The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 23, 1921, Page 3

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i Al Stiiking proof “North ‘Dakoty residents who. it ) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. PICNICS NOW USUAL THING i N.DAK, WINTERS Group ‘of ‘High § School Students Hike to River-for . 1 Feast of the fact make their annual, pligrinjage to Califor- nia’s balmy coast litte this winter did not put“much over ‘on those that re- mained at, home wa: picnic held yesterday ‘by a, group high school students near the Migyouri river. Justa couple of days ago Dakotans in Los. Angeles’ winter regort terri- er thought they were doing some- ing unusual and exclusive whe they held their annual February pic- nic in’ that city. The picnickers fried bacon, cooket coffee and prepared the other food necessary for, a well-balancee? mea}. Those who took part in thé! picnic were: ‘Genevieve Parsons, Ruth Pol lard, Mary Atkinson, Florence\ Jfger. Margaret Smith, Gwendolen Welch, Robert George, ;Tyler Kludt, Richard Elliston,” Kenneth. Morris, Phillip Boise, and Charles, Gobel. ROBERTS TAKES . — MULLOY BID TO “BOXING MATCH Mulloy -Shows ve Past Foot, Work in Bout With’ ‘Sailor | Burke Heri At the ¢onelusion, »f the siv-round boxing match ‘staged last night by Jimmy Mulloy of St. Paul, and Sailor ; Burke, at the Rex theatre, Frank! Roberts, af Bismarck, announced that * he accepted the challenge ‘ef Mulloy | to a match,. :Mulloy said that he! Would meet Roberts if a suitable! j purse were provided. It is probgble; that, the two men’ may -meet within: the next two weeks. Mulloy, showed some fast foot worl: in his bout with Burke. he bout} was strictly: a boxing match, neither | man trying to land anything like a knockout punch. The crowd was a disappointment to the fighters, only | about 75 people being present. ‘The bout was declared a draw by Referee } Sullivan: i LEGION WILL ASSIST MEN ON. ADJUSTMENTS Department “headquarters of » the American Legion has anounced a cen- sus of disabled veterans of the World War in North. Dakota, in connection with the memVership clean-up cam- paign being held by the Legion this week. Post comnianders are asked to establish offices inevery community Dy handle the necessaty paper work. H personal canvass will be. made i members to Jocate the men whose; claims’ have~ not been settled.” All cases will be cleared through depart- ment headquarters, where they will, be’ handled direct with the Burean of Risk Insurdnce. ‘Every ex-service man and woman who mav how or at any future time be, entitled to compensation, 0; Be @@unt of injury orddisease resi from, military service should apse their claims this:week: | An effort, will |, be made to have every claim-made for compensation or medical treatment! straightened—out to the satisfaction; of the claimant, which is the first and the most importants work of the Le- gion, WHEAT. SHIPMENTS | ). SHOW. BIG INCREASE Galgary, “Alta Feb. 23.—Nearly , 20),000 bushels of wheat. valued at $25 37,439. 85, were shipped to the Unit-/ ed States from the prevince of Al- berta during the month of January, MOTHER! “California Syrup of Figs” Child’s Best La- | pal calive y Accept “California Syrup of Figs ouly—look for the name California on * the ‘package, then you are sure our child fs having the best and ost. harmless physic for “the littte ata acheMiver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say “Cali- fornia.” Who will Succee™Caruso?- the place.in oper ett by Enrico Caruso-can never sing in opera again, even if he wins his brave fight withdeath. Who will suc-; ceed him as|the lez ding operatic ward Johnson (left-above) and elli (lower left) is [talian; Luci above) is Spanish, ; according to the monthly export re- turn submitted by S. C. Reat, Us S. consul ‘in this city.’ As compayed with the correspond- ing month Aast year, this is\a very large increase, Increages are also shown in the export of fibur, oats and | shorts while a decrease in the num- ber, of cattle shipped is recorded. The ‘total number of cattle shipped during January,4921, ~was ued at $225,743.38, as against 5,570 jhead for January 1920, valued at $770,042.89, Flour exported in 1921 | amounted to 13,425 sacks, valued ai | $52,289.59; oats 77,604 bushels, val- ued at $4,445.28; shorts 2,400 sacks, | valued at “$2,958, and wheat, 179,655 | bushels valued at $287,439.85. | SOO REPORTS INCREAS IN GROSS EARNINGS St. Paul. Minn, P ‘The Min- neapclis, St. Paul & Ste. Saulte Marie railroad company has reported gfoss | earnings for. the six-months’ period ending Dec. last, to the oflice ot the eet ‘t 'ax commission, as be- ing $8,987,663.63, for which a tax of $444,883.18 will i paid. The company ‘reported $7,505,119.66 gross earnings for the corresponding period a year | | ‘| | i 0. The Minneapolis and St. Louis rail road company reported gross earning: for that period of $3,268,788.22, which Yall amofint to $163,439.41 grosg earn-| ings tax. A year ago for the corresponding | period gross earnings for that com pany were, $2,661, 3 i A motor sled, to replace the prim-| itive dog sled, ‘has been invented by| Alaskan, f LCOK OUT FOR 4) Val-|, Shas myriad harmony ya Authorities of the musicaleworld agree that no one can fill Caruso, greatest tenor the world has ever seen. Doctors say tenor?, Grouped about him here are five who are mentioned. Ed- Charles Marshall (lower right) are American; Giovanni Martin- en Muratore (center), is french; Hipolito Liyare (right Oak CARILLON WOMEN'S WOMEN’S PEACE _ MEMORIAL PROPOSED BY ART | CLUBS OF FEDERATED WOMEN is the plan of! the Washington Arts/ clu& That the carillon shall be the finest in the world, making, Washing- {ton a Mecca to, which millions shall} come to hear the magic music of the bells as they are chimed daily by the) most noted callieur in the, world, Dr. | Denyn of Malles, who hag-promised | to install the carillon,, to. play ‘it daily, and to condugt a school for] players—is part of the plan. Tht. the lon, which/it is estl- | mated will t $200,000, and a suit- lable-building -and tower to house it,) which would probably. cost $2,000,000 iemorey bay erected by the if A Nation’s joy and woe bells { surge and _echo years to be Like voice of many waters o’er the sea, ie these great Shall through the 4 , that’ ebbs and} swells! , fis Nee iee bronzen tones shall to nadir hells, mighty flood Shall seem a voice of Goud, free ‘9 consecrate the land sdom dwells! 4 Their ring \ inst byl tyranay; calling the \ where frec- federated club women of America as their own} These hells shall be a prayer, a dirge jonal headquarters and as their} a hymn; bute to the men who! lost thei;'| A paean- glorious for battles won lives in the late and a yerma-} Chateau-Thierry, St. Mihiel, Ar-| nent protest which. causes w: gonne. | f tion of W. Westlake, chairman of | Dak. Club Bull j said, that the state investmgnt board | certificates, the purchase money to be , revolving fund of the _| early in’ March. ELTINGE Cecil B. DeMille’s -—— PRODU VEVERY DAY Is FEATURE DAY _ CTION —— “Don ’t Change Your Husband a FEATURING Gloria Swanson, Elliott Dexter and Theodore pata hy C Companion Picture to “ a A Paramount-Artcraft Production ) nge Your Wife?” FRIDAY ~ James Oliver Curwood’s “NOMADS . OF: bells and the towers are expected to ise again.—Krwin Ff Smith in’ No. INN, WILL PAY SERVICE: MEN CASH State Investment. Board’ sal Purchase $1,000,000 Worth of Bonds St. Paul, Minn., Feb, 22.—Plans to pay the balance of the soldiers’ bonds }- are annouiced after a confereace of Governor J. A. O. Preus, Clifford L. Hilton, attorney general, Henry Rines, state treasurer Senator A. J. Rockne and ‘Representative Theodore Chris- tiansdn, * A bill providing for a tax levy of $500,000 a year for a six-year period beginning next year will be the means of raising the-$3,000,000 necessary to complete payment of soldiers’ claims. To make the money available im- | mediately, it is proposed, Mr. Rines purchase $1,000,000 worth of bonus derived from the sale of $905,000 worth of long time Massachusttts three and three and one-half per cent! bonds, held in the trust funds of the state. . , These ‘Massachusetts, bonds, Mr. Rines stated, will naturally be_sold at a discount, but the deficit incjiryed through this sale will be made appropriating, the gicficiency Aron tate. - Theopher $2,000,000 ‘will be staken] from the revenue fund of the state and replaced by the tax levy. The bills to be introduced will also make it possiblejfor the treasurer to borrow from the Various state funds in excess of the amount now pezinitted, | Mr. Rines stated. \ The bonds héld in the trust fund are | expected to be Placed on the market the 5 | like the cannon’s roar: | the Arts Club (: dQ in, the twilight A call tor anty illon committee, at) a diner, tendered by the club to the federation board of directors during dim, Voices\ of those whom we, shall see} their recent vi to Washington. | That the idea ong as dt first s The. American eee of Art. »med wag pointed out ; by’ one\.enthusiastic board member, A musical) peace fower to com-| who suggested that a dollar each memorate at the nation’s capitol the} from the federated club, women victory over imperialism and the part wont make the building possible. he unique feature of the proposed is that the<tower he pro-| each state, the I memoriz vided.a-bell tor trict of Colum! Porto Ricé, thé Philippines and Cuba Bach’ state and possession is to\ pro vide its. own bell. Prominent ¢iti- zcns, in several instances, have guar- anteed a bell for th ‘Each bell, as planned, will carry the name,of the state and an appro- | priate inscription. While the bolls j will vary in trom, a smallest: of lesg than fiftegn pounds to a largest of nearly tv ions, individually they! will be, of equal importance in the [| great musical instrument. ‘There is no cariflbn in this coun- try,/and, it will be “built, the Arts ‘luly declares; it not bythe federa- tion—then by popular subscription. It ig predicted that the music of the 54 bells,-heard over the city, would, become-one of the distinguishing! characteristics of the capital and per- haps, in the recollection of the play-} \ijg of some patriotic piece, that which | would linger the longest in the mem-| ory ,of the visitor.. The nearest apy, ‘proach to the carillon in tho United States are chimes, composed of a few bells ofnarrow musical range. /The; bells of a on, fixed and immov- able, are rung by hammers and are} played. automatically. or by keyboard, like-an.organ or piano, They have a} range of four octaves! or more, and consequently in chromatic power have | breadth comparable to>a piano or organ, with bells representing the tones and half tones instead of strings. —In the most recent carillon, consist- ing of forty-two bells and dedicatedy last August at Queenstown, Ireland, the achievement was mauve for the first time of tuning to equal temper-; ament, just like a piano or organ,, so that music may be Played with equal fac’ in any Queenstown ¢: is eclipsed by one of forty-nine Icils at} Rotterdam, Holland, which will hold the honor of bcing the largest in the world until the proposed cariilon ot | fifty-four belis is installed at Wash-! a hy "THE PEERESS! | | The Gheni, Temonde, Li not,such ‘a daring | FRAMED SERVICE] © BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Knox all over the Northwest for Quality O MAIL US YOUR FILMS = The photographer cath Lady Ribblesdale, American-born | English peeress, formefly Mrs. Joh Jacob Astor, tearing head ‘first at breakneck speed down the bob-sled’ run at St. Moritz, pSvilzeriand, She is one cf the leaders of society in England. ; ortrait of her. | Belgian towns were all famous in: Burope before the war, but many of i the Belgian bell towers are-now in ruins and the bells removed to Ger- many, Germany _must__return_ the} F.GRADY TAKES SCOUTS ON HIKE Scoutmaster “F. J., Grady although the thermometer was kept close to the zero mark got his First Presby- terian Boy Scout troop on the march arly yesterday and didng return un- til § o'clock inthe evening. ‘Phere were 19 scouts in line. They went to the South Ferry landing about a mile from Elm Grove and Nnade their camp there. After they liad cooked the “eats’ they hiked across/the fiver to old Fort Lincoln, where they madé a thorough ingpec- tion of the camp site and found sev- eral old army buttens which had sur- vived a fire, One of.the boys took his tenderfoot examination. Patrol leaders Donald Rohr and Qrlando Benson were on duty. ‘ eee by |- ‘business and he had become inter- : “ THE .NORTH”: Ren KNOWS INTERI AOE SMARC THEATRE Tonight—Tomorrow _ Viola Dana , STARRING IN “The Off-Shore Pirate” A Story That Proves Again that Woman f Against Stacked Carls, - + Always Wins Evea \ __+ COMING BU and Phyllis” OR FROM MINES UPWARD—WINS INTERIOR POST — FALL FEATURES, AGH=59. 4 /DUCAT schools; pringipally self-taught. MARRIAGE—In 1883 to Miss Emma Garland Morgan of Clarks- ville, Tex. CHIEF - INTERESTS—Farming. and stock. raising. CLUBS—Manhattan York, Toltec in El and Foreign Club in Mex, (N. Ee A Stati Washington; Feb. Senator Albert Ba: Rivers,,N. M., for secretary of the j in- terior, President-elect. Harding in- doubtedly was influenced by the sen- ator’s muny-sided. knowledge of. .af-! fairs »within the country. nel * He knows how-to operate a reaper He knows.how to apply a hickory | rod tu an obstinate schoolboy. He knows how to rope~a steer. He knows how to address a jury He knows how to run a drijl in a mine. He diers. « “ All of these things he learned first-| hand—as a worker. 4 ‘A most momentous event in Senator | Fall’s lifé occurred at’ Frankfort, Ky. | Nov. 26, 1861. born. y Tearing a page¥rom Horace, Gree: ley, he went west in his youth, and} landedsin Texas. | Teaches School, Fall went to country schools. Later he taught in them, Invthe intervals between classes and at other odd me- ments he. read Ha He was about 20 then, For éight years Fait worked about in the west as a farmer, a ranchman and a miner, absorbing knowledge that stood hint in good stead later in| life. In-1889 he took up the practice of | law and devoted himself diligently to it until 1904. In that time there had come to him. considerable: Mexican New Tex. huey, in Rn knows how to!command sol- ested in Mexican lay. In 1904 he be- gan to specialize in Mt. Fall served throughout the. Span-| ish-American war captain of Com-! EDISON: AT WORK—This latest | “photograph of Thomas A. Edison | who has just passed his seventy- fourth birthday, shows him at work in his laboratory Orange, N. J. Senator and Mrs. Albert B. Fall NON — In... country | That's the day he was | y pany H, First. Territorial Volunteer Infantry. Elected to Senate. ~ ! On March 27, 1912, the New Mexico | legislature elected Eatl to the U. S. i senate. He was re-elected in tos for tif term ending in 1919 and again re-elected on Nov. 5, pole for the ‘term ending 1925. Fall, was several times ‘a rhember of the New México legislatuje and also a member of that state's con- stitutional~convention. Latershe be- rdame associate| justice of the New Mexico supreme court and was) twice torney general of the territory. |, In recent years Senator Fall be- came interested, in Mexican mining concerns and also had lumber, land and railroad §nterests, many of them, in that country. F Senator Fall hag a jarge ranch near Three Rivers and is greatly interest- ed in farming and stock raising: A powerful searchlight at the top of Mount Washington could be seett by a ship 97 miles, out at| sea: — FLUENZA As a preventive, melt and ine hale night and moming-> Gre Khn Jas Une Yea FOR SALE ° 1 60” Fumed Oak Buffet. If you want something good callat 618 5th Street. ASK Your Grocer For Humpty Dumpty Bread Produced b: BARKER BAKERY: WHEN YOU ASK FoR BUTTER 4 NORTHERN We have more calls for Bank As- sistants than we can-supply. If a good \ BANK POSITION ever appealed to you, look through the Banking room.at the Bismarck College, Conceded among the best equipped College banks in the country, Here the student learns to do by do- ing. It-is real banking, using college money, and real bank accounting, up- to-date. We make a. specialty of. training young men and women for the high- er-salaried bookkeeping and .steno- graphic positions. Send for particu- lars. When you know what we have done for thousands of oeere you will attend, * ‘Write G. M. Langum, Pres. Big: marck, N. Dak,

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