The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 24, 1920, Page 2

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PAGE TWO_ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE / \.. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24, 1926 SEEK TO BAR AGITATORS BY, DENYING PASSES American Diplomatic Agents | Seeking to Stop Entrance of Undesirables The Hague. plomatic offi: possession of evidence of propaganda schemes originating in Moscow are cp- posed to any attempt to abandon the} United States passport and visa s} tems now in operation. Thjs ‘is be cause. they are convinced that the Ruesfan Soviet government has been; attempting to send hundreds of dangerous agitators to the, United States. Wartime passport regulations, have been considerably modified both for Americans and. foreigners. seeking | American ‘visas, in the past few months and e attempt will be made, it was said, to make travel as easy us possible abroad nex\ sum- mer. But, in face of the evigence which has accumulated duri the past few months, believe to indicate a determined effort by the Bolshevik | government to spread its jurisdiction | to America, the diplomatic officials do not wish to surrender iets mest potent safeguard against it—passport control. “So far as the would-be emigrant is concerned,” one American official said, “things have just been so sim- plified for him that, in ten minutes time, providing hig own government considers him a worthy subject and has so evidenced this by giving him] a passport, he can answer all the questions we want to know about him If he is satisfactory, he can get his visa the same,day and be on‘his way to tha United, States speedily. 4 aniveung Abroad “The sAmerican traveling . abroad will get all the assistance possible to give him. If he frets because of the necegsity ‘of securing vibas from vari- ous bther consulates, if he wishes to visit several countries and objects to frontier inspections, he must remem ber that perhaps the man who sat next to him in the railway car. was a Bolshevik or an anarchist, en route some plave with a bomb, who migh: be stopped at the frontier before he could. throw the bomb: “Americans coming abroad wiil save themselves much difficulty if, just as they go to the bank before leaving to get a. letter of credit, they wil! MOTHER! “California Syrup of Figs? | Child’s Best Laxative | \ i Accept California” “Syrup of Figs only-—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child. is having the best and most harmless ‘physi¢ for the little stom- ach, liver¥imu “pdwels. Children love its fruity’ taste.” Full directfons on each bottle.’ You’ myst say “Califor- {and three were international crim- DELYSIA BRINGS 2 aaa , secure at foreign consulates in Amer-! ica visas permitting them. to ente. all the countries they wish to visit.” # While most of the: bolshevik agenis enroute to America seek to get} through on false -seamen’s certificates | or by other surreptitious means, ac- | cording to American officials here, there are a number of nervy ones who appear at Amerigan passport bureaus, from time to time, and request legi- timate visas. \ Reiuse 25 Persons During a recent week at an Amer-} ican passport bureau in Holland, out | of 25 persons refused visas four wero known to be revolutionary agitators, inals. \ The United States Surgeon Gen eral’s office has recently established | at some of the big embarkation ports | in Europe bureaus of sanitary inspe tion and ‘quarantine, which, co-operat- ing With tle local medical authorities, seek to prevent diseased, emigrants | from going to the United ‘States. | +The whole effort,” one official sai by passport control and medical | inspection, to control the situation : on this side thus relieving. Ellis. Is- | land and the other immigrant stations | at home gf much wor ' To Cure aCold ‘in. One Day Take Grove’s LAXATIVE BR QUININE tablets. The genuine bears the signature of E. W. Grove.. 30c. EURALGIA or headache—rub the forehead | —melt and inhale’the vapors ' YIeKs / VAPORU Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly OMO | | | THEN, It is everlasting friends. details. BUTLER Fill - 32 More Days WHY NOT A PHOTOGRAPH? , appreciated by your family and Make your appointment now be- fore the rush starts and when we can have time to bring out all the mere 311) Main St., Upstairs Phone 249 This College has constantly more calls for office help than it can, supply. All students who remained | to complete its course have been sent to good business and banking | positions. In. session throughout the year, the student enters at any time. Preparatgry department | where students may commence with the lowest primary branches. Besides the ordinary Expert Courses in higher accounting, Stenography, and. Banking; Send for all particulars. j G. M. LANGUM, Pres. Bismarck, North Dakota. | XMAS — and everlastingly STUDIO | AUOAHUNUAAUVOTOOGOFEGOUOOLGNUOESUEODUGOOOOBESUAOEOUONEOUOUTOAUOOOU | Plenty of Hootch in Gotham j of drinkers to care for. “THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BACK IN THE WORLD” TO AMERIC NEW YORK—Here we meet, face to face, $o to speak. the most beautiful back in the world. Perhaps you have followed the trackless trails of India, been the friend of queens and ventured in the Boreal wilds. Perhaps—oh, well—whatever y ou’ve seen! (left), “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet!” Kitty Gordon (right) uNed to have the world’s best back. But the artists here and in France and England now hand the honor to the'French girl, who has come to New York with “Afgar”’—the colorful spectacle imported from London. She formerly played also; in Paris. The French regard her as the successor to Gaby Deslys. al OLD BOWERY “HISSION 18 ~ STILL A HAVEN i i | | | | | Ghetto but Harder to Get Than Before 1 ; j | New York, Nov. 24—-At the oid! Bowery Mission, for more than four | ; decades the leading lower East’ Side! | Knownall over Yhe Northwest for Quality haven for destitute drunkards, ture classes in elementary and. philosophy and educati amerg the ghetto’s women dren are faking the place pe the work done thore tofore for nien homes lec-| without food. “Flops and eats” as shelter and } the old ( food are referred to by time denizens of the Bowery, ave ne longer to be the chief sola to “hop heads” andi “bum: famous institution. | Directors of the famous place have ? acknowledged time for more than teeding and sheltering from night to night a horde of “floaters” and “boes”. Since its establishment 41 years ago ‘Bowery Mission workers have been rushed with seemingly cease- less efforts to find food and sleeping room for long lines of those classe: as dowif and out. #Now, they say, the advent of prohibition pas brought op-; Dortunity to lift their heads. Plenty of “Hootch” John G.. Hailimond, Mission super- intendent and Anson C. Baker, se retary, outlined the new _ situation. “vhere’s still plenty of ‘hootch’ on the Bowery” they said, “and plenty ‘But it’s hard- er to get than it used to be.” “We have almost as many, men to look after as ever. When the saloon went: it~did-not-teke with it drugs and the like. But a far percentage ot them are sober—clear-eyed and clear- brained. We are increasing our edu- cational work among the old-timers whose heads used to be so steeped in liquor that they could retain noth- ing but the address of the Mission. “We now have more opportunity to look around, a chance for educa-° tional work among women and to | start at the bottom with the rising generation.” Sixty-year old “Christian John” Wart z, a follower of the Mission for half of his life and still hanging on, ‘added his word to that of Mr. Halli- mond and (Mr. Baker. ~ “The bum business is dead,” he said, “But if a guy had told me ten years. ago that the day would. come when there wasn’t enough boes and | cokies on the ‘Bowery to keep this place busy, and that the ‘Mission would decide to go to taking care of women and children, I'd have said he’d been ‘coking’ himself, or h..ting the pipe.” PROSPECTOR IS . TYPE OF THE PAST Denver, Colo., ‘Nov.,_24.—The Black Hills prospector, that unique charac- ter who has furnished many a theme for novels built around man’s quest tor gold, practically has disappeared |" Y. in from South Dakota, B. C. Lead, S. D., declared toda; ayes of Jo att HURLEY’S ORCHESTRA Up-to-the-Minute Dance Music. ~ b 406Y, Bdwy. Phone 909 If you hayen’t seen Delysia’s back | said, dress before the twenty-third nuai convention cf the American Min- ing Congress. ‘Passing of the prospector has been due primarily to the fact, according | to Yates, that “the gold taken from the mines does not hava sufficient value to pay the ¢ost of production.” ase described tlig gold industry ~ in the ‘Black: Hills as being “in a state of disintegration.” an- DAILY Eee CENCE © BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA ® MAIL. US your FILMS © Low Prices on Aluminum Ware for Thanksgiving Round Roaster, Reg. .$3.20 Oval Roaster, Reg.... 5.50 Comb. Cooker, Reg. .. 4.75 Wear-Ever Roaster p pan ROB. 283 eh LG 9.00: Big Values In Silverware Community and Universal at 10% discount on entire line. line. the hil's are to be found empty houses and deserted prospectors'-cabins,” he “In every mining community ot! “The gold industry,” he’ continued, “ig fage to face with a grave crisis, brought about by tHe the short-sighted pol. SPECIAL MENU IS ARRANGED & ‘ SS ae Par Turkey ee Chicken Duck. , Ce | vf Hot and Cold Meats Oysters Home Made Pies ) Frappe Will Be ; New hedianers as well as old established housekeepers, | will appreciate. the way we have” il prepared to supply the kitchen—cooking and table needs for Thanksgiving time. Everything needed to prepare a delightful meal can be found here. Our assortment of roasting pans and carving sets are two lines worthy of special |men tion. “Note the svecial low prices we quote on ms mi Uj household needs for Thanksgiving. ‘ % ~ HAO OA? Special 10% Dis- count on all merchan- - dise listed from! this date until. Thanksgiv- ing. Carving Sets and Kitchen Cutlery for Turkey-Time Three-piece Carvers, Stag Handles, Genuine Silver Mounted, priced from $5.75 to $11.00 Butcher Knives from 75e to $1.50 , Quality Guaranteed. LOMAS HARDWARE COMPANY MAIN STREET DINNER DANCE : > SWEETS-SHOP THANKSGIVING DAY And Evening, Starting at 11 O’clock a. m. and Lasting: Until 8 O'Clock p. m. - | EVERYBODY WELCOME | Ice Cream and Soft Drinks the goverament of breeding without feeding the one industry absolutely essential to the life of any civilized nation at all-times.” world. War. and ‘icy adopted by v Cakes and Bread ‘Served Free Enamel Ware Utensils at Attrac- ‘ tive Prices for Thanksgiving Alladin White Enamel Ware. A aualitv niece of Reed Enamel * Roasters No. 2 Flintstone. ..... .$4.50 No. 3 Flintstone........ 5.00 No. 4 Flintstone....--.. 5.50 No. 3 Matchless Blue and White ...... .. 5.50

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