The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1919, Page 8

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Jolumbia Phonographs Columbia Records ON EASY TERMS WHEN DESIRED COWAN’S DRUG STORE , BIG 4-RING WILD ANIMAL’ CIRCUS penne A", BISMARCK ——ONE DAY ONLY—— FRIDAY, JUNE s ere THatsD! ONLY REAL WILD ANIMAL CIRCUS ON EARTH 2 TRAINS OF CIRCUS WONDERS 600 People 600 | 550 Horses 550 EVERY ANIMAL AN ACTOR EVERY ACT AN ANIMAL ACT 1200 PERFORMING ANIMALS 1200 More Educated wild |.qa@f'> Most-sensational beasts than all q : wild animal other shows act extant combined da , + A () Oancing Horses 0 30 Lions 0 ‘ 4 Dancing ning! in One Act ‘AN ACT GORGEOUS iv, Barnes offers as an added feature this season The Fairyland Fantasy “Alice in Jungleland” j dcintillating Two Mile Open Den Street Parade 10:30 a. m. Performances 2 and 6 p. m. Doors Open! and 7 p. m. COME EARLY There Is plenty to amuse and Instruct. One hour concert before each performance by Barnes’ 40-Place Matine Service Band TRIBUNE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS TOWNLEY LOSES IN COUNTRY AND GAINS IN CITY Many of the State’s More Sub- stantial Farmers Begin to Reckon Cost LABOR SUPPORT SOUGHT Chief of Nonpartisan Hopes to Sway Wage Earners Thru Federation That President A, C. Townley is losing ground in the country and gaining it in the city. is the contea- tion of shrewc observors who are making a study of the referendum contest now be:ng wagec in North ‘Dakota to determine ‘at a special election Thursday the fate of two important league bills, one of which creates an industrial commission to manage all state-owned utilities and enterprises, and the other establish- ing the Bank of North Dakota. Farmers, it is sald, epecially the larger property owner, have begun to look askance at the league’s indust- tively large amount of capital, to be furnished through state bond issues, which is involved. There will be, it is claimed, a marked decline in sup- . | Port of the league upon the part of the more substantial land owner. Upon the other hand, the tenant- farmer, who is principally benefitted, it is said, by the league taxation pro- gram, is standing pat, and city wage- earners are displaying an increasing interest in the pledges which “Mr. Townley is making them. Townley’s Dream. The dream of President Townley has been to unite the farmer and the wage-earner, the two largest classes in America. His effort to organize North Dakota farms as a glosed shop, through a working agreement with the agricultural workers’ division of the Industrial Workers of the World was a step in this direction. That attempt, made in 1917, resulted in complete failure. The farmers ob- fected to union wages and _ union hours; declined to be “dictated to by their hired hands,” 4nd flatly reject- ed the proposal, as presented to them by President Townley; Governor Frazier and Commissioner of Agricul- rial program because of the compara-|° . BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNB TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1919. places on the league's legislative ticket, and a labor man was elected to one state “office, that of railway commissioner. May Play Leading Role. Organized labor, which has not up to this time been a great factor in North Dakota politics, promises to play an important part in the refer- endum election as a result of its es- pousal of the-Townley cause. While league organs in this state have not been in accord. with the attitude tak- en-by President Gompers and the American, federation toward the Winnipeg ‘strike and other recent de- velopments, an entente cordiale has been established with the state feder- ation, which endorsed the league's in- dustrial ‘program at the recent Minot convenf#jon. Numerically, organized labor does’ not compare with the farm- ing element in North Dakota, but if The P as ROBABLY no existing in- dustry serves such a useful urpose in so many ways e automobile industry, the desertions:in the rural sections are relatively ‘few, any considerable gain in labor. support at the polls may decide the issue June 26. Five Other Measures. In addition to the’ two league bills; re pe Die bar Sere Me narety il We Unusual of Ge ual to Butter for cooking—Better than ive Oil for salads, at either. Better, more Wholesome and Economica] than ard Use one-fourth to one-third less Mazola for shortening than butter or lard. in frying, use Mazola over and over again to the h. we 1 aay | H a Sm im i y \j \ LN é | Economy the price of or compounds, drop—it never absorbs odors or flavors. Wonderful Cook Book. , Write today for it. CORN PRODUCTS:REFINING CO., P.O. Bex 161, New York NATIONAL ‘Al x STARCH count for ten thousand; there is a silent vote of ten thousand which was not recorded on any of the league Program amendments last fall, . and there are probably 40,000 electors who are solidly opposed to the league pro- gram. This would leave a margin of 10,000 for the returned soldier vote. ADJUDGED INSANE. St. Paul, June 24.—Dr. Arthur J. Gravelle, charged with murder as the result of the death of his wife two weeks ago from gunshot wounds said to have been inflicted by ‘her hus- MTT ' 300,000 Maxwells; they CO. Sales Representatives St. Pi i SUFFER FROM CATARRH But You Must Drive It Out of |To be rid of Catarrh, you must Your Blood. drive the disease gerias out of your Catarrh — is blood: : Splendid results have been re- ported from the use of S. S.-S, which completely routs from your blood the Catarrh germs, for which it is a perfect antidote. . If you wish medical advice as to the treatment of your own indi- vidual case, write to Chief Medical Adviser, 42 Swift Specific Co. At- Janta. Ga, aa annoying enough when it chokes up your nostrils and air -passages, Sausing difficult breathing and other discomforts, Real danger comes when it reaches down into your lungs. This is why you should at once realize the importance of the prop- er treatment, and lose no time ex- perimenting with worthless reme- dies which touch only the surface. ~ =z Guardian Life Bidg, Mina, SSSA mT Ne ey. DB SAMA Wien aT ae hit Ds fli i ed ture and Labor John N. Hagan.| vary. Some insist it will be, very| band, was declared insane today by| th \ Townley was not discouraged, how-| large; others are confident \it ‘will be] a committee of physicians. He. wae’ ager pres ftaeraeion peat i ever, and, after flirting with the I. W.) small. It is doubtful, however,| ordered committed to the asylum for| charge of murder. . er W, ‘he turned his attention to the] whether the total number of ballots ‘ state federation of labor, from which} will exceed 110,000. Of this number, he secured ‘an endorsement of the! 40,000 may be assigned the league as league program. In the last election] members who have remained more or YOU NEED NOT } several labor candidates were given|less loyal. Organized labor may ac- rs i had such Standard Oil Company (Indiana) and the Automobile Industry increasin he got it, This is a and certainly no industry has in proportions. oe. Such an increase would have been impossible of accomplish- ment if a market for moderate priced cars had not been found and without the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) it would have been impossible to find this market. When only the rich cou'd af- ford an automobile the Stand-. ard ‘Oil Company (Indiana) had the vision of most every- one driving his own machine. The Company set out, not to find a way to make gasoline prices higher, but to keep them low in the face of the enormous demands made by the automobilists, which in the average industry would have caused abnor- mal increases in price. The efficiency of the Standard Oil — Company in making a constantly has kept down'the price of gasoline and enabled the man of modest means to run-an automobile after The Standard Oil Company not only makes gasoline to sell at a low - price, but to fit the requirements of the modern automobile engine in such a manner as to enable the owner to get out of his car all that the manufacturer designed it to produce. usefulness of the Standard Oil Com- pany not only in contributing to the success of other industries, but in discharging its obligation as a public servant so that all may benefit from its efficiency and by its operations. ee Standard Oil Company 910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL a meteoric increase number of by-products salient example of the there will be votéd upon June 26 five other measures Which were not in- cluded in the ledgue program which the’ farmers approved last November, but which: President Townley spon- sored during the last legislative as- sembly: These are the judicial re- districting. bill, reducing the number of districts from twelve to six and the number of judges from twelve to fifteen, the three new magistrates to be named by the. governor; the print- ing bill, abolishing two official news- papers in: each county and providing that the solitary survivor shall be se- lected by a printing commission of three Nonpartisan office holders; the immigration bill, approximating $200- 000 to be expended in advertising North Dakota; the tax commission pill, reducing the membership from three to one, and the board of admin- istration. bill, which abolishes the board of education, board of regents and board of control, and places the administration of public schools, higher institutions @f learning and penal and charitable institutions .in the hands of a commission of five, three of “whose members are to be selected by the. governor. * Polls OpenFrom 9 to 9. Under the new election law the polls will open. at 9 a. m. and remain open. until 9 p. m., Thursday. This is expected to be inducive to a large rural vote, as it will enable farmers to dispose of their work during the daytime and get to the polls before they close in the evening. Opinions as to the size of the vote generally ‘Chevrolet, Hupmobile and Hudson Motor Cars Smith Form-a-Trucks and Tractors Kelly-Springfield and Pennsylvania Tires (Indiana) Prest-o-Lite Batteries and Parts ACCESSORIES NOTICE——— We have on hand a few used cars which we will sell at reduced prices in order to have a clean slate for our semi-annual inven- tory July 1, Some real bargains. MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR COMPANY Bismarck; N. D. grow better as their numbers multiply IKE” an artist who paints a picture, or aman iti’ business, the Maxwell improves with each day’s output. Gradual, almost invisible to the man at the forge or in the accounting office but certain as the rising of the sun, there’s.an improvement well nigh daily. There. have been five years of making this Maxwell better and better, and the basic design has never changed once in that time. At one time the Maxwell was known only asa hill-climber. Again it gained attention through its work in rough country. Then it earned a reputa- tion on economy. But gradually it became better and better spoken of for its enduring, everlasting reliability. . That kind of reliability that doesn’t burn your pocketbook with repair bills, that knows no task too difficult, that never complains of old age, that gives "you about as mich trouble as a pair of shoes, that travels on a very small gas appetite. 300,000 of them are in use throughout the world. In those sections of the world where few cars make good, there you will find the Maxwell—often the dominating car. The 300,000th Maxwell is the same basic car as _ Maxwell No. 1. No changes in design—but many. improvements. -There’s no doubt it’s a better car today. Nearly 300,000 of one model has its obvious effects, feu More miles per gallex More miles os tres WESTERN SALES CO. H. C. BRADLEY, Mer. —and— Bismarck Mandan

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