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PAGE EIGHT CREW WON'T SAIL AGAIN Frenchmen Disappointed Be cause They Don’t Get Liquor New York, June 13.—Nearly half of the crew of the French line teamer France served notice on | her captain as the vessel sailed to- day that they would refuse to make wnother trip to America on her un loss arrangements were made so that they daily could get the two litres ration of wine provided by French law. The captain declared the Pr: ule if crew marin nee would return on sched- had to rec French tuit a new im the merchant college. TO MAKE Washington, June negotiations initiated by the state department with various maritime powers contemplate a solution of reciprocal ‘basis of the » controversy and of the rum sling problem through exer- of the treaty-making powers of the government. American officials, it was re- vouled today, see in this method an opportunity to eliminate inconven iences to foreign ships within t three-mile limit due to enforce ment regulations while at the same time the hovering fleet of rum enugglers off the American coasi may be broken up through exten- m by treaty agreement of t right of search for this specific purpose to the 12-mile limit, RAW SUGAR IN DECLINE New York, June 13.—-Disappoint- over the ers in tne markets tor futures ‘became de- moralized today and sold heavily, 60 to 67 points close. Rallies of to 30 points followed on recov- ering but the undertone after mid- cay was still nervous and unset- tled. Fine granulated was quoted from $9.50 to $9.90 by various re- finers but these prices were entire- ty nominal. BRITISH IN REPLY TO RUSS London, June 13.—(By the A. P. ¥ British reply to the last ssian note states that the Soviet govern® ent “having complied with the essgptial conditions of the gotrnment, this corr s ence may now be brought to a con- clusion.” New District Representative For Maxwell Co. O. W. Peterson, now district rep- resent of the Maxwell Motor Sales Corporation, will spend much of his time in North Dakota terri- tory, and will cooperate with the Lincoln Motor Company of Bis- ck, distributors of Maxwell rs in this territory. Mr. Peterson goes to the Maxwell from the Northwest Nash Company and previous to that time was a Studebaker factory representative. He is a man of considerable exper- ience and is possessed with a broad acquaintance throughout the North- west Bismarck Lodge B. P. O. E. will observe Flag Day, June 4th, in Custer Park by the Elks Band — giving a concert of one hour beginning 7:30 p. m. Followed by a Fifteen CORWIN MOTOR — 0. Bismarck, N. D. ship; demand for refined | | | This picture, when the flood in Calgary, Alta tarily was expected to be washed away. in the mountains, 75 miléy away, as well as by terrific, heavy rains. The water THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Was at its peak, was taken on a bridge which momen- of the Elbow River were swollen by two cloudbursts CONVERSE — _ ENTOMBED MINERS |T ABERTS LOSE When a loca were entombed. cut off from co testify. AMERICANS This motorless plane, by H. U. 2 weighs 200 pounds. Minute Address. Friday, will hold Initiation and Lunch- 1 mine shaft near Bicknell, It took 79 hour: mmunication. manipulated by Arthur Heinric’ five minutes and reached an altitude of 100 feet at Bayside, N. ordman, of Brooklyn, it has a wing spread of 40 Ind,, s to rescue them. e man, TAKE UP GLIDIN 15th} con at 8:30 p. m. caved in,-three men | But they were not { pparently sniffing the! earth, ; is in reality talking to the buried men through a tube. was not the only thing poured down, as the bottle near the right’ might Conversation leet and Alex Rosen, Ex. Ruler. Where to oy US Tires ° ~ (, We HENZLER : + Bismarek, No. Dakota.” More Royal Clinchers for 1923 United States Tires are Good Tires THE, U.S. Tire a took plenty of time in devcloping the ‘Royal Clincher Cord., - When itwasfinallyplaced on sale there were no mis- takes in.ite Last_year we -eouldn’t make Royal Sitters fast enough. Production fSe 1923 has been more than doubled, But whenever and wher- ever you can get a Royal .Clincher—take ite Give Money to Boy Claiming He First Told Story rand Forks, N, D, June 13.—G. , Grimson, special assistant attorney | general was here last night on his | return from Florida where he i8 in- ‘terested in the murder trial of Wal- ter Higginbotham, whipping boss, | charged with the death of Martin ‘Tabert of Munich, N. D., in a Flor’- da prison camp. Mr. Grimson ® on his way to Langdon-4o attend to court matters and expected to re- turn to Florida when the botham trial is resumed June 25. When informed that a young man | claiming to be Glen Thompson the | youth who first wrote to the par- Jents of Tabert telling of their con's | |death, had been at Muvich and se- cured money from Mr. and Mrs. Ta- bert on the strength of his sto:y, Mr. Grimson branded the -youth as} [an imposter. He said that Glen! ‘Thompson was still in Florida, | Mr. Grimson is the man wh months ago made & personai inve: gation of circumstanzes surtound the death: of! Tabert “from alieged abuse, which finally resulted son reforms througheut Flori | Memorial Contest Set For June 22 The final elimination contest for Winchester Memorial Prize will be held at Will School, Friday aftérnoon of. June 22, The nine entrants, threc students completing the eighth grade in the Bismarck schools and: six from the various schools of the . county, | will participate in the arithmetic ex amination or contest as a result of which the winner will be selécted and presented with the Winchester, Mem- orial prize of $25.00 the Memocia: .uud has been estab- lished by the family of Judge Walter H. Winchester in honor of his. mem- ory. © The is given annually to ithe ranking student in arithmetic | who is just completing the eighth | grade. ! Butler Studio will close from June 14 to June 19 on eecount of attending the State tion at Dickinson. i | 1 | | 1 \ | 1 { stayed up | $885 f. o. b. Detrott va TO IMPOSTOR Higgin- | pri- | Christian Endeavor Conven-' IHATION REPRESENTED Financial New York is pecu, Marly represert- ative of the whole nation. All parts of the country, the small towns as well as the big cities, have sup- lied the great- r part of the maa power and brain power enabling it to function ;as the nation’s financial capital. | A recent tavestigation as to the ‘origin of one hundred leading ex- ‘ecutives in the New York financial district, showed that no less than sixty per cent were born outside New York State, that no less than twenty-eight per cent were born in towns of 6,000 or less, and only twenty per cent were born in New ‘York City. The birthplaces of represented Pennsylvania, Ohio, | Massachusetts, Connecticut, Mich igan, Missouri, Mlinois, Maryland, ; Delaware, Vermont, Mississippi, | Kentucky, Tennessee, Minnesota, lowa, Florida, Rhode Island, North Carolina. Indiana, Wisconsin, | Georgia, California, Montana, West Vilrginia, Maine, New Jersey and the District of Columbia. The same situaton is true of the younger men, particularly in the | banks. This reflects more than F, H. Sisson these men AT FINANCE CAPITAL By FRANCIS H. SISSON Chairman Public Relations Commission, American Bankers Assool: of credit in which banks through-' out the country deposit unemployed ; funds fn New York. When crop | needs in rural districts or indus ‘| trial expansion in manufacturing | centers Increase local requirements | for money these local banks callin | their funds from New York and tp addition may ask the bis city i banks for loans. Country, banks frequently deposit as security the notes of their own, customers, often secured, in turn,. by farm capital such as ploughs, livestock’ and other possessions. Theyfitty thousand dollar note, for ; instance, of a country bank in a big New York bank may have at | tached, as collateral security, fifty or a hundred small notes of a bun- dred dollars up to a thousand or | more, signed by local farmers and- their wives. Into one of the big: gest New York banks comes in this way from the South each crop season a small note secured by a plough and a harrow and a mule named “Molly”—an incident that has been aptly described as “The Minting of Molly.” It is one among many, securing & large inter-bank credit. Thus |s big banking in New York brought close to the plain people of the soil—-thus does it finance their humble husbandry—and thus has ft felt the need of recruiting: its officers from among men familiar and sympathetic with local con- merely the attraction of the ,big city for ambitious young men. It is the result of the definite pur- pose of New York banking to equip itself to perform most effectively its work for all the nation. A brief description of the mechan- iam of the nation’s banking system will make this clear. Many of the New York banks are bankers’ ' panke. They great reservoir Wins College Oratory Contest Jamestown, June Wells and Theodore , ‘the contest in oratory at Jamestown Coliege last night. [eae was’the speaker and Rvose- velt was the subject: “Theodore Roosevelt-—American.” They were a well matched team. | The young ora- tor has a good many of the quali- ties of the great Statesman and Pa- triot, and he was able to realize his theme and convey his deep under- standing and feeling to the ap- dience. Still his competition was strong, <o strong on the part of Ru- ben Strutz of Jamestown and Hor- ace Headen of Williston that they tied with him in rank and the per- centages had to be used in order to” teach a decision, - Wells is from Minnesota but attended high school in Fargo. Headen is brother of Ed- Headen, who won in the ora- r contest for women, and he is himself the 13.— Kenneth Roosevelt won men's winner of last year's ‘prize for the best cssay in the state on Good Roads. The prize is $50.00 (part of it in the form of a medal) and is given by Judge J. A. | Coffee cath year. Five-Passenger Touring Car ditions—able to visualise the needs of the people there and pass sound judgment on the credit factors in- volved. It is due to the conditions thus pictured that among the officers of New York's banks will be found representatives from all parts of the nation, They are the delegates of the people at the business cap- ital. |" “City NEWs (5p ose | Parents ‘of Girl ° Mr.:and Mrs, T. B. Meinhofer of the city are parents of a baby girl { born. yesterday at the St. Alexius hospital. i — | Last Meeting | Lloyd Spetz Post American Legion will hold its last regular meeting before the «summer vacation tonight, and ‘Commander Cordner urges a [wood attendance to clean up busi- ness. on hand. i Alexius Hospital | V..G: Goodard and John H, An- derson, city, Mrs, T. J. Kinney, Braddock, and Theodore Smith, Van Hook have cntered the St. Alexius hospital for treatment, Miss Helen White Calf, Elbowoods, Miss Iva Delong, New Lei Miss Veronica Kwako, Zap, Edward Kowaleswcki, Beach, ahd Mrs. H. G. Orr and baby boy have been discharged from the Bismarck Hospital | Glen Clark, Ha Miss | Larson, Douglas, Emanuel ‘Hebron, Henry Klein, Willa, Lillian Terras, Mrs, A. 0, Weekes, Flasher, J. 0. Johnson; Falkirk, Mrs. Mrs. Price. Owens Ole Torkelson, Flasher, city, Wm. | Actual dominahce in its market _. - has been awarded the good Maxwell, both because gfzits ,, remarkable beauty and ‘the ie higher grade performance / . which tells how finely it is built? : : The delightful ease of its driving - ‘and riding are further factors’ in the preference which is be- ing accorded to it everywhete. — : | > Lincoln Sales Company, - Oftice 207 Brosdway, Bismarck, N. D. Phone 82 |Minute Address. Friday, 15th account of attending the State WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1923. 2A Question a Day: ?: Before you buy a car ask the salesman this question: If I had bought your car in 1919, 1920, 1921 or 1922 what would it be worth tofay according to the National Used Car Market Report, used by automobile dealers in taking in used cars? (After long and faithful service the OVERLAND gives final satisfaction of a higher re-sale value. An OVERLAND purchased in any of the years mentioned, is inane MORE TODAY than any other car in its ae class. WATCH for TOMORROW'S QUESTION Buy By Comparisoa—, And You'll Buy An Easy Terms If You Like, . a Lahr Motor Sales Company Reidlinger, and Willie Weber Gar- tison have entered the Bismarck hospital for treatment. Henry Seid- ler, Coleharbor, Alfred — Sippert. Eureka, Arthur. Renner Beulah, Helmuth Koth, Wishek, Miss Anna Weigilt, Wishek, Mrs. Rudoluh and Wishek, Miss Anna Tollofson, Christ Zumelln Hanover, C. Piles Can Be Cured Without Surgery An instructive book has been pub- lished by Dr. A. S. McCleary, the noted rectal specialist of Kansas City. This book tells how sufferers from Piles can be quickly and easily cured without the use of knife, scis sors, “hot” iron, electricity or other cutting or burning Larberg, Makoti, and Mrs. John Doerr, Lehr have been discharged from the hospital. any method, without confinement to bed and no HAIR looks a Golden Glint MEDIUM BROWN vest of all after Shampoo. hospital bills to pay. The method has been a success for, twenty-four years and in more than eight thous and cases. The book is sent te paid free to persons, afflicted @ i* piles or other rectal) troubles © ciip this item and mail it with n Bismarck Lodge B. P. O. E. will observe Flag Day, June 14th, in Custer Park by the Elks Band — giving a concert of one hour beginning 7:30 p. | 4"4 address to Dr. McCleary, m. Followed by a Fifteen|"atview Sunitarium, Kansas City, will hold Initiation and Lunch- eon at 8:30 p. m. Alex Rosen, Ex. Ruler. Butler Studio will close from June 14 to June 19 on Christian Endeavor Conven- tion at Dickinson. You won’t “keep adding’ You know lots of men who buy a quart © of oil with every five or ten gallons of gas. Trying to liven dead oil with new oil. It won’t work. The best method ‘of lubrication is to drain your crankcase about every 800 miles and refill with SUNOCO THE DISTILLED OIL' Distilled oil is purer than oils compounded of “cylinder stock” and light oil. It lasts. It enables your motor to last. You'll be proud of your motor ce. Ask your dealer or write us for booklet, “What's Happening Inside Your Motor?” MARSHALL-WELLS COMPANY DULUTH MINNEAPOLIS SPOKANE PORTLAND _ F nh & Welch Hdwe. Co. Steele Hdwe, wrench N.D. Steele, Nope Company h 3. 'T. Parke Heng eins! be Sterlite ND. . Rodgers Bros. & Bliss Berle, Sijea oo McKenzie, N. D. ig: A. 'T.. Welch, Uenten: ND Digby Menoken, N.'D, Sander Mere. Co, ’ Sanger, N. D. ‘These dealers sell cars—they G. Schultz want them to run well—for Rose Haye, & Imp. Co. A leaeee: siaents ep Beulah, N.D. a bed Dodge Mere. ‘Co. Dodge, N. D. Lahr Motor Sales Co, Ree adel Saaaee: MURA uniah! Halliday, N. D. Motor: Inn Kiligeer, Nb. Darker’ & Jorgenson - Flasher, :N. id i Wachter & Bean, Glen Ullin, N. py Hebron Hdwe. Dodge & Twin hiy Tractors bs, J, A. Forster Garage ge Eavpere ia ND. Baler sok Dickinso ison Hd Ww. c. Behl weer goa a os Doage a Overland Boost, N. D. Toppen Merc. Gontend Reet (ig flyaRitght, Overiand Toppen, 8. D, Haselton: Motor Co, Haselton, N. D. ‘Dawson WD: Witton Motor Sales Co. Ls Northwestern Motor ahh oa ivbe' ~ "Linton, N. D,