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i cee’ =r ETS NORTH DAKOTA'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ESTABLISHED 1873 FOUR WOMEN KILLED, MANY INJUR BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1928 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Cloudy and warmer tonight. Sunday somewhat unsettled. PRICE FIVE CENTS) ED IN BLAS Japanese Continue to Strengthen Their Position in Shantung CONGRESSMAN DICKINSON OF IOWA TO BE PRINCIPAL SPEAKER HERE JULY 4 ORDER BEING RESTORED IN BATTLE AREA Telegraph and Telephone Lines, Cut During Fighting, Again in Use TROOPS ARE REINFORCED 20,000 Men Ready to Be Moved Into War Torn Province —Tientsin Restless Shanghai, May 12—(AP)—The Japanese in Shatung continued to strengthen their position today and there were indications that order was gradually being restored. Thc telegraphs and telephones be- tween Tsingtao and Tsinan, which were cut when Chinese nationalists and Japanese battled for possession of Tsinan, were in use again, The Japanese aircraft tender Notoro arrived at Tsingtao, strengthening the Japanese war- craft gathered in Chinese waters. The Japanese railroad authorities in Tokyo were rdered to prepare for a large troop movement to Shan- tung between Sunday and the end of the month. Twenty thousand men were in the force to be moved into the war torn province, bringing the Japanese strength there to about 28,000. Also 5,360 horses will be shipped to Shantung. A Japanese news dispatch from Tientsin said there was great unrest among the Chinese there. FLYERS G0 T0 GREENLY ISLE T0 GET BREMEN Two U.S. Army Pluses Mak Trip in Charge of Major General Fechet New York, May 12 expedition of two Unit army amphibian planes today was on its way to Greenly Island to aid in bringing out the transatlantic monoplane Bremen. Taking off from Washington yes- terday afternoon, the flyers spent the night at Miller field, Staten Island, where Fred Melchoir, chief mechanic of the Junkers company, builders of the Bremen, joined them. They hope to reach Greenly Island Monday, making stops for fuel along the way at Portland, Me., Pic- (Continued on page two) ——_—$ 2 f Weather Report _ } o—_—_. Temperature at 7 a. m. Highest yesterday Lowest last night . Precipitation to 7 a. m. Highest wind velocity . Te Temps North Dakota— 59| incident. Hanson states | able limits. Of cous a PICKLES ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY FOR Only Person in Race So Far Against Miss Bertha Pal- mer, Incumbent—Seeks Of- fice Unindorsed by Any Po- litical Party. or Faction, He Says Announcement of his candidacy for state superintendent of public instruction was made here today by Claude E. Pickles, Bismarck. So far as is known here he is the only person to announce himself as a can- didate against Miss Bertha Palmer, incumbent. “T am seeking this office unin- dorsed Rea political_ party or faction,” Pickles said. “This being &@ no-party office the same s‘.ould be free from broken political prom- ises or new ones to break.” Pickles, who is 42 years old, is married and has two children. He was born at Anna, Illinois, and was educated in the IMlinois rural schools and at the Southern Illinois Normal University. He received a bachelor of science degree from Valparaiso University, in Valparaiso, Ind., in 1911 and in 1922 received the de- gree of bachelor of arts in educa- tion from the Valle; City state teachers college. le taught rural schools for three ears, was superintendent of classi- ‘ied high: schools for five years and served four years in the office of intendent of public instruction, as state high teacher, high ‘sahool examiner and deputy state superintendent. le left the department of public instruction when Miss Palmer took office and has since engaged in the insurance business here. DRY OFFICERS UNDER ORDERS NOT 70 SHOOT Promiscuous Firing at Sus- pected Law Violators Must Stop at Once Washington, May 12.—(#)—Pro- hibition enforcement agents throughout the country were under fresh and strict orders today from Washington that promiscuous shoot- ing at suspected law violators must ene once, e new ‘warning went out from dry headquarters in the treasury ment that Robert Taylor, a West Virginia enforcement agent, dism: from firing at an au- tomobile that failed to stop for in- spection. ae Although somewhat similar to the shooting of John D. Hanson of Nia- gara Falls, New York, by coast ismen, which is now causing a row in congress, Commissioner Dor- an said the dismissal of Taylor and @) the issuance of the new orders to his men had no connection with that He explained that the case was ourely a cosst guard matter, even though this arm participates in the enforcement of the ay law. “we i aes i “ages it fe are ing up with fis on ‘vehicles on ways whether they stop when commands ed or not,” Doron said. “We will certainly not shield officers charged with this offense and we will aid at any time within reasgn- had fired on an automobile on the highway near Huntington, West Virginia, in direct-violation of or- Amenia . 61 25 0 Clear BISMARt 59 36 0 Clear Bottineau 59 33 0 Clear Crosby . 60 33 0 PtCldy Dickinson 62 39 0 Clear Dunn Center 60 37 0 Clear Ellendale ... 32 0 Clear Fessenden .. 25 0 Clear Grand Forks .. 58 28 0 Clear Hettinger ..... 38 0 Clear Jamestown . 29 0 Clear Langdon ...... 31 0 Clear Larimore . 25 0 Clear Lisbon .. 26 0 Clear Minot .. 31 0 Clear Napoleon . 26 0 Clear Pembina .. 58 28 Clear Williston . 48 0 Clear Moorhead, Minn. 58 34 0 Clear South Dakota— Huron .. 60 34 0 Clear Pierre .. 66 40 0 Clear Rapid oy, aan 38 0 Clear WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: In- creasing cloudiness and warmer to- night. Sunday somewhat unsettled, ‘or North Dakota: Increasing cloudiness and warmer tonight. Sunday somewhat unsettled; warm- er extreme east and cooler extreme west re EATHER CONDITIONS The high pressure area, with its accompanying cold weather, is mov- ing slowly southeastward and centered over the upper Mississippi Valley this morning. vid frost 6 in morn: = oceurred at a few the north-central states . A trough of low pressure from Alberta southward to and Arizona while another “! has appeared over the north cific coast. Precipita’ i LE ders issued by Administrator Pen- ni it regulations of an o! , or failing to stop when ordered are not felonies, ex- Protests Hanson Shooting ‘The latest outburst over the Han- occurred he ast commandant, has been cere cine before the Senate committee simultaneously with the announce-. had] Baldwin; : fH SUPERINTENDENT PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Today in Congress Senate continues tax debate as House takes up Buchanan bill to control pink boll worm and bills on consent calendar. Senate campaign funds com- mittee again examines James ma of Hoover organiza- House naval, postoffice and Indian affairs committees study minor measures on calendars. JURORS DRAWN FOR NEXT TERM OF COURT HERE Term Will Open Tuesday, June 5, With Judge Jansonius on Bench With a calendar of average length in prospect, the spring jury term of {Burleigh county district court will 9 at the courthouse here on ‘uesday, June 5, it was announced [today by Clerk of Court Charles Minnie J. Nielson, then state super-/ Fisher. Judge Fred Jansonius will be on the bench, with Edwin McCarty act- as court reporter. ‘orty-two Burleigh county citizens were selected for prospec- tive jury service at that term this mo! at the clerk’s office, by Sheriff Rollin Welch, Treasurer G. L. Spear and Mr. Fisher. Fifteen of them are residents of this city, while the others live elsewhere in the county. Prospective Jurors The Bismarck residents include L. H. Richmond, Joe Brown, F. W. Murphy, Ray V. Stair, J. C. Beattie, bf A. Jones, P. R. Webb, S. F. H. E. Spohn, B. F. Logan, G. N. aay mon Tom Cayou, W. G. Worner an P. G.' Harrington. Those residing elsewhere in the county, with their postoffice ad- dresses, follow: Adrian Asbridge, Bismarck; Isaac Kennila, Wing, route 8; C. M. dohns, Wing; A. Thy- sell, Bismarck; K. A. Ersland, Dris- coll; E. A. Trygg, Baldwin; John McCormick, Menoken; W. F. Keeler, Driscoll; Tony Newgebauer, Bis- marck; Arthur Nelson, Wing; Burl R. Monroe, Wilton, route 3; Den McDonald, Bismarck; H. N. Mene- fee, Bismarck; D. J. Warren, Bis- marck; Geo. McMurrich, Britton; Carl Seichert, Wilton; Arnold Peter- son, Braddock; Mrs. Jay Delong, Lee Sanders, Bismarck; Ernest Lange, Wilton; F. B. Loomis, Sterling; L. H. Knowles, Wing; Alto ‘Uhae, Regan; H. E. O'Neill, McKenzie; Geo. McIntyre, Arena; Mrs. Bertha Ellison, Sterling; Eddie Rasche, Regan. ‘The sheriff's office will serve notices on those whose names were drawn in the near future. They Woman’s Name Is Mother By DR. DANIEL A. POLING (Minister, Marble Collegiate Church, New York, and President, Inter- national Society of Christian Endeavor) ., Woman, thy holiest name is Mother! Mother, not by the number of children you bear, but by the deepest instinct of your nature, by the master passion of your soul. Mother is the name of woman, whether she bears and mothers her own children or mothers the children of another, or the waifs of a city or the refugees of a desolation. Call her intuition, for she has the sense of future events. Call her Courage, for she is braver than the bravest of the brave. The lonely path she takes into the primal darkness where no. man has ever gone, but whence every man has come, is a more fearsome adventure '.| than the questing of continents and the charting of seas. Call her Comfort, for even God could find no richer figure—“As one whom his mother comforteth, so I will comfort you.” , Call her Sacrifice, for she gives her all—body, mind, and spirit; pines all gladly and weeping only that, having given all, she has nothing left to give. Call her Patience, for in her this grace has its perfect work. Call her Forgiveness. Aye, call her Forgiveness, and into forgive- ness blend the colors, the fadeless colors, of unchangeableness. She is “the same yesterday, today and forever.” Heaven and Earth may pass away for you, Sir, but your mother will never move. She will be wait- ing for you, waiting for you when, hungry and naked, you come whim- pering back. All others may condemn you for your weakness and curse you for your sin, but she will piece together your broken life, call it beautiful, and with her naked hands lift your bleeding heart again to God and claim for you His healing. And Faith—call her Faith at last and to the last—faith when all else fails and all others flee. Intuition, courage, comfort, sacrifice, patience, forgiveness, and faith—these arc the seven perfect parts of mother love, mother love, which, next to the love of Christ, is most sublime. N. D. PURE-BRED SIRE SALE STARTS IN GRAND FORKS TODAY-TRAIN WILL will be summoned to appear at 10 ‘a. m., on the opening day of court— Tuesday, June 5. ITALIA WILL NERD REPAIRS ON ITS MOTOR Engine Badly Damaged by Dragging on Ground in * Landing Yesterday Ki Spitzbegen, May 12. hE Tae ditpible Tealia was in her hangar today with a damaged right motor caused when the airship was dragged along the ground on ing from an unsuccessful at- tempt to explore lar regions. Thick fog and a blinding snowstorm caused General Umberto Nobile to turn back. The e_will require ‘irs before an flight can be att dd. General. Nobile a4 ha he wa reached Franz Josep! |, one of the few bits of land breaking the monotonous stretches of ice and wa- ter, when fog prevented observations. Attempts were made to find a way at altitudes ranging from 100 to 1,000 meters but all to no avail. The trip to explore the little known Lenin land, formerly Nich- olas II land, was therefore aban- doned, a land ie only vagvely represented on most maps of the arctic regions and General Nobile had hoped to learn what the Rus- sians, who discovered it in 1913, had failed to find out. Instead of anticipated flight of 40 hours, however, the Italia was in her han- gar again eight hours after starting and Lenin land remained as vague as ever. : Olle I. Skratthult Coming Here Again F place where the sho it iven and further an- nounced later. / 28, May 29, Willistor MAKE TWO WEEKS’ TOUR ACROSS STATE sembled at Grand vw | MAY FESTIVAL AWARDS GIVEN OUT AT DINNER R. B, Murphy, F. E. Diehl and W. J. Chureh of Bismarck Are Speakers Fargo, May 11—()—May festival activities reached their climax at the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege last night when prizes were awarded to the high teams and high individual’ who competed in the agricditural, literary, dramatic, forensic, dancing and home econom- ies contests. The festival will close Farmers from Several Coun- ties Gather There to Make Selections — Much Interest Shown Grank Forks, N.'D., May 12.—The pure bred sire sale in Grand Forks today is proving as interesting to farmers and business men of Grand Forks and adjoining counties as a regular livestock show. Farmers are here from several counties to select pure bred sires from the 250 head assembled for the series of sales over the Great Northern Rail- way system in North Dakota, the first sale being conducted here to- day at the fair’ grounds. The animals. were shown in the livestock buildings at the fair grounds and are creating interest comparable with the interest in animals shown in the same buildings during the 4 Burned to Death Greeley, Colo, May 12.— (AP)—Four persons perished and another burned when fire stroyed the ranch home of Adolph Maize, near La Salle, Colo. The dead: Mrs. Maize,* 34, and three children, 6; Mary, 4 and a baby four months old. Albert, 8, ran from the house with his clothes in flames. 2 PILOTS LOSE LIVES AS FORD PLANE CRASHES Machine Catches Fire and Both Bodies Burned Before Announcement Made Today by Speakers’ Committee That Well-known Representative Will Be on Program—lIs One of Leaders of Farm Bloc in Congress Congressman L. J. Dickinson of the tenth district of Iowa will be the orator of the day at Bismarck’s Fourth of July celebration, it was announced by the speakers’ commit- tee today. ested in farming all of his life, Con- gressman Dickinson ha. been one of the leaders of the farm bloc in con- gress. He is regarded as an author- ity on agriculture. Mr. Dickinson, who makes his home at Algona, was born in Lucas county, October 29, 1873. He is a descendant of Nathaniel Dickinson of Hadley who settled in Massachu- setts in 1630. Educated in the public schools of his native county, Congressman Dickinson early decided on law as a Being Recovered Detroit, Mich., May 12—(®)—Two pilots of the Ford Motor company were killed today when a tri-motor transport plane crashed and caught | attorney fire soon after taking off from the] Ford airport at 8:45 a. m. The men killed were William Munn and E. K. Parker, both of Detroit. The pilots were on their first reg- ular run to Buffalo, N. Y., on a freight route. Edward G. Hamilton, chief of operations of the Ford air line serv- ice, said the accident occurred when Munn, who was at the controls, forced the plane off the ground without sufficient flying speed. Soon after rising the big airship stalled, slid off on one wing and spun to the ground near the Mich- igan Central railroad tracks close to the air port. The plane was wrecked and both men are believed to have died almost instantly. Both Men Married Munn formerly was a test pilot for the Hess Aircraft company of Wyandotte, a suburb. Parker for- merly resided at Denver, Colo. Both were married and both only recently had become pilots for the Ford air- line service. The plane an.all-metal airship carried a loa. of freight. | When it crashed a broken wing punctured the gasoline tank and the fuel was ignited. It was more than an hour after the accident before the bodies of the victims, both burned, could be recovered. “ The fatalities were the first in- Saturday with a program consisting largely of athletic events, Awards were made at a dinner at which talks were given by R. B. Murphy, F. E. Diehl and W. J. Church of the state board of admin- istration, and president John Lee Coulter, Dean H. L. Walster, Dean Alba Bales, and Professor 0. A. Barton of the college staff. Benson County Agricultural high school, Maddock, received the great- est number of points and was awarded the sweepstakes prize for the second consecutive time in the home economics contest. Beach placed second, Jamestown third and Lakota and Edgely were given hon- orable mention. Central high school, Fargo, by state fair each year. The sires were selected from the best herds in the United States and Canada by the Greater North Da- kota association and the Agricul- tural Credit corporation, these two institutions having invested ap- proximately $50,000 in the animals. The sales are to further advance the better farming programs inaugur- ated by James J. Hill and continued by his successors, At other points where sales will be held, the animals will be sold from a special train. Train Starts Monday Monday the Sire Sale train starts west over the Great Northern rail- road, stopping at Larimore Monday morning and Niagara Monday aft- tiaindcr of the week follows: Tues- mai of the week follows: Tues-| securing 49 points, ranked first in day, Northwood and _ Hatton: |the exhibits contest in the class hav- Wednesday, Lakota; _Thursday,|ing over 4,000 ‘population while Devils Lake; Friday, ‘and | Dickinson came second. La Moure York; Saturday, Rugby and Towner. |secured the greatest number of The schedule for the remainder of | points, the tour is Pa a ane cinl ‘ Westhope, Bottineau, ww Citys! There is a ring. bel to May 22° Sherwood, Glenburn, Gran: | p,rhete is ring. belonging ville; ‘May 23, Minot; May 24, of honor, formerly. occupied Noonan, Coteau, Berthold; May 25, ‘a diamond, is to a human Wildrose, McGregor; May} tooth. It cost $8750 and was the 28, Tioga, Ray: | tooth of Sir Isaac Newton. “Rubayat” of | Omar Khayyam, '166-thou- is the tiniest volume in sandths of an inch across and 6- '| hundredths of an if mn. “It Id be difficult to over- estimate the value of this under- agricultural interests of North Dakota,” C. W. Wilkins, ish Museum; it is only _.. (Continued on page two) inch thick. ¥ ‘\Civil Action Against volving a Ford tri-motored airplane. DOORKEEPER OF CARD CLUB I$ SHOT DOWN: Bandits Get Away With Much Cash After Terrorizing Patrons Kansas City, May 12.—After kill- ing a doorkeeper and wounding Wal- ter Franklin, widely known Kansas City billiard player, bandits last night lined up 70 odd patrons of a| men’s card club here and escaped with a large amount of cash. The body of James F. Brown, 50, . a doorkeeper, was found at the en- trance. He was shot three times. Franklin was struck in the chest by one of about 30 bullets he*esti- mated the bandits fired to intimidate the patrons. Physicians said he would recover. s Franklin said at least four bandits entered the place, known as the Hub club, and started shooting at the ceiling. When several, men dived under tables instead of lining up against a wall as directed, he said, the bandits fired into the floor and kicked and beat those who were slow in obeying instructions. Accounts of how much money was obtained varied, but several wit- nesses agreed at least $1,000 in bills was taken from one table, in ad- dition to loot taken in a hasty search of patrons. Wheat Growers’ Group StandsUpon Demurrer 12.— district court of F. W. Co) . et al, against Geo: E. is and other eles of the North Dakota ‘Wheat Growers’ nanoclay, execu- = ent of affairs of association and asking for an accounting, now stands. upon a, demurrer to an amended complaint, which was filed | |ch ing misman-| so life pursuit. Ho graduated from Cornell college, Iowa, in 1898. In 1899 he received his law degree from the state university of Towa, and was immediately admitted to the Mr. Dickinson served as county of Kossuth county for two terms. He was committeeman from the tenth Iowa district on the Re- publican state central committee from 1914 to 1918. He was elected to the 66th, 67th, 68th and 69th con- gresses and won his seat in the 70th congress without opposition. He is a member of the house committee on appropriations. CLOTHING OF Born on an Iowa farm and he ve seriously EXPLOSION OF STEAM MANGLE IS DISASTROUS Accident Occurs This Morn in Laundry Building at Kokomo, Ind. MANY WORKERS SCALDED Building Is Wrecked an Others Within Two Blocks Are Badly Damaged Kokomo, Ind., May _12.—)—Fou women were killed, six person injured and 15 o were suffering from shock bruises as a result of the explosio of a flat work steam mangle in th Fridlin laundry here this morning. The dead are: Rozella Courtney, 17. The fourth body was unidenti The women were working on mangle when the blast occurred. Th one story brick laundry buildin was wrecked and window panes buildings for two blocks surround ing the laundry were blown out. The mangle was situated in th center of the main room of th laundry where about 25 women and girls were employed. The explo: tore out the front of the buildin and blew a large hole in the roof off the structure. Many of the work were badly scalded by the stean which filled the room. Elmer Merrill, engineer at tl laundry plant, could not account fe the explosion, He said that he just started to heat up the machi for the day’s work and that the: was only a pressure of about 70 pounds when the blast occurred. He said that the machine usually cat ried a pressure of from 85 to 90 pounds. The mangle, he said, in good endition. WOMEN SCORED | BY POPE PIUS | | Pontiff Complains the Faith- ful Neglect Ecclesiastic Discipline (#)—Women’s | of the feast of his own patron saint, Achilles the Martyr, the document deals with “the reparation that all owe to the most sacred heart of Jesus.” It im-| presses upon all the duty of asking| forgiveness for looseness of morals and neglect of religious practices. The Pontiff complains that — thi faithful neglect ecclesiastic pline and forget Christian tradition “which is the support of the en’ ian life, regulates dome: y and defends the holiness of | marriage.” He continues: , too, the education of youth is entirely neglected or spoiled by effeminate care, while the church i: even denied the faculty of giving toj| youth a Christian education. “Christian modesty has been lam-| entably forgotten in the way of] living and the dressing of women, especially while an insatiable hunger | for the perishable things of this world, anxious seeking for popular | i favor and a disdain of legitimate authority and the word of God pre- dominate, thus shaking the faith or) endangering it seriously.” Alludes to Russia, Mexico The Pope is believed to have al- luded to Ru and Mexico when, in reviewing the world situation, he id: ms rom the extreme confines of the east to the last frontier of the | west, we hear the cry of peoples to us whose governments have risen and conspired together against the Lord and his church. ie “In those nations we saw divine and human right trampled upon, churches destroyed down to their foundations, ecclesiastics and saint- ly virgins driven from their homes, imprisoned, starved and afflicted with opprobrious tortures. — “Legions of boys and girls were torn from the bosom of the mother church and_ exhorted to deny and blaspheme Christ, being led into the worst crimes of luxury. In other words the entire christian people has been threatened and op- pressed, in constant danger of apostasy from faith or of a most atrocious death.” School Inspections Are Nearly Finished Inspection of county rural and consolidated pablic Aeboole in Nee Dakota applying for is nearly completed, according to H. H. Hanson, state inspector. Approximately $219,000 was tributed to the schools during the last season, according to Mr. Han- mn. At the present time, he said, there are about 1,800 schools in North Da- kota that are on the state aid list. These are divided into equal num- istrict court here April 13, coun- be defendants announced yester- day. The demurrer must be Secided by the court before trial upon mer- its of the case. ease ge ‘The grounds that the amseded A somvlaes fails to state a cause ion in law. This is the same objection taken by the defense when the case come up for trial on the ot complaint, and which was sustained by the court.: s bers in the eastern and western sec- tions of the state, and inspectors are sent there to find if the schools menare up to the state require- men! Requirements fixed by the state concern the Longe oe of Hg school, buildings, grounds, play- ground eauipment, heating, lighting and ventilating facilities. the gen- eral and reference libraries, labora- tory equipment and an adequate equipment of text books. {a former amateur boxing champion, {theatre and rele: | Swearing and foul language judged SEATTLE HAS MYSTERIOUS, BOMB BLAST Detonation Between Two The-| atres Breaks Windows, Rocks District Seattle, Wash., May 12.—(—A theatre bombing which left as clues only a sheet iron stage door riddled with scrap iron slugs and the con- flicting stories of a half dozen wit-| nesses turned into a mystery today to police who were investigating. It was the sixth theatre bombing this year. The bomb, manufactured with a motion picture can and dynamite and loaded with rusty scrap iron, xploded in the alley between the ‘colonial and Capitol theatres here last night while both show houses were filled. The detonation, which shattered) indows in the alley and rocked the business district, alarmed theatre visitors and crowds in adjacent streets and caused a near panic in the audience of the Colonial theatre, This house was the apparent object of the bombers. The only arrest made since the ception of the bombing campaign was that of Thomas J. Woodhouse, who was taken April 23, charged with the bombing of the Embassy sed on $4,000 bail. Antiprofanity Group Is Meeting in Italy. Brescia, Italy, May 12.—(AP)—~ from the medical standpoint are the subjects of an address on the agenda of the third annual congress of the Italian Antiprofanity league, which opened here today. Strongly supported by the Cath- olic church and the fascist govern- ment, the league has made great progress in the last five years. In a country where not so long ago swearing was common, profanity has sunk into comparative disuse. Everywhere the league’s placards beseech the reader to abstain from pad language “for the honor of italy.” The congress is under the honors ary presidency of the Duke of Be: gamo, cousin of the king th- er of the Duke of Pistoia, recently married to the Princess Lydia of Arenberg. The delegates attend pontifical high mass in the cathe. dral tomorrow, and the! ipreading antibigspbeming sprei an phemi Propa- ganda ‘erongh the public schools. A solemn te deum in the Cathedral of Salo will terminate the meetings.