The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 3, 1928, Page 6

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PAGE SIX COOLIDGE SAYS HOOVER SPEECH { Breaks Silence Second Time in Campaign to Praise Repub- lican Nominee Washington, Nov. 3.—(?)—High raise for Herbert Hoover came last night from the White House. Breaking for a second time the silence which he otherwise has maintained consistently with respect to the presidential campaign, Pres- ident Coolidge wired the Republican nominee at the conclusion of his St. Louis address an expression of con- fidence in his ability to administer the affairs of the nation and a dec- laration that he had demonstrated a fitness for the presidency. Although reports persisted for ) SHOWS FITNESS season, and foreign visitors _regis-| tered from Rumania, Czecho-Slo-! vakia, Ireland and Australia. | According to Mrs. Fred Conklin,| chairman of the D, A. R. committee) in charge of the cabin, plans are| being made to enlarge the native! North Dakota garden which sur. rounds the cabin. At the meeting of the D, A. R. Friday afternoon, Mrs. E. A. Thor- berg read extracts from “The Key- man of America,” on national de-| fense, the immigration problem in} America and the youth movement in} Ame | Plans are being made by the D. A. R. or a Waffle Day party, to be held in the near future. Supreme Court Will | Review Purchase Case) | The fight of Geo H. Purchase, Fort Yates, to be reinstated as state’s attorfiey of Sioux county xft- er being suspended and then being put out of office 'y the late Gov- ernor A. G. S THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1925 CANADA LIQUOR PLAN FAILURE “War Time Prohibition in Prov- inces No Indicator, Speaker Declares Governmental control of liquor in Canada has proved an absolute fail- ure, und the plan would be the worst that could be tried in the United States, according to W. R. Wood, nnipeg, Manitoba, spoke in Bismarck last night. 4, who was a member of the legislature, is secretary of oba_ Prohibition Alliance, was the principal speaker at a pro- ibition rally at the McCabe Metho- piscopal church last night. meeting was non-political, the names of no candidates being men- tioned, but persons who attended the iz were urged to vote to install andidates in the state and who { ter part of the war, the speaker de- clared that the move could not pos- |sibly be taken as an indicator of | what would happen in Canada if ibition should go into effect. ‘That period,” the speaker con- tinued, “was mercly a wartime meas- ure, and not meant to be permanent. It was in no sense of the word pro- hibition such as has been instituted jin the United States. |. During the period of 20 months jin which the “partial-prohibition” | was in effect, he added, the country was the most prosperous, compar- atively, that it has ever been. He pointed out that under the law @ person was able to purchase one case of “hard liquor” and 20 quarts of beer in one week. If there are two adults in the family, the amount purchasable is doubled, and the number of adults and the amount of liquor available is figured on a comparative basis. In that way, he said, there is no way in which it can be restricted or controlled. Wife Killer Is Given © Life Sentence in Jail z i | who was Cooper’s counsel, said he would seek a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence. eden was chai with beating and kicking his wife, who died in their home at Spring Park, Lake Minnetonka, October 11. Gypsy Children Rebel Against Bathing Order Bratislava, Czechoslovakia, Nov. 3. —(AP)—A special “soap and water squad” of police has been named to take charge of bathing the gypsy patched after the president had heard Hoover’s speech through the White House radig. There had been no indications that such a step was contemplated. Declaring that he had listened to the St. Louis address with great satisfaction, Mr. Coolidge termed it the concluding speech in a series which had disclosed “a breadth of information, a maturity of thought and a soundness of conclusion on Public questions never surpassed in & previous presidential campaign.” Shows Hoover's Wisdom dai The chief executive told the nom- Inee he had had “the knowledge and judgment” to “tell the people the truth,” that he had been “clear, tandid and courteous” and had dem- onstrated a faith in the people and ® “consciousness that the truth has & power and conclusivness of its own that is always supreme.” The dis- tussion, Mr. Coolidge said, had “only ade more plain the wisdom” of Hoover's proposals for meeting the Issues of the day. “You have shown your fitness to be president,” the chief executive said in conclusion. “You are able, experienced, trustworthy and safe. Your success in the campaign seems assured and I shall turn over the ‘eat office of president of the Jnitel States of America to your keeping, sure that it will be in com- petent hands in which the welfare of the people will be secure.” 8,653 VISITED been retained by a number of Sioux ! county citiz ney George I y ty, in the fight against Purchase’s ; reinstatement. sented by Louis H. Connolly, M ne hase then appeal.d to ee F state supreme court. | William Langer, Bismarck, has; , to aid State’s Attor- | Drowley, Sioux coun- | Purchase is repre-'f in attorn J. A. COFFEY “ nken.{Pational offices, The Indian School i i —(AP)— weeks that Mr. Coolidge would at! nha and seplect fe officiating me the Bitls chorus entertained with songs. Renee pels Rage mle some stage take an active part in| oounty official, was remoyed from} The Canadian’ plan has failed| ond degree murder charge growing the Hoover campaign, he had pre-| office aout/a year azo by the late; Miserably, due to various reasons, ; out of the fatal beating of his wife, viously made but a single public} ,overnor upon investigation of af-| Wood declared. He pointed out that| Margaret Cooper, today was given| | pronouncement in this connection—| fairs, |the manufacture of intoxicating] a life. sentence in Stillwater prison a message to the Massachusetts) “He then appealed to George E.| liquors had never been controlled,| by District Judge E. F. Waite. A ~state Republican convention assert-| McKenna, Napoleon, judge in the|#nd that the distribution of the] stay of commitment until Wednes- ing that the country needed a con-| third distr: eKenna called in! beverages could not be expected to a ‘was granted by the court to en- tinuation of Republican rule. Fred Jans fourth rie able Cooper to straighten up his Result of Radio judge; who Geatled ‘apaiet Pun! business affairs. Last night’s telegram was dis-| ch L._L. Longbrake, public defender, For Judge of District Court Vote for X Your vote will be appreciated. Political Advertisement Candidate for Reelection as Justice of the Peace, Burleigh County Pol. Adv. , |pickaninnies cf the Czechoslovakian Prairies. For the first time in history a school has been established near Ungvar for gypsy children. The experiment has proved that if enough playtime is included in the scholastic program the younger gen- eration of nomads becomes tracta- le. Everything went well until the teachers tried to Jaunch the idea of taking a bath, The pupils rebelled and it was finally necessary to call for official help. ‘ John L. Monroe OF BALDWIN Candidate for SHERIFF Moveg to Burleigh County with! parents 28 years ago; taxpayer here for 24 years; and have a fam- ily to support. Township Constable for 1@ years two terris as School Director Asks for Your Support Upon a Platform of Law Enforcement and a Square Deal for All Paid Pol. Adv. Rollin Welch ~ W. E. PERRY FOR CORONEI A Resident of Bismarch for 19 Years Pol. Adv. Candidate for Reelection to Second Term Sheriff BURLEIGH COUNTY, NORTH DAKOTA Political Advertisement STATE SHRINE Tourists from Every State and Four Foreign Countries Saw Roosevelt Cabin Roosevelt cabin on the state capi- tol grounds has been sited by 8653 people during the last season, according to a report made by Mrs. Arthur V. Sorensen at the D. A. R. meeting Friday afternoon. The cabin was opened by_ the Minneshoshe chapter of D. A. R. on June 15, and the official season closed October 11. In observance of Navy and Roosevelt Day, it was re- opened for the day of October 27 when 70 visitors were received, Tourists from every state in the union have visited the cabin this FRED JANSONIUS Judge of the Fourth Judicial District Candidate for Reelection Pol. Adv. E. J. GOBEL Candidate for Re-election For 4 CORONER of Burleigh County Please May I Have Your Support? (Pol. Adv.) We Have No Millionaires! No Railroads, No Office Holders and No Big City Daily Papers Working for Us, and This Advertisement and Statement Must Be Brief Because We Have Very Little Money to Carry on Our Campaign. Many untrue statements have been made by those attacking the amendment to pay depositors in closed banks, principally as to cost. The falsity of opposing claims is proven by the terms and conditions of the amendment itself. Section three speci limits the bond issue to $25,000,00 so it cannot exceed that amount. The same Sec its the interest to 5 per cent, and there is no reason why these bonds should not sell for less than 5 per cent, as other State bonds have been sold. The same Section provides that bonds shall be retired serially. Therefore, interest will not run on the full amount of bonds is: the full time. The bonds will be paic ments and the interest on payments cease. The millionaire-railroad and collectors lobb opposing the amendment ignores entirely ection Six of the amendment which provides that all the assets of closed banks now in the hands of the General Receiver shall go to retire the bonds. There are millions of these assets that with proper attention can and will yield $10,000,000 or more to retire an equal amount of the bonds without cost to the taxpayers, The distribution of $25,- 000,000 among depositors throughout the State will greatly increase the value of these closed bank assets. The General Receiver and his horde of deputies and collectors are opposed to the amenément and are among those making untrue statements concerning it because they will lose repens Tose. cloaed bank parts will be given e attention they should receive by a liquidatin, Board provided by Section Five of te Pop ment consisting of the Governor, State Treasurer and Secretary of State. Using the opposi ion’s own figures covering in- terest charges which they fix at $25,009,000 for the full sum of $25,000,000 of bonds, we will admit that full interest charges may be $15,000,- 000 for the net $15,000,000 of bonds not paid by the assets of closed banks which go to retire Is, so the total cost at an outside figure may not be over $30,000,000, which is spread over a period of thirty years, The Millionai: ilroad-collectors lobby tries to make you believe that every dollar paid musi be by residents of the State, whereas thousands of non-resident land owners will pay their share as will also the railroads and other corporaticns that are taxed on their earnings, franchise and personal property. The cost to residents of the State will not be one dollar per person per year. The opposition itself admits that 58 per cent of taxes are paid by non-resident individuals and / corporations. do so, It ignores also the fact that Section Eleven pear iies that speculators claims shall be rejected. rejection of irregular deposits and specula- tors claims may reduce the a it of bonds nec- pay depositors to much less than $25,- By the selection of ten exceptional cases claims that 40 per cent of the de- non-residents. It carefully refrains how many of these people are for- of the State who left their money many are persons who because of thie loss of their money were to leave the State to obtain work or li relatives. At North Dakota Good Faith Association By W. C. Drake, Seeretary Paid Rolitical Advertisement this point do your own thinking. You know that outside depositors recovered their money years ago. When trouble started they were the first ones to withdraw their deposits and their action closed many banks. The number of outside de- Positors left and the amount of their deposits is almost insignificant. Even if the amount were larger in all fairness a debt is a debt regardless of where the creditor lives. Section Nine of the amendment limits specific- ally the amount of taxes that can be levied on ac- count of the bond issue. The one mill levied ex- actly replaces the Soldiers Bonus tax now ex- pired by which the State has raised $10,000,000 in fen years without knowing it. Your taxes will no! increased except for some other purj than the bond issue. e ee, The opposition by false method of ,calculation try to make of the bond issue a heavy increase in annual land tax. What are the facts?—The average tax per quarter section, per annum, required to repay the bond issue, and interest, will be less than threc dollars. No more than we have been paying for soldiers bonus—which now ceases and, like the soldiers bonus, it will establish the stability and good faith of the state. Much has been said about bond companies. These companies passed their losses along to per- sonal guarantors who without any benefit what- ever to themselves suffered large losses. But don’t forget that thousands of personal bonds signers became liable for the funds of School Districts, Villages and Townships and many of these small divisions lost money or had no bonds. What will be the effect of the passing of the bond issue on the happiness and prosperity of every person in the State? The repayment of deposits will increase land values to every land owner because much of the money recovered will be used to buy land. When land is selling prices goup. An increase in price of only $100 a quar- ter section will exceed the amount of the bond issue. Putting Twenty-Five million dollars in circulation in the State at one time will stim- ulate all business. ‘More food, clothing and com- forts can be bought. Old debts will be paid. Im- provements will be made and homes built. School Districts and Townships will recover lost funds and he able to reduce taxes. Every person doing business or owning property or working for wage: the State will receive sufficient benefits to pay his or her share of the bond issue, and a profit besides. Increased business and pros- perity in the State will draw new residents, re- sulting in increase in property values, they in turn will pay their share of taxes for the issue and every other 4 ‘ te 18 hea ike Administration The State IS liable sponsoring the Guarantee Fund law did claim it as a State guarantee. They water when trouble appeared. ‘ gate ht bei ae: The passing of the Bond Issue Amendment will nd’ stabliize’ land valuco-sdebte carrying: Blah and stabilize valu is interest rates cam-be paid,—houses built,>-schools opened or improved. Remember too that the money depositors lost was all loaned in North poe oe Coe benefits be lost beet use of the- op; i a few selfish righ willing fe men and outside interests un- admit that they too will be benefited by the common good? If you believe in a Greater . ~ North Daketa * YES. For Efficient, Courteous Service General Election, November 6th, 1928 (Pol. Adv.) VOTE FOR LUTHER VAN HOOK TREASURER of Burleigh County Political Advertisement , A. C. ISAMINGER Candidate for Election to Second Term as COUNTY AUDITOR Burleigh County, North Dakota France _ is the only European| shows an improvement on the pre- country whose present thrate' war figu PTET CT What About Your State’s Attorney Your State’s Attorney should be honest and have a hi degree of natural ability. In addition to that he should a specialist in two distinct branches of the law, namely: Criminal Law and Municipal Corporations. Criminal Law deals with the prosecution of those charged with crime. Municipal Corporations has to do with Villages, Cries, Townships, School Districts, Counties and other organizations supported by taxation. This places the State’s Attorney in a most vital position in government and also in regard to taxation. Government and taxation go together and mean more to the people than anything other than life itself. Burleigh County is one of the largest and mast populous counties in North Dakota and I believe without exception has more business in its State’s Attorney’s office than any other County in the State. The people of, this County have seen fit to enable your present State’s Attorney to have the benefit of that practice and you now have the benefit of that specialized service. There is only one way to become a specialist in that work and that way is by practice. ° When voting for State’s Attorney you are hiring a law; for a highly specialized service. Should you not select that servant with great care and see to it that you secure the best available service? There is an unusual number of extremely important cases pending now which require special service. Yours sincerely, F. E. McCURDY, Candidate for Reelection. Political Advertisement RECORDS OF JUDICIAL CANDIDATES In Supreme Court Judge Coffey’s Record— 17 Cases AFFIRMED in Consecutive Order during past two years. Judge McFarland’s Record— The 100 per cent Judge—100 per cent REVER- SALS. In his 10 years as County Judge NO CASE Appealed from his decision to the Su- preme Court has been Affirmed. EVERY CASE REVERSED. Base your vote on EFFICIENCY and reelect J. A. Coffey x Judge of District Court Political Advertisement Read THE TRUTH ABOUT PROHIBITION in the December issue of the ANTI-PROHIBITION MONTHLY, now on sale at all newsstands. If your dealer cannot supply you, write to Anti- Prohibition Monthly, Bismarck, No. Dak. er 10fr Rally! Rally! Geo. F. Shafer, Republican en- dorsee at the June Primary for Governor and Halvor L. Halvorson, former Democratic candidate for Gov- Bismarck Auditorium Saturday at 8 p. m. Hear a frank and fair discussion of North Dakota problems. Broadcast over KFYR. Don’t fail to listen in. eae

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