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WEATHER FORECAST Partly overcast tonight and ri- day; somewhat colder tonight. i ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA THU DAY, OVEMBER 1, 1925 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | ™5an_ PRICE FIVE CENTS MRS. LANSDOWNE ON STAND IN MITCHELL TRIAL NORTH DAKOTA | GOVERNOR-ELECT MEMORIAL CAPITAL CITY UNIQUE PLACE Has Annual Payroll of $2,230,- 000—Population July 1, 1925, Was 9,150 FARMING AIDS GROWTH Has All the Advantages of Other Capital Cities Many Times Its Size Bismarck is unique among the’ cap- | itals of the 48 states of the union that its chief industry is a state own- ed institution with practically no pa; roll, according to local boosters of North Dakota’s capital The industry is the twine plant which last sed 4,000,000 pounds af” ba which was sold to farmers thro Production ‘for » additional room havin provided by the cons wing on the prison building. Despite the fact that laborers Jeading industry d ng is Diver: fied tion of farm activities has aided materially in’ Bismarck’ srowth, together with that of the neighboring city of Mandan, and the large te industrial enterprise is that of buttermaking, a total of 500,000 pounds of manufactured in the city in 1924. with most state capitals, ployment for many of its cit provided by the e gove every department of state having its executive offices here. In addition the Bank of North Dakota, a state owned institution, is located in the capital city together with a gover: ment schoo] for the education of In- dian girls from nearby. reservatio Railroad ed City Located in the heart of the state on the Missouri river, Bismarck was a town of importance even before the ment, advent of the Northern Pacific rail road. In its early stages it. was a trading post o’ importance for men who navigated the Missouri river in flat-bottomed stern-wheelers and ter, with the advent of the railroad, the commercial center of western North Dakota. It owes its name, however, to action by the board of directors of the Northern Pacific railroad who christened their station Riemarck in honor of the “Iron Chan-* cellor” of Germany. Protest against tae name was mage during the world war, but efforts to change it proved futile. The present state canita lected as the territorial capital in 18 General Grant attended the laying of the cornerstone of the ter- ritortal capitol building and Sitting Bull led the procession wh: ganized in his honor, local historians. It was made the state capital in 1888. Large Hotel Center Pioneers of frontier days planted the seeds of the city’s commercial success and its location in the he: of the state, at the edge of the Mis: souri slope district where large towns are few and far between, made it the hotel center of the entire district be- tween the Red River Valley in east- ern North Dakota and central Mon- tana. It claims the largest transient population, in proportion to its size, of any city in America, its hotels ac- commodating an average of 500 st The population of the f 1, 1925, the state census shows, was 9,150, Since territorial days the old-time shacks have been replaced by modern buildings, many of them fireproof and the ta lleee eight stories high. A Medical Center In addition to being the gr commercial center in western North Dakota, the capital city is also the medical center of this section, boast- ing two large hospitals. The school system, public and parochial, has buildings valued at $1,000,000 and the total property value of the city is $12,000,000. Diversification of agriculture has meant much to the capital \city, more than $2,000,000 worth of butter, eggs and poultry haying been shipped to eastern markets in 1924 and corn ma- tured in the territory being sold as seed to farmers in Canada and nearby northwestern states. In addition to being the geographi- cal center of the state, the capital citys lays claim to being one of the most important club, social and re- ligious centers of the state, several religious denominations maintaining headquarters here. Despite high freight rates which} inerease the cost of transporting paving materials, the city has 16 miles of paved streets, owns its own water’ supply system and has a free municipal swimming pool in addition to wae and other recreational ad- vantages. Automobile Levels Barrier of Winter “Not so long ago at about this time of year the motorist was getting ready to ‘lay up’ his car for the win- ter. But today he is depending on his car more dufing the winter months than in any ether season,” says E. D. Rose, vice president of the Lahr Motor Sales Co. “Car manufacturers have eliminat- ed the discomforts and inconveniences of winter operation and by doing so have leveled the barriers that use: to keep people from getting about in the inclement seasons, “Automobile transportation is well nigh indispensable to success nowa- days, because the man whom winter forces into hibernation is at a dis. adyantage compared to the man whose good car takes him everywhere, whenever he wants to go.” Gasoline production in the United States is now almost at the normal level of 21,666 gallons) a minute. butter having been | em-! ens is! | “. UARRY MOORE “i WET GOVERNOR [$ TEACHER IN SUNDAY SCHOOL : 'He’s for W. C. T. U. Against Volstead—in Pol- and E BRITT Writer Nov. 1 meric few vette ‘been a years. e, commission: ance of o the gover- of more than “light revenue , who was swept i norship by a majorit | 40,000 votes favoring his and beer” platform, | Leaving hool at 3 to become a messeng d-help support the family, to study law he is te | irreconcilable o |The big int life all these “| years has been boys the making j of them into me: “It is because my hobby is boys wines] BUILDING DEDICATED Governor A. G. Sorlie Deliv- ers Dedicatory Address on Armistice Day L. P. WARREN RESPONDS Building. Costing Half a Mil- lien, Made Possible by lature Brief and simple exercises marked the dedicatio esterday of North Dakota's Liberty Memorial building. ed on the State capitol grounas cost of $500,000. brief address Gov, AWG. Sor- ted the building to the North Dakota men and women who served in the world war. Lb. P. War- ren, commander of the. Bismarck poot of the American Legion, responded tor the veteran In his address Gov. Sorlie said in ago today the joyful received that the World dended; that peace had been tored by the signing of the A tice. Throughout this nation ful people gathered to obser and the cruel sacrifice of human ‘On each anniversary of that day we remember with gratitud who enlisted in their country's ser- vice, who faced the dangers and ¢ dured the hardships ef that ¢ war, We pay who gave the acknowledge who suffered injury vice. r lives in that war. We from their A Special Significance “To us this seventh anniversary has a special signifiean gathered today to dedicate the Liber- ty Memorial Building of North Da- kota. This building was made possi- ble b the citizens of our through the act of the Legis! 1919 providing for the erection of forever dedicated to the memory those who enlisted from North Dako: ta to rather than in spite of i —that [am system of distribution he favors is something like, that of Quebec. As for the W. C. U., it was organized as an eee Sionat group to build up intelligent resistance to temptation. That is what he advocates. | Governor-elect Moore used to be plain “Red” Moore when he_ played second base on the old ‘Pine Athletic Club baseball team back in his youth. Just after he passed 21 he became secretary to the mayor, and from then on his career has been politics. He was still a youngster when he ran for office as one of the city commis- sioners, and was elected. Young Commissioner Moore wasn't in harmony with the majority of the jadministration at that time and they |relegated him into obscurity in the department of parks and public prop- Before he was through he had this department radiating more in- fluence than any other in the city government. He developed athletic fields and playgrounds until there was recreation space for every fam- ily. You know the marble contests! Where the best kid from each alley yard competes with all the s nd then the town cham- pion is sent off to Atlantic City for a grand national championship mar- bles meet! Well, that is A. Harry Moore's idea, and he staged the first marbles championship contest ever | held, right on one of his parks here. In his office is a large collection of silver cups and photographs of win- teams, trophies of Jersey City boys’ development on the public play- grounds. But getting over to the new gover- nor'’s other hobby, which is the pro- ibition question, he calls it “the est issue in American politics to- it will not cease to be a hot issue until it is settled all over again—re- moved from national dictatorship and left tothe choice of states,” says Moore. “My election as governor on a wet platform means practically nothing. I am the third ‘wet’ in sucecssion to be elected governor of New Jersey, and conditions remain as they were. T can’t repeal the eighteenth amend- ment, and I never promised to. “Lam simply the symbol of protest. Our state doesn’t like the Volstead act, and it intends to keep on saying 80. “We have reached this degree of frankness in New Jersey. We don’t talk dry and drink wet. We don’t evade this issue which is nearest to the thinking of thousands of voters and try to stir up smoke on minor questions. And whether other states agree with New Jersey on prohibition or not, I think they will agree on opr method .of regarding it squarely as a question upon which the people have a right to say yes or no.” WORE THEM ALL Paris.—Delays in delivering dainty silk fabrics and feminine: “creations” from here to England have created a new race of “smugglers.”’ An Ameri- can bought some dainties and got them into England with the aid of a Mannequin as she describes it,.“The mannequin wore six sets of lingerie, and I had two bottles of scemt in my cai ve, honor, patriotic devotion OF GENNA GANG FOUND GUILTY —Will Now Be Tried on Another Murder Charge Chicago, Nov. 1 a policeman, were found guilty ly tod: The im, Harold Olson, eet in 6 pistol baile in whieh an other policeman, Charles Walsh, and Mike Genna, gang leader, were killed. Robert E. Crowe, state’ announced that Scalisi and Anselmi would be tried at once on murder charge in connection with Walsh’s death, and that a verdict of hanging would again be sought. The defense asked for a new trial. Self-defense was the theory of the defense. Scalisi and Anselmi con- tended that they did not know that the automobile which drew up along- side theirs contained policemen) and so shot in self-defense. Refusal to Let Mitchell Attend Banquet Hissed New York, Nov. 12.—()—Hisses and booes came from 300 wartime av- iators at an Armistice Day dinner last night when a telegram was read from Adjutant General Davis, refusing per- mission for Col. Wm. Mitchell to at- tend. The telegram from General Da- vis waid: “In view of the fact that the phys cal presence of Colonel M chell is necessary at the court-martial before which he is appearing, favor- able consideration cannot be given to your request.” The telegram was in answer to two messages sent to President Coolidge asking that the colonel be permitted to come to New York for the reunion. A telegram from Col. Mitchell say- ing that he could not be the honor guest wags cheered. The post tele- graphed President Coolidge that it endorsed unequivocally Col. Mitchell's position before his couse martin In an address, Representative F. H. Laguardia, former aviator, said “Billy Mitchell is not heing Judger by_ his peers. He is being judged by nine Lo robbers of thee general staff.” Il those} t tribute to those! our obligation to those| ser-) | We arey state! will be ature of building on the Capitol grounds to bel jar ‘ve the nation in the World gress and development of mankind,— 1 and Were Charged With Murder (#)—John Scal- isi and Albert Anselmi, members of the notorious Genna gang who iliag ol murder and ‘their sentence was fixed at 14 years imprisonment by a jury which deliberated 10 hours until ear- was attorney who had sought the death penalty, another Es TALKS, MUSIC, VAUDEVILLE TO nelly, Prof. Arvold, J. G. Haney Are Speakers | BANDS AND ORCHESTRAS Corn Pageant, Magician, on Entertain- ment Program for Show, Governor A. G. Sortie | Principal speaker at the opening pro- | gram of the Novth Dakota State ( Show Bismarck on 17, 300 p. sin pl in Tuesda, vember at 2 will all t e by + ing and the show may be visited 10 o'clock on, m. rom but the formal opening will take place aft |, Following Governor am of high ¢ in the rnoon, s address y ing e json and Graves combination mn exhibits this year will be on display in the City Auditorium and all enter~ tainment features will d there as one of thanksgiving and of] as well, ther tie entire | riotic expr We rejoiced) show under one roo! t the princ liberty and jus-|— a @ had prevailed notwithstanding|| a the years of hatred, bitter warfare|} EXHIBITS FROM ULLIN ARRIVE | GAH lef Glen Vilin | brought to Bismarck this morn- ing more than 40 exhibits of corn hoooed IN Unat viernity this year {| which will be in the competition at the state corn show. B: i} and merchants of || have r fund of und merchandise whieh will be ecial prizes to the who win | ‘The Corn Pageant “| At 8 o'clock Tuesd lowing music by {the play Zon present fo orchestra, ning, musical numbers galore on each pro- Aes gram, After the play the spectacu- | Soca an amt a rh pageant, showing the pro- | i 74 . oft gress of corn development. in they bine me Wipes northwest from the time of the Lewis Out Quarrel of and Clark expedition, will be given. a ‘wet, fares Governor-elect] War. That legislative enactment] All yaudeville stunts will be repeate 2 are ; “Thee are hundreds of me| provided that the Liberty Memorial 5 Pentata) 53 Years Ago ; School boys now grown up Building might contain a Auitable ‘The oly ToiGpeale dive eee around here, and are not drunk-| memorial to Theodore Roosevelt, ani e feature of dne: afte pattle, , 2 sconcilei around here, and they are not drunk-| eee other soldiers. and sailors) 200N's program will be the address by enetlh Ney e eae ue — He explains that he thinks men are] whose lives had been closely conneet-| Charles Donnelly, president of the ¢ demes Hi Averdick, age 7, {developed by facing dangers” andjed with the history of North Dakota.| Northern Pacific railway | company. ltucky physician and. fort al | choosing freely to resist not by hav-| appropriate desirable| Mr. Donnelly is an exceptionally in- }tor, and M leora Venter, 71, Se- ing a paternalistic state shove ay | thats a memorial such as this should ferecting alker and those in charge a jattle poetess, were married here’ yes- dghgers beyond reach. he provided by the state and located! 0f the corn show program feel quite! e “ | terda i He is “wet,” but he is against the| here on the capitol grounds. May the, fortunate in securing him for the} Fergus Falls Hospital Uses senting thabire., Venter shud hes suloon and for the W.C. T. U, The| dedication of this building impress] occasion. | He will talk on agriculture A a lcaitacncaemow.cAvardick renewed. hi idea that the saloon poor man’s| upon our minds the great influences ins reneral and corn growing in par Recent Discovery in Case | suit, which had been broken off by club is all wrong, he believes, and the} which Itave always marked the pro-| ticular, My. Donnelly will alse. give misunderstanding Wednesday noon, at which all exhi itors at the show, as well as membe of the Lions and ‘Rotary clubs, will be guests. Wednesday afternoon's ment program at the auditorium will include a full program of magi cluding the act of the audience. These feats will demonstrated by the Master Ilusion- ist, Professor Swift. An Operetta Wednesday evening Prof A. G. Ar- vold of the state agricultural college} will talk on the subject: “Let Us Learn to Live Where We Are.” The will be pre- sented Wednesday evening and Prof. Swift will again appear, his feature operetta “Susan Janee” act for the evening to be that of su: pending a human body in without visible means of support. Thursday afternoon's program wil include band musi tional Harvester company. In evening an orchestra wi pageant will be again presented. No entertainment is provided Friday, to'the public will be awarde Tickets carrying five admissio are being sold for $1 and are mee ing a ready market. Each ticket may be used by one person f times or five persons may enter one time on the one tick and the priz OLD WATER MAL High Holborn, Eng. —Water made from tree trunks, be 800 years old, have been uncover- ed. The wood used is thé@:ght to be elm. Weather Report | POLE oo Temperature at 7 a. m. . 26 Highest yesterday Lowest last night pat Jat will be curtaile fl he Red | Precipitation to 7 a. m. . +O that military trainin SEO Ne eR EG| re ° y training in athletic or-| Cross 4 P oximately: Highest wind velocity 10] ganizatfons will be suppressed; that fa Dine anae A to a 00 the police effectives above the maxi- @ i , petal WEATHER FORECAST | : available for this single operation, | For Bismarck and vieinity: Partly |™4M of 150,000 men will be demili-| the largest in the peace-time history overcast tonight and Friday; som Partly overcast | omewhat colder | tonight and Frida tonight. Weather Conditions An extensive low pressure area, with its center over Iowa, extends from the Great Lakes region wes ward to the eastern slope of the R ies. A high presure area is center- ed’ over Utah, Precipitation occurred in the Great Lakes region, middle Mississippi Valley and from the northern Rocky Mountain states west- ward to the Pacific coast... Lower temperatures prevail over the north- western Rocky Mountain’ slope but moderate temperatures are reported in all other sections. ORRIS W. ROBERTS. OBicial in Charge. Two Plays,! will be the! bits | Tuesday morn. ; entertain- in-| sawing a human || body in two parts in plain view of| be} mid-air acrobatic feats, ! and an address by J. G. Haney of the extension department of the Interna- the play, the male quartet will sing, and the corn, for but the exhibits will be open, mains } t believed to | | that the authority of the commander | Middle- Aged Bookkeeper Turns to | j Un i By home made yawl in which he cir oman: hi |The other diy he came | He was ne lon | weokkery writer land NEA Si 1 British tank mike the cabin, saili rome true, And en and jib such a went the ur daily elt in books about ti Jhorizon extended far beyond the dus- | a ty confines of his offi | tanker's H | the. tro Builds Own Boat on the loose. mastered the a cou harbor one Asic parted Wontlier bi) Gnd oF & shorn would be willing to. start out tomorrow with hgr just little W hy, I again tout of the » RED CROSS | BUDGET FIXED | | tried out at Wright {tal here to save the life of th year-old daughter of Mr, d Mr Vernon Langness. Physicians said today she wus improved after the treatment. i The child was suf: from an fadvanced stage of p id her | | body was swollen so that attendants believed she was about to die. A solution, of which the basic ei ;ment was mercury, was injected into her vein | The treatment was successful and ‘the child is recovering. T0 EVACUATE COLOGNE ZONE DECEMBER 4 French Officials Well Satisfied With Germany’s Note on Disarmament he Greater Part of the Year's! Funds Will Go Toward | Special Services Washington, Nov (PF) On the eve of the annual drive for new mem- bers and maintenance of its standing army of supporters in ret, Chairman Payne of the American Red Cro: that ‘s budget are had been fixed at which will aster relief services of will ab including di Spe ial tion the Bathe hospital behalf. {service men to total cluding former service men's welfa $140,000; emergency work for these men nd_erection of eonyal- escent 50,000, $300, ae sum The ed D anted Paris, Nov. 1 Zone will be evi it is taken for gi | circles, the German note on disarmi ment having been found so satisfa: that no further obstacles are an- Cologne ember 1, fFicial t serv That Germany purposes to bring about general disarmament and to] a ‘make an endeavor to come into full] pix ‘accord with the Locarno pacts is the prevailing idea obtaining her ing out of -the reply to the { Among the features of the {note detailing what Germany to do in the premises are ‘or Disaster Relief 0,000 is tentatively fixed for diss lief, which is tie amount set aside each year because of the impossibility of culeulating the | relief demands in this respeet. As an| example, Judge Payne pointed to the contributions in the mid-western to nado relief operations which ed to $2,644,920 up to June German expects surances of the Reichsw | tarized, that all weapons consi by the Versailles tre:¥y | will be confiseated and that of the society. Out of the tornado relief fund for} the mid-west victims, the budget lists | $2,702,233 to meet the continuing re- quirements from ,that section, to which use it is restricted, and the ex- pense of administering the fund will be borne by the Red Cross, to permit every cent of the relief money to be spent for actual relief work. The budget appropriates $ for domestic operations and $404,47' for foreigh work. Headquarters and branch office operations are alloted $1,469,600. pieces ‘of heavy artillery will be destroyed. Luther’s Speech Approved ‘Favorable comment was heard today ! on the utterances of Chancellor Luth- Jer in an address before the mer- chants’ and_ industrialists’ associa- tion in Berlin, particularly his state- ment that the Locarno agreement in- ‘corporated the desire of the German people for peace. The agreement, he declared, gave Germany a chance to participate in vital international | Questions and that the time for such | participation had come had been dem- RELIGIOUS REVELATION onstrated by the statements of the] Nagyszakacsi. Hungary—A rumor British, French and Belgian state-| that the Holy Virgin :shas appeared to ment both at Locarno and subse-|a peasant girl here has caused thou- quently. sands of pilgrims to journey to this Hig Bainctne corstanantcaud: bike yAP ministered poison, _ ___ the Sea and Sails Around Globe FEATURE SHOW (~ , Gevernor Sorlie, Chas. Don. went Cape down Fown, wa home You have to watch out w ty-vear-old bookkeeper put distant shore apt to take his dream serious Pidgeon will never be ke y any STEPHENSON "MURDER TRIAL NEARS AN END ch Side Given Eight Hours for Argument—Defend- ants Remain Cheerful Noblesville, I The murder trial o url Klenek and its end here toda All evidence submitted short sur-rebuttal, the p that the jury would be give late Frid rly Sa Judge each ment. The case, growing out of the al- leged abduction and attack on Madge 12.) tephenson, ntry neared excepting pects W the ¢ parks his limited side to eight hours for argu- Obehol Indianapolis girl, ¢last 5, began Oct. 12. She died il 14 from the e of self ad- Stephenson Confident As the end of the trial Stephenson continued ¢ Klenek and when he was gra K. K. K. in Indi also. t the at ha with them a manager of a pub- and a truck driver will de- the fate o who lie utility termine in four years r a political power in Indiana. ‘es SHOOTS MAN IN KINDNESS, POLICE TOLD Tired of Life, Confessed Murderer Says —lIll Feeling Hinted Washingte the victim favor, Jo poli Stein, ov. 12-(P)— Because ed him to do it as a eph A. Pickard, 25, told the he shot and killed Joseph F. 45, here last night as a quiet- rranged act of kindness. “I did it because I hated to see him live when he wanted. to die,” was Pickard’s plea when held on a murder charge after confessing to the police that he shot Stein his room in the basement of a hospital where both worked as window washer: Pickard said Stein wanted to die because he had “wrecked his life,” but other employes at the hospital said there had been ill feeling between the two men because Pickard had made pieveations against Stein's character. ei alleged to have continually ein for living under the onus INCE the Prince of Is Valparaiso—As Wales was entering a residential sub- urb here, an elderly woman dressed in black rushed out of the crowd, (China produces about 60,000 long} hop haye, declared the story to be a tons of unshelled peanuts in a year.! fraud, threw her arms around him, exclaim: ing, “Forgive me, Prince,” 4 TELLS COURT SHE RECEIVED FOLEY LETTER Substantiates Mitchell’s Charge of Atiempts to In- fluence Her Testimony GIVES CONVERSATION Says Capt. Foley Letter Was an Insult to the Mem- ory of Her Husband Q Noy Zachary I uns downe, commander of (P) widow of the 1 the dirigible Sh led tod n the court-mart William Mitchell nse cour to prove by her testime a navy officer ende to have her give false testimony before the Shenandoah board of inquiry by acting her former statement Commander Lansdowne. \ to take the $ nandoah on 1 flight to the middle west over his protest Representative Frank RB. Reid, chiet defense counsel, said her evi- dence also would support Mitchell's char been e that the navy department had uilty of “criminal negligen the acusations which led to ubstantiate Col, Mit ge that improper attempts ade to influence her tes- timony before the Shenandoah board of inquiry, Mrs. Lansdowne testified that Captain Paul Foley of the naval hoard had sent her a letter which was “an insult” to the memory of her husband 1 aid she could not pro- had nsdowne testified that the was given her by Mr: tle, dr., wife of Capta navy commander of the + who i 7 and of the by the in the Who Was judge prasecution bourd inquiry nsdowne) had every ¢ nthe board and was willing the investigation to it t author attitude dence to leave compete y. This statement she described nsdowne's te ard, but the and Was supporte Letters Introduced The defense then introduced copies of the letters exchanged between Cap- tain Lansdowne and the navy depa ment relating to plans for the Shen andoah’s last flight. “Did Captain Boley come to see you fore you testified?” Rey 1 of the Mitche!l counse [wo nights before T testified.” “When did vou testify?” “October 9th.” Colonel Sherman Moreland of the prosecution, then took over the exan- ination, did aptain Gherardi, (aid to Si y Wilbur) visit you at Lakehu on or about Sept. 4th?” he asked. “He did.” Mrs. Lansdowne said she didnot tell Captain Gherardi that the “things she had said to the newspaper of the Shenandoah were lies.” “T denied to Captai “that Thad said that the f the navy personally was the murde of my husband, That is all I denied Mrs. Lansdowne further testified that the letter Captain Foley sent her suggested that she state her willing- hess to waive legal defense on behalf of her husband, and authorize the naval court to t for him. Foley's Conversation “What did Captain Roley you when he visited you?” Mr asked. “He impresse tance of the court. nnity of my appes ay to Reid the id the @ was v1 I expected I told him 1 would t that the court had Shenandoah had t on a political flight, despite Wilbur's denial. “Captain Foley said [ had no right it was « political flight as the s had a right to see their ed me He s impor- sol- great and asked me wh. to tell the court. ring Major General Wm. S. 1 member of the court, Mr: id the letter from © tain Foley had no signature to it no mark to show even that it from the navy department. “How did you know it was a letter from Captain Foley?” “Because my friend said so “What is the name of your friend? “Thad rather not sa The question was repeated. Then Mrs. Lansdowne said: “It was Mr Jr. Stutsman County Taxpayers Lose Injunction Suit Jamestown, N. D,, Nov. 12.—(#) - The petition of a group of Stutsman county taxpayers for a permanent in- junction to prevent the board of county commissioners from carrying out their contract for the erection of an addition to the county courthouse was ied in a decision handed down by District Judge Jansonius to- da; The court holds that the com- ioners are entirely within the law, and that “it appears that Stuts- man county could annually “levy sev- eral hundred thousand dollars, with- out exceeding the constitutional lim- The decision continues the tempor- ary injunction for 15 days, and it is expected that an appeal will be taken to the supreme court. In case an ap- peal is perfected, the temporary in- Junctton wath ee Senbingee