The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 5, 1923, Page 3

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1923 GIRL PROBLEM RURAL ALSO Not Confined to Big Cities,| Says Social Worker, Here The problem of delinquency among girls is not confined to big cities alone, Miss Virginia C. Young, rep- resentative of a branch of the Nation- al Committee on Prisons and Prison | Lzbor, said in Bismarck today. Miss | Young is completing a tour in which | she is investigating conditions in state in the union. We are often accustomed to think- | ing that such problems aré confined to urb: population alone,” Miss Young said. “When you slook out r the glorious prairies of North kota you think nothing could ever xo wrong up here. But you have many problem especially big problem in the great number of | migratory harvest workers that come through here every year. And it is the women that suffer.” Miss Young visited-the state train- chool at Mandan and the state prison in Bismarck, and will visit | the Florence Crittendon home in Zo. 1 am especially pleased with the progress being made in the state training school at Mandan,” said s Young, who has visited the in- stitution before, Among other things, she said, her organization was seeking to interest club women of: the nation in the problem of juvenile delinquency. pas Bee mS ag Jap Disaster | Worst ’Quake || | In History || Ost eore = >| Tokio, Japan, 7,000 killed; Nov. 11, 1855. Arica, Chile, 500 killed by earth- qua ake and tidal wave which carricd | two American warships inland one mile over roofs of town; Aug. 13, 1868. Malay Archipelago, 36,380 killed by earthquake, voleanic eruptions and tidal wa Aug. 26, 1883. Sabkiru district, Japan, 30,000 kill-| ed by earthquake and tidal waves; June 15, 1896, Formosa Island, Japan, 1200 ixilled; Keb. 7, 1906. \San Francisco, Cal., 500 killed by thquake and fire; property loss} 000,000; April 18, 1906. ‘alparaiso, Chile, 1500 killed; 16, 1906. Kingston, Jamaica, 1100 killed} Jan. 14, 1907, Isle of Sicily and Calabria Pe: . sula, Italy, 76,483 killed, 95,490 i jured, 11 towns destroyed; Dec. 2 e: Aug. , 1910, y, 3000 killed; Aug. 9, 1912 Japan, 430 killed, 20,000 ss in earthquake and eruption; 1914, 200 killed; May 8, 1914. Aquila, Caserta and Rome provin- ces, Italy, 29,978 killed, Avezzano des- troyed; Jan. 13, 1915, Guatemala City, Guatemala, 2506 killed; Dee. 24, 1917. Mugalla Valley, Italy, 160 killed, 16 villages damaged; June 29, 1919. Aguadilla, Porto Rico, 116 killed; Oct. 11, 1919. Orizaba district, Mexico, 3000 kill- ed; Jan. 3, 1920. Mendoza Province, Argentina, 175 killed; Dee. 17, 1920. Southern Albania, 300 killed, 700 hurt, 10,000 homeless; Dec. 18, 1929, and Jan, 2, 1921, Kansu Province China, over 100,000 killed by earthquake and exposure: Dee. 26, 1920, Coquimbo, Chile, 2500 killed in earthquake and tidal waves sweeping 200 miles of coast and damaging 10 cities and towns; Nov. 11, 1922, Aomari, Hakodate and Kushui 13- land, Japan, 150 killed; Dec. 10-15, 1922, homel Jai —— <> | The Weather |: eo © For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly overcast tonight and Thursday. Coel- er Thursday and west portion to- night, For North Dakota: Partly over- cast tonight and ‘Phursday. Cooler | Thursday and west portion tonight. | General Weather Conditions An area of lew pressure is center- ed over Saskatchewan this morning | and precipitation has fallen over the Canadian Northwest, in the Great Lakes region and in the middle Mis- sissippi Valley. Elsewhere the weather is generally fair. Tempera- tures have risen considerably over the north-eastern Rocky Mountain re- gion, but elsewhere temperature changes have been slight. North Dakota Corn and Wheat Re- gion Summary For the week ending Sept. 4, 1923. Favorable weather for fall work prevailed throughout the week, but rains interfered somewhat in Ram- sey County. Shock threshing of spring wheat, oats and barley is prac- tically ‘completed and stack thresh- ing has begun; Flax is mostly har- vested and some flax threshing has begun with good to excellent yields. | Corn is maturing rapidly and most of it is out of danger of Arost. The potato harvest is progressing with fair yields. Corn cutting, silo fill. ing and haying is progressing rapid- ly. Very little rain occurred during the week, but fall feed is generally | plentiful and -livestock is in good condition. North Dakota Carn and wheat ° re 8, & Bottineau . Bowbells Devils Lake 80 48 Dickinson 82 50 j wrecked the major le Louis Guisto, The b who, during the spring si urtago Costa Rica, 1500 killed; Dunn Center . Ellendale . Fessenden Grand Forks Jamestown 2 a FS a SSSq0PSooooooooN 220qq%%QQA0%K0 7 Pembina . 82 42.0 C Williston . . 80 62 0 PC Moorhead 82-48 0 C C, clear; partly cloudy. KF J, Bavendick, Temporarily in charge. TULSA FEARS | MILITARY LAW Tulsa, Okla., Sept. 5—Tulsa citi- were apprehensive today lest more} vigorous imposition of martial law| regulations should follow open defi- | ance of state military authorities by |a masked band that abducted W. J. Matthews, a mechanic, and attempted to flog him. Wounds Wreck Guisto’s Career Cleveland, Sept. 5—Gas wounds received in the World War have e career of t baseman on, gave promise of becoming one of the best i cifie C unconditional re land Indians on r his p Guisto became a member of the In- dians in 1916. Then came the war, commendations of Guisto seeing service in France| was gassed. He returned | where he to America in poor physica] condi- tion. Since then he has be@ unable to stand the eastern climate. After playing the Oakland team in| sue during the 1919] the Pa and 1 fie led seasons, Guisto reported to the Cleveland club at the spring train- ing camp, but his health failed to stand the strain and he was permit- ted to return to On d. He again joined the Indians in 1922 and remained with the tribe the bal- ance of the season. He was given a chance to break into the game when “Stuffy” McInnis was hurt, and play- ed splendid ball until he met with | an injury which kept him out of the game many weeks. It was on his showing that Man-} ager Speaker decided to part witi| McInnis last winter. Joining the In-| dians at Lakeland this spring, Guisto made a great effort to fulfill Speak- | er’s expectations. His play during the spring training trip was a fea- ture of the Indians’ work. Guisto was sent home when the team reached New Orleans to consult the club physician. He got into the game when the season opened, but was unab’ to get back into the stride h ad shown in the south, and eventually was replaced at the initial bag by Frank Brower. Shoulder Stoop Causes Old Age Portsmouth, Sept 5.—Dr. Peter MacDonald startled the British Medi- cal Association conference here by stating that a stoop of the shoulders causes old age—a direct inversion of the popular theory. He said that by following the ad- vice of a layman he threw a score of years from his shoulders. “I was feeling old and decrepit,” explained Dr. MacDonald, “when I} had been reported was rai picked up a book, published by this layman, from a bookstall. I was then a premat@rely aged man, “I saw the author, and he told me that I was old simply because I stooped. Under the treatment he laid down I threw off my stoop, and in a few weeks I became a different man,” Dr. MacDonald is an upright, sprucelooking man, with an eyeglass and when he stretched himself to his full height and carefully adjusted his monocle he looked barely thirty years of age. “We doctors,” he said, “are too pre- judiced against laymen who make a study of a certain subject, and often learn more than we do, despite all our knowledge of medicine and sur- gery. “We have accepted the idea that the stoop of the shoulders and the bend of the neck are inevitably link- | ‘ed up with old. age. “I know it will sound unorthodox to you all to sugest that old age is brought on by this stoop of the shoulders, but I have been convincéd that it is so; the stance of the body seems to be bound up with the period one can live, and if every man would | hold himself upright he would live | many years longer. Latest circular saw is of paper which, driven at high speed, cuts through a plank of wood as easily as steel, NOTICE! Continue boiling city water. City Health Officer. Dancing! McKenzie Roof Garden — Tuesdays, Thurs- days and Saturdays. 10c e Coolest spot in Bis- GINGER. ALE 'S ONLY arate FOUNTAINS YOUR DEALER WAS /T FOR SALE—Jiffy Washing Tablets WAD FOR SALE—New 1923. Hupmobile FOR SALE—2 chairs, 1 rocker, cre- FO é t MODERN home for rent.--Hedden Too Late To Classify ————"* SUM OF MONEY found. Call at stamp window, post office and pay for ad. 9-5-3t FOR RENT—Rooms at 200 Ave. D. 9-6-3t a bleacher. 407 llth St. Phone A78W. 9-5-lw NTED—Girl for general house- work. Mrs. E. V. Lahr, 15 Ave. B. 9-5-3t FOR SALE—320 acre improved farm or would trade for house and ibe in Bismarck, 9- touring, # real automobile at bargain price, Almost new E Coupe, run only 1500 miles. consider a trade or first paper. Telephone 488 or write T bune No. 630. 9 tonne covered wicker, and 1 large mirror. Fliea Barr, No. 7. Person Court. Phone 851R or 49J. YOR RENT--Fron, three room vn- furnished apartment at Phone 614. teer- tire. six weeks; Motometer, large ing wheel, bumper and extr Reasonable price. Write 6 able price; run 8,000 miles; good shape, Write 687, care Tribune. ime a 9-5-3t WANTED—Lady for repairing ladies aners e | and men’s clothes, City C Dyers. 9 FURNISHED ROOM for rent in ne house, suitable for two. — Across | | from High School, 712 7th Phone W. o-5 Real Estate Agency. Phone 0. D-0-2t 10, 000. People Fleeing From Tokio'Are Trapped (Continued from Page One.) from Osaka received here this af- ternoon. The dead include the Amer- ican and British consuls. STATION OPENED San Francisco, Sept. 5.The Radio Corporation here was advised here to- day that Sunabashi wirel ation 10 miles east of Tokio was opened today and was transmitting and re- ceiving Japanese and American gov- ernment messages. AMERICANS SAFE Washington, Sept. 5.—All Amer- icans in Tokio are*believed safe, Am- bassador Woods reported today to the state department, Estimates of the dead in Tokio were placed by the ambassador at 10,000. He stated that some Americans in Yokohama heen killed. Communication with Yokohama, he said, had been opened. ‘ANS DEAR the American commercial he «ut Yokohama, E. G. Babbitt, dead, New York, Sept. 5.—Doubt as whe- ther the Bonin island lying southeast of Yokohama had been struck by th earthquake which rocked Japan ed this afternoon when the Commercial Ca- ble company announced that the sta- tion on Peel island, one of the group, had spoken to Guam repeatedly since the catastrophe. ONE MILLION HOMELESS New York, Sept. 5.—Two official messages received today at the of- fices of the Japanese consul-general éstimated the gasualties in Tokio and vicinity from the earthquake at 160,- 000 with one million persons home- less. Dancing: McKenzie Roof Garden — Tuesdays, Thurs- days and Saturdays. 10c dances. Coolest spot in Bis- marck, jprouine NGS See your doctor. Vicks, how- ever, will G the irritation, VICKS IicKS Over 17 Million Jara Used Yearly DR. M. E. BOLTON Osteopathic Physician 119% 4th St Telephone 240 Bismarck, N. D. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ROTARY CLUB . READY TO AID FAIR PROJECT (Continued from Tage One.) Nother states which made a big feature of corn shows. Want Exposition he said the farmers came asked why there war where they could show j which oie new when he reache s ‘ d Carl Nelson | acting Geenpine tba Or the|and lower Canada, He told of the which | progress in diversified farming and | typifies a familiar farm operation in| the prosperous appearance of thos diversified: sections only. Several vacationists who have | turned home told of th Dr. Quain reiated interesting featur fifth trip to the Black Hil stating that those wh tion trips could be divi sses, the high brows al and art centers of the| Adrian, M effete east; the medium high went to the Magnus Johnson state capital was the toe and that now was the oppor- tune time to” make Bismarck the corn | center of a wide area, ‘that in 1920 Gevaeen “girenitureant adds aoa" in- se was noticenble each year. Ray Bergeson endorsed the project brows | kane, Wa and} — ot | : s close to nature frequenting -out spite aid could be secured y roads and getting close is show of state wide declared that the never lost their were within ¢ Rotary, said that th idually HHYOuEH tion of Commerce, Ls i When they auld be R SALE—Ford touring car, ron | seal UlPNORys Serer cclairntrd | n told of a busi with uppropria | presented Judy e Christianson with » George panes care | Tribune, 9-5-3t | FOR SALE—Dodge sedan; reason- .. He ae that soc- with which to pursue gardening while L. K, Thomps m gave! fied an’this and that the CAPITOL THEATRE TONIGHT. AND THURSDAY ‘PLL FIGHT YOUR GANG ALONE ie girl in all motion picture history has ever earned eater right to your love, admiration and applause ten the daughter of the K superb, who holds the vast shipyards left by her father —who fights the crooks, the gangsters, the adventurers whg seek to crumble her empire of wealth. Keoghs, gentle, Mar$hall Neilan offers his supreme motion picture achievement, a true, sweeping masterpiece of screen entertainment. 5.—The family of WITH 23 FAMOUS STARS! are all LAST TIMES Tonight WEDNESDAY MONTE BLUE as DR. WILL KENNICOTT FLORENCE VIDOR AS CAROL “MAIN mer Sinclair Lewis’ Popular Story that made the world Don't Miss It. fit up In surprise, Great Cast of Character Actors Shines in-a hurry— Saves leather and worry!” Keeps the shoes trim and tidy. Gives the look and feel of: prosperity. Black, Tan, White, lightning. Everybody's: saying it’s Oxblood, Brown Everyday in everyway you need the SHINOLA Home Set. Gertaine bristle dauber cleans the shoes and applies the polish and the big lamb’s wool polisher brings the shine like -“The. Shine for Mine" I'v, Quain certain tools commonly | the one crop plan was everywhere known as first mice to auto-tourist. | evident. He returned very well satis- fied with the conditions in the Slope rew, ard J. Leonard Bell | eeotion, pie enti Magnus Johnson fox trot or probably will | P. Jackson qualifying in the ghebrow class of vacationists told interesting trip through the water and auto, Many histor- al points were visited in New York st b | localities that were dotted’ with cat- | tle and silos. J.C. Taylor and Hal Dobler were amed as 2 committee from Rotary lt assist in the commemoration of nt on yacu- | Constitution Day. into three; The following were gues of hon- Allen, y, Spo- or: E. J. sh. NAMES IS NAMES Kennington, Eng., Sept. 5.--A man named Death recently won his lover ty, following conviction on ciars assaultin police ¢ use he braved death so 1 in the late war with military honor, SAILING, SAILING Southampton, Eng, § trians who a Hamburg. to New York ima oot ketch have just put into this SYNCOPATION! V2 nn BB ee es ii STUPENDOUS WORLDS SENSATIONAL FECURD BE ANG HAL CORED oem, INES! OF FUN AKERS BLUES SINGERS QUART port. The distance 3688 miles| Dancing! McKenzie Root Horseshoes worked into the boat are| Garden — Tuesdays, Thurs- expected to bring good luck. days and Seluranya: 10c Henry Sullivan, h Channel, has “ith a check for 1000] Beulah Lignite Coal is Best. 5000, oftered by ©"! $4.75 per ton. Order now. fl 4 nition of Sullivan's bravery in mak-| Wachter Transfer Co. Phone | ing the success‘ul attempt. 62. London, ‘Sept. 5 who swam the 3 Edward Hulton, We have spent.37 years build- ing a distrtt pution system to give you good s¢ ervice every- Thus, with the 5¢ highest possi ible where. price, quality in a eves in easy reach of on aiseh all. AUDITORIUM fists’ SEPT. 6th THE SHOW THAT SET NEW YORK, BOSTON, CHICAGO AND THE ENTIRE COUNTRY IN A WHIRL OF JAZZ AND Entirely Different From Any Thing You Have Ever Seen! SEATS ON SALE—PRICES.... MAIL ORDERS WITH ENCLOSED CHECKS. NOW. | PAGE THREB rae Coolest spot in Bis- One Murphy Bed and Steel Kitchen in Every home. Saves two rooms. It also saves $500.00 in cost of home. Write A. J. OSTRANDER for information. Bismarck, N. D. ye Sue Lee Y= za AT? OR( HESIRA To oo

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