The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1922, Page 2

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_ powels—aav, | PACER TWO iS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE is THURSDAY, JANUARY 12,:'22 . a EE — oe — = al a PROCLAMATION! Ma HN MTN TTATATUhTk ETr TTA KILLED THEIR | ~ OWN DAUGHTER Took Her For The Other Girl,| Whom They Intended To Rob WHEREAS, The people of our state have ever proven a law-abiding and God-fearing people who desire frequently to renew their allegiance to Sofia, Jan. 12.—A strange tale of} — the id that have made us a great people and to ‘inspire the youth of banditry resulting in the murder by mistake of a girl by her own father and mother is vouched for officially | by the Bulgarian poli H * Ivan, a peasant of Hazrad,+sold two calves for 10,000 levas and started | home from the market with his daugl ter Milka. Fearing robbers he gave} the money to his daughter. The fath-: thig important subject in churches, schools and all public gatherings. er was attacked on the road and kill-/ Done at the Capitol at Bismarck this Eleventh day of January, A. D. ed by two men who saw him make} 1922. 1 the sale. : (Signed) R. A. NESTOS, Milka fled and sought refuge in a} (Seal) Governor. a peasant cottage where a woman a ‘her daughter comforted her and gave) her dinner. Later Milka was sent} to bed with the woman's daughter. | ‘When the husband returned he told} his wife he had killed a man useless-/ ly, as the money he sought had b ¢arried off by the murdered man’s daughter. The woman to whom Milka had told | her story, repeated it to her husband; and the two determined to kill the! girl as she lay asleep to get the 10,-| 000 le \ Milka, in the daughter’s room up-| stars, overheard and. escaped through | 2 window, When police were brought | by Milka they found the old couple} had gone upstairs and killed) their} own daughter ‘by mistake in the dark. | 3 SCOTLAND FOR INDEPENDENCE London, Jan, 12—Now there is an| agitation for the independence of Scotland. Forty members of the Scots Na- dional League, which stands tor com- plete separation from England, re- eently met in London and, to the wild strains of the bagpipes, affirmed their determination to fight, if need be, to gain complete and absolute independ- ence for Scotland. Speakers recalled that in 1706, Scotland, was a free country with a ational debt of only one’shilling and seven pence per head of the popula- tion. Today, every Scotsman owes 477 pounds. Scotland's contribution to taxation last year amounted to 113,487,000 pounds, but only one- quarter of this way devoted to Scot .ish purposes, they complained. The threat of a Scottish secession nas, however, failed to rouse any-) ching more than a tolerant smile from | the general public. Railroads ' Transferred To Polish Government Danzig, Jan. 12—Transfer of the Danzig railroads to the Polish gov- ernment, which is to administer the main transportation lines of the free city created by the treaty of, Ver- sailles, was accomplished recently without a hitch, this being one of the principal changes in completing the! arrangements designed to give the new Polish republic anvoutlet to the ea. i , The Danzig railroads are to be un- der direction of the Polish Minister of Railroads in Warsaw and operated jn conjunction with the PoJisIr. stats railroad system with an assistant’ di- rector residing in Danzig. Tre Poles, it is said, plan to,retain all the Ger- mans employed on the Danzig divis- jon and in this way do their share} toward maintaining friendly rela-| tions with the Danzigers so far as the railroads are concerned. ae { Prince Tekintzi_ | Is-Carpet Vendor Moscow, Jan. 12.—Prince Tekintzi is a vendor of the famous Tekintzi type of carpets in one of Moscow's cooper- ative stores recently opened. He is a prince or “Han” in the neighbor- hood of Bokhara in Turkestan, whence | ‘come carpets equal to those of Per- sia in quality, He has fallen to his present low de- gree hecause of the Russians. First, ‘under the ruthless General Skobelev, | in 1881, the Russians defeated the| Tekke Turcomans and completed the} conquest of Turkestan, and this prince was captured by the Russians, Now, under the Soviet regime, the has Jost his estates, where the carpets were made. ‘He was Minister of Foreign Affairs, at Baku, until the Azerbaijan Repub- lic was, over a year ago, converted to Communism by Moscow, and became} a Sowiet republic. Then he was locked up and shipped off last spring to} Kolmogori prison, near Archangel. Only lately he was released. TRAILL SELLS $93,000 BONDS. Hillsboroy N. D., Jan. 12.—Tiraill} county has just sold $93,000 of re- funding bonds to a Minneapolis com- pany, at 51-2 per cent interest and a $30 premium. Minot, N: D., Jan. 12—The mini-| mum ne in police court in. Minot hereafter will be $10 and costs. Fines} of $5 and costs which have been; Jevied in some instances have’ not) een enough to pay the expenses of; keeping other prisoners, who are w able to pay fines and must serve jail) sentences. CUT THIS OUT—It Is Worth Money. Cut out this clip, enclose with 5c and | 2835 Sheffield | mail it to Foley & C Ave., Chicago, Ill., writing your name afd address clearly. You will receive in return’ a. trial package containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kid- ney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly , cleansing cathartic for’ constipation, ‘ Piliousness, headaches, and sluggsh kidney and is Dladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic | City 25c. past RY Se LAW AND ORDER DAY WHEREAS, The Law and Order Union has requested that a day be set aside for the purpose of considering the value of a constitutional form of government and the desirability of maintaining law and order, and WHEREAS, Respect for, and obedience to, constitutions, laws, and con- stituted auth y, lies at the very foundation or good igovernment, and WHEREAS, Insidious influences and fcrces are continually at work in our country fostering distrust, unrest and lawlessness, and undermining the home, the school and the church, “and e with the same ideals, _ ft OW, THEREFORE, I, R. A. Nestos, Governor of the State of North Dakota, do hereby designate: . ri SUNDAY, JANUARY 22, 1922, as LAW AND ORDER DAY and ask that on that day and the week following special stress be laid on oe . By the Governor: (Signed) THOMAS HALL, Secretary of State. MINIATURE rut $40,000 into a $200,000 pool and netted $2,500,000 in three years, it is said, when {!t was found thé entire mountain was copper. VACANCY IS FILLED, . Cando, N, D., Jan. 12.—J. J. Kehoe, Cando attorney, has been appointed SUBMARINE . state’s atorney of Towner county to To Be Used In Recovering fill the vancancy made oe the death Treasure From Ships of the late W. T. Mosely, with whom ° 41” | Kehoe was in partnership under the Lost At Sea legal firm name of Kehoe & Mosely. ‘The appointment: was, made by the Rome, Jan. 12—A miniature sub-| tnanimous vote’ of the’ Towner coun- marine having a capacity of about| ty board. vMe cubic yard and operated by one SST man has been invented by an engineer| _ Washington monument at the fed- ot Trieste to recover treasure from| ¢f#! capital was 93 yedrs in making. ships lost at sea and now lying in he ocean depths. The little craft was devised by rancesco Kalin. It has an electric motor, a pump for expelling water and. a-device for changing the air] within the submarine which will al- tow her to remain submerged for two hours. Two reflectors of 3,000 candle-pow- er enable the worker to see clearly about him while immersed. The little submarine is attached hy an’ electric’ cable to a ship on the surface “which can, if | necessary, raise the undersea boat. The latter. however, rises to the surface without assistance. It is,claimed that the little craft can descend to greater depths thaw nave yet been attained by submarines. | The boat was recently tested by sev- eral naval experts. Senator Penrose Left $20.000.000 To His Brothers Philadelphia, Jan, °12—Boies | Pen‘ rose is said to have been worth $20,- 000,000. The senator's will, leaving his ‘en- tire estate to his three brothers, has been filed here. His brothers were also named ‘executors, and were in- structed to file mo inventory or ac- count of any kind of the estate.’ The will was written on a single sheet of paper and dated June 10, 1905. Altogether the fortune controlled by the Penrose family is estimated at $50,000,000. * Back in 1907, when a tip went out to “Buy Utah Copper,” those who act- ed on the suggestion more than trebled their fortunes. The Utah Copper com- pany, which owned a mountain of the metal in Utah, was controlled by Senator Pennose’s father, the senator himself and his brothers... Spencer Penrose, who lives in Col- orado Springs, is the discoverer of Utah Copper. He heard of an old Mormon, living in the desert of Utah, who thought he had a copper mine. Investigation showed that the old man had a hole in the ground, a windlass anda bucket. Once a day he let the bucket down, filled it with copper ore, sold it and was content: He-had enough for the day. *He promised to sell to Spencer Pen- rose, so the latter came east and in- terested his family. Boies Penrose MONTHS OF - _ SUFFERING How'a Baltimore Girl Recov- ered Her Health Baltimore, Maryland. —‘‘For several months I suffered with severe backache and General weak- nes’. I couldnotsleep comfortably at night for pains in my back. I found your book at now. You may tse this letter to hel other girls, as the letters in your book helped me.’’? — RosE WAIDNER, 3018 Roseland Place, Baltimore, Md. . That is the thought so often expressed in letters recommending Lydia EB. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. These wo- men know what they have suffered, they ; describe their symptoms and state how, : they were finally made well. Just plain statements, but they want other women to be helped, 2 Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound is a medicine made from medi- cinal roots and herbs, and withdut drugs, to relieve the sickness women so often w of have, which is indicated by backache,: weak feelings, nervousness, and no ame bition joel Ber jiny thing done or to go anywhere, as helped many wom Why not try it? iy y wa ROHRER’S TAXI Phone 57 Penitentiary 75c. Experienced Drivers Only. Go Anywhere, Any Time. ° SAFETY FIRST. i ETT ULUNEPLL EN BG, A TTT ToT 0 0 CC nidge! ing Down the. You Like a Hot Dish. SS for these cold mornings— something that not only gives 4he stomach that warm © and comfy feeling, but makes good, red blood and healthy tissue’ which fortify you against all kinds of weather. Nothing so strengthening and satisfying as Shredded Wheat With HOT Milk red” USINESS TODAY IS CROSSING into prosperous times. Experts proclaim it, indica- tions point to it, past experience assures it. The regular traffic between producer and consumer is being resumed rapidly—bridged across by Confidence. Swing the bridge of Confidence down to a straight-away road and keep it there. Business is reviving—as it did after the depressions of 1896, 1904, 1908, 1914. The volume of manufacturing and trade is increasing daily, unemployment is decreasing, loans are expanding. Business is. gathering momentum— ‘ q Space contributed by BISMARCK TRIBUNE in co-operation with the ROTARY CLUB PROSPERITY CAMPAIGN ‘Advertisements contributed by Frank Presbrey Advertising Agency, New York PU) TATTEPRST TTT Prosperity Is JUST ROUND THE CORNER ra Better: for children than ordinary porridges because it encourages thorough . chewing which is necessary to form sound teeth’and insure ° ‘ gooddigestion. It is ready-cooked and ready-to-serve— saves fuel and saves time. ; a Heat the Shredded Wheat Biscuits in the oven to restore ‘their crispness; pour hot’ milk over them, ‘adding a little cream ‘and a little salt over them. A better bal- anced food than eggs or potatoes and costs much less. | “Health and Strength in Every Sh ‘TRISCUIT is the Stiredded Wheat crackdr—a' real whole wheat toast—and is caten with butter or soft cheese.

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