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ERE ANAL ENR I EET INE GP - ‘WEATHER FORECASTS Mostly cloudy tonight and Wednes- day. Seeker tonight. THE BIS ESTABLISHED 1878 ‘ CK TRIBUNE BISMAROK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1927 £8 NRHA REPT SE RENE, TER [FINAL EomiON | ‘ PRICE FIVE CENTS GRACE’S PLANE CRASHES--FLYER IS UNHURT Fireworks Fatalities In U. S. Much Reduced This Year COUNTRY HAS [By yrd May Sail For Home July 12 SAFE AND SANE |= CELEBRATION Only Dozeh De Deaths From Fireworks—Other Causes Boost Total Somewhat ABOUT 800 ARE INJURED Human Flag 11s ANXIOUS TO [2 START. WORK ON POLAR FLIGHT Transoccanic Flyers Urged to Hasten Back For Wel- come Prepared Here New Total Tonnage Figures’: For Cruisers—Japan’s Re- | o— quest For Unrestricted Numter of Small Subma- rines Due For Refusal Geneva, July 5.--(/)—The Amer: ican delegation submitted new total Ke figures for cruisers at t day's secret session of the experts of the tripartite naval confere: shy offitial confirmation is terday, Auto Accidents, Drownings, Plane Crashes Add to * Fatality List Chicago, July 5—(#)—The sharp decline from old time independence day death tolls was shown again this year when fatalities reported directiy from fireworks, guns and similar ob- jects used to celebrate the day hove?- ed around the dozen mark. The widespread use of the auto- mobile, however, helped to run up a week-end death list of probably four Score or more from all causes. Race track mishaps, plane crashes, rail- road crossing accidents and drown- ‘ings were fepresented in tne fatal- ities reported from various parts of Nhe country Nearly 800 were in- jured from ail causes, Among those killed by fireworks and guns were: Fireworks Fatalities Net? Albany, Ind.—Norman Kin- man, 3, and Lucille Moore, 7, burned to death when upset candle ignited fireworks. 4ghency, Wash.—Stephen M. Harris, 51, killed when he fired bomb of own invention. CherryCreek, N, Y.—Howard Phil- accepted. | CELEBRATE 4TH IN PARIS boxes, the debi | Failure of Ccmpass to Per- form Believed’ Due to Nearness of Mines standers: promise and in a genuine attempt to meet Great Britain’s expressed needs in cruisers, has suggested an increase in the maximum tonnage for Great Britain and the United States so that the new total would be in the neigh- orbood of 400,000 tons. This is 100,000 tons more than was indicated in the original American maximum proposal, and roughly cor- responds to, the existing strencth of the British cruiser fleet. The experts adjourned almost im- mediately to permit the British and Japanese plenipotentiaries to stedy| the new proposal from a political viewpoint. It is deemed doubtful that the Americans would sign a rekty call- higher Paris, July “5 ‘5$.—(AP)—The French government han decided to confer the cross of the legion of honor.on Commander Richard E. Byrd. There is also the ques- tion of giving the same decora- tion to the commander's three Pal a on his transatlantic ight. Paris, July 5.—(}—Commander; Richard E. Byrd is likely to leave for home on the steamer Le sailing July 12, although the departure itely fixed. it was \stated today thd he and his transatlantic flight companions have decided to leave i Paris Saturday and spend the week ¢ for a cruiser tonnage than their new maximum, as this, it is thought, would be regarded by public opinion as augmentation in- lips, 16, Killed while tampering ‘with| perched atop the flagpole of the end at Le Touque, the famous water- | Stead of limitation, pistol. Hotel Morrison in Chicago, 617 feet ing resort. Beyond that, their plans| Indications are that the Javanese Great Barrington, Mass.—Mary| above mother earth, Joe (Hi) Powers have not yet been formed, except! Tequest for an unrestricted number Sweeney, 7, burned to death whenliabove) will attempt to sit for 20 that they will return to the United! Of small submarines will be refused. and that Japan must content hersetf: ing igni loding fire- clothing ignited by exploding fire- ith a slightly increased submarine days and shatter the non-stop pol crackers. | States as soon as possible. sitting record recently established Their decision not to stay inj Philade!phia—Israel Tessler, 7, kill-|by “Shi k” Ny in Newark, France for an extendeg period is due! tonnage, though within the maximum ed by pistol shot. N. J. Kelly's es ‘on ne ten days. | to pressure brought tg hear on them| total suggested by the Unit the United States, St. Louis. Mo.—Haden Har 12,]Powers will get. food three times to has€en back to the United States killed when he fired gun into gaso- for the welcome prepared for tl line car di scike Sage A a there, and Commander Byrd’s desi STATE'S BA BANK Chicago — Josephine: Zielna, to begin preliminary work on his burned to degth. proposed south pole flight. Gilroy, Callf.—Clara Welky, 3, died gins Celebrate the Fourth Byrd and companions, with Clarence D. Chamberlin and Charles 4... Levine,.who preceded them A flight ‘across the Ate were the central. figures Pari independ- ence Day. celebrations. They were acclaimed by crowded boulevards. | The six Americans had luncheon ith Louis Bleriot, who flew across of burns Vn) exploding A etd Eeergeiet ie «|PRISON BREAK» IS FRUSTRATED, | 10 CASH LARGE CHECK TODAY, Workmen’s Compensation Bu- reau Offers It For Pur- away, Fort Collins, Colo--Jack Albean, 28, a soldier, Killed by cannon shot. About 700 perso fireworks and guns, including 228 at were injured by the oes Pele 18 years ago; St. Loujs, 214 at New York, 100 in E nded an Independence Day cere- Washington, 35 in Chicago, 51 in|Two Armed Prisoners Beat Tory in the Fisce de, Etats Unis, chase of Bonds American Chamber ‘of Commerce at its annual Fourth of July banquet. Commander Byrd called on the mother of Laptain Nungesser to of- aay fer his sympathy. After voicing the Marquette, Mich., July 5—@)— eve, tat seer ion rite re soar alive, he tol er that she wou Twenty-one inmates of the Marquette soon have a check for 30,000 collected branch prisot are held in detention) in America’ by the Nungesser-Coli S” 40 Killed in Auto. Acct aii cells today after rioting last night] committee, of which he is a mem-| men’s mpensation Bureau will of auto-| which followed an attempted jail| ber. have joined the ranks of heavy bond- Although a complet! Milwaukee,’ three at West Field, Mass., and from 25 to 30 at a celebra- tion in the forest preserve near] Chicago. Strict laws governing the use of fireworks undoubtedly helped to hold down the casualty toll. In Milwaukee a drive against violators of city or- dinances had counted 1,200 arrests over the veek-end. Guard in Futile Effort to . Release 21 Inmates cover their Today, acgording to present plans, the Bank of, North Dakota will be called upon’ to cash the largest check ever presented to it for pa: ment. foot One small piece of paper will de-| mand the payment of $1,809,620 and when it is honored the State Work- At the chamber of commerce ban-| hold mobile fatalities was not available,| delivery by two armed prisoners. One paritne. che perce ban-l holders. : the outstanding accidents that were] guard was beaten by the prisoners | heir ae mes nee eneesge By mafrangements, for the transaction, , recorded in the day's news parriee a a and a convict slightly injured dur- | Marshal Foch, forme Peabidene My permits the compensation bureau to death toll of more than 40, with 75) inz the rioting. lerand and General Goueard and a! tarry its reserve in bonds, already. pt mipre jajaned, Ringleaders of the plot were John |hundred or so prominent French-|have been completed. The mone ap, Te wore Ries la Aaa en Bodo wayne iGouniy (Dsteolt) men, . . will be used to purchase state Bonds | in Missouri, seven. in Chicago, murderer, ‘serving 4 life sentence, Byrd Visits Jusserand met death and three were injured in aud some rack, Res ceanc eer ipite, Susnerand and the Bank of North Dakota stands | the action of guards, The convicts early morning exercise when the accident occurred. iron bar fence separates the prison yard from through this the men peered at the drowning struggles of the boys. Warden Lewis E. Lawlee defended §, WILLING T0 COMPROMISE IN ATTEMPT TO MEET ENGLAND'S NEEDS American Delegation Submits All the Cop Got Was | The Engine Number | San Francisco, July 5—()— An unidentified man stood at a busy downtown corner here yes- everybody sight to have a drink, and scores invited and ris, grinned yourselves, @rinks are on me.” A crowd of nearly 200 immedi- ately started breaking open the Undamaged boxes and sorting out unbroken “Scotch.” While the car was sur- Founded the driver took the li- cense plates and disappeared. A policeman arrived after the wreck had been cleared of its liquid content. the engine number. bottles bodies. the of the guards. It all began with an automobile collision In which the man’s car was overturned. bottles streamlets. He crawled, out of Out of it came liquor rue waved his arms and said to by- labeled fully, the moment Many convicts amor for mission to go to the rescue, but the guards, who feared the men might take advantage: of the opportunity to escape, threatened to shoot the first man who tried to cale tne fence. The youths were.not identified and today a search was under way to re- were having rive: He out that only a few weeks ago a prisoner pleaded for a rescue another convict who supposed- ly had fallen into the water. the “dorwning” man was pulled out he was found supported by two i chance took ‘CONVICTS ARE! DENIED CHANCE | TO SAVE BOYS ryers win try For New Airplane | Three Youths Drown in Hud- Endurance Record son River While Guards Level Guns on Inmates at wae per- their A 12- and pointed to; When (ner tire tubes, Warden Lawlee de- a crossing crash st Manown, Pa serving a sentence for automobile! Jusserand, former French amb: to make over $59,000 on the deal— | clared, and it later developed the two men were brothers. > B ; Reema wore « iding f ne . he bank management is none mother and her. five children were] theft ering nrtiisla’ cechoseke Bin egerand,, forme eng eee Killed and two others injured aear| tuck] and’ Podoleki, ‘the od Sim, | 89, he . Gear Wekk veheate AN Niagara Falls, N. Y., and there were! stated, were believed to have ‘out! explanati much ‘prefer to forego the profit and scattered deaths other localities.| their way through. their cell bars|bassador as to why his comp: keep the bonds. The reason is that Robert Tippy of Peoria, racing) with an improvised hacksaw. not function properly toward the|he probabl a be able to get drivef, was killed: in an ‘auto race} Krom their cells the two conviets|close of the transatlantic flight. mais lor tims tee Mec, crash af Decatur, Ill. while (wo! went to the disciplinary ward, whe M. Jusserand believed it likely| He feels that the bank is making racers were injured at Butler, Pa. | th that the compass was affected by/ something of a sacrifice in selling 13 .Drownings in: Midwest the iron mines in the Calvados sec-| the bonds agreed upon, even though A crashing of Normandy over which the) they are being sold at a premium. brought dea ‘off the C 4% Per Cent and Harry Danbur py, of, the “bonds to, be purchased othe Ie by ie compensation bureau are o: Thirteen drownings we: Series H, state real went bonds, In_ 1903, beegne four and Poy et cent. ‘or one lot o: ¢ bureau the -Valte Sialas pamueter 66 ang will pay face valué plas $14,805 pre- movement for a “sane Fourth” wag mium and $175 acérued interest. { started, the deaths fied injuries grad- For the second 1 yf $900,000 the} ‘wally have bran. red reduced. bureau will. pay face value plus $4,190 whl and 450 ecrucd hee interest. jot! locks of onds bear 3 KILLED IN AUTO. CRASH North Dakota association will hol interest at four and one-half per NEAR PLAINVIEW. MINNESOTA | special meeting in Jamestow: cent but the. Premium on the first Plainview, Minn., July: 5.—()—A) Thu: afternoon, July 7, to take bloc’ will luce the income to the fourth of July outing ended in/final action on the request that the bureau to. 4.10 tragedy when two automobiles col-| association finance the promotion of lided headgn, two miles the Missouri river diversion project, | B' Mouiay night, causing the death of|C. E, D, the as- The 1 prisoners in the Marg branch. State and city police arrived time to prevent the men from leavi the corridor leading to the deten- G.N.D.A. Directors to Meet at Jamestown Minot, N. D., July 5.—The_ state board of, directors of the Greater jane near Aurora, Ind., to -Raymond Hodges P and injurea an- vados coast often ta their/compasses went Commander Byrd gave one of the three propellers of th Chamberlin and Levine, been using a German propel their original blades were need when they made their forced landing’ at Klinge on their flight from New York to Germany. The two col lapsible rubber life mate of the America were presented the commander to Maurice Droug- Ba, French aviator, who is planning to fly from France to N YRDS Scag 1s aE ec REPAIRED AT CHERBOURG. Cherbourg,. France, Commander Richard qk. atlantic. monovlane ie Ze was brought to‘ Cherbou! recorded at 7 a.m. Highest ove Bir cent. Returns from the second block will be 4.121% per cent. . Danielson, president of view of the fact that the bu- 3 an juries to three} sociation, announced today. At the taro of whom are not-expected| recent meeting a committee consist- reau has been getting only three per. cent for its money deposited in ing of five officers of the Greater North Dakota association was a the Bank of North Dakota, its direc- inted to confer with officers of the tors are happy to make the change. It will increase: the income of the jissouri River Diversion association, proximately | $20,000 a year, and the Janres River Development as- sociation and present a report to the | sho} it grows no Varger than, it is Jamestown meeting. This committee} 5! “Investment of its funds in the will meet at 11 a.m. in James- bonds Cs ra se hareen no more tat ill con- worry than deposit, of {its money in need ae 230 pm Ersadiaeniaiba gal F774 special experience with machin- the The bi bonds will be ae “The commi thee. will work out a " ery affected ag By alk Sa salt Siar. with he — basis. of ration on the project le wi bs | chat 1 Tame wil meet with toe! Hawaiian Flight hey come. due approval of all concerned,” Mr. Dan- to the com- Jelson declared. Took 36 ne 1 . ee reluctance make the based on ay opinion that eeres, ‘of safe bonds hearing tour: half per cent in at is. increase . rather than de- The bond) 5. Bottineau The dead are Mrs. Charles. Popke, “3 years o of Bellechester, her shut Persi a 3; at Prethelt. 17 Ai old, who. Popke’s All Cand: Seokes ki Ellendale of the Frond Fessenden ion The oy have pea taken apart and thoroughly cleaned by mechanics internal injuries. - held. out_for recovery i gatepereet - pital. » gutemoblie ari ‘riven 2 by. view, | iomopte t in ee ‘Moorhe id ry readings<éc 7 a, m.) ir fe rtly. cloudy, 69; roads 5 Se oes of| warden, tation to 7 a. m, . Highest wind velocity. today: Temperature at 7 a. m. yesterday last night ‘emps. Minn. BH nevertheless, in inches Fot Bis mr m yonecast “Mostly cee, comin, and Wednesda: ex- . . . 65 : 0 . 36 Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudy €loudy Cloudy Cloudy Glooay joudy Rain Cloudy ‘Tha: above record oe for the 72 ka ee tm. local time, | , iy. Cool- tb Mos dy ee enditions pre Cooler joutheast ro oe y the coming ‘site ; record was This picture of Matthew Kimes (left), most notorious of Oklahoma bandits, was taken in front of the jail in Flagstaff, Ari Grand Canyon. couple who gave their names as Mr. and Mr: ‘They explained th Seven murde Kimes’ capture in th car Kimes wa: Paris, July Balchen, says the Pa: the New York Herald nomsining, Ne Y;, duly 6 —(—Held SD, will try for a new their prison yard by the leveled 1,200 convicts Sing Sing prison were forced to stand helplessly by while three youths in 1a canoe drowned in the swirli ters of the Hudson but a few feet record as soo! turn to the United States. belief of the three flyers present record, made Chamberlin, of 51 how 25 seconds, can be bettered by least 10 hours by carryins 50 gallons more of gasoline than. ord was made at New The airmen are conv be done without materially altering | the Bellanea plane, w ablished. LIBBY TEI EARLY HISTORY yesterday | OF THIS ‘White Men Encouraged to Come Here By Grand Forks, N. D., Fortunes made in the cluding what is now by fur traders who sharp and illegal com the the history departn Dr. Libb¥ tells abot ute, written for t ss. The article fol After the expulsion ‘and made Quebec the new colony, and the trhders that French fur trade land, ing Scotch Highlander’ business openings and venture; the old Fi Houses ' that had ou hundred others were too. There were here Verendrye’s old empl be ‘sent back into. t and having the good Indians Rockies, these men pr to their employers, that had come from New World. The newly o7 anize followed along great northwest were again sending lontreal as in the French supremacy. ture: chartered 1m dso! i ica eir furs might hav. by the Bogitk but these (aitieare da race as the paired their fee m, wil ack Some of Ue ie ee meen Da-| Ress... =| Bn * Maths trea ids “with the 1 inder riding. Kimes was being sought. jies in Oklahoma are charged to serving a life term in the Oklahoma penitentiary. 'CITY CELEBRATES SAFE, SANE FOURTH, \WITH NO ACCIDENTS OR FIRES REPO REPORTED (P)}—Clarence D. Chamberlin, Bert Acosta and Bernt! Made By Fur Traders udson’s Bay compans pressed regret that ho had not been to do with encouraging white men to present when the youths were strug- Visit what was then a remote frontier, | gling for life as he would have had “ccording to Dr. 0. G. L the authority to allow a olunteer | a conviet to attempt a rescue.’ —___________, Weather Report Weather conditions at North Da- from America in 1763, kota points for \the 24 hours ending took over the akotu Uniyersity here. th article on the history overnment of Cahada Montreal, mained French and here we gregated the canoe men, the hunters | English merchant, both looking for \Verendrye’s expeditions as well as a Were Valuable Men Knowing every trail and; portage, fa- miliar with every deta from Montreal ands to make their fortunes in the erendrye’s old trai utifizing his unused portages, ca: an hared “financially ris edition of Tribune, prob- airplane en- nas they re-| It is the that the! by Acosta and! rs, 11 minutes at when’ the -gee~ York in April.: inced this can ith which the LLS STATE Fortunes July 5.-P)— northwest, in- North Dakota, entered into mpetition with had much bby, head | ut it he lows: of the French the English Associated f the re- re con-} capital how. had made the the enterpri as well as ¢ ready for any rench trading tfitted all of located here, nearly all of | joyes, eager to he wilderness. of woodcraft will of all the to the ‘oved invaluable the merchants the British Is- d fur brigades In a few years U Seven Murders Charged to Him | Kime: i Many Travel to saveistts Neuss Sum- hess” VICINITY | Robert B. Hanson, Walter Folendorf, their furs to best days: of These. freely to the “g company. rt entirely illegal. and been seized! home made dynamite pede cont ofticers nk gums ingsabout 50 pounds of. "explosive dventui id they per- in ‘thelr }and Femous woutd have \wreel traders bec: ner 3 bo building if }t had nd ahi hen the ““re|Found in Office of into| was found early tod No_aceic | tion traveled to nearb July attracted many. was popular with many, as was Mer- and J. H. Sinciair were speakers and where dancing and water sports were ft ended yesterday. SHIP FALLS TO EARTHSHORTLY AFTER TAKEOFF |Proposed Flight From Hawaii | to Mainland Comes to Sud- | den End Monday |PLANE BADLY DAMAGED Former Bismarck Youth Has Not Decided Whether to Make Another Start a, Island of Kauai, Hawaii, duly 5.—(#\—The twisted ruins of an airplane, a brokenhearted aviator and a disappointed field staff were all that remained today of the trans- | oceanic flight project of Richard | Grace, Hollywood stunt flyet and {former resident of Bismarck, N. 1D. j who crashed to earth here yesterday | shortly after taking off for a hop alone to California. The jinx, which has haunted Grace practically since he arrived and laid plans for the flight, permitted him to come out of it unhurt, but the toll | plane was badly damaged. ' Whether ollowing | he will attempt to salvage his plane With the bandit are shown a | for another attempt has not been de- G. H. Kady, in whose | termined. y had no knowledge that The stunt flyer took off at 5:24 a.. and a dozen bank robber- Aes eye a eee peel vhose othe Jeorge, is |to head for the mainlan ile Whose ‘srother, George, 14 |e itonene die: 4nkestt pulntcaaay bas fore he had headed his plane direct- |ly westward, the tail of the mono- plane was seen to flutter. Grace headed it back toward the beach run- way and it nosed earthward at an alarming speed. Escrnes Injury Survivor of 24 other air crashes, Grace managed to hold the mono- plane under control after a fashion but it struck bushes on the edge of the field. The fuselage and one wing were smashed but the stunt flyer crawled out of the wreckage unhurt. He had been in the air just 51 minutes. No official explanation of the cause of the trouble was forthcom- ing, but it was believed the takeoff over the rough sands had so shaken the heavily loaded plane that its rud- der was weakened. The plane carried 322 gallons of gasoline and weighed more than 4,000 pounds. : Although materials have been or- dered for rebuilding the plane, it not made known whether the would be undertaken here. ce and his mechanician were said considering roturning to Hono- omorrow. * “=| YOUNG ENSIGN CALLED HERO IN WAR ON RUM Captures Steamer With $500.- 000 Cargo of Alcohol Al- mer Resorts For Celebra- tions and Ball Games—Oth- ers Visit Various Cities in State — Weather Is Good Over Week-end, With Only Slight Sprinkles Bismarck and vicinity celebrated a “safe and sane Fourth” this year. nts, no fires und no damage were resorted over the past week- | tdF ant Gr end, one of the quietest in yew sorts to spend the week-end in boat Fourth of celebrations with al their ap- jpuFtenunces were held | throughout the east and west Missouri Slope and i A great part of the city’s popula- summer re- jing, bathing and fishing. Wildwood Lake, near Washburn, ( cer, where Congressm in Tom Hall | ures, Many attended the Bismarck-Tur- J tle Lake game her Sunday, when Bis- | most Single-handed , marck won by a 3 to 2 score, Mem- : bers of the Bismarck Country club | ips 3 & who did not leave the city for the; New York, uly 5 ea 2i-yenr- Fourth took part in a golf tourna-/0ld ensign of the coast gua almost single handed captured a rum steamer with a $500,000 cargo and a jerew of 22, today was hailed as one of the greatest individual heroes in the government’s war against rum, Charles Duke, armed with a rifle ment which s1 rted Saturday and Paul Cook was the winner, Business at Standstill Business was ata standstill dver the holiday. Practically every estab-| containing only three cartridges, lishment was closed as were city,|leaped from a small coast guard county and state offices. ‘The posi- | patrol boat to the deck of the liquor office observed its regular hoiiday|tunning craft, bowled over a sailor who sought to stop him, herded the crew below decks and then stood guard for three hours until help ar- rived. The capture occurred almost in the shadow of the statue of liberty. ‘Threat Proves Successful Duke halted the ship by a shouted command to hés crew to “turn the machine gun on this gang if they don’t bring this ship up at once.” |The coast guard boat carried no machine gun, but Duke’s threat suc- ceeded and the ship was swung about so sharply that she ran onto a mud. bank, Calling another of his crew to aid him, Duke herded the rum running lcrew below decks, while he ordered {the remaining two to set out for aid. For three hours the ensign sat on guard with his rifle across his Mrs.{knees. Finally two Aarger patrol boats reached the, steamer and took over the prize and Inspection of the Teel " revealed 160,000 gallons of alcohol. Duke was formerly a newspaper reporter in Washingto Mexican Officials Arrest Two Priests Mexico City, July 6,—(#) — Pedro Aguilar and Rafael Villafana Azarte, Catholic priests, have been arrested, charge with saying masses in pri- vate residences in contravention’ of Mexico's religious laws, and with be- ing implicated in the League for the Defense of Religious Liberty in a revolutio! plot, The newspapers say that other new arrests of Catholics, ’ whe are chai with sedition, have ‘also been but that the police have not. re- vealed them, N. P. to Abandon schedule yesterday, with one delivery of mail in the morning. Although c.ouds scurried across the sky all Sunday and yesterday there was ony a sprinkle now and then, dis- proving the old adage that “it aiways rains on the Fourth.” *Some Bismarck people journeyed to Minot over the week-end for the opening of the Northwest fair, while others traveled to Spiritwood Lak near Jamestown, and to celebrations in the West Slope country. AUTO ACCIDENTS MANY OF FARGO + D., July 5.—(P)—Six Far- 0, D me zens and seven others were injured and one man was killed in automobile accidents over the week- end in the Fargo territory, according to a check up made today. The’ Fargoans hurt include Alice Peterson, Violet’ McCoy, Albert Chapman and Oscar Dygve. The an killed was Andrew Jar-| vala, 38. of Ponsford, Minn. In addition to the above casual- ties, 11 persons narrowly escaped serious injury or eath when cars in which they were riding turned over in the ditch. Fargo motorists returning from the Minnesota lake district Monday night reported at least a dozen automobiles in the ditch between here and De- troit Lakes. Fargo and Moorhead hos- pitals reported, however, that none of the occupants of the’ overturned cars were brought in for medical] aid. Dynamite Bomb Is Spokane _Newspapers Spokane, W Seay July 5A. and with the fuse burned to within a few inches of the percussion ¢an, in the build- ing which fn aed the Spokane-Review ene. toe C1 nicle. “Police if the infernal Haachine £ ked the front of the exploded. The news; rs advanced no motive, though ugh both. ys ete Pad Bega and iene anialinmieaaiaal