The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 3, 1919, Page 3

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NORTH DAKOTA 4 iz THURSDAY; APRID:3, 1919. “TOO OLD TO MARRY,” SAYS 87; BISMARCK: DAILY. TRIBUNE: RUBBER PLANT N eS Dede COULDN’T MAKE BRIDE, 18, HAPPY |4\ OWES $150,000; | | FOR BISMARCK? |. $9,369 ON HAND! | MIS POSSIBLE 3 State Auditor’ ‘Kositzky «Fears |trend of Tine Business West- Waist-Seam Suits, single and doublé-breast- - fF f * holding up .cettain bills’ through Some Officials Must Go Without Salaries ASSEMBLY MADE BIG DENS : : i Set Aside Almgst Half-Million in| Emergency Appropriations How Money Went With $150,000 in unpaid bills. ‘on file, and with but, $9,369.73 in the state treasury’s general fund on April 1,’State Auditor Carl Kositzky, stung! to-action by criticism of his opponents | wtiin the league who have, it is al-| leged, spread the report that he is | Ward Brings Hope of New Industry Here | CAPITAL . IS INTERESTED Prominent Financiers Have Been in ‘City Looking, Over Advantages d \ © A rubber tire plant for Bismarck | is one ‘of the possibilities which the reconstruction’ period holds in store for the capital city. Representatives | of eastern capital have been here dui-; ing the past two days looking over the | advantages this location offers. They are satisfied that ‘the cheap lignite fuel which abounds in this region, the ed, many variations. Business Suits, new. Worsteds, Tweeds, Cheviots, for every fig- ure. If there is anything new “Bergesons” have it. Value : . Ours are the best values money can buy from’ the finest ies 4 makers of ready-to-wear clothes. The big thing‘is the-part: you can’t see; the tailoring inside; the interlinings; the wool fabrics. Those things give you the wear—the service. am “spite,” today made public a report’ which would indicate that North Da- transportation facilities and geo- kota is a trifle worse than bankrupt. graphical situation of Bismarck will ? * 8 : __ | commend this cit¥:as a site. : How, the’ Moneys Went y Mr. and Mrs, Jam) ried life and Hart went home to his! \ ‘Tire and teen en: are ‘doing bus- April 1, 1916, the last year of the|es Hervey Hart ‘ Gaughter. 4 : , .°}imess under a neW creed,'a new dec- arle Hanna administration, North Dakota,| New York—“I was too old-to mar-| —Wifie brought suit for separation.|jaration of independence, and in the after paying all its bills, had ‘a $522,-|ry,” wailed James Hervey Hart, aged | Hart filed a counter-suit for annul-} making of that ’”’ declaration cities i : s 090.43 balance in its geheral fund. 87,-after fyur weeks as husband of a! ment of the marriage. “| throughout the West are vying for = %: ‘ pril 1, 1917, when the Townley re- girl of 18." ee s Testimony brought gut that he had |honors as the Jeading-role performen, Representing three of the best makers as we do we give you ‘ime had been in the s: le only three} But the colirt couldn’t see it that) promised to’! settle | on the! Henceforth Aierican rubber manu- en «, Cee 6 My hhonth, the balance jin the general way, and Hart will have to stick to; bride and make her life-a “paradise | facturers can ‘crook their fingers with the results of their efforts in’style creations, . (cams ‘un fter’ all bills were paid, was|his bargain. on-earth.” a ‘ impunity at the former importers’ ilori $401,282.82 wo "ema aod bride was a manicure girl The} Hart found the sdeond Hart of the| monopoly: ‘There'll-be no Klek ack tailoring and patterns. ‘April'l, 1918)-the second year of the| wedding took place two weeks after | compact the hardest to fulfil. from the monopolists. The monopol; : ; poly HAND PRESSING Townley. administration, North Da- kota-had all of its bills paid and $242,5 877.79 in its general fund. \ April 1,.1919, in the third ‘year of tlie Townley era, North Dakota, owed $150,000 in current indebtedness, and it hada balance in its general fund of $9,369.73. The official payroll is~ $38,000 per, month. Salaries have been paid up to April 4, but the state auditor ex- presses the fear that officials ‘and em- ployes may bé forced to. eschew their semi-monthly pay checks for some} months to come. North Dakota has $463,000 out- standing in bonds, some of which fall due this year. the couple met. Four weeks of mar- RRA ARRARAR AS the farmers’, movement. readily ‘sa vied.’ “Because of boasts eminating from office to Dreak, pretty: soon,’ state offiicals and have been daily expecting the Independent; iation or other agents of | Langer’s Attorney General big is going that. ‘something friends of' the administration Voters’ the outs’ le interests fighting the ac of the legislature to spring this at- tack, Mere Scrap’ of Paper “Lawyers here feel that the case as outlined in newspaper accounts not ‘worth the paper it is written on. Hart is a retired jeweler, publicity stunt its. backers are due for a second disappointment, for it became kfiown here tonight that the industrial commission against. whom the action is primarily directed will not trust the attorney general with this. matter-any: more than they have done in connection with the bank of North Dakota but will hire, an attor- ney to represent it _It is ‘also possible that the Nonpartisan league, repre- senting a membership-of over 50,000 farmers and the majority of the vot- ers which made possible the program now attacked may ask to be allowed is_all in. It’s a‘“has heen” And there'd about as much danger of. its “coming back” as\there is of the former crown prince of’ Germany run- ning for president on the prohibition ticket. War did the same thing for the monopoly that it did for the Hoh- enzollerns. Freedom’ of manufacturers from the clique of importérs who for moré than @ generation’ have monopolized the. raw rubber trade of the world will mean that Pacifi¢ ports are to main- tain their status—gained during the war—as.the ports of entry of 75 per cent of the raw rubber output of the world, It means that a fleet of rub- ing when William Hohenzollern gave up the job of war making and kaiser- ing to devote more time to whiskers and solitude of the sawbuck. CUSTOM TAILORING EXPERT REPAIRING S.E-BERsesON & SON a) — Pam Wc Hirsi, Wickwirz Co! These were the conditions prevail- With the signing of the armistice at Belgrade’ was to intervene. ‘ber boats will ply regularly between Pacific ports and the rubber zone of the importation ban on raw rubber was lifted. And with the approach the Kragarovitch dynasty had been overthrown and a republic proclaimed issued today by a DRY CLEANING ~* venes, “Ttalian propaganda.” delegation of Serbs, Corates and Slo he report is characterized as HAnenduessennnsnnenunouenccodyevennencenenneneenueneaueaeaty tugs, “While officials here have been ex- pectant of this move they did not look for such a crude piece of work. It is the general opinion that every point raised in the complaint is a matter for the state. courts and not | the tropics; that a strip of raw rub- ‘ber will stretch—in box cars—daily from the Pacific to the Atlantic. ~ $700,000 Was Overdue For nearly four months $700,000 in bills charged against various state in- of peace the New York-London im- porting monopoly looked over what was left of its once famous rubber . +» REPLACING LENSES ony ~- there remains_a considerable amount _ "due from the ‘counties, and that/there . are paid in February,” said Mr., Ko- stitutions remained unpaid. State institutions, says the auditor, are still, according to the statement df. Secretary Leissman of the board of} regents; paying $300 interest monthly on‘doans negoviated with local banks \ state treasury and appropriated, de- clires--Mr- Kositzky. He states that will algo be some miscellaneous col- lections' in. June and July and some revenue from the new oil tax, which became effective March 1, but“-he sees no hope of reallyicatching up with the state’s fast mounting tide of expendi- tures ‘until the21919 tax levy begins to come in next December. “The greater, portion of our taxes sitzky‘today. ‘‘This tax has been tak- en~in and applied on: past due, bills, $700,000 of which had been running for almost four months. ~We ‘will get some delinquent tgxes“from now on; there“will be some revenue from fees and fines, it is diffieult to estimate how. much, I-cannot see, however, where we are going to get enough money to pay salaries and current. ex- penses, and oné or the other will have to wait. , a. Forced to Defend Self ing the report over the state that I am. holding ‘ap*certain bills simply Ahrough spite.. Ihave never, operated this office on a spite’basis, and I don’t should“have the truth. the counts on replaced ‘as attorney for' the. bank’ of: North Dakota. \ iS Easy for Vanger | “In view \of the geenral attitude which stamps the whole affair as.a} farce_it was ;believed in political) circles here tonight >that the purpose | of the Independent Voters’ assacia- tion and ‘others opposed to the farm- ers’» program, involving even the attorney geenral himself, is to set a stage on which Langer can come out] 15 Culls and common $6.75 to 12. as a defender and cHampion of the| ague cause and win-himself. back) into /the good graces of the member-| ship by winning a ‘soft’ legal victory | for the farmers, since ordinarily he would be called upon to defend that | state in such an action in the federal courts. ~ Those who are familiar with the recent turn of events readily link this up with the fact that the kept press is already beginning to herald Langer as a hero. In today’s issues the same papers that called him a dub and\ abused him when ~he ostensibly d railroad administration... As’a matter of fact, which these papers knew, in the Jatter instance Langer did not par- ticipate in the least’ in the railroad eut to The It was believed that the gang would lat least attempt to raise some federal question in taking their action to a federal court. Well informed men de- jclare that not one of the three counts raised has any place in the federal Rubber manufacturers of the east and west already are rushing their representatives to Singapore—‘Tne Rubber Capital of ‘the World.” Some have gone so far as to purchase rub- ber plantations in, the equatorial re- fleet. brand new “vessels coast yards‘and flying the Stars and Stripes, what the U-boats had spared |= of the old time rubber bottoms made pitiful showing. Contrasted with a real tleet of ‘built. in Pacif Bulk of sales 1 to 20.20." Light weight $19.60 to 20.25. Sows $17.73 Pigs 17.75 to’ Cattle receipts strong. Heavy béet steers, Butchers 8.40 to Veal calves $15 5. “11,000; steady to $11.50 to 12.40. 75. 75. to 15.50. Stockers and feeders $8.25 to 15.50. wes medium and good $12.25 to 5. §T. PAUL LIVESTOCK. St. $19.5) Minn., April 3—Hogs/ nearly all of the raw product to Eng- 5; bulk $19.60 to 1965 Cattle 5,000 killers steady, 25 cents lower, steers $6 to 19. Cows and heifers $5.00 to 14.00. Stockers and feeders. best steady, others weak and slow, $5.50 to 15 50. Lambs $12.00 to 19.00 , Weathers $14.00 to 1 Ewes $5.0 Oto 14.00. — MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN. ‘Minneapolis, Minn., April receipts “178. cars Compared with 127 heat through Pacific ports. Among those en route to Singapore, is a raw rudber expert from the Gates Rubber Co. of Denver, who, in addition to shipping thfough Pacific ports 90 per cént of the.rubber manufactured west of the { Mississippi river, will advise his Den- ver house as to the practicability of purchasing several plantations now owned by Briton: y , New York and Lon-! don shipping interests, operating in conjunction with’ English capital i who owned virtually all of the rub-| ber plantations of the world, shipped | land, whence it was transshipped to the United States lus the New York-London importing and shipping | monopoly caught the American manu- facturer’ coming and going. Uncle Sam’s rubber-industry had to pay the freight from plantations of the Malay | Peninsula, Asia, Ceylon, Brazil ‘and jthe East lidiés to England. It was “stung” again for. the re-haul back across the Atlantic before and after tle raw rubber began drifting into the United States by way of Pacific ports. And by the time America sat in on when Singapore brokers were offer- jtrucks phone Wachter |.der a monopoly as old as ‘the rubber |5 industry. 0 Forty per cent of thd tiresconsumed in the United States: are used’ west of the Mississippi river, because forty per cent of the automobiles dre in that region. aturally,.cubber manu- facturers are asking: “Why then should not tires be ,manufactured in} the territory in which they are used?” “If the raw material comes to Amer- ica through Pacific ports. who should the western consumers of that mater- ial—the tire users—go to Boston, Mass., or to Akron, Ohi, to buy their finished products?” Upon the continued development of this industry in the west depends the permanency of Pacific ports as the ports of entry of thousands of tons of raw rubber annually. The success of the Gates Rubber Co. of Denver, the Savage Rubber Co. of San Diego, and other western com- panies less widely known proves not only that Pacific ports may retain their “rubber prestige, but that the 310 Main size, 2 for 35e value For moving vans or 10c value jauuenaneneoanenvcunt Quaker Oats, small | Oatmeal, large gize, eNUnqUNNUEORONONE When brokeri glasses reach us by mail we try to get them back on the next train. We keep:a record of all our own prescriptions and a piece of broken lens is al] we need if Home of Quality Groceries and Meats NEW SHIPMENT Phone 60 Soup, Beef or Chicken, 15c value eae 10c . 20c Sweet Baby Beets, 30¢ value fended the validity of ‘the constitu-|} yy; i oF] f: . * “ t tate- i Minneapolis, Minn.‘ April 3.—¥lour | manufacture. ‘ z ’ e t F H Mince 5 1 ee ee ett the “state, auditor, | onal amendments a few montis 969) unchanged. jue) Mat when Hun subs dbclared an op ee eee eer dine |B quality, 10s value. 1... DOC | Meat, 200 value 15¢ ). “if i€ had not come to my ears that pisieed li Ni ing fa ere Hegel * Barley 1't6 1:10. \ Sarbod to, Supp ng and aone Bull] ond other rubber products xe ee 7 1 SOLAR i 2 eH a ry<n Cs 38. started to tighten up on all cargoeg; ~ : paid workers of the league are spread-| the gipreme court. over the federal Brent. except food aid war necessities, at Quality Macatoni, Sunmaid Seedless Raisins, 20c value .. _15¢ : cs y f i 4 a year ago; casa No. 1 northern $2,43|the war game every ounce of rubber y jatend te peer NR ly c bills bios aa Ae Al we preparation ane a -to 2.50; corn N, ‘3 yellow 157 to 158;\ entering this country came in throug —62,, ds _ ‘ f “find money’ to pay them, and they are | Packard. Th, the vanfendments case | US 2) 2 82 ST ted* however, ‘bythe rovenment’s| REPORTS OF SERB Droniedary Dates and Figs—-Grape Marmalade se ‘Being baie in OG pt ed ea ‘9. | Langer’s only activity was to read a For moving Vans OY {cargo conservation measures. Also, : . being digtriminated against. S% T feel br fore the court which one =| truck: hone. Wachter ‘as a further conservative mneasure, the TROUBLE. CHARGED FINEST QUALITY MEATS AND SAUSAGE, aes Lie % ‘ diministrati fixed ri ft 6: ry be that ingjustice to myself the :people Tug PS <|eents a pound on raw rubber atatime| TO TH & , ITALIANS AT ALL TIMES g » “We have gone on creating new “Should the affair t —§2. ‘Washington, D. C.,'April 3—A form e awe GUSSNER’S irc nt.) Was asked tq rest court withopt first, having gone thru] gions of th English ca fi e glasses were fitted elsewhere. produce ¥ ids: to te vuhele curee| commission from issuing bonds was | the state's dudicial machinery.” pe have He eae ad URE Americans started to buy, and with|= th gas % f i Let us keep your \- The last' legislative assembly. in|2M echo of, the rumor circulated by path eed ae these plantations, as well as on. the| Simgapore docks creaking under the)= glasses in repair and make‘ your jnew ones. emergenty.-apprepriutions called for Frank, E.” Packard,, assistant and) ti hic ea wild rubber forests, and prior ‘to the weight of tons of rubber sheet the/= S Mees : Agile ta saan : about i half-millica which- must come | Chief political adviser’ to’ Langer, to |4—-—~.—_~____________ | war the world’s supply of rubber had market developed into a regular bar-|3 —reaentte onesie meee eT ae froin the general funu. Some of these the effect, that the bond acts provided} MARKETS | to pass through London, even while gain sale. There were no British ships |= nds’ already have been drawn| constitutional’ means of ‘retiring |.) America was producing 75 per cent of |2Vailable to erry this gum to Inne BONHAM BROS. inind oP gainet, but there is much more ‘that | tMe bonds, for which action Backsta |e | the world’s ‘outpat‘ptrubber goods. | 22d." Thete were plentyot ‘American J i must be set aside. and his chief were called-to account by; —_.. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. Now, agents of American manufac-| Pottoms ready to transportit to Amer- Jewelers : = -A-majority of the tax levied for |}% dat ree ‘ASE! 26,000, low and weak. « | already stationed at the-Rubber Cap- 7 y ie i ist i ji: ‘ 2 1998 already, haé been paid into the | Week. ‘This resulted in Langer’s being’), to 65c higher. \ * ital have instructions to ship direct ein toneiees ia teen Lea Prtometrist ® Charge, of ‘This Dept = ununucarunduesvavncetouenananeysnianaiT 4 rity ———- ing it at 25 cents a pound without a , Seuucteertte and ew, bards avd pe bid for the enormous stores on hand.|al denial of reports from Romie that} \ : fil U ‘ ed our revenues. Now there must be SSS D ? 8 a@ halt, and: someone must patter: There’s pnly one means of, putting money into.the state treasury and that through ‘taxes, fees or fines. We have discovered, too many ways of taking money out) of the ‘state treas- ury.' The last ly alone ~voted almost $500,000 in emergency appro- priations, all/ofwhich come out of the general fond.” «+ x ar no Ee : For moving vans or trucks phone Wachter STATE INDUSTRY + BOARD PICKING - OUT BANK SITE|{] ah SApeaee/- (Continued from! Page One.) other members of the administration will adopt the same attitude. e WOULD FREEZE LANGER OUT; “TOWNLEY. EXPRESSES VIEWS The Courier-News,, Townley’s daily organ at Fargo, this. morning carries under a Bismarck date-line,, evidently |? ifispired by President Townley him- self, the following story: > ““If. thesintentién of, the= political gangsters invasking the f court to-halt North Dakota’s chosen indus- ‘men chai ‘with cayrying it out the attempt failed to by. While*the merits behind the injunctional pro- ceedings were met here with ridicule and laughter, the full purpose of the ee \ Anierican-Mutwat : = ee Mary Miles “Mi ie Who stars tonight at.tne Orpheum: theatre in “Rogerhary limbs the Heights”. a picture’ containing every- thing required to suit~a mixed “Ameri- can audience, from baby to grandma. This program -will be shown ‘tonight 1 ‘ z a = =u MU TT - Greetings to es nae. ‘Spring! We are ready with a Spring line of merchandisé that is extremely attractive in quality and price. Here.are a few of the items. Come in and _ see these and others. 6 d Mey at Our Spring line of Children’s Hatsare the best we have had for years, and our. stock:the: largest -in town. W.: also earry a line of Ladi es’ Hats, Hat-Shapes, KN 4 " ~ Frames, Braid, Ribbon, Flowers and Hat Wire. See our large assortment of Children’s Wash Dresses. j We will guarantee our. prices to be the lowest. For several reasons, we can not advertise prices. All we ask oi and small profits. i Wire Hat | is that you look at other lines, and then come to the 5.& 10c Store for real bargains. Our- motte: Quick sales ~

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