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HERDIC RESGUES MADE IN STORNS Nary Struned Perstns Saod in Wosten Blzars Denver, Jan. 28 UP—As nunther‘ severs cold wave swept into the northwest today, stories of heroic rescues enacted during last week's blissards continued to filter from ! snowbound sections where horses, | lelghs, tractors, planes and even | trains were pressed into rescue | service to bring stricken persons to | medical care. Equalling in interest the victory over the elements in taking an 11 year ola Idaho girl over 30 miles of suow drifted trail to a hospi at Cottonwood, Idaho, was the story of the methods taken to get an ail- ing caretaker in Yellowstone park out for medical treatment. i Horses featured in the Idaho res- cue while horses, a toboggan, am- bulance, & tractor and a speclal train were used in the Yellowstone rescue, Airplanes located a stricken | plane near Elko, Nev., and horses were used to rescue the pilot and his two passengers, who suffered Kreatly from exposure when the plane made a forced landing in Se- cret Pai Jack Worth, Old Faithful inn win- ter keeper, was under a physician's | care in Livingston, Mont., today aft- er an epic battle in the deep snows of picturesque Yellowstone. The last stage of his trip was from Gardiner to Livingston, and when | an ambulance was unable to break | through, the Northern Pacific ran a special train down its branch line | to pick up the man, stricken with heart disease. 1 Telephone Treatment | ‘Worth was attended last week by | his wife and a ranger, who treated | him under instructions telephoned from Mammoth. Then the medicine ‘gave out and rescue parties went to | his rellef. He was hauled by tobog- #an to Norris. A four horse team, and a tractor took him to Golden | Gate where an ambulance replaced | the bedded sleigh in which Worth | had made the 52 mile journey. He probably will recover, it was | mald. A small band of cowboys and | stockmen pushed their way back | home through 10. foot snow drifts from Cottonwood today after as- surances that Narcie Aram, 11 year old daughter of their friend, Jim Aram, was recovering from an operation for acute appendicitis. The cowboys struggled through a blizsard and drifted snow for many hours, driving a band of horses be- fore them to break the trail, as they fought to clear the path for the | sleigh carrying the suffering girl, | who was stricken last Thursday morning at her father’s ranch. Her father bundled her into a sleigh and started for Cottonwood, but after an all day battle, was forced back. He oalled neighbors by telephone for assistance and the re- | | siclans believe he will lose his han: Guests at the Gaylord hotel at |Columbia Falls, Mont., were forced out into 10 degree below zero weath- er when the structure was destroyed by fire S8unday. J. E. Lewis, pro- prietor, saved three valuable paint- ings by the late Charles M. Russell, Montana's cowboy artist. One of the | works was *““The Three Wise Men.” | Butte last night reported a new | snow fall ranging up to six inches, while two feet of snow fell at | Thompson Falls,"Mont. The mercury |nor of Oklahoma, and | dropped to 42 degrees below zero!chiet executive in at Choteau, Mont., and other north- |ern Montana points reported read- | called to appear before the senate ings nearly as low. | Untold suffering has been caused | range livestock in all the mountain | states, and it is feared the losses | will reach a high figure, MOREAU ASSISTS RESCUED SEAMEN New Britain Man Hospital At- tendant on S. S, America | In Uniform of U. S. Paul E. Moreau of v Britain was a member of the hospital staff | of the c of the S. S. America, | which saved the foundering freight- er Florida in the midst of a terrific gale on the Atlantic, January 23. | He was one of a staff of five in | the ship hospital, there being two doctors, a nurse and two attendants, the local boy being one of the latter. This group of five administered first | Marines. PAUL E. MOREAU 4id treatment to the rescued sea- | men as they were brought aboard, | saving the 32 men from dangers of | pneumonia and shock. It was during the midst of the |storm that a baby baby was born |on shipboard, it being necessary to |strap the mother to the operating [table during the arrival of the son. Moreau is a son of Mrs. Augusta | Moreau of 323 West Main street and |two other articles of impeachment | | charges were filed they found me |in the banking department in 1927- | | deficiency certificate for support and {in 1928-29, sponse was immediate and success- |is a nephew of the late Dr. E. T. ful, | The passengers of the marooned | vlane, L. J. Pfleuger, San Francisco, | and A. P. Ames, Camden, Me, left | Salt Lake for their homés last night after their terrifying experience in the snowbound Nevada desert. The pllot, Frank Barber, who was in. ijured about the head in the crash, was in a serious condition at a Salt | Lake hospital. Barber was brought down last | Thursday by & blinding snowstorm. Planes found the ship Friday after- noon, and ranchers beat the trail to it through deep drifts early Satur- day, finding the men in a nearly | frozen condition. Barber, semi-con- | \sclous, lay in the twisted fuselage moaning for help, while his com- panions were 100 weak to aid him. | . Weather Bound Bcores of trucks and automobiles were weather bound in isolated: Colorado and Wyoming sections to- day, where residents opened their homes to shelter those marooned until the long-lived blizzard passes. | Workmen with shovels rescued | three trucks and four automobiles which were snowbound yesterday | Wwhile attempting to follow a rotary | snow plow into Lewiston, ] The wind blew s0 hard that the | road elosed in the wake of the plow | before the caravan could pass. ! Most of the small towns and vil- | lages of Idaho which lacked rail- road communications were fsolated. | Eastern Washington and Oregon were little better off, with plows and | crews at work continuously to keep | Toads open. Believed to have become exhaust- ed while battling the storm, John Selivocan of Butte, Mont, was found nmearly frozen on the out- skirts of that city yesterday. Phy- [every dey in the month]] Business girls who let menstrual periods interfere with duty have not learned of Midol. This remarkabie preparation neither hinders nor hastens the natural process of men- struation, but it does stop the pa Midol is not a narcotic. a8 safe as it is direct and It is only common sense to use You have probably firicd other things for menstrual puins, but so had the many thousands of women who today bless Midol. It brings complete ease in five to seven min- utes. Or prevents pain even start- ing, if taken in time. Every drug- store has the trim little aluminum rase of Midol to tuck In your purse, for fifty cents! It is just certain. it. . |vana | The Fromen. He has seen service in lhe’ U. 8. Marine corps. He attracted na- tional attention in 1926 when as a private in the marine corps he and another private, Oliver Bliss, were in swimming when the explosion oc- curred at the U. & arsenal at Dover, N. J. Both young men, reported &s having escaped injury, disappeared | from the arsenal. They turned up in Tiledo, O., a month later, where . they were found in a railroad sta- | tion a few miles from Bliss' home. They were suffering from shell shock due to the explosion and both spent considerable time in a U. 8 military hospoital. At the home of the young man today it was stated that he had not been heard from since he was in Europe and no word had been re- | ceived indicating that he might be on the way home. Y. W. C. A. NOTES Health Education Dept. Schedule for pool and gym for the new term as follows: Monday. 6-9, swimming classes. Tuesday, 10-11, private gym class, Idaho. | 4:30-5:15, junior plunges; 6-9 senior | plunges; 6:30, private tennis; 7:30- 8, reducing; 8-8:45, Jolly Jim. ‘Wednesday, 3:30-5, Plainville high. Thursday, 10-11, private m class; 4-6, Normal school; 4:15- tiny tots ancing; 6-9, senior plunges; 7:30-8, reducing. Friday, 6-9, swimming classes. Saturday, 9-11:30, junior swim- ming classes. Pinnacle Club Notes The Pinnacle club will meet Mon- v in the Y. W. C. A. club rooms at 7:30. After the regular business meeting there will be discussion on plans for a Valentine party, annual banquet and for initiation of mnew members. Nine new girls have join- ed the club this month. After the business meeting Miss Helen will talk on current events, and M Misterly will discuss the articles to be cooked for the There will be music and fun. Wed- nesday night is b: ethall practice. Come and learn a new cheer with Mary Mariotti. Friday night basket- ball coaching with Miss F aedt. Girl Rese All Girl Reserve clubs will meet on their usual d; this week, Canadi~n Boat to Aid Norwegian Ship v. N. 8. Jan. 28 (A—The government s mer - red from orth ttempt to release the freighter ice- tween Ma and laden with oes town, P. E. L Ha . has been fast on the ice mile off shore, for a week. ley, en route from Halifax ormentine to replace the mer Prince Edward Is- from a half to Capr crippled land. was unable to get through the | advic ice in ordered to The government steamer Mont- calm which received orders on Sat- urday to release the steamer San- Ibro from the ice in Bay St. George, |Newfoundland. sailed from her | vesterday. and was PARLIAMENTS IN dinner Saturday. | JOHNSTON TO BE IN COURT TODAY Oklaboma Governor Faces Sea- ate Impeachment Charges Jan. 28 UP— suspended gover- the third the last eight impeachment, was Oklahoma City, Henry 8. Johnstol years to face court of impeachment today to an- | swer five impeachment charges. He | will be summoned later to plead to | three additional charges, while still against him await legislative action. Meanwhile the house of repre- sentatives investigating committee, which preferred the 10 articles | against the executive, prepared for | another busy week to probing into alleged misconduct by state officers. Asks For Funds On the eve of his appearance the suspended governor last night ap- pealed to “my fellow citizens” for funds to aid in securing counsel. He said that “when the impeachment without a dollar with which to or- gapize counsel for my defense.” His statement said: “It will re- quire weeks of unremitting toll day and night to meet the issue, Many of my lawyer friends have volun- teered their services free of charge but I cannot expect them to sacri- fice 0 much without being com- pensated.” The suspended governor said: “Tt is distasteful for me to be forced to appear before my fellow citizens in this light, but I am confident that the masses who sent me to the state house to direct their government | have the same abiding faith in me today as they had when they ex- pressed thelr choice for governor two years agi The executive has not announced names of his attorneys and the exact course of proceedure for the trial remained in doubt. It was believed, however, that Johnston would ob- ject to each charge on the grounds that it does not constitute an im- peachment offense. The five charges to be answered today are: Article IT—Unlawful diversion and misappropriation of funds to pay J. W. “Buck” Eldridge. Article ITT—Unlawful issuance of deficlency certificate for extra help 28. Article IV—Unlawful issuance of maintenance of lssues commission 1927-28, after legislature refused ap- pripriation. Article VII—Unlawful issuance of deficiency certificate for support and | maintenance of issues commission | A scnate Investigating committee has ended its hearings on the al- leged bribe rumors in connection | | with the ending of the purported | impeachment session of the legisla- ture in December, 1927, and will make its report today, according to Senator Ira Hill, a member. | SESSION N EUROPE Many Gountries Interested in Bills Up Before Solons By the Associated Press. Parliaments are in session {n many of the chief capitals of the world, | their members maneuvering either for scheduled domestic political | campaigns or to force or avoid such events according to whether they are pro or anti-government. Great Eritain, France, Germany, the Union of South Africa, and Japan are in the office and law making stage. A notabfe exception is Italy where |the old parliament has passed and |the first set election under the one | party fascist system is in the offing. |Jugoslavia is approaching that sort | of a campaign, King Alexander have |ing announced that he intends to restore the national legislature as | soon as his dictatorship ministry can | reorganize the body politic after dis- isolving all the old political ma- chines. The king said that these | partics had shown distrust and dis- sension among the Serbs, Croats, Slovenes and Montenegrins, whereas at heart these elements in his do- | main were as one in being South | Slavs, Japan's new diet, the first under |universal manhood suffrage saw the government of Baron Tanaka on the defensive early in the session. The premicr made an important speech at the opening of the diet, discussing forcign relations at length. He re- ferred to the United States immigra- tion laws as having created a ques- tion which still needed patient treat- ment, To Preserve Interests He also assured the diet that Manchuria’s action in hoisting the flag of the Chinese nationalist gov- poleon's planned invasien “right little, tight little isle." But the spectre of invasion has been given some lusty buffets recently, ad- vocates of the tunnel saying that the autumn demonstrations of the ef- ficacy of air craft in attack had laid the ghost, Feted Doorn Manor has witneased its an- nual pilgrimage of the lovers of the German imperialistic regime. Hun- dreds of former army officers and representatives of the old German nobility journeyed to the Holland vefuge of the former Emperor Wil- thelm II and congratulated him on his 70th birthda; Herr Hohenzol- lern was said to have reached the stage where he shuns publicity, but he showed he still possessed his sense of timeliness by authorizing an interview In which he advocated that Germany should be relieved en- tirely from paying for the World war. This interview appeared just seven days before the new repara- tion commission is to assemble in Parils, Afghanistan, which week before last had three kings, had virtually none at all last week, according to the tenor of various dispatches. Moscow heard that Amanullah had rescinded his abdication. Then it reported that the Jalalabad tribes, which several weeks ago accepted ! gold from Amanullah as the price of renewing alleglance to him, were fighting their way toward Kabul. British frontier points said that Bachao 8akao,—the ‘“‘water boy" who drove Inayatullah, brother of manullah, from the capital—was elpless. in the face of the responsi- bilities which events had thrust upon him. One of the reports related that a revolution of feeling had occurred against this modern day Gungha Din because it had been discovered he was not of the predominant race of Pathans, but a Tajik. ""he Tajiks are an admixture of the old Persian and Arabian stocks but the ancient Pathans made them workers—the hewers of wood and drawers of water. March On London Unemployment thrast itself into ST. JOHN'S GHURCH HAS NEW TRUSTEES Pastor Submits Auoeal Repot on Progress Daring Past Year Edward Lanske and Gustave Hurts were elected trustees of St. John' German Lutheran church yesterd: succeeding Richard Vogel nd Charles Hepp, who declined to be candidates for re-election. Rev. Martin W. Gaudian, pastor, reported that there had been 20 deaths, 31 baptisms, 19 marriages REV. MARTIN W. GAUDIAN and 38 confirmations in the church during the year. Receipts were $6.- 767.60 and expenditures were $6, 521.78, Officers were elected as follows: President, Emil E. R. Vogel; elder, Edward Sonnenberg; deacons, Her- | man Busch and George Huonker ID “Merode” Rayon Lingerie Fashioned By Mannequins Tuesday and Wednesday January 28th and 29th Two Showings Daily at 12:15P.M.and 4P. M. Under the personal supervision of Miss Joan Dexter, the Merode Styl- ist. We invite you to attend .this fashion show and learn what rich lingeries MERODE has developed in lustrous rayon. Mannequins will the notice of several governments. |Jr.; financial secretary, Julius Son- A march on London was started | nenberg; recording secretary, Peter from Glasgow, with auxillary bodies | Nuss; treasurer, Willlam Jurgen; forming in a dozen other British in ! auditor, Fred Wisheck. display these garments, that you may see ex- actly how splendidly they will fit, how excep- tionally they are made, and what rare styling dustrial centers, the Prince of Wales is starting today on a tour of the distressed mining districts. The London county council declded it cowld not well furnish jobs for work- less miners while many London men wanted work. In Budapest there were riotous demonstrations before the Hungar- ian house of iords while that body was dedicating a museum. cry from the streets, Down in Captown there was loot- ing of food shops on the day the parliament of South Africa reassem- bled. That day has usually been chosen for unemployment demon- strations but this year the affair got out of hand. Over In India the followers of Mahatma Ghandi were given a plan for a comprehensive boycott of for- eign made cloth. Use of the hand spinning wheel and home industry has been one of the major tenets of that leader's projected reforms. He was credited with urging his follow- ers to organize a campaign of burn- ing foreign mada textil LEAVFES CHURCH SCHOOLS The United Week Day church schools this week accepted the resig- nation of Mrs. Carrie Johnson, a member of the faculty. Mrs. Johnson has for two years been teacher and planist at the A. M. E. Zion branch of the United Week Day church schools. During the summer of 1928 she served as assistant in the Dally Vacation Bible school at the Stanley Memorial church. Mrs. Johnson leaves her work here to become superintendent of the Day Nursery of the Avon Street Community House of Hartford. ,criment and the subsequent events | fin the territory ruled formerly by | Chang Tso-Lin, friend of Japan, had | not changed the Tokyo determina- tion to preserve Japan's special in- | He said that Japan | sovereignty | terests there would respect {and China's 1o all in its power to forward the principles of the open door and | cqual opportunity but desired above |all that China should be made safe | for foreigners and natives alike, He counselled the present governors of |China to use restraint and careful- | ness. Another attempt is being made to laettle the differences between the two countries, the Japanese r having gone from ¥ king to anking to rcopen the negotiations. | Hitherto China has refused to treat lunless Japan first withdrew all her |troops from Shantung. The latest said she had modified this jto aa > of cvacuation. Britain and France have again been discussing the boring of |a tunnel under the English channel. In former days this was vetoed by | English circles which had not for- | gotten the Spanish Armada or Na- minis- | nd for an absolute guar- | ts As a rapid-action weapon against colds, no remedy isbetter known than GROVE’S BROMO Easy to take and mildly laxative, it rids of poisons caused by colds. The tonic properties keep vitality up, Because grip, influenza, and other serious illnesses often begin with a cold, it is wise ! any cold threatens, And Won’t go out to play When healthy youngsters, usually full of mischief, suddenly lose their ambition to be engi licemen, they are probubly full of cold germs. Eoou of appetite, listlessness, or feverish condition, should put parents promptly on guard. | | {Trying to Find | Source of Liquor Baltimore, Jan, 28 (P—Following the suspension of three students in the Eastern High achool for girls for alleged intoxication in class last week Dr. David E. Weglein, super- intendent of public instruction |sought today to determine whether liquor can be purchased by students from neighborhood speakeasies as has been reported. i One private house where students are sald to have gathered during re- | cess hours, already is under surveil- lance of achool officials. The address of an alleged speakeasy close to the | achool was received by Miss Laura | J. Clarnes, principal who says she will submit it to Dr. Weglein, The girls were suspended after they had caused a general disturb- ance in class. S8chool officials said the girls were under the influence of | liquor. Bearch revealed an empty liquor bottle in a rest room. Members of the Public School as- soclation, and the Alumnae associ- ation of Eastern High school, plan to offer their aid In the investigation to determine whether or not speak- casles flourish in the neighborhood of the school. Religious Educator To View Church Schools J. E. Jacobs, associate general secretary of the Religious Education Council of North America, will meet |in conference with the executive committee and supervisors of the United Week day church schools to- morrow evening and will inspect the schools on Wednesday. system to obtain quick relief when ly wise, to make certain of getting the right remedy. ize GROVE'S, whén asking waROVB’sBROMO&“’hlP:I“NuE Price 30c, GRO I BROMO LAXATIVE VE' QUININ TABLETS E is developed in this new fabric. Plan now to be here promptly. The exhibit will be held in the Ready to Wear Dept., on the second floor of our building. There is no charge for admis- sion, and admission is to women and misses only. Come and See These Displayed on Living Models. Showing will take place on our 2nd floor - MAYTAG Washers Nowin Antarctica = "3 . HE BYRD South Pole Expedition has reached its permanent base, 2400 miles south of the nearest human dwelling. “Maytags were sclected,” says Sidney . 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