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ir tonight and Tuesday; Migntly ol colder tonight. 4 ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | ftom | BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1926 PRICE FIVE CENTS 31. PAUL HOUSEBOAT PARTY ENDS IN TRAGEDY PLAN DEVISED TO LIQUIDATE CITY NATIONAL DEPOSITORS TO MEET] mas!: Will Gather at City Audi- He May Win Pardon Cc. Latimer is a “trusty” éon- vict in the Ohio tison at Colum- jus. When 13 con- victs broke out the other day he took Aa gun and went ‘after them, help- ing police recap- ture 12 of the fu- gitives. As a re- sult, it is el agh ed that Gov. Donahey may ene him a pardon. He is a former major league baseball is serving sentence for t; ‘and manslaught RED GROSS 10 CONDUCT ROLL CALL THIS WEEK de] John Parkinson to Head Drive leben Tyesday bight at at 8 o'clock at the city auditorium. The First National bank has co- cent of each City National depositor’s account will be t ings, pected in like kind to the First National bank, where it be be available for usq immediately, result of funds which would Re ised by the de- Positors’ committee and advances by the First National bank on the bills receivable of the Cit ti This would mean that 50 per cent of a depositor’s checking account would be placed on checking account at the First National cate of deposit at the First National for 50 per cent of its amount. May Pay In Full The balance of the deposits in the City National, according to the pro- posal, would be assigned to the City jational Depositors® | Holding com- pany. All equity in asscts of the bank would be assigned to this com- pany to be held in trust. for the de- poritors, and the company would d with the work of hea bran the depositors id ovensenlix be paid practically in in fou, althoug! this would depend somewhat on crop conditions during the next few years, (Continued on page two.) SOON FORGOT, START AGAIN. REAL ESTATE BONDS. 678,000 TO FEED. | ROYALTY Is IN THE BLOOD. By Arthur Brisbane. copyright, 1926.) Rik: seats ae Thurday it rane is It the mi es 22, hard ize that big po nish war as for the old o'to veterans think of the a sickens memory, ha: man to realize that the civil war is pases, iaaey, oo except to a little i ye ane forget i cg so we start new ones, Before the American Copstenstion Council, in Cleveland, Ww. ad of the biggest ond oldest nd. Rasen: 38, se in Aserien, te ne terest investors and the public thorities. Mr. Bishes's compat for nearly 50 years, with dollar ry rina or Jverest to any investor, record that only a few of the country's sonnies: £ fin cial concerns can equal. Many big railroads have ‘reason to envy it. It is therefore Mr. Strau speak as an ex; issues, and his eeretiny of such 4 entitles him, the sratitade of al of all investors. G. W. Hin n, commenting on Mr. ut pene the publi is buying real estate at the rate of a billion a year and the total soon will be many bill iition. The enterprise leads pasate) ing of housing ‘acllities afte period f of course, the lo Tt also has the ile Straus. ormanicat jon, shane uthorities should see to it Snamegtions | made by Mr. Btfaue re carried out oot able at ants, ee posite state bonds a! - ly that, Sad total nothing Ie ing ae. —Need of Relief Work Greater Than Ever With the need for relief work more urgent than ever before and a new project for the care of crippled and defective children before it, the local Red Cross chapter wil go into its an- nual roll call drive Thursday morn- ing with added zeal and enthusiasm. John Parkinson will serve as chair- man for the drive and at a meeting this afternoon workers will be as- signed to tcams and plans will be made to comb the city. srdsy night. An intensive three-d: drive is expected to bring results that will give the chapter sufficient funds to carry on its worthwhile work. Every resident of the city will be visited. To Form Organization At the meeting this afternoon, in} addition to the organization of work- | ers, a publicity campaign will worked out and will be carried on throughout the first part of the week and during the drive. Comi will be appointed and other buziness matters attended to. There arc six classes of member- ship in the American Red Cross, Four of these, the one dollar annual mem- bership; the five dollar contributing membership; the 10 dollar sustaining membership and the 26 dollar sup- rting membership, are used largely the-local chapters. _Oaly. 50 cents each subscription is sent to na- tional headquarters for national and international work. The two remain- ing memberships, a 50 dollar life and ‘a 100 dollar patron, are for the bene-: ards on a par with the highest fit of the national organization only. Relief Calls Numerous Calls for relief this fall more numerous than ev: the tance ‘Women’s Community Council has been gathered and sent families. Underwear and nd hopes in @ position to respond to all| farm f these. o'ghe telief work of the Red Cross in Burleigh county m4 well known and the city and county have shown their confidence in the ability of chapter in ne drives. The organi tion is again counting on this su to enable it to continue the wor! at w project in relation ¢o cri defective children ie a ne- rt cennty will be made by the local of- low 2 ms recelne wil fll tee reed, sel just as 4 asked to these as promi ntly as penile ria ae wine Kunkel’s Condition The drive u be! is ¢ \ England, Scotland, | abundance of agricultural products on} rey at te SORLIE TELLS {WORLD'S BEST | RESOURCES OF ENTERTAINERS | NORTH DAKOTA/TO BROADCAST Governor Refutes Erroneous|Radio Listeners Tonight Will Ideas Prevalent Elsewhere Hear One of Best Pro- About This State grams Ever Given TALKS OVER RAD1IO/22 STATIONS ARE LINKED) State Built Upon Solid Foun- dation of Law and Order, Chief Executive Says Y. Symphony, Oratorio, Bauer, Mary Garden, Will Rogers to Take Part New York, Nov. 15.—(4)—Millions of persons will be able to yattend by radio tonight one of the greatest per- were ever given. fee -two stations will be link- ed together for simultaneous broad- casting. The event marks the formal taking over by the National Broad- casting company of station WEAF, which the company acquired two weeks ago. Tn the hi hookup will be Made oe wee New York; I, Mess Chicago, U1. AP). vantages and ources of North D: kota were described here Saturda: night in an address by Governor A. G. Sorlie of that ‘state, Nacliversl over the radio at WMAQ. Fertile soil that produces more than half of the hard spring wheat raised in the United States, vast deposits of lignite coal and the finest white pet tery clay in the world are among Fhe piste which insure to North Dakota rgest measure of appi- ness and prosperity, Sorlie 's WBZ, Springfield, Refuting what he declared to be an Cea we Mass: Bh erroneous idea regarding North Da- fei et kota the executive said: “The crro- war, Buffalo; wait Philad ies 5 neous ideas prévalent in all sections] WRC, Washin, ‘WCSH, about North Dakota are a source of WCAE and KDKA amusing astonishment to most North WTAM, pied Dakotans. We cannot understand Cincinnatt, WWJ, Detroit; how people can hold to such bliss-] KYW, Chicago; WHAD, intentions fully ignorant ideas. To many peo; ve KSD, St. Louis; WCCO, 'St. Paul and North Dakota means nothing but Minneapolis, and WwDarF, blizzards, ane City. er} 7 p. m. Central Time All these stations will ae broad- casting at 8 p. m. New York time, excepting WDAF ai WSAI, which will begin at, respediely 9 and 10 p.m. New York time. and radical bolshevist, living on the] The New York symphony orchestra verge of imminent bankruptcy. will give four numbers and the New “Perhaps we North Dakotans are| York Oratorio Society it furnish somewhat to blame for permitting | ¢hree. such ignorant ideas and gross mis- Harold Bauer, pianist, will apy representations to exist. ‘The truth} with the orchestra and in solos. Oth- that we live in such comfort andjer artists will be Titta Ruffa, bat contentment and we are so busily! tone of the Metropolitan Opera co: engaged in producing the things that) pany, and Mary Garden, soprano of ;make it possible for the rest of the|the Chicago Gi country to live that we have not Garden will taken the time to broadcast the facts Rogers, will regarding our state. We have been| with a diplomat” from the dressing workers, not boosters.” room of the theatre in xine the pearing in Independence, insas. of North» ‘Dakota| “POMin \ independence, ens, Gov. Sorlie si come from Wales, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Germany and have brought... with them ideas of culture, -~-musie,-~art; poetry and folklore. whieh exist there: and are doing much to place: North Dakota’s cultural — stand- Kansas bitter cold, The only an imagine is of a vast ep of perpetually frozen, unpro: ive prairies and a peeeey that is a composite of primitive Indian gram the light opera company, the Goldman band, Weber and Fields and others will provide enterteinment. Orchestral dance selections will be given by George Ol: and his music direct from the a of the Pennsyl- vania hotel; by B. A. Rolfe and his orchestra at Pal D'or, New York and by Vincent Lopez and his orches t anywhere. i Lopez, ‘urning to the early history of ate the cxecgtive said it had tT seit WORLD POTATO |: CROP IS POOR THIS SEASON American Poe Larger Than Year Ago, But Still Below Five-year Average fought and that| as pleasant for the Indian: tribes in Dakota land” who raised an, its rich prairies. The 70,000 square mil f land in North: Dakota make it ger than New York, New Jersey, heer rp and M busetts combined, he said, and the state has more than 40,000,- 000 gar ee hey land with 64,000 000,000 acres under cultivation. “Rich in soil fertility, amply sup- plied with moisture and_ intersive sunshine during the growing season, forth Dakota is preeminently an ultural state,” the governor said. “No other state can match our rich ind productive soil. No other state ean produce such it and valuable crops as ours with so little np Nomh Dakota produces all hi with the season’s rainfall withou it irrigation and without inoculation of ; ine the soil. Without boasting we can) say that we have the best and cheap- it land in this or any other country. Wheat Not : “In addition -to sprin Ser) it, North ring wheat, Noi one hat the flax raised in the Washington, Nov. 15—UP)—A « erally poor ing countrit ported today x bp, the icultural de partment. Although e American crop was said to be 35,000,000 bushels pre Cad Mert, year, it still is 3 low ive-year average. wins, sof had ‘The Canadian erop, while 3,000,000 b wr 1000 ry eee rs 1925, was placed at o low the five-year av ne ited nd’ the estimated production in cape, exclusive of Russia, will be} ‘hi Sl about 15 per cent less, with quality “not tavereie: Ih ind, Wate gnd Northern Ireland, rotti ported, as well jiseased al tubers. Rai rmany has retarded crops the’ iaamaerland ‘i Czecho Sloval said, ign potatoes to mect the and millers use it for blending with Oe soft, low- praia. wheat grown in ther parts of the country. Increased corn acreage in North D: kota proves that farmers there have added. is crop to their aieralded| tl Lonel the speaker Wee eg ores ckad Yegg M: Mis' take sarin the “state in Pi aes Irist . as Holdup Prospect shington, Nov. 15.—UP)—Michael M. O'Connor is 58 years old and all is Hite been Irish. lies southern markets w' hi cores 7 Bd stock, Sor! ie £ alfalfa, me up will you growled and started forward. The negro fired once at his fect. large that bonds] tempt to » the average for North Dakota ie fn aed three times as large as the hole undermining #, it fell and average of other states. ned him in. Shortly afterward Growing production of sus kel was by his daughter, he said, has opened th 9 agg Far tga Seta tive pre at in ghe ne lar tion ts serious, doc-| distant future North ta will be eM world” as swell as s the of the world.” But Michael was is salning momentum and the fellow fie: yy = for two blocks, ‘atley tricked him’ He couldn't find hide nor hair of the ety ee “it ld only had a brick,” he mourn- ed. to a policeman. ‘So’s Your Old Man,’ Says ‘Italian Flier When ‘Congratulated ' Norfolk, Ve. Nov, 15—()—When Major Marie Dev Bernard” Teale for } filer, » won the During the latter half of the Pros} sa Schneider trophy in f “Weather Report 1 Maryland Twister AVTAG, Death came upon eleven children at their desks in this La Plata, Md., school house as it was Hector cardboard in the vortex of a whirlwind w than twenty other pupils were pha and a negro couple living nearby lost their h cut a swath of en f=) NINE REBELS 3 Killed in ARE SLAININ | Mine Blast: CHIHUAHUA c= tsmion ose sors sa Before Day Crew of 300 Killing Believed to Have Re-! wiles tals vealed Plans For New Rev- olutionary Movement Moundsville, W. Va., Nov. 15. sand a boy met d two others were seriously injured two of their comrades were entombed _'by a gas explosion eurly-today in th rst street mine of the . Gas Coul company here. vi Eleven workmen escaped the bl » Which oc% d the south entr about a quarter of a mile from the shaft. They were brought to the we in the mine cage four hours (P) Rumors that General Nicholas Fer-| 4 Zs f of staff for Gen-! i i Erancioco (Pancho) Villu was| the Worse for their experience. Gout tec ba nreioned First reports were that four miner fevolution, have heen denie Gen-| were entombed but a checkup of cral_Rumon Lopez, commander of the’ those in the mine xt the time ac- ican federal garrison here, ‘The’ counted for all but two. Rex ed General Fernandez ¢reWs Were searching for them an small detachment. of| held out some hope they would be Mexico ‘No. | found alive. This, it is said, was part of to mobilize thousands of; followers, who located on: huahua ranches when the bandit! j leader was slain. General Lopez admitted that de tachments had been ordered to search: jfor, the, rebel band. “Last night, h ldectared, nine of the band had been! killed according to unofficial reports and that Major Jose Florenzaza, his; chief of staff, was hunting for the others. He declined to state who was is command of the rebels. was overcome. ‘The father covered | ig et Le, oer ml the boy’s head with & coat, hoping to an outbreak is unlikely at this time.! | Kepceat Tad Mek aha then pine) They sin a serious gevolt would be| ba the sh more apt to occur after crops ha been harvested to provied food for the] p,i He ™ eis operated by the JAY rebels and money for munitions. | normal working force.of 300 men was ention crested by religious restric Bee, scheanine ag 80 (to work until 6 the time of the blast. were getting tions hag been advanced as one of th: reasons for planning a revolt at this! th0 mine in condition for the regular force. time. General Fernandez, however, is ‘Coal Men’s Combine said to have been in accord with anti- Catholic: demonstration: Is Placed Under Ban Half-Holiday Only Washington, Nov. 15.—(@)—The on This Christmas Noxthwesterp Traffic und Sorvice aes ay of mr yenenrolis has been Bismarck postal employes will! ofdered to desist from business prac- tices regarded by the federal trade ya halt holiday on Christmas, co caissioa. as wnfair. The bureau | was charged with being 2 combine of D ‘the approximately 1800 coal dealers do- holiday falls hag tha dase cinet be ing business in the states of Iowa, would mean a two-day suspension if! Minnesota, North Dakota, South Da- the Christmas deliveries were omit-| kota, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri, e Foreman’s Son Killed en Jesse Fogle, mine foreman, ed from the mine uninjured he tsick, for fur down in the stag son, Walter, died. ‘ogle’s boy was not employed in the mine, but had been visiting his fath- er. When the blast came, Fogle an ! 10 fellow workers fled before a cloud ‘of smoke and gas. They dragged the; boy with them. but before they suc ceeded in erecting a brattice the lad | ted, the postal department has order- in conspiraey to restrain the trade of have taken steps to] ed competitors.~ Utility Properties Are Consolidated Nov. 15.—()—Consolida- tion ” public wnlity properties valued ai pes a than $10,000,000 was announs here Sunday. The hold- ings are in Nebraska, Iowa, Minneso- ta and North and South Dakota. Included in the transaction are the Platte Valley Power and Light /eom- pany, and a number of independent companiss: all of which will hereafter 35 | be opertited by the Central West Pub- ie % ervice company. The Platte Valle napany, form- erly controlled by Max McGraw, will continue to furnish engineering and management service for the reorgan- ‘ized company. W. N. Albertson, Mil- waukee, will continue as president of the Central West company. Williamson: County Has Another Murder Herrin, mL, “Nov. tempts to’ determine the identity Ssturda who claimed another victim test wictim was Claude Craig, coal. miner, whose body wi pa id “early terday near a@ ro: that carriers make a delivery Christmas morning. Borage will send out our carriers on ular routes in the morning,” brid Oliver Lundquist, postmaste: “The routes will be so arranged that the men will be through and back to the office by noon, thus giving them «# half-holiday.” 4 Chica Weather conditions at North Da- kota Boints for He 24 hours ending at win . ‘THER Fol AST For Bismarck and vicinity: Mostly fair tonight. and Tuesday; slightly colder tonight. For North Daketa: Mostly fair $eeikht and Tassie silently colder tonight east and central ions. ‘WEATHER COND! CONDITIONS Pressure, with its pee] over oF. siecle Valley, extends Beaten east t urday night occupied the time of whe aie county officials Figo thorities believe thi to nol come a an Aeate by thy or Shelton gengs, for he had not been| known to associate with either. . London's dustbins contain Leen ns of, year, removal Takes 13 Young Lives Takes 18 Yours Lives | Glendale | 4, the explosion, apparently none, ° sses he had stood by help-' 3 The workers in the mine ut} SEVEN DROWN AS DUCKBOAT IS CAPSIZED Bodies Have Not Been Recov- ered—Three Persons Are Rescued From Water ALLEGED LIQUOR PARTY Merrymakers Attempt to Flee in Boat When Patrolmen Arrive on Scene Pa Minn, Nov. 15.—() —Checking by police today re- duced death list in the “house boat party drowning” here last night by two, leaving five per- sons still unaccounted for, Fay Chisholm, one of those reported drowned when 10 per- sons attempted to excape trom al aed drinking party during @ police raid on a houseboat, was naid to have been home all night. The second man, Mike Hogan, elated rted ween near the riv- ide. More foundered as they were escaping from the houseboat, are missing from their homes, St. Paul, Nov. EC liquor drinking party aboard 0 house- t on the Mississippi river here ly lust night when rymakers, attempt ‘om the law, were © river when a small (QUEEN MARIE WILL BE HOME BY CHRISTMAS # :Cancels Part of Southern i Trip and Advances Sailing Date to December 11 fhe vietims were five men and two women who died in the water when ithe leaky bout foundered as they fled from the houseboat. one the bodies were recovered, Three of the 10 persons who were in the boat were rescued, From them it learned that those drowned were: Joseph Becker; ( ‘dull, owners of the housebo Hogan; Joseph Kenaly; holm; Mrs. ne Pothen, a named Harriet, *| Mrs. Nick Becker, Gertrude son and G ¢ Lavalle, all ¢ Paul, were cued, Call Police The tragedy occurred when those on ¢ housevout tried to flee as two .;Patrolmen appeared in response to u call from a neighboring bont whose [Occupant -reported to police that thet was a drunken fight in progress on the Randall craft. Recently the p idall's boat on a liquor char ¢ the occupants of the pl. aped by leaping into a rowboat alongside and pulling for the other shore. It was believed that last men and women th the same mped into the boat und start- ‘ed for the other side. Half way ove they shouted for help and the of- ficers reported that the bout was sp around in the swift current, and soon capsized. ot Nov. 15. () . the Christian holiday thoughts of home to mil queens to the humblest will f Mi rooftree in Buch the bleak Atlantic. At the request of King Ferdinand f Rumania, his royal’ consort has celed a portion of h she and Chi r re Decembe: They will 24 f the will he abando arlier sailing date. |. {The flaming stacks of steel mills y, I eckoned Queen Marie from round of receptions which filled her time Sunday from, ‘noon to late at night. | Tonight she will be a guest at the | Casino Club ‘MAN ADMITS FORGING HIS | OWN PAROLE, = Is Again in Jail—Hoax vw GOP HER STATE covered When Parole Is GETS SNOW AND RAIN SUNDAY Filed at Capitol Precipitation, ‘Quite General Over the Past Week-end, Continues Today St. Paul, Nov. 15.—()—Sleighs use in extreme northern ‘Minne ta, central Minnesota is getting snow parole was filed at the cupitol. j and southern Minnesota rain as pre- Although he told officers last night| cipitation, quite general terday, that the prepared the parole, he re-| continued throughout the state to- fused to reveal how he secured the; day RIREK Ged baadt walled fram thet Hive dnphss ae suai fell at Interna.” camel tional Falls Sunday night, while the temperature dropped to 20 degrees above zero. Steps were being taken to open highways with snowplow out- | fits, while the snow, logging compan- s reported, will be of uftold value that industry because sleighs may now be used. Highways in the vicinity of Fergus ‘alls were reported to be drifted un- ider a five-ineh fall, wine Wiltmar had an inch of snow. Little Falls, Moorhead and St. Cloud reported ‘con- tinued snow today. Temperatures in conizel Minnesota ranged from 27 to Other portions of Minnesota, cluding the Twin C in general precipitation. TRAIN STRIKES GIR GIRL. BLINDED BY RAINSTORM ' St. Paul, Nov. 15—()—Sleighing in extreme northern Minnesota, a snow t Ortonville with drifty four Pp, and heavy snows quite gen- eral in coueenl ‘Mitnesota, fh eg ee the state another touch of winter, One serious accident. wax reported BLIND, PUT EXPERT ON WATCHES result of the agit Sunday rain- London.—Blind people are reputed) fall, which tu: ve to be singularly clever with their| many communities ther th first. f of fi but a Saichaker, born blind,| the year, is seldom heard Mi “) ard Such a man, Thomas Rippin, lived| was strucl at'Holbeach, Lincolnshire. Born blind, | Sunday. he could take apart and put together again watches of most delicate pan anism, and in less time than most watchmakers who have good ight. @ some of the wheels and’ igh a and when| Minnesota. A stor atauas na vicinity, reports cated, | Three Are Saved The police and residents of the river bank, attracted by the screams, ‘et out in other boats in an effort to |reseue them, Only three were saved. Police today held Fred Labatt, Min- neapolis and Matt Becker of St. Raul, brother of Nick Becker, pending an investigation. | City, Olka., Nov. 15. tting that he forged | his! own parole, L. M. Carson, former | Creek county school superintendent,! convicted ‘of raising a warrant, was | again in jail here toda Larson was sentenced to 16 years jin the state penitentiary on a charga | of raising a county supreme court warrant from $4.05 to $204.05. | Four days ago a parole was receiv-| ed bearing the signatures of the 4 ernor and secretary of stat Larson returned to his wife and six children. The hoax was discovered when the| —— Temperature and Road Conditions | (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) Bismarck--Cloudy, 35; roads good. | ase Cloudy, 2 ie rouds good. roads good. roads good, ‘loudy, roads heavy. Grand Forks Cloudy, 30; roads in- good. Jamestown—Cloudy, 30; roads goo Hibbing—Rain ull 38; dirb roads soft. Mankato—Cloudy, 37; choppy. Rochester—Cloudy, ue roads soft. Crookston—-Cloud; roads fair. Devils Lake—Cloud; hs roads fair. night, cloudy roads soft, Legatd, 57 years train in Fe: see the fied hi