in this country, | Y.C.L. Convention to of justice wil cans showed five positive points of comparison and that “the similarity ieee eS te conviction in court.” Six Men Are Endorsed By Cass Republicans sy Dusiness seasion the state senate; L. L. Twichell, cumbent, and K. A. Fitch, W. H. Shure, boundary continued in force Saturday, with a number of workers turned Bring Many Delegates| Between five and six hundred boys and girls are expected to attend the Young Citizens League state conven- tion in Bismarck May 4 and 5. Jerry Pinch of Stutsman county, president, will preside. The conclave will be called to order} | in the house chamber in the capito) at 1:30 p. Monday, May 4. Tues- opens at 9 p. m. Star of Silent Films Wins $85,000 in Court New York, April 25.—(/)—William 8. Hart, star of the silent films, was awarded $85,000 by a supreme court jury Friday in his $500,000 «=suit against the Unit- ed Artists corpor- ation, The retired cow- boy actor charged that the company failed to exploit his final picture, “Tumblewee ds,” and that Joseph M. Schenck and the late Hiram Abrams, execu- : tives of United Artists, conspired to force him out of producing his own Pictures in 1925, LINDBERGH RANSOM MONEY TURNING UP, NEW ENGLAND HEARS Federal Agents Deny Their Ac- tivity Has Anything to Do With Rumors Boston, April 25.—(?)—Faeed with recurrent reports that $20,000 in ransom money had turned up in New England in the past two weeks, federal agents Saturday enig- matically explained away an armed mass sortie as “target practice.” ‘The reports, published by the Bos- tom Post, were em} denied by Clarence D. McKean, head of the ‘Boston bureau of the department of Justice. “There is absolutely to it,” ne nothing , Unusual activity among federal agents has been evident in this area recently, causing speculation about their moves. ‘The ransom money report came on the heels of another that Alvin Kar- pis, wanted in connection with the oe kidnaping, was in New Eng- Then Friday, three carloads of fed- eral agents, heavily armed, sped from headquarters here. But on their return, McKean as- serted the men had merely been out to “target practice.” In Chicago Bernard M. Finnigan, attorney for Stephen Spitz, convicted forger, who claimed to have pur- chased $5,000 of the ransom notes and cached them “somewhere in New York state,” called the reports “a new hookup to me.” He said the $5,000 which Spitz claimed he had, had been made available to authorities. Roy Frazier’s Hearing Scheduled for May 2 (Williston, N. D., April 25.—(P— Police Magistrate A. L. Butler Friday afternoon postponed the hearing for Roy W. Frazier, highway maintenance engineer, arrested on a charge of “un- lawful discharge of firearms,” to May 2. Frazier, who voluntarily re- turned to Williston to answer the warrant issued for his arrest, asked that he be given time to prepare for his hearing. Harry W. Stewart, 32, Langdon Lawyer, Dies Langdon, N. D., April 25.—(7)— Harry W. Stewart, 32, assistant states attorney of Cavalier county since 1927, died Friday after a month’s ill- ness. He is survived by his widow, @ son, Jack; his parents, Mr. Mrs. John G. Stewart, Nekoma, N. D., ‘and two sisters, May of Grand Forks and Dorothy, a student at Mayville State Teachers college. He was & graduate of the University of North Dakota law school and active in lodge work here, Finley Peter Dunne, Famed Writer, Dies New York, April 25.—(4)—Famous shafts of wit and wisdom which once made the mythical “Mr, Dooley” a by- word of American households were re- called Saturday with the death of Finley Peter Dunne, 68, creator of this delightful character. Dunne, iting in various Chicago newspa- pers shortly before and after the turn of the century, used the name of “Martin Dooley” as a character who spoke with Irish dialect and humor will|Upon the various problems of the in with Gov. Walter Welford and Arthur E Thompson, state superintendent of laces of interest in and around Bis- and Mandan, ARTHUR HAYNES DEAD Fargo, N. D., April 25.—()—Arthur Haynes, 65, Fargo, died Friday. Sur- viving are his widow, two sons and & daughter Dd times, He died Friday night. MBS. SAGE LEAVING Chicago, April 25—(7)—John Dil- linger’s nemesis, “the woman in red,” who led the outlaw to his death at the hands of police and federal agents 21 months ago, bade farewell to fam- ily and friends Saturday as she pre- pared to leave Chicago shortly after midnight on her forced departure from the United States to her native Rumania. Judged State’s Best Male Actor Here Monday OSCAR RIKKE OTHER VICTIM Car Drivers Fracture Skulls in Upsets While Driving Alone in Country Miss Springtime has arrived in North Dakota hand in hand with the old man with the scythe who fre- quents North Dakota highways. Two central North Dakota farmers died beneath their overturned cars this week to raise the year’s automo- bile accident death toll to eight lives, N.D. Traffic Toll 8 ‘se 20 One of the dead men only last Mon- day won distinction as the outstand- ing adult actor in the state adult play contest conducted under auspices of the WPA recreation department in Bismarck. ‘The dead are: 7 Oscar W. Rikke, 58, Hamberg. Harry W. Hooper, 50, Courte- may. Both men were found dead in their demolished automobiles by passersby. Rikke, well known Wells county farmer residing seven miles horth- east of Hamberg, was found dead Today Rikke is survived by his widow, six sons, one daughter and a stepson. STOCKMEN 70 VISIT OLD MILITARY POSTS Fort Buford and Fort Union Tours to Highlight Conven- tion at Williston Williston, N. D., April 25.—()—The old military posts, Fort Buford and Fort Union, will be visited again May 18 and 19 by the old-time ranchers and stockmen who help write their history. A tour of the forts and old Villa Militaire, last vestige of Buford, where Sitting Bull and his starving band of braves surrendered to U. 8. army officers more than 50 years ago will be @ highlight of the annual two- day Western North Dakota Livestock association convention. The session is expected to draw one of the largest assemblages of cattle men in many years to this section, Andrew Johnston, Watford City seneher, secretary of the association, ‘Among scheduled speakers are F. E. Mollin, secretary of the American ‘and| National Livestock association, Den- ver; State Senator James P. Cain, Dickinson; J. 8. Taylor, Watford City; Thomas H. Moodie, WPA ad- ministrator, Bismarck; Gov. Watler Welford. Bismarck; R. C. rs Great Northern railroad livestock agent, St. Paul, and H. A. Mackoff, Dickinson. War Fear Unjustified, Japanese Chief Says Tokyo, April 25.—(AP)—Hachira Arita, Japan’s new foreign minister, declared Saturday “alarming rumors in Europe and America” concerning possibility of a Japanese-Soviet war “seem to be unjustified.” Talking to foreign correspondents, the foreign minister said he did not believe such Charge Fargoan Stole His Garage