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PAGE FIGHT ‘URGELAWST0 | | FRERSCHOOLS: —ORPOLITICS Selection of taaiy Superin- tendents Solely Upon |; Ability Urged STOCKWELL SPEAK: | Urges Closer Coordination! Between Secondary and | Higher Schools | | Fargo, N. D., Nov. 23.- Stockwell Fargo, former state sup-} exntendent cf public instruction | added his plea that selection of | county and state superintendents be f taken oat cf pot , to that of Nel- soa Sauvain, president of the state | teache: ssociation last night. | Both in a symposium = on} kota’s school needs before | ers convention. \ declared school superinten- dents shcald be chosen on an entire- ly professional basis and added that } this would mena o “very radical” re-organization of the educational laws and policies of the state. here should be however,” he{ said, “the closest coordination be-! tween the common school system | d the secondary and higher scnools of the state. For that rea- son it is our opinion that there should be an appointed state board | vf educat.on cf not more than yeven | members who should have general | North coatrol of all public education in this state, This beard to selget the heads of the various state “educa- tional institutions and: I-kewise the! state superintendent ««° public in- struct: ‘on cr commissioner of educa-| t.on.” For the counties like boards of education were recommended which weuld chocse the county superin- tendent, North Dakota's educational needs are not material said Minnie J. Neilson, state superintendent who also spoke last -night.--Vision and ideals are the well springs from which good education must come. “Laws will not give vision,” she; said and also: “Education needs salesmen.” : The “tremenduous law breaking by men and humble positions” is tending to break. down “our civic morale” and teachers and school officials must have the courage to stand out against this by citizens of what amount of in both high MIDDLE ROW: PHIPPS; LEO SCHLIEPHAAK; By NEA Service, Leo Schliephaak, Messenger No. 1622, to answer the question. “I DON’T ENVY MILLIONAIRES’ TOP ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): “BUBBLES” LUCKENBACH, New York, Nov. 23.—What does Ve first job delivering typewriters a boy who! works for ‘his living at $14 a week. Pretty good for an think of the little children of the | "whe boy, I thought. rich? When they go for a.walk it’s with NEA Service asked 16-year-old 2 Durse and a couple of pedigreed Boy | Pumps. When I go deliver a tele- gram, and if it’s long-diftance job I Leo was’ given a handful of pic-|8et 9 1-4 cents for it, and 1 1-2 ever station, R. C. Moore, secretary {ty reg to look at—Baby Robert Goe- cents for every other message I’ve of the Illinois teachers association! declared today before administration section. . More professional’ training for teaching itself—but not less scholar- ship—is needed in the: colleges, E. Allen of the Valley Gity’ state teachers college declared in» ad- dressing the higher and profession- al education section, Mounting costs of education and the part this added cost in the pub- lic \schools of the state is playing in the increasing tax burden were the principal themes before the joint session of the county and city su- perintendents ‘ of schools .and the school administration section of the North Dakota State Teachers’ asso- ciation meeting today) JOKE LEADS TO SHOOTING OF MECHANIC “You're Tommy O'Connor,” He Tells Stranger in Shop (By the Associated Press) Ottumwa, Iowa, Nov. 23.—Oliver Dimitt, mechanic, is in a critical condition from a bullet wound in- flicted by a stranger last night after Dimitt had remarked that he looked like Tommy O’Connor, noted Chi- cago bandits. The stranger had been hanging around Dimitt’s shop most of the day and fled immediately aft- er he shooting. Dimitt had a picture of’ O’Connor on the wall and glancing from it to the stranger remarked “you're Tommy O’Connor,” he turned around to face a revolver backed by the command “stick ’em.up.” + Dimitt thought the man was car- rying out the joke he had started and laughingly said, “now I know you're Tommy.” r The bullet struck Dimitt in the right shoulder, penctrating the lung} and coming out at the back. Doc- tors say he has a small chance to recover. ASK SHOWDOWN | ON DAUGHERTY the school Washington, Nov. 23—The house judiciary committee adopted resolu- tion today calling on Represntative Keller, Republican of Minnesota, to present by December 1 a statement of facts showing the alleged act or acts for which he has asked for. the | impeachment of Attorney General j Daugherty. Study Legal Aspects Of Packers Merger (By the Associated Press) Washington, Nov. 23.—Legal as- pects of the proposed merger of the Armour and Morris packing inter- ests are under study by the depart- ment of justice, it was learned to- day, with a view of laying a com-, prehensive formal report before the Ge cabinet at an early meeting. j tenor’s. millions; Luckenbach, daughter of Mrs, Ed- gar Fj | Lundkenbach, an heiress, to more than $1,000,000 Sonia; Ph'pps John R, McLean, eldest son of the »|in sight when they’re 21. But when let, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert |0t in the book. Goelet, called the “hundred-million- the safety deposit vault. dollar “baby;” young John Jacob | the safety Astor, son of the. multi-millionaire got $150 saved up in the bank. And Say, they may have millions in, But I’ve lost'‘on the Titanic; Anna Hewitt, \T’ll bet they never get the chance.to ; | $2,000,000 heiress of-the late Peter throw, ont Weln chpsts (the Way at Cooper Hewitt; Gloria Carugo, who | did when I stepped up and deposit- inherited a big share of the famous ,¢4 my first dollar. little James Paul My uniform may have od few Donohue, grandson and heir of the | $T&VY spots.on it, but that’s a lot late F. W. Woolworth: “Bubbles” better | than wearing velvet pants and having a governess ‘stand around with a whiskbroom in her hand saying “Naughty! Naughiy!” I guess I envy the: rich kids once in a while—but not when I think about it. Why, those kids even will have their reading matter picked .jout for:them.: I read what I want. ‘hEtstory ard the lives of Roosevelt jand Lincoln are pretty good, and I ' put my nose 2 \in, the dictionary-when- ever I can.’ This stuff about mes- Senger boys reading dime novels is bunk; I never read one. ‘ Messenger boys don’t all smoke of the wealth’ steel family; and millionaire Washington publisher.’ - What Leo thinks about it follow: BY LEO SCHLIEPHAAK Messenger Boy No. 1622, I am 16 years old and rush tele- grams for a living. I never wrofe a piece for thé paper before, but to get in good with the editor I told ; hin i would write my idea of what ! this picture gallery of lookalike tea inesssinaet boy. don’t’. If a kid isn’t rich he can A fellow might, think rien kids’ Play marbles and things like that have it nretty soft with butlers and { Sess some rich kids think mar- governesses and palaces and prize’ | les are something they decorate dogs and a couple of million dollars | 2ote! lobbyies with. to: act in front of 2 butler, ‘bit.1 ou think it ove: ju got t 7 * you got to admit meet lots of bigger. men than“ but there’s a lot of drawbacks,¢o this lap of luxury business, I wasn’t born with any golden | spoon-in my mouth like they were. Byt when I uge a spoon on my three square meals a day I know who paid for the spoon—and the food, too. That’s me—I paid for it. I had to quit school when I was 14 to do it. But I go to night school when I get.a chance, and the work doesn’t hurt me—except pounding pavements keeps me rather thin. Baby millionaires like the Astors Carugog maybe never will know} and Woolworths and Goelets and anything about playing hookey or} having a good scrap or picking} their pals without’ an 0. K. from the urse or the tutor. | Maybe when they're 14 they'll be.| wheeling to fashionable schools in limousines—when I was getting Don't Baby Corns—Use | 6 ets-It 99 selves to blame eon, etc. Trimming ad ae paating.” eat. on the dotted line they do it—for. telegram, I mean. Kids with’ ‘a’million dollars are got everything. Minneapolis—Martin Hopsahl was killed and three other. persons were injured in an automobile: accident. fesd nd paring merely makesa bad rse. Millions of others are teat They know how easily and quickly “Gets- It” shrivels and peels corns and calluses lin one piece. Get your money back if went chew shoes with comfort. vy. K. Lawrence&Co., Mfr Gbicago. "Boats but atrife—everywhere. KLEIN rich kids Clgarets and shoot craps either. I Probably I wouldn’t know. how.},roet! lers. And when I tell them to sign ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE KIDS!” SAYS LAD WHOEARNS OWN LIVING ’ JOHN JACOB ASTOR, JAMES PAUL DONHUE, ANNA .HEWITT. GLORIA CARUSO, ‘ROBERT GOELBET, JR., JOHN R. McLEAN. BOTTOM ROW: BONS Booze Smuggled | Minneapolis, Nov. Nov. that discipline’ in the’ Ri liquor is smuggled’, and ~prisoners while hours’ drinking, ' Judge itions ‘be. ders from federal Morris that con gated. He ected French Jr, United States distrie to inspect the place. have received reports, which in dicate the prisoners are large. measure of .\freedom, Morris sai what there reports prove true, I shall ha’ prisoners transferred jail.” t but ‘if ‘the federal to ire, safe! to overcome falling hair and baldness ia to remove the in- fected Sebum. We n now supply you signed Sunrantee, Positively stop falling hair © and surely make new hair grow. For the re still alive out of 100 falling hait Be'ture to got Van Bes..the only pro" uct we know that will not ‘fail. Van Ess Liquid Scalp Maesu special applicator which tneures: per‘e: all right—but I- guess they haven’t ; success in operation. is nold-on-a fe yee Guarantee, Which’ we will sign. for Will not digappoint —-u. Bismarck, N. D. _Yeports a. big, full dress affairfor the. INAUGURAL BALL How are you prepared to meet such. formal occasions? Better have a chat with Tailor and Cleaner. «| side the railrodd-tracks near Into to County Jail ty jail is so poorly ‘maintained that | into’, the place olgvieg dice: and cards, were follgwed today by: or- : Days. of the James and. Young ‘boys LaFayette |in Missourl were recalled at Galja- attorney, and Marshal EA. Rustad iven a ]jlooked in the vault. Judge |. “I do not care to say |about 3 o'clock and: cornered they | other at Vai wll grow héw. hair'and quickly stop Be oure to get started at once-—-Van ‘est Finney’s Drug Store. Chamberlain showed resistance was shot, The vault and safe were then blown open. The explosions were at inter- yals of about 10 minutes and before thé last one a considerable crowd had collected in front of the bank, The citizens were held at bay by some of the bandits while the others operated inside. Numerous’ shots were fired from sawed off shot guns and revolvers to intimidate the on-\ lookers and when the robbers -had finished their work they entered a motor car in which they had come, and made away. without molestation. During the firing while the rob- bery was in progress, one shot struck Frank Woodruff, a hotel keeper who was an onlooker. Neither, Wood- ruff’s nor Chamberlain’s wounds are considered dangerous. PIERGE BUTLER ‘NOMINATED FOR JUSTICE Prominent St. Paul Lawyer Named to U. S. Su- preme Court he NIGHT MARSHAL IS KILLED IN | ~ RAILYARDS A Gang of Hoboes Believed , Responsible For The Murder (By the Associated Press) |. South Haven, Minn. Nov. 23.— | | Rudolph. Mauer, night marshal here was shot to death in the Soo Line yards at 3 a. my today. Mauer’s body was: found lying be- the outskirts of town early today with a | bullet wound through ‘the best, his pistol was lying beside his body 4} with all ‘chambers discharged. Last night he went to the out- x/ skirts of the town ‘to investigate a camp fire which was burning at a point where hoboes and transients sometimes: stop. According to several |: men who had seen a passenger train come in a half hour before, three men alighted from the “blind bag- gage.” The men,are believed to have been recognized: by the marshal as being wanted for recent robberies, and. it is thought he attempted to arrest them and that a gun fight followed. TRIED TO ARREST TWO. Minneapolis, Nov. 23.—According to information received -here, Rudolph "fuer, marshil at South Haven, was shot to death when he tried to ar- rest two men believed to have been implicated in a series of robberies at South Haven and nearby towns. Detectives believed. he surprised the fugitives as they were boarding a cattle train for St. Paul, and the gun fight followed. The marshal’s body with three bullet wounds 1n his. chest and an empty pistol clutched in his hand was found today, Armed with a description of the alleged slayers,'a posse immeaiately was organized and the man hunt started. ROBBER BAND /INRAID MAKE | HAULOF $4,000 (By the Associated Press) Washington, Nov. 23-—Pierce But- ler of St. Paul, Minn., was.nominated today by President Harding as asso- ciate justice of the supreme court to take the- place made vacant by, the resignation ‘of Associate Justice Day. « Butler is a Democrat. He has een a practicing attorney in Min- nesota since 1888 and has been coun- sel for the government in a num- ber of important cases. He is a na. tive of Dakota county, Minnesota, aged is 66° years ‘old. TE MacDonald Becomes Opposition Leader (By the Asnocieted Press) London, ‘Nov, 23.—J. Ramsay Mac- pena laborite assumed his new rosition ‘as leader. of the oppostion }in the house of commons this after- noon and in the debate on the specch Seonk: Days of James and Younger | Boys Recalled in Miseouri a ici ‘ * . (By the Associated Press) St. Joseph, Missouri, Nov. 23.— t | tin, Mo., early today when ‘six ban- alts, robbed the First. National Bank of” $4,000! in gold and currency. Ten + |thousand dollars in cash was over- the town the ight watchman, John Chamberlain, Ijin a stairway near the bank. When The robbers: entered Just Receivéd 875 Genuine New Army SHIRTS The Sedan is the ideal like the ‘chassis, is built ‘Double Efbow. and get yours. ‘Broadway \': Mercantile ‘Army & Navy Store. ~Mail Orders: Filled. 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