The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 6, 1928, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a] 430 i 4 > 4 ‘ ’ t y . <F s NORTH DAKOTA'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER === |THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE === ESTABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1928 i cE RI PRICE FIVE CENTS | DEAD, HEAVY PROPERTY LOSS IN WINDSTORM TON-TOM BEAT STONBAGEMAN ITALIAN ATRMEN| — sex cite Rewrats Pine antowt FARMER DIRS HEARD ON UTAH RESERVATIONS ‘Agent Charged With Ignoring Pleas for Medicine During Flu Epidemic INDIAN GIRLS MOLESTED Inaccessible Island Off Alaska|Flight of 4,417 Miles from Yields Four Bodies of Pre Europe to South America historic People Sets Record OTTER SKINS LINE VAULT|HOP OFF AGAIN FOR RIO Tribesmen Demand Right to Use Own ‘Companionate Ancient Ice King Clothed in|New Aviation Epoch Written Bird Skins Is Buried Over Equatorial Seas by Marriage Rites’ With Servants Modern Romans ed # —e Washington, July 6—)—E. s 4 lew Yt 1. —(P. 8 Rio Janeiro, July 6—/)— B. Merritt, assistant commis- s astery as Sat cit tae thd Safel; aching the coast of sioner of Indian affairs, today & # mummified remains of Stone Age| Brazil last night after a bril- discounted the possibility of ‘ man is described in a dispatch to} liant record - breaking h an uprising among the Goshute 2 . . |today’s New York Times from Har-| across the perilous Atla Indians _on the Deep Creek, old McCracken, head of an expe-| Captain Arturo Ferrarin Utah, réservation. ——— dition of the American Museum ‘of| Major Carlo P. Del Prete, Inspector Herbert H. Fiske, 3 : Natural History to the Aleutian] ian airmen, were lost in a heavy of Arizona, has been dispatched = : Islands off the Alaskan coast. fog for many hours in an effort to Deep Creek, Merritt said, and j : Four mummified bodies, three| to continue from their landing the bureau is awaiting a report q 3 : ee adults and one infant, were found] place at Point Genipabu on to from him, but confident that the ae < ¥ on the summit of Rio Janeiro. disturbance is a minor one. é : : cessible island, along with their The Italian flyers took off : : clothing, domestic articles, hunting| from Port Genipabu, 10 miles Salt Lake City, Utah, July 6 i weapons, and other paraphernalia| north of Port Natal, and started (AP)—Efforts to : that went with the buris! of pre-] southward but soon were caught lettermine 2 ? ry { coe historic man. in unfavorable weather condi- Pies ts et a Gonmas ee . SF. é The burial tomb bore evidence of| tions and for many hours sought in eastern Utah to find expression ae Mongolian influence, but there was| a safe landing place only to find in the throb of tom-toms, were under : i nothing to indicate contact with an-| themselves eventually north of way today following reports the y, cient or modern civilizations. .,| . of Point Genipabu to which they tribesmen had threatened one reser- % The vault was made of well shaped} had tried to return. vation official and sought the re- : ; and mortised drift logs held to-| Finaly they made a safe land- moval of another. es gether by bone nails, and had been| ing at the town of Touros which An unofficial investigation of re- . x ¥ wedged in a rok See That a is about 50 miles north of Port ports the Indians were holding th geen Natal. nightly councils to express opposi- $ It i fs Reece pe Biers © tion to B. E. Brigance, agent at the ae. arte of eich it the body Bio Janciro, July 6—()-—Two Deep Creek reservation, wa of a man, evidently of high rank, | Italian airmen today held the record yesterday by prohibition officers. | Miss Kat! Fall, 16, junior in high school at Alliance, ©., has just/and in the other the bodies of the|for the longest non-stop flight — After a tour of the reservation. |made her first solo flight. Aviators say she’s a “natural flyer.” She| other two adults and the child. 4,417 miles. the officers announced they would expects to fly after she is graduated from high school next spring. The body of the ancient ice king make every effort to keep liquor ! y h t k Ps 5 cane A ; hen the building was picked up by from the Indians. They expressed ing a shirt of bird skins, bo! from the mainland of Europe to the cabin of the plane, which will carry them on part of their trip. Collyer, the wal, canal a Seae , the belief that unless the tribesmen h C h ted. Wrapped around |mainland of South America, Captain |the pilot, is holding Tail Wind, their mascot, | Below is their monoplane, | 100.) "lq? coin and’ reduced ‘to eat iprepiacd scrcel cee P TeEAaAC. er OOS es cloth of skins of | Arturo Ferrarin and Major Carlo P. City of New York, which will be shipped by boat to Europe. aplintered anass of wrecks. a i ' 4, |All set for the start of their attempt at a globe-circling record, John |Milees south of Mandan, was killed was clothed in otter skins surmount-|_ Making the first continuous flight | Henry Mears, left, and Captain C. B. D. Collyer are. shown above in the|in @ barn, where he wa: WHEN TORNADO WRECKS BARN Northern Pacific and Soo Line Transcontinental Trains Tied Up MOTT IS ISOLATED Cyclone Sweeps Five-Mile Area Near Wilton; Boy Scout Camp Wrecked Midsummer storms following the hottest July day in two years, when a temperature of 92 was recorded in Bismarck, swept the Missouri Slope country and the greater part of North Dakota early today. High wind gave the storm the roportions of a tornado in some localities. Heavy precipitation oc- curred. Toll of the storm was counted to- day in one death, disrupted telephone and telegraph service, damage to crops, the wreck of farm buildings in many portions of the state, and delayed transcontinental train serv- ice on all the state’s railroads. The volume of property loss re- Ported increased steadily as tele- phone and telegraph service was restored. At noon today the entire district around Mott was still iso- lated from communication by tele- Phone and telegraph. Only meager reports of the storm damage in that section were available. Farmer Killed Charles Gossard, 44, bachelor farmer living in Morton county 13 sleeping, Del Prete brought their huge Savoia their campaign in which they are e 5 1 i home with Gossard as a tenant unders| to seek the removal of $ | h whole was enclosed in a parchment-|Plane to rest on the beach at Point HOM AGE iN P AID farmer, took his family to the ba: Brigance, together with Dr. E. A. y ail Rather an f sea-lion intestine. The ae eee Eee “anata ' Looks for Pot of ment of the home when the storm Farrow, superintendent of the seven s were less elaborately Indian agencies in Utah. standard time) last night. They had 3 oe sed, and were believed to be been in the air within one minute of The prohibition officers, who were P d those of servants. , 52 hours having ho; off from sccomznaom te antl ay Judge’s Fine rie some wl Eun ttiird Hie ter, heard the Indians charge that ——_. with his wife, is aboard the Mor-| Rome time. (1p atey.™ caste i igno = issey, the expedition’s ship. standard time) Tue: thetr ples tee fab ie Spires — Saws and Hammers Building SOVIET DOOMS riseey, Haein Se: oe anal” They, Brake thn catance fiight-rec* Four Most Powerful War , bodies was being presetved as-they}ord of 3,909 miles set by Clarence} Yords Render Account at " found it, so that experts of the mu- | Chamberlin and Charles A. Levin ‘Tomb of Fourder ing an influerze “epidemic which Tabernacle’ Ate se Neigh? ; fron Had bined acnrene it i hers - seum here might examine the find |little more than a year ago in a : to Action exactly as it was taken from the es from Roosevelt, N. Y., to ees peal Attar ee an hour and 20| Peking, China, July 6.—With the stated that Brigan:e himself was minutes at Point Genipabu the Ital-|full mysticism of the Orient in its SWEDISH FLYER ians hopped off again { most dramatic form, the four most Janeiro 1,500 miles the Experts Convicted of Attempt- - ing to Destroy Russia’s Coal Mines idden for five ‘weeks while the mae powerful military leaders of epidemic was at its height. NORRIS COMES AID Brigance Denies Charges es Ek ese was ee —— exe oi A Ta thei Coooea - with hating’ Docent =. Sisisy ‘and Fort Worth Divine ‘Double they fololwed a route past Cibi nationalist movement in China to- with Indian bureau funds. These| Dares’. Judge to Put. Women and over the Cape Verde islands and| day stood before the tomb of the charges were emnaatically denied by —— southwest over the Atlantic before|late Dr. Sun Yat Sen and presented the agent, who declared that the Carpenters in Cell Moscow, July 6—()—Convicted landing on-the h. Thi account of their stewardship in Indians secured a false statement of attempting to dest: the coal n is 4,542 miles, but an air line is|the Nationalist cause to the founder from one Indian girl, and .that the ... | industry Bf Russia in Donetz|Nobile’s Savior Is Rescued] used in determining the record. of the Chinese Nationalist move- girl had told him of being forced to| Dallas, Tex., July 6.— () — Dili- Basin, eleven men were under sen- f F by Daring of Stormy weather with heavy clouds | ment. : i make the statement. gent. use of hammers and saws! tence of death today. Six of | them, rom Floes by Daring pat the gob) in peril in the, last cpNationslism’s military big-t, through the night thi however, were recom lor ours Oo! ir long flight. ey |Chiang Kai-Shek, Feng Yu-Hsiang, Bai Feige hy mae ciel Feta ot might oveeay, ear yail commutation. Companion Pilot had difficulty in getting their bear-}Yen Hsi-Shan and Li Tsung-Jen, tom-toms in the hills back of the list it Germans who with 50 Rus- ings after reaching the coast of|united in devout homage before the agency at night, and that friendly |CVancelist in custody of a woman|sians were placed on trial on May| Stockholm, July 6.—(AP)—The| Brazil. Sighted over Port Natal at|ramains of the late leader, report- Indians had told him of threats made sheriff and another pastor threaten-| 18 in the Historic Hall of Columns|chief of the Swedish rescue mission Pp. m. they were believed to be| ing to the spirit of the father of against him by other Goshutes. © ing to defy an injunction. were freed. -Two of them were| telegraphed from Spitzbergen today|headed for Rio Janeiro. Prepara-|the Nationalist cause the successful One, of the Goshutes’ chief reasons| The Rev. Earl Anderson, pastor | 8quitted one paroled. that Lieutenant Einar-Paal Lund-|tions were immediately begun there|completion of the military stage o! for their opposition to him, Brig-|of the Dallas Fundamentalist church, ‘echnical skill which may be use-| borg, Swedish airman,,had been res-}to welcome the aii nd special|the Chinese revolution as he envis- ‘nce said, his demand that/chose to go to jail. yesterday rather | ful to the Soviet in the future was|cued from the ice it Foyn Island.|trains began to carry enthusiasts to| ioned it, and pledging to him loyal ung couples of the tribe conform |than ‘@ $100 fine and furnish a| the factor that saved the six men/ Lieutenant Lundborg was marooned|the Affonso aviation field to greet| cooperation to achieve the recon- ze the white man’s marriage cere- 1000 when Judge Towne | Sentenced to death but recommended | when his plane overturned in an at-jthe flyers. struction of their country along the mony, instead of the tribal rites,| Young found him ty st contempt “or commutation. These Pccest ae e off survivors of the Apparently the airmen became|lines which he had pointed out. ion a tempt to which he described as being “similar | of court Beresovsky, Matoff, Talla disaster. 4 ]eot for three h and45min-| At the last minute, just as day #o compantonate rearriane.’ He ereties cae ine reek ete ae | Boyerchinett, Shadien and Brantan: Swedish department received|utes after being sighted at Port| was breaking, the ranks of the four ped. Il-feelii ainst the ‘agent had | ernacle . : or a @ message from the b: ‘ip quest | Natal they landed on the beach ten| were dramatically completed by the its inception ee time ago when a| jy, waynes issued the injunction] rhe court deliberated 48 hours.|/that the rescue was effected by the/ miles to the‘ north at 9:10 p. m. arrival of Feng Yu-Hsiang, long one Piute Indian named Askamie, whose ee? the pastor afte residents| When it was announced the thror/s| Swedish flyer Shybei Captain Ferrarin was a member|of the most picturesque figures wife, Rosy, was a Goshute, was hood. was so great that extra troops were} Details of Lieut. Lundborg’s res-jof the Italian Schneider cup team|2mong China's military chieftains. killed by ae ‘wounds, suppos- bag y rire py plained that called out. No trial since the Soviet}cue were lacking, but confirmation|which won in the United ‘State in| He had traveled from his _ hea edly in a drunken brawl, Brigance|s¢ ‘night and that specifications of |°#me into power has attracted such|came to Stockholm directly from] 1926 and lost to England in Italy in|quarters all night long despite ill- said. The white authorities decided |the project failed to conform to city | attention. There were accommoda-|the lieutenant who sent a message|1927, Major Del Prete accompanied|ness and appeared at the scene that Askame had committed suicide, | ordinances. The. complaint charged | tions for 1,600 workers and members| to his wife saying that he had been|Commander Francesco it bearded, travel-stained and tired. ‘but the Piute Indians charged Raer the building projected into a zone! of the civil service to witness the/saved by his comrade, Lieut. Shy-lon his flight from Sardinia to ——— and her sister, Alice Baker, with | crested to. permit the | trial daily. Loud speakers were in-| berg. i fs » South America, North Amer- causii Pear ingh Reape de-| street, and that. regulations Fag mallee 0, that all could hear the is Fe Ms belienl uabeble in Stock: re en. across the Atlantic by way mi 8 irrender | proof tructi uditor roceedings. ol at operations to rescue o zores to Italy. the women so they could be dealt | yore coetrmsinn: 8 rims | Prose on triel wore accused of|other men on the ice floe have been ch by eo sr Prighiened by Train | PARTY POLICIES MRS. SHAVER IS | 2m Jumps ‘o Death D., July 6—— | Tariff on Imports to Protect German | o Louis Gehmitt, 7 dee SMITH’S ENEMY empl ont e Steve Rasser farm Mill Workmen Against ; + sees a rail idge ii is de Cheap Labor Is Issue Sioux fh of ral frightened by the 3 3 Says Ticket Phe train cs nt ington, July 6.—()—Declar- jeg vie and Plat- senin..ceaw. Broaght the train Piaf tec iee feaerag would fol. i ‘been. nation. heard t low an instructive and informative x, tos t= form Is Joke Pr Schmitt wat on his way fo Breck aurme, Jn, the campaign, Chairman o - pot Ms. Ae en serides, Minn., for hospital atten- ae Bs A hi : eS that te shington, on eg i ings of conscience a! r= and pastor : thet ete mith, NI7EETT TT Plage oo 3 within the law were not rging § Wimbledon Singles . Title coach of Poet subjects for political debate.” the jail, where ta Republicans, Work said, were the tabernacle y ee a solely in preserving the w. 1 foundation of good government ad- ministration through its party or- ganization and wished to secure complete unity in this common pur- Pole outlined as the first work to ‘ aj & pl ) that they may prodars of our.farms Dr. Norris “was tatanding issues ing = ete te ‘of the campaign.” Valen- | there. ao ol Fred Kaser, il #2 E i i 06 : i | He of Stanton, 50 miles north of Man- f dan, where a large barn on the Rit- terach dairy farm was demolished. = rye se) ENOVING REST Body Herman Branneske, who makes his i broke. Twenty minutes later, wh Gold in Manhole; the storm subsided, they secured + + lante d he Finds It in Cell |/srmy snd searched the wreckage ss He was found dead, pinned to the Chicago, July 6.—(AP)— Freund with a heavy rafter across Samuel Owczarski was going ||his throat. Branneske was forced around town lifting manhole ||to saw the timber to lift him from covers. Each time he would |/the wreckage. peer into the depths, then shake Nearly every building on the his head regretfully and move |/farm, including a large barn, two on to the next. granaries, chicke and hog houses, The procedure puzled Po- |/and two garages, was flattened. liceman Staszak. The house alone escaped serious “Lost something?” inquired ||damage. the officer. Two sisters of Gossard, who ar- “Ssh!” whispered Owczarski. ||/rived from Corning, Iowa, yesterday “I'm looking for a pot of gold.” ||to visit him, slept in the house. | “Is that all?” was the cop- ||They escaped injury. per’s comeback. “Your'e a bit At Sanger, 26 miles northwest of late. Another fellow found it, ||Mandan, six farms reported damage. and it's over at the station ||Barns were blown down on the Bert house now. Let's go get it.” Gregory, George McCone, Horace Thus tactfully did Officer ||Beardsley, Tony Kewbe: Martin Staszak lead Owczarski into ||Myers, and the Bagil Brothers captivity from which the latter ||farms. Most of the buildings on later purchased freedom with a ||these farms were modern. Small fine of $20 and costs. buildings were also ‘demolished, while dozens of windmills were crumbled. The storm stretched to the south 1 In Bismarck the storm broke with a 40-mile gale which whip} up clouds of dust and whirled them through the streets, dir’ dgec signs, — and roused hundred from sleep. It Association of Commerce and|was followed by .44 of an inch of + rain, which fell in cloudburst sheets. Five Tenants Forced to al West of, this ity 8 Ba Meters istrict of the Ba nds Move Into Street waters were reported to have pene’ sat Aes He ace ot ~ i: nee jorthern Pacific railroad grade. The elects uatted by short.circuited leranscontinental . train which left here shortly befor. 11 o'clock last ge “Web eee was controlled by night was turned back and rerouted rnishings of | four! over the branch line from Jamestown apartments, equipment of the Asso-|2°¢ ine Ni'iwaukee, ciation of Commerce and the Webb|' “Railroad officials said early to- Undertaking parlors had been moved day that it will be 24 hours before eo he mee shortly after 10:30 the track can be repaired and Dormal gas : traffic resun.d on the western Da- Damage by smoke and water was R > oo fine a to furnivure moved ee hes division of the Northern Pa she apartments ot, 6lise eif-|""In Bismarck the wind uprooted fer, Theodore Anderson, of Butler i Bistoeraph studio, and Mrs. Alice |Pnse of hate teoen 0nd ager rigl ork. Ht “it Fire burned a hole through the “aoe feat ate ae roof of one rear apartment, and |Grain fields were reported lodged in damaged walls of two rear apart: |come sections, but damage will not ments. The alarm was turned in at Bigs 10:30 by pedestrians who noticed Be eat eee in fhe country smoke coming from the place. Fire- men had controlled it at 11 o'clock. Cloudburst at Pembina At Pembina. N. ording te seer er ace reports of the Bismarck weather bu- rea, there was a storm of cloudburst proportions, when 3.50 inches of rain fell during the night. Three other points in the state reported precipitation of more than an inch. Starkweather, N. D., reported heavy windstorms late yesterday A meeting of the executive com- wrecked many farm buildings mittee of the Nonpartisan League|near that town and Olmstead. will be held in Bismarck, July 18,| Lightning struck the Lutheran Roy W. Frazier, charman announced (Continued on page two) today. 1

Other pages from this issue: