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\ a WET CAMPAIGN OPENS SUNDAY AT DICKINSON} Stone, Streich, Campbell and|% Hardt Are Speakers at Mass Meeting Dickinson, N. D> March 12-09] § beral of prohibit ebttenat ina ; tate conatitution, four speakers ad- . dressed a mane meeting be the the arm- wa re C. of the North Dakota Better Citisens . Stone, president 3 pg eS and wet canilaate y made for others to obey,”|@ Stone declared the tightaesth amendment and so-called enforce- ment act are Looks od ression S of a fleeting whi at is but well-organized minority, by Teb- a trickery, fo upon pane people in an cepadease moment.” Commenting on the manner in Velatead act ives from when the vote on passing the bill % over the president’s veto was taken, prises! 175 voted for its passage and| $ 65 voted against it, ‘ Indifferent to Law “Citizens in every walk of life] $- are indifferent Tx not defiant to- ward this law,” Stone charged, and|% averred that “our overworked courts| % are becoming tribunals of mockery ee ard jes Stone said that he, candidate, is for the modification of the Vol- stead but against the saloon, that he favors the McNary-Hat bill, the G t Lawrence| & vies Lakes-St. waterway cooperative market . Ing aad thet here rt Ata grant-| & ing milling in races Canadia: s Privileges 3 to ian grain in oy Stone said that if in country his} opponents for the Republican sena- torial nomination will come out in| % support of the movement to revise the Volstead act he will withdraw his candidacy and give that candi-|% date his su; Streich said he is willing to stcnd|$ on the wet platform ado; t convention in Bismarck eetiier in the year and ex his belief) % that the eighteenth amendment “is| & shield for lave thaw and double | ‘3 dealing. I believe that a law which is unenforced should led; that our present preltibition pemeea: ment is ie ness and ee A Wide. Difference Declaring that he. believes in and practices ieminereaety Streich fr > “real temperance prohibition ‘2 not bed. ‘ellows an —_ the differ-|% 1 between these ts as wide as the f North Dakota.” -n his address Campbell charac-|% fe} “the prohibition amendment | % d the ae = o a % {s-at the personal. liberty of|@ said i the rican citizens. He -ster Citizenship association be-| % ieves. in temperance in eatin; drinking, general “conduct and & egislation and quoted Abraham|% Lincoln as having said: “A prohi-|¢ sition law strikes a blow at the very principles-on which our gov- ernment is foundéd. I have never|® given my consent to such a law. Cntil my “bia shall be silenced in| death I shall continue to fight for] ¥ she rights of men.”. peposneine the “atloon as the breeder and ni of crime, Camp- bell said the Better Citizenship a ‘ soctation opposes the saloon Hrcy Ay does the Anti-Saloon League. He branded prohibition, 2 it a meal ticket for the | %& booileggers. It causes contempt for|® law and increases taxes, drunken-| ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE A SPLENDID» NEW SERIAL- Announcement Of a new story by Anne Austin is always a promise of a reading treat to the millions who have become familiar with the writings and the career of this youthful and successful novelist. Now she has written a new serial—GIRL ALONE a realistic tale of love and romance and carnival life, the story of an orphan girl’s adventure into life. - ' Anne Austin’s nation-wide popularity was gained by such newspaper serials as “Saint and Sinner,” “Daughters of Midas” and “The Penny Princess.” Last fall she produced a novel, “Jackson Street.” You will like GIRL ALONE because it is an unu- sual story and because its author has a talent for -making her characters seem real. Here are some of them on this page—Sally Ford, the “girl alone”; Pearl Carson, arrogant and jealous; Clem Carson, her surly, narrow father; David Nash, who helps Sally out of her.troubles. o