The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 8, 1923, Page 8

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_PAGE EIGHT TORTURE MEN | BEFORE KILLING IS EVIDENCE Federal Authorities Disclose | Facts in Probe of More- house Parish Affair PROMINENT CITIZENS Two Whipped by Hooded Gang Unable to Identify Ku Klux Klan Bastrop, La, Jan. 8&—With a lapse of a day in the open court hearing of observance of a state holiday, Attorney General A. B, Coco and his corps of assistants - directing the state investigation in the kidnapping and slaying of Walt Daniel and| Thomas Fletcher Richards and others | d depredations in parish, turned their at- ay to a digest of evidence plished by scientific deduc- tion and physical @xhibits that the two men were subjected to extreme band cracltics before they \were put to death. Meanwhile federal and state in-| tigators continued the assembly of evidence, upon which it is expect- ed a score or more men will ulti- mately he placed on trial as mem- bers of the black-hooded band al-| leged to have been responsible for | the kidnapping and slaying, | The names of three prominent) Morehouse citizens have already been mentioned as participating in n mob action the early part of -Augus. when Watt Daniel was accosted’ but | not harmed. J. L. Daniel testified | lay that his son told me that he ed from beneath their heads |. K. Shipman, exalted cyclops of the Morehous Ku Kfux Klan; Dr. B. M.{ McKo'n, former mayor of Mer Rouge, and Laurie Calhound, « Morehouse | deputy sheriff. However, the identity of members | and any other countries that stood ‘in the path of German monarchial Need Aided Needy; Now in Mre. Bob Fitzsimmons. widow of the boxer, now wife of Peter Reiner Chicago. has been taken to a hospital and now faces poverty and sick. ness She is said to have given more than $100,000 to aid the poor in het Prosperous days THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE UNIVERSITY ‘| Gas Low, Mayor Raises It | BEES BRING f-| STATE NOTICE BUDGET SAME AS LAST YEAR Cut From Requested Amount By About $500,000 Leaves | Total About Same —— ASK MANDAN BUILDIN | | The state budget board has cut! more than $500,000 from the budget | of the University of North Dakota or the next two years, according to D. C. Poindexter, state auditor. The university asked for $1,554,972. The board recommended that the leg- islature appropriate $1,042,785, This total is $104,775 less than allowed for the two years past. However, | two years ago the budget included | a $150,000 building item. The sum recommended is divided ander six headings as follows: Net maintenance Improvement and repairs . Cold weather and low gas pressure constitute a civic emergency. accor® | ing to Mayor W E. Nicodemus of Drumright, Okla. So he gathered a committee of citizens and tapped a private main for general supply. Pic- ture shows the committee at work, with the mayor second from the right. | {New buildings . Equipment Miscellaneous Publie service) net . The items of maintenance ‘ina pub- | lie service are marked net because they do not include incomes to those held today in the case brought by |the Federal Trade Commission jaganst the Curtis Publishing Com- | pany. FOUR MILLION IN IGERMAN ROYALTIES HARD AT WORK By M Iton Bronner NEA Staff Correspondent Rariane: Berlin, Jan, 8—Openly, when time, |” One of the recent Bayarian devel- place and offi perm't, secretly, | opments was formation @f,the Na- when the reverse is true, German | tional Socialists. They are not. So: Monarchists work for restoration of | gintists. They are Monarch’sts. It a throne. has been openly charged they have In favored places, I/ke “white” Ba- | organized storm stroops and secret- varia, they arg very bold. Even in ed weapons, “Red” Berlin and “Redder” Saxony, Mussol.n ‘s fucess with his Fas- they have secret organizat ons. ‘ has the support of the mass of Ba- cisti in combatting the Italian So- has brought new ambit ons departments as well as amounts ap- | propriated by the spate. These | comes are estimated at $212,000 in in- | come from lands, interest and in stitutional collections for the main- | JEWELS BELIEVED vice department—all figures being | for the two year period. Maintenance Cut The next largest reduction to that iYnade in the building request came in the.maintenance of all depart- ments. “For this work the university asked for about $167,000 more than it got—$1,068,642, asked, and. $901,- 868 recommended. New York, Jan. 8—-Visitors mak- ng Sunday pilgrimages to the graves of relatives or friends in the Na- tional Cemetery ‘n Brooklyn yes- terday were halted at the gates by military guards on duty to protect the grave where $4,000,000 of Rus- | sian‘crown jewels are reported to be buried, “ us be the day of | calists c . ‘ i i 5,000 whieh Kater Getmany was to de. | t0. the Netoval Socialists. They | No, increases in ‘alary wet al-| NOt MrOwne NCH of Joke 50th clare war and beat France, England | dieam of a movement which shall | lowe oug! e bo: mI “| whose coffin the jewels are believed spread over Italy. plan: “Der Tag” now is the day upon which they will overturn the re~ public and substitute for it the old monocled swaggering Junker clan. ong Live the K ng.” spread over Germany as the Fascist: It would end the . republic and restore the Monarchists The other day. in the Bavarian Land- tag one of them raised the cry — As scon as these National Socal- employment of a few additional in- structofs. \ | secreted, the soldiers were under In the public service “department | 0Fd?s to stop all visitors on the road the board recommended thatthe bi-| the cemetery ‘property. only OD ological station and the gedlogical| Who Proved to be regular v sitors survey be discontinued. The réagon | Were permitted to pass. given is the. need for strictest econ-| , Superintendent Buschman stated there had been no offic'al action to- of the Aug. 24 hooded band said to; Time, circumstance and cond tion omy and belief that the university ists under varioues disguising ¢ames ; and state can get along without them sought to organ’ze outide Bavaria, have been responsible for the kid- napping and murder of Richards have not been revealed so far. The elder Daniels and W. C. An-| drews, who were whipped by that imob declared they could not recog- nize any of their assailants. | Andrews says he has been asked many times since the incident as to whom he suspected. When asked by| un attorney Saturday whether any whom he had under suspicion had| asked that question he replied they had, He said he believed Klans- men made up the mob. Witnesses during the week were! expected to include members of the Daniels and Richards families, in- cluding some women and children. ———————— i \HANIHARA lew — | Once “Bad Boy” of Jap | Diplomacy, He’s Now | Slated to Represent Nip- pon in Washington. —_—_—__———o By NEA !Service | Tokyo, Jan. 8.—A man known only two years ago as the “Peck’s bad boy” of Japanese diplomacy will represent Japan at Washing- ton if present plans to name Masanao Hanihara to succeed Am- bassadoor Kijuro Shidehara are carried out. For in 1920, when negotiations to. bring about amity between Japan and the United States \ovey ‘the Califernia land question were in progress. Hanihara caused the Japanese government deep em- barassment by making speeches on the question when the government wanted it veiled in the deepest secrecy. Hanihara is 46. He is a gradu- ate of Waseda University. | He has served as attache of the legation at Seoul, Korea, secretary to the embassy at Washington, con- sul general at,San Francisco and vice foreign minister and director of political affairs. He was one of the senior dele- gates at the Washington arms con- ference in 1921. ‘FIGHT T ADVANCE OF SOW THISTLES Fessenden, N. D., Jan, 8. of Wells County are fighting advance of the perennial sow th'stle from the northeastern part of the state, according to the, annyal re- . port’ of County Agent E. W, Van- curs which shows that 55 patches of this weed were found in the eastern part of the county during the sum- mer and destroyed. ‘A survey made in the eastern part of the county showed tl 95 per cent of the farms had sow thistle on them, while essily 80 per cent ef the farmers interviewed during the summer declared that none of these weeds were to be found on the’'r farms. Weed commissioners ‘were appointed who cooperated with ‘the county agent in handling the sit- uation. ills Tobacco Ne ire og sPimady ‘Sum and Cyne 0 des! so play into their hands that the Monarchists are making substantial gains. To those who feel Germany hasn't a friend, they say: “You drove out the Berlin government dissolved the organizations and forbade the'r meetings, Bavaria ignored the decree. In the G w one kaiser and got the Versailles | Landtag, Minister of the Interior treaty with its cup of\iumliat on.” | Schweyer said he saw no danger in To the workmen: “Under the | the Nat:onal Soc alists. Kaiser your wages went farthe More recently the German govern- | $1, ment issued decrees aga nst student ocieties in lyeeums and universities, hose existence it deemgd a menace to the state—societ es dominated by .sons of Junker families, of old offi- cers now ithout fat jobs. But the trouble, even outside To the small bus ness man: “Un- der the Hohenzollgrns you never had to pay such monetary tribute.” The Monarchists have press, pam- phleteers, book writers. A snuffy Bavarian professor in a big university repeats that Germans are so constituted that they must have a boss, of never sure it has, accomplished ts The ‘old newspaper, “Kreuz Zei-| Purpose, It dissolved. the Orgesch, a tung”, appearing! as the “Neue | semi-m'litary soc.ety, and practically Preussiche Zeitung,” restores © the; the next day there was formed a iron cross to ‘ts t.tle head, with the motto: “Forward With God, for! King and Country.” This in th capital of, the German republfc!- In the Reichstag the Monarch’sts to tennis for the present at least. The health laboratories at Fargo, Bismarck and Minot rand Forks, ill continue, however. The board cut recommendations for these but not with particular severity. In the matter of maintenance 500 for improvement and addition courts commons and engineering Ask New Buildings was _ eliminated | while work on drives and walks and on the buildings was reduced severly. Ward exhumnation and maintained eietiey as to the location of Jones’ NSPECTION OF \. “GUARD SOON Annual) §nspection of North Da- kota Nationgl Guard companies and | armory inveftories will’ be conduct- ed by Major Nee S. Fulton, D. 0. L. (Inf.) instkuctor of the M nne- sota National Guard, fankato, Bavaria, is that the government ‘is union of ex-members of the Orgesch. There is never any lack of money to engineer these organizations. The i Hehenzollerns give none. The ex led kaiser is too greedy; his sons too Minn., ‘from March 5 to March 27, according to special order 302 just received by the adjutant -general of North Dakota. W. F. McClellan, superintendent of the state training school at Man- oan, first requested more than $8,000 of the bugget board for expenditures on the schoel during the next two ye@rs, according to D. C. Poindexter, auditor, but later reduced his re- quest to $490,464. Of ‘this the board aupyes 090. New buildings were requested to the amount of $195,000 and $123,000 f s inventory also will ade of all United States proper- ty in possession of the state staff, corps and departments and units of the 164th Infantry, North Dakota Nat’onal Giiard for the purpose of determining the exact quantity of equipment and its condition, $332,- have deputies. Among the 459 mem-| hard up. The money comes from |was granted for their erection. bers the Social Democrats lead with | Junkers, owners of big estates in} Meanwhile house and senate have ° 173, the Central\ Party has 68, the| Pomerania, Brandenburg, Hanover, ordered an investigation of the in- Picked? 4 East Pruss a. The hard times do not | stitution by a joint committee and tk German National Peoples party 67. This latter ‘s the party of the Junk- ers and Monarch sts. Its Reichstag leader is Karl Helfferich. Not part of the National Peoples Party, but playing the Monarchist game, are organ zations whose name is legion. Then there are such seerct organ- izations as baught about the mur- ders of Eraverger and Rathneau. After these murders the govern- ment passed laws for the republ'c’s safety. These laws have brought the republic and the Bavarian gov- ernment into sharp dispute. The latter has looked with benevolent eyes upon various organizations whose aim ‘s to say the least, anti- republican. Bavaria ins’sts upon self-govern- ment, home rule. This undoubtedly | lowley for o8servation. bother them. prices. working for the kaiser’s fam ly, “Padlock” Provision Of Dry Law to Washington, Jan. 8—Stringent ap up the liquor situation in ber KID PORTLAND (arn Tom" CALLED, ANT WW. ses! A AN HELL START LOOKING 4\ Now = DVoU FOR/CUT RATE SPECIALS : ONTOMBSTONES ! = T HEAR WANT “To cHECK ‘A MESSAGE FOR HIM @-= HE'S BEEN Gon! AROUND FANNING TH’ CHIN THAT HE'S GONNA PUNCH THREADS ON MY HEAD SOT CAN WEAR A NUT For A HAT) = { { { \ | Their potatoes, rye, wheat and hay have brought top Their farms are constantly Be Enforced plication of the “padlock” provis'ons of the prohibition laws are to be invoked in an effort to further clean New York, It was sa'd today that a num- cf prominently known publ'c houses were included in the list pre- pared by Acting State Director Yel- : Here's WHERE K(D PORTLAND PACKS UP His - H KNUCKLES AN! stk rt any action they take on the budget depends on the findings of this com- There has been a considerable ex- pression of sentiment for separation of dependent and delinquent children and minors who are at school to- gether. The house committee named to in- vestigate the Mandan school were to’ go there today. Can Make Contracts With Newsdealers Washington, Jan. 8. — Publ'shers are not prohibited by the Clayton law from entering into contracts with news dealers as agents to act exelus'vely as their wholesale dis- the supreme ‘court Expected resignation of Associate Justice Pitney of the U. S. Supreme Court may be followed byappoint ment of Robdrt von Moschzisker, whove, chief justice of the Suprem¢ four of Pennsytvania, to succeed Wow stHis & » HALE HOUR EGG COULD : FROWN AT A | Per Box’........... _ Strictly Fresh Egg: Per Dozen Choice Dairy Butter. Per Pound Five Pounds Choice Navy Beans. Five Pounds .....,./:.... --Swansdown Flour. {Per Package '...........-. , Regular 40c seller. ‘Three Cans ... “10 Pound Sack. »:50 Cent, , A oe ee “Kippered Herring, regular 30c seller. PR BINS 25 ose 3s pistols > 2 Peave's | oh78 Né. 2 Can New Pack Strawberries, Minnéopa Brand. ‘Snider's Catsup. 85e seller, per bottle 2c. PROMOTED BY L. DeLiguori to Head Max- well-Chalmers in Several States L. De Liguori, who is. well known in Bismarck, has been appointed su- pervisor in charge of Maxwell- Chalmers business for the Minneap- olis district operating the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Da- kota, South Dakota and Montana, For the past six years Mr. De- Liguori has been in charge of the Maxwell and Chalmers field finances in the western half of the United States. It pointment is but the natural result are among the largest manufacturers in the United States. | MANDAN WILL Two new company un'ts of the North Dakota National Guard will be organized next month, according to an announcement made today by Adjutant General G. A. Fraser. These company units will be at Car- rington and at Mandan, The Carr'ngton unti will be known as Company F, Rifle unit, and the one at Mandan will be the Second Battalion, headquarters company. Among the plans for the com'ng year, there is expected to be move- ment started to improve the quar- ters of the Bismarck units, on the quarters are reported inadequate and not large enough to house more than a squad or two of the companies. | Larger quarters will be sought, it is | beleved. Richholt’s Cash asd — [mar] Grocery (mae tieyer| TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY SPECIALS Fancy McIntosh Red Apples. .75¢ 50c 5Oc -50c 45c .25¢c $1. 00 -80c MOTOR FIRM is stated that his ap-, of faithful and successful services | as well as a broad experience in all | other departments of the automo-; bile business. The Maxwell-Chalmers companies ‘ ORGANIZE GUARD | | | | be MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1923. North Dakota Gets Advertis- ing from Strides in Industry Fargo, N. D., Jan. 8—While North Dakota ranks low in the volume of honey produced as compared to oth- er states in‘the union, the indus- try here is receiving much valuable advert sing according to- observa- tions made of the last issue of the American Bee Journal of Hamilton, Illinois, which contains three arti- cles. connect ng North Dakota with the bee keeping industry. , Dr. R. L, Webster, entomologist at the North Dakota Agricultural College is given credit for the re- cent development of the industry here in a short article whith appears in the last issue of this magaz ne, together with his photograph. CHECK LIQUOR OF FOREIGN EMBASSY Washington, Jan. 8.—A close check has been inaugurated by federal prohibiton authorities on liquor, which was consigned to foreign e1 bassies and legations here wth view to determining whether di: preportionate supplies are being brought through the American ,cus- toms to these favored destinat'ons. Anti-Tuberculosis Association * Asks For Fund Faced by recommended cuts in the state appropriations for the carry- ing out of a program of tuberculo- ~kills pain Bruised ?-ease the pain! Apply Sloan's to sore spot. It increas es circulation: scatters congestion. This teduces swelling and inflammation -the pain disappears! Sloan's Liniment For rheumatism. bruis MOTHERS, DO THIS — When the Chil dren Cough, Rub Musterole on Throats and Chests No telling how soon the symptoms may develop into croup, or worse. Ati then when you're gl ad you have a jar of Musterole at hand to give Prompt relief. It does not blister. As first aid, Musterole is excellent. Thousands of mothers know it. You should keep a jar ready for instant use. It is the remedy for adults, too. Re- lieves sore bee tice bronchitis, tonsilitis, He td neck, asthma, neuralgia che, congestion, pleurisy, rheu- matism, fumbago, pains and aches o/ back or sprains, sore muscles,, or joints, chilblains, frosted feet feet and colds of the chest Pap A She may prevent pneumonia ). jars and tubes. Better,than a mustard plaster sis work, especally aniong children of the state, workers for the North Dakota State Tuberculosis ass tion, have invaded legislative” h in an attempt to lobby through m sures that will enhance the proposed approprat'on of $7,000 to a much larger sum. More than $71,000 will be asked of the state legislature to carry ons this work in the next biennium, ac* cording to the lobbiests who include many prominent women of the state. This sum will be needed to ade- quatély carry on the work, it is said. The amount does not include sums that will be needed to support the state sanitor'um for tubercular per- sons at Dunseith, N. D, At the sani- torium, accomodations are provid- ed for 171 patients, and it is re- ported that the quarters al-J ready crowded. f s are es, Strains; chest colds. = } Going to California For The Winter? Take the route through the Northwest— in months of scenic glory. See the majestic snow-covered mountains of Montana; the great primeval forests and beautiful valleys of Idaho; the vast orchards and big stock ranches of Washington and Oregon. Cross the mighty Rockies and Cascades on'‘the Northern Pacific Ry. “2000 Miles of Startling Beauty” California Tours sold Coast or Through t igi “4 tte Visit the Puget Sound - and-Columbia River regions, You will be enchanted by the attractions and hospitality of Spokane, Seattle, Tacom Portland and other Pacific Northwest Cities. Then south through Oregon and California, past won. derfit Mt. Shasta. Steel Trains EVERY TRAVEL REFINEMENT Gateway. The t: Seattle ta well worth the small additional cost. W. A, McDONALD Agt, Bismarck, N. D. Undertakers - DAY PHONE 246 Bay Phone 100 220 MAIN Upholstered, Furniture Made to Qrder, WEBB BROTHERS Embalmers balmer in Funeral Directore NIGHT PHONES 246-887 * PERRY -UNQERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in Night Pone 100 or 687 BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY STREET

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