The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 1, 1937, Page 1

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U.S. Marine Commander’s Protest Heeded " APOLOGY FOR FORAY |Ted Martell Wins In Grid Guessing IN AMERICAN SECTOR MADE BY ADMIRAL Wippon’s Bluejackets Seize Chin- ese Junk, Cross to Bank Protected by U. S. 9,000 TROOPS ATTACK Paddle Across Soochow Creek to Launch Drive on New Chinese Positions (By the Associated Press) Japanese Admiral Kiyoshi Hase- gawa apologized Monday to the United States marine commander who protested against a Japanese Former State Official Only One to Pick at Least 15 Win- ners Saturday ‘Theodore Martell of 901 Avenue E, Bismarck, former state commission of agriculture and labor, is the win- ner of the $10 first-place cash prize in. last week-end’s football contest conducted by'a score of Bismarck’s Yeading merchants through the Bis- Martell was the only one among the hundreds of contestants who was able to pick as many as 15 winners out of 20 difficult games last Setur- day. Though 10 others were able to cate 14 foray on the American-protected side| Carrie of Soochow creek. A party of Japanese bluejackets fhad crossed the creek to the Ameri- can sector of the international settle- eae hire rates junk seized after scaring of se crew by firing biank shots, Brig. Gen. John C. Beaumont, marine commander in Shanghai, pro- tested to Hasegawa, who apologised @nd promised there would not be a fecurrence of the incident. 7,000 Cross Creek The apology came as 7,000 Japanese shock troops, under cover of a thun- , Gerous artillery barrage, crossed Soo- chow creek west of Shanghai. Closer to the settlement, Japanese used the ‘Chinese junk and other craft to nego- tiate the creek and attack Chinese positions along the south bank. Tension between Japanese and British troops became .more acute, with British blaming Japanese for 10 casualties, including five deaths, suf- perc ny their forces in Shanghai thus Chinese dispatches said 2,000 Ja- panese soldiers were wiped out in @orthern Shansi province. While their comrades were fighting on the front west of Shanghai, sur- vivors of the Chinese battalion which evacuated its citadel in’ Chapei early Bunday were held in a detention camp fn the international settlement. A Japanese army communique as- serted 400 Chinese troops were killed on the North Honan front Sunday when a Chinese attack north of (Changteh was beaten off. Fall Fatal to Wife Of Sing-Sing Warden Ossining, N. ¥., Nov. 1—()—An| Ws ago was the obituary Monday of itorial written by inmates a few Ee “foster mother of Sing Sing’— eight by virtue of their better scores For Grid Guessers Because ‘of its popularity with the fans, @ score of Bismarck’s leading merchants have decided to football continue their guessing contests through the month of November, which winds teenth St., and 120 Avenue B, both irs, Kathryn Stanley Lawes, wife of of from shock and loss of blood from a fompound leg fracture received ap- parently when she fell after her heel cought in a boardwalk near Bear mountain bridge. Railroads’ Income Below Last Year’s Washington, Nov. 1.—()—The As- sociation of American Railroads re- ported Class 1 carriers had a net railway operating income of $59,304,948 fm September, a decrease of 15.4 per cent compared with the same month The tion said, to rising cost of operation including increased cost of materials, supplies and fuel, as well as a higher ge rate. Ex-Postmaster Admits Embezzling $804.96 Fargo, N. D., Nov. 1 —(®)— Everal McKinnon, former postmaster Ross, N. D., plead guilty in fe eral court here Monday to a charge of embezzling $804.96 from the postal department. Passing of sentence was deferred until the opening of the court term at Minot Nov. 9. at) and winners entire group ranged all average , which The Weather Cloudy and colder to- night; Tuesday gener- by Japanese LARIMORE WIDOW KILLED AGAINST CEMETERY PENCE Mrs. Pearl Ellingson, 53, Dies of Fractured Neck and Skull Sunday |LOCAL MAN SLIGHTLY HURT THEODORE MARTELL SARG MARIONETTES ARRIVEHERE TODAY FOR PERFORMANCE Sixth App: ance Here Under Auspices of AAUW; Local Boys to Assist ~ her physician. this | tured rib when A. D. McKinnon, Jr., Bruce Mur- phy and Wife in Crash Near Cooperstown (By the Associated Press) ; Pearl Ellingson, 53, widow residing in Larimore, was killed Sun- day night when a coupe in which three persons were riding, went over ar embankment north of here and crashed into a cemetery fence. Her neck ‘was broken and her skull frac- tured. Mrs. Ellingson was driving the car which was practically demolished. Mrs, Gunder Jenstead of Larimore suffered chest and head injuries and N. D. Traffic Toll totxy 106 ‘i= 100 was taken to the Larimore hospital where her condition was reported as fair. Jenstead suffered minor back in- juries. Mrs, Ellingson has been s resident here several years. She is survived by two children. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Liessman, 615 Seventh St., traveled over 7,000 miles through the Far West and the South- west this fall without mishap only Scout Patrols Get Credit For Quiet Halloween Here There was little in the way of clean- ing up after. Halloween fun-makers in Bismarck Monday, thanks, police and city officials said, mostly to the pa- troling activities of Boy Scouts Satur- day night, Two hundred twenty Boy Scouts and 171 friends they brought with | nigl them roamed the city during that evening guarding against damage. Altogether 391 boys took part in the Patroling program Only minor pranks were played by the city’s mischievous youth on the night traditionally turned over vo practical joking, Chief of Police W. R,. Ebeling said. “There were a few garbage cans tipped over and a few telephone poles were dragged across streets, but so far as we have been able to determine n> really serious damage was done. The Boy Scouts did a good job and de- eve & lot of credit for it,” the chief said, E. 'B. Klein, police commissioner, was of the same opinion. “Thanks to Bismarck’s Junior As- sociation of Commerce and the Boy Scouts,” there were fewer calls at the police station Saturday night than SETON 70 BECOME HONORED MEMBER OF SCOUT SOCIETY Noted Naturalist Will Be Given Arrowhead on Gold Chain Wednesday to tip over and amash their car when | op within 150 miles of home; i Mrs, Liessman was. “painfully but not seriously” injured, according to . She suffered a frac- the car rolled over. Occurred Near Edgeley The accident occurred on U. 8. Highway 218 about 12 miles north of Edgeley, N. D., about 4:30 p. m. Sat- urday when the left rear tire blew = out and the car swayed about 50 ye), Mind Said Distorted by Family Worries; Two Boys, Father Survive rangements Monday for Mrs. G. R. McAnineh, the 35-year-old mother whose family worries, officers said, distorted her mind and prompted her to blow out the brains of five of her seven children before taking her owa life. Stilled in death with the mother were Cora Belle, 13, Geraldine 10, Alive were the f Ray, 15,,and Gail, 11. The boys prob- ably because the otgun she used to destroy: the others. “All that saves you boys is no more shells,” said the mother in a note ad- ~ ‘|dressed to them. The elder boys told again Monday Mar-ihow they returned home about mid- ton . Newton (Continued on Page Two) Beavers Set Example For Army Engineers perintendent, called on the North Dekote chief game warden to do night-Saturday after celebrating Hal- ‘loween in Indianola and found the resides at Fort!podies of their mother and their custody for investigation in connec- tion with some petty crimes recently. Snow Flurries Fall While snow flurries were prevalent Dakota LDREN, SBLR feet along the highway before it ‘struck loose gravel and careened out of Liessman’s control. It rolled over once and came to rest on the wheels, badly damaged. Liessman hailed a passing road maintenance engineer to take him and Mrs, Liessman to Edgeley, after which they came to Bismarck. Liessman was for many years as- sistant secretary of state in North Dakota. One man was seriously injured and others received cuts and bruises when two automobiles collided on U. 8. Highway No, 7 about 10 miles west of Cooperstown in another Surv day night accident. In Northeastern N.D. ‘William Ralph, who lives near Sut- ton, received chest injuries. He was taken to Valley City hospital for . His condition is not be- Others receiving minor hurts were Mr, and Mrs. Bruce Murphy, East Lansing, Mich., and A. D, McKin- non, Jr., Bismarck, in one automobile, and Clarence Olson, Sutton,driver of the other car, and Ben Ramsey, also of Sutton, a passenger. ‘The collision occurred when Olson drove his machine onto the highway (Continued on Page Two) F. J. Heney, Famous Prosecutor, Is Dead Santa Monica, Calif., Nov. 1—(#)— Francis Joseph Heney, 78, pioneer jurist whose work as a prosecutor in the celebrated San Francisco graft cases of 1908 was called “marvelous” by Hiram Johnson, is dead. Sensational developments in that casein which Heney was shot in ccurt and his prosecution of the Ore- ,}gon land grant fraud cases aroused national interest. pioneer in the Scout movement with an Indian arrowhead ona gold chain, there are on normal evenings,” Klein said, ‘Remarkable,’ Says Klein “It seems to me this is rather re- markable and a tribute to the plan the junior association and the scouts have worked out. for entertaining the ised ae girls of the city on Halloween Scouts who patrolled the city Satur- day night met at nine different points to begin their duties under the direc- tion’ of Scoutmasters and assistant scoutmasters,, Later—between 10:45 and 11 p. m., they left their beats to eat a lunch provided ‘for them by the junior association. “By 11 o'clock practically every- thing we had prepared was eaten up,” said Helge Zethren, chairman of the Junior association committee in charge of the patrolling program. “Those 800 buns, 800 cups of hot chocolate, and hot dogs and seemed like a int when we started distributing them bus. fapeers Tune: y[beys soon, take care of em.” Zethren declared success of the plan was due largely to Scoutmasters and eapieagia pooutanasters Biles took the ent evening o! e charge of their troops. Halloween Victim Is Philosophical Rochester, Ind., Nov. 1—()— “Aunt Ella” Mcintyre, 78, and +) Early Resident Came to Capital live up to the ideals of tion which Seton hel; it Tickets for the public lecture in the high school Thursday are 40 cents for adults and 25 cents for school children, A reception for the Setons is being planned for Wednesday evening, at a time and place not yet announced. Peterson Bound Over released from the state penitentiary June 10 after serving a sentence im- posed on him in Ward county for a similar offense, Allen said. COMMITTEEWOMAN DIES Minneapolis, Nov. 1—(#)—Mrs. Oscar Adams, 52, Democratic national com- mitteewoman for Minnesota, died in Minneapolis Monday. Marriage Annulled City in 1873 in Covered Wagon Train Felan, ‘Vance Wilson, Mike Ryan and Harry Snyder, former associates of Mr. Ar- old on the staff at the North Dakota marck in August, 1873. Not long after the Arnolds sett! here, the young man went to work for Joseph Pennell, who had a gov- lernment contract to furnish hay to old Fort Abraham Lincoln, Mr. Ar- terboy for the — Only Two Transfered ie ak HG tet “Without their co-operation and help we couldn’t put the thing across,” he said, Scoutmasters, assistant scoutmasters and the number of scouts and their friends who took part were as fol- Troop 1, John Runge, scoutmaster, eight Scouts and four visitors, Troop 2, N. L, Lillestrand, scout- master, and John Thomas, assistant scoutmaster, 25 Scouts and 15 visitors. Troop 3, E. F. Haldi, scoutmaster and Dick Grebow, assistant, 22 Scouts and 20 visitors. ‘Troop 4, Emil Johnson, scoutmaster, five Scouts and six visitors, Troop 5, Edwin Roedel, scoutmas- ter and Rolland Stimson, assistant, 25 Scouts and 25 visitors, Troop 6, Joe Kirby, scoutmaster, 25 Scouts and 18 visitors. Troop 7, Charles Caruthers, scout- master, and John Dixon, assistant, 18 Scoluts and 18 visitors. Troop 8, Albert Hartl, scoutmaster, 18 Scouts and 12 visitors. Troop 9, John Karaziewicz, scout- master, 24 Scouts and 26 visitors. Troop 10, Charles Schatz, scout- master, 22 Scouts and 18 visitors. WMRS, A. E. SHERHAN, PIONEER MONTANA WOMAN, DIES HERE Heart Disease Proves Fatal to 83-Year-Old Mother of Margaret Sheehan church, oficiating. Following the services the poy wt be sent to Baker, Mont., for Born in Albion, Wis., Nov. 23, 1855, Mrs. Sheehan taught school for sev- ally fair, cold. ' THIS COUNTRY MUST LEAD 9-POWER MEET, HE TELLS COMMONS Foreign Secretary Rejects Italy’s Demand for Return of of German Colonies CITES ITALIAN WAR GAINS Any Action on Far East Depends on American Co-operation, He Declares London, Nov. 1.—()—Foreign Sec- retary Anthony Eden told commons Monday that Britain will go exactly as far as the United States in seeking an end to the Chinese-Japanese con- flict at the Brussels nine-power con- ference which opens Wednesday. Making clear that the United States is expected to take the lead in any definite action to control the Far Eastern threat to world peace, Eden said that Britain is prepared: “To go as far as the United States, in full agreement with them—not rushing in front, but not being left behind.” ‘The foreign secretary, who will head the British delegation to Brussels, gave the Far Eastern situation front rank in a frank pronouncement cov- ering the whole international field. He also curtly tossed back Italy's bid for a return of Britain's war- gained colonial mandates to Germany and upheld the government's course in the Mediterranean and Spain.- The United States, he said, took the initiative in convoking the nine- power conference and any action on the Far East “essentially depended on the co-operation of the United States.” ‘The foreign secretary advised Italy flatly, amid commons cheers, that she need not expect the return of col- onies to Germany while Premier. Mus- solini keeps territory which Italy won in the war. Thus, with what he deseribed af his own “appalling frankness,” Eden answered Premier urging in his address last week, that Ger- many get back s “place in the African OK APPOINTWENT DISMISSAL PLAN NDAC Officials Will Make Reo- ommendations to State Board of Administration A three-point program for establish- ment of procedure in appointments ‘and dismissals of North Dakota Agri- cultural college employes, submitted by Dr. John C. West, acting president {of the institution, was approved Mon- where they settled upon s homestead, Mr. Sheehan died there in 1912 but the home- Seaplane Completes South Atlantic Flight Paris, Nov. 1—(4)—France’s great flying boat, Lieutenant de Vaisseau Paris landed Monday at Dakar, Sene- gal, French West African colony after a flight across the South Atlantic from Natal, Brazil. The giant seaplane cov- ered the 1,830 miles over open ocean in 17 hours 55 minutes. Average speed was 105 miles per hour. From Soo Only two officials of the Soo Line's offices in Bismarck have been trans- fered so far to Enderlin in the con- solidation of the Missouri river di- vision with the Minnesota division. dispatcher, is the re Other changes effective Munday in the opera! department were an- nounced satura lay by E A. Whit- superin’ . G. W. Leigh, purchasing agent, will day by the state board of administra- According to the procedure, no faculty member will be appointed without full discussion by all super. for officers, specifically department heads, dean and president, the re- sults of this conference to be trans- mitted to the board of administration as_a formal recommendation, In agreement with procedure in other universities and the intent of the law, no employes of the state col- lege may appear on the regular pay- roll without approval of the board of administration on file in the office of the secretary of the institution, ex- plained R. A. Kinzer, board member. Communications regarding the work of the institution to the board of ad- ministration, it was outlined, must be transmitted in all cases through the president’s office. In submitting the procedure, Dr. West said “this is in Yne with the current practice in other institutions of this nation and information is on file for inspection of any board mem- ber which will disclose the necessity of this action being taken.” DEANS TO GET $8,000 Madison, Wis. Nov. 1.—(#)—Uni- form salaries of $8,000 a year for four University of Wisconsin deans, recom- mended by President Clarence A. Dykstra to eliminate “unfair differ- entials,” were approved by the board Nee regents. Office Here be purchasing agent and general storekeeper. J. B. Noyes, now store-

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