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WEATHER FORECAST Partly cloudy tonicht afd Tues- day; warmer tonight, _ ESTABLISHED 1873 DEMOCRATS OUTLINE PLAN | OF CAMPAIGN Shaver Predicts Gains Tha Will Give Them Control in Both Branches 10 MORE SEATS NEEDED Tariff Commission Probe— Aluminum Co.—Tax Reduc- tion to Be Emphasized Washington, Match 29—(#)—Pres- idential Heber the Aluminum company of America in which Secre- tury Mellon is a stockholder, the taFiff commission investigation end tax reduction will ut sized in,’ the Democratic = rg ich to gaih con. <a of congress thi This was made clear ina enh Maybe This Darwin Was Right fissued today by Clem Shaver, chair- man of the Democratic national feom- ‘mittee who asserted that “the con- gressional campaign is approaching. with excellent outlook for ins thi will mean Democratic contrd] in butt branches.” Principles Violated “The effort of the pregident to in- timidate and coerce menpbers of the boards and commissions by wsking for | written resignations @r compromising committments whenf he makes pointments is an astounding violation ‘of the principles of free government,” the chairman declared, “The resolution to ascertain wheth- er the attorney geteral had been e: peditious in prose¢uting an inquiry of ‘the Aluminum cofmpany of America a resolution looking to the emplo; ment of special counsel—-was defeated in the senate, i, keeping with admin- istration policy, but the rising tide of popul: ination over the ad- istration tampering with the tariff commission led to adoption by , the senate @f a resolution resulting in an investiggation now under way. \: congréss in forcing an annual tax luctigrin of at least $60,000,000 more 3 nm ? ie administration would for a ‘ane 6 Ame admit to be within reason anifest. The public is safer when i tre is no great and tempting su lus, especially in the hands of an ad- ministration that as to ‘its economy ‘doth protest too much.’ “The chief business of ‘the demo- cratic party tle year is the election of its ¢ for senator and rep- a ateiees ie in the congress and for| Billings, Mon| state and local offices. Our cnergics Bill Hart, motion picture star fent- should and will be directed to this ured in many a western drama of the and its principles, unity for! silvered sereen, will ¢ Dette to distodgd and Gleféae the Htec{ next summer to attend ob: t BUEIEAA. BAnty these are. the] the _semi-centennial ersary of ths Battle of the Little Big Horn at peri dretoaty PSENQAIR SE SUR Genlonel cer Battlefield, 60 miles southeast Means Limited Ist here, on June 24, 25 and 26, next. The national committee “with limit-; Announcement of his decision was ed means by comparison with the} made in # personal letter to James A.| s pampered Republican organization,”| Shoemaker, secretary of the nal | Mr. Shaver said, will cooperate with} Custer Memorial association, which the senate and house campaign com-| i* sponseringsthe.affa mittees and the state committe the fight for control. Pointing out that Democrats hold 24 of the 48 gov- M. S. Wiliams, C ence. He has built him modern ccnveniences, in a tree neat S BILLHARTTO — BE AT CUSTER | ANNIVERSARY Is Very Much Interested in 50th Observance of the Famous Battle wtelle, Calif. St. Paul, March 29, (A) ates of ‘Richmoni Si wit! was closed today, hard Baegelmann i | William M | ~-City officials ed an investigation of the of a shell for a French late yi ‘day old boy at a celeb INTERPRETER NAMED ‘] Chas. McLaughlin, only living a pee ent at feats ini] son of the late Major James Me- ds Laughlin, ‘has been appointed on . to bef the national committee arrang- “Thirty-four senators are t 5 1 ing for ghe obs¢rvance of the 50th elected next fall. Of the 34 whose |} ig for se Obi gr yams ot tote pacts he Altaf pirate. only seven | Little Big Horn, according to in- safely Democratic states, A gain of foriation furnished the Tribune ten of the 27 seata held now by Re- i] ‘by D. !. Barry of penn Wi publi ns would give the Democrats a formerly of Bismarck. Mi flareback. fragments into the crowd. Laughlin will act as S majorit: t Corporal Harold Paukert, preter at the obser rer Ss ; : 2 25, [| Allen Holman and Private : will take place on June 24 and 25, |) Allen Holman, and Hart says -in this letter that he is| There is evidence that not interested in the memorial from a standpoint of motion pictures, “but just as Bill Hart” he is “very much interested. He refers to his boyhood days spent a a South Dakota Indian reservation saying, “I was brought up with the Shows kids myself.” Several thousand Siouxs, Cheyennes Blackfeet, Assiniboine and Crow In dians will be present at the semi- centennial and will make‘it the occa. sion of a memorial to di Sioux left as the price of their annihiliation of Custer and his immediate command and the casualties they inflicted on) the commands of Reno and Benteen at ‘Reno Point, four miles away. The aceeptance of Bill Hart is the first Secretary Shoemaker has_re- ceived from motion picture stars to} whom he addressed special invitations ‘recently to attend the semi-centennial ceremonies. ‘These invitations were directed especially to stars who have particlpated in western dramas of an; jetorical nature. : PROS caren a a | Weather Report | Temperature at 7 a. m Highest yesterday . Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 Highest wind vélocity Weather Forecast For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday; warmer which infest so man MORE WALL 8ST, SORROW. GARY AND MUSSOLINI. JOHN D'9/NEW MEDAL. A CLEAR LITTLE DOG. Re By Aras seared i Bey street agitation yester- | day. Sixty-five more stocks found new low resting places, Nothing is the nintter with tl try or with Wall street. It wi yesterday that Mr. Durant, the able automobile gentleman, was letting others have some: of the stuff that he bought at low Prices, in’ other words, “liquidating.” Nobody was hurt except the gam- biers, and the whole world knows that the only way to discourage vice is to make it expensive. Wall street’ aengs piskes gambling expensive, if you jobless. The Senate undoub will con- firm arrangement wit! ia A as it should do, The settle: oe was fair. Without Italy the victory of the Marne would have been impossible. Instead of collecting money from Germany now, the French and English mig! fied cartyine out the orders of Pru B prine transplanted from Berlin’ to Paris and London. The Ku Klux Klan have opposed the Italian settiment. Why, not clear. They object to foreigners com- ing to this countryvalthough like the wate of us, Cad are all descendants of fore! y Bbt in the “Italian debt settlement hepa no eesren S arene com- ng here. y only sen money: Who objects to that? xa is said in the 6 Senate, that the ‘u Klux oe met i | t -_= Partly. cloudy tonighY aud Tuesday: warmer tonlght: Weather Conditions A high pressure area is centered over the northern Plains States znd cold weather prevails from the Great Lakes region to the eastern Rocky Mountain slope. Temperatures were near zero from> Wyoming northeast- to the central Canadian Pro- vinces. A low pressure area has ap- peared over northern Alberta \ and ir} treme west, in oc- curred from the middle Mississippi ork Valley westward and southweastward to the Rocky Mountain region, The er an senerally fair an ee Da- kotas and in xtreme West. z ORRIS W. ROBERTS, * Official in Charge. TOWN severely g Le ae imal] ‘town west-of her. wae. pire Aaturtay, March 27 Construction work Alexius hospital was wo tee He kind of mai Stious gem arm m his metho When Judge Garr aapottas ie company, met conversaey fey lo: are come to Rome?” a’ see Notice the rouaesyee es parle. Moraine fs, o pinto reba general Cloud, Minn.,. hi the plumbing and ‘h ting ing of concrete h deposits approximating $240,00 J and officers of Wisconsin national guard today ry killed an cig « wounded three guardsmen ation here during which! the gun was fired as a salute. shef had ‘been fired and when breéch was opened to discharge the empty shell case there was a sudden A second hell resting on the tail of the gun exploded, on the nurses’ home being added to the St, Kun today, with James Guthrie of “St. Paul as superintendent of the work. BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1926 War veteran, has gone back to an arboreal exist- self a comfortable three-room cottage, with all | ty leader Richmond, Minn., Bank Is Closed, ‘BOY KILLED BY _ EXPLOSION: OF CANNON SHELL Three Members of Stevens Point National Guard Company Injured Stevens Point, Wis., March 27 () the One the hurting John, Kropidlowski was killed and Corporal George aphids, crops, may car- Ty plant diveases from one family of plants to another distinct family new The construction contract has pet awarded to’ A, C. Thomas of St. aul, while Benson & Britz of St. ave the contract’ for and F. Champlin of Fargo ha: the. electrical’ work. The entire structure will be of fireproof constvuction/ and Mr. Guthrie’ expected to start. the pour- ‘he beeen for oy new addition leted last fall,- FARMER-LABOR DOCTOR WILL OF STEALING Aged Physician Sa Forty- five-vear-old Count Is All Nonsense - LEGALSTATUS | Walker Says Convention at | Minot Will Not Endorse Any Candidate ,LEMKE IS AT MEETING CLAIMS WRONG IDENTITY | A2iecammeinite of Candidates 91-year-old Accuser Equally For Office Expected to Determined to See Jus- Come Forth tice Served Ta party of ue in the ele. r were the paramount ssion at a state con + Mareh 29. Asbury Park. 1 and Crimean -old charges that ive as Laborites in Minot thief and escaped prisoner ected to gain full His M-year-old accuser Deputy y meme tum late this afternoon. Sheriff 8S. F Black of Bingnam | Coming out of the conference, as equally determined to j which is tamed os “a business meet- ing to | ing” by some of the party leaders, is jexpected to be announcements "of old,” | candidates for various. 0} + ale) suid {though the convention i will care wh | make no indorsements of candi- is convieter j date, according to R. H. Walker of ie ally “nonsense non ; Yucca, chairman of the party. sense, but I hive no: grudge | One Object: At- Prim: » Osbald | Preservation of the legal status of “He thinks he is doing his duty: } the party n North Dake any part wiil be the | which the will in the election, according to but in the words of Wil- of Fargo, one of the par “we'll be prepared to take primary winners at the) y, Spent Night In Jail Osbaldeston spent F lock-up after Black had Dr. jin the ! June primary | Mr. Walker, liam Lemk p- peared heie with the musty warrant, for dug out of files where it lay Yh end half a centur f the prisoner whi jon the June | fall election.” “We'll make no effort to embarrass | any of the league-endorsed candidates at the primary election, but what we | (hope to do is to get our candidates j nominated, and get our party | chinery ected xo us to pre our status as a legal party,” Mr. ker declared. Lemke Not Anxious Lemke, who has been promin- than one’ Usbilde - 's mind mo: when he of Dr. that I have Back in 1880 sandy mus He looks about pt older.” rallied solidly to Mayor Hetrick the same today e Asbury Park has the doctor's cause, Mr, ently mentioned, as a possible candi- | imd_ citizens lan to urge Governor, [date of the Farm bor purty for Moore of Jersey to refuse © the United States senatorship, said tradition ae j that he was not anxious to make the by Dr, Osbaldeston’s |race, if some one else within the if he oan find an old tele era het jparty could be persuaded to do so. will prove an alibi. On the day of | Further than that, he would make the theft of a horse and rig valued at! {no definite announcement. $500 in Binghamton 45 years ago, ite | About 35 delegates were in. at-'Jawyer sa doctor was in # the s near Plattsburgh ann received a telegram .from New tendance at the conference earls thts; Adirond afternoon, which will follow an in-| had formal meeting held this forenoon at] Jer which nothing of consequence was May Have Been’ Half Brother i accomplished. Two or thr Dr, Osbaldeston said he had a ify loads of de! ites ure expecte: brother named Dr. Edwin arrive this afternoon from Burke| deston, who died several yeu county, the home of State Senator, This half brother cons antly eek Ralph Ingerson of Flaxton, who has| him into trouble, the physician said, | been prominently mentioned as a can-Jand resembled him, even to a silver didate of the party for the governor-| plate in the skull from a— bullet ship | wound, i We have no fight with the ity of the Nonpartisan leagu wi the declaration of Mr. L “Undoubtedly "GOVERNOR WILL REEUSE 10 HONOR EXTRADITION PAPERS we will put som care ark, N. March 29, (@) them on our ticket With stic! ~Governor Moor n a statement the industr telephoned from Trenton, announce: » We will have didates for t Fire Does Damage to Private Garage The fire department was cailed to ‘that he would not honor aay extr tion papers which might be pre ed to him for the return to ing ton, N. Y., of Dr. Edwin P. T. R j group of escaped pri the home of Abe Tolchinsks made by De- Eighth street at 4:30 o'clock i Foster Black of | afternoon by a fire which had 4, Binghamton, Y., whe himself is between two garages. The flames’ 91 -years old. were soon extinguished after the ar- 7 — rival of the department, but Mr. Tol- MEDALS PAWNED chinsky’s garage was quite badly dam- London London pawn shops are aged and the one alongside was severely scorched. Firemen believe’ the blaze was started through the: carelessness of children. swamped with war medals. Officials are coming from. They are being sold! _at low prices. PARTY TOKEEP FIGHT CHARGE: (P) Usbuideston, ; | here are endeavoring to learn where they | Rescues Sister When Myrtle Mayc, 8, of Toledo, O., crept River near her home to pick up a falle dunicr, and she fell in. Her brother, her life, though the water was wel a medal for his braw Photo shows him at the left, From Icy Lake , the ic jumped in after he 1 over head. gave and Ne has been wath ¢ Myrtle beside hin. ‘Minot Commission Hires Bradford as Special Counsel ch 20 (PY A spe 2 Minot city cow x forenvon by J. Th Brunner, dent A.J voted “to employ be , Bradford of “Mino orn pecial pial against M moval p ding Chief Dan Dougherty, noon at 1:30 0% ry ne Dougherty hear against Polic and se. this af) ws the date for ing. ‘YALE MEDICS WILL NOT GET CHAPMAN BODY: Rey. Barry » Prison Chaplain, Will Claim Body If No One Else Does Wethersfield, Conn., March The one man who has been closes to Gerald Chapman during the y he has been held in the sti will claim the body of the notorio criminal in event of hanging, if it is unclaimed by others vy. M. BP. Barr: r of the Heart = Church who has been the only spiri viser the condemned bandit] has declared that Chap-| 1 man's x will jo to the Yal medical school for dissection —pur- poses. Stating that he would see t 7 is give lecent burial, “It’s the leust I) Father Barry on his statement to ex he meant by * Chapman had sought religious con-| solation. Wheh Chapman was brought here u year ago he was known to have been an agnostic. Should Chapman hang April 6, Father Barry will aecompuny him to the gallows. | would not enlarge jain whether WORK STARTED TODAY ON ADDITION TO ST. ALEXIUS HOSPITAL WHICH The nurses’ home will inciude the full basement and four stories, und will face Tenth street. The building will be of the same construction as the ae hee hospital, und/the front will identical with that of the hos-_ pital, except that two sets of steps will approach ue front entrance, one from either side of the landing, in- stead’ of a single set of steps as at as ipso ki ill be fs df th wi e AS ir remove: rom 1e Reerention. Hall: Provided | noixe of the building and the street The basement floor plans call for as possible, a large recreation hall or gymnasium, | Will Increase Hyspital, Capacity a dietetics class room, with adjoining | dining room and kitchenette, # laun- | +The nurses’ home will provide ac- | dry and shampoo room, cake hee | room, and two large trunk rooms. The first floor will include a large demonstration and class room, two reception rooms, the superintendent's office and sleeping room, nurses’ liv- ing room and library. The second and third floors are givén over most- ly to nurses’ sleeping rooms, and the fourth floor will provide slecping quarters for night nurses, where they WILL PROVIDE QUARTERS FOR NURSES AND INCREASE HOSPITAL CAPACITY Ne commodations for about 80 persons. The hospital annex which is now occupied by the nurses will be used by the nuns in charge of the hospt- tal after the new nurses’ home is completed, and this change will pro- vide 35 more beds for patients in the hospital. The institution has been crowded to capacity for some time past and the additional room for pa- greatly desired. that the new build- ing will be completed and ready for occupancy somexime during early October, although the cantract does “| not call fo® completion until Novem- ber 1. “for any Catholic” that | GOVERNOR OF [OWA REFUSES TO REAPPEAR beuve He Thinks House Agri- | culture Committee Is Suf- ficiently Informed Washington, March Hammill of low yuest that he reapp (® has declined before the 29. Gov- nor ar | house agricultural committee in con- }nection with farm relief legisla | tion Governor Hammill made a general statement before the month ayo, and at the Representative Kincheloe, Democrat, Kentucky, the committee asked hi to retarn for further intcrrogation. Mr. Kincheloe contended that’ Mr. committee a request of the com- great num agricultural ad fa it has had hearings on the “that it n the sub ject to pre judgment f the ommend for pi the age. <1 will put forth its) ommitte which nd has labor insofar as bette be attained by legislative pr Hirth Testifies William Hirth of Columbia, i man of the corn belt comm appeared in the committee roo had bee jailed by 1 members of t committee j ‘attempting to intimidate congress. In concluding his testimony he had | id the political | the one in pow sponsible farm re! 8. i. Thompson, president of th ‘a time, | congress “inform us it is. th {mon understanding that this se | will not adjourn until farm rv legislation has been enacted.” | endorsed the corn belt bill to iev }a fee on agricultural products to a: | sist in handling the surplus problen | “Representative Purnell, Republi- j can, Indiana, asked if, with farmers | eaven. to understand the government | ad set up machinery to guarantee certain prices, there might be 5 an over production us would br |down the machinery. Thompson considered the require- ment that farmers bear the cquali zation fee to be “the greatest eduys- tional force in regulating production, ch vk since the heavier the surplus, the | larger amounts subject to assess- ment.” MILLERS AGAINST BILL | At a senate agriculture committee | hearing on the same bill today, Sena- |tor Capper, Republican, Kansas, said American lers were making an or- ganized effort to defeat the farm re- lief bill because of the fee to be levied on agricultural products. He said he had received a large number of letters from Kansas mill- ers and had been informed that mill- s over t country were disturbed the fee. Chester C. Davis, re- presenting a farm re lief committee, declared the bill carried no disad- vantage to the American millers. Chairman Norri id the depart- ment of agriculture also opposed the bill. | Range Towns Want Daylight Saving Hibbing, Minn., March 29,4)- - Agitation for the introduction of day- light saving in Hibbing and vicinity is being revived here this year and un effort will be made to have the change in time made general for the entire range, starting about the mid- dle of April. TODAY IN WASHINGTON Senate considers Italian debt settlement. Miscellaneous bills. are before the house. Senate ‘and house agriculture > committees discuss. farm relief. ===JTHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [aca oe ees Hammill’s statement was vague as to| } But the fact which confounds the ite ther experts, Mr. Denison de- . is that while the decrease in ieaiation may have en held re- sponsible, ith justification, for the »|severe weather on the Atlantic and the last thre xf | ’PHONE CABLE i He} PRICE FIVE CENTS NO RELIEF IS IN SIGHT SAYS WEATHER MAN Rocky Mountain Region Has Had Continual Snowfall Since Wednesday MORE SNOW PREDICTED Rainfall Is General Over Ari- zona, With Nearly an Inch at Phoenix Denver, March 29--)—With 48 automobiles stalled in snow drifts be- tween Colorado Springs and Denver, | the weather man today held out no promise for relief of the Rocky mountain region, which in many plac " da continual fall extending as far _ Albuquerque, has +. following sev- oral w of ring like tempera- tures. The weather observer said that more snow would fall and that the end of the cold wave was not in sight ;. While Monta was having colder | Weather punctuated by sngw flurrie last night, in Colorado the fall hew A foet on the level was re- ported at Palmer Luke, where it had drifted badly. Arizona had general rainfall which w he. in the central por where Phoenix had nearly | yesterday and ly last night st of the rnow which had faller inithe region in the past few days melted as it fell. W tempera: tures dropped below freezing at sev- tana and Colorado points night, no extreme cold reported, . v BNORMAL DITIONS | ESTED ia, B. C., March 29—()—F, Jenison, Superintendent of h Columbia meteorologi- cal station here, s the abnormal conditions of the past winter, with its striking contrasts in various parts of the world, are probably traceable to contending forees in the upper jnir zone. “The weather during the season has been amazing in many re: spects,” says Mr, Denison, “and the scientific world this far has-been unable to account for it with any de- gree of certainty. However, there seems to be little doubt that during or four years there has se in solar radiation, y that must have had a rope this winter, in the westerr phere, particularly along the ¢ slope, the weather has been y mild. still maintaining a per- however,” uecording to survey the in one other; oraial floods n, and abnormal droughts ‘MAN ADMITS | THE THEFT OF Stole Several Thousand Feet in Northern Minnesota— Sold It For Junk St. Paul, March 29—()--H. Meixner of St, Paul, arrested on com- plaint of the Tri-State Telephone and Telelgraph Company, confessed Sun- day, police said, that he stole several thousand feet ‘of telephone cables, Mostly in northern Minnesota. icinity of Hibbing and Chis- Several thousand feet of cable ill buried near Carlton, Minn, he is alleged to have confessed. 24 LAWYERS DISBARRED Others Suspended—Dis- barments Cover a Period 15 of Three Years . Washington, March Twenty-four lawyers have been dis- barred from practice before the treasury department as u result of an investigation of charges of collusion between them and employes of the internal revenue bureau, A list jof those disbarred, made public tolay Secretary Mellon, also included 15 others who have been suspended. The disbarments covered # period of three years. Charges against the lawyers td varied, some including sg Se attorneys to bribe employes of the income lists of taxpayers subject to extra assessment. Senator Gloss of eis rs former Democratic seouenty 6 of the treas- wry, complained prescient of oe cnaracter 29 () —