The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 18, 1922, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT TRE BISMARCK TRIBUNE KELLER CASE ACTION UPTO. COMMITTEE: Body Will Investigate Possible Action Against Minnesota Congressman ‘GLENDIVE TO CELEBRATE DEDICATION OF NEW : | $250,000 NORTHERN PACIFIC STATION =e hington, Dee. 18.—The house ccmmittee appointed a mittee today to investigate vhat action, if any, should be taken { in connection with the refusal of j entative Keller, Republican of Minnesota, to testify before the committee as to the information on which he based his impeachment charges against Attorney General Dangherty. There had been -on_ indication ye meantime of any change in Mr.] The new depot and.division head- | Gtendive will become thd only other, This splendid new’ structure ‘will Keller's attituce toward the com- |quarters of Montana the Northern dining car supply station! on the en- | cost over $250,000.00° fer building mittee summons since he served ipacific railroad at Glendive, Mont- | tire system. besides thosé lozatell at and cquipment. It was, built to re- Hoe through his counsel Saturday | ai is one of the finest and largest | St. Paul, Minnesota and Seattle, | place an old’ frame building ‘destroy. at he stocd on his wghts as a Washington. ed by fire on January 15, 1921, and structures of its kind on the ent.re system of the Northern Pac fic Rail- way. In arch.tectural, design, it, is modern und may be classed ‘as Northern Pacifie depot style which is more adaptid to business effici- ency than mere beauty of cutline or conti! guration, Its lines suggest di- rectn exactness and tnorough- ness without frills or ornateness. The building is emblematic of the spirit and ideal of the railroad which built it. Hebron pressed red brick, with trimmings of white brick of the same type worked out in neat artistic . designs, is the material employed for the exterior. ! will be formally cpened with appro- priate ceremonies on. December 20, ' 1922. In addition to this new station | ctlice building, the No:thern Paci- fie Ra‘lway is glso constructing a ew central heating plant at a cost of’ $150,000.00, and a new fire proof storerocm building of concrete fg cost $80,000.00, ~ Glendive is ‘justly proud of its new railway station: and. will put on quite a celebrat‘on ‘for the opening, to which railway men from. all parts of the Northern Paci fig will come including a special train of: Pullman cars from St. Paul. The. City wel- member of the house in refusing to respond to it, holding that the com- mittee had exceeded its constitution- al powers in issuing it. What action the committee would take in the matter appeared to hinge on its con- clusion a view to contempt proceed- ings. as some membet's wanted ‘to do at the last meeting, Saturday, la- though others were doubtful of the last’ meeting, Saturday, although cthers were doubt*ul of the com- mittee’s It Will Be Dedicated Dec. 20 Thet part cf the building housing the officers ofthe division is three stories high and the rema‘nder but one story. It is 286 feet long, fac- | ing the railroad tracks, and 42 feet | wide with a height cf 20 feet for the single story!pcrtion and. 40 feet for the balance of the building.; On the track side there -is a passenger plat- form with red brick flogrittg extend- ing 5 feet from the building’ to the first passenger train tracksyand is 380 feet long. This is intercepted by three grass and shrubbery plots, the centre one of which is-oval and of the situation Mr. Keller's w'th- proceedings, the from drawal from the resulting heuse committee plans to resume wer comes the presence of every one to hearings onthe impeachgent {It is fire-proof structure of concrete |the other two! cblong..- Ther are |help it celebrate as special invite- tomorrow, with Representa- |2nd brick throughout. The entire |two additicnal platforms for train |tions are being mailed only to a tives Woodruff of Michigan, and {building 1s to be employed solely | vervice. each cf which 18 1,000 feet |number of railway ‘employes who Johnsen of South Dakota, appeating |for the railroad purposes, the |long of the same mi al, and one | served formerly at Glendive, and as witnesses. /Bround floor being devoted largely |of which is 18 feet wide and . the | are now scattered over the country, traffic purposes and |the remainder for off'ces :6f.:"the | Yellcwstone division: of thé -North- {ern Pacific Railway. In the base- {ment will be found storage room, I Vaunte and the refrigeration plant of jthe dining car department since {with the commencement of the year, WALLACE REID NOT EXPECTED T0 RECOVER On Verge of Death For: other feet » between whichr: runs @ind railway officials of the North- the main track of the railway: line.]@rn Pacific. Special invitations ‘are issenger traihs will stop ‘in front jai being sent to commercial “or- of the depot cn a special track for | gan‘zations and the press. .as they that purpose, capable of holding the | represent the community. of’ théir longest passenger train,’ and thus tespective cities. Glendive has hung leave the main track free for other | out the sign “Welcome. and cordial- uses. iy invites all to be present, Seeeeteitriere tea ive condition or from influenza. ; night to hear the Major and to ob- “A rein‘ection of influenza is pos- heb A sf pele at any time and could cause | “°rv® the “boys, 'in’ theit “gymnasium activities. his death. This is not anticipated ,by Attending physicians, but must} The Comrades will not meet. on Thursday night, owing to the fact jto passenger INTERVENTION OF AMERICA | | CHIEF ISSUE Wagy Europe Believes United States | | Is Preparing to Partici- } pate in Her Affairs \ | \" and is being considered.” “He thought he would die the | that the Senior class play is to be other night,” Mrs. Reid said. “He | held on that night. was so brave about it, poor boy. For] The Pioneers of the Wachter three nights he had‘expected.to die. | school elected the following officers He is not'afra‘d.{o die. but he wants last Wednesday night: Ed. Spriggs so much to live for Bill and: Bétty | Chie; Aubrey’ Coleman; Deputy eee, ieee to their son and Chief’ and Clarence Robidou, Scribe. ¢ i There are fifteen enthusiastic: mem- British, Dec. 18.—Those newspap- ers te which the British public looks for solid and conservative guidance {completely reject the idea that an ik Min proeeat “cond eatin pods Several Days, Wife \ bers on the: South Side, and :Russell , i . Reid is the. Pioneer Guide, . These Is. ba: th Hi These fees thet Says | Bismarck Boys The , Young : Comers ‘basketball their correspondents in the United Sama ae : league, commenss dss la States who appear to have probed | Los.Angeles, Dec, .18—Wallace | The big event at the Pioneer| mornin, e Wild Onts—Captain:-Lawrence Ko Reid, motion, picture star, is on the verge of death and for several days has. not been expected to live ac- cording to. Mrs, Wallace Reid (Doro- thy Davenport) in an interview to- important sources of information cver the week end. The possiblility of American in tervention in Europe’s troubles’ still engrosses attention here. Grand. Council last Monday night sitzky, Harold’ Yeasley, Chrl Hoff- was the election of officers. Ernie| man, Bob Burke, Cinrenee Bahmer, Bdnser was elected Grand Chief, Ben| and Leo ‘Benser.’ Jacobson Deputy Grand Chief, andj Tigers—Captain Ed. O'Hare, Dick Two or three of , the morning |day in: the Los ‘Angeles Examiner, | Ronald McIntyre, Grand Scribe. Re-|'Gallagher, Norm Nupen, Neil, Cam- newspapers reiterate with more or )Biven at. a Hollywood sanitarium | tiring Grand Chies Al Watkins will] eron,,Harold-Corden and Jim Lund. striking embellishment last [last night. present the new Chief with an In-|_ Lions—Captain Louis McCorrle, One of the physicians, accord'ng’ to the Examiner, corroborated Mrs. Reid’s \ statements, saying: “Mr. Reid has’ been near death for the last five or six days. His tempera- ture has repeatedly reached\ 103 and way that has not been divulged, will | his’ pulse 130, His heart action is ake a hand in helping to solye the {irregular and weak, he has fainted elaine: Cae, Fitherto \ hove [on an average of three times daily, , boys on the signifieance of the Pipo| Lynx defeated the Tigers 4 to 2, baffed European statemen, The ‘and has lost ‘seventy pounds in ' of Peace and how the Indians record] Next Saturday the Wild Cats will fimes while deprecating exaggerat- weight. _Laljoratory findings at the , their. history. play the Tigers and the Lions will ed optimism, says that the rumors |Present time indicate he is suffer- | Parents and friends of the. boys] play the Lynx, * American intervention doubtless- |ing either from a complete exhaust- ' are invited to the Grand Council to-| ‘The class in Astronomy held its i ly have a substratum of ‘fact, The first session on Saturday night at dewspaper welcomes indications of | Mr. MacLeod’s home—boys wishing the “fresh interest and understand- to oin this class should do so before ng”. the United States is showing next Saturday night. in European conditions. Meeting of December 15, Troop 1, a mere Bismarck. Barjert Jacobson presided iG. N. DIVIDEND in the absence of the Chairman, RATE REDUCED Robert Birdzell. A committee was appointed to formulate plan to raise i some money for the troop. The com- St. Paul, Minn. star Oil inittee consists of Robert Birdzeli care heulc Mina seem Rae | Ralph Newcomb and Russell Le Bar- roted a 21:2" percent “nemianmuel ron, A committee consisting of Rus- dividend, reducing the yeardy rate basis from 7 to 5 percent, at a meet- ng here today. , The dividend is week? stories concerning an impend- ing loan. The consensus of opinion, however is “that there is something in tha vind,” and that there is a distinct possibility that America, in some dian war club as the symbol of his| Don Kenniston, Geo. Eisenberg, Mir- authority at the Grand _Counci. rel Enge, Jim. Coleman, Cliff Forsythe. meeting tonight. Lynx—Johp O’Hare, captain, Jack The speaker at ‘tonight’s council] Cowan,: Spencer Sell,:Jim Anderson, will be Chief Mato Watakpe| Bob Aune and John McNary. X (Charing Bear), who is Major Welch| In Saturday's:games the Wild Cats of Mandan, He will speak to ‘thé| deefated the Lions 2 to 1, and the Million Starving Children 7* if ind Uncle Ara Best Friend SPANIARD IS GIVEN NOBEL HONOR PRIZE Physics Award Goes to Prof. “Niels Bohr of Den- - mark Stockholm, Dec. 18.—The reasons for its choice of prize winners in this year’s,award of $200,000.00 have been announced by the Nobel In: tute. This Swedish institution awards annual prizes of $40,000.00 each for notable achievement in the fields of physics, chemistry, medicine, liter- ature, and in the cause of peace. Sometimes the list of names select- surprising to the public at large, but in general the wisdom and insight of the judges is endorsed. The gward ‘in literature, which seems t@ arouse more popular inter- est: than any other, goes this year, not’ to Thomas Hardy, as had been hoped by his Swedish’ friends, but to the Spanish playwright Jacinto Benavente who, though little known outside of his own country, is said to have’ done more than any. other dramatist to modernize, and bring fresh stimulus to the Spanish the- ater. He has written about 80 plays during the last 30 years, His come- dies of social satire are directed at contemporary life in Spain, and he is not unlike Bernard Shaw in his ability to hold up the mirror to hu- man nature. He is original in point of view, and tefined in style. Professor, Albert Einstein, of Ger- many, received the 1921 prize in physics, not for his famous theories of .relativity, but for his discovery and ‘elucidation of a law regarding electrons and the photo-electric of fect’ of atoms. “This law,” said prominent Swedish scientist;, “is the bridge which ‘leads from theories concerning atomatic structure’ to facts which can be experimentally verified.” The physics prize for 1922 goes to Professor Niels Bohr of Denmark, who. is only 87 years of age and the youngest person who has ever re- ceived a Nobel prize, for his discov- ery of methods by which the inner structure of atoms, may be studied. He has, in fact, been able- to con- struct atoms artificially which. cor- respond in substance and spectrum analysis to the natural particles Professor Bohr is of the opinion that} every scientific advance, even those which for aitime may seem only academic: and fruitless, will some day: have a direct practical value to humanity. fo announcement. of awards of this year’s prizes for medicine and peace have: been made. It will be re- membered that Americans have al+ ready captured three peace prizes. Theodore Roosevelt, Elihi Root; and Weodrow Wilson were the winners in'1906, 1912, and 1919 (respectively. The Nobel Institute was establish- ed by the will of Alfred Nobel Swed- ish® scientist, .best’ known for his invention of dynamite, who bequeath- edi.his entire fortune of 30,000,005 kronor, about $8,000,000,00 for this parpose. The first annual prizes were distributed in 1901.. ORDER FRENCH CONSULS OUT {Ry the Associated Press) Vladivostok, Dec. 18.—The Soviet government of Vladivdstok which re- cently took over the administration |, of the city and surrounding terri- tory, known as the Primoria, today ordered the consuls of France and ten other countries to close .their consulates and leave the Primoria within a week. \The consulates of. the United States, Great “Britain, Italy, Germany and Australia, were not closed and may continue to function. No announcement as to the consul- ates of China and Japan has been sel Le Barron, Robert Birdzell and Alfred Muir was appointed to see rayable February 1 to stock holders lof record December 29, 1922. about getting a padlock and some other neceney things for the cabin. Real Estate Transfers Made Motion made that no persons not members-of Troop 1 be allowed to Real estate transfers filed with the register of deeds include: use the cabin without. the Scoutmas- ter's permission. A committee con- sisting. of Herbert Zvorist, Alfred Muir, Hugo -Shelnker, and Bayert E. C, Ruble and wife to Wm. Ko- fra SW%, sec. 33, twp. 140, range 75. . John L. Schneider and wife to Jo- Jacobson, was appointed to attend seph Burckhard Coffins Ad. lots 11 | jto the details of entertaining the. ice troops of our cabin during and 12, block 1, Bismarck. ide i| Lucia M. Williams to Geo. Lewis, \Christmag vacation. Barton Muir was madg an associate member of Trooy N72, sec. 11, twp, 137, range 76. Aug. E. Johnson to Emanuel Ger- NW, sec, It was\announved that hereafter the meetings: would be held at 7:00 o'clock during® he basketball season. Meeting then oe adjourned. CALL FOR CITY be BISMARCK WARRA| 2 le, 79, }, Augusta Billington and husband to ‘Alice Barnes, Driscoll, 3rd ad. all of blocks 1 and 2, Monarch Elevator Co. to R. sRierson, part lot 3, all lot 2, sec. 2 twp, 142, range 78. 1 Geo. O'Hange and wife to Chi ‘Deem Nis, sec. 13, twp. 143, range 78. 15, twp. 141, range Notice is hereby given that there are funds on hand to pay the\folloy- ing warrants.of the City of Bismare North Dakota, drawn on the follow- ing funds. All General Fund: warrants regis- tered on. or before ‘August 1, 1921. Interest will vane on the above war- eae ete A City of Bamarck, Ne Ds or at, the penaberes N42, sec. 13, twp.-° 143, ad . office of. City Treasurer of said City. range 78. ; A: J. ARNOT; ‘Frank E. Hedden to E. A. Brown, j : i “S City: "Treasurer. ay P. 2nd Ad. part lot 4, block 27. A WoULD KEEP AGENT. |] Beach, N. D. Dec. 18—A commit tee. of five, consisting of J. P. Smith, ! ‘chairman, George Hammond, A. J. |;Beier, E, H. Mason, and Lew: Od- jland, was appointed to work out the details fof a campaign to raise suf-, ficient funds to finance the agricui- |tural extension work of Golden Val- ‘ley county, 1,000,000 children im the A. 7 a kitchens the ‘Joint. Distribution Committee is supplying food HE Russians love Uncle Ara. Along the Volga, where famine stalks, that is an ‘American word which means com- fort and protection and sometimes life itself. The people everywhere call the American Relief Admin- istration “Uncle Ara” because the signs that are displayed over all the kitchens and food distributing stations read like this: A. R.A. in the Ukraine and White | Russia.’ The feeding work is carried on’ along purely non-sectarian lines. The Committee has. fed about t 2,000,000 persons dally. 4 Even casual observers in South: |, Russia notice the effect and the @ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA © Knowl all over the Northwest for Quality ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS %, 12-18-19-20-21-22-23 made. The consulates ordered closed are those of France, Belgium, Holland, Denmarck, Sweden, Finland, Esth- onia, Poland, Latvia, Czecho-Slovakia ind Georgia. ot. spection. The state agricultural college will jtory and as-ets, her financial struc- ordere¢ | people eat and weal Gifts Worth While The, day of impractical gifts has. passed.” Gone is the time when trinkets, w able as gifts. Today something li something both useful and beautiful, is. the * ideal Christmas gift. Eespecially does this - new order of the day apply to: Jewelery: We're proud of our present selectién. Our one idea has been to assemble an abundant stock of popular priced atticles of Jewelry— sold to you by —a ‘Yeliable Jewelry Store, Quality is never sacrificed for price. Every- thing in Jewelry is here waiting your: in- Bonham Brothers , \« —- wer By NEA Service. Portland, Me., Dec. '18.—‘“Yes, in- deed I look like Santa’ Claus—but | as I'm only his first lieutenant,” says Edward K. Chapman. And like Santa, he is essential to the spreading of Christmas joy in the big eastern cities. For 56 years he has been shipping in their Christmas trees. ¥ \ 14“T yeturned, wounded from Civil War. I was penniless too, and MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1922 | ANTA’S LIEUTENANT” LOOKS LIKE GOOD ST. NICK AND FURNISHES HIS TREES cently clothed. The thoroughfares are cleaner than in the average | American city. The trains take care of the traffic and run on schedule. ! In Berlin, hotels and restaurants jare jammed. In most theaters a i | half-day before the performance be. | gins there is the sign “ausverkauft” —sold out.” But mueh of. this selling prosper- ity is due to foreigners. : It is the “guslanders” who crowd * the hotels and help fill theaters and | restaurants, It\is they who patron- ize the taxis at 1,500 to 6,000 marks per fide. Walk away from the brightly \lighted, well-kept main streets of | Berlin, Hamburg, Bremen, what city you will, and go to the dimly lighted streets and you find another side - the German picture. . " You find the middle class—the small tradesmen, the professors, the teachers, the old people who had re- tired before the war, the doctors— ‘all these people pinched by hard times and sometimes almost starv- ing. | Even the workmen protected by the it was near Christmas time, I de- cided to go into the woods to get the strengthening odor of the pines. I cut a carload of Christmas trees and took them to New York, where employing 100 men to cut them.” I sold them. GERMANY—1923! IT’S’ LAND OF STRIFE BY MILTON BRONNER. in NEA-Staff Corraspondent. Berlin, Dec, 18—Beaten in war, pledged, to pay vest revarations,, de- prived of much of her richest terri-| ture. tottering and her industry slacking, the'eve of 1923 finds Ger- many thfeatened*by foes: without and foes within. 2 Every, threat from. without strengthens the hands of the- foes within. France: is demanding Germany live up to the very letter of the bona; signed at Versailles. There is al- ways the threat that’ more German territory will be occupied by French troops. Such an oecupation would increase the financial burden of Germany, seriously cripple industry in ‘the newly ‘sized territory,’ and further paralyze the German: mark. Today there are only three main’ Gurreneies which’ are cheaper than} that of Germany--Polish, Austrian and Russian, Every drop in the value of the German mark upsets cverything in| Germany. Every previous adjust- ment has ‘to be adjusted. Tt forces theissue of more paper! ses’ people ‘to stuff their wal- lets with thousand and ten thousand mark note! ‘ It increases the government's ex- because iq; employes get) newly increased wages, and unem- ployed workmen and disabled sol< diers get increased , pensions. It forces up the cont, of everything | in pi er marks. It brings ab universal demand; or more wages—in paper marks. | It makes'it ever, more difficult for! the country to buy abroad the. food: stuffs ‘and raw materials Germany must have if people are to be féd) and clothed and:if industry: is too on,’ You woufd think that a Germany ree accept- e Jewelry, Ruasians say that if it was not for the work of the Committee thous- ands would have died of starva- tion. hen one of its representa- tives enters a town, the children of all ages and racesflock around him and cry “Uncie Ara! Uncie Ara!” for his presence generally means food. And that is the one thing that millions of the’ Russian people need’ more than anything else wintey, leontinue co-operation by putting Herbert Hoover, Pres, }.200 and the services of its specia into the county. A budget ot i was cubmitted as the amount | ee cenally, there), ts: elweze: 8 of funds to be raised in the county.! ported re the pein aT ie large a teritory ae Jaime Distribution Committee”, This posible so that a !few individuals | (gemanteation Pare Ty comet will not have to carry the burden. | ‘work in Russia of the A. R. A. of The county agent proposal was de-} }which it is an integral part. i | feated at the recent election. im _addition to feeding over | rower ope § George Beban THE SIGN OF THEROSE ; which the mark had tobogganed from 250 to the dollar last May, to about 8,000 at one time in Novem- ber, would be a serious danger of bh- coming a second. Russia. But Germany is not a second Rus- sia and not likely to be. ~The people ere too intelligent and too well educated, -, On the surface things seem to be going well in Germany. little or no employment. Beggars are absent. well stocked. JOT THIS DOWN! There.is The shops seem fairly The people. seem .de- Hereafter every at every one Special introductory prices are offered for the purpose of introducing LEWIS PRIVATE-.BRAND COFFEES TO EVERY HOUSEWIVE WHERE OUR STORES ARE: LEWIS “FAMOUS” COFFEE Important at the breakast table welcome at every meal. 1 pound .... -8 46) mornings. i@ypounds ..... + 120)1 pound ............66..6.8 88 pounds ... + 2.10)3 pounds . sane 1.10 10 pounds .. - 3.98|5 pounds . Li Foy sale only 10 pounds .. - 380 .. “WHERE THRIFTY THOUSAND TRADE.” Mail orders filled from all stores — postage prepaid on coffee only, “PHONE 387 COFFEE DAY Open Evenings All This Week A Good Place to Get PRACTICAL Xmas Gifts their labor unions and thus enabled to force up their earnings—in paper ; marks—find their wages too small |to keep their families in comfort. j And it is here that the internal foes of Germany -get busy. : To the left stand the Conmunists, | to some extent fortified by Bolshevik money. ‘ To the right ctand the monarch- lists, largely financed by the great : land-owning Junker class. | Communist agitators are very busy among the city workmen and the peasant : laborers. They sagthe present republic is a flat failu Posters designed to inflame thoughtlecs minds appear upon city boards. In Hamburg I saw a red sheet which asked the workman how he would live When bread cost 500 marks per loaf and hundreds of thousands of men walked the streets j Jobless. It said wages were only | within 50 per cent of the costof liv- jing. It proclaimed that the real ene- mies of the workers were the capital- ists, the leaders of the old political | parties, and the foolish sheep who ; allowed themselves to be led to the slaughter. On the extreme right and more dneennnn | dangerous to the sorely troubled re- public are the Kaiserists. They have , their newspapers and their pam- phleteers. They. point out Germany's sad plight and then they hark back to the good old days under the kaiser. In some sections of Germany, re- cent elections have shown an ii crease in the voices for the Mon- archist party. While the Communists dream of a red revolution which will make: Germany Bolshevik, the Mon- aoe plan for another “putsch”” ‘ which will once more put them in the’ saddle. My own judgment is that there is more danger fror, the Monarchists than from the Communists. Tuesday will be of our stores. LE “JUSTRITE” W COFFEE A tasty, healthful “drink” that just hits the spot these cold Stores at— { Faro ° Moorhead Valley. City Jamestown Carrington Bismarck U ie i

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