The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 28, 1921, Page 6

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8 PAGE SEX | ENEMIES MALIGN LRGIONAIRES AT THE CONVENTION Claim There Was Rioting. Law- lessness and Destruction of Property BUT POLICE SAY NOT so: No. 28.—(By The ince the Ameri- convention adjourned Kansas City, M can Legion. here November 2, numeroys_ stories have drifted back to Kansas Ci of rioting, lawlessness and destruc- tion of property reported to have oc- ; curred here during the convention. Numerous inquiries regarding the al- leged lawlessness have heen made of the police department here, but in- teresting ay the stories are, the po- lice department has been obliged to deny all of them, according to Charles Edwards, chief of police, and Matthew | A. Foster and John E. Wilson, Kansas | | \ | City police commissioners. The records of the police depart- | ment show, according to Chief Ed- | wards, that no Legionaires were ar- | restcp during the session of the con- | vention. | “Two ex-soldiers who came here to attend the convention died,” the | chief said. “One of them committed suicide by taking poison, and one man | died, several days after the concen- tion, from pneumonia. He was a Can- adian veteran and ava% jburied with military honors. ‘Nobody died from drinking wood alcohol or corn whis- ky, or any other sort of whiskey, as | far as we know, and we believe we know practically everything that hap- pened. “Property damage? It amounted to | this: Eight or ten pillows belonging to a hotel were ripped open by en- ; thusiasts one night, who wanted some | artificial snow for stage effect. ., The | feathers were thrown down into a ho: tel lobby and into the street. A fleet of trash cans, placed on the streets, was pretty thoroughly demoralized. Some celebrant, who had been waiting | three years to express his delight that the war was over, got the idea it | would be fun to drag a trash can at | the tail of a taxicab. The idea spread. The casualties among the tin trash cans were. heavy.” As a matter of fact, according to the police commissioners, that ebulli- ticn of spirits, comparable to what often happens. after ‘a college foot- ball game, was the only semblance of lawlessness which occurred during the convention. The crowds were large and noisy, but they did not de- stroy property or indulge in the drunken orgies with which rumor has | credited them. “We found, in almost every case of reported rowdyism,” Chief Ed- wards said, “that the persons respons- ible were not Legionaires, or even ex- service men. They were local police characters, who took adyantage of the have immense areas of ) BE 125.—Mrs. Rivka Zippe expects to live longer than her grandmother, who was 125. She has only 20 years to go and says she may bob her hair before then, she feels so young, She lives at the Daughters of Israel Home for the Aged at New- ark, x. J. RR AR RAR RAR “What I am deeply concerned with is that the whole of-the land of this country should be farmed at a profit, so that many more families may be employed” on the land. Tens of thousands can be employed on pig- breeding, at present by far thp most remunerative side of agriculture. W land. Why should we not connect un- preductive land with unemployed pe ple, and make the land produce pig: MANY SEEKING — SLOGAN PRIZE Town Criers Offer $30 In Prizes For Best Slogan For City Got your slogan yet? Several already have been submit- ted in the Town Criers’ slogan con- test which opened last Friday. Scores are expected to be submitted before the end of the contest, on December: 17, Each slogan is timed on receipt and in the event two are the same the one submitted first is considered. For this reason all persons who. will submit slogans are urged to get them in as-early as possible. The slogan, which will be used to advertise Bismarck, must contain ‘not More than five words. Prizes of $15, $10. and $5 are offered for first, second | than fruit 86,365,658 taxable gallons of} ‘gan; John B. Adams, city; W. P. j Langley, Sterling; Frank ‘Titus, FE. G.|//" | Puterson; - cit H. -O. - Freshaur,| ¢olip, Regan; ‘Edw. Bannon, oly Ai ridge, Bismarck, calenser will be called at 9:30 instead of 10, a. m., and y is called for 2 p. m: of that it day. TAX INCOME OF U.S, DECREASES IN LAST YEAR ‘Commissioner Blair Points Out Decrease of Nearly.a Bil- H lion Dollars | Washington, Nov, 28,—Tax receipts | of the government during the fiscal! year 1921 decreased nearly a billion; dollars as compared. with the previous | year while the cost of collection in- | creased 32 cents for each $100, ac-| cording to the annual report’ of the bureau of internal revenue made pub-| lic tonight by Commissioner Blair. Collections by the- bureau. during the past fiscal y 000,765 against $5,407,580,251,. for the crease of $612,579,486 or 15 per cent. The cost of administering the in- ternal revenue laws for the year the! i report said was $40,203,716 or 87 cents! | for each $100 collected compared with 55 cents for the preceding year. How- ever, the report-added included-in the} expenditures was $6,899,407 for the ad: ; ministration of the prohibition and; narcotic laws and $130,000 for the en-i forcement of the child labor tax law, | ; Which deducted from the total, leaves | $33,174,309 or an equivalent of 72 cents | for each $100 in taxes collected, { Of the total taxes collected during ! the past year income and profits taxes | aggregated $3,228,137,673, compared | with $3,056,936,003 in 1920 and mis- cellaneous collections totalled $1,366,- 863.091 against $1,450,644,248 in 1920, ; The principal’ decreases in these taxes were: An alGoholic liquors, $57,247,720; | tchacco manufacturers, $40,589,960; excise taxes, $38,538,121; corporation capital stock, $11,494,767; and stamp taxes, $11,879,815. These decreases, the report said, were materially offset by increases on! estate tax, $50,407,697; transportation | and telegraph, $12,164,326, and admis-; sion and dues, $13,972,095. | Collections under the pehalty provi-; sions’ of the national prohibition act during the year totalled. $2,152,387) | Receipts from distilled spirits, includ- ing wines, during 1921 aggregated $82,598,065, compared with $97,905,275 in 1920 while fermented liquors. pro-j| duced $25,363 against $41,965,874. During the fiscal year 1921 there were produced from. materials other distilled spirits, a decrease of 13,250,- 183 gallons from 1920, while 34,993,154 gallons were removed. from bond, an increase of 6,772,245 gallons over 1920, jball at the University of Minnesota, THE SISMARCK TRIBUNB | | | | \ | UP. SHE GOES.—When the Eskimos ar totalled $4,595,-jat Wales, Alaska, catch a whale they | want to Celebrate. They haven't any 1 year ended June 30, 1920, a de- | fireworks, or firewater. So they cele- | brate with games. The blanket toss is their favorite. .Sometimes the girl in the blanket is thrown as high as 35 feet. \ - DR; WILLIAMS Will Fill Out Contract: For 1922 It Is Expected penne IMinneapolis,, Nov. 28.—Dr. H. lL. Williams, for, 22 years coach of foot- ‘probably will-be back in charge of of kontrol, probably will retain. his position for another year at least and will probaply be chosen president ot the Western Conference Association Saturday at Chicago. This wag: the turn in the athletic upheaval at‘ the university which ap- peared almost, certain this morning when it became known that the alum- ni committee ,on athletics will submit recommendations for the fulfillment of Dr. Williams contract calling for: another, year: ARBUCKLE ON WITNESS STAND “TO KEEP JOB the Gophers inext year and James | Paige, chairman of the athletic board I| | | | | \ ! egainst the said defendant, Frank D. fay Woodworth, for the ‘sum of Eteht Hin- Albin T. Spangberg, Thomes H.Ince presents Chickens | Dare-Devil Deems had fancied “poultry” ever since he’d learned to crow. But it wasn’t’ the kind that rises at dawn and sings to the morning sun, One day, he lost his fortune ai ing real chickens. sand laughs. Hall, BISMARCK THEATRE i ae - TONIGHT AND TUESDAY Petitioner, vs. The rest is a hatch.of romance and a thou- With GLADYS GEORGE ° A Thomas H. Ince Production from the Saturday Evening Post Story, “Yancona Yillies,” by Herschel dents of the State of North Dakota, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, "21 nd went to rais- 2 4 ’ and Nati 4 Anna Spangberg, Gustaf G. Spangberg, | by. publication, by printing and pub- Dig: crowds to Cry rough etaft. Ser |-and third. beat - | Liquids containing more than one-halt| Tells Story. of Fatal Injuries|'Voodworth. for the wun ot na rinety. [David Be Spancbers: Dicwia f neex: [lishing seid Gltarion three times, pace Grellocaly, potty, gamblers, arrayed: ie of ‘cne per cent of alcohol produced at five cents, which Judgment and decree, | Mary M, Wright, Paul V. Spangberg. each week for three successive weeks, , uniforms they had bought themselves, and never: earned the right to wear, SELECT JURORS breweries and dealcoholizing . plants to Rappe Girl | among other things, directed the gale by me, of the real estate hereinafter Huldah 8. Spangberg, Claes H. Spang- |in. the berg, Albert L, Spangberg, Walter H. {ismarck Daily Tribune, newspaper published and printed daily, : $ during the year aggregated 193,446,763 t fim » described, to satisfy the amount of said | Spangberg and all other persons inter-. {except Sundays, in the City of Bis: started a gambling game. We broke Zallons, compared with 286,169,680) , San, Fran@foni Nov. 28.— “Fatty Sudgment, -with iiterest. thereon, and | ested in Said estate, Respondent marek, in Burleigh county, North Da- Thuckle tool le stand it up the night cf November 2, and they ran away so fast that several of them got caught.in a revolving door in a hotel and. badly bruised. “One shooting scrape was reported, | in a quarrel over an American flag, | We found out that the ‘patriotic vet- eran,’ who received a flesh wound from his opponent, was not a veteran at all, but a casual tramp, who had never, been in service, but was feel- | ing over-patriotic. “The police found the ex-service men, their best aids in quelling what | Tho following jury men hive been | lections districts from’ 64 to 74 was |County of Burleigh and State of North | North Dakota, and that the said peti- best thing in the r +" ‘ ? other room and when I came back) Dakota. on the 29th day_of December, | tion will be heard and duly considered by might have become disturbances. The |drawn/ E. G. Smith, city; §. p,|Tecommended by Commissioner Blair | Tit vote vas on the bed tearing |. D. 1921, at 2 o'clock P. M.. of that |by this Court on Wednesday, the 4th soldiers and the ‘buddies’ seemed to |iRoher, Carl Pederson, A. F. get along very weli. Perhaps one rea- son for that is that a considerable part of the present polic force, are themselves ex-service men.” | Chief Edwards was a major in the | Commissioner Foster said that the number of accidents reported during the Legion week was below normal. | One automobile was wrecked in a col- lision with a street car. No one was | dangerously injured. FOR COURT TERM Judge Coffey Will Preside At December Term ‘The December term of district court will open here December 6, with Judge J. A. Coffey, of Jamestown, presiding. MeConald, city; Henry Mulari, Wing; J. A. Mont- gomery, city; Oliver Peterson, Wil- ton; IH, H. Engen, city; C. J. Tryga, Baldwin; H. J. Whodmansee, city;, J. M. Pertholf, McKenzie; Geo. Man- ley, McKenzie; J. C. Anderson, city; Chas. Swensen, Bismarck; Geo. Boel- Mer. Arena; T..N. Thbrson, Wing; R. ™M. Ludeman, Menoken; ‘A. W. Lucas, F, L, Atkinson, city; C) F. Lindsey, Newell Blexrud, Pegan; '& O. Homan, city; R. C. Boren, McKenzie; Fred, during the previous year, while the quantity of cereal beverages contain~ ing less than one-half of one per cent aggregated 285,825,830 gallons. Pro- duction of wine and cordials for the year anounted to 19,551,595 gallons and at the end of the year there were 27,604,896 gallons in hond as compared with 17,677,370 gallons on June 30, 1920. ‘ * Increase in the number of tax ‘col- as a means of increasing the efficiency of the internal. revenue service. Dur- ing the past ten years he declared the work, of the revenue bureau has been entirely transformed, and the num- ber of taxpayers filing returns haa to a total bf 9,000,000 annually. “Pyactically' all of’ the 600,000 tax- payers,” he’ said,’ “dealt with collec- tors of internal revenue but once each year, while under present laws the monthly returns required of sales-tax of alcohol produced during the year |isco from by, increased from approximately 600,000 ed dizzy spells often. day in the him. Ar- Tmanslaughtef }¢asé ‘agai buckle: said “he cai San Fran- the costs and expenses of such. sale, or so much thereof as the proceeds of uch sale applicable thereto will satis- ’ Angel eptember 3, and. stopped at the hotel. where he was! alleged to haye fatally injured Vir- ginia’ Rappe,, “T: found Miss Rappe-on the bath-j room floor, very si¢k, he said. i “She was holding her.abdomen and | I- gave her some water. While I as- | sisted her, Miss Prevost and others | ‘pntered the room and I went into an- { her clothes.and moaning.” "+ Arbuckle said he was dressed in a bath robe and under clothing. i “T helped Miss Rappe into the bed," Arbuckle continued. “She said she! Then I went. to the bathroom. When I returned Miss\Rappe was on the floor. I placed i her.on the bed. Mrs. Delniont, a guest i of the party, told me Miss Rappe- I told\Mrs. Delmont to..leave or 1} ‘would throw her out. of the window.” | Quarter (8! jsaid defendant in and 'y:; And by virtue of a writ to me is- sued out of the office of the Clerk of said Court, in and for said County of Burleigh and under the seal of said Court, ‘directing ,mg, to sell said, real property pursuant*'to said judgment and decree, 1, Rollin Welch, Sheriff of said County, ‘and ‘person appointed by said Court to make said sale, will geil the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder, for cash, at public auction, at the front door of the,Court House in the City of Bismarck ‘in the lay, to satisfy the balance, owed. on aid judgment with interest and costs hereon, and the costs and expenses of such sale, or So much thereof as, thy proceeds of such sale applicable there- to. will satisfy. The. premises to be sold, as aforesaid pursuant to said judgment and decree, and to gaid writ, und to this notice, are descr|bed, in said judgment, decree and writ{ag tollows, to wit: gn ‘All the right, title and interést of the to that real Jurleigh’ County,s)Ngrth Dakota, described. as the Sautheast ) of Section Nineteen vroperty In day of January, A: D., o'clock in the forenoon of that day, at the Court room of this Court in the Burleigh county, North Dakota, Court House, in the Ci Burleigh you and each /one of you are hereby cited to be and appear Court at said time.and place and an. The State of North Dakota, above named Respondents and all Per- sons interested in the estate of Mag- nus Spangberg. otherwise known as M. Spangberg, Deceased. You and each one of you are hereby notified that Albin T. Spangberg, the petitioner herein, Court his petition, praying that letters of ‘administration’ upon the estate of Magnus Spangbery, otherwise known as M. Spangberg, late of the township of.Ecklund, in the County of Burleigh, in the State of North Dakota, deceas- ed, be granted to Albin T) Spangberg of Trygg township in Burleigh county, py there be, whyat petition should’ not be granted, Dated, November 26th, A. D., ‘othe before has filed this 1922, at 10 f Bismarck, in Dakota, and county, before this Said petition, gnd show cause, the prayer of sai 1921. By The Court, <I. Cy DAVIES, J Judge of. said County Court. world for rickets. Scott’s Emulsion ain richest cod-liver kota, all not less than twenty days said hearing, and let said Cita- tion be served in accordance with the laws of the State of North Dakota. Dated November 26, A. D., 1921, —I. C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court of Burleigh County, North Dakota. (SEAL) 11—28;, 125-12 RICKETS Cod-liver oil is the abundant in the vita- SAT ALL DRUG STORES PRICE, $1.20 and 60c. ‘Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. —— ALSO MAKERS OF Arbuckle. then took Miss Rappe into | (19) ‘in Tow ship One Hundred Forty- (SEAL) ; Anderson, Driscoll; C. S. Gallagher,! payers, together with the quarterly payment feature provided for income taxpayers, necessitate fifteen million separate transactions annually.” NOT ACCEPTED SPLASHY WEDDING Mr. Edge Explains “The Purpose| of This Offer” | Lendon, Nov. 28.—S. F. Edge, a sci- entific farmer, offered some few weeks ago, to hand over farm land valued at $100,000 to a committee of his employes without cost, but subject to the proviso that they should pay their own wages out of the proceeds. / It.is announced that they have de- clined the offer, and Mr. Edge has ex- tended it to any reputable labor body, such as the agricultural workers’ unions. “The purpose of this offer,” said Mr. Edge, when interviewed at his ! Sussex farm, “is to prove to the trade unions that farming, like every other | ; industry, will only pay wages that | | are earned unless they are drawn from capital. Agricultural laborers have been misled as to the profit a farmer makes from corn-growing or ordinary agriculture, and it was to teach them the truth that I made this offer, “My employes on my farms, which have grown in the last two years from a modest 50 acres to some 2,000 acres, have not accepted my offer, knowing that they will make more money in wages than they could make out of | the farm. | “TI now suggest that one of the farms | should be run on a ccoperative scheme | in charge of the workers and their | unions. There'weuld have to be an | agreement that accepted methods of ; good husbandry be observed. It | would be possible, of course, to en- | 9 oO 4 joy several years: of prosperity by | a é = taking everything possible out of the | J. J. Ashley and Miss Ella M. Robbins didn’t like the social splash of 2 land and putting nothing back. The farm must be kept in good order, another room with’ the assistance of The door Jeading from:his room into were found open. PRIEST WIDELY: ‘KNOWN IS DEAD Collogeville. Minn, ‘Nov, 28.—Right Rev’. Peter Engel, president of St. John’s university and abbott of St. Jchn’s Abbey at Collegeville, died at operations, ¥ The distinguished clergyman was one of the most prominent Benedictine prelates in the United States. The, funeral which = will be at- terded by scores of prelates from all parts of the country will take place at Collegeville, S FREIGHT WRECK ON NORTH SOO — ‘A freight train wreck on the North Soc, several miles north of Bismarck Saturday night, &aused a long delay in the transportation: The Foch spe- cial from Wilton could not run Sun- day on. this account. A car in the middle of the freight train went off the track spilling coal on all sides. A wretking crew was hastened to the scene. . NOTICE OF SALE Notice Is Hereby Given, That by vir- tue of a Judemen//and dei in fore- closure, rendered and given by the District Court of the Fourth Judi District, in and for the County of jleigh and’ State of North Dakot: entered and docketed in: th ce jthe’ Clerk of said*@ourt in and for isaid County, on the 2tstiday of Octo- |her, 1921, in'an action Ww! ) Driscoll} (G8tata. Rank, -a corporation, - plaintiff, fences ‘kept up, ditches drained, land ‘church wedding so they were married in a motorboat~on-the Thames,”Lon- bettie } and chulldings maintained. !don, {Sounds jike a paradox, doesn’t it? r t ang. Frank PD. Woodworth, @lefendant, { fawevofephe said Hainatiteg ait Harry Boyd, assistant nanager of the dian. ‘hotel, he: said. i the corridor and a window of the room | 8:45 P. M. yesterday, at Rochester, | where he had recently undergone two; one (141) North of Range Seventy-five (75). West of, the Fifth Principal Meri- - ROLLIN WELCH, _ Sheniff of Burleigh County, Ni D. E .McCURDY, « : Attorneys for Plaintiff, P 4 Bismarek, ND. 1128; 1 imeeuie. NOTICE OF FORECLOS| WRESHERS LIEN Notice Is Hereby Given, That default has been made in the conditions of that certain threshers lien’ filed by O. ¥. Personen of Wing, County of Bur- leigh and State Dakota against certain thres belong- ing to Johu A. Wai lage of Wing. Burleigh County, North Dakota, dated the 13th day of September, 1921, to s the following indebtedness to-wit: The payment of One tfundred Wighty-five Dollars and Fitty Cents ($185.50) for threshing prain during the season of 1921, upon the West one- Twp. 41, Range 76, Burleigh County, which said threshing lien was duly filed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County and State of North Dakota on the 13th day of September, 1921 at 9 o’colek! A. Ms that the said default is of the fol- owing nature, to-wit: That no part of the said sum: of-$185.50-has been paid; |that there is claimed to be due on said ithreshers lien at the date of this no- |tice the sum of $185.50 for principle | and interest. 1 that said threshers lien will be | foreclosed by a sale of the personal |droperty covered by such Uireshers {lien and hereinafter described at pub- Hlic auction agreeable to the statutes in ‘such case made and provided at “Bis- marek, Burleigh County. North Da- jkota in front of, the County Court ; House of said county at the-hour of 2 o'clock P. M. on Monday, the 5th jday of December, 1921. ‘The personal |property described in said threshers’ Vien which will be sold to satisfy the same is the following, to-wit: // ! Four hundred ix bushdls of wheat. fi | Two hundred ten bushels of oats, |,, Dated the 26th day of November, | | 1 | \ ‘half of Sec. 10, i 1921. EDWARD S. ries and JOSEPH COGHLAN, Attorneys for O, F, Personen, Bismarck, North Dakota. APPOINTMENT OF ADM ‘RATOR State .of North Dakota, Burleigh. In County Court, before Hon. Davies, Judge. : | In the Matter of the Estato of Mag- ‘hus Spangberg otherw z ea 111-28 ‘ County of ed, v Lc. | Let personal service of the Citation be made upon all of the above respondents, who are residents of the State of North Dakota, at least twenty days prior to Wedn of January, A. D, 192: Citation be served upon all of the above respondents, who are non-resi- BATTER SERVICE above day, the 4th day and let said and Auto Lite start EXCLUSIVE ELECTRICAL SPECIALISTS Service and parts for Delco, Remy, Northeast KI-MOIDS or ) For INDIGESTION ers, Rosch. Eisemann and K-W Magnetos, Exide and Minnesota bat- terics, and Klaxon horns. ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE CO. Bismarck, No. Dak. The farmers south of prepared a steer for a Barbecue for ext Sunday, December Fourth and invite ihe Hunters of Bismarck to Coyote Drive. Assemble Schipfer and Lambert only your shot gun. Eve been provided. WDA DUD ! TUTE ETE TE AE TELE QUEUE LEA CAC NORE ING AR TAC TAGING A BIG BARBECUE : aad COYOTE DRIVE December 4 Bismarck have join them in a at 9 a. m. at the farm, bringing rything else has W/W dV/9

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