The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1924, Page 2

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Sate ey PAGE TWO ~ REDUCTION OF ARMAMENTS IS PARLEY PLAN Will Be Held Under League | of Nations if Great Pow- ers Approve It { If three or four! of the great powers--Great Britain, France, Italy, Japan--which have | permanent seats on the council of | the League of Nations and 10 other state members of the league ratify | the protocol of arbitration and se-| Geneva, Sept. day, there June 15, 1925, a conference for the reduction of arnia- ments. | The United States, like Germany, Russia and other nonmembers of the league, has been invited to partici- pate the conference, the program of which will be prepared under the | direction of the council af the league, The long ted protocol draft) was presented today officially to the | commission on disarmament by the “big twelve” compo: the subcom-| mittee and speeches were made by Dr. Edouard Benes, of —Czecho-Slo rthur Henderson, Great Brit-| nor Schanzer, Italy, M. Bon- | France, and M. Poulet, Bel-j cour, ium, The protocol provides a plan of ar-! bitration for disputes of wh natu¥e; it also provides securities countries like France and Belgium | by authorizing regional accords, sti: | pulating that they must be open covenants and quite definitely ar rangés for a conference for the re- duction of armaments. STATE'S LEGAL | HEAD IS KEPT | BUSY IN COURT Long List of Law Suits Handled by Attorney-Gen- eral in Two Years The Attorney-General of North Da- kota and other lawyers in the depart- ment, never lack law business, the report of Attorney-General G Shafer for the last biennial pe discloses. During the ¢wo-year per- iod ending June 30, the report shows, the Attorney-General’s office handled cases as follows: Two cases in Uni ed States Supreme Court; two cases in United States Circuit Court of Appeals; 14 cases in United States District Court; in state su- preme court; 8: of in district court pending in district court; in six railroad commission cases; 23 criminal cases disposed of in district | pending inj for Work- district court; men’s Compe The state licqnsing department, un- der the Attorney-General, during that time figured in 176 prohibiti cases in which the evidence was se- cured in whole or part by the depart- ment, Of this number, 59 pleaded guilty, 27 were convicted, 10 were atequitted and 70 cases are pending. There also were 19 prosecutions for the sale of cigarettes, pleading guilty, four being convicted and two being acquitted. Eleven _prosecu- tion for maintaining houses were prosecuted. In addition to hending the legal department of the state, the Attor- ney-General is a member of many boards, including the Industrial Com- mission, disorderly Pioneer Farmer Dies At Dickinson Dickinson, _ Sept. 23—Frank Kra- licek, 76, died Friday at the home of his @aughter, from heart failure, ter having been ill for several wee SS ONE THIN WOMAN GAINED 10 POUNDS IN 22 DAYS Skinny Men Can All weak men and women, All nervous men and women, Alt skinny men and women Cah grow stronger, healthier and take-on weight : in 30: days by just taking Mc- Coy’ Cod Liver Oil “Tablets | four; times a day + as easy " to take as can-‘) ae Ang what a hit "hese flesh producing tab- Jeta ave made ie! drug- 3 Do The Same}! {he held to the correspondent’s hand jand thought of his THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE , __ *Art For Art’s Sake And ‘Love In A Garret’ Are Worn Out Themes Guido Ciccolini and Family Somenone Someshere inthe world is Sigh ing Sor you, - Some-one some-whene inthe worl s eyeing @o¢ Guido Ciccolini Says Modern Artist Is Also Practical Business Man The genius in a garret theme as worn threadbare, decla Guido Ciccolini, famous operatic tenor of the Chicago Opera Com- pany. Mr. Ciccolini insists that gen- juses never did flourish in attics, anyway, and always found it well. nigh impossible to raise a family there. speak of ‘art for art’s sake,’ as if it were rather disgraceful to get any mate life,” he points out. vied audiences, “In the old days an artist scorned to be a really counts. good business man. it beneath him. “That is probably why there were so few happy artists. Now it is different. ‘The artist real that every hobby or avocation he may have, adds power and beauty to his interpretation of his art. “One week T may sing in a con- cert with Galli-Curci and the very next week I may sing in vaude- ville. Ido not think that this de- tracts in any way from what 1 He thought ence in a concert hall in a vaudeville theatre. penditure, and as most is spent in, traveling, rather work harder them with me, than hi “You used to hear artists Born in Bohemia, he came to this country 35 years ago, having farmed in the Green River vicinity during, thai time. He is survived by his wife | and seven children, WOMAN ADMITS. | SHE JOINED IN | KILLING PLOT, ape. | (Continued from page one.) he had protested to his Bishop after being assigned to the Ina church. | CONGREGATION CALLS | Menibers of the Ina congregation; where the clergyman had been more than a year, called at the jail today ster and expressed their confidence in him. | Sweetin een described | as a woman with attractive features. She is the mother of three small boys, who are still at the Sweetin home in Ina, Rev. Hight also has three children at home, the oldest daughter having been married and moved awa: Loveless married life, both the minister and Mrs. Sweetin told the states attorney, drove them together and led to the plot to poison their mates so they might marry. “I'm a preacher, but I'm human— all too human,” Rev. Hight told the}! correspondent. He wept bitterly as —- | “Lief Erickson Day’ will be ob- | served by the Bismarck Kiwanis have to give to the world.: A| alone.” ERICKSON DAY “*°2HOtPEE Fargo, Sept. aged about 55 IS PLANNED pecial Program to be Ar-| 3 ranged by Kiwanis Club caused the death. | club at its luncheon next Monday. Dr. N. 0. Ramstad has been named chairman of the arrangements com- mittee for the day, and speakers | will include Governor Nestos and Judge Sveinbjorn Johnson. Many in- teresting features are planned. At the regular weekly Kiwanis luncheon Monday, five members of the club were called upon by chair- man of the day, George Shafer, to| talk on “My Business.” They were! Otto Bowman, Joseph Breslow, Jack Runyan, Dr. W, E. Cole and C.| Bertsch Jr. Too Late To Classify FOR SALE—Real Estate Business for a small amount of cash, a bargain | if taken at once. Write Ad. No. 840. care Tribune. 9-23-1w Hazelton, Sept. bene 23.—Wm. 55, a bachelor with ex- for you, real artist should be glad to have It is what you ing and how you sing it that “There are plenty of popula musical compositions, for instance ‘Somewhere in the ‘World, that ure just as interesting to an audi- as to one “Then, too, when I travel I al- ways take my whole family, that is, my wife-and two kiddies, course, this requires a large ex- Of of my life » I would and have it, the trai! |tensive land holdings near Bremen land Hamburg, N, D., was found dead jin a barn near Hamburg last Fri- , it became known, Heart trouble Early Settler Dies in Colorado 23.—Herbert D.| Connor, an early settler of the old |, Mrs. Addie Hottell Coggin, August 30, at Fruita, Colo., where he was engaged in fruit and stock farm- cently here. ducting a general store in Williams- port, which he managed for several WOMAN DIES, the oldest pers States, by her own claim and those ticket. candidacy. regardless of Williamsport neighborhood, died ing, according to word received re- In 1884 he began con- DECLARED 128 Tacoma, W: . Sept. 23,—One of s insthe United For SURE relief from of her family, M i, is dead here at the age of| ! the year she was born, 17: record kept by the family is cor- | of Dickinson, died Partisan Politics. Teika Stan- years. Adams was elected sec-; ond president of the United States hej { DICKINSON _ MAN DIES Jacob Stroh, 's northwest Thursday at Dickinson, Sept. a farmer living constipation ‘he sure you get ALL BRAN—Kelloge’s! If you suffer from constipation, you cannot afford to lose time experiment- ing. Tho poisons which accumulate while you try ineffective measures can undermine your health. If eaten regularly, Kellogg’s Bran e guaranteed to relieve permanently | the meet chronic cases of constipation, your grocer will return your money. it brings you SURE results because, ‘it is ALL bran. Nothing but ALL bran ean be wholly effective. Doctors znow this! That is why Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and krumbled, is en- @orsed and prescribed by physicians everywhers. It wil! bring back your health to you, So be eure you get Kellogg ’s Bran, cooked and krumbled. You eould tell Kellogg ’s Bran with “our eyes closed—once you had tasted that delicious, nut-like flavor, market. For Your _ Coal Lucky Strike, the only first class Lignite Coal on the McCormick, Deep Vein, the ‘next best, Kellogg ’s Bran is quite different from ordinary unpalatable brans. ‘The won- derful flavor of Kellogg’s is exclusive. You will like it. Eat at least two tablespoonfuls daily—in chronic cases, that much with every meal. Eat it with milk or cream. Sprinkle it over other cereals. Cook it with hot cereals. Try it in the recipes which are given on tho package—such as bran bread, muffins, griddle cakes, ete. But start cating Kellogg’s Bran to-day. Have each member of your family eat it. Bnjoy that perfect health which should be yours. Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and krumbled, is sold by all grocers. It is served in individual packages by the ‘leading hotels and clubs. Get it at your res- taurant, too! Made in Battle Creek. (Political Advt.) i | his home. 8, and has lived for many For Sale— Choice Canarie son, N. Dak. Box 728. DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. | gist is selling fnore=and more lof them every “I had lived for “before I met her.” “There is a | riages must hav ast getastin, 0 ir is chock full of Vitamines and yonderful flesh producer and th creator. “oar wants to swallow the hor- tiblé wfuff when these wonderful tab. i leCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Tablets just as good and so easy to happy.” “A Box of 60 tablets for 60 cents— t least & pounds in ‘30 days— j dan. eck. Ask —A— or any good anywhere, ‘oy’s, the — original ‘od Liver Oi} Tablet.” — Adv. i meat and potatoes, 4 gain Medical experts and Halvorson At Mandan Tonight 2 Halvor Waisiense, idate for Governor, will speak tonight ind Hf-any thin man or women don't ja: 8 o'clock in the Elks Hall at Man- th fusion say the a basis or there is no happiness. Hadj J met and married weetin our lives would have been unutterably candi- modern city dweller is undernourished be- cause he relies too much on bread, | | | Lin the study of Latin and Greek, FOR SALE-All kinds of furniture, | Oe Saye n if taken at once. - Beauty is But Skin Deep And st’ Good Blood is Beneath Both Minneapolis, Minn.—‘I want to | make this public expression of what | -23-3t | Dr. Pierce's medicines have done for j = me. Some years ago I was in a weak, FOR SALE—Wilton rug, congoleum run-down condition with neither rug, ges hot water heater at bar-, strength nor ambition. A neighbor | g Call morang 9 to 1, 53) suggested that I take Dr. Pierce’s Thayer, telephone 966M. _ Golden Medical Discavery. I secur- 9-23-2t | ed a bottle from the drug store and 9. WANTED-At one 3 year old baby. irl to care for Phone 209. — - his was so helpful that I had no % 4 eS I be oes Strips of New South Wales stamps, need of a second bottle, To those 4 1 of different values and dating back| whose condition needs building up¢ g Deale to 1855, were discovered recently in| can and do recommend, Dr. Pierce's Uw ; 9 r the record office, Longén, ;Golden Medical _Discovery.”—Mrs. . a Addie Hottell, 711. Buchanan St, Boys and girls in Américan schools | N. E. i, hanap PHONE 610 are two years behind children of the} ; Gain health and vitality by ob- same age in most European cities|taining Dr. Pierce's Discovery at j your drug store, in tablets or liquid. Mined*at New Salem, N. D., 240 feet under ground. Both dry mine Coak Try a load of either and be con- vinced. Lucky Strike at $4.85 or McCormick at $4.35 per'ton delivered. Then our Nut, running from 14 to 8 ‘inches.’ The best and the cheapest of any fuel, for Stoves, Ranges, or self feeding Heaters, at $4.30 per ton delivered. _ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 23, 1924 LaFollette Wheeler Progressive Rally a PATTERSON'S HALL Wednesday Sept. 24 5 8 P. M. SHARP. Congressman Edward Voigt of Wisconsin will talk on National Issues in support of LaFollette-Wheeler Congressman James H. Sinclair of North Dakota—will explain Farmer-Labor Issues involved in LaF ollette Public generally invited to hear discussion of.vital Public Questions. Insurance Commissioner Olsness will discuss State Issues. Congressman Voight is magnetic speaker whose address will be enjoyed as born in Russia i ars He is survived by id 10 children. He x Singers, Imported German VAPORUB years before going to Colorado. rect. , dies ae —— Saeenpunied Rollers. Jacob Bull, Dickin-| ——O2s*!? Miliion Jare Used Yearly_ For the most. efficient service CALL’ - 100" Balloon Tire Discovery—Supertwist oun probably thinking about buying Balloon As you know, Balloon tirés ard much larger than ordinary tires and run at lower air pressure. They stnooth. out bumips, save your car pri its occupants, 2a ‘be orient a Bal ereee must a up and give good mileage under the coristant flexin; and bending to which it is subjected. 4 The durability of Goodyear Balloon Tires is assured by a new ‘invention —Supertwist Cord. Supertwist is an extra durable cord fabric devel- oped by Goodyear especially for Balloon tites, Its superiority lies in its greater elasticity. Su twist will stretch tarther: Sedtnery cod betes it "breaks, Hence it protects Goodyear Balloon ‘Tires against stone bruise and rupture." ° We have Goodyear’ Supertwist Cord Balloons for the new small diameter wheels or to fit the wheels now on your car, without change. Lahr Motor Sales Co. ITES-STINGS Apply wet baking soda orhouse- hold ammonia, followed ‘by BYRAN’S TAXI

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