The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1922, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ed _ cessary, None other his been offer- WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1922 LEMKE SPEAKS ON ISSUES OF : FALL CAMPAIGN (Continued from Page @nc) fts kind in its time—but against | the hardened . chill-stecled sides. of | the steel trust, the packers trust, the oil trust and-all the other innumer- able inerlocking trusts, its soft lead pellets fall flattened and harmless! “We must have a new gun. A gun adequate for defense or offense. Xears ago, when Sitting Bull was om | the rampage in South Dakota and the Indians felt annoyed because the | cowboys interfered - with their; slaughter of the cattle on the plains, | a delegation appeared before the ag- | ency nead and demanded of him: “Much guns; heap big guns.” The | agent was ‘unable to understand the | demand, for cannon, He inquired why | the need for heap big guns, and was | informed that they were needed to “kill heap cowboy ‘all one big shot.” | The people, like Indians, are being: dispossessed of their lands and their | property by an alien crew. There must be a “heap big gun” for de- | fense. That gun must be our gov-| ernment fitted to our pressing and} very great need, | “That is the cure the farmers of | North Dakota have accepted as ne- ed or suggested. But how was it to; be used and how was the govern- ment to serve us‘in a time of stress like this? There is no. better way} than to teach by instances. “During. the Nonpartisan adminis- } tration approximately $3,000,000.00 of state money was loaned to the farm- ers without the sale of a bond. A re- | cent report of the state treasurer ' shows that on August Ist, there had been $3,700,000.00 of bonds _ sold, / $8,000,000 of which was used to take} up the first loans made by the state. | That leaves $700,000 as the amount that the present state administration | has loaned. Two days before the Nonpartisan administration left of- fice, I made a motion, which was carried, for the sale of $10,000,000 of real estate bonds; $5,000,000 of elevator bonds and $2,000,000 of Bank of North Dakota bonds. All of this money was available to the in- coming administration on the day the officials were sworn in. The rec- ords show that not one dollar of the real estate bonds were made use of, until March, 1922. For three months the present administration did not loan one dollar to the farmers, while hundreds, yea thousands, were being foreclosed upon and other thousands were losing their farms through failure to get money to redeem them, | within the redemption period, This was the harvest time of the farm mortgage’ sharks. For some reason the state government offered no resis- | tance or competition to the demand of the farm mortgage trust companies for renewals of its liens at the high- est rate of interest known since the usury laws were enacted. Your gov- ernment could have armed you, with the money at its command. Instead of its preferred the flint-lock sys- tem, of the mortgage shark—and few | ever recover from its ‘bite. Urges a Bonus “North Dakota is the father of the Soldiers’ Bonus. It was the first state | to enact such a law. Our law stands today the best and most liberal of any in the union. I not only wrote this law but conceived the idea as to the least that those who did not, go to the front could do. The law was passed by a Nonpartisan legislature | and signed by Gov. Frazier. I am/ astounded and filled with humili- ation and shame, as is every red- | blooded citizen of the state, that | Gov. Nestos refused to join with three-fourths of the governors of the nation in asking the President to | sign the bonus bill and his confes- | sion that he was unfam| provisions of the law, ' the state | that gave the compensation idea, its|puardian for baby, Guy Stillman, include barns, ete.) i birth, is one that will cause every® North Dakota to hang his head in| shame.” | MAP OF STATE | IS PLANNED | BY COLLEGE Fargo, N. D., Oct. 4.—The North | Dakota agricultural college exten- | sion department is making a new| map of the state—aiming to show! which regions ~produce wheat, high | in gluten, and which ones produce lower grade wheat, The outstanding fact noted to date in the making of the map, is that the | western half averages deeidedly higher than (he eastern end, accord- ing to P. F. Trowbridge, head of the experiment station. At a rough esti- | mate, the differently colored pine used to denote the wheat quality show the west has a content of about 12 percent while that of the east is between 16 and 11 percent. of gluten. | Samples are received from demoa- stration and private farms all over the state and are tested the quality of each sample being denoted by a colored pin stuck into a North Da- kota map at the point where it was raised. i ‘Another factor which enters into, consideration is that the wheat which | was sown early is of the highest quality. This, according to Mr. Trow- | bridge, because this year the early | sown wheat got a good start and had a cool weather in which to mature— | Over 30 Million Bottles Sold Crosses Pacific in Junk Captain Ward, an American, with his Chinese wife, theif son, and 4 crew of three Chinese, crossed the Pacific from China to Vancouver, B. C., in the small Chinese junk “Amoy’ shown above. The crew had to ‘ey ‘feht off-a huge“snake that invaded the cabin-while they were at se. a strong factor in adding gluten to the grain. Gluten is desired by millers be-; cause it gives the flour the quality |that makes a loaf of bread “stand up.” Stillman Case Awaits Decision Of Higher Court White Plains, N. Y., Oct. 4— Supreme Court Justice Morschauser today reserved decision onan ap- plication for confirmation of the report made by referee Gleason in the Stillman divorce case. - Justice Morschauser; who an- nounced that he would make his de- cision known before next Friday, added that he was ready to confirm the report today but that counsel for Mrs. Stillman had asked him to take his time so that if the banker’ carried the case to the appellate division, it ‘could not be there af- firmed, that the report had _ been confirmed Without careful study of the report and evidence. The application was made by Mrs. James A. Stillman, who was cleared in the report of charges of adultery x with the | with Fred Beauvais, Indian guide, reports. and joined in by John E. Mack, whose legitimacy was upheld. Request for the delay, Justice Morshauser said, had been made by John F. Brennan and Isaac $. Mills of counsel for Mrs. Stillman. @It was explained that by render- ing his decision before _ Friday, Justice Morschauser, would render unnecessary similar hearings sche- duled for that day at Poughkeepsie and Nyack. THRESS AND BROWN BUY PAPER; MANAGER HOLDS OUT, Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 4.—The sub- scription list and good. will of Bill- ings county Pioneer, a Nonpartisan league paper at Fryburg, was sold at sheriff's sale yesterday to Otto Thress and John B. Brown of Dick- Playmates 7 David Malone,, Washington, likes to spend his spare time in the Na Honal Zoo playing with this baby Yon. They'se reat triends, | likely. inson, who held a judgment against the plant. The consideration was not made public. | E, D, Knotts, who ran the papery |for the Publishers Natjonal Service) bureau, has possession of the same and will not give it up. Further ac- tion on the part of Brown and Thress to secure immediate possession is , G. P. Nye of Cooperstown, former ; owner of the sheet who held a mort- gage on the plant, has started fore- closure proccedin; ASK. TEACHERS TO AID FIRE PREVENTION Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 4—School teachers in the state sKould aid in the work of fire prevention week (this week) by bringing methods. of fire prevention before their ‘pupils says A. H. Yoder, director of the ex- tension division of North Dakota University. He advocates the follow- ' ing steps in carrying out the plan: 1. Discuss losses by fire (in' com- munity and country, in state and nation). -2, Have children make inspection (Upon school © building, in rural communities homes and | 8. Have individual reports read| before school. | 4. Study laws of community and| state designed to prevent fires. } 5. Invite members of the local fire department or fire insurance men to tell the pupils about fire ope vention. 6. For one week at least carry out faithfully the fire drills required in the school system. ’ THE WEATHER | | ee ees For twenty-four hours ending at noon today: Temperature at 7 a. m. Temperature at noon Highest yesterday . Lowest yesterday Lowest last night ... Precipitation .... Highest wind velocity ... } WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair tonight and Thursday; not much change in temperature. For North Dakota: and TKursday; not much change in temperature. Weather Conditions ure, warm weather prevails in all sections from the Rocky Mountains eastward. Showers have occurred from the northwestern slope of the Rockies to the Pacific Coast but elsewhere the weather is fair. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist. INDICTMENTS ’ ARE- QUASHED New York, Oct. 4.—War time in- dictments charging Jeremiah A. O'Leary, former cditor of Bull and a number of others with conspiracy to commit treason and conspiracy to obstruct recruiting, were quash- ed by Federal Judge -Foster today on the motion of Assistant United States District Attorney Joyce. St. Alexius Hospital Mrs. Anna Companion of the city, Mrs. Philip Webb of the city, A. F. Knowles of the city, Mrs. E. R. Schultz, of Tappen have entered the St. Alexius hospital for \ treatment. Mrs. F. J. Johnson and baby boy of the city, Miss Frances Wanner of the city, Mrs. Faustinus Broun of Strassburg, Master Adolpf Merring- dahl of Driscoll, and A. Hendrix of IP G. 3 Remington Asserts; j importance to the ‘people, of: this 'fanmers have been subjected to is ; County Agents H. §. Bacheller Fair tonight! : _Under the influence of low press-| | THE BISMARCK FARMER DOES Wage Cuts Must Come; In speaking with P. C. Remington, president of' the City National bank the other day he called. attention to! the following editorial taken from “Farm, Sotck, and Home” «which touches om several -matters of vitai community. * 4 “Does it ever occur to a striker, or labor leader, that every argument there is at this time for quitting the job'and preventing some one else do- ing it, could have’*been’’ advanced, | with even more plausibility, by every farmer in the United States at any time since deflation started with farm products in the fatal fall of. 1920? It does not. It is the farmer’s bus: iness to produce food; he is one of the processes of nature and he will always be Johnny-on-the-§Rot when harvest-timte comes, so that the world | can eat. This, is the reasoning: of the. average worker, but the coal miner would bitterly resent the far- mer considering the miner’s job a3 being merely a producer of coal, that the. farmer may be warmed. The railroader would object to being con- ‘sidered a mere cog in the transporta- tion’ machine whole sole duty it is to furnish transportation. for the far- ‘mer's crops. | “Labor is fighting wage cuts; it is, in other words, fighting deflation by | refusing to do the job. This is nat-| ural, Wage cuts often work herd- ships, but under present. conditions | must be faced. | “The sooner labor realizes it must} stand a deflation corresponding to that of basic industry, the sooner it will get started toward a fairer wage standard. Labor leaders do not see that the heart-breaking deflation what is making heavy cuts in the wages of their foilowers necessary. Cutting dewn the purchasing power | of 40,000,000 of our people has} brought about business stagnation which makes a lower wage Tevel an | economic necessity, fight it as they will, When will people learn that cheap food is the very last thing} they want to make them prosperous? | “Farmers have not struck but un-| less the noa-farming section of our| population change’ vieix views of the! farmers {) mere food machines}. be- gin to sce them as human beings, en- titled toa fair return for their la- bor in the shape of good homes, edu- cation for their children, and free- dom from crushing debt, no one ean gay they never will.” APPEALS FROM PENSION AWARD the country money paid to # county for mothers’ pensions prior to i su- preme codurt decision of Feb. 9, 1921, relieving citins of responsibil- ity for paying any part. of the moth- ers’ pension, will be tried out in the supreme court in = suit between the city of Bismarck, and Burleigh coun- ty. The city sought, and received, judgment or $1,248 in the distric! court against the county, alleging it had been charged with this amount. for the mothers pension fund by the county illegally. CATTLEMEN ORGANIZE New England, N. D., Oct. 4. ganization of a co-operative bull as sociation by farmers of this section of the country will be perfected at a meeting to be held in New England. ot Hettinger and Charles Eastgate Slope counties, have charge of the arrangements for the meeting. Smal: rings or blocks probably. will ! formed, and all joined in one big bull association. Directors will be chosen by each block and officers Wed at. Last i Because they couldn't read or | Write, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas’ Whit field, London, never knew the docus ment they cherished 30 years was @ marriage license, not a certificate. NOT STRIKE of |] So now they have just been mar- the city have been discharged from the hospital. fied al over azain. ‘TRIBUNE . Navy Belle Takes to Stage , Miss Gaile Beverly, daughter of Commander Nelson H. Goss, United States Navy,-has forsaken social life‘to appear as a dancer on the stage. She has @ part in a New York production. “” by the association as a whole, ac- cording to the plans. TESTING DEPT. IS PLANNED BY COMMISSION The State Highway Commission in preparing to inStall a testing depart- ment, on which materials such as gravel, sand, cement, surfacing mate- rial, corrugated , metal, pipe and paints being used in road projects will be tested, according to H. 0. Wray, assistant chief engineer. purpose is. to determine if the ma- terials are up to standard require- ments. The U. S. Bureau of Public Roads has declined to do this work in the future for the commission, Mr, Wray said. Trish Government Grants Amnesty (By the Associated Press) Dublin, Oct, 4.—It was the hope of rast in peace without further blood- ‘| shed. that the Irish government of- fered full amnesty to all offenders who surrendered ‘their arms by Oct. 15, says-the proclamation to this ef- ect, issued yesterday. Tho right of a city to recover, route ‘The document sets forth the gov- ernthent’s knowledge that many per- sons: have been forced to participate in rebellious actions “against their will and better judgment, while others have come to realize that they have in truth put their hands to the ruin’ of their motherland.” | Bengal Floods Take Heavy Toll Calcutta, Oct. 4.—Floods in North- ern Bengal have taken an enormous toll of life, according to passengers on the first train to reach here from Darjeeling in eight days. The travelers est:mate that sever- al thousand persons have been drown- ed in the affected area, others thou- SS ““CASCARETS” 10c _ Best Bowel Laxative When Bilious, Constipated To clean out your bowels without cramping or overacting, take Casca- rets, Sick headache, biliousness, gas- es, indigestion, sour, upset stomach, and all such distress gone by morn- ing.\ Nicest. physic on earth for grown-ups and children, 10c a box. d. at the wal A AMOS OW feet of the judge— —— - The mystery was solved— Happiness MATINEE DAILY AT 2:30. USVI RR MORE — Cecil B. De Mille’s Finest Achievement Cast includes THOMAS MEIGHAN as the district attorney LEATRICE JOY Z al SHOWING as the. girl of Alice Duer Mililer’s Saturday evening Post story. « “MANSLAUGHTER” at usual admission prices is really ‘sands made homeless and destitute, and valuable crops destroyed. The floods are said to be the worst in the history of Bengal. VALUATION OF COUNTY LESS Valuation of real estate in Bur- leigh county, after changes by the board of equalization have been made, is approximately $917,000 lower than last year, it was an- nounced at the county auditor’s of- fice this morning. The total valua- tion of real estate in the county last year was $20,223,578, of which approximately one-fifth is repre- sented in property of the city of Bismarck. Do your feet tire, your ankles swell, or, do you feel shooting pains in the knees.. If so, call at our store Satur- day the 7th, for free advice A.W. Lueas Co. THINK FARMER WAS KILLED Fargo, N. D., Oct. 4.—Belief that Ira Wilcox, Ayr farmer missing since last Thursday was Rilled or kidnap- ped by bandits and carried away in his own machine, «was strengthened ! among authorities and friends today ' when the search failed to reveal any , trace or possible clus to his where- abouts, officials at Ayr and Buffalo t advised W. C. Greea, state's attorney today. \ ——— Do your feet tire, your ankles swell, or, do you feel shooting pains in the knees.. If so, call at our store Satur- day the 7th, for free advice. W. Lucas Co. Undertakers DAY PHONE 246 Day Phone 100 THE SEASON’S FINEST AND NEWEST PICTURE “MANSLAUGHTER” ONLY TWO DAYS WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY TO THOSE “MANSLAU Come early—the first show at 7 the second, My seem the shortest nine reels you enjoyed for you every minute. slaughter” is _ shor ; Blue Mouse theatre in Minneapolis. a treat on the Eltinge Tere aS | BUSINESS DIRECTORY ..\... WEBB BROTHERS Embalmers Licensed Embalmer PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN Upholstered. Furniture Made to Order. PAGE THREE mmm mam nn é Heavy Tweeds : Make wonderful sport suits for fall and winter. All the new fall styles are here; $25 - $35 - $48 See our north window. _ Softings the new overcoat material, warmth without weight... The new light colors are here $35 See our south window. S. E. Bergeson & Son Tailoring 1. Dry Cleaning / ET MES TNL TA RIA TONIGHT —and— THURSDAY PETER B. KYNE’S - Saturday- Evening Post Story | “A Motion to Adjourn” with MARJORIE DAW and RAY STEWART Two Reel Hall-Room Comedy “IN BAD AGAIN” ———— Do feet tire, ur S 5 aaah, ot "te Francis Jaszkow'ak ankles her bed a aed fee) shootin; ins in the knees. If so, call at our store Satur- Well Driller. day the 7th, for free advice. Dealer in Wind Mills, Gasoline Engines, Cotton Wood Lumber, A. W. Lucas Co. eee | Hard Wood Lumber. ’ ’ All kinds of Stove and Fire wood. For First Class Call or Write. SHOE REPAIRING 421 12th St, Bismarck Go to the- Bismarck Shoe Hospital 411 Broadway’ Funeral Director: Charge aT PHONES 246-887 NI in Charge Night Pone 100 or 681; A sudden hush fell over the spectators— © STREET TONIGHT EVENING SHOWS 7:30 & 9:15 began to creep through the mist of tears— You'll miss one of the greatest dramatic climaxes ever con- verted to the screen if you don’t see this smashing trial scene in the biggest heart drama of a decade. “IN THE NAME OF THE LAW” |i PALACE MANDAN TONIGHT and THURSDAY NITE Special Rates to Auto Parties ITM TAO TUTE eR ee WHO DID NOT SEE IGHTER” yesterday: This picture will ever will be interested Incidentally ‘“Man- NOW showing at the 9:15.

Other pages from this issue: