The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 4, 1922, Page 1

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The Weather Generally Falr FORTIETH YEAR THE BIS CK TRI BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4 Last Edition PRICE. FIVE CENTS NEW CUTS MADE IN FREIGHT RATES ARAL AAAA RAR ‘ : z ‘ fj ] SLOGAN PRIZES Henry 20 PCKALSEI COUN TOPAT GARRGIAIN © MOREAUTONN. : 4 — r | 1921 THAN IN VOTED T0 PICK PART OF COST. INNEWRIOTS —, PREVOUS Year "ppp HI | = { A Approximately 1,800 more au- | ECT GRAIN, i | tomobiles were rezistered with 3 j } UNDERP ASS IN ER ] N cit the state motor vehicle department | iy \ during ited visi In 18h aceord- | i i F i | Ing to E, P. Crain, registrar, in a RG | Ria i | report made today, Fees in’ 1921, | ae Committee Names Three on: IR lution Ad in Casualties in P: Series of however, are less than in 1920, be: y uM re i ¢ | j A ed | aesotulion lopted to Aid .in tach ee an % resent perles Ol cause of many registrations of Railroad Revenues Will Be Cut \ Which Prizes Are Award Proposed New Road ‘to | Disorders in Belfast In. ised cares oS RE | Approximately 80 Million b nh ; ( gures for follow:. Cars ’ by Town Criers Club the Bridge | cludes Infant and trucks registered, 92,6483 re-.. Dollars By Ord Olle I : pig exbdc We i registrations or transfers, 6,261; | y badd ; 7 . ‘passenger cars, 90,300; trucks, —— on “BISMARCK SERVES” BEST, PATTERSON IS REELECTED; DAIL RESUMES ITS DEBATE ra) motor cycles, 5103 trailers, ‘STUD¥ FURTHER DECREASE ~ k i i ee RI! i Sane Total fees codected were $683,- eae é 1 i { i 4 Club Will Not Adopt a Slogan, \Heads Commissioners Again,' Eamonn De Valera’s Version of feet as compared to $961,309.55 linferstite. Come@ee icons 2 | 20. < 4 However, Until Next Meet- Being Elected at Annual | ‘Treaty is Pre8ented to Dail onc! pergeiene i920 were | | sion to R in Connidere < . 5 ! xf ej 800. Under the registration for a ing, Seeking Opinion i | For Considerati 2 ; ‘ ; , § | Meeting Held Today ion | Sa ee ae eutormobille for tion of Rail Matters Approximately 300 slogans: for Bis-; The Burleigh y : | Beliast, Jan. 4.—(By the A i lappa ie fi igh county board of com-} * . #—(By the Asso- q wharck were submitted in the slogan jmissioners, in annual session today,| Slated Press.)—Six deaths have \ New. Yorks. Jai 4. rsiehts rate) fe contest held by the Town Criers ‘club. [pereiceted BE. o Patterson chairman eee front th present series hy ‘| eaaene Re eat pee ese vol- I di ‘ight to the; jof the board and adopted a resolution | isorders in Beliast, one of the ; untarily by the railroads and ordered A report was made last night to the; jagreeing-to pay part of the cost of an! fatalities being that of a child -| by the Interstate Commerce Commis- Town Criers meeting in the McKen-| underpass of the Northern Pacific] who was shot while in ‘its mothers | B ANK i sion will cut down railroad revenues ¢ zie hotel. The club-tentatively adopt: | railway in the proposed new road to! arms, Firing continued last night, | i by appnoximately 80 million. doll: it ed one slogan and awarded prizes, but | the Missouri river bridge. the ‘fiercest being in the York . ‘ig {i he bi eld i postponed tinal action untll next i Mr, Patterson, who was in the jury} street area which comes under the | I BEI iat fy anes fee ie Racor aay! meeting in order to ascertain general 4 then ting Se coemuasiaers Rela 8 o'clock curfew law. | cnereae eee be decreas “ estat sentiment as to the slogan awarded ’ Shain) has been chairman of the| Dublia, Jan. 4.—(By the Associated! jE PSENCE [and ary ior eons MM lepieetp Dt ter- first prize. ‘board for 12 years and has been a| Press.)—On the re-assembling of the ritory will go into effect Saturday and First prize was awarded to Roy La , . : SS H jeounty, commucsioner fon 3 years. Dail Eireann today the new version Manager of Bank of North Da-; win eared per ae ee ae een ee are Frau Von Rochow is reported betrothed to Ex-Kaiser Wilhelm. She is | board providing for! ‘the pavinent of of Eamonn DeValera’s amendment; kota Says That Force Will j effective January 1 by all railroads ex- f see anation that this meant Iu busi- BOW his guest at Doorn, Holland, according to German newspapers. She is| part of the cost of the underpass re-| was distributed to the members. Iti Be Considerably Decreased | “Arrtuecmente hone wa A ness, socially, to shoppers, tourists, for the wealthy widow of a colonel in the Danzig Hussars and first met the |cites that the board had_ previously proposes a treaty of amity and asso-| | Hrangements;/bavenbean made by kaiser during military maneuvers. , appropriated $32,000, to. pay the ! CORRES ithe commission to resume, next Wed ; awarded pt Tolan Bortell, of Bis-— Hl ; struction of the proposed road to the) Pmment of Great Britain and of the QUIT, PUBLICITY BUREAU fe pase a tedenaeeeat Fag eat ae marzk, who submitted the slogan: PER' IN. D. MAN HELD Exidge, that atiiee the praiket hes been 1 other states of the British common-} ; i tion will not be concluded Mage beteen “Try Bismarck First.” Third prize i AS RUM RUNNER H ‘al aid project No. at | wealth, n ' h March 1 and it is probable that the went to Hulda Sangberg, of Wilton,: \ ; the highway commission had entered - : Will Be Abolished; Although: commission will not reach @ decision a who submitted the slogan, “Bismarck, | \ om Ae ae jinto negotiations with the Northern HALF EXPRESS OPINION. | i before April 1. Where Two Ways Meet,” it being the | 1 Tgente Ea Rar teeie ‘pola bea | Tacific railway and the government on| puttin, Jan. 4 (By the Associated | Some Halletite: ‘te f0.Pe aLETEE Fecommendation of the committee that | 1 I eaues “oe” battled” embarmedi whiskey pata itkae pi ae rt ed Press.)—When the Dail reassembled | Issued By The Bank DENN CA. FOLEE TUES CHARGES if used the sl anged to “Bis- | ale ‘ Visage pay; ‘ " y : Pie De Ota tes ‘ i alte Senebe yee Reece Op i valued at g4i000 whieh they allege | one-tourth of the cost, and the North- | Henay, 59 of < ie members, near [nics — cent charges by Senator La Follette 4 as { as smuggled into the United States|ern Pacific will pay one-half. alf, expresse heir views on ba Expenses of operation of the Bank that an agreement not to push legis- i A large number of slogans were sub-| from Canada, as a result of a raid} The resolution then authorizes the | Irish peace treaty. Between private'of North Dakota are being reduged lation to'repeal the so-called guar- 7 mitted by students in the local schools. : : | last night on a residence in St. Paul.| county to pay one-fourth of the cost, |@nd public sittings the Dail has thus and will be cut considerably more in anty section of the EschiCummins The slogan of Frances Halloran was i | Five men were arrested and an auto-|not exceeding $6,500, and the: chair- i far devoted nine days to debate. the near future through consolidation act and to restore state control over held foibe ee best of those submitted Agreement Reached By Sub-, mobile confiscated. 3 man of the board was authorized to} Although the list of speakers iy still of departments and work, under the intrastate rates was obtained from ee tl ° a ee Pee ie special errand : Chi T | _, The whiskey was of a Canadian va-/sign a contract executed between the | far from exhausted it is apparent that direction of Manager C. R. Green and farm’ organizations leaders at a con- her. “He ‘10 =e ats % gate + a au Committee on Chinese Tar- j rety and was concealed in the ton-| various parties. every argument has been brought for- the Industrial Commission composed ference here with representatives of Blsgatek ie ch noes BEL OF MuCer| iffs For Conference neal of the machine. Alphonse! ~ ——_—_—_—_—_ \ward and it is believed that hence- of Governor Nestos, Attorney-General ne. railroads and of coal, steel and The selection of the first three slo-! : Laie Aysaan ape, Rome anne SCHOOL BURNS; | forth the speeches Wil pe res teeta feiten Sede pa ieee Wt. Drummond ot iasas | Cleg sang as mane py Heals) of Washington, Jan. 4.—-(By Associ- | kamera RENT Se i LOSS $75,000 writay, at the pret Se eae, pa six Gaploves: have left the service rast of the: ‘uoard ofisovernor’ of Be ans pela) —The practi letion E the treaty fight of the banking department of the ernational Harm Congress. bp ari Crie* rs ated Press) —The practical comple ie RAE pressed today. As the treaty figl Mr, Dr ‘a eoretcr eam aera tern ae of the report to be submitted by the Grand Forks, Jan. 4.—The public|nears the end the opposition is be- |BanK 98 ihe ee vier ted ieeain he canteronee Liveannes . ‘nich te respectively. The school slogan was,committee of naval experts to the; . school building at Park, River, N. D.,| coming increasingly bitter. ‘The at- Green fins he ue Peat it without termed a secret meeting in the state- awarded by a committee of Town naval committee of the armament! valued, at $75,000, half covered by in-{ mosphere at yesterday's session be- ii ek tigi cal ce ment by Senator La Follette, declared Criers. ; ‘ f ‘a the Sab i surance, with nearly all its contents| came tense at time and the speeches alae pti ; Hie lency. : the session was not a secret one and ‘Among the’ slogans Sabinitled Wels es eae eee cere Toe he: subs was destroyed by fire Monday. School |y representatives of both factions) P. E. Haldorson, former state ex- that the agricultural .representatives ; the following: a committee on: Chinese tariffs on a .5/ < was not in session at the time of the! were more frequently broken than Rt and roceney bad anit Banke held ‘out uncompromisingly. for a re- Sunny City of the Slope, Best Be- Per cent effective basis were two im-! : A LONG GRIND fire. ¢ Tc hfapetotore hy. challenging. interrub pa been appolnced bys a peal of the guaranty, clause a the tween“ 3; : “Ends: : : : in’ thecans BY Bh PS EPR ire nae manana | tions, : u re en tO needs ment. transportation act and the.railway ex- Hees eae eee three mands; skeet Bea ties today in the 4 4 1 iy pone: f a rere aud ju Prothane jot tis eae cous agreed not to oppose its re- Northwest, Gem of the Occident, Bis- The naval committee m edd ; a4 UL pia (8 seeahenas A bins sahones marck Hits the Mark, Bismarck the to meet this, afternoon sia hieleens Mass of Business is Faced in. London, Jan. do Copunpance ot he be oe Me ie sp nolateade Mr. alin teins orfbnigotion lenders ene eats City, Port of the Plains, Ker- it was said, ‘to receive the, reports ‘of; Pending and Prospective r harp satsconieny Lie Q Telah cera Green said, wags made because of Mr. ‘concerned, he said, was to obtain nel of the Wheat Fields, Capital of the the experts which will embody precise | J and opponents e p 2g | Haldorson’s ability from past connec- , quickly the greatest possible reduc- Cattle Country, Buy, Build and Boost definitions of the ‘replacement sched-| Legislation 4 treaty was what mainly impresses jtions, and was made without consulta, tion in freight rates and to cause the =, Bismarck,.. Bigger, Better,. Brighter ules as well as the exact method of! English newspaper correspondents | tion with anyone. correction of any condition unfair to “with! thé® school, December 31; 1921. Bismarck, The Magnet of Prosperity, scrapping warships which are to be! Honorbright Bismarck’s Alright, Voice eliminated from the navies of the! of the West, Watch Our Mark—Bis- signatory powers. 4, marck, The Midwest Wonder City.. rin { Flower of the West. re SEE FORWARD STEP. | The committee on coordination of charitable activities in the city re- “tep toward agreement by the powers, ported that a meeting had been held on the American proposal to prohibit} with other organizations and that the use of submarines against merchants { Matter would be carried further. S. vessels was. seen today in the pro-! A. Floren was introduced as a new posals accepted in principle by the member of the club. ‘French delegation, subject to a dis-: The club held its first discussion cussion of the precise language of the! of the advertising course which it is, dec be ' to study, during the winter. eee eed still are awaited from the govern: | PROFESSOR AT iments of Italy, and Japan there was ‘of France and it was believed the del-} ROE © legation would be prepared to resume | TOD ove ee ion ofthe matter today at a> } | indication that neither of these parties; 7 meeting’ of the full naval committee; lot the conference. The State Board of Administration | : Cisad \ ‘Washington, Jan. 4—Congress faced | a mass of pending and prospective ; legislation..that may keep it steadily | at work until late in the summer when | Washington, Jan. 4.--An important’ it got down to work today on the 1922 Testimony Given Before Senate program. i Along with the routine load of ap-|' Investigating Committee propriation bills there confronted the ; = AS senate the pnobability of more or less |: In Washington protracted debate over the new in-| ternational agreement resulting from |! ee the Washington armament confer: | Washington, Jan. 4.—P. Hubbard, ence while the house also faced im- | of New York, employed by the Ameri- ortant ii s including the new pend: ; fhe anttiynehing bill. y , | Preparing bodies of American sol- a senate committee today that of three jtee investigating charges by Senator . | Watson, Democrat, Georgia, that Nonpartisan League Reported} American soldiers were hanged with- é out trial in France, Hubbard declared 1 cap over each face. 7. hi Called as the first witness at réjl; © Cause of Tragedy ‘sumption of hearing of the commuitl Fa Re | 5 | watching the proceedings in the Dail) j % yesterday. The writers agreed that! j the recezs had done nothing to alter | »can Graves registration service: in|, the respective attitudes of the meng bers and said it was evident as soon | as the sessions began that Monday's: |rumors of some possible : surprise making for unanimity had no founda- tion in fact. FIND2 WOMEN DEAD IN HOUSE ! 1 Aberdeen, S. D., Jan. 4.—The au-| thorities today were investigating the ; lease of the death of two women and The publicity bureau, whith was headed by W. G. Roylance, will be dis- continued. Mr. Greep expects to issue a statement of the condition of the bank at regular ‘intervals, and a bul- letin will be published within a: few days ix which considerable! informa- tion about the farm loan department will be, given. However, it is not plan- ned to issue the bulletins in such a. way that it could be charged they were | being used for propaganda purposes, | Mr. Green declared. i The. banking department of the bank! will vacate the second floor of the’ Bank of North Dakota building and will be consolidated on the first floor. will be occupied by the farm loan de- partment and the Industrial. Commis- sion. Mr. Green’s office will be! moved from the rear of the bank to the! front where easier and quicker access | will be afforded business callers. agriculture by peaceable efforts where Possible. N.D. IMPLEMEN DEALERS MEET — JAN. 25-26-27 Convention Will Gather in Fargo would interpose serious objection if! | oles ieiaterred he toons are ~ cole chm be accomplished by the re-/ —30 Firms Have Reserved seives the full approvali (around the neck of each and a plac! . r duction in the number of employes, | the proposal receives the full app | Police of Aberdeen Investigating Mr. Green ‘believes. The second floor! Space Fargo, N.-D., Jan. sfvteny and di- versified problems are’ tp come before the North Dakota Implement Dealers’ association when that body meets in has announced the resignation of! i i the illness of two men who were found ; ‘igqy, 20nual convention here January 25, 26 Prof. W. R. Porter, professor of ‘nar | SEEK LOCATION i To Have Joined Move- ‘there was nothing in the coffin py {fhe i house last night. Police said eset seaane vil scont nie {0 pay. |and 27. ‘Thirty firms already have re- keting and organization at the State: OF HENRY MEIS ment There : which the bodies could be identified. | they had not determined whether li-| Fo said that fine DANG ation haa teak served space. \ Agricultural College at:Fargo. Thei resignation became | effective at. the! Does anyone know of Henry Meis? end of the year, Prof. Porter request: | ; His mother has not heard from him; ing that he be relieved of all duties! for months and is worried about him, | according to a letter received by the The ‘board also announced -it had! postmaster, The letter, which is from, approved the request of President|Z. M. Meis, a) brother, says that he! John Lee Coulter that an immediate; was lest heard from in Aberdeen, S. search be instituted for a man to take | D. on his way to North Dakota to har- a place that will be created in which! vest. His description follows: Ger- es “The bodies were identified by the t J, cross on the outside of the coffin and Waco, Tex., Jan. 4—A new party 0! the black caps were not removed be- be known as the “nonpartisan politi-' ¢ he bodie -aalitnpied: towths cal-conference” was. organized here | fore the bodies were: shipped to the yesterday. Affiliated with the. party, United States for burial,” Hubbard according to iL. J. Sulak, vico-chair- ; testified. man, ‘are the farm-labor union, ‘Non-! partisan league, the four big railroad ; pnotherhoods, the state federation of the new man will head the instruction fn agricultural economics, farm ac-| counting, commodity cost, marketing co-operation and rural credits. The} board also announced it had approved |man descent, third generation U. S., 6 feet in height, 185 to 195 pounds, | red-faced, sandy or brown hair, blue eyes, strong face, large, prominent nose, ‘aged 22 years. It is asked that these organizations. Another meeting will be held here February 21 when important action is contemplated. t BANKS NAMED John Valley, of Grand Forks, has the plan of Dr. Coulter to co-ordinate! information concerning him be ad-| instruction in the above branches in/ Tessed to Mrs. H. K. Meis, care rural DAKOTA BOY ‘been appointed receiver of the closed Forks. district the school of economics, experiment station and extension division. Dr. Coulter’s own particular knowledge of the’ field will be of great assistance {to the school, in the opinion. of the; Yoard, not only in the selection of the man, but also in reorganization of in- struction. i BLUESKY BOARD | DEPUTY NAMED H R. J. Murphy, of Bordulac, has been! appointed office deputy of the state ex- aminer, to act as secretary of the Blue Sky Commission, succeeding W. S. Mitchell, resigned. C, T. Hopperstad, FLOUR PRICES | route No. 5, Tecumseh, Oklahoma. BREAK SHARPLY Minneapolis, Jan. 4—Acute weak- ness in the wheat market yesterday resulted in a break of 25 to 30 cents a barrel in flour prices at the largest SAID MISSING, banks in the Grand icreated in the consolidation plan of , aoh an(the’state banking board and guaranty Jamestown, N. D., Jan. 4.—Herman ; fe will be recelv- : 4 +._ {fund commission. panty, IL eee an ‘er for the following banks: State Bank A A ing | Of Milton; Peoples State Bank of tovMinneapolis: by @ message stating | Grand Forks; Citizens State Bank of that his son attending a telegraphy | 2 Bank of Mowbray. school has not been seen since Des pe neato ane nN: Tiventon; ralven cember 24. ‘at Milton, and deputy state examiners THROWS ACID, ‘assigned to the other banks. milling qompanies here, making new low figures in flour prices in about six years, Family patents today wére ~uoted at $6.75 to $6.80 a barrel when sold in 98-pound cotton sacks in car- load lots. BLINDS Girt PREMIERS JOIN Des Moines, Ia. Jan. 4. fi squirted in the face of Miss Bernice Williamson, 18, last night by an un- identified assailant destroved her eve- sight. No motive is known for the TOSAVE EUROPE jquor or fumes from a_ stove were! | responsible for the tragedy. | The dead are: Miss Louise Waltman | and Miss Effie Funstan. \ John ‘Keller and Merle Fulker are; lin a hospital in a serious condition, They are under police guard andi will be questioned today regarding the affair. , The bodies were discovered late last night after the mother of one of the girls had ‘asked the police’ to search for her daughter, missing for. two days. Clues obtained by the officers led them to a house which’ had not been occupied for some time. DOUGLAS WANTS A LIGHT PLANT The people of the town of Douglas, a thriving town of Ward county, are using candles, lamps or any other method of obtaining light. The local electric plant burned. The owner, Wm, Johnson, carried no insurance. Citizens immediately propased that the town take over the poles and equipment not burned and build a new plant. Representative Andrew John- son came to Bismarck in an effort to sell $5,000 worth of bonds to the board of university and school lands with which to rebuild the plant, CONDITION OF shown by various officials of the counties, cities and school districts | with which the bank deals, and that: he hopes the friendly cooperation will | continue. Mr, Green had deeply impressed of- ficials in the capital by the quiet, bus- iness-like way in which he has taken . charge of the bank. BOARD TO BUY | SCHOOL BONDS The board of university and 201 lands, in meeting here, received a re-| Port from the auditor showing that about $35,000 had accrued in the per- manent school fund through interest payments, and authorized use of the money in making whole or partial Payment on bond issues purchased from the Hartland school district, McLean county; Nebo school district McLean county; Nebo schoo Idistrict, Oliver county and the Highland school district, Logan county. AUTOGARAGE LOSS $150,000 { Chief among the problems which will occupy the attention of the im- plement men are the price level for their product in 1922 and what can be done to place agriculture on a. profit- able basis, according to an,outline of the program received from R. A. ‘Lathrop, secretary of the state or- ganization and president of the Na- tional Implement Dealers’ associa- tion. Ways and means of 1educing freight rates, the dealers’ opportunity to aid diversified farm operations, new fed- eral tax laws, and contract forms and provisions also are to be studied. The general exhibit of implements will be held in the Fargo auditorium. This year the convention committee has decded to eliminate the tractor feature of the exhibit. ‘ ‘Many prominent speakers are on the program, including Dr. W. C. Hodgson Pastor of the First Methodist church. of Fargo; J. B. Eastgate of Larimore, member of the North Dakota legisla- ture; Dr. John Lee Coulter, president of the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege; H. J. Hodge, secretary of the na- tional association and George E. King of Kensal, president of the state as- sociation. WANTS TO BE CONGRESSMAN Indications that a new hat would be of Minnewaukan, has been named a —_—_— attack. if * Cannes, Jan. 4.—To save Eur- 3 Centerville, la., Jan. 4.—Fire of un- | Shied into the political ring before the deputy to do county examining work| AT. JENISTS TO : 5 ope from complete: economies MILLER CRITICAL | known origin early today destroyed| ext primaries were contained in 3 iN rents Senor Would Exterminate fi an falling a arte are the hig Sue the George Steel garage and 56 au-| letter to Secretary of State Thomas aes DISCUSS BURCH] Vermin Scientifically; tasks to be undertaken here by | St Paul, Jan. 4.—No change was | tomobiles. The logs is estimated at) Mall in which Ernest J. Carmichael, aa Premiers Lloyd George and Bri- |Teported today in the condition of $150,000. superintendent of schools at Burn- JOHNSON GOES TO ST. PAUL Attorney-General Sveinbjorn John- son is in St. Paul to look after thé state’s interests in the case in which Frederick A. Pike, lawyer, sued for fees claimed to have been earned in legal work done for the state In- Los Angeles, Jan. 4—Alienists sub- poened by the state were expected to testify sometime today in the trial of Arthur Burch for the murder of J. B. Kennedy. Through these alienists’ testimony the prosecution expected to ‘combat opinions voiced by experts on mental disorders called by the de- | fense who said that Burch was insane and if he killed Kennedy did not real- gustrial Commission. ‘ize the nature of the act, and of France. Opening private conversations today soon after the arrival from Paris of M. Bri- and, the two premiers hegan to lay out a program for the allied supreme council which convenes here Friday. London, Jan: 4,—A society has: just been founded for the scientific ex- termination of vermin. It was chris- tened the Institute of Applied Pest- ology. Alfred E. Moor, its chairman. believes it will adcomplish a work of | international importance. Osmium is said to be the heaviest] © Ostrich’ was known to the ancient: es all substances. +a the ‘camel bird.” Clarence Miller, who was operated upon for appendicitis. He was former congressman from Duluth and is’ sec retary of the Repubjican national committee. His condition is said to be very critical. ‘Between 1912 and 1919 nearly ‘$4,- s | 000,000,000 was’ added to railway pro- Youth Ts Arrested, | Walter Harold, about 20 years ola. | was arrested by the police, charged with theft of three dresses from a house in which he was a guest. The dresses were recovered.” 2 stad, N. D., submitted blanks indicat- ing that he intended to run for con gress. He also asked for copies of the laws governing entrance into the primaries. Burnstad\ is in the sec ond di: ict, represented in Congress British royal observatory was es- |perty values in the United States. tablished in Greenwich in 1675, ! at this time by George M. Yiung. Spaiiiards first brought the orange tree to America, x

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