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eS ee ey HAwsescanere PAGE TWO PEKING PEACE IS SOUGHT IN CONFERENCES Attained Little Success Yet in Effort to Bring ¢ erals Together n- Veking, Ch arrange 2 pe Gen the unit of the general” he adher Atlantic the Hip expected aries and eral nevolent were ediz rim. 3 KILLED AS BIN COLLAPSES Farmer's Wife and Two Son Die in Minnesota 2x. + M of a farmer of Wheaton. | d 4-year-old | were ¥ 1 yes: when the | upstairs bin col- the ie loay oro! an loading lapsed, them in ny her hus mall children, ane Suse ae | were not the o ticipants, for} loan in Great Britain but not permitted mn : ; . we seen there were sub-participants back of|by American banking law. Tt was a the financial resourets of the country| where among the people who like to election as one ef the Judges of the District Court \ th m, Thee is sald he honds to demand Het eral a need in the most effective eas ae did elevelat sort of thing. The master if ilave had the honor to serve you in this capacity dui nvestors, this widespread organization | two to ¢ by the deposit 0! s ‘a ions, y the v>} mit vi icy unquestionably * * : ~ LF id - eIT ene | this falas pusned out of the| Government, had Bought or, borsowed| Cem c Mn oe i cel ster and ME Sole port for the ensuing four years. hands of the bankers at once, Bankers! from British owners, Mr, Page refers which might: inter: ere wit! 3 Ss own acter and memory need no defense * i who are bond distributors buy bonds as| to this collateral. plans for bond offerings, and inasmuch | against the calumny. Respectfully, ann poe eee. Sere mane | eae ee é 2 ees z = x = ee 1 ay Moa ae assim conte whieh | 7 i evidences the growing demand which| rnointment are the Commercial ‘EK avy awhile : = = er} is building up. \orns and the Bismarck Association BASEBALL PLAY | Hear collaps- | | Hi] Me. Gohlke expects by far the | Wms 5; Seattle, Oct, 29—Owners of the | ing grana daugh- | aa : | bok estes hile Fey nai eattle Indians and the St. Paul ff ter, who was at the farmhome near-| While a few any per-|while the taxpayers inlign des | abaaseasomemithesietonysar thisjcon, nts, who have played one bys immediately te phoned neigh-|sons pred victory for|serts that claims th a) Core sre for the minor league Vote For _ bors. A search for the three per- Follett itis abate: [hoetaiedl byatheabill ‘ i gates smpionship, have ag sons was instituted, but all were! t two Weeks there has nd Ha Halvorson have | Yi learned today, to ask cancellation | nie dead when recovered, about an hour | Paine coin eeee nt ment d themselves as opposed to o1 further games if rain prevents | 6 tater. {that predivtio: a being freely |the bill. . further ames. In event of can- | ar e husband i from {made that Coolidge will win North VAnk | ie eae cellation St. Paul will be a -—for— bile En norely porate accident. Dakota's clectoral vote. Many Cool-| Presid Coolidge has a lead in| Presbyterian Minister * in| the minor ISDE uC chanipionehiy due He broke down comple when he nis are said to be will- ja ‘aw vote being conducted by the | , to its victory over Seattle in the \OUNTY AUi TOR ed the scene. on the resuit.| Grand F Her. The vote is South Dakota Called Upon | initial and only game played, and | Cou DI yo was a of * » foreign policy of the | Coolidge LaFollette 3 Davis 5 victory over Baltimore, i by adjoined a bs pad much to do | 26. ouode . Z ana | ¢ General Election held oined urn on had im oe ya 6. rs Propesed for ‘Secretary of| Madison, Wis. Oct. 29.—Charges of | ‘The largest species of jellyfish are | Atthe sGopekala ery ntial | The “Get-out-the-Vote” idea is | Agriculture Molation of church vows have been | said to be capable of capturing and : sl grain loading was de The grain j spreading over‘ the entire state. In | Pied against Dr.George H. Hunt, | digesting other fish! | i ici pee ee cao a oe eta! i state. In| ae pestor of Christ. Presbyterian ehurch = eis i My motto is efficiency — and stored in the upper was re The North Dakota Patriot, a little, the last primary the vote dropped | i 7 i sag g | served for farm I euLioalen: bate Retin watotaiuae lori) ceniantinis® THiaueeNevemer| | ope uEen oe er ywaner esos here, the largest presbyterian pas- | The cotton boll weevil did rela- | economy. he bodies we to an Society! aeiilioh | atter| alecion siguroximately 250.000) caaue jae aylon dlireeted .aguin Lore Ie a ee aPeaeA BOOM PI tively Mttle damage inj the south | er eras Ne ‘ | approx’ 3 oward the vacancy in the | Yesterday. Rev. H. E. Andyews, Saas 2 > Iv undertaking Cole of the First Dis- | votes were east im thé state, In the | cabinet caused by the death of Sec. | Pertage, moderator of the Madison during 1924. (Pol Adit) . soama t ee ee Snes 3 Ree ad , ction, pproxi- | Wallace. Tele, presbyte has called a conference | y { oe RUE ue Uae he vole} of Litchfield, Minnesota, ee THROUGH sir sentences” [aropped oft 20,0" more [of Tanti Minnesot oS, | The, shares are the outgrowth | other Republican lead of Minne- peer, scheaiced to, De: Huns and Ay W ALKER’ S| ong attacks are being made on Attome 2 Sha Feuer creed ee ee published in Tocal newspapers on the VOTE FOR The H f the F it VAvaos |he at evel andtecde Thur ie took nar alm the gpreccnyaion ee oF DE San vcenee we —The Ho g us S50- and eds ursday, ign Pres } i eee, arry Fosdick, XN ee c a ‘amous ae TA Pekin Briday, | PME ou Baseideny Coolidge: York having declared the Presby- Chile Con Carne one ononerstowme Satunday (tee ag a ee terian “confession in faith” ond the eo e 7 , bill ane ¥| FOUR BODIES BACK COULTER | infallibility of the bible are ante e ngs y | Fargo, Oct. 29.-Four commercial | oyated. me ope Nee Da: The letter as published said that Yor Coroner 4 1 and er th s where t tomatic : | Piles Can Be Curec) Without Surgery | An: instraetive book has been pub: Hshed ‘byDr. A: So'McCleary, the fibted “rectal “specialist: vof Kansas} Gity. This bookrtells how. sufferers from’ Piles caw be ‘quickly and easity | cured without the use of knife, scie-| sors, “hot” iron, electricity or any other cutting or burning method, without confinement to bedand no’ hospital bills to pay. The method | has been a success for: twenty: years and in more than eight tho and’ cases.~The-book is sent post. peid freé to“personé iiffticted ‘wit piles or other rectal troubles: wh clip this item-and: mail it with name! and address to Dr. McCleary, D5e:/ Parkview Sanitariam, Kanens “'rv.) ~ Mo. bisa aul four |, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1924 A CHAPTER OF WAR HISTORY By George E. Roberts From the Monthly Bank Letter for Ocober, Issued by The National City Bank of New York Le September ain current ¢ eficet that inte sational h et nsible i oi our cont at that time walle to Great Britain, his ii tno war as been “Life and Lett pp, 261, 272-273 cole elk nation | came in in the nick of time tor mete a neta very tt If we hadn't, their or an bugetadl ds would have down soon and leap ac w it. 1 shal] never forget the Peel T spent cwita Mr, Balfour aud: Sfr. | e with the] ‘The mutter that was chictly pressing at al Mf the ‘Bulcour visit was the fact | ca British bulavers New York the st ys be vemen vever, that Be ae 1 was finaneit only herself A, U. MEYER aitkiew|i con Dred ti found hersel | gt (00 cons de i ns with which us allied « war, ‘Thus by April €, 1917, Great had overdra cith J. ny held by many letter. Anglo- by an organizatiot vestment houses headed by J. n & Co, and comprising 1,370 sub- hing houses, located in all parts « e bankers, however, The the country. fopaceunn he nitation | d such high t Government manuf orm tions. At the present of Chile of Mexene turned dut during : Such pas been the mend idtoWalker'# R that a new factors capacity’ Has just minafacture the necordiny’ to W of Walker. Prope: Mr. Goh check kept on the the first'few days o ed chat over 1% y's output. increasing de-| amates, products, Gohike, Manager clo: rtment operation, Tamales 000 manufactured and packed per day placed end to end, these tamales would stretch out ‘into a distance of seven mi jez, which gives an exce ie tremendous outpur hose ta carload lots to country, Mr. Goh!se repor biggest ve business for the were! rred to pinion U, MEYER is or warrant what- ch five-year loan of ),000 which was floated in this 5, was hand ers and in: Pp ing, and as | and th ed Mor- Government payity French re th lwar, A sone reac Uh there 1c first, as m te ment 1c United States entered the pril, 1917, This loan has had nublicity. through a_ reference made to it by th Libs f the only that he As this an important extent in this ing to give hin them ) re ts were credit of Great. the late Walter H. Page, ed St this matter, the American paid this overdraft, out Loan. A Bank are in a position to how it was liquidated. not attempting to wri led or exact account-of the trans- its attempt i such an account, and the statement as given is not complete or strictly accurate, the loan was not overdraft, which is a common form of his inform: sell them and ble in order to be in| t the operation. © of bonds was paid of at | , October 15, 1920, the British half in full,) Government floating | (00.000,000. onc de to priv es Ambas' Account, fF $400,000 f the proce This was a partic ow how its in the form o: ment a Coll vt te As these te hold- evident that the United Stat never had any paritici- n this loan, n to which the above letter fers was a demand loan held ler group of bankers at the which ton ct saved the In the first place, ut buys goods, for the purpose | dor 1,000 et was f an A few words of explanation about these securities is necessary, After the exhaustion of the proceeds of the Anglo-French loan of 10,000,000 the British Government continued to cover its purchases in this country by ship- ments of gold and by sales in this mar- ket of American ities which it procured from British holders, Laws were passed by the British Parliament creating inducements jer the British owners of such securities to convey them either temporarily or permanently tu the British Government, for the purpose of aiding in financing its pur- chases in the United States, and very large atnounts were obtained in this. manner, 4 h had been un- British investors— insurance companies, investment com- panies, individual investors, ete.—in all the years since British investments in this country began, were of a very high class—many of .therh underlying bonds the oldest. and strongest railr in general a collection of secur which for the most part had been in- frequently seen ins the markets in re- rs, being held as permanent ins These securities, w der accumulation of & were sent to the York representatives of the Brit- ish Treasury, J. P, Morgan & Co., to be sold or used as collateral for loans. Several tite-loans were issued on such security and distributed on the public market, and in ail more than $1,000- 000,000 of the secari were sold by J. P. Morgan & Co, Obviously, how- ever, sales had to-be made at low prices compared with the prices which these securities had commanded before the war, and it was desirable that they should not be pressed for sale faster than the market could absorb them without depressing prices still further. To avoid doing this, the demand loa was resorted to as affording some lat tude in making sales and in the selec: tion of dates for offering time-loans to the public. The demand loan was shared in by a selected list of the larger banks, in and outside of New York. At the time the United States entered the war this loan was ap- proximately $345,000,000. atid was se- cured by collateral of the kind de- scribed above, having a market value at the itme of about $700,000:000, and readily salable. When the United States entered the war the Government at Washington im- mediately assumed supervision over the security markets in order to mobilize i ident of the North D: of Pavert Fate st.” He wrote 1 . Here he is on, who words reing cong atulated by Bessie ud With 126 words a minute, plains i proxima the high approximately double that amount States as it was nec! of those governments in this country to continue, it was quickly decided that all interests would be best ser by having the United States Govern- ment finance such expenditures . itseli. ary for the purchases ed by hat was the end of foreign flotations in this country until after the w By the time the United States Treas- The statement taken over by the United States Treas- ury is a mistak have any knowled; approached the negotiations with the subject, nor did they demand on the British 1 the loan, irom funds accumu y with J, P. Morgan ent ual. rn ng thi: ely poi of vs the British Treasu & Co., but this receiving funds from as the sale of exchange, transfers England account with the Vederal Re serve Bank of New York, ete., and the same time was being di for current payments by the Drit disbursing offic Treasury of the British is, of course, commor that f of Joan 1 1 ury was ready to take over the full br den of payments on account of British purchases, which was after the United States declared war, the demand loan had increased to ap- $400,000,000, with int, thi so ACC secu may ha source is possible. As to this no knowle but the payment « loan was in, novdegree dependent receipts from that source. a month or so which collateral was still at this loan was far as. the bankers orat, dl ne réasury or had any Treasury oh the ever make asury for the dt was paid ed by nt was constant! various sources, ities, the sale irom a Bank ot of t yn upon sh d 1 at the Uni came to the support Treasur that time, knowledge, and funtls used in liquidat- ¢ come from that ¢ have the The essential facts are that this loan it, and tha to the U1 country the collateral. in the life of the loan when it could not “have been liquidated from the pro- ceeds of the collateral. was amply secured with collatera American origin, that the lending bi had no occasion for anxiety about they did not turn it over ited States payment was not dependent upon this entering the v resources of Great of nk= Tr Its asury, r, oF upon an Britain other than There never was a time Of course, the whole miserable story Dr. Fosdick had been the object of It had of the influence of the bankers for the entrance of this country into the war falls when the alleged motive for it disappears, ° its origin son jfood in the skin of a buffalo. oltlee rete the ap- 1 “personal attaeks by men who have - = John’ Les Coulter, 1 atylcd> themselves fundamentalists Burleigh County, North Dakota kota and (Ore excl anelee Any thenioe pas | ego, as Secretary 0 Ths charges have -not yet been \ Berets ; augers the laterite ceased uy nabs Hantand he deciin- | Constipation, Biliousness, }| (Polieal Agvertiseme nt) 1 eutiely Ons Soul al od arene sre hat re ‘Sick Headaches. y SB OUT G fey NORMA RObAL S| Se secu 5 t <Fenewiag that vigor end sood fecl. § | pees é ing to necessary to being weil and ——= | 3 PY i , Used for Guer MITE Rae ETH 1 i 1 IH TTL | HOLD. AN FOR Aeseceooa MEU TTTTTAT RARE HT ELH CULL LER ELE EE ee | a AS a | pmmbrcinayy SE | a , A is ! { ‘ ay MEY MOTE HAVE YOUR = Has Beer Hunted in-Countiy ais E4 » ‘For Bight Years Chi Bl : : "7 a fil ips off the Old Block | = uction = <P NT JUNIORS===Littlo No = 2 | Minneapolis, Oct. Apprehen- The samc NW—in ara) doses, = Es nm here of William Klatte, alias | candy-coated. Forchildreniand adults. | = = , who has been hunted Sold By Your Druggist = 5 = country for more Uhrs t . = inf connection with is = a murdey at-White Plains; N. Y. Jdn. = 71 = 4 was disclosed here tod 9, * ; j = eae ey Oneal ia i = Printed in The Tribune Job Printing Depart- = hpige of grant: | ys wantdd = ment. We can give you superior service in =e at} White Pliths, Mr, Olson said, in COMPANY laying: out your copy. Our prices are right a ‘conngetion With the slaying of Gré- || and our service is prompt. 2 \ = gopio, Feirfe, a-merchant who, Ols F ey i . = |sald\‘was killled at the behést of h Grain Commission \ } = = wife bedause she loved another. K ; | The wife, a gister, a woman frie! Minneapolis Doleth F= Bismanc! TRIBUNE = and a New York gunman now ke Chicage Milwaukee = . = |sedving terms for’the murder. e {= I : DEPARTMENT Bu given a huge cup \ pe a | Send us samples of your gratn |} | == = minute at the bu: When on the warpath, the old |¥¥ and Max for valuation: sample }} | Fe = r Indians often boiled their ||] @mvelopes sent upon request 1) Ss | d that when he though be killed, the moose fell over « TTACKEDBY _| MOOSE; SAVED" fre y cos 5500, is ot. |Tecently cost $5500 of an Atlantic liner { Dawson, Y. T., Oct. 29.—' json, hunter und trapper, of Indian} | River, told on returning heve of be-| | ttaeked recently by an unmo-| rrence’ by hunters. bull | re arged him from the timber i M.E. BOLTON | Olson said he took a flying shot and} hit the animal in the head. The} j moose continued his charge, hurled| Osteopath \ | him to ‘the ground and gored him in) v y ‘ oh and a head © a bale cl jthe thigh, hand and head. Olson Specialist in i 1 Chroni¢ Diseases Felephone 240 1191%4—4th St.}, Bismarck, N. D. ores \ | Headach - |} AT ECT i tare’ wary oa dortered | ELECT | iy ur ele | | | TAN LAC | Candidate for Re-election , | | The World’ 3 Best Tonic | County Auditor | At All Good Drug Stores |} : < : Mil Over 40 Million Bottles Sold || Burleigh County Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills for | Veteran of World War. Constipation ' (Pol. Adv.) “ | E. J. GOBEL \ ' Candidate For H Re-election ; CORONER Burleigh County Your support will be appreciated To the People of Burleigh County and the Fourth Judicial District: I desire to announce that Iam _a candidate for re- sare tli i are ! il HITT Lai AUUSUANAUA UA HiT