The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 23, 1921, Page 8

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/cember 27 to 30 and will read a paper VAG hi PAGE EIGHT Tie RAMARCR TRON N.D.U. FACULTY MEMBERS WILL 6070 MEETINGS, Four Prominent Educators Wil!) Attend Educational Meetings | During Vacation { Grand Forks, N. D., Dec. 23-—Four | members of the faculties of the Uni- | versity of North Dakota will attend | meetings of the different educational | associations during the holidays, The | meetings, which are national in scope | are teld at Chicago, Princeton, Pitts-; burgh and St. Louis. One other edu- caticnal meeting slortly ‘after the! holidays also will be attended ‘by a} ntative of the University of: North Dakota | Dean Hugh E, Willis of the North: Dakota Law School will attend the | meetings of the Association of Ameri- ‘| can Law Schools held in Chicago. Ay committee of the association, of which | Dean Willis is the chairman, is pre- | paring a source hook on, Modern Pro- | cedural Methods and a report of the! progress of the work will be present-| ed to the association. The other mem-:! bers of the committee are Dean John | H. Wigmore of Northwestern Univer- } , Dean Charles H. Hepburn of In-| any. University, Dean W. T. Lafterty | of the University of Kentucky and} Harley, secretary of the | n Judiciary Society. Dr. John M. Gillette, of the Depart- | ment, of Sociclogy will be the repre-; sentative of the University to attend | the meeting of men_ interested, in) Economics and Sociology’ to be held!her platform she pledged to rid the town of bootleggers. The mecting, one of |and other leading women of the country have ‘wired ft Pittsburgh. SHE’S A MAYOR AT 23 Dr. Amy the largest of the holidays, includes | upon her election. the American Economics a: association; Poli! TG ey en { ciation; in Accounting; sscciation; Association of: y Professors and Association | : Legislation. Dr, oiatte | vad 4 paper before the Americ: ican So iological Association dealing, rath the “Points of Contact betwee: and Country.” Prof. Clarence Perkins of the Uni- | versity History Department will at- i tend the meeting of the Ame: Historical association at St. Louis, De- | y there on “English Electioneering inj the Time of Robert Walpole.” Profes- sor Perkins spent the whole of last in London and Paris engaged, in historical research work in the Brifis!i Museum;’ Public Record. Office sand the Archives of the. Ministry ‘of Fe n Affairs in Paris searching out | correspondence regarding the story of England tbetween 1730 and 1741. Dr. Henry J. Humpstone of the De- partment, of “Psychology will. attend the sessions of the American Psychol- ogical association at Princeton, New. Jersey, during the holidays and soon after the first of the year, Dr. Henry FE. Haxo of the Department of ‘Ro- mance Language and ‘Literature’ will attend a meeting of the Vocational Educational association of the Middle West to be held at Milwaukee, Wis. | ONLY TWORAIL ROADS BEING BUILT INU. §. The Kansas & Oki Oklahoma, 225 Miles Long; the Other is From Pratt to Kinsley Wichita, Kan., Dec. 23—The only railroads now being built in the United States are two in number and both are in southwestern Kansas, ac- cording to the man who is huilding them, C. P, Byers. They are the Kan- sas & Oklahoma, a 226 mile line from Forgan, Okla., just across the Kansas | line, to Liberal, Kan., and thence west to Baca and Las Animas, Colo.,‘with Trinidad as the ultimate objective; and the Wichita Northwest, extending 144 miles across three counties, from | Pratt to Kinsley and Larned, which is | completing a 13 mile stretch from: north of Larned to La Crosse where it will have connection with the Mis- s®uri Pacific railroad. Trains have | been operating on this road for sev- eral years, although the project is far from completed. i “As far as I have been able ‘to fina | out, or as shown by the records of the Interstate Commerce Commission in Washington, these are the only dines, unde construction now, in the United States,” said Mr. Byers who is presi- dent, general manager and construc- | ‘tion superintendent of both compan- jes, Construction of the Kansas & Okla- homa cut of Liberal will continue all winter, weather permitting, Mr. Byers | said, This month an entire train load of steel rails arrived and more. than 14,000 éies are piled at intervals along the right-of-way. Mr. Byers is a type of railroad man | of the “old school. His experience dutes back more than forty years when he worked as a laborer ‘on the old Kansas and Pacific—now the Union Pacific line through this state. He was a superintendent of construc- tion cn the Rockford Island across Kansas to Dallas, Tex, in the middle ’80's. He built the Hutchinson & Southern railway, from Hutchinson, Kan., to Blackwell, Okla., now a part of the Santa Fe system. iati Sociological a Pp Association of-University In- r Farm Eco- | LESS THAN LAST YEAR IS REPORT n! More Cars ‘Used in in Its Trans- portation—But Cost Kankonen, 23, was recently elected mayor of Fairport, 0. {n Mrs. Harding sé D ove thy neighbor as thy- selt. They d re themselves, like Count Tolstoi, “searchers for the truth in all things.” They arrived here in early September with a per. yit from Moscow to occupy a portion e now classed as a na ution. .A teacher whose ‘brother is director of the aolony, or- ganized the movement. The 18 mem- bers, all of whom profess the prac- itical idealism of the Doukhobors sect with .a2 mingled belief in Buddhism, were allotted quarters in a once handsome but now tumbled-down one- story building of the estate built in of the ¢: their congratulations | ! acres included in their grant. Foo‘ | ‘tar:-hes-been aupplied.tree, by th ‘Sovtet. government, the same as to all visitorg to the ‘Tolstoi home, thé “/three women Jo the cooking. ’The correspondent came first in contact with a member of the colony ina rather strange manner. After a long journey, he had beon enrolle ds a pilgrim at the Tolstol home, acy cording to the rules of the institutio: ‘He was given a bed in the groun floor room, charicterized by a big brick arch, a room occupied by. Tolstof; for sonte 15 years. Just as he wa dropping off to sleep, he was roused by pleasing chords on the grand piuno I located‘in the room. The playing wagi done by a young man who wore high} ‘| boots, a belted jacket, and a sneep-/ skin cap. Seeing the correspondent, he stopped playing and apologized, saying he didn't know the room waa! occupied. Then he went on to explain; who he was and began to ask infot- mation about the possibility of walk- ing to India, by way of Turkestan. He |. wanted to study philoscphy there. he |! said. The 100-acre farm includes a big orchard planted by the famous Rus-' sian vuthor and one of the first acts all ths trees. This operation was pre- cede by an animated discussion jas to whether it should be done. The young men carefully debated tl ‘problem. If the trees are not white: washea, the orchard will be ruine-] ingects but if the whitewash js applied the insects will die of starvatidu and jit Js, wrong to destroy life. As the Imembers of the colony are vegetarians and fruit is therefore the prime ar- ticle of food to them, necessity cte- vailed over ideals-and the wl hitewash- ing was done, A second problem w after the same reas For iggny | years the manager of the Tolétci | ite has heen Prince Obolinski, Who | pied a building once used by the nts’ school. ‘he newcomers,, declaring that the ptes- ence of an overseer might resthict their “iiberty of action,” have decreed that the Prince must go and the Obo- linski family soon must i see food fad) | shelter elsewhere. $ —— } NOTICE i} NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That James W. Lee’s interest in the American Cafe has been taken over‘by the undersigned Wong Wee and John On, and that said James Lee has nothing further to do with the said Cafe. of the newcomers was to whitewash | = GLENDIVE LOST. 10 LOCALS BY: SCORE 500 12 Di In a game replete replete with occasional thrills and excitement, the splendid offensive and defensive work, and re- ™markably accurate foul» shooting of Twilde, Glendive’s beilliant: forward, Bismarck trounced the Glendive high school quint, 60 to 12 last night. i Tainey,. the elongated center, played exceptionally well for Glendive and ‘his repeated recoveries of \rebounds from the “bank” jhelped materially in i keeping the ball out of Bismarck’s | territory. For Bismarck, Brown, filling Kludt’s stioes, was uncanny in locating the ‘basket, dropping the ball through the net nine times during the first period. With more experience he should be- come a capable running mate for’ as, your Holiday Message There are few things in life that convey one’s sentimeht to another like Flowers, Thoughtfulness and sweetness are embodied in every petal.~ lle who again. Played steadily and col ntly, scoring with frequency. ‘Aiteon;sutteHiiik® froni”@ ‘severe told was not up to his usual form and lacked the aggresiveness which-usual- Hd marks his play. He experienced iMiculty in locating the basket. Doyle ae all over. the floor. With more experience he promises to become an effective factor in Bismarck’s team- play. Scroggins, playing in Mid-|. ues position, was a tower of rength on defense. With the score standing 30 to 6 at the end of the first half, Coach Swan- ish sent in Halloran for Brown, Jesse Scroggine for Burke, Rhud for Altson, Middaugh for Lee Scroggins, and|* Robideau for Doyle, early in the sec- ond half.’ The “seconds” held Glen- dive to one basket and scored five themselves. Halloran promises to de Yelop into one of the ‘shiftlest” for- wards in the high schools. / Lineup: Bismarck— Burke . Brown . Alfeon . (Doyle .. Glendive— Femininity loves flowers — particularly, at, Holiday Time. sweetheart will welcome them. with open arms. Here you will find everything in seasonable blooms — ready for prompt | in December. figures .issued, by the Minneapolis Traffic association indicate. °This is (ty contrast ta the shipments in the |two preceding months, October and December of this year, when with} flour at a higher price, forwarding | shipments were heavii Officials .at the Traflic association believed the falling off of flour ship- ments ‘was due to the holding up of flour orders until after ‘the scheduled: reduction in transportation rates on this commodity goes into effect late; Al first the reduced | rates were to go into effect on Decem- | ber 10, but rehearing petitions caused. the date to be postponed. CHRISTMAS — -The wise and thoughtful giver is the one who treats his or her friends to useful pres- ‘ents. Our tables are still covered with a variety of attractive articles ‘suitable for CHRISTMAS GIFTS. C. M. DAHL An outstanding fealure of’ the re- 1 Dahl Building port shows that although the tonnage of flour shipped was smaller than a year ago, more cars were used in hauling it. This means, traffic of-| ficials stated, that the cost of oper- ating these cars was greater than last year, but that the tonnage, and revenue to the railroads, was smaller. Figures show that during Novem-| ber, 1921, 5,143 cars carrying 1,464,- 692 barrels of flour left Minneapolis. Compared to these figures are the 1920 totals, which show that 5,064 ears forwarded 1,744,981 barrels, In, October and Septemb’r, this year, shipments totaled more than (during the corresponding months. the previous year. October's figures are; 2,039,551 barrels for 1921, @ompared to 1,606,723 for 1920, with about the same proportjon for September. Prices of flour during November this | year ranged from $6.90 to $7.80 a bar-; rel, while flour touched a high mark | of $11.50 and a low of $8.35 a ea ago in November. Shipments of millstuffs in Novem: | ber’ also showed that the number ot! cars forwarded were greater, and the| | tonnage shipped | 80 PEOPLE SET UP BOLSHEVIK COMMUNITY Yasnaya Polyana, yana, Russia, Dee. 22—| Fifteen young men, two young women | and an elderly matron have recently | established on the Telstoi estate what | they term “an improved Bolshevik | community.” Described as an at- | tempt to rectify failure of communism, | the members of the colony are the de- clared enemies of the destruction of property, human or animal life ahd | thus are arrayed against the Soviets government. The members of the colony make a religion gf manual labor and declare its chief tenet to be embodied in the} Main. Street ft Greatest Shoe Values | Ever Offered in Bismarck: SATURDAY ONLY ~ LADIES’ OXFORDS Brown and Black, Military Heel. All : ve LADIES’ HIGH TOP SHOES Bleck “and. Brown. All sizes. Very specially priced for this sale. MEN’S DRESS SHOES Special values. $7.50 shoes... Aiseraty MEN’S, WOMEN’S and CHILDREN’S wearing apparel is marked at a tremendous reduction for this sale. $6.95. valu LADIES’ OREOEDS 3 Bie and Brown, Fre: \ The BROADWAY STORE. 504 Broadway, Annex Building, Next Door to the Capital Security Bank. Come in and get ‘our prices. The counties through which the By- ers lines run, are heavy producers of wheai, in production of which crop 3 ieads the world according to The Byers lines are iced by the people they serve rath n by rail bonds marketed i money centers. Towns and townships through which they pass vote proportionate amounts. . Soviet Russia built 60 locomotives during the last 12 months: Rubber was first used as eraser. their pencil | SAVE 50c A TON ,Order Your Coal From The New Salem Lignite Coal Co. (Corner Front and Eighth St.) CHAS. RIGLER, Manager. Phone 738. COAL $5.00 PER TON DELIVERED Everything Must Go! Come in and make your own price. Saturday, 2:30 ad 7 p.m. COLEMAN'S: a ¢. Plants—A™ complete Hine of Poinsettia, Cyclamen, Begonia, etc _ to bé appreciated. : Table Chi Chrigtmas : Trees. with heer sence Se ate Lycopodium, last indefiftely. .. of your voice—and smile. ’ for others. shave l ess, here, there and ores: Hoskins BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA. | bers F, D. T. deliverin, flowers thr: h our Menpes throughout the United States, Canada —in fact the entire re aca Scroggins ....,.RG Summary_—Baskets, Burke 7, Brown 10, Alfson 3, Halloran’ 2, Jesse Scrog:" gins 1, Twilde 2. Goals from fouls, Altson 6 out of 8; Twilde 8 out of 9. BODY OF MAN FOUND DEAD Police Compelled to Disperse Crowds Around Trolley Car in Riot Omaha, Neb., Dec.»23.—Police were compelled to charge 4 crowd around a trolley car here today after the riot: ers had pulled the trolley from the wire. Police and detectives have heen unable to identity*the body of a man, found dead near the offices of the packing plant here last night, or to find a clue tothe persons doing the shooting. Mother, wife or To Handle 1780 for the serfs of Prince Volkonski, | Dated this 21st day of Decem- Pdelivery. father of Tolstoi’s mother. ioe ber, A. D. 1921. Mig, * 5 Minneapolis, Minn., - Dec. - 23.—De- altatae Wathen amg: weve cesiaed rn WONG WEE. ‘es .° ‘Dozen. POINSETTIA (cut) Dozen ~~~ ‘spite the fact that flour prices were|prepare for the cultivation of the 100 JOHN ON. Extra large... «$10.00 \ down to lowest levels in many years| - 5 3 k i Large. .. 8.00. * during the month of November, and Mediunr + 6,00.” several’ dollars cheaper per barrel Small: .. +. 4.000 © than the -correspording nionth in phiveanthethiins 4.00. to #00 1920, less flour was forwarded. by the pan white... o a large mills here during November of ps i bunch of 50. a a this year than that month last’ year, mapdragon ......... veel -» Must be seen - 50e, ‘75e and $1.00 nese $1.00 to $2.00 The Gift of Your: Voice The best gift of. an at Christmas time is the gift “It’s a gift of friendliness and of thoughtfulness It's a gift. of your happiness to those who may whe 's @ gift:that the telephone can deliver for : you NORTH DAKOTA INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE C0, a >

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