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PAGE TWO ” THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BATTLE LINES BEING DRAWN AT CAPITAL Washington Seems Quiet, But | Propagandists Keep it Noisy Underneath BY LARRY BOARDMAN NEA Service W June s much, however, that the unclothed optic misses Congres® hi ummer sun, a lazy hound withou Which only goes to sh ances are oft Behind its cal ital’ is getting hither and thi oxire-pulling susier than rind dog vhen ww urshalling, their f r whe to be the | cl During gre: the ¢ kindred orga the Crampton bill gre increased penalties Jaw violation The bill d Congres and it to put providin: for liquo a natural death when journed, but the dry now planning to pre lation which, indeations make even thinking of cot a heinous offense With this in view they getically canvassing t Congress, ing the w are ener friends in| y for smo re © offset_this, the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment gaining in strength and influer every day, is hard at work recruiting | legislative strength in its campaign | “for light wines and beer. | Preparinh a Bomb The Couzens ating the inte: adjourned a investi | viee,| 1 an organization, but ill on the job. ing over testimony | Eandictherwise fitting themecl make out a report which is quite as to have the effect of a bursting bom when Congress e n. double-bar- , taking up income tax and Brorivition edfareemant, very lithe » will he occasioned if it deal of trip-hammer blows at the foundations of these institu mmittee on which a good anxious 5 Senate committee elections, now investigating that there were irregularities in the election of Senator Smith Brookhart of Iowa. ~The riddle is: How will the Senate line up in that battl Brookha lican and very the Old G ive Repub. uch in wrong with rd, while the charges are eck, his opponent in. the tion, who is a Democrat usual Senate lineup is Old s the “Anti. de up off ce is a powerful organi- zation. It defeated the appointment » of Charles Beecher Warren as ator- + ney general. in this case, crats find them rassing position. T. to play the Old G posing Brookhart—yet how can they | oppose Steck, a fellow Democrat? The Old Guard is in even more of a quand: It z doesn’t want to side with a however, the sin an _embar- don’t want ‘= game by op- | POWER N AUSTRIAN UOLITICS ated Press) Melbaurne mers are be- coming a telling forée in Aust an politics. A year or so ago the san unorgat d, fretful body disregarded by politicians, they are beginning to dictate terr The Nationalists who held s: through the war hay = heavily in recent s : have succeeded in hanging on to ministrative power by forming p: with the farmers. These pact go ernment rule Victoria and the Com- = monwealth, but a campaign recently launched by farmers of the region ; indicates that they will take the field | * on their own hook. if Although the majority of voters | e in the coast capitals, the agrarian vote has increased out of all propor- _tion to its strictly rural following The impending issue seems to be aj ash between the farmers and the |_ abor party, which holds power in “four states.’ Mayn predict that the | next Federal government will be com | posed of Labor ministers. Farmers’ | declared aga were lost S$ ID TO REORGANIZES Ht The Associated Press) —Troop movements in- #to the capital which, late in May, in- creased the garrison to the unpre- icedented figure of 15,000 and caused | “excited speculation, elicited the re- assuring statement from the war de- = partment that’ the men were being brought to Mexico City from outside posts to be reuniformed and re- Farmed. Reorganization of the army in ac- eordance with plans announced by “the Calles administration when it .took offite has been proceeding stead- *ily-‘for nearly six months and the regular forces, according to latest forination available, have been re- duced to approximately 50,000. Among zthe enlisted men discharged were 45,000 minors. The number of gen- erals and commissioned officers down zto the rank of major, who have been tunable to prove their right to the rank they claim and have been drop- sped, totals more than 1,000. Modernization of military regula- ‘tions, unchanged for more than a cen- ‘tury, and a plan for a modified sys- tem .of universal, obligatory mili- tary training are the tasks assigned %o a special commission of officers. fd SWEET FELLOWSHIP New York, June 15.—A poueercls fellowship in the chemistry of pe! umes and essential oils recently Pca cag at Columbia Uni sity. a ee Grain Growers G a corpo! Consumer pany, v eof Michi of the dustries appellant. Lovell & Horner, Thom J. Green General of the > o of counsel, corporation. Demo- | W. Jacob Peter Mesling, i Jacob Kirs\ Hav corporation, Dinsmore Con poration, MeCaull-Dinsn corporation, Syllabus TO TESTIFY IN “B From © doi Cord tion, I and Appellants. doing bus- under the name and style Board of Michi » et al, Defendant Syllabu An order action i Appeal from the 5 Count for the dismi hot an appealable District Court of » Cole, J from an r Curism Opinion, hkoawitz and Lel N. D.,, attorne of Fargo, N. D. Assistant Michigan, of attorneys for respondent. From Hettinger County | Plaintiff and rn National Bank | Minn q | and Respondent, | jaintift nd and Respondent, F. Krame | I aintif! and Respondent, | Kirsi nd Respondent, | 4 c hn 1 d Respondent, ck Equity Exchange, a and the MeCaull- Npany, a cor- Defendants ore Company, a Appellant. These action ht to sion wore ural for the conve warehouseman, al mar MeCauli-Dinsm poration, engaged in ton business, Mec full ‘Dins-| 1 corporation, just opinion in that and is adopted in in so far as the ABY FAR Jorn \join in the disqualifying affidavit in | the | do not so | charge, and if the whole el order | Attorney lt | Judge. and Respondent, | * 1” CASE Mrs, Trene York district nearly died {| pt the behy Geisen-Volk ter in conne Meroff told the New ttorney that her baby n treatment received i fi Helen farm ind slaugh- institution, here ra are indentical | with those therein determined. Undge the provisions of Chap- 1 providing for son account of pr where there are two defendant, all must questions eHngevot THe judice or bias, y parti the trial judge mor prejudice appear from ndants who y nominal order to. disqus against whom is made, unless 1 atid ; or un instruction standing wlone may be insufficient or errone- yus, it must be considered in connec- tion with the remainder of the arge tak- together correc s to the law, = thereby cured. the instant ¢ the error, if he opinion held, such error in_ giving, Heives a tructions as HOE App iilrom AherDistriet Court of Hettinger County, North Dakota, mbke, Judge. RMED WITH or refusing to to warrant @ Opinion of the Court by Nuessle, Hanley & , North Dakot Sullivan, of Attorneys for Sulliv Appellant. i wcobsen & Murray, of Mott, North Dakota, Attorneys for Respondent. ENGLISH EXPERT FORECASTS RADIO CONTROL OF RAIDERS (By The ociat Press) Manchester, England—Dr. L. ulmer, chief of the applied phy: lepartment of the College of Tech- nology, Manchester, told the Man- ch Missionary and Philosophical iety recently that in the next war that which was accomplished by the British in the Zeebrugge raid in 1918, could all be done by wireless A soldier in a, dugout in England could send out a’ fleet of boats, sai Dr. Palmer, guide the vessels by dio to a certain point, make them arge bombs and then bring them ck without airplane “observation. The course of the ships would have to be plotted upon a map, but with airplane observation a raid could be le against the enemy with great cision, The speaker explained that in controlling a torpedo aimed, for example, at a submarine, the tor- pedo could be seen all the time, and if it went the wrong way a tap of a key would alter its course and send it in the direction of the target. , SONE PAN recent luncheon one ed Sir James Barrie s plays were not more an others. “You can't get a great success every time,” he replied. “Some Peter out altogether some Pan out very well.” ar if some of | successful APTURED IN RUM ROW The two-masted schooner William A. 1 tum supply ship in Rum Row, w. jue suppies to a foreign th‘p without proper papers, by a lorse, found alongside an alleged |, seized on a charge of furnishing gyro) ship of the Coast Guard. on with the deaths of CHICAGOTAX » WAR WATCHED BY BIG CITIES County Refuses to Pay State Until Representation’ in‘ Legislature Is Increased MAKING MU BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer Washington, June 15.—When the sioners refused, | |a few days ago, turn over ‘the state’s share of the county taxes to the treasurer of Illinois, they took the first step toward what may prove to be the greatest change this coun- jtry has known since big cities began | | to grow. | The state treasurer, naturally, will | sue. And since a federal constitu- | jtional principle is involved— Ah, a word as to that principle! t's the crux of the whole thing. Illinois was districted for legisla- tive purposes long before Chicago— Chicago and Cook’ county ate the same thing—had attained its present population. On the basis of its then ‘number of inhabitants, it was given | adequate representation at Spring- | | field | Chicago grew, however, out of all! proportion to the rest of the state. Out of all the citizens of Mlinoi nearly half are Chicagoans. They pay more than half the state | taxes. But their representation in| ‘the legislature hasn't been increased | by_a single seat. Finally, they demanded a redi tricting of the state, on an up-to- date population basis. Rural mem- bers of the legislature, heavily out- numbering the city representatives, turned the proposition down. Thereupon, “Cook county,” said the commissioners, “is being taxed with- out due representation, at any rate. This is unconstitutional. By violat- ing the constitution the legislature has invalidated itself, We repudiate | taxation imposed and laws made an illegal body.” bowl, near Los Angel Well, as previously remarked, the “iy When the mount: mountain, And si ‘Tuey are Mrs. public. Artic iM: at 25 wouldift come to M the American publ eerts, these women. are bringing symphony concerts to ‘the Amierican ; Marion Powen, and they cordust summer concert serie Crowds average 10,000 each _ SIC POPULAR met, Mchamet went to the > won't go to symphony con- sistant, ‘Misa in Hollywood nd tickets sell on Carter and ‘ner cents, state treasurer will sue, of course, Prmut, 4 federal consututional prin-| STATE AUTO BODY ISSUES PUBLICATION ciple being involved, the commission- ers doubtless will get the case before a federal judge. There will be ap- peals, but both sides will be in hurry, the treasurer for his mone and ‘the commissioners: to vindicate} pull of live their position. snag Tt will be a litigation well worth | om,,conceming pushing ahead. In-short order it number of the Hl OF will be before the supreme court injyan of the association, publication of which began this month, The organ is published in accord- ance with a decision made at a mect- ing of the association held here last March. Its purpose is to keep its 1 Washington. members inf s to the associ- L, Conklin of the | s_and informa- the North Dakota first Now, suppose Chicago wins. , It will mean a revolution, nothing less. Not a big city in the country but is in Chicago's fix. New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapoli St. Louis, Kansas City, New Orleans, | association. Minneapolis, St. Paul—all the rest—| The associ all in the same boat! plan to prov ot ont but is under rural domi-|for members anywhere in the ‘nation. The country is predominant-|1If a member of the North Dakota ly urban, as census figures show, But | Automobile Association is stranded it is rurally governed in every single | outside the ¢ state. any city or town in North It looked as if this might go on|the cost of having an automobile forever. The situation could be|come to his rescue and bring hi changed only by the votes of rural|family into town and return to tow legislators and they wouldn't. vote|in his car, will be taken care of by that way. the association. Chicago, however, has thought up|, I a member is out of gas or hi a method of attacking the problem ce spereyte rua down” the from a new angle—the judicial in-| il hes provided by the as stead of the legislative one. It may) the member merely “paying for If so, it's inevitable that every | SUPPIes: ter of lati hich hith ee mere) fas suftered: under’ the msrute of | Italian Critics Praise American those who, at best, knew nothing ot metropolitan conditions, and, at worst, positively enjoyed playing | horse with city slickerdom, will fol- low the example of the community- by-the-lake. Then. look out for some mighty rapid changes in a lot of laws! British Dry Workers Point To America Hull, Eng, June 15.—Prohibition in the United States has proved to be the handmaiden of thrift, home building, happiness and prosperity, and it would go a Jon; FY, in Eng- land toward solving the problem of unemployment, said Gerald France, tne president, addressing the Na- tional and Commercial Temperance Union here at its annua] conference. Mr, France said he rejoiced in the sinking of the vessels “flying the dolly Roger of the bootlegging fra- ternity,” and he hoped those men wav .ianced this trattic would lose every penny they possessed, rather than that “the fair name of Britain should be dragged into the mud of international treachery.” ARERR ATOR, TO DECIDE PAY OF GERMAN ACTORS (By The Associated Press.) Berlin—The long conflict’ between’ the theater producers of Germany and the stars, or prominent actors, as-they call themselves, has at last been ended. The stars have scored what will probably prove an empty victory.” The clause in the managers’ agree- ment to which they particularly ob- jected was that by which they were Placed in four hard-and-fast classes, with definite maximum fees for each class. They declared this was incom- patible with their dignity, as artists, and that no ‘artist could submit to Haying such a straight-jacket put on im. The classification has been aban- doned. Every actor is free to make his arrangements from pley to play. But whenever sn actor wants to emerge beyond thé. ordinary class whost maximum fee is fixed dt $75 a night, an arbitration board of three men must deliver an opinion as to whether his claim:for a higher wage is justified. The feeling in German theater cir- cles is that the stars have saved their pee at the expense of their pocket- ooks. tor tion is working out a le,a free towing service (By The Associated Press) Rome, June 15.—The work o' ‘American moving picture comedians ig creating a new comic tradition comparable in excellence only with that launched by the famous Vene- DARING NTENC! It, takes a daring man for this job. New Yoke ENTENCED TO. BED you ‘ton the towerint: cliffs of Flamborough bed for a day ‘or until. you sober up,”|Head on the Yorkshire coast of Eng- the judge told Max Wade, who was|land are’the homes of countless sea arrested on a charge of drinking|bitds whose eggs are much sought too much liquor and being disorder-jafter. During the nesting season in- ly. ‘Tl send a policethan to see tyepid climbers descend the face of that you stay there.” ‘cliff by means of ‘ropes held by SESE RT ERESED ES * rcolleaguse above. Clinging with hand BEATS PISA “AT LEANING and foot - and sometimes swinging London.—Did you’ know, that there hundreds, of feet above the water, isa tower that leans more than the they make their way over the vag [famous ohne at Pisa? At Caerphilly 'ous ledges collecting eggs which they in Wales is a tower which leans 11 glace in bags attached to their belts, feet in 80, while the Pisa tower Picture: shows Sam Long, one of the leans only six feet in 80, 1 filost expert of the climbers. state. y or town limits of Dakota, Comic Pictures jtian art theatre of the 18th century, jaccording to Italian cinematograph comedian maintains his fereonialjtysahulstagelbusinewalineall of his pictures, instead of adapting himself to the stories which are be- med. Thus Charlie Chaplin is Charlie Chaplin whether he amp or millionaire. Just as the centuries have multi- plied the Columbines, Pierrots and Harlequins of the Venetian theatre, so they will multiply the Chaplins, the Harold Lloyds and the Larry Se- mons who eventually will evolve into constant types. It is pointed out that the American films, far from being con- \temptible from the point of view of art, have much in common with the great works of the humorous master |from Aristophanes until our da; | ticularly and of formalized outstanding diff that the Ame! | American films h symbolize marvellously certain |grotesque and humorous a | humanity. ETERNAL CITY BECOMES EXPENSIVE LIVIV! PLACE (By The Associated Press.) Rome—Rome has climbed to a place beside Moscow and New York among the most expensive cities in the world, according to official sta- tistics. These show that since the beginning of the Holy Year the monthly index figure jumped almost three per cent, but tourists and resi- ree that their personal sta- showed a greater increase. Travelers lament the palmy days of a few years ago when Italy was fam- ous for its cheap living costs, and as- sert that the -rocketing prices force them to revise their estimates of expected expenses and to alter their plans for further traveling. But the brunt of the increase is borne by the Romans, who have to pay: maintain their home: planations are asked, invariably answer sn the Holy Year.” Great Lakes Tie steel srampbins, Tionesta, Jun- of the th oe ri Corpaation cipal ‘ports all the princi ties geen Lake Huron, Leke Su- perior. 2230 MILES rf ble 1 sLaseoromee rere aries the finest of ol ‘sccommodations. Meals end berth ,ingladed in fare. ORCHESTRA DANCING . For further Information, tickets and servations call any Taurist or R. R Ficket Abent, or : G. N.. Williams, Gen. Mgr.,. Great Lakes Transit Corp. 101 Palladio Bldgy Wutdth) Min TAILORING & HAT WORKS pa a Cleaning~ Pressing Repairing Remodeling Dyeing LADIES AND MEN’S CLOTHES Hats Cleaned’ and Reblocked | 24 Hour Service on Malt Orders. We Call: For and Deliver. ; Phone 58 4 twice as much, and sometimes | Day Cruise: WILTON COAL The Washburn Lignite Coal Co.’s Mine — at Wilton, N. D., is the largest lignite mine in the world—representing an in- vestment of more than One Million Dol- lars. It has taken twenty-five years to de- velop the Wilton mine to its present stage of development —a quarter of a century spent in improving one product. y When you buy lignite coal from Wil- ton, you are buying the best — a type of coal that is mined by the most modern mining equipment in the world. The vast deposit of coal owned by the Washburn Lignite Coal Co. at Wilton has supplied the trade with a superior grade of coal since the industry was in its in- fancy. An inferior grade of coal could not permit the development that has taken place at Wilton—it has had to be superior to hold its place, it continues to be su- perior. “Wilton Service” is back of every ton of coal mined at Wilton—the product is standardized just as any other product that has stood the test of years is stand- ardized. You don’t gamble when you buy Wil- ton coal — you know just exactly what you are getting and what it will do. Why take unnecessary chances? Coal oc WILTON, N. D: