The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 4, 1929, Page 6

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a Constituents £ | SOREN ASI ; i RIGHT SCENE APTER | Md | ‘ AGE SIX CAPITOL WET POLL TRIUMPH Victors Threaten to Recall So-| . * lons Who Misrepresent | + s Madison, Wis., April 4—(AP)—The effort to repeal Wisconsin's prohibi- ‘tion enforcement law moved to the sstate legislature today bearing a two- to-one endorsement from voters in "Tuesday's election. | * Both those favoring repeal and ,those opposing it concentrated their | attention on the state capital. the ‘wets demanding prompt action as a result of their poll triumph, the drys “equally anxious to turn election de- ‘feat into legislative victory. | The latest returns on the referen- dum to repeal the state prohibition ‘enforcement act gave yes, 277.404; no, *145,299. The vote on legalization of 2.75 per cent beer was yes, 258,764; no. 148,131. This total included 2.003 of | the 2,759 precincts. ‘The election was merely an expres- | ‘sion of opinion and not a mandate to ‘the legislature. Some of the wets, ‘however, said they would attempt toi have any legislator recalled who voted ; ‘against repeal and came from a dis- | trict that favored repeal in Tuesday's! election. Wet Bills Introduced i . Bills which would carry out the wishes of the majority of the people fs expressed in the referendum, have already been introduced by State Sen- ‘ator Thomas M. Duncan, Milwaukee ‘socialist, who was also the author of ‘the referendum. Senator Duncan said last night he; was greatly pleased with the “tre-| *mendous victory” of the wets and pre- dicted that it would be followed with legislative action complying with the} voters’ wishes. | ) “The legislature will never pass a| repealer bill,” countered the Rev. Warren G. Brown, state superintend- ‘ent of the Anti-Saloon League. “It | Jooks as though we carried a major-) ity of the counties, and I look first ‘of all for legislators to follow the| wishes of their constituents rather | than the state as a whole.” | ? Cities Wet Strongholds | ‘The vote ran much the same as in| the 1926 referendum on memorializing | Yvongress to modify the Volstead act, ‘although the majority was not as yereat as three years ago. The cities ‘were thestrongholdsof the wets, while | most of the rural communities voted | dry. Milwaukee county voted six to fone for the wet measures, accounting ‘for almost 70,000 of the majority ained by the anti-prohibitionists. | The rural vote was curtailed, said | Mrs. Anne Warren, state president of the Women’s Christian Temperance union, by storm conditions which also played havoc with communication wires and delayed returns from many of the outlying counties. There was much discussion today over the attitude of Gov. Walter J. Kohler, who would sign o. veto the measures if they were passed by the legislature. The governor took no stand on the referendum but pre- viously he had indorsed President Hoover's “concurrent enforcement of prohibition by states.” |Catholic Daughters Plan State Meeting Preliminary arrangements for the annual convention of the North Dakota Grand Court of Catholic Daughters of America were made at a meeting of the Mandan order last night. The state convention will meet at Mandan May 21, 22 and 23 and the local order will be assisted in the entertai: ment program by the Bismarck court of the order. The general program is being de- veloped by Mrs. H. L. Reichert. Dick- inson, state regent, and will include an address by one of the national officers. Circus to Feature Clever Animal Acts Albert's Indoor Animal circus. fea- turing Jerry, the wrestling bear, will be at the Auditorium Saturday, April 4, for a matinee and evening perform- ance. Many trained animal acts, including trained goats, monkeys and dogs will be on the program, and addition.’ features are bicycle riding stunts, juggling acts and a tight rope walk- ing performance. Prof. Eddy, Chau- tauqua entertainer, cartoonist and story teller, and Albert, the strong man, will provide a different type of amusement. r City-County Briefs Judge C. J. Fiske returned yester- day from a trip to Minot. ° Fred Traynor, attorney of Devils Lake, is spending a few days in Bis- marck on business. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Packard, Shields, were business visitors here yester . Luther Monson, son of Rev. and Mrs. I. G. Monson, has entered the as | Bismarck hospital whefe he will un- dergo an operation for mastoids. Mr. Monson has recently returned from Glendive, where he has been for the past three months. A_five-mile stretch of Colorado road is paved with rock from mine ore dumps. Gold in this rock is said to be valued at $20,000. derful Calumet Cakes on 1] the table and see how quickly it disappears. So pein gone before you now it. Fine food for children. Nourishing, healthful, easy to digest, and easy to make, when leavened with Calumet. LESS THAN DOUBLE ACTING it is sealed in vacuum - - but with - - fresh and fragrant as _tillyou try it. No other te The world's only truly fresh tea --not merely fee You will never know how much that means, + + fogit's @ closely guarded Schilling secret. “« ¢ a e/g e . v) CaAAy 6, because it is fresh to begin they enjoy it in the Orient. a is like it --nor can it be INSURANCE TOPIC OF FARMERS UNION |Area Agents Are Being Given Instructions at Meetings as That Held Here cluded their conference here. Wed- nesday evening, and moved on to Wil- liston to hold another there. The conferences are dealing with the three lines of insurance the union conducts—casualty, life and mutual property. with a department of au- tomobile insurance coming up. The meetings held at several cities in the state at this time are intended tr conveniently assemble the local agents in the several territories ana instruct them. Among those attending the session here Wednesday were Wallace Camp- bell, Bismarck; Harry Hoffman, sec- retary of the fraternal organization of the union in Sargent county; W. R. Crouse, of Kaiser; E. E. Green. | state secretary; S. A. Olsness, state | commissioner of insurance: Harold Shaft, assistant attorney gener: W. E. Matthaei, scnator from Fessc den. A new laboratory in Berlin, Ger- many, is equipped to produce tem- peratures as low as 452 degrees below zero, or about 8 points from absolute zero. your Lanpher dealer's, THE BISMAKCK TRIBUNE Minneapolis Airline Rates Are Reduced Minnecpolis, April 4.—(?)—Reduc tion in airplane fares from Minne- apoiis to Rochester and to Chicago over the universal airlines system's lanes was announced today. The new rates are: One way to Chicago. $30; reund trip $50; one way to Rochester, $6.50; round trip. $11.00: one way, Rochester to Chicago $25; Sry trip, Rochester to Chicago. State Farmers union leaders con- | $42. NEVER STRIKE A COP Portland, Ore.—J. D. Clark and Police Officer H. P. Tolson were slowly cruising up and down the city streets. The former was looking tor his stolen automobile—and the latter }was helping him. They came upon | the car, comman ‘eered by two youths. }'The copper got out *o arrest them, and one of them hit him over the head with a dinner bucket. They | fled, but the cop, anger lending wings to his feet, caught them and clamped them in the jug. STOPPING THE LEAK New York.—Customs officials re- jcently seized a cargo of nearly 5,000 | gallons of Scotch malt on a freighter docked !1 Hoboken. The malt used for making whiskey, is diluted many times for bootleggers’ consumption in this country. It is estimated that the value of the 315 15-galion kegs seized is between $100,000 and $150,000. Some parrots have been known to live 60 years. eAbreast of the season Brivo your appearance abreast of the season with a Lanpher Hat... mellow... made of im. ported fur... shaped by dexterous hands... styled for today. See the newest spring styles at LAN PHER HATS | Popularly priced at five to ten dollars DAHL CLOTHING STORE T'S: SW Allsuminer they gro and bloom radiatin color an fragrance. ARE GR blues— THESE High growers, dwarfs, climbers, —reds, pene i shades. —Everything you could want in annual flowers. PRISING A few packets of seed, spaded soil, a rake and some string — your planting’s done. HOW EASILY Sunshine and moisture bring up the sprouts and the great miracle is on. SEEDS the name “Smith” and also the words | amateur in Australia reported receiv- AUSTRALIANS KERP [ss HOPE FOR AVIATORS = asamp * ih Wears Taft’s Duds | Weak and Fragmentary Morse! Code Message May Have Been From Lost Flyers jwhich former President Sydney. N. S. W., April 4—(P}— Australians look to native runners as offering the greatest prospect of finding Captain Charles Ki.gsford- Smith and his three flying ecompan- jons of the Southern Cross, missing somewhere east of Wyndham since clair, who noted during a recent visit las. Sunday. with Mr. Hollar that he was about It is feared that aicplanes now en-|the same size as Mr. Taft formerly gaged in the search for the men have | Was. The congressman also tearned Pherrin township, near here. The arrangement whereby a num- jencountered in attempting to find jclothes to fit him. | When Congressman Sinclair re- turned to Washington recently, he got men in the wild country. The search by planes is to be con tinued, weather permitting. Cap- tain Kingsford-Smith and his com- Ppanions. possessed pistols with a sup- ply of ammunition,-enabling them to |to help out the plump North Dakotan. kill game for food. |Mrs, Taft searched through her hus- | band’s wardrobe and found one of his News in a dispatch from Melbourne |to Congressman Sinclair, who in turn Australia, says that a Morse code |S°nt it to Mr. Hollar. message has been picked up which; kg TIN may have a bearing on the search| The !ength of the longest snake in for Captain Charles Kinssford- |the New York Zoo is 26% feet. Smith and the missing Southern | Cross flyers. ‘The message, the dispatch says, was weak and fragmentary and contained Dr. R. S. énge ee chi Tune in on KFYR every) Sidguae Paynes morning for the A. W. Lucas| Bismarck. N. D. Co, day’s special. | pes “men eating wild fowls.” A wireless | 'ber of former president's garments ‘have been turned over to Mr. Hollar {was made by Congressman J. H. Sin- little chance of sighting the missing Of the difficalties which Mr. Hollar} |in touch with Mr. Taft and he agreed: London, April 4.—(4—The Evening | biggest suits, which was turned over! | THERE'S A DIFFERE Cleveland.—The patra <4! dashed madly up to the curb Direct- ly after several high-vowered auto- mobiles drew up alongside and uni- ©) formed men and detectives rushed up to a house and hurried in. “Where's the policeman?” “Who did the shooting?” the cops asked the ——--—___ — —-—--——— __ $| woman of the house. “What police- Williston, N. D., April 4. — Clothes William Howard Taft wore in the days of his greater corpulency now grace the ro- bust figure of W. O. “Dad” Hollar of man?” the woman asked. “You phoned 4nd said somebody shot a cop in front of your hquse, didn't you?” the cops demanded. “Nc,” faintly replied the woman, that somebody was shooting craps out there on the sidewalk.” Chicago's heaviest rainfall was on August 11, 1923, when 2 2-5 inches of rain fell in 80 minutes. —_—_—_—_——— CORTLEY In the long run, it pays | trousers) from $18 to $42. Youth’s Prep Suits, 12 to 18 Boys’ Suits, 4 to 12 years .. Topcoats, camel’s hair and t The Store with DAHL CLOTHING STORE that doesn’t mean you have to pay more for them. Select any of our Cortiey suits—in the season’s newest shades and patterns. They are fine examples of what we mean by good suits—ranging in price (with two pairs Dahl Clothing Store THURSDAY, APRII. 4, 1929 | Too Late to Classify FOR SALE—Prairie hay. Inquire Broadway Food Market. WANTED—Experienced tire sales- man to travel western North Da- kota and eastern Montana, head- quarters at Bismarck. Only sales- man with record as producer will be considered. Stete salary, exper- ience and reference. Write Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 72. FOR RENT—Two large furnished room: on ground floor, with private entrance, use of electric washer. No objections to one or. two children. Phone 1219-W or call at 422 Fourth strect. CLOTHES you to buy a good suit—pbut seeceees $9.50 to $17 seccceees $7.50 to $14 .+ $19 to $28 years weed the New Front oy | | | | MEN’S SHOES For Work and Dress $1.97, $2.97, $3.97, $4.97, and $5.97 BOYS’ SHOES For School and Play Very Substantial Reductions LARGE LOT WORK SHIRTS For Men and Boys 37c MEN’S HEAVY BIB OVERALLS Te ALL NOTIONS AND TOILET ARTICLES ‘ Price Low - Large, Heavy TURKISH TOWELS 25¢ Each House and Porch ‘ Frocks $1.47 - $1.79 - $2.79 48 in. Oil Cloth - 2%e $1.97 $2.97 All Corsets and Brasc‘eres _ 1-3 Off ALL SILK 12MIMPONGEE...........:.....,0. } J.C.PENNEY CO. Closing Out McCracken Stocks Rapidly ACT NOW TO SAVE SHOES! SHOES! SHOES! High Quality Shoes for Every Member of the Family Priced to Move Quickly WOMEN’S SHOES A Large Assortment of Styles and Leathers $3.97 $4.97 GIRLS’ SHOES Oxford and Strap Styles Greatly Reduced Prices ALL RUBBERS AND CANVAS FOOTWEAR 20 Per Cent Off BOYS’ BIB OVERALLS One Large Lot 67c Large Stock of LUGGAGE 20 Per Cent Off BLANKETS OF ALL KINDS - While They Last $1.12 to $4.97

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