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“5: > “HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE " PRIMARIES 10 TAKE PLACE IN OHIO AUGUST 8 ered for the Republican Gu- bernatorial Nomination ‘at = ALSO FOUR DEMOCRATS : Sixty-five Republican and Democratic Candidates Out for State Offices (By the Associated Press) Columbus, Ohio,July 18.—Particu- lar attention in connection with the . Ohio primaries August 8 centers on = the Republican nomination for gov- ernor. The Democratic contest for ; governor and the Republican nomina- tion for United States senator also are developing sharp campaigns. There are nine candidates for the ,, Republican gubernatorial nomination, = and four are contesting for the Dem- ocratic nomination, although one = may be hurled out on a technicality. Four are in the race for the Repub- = lican Senatorial nomination. For the = Democratic senatorial nomination, g: Senator Atlee Pomerene is opposed ts by former Congressman John J. = Lentz of Columbus. i There are sixty-five candidates, for .. nomination for state’ bffices ‘onthe £ Republican and Democratic tickets, the largest field the votérs of Ohio have ever been called upon to face. Chief interest in the Republican % governorship race appéars to lie in * the probable strength of Carmi A. “Thompson, of Cleveland, who has = peen endorsed by the organization in « the’ larger cities and who is reported = to be the personal choice of Presi- { dent Harding,himself .an-.Ohioan 32 Thompson formerly was secretary of * state in Ohio and took a prominent & part in the American delegation at + the Washington armament confer- 4p enice. # Gov. Davis Not a Candidate. ‘Among those pitted against him are Congressman’ Charles L. Knight of Akron, who is running as a “pro- gressive-Republican,” and Secretary of State Harvey C. Smith of Zanes- | ville, who has been characterized by the’ prohibition forces as a liberai candidate. Gov. Harry L. Davis of Cleveland decided not to seek re- election. Knight was a member of the Pro- gressive party in 1912, and a follow- er of Theodore Roosevelt. His friends claim that Ohio progressives are hs % strong as their victorious neighbors * in Indiana, Pennsylvania and Iowa, z, and that Congressman Knight will be :: swept: into the nomination. _. Knight has published the Beacon- = Journal at Akron for years, and only “recently purchased the Springfield << Morning Sun. "Smith, formerly a probate judge at <: Zanesville, has served two terms as ™ secretary of state. Although he has __come out on a strict law enforce- ment platform, the Anti-Saloon _ League charges that Smith is a “wet” Sand that he will receive a large vote from those opposed to prohibition. C. Homer Durand, of Cochocton, is running on a wine and beer plat- form, as is J. W. Durnell of Colum- = bus, Daniel W. Wflliams, a Jackson newspaper publisher, also classes =himself as a “progressive Republi- can.” He was the Progressive can- sididate for lieutenant governor in 71912, State Senator Arthur H. Day, sof Cleveland, is running as a soldier fdidate. He served overseas dur- ing the war and was the author of trtie:-Ohio soldiers bonus law. Ru- pert R. Beetham of Cadiz, speaker Sof -the Ohio House of Representa- tives, has come out on a platform ad- “vocating the curtailment of campaign expenses and’ the publication: before election of expense accounts by can- dates. R Harry Clay Smith, Clevglandnegro “editor, was one of the last to enter the race. Friends of Secretary of z,State Harvey C. Smith charge thu! the Cleveland negro was inducéd to ‘enter the race by opponents to their “candidate, who hope to split Judge Smith's vote: through the similarity Sof names on the ballots. The Cleve- land negro opposed Jiidge Smith for =the nomination for secretary of state two years ago. * “LEGALITY OF “-RAHL BOARD IS __.. IN QUESTION = _> (By the Associated Press), | = Fort Smith, Ark., July 18.—Legality of the United States railroad labor Epoatd was attacked here in the federal court upon the ground that it “3s assuming jurisdiction over men “engaged solely in intrastate com- merce, who can be regulated only by ‘“Hhe states. ‘NEW EDITION : OF “MIRRORS” "IS PUBLISHED The author of “Mirrors. of Wash- ington,” who set official Washington fgog and attracted nation-wide dis- cussion by his intimate pictures of Washington official life and his un- sparing estimate of the ability and purpose of many of the nation’s poli- tical leaders, has written a new “Be- pine the Mirrors,” which also bids fair to become the theme of discus- sion for the nation. i In “Behind the Mirrors” the author presents a general picture of poli- tical. tendencies as well. as political ‘personalities. It portrays vividly Jeaders and near-leaders and the hows and why of their. leading. It analyzes present-day governmental psychology and development. It is a} cross-section of fundamental things | ‘ms they are at Washington, behind | the gilded curtains of partisan press- | - HOUSED IN OTR RULES, By NEA Service. “Cineinnati, July 18—On 0 door on the tenth floor of the Dixie Terminal, which is an office building, arcade and street railway terminal in one, ig a sign that reads MISS ANNA MARCUS BUILDING MANAGER And inside presides a young woman who from a large mahogany desk rules the community that inhabits the vast biiilding. She is Miss Anna Marcus, She is, in fact, the major of a pri- vate town all housed in one building —a town with a Main street, the arcade, that has in it 50 stores of all kinds. Dixie Terminal it’s named. rather “Dixieville.” In Miss Marcus’ “Dixieville” there is a union, traction depot where 85,- 000 persons’ go every day’ to take street cars for the over-the-river towns in Kentucky. Over all is the ten-story Dixie of- fice, building, at present occupied: by 1,000 workers and: ultimately to be occupied by about 1,500 more. Over this domain Miss Marcus is boss. It is her business to sec. to it HAIL LOSSES ~ INSOUTHEAST Call it Additional reports of hail damage ‘that the storm which swept south- east from Baldwin apparently jumped a strip of territory and then struck }south of Sterling, doing much dam- age in the Long Lake country in the ty. said to have been damaged whilu Kintyre reports. said that. about’ 10,- 000 acres north of there was 50 per cent loss. North of Napoleon there was hail through a strip about about two miles wide and ten to twelve miles long, which suffered a 10 to 15 per cent loss. ” Six to_cight miles northwest and three miles southeast of Fredonia there was hail loss, while a ‘storm sweeping southeast from Fredonia to around Kulm damaged a stretch five 10 to 15 per cent on wheat. leigh’ and. northern Emmons county FORMER RESIDENT OF STATE DIES (By the Associated Press) |, | Minneapolis, July 18—George 'C. | Howe, 71 years old, for many years terests in the northwest, died at a hospital here. Mr. Howe was active in oil promo-) tion in Pennsylvania as a young man, later moving to North Dakotaa then to Duluth and then to Minneapolis. Surviving him is his widow. Mr. Howe’s move to North Dakota was by proxy, he having purchased a large farm “The Bonanza” at Cas- selton, North Daokta, in 1889, while) himself still a resident in the Penn- sylvania oil fields. Mr. Howe never | lived on this farm, according to rel-! | atives, but his brother managed it for him. | NEW HIGH SCHOOLS | Ft. aYtes, N. D., July 18—At a meeting. of the school. board of this | district, it was decided to establish | high schools this fall in both thei Selfridge and Fort Yates schools. A | new room, and an additional high | school teacher, will be added tq each | of the two schools. .. .TO REOPEN MINE Zap. N.'D., July 18—Receiver P. J, Cahill of the Luck Strike Coal Company, arrived from Wilton Tues- agentry.” The book is illustrated with | day. Mr. Cahill will look after some $5 portraits of Cesare. “The book is published by Putnam. | work preparatory to opening the: | mine which will be some time in, | WOMAN IS *MAYOR” OF TOWN last Friday night received here show}: southeastern part of Burleigh coun-} About 18,000. or 20,000 acres are}: four miles wide, the damage being} estimated at 10 percent. There also . Was a strip six miles north of Lehr,|' mileqwide 50 per cent on ,rye and|) Farmers from southeastern Bur-[ in Bismarck today reported the loss-|: | identified with mining and timber in- t OFFICE BUILDING MISS ANNA MARCUS AND “DIXIEVILLE,” OVER WHICH SHE that every room ¢rd store in “Dixic- ville” is populated with none but, the|; |, desirable. She watches the windows in, the |stores of “Dixieville’s Main street, | because under its laws every window |’ must look like its neighbor, ‘with no}: garish posters. _ She makes all contracts for: im- provements and repairs; the electric service; she: Bosses the janitors and. the scrubwomen and the rest of the working force; she}: receives the complaints and sugges- tions of the inhabitants; and collects |/ the rentals. , And, in between, she has. an eye|' on the elevators, keeping before her the’ daily mileage of each elevator and the number of stops.each makes, | lin order ta check them up for. effi- ciency and economy. The lady-boss of to work at 9 a, m, and seldom quits before 6; and two or three nights a week she returns to her office. for}: more work after supper. “Yes, it’s a job’ that keeps. the, mind busy,” says Miss Marcus.. “And what keeps the mind busy keeps-one. happy. That's why I like it.” . ied. by his two little sons and daugh- ter. ‘ TRAIN RIDE IS FIRST TAKEN IN 39 YEARS Washburn, N._D., July 18— Thirty-nine years ago Mrs, Con- stance Falck got off the train at Bismarck and with her husband and family took « team and drove over land to what is now Mc- Lean county. That was back in, 183, where the west was still wild beyond the Missouri and the railroads were still several years off in this county. When Mrs, Falch got off the train at Bismarck in that year it was the last train ride she took until this week when she went to Bismarck to visit her daughter and to con- sult a doctor. It was not that she did not have the opportunity of riding on a train, but she just didn’t care to. She. has’. been many times to Bismarck by auto to visit her daughter before this time. She was accompanied on , this trip by her daughter who had, been here visiting .and by. one’ of Her sors, Fred. |AIR MINISTRY .. | IN ENGLAND IS qi London, July 18,—The Air Ministry is about to carry out experiments for establishing an air station on “the Thames and test fights\soon will begin The new station probably will be near the, House of Parliament and:‘when in use will save the journey by motor fear to Croydon. aerodrome,. ‘thus: shortening by anhour ‘the journey. by: Plane from London to Paris. * The ministry also has approvéd'a scheme for an air service between|. ‘Southampton and the French ports of Cherbourg and Le Havre. The main object of this plan is to shorten’ the, cross-Atlantic journey by’ pick- ing up passengers from Cherbourg, conveying them rapidly by air to Southampton, :and.thence. onwards tu London by train. GUARD CQMPANY ORGANIZED. _ Dickinson, N. D., July. 18 inson’s* company, Company K, in the North Dakota National Guard” wiil probably be mustered into. service the latter part of this month or the first of next month, according to | H. L. Roquette who is in charge of the reorganization of the company during the absence of Captain L. 2. Baird. Mr. Roquette reports that. there are 46 enlistments in the company at), the present time. The law requires} a minimum strength of 50 before be- ing mustered into the service. When the company meets, on Monday, night, of next week, the four additional. en-. listments necessary to bring .the company to the minimum strength are expected. Several have express- she runs], “Dixieville” gets | August. Mr.: Cahill was accompan-:|, ‘GETTING BUSY} —Dick- |' PICKPOCKETS ARE MODERN New York, Thy 1—The modern pickpocket in New York is pecu- lator. He invests a little change in jthe hope of getting large returns. And’ here, according to: that fountain- head of information, the polite, is way he does it: ‘ Having’ selected @ potential , vic- tim; the pickpocket drops a‘coin in front of him, Then he 1s the stranger's. attention to it, ‘solicitously ‘inquiring if perhaps he did not drop the coin. More often’ than, not the stranger reckons it possible’ he might have, and’ stoops over to pick up the money. Whereupon the pickpocket lifts the wallet from the stranger's ;hip-pocket, 3 ; Well Known Man, Is Found Dead (By the Associated Press) ! Minneapolis, July 18—Edward G. Turnham, 52 years old, prominent Longi Lake contractor and brother of | Representative George Turnham’ was :found:, dead. on, the Luce, Line Rail- way track near Crystal Lake, An empty wallet was found near the body. Mr. TurnHam’ was in the Kabit ‘of carrying large sums of monsy, ihis brother said, Beputies: inveati- :gating believe Turnham was slugged ‘and thrown across. the railroad ‘tracks, A west bound car. str the body atid nearly severed the héad. : One go BORE. Sate fei ed their intentions of enlisting at that time. | Victor Tal GERARD SEES KAISERIST PLOTS Zs ___ LASTING THROUGH FIFTY YEARS BY. EDWARD M. THIERRY. ; Newport, R: 1, July 18—James W. }Gerard, former ambassador to Ger- marty, sees the liberalization of the beaten émpire on the way to rcaliza- tion. oe Disclosing. for the first time in an .inteeview, with NEA Service the prophecy, by. Walter Rathenau near- ly two years: before the armistice tHat it would take 50 years’to liberal- ize Germany; Gerard gocs a step farther and says, he is convinced the prophecy. willcome true, Just returned from another visit to Europe, ‘Gerard declares neit! the assassination of Rathenau nor the menace of monarchist plots will prevent thé: success of the task Rathenau. foresaw and was engaged in when murdered. “As I was leaving Berlin in Febru- ary, 1917,” said. Gerard, “Rathenau told me his country would be defeat- ed ‘within two years and that it would take 50. years to liberalize Ger- many. He was right in both in- stances. “Propaganda favoring” the mon- archy is persistent through the news- papers backed by the old armament trust. There is: éven a reaction of royalist revenge noticeable among schoolboys who did not suffer in the war’.and. who jn their uniformed minds see the picturesqueness of the monarchy. “The government in its present representative . fo rm—forced' out wheneyer the lower house wishes— will become, I think, an executive bureaucratic government like that of the United States. “The * assassination of Rathenau and the discovery of the monarchial murder bund has drawn the line sharply in Germany; On one side are the junkers who/fayor the mon- archy and the re-establishment of compulsory military service, for re- venge and war—against ‘the plain people. “On’ the other side are the Social Democrats, liberal thinker: They will be joined by the middle classes, who for the first time under the republic have a chance to get on in the world. This side will prevail.” Gerard says Crown Prince Rup- precht of Bavaria is a menacing monarchial factor. “He openly boasts he can get back his kingdom any time he pleases,” says the former ambassador. But Gerard scouts the possibility af Rup- precht’s’ succeeding and proclaiming |: himself German emperor. “Germans in America can do a great deal toward liberalization of their fatherland,” Gerard says, “by throwing their influence against mili- tarism, royalty and military service. “There is a tendency of some to be for kaiserdom and militarism — and perhaps because they escaped the evils Of it.” Gerard does not think there will be a financial crash in Germany. MAY RESUME HAGUE CONFAB (By the Associated Press) : The Hague, Juy 18—A communi- cation from the Russian delegation held out,a prospect that the confer- od dance fsllaves erty. J SYRUP PEPSIN IN OLD AGE Much used by elderly people for constipation, biliousness, aches, etc. "ANY men and women, as they grow older, siffer constantly from little ills, The cause is the poisons produced by chronic constipation, result- ing in headaches, depression, bloating, sour stomach, bad’ breath, etc. A single bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin willsprove to you that you can so régulate yourself that elimi- nation will occur promptly every day. Increased doses are not necessary. It is a com- bination of Egyptian Senna and. | othersimpleJaxative herbs with | pepsin. The cost is only about Ha cent a’ dose. In spite of the fact that Dr. Caldwe!l’s Syrup. Pepsin has been on the market 80'-years fl and is today the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, the formula has never been im- proved lipon. It is safer and better or you than salts, minerals, calomel, coal tar and such drastic purgatives. Half-Ounce Bottle Free Few escape constipation, so even if you do not require a laxative at this moment let me send @ Half ounce: Trial Baul of my Sorup ebsin FREE OF CHARGE s0 that you will havelit handy when needed. Simply send your name and address to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 514 ‘Washington St. Monticello, Ili, Write me today. a =—_—_—_—_—_—————————SSS———————————e————eeeaeaae ence on Russian affairs here which has seemed on the verge of a final breakdown might be resumed. TO HEAR NEW PROPOSALS - (By the Assoctated Press) The Hague, July 18—The non-Rus- sian subcommission on property de-|-coaches cided to meet the Russian delegates tomorrow and hear any new propos- als the Sovict representatives desire to make concerning restitution of or compensation for confiscated prop- ~for with Victor dance music, every dance is a good dance. You, yotirself, select the latest dance numbers, played by the greatest dance ‘orchestras. - Always at your command, on Victor Records, are Paul White- man and His Orchestra, The Benson Orchestra of Chicagc, Club Royal: Orchestra, Joseph C. Smith and, His Orchestra, The Vir- All Star Trio and Their Orchestra, Hackel-Bergé Orchestra, International Novelty Orchestra, Zez Confrey and His Orchestra, and other favorite organizations. Victrolas $25 to $1500. Victor Dance Records, double-faced, 75. cents and $1.25. At all dealers in Victor products. king REG. U.S. PAT..OFF. portant: Look for these trade-marks. Under the lid. On the label. Machine Company Camden, New Jersey — 1 KILLED, MANY HURT, IN CRASH (By the Associated Press) Savannah, Ga, July 18.—Five on the Seaboard Ajrline train No, 3 turned turtle yesterday imorning near Cox, Georgia. A negrq ‘dining car cook was killed and sev- eral passengers injured. The .train struck a broken rail and five of the cars were tossed into the ditch. ‘ Victrola No. 80 ~ $100 Mahogany, oak or wainut another Victrola ‘TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1922 ., ’ a ee