The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 9, 1927, Page 1

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WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy tonight and Thursday. Somewhat col ESTABLISHED 1873 TO BE: 3-POWER AFFAIR France and Italy Will Prob- ably Be Asked to Send Observers to Meeting ed a number of people from all parts’ PAY N B Britain and/| ofthe state, with several registered i 1 ‘okyo news advices clear- indicating Great Japan will accept th nited States at Geneva this sum- mer on auxiliary: warcraft limitation are taken by officials here to mean that such+a project ultimately will be. brought out. While there has not been much doubt us to the J toward such an arrangemen} sentiment in the ny limitation of anti- | St submarine craft as long as her coi tinental neighbors i submarine construction, and officials have looked to Great Britain to re- move the greatest obstacle way of a three-power parley. Itay, who turned down ‘ican proposal for a five- power naval limitation conference, which Great Britain and Japan fav- ored, probably will be asked to send observers to the three-power m ing, formal invitations to which be held up pending replies from the latter two countries. Japan Favorably Inclined A Tokyo dispatch received carly to- day said Japan intended to accept the latest American suggestion. hes perviously had the absence of re- declared that, ceipt_ of a formul American Great Britain i The impression also was given in League of Nations circles at Ge- neva that Great Britain would accept. Great Britain, as interpreted by that country’s officials, was described as demanding British acceptance American plan for naval i While attention was galled to hand: caps under which delegates of the three powers would labor in absence of Mediterranean powers, hope w: expressed that whatever might b plished would serve to convince ce and Italy it is to their inter- ith other great naval powers in world di: MINNEAPOLIS BANKS TO AID INSEED LOANS Agree to Help Farmers By Purchasing Bonds Issued By Counties nt.Jand crossed and recrossed the stage, held in Minneapolis ied by official First National Bank, the Minneapolis Monday, atten x ‘rust Company, it was de- cided to offer all reasonable financial in North Dakota, lontana requiring Reports were read aid to any count South Dakota ani seed financing. indicating that. the need for financing was not general but fined to certain areas in the three states, due to the spotty character of last year’s crop. Details were not worked out but in a general way the aid would take rants or seed bondi county commissions county desires to ii suggested that the bonds have a pre- paying privilege. The four financial institutions have already begun negotiations with var- ious counties independent); fail congress to appropriate carry out the Norbeck John- I felt by the Min- however, that the is so short that jue bonds it was time before seeding more effective aid could be’ rendered by joint action on their part. [ Weather Report | o—_—_—_________.6 Weather- conditions at North Da- kota points for the 24 hours ending Highest yesterda: Hiss last nigh Precipitation to Highest mitnee po . = For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. what colder tonight. tonight and Thursday. colder ponies west WEATHER CO} A high pressure 20] tomatic silencer-revolver, must die in| are not, putting tl Partly cloudy cipitation decurred in Wyomin; from the western slope of thi ies to the Pacific coast. temperatures 3 > DISTRICT COURT CONVENES of the prohi- ular term of the district |» ills iy i C today. S*Oih Ss Sf mies sing hy fen ois] ae" Ratt $e" Pe at the session, less. if VAUDEVILLE, STYLE SHOW PROVE TO BE! OUTSTANDING EVENTS OF TRADE WEEK’ + > Entertainment Features Pre- sented For First Time at Auditorium Last Night— People Coming Into Bis- marck From All Parts of State For Big Event Trade Week Program Wednesday Evening Girls’ flee club of junior high school sings at city auditorium. Vaudeville program and style show. Thursday Afternoon Vaudeville at city auditorium. Talk by John Lee Coulter of the state agricultural college. Free to out-of-town visitors. Thursday Evening Vaudeville program and style show at city auditorium. Public wedding on stage. Despite slightly copler weather and @ brisk snowstorm, the steady sti of out-of-town visitors to the city’s Automobile Show-Style Show and Trade Week continued today and boosted the attendance total to new heights. lore than 600 were registered at noon today, with double that number expected during the afternoon, As yesterday, the registration lists show- S from eastern Montana, and western Minnesota. | Entertainment features of the event opened last evening at the auditorium | with the presentation of vaudeville and the style show. Opening the show was Earl Pat- well, singing several songs, followed AND 20THERS presented an acrobatic act and the i ‘ = eee aera beget ela ST Bakken Bill, Reducing Com: Ei neared i 1 ya i: |and the Stanchfield Sisters ina song| Pensation Benefit Scale, Signed This Morning | and dance act, after which the Peter- son Brothers presented a “trampo- line” clown comedy* act. The Stanchfield Sisters appeared! One bill was signed and three ve- in a soft shoe dance and Earl Pat-| toed by Governor A. G. Sorlie this well sang his “bug” song. morning. Leroy Sisson, the closing feature,| The measure which became a law “brought down the house” with his; was the Bakken bill reducing! the ben- act. Dressed cleverly, the youngster efit scale paid by the state work- gave a finished demonstration of ; men’s compensation bureau. No soft-shoe dancing and arleston statement regarding it was made by variations which proved to be one of | the executive other than to say he the biggest features of the evening. | had signed it. - The bills vetoed were House bills Armour's Band Plays 274, 241 and 191. The first would A special feuture of the program ' have changed the law relating to the was rendition of several musical num- asking by county or city boards for bers by Armour’s Band, which proved bids on paving projects; the second Popular with the audience. | would have placed the state hail in- @orrect and frshionable apparel surance department on a budget and for both nygw"and women for all oc- the third would have limited the right casions Was shown. The garments to vote at bond elections to free were modeled with marked ability, holders or persons paying personal the manikins carrying themselves property taxes. with professional grace and skill. The Paving Bilt Baskets of flowers in maroon and| In vetoing the paving bill the gold formed a semi-circle with a huge executive said: “This bill seems to album, called the “Book of Fashions, have been intended to aid someone in rage arranged attractively in the sale of patent process paving. HELPLESS MAN KEPT ALIVE BY "HUMAN CHAIN’ | Doctors Pronounce Feat One of Most Remarkable Known to Medical World DIAPHRAGM PARALYZED | Men Work in Relays of Two! Each to Provide Artifi- cial Respiration hovered over the ree! L converse | briefly with those about him and phy- sicians redoubled efforts to prevent | a fatal instant’s break in the rhythmic| Procession of men who have been in- ducing artificial respiration for the stricken young salesman since 1 Sunday morning. Two by two they approached the! bed, swayed back and minutes, one on each side, working feverishly ig exact iz their hands down on t! | e victim's low- endless respirational Twenty-four men have worked in an unbroken continuation of eight- hour shifts, while others of Frick’s friends stood ready to act as substi-, Work Began Sunday k, the process has day morning, wh creeping paralysis took controlling the movements outh’s diaphragm. The case seemed vi but doctors immediately set up an icial respiration, and Friek re sponded to the against hope, the me Nl ard Barr, 15, confessed last night that rtually hopeless | firm trooped in, They were hastily instructed in the vrinciples of artifi ever since have t: the two physicians waged alone for | breathing, ane en up the batti the center of the stage. As the book North Dakota has had enough paviny Brened by uniformd attendants , scandals without having such a law ta model posed against /as this bill proposes on its statute ackground of black satin. A’ books to encourage more such nauseat- tal oe Siac TE TS ing affairs as.most citizens can recall extective touch : “as vecoration el agie happetied during the last few ie “pages” of the album. “It is possible that the bill is an The medet stepped from the book | attempt to overcome, by legal means, the resentment which these paving scandals have caused, “It is a splendid idea for all of us to help one another, On the other hand it is unfair to attempt to use a law to thrast something down the throats of city or county boards of commissioners which their sound judgment. would cause them to re- turning about so that it was possible to view the garments from all angles, then, crossing behind the semi-circle fencing of flowers, entered from the other side, turned again and re-enter- ed the book, after which the cover was closed. Many Costumes Shown The manikins appeared in rapid suecession, making every second full|” “The state highway commission has| of interest. The performance was already gone on record as rejecting excellently managed. The display the use of patent types of paving. opened with the showing of sport [ see no reason for forcing city her frock or coat it. An attractive assortment of street] “«] have vetoed this bill because I store, Beautiful afternoon dress were exhibited by models from the! Harris-Robertson show. Some id of the season’s beautiful fashions in The Hail Bureau Budget Bill dresses and coats wre shown in the! Reasons for vetoing the measure| took (Continued on page three) budgeting the hail insurance depart-| ment, given if the message were a business institution with expendi- Is Forced Down By tures varying greatly from year to Oil Pi T bl ane Aepeading open Phe nniabet. 9 ail loss claims filed with the de ape rouble partment. It is impossible to es mate the cost of operating this de- A . partment because no one is able to tion of an oil pipe in the motor: foresee the expenses involved in the of his plane brought the trans-At-| adjustment of losses, which vary lantie expedition of Major Tado Lar-! from year to year. re-Borges, Uruguayan flier, to an| «A pill similar to abrupt end while he was flying from by the 1925 legislative session and Casa Blanca, Morocco, to Cape Jybi. He ‘made’ thiy known n'a briot Mat, Yojoed, far the samme reasons as message received by the Uruguayan minister through the high commis The Bond Voting Measure sioner at Cape Jubi. ‘The message Madrid, March 9—()—Paralyza-! fonction sande Wononen “This bill provides that no perso: <q | shall be eligible to vote at bond elec-; Aaa toes the sane wae cextepye tions who is not a frecholder or who joes not pay a personal property tax.| ta point about 109 miles| “OT this bill were to becomes law! from Cape Jubi, 3 i Tam of the opinion that it would ser- ha aor grado warre-Borges ig in the) iously interfere with the legality and captured him and his three: flying| the sale of bonds. After any such companions er the plane was mieten the eens pet ee raised whether or not the bond issue was wrecked. | He is believed to be held | joey Gepending upon whether or not zs II the citisens who sated hea dol- A jars enougl eir cre er in Omaha Sniper to real oF personal propert ey * . “It questionable al whether Die in Electric | sucn's iaw would be, constitutional, H since {¢ seems to be in conflict wi ~ Chair on June 24) vecion 122 of the constitution of North Dakota. Lincoln, Neb., March 9.—(#). Would Bar Most Women Frank Carter, the sniper who terror-| “TI hope the citizens of North Dako- ized Omaha residents with his au-|ta are not potroprading. I hope we lar mark-ahead the electric chair at the state peni-| of the right of citizens to exercise tentiary here June 24, the supreme| the franchise. Surely the people of court held today. . North Dakota do not want the dollar In an opinion the high bench of| mark to be the indication of a citi- the state affirmed Carter's conviction] zen’s qualification to vote. We pro- for the murder of Dr. Austin Searles| gressed beyond that stage long ago. at Omaha last year. The decree held thermore, by the adoption of that Carter must be put to death. the 19th amendment to the constitu- rea is centered | tween sunrise and sunset on Friday,| tion of the United States, women over the Great Lakes region shia ee June 24, were granted equal franch' with and Rocky Mountain region. the northern men, The provisions of th! law aaa f iT it th t- Earth Tremor Ends | oud amet eee tomataiy, fexr| 89,000,000 el hours, each alternately compressing anfl expanding one lung, oxygen for the tissues, hysicians said they were witness- ing one of the uenievements in medical history sixty-five and seventy hours ed and the spark of life lingered. The fact that Frick paralyzed Sunday, encouraged those at his side but’ doctor: were fighting against time in their effort to have the youth breathing again before his body would succumb to the shock of the artificial respi tion wearing away strength even us it save? his life. Marvel at Devotion At the bedside were the father and mother, mary devotion to a comrade, 8 4 battle as they have watched it for wear by the Rose Shop. Each model | boards to ask for bids on such patent! four days. wore a hat in the same color as) paving if they have no wish to use| ” watchin the first brought Frick to | hospital Saturday, when the f | signs of the numbness, diagnosed as frocks was shown by the A. W. Lucas | believe it to be contrary to sound! Landry's paralysis, were discovered, public policy and against the inter-| three days after the youth had had ests of honest government.” | two teeth extracted. ysis had numbed his legs and creeping up his body possession of the diaphgram and the chest wall muscles, The patient has been unable to eat Uruguayan Flier “The hail insurance department is| for many hours, and has been given glucose solution, | paral; wa: injected into hi quart at a tim he has slept less than an hour. physicians said, ARMOUR GRAIN ee CO, ACTIVITIES |isizi'isints ior.) Sin Be Heated ana |POLICE MAKE TO BE PROBED Resignation of Two High Of- ficials Reported—Commit- | when Dr. J. F. Balzer and Miss Mary | here today by Edwin L. Howard, arch- tee Is Appointed was passed) \ In vetoing the bill limiting voters | said the failure cof the oil pipe to| at,bond elections the executive said: | March 9,—(#)--Prii reports of the resignation of two high officials of the Armour Grain and appointment Chicago board of trade of 1 com- mittee to investigate alleged irregu- larities of the concern in connection with the grain marketing company held the attention of the| grain trade today. Gorge E. Marcy, chairman of the of directors of the Armour concern, and George Thompson, su- perintendent in charge of elevators, | were the two officials, the Tribune known after. a special meeting of the comnany’s directorate. Marcy, who is in Pasadena, Calif., is one of the oldest chiefs in the Armour organization’ in point of service and one of the most widely known grainmen in America Directed to Pay $3,000,000 The Armour Grain company recent- ly was directed to pay approximately to the defunct Grain. Nurses’ Mistake Costs Five Baby Lives { jin their charge The infants were giv: Irene Schwar Aileen Callahan and Margaret Cuff. Chicago, March 9.--)-An endless; human chain held Albert Frick in the! land of the living today while doctors | 22-year-old youth! who was still alive although he had/ not drawn a normal breath for th days, as a result of paralysis of. the Laws Designed to Protect; Up Business For Attorneys, visions Cause Failure of; | Father and Step-mother Were| Hail Insurance Bill iM Asleep in Room—Six Chil- Two more bills late Tuesday were added to the list vetoed by Governor to four, . Bills killed by the Dallas, Texas, March 9.—-)—How-| nor’s ac he tossed a lighted dynamite bomb nto the bedroom of his father, H Jack Barr, contractor, and his step- mother here early today. Vai , ‘The elder Bart, awakened by his | wife when the bomb landed on their revising and amending | insurance law in many par uilty here toda Tuesday morning the ex ative! i nk here. In a written statement to offi travel outside the state by state o seen in nine years, “This bill provides that i ‘ university. children wereusieep in the hou: tion bureau where cla John Walker, negro employed by} utisfied ith the m e e had not ri Bart, made the bomb a week ago at the request of the youth, who said! qi he wanted to dynamite fish. The elder Barr carried life insur-}be improved in some re: ts but|was the best w: severely, but wanted the law to take'the workmen’s compensation insur-|of impri years 8 course, {ance is to insure adequate protection | degree burglary. jured workmen without the n heavy expenses in retaining a yer to fight his case. Had this would have been much less agitation! away by the whi vari bied for it durin, ssion were found by the nii Says She, Too, Was Victim | quite frank in their statements that] ‘Then followed Jot the state. The workmen's ¢ wap Los Angeles, March 9.) sare? ‘ pe Margaret W. Rowan, religious lead-| signed to protect. the workingmun,! cane and she w er and prophetess of dooms-day, oc-| mot to build up a business for at-| arraignm cupied a cot in the prison ward of the|torneys. Were this a workingman’s| "Mf days to answer a charge of plotting| would have signed it. to kill a rival leader. “In most cases the right of appeal | Using crutches and escorted by her|from decisions of the bureau would | son, Mrs, Rowan hobbled into police (Continued on page three) headquarters yesterday With two Es of her followers, she is accused of having plotted to kill Dr. Burt E. Fullmer, who ed be was drug-| J ® . | ged and beaten when lured te a tour- Lighted By Wireless ist camp near here, churged the ut- pune li tack resulted from y Distes. Mark 0 Mrs. Rowan was further im ed and lighted by wireless” was made ; A. Wade, a nurse, admitted the at-| itect of New York city, in an address ing the instigator. ndering Mrs. Rowan told] “°"8"* ¢ that ii d of havi : .. ° had band in the affair, she tao, wa Winning Two Prizes tallcd to” the. ‘camp by. telephone.| Proves Too Much For | assailants wore woman's clothes, Under Advisement | reinstate his appeal, dismissed when STORY MEASURE AMENDING HAIL INSURANCE LAW AND ONE ALLOWING APPEALS FROM WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION BUREAU DECISIONS VETOED BY GOVERNOR SORLI arian Meyers Gets Light) mated at present. | Term Upon Pleading Guilty dren in House Sorlic, bringing his total for the day to 3rd Degree Burglary tion yesterday afternoon were H. B. | Vermilion, S$. D., March 9. 1, permitting appeals by workme rian Meyers, former co-ed f decisions of the © work-| University of South 's compensation bureau, and S.'sentenced to 30 days in the 5 th itenti when y to attempting to] The Tokyo Ashai Shimbun (a new rob the vault of the First National! paper) estimates the dead in the en- bed, tore out the sputtering fuse, and} vetoed bills amending the law r { ‘Third degree burglary hurled the missile out a window. 10 ing to the qualifications of coroners} fie charge aga diq not explode. Jand changing the law relating to|was arrested here ttempted to gain the boy explained his act by saying fj and employes. o the vault with an el he desired to go to California to/ In vetoing House Bill 91 the ex-|the time of her arrest, the visit his mother whom he has not! ecutive said: jshe needed $24 to pay jared that, in h bureau, appeals maybe taken to the hands of society trict court. wished to give her “The existing law could no doubt} The 30-day sentence third AD aa Ia t sity of resorting To legal ac :, “ee M . A strong contributing factor ca. fhe was the desire to spare the work: NTEaGatLene cutting telephone First 3 rf telegraph proposed a reasonable limit on|qyres: she broke into the building jthe fees of lawyers prosecuting such] the” Sault “with lectrie vision been included in the bill there] yault. door. | She deightenell — ing of an electric Mrs. Margaret .W. Rowan! for. its passage. who lob-|¢lock, but returned shortly and was nt watchman, series of mancu- nt to the state ‘ . it would mean money to them. There! vers to have her 4 of Attack in Camp fe conventions that the bill {hospital for. the insane at Yankton! Are Moving in Increasing. ing demande: y the workingmen) for observation as to her mental con- * 5 at the hospital | Strength on Nanking sation insurance laws ere di reported that the girl | vturned here for s Mey o showed no signs county hospital today following her| bill and not a bill sponsored by a! of emotion after sentence was pro-| dramatic surrender here after nine| few ambulance chasing lawyers, I, nounced, will be t tentiary’ this evening. , Mr Meyers, the girl's widowed m . broke down slightly, but seon regain- ed her composure. peni- ex,| looted by a umob. 28 ARRESTS f Mrs, prediction that the time will come ft Wie weus cee pid followers. when the American home will be jfrom as far west as Hankow. They H Claims She Was Attacked Opals of meee) ahd concrete and heat-| are reported advancing around both ‘ack and uccused the priestess of be-| before the American Homes National|406 Automobles Tagged Dur- i Proper License Tags ‘y. commission by ‘ive 9 here. He fainted when a barrow pig | Petit larceny, two for reckless driving Earl Clark’s Plea |< the grand championship yester, | and two for fornication, and one each | day. He dropped dead when his pen| for speeding, vagrancy, ope of three pigs also took a btve ripbon. | motor vehicle without proper licen: and investigation. operatiny Three hundred ‘and thirty-four calls : Clark escaped from the Los Angeles] Cape May, N. J.. Mar. 9.—UP)—Miss | were reported und invetigated ‘during’ Chemists, Will Try . jcounty jail where he was awaiting | Mary Clark of Pittsburgh and Wash-| the month, Other deti "| to Learn C: j execution. ington, whose frozen body was found | partment's work for the period are: rn Cause of Clark, several‘ months after his|on the blizzard-swept beach here on| Doors of business places found un- escape, was recavtured Mii January 15, committed suicide when | locked, 2; auto accidents reported D., where he had mar she found ‘her fortune depleted, ac-| investigated, 3; white way and alley | THE BISMARCK TRIBUN BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1927 DISASTER ONE OF WORST IN JAPAN'S Hi BNGLAND AND. JAPAN FAVOR U.S. PROPOSAL Washington Officials Believe! Conference at Geneva Will Become Reality. = ——_— DEATH TOLL “MOUNTS WITH ~NEW REPORTS [Official Estimate of Casual- | ties Is 1,699—May Run Up to 5,000 Deaths ‘TOWNS ARE WIPED OUT | Harrowing Scenes Related By | These three nurses at a Chicago hospital sorrowfully explained how an error cost the lives of five babies} Correspondent Who Has iven boric acid solution by mistake. The nurses (left to right) are) Visited Ruins | | Tokyo, March 9.—(AP)—The | home office announced this aft- ernoon that, according to latest advices, 2,275 persons were killed in M earthquake in Cen- pan, and 1 ingared. Houses numbering 3,606 were’ de= tral | E' stroyed by fire, 3113, by fhe ake, 158 were rtly bers 657 damaged is; the shocks. hington, March 9.—(AP)— offer to Japan in their latest = TOSSING BOMB) werine a sot vit) GIVEN S0-DAY ras: socsin-me toe ,of Monday's earthquake catastrophe |in central Japan continues to grow ial estimate of 1,699 to news- |paper figures as high as 5,000. The |number of injured cannot be esti- j, {The home minister, interpellated in the digt today, gave the official figures of 1,699 deaths, but said this lexcluded the towns of Miyazu | Mineyama, fsom which reliable in- | formation had not been obtained. Mineyama is understood to have | t the} been hit the hardest, and one unof- was | ficial estimate is that fully 2,500 per- state! sons lost their lives there. Estimates Vary tire carthquake region at more than was the} 3,000, while the Tokyo Nichi Nichi st the girl who| Shimbun gives 5,000. . after; An Ashai correspondent says the itrance | town ‘of Amino, of 4,000 population, tric drill, At| was nearly destroyed. More than 200 id|were killed and 500 injured in the at/ collapse and, burning of a theutre, 0 Troops are digging bodies from the Besides Bair and his wife, six|heard by the workmen's compen In sentencing the girl, Judge A.| ruins. The refugees, many of them 3 n,Jinjured, present a pitiful spectacle, n break | their misery accentuated by the snow and that hey and cold. ir chance."] The snow, together with the fi he thought,! sures opened in the earth by the con- to vulsions, have greatly at- ance totaling $40,000. He said he did) this bill is obviously ~-* an improve-, regain her proper station in society.;tempts to get relief to the aufferers not wish to see his son punished too! ment. One of the main purposes of The law permits a maximum sentence |e automobiles, and food 1s being carried in by coolies Harrowing scenes are described by a correspondent for the Asahi who (Continued on page three) a drill appeals it would have been 4 much! which, authorities said, was stolen, OF ATTENTION better bill. 4 Her attempt failed when the cord Not a Workingman’s Bill on the drill would not reach from the ; | “On the other hand, had this vro-t nearest electric light socket to they IN CHINA WAR | Cantonese Occupy City and ‘Shanghi, March 9.—UP)—Attention centered today on Wuhu, 200 miles vest of he: use of its occupa- n vancing Cantonese and | riots in which the customs house was Foreign women and children of Wuhu evacuated the city today and left by steamer for Shanchai. No casualties were reported, but indica- tions were that all foreieners would soon depart from the city. The janti-riot measures were described as “lukewarm.” Latest military events seem strong- ly in favor of the Cantonese, who are moving in increasing strength down Yangtze river toward Nanking sides ot Lake Taaihu, in their effort to attain the Nanking-Shanghai | railway and thus deal a severe blow | to General Chang Tsung-Chang, chief | defender of Shanghai, by cutting his ing Month For Not Carrying Communications. Nationalist soldiers at Wusueh, be- jlow Hankow, rushed and captured a British steamer Monday, startin, down the river with jt. A Britis destroyer . later intercepted the e/atepped into a cabin she | Twenty-eight arrests were made by’! y ‘ ee ee ened ee One of her Stockman of Texas) «. Bismarck police department dur-| Steamer, and recaptured it. An pa slsig ing February according to a report She freed herself from her attuck-| Fort Worth, Texas, March 9+ ()-—| Presented to the cit ission \ers and sped away in her cur. T. S. Cline, 55-year-old stockman of | C.J. Martineson, chief of police. Eight Prosper, Texas, is dead as a result of |} Of these were for drunkenness, J heart ‘attack following the’winning | for disorderly conduct, four for en- {2° ee ; Supreme Court Has = | 2,"2st! attack following the winning | (acing in the liquor traffic, three for | Be Cantonese are likely to occupy armed guard was placed aboard. Observers in London, drawing con- ‘elusions from dispatches from the far east, have expressed belief that |Shanghai soon and force the north- erners clear to Manchuria without serious opposition. But they do not feel alarmed over this, commenting ‘|that there are sufficient foreign ‘forces in Shanghai to cope with any Los Angeles, March 9—()—The erp * Four hundred and xix automobiles | siraati ; , |California supreme court today had Authorities Decide were tagged during the month and! Settlement there. would inepeetional under advisement the plea of Ear A e drivers warned to obtain their! fettiems [aClark, convicted ‘slayer, that it| Woman Killed Self | iss; {iunse ture the sepert shows | 19 affected by a trunsfer of authority f the de- Dr. Souba’s Death ray 1 I Menace From Fumes) vomes, hold either real or personal mpany by an arbitrator who that engaged in busine: His request for | cording to state police. ir own oma ! I have vetoed| t ite Monnens Nicaragua, March 9.—() | | —Verifi ation was received today | fell Sains aden tte Official of Union _ hundreds of thousands, of dollars Pacific Line Dies in denies in the rich coffee territory oaaks: March 6 os Be by Saturday's quake, filed tho| dent of the Union Pocfic systema y and tin the » ft which de-| fo: ice presiienk of the Brother- tractive faues ule ceartantty sana: hood of. Zaliroad Trainmen, died at. mples changed time of the formation of the 1,000 cooperative the Armour concern held 48 per cent of the stock. yment of the debts of thi lefunct company, the remainder w: to be divided among the concert in_the project, jum Brothers and the Rosen- baum Grain corporation. The board of trade which is composed of some of leading figures in the Mr. cific’ trom Cleveland in 1921, will go into all details of the alleged i itie court, in dismissing the apyeal, fail. FAREWELL TO HOUNDS Two troopers found that Miss Clark | reported to Hugh followed for years. A special meet-| inherited from a brother was gone,| er. ing of the huntemen was. arranved| she would end her life at his home in Leicester after he had! The nooners concluded expressed the desire to sce the dogs’ ended her life by walking for the last time, ’ surf at high tide, eft (nec b phi lta eas as many as 10,000 eggs, other may produce only a few, v lights repaired,’ 79; thefts reported) Minneapolis, March 9—()—Pailin; reinstatement of his appeal was A finding to this effect was pre-| and investigated, 16; transients pro-| i x re based on the ground that the supreme " red by troopers for submission to-| vided with lodging, 15; eir attempts to learn the ca in ry reports ofj of the death of Dr. Frederic J. Soul . layeto Judge Henry. B. Ware, who| stolen cars received and filed, 370;| who died in his office Mee sue d to attach its judgment and deci-| ordered an investigation after a cor-| car owners cautioned for ‘i “to ion, oner’s jury had expressed the opin-| lights, legal papers ion that Mise Clark was murdered. | quarantine tags posted, 2 improper | municipal authorities today turned the chemical laboratory of the Uni- arc lights | versity of Minnesota to solve the Electric company, | mystery. ois London, — Propped up on pillows id only sbout $20 in bank and that| 4; telegrams and letters filed, 51. at his window, Fred Holland, 80, a tate had dwindled to almost The police collected $4.76 for a) failed to disclose a natural cause bedridden sporting farmer, recently| nothing. In a diary found in her| board bill durin the month and tur: bade farewell to’ the hounds he had| trunk, ahe wiote that when the money | ed the mofiey over to the city treasur- When a post mortem examination © death, e universi Soube's vital organs A singh ther snail may hatch for at single. mothe: wy Baten nae ee ak least a several patients wai d

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