The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1924, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1924 " ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE THREE - > DAWES STARTS | HARD DRIVE IN MANY WY STATES Republican Vice - aneea | Candidate Begins Final Eastern Tour DAVI TOWARD SOUTH Democratic Candidate Satis fied with Tennessee — LaFollette in Iowa | | | | Dawes Special, to Philadelphia. eastwa . and Oct, 21, en route | Heading a general | d movement of presidential | vice-presidential Charles G. Dawes traveled today to | Philadelphia where tonight he will | open his first and only speaking | tour of the Alleghenies. The Republican vice-presidential candidate will begin his seven-day speech-making swing through the’ five eastern states of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaw: ew Jer. | sey and New York with a discussion | of the budget. ! candidates, | DA Is ELATED Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 21.—John W. Davis went out of Tennessee toda: to carry his campaign into Kentucky | und then back to Indiana and Ohio, His departure from this state w made the occasion of repeated dec- ,ltrations voiced confidently _ to “friends who conferred with him dur- ing his two days’ stay here that the Tennessee political trend was alto- gether satisfactory from a Demo- cratic standpoin The candidate's two political ad- dresses here yesterday were declared by Democrats to have won many vetes for Davis, REVIEWS DEMAND LaFollette Special, en route to Rock Island, Des Moines, Ia., Oct. 21} -As he turned eastward today with the intention of devoting the re- mainder of his campaign to stump- ing in the states east of the Mi sippi, River, Robert M. LaFollette, adependent presidential candidate, resumed his demand for a searching inquiry. into campaign contributions. Declaring that letters already put into evidence before the Senate in- vestigating committee “show that funds being raised in eastern states are to be used in the doubtful west- ern territory” Mr. LaFollette de- clared in a statement that “all these ; western states have corrupt prac- tic this money is being used in unlaw. ful amount in those western state where, corrupt practices acts ex the rights of Senators and Con- wressmen to their seats will be ‘questioned in the next Congress.” ANOTHER BANK IS REOPENED s acts and should it develop that i | \ | | Republican Women Are Completing Organization To Elect Coolidge And Straight Ticket In November iiihaniubet NS Te eat eee Washington, Oct. 21.—For the hu- morously inclined, there is a vast range of possibilities in the situa- tions that will inevitably ari result of the approaching election. elected—Cool- No matter who is idge and Dawes, Davis and Bryan.} or La Follette and Whecler—the! Senate is certain to! be the setting of some uations | that for sheer humor will outreach the wildest imaginings of the burles- United Si que librettist or the comic supple-| ment. artist. those who do not take their and their congressmen and | too seriously, Washington during the next Congress will be bet- ter than a sideshow, Consider the situation in the Se§ ate should the Coolidge-Dawes ticket} come through a winner. Dawes becomes vice president. Hi sole duty is to preside over the Sen-| ate; to decide points of order in State Bank of Calvin, it The Peopl wvalier county, has reopened, was announced today by the s banking department. The bank, which went on special deposit ember 1, 1923, had deposits of $2 000, capital of $25,000 and surplus of $3,000. Neal Nicholson is presi- dent and C. A. Borg cashier. This is the 32nd closed bank to reopen in North Dakota. A TO VOTE ON POOR FARM! Williston, N. Thiarecuany cbctos call oan is, 4, on the question of establishing a county’ poor farm. Ameriean Legion meeting ednesday evening. Enter- tainment and lunch by Aux- iliary. Come out. Crop production in the last de- cade has increased 13 per cent. ee b. B. C. MAN NOW. BANK CASHIER \ Another promotion‘to the credit of a graduate of Dakota Business College, Fargo! S. J. Bina is now Cashief of the Brushvale State Bank. 227 ‘‘Dakotans’’ have become bank officers, nine in Fargo, ‘alone. D. B. C. graduates recently well- placed are: Liliian Johnson with Standard Oil Co. (They have em- ployed 137 ‘‘Dakotans’’,) Oscar Olson with the Internal Revenue Office, the 20th Dakotan for Far- go government offices. Watch each weck. *‘Follow the Biccedsiul, ”* Begin Monday. Write Lo Watki 806 Front DR. R. 8. ENGE Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D, RENT. A UNDERWOOD Special Rates to Students ; 4 Months, $10.00 Underwood ‘Typewriter Co, Harry Clough, Mgr, OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO ,_ SALES CO. 107°5th St... Phone 428 |cordance with the rules and preced- {ents and to be an imps arbiter | jin the matter of procedure, He has | no vote, except in case of a tie, and | no voice in debat | Down on the floor, on the Republi- cun side of the aisle, will sit Senator | ‘Brookhart of lowa, who fought | Dawes as the candidate of his own party and demanded that he be re- moved from the G. 0, P. ticket. i Wiil Dawes recognize Brookhart | when the Iowa senator a to make some remarks? If he does, or if he doesn't, interesting and} explosive things may happen, Match | and powder keg will be in juxtaposi- | tion. The possibility of a blowup will be ever present. Consider, too, the dramatic possi- | bilities underlying ‘an average speech of Caraway of is the Democrats’ most expert skin- Iner, and he specializes in taking the hide of the G. QO. P. elephant. Students of the effect of over mutter will crowd the Senate galleries to watch the physical and emotional reaction on Dawes as Car-| slips his knife through the R can cuticle and proceeds to lay bare the carcass beneath. C: carves with a careless hand a CAPITOL THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT mind which ; more repressed men than Daw | ton, consider for a moment th r SAAR OARTR Grand J. TO A plea vote, a Jand was S. Hen kota, er tior for th t SSA Can “Hell-an’-Maria Dawes presides in the Sixty-ninth such a situation, be ex I be on the floor a side of either or both low the traditions of vi ethic No stage drama will ha ituation may decree, and Wheel on the tenseness of that time Re- will be there as senators d emotion might bring on apo- one of them is there as the Unleashed emotion would ne offi while the cther bring real fireworks. | the White Hou ‘ " Suspense? Human interest? On the other hand, should the na? A : 5 Davis-Bryan band wagon bring the) That's what Washington is going candidates to Washing-| to be full of nothing else but, as Democratic rony Tom Hefling would say. of soul and spirit that would tear at === the ve itals of Henry Cabot Lodge Too Late To Classify when he arose in’ his ‘chair and ans sought the privilege of recognition FOR RENT—Strictly modern five from “Brother Ch es room duplex, attached garage, Next 10 having to appeal on bend- immediate possession. Tel. 751 ed knee to the Council of the League or 151. 10-6-t£, of tions for permission to run for ~ a lection, one can think of no pill FOR RENT—November Ist- mo quite so bitter, no humiliation qu urnished home. Call. at’ Logan's so complete, as for this blue-blooded © or phone 761. long 10-21-3t in| dean of the Senate aristocracy, the sage and intellectual leade ihe upper house, to be compelled to | READ TRIBUNE WANT ADDS, wo kinds of Health Insurance (Onn tind fy to pay a high preariam aod Int fa gaanbleeste whet ever est you willenjoy good health The other hind ts to enfeguard yourself againet @ health by eating food which suppiise off Contains all 16 of the necessary nutritive elements —.and its unexcelled flavor will t ruly tempt your appetite. ; AUDITORIUM - MONDAY, OCT. 27. Curtain 7:30 Sharp. _Seats Harris & Woodmance—F' riday, Oct. 24, Mall Orders Now. DAVID BELASCO'S STAGE SUCCESS Adapled From theplay by Wilkam CDeMille Robert ELee'and US.Grantare central figuresin this Rei Drama, / looking Ker @ Clean, Brilliant Pla: With 2 Great a2 ee ‘Many taughs iS and a few Tears and s6e MERTON MOVIE affey a Solid Year at the Cort Theane NY Prominent in Mr. Hunter’s supporting company during his Bismarck engagement are the following players: JEAN FORD ROMAINE CALLENDER JOHN WEBSTER EDWARD M. FAVOR BERT MELVILLE FANCHON CAMPBELL MATTHEW SMITH, JR. GEORGIA PRENTICE TOM HADAWAY EUGENE ORDWAY BILLY JANNEY WILIAM ADLER (Direction of George C. Tyler and Hugh Ford) 5 —NOT A PICTURE— Prices 92.755 92.503 61.65, inclnding-tax. Gallery $1.10.— C vy of V. ter of the and by W td "MASONS HEAR | PLEAHEREPOR CONSTITUTION : Master Henry and W. utcheson Ask Study Fundamental Law | | | CHOOLS | ONDUCT made that every citizen t every citizen seek to un derstand the fundamental law of the} enough understand the made ley City, grand mas- | lodge of North De . Huteheson, iectur onic Service Assoc trict convention of Mas- Mason M ne : : ons held at the local temple. Vis owing the banquet there w sohaaR ie NaN ors from several lodges were present / work in the lodge room. It was an Republican National Committee-| Pictured above are Republican 'is prosperous, they need have ne | 4,..) al wer served in the Masonic nounced Bismarck Masons would 0 women are preparing to wage an National ,Committeewomen at fi hhey apreeiate that during | jo) Ui" GS OU teLs a Thomp: | to Washburn, Osteber zoeive lintensive campaign between now Campaign ‘Headquarters, Chicago, the past tour industry hae [80m district deputy, presided. | pe Tdeeree work Were j and the November election. With to confer with Mrs. Alvin T. Hert. known a revival and that The American Constitution, Mr. | se | state conventions over they are d Bina West, Michigan; | agriculture is commencing to reap | H¥tcheson said, was a product of | FARMER VICTIM getting down to business of Edgar P. Penney, Nebraska;! the benetits of restored prosperity, |¢%@ltion and the best minds of the ‘electing a strai, Republican} aul Rewman, South Dakota; | Women will vote for Coolidge.” Se ores oc: Jee at onth IN ACCIDEN ticket. Prior to completing the Mrs. John Gordon Battelle, Ohio. Miss Bina West of Michigan, and | With devine guidance. rei et work of organization in their) In many of the states in the Mrs. John Gordon Battelle of | “the Constitution,” he said, “is an) yoy pein tates, Iayge numbers have visited, Middle West, women leaders re-/ Ohio, both reported to Mrs. Hert | ¢XPression of the will of the peopl?) Qeike, aged ithe headquarters of the Kepubli- pori that it is the woman on the that the women's organization in | insisting on rights of the indi uo zig died on the result ‘ean National Committee, Chicago, farm who will elect Coolidge. Mrs. th tates has been perfected. & [#3 Ree ithe Willkois ay mo) Jof injuries sustained when he fell to confer with Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, Paul Rewman, Republican leader Jeader has been appointed in each Certain, stable rules and prineiptes| from a hay rack between a team of leader. in South Dakota, says that women county to dircet the work locaily. | f severnment, designed for perman-| horses becoming fright All agree that Coolidge makes’ are constructive in their thinking Reports from the west. and [eney. were laid down in the Ameri-| anning away, and the | a strong appeal to women. They! and will listen to reason. “If we northwest Indicate that the work }€an Constitution, adopted after long | wheels passins over his chest, ‘The | say women appreciate ‘he high can cover the state and make a i, going forward. Helen Varick | StU@’ and debate, hes The) sccident happened on October 13 and | principles for which stands. | personai appeal to farm women, pesca te Ameri Constitution, which has] Mp. Oelke lived for three d i They feel that his : naracter| we will have nothing to_ worry Boswell, director of the women’s | heen culled the most wonderful do- survived a widow and 11 | end spiritual qui! 1 him for! about it uth Dakota,” reports division of the speakers’ bureau | eument of its kind, was all the mora August, Rudolph, Will | leadership. Wor the policy) Mrs, Rewman, in the Eastern Division office, New. | remirkable’ when one considers the | Arthur of New’ Le ‘| of strict econom: J by the! In discussing the outlook in york City, has reported to Mra, | situation ut the time of its adoption,| and Samuel of Yakima, Wash : Republican par. 1021.| Nebraska, Mra: Penney said: | yo inat a o f 200 traine | Be suid. Lawlessness and indecision | Mrs. Louis Treude of New Salem, They look upon ' 5 “Women think first of their homes at a corps of 200 trained Twas prevalent, and in the convention | Mrs. R. J. Doin and Mrs, C. A. OL of the nation’ and the needs of their families and SP are campaigning tn the | there was conflict between the fed-| son of Bismarck, Mrs. Andrew eping on a lai, ithey know that when the country; states along the Atlantic seaboard. | cralists on the one side, who would | Spalding of Wenatehee Washington, ae Se SS) make the fede government and Lillian Oclke of New Leipzig. ry GY ny address this newcomer from Ne- HUNT GETTING READY FOR pies evans te LONG VAUDEVILLE SHOW ticre, indeed, would be a real ete drama of soul, Or melodrama, BY HARRY B. HUNT thas pricked the risibilities of much ketees Meee Service Writer In either case, whether Brayan or FRANK O LOWDEN night by Theodore | ! A brother, Adam Oelke of Fredonia preme and those on the other ing on the rights of the stat nd sister, Mrs. Schaible of Elgin, Whe ino, rid, the conflic o survive. Funeral services were between pleas for the tyranny of al held at New Leipzig on Sunday monarch and those urging mob rules, Out of all the dissension and study| CORN TO YIELD came the American Constitution pro- >) a viding for (hree coordinate branc! 50 BU. PER ACRE of government, legislative, executive SeISeTs and judicial, he sdid. William Hassa, living about five in closing Mr, Hutchgson told of | miles southeast of Bismarck, is said the efforts of the Masonie grand] to have one of the best fields of corn vdge officers to get out the vote at] in Burleigh county, It is estimated the coming election nyo many the corn, which is Mr. Henry, in brief remarks, ex-| Northwestern Dent, will yield 50 plained the program of the grand! bushels to the acre. lodire. In some places in Burleigh coun Study of the Constitution is to be| ty, it is said, there has not yet been undertaken in the dge, he; # killing frost. es will be ES einen given during the winte Many people do not appreciate cit-| izenship, Mr. Henry said, and not] the SPANISH SHAW Spanish shawl is t fashionable The all means. most type of eve fundamental! ning wrap for summer He told Masons they could be Barley exeveds oats in feeding ood citizens in peace time as in war] value. a thine, cand) herunged pon) all y= | ee the benefits of the Masonie | d winter program, the study of mnstitution and the governmen(, Is Invited to Hear EX-GOVERNOR OF ILL TONIGHT ——A NOIS MR. W. L. DAY Representing the Karpen Furniture Co. Will be here Wedne Come in and discuss your upholstering problems with him and see the many beautiful patterns. WEBB BROTHERS “Merchandise of Merit Only” CCSS ELL ESE TOL OR LOOEIESEEOOSIELEEIOLEEEOOEELIEESLEEESIOLEONOLTESESEOELSOOEDEDEEDESEDOESELEDESIDDDOSOLESELELDELOSEDOL ISILON EVERY VOTER |TRAVELING MEN TO MEET HERE There will be a meeting of traveling men in Elks Hall at 10 o'clock Saturday morning, to dis- cuss matters in connection with the coming election. Absent voters’ ballots may be obtained and filled out at the time. All traveling men are asked to be present. TURKEY CROP CUT*IN TWO Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 21.—The tuikey crop in North Dakota this year will be only half as large as that of last year, according to re- ports received by H. 0, Herbrand- son, federal crop statistician for the state. Wet weather during the spring and early summer is respon- ple for the decrease. ‘Cook By Wire Instead of by Fire. day, Oct. 22. PPOLIILODLOOLOOLOLOLILOLOLEDLLOLELOLODOL LIED IDETESELEOLODLDODDOOLEL ODED DELS DODO ODODE DDDOD ODODE DOD OO OOD ODED» ELDO»OOE

Other pages from this issue: