The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1924, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT ENTIREBOARD | OF BOTTINEAU IS INDICTED Charged With rregtacttng | Duty in Supervising County Officers Bottineau, N, D., July 3.—The en tire board of county commissioners of Bottineau county and former county treasurer, Henry Dana, were named in indictments returned by the special grand jury here to Dis trict Judge Buttz. | Dana fs charged on one count with having deposited c y funds in the First National F Rottineau in bank. The are indicted on two counts, ch “failure to supervise the conduct of county offic and “failure to su yerintend the fiscal affairs” of the, county. The county lost considerable mon ey in the failure of the First Na tional Bank of Bottineau. PAIR HELD FOR TRIAL Must Return to Jamestown, on Murder Charge five St. Paul, July 3.—Frank and Cora | Funk, held in) Minneapolis in con- nection with charges of manslaugh ter in the finst degree for Norta | Dxkota officials, must return to Stutsman county, North Dal face trial on the charge. Preus today honored requisition for the two sought by Governor K. A Nestos. The Funks are charged with manu- facturing intoxicating liquors and in a negligent matter permitting some of the boiling mash to pour. over their young daughter, Mabel, who died from burns received in the ac- cident. MAKE MUSEUM OF CHURCH Chueh Attendance Decreases in Bolshevik Russia Leningrad, Russia, July 3. (By the A. P.)—Church attendance in Bol- shevik Russia has decreased to suét. an extent that many churches are on the point of closing their doors. Contributions from congregation sre so meager that they scarcely Keep the churches open and pay the slender salaries of pastors. ‘As a result, the governing body | of St. Isaac’s cathedral, erected at a cost of exceeding eleven million dollars, have made it into a museum and will charge admission. LAST YANK - BLIMINATED Wimbledon, “Bngland, July 3- a Norris Williams, remaining | American in the men’s singles of the Wimbledon lawn tennis tournament, | was defeated in the semi-finals th sore French star, who won 6-1; | sole Child Labor Amendment Is Voted Down Atlanta, Ga., July 3.—By a vote of 34 to 0 the state senute alopted today by substitute, a house reso- lution providing for the rejection | of the 20th amendment to the con- stitution of the United States, which would give Congress the power to regulate and prohibit employment of all persons under 18 years of age. URGE COX GO | TO CONVENTION | — | July 3.—Scores of telegrams have been received at | former Governor James M.° Cox's newspapet offfice urging the former Dayton, 0., | Field, Sta MIRACULOUS S Remarkable picture show n Island Y., when his stunt flying. He nose-dived into the carrying the pilot ashore while A i “Buster,” shaggy French poodle Hlown him up there from the + couple of neurs. But that w the cameraman so. He consenter , could get hi ame storm that ‘brought were reported kill there. Governor to come to New York as | : “titular” head of the party. Up to noon Mr. Cox could not be located | and he had left no word us to his) whereabout: DEFEAT BLOW AT UNIFICATION Chattanooga, Tenn., July 3. (By the, A. P.)—The Methodist Episco- pal General Conference today de- feateq a resolution which would have resulted in immediate adjourn- ment without action on the unifi- cation plan. GLOVER COMES HERE TONIGHT © OW. Irving Glover, third assistant postmaster-general of the United States, will arrive here tonight, it is expected, with his wife, and to- morrow at 10 a, m, at the Mandan {air grounds will present: to repre- ‘sentatives of Indian nations of North Dakota a testimonial from President Coolidge thanking them for their during the World War. ‘GREB-STRIBLING BOUT CALLED OFF higan Ciy, Ind, July 3—Wil- tenePC, Dall, ie of Michigan : Ned the Arena Gee ENV AT TE Mother Nature angry. city. dential district. under several feet of water. below is the pline in the belonging toa ustated area of tornudo-swept Lorain, O., © wien the photographer happened by ‘ound. THe pre wh tov such death and desolation to Lorain, ‘y and other northern Ohio cities Here is what it did to St. Boniface’s Catholic Church, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE © kK. Jounson, sil dead as he was execu mnd escaped with but. slight i water with a engit hay MORE STORMS family, living in the marooned on top of A ne terrific bly had been there a long for “Buster.” He told rnd still until che man helped him thongh, Then ie ESC APE FROM DEATH air mail pilot, dropped into the bay off Miller ind I it the k wand } motored to Duluth with Naney, who nr the American embassy occupied vir- ,| taally the entire attention of the house of peers at its session today. Baron Kijuro Shidehara, minister of foreign affairs, recounted the measures taken to express to the United, States. the regret of the Jap- ancse government for the incident. HAWAIIAN VOLCANO ACTIVE Kilauea Continues Display While Tourists Flee Volcano House, Island of Hawaii, Halemaumau, the n House of Everlasting fire, of the active volcano of Kilauea, continues spasmodically to present a display of terrible natural ers which has not been excelled within the memory of living man. Renewed activity: may rock the en- tire island, it is predicted by scien- tists. Violent outbursts, wracking the throat of the firepit and sending in- candescent boulders hurtling high into the void, have occurred on an age of twice daily during recent , accompanied by heavy dust clouds which are split and rent by bolts of lightning and peals of thun- der, Earthquakes of varying in- | tensity have been an almost constant comitant of the eruptions. Steam from the cauldrons of ater, and huge avalanches of rock, which once formed the rim of the er, go crashing down to be hurled up again by the next explosion. ‘Tremendous subterranean — forces are at work under the surface, in pit and under the earth of the surrounding region. Serious quake shocks have occurred in the Puna and Kau districts, opening wide ks in the surface, some as wide 0 feet, With the descent of the rock avalanches, mushrooming clouds of} dust, one rising atop the next, caught | in the whirl of heat from below, bal- loop upward and upward, giving the pit the appearance of a vast factory chimney. Caught by the trade wind, the murky banner trails off toward Kau, the fire particles held within its fold falling like rain and paint- Minneapolis, ing the landscape near at hand with the chapter of domestic events in| a lavender smear, in the distance which little Nancy r was the eon- | with’a covering that appears almost tral figure written today at Duf! like banks of snow. Beneath this luth, when the child’s father, Irving | canopy of cloud the sun is blotted Minneapolis grain man, was | out and the countryside is darkened rried to Mrs, Ruth Peterson, Min-|as by an approaching thunderstorm. The desert lands of Kau are taking on a new appearance, as is the floor of Kilauea proper. The plantation town of Pahala, some 25 miles from the volcano, likewise suffers. Ash one-sixteenth of an inch thick has spread over the buildings, fields and streets of the community, Before the present disturbances be- gan the pit was « rough ellipse, mea- suring 2,000 by 1,800 feet. ‘Today the void is estimated by Roy Finch, in ting a loop-the-loop during a bit of njuries. Above are shown ‘bathers| the tug seeking to pull it out. ‘GIRLNOW HAS” FOUR PARENTS “New Difficulty Arises in Nancy Stair’s Case now has: four Irving Stair, her father; her new stepmother; M Corbett, her mother, and Merritt J. Corbett, her stepfather, a millionaire | manufacturer ‘ Mr. and Mrs, Stair were married in the presence. of only a few friends ae 2c Duluth Home of Mr. aid. Mrs. emony being | Adlard of chureh, They parent Mrs. First Uhite be approximately 2,500 by 4,000 feet. M enpolis Sund: ry . A in Minmea patie Est SondNs| ‘The Hawaiian National Park, in charge of the voleano observatory, to! The child will spend three months with My. and Mrs. Stair, according | Which Kilauea js situated, is eon- | sidered a danger area, Visitors are also hit Peoria, Ill. Three | While the tornado was sweeping across from Illinois to Pennsylvania, | a cloudburst:-and a flood were inundating the streets of Gafesburg, Ill. It was the second time within a few weeks that Galesburg ‘had seen The first time, a terrific hailstorm swept the Here can be seen the swollen’ waters of Cedar Fork, creek running through the heart of the city, racing toward the re: Tracks of the Santa Fe Railroad were submerged The creek, usually only a few feet across anda few inches deep, suddenly had ‘become more than a block wide. a small ‘the Young Stribling-Harry Greb box- ing contest and other matchés sche- jduled for July 4 in the open air | seen here, cannot be held until the antine in the adjacent state of Mich- igan, which, he said, will be two weeks at least, Mayor Dall said the nearest case of smatinox of which he knew was, several hundred miles from Michi- gan City, hut deemed the postpone- ment of the fight necessary as a precaution. Promoters of the fight held a hasty conference and an- that the dete would be set ‘ban is lifted on the smallpox ,quar- | back until the ban is lifted in Mich- igan. ‘Round World Fliers in India Washington, July’3—The Ameri can round the ‘world fliers arrived gt Umballa, India, from Allahadua oy; July: 2) and planned to depart for Multan, their next stop, ‘today, a message to the aif service togay said. A cylinder in’ Lieut, Nelson's plane was leaking,but it was believ- ed it, could be quickly” repaired. \ MAN WHO CUT to-the court order directing her cus- ind then. will, return for-nine | Welcomed at the Volcano House, but to her mother and.,st p-|thgy have heen very care § ly gui with whom she spent part fedi expecially since the death of T. ih “he nit , Taylor and the disappearance of ico soldiers who had been visi®. at the Kilauea military camp. Motorists are warned that “insist on taking a chance,” in ap- proaching within three miles of the voleano, they should keep the road open and he ready for instant flight, futher, of last winter FLAG IS HBLD|S' ss Ht Japanese Police Charge 21-]! | Bismarck Boys | Year-Old Youth With Act | ate : There will be play tonight at the Paosevelt and the Richholt school piayground. There will be no play- ground games on Friday the Fourth. Tokio, July %—Rihel Okada, 21 arrested a® Osaka, under « PLAYGROUND WORKERS HOLD PICNIC Mrs, W. E. Butler, Miss Josephine Welch, Miss Margaret Postlethwaite, Charles Butler and J. J. M, MacLeod drove the playground class to the Heart river yesterday afternoon to. picnic, After exploring the hills and valleys, a lot of fun was had play- ing pienic games. Before returning home, singing and games to be used on: the playground were practiced. FINE*PLEATS French shop Is Maou, very at the imeem embassy k malice asserted that Okada as a member of a society for th» prevention of bolshevism and that he has been identified as a member of the gang which mobbed V Goto’s residence last December ‘The two young men arrested ye! of the same society, which is suid te be made up m of young re- actionaires with nly tenden- cies. They are still in custody. All three lived in a lodging house which the sociéty maintained near the American embussy. It was there tit the mutilated flag was found.} charming frocks of flat crepe finely The criminal code prescribes | aecordion pleated and trimmed with maximum of two years imprisonment | hand hemstitching. for the crime. discal Cook pe Elen aty. Interpellations of the government in regard to the cutting down by an unidentified Japanese of the flag at it is Safe. \Keep cool—try this new Summer breakfast QUICK~QUAKER — feeds you right’ without over- heating your 3 fs tas Oak No; , hot kitchens. frying pans to clean. Delicious! . HY eat, heavy. foods in Summer — foods that make you. hot and uncomfortable? Why fry and cook a Suminer’s morning ? Here’s a complete breakiest, luscious beyond tom- pare, the world’s premier vigor food, cooked and ready in three minutes. . That's quicker than toast! Quicker than coffee! Pre pare it while the fruit is being served. Tye Summer breakfast supreme. aiscildld (all die‘ acid exclahé onibenann Medium: 144 pounds; Large: 3 pounds, 7 02. 1 THURSDAY, JULY 3. 1924 100 Wild Animals Exh TWO BIG SHOWS for ONE ADMISSION PRICE CIRGt cu WILD} INOLUDING BUGER RED, HANK LINTON, OKLAHOMA DAN Trae JOE, PRAIRIE LILLY BILL, DAN OFFAT and the world’s greatest buckii nfo horse riders, ropers and bull dodgers, together with a b ae ou Sioux Indians, presenting are West . 4 Rings - 2 Stages - Steel Arena - Wild West - Horse Show BIGGEST WILD ASS CIRCUS in the WORLD 4 Riding Davenports Premier Bare Back Riders of the World CAPT. TIEBOR and His Trained Ses Lions including “Nero” the talking seal CAPT. FURTELL and his ten African male lions in a dare-devil act ASHCRAFT and his Polar Bears including shoot-the-chutes TOM SMITH 30 De Cars Bauals oy Freight care WILDANIM. 100 Exhibited in Ponte ‘1080 WAGONS ROBBINS BROS. PERFORMING ELEPHANTS ten in number. World’s Greatest Circus Act PONCA BILL WILD WEST well known cowboy: AERIAL LLOYDS, MABBE JAPS, BOUNDING LAWANDE, — WAIET CHESTER SHERMAN and the ACROBATIC KENTS 10 - Performing Sea Lions - 10 Performing African Lions, Tigers | Performing Zebras, Horses, Ponies nthers and Pumas Monkeys, Dogs, Cats, Birds BIG SHOWS forthe ONE PRICE OF ADMISSION _ Will Positively Exhibit at July 9th BISMARCK Wednesday 4th OF JULY BANG! BANG! BANG! Tire Prices Smashed ON STANDARD TIRES MICHELINS 80x31 Regular Cord $10.50 830x314 Oversized Cord 2.75 32x4 Regular Cord $16.50 38x4 Regular Cord $17.00 34x4 Regular Cord $17.50 81x4.40 Clincher Balloons $14.50 U.S. TIRES 380x3 Usco $6.65 380x314 Usco $7.25 Regular Royal Cords $11.00 830x314 Oversize Royal Cords $13.00: 82x4 Royal Cord $18.50 30x314 EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS Better than mail order house tires and tubes at mail order house prices. . 80x314 Extra Heavy 30x31% Oversize Cord Fabric Tires $7.25 $10.25 “80x8 Tubes ..........$140 80x31 Tubes........ $1.65 We are open 24 hours every day. We oie all aie ‘of cars. “We specialize on greasing, washing and radiator work. Quick service. 'TEXACO GAS, OIL AND GREASE LOCKWOOD ACCESSORY. CO: Phone 187 800.5. Main St. Sess:

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