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MONDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1926 STATE PRISON LICENSE TAGS| Officials Colialder Proposal to| Install’ Machinery For Such Purpose Proposal to = ii ll machinery at | the stute penitentiary and use prison | labor in the manufacture of North Dakota automobile license tags bas been made to Governor A. G. Sorlie and prison officials by John R. Wald, Nitro, West Virginia, who nlakes a business of installing industries mi state prisons. Warden John J. Lee is desirous of adding some line of work to the| penitentiary operations which will | serve to keep all of the. prisoners | employed. | At present he has 319 men behind the walls, which equals the all time nigh record for nymber of prisoners. The twine plant offers employment for about 120 men and occupation: are found for numerous others in operating the prison farm and gar- dens. At present, however, Lee has 70 or more men for whom he would like to find occupations. He. already has recommended installation of a small shoe factory which would make shoes for the inmates of other state é institutions but.even this will no solve his labor problem. Not Steady Work A license tag plant such as he), has in mind would employ about 20 men but the chief difficulty is that the tags needed by the state would offer it only two months of steady work and prison officials have no desire to place it in competition with private companies. Wald has suggested that an ar-| rangement might be made whereby | the states of South Dakota and Mont- ana might have their tags made at the North Dakota prison, thereby in- suring enough work to keep it in| constant operation. If installed the plant also will be expected to manu- facture road-marking signs for use by the state and street markers for cities. MANY CHANGES IN LAWS WILL BE REQUESTED (Continued from page one.) tion already are bei planed. Governor A. G, Sorlie is known to be considering the recommendation of increased safety work in his mess- age to the legislature. The execu- tive may endorse a proposal to add 10 cents to each auto license fee to support the state safety council. The state safety council will usk passage of the standard bills recommended by the national council to control the operation of vehicles on the high- way, The supreme court and district judges will present a bill to create a state judicial council and. will buck bills designed to speed up the courts in the administration of justice and at the same ti reduce the cost to the counties. eral of their ree. oincide with those of work on $ ready been done by the state budget i will present its report at the opening vf the session, So far as has been le: posals to change the the Bank of North D: ill and elevator ha ated although it is that both institutions lative attention. vd here sidered certa will draw: ley INGERSOLLS INVOLVED IN LOVE TANGLE|: (Continued from page one) ly, wanting to have it over with, that 1 was not going to see her any more, “She was very angry. Going into the other room she returned with my hat in her hand and held it toward me. ‘Go now,’ she said, and I reached for my hat without answering her. Claims Woman Fired I took the hat she fired with tol she held beneath it. heat her ¢ a shot.” Mr. and Mrs. Probasco were mar- ried in 1912 by an cthical culture ceremony which did not mention God. Mr. Ingersoll came to New York with $175, started a rubber stamp shop and’ finally evolved, through study of an elarm clock, a cheap watch that made him famous and won millions for himself and his brother Charles. The Ingersolls had been married 22 years and the Probascos 14. Neith- er couple had children. Maude R. Ingersoll. was the fav- orite daughter of the famous “Bob,” who died in 1899. PRISON TERM OF FIVE YEARS RECOMMENDED (Continued from page one) “Tam very, ae gratified with the treatment received at the han Judge Lembke,” said M. H. Kor: the boy’s father, but added: cannot, however, if the jury had been out for over 20 hours with some of’the jurors con- sistently voting not guilty, the five- year sentence could have been fin- Hi arrived at.” ‘tne trial, which started Monday with the selection of jurors and con- tinued with the testimony of wit- pases until early Saturday morn- ing, will cost the atate approximately $1,300, John dtmann, county clerk of court, estimated. The first murder c: in Morton county in umber of years, the trial attracted ‘the attention of Man- dan people to a marked degree. From the ope ! >, ste enetronn wae jamme: pe pager to heat the case and on ‘the final day, when te attorneys delivered their dramatic eve! tramp, through tie them back to the shack. gaged in another and 3 MAY MAKE AUTO: after he had been taken to the counsel “was that Korsvick ha: | opportunity, | seif-defense |to agricultural re! ¢ ran to the other room and I/) understand how, |) Morton |) seat was taken and the || site were lined with standing aga i Pahaininen ‘Bhot October 2 Korsvick had been cantare Pein second by ge murder following the shooting of Arvid Pahai me near Schmidt on October 26. In com- any with “ple 2 Chee. Mrs. Lou ed tton then othe re tain in about oe h ars Miter s woods which jed (Korsvic with Atsid} 30-30, "Sava rifle which Arvid fled | and. was fired upon from loss of Sto sd Entering the wrested from him, afte from the hous by Korsvick, dy marek hospital. The contention of the defe jon Pahaininen when be beliv {life to be in danger and: they the fore pleaded self-defense, The prose cution, however, contended that Joc! was without his rights in en Arvid’s shack and declared that, his failure to retreat when he had he no longer could pl but was the aggresso by| n HAUGEN TODAY: : pon ie Relief chased We he tion Once More Has Title | cd of ‘McNary-Haugen’ Washington, Dee 0 —P)—A com-| panion for Senator McNary’s bist relief bill drafted Chairman Haugen of the house a 1 committee, it pos-| 9th 0 once more attach the title} *¥! -Haugen” to the proposed | wil Representative ing! Bill se hecbeetitilahecelartentiliteh { Washington, D. J | bloe in the house is preparing to 0 van-/Only 4 Weeks After! wt ae Her: Husband’s as bee ed, explaining his proposa “= WET BLOG IS WORKING FOR * MODIFICATION . Hill Preparing 20 AP) o action in behalf of a modifi n propos af cons er unde roof the rn) one support. Representative Hill's | “Cider of 2.74 per cent,” ‘wl For Come- back of Light Wines, Beer The wet tee oh modifi ot 1 would i afte THE BISMARCK “TRIBUNE *” 1 Temperature and aE ba archbishop of ‘Turin, and Lauri, Nuneio to: Pol vadings a a. im.) Lorenzo DOC WILLIAMS | He ended the ceremony by precan- han ‘hesi ad izing various bishops, including Theo- would le Road Conditions dore Reverman, Bishop of Superior. is one, 0 The pontiff’s allocation lasted 50 ‘ ( game.” leat es minutes, He again strongly denounc- Pisruarek Cleat, 265 roads good. | eq the “persecution” of the Catholic SHORT | Havils fake Cloudy 213 "roads] church. in Mexico, urged the French 6 5 ; Vea bee holies to unite. in the” religious ier i it aly icld although feeling free to follow dhldapdaetell Cloudy, 23; roads) the various political parties, and te- | Heney + Mundantle pretted the excesses against Catholic Bove rg Wine fair, Dulu United of the heart ¢ -|Pop | held a's S.C Manki Hibbing Rochester all the members of the sacred col- lege residing in Rome, headed by the loud th Hot Iron, Placed in Death 20--)—Onl sudden deati d husband, Mrs. dow of the late nator and publisher nes Capital here late yeste s old. e Pius Conducts Disastrous Bewburg, W. Four small children were b death at Scott: ight when the bed clathin De had p warm, the children of the Rev. F. Hines, and ranged in age The victims of the organizations which occurred in Italy ast attempt on the life of = FOUR R CHILDREN BURN T0 DEATH Keep Them Warm, Causes bs Blaze h Dec. 20.—)- , near here, last fire from a hot iron which the mother ced in their bed to keep them nd Mrs. D. Father of Celebrated Minne- sota Gridiron Play Claims It Is Essential halt apolis, Minn, L, Williams, Minnesota Dev —() father of the shift out of all forms of sisted ich grew virtually shift p used in modern football, refuses to see his pet offens Bed to| weapon of days gone by outhiwed |» without 1 fight. the former mbled evidence contention that the shift, prop- dled, not only is legal but n essential part of football ed today. At a meeting of Twin City editors this we Ww ng caught | showed motion pic of his shift in” his brilliant as used ba ; it Minnes This prompted 7 fire were|one of the local critics to suggest that the University of Minnesota, whose teams have always widely use shift formations, would do well to innesota h supporting burned to from one * and a half to eight years. i : Secret Consistory The father, n Methodist Episcopal |send Dr. Williams to the coming circuit minister, had gone to Mount| meeting of the rules committee “to| se Dee. (P)—Pope Pius ecret consistory at the Vati- with the participation of ning services. the zero weather. Returning to the room : 3 be! nonagenarian cardinal, Bishop Van- MRC EEGm oo Arsen cen, | HUTTE Jlater, she found it in flame: ne ean be fexally made inthe}. The pontiff offered prayer and de-| her lone efforts to fight the postpone for two “years the applica-| non-intoxic: no rea: tion of an equalization fee on cotton. vritten the measure would have authorized such a fee on basic crops, to be used to handle the sur- plus ‘problem. Reference to Tariff Mr. Haugen said the closest hi | bill came to bringing up the ft | issue was a clause that there shall be “equality between agricultural commodities and other products.” There had talk of a disagreement; between senate fram leaders and Mr. Haugen over the tariff as related f but the belief was expressed today by these leaders that a way would be found to con- centrate on one farm measure. Fulmer expr gratification over Mr. Haugen’: cision. As for their diffgr the application of the eq: fee to cotton, he said he fe could be threshed out in comm “[ would insist for my part, said, “on postponement of the equali- zation on cotton for two years but I| would not oppose a desire to also postpone the fee on middle western agriculture crops.” | Seal Sale Already i Has Brought in $200 of The sale Christmas — seals through solicitation of the business men of the ci and in the booth sales have netted the North Dakota Tuberculosis association more than $200, Miss Winifred Barrington, chairman, said tod The cheek-up on the sales by school children will be made today and tomorrow and the school selling the largest number of seals w “4 be awarded two books for ibra The $200 does not include $15 has been returned by clubs and ner organizations of the city who rec ed Christmas seal bonds whic were asked to purchase. Clubs who have made no returns on these bonds are asked to do so immediate! A list of ten books has 1 pared by select Mong volumes. tion in th keen and it is expec n this source If seller” e stores until Christmas day, Miss Barrington said. All other phases of the drive will be checked up tomorrow. TOO Lo! “But madam trar’s clerk achinineditann Lin actrees eunlicntt “the law compels me to record all previous marriages before I issue a license. “Good exclaimed her nd Tve- got Bits, London. forest fire eve: why in those stat such beverages, including malt bev: commercially sold under such restrictions as such j states may make.” | erages, Lyin’ Tamer” ing, there ate h desire may not be Practical Gift Suggestion The woman who gives a HICKOK Belt for Christmas ‘pays a subtle trib- ute to the good taste of the man who re- ceives it—and in so doing, shows her own good taste, HICKOK BELTS BUCKLES BELTOGRAMS Capitol Theatre aperes.s and Tuesday House Peters “Combat” . Virile, Rugged He-man of the Screen In a marvelous melo- drama of the North Woods and a hate that turned to ~ everlasting love. You'll have a glori- ous time watching: this rugged, virile, he-man of the screen battle with * man and the elements for the woman he loves. ‘There are thrills, romance, and the most remarkable r screened livered his allocation; then, after re- buckets of water proved fu By Way of Introduction to Our Recently Remodeled Store We Have Planned a Surprise Package Sale 3 Days Only Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday Zion church to conduct Sunday eve- When Mrs. Hines put hildren to bed, she placed iron at their feet because of the sub- save this great play.” The fact is footballdom in Minne- sota is just realizing the significance | % of the action taken at the recent Big Ten coaches conferences in Chicago, when Coach Clarence W. Spears of Minnesota offergd to alter his shift plays materially in order to get a 1927 game with Michigan. Dr. Williams does a hot sometime s. When fire with tile, Mrs. “ t anticipate ’| cciving the consent of the members| Hines ran a quarter of a mile to the no : of the aera it . appoluted two|nenrest neighbor but the house had |any adve ruling from the rules | B@i@ it, | new Ital: ppe Gam. | been destroyed when help arrived, ‘committee, barring unexpected pres: | ee eee! ee! A Limited Number of Packages Get Your Share sure from: anti-shift quarters, since, id, “the rules committee always An Indiana mother tells this: “We find nothing to compare with Foley's DO YOU KNOW : CRANE’S BOX PAPERS Have you seen our line of Box papers? HOSKINS-MEYER ‘and colds. My little lad had-troublo with his bronchial tubos from. his third year, bet since we started giv- ing him Foley’s Honey and Tar we have begn, able control it. We know there is nothing t6 compare with Foley’s Honey and Tar Com- pound.” The very name tells a story. Good also for croup (spasmodic) and troublesome night coughs. Ask for it.—Adv. tated to do anything which asen strategy, for deception f the cardinal points of the TALKS BY THOUGHTFUL MOTHERS ind, Tar Compound for coughs ¢ 4 7 ae Make an ideal Christmas gift? IGA ORES AT RIArareTe! All the latest Styles and Sizes Priced from 50c to $25.00 a Home of KFYR Pi diGi8i SERS A TRRTRT ATS Te Terere! Every Package Guaranteed to Be WORTH at Least $2.00 = = = = = = 4 ad The Women’s Packages Contain An assortment of some of the following items: Luxor Compacts Mary Garden Compacts. Flaconets of Coty, Caron and Houligant’s | Perfumes ; Toilet Soaps, Creams, Rouges, Shampoos é Toilet Waters of various manufacture Gainsborough Powdér Puffs Tooth Brushes A Bath Salts Dusting Powders ndjmany others too numeroys to mention— Besides, small gifts for last minute shoppers. _ Finney’s Drug The he Now Spare in —— We have prepared a quantity of surprise packages, each containing merchandise of a value of not less than $2.00 and some of greater value. Only ‘merchandise of gcod standard quality has been selected in the preparation of these packages. In order to assure the purchaser of articles |, which are particularly suitable to his or her needs we have prepared individual packages for men and women. ~ Every package is sealed and it is impossible to ascertain the contents until opened by the purchaser. surprise, surprising in proportion to the value of your package—being guaranteed to have a value of at least $2.00. : But every package will be a real. g Store The Men’s Packages Contain An assortment of some of the following items: Shaving Lotions d Quinine Hair Tonic Hand Scrubs - j Gem and Gillette Razors Durham Duplex Razors Shampoos , , Toilet Soaps , Shaving Brushes Hair Brushes F Tooth Brushes ; Pipes Mechanical Pencils And many other items too numerous to men- tion. Get Your -