Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WEATHER FORECASTS Probably local showers tonight and Thursday, Warmer tonight. ESTABLISHED 1873 A, J, BEVERIDGE [_wit'speat rere] HANKOW WILL NO AGREEMENT INDIANA SOLON, DIES SUDDENLY Health Had Not Been of the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1927 } BE SCENE OF ISREACHED BY NEXT ATTACK COMMISSION ; Nertherners Gather All Avail-' Preparatory Dis armament. Best, But Condition Was able Forces to Oppose Not Thought Serious SERVED IN U. S. SENATE Retired From That Position in 1911 and Was Later Twice Defeated Indianapolis, Ind. April 27.—(P)— Albert Jeremiah Beveridge, former United States senator from Indiana, died suddenly here today. Mr. Beveridge was twice elected to the senate from Indiana. He retired from the senate in 1911 and twice sought to return but was defeated in 1914 as the progressive party cnadi- date and in 1922 was defeated by Samuel M. Ralston, Democrat. He has been working here for some time upon his latest bool, the life of Abraham Lincoln, but his work was only half completed. Death Was Unexpected The former senator's health had not been the best for several months but his condition was not regarded as serious. His death occurred at 6:10 this morning, and came 18 9 shock to close associates wro said there was no intimation yesterday that his condition was .ir any way critical. Mr. Beveridge’s death was caused by heart disease. The heart ailment had caused some concern to im i- ate members of his family duri last two weeks and Thayer of Johns Hopkins Univers'ty | was called here. Both Dr, Thay and Dr, Charles P. Emerscr. of In-! dianapolis were hopeful, howe.cr, of | Mr, Beveridge’s recovery. | The former senator had not been} confined to his bed but on orders of 64 years old. | r. Beveridge will be buried in| been set. Mrs. Beveridge, a son ang a-daughter, survive, --~ | the direct election: of all public of- ficials, Albert Jeremiah ca EY Twice he-attained. membership in} the United States senate from In- as an aspirant. for the same place by popular referendum. the Republican party in 1912, Bever-j Hoosier, as temporary chairman, ut- tered the principles upon which the the measures which the progressives espoused and helped to enact were Since his retirement from senate in 1911 Beveridge twice (Continued on page three) Highest yesterday . Latent last night Weather conditions a kota points for the 24 his physican had been ‘living quietly while undergoing treatment. He wns Crown Hill cemetery ‘at Indianapolis. | The date of the fu-eral has not yet | Favored Direct Election i One of the pioneer exponents of | consistently was unsuccessful a candidate under the system. a through election by the state} legislature, and twice he was rejected 4 When Theodore Roosevelt bolted idge went with him. At the Bull Moose convention in Chicago, the progressives relied for success. Through the irony of circumstances decarants ta the ambitions of Bever- e. the sought to return. In 1914, he was defeated as a progressive candidate ¢— O | Weather Report — ee Temperature at 7 a. m. Precipitation to 7 a, m. Highest wind velocity lo ja hours ending st 8 a, m. today: Temps. 3 tat it iP! ci cS ©o2Soin inches BISMARCK Bottineau . ‘Devils Lake Dickinson Dunn Center . Ellendale . Fessenden aac Grand Forks .... Jamestown . % Langdon Larimore . For Bismarck and vicinity: Prob- ably local showers tonight and Thurs- day. Warmer tonight. j For North Dakota: Probably local showers tonight and Thursday. Warmer tonight and extreme east portion pie GENERAL WEATHER CONDITIONS The low pressure area over the Da- kotas: yesterday morning has moved southeastward to the lower Great Lak gion and precipitation occur- red in that section. Another low pressure area, accompanied by unset- | tled weather, hi appet red over the! extreme north ocky region. It was raining this morning tin the north Pacific coast states. igh pressure, accompanied by gen- erally fair weather prevails over the Plains States and PI f Temiorste are moderate ions. ’ North Dakota Corn and Wheat Re- sion ry For the week ending April 26, 1927. Freezing temperatures prevailed in alf sections during the fore part of; the week greatly delaying farm work} due to frozen ground, although no’ tae to spring ' t has be ported. Farm work made fair greis Saturday and Monday. tures and ‘ran; sre coming nicely. affording muel . Much — roa ara generally in a oO lu work is being dongand highways condition. RI ROBERTS. ‘dn charge. ie] Valley. in all sec- | $25,000 Prize Will Go to Win- Mountain | $10,000 ill Radical Cantonese TUATION IS SERIOUS) \Exact Number of U. 8, Sail.) ors Wounded Aboard Pen- | guin Not Yet Known ' Shanghai, April 27.—(). able forces are being g the northerners, i . for the purpose of attacking the rad-| ical Cantonese stronghold, Hankow. SKeleton forces are being left tem-: porarily to defend the northern posi- | tions elsewhere. Hankow, where a serious situation has prevailed for some days, is reported to be more dis- turbed than ever and Japanese fami- lies unable to leave are flocking into the French concession to seek, refuge there, The battle between the Cantonese entrenched at Nanking and the nor- therners on the other side of the Yangtze at Pykow was still in pro-! gress today. Thére was firing be-' tween Cantonese gunboats anchored | off Hankow und the northern field batteries at Pukow. One hundred} wounded Cantonese have arrived here from Nanking. The United States auxiliary ship| Penguin, which was fired on heavily | Mondaw near Kiangyin, on the Yang: —— ? | tze, has arrived at Chinkiang. The | Dr. Landrith of Ghicago| United States naval authorities here} | . do not know the exact number of men | Widely Known For Lecture | wounded in the firing, although it is on Law Enforcement red by! e, Dr. Tra Landrith, D. Chicago, HL, intery secretary of the United the Christian Endeavor, will give an address at the city auditorium in Bismarck Monday evening, M 8 o'clock. He has gained m throughout the country for his talks on law enforcement and world peace. PUBLIC URGED TO HEAR TALK | BY C. E. WORKER tension Society of ‘known the vessel suffered the heav-| | iest casualties of any attac’ | ican warships sinee they arrived in| | Chinese waters. One of the men was ers! shot through the lung, but it is a r im} clean wound, and he is said to be im-! ing when | proving. LL. D., of | Local Christian are hopin will be pa Dr. Chicago, the subje world peu the ¢ on| GUNS OF 45 BOATS t and! TRAINED ON HANKOW o touch on) Shanghai, April 2" (A) -Forty- | he the/ five gunboats were stationed in the | Christian Endeavor which is/| Yangtze, today with their guns train- now found in nearly every country | ed on Hankow. While on the surface the globe and has over 80,000 s0-|Hankow is quiet, there ieties and 4,000,000 members. There | sion and rumors persist that the will be admission charge and! Britich are planning to retake. the elt A) Fabien i sirif Lidgastin {concession. ’ Newsy reports of Dr. Landrith’s i 4 ‘a’ at Nariking, field pleces are being ‘© moved to selected’ positions outside plimontary..“The moment Du. vith “begun “to spek "the audienc responded and realized that a master the mative site of wit and oratory was addressing 1%, native city the crowd,” says the Warren, Ohid,, iny ; Tribune. ‘“He is one of the best: int 1) spi istened to by a Wa 4 ren audien Bangor in Hankow are listen- corner speeches by though the author is no desire to there is fe: Maine, Daily News rith’s address, there h ‘is a brilliant orator no question bout it. His address‘ glittered with smart sayings and was rich in simile, in metaphor, and in word painting. He has a gift of humor, and, ike all true humorists, cun be touchingly earnest and elo- quent. when occasion demands. In fact, few more entertaining men ever stood ujton the platform of City Hall.” Ts al Statements @ypical @ Dr. Landrith’s pungent statements are the following: “AN prejudice is the child of sin and ignorance.” “Better be right than regular, decent than democratic, respectable than republican, and it is hard to be both all the time.” “Be fit to live and fit to live with.” “A man ought not to belong to a political party; he should merely be a member of it.” “The church is God's organized omnipotence on earth; and it could do what it would if it would do what it could.* “The five prejudices that must die before America can be first for the weal of the world—and they are rapidly dying—are sectional, sectar- ian, partisan, and national.” COAST-COAST MARATHON IS TO BE HELD nevertheless, that the uted with ‘radi imperialism,” will fail to contain themselves in critical momen’ Advices from Hankow say that Feng Yu-Hsiang, formerly known as the “Christian general,” has been of- \fered commandership of the Hankow armies. DEMPSEY WILL MEET UZCUDUN ABOUT JULY 1 Winner Will Fight Victor of Maloney-Sharkey Bout For Chance at Tunney New York, April 27.—()—After peeeivian) itive agpurances today at Jack Demnse: to stage a comeback, Tex hicks announced he will match the former champion for a bout with Paulino Uzcudun on or about July 1, probably at the Yankee Stadium, Rickard made his announcement after a conference with Gus Wilson, Dem; are trainer, who told the pro- moter that Jack had resumed boxing and was now in condition to remove any doubt about his ability to enter the ring. The promoter also received a direct wire from Dempsey declaring he would be ready by early summer to “flight anybody.” Shaping his plows immediately, Rickard declared he would match the winner of the Paulino-Dempsey fight | with the victor in the Maloney-Shar- key bout, scheduled May 19 at the| stadium, to determine the opponent) for Gene Tunney in 4 championship match in September. Doctors Find Him “Fit” Dempsey, according to Wilson, ‘has been examined and found fit by sev- eral physicians. He has rid himself of all traces of blood poisoning whi bothered him. There is’ nothing; wrong with the ex-champion’s spine,! Wilson said, explaining reports to) that effect were allowed to stand) money as a “blind.” Rickard expecta’ no difficulty ex- | tricating Paulino from his present} suspengion by the New York boxing| board for failure to LE ae i with | a Boston contract. ulino ts will-) ing to appear in Boston prior to meet-! ing Dempsey but will insist on nam-| ing his opponent, the promoter under the terms of the contract. Rickard will meet Gene Tunney next; Friday at 11 a. m. ¢ it the second $100,000 on the champion’s guarantee for the title bout, which probably wi! be held early in September. THEY’RE-ALL ALIKE “Do girls really like conceited men better than the other kind?” “What other kind?”—Pele Mele. When Robert Loe! Seot- ner of Race From Los An- geles to New York Los Angeles, Apri} .27.—()—C._ C. Pyle, versatile promoter of profes- sional sports, hag announced a Los Angeles-to-New York marathon foot) race to be held in February, 1928,| with a $25,000 prize to the winner, probably as much more in nine oth- er awards and with a world wide en- try list. The marathon is expected td take three months to complete, The $25,000 first - money will be posted by Pyle, but he expects the additional nine prizes beginning with 1 as a second place award to be advanced by cities along the 3,000 mile route. No one is barred from the mara. thon, and Pyle predicts an entry lis of more than a hundred runners. The Tarshumara Indians from the Chihuahua Sierras of Northern Mex- ico, one of whom set a new worlds récord last week in winning the Law; rence-Kansas City race, have signed several entries. Au Arab, whose 90 mile run as a messenger during ‘the Riff uprising inspired Pyle to hold the trans-con- tinental race, has been entered. e runners will follow no sched- ule, They can run when they like and rest when they like, bu¢ each much ten- | TO QUESTIONS Body Adjourns After Five Weeks of Study MEANS A YEAR'S DELAY: Successful Disarmament Con-! ference Assured, President | received in $10 5 Loudon Declares Geneva, April 27.—()—After strug-) gling with armament reduction prob- | lems for weeks, the members of the preparatory disarmament com- mission scattered today without hav- ing reached an agreement. This means that the proposed international | aw disarmament conference will not be-| REDEEMER A TOR come an accomplished fact until next | year at the earliest. | 3 When the commission adjourned S| last night, with the prospect of meet: || ing again about November 1, the! | Sara i ‘ president. M. Loudon, declured that;| In response to the nation-wide & successful disarmament conference!| appeal for funds with which to was virtually assured, but that the || carry on the Red Cross relief destiny of disarmament now definite-|| work in the flood-swept ureas of ly depended on public opinion and’! the south, the Burleigh county the willingness of the governments to || chapter of the Red Cross reach agreements on the principal | receiving contributions from citi- issues. | zens of Bismarck and the sur- In addition to the deadlock on rounding territ i method of limiting naval armaments,'| morning $62 hai receiv the main problems on which the } All donations will be acknow commission failed to find agreement || edged through the press and will in preparing a draft disarmament,, be forwarded to headquarters treaty were the creation of a system!) immediately. of international control and a system|; Money is needed quickly of general limitation of armaments | order that the flood sufferers by curtailing national military and | may be given help in the form of naval expenditures. The draft was | food, clothing, shelter, medi dotted with reservations by various | ete., and persons who wish to ‘ount Von Bernstorff of) their bit” in this work are a ermany said the session proved that | to send their remittances at once governments had little zeal for dis- | to Miss Mary Cashel, secretary of armament. the local chanter. The general opinion in Geneva to- Donations already day was that, despite failure of the | clude: commission to ate u text sats! yf, Bell isfactory to all, the disarmament pro- Mrs’ J. L. Hughes gram would be pushed vigorously, no John Barbage tably by public pressure, at the Sep: TOlisneet: Btannen tember session of the League of Na- | peterson Bros, [irl dor ei Mrs. W. H. Webb Plans are under way for a three-,) Henricka Beach powe al conference of thesUnit-|/ ype AL, MeMartin [ed States, Great, Britain and) Japa. go eS harms de 2 as suggested by President Coolidge.’ | ieee indications are fhit, { wit open “W sey ae wl 81,000: fe0m:| [at League of Nations headquarters! | umet Baking Powder com- ‘about June 20, Reports have already, hicago has been reported been circulated that Great Britain! } wy the Chicago Daily News in its inay. propose abolition of large sea-.| relief fund campaign, matching a caak ena oe 1) like sum given by ‘the Chicago PLA NOT TO STOP | OTHER FLYERS ONCHEST PLAN Inquiries Answered Explain- H { i { ing Aims of Project—Prove | Seven Expeditions Said More Ky. At the lower right a Salvation Army wor! Its Value to Bismarck 8 announcement that | munity Chest campaign will ducted here Friday and Saturday,| New York, April 27.-(P)~Death of , much interest has been shown in the} four members of two Paris-New York plan and queries have been made of | acrial expeditions since last fall made | those in charge. seven other expeditions more deter- In setting forth some of these] mined than ever today to accomplish queries, Judge A. M. Christianson, | the feat. | resident of the local Chest group,| The deaths of Commander Noel ee set forth answers showing why | Davis and his alternate pilot, Lieut. the Chest plan has supplanted the| Stanton Hall Wooster, at Messick, old system in many of the up-to-date yesterday, are the latest toli: cities of the nation. Some of the} exacted by* accident that have .stalk- questions, together with answers,|ed the proposed flight since the xe- are: sldant at ossexelt Field Beng lands “What the ast. September, when Charles W. ce hat Clavier and Jacob Islamoff, were kill- A—“It is the treasury of 10 wel-j}ed in the crash of the Sikorsky plane -e and characte: ilding agencies.|in which Captain Rene Fonck and It has this one campaign instead of | his crew were setting forth for Paris. 10 separate drives, Despite tragedies, the backers of Q—“What are the agencies?” the Bellanea plane, which recently A—"Boy Scouts, Salvation Army, | established « new world’s endurance Women's Community Council, Juven- | record, announced they are practieal- ile Band, Campfire Girls, Boys’ Wel-|ly ready to hee, off. fare Work, Red Cross, Society for Bellanca Plane In Ready the Friendlies, North ‘Dakota Chjl.| This plane, in which Clarence D. Determined to Make Oceanic | | Flight After Mishap is Community {troubles \dren’s Hot and Florence Critten- ton Home.’ Q—“Are all of these agencies to benefit from this week's drive?” A—“All of them except the Red Cross, which has al ly held its campaign and has raised the neces- sary funds to carry it over to the projected fall Chest) campaign.” Q—“How is the amount of money needed by: each agency decided up- on?” A—"Each organization has furnish- jed an itemized statement of its ex- |penses for the past two years and the six its proposed budget for 30 and months ending September |also for the 12 months following, to hj the budget committee. This com- mittee, made up of seven level- headed business men of Bismarck, has gone carefully over these fig, ures and established the lowest pos- sible operating cost for each agency hich permit it to function and agencies gifts?” i—*Each agency is doing its own worthwhile work and all (must be supported alike, but any contributor, if he wishes, may designate which agency or agencies are to receive his’ donation.” ‘Hes any outside agency been ¢ngaged to put on the campaign here this i A—“No outside agency hi: been engaged. Although other cities, in- cluding Grand Forks, engaged 01 side. workers to put the drive acro all the work here has been done and will be done by Bismarck people only. There is not a cent of :ex- Pp sup- 1 by the cities passed through. Byte estimated that the winner woul ora of I them. These wi have to average 32 miles a dey. hart, of land, tried to play golf in. Central Park, New. York city, in 1888, hi Wag ‘arrested on suspicion of’ insan- nse connected with this campaign. ry cent you give will go directly into the chest, to be divided among the participating agencies, be! What will be the expenses of | Chamberlin and Bert Acosta stayed | in the air almost 52 hours, is the most serious contender in the race. The accident to the Davis machine has not slowed up preparations for its flight. It will be ready to fly i again today. | “Other remaining contenders are: {Commander Richard Evelyn Byrd, first to fly over the north pole, whose pase was badly damaged in a test flight recently and who prob- abl$ will not get away before mid- summer; Captain Fonek, who was to arrive in this country today to plan | for a second attempt; Lieut. Winston 1H. Ehrgott, of the New York National Guard, whose plans are somewhat led in mystery; Captain Charles | Lindbergh, airmait pilot of St. Louis, whose plans also are generally un- ‘known; Captain Charles Nungeaser, French war ace, who is expected to take off shortly from Paris, and M. ; Drouhin, former holder of the dura- tion record who also plans to hop 4 off from Paris. | The spirit animating those plan- ning the Paris trip was ‘expressed in a tribute to yesterday's victims by Porter Adi » president of the Aeronautical Associatio: “Great as is this loss it will serve j only to inspire other pioneers of American aviation to carry on an | complete the argosy of their ambi- | tion.” BANDIT SLAYER DIES Coffeyville, Kan.—John Joseph | Kloehr,'who became famous in 1892 {when he shot and killed three mem- bers of the notorious Dalton gang ‘of bank robbers, has died of old 5 | When the Dalton gang raided “he ‘two banks of the city, Kloehr es- | tablished himself behind a fence and sniped away at the bandits until he be killed three and the rest had led. if djaide until he Why the Red Cross Needs Your Contribution Throughout the flood-desolated M pictured above are characteristic. shown refugees in a hastily const! of the first refugees that arrived distri Bombing Laid to Labor Troubles April (®)—Labor re blamed for the bombing curly today of a two-stor: owned by James Burke, Judge Joseph Burke of court. The bomb w the of the buildin; the lives of a family of six living the second floor. Chieag: DAVIS AWARE HIS AIRPLANE WAS NOT SAFE Told Friend Craft Had Been Made Half Ton Over Weight Specified in Plans New York, April 27.(#)—-Lieuten- ant Commander Noel Davis, who was Killed in the crash of his airplane, the American Legion, yesterday, greatly deplored the fact that his craft weighed about half a ton more | than the plans called for, according to Edwin Wildman of New York, a personal friend, in a Washington dis- Patch to the New York Times today. Davis was greatly dfsappointed | when he found that the plane weighed 1,150 pounds more than was planned, due to a detail of construction, Wild- man said, He explained that the over- weight was not a matter for which anyone was to blame, but that it was one of the things entering into the development of flying machines. Mr. Wildman said he himself was to have gone to Langley field to be taken up by Davis, but that the lat- ter insisted he. would not jeopardize the life of anyone but himself or his had satisfied himself of the ability of hs machine to go aloft with a full load. “I know perfectly well,” he added, “that he would not have told me if it had not been the truth. That is the tragedy of the whole thing— that he should have kept going on trying to make tl lane meet the | exig@ncies of col ij i DIFFICULT DECISION “Why don't you ask your hus- band’s -advice on the matter?” “I intend to, as soon as I decide; what I'm “going to do.”—Answers. PRICE FIVE CEi RASTIC STEPS PLANNED TO SAVE NEW ORLEANS —_] CREVASSE 10 “BE OPENED IN ~ LEVER FRIDAY /Two Southern Louisiana Par- shown above, “USED IN TRIAL i | | | | | Within a few days after the Mississippi flood reacted its height, the Red Cross has established 4 gee camps. Many of them, such as the one nar Hickman, Ky., re tent colon | two parishes, St. quemines, ishes Being Evacuated Be- fore Dike Is Opened REPARATIONS PROMISED Leading Financiers and Busi- ness Men of New Orleans to Pay Damages New Orleans, La., April 27.—()-— The tramp of national guardsmen echoed along levees today as two southern Louisiana parishes were be- ing evacuated perparatory to sur- rendering them to the waters of, the Mississippi that the south’s largest city might be saved from the on- sluught of the flood. Vigorous protest by citizens of the Bernard and Pla- which often have wit- | nessed the withering fire of guns in | the perennial trappers’ warfare, was to patrol the levees. ssippi valley scenes like those t the top and right (below) are f camp near Hickman, is shown with some in Memphis, Tenn., from flooded} iets, LIQUOR PARTY | EVIDENCE T0 BE Stage Actress Said to Have Been Drinking While Hus- | band Lay Dying | Los Angeles, April 27.--(®)—Gin fizzes, said to have been imbibed by Dorothy MacKaye, stage actress, in| the apartment of Paul Kelly, while | her husband, Ray Raymond, musical | comedy star, lay dying in a hospital, came an element for the prosec’ tion today as the district attorney's office prepared its murder against Kelly. District Attorney terda’ sion of e} Forest ‘as early morning of April 19 upon being notified that Raymond was about to die. They went to Kelly's apart- mer.t where the drinks were served. Murray, who in charge of the prosecution of Kelly, announced that the evidence of the drinking party would presented at the murder trial. ly was indicted foliowing admission that he engaged in a fist fight with Raymond in a quarrel over the actor's wife. Miss MacKaye and Dr. Walter J. Sullivan were in- dicted as accessories after the fact, accused of concealing evidence bear- ing upon the death of Raymond. Raymond buried ye@terday, Miss MacKaye, wearing a widow's dded a dramatte touch to the ral when she swooned as she knelt beside the casket and placed a baby shoe The tiny 1 footgear was one of the year-old daughter. The actor’s mother, Mrs. A. R, Cedarbloom of Forest’ Hills, N. Y¥.,| collapsed at the funeral. the connor, 89 SLOW ran 1 ere you speeding? The Girl: No, out T just ised someone who was.—Answers. England is attempting to introduce the Douglas pine. It reaches a height of 250 feet in this countty, more than twice the height of any tree in England's forests. case | registered as the residents continu Assurance that the property own- ers of the Poydras area would be re- d for damages came from 50 i iers and business men Flood at a Glance | (By The Associated Press) To protect New Orleans from the mighty flood rolling down the Mississippi, a long break in the levee south of that city | has been ordered for Friday noon. | The Louisiana National Guard has been mobilised for any emer- gency and soldiers now stand guard over long stretches of the jevee, 4 ‘ eb A general exodus of ‘the. dents of the two parishes has’ gun with the roads to New Or- leans crowded with automobileg and wagons: piled: high . with household goods and- other pos- sessions, | With: the crest of the flood ap- proaching inundated Arkansas Cits, Ark., additional. towns in | that state and Mississippi are in danger. The great army of homeless, now. dat more than 160,. 000, is -houtly increasing as the flood waters move aeross Ark- ansas and’ northern Louisiana. To rescue the marooned, the Red Cross has requisitioned 100 small craft from the coast guard. Additional seaplanes for use over the 10,000 miles of inundat- ed territory in seeking out the isolated refugees have been call- for by the organised relief forces, Secretary Hoover completed in- spection trip down the Missiasippi and will return to Memphis to arrange with Red Cross officials there a more extensive plan of relief, rescue and rehabilitation. x | } nor 0. H. Simpson, Mayor Arthtir 0. Keefe, and President Guy L. Deano, of the New Orleans levee board,- in signing a resolution to this effect. Friday Noon Is Time Limit Meanwhile officers of the two per- ishes were warning inhabitants to flee after the issuance of a procla- mation by Governor Simpson setting noon Friday as the time for the crevasse to be cut. Approximately 4,000 persons must be moved out of the area before the crevasse is made and reparations will be settled upon by a committee of five persons constituted by two pointees of Governor Simpson, two persons named by the New 0: city council and one member des! nated by the board of levee commi sioners of the Lake Bergne distric.. Hundreds of persons formed the seemingly endless caravan which streamed out of the doomed arca. Battered automobiles, trucks, wag and even fess carts trundled thro the gravel toward New Orleans whe: {they will be cared for until the wa- ters recede from their homes. All movable belongings were included in (Continued on page three) | ‘Last Minute j Bulletins | Winnipeg, April 27—(APi— Flood conditions along the Assin- aboine river west of Bra | | } \ H 1 the dead actor's hand. | | first worn by the Raymon@’s: foar- | ween, nty bank 4th Brink & Reibold building‘ a call for the fire de sie aoe a ui e i Tenulted. The department yesterday afternoon ish pile fire,