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wea’ Cloudy and colder tonight; zero to 5 degrees below. Saturday fair. ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926 me:|THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE mam | PRICE FIVE CENTS ICE ON GREAT LAKES GRIPS 40 LAKE BOATS -APRODUCTION 3 INGREASE IS FARMER NEED Wall Street Method of Build- ‘ ing Up Prices Does Not Help, Says Speaker PICTURE PAINTED BLACK Lowden and Brookhart Both Claim Agrarian Situation Is Most Critical Chicago, Dec. 3—UP)—Middle west- ern agriculture today had poured its plaints, its problems and its ultim: tum upon America through addresses made before nearly a dozen conven- ‘tions now in session here. Two political agriculturists, Frank ©, Lowden, former governor of Il nois, and Smith W. Brookhart, ator-elect from Towa, painted the farm picture in black..“The agrarian situation,” said Lowden, “is in a bad The nation, in Brookhart’s opinion, faces “the greatest farm is in history.” While these two men, addressing separate groups, were urging prompt recognition and remedy of the situa- tion, another speaker, Mrs. T. P. Hollowell, Republican committee- woman from Brookhart’s state, told the Illinois Republican Women's Club that the Republican party will be repudiated in fowa unless it “an- swers affimatively the demand of the middle west for farm relief leg- islation.” Remedies Offered Two other speakers, addressing committees of the American Bank- ers’ Association, offered remedies for farmers. “Increased production, not in- creased prices, is the road to farmer relief,” said’ Arthur Huntington, public engineer of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, “The Wail Strect method of ‘building up prices’ will never suc- ceed for the farmer.” A better tariff 5 m, and a “gen- eral, long-time legislative develop- ment policy for agriculture,” were suggested to a bankers’ committee by Walfred Lindstrom, Pleasant Lake, Ind, chairman. of the Agricultural Committee of the Indiana Bankers’ Association. Former Governor Lowden said there were remedies available “for a nation brave enough to try the ex- periment,” but he did not go into details. Farmer in Quandary “Rain last year raised the cotton crop five per cent, and decreased the price 20 per cent,” he said. “Now the farmer doesn’t know whether to thank God for rain, or pray”for a drought.” Senator-elect Brpokhart said the seriousness of the present situation calls for “a complete cooperative credit system, with a cooperative re- serve bank, all under control of the farmers and laboring people them- selves.” “With indirect discrimnation against them by banks, railroads and government tariff legislation, the farmers cannot find relief until they control their own credit system.” He added that this could easily be accomplished by amending the inter- mediate credit act, G.N.D.A. DRIVE IN BISMARCK SUCCESSFUL More Than $1,000 Raised First Day—Total Expected to Reach $2,000 More than $1,000 was raised in Bis- marck on the first day of the drive for 1927 memberships in the Greater North Dakota Association, J. P. Wag- ner, campaign chairman, announced today. Seven teams, each made up of two volunteer workers, canvass the city yesterday. “The initial response was very tifying,” Mr. Wagner declared, ind with three teams yet to make a preliminary report we have passed the $1,000 mark. As the other com- mittees complete their work and those making initial reports cover « Ahelr territories again to reach thosg missed yesterday, I am confident that the total will be in the neighbori-vod of $2,000. Last year Bismarck rais- * ed $2,100. The. quota for Burleizh county this year is $2,500, slightly lower than the amount raised in the county last year. Th who are missed by the teams should mail their checks direct to me. Auto Accident Is Fatal to Two Duluth, Dec. 3—@)—Loya Ander- started ko, Uniformity | [co-eds of Highland Park Junior | College, Detroit, ha’ four-<« week of a kind. That is, on four of the five wee chool days they wear the uniform — pictured The uniform was adopted on ition of the girls themselves, to! lessen competition in clothes. The pretty demonstrator is Miss, Wilda Spann! SAFETY BODY WILLWORK FOR UNIFORM CODE Would License Drivers of Au- tomobiles—County Com- mitteemen Appointed An attempt to obtain a uniform motor vehicle code for Nurth Dakota will be made by the state safety commission, members of the execu- tive committee, meeting at the cap- itol Thursday decided. Sections of the new code which may be suggested to the legislature at its winter session are a law gov- erning the proper use of an automo- bile, and a drivers’ license law which would require all new drivers to be tested as to their ability to handle an automobile %efore being granted a license. ‘This law, as proposed, would apply only to those who statt driving after its enactment. Representative in Each Count; Decision to appoint a represent: ative in each county was made fol- lowing the report of H. A. Brats- berg of Minot, chairman of the membership committee. Organiza- tion of local safety councils in the state's major cities, recommended in the report, will be undertaken in the near future, the group decided, Arrangements have been complet- ed to receive monthly reports on ac- ature und cause, from , Dr. A, A. Whittemore of Bismarek, chair- man of the statistics committee, re- ported. The committee will deter- mine proper preventive measures from these reports, he said. C. 8. Buck of Jamestown, chairman of the committee on public educa- tion, read the committee's report and it was decided to have this group take charge of publicity for the safety commission, furnishing news- paper ‘publicity and providing speak- ers for various club meetings. Socialist Premier and His Cabinet in Denmark Quit Posts Copenhagen, Denmark, Dec, 3.—UP) —The socialist premier, T. A. M. Stauning, presented his 'cabinet’s r¢ ignation to the king today in conse- quence of the liberal and conserva- tive victory in yesterday’s parliamen- tary elections. Former Policeman Is \Electrocuted Ossining, N. ¥., Dec, 8—()—John J. Brennan, a former Broklyn police- man,’ died in the electric chair in Sing Sing prison last night for the murder of Samuel Kraniof in a police ‘station where the victim had come to protest against Brennan's black- mailing. ‘ -Brennan hoped to the last for a reprieve on the ground that he was ot | Reel when he ‘Titled Kraniof, but Smith would not 4 Satara Brennan was 28 years ol leaves s young widow and en infant son, |1 saw her buried on her face on a ¥ | day when a searching party, combing INQUEST WILL ECAUSE OF GIRL'S DEATH Father’s Dream of Seeing Daughter Buried Face Down- ward Becomes Reality SWEETHEART IS SOUGHT, $300 Reward Offered For Youth Who Disappeared After Girl Left Home Prairie du Chien, Wis., Dec. 3.—O)| —The sinister dream of Christ Olson that his daughter Clara was dead, has become a reality. AT've seen Cla the tobacco planter had ae long before the ‘body of the pretty 22-year-old girl was found ina shallow grave on Bat- | tle Ridge near Rising Sun, a quarter of a mile from the home of Erdman Olson, who thas been charged with | the slaying. |. “W've seen her in a slream,” Christ] | told neighbors. “I know she is dead, hill near Rising Sun.” That dream of tragedy and death which came true to the letter, fortify- ing his suspicion of his daughter's | fate, led Christ Olson to swear out a | murder warrant for young Olson, |“upon information and belief” sever- | al days ago, although there was then no direct evidence that the girl was | dead. | ‘That evidence was supplied yester- |the picturesque Kickapoo Valley, | stumbled upon a barely filled grave | in which the missing girl was lying—| | face downward. Awaits Autopsy Today the body lay in a morgue in ja plain wooden coffin awaiting an | autopsy to determine how death came 0 the girl, who was an expectant mother. ‘An inquest, which was to have been ‘held today, was postponed by Dis- trict Attorney J. S. Earll until a} pathologist arrives Saturday to per- form an autopsy before a coroner's jury. Earll.expects to be able to | hold the inquest with expert testi- mony tomorrow. Meanwhile search was pushed for the girl's 18-year-old sweetheart, Erd- man, Gale College student, who dis- appeared September 27, 17 days after lara left her home in the evening “to get a breath of fresh air,” and mever returned. Sheriff Sherwood of Crawford county planned to go to Dwight, Ill, today to interview a youth held there answering the de- scription of Erdman. The suspect gave his name as Walter M. Chris- tenson, 22, and his home as Porter, Minn., and maintained that he knew nothing of the case. Father Faints Bi Clara’s body was identified by the father, who fainted after he hed pointed with an age-withered finger through the cracked clay to the black | silk dress which Clara had bought Bhe said was to have been her bridal garment for her marriage with Erd- man. Erdman is a son of Albert Olson, unrelated to Christ. He left college @ day after Christ had visited him. A letter the youth wrote to his par- ents at the time of his disappearance ‘was made public last night. In the missive he told of the visit of Christ Olson and said, “I am leaving for some place where no one knows, xxx You will never see me again unless it is in a coffin. xxxxx, These peo ple (Christ Olson) cannot prove any- oe, definite.” I have failed as a son,” he wrote ever know me by that name (Olson) again.” Rewards of $300 have been posted for word of the youth’s whereabouts and his description has been broad- cast to police. Weather Report | Weather eondlsious at North Da- kota points for the 26 hours ending at 8 @. m. Temperature at 7@. m. .. Lowest last night Highest yesterday .. Precipitation to 7 a, m. -. Highest wind velocity . WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Cloudy and colder tonight; temperature zerq to 5 degrees below. Saturday gener- ally fair; not so cold in afternoon. “For North Dakota: Cloudy and colder tonight; cold wave extreme southeast portion; temperature zero to 5. below. Saturday generally fair; not so cold in afternoon... WEATHER CONDITIONS, A large high pressure ares, accom- panied. by cold weather, is centered over Saskatchewan. Temperatures are-below sero in Alberta and Sask- etchewan and near zero in northern ‘Montana and North Dakota. The pres- sure is low over the eouthern Rocky Mountain fish ag Bev riateyed tem- peratures prevail sections ex- copt in the northern Plains States antl iy yp Mountain — region. anow is | in the northern border states and in the western Can- adian Provinces. 9 . 30 + @ - Hunting Dog Is Blamed For Death of Man Brownsville, Tenn., Dec. 3—) —A hunting dog is held respon- sible for the death of J. T. Davis, merchant, found mortally. wounded yesterday in his wrecked automobile on a high- way. .The dog is believed to have struck against a loaded shotgun on the back seat of the machine in such a way as to cause its discharge. BANDITS ARE BEING HUNTED AROUND MINOT One Man Taken Into Custody For Questioning Concerning Plentywood Robbery Minot, N. D., Dec. 3—(#)—Search for two bandits who Tuesday eve- ning robbed the county treasurer's office at Plentywood, Mont., of ap- proximately $106,000 in cash and se- curities, today centered in Minot where one man is held for question- ing, while the two suspected robbers are believed to be in hiding here or may have fled early tod County Attorney C. E. and Under Sheriff Robke of Plenty- Erickson wood are in Minot to conduct an in- vestigation an effort to apprehend the men who committed the crime by holding up the county treasurer and a woman deputy as they were about to close the oft An Ex-Convict “Nig” Collins, an ex-convict of the North Dakota penitentiary, where he a sentenc for automobile g, is the man who is held in jail here for questioning as an out- growth of a report that he drove a large automobile with a Montana license containing two other men from Minot to a point near Gran- ville, N. D., late yesterday. The two men got out of the car, it is report. ed, and caught rides into Granville, where they purchased train tickets back to Minot, one ridi in the front of a chair car and the other in the is met the train when it ar- rived in Minot last evening, but did not take any one into custody. The automobile which Collins is reported to have driven out of Minot toward Granville was seized by Mi- not officers in a local garage, and Collins was later questioned and tak- en into custody when his answers did t suit authorities. was turned over to the Plentywood officers last night for questioning. Minot authorities left the room at the time and again took him into custody when the suspect’s conversation with the Montana of. ficials had been completed. Collins is said to have frequently been in both Minot and Plentywood. FORMER STATE SCHOOL HEADS Portraits Unveiled at Capitol —Prominent Educators _ Attend Ceremonies Tribute was paid to five former superintendents of public instruction by prominent educators, when their portraits were unveiled at the state caiptol Thursday evening. Portraits of J. G. Halland, J. M. Devine, W. L. Stockwell, E. J. Taylor and N. C. MacDonald, gifts of mem- bers of the individual families, were unveiled. J. G. Halland “led the way to bet- ter things and built up many fine enterpris R. M, Black, president of the Industrial and Normal Schoo! at Ellendale, declared, and called the former school head “a man of deep scholarship.” J. M. Devine was praised by Pres- ident George McFarland of the Minot State Teuchers’ College, who charac- terized him as an “educational leader and a.man with a remarkable record of service and help to the state.” “One of the keenest educational leaders North Dakota has ever pro- duced,” was the characterization of E. J, Taylor by P. 8. Berg, city sup- erintendent of sclools at Dickinson. “N. C. MacDonald was loyal to the great cause of education,” Miss Bea- trice Johnstone of the state univer- sity declared, adding that “he made {|GUESTS ORDERED OUT PAID TRIBUTE RIFT BETWEEN CHAPLINS IS PARTY RESULT Screen Comedian Claims Wife | Had Noisy Drinking Par- | ty in Their Home Mrs. Chaplin Charges Hus- band Was Cruel and Seeks Permanent Separation Los Angeles, Dec. 3.—()—Mrs. Charles Spencer Chaplin has no intention at present of divorcing her millionaire screen comedian husband. Instead she made it clear, after a conference with her attorney today, legal action for separation will be instituted and a cash settlement asked. Los Angeles, Dec. 83—()—Confliet- ing ideas on the propriety of an early morning party last Tuesday at the Beverley Hills mansion of Charles Chaplin, which culminated in the separation of the film comedian and his wife, lessened the chances for| ace between the pair today ws th turned to their lawyers for consol one aspect of the party they! , that Mr. Chaplin instructed his wife to turn her guests, including | Baron and Baroness Mille de Pre-| court, out of the house. | Chaplin described the incident as aj “noisy drinking party” which, he says, “roused the entire household, | including the nurse and the baby.” | Her Story | The comedian's wife Insists that] the y Was “very quiet and re-/ spectable.” Mrs. Chaplin, in a statement from the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, William, Curry iF Beverley | Hills, said she and her mbther, Mrs.| Lillian Spicer, had given a small) dinner party at the Biltmore hotel! Monday night, honoring the baron and| buroness. After the dinner the party adjourned to the Chaplin home. “While Twas entertaining my | guests, Mr, Chaplin came down stairs Md made «dig fuss over the noise he; said we were making. He asked me! to send my guests away, which I did,” Mrs. Chaplin related. Chaplin gave a different account of | the evening. “I objected to a noisy drinking par-| ty of men and women who came to| my house at 2 o'clock in the morning | when [ was asleep and roused the en- tire household. When I heard the piano, organ and Victrola going at once it got the best of me, so I cull-| ed my wife upstairs and told her to} get the people out at once,” the com-} edian said. Legal Battle Foreseen That a legal battle over the c tody of the two Chaplin children,| Charles Spencer, Jr. 2, and Sydney Earle, 1, would be waged in the event | of a permanent separation has becn, indicated by both the actor and his! estranged wife. Mrs. Chaplin yesterday reiterated | y that she would never “go back” to her| husband and said she was determined to keep her sons. She bitterly flayed | Chaplin as “a husband and a father.” | She charged that he had been cruel! to her, and that he “remained away | from home night after night.” | Chaplin denied his wife's charges of cruelty. He announced that he would make “every effort” to obtain the custody of their children und au- thorized the statement that he would no longer be responsible for Mrs. Chaplin's bills. FUNDS ASKED POR NEAR EAST RELIEF WORK Golden Rule Sunday to Be Ob- served in Churches—Need Is Very Great Pastors of Bismarck churches have made special appeals to their con- gregations to contribute liberally next Sunday to the Near East Relief work, inasmuch as Sunday, December 5, has been designated us “Golden Rule” Sunday, and the day wil! be fittingly observed in most of the city’s churches. Rev. W. E. Vat pastor of the Methodist Episcop: church, is chairman of the campaign here, and is anxious to have the city make as good a showing in the na- his difficulties stepping stones.” Speaking of Walter L. Stockwell, Louis F, Crawford said, “The people of North Dakota will never regret the fact that they elected Mr. Stock: well to the state superintendent's office. He was a leader and always liked because of his vigor and en- orgy. 5 officials and prominent, North Dakota educators attended the eeremonies, which were held in the office of Minnie J. Nielson, present superintepdent of public instruction. * RBIF W. ROBERTS, . . Ott in charge | ‘ The have air mail service | between | York and Chicago. Suffering Is Intense kio and Tukuoka, «bout “the first blizsard of the winter ‘the. same distence as between New| brought on intense suffering and it tion-wide solicitation as possible. 1 Associated Press dispatches this week recorded the news that the’ recent earthquake in Armenia de- stroyed thirty-six villages and 70,000 persons were left homeless. All of the orphange buildings where 10,000 children are being cared for by Near East Relief were dam- aged, one of them completely demol- ished. These orphans were ;com- pelled to vacate the buildings and were sleeping outdoors unselfishly sharing their blankets with the vil- » children, (Continued on page we) {ed upon and an effort is Supports Dad at Altar Mayor Malcolm household for was Marjori picture of the wedding: prin ‘old son, Clark, and sh | His best man| s little daughter, | amera_ when this | Mrs, Nichols is the twin | the flower girl, h sister of the mayor's late wife. TENSION INCREASES IN FALL-DOHENY OIL CONSPIRACY CASE AS ATTORNEYS WRANGLE OVER TESTIMONY PRESENTED: a Hall-Mills Case Is Given to Jury | Courthouse, Somerville, N. J Dec, 3—(A)—The Hall-Mills was given to a Somerset county jury at 1:44 o'clock this noon. The trial was started onc month ago today when Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall and her brothers, Henry and William Stevens, were charged with the murder of Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills. Mrs. Mills was slain with the Rey. Edward Hall, September 14, 1922. i EFFORT MADE | | TO SIGN ALL DEPOSITORS : 20 Men Canvassing City For Signers to Effect Liquida- tion of Bank Over 20 men Bismarck in an rk of procuring ments to per cent payment plan pro: the City National Bank de committee Depositors liv yet | 1 ing ii igned th not ring © being m: o otbain ull their signatures by Sat- urday night. A number of small depositors have neglected .tp sign these agreement: wbout 500 signatures remaining. be secured, All depositors must sign the agreement before the proposition will be approved by the comptroller of the currency. A number of child depositors have accounts in the b should make a spe effort to see that the children’s natures are ob- tained, Norman I. Roop said today. “The quicker these agreements are signed, the quicker this matter will be settled,” Mr. Roop declared. C. Boise, Thomas J. Burke, John Barber, N. E. Bystrom, George A. Duemeland, F. E. Ellsworth, F. A. Ernisse, J. A. Fleck, F. J. Grady, A. W. Gussner, S. F. Hollingsworth, W. F. Harris, B, E. Jones, E. B. Klein, J. A. Larson, A, W. Mellen, F. L, Moule, L, V. Miller, O, A. Olson, E. W. Wasche and E. A. Thorberg are the men who are canvassing the city to obtain signatures. J. J. Murray Named Assistant Manager of Grocery House ad, Murray, forme formerly of Mandan, has-been chosen as assistant man- ager of the Winson & Neweéll com- pany’s Bismarck house, which was openeds¢here this week, according to J. C. Oberg, manager. Mr.’ Murray ‘was until recently connected with the Missouri Valley Grocery company at Mandan and has had considerable marek whe h e ugreement arc experience ‘in the wholesale gro- cery line. Consequently his se- lection © assistant to Mr. Oberg puts the Bismarek house in ch: of two men well qualified to succ fully, carry on the company’s bus Doheny’s Payment of $100,- 000 to Fall Had Nothing to; Defense Seeks to Prove bea Do With Consummation of “| Elk Hills, California, Oil) Contract | Washington, Dec. 3—-UP)—De- claring navy witnesses are being | Prompted from Secretary Wil- |i | | bur's office regarding their tes- timony, defense counsel in the Fall-Doheny oil conspiracy: trial today called on the secretary for an explanation. P)—A $08: ion in |Doheny-Full vil conspiracy case we {plainly visible today as the opposing | attorneys wrangled over the testi- mony of witnesses who will prove to| jury either that Albert B, Fall and| Te paldS Uihens ave guilty ct con: piring to defraud the United States | stant was entirely apart from the consum- vf the contract, at the outset 2 FREIGHTERS ARESTRANDED IN SUPERIOR One Had Cargo of Automo- biles, the Other Carried 120,000 Bushels Wheat 18 AUTOS GO OVERBOARD | Coast Guards Rescue Crews— Tugs Work Desperately to Free Other Boats Chicago, Dec. ice today gripped (#)—Fast-forming 40 lake boats, | caught by cold and storm in the St. | Mary's river channel at Sault Ste. | Marie. In Lake Superior two’ freighters | were stranded on the rocks off | Keweenaw Point, driven there by mid- | week winds that swept the upper lake. They are the City of Bangor, | Duluth-bound from Detroit with a cargo of automobiles, and the Thomas | Maytham, taking 120,000 bushels of | wheat to Toledo from Duluth. Eighteen automobiles, spiked to | the deck of the City of Bangor, slip- ped overboard when the ship ground ed, and today were frozen fast to the ice at the shore. Crews Rescued Coast guards rescued the crews of ichols of Boston didn’t have to call beyond his owa| both freighters—29 men—from the 1 to see him through the parson's job. City of Bangor and 24 from the Thomas Maytham, Weather predictions for today car- ried little promise for the stranded cargo carriers. Shifting winds were prophesied for Lake Superior, with snow, while upper Lake Michigan and Lake Huron had the prospect of snow flurries and moderate to fresh south- erly winds. A stiff gale might prove disas- trous to the City of Bangor, a 400- foot steel vessel, whose hull already has been damaged the grounding on the rocks. The Maytham, which ! was riding easily when abandoned by her crew, is regarded as insecure and may pound to pieces under a strong southwest wind. Ice Crusher Coming Four tugs, working desperately to free the vessels locked in the St. Mary’s will get help today from a large ice-crushing railroad ferry or- dered from Ignace by John S. | Ashley, president of the Lake Car- riers’ Association. Great stores of grain await move- ment from the head of the lakes. This is spurring shippers to extra efforts to keep navigation open until a por- tion, at least, of the grain can be | moved. _ BLKS PREPARE PROGRAM FOR MEMORIAL DAY Alex Macdonald ( to Give Prin- | cipal Address—Public In- vited to ‘Attend in the famous naval oil leases, or | re innocent | vhich seeks to prove | pt of $100,000 from | he lease for the Elk ‘i ‘alifornia, was in negotiation, i | lowed the government to try i k down the testimony of H. | Foster Buin, who served under Fall as ‘chief of the bureau of mines, Bain | testified that Fall was not in Wash- ‘ington during much of the time the ject was being considered by the interior department, of which Fall was head, Answers Less Specific |, Owen J. Roberts, special prosecu- tor in the case, showed by his more spirited ero: nination that every point in the case from now on is to be bitterly fought over. His que tioning of Bain assumed the charac- ‘ter of a hammering attack centered jaround Bain’s part in negotiating the Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, naval oil storage plant contract, which was awarded Doheny’s Pan-American Pe- troleum and Transport company on April 25, 1922. Roberts read to the jury several excerpts of Bain’s testimony in the Los Angeles civil proceedings, in which the government won a de- cision nullifying the Doheny con- tracts, and asserted that in his di- rect examination here the witness had presented answers less specific and direct. Bain explained he had worked on a great many government projects since 1922 and found it impossible to jearry all the details in mind. Fur- ther, he had been out of the govern- ment service for about two years and had had no access to the bureau of mines records since his Los Angeles testimony. Fall Did Not Suggest Plan Bain affirmed he had himself sug- gested to Doheny representatives that the oil company team up with a construction firm bidding for the Pearl Harbor work. But he had of- fered the same suggestion to other oil companies, In no case had Secretary Fall sug- gested the plan to him, he said, but it occurred to him in the course of department discussions as a likely means of surmounting the difficulty encountered in the fact that the con- struction work was to be paid for (Continued op page two.) Members of the Bismarck El lodge, as well as the general public, | will gatherer at the Elks hall Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock to take part in the lodge’s annual Memorial day ob- servances. Each ‘year, on the first Sunday in December, all Elks lodges in the country hold exercises in memory of members of the order who have passed away. This is required by the grand lodge rules and regu- lations and a special ritual service is provided for the o jon. Alex Macdonald of Glencoe, a life member of the Bismarck lodge, will deliver the memorial address at .the program Sunday afternoon. Mr. Macdonald is an interesting speaker and his message will be worth hear- ing. The exercises are open to ull and officers of the local ‘lodge have invited the public to attend. The Program | Funeral march Mrs. R. Ritualistie ceremony Officers of the lodge. Quartet, “Rock of Ages”. Dudley Buck Mrs. G. E. Wingreene, Mrs. Her- man Scheffer, Henry Halvorson, George Humphreys, Mrs. R. E. Morris at the piano. Ritual Quartet, “The Home Light’ Memorial address Chopin The audience, Ritualistie closing . Postlude “Mareh Jubilant Mrs. R. E, Morris. tater SET ae