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WEATHER FORECASTS Fair and cool tonight and Wednes- day. Light frost probable tonight. ESTABLISHED 1878 PEACE NEGOTI AMENDMENTS — TO CROP BILLS ARE DISCUSSED Five Days of General Debate Completed By the House Last Night HAUGEN BILL IS FIRST Personalities and Charges of Sectional Conflict Enter Into Debate Washington, May 11—()-+The surplus crop bills entered thé tor- tuous trail of amendments today, five days of general debate having bgen completed late last night hy e house. , Although differences of opinion ave become more sharply outlined with the progress of the debate, lead- ful that action may be Friday or Saturda e stabilization, as proposed én the $375,000,000 Haugen bill, is tech- nically the business before the house, that measure having been automatic- all placed in position for considera- tion of amendments when ‘the extend- t taken Pri ed period for general discussion end- | ed last night. No Roll Call Required This is the only one of the three bills which can be submitted to a record vote under the parliamentary situation surrounding them. After it has been read for amendment, one | paragraph at a’ time, with members limited to five minutes for discu: sion of proposed changes,,the $100,- 000,000 Tincher éredit measure and the $10,000,000 Curtis-Aswell commod- ity marketing bill\may be advanced as substitute: quired for de cedure. Personalities and charges of sec- tional conflict entered into the clos- ing hours of the general debate. The Haugen bill, advocated by the corn helt delegation which sponsored the equalization fee principle during the recent farm relief hearings, provided the main vehicle’ for’ much of this dispute. Calls Plan Unsound , At one point Representative Begg, Republican, Ohio, insigted that the plan was unsound and urged members to stop making promises to farmers solely to gain votes, asserting that any political revolt against his party in the west would be brief. At another, Representative Quinn, Democrat, Mississippi, wanted to know, when Representative Tincher, Repudtican, Kansas, who voted for the McNary-Haugen bill two years ago and is now sponsoring the relief program advanced by Secretary Jar- dine, had, “changed his mind” about the economic principles involved. TODAY A DESERT TRAGEDY NEWSPAPER WARNING THEY’D ELECT THE KING END IN SIGHT ion under such pro- BY ARTHUR BRISBANE (Copyright, 1926.) Mrs. Cox, a young mother, on the Arizona desert, was alone with her two little girls, one four months the other three years old, her husband was away. She was bitten by a rat- lesnake, the dreadful poison worked! so fast that she had no strength to crank her little automobile and go ‘for help. Knowing that she was dying, not daring to leave ‘her two babies to die of thirst or be killed by prowling animals, she killed them, then died of the sn&ke poison. Earnest citizens a ked to “ex- press their opinion as to her con- duct.” The answer is that the deci- sion rested with the mother. The mother struggled against the poison for 24 hours, her body, swelling, blood flowing from a wound that she had cut to let out the poison. Then she shot her two children to death and wrote, “Bury me and the children in the same casket.” Opinions concern- ing that tragedy are not important. Mr. Cornelius u sie itis tabloid newspapér is in the ‘hands 0: a eae in Los Angeles which emphasizes the warning given in this column more than once against buy- ing stock in newspaper enterprises. Those offering such stock may mean well, but they cannot know whether they are headed for prosperity or @ receiver. Stock in @ profitable news- paper, is not for'sale. The other kind should not be bought. It is otherwise with ‘bonds of an ‘established gprofitable paying. news- paper. The New Yor! Evening Journal;| for instance, calls in this week, and pays off more than ten years ahead of time 2 1-2 millions of bonds issued within the year. And the buyers get a bonus of 4 per cent for surrendering the bonds. No property is harder to build than a newspaper, none harder to kill than one thorokahly tablished. James Gordon Bennett's. New York Herald proved, ‘that. for many years. e Prince of Walas and his broth- er ytne Duke of Yorkin the house of simmemy arasa, Pastas seoites juchat by al bem kings, and. the establishment of ‘a British republic. \ wet Buchanan would discover, if he got this republic, that it takes more than a name to change & government or a people. ~ You copia call Persia # republic, hut 1 you would have Foute oe ¥ republic, No roll call. is re-; | THE BIS ROUGE— | i i | Has never danced or been to Has never used powder, lipsti Has never sipped a coc spooned ? Well, there is. Seattle. And, to top it all, she sa satin slippers, chiffon ho: “I’m perfectly happy,” she says. frock at a party once. back into my uniform.” atmosphere. And—oh, yes--she’s been kissed! Seattle—Would you believe that there a theater? ail, smoked a cigaret, played “We have our boy friends, you know,” CK TRIBUNE [awn BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1926 still a girl in America who: ouge, or bebbed her hair? ds or There’s Miss Florence Kelso, Salvation Army lass of s she never has any desire for short skirts, silk frocks or gigolo hats. She doesn’t even know what a gigolo hat “I tried wearing a friend’s pretty It was so uncomfortable I took it off and got Miss ‘Kelso was “born inte the army” and has spent all her life in its she adds shy! 10 HOLD BOND ELECTION ON | JUNE EIGHTH School Election on June 1 Caused Postponement of Date For One Week The special election decide whether or nat the city shall issue $50,000 in bonds to finance the build- ing of a community building in Bis- marck will be held on Tuesday, June &, it was decided at the mecting of the city’ commission last evening, when the resolution was passed au- | thorizing the city auditor to call such election. A week ago it was decided to have the election on Tuesday, June 1, but it was since learned that the annual school election will. be held on that date and it was not deemed advisable to hold both elections on the same date, inasmuch to | { whereas, in the special city election ‘the voting must be done at each reg- ular voting precinct. the commisgioners set Tuesday, June 8, for the election—one week later than originally planned, Two Questions The bonds are to be in the denomi- nations of $1,000 each, according to the resolution, bearing interest at the rate of fi ind one-half per cent, payable semi-annually. First pay- ment of the principal will be in 1931, when $5,000 of the bonds would be retired, with $3,000 retired annually thereafter, from 1932 to 1945, in- clusive. Voters will be required to decide upon two questions, each of which will ‘be upon a separate ballot. One question is whether the:city shall be- come indebted in an amount not exceed three per cent of the assessable value of its _ taxable property, without regard to existing indebtedness, for ‘the purpose of erecting the proposed community building. The secord | question will be that of issuing $50,- 000 worth of bonds in order to fi- nance the project. ~ Polling Places The resolution provides for the following polling places for the spe- cial election: First ward, precinct No. 1—William Moore school. First ward, previnet No, 2—C, B. Little garage. Second ward, 1. ‘ sad ward, precinct No. 2—John 1—High to , precinct No. J—Waill rage. Tiled ware, precinct. No. ia , sentra ward, precinct No. 2—Rich- hool. mg aE ‘ward-—Wachter school. ‘ward—105 Third street. Sitth “yuri, precinct. No. Fire wea, ward, ppecinet No. 2—St. d 01. Mary's screction Officials The following election re naméd: ae First ward, precinct No, 1—William Harris, L. Larson, Mrs. Elmer Brown. First ward, precinct No. 2—L. F. Crawford, E. H. Sperry, H. P. God- fd. ; ward, precinct No. 1—James urran’ Peter eid, ©. W, Blunt. ofticials cinet No, ‘2r—J,N. , A, 8. Erickson, Robt. Phelps. (Continued on page three.) s all voting is done! at one. place in the school election’ Consequently | | Man Falls Three ‘Stories—Is Only Slightly Bruised Milwaukee, ing three stories, backward somergault ped, Harold Perry, unded on his only 11—(A). turning Fall- two slightly fell from a window while at work at an apartment building. After an examination at a hospital he walked to his home. WOMAN TAKES POISON WHILE WAITING TRIAL Mrs. Esther Atz, Charged With Poisoning Her Son, Died Last Night . rmont, Minn, May 11.—@)— » an ipdictment charging her irst degree murder remained ,' Mrs, Esther Atz, charged the death of her son Raymond, five years old, took poison last mght and died. ? Mrs. Atz, who was 28 years. old, was at liberty on $20,000 bail after her arrest Murch 15, following the inding of poison in the organs of her son. She is the ‘last of a happy family of four of two years ago. At that time her husband, Charles | Atz, a garage mechanic, was killed by ‘an explosion. A year ago, Flor- ence, two years old, died. December 14, last, Raymond died in convulsions and an investigation brought his mother’s apprehension, The ‘Martin county grand jury late Monday: reported its findings in the case but a formal report was not planned until today. lowever, after her death, the clerk of the district court announced that a true bill charging first degree murder had been reported. Son of Jamestown Doctor Is Drowned Jamestown, N. D., May 11.—~)-- Stanley .Musburger, three-year-old son of Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd E, Mus- burger of this city, was drowned in the James river at about 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon when he fell into the deep pool at the foot of the mill dam, The little fellow was tak- en from the water about 15 minutes, it is estimated, after he had gone down, and the pulmotor in the hands of local physicians: wag used for a half hour without effect, He had been playing on the fish way wall at the foot of-the dam with an older boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Matchie, who fell in with him. The story is that an older Matchie boy, about nine, fishing nearby pull- ed his brother out byt could not get the other. He then ran home some two blocks but in his fright could not make his mother understand that the Musbatgor Sail hades’ in ‘“ gee e. spre: ie alarm but \mean- ed William while another boy summon: bo ’ Bice dcr ae anges | ke if ' 4 id -is‘a “grandson of James Buchwnan of Buchanan, . NAVY EXPERTS ARE SURE BYRD CROSSED POLE Foreign Countries, However, Await Positive Proof of Achievement DOUBT PLANE’S ABILITY German Papers Say Success Result of Yankee Enter- prise and Daring New York, May 11,—(?)—American navy experts are accepting as an.act accomplished, the flight of Lieut. Commander i, Byrd’ and Pilot Floyd Be Spitzbergen to the North Pole and buck, notwith. standing the feeling of reserve held in Italy, Denmark, Norway and Ger- many pending positive proof’ of the achievement With un compass and his own bubble sextant, Byrd at all times was able to determine his “exact position and to know positively when he eross- ed over the pole and circled about it. It is the belief of the naval experts that with a bright sun shining and ubsolute freedom from fog or clouds, Byrd was certain when he returned to Kings Bay Sunday that he hid visualized from the air thq scene that Peary had observed from, the ice—the exact top of the world. It is the opinion in naval circles that with the formula which had heen worked out for him to deter- mine his geographical position, Byrd's claim will prove outside the realm of contradiction, Sailed Straight To Pole He sailed straightaway toward the pole, without any markers below to show him the route, and the plane winged its way back over the. vast stretches of ice directly to the spot where the birdmen started on their momentous journey, From Rome came reports of some incredulity, but it is admitted that if the claim is scientifically proven it will mark wonderful achievement. The chief doubt raised in the minds of the Ita i r the ability of the plane. ¢ Ford, to nego- tiate 1500 miles from Spitzbergen to the pole and return in 15'4 hours. rmany, although — reserving judgment: until C presents proof sup} claim, the newspapers hail his an-j nounced conquest of the pole as a characteristic result of “Yankee en- terprise and In the opinion of the Danish ex- plorer, Peter Freuchen, Byrd solved the problem where Amun last year “by traveling light. en that if, the commander serts that he circled the pole, may be certain he has done so. Await Observations Dr, Skattum, president of the geo- graphical society of Norway, ass that it is impossible to accept By: claim until his observations are pub-t lished. Mrs. J. Rivers Byrd of Baltimore, grandmother of Commander Byrd, was not ustonished at the achievement of the commander. Great-grent-grand- 4 mother Byrd, she says, predicted 2 long time ago that one of her de- scendants would get to the pole. f Weather Report Se ne Temperature at 7 a. m. Highest yesterday Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 a. m. Highest wind velocity . Weather conditions at North kota points for the 24 hours ending at 8 a. m. today: | as- i Precipitation @ecS0SS5S555SCin inches li Bismare' Bottineau . | Devils Lake | Dickinson ... | Dunn Center Ellendale . Fessenden Grand Forks Jamestown Langdon . Larimore . Lisbon . Minot lapoleon ... Pembina Williston . Moorhead, Minn, .66 42 0 © WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity; Fair and continued cool tonight and Wed- nesday. Light Saat probable tonight. For North Dakota: Fair and con- tinued cool tonight and Wednesday, Light frost probable tonight. GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS ‘A large high pressure area covers the entire Northwest this morning and cool weather prevails in that se tion, but no damaging frost occurres at any place, The low pressure area is centered over the lower Mississippi Valley and precipitation occurred at most places along the eastern Rocky [ Mountain slopé, in the middle and southern Plains States and in the low- er Mississippi Valley. The weather is generally fair in the Great Lakes region, upper Minalesipay Valley and from the western Rocky Mountain slope to the Pacific coast. Pioneer N. D. Woman- Dies at Minneapolis Fargo, N. D., May 11.—UP)—Mrs. Mathew Harrison of — Minneapolis. pioneer North Dakota ‘woman, died of heart failure in Minneapolis Mon- day, according to word jived here; ‘The funeral will be heid in Minne- apolis. Thursday afternoon. Mr. al county (n 1881 "ir Marrlaon opera unty in . Mr, Harrison 0} ineliet otis, | ed the Rolla Milla at PRICE FIVE CENTS ATIONS ARE BELIEVED UNDER WAY | ~ NO DANCES, SMOKES OR HE’S HAPPY Church Marriage Isn't Enough---Millionaire|\) DEFINITE Publisher, Wed Decade Ago By Pastor, to Be “Remarried” By Judge Lindsey of Denver Kax,, May 11--Most eloping coup! eense tightly eluteh: hand, stop in at a J. Ps and have the knot tied in a hur And when mother and father find out, they very often insist that the knot be re-tied in what they consider a more fitting manner by a gentleman of the clergy in frock cout and every- thing, with a choir singin q and calla lilies heaped upon the hymeneal church alta Bat Mr. and Mrs. Haldeman-Juliu re about to do it just the other way round, Haldeman-Julius is the noted “lit- tle book” publisher, who in a few years has attained great wealth by suing vest pocket editions of stand- ard wo. Combined Their Names Ten years ago he and Mrs. Halde- man-Julius were married in the con- ventionat manner by a Presbyterian minister, The only thing unconven- tional about the marriage was that the publisher decided should not lose her name entir Refore the marriag Julius and hers Haldeman, his name was man-Julius and has so been known ever since, But now the publisher has decided that marriage by a clergyman does not constitute a real wedding. So he and Mrs. Hildeman-Julius will be mar- ried again—-this time by a ju Judge Ben Lindsey, noted juvenile judge of Denver, will perform the “re- peat” ceremony on the terrace of ‘the Haldeman-Julius home at ard, some time int May. The date has not been decided because the day must be sunny. . The “little book” millionaire, who has been thinking furiously about this instittuion of marriage, decided not only that marriages by clergy are unseemly and unfitting, but that a marriage performed in gloomy weath- er is not right. Exact Date Not Set So the exact date for the Halde- man-Julius “repeat ceremony” will not be set until one day da ght and golden. Marriage is a civil contract, and the proper person to tie the knot is judge who represents the state, and not a preacher, who represents the church,” says Haldeman-Julius. “Marriage is a man-made institu- tion, regulated by law. I have always segarded the fact that we were mar- ied bya preacher ‘as’a blot on our’ lives, and for the satisfaction of our intellectual integrity t and I agreed to go through ceremony before a judge.” A unique features of the “repeat” Haldeman-Julius marriage will be the attendance of the bride by her daugh- | ter, and of thé groom by his son. Eight-year-old Alice will “give her mother away,” and hold the bride’s bouquet while her father puts the ring upon her mother’s left third finger. He'll Be Best Man And the groom, attended by son Henry, aged 6, will present his best} man, no doubt with a new scooter or baseball mitt rather than the con- ventional] gold cuff links, “While it may seem strange for a father and mother to be married with th own children bridal attend-| ants,” s the millionaire fathe: “my wife Marcet and I believe that it will mean much to our children to re-~ member that their parents were con- sistent to their intellectual integr “And you must admit it is some thing very unusual for 4 son and daughter to be attendants at the w ding-of their parents.” MAN KILLED AS AUTO TIPS NEAR MANDAN John Ennis, Selfridge Farmer, Is Victim — Accident Late Last Night Mandan, N. D., May 11,—(@)-—John Ennis, aged 55, for the past eight years engaged in teaming and farm- ing at Selfridge, N. D., was instantly killed late last night when the auto- mobile in which he was riding went into a ditch a half mile south of Mandan and overturned. James Fogarty of, Selfridge, who was driving, was pinned beneath En- nis and the car, but. managed to e squirm out after about two hours at} it :30 this morning and summoned aid. Ennis was dead when taken from the wreck. : The dead man has a brother in Mason City, Iowa, another at Manka- to, Mjnn., and a third brother in Minneapoli: Mandan Boy’s Leg Broken When Auto Hits Motorcycle Richard Gussner, 17-year-old Man- dan boy, had one leg fractured at 6:30 last evening when the motor- cycle he was riding was struck by an automobile ‘said to have been driven by Roy Benson of Bismarck. Guss- ner was thrown to the pavement. The accident occurred at the corner of Main and Fifth streets here. Gussner was taken at once to the Bismarck hospital where his injuries were ‘given attention. He is said to be getting along nicely today. Benson, it is—said, was driving south on Fifth street and turned east ‘onto Main street. Gussner was com- ing from the depot and drove his poarrre into the/ path of the au- tomobile, woke : Recent experiments tales that: birds have a sense of taste, though not acute. Pies The pub-' lisher combined the two into Halde-j “comes | ter to “give the bride away.” NORGE STARTS - ON ITS FLIGHT TONORTH POLE Amundsen-Ellsworth Dirigible| Left Oslo, Norway, at 10:10 This Morning Oslo, Norway, M.A) ~The Amundsen-Ellsworth dirigible Norge | started on its flight to the North Pole und Alaska at 10:10 this morn- Spitzbergen, Captain Amundsen at morning said: “Now flying across the Polar Ice. The expedition sends its best thanks to the premier (of kindly telegram before the start. It was officially announced this aft- ernoon that Captain Amundsen will take possession of any land found during the voyage in the name of the King of Norway. Hope To Discover Land Roald Amundsen, noted’ explorer, and Lincoln Ellsworth, his companion on their unsuccessful attempt to teach the North Pole by airplane | last year, hope primarily to discover ‘land during the flight of their Ita- ii built dirigible Norge, which be- {gan today. Amundsen has pointed out that it is only 2,000 miles from Spitzbergen to Alaska and that the, discovery of even a small piece of land near the top of the world would afford an invaluable connecting link ca and Europe and this received immediately Norge will fly in almost a straight line ross the pole and through the center of the unexplored region of the arctic area in the polar sea. The leaders of the expedition have estimated that it will take three days to fly from Kings Bay, Spitzber- gen, to Point Barrow, Alas STATE LOSES SUIT AGAINST OIL COMPANY United States Circuit Court of Appeals’ Upholds Tax Case Decision St. Paul, May 11—(A)—A verdict for the Standard Oil company of Indiana against the state of North Dakota in a tax dispute case was opheld by the United States circuit court of appeals in an opinion handed down here today. The state appealed the case in which it sought to obtain a net in- come tax of $105,249 for three years up to 1920 instead of $29,178 paid by the ‘company on the original as- ‘sessment. The case was brought in district court after a change pcm Place in the office of the state x commissioner and 3 appealed by C..A. Fisher as state treasurer, ing, says a message from Kings Bay, A wireless message received from! 1: peep way) for his |” PROPOSAL IS YET IN SIGHT Labor Official Says Some- thing Tangible May Be Forthcoming Tomorrow PARLEYS PROCEEDING Only One Passenger Injured in Express Train Wreck Near New Castle _ London, May 11.—)—Peace nego- ‘tiations in Great Britain’s general Strike can be definitely said to pe going on under the surface. _They have not yet reached an of- fic status, and what results they will achieve remains to be seen, a man high in the labor ranks stat | late this afternoon that parleys w | proc ‘They were in such a del- state, however, he added, that nothing further could be said for the moment. He said it was possible something tangible would be forthcoming 1o- morrow but emphasized that nothing {definite was in sight now. government communique, issued at 7 o'clock tonight, says: “There is as yet little sign of gen- eral ‘collapse of the strike, and the trades union congress is believed to be making efforts to eall out certain trades still at work. “It can be definitely stated that there is growing disaffection among the strikers with the policy of the general strike, and considerable un- easiness as to its ultimate results,” FOUR KILLED IN RAILWAY ACCIDENTS London, May 11.—@)—The first case of serious sabotage since the general strike began was reported to- day. The famous “Flying Scotchman,” an express from Edinburgh to London, Mr. and Mrs. E. Haldeman-Julius and (inset) Judge Ben Lindsey, who will perform their second marriage ceremony. their chlidren will attend the wedding: Sketch shows how the son as best man, the daugh- HINGTO? Haugen bill for amendment. Railroad labor bill before senate. rohibition continues committee WORKMEN DIG DOWN 38 FEET T0 GET BABY Attempt to Revive Infant Un- successful—Had Died of Suffocation Benton Harbor, Mich., May 11.—(@) After digging down 38 feet, vol- unteer workmen late last night took from a well on a farm near here the body of the 14-months-old son of y d Mrs, Elkneh Carter, More than 500 workers from the vicinity, spurred on by the pos ty that the hild might still be alive, worked for more than 12 hours to’ reach the baby. After efforts to revive the infant with a pulmotor proved unavail Dr. W. T. B dead. “He said death was caused by suffocation, and not by the fall, Ff- forts to reach the child without dig-' ging were futile because of the nar- rowness of the shaft and the fact that he was so tightly wedged against the wall that it was impossible to bring him up with grappling hooks fastened in his clothing. Grading shovels and road scrapers were used to dig an inverted cone- shaped hole, about 75 feet in diame- ter at the top. Beef Cattle Train Will Stop Here For Evening Program Farmers from Burleigh county and surrounding territory are expected in Bismarck on Wednesday, May when the beef cattle special train will arive here for an evening stop, ‘and arrangements are being made for a full evening’s program. The train is scheduled to arrive about 6 o'clock in the evening and the program will take place between the hours of 6: and 9, If the weather permits the entire affair will be at the baseball grounds. The program will be cai ried out rain or shine, however, as if oye wesihes:is nate prante a section 01 e Northern Pacific freight dey will be used. . sel Twenty-one head of cattle will be with the train and all beef breeds will be represented, including Here- fords, Angus, Shorthorn and Galloway. Representative animals of each breed will be shown—the best that can be found in North Dakota, and sentative of each breeding association will give a talk on that particular type. An expert meat cutter will be among the speakers, who will explain the dif- ferences in value of the various cuts of meat from the various types of animals. > The marsh wren builds. several nests besides the one used as a home, the empty nests being dummies to deceive marauders. repre-| John Crowley of one of the fastest trains in Great Britain, was wreck yesterday near New Castle, afid the authorities today claimed a rail had been deliberately: loosened, The train was being run by unteer crew, replacing railw: ens Luckily the engineer had slowed to a bare six miles an hour, and only one passenger was injured. é Foor Deaths In 24 Hours Four deaths from railway accidents have occurred in the last 24 hours, Three passengers were killed and a number hurt when a train manned by volunteers collided with a freight train near Edinburgh, and in another accident at Cambridge one person was killed and two were injured. King George held a private coun- cil at Buckingham Palace this morn- ing. Whether it was for ratification of further emergency measures was not disclosed. A government spokesman, outlining the situation at the, beginning of the eighth day of the strike, said there had been important defections among but that the main ikers remained out, le country wis quiet, he added. improvised transporta- tion services were steadily expanding and the measures of protection for the volunteers had proved efficacious, Much interest is being displayed in the activities of the various labor leaders, and especially in a general meeting of these men scheduled for tomorrow, at which it is reported a formula for ending the trouble will be discussed. | No indica side that p Daily Mail Is Issued Notwithstanding the government's action in commandeering the news print supply not in the hands of pub lishers, the Daily Mail brought out its first London edition this morning, In its leading article the paper suggests that “as it is not denied by any one that ‘the general strike i illegal,” the “trades union congres: has no legal sanction, its orders are contrary to the law, and it should be ssolved.” The Mail also urges that he 500 soviet agents in Great Brite n has come from either eis i declaration that the strike is illegal is declared by the government spokesmen to have caused pany trade unionists to ree turn to work unconditionally. BODY OF WOMAN KILLED LAST FALL IS FOUND Husband Has Been Held Since October on His Admis- sion of Guilt ~ Ashland, Wis., May 11—)—The corpus delicti, or, literally, the body of the crime, has just been revealed in the case of a man held since last October for the slaying of his wife on his own adi mn of guilt, al- thought the body of his victim was missing. The waters of Chequamegon Bay, dia! ef rales girdig y! of ice yesterday, washed up the of Mra. Ashland, nearly seven months after her hi sur. rendered to the police and confessed slaying her. a Crowley was charged with the woman to death with an oar’ throwing her body into the bay had never been cause of failure to red and