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THE WEATHER Generally Fair tt thee, THIRTY-NINTH YEAR ~ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA. THU THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ect toes er cea, h i LAST EDITION Jn eee PRICE FIVE CENTS DAY, OCT. 28, 1920. GOLDEN VALLEY FARMERS PUT TOWNLEY TO ROUT Renominated (Easily |} GOBLIN PARADE TO BEFEATURE OF HALLOWE'EN Hundreds of Boys and Girls of EXPENDITURES IN CAMPAIGN MADE PUBLIC Q’CONNOR WILL END CAMPAIGN IN HOME TOWN: BUYING FARGO HOME FOR TOWNLEY FAVORITE WHO LIVES IN BISMARCK SAMPLE OF BLAKEMORE CONTROL Home Buiiders Law Violated Again in Loaning $8,000 on Resi- dence Purchased for the Tottens, Employes of State Administration—Like the Lemke Case. the property. R B OI eet City Will March Through Streets to Auditorium PLANS MOVING RAPIDLY Contributions to Swell Funds for The Enterainment Are Asked HALLOWE'EN FUND $ } The fund to give the boys and | | girls a real Hallowe’en celebra- | tion Saturday night was started { by $1 contributions irom the | board of governors of the Town | Criers, { | Small contributions are asked ‘| from eyery Good Fellow in the | | city for the success of the even. | | ing, ‘ if Send contributions’ to The ' ‘ibune. i e The “gobling parade” will mov2 promptly at 7:30 o’clock Saturday evening. The party planned for the boys and girls of the city on Hallowe'en. is gv- { ing to he a success. The Town Cri ers club, which is sponsoring the af- fair, will have every detail complete for an enjoyable evening. The elaboration of the affair de- pends a good deal on the number of Good Fellows in Bismarck. First an- nouncement that small donations would be received and a quick re- sponse must be made. The Town Criers board cf governors started the hall rolling with $1 each, and the $1 contributions must roll in pretty rapidly if it is to reach sufficient proportions. Contrilutions may be} sent to The Tribune or handed to G. | N. Keniston, secretary of the club. | Parade Heads Named C. F. Bolt will he in charge of the | parade with Rogert Webb as first as- | sistant and six other men stationed ; at various posts along the line of; march. the children will form at 7:15 and the parade will move at 7:30. The pupils. of the yarions schools will form at the following points: Will school—on the school grounds Wachter school—on street in front of fire hall. | Catholic school—on street in front of fire hall. ot North Ward school—North of Will school, ae Everyone in the parade is expected to be togged out in Hallowe'en dres: Many will carry pumpkins, many } Japanese lantern and some novel cos: tumes are expected. Go to Auiltorium After @ short parade through the downtown streets the parade will go to the Auditorium, were seven reels of the very best moving pictures, chiefly comics, are to be shown, through the courtesy of the. Eltinge and the Orpheum theaters. No one will be permitted in th parade or in the Auditorium over | 20 years of age, except the patron esses, who! are wives of Town Criers. and Town Criers who are to assisi in keeping the boys and gir in orderly channels. The show will be over promptly at 10 p. m., and parents may rest assured | that their children will be in safe hands from the time the parade starts | until the show ends at the Auditorium, when they may meet them outside. CONSTANTINOPLE WORST CITY IN THE WORLD SAY POLICE Constantinople, Oct. 28.— Cherif} Bey, chief of police, declares that Con- | | i | stantinople is the costliest, wickedest city in the world. “Since the armis- tice it is filled with spies, thieves, murderers, politicians, bolshevi, * agents, opium eaters,” he said when he heard that the tombs of the Sultans had been plundered and silver chan- deliers, ancient shawls and precious rugs had been stolen. “The only thing that is clean about here is the | plue waters of the two seas,” con- cluded Cherif Bey. The waters of Marmora are any- thing but blue and Constantinople must be very wicked indeed. TITLE BOUT New York. Oct. 28.—The fight be-| tween Jack Dempsey and Georges} Carpentier’ for the heavyweight; championship of the world will be; heid in Havana, Cuba, it was, an-| nounced here’ last night. | Selection of Havana as the scene} of the contest was made by Tex Rickard, Charles B. Cochran and| William Brady, who. stated they hadj received an offer of such propor- | tions from a syndicate of Cuban capitalists that it was finaly deter- mined the championship battle would be staged in Havana. WOULD D. E Grand Forks, N. D. Oct. 2 Allen 0. Birchenough of Thomas, known as the “fighting parson,” declares hi debate Lynn J, Frazier, William Lemke, or any other -bona fide | resident of North Dakota at any | time between now and election {| day, { | Beep sl ATE | i {reading and correcting paper‘ /$189,0 IN HAVANA |) por HAIRCUT Senator Moses was renominated by a majority of more than 12,000 in one of the most bitterly contest- ed primary elections of the present campaign. Senator Moses is a bitter opponent of the ' Wilson League of Nations Covenant and ranks in the group of “irreconcil- ables” of the Senate in the long and bitter battle of the lagt two ses- sions of Congress. He js a scholar of remarkable ‘inguistic capacity, was formerly American Minister to Greece and while there acquired command of the modern Hellenic tongue and is also a French scholar of high repute. During his cam- paifn, he conducted a tri-lingual speakin; tour, addressing! Cana- dian-French citizens of New Hamp- shire in French, the Greel:s in mod- ert; Greek and old line Yankees in purest Concord English. OR eer USE MONEY OF RURAL SCHOOLS FOR TAXI HIRE Demand Made on Totten’s Board to Turn Back to Fund Over’ $2,500 The state auditor has in his posses- {sion a demand that the state board of idministration, headed by ex-Rey. Jeorge Totten, refund $2,687.19 to the aw for state aid to rural schools ich is alleged to have been erron- eously used. The Amount. it for printing, laries of stenogra- phers, ete., being subtracted trom the money which should go to the upbuild- ing of the one-room and consolidated schools of the state, instead of paying the anlount ont of the regular appro- priation of the board of administr tion. The attorney-general’s office holds that the amount was used with- out authority in law by Totten’s of- alleged, was used The purposes for which the sum was used are said to be: printitig eighth grade examination questions, pur- pewriter, si and incidentals, chasing hire neluding hire. The total fund for state aid to rural schools is something over $250,000. ti [FRAZIER WRONG ; IN BOASTING OF INCOMING CASH A palpable and glaring “error” made by Governor Frazier in a cam- paign speech was pointed out here to- day at the state house. \ Governor Frazier is reported to have told an audience that for every dollar deposited outside of North Da- kota by the Bank of North Dakota three dollars in deposits have been received from outside of the state from labor organizations. The own figures of the bank, which alwa are accepted by the public with a grain of salt, show that on Oct. 15 there was $568,610.14 of state money deposited outside of the state and a total of individual deposits of 5. In other words, for every dollar brought into the state three dollars have been sent out of the state. ON JANUARY 1 .—The central of the Chicago, Oct executive com barbers association — repr ing 2,600 barbers decided to to one do the. price jor @ haireut and 35 cents the price ot n shave, to hecome eitective Jan- uary 1, “We are sorry but there seems nothing else to do,” s Arthur B. Raymond, seeretary-treasurer oi the Journeymen pers? union. “However, the public should he educated to tip the barbers. That would help some.” COTTON am, Oct CHANGE —To. facilitate cotton with Germany and cotton exchange, which capacity up to OP Rotterd trade in America, a will control a storage | 100,000 bales, has been opened here. LABOR BODY STATEMENT COX HITS MAGAZ E Democratic Candidate Renews His Attack on Publication | News — Frazier Doesn't Asserted Unfair | Prove Charge The Republican} Grand Fork ~ Det. 28 committee’s campaign to! Borie pir, oct: 28. Senator Warren G. Harding! 7 O'Connor fusion ticket candidate resident will cost $3,442,892.32, Fred | for Governor, will close his campaign - Upham, national treasurer of the; in his home city Moniay night. 0’ party, notified the senate committee’ Connor is expected : appointed to investigate campaig ior is expected to poll a remark- expenditures in a report filed with}®ble majority in Grand Forks and the committee today. {Grand Forks county. He is expecte? Of this sum $3,042,892.32 had been! P <ceptionally spent up to’ the close of businesd Sm: (1 PO! an: exceptionally strong la- day, Oct. 24, and Mr. Upham estimated | Por vote here, as he has been popular ihe expenditures in the closing week|in labor circles for years, of the campaign as $400,000 addition-| Beginning wi rehlig! 7 al. The report shows that $301,388.98 | wuien wile ee enoreiel bs at spent between Oct. 18 and 24. | the evening and will conclude with a ighteen donations of more than | neeting in the Auditor z Rte $1,000 each include R. S. Lewis, Fargo, |) a Hy ae wittch N. D., $1,100. u| Mr. re) Connor, Oe 'B. Burtness and Dem Expenses apeinert Kamila eu Miss Minne Total receipts by the Democratic! "* Qc Sop Wit Speak national committee tg Oct. 25 amount) O'Connbr, Burtness and to. $878,831.24, accorlling to an an-/47@ home candidates, and nouncement today by Wilbur W./ Will give them a great welcome. Marsh, the party’s national treasurer. | Lowe is in general charge of The sum collected, the Democratic #’rangements for the parade. treasurer stated, is constituted almost; In the meantime organization work entirely of contributors to the cam-;is going on steadily in Grand Fork paign fund with the exception of: and Grand Forks county. Women $150,000, which was borrowed. ‘taking a strong interest in the cam- Disbursements by the entire organ-: paign. ization up to the same date as shown} —_——. by the statement amount to $823,- | DENIES STATEMENT joa 08: . | Fargo, N. D., Oct. 28-Hlof Frid- ax TLL DAMS ,lund, secretary of the Fargo Trades Daytheoy oe LR he state-| 2nd Labor assembly, i used in the ment chargiitg. the Saturday Evening | 1'@"80 Courier-News of saying that he Post and its editor, George Horace, had been “forced” to issue a signed Lorimer, with unfair partisanship,| Statement repudiating a vicious was issued today by Governor Cox. paminntes issue in the hame one “The insiduous purpose of the Sat- Trades and Labor assembly of F urday Evening Poste cloaked under, #0, Without the ~sunction of tha nonpartisan methods for a decade or! body, s: id that the charge against more, has ‘finally been brought to: him is jithout foundatidn. light,” Governor Cox declared, saying; “I did not say to anybody that Mr. that it had printed misstatements only | Sehannach forced me to issue the four days before election when it was | statement that I made public yester- too late to retract it. ‘| day," said Mr. Fridipud. That the Curtis Publishing ‘com-| [made “that statemevt because 1 pany had been found guilty by the do not believe in that kind of politics, federal trade commission of v! lating the Trades and Labor the anti-trust laws by unfair p |assembly had not authorized the use in distributing -its periodical by the’ gr jts name in connection with the governor who declared big business) pa myphiet on which its name was was opposed to him because he would printed.” Ee too ee deal and, ROtIne: Members of the Fargo Pressmen’s “When early in the week I called) and Assistants Union issued a jsigu- attention to fhe guerrilla tactics of ed statement refuting charges ot dis- the urday Evening Post on the} hones brought eee ee basis of its last minute attacks on me; cials of Fargo by the Socialist pa ithe response of Mr. Lorimer, its edi-| per and repudiating the pamphlet is- i s that my action was unethical; sued in labor's name, perfectly willing to leave the de~! jon of ethics to the voters of Amer-j GOVERNOR ca, many of whom have been life: i Devils Lak D., Oct. 28.-—Gover- time readers of the Saturday Evening} yo, prazier failed to back up his Post and who, from the time of /its’ charges here when Siver Serumgard origin, have looked upon it as a house- | ( allenged the governor to back up Fol journpl to whieh hey rendered, with proof his statement that the devotion because it took no part iM! vin eapolis Chamber of Commerce {partisan campaigns. The question OF; ing wall Street have contributed eth: would seem to lie in what, @0" ° 5 i ng haye come to look on as a/ Millions to defeat the Nonpartisan state. square deal,,and, when @ nonpartisan ; program in this E journal becomes partisan in’its very; Governor Frazier aid that the last issue four days before an elec- Chamber of Commerce had paid into tion at a time whien it impossible| the I. V. A. campaign funds $1,000,- for misstatements to be corrected or 000 to defeat the Nonpartisans. deceit to be met—-it would seem to in-; “Have you proof that the Chamber dicate a very deep-seated selfish in-! of Commerce has contributed one terst based,on some purpose which’ dollar to the I. V. A. campaign?” Mr. could scarcely be called straightfor-| Serumgard asked Governor Frazier. wa and honest. No man who repre-} “] haven’t the proof with me,” Fra- sents a just cause has any objection /zier answered, “but TI know that the lto presenting both sides of the case.”| Chamber of Commerce controls all Tr es (the I. V. A. newspapers HARDD PEAKS Well” said Mr. Serumgard, “if you , Cleveland, Oct. Senator Her will come to my house I will show you cl who opened “hie” final lepee 82 who the contributors to the I. V. A. swing with four speeches to Cleveland! | aien g want'to give yau'a audiences spent most of today quietly | Campaign are. tae ‘t qi ri chance to put yourself right. 1 don't at a hotel here, resting and conferring eek Nerie Dakota ith local Republican leaders. want the governor of North Dakota ‘An automobile ride and a luncheon}to £0 around making false state- at the Cleveland country club were] ments.” . ae the only engagements on the nominee's} At this point, Socialists in the au- program before his departure in the; dience yelled, “Throw him out me’ un afternoon for Akron, O., where he is|ing Mr. Serumgard, while Mr. F razier ito speak tonight. ‘smiled at the threatening riot and | Se | never offered to silence the Socialists COOLIDGE IN N.Y. ‘who led the demonstration. New York, Oct. 28.—An old-time! -Governor Frazier said he torchlight parade up Fifth avenue to-| pave the proof in his pocket.” i ll feature the culrhination of | aes Judge Nuchols Here Chicago, Oc national alect & Kamplin the city oe @ ;and because BACKS DOWN “didn't campaigning here by Governor ‘ Coolidge, Republican vice-) Jugge S. L. Nuchols, of Fargo, as- presidential nominee. nat of sistant United States district atfor. eee ee anor tered there vould “be| Hey spent Sunday Ih Bismarck, afte: the parade, oecrmad 100 bands in Mrie.| attending Federal court On f inot, last Cerner Coolidge will occupy. the] week, at which Judge Woodrough, of place of honor in the reviewing stdnd Omaha, Neb. presided. at the Union League club.. The nom- | ~~~ inee later will make an address at; Carnegie hall. | INFORMATION NON. P, STATEMENT | washington, Oct. 28—-Neither the | REGARDING (American Federation of Labor non- | partisan campaign committee, the - VOTING Nonpartisan league and the farmer- labor party have filed statements cov-| ering expenditures in the present, political campaign, it was stated at the offices of William P. Page, clerk | of the house of representatives. All voters who desire in- formation relative to ballot, voting or anything con- i] nected .with. the .election Tuesday, November 2 can ca WEATHER REPORT ' For twenty-four hours ending at noon, Thursday, October 28. / Temperature at 7 a. m. 20) 750 Highst yesterday fs | Towest vector ts | Between the hours of 9 Lowest last night _ 19) Land OPM Precipitation None | A. M. and . M. - Highest wind veloc 15-N i Tf you are in doubt on any Forecast _,.\| matter get in touch with For North Dakota: Fair tonight this number and Friday; warmer tonight and in the east portion Friday. ! 1G. G. P. Spends Over $3,000,000 | Grand Forks Prevares to Give} : While Democrats Spent | Candidate Great Reception About $900,000 \ Monday Night _Repudiates Charge of Courier- | ‘| marketed their grain under the Minne- The Townley managers of the | state building association | Blakemore, manager of the home have adopted a wonderful method building: assocluton, admitted to a lata representative of the Fargo Fo- | of providing homes for those in | : rum. that 000 of state money dire need of residences —it buys | | of " had been loaned for the purchase a home in Fargo for a resident | of the hou He explained that of Bismarck. a after it was purchased it had The ex-Rey. G. A. Totten S been made into a duplex and $4,000 head of the state board of ad: | loaned to each of the Tottens. The ministration and G. A. Totten J . + elder Totten is chairman of the are the beneficiaries of this ac- board of administration here in tion by the!home builders. mE ‘ Bismarck; his son is employed in This is how it was “worked” | the Nonpartisan league headquar- A beautiful big residence in * ters at Fargo. 1 Fargo w bought by the home The $8,000 of state money was builders for $10,000. It became invested for the benefit of Tot- known subsequent to its trans- tens when many citizens in Far fer that the home was bought by go wanted tp build modest homes. the state for the Tottens in direct Whether‘the elder Totten will conflict. with the home builders rent out his half of the duplex law which fixes a maximum of is not known. 5,000 on homes to be built by the The law is violated in this case association. in the same way in which the Since its purchase approximate- | $10,000 to $14,000 home is being ly $4,000 has been spent in im- | home built for Bill Lemke in Fargo. A ee “in campaicn | FARMERS MUST on women —— WAIT FOR HAIL to threaten Russian women with \May Be Dec _ The latest method of oppres- sion and trickery resorted to by deportation if they fail to vote 1, Before Some the league ticket. | Losses Are Paid Due to That this threat had been} Certification Delay made to Russian women in com- : munities southwest of the city,! Many of the hail losses of farmers who have not been in the United ' may not be paid until the first of De- Sates many years, was reported | cemper; it was stated today at the antihe cree hed Asanti state_ auditor's office. Auditor Carl :Kositaky has given orders that the to west of the Missouri river by ; organizers. ; Warrants be paid as quickly as pos- al el io) |sible by his oftice. | “We have not yet received the cer | tifications from the hail insurance de- | aeputy. “We are going to get -busy | just as soon as we get them, in spite jof our other work. Last year the lists ‘ was many months | } not in our office.” | The deputy auditor pointed out that it was a huge task to pay all the war- {rants. It was estimated that between to be drawn, as thousands of the loss- {es have more than one beneficiary. —-! | Mr. Worner must sign his name on Fargo, Oct. 28.—The fact that ap-.¢ach warrant, or over 20,000 times. e Over 50,000 Bushels Marketed in Moorhead to Avoid N. D. Laws | partment,” said W. G. Worner, chief é were delayed and’ after the loss occurred that some { 1 ‘farmers were paid, but the delay was | 20,000 and 25,000 warrants will have wheat into North Dakota elevators fo! le. North Dakota farmers them- according to the records of the in buying agencies in Moorhead, partment. Manager Hagen and assist- ants worked steadily for many days | sifting the claims in an effort to draw ‘the total as quickly as possible. In South Dake under a hail law directly past the Fargo grain buy-| said to possess advantages over the ing agencies which are governed’ by; North Dakota law, the hail losses ar? the North, Dakota grain] grading | all paid by Oct. 15, laws. } | : For many months sr sota law, They haul their’ wheat and the league press | #———— Semen “What's Your Guess yent edition of the league’s country| This question is uppermost now and bapersaithe story ie repeated, and it}i¢ all réports can be believed it is says fhe list of thé Minnesota, farm | believed it is going to be a Republican ers who market their grain in North Dakota would be found on) year nationally. another page of the papers. No{ One expert has diagnosed the situa- such li however, are published. jtion as follows 2 The investigation that was .made! Electorial Electorial in Moorhead discloses the following| State. Vote. State. Vote. Cass county grain producers mar-} California .... 13 New Mexico 3 keting their wheat in Moorhead, sev- Colorado New York 45 eral of them being strong Nonparti-' Connecticut 7TNorth Dakota 5 san league membe Delaware ...... 3Ohio . won 24 Emerson H. Smith, (Chant Smith) | Idaho 4 Oregon 29 Pennsylvania .. 38 will go for P. P. Parminter. W. H. Northup. A.| The following sta The government thermome- | 9; Iter registered 32 degrees, at 7 a. m.,|"~ | while the cold weather is general throughout the ‘tate the snow was |confined to lake shore sections. Up- | per Michigan, adjacent to Lake Supe- rior, reported light snow. | ground PANKHURST GETS IMPRISONMENT | London, Oct. 28.—Sylvia Pankhurst Se eas {who was arrested on Oct. 19, charged : SPEED WI jwith attempting to cause sedition in | CAMBRIDGE. Mags. -— Although | the navy by editing and publishing an Churchill weighs but 160 pounds he | jgsue of the newspaper, “The Workers has been given a regular position at | Dreadnaught” on Oct. 1, Was sentenced peitoect on the Harvard cleven. He | today to six months imprisonment on '4s a great running back field man. {conviction of the offense. 1 ——_ DEMAND REASON FOR OPPOSING | PROBE OF BANK \Stormy Meeting Held at Beach, Former Home of Boss of the League CAMPAIGN DODGE UES Business Men Keep Quiet, While Farmers Ask Questions and Women ‘Shout _ Beach, N. D., Oct. 28.—In all ° his experience as imperial leader of the Nonpartisan league Ar- thur C. Townley probably never got in so tight a box as he did here last night when he ad- dressed the largest crowd that has yet ‘attended a special meet- ing. Two farmers put him to rout at times. Pandemonium reigned and shouts of “answer ques- tions,” “Tell us why taxes are so high” and “why do you want us to vote against examination of the bank” were hurled at him after the audience -had listened to his long boycott tirade, and he invited questions. It was the same old Townley who came back the Townley who went jbankrupt trying to farm on a “Big Biz” scale, the Townley who was a Socialist list party in ago. That Bank Deal He came into a county where the Bank of North Dakota had loaned 450,000 to a non-resident of the state, according to the records in the county‘ offices here, while farmers could not get loans on small farms. Probably half the atidience was ‘omposed of women, and they seemed aven more insistent than the men in manding replies from Townley, while he avoided them and rambled on about “Big Biz” and grain gambling, iling to answer questions. Townley’s downfall, came when, after-Kis loug, vulgar tirade ‘against business men ‘and his efforts to fan lass hatred, he grew bolder and ask- ed why business men opposed the farmers’ program. No one responding ae grew bolder and rather sneeringly peated his invitation which was ac- cepted by A. H. Kukowski, farmer, wko was continually interrupted ‘by Townley when he tried to speak. The crowd became incensed at .this treat- nent of Mr. Kukowski and demanded that Townley allow him to respond to known to Beach people and a leader in the Soc the state just a few year: proximately 50,000, bushels of wheat; The legislature cut down che aD V:he . invitation and speak. Women and rye produced in Cass county has} propristion SH he CS te at particularly were disgusted at the . jit has been short of help. The rate | antairness of Townley. been marketed in Moorhead, during 'foy the year, which is fixed at the sane the last eight months constitute the;as last night, 25 cents hail tax and Leaves Platform most elfective denial of the claims of the 3 cent indemnity, was made pub | _ After ten minutes of commotion Nonpartisan league feaders that Min-/ le yesterday. It was due on Oct. 10} rownley left the platform. Kukowski sesnths taniiere are heliking thel i but the deiay of 16 days was held un- | said he 's not spokesman for busi- sota farmers are bringing their: wvoidaple by the hail insurance de-|ness men, but supposed they opposed the league for the same reason he did, because their taxes had been trebled without anything to show for their money. H ked a lot of pertinent questions that Townley would not answer when 1e resumed the stage and rambled off uto a discussion of things immaterial o the disgust of the audience Town then sneeringly would give someone else ten minutes has been carrying the story that} i , 3 y ad J. M. Sill, another farmer, went farmers. all along the Minnesota! | ° e 1) veear nd rh S| neuen border have been bringing their! On National Ticket ite grea deeeaat . One the wheat into North Dakota, but they |. — —— 4 1 measures, haeehiy th i have not produced a single instance = aiath Fn earaieert ne Set ebannes wae noe vhere this 5 e cur- w e national election go? ; g a aske where this was done. In the cur ON why one law was made for the exam— ion of private banks and another y the Bank ,of North Dakota. (A ker inthe faw prohibitg, the» baak. aminer from examining liabilities of he Bank of North Dakota.) Townley’s weak answer was that he was not running the bank and the ‘owd exploded again. ‘Townley said if anyone wanted answers to those juestions they could go to Bismarck ind interviews Cathro. He totally ig- aored the question as to why 000 was loaned a non-resident, an uncle of Congressman John Baer, when 5 over 1,000 bushels. Chase & Hoppen, Illinois ba ree 7 ; over 1,500 bushels. D. G. Radcliffe, Indiana ip Rhode Island. 5|(armers could not get money. to-finanse over 3,000 bushels. Jake Lowell, 1,-/ low 13 South Dakotl.. eee eee eet ee eee aa che 300 bushels... Henry Johnson, 2,000} Kansas 10 Utah 4 smerine, questions. like; (hat and {he bushels. Wm. Francis Maine 6 Vermont a) crond Jeered. hing, many, Women any John Meeham, 1,500 bushels. Ed. Lo- | Massac 48 Washington... 77. 0 fim &@ £0 back to-Bt, Fant: berg. Lemke Bros. Gus Loberg. Mrs. | Michigan 15 West Virginia 8 Boss is Humbled A. Suket. Henry Loberg. ew Jersey 14 Wisconsin... 13] ‘rownley was in an humble state of Stockdale. Juius Loberg. Minnesota 12 Wyoming *)mind when he left. He said he only Cracken. John Loberg. Ww. Mis: 18 Seq {came out here to learn fi hand why Hall-Hooper Land Co. E. HA ge 8 — TOlal 364! business men were fighting farmers. Heidner & Houch. KE. F. mpshire.. 4 This was the burden of his speech and Rehn. Wm. Shoof. Geo. Parminter. Ne y to elect, into this he put venom enough to poison some. But he did not threaten Vogel. Emile U Carl Oswald. Mr. | Cox: ,{boycott. He evidently had been feel- Lisberg. John Ness. A. L. Gray. Vice | Alabama . gir 3]ing a reaction on that threat. He & Gray. ‘Arizona .... North Carolina 12/talked of war on grain gamblers, the = Toe | Arkan 9Oklahoma 10 (heer trust, bankers and price fixers. MILWAUKEE SEES Florida outh Carolina 9 Not a business or professional man in- Georgia 3 ne terrupted him. A LIGHT SNO WwW [Lou ~ 20] “A dozen farmers took advantage of heae E - 12) the opportunity Townley offered to Milwankee, Oct. 28.—The first snow {Montana rete Tyg {interrupt him’ and questions. of the season in Milwaukee fell this)’ ay. 4, F al. 145 | Altogether Townley a whipped : The following states are doubtful: ia Wileyis wis: ie P 7 ed as ached t 2 re wow 7 {man when he closed hi peech plead- morning, but melted as it reached the Maryland, §; Kentucky, 13. Total, ite |t6r' peste between “Claades, Everybody who knew him in the old days remarked that his pep was all goné and they believed him when he said the league was beaten unless it uld rake up every vote from former members. He pleaded with his fol- lowers to go out in gangs campaign- ing. Admit He’s Slipping Even Townley’s own followers ad- mit that he has ually drove aw would not answer questions on which (Continued on Page Three)