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" ” ' ' 4 ‘ “4 ie) Last Edition FORTIETH YEAR ; BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1921 _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PRICE FIVE CENTS CHICAGOAN BROODS OVER ARTICLE INNORTH DAKOTA COURTATTEMPT “MAC” POSES FOR THEMOVIESIN MAGAZINE AND TAKES HER OWN LIFEIN BATHTUB TOBLOCK LAWS pre Mrs. Mary DeBrito Objected To Local Man’s Views on Mob Violence WRITESTOSTATE OFFICIALS| Addresses Letter to State OF-| ficials Care of Governor | Frazier ‘on Subject | (By the Associated Press.) ‘Chicago, Aug. 16—Authorities to-) day ascribed the suicide last night of | Mrs. Mary DeBrito to a letter alleged; to have beon received by her from a magazine editor. (Miss DeBri'n, ad-} vertising specialist and a beauty whc had taken several prizes, was found! immersed in a bath tub at her room-| ing house with the tube from an open gas jet im her mouth, according to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Weiler, with who she roomed. Mrs. DeBrito told them of reading an article in a maga- | zine published jn North Dakota sup-! porting the practice of tar and feath- ing for certain groups. She is said) to have taken exception to the arti- cle and to have written to Governur j Frazier of North Dakota condemning | it. This letter, it is said, was sent! also to the magazine editor who re-j| plied with a letter denouncing her. She attributed the visit of a man to; her home a few days ago to the let- ter she had written and asserted ne} had threatened her with injury, ac-! cording to Mr. and Mrs, Weiler whi! assert that her fright increased until! she decided to kill herself, se ® The article referred to appeared in Jim Jam Jems magazine. | Search for three New Chicago, Aug. 16.—Police today be-| gan search for a letter from a North} Dakota periodical in the hope that it might contain some clew for the! suicide last night of Mrs, Mary De-} Brito, aged 28, advertising writer for! a department store. ! They are also searching for three | men, two of whom visited the young; woman’s rooming house at 3 o'clock | this morning a few hours after she was found dead in the Batbetb with} a gas tube in her mouth and took every | “ ; s paper and photograph from her room} ES eas SEARLES, THE AR- Representing themselves as employes; ,.*), ae aaa Gas SU ine "OR of the coroner's office the two strang-; 1/8, WHOM SHE IS SUING FO ers carried out a number of pictures, ; $2,000,000 FOR ALLEGED BREACH letters, personal papers and even forc- | OF PROMISE. ed the girl's trunk. The third man! ~~~~~ being sought appeared at the room-, Sete ing house last Saturday and repre- |°f the newspapers— ens senting himself as an insurance com- Teferred to the incident at all did so pany employe inquired into Mrs. De-!in such manner as to lend encourage- brito’s life history. Later ‘the same’ ment to the perpetrators of these law-| day he visited the girl’s office and is/less acts. In no instances were any; said to have threatened her. lof these men guiltay of having vio-| Mrs. Edward Weiler, with whom lated any law, and the only plea the! Mrs, DeBrito lived started police on, mobbers gave was that they were| search for the letter from the maga-jafraid they might be going to say, zine editor. Two weeks ago, she said,isomething disloyal. It is also a pe-| the girl read an article in a North Da-‘eyliar fact that the Governors of}; kota. magazine advocating tar and/these states took no action worthy of | feathers as a punishment concerning:the name either to punish the perpe- | certain cases. She wrote a letter t'trators of this violence or to prevent} Governor Lynn J. ba dae repetitions of such occurrences.” | as why the magi i ae ane ee A Tatler from the Gov-' Wallace Campbell, mf Jim Jam) ernor’s secretary who replied to her/ Jems, in absence from city of Sam} letter, said the complaint had been re-) H. Clark, publiser, who is in Mon-| ferred Merlday Mrs. Weiler told the; enor hastat 4 last, Mrs, M. DeBrito | police the girl received a letter from op 133 AImdale avenue, Chicago, after! the editor and appeared upset. Sat-\ jeading the August jssuc of Jim Jam| mrday when she came home and told | Jems wrote Governor Frazier a most! of the man who had threatened her venomously false letter about our and learned that a man answering the | publication. Mrs. DeBrito was gre: same description called at her home), aroused because we excoriated a ahe appeared on. the verge of cOl-| Beaumont, Texas, abortioning phys lapse, Mrs. Weiler said. !eian who had received a deserved! The coroner's jury returned a Ver-' oat of tar and feathers. For some! dict of suicide while mentally derang-| reason Mrs, DeBrito seemed to par-| ed. { ticularly favor such gentry. Her ae ‘ter to Governor Frazier and the reply ANS VE FOr ea al came to our notice, Thereupon we Mery eo ie. Chi d the ‘wrote Mrs. DeBrito. We judge tha cide in her room in Chicago read U " s Aired: somedinclos’| icle in Jim Jam Jems while in Min- | the poor woman feared some disclos ae si she said in a_ letter ad- ure in her past life. We know noth-) eed to wigtate authorities, care of ing about her. beyond the fact men-/ the Governor.” tioned.” A | In her letter, written while on a Letter to Mrs. DeBrito. ; Northwestern train, she denounced the | Mr, Campbell exhibited the letter) editor of the magazine for its pas-; which he had written to Mrs. M. De- | JOHNSON AND AL-! —so-called—if they; e8. .,| Brito on August 8 in which he replied ane yefer to the paragraph or skit to her attack on magazine of August) deliberately encouraging private citi-| 8, The letter reads follows: ii i indivi ens—or rather irresponsible int d tals—to take up the law into thelr M sees own hands by gloating over a most’ ey Bundale ves | disgraceful and regrettable jneident eee 5 3 i d feathering of a man in| Madam: Thee Ree nited, States—a Ewhite doctor: Your letter 9 Govertior Evade) i la 1 a for v re! » before nt, Texas.” {and copy of reply thereto lie befo j a he continued: “T understood or was, us. 1,ooks ty us as if you had in-| laboring under the naive impression serted your sncoping nose in the) that we had laws in this country ap-jcrack of the wrong door and got it plying to such cases, and that it was squeezed a bit. not necessary for us to decide what; Would recommend you to peru should or should not be done. When Uncle Sam's Constitution and particu we reach the stage where cowardly, larly the clause relating to the free- contemptible riotous mobs ‘can with dom of the press, It might tend ‘to impunity render their own decisions jllumine the cimmerian darkness of and persecutions, we have reached | yonr ‘mentality on that subject. critical state indeed for our country’s! This magizine is on its tenth year welfare.” ,.{of unparalleled success. Tt numbeys Nelson A. Mason, the Governor’s' over two hundred thousand monthly secretary, replied in athe absence be readers, declines subperintions and Governor Frazier. He said he ot) y ments-—which all other mas- lieved the girl was laboring under mis-azines. beseech—and does more real apprehension regarding the articley sy9q than sna or your ilk will do that he did not believe that Mr. Clark | from now to the crack of doom, | intended to convey the idea that he Why do you so object to an avor, was favors general mob violence. tioner and an advertising doctor—! Mason called attention to many in- whose doings the law pnoved power stances, in which be said ore been less to reach—receiving his just de- for the Nonpartisan league had been ont. at the hands of an outraged tarred and feathered in other states | (on munity? Have you any special than North Dako and Governors had reason for favoring such gentry? taken no action. It was, not in the prov: What do you “pay judges and juries ince of state authorities, he said, to for” in your city? Is it to suppress attempt, to) takes ection agains’ {ie race rjots—which they haven't done? meee , Is it to punish or to free just twenty- Mr. M. Masons Teer will per-| seven red handed murderesses - iietods ee waved I ‘would like| Which they have done’ Is it to be Tu witention vi powerless to arrest your governor un- to call attention to mob violence used Se oa ee eoahdenee gunie? against organization workers in the indictment for @ eee tnbEt National Nonpartisan league move- |Is it to nurture and to fond e be st ment which organization placed most} notorious gangs of criminals and cut of the present state officials in office. throats in the world, who thrive and In Washington, South Dakota, Ne- fatten in Chicago? If you are under- braska, Kansas, many men who were| going a “reform” spasm, ae ie earnest law-abiding citizens, have been | city end ae afford you boundless opportunities. M. DeBrito, PRINCIPALS IN LOVE SUIT ARTIST SEARLES OUT OF REACH Process Servers in $2,000,000; Love Suit Unable to Find Millionaire By Newspaper Enterprise. Boston, Aug. 16.— It’s “Easy come, easy go” im the case of Albert Victor Searles, Searles is an artist. Pool will be Slides Showing extraordinary Bath | Secretary of State Hall Talks of | | Failure to Provide for | Publicity Pamphlet “What—have my picture taken in H ‘this!” exclaimed W. A. McDonald, | “Why, certainly.” RECALL CAULDRON BOILS: “Say, man, I’m for this swimming i {pool but——-say, look at it,” protested | :“Mac.” | Judge Christianson Talked of ate Manage iltinge persisted, | For United States Senator “Now, look here,” he said. “Here cre jsome of the women of the Business | —Other Political Dope jand Professional Women’s club have is | gone. and made you this wonderful An unusual situation has arisen and! athing suit because you can’t buy one : ibig e e j unusual consequences may follow the pig enough and the Enaeawctitas the failure of the legislature to appropri-' pect to see you in the suit. The Butler ‘ite money to provide for the publica-| Studio is going to take your picture tion of a publicity pamphlet before |4Md We are going to show it in the | . : ac. | movies. You've got to do it.” Seca eee Car seco ae “All right, I'm game—anything for ‘ to Thomas Hall, Secretary of the pool,” gallantly replied “Mac,” i State. ‘though weakly, as he surveyed himself The constitution provides that aj in the glass. i publicity pamphlet: shall be published | A Wonderful Creation and also requires the legislature to; He saw himself encased in the most provide means of carrying out the pro- | extraordinary bathing suit the swim- jvisions of the constitution. ming pool or any beach ever saw. “lam wondering what effect this; “Mac” calls jmay have on the election,” said Mr,| Jointed suit. The body of the suit is Hall, “Suppose these initiated mea-/of green the bottom of the sures carried and they they were at-|Over-skirt is of white with (a woman ‘tacked in the courts on the groundjought to describe this) ;that they had not been constitutional-| edges of white and the cutest little jly adopted—that the people had not|white embroidery or something on the jhad the proper information on them |edges.. Dale Simon, of the satin; ;through a publicity pamphlet as pro-| And just below the edges of the ; vided by the constitution.” jover-skirt two vivid green pantaloons | The same ,would: hold true as re-;protrude. ne {gards the constitutional amendments.! The neck is V-shaped again with a |Mr. Hall pointed out that both the| pretty white border all rumpled up j initiated measures and the constitu-| and just below the border five flowers jtional amendments, if carried, might) in a row—a red, yellow, green, white | Especially Made For Him triangular glances of the beach mermaids, W. A. McDonald in the Most ing Suit Ever Seen— The front is hardly a straight front —Mr. “Mac” weighs about 250 pounds —but it is effective with a white sash neatly tied in a sailor bow. And in this creation “Mac” posed for the movies—the bottom of his feet and the top of his head bare. What You'll See Pose No. 1.—Full length, face to- ward the camera with the words on his ‘lips—“If this don’t bust your camera {a sledge hammer won't.” Pose No. 2—Here is shown “Mac” as a diving Apollo, with arms akimbo jand his countenance filled with de- termination to hit the water headfirst instead of amidship. Pose No. 3—Coming “Mac” blowing out jemerges from the dive. Pose No, 4—Going down. “Mac” slowly sinking into the nine-foot depth of the swimming pool. Pose No. 5—The envy of the beach- “Mac” strolling on the sands with a parasol and his green creation the envy of all up for air, water as he Pose No. 6—The beach tour a suc- _ “Mac” scornfully glancing at rivals and content to have all the = All this will be shown on the screen at the Eltinge tonight unless “Mac” really did break up the camera, which is doubtful as it is triple strength. the Eltinge last night. An elaborate program and the showing of the “Mac” pictures tonight is expected to pack the house at both the 7:30 and 9 o’clock shows, to swell the swimming! ibe held jllegally adopted by the courts} and pink. ane ree et measures, one 0 ie provides ‘FOODSHORTAGE IN UNITED STATES. which provides for the abolition of !the Bank of North Dakota, and the i — i Washington, Aug. 16.—Food shori-} | age in the United States has assumed) {constitutional amendmen stitute, (the Independent platform in the elec- the proportion of a famine only in a! “scientific, restricted sense,” but has: tion, according to the pronouncement been accompanied by an increase in| of the Devils Lake convention, ‘| Mr. Hall blames the state senate, pellagra, the public health service re-! ported to President Harding. | ' which was Nonpartisan, for failure to appropriate the money, saying it struck out a house item. Attorney-General Lemke, asked about the matter, said that the ques- | H tion had not been put up to him and! i that he could not discuss the legal i 'phases because he had not had an | |opportunity to study them. | ce HEADS IN CITY { downed. In addition ;to Burdick’s name . ah State the friends of’ Judge’ Christianson are Meeting With State Board Of urging him to uake the race for Me- ini: i | Cumber's seat. The senatorial plum | Administration H has started the bees to buzzing in — ‘the political belfreys word has| Heads. of the state normal schools come from Judge Chris n and as|are in session here today with the far as is known the matter is being |board of administration, considering stimulated solely by his friends who|the question of uniformity of credits hold the jurist in high esteem for his/at the various institutions and other ‘excellent record onthe bench. Hisjmatters Those constituting the coun- jcampaign against Spalding und again|cil of normal school presidents are: lagainst Richardson show that this/R. M. Black, Ellendale Normal, pre: lesteem is not misplaced. jdent; L- H. Beeler, Minot normal; C./ i ** 8 \E. Allen, Valley City; S. T. May, Dick- Nestos’ candidacy for governor on/inson; John O. Enjen, Mayville. | ‘the fusion ticket recalls his fight! The state board has awarded the against the McCumber organization. contract for the construction of a} ‘His vote at that time gave the old|power plant at the Dickinson normal | ‘timers a few chills. He outdistanced | to Harrison & Son of Jamestown, Bids : Hanna who had a state machine back | were received several days ago. Con-! | nim and a large campaign fund./ tract for installation of mechanical! | As the time approaches for the re-; call election, the senatorial fight bobs up and like Banquo’s ghost will not be mony. Hl | on, who is a musician and an artist,! any rate no organized drive was made | "tow 0] of 1 many ne See ett ome sai |Nestos had no organization and played | centric multi-millionaire uncle, the|# lone hand. Those interested in fom te Kdwin P. Searles, died. ‘The un-/P#ting Nestos’ strength with that Hal cle lett the young man only $250,000, | Hanna's and MeCompen's can Tarn 1) with a proviso that if he should con. | ae ane eat 16,699; fictreaner 38:0805} peal ve jie, wouldn't get, even | veston 18,619 and Herman | Midtbo} he pended to his private secretary. j baltee prc nee rite od al But the artist took a chance, got a) 4 name on a ballot is good for from} lawyer, and obtained a settlement out 3,000 to 5,000 of a sympathetic vote. of court which netted him $5,000,000. | Nestos carried the following counties: Wiie 's Divorce. Benson, Divide, Griggs, LaMoure, Meanwhile M Searles sued divorce, alleging non-support! And got an award of $140,000 ali-|;, for | Trail, Ward, Williams, view of the fact that Hanna had! | achi and jt was This is to be delivered, together |treagne at Heras MeCumber had! with her final decree of divorce, iM! the Jeague with him although Town- October, A! eee |ley kept his organization on the sur- And now comes Miss Mary John-| face confined to the state policies. At! too. at the primaries by the league in! Besides this, she has a reputation pehalf of any sensatorial ticket-they | for pouring a cup of tea superior to, were interested primarily in landing! any brewed this side of England. state and legislative candidates. In In fact, she was keeping a tea room (Continued on page 6.) | at Portsmouth during the war, when! , an! Searles had quit the palette for the; drawing board, and was copying! plang for Uncle Sam mm the shipyard. Plot Thickens. One day who should step into the tea room but Mr. Searles? Over their tea the artists talked of the days when the war would be over and they both could go back to Art with a capital A. i “He proposed after three days,”; 1ys Miss Johngon, “I acceped—for; | saw in the young artist more than) the ordinary observer would see. “Of course, | never dreamed but; what he was single. so I was dread-| fully shocked when he came to me a tew months later and confessed that he had deceived me. ; “But he said that a divorce was be-| ing obtained and that after everything | was straightened out we would be married. I forgave him all—and! waited for him to make good his promises. But he has not done so. | “So I am suing.” | Two million dollars—count ‘em, | two hundred, two thousand, two hun-| dred thousand, two miilion—is all she asks. \ Searles Vanishes. Searles ig wut of reach of process servers, They can’t get his address. | His lawyer says he is in the south! seas, fitting out a yacht—and the lawyer denies all of Miss Johnson's; charges, from start to fin | “Mr. Searles became acquainted with her,” he says, “but he thoug! she was engaged all the time to ‘THE CLOTHES WOMEN WEAR | Fashion news — oh, chow im- 9 Portant to get it while it IS news. The Tribune Page for Women gives you the very first whisper 9) of coming styles, the reliable and authentic forecast secured from leading style centers of the world. The Tribune Fashion Hints are sensible, practical and as useful for the family of small means as for the woman who has dresses for all occasions. | driven from town to town, Bepesa, ities. tarred and feathered, and the majority (Continued on page 6.) naval officer.” ‘Mountrail, -Nelson, Ransom, Steele, {Ranged yesterday at Datura and boiler equipments are yet to be let. Bids were to be received today. REPORT NEGRO HANGED BY MOB Groesbeck, Texas, Aug. 16.—A re-j port that Alex Winn, negro, was; near here | y an armed mob following an attack This was considered quite a feat/on @ white girl was received today | Bankers’ from the justice of the peace at Da-| tura to county attorney L. E. Fair-| banks. | TELLER MISSING WITH $75,000) Denver, Col., Aug. 16.— Edwin A. Morse, 32, head teller at the Interna-! tional Trust company here, has dis- | appeared with about $75,000 in cur- rency, it was announced today by John Evans, president of the institu- tion. Miss Mabel Penfold, 22, a filing clerk also is missing, Mr. Evans said. LODGE NAMED ON U.S. DELEGATION Washington, Aug. 16.—Henry C. Lodge, chairman of the senate foreign committee, has been definitely select- -ed by President Harding, as a member of the American delegation to the disarmament conference. ASK STATUS OF RAIL SHOPMEN Marion, O., Aug. 16.—Request for definition of the status of former em- ployes at the Erie Railroad shops here | who have not accepted employment with the Railway Service company which yesterday took operation of the | shops was made to the railroad labor board by the local shopcraft union. WATHER REPORT For twenty-four hours ending at noon August 16. Temperature at 7 A. M. . Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday Lowest last night . ' Precipitation 66 3 saees . None Forecast | For North Dakota: Showers this afternoon and tonight; cooler in the |north and west portion tonight; Wed- \nesday probably fair, cooler in the ‘Bank, Flora, N. D., early today and} | fixings demolished. | been cut, pool fund. NEW EVIDENCE IN MURDER CASE Authorities Say Shotgun is Identified Los Angeles, Cal,, Aug. 16—While attorneys for the defense today are beginning intensive preparation for fighting the charges of murder filed against (Mrs. Madalynne Obenchain and Arthur C, Burch in connection with the slaying here August 5, of J. Belton Kennedy, broker, the authori ties this morning were considering the newest skein of evidence brought to light, It is declared identification was made of the stock of shotgun which was found by a beach camper eight miles from the scene of the murder. It was identified, according to a story which appears in the Examiner this morning, by the proprietor of a local pawn shop who said that he old the gun of which the stock is said to be a part to a man sometime between July 25 and 28. YEGGS BLOW: FLORA BANK Enter North Dakota Institution and Get $1,400 Fargo, N. D., Aug. 16.— Burglars blew the safe of the Flora State escaped with $1,400 in currency, ac- cording to word to the North Dakota, Association headquarters here. Five blasts of nitroglycerine were set off and a large part of the bank’s| Telegraph wires into -Flora had aid authorities, who tracked the cracksmen as far as Maddock, where the trail was lost. MAN FOUND NOT AMBROSE SMALL: Des Moines, Aug. 16.—The identity | of a man whom_ private detectives | claimed was Ambrose J. Small, miss- ing Toronto millionaire, was estab-! lished as John Daugherty, inmate of | a poor farm. | Tribune Want Ads Get Results, Ask C. H. Kelson, Napoleon; What a Tribune Want Adver-| tisement will accomplish was} demonstrated effectively today.| \ | | traveling bag between Patter- son’s farm and Fort Lincoln. He advertised the fact in the; classified columns of The Tri- bune. Tuesday morning H. O. Batzer of Hazelton brought the grip into The Tribune office. You can get the same kind of service out of a Tribune want advertise- ment. If you need a maid, have! a room for rent or a house for} : h others—you know this} it a one-piece ‘out | Po the proud look on his face. j tion.” Last week C. H. Kelson lost his ti DEVALERA FIRM | HIS VIVID GREEN BATHING CREATION ON STAND FOR A POSSIBILITY? Feature of Last Benefit Performances at Ellinge for the Swimming | FULL FREEDOM | President of “Irish Republic” Reiterates Claims for Sep- aration from British SOLDIERS ARE RECALLED | Leaves of Officers Cancelled as | a Precautionary Measure Against New Outbreaks i London, Aug: 16.—(By the As- | sociated Press)—All soldi&s on leave from Ireland at Aldershot and Farborough have been ord- ered to return to their regiments immediately, Belfast, Aug: 16.—(By the As- sociated Press)—It is reported here that the military authorities in Ireland have cancelled all leaves of absence for both officers and men and that all officers and men who are away on holidays have been recalled. It is stated this step was taken merely as a precaution against surprise and has no other significance. _Dublin, Aug. 16—(By the Asso- ciated Press)—In opening -the Dail Eireann at its first public session here today, Eamonn DeValera, the Re- publican leader reiterated Ireland’s {Big crowds saw the feature picture at|¢laims for separation from Great Brit- ain and declared the only government the people recognized was the minis- try he the Irish Republican parlia- ment. He and his colleagues, DeValera said, had adopted toward England the principle laid down by Cardinal Mer- cier, of Belgium toward Germany— that external authority was unlawful- The Irish, he said, stood for the ideals in enthroned m the American declaration of independence, Mr. DeValera provoked laughter by describing the ‘British attitude as that of a great nation demanding guaran- tees for its safety from a small one when it should be a big nation guar- anteeing safety to a small state. The cabinet, Mr, DeValera declared, did not think the British proposals were just. Mr, DeValera pointed to the vir- tually impossible conditions surround: ing negotiations with the British gov- ernment, fior, the position, he said, was that of 4 man unarmed, facing a man pointing a pistol, SEND ALIENS TO HAWAII! This Is Solution of Immigration Problems Proposed By Siegel By Newspaper Enterprise New York, Aug. 16.—“Divert im- migrant labor from Ellis Island to Hawaii.” That is a salution of the immigra- tion problem proposed by Congress man Isaac Siegel, ranking Republi- can member of the Committee on Im- migration. “Congestion and confusion at Ellis Island has only begun,” said Siegel. “A hornet's nest has been stirred up by the new 3 per cent law. The new law isn’t working—and it can’t work. “Now a way out is suggested. There is a terrific outcry against more immigrants entering this coun- try. On the other hand tales of suf- fering and hardships come from Ellis Island and from foreign ports where thousands of people seek a loophole in the law allowing them to come here. “Hawaii has sent a commission to Washington, pleading for the immi- grants America is trying to keep out. They want immigrant labor to com- bat the Japanese menace. “There are 257,000 people in the Hawaiian Islands and 109,000 of them are Japs. The Japs are leaving the farms to enter industry. The Haw- aiian Commission claims agriculture in the islands faces ruin.” Congressman Siegel declares that the new 3 per cent law has “taken the human element out of immigra- Instead of solving the prob- lem and uniting families, and getting the pick of desirable immigrants for America, it is working in contrary fashion. “Seventy-four per cent of all the immigrants reaching Ellis Island are children coming to rela- he said. “They do not disturb the economic condition, “If we diverted the remaining 26 per cent—or most of them—we would relieve congestion and confusion here, allay the fears of people opposed to the influx of the foreignborn, and help Hawaii to solve its Japanese pro- blem.” REDUCTIONS OF WAGES ARE MADE New York, Aug. 16—Wage reduc- sale, try The Tribune service. It) will always get results. Hun-; dredsof people havearticles about; their homes for which they have! no use. A classified advertise- ment will sell them. When you) have something to offer let The! tions of 10 percent for skilled work- ers and 25 percent for common la- borers was decided upon today by the board of arbitration which has been considering the wage controversev between paper mill employers and manufacturers in the United States and Canada. The new wage scale which will effect 12,000 workers, be- ‘south and east portions. Tribune sell it for you. jcomes effective at once.