The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1923, Page 1

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{ Generally’ fair tonight and Fri- WEATHER FORECAST. day. Colder tonight. LAST EDITION THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | + BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1928 LAX SUPERVISION BLAMED FOR BANK CLOSINGS GUARANTY LAW | HOUSE PASSES | 18700 LOOSE BILL TO AID SOLONS TOLD INLAW SUITS: sm " | | Measure Would Establish|on recommendations which w.ll be | {made by the government for better- ESTABLISHED 1873 | PRICE FIVE CENTS VE IN RHUR Mov GERMANY SEES MOVIE LAND | MOURNS LOSS OF WEAKENING IN PLAN CHANGES Reluctance of French to Force IN WHEAT STATES Wallace Reid Dies in Wife's = | APPOINTMENTS ing Month Washington, Jan. 19.—Experts of | aeini ou Owing Months/ot Complete Compliance Re- garded as Significant the department of agriculture after | Sickness nm H FRAME PLANS WOULD HAVE FOR BETTERMENTS | CPN ATE, K. Peace Prize Governor Suggests More Gen- MANY TRIBUTRS PAID Sumbitted to Legislature | Presented by the Assistant Secretary of Agriculture C. W. Pugsley, at the Spring Wheat Regional confer- ‘ence at St, Paul tomorrow when rep- | resentatives of the Agricultural Col- | lege, Minnesota, South Dakota, Mon- | tana and North Dakota will meet | under the chairmanship of Dr. Cof-} fey, of the University of M.nnesota. i | + Rules of Evidence in Grain | ment of conditions in the wheat | cral Application of Law FEAR GENERAL STRIKE i anty, Fund Commission Is | growing states. ' i abi | Storage Cases These recommendations will be In Note to Body His Great Ambition was to be} { aie an Money in Banks Seized Caus- ing General Panic In Rhur Section Producer Not Actor Say Friends ‘FIRST WOMAN’S ARMORY BILL STAYS IN HAVE TOO MANY BANKS poe Los Angeles, Jan. 19.— Filmdom | today mourned the passing day of Wallace Reid, motion star, , whose death ended his long battle Miss Nellie Daugherty Intro- duces Measure to Punish Intoxicated Autoists | Measure Killed Is Revived by * Being Re-referred to | Senate Committee Gudranty Body Says That Number Higher in N. D. Than Elsewhere Per Capita MURDER OF Essen, Germany, Jan. 19.-—The an nouncement at the French genera headquarters that the customs and ing of many banks in the state, the Depositors’ Guaranty Fund Commis- sion declares in a report on the work t of the commissoin, submitted to the legislature this afternoon in re- sponse to a joint resolution passed = by both house sd senate. The present guaranty of bank de- had been placed in storage and sold, | ! COULTER PLAN Presidént of Agriculture Col- | “God—I—Please”, He had been unconscious for many hours but in his last talk with his wife when his mind was clear he seemed to be aware, relatives said, | that death was almost upon him. At that time he said “Tell them, mama, Passage of house bill No. 38, rea! | | In brief note to the North Dakota | U8 of habit forming drugs. mediately in the Rhineland will ve More. rigorous laws regarding agrded as being of much importance} i senate yesterday afternoon, Gover His death came as he lay in tae! promulgated in use Ruhr brought banks and more constructive super. to farmers in the state who have or| | Tis ‘ z ‘arms of his wife, known in the forth the comment in German circles rau : x contemplate bringing suits against [nor R, A. Nestos pointed out that) screen world as Dorothy Davenport the French military authorities vison would have prevented the clos- elevator companies for grain which! | the consent of the senate was neces-| and as he lay there he murmured: | = were reluctant to apply such penal- { sary in naming only a few of the pics tm auhe “me yiy, ccuunumaneay Delay in enforcement of the mea- sures here is regarded by the Ger- mans as a sign of weakness. As the French, Italian and Belgian customs experts completed their plans for controlling the export busi- was accomplished by the house yes- terday afternoon without opposition, | the vote being 91 to 0. ‘The bill, in-| | troduced by Rep. Twichell, estab- ‘lished rules of evidence under which | ; farmers may sue for recovery of the} Brother-in-law of I. L. Daniel Tells of Plot to Kill Members | more important ; North Dakota. | He declared that in his opinion | | the requirement of the consent of the senate should be more general than it is especially in the case of state offices of | : 1S y : j1 have won my fight—that I have | 47, psy g i ness of the Rhineland, which in- By are Hate ed [value of he grain, and provided an! lege Urges First Local | the more important offices and sug, | lone Gann JAP” JONES TESTIFIES | cludes 72 percent of German's dye to meet the situation, the commis-1 | SiphemnoseWalegs G : R gested that this idea should be borne| He had called his wife “mama” = | trade as well as the products of the 2 : ation, | The house also passed, but wel Agencies in mind in connection with possible| since the birth of their son, Billy, | Krupp plant at Aixle-Chappelle, the ‘ sion asserts, and declares thet the; Mrs, Charles E. Simonson of | some opposition, a bill reducing the! five years ago. Tells Probers Into Hooded | Ruhr valley offered neither i law, as it now stands, “is nothing} New York conceived the idea of | mileage allowance to county ruper | Se enteti | more than an advertising dodges to| The Woodrow Wilson Foundatibn, intoniante Seem 15 cent ceen ee Representatives of all phases of jance nor oposition to requisition- ct deposits.” | i legislation. \ | POINTS POGSIRTINTES| The note came soon after the sen- | Gang Outrage That He : i governor" tion picture work offered ther ing of coal shipments. a @n institution of nearly a million | eling within the county und. ten ate had confirmed the governor’s| mo! Hiss ; f 8 . te | ef 8 thy to his widow, little Bill; ‘ Hy The amount taken over thus far i: The state of North Dakota has) dollars’ endowment, the income of | cents when traveling out of the A Fee eee pred Gal ed ete Md patie ad Knew of Kidnaping seul, : too many books, and “the result has hs cl ae be ie ae eae for |county on official business, to 10 1 Di ]| ing two years, The matter was saat adopted sometime ago. Tributes to ees The Franco-Belgian order forbid been an era of vicious banking prac-} eonspicuous public sei | cents within the county and five} Farmers Can Control Disposal | sidered in executive session by the| the dead actor were many, i (By the Associated Press) ding the singing of “Deutchland Ub« tices, the report asserts. Wann nnn | cents when traveling outside the} . “We have lost one of our greatest} Bastrop, La., Jan. 19.—William J.| Alles,” or the “Die Wacht A. While making no direct récom- ligounity: <heavoteswaea0lto ili, Of Large Part of Their | senate on Tuesday and Wednesday. e have lo: of our greatest | DD, n ia mendations for legislation the com- mission points out aonditons and de- clares its wilingness to appear by fore any committees of the legisla- ture to aid in framnig constructive bank legislation. - The conditon of closed banks, the report declares, is one of grave con- cern adding that “the subject is so full of problems that as you proceed, you will become, as we have, some- d by its magnitude and Financial Condition. The financial conditon with respect to close banks is related as follows: Since the enactment of the gnar- anty of deposits law 70 banks have closed (68 since Nov. 15, 1920). De- NEW LAWS ON BANKING ARE | House and Senate Commit- tees Hear A. G. Divet Discuss Situation | CONSOLIDATION With 21 members absent, most of | |them being in Fargo to attend the Tri-State Grain Growers meeting, 5. geese | business continued light in the} Fargo, N. D., Jan. 19.—An utgent | house. appeal for the development of first | Five bills were introduced, among them the first bill ever introduced by tive body. automobile while under the influ ;ence of intoxicating liquor a mis- |demeanor, punishable by a fine of lfrom $25 to $500, or imprisonment not more than one year, or both, Limits Motor Truck Weight. Rep. Twichell introduced a bil! PLAN | prohibiting any person from driving | It is house bill No. 59, iby Miss Nellie Daugherty of Ward county, and makes the driving of an Grain Crop local and then regionai co-operative | marketing organizations for handling | farm products, but with a suggestion | against duplication of agencies and; the use of existing organizations as far as possible, was the keynote of -/the president’s address by Dr. John Lee Coulter before the ‘Tri-State | Grain Growers’ convention in session | at the city, auditorium Thursday evening, January 16 to 19. G “We are looking for a plan’ in which those engaged in the many processes of distribution shall have | The Bismarck armory bill which has been before the senate and its cominittees for several days past re- fused to die, Although the report of the appropriations committee had recommended it for indefinite post- Pponement ‘the bill on motion of Sen- ator Benson of Rolette county was re-referred to that committee sor further consideration. It is expecied | that a minority report recommend- ing the passage of the bill accom- pany it on its return to the senate. Three minor bills, two of them dealing with laws governing insur- ance companies and insurance agents were however killed the senate ac- cepting the recommndations of in- definite postponement from the com- mittees to which they had been re- stars,” said Jessie Lasky. Some of the tributes of movie stars were “I canont express the grief and sorrow I feel,”—Charles Chaplin, “He was a charming boy with great genius."—Mary Pickford. “The motion picture has sustained an irreparable loss.”—Douglas Fair- banks. The son of Hal Reid, the famous melodramatist, did not want to be an actor sit is said, but desired to be a motion peture director. friends quoted him, “and I still don’t ers liked the shape of my nose or something and I was powerless to do what I wanted:to do. But taey’re “I never wanted to be an actor,” | want to be an actor.t The promot- | McDonald, brother-in-law of J. L. | Daniel, father of Watt Daniel, who j with T. F. Richards was kidnapped |here August 24 and whose mutiliatea | bodies found in Lake La !Fourche last month testified at the | open were hearing into the activities of |the masked band in Morehouse pas ‘ish today that “Jap” Jones had told [him the “whole damned Daniel fam- lily” would be “cleaned out” before the alleged attempt to assassinate Dr. B. M. MeKain was settled. i McDonald said Jones did not know jhe was related to the Daniel fam- lily and after he became aware of Rhein” under penalty of a fine © 200,000 marks or six months impris onment is received with disgust. It promises to be a real hardshi; | for the pent-up feelings of the Ruh workers have frequently found a outlet in these and other patriotic songs. The Germans as the occupation begins its second week continue to concentrate their resistance to ecc nomic and financial lines. To a nou tral observer this appears to hav put the French on the defensive. REFUSED TO DISPATCH COAL The president of the district rai! way mine administration of Exse: refused today to dispatch coal train rejecting the French plans for shi} positors of two banks were paid in las their motto, efficient production, | ferred. not going to get away with it for-|it asked him to forget. ments, {a motor truck of more than five tons full. Nineteen banks have been re- opened, leaving 51 state banks now closed and in the hands of the bank- ing board, 3 Total deposits in closed banks were $7,145,636, and less than 50 per cent of the amount is guaranteed under the law. Maximum assessment on membe banks yields $240,000 a year, a great- er assessment would drive state banks to nationalize. Interest on liability to depositors —placed near $4,000,000—more than equals the annual income. There is now $573,743.62 guaranty fund. Of the “questioned deposits,” on which laibility is in doubt or now de- nied, $961,656.79 is redeposits of the in the Bank of North Dakota in closed banks, Good and collectible. »paper in closed banks is estimated'to be worth but 44 cents on the dollar. The board, which made the report, is composed of M. R. Porter, Minot; C. B, McMillan, Hannah; S. G. Severt- son, Bismarck, all bankers, and Gov- ernor R. A. Nestos and Gilbert Sem- ingson, state examiner, ex-officio members. i Throughout the report great stress is laid on the declaratoin that the Guaranty Fund law is hopelessly in- adequate; that there is conflicting authority between the state examin- er, banking board and commission, and that no adequate powers are giv- en to anybody to close up affairs of closed banks. Too Many Banks, + \“There are too many banks in North Dakota,” the report declares. “One to each 750 population. average in the United States is to each 3,600. Overhead cost t direct tax on that community. less banks, closer supervision and better banks.” The reports points out that re- ceivers have restricted powers, that | 1, there is no recogniezd authority over (Continued ‘en Page 2) The/ tion it would be the court’s duty to one! order the co ©| was any opposition by any parties, maintain two banks—often three or| the court wm four and where one will serve, is al i¢ Have! danger of substantial loss an indem! - carrying capacity on any public hig): |acted regarding the banking indus-| incorporated city» Rep. Martin in- try in North Dakota, A, G. Divet,! troduced a bill removing present pen- counsel for the North Dakota Bank-| alties on tax delinquencies, and sub- ers association, told members of the| interest from date of delinquency.'! senate and house banking commit-| Rep, Lackey introduced a bill reduc. ‘tees here. Among the first pro-!stituting a penalty of 10 per cen posals which may be taken up by the: ing the penalty for violating dairy| committees in the bank consolidation! laws from 10 to 90 days imprison- bill draft by Mr. Divet. !ment to not more than 30 days, Among the principal points of the! leaving the fine the same. | consobidation bill are: | ‘The house passed without dissent} 1, Notice must be given of inten-| the senate resolution calling upon! tion as protection to all stockhold-| the Guatanty Fund Commission for fers, | report of closed banks in the state,| 2, Two-thirds of stockholders of| which report is expected to be sub-| both institutions must approve. | mitted to both houses of the legis- 3. Mergéd institution must have| lature tomorrow. at least two-thirds of capital of the Kills Two Bills, | two merged. |The house indefinitely postponced| 4. Corporations must be in such} the Jackson bill—No. 41—repealing | condition that nothing but perfectly) the law authoriizng courts to review! sound merged corporation should re-; the levy and apportionnient of spe-| sult. - cial assessments. It also iilled/ 5. Conditions must satisfy state | house bill No. 26, which limited sher- examiner. iffs to 10 cents a mile mileage, and 6. Matter must go before district! abolished the present livery fee. court for approval. In 9 committee of the whole the| It was estimated by Mr. Divet that | house advanced toward passage H. B.| the quickest time in which a con | No, 37, which reduces the time inj solidation or merger could be effect- thresher’s liens must be file! ed, under the proposed bill was two 30 to 15 days. ‘There were; and a half to three months.’ Such | scattering “noes” when thz commit-| time would be necessary, he said, in| tee ‘report was adopted. "SCHOOL LAND | INTEREST UP bank examiner satisfied, it\ would be necessary for a petition to be filed in district court. and publication \ List Is Furnished to Legisla-,| ture by Commissioner As Requested. made in a newspaper for a period of three weeks, “If no one appeared in| objection 20 days after the publica- If there igation. would hold a hearing, and any creditor showed he was i nity bond would be required to pro- tecé him. i Other suggestions for bank legis- ition were advanced. Too Many Banké. Mr. Divet read a letter from State Interest payments on farm loans and interest on school land contracts have shown an increase since the | operation of his farm and then +in-/ economic distribution with prices to consumers based upon the principles of equity and justice,” Dy Coulter pointed out. The speaker traced the history of marketing from the carly days when great fluctuations in pri- ces prevailed in general and between arious sections of the country, and through the later period of éXchan- ges and great corporations. While at first this great system of market- of Yegulation, more recent efforts ing acted under an entire absenve were directed toward declaring the great organization machine in charge of distribution a public service which demanded regualtion, Dr. Coulter de- clared, What is Solution “What further can the farmer as a producer do to take full advant- age of an organized and prope supervised and regulated market?” } Dr. Coulter asked. “Shail cach farm- er devote himself exclusively to the more successful’ organization and gle-handed deal with the market or! send his product direct rio the channels of tradc? [hose cf us who! have. now for fifteen years or more devoted most of our time to a study of the best way to use the machinery of marketing think that far aers| generally will be able to secure the! best results by developing «moag themselves first, local and then, re- gional organizations to direct the flow of the products to the market places, Only in this way does it seem that we shall secure orderly and regular marketing and only in this way can we retard or speed our products on the way as the prices offered attract us. Co-operation on the part of. farmers in Yocal groups will mean! better grades and standards, better organized storage-and movement to} the market, Only in this way does it seem that the best advantage will be| taken of price variations. With re-! gional committees or boards of. di-| rectors to keep constantly in touch with market demands and tendencies, full advantage of a stipervised mar- ket is within our grasp. By this plan, too, the farmer may better sell on { sessions this afternoon, Two Bills In Only two bills were introduced in the senate this afternoon. One of. them introduced by Senator Carey of Richland county is a concurrent resolution providing for submission to voters a constitutional amend- ment to lengthen the term of office of county superintendents of schools to four years. The other bill put in by Senator Gardiner of Nelson county would permit the division of a voting dis- trict at the Aone of the city coun. cil or other governing body when more than 300 votes were cast in the district at the last election. Several of the county commission- ers who are attending their conven- tion at Mandan were present at the but the large number expected did not ar- rive. Eleven of the members of the sen- ate were absent today most of them being in Fargo attending the various life like they did my father. He could have beeh a great play- right but they wouldn't let him, Some of the boys got him to write & “mellowdrammer” and after it made a big hit they'd never take anything , else from him. It was the same way | they ignored my desire to be a di-| rector. They put me*out as an actor | and made money out of me. There- after I, was doomed but I'll stop them. One of these days I'll be free | to do as I like and that will be the| end of my acting. The body will be cremated in ac- cordance with Reid’s wishes and the ashes probably sent east. | for Dorothy Davenport Reid, awed] sadness Yor little Billie, the son, ana Betty, the adopted daughter, and woeful grief for hundreds of inti-| mate and personal friends in the| studios, laboratories, music rooms,| and business offices, for few men so! agricultural organizations meetings in progress there, MINOT GETS NEXT MEETING OF SHERIFFS Banquet Closes Meeting of Law Enforcing Officals In the City The sheriffs of North Dakota will hold their next convention at Minot next summer at a time to be named later, they decided yesterday white in convention here. The convention ended last night with a banquet, A committee of the sheriffs met with the state affairs committee of the house to present their position on proposed legislation to reduce the young had so many friends and ad-| mirers as Wallace Reid. j His life was a virile and well- filled life. He had an experience far! beyond his 30 years of life. | The music room in the Hollywood home is silent and even the inani-! mate saxuphone, the violin, and| stringed instruments which vibrated | sto jaz in his hands seemed by their} stillness to cmanate sadness. Ambassador Harvey j To Return to Post After Conference, New York, Jan. 19.— Ambassador | George Harvey who returned from Washington today after having been | a guest at the White House since January 2 will return to his post in| London Saturday, his secretary an-, nounced today. He will sail on the steamship America from Hoboken. \ BE THRIFTY ‘1 —_—_ ever, They're not going to ruin my } Today was one of poignant grief|: “Jones said we are going to clean | out the whole ‘dammed’ Daniel family before this thing is settled. He did not seem to realize that I was related to the Daniel family, he testified. “I played his hand and told him that I would not get mad about it. I told him Dr. McKoin was never shot at. “Do you know anything about the kidnapping?” he was asked. “Yes, sir, I knew it an hour be- fore it happencd. You see I was in the town at the same time. You could hear all about it.” “Let's have some more of what heard.” “Well, after the kidnapping Jim Harp and us got to talking in his butcher shop about the kidnappin, and he told me they should have kill- ed them the night they caught Dan- iels, Andrews and Neil on the Gal- lion road and they would not have had any more trouble with them.” (The Gallion road kidnapping occur- red Aug. 15.) “Jim Harp told you that?” he was asked. “Yes, I let it be known to him how much I approved of it and added a few other ords to make it more binding. 12 BELOW IS DAY’S RECORD 'Cold Snap Sends Thermom- eter Down Rapidly Here A sudden cold snap sent down the mercury in Bismarck to 12 below zero at 7 o’clock this morning, but the termometer had risen to 1 above at noon today, and there was pre- diction of further moderation to night. Other cold places in the Northwest included: Calgary, —16; Edmonton | Permiss, federal minister of financ TO ASSUME COMMAND Muenster, Jan. 19.—Dr. Andre: has arrived here, to assume supren command of the German eeonom and financial defensive campaig against the French occupation of tl Ruhr. STRIKE EXPECTED Essen, Germany, Jan, 19.—A ger eral strike cf the freight railwe men throughout the Ruhr is expect this afternoon. Orders for the stri) were received from Berlin this mor ing by the railroad workers and noon the union leaders were in sc sion with the orders before them. The French expect them to repuc ate their promise to continue. wor aad to obey instructions from Be in, APPROPRIATE MONEY Duesseldorf, Jan. 19.—The Fren authorities today appropriated t noney in the Duesseldorf branch ‘he Reichsbank. : They also rounded up the autor biles of the depositors who had co: to the bank to draw money from t institution, seized the money wi drawn ‘and retained possession the automobiles, A demand was made by the occ. pation authorities for a detail of police to dose the streets adjoininy the bank but the municipality r fused to supply the men. All the banking institutions Duesseldorf, both private and stat closed this afternoon claiming to 1 unable to carry on business owir to the seizure by the French of t} local branch of the Reichbank thi shutting off the supply of mark The economic life of the city is « a standstill, i PARLIAMENT IN RIOT. Paris, Jan. 19.--After what is sai ‘o be the wildest rioting in the his sory of the French parliament, dur ng which fifty deputies engaged i \ free fist fight on the floor, tl hamber of deputies this evening !: a vote of 871 to 143 decided to sx sample and gain the much coveted premiums paid for choice products. There is nothing in all of my stud- ies as yet to prove conclusively that all should pool or sell on sample or follow any other special formula. mileage allowed for official travel, from 22 cents a mile to 10 or 15 cents a mile. They told the committee that the present allowance is not more than enough to cover cost of travel and Hoover Sees Country Progress By Thrift Week Idea By Herbert Hoover U. S. Secretary of Commerce, who, as U. 8. Food Administrator during the war, saved millions of Europeans Examiner Gilbert Semingson stating there was no provisidn in the present law whereby a charter for a bank could be refused, and sugested there should be legislation Dermittigg the —14; Prince Albert, —28; Marie, —4; Swift Current, Williston, +12; Winnipeg, Moorhead, —8;. St. Paul, 0. The high pressure area which mov- governor \in his message called at- tention to delinquencies along thi line; and especially since the. legis. lature called for a list showing all! delinquencies of more than 2 years, | , A.C. BUILDING A IS DEDICATED —18; A commission of the chan vhich investigated charges Tachin recently had been engage gj . d the Plai: tates and region | :o isti tivities in the R ; Fargo, N, D., Jan. 19—Dedication | refusal to issue charter to & bank| according to Carl Kositzky, land com-] The chief aim now acema toome to| that such reduction: would, hamper| from starosiens of the staat Takes, wae; boing: on Poscemeanaet eins deputy’ i j ceremonies for the new agricultural] if a town was already “over-banked.”| missione: be to control local and as far ag|their efficiency throughout’ the} Washington, Jan. 19—The whole eastward today. Tomperatures al-| jamentary immunity be lifted so as building at the Jiorth Dakota Agri-| Mr, Divet said this. seemed to him is will be published in the| may be a reasonable amount of ter)| state. Progress of our country depends up- ready had risen in Montana today. SCHOOL CHILDREN TO GIVE OPERETTA The oneretta, Snow White and the journal of the senate, according to Mr. Kostizky. : Mr. Kositsky has furnished all members of the legislature with a list of 5 year delitquents which was available so that they might study this in making plans- for expected cultural college will be held this af-|like a common sense proposition; ternoon. that the number of banks shbuld be f The program will be held mithin| limited to those needed to serve a f the building and addresses will be | community. given by President John Lee Coul-| Another sugestions of the exami: ter, Dean C. B, Waldron sone Burt} er was regarding power to etd Oderkirk, president of the Saddle| sessment. against stockholder. A i] and Sirloin club. _ }There is no exception for banks in! legislation tq remedy the delinquen- In addition to’ music, which .will| the present laws.regarding the levy- die ie Makaieat Se feu ware be furnished by the Cadet band of | ing of assessments, Banka, as other| Principle, i to permit, of the prosecution of Qechit by the gowernment on 2 charge of conspiracy against the sc curity of the state in connection with aligns to-call a general strike in 1h, Ruhr and in French cities to protes. jgainst France’s seizure of the Rut GRACE LUSK PARDONED The meeting did not, however, ac- cording to Odin- Overby, Grand Forks county, president of the sheriff's as- sociation, pass any resolutions “or take any other action against the Proposed reduction, being willing to leave the matter with the legislature after having presented the sheriffs’ sid of the cas. Two of the features of yesterday's minal storage and have regular re- presentation at terminal points to take advantage of mafket require- ments, I would strongly advise against an expensive duplication of agencies, The Wheat Growers, Graid Growers and Equity Organizations should suffice and represent the dif- ferent types of organization to suit the individual view of the grower. on the itidividual savings of our peo- ple, for when all is said and done the improvements on our homes, our farms, our goods, our roads, ,rail- ways, factories, etc., are the net-sav- ings’ that one generation hands on to the next, and our progre: is marked by what we have saved and improved during our generation. However vital as this fact may be. banks might have been saved if this i farmers at the Tri-State Grain Grow-| could have been done, he said, ers convention to: attend. the cere- monies, inquent “hav farmers Elevators ion talks by W. F. McClel-|to me thrift hi i Seven Dwarfs, will be given by the] Madison, Wis., Jan. 19—A céndi- ‘ tho Agricultural college under the| corporations, may assess stockhold-| Soo" mora Yee elinauen "| “Ia. Noch Datta thtee are naw Lana: fuperintendent of the. Stace| personal, value, Saving is the only | hildren ‘of the local schools at. the tional pardon was granted yesterday direction of Dr. C.8, Putnam, @ num-| ers 10 per cent:: Mr. Divet said some| “phe list of 5 years delinquents| a total of 501 strictly farmer owned | Training School at Mandan, and Dis-] road to personal independence. I had| City Auditorium, Feb. 2, under the] to Grace “Dusk, Waukesha, cschoot- ber of. student éntertainment fea-| banks have. wanted to\make assess! cg rig more than 400 nam elevators with a capacity of 18,019-| trict Judge mt L.A Berty, also of} guaranteed income, independent of| ¢izection of Miss Emma Taubert. | teacher of second degree Aeon piped lg thai ae rents e. sroneien saemeale It will take several weeks of work| 000 bushels. If we add the 318 pri- qeseee. ‘The former pone oe the ark qurbedy: ston 8 couple of months ; eon 150 an eae ie le and Sirloin club. 8) foul ey could not do Many|| to prepa: rear list which will| vate locals wit! pacit T= lone at the training school} when saved $150. I was inde-| in the choruses while about six y cial invitation will be tendered to Bepare BCE Tae ie ance Wacol wINh 8 caDnalty of 8 86%y ids ‘tay. | Povple, four af which are Uh tbe ing while the judge spoke of the duties of the sheriffs. About 85 sheriffs were present at the convention, be a long one according to the land| 000 b: commissioner. The workers in’ his “I know of a-number of people who| office must go over 10,000 entries to. (Continued on Page Three) | get all of these, names, u we a total of home owned elevators to the number of} 819 or one-half of all’in the state | (Continued on Page Three.) . ¥ pin rs Pendent for a year when I had sav- ed $1500. I had the courage to take. the risks in trying for a better job the minute I could see a year ahead. ‘students, will take the\parts of Snow White, the P#ince, the Queen and] | the Huntsman,

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