The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 23, 1926, Page 1

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% “| =S==]THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [a E S10 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1926 RMS GIVE EAST HEAT RELIEF “ INBISMARCK _ ARR FLOODED City Gets Heaviest Single Rain of This Year Last Night—1.39 Inches . WILL BENEFIT CROPS Farmers With Poor Fields Should Imniediately Sow, Feed Crops, Says Roberts Plt Boh san ane ana pcad he benefited rowing | The and ee Bismarek had the heaviest precipi- tation reperted by any of the 18 es Fort Worth, Texas, July 23—You ernmeht reporti: ions, with 1.39 may what’ you will about the million-dollar First Baptist church of Fort Worth, Tex., where Dr. Norris preaches to the largest con- gregation in the world. At the right, in the rear, in the building that houses his Sunday, school of 7200 of am inch. This was also the heav- Rev. Dr. J. Frank Norris, the south- i west's moat ‘fame: yu . Grand Forks was ‘ you must admit th: next with 86 of an inch.) : of a fight. 3 evangelist. But at he don't afraid The rain here assumeu the propo! : : Just now Dr. Norris is at liberty tions of a near cloudburst, the great F ‘on $10,000 bond for shooting and er part of the total precipitation com-| § killing one D. E. Chipps, a wealthy .ing within 9 15-1 inute period, and itman who had called at his ministerial * the streets were flooded. Small hail. < ‘ y to remonstrete with the stones fell heavily in parts of the ¢ ps although other parts reported no a close friend, Mayor H. C. Meacha hail, The hail did little or no dam- wcihe three butlets thet ‘Dr. Norris age except, perhaps, to garden stuff. A sharp elec! storm accompanied the rainfall. ‘ Basements Flooded Water rushed along the paved Son of a during na | Born in Ale boy, often had to long fight from the very beginning. Drunkard a, the son of a drunken father whom Norris, as a pilot home from it away, and the street department Whee jconvivial bar rooms, Dr, Norris has crews were kept busy nearly all night Ft been a Texan since the age of 12. - opening up manhole covers and clear- |, as 4 young man ‘ing away dirt, grass and tree , {bullets from cai branches from the gratings so tl while range ridin, water could get away. For a tit ‘ j the range to repare ding mi some of the streets resembled min- iature lakes. Baptist Several basement barber shops and basement store roofs in the business Jat Baylor university he stopped three le rustlers’ guns i. Then, eo he plunged ortation and district were flooded with from one Rey. Dr. J. Frank Norris | At his first pastorate, the McKi: water after the storm, and the base- ments of many residences were also flooded. | Rain 111 all along the south Soo! » line, according to reports received or two inches to that many feet = i ever, and very little in the south- fey Avenue Baptist church at Di n las, Dr. Norris inaugurated a wer on! presence there. The ‘three prisoners,| Heights, ‘@ suburb. ng 4 penitentiary ing on, races, This ADAMS TELLS DETAILS OF HIS HOLDUP Hankinson Robbers Were Very Decent About It, Local Mail Clerk Says “It was all right once, as an experi- ence,” was the comment of Frank H. Adams, railway mail clerk who was jheld up and robbed at Hankinson yesterday ‘morning. Adams went on to say that more than once would be y boo much. “The next fellows might not be s decent about it.” he commented. Mr. Adams was in Bismarck t yufter his harrowing exper response to a tclegram reque: ig ‘his: race tracks that finally resulted in a Caught shortly after the robbery and j sate law providi taken to Wahpeton, the county seat,| 4 ‘sentence for betti [re ‘scheduled to be arraigned before EY was after a woman in his congrega- i tion had told him how her son had tomorrow, and Adams has probably tte erent No va watard A: NTO come to ruin through gambling on been summoned as a witness in the * the northwest part of the state, how- y ithe horses. heari: It was in 1909 that Dr. Norris was U. S. Commissioner Gustav Schuler Gives Deputy Sheriff Credit mJ \called to his present church, the| “Adams, whe this qmorming was in- aragonite : SLOPE A R i A inet peptist che at Fort Werth.| clined #0 “cahelder te robbery “as Raise a So fiery and unsptring were his pi ‘something of a farce since the “parmern inthis section of, thal pit denunciations of whet ‘he consid-| mail was recovered and the three men i immediat st paris : ‘a Te eee ee inmedincy seca, Pastures Turn Green, Corn Wai‘spiit wide open, and a struggle! Deputy Sheriff Mr. Robergs said today, “With the | - | beran, tains oe Monday and last night to| Gets New Impetus—Farm- | struction of the break the prolonged dry spell, it is Acquitted practically cartnin-that,. plenty off ers Planting Oats Dr. Norris wa /uoisture will be provided from now! - ‘thet culminated in the de- church by fire. of Arson indicted for arson, but gained acquittal and renewed his on to raise good crops of fall feed if, .Mgndan, N. D., July 23—(#)—An fight. At one time a-group of <i they are sown now.” ; 81 of t \ area last. ni come as the, days to leave the ineh rainfall in the Mandan ens called on him and gave him ten city, but he barri- Hankinson for his wo up the suspected parties, conmented very favorably on courtecus and gentlenranly attitude of the men who held him up. According to Adams’ story, the j Pailway mail clerk on that run has about 'three and a thalf ‘hours work in RAIN AT JAMESTOWN arettect bens of the year to farm. ceded himself in hiss home, got a/the yards at Hankinson. BOOSTS CROP OUTLOOK bea irymen. Pastures which wawed-off shotgun Jamestown, N. D., July and defied. them. ome: s had turned brown and A little later a gangster shot at hi Over an inch of rainfall in the last’ gere under many weeks of dry, hot @* he sat in his study, the bul 48 hours has brightened up things og again green today; corn burying itself in the wall close to wonderfully in this section after given a new impetus and head. Again, a friend struck weeks of dry, hot weather had prac-' dozens of farmers were in the fields volver = vy hand of a assal tically blasted small grain crop today planting oats for a late hay Just in time to save Dr. Norris’ No. 165 comeés in on the main line, bearing mail from the east. ‘Adams had just come back from tting the registered mail on 105 and! it on top of his tabje at the end tof the car, sorting it. His beck was BASEMENTS Postal Workers of Minnesota Meet in St. Cloud Toda . Cloud, M July 23—). Hundreds of de! were in St. for the opening meetings association of Minnesota federa- clerks and the y conventions of the held ainment toda: ineluded trips of inspection throug St. Cloud's granite quarries, and luncheon at the “state reformatory where guests will be addressed by Superintend feo George, nal president of postal clerks, C Stultz, vice presi- dent of letter carrie: ind Postmaster Charles J. Moss of St. Paul, will ad- dress the formal business session at a c m. tonight. A dance wil this try, clu e the features of the conven- tion is the Minnesota letter car- riers’ band from St. Paul, which this morning serenaded Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Moos, Sr. parents of § Pgul’s postmaster. Usiness x ns are scheduled for ‘oncluding early in the evening with a parade, It is estimated that 400 delegates id visitors have registered up to early noon today. CHICAGO CAFE OWNER KILLED BY GANGSTERS Victim Known to Police as Ruler of Underworld in Chicago Heights Chicago, Jul (AP)--From the shadows of his own cafe, four blocks! from a police station, booze gangsters or vendetta slay late last night} poured out a of lead that took y left for Wahpeton this afternoon, in| the life of Philip Piazza, wealthy his] owner of two roadhouses in Chicago illers were in an auto and, ing the fusillude, disappe: darkness. iazza was known to the police as the ruler of the underworld in Chi- cago Heights. : HAIL DAMAGE CLAIMS TOTAL 272 FOR WEEK’ Dunn County Leads List With’ 50—Total of 4,696 Claims | Filed This Year Only 272 claims for hail damage’ to the door which is in the middie of; surance department du: ‘the car. After a few years of such tempes- “CE car. | ” : > eee saat habsatastollika koma AAAAL | lob nein Gas worth $4,000 to me,” ‘tuous combat br Norris found him-; | “Stick ‘em up,” te ‘heard @ voice and the crop is considerably bet illiam Borden, farmer in the welf firmly established. His, congre- Fram dieetose sear, Montes, ers, became one of the largest, if he thought some- rh eans\a third big crop of pres gog corn aa I looked for, largest, in the world. A new at upwards of a million dollars. He pots. at ‘nore bushels of pota Paciti Mi of the toeg and 500 wore bushel of onions.” wheat ts, thin { eg. arvis, agronomist built up «Sunda ver, and y School of 7,200 ir of 600 voices The heads are good, howe padture expe: mbers, fome fields will yield well, «90 to \Gegst Plaips Field Station, urged the /*IMK* im bis church, | is credited i A 40 cent yield being the estimate planting of oats sown a trifle heavier tov "Corn and flax/ throughout the’ thew usual. “While — district should make a good crop. { inapeed @ good corn cro with i ving the “ has caused the expulsion of more than fa half dozen teachets from various jowevi re or less lacking, It 18 otate institutions because they were FARGO I8 GETTING “to try the oats-for-hay ia ¥ ALL-DAY, RAIN, TODAY We tine tosh toe steel fond of the theary of evolution » July 28.—()—One of, very farmer who is short on hay’ the best rains of the season began should plant oats now. It will re- re early today and up to| quire moisture two or three weeks 10 2. had totaled nearly half en| from now but it will mean plenty of inch. iS, ll-dey rain is the predic-| feed stock.” tion of observer in Cag ted the Best Crop'in History © weather observatory at rhead,| The New England country has the Minn. The rain is covering the en-| greatest crop in its histo even! Tor tire southeastern corner of the state. mele, to the rain last night the Gol- n Valley (Mercer county) district had mn pastures; good crops are werywhere in the river bot- while th wailable The Mott dis-| THEY DO NOT LOVE Us. ie NKEY , of cattle out of t OE ; determined, included very few dairy IF THE. WORLD COURT GOT US. || Mock. and represented culling out) “Morton county is amply able to (By Arthur Brisbane) take. care of itself if there is a 1926 said A. W, Furness, Mandan Commercial the] Joseph P. Hess, president of ¢! seer iad har! hae kept tn elose couen with’ The yterious drop. in Pong woos situation throughout the Missouri Soden that might disturb tie gar-, slope ares, today emphatically denied ket. Invest your money #t home. that an: eae ertale Sieeee inston’ Chu that: “while it ts true some sec- spent seven billions here ‘Seek te dieeiate. 6 ;one was fooling him. church was built, its value estimated ! Faces a Revolver Then something i back-end he hear voice say “I told you ‘to stick ‘em up. Then he dooked around and found stranger with a gun pointed et him. On the other side of him was another, Rolette 18; Sheridan 4; Slope 5; We dont tino turt “We don’t aim to ju any” sof the were the considerate words " ported froin ion, and did not bere ez jending Saturday, July 17. Dunn county led the list with 60 and Divide | count; 38. } Bottineau 7; Bowmi 3. Burl | Burle’ ten 45 ores 2; Hettinger 6; La Moure 4; McHenry Msintosh McKenzie McLean | Pembina 2; Stark 34; Steele 1; Stutsman | Traill 5; Wells & and Williams 10. "| | The total number of claims report- robbers. “This ain’t your stuff, any-| ed so far this year is 4,696. way. The best you can do is what ‘re ‘told.” cere i on cate sites! HTL, DAMAGES me complied with the request fivryce = GRAIN CROPS him, he says. The.robbers foreed him to tie down ‘on the floor of the car, tied him hand ‘and foot with pieces of rope which they had brought with them all pre- pared, having cut them from a er piece in the station, They tied aj we ‘handkerchief about his “mouth, but dig mot stay long enough to ti it very tight. fore haves him lie down, one of the group had courteous- ha ance thet they lame Ge treken| | Coammetely Wiped. Out on the floor, Then a work table was; shoved over him and the last Adam: (Continued on page four.) st” BOOZE SERVED TO INMATES OF Close . That | Whistles CHICAGO JAIL Frees ne sore Police. Find Bootleg Joint! So|'"« * reverts here "AT CROOKSTON Some Fields, Ready For Har- | vest in Few Days, Are Heil pered a small strip of fertile, | farm lend here last ni \ing grain 35,40 200 per cent an Reports were a strip four | miles wide and nine miles long suf- fered the worst hail m. i ;of years. D. A. Mel Crookston Times reported that ber crops, ready for harvest in a few G cadsed losses of 10 per cent, From Scarlet Fever evening at the St. Cloud Coun- |” Parade at 7:15 p. m. July 28 107 In Highest ~ | Will Be Followed By Ini- BY POINCARE The highest official temperature : recorded was 107 in ‘east. on’ Broadway to Fifth street,; Minister of justice~Louis Barthou.! Threat of storms drove to. their « care, after presenting his new cabinet, The initiation ceremonies will be {o'the president today, sad he count. followed by @ banquet at the Mc- 4 on having a talk with Andrew W.} | Kenzie hotel at midnight. After the ‘allon, American i aes eainsanspas eden. tren oes FOREST FIRES |*Agerwood 00. ITORNADO-LIKE IN NORTHWEST | ""Sett"Soek| Gare TRS License to sell 1,000 shares of common stock at $100 a share has om been granted by. the state securities commission to the Consumers Home Oil company of Lidgerwood. The ——- comp mpany plans to operate bulk tank | Trenches Are Thrown About] ““The Reaver “Creek Oil company s pany, Largest Blazes in Four | Stith: wa authorized to sell 87,000 | Farm Buildings Wrecked and ‘rex! shares of stock with a par value of | , The company plans'to drill fer, Crops Ruined in New York 1 Western States Hi | Lee Higginson and company, Chi-! Late Yesterday cago, was authorized to deal in se-| pre 3, curities in North Dakota, | 10.000 MEN FIGHT FLAMES Ueda ‘PEOPLE SLEEP IN PARKS One Blaze in Tahoe aa 1 VILLAGES aS ‘Temperatures at 100. and FLOODWATERS) eer Tearing down through Madinon, Missoula, Mont, July 23—()— ext and brush fires in the north- western states and southwestern Canada are generally reported under a Chi : Peete sweeping approximately |Loss to Crops and Property o bale of tormaaerti repertines 8. i \- ih th mere than 10,000. men an the Estimated at $50,000,000 onty anaes contetiace a sieee. ‘enches have been thrown . 000 and left wrecked farm build- about the largest blazes in Montanu, —Many Homes Gon hington, Idaho and California, " erie vate tee veer Lips poen pi (AP) —Seven| n'a farm near Earivie.” They troved through! had sought shelter in a barn when the storm broke and the building colle * under control are expected — to burn for a week. Belgrade, July Villages have been d rsting of dams in the region of| Batchka, due to. the flood in the California, the sitaa,| Danube ‘river, which has now lasted tion was reported as greatly improved| for three weeks. Great damage hax in western Washington, Oregon and| been causdd to crops and property at in the Cunadan provinees, The Tahoe | Various places. The ministry of ax. fice” Hae sburweld ov 000 acres | Culture estimates the loss up to the] Ney y, reer Novisad, a commercial center, is| Kyt, (orms brought relief today to | flooded, and the lower parts of Bel-| Nw England and the middle Atlantic grade ure inundated. The plains of | (rates but increased by three score the Save river and! of the Danube | Haq “cieq ‘cl! fromm heat wave that y e | ec a mperature near Belgrade are completely flooded, | records, Within 26 hours, OF deaths amma aoainie sah The situapion is aggravated by heavy a ee Beeavenen ey Y] were added by heat and storm to It ix said thousands of houses have] Wednesday's toll of two seore killed ) been destroyed in the affected re-| in the east and midwest. The mid- sions and that much livestock had| West got relief in rain and cooling ects ee breezes early yesterday, but the east sweltered until last night, ‘<n There were 22 deaths in New Eng- land traceable to the heat or storms, 10 in New York city, 11 in New Jer- sey, two each in nd rain fell in torrents a moment before the wind swept over the area. ported out of control north of Boise, Idaho. Washington and Philadelphia and several upstate in q New York, in addition to 10 women on an outing killed in a bus accidenc at Nyack, New York. Hagerstown, Maryland. It was 103 in Washington 2 ". and 100 My ii Six Former Premiers in List— Maryland” ae a ee artion of Modern, Woodmen, whieh Others Have Been in mara Einckeuee nee hae will be held in. Bismarck July 28, : will ‘open ‘with a phtade at 7:15 p. Cabinets Before woe City. . according to the schedule which Ti ough s been made out by District Man- agar beat are, Brourht «plague ne f a of flies at Ogdensburg, N. Y., and . 2. C. Mathi ib "| Paris, July 23—CP)-M, Poincare 7 “ wide sulle seeteeday encoueh Le nab Par -ciageen ermal gamit al them ett ee kone ’, s post in his new cabinet. y iacivarnda willbe femal or iho Aca iale rir eaaumae ot caliate city jail at, Balsigh Rone ae ts dit rf e ” rs is as follows: i i wiles. Men eet watt ee ce nence: Ie! Premier and Minister of finance: Lppdencar ies north on Second street to Broadway, ; Raymond Poincare. “Storms Delay Traffic tiation, Banquet The program for the district con- Foreign affairs—Aristide Briand. Interior—Albert Surraut. [| Beesen Spann as eee ie slept two sone Fifth street to Main, and | o aeraeulnie ae Mpatiacean ais ce acpi ey | eceeceeee eee He ‘lsy'a ‘Nigh ‘of will open at 8:16 p.m, with an ad- larine—Georges Leygues, | 97, dropped six degrees in eight min- dress of welcome by L. J. Wehe. ‘The| Public works—Maurice Bokanawski. | utes, Wire communication was ser- response will be given by P. J. Mur- | Faeratinn —Pelonaed Herriot. \iously affected in New York state phy, state deputy head consul, and) Commerce--Andre Tardieu, und New England. Some trolley the’ supreme organizer, Ralph E,/ Colonies—leon Prierr. | lines and railroads were blocked by Johnson, will deliver an address. ", Pensions—Louis Marin, ile, | branches of trees and there was con- The ceremony. of adoption and ini-| Asticulture—Dr. Andre Queuille. | siderable unroofing of buildings, tiation of new members will be ut! L#bor—Andre Fallieres. i | The list inctudes six former NIT TIT 10 p, min dramatic form, conducted premiers, and ‘all. the ‘others “300 STRIKERS ‘ serve le once efore as Pe a by degree cabinet minist | teams from the Coleharbor and Pol- | . lock, 8. D., camps. The ritualisti | werk will ioge ae iy rey RARE PREMIER POINCARE ASK JOBS BACK teal cote a . Paris, July 23—(@)—Premier Poin. | secretary of the banquet there will be a continuation ‘treasury, who arrived in France to- day as fe peers at Patterson hall be- Vv. a.m. rT i i The program will be featured by pre eee micr said tte tt aechoue SUbWay Motormen and number of entertainment acts, such ‘which he wished 10 convult. Secretar y clog, dancing by ‘Faldin Metton. ¥, Switchmen, Who Walked Out igurdson, ‘Coleharbor a har. July 6,'Ready to Work sa emnoment io Sermee WECTFALL Fa ami in of St. Paul and Joe Solittsky Pret ag Pian gi of Bismarck. f pairs july 30 at the Grand Pacific. hotel, at’ 4. | for thete oll janes oa which field men from all over’ the HE AD LIONS cry teeter ys oe resent. : last night that they had lost and Mr. Murphy. will aiele his per. ted to march in a body to tl sonal headquarters at fices of the Interborough Ri Pacific hotel all day July 28, for Transit company and gig nds reception of visitors. Mr. Mathie San is in charge of the convention, and| Convention Being Held at Whe eet ene ee eee has heads parters will also be at the Francisco — Election of The company claimed a five cent fare would not permit wage increases. Officers Tomorrow — ‘ | REFUSE TO TREAT Crookston, Minn, July 22—aP)—\Fined 150 Yen For WITH STRIKE LEADER e San Francisco, July 23—Unless| New York, July 23—UP)—New Taking Photographs there is an upset in the plans, York’s subway strike is on eer i F liam A. fall of Mason City will! Four hundred striking Interborough in ‘ortified Zon ej be elected president tomorrow of the| Rapid Transit company employes, who Petetnatlonsl Batnalation a Tens today marched in a body to the com- neki, J es July °23— __{¢lubs at the annual convention here. Is to ask that tl Louis Vocchwerhy clerk inthe Anjse.|1t is expected that Detroit will be| back the jobs they quit oe Jett te peas ulate ber sentenced to] chosen as the convention city of 1927.] were met with the announcement that ron ee of ¥80 yen (about $75) on| Westfall is now first vice presid the company would not treat with Ed- Conviction of chante of taking phn| If the program to elect W . Levin, the strike leader. besten in a fortified sone. ogel.| Fors through, Irving L. Camp of| The strikers shouted a derisive poll ‘at Sesebo Naval|J0hustown, Pa., will advance to the | answer to the company’s officials and Base tently eet as office of first vice president. He is} reti d to their hei now second vice president. The con- s the new phase of the strike. '|ventton ends tomorrow afternoon. | They declared they would not break Willard Louis, 40, > allegiance to their strike leaders. Movie Actor, Dies Glendale, Calit., J a Willard Ieuls, 46; motion victors thhome here iNness . Ee Way int . Milwaukee efas’ in the deal, The fash ie eash involved was not ‘pu Cc re i S| aS

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