The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 3, 1923, Page 2

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“AGE TWO OR BUILDING AT DICKINSON ‘ceds of Normal School Are} Laid Before Apprporia- tions Body Here | no apprey of $75,000 to} \ plet¢ the main building ‘of the) kinson normal school and to equip! vas asked of the house appropria-| s committee here by President} ‘ May of the school, with other| sinson citizens. he president explained that when as for the building, erected with | +240,000 appropriation of the 1921| islature, were drawn, it was the inion of are s and the board administration that since the F pography of the school grounds| ecessitated one large building it) rduld be made suitable to meet the | uture growth of the institution, Provisian- is made for the com- letion of the present 3-story build- ng by providing a gymnasium and uditorium. Architects estimate the| york can be done now for $60,000, Ind that if delayed an additional ex-| ense of $25,000 would be entailed.| fifteen thousand was asked for! Hquipping the building. The pro- }osal wag taken under consideration. Dating President May’s talk he re- erred to the proposal of the North| Dakota Tax Payers association and ther agitation against the teaching| f high school subjects in the high-j r institutions of learning. He opposed this, it's ecessary part of the work, and com-| bared high schools in the western hatt-of the state to those in the astern part 20 years ago. “Tit admit the majority of our tudents are’ of high school grade, ut they are above high school age,” esaid, “I do not believe they ought o be deprived of an opportunity to| on.” “So far as I know,” said Rep. watt,| cussion.” superintendent of the W. F, Burnett,| S. Berg, ckinson schools; own, of Dickinson, and memb the Stark county delegation in the | use. S5- ore eet Senate Calendar || NEW SENATE BILLS 3. B. 251, Game and Fish Commit- ~-Puté a closed season on frogs. the committee was shown that Twin | ‘y epieures had developed such | ste for frog legs that when Min-| nesota closes the season on frogs from April 1 to June 15, the hunt- s who seek the frogs for the table {eficacy =market come over into North Dakota and capture them in .pge numbers, The measure closes he season the same dates as Min-) »gota but permits the use of frogs| or fish “bait or scientific purposes | any time. S. B. 263, Van Came (Ind.) Pem-| pina—Repeals Chapter™122 S. L. 921, This measure would repeal the | present statutes which limit a city, village or township, school district | wr other political subdivision he average levy of the three years receding: which the author contends | ras greatly handicapped growing ommunities. S. B.°257, Gross, (N.) Grant—| Would limit the levy for county road i improvements to one $. B. 268—Baird, (Ind.) Stark and! (N.) Adams—Incorporates wat features of the resolu- Congress at Mandan heid the part of the state engineering, | ofps with especial reference to ir- rigation “and legality of water ts; cg the appointment of a ommitte to be composed of the tate engineer and two others to! negotia' ,compact and an agrec- ment with the states of Montana and South Dakota respecting the use} ind ‘distribution of the waters of the Missouri river, and facilitates a iprogram ef irrigation contemplated in the “ifpe counties of the state. 9.B, 259, Baird, Stark and Kal- dot, Traiil, Inds.)—Would, on re- ersal by the supreme court of ca- ex in district court based upon er- port, require that only that part of je zone in error need. be re- ried. 8, B. 254, Storstad, Cass and Gar- diner, Nelson, (Inds.)—Aimends present ada on exemption from te jon to exempt only lodge, jergical, faticious and state pro ty leaving all other property sub- ito taxation on assessment. i 905, Etonstad, and Gard +Provides that all propferty- i, Personal and mixed by sub- # general property tax and a sessed at 50 percent of its act- | ime 6, MéLachlin, C Gna.) “before ‘the legislature of tof North Dakota the mea- Tg been introduced in congress calling . for euiiiens relating to the and ownership of revolv- js and other arms of simi- This ‘measure identical z ure proposed a rati- all of the states by the $. Revolver a: soeltlan for extreme penalties ‘of of five years impriso’ ot ig an 575,000 ASKED /X=¥ Per Hurried Living Is Brinwing on Mental III Worse Than Old Plagues, Dec ates B. Cain, J. P, Smith of Beach, | L. McBride, and Sheriff George | airman of the appropriations com-| ttee, “that subject hasn’t come up} nd I don't think it will come up for| Dickinson men present at the hear-| day faces a peril, inelyded Judge Thomas Pugh, s|the University of Chiengo and the @ aye all muc’ too uselessly Saag “We are all much too uselessly By Roy Gibbons busy. NEA Staff Correspondent. “People run about in endless cir- Chicago, Feb. 3—“Civilization to-| cles. There is lack of stability. far more insid- Its Symptoms ious than any wastage of the body| “Our minds have reached a stage by disease—we are becoming a world of crazy nerves.” Professor Frederick Starr, head of the department of anthropology of greatest living anthropologist, made this statement here today. This disease, too new to have a name, is far more insidious than any of the ancient plagues that once destroyed whole nations. And we are all suffering from it, according to Professor Starr., Ills Blasted Empires Professor Starr, commenting upon a subject raised at. the recent Cambridge (M session of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science—the theory that the old Greeks, Aztecs and oth- ers lost their empires not because of human invasion or conquest but because of disease, introduced in some cases by the victims they had conquered, “Plagues and pestilences of the old type no longer menace civiliza- tion. Seience has made it impossible for them today to destroy whole nations. “But we face an even greater | peril today.” Then the great anthropologist gave me this description of the new malady he belieevs has afflict- ed the whole race: Its Causes “Everyone is trying to do some- HREATENS CIVILIZATION We are in a ti moil, jumping, running, careeni not. knowing where to go. bar to effectiv friendships frustrating the ordinary of human relationships. PROFESSOR FREDERICK STARR thing different. “We do everything fast. We tele- phone needlessly, thus putting up a and civilities | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE December f and March 1 must be paid, Vote 77 to 31.. { H, B. 65 Dougherty—Reenacting and amending state optometry law as asked by state optometrists as- sociation. Vote 79 to 29. i H. B. 40, Twichell—Cancelling all | uncollected personal property taxes | | delinquent before 1918, Vote 108 to 8. Killed in House H. B, 116—-Appropriating money {for special assistunt attorney gen- jeral to handle the work of railroad commission cases, An attempt to: re- vive bill killed vote 57 to 51. | ar | | | AUSTRIA GIVES _ ITALY RELICS «OOF NAPOLEON Vienna, Feb. 3.—The crown, the | |scepture, the seul of state, the mar-| | shall’s baton and the mantle, all used | SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923 but the German inte: concerned worked to impede. a waiters’ exodus from the Fatherland; One of these obstructions was a demand that for every German waiteragoing to Hol- land, six Dutch waiters were to be sent here. Some of these;workers abroad have been drifting to Italy and Spain, but the former country has shown strong resistance to their re-entry. Qppo- sition to them also has been found in the Scandinavian ‘countries and in the British overseas possessions. In one of the German colonies the admis- sion requirements have been tight- ened even recently. Holland has been proving more and more of 2 magnet for German house- maids as well. According.to an un- official estimate recently announced here, there are at least 100,000 of these “frauleins” now on Dutch soil, with 10,000 in Amsterdam alone. The number is so great, it is said, that many are finding difficult\in obtain- ing employment. D. B.C. GIRLS HOLD Inve German toys remain unawed despite the threatening attitnds ot the French irivaders. Here is shown a group of young Teutons in Essen, telling the French sentry what they think of him. Note the clenched fist’ and belligerent Gpression of the third boy from the to ° ! | by Napoleon I at his coronation at | Milan on May 26, 1806, have been | | surrendered by Austria to Italy in accordance witha clause of the! |treaty of St. Germain. The house of ;Hapsburg becamé possessed of these | jtrophies in Italy and carried them | joff to Vienna in 1848, since when their return has more than once been urged by Italy, but without suc- | » cess. | | Of the gold-gilt crown, gurmounted | iby a cross and richly inlaid with }-| mother of pearl and paste stones, it | sleeved coronation robe of green vel vet trimmed with ermine and em-} broitlered in gold and-silver lace, in which in gold leaves of clover Napol- | con's initials recur a hundred times, | | always has been regarded as perhaps | the most magnificent robe ever worn by motfarch at his coronation. It was with many regrets that the release of these objects was pro- | nounced by, the National Assembly \-here, LONDON BANKS ur- ng, has GERMAN WAITERS ANXIOUS TO Berlin, Ring of the ne serving you any longer, I am going back to try and get my old position | will be recalled that Napoleon set it | in England.” while visiting in Germany and, will-|War, the Swiss authorities took sim-| ing accountants, private secretaries, jon his own head exclaiming: “God! servile German waiter in one of | ingly or otherwise, became a part of |ilar action against German waiters) (oii report é hundreds ; has bestowed it on me; woe to who-| Berlin’s better-class restaurants was|the military forces. in Switzerland. Further, the Swiss ¢“D. He se have dea Cat ever attempts to touch it.” The one-| overheard making the above remark| In 1914 there were some 3,000 Ger-|C™Ployers came to the conclusion | o akotans’’ have done. in English to an American diner. Asked why he-had delayed so long after the war in seeking re-employ- ment abroad, the waiter explained that only on December 25 had the Englishment government lifted its post-war ban on German arrivals. For this man, and doubtles hun- dreds of others in his calling here, |htat date had stood out long as a red-letter day o his calendar. supporting his family, with no other remuneration from the than the ten per cent tip legally pre- scribed for waiters in Germany, to- strictions finds wide favor among many here who are chafing at con- finement within the vicious circle of low wages and high costs of living, with 2 mark that is constantly de- preciating in value. “2-IN-ONE” JOBS Martha Meintzer and Gladys Hel- mers mastered bot bookkeeping and See EY at Dakota Business RETURN TO ENGLISH RESTAURANTS; BAN FIXED DURING WAR LIFTED |S" ses, sneen| Steg" Fate SD Net he . Switzerland and lolland were the \ - d pre-war “promised lands” of these former olds “2-inne’ Position Feb. “After the begin-| out many dropped their knives and|frock-coatéd, disciplined pilgrims. wit an Merc. Co., the latter with Atty. Nelson. Perfecting themselves in two lines widens their chances—ogens the waygo becom- However, when Germany obliged nu- merous Swiss waiters here to leave the country at the outbreak of the ear I shall not be|forks in other lands to come home and pick up a rifle, others were de- ported or interned; some were caught that the Germans had underbid Swiss waiters so greatly that their com- petition was injurious to the coun- try’s native populace. \ Two years ago, arrangements were made for an international exchange, ~ “Follow the Succe$$ful.’””? Enroll now. Send names of interested friends and get Success Magazine free. Write F. L. Watkins, 806 Front St., Fargo, N. man and Austrian cooks in foreign countries, and 15,000 waiters. To- day there are from 500 to 1,000 cooko and about three times! that many waiters. The latter figures do not include a large number of Gerr:ans who remaitied in the United States throughout the war. Chicago is cited here as having hitherto been the most popular sin- gle point of attraction in th» out- side world. In that city alone, be- fore the war, the German and Aus- trian cooks numbered 300 and the waiters no less than 1,000. European ‘countries also drew SPECIAL MECHANICAL COURSE Starts Feb. 10th to April 1st. Special tuition. It covers prac- tical training on forty different makes magnetos, all make starters and generators. Over thirty different make “live” motors—all makes tractors—storage batteries. Great demand He been working for months and restaurant bordering on almost complete neu- rosis. “We are in the midst of a horrible | unrest, which, in the guise of re- commercial of FLOODED WITH SILVER COIN London, Feb. 3.—London banks are give. It is ers who were fore the war. gether with such added gratuities as benevolent guests were inclined to estimated that there are broad now only one-sixth of the German and Austrian cooks and wait- many of these employes: away from their native tables, and it is a sour:> of surprise to many tourists here that frequently the man w'o serves a c guages. London abounded in Ger- in foreign employ be-|man waiters, and naturally the re- When hostilities broke them can speak as many as six lan-| ing for you after April 1st. HANSON AUTO & cent relaxation in the English re- for practical trained mechanics. Ge' Write } this course. We still pay $1.25 per hushel for wheat, Fargo, N. D. aE really for a good job wait- NOW for information, ean TRACTOR SCHOOL. ligious zeal, greed tested. lust for power and conquest, is tear-; ing whole peoples away from the] ities to handl Tia 5 le the huge amounts SERS and traditions of their | which have been deposited with them. minds, abectonnines tots SNew [tec estimated that there is twice schemes of government are being overflowing with silver, so much so that they are embarrassed for facil- as much silver in circulation in Eng- land as is necessary, that one-half of the 60,000,000 pounds worth of \ How U.S. Feels About The nails or teeth. These are going now. | “And if these effects ‘gf nervous | breakdown are visible inthe physi- | cal makeup of people how must thei minds be affected?” non-political board of managers for the state mill and elevator. S. B. 260, Baker, (N.) Renville— Is the measure asked by the North- west Wheat Growers association, and which is held necessary of pass- age go permit that organization to qualify for aid uder the require- ments of the War Finance Corpor- ation. Requires that grain must be held in warehouses or storage Te- ceipt endorsed if grain is moved or sold and permits @he Wheat Grow- exs to,ship grain’ to terminal ware- houses owned by themelves and re tain credit. Passed by Senate S. B. 130—Appropriating funds for deficit in attorney general’s de- partment. S. B. 181—Appropriating for rewards for apprehension criminals. S. B. 135—Appropriating $800 for burial of inmates of state pen and geform school. S. B. 188—Appropriating $250 to defray expenses of state canvassing board, S. B. 125—Appropriating funds to pay deficit in N. D. miscellaneous fund. S. B. 189—Allowing $800 for. burial of soldiers, sailors and marines. i 140—Appropriating $1,300 for upkeep of ten state parks. 8. B. 149—Applying the slander and libel law to benefit insurance companies. S. B. 154—Applying to domestica- funds or fied by service of notification of intent to foreclpse by newspaper publication and registered letter as | well. The measure is intended to clarify certain conditions existing in the operation of the Bank of | North Dakota. : H. B, 178, Freeman, Grand Forks | (Ind.)—Removes from qualification | of assessors the requirement that he be the owner of real estate. H. B. 179, Burns, (Ind:) Ward— Extends the teachers retirement | and insurance fund to 1925, the law | automatically expiring in 1922. H. B. 180, Burns—Giving resi- dents of unincorporated villages up-, on petition of 65 percent of real| estate owners, the same right to| authorize a levy for purchase of fire fighting equipment as now accrues to incorporated villages. H. B, 181, Trubshaw, (Ind.) Bar- nes—Rewrites the present statute) concerning regulation of pool halls, | theaters, dance halls, taxicab stands, | soft drink stands, etc., so as to re- peal the law giving back to the! cities, villages and townships the | licensing of such places and col-| lection of license fees and regula-' tion of the same, instead of ‘the special department now under the | control of the attorney general. | Fees paid are slightly amended | from the present schedule. I H. B. 182, Halcrow, ‘(Ind.) Pem-' tion of minks, beaver, skunks, etc. S. B, 158—Giving $500 for repair of monument in Whitestone battle- field park, Dickey county, damaged by cyclone. §. B. 51—Fixing publication fees for ‘official and legal publications so-as to make all after first publi- anne paid for at straight matter rice. 8. B: 151—Amending ‘statutes rel- ative to trusteeships. unless-wife has signed paper under which foreclosed, Tilled’ By ‘ Senate c ‘anlewful . possession stay 8. B. 120—Rni the compenss- bina—Another . of the ‘numerous measures offering suggestions as to how publication of ‘delinquent ‘ax list costs shall be reduced. H. B. 188"Harrington, (Ind.) ‘Bur- leigh—Is a ‘reciprocity act for ‘li- censing of insurance agents, This measure is identical with one killed in the senate but over which the author says there was a misunder- tanding so as to make its approval and passage in the house probable. Passed in House ~ Ss. BY Aix Steateios O—Amending law requiring architects to ‘plan ‘and supervise building buildings -by ac- cepting one and itwo. room schools costing not more than $6,000. 108 to B ‘Rusch—Allowing city. fire’ department relief Uaepecthtions to pay tp to $80,000 per month in- stead of present maximum of $40.00 livered. Co. COMING TO For His Ninth Year in North Dakota | \February 15th - 16th) Ory ces Peapisinsiergern nervous {coined silver could be dispensed with, 7 breakdown. It was needed during the war, but < 4 “Effects of this neurotic psygho-| today the banks are at their wits - x / ogical disturbance are seen in the) ¢"4s as to what to do with it. The} r) ~~ symptoms of present-day disease. | Vaults of many banks are filled, and | ? Aitcaontaj which 6) level ‘ago were| it has been whispered that the dun-! Mj simple of diagnosis now bear no|seons of the Tower of London have | a symptoms of their real character. | ben seauisitioned to store the sur-| “The diabetic once wasted away. | plus metal “ eday he idles inde sspet? of fcOrP Ls My oe The most useful result which could follow the visit of the British Debt Funding Commission to ~ ky “And so it’ goes down the calendar| Oberhof, Thuringia, Feb, 3.--Tac these shores/in the opinion of the New York Globe, would be “a better realization by Americans of of all ailments. The age is changing | longest eki-slide in the world, ex- | ” i cyerything. This le sthe reault. of] tending ofer 60 intlesj-will bs opencd | the economic problems to be faced by other countries if large annual payments are made, and it thinks nace minds. |near here in February. The course | that Stanley Baldwin, British Chancellor of the Exchequer, ‘used no idle rhetoric” when he ‘said that “At the rate we're going, it is only jis laid out on an old road winding | _& a GLEBE eke Bate ea Ga? preeoat | tneough due ills of the TRUPINEIREG| ‘the settlement we make here will determine the condition and material welfare of the great mass of mode of civilization causes the race | forest. A large number of entries) wage-earners in both Great: Britain and the United.States, and their wives and children.” Several a y to degenerate in such a manner that |is expected for the regular winter / i ‘ i s), “ bt Soe ee een eee enate acer: is sexnects 3 editors take issue with Mr. Baldwin’s statement that “every cent used for the purchase of goods was i : Beulah Coal now $5.25 de- Wachter Transfer: Phone 62, + | BISMARCK \ Dr. Mellenthin | ‘ SPECIALIST DOES NOT OPERATE Sante, f Will be at got McKENZIE HOTEL | Thursday and Friday, Office Hours: 9 a, m. to 4p. mi TWO DAYS ONLY No Charge for Consultation Dr. Mellenthin is a regular grad- | uate in metlicine and surgery and is licensed by the state of North Da- kota. He visits professionally the more important towns and cities and offers to all who call on. this ‘trip consultation and. ‘examinatian free, except the: expense of treate, ment when desired, According to his methog ot treat- ment he ‘does mot operate for chronic appendicitis, gall stones, ulcers of stomach, tonsils or ade- iq noids. He thas to hig credit meny won- derful results in diseases of the stomach, liver, bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidney, bladder: bed wotting caterrh, weale lungs, rheu- |} matism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rec- tal ailments. If you have been ailing for any length of time and do not get any better, do not fail. to'.call, as im- ‘proper measutes rather than dis- ease are very often the cause of me month to pen spent in America,” the New York Journal of Commerce declaring on the contrary “that some of the money (it has been estimated at a billion and a half) was used’in keeping the value of the British pound stable in the market.” with the a Be of Britain’s War Debt to us and presents in easily understood form the mass of con- flicting opinion upon what has been termed “the most complicated economic problem which the two leading nations of the world ever faced. sd The Ruhr Invasion As a neness The Herrin Massacre Verdict The Irish Free State’s First Ye; Canada’s “Keep-Out” to Klanism Pavements ‘As Motor Signboards | Music 4 Talking Across the Atlantic Where Negroes Mayn’t Live at A New Evangel of Acting 4 Harvard Peace or War With Islam? Catching Leaders For the Ministry Automobile Killings, Pro and ie Labor Turning Capitalist et February 3d Number, on Sale To-di Py ry One of the very-interesting news-features~in The Literary Digest this week, February 8d, deals \ The Right to Murder Labor American Business in Germany Larger Profits From Happier Workers When It’s Best to Be Fat or Thin Tap the Socket For Light, Heat, and Other news-articles of immediate interest are: Proposition (With Map) o Finding God Behind Evolution Bad Training For Disabled Veterans Can Every Family Own a Car? Topics of the Day Many Instructive Illustrations Including the Best of the Cartoons Fun From the Press—A Laughing Hit! ~ The. strange tribe of _Yptidehis, in Ceylon, have no sense of humor. Wit, banter,or slapstick-is a total loss. The funniest. antics.evoke no visible’ response. When visit- ing them, comedians always buy a round tripticket: “They are gluin as ‘funeral mutes.” But happily the rest of humanity likes to laugh. Laugh- | ter is the safety valve/for depressed epirits,. So every | week The Literary Digést gathers the cream ofthe world’s * ody that you may enjoy a Taugh-foayt. deh cleverest of the terse, tart, and timely patter of newspaper joke- smiths is presented on the:screens in undreds of motion- picture theaters throughout the country. The funniest of the current stories and anecdotes make laughter a re- lef, Watch’ for “Fyn From the Press” at your local theater. It’s new every. week. See one and, if you're not a Veddah, you'll become a fan. “Fun From the Press” Produced by The Literary Dae: alias by W. W. Hodkinson Corporation. day—At All News-dealers—10 Cents

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