The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1925, Page 1

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_ WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Part- ly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [aaanm f ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1925 PRICE FIVE CEN' ~ WOULD REPEAL MILL MANAGERS LAW | NEW GRAFT CHARGE HURLED A AT GOV. DAVIS FIRST BILL ON = ORFIGIALHELD | aS pili HIS SOLICITOR COME UP SOON OF NEW BRIBE U.S. AGAINIS FORFEIT LAND DISHARC CNS RENEW PLEDGE plies LOAN DEFAULTS — OF COMMERCE ANNUAL GATHERING | RUONIGY | sue ai» ' Portland (Ore.) School Girl Wins $15.000 Home for Best Essay on Lighting Governor Will Delay Appoint- ment of Board Till Meas- ure Is Decided | Palda, of Minot, | | A Ri ntatives! State E bsol Own- Speaking as an Outsider, | $2,500 Agreed Upon For Par- merican cutee ; State Becomes Absolute Own- jin. to Be a High-Toned) . - don For Convicted Banker, i A i ik | er of 13 Parcels of Land | i Compliments Bismarck on| LIGNITE RATES ARE UP Document in Paris By Foreclosure the Pregress Made in the rane Attorney’s Charge Says Last Decade — Reports of | Legislature Directs Railroad OUSTER IS STARTED HELD scam sae HOWN | Vericus Committees of Commission to Secure a i Work of the Association Full Information a eens == | f i irst Time S x as/ Pi a Are Given a Attorney-General Begins A irst Time Since ae Wa iL rineipal and Interest De-, lA bill to repeal the law enacted “ Signed—F, See It 2 | jin providin board et tion to Remove the Bank Ib Small S | linquent‘on Real Estate Remarkable improvement made in! y ied age erate = As Important i Loans $464,000 i WANES SAE r i We anaes agers for the state-owned, state-ops é' issi i aA a D: H smatre| vithin ie us| dozen + Yommissioner A H 5 \ erated mill and elevator at Grand . urs eviewed for members o: Saree | —— | the der or |Forks, probably this week, will i 1 he A. P.)-—! a a th 0 on of Commerce, in an- rks, probably this week, will inaus Topeka, Kan, Jan. 13—(By the Reeeeesaiaiives Na Weta Siar The state of North Dakota is now| nual banquet at the Elks Hall last |84%ate the Nonpartisan League leg- A. P.) A new sensation, involving sven f san’g the absolute owner of 13 parcels of night, by Judge L. J. Palda of Minot, |‘Slutive program in the state legis« for the first time since America’s 1 the alleged solicitation of money by failure to ratify the Versailles trea- farm land, and unless the * former living the view of a res: ana eure: a state official for a pardon, broke The board of managers law, which was fought by the Nonpartisans in ty are about to sign an inter-allied| owners take steps: fo redemption other city, Judge Palda found mu in Kans: this me ning engulfing gree! subje He Sarre . worthy of compliment in Bismare ‘ Carl J. Peterson, state bank com- Baa a ieetGermuinenaesuea| nod Ueki dis xa IU When he first sw Bismarck, | the 1923 legislature and criticized missioner, friend and political ad- padthenits. more tracts, ag a result of default-| Judge Paldn said. it had “unpaved qurae the last campaign, will be viser of former Governor Jonathan Instead of observers, the Ameri-|¢ payments of principal and inter- streets, the statehouse was" far out Beet eed) legislature soon, Davis’ qho,) pith) ‘his oon) iL cans now become active participants: est on farm loans made by the Bank , into the country, there were many Teates ted ite H A. Vogel, League cilteeee with accepting a bribe for i sitakti aoa old buildings and Bismarck had the ler in the House. He said today oat : in the settlement of the situation! of North Dakota, i ! Ne! thats alive peal ene bab! extension of executive clemency. arising out of the peace of Versaillea:| | air of ountry town, Now, he said, P asure probably will Ouster proceedings will be institu- HAUTE EGHATHEVeR TEC CR TOMEGERO. | THO Conoue hisulundutonthenscuta) ix an attractive city, well] Peintreduced this week, ed immediately against Peterson, it most important result attained at has thus far been $945,496.77, The , and growing along proper Ge a eneueue of the board of CnC pone oe eames |the inter-allied financial conference face of the original loans thereon ie fi ror bY the “Iudustsia). Goranisstoa ees \ manded that Peterson resign. Peter- i Peer dea te 10 clone noon atic) tauilledi 5g 749) ae alien the city was attributed to the ome |e® members of the board have been fused. j cooperation of the United tutes 1S cost is represented by interest, legal sola v1 i . 5 named. It is understood that Gov- i "ine baal commissioner is charged iYegarded particularly in French pein She rueauons cote ernor Sorlie will delay efforts to : circles a pnst ing a ew ie Judge | in an affidavit sworn to by A. L. H eee ne Race ae eed cts are brought ‘out in’ wholetie select. men for the board pending a ) Oswald, young attorney of Hutchin- [Ree coraneeetice he future. hoty the audit of the Bank of North Da-” ine the: decision by the legislature on the son, Kansas, with having asked MOV Gad Wanvevialll. Ure nena ae te modeeby Temple Brisstian andi necessary if Bismarck is to continue|"¢Pe#! measure. If the board of $4,000 for a parole for Walter pat a Hakeasl Co, which just been presented | to forge ahead as she has in the, managers law were repealed, direct Grundy, convicted Hutchinson bank- = coat is the Hinds to the side’ anductetal domadasion, (| ae A bcedterdise fi Gone Ga Ibe seater of the state mill would er, and later agreeing ‘to accept dor Kellogg, ca ye d t | “JIM” FERGUSON ihe ‘siid) tei confident iofsithe! future fall upon the industrial Commission $2,500 for a pardon. Julia Sutherland Grog isnt tor awhile, /4 to assume direction of eas | 1 Months lneenuncectnes nut agulh eae taco ee Saeed: posed of Governor Sorlie, Attor- The affidavit brings former Gov- She’ . But she will aero pale b There wer loans amounting | ob Sonu © it not for the team work of | Ues;General Shafer and Commis- ernor Davis into the case as the| have a $15,000 h when she » housekeeping. She wou | jin -value to $5,825,450 closed by the! Austin, Tex. Jam. 1s sim Per ae A lished through the oe" of Agriculture Kitchen. one who took Oswald to Peterson| it for writing the st essay on home lighting ina’ nation-wide contest farm loan department of the Bank of; guson is coming back to the gover Awuncinlaoneoth Cor ea Jud, Independents, when the law was when Oswald was seeking clemency A miion school children participated, | North Dakota in the 11 months be-! joy. ottice Ma's high-toned flun# Palda especially complimented Bi cise ceneail “an aan rd for Grundy. SSAA ee, | | 1, 1823) and Oxtober 15, | marck on adopting a zoning plan.| or managersoccpeine® nee H according it. This! ers. -occupyin| ositions at this: meeting. with Davis, the Geen he total number and amount of the! “Jim” was governor himself until! GY (2 Well detined pian. Tn pass-|any other institution—to supervise eetideyay are fhe Bovemnar. firey New Rail Line uns made through the “Bank of, ined impeach: | i eae e Hlcagatd ee SEEahe eetticl ee ey entlaadeiae veld Ouwald 3 here eat aban eely aes nth Dakota since its establishment, : nst him in August! tin to Kurop with the active managers. They ulve eee re ae Bends ace "The IB 6 k ro Ww: Jan. Notice that in 1919. The total number of loans! 19 nd. ruled he never again could | New ‘iliccrs fiiitatted asserted this removed the mill Sonw ee ee the Short-Line railroad made since the foundation of the! hold office in ‘Te jee. e Ne Asso. | political contre! CORES CoB ssocidtion will oppose the Easter | hank 447 and the total amounts! “But they can't keep me trom inte, Snnual meeting of the Axso-) Nonpurtisuns, on the other nanq, “T then said, ‘Well, then I suppose feaeeeit u metre Apoaea ae lero are and the ‘al am ”l hantagires “ct aie etre he cheer cintion of Commerce and the install-|iepue that the board of managers is ghevonly pee eae rent ibitte Lions Club Entertains Four{t#¢ Va" Swearingen Brothers, nas |Ambassader to Germany to 7°. tye principal of these loans/ fully observ i ea ee austiisetcan aeasaneciaiey bide “At this point the Governor; whose | been Eitan to the Interstate Com-! Sueceed Kellogg at the [seas had been pepgie on Octo. Beside bringing in the bond a the sion for « renewailet civic vows;|by the cand poulaare iereiee manner had been very brusque aad at Dinner Hagens pmibission: . Cc St. Je lane 15.1925, while hg emountse) ! He oue oy IPN | in which every member present delegated representatives. cyusbys, immediately” changed’s2 He oe ourt of St. James thoameincipal dpayinetite jw iuch ware (Daughter Deredee Mopk Satter | ihe) y awed awillingnicas ital seontinue ital Ghoeenereenic ts arose, took me by the arm und led] Members of ihe state Industrial | pe as delinquent was $135,175. This had) family skittles, “Pa's” flunkeying, work for the best interests of the (Forks tavonon for mee devacaaa me to Peterson's office, giving alCommission and Judge J. KE. Burke Washington, Jan. 13.-Alonzo_ B.! been. Heslued sto (#1081003 (on) Noval ReCballly: wills lneludes deciding au) city through the Association of|ifpon his return from conferences knock, Peterson drew the curtain|wore honor guests at x dinner of jHoughton, ambassador to Germany,| be? 30, 1924, 45 days. Mat anes (emerson le see pate Suen Gon Members were called{with O. L. Spencer, manager of the aside, saw it was the Governor andthe Lions club, held in the luncheon | has been virtually decided upon as/# large amount of liquidation as a}ments and keeping the ature) (Continued on page three) mill, and department heads, it is admitted us. room at the Grand M f BISHOP ambassador to Great Britain to suc-|Tesult of the moving of the crop. yin line, voters suspect. é probable that other. legislation ree “This is Oswald, the Governor | inst night. Ae VA | bee! Gnank Bs Kellogg, | ‘These figures however do not in-' An early action of the eistature: Ra rdine thes Reiibieis atid to Peterson, and thereupon] Governor A. G. Sorlie, ch. 1 | Cablegrams have been exchanged | “lude loans on which the department no doubt will be the » rém IN med. left.” g ota thebentam iaeinneanolecon = ‘between Washington and Berlin and be Guat and stiles go aa s coi > holiling a Abilitie a ats ea Up i i i : 4 i ‘ u indicate vill- |@ sheriff's ed or certificate of sale, jeanwhile is acting as “ e SC. 0 s for co i Oswald’ relates. in\ ghe. -affidavity/eration’torgNorthy Dako (CourtaConvencsialaleyeland|| MEcHourhionshas: indicated ca) wit ee eee lint tove46:000, andl press, aueun Wepertete arn. crece.| tees to work on itil eulashense he saw Peterson later that day and |ney-General George Shafer spoke on | ingness to accept the post at the je former amo $46,000, went, v ; | : 0: a the bank commissioner told him |«pojitical Cooperation"; Commis-| To Hear Case jCourt of St. James, which will be-|the latter to $704,800. Figuring all) spondents who have sought inter- d in the legislature. Mr. Vogel ae ay fi 2 i : ". Kellogg as-|loans on which foreclosure proceed-| views and signed statements from! serted that many representatives Grundy could get a parole for $4,000.! sioner of Agriculture and Labor come vacant when Mr. Kellogg a: fore e ; r ¢ ee gaia ir The attorney said he was “solKitchen spoke on “The Dawn of aj San sumes duties of Secretary of State.} ings have been instituted or carried} Mrs, Miriam Ferguson, who'll be in- | pats renee noe bills until the ap- astounded” he confided in John H.| New Day for the N. D. Farmer.” Cleveland, Jan, 1 13.—(By' the A. P.) | Mr. Houghton has attended many | through as due in full, the discre-| augurated gdvernor Jan. 20g ha e A peepee ie ad been disposed of, Rhodes, formerly an Assistant Kan-| Judge John E, Burke, newest mem-| ~The court of review of the Pro-lof the conferences in European | pancy between actuul amount of un-! been turned down cold of late, Judge Jansonius Acts OO ary Aut C are ee sus attorney-general, and asked for!ber of the supreme court, spoke on| ‘stant Episcopal Church, called to| capitals, made necessary in the work | Paid principal, and the unpaid prin-| “Jim”, they have been informed, | Mainline oudiGaestih zo} cate set Sovemnen Sorlie’s rec- advice. It was decided to lay thejthe state in general meet here today to hear the appeal | of rehabilitation, and has first hand | cipal not yet due is $1,006,219. is doing all the f writing and | andan Road Squabble ie ee ja va ee appropriation bills matter before the Attorney-General,| Qbert Olson, vice-president, of | i" the case of Bishop William Mont- knowledge of almost every problem Bees eecieey talking these days —at so much per} b e disposed of in the first 20 days Oswald sa the club, introduced L. J. Wehe as | #omery Brown, had before it briefs /in which this country has an inter-} _ 9. HOred orures Complete leted,| 4 ; | An appropriation by the legisla-|eugtey jection. The. Governor. dis- The affidavit alleges further ne-|toastmaster, At the conclusion of | ftom both sides. est, He is 61 years old and was| Foreclosure has been comp! ted cAeddy Roosevelt wrote ‘his own |ture is required before expenditure |W ne geee DHefly with Mr. Sotiations were conducted with Pet~|the speeches the mecting was turn-| Counsel for Bishop Brown, wholhorn in Cambridge, Massachusetts. /4nd sheriff's deeds secured on pro-| stuff, so why not me?" Ferguson inj or money eun be made trom the state Ghecbian eh ieee eee erson when it was agreed $2,500!eq over to Lions Hemmel, Hendricks | W88 Convicted by a trial board of the | Before entering Congress Mr. Hough. | Petty pu peas aecualty, fori Squires, “I've already signed an ex-!hridge fund by the Highway Com. Cater [noua bene enate aDDEC Baia would be accepted for a pardon for land Fremberg for songs and stunts, | House of Bishops last May 31 of ut-}ton was engaged in the business of | #mounting oe the atater Tnelads | (lusive contract, mission, Judge Fred Jansqnius of |Vopel calla hie appa ee Grundy. Through telephone con-|The program opened with singing ; tering doctrines not held by the/glass manufacture at Corning, New| tY 's ner held ¥ ie tal ; neues Mas: name is worth a lot of /district court, held in a ‘decision cee peat sph oprlations com- nections witnesses listened to the!ied by Henry Halverson. chureh, retied upon, anual’ the gamel York, and was interested in other | IPE che principal of the loans, ac-' money now, and money is what we|handed down today in the case of | mate’. 7 meeting. this afternoon. conversations, Oswald states. He re- posi points’ as were made at the trialjindustries. He attended universi- | crued interest, legal costs ete. it has; need. 1 had to spend considerable,|the Northern Construction Company | Want Lignite Information lates he visited Governor Davis at jin an effort to prevent affirmation] ties both in Paris and Berlin. {cost the state $58,890.78. The income you see, fighting to clear myself af-!of Grand. Fork against the state} A full report within ten days of the executive mansion and says Pet- j of the conviction, and a pronounce- The selection of a new Ambassador | from this investment has thus far ter [| was impeached. | auditing board, The compa contemplated action by railroads in erson agreed to a payment of: $2,500 ment of sentence, to London, so soon after the promo-{@mounted to 130, of which $100 was; Ferpuson publishes a weekly PA-|to collect approximately § the senate for a change in the basis to which, according to the. affidavit, | 5s as RSE tion of Mr. Kellogg was announced, | derived from rental of a farm in! per, the Ferguson Forum. Heged due for construction of a con. | 0! lignite coal rates in the state is the Governor replied “I don’t care 'Re f would be, in liné with the policy Mr.| Burleigh county and the balance; je ete road from the Missouri river |#8ked of the state railroad commis- AUUNEeT GUOUEC EME Berea ae vision 0: AEA A ee aT ot | from f pay men tirade attenicHe a RUM CH bridge west for a distance of little {50% ina cete nny presented to the an attorney and that is all up to clearing up such matters at the} Passe i nN jover two miles, which was held by !5tate senate yesterday afternoon by Nin Code Proposed earliest ovaaitle insane | Foreclosure proceedings have also| [re ateang, Chamiaen fy i %jSenator Benson, chairman of the PeterSon announced he would fight ties cs No announcement of a selection is} been pushed through and a sheriff's | [part of the bridge project. committee on railroads, and adopted the ouster proceedings, denying| 37 Lives and 15 Boats Are! Officers of the North Dakota Bar | expected immediately, however, and/| certificate of sale obtained on the| was contended by the plaintiff | Without dissent. The measure pass- charges made by Oswald, who, he) y 0.4 During the Year 1924 Assealeten, in paar ng) Deks, aici it still is possible’ that the choice | Boe Seen 120 ore eee ee the) det “iwitien) nveulediiror a a sen e and Chairman Mil- asserted, had proposed to advance § ed a plan suggested by Justice Svein-| may fall somewhere else. which a 3 b jstate aid in construction of bridges will arrange a conference in money to free ‘Grundy, but that he hye at bjorn Johnson, chairman of ‘the code Except for Secretary Hughes and|crued interest, and legd] costs has: lover navigable streams and ie .{St. Paul with railroad heads, had refused to participate in such a! GJeveland, 0., Jan. 13.—Thirty- , Committee, of having the Bar Asso-| Secretary Gore, who leaves the Ag- | boosted the cost of this property to} : él ‘quent acts of the legislature setting | The resolution declares that “it deal. seven lives and 15 boats, the great- | ciation under revision of the} riculture Department March 4 to|the state to $886,595.99. | plidlveston, Tex., Jan. 13. Two rum |acide a portion of the motor vehicle {#PPears from the, attitude for the Davis, in a statement, said he had | est in a-number of years, were lost | North Dakota Code, Efforts to get/ become Governor of West Virginia,} Foreclosure proceedings are now|ships, three armored motor trucks, |Ticense fund for use in such con. |Past two years and at the present told Oswald of his determination | oh the Great Lakes in 1924, reports | appropriations from the legislature}no changes are expected to take|pending on 30 more loans total-jabout 800 cases of liquor and two | struction permitted the Highway |time of the railways operating in not to extend clemency ta Grundy. !of underwriters revealed today. for this purpose have failed. place on that date in the cabinet. {ling $123,400. men were captured by U. S. Coast |Commission to expend the money in North Dakota that an application “Khe statement he makes that I] ‘The boats had a trip capacity of | Justice Johnson’ suggestion to} Secretary Davis, at the request of| Of the 223 loans on which fore-| ‘uards after a gun fight about seven | retion. Judge Jansonius, | Will be made for an increase in the led him to Peterson is torrect, pos- | 36,300 tons. . President A. W. Cupler, Vice-Presi-} President Coolidge, has withdrawn/| closure proceedings have been com-! miles east of San Luis Pass, at Gal locas holds that there must be | lignite freight rates affecting North sibly, so far as introducing him to The greatest loss of life was on|dent C. L. Young and Secretary R.}his resignation. jPleted or instituted, 166 belong to\veston Island, at midnight last | specific legislative appropriation. Dakota.” An increase in rates, the Peterson is concerned, but not tothe steamer Clifton, which founder-|E. Wenzel, was that individual at-| The statement was authorized to-| “Series.” All of which were made ; night. | Approximately one-third of the|T€selution says, would, in the opin- he” make a deal for a pardon, “said the }ed in Lake Huron the week of Sep-|torneys be designated to take as-;day at the White House that there, under the Frazier administration. | = cost of constructing the concrete | ion of the legislature, “result in yi former Governor. tember 21, 26 members of the crew | signed parts of the revision and re-|is no substance to reports that the| There was a large liquidation of }—-—=—-————————— | oad remains unpaid to the contract-|the closing of a large number of & —— 2 and two passengers going down with | codification work, perhaps 40 to 50|change in the secretaries would lead | delinquent interest between Octo- | | Waciker Report | Jor. The remaining two-thirds of the |!ignite mines and’ seriously cripple 1 ASK INVESTIGATION the ship. Five lives were lost on| in all being asked to participate. The|to any modification of the foreign | ber 5, and November 30 last, rs @ cost. was provided by federal aid |@!! lignite mines operating in this ij Topeka, Kan., Jan. 13.—(By the A.|the steamer Orinoco, three on the|work would be undertaken by the| policies held by Mr. Hughes. | record shows, this item being reduc. jand county appropriation, state, and as a consequence, cause P.)—Democratic members of the! Protection and one on the State of | Bar Association:as a service to the| The non-recognition policy towardjed from $471,414 to $362,496 during, For 24 hours ending at noon: | z serious injury to the state.” House and Senate, ‘at a joint confer-|Qhio, destroyed by fire here. state as a whole. Russia, always strengly advocated | that period. | Temperature at Ta. m : | There’s Action Stating that “it is desirable that ence ‘this morning, unanimously - by Mr. Hughes, will remain unchan- Collections Made | Highest yesterday 1 the Legislative Assembly may be adopted a resolution calling for “a ged so long as conditions remain as] Collections by the farm loan de-| Lowest fully informed ‘as to any contempla- In Third House thorough investigation” of charges they are, ‘ partment during the 11 months per-'Lowest last night ted action by said railways to se- against Governor Jonathan Davis, se iod covered by the audit totalled. Precipitation | If No Other jcure such increase, for its guidance who was arrested yesterday a. few , mr, Ndonglion wax in Biemarek, $486,272. The cost of running the} Highest wind velocity io femslation during the Baran hours before retiring from the of- N ONU, S GOVERNMENT ast fall during the presidential! farm loan collection department for | The first legislative ‘rumpus |Sesion.” the resolution directs the ice of Governors owe PROHIBITIO jo We campaign and met many local people.| the same period was $13,820, Th Z| vor WEATHER FORECAST dl Siarea Uiauneeen Coat pes railread board” to confer with said j a cost exceeded its administration al-| ,*0r igesrans visioltys Partly | Third House, roileonds and secure, tall information WILL RESUME Senator Bill Matin of Morton) involving drugs and liquors and pre- | GOVEENOY’S pombuse byl AGRO emiehi is CBBIERG | wenrecaay” eaurinaed cela: (gb Mbit House caucus Csbaa |e muh ehvy tierincieatece an v, leaguer, today renewed, his|S¢ribed penalties” and “the counties as a loss against the department, | | eer Non Dakotas Partly cloudy |. D8 issued for 10 a. m. by ~ ey report to the legislature in ten PD WORK ON KING §| ‘cunt leasuer, today é ‘of North Dakota ate yearly. expend- Luncheon Held} tie totat operating expense of the, Cloudy tonight and Wednesdae, |” House employes, Mose Rosen- [#25 ca efforts to have the state of North Ing more than. $1,750,000 in~ costs, rns farm loan department for the per- eae Ae a sday-| ow, speaker of the Third House j enator Benson, making an ex- £ TUT’S TOMB) dakota place all the burden of dry|egurt expenses and géneral admin-| The “Governor's Luncheon,” which | iod was $89,549.42, and the net loss, ed sco. | two years ago, refused to re- |? eperer i ue Senate, said that an law enforcement within the state | istration in connection with the en-|was inaugurated during the Frazier (Continued on page three) WEATHER CONDITIONS cognize the call, and was gup- lncrenee ie Ms a ae rae roan London, Jan. 18.—Howard Carter,| upon the national government, citing | forcement and this sum expended | regime, was renewed yesterday when SEES | ‘The high pressure area over the| ported in caucus by some Senate atutione io Harkness layecee uae the Egyptologist, has reached anja saving to the state and counties|annually ‘can be reserved for the|Mrs, S. Hultberg entertained thej| No Authority | Plains States yesterday’ morning has| employes. was needed to uide the legislatur agreement with the Egyptian govern-| of the state of more than $1,750,000. | payment of necessary expenses of|Governor and state officials at ‘spread out somewhat and now covers After argument aver the or- lin making a Aa alien < i ce menp. under which work will be re-] A bill introduced in the senate | government, and : luncheon. It ?s planned to hold To Order Motor the. Plains States. and Mississippi| ganization, the members ‘were |ttate institutime ee sumed on the tomb of. Tut-Ankh-| today by Mr. Martin would repeal all| “Whereas, the geferal financial] these luncheons each Monday during | , Valley and much colder weather pre-| .convinced they couldn’t have a Amen, the exploration of which Mr. Carter took over upon the death of Lord Carnarvon, says an Agency Dispetch from Caire this afternoon. ¢ TO WITHDRAW GUARD Washington, Jan, 18.—Withdrawal from Wieazagns by the United States of the Mai Guard maintained there has been determined ‘upon. the sections—10092 to 10176, both inclusive, compiled laws of N. D. for 19138--which have to do with the pro- hibition of liquor, manufacture or sale of the same. The bill sets forth that “Whereas the government of. the United States by virtue of the 18th amendment. * * * or so-called Volstead act, has covered the field of prohibitory laws condition of the farmers and tax- ayers of North Dakota require an economical administration of public affairs, an emergency is hereby de- clared to exist and this’ act shall be in full force. and éffect after its passage and approval.” Mr. Martin had a simi pill in- troduced in the 1923 Session of the legislature. the legislative session. MAN KILLED WAILE SLIDING \ Washington, Jan. 13.—-The states Aitkin, Minn., Jan. 13—Jack Low-|have no authority to compel a pri- ty, 26, was instantly killed when/vate carrier by motor vehicle traffic sliding down hill when h here last night,;to engage in public traffic for hire, sled crossed a small stream the supreme court decided today in at high speed and crashed head-onija case, brought by the Michigan into a tree, breaking his neck. His | Public “elutes. widow ant one child survive. , Commission | and others. Vehicle Traffic! vails over the Mississippi Valley. ; Temperatures are below zero ‘in the upper Mississippi: Valley, middle and northern Plains States and in the Canadian Provinces. Light preci tation occurred at most places in the northern states while generally fair weather prevails over the. South. ORRI6 W, ROBERTS, Meteorologist. |, The first of many communications expected on the subject of the child labor amendment to the federal con- stitution was received by the Senate from the W. T. U. of Wyndmere, advocating ratification. Senator Stevens suggested, as a matter of economy of time and money, all such ~% [communications in the future be or- Jreferred directly to a committes, | Continued on, page. three). legal meeting this morning un- less the speaker called it, so the caucus adjourned until late to- day. j It was rumored that those sup- Porting Mose for re-election charged a “frame - up” against him, and planned to’ serve court injunction against the ganization meeting being he!

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