The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 20, 1923, Page 2

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PAGE TWO atthe in nt ume t evions yi aise more bi hen th ome went ¢ xplained by the eh hat larger proportion bracti ent for 192 bublished, dese: hang: nvolves the use lains, arvested ef produced, sin our or five son gras: While the total In the country has de ent years, the artic r, since the greater now than in increase in the ially aged t during the last ond to ca and Autralia have Americans 1907 ere y 20 percent. seef involving lases only the forequarter: entiles, as a rule, prefer hindquar- ers of beef. North Atlanti st amount or ory east of the jion. ytinge; Freed, erican prisons.” ‘ind prison ba: ot reclaimable “I believe convicts and physically. ishment. n a. year. era. are . recidi billi. ally. BREF SUPPLY NCREASES ON ATION'SFARIS Washington, D. C., Jan. 20. — Al- jough there are actually fewer beef United States at pres- there have been in it is now possible to year than re were more cattle, This ntradictory state! United States De- artment of Agriculture which shows of jows are kept on ranches and farms, ind beef cattle are slaughtered at n earlier age than used to be the In @ discussion of the American lattle industry during the last 75 ears, the yearbook of the dep which has just b bed the growth and of practice in the business. he system of using younger cattle lor beef purposes, the yearbook ex- of ed pers 100 pounds ot a large propor- ion of the gains in weight are made In the feed lot than was formerly he case when steers were carried umber of cattle ed in re- states, the not as serious as might number of cattle any om 1896 to 1917. Census figures for 00 and 1920 show there has been percentages of heifers, cows and bulls, se in the percentage of steers. mber of cattle in the country in- eased 10,200,000 from 1914 to 1919, three sre has been a decrease of 2,000,- ) head. However, the greater pro- rtion of cows at present.makes it striking parallel to the ssible to grow more beef, especial- if more of the calves, instead of | jy g slaughtered, are fed as yearl- | hat the country can readily re- a quickened demand for “f, was demonstrated during the r when production was so stimu- sted that during 1917 and 1918 com- sined more than one billion pounds beef were exported, which was sercent of our production and 22 ent of the exports of the world | -ing the period,’ the Yearbook de- res. “Since about 1905 South Am- | having been convicted under similar been ief surces of surplus beef.” are eating less beef per pita. than formerly, it is stated. e consumption of beef and veal the United States decreased from pounds per person in 1907 to 60' unds in 1916. Between the periods to 1910 and 1911 to 1921) Jang in has been ‘a decrease in con- smption amounting to approximate- The article includes interesting in-| ney says he will make a parallgl to rmation to those engaged in @he | the London ca dustry, on the variations in de- | nd for different kinds of beef in| ager, was found dead near the door arious cties and in changing sea-| ons, High-class hotels, it is noted, ant prime, fat and finished beef, | was sleeping. while the average housewife wants | waste, In warm | weather the principal demand is for teaks and chops, while the winter rade demands more roasts and boil- ing meat. The orthodox Jewish trade | 8, A survey made in 1920 showed at hat time nearly 32 percent of the beef produced was consumed in the | 2Ation and salesmanship. He sct fel- state’, The next larg- | !ow prisone 4 percent, was con- jumed in the east-north-central di- ision. In other words, more than 55| percent of the total consumption of Prison was soon swamped with mat! beef and veal occurred in the terri- 4nd Eytinge was conducting a $5000 Mississippi and 4 month busine porth of the Ohio River and Mary-| 4 jand, The smallest consumption oc- | tically running the prison. urred in the South Atlantic divi- | The survey of the beef-cattle sit- ation, leads to the conclysion, ac- jording to the department experts, hat the period of liquidation is ov- | x, and. that when industrial condi- ions and-retail prices :permit a nor- mal consumption of beef, cattle pro- thould~be prosperous again. Pledges Life to : Aid Convicts By Jack Jungmeyer NBA. Staff Correspondent Los Angeles, Jan. 19.—“I’m go- Ing to devote the rest of my caree: o reclaiming human wastage That’s the ambition of Louis Vic- or Eytinge, hero of the most re- markable success’ story in a genera- ion, who from a mere penitentiary | pumeral made himself respectfully | own to a million American busi- | ss leaders while he remained be-| “Fifty per cent of prisoners are under the present em,” Eytinge said on his arrival ere after his release from prison. should be lassified at the beginning, mentally Then their terms uld be devoted to education, not / “Crime costs the nation a Liberty Fifty per cent of Wists (two br -timérs), responsible for 90 per pnt of crime. Suppose we could re- Bee recidivism by 25 per cent, we ald thus lop a great chunk off the -Eytinge we Arizona. state peni- under life sentence on. con- ,of murder. He was expected THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE oe ‘KENTUCKY LOVE SLAYING “NEW | BYWATERS CASE”; PROSECUTOR TO ASK DEATH PENALTY FOR WOMAN | a a It is beef t- en more SS XS year aa MRS. LURALIE NOFFSINGE (INSET) By NEA Service | Mrs, R AND OLLIE GIBBONS singer likewise was seiz- years Henderson, k Jan. 20.—Will tais | oa and likew!koiwasagpivitedilawky: | mining community of 12,000 souls | °° ‘ saat Hanon omen furnish the United St with a| County Attorney King expects hompson-| prove that Gibbons committed the Bywaters murder case which has | slaying at the urging of Mrs. Noff- stirred the world? That seems to be a possibility fol- lowing tae announcement by Coutity Attorney Leo King that he will ask nger, that the alleged guilty pair expected to get the $20,000 life in- surance of the husband and with it to flee to a distant land. the death penalty for Mrs. Luralie] . Kin declares he has secured a Noffsinger, accused of inciting Ollie | confession from Gibbons, in which Gibbons to sla r husband, as well | Gibbons is said to declare Mrs. Noff- y as for Gibbons, charged with strik- ing the death blow with a macnin- ists’ hammer. In London only a few days ag Perey Thompson and Frederi ers died on the gallows after er repeatedly goaded him into laying the husband. “Many times,” the alleged confes- sion says, “Mrs. Noffsinger, aad me go to the mines and play sick to fool her husband. Then ‘I’d come back to sce her. “I never had a better friend than Gus Noffsinger. He was my friend at all times and I wouldn’t have done this if his wife hadn't kept nagging at me to kill him.” Woman Denies It Noffsinger denies the county charges. ij ie. He plotted’ my hus- band’s death,” she shouted when confronted with Gibbons’ alleged confession, The accused woman is short if stature, Her cheeks are drawn Her dark ‘eyes are wpparently lost in their sunken sockets. She shows plainly the mental tortures she has suffered. Her daughter, Ruth, 5, is with her in her place of detention. The most peculiar angle of the ase is that the murder which, ac- ng to the county attorney, the r counted upon to give them per- fect love, has turned their love to hatred. For Mrs. Noffsinger, is bitter in her denunciation of Gibbons and he is equally bitter toward her, the | charges. Bywaters, it was proved, stabbed hompson’s: husband to death. Bywaters’ swee d him to do away d, according to let- ad in court, Mrs. Thompson the first woman hanged in Eng- Henderson's Parallel And here is the sordid Henderson tale out of which the county attor- Gus B, Noffsinger, 2, -mine man- of his garage, not more than 20 fe from the bedroom where his wife | Noffsinger had been stricken de on by blows from his own machin mmer. The slaying took pla New Year E Ollie Gibbons, 34, mine employe, was seized and charged with the while | slaying, He was spirited out of Hen- on by police who feared the | roused populace would lynch him. neither his employers nor the other employees knowing his real identity. In Denmark Prince Aage was’ call- ed the American prince. His habits and tastes were similar to those characterizing the citizen of the United States. Most of bis intimate friends were Americans, and their mode of life was lie, Soon after the war the Prince visited te United States, plunged into socievy, and adopted many American ways. Recently it was thought desirable to use the Prince in an ambassador- ial capacity, but, with his. fortune gone, he was unable~to accept a gost paying only a small income. So he has entered military life, having the reputation of being one of the finest soldiers in Denmark, The Princess |Aage and their five year old son at work manufactur- h he sold outside through advertising letters. So effective were these letters the Within a few years he was prac- ‘DANISH PRINCE MUST EARN LIVING Copenhagen, Jan, 20,—Prince Aage of Denmark, whose fortune was | wiped out in a recent bank failure, has gone to Morocco to earn-a living as a major in the French colonial | forces, Just before he departed, dur- | ing the Christmas holidays, he said he was genuinely sorry that he could not take up an active business | career in his own couptry. He had | never enjoyed anythitg more, he | added, than the job he once held for | Several months ipéa foreign branch Tr of a well-known Ameritan firm, "Alley Cat Wins Blue Ribbon of the Princess's father, Count Calvi di Bergolo, The winter months, generally re- garded in the United States as,bving December, January and Feb?uars, are Considered in England to be No- vember, December and January. from tuberculosis within. two “ast pick. of several “up| bolts had a Eytinge. He|. se fact berated on vata, he ie have gone to live in Italy at the home} | guest of relatives in the city ‘for ‘SHORT COURSE OPENS $00} Time to Consider New Meth-| ods of Farming, Says Dean Fargo, N. D., Jan, 20.—“When two bushels of butter fat have a market value of one bushel of wheat, two bushels of barley and three bushels of oats, it is time to consider sources of income other than grain raising,’ is the statement of C. B. Waldron, dean of agriculture at the North Da- kota Agricultural College in annou: cing the short course in Dairy Hu: bandry to be given at the Agri tural College February 6 to 11 in- clusive. Short courses opened at the Agri- cultural College January 22, and will continue until March 9, This year the courses are given in units of one week each during which one particu- lar subject is studied. Meat production was a course of- fered during the ey week and this was followed by ‘h study of forage crops for the second week. Following } the Dairy Husbandry Week six days | of instruetien will be given, each in ; poultry production, grain crops, po- tatoes, farm management and farm | machinery. INDIAN RACE - — NOTDYING OUT | Atlantic City, N. J., Jan, 20.—The | American Indians as a race are not ‘dying, as so many people think. On the contrary, they show this year a slight numerical increase as com- | pared to 12 months ago, according | to Dr. E. E. Higley, of Chicago, sup- erintendent of the work among In- | dians of the Board of Home Missions. | of the Methodist Episcopal church. Dr, Higley disclosed this condition |in an address today at the annual meeting in this city of the Home Mission council of the church. The Indian census a year ago showed 340,838 Indians, now they number 340,917. “There is no field of home mis- and processes of cooperation among these denominational boards and works is more manifested than in the field of christian work among Indians.” continued Dr. Higley. | “The ¢hristian missionary work | among Indians, includes a study of | the mssionary stations and native | churches, their economic and spirit- ual resources. (2) an estimate of the Indian schools, ‘both governmental and mission, their educational stat- us, and the opportupnity presented for a unified religious educational program; (3) a survey of the #47 reservations and: other communiti¢g’ where Indians ore to be found. jm any. appreciable number. SS ae ae “There are 90,000 Indian boys: and: girls between five and 16 yeara.of! age who are of school age, about 30,000 are enrolled im government schools with 30,000 in public schools, and the remaining 30,000 are still without school privileges, In the In- dian schools especial emphasis is put upon agriculture and home econom= ies. In the large non-reservation vided. Fhe manner in which the In- has worked for the fuller enrollment lof unschooled Indian boys and girls, is matter for favorable comment. “In the old days the Indian cen- | tered everything. around his religion, and his religion entered into every phase of his life. He not under- stand a christianity which is not in: someway related to his physical well being, to his planting and his har- Lvesting. At present health conditions in many places are deplorable, The | Christian order of the day ie for so- cia] and community’ services which are an expression of the religion of Jesys Ahét shall be sufficient for both forlds, this world and the world to come, That social religion appeals to the Indian. The modern program of the rural church among Indians is needed for the young peo- ple coming home from sckgo] life. They do not want to return to their pagan religions, they know they are false. The church must plan a more careful program for Indian endeavor which will satisfy the religious in- tellect and social desires of the youth as well as the aged. The church must even use the Indian dialect, but™ it must emphasize English speech in training native leadership. “The church must disegver and develop a trained and native chris- tian leadership. The Indian young people should be encouraged to go further than the sixth grade com- monly provided by the government reservation schools, Educated Indian ;farmers and their wives, teachers, and other professional men and wo- men, and a well-trained Indian mis- slonaty above all, are urgently need- ed.” Mr. Hackensack,’ Minn., are guests at the home Of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Gray, parents of Mrs, Keller for several weeks. The meeting of the Town Criers club scheduled ¢for Monday. has been postponed ot Jan. 29," James Svihovec, who recently sold | hig interest in his: grocery: bat ny here left Thursday for Chicago to Join Mrs. Svihovec, who has been a j Several weeks. They plan to leave later for Iowa, where they will’make their home, * ¥ Mrs. C. R. Darland of, Colorado Springs, Col., is.a guest at the home “| the other hand, the royalists might. | doubtful if doubtful if Germany is sionary endeavor where the spiritd 1 | BY CHARLES-P. STEWART. | France having made good her threat | to try hurrying up payment of her war claims by a seizure of German | territory, a state of affairs exists in Europe which may end in any | one of a good many different kinds of trouble. < | For instance, a revolution in Ger- many wouldn't surprise anybody. | Any government which permits tae | country it rules to be invaded by a | foreign power's troops is bound to | be blamed. This furnishes discon- | tented clements with a chance to | grab at control. On one hand, they German “reds” might attempt it. On | Or the Russians might think it un | opportune time to try to gain some | advantage. ie | The “little entente,” consisting of new, war-formed countries in east- ern Europe, is a source of unca’ | ness, In fact, it’s understood their | premiers are about to meet at Bel- grade to adopt a plan, similar to | France's, against Hungary. i |. Italy, just on general principles, | is so uneasy that Premier Mussolini | ordered a partial mobilization. Trouble in western and central Europe by distracting attention from fhe turbulent Near East, makes Turkey very independent. The very face that it’s impossible to tell what may happen, or where, ‘nly adds to the feeling of anxiety. London and Washington disap- prove strongly of what France has | done. It isn’t that there's ‘any sympathy at either of these capitals with Ger- many. They both consider that it the Germans are able to pay, they aught to be compelled to do it. But they regard it as at least very able to do so. Just as they were Hoping the world was going to settle down, with some prospects of a re- turn to “normalcy”, they’re much dissatisfied by France's refusal to abandon a policy calculated to up- set everything again. Premier Bonar Law of England marked hig objections to the French course by quitting the conference with the French, Italian and Belgian premiers when he found he wasn't going to be listened to, It has been learned that Myron T. Herrick, United States ambassador to France, without actually protest- ing against the French advance into the Ruhr, did tell Premier Poincare that the Washington administration was opposed to it. Roland W. Boy- den, unofficial American representa- schools many trade courses are fro- |] dian Bureau for the last two years | part of the United S for France, but to a ~ be fully justified by t) victions. A Loose Cog In At One Time How Business C: | unbounded: laughter you will enjoy } ters by W. W. of her sister, Mrs, D. G. Filkins for several weeks, * pete Mr. and Mrs: A. R, Tayis enter tained“24 guests at dinner: Thursday evening. After dinner’ the evening. ‘was spent: in playing: cards; : NF - | WHAT'S GOING ON IN THE WORLD Week’s Chief Events Briefly Told “productive guaranties” of official Washington, The Plague of Tax-Free Bonds A Defense of the Ku Klux Klan Writing Two and Three Sentences. “First Radio Nights” For Authors Matthew Arnold’s Debt to the Jews The Anti-Catholic Torch In Canada How New York Society Got That Way .The New Ohio Railroad Kings * Many Illustrations Including Maps and Cartoe) Where Do Jokes Originate? : seven original jokes in the world. If this is so, what a furnishing mirth-loving America with material. First lic good natured are the newspaper “Wits” and what is based upon their efforts, ~The best jokes, the cleverest hey are printed in the press of the world are eagerly and a selection of them presented upon the screen Some one has said that there are onl vast amount of thought must be expended i ; and foremost among those who keep the pub! known -as typical American humor must be epigrams, the mo&t humorous incidents. as t scanned each week by The Literary Digest editors in motion-pictute theaters under the heading “Fun From the Press.” t Many hundreds of theaters suggest that you attend the theater in your locality where id: entertainment. lodkinson Corporation. tive on the reparations commission, likewise told the French, Italian and Belgian delegates that he didn’t be- lieve Germany could pay France's claimrs, and said he agreed with Eng- land. The United States too, recalled her few troops still on German soil. They didn’t mean much in a military way, but their recall implied a pro~ te e Z seems even Premier Mussolini protested, though Italy voted with France on the reparations commis- sion, ’ Only Belgium is cooperating whole-heartedly with the French. France first seized Essen, seat of the great Krupp factories; then Gelsenkirken, center of the Ruhr coal industry; it's expected still more occupations will follow. There was a hostile gathering but not much trouble at Essen, Munich also has been the scene of~ anti- French gathering and Bavaria gener- ally, which is regarded as royalist, is reported exeited, The Memel dis- trict, in East Prussia, is in a state of disorder, reported in some quar- ters to mean a desire to join the new republic of Lithunia: in others to be anti-French. The German government, however, sanctioned no resistance toe the French invasion, saying it sticks o the Verdiilles treaty, which it ac- cuses France of breaking. It re- called the German diplomatic repre- sentatives from Paris and Brussels and gave notice that all talk of pay- ing war damages to France and Bel- gium is off until their troops are out of Gerniany. German protests against the Ruhr invasion were sent to London and Washington, but it’s understood thoy won't be answered, England and the United States feeling, despite tacir disapproval of the French course, | that there isn’t’ anything they can do about it at present. There are plenty of signs that the | French, now taey’re “in the Ruhr, hardly know what to do next, : TUBERCULOSIS Dr. Glags has posi- tive ‘proof that he is able to cure tubercu- losis by inhalation, in climate. 'Dr. je. ware of imitators. For further in. formation address THE T. F. GLASS INHALANT CO., Mason Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. it is generally agreed, is ay conviction that the seizure o' and that it opens the door to a host of disastrous pos: Many American papers, on the other hand, whole-heartedl: a show of force, “the only language that Germany understands” he results. / THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, January 20th ism from all quarters upon the present acute situ ation in the entire world. Other: news-features of very deep intere: \ bring their own from home, “French s - SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923 Presumably they counted on deal! ing there with the great Rhine- land Coal Syndicate, but ‘this organi- zation, just before their arrival, moved bag and baggage to Hamburg. It nad to leave its properties be- hind, but they must be worked to enable the French to’ get anything out of them and the French lack the workers’ goéd will, They migat but moving ‘an entire industral popula- tion is a tremendous undertaking. The difficuities she faces may be responsible for France’s talk now of a considerable extension -in the timé permitted Germany to meet the damage claims against her, France in the meantime retaining controPin the Ruhr and exacting certain-other conditions, such as Gprmany’s sub- mission to allie® supervision of her finances, to living within her income and to rising an internal loan to stabilize the mark, \ But will Germany agree? ‘That probably will depend on the multipli- cation of her own difficulties and the result bf her observation-of France's. When the French government sent troops into the Ruhr, it was inter- preted gonerally as a rejection of Secretary of State Hughes’ proposal of an international board of finan- ciers to decide how much Germany was able to pay. Maybe this was a mistake. It seems the Hughes plan was laid definitely before Premier Poincare, who neith- er turned it down nor expressed any hostility toward it. Hopes are entertained that it may be accepted yet, if the Ruhr venture Proves a failure. At any rate, it is said the Washington government is keeping the “door open, with a view to.a tender of its “good offices” i€ it receives any intimation that it would be well received, f The Poincare government's posi- Big Savin Bed seedy for use, it ike any higharade metal Can France Force Germany to Pay? 4 The ‘sudden withdrawal of the last thousand of the American terpreted by many Washington correspondents and editorial observers The World Race For Oil the British Machine ame Back in 1922 ° wherever it is shown. (With Colored Maps Showing the Oil Regions of the World) |’ The Worst Blow to the Ententeé Brain Tests For Drivers to Make Motoring Safe A Plague-Proof Town The Stupendous Archeological Find In Egypt England Starving For Humor ¢ Bridging the Gulf Between Jew and Christian - Is It Safe to Marry On Topies of the Day The Spice of Life This new g in Having soldiers from the Riiine is in- as an emphatic protest on the tates Government against France’s invasion of the Ruhr Basin and seizure of for the payment of Germany’s reparations debt. This attitude on the part ie neither to sympathy for Germany nor lack of it guaranties will not solve the reparations problem, r) sibilities, chief among which is another world war. ly applaud France for restoring to ; and they predict that her conrse will The German-language press in the United States king from Germany hey richest industrial district the French will deprive th chance to get any further reparations,” declare: results of the Ruhr invasion will amount to for Germany, and possibly civil war in the Reich.” emselves of _the last s the Philadelphia Tageblatt, which thinks that the uicide as well as unspeakable misery and chaos Other German-language papers express similar con- » presents a sweeping survey of the critic- volving France and Germany and, in fact, st in this week’s DIGEST are:— have booked it and we would : “Fun From the Press” is. adverti It is produced by The Literary Digest and distributed to thea- Il News-dealers — 10 Cents tion in England and America has not been strengthened by the existence of a wicely expressed suspicion in both countries that the Ruhr expe- dition was dictated by nothing but a hope of gaining political advantage at home through what it thougat would be a popular move. Naturally it’s the concessions of opinion that the world’s peace never should have been endangered, for any such reason, Nevertheless it’s felt that the gov- ernment, it such was its motive, will be likely to change its policy very quickly if it finds it made a mistake, what is what it probably wil. find if it can’t get much out of Germany and English and American coldness affects France's own credit unfavor- ably. The Britisa “debt commission,” led by Chancellor of the Exchequer —~ otherwise Secretary of the Treasury —Stanley Baldwin, is in conference with the government in Washingtoh concerning settlement of England's ‘war obligations to the United States. England expects to pay every cent, but wants more time and lower in- terest. Taese probably will be ar- ranged, At Lausanne the settlement of England’s differences of opinion with Turkey has made fair progress and peace prospects are better. The Turks however, have not stopped making military preparations, eat Protection forMEN| Large Tube ss¢. Kit (4's) $1 rugetate: 4 CATARRH Sickie, Devt. 4 of BLADDER! Ayre ton Chreurar “or | One Murphy Bed and Steel Kitchen in Every home. Saves two rooms. It also saves! $500.00 in cost of home. ‘ Write A. J. OSTRANDER for information. Bismarck, N. D. is pessimiétic. “In $20 a Week? short reel creates and Pe Re

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