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PAGE TWO WEST STATES | FILE BRIEFS WITH THE IG Pémissal ef Railroads’ Appli- cation For Higher Freight Rates Is Urged Washington, April 5.-AP) ‘The brief in support of the motion { western states to dismiss thi ern rail s for 1 freight rates was filed ith the i rstate com by indi ts tock a ition to in vcting: their respective | rf of the states asserted wert ituted by © Western ds for the deliberate pose of de i r return a ntage se » could lawfully be » of the commis aran- | absolute right to ich will produce ardless of economic arguments in connection with the general investigation and the western roads’ plea_are to be heard here May 19. The states which joined in the brief filed to- | were: Idaho, Iowa, i, Mon- South Dak Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming. Former Woodworth School Head Held on Federal Count AP Colerado, hington anc Jamestown —John W. the sche- h examination ation of the en by vs on the charge of de: wed in the county jail there . being finally released when the charge et charge by his C. Wright of Me against him. 1 is brought a father-in-law, din State Income Tax Payments to March 15 Total $282,000 up to March largest Mare collections re- industrial and farming i o a more complete obse: of the state income tax laws are believed 1b tax offi to be contributing c to the increase. Former Banker at Mapes Is Serving | Prison Sentence Hi. W. Derrig, Mapes banker, has begun serving a two and one-half year senien state penitentiar: following his conviction in county on an embezzlement ¢ ES aaa e | NEWS BRIEFS | Loans and discounts ere 5 {€ Iverdrafts Warre ere FAVOR COMPLETION OF SCHOOL Napoleon. A committee of ten, regard to finishing the local school! building, completed the f the tae aver on Wedneadis and re. State of North Dakota bonds y in Other real estate favor of extending the debt limit of {Checks and other cash item: ‘Cash and Due from other banks..... port that the people are gen: the district and to bond for building Purposes. CALL MASS MEETING Dunn Center.—The Cham Commerce of Dunn Center has issu- ed a call, through its secretary, C. P. Rosendahl, for a mass meeting of the city’s residents, to be held at the city | auditorium Tuesday evening at & o'clock. The purpose of the mecting is to decide on Dunn Center's activi- ty in the campaign for the removal of the county seat of Dunn county and to take steps toward furthering Time certificates of deposit the interests of Dunn Center's can- didacy. : TO GRAVEL ROAD i Minot--The Renville county com-) missioners have voted to grade the! six mile stretch of highway joining| the highway in Ward county north of | 2 ard Bottineau commissioners will-gradc the 15 miles leading north | trom Renville county to intersect the! »Bottineaa-Mcaail highway. This will join Mchall. Bottineau and Minot by , +B gravel highway. } Oe PIONEER DIES ‘Fessonden—Peter Winer, 76, a resi- | dent of Wells county since 1896, died, day, 30, at his home inj den. ‘Mr, Winer leaves u widow | three children. Funeral services ‘were’ held Thu: and Mrs. Winer would have celebrated their golden wedding ‘anniversary this spring. 2 ’ IN Ona chats dr, of near, ‘The th andj, an Liberty Loan Bonds named to find out the sentiment in, Premium on Liberty Loan Bond Cashier’s checks outstanding. ‘afternooh. “Mr. 1921 “i (Seal) ; Correct. Attest:— . : C. W. McGray, Krist‘Kjelstrup, J. A. Hyland, J. P. Spies, Pretty Big Chip Of Old Block Ef big as his famous father. H he entered af arbitration in Chile. Best Dressed ary hearing vA 6 HOLD TRACK M McClusky The FeCl meet week. Member of Cass Co. Board Dies Suddenly Fargo, XN. D., April §.--@) -Rob ber of the Spanish Aviators Start Flight to the Philippines) o'clock Their in north some 11,000 mi \Ghattes. Purely fre) star, renewed his claims to See turn {tite of the best dressed man ain by air § va h appearing in “straw_of the sgason, ere ter musical comedy the or the : No. 1162 Report of the Condition of THE CAPITAL SECURITY BANK eat Bismarck, in the State of North Dakota, at the close business April Ist, 1926. secured and u ts, stocks, tax certificates, claims, etc... . Banking house, furniture and 4,7 62,830.84 67,582. : » LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in.... Surplus fund ‘ Undivided profi Ss expe Individual deposits subject to check. .$ 88,459.89 Guaranty fund deposit 1,217.80 64,415.60 10,741.58 1,485.24 Savings deposits Due to other banks ... Notes and bills rediscounted. Bills payable .. Liabilities other None . None None 5 é $276,658 I, S. G. Severtson, Cashier of the above named bank, | solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the bes: of my knowledge and belief. ol .. $137,759.08 219.61 11,401.09 40,000.06 287.53 6,950.00: 10,000.00 2,458.04 1% 0,000.00 1,000.00 2,314.45 16 de S. G. SEVERTSON, - ? Cashier, Balectined and sworn to before me this fifth day of Ap. : ae C. L. FOSTER, Notary Public, Burleigh County, N. D. My Conimission expires April 1st, 1928. Directors. ri!. o- ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 3 Strengthen t et | MANDAN NEWS | Fitey-cight great grandchildren, = By Herbert Kaufman NAHE gentleman at the bottom hasn’t ALWAYS proved the strong man of the troupe. There are years when the retailer carries the farmer, when the wholesaler carries them BOTH, and the banker car-. ries them ALL. Trade, industry and finance more than share with agriculture in sustaining prosperity. The most important job that America has _ on its hands today is to make AGRICULTURE play its illus- trated part. When the profitable pr’ First, the small town merchant curtails his orders. Whereupon the firms that supply him, promptly restrict output. Then city stores sell less goods, because of re- duced jobbing and factory payrolls. And immediately bank depesits shrink and credits freeze. and does not maintain adequate yields at es, depression becomes epidemic. All commerce contracts as money tightens. Building operations are halted. Transportation conserves reve- nucs. delays improvement and limps along with inferior faciliti¢s. . Equipment and rail orders are canceled.. The panicky circle widens. Mining languishes. Fewer cars and tires are sold. There’s default in installment payments. The delinquent tax list grows—county, state‘ and fed- eral retrenchments follow. Advertising budgets are cut to the marrew; suburban development is side-tracked. Road work ceases. Bonds drop; stocks fall off; directors pass the dividend. And presidents of mail order concerns dig down in their jeans to tide the corporation over the crisis. When the FARMER is up against it, ALL classes automatically join the Trouble Club. As soon as hard timés itch the rural districts the whole body-economic scratches. Current memories recall the tornadoes and droughts that once habitually devastated Kansas; the cause lay in Indian Territory. Before Oklahoma plains were culti- vated, snd planted with a lusher vegetation, vast stretch- es of/buffalo grass there stored up sun rays, which grad- ually fried the air until it went crazy with heat and raged in holocausting fury in the next neighbor's yard. Just so, atlverse seasons and bad crop-breaks generate forces that disrupt commerce, sweep from store aisle to blast furnace, to mill settlement, and drive capital to the cyclone cellar. . ‘Reproduced by Courtes church, arrangements to be made fol- Jowing the arrival of relatives. Sister Terentia survived by. three . brothers. ef The Minneapolis Tribune Minn., five years azo, and was educat- ed in the Benedictine college the Beside her mother, who was her when che died ,Sister Terentia is Funeral everrrr MeNTAR ws yramid There isn’t an income, a Wage or a sal: ¥ J United States but ibaa Ret partnership with the grain field, the range and th barnyard. And it won’t be a steadily’ paying partnership until it’s an ACTIVE one. No civilization was ever so efficient as ours. Yet, it is an efficiency that can’t possibly reach and hold peak levels while the originating units of wealth are loosely related. : Machinery, and specifically, the delicate machinery of production, won’t run smoothly and meet schedules if its cogs are not intermeshed. The farmer must be adjusted more closely to national transmission. He isn’t functioning at par and the keenest cost and marketing intelligence at command is needed to lead him from confusion to method. Hazy legislation and the haphazard remedies in po- litical chests shan’t cure the SURPLUS-ACHE or regu- ‘late high market pressure. The doctors who so signally prescribed for industria! indigestion; the experts who trained steel barons and merchant princes and woolen kings not to bite off more. than they can chew, are best qualified to diagnose the disordered system of agriculture and correct any funda. mental weakness. Self-pretection urges Wall Street to devise more stable and mobile plans for credits—to reduce loan risks and bring farm paper within the interest average of trade acceptances, The shrewdtiess that eliminated so many handling costs_and round-abouts of distribution through grocery and baking combines, can crack two chances with ‘one stone, and effect still GREATER economies by rubbing brains with the raiser of merchandise. The village retailer who doesn’t place his roadmap tc success at the disposal of his best customer, fails opper tunity and snubs the balance sheet.- : THE FARMER IS NOT A SPECIAL, WARD OF GOVERNMENT, BUT OF BUSINESS. His prospects were never sounder—his welfare never more assured. He dgesn’t need legislative crutc1es 80. much as he requires access to information and reason- able co-operation. When HE learns to run his affairs by approved modern practice, the ENTIRE economic pyramid, will hold firm. Copyright, 1926, by Herbert Kaufman Ne titions were signed by 172 residen' most of them living outside the ing district. If nothing .is\ don cerning the petition, bids on the pi posed paving project wjll be ope ry in these :.-'mola”, at ‘the Capitol Theatre three days commencing to- randchildren, and six living children form the family surviving Chris Schantz, Sr.. aged 88, who died at his home in Glen Ullin Friday afternoon following a stroke of apralysis. Mr. Schantz was born near Samaria, Rus- | sia, coming to the United States 41 years ago with his wife and eight children. He came directly to Morton county and took up a home: Twenty-seven ars ago he retired from farming and settled in Glen Ul- lin. His first wife died in 1905 and in 1907 was married to Mrs. Helen Wanner, who survives, g Mrs. Etieudenna Rober, wife of D. 1. Rober. Sixth aven’ sonthee died suddenly at noon Saturday. fol- lowing a heart attack. mrs, itover has been a resident of Mandan ‘since 1898, moving there from. Florence, Wis. She is survived by her husband and eight children.. Funeral services will be held at St. Joseph’s ‘Catholic ———————— 57,024.04 223,343.65 | Dies at Dickinso! Minneapoli: Terentia, 22 Benedict, school at Dickinson, N. D. fluenza “penumonia hospital there Saturday word received hei er Terentia was the daught Mary Kallberg, ton Avenue, Minneapolis,.. She joined ine Order in St. Joseph. conducted T Benedictine Minn, Dickinson. city ordinance, author meeting here Monday night. ns asking that the rtain districts in the ci sled were . presented ission ktce last v9 will be discussed at ‘the comission April 28. ASK REPEAL OF PAVING ORDIN- ANCE ‘The pe- ' Herman Ode - Dairy RETAIL DELIVERY ARAL > Milk from accredited und tested herd, For House Delivery _ See Lillian Gish, star of| “The Birth of a Nation”. ‘Dewn East” and “The 1 White Sister”, in her new, production, “Ro- | “Sells Géod Lumber” > See Us for Estimates or call phone 17 If you plan on‘a new home If you like to remodel your home If you have a garage to build If you need a porch or sun room “If you need sunshine © If you heed a kitchen cabinet or china closet If you have a desire to modernize your home If you need fresh air If you want good materials If you need a coal bin If you need good coal for summer use If you like‘to keep warm 4 If you want value for your money If‘your roof leaks If flies may trouble you later on If you wish to keep cool = * Jf you need repairs of any kind If your windows rattle If your floors are bad or worn : If you wish to be happy this summer. ad For now‘is-the proper time to have all these wishes fulfilled by making necessary arrangements with > Us—We Know. J —N. E. BYSTROM; Manager. | ‘COR. 6TH ST. & MAIN ‘PHONE: 17