The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 8, 1923, Page 1

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WEATHER FORECAST - Partly cloudy tonight and Thurs- day, possibly becoming tt } DRUG BUSINESS | | IN PROCESS OF GREAT CHANGE!” CAPITAL BOWS" ‘COOLIDGE SHOULDERS HIS CHIE nA f, BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, AUG ‘ FS BURDEN | MAKES ATTACK ON INDIANA’ EXTRADITION ¥ TRIBU UST 8, 1923 T FUNERAL RITES (ERMANS ALSO SPURN BRITISH DEBT PROPOSAL Fey 2 PRICE FIVE CENTS —— SOLEMN, BEAUTIFUL TRIBUTE PAID PRESIDENT HARDING AT STATE FUNERAL SERVICE { , Skill Needed to Meet hav + . | E. R. Sinkler, Minot Attorney,| Chancellor Cuno in Speech ‘ \ y 4 mands Made Upon the Opposes Request to Send Says That Conditions Are |Long Procession of :World’s Notables Are Among the a8 Stores by the Public Aourgen Olson Back Unpleasant Mourners—Mrs. Harding Has Last Minutes Alone With aie —_- Body in the East Room of the White House—Body Lies 4 3. SEE GREATER CHANGE 4 ee on 4 lu y. { { IMEARING IS, HELD HERE|‘ 0) i In State Remainder of Day i 8 nditions in } a! ; Speaker a ie Cor ; ' “"! Matter Continued From Time] Greatest Confusion Obtains in (By thy Associated Press.) i gases 4 Wels. o ‘ to Time Because of At» the Retail Markets 1 Washington, Aug. 8.— A swelling tide of honors bore EY i 4 : i ES gape tempt For Settlement Throiee Sette | phan, bo the PRenNBts ton pone ee ae ‘ —— » to . The great change which has taken —- \ i For him the earth of ambition was ended, the compelling Ths. ; ‘ i to Indiana's] Berlin, Aug. 8. neellor Cuno in I L 5 uae diaemerare batiuese since tee seTieie rab Waseecisealtioh “ct sours | hid protlaed Apeaehyia: MecReteneeag call of duty atilled in death. Amid the tens of thousands of HOE TRdGA? the NOPE DObGHe. PRET gen Olson of Minot to face charges |on the reparations situation today his silent countrymen grouped along the way he passed ir wiudeddleat’“Adsoslation? TMOlAIAG (6 Preferred as a result of the failure /dealt particularly with the proposals | such state as only the great dead of the nation may know three-day convention in Bismarck, ratte Farmers Bank of Newburgh, | (oro aritanet recently advanced by/ and beyond the brief hour of the ‘ceremony there awaited nd., eh Olson = : ‘ ft iawoiluehyy chy ah BL as holder, was voiceg before Governor| ‘The chancellor said the principles |fOr him rest eternal on the soil that gave him birth. be es eg a ae Nestos today by E. R, Sinkler, Olson's | on which “Great Britain had based| Down the wide avenue he was car- St. Paul. attorhey, her proposals .were unpleasant to, ried today with marching legions} bier with bent, uncovered heads to : A greater, To give Indiana attorneys here | Germany. a tramping ahead to lay him under the} bid farewell to the upright, kindly J dee. yas ree cisae time to prepare answers to Sinkler’s eh Cae iS a oil awhile ere he/man ao soon to leave Washington i perteny nets now oate : objections the hearing was adjourned GREAT CONFUSION goes back to his native state to stay | torever. ; the strictly apothecary shops and the until Saturday morning, Berlin, Aug, 8—(By the Associated |{rever. That high resolve of duty Move From White Hotse. { merchandising drug stores, he said. Sinkler asserted that “Indiana 18] press)—Utter confusion prevailed in{"@4 brought him death and with i. It was a few minutes = ten ‘ Specialization is increasing in the ttempting to collect a debt which Sekt asi 4 ines in| Pe#ce and quiet he loved, but which | o'clock when the great proces#ion of eastern éenters of the United States, Hie Guat jaunt bayTdLee buLSNortn pate eta a PRE Ea nee he set aside at the nation’s call. sorrow swung out from the White nie buetly. described WatoPtows ton back to. tndiang.to be corocroed [centinted plunging of the mark and jarching thoutshds of the meet | te te Sein ate pilgrimage South’ "Dakota; stores wHleh Rb: suid intovaraetbleasenter 4 fee conssduane fantastic rise of the/ine way, the steel of their bayonets | other long caravans of grief and of s unique in the Northwest. It is Declaring that under the laws of + glittering above them. Soldiers, sail- | rejoicing, of regret and of triumph, ay dre’ above)“ hARAL Rg NoaTyes AFUE Indiana all stockholdefs were linble |, While the food situation continued | try, marines and citizen soldiers all | had preceded it in years gone by. ‘ and: medicines and :4illinggveleMp- for the full amount of the bank’s|‘® Show a chronic shortage in oF-| were there and behind them came the| Tenderly the President had been i iowa. 1b geeapleanghll ef arerBOe losses, S nkler“declared that the de-| ‘inary staples, hourly rises of prices! new President still bowed in grief |carried for the last time from the is fav asel eolaFeese Roum th ccaeere positors in the failed Indiana bank | Used by the fluctuation of the/that his office’ came at such @ price.| portals of the White “Hose tes ay duck a “apetialloeds Geuipegas: hot asta Nouldher dune: mark are projecting a new and seri-/Came also two men who before him | placed again on the artillery caisson There will be other such stores in The hearing opened yesterday af- | 0S element into the situation, as the|haq held that office, onc to be strick-| that had borne him last night from “eS the country; he declared ternoon but was adjourned with lit- | retailers aro withdrawing their wares |en like himself and so crippled in ill-|the funeral train through the east } vs Bly "Task 2 tle action, because the previous re- fiom sale bag ML aaa ae ness that he might not give Lee pen itera! a few ae amid o “ec ey . a es to pay prices based on the gold|as he would to the sorrowful duty o! lowers that had been placed there in “On the other hand I believe the! | Here's President Calvin Coolldge beginning his Ufe's biggest job, This photograph was taken at hin| West of the Governor of Indiana for | fuse i} 7 7 greatest opportunity that ever faced|desk in the temporary White House in his rooms at the Willard Hotel in Washington. You'll note the} 0lson’s extradition, issued some | mark or the dollar units. the day. Behind this endless array | tribute by the potentates of the earth ‘ X ‘ vipa months ago, was rev Shopkeepers Prociaim Strike —_|marched the great body of American |and by the plain pec le the fallen the retail druggist lies in merchan-|‘band of mourning: he’s wearing on his left arm, Ss ARO, was revoked and new rales ¥ dising,” ad Te Noyes. “Turning oe charges and a new warrant present-| As the latter procedure results in sieeve the men who re) the | chieftain loved so well, i 5 rr. . > ~ S a | eds, which took Sinkler by surprise. | the price ranges which-are prohib:t-|whcels of a grent government, mov- | : : the Meng” stereyanve/aynigis class de~ ATTACK MADE | Hearing on the original request fof |ed under the usury ordinances, the| ing in the ‘huge silent buildings Cathet “1s Opehel: ‘ perc rch canons: tony OXuty TEVSrCHER: extradition was continued from time | shopkeepers’ union has proclaimed a| about, ae eet bigrer-ieterliaaey Aise, ‘ ON COOLIDGE | to time on the request of the Gover-| general strike for Thursday and all| Military Bands in Line, Clvay and" friends aight” Lbat oa He gave as an example a store in H OWN hor of Indiana, Sinkler said, because | retail establishments except food] Military bands interspersed in the.| tivet, and fv in the Ei New York where there is a phat- j OWLED DOW riemarampe was made to effect a set-| shops will close for a day as a pro-|columns played old. old hymns that | iat look thefe: in beloveg'dead whe i macy department in one corner and tlement in the liabilities growing out | test against conditions under which|Stir and comfort. THe hum and dim Jay with: a, peacéfol arile in the fe: f the rest of the store is devoted to New York, Aug. 8—A city conven- of the Indiana bank failure. He said | they arc expected to operate. Re eee cane te Tale Tine | DonsTtieteeaen) q merchandising. The volume of busi- I tiow of the Socialist party of New Olson signed an agreement under| Their chief objection is being di-| draped casket Sere Bete cate | Pormine eP¥ad dat awilsoalt iimasie ness done by the retail drug storo in York nearly broke up in a riot when ‘ which ‘he was to give as security | rected against the prohibition of [of quiet in the White House was}, form by thai Gates of: the! chief the past has been so limited that it W tesolatinn, “dandgniting Presiieat nbout 2,000 acres of North Dakota | price quotations based on the gold|/acking. But there was no sound or magistry, came to the great portico was difficult for a man to make a de- x Calvin Coolidge as a “reactionary and . : land, but the agreement was not con- | unit. Tarte in eee ereae scons thet just before the hour of departure to cent living, he said, but added that Aged Man Is Held Responsible |® {°° ‘© labor,” was read by William summated and the settlement w. Many shops throughout the city |i" niente aia rele bunt. |take his place in the cortege at the the way the business is being de-| Ag Karlem of the resolutions committee. Supreme Court Says: Legisia-|""cvented by one or two attorneys |already have shut down, barricading ing had been carried: by on silent | invitation of President Coolidge. Fant H geloned ie the east the big spun a ‘For Tragedies in Battk All. over the convention halls dele-} * t Did Not template: in the apede their doors and emptying the shop wheat to be. lifted to a catafulque | Chief Justice Taft, the only other ex- j usiness is coming. The question, “he! 4 ib ae gates leaped to their feet with vio-| ‘ ture Did Not Contem a ‘ants to Settle, windows of, all..display. President, also was waiting when the ' said, was how best to take advantage! ‘°<--. Greek ‘lent protente against the spirit of the] peining ‘Them In It “I believe the Governor of Indiana] Meanwhile, thu’ government is mak-| (> 114 Kicat, stone chamber of the |” Suen, Stee was waiting when the } of this and how to meet the revolu- : resolution and the terms in: which it ~ trereibed good Judgment.in delaying |ing hectic efforts to prevent the sit-) “ “There is keeping with the simplic- {Stripes like that of other ealdiers tion that is being worked in the bus: Battle Creck, Mich., Aug. 8.—The| Was couched. 4 the matter,” said Sinkler, “and I be-| uation from ig into a state of! ity of the man who Ipy dead the-fun- | 40 have made the supreme sacrifice iness. : body of Mrs, B, Il, Stewart,-58, was | “Kill it, kill it,” resounded from * lieve it would be good judgment to | unredeemable d is hastening | eral services were of brief, impres-|¢® their country was liftd from its Other speakers emphasised the im-!+ouny by a posse of searciers lato |the auditorium and order was not| DECISION OF GOURT|comtincec further, and a settlement |its program lof tax and financial sive nature. Afterwards in ite slees | #etting of ‘lowers to be borne to its portance of the drug store and de-| esterday 10 miles southeast of this | restored until the chairman had or- may yet be effected. measures. of honor beneath. the dome the body | Plate amid another snd perhaps a i a red that the lease ‘Try the) city, bringing to three the number of {dered the resolution back to commit-| Because it held that the case befora|, He admitted Olson was civilly lia:| ‘The dollar rate fluctuated between | was to lie until nightfall, while thou- | 8Tander array of floral: coloring and rug Store First” is simply the em-| persons whose deaths are blamed on|tee for revision, It was not present. ie t properly an equitable ac-| Py yprige ied that he was criminal-|three and four million marks to the| sands upon thousands file past the | fragrance in the rotunda. President i bodiment of thé sentiment of the| youn H, Wells, 70, retired merchant |cd again. ‘ Se Dron ony: ae meee le -8¢- ny Lintite,, dollar throughout the day. Coolidge who enters the White public generally—that they havel and reputed to’ be wealthy, tion the supreme court did not find] Sinkler also attacked the three| d House with h heart upon the { , come to look upon the drug store as) Wells carly yesterday. shot, and it necessary sto decide ‘one of tho} counts against Olson, ra'sing numer- GOVERNOR FOR duty of the highest office in the land, { the place where they may get what) killed his wife, Ella, 68, and himself. strongly contested points in the con-] U8 technica} objections. The counts arrived to take his place also just a! they want at any hour of the day.| He left word with a nepaew that he 1. troversy between the Ransom County|°h#ted conspiracy to obtain money CALLING.OF the hour set for the departure, They emphasized the skill of man-}had killed Mrs. Stewart and placed / zi Farmers Press and the Ijsbon Free|U"der ' false pretenses, obtaining : , As the. cortege was forming unde agement necessary to conduct a store| her body in a clump of bushes sqme Press over the selection of the latter| Money. under false pretenses and U.S. CONGRESS neath the shadows of the great tre‘: under such conditions, distance from this city. as official paper of. Ransom. county, grand larceny, He alleged that with through which many | Presiden: Other speakers at the morning ses-| “Jealousy is the theory advanced by but:the court in its discussion of the| Tespect to the first two charges the! Governor R. A. Nestos has written have looked out upon the worl. ‘sion included S. C. Henry, secretary | police as the cause of the triple kil® case strongly intimates, according to] Sstute of limitations has expired, |t President Calvin Coolidge calling sometimes in triumph and mat of the National Association of Retail] ing. ° interpretations placed here, that the] tne oNenves complained of, he said, | attention to a letter he addressed to times in sorrow, the bell ‘of Druggists, of Chicago, and David W.| ‘The body of Wells and his wife/State Board of Equalization| corrupt practices act of 1911 docs not TREC eee November 1.1917.) presidant)\Hardiny late. in July end John's Episcopal church across Li Aberle, President of Henry C, Gar-|Wwere found in their apartment when he apply to the case to newspapers] Sinnier asserted that the charge/ soitcrating and re-emphasising ‘his Se ee fayette Square known as the chure! rot Inc. of St. Paul. Their talks | detectives, called by neighbors, broke Hears Their Arguments {which are candidates at an election|™ade in one count that Olson ab- special session of Con- in ' i of the Presidents: began tolling it uw! cir ded f; belief that a speci en al 10 ot and Kil were devoted to strictly business af-|down the door. Both the man and the seme as, other candidates, The| iesvser from Indiana on October 11, | acy should be called for the espec- doleful lament at the passing of | fairs, Mr. Henry telling how the na-| oman had been shot through the| County auditors of the state met/ plaintiff and appellant had contended j aR a rseepaaan Olson was in |‘al purpose of enacting legisiation| NeighBor Is Found Not | great heart in the gelasy of samo: ‘ (,_ tional assoctation was working in the| head. A revolver was gripped in| here today with the state board of|the Lisbon Free Press had violated | eer eAtetuee Becta: oh ao to stabilize agricultural conditions Guilty in South Dakota | **!* ‘ interest of the retail druggists. Wells’ lifeless hand. equalization and Tax ‘Commissioner| the corrupt practices in offering to i hana e, Tot land produce prices in the Northwei : Mrs, Harding Alone ¥ cee lastseen yesterday |¢ ¢. ¢, to di tai furnish to each voter of Ransom|WéFe in Indiana trying to straighten Only as the procession started did Pe Rats Sarr’ ee cording to those liv- itive to texetiog, | county 8 copy of its paper contain. up the bank affairs. With respect to eee A Sioux Falls, 8. D., Aug. 8—After| it become known that iif, Herdinc Simoes ore ith a short ad-|i6 Rear the home, sie drove away | “ay, ‘crate bend of equalization| ing the delinquent tax list. rthur Halvorson and John C. Efing- | Indian Fair Set deliberating 15 minutes and taking | had been with the body in the Ea: eam, Program with\s short ad-| si snceutomoile with (‘an elastic ES ty auditors’ argue|, “The Corrupt Practices Art (chap-|€T, charged jointly with Sinkler, the For A t 29-B].| tro, baliots the jury in the trial of | Room for half an hour at 1 o'clock dros: ena Till hear the county auditors argue/ +. 195, laws 1011; sections 928-044, |Jatter asserted EMinger was now in or Augus wO*) Carl L. Bergeson in circuit court| 44; i Sh 1 t , An interesting feature was the| "Police are working on the theory | £2F, the retention of the values of | C7 77% ay” nt nections 28 diana. pia oe | Last night returned a verdict of not| ting mo sensing mm eae ne questfon box on federal prohibition that Wells drove the woman 10: the | el Teepectivescounties for taxation| c.g scrors) apPueet, ai Primary | INC presentatives Here Ft. Yates, N. D., Aug. 8. for | guilty to the state charge of murder| times and at other times attended ty Brome etaonucted by Arthur A./ woods, shot and killed her and then |PUfloses as fixed by the county] States, but the lavgange ct the wtf The state of Indieve fy Topresented/the twelfth annual Standing Ruck | of Eugene Griffin, who was shot and ONS oF two relatives. But while th Stone federal prohibition director! returned, killing his wile and hin |PO%rd of equalization. ‘Tax Commis-| indiesigs thatthe teeniture eccat| here ba Fred 7 wean of the state | Indian fair at Fort Yates have recent- | killed in Bergeson’s yard 22 days| officials were gathered at the funer:i for North Dakota, and J, B. Greeson,| self,” sioner Converse probably will also £01 ed that certain provisions should be| banking departmen, H. A. Bippus,|ly been set by the Indian office for | ago. hour to take up their places jm thi narcotic agent in charge, Northwest-| Mrs. Stewart was the wife of an| into intricate tax problems. Enplicable only to elections of public| Prosecuting attorney of Warrick|the 20th, 30th and 3ist of August.|\ Griffin was found by Bergeson in| cortege she remained in. her, room ; ern district, Minneapolis, They wer | clectrician, Bert Stewart, Wells came | Practically ever) county abstract | officers, while other provisions should}.county, and Judge Thomas W. Lind-| These dates are carlier than custom- | the latter's chicken coop and accord-, alone with her grief. i into the ‘n@fy!ahd/tntricate govern-|to Battle Creek two years ago from |°! ®8sessments was in to the state| be applicable alike to election of of-| sey of Evansville, assisting the state.|ary and conflict somewhat with the |ing to Bergeson he was fired upon| Before the casket, as it was cur- ‘mont ‘‘regulettonés Gwhich -the | drug-| Oklahoma. board when the meeting opened,|ficers and elections involving somc|.' The affidavit on which the extra. | Congregational convention at Cannon | by Griffin Bergeson then fired two} ried down the steps, walked the two nn Fey gist is suppoded to know and care- 5 ES ey {, , | Which was, Mr. Converse said, an un-| measure, proposition or question sub-| dition of Olson was asked was in| Bal shots at Griffin, the man dying al-| ministers selected to officiate lat«-r | fully follow. usual ‘record. quien at an lection,” says the syl-|.obtain money under false pretenses, *v seoeegimesintaly: It Mit suepos ed at the Sareea ARAN Pate ja, They The convention, which began yes- labus of the decision, which was is- obtaining money under ‘false pre-jheld just prior to the opening of | that Griffin had entered the coop for| walked side by side, Doctor A. Free- terday morning at the Masonic tem- MOTHER SEEKS 3 sued per curiam, or by all judges. tenses and grand larceny, school, which begins this year the 3rd ie DaEPGRe at lllae a ropster which man Anderson, pastor of Mr. Hayd- ple, with a fair attendance had grown Y Adopted in 1911' BSG eee hae ahenined | Tene emnaee Pee gee eee aie gprs ptt a today until nearly 150 druggists had “The Corrupt Practices Act was}$118,600.00 trom the Farmers! _. A Y : registered at noon when a picture of RETURN OF BO adopted in 1911. (Chapter 129, Lawa| Bank of Newburg, Indiana,” said Barton Business Beene er Lenranenta eee Sees ee the body was taken. The yesterday Leroy Hipsher, 16 years old, is| 1921; Sections 923-925 C, L. 1913),”|Judge Lindsey. “It is alleged that ies Sudd ths military and nava’ 3 wi © has afternoon program was devoted t¢| + | wanted badle by his srother, '‘Mre_| #9¥8 the opinion, “At fhe time of its[Mé and assogiates represented to the| . Man Dies Suddenly been near to, the President at! eae eae me atk evra She drug-|Gets Nearly $100 From Fargo | Martin Hipsher, 1415 1-2 Dupont fuaponcn:. (uate. Was pe mrarision for nail ee BaD oy ee Willow City, ND» Aug. 8—Word OF MURDER full-weties ae the feet esdet ae gists he a banquet at the Grand z e selection of o! a] a rs el wo! more an Alot 'y, N. D., Aug, 8.—' ' 4 Pacific hotel, with Harry W. Gray a, Merchants, Police Learn | venue North. Minneapolis. : Aug.) 8t an election, In fact, ¢ 1 million dollars and that every dol-|was received in this city of the sud- |. L| people. toastmaster, and then went to ¢ ee rerey sett fon the, Pucet Sauk islative assembly which enacted ‘the| lar desposited in the bank was back.|den death of Jas, Tyvand of Barton AEE a _In Pennsylvania avenue the ‘ons: Auditorium to hear the North-West-| A. Lee will be taken back to the re ian faal han nat ieee ‘ieee ‘i pea Corrupt Practices Act, algo, enacted}ed by them. It is charged by . the|at his home in that city last Wednes-| Cleveland, Aug. 8.—John L, Whit-|.Silence Qt nitherte had been dic ern College Glee club. t gion. ;| 2 jaw imposing upon the county com-tatate that he withdrew money from|day evening... Mr. Tyvand was ill but | gicid wee fourm’ geile nn first de-| turbed only by the champing of ti 1 MM state hospital for the insane’ at| 1, i bout 145 mdi id i ii i epee Following the election ofvoffticers|Jumestown Inte today, ‘but he| oo veges About 145 pounds and i8| missioners of edch ‘county in the|the bank and placed i¢ in werthioes|a short time and hic death wes total, gree murder with a recommendation mounts of the troopers. w and disposal of other business this|knows he’s had a fine timo :since |). gree helene with mer} state the duty to designate the of- Paper, such as stock in North D ly, unexpected by his family ;for mercy in Judge Phillips’ cburt| broken by the strains of Chopin's afternoon, a big ptogram of enter-|he escaped from there Sbnut a week: dium. brown hai, ‘ ita ficial. newspaper of the sounty ta corporations of his, mortg many friends, The, deceased was late today for the murder'of Patrol-| funeral march, played by an. ary: ) tainment was prepared for the drug-|ago ~ |. His mother appealed to Governor| (Chapter 187, Laws 1911), The law/ang tands of none or little value. old time business man of Barton and |'man Dennis Griffin on May'}1. Judge | band. There was only a brief de)::y gists. 7 ‘Lee ‘went to Fargo first ‘and cash- | Nestos to advertise in finding him,| providing for the selection of an of- Prosecuting Attorney Bippus added 48d many friends throughout this Phillips immediately sentenced Whit-| then until the last journey of Wir- feed oe a geecmlle drive was |ed about $100 worth of checks, ong |*%d the Governor asked the newspa-| ficial newspaper was enacted in it is [HME two: suicides had grown out of Part of the state who will regret his |field to life imprisonment in the Ohio| ren Harding slong’ the. haters Been engaged te the tocet reine [Of them for $41. He. represented Per men to give it publicity. | ° (Chapter 197, Laws 1019). Hence, it I8 |e failure of the bank in Indians, [sudden death, Penitentiary, thoroughfare had begun between the ‘gi Beek jongaged by the ‘local drug himeelt variously as a Sarma and ; AA] peatiase that Ae she ston a; the legies ihe suicides being members of the é sane sree sf ir ene, made . p ‘or the trip arranged by the Associ-|a government detective. ; He had , q ard of directors of the bank whom long, aisle of grief from the very a ation of Commeree. Foligwing the}no trouble getting money, WARD TO PUSH Spry teak LUMAR hrc ihe criaacsllagad’” ware {nhocent of tae LADDIE BOY TOUCHES HEARTS OF gates of, the executive mansion ‘0 a “~ drive many sport events were on the| . Then ‘he rode to Bismarck in fine pply ;. | transactions. Program at the swimming pool. To- night theannual ball of the druggists will be held on the McKenzie roof garden where other events will take place. § + Tomorrow will be ‘held the! annual outing and picnic ,of the convention. style’ on ‘@ Northern Pacific train, right through Jamestown. ‘He. approached Chief’ of Police called wp: estown. , Officers of the association are well |they wanted. him and a man came’ ; Blessed witb: the attendance. For | todsy to také him back. 7 / many yearg the convention. alter- Lp cre peepeertel nated between Fargo. and Grand:|40 BUSHELS: BARLEY’ THRES Forks, and thi the first ‘conven-| | James » NLD. Ang. 8—A tion held in Bismarck. A, greater | of barley.om the Gon Jensvold number of draggists from’ western | near Jgmestown, the first th North Dakota are here than ever: of the setson in this before, | trom 26 40-40; hushele. an Gere. and The Lahr Motor Sales. company, | wad of It was threshed + ‘distributors of Willys-Knight and i Overland tars, have furnished “cou: . esy cars” for the Aug. HED. | ty problem in collecting seed and jeld:| feed liens, as the result of the recent rm | supreme. court decision holding liens ing | are good only on the erop for. which vielnity, ylelded | seed“ was furnished. COLLECTIONS Minot, N.D., Aug. 8—That Ward = «y| county intends to collect its seed lien |. pedantic Baek He seat claims from all able to pay or to didn't Usten right and the chief | obtsin judgments, is the declaration ! u They said|of August Krantz, ch@irman of the Ward county. commission, in, com- menting on reports in several news-'| papers that the county faced a knot- Outstanding unpaid sced and feed person ths Mate farctabet sont sad were fyrni rt ‘feed. rests 192%) total about: " Lhasa tot to figures: ‘oficials, pose of selecting an official new: paper.” — After quoting the section relating (Continued on: Page Three) Shoplifterg Are Held’ in Minot Minot, N. Ds Aug, 8—Minot police are seeking to clear up the mystery’ ff ‘Fecent shoplifting from two stores ere. “Mae Belle Shupe, was ar- rested /here when police found arti- cles of clothing alleged to have been taken from the looteq stores. Jay ‘ Request Revoked ;, At the opening of the hearing yes- terday afternoon Prosecuting Attor- Hey Bippus announced that the re- quisition on: which Governor McCray il months ago asked extradition of/Olsén shad been revoked, and pre- sebted idavits and requisition ecutive. » indixtments on which the first xtradition was asked were quashed by the circuit court of Vanderburgh fogunty, tadlana’'ta which the matter had been sent on change of venue, reek M 21, and, W. 25, were | he paid. - ; tao a a both be! ound ina}, BR. Sinkler, Minot attorney, rep- ‘| roém, at hotel with the woman, | Fésenting Olson, was taken by éur- }prise' by the presenting of new - Wontineed on: Page Three) police aay, An--effort to definitely yeatablish ‘the ‘Identity of articles found is being made; ‘ ATTENDANTS AT PRESIDENT’S BIER Washington, /Aug. 8.—Laddie Boy said his last good-bye to his master in the East Room of the ‘hite House this morning and there may be some hard hearts who think he couldn’t know, but it seemed to those about him as i who loved’ Lad- die. Boy no less than her ‘hus- boys) did,-told ale sheridan ets whose apecial charge the pup has been te take him in the East | Room’ for a moment because he seemed to want to go. Alertly he - eniffed the heavy air, freighted with the fragrance of the fun- eral blooms, walked silently ound the great crystal chande- ind poked his nose in the as if looking for the master he k ras th but could not then’ turned brown ¢: the White House attaches with ah inquiring look which was too much for them to endure without theit own eyes turning misty, 8 Laddie Boy knew his master was back in the house but he. -aeemed to ‘sense that. for some _Teeaon he coulin’t. see him. and like a good dog he concitided. there was hing to do but fe the towering capitol a mile away. E ‘At the same time « bugler came to the portico and sounded. shrilly. tne single note of the aoldier’s call to at- tention.. ‘The cavalry opposite on the avenue came to a: sharp salute with their blades flashing in the spnlight. Then there: was a flurrgef the drums just es the guns of Fort Mc\-

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