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- 2 PRESIDENT SEEKING PRACTICABLE ACTS | TO REMEDY DROUTH' Appoints Committee to Make r Report to Him When He Tours Swelterbelt Helps Settle Strike at | washington, July 22.—(/P)—Presi-' dent Roosevelt Wednesday set up al committee to study “practicable meas- | ures” of remedying drouth conditions in the great plains and indicated he would confer with the group in thej heart of the parched area sometime in | August. 7 Pik “Circumstances make it obvious, the president wrote, “that velief activ-| ities are not sufficient and that a! competent study and recommenda- | tions are desirable.” | The president, who is on a sailing | the | vacation, announced through White House that he had named Mor-/ ris L. Cooke, the rural electrification | administrator, to head the study. Committee members will include; John C. Page, acting commissioner of the bureau of reclamation; Col. | Richard C. Moore, of the army engin- | eers; Frederick H. Fowler, of the na-| tional resources committee; Rexford | Tugwell, the resettlement administra-! tor, and Harry L. Hopkins, the works | progress administration. i The president wrote: H “I am writing to ask you to serve} as a member of a great plains drouth | area committee to carry on a study} looking towards the most efficient util- | ization of the natural resources of! the great plains area, and especially | towards practicable measures for, remedying the conditions which have | brought widespread losses and dis-| tress to so many inhabitants of the Missouri, Platte and Arkansas valleys. | the Panhandles of Oklahoma and Texas, and contiguous areas. . . “I should like to have the commitee ; make an early study of the conditions there, so that I may have the benefit of its views’with respect to them, at some point within this area sometime in August.” President Roosevelt had previously announced his intention to make a swing through the drouth area late in| August to survey at first hand relief; activities already started. MURRAY, HOLT LEAD IN MONTANA VOTING Eastern Counties Expected to Increase Margins of Poll Leaders James F. Dewey (above), commis. sioner of cénciliation of the depart. ment of labor, helped in drafting the plan through which an agree- ment ending the Portsmouth, 0., steel strike wae reached. (Associ- ated Press Photo) TOURNAMENT PLAN OK on Arrangements for Tournament by Bismarck Legionnaires to enter. ism chairman for the Legion. jing the tournament, __ jthe public character of the occasion. Helena, Mont., July 22.—(4)—Sena- tor James E. Murray and Gov. Elmer ocratic nominations for the offices; they hold with a third of the Montana primary election returns counted. Tabulation of votes in 388 of the state's 1,237 precincts gave Murray! 16,153; Representative Joseph P. commendation to Bismarck. Walter B. Sands 2,668. | In 418 scattered precincts, Governor/ Holt had 14,629 votes to 13,569 for Representative Roy E. Ayers; Miles Romney 7,637; H. L. Murray 2,758; Frank Hayes 578. Supporters of Murray and Holt said eral tournament chairman. their leads would be increased by re-| turns fi ti Montana counties.| | where both candidates claimed) | Andrews Happy strength. | T. O. Larson had 4,190 votes for, Due to Old Egg the Republican nomination for United , States senator in 328 precincts. L. Ray New York, July 22.—(7)—A dif- Carrol had 3,257; Hugh Egan 2,496; ference of 10 years or so in the Jes H. Stevens 2,417. | age of a husband and wife means In 385 precincts Frank A. Hazel-| “absolutely nothing,” the pretty baker and Robert Pauline, Repub-| young wife of Explorer Roy Chap- lican candidates for governor, had; man Andrews said Wednesday, 9,318 and 3,206 votes, respectively. “when they have as a mutual in- terest a dinosaur's egg 95,000,000 years old.” Chaillaux since, under the agreement which brought the attraction to Bis receive a part of the gate receipts. Justice Stewart in his senatorit race had campaigned with the slo- Rich Men ‘Nuts,’ _ Patterson Avers ——____——————s IS GIVEN APPROVAL National Officer of Legion Puts | Approval of the arrangements made tain the Western sectional junior baseball tournament in late August was voiced here Tuesday night by {Homer Chaillaux, national American- Members of the visiting teams will ‘be housed and fed at local hotels dur- | Deal. They have been pioneering in the hosteiries having given special rates in view of Each visiting team will be sponsored by a Bismarck service organization, Holt topped rival candidates for Dem-! whose duty it will be to entertain the boys while they are in Bismarck. This is the plan which® was used at the regional junior tourney, held here a year ago, and which brought much marck, the national organization will | | _H. W. Rosenthal, commander-elect 'of the Bismarck Legion post, is gen- a gan: “For re-election of President Mrs. Andrews is in her 20's—23 a Roosevelt.” State Senator Larson.) years younger thi her hus- leading the Republican race for the} band—and the 95,000,000-year-old senate designation, expressed opposi- | tion to the administration's reciprocal trade treaties. | dinosaur egg reposes in their apartment under a glass bell. But Mrs. Andrews’ attitude was that when you study fossils and dinosaur eggs, and think in terms of the long cycles of science, 23 years are nothing. : “The important thing,” she said seriously, “is for a husband and wife to have common interests.” SNAKE CAUSES 50 DEATHS | Lucknow, India, July 22.—()—Fifty | persons were drowned Wednesday | when a snake caused a stampede on) @ ferryboat and it capsized, on a tribu- | tary of the Ganges river. Vancouver, B. C., this year is com-| The French, as 4 rule. ~~ memorating the 50th year of its/ until midday, except a steady growth. |cup of chocclate upon 2: - Iced tea for you and lced coffee for your husband This Kitchen Range model genuine Silex glass coffee maker improves the flavor of your brand of coffee. Strainex ... slipped into the neck of the lower Silex bow! makes it a self-straining tea maker. Until Sept. 1 only ... both Silex and Strainex at a special price of $2.95. GET YOURS TODAY : - GLASS COFFEE MAKER Wealthy N. Y. Publisher Says! | Roosevelt Has Best Grasp | of U. S. Problems | | pleat iano ead | | Capt. J. M. Patterson, publisher of} |the New York Daily News. accom-/| | panied by Fred Pasley of the News | editorial staff, dropped in on Bismarck | | Tuesday evening in an airplane pi- \loted by Duke Krantz. | After discussing the drouth with | local residents, they left by automo-! bile for Pierre, S. D., their aim being} to stop and talk to farmers on the} way and otherwise get a mental pic-| ture of what the drouth is doing in the west. Captain Patterson, a husky man nearly six feet tall, was wearing a blue denim shirt, open at the throat, and a battered panama hat when he dropped into The Tribune office. Answers Questions Pleasantly After quizzing The Tribune’s editor about conditions, their causes, and possible cures, he pleasantly answered j some questions which were asked in jturn. Here are some of the results: He has no cure for America’s eco- nomic problems. The Very rich men | with whom he has talked—and he must meet a lot of them because his newspaper has the largest circulation in America—have a positive phobia against the New Deal. They feel the government is trying to tell them how to run their business and they won’t stand for it. “They're nuts,” he added, in de- scribing their state of mind. This was somewhat surprising in view of the fact that Captain Patter- son's newspaper is one of the most Profitable in the country and he is, | himself, a very rich man, though one 1; wouldn't suspect it to look at him or ;to listen to him talk. The farmers | with whom he will talk on his way to Pierre won't suspect that he has two ' nickels to rub together in his pocket. | Likes President Roosevelt The man with the best grasp of the national situation whom he per- sonally knows is Franklin D. Roose- velt, who is a mine of information and can turn it on at will, Captain Patterson said. For illustration he told of a visit to the president follow- ing his return from the Civil war battle fields in which he, as a former | military man, was interested. | Patterson had been studying their history and was “fresh” on the sub- ject. When Rooseveit talked, he said, -|it was as though the president had spent the night “boning up” on the subject. The New York publisher is not dis- couraged over the apparent lack of unity and direction in the many gov- FIVE CHARGED WITH KILLING NEGRO JUST: | war veteran “just for fun” during a FOR ‘FUN’ ARRAIGNED Dean’s Incredible Account of; Murder Corroborated by Witness Detroit, July 22—(?)—Five men charged with killing a Negro World Black Legion drinking party a year ago stood mute Wednesday at their arraignment on murder and kidnap- ing charges. Pleas of innocent were entered for the five, and all were ordered held without bail for examination July 28. The first, almost incredible ac- count of the shooting of the Negro came from Dayton Dean, confesser of Black Legion deeds of violence whose sanity has been questioned in court. Prosecutor Duncan C. McCrea said, however, he had obtained a corro- borating statement from one of the jmen Dean named. Names Same Men That statement, the prosecutor said, came from James Roy Lorance and, like Dean’s account, named Harvey Davis, reputed Black Legion “colonel,” John Bannerman, Ervin D. Lee and Charles Rouse as the other persons present when Silas Coleman, 42-year-old World war veteran, was shot to death in a marsh near Pinck- ney, Mich. The new charges were filed on the Dodges Death Twice in one week Jacqueline Cochran Odlum (above), missed death when her plane crashed at the Indianapolis, Ind. airport. In the first accident she made a forced landing at the field with her plane in flames. She escaped again when day Davis, Lee and Bannerman, with 12 co-defendants, were to have gone on trial for the Black Legion “execu- tion” of Charles A. Poole. That trial was postponed for at least two weeks. Dean has pleaded guilty in the Poole case, and is. the state's principal wit- ness, Lorance’s statement, as made pub- lic by Prosecutor McCrea, said that he went to a cottage near the night before the slaying. Fished and Drank “The next day,” the statement said, “Lee, Bannerman and I did some fishing and drinking. In the eve- ning the others got there and Davis told us: ‘Get your guns, we're going to have some fun.’” On the way to the scene of the shooting, the statement said, Davis announced: “‘We got @ Negro that beat a white boy. We're taking him for a one-way ride.’” Dean’s statement made no mention of any accusation of wrongdoing against Coleman. He said Davis had asked him to “get hold of a colored fellow” because he “wanted to know what it felt like to shoot a Negro.” Gun Was “I told Davis I didnt want any part ernment enterprises under the New new fields and mistakes were inevit- able, but what appear to be contra- dictions sometimes are not such at all, he said. Cites Land Policy For illustration, he used the gov- ernment’s land policy. In this area, he said, the government is retiring land from cultivation, spending money to do it, while in other places it is spending additional money for Financial details of the coming tour- | ‘ion. Monaghan 14,919; 8. V. Stewart 4,778;'nament also were discussed with fakes ea He holds that the two things are t {not incompatible, since if people are = ‘to live they must find or be placed on land where they can earn a living. |He has visited President Roosevelt four times since the former has been in office. Each time he has been '*sent for.” | Captan Patterson was particularly | lsympathetic to proposals to irrigation | |in this region, asked if it wouldn’t be | possible to dam the Missouri river {and get water on the land in that | manner. -Asked what he thought might be j conditions in the United States, Pat- ; terson had no remedy. Instead he (merely offered an observation as to what big corporations and very wealthy men can do with their money. Where the Profits Go Many do not live ostentatiously, and even if they do they usually have something left over to invest. This jthey put into either new enterprises or new labor-saving machinery, he said, and thereby reduce the volume of employment. used to buy bigger and faster | been. some pressmen out of work. > are possibilities that Captain a on may become a powerful in- «...12¢ in the fight for irrigation in this region. He agrees with it as a , Solution for many difficulties and this agreement could easily be trans- lated into effective support. Jerseyville, Ill, July 22.—()—A weird story of a snake caught in the act of milking a cow was told by an eye-witness at the Arthur Gwinner farm Wednesday. Belief that there might be some truth in the antiquated cow-milk- ing snake tales, said Gwinner, a Jersey county farmer, led to so- lution of the week-old mystery of his place. Neighbors who doubted Gwin- ner’s story were shown a huge blacksnake full of gunshot as evi- dence, and told that old Bossy no comes in half-milked. Gwinner said when the herd approached a spring for a drink | the snake slid out of a stump, its | head elevated, and wriggled to- |. war@the cow. He said the reptile ' coiled about a hind leg and | fastened its mouth to one of the | teats. The hired man beat the snake off with a club and then shot it. had tasted wine. FHA TERMS FOR REMODELING AND done to establish better economic i Applying it to his own business he | said profits from his newspaper have “3 and the result has been to 2 Snake Milks Cow '| On Illinois Farm o—_——__—_—_——_* It is believed that kissing originated from the desire of men to know whether their wives and daughters of it,” Lorance’s statement continued. “I said ‘my gun’s registered and it would be dangerous for me.’ Finally we stopped by a marsh and a colored fellow got out of another automobile. “Davis shot him in the stomach, The fellow tried to say something but could only gasp. He ran ahd we ran after him. The others kept shooting after him. I went back to the car, picked them up and took them back to the cottage.” Coleman’s bullet-pierced body was found in the marsh on May 26, 1935. Nves =: NEWS Mrs. Nelle Dale, sales representa- tive for Helena Rubenstein of New York and Paris in the middlewest states, spent Wednesday at Robert- son's, the local distributor for her firm, and at Mandan. Contract for constructing an un- derpass and 0.104 miles of approaches in Velva has been awarded Rue Brothers Construction company of Bismarck on a low bid of $179,719.16, the state highway department a nounced Wednesday. Bids were re- ceived on the project July 10, but ac- \tion to award the contract was de- ferred. Budget for the city of Mandan was Set at $55,600 for the fiscal year 1936- 37, or approximately $5,000 less than last year. The reduction resulted from smaller interests and indebtedness payments. L, E. Birdzell, former justice of the North Dakota supreme court now counsel for the Federal Deposit In- surance corporation in Washington, D. C., has been a Capital City busi. ness visitor the past few days. “The Townsend movement is be- ginning to disintegrate,” said Theo- dore Nelson, former North Dakota politician, as he talked with friends here Thursday night en route to his Oregon home from the Cleveland convention of Townsend clubs. Snakes are known for their glut- tony. A 70-pound python recently ate a 20-pound pig in one meal. This her plane nosed over ground. looped as she was taking off for New York. (Associat Press Photo) Train Will Disclose South’s Advancement Bismarck residents who visit the TURNER, MEYER AND | KEY WILL PROMOTE SAFETY IN BISMARCK Three Famous Record hapa i i in Motor World Coming on duly 30 New impetus will be given the move ment to promote safety on the high- way, in the home and elsewhere when three famous figures in the motor; world come to Bismarck Thursday, July 30, They are Col. Roscoe Turner, fa- mous speed and long distance aviator; Louis Meyer, auto racing king and only man to win the Memorial Day race at Indianapolis three times and Fred Key who, with his brother, holds the non-stop airplane flight record. Their joint mission will be to stimu- late the public consciousness to a realization of the need for caution in daily affairs, particularly on the high- ways. Sponsoring their appearance here is the National Safety council, leader in the safety movement in this coun- try for more than 23 years. Backed By Oil Firm Backing the activity financially is the MacMillan Petroleum corporation of California. Turner and Key will come to Bis- marck by air, the former in a great tri-motored plane weighing six tons and the latter in the ship in which the non-stop flight mark was set. They will come here from Aberdeen, 8D. Meyer will come overland in his own automobile and will bring with him, in a specially-made trailer, the racing car with which he won the last 500-mile race at Indianapolis. The airplanes will be on display at| the airport and Meyer's racing auto; “Know Mississippi Better” train when it arrives here at 3:20 p. m., Thursday, will have an opportunity to note the commercifl and cultural development of the Old South in the exhibits which pack two full-sized Pullman cars. On board the train will be approxi- mately 150 persons, representing every occupation in the southern state for whom the trip into the northern part ot the United States and into Canada will be in the nature of a vacation. Some of these will remain with the train and act as hosts to the Bismarck residents who are expected to visit it and examine the exhibits. The re- mainder will be guests of Bismarck and Mandan residents on a tour of the capitol building and to points of interest in the two cities. REPORT OF A HOLDING COMPANY AFFILIATE OF A NATIONAL BANK Published in accordance Section 5211, U. 8, Revised Sta- jen. Report as of June 39, 1936, of North- west Bancorporation, Minneapolis. Minnesota, which is affillated with The Dakota National Bank & Trust Company of Bismarck, charter num- ber 13598, Federal Reserve district number 9. Kind of business: Owns or controls, directly or indirectly, capital stock of banks and other corporations, Manner in which above-named or- ganization is affiliated with national bank, and degree of control: Affili- ated by reason of common ownership or control, directly or indirectly vest- ed_in Northwest Bancorporation. Degree of control: 66%. Financial relations with bank: Stock of affiliated bank owned $135,- 581.68. Other information necessary to dis- close fully relations with bank: None, I, Gardner B. Perry, Vice President, of Northwest Bancorporation, do sol- emnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. Gardner B. Perry. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 7th day of July, 1936, (SEAL) 0. A. Buelow, Notary Public, Hennepin C., Minn. My commission expires, October 3rd, 19) Sik WALTER RALEIGH, that gallant courtier of Queen Elizabeth's time, was sailing down the Caribbean Sea in search of new land; when, on March 22, 1595, he sighted a strange island fhat seemed to overflow with pitch, a better pitch, he found, than that which he had used to caulk the seams of his own ships. It was the island of Trinidad, was enough food to supply the snake wth energy for more than a year. To determine their suitability, 11 different kinds of material wi!l go into two experimental runways now being built at Purdue University airport. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by The School Board of Apple €reek School District No. 39 of Burleigh County, State of North Dakota, until. 2:30 o'clock, p. m, on the 13th day of August, 1936 at the office of the Clerk, postoffice ad- dress Bismarck, North Dakota, and | will be publicly’ opened at the office of said Clerk of said District at the time mentioned above for the furnish- ing of all materials require@ for the erection and completion ef a one classroom frame school bullding. Plans and specifications for the construction of safd building will be on file and may be seen and examined in the offices of the Clerk of said District. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check drawn on a solvent bank in the State of North Dakota and payable to J. P. Peterson, Trea- surer of Apple Creek School District No. 39 of Burleigh County, State of North Dakota, in a sum equal to at aeet 5 per cent of the amount of the The School Board reserves the right to hold all bids received for a period of fifteen days after the day fixed ves the right to reject any and all bid: Dated the 22nd day of July, 1936. THE SCHOOL BOARD OF APPLE CREE K SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 39 OF l= KIGH COUNTY, Bur, ui NORTH DAKOTA. TD ar By Mrs. Arthur Knudsen, i Clerk. 1-23-30 8-6, and the pitch that he noticed flowing along the shore came from a lake that even today furnishes much of the world’s asphalt. “We made trial of it in trimming our ships,” he wrote, and found it “to be most excellent good, and melt- eth not with the sun as pitch of Norway.” In the last half century, some $,000,000 tons of this material has been removed. As a result, the general level of the lake has dropped about 20 feet. Trinidad’s pictorial issue of 1935 includes a stamp illustrate ing Raleigh's discovery of this lake. i ae Popsright. W56, NUA Service tne.) will be parked on a down-town street. The public is invited to see and in- spect all of this equipment. Will Explain Mechanics At the same time the three men will- explain the mechanisms to the visitors, sign autograph books and otherwise get acquainted with the public. Their visit will be made the occa-| sion of a special safety demonstration j by the Bismarck Association of Com- merce and the Service clubs. ‘The latter, consisting of the Rotary, Kiwanis and Lions, will hold a joint luncheon meeting at the Worlr War | Memorial building at 12:15 p. m., duly | 30, at which the three visitors will be guests of honor. Association of Com- merce members who are not also! by to attend. The three visitors will speak and their talks will be broadcast over KFYR, direct from the dining hall. Name Reception Committee Appointed as members of the re- ception committee to greet the men at the airport at 11 a. m., were H. O. Saxvik, Paul O. Netland, W. J. Flan- nigan, Dr. H. A. Brandes, M. H. At- kingon, Dr. H. T. Perry, Kenneth w. Simons, Charles Goodwin, A. P. Len- haré, Paul Wachter. William Bbeling, Dr. A. M. Fisher, J. L. Barth, F. A. Copelin, and F. L. Putnam. In addition to this activity, Mayor Lenhart is expected to proclaim July 30 as safety day in Bismarck. et Bismarck and will leave the next day Bismarck will be the only North Dakota city to be visited by the three men who expect to visit all parts of the United States in their safety campaign during the next few months. | LISBON FARMER DIES Fargo, N. D., July 22—(#)—Peter Vie, 44, Lisbon farmer, died here Tuesday. He leaves Mrs. Vie, his father, Ole Vie of Lisbon, and a sis- ter, Mrs. Charles Nord of Enderlin, tree comes from one bud. Tammany Chief mous government of Catalonia was members of a service club are invited} celona radio station, indicating Luis Companys, the provincial leader, may have been deposed. Paul night club owner on trial for The trio will spend the night in| Jr.. took the stand in his own defense Jate Wednesday and began a general for Rapid City, 8. D. denial of government charges. torneys, trying desperately to save him from the gallows, portrayed him Wed- All foliage and fruit of the cocoanut| nesday as a well-meaning fellow who | had a way with the women. ROTARY HAS REPORT i ON 1996 CONCLAVE George T. Humphreys Giva Local Members Picture of Convention Is Active at 77 George T. Humphreys’ resy the 27th International Rotary con. jvention at Atlantic City, N. J, Sune 22-26, constituted the program to the luncheon meeting of the Bis. marck unit at noon Wednesday in the Grand Pee Sete George A. Duemeland anno the arrival of the Know Missising Better train at 3:20 p. m., Thursday, A request for cars to take the 15) Mississippi visitors on a tour of the city brought 10 responses from the club membership. That there will be no regular lunch. eon meeting next Wednesday in th: interests of the “Safety on the High. ways” program was announceg Fred A. Copelin, president. The Ro. tarlans, Kiwanians and Lions yij hold a joint meeting at 12:15 p.m, Thursday. Speakers then wil) ins clude Col. Roscoe Turner, speed flier. Louis Meyer, winner of the Memorial Day automobile classic at Indiana. polis, Ind., and Fred Key, endurance flight record holder. Richmond Is Chairman L. H. Richmond, program chair. man,. presented Mr. Humphreys 4; speaker of the day. After describing the famed board. walk, the $15,000,000 municipal aug. torium which seats 40,000 persons ang| other highlights of the convention! city, Mr. Humphreys turned to the | gathering itself. It was, he said, the ilargest International Rotary conclaye| | sittce that in Chicago in 1930, 10,000 | Rotarians, Rotary Anns and sons off | Rotarians being registered. i Manier Elected | He reported the election by ar. clamation of Will R. Manier of Nash- ville, Tenn., as president, succeeding] Ed R. Johnson of Roanoke, Va. §>. cial and business features of the pro. gram and the entertainment for Rotarians’ wives also were described, On his return from Atlantic City] Mr. Humphreys spent a short time at Philadelphia, Pa., and then to Hamilton, Ont., for a five-day vi with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rich ard Humphreys. Guests at the meeting were Edward Adams, Presbyterian missionary tg Korea. who is spending the day in the city; C. W. Hawes, Minneapoli and John B. Shaw, Fargo. Dewitt A. Hall Dies Of Old Age in Minot Minot. N. D., July 22—(?)—De} witt A. Hall, 76, early Minot blacks smith, former Ward county jailer andj once member of the city police force died of complications incident to old age Tuesday afternoon in a Minojj hospital. Military funeral services will by held here Thursday for the charter] member of the Col. E. J. Piersoa| chapter of the Spanish War Veterans Born in Ontario, Hall lived at Pari PEIFER DENIES CHARGES Rapids, Minn., before coming to Minoi St. Paul—John (Jack) Peifer, St.| 36 years ago. Me of =e A colorful career ranging from mine physician in Arizona in Wild West days to New York City health commissioner has been: that of Dr. Thomas Dar- lington, Tammany’s grand sa- chem, shown speaking at a re- cent celebration at the Hall. At °7 he still is active as. a physi- cian and civic worker, and in recent years has delivered hun- dreds of lectures in eastern cole leges and over the radio. Late News Bulletins (By the Associated Press) REPORT GENERAL SLAIN Perpignan, France—Unconfirm- ed reports reaching here said Gen. Emeleo Mola, commander of Spanish rebel forces in the north, had been slain in a battle with government troops. ATTACK CATALONIA Perpignan, France—A violent an- rehist attack on the semi-autono- roadcast Wednesday from the Bar- AYERS LEADS HOLT Helena, Mont.—Roy E. Ayers Wednesday led Gov. Elmer Holt in the Montana primary contest for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination on the tabulation of votes from 569 of the state’s 1,237 precincts. The vote: Ayers 20,885; Holt 20,521. onspiring to kidnap William Hamm, ADMIRAL MERTZ DIES San Diego, Calif, June 22.—P- Rear Admiral Albert Mertz, 85, U. 8 N, retired, leading figure in Americal} naval history for half a century, died here Tuesday night. ADMITS KILLING WIFE Tiffin, Ohio—Joseph Perryman, 42, real estate operator, confess- ed Wednesday to shooting his wife, Margaret, 53, to death in a lonely woods July 14 because he wanted to “be free to run around a little.” If all the waterfalls of the worl |were harnessed, they could furni only 10 per cent of the power bein CAPITOL FIGHT FOR JAMES Los Angeles.—Robert 8. James’ at- Comfortably Cool Whispers! THE BREATH OF SCANDAL! -». touched their innocent ‘lives and shattered the world ‘in which they lived. One lie «and three people were ‘exposed to ridiculeand scorn! Vivid, exciting, dramatic... and already the most talked about picture of the year! Miriam, swommete HOPKIN Children JOEL McCRE WHISPERS! SAMUEL GOLDWYN resenis with THE YEAR'S MOST DARING FILM! The Dust Bowl Picture \“The Plow | That Broke | . the Plains” | ALSO el St Paris ike day a au prks reer ” News Novelty LOUISE LATIMER _—_— FRIDAY - SATURDAY S-OBERON * Directed by WILLIAM Wise Today News and Pictorial Friday Musical ENEMYS WIFE ¥ Pat 0 BRIEN = Mar yaret LINDS#