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North DaKota’s \ The Weather Oldest Newspaper |. Partly cloudy tonight and Sua- day; little change in temperature. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1878 : ‘ PRICE FIVE CENTS Three Die in Minnesota Fire . Midwest Swelters in September Heat Waveltt:isn — BY FLAMES: NORTHWEST IS COOL |L___Hazen church to Be Dedicated IREPORT TWO DEAD |Honduran City Is : 0R me ae BUT MERCURY SOARS aa | | AS FRENCH PLANE Burying Its Dead || | —— IN OTHER SECTIONS FALLS TN RUSSIA iy Nt ALL OF ures Wear 10; O1 Res UNEMPLOYED ARE PACING DISTRESS)" ords Shattered Among 150 Known Victims Are 11 American Clerics, Killed As School Falls BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1931 Two: Victims Were Attempting To Help Neighbor Save City of 13,000 Is Inundated By His Property Tidal Wave Following Proposed Non-Stop Flight From Disturbance Paris To Tokyo’Ends In Tragedy DETAILS ARE NOT aivel Relief Efforts Will Be Based On Plan Designed To Assist Destitute Only MANY REFUGEES REPORTED HOUSES UNSCATHED Families Forced To Flee As Blaze Advances; More PHOENIX IS HOTTEST SPOT Deaths Feared Three Men Were Aboard Craft But Dispatches Fail To Identify Victims New York City Has Warmest Day of Summer; Prostra- tions Reported Grygla, Minn., Sept. 12—(4)—Thres Persons are known to have lost their lives in a disastrous brush and grass fire that swept a wide district east of here Friday. Two of the dead are Marving My- rold, 29, and a bachelor named Bogen. Thei rbodies were found at the home ° Belize, British Honduras, Sept. 12. aosea there ee of 18,000 persons, Washington Sept. 12.—()—Federal devoted lurday to burying the 12.—-()}—Two of the| feliet efforts were based Saturday on|Gead and ministering to the injured, the French airplane|the essumption that the number of | Victims of a hurricane that devastated unemployed in distress next winter|the city Thursday. will be far less than the total jobless.| More than 150 were esti- ‘Administration officials regard the|mated to have lost their lives in the distress problem as serious but are/storm and ensuing tidal wave. Some confident it can be adequately cared |unofficial reports placed t!: number for and feel there is no occasion for|of fatalities as high as 700. Bodies Public alarm. still were being unearthed. Many A survey of the probable relief bur-|were injured by falling walls and den is being made by government|roofs. Seventy per cent of the city ADMINISTRATI So ees oun scr aaeet ee ee S| oppene peyepn (By The Associated Press) A late summer heat wave brought | torrid blasts which had left, during the last 24 hours, records in many districts. ‘While relief was felt in the north- climbed to 100 in.Huron, 8. D., and) Moorhead, Minn., only the rarest pos- | sibility of cooler temperatures was) a for the central and eastern: states. sauna bagi ee ete etuee joenix where temperature 0 2 Speakers at the dedication program will include Rev. F. J. Wacker, Fea net eer yes eay Ne. | Parkston, 8. D, former Hazen minister; Rev. J. D. Gross, Redfield, 8. D.; Associated Press Photo John Henry ser, 82, Davie county, North C: t convicted of slay! and sentenced to d chair Nov. 5, third was a 16-year-old boy whose name was not learned immediately. widely scattered territory stroyed. Grygla was In than 10 miles, but the inland village of four towns was deserted. With no reports from more dis- | welfare agencies and federal officials |scathed and every church in ruins. are not yet ready to estimate what it| Starting at 2:30 p. m., the disturb- ‘will be. ance raged for about three hours They are confident however, on the| with a calm period of 30 minutes. It basis of last year’s experience, that|was immediately followed by a tidal the total number of unemployed does | wave that accounted for most of the Rev. A. Hacke, Fargo; and Rev. J. H. Wacker, ney, Mont. Worst Early Storm Came 28 Years Ago The Hazen choir, under the direction of Rev. Mrs. in private| Whether the crew was hurt. not represent the number who need help. Administration leaders believe that, while the census bureau showed 6,000,000 unemployed last win- ter, the number in distress was be- dead and left water from five to nine trapped when St John’s college, a Jesuit institution, tant areas it is feared here that other deaths may have occurred. Myrold and his father, Matt My- Senator Watson Opposes Revi- Told, succeeded in saving their own home and went to assist neighbors who meanwhile had fled from the ap= Proaching flames. They were trap- tween 2,000,000 and 5,000,000, Next winter the number ‘wag:raeed. th ‘The ch located at the intersection of Hasen’s Main street and LASKAN COAST IS cage American church is al ‘8 5 concerns was help may be larger, they believe, but pra te i for ive general problem will be somewhat |Placed roughly at $260,000 and the total damage at well over $2,000,000. iter because the burden of last |. COMBED FOR FLIERS Years 1200000 aroughe victims will be | Tid medical aupplies were crenenen| . Weehington, Sept, 12—(P)—A sharp Deceipree 6,000,000 unempl last |bY flood and rain, handicapping sub- difference of opinion over tax revision ‘Fargo Veterans Join me winter, officials believe Tponaoo rep. (sequent rellet Government |st the next session of congress 6 held) Fight for Fort Lincoln reper tat steamer captain| met ne mania: “may Sto e home of the Mena cou was |e and Pray ‘This was emphasized Friday when : Heard Plane Tuesday Is were only Lanepioreq een soa recatl-| Governor J. A. Burdon finally got|Senator Watson of Indiana, the Re- REGULATIONS FOR pear out @ radio message to London asking | Publican floor leader, declared at the this that a British battleship be sent with | white house that he was opposed to a revision at this time. His view on Northwest Borrower Must Give Promissory Note Martur- ing Sept. 30, 1932 ‘ sion Now; Says It Would Unsettle Business Pass Resolution Saying Serv- icemen Are Opposed To Seattle, Sept. 12-—-UP—The Abandonment Plan for 1 Moyle aft 0. AP Batt, 2 afl drop. Sept. 12, m™., the vain con- tint i ab = railroad employes Ls ara _|how to meet the treasury deficit dif- e fered from the revision proposels of cleared| Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, and Representative Bacharach of New Jersey, also aministration followers. At the same time, Senator Harri- son, of Mississippi, ranking Democrat on the finance committee, said in a An American relief ship, the mine-|statement through the Democratic sweeper, Swan, reached Belize Satur-| national committee that “of all times 28 ft “i ut is fs eg i at 3 & ge They take no that 6,000,000 unemployed means that counting members of the families of the jobless 30,000,000 are in need. The problem next winter, they be- Heve, will not be of aiding 30,000,000 He said the plane| people, but only those who are desti- i tute. this is the worst for men in high places to talk about increasing bur- dens upon the American public.” Senator Watsor. said it would be a mistake to attempt to revise the rev- ture department. Loans to an individual family will |Liberal Extensions of Credit y| Had Embarrassed Overly Merchant - E i A 2 iu re g QUAKE oe ey Wellington, New land, —()—A sharp earth shock the district of Hawkes Bay Saturday. but did no damage. SLOPE fon Pfeifer, formery of Rhame, and Jake oe, married , Aus s 8 ee & s | i i | | (Continued on page Brotherly Love and Keen Eye Embarrass Bismarck Officials Chief Chris Martineson were em- ~ g jeoredi brought about San creat Te seemed inevitable that 1ose-|—San Juan was recovering today es of a considerable amount could/from a hurriacne that took a toll of i 3 Lad a lineups for Sunday's Bismarck Leitz, ss Becker, 2b L. Klein, p Rescue crews worked doggedly Hagen, 1b at the slate fall, while the clergy- man read the Bible. Then Cotter complained of hunger and was ae Hays, cf 2 physicisn, suggested covers |Deny Heflin Use of fe save arm 1 se Oe eee te Fresno Auditorium Fresno, Calif. Sept. 12.—U=— Davis, company physician, volun- etree Id he found. ne “| chomas J. Heflin, former U. 8. sena- tor from Alabama, was arm could be found. Miners dug a 15-foot tunnel to \ Cotter’s arm and Dr. Davis, surg- ical instruments tied to his belt, Betetet i rit 3 & Over emphasis of the problem, ac- to their view, hes disturbed enue system st the next session, be- 4 cause, he added, it would have an SAY MISSING MAN ares smn or | 4€| voiced while President Hoover hurricane which destroyed St. John’s! stuaying the problem of whether to y WORRIES college at Belize, British Honduras,| recommend s change in the revenue included poling four scholastics,| system ‘or to continue the treasury Reem Jeayls brother. long-term bond issues and short term They all studied at various times at irinancing to meet the deficit created | Local Team to Battle Washburn Senator Reed is sponsoring a gen- i eral tax of one-half of one per cent marck Park ICE SEE Minot, N. D., Sept. 12—()}—The said if no additional revenue was fact that Emil Carlson, 42, Overly|charge of Catholic work in British | forthcoming “we must then put our . | foot down on the farm board, or any Alsska to determine whether any iy ‘since last Sunday, has| The Rev. William Tracy, St. Louis; | rurther appropriations for stabilizing dealings was learned Saturday.|® scolastic: Rev. Bernard A. New, the American ion, the Veterans | same at the city athletic field at 2:30 ae ynether Carlson has met with foul Buffalo, N. Y.; Rev. William Ferris, a of Foreign ab elon ‘other Veterans | crclock Sunday afternoon. orgal if business or other worrles, 1s| Superior, Wis.; Rev. Charles Palacio, |) ner, ” district has been canvassed in a ticket causing ‘Bottinesu. county author-| Valencia, Spain, an American citizen; Watson experased faith in the abli-|s#le for the game by committees rep- Smith, Racine, Wis. ®lrunds to meet expenditures during |®2¢ Cosmopolitan clubs and the As: and urged that the 7 going into the revision if it is neces- *) sary. .| PORTO RICO TOWN His view met the approval of Sen- up |sinia, who said he was fearful of the Juan, Porto Rico, Sept. 12. consequences a revision would have Representative Bacharach had ad- vocated an increase in the income pod with @ gift tax. = CARSON GAS STATION ROBBED ved) “Carson, N. D., Sept. 12—Authori- LOCAL MAN. BARBIES ion E, Welborn, Hazelton, and Tom- into a local filling station here Tues- ’ . a of Cariaon, $i Was) ae ight and escaped with a zal my H. Davis, Bismarck, were mar. -jamount of change, are persons liv- p saa "|ing in Carson or the vicinity. Thomas, Emmons county judge. "tie"! From Rock Which Barred Liberati rom Which Barred Liberation Charleston, W. Va., Sept. 12.— der jagged slate far down in s coal mine, with the surgeon lying le of Aukstock Cotter, 30-year- miner. ter hours of effort, dur- ts minister read pas- cording the public mind. control. PRISE Bt. Louis, Sept. 12—~—The 11|Unsettiing influence upon business members of the Missouri province of/" the difference of opinion was not yet Priests, and ON€/ practice of borrowing money through declining if id growing ex- " Py acturen Teeimts and growing e-1 Wine In Contest At Bis- upon all sales of commodities, He tion, immediately telegraphed| merchant who has been mysterlous-| Honduras, are: to have been near| nad finaneial difficulties in his bust-| Richard Koch, University City, Mo., operations, and we must say ‘no’ to play or has purposely Gisappeared be-| native of Ireland; Rev. Leo Mooney, nizations demanding increased During the week the city’s business ities who hat n investigating his|Rev. Francis Kemphues, Cincinnati;! iy of gecretary Melion to secure|Tesenting the Lions, Kiwanis, Rotary, the depression people “find where we stand” before REPORTS TWO DEAD ator Hatfield, Republican, West Vir- on business conditions generally. taxes in the upper brackets, along a as|ties believe that thieves, who broke Linton, N. D., Sept. 12—Miss Mar- ried here Wednesday by Adam week, and oe 5 Hi or ow-|Cuts Off Miner’s Arm To Free Him ()—An amputation performd un- flat upon his back, has saved the entombed miner was lib- the Bible for him and BEERS 8 eaate ag q a speech Sept. 22, on the ground | | eee “stir up religious strife. jhatred.” The action was taken commission a delegation Protestant Hed