The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 8, 1926, Page 1

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WEATHER FORECAST. { | i Fair tonight and Saturday; slightly colder tonight. CER REATT CRS A GONG Oem ce teee ocean DS SSUES A ete SSUES APRS oe Wl aOR Se ate aE URE NSU naptes- Rts erence nearer 4 ESTABLISHED 18738 : _ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1926 ’ STARR OF LIFE [Woman Is Head of Larg est (SUNNY DIXIE | CHANGESFROM| Tree N ursery in the World IS A LAND OF SHE’S THE ENTIRE STAFF — F : : spree shige’ re bill. | ‘ : . ‘ore sen- ‘ ! Products of Golden Corn Be- ‘ ais : ate oe ee : uk Entire aislaintihaee Section 8 = Dhl ee conti Ss ‘ coming Staple’ Articles on oS . = : Fubber taveatigadion. of United States Has % oe 5 Government officials testify in Midwest Tables : oe : : senate aluminum inquiry. Snow, Sleet, Rain BECOMES LEGAL TENDER International Harvester Com- pany to Trade Machinery, for Corn at $1 Chicago, Jan, 8—UPh=The “Staff an x ee Atlanta, Ga, dan, Communities East of Rock) Mountains Recovering from Heavy Snowfall 8.—(/)—Snow, contributions to the world’s food su sf From the Qhio and Potomac ply, is Boing on midwestern tables 5 . " 2 : a ers, extending into middle Georj every concelvable form—corn “pone” : 4 § dan ee and Alabama, the section was exper: cornmeal mush, corn fritters, corn : * s iencing a steadily chilling rain, gen- syrup and even corn sugar. erously intermingled with snow and | Faced with a crop surplus, farm sleet. leaders hope in this way to turn the TRAFFIC DEMORALIZED of Life” has ‘been changed from . oS : sleet_und today had converted | wheat to corn in the grain belt. 3 ‘ sunny Dixie into a land of juicy! -- The golden corn, one of America’s slush. mountainous regions of Ten- a gold of the corn into the gold of a Kentucky, North Carolina, dividend for the grower or at least eorgia and Alabama, snow | ‘ provide a means of working off ex- ated, rain and sleet enter- cess supplies. ing into the combination in the foot- Miinots Town to Have “Corn Day. ‘ . . - hills and “lowlands. Sporadic fi . ‘ ries of snow were reported from} jays and corn meetings are : : ; , < 4 d HI it { planned throughout the central west, : ‘ Ree Hee earns: Cnt pe soda, . C1 1 e 8 ‘one of the first echeduled at s : . ‘ increasing in’ volume as Morris, Illinois, on A fe : 5 " : ¥ nightfall descended. Morris, Tilinots, on : ‘ : oy _ Transportation free corn dinner, ru ig the gastro- % nomic scale from corn ted beef. corn gravy, succotash, corn bread and corn Evelyn Smith loading a big tree. Syran, down to colfee eweetened with! Now york, Jan, Seventeen sears ago Evelyn Smith was left a heritage WEATHER HAS CLEARD IN Reported reed oil, foot Mterally |of a few acges of land, no experience, NDS BY \ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGIO: | ternational Harvester company’ haa {amd a love for trees, Kansas City, Mo. Jan, 8.—(@)—| anvlounced’a: program inghiving corn ing .on this unfirm founda- Communities on the eastern slope of that goes buek te the-most prenitive tt velyn Smith now is active head A F N RTH DA OTA the Rocky mountains were recover- meang of commercial. tradage-bar | of &, "DIE, tree” nursery, the Targest| ter. The concern will trade imple. | °: ar ind in the world, with nearly last two days, which in some sec-! ments.to: Sarmera CaWicorn: 0 acres of land, and a million tions blocked highways, but unsettled tree: ’ % e conditions were expected to bri ing from the heavy snowfall of the! ring | Trading Basis $1 a Bushel. has sent big trees to every} awn | light snow to the greater part of the! The basis is $1 a bushel for No. 2] civilized country in the world, and to middlewest. today. | Flurries were predicted in the gov- jernment forecast for the states bor-; {de corn at Chicago, a price which the|tearly every city in the | United ing the Great Lukes and as far ind train schedules ware being | n into the discard. Miss Mattie Thomas, 53, is the i Daily Citizen, he town with th which she has been riding for the past 28 years, HUSBAND aepatt PAY FOR mania for spending his pay in five and ten cent. stores grounds for divorce. \ lars a week alimony went with Mrs. Frank T. Hullpgs allea- ed that her husband, ‘mmediaie- ly upon receipt of his pay, 100,000 MEN WERE READY FOR UPRISING Police Have Secured Much} told a priest, whom he insisted Bean \ Hieves will be rewuhed iG] States, Landscape gardencrs, city! A Total of $4,083,741.86 Has \ ponent her, aaerereee ll word oH ao as southern : jouri. m law. Every week dozens of men The weather hid cleared, however, | p women, prominent in their fields, Industrial Bonds Up to IN FAVOR OF Nig the ‘Racky ‘Mountain, region andl ‘at Chicago. it the old Colonial home at Amawalk, 1, 1926—State Be aN den ‘@ | ae to ‘gah ee which rece’ ‘eI fore the farmer is called upon to de- je reason for her suc S " the brunt of the storm as it ‘sprea liver next May, dune and July, he jnst “to phrases, Mies, Smith Auditor Steen Prepare: | ARBITRATION eastward) and where at least. two n sell it elsewhere and settle for eh , father, Major a Sm Complete Statement . jdeaths were caused. 1 Th fe t ounder of the American Press aast | speculat LES Balt toe bangs} ciation, loved trees and. made-them| Interest on Bonds \isgued. bythe} Neithér ‘Side \ Gains Any; bd re ire Create ty penny, according to figures! com i Ca inal Mercier Pashley ‘quel tees Nieuth’ Miss Smith piled by John Steen, state auditor. Ground in Conference— Optimistic Though be more the basis of little money, and ‘one or two small] bill is $1,480,222.50 a year. Members Still in Session : offer than the same numb: farm: @ legacy. Her father never} Total interest paid up to January riod eding th % xcept when he disposed of land} amounted. to $4,083,741.86. No other] members of the 0) posing groups in| Brussels, Jan. 8. -—The condi: iad ieaialibed as sta tare his which contained trees te had olanted.| bondy are ‘outstanding acainet, tine] the ener it a eee eine BTOUP are, tion of Cardinal Mercier, who. under- Sam H. Thompson, new president! must be @ market for really fine} ‘Total tax. levies to retire interest] other side is ready to quit and fhove tinues stationary, feebleness per: of the American Farm Bureau Feder- | trees. , and pay the principal of various is-|a sine die adjournment. sisting in spite of normal tempera farm bureau in the corn country, rec-| started to stud: em. Every book} Home Builders defitit. are placed by}to bring an end to the| hard coal’ nourishment. i emmending the holding of “corn | available’ was fevoured and she re- Steen at $3,159,315.16. Beginning in| strike, now in its fifth month, wi 5 | “I know that many prayers are be- Pans of corn products. Mr.jied meghanics of tree growth. 848.33. In 1920 no bonds were due| meeting, fi the situation -ap- not yet lost,” thi ed prelate Thompson asserted ‘od en good] By ithe work herself, she at! and Steen’s statement shows no levy Peatadiee. ie Paine) ation ap: | are pat, wt Bclenatenileen dents that the extension of tht mate-lorasiee te Tap case and bandilce of] Ty es $197,742.78; 'in 1922 it was" Alvan Markle, ch ieee eh Peeeatione jo' e | lev; 742.78; i ‘ ition. ment throughout the corn belt would| trees, Gho/even spent hours In. the| $694,396 167 in 1060 1i was S661 30571; | jo en eerkie: chairman of the! conditio 8 miners and six operators together in but my stomach hus failed me, uation. mee ening je" trees there. it jumped to the high péak of $819,- the hope they will hit upon some so- pas alinget, failed me. There ix . ti ry do.” to popularize corn sugar; The prod-jin matured trees.—Small trees Tax Levies for Bonds. “The operators are willing to ar usa eeneuicte sad is a May corn clos-| Park experts and builders of cri Been Paid as Interest on ¥ the ai fi South Dakot: th- If corn goes above $1'a bushel be-| 40 miles north of New York, City. January ihe sesh seh ih haten s implement purchases in the rE x Torspepeturss today were not un-; fide pur. 3 covering the fai this hobby. state of North Dakota costs it a pret- announcement said that. co corn would} found herself and her mother with ‘be exact the state’s total interest 5 ; pie Uy Feebleness Remains; els would have bought in the five-|had sold # tree during his lifettime.|1, 1926 on state industrial bonds} New York, Jan. 8.—VP)—Individual Use of Cora\Sugar Urged. She conceived the idea that there! state's credit. prepared to stick it out until the’ went an operation last week, con ation, has sent a bulletin to every] Knowing nothin, of trees, she|sues of industrial bonds and the Yesterdays discussion in the effort,ture. He is unable to get prope: day: 8 a means of stimulating con-| membered what she read. She stud-| 1919, the grand total levy was $268,-| described as perfunctory. Today's, ing offered for me and that all hopes rises already obtai he hed po pert béceme familiar with every op-|was made. In 1921, however, the] nothing better. | i f i v4 . materially relieve the immediate ait: city: parks, pruning, bracing and|in 1924 it was $766,874.48, and in 1926) srt conterence, is holding the six| | “My operation was a complete suc A particular drive is being rally decided her field was] 158 uct of the maize fields looked as good | had alan a against them from the! ‘Tax levies: for real estste bonds| trate all ers want to negotiate a contract pounds yesterday as fast as it could |food: from strange soil and enable| North Dakota bonds total $847,150.72; he unloaded from trucks. Reports|them to: overcome ‘the shock of re-|Jovies for mill and elevator construc Without calling in outside parties. to farm bureau. headquarters here| planting, tion bonds total $810,000.81: mill and] que, ”orkers, declare it unfair to ask said that in one district in Iowa cam- (Continued on page three) mine owners are unwilling to arbi- Seis ae plscel t Nesates pecnd, Fax Bet oH Gels Big Tree igs) tate the selling oa of, coal. partments of the fed eral sy tar fr sea ICL | ment and the state of Pennsylvania x s, gi Austrian. pines or maples ill New York, waiting f a Is Wedding Gift. Inches through, ‘might ‘eat! A NEW YEAR N Feaulte or for developments,® that|Selne Continues to Rise— of Vanderbilts fore, the Amawalk. Nurseries “ would justify a move from Wash- * will'not seli-a tree unless it is. ma- ington | or Pennsylvania to bring) Damage Will Likely Exceed York, 1. B.A ki ture and has developed the. proper sel 4 Petite amends alter. oot system to stand planting. In ad- onan vs merchants "of That of Other Floods nating with clusters jition, a service department ca: Ryle rae en te. ohare ne i —- from, wedding gift in the Vanderhflt| the trees “until ‘they are. defi appeal ; : ; : inl for ihe Second yn in i ertablished in their new homes... | Fifth Man Said-to Be Wander-| ances of the teap because of the| continues to rise. | Provided there is ele te Ae ns ae i ing it has caused in the coal 5 t; orders from. Miss suffering i there is every probability there will vanaeri soto ERNE, fe Bath] Smid, No tree which is faulty, in| Mg in Woods, Blinded by. | districts ibe, the river in expected to cease its was set fot reac cae A fier. growth, or which shows any sign of Bootleg Liquor d upward trend Sunday, noon, infection, is allowed to take space on CONTR ACTORS Workmen are buatly gneoeed in} i i Be itt, a farm. making cement and sandbag bai ced Pe when, fhe demas a ea organization has grow: Binghamton, N, ¥., Jan. 8.—(4)——-A & cades at all vulnerable’ points along s ir. Vanderbilt. ” “At first hi id,-“I_ was presi-| New Year’s celebration ended yester- the Quays. These, however, cannot Ny ee houge on east Sixty-fourth street | dent and manager. When @/day in the death of four men, A prevent flooding by infiltration of has been presented ee the cor pay was to be sold, I was salesman.| fifth, blinded by alleged bootleg 1i- places in the city, at a lower level! Mr. Vanderbilt, and shas been fur- when the tree was moved, ‘I did) quor, was wandering in the woods than the water. The outlook conse-! nished in preparation for, the moving.” near a lumber ca: at Ramet quently is regarded with anxiety by. “y tan trom s wedding trip sbuth, |. Pa ain eee vagus of the fatale, was brourht ARBITR ATION ee Ee atte lance at Geeniies Patrick's, cathedral, was thosen. to], Now there are from 190 to, 175 men ee Gntniiae cae ork The situation in the suburbs, both up and down stream, is growing graver. While the watermary is Henry Deutsch; Minneapolis well’ below previous retord levels perform the heen ‘The groom is} ot the “farm. Depgitments are al) tizth member of the party who col- an Episcopal "Department beads lapsed after he neared the company’s office. “Weather Report | ec responsible ‘A relief party found ‘three men the damage undoubtedly will be far Ss [Weather Report ||" dead.on the, Noy of the camp: .,,4| Attorney, Explains Value | frets: thantha of previaus fends Dos sl in the kitchen. Searchers combed of Such Laws bullt on the banks of the river since| Tembarpturs at 7am... ‘But every opers- the woods for the missing survivor. . hath Al Mac Nousing yeoulodys Vaca : it yes: toraey . Fy ion, is Hy pple pehgad by. Evelyn i Tan. 8.—()—Urging 02 | will sant that a tee a could do his job lit sg tion to cut down the number of f thd rivers in the provinces aes AAPA WAH BENE, ER + Rumblings Diminiah) jreti%,‘Gyocd ‘ur couse procedure] age fe. Generally, hows) feinity: | of ttorney, ex- pondislens Bed In jum with violence, Wednesday, is continu-| plained the process of ‘Srbitration to! ium the flood jitions inj id to foster better understanding the situation shows improve rit plimaer see Pes gainst 8,--UP)—The jon between contractin; parties, Henry a pare a cia le oie and eee esdoius: which, be an | Deutsch, Minnea; RA . , The pitt rumblit rej almost 400 members of the northwest deseo City, | J: sens ie forte, indi rect Associated General Contrac- t asta, ite auccosatal | yep fost th ate ar vain a5 Aiooienscat Boats enanal oh: ’ ef gelkcy mae see, flewing of an arbitration st might the Seine at the Aus:! » : , senses akes y 7 s ‘tre if allowed by| terbits Ege showed a gauge of 20 erson r n nthe ater ee , ly make for was seven feet lower] the . otti way in the| unde: ling between the. oe oad height of the rise 1010. In the Rheims istic ‘he "other, inces. FOR PLANES Tie tare, Pang in Evidence Concerning Coun- | fea | rn questions on which no | vr as the product of cane and best. tol start. Their roots were vot large|since the first one was issued total 1. The min- i terfeiting Plot Morris ‘residents, who bought 3000fenough, nor fine enobgh, to obtain | sven aoregs tax levine far Bank cat] mereement can be reached. The » é | ’ | Budapest, Jan, 8. 100,000 men ure said by {tors to have been available for the j coup D'Etat which was to have plac~ ed Archduke Albrecht on the Hun-| Regulars of the na- tional army to the number of 37, controlled by Admiral Horthy, | regent, 25,000 police, gendarmes and and. about 40,000 the Universi garian throne. customers office: fascisti comprised the body. Tt is claimed that Regent Horthy was fully in sympathy with the move- | ment and willing to relinquish the regency in order that Albrecht might} ascend the throne without hindrance. The latest facts in the si’ i seem to tend to show that Ludwig Windisch among the conspirators in the thirty billion franc counterfeiting plot, did nob act entirely from polltical| mo- It has been stated that money obtained from floating spurious notes was to used in furthéring the ambitions of; Archduke Albrecht to crown of Hungary. Parties Involved The semizofficitl Hutgarian tefe- | graph agency points out in this con- nection that those arrested from par- ticipation in the ccuntergeiting ; be- long to different political parties and that this fact does not tend to bear! out. the charge they were acting with 1 no. rain during the ‘intervals, and| Ribreeht has issued u disclaimer, de- claring that he has had no relations, direct or indirect, with i Graetz for several y e obtained, they clai ‘ull admission from Ladislas Zeroe, an employe of the acute, fost of the houses are of a ernment map \ toast fst neh Mts Smith, and. e on ithe place] Mount Vesuvius. that arbitration be’ substituted for| flimsy character. ib reau, that the spurious notes were printed with the aid of Johnann Virag, Ladislas Sparling,. Josef Hala and Franz Farragh, all or whom have been. arrested. ing press used ‘at bureau has been found at ~ This concern also pi the metal for the plates, from which the notes were’ struck. Ludwig Kiss and Mechanics | | ranks the Attorney General at $3,600 counterfeiters were through with eae EEE “one BELL IN Europa rk—This town claims to have bonis? bell in Ei perope. It is. in Town Steeple. ind isin goed, sate Washington, © ted ale ae wi hones th the alrighble is Boe 1 the oo to an alerm ode Amid. the ‘bi start late in i idan pe a Eufaula aid of her bicycle, NORTH DAKOTA HAS 1,725 ON MS PAY ROLL WITH A TOTAL MONTHLY SALARY OF $240,179.62 Congressmen Get $10,000 al Year Each — Governor's; Salary Is $5,000 — State Has Eleven Employes Who 5) Receive Higher Salaries Than Governor BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS If a taxpayer's dream of a state in which there were no public officials und no public payrolls were to come true in North Dakota 1725 persons would be looking for jobs and a sal- ary list of $240,179.82 a month would be wiped off the state's budget. These are the official figures as | prepared by State Auditor John teen who is just finishing an analy- of the state payrolls. It is the ifirst complete payroll analysis ever made in the history of the state, so far as Steen knows, and hence’ no comparisons with previous years are available. If the contention of members of} the Nonpartisan League that senators | | are state officers is upheld, the sen-| ators und congressmen representing North Dakota at Washington ‘ould head the list of salaried employes of the people, They draw $10,000 a year) eae If, on the other hand, they are| federal offiteholders, the palm for high salaries on the state payroll! joes to the presidents of the state's! wo leading educational institutions, | head of each gets $7,500 a year. 11 Higher Than Governor Eleven state employes draw high- er salaries than the governor, who| is listed at $5,000, and three draw as much as the chief executive. R. H. Slocum of the state agricul- tural college holds second place all by himself with a salary of $6,000 a yeur and the five judges of the $5,500 w year. Three persons divide fourth place |” with a salary of $5,400 a year. They are 0. P. Cosk Joseph Kennedy and V. P. Squires of the University | of North Dakota faculty. Three persons share fifth place! with Governor A. G. Sorlie, They pre State Bank Examiner Gilbert |Semingson, who draws two saalries, jone as Chief Bank Examiner and ai other as secretary of the Guaranty Fund Commission; George A. Me- Farland, president of the State Teachers College at Minot, and C. Allen, president of the Valley City State Teachers College. Instructors Well Paid who .receive salaries of from $4,000; to $4,800 a year, most of them in- structors at the University of North Bakote and state agricultural’ Col- lege. , Within this classification come the 15 district court judges who receive $4,690 a year. Of the %2 highest paid persons on the state payroll only six are elective “office the governor and the five judges of the supreme: court. Ranking above, elective officers who head state departments comes t state tax commissioner who receives $4,000 a year. . Financially he out- a year; the state insutance commis- cretary of state, the co missioner of agricultire and labo: superintendent of public instruction, the three railroad commissioners gnd| peor ates me ye rated ~ mn al State T an A c. A Fanos also fall within ie since ‘telery practi stan asa sal for elective ofticeh a Some Employes eerireinen Negro. insure ties shes that 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [atom PRICE FIVE CENTS | SENATOR IS A STATE OFFICER, SAYS STEPHENS NYE ENTITLED TO A SEAT AS AN APPOINTEE Constitution of Both State and Nation Authorize Ap- pointment, He Says BLUNT CASE IS CITED Impeachment Case Dismissed in 1799 Because Senator Was Not U. S. Officer 8.—()—Gerald . Nye is entitled to a seat in the senate as the aj Stephens, Democrat, Mississippi, to- day told’ the senate in the minority report of the elections committee favoring the seating of He said a senator is a state offi- cer and that the constitution of both the state and nation authorized the governor to fill the senate vacancy by appointment. A Phrase of Words “The phrase ‘United States sena- said Mr, Stephens, “is simply A United States ‘a phrase of words. senator does not exist until he is elected by the state or appointed by ight to become a legislator of the United States gov- ernment goes back to the power of the state to act. “The question goes back to fifth congress in peachment proceedings were dismiss- ed against Senator William Blunt because he was not a United States Governor's Action Wise ing to questions as to nator Stephens explained that the governor had not called an election because it would cost $200,- 000, which would have to come out of the pockets of a people already burdened by a serious economic con- “I think the governor acted with great wisdom in not burden upc: his people,” the Mis- sissippi senator said. ranged for the election of # senator in the next general election Replying to Senator Reed, Demo- Missouri, Senator sail that so far as he knew there had been no serious protest against the ") seating. of Nye and that there, had bepr no suggestion of-.‘' Zonngetion. with the Senator George, D interrupted to sey that Representa- tive Burtness, Republican, North Da- kota, had appeared before the eles- tions committee to represent certain protestants in North Dakota. Pel evidence was taken,” Senator MISSING GIRL IS FOUND AFTER ALONG SEARCH Accuses 60-year-old Uncle of Having Held Her Prisoner in Chicago jocrat, Georgia, 8.—@)—Elsie Dun- of Manchester, . who disappeared from her home | last February, was found today with Id uncle, John Dunlavy, | whom she accused of having held her |a prisoner in a northside apartment f North Dakota and) leva 15 the State Agricultural College. The | lo The girl was found after her father had searched many through a letter smuggled out of the house and sent to Dunlavy’s wife in | Rochester, N. Y. The police said Dealer admitted 1's accusations. “Say: i She Was Kida; The Pe declared her ‘uncle kid- naped her from her father’ that he beat her, threatened to kill her and would permit her to talk to She was put under the care of a sister and an aunt by the police until the arrival of her parents. Dunlavy is the father of five chil- The girl's parents are hurry- supreme court are next in line with | the jon with her aunt Notification of Chicago Poauncle is holding ‘He kidnaped me. jee re nen save ie |late,” the letter said in part. Next in line come 57 individuals | '™{t ae ister’ Inetned that. a’ bi girl had been born to the girl tive Officials at the hospital today eg the girl refused to tell anythi herself or of the child’s father.’ baby is still alive. Elks Conduct the Scheffer Funeral me a prisoner. ase tell father too

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