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{ the car from the rear seat shead of ve F Southeast of Wilton, Meets EGETTING OUT OF CAR i Inereasin~ cloudiness and warm- Tuesday unsettled. er tonight. HUNDRED S KILL ~ RAGING TORRENT BURLEIGH CO. |‘emteus pete? i. | ARMER KILLED) -4-%- Encampment traveling in automo lex,! unadveds being forced to turn | ty rile the recoding of che wie: 1! Committce meetings and continu: , tion of registration and organization occupied the attention of those who| succeeded in reacaing the city today. | GARRISON HAS BAD FIRESHOTEL I$ THREATENED Meat Market and Cafe De- struoyed—Hotel Guests Flee in Night Clothes (Special to the Tribune) Fossberg, Who Lived’ Instant Death Shotgun Accidentally Dis- charged, Full Charge En- tering Man’s Body, Oscar Fossberg, farmer living six miles southeast of Wilton, was. in: icleh county's finst hunting. fatality cig! at of the season. accident, which occurred about 4:80, took place about six, miles. no of Baldwin und sheet four mate from the victim's Mr. Fousberg was out hunting with Albert Fossberg, his brother; Carl Johnson, a brother-in-law, and a 12- year-old nephew. In getting out of The main street of Burlington, Kas., was swept by this raging tor- rent that caused thousands of dollars damage and endangered many lives GREEN WANTS the rear seut of the automobile fa AB aha vt the We the paris had stopped’ alongside. a| Gartiso “Twenty when heats rains flonded the Neoahg) ield, Mr. Fossberg accidentally dis-|five guests at n hotel T) i] he and i Cree a Pas ble ed his gun, the full charge en-| were forced to flee night 14 : Hie wuteeuniaing countey. ansits tering his chest and ~oing out of his| clothing when fire morn- | eg ie ho body through the back, just below his | ing d at mar a | his way in t ; heck, He evidently had the gun ubead fot aud the Midway cafe ining: GUARANTY LAW: hie auto, trolman Theodore Olson awakened : | flood Miss Ju No One Saw Accident the hotel guests, who found their eid and Miss Lois phono oper: posts warn ‘when water ¥ \first floor of building INJUNCTION rooms filled with smoke and flames near by shooting high into the Burnie W. Maurek of Fargo, state chief game warden, and R.B. Flyon of Bismarck were among the fiatel guests who escaped. e Much credit is given A. A. Yonkers, anger feet deep in the jephone exchange Problem ts to Protect Small Savings DBopositors and - Bank, He Says Mr. Fossberg’s brother and brother. in law were just stepping out of the front seat as the gun was discharged, and the nephew had stepped out of his uncle, so no one actually saw just how the accident occurred. law for that state was considered. | Green is quite frank in expressing; m the belief that the guaranty fund law! = ; in North Dakota has failed miserably.| Vote to Consolidate, Taken It has some $30,009,000 in liabilities | piled up agaifist it and a prospect that} Nine Years Ago But Not it will not fight clear for yeurs, even | Acted on, Is Void i pointed out, “Still,” he said, “there Fs A dake see Per as ‘The school board of Deep Water some good in anything that is bud <3 : | DIET HIMSELF Fost an thete usually fe.some bud in| Schoel DistriatNo., 77. of MeLean, I ‘ 4 good.” gounty is acting within its rights in! thi . F moet ningt teoblens, ae Green sees! awarding a contract for the erection Wants to Prove Whether Light Fare Imposed Is born and raised in this vicinity. Ono brother and two sisters sufvive. fire department, for th Sheriff Albin Hedstrom and Justice | et, Of the Fite dep eee tire,| Among plans fer the amendment of the Peace W. S. Casselman’ were| men handled the fire. ‘The loss to the | of the stve gasrunty fund law which | called to the scene of the accident,| meat market and cafe in estimated at {My be pres ned to the coming sex- | the latter acting as coroner, and the! $10,000, most of wh i thought to| sion of ture for consid- death was declared accidental, The| be covered by insurance. eration one advancyl by C. RB, body was taken ‘o undertaking par-] ‘The Garrison hotel suffered broken} Gre mnager of the Bunk of North, lors at Wilton. g windows and loss from smoke and| Dai.otn. en recently attended a} 5 Mr. Fossberg is unmarried. Hel water. The building will be repaired] conference of Minnesota bankers at ; was about 32 years of age and was| ut once. which a depositors guaranty fund H TODAY GARY RESIGN? WHY? DO YOU WANT A BISON? KIPLING FEELS ®ADLY. SWEEPING THE HEAVENS. it, is to protect both the owner of, of a school house in that district to the small savings necount and the! Erickson-Helleickson Vye company of banks. Persons coming in the in-! bear ep according, ee lecision| class Ww: v ; out | handed down by Judge Fred Jansonius' yestor class would have to look out/ handed down by Judge Pred Janson! ~~ Picopyright, 19880" | ‘Cruel and Inhuman’ per imenelyess jtion brought by M. O, Almquist, J. Joagd Garyr nena 'of the. big. stect! beim Special Protection | Beam and P. J. Weigel to secure a/ company, will be 80 years old next’ Hartington, Ne! His plan ix this: create a special) bermanent inpanessn Reinet suc | month, Wall street asks, “Will, County Judge W. rotection for savings accounts of Lr ek pri toate ay eee he retire recently sentenced Fre: 1,000 or less through a guarantor’s | | TCU ie ee den indicated that | protection fund similar to that now rung : ney | nine ' This would nectect the sriall| district voted for school consolid The| tion. No action was taken further A grea business needs a thinking 60 days in jail, the first 10 and alter- mind, not a hurdle jumper. Why, nate 10 days of which must be s should he retire? ed on bread and water for violation in use. wavings dep | Gladstone ran the British parlia-| of the liquor law, today had started] surarice that his money is safe. The| thu! eer Te a eeaall: ment when he was past 80, Von' his self imposed broad and water diet next. step would be to limit the use, the, Project, however, aad no con Pea Moltke ran the German army when sentence of five pest 80, Pope Leo ran the world wide ‘atholic church at 90. which banks could make of funds so! : . 80! the voters turned down the question deposited and limit the amount they! 'r°.cesciidation, again presented, and] could accept from any individual un-/ ‘ted favorably on the question of| der such circumstances. The banks | juilding two one-room school houses! would, by law, be limited in their| Duliding two o in is who always law violators and especially violators = {of the liquor law, “sentenced” him- Why should Judge Gary retire in self to the diet to prove once and for the prime of life? Many of his all if-the food to which four Nebras-| investment of such money to certai friends ean testify to his perfect, ka liquor law violators now are sub-|Kinda of liquid and ultra-conserva-, 47, Teo Much, rine Mewes A health and great ene: jected is “cruel and inhuman.” ‘| tive’ securities, thus protecting the ) 2 "boon in operation for the nast| His ormen ization holds its competi-; * tors in the hollow of its hand, and) legal fights which have been waged has $100,000,000 cash in bank. against the diet sentences impo: by If that be the result of old age, Jy, Orville Chatt at Tekamah. many corporations would like some| After the five day try-out of the of that 018 age. fare, Judge Bryant declared that if = his digestive system is unimpaired, he would continue the simple diet to 10 days which is the usual period with bread and water sentencing Judges. | Weather Report | Weather conditions at North Da- and Tetawe meee It ia peatty. besia- kota pointe for the 24 hours ending oe nitat a : 8 a. m. today: pling ‘on'td describe this na-| Temperature at 7 a. m. His ection wea pesmecee Na Ibe five years’ without legal interference,| guaranty fund from likelihood of the requirement of*such a law would] 1917 has been permitted to, tie gov: be barred from accepting savings a Sonia inl opinion. "Wt jnmy opi oe mi tion that any matter voted on, such} “The man with from S10 to. 51 008) us the selection of school sites, build-| is not, usually an investor, He is: in of schools or the consolidation of eine br the inclination to look| #hools must be acted upon by the dis-) Phe the or he imeagaten ute ‘his| grict within & reasonable time or it money either in the bunk or in his| P&gpmes 9 aye oncerning but! kk, When he gets more than $1,000; idl he electi wit ag look af 0; not deciding that the election o 1 he ‘then can look uround for 4n in| was valid, that the provision voted Ffeelepesen rs ri) > feta Py Pont te sect fl eaten was not a ' cl something with them in # construc-| the Prpposibson. was again Pee ecu | tive wa; 4 in 1921 without legal interference, and | The highest claim made against] since the proposition voted upon in| the present guaranty fund totaled! 1921 was acted upon by the voters of | more than $60,000. ‘the district, I will therefore | make | any| | What man wants to do, he can do. A little while ago the noble bison was dying out, everybody had said fare- well to him. jow the government, with herds of bison on its hands, of- fers you a vigorous live bison for $86, that you couldn’t have bought for $5,000 a fittle while ago. Rudyard Kipling does not like us, ee Bos ee an Plind te pee eae - 45 mere tp| en order dismissing the action.” oa However, Kipling is old, past his] Precipitation to 7 a, m. ‘0| ORGANIZE IZAAK WALTON CLUB sb. Cel a selling period, and his British ego| Highest wind velocity ..... i2 Ha eee Es ae HOLD BOWMAN COUNTY COR? Uncle Sam to finance England in her bela Snd are planning to sccure u few! Howman—September 29 hus been Deel i im to fina ng! in her, ae maisente and Hungarien, partridges selected as ite day forthe Revnan 4 - = i ini ere is] ex rvest festi- feral Were by HY [ew ectrine ty mer ot Shout it in verse, nobody here. will % i} i | eens object. FS a &e Hansvsé Gould Me’ Kidling aeatect ARS Mee: Sota ‘ ‘ ; thene”guertions inabother ogemt "| Boutinany va.-.:. 40 ib @ Clr Tribune-Hoskins-Meyer to Broadcast it been en- : t) nT roned inva war in 101. “with Its! Dekinsen. 0... 60 3B Dempsey-Tunney Fight , back to the wall,” as Kitchener put! Dunn Center .... 66 27 0 bs it, now many billions of dollars! miiendale ....... 62 36 0 . Eta whnld Postand-have weut us, a Fessenden os 26 0 bs : ‘ i: many millions of men? One man, one/ ¢ Fork 66 32 0 Clear Fight fans in and around Bismarck who want to get first oa ° What did Great, Britain do in Prete 1 31 0 Cloudy |} hand information on the Dempsey-Tunney fight at Philadelphia our civil war, and in 1776, and 1812? dane mf rn £ st otd ‘Thursday evening, September 23, will have their desires gratified What great claim on American grati-| Misbon oes 8 Glee ‘through the efforts of The Bismarck Tribune and the Hoskins- tude and generosity has Great Britain| Natote 66 20 0 PCidy. Meyer radio station. =~ , antag + established, beyond the fact that on} pembina . 63 32 0 Clear A special leased wire connected direct ‘to the ringside at two occasions she took = beating) witliston ... G4 34 .01 Clear Philadelphia will be in operation at the Tribune office during quickly and gracefully? Moorhead, Minn. 64 34 0 Clear the fight, giving every srs ee i big hoya spond Arrange: ‘ f or The record is for the 48 ts have made wi joskins-Meyer to ex! eir re- trated pate from sony. cosntnes hours ending ef 7 a.m, todayslocall] mote control system to the Tribune editorial rooms, so that the * ies | time. fight dope can be broadcast over radio station KFYR just as It the listic theor! EA’ cannot e: ‘anything for the rea- WEATHER £m rapidly as it comes into the Tribune office over the special wire. + son, among others, tI there is no In addition to this a fight party will be staged on Broadway such things as matter. Redued - alongside of the Hoskins-Meyer store, where the blow-by-blow * ‘ feather te story will to the waiting crowds through the lo7.d Py ln He A rg seeker at the top of the building. ‘The limited space at .the tem hke a pode °° Tribune office it impossible to have the gc el nsgt of sun, little electrons flying around it,| there, so those wishing to the fight foe rtawats, Matter is only set no’ i" tt want that is, ass A seipatiat said, “I have 8 Ra trace Ged” at . BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1926 ahs ED IN HURRICANE SWEEPS THROUGH KA |200 Catholics Lis | Freedom, they were thken to police (===)THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [ism] NSAS TOWN meer '6,000 INJURED AND 38,000 MADE HOMELESS BY TERRIFIC STORM ALONG BAST COAST OF FLORIDA Minmi, Miami Beach, Hollywood, Fort Lauderdale and Moore- haven Hardest Hit—Cities Flooded to Depth of 13 to 15 Feet—Communication Paralyzed | areas ora PLEASURE RESORTS TURNED INTO MORGUES ! sats iets Red Cross Rushing Aid to Stricken Area—Guardsmen Called | Out to Prevent Leoting—Nearly Every Building in Miami Damaged By 100-mile-an-hour Wind West Palm Beach, Fla. Sept. 20.—(AP)—Southeast Florida, lashed by a violent hurricane for nine hours Friday ‘night and Saturday, early today had an estimated death list jof more than 800, and property damage in excese of $125,- 000,000 with indications that the toll would mount still ‘higher when daylight made a more complete check possible, The “playground of America” was metamorphosed into a scene of desolation over a wide area. Pleasure resorts were ‘turned into temporary morgues and hospitals, and trains bearing physicians and nurses were arriving in the storm- torn section from many directions. Houses and office build- ings were crowded with refugees. The Palm Beaches es- cuped the heavy damage suffered by their sister cities. The injured in the ravaged district were placed at 2,000, ‘with 38,000 homeless persons seeking relief. Water Knce-deep in Streets Water was knee-deep in the streets of Miamj and Miami th, all public utilities were disabled and restaurants > closed. Drinking water was served in half portions. Urgent appeals for food, water and clothing were answered |by special relief trains that were despatched to the storm urea. | The death toll in the Miami vicinity was placed at 804 by Jerry H. Owen, general superintendent of the Florida East 1€ Iway, of which 500 were in the city of Miami, 250 in Hollywood and 184 in Hialeah. Other estimates listed 100 dead at Fort Lauderdale and a similar number at Moore- haven, 75 miles northwest of Miami, where the waters of i odes eeeees = Lake Okeechobee were_whipped over the dikes, flooding the city to a depth of 13 to 15 fect in some places. Forty of those reported drowned were wom- en and children, und unconfirmed re- ports suid the road leading to Clewis- ton was strewn with bodies. Clewiston was believed washed uway. Storm Nears Pensadola The hurricane was reported early : eer to be centered 50 or 60 miles ratinited deta] South of Peisacela, where it was ex- jously injured 29; | Rected to atrike-this morning. All seriously injured 150, | Precautions have been taken there, j it was reported. ' Hialeah _ Looting broke out in the negro sec- ‘|. Known deud 21; estimated dead | tions of Miami last night. Seven sus. 200. Known seriously injured 60; | Peete were arrested. Three bundred mated verlounle iniored tam, | special policemen were aworn in for Minhas : * | voluntary duty and marital law was orde At Hollywood, 200 special peenans were added to the patrol force. ‘| Casualties of . Florida Storm (By Associated Press.) Miami Known dead 194; known injured 7; seriously injured 250; more than 10,000 Lorntlass, Fargo Man Killed. V: at Ellendale When “JACK DEMPSEY * - le THROWN INTO <1238°3 RROBIVERSHIP Kearns Demands to Know Amount of Funds Earned | From 1923 to 1926 son, 73, of Fargo was n_struck by an automobile > on hi urday eve xram received here from Aberdeen, 1), where the body was taken. M fevenson had been employed as 3 retaker on the North Dakota agri cultural college farm here, estimated dead usly injured ce. me hath i Cutting a path from Miami north to 400. Estimated |? p, the, Nuneicane. ; tained a velocity of 120 miles an hour, j leaving wreckage in its wake. It roa! across the Everglades and passed into the Gulf of Mexico with ionly slightly diminished intensity. |The west coust was not damaged seri- ously. Fort Myers bore the brunt of j the storm on the west coast. There public utilities were put out of com- ; mission and towns were lated for i several hours. estimated homeless 5,000, Coral Gables Know dead five: estimated dead 25. Known seriously injured 60- 100; mated seriously injured 150. Estimated homeless 500. Ford Motor Company | Is Found Guilty of Patent Infringement! a3 \ St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 20- -P)-—-A| decision involving about £2,000,000; was handed down today when Fed- eral Judge Davis ruled that the Ford Motor company of Detroit had in Philadelphia, Sept. 20—(AP)— Notwithstanding a maze of lifi- gation enmeshing the Dempsey- Tunney battle, fight fans appar- ently have little doubt the bout will he held next Thursday night. Money for seat reservations continues to pour into the head- quarters of Promoter Tex Rick- ard in such a stream that the One dead; mated seriously injured mated homeless 200. muted seriously injured 75." Exti- mated homeless 1,000. Dania APPEAL COMES HERE Relief for the storm stricken area is asked in a telegram Known dead ited yd ceive fringed patents for trans wath of, clerks be ail bet |b 30; Lawns eenipasiy thar Pacis calued from national headquar- thpes Ameo by ae rrrean Bohn pele Ai a bee oitlaated Aenanily, injured 25, leigh county chapter of the Red 9 . Louis. avis © by Esti te C1 D. y. ii joined Ford from further infring mark. Rickard said he expected atlnated hanicle frets telay. betes] oat is the sale to “o over $1,900,000, which would exceed previous r ords for fight collections by more than $250,000. ment and ordered an accounting. | estimated jously in- homeless quarters, however, before decid- ing just what will be done here. Definite plans will probably be announced tomorrow. Are Arrested | duck] porarily of a receiver late Saturd esult of n suit file At St. Petersburg several thousanil trees were uprooted and water flood- od the outlying districts of Tampa, 15. Known seriously injured 15; estimated seriously injured 26. Estimated homeless 500. saci | Kearns, his former manager, Mexico City, Sept. 20—()-About} jng an’ aceount of ull funds ¢ i none. 100 Drowned at M . City } aa ‘ Moorchayen 200. Catholics, ‘men und women, | by the world’s heavywe erat Saree: Striking the vast expapsc of Lake under arrest today. From a mei from August to August uf Okeechobee its on northwestern sweep from the east, coast, the storm hurled enormous waves against the little city of Moorehaven, where Dr. J. W. Mitchell, a physician, estimated that at least 100 persons had been drowned, Residents were forced to the top of dk buildings, “he said, and 23 persons were drowned when a two-story frame From Storm Area) tiictire collapsed, fie dectered the * drainage dam built around the town (By Associated Press) at a cost of hundreds of thousands he first news dispatches received | of dollars was wrecked and the coun- he deeree, however, permits Dempsey | ditect from the. storm shattered city| tryside flooded. Only the brick bu through counsel, provided | of Miami since the disaster estimated} ness blocks and a school house were 0 d.{ the dead at between 600 and 1,500,)0n their origi foundations, Dr. These figures did not include ‘the| Mitchell said, and shells of small ‘casualties at Fort Lauderdale, where houses had floated blocks from their, 100 were reported dead, or at Moore-| original positions. x haven, 75 miles northwest of Responding to urgent appeals for Lake | 500 troops “as quickly as possible” man tell; from the sheriff at Miami, Governor homeless] John W. Martin disnatched several mated at| companies and hospital units of na- tional guardsmen to the scene. Red Cromn Rushes Su; ies The Pullman company mi ire resources of equipment ayn able, and the American Red Cross offered io full facilities. Known dead eight, estimated dead 10. Moorehaven Estimated dead 100. last night under the auspi 1926, the per oe thee se «For Defense of was ordered to e chane 1, Inger- soll at 10 a, m, Tuesday for a hearing. Must Post $100,000 Bond Vice Chancellor Ingersoll issued a iwrit ne exeat, restraining Dempsey i from leaving the state pending d sition of the suit and also enjoined | him from assigning or transferring or disposing of any of his property. upplementary agrcen uttached to headquarters. The charge is that they were hold-| ing a meeting for seditious purposes. | British War Vet Quits Channel Swim Dover, England, Sent, 20.-(A)--Col. | onel Bernard C. Freyberg, British war); veteran, who started on an al pt to | swim the English chi € | Gris Nez, France, | ing, abandoned the effort noon, | i 2 bia IER, | fulfill his engagement i ‘Sailors Hurt When | his world’s heavyweight championship | against Gene ‘Tunney next Thursday | where huge waves from | ms eiri chobee took a heavy h Boat Is Fired Upon)" rmerson tu, richards of Atiantie| “Untold thousands were a | Git; state senator, was appointed: and the injured were ‘ary reeeiver of Demp- | 25,000 to 50,000. broperty, pening disposition oF: suit. Continuing its path of devastation, Suit Demands Accounting j the tro; 1 hurricane that struck ‘the Florida cast coast Friday night.| ¢; Senator Richards was obliged te| crossed the Everglades and roared post a bond of $100,000. \A bond for; ou€ into the Gulf of Mexico, today the same amount will be required of! was striking at Pensacola, accordi jto meager advices received just be- fore that city was isolated from com- municstion. Word from Pensacola, at the ex- treme northwest tip of Florida, said First Dispatches |. Peking, Sept. 20-—(—Three Amer. | ican sailors. were wounded, none of § them seriosly, when the gunboat Pigeon was fired on Sunday morning} while passing the City of Hanyang on the Yangtze river, according to re liable foreign telegrams from Han- Riesy i ‘ The suit specifically demands an = Tp | accounting from Dempsey of every A cent he has earned in exhibitions and Today’s Games in | aise the amount of money he jis re-| treme northwes pilorida, sal 8 * ported to have received in advance| a mile gale was lowing is National League || ftom'tex rickard promoter of Demp-| morning and the barometer roading | s00t section of the east const —————_—© | soy’ fight with Tunney. Dempsey 20.16, eae Iso must give an accounting of the y Damage Great oney he has received in gate nivale correspondents of the (First game.) R. H. E,' sions from his traini Press, arriving in Miami Chicago ....... 4 10 1 Saratoga Springs and the in New York A 1; Kearns, in bis bill of d | voluminous decument of 2 a ~ Kau 4 3 Scott pages, Pman ned. opeaelers Pratt at sets forth that he has been mani 4 0 more fi Cunimings. fest gan Cincinnati . on... 4 5 ‘ha ney iy meer Baten, Me and 7 for a