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\ ficial attendance yesterday was 30,203. | FORTIETH YEAR YANKEES TAKE SECOND GANE “AS GIANTS FALTER BEHIND ~—NBHFINA Smart Baseball Aids Americans In Second 3 to 0 Win MEUSEL STEALS WAY HOME) Duplicates McNally’s Feat — Ruth Steals Second and Third Final Score: Giants Yankees Polo Grounds, N. Y., Oct. 6—Captain ~~ -Peckinpaugh of the Yaukees was pre-! sented with a chest of silver before the start of the second world eeries. The crowd was much larger than yesterday and probabiy numbered! something over 35,000 folks. The ot-! The band played the “Star Spangled Banner” and the Yankees took the; field. _ 2 Some little times was ust clearing the playing field of phowgraphers and, bandmen. Then Governor Mill‘: threw out tae! first ball and the game was on. Batting order: Giants, Burns, cf: | Bancroft, 11; Frisch, sb: Young, rf: Kelly, 1b; E, Meusel; If. Rawlings, 2b; Smith, c; Nehf, p. t Yankees—Miller, cf; Peckinpaugh, | 8s; Ruth, If; T. Meusel, rf; Pipp. 1b; Ward, 2b; McNally, 3b; Schang, Hoyt, p. FIRST INNING Giants—Burns struck out, missing a | drop curve for the third strike. Hoyt | took Bancroft’s bunt and threw him out at first. Ward threw out Frisch | at first. ‘No runs, no hits, no errors. Yankees—Miller sent up a high foul which ‘Smith muffei for the first error of the series. Miller then walked. Peck out, Nehf to Kelly, Miller going to second. Ruth walked, Meusel lined out to Frisch, who doubled Mil- ler at second with a quick throw to Rawlings, No runs, no hits, one er- ror. , A { AR ri SaveKs f | a ! = SECOND INNING | ‘Giants—Young out on a grounder to Pipp, unassisted. Kelly struck out. Meusel went out on a- grounder to Pipp... No runs, no. hits,.no errors... | Yankees—Pipp walked. Bancnoft threw out Ward at first, Pipp going to; second. Frisch took McNally’s ground- HE BIS BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1921 Last Edition PRICE FIVE CENTS JOHNSON TELLS “WHAT HEWOULD PITCHING BATTLE | HOYTIS VICTOR Candidate For Attorney-General Against Lemke Declares Some May Go to Jail | iMAKES SAVAGE ATTACK Candidate Grows Wrathy in His Condemnation of Frazier, Hagan and Lemke 1 { t i i | | son, Independent candidate for attor- ; Ney general, invaded the home county (Of the ‘two chief leaders of the op- posing factions in the recall campaign, i ning, the county seat of Dunn, in the \| forenoon yesierday, and in Killdee? ‘ ‘tlast evening. ! Friends and neighbors of Thi. G. {Heard the issues discussed from the {Independent point of view. Johnson has been campaigning in the western part of the state for several days. “Nothing needs to be said or done to prove that there is a bad mess in North Dakota,” declared Johnson, “and that the school districts, town- | ships, villages, cities and counties find themselves unable to pay their obliga- tions evon though a’ sufficient tax ‘was levied and paid: last year. “Everyone knows that in spite of the fact that our land values have not been inflated as they have in other states, farmo:s and businessmen are} \Liuving great difficulty in financing | the'r affairs. | loaned to individuals in the state have been withdrawn and other mil- lions have been withheld. ‘ “Everyono is anxious to have these conditions changed as much as possi- le and as quickly’ as possible. To change them it is necessary to locate the causes and apply the remedy, . i “Officials Plead Gullty” NEHF | ‘“The causes are to be found in the Waite Hoyt, of the Yankees, was vic-| Official records even though these only to. Art Nehf, of the Giants, in a| Scratch the surface so far as disclos- pitching duel today. ing all of the irregularities for which our present administration must be i held accountable. “A-atudy of our public records dis- closes admissions made by Frazier,, Lemke and Hagan and minor officials | working under their orders, which es- | tablish beyond a doubt that ‘Frazier, | Lemke and Hagan, acting as the in- dustrial commission and as such exer- cising control over all public money, ; have misused and squandered more than six million dollars. “In their haste to please political pets they, loaned fn illegatly excessive amounts to them nearly three million dollars of tax money when they should have waited with their farm loans un- | Ward. No play. was made on Kelly at first. Meusel forced Kelly at se- cond, Ward to Peck. Ward threw out Rawlings at first. No runs, no hits,| no errors. Yankees—Schang sent a long one out to Young. ‘Hoyt flied to Kelly. Nehf. took Miller's hopper and threw him put. No runs, no hits, no errors. SAFE! \ er and touched Pipp for the second; out. It was a smart play. McNally | reached first. McNally went out! stealing, Smith to Rawlings. No runs, | no hits, no errors. | THIRD INNING | Giants—Rawlings got a‘ Texas! leaguer into left. Smith popped to/ Peck. Nehf struck out. Burns fore: | ed ‘Rawlings at second, Peck taking j Burns grounder and touching second. | No runs one hit, no errors. { Yankees—Schang hit a high one which Bancroft took. Hoyt got a ‘Texas leaguer into right. Mille? flied ; out to Burns. Peck walked. Coa O’Leary complained that Nehf 1s doctoring the ball and Umpire Moriar - | ity threw it out. Ruth walked filling | the. bases. Meusel popped to Ban- croft. No runs, one hit, no errets.. FOURTH INNING Giants—Bancroft struck out. Pipp took Frisch’s roller making a, beauti- ful one-hand stop. McNally tarew out Young. No runs, no hits, no errors, Yankees—Pipp senta sky-scrapzer out to Young. ‘Ward got a lucky hit into rigtfield. He seemed to be dodg ing the ball when it struck iis bat and flew over Rawling’s head. Nehf took MoNally’s grounder and threw wide to second both Ward and McNai- ly being second. It was an\error for ‘Nehf. Schang walked, filling the bases. Ward scored while Rawlings was throwing out Hoyt at first. Mc- ‘Nally also tried to score but was caught at the plate, Kelly to Smith. One run, one hit, one error. FIFTH INNING Giants—Kelly struck out, Schang throwing him out at first. Meusel walked. Rawlings flied out to Meusel. Miller came in fast and took Smith’s fly. No runs, no hits, no errors. Yankees— Frisch knocked down miller’s hot grounder and threw him out. Bancroft threw out Peck. Ruth walked for his third time and stole second and third. Ban¢roft threw out Meusel. No runs, not hits, no er- ee For Te Lua mio SLIDE! SIXTH INNING : Giants—Nehf walked. Burns flied to Ward. Hoyt threw out Bancroft at first, Nehf going to second. til real estate bonds could be sold. “Hagan Helped Himself” ; “John (H. Hagan, himself a director | of the Bank of North Dakota, brushed aside eleven hundred and eighty-four farmers, who were waiting in line| ahead of him, to get himself a loan. His application was No. 1219, his loan was No. 36. } EIGHTH INNING e Giants—Ward threw out Smith. Ward also threw out Nehf. Burns strolled to first and went out stealing Schang to Ward. No runs, no hits, no errors: contrary to all good business practice DO IF ELECTED CONDEMNS LAWS | iKilldeer, Oct. 6—Sve'nbjorn John. | by addressing large crowds in Man-| Nelson and Senator A. A. Liederbach | “Millions of dollars that used to be | by the Independent Voters Associa- { printing was let on September 24. The ‘For political purposes. they haves, ‘PUBLICITY BOOK TS OUT; LEAGUE. Space Given in State Pamphlet! | For Attack and Defense of | I, V. A. Program | | | 'SOLONS MEASURE IS UP, , People to Decide if Salaries Shall, , Be Increased to $1,000 | Per Biennium Voters of. North Dakota, in addition c to the political issues, will vote on} the question of raising pay of mem-| bers of the legislature, ‘ A ‘constitutional amendment. sub- ‘mitted to. the people proposes that each member of the legislture shall receive $1,000 per biennium, $500 for each 60-day regular session, instead of $5 per day. No extra pay is pro- vided for special sessions. Another amendment privides that in counties having 8,009 population or less the county judge shall also be the; clerk of district court. These two proposed amendments are referred to the people by con- current, resolution of the last legisla- ture, and have-been lost sight of in the discussion of the initiated laws and amendments thus ‘far. Pamphlet Reing Mailed The North. Dakota publicity pamph- Jet, containing all the proposed initiat- ed laws and constitutional amendments and argument for the ones proposed PANKHURST IN | NEW ALLIANCE, London. Oct 6—The London ‘Times | labor correspondent says. that Sylvia| Pankhurst the militant suffrage lead-! er “having been expelled from’ the; British communist party for contin-| ning to run the Workers Dreadnaught! as an independent organ” after she! was told not to do so, now announces | the adherence of the ni “the fourth international tion and an argument against them by the Nonpartisan League. ’ The mailing of the pamphlet began today from the Tribune company office. There are 200,000 copies of the 40-! page pamphlet. The contract for the i) paper to| i SUNDAY STORE OPENINGS ARE rei rer te Fen HIT BY LABOR ae rpsnearly $1,000 less than | Trades an d Labor ‘Asctinbly| Also’ Against Practice of Keeping Open Evenings ( job involved .a great deal of com- position, the shipment of a carload of paper from Minnescta mills, and they press( work’ on a total of 8,000,000 pages. Big presses have run night and day to get the work out as quick-| ly as possible so that the pamphlet; The Political Issues The political amendments and laws to be voted on are: Constitutional amendment — Pro- posal. to limit the industrial bond issue to $7,500,000 instead of. $12,- 000,000. The opposition argument is that the effect ofthe amendment. is actually to ‘raise the debt limit on unsecured bonds from $2,000,000 to. $7,500,000, { initiated laws—Two election laws.| One proposes a nonpartisan primary for selection of candidates. for state| offices, abolishing party designation. | The ‘second proposes to nominate arty candidates for U. S. senators,| . S$. representatives and_ precinct committeemen in March. The Non- partisan opposition statement assails the former as “the Federal Job Act,” The Trades and Labor assembly, of ‘Bismarck, has gone on record as op- posing the practice of some stores of keeping. open for business every! evening and Sunday forenoon. resolution follows: At their last. regular “meeting held} Monday, October 3, the Trades and! Labor Assembly adopted the following resolution which voices the sentiment | of organized labor of ‘Bismarck — re-! garding the practice, recently adopt- ed, of some stores of keeping their} places of business open every eve- ning and Sunday forenoon. | ‘‘Whereas, it is the aim of Organiz- | ed Labor to maintain regular hours of The} i or the first time, Sir Harry Lauder America. Photo shows them arriving on the steamship “Aquitania.” “HUMAN FLY” IS. declaring it is designed to enable Yankees—Peck popped to Frisch who. dropped the ball. Ruth forced Peck’ at second, Kelly to Bancroft. Meusel singled into centerfield, Ruth going. to third on_ the throw-in. Meusel went to second. Ruth scored whilc Rawlings was throwing out Pipp at first and Meusel went to third, Meusel stole home and Smith had a short passed ball. Ward foul- and in many instances in direct viola- | those who have for the last four years tion of the laws of the state, put supported the Democratic party in more than $2,000,000 of public money; the state to claim they are Republi-: into banks that are either question- | cans when they go to Washington to| able or closed. |, | Secure jobs. The second one is call- “They have organized and obtained |eq the “Snow-Bound Election Act,”| control of a large number of banks for by the opposition statement which} the purpose wf getting their hands and | declares the primary is provided for the hands of their henchmen on not |‘March when blizzards often cut the only the cash that their supporters | vote down and give a small group of} work in all lines of business as far as possible, and “Whereas, there are a number of| stores in Bismarck that keep open for business long after other stores closo: at night, and by so doing are lengthen- ing the hours of labor of many em-{ ployes even though such establish- | ments do not help, as they will even-| tually compel other stores employing clerks and other workers to remain | ed out to Kelly. Two runs, one hit, one error. put into those banks as stock and de- “ a posits, but also to get théir hands on F 5 NINTH fh NG Bancroft | public money which they did not daro F Cae u Tsitigle: inte right.| to load nn a truck at the back door of TiSC! 7 q ty Young walked. Kelly hit into. f double| the Se ENcinincathate Fricke! play. Meee Went to Pipp. No “Nearly a million dollars of runs, one . K TAXING LIMIT BILL ARGUED Constitutionality of Act in Ques- tion Before Supreme Court 5 public the pockets of the political henchmen of Frazier, Lemke and Hagan and into |their blue sky corporations passed {through the Scandinavian-American Bank, which is now closed never to open, owing the Bank of North Dakota nearly a half million dollars, which the tax payers will eventually have to make good. “They have admitted that they have violated the laws of the state that prohibit public officials from appro- | priating public property to their per- jscnal use and of being parties to ob- taining money for persons or corpor- The constitutionality of house bill ire interested. No. 25, limiting amount of taxes of| “Graft in Homebuilding” counties, cities, etc. to one-third of} ‘The Homebuilders Association has their 1918, 1919 and 1920 revenue,|veen used as an agency for political for the year. 1921, was to be argued | grafting of the worst kind although on in the supreme court this afternoon.ja smaller scale than the’ Bank of The law ‘came before the court in! (Continued on page 6.) two cases. In e of th against County Auditor’ em, stated! Tucker of | pany contended that the limitation’ applied to each individual item in a; county budget. In another case, Wil-| son vs. the City of Fargo, the con-| stitutionality of the law is at issue.} od DIVERSIFICATION SHOWN. _ | Tax Commissioner Wallace Com- | Lidgerwood N. D., Oct. 6.—Diversifi- | cation possibilities of Richiand county, ares Federal and State Reports were wel shown by the large and va-! rieq exhibits of grain other than) wheat, grasses, corn and vegetable, Sanaa fiea ss products at the second aiinual Harvest! The state taxing department has festival held here last week. Ccrniex-|*nished the comparison of reports of ji cat ‘corporations filed both with the state hibits were large and artistically dis-} federal t id. the Work’ played. A big poultry show was ajand sre Seenow kecit rab Ee ee CSE rane one | musnioner said: “It is impossible via 4 z 5) ic’ tertainment program included air-/ 1h ne Jen or oat io ness ipa ik plane stunts, baseball aud football. dust hae Pwayecalecoveret +4 money that has been transferred into |: jations in which they and their friends |. on : i 4 jthat th le h ndorsed their Cass county by the Northern recite INCOME REPORTS 2: ener Bee i railroad company, the railroad com-| “The rural credits law is assailed; politici: i 7 open in order to meet such competi- | poli cians opportunity, ‘to contra} ie tion, and will thereby break down the | present standard of working condi- election. i 4 The public depositary law propose tions enjoyed by the employes of most ot the mercantile establishments of | ! to disqualify thé Bank of North, Dakota fore recelying: public funds. |S jemarck; ie present law, the statement op-|""(, oy) s passing. the law says, permit private| \ “Therefore, Be It Resolved, iby the | banks to compete with the Bank of Bismarck Trades and Labor Assem-| North Dakota on equal terms. - The| Ply, in regular meeting, that we urge! public depository law enacted by the|#ll members of organized labor and last ‘session of the legislature covers] thelr friends to refrain from patroniz- | all the ground of this proposed law,; i" such storos, thereby expressing | the opposition statement declares, ex- their disapproval of the attempt to cept that. an effort is made in the; Jengthen the hours of the employes of the mercantile establishments of Bis- | marck, and be it further | proposed law to reek the Bank of! North Dakota by prohibiting the state| "4! i te t3 Hi H ‘Resolved, that a copy of this reso- bani, from competing with privatel sation be turneh ea the’ newspapers ot I ial C anasii |; Bismarck, with the request that it be | Fe een aw pro-| Published in an early edition.” vides that the members of the com-; SEERA} mission’ shall be the secretary of! 2 state, state treasurer and comnis-| WIESMAN GIVEN sioner of agriculture and labor. This law, the epposition patatemont, dé:| 1 TO 7 YEARS clares, is a measure of deceit, it being aa aa A framed by the I. V. A. so that if Gov-| Hustings, Minn., Oct, 6.-—MIke Weis- ‘ernor Frazier and Attorney-General; man, of Minneapolis, convicted here Lemke are reelected and the initiated; June 10 of running a disorderly heuse "law carries the control of the in-| in that city, today was given an inde- dvtrial. commission will be taken out! terminate sentence of from one to ‘of. their hands in spite of the fact; seven years of hard labor in the state penitentiary by Judge Albert Johnson in district court. Stay of execution of sentence to by the opposition as “The Ruralj October 11 was Branted to enable ‘Credits Bunco Act.” The act is $0: counsel for Weisman to perfect an ap- framed, the opposition statement de-! peal to the U. S. circuit court of ap- ‘elares, that it will be inoperative: peals. ‘ ‘and not a dollar of rural ctedlty loans| Yean be made. It is charged it is; drawn so that it woul not operate. NINE MOROS \° Another act provides for the dis-; ; | solution of the Bank of North Dako-: ARE KILLED ‘ta. There a straight-cut issue on, Pas TEE BESS, ‘this: whether or not people wish the! Manilla. Oct. 6—(By the Associated bank continued. The opposition; press.)--Nine Moros were killed in a charges that the law contains no! fight at Kulay Kulay, Sulu province. ‘limitation requiring that a reasonable petween 30 Moros and a wetachment ot {consideration be obtained before sell-' the phillipine constabulary numbering ing property and declares it would 16 men, headed by Governor Carl permit tru$tees to “cut the melon.”! Moore, of Sulu province according to : {an official dispatch received at con- POSTMASTER IS | stabulary headquarters ioday. THE “WEE WIFE” COMES ALONG CANALSHAKEUP TO SAVE MONEY ISRECOMMENDED Commission Submits Report To, Secretary Weeks Asking Radical Changes Washington, Oct. 6.—-(By the Asso- ciated Press.)—Tnorougn reorganiza- tion of the administrative machinery in the Panama canal zone with radical changes in existing policy affecting employment of labor, physical opera- tion of the canal and railroad, pay of employes and other important subjects is recommended in the preliminary report submitted to Secretary Weeks by the commission which recently in- vestigated conditions in the Canal! Zone at his request. The commission estimates that an annual saving of $5,000,000 would re-! sult from adoption of its suggestions. KILLED IN FALL Jack Hughes, Who Appeared in Bismarck, is Killed Jack ‘Hughes, “human fly,” who climbed the Van Horn hotel in Bis- marek a few weeks ago, was killed in a fall at Sandpoint, Idaho, according to dispatches received here. ‘Hughes was giving an exhibition in wall scaling at’ Sandpoint when he fell 30 feet to his death. (Hughes lived in Detroit, Mich. He came thnough Bismarck on his way to the Pacific coast, where ho said he was to do stunts for the movies. WALKS OUT OF JAIL IN PLACE OF CELLMATE Chicago, Oct. 6—Benjamin Leiber- man, one of four men alleged to havel robbed the Kleintown »ank, of ‘jewelry valued at $100,000 on Christmas eve, | 1919, walked out of the county jail early this morning by subst:uting himself for another man who was to be re- leased on bond. Early this morning a woman repre- senting herself to be Mrs, Aneta Lie- beFman called at the jail and present- | ed $3,000 bonds for the release of; George Williams, Liebe: man’s cellmate held of a charge of robbery. Williams] was summoned by the jailer but Lieber-| man responded and succeeded in get- ling away before his identity was dis- coveréd. GRAIN GROWERS | 10: OPERATE Given Permission to Solicit in sion to solicit membership and oper: | ate in Iowa has been granted the UL S. Grain Growers, Inc., by Secretary of ‘State Ramsey. The movement is said to have the support of all the farm organizations in the state. Solicitors will be sent into the field to sign contracts with cooperative elevators and with growers, The Grain Growers association is now. well organized in nine middle- western states. QUITS U.S. ARMY Petitions | { [oon Oct. 6. State of Iowa ain Temperature at 7 A. M.. Des Moines, lowa, Oct. 6—Permis- | Highest yesterday 93 BODIES ARE ~ RECOVERED IN ~ FRENCH TUNNEL |Feared Loss of Life May Be Greater When All Rescue Work is Completed A REAR END COLLISION \Train Crashed Into Another Loaded With Passengers Inside of Long Tunnel Paris, Oct. 6.—Twenty-three bodies of persons who lost their lives in the rear-end collision of two suburban passenger trains in the half-mile tun- nel leading into the St. Lazair, railway ‘station yesterday afterzoon, had been recovered from the smouldering wreckage this afternoon. Seventeen coaches caught fire after the wreck and firemen, almost help- less, cut a hole through the pavement of Rue De Rome, hoping to create an upward draft in order to allow the smoke and gas to escape. Both trains s wife accompanies him on a trip to|,were filled with commuters homeward boufid and authorities feared that a greater loss of life wouid be recorded when all bodies have veen recovered. The crash occurred when the 5:52 train for the suburb tMary-le-Roy crashed into the rear eff of a train from Versailles, whica left four min- utes earlier on the same track, but which stopped inside the tunnel. Cries for help and moans were audible at both ends of the long iunnel after the wreck. The fire, it is said, was started by explosions of small illuminating gas tanks in the coaches of the telescoped train. The train for Versailles had | stopped to repair a broken coupling. Paris. Oct. 6.—Reporis received by the authorities of the Joss of life in j yesterday’s, collision between two sul:- urban trains in the tunnel leading to the St Lazare railroad station showed that up to the present 17 persons are dead. Of these 15 were killed or burn- ed to death in the car which caugh’ fire following the coilision and two died in hospitals. Newspaper reports indicated that about 100 were injured. TRAINMEN ASK FOR A: STRIKE Are Received By. Brotherhood Heads Chicago, Oct. 6.—Formal requests to strike have been received from lo- cals of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen according to W. G. Lee, president of the union. The requests received from general committees ‘2 j representing employes asked permis- sion to strike at the same time as the Brotherhood of Railway Engineers, the Brotherhood of Railroad Engine- men and Firemen, Order of Railroad Conductors and Switchmen’s Union of North America. The latter four organizations were counting their joint strike ballots this week. The trainmen have already voted to strike. UNDESIRABLRS ARE DEPORTED Minneapolis, Oct, 6.—Eleven unde- sirable aliens were deported today to their native lands by the Minneapolis office of the U. S. Immigration Service. | Among them were George: ‘Nicholas,’ from Calavier, N. D. immigration of- ficials charge that by a:cans of forged documents he was representing him- self as a collector foc Syrian relief. The party left in a private car for Chicago where they will join other deportation parties and ve sent to New York preparatory to their departure from America. PROMINENT RED CROSS MAN DIES Nice, France, Oct. 6.—(By Associated Press.)—Harold Carroll, of Carrolton, Md., who played a prominent part in American Red Cros work in Italy dur- ing the war, died suddenly today in the garden of his villa at Mentone, near here. ——* fae ee | Today’s Weather | —$—____________- For Twenty-four hours ending at Lowest ‘yesterday Lowest last night Precipitation Highest wind velocity . Weather Forecast For Bismarck and vicinity: Un- settled and cooler to-night with prob- \ably rain: Friday fair and cool. For North Dakota: Unsettled and rain in the east and south portions; Friday generally fair and cool. Weather Conditions A strong . high pressure area is |central over Alberta and covers the northern States eastward to Minne- sota. Low pressure areas cover the middle Plains and the Lake region. SENT TO JAIL. ee | AFTER 45 YEARS ee (LEAGUE HONORS | Heyer g an The weather has remained fair Washington, Oct. 6.—Major General! penerally with temperatures moder- Joseph T. Dickman, commander of the! ate, but unsettled conditions have lit but fair to announce that amended | reports for 1919 and 1920 under the, ‘state income tax law would be receiv- | Frisch went out to Pipp, unassisted. No runs,‘no hits, no errors. Yankees—Nehf threw out Pipp at Fargo, Oct. 6—Joseph C. Evans, | DUCK HUNTERS first. Kelly took Ward’s grounder and beat the batter to the bag. Mc- \ed and no questions asked up until ithe 15th day of November. No prose- GETTING BUSY cutions will be instituted until after FOUR NATIONS formerly postmaster at Beulah, N. D., \pleaded guilty to misappropriating $1,300 of war stamps ana war savings; Geneva, Oct. 6—(By the Associated ; Bighth corps area, with headquarters{now devoloped and the weather in at Ft. Sam Houston, Tex., and-former| North Dakota will be unsettled and “Nally fouled out to.Frisch. No runs,/ puck weather all along the line. | that date for false and fraudulent re- ; funds before Judge Amidon of federal|FPress) — The four non-permanent no hits, no errors. SEVENTH INNING Giants — Young walked. Kelly Snow flakes fell in Jamestown. Mandan and Bismares during the noon hour. Foreeast was for rain. |turns, All corrected returns for the two years, filed before that date. will forced Young at second, McNally to | be’ substituted for the original return Duck hunters were getting ready. and the mattas closed in that way.” court and was sentenced to 60 days in} members of the council of the league | the Morton county jail. He was direct-| of nations, China, Belgium, Brazil chief of the army of occupation in Germany, retired today from active service ending a continuous record of ed to return the amount of his defalca-,and Spain, were re-elected today by tions. iat |the assembly on the first ballot, ra more than 45 years in the military es- | tablishment, cooler to-night with rain in the east and south portions, followed by gen- erally fair and cool Friday. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist,