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t me “ ‘tM of! 5 * e ee eal a ORE PPD AKG WEBEL LARD BLOC AIOO SEE CARE PRIS SHCA IIIA WIS che le A EE RRR , the withdrawal under the terms per- <a ee vey 9 “te neg ook , PAGE SIX MONDAY, JANU! RY 14, 1929) RE R A A N Al ARM. RI years, president of the First Nation- er today faced a here on a ‘and went in search of Hardin,, GOST NORTH DAKOTA FI 5 GE D S NG WOMAN CrATR BANK | al Bank of Buffalo and the Alice ENRAGED FAT eae of killing 54 roadhouse Thom he met in an alley, Sullivan’ State Bank at Alice, died at her rer. opened fire, fatally cat er L ETS NEW LOW M. ARKS home here late Saturday from a The father, F. E. Sullivan, 46, is|din, and then surrendered eae ice. stroke. said by witnesses to have shot and|He was arrested, released on 1 { es ERTIES She was 64 years old and came to canted fatally Alex Hardin, 26, ‘the bond, and then re-arrested on a mur’ | ~~ sme pesTRoys PLANT Ry > eeavente age Sick tee ae innkeeper, shouting, “I can't let you |der charge lest night. His prelimin- ‘Bl li Set at $215,000; ban They established the Buffalo SABRE RTGS Og ruin my daughter,” as he fired. Sul-|ary hearing was set for Ye \ ;Blaze Loss set a YOU; Superior, Wis, Jan. 14—()—Pite| Mrs S, J, Moore, Buffalo, Dies |hank with Mr. Moore as cashier and | gnot and Killed Ui Vendor |tivan accused Hardin of selling 1 i ‘ ‘ destroyed plant of the Superior Mrs. Moore as presidert. Mr. Moore iquor Vendor uor to the party, which included ‘his FORMER SENATOR DIES | Chicago Firemen Answer —_| Journal, causing $49,000 damage. Saturday After Stroke died about two years ago. A broth- to Save Honor of His child, oe | tH = er, Charles Messenger, of Amster- Sulliven did not learn of the mi Operation and Maintenance of 114 Calls pavib WebAACD ab at Home dam, N.Y. and * daughter, Mes. Daughter until his 15-year-old da er, pe) *: ‘ Suanaeael jur eterson, uffalo, are e ive other studen' ‘was General Departments Total eS ls ay York, Jan. is. .—(#)—David | Buffalo, N. D., Jao. 14—(AP' only survivors. Wuneral services| Camden, Ark., Jan. 4 (AP)-—Aa [bond recently pag td as wines Three-Fourths Expense fasco, 69, theatrical producer, is ill) Mrs. S. J. Moore, of Muftalo, prom-| will be held Tuesday from the Pres-|the result of a high school thor MINNESOTA CHURCH BURNS with Ta influensa. inent in North Dakota for many |byterian church. a roadh een. D.C, re Beh eae eigtt6 e cost of governing the north cen- ry Drops Eight Degrees tral states, including Minnesota, Iowa, mercury ee e une Dakotas a Wisconsin, has been in Hour Here Today but estimated by the United States de- A \ partment of commerce for the year . Rises Afterward 1927. The total cost of government of the 43 state governments amounted to approximately $1,175,000,000. About three-quarters of this amount was expended for the operation and main- | tenance of general departments. Other payments included funds for After dropping from eight below zero to 16 degrees below hetween 7 y, the mercury start- jed a slow but sure rise in Bismarck jand had risen to nine below at noon. |. New low temperature records for the operation of public service enter’ |the year were established at various Grand Forks, N. D., docks and ales ie a a ae the week- id aiid ir! {end as North Dakota prairies were Fee ral! Bnd istigation enter- | overed with a thick blanket of snow. % Fires in the midwest during the mulghway and waterway develop: cold. spell, which found firemen charities, hospitals and penal institu- working under a handicap, brought a tions ranked second, with education |loss of $215,000 in five communities. @ close third. Bismarck and North Dakota will In the list of states mentioned Wis- | be fair tonight and partly cloudy to- consin had the largest assessed valu- | morrow with rising temperature. It ation of property subject to a general | will be colder in the southeast and property tax. The others follow in|not so cold in the northwest section order: Minnesota, South Dakota, | tonight. Towa, and North Dakota. The order| Mercury set a new low record for changed, however, in the amounts of |North Dakota this year when it ~ general property taxes. Wisconsin, for |dropped to 32 below at Grand Forks example, had more than five billion/early Sunday. Valley City also was dollars of real and personal property |hit be temperature near the 30 be- not taxed for state purposes. Minne-|low mark. Coldest temperature in sota led in the total of general prop-|four years, 28 degrees below, was erty taxes, followed by Iowa, Wiscon-| recorded at Fargo yesterday morn- sin, South and North Dakota. ing. The previous cold mark there It cost Minnesota more than $40.-| was 30 below December 28, 1924. 000,000 to run its affairs during 1927,) ‘Temperatures reported in the state Wisconsin $31,090,000, Towa $23.000.000. {this morning follow: Valley City, 10 Feet ante sap And South | below; Minot, 22 below; Devils Lake, [tla 15 below; Jamestown, 10 below; Far- go, 9 below; Williston, 16 below; and Grand Forks, 10 below. Roads are in poor to fair condition throughout the state with many of the highways drifted. Snow followed the cold in many sections, with Albert Lea reporting eight-inch fall during the night. Former University Student) | pion oplearehireterlt y, a Faces Charge of Killing terian church was destroyed last T M night, with loss of $85,000. Fire wo Men caused damage of $50,000 to the Su- perior Journal building at Superior, Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 14.—(#)—Insanity | Wis., $40,000 loss in destroying the probably will be the defense plea of |Christian church at Redwood Falls, George R. Harsh when the former | $30,000 to business establishnients at university student goes on trial in|Hastings, and left Tyler without a Pulton county superior court tomor- | drug store. Yow for the murder of one of twomen| One of the low thermometer read- shot to death in holdups. ings of the week-end was at Duluth A physician who examined Harsh | where a minus 34 was the coldest the Saturday said he found him “in a|Minnesota City at the head of Lake nervous condition” and alienists em- | Superior has had in 11 years. Green ployed by the boy’s family have made | Bay, Wis., had 20 below, while tem- Numerous physical and mental tests|peratures throughout the middle- of the youth, who is said to have con- | west with hardly an exception skated fessed the slaying for a “thrill.” under the cipher mark yesterday and Attorneys for the youth were said | last night. to be ready to introduce evidence that | Chicago had an official 10 below, Harsh’s father died from a tumor of | with some suburban thermometers the brain in a Baltimore hospital in| showing as low as minus 17, There 1921. Alienists for the state also have | were three deaths directly attribut- examined the youth and are expected | able to cold, and there were several to testify. hospital cases of ‘persons suffering It was’ considered reasonably cer-/frozen hands, feet or faces or per- tain that Solicitor General John A. |sons injured in falls on slippery side- Boykin, would put Harsh on trial for | walks and pavements. the murder of Willard Smith, 22-/ Cary, Ill, was believed to have year-old drug store manager, who WaS|heen the coldest spot in the state shot to death in a pistol duel with a | Sunday when the temperature hit 32 t. below. At Pana the snow and un- A wound received in the exchange | usual cold brought out sleighs for later led to the arrest of Harsh, who | the first time in a quarter of a cen- implicated Richard Gallogly, a fellow tury. is student. The boys are said to have 114 Fine Alarms. © “pct yall pnp shag pi igpionll genie MRE the 114 alarms the Chica- for a “thrill” led them into numerous go Ace tepecient answered yester- oa on one of which Smith was day was a spectacular blaze atop the essed Foreman National Bank building, mann ey vee Soon clerk, | Under construction at La Salle and during a holdup. Washington streets. A salamander 5] left to keep the concrete from freez- ae a eo ee: = Balicitor. ing was believed to have started the ire in the tower, which became a yale Penalty would be | torch lighting roofs of surrounding loop skyscrapers and sending flam- ing brands to nearby buildings. Scaf- folding and tarpaulins from the 25th floor to the top of the 40-story build- were destroyed by the fire which was not as costly as it was threatening. E ENCOUNTER: Firemen worked 300 feet in the air in below zero temperatures, and came down when the fire was out coated with ice. The loss was esti- Permit to Take Water From| mated at less than $5,000. Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois and Wis- Lake Michigan Upheld consin all experienced the severe as Valid cold. Snow banked railroads, dis- rupting schedules, and many high- ways were blocked. Washington, Jan. 14—(AP)—Chi- ‘emporary relief late today— ago won a victory today in its con-|about 20 above, the weather man troversy with other Great Lakes |said—was expected to be followed by states over the diversion of water|new cold, borne across the midwest from Lake Michigan. by winds from Alaska and accom- The court sustained as valid the|panied by snow. permit issued by the secretary of] A sharp drop in temperature, ac- war under which the Chicago Sani-|companied by snow brought sub-zero tary district was withdrawing the] weather to many points in New York ‘water. state, while in western Pennsylvania Under the decision which was de-| thermometer readings were close to Tivered by Chief Justice Taft, Chi-|the zero mark. cago will be permitted to continue] Stony Creek had the lowest tem- erature in New York state with 12 low zero. At Ogdensburg, where it was 11 below zero the St. Law- al Merchat di pone sitar froze over for the-first Gen time this winter. 4 ator e8 in ecnan eae A light anor ae uahered ok cold ncorpo! ted wave into New Yor! ity. ere » was extreme ae Hig ne thee ae out Ontario, witl legrees below i Bo dan 14(AP)— | sco at White River, a record for the province. Temperatures at other points ranged from 33 degrees below to 21 below. At Saulte Ste. Marie the St. Mary’s river was frozen over. mitting completion of other arrange- ments for sewage disposal. When one of the largest firms in the Northwest handling hides and skins became financially in- volved they came to us and offered their entire stock at our own price. We accepted eagerly—realizing the stupendous values we could offer—realizing that we could eclipse each and every one of our. 36 pre- vious annual January Sales. Our factory has been working night and day converting these skins into Frederick-James Garments. Our experience of over a third of a century in fur craftsmanship has com- bined with this rare purchase to make this sale un- precedented. WITH FREDERICK-JAMES STANDARD QUAL- ITY MAINTAINED WE PRESENT THIS Hudson Seal Coats of soft lustrous skins $297.50 Northern Seal.,. Coats Self trimmed and with collar and cuffs of Squirrel, Fitch, Skunk, Mink, Krimmer, Fox and Wolf. A variety of styles and linings. Sizes 16 to 52. *Q7 2 Be Replaced at Market Prices - Tn All Our History Nol « Fur Sale Like This 3 Greater Than Any January Clearance ARRAY OF GORGEOUS GARMENTS AT LESS THAN WHOLESALE COST All Otfers ot T. his Advertisement Subject to Prior Sale Because Skins Could Not |@ Starting at Noon Tues., Wed, Thur, Jan. 4, 16,17 At in Tomboy models $197.50 Black PonyCoats Tomboy Models, Blanket fined, large platinum wolf shawl collars. Value $125.00 $ 59°° Muskrat Coats poe and blended. Some with luxurious Fox Vv collars. Elaborately lined. Values to $325.00, Hundreds of Other “History Making Values In Every Popular Fur All coats purchased GUARANTEE on this sale will be We guarantee that all Frederick-James Coats are stored during the perfect when they leave our factory. However, coming summer and I} should any unforeseen defect in workmanship or insured against fire, nes material develop our usual broad guarantee is here- moth and burglary, ‘by extended and such repairs will . made or thede- ff - ‘FREE OF CHARGE. : May = replaced FREE OF CHARGE ae ay 1, oe