The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 23, 1922, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WD. RED CROSS "WORKERS PLAN Speak at Meeting in Legion Hall, Oct. 27 “Red Cross workers from 22 coun- | ties in southwestern North Dakota | will ‘hold a conference in Legion hall Friday, Oct. 27, when they will | discuss the work of their chapters in the different counties of this dis- | trict and make plans for the coming enon i Xperts in various branches of the | program. | \vork will appear on the Among the speakers will be the fol- | lowing: A. L7 Schafer, director of | * the punior American Red Cross Cen- | tral Division in Chicago, Dr. Robert | Oleson, U. S. public health surgeon of Grand Forks, and Atty, C. L. Young, chairman of ‘the Children's Code Commission of Bismarck. At the noon public luncheon, there will be a roll call of chapters at * which time an address will be given by ©. L. Young. ‘An address of welcome will. be made by Dr. F.°R, Smyth. This will ve followed by an outline of the co- speration of the Red Cross with the U, S. Veterans’ Bureau in Minnesota by E. P.Crick, chief of Red Cross} Service U. 8. Veterans’ Bureau Sub-| : District office at Fargo. Maurice R. Reddy, director of Red Cross Service U. S, Veterans’ Hospital, No. 30, Chi- | cago, will discuss the work of the} National Red Cross for disabled s!- | diers in hospitals. ‘ How chapters are caring for ex- _ service men will be discussed by Bismarck, The place of the Red Cross chapter in the health program of the : county will be discussed by Dr. Rob- ert Oleson, U. S. Public Health Sur- geon of Grand Forks, and by Miss Isabelle Carruthers, field representa- tive, nursing service, central divi- sion, What the Juniors of the Red Cross are doing for their communi- ties will be presented by A. L, Scha- fer, director, Junior American ‘Red Cross Central Division who will ex- plain. activities which are being car- ried on by the Juniors. Miss Elsie Lawrence, welfare worker at Bismarck and Miss Hen- rietta Lund, field representative of central division will outline reliet work which has been done under the Red Cross. The counties included in this con- ference are: Adams, Billings, Bow- man, Burleigh, Dickey, Dunn, Em- mons, Golden Valley, Grant Hettin- ° ger, Kidder, La Moure, Logan, Me- Intosh, McJ.can, Mercer}. Morton, Oliver, Sioux, Slope, Stark, Stutsman. eee MANDAN NEWS | ‘TOWN ORIERS WILL BANQUET > SLOPE EDITORS Stissouri Slope and Develop- i ment Association to be Formed The Mandan Town Criers club has issued invitations for a banquet to be given.at the Lewis and Clark ho- tel at’6:15 p. m. on October 30 at |, which the members of the Missouri Slope Press and Development asso- ciation and R. T. Porte of Salt Lake City, will be honor guests. The Mis- souri Slope newspaper men will or- ganize at that time. The program to be given at the banquet includes: Welcome to and Purposes pf Missouri’ Slope Press and Development Association,” E. H. Tostevin, Mandan; “What the Slope Should Advertise and Why,” Hugh Black, Werner; “How the Or- . ganized Slope Press Will Aid Devel- 2 opment,” G, W. Stewart, Wilton; “Boosting,” Walter Cushing, Beach; “Co-operative Community Advertis- ing,” R. T. Porte, Salt Lake City, - Utah, f Organization and:-election of offi- _eers of the Missouri Slope Pres» and = Development association will follow. :Mr. and Mrs. Breiner . Have Anniversary ._ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Breiner of Sixth avenue Northwest, who were married fifty years ago in Austria- -Hungary, were guests of honor Fri- day at a dinner party and reception at the home of their daughter, Mrs. J, J. Gogerty of Fifth avenue North- west. Dinner was served at 2 o'clock, covers were placed for 20 guests, including close friends and relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Brein- er. An interesting feature of the din- ner-was a large cake decorated with “miniature dolls, representing a bride and groom dressed in the native cos- tume of Austria-Hungary. Mr. Breiner,~who is 80 years old, and ‘Mrs. Breiner, 69, came to Man- dan 6 years ago from Hungary, lo- seating on a farm south of the city. “There are two children, Mrs, J. J. .Gogerty and Mike Breiner both of ‘Mandan. Many beautiful gifts were present- ‘ed to Mr. and Mrs. Breiner by their friends. A Community Sing will be held Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock at the Commercial club .rooms under the auspices of the Mandan Musical club. Mandan citizens are all urged to at- tend and bring any song books which they may have at home. The officers of the musical club have outlined an interesting program ~ CONFERENCE | Many Prominent Men Will) of study and entertainment for the Mectings will be held the second ! Mr. and M. V. O. Matson who have been making their home in Man- dan during the past four months left Saturday for Jamestown, where |Mr. Matson is ,employed by the Northern Pacific. During the absence of H. W, Tackaberry in the west, Mr. Matson has been taking his place as water foreman on the North- ern Pacific in Mandan. Marriage licen3es was issued Sat- urday by Judge B. W. Shaw to Mary 'Bendler of St. Anthony and John Stroh, and Teina Bissert of Hebron, and Otto Landseidel of Glen Ullin. Miss Edna Pearson and Fred Han- son, both of Flasher were united in marriage at the Lutheran parsonage guests, Major A. B. Welch; “Aims }%® at 2 oclock Saturday. in Gilmore of Spearfish, S, D., who has been a guest for the past two weks at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bergiem left Saturday for his home, The Parent Teachers’ association will hold a meeting this evening in the high school assembly room th's evening at 8 o'clock. Supt. H. ‘0. Saxvik, new superintendent of Bis: marck public schools, will speak of “The Aims of a Parent-Teachers As- sociation,” a C, H. Kermott, who has been con- of Mandan, and who is manager of the local store since the purchase by the company of the Gordon store of Minot, has been made a member of the International Association of Practipedists, an organization incor- porated and chartered ‘under the laws of Mlinois, MANY ENEMIES OF CORN CROP 40 Per Cent Loss Due ‘to Weather, Disease, Ete., Says U. S. Department Washington, Oct. 23.—Of every 100 bushels of corn that farmers set out to grow, only 64 bushels are realized, according to figures com- piled by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture over a period of thirteen! years. The difference between the potential crop and the quantity harvested is due to weath- er conditions, defective sced, plant diseased and insect and animal pests. For every bushel of corn harvested somewhat over one-half bushel fails to reach harvest. Were it not for the elements that tend to reduce the size of the crop, the average crop for the thirteen year, period would have beén about 4,374,000,000 bushels instead of the 805,000,000 bushels actually har- vested, provided the same acreage had been planted. . The department points out, how-} ever, that if these elements did not exist and corn gfowers were certain of 100. percent results,. the corr: acreage probably would have been greatly reduced, so that the final outturn might not have been a larger crop than that actually harvested. It would mean simply that the farmer could get from two acres thé crep he now harvests from about three. The largest potential corn crop was one. of about 5,000,000,000 bushels in 1917, ‘although the acual harvest of 3,065,000,000 bushels in that year was exceeded in the three years 1912, 1920 and 1921, the largest harvested, crop being 3,- 3;209,000,000 ..bushels in 1920, A larger crop of corn is due to a re- latively low prevention of produc- tion by the many causes by which it is limited, but of course produc- tion is also related to acreage, the department’s records show. During the thirteen years the lowest degree of prevention was 23.5 percent of a potential crop in 1920, and the highest was 44.5 per- ent in 1913 . covered, from about one-fourth to} nearly one-half of a potential pro- duct has failed to be realized. The average is @ little more than one- third. Salinger Surrenders At New York City New York, Oct: 23.—B, I Salinger Jr, vice - president and general manager of the Midland Packing company who was indicted last May by a federal grand jury at Sioux Falls, S. D., on a charge of using thé mails in a scheme to dé- fraud investors in the stock of the company surrendered today to federal district attorney, M. S. Mat- tuck. Salinger ‘returned on the Aquitania from abroad yesterday. Arrainged before Federal Com- missioner Hitchock, a charge of be- ing a fugitive from justice in South Dakota, Salinger was paroled until Monday when he promised to furnish a bail bond, He indicated that he would fight removal to South Dakota. ' W. C. T. U. ELECT Mitchell, S. D., Oct. 23.—Officers were re-elected as follows today by the South Dakota W. C. T. U. in an- nual convention here: Mrs. Flora Mitchell, Brookings; vice president, Mrs. Lucy A. Borneman, Sioux Falls; corresponding secretary, Miss Emma L. Mead, Alexandria; Record- ing secretary, Mrs. Maud A. Jones, New Underwood; treasurer, Mrs. Mary H. Erskin, Mitchell. Mrs. E. A. Boole, National vice president of the W. C. T. U., Brook- lyn, N. ¥., was the guest of the con- vention today. She deliveerd an address thjs afternoon am will speak again tomorrow afternoon. The conevntion will close tomorrow. 2» NOTICE TO VOTERS year which will include chorus work. | land fourth Tuesdays of each month. | nected with the Greengard Bottery |. Within the period Jioften. | i i i | | i - .4n.the. business world here. Baroness Would Be Typist Baroness Thais Lucander, her Finnish estate swept away by thy is studying stenography at Boston. She'll try to recoup her fa BABIES FIRST IN FILMDOM OF AMATEURS More Pictures Developed of Them Than All Others Combined Fargo, N. D., Oct. 23.—Babies rank highest in North Dakota as targets for the amateur’s camera according to a large developing and printing firm here which finished pictures taken in Fargo and mailed in from other points over the state. Women are second. The amateur artigts are absolutely impartial in their choice’ of subjects snapping away at a good looking ones and ones who afen’t quite sy much so with the same zeal according to the finishing experts. It seems that they usually catch the ladies with their old clothes on: and aim for a ludicrous or home like effect rather than one of sartorial splendor. The young couple, togged in Sun- day best and out for holiday, prob- ably stands next on the list, Man figures in the films but sel- dom. Apparently with a sad con- sciousness that he is the least lovely of the human species, he dodges the camera’s eye so that his lack of. beauty may not be recorded in bla and white. As for facing the came alone, it is almost impossible to get him to do it. The order stands the same as re- gards people who come into the stu- dios to have their pictures taken ex- cept that newly wedded couple have a place somewhere above the men. These come into the studio occasion- ally but only when they have to do so—when they must have a cut for a newspaper, or a picture to end with an application for a job, OF Tike A en they want a like- ness for al purposes, But otherwise “you'll seldom get him to have a picture taken after he gets out of his twenties,” the photograph- er adds. . The horse is the most populas. as far as picturés taken throughout the state are concerned: Here in Fargo, however, the dog appears most The predominance of ‘the horse is explained in what many of the pictures taken \in rural commun- ities are field’ and: narvest scenes in which the horse ‘naturally has a bet- ter chance than the dog. < Fishing and, hunting’ seasons too are reflected in the films, As winter comes-on people almost quit taking pictures the finishing ex- per; say. A falling off of 3-4 of the amount of films is noted at this time of the year. MINERS STRIKE. IS THREATENED (By the Associated Press) London, Oct. 23—The union min- ers have posted notices throughout the South Wales mining district that a general strike of the miners will occur a fortnight hence unless the HAS NEVER FELT BETTER IN ALL HIS LIFE Thousands of frail, nervous people and convalescents everywhere have testified to the remiarkablé power of Tanlac in bringing back their health, ‘strength, and working cffi- ciency. It seems to quickly invigor- ate the constitution and is a power- ful foe of weakness,’ A. J. McCauley, 810 W. Fifth St.,: Duluth, says: “My health was all broken up, my stomach gave me all sorts of trou- ble, and I was so run down I wasn’t equal to my work at all. Four bot of Tanlac built me up and made me feel well and strong again and I’ve been feeling finé ever since.” There is not a single portion of the bedy that is not benefited by the helpful action of Tanlac, It en- ables the stomach to \turn the food Registration day Tuesday, Oct. 24. You may register at the regular voting places, Heo at any good druggist.—Adv. |into healthy blood, bone and muscle, | purifies the system and builds you back to normal weight. Get a bottle k | nonunion miners join the federation and an 100:'percent membership, is obtained meanwhile, CONSUMPTION OF GERMAN BEER 1S CUT Berlin, Oct. 23—The world out- side is drinking only about half the German beer it consumed ~before war, and for teis condition -Ameri- can prohibition is neld to be large- ly responsible. During the first half of the pre- sent ‘year only 279,000 hectoliters were exported, making an estimated export of 558,000 hectoliters for’ 1922, as compared with 1,129,000 an-" nually in pre-war days. ' The: latter: amount was valued at 28,000,000* gold marks, while the value of beer sent abroad during this year’s figst, semester is fixed at nearly 500,080,- 000 paper marks. ‘ ‘ The principal pre-war customers ‘or Germany’s brews, which made the word “stein” a commonplace in bars virtually the world over, were Belgium, Switzerland, France, the United States, Great Britain, and Austria-Hungary. The war paralyz- ed Germany’s beer export almost { completely. With the return... of } peace . the industry’s were not so much the recovery {of lost markets, as the securing of raw materials, particularly barley. Even | today the shortage .of barley for domestic consumption is.such that the breweries are not permitted ‘to use the home-grown product for ex- | port bees, In securing the supply rabroad they have turned mainly to countries where the currency was | relatively weak. but, barley. scarcity | there has forced them to buy-a good deal from America and Denmark. Today German beer are the resident of | and the inhabitants of the Near East. Of late there has been an Egypt has proved a good customer because of the ban maintained on British products, Other buyers in- clude West and South Africa, the Congo, and Morocco. Recently there have been several consigments to Paris. BISMARCK GRAT (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Oct. 23, 1922, No, 1 dark northern . $1.01 No. 1 red durum . No. 1 flax . No, 2 flax .. No. 1 rye Have you registered yet? If not, register tomorrow at the polling place in the Ward you live in. ~ O’Connor-Nestos Club. with See the Perfect Lover as a hot-blooded toreador, the idol of Spain. See him hazard his life in the spectacular bull- fight. See him yield to the lure of .a titled Spanish temp- tress. You haven’t seen Val- entino till you’ve seen “Blood and Sand!” Thursday MATINEE DAILY AT 2:30 Two Shows Each Evening 7:80 and 9 O’clock COME EARLY Get You Seats For the First Show by 7: Seats Will Fill Fast ONE OF THE BIG ONES USUAL ADMISSION ‘meant \“pHE CAPITOL 7 Tuesday - Wednesday - fl “A Connecticut Yankee” was not aay RCPS THIS | AT THE MOVIES | —__——______"—__-+¢ meant. to. throw ridicule upon the idea that the Middle Ages were a plumbing, without telephone, with- better time: thaiy the present, 4 a uae to be instructive. It was | hi: Middle But out good roa RODOLPH VALENTINO Blood and LILA LEE~> NITA NALDI today as they were like—without the leading drinkers of |f the British and Dutch East Indies | & No. 1 northern $prmng 96 No. 1 amber durum . 83 Ne1 mixed durum i » “Learn, {th fankee in which, in f are / while laugh while you learn.” This might ‘have been the motto ditticuties | a ‘Twain kept on his desk- : the Capitol "Theatre this week as a special William Fox attraction. But Mark Twain had no ‘such idea. educes swellin; Soe Mark Wood cin alg The pains of strains and sprains ue to congestions. Just quicken the circulation, and the inflammation and pain subside— disappear. Without rubbing, Sloan's pénetratés and breaks up the painful congestion. Sloan's relieves rheumatic backs. Loose: coldsinchest. Keep it handy, Sloasis Liniment-kills pain! TONIGHT you laugh, and e wrote “A Connecticut King Arthur’s Court,” im form, is showing at it teaches in spite adeventures of young Martin Cave dish among King Arthur's knights | more than any other ‘book or play of itself. The “A Connecticut Wy modern Don Quixote. Yankee” is It has done the]... Singers. son, N. Dak. CAAA in the “when Knights were bold.” and ladies tall, better than all the | to prove that men are as chivalrous ory books, just whatMife in the Age For Sale—Choice Canary Jacob Bull, Dickin- 4 neuralgia, warms tired, aching ‘ongestionfrom MONDAY ANITA STHWART in “THE INVISIBLE FEAR” ‘Pathe News ~ Christie AOA _Frazier and Lemke did not know how business of the State Government then, AND YOU RECALLED THEM. Are They Smarter Now Than The ae y Were Then? ‘ to run the Do you think they have learned how to conduct the business of the State during called them? Hardly. the year since you re- AFTER THE RECALL TOWNLEY SAID it was a “government by dubs.” THE RECORDS SHOW that Townley had-a lot of good reasons for that statement. DON’T YOU THINK THE SAME REASONS EXIST NOW? SURE YOU DO. Neu When You Fire A Man becausé he did not make good, you don’t rehire him the next day, do you? Burleigh County Joint THEN, WHY REHIRE RECALLED MEN, WHO HAVE FAILED TO MAKE GOOD? DO YOU THINK THEY ARE SMARTER NOW THAN THEY WERE THEN? VOTE FOR NESTOS FOR GOVERNOR. NESTOS IS TRE MAN WHO HAS MADE GOOD. THEY ARE NOT. Campaign Committee. (Political Advertisement) i Comedy i 1 1 i ail ic t ny «

Other pages from this issue: