The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 11, 1923, Page 2

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 TWO ROYALTY MIXES | . WITH SOCIETY IN WASHINGTON | Causes Hostesses Many Per- plexing Moments in Re- calling Titles TITLES CONFUSE ll Nations of Earth Repre-! sented in Washington ONG FLOWERS BANK I ces are granted in America at the | Tate of DIVORGES IN AMERICA ARE ON INCREASE ( Situation Serious — Time ‘For Immediate Action Has Come JAPAN ONLY RIVAL ' | Winona Lake, Ind., Aug. 11.—Diver- one every four minutes | making use of the custom and the op- Pe SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1923 a wealthy Cireaissian widow who hat come from Damascus to the wilds of Transjordania to look, after her late husband's sheep. The sergeant ran off with her to Kerak, where he proposed that they be married. Unfortunately he had omitted one thing, which is curiously regarded as essential even in “marriage by cap- ture,” to secure the lady, consent. In this case she declined. Appeal was made to the authorities, and King Abdullah. ordered the arrest of the would-be groom and decreed that the custom of marriage by capture should cease. because, too, the integrity of the fam- ily is wom: quest, uopn the wo- men of the country must be laid the business of bringing about reform. “Unification of marriage and di- vorce laws is only a partial solution of the problem. There must be early training for marriage and pafenthood, and this cannot be provided for by law.” King Cools Ardor Of Too Hasty Lover E e Jerusalem, Aug. 11,—Beyond the Jordan is a Community of Circas- sians, recruited by the British for police duty, the mle members of which @re inclined, even today, to follow the old custom of whirlwind campaign in their love affairs, some- times called marriage by, capture. A few. days axo one of these men, w BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA w Keown all over the Northwest for attacked: a house with yey throughout the year, and are more] portunity, @ MAIL US YOUR n Society : jumerous here annually in proportion | some of his companfons and captured FILMS ®. renee to Gor poupiatign tees in any ote q < country which fecords marriage sta- Washington, Aug. ut lat ae tistics, The annual total of decrees Be eerc ae aac Wash. | Yor the 48 states is in the neighbor- stess to official s rton, and not the Jeast of her wor- s is the necessity of keeping at her | iue’s end the proper title and pre- for those of her guests who are | hood of 160,000 and is increasing three times as fast as the population, Such ate the conclusions of Judge W. H, Thomas of Santa Ana, California, former associate justice of the Califor- Between the Farmers . mbexs of the diplomatic corps. nia District Court of Appeals, drawn [1 ‘ {n deference to the customs of a from a world: survey of marriage and | jk nocratic country, many of the for- divorce figures in preparation for ||™ \ *‘ n ambassadors and ministers, to- an American campaign for a natienal | | her with the members of their | code governing marital relations. Ea an KY i} ’ ffs and families, have coor “In contrast with our records, one tin “Mr.” “Mrs.” and “Miss” » only titles by which they addressed. Others have not, how- nd the official diplomatic list tate Department presents an dom e of fi gathered 3 i td ., r ™ A a tear ct the ensth, ‘in some| _ This is a closeup of the flag-draped casket as it Jag @p¥Me East! Room. Floral offerings from All over the country were banked hign «cor ddgua CA est pa Agate We are jh iced taal that there even appears to be a par- | around it. ee) ee ¢ “Ou: heads the list among concerns the farm ani e farmer. OO Ae So TOC loxieal divergence among the rep- sentatives of a single country. octness next encounters “Senor Don Gayangos.” the Am- and his wife Ward ae Riano.” nan Riano y osandor of Snain, Senora Dona Alici: ‘Senors,” “Senoras” and “Senoritas' rule generally amone the Latin- Americans. althouch the Argentine Tet i¢ headed by “Mr, Feline A. Fs- nil” the charce d’aftairs, while the Tirvenavan minister and hie wif stvle themselves “Dr. Jacobo Varela” and “Madame Varela.” With the Jonancce it is “Mr.” and (Madame ” The Chinese Minicter is d Sze” and his wife hint the connaelor of the Tepation is “Mr, Vane Kwai” je his wife ts “Mrs, Yone Kwai.” ery man excent twa on the German 7 dat hag the nrefix of “Dr.” and of tha tun evrentions one is a “Raran” ona the ather. aceordine ta the offic- fal Vet, ie ta he addraccad ae “Horr,” The Mm te “Rran.” Among the Ténlians it is “Sienor” and “Sig- ine nenfie Ts addition af eanren there are the nlamate and thaip wivee who he- ne te tha nohiltte and wha ean he Med hy none af thera $ilae, The Binion. “Ravan de Cacttor da Marshianna” the Rritish Ambnacadar tg “Tbh Honarn- Be. Sir Anckland Geddes.” the Hnn- warion minister is “Count Lacelo + Bzechényi,” and the Roumanian Min- ister is “Prince A. Bibesco.” The Persian list, in which only an expert ‘can separate name from prefix, is as follows: 4 “Mirza Hussein Khan Alai, Min- * ister; Bagher Khan M. Kazemi, Coun- lor; Abdullah Khan Entezam, Sec- “rethry; Hadi Khan Khatiblou, At- tache; and Sultan Mahmood Khan = Amerie, Attache,” Ambacendar fa “RUST FOUND has devolved upon the air force. BY BARBERRY FIRST OF ALL Fifty Bushels Are Found yor Farm of M. N. Ault, Near Cavalier Cavalier, N. D., Aug. 11—Heav: rusted grain in the southwestern part of Pembina county recently led to the discovery of 50 common bat- berry bushes, growing on the farm of M. N. Ault, five mles south of Cava- lier, where they were located by| Colin Stewart and Clarence Jensen, members of the barberry eradication forces in North Dakota, Badly dam- aged wheat fields gave the scouts a clew to a local source of the rust. Upon taking over the scouting in the territory south of Cavalier, the scouts found that the rust was very in- tense on the grains. Suspecting that barberries in that vicinity were the cause of the infection, they conduct- ed an intensve campaign to locate them, consulting every farmer in the district affected by the disease, Mr. Ault reported the suspicious bushes in the corner of his grove. Grasses adjacent to the bushes were heavy This is a picture of a ~ Ann~ ~ ection of the Lincoln funeral ‘cortege ds it moved through the streets of Wash- ington to the train $hat carried the body of the great emancipator back to his old home in Springfield, IIl., in 1865. eT candidates would than it would gain, Now, however, the party 5 are at liberty to use their best judg: ment. There's no reason why t shouldn't make as radical a selection as they deem-desirable. ! lose more votes leaders |No, not dead, but sleeping. WARREN G. In Memoriam HARDING divorce for every nine marriages,” Judge Thomas said, “those of France and, Germarty, our closest éompeti- tors) dwindle into insignificance. We have only one rival, Japan. Until re- ,the nations of the world in this down- Boys have been formally recognized by the courts. In 19 states there is no low restraining feeble minded _per- sons from marrying, and only three states forbid miscegentic unions, or marriages between people of differ- ent races. “Everyone is satisfied that these laws must be uniform. Hence the time for action has come. And because men have dilly-dallied about it, and Oil. What the Standard there is a very strong natural bond. Te ee . ; y : ; jward procession. In’ 1890'there were i ; iv- er eaaiencatierorenatacivan’| mite aut of dell proie tlan | Bene WHEN LINCOLN WENT BACK TO SPRINGFIELD Thlor aiohees keris ase thee 1S 2 HLS R02 BUD clea A Gila kL a ior, who as dean of the corps heads | iy imoe. “France,” says he, “is ial were 112,000, In Canada. in the whole ing him the best possible banking service. xe diplomatic list. eschews the | civ country which within the next year of 1918 thong, were, B® divorces.” ° Be iaee susaeravte ner the |(e3 ars is likely to be able to con- AvNAUPRE AIO gs he caine ant We encourage at all times a frank discussion rext name is not that of “Mrs Jus-]) °°" hilar ae nie ee ene || in commenting on our present varied of his needs and opportunities. e Beacons 1aatena dhe likb reads) lone creme “air Loudy owe are law. In nine of these states—Florida, . Madame Jusserand,” and there fol-|0t in the most remote danger of’ in- Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mis- i Sg string of “Madames” and|V@sion which comes by sea. There-| souri, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Modemoiselles.” ee ay the first bi aad ener | ike oe) a cane the common Bismarck Bank The eye of the seeker »fter cor. lite jorshomasactentemanauckat Riel jaw ages of 12 for girls and 14 for { x Bismarck, N. D. Dawa wa ue HEN the Standard Oil Com- pany was born, this country of ours was a land of scattered agri- culturistsand a few centers of struggling industry. Power was limited to the physical endurance of horse and man. Had you lived then you would have enjoyed few of the comforts which to- day are a common heritage. In one generation, living condi- tions in our country have changed completely. Today, we are a prosperous nation. Our industrial production is intensive. The world is our market. Petroleum products, created and not only will there be a new name at the ticket’s head, but the policy| 4° ; the ticket represents may be quite | Orer ithe tommewiien erpas fed; different from the one Harding's; Loving disciple, cease thy striving, lows, undaubtedlyewould have) Bale (ea a ea arate tioriact his party to. me, thow good a ‘ , and that he has noticed it on his eae mans Come to Me, I am the Way.” fields before it has appeared on those You Can't Tell The harbinger of death, of his neignbors. Me has signified] Jt looks like a pretty good bet that| Fleetingly as indrawn breath, his intention of signing an atfidavit | Coolidge won't be the nominee, un-|N his saered mission sped, with rust. Wheat fields in that ter- ritory were suffering under the load : POVERTY ENDS _|ricry‘veve sutering un , ROYAL ROMANCE)" nates he nas naa ‘a rust on his grain more than 12 years, “London, Aug. 11—The post-war peverty of many once powerful nobles has brought before the pub- lic the sad ending of a royal love af- fair. Loving vigils angels keeping manufactured by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), have made new industries possible. Individual opportunities have multi- } arated in exact ratio to the Progress of me to that effect, also including that he| jess he performs miracles in’ less paae ue summons at the Savior! ee = The story is the romance of Prin-|is firmly convinced the busnes have | than a year, for he’s classed general-| Joyously the angels sing, coss Louise of Belgium, daughter of|been:the cause of the early appear- | ly ue moce conservative than Hardng| Welcoming the great, cfosader New industrial Peactions and modern Leopold H, who married Prince Philip| ance of the disease in his own elds. | was, , To the councils of the King. errige have been made ible of Coburg, and about thirty years| instunces like the above, the scouts| And yet it’s impossible to be qiite ISABEL LIKENS GATES, - because : petroleum © ope- ago left her husband and her two] say, show clearly the relationship ot | sure. On a show-down, in the con- . H = children to elope with Captain Geza|the barberries to the rust and how,| vention, the Republican conserva- rating power. } ' * von Mattasich, a Hungarian noble-| with favorable weather conditions, a} tives may prove to be stronger than, < man, few piantings can be the source of|the progressives, sg-called, not so} ‘i ‘ Pettolanm supplied the lubricants ; = The princess was divorced by her|@ rust epidemic that will sweep over | strong as surface indications have : MF Z of husband, and Captain von Mattasich | @ large grain growing area. Through | led people to suppose. ue : needed for the speeding up of machin- ; lost his commission in the Austro-|4emonstrations at fairs and instruc-| Seemingly the man- whose chayees FR UST < ery and the consequent increased Hungarian army. Following the war| tions by the scouts, people are rap- | have been. most strengthened is Hir- ; ‘ money became scarce, and the lovers palatial residence in Vienna small village. nt The princess disputed the will of her father, who left everything to his morganatie _ wife, the Baroness Vaughan, but she lost the = Then she appealed to her sister, the Princess Stephanie Lonyay, former Crown Princess of Austria. Princess Stephanie offered to allow * Louise, who is now 64 year old, to spend the rest of her life at the beau- were compelled to move from their toa suit. idly learning to identify the barberry, and aré co-operating with the era cation forces in their efforts to de- stroy them. It is this co-operation, the barberry workers declare, which is making the campaign so success- ful this year, for without this assist- ance it would be impossible to locate every planting, since many of them are in obscure places, Scouts an- nounce their headquarters in the newspapers when they are working in a territory, thus giving the resi- dents an opportunity to giye them information of any bushes of a sus- am Johnson. Whole Outlook Changed The new outlook upsets Demoer: calculations, tbo. The Democratic leaders thought they knew just the type of man and sort of platform they'd have to oppose. The fact that they're almost certain now to have to face an altogether different type) of candidate, standing for an altoge- ther different line of policies, may! force them to change whatever cam- paign plans they’ve tentatively made. Engineers SeareK for Methods To Prevent Explosions ‘ Washington, Aug. 11—Developmeat of a method of testing the amount of explosive ‘dusts in -suspension the air at commercial plants, with the of redacieg, the number of disastrous explosions, is under way by engineers of the Bureau ef Chem- istry is the woman who With these new practices and the ew institutions- to manufacture the ’ new ucts, : gre new opportunities of af Kinde labor—for capital— 7 you have an automobile — bared g your father never. dreamed of Dorning the Department of Agricul- ture which expects shortly to an- nounce the perfection of a success- ful testing instrument. Such a de- vice, it is said, would result in the saving annually of many lives and an untold amount of property. jhe’ Processes in many industries are productive of considerable wrote the official G. 0, P. campaign song in ;192Q—“Harding- We Want j <a ae j You, Yes We Do,” whieh, was played { HENS by the Marine band at the Harding inaugural. Her memorial to the dead ident, .given. herewith, was to ‘broadcast todgy asa part of a radio memorial service at. the- time tiful castle of Orosziar, in Hungary, * on condition that she teave von Mat- : tasich. The offer was accepted, and friends now have found agother home for the penniless captain! Expert Suggests Third Party Prospect The third party movement may be | affected, as well.» Perhaps us the old | line groups’ police develope there :| won't seem to be much need of a | new one. For example, with a man cd picious tharacter, f What's Going on in | The World o- ‘ PB ad fact that yee own an automobile less significant than the fact that the of industry —dependent uy on petroleum fr it successful oper- has made’it possible for so large like Hiram Johnson in the field as a regular party nomitlee—this is just we By Charles P. Stewart Limit on Armament London, Aug. 11.—Major-General Sir Frederick Maurice, who was Chief + of Military Operatjons for Great Bri- tain during the war, declares in an article on the increase in the air forces of France and Britain that “it is high faints ae question of limita- ~ tion of taken_up ser- ; iously.’ He fae that the British * Government’s recent decision to near- ly double Englend’s present air equipment meant a return to eompe- * tition in armaments and that such competition is not likely to lead to improved relationmbetween the two : °Gauoesi Mawrled ompkasioes: Greet em] _ Britain’s sore alteaates to enter into a fhe Feduction’ of air otha NEA Service Writer What ‘effect will Harding’s* death have on the presidential fight of 1924? 2 With the tragedy so recent, ‘politi- cians have discussed the question lit- tle yet—aloud. But naturally they have ‘It much in mind. It’s generally agreed that Harding would ‘have been ‘renominated if he'd lived, However, y leading Republicans felt that public sentiment, called for & more radical candidate than ‘he. For instance, Magnus Johnson’s defeat, of-Harding’s choice, Governor Preus, in Minni esota, looked’that way, A so- calié@ © progressive nominee, these Bivabigrect agen would votes scouldn’t get. But NOT to re- him, they also believed, bd the party the support 0! joters who considered him | d an illustration and no prophecy at all—it wouldn't appear that there'd be any necessity for the progressives to name a casa of their_own. - ih 'the Ruhr England’s made up her ‘mind that unrest in Europe, kept alive, as she sees it, by France's’ course in the Ruhr, has got to stop. Premier Baldwin House of Commons last week. He offered France one jlast chance ‘to join in a rehabilitation policy which the British, he declared, intend inde: iintely to adopt. Otherwise, he added, England will go head with her plan anyway—elone or with auch help as she can get. In the’ House ‘of Lords, at the same time; Foreign Minister Lord Curzon ‘gav that: Europe is on so in the quigkly, France will yield, clouds, which, hanging finely’ sus. pended in the air, farm. a combina- tion that highly explosive. Antong the establishments in‘this edtegory are grain elevators, ‘rubber’ working plants, spice, flour and feed mills, and plants in which powdered sugar, corn starch, sulphur ‘and aluminum are “sed or manufactured, . Through a period of many years’ fires and explosions-in these and cth-| er industries have taken an immense’ ® toll... The: attention of engineers has been applied to: their: prevention; and the government has organized a lab-| ratory under the ditectionof Pavia. d. Price, in. the Department ‘of sole atady ofx‘dust explosion prevention. the seta wrlomon in ssnesaity i, thi dust! of the burial at Maridn.* 4! heen to discover how much dus! must besuspended in-the air to form an! Bu 3} mixture. While the lowest of The in- limit “was not definitely ascertained, | it’ seetis ‘to ‘range from a conti from“7 to.36° ounces of dust per thousand cubic feet of air. strumeént devised by Mr. Price and ingineers is to enable plant en- ' gineeys to-check up on this-coriditiom. igh a paper filter, and ‘com; 3 the weight ef the collected \ the #mount of air thus ansliied. é ‘ @ percentage of people to own one. Ph baa mh coor, product — the the © ‘ wel the Phe Suaderd Ol d Oil ma . ))—the brawny arms of every other industry would ‘shrivel to ust- : Without Standard Ot Com; a initiative and pe Ctearety. aon beret f giving peinie. bode deren

Other pages from this issue: