The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 2, 1921, Page 2

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~ MOMEN VOTERS ~ WANT ELECTION LAW CHANGED “Claim They Are Not Able To Vote Unless Registered Same Place as Husbands LE SPOR Tek ae ‘DELEGATION MAKES KICK Boston, Noy, 2--A woman whose | husband establishes his legal resi-! dence at a club loses the rght to vote in this-state’ Her only recourse un- der existing laws, it was brought out recently, would be to go there and| live with him. t Appearing before the secretary of state and attorney general seeking re- | peal of a law requiring that women | voters must be registered from the! same address as their husbands, a delegation of women asserted that several of their sex had been refused! the ballct, because the legal residence of their husbands was at Boston clubs. t Other es cited included that of a Brooklyn woman who did not know ; the whereabouts of her husband and! was refused registration, and that of | a woman in Sharon who said. that! she was legally separated from her | husband put had been given to:un-! derstand: that she was “not divorced | enough” ‘to: maintain ‘separate resi-; dence and so could not vote. ! TO. DEPOSITORS= SOME BIRTHDAY ‘Oleveland, O., Nov. 2—The first; cooperative national bank'to be estab- | lished. in the United States, the Broth- | erhood of Locomotive Engineers Co- | operative National Bank of Cleveland | +-is celebrating’ its first birthday to- day) by: distributing to its depositors | an extra ‘dividend of one-fourth to} f of one per cent. This is in adiition to the regular four per cent | paid on their savings. | The success‘of the institution is at- | tested, according to officials, by the | fact that resources have grown in 12/ months fron $650,971.77 on its open- | ing day to almost $10,250,000. | Warret: 8. Stone, who as head of | -the. Brotherhood » of: Locomotive En- | ‘gineers:has had a prominent part in| the railroad strike situation, is presi-, dent-of'tle bank: It is controlled ex- | elusively by meéthbers of the Brother- hood, which holds 51 per cent‘of the | stock... The remainder is owned by: individual members, All its: officers | belong to: the brotherhood. Not all! the employes, however, are members. | ~ Unlike other national banks, share- : holders are limited to dividends of ten | per cont.: A general banking business | is conducted, considerable being done | by mail. ‘The bank has-a ‘capital of | $1,000,000 and a surplus of $100,000. | Officinis’ of the institution are planning to erect a twenty-one story | combined batik and office building on! the present’ site directly opposite the ; fourteen story home of the Brother- , hood. { MANDAN NOTES | Mandan Shriners Hold Annual Party: The second annual Hallowe'en par-) ty of the Mandan Shrine ‘club held) Monday: evening proved to be one ot; the most'elaborate and enjoyable par- | gies-of the season. | Upwards of 75) Shriners and: their families were | ‘present at ithe banquet which: was| splendidly served by the ladies of the; Bastern Stir. .'The dining hall of the sMasonic temple was elaborately dec- | orated in the red and yellow colors| of the Shrine, while fezzes were pass-| ‘ed around to all'the guests, men, wo- men and children, | Following the banquet the party | went to the Palace theater after) which they, returnéd to’ the hall fo ‘yu progtan}.. Mrs. W. H. Ordway, Mrz. F. W. Fitzsimons, D. C. Molir-and Md. Stein gave vocal solos, and the Nut) Quartette performed with some: es- | pecially’ written © parodies featuring | John Racek and H G.-Taylor. i A flashlight picture of the party | was taken. : | Following the pregram, dancing was'| in order until a late hour, the Man dan orchestra furnishing the music for the dance well as the banquet Announcements have been received | in ;Mandan of ‘the. birth of a baby, daugliter té Mr. and Mrs. Ernest! Mahler, October 18. Mrs. Mahler was} formerly: Miss Carol Lyon. . Word has, algo been received of the arrival of: 1; baby daughter at the W. J. Davis home , at National City, Californi Mrs. Davis was formerly Miss Isabella Voss. i F. L, Kermott:of Grand Forks, is al guest'at ‘the home of his son, C. H.; Kermott here for a few days. | Mrs. FsW. McKendry left last even-| jug for’ Lambert, Montana, where ;she; will visit her sister, Mrs. E. G. Ufer.! ‘Mrs. 1. C> Iverson and her father, Mr. Weeks, have left fora visit with relatives at Spokane, Wa: Mrs. Edward ‘Schulénberg ‘of Glen Uli if a guest at the W. H. Vallancey | home for several days. re ‘of Jumestown is ‘vis- iting at the home of his daughter, Mrs. F. H. Waldo. - | Miss Inez Glendive after a y her parents her apa ye a i Mr. and-.Mrs.. Edwin Nichols of | Glenwood City, Wisconsin, ate‘ guests’) at the L, F. Lyman home, They are has returned to at the home of RAY AMOS YARGUS AND HIS FORMER WIFE, MRS. MAUDE Hutchinson, Kan., Nov. -1.—Misgtake or murder? ‘A belated post-mortem examination will be held over the body of George V. Barnes, the death-bed bridegroom, to ascertain how much arsenate of lead-his stomach contained, His bride, Mrs. Maude Yargus- Barnes, is in the Reno county jail here, awaiting trial on charges of murder in the first degree and big- amy. Her divorced husband, Ray Amos Yargus, of Hannibal, Mo., oc- cupigg another cell in the jail, on a charge of plotting with her to poison Barnes. “I-don’'t know how it could have happened,” tearfully explained Mrs. Yargus-Barnes, on the evening of Sept. 29, when Barnes, died at a hos- pital. “For ten days I was feeding a gruel of cornstarch and water for an acid stomach. He ‘kept wanting j cornstarch and water, but seemed to grow worse instead of better.” Six hours before Barnes death, ne was married to Mrs. Yargus in his home by the probate judge. Tells of Poison, When public officials with arouse: suspicions began to investigate, Mrs’ Yargus-Barnes first denied that there was poison in. the house. .Then she recalled a parcel of arsenate of lead which she says her husband had bought to.use on some plants. The peison was on a shelf in the pantry, in a paper sack. Ina similar sack ‘was. some cornstarch, «Mrs. Yargus .had’: been keeping house for Barnes for a number. of ewe! enroute to Oregon, where they will spend the winter FORDS RUN 34 MILES ON GALLON + GASOLINE Start Easy in Coldest Weather—Other Cars: Show Proportionate Saving A new carburetor which cuts down gasoline consumption of any motor and reduces gasoline bills from one- third to one-half is the-proud achieve- ment of the Air-Friction Carburetor Co., 260 Madison St., Dayton, Ohio. This remarkable invention not ‘only increases the power of motors from 30 to 50 per cent, but enables every one to run slow on high gear. It also makes it easy to start a Ford or any other car in the coldest weather. You can ‘use the very cheapst grade. of gasoline or half gasoline and haif kerosene and still get more power and more mileage than you now get: from the highest test gasoline. All’ Ford owners can get as high as 34 miles to a gollon of gasoline. So sure are the manufacturers ‘of the immense saving their new ‘carburetor will make that they offer to send it on 30 day’s trial to every car owne: As it can«be put on or- taken off-in a few minutes by, anyone, all readers of this paper who want to try. it should send their name, address*and: make of:car to the manu. facturers at ‘once.. They also want lo- cal agents, to whom they offer excep- nally large profits. Write them to- Ady. pee Ss Ven ee Y TOUGH ON GEORGE. n, N,.-D.,.. No’ George [months prior to the deathbed mar- riage. Their acquaintances thought she was his wife, and were surprised when she applied for the marriage license. aBrnes, a salesman, was 44; Mrs, Yargus is 31. Court records showed that Mrs. Yargus obtained a divorce from Yar- gus May. 2, 1921. . Under the Kansas law her marriage to Barnes - before six months had elapsed made her guilty of bigamy. She was arrested on that charge. and’ placed in’ the county jail. Then Sheriff Clark, of Reno county, found in the Barnes: home two :cup cakes; One partly -eaten.; These were analyzed by a chemist who! reported them to contain about a. tablespoon- ful of arsenate of lead each: A letter from Yargus, dated Sept. 29, the date of Barnes’ death, and mailed Sept. 30, at Hannibal, Mo., waz found by the sheriff, This letter was addressed to “My Dear Little Wife” and signed “Your Sweet. Daddy— A. Y.” It contained advice to Mrs.. Yargus telling her what to do in dis- posing of the property of Barnes. Clark then swore to murder’ com- plaints against Mrs. Yargus and Yar- gus, ed the whole affair has been: a, plot by Mrs, Yargus and her former hus- band to murder ‘Barnes atid get pos ; session of his property. . But the couple: maintain. their in- nocence, and pgint for proof. to the fact that Mrs. Yargus. had, frequently called the doctor who ministered to Barnes. a pn ee eee Lord, a young man working on‘ a farm south of “here was shot: in’ the ;arm recently and is now-in the hds- pital at Bismarck. He ‘was. passing a gun up to his employer. on a load of hay when it was discharged. ANOTHER CONVERT FOR “DAIRY. 1 Hazen, N. D., Nov. 2.—Benjamin Stoelting, who. farms 3,300 acres of land near: here is: making arrange- ments toenter the dairy business, His first business venture in starting 4 j dairy was. the; purchase of a carload of pure bred dairy cattle. TRIED TO SAW he WAY TO FREE. Devils Lake, N. D., Nov. 2.—Ray. Brown, held in. the. county jail here, after being sentenced to a year in the reform school attempted to saw his vay out. He ims his home is at Tacoma, Wash oH NOTABLES TO ACT London, Nov. 2.—British -leaders in arts, letters, fashion and: science, will act in a Lord Lytton coinedy on | Nov. 30, at: one. of London’s most brilliant social and dramatic’ events. The program is for the benefit of the ‘Children’s Libraries movement. -. FIND BADGER IN ROOM Eversley, Eng., Nov.’ 2;-Awakened by a noise in her room in the early morning, Miss,.Emily eyes staring at’ per from the ‘foot ‘of her bed. A badger had sprung: if through the open dow: »-It escaped the same way. sy \ Unless you see the name “Bayer”.on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin 21 years, and proved safe SAFETY FIRST! Accept prescribed. by physicians for by millions.—Say “Bayet”! only an “unbroken package”. of genuine Hien Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper direc- tions for Headache, Earache, To othache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu- ‘matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American! aint z a Handy tin boxes of 12 tableta’cost but a few cents—Larger packages. °° Aspirin Js the trade mark of Pa; cture of Monoactticactdester of Salicylicact@ Attorneys for the state: argue that]: is a transient, and |. inter saw two]: DELINQUENCY . DISCUSSED Movies ‘and _ Newspapers Get Their Share of the Blame For: Juvenile Wickedness Juvenile | ig, George | Jackgonville, Fla., Nov. delinquency is, not incre: L, Sehon of Loutsyille, chairman of the Atmerigan, Prison Association's committee on juvenile delinquency, tcld the, association here tonight. Mr, Sehon..said that.a majority of! his committee of 60 held the same view and that it: was supported ’ b; tistics: from authorities in leadi cities throughout the country. © He said hig--broader knowledge of the situatiog gained \as chairman of tae | committee had tei. him to this con- clusion,“ because when appointed he firmly ‘believed juvenile uelinquency to: be growing. ‘ The chief ‘cause of juvenile de-' | linqueney today atccrding to an over- | whelming majority of the committee, Mr. Sefton reported, is a breaking ; down of. parental .responsibility. |. “Tcane firmly ‘copvinced,” he added, “that there: must be an immediate re-' that onthe part of mothers and those who will become tse mothers of the! childrerkiof this astion—or there wiil: be an jalayming, unconquerable in- crease ‘ff juvenile. delinquency.” ‘Of. the . movies, Mr. Sehon “There ‘ean be no denial of the bane- ful infhetice of “scenes to often do- picted on the screen. Court records! almost- without number trace juvenile | crime d{rectly to ‘this source. “Thetg. seems to be nc: divided opin-' on as ‘to the necessity for suppres-, sion, trough, careful censorship : by more:drastic means, of this prolific ; source;‘@f depraved thought and crim-} inal action onthe part of the young. “The ‘press of the land,” he added, “is another agency. which should give} cata, of ‘transgressions ‘by those of tender; years, apd: immature minds. There! can be,:tthere is:no question that the! origin ‘ofa portion’ of juvenile delin-; quency 4s located in the columns of the daily: press. . “The; committee has found the ad- ministration of the criminal law of the land another source from which “springs! juvenile delinquency. Re- cent years have witnessed a tendency $24.50|$19.60 46.30| 37.05 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 There was no hitching post in front of the New ‘York City Hall so Van af Gulick ‘rode “Pete” right towards infrequency of conviction for minal acts, and at the same time 2 tendency to minimize the pu nient of the criminal in those cases where convict! is secured.” NEGRO’S HOME RAIDED FOR STOLEN GOODS Minot, N.. D. Nov. 2.—Four men were arrested and a large quantity of clothing found when the police raided the home of a negro here. Police be- i lleve the clothing is from recent store robberies in North Dakota. us eoncern-in cur quest for the causes |A FREAK ACCIDENT MAY PROVE FAT. Medora, N. D., Nov. 2,—Ralph Kel-j s0, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kelso of Sentinel Butte, is suffering from a severe gunshot wound received when he was breaking brcnchos near Ryder station, six miles west of here. A revolver, strapped ina bolster, was in some way discharged, the bullet up the steps to the mayor’s office. sumption of that. responsiblity—anti |Gulick is making an equestrian jaunt across the continent. ranging upward and lodging in 4 |lung. His condition is considered to be critical. WARD COUNTY TO GIVE $100 IN PRIZES Minot, N. D., Nov. 2.—Prizes of $50, $30 and $20 will be given for. first. second and third places in a class for community exhibits at the Ward County Corn and Potato show. ‘To as- Rist insthe financing of the show, in: ated $500 and the Minot Chamber of Commerce, $1,000. DUNN COUNTY FAIR _ANNUAL EVENT Killdeer, N. D., Nov 2.—Permanent «tganization is proposed for the an- nnal Dunn county fair. A meeting is called for November 15, at which the }election of the officers and adoption of- articles of incorporaton are pro | posed. usiness Needs r Transportation Costs “\ It is recognized that the need of the hour is a reduc- tion in transportation costs to stimulate ‘ndustry and - commerce and improve general business conditions. — Firestone Again Leads in Lowering Transportation Costs county commissioners have appropri- | i$ 91.85 Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets “| Tf your skin is -yellow—complex i) pallid—tonguecoatcd—appetite poor— | you have a bad taste i your mouth — a lazy, no-good fecling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sti calomel—were prepared by fter 17 years of study. Dr.Edwards’OliveTabletsarea purely” vegetablecompound mixed witholiveoil. You will know them by their olive color. Tohaveaclear, pink skin, bright eves, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days you inust getat the cause. ve ‘Yablets act on like calomel—yet fter effects 1, JAPANESE ARE “THINNING OUT Honolulu, Nov. The. excess of <5e@ departures from the terri- Haw over the number of Japanese arrivals during the first s' months of 1921 was considerably nv: than the excess of departures through: out 1923, territorial officials announc- ed today. Pricr 1 1920,the arrivals of Jap- janese hie had been greatly larger ithan the number of departures of | Japanese for their native:.land, ‘of- | ficials said. "Public Stenographers. Busi- ‘ness Service Co. | Hoskins Block. Phone 662. QUALITY-FOOD It’s not volume, but suality ; in diet that aids ‘h growth. Scott’s Emulsion i lity-food that ete cohen tide over times of weak- ness. It’s rich-in the precious vitamines. AT.ALL DRUG STORES PRICE, $1.20 and 60c. 21-25) 40x8 | 165.20 14 Giant Solids 53.55| 42.85 Size 36x10 - 68.45} 54.75 lost Miles ba hte Price 106.90 Old No greater tire values were-ever given. See your Firestone dealer. He gives the best in service and the greatest in value. per Dollar 40x14 | 181.75) Prices on Other Sizes Reduced Proportionately First. floor, -

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