Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WKENZIE TAX CASE EVIDENCE um State Opens its Presentation Before County Judge in Bismarck Today ified in Court That Residence Was Here, Says Witness Witnesse: stand for the an inherit £ the : eal paliticn er, to testify that he had voted Bismarck, in the resumption ef hearing before County Judy Davie, W. A. Falconer fied that MeKenzis tered for the 1920 primary election as a resident of Bismarck, although he wa pending st of his time in St Paul. M. J. O'Connor testified that at several elections si years pre Mr. McKenzie voted in Bis and said this city was his le although he was not here much of th time, The state also introduced a deposi tion of Cha FE. McNamara, rep to the effect that on Ju 14, eight days before his death, Mr. McKenzie, testifying in the ¢ of Green .vs, ttle in federal ccurt, St. Paul, before Judge Booth 1 today city ass vious marek al residence Carrying the practice off San OEE AEE SELENE YEE: dead and injured from the U. §. Pedro Harbor, Calif. Forty-eig S. dreadnaught Missi ssi officers and sailor igh explosive flared back from the gun brecch, filling the turret wiih dead XPLOSION VICTIMS BEING TAKEN ON HOSPITAL SHIP | when human {| one. *| a complete. transformation. ppi to the hospital ship Relief following an explosion during range apped in a gun'turret by the biast when a heavy chirge of his residence wax Bismare| had been since 18 The state’s witnesses followed the | resting of the case in behalf of the | . H, Poole of this city being | witness by Alfred Zuger and H. ( | for George P. Flannery, administ tor, who maintains Mr. residence was in Mr. Poole test assisted Mr. McKenzie in makin his federal income tax returt ing paid to the $ ul offic that on October 21, at a m of the Bismarck Water Supply ( pany in St. Paul, Mr, 3 he had disposed of his interes would not return to Bismarck. IS VI Ell McKenzie’s | Wilson Followers Want Definite League Plank By Harry B, Hunt NEA Service Writer | Washington, June 18 ©The shade of Woodrow Wilson will be invoked at the New York Democratic vention by a fighting group a’ his loyal followers in an effort to carry forward the cause closest ‘to Wil son’s heart, by incorporating in the party platform a clear-cut ‘and defi nite plank endorsing American pat ti¢ipation in the League o Nations. Four of Wilson's old cabinet mem kers, all of them list-d as possible residential selections, will joi in the fight to commit the party on the League issue. They are : Newton D. Baker, former tury of war. Carter ¢ of the treasury a signation. David F. Houston, agriculture and later of t der Wilson. Josephus Daniels, secretary of | navy through the entire cight years | of Wilson's regime. | EKach Pass Adds Ser Aiding these ex-cabinet official in une drive to resurrect the caw of their dead ch But two days to another battle duty in. China, Norman’ Lce hoy of San F death in the abourd the sippi. In his mother dated, told you some in Friseo in J now 1 will make to transfer me to jby the first avai the are tiring tle practice June I su dre la Ju tin seere , who served as head | ter McAdoo's re- ary of ury un- # speci , not only be- | e in the bur} believe it can be any other i Democrats from | publicans and stir the nation’s dor-| the market every mant idealism, will be Bernarg M.| Ethr of the Lahr Baruch, Robert W. Woolley, Norman | “The millions Davis, Henry Morgenthau and Vance | he re McCormick. | tomotive enginee There is the making of real drama | serviceable in the scene as it will be set for the | who sold League of Nations fight. {is properly Wilson's last message to the coun- | owner looks try, his brief Armistice Day speech | of daily last November 11, will be made the keynote for the oc Feeble, broken, Wilson leaned heavily on his cane as he addressed the crowd that made pilgrimage to | case his home on that anniversary of the | s, end of the war. But as he spoke, something of his old fighting spirit came back ‘to him and as he closea, | his voice rose in+a challenge to those | foés, “ those fools,” who interposed | their “puny wills,” against a cause | which he said, “as certainly as tiere is a God in heaven will prevail. “The autemobil rds the c we to | depre: Ree. | car de cause used betters then pon ehay differentiate and ce be ded as ¢ conc these the for perfor modern dealer ju ly sees to it th sold in other ye to their owne of the new ach respo: passing ibility of With this last their old commander as the tle ery, champions of th: in the covention believe the cru ing spirit of the delegates may ie | -roused to a higher pitch than b, any other issue. These leaders of the League cause deny that it can be used in any way to the party’s disadvantage in the campaign. *“The Republicans will charge us with favoring the League, whether | we say So or not,” they explain, “They will seek to use it against us, anyway. All we propose is to make the League battle an offensive, not a defensive one; to stand definitely and boldly for American participa- tion in. the only world’ organization which promises any practicable as- tistance in maintaining the peace of } the world.” TRAVELING MEN TAKE i NOTICE message All traveling men are re- quested to meet at the ELK’S eet. at 19 earls ade toa morning. Im jusi- Ress. John L., George. ‘ Cook by Electricity. Argonne leave leave, although I r owner fron CTIM only does the number of ¢ in-| crease for which he is responsible, | but each new model adds to the complexity of service problems, “Keeping a thousand car owners. P happy is 4 ‘more difficult and more important job than selling cars to one hundred car buyers, and that is about the way in which the modern Gewier's business is divided,” WOMAN LEADS § ¥ | HERMIT LIFE Woman Botanist Leads Her- mit Life in Mountain Wilderness By A. H. Frederick NEA Service Writer ; June 18—A woman | who found her vocation in| pleecs otherwise unpenetrated save rdiest of occasional hunters prospectors, has her has. away frome transfer hip and a tour of M. Finch, fate deerced that’ botanist who makes her living from Barbee, Zl-year-old. gathering rare plants and bulbs. cise), should. meet! Her workroom ig ‘remote ranges ReLuuiRee of the Siskiyou mountains of north- duaupite ern California and’ Southern Or. gon, st’ letter. to his’. Her equipment is rifle, pack horse ine 1, he said, “[ httnting dogs, tent, bedding, pick, hack TL would be Slovel and) ax, provisions — and but TP don't think now! ef ba taale. ih fee SM eue eee he mountains, I love them!” de tho Agiatic ian res Mrs. Finch, I have spent aul lable transport, and| MY life in them. For more than 26 here dune Li. We | S¢ats E have worked in the Siskiyous ere .sune ¢ 1 have shipped my plants and al experimental bat-| julbs to most pa nd Europ Finch generally makes her trips alone—journeys of a week to 10 days—and meets dangers ot | storm and blizgard without Nor docs she fear wild trust ng to her rifle ‘accuracy protection Mrs, Finch became interested the work when she heard stories the rare specimens which were hid \ in the valleys and unknown viaces of the Siskiyous. She made her first trip, and atisfactory were the results by the au-| she has continued. r must be kept in] Plants and bulbs which she dition. The dealer} lects are cagerly desired in all parts last season models| ef the world, rare Lewisias, Mari- one to whom the| Dosa tulips, rock plants and many all the necessities | other mance, The truly} Mrs. Pineh conscientious- | Which she Mt the cars he has| outdoor life. , s give satisfaction| “! expect to be doing the same as he does “in the| York when I am sixty.” she de- | } “Personally, I think it's a models he has for] ‘ares. | creat life for a woman.” the| ‘The permanent employes of the ;eensus bureau number 700. explosion United ily have so I can't get tried hard ing Year vice Burden| animals, for alone safe the heavy innovations in tion put into Motor Sales Co. s that might le deale In the that of « si pbsolete b y s in the hest of heaitn, tributes to her active year adds to the dealer, for not d Scene in the street just outside th Highland Park, Detroit, when the Ten the factory, ieee at ae cnrs come ae issippi the stature turret and who directed the prelim- inary efforts to remove the bodies | Donning a turret trap de murk, groped through L. Stary, Towa, Saturday in charge of an Towa; officer to answer a charge of cheat- |! ing by false pretences BLAST HERO TWO LEGION ® 4{ Quinn and Hatfield Will Be in Mandan Two .national chiefs of veterans organizations will be speakers at the American Legion, Department of North Dakota’s annual conyention in Mandan June, 30, July 1 and 2. John R. Quinn, San Francise tional commander, of the California last Thursday -with ge J, Hatfield enroute to Man- dan. He will stop at a. couple. of Points enroute for address. Com-~ mander Quinn -will speak at the Man- dan convention of June 30, the first day of the session. The other: na-} tional commander is Robert J. Mur-! phy of Nora Springs, Iowa’ “Chef de Chemin de Fer” of the -Forty and Eight, the now famous hox ear iety which is the “shrine”. of the Legionaires. Mr. Murphy will not{ address the Legion convention, but will be the guest of honor’ of the state “40 and 8.” Murphy will also‘unveil, on July 2, the beautiful bronze esquestrian | statue of Theo. Roosevelt, made by A. Phimister Proctor and donated to the city’ of Mandan by Dr. Waldo Coe of Portland, Oregon, a former resident, Geo. J. Hatfield, traveling with John R. Quinn, was general chair- man of the recent national Legion convention in San Francisco. “ He will address the Legionaires on the “Veterans Welfare Board of Cali- \ fornia,” which administers a fund of $10,000,000 for disabled men. ‘Yuma, Arizona, only has 18 cloudy ays in an average year. I, D. Smith of Spokan uboard the dreadnaughP Mis 1 gunnery, observer from S. New Mexico, sriall ot but of great courage, who , the first to enter. the wrecked Primary or crude zine is made dv rectly frem the domestic ore. OF mask he forced ithe r weighted with dead, stly toll Nn. the /gas water, over odies dissipating the hope that hny et lived, \ DAKOTAN WANTED IN IOWA Grand Forks, N, D., June 18.-}-B. formerly the mayor } of Sanya, N. D, and more recently proprietor of an automol ishment here, left for Rock Rapiiis, urveyed the gha orrects ation. in a horse deal. ¥ WR JUNIORS rLittio Nts One-third the regular dose. Made, ‘Of: same ingredients, then candy. ysoated. For children and adults, SOLD BY YOUR DRUQGIET: WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in j _ Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887. - PERRY ; UNDERTAKING PARLORS >. Licensed:Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 100: PERSONALITY TO FITCLOTHES Would Analyze Women’s Per- sonalities to Make Them Fit Clothes ‘By M, Therese Bonney NEA Service Writer June 18—In these days beings have strange complexes and even dogs are suscep- tible to the colors they wear it seems rather natural to think of having your present wardrobe syched” and thus learn what you ould wear. The color you year is a very vital Mime. Valentine de Tukine, for- mer Russian noblewoman, thinks nothing of more real importance than that a woman. be happy in the clothes she wears and how, she ask is this ever possible when the vety clothes’ she wears have been de signed and created for a personality diametrically opposed to hers? , How fatal it is when a woman wears checks when she should wear Paris, P sh ukine believes’ in unalyzing a an’s personality and diagnosing her alrcady developed taste just as a docter might proceed for a dis ease. The results are astounding— Clothes shoflld be designed and models cre- WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1924 the woman,” says Mme. de Tukine, "who wears clothes” simply because they are the latest utgle.” CAR STALLS, DRIVER ESCAPE Hebron, N. D. June 18—Karl Kreis, farmer living ten miles south of here is minus one perfectly good car, the pilot bars of the engine morning. are dented and bent Kreis is alive, and unhurt to tell the stery. ' In Hebron to attend the Congrega- tional church conference he started for his home and his car stalled di; rectely on the railway tracks. The train, came in sight and Kreis vainly tried to start the machine. There was no time td push it off the tracks. Kreis jumped for his life and stood idly by and powerless as the train approached gnd smashed his but 4 hauling N. P. Train No. 1 Monday! car into ten thousand bits. YOUNG MAN! HERE’S YOUR OPPORTUNITY. We are going to add a salesman to our retail force. We want a young man who isn’t afraid of work, and who is determined to make good. Previous experience is un- necessary. hg If you are a hustler and want to connect up with a growing organization, selling the best automobile values in the world today—- OVERLAND & WILLYS-KNIGHT—WRITE us fully about yourself. ‘ This is a real opportunity with a future if you’re a go-getter. — Hit ated, not for slim, trim chosen msnnequins but for the individuar who is to wear them. Mme, de Tukine comes to tea, stu: dies your personality, notes the way you sit you walk and use your hands and then gives you a preserjption telling you the kind of clothes, materials, colors, ' combination ot lines you should wear, designs them for you-and gupervises their execi- tion. She will not take tea with you at the Ritz because she wants to sce you as you teally are, for.it is, first and above all, your natural self your clothes should express, “Woe unto FARMERS! Insure your property in your own company Slope Farmers Mutual Insurance Co. of No. Dak. AND SAVE PART OF YOUR INSURANCE MONEY— This’ company was organized by the farmers for the farmers to save themselves some money, instead of sending, all their insurance money to Chicago or New York and build their states and cities. Why not the farmers insure themselves, and keep part of their money in their own pockets? The merchants have their own mutual insurance companies which save them 40 per cent. WHY NOT THE FARMERS? BOOST YOUR OWN COMPANY See your township-clerks about this insurance, or call Home Office. First Guaranty Bank Bldg. Bismarck, N. D. An Extension Telephone - Saves these Steps Why get out of bed at night and dash down stairs to answer the tele- phone? An extension telephone upstairs saves these trips. It costs but a few cents a day, Just call our Busines Office and say that you want an exten- sion telephone. NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO. Might Phones 100 or 484k. y amet ap