Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
£: KANSAS CENSORING - OF FILM ON COURT IS CAUSE OF STORM 66-Word Speech of Wh Speech of Wheeler in March of Time Newsree! Arouses Bitter Dispute Kansas state board of review, said the Montana Democrat's remarks, which touched on patronage were deemed “partisan and biased.” Immediate contention was raised ture, pointed out in New York that the matter remaining a was favor- able to the court “You can say that the privilege of spectre postmasters will not be accorded to me. You can say I'll get no more projects for my,state. You can say what you please, but I say to you and to Mr. Farley (Postmaster wrong; it is morally unsound; it is a dangerous proceeding.” Wartime ‘Y’ Scored In Nazi Press Paper Berlin, Apr. 17.—(#)—The National Socialist (Nazi) Correspondence, a daily press service, took a slap at the wartime YMCA Saturday in connec- tion with German press attacks on the showing of an anti-Nazi film at the Riverside Memorial church in ‘Then, too, anti-German films were shown less in (American) public theatres than in camps of the YMCA. Makes 240 Miles on Seven Gallons of Gas Vincent Cavasino, local aviator, is back from a trip into the lower Mid- dle West and an argument with Titus Richards, manager of the airport at ‘ Fargo. Cavasino used only seven gal- ee \ « lons of gasoline and 166 minutes to. fly to Fargo from .& pane eee of Minneapolis, a distance of 240 ntiles. The latter refused to believe it but when he looked at the plane’s gaso- line tank he found that it held only 10 gallons. The plane is one of the new, light models now on-the-market. Six Persons Killed in Auto-Truck Collision Paso Robles, Calif, Apr. 17—(P)— Six persons were killed and four others injured Friday night in a col- Usion of an automobile and a truck at Keck’s Corners, 40 miles east of here. Five of the victims were mang- led so badly that identification had not been made Saturday. The sixth was cremated. Two others were in critical condition. TAKE A STROLL THROUGH PEACOCK ALLEY. A REMINDER... Time to put your Furs away in Storage. CAPITAL LAUNDRY CO. Come In Or ‘FREE Demonstration .n.'se. TAVIS MUSIC CO. 419 Broadway Bismarck, N. Dak. the Kansas relay “ep ten Saturday 404 points, 1,002 record. i ers, heeding a circuit court injunction, ended a seven weeks’ occupancy of the Essex Cigar company plant here Saturday. FACE TAX SUITS ‘FUR COAT’ HUNGRY St. Paul—G. H. Carlton heard strange noises in his automobile, parked in front of his home. He went outside to find a raccoon ripping the upholstery to shreds, MORE MONEY FOR N. D. Washington—Senator Lynn J. Fra- ier received word Saturday the Rural Electrification administration had Made an additional allocation of $185,000 for electric distribution lines in Cass, Barnes, Richland and Trail counties, N. D. BLIND ACTORS PERFORM Chicago—A group of blind actors, who find their way round the stage by strategically-placed rugs and find fellow-players by tinkling bracelets, will present their annual performance here next Saturday. 66,000 FAMILIES NEED AID Washington — A government eco- nomist reported Saturday 66,000 farm families in the paths of the recent Ohio and Mississippi river floods faced a huge job of rehabilitation, FAILURE, ASKS REBATE Tokyo—A graduate wrote to the president of the Imperial university demanding return of 18,000 yen ($5,146), his seven-year tuition fees, because he had been unsuecessful in life. The president replied that was not the university's fault. ICE LOCKS HARBOR Duluth, Minn—An 8-mile field of ioe jammed into the west end of Lake Superior virtually sealed the Duluth- Superior harbor Saturday. PERMANENT ACT SOUGHT Washington — Senator Frazier said Saturday he will ask congress to make permanent the farm mortagage mor- atorium clause of the Prazier-Lemke law. The present clause will expire next April, Jamestown Grads Plan Alumni Organizations Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 17.—Plans for organization of branch units of the Jamestown College, Alumni asso- ciation throughout the state were made when 17 ‘graduates of the col- lege residing in northwestern North Dakota met for a reunion banquet in Minot last week. Norman F. Iverson, superintendent of schools at White Earth, N. D., was elected chairman of the group and was charged with arrangements for an alumni reunion at the state con- vention of the North Dakota Educa- tional association in Minot next fall. Albert Peterson, Washburn, superin- tendent of schools of McLean county, BANK NIGHTS BANNED Springfield,-Il., Apr. 17—()—The supreme court held Friday that the- ater bank nights constituted a lottery and authorised authorities to prevent Phone For Phone 762 Cooperation of G-Men Asked in _ Running Down Cracksmen Who Got $2,312.12 Immediate hope of finding the men who Thursday night burned open the safe of the Venturia State %! bank rested Saturday in the federal] © department of justice at Washing- Fingerprints found at the scene iphed by experts from 5. justice will continue its interest in that the amount involved is not sufficient to give them juris- diction under the federal law. It was , however, that the G-men will agreed, extend to state officials all possible co-operation, Miller said. Local Officials Assist Local officials, headed by State's Attorney O. A. Ginnow, also were co- Iowa Wife Murderer Sentenced to Hang Fort Madison, Iowa, Apr. 17.—(?)— Walter H. Rhoades, 31-year-old con- victed wife slayer, awaited in death effort to save him from the gallows. Rhodes was sentenced to hang Apr. 29, 1938, by District Judge James Gaffney at Iowa City. He was convicted of loading a shot- gun with dynamite and tricking his) wife into firing it in the basemnet of their Iowa City home last Feb. 9. Banco Business Now _ At Peak, Ch Chief Avers pestered ht Apr. 1.—()—J. C. Minnea| Friday told executives of the organi, zation ‘and its affiliates the present volume of business of the corpora- tion is greater “than at any time since pre-depression days.” Thomson said the corporation reported at the end of March deposits of approximately $385,000,000, a gain of $24,500,000 over last year. Police Nab Fargo Man Here for Non-Support to Fargo by Cass county officers to r erate of non support of minor child. Sheriff county was in You'll smile, too. . . after one of our perfect SUNDAY ; DINNERS Try one tomorrow Sunday Dinner Features STEAKS, CHOPS, CHICKEN... 65c Served from 11:30 a. m. till 8:30 p.m. Grand Pacific "| Drake, clear tonight and Sunday; in temperature. For North Dakotat and Sunday; not muth chi perature, For South Dakota: Fair tonight Sunday; slightly colder central and south portions tonight. For Montana: Generaliy fair to- night and Sun warmer east of Divide Sunda: nerally fair to- ightly colder to- ver death, coast, Se Light precipitation. h the Great Lakes region, midd| Mountain region and over t! ation to her home in Napoleon. moderate temperature: Bismarck station barot 28.14, ad te rise, 5:51 a. m. Sunset, 7:34 La WEATHER OUTLOOK On for the period ‘or the reg’ fon of the Great Lak. Generally fale first of week, probi followed by shower period within 1: ter part; temperatures normal for the died in 1920. Mrs. Wi Bper Mississippi! and low- er Missouri Valleys and the northern and central Great Plain: Generelly fair beginning of week, lowed by a shower period by middle or close; temperatures near normal in general. Fred Kuhimann, 6&r., brothers, and a sister. W. Feichtner officiating. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Statio: Total this month to dat Normal, ae mont fe Total, ary Normal, January ist to de Accumulated excess to date .... « NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High: Laws BISMARCK, el > Beach, clear Carrington, cl Crosby, peldy. . Dickinson, cle: Apr. 21, Dunn ‘Cente: Garrison, clear . Jamestown, Max, clear . Minot, clear Parshall, clear . Sanish, peldy. Williston, clea: Devils Lake, clear Grand Forks, clear . Hankinson, clear Court Judge Daniel Vallee was accompanied sion, and Hymen Bushell York. show girl, leaving a theater. Moorhead, clear . Minneapolis, cldy, soUTH DAKOTA FOINTs Aberdeen, Huron, clay. Mobridge, eee Pierre, cldy. Rapid City, cl . Bataan ther MONTANA P heattiltd se “will eventually Glendive, clei Havre, cldy. Helena, clea: Lewistown, clear Miles City, clear . victory of arms.” war, an ary of @ religious war.” «Editor's Ne come lette! ous He expressed, lal religious subject: attack individuals which offend good taste and fair play will be retired to the writ- All UsT Hf ‘War, was so ghastly. letters’ a ‘mayb *) sf Friday nig Jefferson, founder of the 6P0 words. Tomas HE WANTS TO KNOW Bismarck, N. D., Apr. 15, 1937. Editor, Tribune: In_ Thursday evening's edition of the Tribune I note the industrial com- GENERAL MORROW DIES Englewood, N. J., Apr. 17—(P}— Gen. Jay Johnson-! moray 67, former governor general Panama Canal zone and a ei prcties of the late U. 8. Senator Dwight W. Mor- tow, died Friday. \ FRL - SAT. -.SUN. May Robson “Woman Distress’ Restaurant Also News - Comedy - Shorts 7 and 9 P.M. — Ite & 2ic NAPOLEON WOMAN Mrs. Albert Wierschki, 53, Vic- tim of Cancer, Buried in Napoleon Cemetery | cer was given as the cause of her -Mrs. Wierschki underwent an oper- & Bismarck hospital last Nov. %|5, and few weeks later was taken nd} Born Marie Kuhiman, Oct. 30, 1883, at Lester Prairie, Minn., Mrs. Wier- schki was married there to Dr. G. A. Mathews, Jan. 1, 1904, and in 1905 moved with her husband to Napoleon, Dr. Mathews, prominent in civic and educational work in Napoleon, where he practiced medicine until his death, Services were held in the St. Math- ews Lutheran church, with Rev. G. Interment was made in the Napoleon cemetery, Rudy Vallee Pleads Innocent to Assault Boston, Apr. 1a —(?)—Rudy Vallee, leader, pleaded innocent coterie to charges of aul and upon. @ newspaper photogra- pher and his case was continued until Vallee Hageete pelere, Municipal 1 Gillen who set bail at $200 and then released the crooner on his own recognizance. by his law- yer, John J. Burns, former counsel for the Securities Exchange commis- Benedict FitzGerald, the photog- rapher, charged that Vallee and Harry Paul his friend, assaulted him after he had snapped a picture of Vallee, Paul and Evelyn Gresham, New York "| Morale Will Decide War, Reporter Says 11.—(?}—Webb a Spanish revolution through exhaus- tion and collapse of morale of one or 10 | the other side rather than by definite tat Telling the American Society of Newspaper Editors its story of “blood, tears and terror” from first hand ex- perience, Miller said “it 1s a political an _ecopomic war, and has cle- doubt that comprom- ise or negotiation could end the con- flict, and said he would not be much surprised if the fighting went on into the autumn, Of six wars he has seen, Miller said none, not even the World MOODIE ADDRESSES RALLY Grand Forks, N. D., Apr. 17.—(P)— Democrats of Grand Forks ht paid tribute to Thomas party, at a Jefferson Day dinner dance here. , Moodie, head of the state speaker, YOUNG-FRIEDA INESCORT velt court bill by Apr. 28. Attempts to close the hearings im- (Dem.-Kans.) and one of the uncom- two new supreme court Justices if mediately failed. The 10-day exten- sion was voted to take care of those already invited to testify. All next week will be to opponents of the bill. Friends of the measure then will be permitted to present closing evi- dence for the first three days of the following week, if they choose. It was possible, however, that the ad- ministration would rest its case and permit the testimony to end next week. given over The committee decision coincided with a proposal by Senator McGill those over 75 do not retire, TES HELD FOR Solons Vote. to End Pre PTR MO Court Act Hearings ‘Washington, Apr. 17.—()}—The sen- ate judiciary committee voted Satur- day to close hearings on the Roose- MEETING AT LPT Rev. David K. Myere, Lemmon, mitted ae holding ras balance Elected Moderator and Rev, i ident Roosevelt be allBwed to 0 appa Magee Stated Clerk. ' Leith, N. D., Apr. 17—Rev, David Te Myers, etenog) Bi eee (Dem.-N.M.) and McCarran (Dem.- of tory to the administration, Nev.)—have offered somewhat similar compromises, posal to appoint six new members to pix court unless justices over 70 with- aw. Opposition senators said submission of the president’s Lab these compromise proposals indi- cated the reluctance of these uncom- mitted legislators to accept the Roose- velt, and thei Proposal ir desire to find way out” which would be satisfac- married for a second tind to Albert Albert Wierschki of Napoleon in 1921, In addition to her husband, Mrs. Wierschki Teaves four children, Roland, Adele and Hertha Mathews of Napoleon, and Mrs, Arthur Lux, South Gate, Calif, her mother, Mrs. and ahr Daughter, Mr, and Mrs. four ious, x railway, the state railroad announced Saturday. of New Saturday, Lindell, 65, court Friday on charges to get food. home of Bob Riley here. county 4 years old. ing the discovery. CAPITOL Last Times Today’ Bret Harte’s drama of the Gold Frontier “Outcasts of Poker Flat” with PRESTON FOSTER - JEAN MUIR VIRGINIA WEIDLER Sunday - Monday - Tuesday Four Shows Sunday at 2-4-7-9 Hollywood's Grandest Star Array Merges with Broadway’s Smash Hit Play Grab Your Hat— Now, Don’t Delay! Hurry Along To See.... Werner Bros.’ enswer to the spring fever problem, with HUNTER + ANITA LOUISE © ALICE BRADY - ROLAND Mi Charles Walters, 210 Eleventh St., at 2:36 p. m, Friday, St. Alexius hospital, Appointment of State Senator Harry Lynn of Linton and Frank Rogers of Parshall as colonels on the governor's staff was announced Sat- urday by Gov. William Langer.’ Jo Ann Smith, 15, injured Tuesday when struck by an automobile while she was roller skating, was recovering Saturday in a Mandan hospital. physician said injuries were not ser- Hearing will be held at McGregor, N. D., Wednesday on petition of Sauk Valley township residents for a cross- ing over tracks of the Great Northern commissic The Mandan battery of the North Dakota National Guard will perform @ maneuver Apr. 25 with 155 milli- meter Howitzers with which the unit has been working indoors all winter, Capt. L. V. Miller, senior officer of the Bismarck-Mandan battalion, said Rubber Check Passer Inherits Big Fortune Kearney, Neb., Apr. 17.—()}—Harry who inherited $40,000 Thursday, was bound over to district of cashing no-fund check for $1.04 Wednesday He is in jail here awaiting a hear- ing on the charge, filed on the day he learned of the bequest from the estate of his parents, former Kearney resi- dents who returned to their home- ‘ge W. Sear said the check Lindell allegedly cashed was in payment for groceries purchased after an appeal for credit was rejected, Children Find Sack of Bones in Iowa Garden|! Missouri Valley, Ia., Apr. 17.—(P)}— A gunny sack filled with human bones was found Saturday by chil- dren digging in the garden at the Two Missouri Valley physicians in- spected the bones and said they were human, from the left side of a man. probably about 6-feet tall and 35 to SOLL CONSERVATION Burleigh Farmers Receive $241,637.56 for Participa- A total of $241,637.56 has been re- PROGRAM PAYS OUT tion in 1936 Program to Carson in the near future, Minot Span Workers ceived in Burleigh county for soil conservation work in 1936, figures re- leased by the county agent's office here show. Of the 2,100 applications Her | for the 1,656 have already been paid. Checks issued to date have repre- for that 1870 applications out of 2,154 for the to ed man appeared, the officer said, com- manded “give me your mioney blow your brains out” and Dietrick | pendix. Ered once, killing George Cervenski, Sati the tril Sheriff C. F. Cross was investigat- ee banal, ed that almost $317,437.50 will be paid to Burleigh county farmers under the 1936 program, Figures from the office of the Em- mons county agent show that a total of $303,697.56 has been received there dred and eighty-four applications re- main unpaid and all but three of these have been forwarded to the State office. Congestion in the state and disbursing offices is said to have caused much of the delay. Present indications are that close to $300,000 will eventually be paid to Emmons .county farmers under eS Program for last year. Patrolman Off Duty Cleveland, Apr. 17—(?)—Patrolman Earl Dietrick, off duty, took his wife awaited a. holdup man who for sev- eral weeks preyed on couples in park- Van Devanter Works On His 78th Birthday 1. Washington, Apr, 17.—(?)—Justice Van, Devanter who has sat on the supreme court longer than any of his colleagues, eee pens awaiting solution by consideration in connection with program received in this ty, ited 90 per cent of the entire pay- ment, although a rate of 4.5 per cent bas now been set to cover the ex- Penses of the county association. About 44 applications remain unpaid and all but three of these have been it to the state office. It is expect- ment. soil conservation work in 1936 and county have been paid. Two hun- Slays Park Robber a city park Friday night and automobiles. After 10 minutes a or Til observed his 78th birthday jurday by studying some of the PARAMOUNT BING CROSBY BOB BURNS SHIRLEY ROSS MARTHA RAYE -in- “WaikikiWedding’ observers Still Seeking Raise Dan Hahn, president of the Minot Central Labor union, was delegated tog Samaroo wen 0 FP resent them. Minot, N. D., Apr. ‘apr. 111m) Minot men, former workers, who walked off the “ob We Weansocay at ‘8 Minot overpass project, stating ‘they. were dissatisfied with the 40 cents back at work at the same wage. Members of the group pointed out’ they hope to, ga! raise to 50 cents appeal to the state highway depart- their‘ requested hour through an 5 N.. D., Apr. 17.—(?)—Mrs. Senttonttis habit ‘® ruptured ap- RANGE OF CARLOT 5 LOT SALES Minneapolis, Aj seen carlot grain 7 No. 2 nara amber durum 1.08; No. 2 re Na.‘ Fley! No. 3, 1.25, Starts Sunday IT’S RED-HOT AND—000H! =: fa Ze =. —é Fargo, Wilhelmina Ida Shaver, 63, formerly Friday in a Fargo widow of Henry J. Shaver, Fessenden farmer from 1911 to 1930, She leaves a daugh- ter, Mrs, Henry Mrs, Herman Scheer, at Hamberg; two other daught fa Mrs, Harold Kucera, and a, sister, end Grace 1 St. Paul, Apr. 17—()—The $10,- Seed in ree peel og passed ‘upper to 14 vote Friday night, was bengsea| in the lap.of the house Saturday, and predicted. chilly reception, FARGO DAIRYMAN. DIES bg Apr. 17.-()—Herman dairy operator, Socal postal of ay ivea’ i 308; yellow 131% ye: THiae not Corn: No. white VISIT THE GLASS BRICK FRONT, THE iat bag cn ogee I NOT De LAST TIMES TODAY SHOWS 2-4-7-9_ Something new and novel in eye and ear entertainment, — W's the tops!