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1. WORK FOR BISMARCK IF YOU WANT BISMARCK TO WORK FOR YOU HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE LAST EDITION BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1922 ~ COFFEY ORDERS G a A \ For Bismarck and vicinity: Snow and Cold Wave to-night, strong orth to northwest winds ESTABLISHED ‘1873 SALES FORCE IN READINESS ~ FOR CAMPAIGN Hundred Men of City Organ- ized Into Teams, Hold Enthusiastic Meeting DRAMATIZE A SALE! Grouchy. Prospect Depicted While Salesmen Convert Him to the New Plan ARMY ORDER NO. 303 F. Staff Headquarters, Nov. i8th, 1922. 1—A general prade of Majore. Captains ‘and Lieutenants of the “Civic Corps” will be held at the Grand Pacific Hotel on Monday if morning, Nov. 20th at 9:30 sharp for “Roll Call” and inspection ‘by the commanding officers. 2.—A group photograph of the whole teams organization will be taken just before the Zero Hour at\l0 A. M. ‘ .—The Army will mess together at the Grand Pacific Hotel at 12 sharp. when Captains will make reports. : 4.—The Campaign _ Executive Committee will also -be present at these Muster Parades. 5.—Absentees willbe declared A. W. 0. L. and will be Court- martialed. By Order, : C. R. SIMPSON, Colonel. P. R. FIELDS, Licut.-Col. Enthusiasm and optimism and con- fidence were the key-notes of the big meetings of all the workers on the Commercial Club Cavpaign teams at Whe meeting held’ at ihe Over OO Eleanor Boardman, famous'film beaut} Mrs. Charlie Chaplin according to reports from California. & Reported Engaged to Chaplin SS TIGER AND BULLDOG HOLD = CENTER OF GRIDIRON STAGE MANY MINOR CONTESTS BILLED y, is about to becorhe the second j cording to Rafet Pasha, -| er grand vizier, and the other “mem- (Leased Wire of Associated Press) CAPPER TELLS WHAT G. 0. P. MUST DELIVER : ‘ Kansas Senator Voices Oppo- garded by Nationalists sition to Proposed Ship | “As Abdication Sulzidy Bill ANGRY AT. ENGLAND/TAX REFORM NEEDED} SULTANS ACT BARS HIM AS. MOSLEM RULER Flight to Christian Soil’ Re- Declares Connivance at Escape! Would Prevent Exemption of Is Interference With. | Certain Securities From | Internal Affairs Taxes | j (By the Assoctited Press.) Washington, Nov. 18.—A program Constantinople, Nov. 18—The : of “constructive legislation” coupl-| Turkish nationalists consider that | oq yith a declaration espns te Sultan Mohammed! VI, by his ‘flight | administration ship subsidy -bill has surrendered the Caliphate, ac-| yas announced by Senator Capper, | Kemalist | | Republican, Kansas, chairman of governor of Constantinople. ! ct “According. to the Moslem law,” | the senate farm bloc, in a state-| he told the Associated Press, “when ment today on his return for the! the sultan leaves Turkish soil and’ opening of congress. ries doa pa jerritory he. Biter | If the Republican party is to con- imsel under christian protection | ,.. : : | and thereby loses the Caliphate, tinue. in power, said Senator cater ceasing to retain any authority over | in commenting on the recent elec-| the Moslems.” ae j tions, it must furnish a constructive Mohammed’s departure ‘on the! program including the following British dreadnaught Malaya in’ the | acts: s - face of a threatened trial for trea-| “Put through the complete rural 'son. by the Angora government. was | credit program to provide farmers. | compared by Rafet Phsha to the|and stock men with an adequate flight of Damad Ferid Pasha, form- | financial system. “It must reduce freight charges. | bers of the opposition who by their! “It must repeal section’ 15-A acts were compromised in the eyes| (Giving the Interstate Commerce of the whole Turkish nation.” Commission Control over State Great Britian’s connivance in the escape,” he added, “is flagrant in- terference in Turkey’s fnternational affairs.” Rafet was, much agitated. Hé | spent several hours following the jescape jin frantically. telephoning | Angdra ‘for instructions and talking precautions against the flight -of the members of the Sultan’s cabinet Rates) and other objectionable pro- visions of the Esch-Cummins trans- portation act. i | “It must’ carry out the policy for a better system of marketing. “It muadt put the developement of the Muscle Shoals project in the hands of Henry Ford. “It must make undisturbed sur- pluses and stock divigions pay their the maintenance (By the Associated Press.) \ New York, Nov, 18.—Clemenceau, Tiger of France, stood on the bridge of the Paris, steaming up New York | bay this morning, his face aglow wanted’ of Clemenceau, “Tiger of France” RAND JUR\ tetera a aaa OOOO “TIGER OF FRANCE” HERE 10 WIN AMERICA FGR POLICIES OF FRENCH; GUEST OF CHARLES DANA GIBSON Promised a small monthly remit- tance from his father, the future war! premier of France established him- self in what is now the Greenwich Village section of New York and be-| PRICE FIVE CENTS CALLED FOR, ~ DECEMBER 5 AT BISMARCK Pistriet Judge Also Order: Impanelling Petit Jury | of 44 CALLED ON PETITIO: Capital City Voters Ask Foi Investigation Into i Election | Judge J, A. Coffey of Jamestow! today filed with Charles Fisher, clerk of the Burleigh county. dis. trict court, an order summoning a grand jury at Bismarck, Decembe! 5, to take up such business as ean Properly come before such a body, | As an aftermath of the recen4 | election, petitions were circulated | among the voters of the count urging that such a jury be called primarily to probe into certain ‘al. leged irregularities in voting. Some close decisions in certain of- fices, it ia urged, led to charges o| improper balloting. mM some instances, it is urged) the envelppes containing abgen' voters ballots have ‘been carried] away and are now in possession off state authorities and that the elec: jtion investigation will go into this| phase of the vote, The jury is summoned to mee’ at 3 p.m. Eighteen persons of Bur-| leigh county will compose this! body. ‘As ‘states attorney, F. EB} ‘McCurdy will present such. mat: ters as may come before the jury, | Whether as an interested person*at| the last election, he will ask the| attorney general to assume the rolo| ,0f Prosecutor was not indicated at} ithis writing. A petition signed in Bismarck by] Grand Pacific hotel last night. over Columbia in-a game scheduled | and other high personagqs share: toward with smiles as-he watched the ap- gan to practice medicine. His field FOOTBALL SCORES |male and female voters set, forth 2 hundred. bysiness and professional. 4 eo A “4 a tien of He ity have ‘beer enlisted in : Ha rete a See ot the Fi choc esa ns ite Fei Pate nRemaliste i ‘today apa eoternnent I ee fe seantitationat -proagh, 1 CEepRoLiiad ahs legming. was.the large French population then/ the necesaity.of such'a jury on the the army that starts out brightand| Princeton 3; Yale 0. to overpower the strong Brown'! measures ‘to guard the famous{ amendment prohibiting tax-exempt| first noisy greeting he doffed his a Ree a hens alleged eigundl thadners ar mat) ¥ rtance affecting] Dartmouth 28; Columbia 7. mee di am oe vi lac ts th nut = om i Syractise 14; Colgate 7. eleven, { palace containing the precious re- | securities.’ picturesque hat. well in. obtaining patients, his col-| ” favorite aj of this country the interests of all law abiding citi- members of the Executive 3 a i a i fethe tee bere: 9 sii tpeand 007. SECOND PERIOD its final game prior to the clash | peace conference, rz wos, Senator Capper said there was| Clemenceau, according to reports {he still was in the mashes of pov- anany men expressed the opinion that . - rs with Pegn, Thanksgiving, day;j Follow the receipt of the invitae| nothing in the election to induce|frpm quarantine, was fast asleep in| erty, ‘ pee aihe Fe eekeed that (eer oe oee, OD: Georgetown’ will battle Bucknell,| tion. by the Sultan’s government, | the Republican party to “falter or| his state room when the Paris drop-| Forced to strike out on a different \ ‘ 3 it was the best array of workers Pittisburg University 0, 13; and New Hampshire wil try conclu-/ the grand vizier suggested that de-j compromise” on prohibition and de-! ped anchor. tack; he: obtained 'a :poaitton alin a: 11: ‘ lists and cards of the firms and in-| University of Pennsylvania: 1. The games today are fhe semi-| are overwhelmed with grief and dis- effort to interpret France to| lacked, and my intellect completed ‘ i ! ( i France to]. a € t dividuals in a -certain district in First period: Yale 0; Prince- | finals only, but they are regarded; may over the flight of the Sultan. America in an address Tuesday | its formation,” he wrote years after- ton 0. i as more important in the champion-| They did not know he was going. night at the Metropolitan. Opera | ¥'d. «(By the Associated Press) ¢ early. Monday. morping to put-the drive “over ‘the to The meeting last night was called: by Colonel Simpson and Lieutenant-Colonel Fields for the purpose of distributing printed matter to all the workers, for a short peppy sales talk by J. McLaughlin, for the drawing of dis- tricts by the four majors and for final instructions regarding the whole drive. Committee Members There. has ever been enlisted for any kind of a drive in Bismarck. The divisional tables were filled to overflowing and extra tables had. to be drafted from the main dining Penn State 0; Penn Univ. 0. Pittsburgh U 6; Wash and deff 0. @linois 0; Chichgo 0. Michigan 7; Wisconsin 0, SECOND PERIOD Harvard 0 0; Brown 0, 3. Superior Normal 0, 0; N. D. Ag- gies 0, 0. Ohio State 6, 3; Iowa 0, 12. THIRD PERIOD Penn State 006; Penn University Washington Jefferson 0, 0. Illinois 0, 0; Chicago 3, 0, Michigan 0, 0; Wisconsin 0, 0. Butler 0, 3; Notre Dame 0, 13. ‘Ohio State 6, 3; Iowa 0, 6, FIRST PERIOD From the position of forthnight ago, because ponderance of veteran strength, es- pecially in the back field, Yale, in; the opinign of experts today, had no better than an even chance with | The loss through juries of Chatley O’Hearn and Bill Mallory, star backfield men, Princeton. been a severe blow to the Blue, ‘Among contests of lesser imports! ance Cornell will meet ‘Albright in| sions with Boston University. paitaaeer BIG TEN CONTESES Chicago, Nov. 18—The three un-! beaten western conference teams inj of a‘pre-i less gifts to the Sultan and his’ pre- in-| has | lics of the Caliphate and the price- Other items on Senator Capper’s program were passage of the “truth in fabrics” and Voight “filled milk” bills, further reductions in govern- ment expenses and taxes and steps to promote European recovery and re-establish foreign markets. Representatives and hig own, went down the bay | this morning to greet “the Tiger. of France,” who has come on a self- imposed mission of winning America for France, ’ The grizzled ex-premier ssid into He declared that “stand pat lead-| Anierican waters on the Paris short- ership of the old school met defeat! ly after midnight and was’ tied up everywhere” in the elections with! at quarantine, along With the cther the people voting enthusiastically| pa:sengers to await tue coming of. for the progressives. the customs boat this morning. decessors\ from wékld monarchs since the time of the prophet. Messages jfrom Angora state the determination of ‘the grand national assembly to place the Sultan und -his cabinet on. trial was based on its decision that they were guilty of a‘crime against the Angora govern- ment in accepting the allies’ invita- tion to participate in the Lausanne legates from the Angora govern- ment meet representatives selected by the Sultan for the purpose of ar- ranging a program preliminary to the conference. The assembly re- garded this, asa criminal action. clared the evident popular dis- content was “a good! omen” requir- ing those in authority to respond to the public will. But he was up bright and early this morning to get his first glimpse in more than half a century of the new world, in which he lived for a time as a young man. Police reserves had been detailed needs. i Wrote For the Temps. This prompted him to communicate with the Paris Temps, for which he subsequently wrote a series of bril- liant letters describing conditions in American, This correspondence. bol- stered up his income to a certain ex- tént, but the remittances from home had stopped in the meantime, hence ‘rary, where he remained for two years, the happient ones of his life, he said not long ago. Libraries were not used much in those days, and the young Frenchman had ample time lection’ fell hopelessly. below his} zens in said’ county which can only be properly and impartially hand- led and disposed of through the ac- tion of a duly summoned grand jury. At the same time it. is ordered that a petit’ jury of 44 members be impanelled. FASCISTI BIG MAJORITY room Comperirs pngiie, pee ne 2 the race for the football champion- | to seclude himself among the Looks the four divisions was led by Jim| South Dakota 3; St. Louis 0, |ship of the “Big ten”—Chicago, to handle the crow’s waiting to|‘? °° i Hooks, | Minori ‘1 MacLeod, George Humphreys , ond ——— Towa and Michigan,—todsy engage| | LEAVES WIVES BEHIND tee the Tiges ‘ashe rode. te. the| feeding the best, philosophers and Minority Break Sullen Silence Blair Clerk. First period: Penn State 0; | in battles which may be the deter-}, _ (By the Associated Press.) home of Charles Dana Gibson, where | "istorians while he perfected his But Are Overwhelmed Each of the sixteen captains was given a large envelope containing town, and set of printed instructions explaining how the reports should ‘be made each day. . if ‘ wepor the purposes of eanvassing,| _ Fist perigd: Harvard 03, | sible exception of the Chicago-Wis- | who is the 22 years old daughter of Himself, He Says itinerary, are Chicago, Springfield, | 3 the town has been divided into four} Brown 0. ee: consin till next week. his gardener, became hysterical | - Ill, St. Louis, Washington, Balti. | Lower Broadway, where in the early | confidence from parliament. First period: University of | Most of the football, experts! when the fact of the Sultah’s flight wintiam Lemke, league eandidate| More, Annapolfs and Philadelphia. sixties met the little group of celeb-| | The Fascisti government was up- district and each of the four divi- sions willbe held responsible for edvering one of there districts. In each area will be an equal number of calls and every division will have the same fair chance of winning the: prizes for the largest number of memberships brought in’ every day. The boundary lines of the districts are Fourth street for the north and south line,.and Broadway for the east and west fine.. The middle of the boundary streets will be the di-! viding line in each ease and no work- er can go outside his district for workers will cover all the territory in this area. Division “B” under Major J. A. Graham drew the south- east district’ and wifl be! held’ re- sponsible for a thorough canvassing within their boundarits. Division “co” with Major H. T. Murphy in University of Pennsylvania 0. Second period: Penn State 0; Second period: Yale 0; Prince- ton 0. Pittsburgh 0; Washington Jefferson 0. and Neither team could score in the first period, although after Princeton had kicked off Yale threatencd the Tigers goai, plac- ing the ball on Princeton’s one vard line. There Captain Jordan tried to buck across, but Prince- ton held and took ‘the ball on {, downs, inches away from the line. Princeton kicked “and on subse- quent plays Yale lost so much ground that it was forced to Princeton’s goal and had the ball on their opponent’s 30: yard line when the period ended. 56,000 AT GAME. Palmer Stadium, Princeton, N. J., Nov. 18—Yale and Princeton foot- command drew the southwest dis- trict and the remaining quarter of the city, the. northeast district will be covered by Division “D” under the leadership of Major L. K, Thomp- son. Dr. Jaynes Talks. ball teams meet here this afternon in their annual game before hte largest throng of spectators that ever wit: nessed a game in the Tigers grid- iron arena. 5 More than 56,000 spectators were present when the two elevens took mining factors in the chase for the; title. ship campaign than the final con. flict next Saturday with the picked the three leaders to win to-| day, at the same time qualifying | their predictions by calling atten- tion to previous upsets in dope and the fighting ability of the opposing and elevens—lIllinois, Wisconsin. The Illinois who played Iowa to a! virtual standstill and than bumped Wisconsin out of the race by a 3/ Soon the whole palace was in astate to 0 victory over the Badgers, meet | of commotion. the Maroons om Stagg ‘field: Badgers invade Ann Arbor home of; known to his . household until 9 the Wolverines, while Ohio State at; o'clock yesterday morning when his Columbus will attempt to check the | aide de camp entered his sleeping advance of the Hawkeyes toward an-| Chamber. When he gave the news . There are ‘games today. Ohio Northwestern, Iowa’s at Evenston. pos: state no. other confereyge foe 42,000 AT ANN ARBOR. Ann Arbor, Mich. Nov, 18.—More! than 42,000 persons filling eyery seat and available standing room were at Ferry field today for the Michigan- Wisconsin game, the result of which is expected to determine Michigan’s! chance for the big ten championship. | The} next Saturday, plays Monmouth College he will reside while in New York. Constantinople, Nov. 18.—The Sul- Clemenceau will make his first | tan’s wives and ladies of the harem * RICHARDSON Not Candidate for U. S. Job, House. Thursday. He will go to Boston next The other cities on his The Sultan’s youngest wife, whom he married only nine weeks ago and was confirmed, and the seven faith- fuel eunnuchs, who, had acted as personal body guards to the Moslem | ruler, for the last five |years gave themselves up to despair, fearing the Sultan had been kidnapped by ; the Kemalists. The other Eun- nuchs and the ladies of the palace, numbering 3800, wept bitterly and for governor in the recent election, George Clemenceau, the French for escent | “Tiger,” who came to this count in Bismarck on legal” business, said R a country Talahawor toiqueation’ aT: are wotis fontne first time more than 50 years candidate for United States district | 7° to “see what. a republic really attorney of North Dakota and seth | !0ks like,” is back in town again. Richardson is my candidate for the|_, #¢ dropped in on New York from place if he is defeated for supremei Paris today, ready to start out on a Seach judge,” lecture tour of America; but he will DID NOT SPEN SPEND Haar 2 number of “ld metcopel tan acquaintances to renew—some of TIME ORMONEY IN CAMPAIGN The Sultan’ en aan cc aopareare was not them with persons, but more, per- haps, with streets and places, and familiar old landmarks. which he learned to know and to revere while teries, as Clemenceau has come to be known because of the tremendous nower;he once held in the political affairs of his country, is here on his own hook and unofficially to present the case of France to the American people, and this he will do in the languages of the masses, for not only does he speak English, but he speaks real American-English — flawlessly and without effort. He is a master of our idiom and has kept up with American slang for more than five decades. L- It was’ back in 1866 that young Dr. bottom for the monarch. { ing his expenses to the secretary of state, declared that he spent neither time nor money ‘in the campaign: Other additional expense statements GETS FIRST LOOK AT STREET CARS| tied inciuce: 120. Bratsberg, can » |didate legislature, Adams county, .| $8.50; Elmer W. Cart, candidate leg- islature. Burke «county, $20; Seth Richardson, candidate supreme court judge, $150; Frank Hyland, candidate lieutenant governor, $150, being ‘in contributions to the state and Ram- sey county campaign fund. (By' the Associated Press) Fargo, N. D., Nov. 18.—Street cars' | Were a brand ‘new experience to | Mrs. Frank Carlson, pioneer resident of Lisbon who returned to her home \this morning after her visit to Far- go. She enjoyed her first ride on 4 English, ; “There my mind acquired what it In the evenings the young student would invariably be oun at Praff’s, a famous old German restaurant in rities presided over by Henry Clapp. The days of Fritz James O’Brien, Walt Whitman, George Arnold and Charles Dawson Shanley at Pfaff’s were gone, but there still was an att mosphere of romance about the place that attracted a younger gencration of intellectuals, and to tHis coterie Georges Clemenceau was introduced. A few mfonths before he had writ- ten to the Temps that “Americans had no general ideas andi no good coffee.” But now all this was chang- ed. The chef at Pfaff’s was the most marvelous cook extant, he wrote, and members. Division “A” under Major; unt, After an exchange of punts “ Fi z ; F. J, Grady drew the district north-| ; Jun’ Autteg another march for | other titléto hang up with the| that the Sultan’ was missing, the| Henry,G. Holtz, candidate for state 7°t ® boy. ee | Ciscoe breeee era subline-| Despite the vote of confidence ' f ‘west of these boundaries and his spoils of 1921. palace was searched from top to|<enator from Burke county, report-| The maker, and breaker of minis- ree ae New York oaieaea ab many of the deputies went home plied for citizenship papers, Once he was tempted to do a lit- tle traveling in the New World. He went to the middle west and journey- ed as far south as Richmond, Va., but did not penetrate farther into Dixie. The state of the country, he said, just recovering from defeat in the Civil War, was so deplorable that it filled him with sadness. Upon his return from the south he was introduced to a Miss Aiken, who had just started a school for girls at Stamford, Conn, She offered him By Mussolini ~ Rome, Nov, 18. ;Benito Mussolini starts his career art as Italy’s prime minister backed by a strong vote of held 306 116, after a stormy se: {sion of the chamber yesterday in which the Socialists and other min- ority groups broke their sullen sil- ence and hurled defiance and, invect- ives at the government benches, only to be dismissed by. Mussolini with contemptuous remarks and waves sf the. hand. He had demanded obedi- ence from the deputies and the ma- jority bowed to the inevitable. To a protest over the manner in which he had approached the cham- ;ber for its support, he replied curt- \lys “I treated the chamber the way jit deserved to be treated.” feeling-none too sure that the prime minister would not dissolve the chamber. Socialists who — voted against the government were heard to ask: “How long is he going | to stand for the servile attitude of those men who would have had him shot a month ggo?” Others, however,.feel that by hold- ing the present chamber in the hol- low of his hand and flourishing the weapon of “dissolution” over its head, Mussolini can rule much more easily than with a parliament having solid Fascisti majority. ing (the field. The sky was overcast but} The game was played on a sogg}|Fargo car but refused to enter an as the tntvising 900" talk ty De tha turf was dry and fast. }| gridiron. Both teams were reported elevator. : NUESSLE LEAD Clemenceau, just turned 25, first|a position’as professor of French! It is pointed out that the authori- Prank Jaynes: ln albriet and witty _>./ [in top form. ms = IS NOW 901 stepped ashore in New York. His|which was too tempting to refuse, | ty to dissolve parliament granted speech, he told how the workers neeg| New York, Nov. 18—The Tiger WEATHER OUTLOOK meagre wardrobe spoke eloqueatly of |and for mére than a year he was ab-| Mussolini by the King applies to the rke no apology to anybody for the| and the Bulldog hold the center of MEET NORTH DAKOTA: (By the Associated Press) his poverty, but the case of shiney | sorbed in what he found to be a de-| Present body alone, and that. he make no apology to anybody for the! the eastetn football stage today.| Superior, Wis. Nov. 18—Superior| Washington, Nov. | 18.—Weather (By the Associated Press) | new surgical instruments, his only|lightful occupation. would probably not receive similar work they are doing, but or thel vio uing the second of this year’s | normal mects the North Dakotal outlook for next week: Region of| Fargo, N. D., Nov. 18—Revised! seher possession, held his future—| It was here that his brilliant schol-| power with a new chamber as. the other hand they should be commend- and with | Aggies at Gates field this afternoon. | the Great Lakes; clearing and cold-|figures and three additional pre-| 4. 5 he though at the time. arship was ef the greatest oenefit,|King, like his predecessors, is jeal- ed by every right thinking citizen in town, for having enough unselfish pride in Bismarck to be willing to. give generously of their time aid ef- fort to putting across a campa‘en of this kind. “You men are salesmen for the Bismarck of the future,” he said. “‘You may have to stop now and again, to explain your ‘wares’ to some man, Do it courteously and vatiently. You can deliver the goods so you don’t have to apologize to any- body. There is just as much civic (Continued on Page 6) “pig three” encounters the title claims of bdth Yale and Princeton depending on its outcome, the game ,promises to add a senga- tional chapter to the historic re- cord of this gridiron classic. In other outstanding contests of the. day, Washington and Jefferson appeared slightly superior to Pitts- burgh; Syracuse possessed a slight margin over Colgate; on past per- formances, Penn State though not up to//last year's standard, was favored to down Pennsylvania, Dart- mouth was conceded an advantage | The Aggies arrived last night and the squad includes 25 men. A drizzl- MAYOR HINES PROMOTED ling rain was falling today. Washington, Noy. 18.—Major Gen- eral John L. Hines, now commanding the eighth corps area, with head- quarters at San Antonio, Texas, has been ordered to Washington, it was] learned today for an important as- signment on the general staff, the nature of which is temporarily withheld at the war department. | | ning, fair and tolder thereafter. cinects—two in Williams\and one in . McHenry counties today had cut the Fair| lead of Judge Nuessle, Independent, begin-| over Seth Richardson, Nonpartisan in the supreme court race to 901 with (aE ea 2,120 precincts out of a, probable CARLSON ACQUITTED 2,180 reported. Nucesle borgir: By th ciated Press ardson 84,751 are the latest totals. | invi Seta: Fores’ Spores ibe Ghanes R.| Among the counties offering revi- resist further temptations Els He eB Carlson, the first man arrested. in| sions was LaMoure, with 118 more | Same line upon gaining his ee Cass county on a manslaughter | votes for Richardson while Williams After all, he concluded, the me ical charge growing out of an automobile | county. figures added 112 to his /to- profession, which had supported six accident, was acquitted by a jury in| tal. Grand Forks on the other Hand | generations of Clemenceaus before district court yesterday afternoon. | increased Nuessle’s total 153. him, was superior to politics. Practical Medicine. Back of him, he believed, lay his political career, which was not, much to boast of. He has served a short term in prison for activities in be- half\of the Republic and had been invited to leave France for failing to er at beginning, fair and cool there- after. ce Upper Mississippi Valley: and considerably colder at for in addition’ to teaching conver- sation French, he did a prodigious amount of work for the school, giv- ing lectures on literary history, both French and English, and translating several works of John Styart Mill in- to French. In connection with his work, he did. some more traveling, going fre- quently to Washington, where be was often seen in the legislative halls, a silent observer of goyernment in the (Continued on Page 2) ous of this royal prerogative, whici is only granted as-a last resource. pele Pca COLD WAVE! The cold wave flag was out today for the first time this year. The local forecast is for “snow and cold wave tonight, lowest | temperature 10 to 15 degrees; ; Sunday fair and colder; strong northwest winds.”