The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 17, 1926, Page 1

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| 4 '* Wade and “Ogden, Round the, 4 From the Army ) a throu; \¢ from he the Pacific. fe Kellogg. dowbtl ‘| y ess (W! ‘. tind @ w jo ottnt constant mi-| Mostly busta: di and Thurs- day; not much change. ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 17, 1926 . \ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Las PRICE FIVE CENTS ST. PAUL COMMISSION BROKER IS MISSING TODAY - GLOBE FLIERS PLAN TRIP TO POLAR REGION World Aviators, to Resign HOPE TO START JUNE 8)} a Civilian Flight Is Being Back- ed by Alumni of Four Universities ~ New York, Feb. 17—()—Lieuten- ants Leigh Wade and H. H. Ogden, crack American fliers who circled the globe for the army, now are to/at the Cit; undertake a civiman trans-polar| Bismarck Kiwanis club. Proceeds flight seeking new A aad to claim! , for the United Stat Coincident with ‘the resignation | from the army of Lieut. Ogden in! Washington yesterday, Lieut. Wade in New York announced that he, too, Lieutenant Wade will lead the ex pedition and Lieut, Ogden will be as-! sistant. Other army fliers ure ex- pected to join them, but their names are withheld until ‘their resignation | becomes certain. Lieut. Wade denied that his own withdrawal from the} army was prompted by the suspen-! sion and resignation of Colonel Wil- liam Mitchell. University Alumni Expedition | The flight is to be known as the | ‘American University Alumni Expedi- | tion, and is backed by Alumni_of | Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and the; University of Philadelphia. One of its primary objects will be the location of land near the pole ns a possible air plane base for the United States. Lieut. Wade expects to. resign from the army within the next two -weeks, The expedition hopes to leave ttle on June 8, and to make its J. L. Bell and Judge John Burke Members of the Burleigh, Pioneers’ asso ion and their de: scendants, over 200 in number, at tended the annual celeb: association at the Grand P. tel last evening. ‘The a was larger: than at any ifie ho- end: affair was most enjoyable. | Following the banquet, served at 7 o'clock, J. L of the county’s pioneers, gave un in flrat flight early in July. plans cen a TODAY Bei kota, saying that he wished to add his tribute to the men and women who helped build this community, Pointing. out thatthe city of Bis- THE TAX ON FOOLS. marck di ROMANTIC OIL. - AMERICAN NOT sexicay. ecker, ewis ition in of ‘how a little later, ot he 1804 and L IN BISMARCK THURSDAY NIGHT | The Rhondda Welsh male singers, who will give a program ony aitalls Auditorium Thursday evening, under the’ auspi a community building fund. Electra, Texas, UT J. J. Martin, secti foreman, kicked a can which he found in a Banquet Followed by Talks ae County previous! ‘gathering of the pioneers and the| = OF DEATHS IN one teresting talk concerning the carly! CONVICT CAMP: history of this section of North Da-j | hee not*get its start os the; tesult of an accident or the whim! mernere-ae sae expedit told ener erat of Alabama- NETWORK OE - POWER LINES Hyrdo-Electric System Links| ' Factories, Homes and Farms in Province MAIN ROADS LIGHTED Rivers of Canada Have Been Saddled to Develop 750,- 000 Horsepower oO we A EDITOR'S NOT This is the, third of a series of articles on hydro- electrical power. In view of the fit in Congress over =) question of public or pi electric administration has a nattonal topic.) BY W. M. BRAUCHER | (Special Correspondent) | Niagara’ Falls, Ont, Feb. Across Canada stretches a armada of mills. Hitched to the mills are the roaring waterfalls- and tumbling cascades of Canada’s rivers. waters of the land have. been f the from the entertainment will x0 into | i| Man Kicks Stray | Can—Three Are | Blown to Bits 17.— Texas, 17.) per on wi h its news 1s se foreman, }] printed. In Quebec are the great pulp and! paper plants of Abitibi, patch of weeds along a railroad right of way near here. to have be stolen here re of a quantity The can contained nitrogly Brothers, St. Maurice, FE. B. Rady! | ine, and Martin and two Mexic and Laurentide companies. | ion hands were blown to bits. in Ontnrtd are the: ds": BSeih)| \] Two others were injured. the Fort Frances and Ontario com- The nitroglycerine is thought [! panies; in New Brunswick, the Bathurst company at Bathurst, and in British Columbia the Pacific Mills Powell River at Vancouver and the Company. Rivers Do Work To run these mills the rivers of Canada have been saddled to yield} 750,000 horsepower and the capital) invested in the industry is half a bil- lion dollars. Drawing upon a forest area of 350,000 acres, the paper mills Canada” constitute one of the reatest industries. ing up the! such a rate>that fear has! d at raw material run out. There _ is; continuous agitation for the placing Son Was Beaten to Death,'of an embargo\upon export of pulp. Yet the industry is being enlarged Man Tells Attorney Gen- | constantly. The development work bee calls for an vutlay vf about $40,-{*! ; 000,000 and it is announced that thi n ONE SURPRISED “BRIT Mf International Harvester Company “BRITON. ” T boats Pied the Missouri river fol?" ruscumbia Feb. 17.--)--A! spending $6,000,000 for the pureha: ae northward to Bismarck and general investigation into recent of timber limits and water powers BY ARTHUR BRISBANE | (Copyright, 1926). and people realized that great railroad was to cross the Mis. souri a great town would arise. Italian government runs a Bell told of the jockeying for The fatest drawin; {of his son “Pute,” who died at a | ment profit of five million dollars|tlements only a short distance’ Conyi § ing, eight t¢™ that ranges from Niagara Falls’ gambling excitement being increased | apart. s convict camp after serving eight 959 miles west to Windsor, 200 miles 1 by an individual predicting winning Name of Town Changed Taylor, in his complaint, charged| UP from the falls to Georgian Ba numbers. The numbers didn’t win,| In.1873 the name of the town was! that his son was beaten to death| With numerous belt lines and ex! but in Naples, alone, the people, changed f om Edwinton to Bismarck,’ by two negro trustees, who had been sions covers western Ontario like «| spent fifteen million lire for tickets.| in honor df Prince Bismarck of Ger-j ordered to punish him. Prison rec-|"¢t In Italy they call the lottery “the tax on fools.” ‘i man capital to this vicinity, the same time the county of, B We need not tritieize Italy, for in} leigh was organized. The Pret this country according to statistics] jan church—-Bi race track fools tax themselves cight| gious organization. hundred million dollars a year, handing the money to bookmakers. And get rich quick schemers tax the American public, especially wom- en, a thousand millions more. first the Bismarck Tribune was bah city was incorporated in 1876. r of gold the Black Hill a new enterprise to th providing stage coaches Arains to convey gold convey gold seek Then The marvel is that ‘the. neople have any money left when the gamblers and the get rick quick schemers fin- ish with,them. It is all for the best ‘probably. He who loses his savines must continue to work hard. Hard work, not peopié living on their in- comes in idleness, is 'what the coun-| try needs. Se in 1883. . Even the prosaic oil business is ‘ romantic. You know of the oil well that the Rockefellers have “brought in” within the arctic circle, It would cost fifty millions to run in a pipe; line, But at least the Rockefellers | know that there is an arctic teserve. | ress. Judge Burke Talks Hon. John Burke, who has lived in | past, present and future. Judge Burke, now a member of the state supreme court, served for several yeurs in the house of representutives, ‘Associated il sala. “bring you! ialek in the state neenalg, | anid hoy pateteg ate ik oid: RRIE yeah) for six years governor of the state. Associated 3 runs a xaos line half a! mile out on the bottom of: the sea,{ has_a flexible pipe anchored at the « Surface end fills tanks, storm or no. storm. e Neupy. At Ventura, on the Pacific coa the Shell Oil Company’s docks were wae away. Its tankers could load no oil. ‘to the state by serving as United States treasurer for a number of ears. : “The strides this state has made jduring the past 50 years are all due to the hardihood and courage. of its pioneers,” the judge stated. He told of the hardships encountered during the years from 1888 to 1294, when practically every crop was a total Toss. courage to go out on the prairies & . build up, homes and transform he There is much excitement about | wilderness into wheat fields,” said the Mexican-American. dive resort, the speaker, “but the strongest ‘ties maintained at Tia Juana just ucrossj on earth are the ties of friendship the California border, Two American\ woven in the warp and woof of ad- girls drank in one of the Tia Juans} versity,” : saloons with their father and moth- Biating ibet in the’ years to come ae down ping up oil; marines some day will find much. wi for enterprising prospectors, ‘he flying machine is prospecting, now. | are wells the water, used in er, shen it is said, they were drug-/ there bea great demand for and subsequently oussa; cously agrioultura] land, the judge briefly reated by Seca that may be shot for! outlined the onderful agricultural theig erie, cane prnets ae Beeniblities ‘of No ae Dakota, as well a e N-/as its man; er great resources, od with, shame, oe HiP stt his| and said that-Shere is u great future Site's and Bi daughters, to wipe out hin store for this state. “The time the stal mm come when the sons and daugh- ters of the pioneers will make this| very sragie and news that 52" of| state’ the garden spot of the uni-. ‘s drinking dives have beenj verse;” Judge Burke said in closing. eee ‘Vocal ‘inate oy Maes py Larson gration of United States puter to ona Bans Halverson, humorous the dives across i Miss Clarice Belk, and And wi an ee : aa a soning as by Mrs. V. J. LaRgse pers talk about : igh ne from e ‘they should x of the old so i, a Cae ae baa the ‘old- Fa coer yay where al Mr. he the lottety, as do many other nations.) location of this city and how at one yielded a govern-|time there were three distinct set-} many, in the hope of attracting Ger- About ure The Présbyter- reli-! 3 established | here that year, and in the same year) started, Bell told of how the finding; brought | ' — TS APPROVED Deadwood. ame the boom days in 1882 and 1883, and the city grew in popula- tion from 900 in 1875 to about 5,000 The. speaker touched brief-| ly on the pericd of depression which! | followed through the 80s and into’ the 9s. Following this, he said, be- gan the city's steady, solid, substan- tial growth, which is still’ in prog- North Dakota since 1882, gave an san eloquent talk on North Dakota, its Later he brought additional honor It takes men and women of i Sas deaths of convicts at Alabama mines; in British Columbia, operated by made by Attorney General convict labor is being | Harwell Low Bills in Ontario ar eikewie i earn Advocates of public ownership | quizy be sonducted into the death ample of what a government-admi istered utility should be like. A sys Toronto, with 535,000 population,! is getting electricity from Niagara at a cost of about 1 cént a kilowatt, Hamilton, Ottawa ords showed Taylor died of heart COAL STRIKE. hour, and rate. The slight changes are erned by distance and local di ences in load and hours of usage. Be- fore the day of the commission rates as high as 7 and 8 cents prevaiicd in these cities. The cheapness of this power was attested to by residents and facto: managers in all these cities. The hotel that does all its cooking by electricity is common in Ontario. In the last 10 wyears 44,000 electric stoves have been installed in homes and restaurants of the province. Charges throughout the province | are based upon a standard rate, with three different classes of use: domes tic, commercial (such as store) an power (factories and big users). There is a 10. per cent discount for prompt payment. Roads Are Lighted Night is ‘changed to day along the roads of Ontarig, where th ight every 100 féet.. These maintained through county asses ments. Thousands of farms are hooked in’ with the power system, Farmers along the power tines have the 5: advantages their city neighbors en joy. Where a pole line must be built to serve the farm, the farmer pays a small part of the cost of the line, mick is deducted from his paonthly | bills. H The progress of the power commis- sion since 1917 when it bought its) first big plant, has been phenomenal and its’ methods: and administration | praised universally throughout the, province. It has grown into a sys-| tem with esters between $250,000,000 | and $300,000, Shortly poral his death last sum- mer, Sir Adam Betk, late chairman | of the commission, when asked for'| London, Production Will Get Under Way Tomorrow—5 Years of Peace Assured Scranton, Pa., Feb, 17.-Anthracite production will’ be underway tomor- Tow. After five months and 17 days of idleness, men and boys will wend their way through snow clad val- leys to the mines. After the break- ers quit for the day in many sec- tions, coal trains will be on the way to the consumers. At a miners’ convention, final ap- proval was given late yesterday to the peace pact arranged in Phila- delphia last Friday by the represen- tatives of the operators and miners. The agreement is expected to insure five years of peace and prosperity in the anthracite fields. The agreement will be signed by and‘ union leaders here —______—_—_+ I Weather Report | Temperature at 7 a, m. Highest yesterday Lowest last night £ what he thought the best expression Precipitation to 7 a. m. Olof the service the commission had eee ye velocity 10] rendered, said: HER FORECAST “We ha’ For Binmarck and vicinity: . Most-| gris $100 600; fectric. light | ty fair tonight and’ Thursdays not | pilig»s soem Sleetrie much change in temperature. oe BY ' For North Dakota: Mostly fair ‘The romance’ of tonight and Thursday, except unset- tled in extreme west portion. Colder tonight in-extreme south portion. WEATHER CONDITIONS Pulpwood Embargo \ Would Not Affect | Newsprint Supply Chicago, Feb. 17.-(#)—American pesseneers would: get’ plenty of newsptint at prices at least as rea- sonable as they pay now even should Canada place an embargo on pulp |wood, Major H. B. Burgoyne, St. Catherines, Ontario, told th the Inland Daily Press Association. C; R. But- ler of Mankato, Minn., in ‘reporting to the fact finding committee, re- auaatee that the members ‘follow a new system in "Ne ae reports. He The weather is somewhat unsettled in all sections and pricinitation ‘oc- curred from the Roeky Mountain re- rion westward to the Pacific coast. A high pressure area, accompanied by colder weather, covers the north- ern Plains region and temperatures are below zero in the central Cana- dian Provinces. meee ere moderate temperat cm _ EEE ind in el AT EAU 3\4. As Kitchen, commissioner of agri- f}culture and ir, is one of the peakers «at se! of Farmers} said under the Miers syatem, eee which a aetoe Bie aie was not eas) ct discrepan- ry schpol Th in the a et arriving at Mite] Amen toeetings elven paryiey. _ figures 7 pints eee oemeesene ane) TOY sabre, eeeeunen nat F ~ TINONTARIO. mighty | sed to supply the world with| n expressed lest the supplies of! of the Price-Duke interests in Que-; jiagara reported about the same! ved the people of On-,' {Prayer—O thou Savior of the metas | I: | j This picture shows the final Phi an important part. The others, { Markle and W. W. POLICE HOLD LABORER FOR Man Is Accused by Prison In- mate of Having Had Part a in Shooting Muni (P) jeu { Participated in the f Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hance, near last August Harry Knapp, jorer, is held by police. her George “Dutch” Anderson, — who! Pape ‘i in Muskegon, Michigan, big 4 nes months. ago, and) Charles; A¢etion Taken as Protective “One Arm” Wolf Muncie, were | Prev jnamed in Hane ng declaration; Measure to Prevent s dy men who did the Ife is serving a life sentence fi alleged murder. Gerald j man, notorious gunman sentenced ir {i xeeuted next month, lived jthe Hance family a few months Aactel to the shooting. Eddie Duffey of Muncie, serving a {sentence in state prison for robber made the statement invelving Knap; and a man named Gobe, just befor he underwent an operation. Knanp related some of the details o sheeting an admi \ Fired the shot which” killed “Mr | Hance; Gobe was said to have killed ™ | Hance. jas the { the Will Check Story Duffey said he met Knapp the af- ternoon of the murder. A local, d |tective is en route to the state jon at Michigan City to ch the story told by Duff he declaring Duffey was “frame” him for having turned s \evidente in.a robbery case involvi both men. Wolfe has maintained his innocency | Seeoehou | Catholic Schools in Mexico City, ‘cial. dispatches, Peubla, say that e Spe- ceived’ here 24 hours has been jgiven Catholic educational instit jtions to close. Most of | shafting up voluntarily. ' Guadalajara dispatches HANCE MURDER al shooting of ‘OVER BORDER 23, a lab. shooting. Chap- Knapp has denied all allegations, Mexico Being Closed, fe Jaccept food and clothing. from them are ladelphia reading on from th THEY ENDED THE COAL. STRIKE ion of union and operator offic ume work in the anthracite fields was reached. a the left is P. 2 left. Inglis of the operators. are Join Military and naval of cliouse ay Sb Lae mitgce. Spread of Laredo, Texas, F ry {border to the for Nueve healing long-hai ‘div four Dy a He said fj ‘ican government. In a day, the governmen eigners from enteti tory who do not | sani and The edict was heaith authorities measure agai rl \Laredo several da {headquarters just outside the N Laredo cemetery, where long of persons stand awaiting their turn for treatment. Among the pa- ents, which number upward of 10, «000, are many cripples, paralyties,! | blind and deaf from both sides of the || 'Rio Grande. | Charge No Fee Although the Indians charge Higion is not knowi k all who seek to {believe in Dios (God) and that God afflictions. | who do! ‘can cure them of They refuse not believe i Miraculous cures {flow of hopeful pation has been checked by proclamation healt issued the « for their ministrations, the to treat those in God. ‘ore house com MEXICO STOPS .. FLOW OF SICK I" of shaving Disease 1 ‘eb. 17. The across the do cemete the i Yucatecas the issued vester t prohibited “for. ng Mexican terri comply with all h requirements.” by as a protective catching of serious congregation of 1 ” who came s ago, have thei wil The n here, but they be healed if they their have vay that’ sorted. No specific cures he | Some Capes scllekes: inthe sae avon, have been confirmed officially. A riot broke out at Mexico, in the | lfederal district, yesterday when the| lauthorities cloved the college of |Terewiana, The rioters were quell- ed without casual tie: Vera Cruz, Feb. 1i--)—C rnor j jJara has ordered «ll the mun ies in the state of Vera act upon the requirements Mexican constitution and alien priests and close all schools. of Daily Lenten Bible and meditation prepare Commission on Evangelism of Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. ASH WEDNESDAY The Temptation reading Read Matt. 4:1-11. Text: Heb. 4:15. One that hath been in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. | Meditation—Jesus knows what is in man's life and this first hand knowledge of human life qualified him to save man ‘because he has lived men, The descent of the Holy Spirit at Jesus’ baptism finally and vividly testified to his divine ‘mis- Immediately after this ex- sion. perience cante the tempter’s voic “If thou art the Son of God.” This throw doubt was -calculated to tl upon his heavenly vision, He refused the suggestion that he demonstrate his power to satisfy the craving of the flesh, or make pec- tacular display before the people, or take ‘an unworthy way to success. He endured temptation and demon- strated his capacity to overcome the appeal of. evil and his right to the moral leadership of mankind. redeem us, from sin. Mal ipal- Cruz to! the | exclude | Catholic | | | vacation while ques countess will charge of moral ing from her elopem |ago with the Karl jdeny her admittan: Secretaary Davis liver a night, follow ng a he desires mare cerning certain pha aration for his fin: his return. Washington, Feb. tention to case of United States. city until tonight ‘overcomers, able.to endure oe problems described ciplines. of temptation. ep strong of will, knowing that tempted | has @een excluded sowill not suffer us to tds what we are able to bear. (Conrighi’ wee—F. L. Fagley) ° elopement several the Earl of Craven, decision in Mr. Davis had first leave for Flovida early today but he decided this morning to stay _ WAIT FEW DAYS; FOR DECISION Secretary Davis Will Give His|t'° Verdict on His Return ‘tions involved are | worked out and when he returns the lear ‘n whether turpitude, nent several years of Craven, is ‘to ce. had hoped to de- the case hearing the countess’ counsel on Monday, but information ses of it. con- While the secretary is vacationing in Florida, his aides at the depart- ent will, perfect the case in\prep- al decision upon DAVIS. POSTPONES | HIS VACATION TRIP . 17.- ()—Secre- tary Davis postponed his departure for Florida on a vacation trip today in order to give further personal at- the Countess of Cathcart, who has appealed from the decision of immigration authorities ‘at*New York barring her from the planned to in the with “semi- to wrest! as of a 3 | legal” nature involved in his deci-" sion concerning the countess; who on moral turpi: tude grounds in connection with her years ago with toe p of In- Mex- _ SWEETHEART) Mexican | to r re-;Shot her, the result- last | nted | Grant, “go-betw Lewis, union pre who pla ident, and | INMATES OF OREGON PEN : Nine ing of Discipline Believed to Be the Cause is believed to ha 1 yeneral tighte new ruling having terday d inaugurat e their prisoners y fold arms maintain absolute meal time. c. MAN ADMITS THAT HESHOT : silence Attempted to Force Their Marriage Wewoka, Ok ed mothe 0 jdenied that he was. the f child and refused to m no! W hen the girl declared that h ilents woula for he said. the ma ‘MORE PERSONS IMPLICATED IN | ALCOHOL PLOT, Additional Warrants to Be| Issued Today — Many Witnesses Called ! additio sons | repo: From-Florida | Officials in charge of the investi- |gation refused to confirm or een — jthis, but admission was m: ,, Washington, Feb. 17.-)-——The| several persons, heretofore unsu ; Countess of Cathcart must remain at} pected, had been implicated before Ellis Island several days longer un-|the grand jury yesterda: til Secretary of the labor de-| ‘The warrants, it is believed, are to partment de whether she willl be issued for ‘these perons, all. of be admitted to the United States.’ | whom live outside of Ohio. The secretary will take a brief) G. A. jolding, operati unit ‘of t. in ¢ investi would Philadelphi 1, telligencs partn ine y the treasury urge of the pi on- said today’s include perso di | Epidemics Cause | Closing of Schools Wallace, Idaho, Feb. public schools here cause of the are 23. The action is let fever, mumps and measles. Mae Murray’s Former Husband Los Angeles, Feb. 17.—(#). film director, which aren ue to 4 Alyi START RIOT Are Injured — Tighten-|! requiring when marching inte the dining room and during "| Killed Her When Her Parents 1. Higdon her of the y he par he | estigation here according to of the in-| from several at Wallace, Idaho} 17.) —All closed be- spread of contagious diseases. ‘An order issued yesterday by city health authorities’ also prohibits children from attending theatres, dances and churches until Febuary in an effort to check the spread of influenza, scar- \ Again Engaged ‘The engagement of Robert E. Leonard and Gertrude Olm- stead, film actress, was announced | Hi POLICE FIND BLOODSTAINS IN HIS OFFICE Officers Force His Office Door After Wife Tells of His Absence ; PLACE WAS I Clothing and Hatchet, Blood- stained, Found — Auto Also Missing DISORDER St. Paul, Feb. 17.) stained clothing and a hatchet, bloodstained, we office of Robert vod also und today in the Emerson, a com mission broker, who ppeared last night after telling his wife that he had business to attend to at the of: ice Alarmed when he did not return ast night, relatives informed the po ice who battered down the — offic door today and found the place in disotder with bloodstains spattered about the floor. The safe and draw ers of rson's desk pparently had been ransacked. Emerson was nowhere to be found. Emerson's hat. and found in the office, the watch dent- ed as though by a heavy blow. Drops of blood formed a trail from near the center of the reom to the office d | The broker's automobile also has disappeared. Police suid they were working on the theory that only mur- der or abduction could explain Eme son's mysterious disappearance. Every detective on the police force was assigned to the case. Hatchet Belonged In Office The hatchet found in the office s frequently used by employes to en crates and boxe Detectives said they did not believe it had been used as a weapon of attack because jot the small amount of blood found on it. Office employes said after an ex- amination that the safe’s contents had not been disturbed except for papers in a drawer that had been r moved to the desk. 4 -omplete check was not made for fear of blur- ring possible finger prints. Mrs. Emerson scouted the, theory husband might have disap/ peared voluntarily, She said he had no business worries and disclaimed any. khowledge Personal eneniga. ‘DEERE-WEBBER : DEALERS HAVE _ MEETING HERE "| Guests of the Company—Af- fair in Charge of Thos. Cooper, Manager r.| Dealers in Deere & Webber im- plements and farm machinery in the \territory adjacent to Bismarck were lin the ¢ terday, guests of the Deere & Webber company of Min- neapol About 50 men were here for the meeting. The affair was in charge of Thos. | Cooper, manager of the Bismarck I plement company. Thé business out- look for this season at the various agencies was cussed and the yisit- [ine dealers listened to*talks dlong [sales lines. The visitors were guests at lunch- Jeon at the Grand Pacific yesterday noon and last evening a banquet was in the Lions room of the ho- Sch secretary of re & Webbe ompany of Min- 'neapolis, and J. W. Thomas of Min- neapolis, sales manager for. the com- ipany, adressed the dealers on sub- j éf particular interest. A talk en by J. S. Molstad of ‘ity, one of the compan traveling men. Orchestra music was provided during the banquet. THREATENED BY HUGE MOB | Men Held For Slaying of Two Patrolmen Taken to Nash- ville For Safety Nashville, Tenn. . Feb. 17. Five men, held in connection with the killing. of Patrolmen Bud Jack- son and George Dodson, at Pulaski. Tenn., were rushed ‘here for safe keeping today after a mob of 500 persons gathered at the Pulaski court house last night. - Four of the men were rounded up in the surrounding hills after Man- uel West, 25, who was captured yes- terday, confessed to taking part in the killing and named Dave Johnson. Anthony Johns, John Bryamar and Joe Atkins. “We just ran inte the policemen and the shooting commenced,” ex- piained West. Bloodhounds ted officers to West's ‘home. STEVE RIDES A A PLANE Pt gh sg i= bere eee jorkey here just before Miss Olmstead de- for the “eust. [was divorced tecently by ray in Pari The: director Mae Mur-

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