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myles _ASSETSHELD 10 BE SOUND Policy Is Defended by State Examiner Semingson as Clean up Method | a wd || Defense of the policy now being | Brateacd by the state banking board | Of! selling the assets of closed banks in the state en bloc if good bids are | | received was made today by Gilbert | Semingson, state examiner. (Mr. Semingson said the action | was taken upon the recommendation | of those who are liable for payment Gf the bank deposits under the . Guaranty Fund law. t-Receiverships cannot be continued h profit indefinitely, he asserted. plaining the a€tion, he said that Guaranty Fund Commission, of “which the appoi members are | M: R. Porter of Minot, S. G. Severt- | son of Bismarck and C. B, McMillan | of. Hannah, all bankers, had recom- mended that the sale of assets be made. The action, he said, also was Approved by a committee of the state bankers association. Since the bank- ers must bear the brunt of any loss- és incurred it is not probable that they would have embarked. onj a policy to injured themselves, he as- serted. It is the plan of the Guaranty Fund Commission to clean up the affairs of closed banks as quickly as possible, the state examiner declared, inorder that money may be realized | with which to reimburse depositors. He deélares that sales of closcd Dank assets previously made had been approved by thé bankers’ com- mittee. The commission has endeav- ored to secure the reopening of banks and where they fail they will close tip the affairs of the banks, he ‘said. The First State Bank of Killdeer, which reopened last week, is the 24th North Dakota bank to reopen after having been closed. Bids’ will be received and consid- ered Wednesday for the purchase of jassets of 19 closed banks. HOG ROOTS TO FIND FOOD NOT IN DAILY DIET Wargo, N. D., Nov. 14—A hog doesn’t root from pure pervisity, just because’ he wants to give his front yard the appearance of no man’s land Between the trenches. He is merely Ss) ~— LN ty‘Ts \ of. a Ions roduction » Pp ABOVE AT THE AT TH CONRAD E. SPENS: CENTER, HERBERT HOOVER: ; BY ERNEST Ui. PRIEST Every American can draw two valuable lessons from. the chart above. In 1920, when coal pro- duction was three times what it was last summer, the price of bitumin- ous coal rose to $12 a ton at the ‘mine and averaged $6.60 during the yetiod corresponding in the calen- «ar to this year’s strike months. ‘There was artifictally induced buy- sng, and there was no attempt to check it or to inform the country of the facts. In 1922, the chart shows, when fuspended production brought a ‘yenuine scarcity, the price was held Sharp: Contrasts Between Coal ‘Production | And Prices For Teo Year Period Shot How Hs |Peceton ea | | eee Pte ba CE eer pee T THE RIGHT, JOHN HAYS HAMMOND. to an average of $3.70 a ton at the mines, despite “bootlegging” and the few. operators who refused to come under the Hoover | price agreements, There are reasons for the phenomenon of finding low pro- duction and low prices charted for the same year. In the fall of 1921 the Secretary of Commerce, seeing that a strike was planned, organized trade as- sociations into a campaign to quiet- ly buy. reserve stocks. The strike therefore found the United States with 75,000,000 tons, the largest surplus on record. Then, last May, when prices started to sky-rocket, Secretary Hoover began the organ- ization of operators under volun- tary price restraint. agreements, at the same time_announcing that he would press for legislation enabling the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to embargo profiteers. The mere announcement of these moves caused prices’to drop. When the strike ended, the price agreements ended too. ‘A program of organizing transportation facil- ities to their fullest and at the same time asking the public through the press to hold off on buying until stocks were replenished conti:ued the emergency measures. Mr. Con- rad E. Spens, whose picture is on the left, was appointed Federal Fuel Distributor by President Harding and is seeing this part of the work through the winter. The two lessons from: this story are, first, that the public does not Dave to, endure exorbitant pricea or If hated | ia pee -\ go without proper information con- cerning ‘attempts to raise the cost of vital necessities past decent lev- els, and, second, that it is danger- ous to have to trust in these* mat- tera to such emergency campaigns as Secretary Hoover has planned and headed. Leaders of high cali- ber are not always available. The President has appointed a Commission of “distinguished men, headed by John Hays Hammond, to get at the bottom of the coat troubles and recommend Beran ent solutions. The creation of such @ commission was strenuously ad- vocated by the Department of Com- merce, and in a recent interview Secretary. Hoover asked the atten. tion and support of the wh'¢ country for the Commission - y TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1922’ ~ Britige Quick Relief b Prove stent toxative properties ot ne aaa oe s , A ANY FAMILY MAY TRY IT FREE Dr. Caldwell 's Syrup Pepsin by test, a andes ua eastIn SCIENTIFIC test hos now\ oe sone tad \ proven what Dr. Caldwell of & Monticello: asserted’ many years, ago, that constipation’ will ‘slow’ > you oR fully 25 per cent... The leat | Wale te test was made by | Wyashinglon Si., Mont De meine of | Do it now! ma Linda, up- on four men in the prime of life ° bowel. movement #04 ig ay for fone. days. selling family 48 hours World) You will find it in any drug store you enter, a geperous- and foul iregeh can size bottle costing you ess than mua no appetite rest tom sleep, gonta:dose: i lodigestion, Headacke, depression, Every member of tho family Y nervousness, cramps. The Bibel 1,57 the infants to. the grand-/|§ sufe was up 28 per cent. It Bat this that Dr. Catdyell has preached to his patients in pri- vate and to the publi€throyech the printed word ever since he began the pragtite of his specialty, diseases of the stomach and bowels, back.in 1875: ‘After observing for years the \ satis isfactory. effect of his pre- S| scription / for constipation, he placed it in drug stores in 1892, a,simple vegetable compound of Egyptian stnna and pepsin with pleasant- eating, aromatics, now ee TAKE DR. SYRUP. CALDWELIS advertising. Congressman - 0. B. though unopposed, took for the Independent: paign, paying his own x contributed $100 to the fund, spent $6 for rents can use it. With Ly. tis gentle and mild. / The form- ula is on the package, Mrs. Roy Cook of Bellefontaine, O., has heen givingit to her S-nonths old baby, me o new @ighs 19 pounds; and Mr. J Daweon of Brinsony, Ga., declares it the best laxative his family has ever found. Try a teasnoontitn of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep: constipation or any of its ay toms. The results will de you. And the cost is only one cent lose. Hans Anderson of Grand Forks, his opponent, spent $352, of which $85.75 was for printing, $100 for tailroad fare, $66.25 for newspaper advertis- ing and $100 to the Independeat ~ | Voters Association campaign funi. State Treasurér John Stven listed his expenses at $100 campaign con- tribution. George Shafer spent $100 in like maner, and $75.00 for. rail- road fare and hotel bills, $29 for livery hire and $15, for newspaper GET "7" “Life. | Polishes Saver for Shoes” bills. | se) The saddest sight on earth is short*man wishing he was taller. telephone bills and $70 for railroad fare and hotel seeking in his blind piggish way to zatisfy his aspirations for some in- gredient, necessary to his physical well being, which is lacking from his daily diet. * This and many more things con- Lata a oa strait Jealousy, over Wal- lace’s former -wife given by officers ‘as cause for ghooting. » ZET revives ane softens the leather, renews the color and starts your shoes on the way many more miles travel. ZETi adye saa a Leb for pers to ’s brogans. ENS “i esen Spring Grove, Minn.,*killed’ by ani- bulance shortly after arrived: here, As he stepped from sidewalk at’ Mil- waukee depot, ambulance struck ‘him, fracturing skull, five children sur-, the brood sow” are} two principles] degree murder. which we insisted upon. This considerateness is in line with the policy of the agricutlural col- lege here throughout. “Treat a cow aS CANDIDATES da neon | MANDAN NEWS ||°ANPIDATES cg. [operas Mrs, ‘W. H. Stutsman, recording sec- STATEMENTS |: Washington.—An enlisted tare of ‘eerning pigs will be brought out in], you would a lady,” sa “8 “4 Ey Ph ys a motto vive. —+ odor. Black dov: the principal North Dakota experi-|in the office of the dairying depart. | 96000 the ‘same ‘dis now,(was provid: ane retary orate North Dakota: Readers C. Poindexter, reelected state pee Dick and Cordovan tnent station exh The Norther” | nent, . ed in the budget bureau's preliminary] ‘ tion of Music clubs, who has been) auditor, obtained his selection at | a Pig and His Pasture,” to be exhibited navy estimate sent to the house ap-| St Paul—Mrs, Sadie! Schwartz,| attendiig the district meetings of less~expense than any other candi- date who has thus far filed a state- ment of campaign expenses. He spent $22.50 for newspaper advertising, and mother of five children, was. -sen- tenced to ninety days in. the work- house and a fine of $150 for making the club held during the past week in? Jafhestown, Forks “has t the International Grain and ‘Hay ghow, Chicago, Recember 2-9, accord- OO ing to H. L. Walster, agronomist of NEWS BRIEFS | (risortca bie Soman acta eas propriations sub-committee. ‘go, and Grand returned to her home. Milwaukee, Wis.—The_ freighter the state agricultural’ college here. wy, Nordland with a cargo of merchan- “moonshine.” /Mrs,: Stutsman declared that she] is willing to testify that it pays. = The. main aim’ of the exhibit will) New York—The anti-saloon league} dise valued at $500,000 sang eight) / sath aaa thought; the’ plans for a. state, wide | ty | be to show that the farmers of| announced plans to introduce in the| miles off St. Francis in Lake, Michi- Shanghai.—A message said that H.| music contest which will. probably E, Ledgard, member of the China in- land' mission, kidnapped by Honan bandits Oct. 28 has been. rescued. Alma,, Wis—Enos Behner,. 40, was beheld at Valley City next spring when cash pi Zes would be given the winners of various events would, he a fine step forward. gan. North Dakota, commonly supposed in jather states to -raise nothing but | wheat, can produce hogs “and let them do all the harvesting,” accord- ing to Mr. Walster. * New York legislature a bill provid- ing that persons who sell drinks :pur- norting to be drinkable alcohol liquor that kills the drinker shall be classed as murderers and aii Shed accord- Park Rapids, Minn.—Alfred Carl- son was accidently shot apd killed by his-guide, Thomas Hilles, while deer QUIT TOBACCO So ‘Easy to Drop Cigarette, Are you: attending school where your education will enable you to enjoy a good income ALL YOUR LIFE? Colored enlarged pictures and] ingly. hunting. charged with murder ingconnection| Dr. N. 0) Altnow returned yester- ii " A s K graphic diagrams will show how the paid, with the killing. of John antenbein, day from a business” trip to Minne- Cigar, or Chewing Habit That will cated with Ihok may feed himself by the “hog-| South Bend, Ind«-A change of| Yankton, S. D.—Paul Madsen, 4 | ‘ity marshal. apolis. No-To-Bac has helped thousands tu oe a oe eeren ‘collage break the costly, nerve-shattered tc wagco habit. Wheaever you have ¢ longing for a smoke or chew, just Place a harmless No-To-Bac tablet in your mouth instead. All desire stops Shortly the habit is completely bro- ken, and you are better off mentally, Physically, financially. \It’s so easy. simple. Get a box of No-To-Bac if it doesn’t release you from. craving for tobacco in any form, our druggist will refund your money without question. Adv. venue was granted Mrs. Augusta P. Tiernan in her divorce suit against Prof. John P. Tiernan, Notre Dame law instructor. / Winona, Minn.—Samuel M. Knopp, 38, former state senator, died. ging off” of Canadian field peas and |, Dakota white ftint corn and also the Fwalue of alfalfa .as hog —pasture jf supplemented by a grain ration. With such food the the hog finds it un- flecessary to root, the agronomist Results of five years experi- line will be shown. The whole exhibit will be a “dra- matization of ‘The Northern Pig | From Birth to Market’ ” a bulletin re: i cently written by J. H.-Shepperd™6f; ‘Coltege . In this: bulletins Mr. ; Shepperd emphasizes the need for un- derstanding and kind treatment of {the animals. None of the pigs in the nursery | thyme had more definite personalities than those at the college, according #6 the bulletin, Tt ‘they misbelieved “thump their ears,” it advises. This not hurt them but they. do not like it, according to the bulletin. But 420 not frighten a hog, and humor JAS A BROKEN- DOWN WOMAN hen I BeganTaking Lydia E. vear-old son of Soren Madsen, far- mer, killed when wagon loaded with corn ran over head as he lay asleep in road at night. coyrses will lead yor into the realm of big oppor- tunities. ‘Let us tell you what we have done for thousands of the most successful business § men and women. A Bismarck College course is a sure. start. in life, and pays bis. Students enter at any time. Equipment the very best; expert § instructors; tuition reasonable. _ Good board and room in the Students’ Boarding Club at $20 to $25 a month. For particulars write, i 4 G. M. LANGUM, ‘President, *Toronto.—Rear Admiral Wm. S. Sims, U. S$. N., retired, said he was vro-British because: the British_were good sports, A son was born Sunday morning at the Deaconess hospital to Mr. and Mrs. H. A, Schmitt. Atty: W. H. Stutsman attended the Towa-Wisconsin football game which was staged in that city yestetday. Mr, Stutsman will go to~ Detroit, Mich., on business after the game. Sioux Falls, §, D.—Two bandits held up 19 persons in four plages and eseaped with about $250 loot. Little, Rock, Avs.—The supreme court held that proprietary medi- cines with high alcoholic content are intoxicating liquors .and their sale was a violation of law. Wichita, Kan.—Sam Wallace, loca: barber, said by police to have shot and killed Dave W. McCloy, Minot, N."% released $10,000 bond charged first Minneapolis. |. —Timan’ L, Quarve, 66, wealthy” merchant _ of Feagenden, N. D., on way ta visit birthplace at ‘The Friendly ‘Enemies ‘The shark sucker, a defenscless College Buifding, BISMARCK, N.. DAK. and retiring fish, takes shelter in = thé mouth of the savage and voraci- ous shark—but it is not harmed by the shark. New York.—Writ of habeas. corpus obtained by counsel for Benjamin I. Salinger to prevent removal to Sioux Falls, S. D., where he indicted for mail:fraud, dismissed in federal court and Salinger placed in custody U. S. marshal. Another effort b made for Salinger’s. release on writ supersedeas, Deer River, Minn-—Henry Thomp- son,- 80, will lose sight on one eye as result premature explosion of. a dynamite cap while blasting stumps on Zarm, a “Cascarets” 10c Best. Bowel Laxative - When’ Bilious, Constipated \ Minneapolis—Mrs. Margaret Erick- son, who walked from home.in Siou. Falls, 8. D.-to’ Washington to obtain jreleasé from federal prisén of he: son, Joseph Anderson, here trying to locate son who left Sioux Falls home two weeks ago. A minute fragment of connective ‘| tissue cells cf a chicken solated by Dr. Alexis Carrel ten years ago, is still growing as rapidly as ever and has, passed through 19,000 genera- tions, ‘ 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 @ box, Taste like candy.~Adv, QUALITY arid QUANTITY RIBUNE “WANT ADS” offer the solution to all pbvpenice your medicine — Tyee ege which has done so | | lbroken-down woman ef your Vegetable Blood Medicine, your problems—no 1 matter what they may be. aldsonville, La.—‘‘I_ write with E. Pinkham’s litable Compound — much to restore m: health, I waba Huntil my husband ibrought me a bottle mpound andoneof | | Heya E. Pinkham’ : had been having pains every apt intervals between, vas weak and ‘tied to be smothering at times, but : a week I felt. like another woman. I loused L eh ia E. ham’s Sanative hee It did me a lot of good too. I | ame your medicines too much | Be} more than glad to recom. | L ghem any woman who is suffer. fom female troubles. You may int-my testimonial, as it is true.”— s.7T, A. LANDRY, 612 Misa, St., Don- | sonville, La, There’ s always someone, éager to buy, sell or dade and - you'll surely find him through a Tribune “Want Ad.” Seores of people are using this powerful meditm every. day, nth you can do likewise with certain ‘success. ah he columns—and send in your Ad today! Note Mrs. Landry’s words—‘‘as it is |/ ie.” etch vente cases table Compound is | NN Bismarck Tribune and Pastes for White. ‘The recent photograph from ‘Englazd s shows that there is no. personal ‘nitterness -between’ Bonar Law, prime minister, and: his predecessor, | pyle They still have time for a friendly chat during the beaj | Tan,