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a5, “ey THE BIS BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MOND. ARBUCKLE C ee FIRST STEEL SPAN OF MISSOURI 8 MEN ROBBED, RIVER BRIDGE IS JOINED TODAY FORBOYVICTIN. ‘WER ~KIOKED OFF, j The work of erecting the huge steel heams, S00 tons of steel in all,,was completed without an ac- cident or any serious delay. Bridge men are satisfied with the pro- gress. ‘There is yet the riveting, painting, laying of che concrete floor and sidewalk tu be done, With the joining cf the sieel beams of the first spau work wilt be staried immediutely on the erection of the false work on the second span. Thefe are three spans in all, and if the progress CK TRIBUN , SEPTEMBER 12, '21 PRICE FIVE CENTS ARGED WITH MURDER ON ee. CONFESSES HE SLEW TWO MEN FREIGHT TRAIN FOR MOTOR CAR About $500 is Obtained by Band-| its in Robbery Near Medina | Sunday Night iONE.IS BADLY | FORTIETH YEAR “FATTY” FUNERAL HELD » HELD IN GELL FOR DEATH OF MOVIE ACTRESS Formal Charge is Preferred Against Motion Picture Actor LUCKY GARDNER DEFIES BARS, BULLETS | { | oe | | | made in the last several days is maintained in the subsequent work it is epected tiat all the steel work will be completed by November. Practical'y all of the steel necessary for the other two spans js on the ground: The erection of the first s} now enables one to’ picture ac- curately the bridge when finished, ‘The great steel arches iower above the roadway on the suucture to a height of about 70 teet, and the topmost point on the «steel work is about 12@ feet above the water. The super-structure is being erected by the American Bridge company, | | | i | ! | Hed Harvey Church, 20-Year-Old: Youth, Alleges to Admit | Gruesome Crime | Interment of Lloyd Russell Fa- tally Hurt Saturday After- noon in Fairview { f | i | i | | INJURED |Also Are Bruised When Forced | to Jump or Are Kicked Off Fast Moving ‘Frain i iret TWO STORIES ARE TOLD, DRIVER. IS NOT BLAMED CASE UP TO GRAND JURY Coroner Reports Girl Dies of Injuries Inflicted by Fam- ous Comedian Boy Playing With Hoop Runs i in Street and is Run Over by’ Automobile | iIn First Youth Says He Com-| | mitted Two Murders i j ee ; ! Seven of eight harvest workers; Single-Handed | who were held up and ronbed of about! {#500 on a Northern Pacific frei Mi train near Medina last night and teal Chiengp, pet. ree | ‘kicked off the fust-movi ‘ i vestigating the double. murder of Ber- | | rived in. Bisma ok MOY, ng train, ar-| nard J, Dougherty, autonwbile s@les- vved I . harck early this after- | man, and Carl Asmus, his companion, | : p 7 f ‘today were attempting to'sift the facts i Oia et the elght is in Medina under! from two alleged confessions by Har- | fa doctor's re, badly injured, All ' vey W. Church, 20 years cld, yester- | were more or less bruised. { day. : | i Authorltied all along the Northern} Jn one confession, according to the | ey fic: were notified. Chiet of Police! police, Church admitted committing! jartineson here this aflernoon, in} oth murders single handed. In a} UDE ‘MOVEMENT TO US. ATTIT - ESTABLISH WORLD ON LEAGUE IS = LABor BoaRD ; ‘Lindon, Sept. 12—There is a move- ‘ment on foot to establish a world lubor international, 7, us F mt ! i ‘The British Lator. Party has sum- Firat Presbyterian’ church,» where te} i moned a confere to be held) in little boy attended Sunday School, of-| tae.y,,| London early in October at which it ficiated, Henry Halverson sang. In- |French Representative Thinks! is propcsed to prepare machinery for! in eftort to locate the tohbe ae pate ‘ : : ‘ the creation of a Labor Internation: a tate the robbers, sent | second confession, the police say, he} Se enna reese cain | U. S. Will Not Ignore |on tines. sufficiently trond ton aaa one {calls to many officers to watch) rseorted he had “accomplices. in the | 1 or en c) H me 7 : . ‘ not-only the Moscow or Red Interna- 5 crime, | saddened countenances to pay a si-! League of Nations no! y it i Los Lope | H fent tribute to Lloyd were playmates | eas : [tional but the buotherhoods affiliated; 415, Reed or enidigs sion |e It was announced today that in in-| VILNA The last sad rites over the lifeless form of little brown-eyed Lloyd Rus- sell, fatally injured under the wheels! of a heavy automobile late Saturday, were held at 2:30 this afternoon inj the ‘Perry Undertaking parlors, Rev. | iH. ‘C. Postlethwaite, pastor of they San Francisco, Sept. 12.—A formal complaint charging mur- der was sworn to before Police Judge Daniel O’Brien against Roscoe C. (Fatty) Arbuckle in connection with the death of Miss Virginia Rappe, a motion picture actress. The complaint was signed by Mrs. Bambina Maude Delmont, a friend of the dead actress. Arbuckle appear- i : 7 to tho American Federation bor. | estigating t! H und schoolmates—Lioyd had started | i ‘ation of Labor. | sna, wearing a solilier’s uniform, was gating the latter statgmept two; | A Socialist committee appointed at | | new arrests and search f dozen to school in the first grade of the Will! irobbed of school just last week. Groups of lit- tle boys and girls in the neighborhood of the Russell home, 44 Rosser street, | pointed out the house this morning} as they passed on therr way to school | and talked in hushed tones of the tragedy which robbed them of one of their most popular playmates. Ran Into Street The accident happened on First street, between Thayer and Broad- way, atout 3 o’clock Saturday after- noon, According to the account of the accident obtained by John Russell, the boy’s father, Lloyd and “Sunny (Minhover were playing in a_ yard. Walter Leroy, driving a touring car slowly, going south on First street, Lioyd was playing with a hoop and it started | downhill out of the yard, gathéring momentum and Lloyd striving to keep up with it. Mr. seroy told Mr. Rus- sell that the boy. came out in the street like a flash. ‘He struck a fender of the automobile, and crumpled up; under the wheels. A front wheel is believed. to have passed over ‘his: right (shoulder ‘While*a “heavy rear. wheel crushed his abdomen, Mr. Leroy stopped, picked the boy up, hurried to a doctor's office and then with the doctor rushed the boy to the Bismarck hospital. He was too badly crushed to survive the shock, and passed away in about a half hour. Driver not Blamed of Underwood, was} great question of disarmament. DISPUTE) | HEAR Geneva, Sept. 12.— (By the Asso-) ciated Press.)—Members of the as-; sembly of the league of nations met jearly today in an effort to finish de-, ibate on'the report of the secretariat of the league. | The council of the league met to-, iday and heard delegations from Po ‘land and Lituania argue the conten-! itions of their respective countries inj itheir dispute over the Vilna district which is claimed by both. f Leon Bourgeois, of France, in the; dcbate this morning said there were) no reasons for the league to be alarmed; nfer-| iby the coming disarmament col fence at Washington. iy “The league respects nationaliza- tion,” he said, “and recognizes that; those who are outside as well as those jwho are inside the league have the! right to occupy themselves with the} “It was not to be expected,” added! Mr. Bourgeois, “that a country which} sent 2,000,000 men across. the Atlantic to fight for liberty would afterward renounce a part in future affairs.” Mr. Bourgeois:cited the presence in Genéva of the numerous correspond- ents of the American press as evidence of interest in the league. | Referring to the dissatisfaction of! some with the Aland Islands award jmade under the league jurisdiction} Mr. Bourgeois agreed with the senti- i H i | i Vienna has alrcady agreed to send a representative to the conference, i 365 and some change j which he had in a pocket, while oth- iers of the eight were robbed of vary- The robbers also stole a watch from Rudquist and took:a watch from one of the other men. According to the story told by these arriving here, three men climbed in the box car in which the eight were riding when the freight train stopped! near Medina to permit No. 3 to pass) it, about 10 o'clock Sunday night. | ROOT DECLINES — TO.BE JUSTICE Age Bars Him From Considering) their faces against the boxcar wall. tee jAll were searched. Position, He Tells Amer- During the robbery, in which each ican Observer of the three holdup men brandished a ‘ing amounts, the largest, being $40.! lowing his return here from Adams, jfor it. Geneva, Sept. 12.— the Associat- ed Press.)—Elihu Root has definitely declined to be considercd for election as judge of the international court of justice. In a gablegram to Dr. M. 0. Hugon, who is here in the capacity of American observer, Mr- Root de- clared ‘he will be unabie to serve on the court: because of his age, 76 years. The refusal of.Mr. itoot is said to increase the chance of either John Bassett Moore or Prof. Roscoe Pound, two other Americans nominated for the court, to be elected. NAMED HONORARY PRESIDE Geneva, Sept. 12.—(By the Associated wi revolver, two of the eight were struck with revolvers. Kicked Oif Train The robbery completed, all. of the Kicked off the freight train. One of the young men claimed the train was traveling 45 miles an hour at the point where they famed? All rolled down an embankment. They called the sheriff at Steele from: Medina ‘and a deputy and two other men tried to arrest four or five men who got off the freight train at Steele, but after the men were chased into-a cornfield they escaped. One of the bandit trio is said to have worn a white cowboy hat, and one | associates of Church was'ahder way | and Church's parents were today to! tbe subject to questioning. Continued 10 Hours Churche's first and formal confes- ' ; sion, according to police, was made, [yesterday afternoon after nearly 10! | Wis,, where he was captured. He! broke down after having been taken | over the scene of the crime. He said | he took Doughewty and Asmus to his | home in the new $5,000 automobile | which had been bought through their! company on the pretense of paying! ‘He lured Dougherty into the; basement of his home, he said, way- ; laid him at the point of a pistol, hand-| cuffed him, ckoked him with a rope| This bandit, who has a wife and hours of ceaseless questioning, fol ‘ed in court to be arraigned on | the charge sworn to by Mrs. Del- imont at the request of the dis- LUCKY” GARDNER. By N. E. A. Service, Tacoma, Wash, Sept. 12.—In again| trict attorney. The case was —out again! | i i i That is the crime career, in a nut- yes aml Friday and shell, of “Lucky” Roy Gardner, train|ATbuckle was taken back to his bandit. Three times he has been captured; and sent “over the ruad” to the Me-} Neil's Island federal prison. And three} times has he made a getaway. | Just now Gardner is—-well, federal authorities don’t know just where. But they are wailing for unother sensa- tional train holdup or mail car. rob-! bery to be pulled off. ‘Then they will! have a line on his whereabouts. eight were forced to jump or were/ and then struck him over the head | baby living at Napa, Cal., always packs with a baseball bat, ; a, gun, but hag never taken a life. He Takes Mother for Ride brags, “I'll never use @ gun to kill. Gardner broke into the “Who’ Asmus was lured to the basement a . ‘ few seconds later and was tied up Who” of crime in 1911 when he went} to the pen on a robbery charge. He and beaten ‘until he believed him dead. Leaving the bodies in the base- ment Church avers he then took -his mother and neighbors on a long au- tomobile ride returning in the eve- fling and burying Asmus’s body in the garage. The home-made grave; ; Was not large enough to hold both; | the bodies of Dougherty and Asmus, ‘ according to police so he took the lat- | jter’s body in the new car, for pos-/ ssesion of which he committed the behaved so well he was paroled at; ; the end of two years. His record |from then until now rns like this: Robbed a° mail wagun of $31,000, April, 1920 in San Diego. Was cap- tured and sentenced to serve 25 years on MeNeil’s Island. On the way to | prison he disarmed his guards on a Pullman train and escaped. In May, 1921, he returned to the United States from Canada and called on his wife at Napa, Cai. Then held cell. Miss Rappe, who died Friday, was removed from Arbuckle’s rooms in a hotel last Monday in a critical con- dition after a party at which five men and four women were present. Au- topsy surgeons said deaih was due to peritonitis, superinduced by an inter- nal injury. Assistant District Attorney Milton | O’Hen said that the charge of murder was based on a section of the penal code directing that such charge be made in cases where death resulted from a felony—in this instance, al- legéd actual or attempted assault. Accompanied by his attorney, Ar- buckle came here by automobile Sat- urday night from Los Angeles, and went at once'.to: police headquarters. He was questioned’ by detectives for several hours, but on advice of: his attorneys he refused to talk. At mid- night, Captain Mathewson ordered him booked for murder. Arbuckle lost his usual jaunty manner. When newspa- per photographers asked him to smile, he said: “Not on an occasion of this sort.” All today Arbuckle persisted in re- Mr. Russéll said tnat he could not; blame Mr. Leroy for the accident,| and no one was more shocked by the; tragedy than Mr. Leroy, whose own children are in the Bismarck schools. | hadicrime, to the Des Plaines river Press.)—Gustav Ador, former presi-|on a brown coat. Each wore new light. overalls, two were stockil built while the third was a little tall- er and was very dark, ment expressed by A. J. Balfour of! IL Great Britain that it ‘was impossible| dent of Switzerland, was elected hor.- to please both sides in such contro-} rary president of the assembly of the; versies. | League of Nations today. fusing to answer questions of the po- lice and his attorney declined to dis- cuss the case. Miss Rappe was 25 years of age and nd threw it from a bridge. Later; Up @ train at Roseville, Cal., and in the morning he left in the! grabbed $100,000. Captured again and ‘new car with his mother for Adams, | Sentenced to 50 years. ; Wisconsin. This alleged confession! Once more, on the way to prison, Mr. Leroy farms considerable land near Underwood but lives here. Lloyd Russell was five years old— he would have reached his sixth mile- ‘among them Norman Roop, banker, of U.S. SUES FOR | PASTURE RENT | M. A. Hildreth, district attorney, has| HALIFAX FEARS Frank Richetti, of San Franc who was robbed of several dollars, had many bruises on his, . He said he must have rolled over ten times af-/ scO, i { Steele, N. D., Sept. 12—Four har- ‘characterized “a tissue of lies” by| he escaped, by whipping out a hidden gun‘and holding up his guards, hand- | cuffing them and leaping out of aj train window. Coroner Peter Hoffman, was followed according to the police, by a second alleged confession in which Church was born in Chicago. She attracted at- tention in that city in 1913, it is said, by advice to young women to create original methods of making a living. : stone on the sixth day of October, His/ tee Bi : : f i Sail i H : rs eing kicked off the train. A;said he had accomplices, | A month later Gardner registered | She was then making $4,000 a year as father et Oe. promos: | TO SID PARKINS NEW DISASTER ire boy, 19 years old, lives near Sor j at a hotel in Centralia, Wash. Hela traveling art mode}, ene said. Miss Roc on the boy's’ grandfather. Many os | Wilton. He declined to give his name.! y | bandaged up his head 1 disguise. | jtappe came to San Fruncisco in 1915, relatives and friends from out of the| Fargo, N. D., Sept. 12—The federal | —_—- All had been working in the harvest. | |The landlady, however, became sus-/ and for a time designed gowns and j pth Bee ee retin attendsthe funeral, government through the office of Col. . Ce var vere i v i picious and notified police, who caught | wore them asa model. She began act- i Explosion of Oil Tanks Causes (Special to ‘The Tribune) him. ing in motion’ pictures in Los An- Washer, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Arm- strong, of Hazelton, and Mrs. Edward (Savage, of Braddock. Several resi- ‘dents of Hazelton came here today for the funeral, Mrs. Russell having for- merly lived in that place. SAYS RAILROADS JOIN TO HURT U.S. SHIP BOARD Washington, Sept. 12.-—Charges that secret agreements between American railroads and foreign shipping com- panies have caused the great bulk of the shipping board tonn.ge to be tied up for want of cargoes were made in a report sent by Senator Jones to Washington to Chairman Lasker. ONE AMERICA PROPERTY NOT NATIONALIZED, Moscow, Sept. 12.—Lecnid Krassin, Soviet trade representative, said the Westinghouse electric factory was the only American property not national-| ized by the Soviet government. OIL COMPANY NAMES OFFICERS) Dickenson, Sept. 12—A. C. Pasen- instituted action against the holdets! of mortgages in the Sid Parkins cat- ‘tle case The action is to énjoin tie! | mortgagees from selling the cattle ar! | the government has a licn on the state for unpaid pasture rent. The cattle were pastured in Stanling Rock In- {dian Reservation land ieused from the | government. The mortgagees, according to Judge !§. L. “Nuchols, assistant district at- Evacuation of Half City nau Al § Sept. 12.—-Explostor- of five fanks of the Intpcrial Oil coms pany’s plant at Dartmouch on the east side of Halifax harbor early today with yumblings that were felt in this city caused the evacuation of half the homes in Halifax. Those who had gone ‘through the explosion of Decem- her, 1917, when the munitions ship, vest laborers weve robbed of akout $500 and thrown off a Northern Pacific freight train near; Medina about 9 or 10 o'clock last! night, according to information to au- thorities here. Following the robbery a telephone | message was received by the sheritf} here to apprehend the alleged robbers; on the freight train. When it reached | Steele a deputy sheriff and two or| vesthound | This time guards lanced him inside | the prison walls to serve his 50-year DEATH LIST IS se i On September 5 the prisoners at Mc- N E Neil Island were staging a ball game. ‘ | Gardner and Everett fmryn and Law- ‘yence Bogart, two tcllow convicts, took advantage of a batting rally and broke for freedom. Some Estimates Place Number of Dead as High as One ‘SECOND BOAT | torney, have agreed that if the gov- | ernment will not stop the sale they} Mount Blanc blew up and wrecked 2 would put up a bond of $7,000 to pay| third of Habifax wiln loss of 1,200 the rent to the government if the court} lives thought it was ancther such dis- decides that the lien for rent comes| aster. Indications were that therej ahead of the mortgages to other peo-| had been neither loss of life nor ser- ious injury in today’s explosion. three men chased .four or five men} who were stealing a ride on the tain} into a cornfield where they lost tie! trail, i One man, who says he is one of! those who was nobbed, is in Steele. | |He said that he was held up at the: jpoint of a gun and $40 taken from; ‘him. ‘Ho was not beaten, but thre others are said to have shown fight} jand to have been unmercifully beaten | ‘The defendants in che action have [80 days, in which to answer the gov-|] BRIDGE BREAK cae COSTS 24 LIVES i be — before they were thrown off the train. | | Chester, Pa., Sept. 12.---Twenty-four No arrests have been made. Al’; |ARMY ROMANCE . | IS SHATTERED; persons were drowned sind five seri ; trains are being watched. } WIFE Is GONE ously injured in the collapse of the Hundred ' — | San Antonio, Sept. 12.—Debris, dam- aged property and rehabilitation work | were the principal remains of Satur-! day's flood here today. | Business outside the inundated dis-; trict and sections where the water was} i not dep and where work of cleaning; The boat will be in cl: was practically completed yesterday | was almost normal today. Removel ot} debris, mud and oil continued in other} districts. Many funerals were held yesterday | | summer, is now hauling coal to Fort Baltimore, Md., Sept. 12—The ro- mance of Mrs. Emily Kaowles Spiker, which created a sensaticn two years ago wkenl as the mother 9° Pearly Spik er’s child, she came to America from England to wed his brother, Guy, has been shattered. Mrs. Spiker, who liv- ed with Guy Spiker in Bast Baltimore, has disappeared. She left a note saying she no longer cared to live with Guy. i ! RT |and more took pl: ioday. SEE MURDERER "siy'reports today ‘von along the OF POLICEMEN San Antonio river soutn of here fail- | ed to indicate loss of lize. ibbii inn. : John! Relief funds totalins $17,478 had) EO AR ai ae by, been subscribed today by citizens of: authorities in connection with the San Antonio toward a goal of $25,000) murder last Thursday of Chief of Po- for relieving the distress of those who} where they are bringing from $25 lo] lice Hayes and two other Hibbing of-| lost possessions in the torrent of Sat- $40 per round. Considerable money | ficers was seen near Chisholm early urday meraing’ which swept over the is being brought into the country | today by a woman, according to word lower part of the city. through this source. to Hibbing authorities. i bridge spanning the Chester river, ac- cording to the police. HORSES BEING SHIPPED. Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 12.—Thou- sands of head of light horses are now being shipped from points on the south Slope to St. Louis, Mo. markets, i Property damage was fixed at nol} more than 7 or 8 million in a statement, ' by C. L. Yandell, general manager of} PUT ON RIVER) The Deapolis, formerly used as a ferry boat, is being retitted by carpen-j ters for the carrying of grain, and wil!) leave the port of Bis ck Tuesday on! a trip up the Missouri to haul cargoes. urge of Capt.| Belk and Andrew Johnson. The Benton, a packet which has been; Operated on the river cll during the! Yates. She is in charge of Capt. Joe Leach. EXPORT TRADE — SHOWING GAIN, Washington, Sept. 12.—Exports in- creased approximately $94,000,000 art} imports about $17,000,000, as compar-| ed with July, according to the month- geles in 1917 and took leading parts . in several. Her mother is dead. Arbuckle was born in Kansas thirty- four years ago. When eight years old he appeared as a pickaninny in a stock company at Santa Ana, Cal., for fifty cents a night. Ten years later he received: $17.50 a week for singing popular songs in a San Jose, Cal., vaudeville house. That was his first regular theatrical engagement. After- ward he sang in Portland, Ore., bur- lesque theater, and later was a dancer in Oakland, Cal. Arbuckle’s first motion picture work wag as an extra man tor companies producing slap stick comedies. It paid him $3 a day. Since then he has pro- duced many film plays as head of his own companies. ENGAGED TO MISS RAPPE New York, Sept. 12—Henry Lehr- man, motion picture director, who was engaged to Virginia Rappe, the film actress, for whose death Roscoe Arbuckle is held in ‘San Francisco, today said he would devote every mo- mont he could spare from his business to pressing the comedian’s prosecu- tion, CANCEL ARBUCKLE FILM. Los Angeles, Calif., Sept. 12—The latest film production featuring Ros- coe Arbuckle, held in jail in San Fran- cisco, was cancelled last night at one of the largest local raotion pictyre houses. The film had been showing all week and last night was to have } The child, adopted by Pearly Spik-}} kopf of Dickenson was given 2 piace; Y the Chamber of Commerce, while the ‘ summury issued to- e : { on the board of directors of the New| els awile .wien ae forgdve:;him: for ‘death list was still uncertain, some ly forelgn trade ae iy 3 been its final appearance. { . - infidelty while overseas with the i day by the commerce Acpurtment. H wner ot the theater, England Petroleum company, succeed) so oican army, is at her hi \ ‘ estimates running as higit as 100 dead.) “ yports in August were $375,000,000! Sid Grauman, own Hi ing BE. J. Strang, at an adjourned | AY ATINY, ephome.. QUESTION IF BRITAIN TRIES T0 | including the bodies recovered. as compared with $321,900,000 in July| declined to comment oa the cance etn ot ee ee eerine wctand PEACE RESTORED : and with $578,000,000 in August, 1920. tert ancine® Alta Wid substituted for theater, All other officers and direct- N MIN RESTRICT NEW ULSTER PARLIAMENT EARTH SHOCK mak the Arbuckle. ors were re-elected as follows: I E AREA t IE RECORDED \"No Arbuckle films were advertised ‘President—Dr. George A. Sarcket, | —_—— INVEN s T \by any local houses ‘oday. Ae the N Elizabethtown, IIl., Sept. 12.— ‘5 ae ‘ | Pa rs-Lasky film exchange, eeca: fromident_—_H. A. Porchering, | was practically restored Hf the Retain Belfast, Sept. 12—(By the Assocjated Press.)—Any attempt by Great Washingien, eee ea pari FOR SILKWORMS Famous Player Arbackls films, it was ‘New England, county Flourspeare mine. Britain to restrict the rights of the new Ulster parliament might result in| Wake described as very Sever’ Wis anking, Sepi.12._Prof. C. L, Chien| stated there had been no cancella- Secretary—J. R. Chalmers, ‘New that might include the United Stats and British coloni recorded at Georgetown eee Ere of the Collecc of Agriculture and For-| tions as"far ag was known there and; England. OH » WEATHER REPORT war 7 might inc ie ‘ e ae a ritis soNEL ‘ ical observatory. The cenier of disturb-| of the College of Agricuiture and For- | D onedent it was not contemplated * 3 5 1 ji This was the substance of warning\by Hugh MzeNeill, speaker of the| ance was estimated to be 1,700 miles] estry, University of Nanking has in-/ 2 presel: . 2 — New] F -four. a ’ . * yo i oA i e canines oharles | Biman.) New Ror aaianber 12 hoursmcenging (at parliament, in an address at Ballymena yesterday. south of Washington. vented a new engine laying box for the| to discontinue booking them. pretemgiye ‘ t Ton vi ; ‘ oh ‘ ; —- h which it is believed may te Director—A. C, Pagenkopf, Dicken-} Temperature at 7 Civil war in Ireland would be the first. result of such action, he said. silk mot ; A % i 5 ¥ supplant existing methods of testing BARS FILMS. : son. Highest yesterday - “The war would become’ world-wide,” he continued. “Hundreds of thou- HARDING TO AID for Pebrine disease in tne silk worm. | Medford, Mass. Sevt. 12—Mayor The meeting was largely attended} Lowest yesterday with the big theater of New England | Lowest last night . being filled to capacity with stock- | Precipitation There have been two methods here-| Haines today notified all motion pic- tofore of making this test, one Jap-|ture houses in this city that films of anese and the other krown as the/ Roscoe Arbuckle wouli be barred un- European method and it is said that) til Arbuckle’s case hal keen disposed sands of people from Great Britain and thé Empire would support northern Ireland and there would be hundreds of thousands of people from the United "| States and possibly from the British colonies and dependencies who would VETS, HE SAYS Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 12—Presi- —- holders. There were about twenty| Highest wind veloci' stockholders from Dickenson present. Forecast The meeting also made several minor} For North Dakota: Somewhat un- and would alterations it'the by-laws of tho cor-| settled tonight and Tuesday; not yoration. much change in temperature, a war which would embroil Great Britain and the United States spread horror over the:earth.” come to the aid of southern Ireland. In brief, there would be in Ireland; dent Harding promised the fullest aid in his power to wounded ex-service men in an address to velerans of the Fifth division, A. E. F, vere. serious drawbacks of both of these have been overcome by Professor Chien’s invention. | ‘of in the court In one picture house jan Arbuckle picture was withdrawn jon the mayor's orders.» (1; 19ifn Hot