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PAGE EIGHT AUSTRIA HAS UNOFFICIAL — DEFENSE ARMY Recognized Body of 25;000, Men Is Supplanted by Other Forces | Vienna, Jan. 2.—Besides its little | Standing army of about 25,000 men | and its state gendarmerie, Austria | has two other armed and organized forces, both irregular and both prob- | ably without the pale of the Treaty. | In the opinioin of many observers here the last two mentioned orga- | nizations may lead to trouble, They | are the admittedly well armed labor | battalions, and the growing “heim-| wehr” or conservative armed orga-| nizations of the provinces, The latter are composed largely of the peasants and lesser professional | classes and ex-officers, and are par-| ticularly strong in Styria and th»| Tyrol. Just how andewhere they got arms, ammunition and equipment is | not known. The Allied Military Con- | trol commission was supposed to have stripped the country of military material, but the fact remains that both these organizations are full, | equipped and number many thou- sands. Recently the police found in| one of the “heimwehr” headquarters not only guns and loaded clubs but hand grenades and poison gases, Incidents in Styria recently showed |Women Voters and worked in Iowa, No. 1 mixed durum a, Kansas, Ohio and N. the danger of these factions. In one case strikers captured and disarmed gendarmes sent to subdue disturb- ances, whereupon the governor of the { province ordered out the local de-! tachments of the army. The ari is proponderantly socialist and sy: pathetic with the workers, but the soldiers obeyed orders, subdued the! trouble makers and released the po- | licemen. The explanation is found | in the fact that the governor had, ame time, assembled 2000 of his “heimwehr” and put them behind | the soldiery to see they did what they | were told to do, | The two forces narrowly averted a serious clash recently in Juden- burg, Styria, and this incident show- | ed even more clearly the latent dan- ger that lies in this condition of af- | fairs. Workmen from some factor- ies entered the homes of “heimwehr” | peasants at night and seized their arms. They were arrested in tura and, when a first demand for their | release was refused, nearly 2,000} workmen, militarily armedgand -or- | ganized, assembled and marched on| the town. Gendarmes were mobil- ized, reinforced by students from the two state universities there, and for two days the two forces faced each other over a little bridge. Then the government ordered the release of the arrested workmen, and further trouble was avoided. The recent disclosure that the large industrial concerns. of Austria are paying to their central body a regular tax greater than their state tex, for the maintenance of “technic- al men” which is merely a disguise | for strike breakers and secret police, |i has not served to lessen the ill fec!- ing of the workingmen, and this con- dition is used by them as a justifi- cation for their own organizations. S. D, WOMAN FIRST T0 GAIN SEAT IN HOUSE Legislator Has Had Promi- nent Career As Civic Work- er — Is School Teacher Huron, S. D., Jan, 2.—Miss Gladys Pyle, recently elected as South Da- kota’s first woman legislator on the independent ticket as Beadle county representative in the legislatyre has been connected with the civic life| and enterprises of Huron during the | years she has lived here. She was born in Huron and is.a graduate of | i Huyon college. She was elected | present is president of the College Alumni association. the republican proposal meet- held previous to the primary | Miss Pyle was not endorsed | y publicans, being one of the ivtes who received a ma-} * the endorsement, but be- idote with the least | At the primary | | yetes. | ur years after her cradua-| tion from Huron college Miss Pyle | taught in the Huron high school, in- | structing in Latin, civics, history | and government. Two years afte: her high school teaching career she ‘was principle of the Wessington pub- lig, schools. ? ‘During the last three years Miss Pyle has been actively engaged ir , Citizenship work. She was connected rectly with the National League of Cigar, or Chewing Habit jo-To-Bac has helped thousands w ‘the costly, nerve-shattered to Wheaever you have + for a smoke or chew, just harmless No-To-Bse tablet in instead. All desire stops. is completely bro- "t release you from } for tobacco in any form, Emile Coue, the ment&l healer who {s to visit America in January, Breached good cheer to crippled children at the Hermitage Craft School ) 8nd Home for Cripples at Sussex during » tour of England, | | | { | | | | | | trict Judge Thomas H. Pugh. | total balance of the county in the| | two banks at the time they closed THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘SATE BONDING FUND LIABLE FOR BIG SUM Judge Pugh Holds They Shall Reimburse Slope County The state bonding fund is liable | to Slope county for $24,576.51 of the funds of the county deposited by J. S. Douglas, county treasur- er in the First State Bank and the Slope county State Bank of Ami- don according to an opinion in the action brought by the county against the bonding fund commis- ion received here today from Dis- The amount asked by the county was about $97,000 this being the| and which could therefore not be Diver Seeks Gang’s Victims For table treats and healthful, appetizing variety, now— Y Economical Healthful Convenient KING’S FOOD PRODUCTS CO. Originato: j Uits ane Vegetable’ {LIVDAHL T0 Fred Jansonius, judicial district. , turned over by Douglas to his suc-! on Teachers Retirement Board. | these banks had been designated as county depositories ‘board of county commissio1 in January 1919, j tion of the board was 'when deposit of county funds in the Bank of North D: { Indiana, Nebra South Dakota, addressing gatherings of women. Miss Pyle is a’ member of the P. O., a secret organization which has ja chapter in Huron, S. D. daughter of Mrs. John Py dent of the South Dakota Woman Voters. Her father, John Pyle, was a former attorney generat | of South Dakota, holding that office | between 1889 and 1902. NOTE FOUND NEAR JAILIN PHILLIPS CASE Los Angles, Jan. whereabouts of M ‘lues of the Clara Phillips, ped ngeles coun jail around a note found about 100 from a tavern in a lonely canyon near Los Angles, where sheriffs declared last night they were for four “hommer mur from the Li centered tos r jail break. WHEAT SHOWS . MATERIAL SLUM ® | transactions of billions or trillions <| of rubles, and who care little about sistent selling based on liberal ccipts especially in the Nortis and Southwest. The opening which varied from unchanged figures to 7% was followed by a decided general setback, Chicag@, Jan. 2.—Subsequently constant selling pressure was not- ably firm and eastern pressure car- ried May dawn more than 8 cents un- der highest points of last week's mi ket. A decided increase of the United States visible supply was an- nounced, The market closed heavy, 314 to 4% net decline. ; Minneapolis wheat No. dark north- ern 1.25% to 1. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Sheep 13,00 BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Jan, 2, 19 No. 1 dark northern No. 1 spring No. 1 amber durum ASt -| ment bsorbing Dane, although it re- . | red durum fore for which Dougias or | bondsmeg.are liable is that res “{to March 1 | séssion went ir F | | effect. As Douglas failed to secu ithe bonds from the banks provid-| ed for under this law hesgnd his | == IN MOSCOW: \ Moscow, Jan. 2.—Automobile taxi-| private owners hava! appeared in Moscow, but the tariff! cabs operated by is so high that on several o ons | | the government has issued warnings to the public to beware of extortion. The street curs, about the cheapest thing in Moscow, are always crowded | to such an extent that foreign vis- itors never consider riding in them. | The carfare is now 500,000 Soviet rubles, or about two ce! The four wheeled dros one or two horses, which ed operation even during the revo- lution, and the sleigh when snow is on the ground, continues to be the most popular way of getting about the city. The drosky drivers insist upon a fare about fifteen times more than the street cars charge. ‘The tax- icabs are patronized chiefly by specu- lators who are interested in daily what they spend. “Bat” Nelson Lost $900, Saving $9: “The Life of Bat Nelson,” former lightweight champion, who met them all and retained his title until Ad Wolgast won the crown, fails to re- veal the money saving capabilities of the former slugging and punish- cessor in office. made compulsory | made compulsory compulsory deposit feature of the! 7 | Bank of North Dakota law went | into force. | of the Plebiscite has not The only part of the, loss there-| transmitted to the French Gover- his | nor formally by Secretary Hughes ult- and an informal inquiry brought Seah guecmeteea ae {ing from pity made subsequent out the fact that it was not ac- A Jy1921 when the de-| ceptable to France.” pos'tary law passed by and the) Judge Pugh held however that | by the Although ac- | Suspended | it, automaticaly | 1921 legislative sés ito | re bondsman the state bonding™fund | == commission are liable for sums ‘de- pesited subsequent to that tim& These amount to $24,576.51. War Plebiscite | Not Acceptable. Washington, Jan. 2.—The State, Department announced today th: I the German Proposal or an agrei = ment urder which France, Great Britian, Italy, and Germany} should . ‘‘solemly agree among lates his lifes ring career authenti- cally. Nelson recently returned from, the ' east where he was awarded $1,000 damages following his arrest on.“a charge of shoplifting, which he prov- ed to be untrue. Enroute home he learned that the price of a sleeping car berth would he nine dollars. Rather than spent that amount, “Bat” says he sat up all night ana when he finally dozed off to sleep all the windows in the coach were opened causing him to take a cold which prevented his talking for sev- eral days. “That nine dollars cost me $900,” he said, “and you can believe me. hereafter when, I want a sleeper I'll nay the price, because I have got to have my voice in my business.” For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, The nicest cathartic-laxative in the world to physic your liver and bow- els when you have Dizzy Headache, Colds, Biliousness, Indigestion, or Upset, Acid Stomach is candy-like “Cascarets.” One or two tonight lu: Tyre All Makes of Rebuilts at Attractive Prices __ WALTER W, McMAHON > Bilious Liver: Willvempty tvour\ bowels scompletely _ by morning, and you will feel splen- did. “They work while you sleep.” : only ten cents a box. Chil- fe Cascarets too. CAA WRITERS FOR RENT DEALER Bi er TUBERCULOSIS Dr. Glass has positive proof that he is able to cure tuberculosis by in- halation in any cli- mate, Fer further information ad- dress The T. F, Glass Inhalent Co., Mason Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. Beware of imitations. |, BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA w | Know all over the Northwest for Quality ,®MAIL US YOUR FILMS %, —_—_—_——_, | R. S. ENGE, D.C. Ph. C. » _ Chiropractor * . Consultation Free Suite 9, 11 — Lucas Block Phone 260 TL TC J. D. Rooney, federal agent, at left, supervising the search of divers in Lake LaFourche, La., for the bodies of F. Richards. The men disappeared following their kidnaping by a hooded gang, and later their bodies were brought to the su: a dynamite blast. Right is Tod Davenport, one of the men kidnaped with Daniels and Richards and then released, 1 t akota was| themselves and promise the gov- it automaitacea-’| emor of the United States” not to resort to war for a period of one generation without the authority SUCCEED WEHE Will be Named on Compensa- tion Board state.\board of embalmers. ‘W. Daniels and T. F. Dr. A. of the lake by aminers. G. N. Livdahl of Bismarck will be appointed member of the Work- men’s Compensation Board, Gov- ernor Nestos announced today. He will succeed Laureas J. Wehe,! whose term of office expires next Tuesday. The Veddas, now an almost ex- tinct race of Ceylon, have none of them ever been known to laugh and they seem unable to tell a lie. been} Two rings are used in the Greek | church marriage ceremony, one of silver and one of gold. Appointments made by the Gov-/iates—ingredients printed ernor today include: wrapper. Largest selling Actual issuance of certificate to, medicine in the world. The Chinese never boil but roast eges. Advertising Needs Time to Develop Opportunities Give Advertising Time: That is the thing it needs most. The advertising agency is the precocious infant among the professions. One of the oldest agencies in New York prints on its letterhead the date of its found- ing, and that date is 1869! Think of it — almost ten years after the Civil War; and the boys of the Civil War are still alive among us. Law traces its ideals and traditions back to Moses; but even Law is not free from missteps. The physician te his Hippocratic oaths, and Hippocrates lived 400 Yet it was only yesterday when doctors discovered that bad teeth can cause anything serious. Is it fair to expect perfection in a profession that counts only a single generation to its credit? Should it oceasion sur- prise whén even a well-laid advertising campaign goes ~ wrong? Is it any wonder that workers whose chief raw material is human nature should have to confess that they cannot always tell in advance just how that raw material will act? Weare learning. We have just passed through one great cycle of inflation and deflation. We know now what happens to the automobile business, and the sho¢ business and the perfumery business when prices go up like a rocket and come down like a stick. ‘How much wiser counsellors to our customers we shall be when an- other cycle swings around. How much better we shall be able to read the signs of the storm, having passed through one such tempest. Do you remember the references in English novels to those old law firms—solicitors—in which sons, have succeded their fathers to the third and fourth genera- tions? Each new generation of lawyers has handled the affairs of the new generation among its clients, dealing out counsel based on records which run back for a hun- dred years or more. There is no reason why advertis- ing agencies, teo, should not outlive their founders and the successors of their founders, growing wiser with each generation and gathering a priceless possession of recorded experience. : ‘Fhink of an advertising agency in 2020 being able to turn. back in ‘the reeords to 1920 and say to its clients: “In the Fall of 1920 this happened in silk, and this hap- pened in leather and-this happened in wheat, and the selling problems which followed were so and so. The present situation has certain aspects that, are similar; and ‘the recommendations which we are presenting are based on a recognition of that fact.” ie We are gaining experience; we are growing more -* and more valuable as advisers every year. Don’t expect the impossible. ; Give advertising time. : 4S Published ‘by the Bismarck Tribune, in’ co-operation with The American Association of Advertising Agencies TUTTI UTE Severe Cough After Influenza “After an attack of the Siw’ which left me with a severe cough nothing seemed to relieve me until I used Fol- ey’s Honey and Tar,” writes Mrs. K. D. Drake, Childs, Md. Coughs result- ing from influenza, whooping cough, asthma, croup, La grippe and bron- chitis are quickly relieved with Fol- tey’s Honey and Tar. Contains no op- on the cough S|SUINIUNNUOOHUUAUNAUAAUAANAURAAN AAAs cecnteennt ere Tee R. M. Black, president Ellendale Normal, to succeed Miss pli ‘und A. E. Toomey of Devils Lake on O. Henderson of Mandan on state board of chiropractic ex- GEENA Pav APTANA OAT judge Fourth’ s feran " *Y TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1923 ; ex