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mt 1 het PAGE TWO LOCAL BOYS IN GOOD SHOWING AT BOYS MEET Walter (ea By GEORGE LeRoy Is Elected Present of CG “al ia he reassuring influence of the centers. ‘The Bryan campaign| in preparation for a strike on April! more than any other country. These resident o roup a tlection is munitest in all lines of much like the La Follette cam-| Ist, but the slackening of industrial| toreign purchases are a very im- Crookston Meeting business. A’ spirit of contidence | paign in general appeal and objec-| activity has been an important fac-| portant factor in making the price prevails and the natural result is tives, but carried a particular men-| tor. For the second week in No-! jor cotton, and American manuiac- —_—-- 4 quickening of trade and industry.| ace in its threat against the coun-| vember production exceeded the} turers are in close quarfers between fs succeeded in Hrue to past experience the stock | tyy’s monetary system. ‘The defeat] corresponding week in 1923, the price of the raw material < aw vis tbe ly pee re eice an ne NM etaae! €/ oi Bryan did not alter existing con-]| The non-ferrous metals of cop-| the goods prices. eRtoy was clect- [have been taxed to the limit to the business community re-| ward. Lead’ particularly isin «| © nder pressure frou ae price ld as president “andle the volume of transactions | Mica with apprehension, the eco] strong. position Me “J ior its raw material, Bus aN Da. course this is not of itseli pros. | (90VS My ie eettnley ae can on The Textile Industries inte the mills ine Bee n_ operating ko t on from Bie ,berity, but when it is considered | (p00) AN Ute Comey & re ie ‘ ata higher rate in recent, weeks.| ¢ included Walter Le- at the stocks represent ownership |) 10 8 aA 1 Se eee itl The textile industries are in better | The known _ tenden: to” higher Pa SRReCamCnde the country’s lead | i ene leueetiyethe Fival diq| POsition and operators in a much) prices foF wool is particularly re and that the buying is It is noteworthy that revival did) more hopeful state of mind thun| sponsible for a little more life i Gen parts of the country, it is sign t follow ie tia y alter the they have been for many’ months.| the trade, although manuiacturer: Bigenteinutions ot the general belie: in bet Seer ee though the elec-} In “eotton goods the situation ap-| and dealers in made-up goods pro-| Paice aide ant Numerous warnings are being] ten undoubtedly was a very IMT parently has reached « fairly com-| fess to be dubious about how the! OReLISILe somuded against the danger of ine] portant factor in it when it came.| fortable degree of stability. The lust| public will take to price increas ; ated prices, and of course there] Ihe depression continued through) government estimate of the cotton| A rise of 5, 10 or even 25 cent tlways is danger that such move-| 18 7 d Wilts seth entirely over un-| crop is just under 13,000,000 bales.) per pound in wool, however, make: ial nents wil tha fast and too far) tl about 189), The low prices 01) the fine Pall weather having: added| only a relatively cual increase jn Bi ane e ormina not} Hsin products had come about several hundred thousand bales to! the price of a suit of clothes u pe exert ween stocks of un-| through the opening of new agti-| cartier estimates. ‘This afforgs al The demand for silk goods is more | * ind those that have! cultural territory by railroad con-| seasonabl fl ing < i cee Geen ‘i ; 1 i 5 ‘ ie ise e enably good working supply 0!) active and the industry is gen unduly depressed. ‘The most, struction, not only in this count ial for the intustry, for! Ait ceperting: wood. business feature of the movement, | bnt in Argentina, x it covers the probahle demand, ai-\ 2), wee can has not been in great | sia. The de vn in this coun-! though with little to spure.. ‘The! ther lines of inchudir i but the breadth: t was due in part also price over the last two weeks has underwear and c uinber ofr oh 1 which followed a period of and town-speculation, accom panied by over-construction and un- sne, believed to atiect the en tire He expansion of credit in numerous wisiiess situation Vhe railroad) « the west. In the’ tive years ‘Mocks have led the movement, for the avera production of he lroads have been in per year was osition for years and then ard A Vernon of s EW etek Coe Minneupolias. Yo ated ticular objective of y the next three years it was about CA Eee ! campaien, ‘Lhe moderate! 2.300,000,000 bushels, ‘This increase tac cot these stocks signifies a be-| broke ice of corn, and wheat | i that the roads will have fair) value cted by increased} atinent under the public policy) production not only in this country hodied in existing Jaws | but in the countries named above: Uignnl: features ' No xovernmental policies could Amiga ‘ollawed on The Conditions of Prosperity | remedy this situation; the norma? balance between supply and demand to be expected that all had ta be restored. iid torthwith show) ‘The great war stimulated an in- and entertain turday Tt was not ustries w: how dinary activity, “The election! crease of agricultural production, uable i jot ot itseli cause more busi} which resulted, after Europe re- how s ness to be done, but gives as-| turned to peace-time production, in eee UNE surance that business will not suf-| joy prices, irom which. there has ting was held on ter by the adoption of certain mis-] heen a pronounced recovery in the rnoon with Mr, Poole {taken and unsound public policies.) .<¢ six months. If this recovery address on “A Boy's Re [Tt is for the people themselves,! i; ‘permanent, the entire busin Following this meeting res ness meu, investors, cmploves.! Jtuation should mend more rapidly all who compose the dealing with the various |Wage-earners. than was the case in 1896-99, There of boy life which would be |industrial organization, to go ahead| ;. “ood reason to expect that this the features of the Hi-Y clubs were x sound lines and with the nec- will be the case. after which farewell ser-/!Ssdry spirit of cooperation, “and ex The Hardware Age says that or- ‘make prosperity. e held, Each be No group or class ders now g received for hard- elf to carry on the w Jean make prosperity alone, not even] ware for Spring delivery are in mmunity and to for themselves; there can be no] excess of those received at this time those who did not attend some idea |prosperity that amounts to much un-] jact year, of the work that is to he aecom- Hess all participate. The bituminous coal industry up lished. : H In many respects the present situ- dion is much like that following the |rictory for sound money in 1896. aS country Was passing erough 3 distressingly low in 1896 and there} Arnson Head in indus-| | Medical Society to the first week of lagged behind the productio: year. To November 8, 1924, the total output was 392, 849,000 tons, | against 475,551,000 tons in the cor responding period of last year, This was duc in considerable part to de- pletion | of ‘large stocks accumulated | November Dr. Dist riet | BY HARRY B. HUNT NEA Service Writer resident hought or nothing some passerby less than Erato) the. Sixth Washington, Dec. 16.--Pouring oil Stn ae murder ‘a 1s going -on OEUREN See eee ae a fire to extinguish the flames, | Within was responsibl ibe worn by members on the floor. Big neve ie. wie most folks know, would be the| Anyway, the police were sum-| ‘This rule had been carefully ob-| SOUthern Farmer ; neeting height of stupidity mone served by Republican — congre: Ty resident —Dr. J. O ie ’ t 7 jee rn 0 Yr eeadent—Dr Wate ficueitively.) tnat Ge And the first bluecoat to reach {women, but Mrs. Norton’s nifty bit urns To Poultry br. G. H.. Speit- {What ‘the Washington police depart-|the scene —remembe was alot millinery wrecked it, probably nee | i Uge ment did the other day when called | battle of honor ween two factions | forever. By E RA Servic A ! Roaiecnends ty put out a verbal conflagration at of the proud and blueblooded Daugh-| And no male member had the] Raleigh, N.C. Dee. 16.—The BENENSON annual meeting of the United |ters of the Confederacy, ‘scions of ‘nerve to protest! southern cotton farmer, discouyaged feeeetig, gL DELTTNE ol : the Old) Southaiwar Dl HiuBrasteny A tae by the boll-weevil, has turned to Tee Seal ae " "The Daughters, it seems, came to Neero Imant The old pork barzel ralls into Con- That poultey A.A, Whittemore, state health {tWn with the spirit fof Oil on fi 1s we suggested at |# early in the esuisones Of a themsinnovation pero ecco ret nen re eee | thats ft still undimmed. The | the start, will not extinguish the} Within an hodr noted where formerly cotton was tie Wonk MOT ee one aes liavane But even that, it. seems, | Message on “economy practically the only crop and source Ae eee a r Hutton, the chairma » more effective than the ef-|to the — joint Bons et profit, "Now, ‘besides poultry, the methods uses Lehre SRS sro officer to subdue {Fletcher of Florida tried to attach |there’s more dairying, and rotation Hons (8 ts yp starting gun in a battle the Confederacy, par- |#S a rider to a bill providing needed | of crops is gaining greater headway. , i by the lust legis here two hostile ticularly when their fighting blood ; quarters for the government in Houlton: pegmade tte sdebut ae jg birth and death! “hot, sides wo primed for jis up. Washington an amendment for § the south through the encourag He explained that the de lene attack. In a jiffy, a barrage of | Officer Braxton believes he should [000,000 worth of postoffices, ete, mont of ‘the -palleoads, New ia regu: ee at aan ently, cou it | Charges, countercharges, ceusas be recommended for the — Distin- ee line (he Ar aee cane neers ANS F880 ane tne fouled Nf} tions and reeriminations was ex- | guished if such 2 ¢ 3 oh nas sige ate baa Mg) lina) of) activity. on all “sides. foe viollces RUSH OF MOTOR formulated. It is called the system Accurate statistics were deemed |?" ands Gutote Rie ueeieae BILLS DUE of co-operative car-lot sale. the first need of the department. ; ¢ HOU eh ae loue co The railroad’s development agent North Dakota's appropriation for! dt challenge from the lead- all of duty.” i A aN ISDE Che the amount capita, Js the lowest of any state in In the only Braxton but all the higherups plies a car at a central point to} the poten, Dr. Whittemo id. De, RIESE URE in the Washington police department | Plated Among 34 State As- wich the farmers bring their | Hl. A. Brandes discussed an unusual! and her calls f hi anne = A eee 95 |poultry. blood disease case RuTibee Meee semblies Meeting in 1925 The farmer is paid on the b: eae *ESSIO. it seemed that e first woman Demoe perhaps the to RULED OUT. iioodiest battic of the Civil W to Congress, shattered an et to be fought--was, in fuct, just tra of the House on her Mount Vernon, Hi, Dec, 16,~Judge | starting--somebody called for the t visit there. Keen uted tod that the slleged police. Ithough she will not take her a. ae No Daughter will admit she did seat until the next Congress, Mr: Sitivers, aftac that would be an admission of /Norton ran down to Washington to Pee eicnine could fot co to for her side. Perhaps somé|hear Coolidge’s message on Dec. 3 SHE WRITES NEW BOOK y as evidence in her join vith Lawrence M. Hight for the pois ening of her husband, * Wilford Sweetin. SPEED RECORDS BROKEN Culver City, Calif., Dec. 16.--Speed records that once startled the sport- | ing world lay today in the wake of Bennett Hill's smashing non-stop ' » to victory in the closing 250- mile race of the American Automo- | hile A 1924 season here yesterda: GARGLETHROAT. WITH ASPIRIN. ’ Clip This and Save if Subject | To Sore Throat or Tonsilitis | Prepare. a arniless. and. efiective giargle by dissolving two Bayer Tab- lets of Aspirin in four teaspoonfuls of water. Gargle throat thoroughly Repeat in two hours if necessar; Be sure you use only the genuine Bayer Tablets of JAspirin, marked with the Bayer Cross, which can be had in tin boxes of twelve tablets for few cents.—Advy, | Mrs. Bates” Batcheller of Boston, prominent ‘sevially in Paris. Boston It is written entirely in French. The preface is from the pen of Gabriel Hanatoux of the French Academy. The book, dealing with the relations between France and the United States, is dedicated to Marsha? Foch, sae CURRENT BUSINESS CONDITIONS: (From the Monthly Bank Letter for December Issued by The National City Bank of New York) of last) Norton of Jersey City, | and New York, has published a hook entitled “Une Amitie Historique.” |- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE E. ROBERTS perienced a rev jorward to a on Spring goods. The Wage Qusstion Among the New mills the wage question under very scrious hung around 24 cents per pound on the December option, and there has been a pronounced revival of inter- est in cotton goods. Stocks in mer: chants’ hands have been low, but mills have been accumulating more or less sizable holdings, under the | necessity of giving their employes | something to do. They made up | goods when they could not buy cotton and sell goods to come out prices the New it suffered more than ¢ even, and this has been the sitwa-! competitors, and have tion for many months. Ives at a disadvantage The change which has come over! rates. The Amoskeag the goods market in the last three) New Hampshire, : weeks has made it possible to move| consent of their many of these goods without loss.| months ago to a and in many instances the owners} duction, concluded that i have been ready to part with them! utdertake to increase operation. ; their way to making* a little profit ‘All of the staple cotton goods ar in better demand and have sustained Maine. ployes. Amoskeag with a of the industry in all about 13,000 iollowed. ha sin: price-advances. The improved px reduction, effective November sition seems to be well-supporied| ‘The lgst change of wages in ‘he by all the cond! The in April, 1923, when a over of raw cotton i 12% per cent was pt small, when considey After the ve | above the the improvement goods market will labor less receptive to wage ions, Northern manufactures in not only of Southern cox -| petition but of importations, ve incvease, There is no Cae) that tho textile industry in England has had a very unsat tory yoar, gihens the in erg to buy freely. ion Foreign manufact i E disposed to lay raw material. xports fro | gust Ist to Noveiiber 2isc | gated 2,766,118 bales, against 1,993, 456 bales in the corresponding per- \iod of last year, every importing country increasing ita takings, Cer- many has ingrensed her takings nd @ivings that the latter will a) [and as a member-elect exercised her | motor busses on strects and |privilege of sitting on the floor. country highways. Whether wilfully or unknowingly} And numerous minor subjects, is not revealed, but she dis rded the old rule, heretofore observed by {woman members, that hats are not to more or less related to motordom, are expected to be taken up. | | of the highest bid offered by pros- i BY ISRAEL KLEIN jpective buyers who also have been i NEA Service Writer nvassed by the railro: agents, | | When the car gets its supply from one district it is moved on to an- ,other, until it is loaded. Then it gocs ‘o the buyer. The farmers are paid they deliver their poultry. | Waste Oil Kills Barnyard Pests Many farmers Have make good use of the oil drained from the crank ca of their auto- mobiles and tractors as an insec INGROWN NAIL Turns Right Out Itself Motorists, next year, will face an- other raft of automot the stream of state legi Thirty-four states will have legis lative sessions in 1925, all but one in January, and every one of them | is expected to consider the passage of more laws concerning the motor- list. The laws will range from sim- | ple regulations for improvement of traffic, through more taxation, up to the most serious of them all-— compulsory liability insurance, The number of automotive bills will vary in all states. They have sified, however, under eight s by the Motor Vehicle Confer- fence Committee at Washington. Important Subjects These are: 1. Compulsory liability insurance. 2. Certificate of title laws to pre- vent theft and bring about recovery of stolen vehicles. Drivers’ Licenses tions necessary for thereof. 4.. Highway Construction and maintenance and methods of prop- ly financing such, ‘5. Motor vehicle taxation—form of registration fees and other license charges. 6. Traffic rules and regulations, learned to and exami- the issuance including hand signals, etc. a sh age ‘ ; i re ‘ atgro” is°a harmless stitiseptic 7. Highway engineering, relating | aturactured for chiropodists, to such things as signs, elimination of curyes, lighting and other meth- ods of reducing operating hazards. 8. Motor @ehicle equipment, in- cluding such Spings gs lights and their adjustment, brakes and their adjustment, etc. 3 Others, Too , These are not all. There is agi- tation for more, motor truck regula- tion and taxation. There are signs .of further legislation with regard to Tiowever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing directions. A few drops of “Outgro”’ in the crevice of the ingrowing nail reo duces inflammation and pain and so toughens the tender, sensitive skin underneath the toe nail, that it can not penetratg the flesh, and the nafl turns naturally outward almost over night Adv, on that basis. In other words, the| on that basis, but in view of th ||| first big step of improvement has! recent improvement in the 3ood | been to get upon a break-even hasis,| market is now procecding on h and now they are beginning to sec| basis. Ten of the leading companic jwith sodium fluoride, a wi | olden Rule OUR NAME Our stock is not yet pleased to show you Our Policy: We buy tors through our vas Runniag an office c or Better quality at Furnishings. 318 MAIN ST. A J. N. McCracken Chain Store WIEL OPEN TOMORROW self at home in this store. ous buying ppwer backed with ample capital to always take advantage of every price concession. We do ‘buy for less, cutting out every expense possible (Bookkeepers and. you in the shape of better values, the same quality for less We specialize on Shoes, Hosiery, Underwear, Ready to Wear Clofhes for the whole family, Dry Goods, Notions, The GOLDEN RULE LLOYD ANDERSON, THE OUR PLACE ° complete by any means, but we will be what we have. Come and make your- and sell for cash, being large distribu- t number of stores we have a tremend- ost money) this saving is passed on to the same price. Local Manager (EPPI 7ER BUILDING) iV SVaN/OW/ AWA Jockey Club, adopted during the | received a cide for use against mites in the | lish over the republic. poultry house and to rid hogs of|war and still oper Hence the! Another sign of the healing effect lice. The fact that such oil is black} club is to.be approached with tbe! of time is found in the announcement and filled with dirt does not in| suggestion that the rule be rescindvd.| chat a bevy of Paris mannequins is the least detiact from its effective: | British boxers are today 2 to come to Berlin to show off the ness for their purposes. | warm weleome in Germany, and Urit- latest French creations in dresses Oil cannot be used on the chickens | ish football teams have been welli for women. rd rts} 1 themselves, but may be spr about on the roosts and in all p of the house were mites hide during the day. For the lice on the birds, poultrymen have had great success ite pow- | buted over | rit of all| which, when bird, will parasites. der the the dist soon get BERLIN WILL LET DOWN BARS | TO MANNEQUINS FROM PARIS | Berlin, Dec. 16.-German _ horse owners would like to engage British jockeys to ride their mounts, but are | prevented by a ruling of the Eng- ~ BISMARCK, DIAMONDS JEWELRY Supreme Among Gems The Diamond Better to buy KNOWLES _ jewel than to wish you had. the store from We are showing the most beautiful lot of loose di: monds, and ciamond set jew elry this year this house has ever shown, our Platinum and white gold pieces a readily recognized by the fine color of the diamonds and the fine lacy designs 07 the mountings. In wrist watches we have every standard make in both Swiss and American makes, and at prices from $15.00 to $380.00, we will tbe please” to explain to you why our Swiss wrist watches are su- perior to most other makes. F. A> KNOWLES Jeweler - Bismarck. “Gifts in a Knowlea ‘box do not bear the imprint of a bargain sale.” Store open evenings till Christmas. A Practical Gift in a Beautiful Setting A. pocket knife of national rep- utation in an Exquisite Gift Bor A keen. edged knife made of the finest, steel and fully guaranteed. A complete display i in many priking designs, with and without vest chains, will be found COME HERE FOR TOYS We urge you to call'early for toys as they are going fast. Our stocks is yet very complete. CARVING SETS — TABLEWARE of a quality and variety you seldom find. FRENCH & WELCH OPEN EVE \