The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1927, Page 1

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ee | ‘ ay . ence with juro: MURSNAY. APRIL 19,.1927 ‘WEATHER FORECASTS Mostly fair tonight and Wednes- oy i day. Not much ESTABLISHED 1878 of \ SMAK — eee eoee we AT ————— lters continued to mount to un> Snerial Election BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1927 FORD COUNSEL ASKS MISTRIAL OF LIBEL SUIT Motion Will Be Presented to Judge Raymond When Court Resumes Thursday SEN. REED IS STILL ILL Alleged Misconduct of Juror ' Will Be Grounds For Re- questing Mistrial Detroit, Mich., April 19.—(4)—Al- leged misconduct of a juror will be made the grounds for a motion for mistrial when Sapiro's $1,000, 000 libel suit against Henry Ford sumes next Thursday morning, Ste art Hanley of Ford counsel told Judge Fred M. Raymond today in successfully requesting a continu: ance until then because of the ill- ness of Senator James A. Reed, chief of Ford counsel. Hanley did not state his reason for the mistrial motion in open court but later said “we will move for a mistrial on the grounds of miscon- duct of a juror.” It was understood that one of the six women on the jury was called in- to Judge Raymond's office last night and questioned about reports of an investigation made by detectives for the Ford ‘organization. Ford Counsel Assailed William Henry Gallagher, chief of counsel himself a and Ford detectives in an address to the court, and“Judge Raymond him- self felt’ the lash ,of Gallagher's tongue. Gallagher, referring to “fear of the| collapse of the Ford case,” asserted | that Ford detectives had’ lined the| corridors of the federal building since the inception of the trial and frequently had been seen in confer- and stated also that twice Judge Raymond had received members of Ford counsel in his pri- vate chambers while Sapiro’s coun- sel was excluded. Gallagher Halts Judge Judge Raymond said to Gallagher that he twice had been asked into chamber conferences. After court had been adjourned and as Judge Raymond was passing through the little door back of his bench into his private retreat, Gallagher halted him with a shouted inquiry as to when was the first time he had been|-viotg and Adeline?” State’s Attorney asked into a chamber conference. “I do not want to enter into any controversy: you,” returned the judge, “your are invited now.” Gallagher, Sapiro, his brother, Mil- ton Sapiro, and the Ford attorneys gathered in chambers. Mrs. William Hoffman, the eleventh juror to be chosen, was brought before Judge Raymond last night by George H. Beamer, deputy United States marshal, acting as chief officer of the court during the trial. She was interrogated by the judge for 45 minutes upon reports made to him by Ford counsel, who in turn had them from Ford detectives. At the end of the long conference in chambers, Sapiro and his counsel and the Ford attorneys emerged si- lently. No one would say what had occurred and Judge Raymond added his refusal to that of the lawyers. “I have given my word that I would not say anything,” said Sapiro. es | Weather Report —__—___—_—_—_——__—_—-@ Temperature at 7 a. m. . Highest yesterday .. “Lowest last night .... Precipitation to 7 a, m. nes wind velocity . feather conditions at the 24 hours ending . 68 0 “North” Da- kota points for {| He is idee 4 quired about the personal greetings New Salem Band to Broadcast Tonight ‘KIDNAPED MEN Over Station KFYR’ ARE RELEASED FROM ‘PRISON’ The New Salem boys’ band, L. W. Jacobson, director, ‘will broadcast | progrant over KFYR at 6:30 tonight, yy remote control from the Elks' | club rooms. Associated with the | roup are three artists, Mrs. Fred) Scho Mann an le lopfleisch, ano %, soloists, and” Harry “Reynard, Yocat|Had Been Held Captive in solo} ‘A dance program will be broad-| Strange House in Chicago cast at 10 p.m. by Curtis Dirlam and | his KFYR Broadcasters, | 0. W. Roberts, federal weather forecaster here, is to give the first | of a series of weather talks on to-| morrow noon's program. At 6:30 a studio program will be given and at 7:45 LF. Crawford of the state historical society will talk on “The Coming of the Cattle Outfits to the Northwest.” MURDERER OF — 2. DAUGHTERS CALLED INSANE Mrs. Ida Albright of McHenry County Will Be Sent to Jamestown Hospital Towner, N. D., April 19.—()--Mrs, Ida Albright, who last Friday night shot and killed her daughter, Viola, aged 13, mortally wounded another daughter, Adeline, 8 years old, ai then shot herself, is insane and w be sent to the state hospital at Jame town for treatment. Commitment to the Jamestown hos- Since Last Thursday ALWAYS ‘BLINDFOLDED Police Believe Ransom of $100,000 Was Paid For Cafe Owners’ Freedom Chicago, April 19.—()--The _kid- naped owners of the Midnight Froi- ies Cafe, who were “super-hi-jacked” last Thursday and held prisoners five days, have been released as myster- iously as they disappearcd. There were reports that ransom of $100,000 was required to effect the freedom of the two—Jakic Adler and Frankie (Sappo Joc) Gelell— and there wax the statement of Gelell that so far as he knows the kidnapers received nothing. Adler and Tony Albino, his chauffeur, who also was kidnaped, had nothing to \say. The three men, blindfolded, were put out of automobiles at separ- ate parts of the city at half hour in- } tervals last night. Bound and Blindfolded Gelell, who also is known as Frank Lawro, ‘talked freely. He said he and Adler got into their automobile, driven by Albino, at the Frolics about :30 Thursday morning and drove to Adler's home. As Adler stepped out i : py | ff shot guns, forced him to re- tie mitt ears yoaterdny bij enter the automobile. Adler, Gelell after a hearing at which the woman| 2nd Albino then were bound and blindfolded and driven away. “We stopped finally in front of a house,” according to Gelell’s account, and they marched us in, “They kept us there all the time, Adler and me jin one room and Tony in another, Our blindfolds were never removed, was questioned concerning the slay- ing of her two daughters, which she admitted. Will Not Prosecute State's Attorney D. J. O'Connell of MeHenry county, who had filed murder charge against Mrs. Albright prior to the time that she was taken before the insanity board, announced today that he, too, is Capvinced that the woman is mentally deranged, and that he will not at this time prose- exe, her on the criminal accusation. | | faces of our captors. “They treated us fine. We got plenty to eat, and we slept well, too, even if we did have | chains on us. Those fellows never said much to us. ior to being tuken before the in- Mrs. Albright killing us, but I didn’t. believe him. They gave us good cigars and our choice of liquors. Nice fellows—but I'm glad I'm hom san commission, had been arraigned in justice court betore Justice ki _ J: Flannagan, where she also admitt aving led her 4 clale to have the alain girls brought rye y made Jakie sign a paper two “Did days ago. He didn’t. know what you shoot your daughters, “Yes,’ MRS. COOLIDGE MAKES 9 YEAR OLD BOY HAPPY Befriends Tow-headed Young- asked the woman. was her reply, maybe it was a check.” ransom agreed upon by the captors and captives should be paid. The best guess of the amount the police would make was $50,000 each Adler and Gelell. Payment of the reported ransom ic said to have been made with a south side saloon keeper acting as in- termediary. This was early last night, the police say, about three hours before the cabaret men were freed. crater |IBLD WORK dmeactatcis| PROGRESSES @ personal friend of Mrs. Cool- has been her guest at the White House and has been invited there again. Robert Merritt, who is as modest. as he is happy, revealed the ped of his friendship with Mrs. Coolidge today after friends had Sunshine Brings Farmers In- to Field Along Soo Line Branches, Is Report Field work is getting well under way along the Missouri River Divi- sion of the Soo Line, according to and conversation he was'seen to have had with her yesterday at the egg Members of the bureau, their wives eight masked men, armed with sawed | | and we never had a chance to see the| One of them said something about| it Bolice,.however,-believe. the paper! stil Adier signed was’ formal notifica-): for | | the the tion by Adler‘to ‘his friends that the| ments, funds ii Hi yr provisions making for better | e ipronounced in the case of James A. $ | Other provisions making for better Wilson-Vare Records | Timoney, co-author, and a 10-day} of Them Have Opinions | vision on the part of the driver sas sentence without the fine for Wil Vthat all cars must be providec n | The new peace bridge, connecting Buffalo, N. Y., and Fert Erie, Canada, in May by President Coolidge and the Prince of Wales. i BALLOT FIGHT | MAY BE TAKEN New York, April 19-—GP)—Mae | |The man who likes to paste pie- West, the star and co-author of | tures of diving girls or mottoes on | Broadw plays, was sen: ‘or AE ere ea: and $500 fine eneral Sessions aibeiduiadd {city traffic git ad forbids pa Judge Donnellan today a jing any sign, poster or } " - ne 7 tie! i an| ‘irst 5 > i \ transparent material on the front | | eials’ Denial of Access to | Philadelphia, April 19—C@)—The |" “ayy the other 19 defendants in the| New Fork, (A)—-Vrolong- | shield wipers. | legal battle growing out of the de-; “Sex” case received suspended sen-| cd efforts to select a jury in the Sny-| {mand of the senate special election | tences. der murder case seemed likely tod, investigating impounding of the taining the ballots cast in Delaware | nounced that he would appe: county at the election last Novem- ber probably will be carried to the supreme court of the United States. | LEMP ah pene tt eer pate examined had formed opinions. None! | eget inne Todhy follewing cae | |admitted he would be influenced by! Hi) ments in the federal district court | | Mrs. Snyder's sex. i here yesterday on the petition of the | { The defendants, accused of murder-| committee for an order compelling} ing the woman's husband, Albert’ pea) Delaware county authorities to | turn the election records over to_its | was, because he was blindfolded. May-, SPecial counsel, Jerry C. South. ‘The be it was a deed to his house and|#reuments centered ground the que Coolidge and Prince to Dedicate New Peace Bridge i} is pictured above. It is nearly complete and is to be dedicated The span is dedicated to the 100 years of peace between the United States and Canada and as a reminder that no fortifications exist cn either side of the border from coast to coast. Ser des Senne’ wo SELECTION OF JURY IN SNYDER Sticker Pasting on Windshields |, Now Taboo Here Workhouse, $500 Fine | One of the in the workhouse provis Pere to 10 da A similar sentence and a fine was| One Was Acceptable—Most | car. (rear view mirrors and with —wind- jliam Clarence Morganstern. : i representing the} defendant: an-! old Speilbers, committee for! : prison sentenced boxes con- Of 50 men examined on the first jday of the trial of Mrs, Ruth Synder, and Henry Judd Gray, not one was| ble as a juror, Most of those! HOOVER GIVEN COMMENDATION | VETO AX FALLS Sn: der, art editor, sat on opposite! sides of the defense counsel table but in such a position that their! jeyes never met. Both faced the jury | ecretary of Commerce Held Competent to Fill Any tion of whether the committee is, box. Gray, corset salesman — and} Judge J: Whitaker Thompson Christianson Stands Firm on} {cy was behind him with her eye — ee directed counsei for each side to file aie sl apan Hin DAG } Washington, April 19.—44—The formal briefs. Mr. South was given| Economy Policy; Refuses Mrs, Snyder chewed gum. She! declaration of the White House five days in which to prepare hisj brief und opposing counsel five days to file an answer. days were allowed Mr. South in which to file a brief in rebuttal. Judge brag her forehead. [tary Kellogg reti was taken up Thompson will announce his decision {firm on his economy policy, Gover- res air [ack me ie ga RAINES ‘B. after he has studied the brief: nor Theodore Christianson last night! yopEL, PUBLICITY Jaxain by the spoke: ie The Delaware county officials had | d unsigned to the legislature,| TO BE JURY FOR ‘make it clear that no derogation o declined to comply with Mr. South's oa aes $1,500 aaa iy to a Gaunt Gaue New| Mi: Hoover's capacity had “been in- ecord ie a a ing wl a ally jueens County Court louse, New | tended. Seiad tae ieee ord deadly fcnvelbpen ot.auprame court| Mork, Api 19--44—William, E:l°Qine rusident was eald:to consider mittee, headed by Senator Reed of | justices. -He had previously vetoed| Young, # hotel publicity man, was|that Mr. Hoover's reputation for Missouri, in connection with the con- ti tn salecy for. district} Selected today as foreman of the) ability and achievement had been so test brought by William B. Wilson, | #3, merease in ¥ jury which will ‘hear the Snyder| well established in the United States Democrat, against Senator-elect Wil: |S¢dze* murder trial. and abroad that Mr. Coolidge would liam S. Vare, Republican. Women’s Clubs Claim Credit For Passage of Pure Food Laws) , cando, N. Dy, i 19.4) the} in criminal mutters, that he would Hoover's direction the commerce de- Peer of ae Nott Pe ateta “race | alate: My reason for Proving | not take into consideration failure of jpartment had assumed a position of food law was largely due to the ef- (of the bill is that this is an inop-| defendant to tuke the stand and|extraordinary importance, both in forts of the women’s clubs of the Portune | time to increase their! that he would follow instructions of reference to the conduct of the state, according to Mrs, C. J. Lord, S#laries.” of this city, a former president and Lunde of Wendell, Minn., at a rece wore mourning of the latest mode. A close black toque was pulled close} above her eyes, her blande bobbed| hair just showing in a fringe across! to Sanction Increase t ssix spokesman last week t ecretary Hoover would not be ned to the state department, even should Seere- Two additional ae St. Paul, April, 19—()—Standing The bill raised the sulary of the) “Young, who lives in Elmhurst and | is married but has no children, was the 69th talesman to be examined.! None of his predecessors had prov en acceptable. | Before being accepted, Young said that he had no scruples against cap- ital punishment, that he believed men and women should be treated alike not be able to damage it by any ac- tion or word if he so desired. The| resident, however, has no such de- ire, it was said, and considers that Mr. Hoover is competent to fill any cabinet place which might be open, or which he might desire. Nevertheless, the president was said to consider that under Mr. hief justice to. §9,000 nu year, the four ussociates to $8,500 and the two commissloners to $8,600. It would {have added $10,500 to the state’s an- nual expense burden. s The veto message was very brief. “1 do not question the value of he services which these able and distinguished men are rendering the the court. He was first announced us accepta- ble by the state, then by counsel tor! economie life bearing upon of the country and its Approves Forest Bill foreign trade. | The governor, however, gave his 1 1925 will result.) ‘The tise for. the nast 24 hours was 4.2 inches with THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | awonm 1} PRICE FIVE CENTS || FLOOD WATERS RISE AFTER SERIES OF STORMS HEAVY RAINS SEND STREAMS T0 NEW MARKS Tornadoes and High Winds Do Much Damage in Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri 1 KILLED, SEVERAL HURT St. John’s Bayou Levee, Near New Madrid, Mo., Breaks Early Today Kansas City, April 19.—()—Floods caused more damage in southwest states today following a series of tornadoes, electrical storms and cloudbursts last night. rey rains in Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma sent streams to record marks again as farmers and resi- dents of valley towns were returning to their homes, damaged by floods and storms in a two weeks siege of unusual weather. Scores of persons were driven from their homes in southeastern Kansas when the, Neosho and Verdigris rivers overflowed. Upwards of 100 families at Iola, Kansas, spent the night in the Salvation ‘Army bar- racks and the city grade schools, when the Neosho rose until it. was three miles wide. From two to four inches of rain fell in central and southern Kansas. Warnings Issued Flood warnings were broadcast in | Oklahoma, where the Arkansas and other large rivers carried the tor- rents into Arkansas to add to. the volume sent into the overtaxed Mis- sissippi_ river, The Missouri river, also was at flood stage between here and St. ouis. overnment engineers re- ported large areas inundated, Damage from tornadoes or high winds was reported in Teaxs, Okla- homa, Kansas and Missouri. One man was killed and several injured by a tornado that struck Arthur ( in eastern Texas, early this morni Eight persons were reported injured in a twister at Big ‘oot, near San Antonio. High winds also wrecked buildings at Carrollton, Mo., Muskogee, Ok and Van Arsdale, Kansas. Only few persons were injured at these points. LEVEE BREAKS, INUNDATING MILLIONS OF ACRES OF LAND Memphis, Tenn., April 19.—@)— he entire St. Francis river basin of southeast Missouri and northeast Arkansas appeared doomed to inun- dation when the St. John’s bayou levee, eight miles north of New Ma- drid, Mo., broke under the pressure of floods eurly today. i The breach in the St. John’s bayou was reported a mile wide. . Richest Land in the World South of New Madrid and in the path of the flood lies one of the rich- est “black land” areas in the world and one which is lacking any major drainage basin for about 50 miles. Such small streams as there are flow away from the Mississippi river, to which there is no access until the St. Francies joins the big river 12 miles north of Helena, Mayor H. J. Fitzius of Lake City told the Associated Press at Mamphis by telephone today that the break above New Madrid would flood thou: sands of acres in the 75-mile streten between the point where the Ir» i broke and where the water will finw into the St. Francis river. ‘two towns, Caraway and Black Oak, Ark., each with populations of 709; are en- dangered, he. said. Disasters Nears Disaster was expected today to overtake many towns which have been fighting to hold their dikes istori vdera- . The reason the spokesman did not| Against the prevailing high waters. He pede hen rolling festival on the White House] reports reaching divisional offices| NOW historian of the state federa-!)) ovul'to the bills of the legisla-| Henry Judd Gray and last, after long’ make clast hie view of Mr, Hoover | Towns in the path of the down rush- 2 * Tem; \ here. The pure-food campaign, Mrs. Lord ‘tive reforestation program which} conference, by Mrs. Ruth Synder’s|in discussing the state department|ing overflow include: Lake .City, ps. § ietly told how a year age Work started yesterday on the Wis-| puintes in n history of the women's Survived the executive veto rampage. | fawyer. Hast week, it’ was said, was because| Truman, Herman, Tulot, Marked $8 us ad greeted him and} hek to Pollock line and was reported| Tih “movement in North Dakota! The governor's signature left vir- Pee URE eee etey the statuts| and. capacity. of Mr.| Tree,’ Tyronza, Lepanto, Deckerville, s Be °8 ristine, 13 years old,| well advanced on the Wishek ‘chich she is now compiling, was the tually intact, except for two com- Hoover was so completely assumed to| Gilmore, Frenchman's Bayou, Joiner, $e 3 re at the egg rolling! marck line. On the Bi first big undertaking of the organ. Paratively minor features, deleted by be known by the president that it| Wilson, Osceola, Marion, Marvard, se | party, He asked their names} line, work has started, -| ization which had been launched in Veto earlier in the day, the compre. j was supposed ' that the assumption| Parkin, Earl, Brickley's, Nettleton, i SB |and then asked them to come to the| what delayed by a heavy 1897. jhensive program for protecting and was held by everybody else. and Marianna. Amenia 71-32 .06 Cloudy | White, House, Saturday. Farmers on the e] "At the meeting held in Grand, developing the state's forest wealth. | farce eee Approximately 10,000 persons were BISMAR - 68 23 0 Clear “About a week later,” Robert con-/to Sanish line started work yester-| porks in 1903, Mre Lord relates, the| The bills signed provided for: | lready reported homeless. Bottineau 64 14 03 Clear tinued, “her secretary or some man|day and from Wishek to Merricourt pure food movement was launched’ A plan for owners of land to have | Crushing power of the Mississippi Brosby . 55 13 0 Clear | came to our house and asked us to| » number were reported in the fields. with the passage of a. resolution the acreages classified as forest \river, riding higher against the Devils Lake 64 22 0 PCidy. hite House. We visited her in} Field work started from Fullerton| which read: “Resolved, that we, the} lands, enjoying deferréd tax pay- |great dykes, which partially confine Dickinson . 65 18 0 Cloudy j one of those big rooms. Guess we] to Hankinson yesterday and w: mothers and housekeepers condemn | ment. . jit to its course today, caused appre Dunn Center .. 61 15 © Clear | talked about several things. Mr.| pected to be quite general today. the use of all food products which| Creation of an interim commission ‘ | (Continued on page three) lendale « 50 81 .21 Cloudy | Coolie me in later with the dogs.| Cream receipts will show a very| are shown to be adulterated and that,| of 13 members to study the forestry | | fomemanine raat ‘4 wenden ..... 68 18 0 Clear | Wa the dogs a while, and then| heavy increase in the next 10 days. as club women, we use our utmost, situation in the state and report to| eee \¢ Grand Forks .. 66 33 0 Cloudy | talked some more with Mrs.-Coolidge,| say divisiona officials, who add that| endeavors to create public sentiment |the next session of the legislature. ‘ i} Last Minute Jamestown 69 25 0 Cloudy | and then went home.” prairie grass has made wonderful/ in favor of our state pure food law.”| Setting aside of certain state lands) Wabasha, Minn., Couple May 1 ° Langdon ...... 65 24 .05: Cloudy Gives Him Presents headway in the jast two days with finite Plan Outlined for forestry purpose: | ‘ Superior Students Enter | Bulletins | Larimore’ + 68 29 0 Cloudy| Rébert sald Mrs.Coolidge gave him| sunshine tising temperature. | 4 definite campaign designed to, Approprition of $35,000 to enable} Be Charged With Murder N Lisbon ....... 74 30 .11 Cloudy | mouth organ and Christine a Chin-| Cold blasts today will have no ef-/ align support for the measure was\the forestry commissioner to make : Third ‘Week of Protest— . Minot .. 85 18 .02 Cloudy | ese doll, “with shoes to fit.” fect on crops, O. W. Roberts, federal! planned, Mrs. Lord said, und each! a survey -of state lands and classify | Some Time Today East Church, Kent England, Napoleon 70 283 0 Cloudy | “What did Mrs. Coolidge say?”| weather forecaster says, pointing out| club was urged to devote its time them as forest agricultural lands. Education Board Firm April 19.—(AP)—A Pembina . 68 82 0 P Cidy.| Robert was asked later by‘his play-| that nothing has been in the ground! to pure food work at one meeting! Designation of 80,000 acres of state | mis Serer 2 force bombing airplane ¢: Williston +» 62 14 .04. Clear tes. - long enough. to be damaged by the} during. the year, In addition every land in the Minnesota national forest | Luke City, Minn., April 19. ms : " r : here today and its f ‘occas Moorhead, Minn, 70. 34 Cloudy said she remembered me. Ask-| cold w: “ woman , was given a pure food as state forest lands. Charges of first degree murder may | Superior, W April 19—@)—, pants were burned to * ‘WEATHER FORECAST ed me what I could play on my mouth 45-Degree Drop | bulletin: + The bills killed by veto provided | be preferred sometime today against With the ending of the Easter recess For Bismarck and vicinity: Mostly | 01 ” he. canaie esitatingly. The temperature dropped 45 de-| “Aji this was: quietly done but the for state payment of five cents per M d Mrs. Gordon Cooper, held in *0d2¥: the Superior students strike Sidney, N. 8. W., April 19— fair tonight and Wednesday. Not | rt said he told Mrs, Coolidge| grees from 4 p. m. yesterday to 7 a.| influence was far-reaching, and. it;aere to a, few northern Minnesota | M¥: an ae IP cc aa entered upon its third week with the (AP)—After four days of rain, much change in perature, |he could play’ “Home Sweet Home,”|m. today, the weather bu: ’s ob-! was due to the work of the club. counties on land set aside as forest |the county jail at Wabasha in con- school controversy deadlocked. the worst storm in 15 yeate For North Dakots: Mostly fair} “Annie Laurie” and “Long, Long) servation’ shows. Yesterday was! women that the pure food Inw was'land und another would have permit-j| nection with the death of the wo- The board of education last night struck this city last night, taus- tonight and Wednesday. to-| Ago,” on the mouth orga id thet | warnt, but at about 4 o'clock 1 wind| passed,” Mrs. Lord said. ted the state to finance its reforest-| mun’s infant son, County Attorney , P#ssed what virtually amounted to a; ing wix deaths. _Reofs were. term. night extreme east portion, Not) she replied, “that is fin began to come up and the mercury) “Mrs. R. A. Sprague of Grund stion program out of receipts from |i p punde declured here today. Vote, °f Confidence in the Rev. A. T. | from buildings by the wind ent quite so cold Wednesday afternoon | she wanted to hear him pl: dropped fast. The temperatyre at 4| Forks was appointed pure food in-|the sale of timber. iM: Lunde declared hore today. Ekblad, president of the board. It, there was much damage northwest ‘ion. Robert resides at Kensington,| p. m. yesterday was 68 and at 7 a. m./ spector and proved most efficient. -—___—- j, Counsel for Mrs. Cooper planned left its position in the matter of ally, WEATHER CONDITIONS Maryland, & suburb of Washington,| today war 23. The highest wind ve-| She hus-the Honor tobe the first. WY Murd \to serve a writ of habeas corpus for reinstating Miss “Lulu. Dickinson, | ‘ A well developed disturbance isj and his father is an employe of the| locity was 34 miles an hour. woman to hold that position in the) "WOMAN Murderer | the Foman's eloase ie 2 charge is ousted schoo! teacher, or of nego: Boston, April 19. — (AP) — " ly i 2 | | not filed against her today. tiating with her, in his hands H : aad vais a recitation Donen! Roney Somes Many Expected at Hees pana eet Apress Is Found Insane ine, Raymond M. Bieter, Vnstructor adjourned subject to the call of the| Canrenge De Mar of Melwese.cugs places from the Great Lakes re- H committee of the health division o :: Hd jin pharmacology at the University | president. ‘ i B. A. A. marathon cai the Glon westward tothe north’ Pacite| Steamers Collide Annual Banquet of ih, est! federation of women's’ «.Waunakee, Wie, April 19. -U)—A|of gfinnesota was here today to tes: | "It was explained by the Rev. Wile; BiaAycAn Thampineship eday Soaut, ‘Precipitation also occurred tn in Lake Superior | Credit G clubs and will specialize in tubereu- | coroner's jury late yesterday found] tify at the coroner's inquest ito liam Hood, in making the motion, the fifth. time. Hie time the lower Hastseipp! ‘alley an Loca redi roup losis work.” | Mrs. Mary McCloskey, 30, insane, and | the death of the child. le inques' a is was intended to give the 2:40:22 1-5. js; Kansas Cit; — fs eet not responsible at the time she shot | was continued from last week. An president a free hand in arranging a —, <Ss porcpreey Sete et rien the pend Houghton, Mich. April 19.—()— — MIND BLANK 3 YEARS and killed her ex-convict husband | analysis of the stomach of the fi private hearing for Miss Dickinson | Los Angeles, April 19.—(AP)=— 24 houts. A high pressure area is| The -s! ts J. E. Gorman of the) Many are expected to attend the; Madison, Wis.—In the early part of William R, McCloskey, April 11. weeks’ old child, made at the Uni- or taking any other steps deemed; Dr. C. H. Parkhui 85, veteran wi from the north Pa-| Great Lakes Transit Line, and'Cletus| annual banquet of the Bismarck! the late war, a shell exploded near H. She testified her husband came to | versity of Minnesota, is to be con- | advisable. ! reform leader pow je crusader, cific coast and much colder weather | Schneider, of the Paisley Line, which | Credit Bureau, to be held tonight at|L. Rice, an American serving in the her father’s home; late at night and | sidered by the coroner's jury. Miss Dickinson was dismissed! and Mrs. Eleanor Mars, Pp from 5 west- | collided in @ dense fog off Outer Is-| 6:30 at the Grand Pacific hotel. | French cavalry. He woke up threé: made a threatening move when she! ‘The baby was buried yesterday in March 14 for alleged unprofessional! of New York, were lars, J ward to the Pacific coast states. Tem-| land, one of the Apostle group, Sat-| City Attorney C. L, Young will be| years later, with no remembrance of | declined to go with him. Believing | Lakewood cemetery,-with the mother conduct. and students of Central, yesterday. The peratures are near sero.in the west-| urday night eeding to their the rincipal speaker of the ete: the intervening time. While his‘ Be injanded 14. 2 her, She seized a | present under guard of the sheriff. high school rallied aN her support | Province: farm | respective on Every ler} memory was a blank he had won a; shot gun and fired. | ‘<onien neeeneeemnts y going out on strike. i over the Mississippi were Should, Know” and takin~ up the Belgian, Order of opold and the | McCloskey was sentenced in Jan-| SHE “NECKS” A ROBBER { Pees eS ion. The Gorman came into legal aspects of business. ‘Short| French Legion of Honor medals. | uary, 1925, to the state prison ‘for Peoria, Ill.—Hearing a noise in her WW BRINGS MEMORY ‘W. RO! took on a cai talks are to made by other mem-/ ee | forgery and was paroled last Decem- | kitchen, Mrs. Geor; homas investi- _Tofonto.—After losing his memory | in charge. |/Sunday for bers of the bureau. J. Henry Kling,| LUTHERANS CALL NEW PASTOR | ber. He became a fugitive ufter be- | gated, found a burglar in the act of , 25 y: fo and wandering over the will be made. fon- Fert penn 4 will deliver a| Fessend ‘he Lutheran congre-} ing implicated in an. alleged plot to! crawling through a window. She ank Burgess rman in| tinued to the head of the lakes: financial report of the bureau's work, | gation: Fessenden, Hamberg | steal prison made goods. | swung a broom in righteous wrath, ines ulties as re- | ‘as on SRS pe ‘and directors will be elected. fieimdat issued « call to Rev. HA. : | eaused him to withdraw his hands—— blow on the head by a fall- ibut-| A great fire at San Luis Obispo, | Russi his Calif., recently, 1 torna: | and attend the ban- Feed ‘one of which car; a cottage moon ard tadications pont to ‘a large 60 fest. attendance. . meetir suce Rev. Lunde was chosen to marked on Rev. Alf. | bas accepted a call to Airways acro head. For the window roofs of warehouses of came down on his neck and held him rd Qoil company of In-| fast while his own agonized cries + | brought neighbors and-police, Indiana are being but not his When he recovered , he was able to recall pa experiences in Australia and South | American ‘ports, Kraabel ‘who! the Standa: other charge. | diana,

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