The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 26, 1926, Page 1

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Partly cloudy tonight and Sat: urday; warmer tonight. ESTABLISHED 1873 BOOSTER BODY WILL DEVELOP TNMIGRATION President Expresses Confi- dence in Success of Asso- : ciation Program FIRST BOARD MEETING More Than 5,300 Citizens Now Members—Treasury Total Nears $60,000 Fango, Feb. 26.—Confidence in the success of the Greater North Dakota association’s program ‘was expressed by Pres. J. R. Carley in the opening of the first annual meeting of the association's state board of directors held in the association’s office this atiernoon. The meeting will take up recommendations for the launching of the assog¢iation’s five-year develop- ment campaign drafted at this morn- ing's meeting of the temporary cxe- cutive committee which has been in charge of the association since it was organized last July. Officers for the ensuing year will be elected this evening, a _“The Greater North Dakota associa- tion is the result of a group of men having a vision of a greater North Dakota and believing that there was néed of a state development associa- tion to make their vision a reality,” Mr. Carley declared. “Those of us who been identified with civic organizations could understand that it would be a tremendous task to create such &n association. In that we were not mistaken, but it is grati- | ONE BIRTHDAY | { fying at this time, #me seven months after we first met to organize, to realize that such a state association is no longer an idea, but is organized and functioning. 5,300 Members “The report of the treasurer will indicate that more than 5,300 f ard looking citizens of the state have Joined, and the total receipts from the sale of 1926 memberships will soon pass the $60,000 mark. It means that the aggressive citizens’ of the state have been mobilized to work to- gether in the building of a greater commonwealth. It means that the movement has spread to every corner of the state and hat farmers, busi- ness and professional men, bankers school teachers, clergymen. and all other classes of citizens have forgot- ten political differences which have prevented unity ef purpose’ in the past, and have become imbued with’ faith in North Dakota and this asso- ciation’s development program.” | The association has gradually ex- tended its membership over the en-| tire state, the president reported, and | while, there are some sections where - organization has been delayed, these | will be reached and ¢ompleted with- in the next 30 days. Some 41 per} cent of the members have pledged ‘their support for the entire five years, he said, so that last fall’s intensive organization work will not have to be repeated. Immigration Big Work sociation,” Mr. Carley con- is committed to a general am of state development, but it een promised to make immig tion work the major part of its ac- tivities. Accordingly, the recommend- ation of the temporary executive com mittee stresses that feature. lieve that in this we ali concur. North Dakota is at the threshold of an cra (Continued on page 8) WHERE THE ASPARAGUS GROWS PLUMS, PEACHES, PEARS, SHEEP SEE THIS COUNTRY - ‘ AND YOU SEE SOMETHING By ARTHUR BRISBANE t (Conysight, 1926) Walnut Grove, Sacramento County, Calif., Feb. 25.—Come to this country, north of San Francisco, you will admit that no Californian ever said enough about his state. No man could describe this state or all the things in it, There is too much for even a California mind to carry. Rabelais himself with all his vocabulary could not do it justice. | Soon the days of real flying will be here. A trip from Boston to San Francisco will be as simple as # trip by electric car to the suburbs. live in the United States and not, know California will be to admit rank provincialism, Meanwhile you must read about it. And arrange to come as yn as you can to stay. You leave San Francisco taking the ferry to Oakland, cross San Francisco bay. a miniature Mediterrancan, into the valley at the bottom of the bay. The waters of the Pacifie pour through the Golden Gate as they pour ‘through Gibraltar Straits, those pillars of Hercules, into the Mediterranean. Around this: Mediterranean of the ‘west there is growing up a new-race, a new civilization, a new start for the thuman race that will make the old seem small the Mediterranean compared with the Pacific ocean. In one gorner of | great bay you could drop and lose New York's har- thor, On either side of the bay is great city. All about, nogth, south, re the soled) Artis atifut ls on 08 an woe Pacific, ‘weatern frontier of the white race. A Everybody has said you must see Sacramento valley. | Proud wet ‘ a val- a To! other persons ‘ { | | Mr. “and Mis. Stanley Kosinski of ‘Thledo, O., have four sons but they| only have to celebrate one birthday. The four boys, born at two-year i tervals, all arrived on February 20. They are, from top to bottom, Eddie, 47; Clarence, 1}; Albin, 15, and/ Stanley, 11. TAXPAYERS AREGRANTED LONGER TIME Treasury Department Grants| Some Extension of Final Filing Date | Washington, Feb. 26.—(#)—-The} treasury-today granted a number of} extensions of time as to when final| tax returns must be made for this year's payments to the government. Extensions were decided upon be- cause of the nearness of March 15, when the returns ordinarily would be due, and to the fact that the new tax law was approved only today. Under the new regulations citizens and tesidents of the. United States whose net income exceeds $5,000 and domestic corporations were given un- til May 15, or two months’ extension, in which to file complete returns.: However, they mest make tentative returns on or before March 15, to-| gether with ‘one fourth of the esti- mated amount of tax.+ If the estimated tax is less than shown to be due on the completed return;.the difference will bear inter- est at six. per cent a year until paid back. *\ Qther Extensions | American gitizens residing or tra-{ veling abroad, including those in the military-and naval service, -and all: outside the United States; were given until June 15, or three months’ extension to file their returns,~)This order lies to tax- ye ka, Hawaii and other inited States possessions, and ten- tative returns will not bo required | of them. However, the return must be accompani by an affadivit ex- plaining the cause of the delay and interest will be charged at the_rate of six per cent a year from the due date of the tax until paid. Dailey Funeral Will Be Sunday; The body of E. H. Dailey of Bis- marck will arrive here from Miles{ City, Mont., tomorrow morning, ac-| cording to word received by ,rela- tives today. Mr. Dailey, a traveling salesman, died at a hotel in the Montara city Wednesday evening a few minutes after idden. attack ‘ sr that section in the upper Mis-|lowing » two weeks’ illness with ton- ee Cea heath hee men Hy] i Valley. The weather is|ejlitis and diphtheria. She was born his sudden Seatn ‘came as a distinet| mostly fair. from the Plains States|on » farm 12 miles west of Hazelton \shock to his telatives and. friende| went to. acific coast due toj and had lived in Nosth. Dakota all her re, ee an extensive high Deersere area cen-|life. Searing relatives inciyde her Funeral. sérvices ‘will be held at the| tered ‘over Idaho. - The temperature|parents, two sisters, a. E. son Webb chapel Sunday ‘afternoon st|-dropped in all, states except Mon-| of Oakland, Cal., end Alice of Saskat- 80 o'clock, Rev. Holmes of the First! tana where © temperatures ac-|chewan. Caneda: three brothers, Don, antist shark ettirist i The oa eapaeny tbe entered. - over = and cand Royo! e taken rg -. ant is r addr 5 Mrs. mother of the little aioe etl ee In chorge girl is seriously ill 8 her home. THE BIS j hibition has been u success {ded that the league official's | mind and |grasping facts make him immune to | convincing proof,” that prohibition is ja failure. | Mr. Wheeler replied that “like jto cloudy tonight and Saturday, BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1926 AMERICAN PEOPLE SAVED HUGE SUM IN TAXES ‘PROHIBITION [44 AREKILLED ISDEBATRD BY | INTHURSDAY'S TWO SENATORS| — WINDSTORNS Senator Edwards of New Jer-|Sccres cf People Are Injured sey Launches Attack on and a Great Amount of Anti-saloon League Property Damaged { j | | | Prohibition Becoming feel Many Rivers Jammed With Efficient Daily, Says Ice in Ohio, Causing Heavy \ Brcokhart of lowa Flood Damage “Washington, Feb. 26—(#)—Prohi-| | Chicago, Feb. 26—-)—Eleven are bition was greatest victory injdead and scores injured as a result hart, Republican, Iowa, and Senator Edwards, Democrat, New Jerse: | While they debated the sub | night over the radio, Mrs. Texas yesterday, the storms struck the central part of the country, ac- companied by heavy rains and snow, at a velocity of 60 miles an hour, 'Norton, Democrat, representative | causing incalculable property — logs. ! from New Jersey, was criticizing pro-| Buildings were destroyed, strorcs | hibition in a speech at another radio| flooded, telephone and telegr. | Station. The count for and against] lines damaged and traffic deiayed. [prohibition was evened when Wayne} Michigan and Wisconsin reported *B. Wheeler, general counsel for the} snow a fovt deep, ight -thunder- | Anti-Saloon league, issued a state-| storms were gencral in the eastern | ment assailing the views of Senator | sta Slightly colder weather with Edwards. snow flurries in the northern and The New Jersey senator gave much| eastern lakes region was predicted jof his time to an attack on je} by the weather bureau. league, cafling Mr. Wheeler the “arch Arkansas. Hard Hit traitor of American liberty, freedom] The greatest loss of life was in | of thought and action,” and declaring| Chico county, Arkansas, where four jthat “not even the sacred courts of/ white persons and a negro were our land are free of the poisonous] killed. Levi Lyson and his three |taint and the league's filthy hands | and breath.” | Wheeler's Statement Called i life at Jenn’ y the entire town of Tisdale, Miss., .| was demolished, the only death re- ported was that of the daughter of Mrs, Lena Martin, peewee] M,C. Spencer of Ludlow Falls, incapacity for] Ohio, was fatally injured by a door blown from its hinges. Two negros also lost their lives near Cruger, Mississippi, one was killed at Green- wood and another near Greenville, Mississippi. Part ‘of Chicago Flooded He termed an “inexcusable li Wheeler's recent statement t mental r whose case ix bad, Senator Ed- yards abuses his opponents with names like ‘arch traitor’ while at a ent wet meeting he referred to If and his associates as ‘chaste vals’ who seek to fill ihe hi northwest side of Chicago were flooded deep enough for boating. Children used rowboats to and from school and in some districts rafts ory flat boats aided householders in their marketing, A thaw preceded the storm in Ohio, jamming the rivers with broken ice and causing overflows with heavy flood dai re. Mills and factories Perei grail with 2.75 He said Senator Edwards deemed pledge to make New Jersey as wet as the Atlantic ocean rankles in his mind.” Any Vote Would Favor Drys Senator Brookhast declared the uni- were closed ersal ratification of the 18th amend-j and traffic suspended at Escanaba, ment was proof;that the majority of] Michigan, where they had the mot the people desired prohibition. He ere snowstorm in four year said prohibition was becoming more ficient daily and that if any modi- fication of the Volstead act is effect- ed it will be to make it stronger. The Towa senator predicted that any vote milies were rescued in from the flood at Rockford, ‘The water was three feet deep on one of the avenues. { on the subject in congress would be| 7 WwW c overwhelmingly in favor of the drys. , “pergons who say that the country | has imnroved because of prohibition, know they are not speaking the truth,” Mrs. Norton declared. She said the most serious question now is the harm being done mentally and physically to boys and girls. Patrick to Help Local Taxpayers Week of March 8 ANOISY CROWD ~TOGREET HIM 1,000 Mandanites, With Band. _ | Red Fire, and Much Noise, W. H. Patrick of Bismarck, tax su- ‘l pervisor for the fourth judicial dis- Meet Train | trict of the state, will be in the state pale vl tax commissioner's office at the state} Mandan, N. D,, Feb, 26,--(P)—“Our capitol during the entire week of/ delegations pledged their word they March 8 to 13, inclusive, to assist in-| could carry the counties in the. third o Warmer tonight and in extreme east portion Saturday; slightly colder Saturday in extreme west portion. , WEATHER CONDITIONS The low pressure area has moved eastward to the lower Great Lakes region and precipi yn occurred in dividual income taxpayers in prepar-| district. We must keep that pledge. state of North Dakota, according to} of the statements of Major James M. an announcement made today by|/Hanley, Independent nominee for State Tax Commissioner T. H. H.] governor, made in the wee hours this All local persons who desire any ley tame home early this information concerning the state i Senden amit. seunes come tax laws or who desire assist-| rivaling those of Armistice day. should arrange to meet Mr. Patrick} ple, cheering madly, met Hanley and at the capitol during those dates. | the defegates of the Slope counties . — when their special train from Devils Cave-in at Rapid Bismarck at one o'clock this morning. The Mandan municipal band jazzed the old rallying song “Cheer, Chee Rapid City, S$, D., Feb. 26.-A)—| of the Forty and Eight, with noise- Two men were killed and two others | making cannons, woke the echoes of injured and two to four are still! staid Bismarck, \ punctuating the wall in an excavation fora new bus-| yells and improvised noise makers. iness building on Main street here at]” When the long parade of automo 1 o'clock this morning. biles reached Mandan the fire the clearing up of the bottom of| gines . Joined the | noisy jubilation the excavation when the 15-foot’bank | while dined De ped Sunes sent 2 for a length of 60 feet toppled over,!red glare over a mile of “main The horses and two of the men were able ta get. out, unassisted. Emer-{ In an impromptu reception staged gency diggers quickly located five|in the Lewis & Clark hotel at two eager ee reiterated his pledges, made at oO | Devils Lake, to support the platform | Weather Report of the independents and devoted his ee ____——————-* a ‘army of delegates who fought 1 Temperature at,7 am... -- 211 great fight,” saying “I earnestly and Lowest Mist nie : | pearaeralty hope to fulfill their be- reclpitation Le ace! out of the slough of, state industry Highest_wind velocity . + 20] Sad soolalism on to the uplands of prosperity and sanity in government.” For Bismarck and vicinity: Part a Rey eae y cloudy to cloudy tonlght, and Sat- urday; warmer tonight. : ~ 2 to Glencoe Girl Mildred Ferguson, 9-year-old daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. i F. Ferguson noon at the Glencoe etery. The services were attended by a large number of friends and neighbors. ing their income tax returns to the] We will keep that pledge,” was one Thoresen. morninj ance in preparing their reports,! At least a thousand Mandan peo- Lake pulled into the Soo depot at City Kills Two Men Re the Gang’s all Here,” and members buried in the cave-in of a 15-foot/ weird cacophony of automobile horns, ~ A gang of 10 men was working on| whistles, even the sirens of fire en- burying most-of the crew and a teani.| street.” Receptivn at Hotel of the men buried. otclock this morning, Major Hanley talk largely to appreciation of the Highest yesterday 33 lief that I can help lead the state WEATHER FORECAST Tllness Fatal For North Dakota: . Partly cloudy % of Glencoe, was buried Monday after- Mildred died Sunday morning fol- ’ «& CK TRIBUNE the world war,” and also was “foisted | of high windstorms in the middle- upon a war crazed people,” in the re-| West. spective opinions of Senator Brook-| | Sweeping out of the northwest and | : rere i L. B. Hannu of Fargo, nominated | al sanction Wednesday and was Washington, — Feb, 26. (P)-The | as The apatiteae coe eee eeneatel | ceanamaittad: yesterday te tin SWhlte methods of Vice President Dawes as | we ee td States senator at Devils Lake yen, | House from where it was sent to the presiding officer of the senate have | | terday, issued the following statement | treasury for review before being "i been criticized again, und this time,! | of, policies: signed by the president. with M ! “Lam deeply app e of the Twenty-four square blocks on the}a Democ jt ee PRICE FIVE CENTS First Pictures of Omaha “Sniper,” His Gun and Man He Shot REVENUE BILL BECOMES A LAW ~— THIS MORNING |President Coolidge ‘Signs Measure While Cameras Record the Scene | PAX LOWEST SINCE WAR i Nearly All Miscellaneous Ex- cise and Occupational War | Levies Dropped Omaha breathed easier when Frank Carter, its mysterivus “sniper.” | who took potshots at citizens through the windows of their homes at hight, was finally captured. Here is the first picture of him to be | paper He ie ae at the left. Above his pistol, equipped | Moning with silencer, t the right is, R Johnson, railway detective at | “7 # i Council Bluffs, la, whom Carter ‘shot five times, but who lived aml | pedectinn at’ gone poe OOO ea the furnished cfficials with a description of Carter that led to the latter's | amount of taxes to be’ paid by the arrest. ‘ American people this year, was sign- es pee a ~ | ed by the chief executive’ in his of- ca | fice us a battery of still and motion picture cameramen recorded the Bear Lunches D: HIS METHODS HIS POLICIES Washington, Feb. 26.--)—The, new tax reduction bill became a law when President Coolidge gave it his formal approval at 1 o'clock this included Secretary Mello: Ditector Lord of the budge sentative Tilson of Connecticut, Repubiican ted by the continued mild a 100-pound black bear ambled down to a road camp near hi floor leader of the house; Chairman Green of the house ways and means committee; Representative G: ‘ Garner of ere today and broke his fast by | ‘Texas, ranking Democrat on the — consuming» few sticks of dyna- - ways and means committee; Chatr- " 7 . mite. OPLy 5 Pe} ye Prw; man Smoot of the senate finance Senator Reed of Missouri White the road | gang stood Favors Deep Waterway committee, and Senator Simmons: of ana f aghast, -bruin-munched on and Agri ; ief —Wi North Carolina, ranking Democrat Criticizes a Ruling of then turned: leisurely back into Agricultural Relief —Will \on the dinance Gaummnteese i eT " the timber, unmolested by the men 5 » P Presiding Officer ioe hesvived, to. F rohtenn Serve the People Reviewed By. Treasury bill received final congression- from s The shooting at any bears for a while No Comment Made . In signing the bill President Coot- idge made no comment, verbal or written, as to its provisions or pro | bable effect. | The signing was to have taken place at 10 o’clock but was delayed by the late arrival of Senator Sim- mons. The president's office was trans- formed into a studio with two Kleig , honor which the state ivention at Devils La | upon me and fully sponsibilities which come with it. h is much that can be done é ‘by earnest effort to bring about con- ‘ditions in North Dakota and in the | jnorthwest. We need to bend every ‘effort towards securing the vo-oper- eth and help of the east in favor of the deep waterways project. The as ry 2 great good that it would do for the | Hghts adding to the illumination. As jnorthwest would in the em-help the | Mr Coolidge took wp # pen he suid Jeast because of the increased pros- | '°,,018 Invited Buttes chairs |perity and purchasing power which | joc¢ wentlemen in front, tall gentle: | would come to us. ‘ behi ng ’ @ Changes in Immigration Laws men behind. “We need more men and women on, our land and the best place'te get | fuel ged perv Republican - has conferred | Dawes making no answer,| The iate the tt has come to his defense. The criticism came from Senator! Reed, Democrat, Missouri, who, shak-{ ent, ing his finger at the vice pre s { yesterday notified him that the @a would “not be used in this senat to cut off the rights of senate! ‘The Missourian referred to a s tion of the day before, when Blease, Democrat, South ro-| & 1 fosowea eh erie pall ‘roma! Report of Dr. Banks Regard: | decision ‘of the chair ruling out of| ing Death of-Five Nuns Being Awaited order his motion that the senate re-| | | t the conference report on the a Dickinson, N. D., Feb. (P)--A| | | i b Senator Reed contended that Mr. Dawes had “gavelled” through an- other motion and had shut off Sena fe. The vice president listen | Coroner's jury expects to resume its! (ye te tn chief " He used two pens to affix his : unexplained ‘deaths of five sisters,|{cd¢ra! immigration laws should be | to Representative Green and the oth- amended to provide that a certain percentage of those from Nort! Furope immigrating to this country should be people who had follow agricultural pursuits in the old wort jer to Senator Smoot. | For 10 minutes, photographers took | shots of the president and the group ehind him from various angles, fin ally swarming up to his desk’ “for nurses at St. Joseph’s hospital, with. in 10 days. The jury has discarded a theory of; respiratory poisoning from the fumes of a wood stain used in finishing Robinson Defends Action Senator Robinscs of Arkansas Demoeratic floor leader, dee however, that there was not “the ; i he for they naturally would follow the slightest reason for denouncing the! new wing at the hospital, and Bane io chien comlcg’ to | Ome: Uae char for the use of the gavel y itidg the technical report of Dr,| seme line of calling when coming to | The clicking and grinding of cam- terday.” He maintained that the vic | F. Banks of the University of] jn opening up new land for cultiva- | eras continued until the president president had been correct in his] North Dakota. Hone Rt ee ek | finally said. Bek iE Falipg: tad Although handieapped by lack of| properly cultivate the land we now SpA Ca, enna te eer b duet, exp! , {was cleared and the president went have under cultivation, and a move | (yy cig ine Come for the semi- ment from Europe of agricultural | weekly meeting with his cabinet. people while not injuring union labor. |e ee eae eee ved. by congress, would provide people to properly farm | ho bill pares down, income taxes. to our land and would solve the problem | their towest lovely. since the world of farm labor. ‘war and wipes out virtually all the Tee eee ee carne Heart, the | Buseellaneous excise and occupational The situation was bY \ help, the hospital i ing the de- | Senator Blease, who the vice) mands made upon it. Every room is} president evidently thought he l!-| now filled and some patients were ready had made his xppeal, but “as! turned away because of lack of ne. a matter of fact.” he added, “the! .gmmodations. : chair did not give me time to ap-) “The sisters died within a few days! peal. | of each other, shortly after they had Senator Reed, who, th inspected thé ‘new wing to the hospi- ened to capaGee HR nice. hresi 4 Yetrltal in a group, At first it was! Missouri and the Mouse rivers and | W45,!¢ ‘i ; Zo after his lecture concerning Sen-| troup aes th : | Missouri and the Mouse rivers and” O¢ the $387,000.00 reduction in ate fuleai snake with feoling. yester- | novent that fumes from the wood) to the restoration of the waters Of /the federal tax. total, more: than stain used in decorating had paralyz- ed their respiratory organs, causing the deaths. | Subsequent investigation caused the coroner's jury. to discard this theory and an expert from the uni- versity was called in. His report probably will be ready by Monday. our large lakes. Outside Capital Needed “We should encourage outside capi- and business interests to come to North Dakota to develop packing , plants, sugar beet factories, briquet- | ting of coal, manufacture of clay pro- ducts and every other possibl nue of industrial life that may be more evenly ‘balan | tween agriculture and manufacture. “Much can be done for agriculture | in finding ways of providing a mar- | ket for und of disposing of our sur- plus agricultural products and through the United States Bureaus of Commerce and Agriculture in bring- | ing information to our farmers of the| world’s negds so that we may hold{ these surpluses down to the minimum. | “Tam in full accord and haye abid- | day and when he finisehd he said that was all he would say about it) “at this time.” | Taxpayers Have Only 2 More Days to Avoid Penalty; :-—- Only two days remain in waich taxpayers may pay their person: property taxes and half of their real estate taxes without an additional penalty of five per cent, and County} Treasurer G. L. Spear is today urging alf those who have not ettled their accounts with Burleigh county to do so at once. | $20,000,000 will represent a saving | to personal income tux payers. Un- jder the new schedule a married man {with two children will have to make | $4,300 before he is subject to income | taxation. ee | Personal Exemptions Raised Personal exemptions are increased from $1,000 to $1,500 for single per- sons, and from $2,500 to $3,500 for married persons. The normal rates are reduced from 2 to 11 per cent | on the first $4,000 of taxable income; ;from 4 to 3 per cent on the next $4,000, and from 6 to 5 per cent on the remainder, Surtax .rites, mow ranging upward to 40 pef,,cent, are, scaled down. so that the new maxi- mum is 20 per cent. Last Minute | ae News Bulletins —_——__—_—_——- o tions against Poland in connec- tion with recent frontier inci- Under ordinary conditions tomor-| : Nm ad ha These miscellaneous excise and sow would be the final day for pay-| ome ee ing faith in President Conllde 4nd | occupational taxes are repealed out- ment without penalty, but since the Washington, Feb. 26.—(@)— his advisors ‘believing Hes the ” i right: ; : last day of February ‘this year falls} President Coolidge today signed | Working carnestly for the comimen| Automobile trucks; automobile on Sunday, Mr. Spear has announced; the resolution authorizing a $2,- | 00d. If given the opportuni: mY orl tires und parts; jewelry; cameras that he will accept all payments tiade| 186,000 appropriation for parti- | Woyk with them for cconomy ab and, lenses; photographic films and | all legislation that will be helpful and| i alr gs Pag ro ses- | beneficial to the people of our coun~ | qui-centennial exposition. | tre — “The nominees who have been in- i Washington, Feb. 26.—(4)—° Monday, March 1, without adding | the penalty. After thr date, ever, the penalty must be i in the payment, as the county trea surer believes that if the lawmake' plates; fire arms and ammunition, except pistols; automatic slot. ma- chines; Mah ‘jongg sets; works of | art; brokers; bowling alleys; pool and billiard tables; shooting galler- govern- dorsed by the Independent convention *, :* f + ¥ ye ther | ry 3 had ‘desired a longer period of tim The house agriculture committee | Will have my earnest support togethe®) jes; riding academies; automobiles in whieh to: make the payments they! approved the MeNary.Woodruff | with those who have been, indorsed) for hire; tobacco manufacturers; would have framed the statutes uc-| bill today to authorize the gov- | far congress by the Repub) ican at | opium dispenser: yachts, except cordingly. ronment to acquire additional { convention. Personally, i shal ‘eign built hereafter | purchased; $40,-. | nominated and elected aa sen bedata ments reaching his office by hiail! QQ6060 Didgtnm for’nine years | do my best for our people, and which beara postmark of March {| was. reduced to $2,000,000 for |! mean all of our people, and for) or earlier will be considered as hav-| each of the fiscal years 1928 {every section of onr tate.” ing been made gn March 1. a and 1929. : | oy . nea ENR HH STR Meee moran tesco veh, i | Affirmative Team (Pi—Nans of the convent of the Wins in Debate at Junior High School) period in many years past, due. patt- | ly to the fact that financial condi-j Incarnate word here have been tions in this section are steadily in given until Monday to don civi- lian garb or’ leave the country., clgara | The week's a es at the Junior; reduced from’ | high school have included s debate! proof gallon. proving, and also to the fact that the | The convent and a school con- held on Monday when ‘the question.’ The capital stock tax is Yepested, The treasurer states that all pay- stamp levies on deeds and various other legal papers. { Auto Tax Reduced {. The tax on passenger automobiles iis cut from 5 to 3 per cent; that on | admission tickets is amended to ex- ;empt tickets costing 75 cents, in place of the present 50 cents maxi- forests, but the proposed i | county treasurer mailed notices to! | ducte! by the nuns were cloacd | every Gaxpayer a month ago, stating | the amountsof his taxes. | yesterday by order of Governor Portes Gils’ of the state of ea eee “ , that Abraham Lincoln as 2 Nye Is Assigned ** | sulla (the setool is to te. Jan American re to, admire | ingen oe fram present ii ee >) < &, wen. % than George ny i cent to 13 per cent on taxes ie to Four Committees! Mr Rebecce Barragan de Crows, | oe “The. affirmativ coor | See Ones cant ee ee posed of Theodore Tsilolihnos, Cle-| ment Smith and Freda DuPu' awarded the decision. hereafter. ‘The gift tax is repealed, and im; heritance taxes are reduced. The in- and all religious teaching is to be eliminated. Washington, Feb, 26,—(#). Senator Gerald P, Nye, who won. contest . ° det ight th s seat in the senate TRAWLER ESCAPES’ } team included Margaret Will, heritance maxttaum: tate Becbthes ‘an: appointee of Governor A. G ——— | Kitchen and Veronica Dodd. per cent in place of 40°per cent, Sorlie, was assigned to the Copenhagen.--While her captors, A;spelling match has been conduct- | present per cent credit for tate committees on immigration, in-| the crew of an inspection ship, were jed by Miss Kingsley during the past! amounts paid in. state week with the six divisions of the Junior high Athy part. By elimina ‘tions, Margaret Will was chosen to inheritance taxes is increased to r cent. Tax Placed On Cereal Beverages celebrating their feat with a party Be The only: new. tax in the bill isa gallon ashore, w trawler, said to be of Brit- inh’ ownership, suddenly went full gular possessions, claims and inter- oceanic canals, © ‘To make room for the new senator, Binghi if Co! ticut gav: ti hi and escaped. represent the 8A; Ida Zerr, the 8 levy of one th of a cent a, polar Been penta evn. | trawler ‘was being held at. Reykja- | Estelle Mason, the 8C;, Robert Me- | on ¢ereal foe ot . : ‘mittee; Gooding of Idaho retired from | vik under $1,500 pond for alle; Curdy, the 7A; Marjorie Ackerman.|° Most of the provisions go into ef insular po ont Pine of Oklaho; Megal fishing. in Teeland waters: e | she 7 i Mec rdy, the i fect imp , The it i lieved ims, an inspection ship crew remain! on |i e final ingaret, Cousens of Michigan retired from the boat was not sufficient to first and Orville McCurdy, ‘teeap- due . x inter-oceani¢ canals, ture her. & after. 2 Re

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