The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 6, 1921, Page 2

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. SRCOND ACTION I$ STARTED IN ARMORY MATTER Personal Property is Asked By/| Action By Attorney- | General | ; Avsecond action involving possession | of the old national guard armory! building here has been filed in district | court. The new action is filed by W.} A. Anderson, assistant attorney gen-! eral, ard is a suit for $4,900 for pro-| perty said to have been in the armory, | including 84 steel lockers, 350 pairs} roller skates, 120 chairs, 2 basketball ; frames, 1 punching bag and rack and} other. articles. .The action is directed | against E. A. Hughes. The first ac-' tion was directed against a number of | people. : | Mr. Hughes was out of the city this | morning and attorneys who acted at | the time the armory matter was in district, court declined to discuss the actions before court proceedings are; held. However, the methods by which | the matter was handled were pointed | out by interested parties. A large: number of business men had given) notes which the armory association! could not. pay, and there were other | debts. It was said that men in the association, of which Henry Murphy! was the head, declared the armory was} not suitable for the purpose for which} it was erected and as, long as the as-| sociation could not pay the Bills and) could':not even pay the men who has given the notes they made the sale of WRECK HE CAUSED. the, property. A quiet title suit was brought, debts were paid, mortgages staring at him, surely enough were ‘were assumed and. tendex made to fs six large crocodiles. The Lieutenant’ state of the money it had put into the race blanched and he wondered whetl:- association. er he too had become affected by the . Soman wiped heat or, perhaps, the red wine, Just METHODIST GAVE then two men- bearing an instrument which resembled. a machine gun on ‘D4 MI L LI @) N TO high stilts came 8 long: {Dont tute ; "| f our crocodiles,” they hegge jeu= MIN! ISTERIAL AID tenant. - “They're harmless and we sit need them in our film. Chicago, Aug. fare total minis- toe See terial support of the Methodist Epis- copal church for 1920 was $24,988,323, MONU: NT FOR reer’ d itaha a ay oc| ANGLO AMERICAN vision of Appropriations of Metho- dist Commitee on Censervation and Advance. Of this amount, pastors London, Aug. 6.—Bunker Hill, «a salaries, including house rent, were|slight eminence adjoining London’s $21,944,613; the District Superintend-|popular playground, Hampstead ents’ salaries, $1,369,221; Bishops'| Heath, is to bear a monument com- salaries, $314,000, and for Conference| memorating Anglo-American. brother- Claimants or for preachers’ pensions, | hood-in-arms during the great war. $1,360,409, A find is being, collected to pur- For building and improvements, the} chase the site, and the plans are tu church spent $10,655,179; and on ailljerect a memorial in the shape of a indebtedness, $4,636,796; and for all}\curved wall, displaying the names of current expenses, $11,210,835, a total| the regiments and commanding ofli- or $51,481,133. i cers of the American and English Centenary and other apportioned | armies who fought together. Meta! benevolences for the church were| tablets. would record the battlefields $16,089,675; women’s missionary so-| and the names of the English military cieties and Childrens’ Day Funds, $3,- training camps where the: Americans 073,672; a total of $19,163,344. stayed after reaching England. Tie Dr. Barton. said’ thatthis gives a! whole is to be surrounded by flower total disbursement for the Methodist | beds. Episcopal church for the above pur- The cost of the memorial is to be poses in 1920 of $70,644,480. | from $50,000 to $75,000 and among the supporters of the scheme are Nich- BUCK PRIVATES Bryce, Lady Astor and the Bishop o! AND CROCODILES |! SWIM TOGETHER par KING OVER ~ Versailles, Aug. 6.—The beautiful | marble. swimming pool created by! Louis XIV, between the Trianon Pa! ace and the Neptune Basin, so that the pages.of the king might enjoy a dip on hot days is now used by pri vate soldiers stationed in the bar- racks near by. During one recent torrid spell about AG PRESIDENT Fargo, Aug. 6.—The state board of administration is meetng at the agri- cultural college here today to consider applications an suggestions for a per- manent president for the college. No decision is. probable. today, it was an- 50 buck privates were recuperating in nounced. the.pool from two hours’ drill in the morning before the noon day meal. | Klinifelter’s Big Electric Suddenly, with a terrified shriek, a) yj is i soldier sprang out of the baths: [EA ianted Merry oO Ed oa by ‘Crocodiles, Lieutenant, there are . erbenatien tn the pool!” \the corner of 6th and Main. “Put a blanket around this man and ooo take him to the guardhouse. He: is) TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS crazy with the heat,” said the Lieu-|!« tenant. } Then with a concerted rush which eqhalled anything ever shown against the’ Germans, ' the--other» 49» bathers leaped out. “‘Crocodiles,--crocodiles!") they shrieked. The iieutenant, # veteran of many| battles, looked closer at the water and there‘? ivith' ‘jaws “set. and -eyés:, | Aer the Horse __ is Stolen ss cae After a tornado has de- stroyed your home, ruined your crops, and. killed your livestock it ‘is'too late to get protection. : Don’t wait until you see the windstorm clouds darkening the horizon before you get your tornado insurance policy. Tornadoes come unannounced! A policy in the Hartford is a sure means of repayment for AL on™ SEEN JOHN ARRE, SIGNING HIS CONFESSION TO {olas Murray Butler of New York, Lord|: Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHI WE ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS By Newspaper Eaterprise. Scranton. Pa., Aug. 6—John Arre is the son of a village huckster, a 14- year-old lad with a passion for smash- ing things. His great ambition was to wreck a train. Day after day, according to the signed confession he has madg to po- lice, he plaggd metal objects of one sort and another on the tracks. Finally he achieved his aims—and ditched the Lackawanna Limited at Glenburn, causing a loss -of two lives and injuries to 30 persons. Seeing that disaster from the tov of an apple tree merely. whetted his ambition—and two days later he was caught in the act of trying to repeat the performance. Now he is in the House of Deten- tion of Juvenile court, awaiting tri for murder. When’ reminded that hi act cost the lives of two engineers, Charles D. Coolbaugh and Jacch Gleischmann, the boy merely says: “That's too bad.” What disposition to make of his case is puzzling authorities. ~ “KIT CARSON TREE” ‘SITE HONORED BY CALIFORNIANS Carson City, Nev., Aug. 6—Unveil- ing a monument near here, the Native’ Sons of California’ cn Sunday will mark the site of the “Kit Carson Tree.” The California tree, a pine on THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WRECKING THE LACKAWANNA LIMITED, AND THE] 20W Greausbor history ‘by the American Forestry as- C sociation, following its nomination by| den, four miles and a half southwest F. N. Fletcher of Carson City, Ne-|of the battleground. yada... It was on this trip that Col. Fre-| is now a magnificent old white oak. mont discovered, Lake Tahoe. pine was in @ pass through the Sierra Nevada Mountains. — down in 1888 by William Thornburg FAMOUS MOONSHINER and J. F. data shows, andithe trunk with Car- son’s name cut in it: was moved to Sutter’s Fort, where it may now be seen. history has been sealed up in a con-| Hatfields, moonshiners and outlaws tainer in the. monument by Native] for two generations, is the chief at- ' v SATURDAY, AUGUS eG T un cE LOOKING FOR THE MAN ~ Ae 3 ; who has been waiting for clothes prices to drop. Am pleaséd to say that all our prices have been marked down, and the new woolens just. received show a mark- ed decline in prices over a year ago, as much as $30.00 on a single suit.’ ___ The largest selection we have ever had awaits your inspection. , ‘ ie ‘Prices $27.50 up—Suit or Overcoat. Klein, Tailor and Cleaner PVTOTE EO pistharekN. Be FEN SSeS A ie ITO in detection far quick = ficient. ‘ i “Fingerprints of more lion and a half person: be kept on, file at, our, byufean,. We, will. is- sue a daily bulletin with laiest crime developments, which will’ be given wide circulation,” : International as well as national co- operation is, planned. 0 SE Eleanor M. Freeman-of Seattle: Wasa:-omders-in “a raid on Old Devil “Anse and “more ef In 1875 Miss Freeman's father visited | Hatfields’ cave, and who wag after- the John Brown, far! accompanied pardoned by President. Wilson by a son-in-law of Brown. Only and tells of life among the moonshin- log foundation of the ‘¢a y e : 5 Ad _| but from the first place was a hickory tree which Mr. Free trimmed and from a branch made cane, which his daughter, now hag. From Guilford College, G., ha ryeome the nomination of th den Oak by Mark C, Mills, nea mil- addition to this special ‘attrac: tion, Ray Stewart will be seen ip a production “The, , Devil "NEW SHOE SHOP” Opens Monday, ‘August 8th. 111—5th Street ©‘ '* Laskin Block, across from McKenzie Hotel. Our aim is to give the best work with prompt service: at reasonable prices. Particular attention given to the repairing of work shoes. All work done:is fully guar- anteed. Our charges are the same as before the war. All repairing'is done by practical shoe repair men. e ba eh. by (0c \nals* Fingetprints At | Central'Buredu >! BY ALICE ROHE. New York, Aug, Ungle Sam is going to nationalize his chasing of crogks e'll do it by establishing at Wasii- ington: 9, National Police Bureau. Douglas I. McKay, special deputy pu- lice commissioner here, is to be sec- retary. McKay, former police commissione> and West Point graduate, explained to me the workings and economies vi the new bureau. : “Today if a murder is committed’ and fingerprints are found, we can query.only a few cities—the most likely ones,” he said. “No matter how General, Gre iq Lord, } i withdrew, ing} Ul \ Wounde These were cared.for hy. the people, of the Quaker settlement of New Gar: Soldiers that died were buried in the shade of what The| Here in recent years has been erected a simple monument.” : The tree was cut O'Gorman, the association’s <0" AT THE REX TODAY Chas. Perez, a’ member of the fa- ‘A full account of the tree's} mous Kentucky feudist family, the traction today at the Rex, where he Sons. “ 7 iss The hickory tree that grew in the| shows his pictures of life in a Fed-| many we ask, we are likely to m fireplace of the Kansas log cabin of|eral prison and tells how he was ar-; the one where the murderer's prints F. P. SUNICH John Brown of Osawatomie and Hav-| rested with the other members of this) are on file. By having the criminal Shoe Repair Shop which Kit Carson carved his name’in|' 1844 when acting as a guide to Col Fremont, has been given a place in the Hall of Fame for trees: with a [>] BISHOP. BRISSMAN CO. Accountancy College. An Accounting School conducted |, by Accountants for Accountants. Not. operated for profit. Both Class Koom and Corres- pondence Instruction. Write for Particulars. Minneapolis \ Wilmae Bldg. « Fargo, N. D. Fargo,i Nat'l Bk. Bldg, S30! St. Paul -Globe Bldg. ee ARM CLUINTOCK Cay VEL ES: STN We write them, °- loss. Insuranee.” Bismarek,- N.D. With our new McClintock Burglar Alarm System which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your Liberty Bonds and other valuables as well as to do your general banking business, First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW . Safety First Aas per’s Ferry has been‘nominated for a} notorious gang and sent to the pen place in the hall of fame by’ Mis¢ for life for the killing of three federal records of all state and cities at 2 central bureau, we can make crime Vhy President Harding Takes the Helm “No more pitiable spectacle of complete legislative subserviency, of legislative truckling, of leg- islative crawling upon the belly at the feet of a master and licking the boots of authority” has ever been seen by Senator Reed, of Missouri, so he: says, than is presented by the Republican Senate ma- jority. However much the people may approve President Harding’s decision to assume more and more of active leadership, the Democrats in Congress, reports one of_the newspaper correspondents, have made up their minds, that he is not to be allowed “to get away with it,” at least until they have shown up Republican inconsistency. Both Senators and Congressmen have denounced recent attempts at what they call “personal rule.” ~ President Harding’s career as leader of his party really began with his address to the Senate which prevented the passage of the bonus bill, notes the Boston Transcript (Rep.). In thus ‘assuming active direction of the most-important business before Congress, we read ‘in the Brooklyn Eagle (Dem.), “He was but following ‘Theodore: Roosevelt and Woodrow. Wilson, who long ago discovered that the concep- tion of the Presidency until recently held by Mr. Harding: tends toward ‘the paralysis of governmental business.” When Mr. Harding took the place of Mr. Wilson on March 4th, writes the Washington cor. respondent of the Seattle Times (ind.), “there were people who believed he was a political jellyfish. But, we read, “he has astonished the skeptics and delighted his friends by his boldness and initiative— first, in what he has done to insure a: world confer ence on disarmament, and, secondly, in single-hand- edly tackling the bonus hornet’s nest.” “Let him take the helm!” cries the Boston Herald, one of the many Republican papers delighted: to see the President taking the lead in the work of legislation. The ‘leading article in‘THE LITERARY “DIGEST this week, August 6th, describes with a world of detail the President’s action in assuming the leadership of his party, presenting as it does, public opinion from all sections of the country as represented by editorials in leading newspapers. Other news-features in this number of: THE ‘DIGEST of interest and importance are: The Insurance Companies Present Railroad Aid Without New Taxes ow or thé Disabled’ n ‘Their Side _ ad ite . tt a oe katie Illinois’ Indicted Governor ee ces cee Fi The New. Menace to Sea Power An ‘Anglo-Yanko‘Japanese Triangle | France and England Fighting Into Coming: The“Trollibus” = © °* *’ ||: Harmony (= | rplitine hill Detection of False Handwriting Austria’s Republic “Carries On” Geofze Washington in'Engiand Golf.By Machinery |? Hindu Ancestry-of Uncle Remus A German Slam At Our Literature -The Necessity of Pistol-Toting:: : Smuts, The “New Man” Out of: Africa Topic of the Day: : Milliotis Starving ih Lenine’s’ Paradise of Atheism More Nurses Vs. Better Nursing ‘Best of the Current Poetry = Numerous Illustrations Including Humorous Cartoons. August 6th Number on Sale Today § News-dealers 10 Cenits—$4.00 a Year. ay he oa ee

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