The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 3, 1925, Page 1

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q WEATHER FORECAST Mostly cloudy tonight and Sat- urday, probaviy showers tonight. ESTABLISHED 1873 SERIES TEAMS MATCHED IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Washington Given Slight Edge For Experience, Steadiness | PIRATES HAVE ‘YOUTH Both Teams Well Supplied With Pitchers and Catchers New York, Oct. 3—(P)—Washing- ton and Pittsburg will go into the| world series next Wednesday as! closely matched as any contender in recent years for baseball's highes honors. i This conclusion is : ent from the analy the sep ive and collective cogs the machines. If either club is to Be given un edge, however, expert opinion con- cedes to Washington on strength of superior experience, defensive stead- iness and the pitching prowess of | Johnson and Coveleskie, plus the faculty which the present world’s champions have of rising to emer- gencies. i The Pirate: ets of their rivals, have greater youth speed and batting punch, a combin- ation which their followers are con- | fident will break down the defensive | bulwarks of the veteran Washington outfit. Spectacular Performers i Pittsburg’s array is the more like- ly to tint the series play with bril- Nance, for the club has some of the game's most spec individual performers in Wright, Cuyler and Care the other | hand, hington’s big stars—Har-} ris, Peck, Goslin and Rice—have re- | neatedly shown their ability to meet | a crisis with a sensational bit of | batting or fielding, ' It was chiefly the startling pla: of this quartet which carried the Senators to the top last year. Where Strength Lies Washington seems to have _ its heaviest advantage in the battery! positions while the Pirates have an| edge in the outfield and also the infield, so far as batting goes, al- though defensively the rival inner quartets seem about on a par. In the box, however, Coleveskie and Johnson, supported by Reuther, Fer- guson and Marberry, will give the Senators impressive strength, pro- vided Coveleskie fully recovers from sore back muscles which were under treatment yesterday. Behind the bat, Muddy Ruel has the more con-j sistent record than either of his; Pirate rivals, Smith and Gooch. Ruel’s rifle-shot arm, incidentally, may be a factor in checking some of the Pirate freedom on the bases. Pittsburg’s Hopes To combat Washington’s twirling forces, Pittsburg is pinning chief hopes upon Lee Meadows, veteran right hander; Vic Aldridge, another right hander who came from the Cubs; and il Yde, brilliant south- paw. Behind tnis trio are Ray Kremer, Babe Adams and Johnny Morrison, all experienced and capable! boxmen. This array gives the Pirates a formidable staff numerically but its need is for one or two members to rise to the heights expected of the Senators’ aces—Coveleskie, if fit, and Johnson. Parents Awarded Custody of Child St. Paul, Oct. 3.—UP)--Mr. and Mrs.| Anton Fossen yesterday were award- ed the custody of their child, Irene, by action of the Minnesota supreme court which found for the parents of Irene against Mr. and Mrs, Olie Hitman of Pope county. Shortly! after the birth of Irene to Mrs. Fos- sen the mother became ill and it wa necessary to remove her to,a sani tarium. The father sought the ser- vices of his sister. Mrs. Hitman, who helped care for the child and later; took her to her Minnesota home| from North Dakota, where the Fos- sens lived. Following recovery 0! Mrs. Fossen the Hitmans refused to; give up the custody of Irene. Action was originally brought in} the Polk county probate court and certified ‘to the state supreme court which today returned the child to its parents. { The Fossens live at Harvey, N. D.,| it was said. i Roads Rough After a Week of Rain, Road conditions throughout North; Dakota were not as good today as; they were a week ago, the survey by! the state highway department shows. ; Condition of various routes was described as follows: Route No. 1—Pembina to Grand Forks, fair; Grand Forks to state line, rough. j Route No. 3.—Fargo to Valley City, fair; Valley City to Jamestown good; Jamestown’ to Steele, rough; Steele to Bismarck, fair with a detour in; fairly good corfdition east of Bis: marck; Bismarck to Mandan, paved: Mandan to Glen Ullin, rough; detour at Glen Ullin, fair: Glen Ullin to} Dickinson, rough; Dickinson to Me-| dora, good; Medora to Sentinel, Butte, rough; Sentinel Butte to Beach, good. Route No. 6—Minot to Max, good; Max to Washburn, rough; Washburn to Bismarck, fair. Route No. 8—Grand Forks to Pe- tersburg, fair; Petersburg to Leeds, og 3 Leeds to Bashy, rough; Rug- y to Minot, rough to fair; Minot to Williston, fair. Route No. 9—Portal to Minot, fair; Minot to Harvey, heavy rains; Har- vey to Carrington, rough; Carring- ton to Valley City, good; Valley City to Havana, good to fa’ Route No. 16—Lemmon to Mar- mouth, good. i To j been to instill into the minds of her | | = 6 When Col. William) Mitchell, critic jarrived at Washington to testify investigating board, he was giv with American Legion men who pa HELP BAND AND | SEE GOOD SHOW Local Elks Will Sell Tickets to “Helena’s Boys” | | i i The people of Bismarck will be given an. opportunity to assist. ma- terially in maintaining a band which! will give cone here next summer and at the same time see a truly high class production when May Robson her company come t the Bismarck auditorium Tueasd: evening, October 13. The play to be presented by Miss Robson and her, company is “Helena’s Bo. and is founded on the Saturday ening Post. story “The Boy Mary, Brecht Pulver. ' Local peop! the con-| certs given hy band summer and which were financed b; the local Elks lodge. the Elks plan to have the b a series of concerts continuing! throughout the entire season and in order to give the public an oppor-! tunity to assist in the expense and) still not solicit an outright donation the lodge arranged to have the Rob-! son company appear here. Members| of the committee will . the city within a few day of tickets and look forw. a cor-| dial welcome from all. show} will be well worth the price asked for the tickets and at the same time the/ purchaser will be contributing to-| wards the fund for band concerts. | The Plot The plot of the play is on the many, new theories of this era, modern! thinking, regulating the world, free-| dom for every one, revolutionizing the whole social structure of the marriage laws, abolishment of the old time sentiment. “Hele is u widow with two ons and on their return from col-! lege, she is enlightened on their lat- est study, with such force that the foundation of her inoral s fairly shaki ” whose life work has two boys, only the highest princi-| ples of refined morality, this open| declaration of such loose morals, be-! ing accepted as proper, is the open- ing wedge for her to plan an at- tack. ! Ready for the Wed: “Helena” is getting re: to he married to a man of very high stand- ing, and their plans are all made, the date set and everything is ready, but she has not been able to get the boys alone long enough to inform them of her step. so she decides to have Mr. Truesdell learn of this new and wonderful theory, and they ac- cept the formula as the right one nd will follow it out to the letter in their approaching marriage. The die is cast and all the ar- rangements are made, “Helena” in- forms the boys that both she and Mr. Truesdell are very much enamoured of the new rules for “the Marriage Game,” and all the old, antiquated, narrow minded, puritanical ethi are laid on the shelf, and “Helen: is adopting all the rules that go with the new and free doctrine. The bomb is thrown and when it explodes it gives the boys and their companions a theoretical dem- onstration of a paste-board founda- tion and Miss Robson has a wonder- ful emotional scene. OO I Weather Report Temperature at 7 a. m. Highest yesterday Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 a. m. Highest wind velocity . WEATHER FORECAST North Dakota: Mostly cloudy to- night and Sunday, probably showers tonirht: not much change in tem- perature. & nding is © \ county, announced in F elcoming Col. Mitchell to Washington of the government's air poli¢ fore President Coolidge'’s aircraft rin reception, Photo shows him raded to the station to meet him, Valuable Jewelry Stolen From Trunk of N. Y. Salesman) Chie. Jewelry stolen from a dward L. Mor: ork jewelry salesman, after s obtained it from a railroad tion to which he had sent it from a downtown hotel. 150,000 longing to Morse told the police he Wwd or- dered the hotel er to transfer the trunk and received a check for it at the same t nother chee! was given to a man registered at the hotel Irving Hart, Minneapo- lis. Late: the station, Morse learned a man of Hart's appearance had obtained the trunk by presenting a check for it. Search by detectives reve:led that the trunk had been taken to another hotel and rifled early ; 10 DECIDE WHERE SUITS WILL BE TRIED Defendant Banks Do Not Want Actions Brought in Dakota Fargo, N. D., Oct (®)—Wheth- er two suits of L. R. Baird, receiver of the Williams County State Bank, and Williams county against the First National Bank of St. Paul and the First National Bank of Minnea- polis and others, demanding restora- tion of assets and resources of $1,- 526,9 Dakota 47 will be ate court tried in a North expected to be at a hearing before Judge 1. Lowe in Ward county dis- trict court the latter part of this nth, William special as- r a of Williams the motion is granted the suit would have to be brought either in Minne- sota or n federal court, Mr. Lemke explained. T.C and chairman of the f the First the board of directors National Bank of Minneapolis, was served with the summons and com- plaints when he made a speech in Grand Forks last June. In resisting the service the defend ants contend that they were not do- ing business in North Dakota with- in the meaning of the law, and there- fore could not be summoned in North Dakota courts to answer complaints against them. Found in Ticket © Office of Theatre} Minneapolis, Oct, 3—(#)—A. bomb, loaded with five sticks of dynamite, its fuse charred within a few inches of explosion, was found late last night in the ticket window of the Wonderland theatre, 27 Washington Avenue south, Minneapolis. Charles Oliver, manager of _ the theatre, remained on the second floor rgo today. If | president of the Soo| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1925 WCURDY 10 FILE APPEAL INTAX CASE! TO PAY DEBT FRANCE WILL GQ THE LIMIT Patterson Will Be Co-defend- Caillaux Disappointed Over) ant in Proposed Court | Action UNCTION IMPOSSIBLE APPEALS TO THE PEOPL Failure to Reach Set- tlement ' McCurdy Notified Too Late Uncertain Whether France to Carry Out His Orig- | inal Plan Appeal from a resolution passed by the Burleigh county board of commissioners "reducing taxes on property owned by E. G. Patterson. chairman of the county board and owner of the MeKenzie and Soa ha. tels, from $59,579.83 to $35,327.15, will be filed today or Monday, F. E. McCurdy, state's attorney, declared. Notice has been served on Charles Swanson, a member of the county hoard, of the propcsed court action required by law, McCurdy an- ounced, Kafer, deputy sheriff, has been » to find Patterson in order to eon him. Patterson will it in the proposed ac- states, a serve not tion, Me Er Tt was the intention of the state's | attorney to file an injunction to nota ‘up. settlement of Patterson's back uxes, allowed a by the county boa T. H.W. missioner, clared Failure of Thoresen to notify Me- | Curdy of the pending settlement. be- fore Putter: h re: pproved by Thoresen, state tax com- Thursday, Will Accept 5-year Agree- ment York, Oct. (P)— After a appeal to “the heart of Ameri- eph. Caillaux, minister of; nd members of the French back 3. vously disappointed” to effect a settlement of $4,200,000,000 debt, M. Cail- ‘s country would do every- within the limits of | her 8 th to pay the debt. He said he ‘might return to Washington in six ck taxes from, With months to resume negotiations. Tributes Bring Tears welled in. the unas he spoke nly to tributes to Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, and Ambas- sador Myron T. Herrick at a test ronial dinner at the Lotos club higher than between men; M. Caillaux d that something 1s the com- Te: McCurdy de- mon friendship between our peoples.! no othe ‘ i r thought th jt clusive, forestalled ;#!! the people of Amer: injune Droceedings, the state's|my country with the samé attorney pointed out, expressed here. i | : ' settling our obligations, be as- McCurdy Notified Yesterda sured that we will do what we must| McCurdy ‘received official notifi-}to the limit of our strength. My cation of the tax commissioner's ap-|country is a country of labor, a coun- { proval of the settlement Friday. try of pride. We will do thing | “I see no reason why it was nec-| we can | jessary for me to notify McCurdy WX said he was uncertain than I did,” Thoresen stated ay. MAIL FLYER TS MISSING _ Pilot on New York to Chicago | Route Missing Since | Thursday j . Bellefonte, Pa. Oct. 3—M— Search was renewed today for a imail airplane which has not been heard |from since it passed over Hartleton, 130 miles east of the local landing | field, shortly before midnight Thurs- ‘day on its flight from New York to ic ago. | More than 100 men scoured the | mountainous country between Hart- leton and Bellefonte yesterday with- Jout finding a trace of the missing |plane or its pilot, Charles H. Ames. i. A heavy rain last night temporarily {halted the search. Ames left New York at 5:40 o'clock Thursday night on the return flight with air mail to Chicago. | Fears for the safety of Ames were expected by some of the officials, who said a forced landing at night in the mountains would be extreme- ly hazardous. |Bismarck Visitor Notices Changes Made During Past 45 Years R. W. Day of Los Angeles, Calif., jis in the city placing special agen’ for a rope machine which was pa- tented by his son. Mr. Day notes {many changes in Bismarck since his last visit here, which was 45 years ago, and he tells an interesting story of conditions in this territory at that time. On his previous visit here Mr. Day and his wife made the trip from Deadwood, D., by stage coach. | Rainy weather and much mud were encountered and it required four days to complete the journey, Ab- sence of the antelope, deer and buf- falo, thousands of which were seen along the trail at that time, was not- ed by Mr. Day in his present trip. IC. Cc. Hearings on Grain Rates Set For Moorhead S. Paul, Oct. 3.—@)—Hearings on | the application of the various rail- {roads operating between North Da- ‘kota and Minnesota points on grain freight rates will be held in Moor- | head immediately following adjourn- ment of the I. C. C.’s hearings at Fargo, N. D., Oct. 19, members of road commission announced today. | Hearings by the I. C.#. will be held at Fargo relative to the interstate shipmen’ of grain of the two states. Spring Earliest of the building following the even- ing performance, |listening to hig radio. He told police that he heard footsteps on the first floor and went down to investigate. He opened the door to the ticket booth and found the bomb that had been pushed tnrough the cashier's window frém the outside, He summohed police who took the Date for Letting Fargo Bridge Job Indications are that the contract for the proposed bridge over the Red River at Fargo will not be let until next spring, it was said today at the state highway department. bomb to headquarters. +| Surveys now are being made to _Mr. Oliver could give no explana-j determine the point at which the tion of the apparent attempt to] bridge should be locxted. Plans will wreck the building, Police stated that enough dynamite was contained in the bomb to wreck nearly the whole block, be drawn during the winter after the location is selected and bids will be received next spring, it was said at: the highway department. j the Minnesota warehouse and rail-| P! ament would tempora’ ments of $40,000,-! accept the — five-y agreement with pa 000 proposed by the American! commission. He had power only to! sign a complete funding agreement, | he said, g London, Oct. hewspapers are temporary debt by ce and United States. They express the fear that it will} react most unfavorably on France's debt to Great Britain. The Times) alone refrains from lamenting Bri-| tain'’s hard case. While regretting that a complete settlement of the Franco-American debt was not reach- ed, it thinks the temporary arrange- ment is a step forward and congra- tulates Finance Minister Caillaux for accomplishing more than any of his predecessors. ~P)-—The irritated over settlement the London | the | reached | Canada and U. S. | Women Golfers Play; For Championship St. Louis, Oct. 3.-—-()—For | probably the first time in the history of, the woman's national golf championship play the finals today had to be postponed be- cause of a deluge of rain which mede several of the greens un- playable. If conditions permitted it_ was planned to play 18 holes of the finals at 2 o'clock thi after- noon, and the other round on Sunday. It seemed possible, how- ever, that the entire play would go over until tomorrow. St. Louis, Oct. 3—()—Canada to-| day contested the women's national| golf championship with the United) States when Mrs. Elexa Stirling; Fraser of Ottawa played the 36-hole| finals at the St. Louis Country club with Glenna Collett of Providence. Mrs, Fraser, who won the title three times, was brought face to! face with the 1922 champion by vir-| tue of her 19-hole victory in the! semi-finals over Louise Fordyce of! Youngstown, while Miss Collett owed her second chance for the title! to a one-up deefat of Edith Cum-| mings of Chicago, who won the| championship in 1923 by defeating! Alexa Stirling in the final round. Former Zep Pilot Threatens Draftsman For His Testimony Lakehurst, N. J., Oct. 3—@)—A personal threat against James Work,| chief draftsman at the naval station! here, because of his use of the word “liar” yesterday in his testimony was made before the Shenandoah na- val board here today by Captain An- ton Heinen, former German Zeppelin ilot. Telling the court that Work’s state- ment, that he had accused the Bur- eau of Naval Aeronautics at Wi ington in connection with the di: ster, could not be sustained, he asked the protection of the court in the matter and added: “I will tell him I am going to fight and I will show him that I am able to do so.” After verifying his previous testi- mony and presenting a chart show- ing the positions he believed from the testimony that the Shenandoah was in during the successive stages of the storm Captain Heinen was e: cused. Whether he will be c: later for further examinations w: not announced. After an executive session the court announced the tes- timony of Work, to which Heinen objected, would be stricken from the record as irrelevant and unneces- sary. | | accounted for, j ranging in length from six to eight Bare been seen. ~~ ST Copyright, Harris & Ewin: Rear Admir Rear Admiral H. A. Wiley, been summoned to appear be investigating army in Holdup at St. Paul This Morning Paul, Minn, Oct a) men held up a New York dia-; mand merchant and even other per-| sons in the or jewelry | store here y ind. | with precious stones valued el than $150,000. i The bandits, who are believed to] have followed the merchant, J. Drei | tus, York, 5 | whe came early their holdup a few “minutes Dreifus entered the Gerber Flourishing: pistols, the three rob-| bers ordered the merchant and clerks! in the store to the rear of the build-/ ing where they forced them to face downward on the floor wh they seized the hand grip in which} the stones were packed and fled. SUB FLOODED; — NONE ALIVE Efforts Being Made to Rescue! Bodies From Ship's | Hull | | Board Camden off Block Oct. 3—By wireless to jiving operations to recov- er the bodies of the crew of the S-51 were temporarily halted | shortly before noon today be- | cause of the growing roughness | of the sea, | 7 | | i S. Camden off —(#)—Divers early today red a fifth body from the sunken submar- ine S-51. It was brought aboard | the Camden at 9:15 o'clock this morning. The body was that of the sea- man found yesterday in the ine room compartment of the S-51 by divers who recovered two other bodies there. With rain falling but the sca fairly calm, divers went to work early today in order to take ad- vantage of conditions which still afe favorable. It is expected that several more bodies wif be recovered during the day unless the sea roughens and stops all work, fhe body was identified as that of Paul D. Berk, engineman, second class, of Shoemakeraville. Penn. Berk and his wife re- | cently had been living at New | London. | | ‘ew London, Conn., Oct. 3.—AP)—| With all life on the S-51 known to be extinct, efforts were bent today| toward the removal of bodies from the metal tomb at the bottom of the sea off Block Island. Already five of the crew have been two bodies having been recovered Tuesday and three found yesterday Of these found yesterday two were! brought to the surface and one was| left in the submarine. As several of the 33 men lost on} the S-51 were washed away as the! ship sank after being rammed by the City of Rome a week ago last] night, the exact number. of bodies! still within the hulk was unknown, but it was presumed to be 26. \ Discovery yesterday by divers that} the submarine was flooded from bow} to stern snuffed out the last glimmer of hope that any of the men whol went down with her would be found} alive. It also marked the end of the desperate efforts of the navy to} raise the submarine to rescue those aboard. | Operations of the rescue fleet have} been enlivened by the appearance of; a school of shovel-nosed sharks, | feet. Sailors expressed the fear that, the sharks may have consumed the| bodies of some of the crew believed to have been swept overboard when| the S-51 sank, Four of the creatures | Plane Carrier _ Christened By Officer’s Wife Quincy, Mass., Oct. 3—()—The huge plane carrier Lexington slid smoothly into the water today at the Fore River yards of the Bethlehem Ship Building corporation while Sec- retary of the Navy Wlbur and a par- ty of naval officials stood by. The ship was christened by Mrs. Theo- dore Douglas Robinson, wife of the assistant secretary of the navy, SUMMONED BY AIR BOARD 1 Robert E. Coontz (left), former comr ro Pr ‘Diamonds Stolen tablished Sunday at Om a by Mrs. ; Anna L. Hazen, — pres of _ the North Dakota department, and Miss flour and min [ dan, | months PRICE FIVE CENTS TUNNEL CAVES IN-SEVEN MISSING FIREMAN DEAD, ENGINEER I$ AMONG MISSING Others Caught in Slide Crawl Through Tunnel to Safety CAME UNAWARES Hope For Safety of Those Unaccounted For Is Abandoned Richmond, Va, Oct. 3—(#) Benjamin E. Mosby, fireman, died today of injuries’ received yes- terday in the cave-in of a sec of the Chesapeake and Ohio tun- nel at Church Hill, which trap- ander in chief, ana 1 left), fort i + an ped upwards of 40 workmen en- commander of the battleship division, have] gaged in reinforcing its walls, esident: Coolidge’s Commission now His is the first known death and navy aviation in the great slide of earth, but Tom Mason, engineer, is believ- ed to have been killed when he was caught in the cab of his en- gine and several negroes are still unaccounted for. Most of those trapped were able to dig AUXILIARY themselves out and crawl to safety. Richmond, Va, Oct. 3.--UP)—All but seven of the more than 40 men caught in a cave-in in the Chesa- peake and Ohio railroad tunnel at = Church Hill here yesterday were shown in a check up today to have ‘lepationis iia made their way to after a Delegation’s — Activities to | harrowing experience pictured. by Nene Fi hie survivors. Center Around Mrs. Tom Mason, engineer of the work a train which ‘was just leaving Fenelon tunnel when the cartn slide oc ene red, is believed to have met Members of the American Legion{ When his engine was buried in the - a anche. all of North y from were cn route toward Oma- parts There is believed to be no chance of survival either for the six negro . today to attend the Fifth{ workmen who are missing. national convention of that organi- Crawl Through Tunnel zution which will be held coincident; While railway rescue crews, fire- men and police squads were making frantic efforts to reach the entrap ped men at the end of the tunnel where the slide rred, most of the survivors, having crawled through the mass of fallen dirt and masonry, with the annual meeting of the Amer ican Legion, In addition to the 11 official dele- gates, including Mrs. Eugene Fenelon of Devils Lake, a national vice sident, scores of women fr {were straggling out at the other end. 1 of the state are expe : They had made their way, a number attend. y of them will be aboard? of them with broken arms and ether the North Dakota special” injuries, through the inky blackness which is scheduled to leave St. Paull of more than 3.500 feet, not knowing the Chicago and on Great Western! when another collapse’ might occur railroad at nine o'clock Sunday} sbove their heads. morning. Many other members of] ” ‘phe survivors described tne crash the auxiliary are en route to Omaha] of breaking timbers Sone ee: by automobile in company with their] falling earth ‘and masonry as the husbands, sons and brothers. Headquarters for the North Dakota members of the auxiliary will be es- cave-in came without warning while the men were engaged in reinforeing the tunnel w MINOT POLICE ARREST TEN FROM ST. PAUL Six Charged With Vagrancy —Serious Charges Against Others Minot, N. D., Oct, 3—UP)—Charges of violating the narcotic laws and of carrying a concealed weapon tate sterday were filed against L. E. jor and Jack Goldie, respective- both of St. Paul, two of a p of 10 persons, including one woman, which was arrested early yesterday morning in two local hotels by the Minot police. Six of the other men, all of Paul, were charged with vagranc and were released under bonds of $25 each to appear in police court to- day. None of them made an appear- ance and the total of $250 in bail money was ordered forfeited. Abbey M. Hurley, s eeretary. To Boost } A special ¢ ss had charge of arranging the decorations for the North Dakota table at the dinner of t s' s which will be heid Monday night at the B Omaha. Souvi ndies restaurant in nirs of tiny sacks of ture glasses of honey will be distributed as part of the plan to boost North Dakota and the table will be decorated with sheafs of the leading grains produced in this state and samples of pottery from North Dakota clay. The report which Mrs, Hazen will make to .the convention on behalf of North Dakota will show the larg- est membership in the history of the North Dakota department. Ac- tive enrollment now totals 4,083 and North Dakota ranks 15th on the list of states. ‘The activities of the North Dakota n will be grouped around is who was elected na- tion: ce president for the north- western district at the St. Paul con- vention in 1924 and has since been active in promoting the interests of the legion auxiliary — throughout North Dakota, South Dakota, Minne- a Nebrask: yoming ll of which are under 1 charge. , Mrs, Fenelon is officer from North delegatio M “ s named to the vice Held For Investigation presidency after having served as! Harry Robertson, alias R. Rankin, first president of the North Dakota] who was not released with the oth: department in 1921 and later as na- tional committeewoman. Official Delegates S. Mickelson, Man- present national committee- woman, left for Omaha to attend the meeting of the national executi committee of the auxiliary which is scheduled for Sunday morning. Other delegates to the convention are: Mrs being held for investigation, will be charged with vagrancy. ether the charges will be filed against the woman, Lola Babeaux, a pretty brunette, remained undeter- mined today. Steps in her case de- pend upon what action Goldie takes with reference to the charge which has been filed against him. The men who were charged with vagrancy and who furnished bonds of $25 for their Mrs. and Frank Mayer, all of whom gave St. Paul as their home address. Bank Officer Optimistic Over A. L. Knauf, Jamestown, who will] felease included: Robert Casey, R. becon national committeewoman for] ‘a. Wells, Clarence P. Conley, Tony the state on January 1; Mrs. H. Jo] Ewi ‘i i. ” Smith Schucster, “Hankinson; Mrs, 8) Ewing, Alias Steward, H. A. Smith ampbell, Lisbon; Mrs. James Mor- ris, Carrington; Mrs, Emma Falcon- er, Bismarck; 'Mrs. G. M. Howard, Williston and Mrs, C. W. Poe, Wash- burn. ——_____—-4 ae * | NEWS BRIEFS | Huropean Affairs ——$$$________—___-o Optimism is the keynote stressed Medina, N. D.—Phillip Gross, 23,| by J. L. Bell, vice president of the was killed and his bride of four] First National Bank, following a trip abroad during which he visited England, France and Switzerland. Nr. Bell believes rehabilitation work in France is progtessing rab- idly. probably fatally _ injured when their automobile was struck by a freight train. Fargo—Eight important freight rate cases are scheduled for hearing here this month before the examiner of the interstate commerce commis- sion. Winona, Minn—Identification of Winona’s “mystery man” is expected to be cleared up when Mrs, Anna Lemke, Fargo, N. D., arrives here. She believes the man is her father, August Kurtz. Grand Forks, N. D.—Harold Fish, 11, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fish, Lawton, N. D., lost his right arm’ at the elbow in the belt of a threshing machine, “There is little I can say with re- gard to Europe owing to the short- ness of my stay abroad.” he stated. Masked Robber Steals Payroll of © Woolen Company Lawrence, Mass., Oct. 3.—()—A masked robber entered the wool mill of the American Woolen company here today, robbed the paymaster of 4d payroll estimated at between $10,000 and $12,000, and escaped,

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