The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 30, 1923, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT CREDIT BUREAU PAYS TRIBUTE TO MR. LUCAS President of the Organiza- | tion He Saw It Making Rapid Strides Tribute to the memory of A. W Lucas was paid by the Bismarck Cre- | wu, in its weekly bulletin to} » iss today. The tribute | follows: | Our President, Arthur W. Lucas. We ure only three months old as a corporation, We had only begun to re that there was something un- 1 in the career of a man whose netism made it possible for us to xrow from a nucleus of eleven to a membership of sixty-seven in less than three months. Our present membership includes the following: Anderson Lumber Co. Barker Baking & C Bashara’s Grocery. Best & Huyck. Bismarck Bank. Bismarck Bottling Works. Bismarck Building & sLoan Asso- | ciation. Bismarck Food Market. Bismarck Furniture & Upholstering Co, Bismarck Grocery Co. Bismarck Lumber Co. ndy Co. Bismarck Tire & Auto Co. Bonham Bros. Breslow’: Brock Co Brown, E. A. Capital City Bottling Works. Carpenter Lumber Co. Central Meat Marke City National Bank. Cole & Blunt. Cook's Grocer; Copelin Motor Co. Corwin Motor Co. Cowan dy Tire Vulcanizing Co, . A. Finney’s. First Guaranty Bank. First National Bank. Folsom’s Jewelry. French & Welch. Gamble-Robinson Co, Gussner's. Harris-Robertson. Home Bakery. Hughes Electric Co. Klein's Toggery. Lahr Motor Sales Co. Lenhart's. Logan's. Lucas Company. Montgomery’s Grocery. National Tailors, Northern Produce Co. Perry Furniture Co. Quain & Ramstad Clinic. Quality Meat Market. Rawlings, Towne & Toney. Richmond’s Bootery. Rose Shop. Scott's Grocery. Skeel’s Electric Co. Smith's Grocery. Snyder Transfer Co. Sorenson Hardware. Stacy Bismarck Co. Stair & Pederson. hter Transfer Co. hburn Lignite Coal Co. Webb Bros. Willman’s Transfer. Will's Seed House, Zahn’s Transfer, It 18 difficult to conceive of Bis- marck without Mr. Lucas. Douglas Malloch, writing an elegy to the memory of a friend in a recent Sat- urday Evening, Post voices the sen- timent expr@ssed from numerous sources in Saturday’s Bismarck Tri- bune. No doubt every word of this poem will find a ready response in the heart of every Bismarck citizen as he pays his last respects today to the remains of our comrade at the City Auditorium. We copy it in full: A COMRADE RIDES AHEAD By Douglas Malloch TIME brings not death, it brings but | changes; I know he rides, but rides afar, Today some other planet ranges And camps tonight upon a star Where all his other comrades are. For there were those who rode before him, As there are these he leaves be- hind; 4 Out there our comrade still find The kinship of the comrade mind. will Time brings us change and leaves us fretting; We weep when every comrade foes — Perhaps too much, perhaps forgetting That over yonder there are those To whem he comes and whom he knows. t I would not hold our loss too lightly; | God knows, and he, how deep the pai But, friends, I see still shining brightly | The brightest link in all our chain That links us with a new domain. For this I swear, because believing; Time breaks no circle such as this. However hurt, however grieving, However much a friend we miss, Between the worlds is no abyus, For friendship binds the worlds to- er i oveb there, world over here. ast that his cur jumps ‘he curve and to escape uninjured. folk taxi between fect several Morgan and Howland Fowler, passe were taken to the ‘Naval Hospital. He links the planet and the star; He rides ahead, the trail he finds us, And. where he is and where we are Will never seem again so far, "| DEATH CLAIMS OLD: RANCHER | Hubert Heinen, Pioneer Ranchman on Mouse River, Succumbs to Paralysis Minot, July 30.—Hubert Heinen, one of the oldest pioncer ranchers of | the Mouse river valley passed away | at the home of his son, John, four| miles north of Foxholm, Saturday evening July 21. For the past two} years Mr. Heinen had been confined to his bed by paralysis attended by his faithful wife-and members of the family. Mr. Heinen was in his 79th year, coming to this country from Germany at the age of six years, his parents settled at Richmond, Minnesota where he grew to manhood, married | and reared a family of seven children, four sons and three daughters. Mov-| ing to North Dakota 37 years ago the} Heinens took up a homestead west of | the city about 30 miles, near what is now known as St. Mary’s township. Those days the district was sparse- ly settled, no fences marked the lines and their cattle not infrequently ranged as far west and: north as the Canadian line. During those days travelers through the country al-| ways found the Heinen home one of| exceptional hospitality. Both Mr. From earth to heaven is the tether ‘That, brings the earth and heaven near ‘ And makes them both a bit’ more. dear. ‘ | several knocks down a 1a np post. It happened in New York, SOCIETY’S AIR TAXI CRASHES The wreck of “Fleet Wing,” one of the airplanes in which society | wport, R. I, and New York City. hundred of the exc It dropped lusive colony Jooked on. H. Cary ngers, and H. H. Thornburn, pilot, and Mrs. Heinen were devout, mem- ers of the Catholic faith and when the church was established at St. Henry's they were among its prinei- and when the parish built the church at Foxholm they trans- ferred their that pal donor. membership. to point ‘as being more ‘convenient, All the children, but one, were at the bedside when the.end came and are left to comfort the aged mother as she is spared to pass her declin- ing years among them. ‘The daugh- ters are, Mrs,-Phillip Stammen, Mrs. Henry Wapshott and Mrs. C. P. Sher- rill and the sons are Joseph, John, | Frank and George Heinen, all re- spected and influential members of the community. Joseph Heinen of St. Paul, an only brother of the deceased, arrived in time for the funeral, ONE KILLED; $70,000 TAKEN Scranton, Pa., July 30.—One man was killed and four other persons were wounded in a hold-up of a Laurel line car near Moosic today by bandits who escaped with satchels conta'ning $70,126. The money was to be used in paying an thracite mine workers at two coller ies. Many rheumatic pains are caused by ill fitting shoes. Ground Gripper Shoes relieve. Make walking a_ pleasure. Alex Rosen & Bro. MIND WASN’T ON WORK! The driver of this one one was lucky enough ny | ASK FURTHER U.S, ACTIONIN GRAIN TRADE Federal Trade Commissioners Hold it Necessary to Pre- vent Abuses ‘ Washington, July 30.—Holding fur- ,ther federal regulation of future ‘trading in grain necessary “to pre. \ abuses” the federal trade com: jon in the concludingsggction of | its reports on the methods and oper- ations of grain exporters makes » number of important secommenda- | tions. Legislation réquiring daily publica. tion by the Chicago Board of Trade of the total volume of the proceding operation of futures and open trades |in each grain ang acceptance, by the jboard on future deliveries contracts at other important markets when . NEW NICOLLET Minneapolis, Minn., July 80.—The new Nicollet Hotel, the latest word in hotel construction, will soon open its doors and offer its hospitality to the citizens of Bismarck when busi- ness or pleasure calls them to Mini- eapolis. Today the last step toward final consummation of the plans for the structure will be taken, when $1,- 300,000 in First Mortgage Bonds will be placed on sale and offered to in- | vestors through the Northwest. A few weeks ago prominent business men of Minneapolis subscribed to $ 700,000 worth of stock in this insti- tution, A committee of bankers, hotel | and real estate men will supervise | the property until such time as the bonds are entirely paid off. The building, standing as it docs on the site of the old Nicollet, facing, the beautiful Gateway Park and but a minute’s walk from depots, is ideal- ly located. The design, created by Holabird and Roche, one of the lead- ing firms ofarchitects in the United States, will insure the structure's be- ing an ornament to the city. The plan, which follows in a mea- sure those of the most modern hotels of New York and Chicago, insures for the Northwest what will probably be one 6f the up-to-the minute hostel- ries in the entire country; but with all its elegance, the management, co- oncrating with the business men of Minneapolis, has insisted that accom- modations shall be provided for guests at reasonable cost. Prices as contemplated, and which will guaran- tee an adequate profit, will be less than any first class hotel in the coun- try, according to|present plans. “For sixty-five years,” said Mr. E. P, Wells, who fifty-three years ago necessary to prevent a squeeze. or corner at Chicago were outstanding among the recommendations. —TOFIGHTU.S. CORN BORERS | Release Over Million Tiny Wasps to Save Corn Boston,.July 30.—With the release of 1,000,000 tiny was: brobracons, in this vicinity, experts of the Bureau of Entomology, United States Department of ‘Agriculture, hope they have sct in, motion an- agency that wil result in the de- struction of the corn borer and the saving of millions of Sollers to the farmers. The success O£ the experi- ment, entomologists say, will not be determined until observations have extended over a period of years. ~ | “Imported from France, in which country and in Italy the habrobracon has proved a relentless’ enemy pf the corn borer, four colonies of the in- ‘sects were bred at the government ‘laboratories in Arlington. Whether the wasp can survive and flourish in the colder and more uneven climat of New England is a question - still | to be disturbed. | The corn borer itself is an import- ed species, having come to America in shipments of European broom ,corn. Its ravages first attracted seri- | ous attention in 1917 in Massachussetts. Since that has worked steadily westward. Last: ‘year the borer caused damage esti- mated at $1,000,000 fn this / state ; alone: The corn borer, which in ap- pearance resembles a caterpil only attacks corn but inflicts injury upon crops of beets, celery, beans, rhubarb, potatoes, peppers, . bucl |wheat, and clover. Altogether, in- ivestigators have found .the borer guilty of damaging 211 varieties of | plants. The habrobracon is ‘said to injure | No crop, confining its attacks to’ the | borer, the gypsy, and the \brown tail months. ‘The wasps are very small, with bodies about ‘the size of the} hend of a pin. The female wasp at- taches itself to the corn borer and Jays its eggs on it, These, when they ; develop, at first paralyze ang later kill the borer. Pas The battle betwen borer and ha- |’ i brobracon began with the release: of colonics of 250,000, habrobracons each |! , in Srugus, Cambridge, ‘Malden and | Arlington. Further etperiments are being made by government entom: -ogists witha view ‘to -finding oth insects which. may | of the borer, OF RESPECT: Inchon today, eioptad role vine! Ys, tions. of tribute n WW. Lueas, ext vondolen- ces to membe~ of the fargily was married at the old HotelNicollet and whose firm, ‘the - Wells-Dickey Compaay, is offering the bonds of ON OLD GROUND | tae HEY KIDS! Girl Thinks She Has I$ PLANNED, 1 1 Sale of Securities Opened to Finance Huge Structure {| In Mill City More Freckles Than Any Feller in This Town MISS GERTRUDE WATTS By NEA Service Who is the most freckled kid in Here's a chance to win the freckle championship. Bismarck? Miss Gertrude Watts, of Newark, N. J., claims the honor in her city and state. Know anybody ‘who can beat her? Get out the mirror and start counting. Gertrude says she counted 1356—and then got tired, because ‘by that time most of her face and neck Ladn’t been tabulated at all. “Mathematical calculation,” says the photographer who snapped her the new Nicollet. Hotcl, “the old Ni-}Picture, “would indicate that she has several hundred thousand eollet stood the gateway to Minn- capolis offering to friend and strang- r alike: the hospitable spirit of Minneapolis, We who were a part of the past generation and who parti pated in many~festivities of. histori- cal character, and to whom in a per- sonal way, the institution meant so much, will regret its passing. But for these regrets*there is compensa- tion in knowing that the old name and the old spirit will continue to live and serve the coming generations |: through the beautiful structure that is now rising where the venerable hostelry has" stood ;for these , many years. ‘It is a serviceable monument standing to the credit of the entire Northwest, for the. ‘Nicollet’ is quite 8 familiar and means*as much to the citizens of our ‘own and adjoin- ig ‘states, who partake of its hospi- ity at frequent intervals, as it does to the city of Minneapolis.” ~With the completion of -the new Nicollet in sight, public spirited cit- izens are now turning their attention to the further development of the ‘gateway into a beautiful civic center, with the hotel as the key, flanked by other buildings of a public or semi public nature extending in both di- ections from the Great Northern and Milwaukee stations. The bonds which are being offered today are secured by a first mort- gage on the building and all its new- ly* installed furniture and fixtures, together with an , eighty-five year lease on the gsound. The bonds will mature serially running from three to fifteen years and will bear 6 1-2 Fistration could block that anyway. ‘into power, put the tariff away up, the spreaa | freckles!” If you self. oy, a | What’s Going on in | ‘The World ee By Charles P, Stewart NEA Service Writer Magnus. Johnson's’ election as Farmer-Labor senator’ from Minne- sota was 1923's big political event to date. ‘ It. was a’ stiff, Republican jolt be- cause it meant defeat of the adminis- tration’s choice,’ Governor - Preus. Democrats register joy on account of this, but their own candidate was beaten worse, than Preus. Really it’ was a Third Party vic- tory—a pally for Republicans and Democrats‘ alike, \) + / It may, not, mean # Third Party presidential nomination pext~ year, but it increases the changes of one. With three candidates in the field it wouldn’t be surprising if election failed to settle the 1924 fight, leaving the Hause of: Representatives’ to choose the next presidgpt., Balance of Phwer In a way, Johnson’ election 18 worse for the Republigans than for the Democrats«».: - + * The Republican administration has policies, It can’t make them effec- tive without House and Senate ma- Jorities. It hasn’t got them. In both congressional’ branches the indepen- dents, of various sorts, hold the bal- @nce of power. Johnson will be a re- cruit for this group. True, the independénts' may not help the Democrats to accomplish anything constructiy The admin- But constructive accomplishment isn’t the Democrats’ / present E With a Republican administrati6n in office, their game’s to gum the cards. I ly they WILL be able to make the independents help them do this, . \ As to the Tariff Naturally the Democrats will how! all they're worth about the low price of agricultural. products—with wheat costing more to grow than the farm ers)can sell it for. | The Republicans, when they went * saying the farmers would benefit by plenty of protection: Prices of everything the farmers have to BUY have stayed high; but prices of things | . they have to SELL haye' slumped. The “Repu claim’ it would : “yet, but: for the This’ doesn’t: satisfy. the farmers, : judging. by the ‘Minnesota’ senatorial election result. ead The farm bloc leaders dictated-the iculture was, rraign:the don’t believe it, get a magnifying glass and count ’em your- Republicans with a very good grace but the Democrats can. They said all along that, the tariff increases were a bad thing. wa Alaska All Excited President Harding, who went to Alaska to get away from politics, has run into a, political hornets’ nest there, ; Certain Alaskans claim a few line: of Big Business are trying to gobble the territory’s resources for. them selves. They chatge official corrup- tion, too. And they seized the’ opportunity when the president was in their midst to air their grievances. Dry League Methods . An overhauling of Anti-Saloor League methods, is. promised in New York as a sequel'to the indictment of State Superintendent W. H. Anderson of the league on charges’ of grand larceny and forgery. The grand jury recommended « general investigation by the legis. lature. ee i England and France / Premier Poincare of France, in a speech, has definitely turned down the -sugestions of Premier Baldwin of England for a Ruhr settlement. Only very unsophisticated folk are swallowing tho .story that England and France really want. ‘the same thing and only differ as td the besi way of accomplishing it. The truth at France is trying to establish herself securely as domi- nant continental European powe: and. England’s trying to prevent this her traditional policy being to. keep any European rival of her own from becoming too. strong, It’s exactly such. a situation as led to the last ‘war. Then it was England and Germany. Now it’s England and France. DENIES SHE GOT DIVORCE New York, July 30,—Irene ‘Castle dancer, arriving here from France t day denied she had obtained a di vorce, from her fhusbahd in~ Paris. She said she would meet her husbano Robert Tremaine, Ithaca manufac- turer, soon after her arrival’ here. The causes: of ‘corns, cal- louses; bunions, are elimniat- ed dnd walking made. delight- ful by wearing Ground Grip- per Shoes for men and women properly fitted by Alex Rosen | BISMARCK ———— JZ Ay WILL GREEN TELLS IDEALS OF KIWANIS! Lieutenant-Governor for No. Dakota Is Guest of Bis- marck Organization « JTS BROAD PROGRAM The ideals of the Kiwanis clubs of the country were expounded at today’s weekly luncheon of the lq- cal club by Will Green of Fargd; lieutenant-governor for the state of North Dakota, who is now en- gaged in a trip about the state vis- iting Kiwanis clubs in various cit- ies in his official capacity. Mr. Green was grected by a large 1ep- resentation of the club. He brought a message of the whole purpose and ideals of the Kiwanis club, as learned by him in the declarations of the club and in the actual experience of they various clubs in the Northwest. He especially stressed the subject of the work of the Kiwanis club for under privileged children, a work which Kiwanis clubs have undertaken all over the United States and in Canada. Mr. Green, from his contact with other high officers and the dis- trict and international organiza- tions of clubs, told cf the plan of operation, explaining how efficient machinery had been built up by the club leaders. George F. Shafer presided at the meeting and Secretary A. IF. Bradley of the Association of Commerce, a guest. introduced Gurney Lowe, who will speak at an A. of C. dinner this evening on the Neosho plan of cooperative merchandising. Mr. Lowe gave w very entertaining talk. Dr. C. E. Stackhouse, city health officer, gave an’ interesting and instructive address on public health, 4 The attendance prize which raffled off went to Joseph Bri RAILROADS T0 CONSIDER CUT IN GRAIN RATE Executives Meet in Omaha to Consider Plan of Business Men jof. That City Omaha, Neb., July 34.-—Executives of western railroad lines are to meet in Chicago today to consider a pro- posal for a temporary emergency 25 per cent feight rate reduction on ex- port wheat and flour advanced by a committee of Omaha business men recently organized to sponsor a buy- ing campaign of these commodities, it was announced today. Announcement of the meeting was inade at the Omoha Chamber of Com- merce following recetpt of a letter from Hale Holden of Chicago, presi- dent of the Associatiof’ of Railway executives who wrote to this effect to John Kennedy, chairman of the Omaha wheat committee, ip CONFERENCE POSTPONED Fargo, July 30.—The conference be- tween Attorney-General George Shaf- er, George A. Banks of Grand Forks and H. FP. Horner,” states attorney for Cass county, to determine what further action the state will take jn ‘connection with the Scandinavifn- American Bank failure case has been postponed until tonight or tomorrow on account of the delayed arrival of Mr. Shafer. Don’t Forget. Bismarck Juvenile Band Benefit. Au torium, Aug. 7. Tickets 75 cents, ‘ NOTICE! Continue boiling city water. City Health Officer. y ,@ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA © Knowh oll over the Northwest for Quality @ MAIL US YOUR FILMS ©. MADE TO MEASURE ns wool SUITS AN) OYERCOATS Satisfaction Always. # National Tailors & Cleaners Sth St. opposite McKensle Roperte-and Second Street North, Fargo, N. Dak, will hereafter be’ under the. same ; especially to. Mr. and Not ‘ weaker now our. chain, . but| #3 In all our Joss and al y shall look’ s At ev'ry star above And think of him, ? management ang students enrolling at one of | these Colleges may change to. the other without our itt 5 , : Fi loss. of ‘time, ‘change ' of text-books or additional ye-till : , . ; : Sdn le rope : y* ‘ __ tation ch : é

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