The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 18, 1921, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

’ When Icicles Point Their Long Cold Fingers at You Exo days are gala days for healthy youngsters under- wearcd in) Lackawanna ‘Twins. Hereistheperfection of protection against the cutching icy hands of win- tér: Here tooiis thé comfore of precise fit and freedom of iaovement however vigor ously the child mzy-play. ‘The downy falbsic of Lacks. wanna Twins is craftily I:nitted out of uncommon good yarns. Ic is sterilize cndpre-shrunkin livesteam --for cleanliness and> un: shrinkability ih. wash.-A fitting fabric for such un- tsually: good underthings. Underwear and Slumber Suits UCR'BOYS AND GIRL: » BIRTH TO SIXT! We invite your inspection of LackswannaTwins ia various styles and in qualities to suit every requigemenc of scrvice end price THE EMPORIUM “Distributor . Fifth Street. re : : Senators Acknowledge “~~ Resolutions Sent Ellendale, N, D., Nov: 18.—Eliendale State, Norma) Industrial school has two; letters..bearing upon:the. dis- armament conference that. its friends feel should be made.a ‘part of the his- torical record of: the school. Some time ago the - students and faculty passed resolutions, supporting disa: ament in strong terms and sent copies of the resolutions.:‘to Senator BE. F. Ladd: and Senator Q., W. ‘Underwood. Acknowledgment of: the receipt of the resolutions from the: two senators, one of whom has an important place in the sessions of the disarmament con- ference itself brought the school the /owner, Carlos Zuloaga.. The purchase letters. they prize. Senator Underwood wrote under date of November. 12; “T have a copy of the: resolutions adopted by the State Normal and In- dustrial] School of, Ellendale. I feel quite optimistic as: to the’ probability of the, conference working out the great :results that we all: desire and I certainly shall do my best in that regard,” Senator Ladd acknowledged receipt of the; petition and: promised to place it on, file. with the. senate. Yeast Vitamon Tal Bring Real Beauty Banishes Skin Eruptions. Puts On Firm Flesh, Strengthens The Nerves and Incieasés: En -/7- FIRM FLESH Na UNDER “SKIN SS NO FLABBINESS NO HOLLOWS Mastio’s VE-EX-MON— thi original Concentrated Tablets Easy and Eto: nomical to Take: Results Quick. If you want to quickly ¢lear your skit complexion, put. sohie rns, heal iis and your bones, increase power, highly concentrated itamii Ls Soares fae Veins. ral Slings (Fat imples, boils ae like magic under its purifying inftu- beautiful, the 1 toned and invigorated inder-weight q Paaythere begin to some firm, are the results that success is abeolutel guaranieod. Be sure to remember the af and genuine yeast-vitamine tablet. ioe. eles like i, 66 d6 nok Metal THTAMON tathets at Si opel 50,000 FAMILIES OF MENNONITES ‘OFF FOR MEXICO ing Unjust Treatment, They Decide To Pull Out | i | i i | \ | | i} HAD MANY INVITATIONS| El Paso, Tex lov. 18—One of | the largest migrations of Christian | eople of modern history is that of | ut 200,000 Mennonites, 50,000 fam- ilies, trom Canada to Mexico, which | will begin in December. Their trek i to last two years.. The Mennonites for the past year} have been looking for a new home; claiming unjust treatment in Canada during the World War. ‘Eight nations; have invited them. Land “sharps,” | “boomers” and others have tried. to influence them. After a dozen trips; to Mexico, during which representa- tives conferred with President Alvaro | Obregon and officials of the Mexican | immigration service, the leaders, al- most decided to settle in. . Mexico. Then editorials from various sources, | save Mexican, declared the Menho-| nites were “making a mistake,” that the religions freedom which they! have sought could not be guaranteed them under the Mexican constitution. | Another trip was made to Mexico and; state and national governments assur- ed the Mennonites that they could | worship God as they pleased, that they | could hold all the tenets of their re- | ligion and could enter that country; and make their permanent home. | ‘Canadian Mennonites hold the same ; belief as early members of the sect who settled in the United States—| that of non-resistance. .The Menno- nites, in defending their belief, de-| clared that thoy suffered less in the early days at the hands of the Indi- ans than did others who waged war- fare against the savages. The Mennonites ‘still refuse to en-| ter any war. ‘Another. peculiar custom of these people is the washing of feet. They! say. that the command of Christ to/ the worhan to wash His feet. stands on the same spiritual level as His acts of distributing food and drink to the hungry and thirsty. To the Men- nonites the story related by St. Luke is comparable to the ones other Chris- tains. regard, including, the Sacra- ment and communion. Community property is another be- lief of some Mennonites, although it) is not general. The members of the sect cooperate in building roads, school houses and churches. The removal of tho Mennonites to America came about whefi. Willtam Penn had been granted land for his Quaker. followers. ‘He was told of (Mennonites who had fled’ from. Ger- many to Holland and his Quakers | came to their aid. The Quakers are credited with helping them financially and in colonizing parts of Ohio, In- diana, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota. Later, colonies were estab- lished in Saskatchewan and other parts of Canada. During the past year afew of the sect have settled in Florida. (For years there were 14 independ- ent bodies of Ménnonttes, but years ago:the sect: was rounited. ‘The Mennonites will settle in Chi- hudhua and. Durango, principally in the former state: Options have been taken on, land in both states and im- provements: are being made on one large tract, the Bustillos. hacienda, or ranch, near Bustillos and Chihuahua City. Thé colonists hdye paid 25.000 pesos to hold this tract, the money ye- ing on deposit to the credit of the Zuloaga family, heirs of the large land Heriti' his alleged victims. Louis Jaume, (4) M: They are: (1) By N.E. A. Service Versailles, Nov. 18—The murderer and the most lover of modern times! ~ Those titles will be given without reservation to Henri Desire Landru it Prosecutor Bonin: proves him guilty at his trial, now wer way at the-Ver- sailles assizes., But noted criminolo- gists who have studied the case, say the state has a hard fight on its hand; to convict Landru on the evidence. ‘Landru, known the world over as “Bluebeard,” is charged with having slain 10 women whom he married or pledged to marry and the son of one of the women. 1 Landru has been imprisoned for two | years awaiting tri Not because the French authorities: delayed—but _be- because Landry, with his keen knowl- edge, of French taw, always raised some legal obstacle when an attemp* wag made to bring him to trial. In those two years. Landru has be- come better known than any living ‘Frenchman. Musical comedies even have been staged in Paris with Landru as the central character. Real Thrills ‘Why? Because the case is filled with more unusual sensational and comic angles than any crimiinal case in the last decade. Here are some of them: The best of Paris’ world-famed de- tectives have been on the case. Some won international reputations by un- covering-spy plots in the war. Ta collect evidence for the trial the police carried on a billboard advertis- ing campaign. They tacked up big red posters bearing Landru’s photo- graph and this inscription: “If this man has made love to you or anyone you know, inform the police!” ‘Landru, is an expert contortionist and is willing to go through his tricks for. the amusement of court fans or prison visitors. He often laughs and makes witty sallies in the courtnoom. Once a “Model Man” Landru wag a). “model, man”—a churchman, ..a faithful: husband and loving father—until, he wag 30, when his; career.of mixed love and murder is alleged to have begun. “ He's a brilliant man of quick’ wit. His answers to. questions made many a magistrate. ridiculous in prelimi- nary investigations. Testimony and affidavits against Landrw on closely typewritten shee:s fill several huge trunks. And Landru now. says his eyes have been ,ruined reading them and that he’ll ask dam- ages from the French government! greatest successful | won his sweethearts’ affections. For price, is 600,000 pesos. the police say he killed only 11 of 73 BELIEVE IN SOLIDIF Underwood, .N. D., Nov. 18.—Ten meetings of the officers of the Mc- Lean Farm Bureau with the citizens of different parts of the county were held this week (Nov. 14-19). The meétings were in the interest of fur- ther solidifying the Farm Bureat or- ganization:of the county. Sixty-four out of every 1,000,000 of ithe world’s population are blind. a ladies’ man—he’s past 50, bald, with a shaggy “beard and not at all hand- some. ‘He. paid little attention to dregs. Those are. angles that are interest- ing to court! hangers-on, criminolo- gists and everyéne who reads: about the case. dru? ‘Only a pile of bones found in Wis country hoyse at Gambais. Some ex-! perts say they’re human bones. Oth-; ers deny it. . i Arf Articles of female apparel also were | found and parts of bodies were discov- ered in a.lake nearby. Tablets dents that Landru kept a fire in his Tee eae * furnace ‘in midsummer, when coal was} high priced and hard to get... This, coupled with the fact that 11! friendly with Landru, suddenly van-/ ished, has caused the police to con-; struct this theory: | That Landru courted 10 women,| % é country home, murdered thein and! burned their, bodies in the. basement furnace! i How can they prove their t heory? | fest on | By N. E. A. Service ur nerve J and look and feel 100 per een tetten . Y i pre try taking two of Mastin’s Siny yeast Versailles, ‘Nov. 18—These are fae toh Fésul t earth 10 women that police charge were fas-; DIGESTION ee ehieaalta, u's VITAMON contains cinated, enticed away and killed by, (Henri Landru,. row on trial here as a modern “Bluebeard:” / Mme. Jamast Cuchet, 4 widow of 40, disappeared at Vernouillet in Jan- | uary, 1915. Her 19-year-old son, An-; dre, vanished at the same time. | Mme. Therese Laborde-Line,, native ; of Buenos Aires. and grass widow, dis:! appeared at. Vernoufllet fn July, 1915. ! (Mme. Marine Guillin, a former gov-| erness, disappeared at Vernouillet in| August, 1915. | Mme. Berthe Heon, a 54-year-old| widow, disappeared in October, 1915,, from Landru’s new villa at Gambais. | Mme. Anna Moreau Collomb, re im Soluble A atid Water Soluble C). and skin eruptions seem the pompleaion pecomes. treat and, e cheeks rosy instead of pale, lips red instead of colorless, ‘ (instead of dull. The whale aystcre ;and those who hb. So rapid and amazing ‘Thereia imitations or substi Heats Or, tutes. You can get Are Positively Guareatecd year-old widow of a Marseilles silk! ‘to: Put On Firm Flesh; | manufacturer, vanished from Gambias | Clear @lie Skin ani 5 in December, 1916, i E thie and Increase Mile. Andree Babeley, 19-year-old | Energy When Faken With household servant for a Parisian for-| Every Meal or Money Back ‘tune teller. disappeared from Gambais | in April, 1917. ; | (Mme. Celestine Buisson. a widow; disappeared at Gambais in September, | 191%. Mme. Louise Jaume, sevarated from | !t WITAMON adame Jamast Cuchet, (5) Madame Anna More (7) Madame Celestine Buisson, (8) Madame Anna: Pascal. ‘Everyone is asking how Landru! women whom he wooed. Landru’s not; ‘What's the evidence sgainst Lan-| ‘And the statements of Gambais resi-| women who were known to have heen; . aged from 20 to 60, lured them to hist her husband and divorced after meet-; LANDRU, “BLUEBEARD? OF FRANCE, LAUGHS AS HE FACES ) di RES kee eh a 1 x jesife’ Landa ‘(left), charged’ with Slaying 10°‘sweethearts, now on trial at Versailles, ‘and eight or (2) Mademoiselle Marie Marchadier, (3) Madame au Colomb, (6):Mademoiselle Andree Babeley, Madame Marine),Guilli ing Landru,, disappeared at Gambais in November, 1917. Mme, Anne Pascal, native of Touton and Parisian acquaintance of Landru, disappeared at Gambais in April, 1918. Mlle. Marie Marchadier, a Bordel- laise, vanished at Gambais in January, 1919. ees GERMANYS CAUSE 0 YOU THE ANSWER Much Squabbling Still Going On In German Press To Settle “This Question MILITARISTS ARE BLAMED Berlin, Nov. 18. (By the Associated Press.)—Why Germany was beaten is again a topic of: acrimonious news- paper controyersy now that the third aniversary (of. German. war machine is at hand. Opinions: areas violently expressed and as Widely“ivergent as ever. An impetus to bitter recrimination has been. given dy an. interview with Field Marshal von Hindenburg, which appeared the other. day in the Ham- burg Tageblatt. In it, the aged army chief once midte: affired his, belief in the. “dagger thrust in the back of the:army’”—the treacherous breakdown of ‘civilian support for the military leaders. ' The sequel: has been the publication Nof a mass. fegspfficial material, not- ably. by tie, Vorwaerts, to show that it: was certainly not the civilians who lost: the ‘Ww: ig Major’ “Deutelmoser,': the» former chief. of. the- official German press bureau, writed;in the Berlin Tageblatt maintaining that the blind faith of the German-nation in its military !eaders continued tothe -bitter end; in fact, until it was plain to all that the mili- tary idqlahad come to grief irrepar- jably, “because they were just soldiers |and not, statemen, which was th j deplorablé.. mistake made by the people. at home,” says the writer. | The extreme radical press is even | more bitter in its denunciation of the | military , failure, The, Freiheit pub- ilishes a long article to show that the {German pepple! Were: systematically | deceived; that they had no conception ‘of the true sitwation atythe front. and ; that the supreme army command de- liberately spread false reports. Furloug denials of. these allegations Is manner, that its leavening vary: It retains its original strength for months after leaving the factories. When you tip the can to get the last spoonful, you Know your baking will turn out all right—the last spoonful is the same as:the first. This uniform quality of — | BAKING POWDER is cause for its big demand. Housewives know they can ae upon the results obtained— that climatic conditions or temperature cannot de- teriorate its positive leavening power. 1 When you buy baking powder remember these facts—that a uniform leavener means bakin i quality—that Calumet és uniform. A pound can of Calumet contains full 16 oz, Some baking powders come in instead of 16 ounce cans, Be sure you get a ceeS—_— SS SS SS pzousice oe Annan. F DEFEAT-HAVE' the collapse of the}: ‘Calumet is made under such exact- ing conditions — packed in such a scientific United States are to be maintained at jatiything like their present level, ity T YPEWRITERS ACCUSERS IN COURT | wilt be necessary tor the American ry ~ All makes al i | dealer's to grant long terms of credit m *” sold und rented . jand for the American to buy more » Bismarck ; goods of Norwegian origin. Typewriter Co. | = Bismarel N. D. / | BANKERS AND FARMERS T0 MEET. Minot, N. D. Nov. 18.—Arrange- ;ments are being made for meetings in each of the counties in this sec- jtion at which bankers and farmers will | discuss the moneys that might be se- ‘cured from the War Finance Corpor. jation. A number of bankers have | been ‘assigned to each of the meetings jand F. E;.Barron, who\ represents the | War Finance:Corpcration here will at- i tend; each one, answering questions | ‘and offering aid where needed. EAGLE Tailoring and Hat Works Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing, Dyeing. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. Knife Pleated Skirts Cleaned and Pressed. We call for and deliver, Phone 58 Op- posite Postdéttice, Bismarck, N.,D. Mall Order= Solicite: Complete December List NOW ON SALE ’ esd come trom the conservative areans. ‘The Tageszeitung wrathfully accuses the “v:le agitators” who, it says, had Jong ago whetteqd the weapon of treachery; while Count Reventlow in; the. Abenblatt. declares. that it was/| neither Foch’s, genius nor ‘the’ British blockade that overcame Germany, but “the venomous work of deserters and traitors behind the German front, who had been infected by the yacifist and revolutionary: virus.” | Adolph Koester, a former minister in the Socialist cabinet, who says that| the dagger thrust story is ‘one of the; most insidious and stupid of war legends.” puoduces official evié dence from reports of commanding) generals, themselvyes,, that, the Ger- man army was well and truly beaten; that it had no efficient .reserves; that | the Allies\.were incontestably. superior | in men and material, and that the | | Records Ma. Medley Fox-Trot Ted Lewis and His Band Biminj Bay. Fox-Trot ‘ Ted Lewis and His Band Say It With Music. Fox-Trot The Columbians Just Like a Rainbow. Fox-Trot ‘The Columbians Yoo-Hoo. Fox-Trot The Happy Siz Fancies. Fox-Trot The Happy Siz ase \agee? 43 1c A-=3482 85c Putian Blockade; bed Germany: ty be Lets Sunny Tener Fox-Trot The Columbians at. a by nT 0'll Be the Next One (To Over You . pacifism had anything to do with ’ Medley Fox-Trot Cry - The éepy a 8 that.” the writer declares. There is no sign that Germans ever; will agree on the question why the’ were defeated: U.S. Export Trade In Norway Is Menaced Canadian Capers. Medley Fox-Trot Paul Biese Trio) A-3470 Dangerous Blues. Medley Fox-Trot Paul Bisse at 85c Why, Dear? Medley Fox-Trot The Happy Siz) p_¢199 “When the Sun Goes Down” Blues. Medley Fox-Trot z The Happy Siz $1.25 Christiania, ..ov. 18.—America’s} export trade in Norway, which made tremendous strides ‘since 1914, is menaced according to trade experts, by the high rate of exchange of the American dollar and. which has al- A-3477 {ready affected American exports with Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes Ireing Kaufman various other European countries. Dapper Dan Frank Crumits 85¢ Figures of Norway’s imports for 1919, recently made public; show that Sally, Won’t You Come Back? Joe Schenck) A-3478 pnt one-third of the ‘ Norwegian Learn to Smile Charles Harrisons 85¢ imports were fromthe United States. a American eaportard: gained x “hold! You’ve Made a Chicken of Your Mother Nora Bayes) A-3471 in the Norwegian markets at a time| Saturday : Nora Bayes} 85 when Norway’s chief source of supply! Swee ‘4 was closed. Requirements, which; ri Lady Frank Creat gerhodhe pi could not be covered in the regular} You're Just the Type for a Bungalow — Frank CrumitS 85c markets nearer home, as was the The Memphis Blues Marion Harris) A-3474 custom prior to the war, had’ to be} taken from America,.or not at all, It is now heing pointed out, how-| ever, by Norwegian trade experts,; that in order that-the United States |° may maintain this position in Norwe-; gian trade: it is essential that Ameri- can manufacturers stipulate virtually| the same terms of credit as other | countries. The dollar now costs more than twice as many kroner as it did prior to 1914. This high dollar rate makes imported American goods so ex- pensive that similar goods from other! sources,,homemade or imported from | Germany, can be sold cheaper and} which .eventually, will crowd Amert-| can articles off the market. | Merchants suggest that if the trade relations hetween Norway ‘jand the 85c¢ A-3476 85c Beale Street Blues Marjon Harris I Wonder if You Still Care for Me Broadway Quarlet Jealous of You Charles Harrison Nervous Blues Edith Wilson and Johnny Dunn’ sOriginal Jazz Hounds | A-3479 8: Vampin’ Liza Jane Se Edith Wilson and Johnny Dunn’ sOriginal Jazz Hounds Opera and i Concert © Come All Ye Faithful Barbara Maurel and Male Quartet _ Hark, the Herald An * y, A-6196 Sing 4 $1.50 ‘arbara Mauzel and Male Quartet 79891 Charles Hackett} $1.00 j } Then You'll Remember Me “Mary of Argyle Corinne Rider-Kelsey) A-6198 My Lovely Celia Corinne Rider-Kelsey 5 $1.50 Carmen “Canzone del Toreador” (Song of the 49968 Toreador) . MRiccardo Straeciari and Male Chorus $ 1.50 | HUTTE! il Instrumental A Music Souvenir | Nearer, My God, to Thee Lead, Kindly Light A-3469 85c oc | ho - mg Duct de Rerekjarto } Hy ‘00 Festival Overture Key of “E” Flat Major Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra | A-6197 $1.50 Marche Joyeuse Key of “‘C’”” Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Stell, Schuetze & Heinrich Stell. and Biedermann + Gypsy String Quartet Gypsy String Quartet strength and purity never }Asse" j At the Mountain Inn On the High Alps = Co E-7304 Dreams and Fairy-Tale 85c Fiora tenacity and a mother who believed in him? Read it in ‘The Lure of Music Dat you know. that aya boy, Puccini,’ who later composed La Boheme, Tesca, and Butterfy, was a failure an everything that he undertook, bur he had-a bulldog New Columbia Records oa Sale at all Columbia Dealers the 10th and 20th ef Every Month gs that do not vary in Récords: ay Ib. when ye Columbia Phonographs Columbia i On’‘Easy Terms if Desired. COWAN’S DRUG STORE want it. =o vt

Other pages from this issue: