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i SISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNB terms. *Phone 490 MONTANA TO HAVE VOTING NEXT MONTH Governor and Congressman Are to be Nominated by Montanans Helena, Mont., June 23.—Candidates already are about with their petition: for the primary election of August 24 when the ci s of Montana will go to'the polls to nominate, in at least two parties, candidates for governor, secretary of state, treasurer, auditor, railroad commissioner, attorney gen- eral, superintendent of public instrne: tion, associate justice of the supreme court (three), two representatives in congress, state senators and repre- senatives; as well as many district judges of the state courts. No United States senator is to be elected this year. Two years hence, the term of Senator Henry L. Myers wil] expire. The state i: gressional districts, as follows: District Gne—i'he counties of Beav- erhead, Broadwater, Deer Lodge, Flat- head, Gallatin, Granite, Jefferson, Lew-; is and Clark, Lincoln, Madison, Min- eral, Misoula, Powell,*Ravelli and Sanders. : ., District Two—Big Horn, Blaine, Car- bon, Carter, Cascade, Chouteau, Cus- ter, Dawson, Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Glacier, Hill, Liberty, | McCone, Meagher, Musselshell, Park, Phillips, Pondera, Powder River, Prairie, Rich- land, Rosebud, Roosevelt,, Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweetgrass, Teton, Toole, Treasure, Valley, Wheatland Wibaux and Yellowstone. i Carl Ridrick, incumbent, republican, second district, and John M. Evans, incumbent, democrat, first.district, are divided into two con- PAY AS YOU RIDE! We have a few bargains in used cars that we will sell on easy Distributors This is your opportunity to buy a good used car and pay as you ride. Don’t wait until they are all sold. DO IT NOW. Lahr Motor Sales Company *Phone 490 candidates for re-election and there will be several opposed to them, Both republicans and democrats have candidates in the field for gov- ernor, among them Former United Stat Senator Joseph M. Dixon of Mis- soula and Lieutenant Governor W. W. McDowell of Butte. In addition, State Senator B. C. White of Buffalo is an- | nounced as a democratic candidat | The candidates from all _ offi j Up, are expécted to number about 4,- 1000. It is thought at least twenty ques- tions will be submitted to the people, several propositions for bond for good roads, for education, ization, etc., totalling many. mil- lions of dollars, ‘WILD LANDS OF | WEST LURE FOR BOLD TOURISTS Many Will Penetrate Trackless Lands of Pacific Coast Country Seattle, Wash, June 24.—Wild coun- try of the “trackless” Olympic Penin- ' gula. in the far northwestern corner of Washington, will be visited this sum- mer by members of the Mountaineers, a tramping club with members in Se- attle. Everett, Tacoma and other | Washington cities. |, Across the backbone of the penin- isula, from tidewater on Puget Sound to | tidewater on the Pacific ocean, the | Motintaineers will journey. Trails will | carry them into regions seldom visit- ‘ed by outsiders, into sunny plateaus. | along mountain rivers, across glaciers | and into the home of the elk, bear and cougar. °, | ' "Mount Anderson, 7,500 feet, the high- a ——OOOOOOe—eeaeaeaesSs———ee jays Wh is AN" | att REREAEG EEO \ Wai the lemon drink—is Orange-Crush’s double in delightfulness! ‘The exclusive Ward process blends with best sugar and citric acid. (the natural acid of citrus fruits). bottles or at fountains Prepared ny Orange-Crush Con Chicago ¢ / | a Or sages ( drink- RANGE -CRUSH Like a breeze off the water at sun> down, Ward’s Orange-Crushe= bubbling and sparkling with orangey deliciousness —cools and freshes! 7 / rd’s Lemon-Crush—a tempting oil pressed from the fruit itself oratory: Los Angele Bottled “in Bismarck, N. D.. by Canital City Bottling Works 219 5th Thema 206, "The Story of Orange-Cruan” from petty county and township places | est peak in the Olympics, will be climbed. Camps will be established at the Dosewallips basin in the cen- tral section of the peninsula. Sum. mits of Mount Seattle, Mount Olym- pus and Mount Meany, other peaks of the section, also will be attempted. Indian canoes will carry the Moun- taineers thirty-five miles down moun- tain streams on the last leg of their journey from Lake Quinalt, in the mountains, to the Pacific ocean. On the canoe trip there will be rapids to shoot and log jams around which the club members will portage their way. Pack horses will carry some of the bedding and food and the trampers will knapsack as much as they can. Between 75 and 100 members are ex- pected to make the trip. They leave July 31 and. will remain away three weeks, WILTON WILL GIVELANGER GREAT CROWD Gronna to Speak in Killdeer Mountains Sunday When Picnic Will be Held Plans are being made for a biz political rally at Wilton next ‘'Mon- day night when Attorney General William Langer speaks. ‘People from Wing, Regan, Wash burn and Baldwin will attend the meeting, which will ‘be the bigest political meeting in Wilton of years, it is predicted. It may ‘be necessary to have an open air meeting, it was stated by a Wilton man today, as there is no hall that is large enough to accom- odate the crowd in the event that there is no rain on Monday. (Mr. Langer will speak in the Fargo auditorium’ on Saturday evening. Re ports from. Fargo say that plans are being made for aymonster mass meet- ‘ng. (Mr. Langer's crowds continue to grow in size as his tour of the state proceeds. ' Announcement of a big picnic and social time, with speeches, will be held in .Killdeer mountains on Sun- day, June 27, There will be a bas2- ball game at 11 a. m. and one at 4 Dp. m., two brass bands will furnish music and. there will be other amuse ments. ( Senator A. J. Gronna will speak ai, 1:30 p. m. and P. D. Norton will fol- low him.’ People will come from distances of fifty miles to attend the Picnic, it is said. \ ‘ CRIPPLE HIKE! Oakland, Cal, June 25_William Stone, a tailor, although a cripgle, re cently started to walk 3,000 milossscam here to Buffalo, N. Y., to see his moth er, Mrs, Mary Stone. Stone said he} would reach Buffalo in six weeks. FINDS HIS PIG. Pierre, S..D., June 24.—A__ranch- man in Haakon county some time ago, missed a pig. For many days he searched and advertised for his porker and finally gave it up as lost. Twen- ty-eight days from the time the swine disappeared, children playing near an abandoned well, were attracted thither bv the actions of a dog. The pig was found at the bottom. It was weak but willing to eat when hoisted from the well. It had lost about 80 pounds, ac: cording to the owner. KILLED BY BEAR. Prince Rupert, B. C., June 24.—Clar- ence Thompson, a logger on Chicago Island, died recently from wounds in- flicted by a large brown bear. Terribly lacerated, Thompson was found by a searching. party, to whom he gave a connected. account of his experience before he died, CAVALLINIE CASE DROPPED Rome, June 24.—Filippo Cavallinie, the former deputy. charged with “in- telligence with the enemy” at about the same time the Bolo Pasha and Cailaux cases developed in France, has been set free, owing to lack of evidence, according to the Epoca. The warrant against Dadda, who was ac- cused with Cavallinie, has been with- drawn. EXPORTS INCREASE. San Francisco, June 24.—Exports from San Francisco to Bolivia for the first three months of 1920 aggregated about $400,000, as much as the entire exportation for the year 1919. accord: ing to the figures of Alberto Palacios. Bolivian consul-general here. Palacios \said he believed similar increase in ACCUSES Husay Memphis, Tenn. — Mrs. Carrie Ma- lone thinks it is cruel for a husband to break his wife’s leg with a stick. She says her husband, John, broke the stick and the leg and she wants a divorce. TRAVELING MOVIE Paris, June 24—To relieve the mon- otonous evenings of the inhabitants who have returned to the devastated regions in Northern France. the Junior Red Cross of America has provided a traveling moving picture show oper- ated by two Amercan women. America’s potato crop last year was 358,000,000 bushels, 54,000,009 below ‘the 1918 crop. trade would be shown by Seattle also. | a ASSERTS JAPS = ARE MENACE T0 ENTIRE STATE Governor Stephens of Califor- nia Asks Negotiations With Japan Sacramento, Calif, June 24.—‘The influx of Japanese into California has brought about ‘alarming’ conditions and it has become necessary to pro- tect the sovereignty of the state against the ‘growing menace,’ through diplomatic negotiations of a strict ex- clusion act,” Geyernor Wm. D. Steph- ens said in a letter addressed to Sec- retary of State Colby today. Governor Stephens expressed the hope in the letter that the initiative measure now being projected in. the state to deny Asiatics the right to all land purchases or lease holds would ve accepted by an overwhelming ma- jority. While California harbors no animosity against the Japanese, he said, the state does not wish them to settle within its borders and to de- velop a Japanese population in her midst. He asks that immediate ne- gotiations be entered into with Japan to make impossible any further “eva- sions” of existing immigration agree- ments and to make such agreements as rigorous as possible. Rapid Growth. “Twenty years ago our Japanese population was nominal.” the letter said. “Ten years ago the census re- ports of the United States govern- ment showed a Japanese population in California of 41,356. A computation and’ survey .recently made by the board of control of the state of Cali- iornia indicates ‘that this Japanese’ population has been more than dou- bled—amounting now to 87,279. The best figures available indicates that wut Japanese*population comprises be- -ween 80 and 85 per cent of the total Japanese population of continental United States. “Respect Rights. Although respecting Japanese cul- ture advancement and the, rights of Japan to, true development, Governor Stephens held that the “people of Cal- ‘fornia are determined to repress a developing Japanese community in our midst. They are determined to exhaust every power in their keeping to maintain this state for its own peo- ple. After stating that “the blood fusion of the Occident and the Orient has nowhere ever successfully taken place” Governor Stephens said that ‘“Cali- fornia views with alarm the rapid zrowth of these people within the last decade in population as well as. in land zontrol and foresees in the not distant ‘uture the gravest menace of serious sonflict if this development is not im- mediately and effectively checked. STEEN PREDICTS LEGISLATURE 10 BE REPUBLICAN Candidate who Opposed Langer Before Minot Prediction Now Sees His’ Victory John Steen, candidate for state reasurer and one of. Attorney Gen- eral Langer’s opponents before the convention in Minot, predicts Lang- ar’s nomination at the coming prim- aries -by an overwhelming majority. He also expects to see the entire tick- :t~tarry a comfortable plurality in ‘the house with a chance for control of ‘he senate. The Independent Republi- san Headquarters in Fargo, yester- day received the following statement trom Mr. Steen: “I believe that the voters of North ‘akota have made up their minds to rid, the state of Townley entirely. While I have no, doubt that the state tick Langer will sweep the state at the coming: primuary election, in some in+ stances the legislative candidates will ‘ead the field in their respective coun- ties. The voters realize that it is necessaary not only to elect anti-So- cialist’ state officia.s, but they must ulso secure control of the legislative assemblies. I am confident that we ire going to get a large majority in the house, and_ while the holdovers make it difficult to change the sen- ate, we have a chance of getting a majority even there. I have been around considerably and I have no- ticed a marked change in public opin- ion. Our farmers are beginning to see things in a different light. and it is mot very often that you find a man who will get into a heated ‘personal sontroversy over the opinions of a man who is not a leaguer, Yes, I am con- fident that we are going to win and the result of the state election in Min- nesota certainly will have'a tendency to.weaken the league cayse also in this state. The people °f the state are awake to the danger in having state affairs—education, finance, and otherwise—in contro! of ‘A.:C. Town- ley and his subservient Heelers.” In Pierce county, which is the home county of Mr. Steen, the Anti-Townley forces are putting up a very effective fight and energetic campaign and lead- ing republicans in the county expect it to go for the entire anti-socialist state and legislative ticket, with a gain| | of not less than 200 votes over the re- cent high_water mark. NEW YORK FIRM FACES CHARGES New York, June 24.—Gimbel Broth- ers. of New York, operating a large department store and controlled by the interests which control others, were indicted on 207 counts for profi- teering in clothing. Frederick Gim- bel vice-president, Joseph J. Dowdell, merchandise manager and Charles D: Slawter. clothing buyer, were indicted on the same charge. , WEIGHED 490 | Columbus, O.—A special coffin had ' to be built for Harry L. Dyer, 40, who died here. Dyer was the largest man here and weighed 490 pouttds. When younger his weight of 360 pounds gave him a place on, the ‘Columbus all-star ‘ory yn: headed by Attorney General]. we send you a copy? Bismarck, ten one if you take your KODAK along. Mail all orders and inquiries to HOSKINS Inc. posure. Kodaks $9.49 up. PROLONG YOUR VACATION—You can make your vacation a lasting, never-be-forgot- The Kodak tells a story that is alway to be relied upon and will help you to recall the memories of the outing in the years to come. Our supply of 1920 catalogues of KODAKS, PREMOS and GRAFLEXES are here. May III OO OT 3 CMM Here’s your first stop—right here at the store. have the KODAK you want for the motoring trip— compact, easy to work and AUTOGRAPHIC—each negative may be dated and titled at the time of ex- THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1920 We Brownies $2.86 up. SBUGUAUGDESUGUEDOAUNOULDEUEUNGUUODAGANOEGOURSULOEINGOEE North Dakota LEGION THANKS CITIZENS FOR. BAND SUPPORT Profit of $200 Realized by mil-| . lion Dollar Band Concert, Committee Says With all bills paid up and accounts checked, the American Legion post! has realized about $200 from the con- cert of the Million Dollar band, it was announced by the band committee to- day. The legion, when it brought the old Second North Dakota band back to the city, did not°anticipate making a large profit from the concert; but believed that the people would wel- come an opportunity to hear the fa- mous ‘band once more. The profits veauzed by the legion come almost wholly for the dance, the tag sale be.ng used to pay the band’s expens- es. The people’ of the city were thank- ed by the band committee for their support of the concert in a statement issued by ‘the band committee to- day, as follows: “We' wish to thank the people of Bismarck and the vicinity for thelr ‘iearty co-operation in the support of the Million Dollar band while it was in Bismarck. The concert given at the. court house grounds in the evening was well attended and the dance which was held at Patterson's hall was enjoyed by nearly two hun- dred couple. The Million Dollar band which is well known in ‘Bis- marck. was brought here undor the auspices of the American Legion and proved to be be a big success. AMERICAN LBGION, By Chairman Band Committee.’ SHORT DOWNPOUR LAST NIGHT AID TO COUNTY CROPS Lightning cracked in Bismarck last night. Sho¥tly after the big crowd was safely home from the Auditorium the downpour began. The lightning and thunder was very intense for a time as was the rain. The total, amount of rainfall was not large, it being just one-quarter of an inch, according to the weather \ tothe You see “Fifty Switzerlands in One” —without a passport—on your trip to the Pacific Coast through the 2 . ° Canadian Pacific Rockies | And though you ride for 24 hours past peaks that touch the sky, you avoid extreme altitudes because Canadian Pacific! trains trail rivers that built a natural highway across the mountains millions of years ago —the Bow, Kicking Horse, and Fraser are the principle of several spectacu- lar canyons you follow from Calgary ‘ to Vancouver on the Coast. Stop off, if your time permits, at Banff Springs Hotel, the Chateau at Lovely Lake Louise, Emerald Lake Chalet, Glacier House, or Sicamous —magic castles of Alpine Fairyland From Vancouver direct connections for Alaska, the Orient, quaint Victoria, and all points on the Pacific slope, A. G. ALBERTSON. Gen. Ag’t Pass. Dept! Canadian Pacific Railway 611 Second Ave., South Minneapolis, Minn. Canadian newspapers and informa: i i tile at bureau report, but it may have been heavier in spots. ‘Napoleon and ‘(Minot also report slight rains but it was less than one twentieth of an inch as reported to the weather bureau. t The rain although slight came just were it was most needed—in the cefitral part of the state, should this be followed by another soon it will have a marked beneficial effect throughout the state, according to the _| weather bureau. eg MAPPING ALASKA. Juneau, Alaska,’ June’ 24.—Maps of the Mount McKinley National Park, in south central Alaska, are being made by members of the Alaska Geological Sutvey, this summer. Work was start- ed this year on the west side of Mount McKinley. which is\in the park and which is Considered the highest moun- tain on the continent. “PROVES UP” CLAIM. Denver, Colo., June 24.—Andrew Chase of this city, a. student at the Uni- versity of Denver, journeys to his 640 acre homestead near Colorado Springs, and spends a few days there each month in order to maintain his. rest- | dence. which “proves up” this summer. Chase is one of the many students working his way through the univers- ity. LIGHTNING IN QUEER PRANK Grantsburg, Wis., June 24.-—During a heavy thunderstorm Clarence West- lund had an experience which he will not soon forget. While sitting with his feet on the stove hearth he was struck by a current of lightning which burned the soles of his shoes, also his stockings and badly burned the soles of his feet. | The current ther passed up his leg. around his body and back to one of his shoulders. Except for blistering he was uninjured. LUMBER PRICE TAKES SLUMP Kansas City, June 24.-A general reduction of about 10 per cent in lum- ber. prices today was made effecti in all retail lumber yards in Kan City. The reduction ranges from to $15 a thousand. FLAMING, ITCHING Car Untold) Seffeciag that use atid Se erin, Could if you are afflicted with eczema, tetter, erysipelas, ringworms, pim- ples, acne, caly eruptions, boils, irritations of the skin, or other similar disorders, you need not expect any ral relief from local applications, and the sooner you discard their use the sooner you will be on the road to recovery, orovided you will rely upon the SKIN DISEASES use of S.S. S. . S. is one of the most satis- factory remedies for diseases of the skin because it goes direct to the seat of the trouble, and by cleansing the blood of all impuri- ties and disease germs, it keeps the skin f.+¢ ‘rom infection, and re- stores it to its normal healthy con- dition, For freé expert medical advice write to Chief Medical Adviser, Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. § Waists Sale JOHNSON Department Store: Fane RREREREREROReR Ee na a = = - a 7 - m= 5 x zs = = ft LN ‘ich TubeFreent® UNIVERSAL TIRE Nothing could be more expressive of economy than buying Universal Tires. The material is carefully selected and tires methodically reconstructed. Extra plies of strong fabric and added reliner are used as blowout precautions, and tires should. run from 7,000 to 8,000 miles. Over a million in use. Remem- ber, a brand new inner Orders shipped same day Clincher, Plain or Non- accompanics order. Guaranteed 5,000 Miles Adjustments made on that basis. Cut your tire expense: order now before the season's rush. We have thousands ready for immediate delivery. Below prices include tire and tube 3 1 balance €. O. D. subject to examination; 5% special discount if fu! tube is included with every tire or $11.75 received. In ordering, state whether S. Se J required. "Send $2 deposit for each tree sou UNIVERSAL TIRE & RUBBER <0. Dept. 114 1035 W. 2iat Street Chicago, tt