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= = uN es mUANUAAJHVEAUACUUUEQOUUUAAUOUASONEEECUUEAOUATUAEOEEOEOUUOOOOSE RUHL ji WEATHER FORECAST. Unsettled and colder tonight. Friday generally. fair. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE pis. Sa oreeeeae ESTABLISHED 1878 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TH FINAL EDITION DAY, APRIL 5, 1923 PRICE FIVE CENTS 20 LOSE LIVES IN SOUTHERN STORM ELECTR (LORD CARNARVON, DISCOVERER OF Tae oa KING “TUT” TOMB DIES; REVIVE 10 HIGH COURT STORIES OF ANCIENT DEATH TRAP. the tomb of the Pharoahs but he added: “Had it not been such an old London, Apri] 6.--The London Press in its voluminous account today of Lord Carnarvon’s life 3 i tomb it might be reasonable to Hughes Electric Company, and death refects the rovular | suppose that polson had entered Files Brief Attacking Val- | fecting that perhaps there really Lord Carnarvon system from idity of Commission Law | is something in the story that the gas present in imperfect . the ancient Egyptians set a mys- eA,» | terious death trap in the tombs ‘The death of th CO.! of their rulers so as to punish by means of poison those who distrubed their resting p Lord Carnarvon's death occur- red early today from the effects of a poisonous bite of an narvon b in the. British i Declares that Commission De-| sion on Going Value of | i i i Superstititous souls ever sinc? Water Co. Not Sound the infection suffered by Lord : wedding took Carnarvon became known have place in London last July. Misy contended it was possible he was Wendell’s father was a New Appeal to the supreme court in its case to have declared uncons' tutional the acts under which th Iroad commission assumes public utiliti York commission merchant and nu brother of the late Professor rrett Wendell of Harvard uni- versity. the victim of retribution just inflicted. Fears of further re- tribution, it is suggested, may deter Egyptians from touching the tomb again but Sir Wallace Budd, keeper of the Egyptian jurisdiction over BELIEVES IT TRU E was perfected today by the Hughes | auntiquitites in the British muse- New York, April 5. Ar- Electrie company of Bismarck, b: um, says that if the excavation thur Conan Doyle, who arrived ‘i f enterprise continues to be fin- in this country yestdrday for a the filing of briefs in support of Sheeq he is sure there. will be their contention. The appeal is} no trouble in securing native Ia- from the Burleigh trict court} hor. which held the acts were valid. Sir Wallace said he had never Many alleged defects in encountered _ liter: records tain occultism or the spirit. of conferring powers over w | suggesting that vengeance would Tutankhamen might have caused put forward by attorneys i be visited upon persons entering the death of Lord Carnarvon. company ina lengthy brief. Bh ene some ona include: ss of law, in that it does not second series of lectures on piritualism, today expressed be- lief that “an evil clemen brought into being by the Ep, Katy, etter! KEEP UP ROADS UNLOAD PAPER: tent and releva and that it does not permit a court in re- | view to exercise its independent judgment of the law and the facts When James McCormick moved ai fnlygini RGvantecsenty ite ereied That petitioners for a change inj {veal welcome from Elgin busines utility. rates are not required to ‘men. Three trucks and severa present firmative proof, thus! Commissioners eee Sec- wagons were at the train shifting the burden to the utili every business man in | there to assist in moving tons me tions of Red Trail, Black | and Lignite Trails That present ri has no set of rules of pi RB of type and machinery. Mr. MeCor- proced nor is it required to question of pot-luel 1S) # and inadequate | May 1 to October 1 or Phat hi he limited, | trai) in Burleigh county, the Lig- | the utility and bar it from resort | pidders on various sections. . Thirty- limited from e: ing independent | yote their entire time to their divi- | St. Joseph, Mich. mick will publish the Elgin Ne 0 SES Tk a \ AT) 90 = have by law, the brief de¢els REQUIRED TO D RAG: “There is no criterion or. guide for the method of proof is! ng both eel Later, if Desired power on the ; yesh ed and once ublished pen-| nite Trail and the Black T ties for a violation are “so On- "jee by the county comm: | we Renorted Jury Stands 7 to 5 for Conviction of Violating to courts to protect itself st | seven bids were submitted. mn of its propert: ; Under the maintenance. contracts jul ment and | sion, provide equipment, drag the ; teen ‘hours and fift 1 ‘yoads especially after light rains, | liberation by the ju the utility or its counsel, It is ay em Effective from About: STILL REMAINS ad commission | Contracts for maintaining the Red crous as to amount to coercion Of | here yesterday afternoon to. seven Syndicalism Law courts are, under the '.i the contractors are required to de- | j and generally keep them in good |of William Z. Foster, charged with April 5.-—Thi minutes of de shape during the season, which is|criminal — syndicalism, failed to Going Value from May 1 to October 1 or later if} reach a verdict. Unless a. verdict The Hughes E required, is reached, Judge White said, the jurors, will not be dismissed until | after tomorrow. The jury was taken to a hotel for Contracts for maintenance of three divisions of the Red Trail, | from Bismarck to the Kidder county nj line, were let as follows: first divi- | the night, shortly after 11 o'clock. sion, Emil Elness, $140 per month; | It has been in secret session since | Second; Edward F. Easton, $124 per |942 o'clock yesterday morning. Al- | month; third, Wm. Myers, §115 per| though confirmed reports were lack- It holds | month. The Bist sivimen is ne ne ft Hae rumioned chat thes jurores jon’s inter i o he ime: marck to enoken; the second 0 | stood * o 5 5 Ree Ret tation oF tne sanc| near Sterling and the third to the| minority being led by Mrs. Minerva | wig ned increment” held to be syn-| Kidder county line, cach being about | Qlson, the only woman member of omonous by the commission, is a| 12 miles in length. {the jury. SUN EAR Cate | "John Elness was given the con- aE aH tract for maintaining the Black HOLDS NORN NORMAL | holds that the It unfairly Supply G Ir with the mpany in its that of Lo ter company for reduction i on the maniteWiatel | Trail from Sterling to the Emmons Hawa canals ! county line at $140 per month. < Et tOr. The three divisions on the Black i LO ea Trail from Bismarck to Wilton | ent nent othe gore let ats tollames Urabe 5 | Sma er month; second, exelude “coing value” from pain I. Knowles, $140 per month; third i and that this is a fatal de-/ Tom Seott, $139 per month. Con- | ect in the law. | tracts for maintaining the Lignite | J) he United States’ Supreme! Tyagi}, from Wilton to the Kidder} | s the evi- legislature to! tourt has declared that going value / county, was let in three divisions as — Head Involved property Hah Hv joa Be | follows: * first, Howard Glanville, into consideration in deter-|g149 per month; second, Harry — inining the final valuation of pub-| Keowlee 120 tee month; third,| Any report that the board of ad- lic utility ministration is planning to remove purposes, roperty for rate-makin, Y ENE BReE abet ee |e reeaebes, $00 Bee Tenet al] normal school heads in the state The. bids ranged up to $200. per| is absolutely without foundation,” ay ‘| month; | Similar ey received |E, G. Wanner, executive secretary | “In the recent decision of the’ tast year for some maintenance commission, referred to supra, 1.0-; work, but the difference between the | menting upon a statement appearing | ct. al ¥, Bismarek Water Sup-{ bids was held too great and they | in # Fargo morning newspaper to; --Company,” the brief says, “an| were held too high. In letting the | this effect. , attempt is made bythe, commission! maintenance contracts the commis], Members of the board left here | to clear t stoners intend to find out if main-| ‘today for Fargo, where they will ‘ood. tenance through this metho will | confer tomorrow with several May- | generally conced-| be more satisfactory and cheaper | Ville citizens in regard to Dr. J. ity is not)entitled to! than for the county to ‘attempt to| Pvien, president « the state normal | y additional value fof ‘good will’| maintain large equipment for: the | School a aaiile: erent eam | on account of the fact that it is a] purpose: The - specifications were | Protests had been made to the board | monopoly and should not profit on| prepared by Comty Surveyor Atkin- account of that fact. We respect- ign fully submit that this court will! ners also let con- | i&n- not recognize such an interpreta. | ructing two 12-foot tion off the meaning of i { ‘going | bridges in Painted Woods townships 73 RENEGADES value’ in view of the decision of the | 8"d & culvert in Hay Creek to the supreme court of the United States | Fargo Bridge and Iron Company, low T ‘AKEN INTR P ‘ Hit Commission Action tinderstood, had been asked to re-| hove cited and further, the fact | bidder. Others who submitted bids that the commission has in one or, Were J, J. Rue and son of Baldwin, two isolated ‘cases, allowed a value! Carl V. Anderson of Baldwin, and Sor ‘going value’ does not remedy |W; W. Moyer of Bismarck. the defect in the act which _ pre- cludes the commission from taking| te, concrete, superstructure on the i iy bridges for $426, abutment concrete Salt Lake Cit: city, Uti h, April 5.— sueh vi to consideration, for, ‘ alt Lake City, Utah, Apri Aun lad heretofore in. this, brief, | at 22 1-2 cents per yard, reinforced | after a tworweeks search through it is ‘what an act. requiressto be | Stee! at 6 cents per pound in place, |the mountains of San Juan basis in done or authorized and not what | et earth excavation at $5.00 Per | southeastern Utah. for . renegade the board sees fit to do thereunder | CUBIC Yard, dry earth excavation ot /piute Indians who revolted and that determines the. constitutional. | #100 Per_cuble yar clashed with white settlers United ity thereof.’ States Marshal Bay Ward’ returne: She brief is filed by Edw. B, Cox| poBf#DGE COSTS DIVIDED | nore last) night, and declared that 73 df Bismarek and Divet, Holt Frame] commissioners of Sioux and Grant |°f,the Indians had been captured. and Thorpe of Fargo. county have reached an agreement | Their chief, Old Posey, however, ace Lae to-divide equally the costs of repair- |Cluded his pursuers and is still at ing bridges over the Cannon, Ball) '*'se ‘TO. SANITARIUM. pose Governor R.A. Nestos willl which were’ ields and other points | india has a small @sh, the gour- spend ten days or two weeks at a ami, which gives‘an audibe croak sanitarium in Battle Creek, Mich,, st Ee Ee villages] when on the syrface of the water. was said at his office today.. The} benefited will also : : Governor has in pagt years occasion- ally to Battle Creek for rest and re- cuperatiqn, Opals are so soft when first tak- en from the ground that they may be pulled apart with the fingers. > y in the case } | Evjen Said 1 Said To Be Oniy | |, .¥- Me bidder offered to aie OF U. S. FORCE| ‘MISSOURI ICE MAY BREAK UP: ~—IN-48 HOURS Condition of Ice and Reports to Weather Bureau Basis | of Statement GOES OUT AT FT. YATES Signs Favorable, Although ' There Is Always Chance | For Flood, Observer Says The ice in the Missouri river here jmay go out in 48 hours, it was said today by 0. W. Roberts, weather ob- server, who based his statement ‘on | ;the condition of the ice and reports from above and below Bismarck, The ,ice went out at Ft, Yates yesterdny. The temporary tinge of winter {which came this morning with a light i Snow, probably will have little effect jupon the time of breaking up. } ‘Always Flood Chance.» The statement that has been is- "sued the Weather Bureau ‘that theré is ice in the Missouri river at Bismarck there is lalways a chance for a gorge and an } overflow till hold true, Mr. Rob- jerts sa | There has been out of the thickness of ice over the| main ehannel during the past ten | day On March 26th the thickness ; of ice wag 26 inches, While on April 2nd the thickness but 13% ineh-! s. The greater portion of ice from the main upper tributaries of the Missouri river has broken up, the There has been a gradual rise in the stage at Bismarck during the past ten days, ithe total rise being about two feet. There is very little snow on the ground in the territory adjacent to , the Missor point from ‘its source to its mouth, he added. ally is a favorable The aver- luge date of the breaking up of ice at Bismarck is April Ist. The earl- jiest dute of break up was March 1: j 1910, when a stage of 26.4 feet above | the zero of the gage was reach, The latest date of break up was April 1899, when a stage of 2 ‘ reached. The highest stage ever leorded was 27.6Sfect on March aL 11881. Other ihigh stag tare, March 25, 1884, 23. 1887; 21.7; April 5, 1897, Apri j12, 1899, 21.2; March 13, 1910, 26.4, ith dates - and April 8, 1917, 23.6, Will Report observers at Fort pentane iW and Washburn have structions to report to the Bismark | j cence when the ice breaks up their respective stations, and timely, j warnings will be issued locally |the latter station. The ice went out jat Fort Yates yeste at 4 p. and this morning the river is p tically free of ice. “This would indicate that the ice} lat Bismarck is liable to go out at e- any time within the next 48 hours,”} |Mr, Robe 's concluded. RAISE FUND FOR TABERT CA {Grand Forks, April 5.—Residents | Grand Forks and the vicinity have ! lcabrenben $110.69 to assist the fam- | lily of Martin Tabert in obtaining iredress for his death in a Florida j convict camp. This money will be turned in as’ part of the fund being raised for this } | Purpose in Cavalier county and else- | |where, The subscription list was {handled in Grand Forks by Mrs. [Charles Allen, of the board said today, in com- ; For Bismarck and vicinity: Un- settled and colder tonight. Friday ; j senerally fair. For North Dakota: lcolder tonight. Friday generally , | fair; not so cold northwest portion. | Genera] Weather Conditions An area of low pressure, accom- panied by precipitation, extends from the middle Mississippi Valley | of administration and who, it was|to the Great Lakes region and an-! sentence in the county jail for pet- | other low pressure area over the |north Pacific coast been accom- jpanied by rain there. Light precipi- ; tation has also occurred along the | {Northeastern Rocky Mountain slope. |The high pressare area centered | over Alberta is accompanied by low- jer temperature in the Northwes' Temperatures have also dropped somewhat over the southern Plains States. _ High Low Pep. 2 26 . o C ata ve as Bottineau oa Bowhells oq Devils Lake os Dickinson 5 07 C) Dunn Center . 0c) Ellendale 0c Fessenden 0c Grand Forks .. od Jamestown oQd Langdon - od Larimore . 0 CL Lishon oP Minot . ‘ 0s Napoleon . 08 S Pembina op Williston . 02S Moorhead 0c © clear. Cl., cloudy; S.’snow; P, part cloudy, | rapid wearing ‘I Yellowstone being open at Glendive | {and practically free of ice. The ice is out from a point forty! ; miles above Pierre, 8, D, This natur-! (ee The Weather !: —_—________-. Unsettled and ; SNOWDEN _ RUSS PREMIER? | FLORIDA WILL — PROBE TABERT SLAYING CASE "TWISTER RIPS WAY THROUGH MAIN STREET Several Are Killed When Houses Collapse Under Force of .Tornado | State Senate Runs Ahead Matter, and Names Inves- tigating Committee LAGS TREAMS ARE. | pees, | Excessive Rain, Hail and Windstorm Are Reported in Many S HOUS BEHIND SWOLLEN { 's Delay Given for Consid- | eration of North Dakota ! Resolution DEATH TOLL RAISED. Alexandria, La., April 5.—The death toll as a result of the tor- tinited deainst the Laborites| “edo Which! late yesterday sweat Axel Ivanovitch Rykoff, 50, | in Tubert of North Dakota, ing the introduction of the| Alexandria and Pineville, a.tewn shown here, is looked upon as thé to have died from bru BY. PRIlI pu SHOWMIEHE (akOve) ||) ceretes Rea tiver: from tain reeyy mort probable successor fo Lenin, administered by a eonviet boss. by calling for the abolition of private Twente ACaieGn hye eutnel ey e Russian premier dies 4 4 capita ona F at MY fovea tor fotin p shee oe voting 28 to 3 to appoint joint corel and the nationalization of | developed that undertaking es- chanical ngineer and ions, ap Mes: leistative committee to make an ine land. tablishments had‘ the bodien wf Y L bog } es in 20 victimn, 14 white and six ne- most powerful members of the si on i viet cabinet. O- | The committee would be compos groes. The list of injured wax and three from the house and Md 1 Pi i property damage was placed at $500,000. of North Dakota for —— . T0 SEE ESCORT | lcial regarding Tabert’s death lor dente cipitati i —— tornado last night: struck Pinevi Tallahassee, Fla., April 5,- The ee WAR VICTIM the Red River, killing 14 pers | Inoue committee med yesterday to | , Iution ‘from the North Dakota legis: | eons Hing for an investigation; Louis Kanell I ee ‘the death of Martin Tabert of | Tallahasse April 4 The | Florida senate today ran ahead in action regarding the death of Mar- Liberal and Conservative mem- hers of the House of Parliament | Neged | hav follow treatment ji} vest s of nr dred yards in width, | The dead i . : that state while under private con cations which Followed | jiarry Me Pineville, mer- Macon, Genes, | Man Taken viet tease in this state, today Gaecingminanrance chant Snoch Will- 5 ‘ Hoenn tedeaduitionnlitine ton e ‘iamson, and his 15-month-old bah From Automobile and te at and Mrs. Ed Gate: Alice Lashed by Unmasked Men Chairman Davis of the committee = nn, Miss Belle Jenkins, Mrs. : said it was planned to report tomor- | REFUSED (Smith, Mrs. Ray Burnett, daugh. Jrow. He exp the delay hy | in-law of Mrs. Smith, and four af We ~ a [saying the committee desired to 0!) Louis Kanell, “No. 258" the first | Mesrees. FORMER WIFE IS GLAD) fitter into the resolution. A eam ; Penne eine oy AMl of those killed were residents i is hi Vass of members of the committee a nft man called from Morton coun-/of Pineville and a ne: saw mill n{favor of a Yo pril 5. Har hands | showed that they wet , died at 5 o'clock this morning in| settlement i rassailant Mrs. Frederika | Joint secutive investi { nd ie an hospital as a result of Bites ‘ fu a a . was consider y assure 0 a ’ eville zens of the of New York late last. nig! Se gassing sustained while in the Ar ; f New York late last night that its repd rat aree’ two i ed throughout the witnessed the severe horse-whinping | ommendati n gonne Forest and whieh developed night the ruins of the 50 or more Sh Mnees Compation:. MEvnWoatl ome nplications after his discharge houses destroyed for the dead and Bright of this « j been kidn | bile, by unmasked | 4 secluded spot after both had | from the army jinjured, checmnatamoed [eee cteretic nt lantonasnauiven he tornado caine from the north- en and taken to} ! : west and crossed over the northern AGHtaerouta miles jwhen the first examination of draft part of Alexandria damaging a from ‘here. The license number of*/ men-was made, that -he could claim: half-dozen heuses. Swerving to an ‘the kidnaper’s car was obtained by [exemption because of alien citizen casterly course it swept up the IMrs. Pace. H A main st of Pineville, carrying : ship. He considered the matter and PSELS TTS | Bright, acording to his version of | re naidercd! thevmatten and yas Ahearronts wlinl Fos, ofa ana the affair, last night said he had then refused to do so, expressing his for two blocks, demolished many been given 24 hours in which to! cae to fight for the country of }stores, then swerved southwest, rip- jleave the city, He stated it would ; jbe impossible to comply in that a * | we would be required to finish up ie ve i his business affairs. | Washington ping its way through another sec- ‘hs Mnay Narrow Escapes Two miles southeast of Pineville adoption, ne was sent to Camp Dodge with Correspondent | the a aft contingent, went to France Mrs, Pace told officers the kid- aaaur eye in the 35th division and saw active the tornado turned its course ag 5 : a a 5 co gain "i napers said they resented the tes- Investigating Conditions | voice in the Vose mountains, Cha-|and spent its force over wean -| timony of a negress in Bright's di- in Northwest toaus Hes SUM Kic RUnTRNG WAG! CIS vorce case against Mrs. Bright on Jgonne Fore Many narrow escapes from in | Monday. Bright said they also Funers services will be held un-) jury were auspices of the American |in the Me correspondent of the Legion post of Mandan, of which he} uge under psed Two child whipped ‘him ‘after they charged, Louis Seibold, for many years | der the eat him with an attempt to take his | Washington ! property away from his children, | He said he could identify some of ‘his assailants, although he did not | New York Heraid, was in Bismarck of Liovd Boyes, wie [know them personally. Mrs. e {today on a tour through the west mee in the r homes when the roof was not molested further than being | during the congressional adjourn- lapsed, were uninjured although investigating political and jfurniture in an adjoining room was forced to watch the beating. pene Mega New York World and now with the was a charter member, Mrs. Bright, when informe, economiq conditions, particularly Lat ie Seon Tae one | the agricultural questions which No news was received today isaid “he was very glad there were | May be pertinent in the national lane and Good Pine, r } n the world, anyway.” congres: idria, said last night to have lives with her mother | Mr. Seibold, who is one of the jin the path of the tornado. y York City. She recently | best known correspondents of the! | : communication with the two towns. Hag ed in a suit brought by Mrs, | gountry, was in Binnarek last wita Streets Blocked with Persons; was eater it Bright for alienation of her hus-| President Wilson, on his tour, One ; : reams Swollen | band’s affections. ‘The case was set. of the most.” widely praised Taking Liquor to Home Heavy rains, hail storms, swollen tled out of court. Mrs. Pace said | pieces of newspaper work of Mr. oe) streams, interrupted train serviee jshe came to Macon to protect her- | Seibold was an interview with P! Constantinople, April Constan-|#nd floods were reported from a self against anything which might | dent Milieon during. jhe nee ill- tinople has three more days in which} Tosa of points in Mississippi and be brought up in the Bright divorce ness as lent when there were to quench its thirst, for the local au- /ouisiana. lease. She wis not called to the / Tumors being spread over the land thorities have postponed until Sat-; Hattiesburg, Miss. reported a se stand. | that the President might resign and the enforcement of the pro- | YC hail storm eee ee | iptimating he had suffered a men-' hibition dec lwhich did consid | 1 ital collapse, whe jiesview a Meanwhile the streets arb blockedProperty and crops, H | Sa ed ations re a ten! ton ane with perters, carriages and automo-/ Visited by a hailstorm i ' HO SMInE dhe: GuUnten | inho |lles ladenuwithi liquor which ts of). Shedg) river. amlibtsstsbus i s c he ‘isa ea ie bev | Were overflowing, causin, mage 1 HUNGER STRIKE Journalism awarded Mr. Seibold @! parc, Period in which alcoholic bev-| iy" the lowlands of thal section. ‘degree in recognition of this and |‘TA#es may be exported has been ex- Sane tended two months, — Sine i Taian During bis. service with the New| Sifter Satubday drinkers of all ie; oa NG Aga 6k aun ‘ " , York World Mr. Seibold also quor will be liable to thirty strok ROSS ayes ee En ae wan {Man in Minot Jail Just Don’t gucged many important. investiga-| With the bastinado, while the stocic storm fore Ina night aniured aPPFORS i articularie 4 coal in. of beverage dispensers will be con] imately Persons, destroye: Get Hungry, He Tells sees Percnlariy ine the font in aiaeaten P °°"3) buildings and wrecked two others Snilor ‘attention and resulted in official ac- eee and badly, damaged craps: tion. , URGE TARIFFS sa TORNADO IN TEXAS Minot, N. D., April 5.—Giving as | gy exarkang,.. ADU! Digg). sconnanm nition’ Atom atts: FEAR FLOOD TO AID FARMERS icce"thvough Cass county inthe Hausa Ro ancantvigel hanety Georce j = _ J Northeast corner of Texas late yes- Dolman, setving a 30-day suspended IN THE YUKON | tonaon, ap Important duties] terday, leaving along its. six-rile on flours, barley, for malting, and] trail about 20 wrecked houses. The ty larceny, has not taken any food! Dawson, Yukon, Territory, April on hops are among the recommenda-| storm swept eastward from Laws [since being committed to the. jail |5.—Fffty-five inches of snow has tions made by the committee of agri-| Chapel, four miles west of Atlanta, on ‘Monday, according to jailer fallen since last autumn, the larg- cultural experts recently appointed| Texas, and turned eastward at Als- | Hicks. test in three years, acording to do-'by the government to suggest im-| mance community, where it lifted. | Dolman drank a milk today. Ap-|minion records. A warning has, mediate measurcy desirable for the ——— parently he is suffering no ill ef-|been sounded by Indians that a/rélief of the farming industry of Ra ae joey SEO fl asl nae el cover tueliovente| cording to tre Daily | CUPID BARGAIN ‘the jailer first became aware of | with four feet of water. _ COUNTER OFFER from information furnished him by | ~~. other prisoners who said the pri- Se: Surin a LITERATE LISTS OBTAINED FROM [eit 's2e"dy‘atn mates of the jail ate Dolma Dolman’s food. i persons of moré than 30 years of | age, is offered by County Judge $287, 000 PAIL PAID | pan. Finke of this city, who says that ie / ° needs to offer some inducement to ; Neonat attract purchasers of licenses. IN N. D. BONU _ Many county organizations engag-|tives in Congress, North Dakota em-| During the past month, but few. ing, in the sorsaten beainee dee ployes in the national capital and | licenses have been issued. acy have obtained from the United|some instances by paying the charge,| , Consequently he offers to insue fie Vouchers totaling $287,000 have|States Census Bureau names of il-|many counties have obtained the denses for half the regular price— been placed in the mails today by|literates and are making a. system-| lists. that is to persons who have attained the adjutant jeneral’s office, to pay] atic personal campaign to induce ii-| The census bureau’s report showed|the age of 30, When asked why: he soldjer bonus kertificates. The money | literates to learn to read and write,|135 illiterates in Burleigh county, of|did not include the young couples, was certified to the soldier bonus{ according to Miss Ha#l Nielson, of| which 86 were in the city of Bis-|the judge smiled, and stated that nll fund by the state auditor from Feb-| the state superintendent's office. |marck. ‘Two night schools here, one| those over the 30 year are en- ruary collections. When North Dakota societies first]at the Will school and one at the| titled to a large discoun' it A total of 830 claims will be paid | endeavored to obtain the names. they| Wachter school, are, in Lees of all they have been missing during, from this amount, which will carry|were met by a ruling of Secretary| Classes in citizenship and for illit- the past years. = A the soldier bonus certificate num-|Hoover’s Department of Commerce] erates conducted at the latter school = bers which have been paid up to 9,-|that they could not be furnished|by volunteer workers of the Busi-| The English language conta 300, it was stated at the adjutant |without charge to cover cost.|ness and Professional Women’s club.}about t ~ thousand © words | general's office, Through North Dakota's sepresenta-!Mych progress has been made, which’ are of Freneh origin, |”