The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 25, 1919, Page 8

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i i ree "BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNB is SATURDAY, JAN. 25, 1919. — 7 - Po <a, wisi es x i service and fair treatment. We Are. We all are when we don’t get satisfactory service; or, on the other hand, when we do get splendid WHO’S A TATTLER? | You Are... . We want to be tattled on and are continually making every effort to improve our service so that our patrons will continue to tattle on us and thus give us an opportunity to please other owners or prospective owners. SERVICE—That’s our middle name. Federal Tires and Vesta Batteries at Wholesale eee ahr Motor Sales Company Automobile Painting and Repairing HAILINSURANCE §ytr'g A BILL LEADS BIG BEER, DAYIN SENATE VAT | i Measure Gives Folks Who Don't | Raise Crops Chance to Get out From Under | OUTLET FOR SCHOOL FUND | May Invest All Surplus Funds in | Bonds of the Good State of North Dakota The introduction of sixteen new bills marked a busy opening for a | brief senate session yesterday. The} most ,important of these was the} league’s state hail insurance bill, in-} troduced by the insurance committee | as No. 47, and which provides for the| assessmnet against all the tillable lands of the state of the hail los: sustained by owners of growing crops The act would assure 100 per cent pa. ment of losses as adjusted by del: ing the computation of these losses until October 1, each year, when all losses will have been reported and ad- justed.. No losses are to be paid on crops not harvested en or before] , i i surety. Premiums to be determined Sept. 15, and. losses must be reported | by the commiss of insurance are} to the, nal imgurance Gepa ment! ig. ye a ji within 10 ean cur: departments requiring bonds and the Pasture land, if under fence, may be surplus each year is, 10 be retired in- éxempted from, the hail tax up to 640 | to bonding fund, unill sigh find BAB acres, or land unfit for cultivation reached $200,000, when the amount of may upon certificate to that effect be the premiums may be reduced. In any| So classified, Such affidavit must|Cvent when there shall not be suffi-/ be filed with the county auditor in the |Clent In this fund to pay the whole) county in which land is located on or | !0S%, the balance shall be paid as soon before the last Monday in June. Own-| #8 sufficient funds shall have accum-| ers of land upon which crops are to| Wlated. be grown and who wish to avail them- a ag “ selves.of the protection of the state Senate Bill 50, by the appropriations hail insurance act must cimilarly cer-|¢ommittee, authorizes the attorney tify on or before the last Monday in| general to appoint at $2,200 per an- June. y {num an assistant attorney general to; "“Losses as adjusted will be paid at; act as attorney for the board of uni- the rate of eight cents per acre on| versity and school lands. eo i each one per cent of loss. the indemni-; Senate Bill 46 appropriates $665 for ties in no case to exceed $8 per|the use of the attorney general, with | acre, nor in any event the actual value} #n_ emergency clause. | —and it is being rolled to t shington, D. C., which is and other Washingtonians. -ming pool. Who wants.a bi Attorney for Board. | inst the various] i | power house. he dump from the plant cf the National Capital brewery, in being transformed into an ice cream factory for statesmen This beer vat would make a swell garage or a first rate swim- eer vat? : ¢ appropriation is made from. the in-! creeing that “the taxation and reve: income of the capitol build- nue laws of this state shall app.y with . now amounts to $750,-| cua, Lorce to allproperty and. busi- v0f. Senate Bill 58 appropriates $2,-|ness and all increase or profit there- 000 for ‘the extension of the capitol | from, though the owners or recipients street: railway east on Main — street/of the same may-have-or claim domi- from ‘its present terminus at Fifth to; cile elsewhere, the intent and pur- Tenth; north on Tenth to the boule-| pose: of this act being that, all. prop- vard. thence west to Ninth and thence |erty or interest .in),property: within on a grade already establisned to the| the state, or income’or. profit derived It 18 directed that.ne-/ therefrom, shall ‘be subject to all the gotiations be undertaken with Soo}taxes imposed: by. the) laws of ‘the line officials with a view to eéstab-jstate, whether the owner of such lishing physical connections with | property or the person: receiving. such their tracks, in order that the state/income or profit reside within -the may freight goods from the Soo line; state or egsewhere. » ‘ to the capitol over its own tracks. Report to: Tax: Commiasioner. Senate Bill 51 gives the attorney; ‘Senate Bill 38 transfers to the state general power to appoint special as-itax commissioner all «reports in re sistant attorneys general as he may) taxation matters heretofore made-by see fit, such assistants to serve eith-| persons, corporations, associations oF er with or without compensation. {state or county officers to the state Senate Bill 55 appropriates $50,000 | auditor. to,the contingency Sund to ve placed) The Single Tax. charitable institutions, all.public prop- lerty of every description, property of ; fair Associations, etc. Then, after these tame preliminar- ies, the bill in paragraph 9 gets down } | to. business, exempting first all struc- | tures: and. improvements on agricl- | jtral lands; then’ all structures and im- provements used as homes on town or! city lots, to the amount of $2.500, pro- viuing the whole amount does not ex- jeceed a value of $3.500; then house-) ihold gods and furnishings ty the; {amount of $500 where tthe whole does} not exceed $1,000, although the furni- ture or furnishings of ;cafes, restaur- ants, hotels or other establishments conducted for profit specifically is not | exempted. Clothing to the amount of $3004 tools and implements ‘of a famer to \the amount of $1;000 and tools of a , Workingman, up to $300 are included. T ticed veterinary medicine in Fargo for | a numer of years and was chief of | the Fargo police department when | Dakota was a territory. Otterstetter | is a market gardener and has made ais} home in Moorhead for 15 gears. Otterstetter is about 50 years old; Mrs. ‘Earnes about 45. Lach Cay oa) = n~-rreofcounterfeits| ¢. 7. Sinch Lumber Co. for Mon-| arch cock 1 ..c-e 417. i You Can’t Rub It Away; i Rheumatism is in the Blood R — tism until you Liniments Will Never Cure. | the ae qeanee Fear Boos af _ If you are afflicted with Rheuma-|S. S.'S. has never had an equal as a tism, why waste time with liniments,| blood purifier and scores of sufferers lotions and other local applications} sy that it has cleansed their blood of that never did cure Rheumatism, an.1j ie:matism, and removed all trace of crops destroyed. The law author-| Senator Drown of Page is author of a senate concurrent resolution endors- | ling the establishment of a league of | nations to/enforce peace, and to pro-| mote the liberty, progress and orderly | development of the world, copies of which, the house concurring, are to be forwarded the president. the pre- siding officers of the national senate! and house of representatives and to izes the commissioner of insurance to name a chief inspector who shall de- vote all of his time to the duties of his office, and who may have as many deputies as he may choose to name; the. commisisoner shall also have a chief clerk and assistants and a corps of adjusters in each county. In any instance where the loss as adjusted at the disposal of the emergency ‘com- ; mission, and Senate Bill 59, by Mc-| Carten, reimburses the common school fund for losses of $23,090 “re-| sulting from misappropriation of; funds previous to January 1, 1917,” | Senate Bill 69. by Mees, makes an emergency appropriation of $680 for! the attorney general's office. And last, and perhaps most import- | ant of all, is the league's “Single Tax” bili, authorizing the legislature to ex- empt from taxation all personal prop- erty of every description and to im- pose the entire burden of producing state revenues upon the land. The bil, introduced in the senate as No. [44 by the committee on taxes and tax laws, specifically exempts all public POWER ~ competition and that exactly meets the pop- sabe See oat never will? 2 the diseas i Aged Veterinarian po hek try to rub the pain auas, 2 Gal a bole oF Sk, eat yor Fe ever succeed. Tr: ! i Shoots Moorhead sensible plan of finding the chins of rue elere, "and at Oe rent bs Business Man the pain, and go after that. Remove| cial medical advice, you can obtuin it the cause, and there can be no pain.| free by addressing Kedicat Director, | (Continued trom Page One.) You will never be rid of Rheuma-|23 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. for hunting ducks. Barnes was about six feet away from his victim, stand- ing in the snow, partially concealed by a high board fence and some shrub- bery on the east, side of the house. Wounded in Arms, Too. : The lead pellets struck Otterstet- Pe ter fairly in the center of the back, 5 just above. the kidneys, and also wounded him in both arms. He may lose his right arm if he lives. He is W. Hum- j denice outh, Fargo, and was’a seamstress. Dr. ee ears ia ane base- ment...0' werside: flate?in |Fargo, were heshag 3 sottiegl, Hie has rae. ~ , OAKLAND VALVE-IN-HEAD AMERICA’S LOWEST PRICED SIX "The Getiéral Motors Co-wil jfteruse i} . ier of ene! ors. this possible. The man who is buying a car i this spring should investigate the Oakland. LALLEY LIGHT AND The dealer who wants a line without serious et By by the state deputy does not appeal North Dakota members of congress. | to the owner of damaged crops as Wants Wheat Kept Up. | fair, he may call for an aroitration| Reciting the fact that no agencies | from a board composed of three disin-| have yet been devised through which | terested parties and whose findingS|are to be carried into etiect tne} shall be final, provisions of President Wilson's proc-} May Buy State Bands. lamation of September 2, 1918, fixing izes the board school ‘lands to invest from its funds! response to the president's proclama-| in the bonds of North Dakota, in addition have gone to much expense inj} tion to the other securities already | preparing to produce a large crop of specified by the statute. The pro-| wheat in 1919, and urging congress vision that not less than one-half nor to pass measures to make the presi- more than re nirds ote aorer dent’s proclamation effective. is ss eS re OW inger. vested in mortgages on cultivated Sonate mf s ntroduend by the} farmy.lands at not to exceed half their) committee on state affairs provides| value and that no such funds shall be|that when a majority of the members| Joaned on any land worth less than! of any county board of commissioners | $10 per acre, is retained. _lor 25 tax-paying citizens shall _peti-| Senate Bill 48, introduced bY | tion the attorney general for an inves: | Church, extends the operations of the | tigation of conditions in their county, | pistercondine fant to ingoge state|the attorney general shall cause such} officers, leputies, s | n ing that the farmers of the-northwest | of university and|and of North Dakota in particular in} and | investigation to be made, the expens: clerks, and provides that they shall! es of the same to be certified by the| buy at the state's expense no other) attorney general to the county, which shall pay the same. i Senate Bill 57 appropriates $° ‘Raby Coming To Your Home! jot which $3,00 for traveling ‘ae Wonderful Event Thet Wiil Much Gladness. i pénses, to tide the railway over from January |, 1919, to June | L9L9. Senate Bill 58, by Wenstrom, would would put an end tq much litigation ‘which has grown cut of the fact that the laws of North Dakota ing the practice of dentists require a spe- cial examination from a dentist com- ing in from -another state. Wen- strom’sc bill repeals the present stat- > utes on ais subject and provides for i ; | the admission of any dentist legally Are rou looking torent dear Pree tins | Ueensed in any other state and terri: tothe, to sen. sioric when hig in reo little | tory on affidavit of'two citizens or such territory that he is a practicing, dentist of good moral character and wspectability. for the Missouri Slope Agricultural and Fair association for the ensuing biennium. For History Building. - Another senate appropriation Dill carries $120,000 for a four-story his- torical: museum and history building to be erected on the capitol grounds north of the present state house, and in whose construction the board of control-is directed to use prison-made available, the work of construction to ‘ve under the diréct supervision of the poard and the plans to be \b metes and bounds, the county aud- ae plained, is to get some revenue out of| Senate Bill 56. appropriates $5,000 school houses, academies, colleges. etc.; all land used for cemeteries; all LANDLORD HIT property, real or io pereaney: of tre state; all it DI ings, wi IN TAX BILLS | srotnds not to exceed 10,aeres; all property used exclusively forthe ac- commodation: of the poor; all’ public (Continued from Page One.) Brilliant light — reliable, steady, low cost, and abso- lutely safe—for the long winter nights in ‘the home; for ‘the’ morning and’ eve- ey on, and such part so used fs located H fon Jands which ean be described oaly| —=—$—$—_—_—_—— Buy Dividend 274 those Pavind Stock$.the greatest stock issue. tt pays * a 12% onits par value ($1.00). Alfof the net profits from present productions must be for dividends. “Dividends are payable monthly. We will mn their nancial statement, fal covering any Stock or Bond fave furnished tree. 208 Southtis Salle St, Chicege, fl. itor of the county in which such lands | are located, or the state tax commis- sion, may request such railway inj} writing to survey and plat such lands and fife such plat with the county; auditor.” Or if the railway fails to! do it, the state tax commisison or! count auditor may cause such survey | to be made and add the cost to the) tax to be levied against this property,; which shall be assessed and collected in the same manner as other real es-| tate taxes are colle , subject to the same genera] classifications, td 1 purpose of this bill, it is ex- elevators, warehouses, jobbing houses, | ete i son railway | fore have Kositzky Shorn. Then to handle all this complicat for money-getting, Senate also from the committee; | machin | bills fon tax hoard of tax comm auditor cretary and general ad- i ministrative officer. Meetings of this ard shali be held in the office of 'the tax ‘commissioner, where all rec- lords shall be kept. This board shall consist of the governor, attorney gen- eral, state auditor, and commissioner of agriculture and labor, and it shall appoint on or before the last Mon- \day in February. 1919, a tax commis- sioner for a term of six years and j whom the board may remove at any ig time, with or without cause. | Situs is Fixed. | Senate Bill 40 fixes the situs of property for purposes of taxation, de TH “4 SOUND I for all surplus funds. our ample; Capital’ and : Federal supervision: ; , ‘ § tug i At this tinge of the year when people.are receiv- ing dividends and interest, we suggest our CER- TIFICATES OF DEPOSIT as being the safest, most convenient and profitable form of investment ‘Whese Certificates are issued in large or small aniounts, eer 4% interest and are protected by ning chores‘about the barn. - Always ready, «at. the mere turn of a switch. Let us ‘demonstrate Lal- ley Electric Light and Pow- er for you. Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. D. NVESTMENT __, « Surplus, combined’ with ular demand, should write for our proposi- tion. : "The Libe Uh Corwin Motor Co. North Dakota Motor Is a Valve-in-Head Bismarck THE MAN WITH A ul SAVINGS ACCOUNT l in this strong bank is the ‘one who is prepared to take advantage of favor- able money-making op- portunities. ~ You can put. yourself in this same position by opening &n’ account with One Dollar or more and making regular additions to it. Bismarck,.ND. Gipaantrans The Oldest and Largest Bank inthis sectionof the State Your money will be in * absolute safety and will earn satisfactory inter- est. : .

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