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re ’ Morton, Brockton Tourney Winners rs =: Generals Cardenas and Cabrillo ty Expect to Occupy Sina- matches this = loa Capital = Mexico City, April 6—(P)—So-called %. deligious insurgents in the state of © Salisco = Xi there today major blows in the rear of both prin- Svipal federal ea Dispatches 2 Melon fevthe a88 35 = red squirrel seven persons and thus became what ‘the police described as a red menace, has been executed. Judge Herbert Immenhausen of town hall police court, the only of- ficial who took any formal action in the case of the people vs. one little red squirrel, a rel before he Patrolman Chicago, April 6—(#)—Morton high terscholastic basketball tournament being conduct- ed here by’ winning the semifinal morning. CHICAGO SURREL KILLED BY POLCE Chicago, April 6—(AP)—The little grievous miscarriage only document Judge Immenhausen issued was @ warrant charging the squirrel with mayhem and providing for his release under $5,000 bonds. Such a warrant, he said, thorize officers to execute the squir- was replaced here. serious wreck. tory by ® passenger exploded by a jolt of that got mad and bit turned disillusioned to believes there has been| a vain journey in Asia. of justice. The id not au- had been tried. Oscar Hansen fired the Kabul. cenpr by pointing out that the rodent | throne. bitten seven persons this week, The German artist waited for weeks for the situation to clear. Fi- nally his money ran out. He traveled home on funds furnished by the Ger- man consulate gereral in Calcutta. Scores Suffering Injuries; Flames Sweep Structure and thereb; , jclety. On the west coast the federal gen- 4 erals, Lazaro Cardenas and Jaime Cabrillo, expect to occupy Culiacan, capital of the state of Sinalos, Mon- . Rebels formerly holding few miles north, and some looked for ® fight when the federals caught up with them. A union of what will be left of Gen- eral Escobar’s army and the rebel the sweetest the sky. R y became a menace to so- First Rains Terrify Children of Drought Sydney, Australia, April 6—(7)— of six years of age experience of rain for the first time fn their lives. It is related that as the drops clattered on the iron roofs of the homesteads, were terrified. But to their parents the tattoo was stood in the open, cheering and were drenched to the skin, just to feel once again the al- most forgotten touch of water from music in the world. They | 2nd turned in alarms. laughing and the | MON-BUILT TRAIN EXPLOSION INIURES SEVERAL Nitroglycerine Blew Up in Lav- atory After Jolt, Offi- cials Believe Temple, Texas, April 6—(AP)—An explosion of undetermined nature in the lavatory of @ coach on a Santa Fe railway passenger train 18 miles north of here today injured several persons. Several of the 15 passengers re- ceived minor cuts from flying glass. The train did not stop. The coach A special officer of the Santa Fe ‘said he believed a small bottle of nitro glycerine had been left in the lava- and have been the train. Steel construction of the coach was said to have kept it from being blown from the rails and to have averted a Afghan War Shatters Dream of Art School Berlin, April 6.—(#)—Herr Haase- Tisenburg, a sculptor of note, has re- ‘When Amanullah was king of Afghanistan and making the grand tour of Europe on which he picked up multitudinous ideas for westerniz- ing his mountain kingdom, he en- gaged Herr Haase-Iisenburg to take charge of a new academy of art in The sculptor left Germany with high hopes but by the time he shot that ended the great Addision ! reached India, rebellious reactionaries street squirrel hunt. He defended his{had driven Amanullah from the (Continued from page one) tween 125 and 150 persons were in the building when the fire broke out. Two policemen, attracted by wom- en’s screams and a negro porter, no- ticed the fire about the same time All fire com- panies responded to the call and all ambulances in the city were called |ing smoke drove me back. I to take the injured to hospitals. 4 Men Jump 4 Floors Four men jumped from the fifth |the only mea | which served as the roof of be dead. their night clothes. $250,000. the civil war, and is one of \ Moines’ oldest hotels. Embers Set Blase escaped damage. cues. A fireman stopped a tried to jump from a third from one of his hands. a large Berlin after one of the first to discover ing in an alarm, he said, back “to wake foople up.” smoke was terrible. When which. It was awful.” from windows, flames Representative E. T. county representative ture, a guest, after got down a fire escape.” bosevel- licked near them. everyone had been taken from the | of River Falls. Districts near Balsam building he said: “I never want to|Lake and Milltown were hit. Several see anything like this again. More | buildings were struck by lightning agony and suffering in one night | and destroyed in the subsequent fires. than most people see in a lifetime.” ter, Iowa | Minn. in the legisla- | was estimated, the storm whipped escaping told of | over an area 10 miles long but lifted hearing warning cries. “I got out of |in some spots to spare a number of bed,” he said. “The floor was scorch- ing hot. I threw on clothes and tried to go down the stairs. Dense, chok- finally ! Gop) floor to the top of the cour |of ihe guests the first floor, three of whom are believed to Police and hotel cmployes were | Urese records. busy this morning checking, up the guests to make certain that none re- main in the burning building. Many of the guests had to fice in| ‘The building, which is a total loss, was valued &t between $200,000 and It was constructed before the Des Flying embers set fire to the ruins | of a business block across the street which was destroyed in a spectacu- lar blaze two weeks ago last night, with loss of more than $100,000. Other buildings surrounding the Kirkwood Several persons most of whom are | $500, unidentified, performed thrilling res- girl who floor win- dow, and succeeded in pulling her to safety and. carrying her to the street after she had swung like a pendulum Other firemen carried frightened men and women down ladders and fire escapes. Several guests also Played heroic roles, one man carrying woman down a ladder safety and then falling in a faint. Woman Guest Heroine A woman guest on the second floor was credited by others with pounding on each door of the floor to arouse sleepers, before she climbed down a ladder and lost herself in the crowd. Thomas Mayberry, negro to porter, the fire, carried or led a score of men and women through smoke-filled halls or down ladders to safety. After turn- he went “Women and men were screaming and moaning,” he continued, “and the the fire- men got there we pulled three men/three persons were reported missing and women out of the inside court | after the storm had passed, and fears who had jumped down. They were} were voiced that they had been terribly hurt or dead. I don’t know /| killed. They are Mr. and Mrs. Basil Sees Enough for Lifetime Police Sergeant Nelse Pastel, one of | struck by the storm and only slight the first to hear calls for help, told | damage was reported there from hail of seeing scores of persons leaning | and aid as| Scores of homes and farm build- After The hotel register was burned and by which the names “The world’s first ; Straight-Hight under 41000 . ; . Now on _ display. E long awaited is here... 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The Roosevelt was thoroughly proved out months before the first car was manufactured. 168, $1465; Marmen Rosie 985; 7, “aa a Phone 1452 $1965. fiom account soks. lies said the towns from whicu the guouts registered were on very few of in Mexico City. floor at 10 a. m., he was believed to 60 have been caught in bed and killed | by the falling roof. Property Damage Millions; Toll of. | Casualties Grows to (Continued from page one) property damage was estimited at! 000. Wreckage Strews Country Wreckage of farm houses and buildings in the country sections strewed the path of the storm's great- est fury from Lake Minnetoka, Minn. and north Minneapolis to a point in northwestern Wisconsin where the wind apparently lost its violence. A recheck of the storm’s path today showed that it entered Minnesota in the southwestern corner, near Pipe- stone but between that point and Lake Minnetonka little damage was . At the latter place it dipped slightly before crashing with full force on north Minneapolis to ‘kill and maim and continue its de- structive course into Wisconsin near Taylors Falls. Perhaps its most severe blow was | delivered at Reeves, Wis. where three | children of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pittman died as their home was blown apart. It also struck heavily near Rice Lake, killing Mrs. Louis Reed and Miss Martha Raawe and injuring more than a score of others. Three Persons Missing Besides the dead near Rice Lake, Traiscoms and Marie Buhrow. The town of Rice Lake itself was not rain. ings were destroyed north and west Near Lindstrom, in Chisago county, where damage of $500,000 ould be checned was farms while wrecking buildings in ‘struck at Rice Lak: and vicinity. Hotel author- adjacent land. Henry Rydeen, a farmer south of | Linds' The body of John P. Scott. 42 Mox- barely es ico City, was identified at 10 a. m.. hoisted their home from its founda- until two nionths ago he sold bonds tion and smashed it to splinters as they crouched in the basement. Fred ‘The body of W. D. Raidler was Olson was caught in the open field found in under debris on the first on his farm by the twisting wind and Ne: j count ; buildings were destroyed and sev- jeral persons injured. As reports of the damage continued |the Minneapolis chupter of the Red Cross were sent into the affected dis- jtrlei to make a survey of conditions and arrange immediate relief. ditional relief parties began search- ing wreckage for possible casualties. High winds also were reported to have caused slight damage in south- ern Minnesota and northern Iowa. Four persons were injured near Lake Mills, Iowa, just over the Minnesota line, One of the injured, Ray Teiden, suffered a factured skull and his condition is critical. Forming over Lake Minnetonka, the summer home of Minneapolis, the storm struck fiercely at the north side of the city, wrecking many homes, damaging all wire communications and uprooting trees, and then tore its way through two Minnesota counties and three in Wisconsin be- fore it blew itself out. The amount of property damage has not been estimated. Minneapolis alone, it will run into more than $100,000 while the path i i Lodge was 45 years old or approxi- of the storm is strewn with wrecked Trial Hinges Upon nately eats sa age of his three farm homes and buildings. Duty Toward Dying drinking companions. Oddly enough, in this city where the population is heaviest only one man, George Lundgren was crushed to death at Forest Lake and at Taylors ie 30 miles to the north and east, death, lifted, to strike heavily at Rice Lake and Reeves, Wisconsin, where four were killed. Mrs, Louis Reed and Miss Martha Raawe, crushed to death, at Rice Lake, and at Reeves the two children of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pittman died when their home was demolished. A farm- er, John Soloman, was Killed at Clay- ton, Wis. The storm developed late in the afternoon. broke over Minneapolis, and in a half hour the northern section of the city was strewn with wreckage. From that point the tornado worked northeast, dipping and rising. Barely Escape Death i rom, and his five children aped death when the wind | i i g i i ie : : E ; badly mauled that he died. Shafer. farther across Chisago a number of farm homes and i § trickle in today, three workers for Ad- where more than 20 farm homes were |festivities were hailstones, which beat in windows |to leave the scene under their Mrs. Reed, living 07 a farm some ;them is based en family of small children in the cellar. |and the fight. the woman was killed oy rocks which |that the latter was in rorth of here the station was badly |/ciguq that the fine point reallv The number of persons injured here White Cloud is Loans Him Arrows’ scores of others at their homes. At fight but when he heard of the pital there, and 16 were being cared Loans Him Arrows to the farmers in outlying districts had suf- trip by Henry Loans Him Arrows, @ ‘The state charges that White Cloud CHRISTIANSON ORD.RS condition to help himself, and that Theodore Christianson today ordered White Cloud guilty of manslaughter. aid is needed by any community. Ad- participants in the drinking party or to aid in the survey. wrecked. There the wind was ac-|one thing certain:ts that Loans not smashed by the wind. power. Twin ted in ‘This When the wind struck thé house, it |of the charge fell from the basement wall. to help Yellow Lodge. wrecked. Today a repair crew WAS | arises. can only ‘.2 estimated. More than] brother-in-law. He did not partici- Rice Lake, Wis., 20 were so seriously cident he hitched up a team to for at a hospital at Barron, Wis. Cloud home and probably saved fered heavy financial loss if not ac- deliberately abandoned Yellow Lodge TORNADO DAMAGE SURVEY this abandonment constituted neg- a survey of the storm-stricken area The defense is expected to be based jutant General Ellard A. Walsh im- the fight could reasonably be expect- Fort Yates Indian drinking and companied by heavy rain and huge | Arrows and Yellow Lodge were Rocks Kill Woman wabbled away and distance from the city, collected her (participat was ripped from the foundation.and |rows although there is At Fridley, Minn., a short distance | yt is in the case of William White trying to untangle the wreckage. | Saved Arrows’ Life 70 were treated at hospitals, and pate in the drinking party or in injured they were placed in the hos- sled and went to the creek, Fear was expressed today that some life. He was accompanied on this tual loss of life. jdrother of John. to his fate, knowing that he was in no St. Paul, April 6.—(AP)—Governor lect. of such character as to make in Minnesota to determine whether on the contention that none of the mediately ordered out two airplanes ed to help the others, since all were In North equally intoxicated. It also is ex- pected to stress the fact that Yellow One Minneapolitan Killed Feared Yellow Lodge Defense for White Cloud, approxi- mately the same age as Yellow Lodge, is that he feared to go to the latter’s assistance because he thought Yellow Lodge was carrying a pistol and that his temper would be uncer- tain, even in dealing with a good samaritan. The defense also is ex- pected to contend that White Cloud assumed that Yellow Lodge would re- cover and go to his own home with- out help. The case has attracted considerable attention in the western part of the state because of its legal pecullar- ities. The state had originally charged the defendants with first-degree murder but this was reduced to first- ‘degree manslaughter after investi- gation had disclosed that Yellow Lodge died from exposure from bruises received in the fight as had at first been supposed. (Continued frem page ne) Arrows on the ice of Porcupine Creek th the Standing Rock Indian reserva- ion. With a temperature of 20 degrees below zero the drinking was fast and furious. The redskins imbibed freely t- keep themselves warm. The fire- water consumed was of the variety commonly known as moonshine and the evidence is that it was strong— even for moonshine. Old settlers hereabouts say that the stories of an Indian's instability of temperament under the influence of strong drink is based on fact, not on fiction. Be that as it may the quartet, engaged in a fight. Woods Echo Warwhoops To all accounts it was a fight worthy of a drunken Indian. Bruis- ing blows were dealt and reccived with abandon. The woods along the creek echoed with warwhoops. Just what happened after the Andrew Hanson, was killed. F. Bryan, a farmer, was crushed to Then the storm apparently sisters, were ‘With but little warning it Perhaps the most severe blow was Har the radia program of the “*Hudson- Essex Challengers” every Friday evening challenges ‘095 AND UP°47 KACTORY Phone 306 THE It Challenges Your Interest in These Important Ways _Easyto Buy For Instance, the Coach $295 Down, and monthly Payments of $53.30 Your present car will probably cover the entire first Payment. The H. M. C. Purchase Plan Offers the lowest available finance terms on : the balance. Essex the Challenger sweeps aside the barriers of price class. It fort of any car at any price, on the basis that no other gives you back so much for every ‘buying swing is to Essex. switching from past _ SUPER-SIX SALES — BIG SWING és 70 Fasy 10 OWN On our own streets, here in Bismarck, Essex the Challenger, under competent observation, averaged 22 miles per gallon. The average owner in this city can expect 18 to 20 miles and upward. Hundreds of records all over the country during “Challenger Week” prove Essex economy. Com- mercial users operating large fleets of Essex cars say that Service and Maintenance Costs, covering millions of miles of operation, are low- est of any car they ever tested the performance, the style, the luxurious roomy com- dollar you put in. That is why the big ; That is why motorists by thousands are favorites, and trading in their present cars fi the big values Essex the Challenger gives. : one A Wide Choice of Colors at No Extra Cost Chersgeis,” A.Big, adubelae “Siz.” Fine look st. are standard. They donot cot you one ‘Towa fedan - 8 upholstery and appointments. ASUPER- GLARE-PROOF rear-view mirror, Roederer - = 8 SIX motor<70 miles an hour—60 miles safety lock, starter and electric gauge for Caste. . os an hour all day long. In getaway and hill fuel and oil on dash. Bright parte are climbing it challeages any car. ,chromium plated. Hydraulic shock absorbers, 4-wheel brakes, radiator shusers and aircleaner E. D. ROSE, Manager eo " BISMARCK, = t . DAK. ‘ .