The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1923, Page 3

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‘“WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1928 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE |- COOPERATIVE |. on¢ MARKETINGLAW 10 BE DRAFTED Indiana Governor Favors Model Bill For Middle West Farmers WILL NOT BE SUPPORTED April 11.--Governot Warren , of Indiana, hopes that out of this come the model cooperative marketing law for farmers of the middle w He vetoed a measure, known as the co- operative marketing act, which passed by the Indiana legislature, recently adjourned, d now — pro- to draft a model marketing law. ror MeCray owns nd farms: eres of Indiana prairie land explanation of his veto, d t the bill would hurt th to be helped. Half of the provisions of the bill were singled out by the governor as “objection- ble,” and furthermore U.S, Le torney-general of Indi a the bill, as a whole, unconstitutional, the governor proposes a commit- tical farmers, agricultur- sof p ft legislato and‘ authori- ies on constitutional law to create the model 4 He sugge that enough farni be on this commit- tee to give the deciding voice. Need Fair Law “The farmers of the middle west,” declared the governor, “need a law first that is fair to them, and I hope to have such a bill ready for the next legislature in time for eve one to have an opportunity to stud » and it be know what it contains, so e need captivated by the title as was the case in the one Just vetoed.” no “Tum a farmer and T favor the principle of coaperative marketing properly safeguarded, but I know only too periences Il some of the past ex- of the farmer, such as that with elevators a decade back; with the ‘scoop shovel corn’ movee ~ment that followed, and with some so-called cooperative marketing agencies that seem to have disap- peared after the/farmer paid his fee to the promoters. know that farming has been profi- table to some one other than the farmer. “I firmly believe, if the provisions of the proposed act had | been incorporated into law, that true cooperative marketing would have » been set back at least 20 years, between those who might controt the associations organized ander it, and the producers entering into the rketing contracts with such tions, there was no balance tween the pow obligations imposeé. Three person. or more, according to the proposed law, might form an association with be- conferred and the or without capital stock; the pro- ducers entering the association ‘ might be tied to it for ten years, and ¢ go to the ything hy produced would sociation for marketing. | bject To Jail “A farmer joining with an asso- ciation and later failing [to market all he produced through it could ‘not onl he fined, but sent to jail. Thers | which the association might incur, ~ and for the payment of which the marketing mem be made liable. there were no on the ers (farmers) might | On the other hand, obligations i $ for their just and equitable ‘¢ of any profits | that might be derived from the gale ef their produces, “Anyone now in business dealings with farm — pro- ducts could not, under the proposed | law, even offer to buy the products | skyscraper and the almost daily trans- jatlantic steamer to picture the extra- | ordinary excitement and stirring scenes As a farmer I! drastic | As | no limit to the amount of debts | d spectfully repre: that onthe States fe the Southwestern Divi- y of Januar, last past, he sion, District of } h ota, duly adjudged bankrupt under th In the Matter of Charles FP. Martin, of Congress relating to ban Bankrupt. that he has duly surrendered To the Honorable Miller, property and righs of property, a Jude of the rt of the has fully complied with all the United States for the District of quirements of said acts and of the North Dako ‘orders of the court touching his} Charles FP, Maritn, of Bismarck, in a 88 100" BY SIGMUND SPAETH, PR. D. Author of “Old Tunes for New,” i “Milton’s Knowledge of Music,” Etc. USIC in America—you hear the phrase often. What docs it mean today? What will it mean tomorrow? How did it originate a century ago? In New York City alone last month there were heard sixty-four performances of grand opera and more than two-hundred-and-fifty concerts and recitals. Mul- tiply the sum of these by the eight months of a typical New York music season, and then by the thousands of communities where music is today a great cultural and civic influence—and you begin to realize the growth of music in America. You begin to appre- ciate why Romans, Parisians and Berliners now look to America as a great throat which swallows up the greatest of their arts and artists. But the real romance of American® music lies in its early buddings, a ccn- | tury ago, rather than in the rich fruits ‘that the: present day is gath It | was a little over a hundred years ago that Jenny Lind, the first great prin donna to come and enter Anicrica, born in her faraway Sweden. It is j | a hundred years ago this month that the first great American pi. arte, the | Chickering, which Jenny Lid would use i 2 Her first concert was given at Castle den on September I1, 1850. The proceeds, $10,000, she gave to char The day \alter the concert every Ne York newspa er acclaimed her as indis- putably the finest artist that had ever ixited America. Among those who gave their enthusi ‘support to Mme. Lind was Chickering who appreciated, ps better than anyone else, what it meant to the advancetsent States. wa: Yor perh | her ¥ of music in the United mi tRgoushout 4 her American (ous | apieihad¥michetofde with the se= Fee oe eee | cess of her tour, and many and inter-|! Those two bir I brightness az thiz| esting are the incidents connected | it double importance and brightness 28 this! ith the transporting of the artist | fe year which, marks the centennial of that {famous American inventor, Jonas Chicke ering, unravels with such impres ceremony. Jenny Lind, the Swedis as her fam i , Barnum, procl edly the most wonderful singer to ap- | pear in concert in the United States up to 1850. She was born of the simplest parents in a Stockholm parish. It was | through Mlle. Lundberg, a Swedish dan- cer, whose maid heard her singing to cat, that her wonderful voice was overed, There were years of fair success, years of dark failure and: dis- couragemént that followed, until at last the pretty little Scandtnavian girl had. become established as the greatest and most famous artist of ‘ope. But soon enough she wanted new worlds to con- quer. Barnum offered her America—and sto America she came. It is impossible in this day of the and the piano which he gave her undoubt- which greeted Jenny Lind’s arrival here IR THDAY °F ing of the American people to the} b nes adulation she reccived eve one of the Boston concert $3.00-for a ticket—in days when $3.00. had a far greater purchasing value than half a month, but I must hear Jenny THE FIRST AMERICAN PIANO - MAKER3 psu? ities of music. here are cndless stories of the kindli- of this great woman, whose head ight easily have been turned by the rywhere. At a girl paid has today—and turned away with the mark: ‘There gocs the earnings of flutist in the orchestra, he was permitted to sit in @ chair behind the scenes, listen- ing to the concert. ‘I'he boy was so im- pressed that ke could not control his emotions, for he wept, sobbed and laughed hysterically. Jenny Lind, hear- ing the isited him the next day and left him with a gentle farwell ring- ing in his ears—and some hundred dol- lars richer. yn September i, 1850, on the steamship Remember how | Lind” The pri secretary | America she expressed her des ‘The not-so-huge boat came to tor happened to hear the girl's words and | hold a sunrise at sea. Accordin ts New Yo nal Street.| have been in those days. There were | told them over again to Mme. Lind, | cloudless morning Captain We: where two arc erected nections, “or short jumps. ately the command came to find | relates ithe anecdote, had her called at honor of the pcerle on board : place one night and | th nd refund her the money with | carly dawn and she stood by his side She was driven to the Irving, a r place the next long since replaced and forgotten, t a tremendon At leans TF opretty ine | every chan; hade and light until the and there in the evening, she wa paticace. | cident took place. A poor Ablind boy | first golden rays shot up from the hori- aded by two hundred musicia 1 ¥ i been sent to the Southern y in}zon. e sun itself leapt up into twenty companics of firemen bearing atcrest im iMusic iat | the bop. nt hew Jenny Lind, | the sky she burst into rapturous song torches, was the stepping stove io the awakeu- | dmough the y of Mi. Ka the }her deeply religious fecling finding ex- BANKRUPT’S PETITION FOR DIS-| the seal thereof, at Bismarck, in CHARGE D. ORDER OF district, on the 7th day of OTICE THEREON. A. D. 19: In the District Court of the United ‘J, A. MONTGOMER States for the Southwestern Divi- cl © strict of North Dakota, (Seal) ni Matter of Ralph M. Duft, By R. Bankrupt, IN BANKRUPTCY. To the Hanorable Andrew Miller, judge of the district court of the M of ot 1. Dy@f, of (Wilton P. 0.5 fof Burleigh, and state G in said District, re- PETITION FOR DIS- for the District of or of North I the county of Burle and state oi mer who belonged to an as on without being subject to! ently Governor — McGr: program for drafting the piodel law will ont have the support of the In- di. Farm Bureau Fed ion, ch backed the bill he vetoed. | ident W. H. Setle, of this organ- zation, hus announced that he | would not confer with the governor » to arrange for drafting a new bill. The farmers, according to Mr. Settle | isgruntled” by the veto, said the bill had the approval of ll known creditors and other per-| 1923, on reading the Peti recognized national farm bureau | one an arent mad paused at he cheers of the above-named Bankrupt, meh if any they have, why the prayer of| Ordered by the court, that a hear- Se the said petition hould not be}nig be had upon the same on rt of the Condition of ) granted, 14th day of Ma A. D. 1923 Loans and Overdrafts, UNBBOUTOR oc os onsen es Warrants, School Twp. .! ng house, furniture fixtures |. ieee rent ense! a cur p: & aid undivide fits : 3 796.70 Due other banks and cash . Total Liabilities Capital stock paid in ., + +$ 15,000.00 Individual depos- its subject to check. Guaranty denosit Time‘ certific of deposit . Cashfer's “checks outstanding .. Bills payable fund 12,683.93 879,88 20,709.96 41,654.94 PA, Coun- Total STATE.OF ty of Burleigh, ss. 1, ©, P. Kijeseth, Cashier of the above’ named bank, do solemnly Swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief, Cc. P,. KJESETH, ; Cashier. Subscribed and ‘sworn to before |! April, 1923, me this 9th day of i Seal) A. T. WELCH: Notary Public My commission expires Feb. 14, 1928 Correct. Attest: . T, WELCH A. V. FISHER cP. KJESETH, Directors, | DISTRICT OF NORTH DAKC ric and that notice thereof be published in The Bismarck Tribune, a new He | per printed i jcourt, that the referee shall send, by jmail,“to all known credit h }of said petition and this order, ad- |dressed to them’ at their places of residence as stated: | _.Witn |Miller, judge of the said court, and] kh The‘ funeral cortege of Sarak Bernhardt-as it passed the Church ‘ol St. Augustin ‘in’ Paris,» Mourners: along the route literally numbered 4 millions. 3: ‘ays that he may} North Dakota, in id dist red by the court to ha spectfully represents that from all debts — pr day of November, 1922, last pi s e under said was duly adjudged bankrupt und nets, except such debts a the acts of Congr relating to ban y law from such discharge. | ruptey; that he has duly surrendered ated this 2nd day of March, A. D.] all his’ property and rights of. prop- 1923, © nd has fully complied with all RALPH M.’DUFP, the requirements of ets and Jankrupt, ORDER OF NOTICE the orders of the cour bankruptey Where he decreed touel he prays t On by the court to | on reading the all debts charge of the above- ate under said it ds pt such debts Ordered by the court, that a hed ing be had upon the same on 12th day of May, A. D. 1 the said court, at Fargo, in tri at ten o'clock in the forenoon; S from such di d this 10th day of ovembe 92: “CHARLES F. ORDER © NOT . DISTRICT OF NORTH DAKO’ On this 10th y MARTIN, ankrupt. pa said district, and that And it is further ordered by the the said cour Fargo..in 8 trict, at ten o'clock in the forenoon; und that notice thereof be published in The Bismarck T a newspu- per printed in said district, and that all known creditors and other per- sons in interest may appear at. the said time and place and show caus MILLIONS ‘AT BERNHARDT FUNERAL | copies the Honorable Andrew UNL rig the se: on deck, silent and motionless, watching they e, why the prayer off 2 That the petitioner should not be] ames and a mit ne iy H ; and the names and addresses fern geet ordeted by holders. owning or holding urt, that the re Vt more of the tota ail, to all know litors, copies ‘President. d petition and ident. dto them at order, ad their places of Witness iller, judg theree MONTGOMERY, Clerk, a ving ers, slockholders, i R, STI Deputy clerk. if any. contain not only. the mee ere Th and security hold upon. the hook of the ut ibnne North April 1 PH OF Wop. County of Burl fore me S pub rek, Dalrota AKOTA and for under which stoclh nd Security holders who ¢ hot Poupon the books of the com y trustees, hold stock and : y otbmr thin and his ve that ° . printe or other to. paid s forin to wit: during the months the names and the date shown above is t D. MANN. Sworn to before me this 11th MRANK (SEAL) My comm Wm, 8. Bismarels D, Mann, . Geo, D, Mann, eee a HERE ARE THE McKENZIE : HOTEL FIVE They play for the dances. at Patterson’s Hall every Wednesday and Saturday nights. Rates for in city. $5 an Hour, outside of city same ‘Rate Plus railroad fare and Hotel expense. Pression in the noble music of Handel’s No wonder that Captain West, when describing the scene, shouid “No one will ever hear Vhat My Redeemer Liveth’ “Messiah”, have exclaimed: ‘l Know sung as 1 heard it that morning.” At the close of her American sa i She died in the Malvern Hills in England in 1887, inourned by the music lovers of the world, a great artist and a most Jenny lovable Her work as a pioneer in the making Lind returned to Europe. character. of great American music was carried on after hi House of Chickering, with which she had been so proudly associated here. And thi Chica, Fuller, who tires fr of marr time ily frie ta Briq Minot to reup nd the a numb sufficient’ a compa Jonas Chicker his home her ugo when he married for the er departure, however, by the is great house. founded in 1823 by the stalwart young country boy, was indeed the one consecrated to such an artistic task. For the story of Jonas Chickering is | BUSINESS MAN DIES TRUE TO EARLY BELIEI go, TL April 11.—Oliver chairman of the board of the Fuller-Morrison Wholesale Drug Co., bel es that when a man re- ‘om business and from a state riage he begins to die, died at esterda of 93, having remained in the ha ness, professional and domestic, to the end, Mr. r announced his views on work and marriage 13 years second king for his wife an old fam- nd 30 years his junior. uetting Co. May Be Reopened| » N. dD, April 11.—Proposals en the Northern Briquetting Co, of this city were considered re cently ab a meetings of representa- tive Minot men, with S. M. Darling of Redfield, S. D., Charles Smith of Yankton, S, D., and C.F, Mudgett of Valley City at the Association of Commerce rooms. The matter of again putting the concern in operation was diseussed, plan is being er of other Minot men, If t capital can be interested, Y¥ probably will be formed | en up with the story of American music. The ro- mance and growth of the handiwork of one is indivisible from the romance and srowth of the other. The New Hamp- shire lad who came to Boston and labored at making with his own loving hands the oldest American piano now extant founded not only a great in-| dustry. He also established the greatest of American arts. Posterity rewarded him. When heroic sized statues of the world’s ten most famous inventors were planned to be erected at the St. Louis World’s Fair, Jonas Chickering was one of the subjects chosen. Think of the modesty of these begin- nings. There still exists the first original piano on which Jenny Lind played he: made, i piano on which Jenny Lind plyead her own accompaniments to her singing of “Home Sweet Home”; There stil exist the written story of the oldest empicyec of the House of Chickerinr, wictea twenty years ago. It reproduces the contract made between David ‘1. Hara- den and Jonas Chickering, by which the apprentice agreed to “come to work early and siay in the factory or ware- rooms until nine o'clock in the evenine”. ‘The agreement was to continue for cix years, and the compensation—ample enough for those days—was to be $6 weekly, with an iacrease of $1 weckiy for each succeeding year! To thors days Jonas tad a famous old sailor ‘riend who had braved the seas all bis hardy ‘Jc. It was his habit to carry out the plans the South Da- kota men and Mr. Mudgett have in mind. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED—Experience waitress. Re- ferences required, Hotel Garrison, Garrison, N. Dak. 4-11-50 FOR. RENT—Large bedroom suitable for 2 gentlemen. Call 644W, 419 ith St. 4-11-3t FOR SALE—7 passenger Studebaker four. New battery, good tires and Neglected Coughs and Colds lead to Bronchitis, Asthma, Influenza and other compli- cations. Stop Your Cough with There still exists the actual old! i Established 1875 Largest selling cough medicine in the World. TONIGHT WEDN| ADA ¥ PROGRAM OVERTURE “RAYMOND” by Thomas 7:20 nee MOVIE CHATS ee LLOYD HAMILTON ‘COMEDY “Uneasy Feet” oo FEATURE “The Little Church Around the Corner’ with Claire Windsor, Kenneth Harlan and Hobart Bosworth. P .GE THREE to load his splendid clipper with the Chickerings, lashing those of them that could not be put in the hold to the wind-swept decks. Then down he'd roll to Rio. The captain was onc of the real beginners of the immense sailing trade that grew up between Boston and the South American ports. He certainly be- gan what is now one of the biggest im- ports by the United States into all parts of the globe—the American piano, There came onc trip, however, when the adventurous old captain, loaded heavily and dipping into a great storm as he neared the Rio coast, came to mysterious gricf. Down went ship and cargo, down went captain and crew. They were never heard of again. But in his own Boston, his own America, Jonas Chickering ‘persevered, as his sons did after him, to the up- building of American music. Jenny Lind was only one of many artists to have their aid and co-operation in being intro- duced here. There was Theodore Thomas, greatest of all American conductors, called by a critic of international fame “a bene- ficient Hercules who lifted America up to where it heard at last the music of the spueres”. ‘There was Von Buelow, considered in his day the most creative musician and artist in the world, The ers is as long as it is It includes all the many ned concerts and recitals z Halls, in Boston and New York. is typitied today by Erno johmanyi, the ‘eminent Hungarian piani.t, conductor and composer, who came to -\merica this year solely to participate in the nation-wide Jonas Chickering Centennial as the representa- ef mus cal urope. eb known public and musical "res are inscribed, also, as sharers in these ceremonies. Vice-President Cool- line of such mas illustriout. dge chairman of their committee, which includes Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Senator Smoot, U. S. Commis- 1 of Education John J. Tigert, the rectors of «1 the major symphony tras throughout the country, His. a1 Wm, O'Connell, Mr. orche Kiminence C Oro Kabn, Fritz Kreisler and many othe: distinguished uames, me‘ r in good running condition, a bargain if nat once, Phone 262. 4-11-1w FOR SALE—Cash oe good papers. Tiap touring ear, Run less than ) miles. Address Box 488, Bis- arck, N. D. 4-11 FOR RENT -lurnished apartment, 2 rooms and bain Fifth St. 41 -3t APITO: Theatre TONIGHT and Thursday. THE FILM GUILD INC. presents + GLENN HUNTER ‘SECOND. FIDDLE’ wih MARY ASTOR aR Sanaa @ TUTTLE-WALLER PRODUCTION Also Stan Laurel noted ° comedian in’ “WHEN KNIGHTS WERE COLD” | ‘Coming Irene Castle in “Slim:

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