The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 3, 1924, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 999 “Skinnay’s’’ Collar Line Vanishes Before Searching Gaze of Teacher, Who Believes In Health Education pomgeTR 4 SORLIE HITS | EXPANSION IN N.P. PROGRAM Takes Different Stand From Platform of the State Convention | ALG. Nonparti overnor Sor an a a ‘ GERMANY IS INFESTED WITH SPIES Even Though War Is Over Foreign Nations Seem To Be Afraid of Germany , IN BRONNER NEA Service Writer London, June 3.—You would think, interallied commissions inves- is with tigating whether Germany com- disarmed, that no allied na- find the pletely tien would need of a spy serviee in Germany. But you would be wrong. France maintains a complicated system of espionage, beewuse the French are neivous lest the Germans may be hatching a plan to start a sudden attempt for revenge with some h re- rio unknown — chemical German Su- The other day the preme Court at Leipzig sentenced a movie manager to IL ment for espionage. 1 them German accomplices, two ot It ul e il and Bs sta, and “will go Y h the industrial pro- | a by t © of the people? The state f Mr. Sorlie fol “The of North Dakota is ur urpa enti vil, rainfall unchine during the growing sea cou un other natural re "It is destined to become one of \ the greates tutes in the union, We | cunnot stop it if we would it is in | evitable, the natural wealth is here. | ee i “We can delay it by bickering over ee | polities and small thing 0 | hasten it by an orderly, organized, i " = | rystematized state government whieh Will make better living conditions | “If my teacher asts me what is|Skinnay aad me we figured out a) our mouth and she says did val tor the people to take the place of | ty. forest prime evil or how to way to _foel her on anne ae put I-dine op your pert too at hose o have left during the Inst 5 jf day. hen we gets up in the : em yellow and me an ie aus ny irs spell backerlawryet and tf 1 W885 ii oening we grabs a wash rag and ay we quit laffing but the “What the stale needs is a sane | t # swell movie last night and g hunk of soap and a lot of hot the fellers and girls lafft, business adwinistration that will | didn't study my lesson I can usally water and we washes our neck ‘cept. Mickey. make of the state mill and elevator | tel her that the prime evil of the and Gant Gs and bs aa Gs eta) 0 now stilt cul Mba ft e Ba of No Yakota an | ¢ errs PeGIBY OF iC spel, $20, You don’t need to bother with me we got footh brushes. got Beast : Tite We h Sore a one omits 1 can spell your hands because your hands get so I don’t mind being clean though those two things now and will de backerlawryet with a lotta €X- washed from handling the soap it was tuff at first. Skinnay and velop them and will go no further | (ta letters and maybe T'm right and wash rag all ‘ecpt the thumm me was gonna have a lot of fun with the industrial program until ex- | and maybe T'm not. At any rate which you gotta rub extra, And last Sattidy and Sundy gittin all I yotta chancet. But when my then whatta you think we do? We dirty and we didn't wash no necks plicitly ordered to do so by the vote of the people ‘ MONDELL WILL | teacher says pull down your collar takes some L-dine and dabs it on } so as I can lookit your collar linesour neck right under our ear and | to see if you washed your neck as teacher comes along and she says | 1 told you, then there’s no maybe. oh! lookit the dirt on your neck \ | | nor nothing Mundy morning but it wasn't fun, what with Teacher not knowing anything about it,” The statement given above was by made young: one of about 79,000 rs throughout the country Ivs either clean or it aint. and everything and spits on “She's took to the habit of asking our finger and tries to rub it off this question every mornirg after and it don't come off beca its whose teachers are competitors In BE CHAIRMAN ve ished singin’ My Country I-dine and then we laughs and the health education contest being | Mizzotbe frst off I tri-} rubb- shows her how clean our eck is conducted by the American Child | ing at et while she was coming ail bet the I-dine and wa “glls her Health Association among element up our aisle but she got suspishus April Fool it's only I-dine. ary school teachers. . The prizes and wanted to see round back “It worked great and the rest of consist of fifty scholarships of | where 1 hadn't had a chancet to the fellers and girls lafft and $500 each given by the Metropol~ See, | rub. ‘Teacher lafft and then she says itan Life Insurance Company to ‘She thinks she’s purty smart but op.a your mouth and we opens promote heglth education. Member of War Finance Cor- poration Is Selected By engaging in liquor traffie; state of | 7 the kidneys, increase their activity on | N. D. vs. Walter Carter, engaging Jand bring pleasant relief, Landon Coolidge Manager nal fic: t : f i ana in liquor traffie; state of N. D. vs. | ponchetiae lean aS - Anos Casey, maintaining a common | D sediitciy ay Weel on One Cleveland, June nk W. ilo ls Nh antl s | S are the best I ever used. I Mondell of Wyoming will be the per engaging in liquor traffic; | ee ableawit a E Acct cheitmen of the Republiean| state of N. D. vs. Nellie Nickelby, jhad lots of trouble with my kidneys Republican national convention opening here Tuesday, William M. Butler, national committeeman from chusetts, | cane a and manager of President Coolidge's ) 0! N nd liver; 1 couldn't lift anything my back was so weak. ry morn- ing 1 was dizzy, could hardly walk, ‘Adv. maintaining a nuisance; tate of N.D. vs, Peter Rennick main- | common nuisance; state | / A. Kooker, knowingly | 1 deposit in a bank while common | but now I feel fine.” HIS CABINET ree campaign, announced today. ht S | Mr. Mondell, a member of the War} (solve ptalone WN eyes i ialist Party Congress | Finance Corporation and a former] Rohr, knowingly receiving a deposit i 5 | Congressman from Wyoming, for!!!" : bank w Hol alot state of Agrees to Support Pros- | years has been one of the Republi- 2y Ub. ROB Soren f ; . Ge cave; dealers, He van for the) im Hauon traffic; State pective Premier United States Senatorship from Wy-1J8¢k Peyfergonan, having in posses- en oming in the last election, but was| S!¢M property used for making liquor, s, June 3-—While the gov defeated by ator Kendrich 5 mental crisis continues to be acute, (Mr, Mondell wired his acceptance | the prospective premier M. Herriot of the honor to Mr. Butler this mort [is nt least assured of a working ma ing. ” the Chamber of Deputies | The appointment is subject to tati+ through the decision of the Socialist! rangements, which is considered hours of th morning unanimously mere mality adopted a resolution pledgin him ocialist: support. The question of President tenure of office, howe 1s confused as before, the only TSTHYEAR CALENDAR OF and’s Lins | : . ‘thing which appears certain. being | Chicago, June 3. Hundreds of hen Will AeHieh atom ihe wend calii| [voices will join in caroling to the | efforts to force him out. | {world that the North American} Friends of Premier Poincare —re-1 anaes |Singers’ Union is celebrating marked that M. Herriot’s foreiyn pol- | seventy filth year here nnounced in his letter to the, Many Cases Listed For Trial | cHmnasht las ey 8 when its annual reur Is lender, M. Blume, does not in District mond jubilee sacnger | from that of the present pre-| held in the Coliseum organ-|mier, ‘They point out that he has | —_——_ jization was founded, in Cincinnati! no intention of evacuating the Ruhr The calendar of the district court|in 1849. Many of the selections | until the secu provided in the| was called this Jensonius, and morning by Judge | are number of | radio. and criminal, listed | for fore the jur; summoned for next week. $ on the calendar planned to be broadcast ition experts report is piven hy ermany and that he ts the re One of the features is the pro-| port without reservation as did M. which is | posed gamation of the individ! poineare {nal societies in a four part singing | by male voices. The Chicago sym-] include: Stute of North Dakota vs. | phony orch is expected to par- ROR INACTIVE RIDNEYS i! : | plbony one es When the kidneys are in need of Henry Weins, us miseh ite series of concerts, | Whe Ca state of N. D. vs. W. F. Nichols: ongs are to be sung {fod Ms oe ae state of N. D, vs. Philip Mill av- | without orchestral accompaniments, | (iuredc ulant for the kidneys. | They promptly und effectively flush | il be The winnin other numbe but with full ‘orchestra, emposition in the American folk | ing intoxicating liquor in | session; John Robidou, having —in- | texicating liquor in his possession; 8 pos- ‘state of N. D. vs. John and Anna} song contest, manuscripts in which | Mrs. J. S. Davis Bennett, maintaining a common nui- | have been considered for many | : sence; state of N. D. vs. Wm. Gabel, ; months, will be presented at the} + aengerfest, | SE | | Conservatives | | Object to New | Foreign Minister; | Gopentiagen) june 3, — Kinsl Christian has cut short his holiday | Lift Off-No Pain! jand returned to Cope gen in or-| |der to give his royal sanction to! | Denmark's first labor cabinet. ee The Conservatives are drawing | attention to the anomaly in the] . voting which showed that althoue” the Labor party only secured 38 | per cent of the votes cast, they are placed in power over revresenta- | ARE ~ YOU tives of parties which claimed 62 them. * xX \ H “et We suggest that you A MOTHER:! This is of Vital Import’ to You | per cent of the votes, 1 ig ‘The conservatives are also; Winona, .Minn—“During my first | strongly criticizing the action of | expectant period I got in a very | Premier Stauning in selecting; weakened ang nervous condition. My Count Moltke as foreign minister. | mother advised me to take Dr.) They allege that Moltke is known | Pierce's‘ Favorite Preser'ption. The | to have extreme Germon symna-| first bottle strengthened me so that | thies and that these are shared by!I continued its use. I took four his wife. thus making it difficult to! botties which not only built me up settle the Danish-German frontier! in strength but I had practically no squabbles satisfactorily. | suffering. I am most enthusiastic Se in mp praise of Dr, Pierce's Fayorite . TAKEN TO JAMESTOWN | prescription as a tonic and nervine The body of Mrs. Louis Stuff of | tor the expectant tather and am Jamestown, who died in a Tocal | 9),, fea? Heme wae telan o ‘Tainestow ens to send this etter for publica for burial. Mrs. Stuff, a pioneer bis aap 8-; Davis, 161 Har- | Jamestown, was 69 years of age. ; enue. eer All droggists, c ok ay Electricity. Write Dr. Piet It is Cleaner, ‘Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, in- atantly.that corn stops hurting, then shartly you jift it right off with fingers. z 4 ‘our druggist sells a.tiny bottle of “Preezone” for a few cents, suffi- *eient ‘to remove every hard corn, ‘soft corn, or corn between the toes, ‘and the foot calluses, without sore- BISMARCK, Liquid ‘or tablets. resident, Inwalids’ Hotel, in Buffalo, Nv Y., for free medical advice. re EASY TO START = H It is such a simple matter to open a savings { account at the City National Bank, that the | very decided benefits which. follow seem all out of proportion to the effort made to secure you want to start with, and in five minutes you’ll have a Savings Account. ToT Gre NATIONAL ‘PC: Remington, President, we A, Graham, Vice President and Cashier. $ 2 ‘C. M. Schmierer, Assistant Cashier. soldiers, Were sentenced at the same time to long terms. The Swiss was alleged to have dounder the orders of a French ptain whom the Germans nabbed and are going to try. Meanwhile the French have seized ») prominent Germans in the oc- cupied regions and are holding them u° hostages fer the safety of the Frenchman. ‘The incident has once fanned the flames on both of the Rhine, t If you happen visit Sofia, capitol of Bulgaria will pri ably be able to buy for a few cent ton-hole bouquet, grown in the gordens of King Boris. In its impoverished state, the government only allows King Boris $25,000 for his job of kinging. In these days of the H. C. of L, the to the amount allotted to him not adequate for the upkeep of the palace, Hence not long ago he reluctantly fired a lot of employes. Among these was his gardener. But he re- fused to be fired. He said he would work for nothing if the king would ¢ him permission to sell some of the flowers grown in the palace gar- dens. One must always take figures about the Trish Free State, coming by way of Belfast, with a consider- able amount of salt. However, the other day, a lead- ¢ Belfast paper printed some as- |tounding crime the new independent state to ‘south. | It elaimed that in four months 24 jmurders had been committed, and conspiracies to murder; try it. Bring the sum NO. DAKOTA figures concerning the and there were 7 cases of manslaughter 16 {cases where men were wounded; 9 | brutal assaults; 94 armed robberies and holdups, and 13 cases where churches and other buildings were burned. Whatever the figures may be, the answer of course is that following the recent years of warfare first between the British and the Irish, and then between the Free Staters and the Republieans, in many sec- tions lawless men are still at large whom it will be hard for the regular authorities to bag all at once. ON SPECIAL DEPOSIT Grand Forks, N. D., Jung 3.—The First Savings bank of Grand Forks }gocs on the state special deposit list today, as a result of agreements reached last night between officials of the bank and C. B. McMillan of Hannah, of the guaranty fund com- mission. ,in_ the meantime, ‘pending between offic of the First Savings bank and officers of other Grand Forks banks, looking to the absorption of the assets and liabili- ties of the First Savin, bank by the other banks, had reached the stage where a consolidation seemed likely, without prejudice to deposi- tors in the emba ed institution. The First Savings is known locally the “O'Connor bank,” because the that W. V. O'Connor, M. lll | negotiations THE NEW HUPMOBILE drives with delightful ease. It is like a flash in get-away. Agents Wanted. OLSON BROS. GARAGE 202 - 4th Street. Bismarck 0 Prices Gasoline eluctuate? TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1924 M. O'Connor and J. F. T. O'Connor, ! are heavy stockholders Deposits total $296,273.27; capital, $50,000, and loans and discounts, $375,638.62. Depletion of reserve is responsible for the bank's trouble. WOULD BUILD STATE FUND Auto Association Urges Gas- ‘ oline Tax For Roads asad Fargo, N, D., June 3.—Directors of the North Dakota Automobile asso- ciation, at a conference in Fargo Monday, adopted resolution: ing the enactment of le place all money obtained from auto- mobile license taxes and gasoline taxes in the state highway fund for building and maintaining public high- ways. They also endorsed the ainis and purposes of the newly organized Greater North Dakota association; invited the Cass county Automobile association to affiliate with the North Dakota association and endors- ed the work of the Civie and Com- merce association of Minneapolis. HAGEN GIVEN PRISON TERM Grand Forks, N. D., June 3.—H. J. Hagen, former president of the Scandinavian-American Bank of Far- go, convicted several weeks ago of accepting deposits when the bank was insolvent was sentenced by Judge Kneeshaw to 2 1-2 years in the state penitentiary. an appeal. He will file SMOKE UP BE COMFORTABLE We have a great display of new straws to choose from; great values, too. GLOTHIERS High Class Tailoring. ‘HE average man, paying for staple “Econo by the month, fails to consider the wide fluctuation in prices, while noting quickly the smallest change in the price of gasoline, which te buys at frequent intervals and for which he pays cash. The reason for the wide ‘fluctuation in the price of gasoline during 1923 was the opening of new fields, which flooded the market with crude oil rich in gasoline. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) bases its price for gasoline fundamentally on the varying price of crude, which in turn is regulated by supply and demand..- To equalize supply with demand, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has erected and maintains storage depots of tremendous capacity. It has located these depots at strategic out its territory. These filled to capacity, in the off-season, to sup- ply the insistent demand during the sea- son of heavy motoring and agricultural activities. dustry,to kee; panding n The service of pany. (Indiana) ices momo ~and te pote fluctuation yy increasing supply in proportion to demand —and by equalizing distri tion, 90 as to bring line prices into seas?-nal and secticeiy tae mece, Standard Bureau of Labor, and Department of Commerce, statistics indicate that gaso- line prices fluctuate less than the price of most staple commodities. In 1922, the price of eggs fluctuated 125 points; potatoes 210 points; sugar 51 points, as against only 25 points in the price of gasoline. In 1923, the price of eggs fluctuated 110 points; potatoes 114 points; sugar 59 points; milk 49 points, as against 47 points for gasoline. This Company has systematically passed on to consumers, in the way of ductions, the benefits derived ved methods of refining petroleum. thas blazed the trail)in originating im- proved technique, improved equipment and more efficient processes of refining and distribution, thereby aiding the in- abreast of continually ex- is for petroleum products. General : Standard Oil Buizding 910° South Michigen Avenue, Chicago Many new braids and shapes you haven’t seen before $2, BIOMARCH, %D - Dry Cleaning. ponte through- uge tanks are rice Te- ‘om im- the Standard Oil Com- tends’ to hold gasoline stribu-

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