The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 1, 1922, Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1922 GRANT MEMORIAL TO BE UNVEILED ON APRIL 27TH Has Been. Many Years in Course of Construction at Base of Capitol in Washington GRANT WAS BORN IN 1822) Patriotic Exercises Will Be Held In All Schools and Churches of the U. S. That Day Washington, March 1—The one hun- dredth anniversary of the birth of | Ulysses S. Grant will be observed throughout the country on April 27. ‘President Harding has promised to speak at the unveiling of a tablet at tho great union general’s birthplace, Foint Pleasant, Ohio, and on the same day the Grant Memorial which has been so many years in course of con- struction at the base of tho capitol in Washington will be dedicated with: suitable ceremonies. The movement for tho hundredth birthday anniversary celebration was set in motion at the fifty-fifth national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, at Indianapolis last Sep- tember. An executive committee headed by Colonel Thomas S. Hop- kins of Washington was appointed by Lewis S. Pilcher, commander-in-chiet and a national committee of arrange- ments was created. It is headed by President Harding as honorary chatr- mah. Among the honorary vice chair- men are Vice-president: Coolidge, Speaker. Gillette, Chief Justice Taft, Secretaries Weeks and Denby, Gon- eral Pershing, Senators Nelson and ‘Warren, Representatives Osborne and ‘Yates, Governors Davis of Ohio and ‘Miller of New York and the head of women’s organizations related to the Grand Army as well as’ General Miles, Commander-in-chief of the Loyal Le- gion and Hanford MacNider, national commander -of the American Legion. The nature and scope of the cele- bration is indicated in the following from the resolution adopted at the Grand Army encampment in Indian- apolis, which reqommended: “That the National Government be requested to. take appropriate action for.tho observance of the anniversary and the congress of the United ‘States take such measures as may be neces: | sary to assure the dedication of the Grant Memorial at Washington jon the 27th of April next. This action on the part of congress we deem of first importance. Governors to Cooperate “That the state legislature, gover- nors of the several states and munici- pal officers bo urged to take suitable action to bring to the attention of the people, the great lessons taught by General Grant’s steadfast adherance ta his country’s cause in the time of se- verest trial, and tHat all institutions of learning throughout the land be invited to celebrate the notable event, ‘go that the deep embodiment of Gen- eral-Grant’s life, service and character in the thought and conscience of his contemporaries may be fastened with transforming power upon the minds of the youth of the present generation. “That special commemorative ser- vices be held at Point Pleasant, Ohio, the place of his birth, and at River- side, (New York, the place of his burial. “That patriotic exercises be held on that day in the schools and churches of the land, that the memor- able occasion may not pass without leaving deep and abiding impressions upon the hearts of the young, and strengthen the faith of those who be- lieve in the God of our- Fathers and in the priceless bcon of civil and re- ligious liberty. Your committee fur- ther recommends that the incoming Commander-in-chief ‘be authorized to formulate a program or order of ex- ercises for the use of Posts on that occasion, and that all members of the Grand Army of the Republic, in so far as they may be able, shall participate in some simple yet direct way in hon- oring the memory of Ulysses S. Grant. “That all patriotic. societies and or- ganizations representing the several wars in which the United States has at any time participated, be requested to unite in the celebration of the an- niversary, and that the Women’s Re- lief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, the Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic, and all orders allied to the Grand Army of the Republic, be invited to jajn with, us in honoring the memory of Gen- eral Grant.” : Anotlier Memorial Dedicated The memorial in the Botanical Gar- den at the foot of the capitol, which will be dedicated simultaneously with the exercises of General Grant’s birth- ‘place at Point Pleasant, Ohio, was conceived by and erected with funds gathered by the surviving veterans ‘of the army of Tennessee. Many vexa- Neglecting That Cold or Cough? ETTING the old cough or cold * drag on, or the new. one develop seriously, is folly, especially when at your groeyists, you can get such a feed and successful remedy as Dr. King’s New Discovery. -No drugs, just good medicine that relieves quickly. For over fifty years, a standard | remedy for coughs, colds and grippe. Eases croup also, Loosens up the phlegm, quiets the ’croupy cough, stimulates the bowels, thus relieving Dr. Kino’s hs New Discov: for Colds and. Cou; Wake Up Clear Headed. That “tired out” feeling mornings, is due ta constipation. Dr. King’s Pills act rand stir up the liver and ga y bowel action. All Porilintg Dag PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE ‘DrKings Pills ot BY ALEXANDER HERMAN New York, March 1—Do you. ‘be- lieve in miracles? is Mary, Moore dpes.. She was’ one of the patients in New York, of Dr. Adolph Lorenz, noted Vienna surgeon. Two months ago she was in an auto accident. jHer skull was fractured in two places—her spine, in three. She was unconscious flor 28 days. Yet today— She is walking around bearing no mark of her close call. Credits Physicians “I want to get back to work,” she tells Dr. A. J. Barker Savage, supor- intendent of the Broad Street Hospi- tal.9‘It’s my busy season now. “But I suppose I oughtn’t complain. I would have been a dead one, if it weren't for Dr. Lorenz, and Dr. Mor- ris, and Dr. Diefferbach, and—” The physician stopped her. “She is the luckiest girl I know,” RAR eee tious delays occured after the sculp- ture began his work, but the hand- some bronze groups. were completed at last. The dedication will bé under the auspices of a committee including Senator Brandegee..of Connecticut, Secretary Weeks, Bishop Fallows of Chicago and Colonel Clarence O. Sher- rill of the army engineer corps. Grant's birthday anniversary comes almost on the fifty-seventh anniver- sary of General Leo's surrender at Appamotax which took place on April 9, 1865, At the close of the Civil War, Grant’s name was more frequéntly on the lips of the people than that of afiy other American, unless it was Lingoin.’ In 1869 he: became Presi- dent and ‘was re-elected to a second term. So his name continued to be before the people. After retiring from, the presidency in 1877 he was for a time less in the public eye, but he still was a favorite. His unfortunate busi- ness venture some years later excited the sympathy and concerns.’ of his friends. It was known that he-was reduced almost to poverty. Then fol- lowed his! illness from the dread dis- ease of which so little is known even now. Grant Completed His Work When Grant began the preparation ef his menioirs, he was ill. It became known he was hoping that, wher pub- lished, the two volumes would yield a competence for his family. His sut- ferings increased as the work went on, fand at last, it became a race between him and death, while mankind watch- ed and waited in anxiety. for the re- sult. Grant conquered, for he Yived to.complete the work. That accom- plished, he. welcomed the relief from his sufferings that scion came. That was nearly thirty-seven years ago. Other wars. have intervened, great national and international prob lems have arisen and commanied the attention of the people, and thus the name and the fame of Ulysses S. Grant have not figured so prominently with the people as they did forty or fifty years ago. ‘But during the more than halt a century those veterans who served un- der him and who loved him, have never wavered in their devotion to his memory. The veterans of ‘the Civil 'War are fast disappearing. In.a few years there will be none left. But old and feeble though they be, the. men- tion of the name of their leader still {stirs their martial spirit and awakens fond memories. ¢ JAPS ARE NOT SUPERSTITIOUS -NO, INDEED? Grafters, Horticulturally Speak- ing, of Japan, Are All Young Men “The Oriental: His, Superstitions,” Marion E. Hall, writing for Japan Mission’ News, says: “‘Yamada san, I said to my teach- er,,‘you Japanese are a very super- stitious people, are you not?’ To which he replied that the lower class were certainly gullible enough; he himself decidedly was not. As a test T asked him if having gone to a fune- ral of a member of his family he would take the same road home he had taken to the cemetery. He laughed and said while he was free from these ancient ideas he would probably re- turn by another road. Popular belief has it that if you employed the same road going and coming, the evil spir- its, now acquainted with the route, would be inclined to lead another rel- ative to the graveyard. ‘We are not superstitious—no, indeed; these ideas BELIEVE IN. MIRACLES? SHE. SAYS ONE "SAVED HER LIFE Mary Moore vee he said. “I have handled emergency cases for many years. But I have never seen a more wonderful recov- ery.” Miss Moore is a young actress. She had played. some important © parts. But her biggest chance was coming. William Faversham had engaged | her. to be his leading lady. ‘She got her lines and started to learn them. Her sister drove her to} the country where it was quiet. Then the autp accident. For three days she lay in a friend's house at Long Island. Then she was removed to the hospital. “With his marvelous hands,” Mrs. James Moore, mother of the girl, ex-! plained,’ “Dr. Lorenz placed Mary in a plaster cast. He used one of his; famous splints. “After 18 days it was removed. “A few days later Mary could turn her head.” 5 \ eee will simply persist, is the better way to state it,’ he said. « B “We have an old gardener who comes in once in a while to trim our trees, fix the hedges and to do similar work. Asked to do a little grafting on a persimmon tree, he culled‘in a young man for the work. I found out later that in Japan the grafters are all yommg men—we speak here of hor- ticulture, not politi as they impart their life and vigor to the grafted| parts. And I thought that Burbank! would have been without honor in this land. “While June, the month of roses, is| the popular time for marriages in) America, in Japan the most unpopular | month is that of September, the} month of the monKey. The Japanese! word for monkey is ‘saru,’ and ‘saru’| means to leave. If married in this month the tendency would be for the bride to leave soon; thus the month is strictly avoided.” AT FARGO MEETING George Shafer, assistant attorney- general, attended a meeting of the In- dependent Voters‘ Association execu- tive committee at Fargo today. Mr. Shafer was to present the viewpoint of state officials on the proposed in- itiative law to increase the authoriza- tion of farm loans from $10,000,000 to $20,000,000. iS RED SHIRT BOOM. ~ ‘Belfast, Mar. 1—Red flannel shirts | are more popular than ever. ‘This, not only because of the serious influ- enza epidemic, but also on account of Tokio, March 1—Under the caption [ ion thai’ they bring luck. L GROWING Glenn Hyder, Wichita, Kan., is only} nine feet in his socks and weighs 325 pounds, but he may be a big man some day. He’s only 19 now, but if he doesn’t stop lighting cigars from street lamps he may stunt his growth. Bless You Don Giovanni—Vedrai, carino (Dearest, Shall [ Tell Theen Song of the Flea The Two Grenadiers : When the King Went Forth to War (Lonely Rose) Faust—Salve, dimora (All Hail, Thou Dwelling Lowly) Serenade (d’Ambrosio) Ultima rosa My Ain Folk Paradise (Viennese Folk Song) Sweet Peggy O’Neik (A Zarzyckip Salome’s Dance—Part F° Salome’s Dancc—Part I¥ Mazurka Polka de W. R. Chimes of Normandy—Dans mes voyages Washing Baby ~Shopping A Chip of the Oid Block: : Give'a Man a Horse He Can Ride. Smile Through Your Tears The Hand of You I'll Forget You The World is Wwalting fer the Sunrise WeepNo More,MyMammy. _- 4 I'll Be Glad to Get Back to My Home.Town That's How I Believo ' 1 Want You Morning, Noon and Night Dream Kiss—Waltz Laughing Rag Bow Wow Blues—Fox Trot Railroad Blues—Fox Trot Smilin’—Fox' Trot Somewhere in Naples Medley. (1) Boating on the Lake (2 (1) La Bergetonctte “ (4) L’Arabest (1) To a Hummin, _ (4) March of the Tin Soldiers Knight of the Hobby-Horse (4) Peasants’ Dance Granny (You're My Mammy’s Mammy) Ka-Lu-A In My Heart, On My Mind, All Day Long Boo-Hoo-Hoo Dear Old Southland—Fox Trot They Call It Dancing—Medley Fox Trot Wimmin—Medley Fox Trot Good-Bye Shanghai—Fox Trot li We Meet Again—Medley Waltz Down By the Old Ohio Shore—Waltz Onthe 'Gin, ‘Gin, Ginny Shore—Fox Trot qa) When S! Marie—F ppelia Malaguefia (Moszkowski) VICTOR TALKING MACHINE COMPANY ew \ ow ‘ox Trot Ballet—Festival Dance and Waltz of the Hours t toda arch: 1922 Frances Alda .__Lucrezia Bori Feodor Chaliapin Feodor Chaliapin Feodor Chaliapin Giuseppe DeLuca Gigli Sascha Heifetz Louise Homer Fritz Kreisler Sohn McCormack ‘ika Morini Philadelphia Orchestra Philadelphia Orchestra Sergei Rachmaninoff Renato Zanelli Marie Cahill Marie Cahill Royal Dadmun Royal Dadmun Lambert Murphy & Lucy Isabelle Marsh John Steel John Steel Peerless Quartet Quartet Henry Burr Charles Harrison Frank Ferara-Anthony Franchini Sam Moore-Horace Davis Original Dixieland Jazz Band The Benson Orchestra of Chicago Green Brothers’ Mellorimba Orchestra All Star Trio and Their Orchestra Victor Orchestra Beniamino. Violin Violin Violin Piano (With Joy My Heart) American in You | Hawaiian Guitars Octochorda and Harp-Guitar Fox Trot ting (3) Walzer (4) March (2) Waltz (Schubert) (3) Scherzo’ (Gurlitt) (5) Le Sécret—Intermezzo (2) Elfenspic! (3) The Witch (2) The Clock jue Bird (3) Postillion Paul Whiteman and His Paul Whi Camden, New Jersey Victor Orchestra Victor Orchestra | 19954 ictor Records Namber Size Price 66027 87333 88644 88645 88646 64776 74687 6022 87334 66023 66028 A227 74729 74730 74728 66025 4526S 45266 45267 {rose 10 . Victor Orchestra Yvette Rugel Edna Brown-Elliott Shaw ' Aileen Stanley-Billy Murray ._ Aileen Stanley-Billy Murray rchestra Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Club Royal Orchestra Club Roya! Orchestra Hackel-Berzé Orchestra Green Brothers’ Mellorimba Orchestra rnaan and His Orchestra Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Victor Concert Orchestra Victor Concert Orchestra | 8354 28855 12856 8857 18858 18859 35714 10 10 10 10 10 10.75 12 1.25 WOULD ANNUL THEDIVORCEOF MARY PICKFORD Atty.-Gen. Fowler Contends Di- vorce Was Obtained Thru Fraud and Collusion McNAB_ FLAYS FOWLER ‘Carson, Nev., March 1—Motion of Attorney General Leonard B. Fowler cf Nevada to have Mary: Pickford’s di- vorce from Owen Moore annulled was |; submitted to the .Nevada state su- treme court bere January 30. Miss Pickford was divorced from Moore at Minden, Nev., March 30, 1920, and 2 short time later married Douglas Fairbanks. All three are motion pic- ture stars. Attorney General Fowler contended that Miss Pickford’s divorce was ob- tained through “fraud and collusion” and declarer the Minden court had no iutisdiction as both parties were “bona fide residents of Los Angeles, | Cal.,” although Miss Pickford swore she was a resident of Nevada. The suit was predjcted,.the complaint stated, on the principle that the state “reserves an tnterest-in all divorce etions.” Gavin McNab, prominent San Fran- cisco, attorney, who represented Miss Pickford, in ‘reply, declared that Fowler had no authority under Nevada laws to bring his action. There was Qo aggrieved party in the case and uowhere, McNab argued, does the law give the attorney general the right to review divorce cases. 7 7 ] < ] 5 | grantel that right, he said, every di- | en off to maké way for another of the | | It the law'trils and air passages of bead; stops) on Pape’s. specials. It is declared that the pageantry of surpassed for vorce granted in Nevada would be} ‘! subject to review. s | “The case,” McNab declared, .“is | “Queen of Sheba’ is u without precedent in jurisprudence. | magnificence on the screen, and that No language can be found in any law thrilling spectacl s the that can be tortured into giving ex- | ch tt race ever have been presented cuse for this attitude of the attorney | in motion pictures. general. It is the first of its kind| The filming of “Queen of Sheba” and should be the last of its kind.” . | under tho direction ef J. Gordon ‘Ea- District Judge Frank P, Langan, of | Wards took an entire’ year. Through- Minden, who granted the decree, later, |O¥t the period a huge force of work- on June 25; 1921, refused to review |¢Ts in wany lines of endeavor was he | employed, and in addition every mem- RrpereeiT appealed to, t ber of the Fox organization on the West Coast—actors, clerical workers, 2 \artisans and all—took a personal, in- WILLIAM FOX SENDING HIS BIG-/terost in the progress of the stupen- GEST PRODUCTION TO CITY “Queen of Sheba,” a William Fox jit, Tom Mix, for instance, volunteer. super-special which enjoyed ‘a sensi jed -his services in rendering the tional run on Broadway, New York, cha: race thoroughly realistic. booked for the Rialto Theater be: The construction of massive sets, ning next Monday. It is described the designing and making of the elab- a stupendous spectacle and a great | rate costumes, the perfecting of the ve story. New York critics hailed | dances, meant’ a vast deal of labor, it 2g one of the greatest photodramas | and the difficultics in the way of com- ever produced. It showed to crowded |pleting the production on the scale houses throughcut the run, until tak- joriginally planned stemed insuper- “Papa's Cold Compound” Breaks, any Cold in a Few Hours Instant Relief! Don’t stay stuffed- nose running; relieves headache, dull- Al ness. feverishness, sneezing. “ up! Quit blowing and snuffling! dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” tak-| ,.“Pape’s Cold Compound” is the en every two hours until three doses] quickest, surest relief known and are taken usually breaks any cold} costs only a few cents at drug stores. right up. It acts without assistance. Tastes The first dose opens clogged-up nos-|nice. Contains no quinine. Insist 20 Iv. dous production and lent their aid to | They were overcome, however, able. and “Queen of Sheba” given to the screen. Betty Blythe appears im the role of ‘the Queen, Fritz Lieber, the noted ‘Shakesperian actor, is King Solomon, and Clair de Lorez is Queen :Amarata, | wif2 of Solomon. Dance every Tuesday, Thurs- | day and Saturday evenings at 8:30 at The Coliseum, formerly Baker’s Hall, newly redecorated. 10c per dance. 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 EAGLE Tailoring and Hat Works Dry Cleaning, Pressing, Re- pairing, Remodeling, Dyeing of Ladies’ atid Men’s Clothes. Prompt and courteous service. Call For and Deliver. Phone 58 313 Broadway Bismarck, N. D. We clean and reblock hats.

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