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Py { a ; 7 ' f=] THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE & te AST EDITION THIRTY-NINTH YEAR BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA. TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1920 me FIVE CENTS BAPTISTS HERE IN THEIR 87TH STATE MEETING Two Delegates Present From Various Parts of State at Opening ; NOTED MEN TO SPEAK Bismarck People Especially In- vited to Attend the’ Sessions The thirty-seventh North Dakota State Baptist convention opened its meetings today at the First Baptist church here, with two hundred dele- gates in attendance and with more arriving on every train. The delegates, who are guests at Bismarck homes. are being entertained according to the Harvard plan with lodging and break- fasts served by their hosts. On Thurs- day evening, a banquet will be held in their honor at the Methodist church. The main feature of tqday’s “De- nomination Day” program is the ad- dress to be given tonight by Dr. Frank Peterson, who will speak on} the “Pilgrims of 1920”, this year be- ing the 300th anniversary of the land- ing of the Pilgrims in America. The address will be elaborately illustrated by pictures collected by Dr. Summer R. Vinten, New York, from all parts of the world. Addresses of welcome will be given the visiting delegates this evening by W. E. Parsons and Mayor A. W. Lu- cas. A special song service will be held! which is in charge of the Rev. Olat Bredig. The general public is cordi- ally invited to the meeting tonight. Annual Sermon The annual sermon was delivered this morning by Dr. of Fargo, who spoke on “The Call to a Newer Heroism.” He laid emphasis ; on the fact that it tock more heroism ‘ and bravery to live a consistent every- day life, than to play the role of the spectacular. “We need heroism to meet the ethical and economic problems of the day, and to face political crisis,” said Dr. ‘Hobbs. “Let me say,” he concluded, “that the unanswerable argument to the spirit of unbelief ‘is the bravery of an every day Christian life.” Dr. M. D. Eubank, M. D., who has served in China for the last 21 years ; as an Evangelist, a teacher, and i physician, delivered the, last address of the morning on “Some Outstanding | Religious World Conditions After the War.” He spoke of the religious con- | ditions in Catholic Europe, and of Mohamedism. He recounted in a forceful manner, the suffering and losses inctirred by the war, and of the fine reconstruction work the Bap- | tists are doing abroad. .Among their plans is the proposal of the establish - ment of a college among the slavs in Hungary, and organization of the Baptists in Germany. One half mil- lion dollars has already been seut abroad for this work by the American Baptist Missionary Society,” said Dr. Eubank. No Work in Russia “Our work has been temporarily | postponed in Russia, but we hop2j conditions will soon improve so that we'may be able to enter that terri-j tory again. In closing, the speaker | spoke of the fine influences of the war upon the soldiers from India. The one million Indians who fought with} the allies received a vision that wi'l) st with them always when they \y came into contact with American and) One of the finest} English soldiers, things, was their opportunity to meet the women of the West. Dr. Eubank will speak tomorrow “Christ and Womanhood.” Speakers | of this afternoon included: Mrs. L.; Jesse P. Bishop, New York City, Dr. Frank Peterson, and F. E. Stockton, who gave the Winona Lake conterenc report. Dr. J. E. Norcross, New York spoke on “Evangelicism All Nations. ‘President’s Addres R. B. Griffith of Grand livered the President’s address. fie spoke of the splendid advances of the Baptists in the past few years, and of the indications that the forces of richeousness are not asleep as indi-' cated by the great prohibition reform. ' Pres. Griffith spoke of the future ben- | efits to be obtained by the passing of the nineteenth amendment which | gives the women the full vote. In con- clusion he said: “T trust that our coming together in this convention will be the means of greatly inspiring us with an earn-, est zeal for the Master and that dele-; gates may be able to carry enthusiasin and information back to the churches of our state, that will result in a great revival in every church.” Mr. and Mrs. H. F. O'Hare, of Avent B, have extended their hos- pitality to Rev. and Mrs. William Sharp, of Jamestown. Mr. Sharp is the pastor of the First Baptist church at that place. President of the convention, R. B. Griffith, sand Mrs. Griffith, of Grand Forks. D., are the guests of Mr. F, W. ‘Cathre: John Gerald York, Grand Forks, is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. French, of Fourth street. CIRCUS ELEPHANT TO BE GIVEN DECENT BURIAL | Salina, Kan., Sept. 28—Plans that “Snyder,” the trained elephant whicn ran amuck here and was killed, be given a “decent burial” for sentiment- al reasons got as far as reckoning with the prospective Figures furnished by a local excavat- ing contractor who said the grave would necessarily be about the size of an average house basement, only deeper, were declared, by the circus owners to be prohibitive. The body’ of | “Snyder was thereupon disposed of on a commercial basis. ‘ Ralph W. Hobbs. | morning on; Forks, de-! grave diggers. ; YANKS REQUESTED TO GIVE RECORD OF WAR SERVICE A special effort to obtain a com- plete record of North Dakota residents who served in the late war is being made by Adjutaut-General Fraser. For the purpose of obtaining the record, the Adjutant-General has forwarded to all posts of the American Legion and other organizations of ex-soldiers, ex- marines and ex-soldiers a letter ask- ing for ance in the work. The letter shows that there have been 15,661 claims for compensation filed with the Adjutant General's of- fice, while the state furnished 30,053 men in the w CRIERS’ CLUBS OF 3 CITIES 10 GATHER TONIGHT Mandan -and Bismarck Neo- phytes to be Installed by the Minot Club ARE PLANNED Mandan and Bismarck will | join hands in a Town Criers’-meeting | tonight. ; The Minot Town Criers, 40 strong, are driving down today, and Will be met late this afternoon outside of the jcity by the local Town Crierg. They will be escorted into the with the pene playing and a short parade stag- ed. The representatives of the three ities Will join in the ceremonies at Elks hall at 8 oclock when the local club will be installed by the Minot | criers. The. Town Criers club is affiliated | With the Associated Advertising club3 of the World, and the formalities of filixtion, together with their own tion ceremonies, wll be conduct- ted by the Minot organization. ‘The Minot organization is known as the \livewire organization of the Magic nd the local criers are expect- great things from the visito né Minot Crievs asked that the Bis- rck and Mandan clubs meet to- gether for the ceremonies, and the joint meeting of the three organiza- tions was arranged here. A feed will be spread by the local club following the initiation. To welcome the visitors the local 'Griers. planned to meet them outside ‘of the city, with automobiles bedec ed with welcome signs, and Phil. Meyer, president of the club, will un {roll the greeting in typical Town Cri r fashion. STUNTS Minot, ' i i CAR SHORTAGE TO CAUSE LOSS, OFFICIAL SAYS | Minnesota Meatien’ of Car Com- |. mittee Declares Conditions | Not Improved ~ St. Paul, Sept. nless the sup- | i ply of grain cars to the Northwest is ! brought up to 100 per cent of normal by October.15 grain shipments will be tied up, elevators will be clogged and grain will be wasted, according to O. |B. B. Jacobson, a member of the ra ‘road and warehouse commission, who erturned to St. Paul today. : Mr. Jacobson on Saturday attended a conference of North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota officials at Chi- cage where the car shortage problém as discussed with railroad men. | The present car supply on the rthwest roads is about 70 percent and according to Mr. Jacobson has not been improving. | The North Dakota, South Dakota, ‘and Minnesota officials and with rep- \resentatives of the farmers, grain dealers and others will meet with the Interstate Commerce Commission in Washington Oct. 9 to present data on the situation. SIXTH BANK IN BOSTON CLOSED BY COMMISSIONER Boston, Sept. 28.— Bank Commis- sioner Joseph C. Allen today took over the affairs of the Fidelity Trust com- pany. His action marked the closing of the sixth banking institution in this city within two months. The others were the Hanover Trust company, ofj which Charles Ponzi, the financial |} wizard, was a director and largest | individual depositor, the Prudential ‘and Cosmopolitan Trust companies |{ and two smaller institutions. | The capital of the Fidelity is $3,- 000,000, and according to the latest statement, had a surplus of $760,000. { Its depostis totalled about $18,000,000. The reason for the closing of the bank, Commissioner Allen said, were “the steady withdrawals of deposits! and slow and doubtful loans.” U. S. AND JAPAN NEGOTIATING | Tokio, Sept. 28.—Negotiations he- tween Japan and the United States with reference to the immigration question are entering “the serious| stage,” Baron Sakatani, former min-| ister of finance, has informed the, ; Koseikai party in the house of peers, reporting an interview with Viscount Uchida, the foreign minister. Assert- ing that this was the only statement concerning the negotiations possible to disclose. Baron Sakatani quoted the foreign minister as saying both governments were making the utmoss {effort to arrive at an amicable set- tlement. PLANTS TURNED BACK IN ITALY BY THE WORKERS Trenches Are Filled and Barbed Wire Entanglements Are . Torn Down GREAT WASTE IS FOUN Owners Assert Workmen Used Five Times as Much ‘Coal as Necessary Turin, Italy, Sept. 28.—Industrial plants which had been occupied by workmen were returned to the own- ers today. Before evacuating the works the men filled trenches which] had been dug around them, removed! barbed wire entanglements, filled up loopholes dug in the walls and when] they left carried with them their arms! and ammunition which were concealed ; in private homes. | Owners of the plants report that | after an inspection they find there was | a great waste of materials during thet occupation of the works. It is asserted that the men used five! times the amount of coal necessary | Heintz of all te-/ seat in Cons run the plant, and that rves are exhausted, Losses amounted to 22,000,000 Liral were caused by out in a large factory which had been occupied. It is believed the fire was incendiary. POLE CAVALRY PUSHES AHEAD ON BOLSHEVIKI One Thousand Three Hundred, Prisoners are Captured and Cannon Taken Warsaw, Sept. operating in the rear of retreating Bolshevik forces in the region of Grodno have reached a point north of Lida, says issued here early today. During -yesterday’s fighting the Poles captured 1,300 prisoners, inc cluding a Bolshevik commissariat and also took eight cannon. Lithuanian artillery has shelled P: lish positions in the Suwalki sector, the statement declares. North of the Pripet the battle is ntinuing in favor of the Poles. The Russians are retreating along the en- tire front but are offering stubborn resistance as they fall back. an 45,000 RIFLES TAKEN Constantinople, Sept. 28.—Forty- five thousand rifles and 8,000,000 a fire which take for 28.—Polish cavalry | official statement | CAPT, HEINTZ MAY BE NEXT HEAD OF AMERICAN LEGIO PACKERS’ PLAN ‘ON STOCKYARDS REFUSED BY U. § | Hold It Would Be Violation of the Sherman Anti-trust Law INVOLVED A_ BIG’ SALE Boston Firm Would Become Holding Company—Court to Hear Case | Washington, Sept. 28.—Objections to }the entire plan suggested by the “big five’ Chicago meat packers for dis- position of their stockyards interests were filed by the department of jus: ptice today in the District of Columbia supreme court. STAR BASEBALL PLAYERS ARE INDICTED BY GRAND JURY ON CHARGE OF “THROWING” GAMES | PRISONER ae | Eddie Cicotte, Star Pitcher, and . FRENCH LEAVE! W. ., Sept For time in the history of the + institution, according to Warden} KILLS PENNANT CHANCES Terrell, an escaped prisoner returned ———_ voluntarily yesterday to the Mounds- ville, W. Va. penitentiary. The prisoner, Oda Miller, a trusty, with five months of a two-year term! to serve, walked away from the prisor tarm Tuesday last. He said he could not resist the temptation to visit his children at Cl Bi punishment even Others are Included in the List. All Players Suspended, Wreck- ing World Series and Big Money Hopes of Men. | CLCOUT Miller's ¢ will be light, | Chicago, Sept. Eddie Cicotte Warden Terrell said. confessed that he engineered the a deal by which the White Sox lost last year’s world series, an official of the court announced this afternoon. Details of Cicotte’s confession fol- To sanction the proposal of the kers to dispose of their stock- rds interests to a holding company ;to be formed by F. H. Prince and Fcommpany, of Boston, would mean j sanctioning of a violation of the Sher- | man and other anti-trust law: ' torney-General Palmer declared. The case will be heard Oct. 7. Would Sell to Prince | Proposals of the packers provided fl for transferring their stockyard in- terests, estimated to involve about CAPT VICTOR HEINT 2 CLEVELAND-— Captain Victor incinnati, who resigned his ss to enter the army at] hae start of the war, is one of sev- 1 who will likely be nominate National Commander of the Amer- Gr te iz $40,000,000, to Frederick H. Prince fean Texion. Hetnts won the French | nq company Hoston, bankers. This tinguished ‘Service’ Modal in France. \Sussestion was said to he regarded )by government lawyers as meaning concentration of control to a greater degree than existed under the packer ;management. The nature: of the counter suggestion to be presented yby the government was not disclosed Others who are likely to be nominat- ed ar Colonel F. W. Galbraith of | Columbus, O.; Milton 4. Foreman of | Sileago: Emmet ONeill of Louisvill Ky.; Hanford MacNiter of Mason City, COMMITTEES 10 _ FOSTER HOMES | | tbe offered to the farmers, producers ‘and traders in livestock. The option provided also that interests using the yards should be represented in the holding corporation directorate and in the management of the hold- ings. Trade Commission Objects | Chicago Congress Takes Action The packers’ counsel contended | to Get All Elements Together that through the medium of a on Plan {holding corporation the value of the yards properties would be conserved jand all would be on a parity so far ag | their securities were concerned. This scheme, however, was not approve: 4 irely. by department of justice at- Chicago, Sept. 28.---The national in- dustrial congress of bttilding and: con-! struction formed here yesterday, to- € y8, although they were said tc day had its steering committee actu: recognize merit in the method of re- ally working to promote a building | taining property values. campaign throughout the country an1) materially decrease the existing short-! recent report to the department o1 | age of homes. The steering commit- justice took the definite stand that | tee will begin immediately to form: concentration of ownership as sug- local committees, who will’do all in’ gested by the packers, would mean |; their power to increase home con-! greater “monopolistic control.” While S| tion’ in their various cities. | officials of the department said they The avowed purpose.of the Congress had not agreed altogether with cer- is to bring together every element {ain findings of the commission, ‘it concerned in building, including con-! was probably that the objections to tractors, material men, architects and The federal trade commission in € be filed would not differ greatly trom cartridges which were captured from} labor, and get them all working inl those contained in the commission’s the Russians by the Germans during ihe world war are being shipped to Genera! Wrangel, head of the anti- Bolshevik government in South Rus- sia. Treaty in Prospect Riga, Sept. 28.— Consideration of detaus as preliminary treaty of pea »etween Soviet Russia and Poland wa begun here today by four commission- named ;to logk after different pha of the problem before pea conference. It is expected aetial work of framing the treaty will be left in the hands of these commis- ans sioners for the time being at least, and! their work will not be interrupted by many plenary sessions of the confer- ne. UNLOADING OF SPECULATORS : AID T0 BUYERS G. A. Hassel, on Eastern Trip, tig to ¢ Finds Many Are Forced to Sell at Loss culators are being squeezed just n eastern markets to the benefit | Sp now of everybody, according to G. A. Has-| go sel, of A. W. Lucas & company, wito | has rturned from an eastern buying; trip. oT here is a readjustment in progress | now,” said Mr.'Hassel. “There parently will be no radical changes in! cided to start conditions. The federal reserve banks | have been endeavoring to remove the} inflation that has been prevalent in the country during the war, by cut- ting down on credits. The tight} money market has caught many spec-! ulators, who have had large stocks of| goods on hand and are unable to get bank loans to carry them over. “I visited many~jobbers, brokers and manufacturers on the trip. I was for-/ tundte in obtaining from jobbers end | brokers large stocks of goods at °x-/ ceptionally low prices, because they have found it necessary, in the «b- sence of credit, to unload. Much of the goods was bought at less than the prevailing market price. “Manufacturers prices show little] change. The high cost of production} makes impessible a marked change in| prices by the manufacturers.” Shipments of the goods which Mr.! Hassel bought at less than prevailing| and Baldwin, it prices are arriving daily and Bis- marck buyers will be given the benefit | of. the low. purchase, he said. The latest fall creations of Eastern | with the United States Civil Service| designers are now on hand, he said. { the company by the | that an inadequate supply of watel The vote on the commissioner can- furnished, and the cond is an ac-|qiqates follows: Schlaberg, 2.512: tior neel the franchise and ex-| smith, 2,483; Westeen, 2.481; Solstad, listing con Ls. |} 2.406; Pederson, 2,225; Bird, 2,168: | Both actions will be heard in the] jighman, 1,985: Kaneen, 1,887. district court here. Attofieys for the} Grand Forks adopted the com- | harmony. ‘The association estimates that there shortage of 1,000,000 noms iy ; Amer They said there is 000,000 worth of building nae ee throughout the couniry and that one ! billion of this in the middle west and $150,000,000 of this in Chicago. report. DINNIE NOSED QUT AS MAYOR OF GRAND FORKS D., Sept. 28.— Jr, was elected Grand Forks city commission in the special election Saturday, and three other members of his ticket were successful for the CITY NOTIFIES | ITS STARTING | | WATER CO. CASES, Forks, } O'Keefe, president of the Grand Henry Two Actions to be Heard in Bur-: leigh District Court Against the time for development of plan by the pac Q Prince, under terms of av i option on the packer stockholdings was obligated to organize a holdine ‘corporation, the stock of which would Local Company ie on, O’Keete polled 2,607 votes, and J. A. Dinnie, his opponent, polled 2,166, | Eon sults the Bismarck | oi cefe’s majority being 488. O'Keefe Water Supply company have been! was candidate for major several }started by the city of Bismarck, by} months ago under the aldermanic rving notice on the secretary of the| form of government, and lost then to company ; Dr. H. M. Wheeler. z ‘ . Commissioners elected are F. W. One of the actions seeks to con~i g.pjaberg, T. J. Smith, A. A. Wes- demn and take over the property of teen and J. H. Solstad. All but rity on the ground | smith were on the O'Keefe ticket. in the matter are H. F. O'Hare. nission form of government several city. attorney, and Newton, Battan and] weeks ago, this being the first group ouns. of officials elected under. this form. The council voted for such action! 1) a statement. today, Mr, O'Keefe metime ago. An offer to sell the! iq; Her plang = Nag made ty. fhe,“ am grateful for the support of y cals jecte $ on i) every way to work for the best in- proposed new water _Works, because] erests of the city without animosity it deemed the cost excessive, and de-| towards any person or faction. legal actions. endeavor to do everything possible for the best interests of Grand Forks. As far as the city election is con- ' POLAR EXPLORER cerned, it was fought on the citizen-! WEDGED IN ICE) ship ies ana, personally, 1 am very glad that state politics did not ente: Nome, Alaska, a, Sept. 27.—Capt. Ra-|jnto it. ould Amundsens polar expeditionary ship, the Maude, is reported wedged ; tight in the polar ice pack west of Kolyuchin Bay, Siberia, and nearly | midway hetween Wrangel Island and the northern Siberian coast by fur traders who reached Nome today. P. O. EXAMS SET FOR CITY OCT. 21 =xaminations for position as fourth ass postmaster will be held at Bis- marck on Oct. 21 to select persons to ! fill contemplated vacancies at Regan is announced. She salary paid at the Baldwin postoffi is $758 and at the Regan office is 16. Applications should be filed ween Chicago, banker the adv: y fleet of armored © port money from the financial dis- tricts to industrial centers or from outlying banks to the down- | town institutions. The plan designed to put a stop to pay-roll robberies was presented to a group of bankers by Burt Bettelheim, a private de- tective, and calls for five units, each of which will consist of an armored truck and touring car. Sept. 28.-Chicago | lay were discussing of establishing a rs to trans- commission at Washington, D. C. I willic ARMORED CARS TO PREVENT CITY ROBBERIES PLANNED BY BANKERS | low closely the story told in Philadel- APPOINTMENTS Chicago, Sept. The Cook county grand this afternoon voted true bills against the following basebalt players in connection with its in- 3 ae vestigation of alleged “throwing” of City Commission Names Men to] world series games last year. Kddie Cicotte, Claude Williams Vv Dp, = Jaw ’ i. ” Watch Polls on Nov. 3—Other | «chick Gandil) “Happy” Felsch, Charles Risberg, Joe Jackson, “Buck” City Action ver, and Fred MeMullin, Election inspectors were named by eer cee eos the city commission at the meeting The ‘oight players are charged with ast night. The commission decided | vonspiracy to violate a state law. to change its previous division of} Voting of the indictment was offi- wards into precincts, the change be- ing to leave the Sixth ward in one precinct ially announced by H: H. Brigham, foreman of the grand jury following v-conference with attorneys for the ion tinct 1, W. ©, Cashman; precinct 2, Marquette; fourth ward, G. C. achter; fifth ward, A. I. sixth ward, Frand McCormick The commission received petitions containing signers, asking for mu- aicipal incinerators and declaring the present method of dumping garbage »bjectionable. The commission in formed the spokesman for the peti Honers that steps already had beer taken to install incincerators next spring. The commission increased the sal- | flowa, and Fred B. Wells of Minneap- yoy was it known whether Attorney} Election inspectors named were: | White Sox club. Gandi, while still olis, Minn. 2 eee ZF | First ward, precinct 1, B. E. Jones; | che property of the Chicago club, he |General Palmer would oppose ex: a recinct 2, A. S. Bol hae 3 PAO CNN), nae 7 precinc 5. Bo ister; second ward.] not been with the team this ye: It De vinet red Peterson; pre was understood he could not reach an a Aad. Ostrander; ‘third ward, pre-} igreement with them over salary. Assistant state’s attorney Redlogle announced that Cicotte was taken in custody after leaving the grand jury room and is now in charge of Wil- iam Sullivan, a detective of the state’s tttorney’s office. He declined to say where t pitcher was being taken. i s State Evidence Just before the indictments were Unnounced a witness was ushered out at a disused rear door of the grand jury room. He was reported to be Sddie Cicotte, the star cher, Ci- i 5 e solte, who was named in the story ary of James Wakeman, city weigher, | 5f the alleged gamblers’ plot told at from $125 to $150 a month. Wakeman} philadelphia last. night by Billy Ma- turned over $500 into the city last} yarg, former prize fighter, is said to year as receipts from the scales, ex- | jy signed an immunity waiver and ‘lusive of his salary aud repairs hen went before the grand jury and Carl Liner, caretaker for the city] ‘estitied. The sudden voting of the pesthouse, was given an increase from] rue bills followed. 360 to $80 per month, The city li- —— brarian salary was increased from SUSPENDS PLAYER: 3100 to $116.67 per month. “Chicago, Sept. 28.—Charles. Comis- The commission allowed the fi <ey, president of the White Sox, to- sstimate on the paving in district No.} lay suspended every member of the 3, the western part of the city. The | eam indicted in connection with the Haggart Construction company has f tlleged fixing of baseball games. Sev- sompleted the work, the total cost o.| 20 of the eight indicted are affected. which was $259,543.73. The company | ‘Chick’ Gandil, the eighth, is not put up a $300,000 maintenance bond ng this year. The suspension Insist on Repairs vractically kills all hope of the Chi- The commission instructed the city} ago club winning the American ittorney to notify the contractor whe | eague pennant this year. put down the paving in the down-| “We will play out of the schedule ‘own district that if repairs are not! f we have to get Chiname to x nade action will be started. ylace the suspended pl Bids for grading Avenue D, be-| Jarry Grabner, secretary of the C tween First street and Washingtor { ‘ago club. wenue, from Avenue C to ae ’ were received. Charles W CICOPTE. DENIAL 71 cents per cubic yard and R. F Ol Sept. 28.—Kddie ) Cicotte, Jaeger 99 1-2 cents per cubic yard | White Sox pitcher, who accotding to The contract was awarded to Wachter. | | Story told in Philadelphia by Billy The commission voted to ask the | Ma r boxer, was involved board of railroad commissioners to |‘? lot to lose the world make a test on the quality of gas} series » denied today that furnished the city. Bids were asked | 1 had ever met Maharg. Cicotte, ac- for 100 tons of lignit cording to the story, met him and Artie Hoskins illy Burns, former ball player in the use. was appointed : r of the special assessment | #tter's room in a New York hotel sion in the absence of E. C.| ‘4 offered to threw the series if $100,000 was paid him by Burns. “IT would not know Maharg if I saw dim,” Cicotte said today. “I do not recall ever having met him. He might have been introduced to me the same N. DAKOTA MAN SERIOUSLY HURT ts any other fan, but I do not re- ms z = 4 nember him. Winona, Minn., Sept our per-) “Bill Burns called at the Ansonia sons were injured, two seriously, as a result of a head-on collision between v light automobile and a street car hotel in New York. He did not talk to me alone, but conversed with other nembers of the team. While I was rere Jast night. The machine was) «ij, ‘ : Prien 5 lemolished. | Harry Milbrand ‘said to with him he was making arrange- de from Harkn 2D. is in a local) Mens for a hunting trip with Bill hospital seriously’ injured, James, the talk of the world series he- hebaee as oa ing fixed is a world joke. EST COST GRE Mrs. Henrietta Kelly, a widow, in rine nN san CeeThe cost of | “2ose home several of the White Sox i - Seat Lo | players have roomed and who has ng North Dakota's crops this fall was greater rather than less than last year, according to estimate by |}; Willard, ym management spe- list at the North Dakota agricul- tural college. He estimated that the t ndling wheat in the state s 10 per cent above that harves been summoned to appear before the nd jury 8 questioned today by P.. Lightfoot, assistant state’s at- tornes Later assistant state’s attor- ney Repligle said her story “was im- portant.” And Mr. Lightfoot said, “If 1 can eather together the angles on which I am working I expect to have something which can be prosecuted in Cook county. of last yea Publisher Here Ewing, of Chicago, is in the week taking charge of the exhibit at the Baptist American Publishing s WOMAN MURDERED POLICE BELIEVE St. Paul, Sept. 28.—With the identi- fication today of the body of a wo- man found last night in a swamp near }South Saint Paul the police believe they may be confronted with a murder mystery. Joseph Ploskota, a work- man in the Armour plant, identi i the body this morning as that of his wife who had been missing from home since July 3 and who police in all parts of the state had been searching for since that time. The sultan, on the little island of Johanna, in the Comoro group, boards ships calling there and tries | to get the washing for his wives. The truck crew would consist of a chauffeur and two armed guards, and it will be convoyed by HIGH VOLTAGE WIRE the touring car bearing a chauf- } CAUS FATAL BURNS feur and three armed men. One —— | feature of the equipment would Williston N. D., Sept. 28-—While working on a light pole, H. B. Wehr- i kamp came in contact with a high | voltage wire and received 2,300 volts of electricity through his body, caus- jing fatal burns about the neck and be a large gong which would be sent ringing by the chauffeur at sight of bandits, and which could be stopped only by the use of a special key. Bankers said they expected arms. He was rescued with great service would be installed here | difficulty and taken to a hospital. within a few weeks, or as soon as | Death resulted in a few hours. He additional details have been work- j,leaves his widow and a 3 year old ed out. (son.