Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
7 THURSDAY, SEPT. 16, 1920 A ’ 7. ARRI cals essential to laboratory work were made exclusively in Germany, but .{now 800 of the rare chemicals are American made, Dr. Clarke said. ; A probable solution of the fuel PHOTOGRAPHED 22 ,was advanced before the < i pencniess when two coal substitutes bw ere suggested. Professor P.. Schoch of the Valversity, of Texas suid -lig- ‘. nite, a half- formed coal found in Aviators Canada, North Dakota and Texas, has ~) great possibilities as a cheap fuei. Coal can he conserved and a cheap and valuable gas made through the use of a by-product coke oven, ac- * cording to a report made by F. W x J Serr, Jr, and E. H. Bird of Pitts- RESULTS ACCOMPLISHED burgh. Coke oven gas is coming in- to favor in regions where the na- 5, i tural gas supply is falling, they said New York, Sept. 16—Military and “potash which can be used as a fer- “elvan aeronautical experts declare thizer can now bec obtained AS " by that the complefion recently of the} product éa the manufacture of cement Gk ' , New York-to-Nome Make Observations During Their Long Journey BISMARCK NATLY TRIBUNE ; AL ROUTE [eee c| “BLEEDING STATUES” STIR ERIN wah. i @ Before the war hundreds of chemi- z rors DUBLIN—Tremendous excitement has been caused in Ire- _ eee Tat HE NEW ‘Last Time + His House As the girlish, fun-lovin who marry them! Tomorrow, “H IMPERIALISM REAL PERIL OF “Finest Theatre in the Northwest; Now Installing $25,000 Robert Morton Pipe Organ. ‘Tonight, ELSIE FERGUSON - ay in A new triumph of emotional acting! own home—nagged by “his people” until she» turns like a tigress and rends them, Elsie Ferguson has created a character glowing with warm blood. A story as powerful, human, touching, as it is com- mon in real life.. A picture for all women, and all men UCKLEBERRY FINN” trip of four American nayy aviators inoi 2 Professor M. from New York to Nome, Alaska, was PA area a gt coC an ou as epochal in its military and com- ciety. mercial importance as Bleriot’s first flight across the English channel, since it opens Alaska to aeronautics. Reports state that the Alaskans are ‘ determined to bring about regular communication through the .air and + now look to the government to foster BU ] the new project. | Chart Course | \ As the result of the flight, it 1s aid, an aerial route has been photo- graphed and ‘charted’ diagonally s bate across the United States, Canada and <a Alaska, with tentative supply and alt) Railroads Unable to Handle All The air board states that the fol- : lowing has been accomplished by the the Traffic Offered, So Ship- flight: \ * An effective aerial route to the ers Use Waterways northwest corner of. the American ae continent and Asia has been establish-| Cleveland, Sepp. 16—Passenger and ed. TInaccessible areas in Alaski{ package freight’ lines on the Great which had never been mapped havel’Lakes this season will have the big- been charted and photographed. {gest business in their history, ac- Usefulness of the airplane as 1‘ cording to estimates of local vessel means of transpoy, both for mail, | men. passengers and freight has been de-| ‘The totzl net tonnage in bitumin- monstrated. Necessity of landing} ous and anthracite coal, iron ore, fields, and ‘service supply stations} store and grain carried by lake throughout the United States and its; freighters, however, they said, will territories has been shown. again fall about 23,000,000 tons be- Durability of modern airplanes and] hind the banner year of 1918. ‘The motors has been proyed and it has} record was then placed at ‘114,614,018 been learned that flying is safe. Even! net tons. This year’s total in shese over territory where transport by} lines is expected to just about equal railroad, automobile, and wagon is! Jagt year’s 91,761,738 net tons. considered extremely dangerous. ! Officials of pussenger boat Mines on My é Lake Erie say the great increase in The sivent ore Gineere Clair | their business is due to the lroads Biract i Was in command of the| mability to handle the volume of a winidend business offered them and because of expedition, states that the flyers con-|) 51 of passenger and freight cars, sidered the route across the eastern} ries and embargoes. the é states, as having few landing fields| oie causes is a eitteGisa tite fee and_not ideal in any instance. The A ‘ y A crease in freight tonnage under what middle west and Canada, he said, a8} 49 heen planned for. far as Edmonton, was ideal. 0 : eset ‘ai theca ry = ther lines report similar increases ‘The expedition sighted innumera In passenger ‘and package freight, Be Bere rd Santen, Street, also in tourist and tourist automobile srevalent. Yukon and Adaska arg| ‘Tavel.. Not only are the lake: lines ve a {| carrying local freight between ports, tand by the report that sacred statues and pictures belonging to} Joseph Dean,“a news agent at Templemore in Tipperary, were’ bleeding and were also causing remarkable cures. Priyate F. K.|! Monahan, discharged, badly wounded and walking on crutches, : touched himself with the statue and is now said to be able to SOVIET REGIME Correspondent Declares That walk without crutches. Enormous crowds are flocking to Tem- plemore. The picture'shows H. Gleeson of Lisduff, who was to- tally blind, being touched on his eyes by the statue. Two hours later, it is claimed, his sight was partially restored. covered and cremated. The tather of | between the Morgan offices and the the girl then arranged for perform-| United States treasury building.” ance of the marria ceremony over 3 y he ashes of the lovers, observing the puss Pick Up Remnants Buddhist belief that the wedding| Working pn the conspiracy theory wouid bind the couple happily in the | he police picked up all remnants of sphere of their future existence. the wrecked automobile and wagon, even going so far as to remove the shoes from a dead horse in order to ablish thé identity of the vehicle nd their owners. Detectives also picked up near the scene pieces of cast iron window weights smelling of powder. There HAS DEARTH were dozens of these and the theory . | was advanced that they may have formed a part of an infernal machine. All pieces of clothing, including shreds of cloths and battered hats, were Collected ,by the police. Madison, Wis., Sept. 16. — High schools and all the better paying po- sitions in Wisconsin have been taken care of but there probably will bé a shortage of about 600 teachers in the according to C. P. Cary, state super- intendent. To mect the situation, Mr. Cary says it probably will be necessary to issue about that number of special licenses for teachers who have not received the, © period of training. it also may be necessary in some cases to transport children to schools outside of their districts. AUSTRIAN - EM- BASSY AT LONDON TCO EXPENSIVE mdon, Sept. 1 stein, a form Eight Hundred Rare Chemicals American-made Since War, Speaker. Says a a ee ce ors Chicago, Sept. monopoly of rare chemicals used in rescarch and’ experiments has been! broken, according to statements to- day by Dr. H. T. Clarke, of Roches-!and located on the ter, N. Y., before the Organic divi-! south of here. sion of the American Chemical so-; The bodies of the couple were re- rough and partly forested, and afford offictais.say, but they also’ report river barg. but the route from Wran-| ; i 3 = jacent to lake ports, the freight being: . Bell to Nome is ideal for water/syrvarded by trucks and electric é It is estimated that approximately G E RM A N H OL D 500 Great Lake vessels engaged in 0) N Cc H E MI Cc A L S will handle 50,000,000 tons of iron ore | and 25,000,000 net tons of bitumionus H ‘ | Tokio, Sept: 16—An unusual mar- 16.—The German} riage today followed the suicide of « cently from the cliffs of Atami, a re- sort frequented by Japanese notables, ro natural landing places except on big increase in freight for points ad- » planes.” lines to points of destination. transportation of coal and iron ore DECLARED ENDED | coat in 152 : j ASHES OF COUPLE couple, who jumped into the sea re- Iau peninsula, 6.--Baron Franken- tache of the pe ntative of the n government af- Here as the republican Av er the war, Pa a FER Stuffy with Cold RELIEF WITHOUT QUININE pecmncmad’ Ver is tooling tor : 1 Legition is also anxious Don't stay stuffed up! Quit blowing ages of the head; stop nose running, x premi than and snuffliug! A dose, of “Pape’s Cold | Telieves the headache, dullness, fev | ‘i a stift the palatial mansion in Carlton House ” } eri ess, sneezing, soreness and stilt-} ‘ro, ies. Compound” taken every two Aours erishness, sneezing, sor si Ter Dies. until three doses are) taken usually ness. | One of the things that Kk Baron Pape’s Cold Compound” is the} frankenstein most on h breaks up a severe cold and ends all grippe misery. “kest, surest relief known and costs] so he said, that 1 penny | y-a.few cents at drug stores. It} have quite a lon& bus ride whic The very first dose opens your clogged-up nostrils and the air pass- — > beautiful mansion in sive _! ve Square wh s Lusi nbass.ido entertained sumptuously before the war. ‘The requirements of the Austrian diplomatic representation are on a much more modest svale now, and as he former ig extremely n, the new minis- Her quarters NN OT 3 without assistance, tastes nice.) Vienna would cost 30 times as much, no quinine. {at the normal rate of exchange. ‘MANY ARE KILLED; Ahhh bebbi be hhh “ AUDITORIUM : One Night, September 22nd The Over-whelming Musi- cal Comedy Success Prices, $1.10, $1.65, $2.20, (Continued from zaze one) explosion, was placed under heavy police guard to protect the millions of gold, silver and paper money lodged in the great granite structure. The first efforts of the police were di- rected toward aiding the injured and iremoving the dead, At 12:40 fourteen bodies were seen lying on the side- walk and ten others were reported taken ‘away by volunteer workers. An emergency call was sent to Governor's Island from which a heavy detach- ment ‘of soldiers was sent to New York to guard the sub-treasury and aid the police. FI Called Federal. invesigators sai headed by William J. Flynn, chief of the department of justice bureau of | investigation, summoned from Wash- i 1 Oliver Morosco ' Presents Your Favorite Comedienne, CHARLOTTE GREENWOOD in Her New Musical - Comedy, Linger Longer ington centred their attention on these wrecks. Some advanced the theory that the automobile had collided with a pow- der wagon and the Dupont company down reports that a bomb had been | exploded in front of the Morgan build- ing. Assistant District Attorney Tal- ly, after visiting the scene, announced his belief that the explosion could not have been due to an accident. He announced that his staff would question all witnesses of the explo- sion, He said that one thing that led him’ to the conspiracy theory was the time of the explosion. This was fixed by a clock in thé sub-treasury build- which stopped at 12:01. he factors that lead me to this belief,” said Mr. Tally, “are that the time of the explosion was at 12:01 p. m. when probably the greatest dam- age could have been done and the lo- Letty Mail Your Order for Seats Now Don’t blame us if you’re unable to ‘secure the seats you want at the last minute. Seat Sale Monday, at Harris & Co. “could dfelebdeteleiebetetetgploetetobeetettelelete ebb t EEE cation of the explosion was midway ing, rural districts of Wisconsin this fall, ; Londor arrived } OFFICES WRECKED | ‘Vas asned to find out whether any of its vehicles had been in the vicinity | at the time. | Other investigators sought to run as BOOKLET 10 BOOST NATION Paris, Sept. 16.—A little- booklet entitled “Facts and Figures Regard- ing France,” in which the story of the devastated departments and the j Work of reconstruction is visualized te a series of tables, is being given plo Americans visiting France. It is jissued in English by thq Commission for the Devastated Regions. whose president is Andre Tardieu, Contrasted with the burdens of 1 national debt seven times that of 1914 ‘and taxes more than four times as Bre are the hopeiul possibilities of rapidly improving export de, the nequisition of the potash, iron and | steel industries of Alsace-Lorraine ‘and the gradual development of France’s waterpower possibilities. The new source of clectric power is estimated at 9,000,000 horsepower of which 750,000 horsepower have been utilized and an additional 859, 000 horsepower will be producing during the coming y Now that France is so.short of coal the power | question is regarded as among the most important, for ho hydraulic horsepower is considered equivalent to a ton of coal saved. iG. 0. P. FACTIONS RUNNING CLOSE IN ILL. PRIMARY (Continued from Page One) is leading Frank Carringer for the Vemocratic nomination for lieute- nant-Governor by 3,000, witir: plural- ity both in Denver and over the state. Pilot John 1L. Eaton, miss st Tuesday when he left Reno, Nev., eastbound in a mail plane is alive and safe at Shaf- ter, Nev., according to advices today. The brief report of the airmen’s safety id he and his plane were found 50 miles south of Elko, Nevada. OUT HUNTING “Among the business men who an- swered the call of the wild this morn- ing and left town early to hunt were: Phil Meyer, A. B. Larson, A. L. Ro- sen, Sam Clark, and Frank Hedden. San Franc HOW ONE WOMAN WAS HELPED Althea Walker, New River, Pa., writes: “I have been troubled with weak kidneys for two years. I took Folew Kidnev Pills and they helped. ! me fine, I rest fine all night and now ;have no trouvle with my kidneys.” ‘When the kidneys do not properly do 'their work, acids and poisons left in the system cat weak and lame back, ‘dizziness, puifiness under eyes, swol- | ten ankles and joints, ‘aches, pains, soreness and rheumatic pains. Foley Kidney Pills have given relief to thou- sands of men and women. (Adv.) FOR SALE—Brown Reed baby car- riage, new tires, $20. Phone 472K. 9-16-3t. = a Boys are replacing female do- mestic servants at one British Sout Coast resort. Now is the time to fill your basement with 'Menarch Coal.—C. A. 'Fineh Lumber Co. Russian Government Is Al- most Out of Munitions AFRATD OF PEACE i London, Sep Just as imper- ialism killed czarism so will imper- ialism be the death of Russian soviet- ism, is the prediction made to The Associated Press correspondent by M. Piip, the Esthonian foreign minister in London, in analyzing the conse- quences of the bolshevik offensive in Poland. While Foreign Minister, last year, M. Piip pitted his wits against the bolsheviki at Dorpat and he is re- garded as one of the best authorities in, Europe on Russian political and economic conditions. : in common with representatives here of other Russian border states. M. Piip is watching with profound concern the developments in Poland. Out of Ammunition, “The bolsheviki are fighting Poland with the Allies ammunition which -they captured from Denikine and Kol- ” he said, “This is now almost ed and Russia cannot renew tack by the bolsheviki on Esthonia, M. Piip said: “We are ready for them. The Es- thonian frontier ig now closed by our troops except the gates through which we are trading with Russia, The so- viet government must know if it suc- ceeds in obtaining a foothold in Ks- thonia the Allies would instantly cut off Russia from the vitally needed supplies it is now receiving through us. We might perish but Soviet Rus- sia would go down with us.” M. Piip. asserted that Russia's eco- nolis condition wus rapidly getting. worse because this seuson's crop a failure. He said it wis vot auwikey thet the cities will souu ve wuvl.y depopnlated} \ Afraid to Releass A “The Soviet governme: reduce its enormous army,” he co.. cluded. “Unemployment i3 now a critical problem throughout — the whole of Russia and if the men who, as soldiers caced for, were thrown on their own resources a revolution would result. The chief terror which the Soviet ru- lers have to face is peace und de- nobilidation.” CANDIDATES FOR | HOUSE ARE NAMED - 'BY INDEPENDENTS | Steele, N. D., ept. 16.—-Petitions are being circulated to have the names of George breath of Tuttle and D. McKee of Tuppeim placed on the fall election ballot in the indepen- dent column for members of the house from this district. J. ©. Sherman, president fof the Kidder County Farmers Press, one of the league candidates won out at the primaries by a very smaH majo y Rollin Weld, a socialist living in the north part of the county, is the other league candidate. Both of these gentlemen have been nrembers of the house for the past four years and have always voted according to in- in ctions and a great many voters feel that a change is needed and some- ne sent to Bismarck that will vote and act for themselves. Lift Right Off Without Pain | "t hurt a bit! ne” on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then Drop a little shortly lift it right off with fingers. Truly! ' Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to, remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irrita- tion, ‘Discussing the possibility of an at- | are comparatively well | PAGE THREE” Features Tonight, WM. FARNUM Rough ai Ready Josephine Hill i i “THE JACK OF HEARTS” | Tomorrow, “The Square Shooter” in Order” g wife—homeless in her istarted behind the California’ Fruit store which. is next door. The wind WILLIAM WOLL, FLASHER MAN, carried the flames and it was neces- sary to.call out the fire department. DIES IN CITY The loss whlotvanibunted to shout tea fais ‘ 'hundred dollars was all covered by, Came to North Dakota From, insurance. ' Mlinois in 1906; Bu | Sell your cream and poultry Fairview Cemetery to our agent, or ship: direct to Northern. Produce Co., -. Bis- marck. Write us for: prices on 1 in William Woll, a well known farmer Flasher, died yesterday at St. Alex- WHEN YOU ASK FOR s BUTTER 2 HORTAERR Tailoring and Hat Works Suits dry cleaned and pressed, repairing neatly done. Hats cleaned and Quigley officiated and interment was!| blocked. , made in Fairview cemtery. i Phone 58; we will call a 1] and deliver. FIRE TODAY ; ‘i H An cmpty building at 119 Fifth 215 Broadway, one-half street was burned eurly this after- block west: of postoffice “|noon_py a fire attributed to a bon-fire & Sai Sey ius, hospital following an illness of cream and ‘poultry.—Northern several weeks. Mr. Woll, who was 73| Produce Co. , ‘ ‘ years old, was born in Highland, II]. ean capstone steader in 1906 and has lived sin Now Is the time to fill tnat time at Flasher, Funeral services were held this canter Local business men served | Monarch Coal. —C. A. ;a8 pall bearers. Interment was made \ ey: in Fairview cemete! The deceased Finch Lumber: Co. dren: Mrs. Lewis Dourthy of Sul van, Ill, W. J. Woll of Ryder, H. L. Woll, Medina, 1. J. Woll, Bismarck, Flasher. All the children were’ able ,to be here for the funeral except Mrs. ! Dourthy. The large circle of friends of Mrs. jAnna Avery were sorry to learn of ‘ occurred after o lingering illness yes- terday at St. Alexius hospital. Mrs. | Avery was a widow and leaves no rel- land twenty-five years ago, and since then has always lived in Bismarck. The funeral was held in Webb Bro- | He came,to North Dakota as a hom your basement with |morning at St. Mary’s Roman Catholi is survived by his wife and eight c Mary Lena George and Joseph of MRS. AVERY’S ;the death of Mrs. Anna Avery which atives. She came over here from Eng- ; ther’s Funeral parlors. Rev. G. H. Announcing the Opening of Our Lunch Room ; We have now opened our Short-order Lunch Room.in connection with our Ice EF 6Cream Parlor and we will serve hot and E cold lunches. Table service and everything served \£ will be prepared by a practical chef. Our prices will be reasonable and meet with satisfaction of the public. ‘MENU i SANDWICHES Almond Olive .. oe. .:,20 ’ Ripe California Olive. . .20 .20 Assorted Nuts .¢......25 SOUP Cream Tomato ........20 Vegetable ............15 Oxo Tall 5, 33-cisc-e stern e iee Chile con Carne........20 | Denver .... Ham and Egg.. | Ham ...... Cold Pork . Cold Beef ............15 American Cheese ......15 |< - Brick Cheese .. Sardine ..........+.+-.20 Salmon ...... .0+-+++-20 Peanut Butter ........15 Consomme ............15 BEVERAGES Coffee Soe OB: BA ek oe ag 1 eee eee Olive castasi nce eo eeed1O OMI a ccet Sack 2008 Home-made Bread, Cake and Pie, 10c | EEE Changes Will Be Made Each Day