The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 26, 1926, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WEATHER FORECAST Probably unsettled tonight and, Suturday; not so cold Saturday. THE BIS ESTABLISHED 1873 ’ CK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1926 [FINAL EDITION’ | PRICE FIVE CENTS “BIG i MURPHY COMPLETES HIS PRISON TERM WOMEN INTHE ; (For. Governor | AMERICANS MIDWEST SEEK | ’ KIDNAPED For Governor—Several , Want State Jobs MORE FILINGS EXPECTED and Jewelry and Were Taken Captive 30M WAS DEMANDED ‘Calles Orders Efforts Made to Apprehend Those Who RAN Indiana, Illinois, Minnesotx Women Seek Congres- Man Struck By | World W.C.T.U. Head Killed Six _| Train Succumbs ~~ CONDITIONS IN | Invited to Speak , to His Injuries; AUGUST A J AIL | at State Meeting pa . j \ comnts V ae kato, Minn, March 26. P— ‘0, N. D., March 26. (P)- Miss ‘ Frank Daie, Fairmont, aged died | | ania” president of the this morning at a local hospital as! ; World YU. has been extend- the result ujuries received when | i a invitation to be the principal s : 0, Milwaukee and | et and guest of honor at the 3 ——— St. Paul passenger train in the yards \annael meeting of the North Dakota here Dale ds he was cut-! “ ae which will be held in +, Ohio Has Woman Candidate Men Were Robbed of Money) ting through the railway yards, of-| Governor Brewster Is Investi-!Jamestowa carly in September, the ce Tielnjs nest, Inimediave “eauue | af | {executive board of the state organ death was a brain hemmorhage. STATE MILL LOST $46,970 IN FEBRUARY" ion gating Charges Made By i Prohibitionists i announced | _—- | om i HT TING 10 TELL STORY ‘ormer Prisoner Describes, Visits of Women, Drink- | [Kite six ||| RELEASED FROM FEDERAL PENITENTIARY Four-Year Sentence For Mail Robbery Was Reduced | By Good Behavior MEETS WIFE AT GATE Tells ‘Reporters “They'll Put Me Back In There if I ‘ { sional Positions Attack Americans [yell aoe | | Say What I Think” — ee . i ad ag Says He C Sta New : Chicago, March = 26—UP)—The sablexigo City, March 26%) The 31,597- Barrels of Flour Were! | sucusts, Maine, March 26-0 ‘Says He Can Startle \ | Kanes aca a its . ‘ tr idnaping of a party o merican | Prisoners at the ebee co ’ 7" ve orth, s. March 26— spring political primaries this yeer linings ongtneede, whe. were Hed: to Manufactured During © | jail had women visitors in their cel York, But Demands Re Bs “Big Tim" Murphy, political and have attracted an increasing \nurh- trees, is the latést in @ series of re- . vial id plenty of liquor, witnesses lease of Wife First killing his wife and five ‘labor leader of Ch ras released ber of women in the middle west as cent attacks on Americans the Past Month + | testified to Governor Brewster in a fit of insane rage, John {fe™ the federal penitentiary here to- candidates for various state and na- Near Asarco in the state of Duran- jhis counsel investigating cha . tae alin, had day, upon expiration of a four-year } . Goins of Stockten. Cant hot tional offices, and the time for : gogn vandits at nightfall on Wednes-| 4 iota) of barrelscotetioue brought by prohibitioni: New York, March 2 26 ) Promis- himself t iaath, He A tae for complicity in the $380,- filing in many states is not yet clos- day seized €. Weaver, Emil] yore Manutactaret ut the state mill |, Additional witnesses were called | ing to ‘tell a story that would startle | ! NER AML Sh aa SAL a) ant bo) Hear pore street” mail) robbery cd, the roll doubtless will be increas-| Mrs. Evelyn Frances Snow is a] Kreglan and A. P. Morris, and Adolpt/ eye janeiactured’ ut, the dary, av a for teday after the counsel tovk tes- | New York, Richa ese Whittemore | that many enemies were conspir-| April 6, ed. i candidate for the Republican nom- | Matz, a German, and robbed them of lone of $464 is 3. Recordin to thee: eer until late ee night a ganfe impli- | winst hin, 4 "uh ha : pees of friends be One woman has filed for the Re-| ination for governor of Ohio, the | avout 500 pesos and all thelr Jewelry. | ron "Oe Auditor KC. Nelson. filed aw, a former urders and in mn | nite the fact that he wad accused: publican nomination for governor in| first woman to enter the race. Her| Te men were carried captives into with: the state tnduaétial commilsaiba: ¢ $1,000,000, today lene ng eee ® Ohio, and Indiana, Mlinois and Min the hills and tied to trees. The band- nage prisoners for his wife. “The plicity in the postal robbery was nesota have wom ndidates for | home is in Mt. Vernon, O., and she] it, announced their intention to hold| A loss of $3,080.03 charged to tha! jit he could n any of their indicted for a holdup of the only’ offen which Congehis) ville yenrly aHuthe stater yeas served as Ohio movie censor. te censor. them for 10,000. pesos ransom and|Clevator department of the astute | He WETHER UR ice ce: beater convicted. Aft In the com: belt kaye aumber: of threatened death it the mony was not | Enterprise brought the total loss. of | Weakened by two confessions, the} court actions, women seeking nominations for state | fortheomi : SUH ai headed SM aL Bila lb six men under arrest in one of th brought t legislative posts. There are rumors, Most of the men are Tieng Vandecy and Pevconeneene | | liquor that was ntored as evidence,! most highly anized bands © fat Fort I also, that Ohio may have a woman the American Smelting and Refining Fe EHOWE the: AIK Ha nee red {and that m prisoners made their) captu n to talk, Whitte i candidate for United States senator. company. Berne ocr 0a ieee n liquor from mash stored in the} mor nt, being the lat on officials said he has lived up < ' ; : 63,081 barrels of flour at a. loss: of i 4 eal There are 16 women in Illinois run. When the bandits left, the men | {3.081 Me oe ee a eucal F cut U8 ; {te all of the prison rules, in spite of house of the state legislature, includ- ed McNealy eclare: ve SABA reaIRELOW 4 i B. Greenwood, an cvun- out on the str » New Jy! is Y sel : ing several for reelection. lowa has ‘deen killed by blows inflicted by pis- |14438 by depreciation and the balance,’ Lltraiet: th (ire mood cnn evans York with what T can telj." he says. | ntence Timothy would not, ha >. twa women candidates for the state !tols in the hands of policemen while] tian above.’ Members of the indus-| s¢ at the jail until Sheriff Cum-! District: Attorney Banton %: Sera e en eee until February, 1927. legislature, Nebraska has two and In- he was attempting a third J trial commission interpreted this toy i called him a damn 1 He, Would give consideration to the re- “| Inin table Humeorist Keeps: Refused Prison Suit diana six, among the states where the jail at Matamoras. Four mean the actual loss in. operation.{ declared thitt once during services| (West provided “Whittemore would e 5 j_, The usual routine was followed in the time for filing has not expired. men’ are under arrest in conneetion | mean the actual loss, in operation. Peas co im|give definite information on halt a! His Audience in a Con- — [iving the labor leader his freedom Only Wisconsin and Michigan in the with his death. auter tHe sud hows: 16 SO TAOL6; | one end | dazen recent robberies in which 8 4 j He was offered a prison suit but he corn bejt have no general election . . Se Pe eT Of the: “banjo froin the’ ether [000 in eush and jewelry was siol tinuous Uproar refused it, preferring to wear a tailor primaries this spring. ly | Four Arrested Cost Per Barret Charles “Pulte ee ahdinen ier made one that had been prepared in - . North Dakota Probably Only) jour persons have been arrested at! 4 statement of the per barrel cot visits of women, drinking] ern pion ieeenes TE GU Ee fants Govemnorship Ixtlan, in connection with the recent fl illed F ted Walt he | Will, Roger: f the nation’s | last, offivials saic State Showing Lower Tax Mier “of Ree iitelpane aad: the gs mitted that he i greatest: humor 2 his initial) He came out of the prison by him- The Ohio gubernitorial wean ot Heide mie 8 omen v ie self, waiting until about a doze : nding of E. H. Heidenkamp, em- : DS ae vente aud ing until about a dozen oth- {ae Tice ae patical ciccies te Bill Each Year ployes of the American Bridge com- inenulanoraligyic le tight, ers. also released today, had filed has ee see Ae ene oe La pany, who were attacked, apparently Ev ret another ota of the| through the gates. M Wanstate motion picturercensor, | Taxes levied by ail political sub-| fF robbery, while driving a railroad | 3) in income 2 cts; | that : batalla 1 NS ibe outer rues ay cot : be ea ss xd ci rr construction | gedue sonienae ee! a i . sa { @ the stage, his act was ! the or ga ey em) ie Psthe~ Griffin White of Richmond, géyisions in North Dakota, the cota Camp in the pemee Saleen traction | deductions from income 48 cents We ist niking in the kitchen u to ra ‘ 1 ba ead ae iMumphy. celédi Malt ne itne if Indiana, seeks the Republican nomin- P , og. [fixed charges 76 cents. The liquor at id he went | : work alsa 4 tax bill paid annually by citizens of] “In connéction with the death of Joe is a ' s | sof one of the Rares ation for representative in congress p 4 Heath of Wee} fieit per barrel from January 1 i jinto the jail with $125 and spent all] " Murphy's first word was! to the from the sixth Indizna distriet. Mrs./the state, is decreasing steadily and|Hall, an American employe by the] Kepruary 28 was $1.486 per barrel, the | but 10 or $12 on liquor. | ne % aebealiten oy ur, widow of minent | has be © 1921, a statement i ican National railways, last Mon-| report shows. another ex-prisoner, t 1 ahs aaa tapatatas ae tc Teicpa aa subactecee: aes en Pas Gace ieee ea iat ear Ixtlan, Remingo Ruelas, a] "Prior to January 1, 1926, the report {he had ‘ween a denute eheritt { i sual program, but] C88, ‘ Chicago manufacturer, is u eundidate! sued by the state tax commissioner's) Mexican, has been arrested and other ie cieminiaeel report he had seen a deputy sher bers of the quartet], “Who are you with?" was his ques Son conapee een Wer unty (Chin tticg show persons are being sought. Hall was bets fdetieit of: speepeae and (cates and that De che :| Demands Made That Repeated 1 few solus und duet numbers. tien to each. . . ago) ‘4 coast” dstrict, opposing ia ‘ i : ( 92,2 re sometimes ran a ight. a SRAIAEsplmsed aevaeni ce “I haven't thing to. si - + ei eschtutive Fred A. Britten, Mrs| “While the decrease in taxes is not stoned to death. ee during January and February it added {fy everybody got drunk on Chtis Questioning of Witnesses [7 ccompanist played several pune] 1 taverns a thing to say until f y, bly | t encquragin, At Acamparo, in the state be 8 to that total, making a total | 1 dh nal th wonderful technique and i : u RoE ale abel cac ttl ng Prer ang facto in cpnnection with the situation |juato, the ranch of J. M. Keele ‘forthe elevator unit of $97. |" he ieclntgd to the first question ‘wsked polis club woman, ha: led for the a oF being protected by troops because of ‘ on.{® Taid upon it last Sunday by 2% Beak i ces FE ene nee earn that Non] armed men. Mr, Feeley has informed “lg Gigipe Pyle Hoven ee the embassy that it is his belief the attack was due to labor troubles. it y at ate ee ae eee The foreign office has informed the as no opp embassy that President Calles per- Republican pomipation, § for s con, a that it has been consistent,” said He expressed the opinion Dakota probably is the only state in the union which show a steadily nn tax bill for the last five = | pertain only to property taxes and do not include hail insurance or special taxes. NO BRITISH HYSTERICS, A CHINESE LEXINGTON. THICKER THAN RUBBER. te WHERE IS LOCK-AH-TAM? CONVENTIONS BEING HELD IN: ST. PAUL TODAY Magnus ‘hahena Does Not levied for the year 192! units 2 a Care to be a Candidate per capita tax levy of $45.48. The per i 5 ital tax levied in 1021 was $48.66; This Yeur, He Says 19 2, $47.18; 1923, $46.69; and in 1924, 415.83, Comparative Figures “Comparing the year 1925 with the iyear 1921, the peak year as to the total tax burden, we find thut state jtaxes since that time have decreased '9.5 per cent; county taxes 10.6 per cent; township taxes 20.7 per cent and school taxgs 3.7 per cent while city and village taxes have increased 4.8 per cent,” a statement issued by the tax commissioner said. “The per- centage decrease as to all taxcs is 9.3 per cent. “The ‘total general BY ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright, 1926) Bermondsey, one of the boroughs of the city of London, decides, through its town cotncil, to fly a wed flag, instead of the British Union ~ Jack, over the town hall, Another London borou; ugh, Battersea, inhabited, like Bermondsey, by Brit- ish working people, largely discon- | oa tented, set the red flag example. The British don't have hysterics pre rly tax St. Paul, Min Merch 26.—-()--- Members of the Farmer-Lubor Asso- ciation and the Nonpartisan league of Minnesotu met in separate con- ventions here today to formulate plans for political, Saaipaleas ta year. Magnus Johnson, former Farmer- Labor senator from Minnesota, open- “The per capita taxes wre based up- aver an incident of this kind, and;on 1920 Federal census and 1925 don’t try te put bit body in jail, or|State census, the population for the otherwise act childishly. On the ,intervening years being estimated on contrary, they say, “if you want ajthe basis of the annual decrease in +e red flag, go ahea “and have it.” such five- Tene period. Wise Britishers know that foolish-| | “An analysis of the net decrease of ness is less “—— if you give it} $374,378 in the 1925 tax burden as Compared with the 1924 tax burden, paaior tat! Hy an rope. Re Gitsioes: the fact tok, wile somal steve rermettabor mecting.as sate Ten, onthe Chinese peuddnts| subdivisions of government decreased | President with an progressive ele- wan ago Shanghai by the|thelr tax levies, other subdivisions] Suet, Iw the stute. HEE ae in the “International)made increases. State taxes de-| “The former senator called atten- settlement.” creased ($960,484; County taxes in-} tion to the Nonpartisan meeting, which he said had the same aims as the Farmer-Labor body, and urged that the two organizations cooperate fully in achieving these aims. Before calling the meeting to or- der, Mr. Johnsort said he did not care ‘to go into pplitics as a candidate this year, but preferred to “lay low” for a couple of aree and then re-enter the field. Hi friends, however, pre- dict that if this convention endorses him ‘for the governorship he will make the race. ‘You are told that this shooting will] creased $213,313. Township taxes in- he as important itt history ap the shot |cTessed $40.20. School taxes _de- fired at Lexington: in 1776, but that's creased $284,609. City taxes incroased @ mistake. Shooting a few students ($26,262. Counties. are the only sub- ina nation of five hundred milltons, division which made any appreciable overwhelmingly illiterate, is sad, but|imerease in tax levies. Presumably, not important, historically. such increase made by counties is due 2+. "Four hundred. million a the five|ito in¢reased expenditures for road hundred malllion Chinese have proba-| 274 bridge purpo: bly not. yet heard aboyt the shooting and never will hear of It. It is aver- . age intelligence ‘that makes .events *. important. Those that have worried because * American business is getting ‘‘too big” may soon worry. because ‘Ameri- can’ business is not big enough to Bae with big businéss in Eur- FBlood is thicker than water. Bri- tuin and the United States are friend. re ut 104 is not leke| ant “A rubber, and She British have been than corlead,Jote'and, would, work's texing srorenshlx ang legitimately | materiaLshardship on the shipper in through the Po je rubber mono-| favor of the railroads which alread poly, with n eorerament essistance. are “enjoying attractive revenu ji fow. co! reat European oe is trust’ aot Hatted bo Beitsion but tat-| Conde 10,8 "ite ehaletan ofotke ing in France, England, Germany,| western classification committee at Belgium,’ and ieaving out the United| Chicago: ‘The board declares that the States. "AM European nations con-| proposed increase of 100 per cent “is centrated on iron ‘and ‘steel, produc: | exceedingly drastic and should not be tion during the war. Now the allies] made without @ thorough ‘investiga- unite with Germany to make that/¢ion,” productlon profitable, _ Tt is the board’s intention to-aus-| in Burke, Divide und Ward counties end any similar increases which may | and in northeastern Montana with “y , Our steel companies are not suf oa filed by the railroad on intra-| its principal power station at Glen- feringyyet, aad a as wab's! state traffic-and “petition the Inter-| dive. Noss y ‘Bethe The United Power ‘com thirteen millions 1 ists nibutien Gary’s big ‘Unit , Kenmare, ed_more than nin Noonan, Columbus, Portal, Bowbells, It earned enough Flaxton and savers! ott other raeae: The Montana-! ol ag common. ‘com: as more than five Lagos mil- mission to sell 1' Bed Men dette BS cash gese! ‘preferred stock, par value $100, at not less than $94 a shhre. many which King William is been pre- ee Ora fie Pees Saanel, Deve ni john ir Andrews, member’ of Creig’s cabinet.” BN Cerin Fem Rail Board Scores Proposal to Boost Rate on Cream Cans Proposals by the railroads to double the freight rate on-empty cream ¢ today drew fine from the state rail- road board. The new rates as proposed would Power Companies Appy For Permit to Join Property Application was made to the state railroad board today by the Montana- Dakota Power company for permis- sion to merge its property with that of the United Power company. Both companies have property in Noith- western Notth Dakota and. North- eastern Montana. + When meee the Montana-Dakota company will be a new unit in the super-power net-Work of électric dis- tribution lines now being construct- ed in the state, It ulready bas lines more than} state Commerce Commission for sus- and Judge] pension on interstate traffic so that interested ehippers may have full oj fotuer to to present their views,” the 0. at worse, tne, big adaanentrn, On ki t pay out “cash ing $13 a eel oe fool ‘of. cara pod} towns” wants a ene to Charles! out of 1 Poteerny concn guns HOT ERE EE = USER ae HEPTANE AGA AB Pe at leo a= ea i Be | Personal Injury | Damage Suits Are | | Filed in Clay Co. .07. This figure is included in the consolidated: balance- sheet: of Leth the mill and elevator units showing the loss for the last two months at $85,491.47 and the loss on the ent- ire enterprise to be $910,402.60. The mill's production record shows Tos Angeles, March 26--@) The William Desmond Taylor murder case will be dropped unless the Los Ange- Jes county grand jury is asked to re- jturn indictments in the case when u In 1921, the figures show, the; Sonally has ordered act efforts be! that it took 4.57 bushels of wheat per] Moorhead, Minn., March 26--() | District Attorney 4 yes returns state's bill was $31,422,004; in 1922 {pide to apprehend exicges mmo f barrel of flour in January and 4.58} The a $30.000“personal injury from the east, the Los Angeles Times was $30,411, 192: 8 $80,- | have attacked anerane: e note! bushels in February, The loss pe ee eat ce loss, 736; in 1924 it was $29.430.688 ‘and beige that the per leat kovernment} barrel was $1,043 in January and $1.-| ern railroa 1 in Clay county dis-| A “she wiecanooe: sin 1925 it fell to $20,165,310, the| Wa doing everything possible in the) 496 in February trict court in eight days was filed to-|der to relieve the rowed feelings ‘smallest since 1919. These figures| citcumstances. = day by Edwin A. Kottke, Havre, Mont.| caused by repeated questionin, He alleges he was permanently dis- abled when knocked from the tender of a locomotive by a defective spout on_a water tank. The first suit was brought by W persons believed to clues as to the slayer of the motion picture director four yeurs ago. Demands are declared, to have been have pi continues Farm relief hearing before house committe: Senate acts on Woodlock no: nation .to interstate comme commission. made from several sources that. an liam McKinley, also of Havre, a car! end be put to the repeated question- inspector, who alleged he received in-jing of witnesses. Although it was juries to his back and hivs when,aj|not said whether Mabe! Normand, film truck fell on him in the Havre rail-| comedienne, was among those to make road yards December 16, 1925. such a demand, it is known that she j had wearied of the case, decluring, she If you had Youth, Beauty, Charm, _ STATES FAVOR no friends RELIEF BILL and just one dime, , Support For ( Corn Belt Bill Is what would you do? National, Rather Than Watch for iss_ N obody —She’s somebody you'll want to know f Washington, March 26.--() -Na- j tional rather than sectional support | Was claimed today for the corn belt bill to finance surplus crops by levy- jing an equalization fee on them | Ata hearing of the house agr: ul- ‘tural committee, Chester H. Gr i Washington representative of ine {American Farm Bureau Federation, | .; read telegrams from federations of 15j widely scattered states endorsing the ' measure cither specifically ciple. The state farm bureau federations favoring such legislation included those of Idaho, California, Nebraska, North Dakota, higan MHlinois, New! i nessee, Rhode Island, » Kansas, Wis- ginia federation opposed the equalization fee as “economically un- sound.” | Weather Report °- ce Sl lala ED Temperature at 7 a os | Highest’ y . ‘ Lowest last might Precipitation to 7 Highest wind velocity Weather Force For Bismarck and bably unsettled tonight and day; not xo cold Saturday. For North Dpkota:. Partly cloudy | tonight and Saturday; probably un- settled in west portion. Not so cold Saturday. t Weather Conditions | The high pressure area is centered lover the Plains States thiy morning | and cold weather continues ftom the | Mississippi Valley westward to the | Rocky Mountain region. However, no ‘These must be an answer to the question and it lies within the pages of the strangest story of a modern girl's adventures you have ever read. A powerful love Pro- Satur- . DON’T MISS HER “STORY OF THRILLING ADVENTURE| ORRIS W. ROBERTS, ¥ Oficial in Charge. : the touch of un artist. Stopped jeathearall audioneee iMan Amputates His in prin-{ i *|Waterway’ Committee “Meet me out de and maybe talk, but they'll put me back in there if 1 say what I think here.” ne prineipal- ‘ay, and his up for the break in y to hear Ri fforts to make the musical program by extending his eee monologues considerably, offset in a great measure the people's disap- : pointment in not hearing the — full quartet. In addition ‘to his usual line of comment on the day’s news from nel world at large, RB 8 found ample | interest, well at Ro son, the and the state penitentiary, the state owned industries, and the pemten- tiar, pad Dela pany | Added $15,000,000 to Income His roping with which he ha of Citizens Last Year, Sorlie Contends nt tained the Ziegfeld Follies ds nightly for many years in ad- dition to his humoreus talk, was], reatly ‘niall by his audience here. fie is equally adept at handing : ie 3 Nor Du rmers siness combination of the two ‘constitutes. $15,000,000 from the state ‘mill and complete entertainment, - eae ae elevator during 1925, Gover Sorlie said in’a statement i By helping to get for the farmer a premium of 15 cents a bushel on the 100,000,000 bushels of wheat raised ill and elevator added r to the’ income of ns of the state, Sortie holds. ven if the mill showed a loss of $1,000,000 a year it still would be a benefit to the st he said. instead of a Joss it showed an o) ting profit of $143,482.23 in 1925 Letter Supports Claim In support of his contenition that jthe mill has been instrumental in obtaining a premium on the wheat sold by many farmers, Governor Sor- lie submitted a letter received from . Peterson, vice president of the orthwestern National Bank of Grand In line with the traffic conference A. i which Governor A. G. Sorlie plans to hold here sometime in the near} future, Rogers’ proposed traffie code given particular attention. His ¢ rules for the control of traffic 1. Abolish all right and left hand | & if you are guing somewhere, ‘aight the People going east, go on Mon- ; those going west, go on Tues- . Any car not paid for will not be allow don the road. ment of,the last rule, ed, would make the safe enough to be used for picnic grounds. Rogers and the DtReszke singers ; left today for Minot for an appear-| Forks. It reads as follow: ance tonight, aft whieh thes willl “During the season’of 1025 I raised start eastward. TI hi just re- {a carload of Marquis wheat on a farm cently completed a tour of the west: | 1 own, near Watford City, MeKenzic ern and southern states. county, North Dakota. | “I shipped it to the state-owned mill and elevator at Grand Forks, for which T received 17 cents per bushel premium, netting me a very attractive price for my car of wheat. in politics and not going tion whether, in the firs: us good business or advis. able to have built this mill and eleva- tor or not, but the fact remains that the plant was built and has been paid Mother’s Leg With Butcher Knife, Saw March 26.--)— George Markwardt, 36 years old, was held for mental observaton after he confessed | that he had severed the right leg of | for by all the taxpayers of the state; his 76-year-old mother, Mrs. August/is operating und manufacturing as Markwardt, with a butcher knife and high a grade of wheat products as hacksaw. Ma: ardt and the body | can be done by any mill. For that of his mother were found in a room| yeason, if for no other, the mill at their home should now be patronized, by every an and farmer in the state en every opportunity to make Detroit, examination last night failed to reveal whether | “I am fully convineed that a great death occurred before or after the j} part of the premium I received on leg was severed. jmy car of wheat was in a great mea- jsure due to the mill, elevator and its $500 Allowed State _|isberatory” work" located’ at “Grand Forks.” Opera Singers. Will Broadcast Tonight New York, March “2. 4 )——Maria Jeritza, Austrian soprano of the Me- tropolitan @rera company, will make her radio debut tonight. Emilo De Gogorza, baritone, and Efrem Zim- balist, violinist, also go on the air . tonight in the same prograin. Beginning at 9 p. m. eastern time, the concert will be broadcast Ehravek good. An appropriation of $500 has been granted to the State committee on the promotion of the Great Lakes- Sb. Lawrence waterway by the state emergency commission. The money will be used in the preparation of a brief and exhibits on the value of the Piproted waterway to North Dakota. ‘his material will be presented to the United States senate at/ nu hearing which it is expected to hold on the subject. 4 zero temperatures occurred at any A similar amount has been appro- oe WJZ. New York; KYW, es Chi: in The T ni stetlaw ; odeges’ penenerss beer ae printed by the Grener. Berth rarest calee «e Aen Pittabs argh; ibu ied by rising temperature, has ap-| Association to promete the advance- ing |, Mass.; WGY, - It Will Appear ribune peared in the extreme West. The| ment of the project. ri ati RC, Washington, ‘ Aer ril 1 weather is unsettled in practically all] The state Great Lakes-St. Lawrence | Each of the artists will presen. Beginning Ap! sections and snow flurries occurred | commission is Gompoted ‘of Governor | wo groups of numbers, t j : at many places. A: c mee Trubshaw, Val- The concert closes the 1926 y City, an Graven, Grand | by the, Victor Talking ty pany. cw, Forks.

Other pages from this issue: