The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 20, 1922, Page 3

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} MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1922 FARMERS OF | _ Hawi IOWA LOOKING. (53K TONO, DAKOTA ) Representative of Immigra- | tion Department Finds In- terest During Trip Stricken Widespread interest ‘in farming | possibilities in North Dakota is evi-! denced among farme?s in neighbor- ing states now, and in particylar in Towa, according to H. 0. Williams, , immigration agent, who has return- | ed from a tour through a purt! of ‘owe. He brought back, he, said, the “names of 400 “live”. prospects, all of whom showed a desire to know morc, sbout North Dakota. During the campaign, he said, cov- ered al® available points on the Great Western railway from Cannon Falls and Kenyon, Minn., to Glad- br@ok and Heinbeck, Ia, and alsu/ points on the Illinois Central be- ‘tween Webster City/and Davenport, | j ending up with a number of towns on! or continuous to the Chicago and} Rock Islands system's lines. During the nine weeks, he said, he made 32 from one side to another. Hattie, famous elephant of Central Park, N. Y., has been stricken with paralysis and derricks sre necessary to shift the enormous patient it eadily treatment of one quart of whisky @ day. * gape ee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE With » OPPOSES RAIL GN. OFFICIAL Beauty, Crowned MERGER PLAN: President Budd Declares That I. €. C. Plan Would De- | crease Competition (By the Associated Press) | Washington, Nov. 20—Competition | between railroads in the northwes} | || would, in reslity, be ‘decreased, if the interstate commerce commission should proceed with its tentati plan of consolidation the Great Northern and the Chicago, Milwau- ee and St. Paul, Ralph Budd, pr ident of the Great Northern, tes fied today at ‘the continued hea before the commission on the sub: ject. Elimination of existing compe- talks in North Dakota, also showing | nervousness is growing uxtil I can’t nightly 4,000 to 5,000 feet of state! stand it, and nothing to look forward films. The total attendance, he said,!to but a moneyless winter. Even was 5,495, or an average attendance | your affairs worry. 1 have gotten to of 171. jthe stage where trivial matters take A change of heart in people of the|so long to get over. Don't let peop!2 neighboring states from the time of falk because I am just as good as the great inflation of 1919 and fol-| the day I was born but it can’t last, lowing is evidence, Mr. Williams said, | Then, he said neither farm owners; ‘nor tenants could be persuaded to move. Since the period of infiation, however, he said, they are looking} for cheap and fertile land. Northern | Wisconsin and Northern Minnesota | meet the first requirement but not) the second he said, while North Da-! - kota’ meets both. “In my judgment, based upon the | _ declarations of many farmers of their | unalterable decision to either move up or visit the state next spring or | summer, we shall have considerable | business from the sections canvass- | ed,” Mr. Williams stated. With a) record-breaking croyp this year over| all parts of the state, with practical- | ly an assurance of a similar crop) for next year due to the abundance | ef moisture’ received this fall, with | the showing we already are making in dairying and corn production, dem- onstrating that we can be successful | if’ we will—but most of all, with the! deep interest shown everywhere in er cheap and easily purchased fertile | lands and the immeasurable natura) | resources hardly touched, this cam-| vaign should be resumed with the/ least possible delay.” Five Young Men Are Held Upon | Serious Charges) 1 | Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 20.—Five | young men of Dickinson and ‘Le-| high were arrested on complaints charging a statutory offense andj were taken to Mandan for arraign-| ment before Judge Thomas H. Pugh. The men arrested were] Frank Durant, Ed Booky, and Max Bauer of Dickinson and Morris; Wellhouse and Jerome Benson of Lehigh, the latter two being em- ployed’ ag teachers~in the Lehigh| schools. State’s Attorney J. P. Cain had! secured a signed confession of the, guilt of all five men and they were expected to plead guilty- and re- ceive sentence when brought before Judge Pugh today. Mr. Cain said that he would ask for the minimum! sentences of one year for, the of-| fenders. As a result of the arrests the Le- high schools Were closed on Friday as the two teachers were confined in jail in default of’ bail. ~ Benson, one of the offenders, is under twenty-one years of age and should he plead. guilty, he will be senten- ced to'the industrial school instead | of the state-prison. MISS FULTON SPENT NOTHING Miss Martha Fulton, candidate for the state superintendent of pub- instruction, spent no money in the | nampaign, she states in her cam-| _caigns state filed with the secre- tary of state. Other statements of state candidate filed inclfded: Frank Milhollan,-state railroad commission, | printing, $55.50; newspaper advertis- iy $6.00; postage, $12,25; contritu- tion, $12.00; total, $85.75. E.B. Lil- libridge, insurance commissioner, printing $28.75; livepy, $30.25, rail- road fare fare, 40.00; newspaper- | advertising, $6.75; campaign fund, $100, total $200.75; Judge A. G. Burr, printing-and atlvertising $22.0; post- ge, $27.10; express 29 cents,” total $52.69. Girl, Despondent, | Takes Own Life) Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 20.—Miss | Ida Puariea, 24, committed suicide here by drinking carbolie acid. She | died in her yoom at the Gardner hotel. The cause ofsher act was a temporary . fit of despondeney. brought on by worry over financial matters, a note she left indicates, Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Puariea were notified. She is sur-| vived by two sisters and two broti- ers. } | ported a wonderful reception I’m afrai get. Ida.” ARMY OF 100 — OUT TO SMASH QVER THE TOP <Continued from Page One) very reasonable remuneration for services in the reorganization. Over 100 at Luncheon Over a hundred workers and mem- bers of the Executive Committee ga- thered at the Grand.Pacific Hotel at noon to have luncheon and make reports. Before the hour the work- ers began to gather from all sections of the city, having covered their morning calls successfully. They re- in every district and sympathetic hear- ings without exception. After lunch- eon and some community singing the chairman called on the team captains for reports, Applause greeted each report and the amounts gradually creeped np Heaps of love, Please for- jand up until the final total stood at 130 signed memberships. The Exe- cutive Committee members, who had been calling on the larger firms then made a report of an additional 100 which made the grand total for the day, 230. The first woman in Bismarck io take out a membership in the new Club was Mrs. W.«E. Butler. The prize for the best percentage of .attendance was won by Divi: D under Major Thompson. The ch man presented the pri fitting and appropriate remar silk flag, presented to the dis bringing in the most members w: awarded also to Di brought in 40 members. The third prize for the a box of Havanas, wv aptured by the workers on Division D und Major Thompson for bringing in the largest collections of dues with their memberships. Their total was 7. The highest individual tea port was made by they worke Team No. 16 under Captain Dobler with a total of 16-members. Team No, 11 under Capt. Boise brought in tne highest colledtions for any individual team, reporting $187.50. The scores of each team as they showed up on the big report bla board are as follows: \ Division A—Major F. J. Grady. Team No. 1,—Capt. French, $50.00. Team No. 2—Capt. Dunn 3, $75.00. Team No. 3—Capt. Olson, 4, $62.50. Team No. 4—Capt. Gussner, 1!, $80.00. Divisional Total, 20, $267.50. Division B—Major J. A. Graham. Team No, 5—Capt. Boise, $187.50. Team No. 6—Capt. Moule 9, $150.0). Team ‘No 7—Capt. Rosen, 6, $62.50. Team ‘No. 8—Capt. Hedden, ¢, $50.00. f Division total 3: . Digjsion C—Major H. T. Murphy. Team No. 9—Capt. Duemeland, 6, $75.00. Team No. 10—Capt. W. E. $160.00. Team No. $50.00. 2, 11—Capt. MacLeod, ey i Tcam No, 12—Capt. | $147.95, Division total 38, $432.95. Division D—Major L. K. son, Team No. 183—Capt. 12, $175.00. Team No. 14—Capt. Craswell, 11 $180.67, Team No. $87.50. Team No. 16—Capt. Ward, $887.50. Divisional zotal 40, $536.67. : After such a magnificent days work the workers will start out again to morrow morning with renewed con- fidence and enthusiasm and pres- pects look« good for another record day’s - report, “Buncheon again at noon. Dobler, Thomp- B.A, Lahs. 15—Capt. Corwin, 9. WILL TELL OF RUSS FAMINE Returned Relief Worker To Speak in Bismarck Soon Miss Mir'am Wes' of the Friends’ Relief Russian famine zone, will speak in Bismarck, friday, Noy. 24 ‘ The public ted to hear her story former member of the Br Relief U: ferred to Russia in December 1921 and served during the height of the famine last winter. returned to American on the . Aquitania, about the end of October, and un- der the auspices of the Northwest tr ‘| Russian Relief Committeec, is’ now engaged on a speaking tour in} half of the American Friends’ Ser- vice “Committee, 20 South 12th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — whi maintains the Quaker Relief M sions, In addition to Russia, the com- mittee also has units at present in Austria and Poland. At the‘ meeting here West ywill give an account of her experi- fence during: the height of the fam- ine last winter. She will also speak of the which now threaten a repetition of that disaster, of the necds of the, hour resulting therefrom. M MANY INSANE PATIENTS ARE BEING CURED St. Paul, Nov. 2 at the Fergus Falls State hospit jare being cured of their mental aii- ments through the employment of occupational therapy, according 19 C. H. Swendsen, member ef the state board of control. * : Two hundred and seventeen p tients availed themselves of this o cupational diversion and as a result made many aprons, towels, t ers, dresser scarfs and baskets for farms, The total population of the institution is 1,613. Occupational ther Swend i g the que tion of cu y instances even where a cure is not possible is relieving the patients to a large de- gree, according te fl nM PAYS OUT ABOUT .$12,000 ap, -N./D., Nov. 20.—Wednesday pay day at the Lucky Strike ang between $11,000 and $12,006 distributed among the, emplo conditions would be marked particularly, he said, in Montana and at the Mead of the Great Lakes. In Montana, Mr. Budd declared, a j of the St. Paul and the hern throz3h mountain- reas would result,in making practically impossible for that te tory to ever obtain other railroad service, because the great distances essary. would prevent other railroads from entering that field. At Duluth, hg added, the commis- sion proposed fo merge the present ore carrying railroads, the Duluth, Missabe and Northern, and the Du- luth and Iron Range into the Great Northern-St. Paul system. This would leave the territory concerned almost complptely outside of the scope of other 'railroads, Mr. Budd contended, adding that these factors indicated that the tentative plan of the co! mission, insofar, as it affected t railroads concerned, had not fitted into the-design of the transportati act which required maintenance of competitive conditions in earryin;: out general consolidation of rz roads. “The project is so injurious to the interests of the Great Northern th ho voluntary action of that co: pany'’s stock holders in compliance with the consolidation suggested could be expected,” Mr, Budd said. “Indeed, the plan itself, sets | plan of motives which would actuate them’ to oppose it” Mr. Budd suggested that if the interstate commerce considered it desirable to split up the present Hill group of railroads, which includes the Northern Pacific and the Chicago, Burlington‘ and Quincy, as well as the Great North- ern, the Northern Pacifie should be taken out “and joined to the Chica- go; Milwaukee and St, Paul. He o posed, however, any separation 9f the three, and argued for the main- tenance of their present association and their unification into one sys- tem. | REFEREE IN OUSTER CASE 1S APPOINTED B, F. Wilson of Flaxton has been named by Governor Nestos as ref- enree to reféree to/hear evidexce in the removed case of Charles Kopri Kopriva, Burke county auditor. + Dickinson, 20.—Josep Albrecht, aged 73 an old time resident of Dickinson and vicinity, died at his home in Dickinson after a brief illness of heart trouble. Mr. Albrecht, who has been retired from employment recently, has been a re- sident of Dickinson and Stark coun- The people Father Ft. Yates, Nov. ,of Fort Yates surprised Bernard by a birthday party in honor of hig 61st birthday. The party was held in the agency hall. A large crowd attended to congrat- ulated Father Bernard and wish him many happy birthdays to come. Father Bernard’s record of 38 years service here has few equals: else- where. SHOW A SUCCESS Washburn, N. D., Nov, 20.—The Second Annual Corn and Jotato Show for Washburn was held Wed- nesday, November 15, at the Liberty Theatre. it “impossible for many to attend who were planning on coming, yet there were a good number of farm- ers in the surrounding territory who de the trip to town. E. Purchase was elected states at- torney of Sioux county over Eu.’ Johnson. The fight was a warm onc. and the expensive construction nec- | al commission | 7 sie ‘ i The conditions of the roads made me baie. ot:leayeg is adopted as e's crown‘by Miss: Mary | Latta, foted London belle. This is, | [one .of ‘the ‘many~ fashions ;which' thas been adopted'in court circles: after_ introduction by: Miss Latta,! PIRATES SEIZE BRITISH CRAFT (By the Associated Press) Hong Kong, Nov. 20.—Sixty-five | Chinese bucaneers who might have stepped from some ancient log of the Spanish main traveled as passengers ‘aboard the British Steamer Sui-Ar when she left Macao for Hong Kong yesterday afternoon. Seizing the ship a few miles out, the pirates held her for 13 hours. The crew and pas- | sengers made Hong Kong today, with |their captors driven away in sam- pans, only after a fierce battle in which two were killed and several | wounded, including the captain, a |French priest and another European assenger. | The British steamer was carrying |a large number of European ana Chi- nese passengers. The pirates, heav- ly armed, were disguised as firs{ or | second class passengers, | .When the Europeans showed re- | sistence, the virates threatened to i beach and burn the vessel. In the jfighting that followed two Indian } watchman were killed and two others | of the crew were wounded. The eap- |tain’s wound is serious. The invaders then got the upper |hand and locked up passengers and lcrew.’ The pirates passed Hong Kong, out at sea, and began to steam jin the direction of Swatow. | Finally, 13 hours later a European | shot and wounded the pirate chief. The chief's wife then directed that the excyrsion be abandoned. Mid- way between Hong Kong and Swatow the outlaws escaped. The Sui-An reached Hong Kong at noon today. —-—_______-_ | The Weather | | ¢——_______—__-—_ For twenty-four hours ending at noon today: ‘Temperature at 7 a. m. .. Temperatare at noon ...-. | Highest yesterday 1 Lowest yesterday . Lowest last night . Precipitation Highest wind velocity . WEATHER FORECAST | For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday; not -much change in temperature. For North Dakota: Partly cloudy | tonight and Tuesday; not much change in temperature. Weather Conditions Precipitation fell in the Great Lakes region and in the north Paci- fic states, but elsewhere the wea- ther is generally fair. Temperatures have dropped somewhat during the past 48 hours in all sections except in the Northwest where a slight rise | occurred. > | ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist. | | | pee ‘| Additional Mark ets | —— BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) 4 Bismarck, Nov. 20, 1922. |No. 1 dark northern . 'No, 1 spring No. 1 amber durum . i No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum ... No. 1 flax .. No. 2 flax Ng. 1 tye 1.10 » 1.05 89 5 70 Life’ May Be Lengthened by These Scientists, 7 cui | \ (By the Associated | 2 COMMITS: SUICIDE (By the Associated Press) Los Angeles, -Nov. _20,—George Bronson Howard, playwright and no- velist, was found dead in a gas fill ed room in his bachelor apartments here today. The police said they be- | lieved it to be a case of suicide. CALL MONEY Press) Nov. Call money firmer; high 5} low 4%; ruling rate 4%. Time loans firm; mixed collat- eral 60-90 day 5; 4-6 months 5; prim commercial paper 4%. New York, JUNIOR RED CROSS ONE OF GREAT | CONTRIBUTION 70 ORGANIZATION An army of children, five million itrong, under the flag of -the Red jross is serving children the world nver. Achievements of the Junior ted Cross organized among school children of America are the bi «or a large part of the appeal for a reat sustaining membership which the Red Cross is now making through its Annual Roll Call. To promote a healthy and happy childhood throughout the world is the program of the Juniors. Just now they are filling 100,000 Christ- mas boxes for distribution to desti tute children . in European citie: all year around they lend a helping hand to unfortunate children of their own communities by furnish- ing cara or equipment for crippled children, by buying glasses for those in need and bringing cheer to little children in orpanages and hospitals. Interschool correspondence’ is creating a better understanding be- tween nations. Under this plan, American school children carry on correspondence with the pupils of foreign schools; learning directly the geography and customs of one another's countries, and daily inci- dents of their lives. The Juniors of Lincoln County in Wyu.umg nave paid for transporta- tion to Salt Lake City Hospital of a child that needed to be operated on for a cataract of the eye. At Alpena, Michigan, they recently brought braces for a crippled boy and materials from which Junior girls made ‘layettes for overseas babies. Marquette Juniors paid nominal fees for 103 tonsil and adenoid oper- ations while those of Oakland raised money for a traveling dental outfit and the services of a dentist. By their ser?ice to the disabled soldiers during the past year all chapters of the American Red Cross in ten middle western states have seconded the declaration of the Mil- waukee Chapter officials “That the disabled men must continue to have adequate assistance in providing his claim and such: advice and social service as will enable him to return to as full measure of life’s advant- ages as he possessed on that memor- able day, April 6, 1917”. Tuberculous patients are among those disabled ex-service men who are most apt to be overlooked and who most need the personal attention which the Red Cross can give. “Swimming is the first water sport to learn—it makes the other safe.” Through instruction in Life Saving and First Aid, the Red Cross has made rapid strides the past year according to a report of Walter Davidson, Manager of Central Divi- ——S NOTICE December Number Tele- phone Directory closes for changes on NOVEMBER 20th . Call 1,000 if you wish any changes made. NORTH DAKOTA INDE- PENDENT TELE- PHONE .CO. Cleaning, Dyeing, Repalring Pressing at new low prices, Mail érders We pay looked after promptly. postage one way. | Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works Opposite P. 0. Bismarck RIVERSIDE OYSTER SUPPER Free Dance. in > % HEAVY CALENDAR Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 20.—More | than seventy cases appear on the} 4 | sion in con ing the people of the | lake segions of the’ middle-west of | the (cuth of ts Life Saving slogan.| Clas. in Fi Aid: have been given | in maay schcyls, ins the coal mininj districts of Southern Illinois and Cheyenne ‘Academy, gf North Dakota. Postmen and firemen of Mason City, Iowa, Boy Scouts of Minneapoli policemen of Oinaha, Nebraska, have had First Aid) instruction and demonstrations through the efforts | of chapters to increase. knowledge | of “what to do be'x the doctor | comes.” ' This important Pied Cross Service, one of many is maintained and en- larged by funds secured from mem- bership support emlisted during the! Annual Roll Call’ between Armistice | Day, November 11, and Thanksgi ing Day, Novensber 39, 1922. re TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST—Tan Jeather hand bag con- taining varions articles Sunday evenings between my home St. Alexius and: Bismarck hospital. Reward. Mis. Kling, 601 7th St./ gals 11-20-2t | FOR RENT—Two light house keep- ing rooms in modern home, partly furnished. Phone 4633. 218 So, 11th St. EVERYBODY WELCOME. ' Given by J. W. Schebler. AGNES AYRES and MILTON SILLS in “BORDERLAND” A drama of madcap love and it’s consequences, — a ‘i FOR RENT-—Two or three fur I rooms for light housekeeping; modern; 4 blocks from town. Call 872. 1U1-20-2t \ Minneapoli , describ - cd by federal agents as “king «f the dope peddlers,” with his wife and Joc Passerelli, was arrested in said which netted $10,000 worth: of drugs, mostly smoking opium. =SSSSSSS=S=—aSeSeSam=aom——=|" R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, 11 — Lucas Block Phone 260 ; OOS: oo Get The. Habit of Sending Your Hides and Furs To || Us For The Best Tanning; save money by having YOUR OWN hides and furs made into useful articles, such as robes, coats, fur sets, chokers, rugs, mittens, gloves, caps, buckskin, oak harfiess, lace and sole leath- er. We also do taxidermy and repair work. We are always in the market for raw hides, furs, and junk. Write for free price ists and tags. 5 THE BISMARCK HIDE & FUR. CO. Bismarck, N. D. | ' Feneeresesaaeasennanet TYPEWRITERS All Makes 1a and a Ave Aro In The Market For A ~ ‘Thousand Tons Of old junk iron, bones, baled paper and magazines. THE BISMARCK HIDE & FUR ANY Bismarck, N, D. CHAS. RIGLER, Mgr. PAVILLION MONDAY NIGHT. Good Music. TONIGHT _-MONDAY and TUESDAY a ps PAGE THRE] fs Ay ee ar OWOL DNIONGIAAOO siva- WV EEL MOU I$1Z “AON ‘ HVUUVATUAVAUAEOOARET HE TT anal On the dresser bestde her bed in’ the hotel room was a note addressed | to hér family. Dearest folks, please don't feel, badly, and forget I’m just a quitter. | It is all so/Rmed; this di fi URNS - Cover with wet baking sods afterward apply gently— vic . A Doe. Adon fan Usd Yo ion Jars Used Yearly | i | calendar for the November term of| ‘the District Court for Stark county | | Which will convene next Tuesday | | morning at 10 o'clock. Judge Lemb- ke of Hettinger will preside\ at t term. + Peking.—-George Olaf Holm of} Mooreton, N. D., an American mem- | ‘ber of the Lutheran mission, has, ‘heed kidnapped in Honan province by! |the powerful bandit army which ap- ‘parently dominates the entire prov-| ince and which has sacked and burn- ed a dozen towns, | “SHAOT GTaYOM AIOHUMARL BUSTER KEATON In “COPS” PATHE NEWS At the Rockefeller Institute where the world’s greatest medical men were recently convened, Dr. Alexis Carrel suggested to the other great scientists the scientific possibility of lengthening age through special -attention to the white blood corpuscles. The famous physicians shown here are, left to right, Dr. Hideyo Nonuchi, yellow fever expert; Dr. lexis Carrel, experimental surgeon; Dr. Simon Flexner, _bacteriologis' :Dr. Theobald Smith, pathologist; Dr. P. A. Levene, famous chemist; Dr. Peyton Rous, bacteriologist.

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