The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 3, 1925, Page 3

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a THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1925 WAHPETON MAY GRT NEXT MEET: OF FEDERATION Bismarck and Dickinson” Are} Also Being Considered, Says Mrs. Waldo th distilet. tions, under this plan, uld be awarded to the seventh and eighth districts in turn. Wahpeton | a the fourth district. The meeting will be held int Woof Mrs. J. E. Mey City, president AMERICANS BUYING MORE | INSURANCE Amount of New Insurance Paid for This Year Estab- lishes New Record New 3. (P)—Ameri- ng as much life weeks as they rai dition of the ion to $15,- ce paid for country, he calle 400,000,000 0 this year—a new reco sents a a ommercial and ry, dare we in’ attempting Cooperation Needed growth of our urban npanying our com- » the organization e scale, the higher and ‘high- d, the rapid- all tend to pendence of our ponalion? the extent of our future problems, and the need of wroad-minded cooperation in their solution.” Robert W. Hintington, of Hart- ford, Conn,, told the members that © companies this. year a further loan of “$1,- 000,000 to American people. is additional loan has’ been used to finance homes and farms,| industry, transportation and c cord for life insurance companies,” . “Never before has the net in life insurance — invest- ngle year reached The total invested/as. United States life insur- ance companies will amount to $11,- 500,000,000 by the end of the current Cane County _ ‘ Appeals Case to High Court The right of ‘ounty to collect $4341.56 from the Equity State Bank of Fargo, now. the Security National bank, is ut stake in a case filed today in the supreme court. The county is appealing from a de- cision of the district court which held that the bank was not required to pay a tax on its capital stock for the year 1919, one of the years dug ing which, the bank holds, there was no statutory authorization for col- lecting sueh tax. The record sets forth that the bank paid the tax un- der protest, It was successful in its suit to recover the money on the ground that it had been improperly collected. The county appealed the case following the lower court’s de- cision that it should return the money. To Decide Whether Insyred Can Change Payee by. by His Will Whether or not the beneficiary of an insurance policy can be changed by the will of the person on whom the policy was issued is the question involved in the case of Elizabeth W. Talcott vs. Laura Bailey as executrix of the will of Frederick H. Bailey, appealed to the supreme court today from the district court of Cass county. Mrs. Bailey is appealing from a judgment of $2601.50 issued by the ‘ict court which held that her step-daughter, Mrs. Talcott, was en- titled to a share in the insurance money. The will of the decedent specifically stated that he was leav- ing ngthing, to his daughter. , $$ _____-____-—____—_- f MANDAN NEWS | ——— E. A. Ketter, secretary of the Mis- souri Slope Fair Association, has issued a call for an annual meeting of the stockholders in that, organiza- tion to be held at the Chamber ~of Commerce rooms on ‘Monday, De- ‘ember 7. The object of the meet- ing is to transfer property to the Morton county fair association which will meet the following Monday night. C, F. ‘Massingham is presi- dent of, the latter organization. J. D, Allen, Mandan taxidermist, has received at his shop for mount- ing an eagle which has a wing spread of seven feet, seven a inenea from tip to tip, the bird he has mounted. ~C, es ¥>| 205 Third Street, N. “W., shot the hind. Aetem neo ORE SMEs rao a cexwngaoRtE trict Attorney Emory R. Buckner, of New York. claring war.” Other Big Features in an cludes the Newark News, Mr. Wheeler is preparing to fight harder than ever during the session of Congress just ahead “to prevent O DEVELOPMENT IN THE WHOLE COURSE of the his- against Mr. Buckner —a crusade which took the dry leader to the storie struggle of the last five years over the Eighteenth White House—is the District Attorney’s recent announcement Amendment has been more significant, in the opinion of the that the business of the Government in the present emergency ‘Baltimore Sun, than the controversy between Wayne B. Wheeler, is to dry up the sources of liquor supply, and not waste time and general counsel of the Anti-Saloon League, and United States Dis- money in trying to run down petty bootleggers, waiters in cafes. 4 and side-door saloon-keepers. The District Attorney, according to the Providence News, “also admits that he can not. regard a man who carries a flask on his hip as being as hardened a criminal as a burglar or a forger. And that, of course, in the eyes of Mr. Wheel- Apparently, con- modification of the Volstead Act, and has taken this means of de- er, is a high crime and misdemeanor.” This gives but a hint of the interesting character of this article What seems to have started Mr. Wheeler off” on his crusade in The Literary Digest, Dee. 5th issue. ’ -ROTESTANTISM INCONTINENTAL EUROPE is reported tor of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York City. in a desperate battle for its life, with the outlook so ominous As a member of a special survey committee of the Near East Relief as to raise the question whether it is not on the point of death. and as a student of religious conditions, he has traveled exten- . sively in Europe and Asiatic Russia. He is a Fellow of the Royal Some of the causes of Protestantism’s desperate condition are Geographical Society of England. In fourteen countries in Europe, inherent in its divisions; others have been induced by the way. The writes Dr. Stewart, Protestantism “lives in an atmosphere of de- net result, we are told, is almost complete loss of prestige, lack of feat, of hatred, of greed and fear-the four outstanding character- financial and moral support, depletion in clergy and congregations, istics of the post-war turmoil in each of the warring countries.” loss of its press and the lack of new recruits to take up the work “This is aringing challenge to Protestant America that should interrupted by death, starvation, and disillusionment. The-grim awaken it to the need.of coming to the rescue of their co-religion- facts are presented by the Rev. Dr. George Stewart, associate pas- ists in Murope. Unusually Good Number of The Literary Digest DEC. 5th ISSUE—ALL NEWS-STANDS TODAY—10 CENTS Syrian Views of Syria’s Thoadiles (Translations from ‘the. Syrian Press Revealing the The President on Business As a Spiritual Force France’s Financial Quicksand The New Deal in China Austria’s Salvation Seen in Union With Germany Who Will-Keep the Old Lighthouse-Keeper? Making Copper Conduct Better Rallying to Save “Old Ironsides” The German Corpse-Factory Lie The Adventures of a Lexicographer Our Prosperous Farmers A Real “Little Journey” With Lunches for School-Children Dickens How Two Apples Grew Together | When Magic Fails Hamlet in Modern Dress The Rise of Greenwich Village Who Wrote Nathalia’s Verses? Are Our Trolley-cars Back Should Chapel Be Compulsory? Numbers? The Soviets Still at War With God | America’s Toys Now Made A Paradise Shot to Pieces in America THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE THREE "| Shall Only the BIG Bootleggers Be Jailed? 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