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¥ic| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE % Pe . J, Nc HoH GREP STREKEN As | i 1} RESULT OF TRAGEDY Mrs. Paul Locher, 26, and Two Sons Are Victims; Was Former Emmons Girl d q | | CAUSE IS NOT ASCERTAINED Husband Built Fire and Went to Do Chores; Looked Up to See House in Flames Hettinger, N. D., April 15—()—A mother and her two children, aged three and four years, perished in a farm home fire Sunday near here. i Dead: Mrs. Paul Locher, 26, and the Resclution to Seek Economic Penalties for Nations Up- setting Peace it E 1H F i site § zi | f 8g BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1935 CCC Companies Returning to State [tet Urine te sone, Yvomet | Gractous, What a big girl Yvonne's getting to be! together over some joke known only to t Us in on the Joke, Yvonne! Here she is with Nurse: De Kiriline as they laugh Look at those sturdy, active little legs, and the real merriment in Yvonne's shining eyes. Gee, life's fun, isn’t it? SSA ERISA oT MOTOR INDUSTRY IS |**or'iiseleaper fever Washington, April 15—(AP)~Im- provement of the Mississippi river at Equal Production for All “of Year 1932 Fi 1 i é ROAD WORK 10 HAVE LEADING PLACE IN NEW RELIEF SET-UP Federal Highway Bureau Jumps Gun in Competition for Slice of Big Fund basin wide Washington, April 15.—()—Surface pointed Monday the see F H FEE'E, it FE ef | i ERREE i Fee. i i i l HE ee ad i Hi e t State Shivers in Cold |[G43 Veteran Dies} ettinger Mother and Two Children Die in Fire Wave Following Snows ONE PLEADS GUILTY TO CONPUSTY IK BREMER KIDNAL Chicagoan Admits Part in Crime But 11 Others Prepare to Stand Trial for trial, he said to Bolton: “Mr. Bolton, you are not repre- sented by counsel?” Bolton, youthful looking, from his chair and, in a clear guilty.” arose voice, said: “I desire to OLSON APPEAL ROM OUSTERBY WELFORD Former Governor Continues as Highway Chief; Expect Ruling in 10 Days State Highway Commissioner Ole H. Olson continued his duties in of- | ons ‘Twenty Degree Rise in Temper- ature Is Predicted for Tuesday by Roberts North Dakota shivered Monday from @ general cold wave which fol- lowed on the heels of snows and cold north winds general over the state Respite from sub-freezing tempera- tures was predicted for Tuesday with & 20-degree rise in temperatures fore- cast by O. W. Roberts, federal meteor- ologist here. Driven by winds which reached a maximum of 36 miles per hour, snows ranging from light flurries to falls of four inches were recorded over the entire state with the exception of the extreme northwest and southeast por- tions. Rain which began to fall in Bis- marck shortly after 3 a. m., Sunday soon turned into snow with .23 inches of precipitation recorded at 7 a. m., Monday, for the previous 48 hour pe- riod. Napoleon Is Benefited Napoleon received the greatest precipitation 1 the state with 57 inches recorded while Jamestown with 42 was second. Other points getting the moisture were Moorhead .24, Bis- ‘marck .23, Lisbon .22, Devils Lake .12, Dickinson .11, Oakes and Wishek .10. At Steele, the bus of the Interstate Transportation company was held up by snow and cleet Sunday morning and 21 passengers were brought to Bismarck on the Northern Pacific train. Officials of the Northern Pacific reported the snows were general all the way west to Glendive and east into Minnesota, while north and south on the Soo Line snows also were gen- eral. Only tame pastures throughout the state are reported beginning to get green while seeding operations will be started within the week if warm weather comes, Roberts stated. Seek Missing Fishermen With temperatures down to 12 above at Duluth, the Associated Press reports that a coast guard cutter on Lake Superior was headed for Thams- ville, near Schroeder, seeking two fishermen reported adrift on the wind-swept lake. One fisherman was saved late Sun- Beaver bay. The man had clung to the buoy for six hours before being rescued. Southwest Hit Again Residents of the southwestern dust cheered by two days of Already tion | Clear skies and a respite from the feba Lal g & g g > EE al ithe E E Fe if : i i : E | ‘lil ag 5 pe i © Sunt Smear Last of Abraham Lincoln's body- guard, Smith Stimmell, Civil War veteran, died Sunday in Fargo. SMITH STIMMEL, 92 LAST OF LINCOLN'S BODYGUARD, I$ DEAD Complications of Old Age Take Final Toll of Veteran Fargo Attorney Fargo, N. D., April 15.—()—S8mith Stimmel, 92, sole surviving member of President Lincoln's personal body- guard and pioneer Fargo attorney, died Sunday in his home here. Death was due to complications of old age. Funeral services will be Wednesday. Until very recently, Mr. Stimmel APRIL 22 FIXED AS DATE FOR ARRIVAL IN SIX DISTRICTS Orders Received at Fort Lincolr. Show Units Far Below Proper Strength SHOULD HAVE 194 ON LIST Some Are Below 100 Mark and’ Only a Few Are Anywhere Near Normal Es i ¢# ley City and Foxholm, signations were not gi Despite recent announcements Washington that new enrollees being asked from this i li BE & i i i iil had been in good health. ‘The funeral will be held Wednes- day at 2 p. m., in the First Methodist church, with Rev. Henry L. Weiss, the pastor, officiating. Further plans for the services have not yet been made. Stimmel was one of the pieked men of the Seventh Independent Ohio ‘Cavalry troop selected to act at the White House as the personal body- guard of Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War. His first enlistment for Civil War service was in an Ohio vol- unteer infantry regiment, recruited for three months’ duty. At the end of that time he entered Ohio Wes- leyan university to study law, but at the close of his first year he enlisted with the Seventh Independent Ohio Cavalry and was selected as one of the guard for the president. This personal bodyguard was still in serv- ice as such at the time of Lincoln's assassination, but was dismissed President Andrew Johnson soon after and was mustered out in September, | 8 | Headed Territorial Council his studies, Mr. Stimmel aed | et spaljet HEED nut : required for such duty camp maintenance normally required fc On this signed to Park about 70 effe COC work. = TAGGING OF CARS BEGUN BY POLICE He |Officials Promise Strict En- forcement of City Traffic Ordinances ‘winter months with a promise by of- fictals in charge that stringent en- Labor Difficulty in Rubber Mills Settled pipebspee ir E i aa iteli