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NRW YORK GIVES UP ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, N. D,, MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1987 ) Bismarck Striker Wounded in Row PRICE FIVE CENTS TRIPLE SLAYINGS IN Surrenders to. Newspaper, Ad-j: mits Gedeon Murders and Is + Turned Over to Police MUST BE -ADJUDGED SANE Girl He, Intended to Kill Escaped) Recall Vote Against Langer Is Certain, Declares Crum Figure in Killer’s Capture titions Now, Says Com- mittee Secretary. (By the Associated Press) ‘workers Sunday. “After careful analysis of recall ac- tivities,” a resolution adopted by the group read “we find that’ enough Irecall petitions have already been signed to insure the calling of a re- f : ii i i g COUNTRY MALMEN [Perseus call election.” Crum, who was elected chairman of the convention and presided at the ‘meeting, indicated the petitions may Claim Recall leaders asserted every county “favorable” results and that declared that more than 30 per cent of fast elec- reported “quite a number” Swaps JOSEP MUTCHLR Son of Oliver County State IHave Enough Signatures to Pe- strike front Monday, this time in EAST CHICAGO ASKS FOR GUARD: INDIANA GOVERNOR REFUSES Mayor Fears Trouble If Steel Plants Attempt to Reopen Operations There OHIO MILITIA STILL ON JOB New Picket Lines Drawn Up at Youngstown in Effort of CIO to Win Strike "(By the Associated Press) Fresh fears of violence shook the Indiana. Troops were asked for at East Chi- cago. The mayor feared trouble if two steel companies attempted to re- open their long-closed mills. But Gov. M. Clifford Townsend, the fourth governor on the seven- state strike front to be faced with a call for soldiers, told the mayor: “There are no disturbances in East Chicago now, and I do not anticipate any. I am not sending troops now. I will not place East Chicago under martial law unless unforeseen dis- turbances occur.” During the 33 days of strike for signed bargaining contracts, national guardsmen have been used in Michi- gan and in Obio; and in Pennsylvania there has been martial law. Half of Ohio's militia is maintain- ing order in the Mahoning valley, the heart of the states steel industry. Gov. Martin L. Davey, in a lengthy statement Sunday night, sald he would keep the soldiers at Youngs- town “as long as necessary.” John L, Lewis’ Committee for In- dustrial organization, which less than & year ago cheered the arrival of; state soldiers at Youngstown because the troops were then under orders to prevent any “back-to-work” move- ment pending efforts of federal Bhd ECONOMY CAMPAIGN $200,000,000 SHY OF INTENDED GOA Path ‘to Electric Chair Plotted for Artist-Killer “Se ® grasshopper on which he had Jeaped on him. He is shown in Areas Report {ce;: Crop Damage Varies y Windshields and other automobiles cracked, and knocked. down twice of ice at p.m. Some observers hailatones were as large as baseballs. At the P. 8. Bliss farm north McKensie the hail started falling which fell from but rain apparently had fallen. Burned by Flaming Hopper Walter Rude, 9, of Council Bluffs, Ia., was Wilton, Regan and M’Kenzie of: wih- a by about some of , at 2:40 p. m. and stopped promptly at 3. Measurements disclosed hailstones 5% to 6 inches in circumference, Bliss said. At the Bliss farm there was no wind but the stones which fell at McKenzie were driven by a wind the north. A heavy rain accompanied the hail ¢ two miles west of McKenzie no . severely burned poured gasoline and then a hospital with an oxygert serted in his nose. His condition is poor, A playmate was verely burned. Hail Accompanies Local Rainstorms HITLER STATEMENT CLOUDS OPTIMISM SSEFEPELS VARMONTSRIA) a numerous windows pamer rier seer uehrer THile Nazis He Will Welcome Victory, of Fas- cists in Spain (By the Associated Press) Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler's de- claration of two German policies in Spain Monday clouded a new optim- ism that the Spanish civil war might be isolated from the rest of Europe. Der Fuehrer told a party rally of 200,000 Nazis that the third reich The Weather | Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; not. so cool tonight. WENDELYN WELDER SHOT IN LEFT LEG AT HIDE. COMPANY Jesse Jones, Plant Employe, Held Without Charge as Police Investigate PICKETS HAD HALTED JONES Attempt to Settle Dispute Is Failure; Plant Operators Scorn Agreement First violence in the four-day-old strike at two Bismarck hide and fur companies was reported Monday as the first attempt to settle the dis- ute failed. ‘These developments marked Mon- day's progress of the strike: 1, Wendelyn “Red” Welder, | Fur company, Front St. in an altercation with a plant employe who attempted to perfom some emergency Held in the city jail without charge pending investigation is Jesse Jones, who, police said, did the % Jones is an employe of the / where a strike for shorter hours and “would welcome” an insurgent Span- | sic! | 24 Letters and Packages Are ish regime as an aid to solving Ger- many’s acute raw acres clea] Senator Dies in Idaho Accident IN CAR ACCIDENTS * former North Dakotans, Joseph E. : Mutchler, 35, of Boise, Idaho, crashed to his death in an airplane near | Nampa, Idaho, Saturday, according Four Lose Lives in Crash at|to Associated Press dispatches. ‘The 1] Manawa, Wis.; Two Young {Plane.in which Mutchler and s com nose-dived 300 =... Boys Among Victims Limits Undetermined also was reported east and south of McKenzie but it was im- to accurately determine the of the storm. of Wilton and at ayia sep- Public Debt at End of Fiscal Year June 30 to Total Over 36 Billions at In Valencia, the Spanish govern- ment announced a merchantman had been sunk’ Friday by a submarine and ordered a special vigilance fleet into service to sweep her wa- ters of undersea craft. Paris, Moscow Gloomy London, rlin and Rome were calm. The heads of their govern- ments were in seclusion at their respective country retreats. Only in Paris and Moscow was there a gloomy belief the last repercussions of the joint Italo-German with- drawal m the neutrality patrol had not yet been felt. Ber attcmac’ Sie pes up e present c: Ps the most dangerous of tl Bpantsh war—to his followers in a biting criticism of the non-intervention committee's efforts to isolate the conflict. “From now on,” Der Fuehrer warned, “we will prefer in such cases to take the freedom, ~|pendence, honor, and security of “Jour nation into our own hands and protect ourselves alone.” Germany withdrew jointly with Italy from the patrol of the Span- ish coast. Duce At Country Home Premier Mussolini, who has steered Italian policy on the same course with Hitler, left the mid- summer heat of Rome for his coun- try home. 3 Paris conceded the situation was a little better, but a feeling persisted that the time had not yet come for optimism. There was little hope found in the official press view in Moscow where it was considered the of war has grown in the past fort- the administration’s economy cam- paign will fall about $200,000,000 short of its goal. : When President Roosevelt instruct. panion were flying feet into - farmer's field. Senator and Mrs. E. F. Mutchler of Center. He was an employe of the U. 8. weather bureau ‘and had taken’ up aviation as a hobby. His parents left Monday for Bil- lings, Mont., where funeral services i will be held. Also surviving is his widow, the former Alice Noe of Billings, whom he married at Moorhead, Minn., June ek 1936. Minneapolis, June 28.—(?)—Nine persons died. in week-end auto acci- dents in the northwest, four of them collision near Manawa, for about six months, said Sam Slo- ven, one of tne proprietors, Jones had a permit to carry a gun, Deputy Sheriff Carl Kositzky said. Commission Meets The Bismarck city commission met in special seasion at 1:30 p. m., Mon- with representatives of both sides in an attempt to settle the capital ’s four-day-old hide and fur plant ‘Thus spending already has gone $102,000,000 above the fee vised estimate. At the current rate it will increase another §$100,000,000 or more by Wednesday, the end of ,|the fiscal year. my took work at the Universities of Wisconsin and Minnesota and the Pacific Tech- nological university at San Diego, Calif. He later pabirt schon at Ana- | estimate. (3 i eee TH , ty-seven workers were entombed Mon- two| Gay when s new railroad tunnel in Kodendro province collapsed. Fifteen others were pinned under the debris. Where Fargo Fliers Died +. i | Found Rifled After Police Arrest Marylander debt to sbout $36,300,000,000. Mattson Suspect Is. Quizzed lat | Bottineau in migte amination to see if they could afford mail from the san hal meeting of the non-| to pay more wages. intervent all et Rome! ‘Those in attendance at the meeting access to the et RAs Cohan ce | ere: Members ot ine: eee ter _mi 9 BC . = ee tend to encourage the Reds in| Foster, Sam Sloven and Charles Rig- Spain.” i Fy % i , Pence member of the a5 beeen oe Highway Crash Victim jis, tem brrens, mie He arrived in Chicago m,|ing a short later with dresses) welcoming. 2 Is Recovering Rapidly) mission ana » teader in the Work- Saturday, roamed the attend-|and other merchandise in his posses-| narily Dunn County Pioneer, — We ed s movie, and then, late in the day, | sion. reports Monday Is Dead rapidly from injuries he Ieieunel cela ute, Seo SemmAlt’| ibs Gay Solowe Spee te eet ie ee Ole Kyseth, ts So eee , rontatSunnay | office when they arrested Webber: | tren torn Y Fargo, N. D., June 28—Ole J, Ky- afternoon were not made public. alr base, was seth, 72, Dunn county resident 50| Mandan state seeanenee Fee athe Robert Gwyther, 82, inthe ‘United ig ; amazingly frank story Morton Pioneer, " i i f $78 fi ze i E a E x li and. resident’ of Morton| and the noted flier county 62. years, died in » Mandan | servers to believe hospital Sundey. Funeral services| arrests in the i i H i Hi ! F i i