The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 1, 1923, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE EIGHT HUMAN SIDE MUST ALSO BE CONSIDERED Immigration Cannot Be Based Only as Economic Problem New York, Aug. 1—The human side of immigration must be consid-| cred along with its cconomic aspect, if the problem is to be solved, says « report published by the National Ind 1 Conference Busi on “The blem in thd United ng changes in the nt's immigration policy are ommende “It is clear,” the report says, “that a wide, comprehensive and humane national immigration policy cannot be based exclusively on the consider- ation of any immediate special or purely economic aspect of the pro- blem, but must be developed out of broad, for sighted and scientifically- grounded vi of national and in- ternational social and economic pro- nd human welfare.” board, after suggesting that encics arising from the way nt laws are handled should » avoided in the future, says that the state and labor departments fail to work in harmony on the immigra- tion problem. No examination is held abroad to determine mental fit- ness, the selective function being in the hands of. .stgamship companies, the report adds which ndertake the work “to avoid heavy fines and not from any sense of public duty.” “Not enough, care is taken to de- tect mental defectives in ports of entry,” ‘the report adds. “Facilities are cramped, and the new law has only added new difficulties.” Some of the theories on which the three percent law was enacted were based on false fears, the report finds. The idea that all Europy was on its way to America in 1917 has been proved incorrect. There is an increasing tendency among immigrants to remain in this country, the report avers, and asta- tisties are given to bear out the claim. The government is blamed in ‘the report fcf slow naturalization of aliens. There is a great need for in- creased personnel in the naturaliza- tion bureau and for a simpler and standardized law. “It is doubtful if one year of restricted immigration has done anything to eliminate this need,” the report adds. Italy is shown to have the most serious emigration problem, Wut the government there is trying to find a way out. MINOT MAN IN BUROPE GIVES NEW PICTURE Conditions Are Not Bad, Says] Dr. P. A. Nestos, Brother of Governor ’ Minot, N. D., Aug, 1.—General con- ditions in Europe are much better than is generally thought in this country, in the belief of Dr. P, A. Nestos of this city, who with Mrs. Nestos returned Saturday from a several months trip through several of the old countries. Dr. Nestos is a brother of Governor Nestos. “All of the countries visited ap- peared to be'doing very nicely,” said the Minot man today, “althougt things in this country are much more normal than in Europe. I talked to many persons, who, like myself, ex- pressed the belief that in order to really enjoy the United States. one should take a trip through Europe.” Relative to the French attitude in seizing the Ruhr industries in Ger- many, the general impression prevails the Minot physician declares, that France is adopting a little too stern an‘attitude. On the other hand, it is said, it is believed in many quarters that Germany is fully able to pay the reparations demanded by France. Berlin is.deseribed by Dr. Nestos as being an apparently wealthy place, where the aftermath, which might be expected to follow the World War fails to appear, Only one beggar was seen by the Minot people while vis- iting in Berlin, indicative of the pros- perity that exists there, Leaving Minot last January, Dr. and Mrs. Nestos went to Frafite, thence southward to avoid contact with problems that might arise through the French occupation of the Ruhr and through Switzerland to Vienna, where Dr. Nestos was en- gaged in special clinical work. De- parting from there in the early part of. Yune, they journeyed through Ger- many to Berlin, visiting there for a time and then continued om through to Sweden and Norway, where consid- erable time was spent in visiting at the home of Dr, Nestos’ mother. The homeward trip was by the way of England and Montreal, Canada. KARDOS PLEADS _ NOT GUILTY —, New York, Aug. 1.—Lo Kar- dos of the defunct \brokerage firm of Kardos and Burke, who was in- diéted yesterday for buketing and trading against customers’ orders, to- day entered a plea ef not guilty. Bail of $15,000 which was fixed yesterday. ‘was continued. ‘ This 1s how Rin-Tin-Tin, famous giggles. LIQUOR CASE DECISION IN N. D, UPHELD Can’t Forfeit Bond of Indus- trial Alcohol User Who Violates Law St. Louis, Aug. 1—The government cannot declare forfeited bonds of in- dustrial alcohol users for misuse of alcohol permits, the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals held: today in sus- taining the district court of North Dakota in finding for the defendant in the case of the government against John Wandamaker of Fargo. Wandamaker had obtained ‘a per- mit to use alcohol in making a scalp lotion and had put up a $2,000 bond. The government, charged he mis: used the permit to violate the pro-! hibition law and attempted to have the bond forfeited. | The . district court at Fargo held the bond was gut up primarily to put up payment in taxes and if Wandamaker had used the permit to violate dry laws he should of been prosecuted criminal- ly. biting the consumption of liquor ii Constantinople which was fixed foi Aug. 1 has been postponed for an- other month’ for the third time. TRIES TO SWIM ACROSS LAKE ERIE, 32 MILES Cleveland, Aug. 1.—Some point be- ‘tween Point Pelee, Ontario, and Lo- rain, Ohio, Carbis Walker, Cleveland swimmer and former member of the Outrigger Canoe Club of Honolulu, early today was attempting to swim across Lake Erie—32 miles—a feat never before accomplished. Walker dived into the water off Point Pelee light ship at 7 o'clock last night, according to advicés re- ceived here ‘from Leamington, On- tario, the nearest point of communi- cation. He is using a combination crawl and trudge-on stroke. He is be- ing accompanied by a power boat and a canoe. ONE ACTRESS ASKS DIVORCE; | ONE WILL WED, Los Angeles, Aug. 1.—Corrine Grif- fith, motion picture actre: announ-| ced here last night she had instructed | her New York attorney to file suit! for divorce against W. Campbell, mo- tion picture director. TO WED AGAIN Los Angeles, Calif, Aug. 1.—The Los Angeles Times today quoted Mil- dred Harris, former wife of Charles! Chaplin, as follows: “Yes I am going to marry again. “My future husband,” Miss Harris continued, “is an eastern capitalist. He will be here in September and ‘then we shall announce my engage- ment. No, I donot wish to tell his name now.” Bandits Enter Baltimore Bank Three bandits oust Baltimore, Au entered a banking Hollywood, keeps in trim for his film feats. |PAN MOTORS The application of the law prohi-] V! sbeat, Rus- | el Forsythe, paying teller into in-| NO. EFFORT TO LEAP HURDLES LIKE THESE Belgian “Red Cross Rin-Tin-Tin, like the girls TO BE SOLD, St. Cloud, Minn., Aug. 1.—Bids were received this morning in dis-! trict court for the Pan Motor| company, sold at public sale under! court order. The property ‘was divided into three parceis to facil- itate the transaction. i} High bids opened by the receivet, | E, E. Clark, in district court, totalled | $418,500 which, together with $40,000 | in cash on hand, are sufficient to}! pay all undisputed claims in full, | CORNGROWS | i Farmer Living South of Bis- marck Shows Its in Corn Belt North Dakota soil and a little; Indiana seed have produced a field| of corn with stalks twelve feet; hich with ears about five or six feet from the ground, H. C. Casper, farming five miles south of Bismarck, has ‘a field in which eleven and a half and twelve- foot stalks {redominate. While ting in Indiana last year Mr, Casper noticed some ‘fine white int corn in the crib of a relative ind wondered why such corn could hot be raised in North Dakota. He decided to experiment. He brought a little white flint seed with him; and planted it this spring. | The: result— corn twelve-foot | high with two and three ears to the stalk about five’ or six feet from the ground. If nothing happens to Stop the maturing of the corn, it will. be some of the finest ever raised in the state. Pains in the legs and back are often caused by ill fitting shoes. Scientifically _ built Groynd Gripper. Shoes for men and women are sure, to relieve and make walking a ‘police dog and highest stopping screen’ staf in Re a 12 FEET HIGH : | replied, stopping short. With this THE BISMARCK. TRIBUNE { feat aor h in the picture, s2ems to have the MURDERER OF = SHERIFF SEEN INSO, DAKOTA Edwin Rust Is Believed to be \Hiding in the Dakota Black Hills ai Rapid City, SD, Aug. 1—Ed- win Rust, 20-year-old slayer of Sheriff I. C. Fulker of Brown coun- ty, South Dakota, passed through id City yesterday and is now hiding somewhere in the Black Hills, according to belief of local) authorities. Joe Kelley, proprietor of a bottling works here, was leav- ing the postoffice yesterday after- noon when he saw a dilapidated car from Minnesota drive up. The driver got out of his car and start- ed enter the -postoffice. Kelley aak- ed him if -he was from Minnesota. -“No, from Missouri,”: thedriver he ran to his car jumped in and drove west rapidly. Men and women with:weak fallen arches get nase . manent relief wearing Grou: Gripper Shoes properly fitted pt Alex Rosen & Bi ij idle. rrows abundantly in this section cf the country. neglect, erew without. attention. ently i twill thrive ‘in rocky barren soil where nothing else will sprout. to the rubber trees and plants of ti form of a small bush or shrub and when mature is about four feet gvreasewood bush. small, tough looking, and have a slight similarity to those of other rubber producing plants. from which the rubber is made is of the shtub, extendii root The latax is separate and distinct from the sap of the Guayule, which flows- through the plant. tax differs from that used in tropi- cal countries” where the trees: are tapped, and the juice oozes out. tire Guayule plant. FUNDEMENTALS Baptist Minister Urges Thee- |; church has “no message today for, a dying world, as a matter of fact the| Christian’ Church is preaching man gospels~and the result is confusion! and failure,” Dr. Curtis Lee Laws, of ‘| Brooklyn, said in addressing the ‘Bap- tist World AHiance; i ONLY RUBBER PLANTINU.S. ~ TS.IN TEXAS Plant Has No Resemblance to Rubber Trees of Tropi- cal. Lands’ abet Ls Alpine, Tex., Aug. 1.—The only rubber producing plant known to vrow uncultivated in North Amer- ica is found in the Big Bend coun- try of both Texas and Mexico,| d nlong the border, and the only fac- tory in the United States equipned to make rubber from the raw latax is in Brewster county, Texas. A factory was established at Mara- then about.15 years ago, but ‘for ‘he past seyeral years has been The plant from which: rubber may-be made is the Guayule, and Large quantitie: have been destroyed by prairie fires and but mv:h continues. to Appar- The Guayule has no resemblance Topical countries. It grcws in the high resembling slightly the Texas Its leaves are The milky juice, known as latax, in a layer under the He of skin ig from the of the topmost branch The method of extracting the la- he fluid is pressed from the en- OF RELIGION RENT ASUNDER logians To Settle . Disputes Stockhéim; Aug. 1.—The Christian -| foundation—.principles of Christian- ity.” Y : ‘ “If this theological war‘is fough to a finlgh,” he said, “at least the present. generation will perish for lack, of vision.” ( “Believing' in the sincerity and high mora) character of these wat- ring theologians,” he said, “I beg of them in the name of Christ and per- ishing humanity that they will quiet- ly, lovingly, prayerfully gather about a table with God’s book before them ond let that settle every disputed question. That book is the ultimate sround for authority.” fail to attend church. Today we have the Arabs of,the avenues and the Bedouins of the boulevards, he said, and they are “as far removed from Christian influences as those who ll in the slums of poverty and squalor. “The palatial hotels and magnifi- cent apartment houses send as few people tc the churches as do the tenement house districts. Our hearts are touched when we hear of vast stretches of tcrritory on the frontiers where no church people can bel seen. But far more sinister is the fact that ®orgeous church buildings, almost countless in number, are to be found in the midst: of the teeming millions of all our great cities ministering to but a handful of people or \else ut- terly deserted and finally abandon- | ed.” Dancing! McKenzie: Root Garden —: Tuesdays, Thurs-: days and Saturdays. 10c; dances. Coolest spot in Bis- | marck. | | i The Name- . Plate ‘Means Much! It pays to be sure of the name on the battery you: select—eure that it stands for the kind of concern you can have confidencein.- - The , Willard name- pecs lel dagen a matter price you pay—marks that bat- tery as.a well-built bat- tery on which you may Yi “Denominations. are being reltt asunder today,” he said, “and those who have long been brethern are’in warring camps contending noty over Non-essentials, but, alas, over the very HOSPITAL FOR SALE OR\RENT Glenwood Sanitarium, at Enderlin, N. D., equipped, acquired under foreclosure, a fraction of its cost, or rented reasonably. cellent opening. for Ostéopath or Chiropractor co- operating with local M. D.’s, or for a couple of nurses. SHELDON INVESTMENT COMPANY Sheldon,, N.. Dak. pleasure. Alex Rosen & Bro. Senstitiey and escaped with $16,000 in bills. ————SSSSSSSS Piles Can Be Cured Without - Surgery Aw instructive book has been pub- Ushed by Dr. A. 8. McCleary, th noted rectal: specialist of City. This book tells how » from: Piles can be quickly cured without the use of knife, scis- sors, “hot” iron, electricity of any eutting or burning. method, er ; without confinement to bed and no ‘ hospital’ bills to pay. T has been & lor, tt ab ee oe Tons: dip ha sdpuintl iC witinaee Dr. ics D to ‘| Parkview Sanitari fully will be sold at An ex- practical ' S BES ZZ — g | CORWIN MOTOR Dr. Laws criticized the people who |- Unidertakers Day Phone 100 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1928 -NOTICE! _ that slouchy walk. goer Wear" Ground Gripper Shoes Continue boiling es a men-and women properly City Health Officer.‘ itted. Alex Rosen‘and Bro. -GOODYEAR CORD PRICES WITH OTHERS 30x3', 32x34 ... S32x4.... 33x4 . 34x4 . 32x44. 33x4¥% . 34x44 PATHFINDE! 80x3 Pathfinder 30x3% Pathfinder Lahr Motor Sales Co. , BISMARCK, N. D. EARMERS AND THRESHERS Farming and _ especially threshing are *h employments .and your employees should bd nayged against accident Threshers can insure all men assisting in threshing including themselves at a fraction of one cent per bushel. 4 * a + Farmers can insure their men the year around and also themselves at a much lower rate. All employers insured with the Workmen’s Com- pensation Fund are free fram liability for accident to employees in the course of their employment. Write for application blanks and information’ WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION BUREAU. 4 - North Dakota Bismarck, WEBB BROTHERS ., Embalmers Funeral Directors ; Licensed Embalmer in Charge ‘DAY PHONE 246 NIGHT PHONES 246-887 PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS ‘Licensed Embalmer in Charge eh Night, Phone 100 or 687 BUICK MOTOR COMPANY nnounces for. 1924 an entirely new and distinctive line of Quality CMotor Cars “In beauty, design.speed and Original mx Wo i24 Boke nodes features . as four 1 brakes; Ate BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, Sine, tributed by the industry. Michigan Meneer, Butters of Vabro-in-Head Mote Coro Dees A Pimp Che Dass bagry:

Other pages from this issue: