The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1927, Page 1

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WEATHER FORECASTS " Partly cloudy tonight and Thurs- day. Slightly warmer tonight. ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1927 ZAGLOUL PASHA, STORMY PETREL OF EGYPT, DEAD All Government Offices Closed Today—Funeral Set For 4 O'clock MANY PLAN TO ATTEND President of Egyptian Cham- ber of Deputies Succumbs to Poisoning Cairo, Egypt, Aug. 24—()—All the government offices were closed today owing to the death yesterday g@ Zagioul Pasha, nationalist leader ‘and president of the Egyptian cham- ber of deputies. Death was caused by the general spread of poisoning as the result of eczema of the outer ear. With the funeral set for 4 o'clock afternoon, delegates from many places were on their way to the cap- ital this morning. Said Zagloul a, frequently re- ferred to as the stormy petrel of Egypt, attracted world-wide attention by his militant agitation for the com- plete independence of Egypt after the World War and the continual trouble he caused the British government at a time when the entire world was, steeped in a maelstrom of interna- tional polities. forms Secret Order inc his dissatisfaction with the British protectorate over Egypt early in the war, Zagloul, although he remained quiet during the strug- gle, gathered about him a great secret organization which was backed by Strong Turkish and other elements. After the war it was found that his influence was so great and the secret organization “he controlled so per- vasive that the British had great dif- diculty in finding any Egyptian who Would dare take hi offiee in the government. With the signing of the armistice Zagloul launched an earnest cam- paign for the abolition of the protec- torate and the, independence of Egypt. First he ht the permis- sion of the high commissioner for Egypt to go to London to place the case before the British public. After this was denied he tried to place the case of Egypt before the Paris neace conference, but he and his fellow delegates of the National party were taken to Malta and. -immured there until they no Jonger could carry out their design.-.-The Nationalists, how- ever, established a propaganda bu- reau in the French eapital and made much of Zagioul’s imprisonment. Riots Follow Arrest The arrest of Zagloul was accom- panied by riots in Cairo and Alexa dria, which were renewed from time to time. The secret organization which supported him made life so insecure for British officers and sol- diers that they were forbidden to go after dark outside the European quarters of the garrisoned cities. An investigation of the Bgyptian situation by a eommission headed by Lord Milner revealed that conditions in the country were really serious and that Zagloul had powerful hold ‘upon the people. Then the British (Continued on page three) | Weather Report | Weather conditions at North Da- keia points for the 24 hours ending pi n Highest wind to 7a. m.. velocity ... Temps. in inches Ament US §3 2-46 BISMARCK. Bottineau. ). Crosby ... Devils Lake . Dickinson Ellendale . senden ant Fork: Inger . Jamestown don Larimore . Lisbon Minot ..... Napoleon . Pembina Williston . ? Moorhead, Minn, 66 °42 WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Slight- Jy warmer tonight. For North Dakota: Partly cloudy Slightly st portion P Cidy, Edy Clear eocee los cococe loo gePrecipitatio sissippi Valley ¥ gure area cen’ fountain region has ied by a.slight rise at. most laos frog thes k westward to ‘the “Pre- cipitation eceurred in: i Lakes region at a few pe Pountele, spates, ‘ DN plon Sameary POLITICAL UNION OF FARMERS SOUTH _ AND WEST PROPHESIED BY SPEAKERS Sea Slayer? Much Progress Made During Past Two Years—Agricul- turists of Two Sections Must Get Together Politic- ally, Henry A. Wallare Says Williamstown, Mass., Aug. 24.—() ,7~ Political union of the farmers of the south and west was prophesied land approved of by speakers at the {Institute of Politics today. Economic kinship of the south and west and other points of political isympathy were set forth by George A. Reek, president of the American iCouncil of Agriculture, which repre- sents more than 50 farm organiza- tions; by Clarence Ousley of Dallas, y Henry A. Wallace, editor of ce’s Farmer, a western farm publication, and by Dr. B.C. Kilgore of North Carolina, chairman of the board of the American Cotton Grow- ers’, Exchange, representing coopera- tive associations in 12 states. McNary-Haugen Bill Favored The McNary-Haugen farm relief bill came in for strong support in the conference discusgion. | “The progress that has been made itoward political cooperation of the west and south toward a fair and construetive policy is tHe result of tle more than two years’ effort,” Mrs. Mary Waite, stewardess on the S. S. American Trader, photoed as ¢ said Mr. Peek. “It requires no she Was arrested on etival in’ Now Prophetic vision to forecast the score York. It is alleged that she slew and permanence which it will achieve in the future.” “There will be an equalization fee in the next congress or an equaliza- tion fight in the next campaign,” he said. . Mr. Wallace, in urging cooperation, said farmers were not getting a fair ies of the national income, partly {because of governmental action fav- oring other classes. It was time, he said, that agriculturists of the south and west got together politically, co- operating at times with eastern la- bor, to hold in eheck the exploitation of natural resources and industri zation of the country, \._ Political Unrest Justified “The farmers have seen the gov- ernment give labor an Adamson act, the railroads a Cummins-Esch act and industry a Fordney-McCumber Louis Fisher, “refrigeration engineer, of the vessel, by pouring acid down} his throat. ANARCHISTS” BODIES WILL BE CREMATED. Vanzetti's Ashes Will Be. Taken on Tour of Europe ‘of the “physical impossibility, tariff act. They say President Cool- idge vetoed the MecNary-Haugen bill | the same week he ned the bank Boston, Aug. 24.-U®)—The ashes bill and raised the tariff on pig iron * by His Sister Lost Rescuers’ Last Picture This picture of Capt. Bill Erwin (left) and his navigator, A. H. Eich- waldt, was taken just before the brave attempt to rescue the lost Dole flyers in ine Paci |ships and planes are seeking Erwin and Eichwaldt. Erwin risked much when he and Eichwaldt took off for Hawaii to search for the missing planes in the Dole race. But he is is the man whom Colonel William Mitchell not long ago public’ hailed as America’s greatest aviation hero of the World War. observers were shot in Erwin’s plane during the war. 1 lent Coolidge Is Fourth Chief Executive of United tional Park—Region Little Changed in Past 44 Years Yellowstone National Park, Aug. 24 4 Three chief executives of th United States before President ( ge have visited Yellowstone Na al Park, yet with the exception ‘of a 200-mile road system, the hotels and the camps, the region is in jly the same state us when Pre Arthur entered it on horsebac yeurs ago. Presient Roosevelt, ited Yellowstone in when he vi 1 north entrance, describing the p {as “For the Benefit and Enjoymen of the People,” and following these tenets, laid down in the Congressional Act of 1872 creating the park, the vernment has exercised unce: vigilance in preserving the wilderness unspoiled. Harding Pa'd Park a Visit Four years ago’ President Harding, en route to Alaska, devoted two day to a trip through Yellowstone. The rapid motor ride he enjoyed here was not available to preceding presidents, for the park was not opened to mo- .tor travel until 1915. Prior to that time, horsedrawn stave coaches trans- ported visitors over the roads. | Today approximately 50,000 private motor cars come to the park each Four year, and a fleet of more than 200 In a heavy, two- busses provide for those who come twe. daring, airmen started on the Now battle- a man well used to risks. For seated observation plane he outflew most pilots in speedy pursuit by rail. | planes. gunners and made his way to shot down six times. He brought them in the last month of the war. That is the record of the man who volunteered to fly the Pacific to see if he could nct find some trace lantry by the war department. of two missing airplanes, Fact Finding Committee Ascribes Mi Three General Caus bU per cent. These are an adequate of Bartolomeo Vangetti are to be! background for political unrest taken on a tour of, Europe, Miss| among farmers,” Wallace said. Luigi Vanzetti, who came from Italy he unnatural alliance under Re- A icanism, Wal tinued, be- toisec ber broliic® Nefare he was ex-| Tetuubedttoce: tempus” ond ecuted in the state prison yesterda: tween aeeleiss asR ond i indy af tl ivi ar is to accompany them. After crem Pier te adv wet a tion here the ashes will be taken to is loosening. Most of the farmers, he New York, London, Paris, Berli it not been for the Civil War and Beockboim and other elli¢e before tt the Denecate party. would. going to Italy, Vanzetti’s native land. jf the Dimoerate party would i "9 vive in modern form {ts ancient tr: The body of Nicola Sacco, who was’ ditions and cease to be merely a sol executed vith Mansett a Ne besouth plus Tammany, it might with- Reerintad Hin eeacebarl be etalon inithe next 10; yaaya wut the Repyb: by his widow, who resides in Boston ican party on the defensive. Announcing a cancellation of plans for exhibiting the bodies of the men{ in various American cities, because the Sacco-Vanzetti defense committee | said the cremation would be next) Sunday, with funeral processions or memorial services in various Ameri- can el The bodies will lie in| state until Sunday in the North End, the Italian section of Boston, the a nouncement said. ogi Difficulties developed in this con- nection today. City ordinances re- quire burial within four days of GENEVA MEET Problems Connected With Pro- “*ifrs."Clendewer Bane thy so-| fession Studied at Inter- fends, said that death masks, would national Parley be made of the two men and many copies distributed. Dry Law Violators to Be Photographed For Rogues’ Gallery, Geneva, A Men who are managing the news agencies and the newspapers of the world gathered lat Geneva today under the auspices of the League of Nations in ‘an in- ternational conference to study prob- ‘tems connected with their profession. Improvement in the means of com- munication, telegraphic, telephonic and wireless, more reasonable rates for the transmission of news, better | facilities in the collection of news, re Fataosel af caeeseanty, in peact 4 time and examination of the general ing of persons arrested for majo abeeet major: jteblems vf the legal protection of liquor charges will aid the police in Dregs information were subjects on Washin Aug. grant prohibition violators i tf tional capital are to be placed in the police “rogues’ gallery.” The fingerprinting and photogr Cloudy of being “mugged” would frighten} investigations of other crimes and / Br will act as a deterrent to other pro-| the agenda. hibition violators, the authorities be-| The Associated Pret Nee plaini rd terday tor | SEeh xplaining an order yesterda: or . the procedure, Major Edwin B. Hesse, | Smith z ig police superintendent, said “rum run- | Joseph E. Sharkey, correspon ners often graduate into other types| St Geneva, as technical advisers. of criminals” and the fingerprint and! Other Americans wer Karl A photographic record would facilitate| Bickel of the Unit M. the police greatly in their investiga- nigshers of the eee ee ape pa erty ed eg are or of the New criminals. He also believes the ordeal York Previa ied by Bawin many would-be 8 js correspo! articipation in liquor traffic. eripps of t was a large re; the Latin-American pre raham Presides Opening the conference, Lord Burnham, proprietor of the Di |Sctare h- of London, who presided, Nicaragua Better Washington, Aug. 24.—()—Al- though American marines have in been ambushed by Nicaraguan -! papers in affecting conditions of the dits, Rear Admiral Sellers, in charge | supply and demand of commodities of naval forces, in a report to the|of which mankind stands in need are declared that the functions of new: navy department, declai conditions |so important and are increasing to in Nicaragua are steadily improving.| such an extensive scale that the The ambash occurred-on August 16 |economic section of the League of’ and two of the bandits were killed, |Natéons must devote, more attention the marines suffering no casualties.|to them than hitherto if it wants to bandits participated in the| increase commercial intereourse and The marines consisted of aj break down the barriers of national detachment -w exclusiveness. ‘i Sergeant Bruce. “The brotherhoof of man already bas been made the subject of an or- praised campaign of pgblity. in the Inited States,” Lord Burnham said, “and the League of Nations must take into account ia ornand intelligence department of tional exchange. At another. Lord Burnham: igtey was considerable ‘inerer crimes. against pro] with vi 9 te ae , would be Democrats today y NEWS AGENCY | MANAGERS AT | Finds Encouragement For Future in Several Factors, However, Chief of Which Is That Plant Has Shown Op- erating Profit of $39,000 So Far in 1927—Changes in Plant Management Tend to Improve Situation Losses of the North Dakota state mil to over $428,000, are ascribed in the main to three general causes in a re- port issued by members of the state senate “fact finding committee” who met, here Monday and Tuesday. ‘hese c: port, wer Excessive prices for wheat which prices went not to North Dakota houses. Flour sales in large quantities for less than the cost of bare materials and transportation. k of coordination between the buying and sales departments. The two last named factors were intimately connected according to the report, since it was found that when too much grain was purchased at too high a price flour must be sold at less than the cost of materials and the loss absorbed by the mill. Future Is Rosy - _ While pointing owt, thesé in the past policy of the plant, the committee finds encouragement for the future in several factors. The chief of these is that during the first seven months of -1927 the plant showed an operating pri $39,000 and that this is the first tim: in the history of the establishment that a profit has been shown for these months, It is also pointed oug Sat changes made in the management of the plant promise a change in the system of wheat buying and theplacing of the enterprise under one head. Improve- ment in the situation is looked for as a result, the seort says. The Report in Full The report of the committee as prepared at Grand Forks this: week thew istakes. committee was-appointed in the last days of the last legislative ession, and its purpose as outlined t that time, was that this committee should function as an interim com- mittee ahd study ‘the-probiems of ti mill and elevator, and recommend to the next session of the legislature a pan policy for the conduct of its ‘Since the publis! in the s lon, the members have work in connectio1 submitted two separate reports to the governor and each of these. reports. have contained’ » recommendations relative to the manner in which the business of the mill should be con- ducted. “It is our purpose in ‘the report the state, to outline these recommen- dations and to state the manner tn which these suggestions have been received and/aeted on by the mill manayement. A iptinge Beeod, on Audits “Our find! ee Deen based up- | on the audits the state mill and 926 which was the most stand- In that. h the ; ere res) this showing; how- ‘on page three) Often he chased German flyers intu their airdromes and then lingered to shoot up the airdromes. plane, he jumped to the ground, wiped out a whole nest of machine the American lines alone. Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 24.—(7)}—! and elevator in 1926, which amounted’ i pr) f good {while traditions of the conflict, is} farmers but to Twin City commission! women who served in armed forces ‘of the United States ad ‘€ $1, and in the ensuing ten days 15,-, which we are giving to the press of] Legion for Paris The park is at a much higher alti- | tude than the summer white house in {the Black Hills. This land of stream ‘vents, geysers and boiling pools is 7,500 ‘feet above the sea, ringed about ith mountains rising to a height of wo miles, Lake Yellowstone is the highest in North America size, 139 square miles. New Species of Trout * In the lake, and in Yellowstone ; river is a new species of trout, the. cutthroat, a game Western fighter. | ‘Down the river beyond the rim of | the 1,200 foot deep canyon, with its falls twice as high as’ Niagara, new altitudes by motor are attainab! the summit of Mt. Washburn, 10, feet. Near Tower Falls, where Pr dent Roosevelt once camped, roam many antelope. Bears abound, among, ;them the cub that so delighted Presi- Once, shot down by a German He was dewn 11 German planes, seven of He was repeatedly cited for gal- for its ll Losses to es ——-‘dent Harding, now full-grown. Big {horn sheep frequent the slopes of Mt. Washburn, Deer, moose and elk browse in the park in numbers as great and ax unafraid as when the| white man first came to the region. The only active Indian fighting in {Yellowstone took place just 50 years ‘ago thia summer, when the Nez ‘Perce eluded the pursuit of General 0. 0. Howard, crossing the park. Several luckless tourists were killed. ILL REVISIT , down 4 e¢ten elope near Yellowstone Falls have left their marks in the 20,000 Men and Women Now ji)" 10 |. In traveling along the park roads Congregating at Four Em- | tne’ visitor twice erosses. the Con- barkation Points LEGIONNAIRES LOST FLYERS | New York, Aug. 24.-«P)—A re- visitation of France by American vet- erans of the World War, planned for three years by the American Legion and a pil- of rededication to worth-} under way. . Some twenty ‘thousand men and in 1917 /1918 are congregating at four prinei- 1 poifits of embarkation, to journey ‘between August 31 and September 10 to the ninth annual convention of the Legion, which meets i September«19 to 24. + It will be the first time in history that such a host has been drawn across the sea on a mission of peace,! S! and the event promises to be an woman and four episode in friendly Franco-American lost at sea—two mote ‘relations second only to the World; Hope for the missing Dole ‘War itself. flyers, Miss Mildred Doran, |" Seven Ships on Their Way ! Seven ocean vessels have started Planes” and Occupants Now Missing a Week—To Aban- don Hunt Thursday @)—A Francisco, Aug. 24 men—seven days jays of search. race | John | “Augey” Pedlar, Lieut. V. R. Knope, | ance aed hs orden (ert who oe : ted ‘ieft: the Oakland municipal airport to France with the advance contin:'for Hawaii a week ago today, glim- Reruailiary bodies since August 9, mered wanly on the seventh day of The major movement of the peace-| Silence. FA Chances were as faint for the re- time army will get under way August! Chances were as faint for, the re: 000 former service men und women'and A. H. Eichwaldt, who flew out will sail for scenes rich with the of the airport Friday in search of s of a decade ago. their missing champions and were be- Heading the host are Howard P.|lieved to have crashed into the sea Sav of Chicago, national com-,after sending out a frantic SOS on States to Visit Famous Na- ; it! Body 18 DOUBTFUL |THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [aun Has Prettiest Ankles M t d the yrandmother. of eight chil- dren. BUT—she won a pretty ankle contest at Stonington, Me. against a hundred flappers. Hence her laugh on the younger generation, caught by the camera in this exclusive NEA Service photo, YOUNG MAN IS AGCUSED OF MATRICIDE of Mother Found Basement of Home—Had Been Dead 3 Weeks in 4 (P)—A_ charge ide today pursued 21-year- old Harry Hill around Chicago as plana went ahead in his home town of Streator, Ill., for the funeral of the mother he is accused of having slain, Young Hill--“The Fish” they called him in Streator because of gambling and spendthrift habits, for which his mother was said to have upbraided him—was known to have been in Chi- cago. Monday night, spending the eve- ning at a friend’s home, From there the trail disappeared. Body Buried in Basement Dr. H. C. Hill, a well-to-do Streator oculist, was responsible for discovery of the body of the wife from whom he had been estranged for seven years. Learning that Mrs. Hill had not been seen since August 4, he asked officers to uecompany him to the home in which she and her son lived, In the basement they came upon newly laid bricks. Digging, ‘they came upon the body of the 55- year-old woman. It was clad only in undergarments, and there were two bullet holes in the head. Mrs. Hill had been dead about three weeks. On the back porch was found a pair of young Hill’s shoes, and on them was dried clay, such as that in which Mrs. Hill’s body was found. As a motive for the slaying offi- ters pointed to several gambling ob- ligations Hill had contracted. ‘They said that since August 4 he had been ing at a Streator hotel, explaining t his mother was away on a va- cation. A bank was said to have cashed several checks drawn by Hill against his mother’s account, accept- ing his explanation of her absence. Non-Stop Flight Tacoma, Wash., to | Chicago, Aug. 24—()—Plans for | Wash., to Tokyo, Japan, a distance of 4,400 miles, which would shatter all existing distance records if success- mander of the Legion; Mrs, Adalin)their radio. Wright McCauley of Menominee, More Ships Join Search Wis., president of the Legion auxili-] In the face of discouraging reports jary; and Charles 4, Mills, chef de|from the 42 submarines, destroyers, ish min de fer of the “Forty and airplane carriers their search; Eight,” honor, and playground society ing “eyes” ever flashing the coloriess of the Legion. . laconic nil-nil” periodically by The customary program of the radio, came word that 16 additional zion will be almost incidental, at|destroyers and one light cruiser, un- its ninth annual convention, to the!der command of Rear Admiral Luke ‘ambassadorial ~hases of the pilgrim- McNamee, were ordered to join the age. Vi: to World War shrines} search. and battlefields, function: eementing| Rear. Admiral Richard H. Jackson, the bond between France Ameri- commander of the Pacific fleet, or- ca, and numerous official and unoffi- dered these boats into action with feial reunions along the one time the idea of scrutinizing uncovered | western front will augment the cus- sea area before falling of the “zero tomary routine of reports, election of hour” Thursda; officers and definition of policies. Seven destro: 8 The Parad “The ‘annual parade, alwa; el spot in the gatherings of the Legion,|C will have a d r significance as the marchers make their way from the Place des Invalides, in the shadow of Napoleon’s tomb, across the bridge of Alexander III over the Seine, un- der the Arc de Triomphe and past the tomb of France's unknown soldier down the Champs Elysees. Signalizing the departure of the high officials of the. organization will place half a wreath on the grave of America’s unknown soldier at ‘Washington on | Sept, 9, carryin~ the other half of rs, deployed across a ‘rancisco and Honolulu. Land and sea plancs dispatched from the decks of the airplane carrier Langley and the aircraft tender Aroostook are scouting an 80-mile patch of sea and down recurrent reports from land or ocean, nf Green Report The latest of these, a story that d green flare was seen to rise and die down up the rug slopes launa Kea, on the Island wali, Sun has th far failed ta resale ed wreath te Paris to rest on the in definite word tomb there of the unknown warrior/that any of the fl; hi rt honored by France. found nd 4 ne ome ps With rr’ padres, Sire set for ihursaay ni tae when all its v the hunt, doubt arinere and ex any of the could: heve re- France.is Legion ‘the \wa: nation, nation’s courtesies wi banquets; every‘ livi 2" (CORR Bue every effort is being made to trace! ful, were disclosed here today by | Gerald J. Smith, aviator of Tacoma, | Wash. Smith said the feat would be at- tempted next June, financed to Ta- coma business men. ‘The object of the flight,” Smith said, “is to prove that it is safe and ‘practical. It will be made in an ‘wmphibian biplane, motored with ‘three engin ‘Storm Abates and | Vessels Start Out Norfolk, Va., Aug. 24—()—A score or more vessels, which last night remained in Hampton Roads to await the passage of the tropical storm, to- day began moving out to sea. There was no rain during the night and the wind, instead of reaching gale force as had been feared, at- tained a velocity of only 28 miles an hour. Cape Henry weather obser tory reported at 8 o’clock this morn ing the wind had dropped to 12 miles an, hour, : * Major Bi and ‘ Mrs. Wall Married {Johannesburg on the steps of i Tokyo Planned) | a non-stop solo flight from Tacoma, | PRICE FIVE CENTS: RED’ DEMONSTRATIONS CONTINUE IN EUROPE YELLOWSTONE, PRESIDENTIAL HOST SINCE 1883, STILL VIRGIN SCENE FORTY HURT IN RIOT AT HYDE PARK, LONDON: Police Reserves Finally Dis- perse Crowd. Marching Toward Embassy MUCH DAMAGE IN PARIS Mob Uses Canned. Goods as Missiles in Battle—60 Of- ficers. Injured New York, Aug. 24.—(4)—Dis- turbances at London and Paris, a demonstration before the American consulate at Geneva and the burning of an American flag at Johannesburg, South Africa were some of the de- velopments in foreign countries as an atermath of the execution. oF Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Van- zetti. After a memorial meeting in Hyde Park, London, last night, the demon- strators began to march, in defiance of police orders, in the direction of the Americ: embassy. The police charged them with drawn batons, but reserves had to be summoned before the manifestants could be dispersed. Forty persons, among them four wom- en, were injured. Wild Scenes in Paris For several hours last night Paris witnessed wild scenes as enraged rad- icals, balked in attempts to hold demonstrations before the American embassy and the boulevards, did ex- tensive damage to shops, automobiles and cabarets in the Montmarte sec- tion. In a battle with police from behind hastily set up basricades the mob used stolen canned goods as missiles. Before calm was restored, with the aid of a heavy downpour, 60 policemen were injured, 10 of them badly, by knife thrusts and 200 manifestants were arrested. Monday night's disturbances in Geneva, when windows of the League of Nations palace were smashed and much other damage was done, prompted the authorities to augment the guards wherever trouble was like- ly to develop. Notwithstanding this, however, a large crowd gathered be- fore the American consulate last night to protest against the death of the two men. The shouts were in- creased when it became known that detectives. had arrested several men believed to have been responsible for Monday night’s rioting, A. severe, thunderstorm and a heavy rain sent the manifestants scurrying for cover. Boycott Suggested An American flag was burned at the town hall in a demonstration by Sacco-Vanzetti sympathizers. One of ‘the speakers called for a boycott of American goods, A boycott of American wares has also been suggested in Finland by the executive of the trade union congress. In Amsterdam, a stone was thrown through a window of the American consulate, but no one was injured. Althouch foreign newspapers gen- erally regret the executions, and there is strong condemnation by rad- ical organs, the Morgen Post, of Ber- lin, deprecates the criticism of the United States. It compares the ex- ecutions with those of the Cheka.in Russia, saying that organization has executed scores of persons when the same doubt existed as in the Sacco- Vanzetti case, but “the world passed them by.” Uphold Judges The Lokal Anzeiger, of Berlin, up- holds the American judges, saying they acted in the belief they were doing their duty. ‘The Giornale D'Italia of Rome says that, by executing Sacco” and Vanzetti, the “free Democratic re- public of the United States” proved that it did not hesitate “to carry out its sentences even st the pro- test of the entire civilized world. sees + © This horrible martyt- dom is unprecedented in the history of nations.” Many Reservations Open to Campers Washington, Aug. 24.-<)—Motor tourists and enthusiasts for the out- of-doors now have at their disposal, in 43 states, ubout 550 state parks or similar areas, with a total area exceeding two and a half million acres, i ‘The number is growing steadily, but the tourist who cannot find what he wants in the way of wild life or life in the wild among the parks can find numerous other reservations where he may’ take himself and his longing to “rough it.” More than 150 state forests gre open to p ic recreation. They contain 1,690,000 acres of “unimproved” land. Reduced Rates to Live Stock Show The Northern Pacific Railway to- day announced an open rate of faré and one-third for the round trip.to the International Live Stock Exposi- tion at Chicago, November 26 . to December 3. > This rate will apply from all points in Minnesota, Montana, North. Da- kota and Wisconsin, als: Pockets will be sold fram points in iseonsin and Minnesota, also innipeg, November 25 to 30. i sive, with final return limit ber 8. kets will be sold jorth Dakote and Montana, _,New York, Aug, 14.—()—Major Ge Robert Lee Bullard, U.S. commander of the Philadelph be married . Genvral Bullard is 66 years old Soak wee ore The general's first wife, the form- st he form er Rose Douglas tanooga,, Ten: | BRO, d | ‘walt widew ef, Bincan. Wall ints.in Rovembe 24 to 27, with final return limit, December 9. eon from Winni- — } )

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