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VOLUME 13, NO. 192. BEMIINT, MINNESOTA, MWA! nmmo AUGUST 12, 1915. GREAT HAGENBECK-WALLACE SHOWS T0 ““’“'Sn?rfi'.'n PRorERTY GIVE T\!()_PERFGRMANCES HERE FRIDAY |, oo rmes ot e soters o Three Special Trains to Bring Big Circus to City Early Friday Morn- ing—Bemidji to Entertain Many FORMS LITTLE CITY IN ITSELF Monster Two-Mile Parade, Including Eight Bar _ *a Be Feature of Fore- noon—Nn. ’%,, “sts Coming. Ca, 73 00161 2 id Circus Day at & tr. Show Lot—Fair grounds. Arrival in three sections o. Great Northern from Thief River Falls. First section expected before daylight. All cars un- loaded by 8 o’clock. Parade—Leaves show grounds at 10 o’clock, traveling streets of business district. Tickets—For both perform- ances at Barkers' drug store. Performances—Two and 8 p. m. Doors open an hour earlier. Departure soon after mid- night for Cloquet. Tomorrow is Circus Day. Novelty will be the keynote of to- morrow’s Carl Hagenbeck-Wallace circus, the best elements of the dear old-time circus, with the newest things in the way of European thrills Monotony and repetition have been eliminated, it is said. * Three trains of double length rail- road cars, twice the size of the or- dinary car, are used to transport the Carl Hagenbeck-Wallace circus. The first section, known in the parlance of the circus as the “flying squad- ron,” is scheduled to leave Thief River Falls, where the show played today, soon after midnight. Bemidji will probably entertain the largest crowds in many years on to- morrow. All railroads entering the city have made arrangements for the running of excursion trains and the officials have made preparations for handling a large increase of passen- gers. The first wagon to be unloaded will be the emormous kitchen van. It contains sixteen feet of steel cook- ing space and upon it is prepared all the meals for the circus followers. While the space is necessarily small, yet it is compact. 7. Requires 22 Tents, It ;'equires 22 separate tents to properly house the Carl Hagenbeck- Wallace shows. There is the cook house tent, stables, four of them, blacksmith tent, harness tent, side show tent, the menagerie tent which houses several hundred rare and costly animals and the big arena tent which comfortably seats many thou- sand spectators. This mammoth tented palace is the largest arena pavilion ever constructed. It re- quired eighty-five men three months to complete the task. It is valued at a small fortune alone. A Little City. The Carl Hagenbeck-Wallace eir- cus, when it is pitched on the show grounds in Bemidji early Friday morning will form a little city all in itself. There is a lawyer, a den- tist, a doctor, two veterinary sur- geons, a minister of the Gospel, the Rev. Cadesmas Pope, D. D., half a dozen blacksmiths and harness mak- (Continued on last page). GOULD TO HAVE ALLEYS Bowling to Be Favorite Sport Here This Winter. A. N. Gould, owner of a confec- tionery store on Third street, is to operate four bowling alleys, the base- ment and foundation for the addition necessary now being about complete. The alleys will be of the finest make, of the model known as the continu- ous and will be equipped with rub- ber balls, loop-the-loop return chutes and all other paraphernalia which goes to make the sport enjoyable. Mr. Gould will spare no expense in secur- ing the equipment and furnishings and he plans to make the establish- ment one of the most complete in the state. The alleys will be operated under the direction of Danie Gould. A bowling league is being formed and eleven teams have already enter- ed. It is planned to pick a city team which will compete with the organi- zations of Grand Rapids, Crookston, Brainerd, Walker, International Falls and other places. The sport is cer- tain to be popular in Bemidji during the winter. WOMAN AND MAN HELD ON CHARGE OF ROBBERY Held on charges of robbery in the first degree, John Libuda and Nellie Mitchell were brought to Bemidji last evening from Baudette by An- drew Johnson, sheriff. It is charged that they stopped an automobile in which Mike Domkiov was riding:and threatening him with injury, robbed him of about $60. They @re heid at the county jail. that crops are in splendid condition |Sauk Center with his son, Lloyd, nnil - 7. PR have been placed on the tax rolls of T and record cuts of rye, wheat, oats |Roy McKenzie, who with Andy Cla- i =g Rt -eo.... Laurendeau|pe)amy county as a result of sales LAIM REATY" TED land barley are expected. Some of the | vin drove to that city last Monday. By (3.0 Tfl EABON. 8. “Ragtime Regiment Band” .. of land under y“m Volstead act and e 18897, TY" VIOLA X elds have’ wonderful stands, the|Mr. Clavin returned to Bemidji by| ~(Written for the Bnited Press.) ceeeee.s Morris QB B BERLIN WORRIED BY 53&'&8;7&;;; m; CIIIPPEWAS OF PILLAGER BAND CONDEMN BALKAN SITUATION|" 2 senn s sr| TREATMENTRECEIVED FROM GOVERNMEN midji band, has announced -the.fol- Diguietate. Appareat in Gormany [comeart: - o (DELTRAMI IS BENEFITED |petermine That wasbington omtat Following Announcement '.l'hnt 8 |1. March—“Arizona”....... Smith A Shall Be Informed of Grlevqnm 2. Medley - Overture — Popular - and purchasing property in this county, the 1 PRODUCTION TO BE LARGE| cva: womerous men nave tocstsd ners recently, the cheap fertile lands being sufficiently incentive to cause them|. Expected That State Will Produce |to sell their more developed holdings,| Neuiral Nations May Join Allies Bonan stk 80,640 Acres of Iand are Placed cn| o1 Congress Know Conditions.. 300,000,000 Bushels of Grain This ge:rse '1'-1;1::1-,k tormerly of this city, o o T 8. Meditation—"Angel of L‘";;’ Tax Rolls of County as Result of : ut now of Sauk Center, is in Bemidji A 0 eeeesos. Glese “ 2 Year—Only Two Crops Backward | va e ser sk Center, i n Bemldjl| INTERVENTION NOT CONSIDERED |, 1o *ioeoi oo "o $1°°° | Btate and Government Sales, | /I GOOSE” TALKS AT COUNCIL —_— Ay —_— Diplomatic and lmm-y Miscaloula- | 5 Ch;rac:;:is;]le_d"nrelm ;rh mbe TAXABLE VALUATION INCREASED |Sleyer of Col, Wilkinson in B o 2 e o arel lend” . :Thurban # s, - tion Permitted Teutons to Defeat |g gelection—*The Sunny South” Oratory Tells Why His Tribesmen Slavs—Menace ia Removed. Lampe| During 1915 80,640 acres of land| Complain--Chipperfield Advocate — locality have great faith in the future CORN GIVEN CHANCE TO IMPR of Beltrami county, many of them OVE having bought land here. Mr. Tan- ner arrived in Bemidji last evening, Beltrami county farmers report]|having made the trip by auto from by purchase from the state. This an- if P nouncement was made by F. B. Lam- St Fordi 8 Instaioes:t9 s son, deputy auditor, the auditor’s of-| Arguments — Claim Money and fice having just completed its report Land Taken From Them. - of lands éntered for taxation by rea- : ¢ son. of eamplelhm of homiestead en- tries; Indians of the Pillager band of This report is required by the State | Chippewas at Leech Lake are not at Tax col mission and shows that near-|all timid -about declaring their dis- 1y thieé and a half townships of land farms of John Colburn, Knute Aakus, |train. The 180-mile drive was made August Burr, Ole Vasson and sev-|in about nine hours. eral other farmers having excellent crops, corn alone being backward. Minnesota will have 297,420,000| MEET MAIL .ORDER. PRICES bushels of wheat, corn, oats, barley, New York, Aug. 12.—Disquietude |9- “America is apparent in Berlin’ over the possi- bility of a rapid climax to the Balkan situation favorable “to . the -allies. WARDENS MAKE BIG “AUL Nevertheless there “are lnd(cafl_ons that Teutonic luck may continue to rye and flaxseed this year, or 38,- . . prevail and prevent”the three neut- [Officers Harry and Bailey Confiscate 456,000 bushels more than the com- Plattenburg’s Chautauqua Address|ral Balkan nations antering the war| 1470 Pounds of Pike Taken by bined production of these crops last 3 - % - P together. 3 year, according to the goverrzment Stirs I::erelt:mnangflnemd)l ];”' Dispatches from Lendon, Paris ana |- Gsme Law Violators at Bena, in the ‘county will be taxed for the | >tiSfaction With the governmental forecast based on condition and| ness Men and Benefit is Derived. |the Balkan capitols giving details of i g 'y ‘Will be taxed for'the 3 P! giving details of -|first time this year. 'Thus it is also treatment. They are determined, too, acreage. th a : & o present negotlations meke. 10|gAyp THRILLING EXPERIENCE |shown that the taxable valuation of |that those in charge of Indian affairs If good weather, such as was ruling mention of influences being brought today, continues for a time, the pro- VALUE OF LOYATY STRIKES HOME to bear on Rumania by the ait 8 aru- the county will be increased by|at Washington shall know just what $298,342. their grievances are and that. con- duction, on the government basis of ple entente. Diplomatic ‘exchanges| Thirteen men have pleaded guilty 3 . estimate, which is subject to revision, | o oq40600 of €. H. Pattenburg | #Pparently are being:confined for the |to charges of violating the state game The records in the auditor’s office |gress also will know the Indian side should run well over 300,000,000 Siiutias ot tue s St present to Bulgaria and Greece. The |laws as the result of an invasion made show that the following towns have|of the story. -This is the same de- bushels. y al e chautauqua in s success of the Austro-Germans 1in |into the Bena territory by Shermn increases of more than $5,000 in the | termined band of Reds that made his- Good Chance for Corn. city has created considerable after-|cagtern Galicia and southern Russia, | Bailey, of Bemidji, and Jess Harry, taxable vnjluatlon of their . lands: |tory at Bear Island seventeen years Every crop that the state raises, | #ffect among business men and people | which permits a Teutonic force to|state game wardens. In making the ghgg;:n, 1;1;.:7:1; HEland, 36,:20; ago. that figures in important manner in |residing here. A great many farm-|pass threatingly against Rumania’s |arrests the officers encountered sev- J:ner ';: 42'7‘ 0;'{ ‘um;z.M;jl.l;‘o» Illim“;gre“m'm ek the money inflow to the farmers, is|ers were present and pronounced the | flank and rear, may-have compelled |eral thrilling experiences, ome of $6 4;;. M’l’iml'e s:n‘gé. M’ou e'Lnlf:. t ;D s,twho s spending bis vacation’ ahead of last year, except corn and [message a good one. the Buchareat-government to refuse | which .might have resulted disas- 85’&‘71: North' é 8’8 419,! Ri h‘]’ : ken: orchGax;rys yesort on Loech hay. Corn still has a good chance to| . A. Barker, president of the Mer- [to consider intervention at this time. | irously. Harry is from Grand Rapids. | oo He, (00 of";"pr'u ks ) s“l"l W b e fc,ked "Yk'!" 1':“;'“ improve. The government found |chants’ association, bécame so en- Not Willing to Sell. The wardens, with Forest| Ranger |, .. 'steen‘erso;n $11,386; ’Zippl; whom they wi?l :rv:(;:l:llerl' :hm;a that the August 1 conditions warrant |thused over its many good points| But, whatever the. reason, the de- |Farley and Matt Holliday, a prisoner, 829"“1' Third ;lnorgu’nize:i distrlct,. iivins itk Fth < y lay thelr an estimate of 60,000,00 bushels for | that he has decided to make a stand- | fined impression is- prevalent that|Were Teturning to Bena by boat on oo’ yeo’ 2o the pifth unorganized |part that he will hecome thelr ad. the state’s production. Last year ing offer to meet and fill any orders | Rumania is not as willing to sell her Lake Winnebigoshish when a storm dist’r ict, $7,924 aits 5t Wanarae o l‘e‘ r a ; there was a corn yleld in the state of | in his lines of business taken from a |army now aa:sheé was when the Rus- |Overtook them. They were towlng ¢ S of the braves fl'oi all tg o 91,000,000 bushels. Every day of [ mail order house catalogue. The an-|sians were in the Carpathians. a canoe and it filled with water and T0 ENFORCE GAME LAWS reservation to “Glen, m.l:_aist:’“mu : good weather from now on will meun | nouncement appears in his ad in this| It Bulgaria and Greece go to’ the [S2nk. High waves broke over the STh th Al en resg ny 4 Hitt the narrowing of the distance be- |{ssue. help of the allies, ‘While Rumania launch and the engine stopped, the : ele ave theretgr sman Wl‘:h ; tween 60,000,000 and 91,000,000 by | “Mr. Plattenburg illustrated so | continues neutral, the possibility ex- |boat, with water in it four inchss | Hunting Sesson for Water Fowl in| 7" e e Th el an increase -of the smaller total. clearly,” sald Mr. Barker, “the many [ists that a Teutonic army might ad- |deep, drifting for more than a mile. | Minnesota Opens September 7. hu’t’ i x:“;eu':‘ ble therte n ““‘E" The potato crop is set down for|advantages a citizen receives by trad- |vance into Bulgaria ‘from Hungary|They were then compelled to wade , & row-bon:e e“i ed &iu:n::y Ti ‘: 33,300,000 bushels, compared with [ing at home that I for one feel we|and largely paralyze the new offen- [for more than half a mile before Under the federal migratory bird |ern Evinrud q‘:t”; wt e mol 30,780,000, Orchards will yield 1,-|should meet these special deals or|sive against Turkey. But with Ru-|Feaching shore, and several articles| ==, o o o "0 " ter fowl sticiis . “ e attachment, 300,000 bushels of apples, compared |offers made by catalogue housas|mania’s army ready to threaten-the |of value were lost. o ,Septembei' 7 atid closés Devsbics “Jim Goose” Speaker. with 700,000. whenever the request is made.” rear of a force invading Bulgaria, it The “haul” is believed to be one 1, in Wisconsin and Minnesota, while The real council, though, took plgce. Tame hay promises 2,680,000 tons. | The point which impressed so many [is improbable the eutons would |of the largest ever made in the state |, \.;\ " oote ang gallinules may be | TUeSd8Y afternoon when the Indigns Last year there was a state produc-|of the out-of-town people, including |strike in that direction. and it will probably end a series of Kille d' during- the-same period. The gathered about 200 strong to make tion of 3,294,000 tons. the farmers, was that loyalty to a| Instead a pubitive éxpedition would [1aw violations which has been re-j . o "o "0 500 xnc’lufllng their complaints in detail - to . tha ——— city means increase in the valuation |doubtless be sent into Rumania and |sponsible for hundreds of pounds of black breasted gnd golden plover,| Sycamore” congressman. . They did NORTHERN FARMERS BEST of farm property as well as that of | while the Rumanians would suffer, |fish being illegally sold. During dradllow legs qpens et 4|80 through an interpreter. and ‘all’ the city property, because a farm is|the Bulgaria-Greek campaign against |June and July 100 barrels of bull- . Bie. dates. _Insectivo- were elgquent and_forcetul. Ti Supt. Dyer Tells of Automoblle Tnp worth more money whén located near | the Turks would go forward. heads were shipyed from: Bena. ’ = | irst spedker was “‘Jim ‘Goose,” wil Pipesto a large city than a small gne, of'a - K Berioni BRndes Fish in Lake Winnebigoshish, -the. ‘}indian name™is' wnr—nhrmm From Bemidji to Fipestone. ~ )i o' ron- thian 5 “dead” one.. : mouth of the Cass river, Third river, wabe, and who is said to be the war- “ - : It is clear that the allles made &, oot goo lake and several other rior who shot and killed Col. Wilkiw: serious blunder when they: refused to son at-Bear Talafid in 1898 -He was i fonists" - price d places have suffered as'a result of the He B g8 47 fhe hres BTN Bk followed by “Red Blanket,” known Bemidji schools, who recently autoed \ viclations. Seven valuable hook nets, to Pipestone, writes that of all the CARRANZA DEN0UNCES manded by the three neutral Balkan a seine 400 feet long and numerous to the Indians as Ga_v-gwa'—che-be- nung, a veteran named Day-dah-che- beaten. time on the upper Mississippi river. roads he has encountered on his trip uations: before Russia was dip nets-were confiscated. that those of Northern Minnesota U S. ABMIN{STRATION That diplomatic and military miscal- | 3 Federal regulations divide the United Avih e Gtier ElNAL ordinee: The ~ gievances recited by were the best. He also speaks of the culations permitted the Teutons to de~ States into two-zones. ‘Zone No. 1, feat the Slavs while the Balkan arm- 1 the breeding zone, includes the states| - treatment Tegelved ienroutt‘e “: ]m::: (United Press) ies were still calling for bids. Now T“REE 0F WORLD SGREAT of Oregon; Idaho, Colorado, Nebraska, | them ~ are ~many, nearly all the farmers of this sgetion for Washington, Aug. 12.—General i growing out of their claim¢ that Russia’s offensive power . has Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Penn- 3 e, man;te’x; o :l;:‘i:? Carranza has authorized the publica-|peen broken, the Balkan -menace is VOLCANDES AGAIN “:"VE sylyapla_and. New Jersey and all that the so-¢alled Rice treaty, of 1§83 e Ssouhere, | tion of a scathing arraignment of the |far removed from the . threatened : staf em.. Zone-No. 2, the whereby the Chippewas ceded and says Mr. Dyer, is not found elsethe Te | United States administration and catastrophe in Austro-Hungary that wh:gting zone!;h ineludes - all states | Télinquished their lands to the fed- Mr. Dyer has covered 621 miles t“ " | Latin-American conterence. He 8d-|existed last spring. (United. Press) south of those named:- eral government has been grossly ing the trip, made via Sauk Center, vised Americans if they were prompt- Just as co-operation and foresight Naples, Aug. 12.—Mount Vesuvius, { violated by the United ‘States _ and Minneapolis, Glencoe, Granite Falls Mount Etna and Stromboli, three of that a large sum of money due them 1. including all the parks |°4 DY humanitarian interests to|were then lacking to the allies, and tslons 4 ngtully” and M”“}"" ,’nc nomns (; " start in Europe rather than in weak-|gas France and England are now un- the world’s greatest volcanoes, have under -its provisions is wro ; E“;V(teh:;a:led:::i'a::d flll; 4T ::lill‘es otnes:; ened Mexico, it being claimed that its | aple to strike In the west while the |282in be“‘“:‘" :‘md" 3:“ ”‘;e helchai:g s::et;:zld\;io:rii{:sFg:n:hfs“ttr e::;aru : & present condition being brought ic strength is chiefly en 4 |forth great - clouds of ~steam : s gallon :z ug::om::}'l:':idt;:‘finh:ia::; about by the robbery of the bandits of ;I;EI::): east, .og,m.nm“, f,t Bi:lfzn smoke. Streams of lava are pouring follows: s L Wall street. Several gemerals have|gction is uncertain for the future. A swans, smaller shore birds-and wood- ducks- are..protected. until September 1, 1918.- Shooting. is- prohibited. be- tween sunset-and sunrise or at any W. P: Dyer, superintendent of the CIRCUS TICKETS FOR KIDS Mayor McCuaig Tells Boys and -Girls How:to See- Big Show. down the eastern slope of Mount Etna Treaty Was Violated. 150, K> 'He vas referrh;g“t:; :‘h‘s assured Carranza of their support. Under exactly similar conditions, |from two new craters and are threat-| <[ wish that all boys and girls| First—That about 275,000 acres of B e s ot e TeT T Frederick the Great was able to de-|ening the destruction of Sicilian Vil | ypger the- age of 12 who have no|their land has been set apart as & apssmbly, plant..of the (ROM MO\P THREE BANDITS KILLED feat continental Europe during the|12ges. The populations of Naples | sther way in which to secure admis- |forest reserve contrary to the provi- CompanYs A e IN BROWNSVILLE BATTLE |seven years’ war. The Teutonic ene- |21d Hessina are terrified. Quakes |45, tickets to the circus Friday will [sions of the treaty and that these Hateojle] der e wondert . were felt at Taranto and Brindisl. | meet me-at the entrance of the Fair [lands contained valuable tracts”of - * organization. The superintendent mies were never ready to strike asks that the Pioneer be sent to him (United Press) - against Frederick the same time and at Pipestone “that 1 may keep post-| Brownsville, Tex., Aug. 12.—After | with full co-operation. The dupli- ed on the affairs of Bemidji.” quiet had prevailed throughout the|cation of this normal defect of coal- el o night and morning, trouble was|itions in the present war has proven ted this afternoon. Three ban-|to be a powerful ally of.the Teutons. TONIGHT |32 ; TIURRARINL & 7 dits were killed during a -running|Its continuation may produce unex- Scientists are attempting to reassure|grounds at 1 o’clock tomorrow after- |pine timber which have never been ' the population that there is no great |ygon. I will have tickets for them,” |accounted for in any manner. danger from these eruptions. said Willlam McCuaig, this morn-| Second—That the federal govern- ing. The ticket plan is the result|ment has by the construction :and MEXICAN CONDITIONS CALL of a scheme. devised by the mayor|maintenance of dams caused tb‘i‘ ASSIS' that the boys and girls might see|overflow of 49,000 acres of valuable FoR TANOE OF (RODES the circus, and he’is receiving finan- | low-lands and the destruction of rich (United Press) cial assistance from many business |areas of timber thereon, besides rend- o A 3 2 fight with soldiers and ecitizens. | pected consequences in the Constan- Bemidji Tennis Players Anxious 1o |Thirty-five bandits were driven across | tinople campaign. Begin Handicap Matches. the river. Real trouble ln expected Washington, Aug. 12.—The state |men. Those who wish to aid may |ering valueless vast rice fields from c before night. JUDGE BROWN TO ATTEND department has messages showing|do so by giving the mayor or Chief|which the Indians’ greatest income With announcement that teams _ - NATIONAL BAR MEETING |that the Ninth infantry has been sent | Ripple a little sum to add to the fund. | was theretofore derived. Third—That the government has wrongfully issued patents to the state of Minnesota for many thousands of acres of swamp and school - lands without compensation to the Indians. Fourth—That vast quantities of (Continued on last page.) ENTIRE FLEET ORDERED T0 LEAVE NEWFORT S00N (United Press) ‘Washington, Aug. 12.—The navy from Laredo to Brownsville, Tex.|Between 60.and 100 children will The transfer of troops was made at|be made happy tomorrow noon as a Col. Blookmore’s request on account |result of the plan. of threatening conditions. had been selected for the Tennis club’| MILITARY RABBI SAYS U. 8. doubles tournament much interest FAILS TO HEAR CANNON ROAR| Calvin L. Brown, chief justice of has been aroused among the players . B & - the state supreme court, who with his and it is expected that handicap (United Press) family has spent a month’s recrea- matches will be played every day dur- Berlin, Aug. 12.—Military Rabbi |tion at Birchmont Beach, will leave ing the next twp weeks. Several |Levi, of the Association of Jews in|this evening for his home in Minne- teams have arranged,K games to be|Germany, has drafted a protest|apolis.. Miss Edna Brown, daughter played this evening and others have |against the sale of war munitions by |of the chief Justice, ‘who had also vis- agreed to schedule contests for early [the United States to the allies. - He|ited here for some time, returned to mornings. There will be no elimina- | says .that Burope stands in flames, | her home early in the week. Justice tion as was the case in the singles | while America, across the ocean, in|Brown will léave Saturday for Idaho tournament, the team having the|peace does not hear the cannon, but|where he will attend the annual con- largest percentage of victories to win. |only the rain of gold into her- lands. | vention of the National Bar associa-. FOUR ARE KILLED WHEN - Balcony Being Constructed. FREIGHT HITS PASSENGER Carpenters are at work today on the construction of a balcony over (United Press) the. prescription case of the Netzer| Columbus, O., Aug. 12.—Four per- drug store. It will be used as an of- |sons' were killed and fifty injured, fice of E. F. Netzer, proprietor, and | fifteen seriously, at Sterling, Ohio, for storage purposes. The re-dec-|when a M. & T. train, carrying a orating of the interior, recently dam- | Knights of Pythias special, returning Reports of all games should be made _— tion. aged by fire and smoke, will begin [from an outing, was crashed into|department has admitted that the en- to the. committee immediately after, The Want Column will. give you soon, the- repair work having been |from behind by a Baltimore and Ohio | tire Atlantic fleet has been ordered to being played. |the desired information.. Band concert this evening. entifely completed. freight train. leave Newport for so\nhem“wltnn 5 Aug. 22, but deny that this qrdgr is “'I‘E i in any way connected Wwith - the SCOOP REPOREI‘:IEJBR It So““ded pretty Solld F 0r A fihost o By ”HOP Mexican situation. If this was the S ] cause, it is stated, the fleet ~ would = : 7 REPENT. WOMAN ¢ L have already been’ shrted The. cruise is ‘customaiy at this ‘season of. the year, however, for target prac- tice. GOHS!DEE GARRANZA NOTE swer to the note of Genenl - .| yesterday whieh warned them “|members of' the” Pan-American ¢ ference - dlsclnlmed any lntonflnn "|the part of Argentine’ paruclp.te ln any progr