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WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy tonight and Friday; prob- ably snow. Not much change. ‘ESTABLISHED 1873 . QUEEN MARIE |[——annuat on cat Under Way | TO QUIT TOUR | IMMEDIATELY Serious Turn in Condition of King Ferdinand Reported to Be Responsible WILL SAIL ON FIRST BOAT Announcement Made This Morning After Special Train - Leaves Indianapolis Louisville, K; Nov. 18—@)— Jueen Marie will ‘ork when she leaves Louisville to- night and will sail for home on the first available steamer. Marie called in her official family and American advisers this morning just before she began a tour of Louis- ville and told of her wish to aban- don all features of the remainder of her tour. Princess Tleana will accompany the queen to New York while Prince Nicholas is visiting Detroit and Cleve- land during the next two days. Exact schedules for both trips have not been completed. VANDERBILT ANNULME) MISS DORRANCE AT WORK. WHY LIVE LONGER? THE THIRTY BEST YEARS. “p yed because “the Roman Catholic church has annulled the marriage of the Duke or Marlborough to Consuelo ne years ago they were Thomas’ Episcopal York. Both had been din the Episcopal faith in in- The Am an duchess di- d her British duke six years go; both have married again. Be- fore that they had two children, one of whom will be the next “Duke of Marlborough. in church in New bapti agen Mser. Lavell, speaking for.Catholi- cism, says the Catholic chureh “does not annul a marriage without good n, for a duke any more than it amp." might have been a sinful agreement between them before the , that would nullify the mar- ch as agreein t to have one or more children, or and remarry if they rew tired of ench othe urch refused a di- voree demanded by eg the Eighth nd, although he had the pow- , and used it, to take away all the property of the Catholic church in Great Britain. Henry the Eighth’s annoyance over that incident saved Martin Luther. Charles the Fifth, to oblige his friend Henry of En d, would not allow the Catholic authori- ties to seize Luther when he spugnces at Worms, defying Rome. But for that divorce incident there wouldn’t have been any Lutheran church. A question that perhaps interests the Vanderbilt family is, “Now that the Duke of Marlborough, announe- intention to become a Roman has had his marriage an- nulled, will he return to ‘his wife the seven million good ye Hyd dollars extracted from the W. K, gerbil fortune, previous to,bis marriage, b; the intelligent solicitor that the duke brought with him from London? The answer probably is: “No. Findings, keepings.” ee Miss Eleanor Dorrane jigent daughter of an able father, ners her father"s factory at the to help manufacture 260/000, wes s soup every year. The young lady, ified by a course of ey at the sa penne, Ss 5 ill mee ents ah hour peel much for an oeiP chia ‘whose fat er is worth fifty m’ nillions, This highly educated irl should first make sure that all mineral salts in the vegetables and meat are preserved in the soup, then move over to the advertising, Aaanua t and write about it. ere she mi ut double her father's output and come. . American sonking, metheds usually | ©, boil out the preci ineral salts and throw them —- Reet one rat abundant food from whi mineral salts have been ble Give another ‘rat nothing but plain wate: will outlive the ot! Professor Julian*Huzley,: heir to the scientific genius of the great Husley, 8 the im of human. be- ings is e much wer in future generations. Eugenits..will breed stronger babies, ey infantile deaths, and births will be fewer. They must (Continued @n-page six.) A. C. Balloting Will Close Tomorrow at 6 Members of the Ass6cistion of Com- merce have antil 6 o'élock tomorrow evening to mark their. chetee for. rectors on the sueeial ballots een hi it fi ta the’ sasodiotlow pifoge: “All an het lots ase be in by 6 p.m. counted. 8. W. Corwin, A. M. yon ee ie 8. Dobler, J.P. oe: fomn 5 a 8 gi tel nese TKe plain water rat] fog ,'B.| notified and THE BIS [_srmsoncartncr Wer JSITUATION IN {REPUBLICANS CK TRIBUNE [xuom BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1926 BLIZZARDS ENVELOP CENTRAL WEST STATES The Burleigh county chapter of the Red Cros all times to help prote marck and the county. Calls for ably be heavy, and the Red ¢ Ss county on its membership ro! tory soliciting membershi: need Workers are thesneedy and unfortun f during t every s winter will prob- lent of the city and now combing the terri- , the drive having started this morning. RED CROSS PERFORMS GREAT SERVICE. IN COMMUNITY-MAJOR PART OF FUNDS RAISED IS USED IN BURLEIGH COUNTY Corrective Work Among Chil- dren to’ Be Major Under- taking This Year—Poor and _ Needy Are Always Cared For—Chapter Serves i Many Other Ways aes Workers in the annual Roll Call drive of the American Red Cross called at the Association of Commerce rooms this morning to receive their supplies before going to their as signed streets to begin a careful canvass of the The response of Bismarck ci zens in this drive has been remarkable and sufficient workers have been secured so that every home and business place in the iy will be visited within the three- limit of the drive. hort talks by Harold Shaft and a radio address by Attorney General George Shafer last evening are lieved to have interested a large to the. ae of workers. A Clearing House The Red Cross in Bismarck serves ‘as a clearing house for a large number of charitable enterprises in Bismarck, ac- cording to Miss Mary Cone eretary. "t| Red Cross se office has numerous calle tor help and it also receives donations from many organizations and individuals who wish to help, The corrective work for children is an. important posse of the welfare work gondueted by the Red Cross. Optical, medical and dental care are provided for children who have no "| other means of Peering, it. The doc- oe LR, of the cit; e shown splendid Cashel said, and services free o charge, jam leaving only the supplies used to be paid for from the organ- imation’s funds. Every effort is made to kee) beri dren in school property dressed. “7 Cross has secured much slothing from individuals in cases of this kind but has purchased mearrt stockings, and underwear for the children, jents Cared For Appeals from the families of sol- diers have been answered and tran- mt soldiers have ‘been cared for. Some of the most touching cases to be handled are ‘concerned with trans- ients, many of whom arrive in Bis- marck ill, without funds, or proper clothin; One case was that of a 17-year-old- y, suffering with tuberculosis. Hi ked the I Rees for funds to pay his way ext county seat. In- stead an investi ition of his case was made and Red Cross officials at his ome town, Rochester, N. Y., were notified of his condition, which wae learned from consultation with bopatelans to be quite sterious Fu forwarded from Rochester to} al ae, ip ey ai 3 along route were heir agencie: on the tril pe their on ip home, In bag ft iad an elderly man) femasrc! very bear ! Red Cross ‘tonds .and (Continued on page seven.) PURNELL CASE | MAY BE TAKEN TO HIGH COURT ‘King’ Went Into Seclusion Because Fair Trial Was Im- possible, Counsel Says Benton Harbor, Mich., Nov. 18—#) —Extended litigation arding the * House of David appea Possible to- day. Attorneys for Benjamin Purnell, leader of the cult who was captured in a surprise raid on the colony yes- terday, say their defense of Purnell against charges of individuals and the state of Michigan will be carried to the highest courts, H. T. Dewhirst, former California] 6, Shperios. Jud judge, now a member of the ‘olony, and J. Barnard of Paw) Paw, chief counsel |, say that Pur went into seclusion four years ag ane he could not obtain a fair “In view of the attitude of the prere three years ago, it would have een not only asinine and rank stu- pidity but suicidal to have submitted to trial at that time,” the statement read, - Furnishes $120,000 Bail The King was resting among his people today. Bail of $120, was given on charges of criminal assault preferred by two former girl mem ers of the colony. The bond w: signed by eight local merchants, Besides eomlee) charges Purnell faces action by the state which secks to disband the colony. \ Members of the colony doubt whether their leader will live to see the end of the litigation into which he and the colony are plunged. Five Million Dollars Will Be ‘Sesqui’ Loss Philadelphia, Nov. 18—()—The sesquicentennial international expo- sition which will close at the end of the month, will have a deficit of be- tween $5,000,000 and $5,250,000, This announcement ae bay tor day by Mayor Ke: 0 added that $5,000, 000 or! subway construction would be used to pay the exposition’s deficit, belly ON to > fer the money ae been gr: vote of the pe ys The | ea *yiamed the wei which resulted in poor attendance as one of the outstanding reasons for the financial failure of the sequi. Rain fell in 17 week-ends ‘since the exposition was opened on June 1, Pelt LUCK it’s a shame year" Traband’s ‘tte pesecente Woman—i'll oe ny. I've romvint for" eight | years " I've as no luck yet!—Qp! on, jon. to ick, einalty int intended for | the MEXICO CAUSES MAY TAKE BACK DEEP CONCERNLYNN FRAZIER’ Washington Officials ilk at Bolshevistic Activities Across Border INTERVENTION IS ASKED Nicaraguan President’s Ap- peal Has Not Yet Reached State Department Nov. 18.—()—-Bol- |" ies emanating from Mexico, which have become incrpas- ingly apparent in the tangled political affairs of central American countries lying between the United States and the Panama Canal, are causing deép concern in Washington. This situation, intensi ready strained relations between the American and Mexican govern- ments, has been brought more point- edly into the open than it has been allowed to appear heretofore through the appeal to the United States by the new president of Nicar- agua, Adolfo Diaz, for intervention to restore peace in that country. peal Not Yet Received Diaz’ appeal, following immediate- ly upon formal recognition of his government yesterday by the United States, has not yet reached the state department, and decision upon it must, of course, wait until it has been studied. In a statement explaining the tion of the American governmen recognizing Diaz, howev Kellogg expressed the new president's offer of general am nesty and cabinet posts to his liberal opponents would be accepted and would end the revolutionary condi- invited interference 4, 2 state of af- ch cause concern to every friend of stability in central Americ: The warning thus expressed was clearly based on official information of filibustering expeditions out of Mexican ports to aid revolutionary forces in Nicaragua and Gatamal and Diaz’ request at least makes sible the employment of ‘American naval vessels to prevent the landing, of such arms and ammunition in his country. Washington, c- in Vessels Carry Arma Five gun-running veasels have left Mexican ports for Nicaraguan and Guatamalan waters, to the Washing- ton government's knowledge, under , circumstances which indicate Mexican ‘official connivance, and foreshadow, in the opinion of responsible Amer can officials, similar attempts to pro- mote political disorder in other cen. jr American countries. For nearly two weeks it has been evident Mexican-American relations Ihave taken on a more serious aspect! |than previously, in the Washington view, and it is now apparent that the long pending oil and land law issues and claim controversies have been overshadowed by the Mexican inter- ference in the political affairs of other central American nations. Pre- sumably, the chief purp interference is the fosterin, a propaganda and bolshevi ophy. Trhe conflict between the theories of government prevailing at present in the United States and Mexico has been observed here with concern for, sometinee. since it has been found | possible thus fer to devise # point | oe ‘Contact which would serve to bring | two together s@fficiently to per- mt the development of understand- ings and agreements. cll: Negro Murderer Garroted in Cuba Santiago, Cuba, Nov. 18—(#)—Jose Quesada Castillo, negro murderer, ving the al-]in Indication: Leaders Are Ready to Ex- tend Olive Branch HIS VOTE ESSENTIAL If He Returns to Fold He Will Be Given Back Former Committee Assignments Washington, Nov. lican leaders in the senate are ready to hold out the olive branch to Lynn J. Frazier of North Dakota, the sole survivor of the group of four sen- ators they read out of the party in ae flush of success at the polls 18—()—Repub- edly Senator Frazier occupies position in any negotia- ti with the old guard as his vote very likely will be essential to the Republicans if they are to organize the senate in the 70th congress, which convenes next year. Should Senator Frazier consent to return to the party fold his friends have indicated he will, he will be viven back the places on the stand- ine committees to which his terms of view entitle him and likely will of the Indian committe ct r Borah, R recently wrote toh suggesting that th€ yeurs ago be rescinded, but it beca y that even before this ec rs ny “idaho, leaders, enc tom ator F ore C0 epee ek GEO. STERLING POET, WRITER, TAKES POISON in San Francisco—Plays and Poems Had Won Him International Fame the ¢ San Francisco, Nov. 18. ernw! mystery of after-life {matist and disciple of Ambros Bierce, rand furnished him countless themes ito work upon, enveloped him in death today. his friends, the writer, whose pic- turesque ways had caused him to shrink from fame, took poison as he lay ill in his quarters at the fash- donate Bohemian Club here yester+ lay. ‘As Bierce, regarded in his time one of the most original of American short story writers, met his death in @ mysterious way in Mexico, so went Sterling, who often proclaimed Bierce as his master, It was said Sterling always carried a bottle of poison with him for use when he feit the temptation to die. Sterling was born in Sag Harbor,’ N. Y., in 1869, and after having re- ceived an extensive education won ‘international recognition with his plays and poems, ran through his life as it ran pee his works. Seventeen years ago a girl who had loved him took poison and plunged into the sea at Carmel. In 1913 his wife, Mrs. Car- rie E. Sterling, divorced him on the grounds one he had a “poet's tem- Papel, arroted in the prison here this He was condemned for the ter, whom he |killed after escaping from prison where he was serving a life sentence for the murder of hi fe. Antonio DeP; Romeo again acted as executioner and was assisted by Frank Davis, Savannah, Ga., negro, 0 aided in the two previous gar- rotings, the first in Cuba in 20 years. Davis’ sentence for robbery has been shortened by presidential action and his release is expected some time next month, | Weather Report Weather conditions at North Da- bag} pelets, for the 24 hours ending Piety, at 7 a.m. Highest Lo Precipitation to 7a. m. ...... Highest wind velocity . For Bismarck and vicinity: Cloudy tonight and Friday; probably occ niece snow. Not much change in} mperatu: ner North Dakota: Cloudy tonight and Friday; probably occasional aes Not much change in tempera- ure. ONS The high, this morning, from e Plains States westward to Rocky Mountai low Lg oa prevails ssi) Great ‘Take: Region States. Light to oe eo generally mya Great aa cat attored places ‘Mieclee en ant Lakes Re- in the orm $ nere perament d later she, too, com- mitted hing Flier Lives Even Though Parachute Fails to Function i f., Nov. 18—)— Although the parachute which was to have broken his fall failed to open when Fred Osborne, stunt man’ and aviator, drove 2 motorcycle over a 500 foot cliff near here yesterday, he robably will recover from hi I\ferios, physicians said today. Tele- 1|phone and telegraph wires broke the fall of the man and motorcycle. Santa Monic: To Broadcast Football Game The Bismarck radio ‘ion, KFYR, owned and operated 4 Hoskins-Meyer, will broadeast the Minnesota-Michigan football game Saturday afternoon, and radio fans within listening distance of ‘the Bismarck station are urged to tune in to the Capital City casters for their football. “do; The Bismarck Tribune’s Asso- ciated Press leased wire will be extended direct to the Minnesota stad-um for this game, td 4 play-by-play story of tl will be telegraphed here. "The Tribune is cooperating with Hoskins-Meyer in furnishing ra- dio liste: this special ervice and the Associated Press reports of the game will he broadcast by R just as rapidly as they tome over the wire. Scores of other games throughout the country at the various quarters’ will also be broadcast. ied to nd th Sunn fi wilt begin. at about the 1e. ffair: | y| council For reasons wholly unknown to{ A streak of trage-| Are That Party: | For love of Evelyn Cook, killed his 69-year-old_ have enough money to ma sentenced to death, but M his execution. This pictur ndmothe He 22-year- Cook insists she was taken in the Louisville jail after Ben- Romance—in Gallows’ Shadow old Lee Bennett of Louisville, Ky., r, Mrs, Rosa Bennett, so he would has been convicted of murder and Il marry him before nett had been sentenced. Research Council Investigates Claim of Cure For Cancer, London, Nov. 18 (®)—Anvther! claim to ‘a cancer cure is unde vestigation by the medical researc of London, says the Dail Sketch. It was octoge! who island the northw. The effective agenc A ham, is a discharge ation jof the human eyelid, the efficacy of | | which was accidentally discovered by Dr. Fortunato Pitta, of Funchal, Maderia. 9 MEMBERS OF LYNCHING MOB says Dr. G | GQ TO PRISON Sentenced to From Four Years to 20 Years Douglas, Ga. Nov. 18—()--Nine meinbers of a mob that removed Da Wright, a white man, from the count: jail last August 27 and lynched him are to spend terms in p from four years to life. sentenced yesterday Ity to murder. The case revolves around the only recorded lynching in ( 1926. A life sentence for participation in mob violence was, imposed for the first time in the state’s history. Major Brown, brother-in-law of the woman for whose death Wright was held, received a life sentenc pleaded guilty. All Defendants White After other pleas of guilty, sen- ces varying from four to 20 year: were imposed on Archie _Tennei George Lott, Paul Cody, Willie nold, Willis Tanner, Joe Hutto, Alma Histor, and Charlie Adam: All defendants are white ~ Brown admittedly was leader of thi mob, His sister-in-law, Mrs. Zelps Rollins, was slain in the kitchen of her home early in August while pre- paring dinner. Wright, a boarder in the home, was artested soon after- ward when it was learned that he and Mrs. Rollins had quarreled, supposed. ly ovef the manufacture of whisky. FARMERS AND BUSINESS MEN | HERE FOR MEET | Organization of North Dakota Council of Agriculture Will Be Completed were Farmers and business men from all parts of the state were here today for the first formal meeting of what is expected to be the North Dakota couneil of agriculture. A prelim- inary meeting, was held here a month ago. | “Among those expected to attend are | George C, Lambert, St. Paul, pres- ident of the Minnesota council of ag- riculture, and Thomas Cashman of Owatonna, Minn,, vice president. The purpose of the proposed or- ganization, according to Moodie, Wahpeton publisher who has taken the lead in promoting the plan, is to make it a non-political mediui which will voice the needs and atti tude of the farmer on economic ques- tions affecting farm prosperity. ae. of its immediate aim: outli the meeting here last month is rae | promotion of movement for the passage of the McNary-Haugen bill or similar tare relief legislation, Today's meeting had been scheduled for this TOrning but was postponed when a number who are expected failed to arrive on time because of snow drifts on some of the roads lead- jing into Biswseck. One Gets Life Term, Others: after pleading! Thomas | heard. Mrs. Hall was described as present FEDERALGRAND JURY INDICTS 74 CHICAGOANS Secretary to Police Chief and | Municipal Judge Are In- i cluded in List “The federal into dry n ‘into the municipal courts and into the ranks of the city police depart- | ment. Captain John Prendet tary to Chief of Police 4 lings, and Municipal Jud, ast, seere- organ Cal- Harry M, fia list of 74 Chieagoans named in the blanket jindictment which was the latest f the federal grand jury, ates were also included in the ich charged conspiracy to de- ption enforcement from | ases in gourt, it was said, o actual sale of liquor. The move was accompanied by a statement from United of dry ent of crooks holding Im- in the Chicago police hich drew an immedi- m Mayor Dever. i ed the an afterma jeity and fed Se IDENTIFIES DEFENDANTS Says Mrs. Hall and Brothers Were People She Saw Near Scene of Killing wrand j ath of brush ‘between the autho 5 Courthouse, Somerville, N. J., Nov 18—-()--Mrs, Jane Gibson, supported by a physician and nurse, raised her- self on a hospital bed in court here today to point to Mrs. Frances Stev- ens Hall and her brothers, Willie and Henry Stevens, as three persons she saw near the spot where the bodies of the Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills were found. The woman farmer, introduced by the state us an eye witness of the double killing, was brought to the court in an ambulance from a Jersey City hospital and began her testimony with a nurse sitting at the edge o! her bed’ and a physician at the head. Heard Voices plain letters” and several oaths by men, An oath preceded the demand “let's xo,” she testified. She | told of ‘four shots which | scribed as “bang, bang bang.” | she said when she told of seeing Henry Stevens, She was not asked to identify the “other man.” She had previously si Carpender at the scene but the state's representative warned herjnot to say who the “other” man was in her testi- meny today. der indictment but is not on trial with his three cousins. spot where the mumble of voices was later, wringing her hands. Mrs, Hall was a: held up to make her identification. Player Dies in — Dies in Louisville, Ky, Nov ert Matthews, 17, died while in a basketball A coroner's vet heart disease. | Hibbing but were wetting nore s Numerous court and police subor-} action as| ind Shots She declared that she heard voices) of men and women and the words “ex- then she de- “[ seen a man and another man,” that she saw Henry Henry Carpender is un- She said that she saw Willie Stev- ens in the automobile but not at the ed to remove her hat which she did as the witness was PRICE FIVE CENTS SOUTH PART OF MINNESOTA SNOW-BOUND Motor Travel Almost Standstill in Vicinity of Rochester and Winona at ROADS DRIFTED FULL Highway Snow Ploughs At- tack Drifts Five Feet Deep —3 Deaths in Chicago St. Paul, Nov. 18—()—Southeast- ern Minnesota, untouched by the snow storm that swept central and western Minnesota yesterday, today was jn the grip of u blizzard, With a wind piting up drifts, six inches of snow covered Winona and vicinity after an all night fall, At Rochester, a storm that began last night continued today, with 1% inches of snow on the ground this morning. | Minneapolis and St. Paul today ex- i perienced a light snow storm with more snow and colder weather fore- cast for tonight. Drifted roads, which hampered lo- cal traffic in southeastern Minnesota and threatened to bring motor travel to a standstill, were being cleared in central and western Minnesota today. More snow handicapped workers, however. Paved Roads Slippery Fergus Falls, with a temperature of 17 above, again reported drifted roads, while at Little Falls, with more snow falling, highways’ were slippery. To combat drifts caused by 5 ‘ing snow, state highway ploughs terday left St. Cloud for their fi innexota. Drifte five feet deep near Kimbal, and roads blocked from Centre to Little Falls, nkato was getting more. snow to- di ith highways already drifted. H ghways were fair in the vicinity of row, THREE DEATHS. CHICAGO AS STORM MOV. EASTWARD Chicago, Nov, 18.—()—Snow-laden clouds roofed the central west today and moved eastward before gusty winds that brought record breaking November snowfall out of the north- west. Corn belt temperatures went down to turn rain into snow, and flurries became small blizzards before winds | which approached gale velocities in j some localities, Warnings were displeved en ali the Great Lakes except Ontario as tne storm center swept today into Illinois from the southwest, where it took snow and freezing temperatur: mercury hung around 20 parts of Texas, Oklahoma and Kan- sas. Five Inches of Snow at St. Louis The passing of the wave left St. Louis with more than five inches of snow by nightfall last night. There {were falls of as much as six inches in Illinois and weather bureaus {throughout the region measured snow depths unprecedented for the month. There were three deaths in Chicay ‘indirectly attributed to the storm. ‘ unidentified woman, blinded by snow, ‘walked in front of a street car; a teamster drove into a fallen high voltage wire and Vernon Smith, switchman for the Nickel Plate rail- road, was killed when, shielding his face from the driving snow, he stumbled into the path of a train. The weather bureau promised j glightly rising thermometers over \the Great Plains district today, and further rises over the corn belt to- morrow, but reported another storm forming over the northwest. Mills Brothers Are New Proprietors of Spring Service Shop Announcement was made today that ~ the business of G. E. Peterson and the Bismarck Spring Service Station has been taken over by R. R. and W. Cc. Mills Rad this city. The shop is now being remodeled preparatory to installing new and up- to-date equipment for auto and gen- eral blacksmithing, spring work and truck bodies. The new arrangement, according to a member of the firm, will enable them to give prompt, ef- f | ficient and satisfactory service, R. R. Mills, who will have active charge of the establishment, has had a number of years of practical experi- ence in this line. Community Council Will Direct Sale of Christmas Seals The Community Counci] of Bis- marck will have full charge of the sale of Christmas seals in the city this year, and Miss Nise Bar. rington hag been named as eral chairman of the sale, which « wil s start early in bgp onal - ‘hea? entire Promads rom a sale this year will be devoted to health work in the sy. of Bismarck, and those in confident that the people of ti will readily res} to the when it ix The committee chagge. ia mee charge ; further Merger of Linton Basketball Game Banks Is reer Ba —— the sate AG" Menke doprtment