The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1937, Page 1

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’ Euro a PERIL 10 FOREIGN RESIDENTS GROWS; AMERICANS PROTEST U. S. Business Resents FR’s f ‘Remain in China at Your Own Risk’ Warning WANT INTERESTS GUARDED Fire Roars in Northern Shan- ghai; U. S. Mission * Properity Is Seized Shanghai, Sept. 7—()—Roaring flames across all northwestern Shang- hai ited the path Tuesday night. of a Japanese effort to batter down the Chinese resistance that has brought their Shanghai offensive to a standstill. own risk. Present U. 8. Stand ‘The note, addressed to Secretary of State Cordell Hull, expressed “resent- ment” of American missionaries and (Continued on Page Two) STOCKS DROP OFF, WHEAT SOARS ON. WAR THREAT NEWS Market Leaders Drop Up to $10 a Share in Worst Set- back of Year Suns | william Tdephone | THE B ESTABLISHED 1873 Widow of Former Tribune Pub- lisher, Bismarck Leader, Is Cancer Victim (Special to the Bismarck Tribune) Seattle, Wash:, Sept. 7.—Mrs, Mar- shall H. Jewell, 72, widow of the pub- Usher of the Bismarck Tribune dur- ing the Capital City’s pioneer days, died Saturday at 1:30 p. m., of cancer, The end came peacefully at the home of her son, Ralph, here. Cre- mation services were to be held Tues- day afternoon. Long-time Bismarck residents agree that Mrs. Jewell was an outstanding figure in early Capital City society. The Jewell home was always open to callers and it was a gethering- place for army officers and their wives from old Fort Abraham Lin- coln, south of Mandan. Entertained. Celebrities Rare was the occasion when an im- entertained by Mrs. Jewell. Theo- dore Roosevelt, then a presidential candidate, was one of dozens of fa- mous celebrities to enjoy the Jewells’ 1865, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Woods, one of the oldest and most prominent families in Cin- cinnati, .Ohio.. Her grandfather's name was Hoftfner. On June 18, 1882, she was married to Mr. Jewell in Indianapolis, Ind., "]and came directly to the young city of Bismarck with her husband after the wedding. Lived in Washington With the exception of four or five years spent in Washington, D. C., Mrs.’ Jewell lived in Bismarck from 1882 May of 1926 when she went west to Olympia, Wash. She after- wards to Seattle. moved 5 Active in affairs of the North Da- kota Federation of Women’s Clubs, Mrs. Jewell held several offices in had @ valuable eollection of photographs concerned with early his- tory in this Worked in Tribune Office For a couple of years after her hus- band’s death in 1911, Mrs. Jewell yoceed in the .Tribune editorial of- In the early 1900s Mr. and Mrs. Jewell adopted two small boys, Paul of! and Ralph, who live in Seattle. Mrs. Jewell leaves her sons and a brother, Carl Woods of California, Her mother, who lived with Mrs. Jewell in Bismarck for several years and who went west with Mrs. Jewell, died some time ago. Edward and Duchess _ Bid Castle Goodbye Noetsch, Austria, Sept. 7.—(M)—Ed- ward of Windsor and his duchess bade “auf wiedersehen” to their castle Tuesday. They left Schloss Wasserleonburg, where they have been for three months, for Vienna and Budapest. Faltering Cubs Buy Minneapolis Hitter Chicago, Sept. 7.—(7)—In an at- tempt to bolster their waning power, the Chicago Cubs Tuesday purchased Carl Reynolds, of the Minneapolis club, a hitting sensation of the Amer- ican Association, for immediate de- livery. Reynolds, an outfielder, will Join the Cubs Wednesday. Mrs. Jewell GET COAL, POTATOES FOR FARMERS NOW IS FRAZIER'S PLEA Senator Urges Resettlement Administration to Take Fore-Handed Attitude f pota. twes can be moved without danger of freezing. The average price of pota- toes in the Red River valley now, he said, is 30 cents a bushel. The senator said he had wired the made by Walton Dodge, acting state chief of the Resettlement administra- tion. 8 SHOT IN RUSSIA the Soviet agricultural program. Alice Faye Elopes to Yuma jc" ISMARCK TRIBUNE || North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper BISMARCK, N. D., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS pe Fears Russian-Italian Rupture Flames Light Way for Mrs. M. H. Jewell Passes in Seattle New Jap Thrust in Shanghai WEEK-END HOWDAY ‘YOUNGSTERS FLOCK (Dan R. Jones Dies | BRINGS DEATH T0| BACK 10 BISMARCK SW MRTHWEST soons Map Of Heart Disease At Least 428 in U. S. Die Vio-| Registration Figures Incom- d Legislator Will B lently, Air Crashes Take plete; Final Number May ao eager allalee i 6 Lives Exceed Estimates MOTOR ACCIDENTS LEAD)/2,500 TOTAL IS POSSIBLE Wahpeton, N. D., Sept. 7.—Funeral services for Dan R. Jones, long promi- nent in North Dakota legal, legisla- The Weather Cloudy tonight and Wednesday; possi- bly a shower. ITALY ACCUSED BY. SOVIET OF PIRATE ATTACKS ON SHPS Demand for Redress Abruptly Rejected; Diplomatic Re- -lations Strained CONFERENCE PLANS UPSET But Italy May Attend Meeting Anyway; Franco-Russian Rift Likely tive and tax-reduction circles who died at 11:05 a. m., Sunday, of heart disease, will be Wednesday at 2 p. m. in the Congregational church. Rev. J. H. Caskey will officate. Burial! will be at Wahpeton. Closely identified with Richland’ 16 in NW Are Traffic Victims, |Back-to-School Movement 22 From Minnesota; N. D. Spreads Through Entire Has One Auto Death — . Missouri Slope Hurly: days came to Bis- marck’s and pupils Tuesday]. as registration and classwork com- menced apace in the city’s public and He was a one-time Republican can- didate for governor of North Dakota. Dan R. Jones fs SEPTEMBER BEGINS WITH HEAVY RAINS OVER WIDE SECTOR Labor Day Week-End Downpour | Keeps Precipitation for Year Above Normal North Dakotans scanned the au- tumnal heavens hopefully Tuesday as September commenced with gen- erous rains giving promise of provid- | Franco: ing the thirsty soil with fall moisture so essential to givirig crops a good was) spring start and restoring the de- pleted subsoil oir, ihe tee Over the Labtt-day week-end, Bis- (By the Associated Press) « A new approach to Spanish non- intervention, and flimsy Italy-Russias diplomatic relations hung by a slen- der thread Tuesday as a result of the presentation and immediate re- jection of a Russian demand for redress for the sinking of two vessels in guerilla submarine warfare. The Soviet Union blamed Italy for the attacks. Italian 3] first indicated ‘Russia’s move might force Italy to stay away from Friday's Mediterran- ean piracy conference, then later in- dicated Itally may attend “rather than satisfy Russia by staying away.” Political and diplomatic sources said tonight that this course might be fol- lowed because Fascists believe the Soviet accusation and protest—angrily rejected by Rome—was a maneuver to get Itely in bad with Great Britain, ‘France, and other powers which will be represented at the conference. May Sever Relations The belief circulated in many Fas- cist quarters that the already anemic relations of the two powers scarcely could withstand the new blow. Relations have not been more than 2 formality between the Fascist and Communist states but it appeared that even the semblance of diploma- tic intercourse might vanish as re- sult of the note handed to Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano by the Russian charge d'affaires in Rome. Russia's note threatened a rift in action on. the eve of the cotiference, made it clear that France had noth- marck, Jamestown and Fargo re- corded over an inch of rain as & Meteorological disturbatice centered in that area between the Missouri and Red River valleys bisected by the Northern Pacific railway. In a heavy downpour that com- menced after midnight Saturday, 1.06 inches of precipitation doused the Capital City and vicinity. Jamestown recorded the maximum of 1.65 while Fargo had 1.04, Other points getting Beach .33; Carrington .08; “14; Drake 12; Dunn Center 54; Garrison 38; Minot .14; Parshall .35; June 7, 1910, to Koerner of Wilkes-Barre, were no children, jurvivors include Mrs. Jones, four John Sundin, > Lillian, crushed when car struck tele- and Forrest State, when a train struck their car near Rochester, Minn. Wilfred J. Barrett, 28, Belle Plaine, "(Continued on Two) WALLACE ASSURES rain were ; Dickinson = Sanish .07; Devils Lake .16; Lisbon wear guaer Me *1 AVE US, WILL BUY predict Courts win |," A Ben Lindgren, 40, Faribault, Minn., ‘ f u deeh .00; Miles City .02. in triple car crash. a Settle Power Fight O. W. Roberts, federal meteorolo- za, Garcee # mitne tee) SUBMARGINAL LAND | wenn, Spr 1—ir-nue |Site tanstnad Tae it Sessa cl an weal sa etald. 5. Gtroerer, 21, po- wi » Sept. 7. tor y night and Wedni with lis, polsoned by carbon monoxide ere ee Se nae toe pone possibly showers; somewhat warmer while trying to extricate car from gravel pit. Mrs, A. B. Miller, Seattle, Wash., when car overturned near McIntosh, 8. D. ‘Torger Torgenson, 76, Homen, N. D., when car overturned Irja Ann ‘Huhtala, 22, Brainered, when her car overturned, pinning her beneath. Earl John Weldemann, 14-months- | maj old son of Mr, and Mrs. Henry Weide- mann, Raymond, 8. D., killed by/ will father’s au Daniel 63, Taconite, Wednesday The state forecast was aimilar. Precipitation so far this year is in excess of normal by 1.72 inches. As of 7:30 a. m. Tuesday, a total of 15.04 inches of precipitation has been renceded compared to a normal of 13.32, COUNTY ATTORNEY DIES Hettinger, N. D., Sept. 7.—(?)—Fu neral services for F. M. Adams county states attorney, who died Monday, were to be held here Tuesday with burial at Colby, Wis. Will Be Expended in Great Plains Area itomobile. el McKinnon, 5 Minn,, killed by automobile while walking on highway near Grand Ra- pids, Harvey Smith, Spring Valley, truck Griver, killed in auto-truck collision. | South. near Racine, Minn. Drowning rae 17, Alexander, ver. Ranson, 18 months old, in' livestock water tank near South Haven, Minn. Gamino, Golden Grain Flood Pours Through Forks Miscellaneous Robert Clark, 30, killed by falling tree during storm at Missouls, Mont. John Simonds, 23, Bemidji, Minn., fatally hurt trying to board freight Harriett Frost, 39, and Glenn Chase, 28, Minneapolis, when crashed into a house near Robbins- dale airport. A dozen searchers in three motor | o7sin. boats continued to the main channel of the Missouri river near Alexander in search Kennedy's {IAN Batra lgety enter day wading with s companion along the river bank. He in- to 2 hole and was swept the deep channel. 5 Freshmen to Report vali Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 71.—Uni- of North Dekota freshmen have been ordered to report Sept. 17 for a four-day orientation program arranged by R. O. Wilson, registrar. is to acquaint the first-year its with the school. commence for from Yangtsepoo past the wharf. The Chinese admitted ares around Kiangwan civic center (6). north of Figiprerd carts ase ele rege ay neqy Shanghai university (7) “strengthened their position, ing whatever to do with it. over the matter. STATE GETS NYA “DROUTH” GRANT Definite Announcement on Al- location of $48,875 Fund to Be Made Wednesday

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