The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 15, 1937, Page 1

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The Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Wed.; slightly warmer tonight. THE BISMARCK TRIB! BSMARCK, N. D., TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1987 PRICE FIVE CENTS | Bismarck Phantom Strikes _ Franco’s Insurgents Drive Wedge Into Bilbao Heart River Floods |LEAGHIS ELECTED | Plenty oa Water — REBELS LINK BELT OF STEEL AROUND ~ BASQUE FORTRESS Mountain Defense They _. Have Penetrated SEIZE IMPORTANT JUNCTION Victorious Troops Poised for : Capture of Long Besieged . Loyalist Stronghold EE 8s Tae E Z f : gif HEE est TF ute | § i jal yee al Mandan Club lent Legionnaires Fanning Out From) " |evacuated the veterans camp at about families INU CHES Stop--After Visit With Chief at White House tax -dodgers received the approval, | Tuesday of two leaders of the. con MBAGER PROGRAM. OF FORAGE LOANS PLANNED BY. FCA Advances Will Be Made to Bor- rowers of Seed Loans On- ly, Agency States fe ee ap Ase bydbes F Wine Hy a Lowlands 16 Families and Veterans CCC Camp Forced to Evacuate Within City Limits Se ireed CALLED CONSERVATIVE WIN ,|Farmer-Labor Ranks Split ls Morning. ‘ Already the fairgrounds was cov- ered by more than a foot of water Out Officers and men, numbering 162, 3 a. m. Sixteen out fi 3 f i ag ag RFE EF 2s ge fey! sags Tributaries of the Missouri are now pouring an: increasing volume of wa- the Big. Muddy,.O. W. Rob- j, 8. weather observer here, re- ved. drowned in the sinking of the 35-foot | « shore in ast adi it 28 ‘ Latimér* had set’ up rival. Farmer- lates the eupport af she slate party. - | who also had Farmer-Labor support, MILL CITY MAYOR” FOR FIRTH TERM World War Hero Returned ‘to Office He Occupied From 1921 to 1929 Blamed for Defeat of Grid Hero Hayoraft Minneapolis, June 15 —(P}— Brig. Gen. George E. Leach of the Minne- sota national guard, World war hero, Tuesday was Minneapolis’ new con- servative mayor-elect. ; He was chosen Monday over Ken- neth Haycraft, former football star, who carried Leach. . month's . primary by Haycraft and Leach. Haycraft and but Haycraft ‘Farmer-Labor supported candidates aed ® majority of the council sen Unofficial election results showed Farmér-Labor candidates assured of 15 of the 26 council saets, the same number they held: the last two.years. William” A. Anderson, who in 1929 became: the city's first Farmer-Labor endorsed mayor was one of three suc- cessful candidates for district judge- ships. Paul Guilford, a former judge, was elected, while Joseph A. Poirier, apparently gained the third Judge- ship. Brought Out Large Vote The campaign brought out one of |the largest votes in the city’s his- tory, with an estimated 160,000 bal- lots cast. a eo Incomplete returns gave Leach 50,- 485; Haycraft 50,822 ‘ General Leach’s war experiences He yest of any Unit mander when his 151st field artillery of the famous Rainbow division was shelled for 248 days without relief. Puree dt i i Fi ‘HE a i i : j E i if ff ag BB if Fi HH rE Ef i F iy | it» ue fey 2 fi i fi; § Fi was in BF a7 ctrl TPL Te -) £7 Her Pictured above is George (Toby) Morton, son of Mr. and Mrs. paddling in a boat on a pond on the grounds formed after the recent heavy rains, The capitol ap- @ year ago that drouth-stricken cows farms were permitted to graze after their normal Morton, 1011 Eighth in the background. is BESss i i * | runn 9 Persons Hurt in Steel Strike Rows Lewis Reported Planning for Strikes in. Other. Plants _of Bethlehem — Cotumbus, Ohie, June: » Martin L. Davey’s ‘ bring steel ue H a BH | : E gE te uae 3 E E it iF Hi Hi had *} said. sons’ automobile, which Mrs. Kupry- anova had said stood outside u a : 8 H al i g ae g i i gee g 5 g g COLLECTORS’ TALE IN KIDNAPING CASE BEING INVESTIGATED ‘|Garbage Men Declare That “Doors of Estate Were Barred to Them Stony Brook, N. Y., June 15.—(7)— Two garbage collectors told federal agents ‘Tuesday that last Wednesday, the day Mrs. Alice McDonell Parsons, society matron, vanished, they were not allowed to enter the Parson Long Island. home when they called. It was the first time such a thing happened in four years, they The collectors, Arthur Chadwick, It was thelr custom to enere the house, they said, descend to the base- ment and collect the garbage, but housekeeper and companion Parsons, who pointed to a large pack- age tied with cord, and told them: “That's all.” Again Mrs. M. O. Agre Is Degenerate’s Prey Well Known Woman Struck on Head by Cursing Man as She Walks Down Middle of Street; Suffers Mostly from Shock « Bismarck’s phantom degenerate struck again at 11 p. m.; Saturday. The victim was Mrs. M. O. Agre, well-known Bismarck woman, now living at 719 Thayer Ave. The Agres were living on Ninth St., Saturday night, however, having changed their residence Monday. The story, as told by her Tuesday morning to a Tribune reporter, begins when she left the home of a friend on Tenth St. about 11 p. m., Saturday night. Here’s Description Of Phantom Moron attacked by Bismarcks phantom degenerate, gave the of the man: shirt, light trousers, white shoes. 30 and 40 years. Height—Five feet and six or seven inches. Bulld—Medit s jum. Hair—Medium, neither blond nor Distinguishing brunette. characteristic—Wore spectacles with horn rims of & ‘dark color. She walked down Avenue B and turned into Ninth St., to go to her home. She got to thinking about the recent attacks on women, she said, and walked in the middle of the street. As she neared the. middle of the block she noticed a man run out from between some houses near Spohn’s grocery and thought he was a man who lived in the neighborhood and was from one house to the other to escape the drizzl ing rain which was falling at the time. As he met Mrs. Agre in the middle of the street, however, he seized her TOREEy, by the coat at her shoulder with his right hand and demanded: “Where in the hell do you thin! Cabinet Approves Plan of Fi- nance Minister to Main- tain Value of Franc Paris, June 15—(?)—France clung to her monetary agreement with the United States and Britain Tuesday as the government's “protect the franc” Program moved toward. parliamen- tary consideration. Finance Minister Vincent Auriol had the cabinet’s unanimous approval of his project to maintain the franc’s value and guard the government's credit in the face of an estimated de- ficit of 40,000,000,000 francs ($1,760,- 000,000) for 1937. Auriol’s plan won the ministry’s sanction only after a momentary split in the ranks of Socialist Premier Leon Blum’s supporters, however, Radical Socialist ministers held a separate meeting after discussion of the finan- cial measures had begun; then they returned to the full session meee com- plete agreement was . Official sources said the cabinet re- Jected s proposal to break away from the tripartite monetary agreement of last fall, under which France, Great Britain and the United States sought to maintain their currencies at steady values. Some sources expressed belief that the government might seek readjust- ment of tariffs and both indirect and direct taxes, particularly those on telephone and telegraph railroads, services and gasoline. Commerce Minister Paul Bastid had ik you're going.” Startled and frightened, Mrs. Agre DANGE PERMIT IS GIVEN 10 PRINCE Amendments to Liquor Ordin- ances Are Considered by City Commissioners A license permitting dancing the Prince hotel was granted to C. E. Ligon, manager, night es Bismarck city consider routine business issued a bid for lowering of trade| dinner parties barriers by other nations Monday, France did not want to try/he said. asserting a “self-sufficient system.” Williston Water Is Tested for Poisoning Williston, N.D, June 15—()—A engineer They also told Connelley the Par-/| sanitary all. day, was in the garage when Ri a the | minutes ERTDELT SEGUE nl Hebds a il; sf i F f | i il iyev i afes! i ki i Fea 88

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