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SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1921 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE THRER. LEAGUE HEADS MEETING LEMKE IN VALLEY CITY Situation Growing Out of Fargo Affair Will Be Discussed There Fargo, July 9—Walter Maddock ané R. oH. Walker, minority members of the state executive committee of the ' Nonpartisan league, will meet William Lemke, Attorney-Gener City tonight to discuss growing out of the publication in the Fargo Courier-News of c the majority members of the commit- tee had squandered the $50,000 ledgue’s recall election fund. Mr. Lemke, who isa stockholder in the Courier-News, the league’s daily paper here, is speaking at Wimbledon, 'N. D. today. Maddock has been in ~charge of the newspaper as state di- rector of publica ns. PLYMOUTH ROCK BACK IN PLACE: as (lo the men who went to,camp and field.” If The Soldier Gets One hundred dollars will be added to what the war already has cost every family in the United States, according to the New York Evening Post’s figures, if Congress appropriates two billion for the 4,800,000 men and women who saw service either at home or abroad in the World War. Treasury experts say the cost would be approximately between one and a half and four and a half billions, and, as the Rochester Post-Express points out, “chair-warmers and desk soldiers” will get a bonus “just “There was some excuse for a gratuity when they were being demoblized,” thinks The Post, “but to offer a cash payment to every one, three years after the armistice, is without a shadow of justification; with crushing burdens of taxation already saddled on the taxpayers’ backs, and with deficits already to be faced, Congress is rushing headlong into the bonus scheme without the slightest notion where the money is coming from.” But “where would it have come from if the war. had continued a few weeks longer?” is the retort of the doughboy, His Bonus Belief that the criminal libel suit i ee tes ae A ‘-against George A. Totten, Jr., and C I : a i os | who favors what is termed, “adjusted compensation. And Senator McCumber, lg hope baad ' K. Gummerson, deposed business man- : : ce asserts that “the Wilson Administration could have reduced the war cost one-fi e ultimate tota Pp | ager and edior respectively of the The historic Plymouth Rock, on which the Pilgrims landed, has been had it handled business and industry the same way it did the men in uniform.” Courier-News, will be dropped contin-|¢emented together after haying been broken in three parts, and is being! ued to grow today. No decision by the | lowered fits original sie-at. Plymouth, Mass. whore a” great’ Pilgrinn| In an interesting article in this week’s LITERARY DIGEST, dated July 9th, the five forms of corto on ae We ahie alleeations Pogenn ees 3 aah payment of the proposed soldier’s bonus is shown, and also the drift of public opinion for and against e mi r f Fuh q si | the payment, as revealed in. the newspaper press of the country. mismanagement of league fuhds | pa) yey f { pected before tomorrow. The commit| HARDING GIVES CLEVELAND BANKER | Other articles of great interest are: f tee is making time today pending th JOB OF CLEARING RAIL LOG JAM: ‘ + i a CK a Valker. A, { a bY ia ‘. 99 9 i pe ee ee oweieioads The Side of “The Girls” On To-day’s Morals and Manners OPTICIANS : ae : F 7 ee : i Fargo, July 9—George K. Address of F. H, Goff at Meeting This Is the Third of a Series. of Articles that Has Been Running in The Literary Digest, and Presents Grand Forks, was elected pr ; the View-points of Some of “The Girls” on Modern Morals, Manners, and Dress. the North Dakota State Optical asso- of Bankers Impressed : ci sceeding vew f . + . errs i ° 5 Fargo, at the annual election of oft President Harding | The Americanism of American Labor || Corn ees Giaea Ih Hinton years et ' i | : s ry cers held this morning just before ad- -———— | *. ° vin ives ‘eachin: Sa e journment of the annual convention. By H. B. Hunt | The Farmer-Labor Flirtation Sa’ gz y il zg y N. J. Zeller of Lisbon was named] Washington, July 9—The job of | What the C Discloses to Us Too Many Dam Failures Pa first vice president; O. M. Varnson of aking the railroad log-jam, in an i a e Census VIS “RB d ” Wireless For All Fargo, second vice p J.{ effort to clear the nation's ribu C tanti L ft ry t i th Heat roadcas' ireiess Anderson of Grand -| tion channels for a normal ump | Oonstantine Le: ut in the Our Prophet Unhonored in Art elected secretary, and tion of business and ‘industry, has 5 of Towner, elected tr heen delegated by President Harding The Renter’s Revolt The Huge Cost of Our Free Schools 1922 Conventi to Fred H. Goff of Cleveland. ° "5 The optical association will hold its] Although Gol’s labors will be on Peace Starts New Squabbles in Upper The Zionist Split 1922 meeting at ti same o | tirely\unofficial, his assignment to the ° . a - the North’ Dakota Retail Jewelers] job wag. with pwledgo and Silesia End of the Chinese Famine jation does. The Jewele > val of Se oover ant . . x ' ' ation will, at their afternoon mect-| Mellon and much of his work will be German Guilt Dawning on Sweden How Marriage Can be Saved ‘ ing today, decide upon next year’s] in cooperation with these two cab- | - . . . meeting place. An invitation from inet heads. | Hard Feeling in the Holy Land Topics of the Day Grand Forks is being considered. sil feality Goft's'fob ts that of & mo- | French Mistrust of Britain Best of the Current Poetry diator, e mi ind me commo! i 1 t se : round on which the g nment and Greece’s Home Troubles The Spice of Life DAKOTA GIRL WIN the railroad executives can agree in FRED H. GOFF | respect to . P oer . period of federal railway operation. | went. ‘This sum represents new cap | Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Cartoons MEDAL AS TYPIST He has no power to coerce, bud full | ital, which the government has con- | tended should be used as an offset | a 5 «st Silver Medal ‘ to what the ,government owes the | Ex-Secretary of the Treasury, William, G. McAdoo, says: _ ’ ' are aes Silver Meds forsyping Toads for rental and guarantees, “The Literary Digest has for many years been one of my most useful, interesting friends. ever won by a North Dakotan was “ The railroads contend the govern: | Nae SoA : * : ae is an important factor in the awarded by the Underwood Type- | forceful and thorough-going way in | mont owes them, on account of rent- Its career has been marked by constant improvement and progress. It is an impor' ' writer Co. to Lillian /Grinley, a | Which, at the recent Ww ne House | als, guarantees, undermaintenance. | intellectual life of the Nation. “ is Fi x dinner to western bankers, he pictur petween $1,200,800,000. a 1s | graduate of Dato Saanes, Col ed the gover ment’s faiiure to elfedt | sy oo he sHntte and yh ; lege, Fargo, N. D. She type a settlement with the roads as the |” he roads maintain they cannot aa r words of new matter in 10 minutes. | biegest single barrier to a revival of | now finance by new issues of stock, July 9th Number on Sale To-day News-dealers 10 Cents. $4.00 a Year. Several positions were offered her. Hd pontatlon eter te the three-quarters of a billion owing | : i @ so impr rarding . tha: the government on capital account, Hatcher Bros. Corporation, Fargo, asked to undertake the hasten- | and that the deduction of that sum secured her services. Accuracy and a settlement. through neg from the government's payments i3. speed make D. B. C. stenographers -| tiations with the director. general | equivalent to attempting tv meet | “‘winners’’ everywhere. They are | of railways, the interstate Commerce | these heavy new capital charges out much in demand. Commission and the executives of the | of current earnings. | « : P? at D. varfous roads. x On the other hand, the director | “ Follow the SucceS$ful” at D. | Hoover, as adviser in general of railroads, James C, Davis, : B. C. Summer School. Be at work | conditions affected © by contends that the roads in present: by Winter. Write F. L. Watkins, | ment, and Mellon bs ae ing their bills for final settlement | F, sary funding and fi " have padded them with hundreds of Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, ND. | Geared to cooperate with Gott tig | Millions in claims that cannot be the size of the job ahead of this | supported. In settlemnts with about | > old Cleveland)! ay bey co Class One roads, the amount | _ ' FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK uULku ante, | cod when it is realized” that} paid was onty about 40° per cent of | ‘ ; $ | y | disputed claims amounting to more | ype amount originally claimed.ags due. | z q NaN Ge ° than 2 bullon dollars met be con: Specifically, 44 roads filed claims of | DA! Ly PHOTO i ‘| posed before a settlemen can be | ¢96,821,801, but accepted in settle: | === : = ; ee reached. : i ment $42,286,914, or 43.6 per cent of |. ‘ + Fo: FOR FERNS co BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © The government has claims against | (he amount, "Settlement is still pond: malllse sith die’ Hinaneing. aimicaltiee T ARIFF ON PETROLEUM CRUDE IS ‘ine’ teespodntal or koubsncla Sie Knoxin all over the Northwest for Quality tro eee veriaa bai ins however, with | about 100 4l285| train of industrial and business hard- ' 5 | monia:in one gallon. of water: facag > TL) a) 1 ne e roa a me 2 short line ; 5 ' OMAIL US YOUR FILMS © |) MEN ckage, terminals and. equip | Oue ouds, and sor "t line' ships which are’ more or less the re- OPPOSED BY COMMISSION EXPERT) excctio: comoination tor watering 1 Will Recommend Funding | Yas knowledze. ‘codplad, with his your fern occasionally. Use thig not | f road situation will be the funding, for arree uhouia bitnbs Hae V. &, Smart, traffic expert for the, “It was stated at the time that the | ferns grow. ja period of 19 years, of the $774,000,- | in any settlement he may ultimatly | stale railway commission has joined | gepletion of the oil supply of the his would relieve the roads of Meee eee would make-an| Fe reported in the naitonal house of | to threaten exhaustion Insofar, of. the Hi. U the necessity of hunting for private Zs representatives. Mr, Smart made pub: | grades of oil used in gas manufacture ere capital to cover this investment, and ; lic a statement of the American Gas were concerned, aad ‘great eal oulty . puld mean that the total of unpaid Association in opposition to © | panies experience 1G i Sela Seeresefel 2 am AN OLD ntal and guarantees owing the CONTINUE T0 tariff. and in some cases found it Ura Y leach Cépiules would be paid. This, he de- Officials of the American Gas As-| ible to negotiate new contri or Each Capeule, FRIEND ares, would give the roads viation today voiced strong oppo-| as oil even at the prohibitive and ¢ With’ which: Loumeet outstanding billa, URGE WORLD sition ts that Dortion of the proposed | unprecedented prices that then pre- “ fo get busy improving run-down 5 a ses a duty of | vailed. BACK- road beds ‘and repalring defective thirty tiv eae eon on crude pet- “Now it appears that a nareatoes equipment. Jt would start steel mills jeum and twenty-five cents a barrel | condition of over production togeth er and railroad supply shops, give an N pe Taal cil. They stated that such a| with what seems to be a temporary upward, impetis: to. employment: and duty would add further to the cost reduction in demand for gasoline and set the whole industrial machine pooh of jving by increasing the price of other petroleum Pe al me ” eee Tater in Galt's Recatig: | Third Internationale to Continue) gas service to the consumer. iy prompted a sitennd tor panier is “ i § s i “ 5 years ago, F vill he to induce railroad ox Efforts Unabated is Gace roe: ‘Secretary-Manager of | portation of oil. oe t executives Lo together on the na- the Association, “many gas _com- “The gas industry consumes en ‘ ture of the claims to be incorporated Report panies whn are members of this As- pually about twenty-four million ar : i bills to the gov t. Bill F eee ‘i il | rels of gas oil and suc 1a siesta tee caieat Widely i. Riga, Letvia, July 9. (By Associated | sociation were motitied Ds ie nt that rarepoueal ‘would -inérease »the of the items yharged. |Press)—The. Congress of the Third) companies whose eusiobllls TOT OCs | price of this essential material and in ‘ ced formula could be follow- |,nternationale nearing close at Mos-| been for many ie continued and | turn would add to the living costs ng and settlement of [COW has demonstrated, rding to} could not be Biven vf gas oll, a pet-| of thirty-million people who depend . aims avuld be expedited. various European and American ob-| dependable supply of mas Cr ithe | upon gas manufactured in processes " : : : Helde* Payment. Due servers in the Baltie that thetpropa-| roleum. distillate largely use upon ga, /— BUT — Goff will champion the — railroad fgenda ie earn POLIS MDEId Fevo: manufacture of artific ; OAR aan + si at large sums are due for [lution is to c u refreshed and rejuvenated Ue aa area RB aetthe lines UBInE an accord now apparently exists be- with the high wines out of |ihe period of federal control. The |tWeen the denine and Trotzky factions : te I come to you policy followed “to spend ‘on {in Russian on important matters of my system, maintenance on each road the aver- | Policy. ae age of the sums spent by the roads,|, From complete accounts of specch- THE GREAT under pr control, during the |®s and proceedings of the congress sas th ding government op- |Teceived from Moscow newspapers . 7 3 AMERICAN : er: and other official Bolshevik forces 3 i : e er basis for mainten- |'these observers are now preparing re- IRE, the intruder, demands The prop €! e i i ti . ” \ i DRINK ” Cott ‘would be the lay- | ports for thelr government. indicating. “IT’S COOL attention when you .are 4 ‘ ing of an equal number of ties, or an |it is unders;o0d, that Trotzky and his ? " peas i pe i ~—,-, * egual amount of new track. During |faction probably will have a free hand Direction Valleau Theaters Company ; planning buildings, just ashe % va Brewed from choicest bar-! the war d maintenance costs, |to promote the Internationale’s work iz th does when ‘destroging poopeny { 1 d selected hops by our | @s did everything else, doubled and jon spreading revolution while his fac- di 7 ‘ & ley and sele n cqual expenditure would | tion in turn will support Lenin's pro- TONIGHT and interrupting business. _ : 4 own exclusive process. I re- than ‘halt the actual main-| gram within Russias WastEy HARRY ik Your best defense is Hartford 5 Ww snap and| tenance the government agreed to re eee ” a He ‘ tain all the bre v tee ee LANGER QUITS “BOB HAMPTON OF PLACER Fire Insurance and the service flavor and am delightfully “"In attempting to bring the govern- HIS DEBATES of the Hartford’s Fire Prevens 5 nt and the railroads together in a | ; . 5 EXHILARATING ;, Gaia attlement of their differences TH TOWNLEY MONDAY AND TUESDAY tton Engineers. : z SS a " Goff is following a line of public | WI D. W. GRIFFITH'S Get this complete ‘protection ‘ ——— work in which he already has achiev- —"n.. . We « ry ‘ This product’ : ; cho, after | Minneapolis, July 9—William Lang Le ae eee because you need it, Ad is NOT GOLDEN GRAIN JUICP fighting, jer, former attorney-general of North this agency for it. : COMPANY bout an agreement in the ,Dakota, who has been appearing in a st a “Near Beer” ; ; Cleveland street railway dispute, fix-|series of debates with A. C. Townley, COMING j aa jane cd ing a value of $55 a Share for the |president of the National s ye | of the old Clevelan Electric |league, announce: r ‘Gi q ” f ‘ y and making possible the|he had cancelled all further debates JACKIE COOGAN in. sa pee ete “The Man Who og ie zation which gave Cleve-|scheduled to be held. Langer declar-| MATT MOORE in... “THE LOVELIGHT” \ Kno BISMARCK BOTTLING WORKS, Inc. car fare at cost, which, for |e dthat Townley had failed to appear] MARY PICKFORD in. - 5. TH LOVERIGEE, _ Ingurance.” |, ox - Saree ‘ ? many years, was three cents. for scheduled debates on-three con-| JAMES 0. CURWOOD’S. Bismarck, WN. D. Phone 427 Local Distributors 204 Main Street As president of the Cleveland |secutive occasions at Bemidji, Aikin Matinee Daily at 2:30 Bismarck, N. D. : Trust Company, he is intimately fa-jand Little Falls. eer tt