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SOT SANE Sn ENE AMR AME URE ENR ER SAY A a nsaeraneruN sneecitve SO RRR MERE ECR ARO TRA USER ROUEN EID RAMEN ‘ . ‘ . THE BISMAR€EK TRIBUNE [avon | WRATHER FORECAST Wednesday. unsettled with probably showers. Net much change in temp. \HOT WAVE ‘STILL WORKING ily of BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1926 PRICE FIVE CENTS SOUTHWEST STATES <= IREOORDS OF ri, SWEEPS OVER Coolidge in Garden of Childhood i 10 REACH § ~ MBN IN CAVE \Rescuers Hope- to Get at Trapped Miners Before Sundown Today YW FATE STILL UNKNOWN Efforts to Communicate With Victims Prove Futile today. Two groups of workers -are labor- ing to reach the entombed men, One ‘group is using a pump to remove water and clear ‘x path ‘through the old shaft into the lateral tunnei. Follow Sand Cave Method + “The other group is resorting to the rach Fi ova C atk A aft ts : 0; ‘ollins. at eing : Fe Ben en Se pence gg ie hein bites Here is the family of D. E. depth of 60 feet, and it is estimated i the workérs must double that dis- {was shot to death by ‘Rev. tance before breaking through the trap. eP5} Chipps, Frank Norris, evangelis: Dr. Norris’ church. The son’s name is E! | Fort Worth (Tex.) lumberman who in the study of tt. Still. Hepefal Efforts to communteate with the trapped men by tapping on air lines had failed but compressed sii being foreed through the, lit airy in hope the victi ive. “National guard troops are on duty to keep hundreds of curious from in- terfering with) the work of rescue crews, CALLES DELIVERS President of Mexico Declares! Priests Seek. Wealth and Power and Keep People in Ignorance—Boycott Brings About ‘Depression in Busi- ness ny FAR OFF? NEVER M $5 A PRESCRIPTION, THE ANI! WITHIN US. Mexico City, 'Aug. 10+()—The situation arising from the ; gdvern- ments religious regulations and their Lrejectionaby, phe (atholics today came more tense’ and more compli: ented. - indict] President, Calles issued his bitter twenty-seven it broadalde against the Catholic druggists. clergy in a statement to an Ameri- ~ -. By. cc t 1888.) overeat authorities doctors, thirty-two BITTEREST "TIRADE AGAINST CATHOLIC CLERGY Auto Dealer Leaves $80,000 to Charity Sioux Ta., Aug. 10—#)—The will of William Warnock, automobile dealer, who died last week, disposes of property valued at more tha 500,000, The largest bequest wi ‘Mrs. Ada Klinger, Sioux City, a step- laughter, who is to.receive $200,000, The two Klinger children were left | $175,000, Eighty ip nkagay Pps is given charity; about $50,000 to employes who do not own stock in the Warnock Warnock’s wife preceded in deatl 5 WANT MILLIONS, ‘him Doctors sold whiskey prescriptions, can “; fwitl mission.” He charged to druggists at $5 cach. Every three! the clergy with seeking wealth and months one hundred resctiptions | political: power, causing revolutions om the government. Some doctors: and bloodshed<and using their pul- sell a whole book as cheap as $200,' pits for seditious speeches, ile others gee eee Le ay Raglan the masses of the people druggists soid wot of whiskey! ignorant. a prescriptions The Catholic Episcopate continued rescription business in New) unyielding in .its refusal to acce jounts to about $15,000,000 a the government’s regulations; there y Prohibition is profitabdie, 'was:no move to return the priests though not yet exactly practical. fof the churches, and the deadlock j wes apparently absolute, with no A scientist says he can prove ana-! prospects of reconciliation. tomicslly that tower animals are in-\) cluded ur physical makeup. They Dare certainly included in our spirit-! Business Nervous ‘ One of the chief developments is One tady calls ther! a movement of depres: and nerv- a viper, one child calls ae { in. business circles, The In character we are far apart} economic situation was already bad as thyenas and white rabbits. + | before the religious regulations went into effect and to this now has been For instance, litt! Jimmy Mille} added the effects the economic was a sexton of the Episcopal church! boycott fostered by the League for i few Brunswick that had for ras-| Defense of Religious Liberty. or Reverend Edward Wheeler Hall, The Reverend Hall knew Mrs, Mills too well. discount ‘ranging from 3 1-2 to 4 per ‘cent, the highest in several years. They were not cautious,’ Prices of some food stuffs are ad and when they met under the crab vancing and the le fear further japple tree somebody mardered them. rises. Secretary of the Treasury Pani apis i ‘Little Jimmy Mills lost hi wite,! to ated the economic situation and y Silver. exchange has slumped, the’ yester inted a committee of experts | INDIANS DANCE Chippewas Claim Uncle Sam Owes Them $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 Ballelub, Minn., Aug. 10—(AP)— from northeastern linnesota. and ‘More than 700 Chippewa Indians nonthern Wisconsin danced and feast- ed today in a cai near here, while their petition relating to claims [against the government totaling be ‘tween $50,000,000 and, $100, was being forwarded to ington | for consideration. at their gathering! ask Commis- The Chippe: ‘day, d to sioner Burke of the Indian bureau at’ Washington to name a dete for an election at which delegates would be ~named to select attorneys to repre- sent them in their suits against the federal government. = Dissatisfied With whom dhe liked, 4nd now he cooks gecommend remedial measures. for the children, But he sa ‘ don’t know who did it, but, it T don’t want him or he: The hurts my feelings doesn’t speak to fata foe oO. J. form cong! Minnesota, and Edward rs of] Walker, county attorney of Cass county, were chosen as the attorneys. Many of d Indians were di e methods used and s general glouce Le jtude of the murderer.or murderess, Q; TE few worshi re are seen hae kil ee a dre. in a of the Gatholle churches, Hed. This was started at killed the cle Mills, who sang in hy choir. How Th tholies say they are praying a0. you ex jain’ paychically the fact the jomes: yr § than _to ‘that Mrs. Hall; who lost @ husbahd, the churches, which are in the harids does not 8 to Jimmy Mils, who, of munieipally appointed committees, lost his wife in the same calamity. | because they do not desire even Distance lends indifference. tacitly ] rl Pie. amperes at \ Three thousand Chinese are drowned gy ‘Sy the rising of the Yi river, undate: X uare miles are: 4; Bids Opened For may, aust Pe other side of _ Paving 3 Blocks But China is he earth, 8d that news means little . ‘ beta some Members of the city ‘commission ,,if.we, heard thet some wrest body | oped bids ‘on three blocks At Pav been destroyed, ing ‘areund. the St. Alexiue hospl- wiped out, that would mean’ néthing| $4! st the council meeting last night. eo oer. : none meeting when the contract is \eThe strat is that Obina,| be 9 . z ‘ vith “pait i. eg ®t ition aber ness of the meeting cot n 8 eng ede and = ities lee! j rs and never. foun thousands o} ret of memeesn F “I Reaver G ey amp have organ nt_emplo} ave \- ised a Jonaye. for aetune of the me any more. How different from the mental et- Indians ment is violating. variou: ‘congressional dill b Erorident cools » bppewas the ri ernment for their clei Board Ney regultions for ven iiiusion of if ecessary re: * durn to the market of ethy] gasoline as well se ses ym automo- will be considered by ith at ite next, ittemore, state the dangei Re. exhausts, hi cated toda: mate board of heal meetitig, Dr. A. A. (| health director, in A feature of the war between| company's frasch! rie Hiaxice, "thes} woe Oe causes WO! ry a pg rg ie . ail overwhetming-| . Ui ahe tivet protest ts ident of by the presi teh :|GETS REPRIEVE, treaties concerning timber and other lands. Aj 1,, May Adopt . New Rule on Ethyl) iter a jation of | j, itte-| tained a writ of JACKIE COOGAN SHOOTS GUARD) Watchman Seriously Wound- ; ed in an Attempt to Frus- trate Revengeful Action ASSAILANT ESCAPES Former Chauffeur Hides in Shrubbery Near Boy Film Actor’s Home been tempt to seek revenge against Conte boy film actor, and his par- ents for a fancied wr was frust- rated here early today “but resulted in the serious wounding of Joe Block, 42, a special watchm: stumbled over a man hidden among shrubbery lining the eer of the Coogan residence in the Wil- shire residential district. The watch- man emptied hi it but the ce ; YUGO-SLAVIA 3 discharged by the Coogans on several occasions but re-employed. He was discharged by his employer in New York lately and returned to the coast a short time after they arrived here from the cast. Arthur L. Bernstein, Jackie Coog- an’s manager, ‘informed police that shortly before the gun fight, be was called to the poem ney and informed that he was marked for'death. He. rted that h ognized the man’s as McRea’s. FACING DEATH Belgrade, lavia gradually is taking the place| a er ‘AVIATION ERA through the new b: | Oroate and Slovenes. Ei Set is. gro People’s deposits in the banks have GAINS GROUND New Domain Taking Place of Austria-Hungary in Com- " mercial Importance Aug. 10) -Yirgo- ofthe old Austria-Hungary in the and political doma of prosperity ingdo y rate. inereased: four-fold within the last Young Nebraskan, Sentenced) %s*- For Marder, Gets Another Hearing Before Board Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 10—UP)—Don ald Ringer, 19, the! youngest Nebras. kan ever condemned. to death, today, received a three day reprieve from| G that nomonths, ar’s government biidget ig. surplus. The crop prom. s to be one of the best in recent ‘3. Foreign visitors. have agreed of all the Balkan countries, i ems the most, promis- Something approaching political nd social unity seems to have been thieved. The ‘country has been able to fund jovernor McMullen, so that the board: its debt of 963,860,000 to the United ‘of pardons: and jparoles can hear, Ringer's application for commuta- ‘tion of his sentence at its regular monthly meeting August 13. The youth's ‘second reprieve expired to- day. Ringer was sentenced to be electro. cutd for the murder in 1924 of Carl: Moore, a Hastings, Neb., salesman, | / States, and negot under way for an adjustment of its war debts to England and Fran Building and reconstruction ope: tions. are proceeding on a tremen-! duous scale. rom 90,000 to capital in 1913, the Slav erty tiations have been Belgrade’s population has increased . From a small at the junction of the Slav and to a city of broad streets, public duildings, fine hom le hotels and immense govern- the N: stares on STATE HOLDS =. TITLE T0 LAND Supreme Court Says Law Un- constitutional Transferring Property to Williams Ca. Reversing a decision of the Wil- liams county district court, the su- forte! ment atru : rivers has heen transformed ii ndid cor no 69 48 night Precipitation to 7 a. m. Highest wind velocity Weather conditions at North Da- kota points for the 26 hours ending perme court has held unconstitution- al Chapter 218, seasion jaws of 1925) directing the state board of adminis- mn to transfer to Williams coun- ty land at the former Williston agri- cultural experiment station. tention, of Attor- Shafer, who ad- et 8 a. m. today: isttation| A: not constitutional, the court's decision pointed out that J wes donated to — state for Devils an educatio urpose . tia 106 of the sate cansitati€ ore-| Dian Caner > 1e ind Without just co Ellendale . 48 40 4 42 43 .01 Cloudy 14 Clear © Clear 0 Clear 0 Clear 08 Clear 08 P. Cldy 0 Clear .08 Clear -10 Clear 0 Cc -10 Clear 0 Clear .20 Clear 50 0 Clear 24 Project In case the land is sold, the de- cision points out, it must be Gs poe and sold under the rules laid down for the sale of public land and the ‘Money used to further the object of the nors. ‘The land in question is a quarter section donated to the Moorhead, . 14 Biver stage at 7 a. m., 0.6 feet. hour change-0.2 feet, . WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity—Fair tonight; Wednesday unsettled with probably showers. Not much change in_tel rature. For North Dakota—Fair- tonight; Wednesday unsettled with probabl; showers west portion.: Not muc! change in temperature. WEATHER CONDITIONS pressure area, accompanied t the entire The 8. trict court of Williams county where Wilhiams county commissioners mus This is the old-fashioned hollyhock garden where Calvin Coolidge played as a memorable incident of the president’s trip from hi: immer white hous Plymouth, Vt. (Climbs Car Top, Saved/From River | When Fred *Redetzke, a traveling ;man residing at Hebron, tu: d t jof the road near New Leip day night to avoid a car traveling ‘the wrong side of the road, h - chine plunged down a bank i a deen hole in the Gannon Ball river The car remained upright, but was al jmost completely submerged. cizke go onto the roof of the vehicle and being unable to swim had to re- main there until his shouts brought rescyers to the scene. IS PRESAGED | IN NORTHWEST ord Reliability Tour Leads to Adoption of Policies For + Transportation St. Paul, new era in Ee P passenger il cities faced plane rvice in the princi the Northwest today a result of the Ford reliability airplane tour. Decision to proceed along these lines was reached at a conference here last night with representatives of the tour and othe¥ interested par- ties from four states and Winnipeg,’ Manitoba, attending. The conference adopted a tion, presented b: H. D. thwest were urged to “unite nite and active policy for the te development of comme: I aviation” in this section. Go Next to Des Moines “This poli A to be placed in operation by each city of the northwest, which will be requested to provide a municipal air- port and to establish air taxi li which will link the northwe: Today, the 22 contestants in the Ford air t which started at De- troit, last Saturday, tuned up their i d made short flights from e St. Paul municipal airport, pre- aratory to hopping off tomorrow for es Moines, low “Some Recordx Made Walter Beach, flying @ Travel Air bus, was announced as the unoffiviul wianer of the Milwaukee-St. Paul leg of the tour. He made the 291 yesterday in two hours seven min- utes, or an average of 137.4 miles an hour. Eddie Stinson with his four en Stinson-Detgoiter, was second ,imn i two hours, 29-minutes for an average | of 117 miles an hour. Several of the pilots were forced down at small Wisconsin towns en route to St. Paul, but no serious mis- haps were reported. Bryan Unopposed as Primary Candidate ‘Omaha, Neb., Aug. 10—(#)—Today is primary election in Nebraska, but leaders who eppear confident that there will be no upsets, the election appeared merely as the opening of the fall election campai tween the \McMulin and Bryah forcs for control of the state administration. There were no special no senatorial contests. Po! at 8 a. m. and will close at 8 p. m. Charles Bryan, who relinquished good chance for reelection as gove nor in 1924 to run for the pre ideney, is unopposed for the Demo- cratic gubernatorial nomination in s and Red-! the matter of elapsed time, with) for Republican and Democratic party | f opened | §: child. Revisiting it was a e back to the family homestead at ARS RAID WALL STREET BE " High Priced Industrial Shares | Take Sensational Drop— Cause Is Unknown ' TWO POWERFUL ATTACKS j New York, Aug. 10—(AP)—The ntock market was unsettled today by two powerful selling attacks, one at the beginning and the other at the end of the session. + General org showed an ex- treme decilne of 16 points, Du- pent 15!, id scores of others Peeps four to 10 Lome Pee clos- ing quotati generally being around the lowest of the day. New York, Aug, 10.--UP)—A sudden dear raid onthe. high priced indus- ‘trial shares brought about a series of | sensational declines on the New York stock exchange today. General Mo- tors broke 14 points to 208, Du- ont 15 1-2 to 295 and U. 8. Cast ron Pipe 8 to 235, while dozens of others fell back two to seven points. Except for the announcements of in increase of nearly $87,000,000 in broke: loans in the week ended July 28, there was nothing in the days news to explain the sudden selling movement. SHORT $7,900; GETS 2 YEARS Assistant Cashier of Kintyre State Bank Confesses to - Embezzlement resolu. Abner Hartinson, assistant cash- fer of the Kintyre state bank at Kintyre, is in the penitentiary here, , following his confession to embez. zling $7,900 from the bank. Martinson was arrested late las! week, pleaded guilty Friday and Fri-. day night was brought to the peni- tentiary here. Efforts to find out in open court why Martinson took the money He agreed, however, to tell Juage ! McKenna of the Emmons coanty dis- trict court in private session. Martinson was sentenced to two years in the state penitentiary. He as a wife and one child. The bank was fully protected by a bond. Business Failures Show Steady Decline A progressive reduction if the number of commercial failures in the United States has occurred dur- ing the last four months, and the total of 1,605 reported to R. G. Dun & Co, for July is the smallest for all months since last October, The decrease from the 1,708 defaults for June of the current year is about 6 per cent, and the falling off from the 2,296 insolvencies of last Janu- ary, which represents the high point for the year, exceeds 30 per cent. ‘Moreover, last month’s failures are nearly 5 per cent below the 1,685 defaults for the corresponding peri- od of 1925, and are slightly less than the number for July, 1924. Although moderate! June total, last month's liabilities of ;are under the amounts ‘for all other months since last tober. The aggregate for June wai $29,407,523, but in ‘May the indebted- ceeded $3: in 1 today’s election, as are Osman Byron, Pender attorney and La Follette-ti Reet candidate, and Roy Harrop, a Seoetonies. 'Gov. MeMutlen ted his chief competition from John. son of former attorney eral, but has so confident ¢! ib failed. | above the| MANY YEARS | ARE. BROKEN Salina, Kan., Leads With 112 Degrees—Highest in 28 Years HUMIDITY: IS LOW, TOO Five Days’ Stretch of Heat Hurts Fruit—Relief Is Promised Kansas City, Aug. 10—U)—West or northwest breezes were forecast today to supplant hot south winds which yesterday swept southwest states under a glaring sun, breaking heat records of several years stand- ing and causing damage to corn and other forage crops. Four Kansas cities and one Okla- homa point reported 110 or higher, Salina, Kans., leading with 112, a 28 year record. The century mark was also passed in many sections of Missouri and Texas, the 103 s recorded in Kansas City being the highest since 1918, Fruit Farmers generally reported forage crops drying up, with a need of rain if normal on is to be obtained. The virtually unbroken heat wave for the last five days has also dam- aged the fruit crop, orchardists say. Rains forecast for the northwest and central states today have little chance of reaching the southwest, weather reports indicate. Low humidity throu; it the re- gion prevented suffering usually caused by such temperatures. Ai- though numerous persons were over- bach a heat, no deaths were re- ported. WILL CONSIDER WELFARE WORK Grand Lodge, Knights of Py- thias, Open Conven- tion in Chicage { of its field of benevolence presented an item of business of major impor- tance for the grand lodge of the Knights of Pythias, for whose thirty- fourth biennial convention members gathered here today, Among extensions considered for the public weal to be taken up, when the ‘Pythians formally launch’, their convention tomorrow, will be a’ home for tubercular sufferers, probably in Arizona and construction of hospi- tals for the care of those in the culion leper colony in the Philip- pine Islands. ‘Delegates from grand lodges in each of the 48 United States and eight Canadian provinces are here. In addition to consideration of the broadened scope, the Pythians will have several other outstanding mat- ‘ters to dispose of including selec- ‘tion of a permanent headquarters. Kiwanians Start Meetings Thursday Hot Springs, S. D., Aug. 10—(AP) —From the two Dakotas and from ‘Minnesota, Kiwanians will come Thursday for the annual two day dis. ‘trict convention at Hot Springs. District Governor Dr. A. Cov- entry, of Duluth, Minn., will errive governor's spec ick up Kiwanians on its number of committees that have | been at work since June ‘predict a Rous beseting ssandanee.. Wak istration and en: inmen' i convention activities will begin Wed- Y. The business interests of trict will have adequate tion during session hours and enter- tainment will be provided for spare moments. Guests will be given the treat of a trip through the surrounding ‘hills, of plunging in “the world’s dig- gest ‘bathtub—the indoor plunge, or seeing @ pageant reincarnation, the west, The sj jal train kers of the convention are to be ident C. W, j State colleges Arthur B. Nelson of St. Paul: EB. J. Knowles of Minneap- olis, William C. Green, Fargo and Governor Coventry, who will open the sessions, Editor Praises Service of N. P. Highway J. Schwab, tor cal for Sctieor Reredtinee rm i Parks ways, & a Tracy of the highway auso- “Before ieaving, Mr. Sconeh ox. Wg a > for Chicago, Aug. 10—U%)—Bxpansion diss