The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 22, 1921, Page 1

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Lhe Weather FAIR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE aah FORTIETH YEAR BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, "21 PRICE FIVE CENTS SHOPCRAFT MEN VOTE AGAINST STRIKE CAMPAIGN WILL BE TRANSFERRED = SHEBO FHNUS UE UT TO THE B COUNTRY School House aes to be; Held Both by Independents and Nonpartisans | i Nis i i INDEPENDENTS-MEET HERE | °) Lemke to be Headliner for League in Bismarck; Preus | For Independents The recall county is to be featured by school house meetings, with two big meet- ings scheduled for Bismarck. ‘ Independents held a meeting last night in, the Grand Pacific hotel to lay! plans for the speaking campaign to be held next week in the county. The! league speakers already have been out| i | in Northwest; to Outline Pro- t fat a conference 12 years ago. 'remarkably. |at a conference. jimprovements, the new campaign in Burleigh) blocks and the residential ; Which I thought was very beautiful on REV. HALFYARD, NEW PASTOR OF M. E. CHURCH, FINDS CITY MUCH Hipkoven COMMERCE BODY | \Declares Bismarck is om Me, Most Attractive City of Size, i gram For Year in Near Fu ture. Aaa S. F .Halfyard, new pastor; McCabe Methodist Episcopal | ree moving to Bismarck to begin | his pastotate, finds the city has im-! proved remarkably since his first visit | “Bismarck is a very delightful city,” | said Rev. Halfyard. “It has improved } 1 was here 12 years ago{ I notice the paving | business district, my first visit, is more beautiful than; ever, “LT think, REV..S. F. HALFYARD, D, D. for its size, that there) To Preach Sunday Rev. Halfyard will preach Sunday ; jProbably is not a town in the North- west as attractive as Bismarck.” ‘LEGION WANTS t | ORDER 10 ROADS 5 ANK T AX 0 ASE (CASE | vems Dispatches Say That! Oedenburg Troops Go Over To! in the tounty holding school house! both morning and evening at the Mc- meetings. three meetings a night. i. of his morning sermon is “Personal No Independent speaking meetings | Influence” and his evening: have been held inthe county, Ac-|‘The Greatness of Jesus. cording to the plan announced fo! Rey, Halfyard, his wife and 12-year- lowing last nights meeting there will! Old daughter, Winifred, have moved be 20 meetings held on Monday, Tues- into the Methodist parsonage at .407 | day, Wednesday and Thursday nights {Sixth street. een t i} Cabe Methodist church. ‘The subject | A SP ECTAL CAR They have been holding i reduced by an average of approx-} | FROM | BISMARCK imately 16 per cent. Notice was given the carriers that} | ‘New Plan Prope ‘to Provide There will be five teams of speakers.! Speakers will be Messrs. Burke and identified Jones, Cameron and O'Hare; Koffel|North Dakota for 15 years. | Harrington and Victor|¥ea"s he was professor of theology at and Davies; Anderson; W. H. Runey and McCurdy. Some of the dates for Independent; meetings announced are: Wing, Oct. ;/ years pastor at St, Thomas and co: from Devils Lake, where he has bi ‘Rev. ‘Halfyard has been prominently | in Methodist circles in} For ning; Cheap Transportation to “National Convention Legionaires want a special car out of Bismarck and Mandan to the Amer- Wesley college, Grand Forks; was twe } 108 ED WAKES SWEEPING Sixteen Per Cent Cut on Grain; | Products and Hay in West- tern Territory | {TO BENEFIT NORTHWEST, iOne-half of Previous Increase is| Wiped Qut; Prompt Action H Demanded | i i | Washington, Oct. 22.— In ; Sweeping | decision involving the entire railroad situation, wage! ~~~~~~~~~~~~ | scales, depression in industry! and finance, the Interstate Com- merce Commission today ordered | \the freight rates on grain, grain} jpr ‘oducts and hay throughout the! | the commission expec tion to be put into e and by Nov. 20 at the latest, and that | the low state of railroad earnings | which led to the increases in 1926 ; Should hereafter be rectified by re-! ductiong in wages and prices and that | ed the reduc The decision removes from wheat! 4 ASKS ANOTHER PDYONCED day and is reported to be proceeding FORMER AUSTRIAN EMPEROR ENTERS HUNGARY IN NEW ATTEMPT TO SEIZE THRONE FROM WHICH HE WAS OUSTED IS APPEALED TO | ‘HIGHEST COURT garian Capital, From Which | Regent Has Fled { \ oes ‘Comm eeroner: Wallace Takes Tax Vienna, Oct. 22. (By the Associated | Case Involving $225,000 to | Press. —Former Emperor Charles of | ' Austria Hungary arrived at Oeden- | U.S. Supreme Court | burg, Burgenland, Friday afternoon | jon an airplane from Switzerland, ac- cording to an Oedenburg message to- toward Budapest, escorted ‘by Oeden- . | burg troops. Wants Supreme Court to Give' The Oedenburg forces immediately went over to Charles upon his ar- | Early Hearing in Case In- [in ae at Oedenburg and he wag pro- . A ; claimed king, accordin, is volving Capital Tax Stock Is iB, ac i to the mes-{ sage. A provisional government, the ad- | An appeal to the supreme court of! vices state, has been formed in Bur- | Charles and That He Is Mareh-| ing Toward Budapest, Hun-| |BEGIN STRIKE IN t immediately | appeals. | western half of the United States/ the United States has been taken by} | Tax Commissioner Wallace in a case! Austro-Hungarian foreign minister. in which national banks of North Da-; ‘ota were victorious in the United States district and circuit court of Notice of the granting of the! appeal. was in the hands of the tax} : genland, in the emperor's interest un-} ;der ‘Count Julius Andrassy, former! The railways and telephone and [telegraph lines have been cut at the | Hungarian frontier. | ‘The situation in Vienna is tense as ja result of the former ruler's Benga: tional move. commissioner today. }# downward tendency should be set! volved, the amount being about $225,- for their rates, | 000.00. It is rumored here that the Czechs | ‘The legality of the 1919 taxes ag-!#"e mobilizing. | The Ai ¢- | essed against national banks is in- | e Sust rian, government. announg ed this forenoon that all precautions | had been taken to deal with the situa- jtion. The entire police force and the Te two courts in which the case} city guards, including the reserve pastor of the First Methodist caurc! “confiscated and nine complete stills 27; Regan, Oct. 27; McKenzie, Oct. 26; Arena, Oct. 27; Sterling, Oct. 25, Moffit, Oct, 26. ei rn Lake Methodists learned of the as- The meeting of the Independent aigniment of Rev. Halfyard to Bis- workers of the county was presided! merck, to succeed Dr. Quigley. Dr. over by H. P. Goddard. Halfyard has been interested in civic Borglum Delayed. work in Devils Lake. Gutzon Borglum, New York sculp-} Rev. Halfyard said he would meet next week. William Lemke, attorney | will speak in Bismarck on! the night of October /26. He probably : deavor to make this the big meeting in the county in their campaign. day, Oct. 27, at the auditorium for the! Tudependents; Testimony For First Time in Years all precincts. In each precinct there were from 7 to 50 added to the books those precincts have moved out since the last election, so that it is impos- increase, if any, there will be in the| vote. tor, was to speak in Bismarck tonight, (Continued on Page 3) general, will speak from the Lalcony of the; CUPREME COURT Governor J. A. O.-Preus, of Minne- Registration day in Bismarck on the two registration days How- sible for the precinct inspectors +o for four years. | It was with regret that the Devils The supreme court today has under advisement the application for a writ of habeas corpus for W. E. Vadnais, former county official of Divide coun- ty, who is seeking release from the state prison. For the first time in many years the supreme ccurt heard oral testi- |mony in the case. Vadnais’ attorney, William Langer, put C. N. Varnum, Father Hiltner and Warden L. L. but will not get into the state until McKenzie hotel, and leaguers will en sota. is to speak) in Bismarck, Thurs; | High Tribunal Listens to Oral| brought. out seme new registrations in ever, it is not known how many in| make a guess as to how much of anj hoard. on the witness stand to prove | ;that the board had not revoked Vad- jnais’ parole. It was iis contention! \that the only reason Vadnais was kept in prison was because of the \ statement of Olaf Braatelein, state’s Several on State Capitol Grounds| attorney of Divide county. , | Vadnais, who had been charged with: Are Damaged a shortage in county funds, had been| —— sentenced to prison, was suspended A 48-mile gale which swept over|on the agreement that he make resti- the city yesterday afternon blew down | tution and he had been eiected cashier) a number of trees on the state capitol; in a bank when the parole was re- grounds. Several cottonwoods were|voked. Judge Grace did not sit in| broken off squdrely, and limbs of| the case. many trees were carried several feet. | Little damage was done in the city,| however. Light globes at the corner of Broadway and Third street were; broken and there were reports of a| few windows being broken in. -! The wind grew in intensity during | the afternoon, reaching a 48-mile-an- hour rate about 4 o'clock, according | to the weather bureau report. | Formal Notification is Given T0 WITHDR AW | Germany of Ratification 8 en notification that the United States \ has completed ratification of the peace! treaty with Germany and Austria has} | ben forwarded to Berlin and Aus-! | tr ‘ia and the formality of certifying toj Washington, Oct. 22—The gradual the completion of the treaties are ex- withdrawal of American troops from| pected to be completed with the for-| Ger! many expected to start within two! mer enemy powers in zbout ten days. weeks! will involve a reduction of the! A proclamation of peace, it was! American forces there to about one- half of the present strength of 13,500 Officers and men. The reduction will be accomplished! pecause of war laws which contain ‘by the°middle of next March. clauses based specifically on the pro- | mulgation of such a proclemation: my WORTH about the CLOSE INSTITUTE | intendent Boyd of Langdon as direct- | or. ‘Rural Inspector A. C. Berg, Miss Anna Burr, County Superintendent and Miss Wood of the State Normal School at Minot, were among the in- 5 4 structors. were demolished in a ceries of liquor| ““pye first session each day’ parti- raids in northern St. Louis county cipated in the regular chapel exer- yesterday and last night by federal] cises of the Normal School with and state agents who estimated that| president Vernon L. Mangun in they destroyed more than $200,000) charge. The Normal School also fur- worth of illicit liquor and distilling nished special music apparatus. stitute. TO CHURCH-GOERS ONLY. HIS SURPRISE BIGGER Nottingham, Eng., Oct. 22.—Dance| Bradford, Eng.. Oct. 22—The mem- tickets are distributed to the congrega-|bers of St. Chrysostom’s tion of St. at Louis, Oct. 22.—Bieven men were arrested; 250,000 gallons of mash and 500 gallons of wine and whiskey were tend services are admitted to the|the vicarage for his return from vaca- cancing academy instituted by the|tion. They got the real surprise when vicar, z he brought back a bride, Stair, members of the state parole} DETAILS SOON ington, Oct. 22.—Formal writ-| indicated yesterday, would be issued! legal technicalities which might arise} ‘Bottineau, N. D., Oct. 22—Teachers | jot Bottineau county closed a yery suc- | | cessful institute here this week. The } meetings were held at the Forestry | State Normal School here, with Super- | for the in- Church aCtherine’s church every|thought they would surprise their vi- Sunday morning. Only those who at-|car, Rev. W. Cunliffe, by cleaning up i can Legion convention at Kansas City | October 3 3L4Niovember 2. | Sixteen ex-service men in Mandan |have signed up to go, P. G. Harring- ton, adjutant of the Bismarck post, | Was informed today. The local. post jeans to sign up 14 to 16. ‘With 32 men a special tourist sleep- ;er can be obtained, which would be| |the home of the Legion men from the | jtime they leave Bismarck until they |return. It would be parked at the j foot of McGee street, Kansas City, | | during the convention. The sleeper | ‘cost would be $10, including the trip | both ways and its use during the con- | vention. It is planned for the Mandan-Bis- |marck bunch to leave on No. 4, Oct. | /29, leave St. Paul at 8:30 a. m. next {morning and arrive in Kansas Vity at midnight. It is expected by state headquarters of the Legion that a } special train will be run out of iargo, ; and the car would be hooked on it, ;The bunch would reach Bismarck on return Nov. 5. | With a 1-cent-a-mile rate and the | special car plan Legionaires can make | the trip to the national convention at | moderate expense. Legion mer. who | will make the trip are asked to no- tify (Mr. Harrington. WHAT YOU WILL CAST BALLOT ON, OCT. 28 | NO. 5. | Rural Credits Law. | Creates Rural Credits Board, composed as follows: first board composed of commissioner of agri- | culture and labur, treasurer, sec- retary of state. Serve until legis- lature meets Thereafter first two officials named and three persons, one from each Congressional dis- trict, to be appointed by governor, shall compose board. Governor may remove for cause. | Board shall sel ecretary, or || Rural Credits Commissioner. Sal- | '| ary not over $5,000 a year. | County treasurer, county auditor and chairman county board of commissioners — shail constitute board of appraisers in county in | which appraisal is made. Board may make loans, 5 to 30 {| years, on amortization plan on || farm lands. Loan shall not exceed 50 per cent of value of land plus 25 per cent || of insured value of :mprovements. || No improvements shall be consid- ered worth more than $5,000 in || making loans; minimum loan $500; | maximum $10,000. Bonds may be is | not exceeding 20 yi warrants may be issued; if yments on mortgages not sufficient the deficit shall be raised by taxation, Rural Credits Board shall take over farm loan business of Bank of North Dakota. ucd for periods i] Question of proposed initiated law has been constitutionality ot ‘| raised. Provides Rural Credits Board take over farm loans of Bank of North Dakota but requires || them to issue bonds secured by || farm loans taken over and to pay with’ proceeds of those bonds back to Bank of North Dakota. Gives board no capital to make loans. Permits issuance of warrants and bonds exceeding in amount total cash on hand in banks, and mortgages, while present constitu- tion and proposed constitutional amendment does not permit issu- ance of such bonds unless they are secured by equal amount of first mortgages. Held invalid in. this respect, Provides for issuance of bonds signed by governor, commissioner and secretary-treasurer of Rural Credits Board. Present constitu- tion and proposed constitutional amendment requires all bonds signed by governor, treasurer and secretary of state. Jeld unconsti- utional in this respect and hay one-half of the increase giv-| fen the railroads in 1920 and on all | Bas been heard held that the i other graing fixes the rate at 10 per!Stock was subject to greater tax than! cent less than those on wheat. The| was levied by daw against other mon- commission further ordered a new re-jied capital in the hands of individuals | lationship built up in the rates onjand held that bank stock should be grain products, including flour and] taxed the same as monies and credits, other .commodities to agree with the jat 3 mills instead of the local rate of | lower devel on the the raw material, axatlon. The monies and credits tax, i e-ten i } | RATE CUT WILL D is about one-tenth the amount of the : jlocal rate. Taxes for tne year 1919 \ WESTERN NOKTH DAKOTA | only are involved as the monies and: ; The freight rate cut ordered on |credits, tax law: was repealed. | grain, hay and grain products will aid | The case, however, is looked upon as | western North Dakota more than} |Probably establishing a iprecedent in} eastern North Dakota, according to ala case now pending in federal court} railroad agent to He pointed out|in which’ the national banks hold that! that many farmers in tie western part |the repeal law of 1919 exempted bankj | of the state had ‘held grain, particu-|stock from taxation. While the tax larly northwest..of Bismarck, where | involved in both cases is assessed | there was a fair crop, and that the | against the stockholders’ individually | | lowered freight rates probably woula |it usually is paid by the’ banks. cause them to’market tt. The recent! The tax commissioner has asked the cut in livestock rates, he pointed out,! United States supreme court to ad- resulted in the shipment of a great| Vance the case of John Barton Payne,} deal of stock, and consequently liqui-|@8 director-general of railroads, dation by many stockmen and farmers fevers the Cantal ote tase, care i ve g Vedas western’ argh the: state roads of 1919. The case was before | APPROVE | the supreme court once and the state Washington, Oct. “99. was enjoined from ‘enforcing the tax tration Dill for funding $50,000,000 of | collection. The state reassessed the railroad debts was reported favoraply|Tailroads, using another part of the today by the senate Interstate Com-/ State, which had not been in issue.) merce committee with amendments by | it now is before the highest court. ; Senator Cummins, Republican, Iowa;) The amount involved in this case is ’ he fi ing {about $125,000, Seetane broadening the financ! Bd The Northern ‘Trust arene ' Fargo, has instituted in tho Cass dis- | / trict court a suit to recover taxes paid i junder protest, to the amount of $4,-| i | 231.95, on the stock of the qompany,! ' alleging that trust company stock was| j ; exempted in the repeal of the 1919 | I] UOR legislature. Three other trust com- 1 | panies are expected to take similar | | ton. Mr. Wallace appears as attorney for |Jail Sentence of 90 Days and Fine| the state in all of these cases. Suspended DISTRICT COURT IN WARD COUNTY bank | 1 company, .of! Elmer Johnson, arrested sometiaie} ago for the operation vf a liquor sti! near Wilton, has received a suspended | IS SUSTAINED) sentence of 90 days in jall and $200 | fine from Judge Nuessle yesterday aft-| The district court of Ward county is} erntoon, on his plea of guilty. {upheld by the supreme court in a de-j Two other boys under 21 years of cision in the case of John Lynch, | age, one a brother, who were taken by | Chief of Police L. (M. Byrne, of Minot, | officers at the time, were not fined. |and W. S, Brown against the district ——_ —_—_——— court, John C. Lowe, judge. ACCOUNTANT’S i The district judge had issued a writ | ‘of certiorari in a case involving an} EXAM PROPOSED: automobile. The syllabus in the caso} : “When a district judge issues for) 4 writ of cor iorari te a police magis- | iy ant|ttate and police officers on a proper} a a ne ne BE ant showing which appeals to his discre- | acording to an announcement by J. H. ition, the supreme court will not grant! Cull, secretary of the state board of |, writ of prohibition to restrain the accountancy. The examination will | district Judge from exercising his jur- | be held in the office of the secretary! fediction. oe —_—+ AMERICAN SHIP OUT OF RACE: Halifax, N. S., Oct. 22.—Klsie of Gloucester, had her foretap smashed None! and carried away today on the fourth “48- wl leg of her first race n Bluenose for * | the sailing championship of the North | Atlantic. The accident occurred while Blue- | nose was leading by aiwut 2 minutes ‘ | after half of the course had been For North Dakota: Fair tonight, covered. slightly colder in the east portion and} WS coe eto warmer in the extreme west | Sunday unsettled. Weather Conditions. en: The low pressure area that w jtral over North Dakota Fridd al ‘advanced to the eastera Lake region : {and the western high pressure area) {has reached the Daxotas. A low pres-|’ | sure‘covers the Southwest. Light pre-! ah cipitation has fallen over the Canadi- (Special to The ‘I'ribune.) A an Northwest but the weather has} Tuttle, N. D., Oct. 22.—A prairie fire continued fair over the states. It is| started twelve miles nurth cf here at colder over northwestern sections but| noon yesterday. It covered a strip two the temperature did not reach freez-| miles wide and about thirty miles ing except in western Canada. north-| long. No lives were lost, no stock ern Montana and nortiwestern North| burned, but two barns and an im- Dakota, mense amount of hay was destroyed. Probable loss, five to ten thousand dollars, | Fargo, Oct. 22.-——Examination AU aera oer | Today’s Weather | | o—_____________-® For twenty-four nours ending at! noon Oct. 22. Temperature at 7 A. M | Highest yesterday . Lowest yesterday . | Lowest last night | Precipitation .... | Highest wind velocity Weather Fore For Bismarck and vic’ Farr} | tonight; Sunday unsettled; not much | | change in temperature. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, \ ana Laborers hotel, { were called out, and extra ammunition was dispatched to the frontier. i Admiral Horthy, the Hungarian re- | gent, is rumored here to have fled! from Budapest this morning, follow- | ing news of the arrival of ex-emperor | Charles in his former domain. Buda- pest advices state that a legitimate | government has been formed there. ALLIES PROTEST Vienna, Oct. 22.—The allied repre- sentatives in Budapest today made a join protest ‘to the Hungarian govern- Ment against the return of former Emperor Charles to Hungary, it was ; learned here today. WILL BE OPPOSED ‘ Paris, Oct, 22. — The Hungarian | government will act as it did on the; occasion of the previous attempt of former Emperor Charles to resume the throne in Hungary, according ,to information obtained here today and will take measures to expel the form- er Monarch from Bulgarian terri- tory, it is declared. Already measures to this end have been ihitiated, says Budapest dis- patch to the Swiss telegram agency, received here from Berne. The news of the government’s decision not to} permit the ex-emperor to remain in Hungary came from the official j source in Budapest the message as- | serted. i EX-EMPRESS WITH CHARLES London, Oct. 22. (By the Associated | Press.)—Former Empress Lita, of Austria-Hungar.y is reported in a | Central News dispatch from Vienna ; to have arrived at Oedenburg in the airplane with her husband. ‘MAN DIES IN LOCAL HOTEL Succumbs to Attack Here—Car- | ried an I. W. W. Card A man believed to be C. M, Scheir, | home unknown, died at the Farmers on West Main street, about 11 o'clock last night, | following a hemorrhage. H The man carried an 1. W. W. card and there were a few papers in his pocket, found by Acting Coroner Beer, but these did not show his home. A} card showed he had worked in the | Shipyards at Philadelphia. Finger-| prints of the dead man will be taken} and sent to Washingtoa, in the hope! | that the shipping board officers may be able to identify him by this method. The man registered last Tuesday at the hotel as Charles Milton, He had come here from ihe vicinity of Van Hook, where he iad been work-} ing in the harvest fields. He had been | to a doctor at Van Hook. He told/ persons at the hotel that he had some | land in the state of Washington which BLOW IS DEALT _ PROPOSED RAIL WALKOUT TODAY 1600,000 Members of Employes Department of American Federation Vote TEXAS Workmen on International and Great Northern Start Walk- ' out on Schedule Chicago, Oct. 22.--The United States railroad labor board will take no immediate action if the trainmen on the International and Great Northern strike today, “if they go out today they are in detiance of the vourd’s order of yesterday,” (. a, senene member of the b San Antonio, Tex, Oct. 22.— Two hundred and fiity brakemen and switchmen of the Interna- tional and Great Northern rail- Toad, on the San Antonio division walked out at noon, Houston, Tex., Oct. 92.—Armed guards took up patrol! duties at the International and Great ‘Northern yards here at noon as 150 trainmen, members of the brotherhood, abandoned their work, Switching in the yard was as a standstill but operating of- ficials said all passenger train crews will be maintained, the place of the strikers being filled by new men. Chicago, Oct. 22.—(By Associated Press.)—One-fourth of the railroad workers of America—the 600,000 mem- bers of the Federated Shop Crafts— today went on record against a strike and voted to remain at work pending a decision of the U. S. iabor board on rules and working conditions. By their decision they dealt the host serious blow yet recorded ygainst the Big Four Brotherhoods and the switchmen’s unicn which have ordered a walkout Oct. 30. The shopcrafts known as the rail- way employes department of the American Federation of Labor, is said to control more railroad workers than any individual union. Their action also it declared to bind the American Federation of Labor against any ac- tive support of a walkout. Telegraphers Would Quit. The Order of Railroad Telegraphers decided today to join the brotherhood. and quit work if the strike order be- comes effective. There are 80,000 members in the telegraphers union of whom 75,000 ; would be affected by a strike, the other: 5,000 being employed on Cana- dian lines. The shopcrafts which embrace sit unions affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, issued a state- ment declaring it was evident that the membership of the Big Four Brother- hoods would not co-operate with the other unions in the event they struck. The shopcrafts were tae first of all unions to vote on a strike, 435,000 votes being cast for a walkout with 40,000 opposed to a strike. Washington, Oct. 22.—Instructions covering the course of action to be ursued by federal authorities in Texas in the strike on the Interna- tional and Great Northern, called for ‘noon today, were in preparation this forenoon at the department of jus i} | tice. QUIT BROTHERHOOD. Cleveland, Ohio, Oct, 22.—Referring to the strike of approximately 600 members of the Brotherhood of Raii road Trainmen scheduled for today on the International and Great Norther). | Of Texas, W. G Lee, president of the trainmen said. “The men-and the committee of ‘the brotherhood on that road have voted to withdraw from the service and au- thority as vested in our constitution jand the matter’is entirely out of my hands.” PEACE HOPE BRIGHTER Chicago, Oct. 22—(By the Associat- jed ‘Press)—Hopes for a peaceful set- tlement of the national transportation ‘crisis were brighter, today, with the agreement of rail executives and brotherhood strike leaders to respond to the summons of the labor board for an open conference here next Wed- jnesday on the wages and working rules dispute. ‘While Brotherhood chiefs in con- he wanted to sell, und that he then} would go to Arizona tor his health. | He was tubercular. | Acting Coroner Beer believed that! the man’s correct name, however, is! Seheir. He was about 40 years old. i He probably will be vuried here. r Football Scores | End second Pittsburgh 14. Chicago 3, Princeton 0. Wisconsin 6, Illinois 0. Ohio State 7, Michigan 4. Harvard 12, Penn State 0. End of third period, Yale 7, Army 0, End first period, Notre Dame 0, Ne- braska 0. ~ period, Syracuse 0, REMBRAN Nottingham, Eng., Oct. 22—H. R. Herbert, art dealer, bought a paint- ing some time ago for 7125. Experts have declared it to be a genuine Rem- ference at Cleveland stated their will- ingness to meet the executives and the hoard it was indicated they had made no plans for suspending the strike plan pending the negotiations. Reports from the San Antonio head- quarters of the strike of 600 trainmen on the International and Great Nor- thern called for noon today declared it would be “a one hundred per cent affair.” The strike decision of the eleven other railroad unions comprising three-fourths of the railroad employes also was expected today, Leaders of the stationary firemen and mainten- ance of way employes voted yesterday to call a strike but set no date, an- nouncing that their action depended upon the shop men whose executive committee meets today to vote upon the walkout. 100 YEARS IN A HUT Frogham, ‘Eng., Oct, 22—John Hay- wood has been living in a hut near here for the 100 years of his life, Like prehistoric man, he has been spearing brandt, worth $50,000, Meteorologist Official in Charge, fish and hunting with bow and arrow. E Last Edition | a

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