The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 10, 1930, Page 1

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ba { | North Dakota’s ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1930 Four Fort Totten Indians Die After Spree Peik’s Educational Survey ONE SIOUX MISSING, THREE FATALLY ILL, FROM POISON DRINK Anti-Freeze Compound and De- natured Alcohol Blamed itt ‘Biel vans ne, tthe noctn|(S CHARY OF STATEMENTS for Dance Tragedy STRICKEN ON RESERVATION One Indian Held for Questioning as Benson County Author- ities Probe Case Devils Lake, N. D., Mar. 10.—(?)}— Deaths of four Sioux aorer ae possibly fatal illness of and the disappearance iat perhaps death of another today were sttribut- ed by Benson county authorities to a drinking party th which denatured alcohol served as a beverage. It had first-been reported that the Indians had been drinking an anti- freeze solution, stojen from a tokio merchant but the state regulatory de- partment advised that the bape is not poisonous, according to W. G. Mc- Donald, Minnewaukan, ‘Benson coun- ty state’s attorney. The dead, stricken at a dance near ‘Tokio on the Fort Totten reservation, are Francis Razett, Jerome Onehouse, Jerome Albert and Mike Goodhouse. |’ Those seriously ill are William Wanatan, Francis Demars and George Ross. + Bought Poison Alcohol Matthias Taylor, held for question- | ing, said Wanatan bought a gallon of denatured alcohol in Devils Lake Fri- day morning shortly before the drink- ing party started, according to Mc- Donald. Wangtan, blinded and par- alyzed, is unable to talk. Taylor said James Jackson, the missing Indian, stole a quart of the compound from a Tokio store and it is assumed the Indians drank that as well as the denatured alcohol. Last Seen On Horse ‘When last seen, Jackson was riding on. bored toward..the Sheyenne He inet reach his sheers nite in ‘Rddy county and has not been found. said De Mars has a fair chance of recovery but that the re- an of Wanatan and Ross is doubt- NORTH POLE ‘BUMPIER’ THAN SOUTH POLE, DECLARES BYRD Bulldog Relishes —_|| American Antarctic Exploration | Youth’s Trousers | OO Chicago, Mar. 10.—(#)—If anyone poriieta Ga tar ie Eni Oe eat OF grounds in his ears and the seat of She would lke to. see if bulldog can keep up his .1000 betting Regards Discovery of Marie average. pd tt batt wich when in walked the youth and bate ier her cash. scream,”she cried; but then the pulldos dog intervened. While the dog hung onto the ban-| Admiral Richard E. Byrd American tore through the| explorer, and the members of his door, Mrs. Evans let go a pot of coffee /antarctic expedition returned to bull’s | Dunedin today after spending more dit’s trousers as he Lahad for the head—another wNote—The youth was not wearing &|tion of the frozen regions at the bot- © METHODIST BISHOP TO OPEN DISTRICT CONFERENCE HER Leaders of 23 Churches Will/>ump Share in Program; World Service Funds Urged With an address of Bishop Wallace |#nd accompanied by Captain Ashley E. Brown, of Helena, Montana, to I. June, radio operator. The flight lead off, the Bismarck District Meth- odist conference will open in renter from Little America, Byrd's base. church, Tuesday evening, to close wi a final service Wednesday pecttng ‘The program includes talks in which 23 churches are represented by pas- tors leaders of their congregations. Leaders of the conference include Bishop Brown, John 8. Wilds, district superintendent, and H. J. Gernhard! song leader.* ‘The program stresses the import- ance of the conference, as it 1s the only assemblage of a district character Teo and lay the state ‘confe:ence at Biigley in the Hie One of the matters to come ‘9 is recommendation for licensing of local ministers. Bismarck Near Top Another is the matter of financing world service. The Bismarck district PITTSBURGH PARTY ee Carnegie Chemistry Instructor Dies of Bullet Wounds Re- ceived ‘Accidentally’ | Pittsburgh, Mar. Naren Gibson, 24, instructor in chemistry at Carnegie institute of technology, died today from @ bullet wound He receive ed early Saturday while attending a party at the home of Walter C. Krebs, student, of metallurgy at the United States bureau of mines here. Detectives said Krebs and E. H. Bap. of Uniontown, Pa., a law stu- ae the University of Pittsburgh, would’ be rearrested as a result of Gibson’s death. They were released under $250 bail each when Gibson said Saturday that the shooting was accidental. Krebs asserted Gibson was shot ac- cidentally when he, Krebs, sought to take @ revolver from Gibson because he feared ineoe did not know the weapon was ; ‘Two young women who were at the First National Bank Of Napoleon Joins in Bancorporation Group (Tribune Special Service) Napoleon. N. D., Mar. 10.—Affilia- tion of the First National bank of Na- poleon with the Northwest Renee poration became effective today, it was announced by Fred B. Heath, oan of the Logan county institu- “The following telégram was received this sttenomt ae J. C. Thompson, vice president of corporation: “We are glad to confirm the en- nouncement of your affiliation Bancorporation, will place your tacititien of this corporation, with re- sources of $460,000,000. We welcome you into this group.” ° Bh icles nth od oldest, in Logan county, having been faunded nto 6 Judge NO. Young * snosident. The posits of $300,000, Officials of the bank will be re- tained, for the present at least. Doheny Bribery Trial Delayed to W strong Fargo district. charges failed to return any contri-|™ent of the expedition was brief. He IS FATAL 10 GUEST Ss ue i nae | Returns showing Bismarck leading all the districts in support of the (Continued on page nine) LOU TELLEGEN NOW HAS FOURTH SPOUSE Famous Stage and Screen Ac- tor Was Once Geraldine Farrar’s Husband Asbury, N. J., Mar. 10.—(?)—Lou FH H | iat al i! a se ldtpitl ry § ft, |Jost in fog and finally came down at Expedition Arrives at Dune- din, New Zealand Byrd Land as Most Impor- tant Achievement Dunedin, N. Z., Mar. 10.—()—Rear than a year in the scientific explora- tom of the world. All Dunedin turned out to greet the discoverer of the antarctic region which he named Marie Byrd Land in honor of his wife. This di was rated by Byrd as the most im- portant achievement of the expedi- Looe om prenctieptt hr flight to the le evoked just two sentences of either Asked how it felt to fly over the south pole, Byrd said: “Very much like flying over the north og except the north pole was is the only man who has flown over both poles. He soared over the south pole November 29, 1929, in the tri-motored monoplane Floyd Bennett, piloted by Bernt Balchen, McKinley, aerial surveyor, and Harold was made over the hazardous heights Also Conquered Atlantic Qn May 9, 1926, Byrd flew out of » Circled the north pole and returned. Among his other ad- ventures was a transatlantic flight which ended when his plane became the water's edge off the coast of expedition, Jengera fo’. Oe: Nom ror, Sa oe meee Ii-gaS-together++fore +h-y mest ‘t Eleanor Bolling, entered the of Dunedin. Dunedin was the last city to bid Byrd goodbye when he set persons lined the waterfront to witness the return. escorted the two ships to their docks. err Es areas canotine ta “Surely the south pole flight was not more important than the flight during which we discovered the new land to the east, on the other side of ‘oe Clin scientists with us worked and the results should prove ' hari very ust We purraree ee areare pane unmapped cout Byrd Pays Tribute Dunedin, often called the “Pearl; Pep ee New Zealand,” has in other 29 DIE AS MINE CAGE PLUNGES 1,600 FEE Boy Begs Governor to To Death by Court “Don’t let ‘em kill ‘Tim’ because he’s thing,” pleaded Donald Diffenbaugh, & letter to Governor C. C. Young asking pardon for his German police dog convicted at @ court trial of killing sheep and sentenced to die under a new California law. “Tim, 104 PERSONS PERI MOTION PICTURE SHOW BLAZE Two Women Burn to Death in Apartment ' Memphis Tenn.. Weed Ph— ‘Miss Faith Carlton, ie ae another | woman known to one of the were house fire here early today. Mrs. A. 8. Martin was rescued by her hus- band who fought his way through the flames and carried her to safety. JAMAICA GINGER NOT. CAUSE OF PARALYSIS Strange Disease Incapacitating Several Hundred Oklaho- mans Not Known Oklahoma City, Okla., Mar. 10.—(> | Failing to find any traces of poison in eight: samples of Jamaica ginger, C. E. Clifford, city chemist today was inclined to doubt the theory that use opinion Jamaica while Great Battle Fleets Set for Mc Mock Battle PP Galea, Mar. 10.— ing airplanes were scan- ng the ea foday as two rent atl toward one another for Soe mock sock battle of Caribbean,” in 9-year-old Santa Rosa, Calif., boy, in .” shown here with his young master, is the first dog to be so convicted in the state. { | Most of Victims Japanese Naval | } victims were Japanese naval men and | their wives and children. Save Dog Sentenced a good dog and wouldn't kill any- SH IN KOREA —~+—_ Men, Their Wives and Small Children - CELEBRATING: WAR VICTORY Patriotic Film Bursts Into! Flames, Firing Building and Trapping 600 Seoul, Korea, Mar. 10.—(#)—One hundred and four persons were killed and more than 100 injured today in @ fire which broke out at a motion! picture show at the Chinkai naval! base in southern Korea. Most of the The film burst into flames during | & special motion picture exhibition at | Shinkai celebrating the 25th anni- | versary of the battle of Mukden dur- ing the Russo-Japanese war. . The show was being held in a ware- the fire, was a patriotic reproduction of scenes in the Russo-Japanese con- flict, About 600 persons were in the when the film burst into fired the structure. who perished were | The bluejacket fire fighters barely managed to prevent this. Sentence for Bribery Los Angeles, Mar. 10.—(P)—Asa Keyes, former district attorney of Los Angeles county, who will be taken to San Quentin penitentiary tomorrow to serve a one to 14 year sentence for bribery, has at least temporarily abandoned plans for an appeal of his conyiction to the United States su- | will be made by Miss Bertha Palmer, Completed for Educators: Recommends That High setoot| Teachers Be Trained at University of N.D.A.C. PALMER PLANNING MEETING| terv: i Urges State Teachers Colleges and Normal Schools as Elementary Centers Suggestion that the heads of state institutions of higher learning he in- vited to meet with the board of ad- ministration here March 14 and 15, to go over the report of W. E. Peik, superintendent of public instruction, at a meeting of the board tomorrow. The report is an exhaustive analy- sis of the condi and work of the various teacher+training institutions in the state made by Dr. W. E. Peik of the department of education of Minnesota University. It was mailed out to the heads of state educational institutions Satur- day for examination. Miss Palmer’s idea is to have them meet here next Friday, formulate recommendations to the board after discussion of the report, and then discuss the subject with the board on Saturday. Recommends State Training Members of the board were read- ing the 58 page document today. Salient points, as seen by Miss Pal- mer, are recommendations that all high school teachers be trained at the state university and agricultural col- lege. The university would train teachers in English, mathematics, history and social studies, sciences, music, art, education and psychology, (Continued on page nine.) JUSTICE SANFORD 10 BE BURIED INNATIVE | HILLS OF PENNESSEE Federal Colleague of Taft's Pre-| ceded His Former Chief in Death by Few Hours ‘Washington, Mar. 10.—/P)—His na- tive hills of Tennessee today offered @ last resting place for Associate Jus- tice Edward Terry Sanford. While the body of a former col-/| league and superior on the supreme court bench, William Howard Taft, lay in Washington, that of the other jurist who had unexpectedly preceded | his friend in death was prepared for final rites, late today at Knoxvivile. A delegation from the supreme court consisting of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes and Justices McReynolds, Butler and Stone jour- neyed to the Tennessee city to attend the ceremonies. When he left home Saturday for an appointment with a dentist, Jus- tice Sanford expected to join his co- workers as they honored the eighty- | Roc! ninth birthday of Oliver Wendell Holmes. He collapsed in the dentist's chair and died of uremic three hours later. ‘The body of the jurists left Wash- ington last night for Knoxville, where some Sanford was born 64 years **aithough President Hoover had de- | ferred consideration of a successor for Justice Sanford, speculation as to an| appointee is prevalent. Among those mentioned as possibilities are John W. Davis, of West Virginia, Democra- tic presidential nominee in 1924; At- torney General Mitchell; Senator Borah, Republican, Independent of Idaho; Judge William 8. Kenyon, of the circuit court and a former Re- publican senator from Iowa, and Cal- vin Coolidge. Prince of Wales Off To Continue Hunting Nairobi, Kenya Colony, British East Africa, Mar. 10.—(?)—The Prince of Wales left here yesterday for Uganda to continue his hunting trip inter- rupted more than a week ago when he contracted subtertial malarial ee: while on a Safari near here. His recovery from fever was unex- ———— | Minot Man Will No | | ‘Poosh’ Auto Again | ¢ Minot, N. D., Mar. 10.—(?)—Hence- forth John Larson of Minot wants bene known that he will “no He extended his “pooshing” | nerves to three men with an auto- mobile, supposedly stalled along a curb, in Minot early Sunday morning and for his efforts was robbed of $39. Larson told police that he was on his way home shortly after midnight when he saw an automobile at the curb. Two men were at the rear of the machine pretending to shove and another was at the wheel. It looked like more man-power was needed to chine. Larson leaned his shoulder against the rear of the machine and gave a mighty “poosh.” The two men also “pooshed” Larson's hat over his eyes, and one of them put a gun against his body and they took $39. The bandits climbed into the car and as it moved away Larson adjusted his crumpled head gear. NORTH DAKOTA ROAD LOAD RESTRICTIONS MADE BY PLOMASEN Ban on Vehicles of Over 6,000 Pounds in 27 Counties; More to Be Added gineers of the state highway depart. ment, effective Tuesday. The orders limit the weight of | vehicles using public highways to} 6,000 pounds, including load. T. G. Plomasen, head of the high- | rapidly "in mostsections ‘or- der was necessary to protect highways | from damage by heavy vehicles. In some places, he said, it may be May before the restriction is heavy traffic as soon as possible. All of the roads on which restric- | tions are being placed are in the Bis- marck, Grand Forks and Valley City divisions. Engineers in charge of the Minot, Devils Lake ‘and Dickinson areas are expected to take similar ac- tion soon. Counties affected by the order is- {sued today are Pembina, Walsh, | Grand Forks, Traill, Steele, Cass, Richland, Sargent, Ransom, Dickey, La Moure, Barnes, Stutsman, Griggs, Foster, McIntosh, Logan, Emmons, Kidder, Burleigh, Sheridan, McLean, Sioux, Grant, Morton, Oliver and Mercer. A survey today showed only parts of five main highways open to traf- fic, others still being blocked with snow. The roads open are U. 8. No. 10 and No. 2, passable throughout; U. S, 81—Grafton South; State route No, 1—Cooperstown to Ellendale; and cate apate No. 4, Jamestown to New TORRENTIAL FRENGH RAINS STOP RELIEF Flood Raneegger ge of Southern France Again Drenched After Five Days Agen, France, Mar. 10.—(#)—Tor- rential rains after five days of mag- nificient weather again descended upon the flood regions of southern France today at Agen, Moissac and Montauban, greatly hampering the | search for bodies in the two latter towns. The rain, if it does not lessen, threatened to cause the wat€rs to rise again. tered in an army barracks while those, of Agen are being taken care of at the artillery school building here. Estimates on the total number of| dead ranged between 400 and 500. Bismarck Man Scores pectedly rapid. eee te Yale, in his TAFT’S LIFE IN BRIEF 15, 1904—Became secretary of war under Roosevelt. Federal Farm Board Fargd, N. D., Mar. 10.—()—Dec- laration that the government, through operations of the farm hoard in loan- ing money to cooperative creamery and produce concerns, is interfering with private business help out the horsepower of the ma- j} Restrictions on the use of state| highways in 27 North Dakota counties | were ordered today by district en-j way department maintenance divi- | | ston, said frost is leaving the roads lifted, al-| though all roads will be opened to/ ‘The homeless of Moissac were shel-| Nation Prepares to Bury Taft i { | | | white painted pews, | while the great organs a the {the hymns, “Abide with Me” Generally fair tonight PRICE FIVE cai STATESMANJUSTICR TOREST WITHBRAVE, AT NATIONAL SHRINE Guns of America’s Far-Flung Army Posts to Boom Requi- ems 2 P.M. Tuesday PREPARE HONORED BURIAL Simple Services in Capitol, af. Church and at Arlington Are Arranged Washington, Mar. 1 10.—(?)—Parting tokens of affection and respect were heaped high upon the bier of Wil- liam Howard Taft today a; the na- tion prepared to give him honored burial. The house on Wyoming avenue where he lived and died was like a mammoth spring basket with - a wilderness of flowers. A proces<, sion of messengers carried to the sorrowing family the consoling words} of friends in many lands. Congress and the supreme court de- cided to recess until after the funeral tomorrow. President Hoover person-| ally directed that the executive) branch of the government should, show every fitting honor to the only! man in history who had been both’ president and chief justice. Fort Lincoln Guns Soma! for Taft. still other salute was to be fired each half-hour untui retreat, which comes at 5 p.m. At 5 p. m. to- day 48 more salutes will be fired... The exact time of the firing of the 21 salutes during the funeral services has not yet been learned, Lieut. Col. Alfonte said, but ea informed that the rites had, m.Set for.2 that tems eee afternoon said that ti ably would begin shortly after services are started, which will be noon here. Twelve officers at the Bismarck their arms today in mourning for ir. Taft and will wear the bands for a 30-day period. While the guns of near and distant army posts boomed their plans were completed for a of } the body tomorrow morning to the | capitol rotunda, to lie in state for . few hours, and for the service at 2 Pp. m. at the Washington church) which Taft attended. Pick Plot At Arlington, across the Potomac,. on a knoll overlooking the white\ house and the capitol, the family marked out the plot where the de= parted statesman will rest at last, ant the graves of the nation’s war leat For all of this preparation, the ac- tual funeral service tomorrow will be} one of the simplest that ever marked’ the passing of a great popular | It will be held in All Souls’ Unitarian , |church, at Sixteenth and Harvard’ streets, The pew where Taft sat, will be: | decorated with flags and flowers. As the church bell starts to toll,. the Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, Taft's pastor for a quarter of a cent | stand at the door to meet cession. To Read Favorite Within the church ie casket will be taken cessional. Memorial chimes will “Lead Kindly Light,” and two of Taft's favorite poems will be read. works of the National Broadcast- ing company from 1:40 to 2:35 p. m. eastern standard time tomer.

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