The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 11, 1922, Page 1

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THE BISMARCK TR For - Bismarck Generally fair tonight and Sun- day, colder tonight. and vicinity: LAST EDITION i BUNE ¥ eh Pe ibe ee re AS \ | ‘ESTABLISHED 1873 i \ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1922 iu (Leased Wire of Associated Press) PRICE, FIVE CENTS i % PT TEL TO Ee dhe] SEEK EE FoR = 7" H 5 : ; me « . \ Mee ‘ 5 Rages ri Des Tre eee a —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—— t oe i ' i PLONE NAS us lg 4 ¥ ii i : ; . . poe sret eee { | Presi Bd " 7 ae 2 + Great Difference in O’Connor’s to the eAdrosses given delows ts es saeaz ine. ‘President Harding in Behalf ann PINAL, : ‘rinceton’s 30 yard line The /Seth Richardson Runner Up ae Vote and I. V. A. Leaders Bin ee : < 4 eves me se | Of American People Places Cornell, 23; Dartmouth 0. - Harvard 3; Princeton 0. — | To Leaders in Judicial Caused Comment atte hye > Ste, ae Wreath cn New:Shrine pean ee eae ey OO tiiectal Rai eo! 3100 with Ge been signed : 3rd Period army 0; Notredame 0 ond period, Alford of Princeton ice Rae Ne | Mander 257 Sec. G.3_ PERIOD Armistice mmany has sf (ASSAY Illinois 8; Wisconsin 0. intercepted a Crimson forward tN PERIOD Al] hostilities cesse et elegen hours this dete the ; Chicago 14;-Ohio-State 3. pase at Princeton's 25-yard line. CAMPAIGN BUNGLED? @leventh instant PERIOD Instructions contained in telegram number - CELEBRATE ABROAD} Second Period Iowa 28; Minn, i. | Captain Buell of Harvard was 1399 PRECINCTS 0O ! 4 Sea wo four seven Sec QS these Hesdqgerters will be conplied with | Nebraska 9; Kansas 0. nh red in the forward pass play : St ian 3 far “pam! Pie WA ie beak pio Mb Britains) West Virginia’ 7, Indiana 0. Wingate at quater for Princeton, | Vote Now Is, Johnson 84,205; } League Probably Will Get ‘i pamery 4 France and Italy Com- Line smashes, and runs and a ‘aan OFFICIAL: = e SECOND PEfioD, forward pase left the ball on | Birdzell 79,326; Nuessle Federal Jobs in State 2 > MOCUTRS ry memorate Day Princeton, 10; Harvard, 3, Princeton's 21-yard line veer 76,294; Richardson 72, 401 We { Army, 0} Notre Dame, 0. Owen failed in an attempt al / ‘ ; aes Major Cavelsy \ = 1 5 ‘ field enema pt ee eee eee ean See. Gene Staff ee Ae TO URENOWN: SOLDIER Ultediaoy Winconste, 6 i ectding’ the ball iapiay on its NUESSLE HOLDS LEAD rot politielaka, (ute: coated wien Gepies to: Chie? Air Service Wanbineton, Mots’ camer: Ohio, 3; Chicago, 0. own 20-yard line, Princeton could Fargo, N. D., Nov, 11—W. L. Pe P 5 pies tos @ g ca’s tribute to its unknown sol- ji riod van not gain in three plays and punt- Nuessle of Bismarck was con- Planation, of the remarkable out- \ Chief 288: ; dier was paid through President |Tizst Period. | © ed to Harvard's’ 35-yard lina | tinuing to hold a lead over Seth come of North Dakota politics. The oh. Hard\ng today with a simplicity oii | aa Gehrke of Harvard fumbled on | Hichardson of Fargo, as almost Mii Wenn eee Hay Broce theg Wag c sivileingly, at. verlsnce with the HARVARD SCORES FIRST the next play and Baker of | complete reports upon the sup- : ne splendid ritual of honors that { Harvard Stadium, Cambrid Princeton recovered the ball on reme judgeship were being re- 30,000, and the defeat of J. F. T. (uss 7 marked his coming a year ago. | a. NOt RAT Priest i i ‘ _ ; y line. After a |. ceived at tabulation headquart O'Connor by 3,000 to 6,000 is the Ef. Sedbalt Toda: Maas Neve lc othe Pelaceton: 1: Harvard's 1s yard i i Os p b . y there was no spoken Ti Iked agai Cri five-yard penalty on Princeton, ers here. Nuessle started in stumbling block for many who are ; d to stir echoes of the sol- se Tocca figta renaey Wetec See led tive. i ith a lead of almost ‘ Vejen : : 4 word to stir echoes son football field today before | Crum gained five “yards and | the day with a lead of almos g to give an accurate view of emn chords and expressions of | v late hour th ‘ fi A ri b | a@ crowd of 52,000 that filled the Gray on the next play was down- 5,000 votes. At a late hour this ’ he: rostilts of the @lectlon: It is the |. ; : high resolve a year ago that still stadium to overflowing. K ed "ice yards from Harvard's afternoon he was leading by 2,+ and in the vote of any two candidates | This is a photographic reproduc-| to the Second Colonials of France. | Company B, 319 Ficld Signal dmant linger amid.) the” smacble Princeton kicked off and Cha- | goal. Then Crum took the ball | 000 votes with scattered pre- 2 Packed by the I. V. A. Scation-an'l ti f the “cease firing” order is-| From the copy reproduced, the ad-|talion, which became the First Sig-| grches of Arlington Cemetery pin ran the ball 40 yards to across the Harvard line. Dins- cincts and a county or: two to { Pea osetia Moh LL ataueel za Nd ; if dress to the First and Fifth corps| nal:Corps on arriving in France, and| amphitheatre where the honor- | ‘iigfield. Harvard in.three plays | more added a point by a kick, | head from. : ! The -plecti bri at | Sued by American general headquar-| 14 °¢9 the Cololials was erased, for| later transferred to Company C. ed dead keeps vigil. mede first down on Princeton’s | making the score Princeton 7; The count with 136 precincts ‘ e flection: may pring steat tors to the United States troops at] selay of the order to the Third corps.| After returning to this country} A distant \thudding of saluting { 3¢.sard line. A forward pass | Harvard 3 at the end of the sec- | to hear from is: Nuessle 84,- ( changes in the complexion of North : é f . aini: d his old position’ with| cannon, the ring of shod horses Hi ‘da first d d period. 041; Ricchardson 81,486. Dakota politics and politicians, Tha|the fighting front in France—an arm-| The relayed telegram containing| Morey resumed his old pos 2 gave Harvard a first down on ond period. H 4 ¢ 4 fread d 4 nds ps 4 a A i ‘ Tel hh: Com-| on the hard roadway, a low com: > , ———; Grant county was the first to : fut f the 1 i in, but | istice had been signed in the World| the order to cease firing on the|the Western Union Telegrap! Princeton's 26-yard line. Three : y r rE future of the league is uncertain, but | ste stroke of 11 on the historie Nov. 11,| any, in Dayton, 0, He died a year| mand, a still flourish of trump- | Harvard plays resulted in a net | Chicago, Nov. 11.—Three of the| send in its vote when the inten- senatoRvand’ the. Sofaeausnt ev cld| The order, as will be seen, was ad-| 1918, was brought back to the Unit-|ago and the cease firing order, and ate Ghd antenr ies Pre loss and Owen tried a field goal | four undefeated football teams of sive clean, up started eset as e * ‘ + z A ry ji i e 3% be which the league has attained on the| dressed. to the First, Third anal ed States by William Morey, a tele-| other messages of historie value), sents and the Tresacet At | from the 26-yard line which Wa | the western conference—Chieago,| returns of the race: Grant gave 4 several hundred jobs offered in fed-| Fifth United States army corps and graph operator at first attached to|were found among his effects. leaper’s tomb, and had gone peer sa tie ibe mas, perer Wisconsin and Iowa—go into bat- NDE Ward Count chelpedy out eral. service in North Dakota’ the “aigain almost before the few red tle today with teams now'outside| ° the Nuessl 1 with. 1,749. to VIC an his own 32-yard line. le lay wi W the Nuessle total with. 1, league is in position to have a ma- | hundreds who awaited realized lee tage atea two by each |the championship running, but| 1256, Rolette was friendly to 5 chine as powerful as the machine it |] / if . | AM that the ceremony had begun. side, Wingate of Princeton fum- | nevertheless dangerous to the title} “Richardson .with a vote, of 895 riches issn dattac'e | ~How the World: Finds Itself Wehtatece ier ai-On the| beds Kc tnd var naled ater |asplrations of the Dig ten leader) for Nucl and 1386 for Rich ate offices. Jt may, be that the suc-} as! ‘on, tee tg oat i di Chicago meets io, at!’ ardson. Ranville enrolled in the cesses in the races for national of-| A § =) | plain granite’ block | in Arlington|._ Fecovering ‘he ball thse yards Columbis, while Wisconsin. and| same column jwith. 458 to 1,214 : fices will inspire the league to give As Made Over by the War cemetery, that a year ago became gp) trom hls own Woe il"Kis own |Towa are resisting invasion of| and McHenry added to the For- ‘1 more attention ie on eer te eed J new. shrine ue sania a Foal Tina’ ‘and Buell of Harvard. | their bailiwicks, by Mlinois and| go man’s’ total with ‘a vote of its: own) reprosentabives, feoms NORM | there blossomed today a wea tch on Printeton’s | Minnesota, respectively. ,2,140 to “1,601; Mercer is now ‘ma Dakota down in Washington and not} Wo. jet the United’ States be- | servative, Andrew Bonar Law, -at/ _Y | flowers laid revently there to Stat cae tee Paes 1 Football’ experfis are too wise in!,'the only county’ not at least give so much attention to state poli-}, 4 any question the greatest and| the helm as priemer. The situation | memorate, the first American's’ un-| Owen made goal from place- {grid iron lore and knowledge of| partially reported. nce, ; by..far the. richest’. of all world|is uncertain, however, ‘There, must th the home coming of American's un-| | ot” siving Harvard three | the fighting ability of the Buckey-| The counties from which vari- ! é& Great Ditkerene in wee nig | Powers!” ‘ sorte bp Ga lection Koon, and-its outcome |) peat ¢ wna areppereltiers sa Eee teat polnlbasinsreett 4 es, Illinois and Gophers tosprediet ous precincts have-not reported overnor Nestos increase is iF t i is’ impossible dict. eas 3 ithe natiort sealed the conve . Boi tees i today for their un-| and’ the number. of precincts Sah ‘ The, role of -bankcr,to the nations | is impossible to_ pred) is ‘ D: Later: A Aen < Harvard kicked off but Prince-- | anything easy today number, majority over the primary by 20,000 he London money |, Britain's. strength ‘and’ wide ex-| Will Begin'a Few Days Later) american faith it then pledged be inued it’s punting poli- |detcated opponents. Instead, they| missing in the county follows: Votes while Mz. O'Connor was defeat-| Ros MMe“ nce g: New York. The| perience as a trading power hus In Bismarck But Begins | side the grave now covering by ‘the Pea Ser eaiteds ter see rescsd'| constiee the’ possibilities of defeat) "Adams 8; Billings 18: | Bow- a ayeepout Ne aia panies beds late’ belligerents all are deeply in| stood her in good stead Maison Fz Let ates: implicity of the| fempt at a field goal from (Continued on Page Three) man’‘4; Burke 4; ea 3; aps less when final returns show 4 4 ay SD sie see her commercial disorgan- Toda: And the utter simplici Cavalier 5;..Dunn 5; Golden. y ‘Amgrica and while repay-| ing sfrom ( an General y ; H the exact’ figure, than Senator debt, to"Amgrica | 11 | ization due to the war, as 4s testifi- scenes today, contrasted against re-| ~~ _- Valley 4; Grant, Logan, Kidder, {iGomber Allies the Lave Al organ | te long deferred, the fant that these | ed. to eloquently by the steady a. | <_|eolietions of pomp and tpalor of TWO PRISONERS | ! / Sioux, Slope and Towner 1 zation candidates increase: eir 1 00 pone scene Tabane iati f her money, now not! a/'year ago in the same be : each; McKenzie 14; McLean 6; ta i | obligations exist gives to this coun-) preciation of } mn WINS WIDE SUPPORT g 1 i majority over the primary excepting | ® z below parity with that of the setting, saved to add new glory to McHen: 1; Mountraill 23; , on the senatorship. [ee ee eee A eRe ne ee ee gtaeayand fat above ié-in |’ the memory of this humble soldier KILLED WHILE , Pree capa nde 4 5 A . ne % t E ; if i le ‘Nii i ; Many (of ‘Mr. O'Connor's frietds vit is the fashion in Europe to say | comparison with mast of the ‘other | armistice day, Nov. 11, ushers in| | Again President Hurcing | ace BREAKING JAIL Williams 2. refuse to accept, the explanatiow Mel that the United States alone profit- | countries of the world. T poll call af’ the American | the Pilstimage from, The figures for the other can- ing’ voted in. editorials “in: 1. V. aby’ the, conflict. Ireland, in fulfillment of war-j the annual roll call of the behalf of all his countrymen, But; = ee ee didateg (fare ther Gugrame: beach om papers that he was defeated simply | ©4 PY te ert ne fought unsel-| time promises, though not without Red Cross generally, although the) this time the message he bore was) Birmingham, Ala, Nov, 11<—Two | for the 2.036 precincts is Bird- i because he was on the Democratic, i i: longed period ' of strife, has i begins here next week..| not spoken’ work but a simple) prisoners were shot and ‘killed, one IDE zell 85,570: Burr 78,866; Englert ticket. ‘They point to a reaction| fishly and for high ideals. tn doing | Tro U'vnted virtual independence |. "ss yore puree?” enid “Le / wreath to rest on the great stone. | was probably fatally injured and two 5 | 74,554; Johnson 91,079, against Republican party almost] 0. UNTOU tor respects, she lost, as | within the British Empire, Ih Sl eked Meat d “Lei the guns that roared the national other slightly injured when they are everywhere in national politics. They | #!ly- a erat lock, “She lost in| While. it would not be correct to| Matin” of Paris, in a recent editorial.| satute in honor of the dead alone said to have attempted to escape Dis | Giaike NUBSELE” Wins ‘ + also! point out that ‘Mr. O'Connor] every belligerent lost. | She leit O°) 5 ‘chat England’s hold on| her|“Red Cross workers came to the aid| broke the stillness to voice a n8-|through.a mine shaft at Flat Top) woGne.Time Mayor of Bis-| Fargo, N. D, Nov. 11—Indépen- 1; received 108,000 votes for Governor] TE © tse We oor gaxes are| overseas. possessions, like Canada| .¢ 1.290,000 of our refugees. In hos-| tign’s pride. j prison “esinn near. here Laat Men’. dent forces this afternoon claimed \ two years ago, which would have bea FF Prosperity is returning but|and Austrilia, has been loosened, ity i ies 205,000 of Becretary . Weeks Present _ The only prisoner who succeeded) marck and Later Became | that w. L. Nuessle had defeated 4 enough to elect him Senator. And/ higher. Prosperity 18 & st, The war| is a fact that they show a disposi- vitals and dispensories 205,000 of our; Fo. the Army Secretary Weeks) in escaping was captrued by the of Seth Richardson for the position on further ‘that the campaign empha-/ deep depression came fir f tion to insist heneeforward upon a| children were received; 85,650 French| accompanied the President and for jticers with blood hounds. — U.S. Cireuit Court Judge | fic" North Dakota, Susreme bench, \ sized more than any previous cam-|'f Tite 4. in every country | much fuller voice in imperial af-|emilies were aided.” the Navy Secretary Denby. hat Sarr ie One This claim is based on returns from t paign en rahe beagheaas fonds | which had a part in the strife, peace | fairs than ever before. The first duty of every chapter of comploted tee Er ofstomenbrs John E. Carland, a resident of; all. but one county of the state, the not a real Republican. Man; i i i i Orne! 60 i i ly days, who} scattered precincts being expected ‘ 7 Spry rought chan: in the United France the Am€rican Red Cross is to the Bismarck in the early days, v e P ig exp of Mr. O'Connor, while appreciating) CFOUEIt TEES wilson leadership| In France, as elagwhere, the WAT| disabled ex-service men and women, | Me that was placed fer oF ee f rose to the position of the United|to offset each other in the final i the support given by individual Teed. Democrats might have gone| leader, Georges Clemenceau, is “inist where no other local agency ex-| ation. The only | towel ft core / States Circuit Court of Appeals, died | tabulation, | workers all over the state and local) TSEC, pepublicans have come in,| retirement, and Reymond Poincare,tist, ‘to meet the case, chapters on-|™Ony Was that lent by & eialinte today in Washington, D. C, atcord-{ Nonpartisan league’ headquarters organizations, are not aoe serv in any case, but the enormous] in the premier’s chair, is directing) 92°. in’ a broader program includ- troop of cave ay, e } | ing to an Associated Press dispatch | claim the election of Richardson : kindly mood toward the central Cain) Ts ty by virtue of which Presi-| the countey’s rehabilitation. Hae pablischealthsridreing and service PTenGenelal PATEy. es tyattooh \ to The Tribune today. , and with a possibility that- Burr is 4 paign organigatlon poich Spagetti dent Harding was sent to the White} The dominant thought of the Gal-| ooo oi itian families, autre ibe eae is tthe. une Jhdge Carland was 68 years of! will defeat Birdzell. This claim i delivery eneompare seek when it| House ungoestioneply wes due to] lic edioinia teers a alton “The Red Cross was present every-| known, among them General Per- age He pasted: ames 8 Sere | Tacos ouennected lateoi pine , vandi ing out of the war. invader, _ hete from the ports of entry to the| ching, for himself and the other ; " rest- delivered big on other candidates, | Causes grow?! 5 y ecti f the sum | Whe Pp df y shing, for hi t G 1 Custer was in f M Areas * ingland. soil, has been collection o! 4 ‘s * ted in in France. Lincoln when General 8 ern part of the state. \ Their contention ‘is thee the Rap In England: the war-time adminis-| exacted, as reparations, from Co aH ears ore emma ae Et aan ees serion ata command, Judge- Carland practiced | Determination of majorities and the OEe en eee sanet those whom| ttation in which the two big Parties: | MANY. the thost severly stricken | Wounded, in aiding the recuperstion|for he had been called’ to New |Situation In Near East Re- law in Bismarek in the early a¥S question of the exact makeup of the 1" te fei, iB nd Conservative. joiner ‘rance, the most s ped a ig ie Piet ode and became promi! ort akota supreme court seeme \ they thoueht wore 9 Conngett triers Leeeral ender, the, leadetshiy ot | by actual war of apy of ‘the reat See ee tean laeeioh pias york ae bore the wretta | ,ported to.be Very Critical | ittivities. He was a member of the 'to be the only question remaining of intentionally allows i } i , has but just finvolved in the conflict, | \ 1 a eg ( ane constitutional convention o: orth! the North Dakota election today. | to slide and concentrated on. the} ero ee George, has. d Jacked bither the enormous resour-| the soldiers’ at the front that they | flowers clustered as the day mov Turks Belligerent | Dakota and also was one of the early | While 200 precinets tae ae other candidates. Predictions wee The old party system of govern-| ces of the United States or the huge gover forget,’ said Senay Verehine: ston, re: the coutine’ festelotione . He tse mayors of Bismarck, He removed to! eecounted for in the race for the ‘ freely voiced before the election by! ot nas been resumed, with a Con- (Continued on Page 2) ‘We have nothing but words one ut tne Ttery were in foree| (By the Associated Press) Sioux Falls, 8, D,, served in judicial | tmnited States senatorship, these were I. V. A. leaders that, 0’Con raise for this organization. of the quiet c Ty 4 ° t ‘ South. Dakota, ‘and was % aha | Bor ould be defeated. “The Red Cross is the first line of| today. As<one every day in the London, Nov. 11.—The situations spe EN Dcben of they abected te increase the majority of omes Unusual Forks situation JUDGE MILLER | defense for humanity. It is intel- year the Buble, yas tees 4 come Constantinople where = cli or, Oe avents a iaart: pas | Erna Pratier; imag” Arab trenene - ; 2 i 5 iti ical; it,i jong: the St | nationalists want the allies to get]. . Cleveland. | eases | Perhaps the most unusual feature H All W ARR ligent; it is economical; it,is a power| and go am ja} | Bation: ing appointed by Grover une. |votes and from that: on continued, ‘ of the campaign was the erera WILL PRESIDE | for: pease. [eC promotse: the cave Lda aa d about the memory [aut and the allies are determined to| The court was-found without juris’ | with only a slight ‘interruption, to Grand eos ees any: of, OCon? IN ST. PAUL: ©, raat ee man si it,"| front af which stands the tomb of| ait tight, is still very critical, all) diction and he became memicr &'| make the gains predieted for him in 5 nor’s friends for this, but they also N ALEI io’the view of Calvin Coolidge, vice | the unknown, “Any rho cared tothe morning papers agree, but none thos court! of ty r |the precincts from the western part ¥ he - j membrance A i s a of the state. aR oem aiier et rit Judge Andrew Miller of federalij rresident of the United States. rate hare with’ the President oz|of them furnish any definite news| Judge Carland always retained af Dheisdivene dure Pics! whee had ‘ chine failed, OC A ts the court will go to Minot Monday to; That the ex-service men think ot with the war mothers or with any|to justify their view. Y fection for Bisel cd, we eigned appeared settled earlier in. the week eee re pboralavater: and the same tic-} hold a term of court and in sa ha -Amerlean Rel areas ataaw’ BuZ other honors paid to the dead. Even the gpvernment itself is de+ a pie one I deaee vn. Bismarck | developed uncertainty as the outly- A Dad ticbas it Hans An- £ ber will go to St. Paul to sft for! helpful mother and the Veter: 3 America’s Share _,, | ¢lared in some quarters to be large- | to : f Judge | ing precincts continued to develop A Saeraen Rea nHhiay sdabapons Judge ' Federal Judge Booth sudge el ream seen in: hae Sein jyav8| But America’s share in armistice /1y in the dark owing to the diffculty forse tet (place of Judge | majorities for Seth Richardson uf 9 n an Burtness; |, may be‘in St. Paul for sevefal) co-operating friend, ae 4 day events was not confine 0 | of ‘communicating’ with the eat g dig. friend: | Fargo until he had climbed up with- Birdzell, and corre While jealou-|Similar Agreement to Last|'weeks. He plans to hold a grand) matter of calling the Bureau's atten-/ those at home. The dead in France| East’ as a result of the cutting of | Carland renewed mat eee | in: threateniag: dletande: ofsthe. lead: all-from Grand Forks. h rts 5 jury and term of court in Bismarck! tion to an unawarded claim or a"! yore not forgotten, nor was there! the cable line near Chanak by the ships and was a g yf iets. That praeinnte ulireported inthe i ay Face politielens tt sted béeatee| Year at an Increased Price, |in March, after the session of the! ill man needing: hospitalization, is/ tack of American fellowship at the| Turks, Even this fact is regarded|the bar association at dinner. ere Th Page net wupreperiad in Wie ; of Bs ere iccand iBorkay dient were, of'| It Is Announced legislature. Siecopinton of the director ‘of the} great Geneva! in ee as ominous, F DIES OF HEMORRHAGE be at elast favorable to his candi- q fic , ‘eterans’ Bureau. .;_| the elgian| unknown, Absolutely nothing can be learne A John Em- | dacy. ¢ fe ey aes thie goald: help ' Application to The American Legion: through its| among the first to fall in the great || Jodi te the present attitude of the we oarieads Se he rudges of | Sveinbjorn Johnson, present? attor- } vr eonnor in the northeastern part of| An agreement has been consum- recent commander, Hanaford Mac-| war, was entombed amid scenes 47> 024 government and it is equally ie United States circuit of appeals | wey general continued to maintain 1 O'Connor ted with the Minnesota Loan Decrease Rates | Nider, says: “No one realizes bet-| such as those that witnessed the | oi own whether the allied commis-| the Unite: sudicial circuit com-|the leadership he assumed at the { the states) 5 oe Managions Cott mee eae * | %&¢ than the American Legion the! honor Great Britain and France ands ners’have carried out their threat | (OF toe ei aie Norcliweatern (-utact’ ef tualivaga ‘aaa’ Chieti Taatice There are many O'Connor’s| and Trust’ Company — whereby Denied By Board) cvienaid work which the American| Italy agd America did their hero ° : ctw in Constanti.{ orising western an aoe ence attic Eh it ei the defeat offered toe vomintil(farmers may sell their 1922 hail Red Cross has done for the disabled | dead ite cotaniich’ martial. Jey 1n'Co states, died suddenly of hemorrhage | Birdzell continued to be second in i) ! a . which seem plausible w z Bays See 7 i . A jeg | ople. lay at his h here.” the rage, | Tene ect the great difference| warrants on the same plan as last) - ‘Washington, Nov, 11—Applications| veterans of the Worl War. eyes ; Ae the sieht American emer ee ‘The: departure for Lausanne of ‘the today at hig: home Bs |"With some- scattered precincts hetween his vote and that of other I. year, at an initial increase in price| of transcontinental railroads for au-| officials have been aa ear eatieal in France, Bagi ag engages | Trukish nationalist foreign minister, ROCEDURE | missing from nineteen counties and | V.A. candidates, not merely a few) (. 1% percent over the _initial| thority to de¢rease rates to and from ful to our, National’ Rehabi Heres Cee remnant and marines who |Tsmet Pasha, has attracted a great P | with the’ total vote! missing from 1 thousand, but ‘many thousand votes.| ~_ by th 1om- | Pacific coast terminals on traffic orig- | Committee. Their generous con heir li during the war, At; deal of attention here and in some DELAYS CASE Dickey Grant, Mercer,, Oliver, Ren- ; One factor which was counted on price last year by the same com inating east of the Rocky Mountains] tions to its support have allowed us | Baye thelr lire ou ie A Abad mires his unespectad ‘atert of thé | ville, wtolle€es aid 'Stae¥’ countiea the j to help 0’Connor was not known to) pany under a similar agreement, | .. destined therefor, weré denied to-| to carry on through our liaison Fp sae aoe reese turene; ‘Suresnes, St.| fourney without awaiting Angora’ | OF HALL-MILL | threo Independent” Voters Associa- many’ people. President Harding cal! The agreement was’ signed by. the] gay by the Interstate Commerce Com-| resentatives at thé idarent. diese tena the Somme, Oise-Aisne, in| zeply to the latest allied note is Fe pamiee= | tion candidates for the supreme f fused to make scores of federe! F-/ Industr‘al Commission and _ the mission. afices of the Veterans’ Barer, ocd | France, in Flanders field in Belgium | carded with suspicion. New Brunswick, Nb, Nov. IL! iadgeship were maintaining a lesd \ pointments in North aes ! Commissioner of Insurance. Under j * ‘ Nee te - ae and in Brookwood, in England, ap- Se eee ER i Only the question ef good procedure | but by a decreased majority. ! * ; District Attorney, to the disabled man’s cause. : ey in. LISTS CABLE RESTORED | - ‘s p ae hi 4 Ae sa | BE Sonate pt Biumarck Man-|te the trust company wit) nurchave| TUCKER LOSES |_| "othe ed Grors i toca of what) omit ree a mencan| bandon, Nev. 1H—The Eastern] Hsin the Pesce tothe wand completed ave, nen Benson, Bat dan, Minot, ., Fargo, beetle ab OC Te: Derren ee OUT IN CASS See eT ee eoread diplomatic or military and naval SEN PEIREERDD Coren eae ee eer jury, Deputy Attorney General Wil-! tineau, Cass, Divide, Emmons, Fos- of *yother «similar (app 1 f ds Samuel Gompers, of, the Anir vn ._|dicials paying tribute. : stantinople, which Was vue reeelthe | bur A. Mott, in charge of the investi- ter, Grand Forks, Hettinger, LaMoure, resentment expressed! crease the amount one-half per- Federation of Labor, “and I am con- n : co eaeore ish nationalists in the | bur A. Mott, , 4 ie ‘. i N es i 4 ae, Rs 7. Says a P 5 , 5 nd, a. Tecause of this. Senator Meron | Ti be Paid Jn March the ane acteat af W. R. Tucker for | Roll Call will meet with a generous] ha "sefferson Barracks. _Mo,,where | ed and is working smoothly, says an) | Tn Ui Moun tot easinent Sargent, Sheridan, Steele, Trail, f yee ees seer aeshaland some Team Guest county auditor by 440, Yotes by and adequate response.” _ many, war dead troy Prince are St yent 2 his ease. He made it elear that he] Walsh and Wali a i a iti f the bers of the Bismarck football| Ford Dougherty. Mr. Tucker is ST Rare ae uried, there also % igh- gs| considered the evidence in han e counties still unheard from other officials but opposition ences team Bail be guests .of the Lloyd| one of the best known county audi-| Magnesium, only two-thirds..the| pressions during the day but to the | The ee ee rd eer ee | trong, enough, to. warrant indict- | Stark,Ward and Dickey are expected I, V. A. organization and differences) tea wt american Legion, at the| tors in the state, and had been con-|weight of aluminum, is the lightest] Sn q72. brought home for burial in tassenger locomotive can, run at the) strong Aralell ba Tart cosa, tg east votes in favor of the Inde- between ty in part for hold-| Legion show, “Goodness Gracious,”| nected with the auditor's office in | metal now known ue ee ae private cemeteries. the havent heavrall straight track, providea| at least two of them on first degree| pendent Voters Association candi- Ing up’many other appointments. |at the Auditorium tonight, the low-| Fargo as deputy or auditor for 16) norebivety. unatteree, Ender Fea ree eee ton: [it is ballasted by a train’ behind it.| murder charges (Continued on Page Three) : (Continued on Page 2) er boxes being reserved for them. years, bleed toh ied i ’

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