The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 25, 1920, Page 2

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Ma FE N den pav ave Bro “Th peti sion pen ing the vive roa: way Bis) new ern T roa stru TR elin stru el mis rece aF Wat be cau feet v pav thei Tra stre traf the unp rall fie. bloc Bro nres and err bun tim; Fra tatir “Th trac of} Pp — th PAGE TWO REFORMS URGED BY LAWYERS IN | ANNUAL SESSION! American Bar Association Opens Meeting in St. Louis —Wants New Court Rules FAMOUS MEN WILL SPEAK St. Louis, Aug. 25,—Comprehensive | before the ; tion for consid- eration as the organization convened legislative reforms were American Bar assoc in annual session here today, The proposed changes, cov wide range, were pres formity for state statutes and moder ization of certain Federal court -pro- cedure. Discussion of methods important place in the convention, A report prepared by the committee on professional ethics and grievances, stated a canvass of members of the United States indicated that prevailing senti- ment favored the incorporation of the bars of various communities, with the Canon of Ethics as a part of the con- stitution of the corporations, which would ‘have full power to supervise the conduct of: all practicing attor. judiciary, throughout, the neys. . |) * Ent’ Fong Litigation, In advocating legislation that would empower the supreme court to~pre- ure in federal courts, a report from judicial procedure stated this would have the effect of doing away with long-drawn- out litigation, and would tend to im- prove state court proceedure, through the adoption of the federal system as This latter would also mark toward unifying the report explained. A further measure of suggested r form urges amplification ef the law scribe rules for common-law pro: the committee on uniform a model. an important step state statutes, governing ‘removal of causes to de! nitely settle the question of district court jurisdiction. It is urged also by the committee on jurisprudence and law reform that legislation be enacted to provide more adequate protection for the treaty rights of foreigners in the United States. The Association will be called upon the peace treaty, including the ¢ovenant of the without amend- ments, in a majority report presented A minority report from the committee dissents. Another report from a. special com- mittee, declares that the interval be- tween the election and, inauguration a. “serious evil, fraught with much danger, because, if an administration i§ discredited by a popular yote of want of confidence, the prestige of the government at home and abroad is weakened and there is danger of humiliation and dis- This report urges that the dates be brought clos- makes no recom- It al- so advises abandonment of the short to endorse ratification of League of Nations, by a special committee. of a president is aster to the republic.” er together, but mendations as to other dates. session of the retiring congress. Britisher. Speaks. While the general convention isin session, various sections of the as- sociation will meet to consider spe- cific branches of, legal practice, for Included in these will be the section on compara- tive law, patent law and legal educa- report to the main body: tion. i The general council of the associa- tion will be elected tonight. Many prominent speakers are ex- pected to appear before the conven- For POISON IVY use PICRY For sale at’ all Drug Stores. Money refunded if not satisfied WILSON TAKES A.\JUNIOR “LEAGUE OF NATIONS” FOR AN AUTO SPIN ing a nted in re- ports submitted by various commit- tees. They tended in part toward uni- for main- taining the standard of the bar on a high level also promised to hold aa of the United States? up three little passeng2rs. all of Washington. Wilson in the official car. ~~ aN | tion. Included among them are Sir} Auckland Geddes, British ambassador | to the United States; former United | States Senator Albert J. Beveridge of Indiana and Judge Ben B. Lindsey, of Denver. The convention will end Friday night, with the annual banquet. ‘Hampton Ly Cargon, of Philadelphia, is president of the Bar Association. OPEN TO MUSIC LOVERS OF STATE The National Federation of Musical slubs announces. its fourth bienn cians. The purpose of these con recogn the superior ability Ami by bringing thei artist pupils into ‘prominence; to en- courage and inspire music students to greater effort in artistic _achie ment; to giye opportunity and public ity to the mos Tr them upon These conte: are arranged in sequence. State contests, to be held, betweer March:1 and April 15, 1921, district s, between- April 22 and May 15, 1921, and the national. contest, June 8°to 1, 1921, Contestants must be trained iz Amer Contestants’ in voice de partment must be between the ages of 20 and 80 years; iano and violin departments, Rules gove awarded, and list of compositions contestants may be obtained by dressing Mrs. A. Jardine, Pre: dent of the North Dakota Mederation of Musical clubs, 1128 First Avenue s., Fargo, N. D. prizes for SANITARY PLUMBING | Hot Water and Steam Heating, Round. Oak Pipeless Furnaces, All: Material and Workmanship Guaranteed FRANK G. GRAMBS Exer Bismarck, N. D, contest for young professional musi- | ‘ — WASHINGTON—How’d ya like to ride with’ the president Three lads rode with the president and Mrs. Wilson through Rocky Cretk Park here. The president saw the boys playing in the park, ordered the driyer to stop and picked The boys are (left to right): “Tilly” Falcone, 7-year-old son of an Italian barber; Martus Mench, 14- year-old son of an Austrian grocer, and “Freckle Face Mickey” Michael Joseph Deegan, 10-yzar-old son of an Trish taxi driver, Above are shown the president and Mrs. cgay SESe exe eatlogetyall he run’ cote ONCE WEALTHY EUROPEANS DESIRE TO TRAVEL, BU | Queen Marie of Rumania Envies fnability of once wealihy people tc travel ,ports and onto the United States owing to passport and money difficul- BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE , “WEDNESDAY, AUG. 25,' 1920 No other institutions better equipped for their purpose—high-, ‘grade instructors. Graduates serve satisfactorily from the start the most exacting employers of bookkeeping and _ stenographic help. For particulars write G. M. LANGUM, Pres., Bismarck, ‘N. D. Ne eel ey ie es Visitors Always Welcome Under the management of some , of the oldest and most aggressive business educators in the country |, —humbers among their graduates thousands of the most successful business men and women in the United States and Canada. Ly —_________" | In Session Throughout the Year f Students’ Practice Bank at Bismarck TURPENTINE TO BE DISTILLED IN NEW PLANT : '§ Bemidji: Will Become Shipping Point for New Industry Within Next Few Days ', Parjs, as Lutetia, was, a, prominent town for Severa) hundred years be- fore it took the name of Paris in the fourth. century. tention of artists of that day, was an! Akvarell, called “Sorg,” meaning sor- ANDREAS ZORN, ARTIST, IS DEAD: ai ee: trip to the lands of the * Stockhoim, Aug. 25.—Andreas Yorn, During ~his. trip he visited Paris the Swedish painter, is dead here. He where his name was favorably men- visited the United States in 1911. tioned at the Salon in 1882. Later he -Andreas Leonard Zorn was not only! Visited London and returned to Swed- Sweden’s foremost painter of today,| €% in”}886. From this’ time on his but his name ranks and will rank Work was divided ‘between artistical triymphs in Sweden and abroad. 5 , oe forever amidst that ~ exclusive: few, Bemidji, Minn., Aug. 25—Distilla-) iat is spoken about as “The Mas- ion of turpentine has begun at thel ters.” He was born in Utmelimnd, Da- 1eW plant just being completed on the } larna, Sweden, February 18, 1860. Douglas mill site near Lake Irvine by Friends produced means for him to} roll in a cir 3 3 - ; visit an artisan’s school in St he Steller company and within the} jo1m, where his artistic. gifts were re- ext few days this city will become,| vealed. | Japan,,has built a large factory for he shipping point of a new product His first painting to gain the at-'the manufacture of sewing needles. or rather for several products includ- ing creosote, pine oil, rosin oil, boiled tar‘and charcoal. Work of ¢onstruction on this plant was begun only a tew months ago and ‘s now nearly conipleted. It is also vossible that retorts will be con- structed. in towns near Bemidji and distilled products shipped here for re- fining. The plant, when completely SCHOOL NOTICE We are now making up our lists of families who-wish to, have girls or boys of the high school. in their homes for jhe year to work for room and board. or for part work The eggs of a sea fowl are almost |] and part cash payment or for all conical in form, so that they will only |] cash payment. We are also mak- Je. ing up lists of places where teach- ers“inay room and desire to learn of homes. near the various -build- ings where teachers may secure rooms. Please phone the superin- tendent as soon as possible.. Each year teachers meet many difficul- ties in securing desirable rooms near school buildings and conveni« ent to a place to board. We are especially desirous of learning of places where teachers may secure meals. Phone the Superintendent. J. M. Martin, ’ City Superintendent. Phone 285 or 835. ee A Chinese business man in Osaka, When Is a Wite | ~ Not a Wife? ay! t Do you fealize that in certain States the marriages of divorced persons are not recognized? You can tinuously, night and day, seven days a week, provided of course that a suf- :ficient quantity of Norway pine stump tan be kept on hand. A ready market has been assured the Stellar company. for all of its products and two concerns alone will take the greater part of the entire yutput.. There will be consumed from three to four carloads of stump this week, and from this, in addition to the ‘J products,, there will be one carload of charcoal produced each week. Ap- proximately 150 cars of stump will be required by November 1 to insure steady running during the winter months and until the frost is out of the ‘ground next spring. Consumers Dray and Transfer Co. ~~ Phone 270 ‘Ice and Teaming TY CAN’T GET AWAY i imagine what dreadful complications that can lead to. E A perfectly respectablo coupio in Arizona may be liable to arrest in case they move to New Jersey. And it all comes from the muddled condition of our differ. ing divorce law’, Read Ida Clyd> Clarke’s entertain- ing article on this subject on page 29 of. The process being used at this plant . 1 Pictorial Review ~ for September Correspondent Because of His Travels * : Budapest, Aug. 25.—The desire but westward to Kuropean sea- for the manufacture of turpentine and its by-products is known as the re- structive process and the grade of ‘urpentine ready to be prodtced here ‘s far above the average grades. PHONE 909 40614, Broadway The Bismarck Sign Co. ties, is one-of-the results of the war to be noted in Central Europe, the Balkans and far into Asia Minor. The intenseness of this desire was{ The wives ‘t's Siamese noblemen registered recently by ‘Admiral Hor- cut their hair so that it stands thy, Regent of Hungary, who ‘said. | Straight up on their heads. . “Why, L wake up nights thinking o1 the sea, and'in my dreams I hear the sound of the ocean, Consider I have sailed the wortd around and now ! can’t even get a glimpse of ‘blue water. I'm seastck in a new sense.” “How I envy you in your travels.” said Queen Marie of Rumania to. the travel-weary correspondent. “Think of the glorious freedom of going some- where, far away.” “if it were not for my duty to my country,” said Mustapha Kemal Pa- sha, the national leader, one hot breathless night in Sivas, Turkey, “1 should be tempted to board ghip anc steam away, anywhere, so long as it went westward. No one but our: selves can realize how tired and numt the mind becomes, out here, througt the Joss of contact with the copin- tries ‘and people we knew in happier days.” NS Women, wives of teachers and pro- fessors, of formerly well-to-do farm- ‘8, Who have been so sorely hit by the ‘war, suffer especially from ‘the lack of the cheap holidays, they were | once accustomed to take in Switzer- land, the Italian Reviera, Paris oi London, where they saw the old sights anew, the styles in clothes, brushed |. up their acquaintance with languages and came home content to await next year’s trip. “IT really believe many of us shall fall sick if we are not able to satisfy this travel forever,” said Mrs. R Vambery, wife of the Hungarian crim- inologist, who wag a great traveler as was his father before him. “Have pity on we poor traveler. To think that now 1 can’t buy a new dress, 1 who once had the money to roam where I would.” The ministers of foreign affairs in these countries are besieged by ap- plications of their fellow citizens who want to go away as diplomatic repre- sentatives or consuls and, many near- important men at home are willing to accept positions as clerks abroad merely for the chance of traveling This fever is not limited to the formerly well-tofdo. Recently a no- tice was publisHed in a Budapest pa- per that any able-bodied man or wo- man wishing co work in the United States would be furnished with ‘a ticket and $50 expense money by the Americans. That same day the Amer- ican High Commissioner, U. Grant- Smith, had to request the military au- thorifies to keep away the mob from his office in the Andrassy street. The railways in’ Hungary, in Ru- mania,and in every country, though worn out by the. war, are always crowded with people clinging to the roofs of the coaches, thick as flies, summer and winter. About the sta-}- tions are big crowds of men, women and children, swarming up and down. ng whole days and nights for e “Where are all these people going to?” the correspondent asked_the con- ductor at Bucharest. He stared a moment in astonish- ment. “Why, anywhere, nowhere,” he answered. “They are just taking a ride. They're travel mad.” The barn owl, when she has young, brings a mouse to her nest about ev- ery 12 minutes. Three hundred and _ forty-three rn ee ne ne death sentences were carried out Jn the ‘British army during the war, A ‘ - \ ese i ean ae, aoe al EI pores oe eee

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