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"ALGOHOL~3 PER GENT. | ANegetabe Reparations similating theFoed by Regula fing the Stomachs and Bowels INFANTS tion, | Thereby Promoting Dies | chen m, | Sinera vor NARCOTIC Lcabeabesennein it ‘ 1 A rn Remedy § f F constipation and Diarrhoea, and Feverishness 2 Loss OF SUEER of resufting therefrom: in nths old Qcents ae “At 6imo ga eses a Exact Copy of Wrapper. ASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature “In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. TOWNLEY’S THROTTLING GRIP ON DAKOTA SHOWN IN SPEECH BY LANGER (Continued From Page One) Mr. Langer then outlined the fight that was continued on Miss Nielson, even after she had taken her office. how she was humiliated and shame: in the district court here by Mac- donald’s league Jawyers. and how finally Judge W. -IL. Nuessle, within five minutes: after the close of argu- ments said, “I find that, Mr. Mac- donald’ has not a sliadow of claim to fit; it means a precise fit— ; a frictionless fit—or no sale. YOUR EASTER SUIT The Spring materials for ROYAL TAILORED suits are ready for your selec- tion. Better drop in now. OYAL TAILORING does R= mean an approximate There is no haphazardism about | making a ROYAL TAILORED | suit or overcoat. The garment is cut, with scien- | tific exactness, to the definite | outlines of the body. Perfect fit is the secret of style and service. You can have it. in a ROYAL| TAILORED suit. EAGLE TAILORING AND HAT WORKS Opposite Postoffice Authorized Resident Dealer Bet f THE ROYAL TAILORS | | CHICAGO — NEW YORY lone yote. insult to the people of this state, Niel 4 j the offic which belongs entitely to | Miss Nielson.” TOWNLEY LIED “During the period.” continued Mr. Tanger, “Townley went up and dow | the state and told the voters that ‘the board of administration bill would lg give M Nielson more powers than ; | she had before. When Mr. Town- | ley 1 that he delilrately lied Theybill he was referring to was not the board of administration bin- at all, but another senate bill, “After the board of administration was brought into being, the first thing Governor Frazier did was to ignore the hundreds of men qualified to be members of that board by @#heir as- sociation with institutions ‘of learning and appoint such men as the twice unfrocked minister, George H. Tot- ten, Sr.,.as chairman of the board and WiJliam Lemke’s brother-in-law as one of the members and Pat Casey as the third. These men with John Hagen, secretary of agriculture, gave Town- ley four votes and Miss Nielson one And to cap the supreme Macdonald was mide official advisor to the board at $3,000 a wife given a position at ~ FINANCES CAUS SPLI T “Un to this time, Townley. called jme Til, Bat a great fineneiay afta cuussd our split, Thomas Allen - Hastings, the mightiest iciers in any Jand, were the direct Tonnies dawnfall from grace in The ‘attorney general then outlined how Box and Hastings went around the country organizing banks yhder Townley ‘coutrol ge comnissions of 000; $5,000; mM). for their efor Tn a humorous yein, Mr. Lun- ser showed how Box and Hastings dropped Porter Kimball from their bank organization because they wanted to retain a larger share of the profits, Kimball, Mr. Langer said, was made a coal baron, + From this point on, Mr. Langer con- fined himself to the fiye subjects which he challenged Townley to debute. Plunging into the details of the Valley City bank deal he ed the manner in which Box and tings operated, | the Lice Lice. mitesand vermin are big causes of poultry loss. Rid your flock of tice. keep hens ~ laying. Kill the jice and ver- min quickly with Dr. LeGear's Lice Killer a sifting and dusting powder guaranteed to exterminate lice and vermin quickly and easily. Always use it at set- ting and chick time, and safe-\ guard your chicks. Get acan from your dealer. Dr.L.D. LeGear Medicine Co. St Louis Mo Dr. L. D. LeGear’s Remedies are sold in Bismarck, N. D., by OSCAR H. WILL & CO. 322-24 Fourth St. how in less than a week these two Townley lienchmen had sold 3200, 000 worth of bank stock and collected $20. 000 for the week’s work, how § in cash in the bank soon turned inte 3 100 in questionable securties, how it represented that the America National bank was bought. for oa 000 when the real pr was S146.000 and how Box ang Hastings then de- mped té Florida to work for the U al trust “to make bindery twine North Dakota farm for { WATERS STICK ; ‘Jim Waters then sent out a state- ment oyer\ his own~signature sayipg that there was uothing dishonest. or crooked inthis deal, “and whep Tremor and told him he knew ts was untrue, Jim Waters said to me, ‘Well, we fellows have to stick together.’ This salleygwas greeted with a storm of applause, The attorney genera] then launched into the Scandinavian-American bank expose and brought a gale of laugh- ter from the audience. when he ex plained the true meaning of examiner first notifying a bank that an examination of that institution's books would be made in a day or two. “Now take for instance.” said Mr. Langer, “that your sheriff here, Rolin Welch, knew there-was some bootleg booze-in theehome of Bill Prater and {he said to Bill, ‘Prater yoif have some booze in your home. I am going: to] raid it tomorrow morning at 9 0’ yelock. Shoot all your liquor to Ed Pattér- {son until after | have made my raid.’ ; ‘Then when the deputy had finished his raid and found everything was satisfactory at Bill's house, Prater would go to Patterson and get this hooze—if there were any left—and take it back to Bill’s house and keep on running a blind pik. LOFTHUS DEEPLY. RED ue in effect is what the R. M. Halliday’ shoot-it-to-the-other-banks let- ter really meant. With a situation like that confronting the attorney general’s department was it any won- der that we had to act secretly. Be | fore, letting O. E. Lofthus, the state bank examiner do any investigation I first searched his record and found that he had run/for ‘governor in Min- ;hesota on the socialist ticket; that he {ran for treasurer in North Dakota on | the socialist ticket, and that shortly latter the police were looking for Bill Haywood in connection with the kill- “ling of the governor of Idaho, Lofthus }° was entertaining him here right in North Dakota.” Mr. Langer then recounted how the | Scandinaviah-American. bank had ex- feeded its legal loaning limit of $9,000 by granting huge’loans to league enter- prises and how some of the bank of- ficials and’ one director of the in- stitution had made loans in their own favors contrary to the state banking laws, “Governor - Frazier’s own deputy bank examiner found the facts from the bank’s books.” said Mr. Langer. “Governor Frazier pensively inquires why I"did not wait before ‘raiding the bank’ He knows that the deputy examiner's repart stated that the bank was insolvent at that time and that if I had given the officials two or three weeks to straighten up the bank’s affairs, I would be criminally guilty of permitting a bank: to operate and do business when I knew it was insolvent. IS RETRACTING “Some people are asking me why I am going around the state making speeches, My answer is that the legis- lature wanted me to make a public retraction of some* of ‘the. charges 1 have made against Townleyism and as I do not control any newspapers like Mr. Townley doés, I have to' go out and meet the vot face to face and make my retractions.”. Mr. Langer unsparingly attacked J. R. Waters, manager of the Bank of North Dakota and former bank ex- aminer and closed his address -with a histroy of ‘the organizatfon of the league proving that it was undemo- cratie and that Townley was the su- preme ruler without any responsibility, either direct or implied. Victor Anderson, of Still, introduced the attorney’ general in a few well choosen w Seated on the plat- form with Mr. Langer were Thomas Hal, insurgent secretarf of state; Cari Kositzky,| insurgent state auditor, and Mr. Anderson. BISMARCK TASTES DEFEAT AT HANDS OF ANCIENT FOE Dickinson Romps Home in Easy Fashion in Basketball Contest The Bismarck high school basket- ball team was defeated last night at | Dickinson by the team of that city by | q score of 25 to 10. The cause of the locals’ defert was due mainly to the stellar playing of Brodie who shot six field baskets in the second-half. At the end of the first half the score was tied 8 to § with Bismarck more j than holding its own. | Dickinson | started the scoring, but in the first ten minutes of this half Bismarck rolled up.6 points. A slippery floor handicap- ped the B. H.'S. basket ‘tossers and by the end of the halt, Dickinson, had tied the score. In the second half, Bismarck only scored two fouls while\Brodie scored thrde baskets from difficult angles. Kiimer, who played his first game ot the season, was taken out in this ‘half and Cook, who has been out of the} game for several weeks because of 2 bad knee, took his place. - Bath men played a remarkably good game con- sidering their lack of practice this season, TOURNAMENT * The basketball tournament for the southwestern district will start next Friday night at Mandan and will con- tinue. the following night. Bismarck for the titular honors for this district. | Mandan and Steele, with possibly Bow- ! man and Hettinger willbe the other ' teams in the tournament. The scoring for the locals was done é a bank] | and Dickinson are the real contenders 4 [END OF Blea YEARS BiSERY Used Lydian“ EP E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Recovered, Newark, N, J.—*The doctor said I had an organic trouble and treated me for several weeks. At times I could not walk at all and I suffered with m back and limbs so. often had to stay in a bed. I suffered of and on for eigh y ears. Finally eard that Lydia et Pinkham’s Ve ge- table Compound was @ good medicine and tried it with splen- T ¢an now do my, house; wor! yay. washing... I have recom- mended hee Ve; eget le Compound and your Blood icine and three of my friends are taking them to advanta; You can uae my name for a testimoni: —Mrs. THERESA CovENTRY, 75 Burnett St., Newark, N. cs You are invited to write for free Advice No other medicine has been so suc- cessful in relleving woman’s suffering as has Lydia E..Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Women may receive free and helpful advice by writing the i dia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received and answered by women only and held in strict confidence. by Taylor, Kilmer and Holta, who each got a field basket, and Boise who shot four, fouls out of six attempts. RECORD Bismarck’s record this season is as folows ; Bismarck 59, Washburn 7. Bismarck 21, Mandan 15 Bismarck 38. Alumni Bismarck 32, Ashley 20. Bismarck 19. Jamestown 18, Bismarck 12, Fargo 8. Bismarck 14, Dickinson 13. Bismarck 23, Mandan 13. simply. prodigious. “Teachers Criminals Holland is Still European View America ing to one of the President’s physicians. Bismarck 15, Jamestown- 17- Bismarck 14, Carrington Bismarck 20, Casselton 22. Bismarck 13, Fargo 21. Bismarck 10, DickInson Bismarck has.only lost four aut of thirteen gamgs and with the exceptian of the Jamestown -second game tied the score in the first half in the games it suffered defeats., The exception was 11 to 10 in favor of Jamestown at te end of the palt. WAHPETON WANTS TO GO THE LIMIT While Hillsboro in’ the reorgani- zation of Co. L of the old’ Fighting { First North Dakota, is first over the top with a minimum strength of 10 men, Wahpeton, the home of old I, apparently isn’t going to be satis- fied with anything less than the limit, for ‘Thomas J. Thompson, who éis looking after reorganizatton work in ;the Richland county seat ypsterday wrote \MajoreHarold Sorenson, assist- ant adjutant general, to ascertain the maximum strength.a.company is per- mitted. He was advised that letter cNipanies may muster in not to ex: ie 150 men. |M'KENZIE BOOSTERS ARE ANXIOUS TO BUILD CLUB HOUSE FOR COMMUNITY i ! George N. Keniston, secretary the Bismarck Commercial club, today for McKenzie where he deliver- ed a’stirring talk on community ;at a meeting of public spirited citizens } of that, section. The, puropse of the ot | FURNITURE BARGAIKS ‘| Mahogany Ives & Pond Prin- || cess Grand Piano, as good as '| new, at one-third off. Walnut Hand-Carved Bedroom Suite at one-third off. Quarter- awed Dining Table at one- Shira ‘off. Bookcases, Tables, i] Chairs, etc. || 519 Fourth St. Phone 511-U | TOPICSOF THEDAY = ice. Congressional motto seems to be, “Never put off until tomorrow what you can HaiQAUGQATHEHNTL TT 1 { i i 1 = | | postpone until after election.” Germany to Try Her Own War ~The Kentucky Cure For Lynching Turkey Under Allied Bayonets Neutrak 1 tl s of Autocratic : Japan’s Fight for Manhood Suffrage America’s Machine-Made.Census Rotary Snow-plow for City Streets How thePresident | President Wilson “knows that he is not quite up to his fighting weight. He is giving splendid attention to’ the affairs of state, and we have every assurance that he will become progressively more active in these m atters with the advent of spring and sunshine,” accord- i Disturbing, however, are the words of Dr. Arthur Dean Bevan, former President of the American Medical Associat ion, who says that “the disease of arteries,” from which the President is sufferi ing, “Gs permanent and not a te mporary condition,” Whatever the President’s mental “nd physical condition, in the opinion of the medica] men, he has emphasized his return, to. public life by receiving a delegation of railroad labor leaders, by sen ding to the Allied Supreme Council a virtual ultimatum on the Fiume controversy, and by dropping his Secre tary of State. “The latter action startled the public and ' aroused a storm of criticism, much of it unfavorable t o the Chief Executive. , In THE LITERARY DIGEST for February 28th, t here is an illuminating article, illustrated with striking cartoons, upon. the return of President Wilson to his 0 fficial duties. American newspapers upon the President’s recent activities and gives various reasons why Secretary Lansing was asked to resign. Other articles in this week’s “Digest” covering questions that are occupying ‘public attention include: The New Railroad Law The Danger Signals Ahead That Some Observers See As the Railroads Move Forward to Priv ate Operation -War-Veterans Ask $1,900,000;000 $50.00 Weekly Prizes to School - A Very Interesting Collection of Ilustr ations, Including Humorous Cartoons : Ls ined 28th puimhes on Sale Today —News-dealers 10-Cents—$4.00 a Year FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Digionary). NEW YORK STM TM a meeting was to organize a community club and to name | will investigate the f + LATULEQEQEEROEOEOUUUEEQOERSAEEOOUUONEGGNERSAUEUOUERRERULGOUTAREESEGAUEOT EAU SNR SPRING HATS ‘The character and quality of our-Hats are not only admirable, but the mod- eling displays the substantial styling and. good taste expected in une work of famous makers. KNOX HATS $10 Mallory Hats $7, $8, $9 Gordon Hats $8, $4, $5, $6,$7 S.E.BeRrcesan : 20N ill ing a clubhouse for the organization. There was- a big attendance at. the meeting. s rommittee that asibility of erect- Monday: ‘and Tuesday Four Acts of Vaudeville 8,000 Feet.of Pictures RE '—Brooklyn Daily Eagle. As to his mental vigor, it is It preserfts — the editorial qpinions of - - Influence of the German and Other Foreign Press When Locomotives Should Not Whistle Germany Democratizes the Drama The Bill-beard Fighting For Its Life ; Prospects of Prohibition in Britain. ~ The Grooming of a Presidential - Candidate World-Wide Trade Facts _ A New “American Tragedy” on the. Stage Personal Glimpses of Men and Events Best of the Current Poetry S