The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 15, 1922, Page 2

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ones Sees y tanraa” abuse neeeersteess tae sable peeae were wes. 4 3 segeecoanen “eueassrenenen® PAGE TWO MINN, RANGERS St. Paul, Minn,» Aug.’ .15.—With, _ continued dry ‘weather janjl high iizswelocity winds forest rahgers and their crews of fire fighters are taxed to the limit in fighting the hundreds of blazes which have been reported in northern and central Minnesota, W. T.. Cox, state forester announced today. i Although the fire fighters are | holding many of the fires within their area, some of the blazes, par- ticularly those near Mongville, Washkish and Brookston, were be- ing fought with difficulty and, ac- cording to last reports, show'a ten- dency to run beyond control. The fires for the most part are confined to peat lands, but in some: cases have reached’ high ground and are creeping into wooded and grass lands. 3 ‘ . Under ordinary conditions; Mr. Cox said, this would not be of such ‘serious import but due to the ex- ‘eeedingly dry condition of the north | +! woods country the steady spread of | ic¢he flames does not augur well for @ surrounding ‘stands of timber. “ALL AVAILABLE LABOR SENT Low Rate to Harvest Workers ; Is Discontinued _ Eastern labor markets have ‘sent “all “their possible, laborers to the —~-enooti Dakota wheat fields according ~to. the investigators the railroads relative to the granting of additional stime for low rates. : ‘aX careful investigation of the la- or market in our eastern term~- imats,” says a telegram received by “the “governor late today, “indicates practically all of bona fide harvest -‘Jabor’has already moved., There may be a few stragglers frdm east and | “~gouth later, but not enough to justify ‘a contonuance of the special rate. HALF BLOCK OF PAVING TO BE’ LAID THIS YEAR The city- commission, meeting last night, decided to call for kids for. half-block of concrete paving ‘be- tween Main‘ street and the Soo rail- road, in front of the Sandard, Oil filling station, It was said. all prop- erty owners petitioned for the pav- ing. The beard accepted the bid of the’ Washburn. Ligitite Coal Company to furnish 1,000 tons: more ‘or'less of coal for the city at-$4.75 per. ton, de- livered. The commission was informed that Frank G. Grambs, ‘contractor for the new main sewer to be ‘builé, ‘had or- dered pipe and will begin work soon: How Irrigation May Profit’ North Dakota Is Told by Experts George H. McMahon, said in’ his speech before the Rotary club Monday that the US. Reelamation Service-was considering the construction of 3 shore plant at Williston. He. stated that in the fourth annual ‘report. of the reclamation service the outstahd- ing fact in the report was the revert: ment or bank protection of the Mis- sourt river at Bismarck. This bank protection, he said, would make pos- sible the installation of a shore mping plant vero Chandler reviewed the his- tory of irrigation in the state. He said in his opinion the reservoir ‘site onthe Heart river, 25 miles south of Glen’ Ullin, was’ the best he had seen in North Dakota. He stressed the im- portance of small ‘irrigation projects, | as a policy of insurance for dry sea- sons. CAPITOL. r “Very Truly Years” is the ‘title of Shirley Mason’s latest photoplay pro- duced by Fox. Iv will be ‘shown at the Capitol theater beginning tomor- row. Its story is of a prétty’ hote! stenographer who longed for a “Prince Charming” amd a ‘cosy home, and of her extraordinary niatrimonial __..experience when said Prince Charm: tng’ Happened along. It was a case of “marry in haste,” and after that the adage was only” partly true—and then ‘but temporarily. There is good comedy as well as pathos in the tale, and the central role would appear to | the perfectly adapted to Miss Masons | personality and art. Allan Forrest is the leading man, and the picture was-directed by Har- ry Beaumont,‘ THE ELTINGE. The ‘feature ‘at the Eltinge for Tuesday and Wednesday is “The Dust Flower” from Basil King’s novel. It | is a simple yet powerful love story,|| detailing how Letty, abused’ and ill- treated by her step-father, Judson. Flack, rises from being ‘a lowly’ flow- er along the roadside, covered with | dust, into a noble and happy woman. The transformation is brought about through her unusual love story. To escape her step-father, she ip about to drown herself when ‘Rashley Al- Jerton, thrown over by the woman ‘he loves, rescues her gna proposes mar-' riage to her. He had sworn to mar- ry the first girl who would have him that he met after geing jilted by Barbara Wallbrodk. Under the guid- ance of Allerton’s butler, who sees} 4 js, she blossoms ‘into new woman- hood and awakens in ‘Allerton’ ‘the Tove that she feels for him. APPOINTED TO BOARD ° Dr. Joseph W. Tarr of Lidgerwood, Osteopathic Examining Board by Governor Nestos for & two year term | to succeed Dr. Jas. W. Lloyd’ of Bow- man, who has left the state. > FIGHTING MANY ~* FOREST FIRES (Ry the Associated Press) if under Letty’s rags the queen that 'she'| has been appointed member of the | ag the Aight, By W. H. Porterfield. ‘When Washington was, chasing the red-cats at Princeton, durn ’em, only 140 years ago, Chicago exist- ed,’if at all, in the Imagination of The Infinite. ‘ Today her, 190 square miles of prairie dirt are the foundation of the abiding places’ of one’ out ot every 35 human beings in our vast country! s Suppose you’ cogitate \over this proposition some-time when nothing better offers itself. ‘Why do 3,000,000 apparently av- erage; sensible men,, women’ and j children, many “of them American- born ‘(and-no worse for that fact) | choose to ‘live-in. this-city? For ‘Chicago has neither. mighty snow-capped mountain peaks, nor rolling hills, picturesque rivers. nor even a background of history. . The site of old Fort Dearborn is today marked by a brass tablet in the wall of a soap factory! This, it seems to me, is more than’ coinci- dence. ‘ If vever a city needed a strangle hold on the soap trust, Chi- cago is it. | Soil Did It Nature thas provided one cultural asset in’ the biggest fresh-water, bathtub in the world, at her very front doors Without Lake Michi- gan, Chicago would be rather im- possible and unendurable, With the, leaven -of the lake, 3,000,000 folks. find :it-more or less comfortable. But what has made Chicago great? Forty years ago, on the occasion of my. firat visit, . Milwaukee: and. St. Paul were rivals, and to be reckoned with ‘in-every equation. Today they are viewed with. the same. kindly complacency which.Herbert Hoover feels. for, an: excellent draughtsman, who will never ‘enter into competi- tion with him an an engineer. ‘What has made‘ Chicago? Just one thing: location. Surrounded on three sides,by the richest soil in all the: world, stretching away in every fireetion: hundreds of mallee ot it, iting \only, the plow and. the har- ae Chitaga ‘sieply sat down and ‘Tete ling come her Way, at, the ‘first, until ‘she got a start as’ the greatest. market known' in what ‘was then’ the” West.“ >” Built: upon the spot where the lake reaches farthest into the fertile prairies, Chicago was able to dis- tribute products by cheapest water transportation to every portion of the rapidly growing Northwest ter-| riory,' Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio and, on ‘into ‘New York and the thickly populated East. ‘And then came the railroads, A. shovelful of dirt here and there, 2 few scrapers and a little work with six mules and a plow where some slight eminence stood in’ the way, wooden trestle bridges across small streams, and ferries across. the great Getting Ready for Brazilian: Flight. ‘| wonder GI ‘The Sampalo Correla, 800 h. #, flying boat named after the of the Brazilian Aero Club, being ‘prepared it isan] to Rio de Janeiro, Walter Hinton and Dr. fr its flight from New York Pinto Martins will make CHICAGO, KNOWN FOR MANY THINGS, “ INCLUDING STOCKYARDS, MAIL- ORDER HOUSES AND. HOMICIDES dlé West in'thé 50's and 60's and "70's, was a’'simple ehough affair. Came Hogs With state and government sub- “sidies of land in’ many cases, worth more than the whole cost of the road; with a complacent public. will- ing and anxious to buy the securi4 ties offered on the sellers’ terms; with no government or state or pub- lic regulation of any. sort; with franchises to cross and recross cities, down the main streets and through the..city halls if.mecessary and with a million hard-working men. ‘and. women™tviling~frém “fawn to dark on a million: Middle; West farms, to make them rich, via’ it any Infpdgo grew? All she had to do was't6 expand in any of three directions. Thera were ‘neither. hills, mountains, rivera’ ner} ganyons to obstruct her growth. |)". § Hogs, cattle ‘and’ Sheep, buf jiways hogs, poured into her great istock- yards by the trainload i part of the-teeming West, wfile the world called. for.Chicago’s pork and beef and mutton and lard ‘and tallow} , and, finally, all the mysterious bi- products of ‘the ‘livestock butchered there, until. it .became:a truism that the packer left nothing of the. steer but its bellow, nothing. of the hog but its squeal! g And, in exchange,” the ‘prosperous empire of which; Chicago was the capital, demanded’ merchandise until Chicago became the greatest dry- goods market in the world, for, re- moved 1000 miles from eastern com- petition, there grew up here ‘the greatest department store in ‘the world jthat’ of Marshall-Field. Grows Wicked: Efficien¢y—that was Chicago's other name. If she lacked history and romance. and _picturesqueness and beauty of every kind—she might | yen be stale ‘and flat—but never, ‘never, never, coald she be unprofit- abl, and“‘so Chicago grew rich: and Today, Chicago's home govern- ment is ‘not‘'a thing to be proud of. Her homicide record: ia frightful; poverty . and. ostentatious wealth jostle’ efich other along Michigan avenue, which one day will be: the world’s ‘handsomest street. But ‘140 years have passed since Fort Dearborn and the Indian fight- er’s log ‘cabin, and in 1922 wexfind & Chieago going in for culture with a big “ce” and going in as. she does everything: else, ona ‘basis which means blue ribbon honors for every | entry, 6 |.’ * For example, the fmest boulevard ‘and: park driveway system » ever built surrounds, Chicago . .with 65 miles of perfectly paved, arbor-em- sbowered highways; the most. beauti- ful and spacious municipal recrea- tion pier: ever constructed is, the pleasure ground of a hundred thousand Lithuanians .and Czechs rivers—railroad building in the Mid- fy youngsters and older folks. satistying to. licious with fresh fruits! - Easy fo digest- perfect summer 2 i ~" Flakes liberally because they are the let you walk or play-or sleep in peace. ‘to the keenest appetite, Insist upon Kellogg’s Corn Flakes RED and GREEN package which ‘signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator | 1 Flakes. ‘None are genuine without it! “Alen mbers of KELCOGG'S KRUMBLES aad and Poles. and Croatians and Ga- va Te. ‘= o Heavy ments during warm weather enconrage drowsi- ai Nlipenness and headache! ‘Eat Kellogg’s Cora: | evap f or #3 Kellogg’s digest easily a Aad, they'sp bea: oe Arr al | directed and led culturally by ‘De | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 7 licians and Sicilians, every summer | night. Here they see fireworks and learn what Liberty really ‘means; and next day they.go out and prac- tice it by performing dark deeds at the behest of some ‘American citi- zen.” : Na ». Famowa Features Here, also, on this. magnificent lake front we..have (the Marshall Field Museum, finest of its kind, and Chicago University, most won- of; our institutions, of .re- search’ possible, while Northwestern University, in the trees at the back door, is scarcely less :famous. Here we find grard:opera costing millions, a magnificent. municipal symphony orchestra and an art gal- lery which, while not the largest of ita kind, is surely:a thing of beauty and a joy ito the beholders, :Here we find the most beautiful hotel :between New York: @nd.San Francisco, the Drake; the handsom- est skyscraper in the country, built by “Mr. Wrigley’s' “Spearmint,” and here‘ also we find numerous instan- ces of the discriminating generosi- ty of. the packers, Philip Armour, prince of preachers, the late Dr. Gunsavlus. What; ia the spirit’ of Chicago? Who can tell? In the\rdom inthe art galery. devote™ to mod- erm. masters, hangs, an exquisite, masterpiece of Jules Breton, “The Bong: of ‘the: Larkd': . ¥ cy The picturp,: as. moat of you know, is.that..of a French peasant girl, the strength, her ‘soarae blue skirt gathered .about her waigt to keep it from the.wet grass:in. which, she stands, her sickle in-one ban other. half-raised in: ecstany. hind: her rises the: lark to grest the just. appearing, syn, with \ Bia’ ma- tutinal anthem. .... Se: With :1 Her. map of haj by a homely han she face to hear the yoice of God s LE | "e HIS MASTERS has met her on the Damascus road. Her countenance is ablaze with a glory not of sea or land for she has! caught ‘the vision. Never again to all.eternity can, she be a clod again She is one with the Eternal, So it.is, 1 think, with Chicago. | Having somehow caught the vision], of what ‘she .ought ‘to bé, Chicago: is coming.to realize that even cities cannot live by bread ‘alone—that efficiency and money and: mortar and cement are only material mani- festations of a soul that owes. alle- giance to the Universe. % (Copyright, 1922 NEA Service) (Tomorrow—Denver, “Queen City of the Plains.”) a FOR SCHOOL ‘OF PRINTING Would Have Course, at State} Science School Adopted “Efforts to have the’ North Dakota Press association” adopt the course in printing to be started at the Wah- petcn State School of Science with the beginning of the school year are being made by men interested in the school, which is attempting to ful fill its mission as a school of trades and industries. The starting of a course in printing was approved by the Board of Administration at a meeting in July. > For the Jast ten years the North Dakota Press Association has been looking over-the supply of aappren- iticessand a year'ego a committee was appointed to. make 2 to’ get Meppaschool ref the: stateput cin ia school’ of printing. The committee, The supremacy. made up of Mark Forkner of Lang- don, Julius Bacon of Grand Forks, and Norman Black of Fargo, consid- ered reporting to the Press Associa- tion that the proper, course to: ar- range for a course if printing at the University. of» North Dakota in con- nection with the school of journalism ‘at that place. During the convention, at Devils Lake, ‘newspaper men from the southeastern fart of the state inter- ested themselvs in the proposition of having the *Press Association foster the school already approved by the; board at 'Wdhpeton.,” The committee of the Press Astociation listened to these men hut withheld judgment. The friends of the State School of Science. are now asking for a mcet- ing at Grand gorks between a rep; resentative of the school, a repre- sentative of the board of administra- tion and the three members of the Association’s committee at which the school can present the plans it has for being an Industria] -and Trade School with especial reference t6 its plans for a/school of printing and the committee in ‘turn can determine if the plans meet with the demands from the newspaper profession for men af least partly trained, in the techinque of printing. In a conference of the hends of the school with Dean Babcock some time ago, it was the decision to make their especial effort in a trade line for the present year that of priting, Dean Babcock of the university hav- ing been named: adviser for the school because of his, understandin, of’ the indsutries of the state. “House Sold. ' ? The -house of, E. H. Howell; for- mer resident: of Bismarck, on Sev- enth ‘street, has-been sold to A. G. Bahmer through the Frank Hedden REATAPetate Agency. Mr. Bahmer has’ taken‘ possession, TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 192 GIRLS LEAVE [NORMAL SCHOOL TO AID HARVEST Many Will Drive Binders’ to Help. Parents. During Next Few Weeks Many girls have left the Dickinson summer normal. school-to aid their fathers in harvesting big crops in the Slope’ country, according to informa- tion given the state board of admin- istration, J; A. Kitchen, state-fedéral empleyment director, said today. The girls ‘will drive binders and aid in the-harvest-in other ways. No reports have been received by Mr. Kitchen indicating that whole families, including all_women*ingm- bers, have gone into the fields to help with the harvest, as H&s begn report- ed from South Dakota. There are re- ports, however, to indicate that farmers are endeavoring to harwest crops with as little outside help as possible. Belief is expressed by|Mr. Kitchen that there will not be a serious { shortage of farm labor in North Da- kota, although there i8° now need of ig workers. One of the cayfses of this is the fact ‘that the harvest, and thresing are coming’ p¥aetically at the same time, ue “At this time there. scems to’be a scarcity of harvest. help,” says & bulletin issued foday by: the state- federal employment service. . “In the eastern part of the state they. are coupling threshing and harvesting and tO; quality means lest musical standa of the Victrola. among musical instruments is directly, attributable to quality. The greatness of its artists, the perfection of ‘its records, -the faithfulness _ of its reproductions, the design and construc tion of the Victrola itself—all bespeak the | , highest quality and make the Victrola the supremely satisfying musical instrument. ‘ - Victrolas $25 to $1500. New Victor Records demonstrated at all ‘dealers in Victor products on the Ist of each month. VOICE” WUE : Victrola REG. U.S. PAT. OFF NUTT TE ine C Léok for these trade-marks. Under the lid. On the label. ; or Talking Mach ee _. Camden, New Jersey WTR UHI ompany 16R A HEADS 4 BANK Wh studi NOW , College, Fargo, N. be had no idea that withia’ 15 years he would head four Banks. Nor did G. A. Thiel, another D,.B. C. gra of becoming the high retary of the great erative xchange. Both men em- ploy many D. B.C, students: W. A. Schuiz is the latest to go ” with Bischof. 2 “Follow the SucceS$ful.””. Fall school is now open. -Write for our magazine, Success, free for one year. Address Dakota Business College, 806 Front St. Fargo, N. D, Ried ft rhe Ailes tate abode edhe dream quity-Co-op- thus using an excessive® amount of % 4. farm help at the same time, which causes the shortage. % “We expect the $5.00 rate for har- vesters, from some Minnesota points to any point in North Dakota, to end Tuesday, the 15th of August. ‘The harvest laborers using this rate, in tmany cases, secured their tickets to the central and western parts of North Dakvta, in preference to tho“ eastern part. This places certain eastern points of the state at a dis- advantage. “As far as our own observation and information goes, the grain has been well shocked right behind the binder. There has been very little trouble with laborers this summer. “The Federal-State employment of- fices at Fargo, Grand Forks, Bis- marck, Oakes, Devils Lake and Minot will operate until September 1st and. possibly longer.” Victrola No. 240 $115 Mahogany or walgut

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