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PAGE TWO THOUSANDS OF PROPLE ATTEND FUNERALRITES Major McLaughlin, Famous Inspector Indian Service, Buricd at McLaughlin MANY INDIANS PR (McLaughlin, 8. D., Messenger.) The remains of Major James Me- Laughlin who died Saturday at Wash- ington, D. C., arrived in McLaughlin mpanieq by F. H. Daiker of the Indian Bureau, who remained for the funeral as the official representative of the government. The body was at Aberdeen Wednesday by Sid- Melda and Buzz McLaughlin, andchildren of the deceased. The body was brought from the tin to the home of R. 8. McLaugh- q Friday morning was taken to srnard’s church where Requiem uss was celebrated Fr. Cassidy of Mobri Bruno of Fort Yates. in state In th when the fun A detail tr Post of the American Legion, in uni- form, met the train when it arrived | and escorted the body to the resi-| The Amériean Legion also escorted the body from the ad | to the church this morning and took part in the funeral services. Interment was made in the family { plot in. the, local cemetery where | three children of the deceased have | been ad te reat in that fe “shoura | Went's death spread rapidly through the downtown districts, » Several id away on the gentle baie A pee Ric hacas li oe etoen tee: the | By NEA Service THEY COMFORT PRESIDENT’S WIFE de of the graveyard in prairie city that bears his name, and | he made arrangements tg this end | several years ago when he had the | remains of his children buried else- moved he! ns from everywhere on the | ¢ Rock reservation came for the funeral. All business was sus- pended in Fort Yates and Superin- tendent Mossman ang the entire force of Agency employes were present. Among others from out of the city who were here for the funeral are D, F, Marry of Superior, Wis., Chas Zi bach, A, C. Wells and Phillip We of Fort Thompson, South Da Judge Hanley, Major Welsh and McDonald of Mandan, J. M. Carignan | of Fort Yates, Wm. Pamplin of Self- | ridge, and many others. | The inside history of Major Mc- Laughlin’s promotion from Indian These four women of the presidential party are comforting Mrs. Hart ‘Agent at Devils Lake to. Standing | body toward Washington and Marion. Left to right, they are: Mrs. M. Rock reservation is best stated in the | dent's escorts; Mrs. Hubert Work, wife of the interior sccretary; Mrs. language of D. F, Barry of Superior, |merce secretary; Mrs. Sawyer, wife of the president's physician, Wis., noted Indian photographer, ang | —~~~~-~~~~~~-~~~~~-~~ for many years a resident of Fort Benue paccilel fotciedi, & close |(the Soumnern eactile : yenrss Actes Mr, and Mrs.| | friendship with Major McLaughlin, Bet pol Dima onthe lore er | which continued to the last. Mr. Bar- ry says: “After the Custer massacre in 1876, Heavy Loss in the Indian leaders were held as pris- Factory b oners of war at Fort Buford, N. Fire| Finally the secretary of war ordered the chiefs taken to the Standing] A fire in the 1 Rock reservation. For a time the In-| dan Candy factory premises in dian authorities were at a loss to de- | three-story Gill block in the east end cide on a man to take charge of the | of the city Saturday night caused a} hostile Indians, but finally Major Mc- | loss of betwe and $7,000. | Strain of Position Too Much Laughlin, then agent at De ils. Lake, City Engi 5 in passing | was ordered to, Standing Roc saw the smoke pouring from the rear For More Than Four “{ doubt if any other living man|of the building and turned in the coulg have handled Sitting Bull,” said |#larm. Practically all the stock and) Years Mr. Barry. “I remember on one oc- |SUPPlies in the } n Candy factory | i casion when a council was being held | ¥8S ruined. Insurance carried inelud-| Chicago, Aug. 7.—A federal amend- at the council house at Standing | 64 $500 on oe ta anche water, ment limiting future presidents to Rock, Sitting Bull beeame enraged at | es in neta flooded the| one terms was advocated here by George Fairbault, the assistant agent | USed in fighting the ooded th : and ordered his followers to killyand |#doining basement of the Mandan] Senator Albert Cummins, Republican, RESae itn inthe Missourl river: beverage company in the same build-| Jowa, president pro-tem of the Unit- ling ng a considerable loss. The! eq States Senate, Senator Cummins “Major McLaughlin arose and tod e je i main Sitting Bull not to do that, Then he | ¢#dy factory has been forced to sus-| was enroute to Washington to aid in | preparations for President Harding's ordered Paul Bloom, who was a | Pend business. cousin of Mrs. H. H, Grace of Superi- a aresties | funeral, : ‘ or, to bring him his pistols. Bloom ACCEPTS NEW POST | “Of ‘course, President Harding tdi si ae Rev. Hubert Buerschinger who has| would have been renominated had he ad eae teaa aa ordered Faizbault | heen assistant to Rev. Fr, Clement liged’) gald BenRtoRiGamin en iin ta decet. This tive the |Dimpfl of St. Joseph's Catholic have’ always believed that 0 feet Gompleay witit kts, comme ‘eg church for the past year and a half!is enough. The gr@at resp of McLaughlin held commis. | A23 been assigned the parish at Un-| and the strain of the office are more From 12 penidents af the Unig, | derweod: His place in the local par-| than any man ean stand. The Pres- : ; ish will be filled by Rev. Peter Woll-| jdont of the United States is required ed States, and concluded more treat-| nik of St. John's. University, S$ eee Niendele ateieat Agere the ease R ern, than any thse John, Minn., who arrived Saturday |}ounds of human limitations. His tory of the country. |t> take up his new duties. He is a break him down. -On-July-tet, 1920, he entered upon | member of the order of St, Benedict, | Cres and worries break him do his-fiftieth: year of continuous serv- = ice in the Interior Department, and| Mrs. J. Tr was eligible for retirement. On this | from Oshkosh, Wis, where she at-|{nit the precideney to one ee occasion | the Washington Evening | tended the golden wedding anniver-| u Star under: ped he ee edding anniver-| might be made a six-yéar term but I Stee ns fe jpf fweust 20, 1920, easy, celebration of her parents, Rev.| inv not sure about that, in| Let Contract For | stand the strain which the Presiden- avis returned Sunda “Maj, James McLaughlin, friend of g the Jail n, who is rounding out his fiftieth year of continuous service in | jured in an auto accident near St. H adi the Interior Department and who is | Anthony Saturday is reported to be Fair Building * eligible for retirement, is going toj|in a serious condition. Mr. Schmidt prs rt ad be retained because Uncle Sari needs | was crushed beneath the car and| Dickinson, Aug. 7.—Contracts for| him, “On account of efficient serv- | thought for a time to be suffering with | the construction of a new exhibit ice,” John Barton Payne, Secretary |a fractured skull. Attending physi- | building and a roof over the grand- of the Interior, recommended that | cians today declared the injury con-| stand were let this week by the exe- = Maj. McLaughlin be continued on the | sisted of a severe brain concussion. | cutive committee of the Stark Coun- active roll, and the Civil Service Com- zi ver |ty Fair association, The contract, = mission has approved the recommen-| A. E. Aldous, chief of the geological| for the exhibit building was let to dation.” : survey of the U. S, department of In-| the George Heaton Lumber company. =. “On July 1 next he will complete a terior for the district, is spending. @!The Walton & Davis: company will half century of service, practically | few days as the guest of Supt. J. M.j build the grandstand roof. In both ; all of which has been in connection | Stevens:of the Northern Great Plains | instances contracts were let to the : with Indian affairs. His récord shows | Field Station. lowest bidder. Work will/begin im- ithat he has negotiated more Indian | - Surveys are being conducted in the mediately. = treaties than any other official of the Dakotas and Montana with a view to! phe exhibit building. will.he erect- eaveetinent A obtaining information in regard to| 4 0° the foundation and floor laid ? oil and the coal beds. A survey as to | C4 On the foundation aba last year. It will be the same size oil possibilities has bccn carried’ on ra sround Mott, other engincers and geo. |#8 the administration building and logists have been working around will be used for agricultural exhibits. Burnstad in: Logan county and coal Complete it will cost in the neighbor. i Jands have been receiving special at- | hood of $2,500. tention. The placing of the. roof on the - grandstand will give the. fair associa- . tion one of the largest and finest Predicts Large Large “(sLasmictaren af ship IAA Ja the, state. Honey Production | Te grandstand has a seating ‘eapa- city of more than 1,000 persons, More than $2,000 has:beon set aside in pu¥ses for the racing programs to Paul Schmidt, age 82, who was ai Join i in Marriage = In California The marriage of Miss Alma Hjelm- zfeth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pan ‘wiltiaton, N. D,, Aug. 7—Ten tons Bt Manon, ant, q,Gerres | of haney willbe produced in the im- ‘Stabler. of Mandan place in M 3 mediate vicinity of Williston’ this Edesto, Calif. July 20 at the he i oes A. Rogers, pioneer’ bee- | The committee is now busy arranging |< Mrs, E. A. "Bisson tte, e home of | Veeper here, predicts. However, this} eard that should Hotabler, They were atéended by Mrs. smecok ost 2° small fraction of the finest and : a “the horey prodaction | florthw A orgeg coe sided ay enere a: few. lei tae Part of the crowd which assembled in front of the Palace Hotel, San Francisco, as news of the pres- struck silence, and were only prevented from swarming into the hotel by hastily mobilized police reserves. | Human frailities are too great too! |lieved that the sandhill country whera’ ding as the special train speeds. hie | J. Jennings, wife of one of the preg- Herbert Hoover, wife of the com- The national-capital at Washington | with flag at half mast. : | McHenry County’s Home To Be Built Minot, N. D., Aug, 7.—McHenry couipty's. Houeitor ‘she’ nour tor he | ent ers of that county carry. drawn by Architect Ira L. Rush: of Minot, and will be submitted to: the | j commissioners in time to enable. them ‘The-cstimatod cost of the structute ranges from $12,000 to $14,000. The property on which the home will be | situated was purchased a few: weeks ago by the commissioners. i dred’miles coy (Men Who Kicened: * Jail Recaptured Newark, S. D. by iff Powers. of ' and: Minnesota, South Dakota counties. a liquor.charge. Barness, when sur- | cert. rounded in a shack in the hills fled to a field but was was taken near Hecla. Officials be- the men were.taken hai dezvous for a g: jen’ &'Ten- nig 4 ing in the two states,” Se eee BITES #0Y, SUCKS WOUND}. mors “ Glendive, Mont, . peievilis Gain |e of Ba: brother. Lise s as at were 1 ing for a swim, aM ii des a epee! and: was. ie THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE IE iy Scenes In San Francisco Where First Rites : Were Held In Hotel For The Late President Soo: | Rev. George M. Landis, pastor of mn Near Velva Trinity Baptist Church at Marion, ©., the church President Harding at- situated six miles from Velva, will | be constructed in the near future if| the reptile. Prompt action by the/ present plans of county commission-| father who cut the wound with a; knife and sucked out the poison and Plans for dwelling -are_now being| then rushed: the lad to a hospital probably saved his life. i ie call for and‘open bids on Avgust 'BO: a 3’ and Girls’ and of Buxton ‘ Home From Tour; Bgxton, N. D., Aug. 7—Sixteen hun- ered in the last six! weeks. and thirty-seven concerts play: | ed mark the tour of /the northwest , by the Buxton band, which was con- cluded last Monday. The band is'made up of -45 boys LaMoure, N. D., Aug. 7.—William and girls of Buxton under the direc-|president’s death. Barness and Charles Bonttcher, who tion of Arthur R. Thompson, super- | evening to his chief when the | about two wecks ago sawed their way | intendent of schools. The group trav-| ~~~. from the LaMoure county jail were | eled in their /own trucks and slept in recaptured in the Sfnd hills : near|'tents. In thegr tour of North Dakota the two states ij LoMoure and deputies ‘ef Horth’ and | whieh thele tour was restricted, ‘our| broken ‘and, wevere® cuts inflicted | rnass was | appearances were made in. Minneap held for auto theft and Boattcher on| lis, one of which was an encore co t. Boattcher i v PL aise aiaw A a BINDER, the. farm home, of her erandiatter, Page, N. D. Aug. 7—Trampled ben| Ales M Mody,” wher ‘hig neath the hoofs of a runaway team ed atte when the horses, dragging a binder,| | crashed into.2 buggy in which. she| © - SW: POBTMAST oe te 2 Eva 5 4 curity, none y Hae Rircwa ‘beneath sy! hoofs.” The binder was dragged. Chief O’Brien, head of. San Francisco’s police department, holding back some of those who attempted to enter the presidential suite when news of the pr esident’s death became known. hundred persons gathered in pwe-| in the picture marked the limit ‘beyond ae none but doctors, family members and attendants could 50 during the president's illness. WHERE HARDING mete WERE HELD This is the reception room in the presidential suite of the P#lace’ Hotel, San Francisco. 1 services for the dead executive were held here Friday evening just before the body started east. it, Her scalp was torn, off; one leg bout Her héad and body. Funeral’ services were held Satur- ‘ day’ at Ayx and interment’ was made| —— rat Buffalo, ° ‘The ‘baby ‘lived with io cpathels at the accident i Tt calls ‘alao” fe appUie| ox ru acre hes "TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1923 The screen shown By NEA Service First, religious -| tonight \and Wednesday. Gen. ‘Paring ane the Palace hetel immediately taligering thie ‘The gencral tas making his’ second visit of the { By NEA Service. aaataeriae AR Re her body; badly mangling and cutting bezora Mr. Strom took orse the gt it Na of. the’ been organized. in, Rou- its. motto is “Justice to:the DARWIN URGES REFORMERS 10) CHASE UPLIFT Do More Harm Than Good, Says Descendant of Great Scientist ue é DONE HARM BEING Propigating the Inferior of Society Instead of Superior London, Aug. 7.—Social reformers as a class do much more harm than good, according to Professor Leonard Darwin, and society would improve much faster if they ceased to worry about it and let it go its own way. Professor Darwin is a son of the great Charles Darwin, and it is na- tural that he should hold strong 4 views on the survival of the fittest and how this best can be accomplish- ed, He says that the misguided ef- forts of many sincere and earnest social reformers really result in en- couraging the continuance of rage inferiority and deterioration, which is just the reverse of what they arc trying to do. In a recent speech be- fore the Eugenié' Bdtication Society, of which he is president, he dwelt upon the harm he thought social re- formers were doing. “Mate Selection” was the title of Professor Darwin's address. He was not sure that mate selection, in’ the present state of society, was gobd for the future of the race, and argued that when the fit married the fit they tended to have smaller familics, while the inferior people continued) _ producing unfit types which became more marked. * , “To secure human. progress,” he said, “the inferior types must be eliminated, and all that should be demanded is that this process be made as little painful as possible.” Pity for others_and solicitude for their liberty the speaker regarded as ¥ among the things that constituted obstacles in the way of racial im- provement. “Tho philanthropists of today, how- ever, Professor Darwin said “only look on one side of the question, and entirely ignore the racial effects of the reforms they are advocating.” Both out-of-work doles to those constitutionally incapable of work, and out-door relief generally, if given without regard to the probability of parenthood in the future, would di- rectly tend to prbmote the inferiority of the race in the future, Motherhood”endowment to the na- turally superior and unfit ‘alike, these and other methods of relieving ! distress, would have the.same result, he contended. Altogether, as viewed by Professor Darwin, there seemed to be a pretty blue outlook for the world generally, and even enlightened cugenists ap- peared to be able to find little com- fort in his views, But Professor Darwin said his ob- jection to mate selection would disap- pear if “by some method ‘less cruel than that of natural selection the in- ferigr stocks could be made to mul- tiply less quickly than the superior.” Sell Bernhardt’s . Home in France Paris, Aug. 7.—The late Sarah Bernhardt often tried to sell her country house on Belle-Isle, off the coast of Brittany, but she never found a purchaser. The property in- cludes a farm, an old fort and a rock! strewn piece of shore front. ~ Within’a few weeks of her death; however, a buyer was found at 360,- 000 francs, somewhere about $20,000. He intends to turn the house into a summer hotel, and will have @ jazz- band and dancing on the first floor before the present season’ is over. The mayor of Palais, the port of the little island, has hoped that the municipality would acquire the prop- erty and convert it into a, Bernhardt museum, but the sale wag put through before he could get. his plan before _\. the public. WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- erally fair tonight and Wetinesday. Slightly warmer Wednesday. For North Dakota: Generally fai Slightly warmer Wednesday. _ General Weather Conditions Althgugh the pressure is high over the Plains States and Mississippi Valley, \rain. has fallen at many places throughout the Region. Fair weather prevails west of the Rockies. Temperatures have risen somewhat over the East and Southeast, but t from the upper Mississippi Valley * westward and southwestward tempor- atures remain Lsikat orm. The highways eee hoat the State are gener-Ay in excellent condition. North Dakota Corn and. wheat Stations. High Low Preci. +75 50 0 PC 0 cl oe o*c 03 Cl ,| Dunn Center . 73 51 0 “| sitendale ves TH BBO Fessenden » 1 50 0 Grand Forks . 14 45 0 Jamestown , 0 | Langdon .. 0 TW 45.0 % 53 0 ration | Napoleon s 4 Perhbina rg Ligeti iste eat ve “the 3 LR fea rave): took ee a aid sender morn § island, ith ® ‘population j-of: da oes is cut. off for~ out bi: it day | onthe ‘by stormy seas, a ead wee Partly cloudy; C, cloudy; R, rain, . Orris 'W: Roberts Mardovoetie Asparagus is believed to be. the oldest known pak used for food. ; 4 eee foe