The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 23, 1923, Page 3

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PAGE THREE disappointed. King Tutankhamen will not be there. The real tomb of King Tut was discovered in 1912, says George Rene, the French Egyptolo- MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1923 WOMEN MAY BE Leffect of lashe man and he ording to who Holding that the women’s hours of labor law in the state provides that women may work seven days a week if the total number of hours employed does pot exceed 48 hours in one week, Justice W.} S. Casselman yesterday afternoon dismissed a case brought against the Grand ific hotel one of sev- eral similar complaints made in Bismarck, States Attorney Allen opposed! the interpretation of the law, as-| serting it plainly stated it was a! violation to require women to! work more than six ‘days in any one week. He said effort would be made to get the matter in dis- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 'ST. PAUL MEN | - MEET WATER CO. OFFICIALS Cleon Headle attorney of St. ; Paul, and J. W. Kelsey, manager of erworks, were in | although his condition still is very o—__________-___ TBE WEATHER | | serious, to be on the road to recov- o—--—____ - —____ Mr. Cumeron’s fever, which Paris, April 23—When Lord Car- {had reached 106.8 had receded to narvon reopens the tomb he has dis- about normal, it was said today, covered at Luxor, Egypt, he will be RUN AAA Webb Brothers “Merchandise of Merit Only” Month End Sale of SUITS and DRESSES Suits! Suits!! Suits!!! THREE LARGE SALES GROUP. $22.50 $37.50 $49.50 There is no denying the popularity ti |scen copies. He WHEERE IS KING TUT? | whipper for four ly believed the st camp was heavier he had had amps but he real been official] deputies were drunk, you wer drunk and the county judge wa drunk? ked Senator Stokes, | » Putnam | For Bismarck and vieinity: Cloudy te ngrtl: cloudy tonight and Tues- Not much change in tempera- nd you would gather there, all of you drunk and try people for be-| ing drunk? “Yes, sir.” thought this was a prohibition? the * the senator observed, | Bism: night and Sun- “It would seem that it would be,! day, consulting with officials of the right here atthe capital,” the wit. Bismarck Water Supply Company rgreed. . Headley one of the attor- iter Poppell said s for the company in their rate Sheriff Jones take » and Mr, Kelsey made an ap- fiscated “moonshine of the plant and testified as had ordered destroyed to its worth. No statement of their contents into another j activities during their visit here’ was r kept for himself. made, en what would he do? Prone na sais OIL, WELL TEST IS INDECISIV Destroyed Water Jug “He woutd call the county clegk, to furnish thein prisoners at $20 a] My, Lang, out into the courtyard and Jask him to watch while he destroy-| Reports received here from Lem- mon, $. D., where Davis oil well wat! sked 1 was to be blown, indicate nothing head. Busy Rounding Up Prisoners | od the jug;” declared Poppel ad jug full of decisive was learned. Latest reports said the well was not blown, but Poppell’s testimony also was ad-| «phe vanced to bear out the contention | senator Stokes samples of sand were shown the many visitors. id day ture. For North . Dakota: Cloudy to partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday Not much change in temperaturs, Weather outlook for the Missouri Valley for the period April 23 to April 28, inclusive: Showers at be- i by gen- tempera- | nor- | replied that it was jadministered them. In an effort to show that a col lusion existed between Sh r Jones and County Jud lis both of Leon county, the prése cution@ounsel, Assistant Attor Gencral wson and Kneesh Poppell former Leon he seen on of con which the court and empty its ¢ which the ther, with somewhat below ple. r or mal. Frosts_ prob: sher T Senator eneral Weather Conditions The pressure is low over the south this morning and precipita- tion occurred from the middle and lower Mississippi Valley to the Rocky Mountain and Plateau States. The precipitation was heavy in Wyoming and Colorado. High pres- sure and generally fair weather pre-| vails in the northern Borger States, aeried sale numb nd convie- aes tions brought about after © Sheriff Jones entered into an agreement with the Putnam Lumber company that Tabert was arrested, convicted! Poppell laughed back the reply of and leased to the lumber yes. sir.” where, after serving only Poppell was asked why he had not trict court for interpretatino. weeks, he died, told Governor Hardee about how the result Sheriff Jones was conducting his of- N.D. ANSWERS i: eee eee til for! him if he did tell. pri Road Conditions The main highways of the are in good condition, but the roads and section roads have heen improved much as yet Corn and wheat Stations. Amenia BISMARCK Bottineau Devils Lake Dickinson Dunn Center Ellendale Fessenden Grand Forks death from a bullet] Jamestown by Mumford. Mum-| Langdon ford is held in jail here without bail.| ayimore Constable Lee of Thoeny, testified that Mumford had told him of the shooting, saying that he had watch- ed Talbot from his house, with a field glass and had seen him des- troying one of Mumford’s fences. URGES HOSPITAL DAY OBSERVANCE Celebration of the National Hospital Day, May 12, is endorsed by Governor R. A. Nestos. North Dakota hospitals generally si will observe with open house to the nd in some creises will be compan State afew] ‘OSS e been! Dakota Man Is Held For Slaying Glasgow, Mont., April 23-—William Mumford, formerly of Minot, N. D., heduled to have a_ preliminary hearing here next Wednesday on a charge of murder, in connection with the death of Hal Talbot, near Thoeny on April 11 ‘The coroner's jury found that Tal- bot ¢: to his wound. inflicted h Low Pr 56 0 » 58 0 55 0 56 High held the job of county jail-? es flor for 28 years,” said Poppell, “and “lit was the only Way I had to live.| the | My wife and I lived in the jail and [ com=Thad a boy born and raised there, 1 would not have known to go jif L-had been dise ‘ you just that the was asked 1 just lied.” ions related to an inves- to Slpriff Jones’ office by nor several months ago. Later Senator Stokes asked pell if he had been sworn before the | r to tell the trath, had not, crit Jones disc grunk 2” declared mediate after entering agreement with the pany .issued orders to “get busy for thi fo ne,” | is s State’s Method of ‘aes Company Is Defended of the thod of taxing | cn corporations tax law is c¢ filed in fede Converse, ner, and John ittorney general, in opposition to the suit of the Standard Oil com- pany of Indiana attacking the method used. Taxes for the of ; suit in 2, not yet ut $40,000, tained a restraining order in fed court pending disposition of the The method used by the which the st attorneys the method by law, tax upon the ratio the kota business bears to the business of the company, applying this to the company’s income to de- termine the profits arising in North Dakota. The oil ipany asserts | its cost of doing business-in North Dakota is higher than in other s' into lumber to his deputic neans money vhere ed.” simply sheritl told the was al- hen or Defense Poppell testified Sheriff Jones be- amblers, income ‘ r ind would arrests a Lisbon Minot Napoleon Pembina. Williston Moo The hours ending at 7 Monday. Cl, cloudy; rain, Orris W. Roberts, Meteorologist. state tax com- in 1d of operatio: Thorpe, assis rs ; ei and ar fast train kick the resting men er ‘would : them off 3 Suits for Spring wear particularly for the 4 . local time and he » extensive drive became known to the hoboes, he said, so the sheriff jand his deputies, including ? went out at night to rouy | hoboes, ars 1919, 1920 and above record are involved in ition to taxes for formally assessed, of ange Poppell was ask- you when one sees such handsome models pal . PC, part cloudy; R, ted to discharge drunkenness, he ought to it long before that,” said tear aes as are included in these groups. Suits ) stand by the ra acks, he id, near where the would stop at a water tank. It y pjat this place that the men would ¢ off the trains find tak entire! way to get around ‘1 pell testified that {automobiles bringing the cht, to the court “late at ievendane third annual : j ; toe of Poiret Twill and Tricotine are Scott Cameron Reported Better held on the Five thousand hos- Scott Cameron, who is ill in lo- pital throughout the nation will] cal hospital with pneumonia, be- cobserve the day, lieved to have passed the c and Tailored, Loose back and Bloused Too Drunk To Hang Negroes Poppell said he received a s a month and witness fees He added that he received s fees and never attended the court, nor was he ever summoned to attend, shown with all the detail features in to lah of jai | wit two r. cases full used back favor embodied with skillful success. a seach 1 ve would ¢ co { how The for ailer told the com- nd therefore the income arising | and from North Dakota is less than the st calculates, te holds that the statute of general application, the tax is imposed uniformly upon all corporations, and that the method used by North Dakota is fair to all corporations, DEFENDS SALE OF N. P, PAPER AS NECESSARY ici. (Continued from “The talk that the /subseription campaign bringing in. ample funds to keep the Couricr going was the veriest tommyrot. True, sub- seriptions were coming in, but every | f y, not an{ being | wou he state | Q, | to | the age 1) ed ned by P, L. Aarhus, and| entitled to that much for the doing, and left | for the Courie newspa- | knows th more than to operate a daily paper for a y he was ome honest people may criticize the sale of the Courier News but on- ly when the facts in the case have been misrepresented. A. C, Townley, in this instance, pursued the on Honorable open. Some of | those squawking thd Joudest are} vexed crash did not come; seem to like perhay profit by the No, My. Lemke did not know any- thing about the sale of the Courier News until it was sold, Mr. Davies, when asked if Lemke} knew about the sale. | TABERT PROBE BRINGS ACTION BY GOVERNOR (Continued from Page 1) continued, but the others were sioned by representatives of the working foreman, He sometimes gave 25 blows sometimes 15, some- times only four or five. “You see,” he explained, “when S)pnight and soners the best thing for them to do some |night, all of them “How judge “Oh, he would be sitting there all | “His what ” Senator “His demijohn, with whic roway Shefit! Jones | mittee of i i audministeres pri-| ; > woman held in the jai in connection with a 1 shooting case. Poppell we deputies would tell the wld our be to enter at times as late pleas of guilty the court hoa 10 o'clock at were willing eee county arrival Jones wh aross a tree stump and whipped plead guilty wer not re would you get the there at that time of night?” John P. Stokes asked. rr because she would tain information bi were £ nt wom when she refused to cided to hang her. “One the deputies, cau, produced a ro mobile,” said’ Poppell. ell drank and we procedure to take a ied the noand tor time with his demijohn.” tokes quer Court Got Intoxicated he Poppell replied. r get drunk you ke u to get drunk id you he was I » ‘taint no use lying about it,” replied Then the drink, round the nogre me to thro it c ng the rope ov | to climb, took her back drunk, the )jail” so we sheriff was TONIGHT MONDAY and when the inspector (state prisoner inspec. tor) came I had to give him a re- port showing*the average number of whippings.” Burch said the blows given aver- aged about ten to a man, No copy of the prison regulations were post- ed on, the compariy’s premises that he knew of, he said, though he had Guard Against “Flu” With Musterole | Influenza, Grippe and Pneumonia! usually start with a cold. The moment you get those warning aches, get busy. with good old Musterole. Musterole is a counter-irritant that | Telieves congestion (which is what aj coldreally is) and stimulates circulation, | It has all the good qualities of the! old-fashioned mustard plaster without the blister. Just rub it on with your finger-tips. First you will feel a;warm tingle as the healing /ointment penetrates the pores, then a soothing, cooling sensation and quick. relief. Haye Musterole handy for emergency use. It may prevent serious illness. 35¢ and 65c, in, jars and tubes, Better than a mustard plaster Teer erccccccccee Charles aa —in-- “A TAILOR MADE MAN” You'll like this new. Ray style of comedy. Class in every line. It looks good, fits and wears. See what clothes will do in giving courage to fight against circumstances. ‘MATINEE EVERY. DAY AT 2:30 d to loon ocal deciared | and two deputies and he took; the woman out in the woods laid her, her PL. Barri- > fromgthe auto-| f— Laurette Taylor rope era tree limb, all of us were too drunk to TONIGHT CAPITOL] THEATRE | The Beloved American Actress ; Pal k, it was de- In the Modern Stage’s Greatest Hit “Peg 0’ My Heart” from J. Hartley Manneyr’s celebrated play This is the Picture THAT SCORED A RECORD RUN OF THREE SENSATIONAL MONTHS at the Lyric Theatre, New York City, at $1.65 top and wag hailed by critics and public as the most amazing picture of all time. This is the Picture THAT PROVED ITSELF AN OVERNIGHT SEN- SATION IN PHILADELPHIA where it opened with a smash last Monday at the Forrest Theatre and is growing bigger and bigger at every per- formance. / This is the Picture OF WHICH TH PHILADELPHIA NORTH American said: “If anything more could be crowd- ed into this picture, one wonders just what it could possibly be.” And the Public Ledger wrote “Remarkable; something more than splendid.” This is the Picture from the play which has performed more than 15,000 times to the largest audiences that have ever assembled. , In.a word Bo ma s This is the Picture of all pictures which you cannot afford to miss. Arrange to see the best production of the year. PICTURE STARTS AT 7:30 SHARP. } Saving Made Easy It’s notso hard—Uncle S: to tell you how in his Book. Send for it today, and get isteady lew Free the “know-how” of what be the hardest thing in the world. Treasury Savings Certificates make it easy and safe. Get your copy now. i | ate ercrc i ----- ms to this coupon to 7 The United States Government | Savings System Lt 0 styles are represented. oe eee oN Silk Dresses Special $16.50 $24.50 $35.00 Dresses that have as_ their motto to be youthful are shown here in an excellent variety of new styles. Taffetas, plain and fabri¢s while Black, browns etc, are among the leading figured crepes tricoshams, and navy are most prominent in colors with several novelty shades included. Yellowstone | Glacier Heed the ning—at first sign of a cold this spring, get busy and get rid of that cold. It’s a simple thing if you take it in time Send to the drug store for an ordinary jar of Muco Salve which sells for 25 cents. Melt a little of this salve in a spoon and inhale the vapors which arise. This will clear the head, soothe the upper respiratory tract and give nature a chance to heal the inflamed membranes. If cold has gotten the start on you, take a good dose of oil at bed time and rub Muco Salve thickly on chest, covering same with National Parks } two scenic wonder- warm cloths, flannel preferably. In the morning cold will probably be gone. MOTHER } Keep Muco Salve On Hand At . All Times for Family Use It has always been a mother’s job to guard the’ family health. Mother saves our lives every year. Colds, spring colds, are mother's greatest fear for they so often lead to grippe, influenza. and pneu- monia. Don’t wait for colds to come. Get a jar of Muco Salve from the drug- gist for a few cents and have it | handy to use first time anyone | sneezes. Doctor’s Advice Your doctor will tell you the | common cold is the forerunner of | much sickness. He advisegs-you to take every precaution against a cold and to treat your cold at once. The “Muco Treatment,” ag some call it, offers the simplest remedy and probably easiest to use. It is Jands! See the gey- sers, bears, canyons, waterfalls and re- nowned natural phenomena of Yellowstone and the rugged mountains, lovely lakes, great rivers, forests and glac- iers of Glacier National Park. Very Low Fares You could not plan satisfying vacation pleasant and safe. Muco Salve contains certain healing elements e turpentine. and menthol that give off a vapor, which, when in- haled through the nose, reach the upper respiratory tract—the seat of the trouble. For deep seated chest colds get a bottle of Muco-Solvent (Liquid). This is the prescription of Dr, 1. W. Giffen who is well remembered by the people of Neenah, Wis. As the name implies it is a dissolvent which disintegrates the mucous (phlegm) so that it cam be expec- torated. Muco-Solvent (Liquid) at 75 cents per bottle and Muco Salve at 25 cents per jar form @ combi- nation that usually relieves all kinds of colds. / Both are sold everywhere by ail druggists. We are positive you can get it here of— Finney’s Drug Store. Lenhart’s drug. store./ Cowan’s Drug Store. Breslow's Drug Store, a ec AAA A Rf SPRING COLDS ARE DANGEROUS This Simple, Treatment Knocks A Cold Right Now. a more Z

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