The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 22, 1921, Page 2

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SEPT. 21, 1921 Str | / WEDNESDAY, ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUND They. dug the cellar, wuilt the.forma, Poured concrete for the foundation walls and placed heavy beams in po- sition. Now they are doing the more | advanced work on their brick build-| ing, using blue prints uuder the super- | vision of a mason and % carpenter. CHICAGO WOMAN STOLEN BY FUIS SALVATION ARMY BUDGET. WILL, BE SOUGHT. IN. CITY Meeting Called at Elks Hall Fri-| day Evening to Plan For ! Drive | Rescued by Posse Headed by’ on Weed ane thy : | Her Husband After Exciting | FAINTS IN STATION Experience on Island Sea al —_—. | Police Matron Finds Roll of Bills on) —= fi San Francisco—Kidnaped for ran- | , Girl After She Had Made an Out- | i 4 e p e Ml e r . a fi (i cry About Being Robbed— if Looking for Work. ~ iq LIN — emsossam | STARVING GIRL = = | as inten Merchants Are Ready for the Big Dollar Days Prisoner Put Under Observation | When Mental Quirk Is | | Scented. GENERAL AID IS ASKED (Plans for raising the Salvation! ae eae ty be alan Bene som, carried into a sandalwood forest | hall Friday evening, { in the mountainous region of one of | The drive tor the budget is to be: | the Fiji islands and rescued by aj gin next Tuesday; fixed at $3,000, which is believed by; the committee to be a smalt budget | in. view of the demands expected to{ be made on the organization. H The Friday night meeting is called | by P. R. Fields, chairman of the citizens’ Salvation Army advisory committee and head of the Elks. The Elks will lead in the drive this year | as they have for the last two or! three but they ask the aid of’ other! organizations and of individuals. | Teams will be selected Friday night | to make solicitations in the business district, Mr. Fields said today, and} probably teams will be named t> cov- er outlying districts. | UNIFORMITY IN JUSTICE URGED BY BAR MEMBERS International Association To Meet in Peking, China, in October Cincinnati, Sept. 22,—The second annnual conference of the Interna- tional Bar Association, which is to be held in Peking, China, October 24 to 26, will institute the beginning of an attempt: to promote the cause of uniform justice in the world and so ultimately of international peace, ac- cording to Dr, R. Masujima of Tokyo, its president. Dr. Masujima_ is now in America, after attending the recent convention of the American Bar Association here. This body was invited to ally itself with the international organization and lawyers of the American bar were invited to participate in its conferences. He will also attend the Canadian Bar Association meeting before returning to Japan. The first meeting of the Interna- tioal Bar Association was held last yeat in Japan. Its object was de- fined to be “to promote justice by the- cooperation of the members of the bar throughout the world:” Its: as- piration, Dr. Masujima said, was to attain ‘permanent world peace by the power of a commonly accepted stand- ard of justice. The principal business before this year’s convention will be a conference on the points of view regarding justice, which, according to Dr. Masujima, differ widely in different countries, despite the fact that the world has seen but two systems of jurisprudence, the civil law and the! common law. The international associativn, he said should begin its work in America and Europe where the common law, which had inaugurated democracy, was up-| held. E “In our opinion, the International Bar Association is an indispensible auxiliary of every political enterprise of which the League of Nations is an example,” Dr, Masujima said. “It is an instrument to. bring nations to- gether in better understanding, parti- cularly the East and West, whose| modes of thought are totally differ- ent. “It should acquire in time among all nations authority to dictate stand- ards of international justice to be en- forced by all the sanctions at the com- mand of. civilization, This would prove the one essential bond of union and understanding between the Occi-| dent and the Orient. BUILD OV TOOL. South Portland, Me. Sept. 22.—In- mates of the State Sehool for; Boys, % reform institution, are building a school house for themseives. An American drama”éternal by James Fenimore Cooper, Directed. by Maurice Tournewr \ead Clarence Llrowny ! tion to contradict the woman's plea | Girl, Stood. on Head by Pastor, Sues. nO ee the amount is; posse headed by her husband was the | thrilling experience related by Mrs. Jules Whatley of Chicago on her ar- rival on the steamer Tahiti, “One beautiful evening I was walk- ing in the garden of our hotel at Suva when eight natives accosted me,” Mrs, Whatley said. “One placed a handkerchief in my mouth while the others tied by hands Carried Her..Into the Back Country. and feet. They then carried me out into the back country. “Several attendants of the hotel saw the abduction and notified my husband. Mr. Whatley immediately organized a posse and gave chase. For over six hours they followed the trail‘ of my captors ‘until they came upon a hut where I was being held hostage. ° “The bandits..planned to hold me prisoner until my husband paid a ran- som. I overheatd’them discuss thelr designs. I was threatened with death should I make-an outcry and a guard was placed over me untt!l dawn, while! the others slept. “They seemed to be particularly fascinatéd with my hair, and the way they acted it was apparent that blondes were infrequent ‘visitors to the island. “Fortunately my husband foiled the plans. With his posse he broke in the doors and after a small skirmish res- cued me.” i MOONSHINE AIDED HER SONS Mother Sold Liquor to Keep Boys in School, She Tells Oregon ‘Judge. Portland, Ore——Mrs. Lena Mayson! wanted her two children to: go through school, so she had to find a way to make enough money, ehe: testified in! (court. be eae | Making moonshine whisky” ‘proved the most profitable undertaking she} could engage in—but the ‘police dis- covered her still and shot ‘holes ‘in the profits, “I couldn’t make enough. money with my rooming house, judge,” she said, “and I simply had ‘to get my children through school, I’ve been buying them clothes and everything.” Judge Deich, however, had informa-| and denounced her for saying she was providing for the children’ when she was only buying them'extras. The judge sentenced Mrs. Mayson to five days in jail and to pay $200 fine on the eve of the gradtation from grammar school of the two youngsters. Washington.—Pretty Mrs. Anna M. Lowndes, seventeen years old, is suing Rev. B. Duckett for standing her on her head. She seeks $10,000 damages. She said that the minister held her prisoner for 30 minutes, during which time he stood her on her head, “‘caus- ing her great pain and mental an- guish,” ee ree Black Bear Interrupts Ball Player’s Angling Freeland, Pa.—John Novak, a $ prefessional baseball player and former foatball star, while trout fishing in Hays creek heard a ¢{ rustling in the bushes dn'the op- {| posite bank and saw'a full-sized black bear as it jumped into the water and swam toward him. The bear,’ after emerging from the water, took a drink from the stream and then proceeded quietly on % 8 way into the woods. Novak gave a terrific yell, causing the bear to strike a faster guit unt it was out of ‘sight.- | R&ige monntuins, met a mother bear {hove tt was later found dead. ; jah. : | Lignite New York Lieutenant’ Putz looked | up from his work behind the desk in It | station one diy to see a white faced | | young woihan clinging to the rail, re- ‘ding him timidly. “Please,” she said haltingly, “I am hungry All'I have had in two weeks | has beén’a plece ‘of pie ard a bottle, of ginger ale. Iam very hung—” and | het voice trailed off and she sank to| | the floor. : : . (Had Gone Without Food. | By the time the lieutenant reached | the front of the desk she was uncon- | sclous, bead : j Policemen cared for the visitor un-j tit the arrival of a doctor, He ding- nosed ‘the “case as malnutrition. After she had been revived; the girl; told the police she was Millie Renner, | | twenty-four years old. Shie said she had formerly lived with an aunt in Jer- seyCity. ‘Three weeks ago she came here, hoping to find employment. She | | had never worked before, she udded, What little: money Miss Renner had Was soon gone, and since she had; walked the streets in the day aud slept | {n haliways ‘and parks at night. Find Roll of Bills, | Miss Renner was booked on a charge of vagrancy and sent to the West Thirty-eighth’ street’ station, where there sa matron, “At that station there came a surprise for the police. The prisoner ‘made an ‘outcry, declar- ing She liad’ lost her money. ‘The matron, believing that lack of food had. brought hallucination, ‘sought to quiet ‘her. by ‘telling her she had no! money. The’ prisoner insisted, and raised such an outcry that the matron searched her. Wrapped in a’ newspa- She Wae Unconscious. per about the young woman's waist she found a rofl of bills amounting to $188. get _ This last phase of the case was told in‘ the West slde court where Miss Renner was taken, The ‘magistrate sent her to Bellevue hospital for ten days, during which time she will be under observation. Two Yeung Wemen Married to Same Man, on Friendly Terms as Hus- band Awalts Tri Chicago.—Two'ptétty young women, wises of Edward Breuer, await the trial of their husband on & charge of bigamy.” The ‘wives are the best of pitsg ch sts a aueh Breuer, formerly an army sergeant, left, his first,wife to go west. In, Evans- tog, TIl"he met, ‘wooed and won Miss Frieda Shoen. “What's the use of being jealous?” asked wife No. 1, who was Miss So- phie Daehr of Syracuse, N. Y¥. ; “I¢ would not do one bit of good te get angry and; besides, I could not dis- like Frieda.” ‘She 1s a dear.” WORSTS BEAR IN BATTLE Mother Bear With Three Cube Attacke Cattleman Armed Only With { Pocket Knife. Asheville, Nv C.—Watter ‘Poster, @ cattleman,.on a roundup in the Blue and three cits. Poster, who is suffering with,a badly mangled arm, encountered the bear) suddenly in. a dense underbrush and. was forced to rely upon a pocket knife when the animal attacked him. The bear, ‘getting the worst of the| melee, retreated ‘about’ 200 yards, ; he West Forty-seventh street police} ~~ RBOALLS BARLY ‘| céntly appearing - in McLean county ‘lin the Mormon temple grounds in Salt “| Young, the Utah sculptor. HIS. WIVES BEST OF PALS| | Arbuckle case. Druggists, Wear, Meat Markets, These two—Big ‘Salt Lake City, Sept. -22—Reports from’ North Dakota that seagulls re- had: destroyed’ erasshoppers whch threatened to-:ruin the ‘crops, called attention heve to a similar incident in ‘Mormon pioneer life in Utah. “Today. a mptable monunient stands Lake City in honor of the birds that saved the early settlers from threat- ened starvation in 1848. It is a pillar abou 100 feet high surmounted by a bronze seagull. At its base are in- scriptions detailing the reason for its erecton with illustrations by Mahonri ‘The first. pioneers trekked across the: plains into Salt Lake valley in 1847. (Brigham Young stipulated that there should be intensive cultivation of the land; crops were grown and the farmers looked for a bountiful. har- vest the next year. Then crickets in hugé armies swooped down upon the vast Movies and mora!s are being dis- cussed everywhere as a result of the What price- must a girl pay for’a movie career?” people ask, The question is answered in this series of articles written especially for: the ‘Tribune by Mrs. Florence Calhoun, mother of Alice Calhoun, fhe: Vitagraph star who in five years has risen from a $5-a-day extra to a $1000-a-week: performer. BY. FLORENCE CALHOUN Mother of Alice Calhoun, Vitagraph Star, the Youngest in the Movies Alice Calhoun is still a minor, still a flapper, still at the period when most’ girls delight in school pals and friendships, when ‘a party” is’ the solé end: of existence. % ‘It’ invariably ‘shocks other school girls, to learn that social pleasures are almost taboo for a young movie actress. Not because she would. not delight in them just like other girls, but be- catise there can be no dances. clubs, sororities, bacon bats for ® girl who must rise before 6 in the morning to start by 7 for a drive of 22 mites:to the ‘studio where she must.make up and: dress in costume and be' realy to ga on a set by 9 o'clock; and who fin- ishes her day’s work by 5 or 6 in the/| evening, s We are all made to be sociable and | every movie maid must call upon | her morale when she sacrifices the | Try a load oi tne famous Beu- p Vein Coal, the best mined in the State. | ; Wachter Transfer Co. | Phone 62 couse i | ANNUAL INDIAN DAY:IN CHICAGO Chicago, Sept. 22—Chief: Oshkosh, a Winnebago Indian, recently return- ed from France where he has been teaching forestry, heads the Indians participating in Chicago's celebration of Indian Day tomorrow. Twp years ’ Big Plans are now being. made by: Photographers, Printers, {could not see:sin anywhere.” Large value giving for one dollar at BISMACK’S FIRST DOLLAR DAYS, Sep- tember 28-29, and every merchant has arranged to place every imaginable class of goods on‘sale for one dollar. Plan and arrange to be here and if you don’t you ‘are going to miss the chance of your life'to save money. ; All classes of goods placed on from a 12 Gauge Shot Gun to the most dainty things for One Dollar." The Town Criers ‘Advertising Club have arranged with every merchant who is participating in DOLLAR DAYS to give each customer a FREE TICKET to a MOV- ING PICTURE SHOW AT THE AUDITORIUM especially arranged for these TWO BIG DAYS. ‘Show starts at 1:30 p. m; and lasts ‘until 3 p. m. “ Why not take part. on sale So Dry Goods Merchants, Department Stores, Banks, Grocers, Milliners, i Flower Stores, Electrical Supplies, Confectioners, Ladies’ Ready-to- Jewelers, Clothiers, Stationers, Hardware, Furniture, Shoe Stores and Repair Shops, Hotels, Garages, Moving Picture Houses, Seed Stores, Wellworth 5 & 10 Cent Store, etc., etc. 6. LLS IN MLEAN CO, DAYS INUTAH crops. The farmers tried to eliminate the pest without success. Transpor- tation’ at the time was difficult, means to obtain foodstuffs from distant points were limited, and the situation look- ed critical. "Wihen ,practically every. one had given up hope of saving any part of the crops, the seagulls, termed by pld ‘Mormons as the “messengers from heaven,” appeared. They did not touch ‘the grain but warred: on the crickets and in a short time had ridden the fields of the pest. There are no records to show from whence the birds’ came. The seagull is Utah’s sacred bird. It is unlawful to kill it. Many of the people of this state hold it in affec- tionate memory and during the sum- mer thousands give of their bread to the birds that may -be seen in large numbers at Saltair, a resort a few miles from here on the Great Salt Lake. : EPA TR SR ERED A EST MOVIES AND MORALS What Of Girl Star’s Social Life? :jMirs, Calhoun. Explains: . ————— rightful pleasures of youth simply. to sleep in’ order to be fit for the next day’s routine of -the studio. Ana as scon as one serial is fin- ished, there is the scenario for the next to be studied: To endure the swift rush of events in the :cinema country, one must have a sense of humor, and humor, they say, is one of the important morales for all humans. There are a few artists who. have grouched a. lonely .path through the jungle of movie difficulties, delays, harassments and embarrassments, but most of the so-called ‘fortunate” personages of movie-land have the spirit of fun in their hearts. When things go wrong, they get a full portion of humor out of the situation. This has many rewards. Probably we get out of ‘life pretty much what we look for, \ But it is fair, or even sensible, to askume that the girl in the’ movies: is: different from the girl in any other émploy- ment? fs We do not expect a school teacher to be eternally concerned with -her heart affairs. Why should we sup- pose that a stenegrapher or movie star thinks of little else? It was reported of a famous beauty, Mme. Recamier, that she “simply i That particular characteristic is‘ not im- possible today, and doubtless it makes a dependable’ shield for any woman. RR RRR RRR RR ago the Illinois legislature designated the fourth Friday in September as an annual Indian Day, and this is its second observance here. Ceremonies will be held in Chi- cago’s forest preserve under chair- manship of Ransom i®. Kennicott. its chief forester. The Chicago Histori- cal Society has joined with the, for- est preserve district, and the Boy Scouts. will assist, A number of In- h in advertising. dians have been invited by the district from reservations in Wisconsin and Oklahoma,-and from Nebraska « > “The youth of America are being brought Up on tle cigar sign Indian,” said Miss, Caroline M. ‘Mcllvaine, li- brarian of the historical society, “and have no conception of the dignity and importance of the American Indan. ‘The society is interested in Indian Day from the educational standpoint. We want. to see develop a more just and true: conception of the original American Indian. VACANT LOTS BEING TURNED Many Planning to Build in City Next Spring “I have sold’ more vacant lots since September 1 than during the rest of the yoar preceding,” said a local real estate man today. “This. indicates that there are a great\many people in Bismarck who are planning to build homes this fall or next spring. If conditions develop as they are anticipated there will be. ‘a large. number of houses under con- struction early in the spring.” Another Incal business man predict- ‘led that not less than 50 residences would be built for occupancy by the Wholesale Houses, Dollar Days—are under the approval of the Bismarck Tewn Criers Advertising Club, which stands for trut ne owners in the spring. . He predicts a real building boo: for Bismarck. Ladies and Gentlemen} ’ Just a word. Bring in your Winter clothes early for remodeling, relining, cleaning and repairing. KLEIN Tailor and Cleaner. re 5 DOLLAR DAYS| - Wed. .& Thurs. Next week. Order Your Signs, Window Cards, and Price Tickets EARLY BISMARCK SIGN CO. | 909%? 909 iPhones :° “The Gun and Shells for a Good Bag of Ducks and Chickens Waiting in the blind while the ducks circle over your decoys—it takes a hard-hitting, evenly distributed shot pattern to bring down that canvas back or mallard. A perfect shot pattern is the result of the right gun and the right shell. Winchester shot guns and loaded shells are famous | for their patterns of uniform spread and hard-hitting de- livery. No duck gets through a Winchester pattern. The duck shooting will be good from now on and we have a good supply of the very best duck loads. French & Welch Hardware Co. The Winchester Store.

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