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4 | i | WEATHER FORECASTS Partly cloudy tonight and Thurs- day; warmer tonight. ESTABLISHED 1878 ERNEST DAWE, AGED 3, FATALLY THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE y BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1923 "FINAL EDITION INJURED BY AUTOMOBILE ON CITY STREET; LIVES < suse Resets, Struck by Automobile Driven By S. C. Moser on West Thayer Street Late in the Afternoon, Rib Piercing His Lung — Driver Rushed Boy to Hospital, But Little Fellow Never Regained YConsciousness. LAST — RITES FRIDAY The life of Ernest Marshal Dawe, teyear-old son of Archie Dawe, mechanic for the Corwin Motor Company was snuffed out under the wheels of sutomobile late yester- day afternoon, Struck about 4:5 o'clock in the afternoon the little fellow died in the Bismarck hospital » hour and a half later, at 6 o”- clock. His lung had been piereed by a rib, ‘The automobile which struck the boy was driven by S$. C. Moser, bak- the McKenzie hotel, who was riding with his wife and little It happened og: Thayer street, pposite the Dawe residence at 20 Thaye A coroner's inquest is expected to} attempt to fix responsibility for the ccident. R. H. Dodds, who tried | brakes on the car that hit thet 1eY, said it took about 70 to 100! fect to stop the car going at 18 to; 20 miles an hour, that the foot! brakes were defective and the emer- bri held only on one wheel. rness of the tittie fellow to bid his father good-bye again before he went to work led to the accident. |! Ernest ha ge with Jackie Dodds. Ernest. saw* his} father turn the corner, and then: hoy-like set out to catch him. The two little fellows crossed the strect vhen Ernest's mother culled him.| tcarted back. As the automo-! bile approached the Dodds boy heard! n cry of his mother and turned; juickly back, while the little Dawe, boy was struck.in the body by the: automobile. He was hurléd to one aide, the car not passing over’ the his body. Mr. Dawe had turned the corney d did not know of the ac- cident until he got down town and a doctor who met him, said he had an emergency call tu ais house. Drives to Hospital | Those who saw the accident and; Mr. Moser and his wife were thrown! into panic after the accident for a! moment. Mrs. Moser left the car, hysterical. The driver, also shaken ; badly, went back to the boy, picked! him up and ryshe@ him to the hos-} pital, a. physician being summoned seipeliately. The boy lingered on fo# an hour and a half, but with no hope of recovery, and never regain-| ing consciousness, 1 The boy's mother was prostrated | by the accident. Mr, Dawe said that) limit are putting out of here almost} 1de#s his information was that the car vhich struck his son was not going, fast, Mr. Moser, he understood, ! had had his car only a short time| and had not driven a car very much./ Mr. Moser, he said, drove the boy to! the hospital alone, holding him in! one arm as he drove, vexpressed | great sorrow over the accident to! the bereaved family and offered all stance possible. Chief of Police Martineson, States | Attorney Allen and Coroner Gobel} visited the scene of the accident,’ interviewing witnesses and taking; measurements. The former cstimat- vd that the car ran 50 to 60 fect after striking the boy, i as: States Attorney Allen said a ell was made at the place by officers with a car. Thq spot, he said, was! where car went up one hill and down another. He said it took about 50 fect to stop the test car going: rate speed. \ Coroner Gobel called a coroner's jury to meet late this afternoon for an inquest in the case. Mrs. Dawe Iyat night wes at the home of her ‘sister, Mrs, Joseph Kelley. The deceased boy was the fourth generation of the family. His grand-mother, Mrs. Chris Johnson, TABSOLVE BURKE d been playing in the yard | ¢i ito be operating liquor fleets HOUR AND HALF | | OF ANY BLAME; New: York, May 16.—John Burke, former governor of North Dakota and former treasurer of the United States, was absolved from all re- sponsibility for the failure of the stock brokerage firm of Kardos and | Burke. of which he was a partner, | in a statement issued today by Da- | vid W. Kahn, counsel for the trus- tee in bankruptcy of the company. The statement added that the trus- tee would not proceed further with | Burke’s connection with the finan- cial affairs of the firm. HARDING SEES CONFLICT IN N.Y. ACTION Repeal of State Enforcement Laws May Lead to Con- flict of Authority \ RUM RUNNERS ACTIVE | Newburgh, N. Y., May 16—Repeai , of prohibition enforcement | statutes would be likely to result in state j “more or less conflict between state jd federal authorities” in the opin- jon of President Harding. The views | of the President were expressed m} a letter to Wesley Waite of this y, made public today. A bill, passed the legislature repealing the act is awaiting action by Gov- ernor Smith. \ GET WARRANTS New York, May 16.—The govern-! ment, which announced yesterday plans to smash a rum ring alleged | from | Miamito Boston, today. obtaincd. eight federal warrants charging | conspiracy to violate the © Volstead ‘ act and defraud the government of customs duties. More warrants, it is announced, will sogn be sought. Gis EER issued | for Alfred Ernest Corns of Uni town, Pa, ulleged to be the super cargo of the British steamer Yank ton, which put into this port y terday out of food ‘and fuel. RUM TRADE JICKS UP St. John, N. Y., May reports from New York that United States government is w: ing vigorous war on the rum fl off the Atlantic seaboard the liquor, trade is picking up briskly, now; that the work of the spring storms} are believed to have passed. Rum schooners reported to headed for the Jersey be! three-mile | daily. H SEEK WILLARD, FIRPO MATCH i Great Falls, Montana, Bids For Match on July 2 Great Falls, Ont. May 16.--The} Great Falls American Legion post today telegraphed to promoter Tex ickard inviting him to match Jess! Willard, former heavyweight cham-! pion, and Luis Firpo, south\ Ameri- | can Giant, for a bout in this city! on July 2, two days before the! heavyweight championship contest! between Jack Dempsey and Tom} Gibbons at Shelby, Montana. i Shelby is 100.miles north of here. | The entire gate receipts for the} Willard Firpo’ bout were offered | Rickard if he would stage the match j here. | i Men who have followed the box- ing game assert the attendance pro- bably would equa that at the She!- is in California -and -is expected Ypme soon. i a great grandmother. Ernest would have been three years old ext Wweelf, on May 20, Mr. and Mrs, Dawe have one other child, Wesley Leonard, aged six years. Version Mr, Moser’s Mr. Moser, exp! of the accident, said that he ws driving toward the downtown dis- trict with his wife and child. He saw two little boys on the boulevard, he said. One started as if tojcross the street, and then stopped. Mr. Moser said he put on the brakes when “he saw the boy go into the street, and then when the boy stop- ped it appeared he could go on pa and he put on a little gas. The boy, he said, then ran into the street and in front of the car. Mr. Moser said he swerved the car but it seem. ed to him as if the boy ran squa! intogthe car. He said he had had the car only a week, but that he was an experi- enced driver, and had driven autos i gpprera) large cities, and said he wid¥ traveling only a few miles per. hour at the time. He said he and’ his family felt exceedingly sdrry that (Continued gn Page 3.) co by fight, in view of the number of | Mrs. Mary Martineson(fans in the state dt that time. — | 1 CAN'T STAGE IT, / H New York, May 16.—Tex Rickard! today telegraphed the American Le- | gion Post of Great Falls that it would ; be impossible to stage the Jess Wil- lard-Louis Firpo fight-there July 2,! two days before the Gibbons-Demp- sey title bout at Shelby, Mont. Rick-! hased for $4.50 an acre, ard advised he had definitely decided to hold the fight either in New York or “Boyle’s Thirty Acre SCORE HURT ~ IN CYCLONE Cambridge, Ohio, May 16.—More than a score of persons were in- jured, one seriously, when a torna- do struck Byesville, five miles south of here last night. Approximately 20 buildings were unroofed. Charles Griffith, 65, was crushed so, badl: when his.two-stoty frame house was cemnliened that he is expected to ' strange man's eyes? ' sensation i said, Tuttle was to jland and Pettibone was to “SVENGALI EYES” ems to Feel Mussoli Whole BENITO MUSSOLINI AND BY WIGLIAM PHILIP SIMMS. “ NEA Service Writer. May 16--Is Benito Musso- ne minister of Italy, a strange nd is Italy an en- Rome lini, new kind of Svengali? playing the role of 1 | tire nation under the spell of this Tonight I interviewed Mussolini and I confess [ am inclined to be- lieve this more than half true. From the moment I entered his amazing office in the new Foreign Affairs Building here, I had this feeling, a I remember having only once before. That was when I in- terviewed Mme. de Thebes, the cele- brated sorceress of Paris, now dead, in her m rious room hung all ound with black velvet and lighted only by the glow from crystal globes used in his practice of Black Magi I have finterviewed kings and em- perors, presidents and princes, pre- ‘iniers, dictators and all manner of ‘men and wome | pressed but Mussolini im- none of. these im- mie pressed inc. He's “Different” Statesmen, I mean he is different from any statesman I ever saw, as different as night from day. I have talked with political leaders whose pro- fundity impressed me more, whose i med to me to be fundament- ally more sound and in whose hands I would prefer to see placed the destiny of my own land. But I have scen none other any- thing like Mussolini, the man with the hypnotic eyes, “black magic’ statesman of Italy, the man who stares at the citizens of his country, from king on down the line, and they all sing to his bidding—like Svengali as eee PETTIBONE APPEALS CASE Demands Share of Profits in Land Deal with Tuttle L. C. Pettibone of, Dawson has appealed to the supreme court his case against Wm. P. Tuttle, wealthy Chicagoun and former resident of Dawson, in which he claims profits on land transactions which migh under the purported agreement and circumstanees, approximate $75,000. Pettibone alleged that about 1911, when Mr. Tuttle came to Dawson, partly because of domestic difficul ties, they diseussed possibilities of profit in land speculation, and that. as a result they purchased some land in western ‘North Dakota, in- cluding 11,530 acres. in Billings county. Under the agreement, he purchase the receive one fourth of the profits for his ac tivities and advice. The land, pur- has in- creased in value to $25 an acre, Pettibone maintained. In his case heard by Judge Nues- sle in district court he asked that the partnership he suid existed pe ‘dissolved and the land sold and di- vision made, Judge Nuessle — held hat there was no question but that laintiff performed many ~ valuable services in various ways, that Tuttle did agree to pay him one- fourth of the profits and that large profit did accrue, but held that not anything in the nature of a part- nership had been proved. From this decision Pettibone appeals. Titles, ranging from “‘von” to higher ranks, are being acquired by the German “newerich” by the simple process of getting » member of the old nobility to adopt them legally—at a price, 3 ee | YEGGS ENTER SELFRI RULE ITALY i’s Orbs |GBORGEGOULD, ! US.RAILROAD | MAGNATE, DIES: ‘Succumbs From Attack of: Pneumonia at His Villa ! Near Mentone, France IMANAGED FORTUNE Assumed Responsibility of | 16 ' financier, | who has been at Cape Martin {here for some died at 3 o'clock this morning. ! | Mp. Gould was stricken with pneu-} imonia at his villa on Mareh 20. For {several days his condition remained | critical but’ he rallied and on April; to be vut of danger. 3 later he suffered a re- don May 3 took a turn for worse, The end came peacefully, ) Mr. Gould's wife and two child- {ren were at. his/ bedside. \ | Mr. Gould, financier and railroad! Jman, succeeded to the leadership of the famous Gould family upon the} ‘death of his father, Jay Gould, December 2, 1892. \ In addition to assuming respon-! i sibility, as trustee and executor, for} ‘the $80,000,000 estate Ipft by his! father, he carried on and expanded | ithe great railroad holdings of the) | latter, and within » few years, dur-{ ing which he applied the lessons! j learned from the elder Gould, he : | became one of America’s foremost | made Trilby sing in the romance}, d financiers. The 6,000 miles! which everyone has read. "| of road left by Jay Gould grew into} Does Mussolini reali: more than 20,000 miles under the} | Mentone, France, May George ay Gould, the American ill HIS. SV GALI-LIKE, EY his hypno-! tic power? He must The first! management of his son, while the} wanes at epee oy a en an many investments in other huge en- ; Cg) "‘terprises, including the Western southern I au billboard pic- uder, a picture so ‘Union Telegraph Company, also we ture of the extraordinary that it held me spel!-| !7eely managed by the principal; bound until I could make out what it! !* es : was all about. The head was in-;. George Jay Gould was born in{ |New York City February 6, 1864, the} clined forward just a trifle and from | O88 | under beetling brows two enormous |*!xth in line of descent from Major) black eyes, the whites showing ail|}athan Gould, or Gold, the original round, huge, exaggetated eyes that |tneestor,” who came from: the south stared straight at you and into youl of England in 1646 and settled in! and through you precisely, like the irfield, Conn. While many of hypnotic stage pictures of Wilton Nathan Gould's descendants attain-' eas Svenga jed eminence in colonial affairs and Pictures Seen Everywhere. through service in the Revolutionary over Brindisi I kept finding War, it remained for Jay Gould to \become the first financier. | Elder Gould's Fortune The Gould family fortune dates} ‘from 1860, when Jay Gould, a part-/ |ner in his fathers hardware store in} | Delaware county New York bought for! ;ten cents on the dollar a control-j ‘ling interest in the Rutland and ; Washington railroad, a little bank- All myself sniped at from the ambush of every fence and wall by those two orlg. 1 could well imagine the ef- fect this might have on the ignorant and less sophisticated peagants of the country. My sole object in coming to Ita was to see and talk with the r markable owner of those eyes-—the man who had turned Italy, almost; rupt line running between Troy, over night, into an arm@d camp) New York and Rutladn, Vt. Young ready to do his bidding—the man uld, in addition to selling hard- who marched on Rome with a pow- erful army at his back and “took” it without firing a shot, took it and forced the king to do his will—tie man who dissolved Parliament and made his word supreme. For t is what Mussolini did and nobody is more keenly aware of this fact that Mussolini himself. He openly boasts that he has but to e his hand and 160,000 “Black Shirts”—Fascisti soldiers—will snap into action and obey his slightest word re, had studied surveying in his time, and took an interest in| building as a result of these! stud | /Two years after purchasing the! road, Jay Gould had succeeded in'| extricating it from financial difficul- ties, whereupon. he sold at 120 the} linterest originally acquired at ten. This was the first fer) of that ge eralship, which, over and over i later life made him railroad developer of his time. } George Jay Gould, quite young, shoved an inelinati to follow in the footsteps of his father. He received 1 thorough edu- cation from private instructors, and subsequently: entered Columbia Uni- versity, but was not graduated. Heir’s Dissativfied Dissatisfaction among other of the of Jay Gould over George's handling of the cueate, however, had! been growing for some time, and in| July, 1919, he was removed as exe- cutor and trustee by a court order. Mr. Gould's first marriage was in 1886 to Edith Kingdon, who drop- ped dead while playing golf on the| Gould estate at Lakewood, N. J., in November 1921. From this union} there were five children, In May, 1922, Mr. Gould married Jeanne Sinclair, a former.actress, 30 years his junior. The second mar- riage was regarde# almost as much lof an elopement as the marriages of his children, Edith, George Jr., an Kingdon. The first news of it came from Paris, where the couple were spending their honeymoon, but it later transpired that the ceremony wag performed ix Zakewood. | K. C. NELSON H IS APPOINTED © TO STATE JOB K, C, Nelson, of Lakota, was pointed fisca} ape agent of Industrial Commission at state mill at Grand Forks, it was announced by the com- mission today, Mr. Nelson, it is cx- pected, will assume the ‘position of auditor, u place created by the legis- lature, when the act becomes effec- tive‘on July 1. Mr. Nelson’s position as deputy bank examiner will be fill- ed by J. L, McRae of Watford City. ETS BUREAU PARTY COMES American Legion to Entertain Them Here Friday Night As ,a consequence of this second} marrfpge, Mr. Gould lost property valued at $3,000,000 left by his first wife, which reverted to a trust fund for her children. | While Mr. Goutd apparently en- jeyed. good ith during the years he spent as a railroad builder, it de- ‘eloped during a lawsuit in 1923 that @ had sufferéd « breakdown, and vas. spending most of his time in durepe recuperating from bronchial rouble, ‘" DE MQLAY ELECTS Grand. Forks, N. D., May 16— ‘Thomas Wiper . of\ Bowbells, wa: slected president of Ivanhbe chapter Order of DeMolwy, at the annual slection held at the Masonic Temple. Other officers named, were: Theodore Rex, “senior councillor; Frank Yan Osdel,' junior councillor; Lloyd Spetz Post American Legion will entertain a party: of Veteran Bureau officials here Friday night, the regular meeting of the legion being postponed. I . The Veteran’s Bureau party will be in Bisrharck ,May 18) and 19 anc will reinstate War Risk Insurance’ and give aid and advice in compensa tion and other veteran’s problems, All ex-service men are urged t: attend the Legion meeting Frida; night,\whether members of the Le gion or not. 2 ee OPEN LATER Londoy, May 16.—The }id has been lifted in Westminster division, Public houses are permitted to re- main open now until-11 o'clock’) A r ruling by the licensing justices re; | Letand Lewis, scribe, and Phil voked the 10 o'clock closing order |'Laughlin, treasurer; all of Grand in effect several yeara .. 9... = Forks. ries ‘HOT SPRINGS RECOVERING FROM the foremost) ; | Yocated in the DEVASTATION OF FIRE AND FLOOD; REMARKABLE RESCUE STORIES TOLD \Only One Woman Injured Seriously When Mountain Cloud- burst Transfor Main Street Into Bed of Raging Current, and Fire Adds to Terror of the Inhabitants of Resort City Hot Springs, Ark., May 16. opened their doors for busines: oF men worked in tireless eff behind by the flood and fire la cloudburst Yashed down the slope streets-—while flames enveloped the buildings in an entire block “Merchants of this stricken city again after a night through which crews to remove the wreckage and debris left Monday when torrents from a mountain to form currents in its principal and added Handling — $80,000,000 another thrent of death to that of drowning. Estate of Father wee © Central avenue, Hot Springs’ main . i thoroughfare and the stream bed Big Attendance hore ifare and the stream af the whirling flood 36 hours carlier, again was opened to traffic though At Band Meet the working squads were able to Thursday Urged clear but a small part of the flots: ch the current had strewn Every juvenile in the city | or piled against stationary obstacle. who wants to play dn the city From this thoroughfare as a base the boys’ band Is expected to be at. Will school at 8 o'clock Thars- day night. The meeting will be held to complete preiiminary arrange- ments, before Prof. Sorlien be- 8 Instruction early in June. sanitary forces today were working out gradually in the rest of the dam- aged area. Norma] activities gf the city had returned or w soon to be resumed. i All public utilities, ¢ electric lighting and street car service, which Because Indfeations are that | were put out of order by the ele- applications may be very large, | nents, again were functioning. every child that wants to play Mrs, Kate ‘Christenson, the on Is espectally urged to be pres: | person known to have received i ent Thursday Ly ieht yo that he | in the disaster, lay in a | i may be sure of getting in the pital today still in a critical con- | peat | dition as a result of a crushed skull! rent and swept along for three | blocks. Physicians despaired of her | as told by eye-witnesses today, swell- CHINESE TRAIN: the wonder that many lives had aammere | Lovett of Fire Company No. 1. | Beat Them and Servants Who! "eed in the work of rescue | jengulfed in the current. Half walk- | jing, half swimming he battled his! ¥ heerecns x and thrown against a coferete post. Shanghai, China, May 16--Met! | When comrades lifted him from the tacked officials, servants who resisted, seized every-| depth of nine feet in many pl | not been Jost in contirmation of early ; While the waters and fire were at| Resist, and Refuse For- | way to a hose cart, lifted his human | bers of the Chinese government gen- water he was unconscious. thing on the tables, despite the pro-! - Parent» are urged to accom: Abe she suffered when she was caught in | pany children If possible. ‘her car by the Central avenue tor-| ‘her rescuers, by swimming, drew her j from the flood. | Stories of remarkable rescues, as | beliefs. Among the outstanding | | heroes of the ster is Capt. John j their height Lovett carried a Woman , . (from a burning building only to be | eigners’ Protest CAPTIVES STILL HELD) burden to safety, then slipped back | \ into the stream. He was swept away darmerie bourded the train bound! When flames burst from the win- from: Peking to Shanghai today at-| dows of the Grand Rapids hotel the tests of the foreigners and held pos-! session of the train for several! ELEA hours, it was learned when the train! 5 roached here this afternoon, i Assail Foreigners Teintsin, China, May 16--Infla-, matory circulars calling on the veo- | ple to rise up against the forcign-! ers have been discovered in a num-| Art O’Brien Charged With ber of nearby Chinese vi and cas ", : in the native city here. The circu-! Seditious Conspiracy lars alleged that a foreign commit- —-. tee whose names and occupations! London, May 16—The court of ap- are given, is planning to turn the! Peals today ordered the release of Ren eeeeGcrnin here; Art O’Brien who was deported to over. torthe Britist jIreland after beign arrested in the {March round-up of Republican sup- | ervisors. ster fore the court on a writ of habeas the state|corpus. On his discharge he was s was be-| immediately taken into custody by between| officers from Scotland Yard and was and ban lead- | removed to Bowe street. In th of Americans! Bowe street police court where O'- held captive in| Brien was charged with seditious Shangtung. The minister said there; conspiracy the case was adjourned were indications that the negotia-!for a week. The court refused bail, tions might drag on indefinitely, =a HERESATURDAY concession Washington, Schurmann reported to department that no prog in negotiations ers for th and other foreigne to reports that certain of the pri oners had been killed, but said ocn- sul reports had reached Minister Sehurmann from Davis at Tsingtau that the bandits had transported their prisoners further into the mountains to the main bandit head- quarters. The consul said the ac- tion followed a conference among bandit leaders. tion to be Held Here GO TO STRONGHOLD Peking, China, May 16—With the government's consent, . Minister of Communications Wuyu-Lin and Gen- eral Yangitch have proceeded to the stronghold of the brigands as host- ages in order to obtain release of foreigners held captive. The state convention of the Dis- abled American Veterans of the World War will be held in Bis- marck Saturday, May 19, with about local posts in North Dakota. The convention will get under way in { the number in the raiding pa HELD AGAIN O’Brien was brought be-} State Convention of Organiza- | 25 delegates expected from various | PRICE FIVE CENTS DGE BANK |WRECK SAFE, FAIL 10 GET MONEY THER! Woman Awakened by Blas! Sees Robbers Driving Out Of The City NO CLUES ARE LEF Safe Door Jammed by Explo sion, and Robbers Can’t Reach Safe Mandan, N. -Robber failed early anything other than a small amou iu change, when they wrecked t safe of the Selfridge State bank Selfridge, according to informati received here by Joseph P. He president of the First National bar and its subsidiary banks in the Slo district. No clues were left by the robber nor was there anything to determi: D., May 16. this mornig to secu A woman, awakened by the bla saw a car driven rapidly toward t! south, The safe door was jammed in suc a manner by the explosion that t gs could not get into the stro be It was necessary for the assista cashier of the bank to drive 20 mil or more to Shields in order to tet phone the news of the attempted ro bery, Selfridge being without te! phone connections. Selfridge is in Sioux county on th« Milwaukee railroad not a great di tance from the South Dakota line. HARDEE HAS BEFORE HIM’ LASH REPEAL ‘Senate Orders Removal Judge Who Sentenced Martin Tabert ot beat their Chinese! flood. was at its height, reaching + aces. Tallahassee, Fla,, May 16.—Th senate passed today, 24 to 0, + house bill to “abolish” the stat: convict lease system. The bil was merely to clarify the statutes as the practice was really abol- ished in 1919, The measure now gocs to the Governor. | Tallahassee, Fla, May 16.—Gove | nor Hardee today had before him { | bill which proposes to abolish i | whip and the whipping boss in st: | convict camps. The Governor's s is-all that is required to ms measure a law. The bill v clinched in the senate yester: | when that body refused to reconsi« ; its previous action, 15 to 13. The senate in executive sess; | yesterday ordeted Judge, J. B. Wil udge of Leon county, removed fr | office. Judge Willis, whose na , Was brought out in the investigat ‘of Martin Tabert-of North Dak«* and who has been charged w | drunkeness and irregularity in off | is the second county official to ¢o the hands of the Governor. The fi jwas J. R. Jones, county sheriff. | Mr. Waite wrote to the Presid | urging that if Governor Smith sho | sign the bill Congress should be co) jveneg and that the Governor | members of the legislature who vo | for the bill should be suspended. | “Every state official who voted j this bill is subject to the law treason, having taken the oath sustain the Constitution of the Ui) eu States,” Mr. Waite's letter sai‘ In answering Mr. Waite, the P ident says: 1 “Pending the approval of the , by Governor Smith this matter ‘largely to be retarded as hav reached the stage where any fede: authority is called upon for a det ation of national policy. W the senate chamber of the state capitol, holding both morning and afternoon business sessions, wh will be ‘followed: by a banquet in the evening. FOUND AND LOST, NEW HUNT FOR VETERAN MADE North Dakota war veterans are asRed by the Disabled American War veterans to join in a search for Roy M. Hancock, formerly a private in the Motor Transport corps, who escaped from the insane hagpital at Jamestown, March 31. 183: FORD CLUB IS FORMED INS.D. Sioux Fails, S$. D.,| May 16—Organ- ization of a Progressive party move- ment in South Dakota for Henry Ford for president similar to such an organization formed or in proce! of formation in other states now is being held up, pending r#erendum proceedings on the primary law. Steps looking’ toward a South Da- kota organization The missing youth is the son of Mrs. Hattie Hancock of Chat- tanooga, Tenn., who waited vainly after the armistice for word of her son. On April 6, 1923, she received notice -from the state hospital, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, that he was Jamestown institu- tion, aceording to word to the veter- fans, and upon communication with the North Dakota institution learn ed that he had escaped. Until the recent discovery that Hancock was insane, he had becn listed as a deserter, The charge of desertion has been removed and he was honorably discharged from the military service as of April 1, 1923. jl be taken in| geegn ts! this state next month, according to 000 was offered today by the trust- word from Roy Harrop, president ofj ees of .Nortl te American Economic Society wnich | the request of Dr. Wal | much of what you say I am fully | accord. “EC “The ngtion had deliberately a’ many years of occasion pdopted ‘/ present policy which is written into the 18th amendment. It is the lav the land. So long as it remains the tional policy there can remain. bul one course for the national govern ment to pursue. This is'to use ever) means to make the law of the lan‘ effective.” OFFERED 16—A reward ‘of $10, Northwestern ee ats