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Factions to Join In Sponsorship of ‘Proposed Measure (Continued from page one) reported the remodeling proposal is feasible ,the governor said. J. A. Dinnie, Grand Forks, who has had | experience in contracting work, will inspect the the amount necessary to put it in shape for temporary use. The plan is to knock down the up- per walls of the north wing, put up @ wall at the south end, construct a roof to house the structure and re- model the interior. The north wing, under the old ar- rangement, housed the treasurer's and auditor's offices, department of agriculture and labor, and parts of the offices occupied by the state board of administration, state insurance de- partments and state land department. The governor said no estimate has been made of the amount of rent that could be saved if offices were housed in the remodelled section, but the amount saved would be several times the cost of remodelling. Two years of college training would be required of persons seeking li- censes for practicing healing in/North Dakota under a measure introduced in the senate by William Renwick, Pembina county, Would Have General Effect The proposal would affect persons desiring to practice medicine, osteo- pathy, chiropractic, “or any other form of the healing art or method of preventative or curative treat- ment that now is or may hereafter used in the manufacture or sale of butter or cheese. The same pro- visions are required in the manufac- , ture for sale of cottage cheese. Not only is the word “butter” pro- hibited for use in connection with Selling butter substitutes, but also the words “dairy, creamery, cream,” and any picture of a cow or cows or the name of any breeds of cattle. Failed at 1929 Session At the last session a measure for | licensing oleomargarine dealers was} introduced but it failed to pass after long and heated arguments in both houses. As first introduced it would G. W. Wickersham Associated Press Photo George W. Wickersham, head of President Hoover’s committee on law enforcement. include those on chiropractic, and osteopathy. Medical doctors would not be af- fected by the measure, as they are required to complete the regular university course of study before they are granted a license by the state board of medical examiners. |Independent member from Trail] have required wholesalers to pay a $100 license fee and retailers $25. Its form was objected to and the bill was later amended to provide for a tax rate per pound, but this propos- al also fatled. Representative Carl E. Jdhnson, county, introduced a bill which would confine an appeal to tHe county board of commissioners for a refund of taxes paid under protest to within @ period of 60 days after such pay- ment. Also, in case of rejection by the county treasurer, tax money paid under protest, must be started within 60 days after the board’s rejection. Johnson's measure provides that a separate fund be kept by the county treasurer in which to place tax money paid under protest. Under! present statutes appeal for refunds! can be made for an indefinite period | following payment, according to the ‘Traill county representative. Einar Twete of Divide county re-| SCIENTISTS MEET IN CALI Associated Press Photo {n this distinguished group which met in Pasadena, Cal., to discuss scientific problems are, left to right: Walter S. Adams, astronomer and director of the Mount Wilson observatory; Dr. Albert A. Michelson, formerly of Chicago university, who measured light speed; Dr. Albert Einstein, famed for k's theory of relativity, and Or. Robert A. Millikan, president of the California Institute of Technelegy or discoverer of the cosmic ray. property of the state and which is| pie of North Dakota are going to! for the purpose of pretty looks. But) jespecially adapted to the needs of the|spend the money for a new capitol as long as it is spent for brick, steel, Would Cut Mileage Fees | If the capitol were removed building in the next few years. I/cement and sand for the purpose of to Jamestown or any other city large agree that we should put up a build-! making the building durable and fire- introduced his bill to reduce mileage |SUms of money would have to be spent |ing that will take care of ihe state's! proof, I will have nothing to say, ho fees of county school superintendents |tO duplicate this property and the needs for the present day and also/ matter how much money is spent. from 15 cents per mile to 10 cents. |holdings at Bismarck would become what may come up in the near future. | state. Must Consider Future | another anytime we the notion. | We have got to take the future into| consideration as well as the present. | That 404,786 citizens have to pass through Jamestown in order to get to \Bismarek, and 172,579 only have to |pass through Bismarck to get to Jamestown, will not hold good on the |long run, not even so much at pres-| jent, as the figures are based on ail- | road travel, a conveyance now only; |used by a small percent, when travel- jing from place to place, within the’ i state. | “How about the 600,000,060 tons of |lignite and the immense amount of ee SHOUSE ASSERTION IS DENIED BY FESS Republican Says Party Did Not Attack Raskob Because He Is Catholic | Washington, Jan. 17—()—Chair- jhigh quality clay in the Missouri; man Fess, of the Republican nation- |Slope that is awaiting development. | al committee, answered Saturday the | This is 99 per cent sure of being de-j assertion he said Jouett Shouse, veloped within the next 50 years, and | chairman of the Democratic national when it does, the Morth Dakota citi-| executive committee, had made that zens who will pass through James-;the Republican committee was at- town in order to get to Bismarck will tacking John J. Raskob because he :appear quite scanty compared with! was “the leading Catholic layman.’ “those passing through Bismarck to| “This is an infamous untruth,” {get to Jamestown. Fess said in a written statement is- | “About the only good that we can; sued by the committee. “This at- lo by changing the seat of our state | tempt to inject the religious issue is ‘government, so far as I can see, is| made for the very apparent purpose that we will give from 30 to 40 mil-; of throwing a smoke screen around {lion school children in the United | the vigorous attacks upon Mr. Ras- | States a chance to laugh at their par-|kob by Democratic leaders such as jents and other folks for not knowing | Governor Dan Moody, Texas, and |where the capitol of North Dakota is | Josephus Daniels, North Carolina. located. | “The Republican party paid no at- “Being very sorry, wish to remain. | tention to Mr. Raskob until the pub- Hl “CARL ROESNER.” | lic exposure of his sinister plan to | impair or destroy the Republican party by scurrilous and slanderous attacks upon President Hoover and (his administration,” Fess said. ROBBERS ARE CONVICTED Pipestone, Jan. 17.—(\—Joseph Hanley and Edward McCabe, Sioux SLAYER A WOMAN City, were convicted of first degrec grand larceny. ¢harges which grew out of the theft of $4,000 worth of A similar provision was made in Obsolete and of practically no value!T should object to spending a lot of| house bill No. 4, but Twete obtained |to the state. unanimous consent from the house to; Owns Sheridan Farm “We can't move the seat of our; {money for marble and other things| state government from one piace to; | A Y an Sener Tee ——--—-——- |Police Think Strangler Might be recognized by the law of this state.” Senator Nels Magnuson, Bottineau county, presented a measure which Uneer the present law, licenses are granted to certain practitioners Of the healing art but no requirements are made for college training. The measure proposes that a “board of pre-professional examiners” headed by the superintendent of public instruction, be set up to pass on whether persons applying for licenses have the proper qualifica- tions. Other members of the board would be the heads of the depart- ments of chemistry and physics of the state agricultural college; the head of the department of biology of the University of North Dakota, and the registrar of the university, who would act as executive officer. It is proposed that no person shall be eligible to obtain a license to prac- tice healing, unless such a person 1s at least 21 years old and shall have completed, with the required passing grades, two years of college or uni- versity work in the state agricultural college, University of North Dakota, or some school of equal standing. The work required must include at least 12 hours in inorganic, analytical and organic chemistry, eight hours of physics and and eight hours of bi- ology. To Pass on Credentials The duty of the board of pre-pro- fessional examiners would be to pass on the credentials of any person ap- plying for a pre-professional certif- icate, or for permission to take an examination for a license to practice healing. When an applicant receives a pre- professional certificate, he could then apply for a license to the boards, which, under the present law, grant licenses to healers. Such boards would require domestiz mutual in- surance companies, except life in- surance firms, to notify the mort- gagee of a policy when the contingent mutual liabilities have not been paid on the policy. The mortgagee would then be given 20 days after the date of notice to pay such premium and liabilities, and in default of such pay- ments the liability of the company to the mortgagee would cease. Licensing of oleomargarine dealers was proposed in 2 bill introduced in the house by Representative Ole O. Sundby, Nonpartisan, McLean county. Copies Montana Law The measure, which Sundby said was modeled after the Montana law governing butter substitutes, would require wholesale dealers to pay a $1,000 yearly license fee and retailers @ $300 annual license fee. Sundby’s bill would prohibit the printing of the word “butter” on containers of butter substitutes or any other substitute not made entire- ly from milk fat. It would also pro- hibit: manufacture or sale of any sub- stance made of vegetable or animal fats or oils, not made from milk or | state. con colored in any shade of yel- low. Hotels and restaurants using butter substitutes would be required to “place placards, plainly legible from all parts of the dining room, marked ‘oleomargarine’ or ‘renovated butter (as the case may be) used here’.” Printing of the word oleomargarine “in plain, black, boldfaced letters, one-half inch high” also would be necessary under provisions of the bill. The same measure also pro- hibits the use of any oleaginous sub- stance not derived from milk, to be withdraw his first measure for re-| vision. T. D. Acheson, Nonpartisan mem- | ber from Bottineau county, presented another measure dealing with grain | storage rates. The measure is sup-| plementary to one he introduced | earlier in the session relating to grain storage and handling. It provides for | storage at two cents per bushel for) 30 days, except when redelivery is; made before that time, in which case | no charge shall be assessed; and for } a rate after the first 30 days of one-| sixtieth of one cent per bushel, but | not to exceed five cents per bushel for one year. Seven other measures provide for appropriations of $100,000 to volun- teer fire departments; $70,000 for the | North Dakota National Guard; $80,- 000 for the bovine tuberculosis in- | demnity board; $34,100 for the live stock sanitary board; $28,- | 700 for expenses of the state; transportation officer; $2,000 for the | annual corn show at Bismarck, and $2,500 to be used in the preservation | and control of artesian waters in the McClusky Entered In State Capital ‘Sweepstakes’ Race (Continued trom page one) moval may say, that to move the seat of government at this time would work a very real hardship upon the taxpayer. There is in Bismarck sev- eral hundreds of thousands of dollars “I am a farmer and I own property | in Sheridan county on which + pay! taxes. If the capitol were to be} moved to McClusky, I do not think) that there is any doubt that I would; be financially benefited thereby. How- | ever, I think, that in the interests of | the state as a whole, the capitol of | the state should remain where it has | stood on the maps of the world since North Dakota was admitted to state- hood, at Bismarck.” | “I think, moreover, that the sane, clear -thinking taxpayer will agree with me.” West Speaks Up ‘The Roesner letter which was print- ed in a recent issue of the Hebron Herald follows: “Jan. 10th, 1931. ! “Logical Capital City Assn. “Jamestown, N. D. { “Gentlemen: | “Find inclosed petition which I'm; returning without signatures, as I did not wish to take the risk to have a dose of tar and feathers administered to me. “Your advice to work fast in order to stop politicians who want to keep the capitol at Bismarck for selfish reasons, appears suspicious to me. That Jamestown is more centrally located, is simply ridiculous. What I would like to know is why the peo- ple of North Dakota chose Bismarck in the first place, if that’s true what you claim. “Of course, your answer will be that at that time conditions were different. | Certainly, conditions were different, but what about conditions 50 years from now. { worth of property, acquired over a long period of time, which is the | “Our capitol building was destroyed { by fire a fe a PROOF POSITIVE "WHY SURE,WOMEN ARE GETTER DRIVERS THAN MEN = = Just Loox AT ALL THE THINGS THEY CAN DO, WHILE cigarettes from a local concern last Have Been Woman Dressed = December. They will be sentenced later. ‘in Man’s Clothes -——— Steps are being taken to connect Mexico with the northern part of Lower California by highway. | Chicago, Jan. 17.-()—A theory | that Miss Eppie Moss, 41, was strang jled by a woman disguised in men’s |clothes was considered by detectives | Saturday as they sought “lews to the imystery of her slaying. 1 | She was found strangled with a jrope in a garage at the rear of her) {home Thursday. Many photographs | found in the dead woman's apartment ‘showed her garbed in men’s sport | clothes. i | The Chicago Tribune reported sh ; Was a niece of Col. James A. Mos: . §. A., retired, a noted author of military textbooks who now is presi- | dent of the United States Flag asso- ciation at Washington. Coincidently | the Herald and Examiner said it had/ jlearned the woman with whom she imade her’ home was known to her friends as Miss Belleta Morse but in \reality is Miss Belleta Douglas, step- | daughter of Col. R. H. Morse, wealthy | vice chairman of Fairbanks, Morse| and Company. i Miss Morse saw the killer escape from the garage. | ‘Her Surgeon Dies | Electric trolley cars have been abandoned for motor busses in | Huntsville, Selma, Gadsden, Ala-' | bama City and Attalla, Ala. Associated Press Photo Mrs. Horace E. Dodge, jr., of the Detroit automobile family, is re- covering from a plastic operation interrupted when the surgeon, Dr. Luis P. Berne, died while she was on the operating table. The Louisiana Firemen’s Associa- ‘tion has voted to establish a state fire college at Baton Rouge, with | practical and theoretical courses in | fire fighting. unannannaze JAONGNONNONOORDODARADAOANNEADNCdA NNGGAGUROUOUSOOSOAOROAAUDNONAAIIND JGGUNORUUUNUGNSOUUUOUCUOUUUTUDUUUQUGUUONUEUUUULOUUUSUGUOUGUUCUUQUUUOUGUOUGUUUGUCOONOUOUUUGUCUROCLOQCUROgUOLACQNONNOONED” OUAaDNNAONGDASNOARNCNOUODMD POUL vi x ORADLUGOAUDOOEOUEUROOORURUOONOSOODOOOUOUAUUORONUGOOONG! Subject: Benefits of Organization and Cooperation A subject which is of vital interest to the individual merchant as well as the chain store. Members of the legislature are urged to attend. The public in general is invited. No charge. annenuinene aunnanenavonaonauen AGAAONONGUNNGAENNOOOGNGCOONONODONONUONGOL OUUEUEAUEOEOVONON PUT LECTURE By James Hobrecker SUNDAY, JANUARY 18th AT 3 P. M. : At The. - RIALTO THEATRE Also known as the Rex theatre at 217 Fourth street, first door north of Bismarck and Grand Pacific hotels. ' AULULUUAUAUOUUNESUUOOULUGUGCOCESORGUENEUUGGOOOUOUUEOCOEUGOONCCURRDOUDOEUONOUUEOON AVEULGUGGOUTUOUDOOUCOUNUDODGANCUOOOOOREOCUDEDUOUCSUCUCUOCUDSEADODEEOOUOOUOUOEEOROOUREDODED Given under the auspices of the Bismarck Trades and Labor Assembly \ UUVNUGUOUNQUDCUHUROQUORUUOUAUCUOEOOCUCUDEDEUEOOONGUGUCGSEOUROUOUEEEGEOEaUaNONOONN NPUULUAUUUUUEUOUOGUODEOGUSODOGHUODOUAUSUOUUOOERUDUOUOGOUOUONEUONONOOORENEONND AUUDUUDUOOOUOUUOUUUUUOUEAOEUOCUENN SUTSODODNGUDEEIONS! 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