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SSRN GPR ERE ORSON EN AE ES THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1931 LBTTER TO BYRNE | NOT YET RAGEIVED Gasoline Tax Referendum Peti- tioners Say They Will Seek to Amend Document Secretary of State Robert Byrne Monday had not yet received any word from H. ©. Schumacher, chair-| man of the committee for petitioners | nl ° | ‘VALIDITY OF JONES Youth Hit by Golf | Ball Dies of Injury ~——__—--- cy | New York, June 22.—(4)—Struck in the back of the head by a golf ball | hit by a man for whom he was cad- | dying, Harold Marshall, 16, is dead.! He was walking ahead on a fairway at the Mayflower country club onj{ Staten island wh-» “chard Keiser of | Elizabeth, N. J., drove. 14 WOMEN ENTER GARDEN CONTES Mandan Man to Act as Judge in Competition Sponsored by Homemakers’ Clubs Fourteen Burleigh county women have entered gardens in the contest held in connection with the nutrition garden project sponsored by Home- Girl Wounded in Attempted Holdup Faribault, Minn., June 22.—(?}—A 17-year-old girl was shot and ser- | fously wounded in an attempted hold- {up of @ grocery store here this morn- | Ing. A man and a woman, accused by; | Sheriff E. W. Haverland of having been two of the three robbers, were captured shortly afterward. ‘SPEAKER PRAISES VALUE N. D. FARMS AT $1,069,968,967 Estimate Made by Census Bu- reau; Report Shows Figures by Minor Civil Divisions North Dakota has 77,975 farms with a total acreage of 38,657,894 and a to- tal value, including land, buildings, implements, and machinery, of $1,- 069,968,967. implements and machinery, including farmers’ automobiles, was $118,743,521, Woman Killed by Thief River Falls, Minn., June 22. —(#)—Falling from church steps Sun- day, Mrs. Frank A. Protz, 62, sustain- ed a fractured skull and died shortly afterward. She was talking to friends after services, stepped backward and fell eight feet. Her head struck a concrete sidewalk. Her husband and two sons survive. p Denhoff Farm Home Fall | from = | Letters from Girl New York, June 22.—(#)—Three letters from the late Starr Faithful to Dr. G. Jameson Carr; surgeon on the Cunard liner Franconia, com- manded attention today from Nas- sau county officials investigating the beauty’s mysterious death. . As a voluntary witness with what he considers vital information, Dr. Carr has come from England with the letters. He arrived at Boston yes- Are Under Scrutiny) tev. * Just arrived a large selection of Wash Frocks, beautiful de- signs in voiles and prints; prices are $1.95 and $2.95, also a beautiful assortment of House Pajamas. The Bismarck Cloak Shop. ° AMERICAN YOUTH Is Burned to Ground} LAW 1S CHALLENGE sss. sus* sre? cams: {County Agent H. O, Putnam said Monday. One garden from cach club will be entered in the contest. | Entries must be made by July 1, ac- |ecording to Putnam, who says that judging will be done July 16 by T. K. Killand of the Great Plains experi- mental station at Mandan. A pressure cooker will be given to of the four-cent gas tax law referen-| dum, who announced at Fargo Satur- est ihe secr of ‘ % - Pas to rarnian bien wth naines, Eddie Norris, Convicted at state to furnish him with names of) pergons who were said to have failed) Fareo, Files Case With U. S. Supreme Court to meet the legal requirements in signing referendum petitions. e last week rejected the peti- tions on the ground they were in-/ sufficient, because some names were! Washington, June 22.—()— The improperly affixed. | validity of the Jones five-and-ten law In a statement, issued Saturday at| was challenged in the supreme court Fargo, members of the petitioners’) Monday in a case filed by Eddie Nor- committee said: ris, convicted at Fargo, N. D., of un- “Since the honorable secretary of lawfully transporting liquor. state has seen fit to reject the four-| Norris protested against a sentence cent gas tax referendum petitions on of five years in the penitentiary and ‘a technicality, in which he claims the|a fine of $5,000 on conviction of signers did not in their own hand-/|transporting one gallon of illegal writing fill in their addresses and/ liquor, contending the evidence did dates of signing, the committee for|not show he was an habitual offender. | the petitioners proposes to take ad- vantage of section 25 of the consti-)and that he had made no attempt to tution which gives the committee for | commercialize. petitioners 20 days for correction or’ The eighth the winner, he said. The following are Homemakers’ clubs in the county together with Jeaders in the nutrition garden proj- ect: ‘Tryeg Cedar Hill, Mrs. Albin Spangberg and Mrs. Chas. Trygg, Baldwin; Three Leaf Clover, Mrs. | Menoken; Canficld, Mrs. Roy Little and Mrs. H. D. Watkins, Regan; circuit court of appeals | Crofte Star, Mrs. E. A. Falkenstein amendment, We will ask him to fur- sustained the sentence. It pointed) and Mrs. Knowly Dorman, Baldwin; nish us with the specific names of out that North Dakota is situated on| Rainbow, Mrs. J. F. Coder and Mrs. persons whom he claims did not sign the Canadian border and declared’ w. F. Nichol, Moffit; Sterling, Mrs. their postoffice addresses and the “It is a matter of common knowl-| gC. Fogarty and Mrs. M. H. Nelson, proper dates in their own handwrit- edge that much of the illicit supply, Sterling; Brittin, Mrs. Jason Hoover of intoxicating liquor which finds its| and Mrs. G. W. Morrison, Moflit; way into sections of the United) McKenzie, Mrs. Fred Schaumberg and ing. “We believe this action of the sec- | Mrs. Arthur Daw, McKenzie; Beyd retary of state, Robert Byrne, is un- States is smuggled from Canada.” warranted, unjust and unfair to the, Admitting liquor may be smuggled) Cross Country, Miss Margaret Mc- petitioners and the voters of the from Canada, Norris declared that| Murrich and Mrs. Robert Welch, state of North Dakota, and we believe fact was not sufficient grounds for, Menoken; Driscoll, Mrs. J. Lewis and further that if he examines closely, imposing severe penalties under the| Mrs, H. Knudson, Driscoll; Wing, he will find the same technicality in Jones act. He declared the govern-| Mrs, J. J. Scallon and Mrs. Albert every petition filed with him since he! ment had failed to show he had been/ Little, Wing; Hay Creek, Mrs. C. J. has been in office, including the peti- guilty of transporting .liquor on @/| Irish and Mrs. M. M. Glaser, Bis- tion for his own nomination to which large scale and protested there had| marck; Wildrose, Mrs. Alida Fetterly he did not object. been no evidence to support the) and Mrs. Laura Englerwan, Brad- “H. C. Schumacher, Fargo; severe sentence. dock; and Menoken, Mrs. E. A. Ebe- SH. R. Wood, Fargo; ling and Mrs, H. C. Craven, Menoken. ‘J. A. Felver, Fargo; len McManus, Grand Forks; | “Bert Morrison, Robinson.” MAN PLEADS GUILTY Amidon, N. D., June 22.—At the! term of district court for Slope cour: | ty just closed J. J Kercher, Marmarth pleaded guilty to the charge of hav vyer’s auditorium burned here McClusky, N. D., June 22.—Miss ing received stolen property and was early Sunday morning, and only the Alvina Rauser, daughter of Mr. and given a sentence of two years in the | camaged walls remained standing to- Mrs. R. Rauser, became the bride of penitentiary by Judge F. T. Lembke,! «lay. The loss is estimated by Willis Ralph Senechal, Anamoose, Thursday. who suspended the sentence, placing | Sawyer. the owner, at $23,000, which the defendant under probation for|he says is partly covered by insur- Gussner’s Cash & Carry Dept. six years. janee- LANSFORD BUILDING BURNS Lansford, N. D., June 22.—()—A rick and tile “{eCLUSKY GIRL WEDS Goo the woman whose garden is adjudged ; \He insisted the off€nse was casual| wm. Kershaw and Mrs. Bibbo Harms, ; building known as jAttacks ‘Better Than You’ At- titude Developed by ‘Crepe Hangers’ Pocono Pines, Pa., June 22.—(>)}—| President E. J. Gallmeyer of the/ Walther League of the Lutheran ;church, in his address today at the | 39th international convention of the league, appealed to young people to allow no one to hold them up to scorn for not being like the boys and girls jof 1890. Gallmeyer, postmaster at Fort ‘Wayne, Ind., defended the youth of today. He attacked the “better than you” attitude developed by certain groups of “crepe hangers,” who, he said, were continually on the alert to crush youth and develop in it an in- feriority complex. “There are only two types of peo- ple today,” he said, “the quick and the dead. To build for accomplish- ment, be on your toes, keep your mind scintillating, develop along up- to-date lines, not a la 1890.” Local Man Pleads Guilty to Larceny Peter Baker, 23, pleaded guilty in district court late Saturday to a charge of grand larceny in connection with the theft of $169.50 from the Western Baking company here re- cently. Judge Fred Jansonius deferred sen- tence pending investigation of the case. A younger brother, also implicated in the theft, and an employee of the baking company, will face charges in juvenile court this week, authorities said. Gussner’s Cash & Carry Dept.| ___NIGHT and DAY 152,503 PHYSICIANS TIN: THE U.S. A.] guard 122 million American lives! Not ‘@ minute to call his ms Subject always to your needs and mine. Serv- ‘ing ch ly. rich atid poor allke. Dispensing help and courage os well” _as medicine. A good friend, o wise ¢ ho, of all people, Is more respected, better-liked, ormore consulted than your docter?. a These are figures given by a bulle- tin issued recently by the Bureau of the census. The figures are given in detail for each county atti district within the state. This is the first fed- eral census report to show these figures by minor civil divisions. Of the total farm acreage 55 per cent, or 21,254,660 acres, was crop land on which crops were harvested in 1929; 6.3 per cent, or 2,419,095 acres, was crop land which lay idle or fallow; and 2.2 per cent, or 854,- 365 acres, was land on which the crops failed to mature or were not harvested for any cause, Pasture land with a total of 10,758,599 acres, representing 27.8 per cent of the total farm acreage of the state, included 3,132,676 acres of plowable land, '400,- 056 acres of land, and 7,175,867 acres of other land. In addition to the land cropped and pastured, the total land in farms included 167,686 acres of woodland not used for pas- ture, and 3,213,489 acres not in forest, pasture, or crops, including the land occupied by house yards, barnyards, feed lots, lanes, roads, etc.. The total value of farm land and buildings was $951,225,446, of which $231,148,629 represented the value of all farm buildings, including the farmers’ dwellings, which were valued at $109,805,873. The value of farm Getting. Up Nights If Getting Up Nights, Backac frequent oar. ae yy alee eres ousness, or Burning, due to function- ‘al Bladder Irritation, in acid condi- tions, makes you feel tired, depressed and discouraged, try the Cystex Test. ‘Works fe starts circulating thru the system In 15 minutes. Praised b; thousands for rapid and positive ac- tion. Don’t give up. Try: ced (pro- nounced Siss-tex) today, under the Tron-Clad Guarantee. Must quickly giey, these conditions, improve rest- ul sleep nat energy, or money, Only 600 : Hall's Drug Store. d- they've got to he good! Denhoff, N. D., June 22.—A burn- ing kerosene stove left unattended on the Ed Wahl farm southeast of Den- hoff started the house on fire, burn- ing it and all its contents to the ground. No one was injured as Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Schindler and family, who are renting the farm, were out- side at the time. Mrs. Schindler started the stove and had gone out to a shed to get something. It was a few minutes later as she was returning that she found the house on fire. Neighbors arrived in e short time but failed to save the house. Only a few pieces of clothing and bedding were salvaged from the flames. BAD STOMACH? Why put up with tt when just around the corner you can secure relief?’ It is unnecessary for you to suffer with a bad stomach. Hall’s Drug Store will tell you how you can rid yourself from sour, burning and ach due to hypers acidity, F. H. Pfunder, PHG., of Minne- apolis, has discovered a wonder- ful formula for the scientific treatment of stomach trouble. Let your Druggist tell you about a host of users right in your city, who are eating, sleeping and en- joying life asa normal person can do the same if a Pfunder tablet al. You won't be the first to try Pfunder tablets— over fifteen million sold last year, You can take them with safety. Hall's Drug Store, 122 Third 8t., exclusive nt in Bismarck, N. Dak. 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