Evening Star Newspaper, July 20, 1923, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Radical Wave in Minnesota Seen Engulfing All Northwest Desperate Mood of Farmers Over Low Prices May Sweep More of Johnson Type Into. Power. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. ST. PAUL, Minn, July 20.—Min- ne volitically speaking, has be a state and become a | Magnus Johnson's elec- Senate by an overwhelm- ing majority portentious beyond |Omega of Magnus Johnson's right to | be a senator of the republic een ota, sed symptom. tion to th Minnesota did not choose the to to fill u Ramsey, & Kellogg b | eky-blue Scandinavian e American politics. It means that the [was bent on filing a bitter, deter- wave of radicalism, which began in | mined, resonant = protest dinst rolling tempestuously across the | rasult. s northwest, engulfing all and sundry P its path encounters, This dispatch is written while Min- nesota is reeling beneath the new blow struck by the farmer-labor party—a blow which clothes the North r state with the distinction of being the first in the Union to be repre owed, ou Ladd and is There galore, enemie are sid Gov. Preus within his should e appointed to fill Knute Nelso of attempting to gratify his ambition cure it. He have let the le ature elect Nelson's : suceessor, He played radical politics s iy ote lats sanin during the past six months of his sier, from North Dakota, are radicals , ;upernatorial term. He did this; he too. But they van und were clected |fla Wit He should have done. this s Rominal republicans. Henr MIPC i thing: and not have done that th ad and Magnus Johneon are the {05000 I3 ininitum. O e 0] But y @ all superflei “:‘:‘Hllv[“'.u\‘\ shinsten from gthe SAme | cuperfluous explanations of Magnu D an o e i, 10, b G eclo ds ta Nl |Johnson's victory: iHe moens to Wakhc e L can- o Sl onamids. Hondeie Shipste GALee las Minnes condemnati Others M within' a_period of cight Minn et e it ftho” conditions” that Ithe farmer and the tive nesota iof th northwest, ibeyond the e ihuve revelled. The ltered against the {which they think tdewn in prec ¢ san that fired th - minute { Lexington in and, lik have chan mérely tered tled men. vy legal weapon They will use —as long as it ue explanations made political ranks. He| republican place instead own a Follow Suit. is to say, ~the Minnes Davis Knute rues the conserva- Cushn Tinne P day times old, on’of latter ord it thus point.” The became embit- tyranny them spirit of them, embit- They tinds Al phi- Cost of Hisx Election. When Henrik Shipstead Washington his elect im if it put meaning of umph. It is srsonal triun was tl man money. in r removed from a T cost_much nds of either as 1k from ark, have made t at least, what it wians whe cond gencration f Norway De Min and iculty cithe: lte or was esting S5 of rstead berryism he breaks, pecit “By the millions Senator,” iillions of have use they and Sh it to elect explained, “I mean dollars lost by the Minesota, who: rt- been foreclosed either couldn’t meet their in- terest at the bank or th at the county treasurer’ nows just how m: have béen lost: t farn when they voted t even one ¢ cost ns. m | farm gage b and for a while presidenti millions thus the mil- resota had me into the - blood that was spilled to mean the count- ensued in Mi hopeless ve been w the te the heartac that occurred when farmers were evieted from the land they could no longer hold bec: they could no longer make of wheat or corn or alfalfa Have Your Papering and Painting —done this summer, No fnconvenience or dirt; competent workmen: moderats charges. Awnings made to order and re- paired, CORNELL WALL PAPER (O. T4 Bk N W, Main < suicides sota followin | tions the farn ering since | were shed 11 the heartbreak the * and tied ¢ eldom Once he right sic himeel winni —and whe to 1 with * utter all t But ully put 1 11 SOLD ONLY 2 LEFT Jameson-Built Homes 231 to 255 Eleventh St. S.E. Only two squares from beautiful Lincoln Park. Six large rooms, tile bath, H-W.H, eclectric lights double hardwood floors, large closet in each room, built-in ice box, wash trays, servant’s toilet, double rear porch, wide cement {front porch and other extras. Open for Inspection Daily and Sunday For Sale By THOS. A. JAMESON OWNER AND BUILDER 906 New York Ave. NW. Main 5526 ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONE R - . 7 7777 700 7, V% Every Home Should Have a Checking Account It is just as essential and beneficial as in a commercial enterprise—for ‘certainly the management of the fiome is a business in every senge of the word. Your check book will give you an accu- rate record of every expenditure—and you will find that by budgeting your expenses and paying by check you'll save money every month. Second National Bank “The Bank of Utmost Service” - 509 Seventh -Street N.W. 1333 G Street N.W. ticism of Governor. { urged to | body | i Y THE _EV ‘REG’LAR FELLERS—Efficiency Expert! RIDAY Noull JUST TAKE) NoUR HAT OFF AW puST THE LINING poom! THE \ERY . (beA! NouR AUNT MAGGie. COMING TO-DAY AND THE DusT AN (HCH THICK (NSIDE AH Qe WWZ MoM! THE FELLERS ARE. WATIN FOR- ME! \TS AN AWFUL (MPORTAN GRME AN L HAFEA Do THE- Prcam! ouT MINIT! JusT AS Sool AS |1anasitdea into office and sudden market, for the bare cost of sowing ” fame. and reaping it ‘arm Conditions Bad. The farmer goes to market and asks: “WRat'll you give me today.” Those are the ‘homespun, honest-to-good- Tariff Not Popular. own | that hyperbole v should | | tinguished republican 3| cumbent, Frank | | | cefve anything that would more read- ! ness reasons, stripped of economic claptrap, why Magnus Johnson, and not “Jake™ Preus, will succeed Knute Nelson in the Senate. The world court issue had about as much to do with Magnus Johnson's The republican organization did its best to Keep the Harding administra- tion from becoming an issue. Gov. Preus acknowledged that he would support “Harding policies” at \\'asAh- ington, 1 C overemphasize victory as the prico of beans in |that fact He spemicans ainovowed Teheran, probably not as much, for blican tariff, which is almost Magnus ‘capitalized the price of agri- ersally unpopular in Minnesota cultural produce to his definite ad- | Hore, as elsewhere, the Fordney-Mc- vantage The world court was not | Cumber law is excoriated as a law of. mentioned in’ the Johnson campalgn, | by and for the “east’ and accordingly nor was the league of nations, nor| condemned foreign entanglements.” nor any of | “The farm-labor view is that such Ipp rest of what westerners “call | crumbs of comfort as agriculture re- high-browed eastern issues. ceiv in the new tariff were put Big Things Expected. there me: y to sop the farmer into What won for Johnson was blood- { 0verlooking the vastly superior priv- red radicalism. He and his platform ileges it confers upon commerce and | supporters pledged that the millen- | indust The Johnsonites were not nium would arrive by special delivery upulous about eliminating the 1t a block away from the board of [if the Meeker county dirt farmer Harding administration as an issue, s wheat 7 as at the same | Was sent to Washington to coal for they attacked it right and left, yment clamping wn permanently | With “Bob” La roundly blaming the disagreeable railroad «bor the despised |Kled before the nomic condition upon the regime R ghetty injundton” of 192 | communities of Minn. | in power at Washington The oppC charged that the | ©f @ disjointed world set right in no| Danger to President Harding's {lroad brotherhoods financed Mag- |time if only the La Follette bloc is | cause in 1924 undoubtedly is aggra- Johnson's campalgn. Whether | SUfficlently augmented. | Vatod by the radical victory in the that Is 8o or not, it is hard to co To end ut | Minnesota senatorial contest. The re- ”"'“ i ,{'g corporate alth”: | sult will not only whet farm-labor's ily have pried open their war chest | (RO SEIS of thy dressceult 1obby's zest for new laurels in the presi than the Wilkerson injunction. Tt i | appointment as Chief Justice ,('\“,"{“""““" campalgn, but. according tc not only rail labor that resents an|United States: the “affront” offered | [1® €Xperience of politiclans her injunction embargo on the “right t0 | 1 Mionee ey The cafront” offered it _is bound to prove con- k The copper miners on the oal ot Bie ! i The Dakotas, Wisconsin Lake Superior in_northerr Court_bi out- Minnesota, re the plac mane | 4lct. sprung, it is, from causes o tterly ariff”; Wall street; the| Which they ‘also feel thems s the on wage e Plerpont Morgan; the | victims. The only preventive will be the Washington admine|a reversal of economic conditions fomenting,” more | that will swing the Those were the “issues® | vote away from the radicalism and Magnus Johnson has | cause it to see its real salvation in Dr. Shipstead probably indulged in Doetic license politician; s to the general nditions to which he ascribed his 3,000 majority over natorial in- B. Kellogg, t doubt. Those con have prevaile 1 sgravated ded lhv‘ ) wheat tum- lowest figure on the Chi- Trade that gt touched -lection by lig bled to the cago Board « in_nine years. Nobody will ever know what t lump meant in_ votes for M Johnson. It was little short of heav- | n-sent, for his purposes. And, as if he very gods were fighting on his iide, the federal court at Chicago, they prattled about abouts, tagious. Montana not likely to ignore Minnesota's ver trust; new war | istration lof the like upon which rners universally f Reason on Surface. is So there’ Magnus Jo e H ota * been er the Min- Docket nerve harder ommon man hit. and hit har to did a littl 40 per cent while ago. | Iroad freight es for farm | is there be 3 impleme cost than it is there | are up duce down ricultural Overstocked Sale Bargain Hunters be only ited States whose him, whether he is a e 2 This is your chance, someshing out of the ordinary, a STANLEY SUIT that has been reduced in a big way— 25% Off A SALE to make it profitable for you, by giving you outstanding Clothes Value. - Maps— The careful Motorist sees to it that every pre- caution is taken before the start to insure his eing o success. By ing a Blue Book in al but” on the . to his destina- There, in the Bluc . you find ' de- information that is You won't have upon the guess who may be informed than elf concerning the There has never been a better chance to buy high-class clothing at prices far below current market quotations. Stanley Shop 1209 Pa. Ave." course. We also State Road Maps which are most convenient. = - The National = = (Mr. Foster's Shop) = one door from 14th Street, °™ i i " o R RS Striking Examples of ings you're realizing here. Summer suits that are soundly constructed—serviceable, stylish— full of the sort of stuff you'd naturally look for Silk Mohair Suit Comfort demands thin clothes, and these handsome tainly cool. Note the splen- < did quality of mohair and the tailoring, which make these suits stand up under hot- weather wear. Dark blue, black and gray well tailored, with silk yoke and piped scams; trousers half lined; sizes to fit young and older men of every / l.'L complete line of Remembrance Shop | Also 1220 Pa. Ave. i There’s no argument—no question of the sav- if you paid more. silk mohair suits are cer- —both plain and striped; all build. Blue Serge Suits All Wonder Suits at $21 are extraordinary values, but_the exceptional value in these blue serge suits at $21, stands out conspicuously. Guaranteed all-wool and fast color; made of a very fine qual- ity of pre-shrunk serge, giving them shape-retaining quality, and carefully tailored in every detail. All sizes and styles. All-Wool White Flannel Trousers, Wonder Clothes Shop 2 Stores in Washington 14th & N. Y. Ave. bl 621 Pa. Ave. and points farther west are | farmer-labor | - JULY 20, 1923 Copyright, 1922, by Bell Syndicate, Inc. Trade Mark Reg. U, 8. Pat. Offic. SHoRT! SHES ol A UTTLE TALLER. THAS Nou Awet tHEN | WOoNT HAETA DUST THE. —Top of THE Piao ORTHE BOOKCASES one or other of the old-time political parties. who today would foreshadow such a It would be a rash prophet | - development. | Bedford Forrest Klan, No. 1, of Atlanta, known world,” adopted a resolution last night contribute to or in any manner afflliate | with the first order of the such time as th lias been purged and different officials placed in control.” miik vegetable food. LEAVES NATIONAL KLAN. Atlanta Body Refuses to Recognize L . You’ll Enjoy the | Washington Hour —that hour you spend each day reading The Star—and keeping in touch with what is going on in Washington while you are off vacation- ing. No matter where you are—or how often your ad- dress needs changing—The Star—Daily and Sunda will be sent at your direc- tion. Control. Ga., July ATLANTA, 20.—Nathan || | | | | | | | as *the mother klan of the | » at no time in the future recognize, national organization of the Ku Klux Klan, until national organization [ —— Linseed is the nearest approach to in composition of any natural Rates by Mail—Postage Paid Maryland and Virginia All Other States Daily and Daily and Sunday Daily Sunday Sunday Daily Sunday One month, 70c 50c 20c One month, 8¢ 60c 25c One week, 20c 15c 5¢ One week, 25¢ 20c 10¢c Graduate Eyes Examined #cCormick Medical College Glasses Fitted Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist 409410 MoLachlen Bldg. 10th and G Sts. N.W. Phone Main 721, 4 Friday and Saturday Specials ALL DAY EVERY DAY C C BLUE RIDGE HAMS b.,25¢ Small 8-Lb. Hams MILBROOK EGGS doz., 34c LEGS OF LAMB 1. 35¢ enitine Springers PINK SALMON, 2 cans, 25¢ Only 4 Cans to a Customer EVAPORATED MILK, can, 11c Borden’s, Carnation or Van Camp’s OLD DUTCH CLEANSER 8¢ OLD DUTCH COFFEE ., 23c Roasted Fresh Every Day—Always Good 20c REAMOFWHEAT ke, FLOUR AT A SAVING GoLo Why Not Now 2

Other pages from this issue: