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stm, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE -22%% E STABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS | 250 Killed By Japanese Quake s, 4 ’ % ‘ 4 Russian Charges Two Powers With Plotting#™=™ SAYS GREAT BRITAIN EXPOSUREFATALT) |\Demand for Santa Claus “YS SCL SRS AND FRANCE PLANNED ngs and | SOUTHDAKOTANTEN| To Visit City Is Strong SOVIET INTERVENTION See 4,500 Buildings and 645 Houses Leonid Ramzin, Being Tried for I aa MILES FROM FARGO|[ “Has Operation ‘jo: st ste rine Urn O+| "repre Deeps Treason, Makes State- ment in Defense Commerce by Tremors E. B, Lumbard, Huron, Dies This Morning After Night on Highway 4g When Sante Claus asked the chil-1LQ§§ PLACED IN MILLIONS Slope Ae Cate at saying if they poustetig, perc ert Harry P.|Fires, Landslides and Burst- ae Goddard, secretary of the Association ing Reservoirs Add to ‘CHURCHILL’ SAID LEADER TEMPERATURE BELOW ZERO “Tanta appointed Mr, Goddard as pwanition — sah agent to make a Ln of ae children living hereabouts see vase they really want him to visit Bis-| Tokyo, Nov. 26—(P)—At least 250 get} um ara aint sae Persons were killed and several hun- rr. "t know ¢ | dred injured today in eastern Japan’s children living in Bismarck and sur- | mogt destructive earthquake ive rounding territory, so he asked The ‘Tribune to help him notify the chil- | disaster of 1923. dren that they must write him letters} Striking @ score of towns and vil- if they want to see Santa Claus. lages of northern Izu peninsula, the The first announcement of this fact | playground of Japan, at 4:03 a, m, was made Monday and Tuesday Mr. | (2:03 p. m. E.8.T. Tuesday) the quake Goddard had a large number of let-| destroyed or seriously damaged 4,500 ters'from children who say they will |buildings and 645 houses according to be disappointed if Santa Claus doesn’t |an official estimate. It climaxed a come. series of earthquakes in that area geen ede on et ee naa since Nov. 10. mail to Mr. 's office With communications partially re- so many letters that his pack was al- stored in the stricken area, which is most as big as that of Santa Claus. 195 miles southwest of here, authori- It begins to look as though Santa | tie. DOLORES ‘DEL‘nIO will get all the invitations to come to | ies began the tragic tally of the cas- Bismarck that anyone could wish, Los Angeles, Nov. 26—(P)—Dolores| but Mr. Goddard says it takes a sheng! ene terlence del Rio, Mexican film actress, under- | strong demand to induce Santa to| Fires, landslides and bursting res- went an operation described as|make special trips such as the one |érvoirs added to the havoc after the “minor” at the Good Samaritan hos-| Which may bring him here and that |quake had reached its maximum of pital today. She was reported to be; More letters are necessary. violence. Many communities had yet “getting along splendidly.” The mailman doesn’t mind carry-|to be heard from and their reports ‘The actress, taken to the hospital ing them. He says it is all in a good | Were expected to enlarge the death yesterday was said to be suffering Here a ve reid pool bank aes ines already have making a ie l- timat in scores mil- Srom@' Sidney elienent. dren who write to him. _ lions of-yen. bas Just send your letter to Mr. God-| Reports indicated the heaviest blow to an end. dard at the Association of Commerce. |fell upon the area extending from JUDGE REFUSES TWO He will see that it is forwarded to|Mishima to Numazu, reglow about Temperatures descended suddenly Santa Claus 15 miles long and 5 to 10 miles wide. during the night, bringing eight be- Below are some of the letters that| The village of Nirayawa was wiped 1 ther “to Lak Mr. Goddard already has received. out, 69 persons being killed there. that Brit ee x al jig patina Farge, MOTIONS 10 DISMISS They were picked at random from |Nagoka, a hot springs resort, also was ‘secon regim the big pile which the mailman |destroyed, 22 having perished there. brought this morning. It would take|A group of small villages in the was established in 1929 and relations Bismarck and Mandan. almost an entire newspaper to print thy se IN WALSH-NESS CASE reuse re Sate these by chance. Here is what these Former President Poincare and Briand, of France, Also implicated Moscow, Nov. 26.—(}—England and France were depicted as malevolent Plotters seeking to intervene in So- viet Russia and overthrow the com- munist regime by Professor Leonid Ramzin, “confessing” today before a revolutionary tribunal which is trying him for high treason. Professor Ramzin, speaking into a microphone which carried his voice to the furthest reaches of the com- munist federation, told an amazing story of intrigue, mentioning casual- ly as co-plotters with him, former President Poincare of France. Aris- tide Briand, French foreign minister, “Colonel Lawrence” and “Lord Churchill” of England, and other figures of the two countries. Facing Death Sentence The defendant, who is the leader of a group of eight prominent soviet engineers facing death sentences on theii‘ pleas of guilty to the counter revolutionary conspiracy, declared that British support to the plot waned. Snow Removal Crews Ham- pered by New Snowstorm in Red River Valley E. B, Lumbard, Huron, S. D., col- lector for the Advance-Rumley com- pany of Fargo, died at 9:50 a. m. today as the result of exposure suf-: fered when his automobile stalled) 10 miles south of Faro Tuesday. | He had left Fargo Tuesday morn- ing and was found face downward in @ snowbank near Wild Rice by a farmer Tuesday afternoon. Lum- bard was less than a quarter of a mile from help. Lumbard was believed to have worked on his car and was overcome by the intense cold. Both hands and feet were badly frozen and pneu- monia developed. He was en route to Huron to spend Thanksgiving day with Mrs. Lum- bard and their four children. Mercury Below Zero Sub-zero weather gripped North Dakota today for the first time this season, as the series of snow storms which assailed the state during the last 10 days appeared to have come Thereafter, he said, the French and state reported readings slightly Eine ts se easts, Services and Big Dance Are |S Senet hee with the soviet were reestablished: The northwestern corner of the The larger towns on the northern t a) a mad <=) stumencortmtoas AOR Snow.Bemoval .crewsof. the. es P chi. , of Santa ledge of the quake belt escaped with sro ae xat|-On Bismarck Thanksgiving Programs =22soe iv eae AE eS nee sacral cremate ee estab- : marc jan Ww rogram pager de pestering ‘when a new| Testimony in Murder Trial Yes- WELCOME SANTA Ported four deaths, Numazu one ana newspaper men. assuming his refer- snow storm, assuming the Proper-| terday Showed Vote's Gun _| Deer Santa Claus: 5 the destructi bret esr ence to be to “Lawrence of Arabia,” PARITY Union Rel Siva eka rnc rgen eg eastern Wiel ie I want you to come and see me. 1/1) 0 pepbnr are towns but e inion Religious Services Sta pa e si las Jamm still got some of the toys that ish arom tote tere wee WHEAT-CORN ig MILLERS ADVISED 10 Clear weather today, however, aid- gave toe two years ago. tam eight| A portion of this stricken area also Day; Memorial Building ed crews in their snow removal work British representative, Sir Philip 2 ith indicatic that high travel See eS | TOIMPROVEPRICES,| om==ro=—PURCHASEGRANNOW ssussesss to back of the intervention movement Bismarck is set to celebrate its 5 . Blocked at Buffalo ee rccial enemas termee y L E BELIEVES Thanksgiving day with feasts of F At Buffalo ‘on highway No, 10 conservative chancellor of the ex- turkey and roasts along with the giv- the road was blocked, but U. S. High- chequer, since the first Viscount ing of thanks and of festivities topped way No. 81, Grand Forks to F: IG years old. My name is Milton Klein, |Suffered heavily in the earthquake of New Rockford, N. D., Nov. 26.—(?)—|I live on 512 Thirteenth street. We|123, notably Atami, Hakone and Ito. Two motions to dismiss second de-|got @ dog named Chip and a cat| Definite news from Shimoda, at the gree murder charges against Joseph | named Nigger. I think that’s all I'11|S0uthern tip of Izu peninsula, was V. Walsh and Gustave A. Ness,| write because it’s elght o'clock. lacking, but a naval plane flying over Jamestown men held in connection| Goodbye and good luck. the town reported no serlous damage with the fatal shooting of David Vote, MILTON KLEIN. had been observed, 23, were denied by Judge Fred Jan- — : % Troops Enter Region ‘id and has not was kept open. The roads in the Sonius in district court here today. Dear Santa Claus: Seaton ‘British polities for off with the big dance of the fire- : » Minot district were reported in fair] As the state rested its case about| I wish you would come to us. I| Troops from Mishima and Shizuoka some time. ; Estimates That 200,000,000) men, inaugurating the auditorium of | Chairman Smiles When Asked if ood condition with Highway No.|11 a. m. today, counsel for the de-| wish you would come to Bismarck to entered the stricken region to main- fendants made a joint motion to dis- | bring me and my brother a few toys./tain order and relieve suffering. to fing a General community building as ® soc 6, Bismare , open. Bansal eee Bushels of Wheat Will Be | ‘?® raid as a social) That Means Prices Are pee raponced tin miss the charges against Walsh and|I am 7 years old and my brother is|Newspapers organized relief units to Janville of the French general staff in center, epair crews continued their work ee i the Red Cross and the military, Paris and, in company with e former Used for Feed Religiously, the chief event of the Due to Go Up on broken down telegraph and tele-| Ness. Upon denial of this motion, | 6 years old. I wish you would bring * t Zi > ‘ hone wires. Céi ication by| Second dismissal of the charge (Continued on page nine) while the home ministry sent experts Czarist general, Lukomsky, of discuss: day will be the union services of nee 2 Petey fas ey id ~s . on against to ward off d fi ith him plans-for intervention ——, 4 in’ Soviet Russia, ‘They agreed a] Washington, Nov. 26.—(AP)—The Tun Viet Latene, Peet tome |. Was , Nov. 26—(P}—Chair-| lished today for the first time since force of 600,000 or 700,000 men, to be| opinion that wheat prices will im-| mirst Evangel man fe of the farm board said to-|!ast week. furnished principally by Rumania, | prove and that the surplus will be tical, McCabe Methodist, Gay that now was @ good time for| Telephone company officials said Nex Poland and Jugoslavia, with ald from|Tednced to normal if prices parity ries millers and feeders to purchase] the damage caused i» wires was the] outlining the case ae the defense, White Russian sources, would be suf !between corn and wheat continues|| Thanksgiving Day ||*h=t. *** (continued page nine) died as i i y Tempting Turkeys ||hespltal at Mishima, which \ gecaped Responsible for ||sists trom okyo Central observatory that he did not participate in the ac- | | Death of Two Men ||Farnuncs thet furtoer ise oe Gat sai peat acta | ped ficient for thelr purpose, once the| was expressed today by Sam R. Mc- 5 4 Addressing newspapermen at his tinued on Vote the result of the dis- plotters had been able to pave the|Kelvier of the farm board. Program in City || press conference, the chairman sald: —_————____ Pena ee his own gun when it ia 3 us igh ge EES way inside the Soviet Union. He estimated the carry-over would jan ly “If any of you are in the feeding or Me ats, fired alone a Peete Nov. aniias mpt- priors pps Maintains His Composure be only 120,000,000 bushels if 200,- ‘The following is a program of || milling business go cover your re- was on the stand — Poole on igs pone: ag saree. t page nine! The defendant, who was surround- | 000,000 of wheat were used for|| Thanksgiving day events in the ||/@uirements now. poo dope night. ed by a battery of sputtering white | feeding. city tomorrow: ned noon. Dewey Pross, New| Both were fatally shot. grocer; K. F. Byron, night| — ‘The first to die was a man who policeman; Fred Sinkler, local garage) tried to cut his way through the ,) man, and Lioyd Austin, blacksmith,| window of the butcher shop of were additional state witnesses to/ William Branska, where there was sone ey. $3,000 worth of dressed turkeys. Vote’s Gun Jammed paca anioee Ie Se Tem ot hg 5 Testimony offered yesterday dis-| Place, was awaken \o closed Vote’s gun jammed during the| ‘Tuder, whom he killed. A few minutes later two police- ent a Number of males and Probably left b him without) A few minut Site Dole: Spi Winters 5 The chairman sited a am not \d movie cameras, never fal-| A new farm board bulletin on re- 10 a, m—Union Thanksgiving ||making any promises but the stuff is WILL PEN TH \f wee tn his self-condemning accusa-|cent experiments in feeding wheat|| service at First Baptist church. worth the money and it’s a good time tion of the foreign statesmen. He de-| gives it. a value of from $125 to 11 a. m.—Prayer and worship |/to buy it. Go buy it because it is clared he was positive, although he | $1.67 per bushel, as hog feed, equal|| in new Trinity Lutheran church. || cheap.’ had never seen either Poincare or|to or sli ly greater than corn. 12 to 8—Dinners. Asked if that meant the price of Servi Are Set for 1 e Churchill, that they were the brains |The sh with cattle and shee 9 p. m.—Firemen’s dance at || wheat was going up, the chairman| Services Are Set for 11 o’Clock of the intervention move in their two | was not quite so |, but with poul-|]| Community building begins. smiled and reiterated that he was not AM: Building Is Not countries. He alleged also the “in-|try it was equally favorable. making any promises, . dustrial party” of which he was head| | McKelvie fixed the present surplus| German Evangelical and German ‘The chairman was of the opinion Yet Completed | the actual representative of the | of wheat at 260,000,000 bushels. The that the wheat surplus is being re- Abi %, French general staff in the Russian |total crop and the carry-over as of| oeptist-et the First Baptist church. |Giceq gradually through feeding) Fred Lincoln, New Rockford chiet| fled from butcher shop with an jove Arctic Circle Dur espionage. July 1, the latter being 275,000,000) ocicck in the . operations. He estimated that well] Trinity Lutherans will attend the|©f police and Frank Wade, two of hasiensga ing Strenuous Life +He reiterated today information| bushels, he placed at 1,115,000,000 morning, over 200 million bushels of wheat|first services in thetr new church| eight witnesses, testified Vote's shot- given in his two hours and a half on bushels. He estimated that 660,000 ‘Trinity Church Opens Mould be used for Uvestock feed this) building, Thanksgiving day. Sery-| gun was jammed when they examined! Fargo Man Instantly | 6.1. norway” Nov. 28. stand yesterday that the summer | 000 bushels, would disappear throug! Another rel event will be the |year. ices in at 11 a. m. wit! after shooting. ‘ 7 Hf pedelindd . 28.—(P}—-Oveo of'1980 a the os set for the in-/human consumption, 85,000,000 bu-| first prayer si worship in the new ———- special nae by the choir and the| =. R. Gedrose and Carl Britton, Killed In Auto Crash Sverdrup, polar explorer, died during the night. He was 70 years old. tervention, but that, due to various/shels in planting and 150,000,000 in| Trinity Lutheran church, Fourth quartette. international complications, it was {total exports. street and Avenue ALat lla.m. The Three Men Held for Although the interior of the new meget 3 ors rteich cate PS er sen |“ uleaing in Regard |e Gt cho, chet = a ween co . The - .e. Y CUSTOMS MEN wheat prices, “enough will be fed to|‘brating this evening with a mixed| 0 Missing Teacher|church school auditorium. ‘The build- ” less, » Dahl, 40, , Was instant Cal Sverdrup in le-time gether with their companions, Emil/ eight miles west of Enderlin Monday |gained a pated sy ae natal the Kerner and Roy Aggola, followed Vote | night when an automobile in which | foremost polar explorers. He spent a after he drove away from the accident | he was returning to his home here|number of winters above the arctic scene to repair a tire. Their testi-| overturned. Dahl suffered a brpken|circle, at various times conducting mony showed that during the re-| neck as the machine turned over aft- expeditions to Franz Joseph Land, newed iment Vote drew from his|er plunging from @ 10-foot grade. along the northern Siberian coast, truck one of two weapons with which| Herbert Groth, driver of the car, re-| and elsewhere in the arctic. z (Continued on page nine) ceived minor injuries. Twice he headed expeditions tc result in a normal carry-over.” program of music and readings and ing is the result of inadequate facil- Leaders of three national farm or-|tomorrow a big Thanksgiving day| Fort Morgan, Colo., Nov. 26—(#)—| ities for carrying on work of the RESI GN POSITI ONS ganizations yesterday urged the sen-| dinner will be served to the pupils. | Three men were held today for ques-| congregation, and represents years ate agriculture committee to refrain] Inmates of the state prison also will | tioning about the mysterious disap-|of preparation. from attempts to amend the farm | receive a dinner in keeping with the | pearance more than a week ago of| The building is located on Fourth marketing act at the short session of | day, but the prison management had | Miss Enid Marriott, 28, Wiggins, Colo.,| street and Avenue A. Rev. Opie S. eae gt A gen board | not yet Season today just what the ee ere. Seth comes Rindahl is pastor. search for ergs ogee’ Nine Held in Custody Following oP its price and marketing stabiliz-| A Thanksgiving day dinner also ts| vesterdey at ‘Wisgins, where Mise e 4 . Eclipse which was forced to spenc the Investigation of Govern- ation paid pray dies ss \Conttiioed ea page nine) Marriott dropped from sight a few Ethel Barrymore Colt Nine Armies of Archaeologists Attack winter north of Siberia, ice-bound, ment Agent momenta after alighting from a train) Makes New York Debut id jo ope e and in 1920 to the Kara sea to seek a Thomas Edison Attempting to Bri the ah of, Rove ev Yat. WOR ep_tom| FUzZZles Incident to Civilization Dawn) =i: 2°7 ee # to sean: jomas 2 empting o Dring pil thtee are farm laborers. sherit| parryrmore, Colt, descendant of fa. Growing old, he gave his expert ad- re . Johnson said two of them when in| Vice rescue parties atrang lor of investigation by a special agent A e 4° Qu f F e N FE questioned yesterday told conflicting mous players, made her New York| New York, Nov. 26.—(AP)—Puz-| By the character of stone tools in lost bers of the Nobile ian acting customs border patrolman. viatio: ear tur debut with Ethel Barrymore last night | zles surrounding the dawn of civiliz-|beds which once formed the shores |!0st members o! expedi de ber n to og in uture Perr Mood Pt Sooo alana ins Roser ogres of Julia Peterkin’s ation have been attacked by nine/of the Favum lake,,the date of the|Snd for Rosld Amundsen, his friend nove] armies of archealogists operating on|dedieation of the Sahara and Arab-|f longstanding. who was lost off detent treasury agents of at| West Orange, N. J., Nov. 26.—UP—| worth, director of the Newark air- ; Mary. a 2,000 mile front from the Black|ian deserts has been approximately|Zromsoe in a fultle attempt to aid itast nine of thems ‘Thomas A. Edison is trying to bring| Port. Among other things the in-| Dawes Is Reelected Although the critics were unani-|Sea to the upper Nile. fixed in the middle of the stone age|“eneral Nobile. fa 3 Five men were. in the county jail ventor asked: A iation’s Head) 2eiinsepproval of Barrymores in| | Receiving the gold medal of the|or the middle paleolithic age, Prof.| Next to Roald Amundsen an today, having been placed behind bars | *¥istion out of the fog. ‘What color are various degrees of ssociation’s Head) siacktace, they and the Holland society at a dinner last| Breasted said. Fridtjoe Nansen, Sverdrup was Nor- between 11 o'clock last night and| He has been experimenting with| fogs? How soon before ‘emerge were liberal in the praise of the new-|night Professor James H. Breasted,| The human conscience began to|Way’s greatest arctic explorer. the color | lighten? | _ St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 26.—(7)—W. R.| est torch bearer. Generalissimo of the scientific forces,| function about 3,000 B. C., said Pro-| He participated in numerous arctic uestioning. Four others were said to| est enemy. His rockets would give off | How does it look from the top? If|Dawes, Chicago, was re-elected presi- described the work which is financed | fessor Breasted, who based his gen-|rescues, and once he crossed Green- be detained at the federal building,| light by night and a black smoke by| you know the depth of the fog, can|dent of the Mississippi Valley assoc!- chiefly by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. | eralization on ancient Egyptian cof-|land on skis with Nansen, Customs officials announced that|day to locate airports and del you land safely? ation at its closing convention session Trib: Won’ Prof. Breasted, director of the|fin inscriptions and writing on papy- ee ee six former patrolmen would be called| the depth of the fog. station can't | torment Bibject of sound as a guide yesterday. pinnae "ed ce une Won’t Be Oriental Institute, indieated some|rus. About this time cereloped ios Once North Dakota . federal grand , but de-| “It seems to me that aviation can’ » Aldworth a 5 id 4 of tl jiscoveries seem mar! theory that man eld res} peters te nay if thay are smscng those | see the mountain for the mole-hil,”| drone of the Motor would drown out eens, La. was named vice president,|| P¥inted Thursday |}2,‘he,ditcoveries seem to mark the| theory that man is held responsible!“ Mropchant Succumbs {under arrest. They. declined also to| he remarked in stating his belief that | such signals. at large, and Richard 8. Hawes, St. —_ first development of the conception | this. , identity the prisoners, who were held/ the solution of the problem was much} “On the contrary,” replied Edison, | Louis, Mo., treasurer. The Bismarck Tribune will not || off heaven and hell and other signifi-| One of the expeditions is workin, Duluth, Minn., Nov. 26.—(#)—Wil- incommunicado. than it appeared. “a distinctive sound could be created| Resolutions adopted called on con-|| be published Thanksgiving day. ||cant events. at a temple at Medinethavu, east of| liam J. Bailey, 76, pioneer lumber “Radio, at the present time, is a| which would cut through the sound | gress to provide “by direct appropri- Employes of The Bismarck The oldest known tools yet found,| Luxor, which contains great walls| dealer of Crookston and Euclid, Minn., MUST STOP TURKEY THEFTS | | bit too delicate for fog work,” he said | of the motor and reach the aviator.” |ation or other suitable financial ar-|) Tribune company will join with |/he said, have been unearthed under| inscribed about 1,200 B. C. by|and Inkster, N. D., died on a train Easton, Md., Noy. 26.—}—Because | in disproval of the radio beacon for| Answers to the inventor's questions | rangement,” the funds needed for|| other citizens of the city in cele- || 60 feet of gravel in one of the Nile’s| Rameses III with the story of his| yesterday while en route from Aitkin thefts of turkeys and chickens have| blind flying “I personally prefer to, covered 25 closely-written pages and|completion of the association's five-|| brating the national holiday. ||old beds. The date is 500,000 B, C.,|vars. Another excavating at Nei-|to Duluth with his son, N. & Bailey, been increasing with the approach of | work up something much more sim-| Edison laid them in a top drawer of|year program of major waterways. fiving thanks, and, last but not || cut down by some other systems of|shar in Asia Minor, scien-| Duluth. ‘Turkey, Day the county grand jury|ple. involving, perhaps. sight or | his desk. The association also reaffirmed its|| least, enjoying turkey and trim- || reckoning to 200,000 B. C., and they|tists have cut through 14 levels of| He leaves his widow at Walker, and has urged that the legislatute decree | sound.” Edison disclosed his experi-| “I'm going to give a great deal of | position for a standard nine foot|| min's. were used at the beginning of the|civilization and arrived finally at|two sons, John Bailey at Aitkin anc the tl ments in a talk with Richard Ald-! thought to this matter,” he said. channel in al! waterways. ice age. the stere age. Admiral R. Bailey at Walker.