The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1921, Page 2

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PAGE TWO TURKEY TRUSTS” ONLY AMERICA Powers Are Playing Great Grab Game in Con- | stantinople i | ALLIES CONTROL CITY | | Admiral Briston, However, | Safeguards Interests of United States BY MILTON BRONNER. Constantinople, Sept. 17.—One of the! great political, commercial and eco- nomical grab games of the world is being played in this city by the vari-| ous European. powers. The nation which is trusted by the| Turks is the United states, and the one man who is insisting upon the! open door, with equal rights for all| and special privileges for none, is} Rear Admiral Mark L. Bristol, Amer-| ican high commisssioner here also in) command of the United States navat} forces in the Near East. i Under the treaty of peace with Tur-! key, the allied powers are in charge of Constantinople until its fate is fix | ally decided. This means’ that the, representatives of Bri France and} Italy virtually rule the ace. | | “YOU-HAVE TO REPORT UPON | YOUR ARRIVAL”, ; Sew up for their.nations all the~com: | mercial good things in the way .of | | mining, oil, banking and railroad con- cessions, not only hereabouts, but also in the possessions that still remain’ to Turkey. And there is keen rivalry be- tween them. Amid this welter of conflicting and selfish interests, Admiral Bristol stands firm. From the naterial stand- point, he only has a small force—six destroyers ‘and a few submaring chas ers—but he has mad2 himself felt by | his insistence upon the American view- | point. Bristol was sent here by the Wil: | ; Son adminstration, but, singularly) The allies have about 16,000 troops) enough, here in “Constan,” as the Eur- | here, to say nothing of considerable| Opeans here call it, our high, commis- naval! forces in the waters around fl pean meer city. To come into Constantinple you uais| one of these: three nations. You have to report to them upon your arrival and you have to have their visa in order to leave. But that is only a smail matter. ni big matter is that they are trying i to have a visa on your passport from | IN THE This hes been only onc of this community. THE GREATEST FARMER One-fourth of the wheat we grow is the result of the researches of the Government. years of untiring experiment and investigation, ‘the Government, through the Department of Agricul- ture, was enabled to introduce into this country thé temarkable Durum wheat through which our produc- tion has been increased fully twenty-five per cent. known accomplishments of the Government, which are covered in the interesting series of stories for which we have the exclusive right of distribution in We'll send this literature to you each month without obligation on your part if you will ask for it. BISMARCK BANK “DANCE’AT* Sterling, N. D. TONIGHT Masi¢ by “The Hurleys” WORLD After many surprising but little- BURGLAR | ALARM OBM MINNE general banking business, Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE ARE BUILDING OUR ‘BUSINESS CLINTOCK CO With our new McClintock Burglar Alarm ayaa which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your Liberty Bonds and other valuables as well as to do your First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW Safety First APOUIS. MINN = = as), EL ea sioner worked out and proclaimed the very policy that Pre@iJent Harding’s adminstration has enunciated. Bristo} said we were not at war with Turkey and that the other allied powers had aoguired neither béfore nor since the | armistice any: special privileges which the United States woul’ recognize, it those privileges sought to interfere; next day. with: thé previous rights and oppor | tunities of our business men. He would agree to nothing and sanction nothing which sought to con- fer special rights upon Britons, | Frenchmen and Italiana, but always {has made a strong rese:yation on be- half of our country. Not only are the Turks grateful for {his attitude, but they remember that | before the war Americans were Chiefly linterested here in educational and phil- {anthropic work. Amercan dollars are still being poured in here for those purposes, ONE MAN BUILT HOUSES HIS HOBBY New York, Sept. 17.—Although en- tering his 72nd year with enougi money to retire and take up golf, Frank D. Johnson of Brooklyn con- tines to erect houses all by himself | and-sell them. For the last 50 years ne has worked 10 to 12 hours a day at this pursuit THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 house on Gravésénd avevue. No hands! but his own have touched the struc- ture since he started it. Last July while hé was working on the house, it was struck by lightning, Digging himself out of Uie debris, John- son rubbed ‘some arnica onto his bruises ‘and was back. on the job the Born in Boston of, Revolutionary War stock, Johnson expects to live to 100/:He hag all but two of his orig- inal teeth and scarcely 4 hair has fall-| en from his head. “T could have knocked off and taken: it easy, but if I had done so I would now be reposing In some graveyard,’ was the way Johnson put it. Besides being a stonemason, brick- layer, :carpenter,, plasterer, plumb- er, tinsmith, painter, paper hansz- er, decorator, glazier, electr wood carver and cabinet. :uaker. son studied all the ins ard outs of 8 governing real estate, so as to save all title searching and allied fees FORMER EDITOR OF | NORMANDEN DEAD Grana Forks, 5,N. D, 8 D., Sept. 17—Word has just been received here of the death at Madison, Wis., of Peter 0. Stromme, 65, well known Norwegian | “| writer, lecturer.and journalist, and for several years connected with the Nor- manden. of Grand Forks. and now is putting up a one-man Mr. Stromme was born at Winches- ter, Wis., his parents having come to this state from Norway in 1848 and wero among the early settlers of Wis- consin. He was duated from the Luther college, , in 1876, and later stud- jed theology at Concordia seminary, St. Louis. He was ordained and served in the ministry at Hendtum and Ada, Minnesota. In 1886 he accepted the professor- ship of mathema Latin and his- tory at St. Olaf’s college, Northfield, Minn. In October, 1910, Mr. Stromme be- came connected with the Normanden wf Grand Forks. Funeral services will be held Sun- day at Madison, Wis. ‘He is survived by his wife and five childron, four girls and one boy, all of whom are married. Ladies and Gentlemen Just a word. Bring in your Winter clothes early for remodeling, relining, cleaning and repairing. KLEIN Tailor and Cleaner. “MANY “FOLLOWING THE SUCCESSFUL” Knowing that hundreds of suc- cessful business men and prominent bankers were trained at Dakota Business College, ic is no wonder that ambitious boys and girls flock to this model school at Fargo, N. D. Good positions are usually ready for new graduates. Edw. Krag was recently employed by W. J. Lane | Real Estate Co. Miss F is the 18th D. B.C. gradu Easel & Sweet Wholesale House. “Follow the Bucce$Sful’” now at the opening of Fall School. Write FL. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front Su. Fargo, N, De ASK Your Grocer Humpty Dumpty Bread Produced By BARKER BAKERY est charges. TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS | F demands of ‘the coming oF HERE is the place to do it. New and Greater _ Gardner Car 8—Motometer. finish. 11—Clear:vision dreadnaught 1—Cord tirés, non-skid front and rear. 2--Bright-finish, leather upholstering. 3—Curled hair filled cushions and backs. 4—Aluminum moulding on body. 5 Natural wood finish instrument board. 6—Oil pressure gaugé on dash. 7—Eighteen-inch steering wheel with aluminum spider and non-tlip trim. 9—Nickel-plated bar radiator cap. 10—Special hard- baked black enamel Dealers: 30 straight-grain genuine top covered with Chase double - texture ma- Quality Car 12—Large plate glass window in rear cur- tain with anti-rattle device. 13—Door-opening curtains on all four doors. 14—Windshield wiper. 18—Nickel- plated windshield wing nuts. 16—Spiral bevel differential - gears with driving pinion integral with shaft. 17—Hydraulic pressed stéel chassis frame with five heavy cross members. 18—Alemite system chassis lubrication. 19—Powerful L-head type motor, 5-inch stroke, 314-inch cylinder bore. 20—Fortyteight-pound crankshaft. CORD TIRES STANDARD EQUIPMENT This new and greater GARDNER car is first.and foremost a Quality Car. Complete to the smallest detail, it has everything a good car ought to have— Quality —Economy—Comfort—Power— Good Looks—Low Price—the crown- ing achievément of an organization that has for over 33 years been noted for giving the American public a “Greater Value” at a “Lower Price.” QUALITY FEATURES 21—Willard threaded rubber battery. 22—Borg & Beck improved disc clutch with steel insert in drive plate. 23—Westinghouse ignition starting and lighting systém. 24—Semi-elliptic vanadium steel springs. 25—Timken and Hyatt roller bearings. 26—New-style improved Carter carburetor. 27—Vacuum tank gasoline feed system. - 28—Stewart-Warner specdometer driven from transmission. 29—Warner-Patterson non-glare headlight lenses and nitrogen bulbs. 30—One - hundred - and - twelve - inch wheel base. \ . THE GARDNER MOTOR CO. Inc. St. Paul ST. LOUIS, U. S. A. Distributors White Bear B. F. POWERS MOTOR COMPANY Minneapolis ' Phone—Wire—Write—B. F. Powers Motor Co., St. Paul, for full particulars regarding the Gardner franchise in this territory. We promise you that it will prove unusually attractive. Repair service for everything electrical on automobiles, trucks Electric Service & Tire Co. 215 Main Street Mod-

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