The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 17, 1922, Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE DRGES RELIEF IN CAR SUPPLY FOR NO. DAKOTA sovernor Urges Interstate Commerce Commisssion Take Prompt Action Governor R. A, Nestos today re- ipeated-the requests already made on several occasions that every avail- ble freight car be sent to North Dakota te move the immense crop his fall and especially that the shipments of lignite coal as well as potatoes and other perishable pro- uct$ be taken care of without fail. The Governor also telegraphed ongressman Young who is still in ashington and urging him to take his matter up with the President nd with the Interstate Commerce ‘commission. The- Governor sai “Some time heo I urged that since there was uch a shortage of freight cars, that bvery ‘available truck be put into the kervice of hauling lignite coal to blaces within a reasonable distance. t thdt time most of these trucks ere employed in hauling wheat and bther products, but at this time it eems absolutely essential that every ruck“in the western half of the state hud many from the eastern half of ‘it, hould go into the service of haul- ng lignite coal exclusively until the ‘oads. become imp: ble. The Lignite ines ‘are: ready to furnish the coal, nd the whole problem now is a pro- blem of transportation, and every ethod possible ought to be used for he filling of the coal bins without lelay. “ARMER’S DOLLAR VALUED AT $1.30 {Continued from Page One) Nollar is meant, the farmer's ability otake a load of merchandise to aarket—produce that he has grown and sell it say for the sum of $100. Farm Dollar Shrinks “In 1913 a farmer could take a undred-;dollars earned in such ‘ashion and turn around and buy $100 worth of material—tractors, eed, shoes for himself and children nd other necessary items. “But since 1913, this converting bower has gradually shrunk, unti] ‘oday, the same farmer taking the ame load of produce to market gets jore—$130—but he is able to buy Above is the Shipping Board steamer @ity -of -Honolulu, which burned while carrying 72 passengers and a crew of 145 between Honolulu and Los Angeles. Lower left is a map showing the scene of the mishap; and ,the transport Thomas which is bringing passengers and crew to Cal- ifornia, is shown at the lower right. | BURNED LINER AND RESCUE SHIP | meet and short-time notes, hundreds | of farmers have lost their farms. “Now is the time for the city man to realize what is happening because the city man depends on the farms, and when they’re hit, he is hit too— only probably worse than the farm- er. “In co-operative marketing rests the cure-all for most of America’s | agricultural trouble. Aware of his} own predicament the farmer holds to the co-operative pathway. as his sav- ing beacon light. “Through the establishment of stable and profitable markets the re- current dilemma such as now faces our farmers: will be ‘solved. Great strides are being made in this direc- tion. “And as I have said, the farmer's own method to this end is co-opera- tive marketing, and a revision of short and long-time credit to an in- termediate credit. “The last-named relief will permit him to hold and store in his own bins and warehouses whatever sur- eee HERE' IS _ A ~ REMEDY: The American Farm Bureau Federation is launching a big campaign to bring about the amendment of the Federal. Land Bank act, by abolishing the lim- itttion of $10,000 placed: om farm loans. Soe Thereby, it is contended, hun- dreds of farmers who must set- tle on March 1, 1923, on toans contracted five years ago, will be saved from bankruptcy. The proposed amendment, - which is starting a national furore, would grant’ farmers loans on ‘an unrestricted basis, in keeping with the value of the average farm. ‘ The plan carries a big agricul- tural appeal. Howard, who is president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, and sponsor of the move, sees in it the farm- er’s final hope to avert destruc- tion and his means for recuper- ation. | | Bill Miske, St. Paul, in the main bout at American Legion Armistic Day boxing card. Toledo.—Herbert Hoover said re- pudiation of loans made by ~ the United States to allied \ nations during the war would. undermine the whole fabric of International good faith. ‘ Whishington-—Six espionage pri- | esoners were offered conditional executive pardons, three for depor- tation. F | N “Chicago—Colonel Samuel H. i Just as a certain Hunter of the Illinois National !guard, testifying at a state indus- jtrial commission hearing ‘blamed |C. K. McDowell, mine superintend- | jent, who was slain, for starting the | |trouble at Herrin last June, | LaFollette, Tenn.—A dozen or! ‘ |more ‘passengers on @ Louisville & | Nashville train were injured in a |head on collision with a freight train, familiar. Ry plus of production is on hand until ly $64 worth of return merchan- His °“His purchasing power = ii kropped ‘from 100 per cent to less than 64 per cent. Constantly facing that situation, with mortgages ‘o A hat word ‘that’s as good as a bond det St Women of 20 have died; 1 has become very rich; 3 are in good circumstai 46 are still working for their own living without any accumulation; 30 are more or less dep tives or charity for suppor’ to do light work are being replaced by younger men. Will you be one of the f the forty-six who are workii dependent? It’s up to you! Remember the best way is to save money steadily. month, year by year will surprise you by its total in twenty, thirty or forty years. The Savings Department of the FIRST NATIONAL BANK, THE PIONEER BANK, will accept any sum as an initial deposit in an account from $1.00 up and com- pound interest thereon at months. DOIT _ First National Bank JUL TR Tr CMa TAL LLL ‘\jand, and into the hands of big syi- ‘| will be forced to grow only those J MMM ale - To the Young Men and STOP AND THINK! Statistics show that of every one hundred average men aged twenty-five, healthy and vigorous in mind and body and dependent on their exertions for their own support, by the time they have reached fifty-five: such a time as he may market it to} a advantage—both his own and the general public’s. Crisis Is Near “The farmer is not a master of high finance. But if he is to survive as the backbene of the country, high finance must come to his rescue. “For that reason I am appealing to the business man to help his rural brother. If the farm goes the city will follow. We must have farms. “If the coming crisis does not drive the individual farmer from the Pp dicates, then, a reversion back to primitive farming may come about. “By this I mean, that the farmer things necessary for the support of his own household such as obtained in the practice of 50 years ago when, there were no} agricultural special- ists, and farming was done mostly for the family or the nearest settle- ment only. iy “J am hoping that this wi happen. , A reversion is some! never to be thought of.. So I am appealing for the farmer still left. Help him to keep his land. You ‘can do this by co-operating with him. | g “Your interest is the farmer's in-| p terest. His interest must be yours,| n, because without the farms there can be no country—no city. Realize the danger now threatening! “Stable markets, which will make profitable return for farm products hi Bismarck: Gt th Nes ; , endent upon children, rela- t. Some of them still able ‘our who have succeeded, of ing, or of the thirty who are to avid a dependent old age A little put by month by four per cent every three NOW! S;ruvOVL NLT ELTA legii Sociations, die of the organizers League and widely known in baseball Buzzard’s , Cleveland, “Summer White. House,” comprising 100 acres, was sold to 2 building syndicate. of Clinton, osperity.” NEWS BRIEFS _ | Pipestoné, M nn—Nelson Triplett, 18, and” McKinley’ Hemming, 16, of Lake Wilson, were killed when au- tomobile turned over. Rankin, Tll.—Two men were killed 11 never] and one seriously injured when two thing | Lake Erie and Weetern trains col- ied head jon near here, Palermo, Italy—Police found ang of rinted moro’ than a million b otes, including American, dollars. Milwaukee.—William H. Austin, Go, tive counsel for Brewers As Baltimore. — Lloyd's register of shipping, analyzing the shipping of the world, said the American Mer- chant Marine was the largest per- centage of new ships and nearly the smallest. of old ones. Duluth.—William Wright, 59, one of the Atlantic reles, died, Cleveland.—Lester .B. Barlow and ‘Glenn L. Martin, inventors, told for e first time how the armistice sav- ed Berlin from an aerial attack by | flying torpedoes. Bay, Mass. — Grover Rochester, .Minn.—James X. Ford, manager lumber plant at Blooming Prairie, killed when Rochester-Ma- son City ‘bus overturned. Grand Forks, N. Towa, .—Bud Ryder signed to meet Sloan's draws new fresh blood to the aching part — scatters con- gestionandt usrelievesthe pain. top suffering, apply Sloan's! Sloan's soothes strained muscles. Re- lieves aching backs. ‘Stops neuralgia, checks colds in chest. wherever congestion causes pain. Keepit handy, Sloan's Liniment-kills pain! d the means of marketing these | products co-operatively are what the farmer wants, And for these tw! things—and for the latter especially —I ask the sympathetic support of | all business men. “Save the farm and you save all. | Let’s get back to the highroad of “Albany, Minn.—The parents of Lor- raine Schneider, school teacher who! of the Red Cross, disappeared from Minneapolis last | caused property damage ‘estimated at March, denied th®t she had been} more than $30,000,000 and “rendered found as reported Saturday night. a counterfeiters who hail} by hurricane and tornado, while the ank | overflowing of tivers, the breaking RED CROSS USES. OVER MILLION IN RELIEF’ Washington, Oct. 14.—Sevehty- j two disasters in which 674 perso | were killed and 621 injured, ¢ | for_ emergency. relief, meagures: the expenditure of/.more @han 441,000 by the American Red ‘Crogs during the fiscal year’ ending Juge | 30. According to a statement. based upon the forthcoming annual report these disasters - t ( ‘ more than 145,000 persons homeless | or otherwise in need. of assistance. djIn one section alone, the report states, on the Louisiana-Mississippi border, Red~€ross' fed daily for weeks more than 28,00 flood ‘re- fugees, The greatest toll of life was taken ‘ f dams anu torrential rain storms drove the greatest number of people from their homes. Fire also played an important part in the chain ‘of disasters which made\ insistent de- mands for Red Cross relief workers. The ydar’s disasters reported in- cluded 26 floods, 19 tornadoes or storms, 15 fires, 4 epidemics, 2} theatre collapses, 2 shipwrecks one of which was the wreck of ‘the U. S. airship Roma, ‘a bridge collapse, mine explosion, railway collision and a drought. LANDIS GETS OVATION FROM LEGION BOYS. (Continued froth\Page 1) ing in their ears, world war veterans began the second day’s seszion of their convention here with the re- ‘habilitation question ;for the chief topic of discussion, In this connection, the Legion- naires were considering the bulletin ; issued by Lemuel Bold, National adjutant, advising them that mil- lions of dollars ‘collected during the | war for the benefit of soldiers. andj sailors’ rightfully belonged to. the| American Legion, After citing certain cases and de- cisions and gserting the Legion was the only organization in its class 'to| legally disburse the fands, the na-| tional adjutant advised the post commanders to take proper steps to. secure all war chest collections. The reply of Col. C. R. Forbers, di- rector of the United States veterans’ bureau to the Legion tehabilitation commission’s attack on the govern. jment’s. record «of, performance. in jdeulirig with the vetreans, also was | | regeiving attention % | | "In his statement, Colonel ‘Férbes.! ‘declared the veterans’ bureau could | 'not ‘be critteised ‘for mistakes\ made junder ‘the first Langley Act in as | ‘much as it had nothing to do with; the selection of sites or determining | tho sort of hospitals ‘to be erected. He «:serted ‘that under the second, Langely bill, he had been given au- thority and funds which had enabled the bureau to establish a record of which he was proud. The Legion's rehabilitation report) termed the government's record “a series of tragic mistakes, postpone- ments, delays, alibir; and ics.” REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. life term in the state penitentiary. Detloff, according to the county at torney, confessed August 6, last, tha he slew Wagner, who was 72 year: GREAT BRITAIN REFUSES PLAN (By the Associated Press) Washington, Oct. -17.—Great Bri- tain, in a communication ‘delivered | today tothe state department, is un- derstood to have declined to agree to the suggestion of Secretary Hughes, for a reciprocal agreement for extension of the right of search and seizure so as to give the Ameri- can prohibition navy jurisdiction outside of the three-mile limit. SENTENCED FOR LIFE (By the Associated Press) Austin, Minn., Oct. 17—August F. Detloff, charged with the murder of Mr. and Mrs. John Wagner, his wife's get her share of their estate, es. timated at $135,000. . August F. Detloff, agcused slaye! of Mr .and Mrs. John Wagner, hi the. state penitentiary by Distric Judge JF, D. Meighen, The loff occupied nine minutes. a calm night. Are you attending school where your education will enable you to enjoy a good income ALL YOUR LIFE? That «will increase with age amd experience? The Bismarck College courses will lead you into the realm of big oppor- tunitiés. Let us tell you gees ‘ what we have done for thousands ‘of the most successful business men and women. A Bismarck College course is a sure start in life, and pays big. Stadents-enter at ‘any time. Equipment the very-best; expert instructors; tuition reasonable. Good board and room in the | Students? Boarding Club at $20.to $26 a month. For particulars write, |. G. M. LANGUM, President, College Building, BISMARCK, N, DAK. olities. After the business sessions today, | the Vets will turn to many social and athletic events, ‘ i | parents, today was sentenced to a old, and his wife with an axe while they slept so that Mrs. Detloff could wifd; parents, near Grand Meadow the night of July 12, last, today was| ment. sentenced to life imprisonment in ar. raignment and sentencing of, Det- The cong of the nightingale may be heard at a distance of a mile or ‘to be entertaining ‘amount of reading is a part of everybody's life experience, 50, too, there is a certain’ amiount of music with which every man‘and woman. wishes to be You can readily enjoy an intimate ac- ‘quaintance with-all-that is best in music through the Victrola and Victor Records. They offer an unlimited course in music appreciation and enable you to observe and to study details of interpretation more closely than is possible by any other means. i * ‘New. Victor Records demonstrated by all dealers in Victor products on the first of each month. Victrolas $25 to $1500. Camden, New Jersey t 'S r s t, \ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1922 . Victrola No. 120 $275 Victrola No. 120, electric, $315 Mahogany or oak : VOICE” Important: Look for these trade-marks. Under the lid. On the label. Mictor Talking Machine Company “HIS MASTERS SERIOUS BLADDER TROUBLE. “Could nob stand nor sit and wa’ : forced to cry out from intense pain,” Chiropractor writas Henry Williams, of Mon-| Consultation Free~ tana. “The doctors said I had in: |Snite 9, 11 — Lucas Block flammation of the bladder an’ oper-| Phone 260 ation was necessary. Tried ca | eae FE EERSTE TY R.S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Kidney Pills and improved at once, Tell all my friends about Feley Kid- ney Pills as it will save many from suffering and perhaps, as-in my case. a dangerous operation.” Bladder and TYPEWRITERS kidney trouble demand prompt treat- ; Foley Kidney Pills give a caer quick. relief. tee Bismarck Pe : . ‘Typewriter Aviation insursnce covering all Co. classes /of travelers in airplanes is R procurable in Germany. It's 15¢ but worth it” Liqeide and Pastes for Sha x

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