The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO A “WICKEDEST TOWN” Is REFORMING Jor this region will end before it has | present Republican tariff rate on|»ne of the most stable and profitable : | | begun. [Cuban sugar is one and three-qua ee ee i cee and ' . ’ ‘f a °. x . ’ aie |ters cents per pound. Under the the land and lea’ in | Oil Men’s Love for Dancing Brings Cromwell’s Transformation. | These are not idle words written Plast Democratic tariff the rate condition for immense yields of | for political effect. They are the one cent per pound, with provision }grain to follow. As a rotation crop words of W. 1, Douglis, president |for ultimate free sugar. Only the|with spring wheat, the combination \ of the Minnesota Sugar Company, |war prevented free sui oming jean not be excelled. i a which is financing the new facto ty. Senator LaFollette evi- 4 at East Grand Forks. Mr. Dougl ands with the Democrats FOR CHILDREN'S CLOTH " save ‘i tucks e very pr i i | tlt is purely a matter‘of business, | Sugar beets open up to as [trimmings for children’s clothes und | ee A ' not politics, with us. We c Rnasela Kaa NOE ~{may be let out as the child's State Tax Commissioner, in {Means Much If Sugar Beet fia bat in a busine st Saitte ct any faced height necessitates a longer he . : may be ruined by the remova AGieROa RY Nate Only! SOE Talk Discusses Effect of | Industry Is to be Built Up, |taritr protection, or t be leg: | BE ee ; | slated out of e d : : > ‘ i ee yan irre. | i Proposed Measure | Says Manufacturer sponsible government. If the elec- | be : tion on November 4 assures us that . m i ‘ our bust will be protected ) SOME OF HARDSHIP WHAT - HAPPEN | against foreign competition, we vill JOSEPH A. i H put forth e effort to have the ‘CHEN verse, analyzing the proposed —ini- | | Washington, Oct y for the 1925 crop. i ‘ tiated tax reduction measure to be | jand North Dakota are in a po “at tne election goes the other; Republican Candi tate @ voted on November 4, before the Lea | VE a i all work that has heen started | i Beh Women Voters je eement| | E ae to pone a field of jeoto stop: We iwilfll for RePa Gab Hin Julitors how to vote on jone of the greatest developments of j1cturn cent of the subscri 4 sieaie the bill, but pointed to some of its ‘the sugar-beet industry in America. |tions received from farmers and | Commissioner of ‘ effects and indicated that should the {One sugar factory already started | P¥siness men in the pocket ; 01 ar ‘ ure pass and impose undue | econ emai aa Gia Ube Gua y dane Agriculture and Hie the ailuation: would nat t Grand Forks, another def- Mather eae” Ge real 3 \ ee ely, Pine roncearey, Oe Mees ple conditions to ente Labor ‘ee i cannot bi 5 puss by the els the guringi@hieat @avmern of the and magnitude.” ‘ Election Nov. 4. nirds of the mem both houses | Teens eo COTE eIire tea ees ee Miedo adequate! tanith aprot VOTE! inite in that repeal or ment, he | lhe. Gig ORG ie ee ier Walley |tion, new development in the su: a) "if il can be established: thi ied ae p08) ipa une west [beet industry is impossible. Our At June Primaries re- the measure will be disastrous to the jof that favored region. A repre- domestic beet growers and sugar | ceived Nomination chools, there is no question in | calcd GC a arnee oe “| manufacturers can not otherwise Ea Oth REGUDICAT Fe ie Ghat o trajority of the ntative o: Best Jolorado sugar | compete with the cheaper tr pro- from both Repub ists isliture will vote in favor of Hoe La ATAU Late eran ae Tee yduction of Cuba, from which most and Democratice Par- if a mistake should t ,aund s ere 3. preater | of our foreign imports come. The ies é , $ nt ce oe should ; available for sugar beets than|° °C" foreign imports come. Th ties. Your. suppor Poa Cte animale tne was supplying ten or twelve fac- appreciated. RINGRECIE. question ia open: Tor| Htories in his state. With new fac- bY if Arauiti Ui cad Gite kay 0 {tories established in this northern tae i | lregion, the overload on the Chaska . Z | nd Mason City factories will be ELECT State Effect i relieved, permitting a still greater | spose we start with the state | lespansion of the industry in central rnment: If the measure be-| jand southern Minnesota as well. Ue a law, I assume that it will be |" it all depends upon the coming : x4 Vote For r sssary to discontinu e aid to sidenti election and the sugar local schools and also to decrease ex- | tariff. The Republican party stands titutions, possibly discontinuing the | tiff for the domestic sugar-beet |} Candidate for Re-election = appropriation altogether for two or! f industry. ator LaFollette has f three of the smaller ~ instituticns.| aligned himself with the Democrats : on —tor— Most counties will be able to go jin demanding a reduction of the County Auditor ahead with the public business, I be present tariff rates. J JITOR Hieve, because it is possible for the| ALO i ahaa AS SON ON) NCING GIRLS. LOWER RIGHT A STREET SCENE | If the LaFollette-Demoeratic plan Burleigh County le ture to add enough to the tax} IN CROMWELL, “WICKEDEST TOWN.” LOW LEFT -OLD BiLL TILGAHMAN, 71-YEAR-OLD FIGHT- |of tariff reduction or free sugar At the General Election held mponiidsoline sons to supply the| ING “COPPHR,” WHO IS CLEANING UP THE) TOWN should come, As biwouldsifiCoalldge Veteran of World War. November’ath countios with the necessary funds.! Cromwell, Okla, Oct. 20-—Cro POSIT nannnnnr jis not reelected, ehere will be no ieianasn : A They will thus be able to comply | yoj) Hate alte ¥ fo dne ; new development work and the great L b p © of the oil field husk-| around, for there v 60) men toll tons mate artificial iprotitey bubeall P' er é Geo Ge with the law by eliminating the levy) jg. being cleancd Jevery woman in Cromwell, so the | the mark profits went back into the|D:nefit of sugar beets to the farmer My motto is efficiency — and for rate purposes. Cities and vil- te investigators call it’ Amer-| dance hail mon began importing | plants, not into the “banks, becaus : economy. ec Ole ete sae anaed cine wickedest town. dancers from the larger cities of the | the manufacturers wanted to re to comply with the measure if) Gig gill Tilghman, now 71 years | Southwest. Dozens of girls were ob-| lize on the marks which otherwise it becomes a law, and the school pro-| jig why back in 1s)6 broke up the | tained from Tulsa, Oklahoma City | would Have been worthless. 4 blem will be serious in some places. | iy¢giin-Dalton yang and nas been | and Kansas City, it is alleged. “Germany was always a_ price “However, the proposed law does] yajcing Cain ever since in the oib{ Suspecting a white slave riag,| proposition. They cannot sell on a not affect the crane ae a fund SOV Fi lds, wields t ibbing brush, | state officials began their investi- | basis of style and chic. Now they > ors that it is possible for the legis/ature In this tewn of 300 persons, state} gations. One man arrested in| are working toward a 10 hour day, _ to use the county tuition fund levy} awents claim they found wide-open | Tulsa in the agt of getting two and that will mean a further redue- Candidate For VOTE FOR as a means of county to high| yambling, 200 dope peddlers, many | Young girls out of the city tion in prices, schools. Or, for that matter, county| dance halls in which young the investigation failed to Ee Re-election aid to high schools and other local] danced for 5 cents a dance to the PRs Ex alice I oll schools. The legislature can inerease,) tune of weird jazz music and 50 to light the wicked- F F N ty tuition le and “choc” beer were sold Governor Trapp sent Mrs, Bassett B 1 igh Cc t Phe conclusion is that even al Hijackers, bootleg and sud-|and Connally down to look the town urlei ‘oun y bare majority of the legislature can] denly rich oil men played for high | over. Judge George C. Crump of 8 y For Coroner find ways in which to temper to a] stakes around the tables in the elap- | Holdenville got busy, too. es : Se Gen ais) amet artnet “the investixators "found Seon Your support will be Batic ek ennty Nee niDAuoth which may result from the measure] The noise of pianos and moaning | tions deplorable Girls under 18 a eiated ’ z if it becomes a law.” saxophones rose above the subdued jhad been brought in. A boy of 8 } appreciate / v The tax commissioner said tax lim-] roar of the oi] derricks banking che | Was caught peddling dope. (Political Advertisement) itation laws were not new, but that] mushroom town while oil huskies A number of se ‘ ye mae (Political Advertisement) opponents of the initiated bill claim] scratched over the rough pine floors Crump marched a batch 0 ee : i ODE hey tiatedaba clainy deren eat oses uwbreakers on fdot to Wewoka, | Investigation Being Conduct- provides that in One out of ¢ three houses m|for trial, tying them to a 60-fo ah 35, 1926 and 19: town was a house of iif fame, state | chain, with a deputy sheriff on e ed by Authorities of 1 levy an amount in ex-| investigators cont ond cena British Columbia percent of the amount] Mrs. Mabel Bassett, state com- | Federal pe rs ile stepped in, narticular district for] missioner of chariti: Fe corree- | diying up the town and breaking up peaerneny aaa ea gear Claud Conally, state com-| the narcotic traffie. Vancouver, B, C. Oct, 30.—Peter ® e imitation does not affect] tion, and ud Conally, ; f fi issioner of labor, visited this town | Then the governor and Judge] Veregin, head of the Doukhobor levies for the purpose of providing} missioner of lubor, | : aa diiking funds Lo cetire. Lends, ortand made these c | Crump backed by the business men, | colony of British Columbia, who was Re d ee vd i Pe ae 2 Bushings hase | decided to hire Bill Tilghman lilled with five other persons in an the county tuition, soldiers’ benus| . Attd the oil ‘huskies passion for | town marshal. explosion on a train of the Canadian . poe mucumey aru.on weoldiers) (BONUS cing hag brought) iabouus the) Uhough Bill ng in years he | Pacific railway between Nelson and ’ and some other levies, It is provid-| dancing i ou | s : La ye | transformation jis just as “hard” as he was in his| Grand Forks, B. C., came to Can- 2 e Sis ee May authorize a levy) “mire were not enough girls 10 go| palmiest d the officials say, ada from exile in Siberia in 1903, to 7] \ within 10 percent of the 1923 levy, Bill has closed up the saloons, a| lead a Doukhobor colony in Saskat- > cul ae anyeny event TE ss ot of the dance halls, and put the | chewan_provine is abe) tuentehy tovlevyias) much taxes) (nay dope sellers on the one; The five dead were: “J. L. Machie, as was it levied in 1918, ; HEN THE CHILL week he and Deputy Sheriff Aldrich | member of the British Columbia ’ “Some proponents of the bill ad- SHOOK P. W. ushered 65 of the dancing girls out lature for Grand Forks; Harry mit the terms of the bill will imp of town, ishop, of Nelson an amateur hockey undue hardship in some instances,” | But Bill s: he needs a lot more and three unidentified per- | L id Mr. Converse, “but they Ip his cleanup is going to be | sons, one a woman. that those instan ‘ew and successful. Ten persons were injured. between and that we must be govern- One ef Bill's best volunteer a The explosion happened shortly e e ed by what is for the good of the ants—and you can take Bill's word | after 1 o'clock tnis morning while ‘ F t number, the great majority. for itis J. FE, Murphy, the train was on, its way here. ‘The “ y assert further that if each citi- dent of the Cromwell Chambe torrifie blast blew bodies out of the f \ zen thinks upon this measure in the Commerce, member of the Board of | passenger car. It was believed at ‘9 e e light of conditions in his own parti- |Health, chairman of the school com-| first that a tank of illuminating cular county, township, city or school mittee, proprietor of the Murphy | gas under the coach exploded but district, the final result will be in! jdance hall, and manager of the | an investigation showed, according harmony with what is for the good “Murphy Dancing ¢ ae ty officials of the Canadian Pacific, of the greatest number.” | | that the explosion caused by AUSPICES —— | high explosives in the car. D, C. Coleman, vice president of Bowman Bank the western lines of the company “ig nipeg, Man., said “the explo- ~ A 2 Officials Are IMPOSSIBLE was caused by some human q } A within the car, either in- Bound To Trial! } tentionally or accidentally SSOC1a 10n oO OI | | | I 1e1 ce ——> I | pacencaaee A special train which carried pro- oy y ¥. D., Oct, 30.—Herman | 4 : vencial police, company officials and y | nand F. Mj Dawes Plan Has Given Ger-| poukhobors to the scene of the FOR Clarkson, cfficials of the clesea | z re ty eck, was to take Veregin's body —F ay State bank of Bowman, at 1 hearing | many First Opportunity (1) t,2 poukhobor colony at Billiant, here, were bound over to dist ! 'o Pa {i €. court, under $2,000 bonds each, on | i To Pay plice continued investigation to- 5 the charge of accepting deposits in| =a rumors that the cxplosion - sn insolvent bank while knowiny st | , Oct. 30- 3 been a plot to b to be insolvent. j did a gocd job when lender. A 4 O. M. Young, an official of the! ‘worked out tre Dawes plan, s born in Tr t iim defunct Farmers and Mechanics | businessm ‘ State bank of Bowman, charged with | illnes e = i v the same offense, is returning vol- | winch could WHY P DECLINE | untarily from California, according | problems, Roger Low prices wool, sheep para- ; to Mark H. Amundson. state’s attor- | \ Dey, manager of the Berlin | cites, and the cost of maintaining | 7 ney of Bowman county. office of the Dayton Company, said | fences are said to have caused the 7 Trials in November Likely 2 polis, today. ; decl and virtual death of sheep ” ‘Trials of the officials bound over disover in ny through-|aising in Ohio. ‘This is the opinion | , probably will be held at the term | the World War, because he was | Ur Gin ine Grier enety| cf Bowman county district court set British subject .° Mr. Day | has) conomis i \ to.convene here Noy. 12, 1924, \ ched conditions change in Ge Rea Rigi s Matinee | 4 Warrants for arrest of the four} y through 12 years of connection - 3 er 2 ‘ F bank officials on the stated charge| the buying organiz Me Ke Ve ae were issued upon complaint of | | aafsitainythats 88 0 8 LITTLE JOE State's Attorney Amundson, after he! | The Dawes p'an Me Gor- = oo had, made an extensive investigation| i y her first opportunity to j of the conduct of various closed | pay, and her fit knowledge ot | SPARE THE ROD | | Bowman county banks, upon order | | hoy much fuel 5 be, aun te AND ~ THE FURNACE of the county commissioners which | } authors got at the bottom. of 1 c avthorized. employment of expert | | ¢¢ ni chans nd ee out the | GETS FULL OF ‘ 4 30 TO MiDNIGHT ’ necountants in going over bank re- | | only concrete ‘wsy to alleviate | | ; cords. | | Germany's troub! ss. ! CLINKERS/ | ‘The immedia'c effect of in- q Al | creased credits, made possible FOUR ACTS OF VAUDEVILLE FOR WEAK LUNGS! | momentary to anton "pricey | momentarily. to stiffen — pri 4 is ‘<a : ai | hut the "general: pricer trond ‘on Musical Numbers by Juvenile Band. _ Colds, and Coughs | the continent is: downward, by , ‘ regres i wre son Ma ay | There is no catthly possibility T Sh Fi sg ne rr. W, Wyatt, Leeton, Mo., : of Germany ever going bolshe- pee $ “{ gained 26 pounds in'6 months.| This is a most unusual One| Accie ator ainito Gancanne wo Shows irst Starts at 7:30. econd Performance at 9 p.m. St: y as long as Feeling fine. I am glad to recom-jgraph of the Prince of Wales. It ture. There is. no chance of *L > e _ i é tend “MeMULLINS FORMULA”. If was taken at Montreal where he be-! any fusion between Germany and you like. No reserved seats. Tickets. $1.00. you have weak Jungs, cold, bronchial came chilled while riding and was! Russia. i ‘ s r , t trouble, stubborn cough, or usthmaj ordered to remain indoors a day, all, “German factories ail through the Pues 2 3 5 4 ‘ fy this old roliable remedy at once.| engagements being” canceled. ‘The inflation period were busy,” "he said. Seats on Sale at Association of Commerce Offices First Guaranty Bank Building Wear ‘only by, Tilden, McMullin Co.,|wear and tear of his present tour! “They were selling in dollars, while ag) Se i a : is Sedalia, Mo. For sale by Lenhard Drug Co.—Adv. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE seemed to be telling on the’ prih when this photograph was made, ce | their overhend was “Mh marks, “So they could ke-p g ig. The infia- THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1924* a a

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