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WEATHER FORECAST. Somewhat unsettled tonight and Thursd: |THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [eam ESTABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1923 PRICE FIVE CENTS SOLONS VISIT TABERT’S GRAVE L_RECOR ACK “SEA LEGS,”. cow mnrrrpR'g FIN AL BREAK [| avtorries To Give, FAILS i ABILITY OF MOSCOW GIRL ‘RECORD D DANCERS L LACK “SEA LEGS,” .of power’ WITHN. P. LIS. SBEN IN FIGHT rth Dakota Leader Defends | Sale of Courier-News; Pro- | gressive Assails It TOWNLEY, WOOD Hr War Declared on Men in Pow- | er in National Nonpastisan League Organization Nonpartisan League publications in the st re at war toda: On the one hand, the North Dakota Leader, to be issued today in Fargo the official state paper—defends the vale of the Fargo Courier-News us necessary, printing statements similar to those made by s. Davies | an interview given in printed in) The in Fork Monday On the other hand “The Pregressive,” the new weekly John An- drews and P. L, alls it the work of a itor, id leaves no doubt but that it believes A. C. Townley is the t | The North Dakota Leader is pub-j lished under the direction of the nas} executive committee of the} n League, and under the: after it s\ n gaya which the! held with JA. Townley s{ Cincinnati, $1 of the piennita dues for its | een nn and Tribune idded on a wet roadwa gue to get support | Frank B. Wood, member of the na- tional executive committee of the/ Nonpartisan League, is bitterly as- sailed by the Andrew's paper. It was at Mr. Wood's house years ago, many | say, that the idea of the Nonparti-j san League was worked out. | John Bloom, former business man-, ager of the Courier-News, denied; knowledge of a telegram sent pel some days ago purporting to be| —— = - sizned by himself and John Andrews ; BY EDWARD M. THIERRY. nouncing the sale. | NEA Service Staff Writer. The sale of the | Washington, April 25. “Do noi regarded by some retaliation on{take it for granted that the League the party of Townley for the action| of Nations will he the outstanding of the league state convention here} issue in next year's presidential in b ing his organization and vir-}¢campaign. It may be out of the way tually severing itself from the na-jby that tim tional organization. | This significant statement, made Happened Suddenly. by a vutionully prominent Democrat, “The trick was turned almost with-! represents a political view hercto- in one hour,” The Progressive in| fore overlooked in the wage of spec its first issu mmenting upon the/ ulation now centering on the 1 ile. “The editor, John Andrews,| presidential race. ; was advised at 3 o'clock or there-| The man responsible for it refuses abouts by the United Press repre-jto allow his name to be used sentative that the paper had been} Anonymou however, he makes sold, and at 4 o'clock was busy re-}this analysis of the situation: moving his papers from his desk and) | “Three things are worrying the clearing his room for his successor} Republicans: First, the League of It was fast work. Nations; second, what will Mr. W B “It appears Shut the ‘papers’ in the {son do? Third, what about McAdoo? deal were signed the night previous,|“The Republicans are doing all the although the transaction has been| Worrying. They are doing all the under consideration for months. ‘the}talking and speculating about ‘he following day about 1:30, F. B. Wood, | Democratic candidate” and the u member of the National Nonparti-j $u@s; thé Democratic candida sin League executive committee, ap- | mentioned ave all been ared with his son, Howard, former | by Republicans. ant governor; H. A, Paddock, Cecil Starts Talk. Townley's legal adviser, and} «Lord Robert Cecil's visit, coming vhnson and Merrick, auditors and!on the heels of Attorney General s, at the office of the! Daugherty's prediction that Pr News and ‘broke the news’ to) dent Harding would he renomi John H. Bloom, manager in charge}by the Republicans, has focu of the ‘only daily newspaper in the! tention on the League. of United States owned and controlled! Now President Harding indi by farmers.’ is ready to put through the Inte “The property was turned over and} national’Court of Justice, a move possession given without a word of} which many describe as getting into protest then, and the accountants|the league through the! back door. were given possession of the books! and, as a shock to Republi d were soon busy upon them, pre-| along comes Senator Pepper, Re- paratory to the statement required | publican, talking League of Nations. to he made to the new owner. ab icmiiy tale (0 tai ranted thi “There was also need for speed. the league will remain an An injunction granted by Judge A. T.! year from next November? We may Cole of the district court had been|be in it before then—in the league, issued in March; 1922, forbidding the of the plant or. paper until ring could he had on the com- plaint filed by about 20 Nonpartisan farmers, which complaint alleged that the national executive commit- tee and the majority stockholder, WILL PAY ALL were planning to sell or dispose i 3 the paper which the money of the farmers of North Dakota had paid] State Treasurer to Clean Up Be In It By Next Prominent Courier-News is s¢ dale ations. ates he mentioned! t for. This injunction still stood and might have been a stumbling block, Hail Warrants in Hands Individuals had it been produced. Contempt of court sometimes results seriously in North Dakota. But the trick was turned ‘on high’ and the injunction was only a ‘scrap of paper’ when the parties to whom it was addressed were across the Red river. / All 1922 state nail warrants held by individuals will be paid within a few days, it was announced today at the state treasurer's office. Fifteen rhage eee ene: or con-| counties will be embraced in the done the perfidy involved in the sale] Cleanup, withya total of about $600,- of the Courier-News in this manner] 00 to be paid out. There will be have prepared the usual convineing| Temaining securities on which sale arguments to cover their retreat.| of warrants under the deal -made by They declare that the paper was los-| the Industrial Commission with Twin ing money and would have eventu-| City financial houses was based, to- ally collapsed. This claim is met by| taling about $1,000,000. This is the business manager, Mr: John H.| the earliest period in which payment Bloom, who declares that the paper| of warrants held by individuals has had no pressing obligations and was bree teen made by the state treasur- “BLOAT LOAN News was a cause of more trouble within the league ranks than any other single hing ane that it was turned over to enemy and sil- enced in the inept of harmony within the league. The only trouble that ever drose was when A. C. Town- over his ‘balance of power’ plan and i 4 ran against the opposition of a ma-| / Brussels, April 26.—Belgium is jority of the state executive commit-|floating a loan of one billion francs, tee of the league, which used the}the proceeds of which will be ap- paper to fight his scheme and de-|plied to the reconstruction of dam- foated it., age caused by the war. The nation’s “Perhaps annoyance was felt by|note circulation is now six billion those who owned the controllingjeight hundred fifty-eight million ley tried to use the paper to| put (Continued on page: three.) francs. “Autos weren't made for gliding,” this machine might have opine | jumped over an embankment and} crashed oes the roof of a building 30 feet below at Carthage, near! LEAGUE ISSUE OVER BY 1924 G. 0. P. Talk of International Court Shows We May Campaign, Says Democrat or anoth In the Senate now 42 votes for it. Only! needed, which may be the international one w there 22 more are sily obtained for court at le: . “The big issue next r more will be the Republican record | and the foreign policy, vof Hughes and anyone doubt likel the tariff the failur Hoo Can Hoover especially mendous disappointment to office with an enormous ing, which is now practi ly alienated 2 andidates ? Democrats talking about them. The cans are putting them up for us tor Underwood, for example. ‘ormer Justice Clarke, who re- signed to lead the League of Na-! tions fight, is talked of. His health alone probably would count him out. Worried. wondering tha going in follow- aren't are Mr. Wilson is going to take, That is for him worried more about Cox, the © interest. They are Me. ‘Adoo than re is talk of Governor Smith! of New York, Senator Ralston 9f, Indiana, Senator Edwards of New k of Bryan, other mentioned Bernard Baruch war industries head, and everywhere there is talk of Henry Ford. “Tammany in New York is against, Al Smith. ‘They are against Baryth, too, or anybody he is for. Besides, | Smith is a Catholic and Baruch is a Jew. Rualston’s ag to fame is that he beat Beverid ty a famous} Republican, in a Republieun state in a Republican year, The drys are against Edwards because he is wet As Ford—nobody knows, . wha to think of him.” [DATE SET FOR STATE K. C. MEET! Devils Lake, April 25.—State Deputy John J. Coyle of Minot has set Monday, May 28, as the date the 1923 state meetiig of Knights of Columbus which be held in Devils Lake, officers and two delegates from tor will each of the councils in the state,! usually the grand knights, will make up the meeting altho members from | all parts of North Dakota are invited to be present and attending the sessions. COMMISSION ON - PEACE NAMED, Obregon Government points Men to Meet U.S. Mexico City, April g6.—The Mex-) ican members of the: special com- mission which will consider the ques- tion of diplomati¢ relations between Mexico and the United States haye been appointed. :They are: Ramon Ross, one of President Obregon’s most intimate friends, and Fernando Gonzales Roa, an attorney. Senor Ross was a member of the constitu- ent assembly in 1917, He now is director-general of ,public munifi- ciences, Senor Roa was an under-secretary in the Madero government. He now is general counsel for the National Railway lines. and is a-member of the board of: /girector ot | be held against the commission. hae sheen sactee: legal rate had been exceeded in Mce- lly entire, Republi- -}| _ Briefs were beng pre the | State! Ap: DEPOSIT FUND = JUDGE SENDS © BEFORE COURT 25 TO DEATH Depositor Seeks to Collect 23-year-old Communist Judge, Where Legal Rate of Calmly Te'ls of Actions Interest Exceeded February Since COMMISSION) RESISTS LOSES SLEEP}; , form | Guaranty Fund Commission Declares That Individual Life! Holds Depositor, Bank Doesn't Count in State | Both Violated Law Crimes | Jansonius has twas “thus: Judge Fred of ‘court today district him the Gluzman, Moscow, April 25 the ~Citizeness Anna before year-old presiding question of whether or not the Guar-; judge of the Moscow district court, ; Fund is liable to Who a few days ago sent seven men of closed banks for de-,'® death for robbery, informed. th« | Associated Press -correspondent to- ;posits on which the bank had agreed day that she hawimposed the death to pay the depositor more than the penalty on about 25 persons since legal rate of interest. ; February and had) pot ‘lost a mos The anty Fund Commission! ment’s sleep or heen troubled by has held it is not liable, and on this | Me? conscience. theory has declined to list for set-i Asked how, as a women, she cal i tlament deposits of more than $a, {When the doomed were shot she 000,000, most of which come under plied that the question of individ-| Hee wale ual tives could have no consideration . MeCurdy when crimes against the safety of the! ae er Ahevel of E. M state and the public were involved. ie EA HeQuerry ‘She had to administer justice, ac- 2 cording to the laws of evidence, so anty Fund Commission was @ she tried to temper her decisions! to the transaction t because it with merey when possible, |had permitted banks to advertise; With’ rette held firmly be- widely for deposits such as the de- | tween tight lips the girl spoke of her | posit of McQuerry’s, that there is court experiences. She is slim, {no direct inhibition in law against] short, her brown, wavy hair is bob- j Payment of the deposit, and that the bed and parted on the side like u/ / Commission should be compelled to’ man’s; her jaw is stern. Dressed as | do so. | she today © McQuerry had answered an adver-/ might have posed for the represen- j tisement of the Security State Bank tation of what sometimes is imag- of New England, offering to take Li-{itied us a typical woman Communist berty Bonds at par on certificates; A pleasant_smile saves her hau of deposit. He deposited $5,000 in! Positive ugliness. Her only adorn-j the bank, figuring’the bonds at par.; ment was the red, enamelled badge | The interest rate was calculated to; of the Communist party. H be a little more than 6 percent. The! |“! have never seen an execution, ; Guaranty Fund Commission, Mr. Me- She said. Sometime the law requires, Curdy said, had permitted banks to the presiding judge to attend these, nay fap) Colla perecntl ia ievese. {bat always T have been bu other | C.-L. Young, representing the tings at the time and detailed some- ; Guaranty Fund Cor ne cy ; ; i Ga ee LLY ceelared Anna Gluzman is not married. She janer low iene fieally wrovided Elntsdeh cegeaionassaparlittic rosin wi(veut| iposits on which more than the Neral! pots. | ;; Yate of interest was paid, could not ‘i = ASK UNIFORM DIVORCE LAWS| Prohibition De- janty Commission depositors Bismarck attorney, | iQuerry’s case, he said. Both the! nd McQuerry were acting i violation of the statute, he said, and the Guaranty Fund Commission could not be held responsible for their acts. ured tod for submission, and decision is not! Enforcement of , expected ‘for some time. i math ; Amendment Also manded RIVER MONEY | Louisville, Ky., April 26.—Resolu- itions urging uniform divorce laws ., j throughout the United States to be ,obtained by constitutional a ' !ment and enforcement of the ing prohibition laws “if it takes the entire United States navy to patrol {American waters and the United States army to patrol the borders of our country” were submitted to the 600 delegates attending the general 900,000 of the $56,589,000 appropri-|S¢s8ions of the National Congress of ated’ by’ Congress under the rae Angi ea rant each ele Aah ‘of the budget bureau for the im-|‘iation today for discussion. and, .ac- (All of Appropriation to be Spent, Indication Washington, April 25—About $40,- tone that the crowd enjoys singing. Dr, P. H. Grewer and T. H, Halloran imeere added to the list of comedians at last nights rehearsal and both i will vender comedy songs. Henry |Duemeland and Bob Webb have a {clever act in which they will depict {two wandering minstrels trying to jteach home after the show had “gone broke”. Henry Duemeland A temporary committee to work} will also introduce a novel musical out plans for a Bismarck Real Es- | stunt in the show, Geo. Russ too is , tate Board was named at tl sso-| slated for a number which is decid- ; ciation of Commerce offices last; edly out of the ordinary in the way jnight. J. P. Jackson is chairman,| of a character song. | Price Owens secretgg¥ and others on |the committee ; G. M. Register jand F. L. Young. Secretary Bradley of the A. of C. j explained the proposed plan for ai real estate board, and the benefit of! j such an organczaitow to the real es: ; tate men and to the city as a whole. Practically every real estate man in the city was present, it was re- ported. | provement of rivers and harbo: | ELKS TO GIVE i budget director had recom- {that the administration might hold{ Dr. Coue is in line for a lot of will be “Day By Day In Every BOARD PLANNED. ready has been alloted by Secreta jtributed among various projects lat-! DR. COUE LOT | mended an appropriation of only $27, expenditures to that figure. ewe at the Elks’ minstrels as | Way I'm Getting Betfer and Real | Weeks and the remainder will he di er, ' OF PUBLICITY /000,000 and it had been intimated | | ! one of the big song hits of the show REAL | ESTATE | Better,” and it is a dandy song too, | | Estate Men of City Name Committee Marked decrease in the fire loss in North Dakota reflects the passing of the increased moral hazard which | followed the slump in values late in 1920 and in 1921, is the belief of of- ficials of the state insurance de- partment. The yeay 1921 was mark- ed by an increase in incendiarism and a jump in the fire loss to a point where for the year in North Dakota the amounts paid out by in- surance companies exceeded premium State Meet of C. E. Association’ To Be In Dickinson Dickinson, April 25,—Plans for the entertainment of more than 150 delegates at the annual ‘state con- vention of Christian Endeavor acalntt, i cieties which will be held in Pickin-| The loss ratio—the ratio of losses son on June 15, 16 anu 17, are now | Paid to premiums received—was 44.1 being made by committees from the | Percent in 1919, 62.5 percent in 1920 Christian Endeavor society of the|and in 1921 it jumped to 112 percent Congregational church. The conven-| Plus. In 1922, according to ff:ures tion will be held at the audi-Teompiled ‘in the insurance commis- torium and a e program, which | sioner’s office, the loss ratio dropped will include sakaby many prominent | back to 58,3 per cent. workers with youhg people, is being} The losses” Bajd out by insurance outlined, companies in the state in 1921 ex- of (night what he talks of j convey Secretary ‘dulu | Townley 6:DAY MARATHON ENDS SUDDENLY Dancers Disillusioned, Empty To Dance on Fi Sea—Police Ordered w York, April 25 decidedly Fight without pair: dancers, the ightest taste of food, learned Ia an old salt means when “sea legs While they were gathering th ion their manager, Charles 3. , Burgess, learned what some other people » said perpetual dancing “Tecan see,” through the patrolmen, “I all cruel ended in he said, peering mist, past a flock of can see now thag it and inhuman.” And disgust, dispair and distrust the first) six-day dancing Marathon, a wet, woeful failure. The eight couples started dancing | ing Vessel WORK TURNED TO CAMP TOWN Also to Inquire as to Why no Death Certificate was Made Out for Tabert IS and Disgusted After Trying in a Top-Bouncing Them Out of State reached 12 hours of the police. either to stop nd the disapprov They were ordered or get out of the state, so they decided to go to sea , The plan was 12 hours at sea, 1 on land, ad infinitum. ‘They toddled up to a plank to a trunk and then o gang plank to a de The deck was that o k used on heavy unusually heavy, so the smack only went out beyond Rockaway Within six hours the fatalities were so many that the statisticians al doned their vigil to hold heads. The hounding main was top-bouneings. At 9 o'clock the dancers wet, cold, tired and disillusioned, were helped off boat. They didn’t have sea legs SHERIFF DEFIANT fishing The Won't Get Out of Office Until He Kicked Out, Asserts Is Jones Talat tivity the April assembly the di of the general investigation of Monday und at noon te LADD TO JOIN WEEK’S PARTY Washington, April &. ary of two transports Weeks to cific The itiner- which will and a con Porto Rico, coust, Hono-| and Alask: announced to-| day at the war department. The transport Grant will start from New York April 27. Forty senators and members of the public are listed among. those who accompany Secretary gressional party Panama, the P: | Weeks on at least a part of the trip,! including Senator Ladd, North D. kota. “LEAGUE PLAN FAILED, SAYS , A.C. TOWNLEY Tells Jamestown Audience’ That New Plan Must Be Followed Jamestown, N. D., April 25.--A. €.! spoke here last night, plaining the plan of the Producers! National Alliance, He did not me tion the sale of the Courier-News. A large audience of farmer: business men heard Mr. Townley. He urged cooperation, politically: and in a bu: by farmers with merchants ankers as the} only way to solve the farmers’ pro. blems, rmers must know cost of; production, anizers for new} movement will soon be in the state instructing farmers how to fix! prices for sale of farm products, he d. Orderly marketing, holdire| grain in the farm granary, accurate knowledge of cost of production’ and} political action with business men were among the things to be follow- ed, i} He said the league program had’ failed entirely to accomplish what was hoped for and a new program] must be followed. {i SCOUTS VISIT WITH LEGION: Troops to be Guests of Local Post Tonight at Hall eae nd Boy Scouts of Bismarck will be guests of Lloyd Spetz Post, Ameri- can Legion, at 8 o'clock tonight. All Legion members are asked to be at the Legion hall at‘ p. m. sharp. The Boy Scouts will meet at the churches which are their head- quarters at 7:30 and march to the Legion hall. Supreme Court Justice W. L. Nu sle will deliver the address of the evening. A program of entertainment will include stunts by the Boy Scouts, Legion members and a “feed” will he served by the Legion Auxiliary. ‘MARKED DECREASE IN FIRE LOSS IN STATE SHOWS TREND TO ‘NORMALCY’ ceeded all records, ahine a total of $5,564,194.25, of which $4,003,439.- 84 was paid out by stock fire com- panies, $913,769.37 by foreign fire companies; $260,427.92 by North Da- kota mutuals and $386,557.12 by for- eign mutuals, The premium receipts for the year were $4,961,029.87. During the year 1921 the changed condition is shown in that total pre- miums amounted to $5,170,673.30 and losses amounted to $3,018,634.21. The stock fire mutuals bore, the heaviest losses and also received the largest amount of premiums, the premium! receipts ‘being $3,802,962.24 and loss- es paid, $2,200,452.08. Foreign stock companies received $730,457.87 and paid out $475,868.32, North Dakota mutuals received $275,624.51 and Paid out $90,766.16; and foreign mu- tuals received $361,628.68 and paid out $261,547.65, FROM NEW YORK ‘TO HAVANA IN 30 HOURS! !nautic isehedule to be main |nécting North and™South * many. jstead of 15 b: didn't have anything. Tabert ‘of N a Florida convict. « @d to the little village of Florida, where it is alleged j Was beaten to death in the camp of |the Putnam Lumber company Members of the investigating com- mittee were to ex: ne the grave in Which it is said Tabert's body buried, and also to inquire as why no death certificate on record at that time. Dr. Capers Jones, camp physician, told the committee he made out a death certificate, but state health uthorities say they have no record. Meanwhile another committee named to hear Sheriff W. R. Jones of Leon on charges of malfeasance in office preferred against him by Governor Hardee following tional testimony given in the T case was to meet the official for his {version of the conduct of his office. Proposed New Aerial Passen-: ; He : i Won't Quit, He Saye ger Line Would Be Boon | Sheriff Jones was asked b To Thirsty | Martin TO PANAMA IN 2 DAYS-BY AIR' That’s One Feature of U. S. Plans for Blimp De- velopment news- paper men if he would resign. “Resign from of Well not un- til they kick me out,” the sheriff re- plied adding “I have been ossly NEA Staff Correspondent. misrepresented by a bunch of, ex- Washington, April — hirty | CO" icts and fellows that I have @lis- {hours from New York to Havanas.| Charged from office.. There in not 2 two days from New York to Panama.! bit of truth in that stuff they told RAEN aAharits eatin ro. | the committee. 1 prove it. As ee Nhe probable | for resigning-—no. I'm going to stay ined eneea uch e to the last minute.’ lag lice opi | Jones, according to testi- America, | ony. given before the committee by Demonstration of the practieabil- Jerry M. Poppel, former jailer of ity of such a Pan-American air ser-} Leon county, on signing an agree- |viee is one of the jobs mapped out, ment with the Putnam Lumberycom- for the ZR-1 and ZR3, monster, pany by which he was to receive dirigibles, now nearing completion,’ $20 for cach prisoner he delivered to he first at Lakehurst, N sec- the company, told Poppell and other ond at the Zeppelin pl: Ger- deputies to “get busy for this means money to nic,” Sheriff Jones the first wit- ness to testif® before the committee jin its investigation of the death of Martin Tabert The county officer admitted having entered into a per- sonal agreement with the Putnam {Lumber Company to furnish the company with prisoners at $20 a head, BY HARRY HUNT. as ture all-American But from New York to Panama would be only one end of the inter- continental service proposed. From Panama the route would ex tend to Guayaquil, Ee’ {Peru, and on to Valparaiso, Chile, almost 6,000 miles from Broadw Five Days vs. 15. But from Valparaiso to Broadway, for the rich Chilean or Argentinian | seeking business or pleasure in the, northern metropolis would be a trip| of only five days by air-cruiser in- steamship, , thirsty gentlemen New York would find the time neces- ary to reach the oasis of Havana! cut in half. | A special Havana-New York serv- | ice might be found advisable and profitable. It is in such s esas th Rear Admirable William Moffet officials of the naval bureau of aero- | inautics believe, i i that comer | transportation by airships will find Ss greatest future. { Between points otherwise acce: j TQ D | N N E R jble only by steamship or by*a com- bination of steamship and railroad! Special Invitation to Women Extended by A. of C. was To Investigate Judge Other witnesses have testified he ordered his deputies to start a eru- j Sade after he entered into this agree; j ment inst persons stealing rides vis freight trains and for vs ver: use he was quoted hee “this means money for me.” Other testzmony had tended to show that the sheriff and County | Judge, B. F. Willis had entered into 4 conspiracy to aid in the scheme. His connection will be investigated. saying nd routes, the airship can greatly re- duce the time required. Navy's Big Job. To search out the routes where! airship lines could best perform such | service and to demonstrate the prac- | ticability of their operation commer- | cially, will be the big peace-time joo} big dirigibles. Development of such a route as is The general public ig invited to uttend the April Forum dinner of the Association of Commerce at the the American Investi-| Grand Pacific hotel at 6:45 pom : ; jis plan-| Thursday evening, April 26, iron Ae Hi A special invitation is extended ork a icago, to women of the city. i believe, will prove more difficult | the evening eae wun taneces than of routes hetween points where | veakers and subjects warn The ee or other service is not now Miss H. Lund—“Need of Recrea- b bah tion for Girls.” However, they are keeping in close Roy touch with’ the plans of the corpora- |, ae Bs. Sysip- Brome Morn; tion, promoted by Dr. Johann|°™S Standpoint.© Hons! promoted By Mrs. J. Henry Kling-—“From an In- The New York-Havana-Panama | Structor’s » Standploint.” route, it is pointed out, would lie] Mr J. J. M. MacLeod—“Boys and outside the Carribean hurricane belt | Girls General Welfare. The program committee’-asks re- and for most part would lie along lines where constant contact could] Servations be made as early Thurs- day as possible. GIVEN FOR ‘Y storms or trouble ahead. In addition to mooring masts locat- ed at scheduled stopping points along the route, other masts might Jamestown, N. D., April 26,—About $10,000 had been raised here last night to finish paying for Property be set up at points where occasional emergency stops might be desirable, on which it is proposed to erect a new Y,; M. C. A. building. as Savannah, Ga. and perhaps Miami, Fla, CHEF'S LOVE—$1,500. London, April 25.—Catherine Daly, waitress, said in court Constant Wil- liam; a chef, wooed her but proved inconstant. She got $1,500 for breach of promise. MANY HOMESTEADERS ~ McLaughlin, S, D., April 25.<-Ten different families have taken up homesteads, or purchased farms or ranches in this vicinity thus far this spring and moved on to their new properties. The bulk of the new sct- tlers are from other points in Nore and South Dakota. HEARSE RIDE IS FATAL. London, April 26,—Several youths appropriated a hearse and went for a joy-ride. They asked Cyril Thomas Roberts, 21, to join them. As he climbed to the vehicle he fell to the pavement and died from skull frac- ture. .