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—{ s ) “North Dakota’s , Oldest Newspaper © THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Unsettled tonight and Wednesday, Possibly showers. Rising temperature. ESTABLISHED 1873 ’ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1930 * PRICE FIVE CENTS Riots Follow Gandhi’s Arrest Two Minnesota Banks Robbed in 19 Hours HEALTHIEST COMMUNITIES ARE _ WEALTHIEST, SAYS JUNGMAN HOLDUP MEN SNATCH $9,000, $2,000 SUMS “AT WINTHROP, BIXBY Two Would-Be Robbers Wound- -. ed, Probably Fatally, Dur-._ ing Ohio Holdup SMALL GIRL PASSERBY SHOT Raided by Two Different - Robber Bands bank robberies in i 5 ab if i | Hoover’s Son te : mat Resembles his mother more than his dad, doesn’t he? Here's an especial- ly posed photo of Allan Hoover, son of the president, who is now attend- ; ing Harvard. house | Eastern:Part of State Receives ‘ Napoleon Boy Scout Troop Urged on Lions; Hazelton Will:-Cam & B g sky fig pada ff Greatest Amount of Bene- ficial Moisture The audience was +] orchestra “mistified’” but SOUTHWEST TORNADOES TAKE LIVES OF TWO IN WIDE SWEEP loxiehoma, Kansas and Ne-| braska Hit Second Time in Week by Twisters FARM LANDS - DEVASTATED Heavy Crop Damage Reported From the Winds’ Fury/and Hail Accompaniment Kansas City, May 6.—(?)—Invaded by tornadtc winds for the second time . | $14,648,753,000, a decrease of $501,- in four days, the southwest today counted a further toll of two lives and thousands of dollars damage. exacted in Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska. Loosing their fury in western Okle- homa, a series of small twisters last night swept over farm lands into. central Kansas and north into south central Nebraska. Mrs. C. T. Bush and a 16 year old negro boy named Edwards were kill- ed in Blaine county, Oklahoma, near Greenfield. Y Approximately 30 persons known to have been injured, dangerously. In Thousands Damage Damage was believed to total thou- sands of dollars, although complete reports were not available because of crippled transportation and commun- ication. At Walters, Okla. where three cot- ton gins and a dozen homes were razed. Loss was estimated at $150,000. celebrities gathered oe the right, is Maurice \ Burglars Adept at Taking Care of Baby Chicago, May 6—(#)—The loving care displayed by two burglars for a baby was the one beautiful feature of the robbery. of the Edward Solovy were few striking braska points, early last night injured (Continued on page nine) { freed Mrs. Golovy’s arms, into which k they placed the infant. . They figured jo Us the baby was hungry, so they went to the ice box and got. some milk. This they prepared expertly under Mrs. Solovy's directions. ,) 'y Having ‘reduced. the little one to a point. of cootet oe Decrease of $1,533,985,000 tnd wont away, cameo 2 Since Decenibéer’31 Shown by Pole Report , May 6.—()—Agere- of the 7,316’ National United States, Alaska, Were $27,348,408,000 on . Pole, comptroller of the , announced the figure today. total was a decrease of $1,533,- since Dec, 31, the date of the e bank call. It also was @ decrease of $1,673,- 414,000 in resources since the call of March 27, 1929. Loans and discounts, including re- discounts, oh last March 27, were Population Shrinks From 2,254 to 2,113 in a Decade, Buck Reports ‘Ten census areas in five counties in 283,000 in three months and a de- crease of $201,173,000 in the year. Total deposits on March 27 were $21,640,978,000, a drop of $1,132,- 515,000 three months and of Dickey County— Spring valley fonango Vill Emmons County: ‘Tp. 131, County— 41, R. 72 (returned nd Quinby +> University Follies Proves ‘Mistifying’ Grand Forks, N. D., May 6—(P)}— and the the scene was striking when a steam curtain, used for the first time in the north- west, was introduced at the showing of the University Flickertail a cay night Edward Spriggs Wins Sport Story Contest Edward i i cf ikl: g i i : if H i E | : i F ! i i i & e FG i i e Hi = i WAHPETON HAS 3,170 A county city, gained 101 10. years, the 1030 . census, 3,170 compared to 3,060, if BE al fe | ‘Bonny Vi Sir Harry Lauder 3 < to bid farewell Chevalier, French musical comedy actor, who is now making talkies in this country. ||NEW ENGLAND FIRE SHOW RESIDENT LOSS = to Sir as he sailed from New York at the same ship was Douglas Fairbanks, screen star, left. At Lauder, center, noted Harry end of his American tour. VICTIMS WILL REST IN SINGLE CASKET Mrs. Walter Braun and Little Sister Will Be Buried at Services Wednesday New England, May 6—(?)—One funeral service and one casket will mark the committal to the grave ‘Wednesday afternoon of Mrs. Walter Braun, 22, and her sister, Gladys Ja- cobsen, nine, who burned to death in 8 fire at the Braun farm home near recognition. The funeral services will be held in the Norwegian Lutheran church in the Daglum community, 15 northwest of New England, at Public Health Services Increase Earning Power of Their Territories | URGES MORE HEALTH UNITS Adequate Facilities for North Dakota Rural Districts is Recommended Grand Forks, N. D., May 6—(?)}— Public health officers from all parts of North Dakota gathered here today for their annual meeting and check- up of health conditions throughout the state. Several health authorities from neighboring states were sched- uled to give addresses. In a paper delivered this afternoon, Dr. J. D. Jungman, epidemiologist for the state health department, as- serted that there is a direct connec- tion between health and earning power and that the healthiest com- munities always are the wealthiest. Money spent in public health serv- ices, he said, brings a high return in increased earning power of the com- munity. Urging the establishment of full- time county or district health units, with a competent man at the head of each, Dr. Jungman said such public employes would act first as advisers to their communities, second as an executive and third as an enforce- ment officer to see that rules laid down for the benefit of the entire community were obeyed. Prevents Epidemics A health unit, he said, would pre- (Continued on page nine) JUDGE GOSS BURIED tianson and Nuessle At- ¢ tend Last Rites one p. m. Wednesday. State's Attorney C. P. visited the scene of the tragedy afternoon necessary. ‘Walter Braun, husband of the dead woman, was recovering today from burns about the face and head ahd from severe cuts on both legs, sus- tained while trying to rescue his wife and her sister from the flames. -Braun said he pushed his wife followed her. In the excitement they forgot the little girl until flame-eaten floor sank beneath her; Braun grasped vainly at’ her up- stretched hand and the flames beat and Oscar, and two sisters, Agnes and Esther, all living near is the son of Mrs. Bertha Braun, near New England. ‘His physician said tonight Braun suffered from shock as result of the tragedy. Two Women Injured in Dickinson Auto Crash ual Sheri- dan ‘county play day has been an-|Csl composition to his accomplish- of the county 1. D., May 6—UP}—Wahpe- | ture Day Is Set for'May 9 A 6.—Moving and W. L. Nuessle, and E. J. clerk of the su Taylor, terment rites. Accompanying the body from Cal- vent epidemics, help save the lives of ‘children, prolong the lives of adults AT MINOT SERVICES Lguatices..Birdzell, Burr, -Chris- Funeral services for Judge E. B. Goss, former district and supreme Brownlee,| court judge in North Dakota, who Amidon, and Coroner John Homelvig| died March 23 at San Diego, Calif., this} were held at 2 o'clock this afternoon and decided an inquest un-| at aie Methodist Episcopal church in Supreme Court Justices L. E. Bird- zell, A. G. Burr, A. M. Christianson, ipreme court, left Bis- marck to attend the funeral and in- |” Bebe to Wed Ben Bebe Daniels, motion picture star, and Ben Lyon, film actor, today an- nounced in Hollywood that they would have a real wedding June 14. The famous couple of the silver sheet have been engaged for more than @ year, OPEN DITCH SEWER FOR STORM WATER NOW IS SUGGESTED City Engineer Estimates It Would Cost $8,400 but Is Not Satisfactory Plan Storm water sewerage costs were still further reduced in a new propos- al laid before the city commission, Monday evening, by the city engineer, when estimates on an open ditch construction across the bottoms on the south side were offered for the consideration of that body. The ditch would be 24 feet wide at the top, six at the bottom and six feet deep. ‘The approximate expense of such a drain in the western section to the Missouri river was given as $8,400, of which $3,600 was itemized as cost of excavating 12,000 cubic yards of earth, $400 as incidentals and $400 as en- gineering fee. ‘ Such a construction was, however, held to. be very. unsatisfactory, as it would involve maintenance costs of $1,500 a year. The engineer said it (Continued on page nine) | WM. THOMPSON, 80, DIES OF APOPLEXY Wilton Resident Being Taken to Old Ontario Home for Inter- ifornia to Minot were Mrs. Goss and daughter, Marian, and Mrs. I. sister respectively of Mrs. Goss. Goss, arrived in Minot Sunday. jamin Babcock, Minot. ‘The Masonic bodies of Minot of which Judge Goss was a member also were to have a part in the services. Pallbearers were to be J. H. Tomp- kins, William Dunnell, F. B. Lam- bert, E. D. Kelley, R. E. Barron and wind, rain and snow storm. reported heavy snowfalls. $100,000 Libel Suit Is Launched by Minister May 6.—(®)—The $100,- 000 suit for damages brought by J. A. preacher of St. Louis, light, unde violin with ability, has added musi ments. “Grandpa's Lullaby” is the name ot the composition. M. through a window of their home aft-| Wright, San Diego, and Miss Mabel er the fire was discovered and then| Wright, Spokane, Wash., mother es she|and Mrs. R. V. Addison, Rockford, screamed. Mrs, Braun attempted to| Mich., the latter a sister of Judge Phoenix, Ariz, May- 6—(?)—All Arizona was in the grip of a severe Most of the mountain peaks in the north are covered with from one to 10 inches of snow. Prescott, Williams and flagstaff all Ubelous statements in a Sunday mag- It was composed some years ago but never set down, its. existence became known by ment in Listowel William Thompson, 80, died at 11:45 Monday night at Wilton, as a Tesult of apoplexy, after five days ill- ness. Funeral arrangements are for interment at Listowel, Ontario, for which place the body will be started tonight, accompanied by a son, R. E. Thompson, manager here for the ‘Washburn Lignite Coal company. This afternoon at 2:30 services g|were held at the home of Dr. R. C. ‘Thompson, another son, at Wilton, these being conducted by Rev. G. W. Stewart, Mandan, a member of the Thompson family by marriage. Mr. Thompson had been in the ‘United States 25 years, coming here from the province of Ontario, where he had engaged in merchandising G. D. Colcord. prior to his migration into the states. me eran cee a tl Hf t » Arizona Blanketed by (256,07 002° Npiond and Mary Severe Winter Storm Moore) Thompson, trom Scotland. He was therefore, aged 80 years, six months and 22 days. Dr. R. C. Thompson, Wilton, and R. E. Thompson, this city, are his sons. Daughters include Mrs. J. C. Anderson, Glendale, Calif.; Mrs. J. 8. son, lives in Winnipeg; and there are two sisters, Mrs. John Livingston, Jr., and Mrs, Cyrus Hacking, Listowel, Ontario. Russians Who Sought Ben Eielson Are Safe Motorship Nanuk, North Cape, Si- beria, May 6.—()—Reports reached today that the Russian aviator passengers ship Stavropol here, had arrived safely at Whalen, St. Lawrence Bay, on their aot from North Cape to Viadivo- Professor Who Understands Einstein Has Flare for Musical Composition Chicgo,: May 6.—()—Prof, Albert. Michelson, who measures the speed lerstands the Einstein theory, paints with skill and handles of C major and is no longer than a single sheet of music paper. Next week the work of erecting Dew apparatus for the remeasurement of light by Dr. Michelson will start at San Bernardino, Calif. At the age of 78 the scientist not only hopes to improve upon the accuracy of his light speed measurement, but he also finds time for his numerous hobbies. At present, his friends say, he is in unusually good health, f 2 KILLED, 100-HURT, AS DISORDER GROWS THROUGHOUT INDIA Mahatma Sits in Barred Cell Spinning Cotton, Emblem of Movement POLICE KILL DELHI RIOTERS Sympathy Strikes Called, Courts Picketed, Railway Serve ice Hindered Poona, India, May 6.—(%)—Wide- spread disorder, with two persons killed and up to 100 wounded, is the answer of Mahatma Gandhi's fol- lowers to the British government's arrest of “the holy one.” ‘While the veteran Nationalist lead- er sat behind the barred window of his cell in Yeroda prison, calmly and industriously spinning cotton on his miniature Charka—emblem of the Nationalist movement—trouble oc- curred in many parts of the restless peninsula, The most serious trouble broke out today at Delhi where police fired on rioters and killed two, Hold Up Trains At Calcutta 15 Nationalists were in- jured in a clash with the police when: they attempted to interrupt railway service between Calcutta and Tekal Chat. A mob estimated at 5,000 took part in the disturbance, many of them lying on the tracks to hold up trains Half of the textile mills in 's which has two-thirds of the spindles in all India, closed as the result of # workless day proclaimed because ob the arrest of the Mahatma. A sympathy strike at Jullundhur resulted in the injury of at least 30 persons who fought with the police. ‘Two were reported in serious condi- tion, Disperse Women Pickets Police at Delhi dispersed women volunteers who were picketing the courts by charging them with their sticks. (Continued on page six) STOCK PRICES SOAR $610 $39 A SHARE New York, May 6.—()}—A fresh bull movement developed on the stock market late today, driving the bears to cover and causing spectacular ad- vances in high priced shares, about a dozen closing with gains of $6 to $39. ‘The market fluctuated uncertainly during much of the day, but had pe- riods of pronounced strength at the opening and during the afternoon, ‘Trading, however, was in sharply cure tailed volume, total sales falling be- low 4,800,000 shares, compared - to more than 8,200,000 yesterday, Southwestern Section Legionnaires to Meet In Dickinson May 13 Dickinson, N. D., May @—The Mate thew Brew post of the American Le- gion will be host on Tuesday evening, May 13, to all posts of the Southwest- ern district of North which includes the entire southwestern part of the state, at a conference and pare ty luncheon and @ program. State Commander Harry Hart and State Adjutant Jack Williams toegther with T. O. Kraabel, of the veterans’ serv- ice, and a representative of the vet- erans’ bureau also will be a ‘This condenence wen 518i P. 20 Dynami of six or eight posts in towns along the Milwaukee in the southwestern edge of the state, will meet in con- vention in the afternoon, Altogether the day is expected te be a big one here for Slope Legion naires with all ex-service men, whether members of the Legion or not, invited. Dozen Fishing Boats Feared Lost in Storm missing off Mokpho, Southern Korea, as the result of a storm last night. ——_—————_>- —* Woman’s Curiosity Prevents Bombing OO Chicago, May 6.—(7)}—A woman's inqialcrenaes prevented a bombing —_—_——— YPSILANTI STORE BURNS Ypsilanti, N. D., May 6—(®)—Pire destroyed the general store owned by W. H. Hyslop and the H. G. Kipp pool hall here early today. The fire is believed to have started as the re- sult of an incubator in the Kong Sid Hystep’s store. No has made of ths loss,