The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1922, Page 8

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i } i PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE RACE FOR FIVE AUTOMOBILES — CAR SHORTAGE GROWS KEENER AS 2ND PERIOD = MAY BEHELP OFFERS EXTRA VOTES ON SUBS, Candidates All Closely Bunched and Striving to Finish This Will Aid in Stabilizing Price,| Period in the Lead for the Hudson Sedan, Studebaker, | Oakland, Nash and Overland.—Extra Large Vote Offer to Close September the 9th.—Second Payments Great} Fargo, N. D, Aug, 30.—That the Seurce of Revenue.—Cars Can Be Won or Lost During | This Two Weeks With only ten more days of the big vote offer left, candidates, in the Tribune’s “Everybody Wins” cam- are working over time, either ain their present leads, or to catch up with those more fortu- nate candidates who are at present ding for the five cars. The race s been so close up to present time that it is as yet a toss up as to who will be in the lead in tomorrow's vote standing, The country candi- dates as yet have the lead on the city as to the greatest turn-in and promise to hold it. What--with the Missouri Slope Fair on, the coftest, and two or three minor affairs, contestants are having their hands full. Several of the candidates are working in Banks, or other places of business, which hinders them from full time work, but their reports to-date show that they are working as hard as any. Miss Kooker, of Dawson, has been in this city the last two days getting subscriptions in her fight for ‘the Hudson sedan, and from her re- ports, their are many as yet left in Bismarck. She is putting up one of dhe stiffest fights in Campaign His- tory, and it behooves some of our city candidates to watch her care- fully, We read in The Homestead, the newspaper of Napoleon, the follow- ing, and the letter below from Mr. Clarence Bryant shows him to be! out for that Hudson. A TRIBUNE CONTESTANT “Clarence Bryant has been nomi- * Sry | Mandan’sPromising | Tribune Candidate | o—_-——— _———_ BOBBY MACKIN. nated for an entrant in the Bismarck Tribune's prize suvseription contest and is busy soliciting new subserip-; tions and the collection of old ac- counts for that paper. He has met with fine success thus far and has great hopes of ‘landing’ one of the muchly coveted prizes.” | —From The Homestead. “Dear Campaign Managers: “I am forwarding two clubs this afternoon, which ends the Big Vote Pericd. A few have escaped, but 1 Vote Period. “T am going to make a tour of this part of the state in my Rolls-Ruff.! 1 weuld appreciate it very much if, you would send me down the Hudson now instead of later, as it would) make campaigning more pleasant, “I am about out of subscritpion blanks. Please send me a couple; more books. “Yours very truly, “Clarence Bryant.” We are indeed pleased to hear from our country candiates, and like to learn of their lively activities. Miss Baker upon being interviewed yesterday told the campaign man- ager that she hadn’t started to work as yet and we would hear from her this period. If this be the case that she has been able to amass the votes she already has without much effort,’ other candidates should be on the- alert or she will head the vote col- umn in the near future. Other can- didates that we have been unable to see or hear from lately are all re-; s o—. expect to get them during the 2.000} The above picture shows the smile that'll win, and Bobby is out to win. ‘rom the reports of his many friends in and around Mandan, and those of his folks that little Overland has a} slim chance of going anywhere ex- cept in Mandan. | in Auto Campaign | = ported to be doing nicely, by their many friends, who are helping them. ASK $50,000 OF BOND FUND) .. MR. GLEN TURNER. Turner has shown much strength in the south part of. the country district, and from the Suit Is Started by Slope amount of ‘territory left for him to County Suit against the State Bonding Fund for $50,000 on the bond of J. S. work, and the size of Linton itself, where he lives, we feel he will-mab+ a splendid showing for one of the Tribune cars. Douglas, former treasurer of Slope hospital, where she was held under county, in which Douglas is also made defendant, is expected to involve a number of. important questions con-| sho supervision by juvenile authorities, in a statement Friday, saying that would welcome the prodigal cerning the extent of liability of the} gqughter and son-in-law home, state fund. i The mother has filed an affidavit According to the complaint of| with Statc’s Attorney 0. B. Herigstaa State’s Attorney Brownlee of Slope] requesting the dismissal of 4 | Reserve district. Rage ois cana Another Entrant | the | county, Mr. Douglas, as.county: treas-| charge against Alex Bakke, husband | uver, in 1919 and 1920 after the pas-} of the girl, and Allen O'Dell, charged | sage of an initiated law, deposited) with perjury in connection with the | TO FARMERS J. H. Rich of Federal Reserve Says railroad strike and the consequent possibility of a shortage of box cars to move the crop of the northwest, upon the grain market, is the opinion expressed in the monthly report on crop and business conditions of John H. Rich, federal reserve agent for this district, made public. He reports financial conditions casier throughout the district, | Mr, Rich reports that the north- west has harvested a grain crop well | above the average, which is of ex- j cellent quality both as to weight and | color, but he reports that the gluten content of the grain this year, may. not prove equal to that of the crop | last year. | Those sections of the district whict: | are situated so they may secure coal | from the lignite fields of North Da- | kota and Montana are in much better | shape than the sections further cast, the report states. | ,. The movement of livestock to farms |for feeding has improved, but. there has been a decline in the marketing | of farm products. There was a de- cline in retail buying and in stocks | of merchandise and material. Manu- | facturing and mining increased, but building operations declined for July {as compared’ to June, “A grain crop we!l above the aver- | age has been harvested in the north- west,” says the report. “The volume of the crop has beeft satisfactory, and | it would appear that for the impor- | tant items, wheat and rye, losses in j other producing sections have been | offset aproximately by the better than usual production in the Ninth Federal The volume of the crop is highly important, but ev2n at that it is secondary to the price at the farm, which is the important element which will determine how far the farmers can go this fall in liquidating their debts, and rebuild- ing their prosperity. ° “The lack of coal has been a handi- |ecap to threshing operations, but will be offset to a considerable degree by | the return to straw as fuel for threshing engines. A more serious element exists in. the shortage of grain boxcars and the difficulties rail- roads are laboring under, which will doubtless tend to prolong the cus- ; tomary marketing period. This muy be beneficial in tending to stabilize prices, CONCILIATION ACT QUESTIONED American’ Judicature Society Asks Leave to Intervene in Case i Petitioning as{a friend of the court, the American Judicature So- ciety has asked leave of the North Dakota Supreme Court to file a brief in the case of E, B Klein vs W. H. Hutton which, will be ‘heard before the North Dakota Supreme Court on September 13th. The case itself is a small one, relating to the collection of a bill but the constitutionality of the North Dakota Conciliation Court act has been called into question and it is this which has attracted the attention of the officers of the Amer- ican Judicature Society. In their plea they state the three | officers making the request are mem- bers of the bar, two from Illinois/ and one from Indiana, Herbert Har- | ley being a member of the North- | western University Law School fac- | ulty, Albert Kocurek being the pub- lisher of the Illinois Law Review and John H. Wigmore being the Dean of the Northwestern Univers- ity Law School. Their request tht they be allow- | ed to file a brigf, of almost, one hun- | dred pages, recites that tho “matter is one of great public interest be- yond the borders of the State of North Dakota and that the decision of importance to the people of vari- ous parts if not all parts of the United ,States, in this, that North Dakota is the first state in the Union may prove to havo a stabilizing affect | to be rendered in this case will be; By NEA Service. Italy. More than one hundred are known to have been killed and at least 2,000 | Wounded. in the past year, and the toll is growing as street fighting ana anti-Communist uprisings continue. Disorders at Milan, Ancona, Leg- horn, Venice and Genoa are report- ed. Nor have the provincial towns and villages escaped, Strictest se- crecy is being maintained over thi extent of the fighting, but it is known that outbreaks are occurring continually. The civil war, which is an out- growth of reprisals on the part of Fascisti following their early anti. Communist activities shortly after the end of the great war, finds the government a non-participating third party. And this even though sporad- ic street fighting, ambushes, seizure and destruction of Communist party property are frequent occurrence: throughout the greater part of Italy. Under leadership of Benito Musso- lini, former Socialist, the Fascisti are gaining power by leaps and bounds. Organized originally to combat the Red terror after the armistice, its membership is now believed to be about 700,000 ex-soldiers, sworn ene- mies of the Communists, By direct action the forced a drastic cut in the cost of living. | In accomplishing this rifles played jan important part, according to report, as well as canes, clubs and fists. i In the annexed province of Vene- via Giulia, foreign language schools, churches and printing plants have been confiscated, their teachers, pas- tors and editors either being driven out or intimidated. The plan of the organization based upon local units. The order is spread out in all parts of the coun- \try, the organization numbering from 20 to 60 adherents in the small- er towns to great units in the order has cities, Each local group takes care of its immediate territory. If the situation is alarming, re-enforcements are sent from other districts, as in the gen- eral strike of two years ago when units of Fascisti were continually on the move. The strike was broken by the Fas- cisti, who opened the shops and fac- tories with workmen of their own groups heavily guarded by rifles of their comrades. 50,000 GET MEDICAL AID "Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 30.—At a | cost™te the state! of approximately $7,500, more than 50,000 men, women and childrén_ received medical atten- tion through the medium of the Uni- versity hospital’dispensary at the University of Minnesota during the j past twelve months, according to fig-! ures given out yesterday by S. G. Hale, dispensary registrar. Twenty-one different clinics, and | a staff of 70 part-time physicians j were required to handle the Yarge numbers of needy persons who came aid. “The University dispensary serves a dual purpose,” Mr. Hale said. “It allows medical students to watch and aid in the handling of practical cases while studying and at the same time serves as a great help tg needy | persons who are unable to pay reg- | ular physicians’ fees.” The only charge that is made is a 10-cent registration fee and 10 cents }| NO QUARTER IN ITALIAN WAR ! Rome; Aug. 30.—War without quar- ter between the Fascisti and Com. munists is being waged throughout 'to the-dispensary seeking medical |) funds of Slope county in two banks! sjleged swearing as to the girl’s age in Amidon instead of in the bank of North Dakota. at the time they were married. She Both of these banks! also told Mr. Herigstad that she plan- closed and the new county treasurer! ned to halt civil proceedings in dis- refused to take certificates of depos- its of the closed banks in the sum of $93,000, The State Bonding Fund had automatically bonded Douglas for) other, I think it is best that I should | £56,000. trict court to have the marriage an- nulled. “If they think enough of acl not interfere,” she is quoted as say- If Slope county wins in this case] ing, it wil be the largest loss the State Bonding Fund has sustained during] in North Dakota, ready to return| may be, the reception of said act or its five years of operation, and should] home as soon as they are positive! similar acts in other states of the other cases involving | that the mother will forgive them, ac- | similar actions of treasurers may be} cording to Allen O'Dell, who has re- | the state lo brought. Charles Simon, tant attorney general, and Stat Attor- ney Brownlee and William Langer, attorneys in the case, have stipulated trial of the matter before Judge Pugh at Dickinson on Sept. & Trial of the injunction suit brought in the Morton district court by 0. McGrath to retain his position as dis- trict game warden as against W. £*. Reko, new appointee, will be tried on September 8 at Dickinson, attorneys announce. Another case, in whick McGrath has brought a mandamus ac- tion for his salary against the state auditor, will be heard in Bismarck before Judge Coffey on September 11. Mother Forgives Daughter Who Elopes Mirot, N. D., Aug. 30.—“Of course she’s my child, and I'll forgive her,” declared the mother of a 16-year-old bride, who escaped from St. Joseph’s Bakke and his bride are somewhere ceived a letter from them to that ef- fect. They were at Casselton when. the letter was written, Mr. O'Dell says. Mr. Herigstad prans to present the affidavits asking dismissal of the case pgainst Bakke in county court, where the charge had been lodged, and the one against O'Dell in district court before Judge John C, Lowe, POLE FLIGHT IS ABANDONED (By the Associated Press) Nome, Ala! Aug. 30.—Captain | Roald Amundsen, Norwegian explor- ev, has definitely abandoned for this jyear his plan for an airplane flight ‘from northern Ataska th North Pole to Spitzenberg or Grants land, but plans to hop off next spring, it beeame known today with the ar- rival here of the coast guard cutter Bear from Point Barrow, for cach visit but this charge brought in a revenue of $15,000 or determination of the validity of said! about two-thirds of the cost of oper- act will be of great importance in: ating the clinic, Mr. Hale said. ‘Two stating the constitutional law gov-/ registered pharmacists are employed | erning said act and similar acts and, to fill prescriptions, which are sold hat the actual decision to be ren-| at cost. dered in this cause will have a prac- tical influence of. great public .mo- ment in promoting or staying as the |decision of this honorable court| which has actually enacted a state- wide conciliation act, and that the Name Principal at Devils Lake High Devils Lake, Aug. 30.—Edwin Mil- ton Belles will be the new principal | of the Devils Lake High school, ac |cording to Superintendent Nelson | Withdrawal of |Sauvain, who returned last night | Pench Delerates ee eg | s Expected| Mr, Belles is‘a graduate of North- ‘western university and has taken (By the Associated Press) | most of the work there on hts Mas. Paris, Aug. 30—The feeling wa./ters degree. He has had several expressed in reparation circles this! years of experience, having taught lafternoon that .the French govern-| Inst year in the high school at Spring- | ment would withdraw its delegates onj field, Ill. |the reparations commission, prepar-| At present he is. visiting with his atory to independent action on the, father at Blakesburg, Iowa, and ex- German indemnity question. This be-| pects to arrive in the city with Mrs. lief arose, it was said, from the fact; Belles next Monday. ‘that the German delegates here had | __. advanced no new proposals acceptable to France. | union. | Wildwood closed Monday, ; |Tuesday, Wednesday and | Walon | Thursday this week account | ‘orchestra playing at Fair) caTARRH | Grounds, Mandan. Keds inlad HandyiProphylactic Kit for Mea| Pri Utmost Protection be 35, Kit (4's) 81 Kit’ In Fascisti war. guard escorting a street car through Above — Fascisti the streets of Milan. mored car following. NEW RECORD FOR BUTTERFAT MADE BY JERSEY COW St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 30—A Jersey cow, owned by the University of Minnesota and kept at the Universi- ty farm here, has broken all state yearly butterfat records for all ages of her breed, it’ is announced by W. E. Peterson, state superintendent of official testing at the farm. Her name is Trill Pogis of Lilly Dale, and she is 5 years 9 months old. She is averaging about. two and _ one- quarter pounds of fat daily. Mr. Peterson . expected her to make 920. pounds of butterfat when her year was up at August 25. The| previous all ages Jersey record was 887.15 pounds. Her milk output up to August totaled 16,381.8 pounds with an‘ average test of 5.37 per cent fat, according to Mr. Peterson. TURKS ADVANCE | IN ASIA MINOR (By the Associated Press) Paris, Aug. 30.—The capture by the Turkish Nationalists of Eski-shehr, the principal stronghold of the Greeks on the Asia Minor fighting front, was reported in Paris official circles this evening. The Turkish advance is being continued, the ad- vices state and now has reached more than 40 miles in depth. MICHELIN Regular Size _ Cord Tires AT POPULAR PRICES Note the ar- Below—Benito BUY MICHELIN CORDS NOW Soft Bead Clincher Type 30 x 8%.. $12.75 31x4.. 115.50 Straight Side Type | 30 x 31%4...........$15.00 82 x B8Yh........... 18.90 B2X 4 ..c.ee ee ee 22.50 BBX 4 veeeeee eee. 23,85 B4x4 0... 2415 32 x 414 + 26.45 Michelin Regular Cords coat only a little more than fabric tires, yet they give about a third more mileage. LOCKWOOD Accessory Co. Phone 382-J Corner Eighth and Main Streets WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1922\ { of 214 per cent, followed by Boston with 115 per cent, Chicago with, 113 per cent, Pittsburgh with 105 per cent, Philadelphia with 92,6 per cent, Baltimore with 69 per cent, Detroit with 61 per cent and Cleveland with 51 per cent. As contrasted-with lasv year's record for this period, Phil- adelphia has increased the percent- age provided for its yearly-need of new accommodations 7.6 times. Only one other city has a larger percentage of its new housing ac- 3 MURDERED AS THEY ENTER THEIR HOME ; : Murderer Lies in Wait at Door and Strikes Victims Down With an Iron Bar , (By the Associated Press) Canton, Ohio, Aug. 30—Two women and a man were murdered and a second man wounded here early this morning by an unknown man who lay in wait and struck down his victims with an iron bar as they en- tered the house. The murderer cs- caped. The dead are: Mrs. Freda Burns, 27; Frank Burns, her hus- band, 25; Mrs, Mary Nola, 20, Luther Armstrong,, 22, suffered a severe scalp wound when the iron bar wielded by the murderer struck him a glancing. blow. per es Philadelphia, Aug. 30.—Building activity in this, city during the first six months of the present year has resulted in Philadelphia» jumping from eighth to sixth place among the nine largest cities. of the country in the number of. new dwelling permits issued, the Philadelphia Housing as- sociation: announces, For the-first half year New York had housing projects which will pro- vide accommodations for 243 per cent of the yearly ‘population increment. Los Angeles ranks next with a record | service. YOU CAN -rest assured when you are insured by us. Financially sound, the com- panies we.represent special- ize- on quick - adjustments, ‘equitable ‘rates. MURPHY BISMARCK, N. D. and SHINOLA * ‘HOME SET, MAKES SHINING YOUR OWN SHOES A MATTER OF A FEW SECONDS The Genuine Bristle Dauber cleans the Shoe, gets into all crev- ices and applies polish quickly and easily. The large Lamb’s Wool Polisher brings a brilliant shine with a few strokes. _ Shinola—Always 10c Black, Tan,White, Ox-blood and Brown, HE differenccs in value between standard cord tires sum themselves up finally in terms of strength, resiliency and Compare any cther tire you know with a Fisk Cord—and from the Fisk see for yourselves how more rubber on the tread, stronger construction and extra resiliency make a big, good-looking, lively tire which consistently delivers much longer mileage. Never before has there been so much long-wearing high quality at so low a price. There’s a Fisk Tire of extra value in every size, for car, truck or speed wagon Magneto Repairing Our electrical department is.swamped with magneto ‘work. Our past record for fast and efficient work for those whose tractors have broken down in the rush sea- ‘son is bringing in new customers from three states. The fact that we are official service station for Bosch, K-W, and Eisemann means that we have parts in stock. We also are service station for Delco, Remy, Klaxon, Auto Lite and Northeast. No matter what kind of electrical ‘trouble you may have, we can fix it. -~-. We Can Save You Money Because We'Know ~ Corwin Motor Co. Shoe Polish ( Hn on ——— ow HLA | Menno AE \Ho It’s best to say “SHINOLA”’ commodations under permit in gle family houses than Philadelphis' Baltimore tops the list with 90 per cent, in single dwellings; Philadel- phia has 88 per cent; Pittsburg, 63 per cent; Los Angeles, 58 per cent, Cleveland, 50 per cent;. Detroit, 40 per cent; New York, 37 per cent; Chiengo, 24 per cent, and Boston & per cent. We saw a girl without rouge. She didn’t look so bad. Time to Retire? (Buy Fisk) ‘Trade Mark Rew. U, 3. Pat. Of. Treat Your Shoes toa Shinola Shine and See Them Brighten Up. \

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