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\e WEATHER FORECASTS a ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1927 noes] THE BISMARCK TRI B UN E | awa PRICE FIVE CENTS (TH LANDS 1M OCEAN; FATE 1S UNKNOWN Logical Route For Air Mail Service Is Through Bismarck’ TRANSPACIFIC PLANE RUNS | Royal Romance | mB MOST PEOPLE ‘ALONG LINE OF N.P. RAILROAD Major Fancher of Spokane Finds Flying Conditions Ideal Along Route STAYS HERE LAST NIGHT Sau. | Is Traveling Eastward Over 3 Pay With Lives For Slaying Deputy Warden HENRY WHITE, DIPLOMAT 30 | YEARS, IS DEAD} |aall France Was Operated on Three Years Ago Roberto Torrez, Walter Sta-! lesky and Charles Duchow- ski Hanged From Triple-| trapped Gallows - Known as Illinois’ Most Desperate’ Criminals ' Joliet, IL, July 15.—/)—Thiee of the seven men who slew Deputy War- den Peter Klein in a break from tn state penitentiai year ago wer: hanged in the heavily guarded Jolie! ‘jail yard today. \ Territory to Be Covered By Air Derby — air, mail service is estab- theough the Northwest to the coast, the only logical route for it is slong the Northern Pacific line, and Bismarck and Fargo are the logical stopping points in North Dakota. This is the belief of Major John T. Fancher, manager of the National j Air Derby and this, he said, is the , | desire of the people of Spokane and the Paci: Northwest. ¢ H Major Fancher afrived here at 6:45 | last’ night from Glendive, Mont., ; stayed over night and left this marn- p i ing at 7;30 for Fargo, where be E 4 planned ton for an hour or two. 2 ‘The Pacific Northwest and Spokane 3 believe that, by estabilshing an air 4 route along. the Northern Pa- 1 cific, the maximum numbér of people ’ 4 cold be served, Fancher declared. 4 Investigation of the matter has : } 88 ELECTRIC BEACON TO BE CONSTRUCTED HERE \y First steps toward making Bis- marck a port for a night airway will be taken here within the next two weeks with the con- struction of a huge electric bea- con for use in guiding air men at_n'ght. i 4 | European royalty is abuzz with ret The beacon will be constructed ‘ports of an imminent announcement by Edmund A. Hughes atop the | of the engagement of Princess Marie Prince hotel and will throw a | Jose, of Belgium, to the Italian Duke beam a mile in length. It is | of Apulia, both pictured above. King estimated that the beacon will | Emmanuel, of Italy, is the duke’s be visible for a distance of 50 great-uncle. | TRISH HEROINE Washburn, Steele, points in Em- mons county and as far west as ron. * It, will have 780, cahale- power and will revolve six times minute Tt 18 the first. air beacon to be installed in the state and will be one of the larg- showed, he said, that four fines ax Countess Markievicz Proved many people are foun jong the Northern Pacific ga are found alone Active Figure in Fight either of the other Northern trans- continental lines. Furth he For Freedom pointed out, this route to ad WEE to be taken by Cla plan the National Aid Derby September] Dublin, July 15.—()—Countess 19-21, only 41 miles longer than} Markievicz, for many years one of the route for Class “A” planes along| the most remarkable personalities in Milwaukee railroad—‘“and 41. Irish life, died early this morning. Her husband stepson as well as marked. Eamon De Valera, the Republican Larger Citi leader, were at the bedside when she North Dakota, £ passed away at Sir Patrick Dunn’s the cities of Fi hospital, where she had been a pa- ndan and! tient for some weeks. be served by the Suffers Relapse total atic in far greater than the population of| The countess, whose activities ex- est in the Northwest. Tee area tein or, Milwaukee line| tended throughout the troubled years | no’ All the way to the coi the| When the Irish people were fight- population is greater ‘this| ing for independence, underwent two lauding week ago suffered a relapse. Thunderstorms all the way fromj _ The chief concern of Countess Billings into Bismarck hampered| Markievicz as Sinn Fein’s woman him, “Major Fancher said when he| leader was in the welfare of Ire. stepped out of his plane here at ex-| !and’s laborers. s belaved b; actly 6:60 last night, “We. just ran into one storm after another,” he : remarked. Byt—he and Bis mechan-| compromising friend. ician, Sergeant Raymi li,] Her first entry into public made the 200.mile trij ‘in the rebellious course of whieh in one hour and 45 ‘migutes. several times was jailed and one Mago Fancher’ e: if] sentenced to death, was in connec: “tickled to tome . flying con-| tion with'the labor movement. . It Mee for nine min-| was about the time when James Larkin in 1913 brought off a long continued strike affecting nearly every form of industry in Dublin, Larkin demanded a minimum wage of abe Crowds Greet Flyers one pound a week for unskilled Crowds ame out to’ ‘greet the} Workers. fi Mal th Constance Markievicz threw herself vers, all along the Tait, tive: | whole-heartedly into tho agitation of the flyers found t no one] Larkin for an improvement in the othe flyers found thet so, by| conditions of the poor, and was in istake, no ome knew ¢! were| close contact with James Connolly, coming. “We had a ible time| chief organizer of the Citizen Army. landing at Miles City,” he said. “We! When the world war broke out had to circle around the two for sev-, Count Markievicz, her husband, and eral hours before cotild even lo-| their son of 14 or 15 years went off cate the landing: fidid:” ~. ted to fight for Russid. Major Fancher said. he planned to “Sentenced to Death arrive in St. Paul at today and| She was conspicuous -in the rebe fon to Ee, « acre ae re se i ase Bide Kk, Aas, he in ns e je ex- ots, breeches, service tunic an to arrive in Chie 3 turday | feathered hat, she commanded 4 in. day | tingent which ‘captured the College nj of, Surgeons. Her surrender was characteristically dramatic. She first is to h 7 shook hands with .all oe instead of on then kissed her revolver originally planned. it over to the British comm was ; After court-martial, she was sen- tenced to death, but Sir John Maz- well commuted ‘her sentence’ to pet servitude for life. In June 1917, she was unéonditionally released by the . British government ith the other'Sinn Fein prisoners. A inent figure in the subse: ape of ya 7s, aliens. ics ‘was: el ® member of te Dall She was the first woman ntal Divide, were we } an adequate landing ever $0 ® seat in the British head, Minn. ‘of Carbuont, Belang eve Moorhead, Minn. 80 60 inn Fein menibers who - ‘i rathe: @ gered momentarily, are adequate) Operations for appendicitis, and a On a triple-trapped gallows, they were dropped to simultaneous deaths while 400 men, who only a moment before had been laughing and shout ing to each other, looked o: Those who witnessed the spectac! one of the last hangings in Illinois, to get into the enclosure, walled about by a 20-foot board fence to kept out those who did not hold passes signed by the sheriff. Pre-| ceded by four priests the three men, Roberto . Torrez, Mexican; Walter Stalesky, Pole, and Charles Duschow- Henry White, former ambassador to ski, a giant Lithuanian, emerged from France and Italy and American dele- gate to the Paris the jail at 6:10 o’cloc | Gives Broad Grin | Duschowski was grinning brondly: and continued to smile. until the th white cap was placed over his head. health much since then. The three men walked with firm; tread up a dozen steps to the trap- door through which they were to plunge three minutes later. Torrez took his stand and looked up at the noose which dangled over his head. Stalesky hora and stag- ut quickly re- bye, everybody.” made by any of the three condemned men. Torrez and Stalesky continued bilt. Mass., in 1916. to make responses to the priest who stood in front of them until the ver; moment the white caps cut off the’ voices. Ceremony Is Brief the trap door together. supervised the arrangements for the triple hanging, one of the very few white canned forms, i 1 Would Spring Trap slain prison officer, was at the jail early, renewing her request that she be permitted to spring the triple trap. The request was refused, and Mrs, Klein remained quietly in the juil office while the executions took place. “Life was sweet to them,” she said, ‘and they did not want to die. But and two children. Cal Klein, brother of the murdered deputy warden, and Joseph F. Moore, Y brother of Mrs. Klein, both of Chi- cago, witnessed -the hanging. MEN FIGURED IN DARING ATTEMPTS TO BREAK JAIL Joliet, I., July 15.—A—Roberto Torrez, Walter Stalesky and Charles Duchowski, three of Mli- the new “break-proof” state peni May 5, 1926. ey were recaptured only to! participate in two more daring a‘ tempts to escape. Mexican, Stalesky and Americans. je Weather conditions at North Da- at 7 a. m. today: : Temperature at m.- ig! yesterday’. Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 Highest wind velocity Temps. ‘ = 2 33 = s 84 65 O 79 56 18 115 69, 0 : 16 B10 16 60 0 80 50 14 7 68 0 4 80 59 09 0.02 8 a) 85 51 32 4 Be 18 77,60 D,. Cle Bee 79 ‘58 .02 Cle 85 54.05 78 . 54 Clear Williston ...... 76 66 wale have been) much el in temperature. be presented) For Notth Dakota: de Alt tonight a — naires portion. mornifig in all sections fre s Say, ‘Here’s How’ ae | Our Heroe | Anan eae ay \ Lael | | time.) —Procee GAVE NOTED SERVICE | Was American Delegate to had fought and struggled for hours Versailles Peace Conference; ' of Distinguished Family i Honolulu, July . { 500 miles from land at 7: When Lieut. Albert F, Hegenberger (right) and Lieut. Lester J. Mait-! HM rived in Honolulu, they took a drink ing coffee that was made in San Francisco, and it’s still warm. They couldn't find the package of food en route sc had nothing to Maitland 3s drinking his as if he were thirsty and the Java just “hit the spot.” OFFICERS EXPECT QUICK ARREST OF SABIN BANK ROBBERS; WO CROWD STORMS VIENNA COURT 30 ARE HURT Release of Soldiers Accused of Killing Socialist Results in. Demonstration They are here shown| eace conference, ‘30 this morning. White underwent an operation years ago and had been in ill eat until they landed. Thirty years or more an American diplomat, Henry characterized by Joseoh H. Choate © man who “set up a school of in London from were graduated elps, Lincoln, Bayard and Hay.” . Mr. White was born in Baltimore, gained his composure. While Dus-:Md., on March 29, 1850, and was edu- chowski continued to 1 lily,'cated in the United States and in Torrez summoned a smile to his face France. He came from an old and and in a clear voice, shouted “Good- distinguished Maryland -family. ‘ married Miss That was the only audible remark Stuyvesant Rutherford of New York, in-law of William K. Vander- ‘Lenox, Their daughter, Mar- garet, is the: Countess Scherr-Those. wife of an officer of the R sian Cuirassiers, whose father was __, formerly associated with the former| The ceremony was'extremely brief Emperor of Germany. hi and the three bodies shot through November, 1920, married Mrs. Emily ‘Vanderbilt Sloane. widow of William! Sheriff A. E. Markgraff, who had Douglas Sloane, of New York. Helps to Avoid War MAN HELD Mrs. B. Williams of Moor- head Is Accused of Driving Bandit Car — She —Men Get of two men who part In 1883 he entered the diplomatic in Minois history, shouted: “Stop service: as Secretary of the United him from swinging,” and raced down States Legation at Vienm, the stairs of the gallows, while dep- later to London as First Secretary uties hurried to still the swinging retiring, and & a Vienna, July 15 ushed the pala smashing windows, forcing doors and :4 jocuments into the streets. again assuming of justice tod the office under President McKinley, j which he held until 1905 when he throwing Mrs. Peter Klein, widow of the!was appointed Ambassador to Italy.|The manifestation grew out of a ju Designated by President Roosevelt | verdict which acquitted as the representative of the United | former soldiers, who we States to the International C ence on Moroccan Aff: s. Williams, who was On. ee n she visited her husband in jail I ; hours after the robbery, plane and steaming to her rescue, in- ‘told the sheriff she had spent the j tercepted a message saying the plane was still begging for help with her {day with two men Whom she knew killed a socialist in a irs at Alge-|in Schallendorf in January. |day, | The police were powerless to clear) #8 “Kelly, |the building, the iron gates of which; were demolished. charging highway bery were sworn out agai on this information. {with the woman, are charged with ews ntering the Sabin bank Thursday land robbing it of $1,922 ‘ipees é The woman is alle: 5 hile the men| ence Uncertain How to Re- jopen sea, but they knew nothing of took a leading’ part i ley, the result of which, it was They, together lor to France in’ ned in 1909, the Ay ey s they didn't think how sweet was life 1907, Mr. White re: the ‘out in front of the national to my husband, nor about his wife: first vear of President Taft’s admin- ii Upon retirement from his Paris post and his return to New vr. White was the ruest of honor at a dinner tendered him by the Society of the Pilgrims at which js services were eulogized by John Bigelow, who represented the United States in France at the time of Na- Levi P. Morton, Ambas- sador from 1881 to. 1885, Joseph H. Choate and others. 4 Scholastic Honors most desperate criminals were} Mr. White received the honorary left of seven who slew Peter Klein,' degree of Doctor of Laws, from St. deputy warden and escaped from} Andrews’ University (Scotland) and geen mopkins and Harvard. 8 diplomat 8, tentiary at Stateville, near here, on tr aay mentioned, were the follow-| He represented | States at the International Confer- {ence in London in 1887 and 1888 for the abolition of sugar dou: International Conference on culture at Rome in 1905 which re- In the first break, James Price sulted in the founding of the Inter- his bid for freedom and national Institute of Agriculture; he chosen chairman of the Amer- ican delegation to the Fourth Pan- which suffered. some damage. The crowd grew during the day and ,to have completely te ¢! halted in the center of the city. M | Documents and papers seized the erowd in the palace of justice were burned in the streets. It is reported that injured when the police ithe demonstrators. sat in the car rged with robbing the bank. Williams was driving a tour- ing car when sle came to visit her band, who is held on a charge of ing abusive lan\ uage Woman Well Dressed is about 30 years old, was neatly dressed when jtaken into custody. of medium build, dark and 3 |géribed by Sheriff Peter Whaley as DISORDERS, BLOODSHED TEN: ON INCREASE IN VI She is a woman d by the Vienna correspondent.,o Evening News as constituting a |“revolution,”, proceeded jthe afternoon and were evening in the The Evening News says the trouble apparently is organ- | ized and is succeeding. jorts, he says, stute that 50 people | and hundreds ! Troops have been called, | Whaley. ut are undependable. fs taking measures amounting virtually to martial law to break up the rioting which devel- fighting joveralls, in the rear of the afternoon, |Shea said, one of them dropped a The number of wounded cannot be|gun from his pocket. (Continued on page two.) STBAMERS IN RASH AT SBA; “ONE LIFE LOST Holland - American Liner! Sinks Norwegian Boat Off Nantucket—No Details ‘Two men who answer thd deserip- tion given by L. C. of the bank, who was the only per- on in the building when the holdup occurred, were driven to near Glyn- don late last night, where they left} effect « settlement but whether they; an automobile driven and entered the tow Follette, cashier correspondent | by a woman according to Sheriff) which authoritative observers would The men then entered a general merchandise store operated by P. J.| veered to the belief that an answer Shea at Glyndon and purchased over-| to the cruiser problem must be While they were donning the | found soon or the conference would store, | have to admit defeat. | Aires in 1910 and the same year spe-| anuen, Police, are cial ambassador of the United States to the centenary of Chilean independ- Ne Was a member of 11 clubs 01 oO | Weather Report |: lasting throughout ington and Baltimore and kota points for the 24 hours ending of several important scientific, geo- c|HBAT WAVE IS RATAL'T0 45 \ Pennsylvania Farmers Har- vest By Moonlight, Rest By Day—Many Drowned saw two men ‘near Dilworth. in the dark, but found two pairs of [overalls in a clump of bushes In the /16_ Root Python Has | Husband Arrested ‘ STEAMER PICKS UP . Willams vcame'ts' Moorhead! . Sailors on the Run (pistes MESSAGE nd from Oklahoma | ‘later, her husband j charge. of petit larceny an leased on payment o} cently he was arrested during an al- tereation with a garage man, Re- New York, July 15.—()—Deaths directly attributed to the heat wave, under which the eastern states have sweltered for three di ed to 45 today, with-scores prostrat- relief from the humidity. Fatalities by states were: York City 7; New Jersey 1 New York, July 15.—()—The Hol- line announced today the receipt of a wireless from the} capteitt of the com! dar stating ‘eendam collide with and sank the Norwegian steam- Sagaland, four miles east of Nan- tueket Jightship at AlL.abgead the Sag: except one, the messa; jot constitute an a held in effect todi 3 North Caro- aland were saved, temperature report nalyeeainr where sev- eral inland comm The case was that of H. C. Bran- Fi @ 20-year lease hd Voondam. was cndamaged and| Andrews, who were| Bismarck—Clear. 58: on, Sibley island to we city et Bis- mare ie pak is inbound for New York. ‘The Vs ogee o'clock aan. . convicted joint! For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly i cloudy tonight and, Saturday. Not] dei out of Reerins ‘ on July is charges grew out of the use of a ww York, at 7 ke screen by the defendants for lleged purpose of ‘The pressure ie quite uniform this the| ‘Bibbing Oloudy, 68; route goods: by) good. ; amoke , the}: Mandan—Partl rs ae sarees i ly cloudy, 69; of the officer because of the poison-| Crookston—Clear. 65; roads ird carbo oxide Lin test was Grand Forkse—Clear, 63; |, ©On- good. nity of ree, Devils OER Mena) 61; OUT OF GASOLINE - CALLS FOR HELP ARE RADIOCAST Flyers Believed tc Be “Some 500 Miles From Land—SOS Calls Sent Out During Early Morning Summon Four Nearby Ships to Come to Their Rescue BIRDMEN MAY BE AFLOAT IN RUBBER LIFE BOAT Machine Equipped With Provisions Enough to Last 10 Days —Plane Had Been in Air 21 Hours and Five Minutes znd Covered Approximately 1,800 Miles . Wilhelmina, July 15.—(11:05 a. m. Paci ing at full speed toward the position last giv- by Nav gator ory B, Bronte avoard the Smith plane, e of the Wilhelmina expected to reach the dist: plane at 11:15 a. m, Honolulu time, (1:45 p. m. Pacific time). The sea was calm and conditiond favorable for the flyers. Aboard 8. : i —(AP)—The transpacific monoplane City of Oakland, flying to Honolulu, struck the water some | 5 a. m., Pacific standard time, to- day after running out of gasoline and summoning four steamships to her aid by the timely use of her radio. The liner Wilhemina, 75 miles from the place where the monoplane’s last SOS was heard, was speeding to the j rescue of the flyers. Two other ships, the liner President Pierce and the army transport Kenowis, continued toward the plane’s last known position and a game of hide and seek over hundreds ot miles of open sea was on. Four Ships Nearby Officials at Pearl Harbor announced the navy was standing by, but that its hands were tied because no sea- plane were available that could make such a trip and re- turn. They pointed out that at least four ships, presumably the Wilhemina, the liner President Pierce, the army trans- port Kenowis and the steamer Calawaii, could reach the City lof Oakland more quickly and efficiently than seaplanes. Besides ‘the rubber life raft, similar to the type Com- Leads to Issue of Warrants! mander Byrd and his crew used after being forced down off Away With | | the French coast, Smith had a pair of collapsible oars, a tire pump, rubber patches, two dozen flares and a signal pistol. Two small waterstills, one for each man, were provided for the rendering of sea water into drinkable fluids. Navy Gets Message A radio message direct from the monoplane, saying they Bank| were “landing in the water” and to rush help, was_inter- expected by authori- ies today, while plans were under y t n Mrs. By, Williams, of cepted by the navy at San Francisco at 7 a. m., Pacific standard time. The last known position of the plane was about 620 a river of the bandit car, on charges’ i163 east and north of Paia, Island of Maui. That was at 7:05 a, m. Pacific time when the iner Wilhemina, 75 miles from the one way radio. | Equipped for Trouble Equipped with provisions enough to last 10 days, a pneumatic life raft and facilities for distilling water, ! the flyers had the consolation that ,; Delegates to Geneva Confer-|they might remain afloat if they jcould make a safe landing in the the help that was rushing toward sume Naval Tasks them, because their receiving set broke down shortly after leaving San Geneva, July 15—U)—There was, How Tose the iitile plane could re- considerable uncertainty today among ';, HC, One ie wee ntmatter of con. delegates to the naval conference a8 Jeeturt when the’ first 808 call 4p nem te Tee, At alsne af ait. icme,. Dronte then reporied they! yay ficulties in which” the chiefs in- 4 ,0n¢, BOE SUPDI Ot tod ‘the sup- dulged at yesterday's picturesque but, ply would hold out four hours but "Pe oe b mel serene shaken|28Kked that help be sent. There was gran the bellet that, ike. session [i ter, Prssipier, thal, they cagld oe marked the beginning of the end of Aueher 600 mies, Gr more to lm the conference, while the optimistic feeling tee alles were certain that all hope of an) When the first call was received agreement had aot een. lost, |they had been in the air 19 hours hers Wan’ uo tlstaking the earns n20 oo, anne Ane Gn Rae tae g the traveled about 1, miles. ey estness of the delegates! desire to| were about 820 miles from Honolulu, would be uble to overcome the exist '*Meir destination. 1 to hours, ing divergences, way a question of before the SOS cull, averaged more b abuerver than 103 miles per hour, according ‘nat commit thmselves. Nevertheles,'t4 computations made from their. po- the majority opinion semingly sition reports. At that rate, 4 four- hour supply of gasoline, would haye land. The excitement of the past few) ¥ days sbems to have worricd all the |e, plane had boon in Sip 8 Oe Maui, and more than 400 miles from New York, July 15.—()—A story! steamer Wilhemina, about 700 miles of a battle with a 16-foot python that| cast of Honolulu, picked up the dis- ped from its crate and started|tress message from the monoplane roaming about sailors’ quarters of|City of Oakland in which its crew, the Isthmian Line freighter Steel|Ernest L. Smith and Emory B. ; He | Navigator was told, when the vessel|Bronte, reported they had. only had been Working as a second hand| docked here, after a voyage from! enough gasoline left to keep them up salesman, Smoke Screen Used itins rope, ‘The snake th ri - | vaded several bunks which the men|about 850 mil t and north in Auto Getaway hastily evacuated. It finally was Ias- reeoe rigiaeep mines eg if e The steamers President Pierce, - Atlenta, Ga., July 15-—U—Use of| Feturned to its crate. Wilhemina and army transport Ken- pitest by in tineeclad vottices deck eae a to kill, the te an ee) yg 8 ge City Te Looms Superior Singapore and the Straits Settlement.|four hours and asking that help .be The python was first discovered ~S it was a rope. The snake then in-| position at the time of the call was soed after a 15 minute struggle and (Gontinued on page three)’. —— ene (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) transfer of St. Cloud—Cloudy, 72; Mankato—Clear, 73; roads good. Imad day thee Winona—Partly’ cloudy, 72; rosdall register of sete 73; roads good. office : - Minot-—Cloudy, 87; roads ‘ain th a nchtaaaet: Duluth—Partly cloudy, 64 jtaken them to within 400, miley, of According to computations here, A short time later, Deputy Sheriff | plenipotentiaries, ‘They appear to| hours and eg sieges Jack Murphy of Dilworth reported he | ask nothing better than an opportun- oing across a field! ity for rest and for reflection on the le lost trace of them was presumably 500 miles from Paia, means of saving the situation. thenearest land. She probably fell short of Honolulu by some 700 miles. Honolulu, July 15.— (4) —The sent. when a sailor kicked it in the belief} The unofficial report of the plane's who on Se chot peices er t t