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WEATHER FORECAST Probably snow flurries tonight and Wednesday. Colder tonight. TABLISHED 1873,° F SENATE NEARS FINAL VOTEON WORLD COURT t > Propcnents Confident of Hav- , ing Greater Margin Than on Cloture Vote AMENDMENTS NUMEROUS It Is Believed the Final Vote Will Come Late Today © or Tomorrow _—_ NO VOTE TODAY Pie sh ers ake em senators insisted today on the world court, an wel ate agreed on the procedure to be followed in con- sideration of the various res tions. Reservations offered hy Sena- tor Swanson, Democrat, Virginia, were taken up. ~ Washington, Jan, 26.—-(4)~--Under the tight of cloture the senate upproached today the vote which will take the United States into the world court. Whether the final roll call will vome before adjournment today or vt be deferred until tomorrow was pro- blematical. Proponents of adher- ence Aave concluded their arguments und opponents now are not inclined to prolong the discussion. More than a score of reservations to the Swanson substitute resolution of adherence have been offered, how- ever, and these must be disposed of before the final vote. Roll calls will be demanded in\a number of cases. One Hour Limit Under the rule which the senate ‘invoked yesterday, 68 to 26, for the second time since adoption in 1917, vach senator ts limited to one hour on the resolution of adherence and all amendments which have been of- tered. Some of these. amendments will provoke more or less general dis-| fe vussion, but leaders of the pro-court + forces are hopeful that a final deci- sion can be reached by tonight se that the tax reduction bill tan be called up Wednesday. On the decisive vote the leaders Yor ratification ure confide: i they will be able to muster an even great- gin ‘than the five above tl 'y two thirds recorded yei ity for the reselation of adherence. Hope To Reject Amendments Likewise, they are confident that as radio other creations they,“have the votes to) feject au amendments to the Swanson sub- stitute resolution, although on! majority will be necessary to adage amendments, The position of pro-court leaders is that the additional reservations in . the Swanson substitute embody the senate figures contained in the great- er number of the prongess tumen ments and they plan to point this out as an added argument for carly action. Opponents of the court make no effort to conceal their satisfaction with the reservations which Senator Swanson and his sistants have added to the original Harding- Hughes-Coolidge reservations. They hold the view that these haye been framed to meet most of the objec- tions raised in the debate which be- yan last December 17. After a half hour had been spent that creased. The p in agreeing on the order in wnich reservations are to be considered, Senator Heflin, Democrat, Alabama, took the floor for the full span of | “the hour permitted him under the cloture rule adopted v9 yesterday. Defends Wilson He spent the time defending Wood- row Wilson from the recent criti- cisms of Senator Blease, Democra' South Carolin Senator Gillett, Republican, Massa- chusetts, expressed regret that friends of the court hed seen fit to so grea ly modify the original Swanson re: olution of adherence, He was fo lowed by Senator Frazier, Republi North Dakota, an ‘opponent of ad- hesion. Senator Frazier asked whether ‘those ‘who oppose entry into . the court are to be disciplined for not. adhering to the world court plank in either the 1924 Republican or Demo- cratic party platform. “Nothing half so radical as. this, said Senator erasers alaanren in the progressive party platform.” Frazier" Otters Substitute No reservations, he said, could re- move all the objections. He w approval of his proposal to substitute international system of policing se I maiden speech, Senator Robi- son, Beale, Indiana; opposed the ‘7 court. >» Earthquake Shocks Are Registered on Two Seismographs Sere aeFotren Fra p aa 26. n earthqu of Ls n= siderable violence was register the sei lemegeaeh of the Puy De Bone 4 observatory. at 18:65" o'vlock morning. ‘The three seconds. mated to have meen A fegp » at eae alate i this” serine e great “alsatee Bt ued for two ‘ial map of | ‘of Alaakany Well, this is it—the 70-ye song was written. year-old chureh ¢ Inset shows the ‘pastor, church hap lately become popular as a place for e!opers to be married. AUTOMOBILES COST NOTHING IS CONTENTION Human Re- sources Which Would Other- wise Have Been Wasted Doctor’s Illness Reveals Fact That “He” Is a Woman That the: 20,600,000 automobiles own- ed by Americans have actually cost in i ik. Gis. euteution vor Taking up the study of medi- cine, the “boy” qualified as a physician, but.kept the cloth- ing “he” had Worn since child- hood. Little hope for the recovery of ‘them nofhi terday o:. the cloture issue. They! certain ee count upon several Democrats as well! class at Jame: us some Republicans who voted have started aw } ugainet cloture to join in the major-! su arm argument on the is that automo- and other modern Juxuries, such moving spictures and “are alinost wholly new creations out of our human re- peoames" Eyre sources such as inventiv ganizing abjlity, manageri working: power, things which othert wise would have gone to waste if | TROUBLE FROM , Twelve Ocean Liners Battling Toward Port, From One to In a@ brief on the subje on the prdrmative, one samt that | rial has been used up| it is insignificant in com-j| parison with the labor element and Prpbably as much new iron ore h been discovered and has been used. proof of the ness of their argument, out that “labor has not been t ferred from other industri clothing; shelter, transportation, edu- cation, ehienaihnen’. furniture, ma- ind other articles stheir own or in- as been made up, or arly.so,- and little new labor has been imported. “On the conftary the greatest produttion corresponds the period of declining immigration. Of course there have been new debts created but they are owed by. one jass of Americans to other Amer We have not borrowed from abroad byt are lending more abroad the enormous new wealth is all abso- People Made Happier ‘Nor has there been a subjec cost in toil, fatigue and deprivation of the producers of new luxuries. genius and talent have expe- rienced in increased degree the joy creation and achievement; rorkers have been ‘healthier and hap- pier than if they had been on the working days and the value of | ay time has been greatly en- hanced by the very products of the A 40-mile spin steadier work. family invigo- the evening ‘with rates a worker so that the next: in the factory 8 not as fatiguing asi it used, to be.” Former Dakotan _Is Mentioned for California Job Thomas Allan Box Box .of Sausalito, California, is bein Governor Friend that state as a di recommended to .. Richardson of able appointee to ‘one of the vacancies now existing on the board of prison di: ae to A ars receiv » Box was at one | time a Feadlede of North Dakots, and e time secretary 0: ota counsel gf defense. _ se who ‘have written let- ict attorney at aaa: Jwas-a@t one time = saan “attorney ‘general of North ic ens DACRE) pal. the only ma fi by ween BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1926 ‘COAST GUARDS INDICTED FOR VIOLATING LAW Dale"? bout which the ‘orge Hanna, The though Dr. acticing here a man, the doctor When her secret became known . Mayfield told friends her parents in England needed a son to meet legal requirements 10 protect’ property rights. ‘They dressed her-as a boy and as-time wore on the habit became der Mayfield is held out by phy- Three. Days Late New York, Jan. 26.—(P)--Three steamships were distress today as the result of a storm out in the At- lantic ocean. At least 12 liner$, in- cluding the Leviathan and. the Aquitania, were battling toward Port with nearly 6,000 passengers aboard, Most of the liners have been de- jayed from 1 to 8 days by the storm, h already has taken a toll of lives and was responsible in part for the sinking of one |ship.. The ships in distr were thé British freighters Antinoe and Lar- istun, and an unidentified vessel near the Panama Canal. When the liner President. Roose- velt launched a lifeboat to take off the crew of the Antinog, two sailors of the rescue crew were lost as the lifeboat was crushed Nagainst the Antinoe. The Norwegiaw freighter Solvang sank off Delaware Breakwater Sun- day after a collision with the oil tanker Vacuum, and.one man was drowned in the heavy seas, when the crew of 29 was transferréd> to the tanker. s af Weather Report | Temperature at“7 a, m. . Highest yesterday Lowest last night . Precipitation to 7 a, m. Highest wing velocity WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and: vicinity Pro- j began ser ance during the suspension. the court's verdict, stipulated yester- day that the sentence will be execut- ed as ordered except as to the pro- vision depriving the former colonel of all pay and allowances. ivalued by Mr. Valinto “at $100, 000. MITCHELL VERDICT IS AFFIRMED Former Chief of the Air Serv- ice Today Begins Five | Year Suspension \ IS ALLOWED HALF PAY ! President Ccolidge Modifies! Sentence On!y as to Pay Allowance pension froin th Contri of the court ma him under the 6th arjicle of war fa ubordination in connection with his determined fight for a unified service, Mitchell will receive half pay and a certain living allow President Coolidge, in affirming Will Get $376.67 a Month Under the president's decision chell will “during the dent.” Be Mitchell has met the new situation thus far without comment. With the president's decis. ed as closing the official p! the case, it is likely that it will pro ide new material for discussion in congress, where the former colonel has many friends. Valuable Paintings Stolen at Miami Miami, Fla.,: Jan. 26.—()—Miami today was broadcasting to police of other cities to aid them in recovering paintings said to be valued at $230,- 700, stolen yesterday from the studio of Adolpho Valinto, an artist here. The paintings stolen include, “The Temptations of St. Anthony,” by Le- onardo Di Vinci, which was said to have been completed in 1480. It is 2 WOMEN BANK | ROBBERS G0 ON! TRIAL TODAY}: Counsel Indicates That _Insan-| ity Will Be the Defense Offered in Court bank robbers—Mrs, Catherine Rogers and her 19 year old daughter Zera— went on trial here today. Counsel for the women has an- nounced thaf the defense will at- tempt to prove that Mrs. Rogers and Zera are insane and were so at tne time of the alleged crime. The de- fense has summoned a number of} she insisted th: Sioux Falls medical myn to testify on this int. First State Bank of Renner at Ren- ner, S. D., near here, last Novémber, when they obtained’ some $300. They were arrested the following] old. day and are alleged to have con- fessed. The women have remained in jail here since their arrests. FIVE OF BEST DOG TEAMS IN THE PAS RACE This Year’s Event Will Cover 120 Miles During a Three Day Period The Pas,’ Manitoba, Jan. 26. Only five of the’ bést team north country were entered toi the official opening of the ninth an- nual The Pas Dog Derby. to be run 120 miles, and will last three days. One-third of the distunce is to be covered each day, over a|thrives well in California, where it is course on the Saskatchewan river. 2 The entrants signed for the first lap today “are Billy Grayson, Earl Brydges, Harry Olensky, Ross Mox- ley, and Emil St. Goddard, all of The y snow flurries night Ae Wed-| P; nesday. Colder toni For North Dakota: Probably snow | flurries. tonight and Wednesday. Colder east and central, portions to- WEATHER CONDITIONS Low pressure, accompanied by light snowfall-and moderate temperatures, aeons from the Great kes i Weg ake to Alberta. High sure, accompanied by fair, cold weather, prevails. from the western slope of the Ro fea the Pacific Another covers Sask- hewan and Manitabe, 2 ‘eekly port | With the temperature rere nor- mal, light preci ovat little snow on the Di iy mi iphone for out id for ate tne wi eer work Toad con- ttgage com- Hoc aie ey ea “Shorty” Russick, former. derby winner and regarded as a favorite this year, failed to enter at the last moment. In: previous years, The Pas race has been a 200-mile non-stop affair. Here is the first picture taken of Martin Durkin, Ch i eated beside | |der, ardent love {suave and well-dr had the knack of attracting all the! |sweetheurts he could manage ever Having Since he was a small town sheik back | rangled and dis- unless he gave her more Known Her Eight | Years I Sioux Falls, 8. D., Jan. 26.—()—| years,” he South’ Dakota's confessed women} thought I was sing! “Recently she got a ‘ She wanted to go out She began taking | r larking at nights, told her I Caner ko. out take her tor houses and to cabaret $ ened to tell m The Rogers women held up the| lutions if 1 di t take her out. + She-Threatened To Tell‘ She! wanted ‘to ta night life be perate and in stand that I couldn't an to break off our But she wouldn’t listen. | "isthon. 2 alone know what po: The next thing I knew she Bet cas fend there before me | ae ol betause he did not want to be charged with murder, se pis suibeted the body of throwing the aaa oe in a field at Media, and hiding the he:‘l i trestle a short distance home ‘at Bywood Heights. slaim to Fame on home cooking. The town, of 1000 people, never hu a doctor, dentist, undertaker, ambu- lance, drug store’ or cemetery here are no restaurants i The derby this year is scheduled} new community. a fayarits, Christmas t: tree. TODAY IN WASHINGTON House nears decision on operative marketing bill. World court debate in senate under cloture. ick tastifies on ouse committee. defense bill in BY ROY J. GIBBONS (Special Correspondent) Chieago, Jan. 26,—Will 0 the wisp; Martin “Durkin, dapper bandit and nonchalant man-killer, captured after spectacular man hunt, is still the | vorld's ‘champion ‘sheik’ i Durkin presents a peculiar “com-| One minute he is a daring} Uae nman, wearing a bullet proof vest vend ah | who stand in the way of the ation of his crimes. The next minute he is a kind, ten 1ecess- sed, Durkin has in GYiffith, Ind. Dared Death for Love He has sweethearts everywhere, lapparently. He has , let {with all kinds of Maluable h ty bly stolen presents death to visit girls he seemed to love.| go gunman, after Siward Dowd of the department of compartment in the train and overpowered hin before he could Durkin--The Sheik of Sheiks! Dapper Gunman Forgot Easily, So Betty I inds Her Place Is Taken By a New Flame CHIROPRACTOR CONFESSES HE KILLED WOMAN’ Admits, in Second Confession, fui perpe That He Strangled Miss inking nothing of killing ment Good looking, ! FIRST PHOTO OF DURKIN AFTER ARREST | rest on a train at . one of the dete his Justic ‘LEWIS SEES SUDDEN END OF STRIKE All Depends on Attitude of Called for Today Operators at Conference | 3p the | A couple of years ago he enjc a triple honeymoon, taking three this light o? loves to Florida in stolen automobile. Lod 1 here under a guard! two groups to heavy to overcome a regi- ment, Durkin pays only a b tention to the plans. that be Instead, thoughts ed with anxiety. and es from suffi his ar I about “the other Werner, for within an inch of b uple of months ago in a x weeks, an 18-y dane, |in CAlifornia a few years ag e station shimmy in the poli so effectively that the about Durkin, whom the Betty Hasn't Forgotten But if Durkin has forgotten Bet hasn't forgotten Durkin. When she learned that Durkin had | ‘forsaken her memory and had mar- married-another girl,| ried-—actua’ she was first dumbfounded, then, an- gry. Durkin had never talked mar- | riage to her, Betty. To be sure, this may have been because she a) rend | had a husband, though she was not! living with ‘him; but anyhow. | the | | without-benefit-of-clergy proposition | had been all that Lurkin had offered | her, lice believe they, will add conside ably to thei information about Durkin’s — mis- deeds. Rich Gifts All Durkin will say, however, is: { “Don’t believe all the cops say. And leave my wife out. wot it. She thinks I'm @ square guy Apparently #he does. The hand- some young sheik who came to the little Minois town—in a stolen auto- mobile—gave her a $2000 diamond ring and a costly fur coat, and bore her away with him after a regular wedding. ‘Marty’s been awfully good to m she says. “I’ve known him for two years, and I believed him when he said he wanted to go straight.” “SAME OLD BAY Paris.—The Bay of Biscay is the same as ever. Investigation of a re- port that the bed of the bay had un- dergone a sudden upheaval revealed the story as a hoax, the government announces. A special survey ship vent out to look over the bay. JUEATHS OMELET Diign Prance. “On a tombstone near this city carved this jitaph; “Here lies, mourned by his-family and lamented “by his pa- trons, Pierre Mercier, rial or of the famous , Merci sryelate recipe for which his son, living in “the Rue | Dijon, is the sole Lalas ea red at-| ng made for his trial—although he faces! am certain,” said Mr, Lewis, “will ght, the death penalty. | have clarific nto be; our negotiat that! prised if be taken care of ‘prop-! prevail in the joint ¢ ing through n oe sheik fashion, he refuses! th! to. worr; | ht Betty ny too, "TL hegan to be | came But | to death a d- | Chicago Pep cee Off with the old, it- on with the new--Durkin has alrew: ‘forgotten Betty in the companionsh lof his wife of lold girl who formerly was M ea whirl at Sullivan of Cornell, Hl. \ ja Up until recently, however, Betty hight the Hane came; seemed to be first his affections, to a climax. és je" met me at my office. She insisted w ng shoti tion of |1t was Betty who got him out of jail| for the immediate’ resumption . of lee mies waaea euntres ps' forgot} jndefinit had just) to change them, ‘BOOZE PLANT So Betty ‘has intimated that she} will begin to talk. If she does, po-! already sizable total of ‘operated when they raided a five- quest the : mil night that if th okes- | men would y their insistence pat the strike would | ter the meeting op-| It is the third attempt by th adjust their differ- ened. ences, A new pressure of public opinion, exerted within the last 48 hours, I the atmosphere for ns and Twill be sur- changed. spir not nf Others did not sh » miners’ leaders “Operators Oppose Lynett Pian The j it plain be- fore g nt to a res the optimism plan of li was the only ion to the \ The operators’ chief objections to ithe Lynett pr , which provi¢ work at the old wage y unless the miners agree OF UNUSUAL SIZE RAIDED Agents Claim to , Have Uncov- ered Biggest Distillery ever Operated [tend the ceremony. ;; overcome the jinx that has silenced | because of marine disasters on the f first two nights of the test. i O. S. calls have claimed right of : ‘overed one ‘illeries ever story building last night occupied by the Southern Syrup and Refining]ing foreign stations will broadcast comp: Agents estimated the plant had been turning out $100,000 worth of alechol'a week for more than a year. No one was arrested, but agents were sent out to look for Frank Parker, former army aviator. The plant had complete idetrack facili- tigs, and included a still 80 feet high, seven 5,000-gallon mash vats, seven 300-gallon mash tanks; five 500-gal- lon storage tanks, two 500-galion heat- ing tanks, one 500-gallon. reeeiving tank, und’a complete set of cooling ‘coils, Agents said the plant been tipped off and those in charge had dumped the still'and escaped be- fore they arrived. SONG WRITER ITER. CRITICALLY ILL San Antonio, Texas. Jan. 26.—(?- Guy Massie, who composed “The Exe oner Song” and other’ melodi: critically ill of sinus trouble at the base hospital Fort Sam Houston, where he ‘was admitted a few days ago ‘a veterans’) bureau * patient. Physicians say cannot live morey than a few month: peers y ASU With « new jack: just- Tnvented it Mes ne eye nee Ft ea PRICE FIVE CENTS FEDERAL JURY NAMES 13 IN ITS REPORT Forty - eight Other Members of Alleged Bootleg Syn- dicate Indicted BILL DWYER IS LEADER Nine of the Guardsmen Still in Active Service—Rum Ring a Big One New York, Jan. 26.—()—Thirteen members of the coust guard and 48 other individuals were indicted today by a federal jury investigating the alleged bootleg syndicate headed by “Bill” Dwyer, former race track Nine of the coast guardsmen. ed in the indictment are still active servite. Three separate in- dictments were returned charging the 61 defendants with violation of the federal prohibition law and cor y to violate the law. grand jury has spent six weens in investigating the alleged rum ring, which is represented by | the federal authorities as having con- trolled 18 ocean steamers in the rum running business, Dwyer and more tl a score of his confederates were arrested in December and since then four bouts, supposed to have been in the trade, have been seized. Cardinal Mercier to Be Honored With National Funeral Brussels, Jan. (A)—Cardinal Mercier, primate of Belgium, will be honored with a national funeral in the Cathedral of Ste. Cudule here on Thursday morning. It will be the third such funeral in the history of Belgium. The body will be brought to the Cathedral from Malines, and King Albert and Queen Elizabeth, together with the crown prin and. other members of the royal household and * thigh government officials and mem; ‘bers of the diplomatic corps, will at- After the ceremony at the cathe> dral the body will be returned to Malines for the entombment in the eats of the. Saint Rombaut <cathe> ‘DISASTERS AT SEA HALT LAST NIGHT'S TESTS O. S. Calls Claim Right of Way—Foreign Stations Heard in U. S. New York, Jan. 26.—()—Officials qorteciins the week’s international broadcasting tests will try tonight to eastern stations in the United States the air. For only 15 minutes i Tent night and Sunday night have * eastern stations been, able to broad- cast. Dispatches from abroad indi- ate that only a few “DX” fans are losing sleep in attempts to hear from across the sea in European wee small hours, With more stations in Europe and South America on the air last night than on Sunday night, reports today showed that United States lis- teners had heard at Jeast nine sta- tions--7EAJ, Madrid, Spain; 2LV, Liv- erpool, England; 6BM, Bournemouth, gland; 2L0, London; CYB, Mexico ¥, Mexico; PWX, Havana, Cuba; oay, Lima, Peru, and LOW and LOX, Buenos Aires, East Has Better Luck Four stations were heard at Mur- blehead, Mass. Reception of fo: programs was more successfu’ New England, the Middle Atlanti stations, than in the middle west, a though in Des Moines, lowa. a year-old fan was raised to the enth heaven by hearing Mexi, on the two-tube set he made-him: In Denver 2L0, London, and Mexico ity William . idnight, a women’s chorus from Breslau, Ger- many. Other unidentified stations,. most of them announcing in Spanish, were heard in the ea The follow- tomes from 11 to 12, eastern time: FOAX,, Limal Peru; LOW, | Buenos Aire: Madrid; } Hambu: Stuttgart, ia Bebosnte Breslau, Vienna, Prague, “Munich, Munster. The American program will go on from 10 to 11 p. m. eastern time, RECEPTION VERY POOR. IN BISMARCK Radio reception in and around Bi: marck was very poor last evening, and as oe naence no-one, so far as can be } was able to tune in any of the Reni stations in last night's _ intermational broadcasting® tests. The reception was very an it was possible to fiir pisos ae few of the ited stations Pelt the even’ volume ng Radfo fans’, however, that soon, s0 that ¢ stations test week comes es Oa,