The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1924, Page 8

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PAUE EIGHT WOOLEDGEIS ATTACKED BY J.B. CAMPBELL Mandan Man, Named at Val- ley City Ouster Meeting, Statement Issues SAYS MAJORITY Asserts Minot Man Was Oust- ed as State Chairman by Clear Majority ACTED M 2--Gaius 5. Wool ousted by a clear Democratic « mittee at the Valley Cit nference called by Henry Holt ( E. Campbell, elected ehairm to succeed Mr. Wooled n tutement issued to North Du kota Democrats today. Mr. Camp: hell's statement follows: Mandan, North Dakota wiose eietey aie January 90, 124. Gordie Dann, sccrctar To North Dakota Demoert oe VISCHTSIN® As the newly elected Chairman of neniy secrolrg to epresentnlive the Democratic State Central Com k mittee I deem it my duty to set forth for your information the following facts touching upon recent action of | Whol Mys second? ce I ate Sommittee: Ht E to) Minot iin! {that this meetir Moh i the State Comm: sttee | January |! called by | ¢ This meeting Secretary Henry Holt on x large number of committ s Demo. inst the nominees to| 1 expect | # themsely worked: by men now ¢ rats who hi vetion of Democratic ite and Federal office felt that they were entitled to hay the Minot meeting will be men), nu meeting to consider pla jlikad, Nelson Kelly of rand Fe 3 Jin ming Presidential Primary E: publicly admitted et tion. meetin, ituanued meeting in Grand Forks that he had | ¢ twenty-four members, a clear m zainst O'Connor in the 19 I would expeet also to find }1 hacia Geel Minot meeting men calling nuous efforts of Mr, Wooledge to| themselves Democrats of the type of prevent the meeting being held. More | Thomas Maloney of Ramsey County, committeen n were present at ig than were pres. at Bismarck when Mr. Wooledge | elected Chairman in September, | At the Valley City meeting a} by a rising vote deposing Mr. Wool- edge as Chairman on account of his persistent refusal to allow the Com mittee to meet, The whole twenty- resolution commending his stand in| the | Who ha solution was unanimously adopted | i ur committeemen also refused to| apts the resignation tendered by} dates who were unanimously recom- Henry Holt and passed a{ mended by a majority of the Stated Committee in its meeting at Valley League Re rnor and supported eve ndidate for ( publican Iam enclosing a list of the candi with |” I believe you will agree shed on his place ist. K ie volfice assistants to representatives in Congress. Lett th Mant: |Ugual vaudeville acts will be pre- Simmons of Nebr 1 Dunn, secretary to Representative | sented between acts. THe cast ap- ry to, Representativ ighlin of Nebraska; Marge Dunn Weir, | pearing in “The Rube Teacher and Mondelly and Jem Dunn, se ry to Representative Clarke ot New | His Krazy Kids,” is as follows: | Teacher J. M. Golden si isy Short garet Boehm NHALING GAS | FUMES FATAL TO ZEELAND MA dD Napoleon, N Feb John Klindt of Zeeland met death whaling gas fumes of the runni ngite of his car in a small ¢ on Saturday of| started the ¢ h the intenti batteries Saturda hed an hop. | one | He United tes Senator since 1916,[tered the shed which awas E ie who is now Chairman of the | filled with gas. W he remained of Directors of the North Da there too long Mrs, Kiaudt sent eles Nen ei lenniLt one of the children to call her | published in Bis yfhusband, the child pack John Bloom, My democracy is not {telling her mama that yr would ‘of that type and I am not ready for [NOt answer. M . went | that kind of harmony then to t d and found i 1 ‘ > on the run s head l¢ and > at the de y slightly noned help, the mecting L to Wooledge is now} me whenl you look over the list and] \, Mr. Y appeal to Democrats Study their records, t you willl away, He, must to come to ot to bolster up his|find the entir list’ is made up. of I eenvelnn yagi seater local club meeting to be held there | men and women who during the last the shed, on February 7th, ‘This Jo Minot | Six or seven years have stood sheuld- | srength to club apparently org: nd} er to shoulder in support of every | Gown on the designed to promote the | real Demaeratic tic I feel that he was found in d candidacy | we can be pr toe such a ticket of H. H. Perry for National Commit He leaves to an, At one ofits first meet-|March 18th and I respectfully com r ings a motion was carried to make! mend the list to your careful ifves- the old. | this endorse for Perry, ‘The! tigation and consideration. ost eleven years also five motion was made by a man whe ac-} Assuring you that 1 deeply appre: | yrothers and 1 Vciate the honor has been con-/aeed mother. wi ndidacy of J. F D0, aus} United] tively opposed tt oy governor i ndidacy the in 1922, and who h known as avowed Non-Partisan League | ne last three cam- hairman — Wooledge supported this: motion and voted for| the endorsement. He is now ranting against endorsements being made by | a majority of the State Committee} representing than half the! counties of the State. Apparently he thinks that he, through his . local! club, has a divine right to pick can-| didates for the whole State. y | more, the State Committee had noj{ vight to meet unless he said so, and| the place of meeting must have the | proper local color, that is, the meet- | ing must be held under the auspices of the Wooledge-Perry club at Minot. | And now he expounds the sanctity | of the Primary Election Law which he by his vote in his local club weeks ago attempted to nullify. 1 be- | lieve every real Democrat in the | State will resent such high-handed | procedure in the interest’ of any | Senate n openly of in porter didates paigns mor | six | an Wooledge, Mr. Perry | s have been busy writ: | ing Democrats about the necessity | of harmony. When Wooledge and | Perry met at Minot over a year ago and Mr, D and picked in secret conference an “executive committee,” what kind of harmony were they seeking for the | ? When Wooledge | Minot club | Democratic party? Slast month in his local voted to endorse H. H. Perry for| National Committeeman, thus at- tempting to force the State Commit tee, if it ever had a meeting, to fol low his examples, what kind of | mony was he seeking for the Demo-| cratic party? When he refused to! call a meeting of the State Commit- | tee and after it was called at Valley City, issued his famous “Verboten”| proclamation, forbidding any one} from attending a meeting where he| was not present, what sort of har- mony was he working for? I do not lay claim to any unusual intelligence, | but I do insist that these various | acts clearly show that the only kind of harmony these men are working for is the kind that will allow them to control the Federal patronage if} we elect a Democratic president. As a Democrat who has supported Dem-| ocrats for almost half a century, I) am- not willing to accept that plan/ of harmony. I will not insult your intelligence as Ex-Chairman Wooledge has done by advising you that you must not attend any meeting where I am not! present. In the performance of du-| ‘ties as Chairman I do not plan to! use the “Verboten” code in my deal-| ings with Democrats. I-think any| Democrat has a right to attend any | meeting he wishes at any place. Per- sonally I shall not attend the Minot meeting, first, because I do not think ~ any local meeting anywhere has the right’ to attempt to force candidates upon. the whole State. The act of the Ex-Chairman ‘in voting for the endorsemént of Ferry long before ‘the State Committee could meet, followed by his ‘refusal to call the \ the Gas Hou: ferred upon me cting me to the |] high office of Chairman, and assur Jing you that I shall strive to main tain the inter our party against all who J destroy it for 4 the suke of patro am F Yours in hig ocratic victo i Chairman, | tral Committee. As They Vie With PHIN A Serv Brooklyn, N. freedom—is it le BY JO VAN DE GRIFT taf’ Writer » dan. 30.—This | to out- | do man in crime as she Iready sought to surpass him in business, art and polities. “Crimes among women ar ing in number a Mrs. Mary New York's | first policewoman and now s Vin. | vestigator with Police Commissioner Enright And not only that, but they're get. 1 ting As w seed qirl | bandit who has Brooklyn shopk-ep- ers so nervous that they just like that—whenever a customer tinkles the bell on the front door. Police thought they had the trou ple solved when th ped Helen | Quigley in jail. Helen i and pret- ty and her bobbed hair has a natural wave to it? How Flapper Bandit Operates. A girl of the flapper type would go into a store, ask for some face pow- der or a tooth brush and then, just as the shopkeeper was turning around— “Stick ’em up,” she’d say. and while she wagged a gun under the propri- etor’s nose her gentleman friend would enter by the~front door and remove everything from the cash reg- ister. Then they'd dash into a taxi and a couple of similar hold-ups before proceeding on their way to the movies, The only tronble was that. after the police had Helen all nicely tuck- ed away in jail the bobbed-hnired- girl bandit hold-uns kept right on. The girl bandit left, a note behind her. “The police,” said the note, “are a bunch of hokum. The girl they have arrested is the wrens one” It was sipned THE BOBRBED-HAIRED GIRL BANDIT, just like a movie thriller. Often Polder Than Men. This is Mrs. Hamilton's ¢xplana- tion: “Crimes among women as amon |* men.” she savs, “spring ‘ nrimarilv from the ganes—gangs bearine snch nietnrescne nmamee as the White Hand, the West Side Gonhers. the Hudson Dusters, the Forty Thieves, Gong. and the like. “mxist'ne between the | ganesters and their girls 1< a very remarkahle devotion. A virl will carry a vang- ster's eun with more oride than a suh feb ever wore a freternity vin. “It may be that certain of the eanesters are now dismising them- calves 8 irls 'n order to divert the-cuspicions of the nolica. “But crime among women is in- vh expectation of Dem- | \ neld Wednes: RELIC PRES | London ‘eb. 2. s-! oroush, Northamptonshire nirror, used probably omen of iashion who lived in ands about the ¢ * Casser’s nvasion of Britain (( B.C.) h cen presented to the British mu cum. The chasing on the back of | |Girl Bandits icon Police On The Jump Men In Many Crimes |” INVESTIGATES MRS, MARY HAMILTON INVESTIGATED o HELEN QUIGLEY fied the girl.band’t. ‘There is many a girl today whose one ambition is to be queen of the underworld. “Sometimes dope’s to blame. Some- times it’s something more insidious than dope—the lure of, silk stockings gonclusively.the object of the} creasing. Cheap movies have glori- !and finery.” . SISTERS FOR BEAUTY | th THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘THOME TALENT Photo copyright, [Marris & Ewing | hand, and to eastern is done by similarity the m hears cutious workmanship, FAMILY GETS, TO U.S. AFTER EIGHT YEARS Washburn, N. D., Feb. 2.—Endo- wife of Matt Dossenko, of jen, and his son George, ar- ed from Jedovska Greblia, State K f, Russia recently, after hav- | heen on the way one month and three days. Mr. Do: senks) started negotia- tions to have his family come to this country in 1917, but the war came on and all matters pertaining to the y in fact he was unable to communicate with n during 1917 to 1921. June 1922 he again took up them passage In le matter of getting and after obtaining the proper pa-; ers she ¥ able to come without any further trouble.” It took many efters and official papers, includ- | ing affidavits and copies of eiti- papers of Mr. Dogsenko, rded to the American Consul before she was able to get The most trowble she ha’ vis to leave Soviet Russia as it a] documents and y to leave. Mr. e constantly | ting with the steamship through which shecbtainea . the Cun ine, tate, Bank, on un, ag rd will senko left Russia country. Mr. in 1011 and expected to send fot h’s family soon he settled In 4 TLL HEALTH CAUSES SUICIDE] Pech, 2.—Venva Nor- ot, committed suicide shooting ‘herself this morning, according to the police. An gn- quest is to lhe held this afternoon. IN health is jeved to have been the cause o} N..D, Mi LINTON MAN Dy Ss iton, \N. D., & Jay R. for many Linton adena, as a result of a old’ disease, per- Linton relatives telegraph that Mr. nt, died at ago Sunday nicious aenemi; were notified ib; Johnson, a his ‘bed-s to reach his death, She was Pasadena before occurred only a few hours after the telegram was, sent. Come to ern Christian’ Quest.” Phone 1-100 Best of Service at the Lowest Cost Cars te Hire — Drive Them Yourself Just Call 1-100 J. R. BRYAN, Proprietor 113 Fifth Street Day and Night Service Bismarck, N. D. ONE DAY ONLY Auditorium FEB.4 Over The Hill NOT A MOVIE and: AUDEYVILLE school, DAYS * “Tuy ile. Minstrel stings 4p. m.. Chil n, 25¢, 0c. | Night Bs “is. goat aS at Harris & Woodman- Hares eos through | like this | Presbyterian Church Sunday evening: Feb. = 3rd, at 7:30. See the “Mod- So 4 CAST IS READY “Over The Hill” to be Pre- sented as St. Mary’s Benefit Everything was in readiness today for the presentation on Monday |, night-at the city Auditorium of the |" St. Mary’s benefit piay, “Over The Hill After’ two weeks of intensive re- hearsing Director Golden pronounc- ‘ed the cast as spf&ndid and ready to sive a fine production. The story of the play, in the belief of the di- rector and others, is especially ap- ind will delight the audi- author has wri a combination of comedy and he clever pathos, using just the right amount of each to make a thoroughly enjoy- able y. Those in the cast ar James Kiley, Joseph L. Clifford, Nicholas H. Wochle, James J. Walsh, Fyerett La France, Sua Cgrvin, Gertrude Fitzgerald, Anna M: A ArilipeROUreGH eh CRLViTEV| TENG lis Yochim, J. M. Golden. In addition to the play some un- lina Brown Henry Charlebois . Howard Murphy ary Long .... | Isadore O’Brien... Ole Olson Ruffle Mary Malloy Tookit . Grace Olson Uno eorge Jaszkov Josephine Charlebois Dick Horner ephen Hogan Interl Corrigan; Comedians |und Chorus, James Heatow, William | Corrigan, Christ Jungulas, Sebastine Goetz, John Neibauer, Hugh Fortune, Stephen Mossbrucher, Donald Me- ughlin. | arian Patzman and Gertrude Mur- | phy will have a singing act., There a be a matinee and evening per- j Perey Da ing e Duggan . The Juvenile Minstrel | tor; neis formance Monday. | ADJ UTANT TO | HAVE CHARGE | OF MEETINGS | Adjutant Chesam, General {t of the panied by Lieut. leapolis, will Sunday morning. Adjutant Chesham will be in charge of all the meet- | ings at the loval Salvation Army all day Sunday as well as a united sol- s meeting of the Mandan and marek Salvationists to be con- | ducted at the local Citadal Monday evening. The meeting will be Prayer service 9 | Meeting at the 10:00-A. M. Sunday school Meeting at the | School 4:00 P. Young Peopl Open air ~Great § as follows: A. M. te Penitentiary |GETS 15 YEARS je FOR AUTO THEFT |. Huron, S. D., Feb. 2. — Fifteen years in the state penitentiary at Sioux Falls was the sentence im- posed today by Judge Elva Taylor on John Hanrahan, convicted in BISMARCK STORAGE COMPANY Storage of all kinds. Rates on application. DEAD CAR STORAGE $2.50 PER MO. * Office With . Lucky Strike Coal Co. Phone 82 909 Main St. circuit court here last week for the| theft of an autgmobile. who charge ‘of shooting with intent to; kill wounding two was tried on the robhery “sharge because under South the latter charge calls triple the number of Quiet | asa ghostf The wonderful Willys-Knight sleeve- valve engine gives you quiet, silky action. Closed bodies remarkably free from power rumbles and vibratien: No.noisy cams. No clicking valves. No valves, to grind. This engine improves with use! Willys-Knight owners report 50,000 miles without fussing with the engine. Touring $1175; a $1795, f. 0. b. Toledo. Z WILLYS- KNIGHT } \ fi Lahr Motor Sales Company BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Hanrahan, | was originally booked on a in seriously | policemen, | connection with Huron Dakota laws for almost ears Of ser- National Battery Has as much Kick and Pep as any battery now in use. Fully guaranteed. Ford size $14.35 Try us for Battery « Service. Bismarck Machine and Welding Shop 218 Fourth Street Bismarek, Special prompt attention to mail orders. Phone 57 February 5th. BISMARCK, your : sightly gerous cords. 4 For Convenience . and Appearance Sake Have your house wired with “Convenience” outlets for : sweeper Table and Floor Lamps, ete. Do away with un-. Its worth your, _ while to lét us ex- ‘ plain and give you _ estimates free. vacuum more to burn than lignite. and dan- hanging Phone 115 WEBB BROTHERS . Embalmers Embalmer in Char; DAY PHONE’ 246 ; : Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 100 wet ers, theater partics, tourists, ete. ROHRER TAXI LINE ——— ee lllEeESESQSWSSSSSSS NOTICE TO FARMERS! ° If you are interested in sowing pure Marquis seed wheat this Spring, we can procure it for you—shipped in sacks—from Indian Head, Sask., at bare cost to us. If interested commuhicate with us before ‘ RUSSELL-MILLER MILLING co. Our Black Diamond Coal will hold fire all night and will keep your home comfortable. It costs very little Try a load and be con- vinced. We also have a good supply of Bearcreek and. Anthracite Nut Coal for Base Burners. F. H. Carpenter Lumber Co. Funeral Directors NIGHT Ey PHONES 246-887 PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLO Night Phone 190 or 687 Ready and Waiting For You is the driver of a 57 sedan or limousine, quite like your own chauffeur. You can engage one of our vitude in case of conyiction. taxicabs by the 4 mile, or by the hour or day if you THE choose. Excellent f ? service for shopp- y | N. D.

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