The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 19, 1937, Page 1

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Ae Telephone 2200 Farm Control Measures Nearl THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1 1878 North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper BISMARCK, N. D. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1987 The Weather Mostly cloudy tonight; snow Saturday; con- PRICE FIVE CENTS y Ready Scranton Man Fatally Hurt in Memorial Bridge Crash WILLIAM FLEMING (Renewed Selling Hits Wall Sect DIES; ADAM LEFOR |, SEVERELY INJURED Bank Examiner’s Car Smashes Into Disabled Truck on Missouri Span VICTIM’S CHEST CRUSHED Bismarck Coal Hauler Had Re- ported Predicament to Police Chief William Fleming, 50-year-old Scran- ton, N. D. resident was fatally in- jured and State Bank Examiner Adam A. Lefor was seriously hurt in a col- lision at the west end of the Memorial bridge across the Missouri river Thura- day night. Fleming died in a Capital City hos- pital at 6:45 9. m. Friday, a little leas than 12 hours after the car in which he was riding with Lefor crashed into a stalled coal truck whose driver was O. N. Galloway of Bismarck, N. D. Traffic Toll Extent of Lefor’s been fully determined suffered a deep gash over the Fighting to Get Under Way at 8 P. M. With Record Crowd | Mill Mail May | Madden Manager Dismissed — Stocks Break $1 to $8 Under Discouraging Business News ACCOUNTING SYSTEM AT MILL TS PLANNED Announcement Follows Dismis- sal of 3 Divisional Heads at Institution Under orders of the North Dakots commission, re- organization of the accoun' Seeaomine cooleat ot tee wea call started immedi QUESTION CHICAGO PAIR IN PROBE OF MINNEAPOLIS DEATH ‘Professional Killer’ Theory Discarded; ClO Leaders’ Claims Assailed Minneapolis, Nov. 19 —(#}— Police they closed place in North Minneapolis as they sought information in connev- trick had fought with his father in union headquarters early Sunday. Officials said the two had not been formally arrested. . \ Criticism of police personnel came from Alderman Al Bastis Friday. He censured Night Captain Willian Forby and asserted the chief, the night. captain of detectives and Ray Harrington, police ‘tillon bert expert were not notified of the murder for nearly ten hours. Detective Captain James Mullen sional killer” theory. Would Have Used Shotgun “The professional killer would have blasted with a shotgun loaded with siugs—or riddled Corcoran with ma- chine gun fire. He would not have strife between two rival drivers unions, No. 580 and No, 574 nearly a year ago. The two unions later merged into the present 544. He did not give their names. Announcement two were being questioned came after Police Chief Frank Forestal had -aid apt] the investigfation apparently was sty: and denounced two CIO peers the Ansty whos charped iene seer Loa) i ae labor movement here. ‘William Mauseth and Hillard 8: of Local 1140, United Electrical, Hd dio and Machine Workers, sent an open letter to Mayor George E. Leach demanding an investigation of the slaying and “gangsterism and racketeering” in Minneapolis. ‘Charges Are Bunk’ Mayor Leach refused to comment but Chief of Police Frank Forestal asserted: “Their charges are all has | bunk.” Meanwhile, Chief. Forestal said, police had been unable to locate the man who Cedric Adams, newspaper columnist, said told him more than & week ago that “a prominent Min- neapolis labor leader” would be “taken for # ride.” At the headquarters of the General commis-|Drivers Union 544, letters and tele- of the cluded the resignation of A. J. Scott jas manager. He said the matter of tion “was at no time grams poured in from labor unions throughout the country, pledging help in the search for Corcoran’s slayer or slayers. Shot We Corcoran, chairman of the North Central district drivers’ council, cover- ing five states, and active in several AFL unions here, was shot and killed near his home Wednesday night. A salt and pepper overcoat with all Beoes seas corned ie Rev. George H. Carey who said it ment on what importance they at- tached to it. Two neighbors of the slain Corcoran gave meager descriptions of two men they said ran out of an alley from the Corcoran garage at 10:30 p. m., Wed- nesday, about the time he is believed tw have ben killed. Another found an overcoat, with all the labels removed, | uiated near the acene. Rewards for the ap; of prehension the killer totaled $11,000, including $10,000 off offered by the joint teamsters council, AFL, with be held Saturday. British Envoy Spends 5 Hours With Hitler Berchtesgaden, Germany, Nov. 19. (#)—Viscount Halifax, Britain’s official” peace envoy, left here Friday after five hours spent with Chancellor Adolf Hitler in what was authorita- tively described fs cordial discussion. Deals of their exploration of Anglo- German relations were not divulged. morning for John Waldera, 52, veteran Northern. Pacific employe, who died ns eet E Paul hospital Thursday. Gee! His Average Grade Is Over 100 South Bend, Ind., Nov. 19.—() lund, whisper: i ani an prerebe Ot: moors (ane judies.” It happened at Rye, WY, lest week. 4 hae of course, deo} 00, but the capable aver- aged 938 for three years in the college of commerce, the highest average.on the football squad. - Briton Streaks Over Utah Flats to New World Record Bonneville Salt Flats, Uteh, Nov. nace shed Ci eearced «nse prorer The 3,100-horsepower fire from four exhausts as through thé mile hour. A whirlwind this dry lake bed “=/RFG LOANS MAY BE USED 70 STIMULATE HOUSING: INDUSTRY Housing Conference Endorses Program to Popularize Home-Owning. Washington, Nov. 19 —(}— Wide- spread efforts of the government and private industry to stimulate business activity produced wd developments, Friday. 1. The housing conference of the United States Chamber of Commerce endorsed a seven-point program, headed by publicity to popularize home owning, as a means of increas- ing residential construction. 2. A high federal official indicated loans congress would study stimulating industries which could absorb idle labor. The Chamber of Commerce meet- ing sa home buling could be en- Stronger competition nena olan other bidders. for the prospective home- owner's dollar, correcting miscon- ceptions of building costs, adjustment. Por pomnD | OF business taxes, rewriting obsolete uilding codes, co-ordination within financ- "the bulding industry, better uy mortgages to unfreeze other capltal already invested in real estate. the machine split the cool sutumn air | fine Americans who fixed my formerly | determine Pkt lage such s measure like a bullet: ran perfectly,” ‘Washington, Nov. 19. — (?) — President Roosevelt's jaw, one of his aides said Friday, “sticks out like a grapefruit” from the tooth infection ment — House physician, said his patient was “feeling fine” and thst fever clear,up the abscess in the socket from which Mr. Roosevelt's tooth was pulled Thursday. 18 PICKETS FACE CHARGES IN Arrested Thursday in Grand Forks for Halting Truck Delivering Bread id Forks, N. D., Nov. 19.—()}— 3 Soviet Teachers Sentenced to Death Moscow, Nov. 19 —(7)~ A woman 2nd two men were sentenced to death must serve 10 to 20 days in prison. faulty® left clutch.” They are Eddie Miller, Dave Frank and Riley sue FAILED, FRANCES MINSTER ASSERTS Heavy Blows Drive Back Chinese Army (By. the Associated Press) Foreign Minister Yvon Delbos Fri-|to day before the French chamber of deputies admitted failure of the Brus- ‘sels conference to mediate the Chinese- Japanese war, was his tion collapsed,” 4 terse summary of what happened. The next move, he believed would have to be given at Geneva. The Brussels conference adjourned ‘last Monday for a week after its medi- atory efforts fell apart in the face of Japan’s firm refusal to take part in peace negotiations based on the nine- Power trea treaty. China Friday the Japanese arm- ‘a cracked the southern wing of Chi- ne’s pence defense line protecting Nan- king. Powerful blows were struck at central and northern sectors of this line, stretching across the Shanghai peninsula some 40 miles inland from ee captured city. jpanese troops advanced to within ress pelea of Soochow, pivotal city of the Chinese defense, and threatened to make Chinese positions at Chang- shu untenable. Chinese reinforce- ments were pouring into the battle zone but, so far, they have displayed little ability to check the steady Jap- nese drive on the capital city. Chancellor Adolf Hitler, at his Ba- varian estate in Berchtesgaden, wel- ‘comed Viscount Halifax, the British emissary, for conversations which may revolve around Germany's expressed colonial demands. Their exact nature has not been disclosed. KILLED HUNTING RABBITS Deer Lodge, Mont., Nov. 19.—(?)— Charles E. Gardiner, 45, was accident- ally shot and killed while rabbit hunting, by Frank La Shell, 30, Powell county Coroner R. W. Ross said in a verdict. Political Import of Trade Pact May Eclipse Economic British Willingness to Negotiate Is Break for Hull's World Peace Plans to negotiate sin the United Staten The benefits to Anglo-American business may be considerable, but they may play second fiddle to the political a trade pact|resents the consistent policy of the . Washi ington administration since it took office. Hull's first big assault i Sat z tinued cold. HOUSE COMMITTEE TURNS DOWN WHEAT PROCESSING TAXES Votes Marketing Quotas for Corn in ‘Very Turbulent Session’ FILIBUSTER CONTINUES Senate Group to Vote on Ever- Normal Granary Provi- sion Saturday Washington, Nov. 19.—(%)}—Con: gressional committees neared comple- tion of farm control bills Friday while senators and representatives devoted another day to talk. Chairman Smith (Dem.-8. C.) an- nounced his senate committee would vote Saturday on an “ever-normal granary” bill. The house committee, taking up individual items, voted mar- keting quotas for corn and voted down processing taxes on both corn and wheat. The house committee was reported to have voted 15 to 8 on the wheat provisions and 13 to 9 on corn. The votes were taken in what one member described as a “very turbu- lent seasion.” Senator Connally (Dem.-Tex.) con- tinued a filibuster by Southerners against the anti-lynching bill. One Vote Blocks Resolution The house, starting another day of varied debate, was prevented from considering a resolution to declare that a state of war exists between ep DD aid « bi-partisan group of senators would ees next weeks io ould be drafted. A house tax sub-committee tenta- preside! quite for the Christmas holidays. A statement by John L. Lewis terme ing the eet ee bill “undeniably sound” in principle, ceorite “eeu limitations,” encouraged its sponsors to redouble efforts to get the bill bee fore the house. Lewis wrote Chairman Norton (Dem., N. J.) of the house labor com- meee that Labor's Non-Partisan , Secretary Perkins and President Wil- liam Green of the American Federa- tion of Labor. for their views, con- tinued her campaign to force the bill from the house rules committee. petition to signed by more than half the required 218 members, 46 Known Dead in New Typhoon in Philippines Manila, Nov. 19.—()—The death toll of the Philippine Islands’ second typhoon in a week jumped to 46 Fri- day as reports of sea disasters were received here. The fishing boat Miss Liloan sank near Masabate and only one member of the crew of 31 wast known to have been saved. Thirteen passengers and sailors were missing after the motorboat Guvan sank off Leyte. In northern Cebu province the typhoon was considered the worst in its history. Father M’Geough Will Visit City E Elks Today district deputy of the North ‘Dakota Eis, will report on the grand lodge at a meeting of the Bismarck Elks lodge at 8:30 p. m., today, H. M. Leonhard, exalted ruler, announces. 900 Cards Filed Here by Jobless call the postoffice for a de- Saturday morning or to call

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