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J ; J i 3 : Partly cloudy tonight and Thurs- day. Slightly warger tonight. 'ABLISHED” 1873 4000 Execution of Anarchists May Be Postponed —_——— judge Will Not Give His Verdict on Defense Move Until Tomorrow Morning WAY THURSDAY Sanderson Must Decide Whether He Shall Permit Defense Those Planning to Cross At- Counsel’s Bill of Exceptions to Come Before Full Bench of the State Supreme Court FULLER'S DECISION ON EXECUTION STAY AWAITED Sacco Refuses to Sign Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus | but Denounces Courts Instead—Vanzetti Signs a Readily—Plans for Execution Complete Boston, Aug. cution of Nicola Sacco and: postponed from earl; move by defense counsel. He permit a bill of exceptions error and habeas corpus preme court. cution. chambers with Attorney Hill, chief defense counsel. Before the exceptions can the court, Judge Sanderson must give hig. consent. . ‘Picco today refused to sign a peti- tion for a writ of hal corpus which Alfonso Goglilo, an attorney Vanzetti him associated with the defense committee, submitted to at the state prison. Vanzetti signed the petition. oor lilo who had come to the prison wit! Michael Musmanno, another lawyer associated with the defense commit- tee, said after coming from the death house that Sacco had -become angry when the petition shown him, had denounced the courts and had exclaimet “They have .cruicifi last seven years, I will have no more to do with them.” ‘ Vanzetti, the lawyer said, had seemed pleased at the idea of the pe- titiin and had signed readily. ADEIROS LEAST CONCERNED oF THREE MEN OVER FATE Boston, Aug. 10—()—Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti awoke to- day to face what presumably was to be their last day of life. Unless Governor Alvan T. Fuller and his council decide to grant them an 11th hour: respite, or their coun- sel can succees in other last minute legal strategy, the seven-year fight of the condemned men to escape (Continued on page two.) { Weather Report | Weather conditians at North Da- kota points for the 26 hours ending at 7 a, m. today: ‘Temperature at 7 a. m. . Highest yesterday : Lowest last night . Precipitation to 7 a, m, Highest wind velocity me for the Amenia . BISMARCK Bottineau se 2282 SGRRSERRESSS £2 =< Moorhead, > WEATHER For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Slightly toni F pe ert ara cloudy iraday, warm- northeast a ou SeBIeeeeeses southwest For. week. endii Weather tavoratle x prevailed gen neally h: Oats, 10.—(AP)—The possibility that the exe- Bartolomeo Vanzetti might be tomorrow morning was seen when Judge Sanderson of the supreme court announced today that he would not give his decision until tomorrow morning on. a from his refusal to grant writs of } to go to the full bench of the su- Governor Fuller at 12:45 p. m. announcement of his decision on a petition for a stay of Announcement Follows Conference j fi cement The judge's emey General Reading and Arthur D. Reading and Hill, in a joint t, said that they had agreed substantially on the! Spe of the bill of exceptions and that: the bill would be put! in fine| shape this afternoon. is to decide whether he shall had made no exe-| followed a conference. in FERGUS FALLS MAN ELECTED THE BI , BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1927 RADICALS BATTLE CHICA the full bench of |fiwever to sein LEGION HEAD: j | OCEAN FLIGHT MAY GET UNDER lantic Anxiously Watch Weather Charts FRENCH FLYERS READY Early Start Vital to Drouhin —Contract Invalid If An- other Starts First Paris, Au 10.—(AP)—With weather litions over the At- lantic atill uncertain, it was said Lebourget field this morning at there was little chance of any of the transatlantic flight contenders hopping off within the next 48 hours. Paris, Aug. 10.—)—Impatient candidates for transatlantic flight honors, gathered at Lebourget, are spending most of their time in a room. where weather charts hang, waiting to see if the great depression which has been hovering over the Atlantic for days past shows any signs of lifting. Latest indications favor a start at {dawn Thursday, but it is nothing |more than a possibility at the pres- ent. Maurice Drouhin, French pilot of the American transatlantic plane Columbia, and Leon Givon, pilot of the “Blue Bird,” both are ready, the opportunity if it presents itself. Drouhin Must Start First It is a vital matter for Drouhi for should another plane start fir his contract with Charles A. Levin: owner of the Columbia, would auto- matically ‘fall through. Neverthe- less, he is determined to take no chances and) will not hop off unless e is reasonably certain of getting across. dl respect, news from the competitors has been more g so far as the French are , indicating the German New* Gopher State Comman- der Was Corporal in 60th ‘Ffeld Artillery Hipbing, Minn, Aug, 10—“)— Corporal L. E. Zumwinkle, of front- line experience in the world war, be- preparations “are less advanced than ‘was at first thought. The mysterious “Tango Bird” to be piloted. by Sub-Lieutenant Paul Taraseom, cannot be the first to get away, but it may be the fastest of the bevy of transatlantic aspirants, for its builders believe it can mantain a apeed of more than 120 miles an hour. It is understood this plane ‘ommander Zumwinkle today cam when the Minnesota American Legior convention made him department chief. Yumwinkle, whese, home is at Fer- gus Falls, as a corporal in the GOth field artillery participated in the victorious drives at St. Mihiel apa the Argonne forest which marked the turning: part .in the allies’ march to victory. Nine months after America de- clared war on Germany, Zumwinkle enlisted ag a private. He was sent to Fort Monroe, Virginia, for train- ing with the 60th coast artillery in December, 1917. The following April, Commander Zumwinkle’s outfit went overseas where it was converted into the 60th fild artillery and assigned to front line duty, His regiment helped lay down the barrage under which the 83) Vanks battled ahead to undying fame at St, Mihiel. And it was the deadly accuracy of the. artillery fire, ax typified by the 60th, that enabled the Americans to sweep forward to one of the most decisive victories of has dis- tinguished himself ate Legion activities, having rved first as post commander at Pelican Rapids, where he’ lived until three months ago, and tl ninth district com- mander. He a member of the ~ neck, face and ears sortnusly. injui state executive committee for two years. Community service work un- der his direction added to his laurel: The new command yer by profession, the law scho Minnesota. BEULAH MANIS Injuries Suffered by Lineman May Keep Him'in Hospi- Willie M. Keller, 24, who was in- jured recently at Beulah, probably will he confined to « local hospital for three months as the burns, it was learned 8 liners 1 the with elect: The dy arm and left leg; burned’ in his loth bane and charred the wach a severe shock and BADLY BURNED: will be given a 20-hour fight with- out load before it is subjected to the more delicate tests with a full load. H Picks Navigator é The other Fren competitor, Dieudonne Coste, who is tuning up a Bregeut planey will have Lieutenant Le Brix of the French navy as his navigator, it has just been decid: The team of Coste and Le Brix looked upon in aviation circles most end of all the planes to beat the Columbia. — All four pilots probably will take the northern route from Ireland to ‘New Foundland. MANY HOMES WRECKED BY Dynamite Blast’ Does Much Property Damage. in Small Oklahoma Town Picher, Okla, Aug. 10.) Ex: plosion of a dynamite magazine in the residential district of this min- ing center late last night wrecked or damaged more than a score of homes without any on Although many ed the bi to radical scouted this belief. Charles Safford, ‘said investigation ‘a indicate the cause of the explosion. He declared there had not. been ear radical demonstrations trict. it, which occurred on the y of the Vantage sining com- wrecked a derrick, transformer oa and ae nearby horas. ofs were damaged on a doz buildii and hundreds. of windows were broken, Several were reported Lago from the shock. acter - lates oso damage near the magazine et 0. A. Sneed, man ? r of the min- ing cotapany, ‘said there was. about in this di The bi 25 MEN First to Finish in Dole Air BYPLOSION Attendi ‘it was a Mists tie seas kota SS ~ BRING USED IN " BURLEIGH C0. Anderson Farm Near Mc- Kenzie Proves Value CUTS 50 ACRES Each Trip Around 100-Acre Field Brings 20 Bushels of Grain ° Marking decided change from harvesting in previous years is the combined harvester-thresher now be- | ing used on the Erwin Anderson farm ; near McKenzie. | e machine, one of the first to |be used in this county, cuts’ and threshes the grain at one time. It is pulled by a tractor but has its own | power unit, so that it is possible to tor and still maintain the same | threshing speed. It is also possible {to cut the grain just as high or low Fresh from his conquest of the Atlantic. Copmander Richard E.\as_is desired. Byrd went to Detroit and got Edsel Ford’s promise to back his com- ing flight to the south pole_ The famous explorer and the equally famous auto magnate are shown together here outside Ford's office, | with Bytd START PACIFIC Race Will Get $25,000, With $10,000 Going to Second Plane to Complete Trip— Qther Flyers Prepare For Long Trips San Diego, Calif., Aug. 10— (AP)—Lieutenants George Covell and R. W. Waggener, U. S. N., who left here today in ‘an air- plane er had entered in the Dole flight to Honolulu, were killed when the ship crashed into Point Loma, near here. The plane was destroyed less than 15 minutes after they had left for the Oakland, Calif., air- port where they intended to take off Friday in the flight to Hono- lulu. The plane burst into flames after it struck Poini Loma. From the position of the plane, it was believed it had struck the west bank of the poipt as the airmen were en- titude. cockpit of the charred beyond recognition, iden- tification being made from a wal- let found in his coat. Wagse- ner's body later was recovered from the wreckage and also was badly burned. faggener is he- lieved to have endeaverod to jump clear of the pli as it fell, but wae caught in wreckage. The men.drew number 13 in the Dole air rac San Francisco, Aug, 10.—()— Twenty-five men and a girl havel d their lives and aviati: en- sts from all over the country have contributed, more than $200,000 in ‘their: attempt to. win $35,000 in prizes for the tirst two planes to fly fro. here to Honolulu two days Such was the lineup today as the 18 entrants in the Dole air derby entered their last 48 hours of pre- Himinaries. Meanwhile, other Ameri- can flyers were busy on. projected flights to Rome, to South America, and dround the world, Paul R. Redfern, who is in Bruns- wick, Ga., the starting point of his forthcoming non-stop dash to Brazil —, 1,900 mile stretch of water inter- vening—announced _yesterday he would take off in a.tew days. Test Flight Delayed The Fokker monoplane “Old Glory” was kept on the ground at Curtiss Field, New York, by a heavy run- way, and test flights preparatory to the hop-off for Rome late this month Were postponed until tomorrow. Lloyd W. rtaud and James D. Hills, the pi crew, sald their test flight would be a hop to Cleveland. x ‘The round-the-world flight of Ed- ward Schlew-of Detroit, which is planne: begin in New Foundland goon, was still in the test stage at Washington. Schlep hopes to cut the 28-day round-the-world travel record considerably by long hops. Tl it of the 13 aiian flight is ~ Degen Se ‘exes, it e in ie fund back their favorite flying son, Captain, William Erwin. The fund taised comes principally from groups of business men, beek- ing flyers who reputations f town lurance» or stunt’ 1ane | since it AND ONE GIRL eae fe on'the left. EREADY 10 - rae T0 HONOLULU Hgts os Tag’s Pony to Be Named Tomorrow Tomorrow's the day, | kiddiest Tagalong, with the | help of Freckles, his mother, his father, and all the neighborhood - kids, has nearly finished the work of over the letters from his nds in North Dakota and oth- her sates, By tomorrow, he ex- pects to know which name the most youngsters suggest for his pony. Wateh tomorrow's. paper for his announcement. LATE GRAINS RUST DAMAGED | REPORTS.SAY {Bank of North Dakota Field Agents Reduce Their Yield ‘Estimrfes The machine is being used on a 100-: field of rye and on each trip around threshes about 20 bush- he acre. It will cut approximate- lly 50 acres a day and takes a swath 20 feet wide on each trip. | Two trucks were kent busy hauling the prain from the field to the ele- vator at MeKenzie, County Agent A, visted the The com lelean. he ne apparently threshed 0 rye could be J, since found coming out with straw and no |heads were found which were not jthoroughly threshed. The machine leaves the straw in a row behind it and also has attachments so that the straw n be spread over the field, or a carrier can be pyt on to col- lect it. OF MOTORISTS I$ CRITICIZED Work of Sending Out Title Certificates Is Delayed, 4 Ingstad Says eo =— i—p} i—PF = == ==) = a TR Failure of some motorists to com- ply with all details of the new law requiring registration of titles to motor vehicles is work of sending out title certificates, State Registrar Fred B. Ingstad said today. entirely stop or slow down the trac- {| els, equivalent to about 22 bushels | farm, | slowing up the |( CK TRIBUNE [naam] 18-Year-Old AGO POLICE Girl Leads Parade Into Loop Area; 71 Placed Under Arrest ; Demonstration Starts Following Meeting at Auditorium in” Protest Against Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti— Mob Gains Recruits as It Surges Ahead | Machine in Use on Erwin) AUTOMOBILES AND STREET CARS ARE DAMAGED | Officers Use Tear Bombs in Dispersing Crowd and Oné A DAY Volley of Shots Is Fired But None is Seriously Hurt —Public Buildings Heavily Guarded Chicago, Aug. 10.—(AP)—Four thousand infuriated Sacco-Vanzetti sympathizers, led by an 18-year-old girl, 'shouting defiance to “capitalism and law,” singing the hymn |of the “third internationale,” zetti must not die,’ |radicalism here last night. joined by others, with a few parade into the loop. f Girl Takes anarchist. Follow me!” women, massed from curb to loop. the passengers. reenacted, ARKANSAS IS FLOOD SWEPT FOR 3RD TIME Little Rock, Arkansas, Aug. 10.— (#)—Swept by three successive floods outheastern Arkansas to- inundation again as flood |waters of the Arkansas river poured {through gaps in the levees at Pen- At present, he said, his department \is 15 days behind in the work of sending out the certificates and sev- leral clerks are spending their entire Although much of the early grainjtime in sending back to applicants crop is beyond damage by rust, lat grains will be severely. damaged in many parts of the’ state, aceordin, to reports by field agents of th Bank of North Dakota, received her today. Practically every part of the stat is affected with the heaviest damag in certain sections of the Red River Previous weekly reports b the field agents indicated that rus! was prevalent but that the damag had been slight. Reporting from __ southwester North Dakota, C. A. Seamands said. that “notwithstanding reports’ an opi aeaie sed the quality and yield it ny fields. Some fields that looke like they would make 20 bushels an ‘acre or better probably will make | modate the ne of the worst features of the rust sit- | handle the work expeditiously. uation, he said, is that the straw “is not going to stand up but a few days He says ts that had been Jet stand a few days too long and it though. a hail storm had only 10 to 15 bushels, he said. after it is ready to be cut.’ he saw a field of looked. as struck it, not over 20 per cent of th stalks remained standing. A heav; rain or wind storm ‘w ions _to the contrary,” rust has| ti Id do great id. Despite these un €;blanks which lack one or more de- tails. Ingstad is asking that persons making application make sure that | all the questions asked on the blanks e/ are answered in, full and that ‘separ- at tions are made for motor e | vehi nses and certificates of e Another point which should not be y ked, he said. is that in regis- tering a new car it essary to make application for a certificate of | title at the same time that applic: n{tion is made for a motor vehicle li- 8 Hi t applications for d ration haverbeen returned on t, he said. in 1 another factor, Ingstad said, d!is that the office space alloted department is insufficient to accom- number of extra clerks which would be necessary ae le has put on as many as he can crowd into his office but could use others if he had space in which they could work. : At present, he said, he does not expect to complete the registration ie title work until the first of the r. however, Seamands| Military Training rage yield for th southwestern as the best in 20 years. erable acreage North Dakota of winter is uniformly good, corn hai Will Be Continued Students attending the state uni- oats and barley east of! versity and state agricultural college the Missouri river are.better than ii the western section while flax, ‘corn and alfalfa appear better west of th lriver. Spring wheat... ‘are ready or almost be good while later fields “may or may not ih the not.” He 01 ines that consid [ corn “seed wai See kia beta seey bard po tale oo" the grain. from filling elds. which : ad territory. This wil} Ww! Me ces Wind he pat in| will continue to receive military training unless they have good reason eto be excused. | Upon his return from the hospital, J. A. Kitchen, commissioner of agri- culture and’ labor and a member of the state: board of administration, voted against the Church resolution to discontinue compulsory milita! training at the two institutio: ‘hen the board first considered matter the four members were equal ly: divided on the question. N. P. Yardmaster at elds are not worth cut- on, report! ples; it was ennounces x i, le Torment et succeeds in‘the the state St. Paul, ¥ ic raliway at Fa N. D. iieeiones visimeeiar at "Sta Theodore Harris, it inted trainmaster at will stand. | Mont. i. be. ready to harvest} Mr. Hogan, who was a mem! ‘will not | the. 20. city commission his asa {| cot counties, ber of |square tor eight | details Laipenin'et pte feat: un remains {dleton and Medford, 40 miles south {of Pine Bluff. Arkansas City, out from under pared to carry on if the approaching flood reached the city. The water jwas expected to reach outskirts of the town late today, but it was not believed the city would be flooded. Desha and Chicot counties are bearing the brunt of the present flood as they are in the area of the Pendleton and Medford gaps in the levee. Approximately 100,000 acres will be inundated, it was estimated, but the damage will be small as lit- tle of the tillable land has been re- planted since the June flood. Residents of the area are not ex- pécted to evacuate the territory. Relief agencies are still caring for 25,000 persons QUAKE TAKES Official Reports of May 23 _Temblor Just Coming In From China | Peking, Aug.’10.—)—Fifty thou- sand dead in the Liangchow district of Kansu province as a consequence of the disastrous’ earthquake of May 28, is the latect Chinese official re- port as sent from Lanchow by Mon- signor Theodore Buddenbrock, of the Steyl mission at Liangehow. The clergyman, who sent the first de- tailed account of the terrible quake, says in x communication dated July "4We are sitting in the midst of the misery produced by the great quakes Apparently crazed by the oratory of the gelo, the mob swept from a protest meeting a uled execution of Vanzetti and Sacco, and stormed down the street. bound for the loop and the city hall. The meeting at the auditorium had passed quietly enough, the 3,000 who attended passing resolutions of protest: against the Sacco-Vanzetti executions and then moving out in orderly fashion to the street. There they congregated, being As the mob surged forward it picked up recruits. first violence came when those at the front seized an auto- mobile slashed its tires, broke its windows and swept on, leaving the driver terror-stricken. halted and the trolley pulled from the wire, while men and women crowded aboard shouting “strike! strike!” terrorizing Another car was halted and the same scene Southeastern Part of State) Faces Inundation Through Levee Gaps flocd waters less than a month, pre-| j about. from Desha and Chi-; ling. and crying “Sacco and Van- * battled 400 Chicago police armed with tear bombs and machine guns, in a savage outbreak of irl, Aurora Dan- inst the sched- leaders calling for a protest Command The girl was among them and at once took command. “I’m an anarchist,” she cried, “and my father was an The street was soon filled for three blocks with men and curb and moving toward the The Next a street car was By the time the parade neared the downtown district, police reserves were speeding to meet the march and~ as the procession swung toward an intersection it was met with tear bombs and threatening pistols in the hands of the reserve One Volley Fired The police charged the crowd, us- ing clubs and tear gas bambs. There was one volley of shots, but it was not repeuted, police orders being to avoid firing unless necessary. In the confusion the police arrested 67 men and four women, including the girl. The collapse of the demonstration was even more dramatic than its in- ception, Breaking before the police wall moving toward them, members of the crowd sought safety in flight. Those in front found their retreat blocked by the forward movement of the thousands behind. Several rioters were trampled in the wild scramble to escape. Win- dows were shattred, doors broken down and motor cars parked at the curbs were damaged. A check, how- ever, indicatd that no one was seri- jured. The girl leader, her flimsy dress partly torn from’ her shoulders in the wild milling of her follower: stood on the running board of automobile as the breakup of the loop-ward movement came. “I'm only a kid,” she shouted, “but 1 guess I know what I'm talking Let me talk!” Puts Up Desperate Fight Two policemn stopped the auto- mobile and pulled her down. She broke from them and ran nearly two blocks before she was caught. trapped, she rained blows with her small, ‘impotent fists upon the offi- cers and kicked them. Finally in 2 police car the girl sobbed: “I'm only a kid,” she kept repeat- “Ain't this a free country? I know what this means to my people, and I'm ready to go to jail for it.” | The girl, it developed, has been 50,000 LIVES taking 2 high school course prepara- tory to the study of law. One of her lieutenants in the demonstration was a University of Chicago student, Dave Wollins, 22, who accompanied her in her dash from the polie and who was arrested with her. Wollin was described as one of the found- . ers of*the Liberal League. The po- lice said that three years ago he was expelled from Northwestern Univer- sity for causing a near riot on the campus in a protest against secret socities. Armed Guatds Placed... As a reslult of the outbreak, the police placed armed guards srou! various places where it was feared there might be violence. These in- cluded the home of Cardinal Munde- leim and the adjoining chancery ef. fices, headquarters of the Roma Catholic church in Chicago, The federal building, county jail ready of May 23. Shocks are continuing daily, without. damage owing. to In the Liangchow district, were killed in that quake, accordin; sons are wanderi trict. 4 here . He Bocnuse ot the ause fons, ‘the fall story te be told. Sh {the wholesale destruction of May 23. 50,000 | scat to Chinese official reports. Four ety tor thousand homeless, half starved per-| pol bout the dis- and other public buildings "Until the “Sacco-Vanaetti interest ni cO- has subsided, 2,000 police have been held for reserve duty and in four ttered. stations: machine jotguns squads are held instant