The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1921, Page 2

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= PAGE TWO RED CROSSIN CONVENTION TO HEAR LEADERS Mery Important ‘tant Subjects Are to. “be. Discussed at Columbus Meeting DR. FARRAND TO aaa aid Columbus, Ohio, Oct, 1—The Na- tional Red Cross convention which. | will convene in. this city on October: 4 and last five days, bids fair to be! the most important of these gather- ings that has ever been held, even of more significance from Red ‘Cross! viewpoint than the meetings held | during the great war. i ‘Men and women prominent in all walks of life are on the program to; deliver addresses to all the delegates. | Dr, Livingston Faerrand, chairman | of the Central Committee of the! American Red Cross and president of | Cornell University, will preside at a/ meeting October 4, when Dr. W. | versity will deliver Welcome. Gov. Harry I. for the city and state, pal speaker. dent of Vassar College will preside at the Junior Red Cross. meeting in the | “The Chal-| afternoon of October 5. lenge of Childhood in America, to the | Red Cross,” is the subject on which, Miss Charl Williams, of the ‘National | ‘W. 'W. Marquart, educational ‘States, will address the convention on | “The Juniors at Work in Our Insular Possessions.” ‘Herbert Hoover, Sec-| retary of Commerce, will speak ov | “The Challenge of Childhood in For- | eign Lands and What Junior Red| Cross is Doing There,” while Sena-j tor Frank B. Willis of Ohio, is.to de- | liver an address on “The Future| Builders of the Nation and Citizenship Training.” Praise Service ‘ i The evening meeting dedicated to America’s Obligation to Her Service ‘Men and Women, will- be, presided over by Dr. Farrand and ten minute speeches will be delivered by such; notables as Dr. Thomas E. Green, di- rector of the Speakers Bureau of the! American Ref Cross; Major-General DeJeune, U. S. Marine Corps; Rev. francis P. Duffy, Chaplain 165th Regi- ment; Mrs. Frank V. Hammer, Chair- man St. Louis Chapter, American Red! Cross; Theodore Roosevelt, Assistant | Secretary of the Navy;. Rabbi Steph- en Wise. Fre2 synagogue of New York; W. Frank Parsons, vice-chair- man in charge of Domestic Opera- tions, American Red €ross; John G.; Emery, National Commander Ameri- can Legion and General John J. Per- shing. \ Robert S, Gast, chairman of the Red Cross Relief Committee of Puebla, Col., will address the convention .on)| “The Red Cross in Disaster” on the morning of October 6. Migs Mabel F. Boardman, Secretary of the Ameri-| can Red Cross, will preside. | Reunions of Red Cross workers who served in the world war will be held at a series of luncheons. Sectional Conference (Sectional conferences will be’ held on the evening of October 7 and morn- ing of October 8," A mass meeting on roll call will constitute the after- noon’s program, winding up with the | historical pageant of the Red Cross in the evening. Among those participating in the | sectional meetings are: Ex-service group luncheon; ‘Miss Clara D. Noyes, director Red Cross Nursing Service, presiding; Merritte W. Ireland, sur- geon general United. States Army; Admiral E. R. Stitt, surgeon general United States Navy; Hugh C. Cum- ming, surgeon general U. S. Public ‘Health Service; Julia, C. Stimson, Ma- jor, Superintendent, Army Nurse Corps, Dean, Army School of Nursing. Military Relief reunion: Col. Geo. Filmer, manager Pacific Division, San (Francisco, presiding; Percy H. Clark, ‘Washington, formerly director of Camp Service, and Assistant Director ‘General of Military Relief; Edward E. Greene, Cleveland; and Edwin H. Brown, Minneapolis. PREMIER GIVES $10 TIP, London, /Oct. 1.—Henry Holliday, a district messenger, took a box of cigars to Premier Lloyd George as a gift from some Americans in London. He returned w with 2° $10. tf HP MILK DO DOWN TO § CENTS, Hinckley, 'Eng., Oct. 1.—Farmers around here have “announced they will deliver milk direct to homes twice daily, at 8 cents a quart. This is a little above half the regular price. pes aaa aa iy At the burial of a London man his six dogs draped in black followed. the cortege, t } ‘LARGE: PIN TICKED BADLY Redand Scaled Over. Could : NotSleep. CuticuraHeals, “My face broke out ‘in large, red pimples, and they festered and scaled over and then dried up. They itched ‘eo badly that I could not sleep at night, and my face was a mass of seh tind everything T saw ad 4 everyt! sew adver- tised but nothing did me any until I got Cuticura Soap and ment. om rae tice: fe Cher and Se oo omental Talcum your daily toilet aay “er ‘watch sale skin 2 See Soe Shana. Fl Thorson, president of Ohio State Uni- | the address of Davis of | Ohio and Mayor James J. Thomas of | ‘Columbus will welcome the delegates | ‘President | ‘Harding is expected to be the princi- | Dr. Henry ‘Noble MeCracken, presi- | | ‘Educational association will speak. Dr. | agent | for the Philippine Islands in the United WOMAN REGAINS SIGHT ANNA MAU Commands Her Eyes To See - Until They Do See! (By Ruth Agnes Abeling) Cleveland, Oct. 1—Train your sub- conscious mind! Make it work for you! Then nothing will’ be beyond the realm of your own possibilities. This is the theory of Miss Anna ‘Maud Hallam, practical psychologist. Miss ‘Hallam is vital, successful, enthuslesti¢ proof of her own theor- jes, D HALLAM tree and flow to’-make at Jeast a change. in;.the: human. ment,’ “That gave me my cue.” for improve- After listening to all of the books | on applied psychology which her ter could read to her, Miss Haitam | asked to be soated beféfe » mirroy. There, befieving the mirnor au aid to} willed concentration, she practically the return of her eyesight. ; Commands Vision She repeated aloud during 15 .in- utes several times every She was stone blind at one time, and due to the awakening of her own jlatent possibilities, she recovered her sight. Health Breaks Down “It was only a short time after leaving college that the train of ex- periences which broke my health be- gan,” says Miss Hallam. “My mother died. I became seriously ill and after along convalescent period began the planning of a home with my fiance— a real. pal whom I had long known. Suddenly a message’ came telling me-| of his death. “Then it was that I broke down completely and lost my sight, “I became possessed of a great: de- sire to leave my home in New York {and gi to Colorado. That was my subconscious mind coming: to the rescue—because it was ‘in Colorado that my sister one Sunday. led me in- to a little church where I was given the thought which gave me courage. “The minister jn that little church said: “Friends, I believe when we can understand the law of human life as well as Mr, Edison understands elec- tricity, We can be well and happy and | Prosperous. When we can make the effort to get acquainted with human life and its automatic law, as Mr; Bur- words; “Cells of my eyés are iend. for perfect eyes, for perfect eye: the concentration, Your property is in- sured Safely when the protection is from this EXPERIENCED Agency. bank has the law and life of plant, BISMARCK -_————_ you, and what we have done for Makes a specialty of training young men and young women for the best BOOKKEEPING lo 900 at STENOGRAPHIC POSITIONS B. B. C. graduates are expert, and experts are always in demand. A B. B. C. graduate never had to shop for a posi- tion. <If you aspire to get a good start in RUSINESS or - BANKING let t us plan a course for. thousands of the most successful business men and women throughout the United States, we ean do for you. ENTER AT ANY TIME No entrance examinations, any deficiency in the common branches can be made up while pursuing the special course. For particulars write Bismarck G. M. LANG Did you read yesterday’s about the Grant County: oi! possibilities . UM, President N. Dak. Tribune, Page 3, Column 2, Play safe and yet get in on the ground floor. Become the owner of an improved. quarter section for. $3,000.00. The improve- ments alone are worth that. make you independent. Lan The oil possibilities may d has reached its lowest ebb. From now on prices are bound to rise. Follow the crowd and remain-poor. Study the science of~investment and you will buy. something everybody is selling or trying to sell. Plan your Sunday to run down and see this improved farm. It will pay you big dividends when the mob begins to buy Grant county real estate a few years hence. Make arrangements for a\day-of pleasure and profit on Sunday by consulting J. HENRY KLING Phone 682 ‘| Press)-The, Japanese. cabinet, ', we then shall be able | corresponding day these ing ht.” | Two weeks from the day she began according to Miss THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [Malm aho was abt to soo vetoes: HOW A PASTOR HAS PREACHED MORE” BY STRENGTH OF WILL vrtect test, Ben Then she began eoncen:ration for ‘That, too, came as willo.i. Withio ‘six months she was perteci.v wol'. | All of this, says’ Miss Hallam, is jthe result of putting the subconscious ; \mina atiwork. |” Today shé is lecthritig on practical | psychology and jt is her ambition to jtound a Bene. ots; psychology in Cleveland. SAPS ACCEPT TSAR iGHNDA Tobe Oct. after | lengthy deliberation yesterday, decid- ed in principle, acooealE to the Asahi | Shimbun, to accept the American sug- | gestion’ ‘as fio the agenda for the ; Washington conference on limitations ret armament ‘and. Far Eastern ques- ions, ! | | WEASELS ATTACK GIRL, Carnarvoashire, Eag., Occ. 1.—Little | Lizzie Thomas, going home from | SchoGl, struck a weasel with a stone. | The weasel screamed and six others | attacked her. A farmer drove them | Off. % TAXERS MISS TOWN. | Rainham, Bng., Oet.1.—Presence of } a bungalow town, buiit by Chatham | dcekyardsmen, has just come to ligt \ here. Tax collectors dit-_not know of | it untff census takers discovered the homes, \ \ a ARERR TRS th STUDENTS SAM. FREE, Cape Town, Oct. 1.+-Six students have | left here on the liner bicemfontein for | Universities in Holland The steam- | ship company has given them free first class passage accommodations. | EPS A GRAND OLD RENE Dy, You can’t keep ‘Strong and wel without sleep. Whether your rest is broken by a painful hacking cough or just an annoying tickling in the throat, the system becomes weakened and rundown. Mrs, K. D. Drake, Childs, Md., writes: “After dn attack of the ‘flu’ I was left, with a severe cough. Nothing relieved me till 1 used Foley’s Honey and Tar, which I can highly recommend.” It covers irritated mem- branes with a healing and soothing coating, loosens phlegm and clears air passages.—Adv. Expert “Aecountants. Busi- ness Service. Co,,. First floor, Hoskins Block. Phone 662 SATURDAY, OCTOBER f, 1921 THAN 7,000 SERMONS IN 50 YEARS / Dedham fowa, Sept, 30-—Fifty years in one cormerence, during which time he preached more than 7,500 sermons and saw 2,600 persons converted and taken into his church {is the record of. {Rev. William Christie Smith, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church here. Rev. ‘Smith, who is ‘seventy-six, re- cently returned from the Des Moines conference having made the 150-mile | lows trip with his wite by automobile. At the conference he preached his semi- centennial sermon. INext to driving’ his” automobile, Rev. Smith takes most delight in walking a tight fope, @ survival of the days when he lonze-? to becpme a cir- cus acrobat, he says. ¢ joy ae By Lydia E. Pinkham's Meee table Compound; Restoring Mrs. Benz te Health’ Altoona, Pa.—‘‘I am writing to tell yu what pia E, Pinkham’s Vegetabl t ee ae done on 5 thi: four months old and’a healthier beby y vould not want. I am sending you 4 picture of her. Everybody says, | “That healthy looking baby." You have my consent to. show this letter.””— Mrs, W. Benz, 181 8rd Ave., Altoona, a No woman can renin the joy and happpiness this healthy babe brought into the home of Mrs. Benz, unless they have had alike experience, iSvery. woman who suffers from any ailments peculiar to her sex, as indica- ted by, backaches, headaches, bearing- down ains, eeormaries, nervousness and ,‘ "should ‘not rest until they have’ ee Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial. three-mile limit. : Rivals promise immigrants to America. per cent Immigration Law had been exceeded. October 1st Number on Sale Today The Arms Parley and the League as Talking Ireland Into Peace New'Mexico Elections as a Straw ¥ankee Capital Invading Europe The World’s Unemployed’ Japanese Doubts of the Washington Conference : France Democratizing Syria Grounds for an Irish-English Com- The Famine Truce in Russiy Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Humorous Cartoons. The veteran's first sermon was de- livered at Perry. His salary at that time was $300 a year. ‘He came ti Iowa from Coskrocton, Ohio, with his parents in a prairie schooner in 1856, and settled on a farm 12 miles from Des Moines. He was a student in the public schools, a tentber of the second graduating lass at ‘Simpson college, Indianaola, and was the. first editor of the Simpsenian, college newspaper. Daring. the first. 42 years, of his ministry. he de\ivered three sermons each’ Sunday. The credit for’ his half century of of. Phone. or Bow to neces 7 \ The first two minutes of August found two ships lying quietly off New York, just outside the And these particular ships were not “bootleggers,” either; The reason for hovering outside the jurisdiction of the United States — with steam up —.was that the July quotas allowed several European nationalities by the new three When the new month was ushered in, however, a race for shore began, with the result that the winner (by two minutes) filled the quotas, and nothing but deportation remained for scores of immigrants 0a the losing vessel. tember Ist a similar race occurred in which six ships participated, and it’is predicted that the same thing will happen around midnight of October Ist. The. World, “asinine” and “idiatic”; The Evening World, “oppressive,.absurd and illogical.” the opinion of the Los Angeles Times, all this “clamor about the iniquities of the new immigration law’ ig; assuming such proportions as-to lead one to suspect that propagandists are back of it.” that. paper sees it, “undesirables are keptiaway ‘from our shores at a time when the number of un- \ employed is probably as great as ‘at any time in our history.” : ''' In a striking article in this week’s LITERARY. DIGEST (October 1st), the blessings and iniqui- ties of the new immigration law are dwelt upon by leading American newspapers, and a. new solution for the immigration problem is suggested which has the elements of common sense and practicality. Other very ee news-features in this number of THE DIGEST are: The New. York Globe finds the new act “stupid” ; How to Look Well in Glasses About Blood Pressure A New Way to Trap Forgers : German Poets Turning to Polities ~ The Best of Jazz Opera in Mexico To Christianizé Business in England Mother as a Movie Censor Personal Glimpses Investments and Finance Topics of the Day: Best of the Current Poetry. News-dealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year. work. in ‘the Eee ts due. toi this: wife, Rev. Smith declares, adding, "She is as able to fill the pulpit as I, ; and has served as superintendent of the Sunday school, chorister, pianist, teacher, and leader in the missionary societies.” i The couple have been married 46 years, and of their six childroa, five are college graduates, four alumni of Simpson college and. one of Missouri State College. ; Dance at Elm Grove tonight and tomorrow hight, Five piece orchestra. Public Stenorraphers: Busi- ness Service Co. First floor, they were carrying In the wee sma’ hours of Sep- Hoskins Block. Phone 662., Whose Wedding Anniversary ° : Comes This:Month? | What could be more symbolic this occasion than a well } ers? Whether the gift honors the first or ‘fiftieth anniversary, the charm and beauty of Flow- ers-bring to mind that great- est moment — their wedding SO >. (day! chosen remembrance of Flow- | \ c _ HOSKINS, - INCORPORATED BISMARCK, NO. DAK, ¢ But in As BD »01—4

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