The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 12, 1929, Page 1

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| North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ¥ | ESTABLISHED 1873 HIGH WIND INJURES 18 AT DEVILS LAKE; BARNS BLOWN DOWN * Thousands of Dollars Damage Is Done by Tornado Which Sweeps City in North TELEGRAPH LINES DOWN Eight Cars of Great Northern Work Train Are Blowit From the Railroad Tracks Devils Lake, N. D., July 12.—()}— It traveled from the southwest to the Trees Uprooted A great body of water seemed to damage. Barns were , and in three known cases, those of the William Rutherford, ened y ir ent of the Fort Totten, N. D., reserva- have been lifted from the lake -and|Momes Are Washed ‘Away as he since leaving the ground 3 Officers Discover $13,690 of} tion, was characterized as “despotic harled against« the municipal beth-} - Mountain Cloudburst Rolls Down on the City cee of isolation afforded by Robbery June 28 rooted and many summer cottages} ivacy for them to take a bath with-| Topeka, Kan, July 12—()—A - Paso, Texas, July 12,—(#)—El| Privacy by when he protested against Hammett’s Sennen. q Paso today surveyed wreckage anci| Ut curtains for the cabin windows, it |comely young brunette, mother of | action in allowing women who had Every farm in the path of the storm /-uin in the wake of one of the most | Was revealed in a note from Mendell /7° 00” Vitek es Oe | pee atled to work at the North Da- ; which said: dian lou i te BT |" Mig co aan asm [were nl tay flowing Der a= ee NDE ABEND THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1929 | ELEVEN CADETS BURN WHILE CROWD LAUGHS Twister Damages Two North Dakota Cities | _——~*«~*«*«éritigh Subs Collide—2iDie==ssSCSC=CSd WISCONSIN INDIANS |CHINA SEETHES IN FERMENT IN POOR CONDITION | OF ANGER AGAINST RUSSIANS COMMITTEE LEARNS Wild Scenes Occur in Harbin | Runsin Virginia” | Every Time Trains Depart Political Dillydallying Blamed Over Seized Railroad for Conditions on Chip- ji soviet TROOPS ARE READY pewa Reservation Officials Ordered Expelled Are 40 PER CENT TUBERCULAR Leaving the Province for Eastern Siberia Superintendent at Fort Totten Is Described as Despot by Former Teacher Harbin, Manchuria, July 12—(7)}— Northeastern China boiled today in a ferment of Chino-Russian antago- nism, which sdmittedly may have Hayward, Wis., July 12.—()—The | the gravest consequences. Wisconsin Indian is in @ poor way, ‘i Harbin vince tad a dee nia Ing on panic, with near riots and wil Physically and economically. ng every time a train on cials and employes and the rupture it represented. He concluded with the | Just at sunset last night the # mighty battleship Rodney led six de- statement that China was prepared | strovers and five submarines over the spot where the submersible went down Tuesday, after collision with the L-12, and rendered impressive last honors to combat Russian retaliatory meas- nesses ‘said. Liquor flows freely on i LLOWING HOLDUP every ‘reservation while immoral dens flourish just off each government dis- trict, it was revealed. ures. Actual seizure of the chines = ern followed seizure first its = phone and telegraph agencies and ii enronearee ane peed gpa ie arrest of certain Russian officials and | acted aboard the Rodney. wreaths | loyes. M. Melnikov immediately | 6 Pe ee Sree were cast into the sea, and the big guns of the battleship and her auxil- | men by noon yesterday. The Chinese mieea ihe Temainde of the road ae in final salute to the eeette. viet agencies vna|_.The admiralty announced that in ine ere rlgeni ogee aie ey and | view of the certainty all the men were John R. 8. Hammett. superintend- Loot Taken in Daylight ; |demanded release of the imprisoned their flight provided insufficient and-sent to the Wisconsin institution 5 It was understood the Chinese ac- -_ suche salvage efforts would be ‘That was the conclusion reached by | the Chinese Eastern railway, seized % Bee sonnei i " the United States senate sub-com- bana ria h the Chinese authorities, which struc: this city and Crary, 14 mittee on Indian affairs which yes-/ departed from tne station. i ti lost their lives when the British submarine L-12, shown above, rammed and sunk the : age errors rraaonnt farm- ber Steen ne aT oft Pembroke coast. Only three members of the crew of the H-47 survived. terday completed a four day investi- Lite fought raat Sererarr | Dr. William Moseley Brown, above, ee eae: eo of the Raia condone 0 mary fara fe wi |e rade of ashi injured when the barn on their farm this state at a hearing here. that Soviet troops in eastern Siberia date for governor of Virginia on a (Bech S5"5 BIPLANE BEGINS ELEVENTH DAY OF FLIGHT; __ | ‘sssnemtztt spec «tes rns cesar eee toga . son, hired hand on a farm at Crary, ? Wisconsin by Senators Lynn J. Fra-| Manchuria at a moment's notice. |“Hoover Democrats,” opposed to the teceived a broken leg. ? zier, North Dakota; Robert M.La Fol-| rhirty expelled Russian officials of |regular Democratic ticket because of \ re maenme PILOTS REFRESHED BY BATH ABOVE CLOUDS |iwis.’*rsonin:Sna""urton "| yn'mtveed nee tne os'y a [rams memere, ek, Pens of 4 ‘seriously, when eight cars of » Great Wheeler, Montana, opened its inves- y for eastern Siberia, and|the last presidential election. Bisho} Northern railway work train were | —————————___ ——————_ tigation at Madison, on Monday. Then | neariy 300 others with orders to move | James Cannon, Jr, ardent dry, is & hurled from the rails near senate ———— ‘ in Wi ° 7 it moved on to Lac du Flambeau, | in 12 hours were leaving the province force behind the new ticket, Lake, ‘orety" and. ardosn, wnte «|| Dance If You Must, ||‘Angeleno’ Is Driven in Wide/| Gladys Glad Bride | |comine tere vewerday. © Ching Ching-Hut ft th i : ce, 5 . 5 5 e nuthber of farm structures were razed|| But Wear Stockin: i . || Of Mark Hellinger || senators rrazier ana Wheeler lett for | wart aichioe tedee ee See tn the vein of those towns. Hail | But Wear Stockings | Circles, Sometimes Drop: re I i tre Winnewure reer Nebras|Eov Soviet coral gener, vast some sections. , ‘ , 15 miles from y, early Russians. M. Em- Highway Blocked nen inn, July eater | Bing From Sight of Port | New, uot, Ju 12 Sldys | ay. the investigation is fo'be cO0-lananor, manager of the silva es lives fang! 0 ps juded in Montana 6 confined bigcked by telegraph and. telephone | the city folks but not for Austin; no Peer pore r-rscbbiedoefrletbsbins "Testimony given here yesterday was | nea ise ang treed to give oa PAYS LAST HONORS Lest ° buildings tect known own nave The public dance floor isn't a ten- | HAS TRAVELED 18,500 MILES columnist of. the” New ‘York Daily cing Witnesses reported “political “pane Chih: ‘Kuang, a Chinese, was ap: oe is court where women may go stock: — News. Mark wrote his own announce- 4 i 2 E been leveled on several farms west of | 7! dillydallying” on the part of federal | pointed to replace him. The new man- ingless, so Police Matron Mattie Fair- 5 ment about it, calling her the highest st thorities as they told of issued ee Crarf, 14 miles east of | banks, has ruled that girls who would | Paul Whittier, Millionaire Backer | paid and most beautiful show girt| Ad mave, authori par Mares ee Statement in which he ‘ here, appears to have been hardest of Trial, Aids in Refuel- pe pore ery rongg ota re tion of the Chippewas, 12 miles from | replaced by Russians naturalized as All f Sal G N } hit. One elevator was destroyed, an- She floor. ‘4 SoU eee 6 here. Chinese or by white Russians. ‘Ope ct Salvage Gone, Navy other badly damaged and the Cath-| , 1 et Bole ee ing Ship. ti : Out of the mass of testimony the} It was reported that Ostroumove, Holds Service for Sub- olic church building was moved from | ‘lowers must be. 5 ‘ moet startling pertained to the fact! manager of the railway in czarist . pi hgescna cope tebe pple ea as apt Culver City, Calif., ‘uly 12% MOTHER If NABBED that tuberculosis is generally ram-|days, would become manager. mersibie's Crew WOUNTAN OF WATER [ese 2 ate 7 tn an jured, so far as could be learned here. at 11:29 a. m. y the statement alleging thet. Soviet Rus- e, Wales, July 12.—( The storm ‘occurred at-5 o'clock ere flyers, L. W. Mendell and R. B. sin had been responsible for the ex- The British navy has said its bye (goue mee the ca Pr the biplane “Angeleno” of the Ri 4 offi- | t® the 20 men who went to death in . of intense heat and stifling humidity. arts eye diseast; is also prevalent, wit- grog poet Reports indicate that many horses and cattle girl killed and hail which Gilly re *——_e 73835228 ertlai K E g E i 3 3 Not Consider Life and Prop- ” erty Loss in World War Paris, 12.—(%)—Premier Ray- Poincare took up today i ae 3 tl i ad t lt li : ile i i Fags bry i [i uPE #8 Hl i i tf i hy ! : is | i E Eee ef : i : E 5 : leged confession that she committed tion was the direct outcome of a the $14,000 daylight holdup of two employes of the Security Benefit as- eS te | ADKING STANDS POR. 2s |STATE BAR TAKES the a are were arceekg. yes- the 4 terday an apartment where they ving together. iney, MILLARD CALLS SEIZURE cheap ger agai OLEOMARGARINE ACT ONLY A NATURAL STEP Seventeen attorneys were sworn a6 sh ‘ 4 Seattle, July 12—(4)—Thomas F.| into membership of the North Dakota confidante 4 aiter, Sopot s eld Millard, an official adviser to the| bar association by Chief Justice John for investigation, é Mir Pp Chinese government, declared here| Burke of the state supreme court at ‘Officers “found $13,600 hidden 1n|linels Congressman: Proposes jie: night that the seizure by Chinese| the capitol at 2 p.m. today. 2-Cent Tax-on All But- Officials of the Chinese Eastern rail-| They were admitted to membership way was “ a natural step following] following examination by the bar “ter Substitutes the recent closing of the Russian con-| board continuing from 9 a.m. Tues- sulate at Harbin.” day until noon today. Only 17 took De “It doestft mean war,” Millard) the examination. Members of the ex- Lr uy oe oie COn: |added. “There will probabiy be some|amining board were Sidney Adams, hes Adkins of Dect. diplomatic exchanges and some rath- Lisbon, John Knauf, Jamestown, and & member of the house agricultural |," riery statments, intended primarily|C. L. Young, Bismarck. Agnes’ May , in a statement today pro- for local consumption. Rex was the only woman in the group. dairymen back AA Ma a ee eeu Fe 3 Nei ij ini: H genthal, Oake: ye . Blume, on all putter substi- | Minister of Finance Billings, Mont.; Philip Heisler Bras- i i e:., Caledonia; Gestur V. Davidson, In Wartime Cabinet Gardar; ‘Thomas c. “Jepsen, Crosby; ; tragedy and was so happy that he Sentenced to Prison | Benjamin Johnson, Osnabrock; H. ge ea ton , Minnewaukan; H. Paris, July 12.—(#)—Lucien Klotz, | noneid Otos, Mapleton; W. Ray of finance in the Clemenceau | Reichert, Dickinson; Agnes May Rex, wartime cabinet, was sentenced totwo| Giang porks: Dewain LauMart Si- years’ imprisonment and fined 50) nenstad, Grand Forks; Clark Arnold franes ($2.00) today on the tripl D Sulerud, Grand Forks; Horace C. charge of swindling, abuse of confi: \ringvali, Bowman; Ross C. Tisdale, St. Thomas; and Alfred O. Wallen, Grand Forks. i i Michelson Plans to Measure Light Me ste Stecas| Through Iron Pipe Half Mile Long Washington, July 12—()—Dr. A.| Initial steps in the project will be again will measure the | made with the light traveling through air, to test the apparatus, after which the plan is to lay down @ sheet tron Hf i §3 rl file i : E i : [ By He gf truth, uy duly 12.—(P)— fs a kind man. He does f Valley City, know what she is doing. I do not broken collar bone and two cause the want her to get a divorce.” were badly damaged in a [sia Judge Gemmill told Bennie to run four miles west of here this ond oie Seer On ie ey. ee. ry ‘The 4 Ee i : ; i Hy H & a 3 ma Hl 3 if Tiles (3 zi & 5 i [ f i A The Weather . Me ch and cooler tonight. gear Hser ed fenicaliy fair. PRICE FIVE CENTS BOYS ARE TRAPPED IN RAGING FLAMES AT CHARITY BAZAAR Dummy House Used in Fire: Fighting Display Becomes Roaring Furnace IS A PART OF THE PROGRAM Crowds Look on Helpless as Victims Beg to Be Taken From Upper Windows =: Gillingham, Eng., July 12—()— While laughing thousands watched what they thought part of a fire fighting show, eleven boy naval cadets and firemen were burned to death last night. Six were seriously injured and were taken to St. Barth- olomew's hospital in aid of which the fete had been held. A specially erected model house, designed to be the scene of a gala fire brigade rescue spectacle, became instead the horrifying death trap for the twelve to fourteen year old boys who had so eagerly taken part in the festival. The youngsters, dressed in clown suits, made frenzied efforts to get out of the flames, bringing only great ap- Plause from the crowd below all un- knowing that the realistic acting had suddenly assumed tragic reality. Fireman Jack Tabrett, who had been the blushing veiled bride in a Previous mock ceremony, was stand- ing at the top of the flimsy structure when flames suddenly burst at the bottom. The crowd cheered « and laughed, glad that the spectacle had begun, but Tabrett knew that some- thing was wrong for the flames should have started at the top and the build- ing cleared of the actors. Charred Bodies Left In five minutes the flameshad des- troyed the oil-soaked canvas and all that was left were the charred bodies of the youths and the gaunt skeleton of the model house. Frantic mothers and fathers crowd- ed the little mortuary here this morn- ing seeking the bodies of their sons. One tall gray-haired man stumbled from the hospital where he had seen his 13-year-old boy die from burns. “My little boy’s clothes were all burned and still smouldering as he lay on the ground beside the blazing mass when I got here,” said the grief stricken man. “Only last night he was asked to take part in the mock- went, even though I asked him not to.” 4 The bodies were so charred that they were difficult to identify and only five of the eleven dead had been identified today including a man mo- tor driver who had taken part in the festival. Ronald Mitchell, previously reported dead, this morning was re- ported still alive although critically injured. Boys Leap To Death A fireman whose bandaged hands indicated the part he had taken in the attempt to rescue the boys said that never in his experience had he seen such a tragedy. “In the glare of the blaze,” he said, “I saw boys and men leaping from the roof. They fell 40 feet, their clothes blazing and illuminating them as they came. We could do nothing—to ap- Proach the building was to risk deat! All we could do was to rush close to the flames and drag away the boys who had jumped.” Arthur Stewart was one of the few spectators who realized what wat happening, and that it was not part of the program. He said he would never forget the scene. “One moment there were laughing gay hearted boys dressed in comic costumes playing in part of the structure. Laughing men and women stood around and watched the fun. Then with terrible sudden- ness comedy turned to tragedy.” CINEMA THEATRE BURNS TWO TO DEATH At Welling, only a ‘few miles away, a cinema theatre caught fire from the operators’ STUDENTS TAKE VOU. Fp autf int é ist sl 3 ite ;

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