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WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1923 ; NEW FIRES IN NORTH WOODS | THREATENING Fires Reported Under Control Again Are Threatening Damage in Minnesota MANY r’ Shift in Wind Causes Thick Blanket ef Smoke Over Virginia Today . x Paul, M 80—Several of the and small timber fires re- ed to be under control the days, today were again thr aable’ timber tracts, accord- to forest FIGHTING FIRE Roy Cummings, Conn. Here are ing on the Housatonic River. Buek, Caribou farms -| were nea Sucker rive acrobatic dancer, lives with his présent ‘wi Mrs. Irene Cummings, Wife No..2, at the o: und Kdna Cummings, five, daughter of Wife No. 1, ‘and the head of the house as the: and nger: Another e near the Cloquet Seores of additional men were be-| river 29 miles northeast of Duluth © rushed into service today to aug-| covering a strip 6 miles long was ment the s of approximately 700] reported to wiped out - ' en fivhting the blazes. al lumber camps. There are f A shift in the wind last night} tlers in that region, Virginia with a thick] Rain was expected today. Ps from fires on the Tower, ee ook and Lake Mud roads. ‘The i WOMAN 76, MARRIES. in this vicinity were not regarde Rolla, D., May 30.—Word has erious but sev Virg ty | been re ed here that Mrs, Phoebe firemen were aiding ns in com-|Dunphy, aged 76, formerly of this t fire for a few miles along} community, was recently married to William C. Mothershead, 81, at Mon- Sturgeon Lake ages owned by Hib- nd Chisholm residents. Con- y, however, were said to rovia, Cal — WON'T QUIT Washington, May General Daugherty S$] Washington aft in Ohio, to e|binet meet denied all reports that h culated that he would resign. rd the bow ional Forest. Others 30,—Attorney- to rest THEATRE '‘ TONIGHT ‘Capitol LAST TIME “HEARTS AFLAME” Ten reels of absorbing interest and big thrills. TOMORROW. ooeasoand « TOM MIX in “JUST TON WITH MISS SYDNEY SHIELDS AND NEW YORK COMPANY. + WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY )») “Racing Hearts” 4 —with— AGNES AYRES, ? THEODORE ROBERTS : and RICHARD DIX Another automobile story by Byron Morgan, author of “Across the Continent” and “Excuse My Dust.” LD y . A story that starts when a @ motor cop and ends in a tornadg, Nf a ° ° Wednesday = Auditorium ives ~=June 6th. | : - E Mail Orders Accepted Now. Prices 50c to $2.50 Plus = Tax. Seat Sale Monday, June 4th, Harris & 5 Woodmansee. Curtain 8:15. = speeding society girl vamps ° “Job be and his forver, Mrs. Helen Cfimmings, Wife No. 1;‘on shore y returned from an out-; “Love Nest” Occupants Happy at Play ~ caleeaal YOUNG HOLDS WORLD COURT AIDT0 PEACE Congressman Adheres to Pres- ident’s Proposal for New Tribunal Arthur, N, D., M tribute to the soldier dead this morning “Congressman George M. Young, speaking on -th Memorial Day program ra few minutes from his mi ay a few words of international ju: 30.—In p e t by consultation, secondly by submission of the dis pute to an arbitration court, and thirdly by war. Peace is de but to‘fight for it is to cre very thing to which it is opp To ‘my mind the nation will co to submit their differences to a tri- bunal in proportion justice meted out. If judgments are partial or political, as has been true in many ca! in the past nations will hesitate to ha¥vard nz nal interest to-arbi- tration or adjudication. That is why to my mind the court should give its moral support to the new cour! “This court, organized thre ago, in the judgment of the co man, is the best international tribu- nal ever organized. If the present court should fail, the cong said, he believed It would be many years before it would be possible to get the nation to consent to another as world yeflrs h says it is the back- ague of Nations. It is not the backdoor to anything. It is the front door to better world re- lations, The senate is just as wide of the mark in what has just been quoted as it is when it says the peo- ple of the United es are opposed to the League of . Many peo- ple in our country, probably the ma- jority, are opposed to entering the League of Nations but they do not oppose the league. Why should they oppose it when it is the only organ- ization to preserve peace in the east- ern hemisphere?” CANDIDATES FOR SENATE Fourteen Want Knute Nel- son’s Seat Nine Republi- r-Labor standard ‘s and two Democrats are the bea candidates to fill the unexpired term of the late United States Senator Knute Nelson from Minnesota. Yesterday when the filing list for the primary on June 18 closed the 14 apsirants were shown as follows. Republican Thomas D. Schall, Ex- ecelsior; Ernest Lundeen, Minneapo- lis; Oscar Hallam, St. Paul; Sydney Anderson, — L: hos Governor Preus, Minneapolis; Vietor L. Power, Hibbing; tin J. Martin, Minnea- polis; J. A. A. Burnquist, St.- Paul; and Halvor Stennerson, Crookston. Farmer-Labor —Charles A. Lind- Magnus Johnson, ton township and L. A. Frits- w Ulm, view and Franci y, Minneapolis. URGES ARMS - BE USED 10 China Declares He Would Civilize Them With Krag Tientsin, China, May 30—Armed intervention by the foreign powers to put down banditry im China is favor- ed by M jor Roland W. Pinger, Unit- held by outlaws in ‘the moun- onghold. He etter to the Associated here today. e captives,” wrote Major Pin- ve learned Mhe personality of dits by now and we no longer impersonally I tion. Civilize my motto, and 1 eve many will have to be STRENGTHEN RUHR HOLD | Poincare Declares Germany Must Not Prolong Her Resistance Paris, May 30—If German's re- sistance in the Ruhr 1s prolonged in- to next winter France “will at once bring considerable means of applying greater pressure,” Premier Poincare said in concluding yesterday’s debate inthe Chamber of Deputies. B vote of 505 to 67 the chamber ed the June expenses of the occ! tion and voiced their confidence the governments Mr, Poincare said he*was convinced Germany would be unable to resist much longer, RUHR STRIKE IS ENDED May 30.—The Essen, strike of Derby, | QUIET BANDITS {American Held Captive in s Army, one of the 14 for- | | ed to make good little laun- James A, Carley Plain-{ | | expressed his | | out the terrors of the first metal workers throughout the Ruhr | which involved more than 500,000 men was ended today, the men re- ..| WHAT FARMERS NEED ADDED 7A NAR TO CREDIT AND GOOD ADVICE «+ By WALTER W. HEAD First Vice , President American Bankers Association. It the farmer is not prosperous there can be no permanent pros- perity in other industries, because the farmer's pur- chasing .power, under normal con- ‘ditions, is one of 7, the most potent influences we have in the Unit- ed States. When conditions with the farmer are gogd, and he is receiving the ‘cost of production ‘« ~ plus something more for his labor, he isin) a po- sition”’to buy’from the manufac- turer. 7 fear’ x A condition that affects the tarm- or, cutting off ‘his purchasing power, festroying his belief in himself, in the ®ankér ‘and in everybody’ else,, san, only bring about a chaotic con- dition, which affects. every bus!- ness man and laboring man in the United States, regardless of what y have. ‘The farmer had all the credit and advice he needed during the period of. prosperity, but he, with us ail, suffered depression, There clearly must have been something’ lacking to enable bim to go on the . even tenor of his way. The an swer is very plain. It is that some means need to be_provided to en able the farmer, after his labor hae beep ‘expended, when!’ the crops have-Been harvested, or when hig live stock have reached the stage where he must ship it, to Mquidate his indebtedness. He must have somebody interested in him suff. ciently, not. altogether from’ hie own standpoint, but from the stand: point of the banker and business man, so that he can put his prod- ucts on the market at the time when rie will bring him the Prost. I do imaginable scheme ‘for co-operative marketing, but I do believe the basic idea is worthy of considera- tion from the*banker’s standpoint ‘as well as from the farmer's stand- point. Bankers are cer‘ainly in- terested in the farmer, by reason of the\fact that they’ cannot’ be prosperous in their own ‘business unless the Yarmer also is prosper- ous. They must interest themselves in the farmer, not only. in giving ‘himjthe business advice ‘he needs and,in finshting bim during the period of construction, but’ iso in helping him place ‘products on the market et a time When they will bring him the cost of Ic tion, grat a pare er for his ces. 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They were granted the | 50 per cent increase in wages for which they went on strike but were refused their addition demands of a| today by bonus of 160,000 marks each. TWO EXECUTED. Dublin, May0. and Joseph Free S$ at Tudmy ae thousand and oné breathless moments. _ counters. You've never seen anything like it. * RIALTO THEATRE Michael Murphy ‘orke were authorities e authorities . They were convicted of participating in a bank robbery at Atahe car. ‘% Dance at Patterson Hall Wednesday and Saturday | evenings. last week, The STAR i ATi priced Wait for the STAR. presents ‘HA. SNOW'S ‘ountléés ‘thrilling afd sensational en- TONIGHT AND THURSDAY .