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WEATHER Fair and Ts r tontght,’ Sat- urday. somewhat ‘unsettled. ESTABLISHED 1873 nes aaa COUNTY UNIT PLAN UP . D. E. A, will Additional news of N. be found on page tw \ kota Education Association FOOTB A LL GAME , Is Held This Afternoon at; cardo Martin Sing Tonight; > . {Dakota Educational association con- Successful Gathering jvention here today were torn be- admonishment of their president afd attend the full afternoon session of the state high school championship | football game Yetween Fargo and | President W. C. Stebbins of Grand | Educators of North Dakota today| Forks, told the ‘teachers aati want or not the cost of education is too | session. The jiot referring tv great and whether the educators are! the football came directly, he made of the maintenance of the school doubt among tne teachers as to whats system. {he meant. | attering applause. { discussed by President Thomas F.' President St.bbins told the teach- | | | || Final ‘Session of North Da- ‘STEBBINS RAPS Auditorium—To Hear Ric- as the Final Act of the| Many teachers attending the North tween two desires--one to heed the the convention and the other to sce Minot. met squarcly the question of whether their duty to atiend the convention responsible for the increasing cost a strong statement which left no His ‘statement brought { They heard the! financial question! Kane of the University of North Da-'ers that tie question of school fi- kota, J. G. Gunderson, president of nances is a b+ one and that if a the North Dakota Taxpayers Associa-~ successful attuck is made on the tion, Harold Wakefield of Neche and educational system it will be by this President C, C. Swain of the Mayville | avenue. Normal school. | “Youveannot remain indifferent to | The financial symposium was ar-| the financial situation,” he said. “We ranged by President W. C. Stebbins have on the afternon program a very and others of the executive commit-; important discussion of school fi- tee, and President Stebbins, em-!Nances by leading citizens of the phasizing the importance of the State. It is the duty of every teach- question, told the teachers that if/ eT to be prestnt/ any successful attack is made upon; . “! regret that I feel that it is my | the school system it will be made on! duty to announce a program in these the ground that it is too expensive.| Words, but I feel it my duty osthe The situation must be faced by the Cause of education in, North Dakota to do 50.” Leaner for the good of the state,! “Waite the football game was ex- Washington, N. C., Nov, 23.—Tha i i ’ | pected to start at 3 p. m. it was not The financial symposium, together iii 61, the convention session would with an open discussion of business end wertEgsbip mn problems, formed the closing pro-; 3 did ecadiree gram for the general session of the i association this afternoon. WHEAT TARIFF | The county unit of school adminis- tration, under which a county board| ‘of educati¢n would replace scores of 1 township boards, was expected to be t discussed. There are many educators: here who desire that the resolutions| of the convention, which called for! state and county boards with jow- amplified witha mof® detailed Policy| Depends Largely’ Upon Rule of the association, Although there! was no definite proposal to go be-| Of Comparisons, Says Con- fore the body, it was expected that! A specific proposals would arrive out; Sressman George Young of the discussions. \ A recommendation was to be made to the association by Secretary M. vention be eliminated each year in| largely on the rule of comparisons” the section of the state in which the| which may be adopted by the mem- gtate convention is held, He point-|bers of the U. S. Tariff Commis- ed out today that it a useless| sion, before whom wheat hearings duplication to have had a southwest-' are to begin next Monday, accord- ern teachers convention in Dickin-| ing to the view expressed today by son when the state convention was| Congressman George M. Young of scheduled for Bismarck. Petitions} North Dakota. Young say: modern language sections of the| follow the rule which has been de- state association also were to come| Clared from time to time by ‘d'ffer- before the body, ent officials of the Commission that the average cost of production Membership Over 4,000 in the United States must be com- Sceretary McCurdy announced that} pared with the average cost in that the membership of the association,| particular country which furnish- which was 3,60@ last year, had been} es the most keen competition? If brought today through mail receipts hard to show a difference of more to slightly more than. 4,000. thon 30c per bushel, the present The convention: proper’ ends this| tariff rate, between’ the cost of afternoon and tonight Riceardo Mur-| Production in Canada and the Unit- tin, noted tenor, will give ‘e concert] ed States. Or will they adopt a before the body. rule to make the comparison be- Numerous banquets and reunions| tween the particular kind of wheat were on the program for this even- being imported and the ie kind ing. Ceunty Unit Up NEXT MONDAY er to name their executive agents, be! E. McCurdy that the sectional’ con-| tariff dut‘es seems to depend. very for the creation of penmanship and| “Will the Tariff Commission so, many people believe it will be and dues payments at the convention, ‘of wheat produced in the. United States? In that case the cost of producing’ hard wheat in Canada j will be compared with the cost cf Lage a hard wheat in the Unit- ed States, and it would be easy to show that even if the present: tariff were increased fift; r cent it would not measure the ait ference in the cost of production between these two countries.” Young “Will appear before the Tariff Commission next Monday and make an argument in favor of ‘that construction of the law which will enable them to compare the cost of Canadian hard wheat with American hard wheat. The records show that the only wheat imported from Canada since the enactment, of -the Fordney-Mc- canker pee bese hard area, ere have been heavy exports 0! soft wheat fron?the United State: ‘nd absolutely no démand for it from: other countries. Committees Report ‘Reports from the various commit- | tees were heard at the’conclugion of the ‘yesterday’s afternoon seesion. The treasurer reported total receipts July 1, 1922 to June 30, 1923 amount- ed to $11,638.75 of which $740 cdme from life members; $9070 from an- nval memberships, from July 1 to Jan, 31; $491.75 from annual mem- berships Jan. 31 to’ June 30; $1065. from principal and interest on note due ciation; $12 from interest on Grand Forks City warrant; $260 re- fund from MM, O. Pippin, over ment of southwestern division's share, The net cash on hand July 1, 1923 was $448.04. At the request of the secretary and treasurer it was decided that an accountart. should be employed to audit the. books of the company. The legislative committee reported ‘that they had concentrated upon few bills instead of spreading their | tional president of the American Le- chances for an increase of wheat j Mrs. Franklin Lee Bishop of Lei- cester, Mass., has been elected na-j gion Auxiliary for the comtng year. RESOURCES OF STATE LISTED BY J. M. DEVINE Tells St. Paul Advertising Club’ that North Dakota Has Remarkable Variety SHOWS POSSIBILITIES! SES Land Is Cheapest and Most Profitable on the Conti- nent, He Asserts St. Paul, Minn. Nov. 23.—-Nerth Dakota’s iesources were laid before members of the St. Paul Advertising Club here at a luncheon talk by Com- missioner of Immigration Joseph M. Devine. Mr. Devine,in tabloid form, recled off facts to show the accom- plishments of the state and the pos- sibilities for the future, and in clos- ing made a plea for faith in his state. Mr. Devine talks at 7:80 o'clock. to- night from radiq station WAG, Minneapolis.” Mr. Devine listed resoutces as follows: Duketins’ Know Your Own State Noré"Dakoti’ tias, 70,000 square miles ‘of fifid. . North Dakota is 7 1-2 times as large as the State of New Jersey and 1-2 larger than the State of New York. These two states have a po- pulation of 16,000,000. North Dakota has a population of 700,000. North Dakota’s agricultural land under intelligent diversification can support a population of 10,000,000, North Dakota has 45,000,000 acres of areable land. Enough good land to make a farm of 160 acres for 2,812,000 home seekers, North Dakota has 28,000,000 acres in farms of which 18,000, on is under cultivation. North, Dakota deads all atetes in the production of No, 1 hurd wheat. She produces one-seventh of this wheat in this country and’ the best wheat in the world. - North Dakota producés more chan one-half of the flax crop of the Unit- ed States, 9,600,000 bushels. Norh Dakota produced . 17,000,000 bushels ®f corn im 1919.° The est® mated production for ghis yeur. is, 29,000,000. . Within tem years’ North Dakota will {row to bertone: of the great corn producing states in ‘this country. North Dakota land measured by what it can produce consistently and profitably is the cheapest, best land on this continent. North Dakota is producing as good a milch cow as Wisconsin and Minn- esota, and population considered, ite ing it more rapidly, In 1919, dai products amounted to $17, 9,000, The estimated value of dairy. pro- ducts for 1923 is $33,000,000. , North Dakota can produce as good A steer, hog, horse or sheep as can Towa‘ or Illinois and round them up for the market as cheaply with our corn, alfalfa and sweet clover. North Dakota is soon to. be one of the great poultry states” *This| year we will sell under a conserva- tive estimate 1,500,000 turkeys, and North Dakota’s energies over a large amount of space. They sponsored the bili for inereased qualifications for teachers; the elimination of holidays, w Be passed; the attendance officer’s Mill, which failed; and gave their backing to the Children’s Code laws, 20 of which became law. No report was given by the ‘nccro- logy committee or constitution com- mittee. CITY GORS ON Certificates of Indebtedness The city of. Bis k has. gone on Minot F ‘ans a acash basis, for the first time in Claim Executive] "*",2" ‘ % Under Ww law: permitting the sale of ci of eighteen months maturity, in an- ticipation of tax payments, the city commission: his sold $88,000 worth of certificates, ‘Part were taken by Minneapolis financial firms, part by a Glen. Ulin bank and part locally. The’ cates rere sold. at-pam ang, 7 cont i ett chy bits i iiHlsbe pall Minot claimefC or RB, A, Nes- tos as a rodter for+the high school “-team in the staté championship foot- ball game here this‘afternoon. — The governor was not certain if he would ‘beable to attend the but he bap tee and he also wanted CASH BASIS cates of indebtedness,’|. because of special quality command the top price in the markets of Chi- cago and New York, Jn 1919, poul- try products amounted ‘to $2,712,000. The estimated value of poultry pro- ducts for this year is $10,500,000. North Dakota will soon be the leading bee state, both in quantity and quality of honey production. In 1920, the State had 708 hives of bees. This year, 1923, we have 13,000 hives ayid the estimated production is 1,- 700,000 pounds. The North Dakota ‘Bureau of Crop Estimates show, in 1922, duproduction of 167 pounds per hive, which was the highest record i state, both as to size, qualfty ana ‘ease of ‘production. the North Da- kota \potato is eagerly, sought by Eastern consumers and Southe tato growers. for ee ing ‘sweet clover state, both ‘for . Paced and feed. _ Continued om page’). BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, aa Pam a ee ee FARGO WINS STATE CHAMPIONSHIP ELECTED COUNT TOLSTOY |KLAN PUBLICITY » SEES NEW RUSS; DEMANDBEFORE NATION RISING. LEGISLATURE Communism Has Now Passed, Bills Presented in Oklahoma Bolshevism Is | Losing House Yo Forbid Wearing " Ground, Life Is-Teaching fof the Mask | ISSUE NEAR Senate Takes Up, Question After Ousting J. C. 3 Walton VIOLENCE NO _ CURE TEST ON Tells Auditors That You Can- not Fight the ‘Bolsheviki With Own Weapons Count Illya Tolstoy, lecturer, phil- osopher and writer and son of the immortal Leo Tolstoy, gave 1500 peo- ple crowded into the city auditorium last night and intimate pieture of Russian life and an explanation of the catastrophic upheavals of his native land in the last five years. Count Tolstoy, lecturing here under the auspices of the Association of Commerce, as a compliment to the teachers, deeply impressed his aud- idnce with his sincerity and the cla ity of his analysis of the ;situation. Sount Tolstoy had beeg ‘announced us an opponent of the Soviet, He was not, however, an opponent of the “fire eating” sort—he discussed calmly and moderately the whole uation and the fundamental causes as he sees them, and pungured his lecture with numerous umorous sallies. An old man, distinguished in appearance, Count Tolstoy voiced throughout his talk a deep sympathy for his country. He predicted Bolshevism would pass and Russia would emerge anew, greater than ever. Hate and vio- lence will not conquer the Bolshevik: howe®tr, he said.. Love and tolera- tion, the teachings of his father, will. solve the problem. “Life, the great teacher of us- Bi! is curing the ills of Russia,” he ‘sai Count Tolstoy has been a resident of America for six years, living in Connecticut. He has traveled. all over the country and has been in North Dakota’ before, more than once. He spoke perfect English, In the beginning he spoke of the underlying structure of Rusgian greatness. 2 Knows Soul of Nation * “Too many people go to Riissia and. stay eight or ten days and then come back and they are, authorities on the situation,” he said, “I know something that these authorities do not know—TI know the,soul of the na- tion.’ Seventy, percent. of the Russian peasants, he said, are illiterates, but added that illiteracy is not always! ignorance. The Russia peasant, he said, knows the traditions and high ideals of the past—he has wisdom. He has the inspiration of centuries of achievement and this, he) said, why Russia had produced so mucl great literature, so many great ar- tists. The Russian peasant, he said, is at onec the foundation and buck- bone of Russia. One other class, he said, is reepan- sible for the creation of Russia—the Gducated class. They sre idealists and care not_for money, he said, They have produced ‘great’ works of science, literature, philosophy. With these people, he said, a man who had too much money was looked up- on,,with suspicion. The programgof the Bolshevism is communism, he said—equslity, no one to have more than another, Capi- talism is the enemy 6f Bolshevism and therefore must be destroyed, and a new structure built from the ground. This, he said, was the pro- gram of the Bolsheviki when they. gained control in Russia. The tevolution, he said, was sup- ported by. the two worst elements in Russia, the workmén ‘and the pro- fessional soldiers. The workmen, he said are not to be compared to what are known as American workmen, The Russ workmen are unskille iliterate and usually are in. the cities because. they have left families in the country, he said. They con- stitute a small class. The Russian people, Count Tolstopy who declared he was fer democracy, had been enslaved by capitalism and the autocrats.s Is Punishment “Bolshevism,” he said, “was the punishment for, the” enslavement of Russia, and also the reaction from the w: The motto of the revoluti ists, he aid, was “rob the robber.” Their conception of nationalization was distribution of property. They lost their incentive tq work under the communistic idea” that evéry man would get the same. It isa law of human nature that man will not work without incentive, he said, Here, he said, began the disrup- tion of Russia—factories stopped, railwAys had to shut down, factories closed their doors. He cited a few, comparisions of the purchasing value of products, Whereas, he said, in the old days the prices of a shirt equalled 40 pounds of ground it now equals 690 pounds of grain. So, he said, the peasant does not. sell his grain. The -factories are closed, buginess. disrupted, peop! ecapnot buy. The peasant is now: wearing’ homespun clothes again, he uses sticks to make a fire instepd of kerosene, he uses honey. for sugar: “People,” he said, are returning to the _primjpive: lif \ The ‘Bolshevik, cannot es on with their program, he asserted. The Bol- _ (Continued on page two) ~ y Oklahoma City, Nov. 23.—(By the Associated Press)—The state senate today in what is regarded as the first test of strength of the Ku Klux Klan elements and those opposing the organization rejected an amendment to the Klan’ bill under . consideration which would have provided for the filing with county officers semi-annually a lst of officers and members of secret orders. The vote was 13 to 23, Oklahoma City, Nov. 23.—Consider- ation of anti-Ku Klux Klan measures was renewed by tha upper house of the legislature today with a view by Proponents of such legislation of establishing an act which would de- finitely remové the secrecy under which the organization operates by compeling it to make public mem- bership rolls and forbid the wearing of masks in public. A substitute bill drafted by a legis- lative committee incorporating these and other provisions contained in numerous separate measures intro- duced in both houses of the legis- lature is being pass@# on section by section by the senat A motion to eliminate entirely from the bill the two sections stipu- lating that lists of officers be filed by all secret organizations with county and state officials and that complete membership lists be certi- fied and made available for public inspection semi-annually was before the senate when it reconvened to- day. »Prolonged argument over these two clauses prevented definite ac- tien on some of the provisions yes- terday. A vote on the measure probably will not be taken before Monday. “The umendment was under discus sion throughout most of the session yesterday. After its failure a ae tute was introduced _providin; that names of officers shall be filled once a yer and that each organiza- tion shall be charged with correct- ing membership rolls three times annually and keeping them always avgilable for Public inspect inspection, WALLACE IS DENIED BOOKS - BY PACKERS Louis Swift Says That Courts Must, Order Him to Disclose Chicigo, Nov. 23—The next move in the action to have an examination by the government of account of Swift and Company rests with - the United States Department of Agri culture following a letter sent to Se- cretary Wallace by L. F. Swift, pres- ident of the company, refusing to open the books to federal. authcri- ties, “Only by direct court action will the accounts be opened,” Mr, Swift said. “If the government has the power to maintain accountants per- manently in our office as it claims the government also would have the power to establish such accountants permanently in all business offices in the country, a situation which we ‘believe is unthinkable.” LEAGUE OUT. JUST 2 YEARS Many Changes Have Taken Place in State Government It was just two years ‘ago today that the Nonpartisan League passed out of the major control-6f the state government. On November 23, 1921, Governor Nestos, Attorney ; General, / Johnson | and Commissioner of Agriculture Kitchen, elected in the recall elec- tion, were inducted into office, with Tnaugural exercises conducted in, the state capitol. Since that time Mr. Ibhnson has been elected to the su- preme bench and succeeded by Attor- ney Shafer, whife Governor: Nestos. and Mr, Kitchen were Uta) for ‘terms expiring in January, $925. Many officials ,in the state house today. were reviewing the great changes wiich have then place “in the- state “government the “pre CK TRIBUN led off for Fargo but was penalized | 1928 PRICE FIVE CENTS TEAMS CLASH IN CHAMPIONSHIP. COMMUNISTS’ GAME ON HARD, DISSOLUTION ON HARD, FAST GRIDIRON 1S DEMANDED General Von Seekt Orders Also Confiscation of All of Party’s Funds Good Weather For Players, Bit Chilly For Fans, With>Mod- erate Wind Blowing Is Dished Out For Championship Classic-Minot Band Furnishes Music for the Game rgo Minot PROHIBITS MEETINGS The lineap) for t s football, v for four and first down, Rusch sare . ; Pallas shed throug} center for four and ohnson LE Amsler Fargo was penalized. Minot was ‘ocal \. Geo. Moc LE Hills penalized rds for interfering Unequiy Vote: of Com Blair LG Stearna » th uscr. Amsler reeovered] dence Is Demanded by Fuller C Corbett (capt) Rusch's fumble-on 45-yard line, Me Gil Moc RG Peterson Mino: kicked, After Bassett gained German Chancellor Chaney RT Kelly two, Fargo was penalized 16-yarde sass Fisher (capt.) RE Hansell for holding. Berlin, Nov. 23—Stresemann Rusch Q Ward Minot braced this quarter and| Government resigned late today McNeese LH Dunnell: played Fargo more than even part off as a result of its defeat in, Bassett RH Wal alrath | time, Both teams struggled with-| Reichstag on confidence vote. Rindlaub F Tompkins’ out success in middle field, resorting , to frequent: punts. First half ended Minot and Fargo high school teams as Walrath for Minot made first down met this afternoon on the local grid- on Fargo’s 30-yard line. Just before iron to settle the state high school half Olson was substituted for Gil championship. The field was lined; Moe of Fargo. with a crowd estimated at 2500, and: Third Quarter the day was fine. for football but; Dunnell for Minot kieked off to chilly for spectators, ; Rusch who retu@ied 10 yards to the Jackson of Minnesota was named } 32-yard line. her kicked outside referee, Rogers of Minnesota was to the 48-yard line. /Dunnell made named umpire and Upshaw of James- one yard, Johnson 3 and Dunnell lost town head linesman. 15, Bassett intercepted a pass on the Minot won the toss and chose to 40-yard line. Rusch gained three defend the west goal. Fuller kick-! but McNeese lost three, Bassett made three yards. and because a Fargo player was off side: Fisher punted to Grinnell who re- and ball was put into play on Miuot's turned to Minot's 30 Yard line, Wal- 83-yard line. Walrath and Dunnell rath gained 5 yards. Grinnell made made three yards for Minot and 2 on two plays and Amsler’ punted Minot was penalized 15 yards for to the 15 yard ‘line. Bassett made NOTE FAILS Berlin, Nov, 23.—(By the Asso- ciated Press)—The Stresemann government was defeated on the question of confidence in the Reichstag today by a vote of 155 for the resolution expressing confidence and 230 against it. Because of this adverse vote the cabinet, it in announced, will re- tire. AGREEMENT MADE Duesseldorf, Nov. 23—(By the Associated Press)—The leaders of industry in the Ruhr valley with whom the French authori- ties have been negotiating for the resumption of operations in the industrial plants signed an holding. Minot punted for Rusch on five yards for Fargo McNeese two| agreement with the French ‘to- the 14-yard line. Rusch made three and Bassett added’ three for first] day. around right end. Bassett made a down. f yard and half through tackle and; After three plays Fargo punted Rusch tore ‘around left end for 15 over the goal line and Minot put the yards bringing the ball to the 21- ball in play on her 20 yard line. yard line, Time was taken out for! Dunnell made three and Walrath Rusch who was slightly injured but five yards. Fisher recovered Minot's he stayed in the game with a bad fumble on the 28-yard line. Mc- ankle, Rusch lost 3-yards on an end Neese made 4 through guard. Time play, Fargo was penalized 15-yatd.'was taken out for ‘Chaney, Fargo's Rusch returned the ball 12 ya tackle. Fisher made 2 on a fake and around left end. Rindlaub made six Bassett made his first down on the yards on a fake pass through the line! 15-yard line. Bassett and Rindlaub Rusch failed to gain and Minot took ffiled to gain through the line and the ball on her 20-yard line. ! Rusch lost 3 yards around left end. Minot made one yard on a line’ Rusch failed on a pass ‘to Fisher on plunge lost a yard on a fumble and the ll-yard line and the ball re- then punted to Bassett on the 36 verted to Minot on her ten yard yard line. Bassett made 2 yards, line, through fight tackle. Fishe, Fargo; Amsler punted 20 yard to Ruseh., right end took a forward pass ‘from’ A pass Rindlaub to Johnson put the Rusch and squirnied through 20 ball on Minot's 12 yard line at the yards for a touchdown after 5 min- end of the third quarter, utes of play. Rusch dropped*kicked'' Score: Fargo 13; Minot 0. Berli Von Seekt, national coinmander of the Riechswehr, today ordered’ the dis- solution of the German communist party and the confiscation of its iunds, His decree also prohibited the holding of communist meetings and the publication of communist news- papers. It was later stated that the dis- solution order also applied to. all n: tionalists and national socialist party organizations. The order fell like a bomb shell on the Reichstag this morning and seemed likely to have a decisive bearing on the attituee ef thewe parties in the present situation toward the Stresemann government. The communists were especially goal. Score Fargo 7 Minot, 0. ; : furious and angry scenes were en- Rusch made six yards off tackle} _ FOURTH QUARTER acted in the Reichstag over General and Bassett added, twe in the same’, McNeese made a yard and a halfyyon Seekt’s sudden and drastic thru guard. Rhindlaub made 6 | sands bringing the ball to the 4 Hansell threw Bassett for a b-yard! Sord line, | time was taken out for loss and Rusch made 10 yards around, they center on the two yard. linc end. Bassett made five yards at ; first down on the 3-yard line. Rind-,“cNeese went over right guard 5 F for a tpuch down. Rusch too kick- laub took » fake side line play for 3 yards and touch down, Rusch miss- g2 S08! Score Fargo 20; Minot ed goal. Score Fargo 13, Minot 0. Fuller kicked to Ward who re- turned 10 yatds to the 37 yard line. Minot made 2 yards on ‘two line plays and punted. Rusch fumbled on an end run and Minot recovered the' ball on Fargo’s 43 yard line. Minot made first down just as the quarter ended with the ball ‘on Fargo's 33 yard line. Second Quarter McNeese intercepted a Minot pass on the 48-yard line. Vanderslos was substituted for Ward, Minot’s qua: ter. Fuller punted to Dunnell on Two line plays measure, RELEASE KRUPP DIRECTORS. Bel Nov. 23,—All the directors of the Krupp plant who were impri oned last spring on charges of re- sistance to the French, growing out of. the rioting at. the Krupp plant on March 31 have been released, says a dispatch from Cologne today. manner. Rindlaub made first down. The ball was on Minot’s 13-yard line. “Thomas was _gubstituted for Chaney of Fargo.” Rusch made a short kickoff “and Fargo recovéred a fumble on the 43-yard line. A pass was incomplete but another pass Rusch to McNeese made 8 yards. Rusch kicked to Bunnell on Minot’s 8 yard line. Amsler kicked to Far- go’s 32-yard line. Thomas made 2 yards. A pass Rusch to McNeese last 5 yards and another pass was in- complete. Thomas failed in an at- tempt at drop kick. Minot took the ball on her 20 yard line made 2 rds on a pass, Walrath added three and then again smashed through for three yards. Bassett in- tercepted a pass on+Fargo's 40 yard dine. A Fargo pass was incomplete. Minot was penalized 15 yards for holding. Fisher punted to Dunnell on Fargo's 45 yard line. Fuller intercepted. a Minot pass on the 50 yard line. Thomas made a yard through guard. There were three miniftes left to play. Rusch tore off 15. yards around left end, McChesney went in for Johnson. Bas- sett: made five yards through tackle and Rusch went around end for 20 yards putting the ball on the ‘yard line, Fisher made 3 yard Rusch made one yard. Bassett put the ball on the six yard,line. Rind- Taub drove over guard for the touch down, Rusch. missed goal. Score: Fargo 26; Minot 0. Rusch kicked off and-after a few eB: RAYA the game ended. The announcement from Cologne apparently represents another tech- nical step in the freeing of the Krupp directors. They wera impris- oned after their Conviction at Wer- den on May 8. They ‘ave been actu- ally out of jail for nearly a month, having been released on parole Octo- ber 25. The release came about through negotiations with the French by the directors as a result of which an agreement was signed for the re- opening of the Krupp plants in tho Ruhr,and their continued operation. yard penalty spoiled the gains. Am- sler kicked out of bounds on the 22-yard line. Fargo was penalized e yards, off side. Rusch gained three around end and kicked outside to Minot on Fargo's 31-yard line. Tompkins plowed through right tackle for six yards, Dunnell niide a half yard and then five for first down on the 20-yard line. Minot lost five and then made first down on a forward pass on the 15-yard line. Walrath made a yard and Tompkins | added three. Dunnell failed to gain and a pass , was not completed, ball going to Fargo on her 11-yard line. Fisher punted, Minot made eight yards on two plays but failed to make first down. Bassett for Fa go slashed through guard for si yards. McNeese went through cen- ERLENMEYER BACK HOME IN BISMARCK, AND GLAD OF IT William Erlenmeyer and family have returned to Bismarck. Seventeen years of North Dakota and the west made impossible the fogs, the gases, smoke and congest- ed centers about Philadelphia and New York, regarded as the most thickly settled area in the world. He has returned west for elbow room and independence—the lure of ) the east is shattered; the green pas- RIOTS OVER FOOD. Dusseldorf, NOV. 23.—One poliee- man was killed and two others wounded during riotous demonstra- tions by the unemployed in Germany yesterday. One policeman lost his life in similar disorders at Rott- heusen, near Gelsenkirchen. Considerable pillaging was car- ried out by the demonstrators, who to be planning to conduct manifestations of a like character in Bochum today. DEMANDS VOTE. ~ Berlin, Nov. 23.—An unequivoca? vote of confidence was demanded of the Reichstag today by Chancellor Stresmann, who informed the legis- lature that he did not propose to re- tain office on the strength of the in direct approval which would be ac- corded him by the rejection of in- dependent “no confidence” resolu- tions introduced by the socialists and German nationalists! Neither of these, he pointed out, would be able in the present situation to command the majority necessary to unseat him, The government, asserted Dr. Stresemann, declined. to be made the beneficiary of party tactics and would onty continue in office on be- ing given a clearly defined vote of confidence. The three partics in the Reichstag immediately introduced 1 vote to this effect. Mississippi. river again it won't be from choice.” The story of Erlenmeyer probably will be written by others in the fu- ture just as it had been in the past. Closing up his cigar plant in this city last summer he went back to his old job in Pennsylvania for the cigar trust. It did not seem the same, The fogs rolled ‘over the hills mixed with the smoke of soft coal and the tures, he says, are here not over| fumes of natural gas. The fine, crisp, the hill ozone of*North Dakota was missed. Bismarck, he finds, has @ hearty'| Family conneetions, the associations welcome, the air is superb and his hood were not potent enough little shop on Thifd street will be| against the call of the page ahad out the old cigar brands in| Erlenmeyer says th is nothing * fy weeks. ‘| like the welcome of the west, where foley has the right -idea,” seid | the handclaspis alittle stronger. He Erlenmeyer today in his letter back'} is here to stay and figs will be grow- ‘home. ing on lemon: trees. if he is ever shout the is comet) ‘irresistable chught ey east again. f out the west an ismarck he Bt of ig appar ‘wibin: you, fitd me enst of tlie, ae BLOCKS OF HARDING. MEMORIAL STAMPS SOUGHT FOR FRAMING Washington, Nov. 23.—Btoeks of unperforated Harding memorial stamps, in any pantie up to. 400,