The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1921, Page 1

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The Weather FAIR E BISMARC TRIBUN FORTIETH YEAR BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 721 Last Edition oad PRICE FIVE CENTS TAKES APPEAL FROM COFFEY’S BANK DECISION Attorney-general Asks Supreme Court for Writ of Certiorari in Matter NO DEPOSITS MADE TODAY State Officials Mark Time Pend- ing Application to Supreme Court for Writ COURT DISSOLY INJUNCTION, The supreme court late this att- ernoon upon application of At- torney General Lemke dissolved’ the injunction grante] the Stuts- man county taxpayers restraining state officials and officers of the B \ from re. ceiving further deposits and_per- forming other functions of the nstitution, | | i | | | | | | THE MAIN COUNTER IN THE 3. ; OF L, KE. BANK, THAT ONCE WA | USED AS A BAR, AND Ws | STONE, PRESIDENT OF ! STITUTION. * * By NEA Service. : Cleveland, Oct. 20.—Most of the 89,- 000 members of the siotherhood of ocomotive Engineers have healthy THE * RREN $./ IN | ENGINEERS HAVE OWN BANK; PROVES| ‘. BIG SUCCESS PARIS POLICE ARE BARFLED: BY BOMB CASE Seek to Trace Down Person Who Attempted to Assassinate U. S. Ambasssador ‘WAS BRITISH ARMY BOMB! i \ \ | i | | i i Valet, Former British Soldier, Recognized Sound of In- fernal Machine i i i Paris, Oct. (By the Asso- viated’ Pres. ')—-Retaliatory: meas- In the event of the exe of the two Halians, Saceo and Vanzettl, convicted of mur- der in Massachusstts, are threat ened against the American cons ulates, in Paris, Bordeaux, Lyons Marsellles, in letters receiv. ed at these consulates today ‘signed by the DANGER OF NATION-WIDE RAILROAD STRIKE LESSENS ' | HOSPITALS OF CITY ARE PRAISED | tutions in Front, as They Meet all of High Requirements of Noted Organization of Surgeons (Special to The Tribune.) ! | Philadelphia, Oct. .20——Hospital | service to the patient in North Da- | kota has shown a marked advance in ) the past year,- according to the third jannual report of the American Col- {lege of Surgeons releasea here today. | This report is h dona survey whicn included personal vi: to every hos- {pital of one hyndred beds or over iin the United States and Canada. The {following North Dakota institutions j were given a place on ‘he “approved” Nhe institutions above they are giving the best of scientific sare to their patients. Franklin H, ul of the Am of Surgeon “Aided by great’ educational have carried on pitals, made by who see working coni.tions as they are. Our. report. for 1921 shows a marked improvement. mm’ hospital serv: ice the country over, and places North: Dakota in the forefront ct stat are active in medical progress Dakota is to be congratulated on its splendid showing ‘gnd on the forward de foundation ical men, Evangelical Deaconess rek; Grand Forks Dea- ital, Grand Forks; . St. Alexiu BY AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS ‘Report Based Upon Personal Visits to Hossital Puts Local insti- proved that} artin, secre- n College! one of the we|- to hos-! AS UNIONS MEET U. §. LABOR BOARD FOR CONFERENCES | 'Declarati | ion Made by Union Chief | Thi at Strike Can Be Settled Held Omen YARDMEN PROTEST STRIKE ‘Association of 10,000 Railroad Union Members Sénds Pro- test to Big Leaders | | CAN BE SETTLED. Chicago, Oct, 20.—(By the Asso- ciated Pre -The prospective rallroad strike can not he post. poned, but it can he settled. This Was the opini the four big Brotherhood chieis and the pres- ident of the switehmen’s union alter 2 conference this morning aiter it was learned they had con- sidered all possible phases of the situation as they may he present. ed at the ting this afternoon with the U. S. railroad labor board. | In the order dissolving the in- junetion, the, supreme court di- rects Judge Cofiey and the plain- how cause wity the order n should not be made permanent.’ This order will be before the court Nov. 1. 1, Bismarek; St. John’s looking: medical men, hespital super-| Fargo; St. pakess hospital, intendents, and truslees who have} made this advance possible.” ‘ FORECAST HIGH | FEND CLUE, 20.—-(By the Assoe Press.)—Fr experts exe iz several hundred letters sent recently to Myron T. Mer- rick, the American ambassador, Soday discovered one, which they | hospital, savings accounts in the brotherhcod’ | | Fargo. own co-operative national bank that! | Wes organized here in November, 1920 The primary purpose of the bank! was to care for the funds of the or-; ganizaticn and to handle the money} Chicago, Oct. 20—Chiefs of the Big ‘Your Brotherhoods and the Switch- men’s Union arrived this morning and went into conference preparatory to their meeting this afternoon with the TO [IRISH PLAN Attorney General Lemke secur- ed the order aiter refusal of Judge Coffey voluntarily to vacate the injunction granted ¢ ‘Tuesday. An appeal to the supreme court was to be taken this afternoon from tie order of District Judge Coffey, granted at Jamestown, prohibiting the Bank of North Dakota from! receiving deposits and otherwise affecting state officials. Attorney General Lemke said the action would take the form of an ap- plication for a writ of certiorari which he said, would nave the effect of staying all proceedings in the case and suspending the order of Judge Coffey. | The Bank of North Dakota had not had any deposits sendered it this; morning, according t» bank officials | Treasurer John Steen said that he had not sent any money to the bank, and that he had asked the attorney gen- eral for legal advice. Eifect of Oider. The court's order restrained all of the officials named, including most of the state officials. from depositing any money in the Bank of North Dakota aduring the pendency of the. order, the} ‘bank from receiving deposits of any; kind, from auditing any accounts or/paying | “the same other than~for ‘legitimate expenses of the state of North Da-; kota. Treasurer Steen was enjoined! from depositing any <noney in the, bank, the members of the board 0-/ equalization were restrained from fix-) ing any state tax levy, the Spitzer- Rorick company, the Toiedo firm said ‘to have bought the state bonds from selling or negotiating any bonds now | in their possession, the industrial| commission and F. W. Cathro were en-| joined from disbursing any funds in} the possession, custody or control ot! the Bank of North Dakota other than for the purpose of paying checks or| drafts drawn by bona fide depositors, | the industrial commission and Poin- dexter were enjoined from using any; state funds for: political purposes, the Bank of North Dakota was adjudged to be insolvent and thereby unfit to be the depasitory of public funds. The} | thrift among the men,” ire sa. restrained Auditor Poindexter! ture of the co-operative ! cf widows and orphans vl dead broth- erhood members. Original deposits were $651{000. To |day the institution has drawn in, de~ posits, from coast to ccast, more than $10,000,000 and is gaining at the rate of $1,000,000 a month. Stone President, The president of the Dank is War j ren S. Stone, who also is chief of the brotherhocd and who once ran a loco- motive on a single track division of | the Rock Island. | “We'll pay at least six per cen: | dividend on stock in the first year of ‘our existence,” says Stone. He’s now creating savings clubs among the 875; local lodges of the hrotherhood. . “Our main object is to inculcate s. “When they accumulate savings, we'll rec: / ommend good. investments. “Our brotherhood pays out $3,009, 1000 a year to widows and orphans of; | @eceased members. In the past 7! per cent of this money disappeared jin a year, for the inexperienced folk got into the hands of sharpers. Now our trust department takes care cf the funds for these p2-pie. Stone is a firm believer in the fu- movement power of labor, Labor's Power. “If labor would only conserve its resources and put it m the banks, i would be able to dictate the financ policy. of the country in 10 years, he says. “Labor’s income is 425,000,000,000 a year. The whole problem is one of" education in co-operaticn, a problem that we have tackled in real earnest. The brotherhood hank is now locat- and in the merly occupied by a saleon. The maia banking counter once served as a bar. But the brotherhood owns sufficient land adjoining to accommodate a 21- story bank building, for which plans eheniy have heen drawn, and which is to be built within two years. NEW MINISTRY hearing was set for Nov. 3. H State officials, both Nonpartisan and} Independent, were named in the suit. | The beard of university and school! lands, composed of Governor Frazier, Thomas* Hall, William Lemke, Miss’ Nielson, and Mr: Poindexter was; charged in the suit with having not; safe-guarded school funds in depos-} jting them in the Bank of North Da- kota, charged as an unsafe depository. Messrs. Frazier, Olsness, Lemke, Steen | and Lofthus were charged with hi ing, as a state auditing board, approv. ed bills for political advertising with; the state’s money. Messrs. Frazier, Lemke and Hagan were charged with having as an industrial commission, expended- state money for politica! propaganda. | Papers Are Served. hh The papers in the lawsuit were served | late yesterday afternoon upon state officials or deputies, ani the Bank of North Dakota. A deputy sheriff was accompanied by Ormsby McHarg, one of the lawyers in the vase, in making: the rounds of the capitol offices. ‘ Attorney General Lemke arrived in his office late in the afternoon, coni- ing from Hatton, in the eastern part of the state where he aad been speak- ing. He said he was awakened at 2 e’clock in the morning, told about the Jaw suit, drove 70 miles across coun try and caught a train to Bismar He discussed the law suit with his: deputies on his arrival, considering its effect on the state yevernment and 1-i}1eq Maxwell's son in a jail break at | is no death | leenl stens to he taken. The action was “denounced by Mr. Lemke, especially: Ormsby McHarg, Jamestown lawyer, ‘who lias maintaln- ed offices in New York for several years and who formeriy was promi- nent in national politizs. The attor- mey general also expressed SUTPTIS2 | ae ee Last Chance To Register For Vote on that Judge Coffey granted the injunc- tion without notice to che state. Surprised At Couri’s Action “T am surprised.that any court with- out giving any notice whatsoever to any of the officers of the state and ‘without giving such officers an OD- 11.104 to register for the recall elec- | #8®. ‘portunity to he heard could be in- duced by the false and -perjured affi- davit of an attorney from Wall street to issue an injuncticn, the effect of which is to tie up the state govern-' precinct in which they: will vote Be Country voters | School, | ment and prevent it from carrying on its governmental cuties.” ‘ Lemke also declared that the sui: was intended to stcp the bond sale, if/may be “sworn in” at the polls, how-j pan possible, and for this reason the plain- tiffs asked and obtained an order pro-; hibiting the tax commissioner from certifying out the state tax, levy, (Continued on Page 3) ~ IN PORTUGAL cs Following Bloodless Revolution New Government Takes Control London, Oct. 20: (By the Associat- Press.)—After a bloodless revolu- ion in Portugal a ministry has been ‘formed and is in full contre! at Lis- hon, it is stated in dispatches received | at the Portugese legation. WANTS T0 SPRING DEATH TRAP Minot, N. D., Oct. 20—Sheriff Scho- field, of Ward county, has received from Hugh Maxwell, sheriff of Ply- mouth county, lowa, a request that if death sentence be pronounced upon ‘Charles Welling, Maxwell be accorded the privilege of springing the death \trap. Welling is held here, charged | with the killing of Julius A. Neilson, ight policeman at Kenmare, Welling is thought to be a Harry Smith, who shot Sheriff Maxwell and shot and |Le. Mars, Iowa. There is penalty in North Dakota, however. ‘Springs fornfed by subterranean riv- fresh water in the world’s oceans. ed in an unpretentious building, for-; HOMESTEADERS LODGE PLANS. FORWARD MOVE, ‘Two Day Meeting With National President Concludes With Dinner at Hotel { | | i i | | ! { ! Plans are now complete for a for-| ward movement by Homsteaders lodge | | No. 300, Bismarck, following a district | meeting here in which Harry Green, ; |of Des Moines, Ia. supreme presi- | |dent, and J. ‘Mulholland, — of | Kramer, N. D., North Dakota state | | manager, went over with representa- | | tives ot the local lodge the work that | | has been done and the possibilities. The two-day. meeting concluded last (night ‘with a dinner in the McKenzie | hotel,-at:which Mrs. E. He Pearson Vhead of the local order, which is for | men and women both, presided. Members of the lodge from Regan, | Hazen, Mandan, Stanton and Eureka j were present at the business meeting ‘held Tuesday with members of the | Bismarck lodge . and the national | president. Following the business session a banquet was held in Legion hall Tuesday night at which 65 per- | sons were present. | The local lodge, already; in good | | condition, now plans to make a cam- | |‘ paign to intrease the membership | |and to enlarge the activities of the | order, } An unusual feature of the dinner last Night in the McKenzie was the meeting of Mr. Green and Mrs, Eva { Childs, of Janesville, Wis., national head of the Royal Neighbors, who was | | attending a Royal Neighbor banquet in the same dining room. They have known each other for years but did not have any idea that they were within. a thousand miles cf each other. The hand of fellowship was extended between, thé two orders in the dining room after the heads exchanged | greetings. | NAVALBASE ~ RUMOR DENIED = London, Oct. 20—(By the Associat- ed Pres The report that Great | i { \ | British forces in France. believe may furnish 2 strong clue | OBSERVE MEMORY in tracing the maker o1 the po! which exploded in Mr, Herric home here yesterd: Paris, Oct. 20. (By Associated | Press.)—Police autho s investiga- | ting the explosion of an infernal ma-' chine in the. residence of Myron T. i Herrick, ambassador to France, yes- | terday reported that apparently a} British bomb widely used during the | war was concealed in the package | sent to the ambassador. i It was recalled that Mr. Herrick’s | velet recognized the sound given; out by the package when it was open- ed as being that of a bomb and that: he was formerly a soldier in the | | No clue as:to those who plotted | to assassinate Mr. Herrick has been found and fragments of the deadly package are being examined in the | hope that it may be possible to trace | its origin. { Paris. méwspapers today voiced | borror at the outrage and printed! long accounts and photographs show- i ing the wrecked room in the Herrick: residence. | MINERS’ FUND "RETURN ASKED | ! Illinois Secretary Wants $43,000! From Howatt Followers | i | | Pittsburgh, Kan., Oct. 20.—Return | to the treasury of the Lilinois miners of the balance of the $100,000 fund sent to the Kansas miners to aid their light he been asked by Walter Nes- | bit, secretary-treasurer of the Illinois! district. ' In a letter to Thomas Harvey, pro- | visional secretary-treasurer of the| Kansas district, Nesbit asked that the | $43,000 remaining shoutd be returned; for deposit in the treasury of District! 12. | | | Denies Lack of Support, Springfield, I1l., Oct. 20.—Further | financial support - from Illinois for! Alexander Howatt and his followers | will be forthcoming if it is needed,! Secretary-Treasurer Walter Nesbit, of | the Illinois Miners Union, said this; afternoon in denying that the removal | of the fund back to Iilinois meant} withdrawal of support. pee ae | RAISE STANDARDS | (Mandan, N. D., Oct. 20—Tightening ; vn of the requirements concerning} the speaking of English has resulted | Britain was planning the establish- | ment of naval bases in the Bermudas | at Singapore, and elsewhere were} termed “pure imagination” by an ad- | miralty official, who declared he was | unable to understand what Premier} Hughes of Australia was referring to in his recent speech on the subject. TWO ARE SHOT IN BELFAST Belfast, Oct, 20—Two persons were ; wounded during firing which occurred ! in the Stanhope street areas between milita nd snipers last evening. One | of the injured was a young gi:1. | BUY AUDITORIUM i Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 20—Grand ; Forks has assumed ownership of the | auditorium here. A scale of rental | prices for commercial, political and | | i | | i 1'ers cause the appearance of spots of religious and charitable meetings has _ been established. | | { Election Of Oct. 28 Is Offered Tomorrow in lowering the number of applications | for United States citizenship here. Patriotic societies are taking an active interest in the acquirements of men asking for citizenship and each application is closely scrutinized. WHAT YOU WILL | - CAST BALLOT ON, OCT. 28 NO. 3, Public Depository Law. This initiated law to be voted on Oct. 28, provides: All funds of public corporations, of state, state institutions, shall be de- deposited within state of North Dakota in duly designated depositories Any state bank, any national bank in state may beccme depositories by designation. Depositories for state funds shall be designated by state hoard of audi- ters jin conjunction with governor. Depositories for county funds shall be designated by county comm joner: 1 ; and depositories of other funds by the hoard which is legal custodian of said funds. In townships in which organ: ization is incomplete’ county comm CROWDED STREET being pounded to pieces by the heavy) low pi The last chance for voters of Bis-: ‘First Ward West—C. B. Little’ Gar- sioners shall designate depo: “ommamncsmaney OQURTSO,K.ON. London, Oet. 20.—Arrangements ‘have been made for a demonstra- tion tobe held on Sunday, the i of the death of ) weney,. formerly ‘lord mayor of Cork, who died in Braxton privon last Setober fol. lowing a hunger strike of more than 70 days. The demonstra- will be held at Trafalgar square and on Wednesday next there will be a commemorative meeting at Albert hail, SHRINERS PLAN 10 AID LITTLE CRIPPLESOF U.S Imperial Wide Spread Program of the Organization TAX LIMIT LAW With Decision Rendered in One Case Attorneys Expect H. B. 25 to be Upheld’ i i ‘APPLIES TO WHOLE LEVY ‘Supreme Court Says Whole Bud- : get, Not Individual Items, Affected i | Decision upholding the constitution- ality of the tax limitation law of the "| state was forecast in legal circles to- ; day, following the decision. of the su- 2 ;Preme court in one of the two suits .Potenate Announces! before it involving the law. It was pointed out that the court had inter- |preted the application of the law in {one decision, promulgated today, and it was not @xpected that the court ——_ would then declare the entire law in- Pittsburgh, Oct. 20.—Ernest Cutts. | valid, of Savannah, Ga., imperial potentate | The ‘high court reversed District of the Ancient Arabic Order Nobles |Judée cole, of Fargo, in deciding that erie i , the tax limitation law applied to the ofthe S Mysto: Shrine upon an: of levies as a whole and not to indi- ficial visit to Pittsburgh, told Shrineravof: this city last-nlene th ce ual items in the budget. of this city last ni ha " ‘ eer the organization had pledged itself | The, case: before the:court was, Insti jtuted by the Northern Pacific rail- to the expenditure of $10,000,000 for’ toad against the Cass county board of the care and cure of crippled children | (ommissioners, to restrain the com- Tegardlens ot ba creel ae ee as|Missioners from making a proposed Mr. © a i aS! bridge , which, E t al statistics have,,been available there | Federye Walch, the. meena leged, was in excess of one-third of are .400,000 crippled children within | the amount raised for bridge purpose: the jufisdiction of the Shrine and |g sig agg teens Durposes | i in 1918, 1919 and 1920. that it is the ae of the or-| ‘The supreme court held that house | Leper ear ospitals iN| hi] No, 25, the tax limitation mea- | vari ctions ; of the country to! sure, limited the total amount of the take cafe of them. {county levy to one-third of the 1918, i | ' jnot limit individual items in the bud-) jgot, | ) The Limitation Law (House Bill No. 25, as passed by the last session of the legislature, said jthat “the total amount of taxes levied | for any purpose in any county, or po- litical sub-division thereof, shall not exceed an amount equal to one-third | of the total combined levies which were made for the years 1918, 1919 and 1920." Exceptions were provided in that school districts might levy 30 per cent above this amount and coun- | ties, cities and political subdivisions were permitted to increase the amount per cent by favorable vote at’ an : election. e ; Tax levies now are being held up ‘in most of the counties of the state | because of the fact that the constitu- tionality of the limitation law has been in question. Many cities and icounties made their tax levies with- out regard to the law, and these bud- GET U..S. LOANS | eets will nave to be cut down aonsid- = lerably. The budget of the city of a | Bismarck will have to be cut down As a result of inquiries and su8-; several thousand dollars, gestions made by Attorney J. M. Han- ley, of Mandan, E. J. Weiser, director | WEATHER REPORT of the War Finance Corporation for; For 24 hours ending at noon Octo- North Dakota, has ruled that soldier ber 20, 1921. bonus claims may be used as collat-| Temperature at 7 a, m. era] and as cash for the purp of! Highest yesterday soldiers engaging in dairying or agri-| Lowest yesterday .. culture in making loaus. Lowest last night . Precipitation .. Highest wind veloci stage: 0.4 change 0.1 foot. | Minneapolis, Oct. 20.—Jose Wal- quist, 19, a messenger for Stahley Falls bank, Minneapolis, was slugged and robbed of a grip fail of securities near the bank door today. The high- way men fled in a large automobile. The attack, which took, place at 11:15 A. M. while scores were nearly, prov- ed futile according to bankers be- cause the grip contained non-negoti- able securities. SOLDIERS MAY USE BONUS TO 31 53 42 one w15-N 24-hour STORM POUNDS LAKE STEAMER foot; Weather Forecast For Bismarck and Vicinity: Partly “eldudy tonight and Friday; warmer to- night. v ‘For North Dakota: Partly cloudy Sturgeon Bay, Wis., Oct, 20—The| tonight and Friday; warmer tonight lighter , Advan cut loose last) egoler night from the steamer Frank Billings day, near Snake island in Sand Bay after! ~ the lighter had started to sink. Her! Weather Conditions crew of five were saved. | The western high pressure area has The Advance is now on the beach, advanced to the Plains States and a sure area has overspread tie Coal taken from the Billings is, Canad Northwest and the northere in the northwest portion Fri- PLS. United States ‘Railroad Labor Board. Union headquarters were optimistic and there was _a_ stnongly evident feeling that there would be no strike unless something unexpected occurs to disrupt the conference this after- noon. Present at the union conference were Warren SS. Stone, grand chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gineers; L, IK. Sheppard, president of the Order of Railroad Conductors; W. G, Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen; W. S. Carter, president of the Brotherhood of Loco- motive Firemen and (Enginemen; and T. C, Cashen, president of the Gwitch- men’s Union of North America, ‘ The 11 so-called “standard” unions marked time today, awaiting,the out- come of the labor board meeting. ‘While a few of thetr general chair- men met to discuss strike plans the majority crowded the hearing rooms of the labor board to see the Pen- nsylvania railroad cited for failure to obey the board’s orders. YARDMEN PROTEST. Milwaukee, Oct. 20.—The American railroad men’s association a fraternal and benevolent , association embrac- ing 10,000 yard masters, yard con- ductors and switchmen today issued an‘appéal to all railroad unions to call off the. proposed general strike and accept the wage cut ordered by the United States railroad board. The union men were warned that if they “arrayed against you will be 100,000,000 men, women and children. The same railroad manage- ment that now seems to decry public opinion would so mould and crysta- lize against you as to overwhelm you and would nse in their defense the power which should ibe used against them.” . The statement, an’ open letter to union men, was signed by Frank McCut Jr, business manager of the order, | | | i | | ‘i DECISION EXPECTED, Washington, Oct 20.—Decisions by the Interstate Commerce Commission in pending cases involving requested reductions of rates on hay, grain and feed and lumber were understood to be imminent today after a conference on the railroad situation in which President Harding, Chairman Mc- Chord, of the commission and acting Attorney General Golf participated. PRESENT UNITED FRONT. Chicago, Oct. 20—The meeting this morning saw the ‘chiefs of the four leading brotherhoods and the presi- dent of the switchmen gathered to- gether for the first lime since the strike order was issued last Saturday. The five presidents were in confer- ence two hours and adjourned short- ly after noon ready to present a united front at the meeting with the labor board, TAX REVISION "DEBATE WAXES ~— HOT IN SENATE i Senator La Follette Leads Fight on Proposal of Finance Committee ' | | Washington, Oct. 20.—Provisions j of the tax revision bill exempting | from taxation fortunes of the income j of foreign traders and foreign-trade ‘corporations derived from sources j outside the United States were be- | fore the senate again today With op- ; Ponents lead by Senator LaFollette, i Republican, Wisconsin, ready to i continue efforts to have them stricken out. | Despite the fight and others yet to | be considered Chairman- Penrose, of | the senate finance committee, has not | given up hope of obtaining an unani- | mous consent agreement for a final vote on the bill the last of next week. tion of October 28 is offered on Friday, Oct. 21, All voters not registered in the irequired tio register. are not: required to register. Voters j ever. | to be open tomorrow follow: | First Ward : school. The registration places in the city Sast—William Moore| ready are registered in townships where organ | complete the board of township super- visors shall name the depository. Deposi s shall be named after {an advertisement has announced rohable amount of funds to be osited and bids are called for. Banks Fourth Ward—Wachter school. hall pay not less than 2 per cent Com- | on call deposits and 4 per cent on time / deposits, List ef depositories shall be rd—Fire Hall. published, ny voters registered on the! Chief change from present law is to first registration day. ‘Most voters al-! omit name of Bank of North Dakota from previous} from list of banks which may qualify as depositories. econd Ward East—Will school. | { cond Ward West—Wm. Kraft] | 3s 1G, a Third Ward West—High school. | Third Ward East—F. Richholt | Dl |" Fifth Ward—Copelin Motor i se. / elections. a total los: WOULD STOP H Grand Forks, N. D. Oct. largest step forward in the op hazing, made by the Men’s ference of North Dakota Universi was taken here recently when members class pledged themselves dulge in the usual form The gr freshman last year —The | where. ight to excepting that showers have occur. Co) the of the present freshman/| northwestern low pressure area will) not to in-) result in partly cloudy weather of hazing.| North Dakota tonight and ‘Friday ap will be retained and the | warmer tonight and cooler Friday in| out the claim of John B. Bracken, af phomore games, initiated! the northwest portion, substitute for hazing} will be continued. |Rocky Mountain region. The Lernper- | ature has_r over the latter tions and has remained moderate els The weather has been fair, He said today that he planned to .; ask for such an agreement within a | day or two. 1} HOUSE DENIES CLAIM OF SEAT in} Washington, Oct. 20—Without a dis- ith | senting vote the house today threw red in the southern Lake Region an. along the north Pacifie coast. The eastward movement of the!. « | Pittsburgh, that he was elected rep- ORRIS W. ROBERTS, |resentative-at-large from Pennsylvan- Meteorologist. {ia to the 67th Congress.

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