The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 3, 1922, Page 1

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For Bismarck and. vicinity: : ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Fair and warmer tonight, Wed- h ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, OTOBER 3, 1922 (Leased Wire of Associated Press) | GIANTS AND YANKEES TUNED TO CONCERT | VALUATION OF |CORPSEISBURNED "FIRST WOMAN | TZLRB, owes 4+ PITGH FOR OPENING OP THEORLDSERIBS: WATER PLANT a eet inencaneg, U-S: SENATOR | BUStNess | ~__USUALBIG SCRAMBLE OF FANS FOR SEATS, 1S REPORTED IS APPOINTED ! [This Is Charge Made Againat Appraisal of Engineers Fig- Mrs. W. H. Felton Is Given LAST EDITION PRICE FIVE CENTS ALLIES AND TURKS CONFER ON ARMISTICE | Kemalist Party Wants Greece St. Louis Man by Police— 4 McGraw and Huggins Will y) a Not Commit Themlves to CONTENDING MAN AGERS ures Cost of Production Grave Robbed Honor by Georgia To Withdraw from Thrace Prediction Upon Outcome Of Plant at $445,000 (By the Associated’ Press) Governor gts a St. Louis, Mo, Oct. 3—Charging ee ba Of Games Which Start ; To arson and) grave robbery, a warrant te Tomorrow [at NAVE PP LNG re etree ae Mato Daag eee ae |MEETING AT MUDONIA a sats ‘ wie has nese missing since Sept. 25, " it YANKS HARD HITTERS City. and Water Company oj vi. Srissouri, near’ St, Louls, was| Doubtful if She'll Qualify as) Neutral Zone on Asiatic Side : Be Given Chanee-t0 Oat rece, T chica babe wie, 2y| Sueeemone to Watson la to | Of peeeienee Cm ef ai ,, Their Manager Says He Has Before Final Valuation first, was believed to be that of Be Elected The Issues i jad Tes hesy v., | Brenn, but later proved to be that Much Better Team Than ‘ The One Which was Beaten : A Year ago—Pins Hope on Ruth Paris, Oct. 3—A Havas dis- patch from Smyrna, the Turkish Nationalist headquarter: ys it it announced the Kemalists have evacuated the neutral zone along the straits of the Dardanelles, of Miss Celestine Schneider, which was stolen from its gruve. ‘A warrant. also wej; sworn out against Brenn’s wife, who is’ under drrest in connection with the case. The warrant charge Brenn with having stolen the corpse from the Tt would cost $449,293 to replace the Bismarck Water Supply Com;; pany’s property ‘entirely new, figur- ing prices on the materials in the )plant as they were on September 1,} according to the valuation .of’ the! company’s property made by the en- gineering department of the failroad| cemetery placing it in his garage commission. Depreciated value of the) and settling fite to the garage. The property, figuring prices 98 of Sep-{ motive, according to the police, was (By the Associate Atlanta, Ga,, Oct. paar W. OH. Felton of Cartersville, Georgia, eigh- ty-seven years old, was appointed by Governor Thomas W. Hardwick to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Thomas E. Watson until the people elect a successor in No- vember, Mrs, Felton will be the first woman to become a senator. rf (By the Associated Press) ‘New York, Oct. 3—The New York (By the Associated Press) London, Oct. 3—The Turkish Na- Giants and Yankees, standard bear- ers of the, National and American Leagues, were tuned to concert pitch today in final workouts in prepara- HUGGINS--MANAGER YANKS McGRAW—MANAGER GIANTS \tember 1, is given as $400,838, The actual construction cost of the materials in the plant,’ as figured by the engineers. of the commission. to ,obtain $6,000 insurance, which Brenn carried. Mrs, Brenn is. charged’ ‘with with- is $276,436 and the depreciated value holding inormation a5 to any part she may have played in the plot, At the same time Governor Hard- wick announced his candidacy. to succeed United States Senator E. Watson Georgia, who died last week in Washington. The primary will be tionalists today will lay before the representatives of the allies at Mud- ania the terms on which they are willing to agree to a suspension of tion for the opehing tomprrow of [10 REPUBLICANS on this basig is $247,582. which, the authorities say, her hus-/held October 17. military movements. their successive struggle for pre- mier baseball honom. The Giants were victors last year in a tensely fought world’s seties that lasted | eight games, The laurel this yeas will go to the team winning four out of seven. With a shorter series, attendance records .were not expected to exceed last year’s high mark—269,977 paid addmissions for eight games—but iu- dications pointed \o capacity de- mands: Club officials teday anonunc- ed a sell out in reserved seats for the first six games, with thousands of unfilled applications. This is ex- clusive of 22,000 unreserved seats in the bleachers and upper tier of the grand still, which wiii go on sale each day at 10 a. m. 4 Even Babe Ruth was unable to sat- isfy a last minute desire for tickets. The Yankee slugger appeared at the Giants’ offices in his quest. “Sorry, Babe, but there isn’t even a hope left,” he was told. He was but one of many. Crowd on Hand. Advance guards of delegations from all parts v2 the United States, Can-| ada and outlying points were on hand/ early today. The influx was expect- One RACE RIOT BREAKS OUT 'a surprise attack on the National- jist garrison at Omeath, county Louth, IN ALABAMA Is Arrested on Charge Of Murder MILITIA. ORDERED OUT Killed and Sevecall Wounded in Fraeas About County’ Jail Montgomery, Ala., Oct. 3.—One ne- | gro was killed, a score attacked and one white man shot in disorders last ! night and early today following the| arrest of Joe Terrell, negro, charged | ARE KILLED (By the Associated. Press) Belfast, Oct. 3.—Republicans made! early today. Ten Republicans were| killed and many wounded. | - SPEAK IN CITY ON SATURDAY Candidate for Ur United States Senator Will _Make. Ad- dress in Auditorium NTERS BURLEIGH CO.| = | | William Lemke Begins Cam- | The railroad commissioners then wilt dain Start When Negro} O'CONNOR. TO | ‘The tentative valuations have been submitted by the railroad commis- sion to the water company and’ the band planned, city commission, thé valuations being} rT 1 made as a result 'of the water rate hearing held sometime ago. A time for hearing will be fixed at which both the city and the company may/| enter objections to the valuations. take the reports of the engineering department and fix the valuation on which rates will be fixed designed to yield a fair rate of return on the investment, according to «the utility practice. . Based'on Two Methods The appraisal of the engineering ‘department was based on two meth- ods—the reproduction cost and the original construction cost. The rail- road commission has held that under the laws of the state it is required to value/ utility property on the ori- ginal construction cost—that is, the| actual dmount of money paid for construction of the plant and’ addi- tions. Utilities hold this is an un-! fair method and not followed in othe er cases, The method of valuation is! involved in a suit brought against the commission by the Minot electric utility and is now pending in federal ; court. INCREASING FIRE HAZZARD Seventeen Fires Are Burning In Three Minnesota For- est Districts OFFICIALS ARE NERVOUS Largest Blaze Burning on 12 Mile Front From Sax To Ellsmere SITUATION SERIOUS, Duluth, Minn, Oct. an¢ refusing to in- form the police of his whereabouts. have an opportunity to qualify and serve as a member of the senate is doubtful for her successor will have in’ December. Mrs. Felton is the widow of Dr. W. H. Felton of Carterville, Ga., who served as a member of congress for several years. She has long been active in Georgia politics. Many years before the women were granted the right of suffrage Mrs. Felton managed her husband’s campaigns and stumped the district in his be- half. She was a friend of the late Senator Watson and supported Gov-| ernor Hardwhek in his recent cam- paign for renomination, Mrs, Felton announced her accept- ance of the appointment. Governor Hardwick, in a_state- 3.—The ment, said he had offered the ap- pointment to Mrs. Watson, the widow of the late Senator, but “to my deep and real regret Mrs. Whtson has Mrs. Watson Declined. conveyed the information to me that ill health and an aversion to the public station in her own name ren- ders it impossible for her to ac-|_ Whether Mrs. Felton will actually |' been elected when the senate meets! cept.” The statement then continued: Constantinople dispatches say the Kemalists proposals, an outline of which has reached the allied head- quarters, there, were deemed discuss- able, but not acceptable, by a coun- cil yesterday of the allied high com- missioners, ambassadors, generals and admirals, Franklin-Boullon, the French en- voy whose personal conversations with Mustapha Kemal Pasha made the armistive conference possible, expressed the belief that an agree- ment will be reached. Demands Thrace. The Turkish proposals are said to include formal guarantees concern- ing the evacuation of Thrace by the Greek army, occupwtion of the terri- tory by allied traops and transfer of the civil administration to Kemalists functionaries, Every London newspaper devotes its principal columns to the meeting and furnishes it; readers with its own version of what is likely to hap- pen, the main feature of the numer- ous forecasts and speculations being their infinite variety. It is stated |from some sources tuat in addition to the allied and Turkish generals, with the, murder of George Wilson, | forest fire situation in the terri. Summary of Appraisal of the conference will include M. Frank- ed to reach its height tonight, Close to 506’newspaper men froin! all parts’ of the-eontinent were ‘on }- hand. Two hundred additionnt press] ‘applications could not be granted be- cause of the-limited facilities, a game warden, who. was shot: Sat-! urday :night while searching for aj negro alleged to have killed Albert ; Sansom, a city. policeman, Judge Leon McCord, of the circuit ; paign of League in Slope Territory, in Mandan J. F. T,‘ O'Connor, candidate for court, ordered. the grand jury called United States; Senator, invaded Bur- The summary of the tentative ap: praisal under the original construg 'tlon method and the value. based: {Continued on, Page Three) tory North and West of Duluth had become: so serious early this |.-afternoon that the combined for- estry and'military forces are con- centrating /all efforts on remov- ing settlers and protecting build- ings, G. M. Conzet, forestry field “In all the circumstances, I have therefore concluded to bestow the honor of this appointment upon’ an- other noble: Georgia woman.” + Governor Hardwick said Mrs. Fel- ton would serve until the general election,: November 7th, when a suc- TOP TO BOTTOM: THE COUNT- lin-Boullon and two Greek military representatives. Some believe the meeting may be rover in’a ‘few: hours-and others sug- gest that days may elapse before a settlenient is reached clearing the way for a subsequent peace eonfer- | ; Ree ans malaga aot ony BOE ste into special: session here this nlorn- leigh county today in his campaign. opening game, but probably for the{ iM& to investigate the killing of Wil-! He was scheduled to speak at Wing cert ae eG eak Miheckmated any; 20% Terrell, according to the police,/and Driscall today, and will ‘speak shy oe os Be cater “| has confessed he shot the game war-;in Bismarck Saturday night at 7:45 be b ath 1d and | den. Two negro men and two negro| p. m. at the auditorium in a meeting ub above ats ey oni ae sa an | Women reported to have been with|which is expected to be one of the material facts, the scramble, ae | Terrell when Wilson was shot are} largest ones of his campaign. kets and the prvparations of tl | being held at witnesses. | A local committee is making ar- faithful who bill jaar ed Pell Three companies ‘of National | rangements for the O'Connor meet- ites vigil tonight in the lee of Coog-! guardsmen. were ordered to the jail; ing, and expects a large attendance an’s bluff, fans in the highways andi when the mob began increasing in from the Slope country. Mr. O'Con- by ways were absorbed in the battle | number last night, and later the firey nor will come to Bismarck from of “ifs” and “ands’—the pro and) department was called on to disperse] Braddock, where he speaks Saturday (Continued on Page’ 2) the crowds by using the fire hose.! afternoon at 1 p.m. Shots were fired at the jail but the} ‘The O’Connor meetings in this sec- M’LEAN COUNTY | Soldiers did not return the fire of | tion of the state. this week follow: \ PIONEER DIES | The mob dispersed shortly after administration caief, disclosed. Heavy shifting winds during the last 24 hours with a 20-mile : Lwjnd blowing today: nave put the ‘féredt fires out of control, Mr. Conzet declared. ESS OF CLONMELL, LADY POYN-| ence. TER, AND COUNTESS ANNESLEY. Want ‘United States to Act. , Th ‘ WILL DRAW PAY Some of England’s most ambitious sdmibeeen Late emeeie WasVfington, Oct. 3,—Although ‘and successful business women are i - Mrs, W. H. Felton, appointed to suc-! members of British nobility, The | treorio oir ener ceed ,the late Senator Watson of Countess of Clonmelli’has opened 4) There ig a large section oF wpinicg Georgia, probably will not have the laundry she calls “The White Ele-| which ould hasctily « po oe opinion opportunity of actual service in the phant” in the most afistocratic sec- | 4; iS Fete 4 ct ily welcome any ac- senate because of the present recess tion of London. To keep her business |*10" by the United States which of congress, she will have the pay | running smoothy she frequently goes and perquisites as well as the title; into the workrooms herself to sup- of a senator until a successor is; erintend. chosen. ‘ Lady Poynter, wife of Sir Am- Mrs. Felton is not expected to come! brose Poynter, the architect, and a to Washington as she may take the | famous beauty, is now an interior oath of office in Georgia and receive, decorator. Her shop ‘is’ in Beau- TRAINMEN OF MANY LINES SIGN SCALES Northern Pacific and Soo| Lines Included in New Wage Agreement cessor. to fill’ the unexpired term would be chosen. c “St, ‘Paul, Minn., Oct. 3.—A thirty- five mile an hour wind at 4 o'clock this morning 'was driving the fires in the Yelsey, Sax, Meadowland and |Fernay districts, according to reports feceived at the offk 2 of the state for- ester, and fire fighters reported that. there was little prospect of prevent- ing the! fires from running together. might help to unravet the tangle. CONFINED tg MILITARY MAT- TERS. (By the Associated Press) Constantinople, Oct. 3—Only mili- tary matters will be taken up at the conference of allied and Turkish Na- the mob. Tuesday, Uci. 3. home for America coming direct to Bismarck, where they arrived about the midde of October. From Bis- marck they came up to McLean coun- ty where they homesteaded and wherd she has been living ever since. Mr. Falck passed away in 1915. Four children were born to them three of] whom are still living. Mrs. M. Mc- Carther, of Bismarck, and two sons, Frederick and Arthur, who have man- aged the farm for their mother since their father’s death. Operators Reject’ - Hoover Request Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 3—A tele- gram from Herbert Hoover, secre- tary of commerce, and James L. Davis, secretary of labor, requesting. submission of a panel of 20 names of persons disassociated with coal mining, for use in the creation of a fact’ finding, commission of the coal industry, provided under the Borah-Winslow bill, was in the hands of T. K. Maher of Cleveland, temporary chairman, at the second jéint session "in the butuminous miners-operators conference here today. The request for the naming of such a panel was rejected by the operators yesterday, the operators explaining they bglieved they were required under the. Cleveland agree- ment,.which practically settled the soft coal strike last August to appoint a committee of men con- nected with the coal mining indus- try and that compliance with the request of the Federal government wounded by member of mob, (Continued on Page Three) CONTEST CAR HELPS BRYANT TO EDUCATION Clarance Bryant was awarded the Overland car in the- Bismarck Trib- une’s subscription content, which came to a close at 8 p. tm. October £3. Clarence is highly elated over his success in winning the car, but will sell the same and use the proceeds to help him through the state university at Grand Forks, for which place he departed’ las: Sunday morning--iNapoleon.- Home- stead. O’Connor supporters showed much | interests in reports from Iowa that Dr. George T. Harding, father of President Harding, had come out 1=| now pending before the Labor Board support of the Democratic candidate | for senator in Iowa, while in Des Moines attend the G. A. R. conven- tion. A dispatch to the New York Times tells of*Dr. Harding’s atti- tude as follows: Des Moines, Iowa, Sept. 28.—“With | fellows like Borah and La Follette to deal with, my boy has enough Bolshe- vists to trouble him in the Senate now without sending any more down té Washington,” De. George T. Hard-/ sides these roads which actually ing, father of the “boy” in the White Ho:ise, declared last night, entering the Towa Senatorial contest to fight (Continued on Page 3) SEVEN PERSONS KILLED IN AUTO- TRAIN SMASH AT ST. PAUL St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 3.—Marvel Es- pen, 7, sole sutviver of a automobile party in an automobile-train ‘smash here late yesterday in which seven persons were killed, was battling for life in a local hospital today as prep- arations were being made for the funerals of her parents and their three small children, and two friends Marvel is suffering from many frac- tures and bruises and physicians fear she may not recover. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William spens of Exeland, Wis., and her two|' would abrogate the Cleveland agree- | brothers, Lloyd, 9, and Glen Earl, 4 ment. months old, and a sister, Frances, 10, were Mr. and Mrs. R. W. McGee of |: St, Paul. The Espens“were being brought by the McGees to St, Paul to move into their new house here. They lost their way and came down, a side street which was bordered by huge lumber piles. They came out on the railroad tracks, just as train No. 7 from Chicago-on the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha railway reached the crossing. The machine was carried 100 feet 4| by the engine and bediets were strewn on both sides of the track. | Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, Chi-| |Northern, Minneapolis, Sf. Paul & were killed in the accident as| Ste. Marie, Northern Pacific, Minne- president of the Conductors, affixed | their signatures today. Under the agreement, all disputes as to rules and working conditions will be withdrawn by both roads and trainmen and conductors. Today’s agreement. included the principal railroads entering Chicago and traversing territory west of the Mississippi ments signed with eastern lines, ap- road mileage of the country now has | signed up with the trainmen and conductors, Mr .Lee announced. Be- signed the agreement today, others, | according to both representative of the roads and brotherhoods, are ex-| pected to accept the same agree- ment, The roads which signed today in-} cluded: Chicago & Northwestern,, cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha, Du-/ luth, South Shore & Atlantic, Great .sota amd! International, Big Fork and International Falls. RANCHER DIES ! Dickinson, N. Ds, Oct. 3-—Paul| Freise, aged 37 years, a well known bachelor rancher of the Grassy Butte country, died in less than an hour after his arrival at the Dickinson hospital on Wednesday evening from a preferated duodenal ulcer. His par- ents who live in Spokane, Wash., were notified. A grown sea lion has. been known to eat forty-four salmon in one day. fires are springing up almost. contin- uously, started by flying sparks. Rangers probability of any loss of life as virtually all. persons living in the | threatened district aave been remov- ed to places of safety. report there is MOTOR PATROL. Duluth, Minn., Oct. (Continued on Page Three) READ STORY OF WORLD SERIES IN TRIBUNE ‘The World Series—an- nual classic of baseball— opens tomorrow in New York on the Polo Grounds, with the Giants and the Yankees contend- ing. The Tribune will receive the full story of the big classic over leased wire of the Associated Press direct from the Polo Grounds. The games start at 1. p. m. Bismarck time and the full story of the games will be in the last edition of The Tribune. little 1 :—A motor river and with agree-| trol for the outskirts of Duluth " +7, | to protect this city from new forest. proximately three-fourths of the rail- | Gnd. brush. fires’ which-ere.-springing up hourly in the north county was (night marshal, was shot and killed! Min the distance. pleaded not guilty. No date was set for trial of the men. Roy Lage and Carroll Denbow, the other two men. bound over from municipal court, yesterday pleaded guilty to the robbery at his hearing jn muni- cipal court last week, was rearrest- ed late yesterday and will be given another. preliminary hearing this morning. Westhope, N. D.—Carl Peterson, by a gang of burglars who robbed the Madaugh Hardware Store of| about $40 worth of loot and escaped. An important island in West Af- rica has the odd name of “Banana.”| Mudania, Oct. 3.—Never was there a stranger setting for a conference of world powers than this little vil- lage, on the Southern shore of the Sea of Marmora. Even the presence of the great warships of England, France and Italy seemed incongru- {ous in the tiny cove belted with |rocks and mud which is. Muda harbor, for their only neighbors were a few scattered fishing boats and non- descript barges. Nothing aout Mudania is impres- sive, save for the bulk of snowcapped !Mount Olympus, rising majesticaly The town is squalid and depressing. There is not a sin- gle building of architectural preten- gomery lived two hours after the shooting and was able to give the police a close description of the men who attacked him. The shooting occurred at the end of the railroad yards, where Mont- gomery left the train after riding |, it through the yards to prevent tramps from boarding it. According to the story he told the police, he had just stepped to the ground when three men who were standing on the right of way opened fire on him. He said he believed only one man shot, although five bullet wounds were found in his body. He declared the shooting be- gan without warning and that he had no chance to return the fire. MUDANIA STRANGE SETTING FOR CONFERENCE ON NEAR EAST ISSUE sions; the houses are of mud, shap- ed like huge beetles and the stores thrust their lattifed windows into the narrow, crooked streets. There is no sound. of railway or motor trucks to disturb. There is no evidence of modern life, sawe two telephone wires whica run into the offices of the police chief and the mayor, There is no evidence of the mod- ern world of business except the of- fice of the Standard Oil company. Such was the setting of the con- ference to which the military repre- sentatives of the allies across the miles of water from Con-| | (Continued on Page Three) stantinople, Wi 710:00 a, m. midnight and military officials now| p,ic¢ 10:00 a. m. OLD PAY IS MAINTAINED | 76 oie vom the fi i tropping 2|her commission from the Governor| champ Place, London. onto i OF PARALYSIS | report: no further trouble is expect: Driscoll seeteees, 1:00 p, m. | Sparks from the fires weré dropping a) 1% Countess Annesley has gone into| tionalist commanders at Mudania. to- ed. peweon ate site AEE me (By the Associated Press) re kated gi fee buraing in i the millinery business, She has n| 8%» the political aspects of the sit- Washburn, N. D., Oct. 3—The; Montgomery was quiet today toi-| EBRON sb ree Dees ad Chicago, Oct. 3.—A new agreement | 4), ders en ‘ait ae and Fone of ENTERS PLEA OF shop in London and takes an active uation being disposed of at a later death of Miss Hilda Sophia Falck,| lowing a night of excitement which | a5, din ‘Wednesday, Oct: sen Aer maintaining the old rates of pay thete Rave aweitl out of the bog part in serving customers, meeting, according to Henri Frank- which occurred at the Falck coun-| resulted when a mob made repeated | (4; ia d tak + {and rules and working conditions country, and are running into the NOT GUILTY TO lin-Bouillon, whose recent trip to try home, takes from this community | demonstrations in an effort to storm y re tow | was signed today, by representatives | hiands, threatening to creep into Smyrna where he conversed - with one of the pioneet residents of the|the county jail where Joe Terrell, |/®M°siown 13 of approximately forty-nine railroads) Tuabie timber lands, according. to ED. PIKE MURDER | Mustapha Kemal Pasha was respon- community and of the county. negro, alleged slayer of George Wil- Street ore? and subsidiaries and the Brother-| ots to the stave forester’s office sible for the summoning of today’s Mrs, Falck suffered a stroke of pa-| 80m, county game warden, was im-| 770" ™! - hood of Railroad Trainmen and the | 1°Pe Sioux Falls, §. D., Oct. 3— conference, ; ralysis a couple of weeks ago, from | Prisoned late yesterday. [emcee e “| Order of Railway Conductors. Ford:try officials are apprehensive | Lawrence Johnson, alias George The two most important questions which she was unable to rally, and Five Men Wounded Le The: agreement, which -will be in| ot the Ais ‘vill reach the heavily |Goteh, this morning pleaded _ not ts be diacunsed today, he said, ears es Sanday) atterneee, At, Before firemen and militery could y besbpererot ee an ec 1928, bestdes wooded sections today under the im- alley to, the charge, of murdering the: deminer on. of 7a fnew, neue! proaching her 76tn birthday. Mrs. wonndcd. mMbegvares ive men were | Ashley rules, including time and one-halt pete et ets aera night ‘of September 23, during » TR AIN GU ARD z= and at Ismid and the evac- Falck was born) in Larvig, Norway,| Rey. A. J. Stokes, well known ne- insane for overtime after eight hours, wa» this hoping declared “there is no|Faid on a suspected rendezvous of y uition of Taras: ie was coaniaeay January 29, 1847. When a young wo-/ gro minister, shot in head and seri-| >. 2 “| considered by the employes’ organi- - r * A the gang alleged to have stolen $50,- reement woul e reached, ‘nan she married Constant M. Falck! usly hurt.” sen igciacaeoeeein zations as favorable to them. Griev-j eatuibd slr happen ue heite 000 in jewels from two trunks at| Staples, Minn. Oct. 3—A posse of| Reports from the Chanak area and for a period of six years she“and| James W. Prescott, shot accident-| i otto ean Carat) os 00 a. m.|2nee egal less) Ske tralarben! 's or new Bres. ee Chicago, Milwaukee St/Paal seventy-five men weaded by the chief Tee a ereeen need Hieron her husband resided at Christiania, | ally, seriously wounded. i Binddock ganizations oe n orehe = The largest fire is burning on’ a ae bs en idee Phi Rindall of police are searching this vicinity | ence’ the" close’ juxtapsaition ot) the , the capitol of Norway. The first part| Herbert Miller, shot in hip, not Bistiarek | ing Chicago approved the agree-| 15/715 front and is almost solid|Medin in circuit for three men, one of whom shot TLOLR EAA Reeh ves of September, 1882, sh and her hus | seriously hurt. BER ment before W. G. Lee, president of from from Sax to Elsmere, accord- Knott, Frank Lage and Glenn Knott,| and killed John Montgomery, a| Turkish and British troops continued, band emigrated from the native| Edward Peal, negro, seriously | Mandan .... "/the Trainmen, and .L. E. Sheppard, | (OM rts, which say that new| charged with receiving part of the|Northern Pacific passenger train| The Turkish officers were making ing to reports, y: loot from the jewel robbery, also| guard jn the yards early today. Mont- | friendly overtures to the British, of- g y y today. fering them cups of coffee and at- tempting similar small counties, The horses of both sides were drinking from; the same troughs. U. §, SHIP ON WAY Gibraltar, Oct. 3—The United States Dreadnought Utah with Vice Admiral, T. Long, commander in chief European station, has arrived here, She will await the ar- | rival of the Cryiser Pittsburgh. to | which the flag will be transferred, the Pittsburgh then becoming the flagship of the American naval for- ces in European waters. CAVALRY RETIRES Constantinople, Oct. 3—The Turk- ish cavalry: has tetired from its ad- ‘vanced positions in the Chanak area 'decreasing the danger of conflict there. ¢ | ‘This withdrawal which’ is describ- ‘ed in messages from the Dardanelles las “slight” was supposed here to be jin consequence of word received by the Turks that the Mudania confer- ence was in session. The Turks, how- ever, were said. to be well within the neutral zone. | — | CONSTANTINE ON WAY Palermo, Sicily, Oct. 3.—Pormer King Constantine of Greece, going into exile after his second abdica- | tion, arrived here at 11 this morn- ling with members of his party oa board the Greek steamship Patria. CRISIS NOT PASSED London, Oct. 3.—British official , circles attach high hopes to the hurried# meeting of the allied generals with the Turkish Nationalist emissaries

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