The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 25, 1926, Page 1

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of Cloudy tonight and Sunday. Not so cold tonight. THE BIS ESTABLISHED 1873 ’ 1ST. LOUIS CARDS CINCH NATIONA HOME FOLKS | _ CRLEBRATE GREAT EVENT Cards Whip New York Giants While Cincinnati Loses to Philadelphia CITY’S FIRST PENNANT Nationally Known * Salvation Army Man to Give Talks Here Major John Habkirk of Chicago, nationally known Salvation Army’ worker, will be in Bismarck today and tomorrow to conduct spe mectings at the Salvation Ary hall COLD WAVE IS ‘clan and the ball is expected to be Unseasonabe Weather Brings 1 filled for his meetings. In addition to the teeetings at the; Near Zero Weather to Parts of Country hall, Major Habkirk will speak at the ‘stute penitentiary Sunday morn- ALLEN GIVES — HIS VIEW OF mre ine FARM PLIGHT { i i HELENA COLDEST SPOT Yanks Have 2% Game Lead in American, With Only Four More to Play | harvested Craps The long uphill fight of St. Chicago, Sept. 25 to win a Natlonal lengus p \ ; | shivered today in th crowned with victory today and! Sayg Congress Countenances: ”! baseball's multitudes’ that have lf watched the neck und neck struggle of the Cards and Cincinnati for su- premacy can now turn their atten- tion to world series possibilities. The Cards clinched the flag yes- terday by whipping New York, 6 to| 4. while the Reds were dropping their first game of a doubleheader with Philadelphia, 9 to 2. Cincinnati braced against the tall enders in the second contest and won, 8 to 4, but the damage was done und for the! first time in baseball history the| Cards have fought their w world series, St. Louis Celebrates When the word reached St. Louis, that city broke forth In the greatest lebration it has seen since the arm- Louis fans, after 38 years d the news with . the roaring of bombs, whistles and whatever noise makers were available. . Motorists,| for this attrocious bill which will h horns shrieking, tied up traf-|add to the farmer’s burden of trai je us crowds poured from downtown| portation and at the same time wi buildings, deserting their labors for|out all the power he has to appeal the time bein from unjust rates. margin over Cincin-| goo ay pias . Even now, Allen sald, petitions. arc nati today ix three full games with Soe eeE teen ane OTF ala onetr tue Inisthate: raeed te k battle with ner jon w ome c i; ree weeks unceasi attle wi . a gunday when ‘Cincinnati plays s| merce. Commission for increased] flecds, “oatched nee” pie’ start! Above, the Royal Palm Decks, completed last year me with the Cards in the| rates on farm commodities, involving] streams back up toward overflow down to a few scattered nubs of piling. Stranded : ofthe year. The stand-| More in. cost to the farmer than he} stages, : of the yacht Nohab,-once the property of Kaiser Wilhelm, and just to would hi received from both hep -=A record low temperature of 20! “freighter Pring Viadimar. Won Lost To Haugen and Tincher relief billg +, 8 63 He reiterated his view that putt] Wash., und Buker, Oregon, while the : 86 66 of the farmers trouble is due to oyer-| eastern end of the wave had sent the loading In farm land obligations and| mercury to 4 degrees at Chicago at thought too much prosperity und #/2 a, m. iF ALEK, EE failure to exercise good judgment in Six Above Zero at Helena ! expenditures more to blame for his] ‘The coldest reported spot in the OPTIMISTIC troubles than a relatively low in-| country was Helena, Mont. where come. the first onslaught of the cold sent| Allen made several sharp thrusts! thermometers to six degrees above | at Governor Hammill and Smith W.| zero. Brookhart, Republican senatorial] Ankle deep snow was reported in nominee from owa, in reviewing| parts of the Dakotas, with tempera: points previously made in his con-| tures dropping 40 degrees in w few troversy with the governor on farm] hours. problems. Slowly rising temperatures GIVEN PAROLE Conference Elevens | on Gridirons Today Man Who Went Through Four Trials, Three Juries Fargo, N. D., Sept. 26.—)—Five Disagreeing, to Be Free Enactment of Laws Costly to Agriculture ries. To the south the cold v down the lower Ohio and into | the Texas Pan b 5 the | winds that halted v } Alberta, Man.t ewan with a si in coursed along the St. vrence toward the seabea 25) — that while my | unseasonuble | sent the mereu) to unp A street in Miami, Florida, after the hu of foliage, telephone poles down and icane. Wreckage from a ba s broken, Disorder everyw counted millio are declaiming about legis! L aid, they‘ are countenai ment of other class legislati ly to agriculture, former Henry Allen of ‘Kansas t into the{ernor John Hammill of Town, in a iletter made public today | “The Watson-Parker bi i lin citing the act voted last winte: to set up new machinery railroad tubor matters, “was passed at a time when every vox populi in \both houses of congress was fuirly (drooling with love for the furmer. | “Yet they all lined up and voted ' i temperatures | ng downward | sptember ! and bio ro weuther to, many toins in Ure country, i In the American northwest the} ave assumed proportions unparallel- | records. Corn and Small Grain Hurt i From thet aiea a blighting chill pt over the fields of corn and} we small grain in the central} adding to the millions of dol- | from recent cloudbursts. | lain fields not reached j ies, killing frosts were | Damage to unharvested crops was | estimated at $1,000,000. ! Winds of tornado velocity currivd | {the lower temperatures to many re- gions and central [inois, weary from lars dam: In western by snow flur spread, id used as a landi lay PCt. a if 586 St. Louis by the narrowest margin from crashing to the grouns. ‘the wind, cavi one mote game “Continued on nage cares.) ‘hreats of ‘Typhoid Pass With! Improved ~ Sanitation and! POISON TRACE caer eatee Same» DISCOVERED IN Mass of Wreckage—Casual-| M AN’S STOM ACH ty List Remains Near 400 | i piiamis Fla. Sept, 25—U)—Reha ‘Butte, Mont. Man Found! through Florida's hurricane atcicken Dead in Bed at Minneapo- | lis After Entering U. { were | WANTED—A CANAL. FONCK WILL TRY AGAIN. ‘WHY MUST WE FIGHT CHINA? OLD LAW, MODERN CRUELTY. By Arthur Brisbenc. (Copyright, 1926.) suman Holt of Illinois wants a canal from Luke Michigan to the) Gulf of Mexico, and the people of the! United States ought to have it. Con-| eressmen from Tex: | ‘lorida, every state North Central conference coaches will send their charges into action t Des Moines, Universit; meeting } Creighton at Omaha in the first con- ference game of the season. ‘North Dakota state college gridders aren today, a week after the deva ting storm, with fears of fam pestilence and riots allayed. \ uisiana, | in the union should work for it. will pluy the Valley City state toach-|""An optimistic. ‘spirit’ wrevailed. | | canal connecting Like Michigan ary i ractice game at Fargo while es Le eds! Minneapolis, Se; -P)—T and the Mississippi would establish’ St. Paul, Sept. 25—UP—Mike Weis- | Columbut of Sioux Falls will, clash Scores, md, business houses have of” cyanide poisoning were found transportation by inland water ways man, who was convicted on a charge between Houston, St. Louis, Kansas of keeping a house of ill fame, and City, Chicago, Omaha, all the great who was sentenced to the state peni- lake cities, tentiary August 15, 1923, was grant- ed a parole, effective Monday, it be- And the thing could be done with) came known in the capitol today. @ few of the scores’ of millions that this action was taken by the state we ‘wre so cheerfully sending to! board of parole following recom- Europe now, in privaté loans, to build mendations by Judge Albert Johnson up their industries, canals and other of Red Wing, who presided at the enterprises. ‘ trial and sentenced Weisman, and by Some day this nation will realize Floyd B. Olson, Hennepin county at- that it pays to develop your own,torney, who was instrumental in the country. prosecution of the defendant. The attempt of Reine Fonck, the} Both Judge Johnson and County brave Frenchman, ends in disat Attorney Olson hearti recommend- and the loss of two | although/ ed the p: of Weisman. opened to dispose of depleted stocks and partially ruined merchandise. the Stomach of Alfred Sherman, 26 ighreats of typhoid have passed apartment, by Dr. W. F. Widen, Hen- with improvement in sanitation and nepin county deputy coroner, late a better water supply in most of the fF jay, and a bottle of cough medi- stricken cities. Throughout yester : day, steady streams of persons were ; ( Pere iat inoculated with a typhoid. serums | Seema at ae elversity ataea Hublic health officiajs are making «' “Sherman came here early jn the jerough inspection of all food. week from his home in Butte,/ Mont.,! to enter the University of Minnesots.| He registered Thursday and returned | with South Dakota state at Brook- ings. Yankton will test Stub Alison’s South Dakota University team at Ver- million. , North Dakota University will play Dakota Wesleyan from Mitchell at Grand Forks next Wednesday while Nebraska Wesleyan and Cotner are billed for next Friday. found near the bed wax sent to Wreckage Is Removed At Hollywood, Miami and other cities in the path of the gale, crews of men are clearing away the tangl mass of wreckuge, decaying vegetab matter and the decomposed bodies of | OU Today’s Games in | National League | | late at night. In the morning Alfred was found dead, The brother George, who conducts store, told police that the bot-{ y animals und swamp reptiles. | P Fonck fortunately escaped. ‘eluman was tried ut four differ-| Boston, Sept, 25—(#)—The world] *"at Fort ‘ciats | te. of cough medicine was not pre- FrinaaTill Ret discourage | the ent times on the charge, three ties | champion Firates. today | clinched | have Fit te ence a | by him hut was alrends a ie | le lsagreeing. e fourth foun im } tl lace in the National league by itatic a pared by a commercial firm. _ the Unsassisted non-stop. flight Be-| guilty, : defeating Boston, 11 to &, in the first] sat ee eork te the Red Croi \ tween New York and Paris. He or} another will soon succeed. And such flights in 20 years will be an every) day occurrence. Again an American gunboat is fired ‘on, tg two points yl we cateete| coast. Hecently a Uni 6 Ship th ft daylight found itself obliged to fire on the thle Party Now York, Bose reine be i es, bat onsiderately used only delphia, Chicago and a large number infire wus = ins. aided net. be. ara cities. é pean ie as a ‘children to ¢ various hours after midnight in range, bot because guns thet. | ight, locks in localities on day- ni ight saving schedule will be set had fired on our ship “were very close bs Standard Oi ip ry backw: ed Lsidheiacan game of u double header. In the | second inning they scored eight runs with none out. Adams Is Witness | Before Grand Jury. | at Fargo Friday Frank Adams, local railway mail clerk, returned last night from Far-: go where he uppeared before the | grand jury Friday morning to give ; Centers against the two men, ' George Irn \are being held on the charge of hav- | jing staged the mail car robbery at’ Hankinson this summer. Miss Bertha H. Varney, daughter | of Mrs. Emma Varney of the Varney flats, who wrapped the package of list went to 105 last night. Officials | money which formed the principal. varied widely in their estimates of | item of the robbers’ spoil, was als the number of found bodies. The | present, having been summoned from Miami missing stood at 210 but; Minneapolis, where she is employed of these, many ure believed to be! in the First National Bank, to give fe. testimony. She came to Bismarck to Moorehaven deaths totaled more | spend the week-end visiting her moth- than 100, with the opinion expressed | er. ‘that the flood waters of Lake Okee- hobee. still ‘conceal more than al Jamestown to Pave | Lincoln Avenue ies. |. Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 25.—)— Prison to Install pie cvaenaNldl toa in The North Dakota jiten- | Lineoln avenue of this city with con- tia will install” Unitateat Pertoker | ‘crete at » special meeting of the city Saulouant for its power. t in the | euanell last nieht, the amount very near aa ones to oer ir bid on this cates < paving ence Larson, loeal agent $24,904. js on two. eatin wl tof oe 05 “tlhe Sad cas as i ie ne:that used ae ee ala possible. last refugees from! Moorehaven left the devastated city !. yesterday. : A clash yesterday at Miami be-: tween sailors and several negroes, in’ ° which several shots were fired, re-! sulted in the wounding of one blue jacket and three ;negroes. The in- cident prompted authorities to exert vigilance in patrolling every. section. $00 Dead, 1,100 Badly Hurt The known casualty list remained today at close to 400 with’ 1,100 severely injured. The property dam- age was estimated in excess of §103, Daylight Saving Time Ends Tonight New York, Sept. 25—(%—This is St. Louis, Sept. 25.--—The New York Yankees ad an opportunity to pionship today by of a double header with the St. Louis Browns. Herb Pennock drew. the pitching assignment for the Yankees in the first game and his orpaneny | was Tom Zachary. The ball park was practically deserted with only 800 fans in attendance. ‘ And Then Came Havoc i properties which ' '¢ been damaged by heavy ~~ ~ { In the grenter Miami area the death It_is believed that “war between China and the powers” will not long} be avoided, China is divided into; fieh*\ng crowns. and a war with China; would not be serious. But couldn’t we keep our boats out-pf the firing! line for awhile? by { Standard Oil company knows| \ plomacy | China inthe Chinese way, with cash, of which it has plenty. trol of turn | bout dij thi ernment, and could protect itsel! | revorted that the ambitious| Huerta is using the Yaqui|’— iis fight for te ] of improvement, in (Continued on page 3.) CK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1926 BODIES OF 3 MINERS RECOVERED—43 MISSING NORTHWEST’S. : | DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE 7 THOSE FOUND ips are in the distance. above was reported from _Yakima,' Right, an automobile from the salesroom of the Phillips garage on Flagler street, Miami, which escaped” ing tricks inside the garage, almest succeeded in stealing this car. SPIRIT PREVAILS AS REHABILITATION WORK TAKES NEW IMPETUS-RED CROSS NEEDS FUNDS | to the home of his brother, George,’ ‘ | hecesgary, man and Louis. Roy, who © Relief wort’ fe of perienced PRICE FIVE CENTS L LEAGUE PENNANT — WERE KILLED IN MINE CAGE Missing Miners Were Work- ing on Eighth Level as Tons of Rock Block Shaft HOPE HELD FOR SAFETY Shaft Is Only Entrance to Eighth Level—Men of Other Levels Escape Ironwood, Mich., Sept. 25. -—(AP)—The bodies of three ‘men, occupants of a cage in |the Pabst mine of the Oliver | Iron Mining company when it ‘hurtled to the bottom of a |shaft Friday noon beneath ilding litters the foreground, palm trees are broken, others stripped |tong of ‘rock, were recovered here. This scene is just one item in the property loss running to un- this morning. Searchers who eee: reached the bodies, yet un- | | identified, have turned to ex- tricating 43 men imprisoned {on the eighth level. Bes | Miners working shifts iYeached the bodies of the three men through another shaft. Acetylene torches were used to cut away the steel supports of the cage at 3 o’clock this morning. While ,identification was not made, due to condition of the bodies, the victims are believed by officials to be Thomas Row- c | ell, undergecand electrician; Evar Gustafson and Gust Sell, two assistants. Hope was held out. by searchers for the safcty of the 43 men on the eighth lev- el, who are believed to have been cut off from escape when the large boulders, loosened by vibration, plunged down the shaft yesterday. _ Mine officials said they are Al My no danger at the present ime. < | | | ing by palatial yachts, are stripped | To the right is the wreck | the left is the stripped hull of the ing in the glass windows and play-, { | | | i | RESCUE WORKERS TRYING | TO REACH EIGHTH LEVEL Iron Wood, Mich., Sept. 25.—(a— Dawn came today without word of the Rurleigh County — Citizens Asked to Contribute I FREIGHT RATE mee st Iron Mine, by a of rock and earth which choked the shaft of the mine, crushed the shaft cage bearing three men and cut off escape of the others.at work in the mine. friends be- Which Aid Has Been Given During September sucte~ MUCH INTEREST Will Begin Oct. 20 While relatives and sieged the mine entrance throughout the night, crews of miners, working in shifts, labored frantically in an effort to clear the mine shaft and reach the entombed men. Officers of the Burleigh nt; Red Cross chapter are today renew- ing their appeal for funds to help in the relief and rehabilitation work in the storm stricken area of Flo: following receipt o national headquart first picture of appalling needs. Efforts which chapters every- where are making the present the need to the citizens of their com- munities is resulting in a gratifying response, national officers state, the local cha hopes to have a# good sized fund to forward to head quarters within u few days. 3 An information bureau has been (y set up at Miami and inquiries con- cerning relatives or friends should be sent directly to Red Croxs Head- arters, Miami, Florida, by the chapter receiving the inquiry. Many Calamities in September “Althoug the hurrien The men on the cage were crushed to death when hundreds of tons of rock (Continued on page 3.) The Bismarck As merce has just rec the board railr that a pub! ring will be held at Bismarck ¢ ber 20 on the pe- dis for increases cight rates. The uted by the ximately 5 some items f Com- on all intrastate proposed increase | Temperature at 7 a. m. | Highest yesterday Lowest last night Precipitation to 7a. im. Highest wind velocity by the rail- the same ate Com- Commission as to interstate ute commission The Inter- erce rates and with the as to the intrastate rates. 5 | eC ce C4 ion had a ge shadow. sieae. eal \state Commerce Commission has ge structive stormy und floods, espe. ,3eVeral_ months and recently denied | $s ‘cially in Texas, Nebraska, Jowa, Kan- jthe increase except as to so-called | ea sax, Missouri apd Tilinois,” sayy the (class tates, or those under which less | ; as message from. headquarters. “In, ¢#fload and merchandise shipments | Amenia ° practically every instance local chap. ™ove. The matter of these rates was | BISMARCK Q ters have promptly rendered all need. Held open for further determination. | Botti f One or two illustrations of the | D ed revision of class rates will| Dickinson . to show the importance, of | Dunn Center aring to the general public.| Ellendale . | Fessenden Grand Forks ed relife. In only four instances thus far has national useistance been PYOPOs They were: fare | “A flood in the Neosho river valley this he in eastern Kansus on September 11} did damage in seven towns and in a! strip) of raral. territorial 85 miles | jong. Communities of Kunsas and | tern Missourt through their Red | Cross chapters raived 4 relief fund and the work of permunent rehubili- | tation is already. well advanced. “A flood at Jacksonville, Illinois, very seriously affected 125 fam on ‘September 8. The chapter f relief fund and is rehabilitating | those having need with the help of | un experienced disaster relief, work- | Some Comparisons The following shows the present | Jamestown nd proposed freight rate in cents | Langdon per 100 pounds for shipping binding | Larimore wine and agricultural implements | Lisb n less carload lots for varying dis- | Napoleo ances: | | Pembina | Williston | Moorhend, Min Present, Proposed Rate per Rate Ee 100 Ibs. 100 Ibs. c ae ‘or distance: 25 miles. 50 miles ..... WEATHER FORECAST 75 mile: For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly 8 cloudy to cloudy tonight und Sunday. ¢; 2 “4 100 miles | Not so cold tonight. er furnished by this office. Many | 10 i | ne tet. act IMinois chapters faced emergency | 168 miles .- wane : ie, 4 tonight and Sunday. Not so cold tonight. Rising temperatu: | Sunday southeast vortion. | GENERAL WEATHER CON ite scconbanytng ‘cold eae a i mpan: col ers the Plains States and central and problems of relief. 300 miles |. 400 miles The state commission further an- nounées that at the same time it will hear evidence from the North Dakota hippers as to present rates, as well 8 to those proposed by the railroad: thus giving the public an oppor- pared to present its views on both fund. westions. “A mine explosion « fahons, a Towa Has Serious Flood “Second in seriousness, a flood of { the Big Sioux river and its tribu- taries on September 17, undermined and stores and residences to | the number of several hundred in Hawarden and Sioux City, lows, and in a strip of territory 60 miles long. hatwees “these points. There was e in adjoining counties. bis Maya satisfac- bas stance of an ex- representative from this ‘ice. Chapters in Iowa are ee iked to contribute to the relie! Sprit Attendance torily with the sent jointly the commercial organ! t Ti ber 8 killed 16 men.| er was loaned to Le- on pege i | | Mi Desired r and Cadicug, who repre- braska. Low: ize Canadian tions of Jamestown, Valley City, Bis- marck, Mandan and Minot, will pre- | that section. sent the views of these organiszat shippers. of toes cities Cextify aa bo Fs 0 e a the probable effect on their business. Farge and Grand Forks will alve bs (Continued on page 3.)

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