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" Generally Fair, of ‘ i SEVENTH YEAR, No. 104 ES ST - NORWAY, CHINA AN HALF ILION Fee Heh JO.OERATION OF THE VEAR FROM | <Fofn Cove) STATES IN FOO FARMER PURSE r=iammoe PROBL ASKED Minneapolis, Thence to Great “Master Sov” (BATISN LANGA. {Bis Chris” THESE NEUTRALS "German Plot NEW OFFEASIE “On’SpecderIACENSED OVER was crs ite ON WEST FRONT mcs ae 2» «SUBMARINE. ISSUE close Scope of Teutonig Acti- Pace On Streets, Says New vity in United States _ Meagre Reports Show Allies Are Police Head Pro.German Minister in South New York, May 3.—When the trial] Maki is; Chief of Police Chris Martineson| American Xepublic Presents was Fonmed here ay, of Captain Sat factory Progress has issued a warning to the autoists P Franz Rintelen, so-calied “master spy” i that tu s i i ignati See Cems RO CTREDL, and seven Against Teutons ae be we oe their spend His Resignation Americans charged with attempting to : ‘aveling in the city limits. disrupt the munitions traitic with the| GERMANS DELIVER MANY Traffic regulations in regard to speed| JAPAN MAY NOT ALLLOW Entent Allies by fomenting stri and and license tags are being violated lockouts, Rintclen was:ready his coun-|/ STRONG COUNTER ATTACKS every day, says the chief. who threat- NEIGHBOR TO ENTER WAR ants ens to make arrests unless the city . Activity of Entente Air New One! ordinances and the state laws are| Havoc Wrought Among. Norwe- Kirkeide-Drown Grain Grading Lakes Station Definite Plan to Be Worked Out Bill Fj Bismarck sent another quota to the e S 1 Will Levy Heavy Direct front last night. Several hundred by Council of National De Tax Against Growers gathered at the Northern Pacific sta- fense at Once tion and bade the boys a fareweli. —_ PRODUCER MUST STAND Five of the ten were students from DANGERS OF UNDER 3 Bismarck high schoo! being Cari A. WHOLE BURDEN OF LAW |aunson, Myron B. Skeels, Jobu iL. SEA WAR PICTURED riage oe Larson, A. M. Bacon and Jewell A. No Equitable Distribution of Ex- | Fiow. Secretary Daniels Asks Aid in oy ‘, “It looked mighty tough to me to tas obeyed. pense Made as in ‘Yerminal |... tnove high school students leave| Recruiting Navy Personnel of Spectacular Features of Te hide gtood Gitte Teor noe tl on een 2y., BAS their studies to answer the call of their ; i : * etic’ Aat country,” stated an officer of Com- Up to 150,000 Engagement nee oe Pits neon ware en Aroused Indignation petal aan i —— — Ps 2 Farmers generally, league members pany i after the train had left the! washington, May 3—The federal (By Associated Press.) ceeding the speed limit. He states (By Associated Press) a in particular, are just awaking to the} Other Bismarck men to join were] 80vernment today took into its con- New breaches in the already badly Movaereore sine careless 0 ne Brazil has drewn one elep ‘nearer o fact that the KirkeideDrown grain] Raymond Adams, Clarence Pickering,| fidence governors and other state rep- battered German line on the Arras} with the chief row will reveat acei- baie Pieler piven peuasnend co grading act, a league measure, and Burton 8. Oacere ud Leste ¥. Spoun: resentatives here for a national de- i battlefield are being made by the] dents later, as the streets of the city| the brink of the maelstrom. Norway iy signed by the league’s governor.-im-| ton of New Liepsig, N. D. . fense conference and outlined «the British in a heavy assault launched| are beginning to be crowded. with ma-|and China are the other countries it Poses upon the North Dakota grain] The men were enlisted at the local problems the nation faces in. making ; along a eee ‘mile front today. | chines. which may shortly be added to. the is grower a direct tax of not less than|navy recruiting office Wednesday and|war on Germany. Gabinet heads ex-| yor yon Rintelen; called “Man of | vill sed south of Lens on the Ache- bearers ist of Germany's foes. te half million per Under the | Were sent to Minneapolis. From there} plained the situation and asked aid am 1 aes le-Vimy road, General Haig’s [Muller Resigns. it a mi per annum. Under the they will go to the Great Lakes ‘Train- . Mystery”; right, R.H, Sarfaty, United| troops drove at the Germans all along T have | ise of a benevolent piece-of legis- y Mai in putting into effect the govern-} States attorney. ‘Wo events have happened in Bra- r- gui nt B18") ing station. ment’s war measures. * the line as far south as Croiselles on |2il which may easily form the impe- ie f gue alld ft has, ‘been ialgcoreteey tere Pree At a second conference today, the | xo said, to tell everything he knew of sey Gensce rivers, Aight aml a salt tus to the last remaining bit on the at masquerades one of the. most un- Council ‘of National Defense will’ pre-|tne alleged conspiracy. ‘The outstand-| MCS Southeast of Arras. Virtually road to war. Wr. Lauro Muller, Bra- e fair acts of class taxation, which any sent a definite program to the states) ine features of the testimony against the ‘whole front ofthe attack, the be- zilian foreign minister, has tendered e, * legislature has ever - been :persuaded for co-ordinating their work in carry-lthe accused men,-all.of whici was giy-|&7ing of the Arras offensive on his resignation on the eve of tae: day © a F tocpane ing out military and economic plans./en George Plochman, trensurer of the April 9, was thus under assault by set for the Brazilian congress to de- io * : President ‘Wilson received the dele-|trang-Atlantic trust company, are|t*@ British infantry. cide whether the public shall draw 8 Terminal Elevator Fund. gates today at the white house and| these: Capture Strong Positions. jits sword. Dr, Muller has been ‘per- g Senate Bill No. 314, the grain and urged that the states draw all ener-] That Rintelen shortly ufter he ar-]| The attack came at a moment tly i of "8 ly. e sistently reported as, if not actually grading act, was trotted through dur- se and efforts together into common | rived in this country from germany in peee it seemed that a deadlock had proGerman, at least an opponent of rs ’ ine .: action. April 1915, deposited. $508,000 with the| been reached, for a time at least, be- hostilities with Germany. His resig- ue the closing hours of; the last _se8 Discuss Submarines and Food. trans-Atlantic Trust compajty here and| tween the two forces because of tie nation Sainlace with fo onder ed n sion and promptly signed by Gover- The submarine situation -was within four months had disbursed all] heavy reserve infantry that the Ger- President Braz returning the dis- e nor Frazier. It provides that no grain ‘brought sharply to the front when the; but $45,000. mang had brought up, The official| Senators Thomas and Borah Lead | missed German minister. The “ode! is . governors gathered at the state, war} That more than $18,000 was paid to] r ‘ eras r may be purchased which has not been : I report speaks positively telling of the wag issued on recefpt of news. that fir: li 4. deput and navy building, and heard Secre-|Dayid Lamar, called “the wolf of Wall] capture of strong Germ iti Attack on Food Speculators : i - ° st graded by a Heense ery taries Lane and Daniels picture. the|street,” who the government charges,| Fyrom Arleun, captured . nie oes ad Nn P the Brazilian minister has been Led ES Fees for grading are to be fixed at : ‘ dangers that beset the country in the|acted us Rintelen’s chief agent in fin-| the drive north of the Bs Na ral h in Floor Debate fused’ spermilasion ‘to. leave: Germany. a standard which will maintain this|Complaint of Murder In First De-}German undersea war. Secretary| ancing plots. : brokecintocthe sO like. Gh ware Norway May Enter War. u vast machine, of which Dr. BK. F. e 5 Baker and other war department offi-] | ‘Then Rintelen instructed George| j, y ‘ wie: a ase ne, Progress: ‘The possibility of Norway's. en- Eaaaie RE Uneiiedd Taaae Weick: will gree to Be Filed By State’s | cials explained the new army Dill; and|Plochman as treasurer of the — trust tae. een made near Fresnoy, mark-/NATION WOULD HAVE trance into the ranks of the Allies is 1 ‘Sect a : said that the success of the war army |company “to cash his checks irréspect-| 98 2 deeper cut into the: Oppy line, based on the havoc wrought among a further, set aside 25: per cent of the Attorney Burgeson rested with the states and depended | jve of who. presented: them.” __ Evacuation of Oppys , SURPLUS OF WHEAT | the Norwegian merchant marine by it . entire cost of aperation to create a — on their co-operation.) At a later] A resolution adopted at a meeting of i ne operation scone yey he Ay caectn ee aay eRe ‘ei German submarines. Norway has r ’ bans a 7 o e ij vhicl ih rn s gton, May 3.—The rising ¥ q 2 . fund for building public grain storage meeting Secretary of Labor ‘Wilson | Lah national peace council, of which| force the speedy evacuation ‘bythe H 5 y 3 8 | suffered so heavily trom the ravages n warehouses Garatnal Sain a MAY BE TRIED AT THE and agriculture department officials j for Congressman Frank Buchanan] Germans of the town: ‘of Oppys to sentient in congress for legislation to | of the U-boat that her shipping is in h ‘ MAY TERM OF COURT discussed food problems and laborjand H. Robert Fowler of Illinois and| which they have been desperately meet the nation’s food problems broke | ganger of complete destruction. ,The - in the state. ‘ needs and their relation to success.|others of the defendants are said to] clinging. out in the senate yesterday in a de-| bitterness of the Norwegians ig grow- r 4 Naming of Inspectors. ESTATE WORTH $100,000. Tomorrow Secretary Redfield will put}have been organizers called upon af-} South of the Arras-Cambrai road, pate that started over the high price ing rapidly, and many voices are in Whenever the: town or community (Special to Tribune.) before them commercial conditions. |filiated Jabor organizations to appro-| the Germans have been driven back Slansor’ ie develonell fate Meuunela sisting that she is no better off than provides a ‘suitable building and Dickinson, N..0., May 3—The Lane Predicts ‘Long War. Laborer oe we paien ie pnts tom the eae ot one south of|tions that the SE way seo deal with if she were a belligerent. feales for housing. puch deputy. |. friends of; “J.C. A” who fave | -Seorelary Lane advised the gover) atyning the ‘private aris) And ymubt- Cra on of Oncne ay tg] hem sas to string.them to lamp posts). Unraat im Gina, at weigher and grader and “the apkeep been preparing an appeal are now orn beta be Lata al the \e oy. | Hada tra RisrAn thie counts.” British would mark an advance of a geuntors tonal teeing’ state mt aeuted tie avout, ena a Tacrdaag zt : 8 + i ernment is preparing for a long war == 8 ‘0 g states , We of said building and scales shall be} going to wait and see what dispo- {and that pales Pas surse of the coun- considlerably more than 2 mile. that there is any real shortage of staple | in Pekin but apparently the President ‘borne by: the, state, out af funds se-} gition is made of the property by {try must be developed to its utmost Give Germans No Rest. foods in the United States. Senator] is reluctant to take the fateful step. : cured on account of fees collected for! tne witi before taking further ac. |if the United States hopes to win. While not pushing ahead on any{Johu Sharp Williams declared there | tt has been reported that Japan 1s un- a *, inspecting and weighing.” tion. Germany, he dec: wide front, the French along thejhad been « hysteria throughout the| willing that China should enter the . : f ‘Aisne in the Champagne are’ giving|country and that the cause of high eel t the Je foreign of- ) j ‘What It Will Cost. The bodies of the Caldwells will | tbe greatest fight Al ar ot UaA Es chee struggle, but ie Japan foreigi There are a read ait 240 in.| be taken to Chicago by a brother- |ing on the defensi , the Germans no rest, empléying their | Prices was lar psychological. He} fice has officially denied: this, ¥ corporated villages which may be ex-| in-law, Dr, Lovewell, who is here. to defeat. : bug an artillery vigorously and takiné’a sec-|aid he believed the German corrup- Conflicting Reports. pected to make application for a The Caldwell estate is esti- Secretary Daniels ‘asked’ the aid of , || tion of the enemy, line here and there on fund rece yaunoartoet in a fed-| In the meantime, the situation in Geputy inspector. The smallest ele} mated to be worth $100,000, com- | the states in recruiting the nava! per- | H.; | last night on the hills east of Mont [Pt pete th ork ne have bec) purope remains obscure through con- Vator pays its manager $1,500 per| posed of about 6,000 acres of land | Sommel to 150,000 after the new naval Haut, where a strong German posi-|" Coy Ch onraGh A MYTH flicting reports, and the extraordt- r annum. It is reasonable to expect] and stock, t bill is passed. tion was reduced and a garrison O&/ word should go straight out from | "Ty efforts of the censors, espectal- that a man wlio possesses sufficient Casey and Burgeson, attorneys | Plans for the new army were out- more than 200 men captured. German] tne senate, Senator Williams suid, that| ly inthe realm of the Central Powers. experience to grade and dock and| for “J. C. R..” when seen by a lined by Secretary Baker. No fore- counter attacks in the region failed. there js no shortage of food. 'Sen-| The only definite fact in regard to weigh grain to the satisfaction of both| Tribune representative, said that |cast, he said, Is Dossible concerning There may be a significance in the] ators Nelson and McCumber agreet| conditions in Germany is that a po- | -* purchaser and producer may com-| the claimant's interests will be |the length of the war and prudence eaaiemer reports of activity which are com-|that there ix no reason to fear a short-| litical crisis exists, and that the an- mand $1,800 per year, which would| Protected, Mirects the betes to enter on it as : ing from the Verdun sector and the |age. tagonism between the parties has b make the Dill for this item alone (special to creibune) if it would ‘be long, Last Week’s Submarine Toll Es-| jines to the southeast of it. ; The nttack on the speculators was led | blazed out with & violence unknown e A per annum, ani is does ss ' i! 2 Sar .. {by Senators Thomas and Borah. The a not take into consideration more than| Dickinson, N. D., May 3.—Deatir Baker avers tome cusrd Voltas timated at 400,000 Tons by British Headquarters in France, via Colorado senator declared they were acon peeinnt oe pret il ‘ 800 stations in unincorporated towns| Will not rob Mike Chamak from serv-| nent's policy concernin; hone guard : i London, Staff Correspondent of the |the real enemiés of the nation, es-/ 4, the target for all shafts, There Hy where the local elevator man would] ing probably a life’s term in the state] ynit; nd ua th ould be encour: Washingeon Officials American ‘Press, May 3.—Another of |pressed the hope that congress wonld | j5 leht whatever on the strike r be made a deputy inspector, entitled | penitentiary. Sea ciwha deparcaoat che cad ae: oa the continuing British attacks was|not udjourn without legislation that] ‘8, DO, nent Waster ee ows trom ¢ toa certain percentage of the fees} Weak from the self-inflicted wound Be dt es the identity of th 'SHIP CONTR: B launched this morning. Hard fight-}would remedy the evil, and satd the situation, and no rel t for his serviees.. Presiming a mini-| from the shot which he fired into his areat0 preety ne ident Sie Ae IP CONTROL BILL ing is in progress under a warm lamp post is the thing to cure such eile of any ind ae 3 ‘ if 3 ody q * . spring sun. ere has been no rain | spect ion. > 2 & i grading station, this item Would] near Taylor, Monday, April 30, Mike Se eee coer caaniition kad (MEANS SELF-DENIAL, enveloped in clouds st dust. troduced an amendment to the, esplon- | oy eters eat RUA TS 1. amount te 4,000, or a total of $456,- 2 i 5 1 i fs ‘ (Progress ‘Maae. age bill empowering the president by | treat in h n e 000 actual veratliis Sel ty this cama as conten o hs ae sul saree ae Soothe ik to do“whab:they Washington, May. 3.— While Reports from’ the battle fronts are|proclamation to suspend during the * s then, must be added the 25 per cent] p, en ides distri rt tha - Ona 2 O aokaat Wi Catt d members of the entente mission jas yet meager, but it appears that |war the operation of boards of trade which is to be set aside each year Cre ee er soased ten jutant General McCain andjJudgze} ot te the alarm of American of | satisfactory progress is being made./and chambers of commerce which deal dor the eeeation ofa (ermfial elevator o might be passed. Advotete General Cromdsn o Aad ficials at the growing inroad of | The attack was on a wide front. At/in futures, © He had it sent to the fund, or approximately -$152,000, rais- First Degree Murder. paket oot ae aes cee ae the submarine menace, they do | Bullecourt the British took another jtable for later consideration. Fa ee aera atic must come| Slate's ‘Riiseog Dureecen - ques | eee eee gat, ihe urbore of vot regard the stivation’as'in any {bite off the Hindenburg line. GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP out of the grain growers’ pockets each| tioned Chamak carefully and. finally le, oMcors raining Camps. saree. faial:—- it ieanal tw, thelr The Germans had delivered strong} Senator Borah predicted a world year to more than $600,000. And this] got the confession. A complaint Factory Men for Farm Labor. view, a great period of self-denial, | Counter attacks at several places, e8- famine if the war lasts two years, and ru! Jeast which mi be : Food and labor questions occupied bi it fl pecially at Gavrelle and at Loos. At if extraordinary and sustained efforts | amount is the least ay charging murder in the first degree ‘ood ant a 1 ut they do not credit any opin- f a ‘ma here : f ticipated. ~!Phei: pratigbilities are the entire time of an afternoon meet-| ton that it is to lead t Yvation | all points, attacked and counter at-jare not made here to meet the food heey oc Chat te will od ahah 1 will be filed against. ‘dni. Si Wil Ndcnhatcthe'r. ee the’ leg. 0 starvation | + cked, the fighting is continuing. problems. He attacked the packers, Nall 9 Pee Reports from the bedside are to the ing. Secretary Wilson told what the) or the loss of the war. "Air Men Active. declaring they made enormous profits | ' i labor department was doing to find Grain Grower Pays It All. pea been page vt pe eee a men for the farm and put forward a| Washington, May 3.—The enormous 1 This tax, it will be noted, comes FEMLOY! ty Jail! ian for drawing men from the fac-|inroads on the world’s shipping made vita da aS i —— , directly from the grain grower. It| within a week or two, the bullet just] Pores to do farm work during harvest |by German submarines within the last] night. Within three days they have | © (pana aa and made vers Lodges of State Meet in Special 4, is not distributed over all property,| grazing the left lung and not pene- 1 I he | weeks have brought to American gov- accounted for 55 enemy machines, and time. Industrial establishments, he | ee friclals a new realization of | have carried out many enterprises be-|of food and government possession of Sessions Tonight and Learn of the packing companies. Food specu- ti The British air men are continuing {and suid speculation and monopoly in their relentless efforts at day and |foodstufts made millions for those who town and city lots, buildings, vacant| trating it, The wound is not so seri-| .4ig, plan to shut down for repairs lands, railroad property, public utili-|ous as first anticipated. when oe are to be Leceasioa: and the disaster that faces the 'United | hind the German lines. The German |? Te male ould led < ties, etc, which under Senate Bill : release a vast army of men for the|States and the allies if the undersea | soldiers plainly dislike the continued | lation, he said, would not be ended un- Sentiment of Members No. 84—the terminal elevator act May Be Tried This Term. work. . warfare is not checked. presence of the ‘British air men, for |til the speculators “are put in stripes Pe . behind the bars.’ Whether the annual state conven- —| Doctors attending the patient, who ; Jovernors e re lett tured dur- which Governor Frazier vetoed: iJ Conscription of labor for farm work} Governors and state representatives | many unposted letters captu Senator Nelson suggested that if] tion of che Elke will be held in Bis- . ‘would have paid a very large per cent|is under guard at St. Joseph's hos- i ver will be here today for a national defense con-| ing the infantry attack dwell on the], “i “a of the whole. Under Senate Pill No.| pital here, say that because of his ro- Sain work never, 1 Pe ference, will take home to their peonle| uneasiness the machines cause. One pore of the statesmen snes about| marck in July rests with word which 8 a message from the government em-| man wrote: ue sano weule cenparig will be received from the exalted rul- 914 the grain grower pays it all, and| bust constitution, his chances for Te-) secretai id, as long as the farms he has no means of evading the tax,| covery are more than favorable. The} and fe ies sete ad private hands |Phasizing the menace to America and| “The air activity is very great. The te Melons. the. wheat’c the ers. urging that there must be the. fullest] English will soon be taking the very atic conditions, the wheat crop | The Bismarck lodge has received as every elevator is prohibited from|May term of district court for Stark 1 ke care i buying grain which has not been grad- souaty is called for May 15 and if and operated for profit. co-ordination by the states in’ war! caps off our heads.” would take M are OF tele the nation| Word from. the lodge: at Jamestown ed by one of Dr. Ladd’s inspectors. |Chamak recovers suficiently by that Increased Spring Acreage. preparation if Germany Is to be de-! The daring of the British aviators | 5701 have 8 went aatplis this year | Suggesting that the state convention in flying so low in the enemy coun-| ie ire than 200,000,000 bushels after | he postponed one year on account of time he will be taken before the court} Food problems will be taken up feated. Rg tat ae < : U-BOATS RAVAGING NATIONS || try is one of the phases of latter day trating itself and providing for seed-| conservation and patriotic reasons. at that time. again tomorrow. Discussion today showed a largely increased acreage of} Secretary Lune told the conference) air activity. ing William O'Hara, president of the ES th The fee exacted by the average public scales for weighing an ord!-| Funeral Arrangements Delayed. |spring crops throughout the country, |that the great destruction of ships was Puts Out Searchlight. ea r) threatening the existence of Great} Tuesday night with only the stars aera Eis heres poise tee Rape hig tnvtond nary load of livestock, coal or other) Funeral arrangements for the bod-|but a prospect of labor shortage in| iti i 4 reareat h on! ; ‘Department of agricul-| Britain and France and menacing the) to guide them the Britains swooped RAILROADS MUST avening to learn the sentiment of the 25 Cents the Load. commodity which need not be graded} ; icti es ies of the victims are being delayed| many states. u e is 15 cents. It is safe to presume until relatives from Chicago arrive.|ture officials said crops could not be United States. No one, he said, knew ——(Continued on P ‘on Paze Three) avering 10 Lear en ca 7 at that 10 cents will be regarded as a 9 t the exact number of ships lost re- ir OC: I's mother and a|too large, as the allies for the next ———— reasonable fee for the grading. which Jamer jie bere Sesidinz. there. eae two years would take every spare|cently, but estimates put last week's word, frome Barge ae ie er. is a matter of much more difficulty Lovewell, brother-in-law of the| bushel of grain this country can fur. |Submarine toll at 400,000 tons. Later; noon states tha’ a than the mere ‘weighing. This would) Lovewell, a nish and still go hungry. he explained that this estimate prob- ball of the Fargo Elks favors post- rancher, is expected to arrive in this ade, ably was too high. poning the state convention. ” mean that for each load of grain the farmer hauled to the elevator he| city, today. . : Secretary Lansing, in a statement would be compelled to pay a tax of} Chamak’s assertion that he believed | during the day, declared the serious- SUFFER FROW EXPOSURE ry \| WALKS 140 MILES ness of the submarine situation could i ] AKE HEN N PLACES TO ENLIST IN NAVY 95 cents. of which 19 cents would go| “J. C. R.” “the man of mystery,” was y Caldwell’s son, despite the not be exaggerated, and that it was Chicago, May —Johns Harley Hopkins of Whitehall, Wis., and great toward the payment of salaries of in-|in real e M poe es spectors and the cost of maintaining fact that Caldwell had just recently ROGKINGHAM IS time the country awoke to the trve London, May"3--Gaptain S. 8. Har- facts. Reports to the i aight ot! ading stations. while only six cents | successfully defended himself against ‘ r ; : OM bs devoted to the building PA C. R.’s claim in the district court, |zive a total of 80 ves s ee aerate Ona Chicago, May 3.—The Chicago, Mil-| prandson of the founder of Jobns terminal elevators. In other words.|Teally brought on the fatal combat, week, figures much higher than any ke b German submarine, were waukee & St. Paul railway, the Chi- Hopkins university at Baltimore is a i to accomplish the same result aimed |Chamak claims. TORPEDOED BY SUB contained in recent British annovince-| SU2E by @ iis vt suffering severe- | C2£° & Alton railroad and the Monon | ty iitea States marine today, having fi at by Senate Bill ‘No. 84, the North Se a |ments, All of the members of the) am unnamed port sullering Route today joined the ranks of rail-| Vea the 140 miles to Chicago from Pa ot Dakota grain grower must pay four.NO- PRIVATE CROP eee || British mission agree the situation ly from exhaustion an arden roads centering here, which are pre- hhh Wis., ‘where he war a stu- F times as much under Senate Bill No. REPORTS THIS YEAP| xew y, ‘ critieal and that the combined ship-|Lieutenant Thomas, U. S. N:, whol paring to replace men employes en-| Mudisom, Uile. wikey wate (i 214, and while under the former act : New York, May -A message re-| pbuilding facilities of the world can| Was in command of the gun creW) tering the military service by women dent in the Unive: eg Se al / his burden would have been shared] St. Paul, Ma Fohn English, @he | Ceived here today by the Garland S.;meet the peril only if their output is} on the Vacuum died of exposure in) workers. without food _or-sleep. Micon i pv the merchant, the banker. the rai!-|of the greatest crop experts of this S. Co. from Captain Edwards at Lou- increased tremendously. the captain’s boat Monday morning.| jt is not contemplatet to employ. comiition ass Lira walkout } roads, the public utilities and the city y, was called in off the road.} don, reads: ENORMOUS INCREASE IN LOSS | His body was buried at sea. The) women in the trades, but they~ wil that when 3 } pronerty owners, under the grain fas aaid it was decided to abandon| “Rockingham torpedoed. = Two Chairman Denman of the shipping] captain's boat was overturned three| be used for clerical and office wosk grading act, the grain grower goes it private crop reports during the coming killed. One boat missing, thirteen board, said estimates had reached the] times and had a terrible battle with} and other light classes of employ- . not yet landed.” | ( Continued on Page Three) the seas before they were picked up... ment. 4 alone. [rene