The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1928, Page 3

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1928 SHAFER BEAVER HIDE TROUBLE State Game and Fish Commis-|list in the union armies in the Civil Regiment nent ander roan Edward Story war, came to Gloucester this sum- mer to revive boyhood memories. The National Tribune, organ ths vetcrans of the Grand “iemy-of the Republic, is sion Still Holds Mrs. Shafer’s Furs = Mae and officials of the state game and|Chinese to enlist for fish commission are nearing the end|service. The same autherit of a game of button-button, who’s/that he was the only one of got the furs, which has created some |ever to enlist in the American quiet amusement in unofficial cir-|ular army up to the time of cles here. World war. It all began during the primary| Cahota claims to campaign when Mr. Shafer was pre-|terite, for his stunt with this| pany I.' senting his plea for recognition by|old seaport goes back more than 70 Republican voters as a candidate for|years. In 1857 the governorship and was the sub-|Day, skipper of tke of the old ject of considerable whispering in|square-riggers sailing out of Glou- | to the latter stages of the campaign. cester, was on a the Several weeks before the primary |treaty ports of China. election the game and fish officials |he took on a Chinese a boy of of Minnesota notified the North Da-|eight years who kota’ Game and Fish commission that | that the captain ado) vim ‘under |t: Mrs. George F. Shafer, wife of|the name of Edward Cahota. the attorney general, had shipped| That was how Cahota reached some beaver nh resota furrier to be made into a coat. At the rec +. +h Da- kota game d t the furs were sent to R. A. er, game warden for the southern half of the state who was at that time engaged in managing the Nonpartisan cam- paign. Several days before the elec- tion the matter was called to the at- situa- tention of Mra. Shafet, the comten<| quarts ceiseriewee eae Gon uf the “gamendepettineny Use|) oe nt eee ee ing that the furs had been illegally BY WELLAND R. GORDON shipped to Minnesota and that there! (Associated Press was no proof that they had been le-| Los Angeles, Aug. 27.—(#)—Cal- gally taken in the first place. It| ifornia’s normal ‘was suggested that Mrs. Shafer | is aia Pn inte about plead guilty to illegally shipping the | three to one. job furs and paying a fine. the present campaign is to raise as Shafer refused to let his wife en- ter into any such agreement, and so far as known here, no case has ever been brought in the courts regarding the matter. Shafer said the furs were taken by his father a number of years ago when trapping beavers was legal and obtained an affidavit by his father and a copy of the license issued to Rr his father under which the furs were | long list of G. taken. He further contends that the law regarding the shipment of furs applies only to raw furs and the that the hides in question had been cured. The law in question makes it illegal to ship raw furs out of the state without a permit from the state game and fish department and was Cee to prevent trafficking in il- caugat pelts ntcriding that the furs were le- caught and Icgally shipped, + demanded their return. At reports, he said,.the game and ish commission had sent them to a Wisconsin firm, along with some other furs, to be tanned. Although there is no immediate probability that the case will get| Smith into the courts, it is considered pos-| that there must be a heavy turn- sible that legal procedure may yet | over to make the ee or phecy ke had in case the furs are not re- | come true. Three ned to Shafer within a reasonable | one democrat throughout ¢ the state ‘alas time. So far as is known here there | quite a handicap, is no present intention on the part The republican council table of the game and fish commission to bring charges against Mrs. Shafer. Tace|the old This is the ninth of a series years heat can be put into the blister- has some of the Herbert Hoover's wealth reports a Bir without a squeak of di common- machine open majority for Hoover licies from the Oregon lexican lary. Over the way, in Governor Smith’s pueblo, where the bray of the demo- of the republican elephant, there an entirely different chant. What was done in 1916 can be repeated in 1928, say the democrats. In 1916 President Wilson carried ae thi state over Charles Evans Hughes headquarters declares healthier from democracy’s stand- point than has ever before been found so early in the cam} mony for this campaign A Your Chance to Save ead Thi Coats A chance to own a coat at a price you never believed pogsible. Our $25.00 and $29.50 Coats all reduced to ...........0cececeeece ees GOSS Our $39.50 and $49.50 Coats all reduced Oo 00 and $65.00 Coats all. reduced oh $5 . $27.75 New Fur Coats. American Wombat, a great winter coat at a great price. Plenty of style. Reduced to ...........-0+0se0eeeee ++. $89.50 ‘been wild about, Park your Rolls Royce in the street as ‘ near by as you can, and hurry. SALE STARTS TUESDAY AUG. 28 _ Promptly at 9 o'clock CIVIL WAR VETERAN, ONLY CHINESE ENLISTED, VISITS BOYHOOD HOME!’ N LUTION Gloucester, Mass., Aug. 27.—(P)— Meera baal only 15 “eee NEAR $0 Binet by Ci aed ele aha eat At the battle of Cold Harbor a/ an election in tl thority for the Tigi B | "Ce shots k hit aut ‘was wor ta took him to Attorney General George F. Shafer | statement that Cahota was the only|the rear to an “arbulanes station Civil warjand then rejoined the fighting line. -|their reunions, Lowe has been the only member of Company I to an- swer roll-call. He has responded as See Another prohibitionist, Wiley & Glouces-|“the v Sargent ‘i inns in Marblehead, somewhat ill he drove to id fellow-veteran’s home hota eee west after the Civil cae war, enlisted with and remainec with the army 30 likeable Henri until 1904, when he was re- ines residence is at the National Sanatorium South Dakota. CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATS MUST GRAB VOTES USUALLY REPUBLICAN TO WIN}:s= == seam space and wordage, generally spe: ing has not penetrated to nia’s rural state have their that. pre-| whose absence has bulked large in liminary surveys reveal a condition! the farm issue elsewhere. However, there is in some of the local issues a little dynamite to pro-| iti vide fireworks for the state cam- leaders admit, however, res and contribute to the blister- oe Process in the national One pyrotechnic potentiality is the|to double-ended fire cracker known ne the Bismarck A. O. U. as “Revenue and Taxation,” or the old puzzle of trying to make state | Jamestown Northern Pacific nine. finds| income and expenditure fit into a parked beneath it in apparent har- oe gheet. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE threshed cut at the California 1 - Lise as 1926. In = yet e votes to 502,298. arhere and how big will the en’s vote be? What effect will the wet and dry argument have on th: ballot box? How many voters w y I, 28rd| carry their religious convictions in- to the voting booths? These are some of the que marks making tate necessary of the company, William} next November. in Marblehead,| Senator Johns ¢1 has one one x pat in the primary, Charles al <a former congressman and @ prohi nm leader, who is both states} In recent years, when members of| a sepubtican and a prohibition party 28rd regiment have had| candidate. The democratic aspirant, unopposed, is Minor Moore, one of the party leaders of svuthcra Cali-| W. surviving member of Com- Cahota learned that Lowe Phillips and a woman Socialist, as Morrow Lewis, complete the group of five seeking nomination to the senate seat, Wheat Crop Movement Will Not Be Halted by Railroad Strike Answering a telegram from Gov- ernor A. G. Sorlie, the federal board of mediation has eerie that it sees “no present reason £qr suppos ing the provisions of law will not be adequate to meet any situation likely the “regulars” railroads. The governor's telegram, sent from pairs of political fect that in past|his sick bed, informed the mediation have not been any too siderate of each other's corns. Many] would be a “calamity” to the farmers old line republicans who had notlof this state by hampering et tae, the time of day with Sen. eeeied 5 i eto) since ib carried the Sent on heer be ti eat oan jul loose banner under Roosevelt |dent Coolidge to appoint a fact-fin litical complexion seem to have traded the tommyhawk | ing commission to proceed under the | in| for a pipe of peace. The senator, on his part, has at many blisters as possible on the face| nounced two keynotes in his cam- of the Golden State. Just how much prin for reelection, loover and a continued battle for raising process is the problem that| the Boulder Canyon dam bill. guessers st California covers. so much The republican organisation Of| Politically as well as geographically, that there is a wide divergence of interests and| south. No campaign in southern redicts with a certainty based on a| California, from dogcatcher to aye O. ¥. victories a tre-| dent, is complete without the and| er Canyon dam issue. Hine to; ern part of the state the con-jcommission that a railroad strike movement of crops. law, and if possible, avoid the threat- ened transnortation tie-up. tlention to its public statement of attention public statement o! supreme ¢or| August 17 and said there has been no change since that tii Schedule Chances ‘ound, between tne north and the schedule of the second annual Bis-| In the nort marck baseball tournament, op-| ing to W. S. li chairman vot tt the Fans went to. ‘the semi-final con- parties have devoted much time,|tests Saturday afternoon expecting sheep shipping facilities is increas- Bismarck to meet the Jamestown Califor-| Northern Pacific nine, and Steele to districts. Growers in clash with the Bismarck Workmen. coblems, but! The original drawings called for most of the heavy crop: are handled the winners of game 1 a few more than 4,100 votes. Smith under orderly marketing Semi. systems ito meet in the semi-finals, and the the second game Saturday afternoon. fight. yy the committee, hence Bi London now has about 900 detec: prohibition question was| tives; in 1877 there were 15. se) TOURIST PAIR Uppos-| receiving set install Confuse Meet Plans | ing sheep into double-deck cars, ced Because of an early change in the| ‘ dam_ is! ponents in the semi-finals ott the | t® complete the work no later than ental of an academic question than| meet were shifted Saturd a hol poker. The farm problem, to which presi-| committe chi cratic donkey drowns the trumpeti: pating dential candidates of both major winners of game 3 and game 4: in ae itate arrangements for vis-| Missouri Slope Golf Meet Plo~* Are Made‘* uge round. Saturday it was decided that oh | police search the world for them, is | original arrangements be apbered outfit, country club here next Saturday, and Steele crossed bats with the VISITS IN CITY; Traveling 270,000 miles in land and air in four years in practically every country on the globe, and us- ing 60,000 gallons of gasoline, 3,000) gallons of motor oil, 200 tires ‘and 300 inner tubes is the unique plan of Dr. and Mrs, George Miller, Phil- adelphia, Pa. The couple stopped in Bismarck four days last week while their au- tomobile was being repaired. The doctor and his wife left Phil- ratte ia July 4, and have visited in ‘ington, New England, Canada. They left Bismarck today, Ala%ka- bound. They will travel all but 20,000 miles of their trip on land, accord- ing to their plans. They are col- lecting articles and data en route for museums and a book which they will | write at the end of their. jaunt. The couple is traveling on an In- ternational Globe Roller, a house on wheels. The unique traveling dwel- ling eae tet of ee Pe equipped rooms, two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a parlor. While traveling the globe- circlers may listen to radio programs all over the ee) as they have a led in their auto. The rooms are lighted by electric light, and fresh water is availuble at any time from their 65-galion fresh water tank. New Stock Pens Are Ordered For Tolna Improvement of facilities for ship. ping stock at Tolna has been ordered y the state railroad board in a case ; ‘ought by the Lavel, Dayton and Forde Shipping association against the Great Northern railroad. The commission ordered the con- struction of two additional stock | pens, each 24 by 48 feet, and that a 16-foct shed be constructed over one end of each pen, The railroad also ‘was directed to rovide a permanent chute for load- jracks and watering troughs Great Northern railroad was in- {structed to include provision for the | improvements in its 1929 budget and jJuly 1 next year. | _ Evidence presented nt the hearing showed, the commission said in its decision, that the need for adequate ing and that »ens capable for caring for a given number of range fed stock are not large enough to handle the sam? number of faroy raised ani- mals, The increasing tendency to ship stock in mixed lots also makes more pens necessary, it was held. Final plans for tie Missouri Slope ‘k | golf tournament, to be staged at the Sunday and Monday, will be re- viewed by the committee in charge at a meeting today. expected that most of the golf clubs of the state will be represented in to make the Bismarck Labor Day | he: tourney an annual affair. Prizes will be awarded to the win- ners in each flight, and provision will be made for golfers who turn in high scores, as well as for near cham- pions, by dividing the competitors into flights where they will contest bie golfers of the same relative lity. Finance Statements No Longer Required Treasurers of public corporations are no longer required to publish fi- nancial statements in some newspa- pers in the county in which the pub- lic corporation is located, Attorney General George Shafer he held in an opinion to sola Drowley, state’s attorney of Sioux county. The law requiring such publication, Shafer said, was revised at the last regular legislative session and the provision requiring publication was eliminated. The ruling, Shafer spec- ified, is applicable to the treasurers a counties, townships and school Wis. ricts, CAMP BREAKS ON AUGUST 30 More than 300 youths from five states who have been attendi North Dakota’s first Citizens Mili- tary Training camp at Fort Lincoln this month are making preparations to break camp and leave for their homes Thursday, At 30, after a strenuous period of military activity, recreation, and athletic training. This announcement was made to- day by officials of the camp. Routine training and reviews at 5 p.m, today and tomorrow are on the schedule for today and tomorrow. Wednesday the youths will have physical inspection, and the remain- der of the day will be taken up by |the visitors’ day program, Thursday jthe camp will be demobilized and goad will return to their homes in orth and South Dakota, Minnesota, Towa, and Nebraska, Why Do Girls Run Away From Home? Why do young girls run away from home? This question is answered in the! photoplay, “The Port of Missing Girls,” which is being shown at the Capjtol theatre today and ton Nearly every city in the United States has its cases of missing girls, 1927. What im ane ! Is them to leave home iselves in the shadows » While relatives and {the question answered in the photo- play. A Berlin chemist has discovered a solution which, when poured on a flat surface, solidifies into a kind of -| Entries are beginning to come ii committee members said, and it i ice which can be used for skating rinks. ane than 75,000 being reported in iY “MARION GETS BY CHEAP | her Leary Cutoms New York, Aug, 27.—)—Marion eagant mors fr th mé » Today - Monday and Tuesday Matinees at 2:30 -- the tournament. The committee plans Piogl whose golden voice has made | have muci r wealthy, is back from abroad|her 12 pieces of and had to pay only $7.60 as duty on| but found only a Evenings at 7:15 FLAMING YOUTH: And Its Hectic Life Dramatically Portrayed MISSING GIRLY: With barbara Bedford — Malcolm McGregor Natalic Kingston — Paul Nicholson Rosemary Theby — Windham Standing SENSATIONAL — DRAMATIC At 89c Pair WE ARE GOING OUT OF BUSINESS OUR BUILDING HAS BEEN LEASED—OUR FIXTURES HAVE BEEN SOLD. WE MUST MOVE THIS STOCK IN A FEW DAYS’ TIME. PRICES WILL DO IT AND WE PROPOSE TO MAKE THE PRIG€ES. SALE STARTS PROMPTLY AT 9 A. M. Tuesday, Aug. 28th COME EARLY! These Prices on Accessories Will Thrill You Come Early OUR FAMOUS CADET HOSIERY—Cadet hos- Our beautiful California Frocks that everyone has eae: | now go 29 PURSES—Every leather purse regardless of style or cost, goes at one-half price. SILK UNDERWEAR—All silk underwear, in- cluding de Chine, Glove Silk and Rayon, goes at ONE-HALF PRICE. VAN RAALTE SILK ca courtneaaaeal conDUROY Robes -. . ONE-HALF PRICE ste and any EX STONE. wae new present goes a HALF PRICE. NECKWEAR—Our famous high grade hand tailored neckwear, all new going at 1, PRICE Full Fashioned Pure Silk to the top chiffon hose. This is what you have been looking for. First Quality, Not Seconds, they go at ...... fiery is a standard value world. duced to .............+. Our number 940, service weight, regular $2.00 value, reduced to . HANDKERCHIEFS—Our beautiful Nottingham ieee Lace handkerchiefs, including all novel- jes HATS—One lot of summer We Challenge the World on These Prices bivvisheo ertson FOR WOMEN’S WEAR : Bismarck, No. Dak. | Avail yourself of this opportunity to provide your winter supply. Our number 955, Chiffon Silk to the top, regular $2.00 value, 2 $8.95 known around the ONE-HALF PRICE hats $3.00 to $3.50 Pair 89c cently. NEW FALL DRESSES A strong group of new Fall Dress- es that have reached us just re- A dress sensation at the price. The last word in style. Dresses One group of good dresses consisting of both Crepes and Satins, absolutely slaughtered for this closing out sale at.......... One group of dresses consisting of fine Georg- ettes in both light and dark shades—not one bad dress in the group. Good size range. The retail prices of this group are $29.50 to $39.50, _ all assembled in one group at our closing out EOS ECE Wear eaepnan ASS 3 New Fall Millinery New distinctive fall hats will be on dis- play during this Sale at greatly reduced prices. ComeEarlyasYou Like: We Are Prepared. : It’s True—We Are Going Out of Business GRIPPING Please Come Early! No Advance in Price $12.95 vi detable

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