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sr sent IR spas NORTH DAKOTA’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ESTABLISHED 1878 IOEBREAKERS, PLANES, SEEK SIX MAROONED ‘Alpine Chausseur and Engi- neer Are Saved by Finnish Airplane SOVIET FLYER SCOUT Two Latest Rescued Found Suffering from Hunger and Exhaustion King’s Bay, Spitzbergen, July 14. —#)—With ten men snatched from death in the Arctic, rescue planes and the Russicn icebreaker Krassin ‘were intent today on reaching a spot some 30 miles to the east of Foyn Island. There it was believed that six men who drifted away in the balloon part of the Italia r the fatal crash on May 2& and aay Roald Amundsen and his companions on @ French rescue seaplane. might be found. The latest to be rescued, Captain Sora of the Italian Alpine Chasseurs and the Dutch engineer Van Do! gen, who had attempted to make a rilous march over the ice to search ‘or Italia castaways, were safe aboard the base ship Citta Di Mil- ano today. They were oe off Foyn Island by a Finnish airplane and brought to King’s Bay. Dependence was placed on the Soviet flyer Chukhnovsky for locat- ing the exact position of the men yep spotted. the Tealians, Captains e) 8) Filly e Zappi and Alberto Mariano and directed the Krassin to their rescue from . n iceberg. The airman and four companions were forced down on the ice near their plane. They succeeded in reaching land, es- tablished 4 base and busied them- selves in repairing the broken land- ing of their craft. From this point it was expected that they would make frequent scouting flights and again summon the Krassin to the rescue. Italian planes will also join in the searching work over the ice of Vic- toria sea in the neighborhood of 80 degrees, 45 minutes north and 30 degrees west. It is that Roald Amundsen held the view that the balloon of the Italia would be focrd in location and the hope is held that he and his companions may have reached this eid and become marooned with em. The Norwegian icebreaker Bra- ganza_ was making its way today toward the camp of a marooned res- cuer—Varming, a Dane. He had started out with Captain Sora but fell sick and was left at Cape Brun with a dog team and provisions. Captain in Serious Condition The physician aboard the Krassin, which rescued seven members of the Italia crew on Thursday, sent word that Captain Zappi, whose leg was badly frozen, was in a rather serious condition. Captain Mariano, the other survivor of the ‘“‘walkii party,” had some fever. The thi member of this troup, Dr. Finn Malmaren, Svenian meteorologist, died on ice from exposure on June 15. The five men taken aboard the Krassin from an ice floe near the scene of the Italia crash were all said to be ina normal condition. The physician said that Natale Cec-' cioni, motor chief, whose leg was. —— in the wreck, showed no other General Umberto Nobile, com- mander of the airship, was eid recovering aboard the Citta di Mil- ano today from injuries to his leg and back. He was rescued by the Swedish airman, Lieutenant Einar- Paal Lundborg, on June 24. Lund- hors, has since been to the rank of captain in Royal Swed- ish £1; corps and received ‘Continued on Page Two) TRAIN KILLS AGED FARMER itn H $F mt E stg gE bs ee Yn 7 = 5 The Millionaire-Maker Money King H eads Drive to Elect Al John J. Raskob Made Eighty Millionaires in Four Years NEW,<TO POLITICS). Devout Roman Catholic, Noted for Charities, Advocates Modification By NEA Service New York, July 14.—The up-state city of Lockport is quite a long way from Manhattan. Yet if the bands in |Washington next March 4 are playing Manhattan's national anthem, which is a song dealing with sidewallks and Mamie O’Rourke, Lockport will be ablé to claim a large share of the credit. ‘ For Lockport’s most distinguished ton, John J. Raskob, who, as one of the leaders in the jeneral !“otors corporation, helped make 80 million- ‘aires between 1923 and 1927, is go- to manage the presidential cam- of Gov. Alfred E. Smith, as el an of the Democratic national committee. Raskob is new to politics. As chairman of the finance committee of General Motors he has not much time for such things. Now, wever, because of his close friend- ship with New York's governor— coupled, perhaps, with the fact that he shares the governor's views on the prohibition law—he is making the plunge. Wall street, as well as Lock- port, is willing to admit that he probably will do a good job. Began as Poor Boy It seems impossible to describe any of the figures in this presidential campaign, in ei , without rings in the old “success story” , Smith, Robi Hy hhave biographies of this type; so has Raskob. | Raskob was born in Lockport in 1879. ihe story soeee wise he was jerk in a pg eee ET z Py BE ee : EA Bs = m3 < i oF! 4 i 4 2 5 fi | H ‘it 4 & 8 H i 3 zy = i Py & i Z s i i : BR 83: : ifs qi} ‘ j i i making i é ft uu ‘iend- | McNat REST ORDERED FOR BIG BILL Thompson has been ordered to take a rest by his personal physician, Dr. Ww. — Sirens Saath precio it “"ayor Thompson had been et the Wis., but returned here for a meeting yee — Immediately aft- er he went ° ‘and his physician "Dr, Kegel said th r. Kegel sai je mayor was sound organically but needed a rest and the mayor indicated he ex: to leave soon for a vacation but did not say where he expected to go. TWO KILLED IN CAR ACCIDENT Rhinelander, Wis., date 14.—(AP) ‘Miss Mary Arner, 18, of Janes- ville, Wis., was killed and her aunt, Miss Mary Pearl, was hurt when had|their automobile left the road and turned over early today near hton. Both were caught under car. RACE PILOTS TUNE PLANES Los Angeles, July 14.—(?)—After one day rest here, twenty-one pilots in the national air tour up their planes for a to Cal., where they will take off again for San Francisco, their next over- eee roche Omlie, only woman entered in the six thousand mile tour which was busy installing a new iy her y lnaialne 3 down Thi #2 fi Calif., where she ursday. She hoped. caravan again at Fresno. Advices from Tucson, Ariz., that Pilot George Peck, who forced out se ders aa trouble, had reac! and e: catch uy} tour the forepart of next week. LOAN FOR MEDAL ee, July 14. H = #28 = i & BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1928 GOODWILL FLYER PLUNGES TO DEATH IN JERSE MEXICAN ACB. MOTHER AND 4 CHILDREN ARE DEAD IN FIRE Chain of Accidents Leaves Only Three of Family of 11 Unharmed LAMP STARTS BLAZE ™ Three Boys Escape by Jump- .ing from Windows. of. Flame-Swept House Helena, Mont., July 14.—---A mother and her four small daughters were burned to death today at Basin, compte a chain of acci- dents which has le: three out of a family of 11. The body of Mrs. Antoinette Le- ine, with those of her four daugh- rs around her, was fe on the floor of her bed room after fire had destroyed the major portion of the Great Northern section house at Basin. The husband, Louis Lepaine, and the oldest son, Julio, are in a hospi- al bed Ss ins period poor a jursday when two speeders crasl head-on at a curve on the Great Northern track near Boulder. Another son, James, sustained broken leg when he jumped from a window of his room to escape the flames, which took the lives of his mother and sisters. Lamp Starts Fire Mrs. Lepaine; Eva, 10; ‘Theresa, | 7; Edith, 5; Three of Richard, 12, James, 9, and Frankie, 8, jumped from their window and their screams aroused neighbors who sought, un- successfully, to rescue the other members of the family. Art Williams, Basin blacksmith, was overcome after he had reached the door of the room where the mother and her daughters were im- prisoned. Injuries to the father and son are not considered serious. PARIS EN FETE, and Patsy, 2. the boys, BASTILLE DAY is Wassail Song Echoes as Corks Pop and Whole City Makes Merry Paris, July 14.(—The people of Paris and all the rest of France have put their ordinary cares le for a week-end of merrymaking. This midsummex letup has been a traditional affair with the French each r since the populace wrecked the bastille and, with it, the old order of things, on July 14, 1789. The anni arrived at the began last night and will roll slong ni will roll along to the sound of ‘music and laughter and the popping of corks until France goes back to work next Mon- day morning. #3 inst a mide ireesigge nlabes every public was out at sunset by flickering gas each flame but an inch or 80 the next. In almost every vil- couples, young and old, danced on slick asphalt. or ancient cobble stones. It was harvest time ie musicians and bottle laden cafe a All Sinking. Parad from the sawdusty li jistro” right up through the scale of sidewalk cafes to the brightly lighted “American bars” were crowded with thirsty and often tuneful customers. Sleep will be a thing of secondary considera- tad tion from now until the week-end is & memory. Shows Are Free With the coming of Bastille day, the and othe: subsidized by the state will thrown open to all comers tonight, seat free and first come, |. In the parks bands will and there will be fireworks dis- ft untouched only | > MTRTAM NOEL WRIGHT STORMS LOVE COTTAGE Authoress and Sculptress Held on Charge of Malicious Mischief WRECKS ART OBJECTS Seeks Husband and Montene- grin Dancer at California Winter Resort San Diego, . July 14.—(P}— Mrs. Mi Noel Wright, authoress and sculptress, was being held under bond here to answer a charge of malicious mischief after she had raided the home of her former hus- nd, Frank Lloyd Wright, noted ct, and destroyed furpiture ‘ic-a-brac worth several thou- sand dollars. Mrs. Wright described the place as & love nest in which Wright and Mme Olga Milanoff, Montenegrin dancer, were living. No one was at home when she made the raid. The Wright home is a small cottage at La Jolla, a suburb, and the architect was said to have had hundreds of dollars worth of valuable furniture and art objects there. Sought Interview Mrs. Wright said she went to the home determined upon a final inter- view with her husband and the wom- an who she claims has broken up her home and stolen Wright's love. Upon arriving at the Wright of the finest bungalows in ive suburb, she found only a negro maid in the house. Infur- iated because her husband and the dancer were not in, she then spent her wrath the household fur- nishings. police said. Mrs. Wright said that the one- year term for an interlocutory de- cree of divorce herself and Wright has not yet expired and that she slept beprred attempt to prosecute him on a 8 charge. Pair Once ‘Arrested. The Wrights were Sg much publicity in 1926, when . Wright alleged she was denied entrance to the Wright estate at Spring Green, Wis. She charged that Mme. Mil- anoff w#s living there at the time. In the same year Wright and the dancer were arrested at the instance of Mrs. Wright at Minneapolis. About that time Mrs. Wright fi a Mme. Milenoff for, 3 F alienation of her hus- affections. Mme. Milanoff’s whereabouts were Umeblo to get any tract of ‘Wright unable to get any trace in Los Angeles. but he is known to have telep! La Jolla this eve- ning and learned of Mrs. Wright’s visit to his home. MYSTERY VET MALONE'S CAS Red Lake River Still Dragged for Body of Missing Legionnaire Regan, N. D., July 14.—The sandy bottom of Red Lake Falls river to- day apparently continued to hold the ant to the mysterious disappear- ance of Beecher Malone, Regan Le- gionnaire, for whom a search has been made. Searching parties who were spread fumed to, Grand Forks today. with to Grai ‘orl iv the word that no Sane of the missing E. Dickson (inset), wealthy Denver theater owner, was held _ ate Herbert Powell, phan grocery boy, shot te home. The thea! iter Dickson e found Powell with Mrs. Dickson, he THE BISMARCK TRIBUN to death owner returned home suddenly and told police. Mrs. Dickson had taken her husband to a train earlier in the day, but he told authorities the trip was “faked” so he could inves! tage ne that his wife was friendly wil ‘owell, Solid South Safe, Democrats Believ COURT ORDERS VOTE RECOUNT Williston, N. D., July 14.—@)— An order for the recount of the vote for sheriff in the recent primary election has been ordercc by District Judge Moellring. This step was made necessary when it w: foi O. Poliny and gol eared ti 4 ior ae Place on » Cl agree as to the manner in which one should be eliminated. EVANGELIST IS UNDER ARREST John Raaum, a ‘who has been engaged in missionary work on the Crow Indian reserva- tion, since last November, has been arrested by county and reservation authorities on a charge of deserting his wife and 13 children at Fortune, of the river re-|N.D. "With the assistance et ies ‘Tyson, vangelist, who have accompanied him from North Dakota, Raaum has been holding been | services at various. points on the lone of Regan, left early this morn- ing for Grand Forks to personally go over n where Malone was last seen alive. Mr. Malone, ver in robust health, was under of the family physician from and in the sub- | Pence The evangelist expreaved Will er ist a mess. to return to North Dakota without extradition papers. NEGRO LEADER IS INDICTEDE Governor Smith Arrives at Al- bany Home for Week-End of Rest SPENT BUSY WEEK | Socialist Candidate for Presi- dent Roasts Both Old Party Nominees in Talk tive mansion today with pect of a rather quiet week-end aft- er a tiring round of political con- ferences in New York. He returned to Albany late yesterday. y leaders ntial nom- e pri In consultation with morcatic presi his campai organization, but probably will be several weeks be- fore everything ia ship-shape and in full swing. The membership of the cam advisory committee, which is to headed by Senator Gerry of Rhode Island, is still to be determined as is that of the woman’s committee, which will function under Mrs. Nel- lie Taylor Ross of Wyoming, and the finance committee, of which Herbert Lehman of New York is the chairman. Notification Date Uncertain In addition, a decision must be reached shortly as to the dates for the official notification of both Gov- ernor Smith and Senator Robinson, his running mate. They will be fixed after John J. Raskob, chairmai Democratic national meas ba committee, opportunity to consult both nominees. “The pet prediction is that the Democratic notifications will come shortly after ceremonies for the two Republi- can standard next month. In setting up their organization jfor their battle for votes with the Republicans, the Democratic nom- the|type of campaign they personally Sued by ‘Inventor Detroit, July 14.—)—The . Ford Motor company, was named defend- suit filed today Antonio Fas Pajalick, ‘who that amount is due him as are to conduct, but the question of | nal headquarters must ith. . While no definite plan has yet been it is ex that national campaign ters will be in New York. t ee eet Raskob, ve Gerry, airs. Ross, Lahman and other campaign do Governor Smith, who will spend much of his ‘ime until he is (Continued on page two) GIVES HOOVER ILLINOIS YOTE inee has made a start at building np fi PRICE FIVE CENTS DIES INGRASH- ON HOME TRIP Berry Pickers Find Body and Wrecked Plane in Pine Woods HONOR GUARD AT- BIER s Plane Falls in Heavy Storm; Believed Struck by_ Lightning Washington, July 14—(AP) —President Cool has ten- dered Presidvnt Calles of Mex- ico the battleship Florida to carry the body of Captsin Emilio Carranza, air ace, back to Mexico, Mount Holly, N. J., July 14—@)— His homeward flight having ended tragically in the South Jersey 4 belt, American soldiers and member of the American Legion today stood, as a guard of honor over the flag- draped body of Captain Emilio Car- ranza, Mexico’s great air hero. Flying over unfamiliar terrain, coagine ia and eg of terrific elec- i storms, his motor mi crasi © his deat in the dense woods eight miles from Chatsworth, less than two hours | after he had ho) off from Roose- velt field, New York, on a non-stop flight to Mexico City, : had gone 85 miles. His body, crushed and broken, the wrecked machine, a R; plane similar to that used by indbergh in his transatlan storm ha tion. Crash Cause Uncertain The cause of the crash in which sy 22-year-old Mexican army uncertain. a iced—one that the s demolished high.in the air by light- ning, and the other that it was wrecked by a wind squall. The lightning theory was some- what substantiated by six sppidente of Chatsworth. These residents the roar of an airplane about 9 o’clock Thursday night, a few min- utes before a revere electrical storm swept across the pines. Today men of the United States army and members of the Mount lolly post of the American Legion plane wat ‘her from New York and the ambassador from Washington. certificate of accidental death was issued by Coroner Benjamin F. Far- er, permitting the removal of the body from Mount Holly without apy other civil formality. PI Examinec Portions of the monovlane thst were recovered were placed. in the armory of Companv M, y 3 Fort Monmouth, Oceanvort. N. J., in an effort to dete:mine the cause of the accident. Captain Carranza took off from Roosevelt fielc fi against perts at the fie adn ie oe the wrec! seal woods was not found until 18-hours later. Another three hours elapsed before identification was established. In the meantime efforts were made all along his route to find trace of him. Not once was he There was no news at all until the berry-pickers’ discovery. BATTLE SHIP TO RETURN BODY Superior, Wis. Ji 14.—(AP)— President Coolidge to fered today I inees not only must determine the |i Coolie untimel Emilo SEVEN DIE IN