The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 17, 1923, Page 2

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LSPaeersr Stamnes 22a Hasta e so PO. = RE ~ 88 Be in aR. BE. ct KG nn ‘PAGE TWO: TELLS OF 4 - YRARS SPENT “Linton Man Declares Euro Look to America as of Paradise EDUCATION Law Allowing Students of All Nationalities to Attgnd School Wise Zont "7 trange and peculic: hans Even a short period like iy years considered from one point icw seems like age nd from an- r viewpoint it is as yesterday Ny find we reminisce we usua uch that we wish might have been c t or that we would do dif. tly if we had it to do over », but happily and on the con- I have no regrets for time sent since leaving Linton, Emmon ounty Deeember 23, 1919. This is » reflection against any thing con- THE ETHICAL SERVICE™ BUSINESS RENDERS By J. H. PUELICHER President of the American Bank- ere Association I sometimes think we lay too much stress on the technical effi- ejency of our business instrumen- talities and too little on their moral service. Is it enough to say t6 our radical opponents of the present capitalistic order that it effec- tively feeds and clothes and houses JH. Puelicher 20d furnishes us with physical com- forts and pleasures and therefore stunts us morally, if 1t does not ively make us better ethically, ft is an inadequate system. The genera] answer to this as- fertion 1s obvious. The very fact that our industry, commerce and finance serve us so amply with the materials and means for physical well-being gives us the opportuni. ky to~build and support our hurches, to foster the arts, to de- welop our great educational system, to be kind to one another. } But need we deal in generall- nected with North Daktoa or the Mes? Do,we not find/in the direct vod old U. S. A. for the longer any seal American is away from his na- ffect of our business upon the in- vidual much to improve his ethi- tive land and the farther he gets pal standards? To toughen his mor- away from it the more he learns to love it and the greater attraction it has for him. Continually we are com- ing in contact with poor fellows who have enjoyed the riches and pleas- ures of America for a number of years and for various reasons have gone back to their old homes and have been caught in a war ruined country without the necessary prooi of American citizenship. Their money soon disappears even though it is dollars, the worlds standard medium of exchange today. Such fellows are really, “Men without a country” and the most pathetic sight imaginable. Any American who finds it difficult to appreciate his country should visit his foreign passport bureaus in the Near East and sce the thousands clamoring 101 admittance to this one and only spot in the world which seems ta_them a arudj.e. It is not my idea to writ ) ,0u about America except to help ,04 a tuiler appreciation ‘oi souatry. Living in Turkey ling that I had las od on the rim o unt Vesw 1 fiber? Is it not good for the per- onal character of the race to do usiness a8 we are now doing it? Let us take the business of bank- fing, for example. Is it a mere echanism or is it a vital moral jorce? Does it do more than, by acilitating production, raise the hysical standard of living, or is ere anything inherent in the anner and methods of banking hat raises the moral standard of living as well? Nine-tenths of ofr business is lone by means of credit. The great bulk of that credit is obtained from, the banks. It is obtained from the banks because men have character, }-because they are honest, because they keep faith—because they can be trusted. e 1 If they did not have these quall- ties they could not do business with credit, they could, not do business at the banks. We say banks deal in credit. That is but a way of baying they deal in honor and hon- esty. They build the business Structure with the faith of man in man. The part banking playg in our IL you Linger enjoy- hat nothing will Constantinople returning over the re Ndbere line of retreat of the defeated Greek Vonstantin- atmy coming out of Anitolia at Smy- seemed that we Yna dnd returning to Constantinople isis which tinople W Colle 3 col Resin Turkey as most of their Mmiehts were foreigners, however Turkish government has, lately ver move on the part of the high- *r officials which, has, gained much | iavor with the foreign population. “For centuries Turkey has shown | inability to form a stable and strong government and the whole world is tooking this way at this time won- dering just what success she is go- ing\to have now with this new, un- abe Povernment, the Grand Nation- al Assembly, at-Angora. “In April I had the great privilege of visiting “Angora and confering personally with Rouf Bey, then Prime Minister, and Fetie Bey, Min- gster of the Interior, and who is now “Prime Minister. “At a later date I will write a de- sscription of this trip to Angora from Piles Can Be Cured Without ‘Surgery and! wisely passed a law admitting cadents into her country irrespec- | of nationality. This was a very | An. inst! ive ae has been pub- McCleary, the list of Kansas by way of the island of Patmos and Athens.” MANILA FAVORS AMERICAN SHIPB Munila, Ogts 17—American ships carrie ost oug-half of the tota foreiy ade of the Philippine 1. i during the first jsix months of this year, according “to custonis What: a busigess life ts growtiig. ‘That! means that the faith of men in! HIRD PRIZ ‘ each other is growing. The more men who come to the banks with charactets that entitle them to that to gain credit at the banks,, they must - possess themselves, E y with characters that win them un-, Muriel Benson Is the Winner questioned trust, the higher be. cofmen the ethical standards of the Of One of Lahr Motors nation. | Is not this a great moral real Latte | & fce that banking renders? It is a. greater justification for our pres.| Winner of third prize in the prize | ent Qnancial system than even its ©sa¥ contest conducted by the Lahr Wewaertat éMcioncy ih iproviaing| Moet costae cit ae ee Ni veaivee material things of life. | odel of the Overland: is Miriel NO gre daraa bn May could be rem | Ronson of 622 Sixth street, Bismarck. | Essays of the two previous prizi : ‘winners have been published, The . jessay of Muriel Benson answers AMERICA’S NEW PLACE [first a number of questions, naming ‘3 | har@pions of various lines in Amer Many Americans fancy that“be. |i!) 22d the fellows: cause labor is well employed and MY CHAMPION our industries have been reporting pion “is the Ove substantial earnings and improve. | r This automobile the depression poriod, | MO! everyone Knows is Amertea’s oy has veen restored, The versatile” car. Everyone ought to see the demonstration of this car at truth is, wha t we must consider |rahr Motor Sales . Company on normal in the future wilf'be an en- | Fourth Street. wis dtepiatse aoe area what | Now, if I were old enough and nero ona ecomae prior to! considering the fact that I had , , OUF new | enough money I would promptly. go Place in the world as the leading |down to the Motor Sales Company creditor nation. That change is aj and purchase an Overland “Cham- permanent one. We are not gothg| pion”. This done I would learn to to return to the old position of | drive it. This accomplished my great debtor nation, Bankers in the ag-| adventure would begin. : ricultural communities have come} I would go (at least. plan to) td to the conclusion that we cannot Glacier National Park and Mount afford to maintain an attitude of | Rainier National Park. isolation and that opinion is not a| About June fifteenth I would start personas one. The men I have | °¥t from Bismarck. On the first day talkedswith are voicing the ideas| ¥,°ud Teach Glendive, Montana of the people with. Whosi'. they nae engine trouble and using have dally" business contact jess gas than other cars touring that way. This would show ; that th A great many politico-economists | Overland has a fine engine) i have warned against America’s en-| The next day I would reach Great trance into the European situation, | Falls, Montana. I would have climb- asgerting that our foreign trada|ed four mountains. Rather high makes up less than 20 per cent of | ones too. @hat would show the our production, and therefore is too | Overland has power and endurance. small an item to be vital or to risk | My car would be way ahead of the our investment in. They forget, and | Cther. cars too. Most of the cars I most people who have listened to| Would meet would be Overlands too. | them forget, that the unimportant | In Sbout six days I reached my ef . 20 per cent is the difference be- | ‘imation. tween full employment of our in-|,, While other cars would be con- dustries and labor and much unem. | ‘i™¥0Usly being repaired, mine was ployment and business depression. |” creel lent ishape, When I hi i If a manufacturing enterprise is very Sesuaaeras Chan cHRETECS running at 90 per cent of capacity. | one would exclaim,” thats the best it may be making a fairly good | tooking car I’ve nm and coming showing of earnings, but it is mot | 1492 miles! I must get an Over- running at normal and ig not earn-| land “Champion.” ’ Many people ing the margin whieh {it should | would buy “Champions” and would earn in order to be fully prosper- {thank me for telling, them to buy ous. It appears obvious that we | “Champions” and all about the Over- shall have to build up foreign in- | land's fine points. ; vestnients in this country. But it | On my journey home I would: be will be necesary to go slowly in | @Pfy because I had bought an the matter of foreign investments, | Overland and also because I would! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BATTLEFIELD OF THE WINDS | of destruction through the state. not and cannot describe the | Champion. Go to see it and buy one too. “Three cheers for the Overland Champion.” Do I hear them? Yes. Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah! Cham- pion! Champion! comes floating mi way on one of those balmy breezes of North Dakotan air. [LOYD GEORGE ASKS U. 8. TO AID EUROPE Desvlation and ruin were left behind when a terrific windstorm struck Nebraska and cut a wide swath Photo shows one of the hardest hit sections where roof tops were cleaved | off 2s though by a giant sickle, and giamt trees uprooted.” core.’ 25] SCHUBERT SONGS IN “BLOSSOM TIME” ~ WIN APPROVAL OF CROWDED HOUSE did not disap- not uncommon frailty before a pair of darting eyes kept most of the au- dience bubbling with laughter on his every appearance, although his. sal- | lies at times were crass enough to hush an incipient outburst. Gertrude Lang “Blossom Time” point the ‘many who had awaited the coming of the operetta founded of the fine sentiment of ‘tri- bute to the life's endeavor of a great composer who endowed the with some of its richest and most appealing melodies. which filled every nook and crook of the Auditorium effervesced with ap- preciation of the sympathetic ‘adap- tation of the melodious strains of Franz Schubert, the Viennese com- poser whose flame passed in 182 | Druggists als d appeared in the Teading feminine role. that of Mitzi. Cunning and cute and possessed of a voice which carried well with Ralph Soule as Baron Franz Schober and Hollis Davenny gs Franz Schubert rendition of the strains of the compositions. g The Weather Speaking in Minneapolis, For- mer English Premier Voi- ces Appeal to Help , Minneapolis, Oct.’ 17.—An appeal for the United States to help Europe make peace was made here yester- day by David Lloyd George, war time prime minister of Great Britain, in his first public address in this country after concluding: his tour of Canada. Speaking before many hundred persons at a luncheon given ‘by the Minneapolis Civic and Confmerce As- sociation, the former premier said: “I am not here on any mission, but until the United States of America, with its mighty influence, with its great power, with the moral com- mang which it has in the world be- cause of its past, with the great claim that you won by coming into the war without any selfish purpose but for a holy ideal, sending mil- There must be assurance that | 7% have to stop along the way to! lions of your best young men across whatever we loan will be used for productive purposes.—William H Knox, Second Vice-President, near home I was happier. ; When I reached Bismarck people American Bankers Association, and back. Why that car is a won- der. I must get ne.” ‘ The amount of trade carried in al!| Two weeks later as I see them Lovtoms to and from the islands dur-| ot riding in thelr new SSA ng the first half of the year amount- | thank me like this, “Gee I'nf glad I d to $108.886,000, an increase of |‘00k your advice and bought an ose than $20,000,000 over the for-| Overland “Champion” They're d=ndy. | trade of the same } Ou 01, 1922. They pre “dandy” cars as unt American ships car- |!” Slaney friend says. fed 5,866 But I have said enough nov British vessels ranked second in| ™y adventure. The few volumn of Philippine trade with | @te.so fine looking with suc Mf this poor third ‘with only a littley more|and such a fine new, high powered han $4,500,000 worth of trade to| engine. . the'r credit. Again, I have said enough. Words the World. Is (Doing CAS SEEN BY POPULAR cMECHANICS cMAGAZINE Hollow Log Is Wireless Set of Wild Jungle Tribes ‘\ Long before the first modern radio set came into being the wild South American tribes that live in dense for- ests and grase-covered plains near the equator, had “wireless” outfits made from the trunks of hollow trees. For "yt the ji cited the proach of ted by one of these instruments which, it is said, can be heard for many miles, is like the dull, distant boom of a cannon. y ; eee. balloons. Off the ground, they remain | Useful Clamp for Stepladdes either motionless or slowly paddle yeti themselves along with their webbed 2 yoke and useful clamp for th feet, not unlike the flight of a dragon |*t¢Pladder, that serves as a rest fo fly, but lacking in its speed. The crea- |0kding windows while setting th panes or painting, ean be made froig tures have bills like ducks. ; Fighting Fire with Steam Saves Many Oil Wells In the great oil fields of the West, where the ever-present danger of fire haunts the drillers, steam has been}. found to be one of the most effective means of combating the flames. As a flasks of lightning, a spark from a piece of metal, or a lighted match, may start a blaze that will result in the destruc- raisari nage aay hgh. are in i to fight them, as pieces of oak about 234 ft. lon; water Would only aid ‘their spread. | wi i 5 ‘cents 2 ate a ¥ o of | ith ® bolt passing throtigh the center liquid fire, it is surrounded by a sand embankment to catch the blazing oil; move the wingnut to attach the clamp, | pools. A | Iq Saskatchewan it was decided | A claus in the Alberta pool con: |per cent of the acreage was not signed up, whs omitted from ile Sas- |\katchewan . contract. : ! | | of both as shown; #wingnut is provided on the bolt. It id not necessary to re \ithe clamp over one leg of ler from the inside, and then over the other leg, after which the Fillirig Auto Vacuum Tank have my engine fixed. When I/was| to fight—until this great land” casts | its influencé into the scale of peace, I despair of the future.” brought to the role of Franz Schu-|®—"~ bert the loneliness of isolated gen- ius that added conviction to the tra- and the skillful interpolation of cori edy which lost effectiveness only ,if pressed to a point where it held’ a note to those who found the st charm of the presentation in its music and beauty. Ralph Soule sang with ‘great personal Bruzovna, a product of the Russian operatic stage, as Bellabruna, gain- ed power: over her audience as she progressed in her difficult role, her work culminating with a bit of com- edy entwined in the song “Keep It Dark” in the Jast act which brought her generous applauge. differed much erally fair tonight and ‘Thursday. ‘ical comedy in| Cooler tonight. excellently and charm. Helen known to every tongue from the con- stant flaunting of their names public print have received so many curtain calls as last night. ally, those pessimists in North Da- kota today might have had a change of heart had they seen that“a worth- while play brought $2,106.00 into the Auditorium in one night. Franz Schubert left “The Unfin- ished Symphony,” The legend which founded the theme of the opera was that the composer had found the inspiration for it in an unrequited love for one of his pupils. Dorothy Donnelly, who wrote from the average mi its technique and its settings. Parti- cularly fine was the drawing room| tonight and Thursday. Cooler to- let me say to you one thing, that | setting in the second act, in which | night. was introduced the toe dancing of were in harmony ‘with the ,” held close enough to the tra- dition to enrich the music with a “The “Song of Love,” which captivated the audience, con- tained the strains of Schubert’ : phony, Schubert's famous “Seren- ade” was rendered in the first act. warm . theme. would say, “Way out to Washington! Referring to a statement that! Americans were doing their best to | forget the recent world war, he urged that they do noteforget. “There is nothing,” he said, “for | you to forget—nothing. There i something fr you to be proud of. You came for naught but at the call | of a great purpose and.a great ideal. | It ought to be your pride. The part you took in it is one whieh is worthy of your greatest traditions. And my ne | last word is that so far from forget 0,506. Japanese ships made a| body an@ such luxurious cushions | ting that part, I trust that the Unit. jed States of America will once more | jin due time, in its own way, cast its | Canadian Farmers | great might into the scales of peace.” | Have Wheat Pools) a | Winnipeg, Man., Oct. 17—Western | 'Canadian farmers will sell much of this year’s wheat crop through wheat that a board of directors should oper- | ate the pool for three months, by’ j Which time, ét is expected, crrange- } | ments will have been made for the !elecNon of a board by contract hold- | Ors. | turn over to the representatives of | the contract holders a_completel; | equipped marketing machine in oper That the provincial board will ation. ing signatories to vith- a specified time if 50 10,000,000 § Schooi Children ® 3 need Mf % scoTTs + WemuisionN our Hea PREVENTIVE for aen Large See i eee ity Teddy Webb, a veteran’ comedian | of the stage, left with an indelible stamp of approbation of his audi- His simulation of a joyous old inebriate should make hi popular so long as the world has left a touch of good humor for the yacil- lations of pre-prohibition days, whch perhaps will be far beyond his days before the footlights. jgood “will and buffoonery and his Fletcher's Castoria has, where recommend it. been in use for over 30 years as a rops and Soothing Syrups, Contains Proven directions are! oy each package. Physicians every-| " Business Directory * WEBB BROTHERS Embalmers Funeral Directors _ Licensed Embalmer in Charge DAY PHONE 246 | Undertakers HONEY“TAR ESTABLISHED 1875 >| No Opiates, Ingredients printed on Wrapper INSIST UF FOLEY’S '7imerica’s Home Shoe Polish: SHINOPA HOME SET: ‘All Children Should Get aShinola ~~ Home Set to Use With Shinola A genuine bristle dauber and big lamb’s wool polisher give quick, easy, and economical shines! ‘ - ‘The polish to.choose for family. shoes —SHINOLA ‘improves the appearante the shoes. wear . longer: ines in handy key-opening box! . Black, Tas, White, Ox-blood, Brown The SNne.for Mine” n ? “) [OOo ao ere anne SION A LEE LIE geen _ |. \ “WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER™17,°1923 ~ ASPIRIN: Say “Bayer” and Insist! Unless you ‘see the nante “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over. twen- y ty-two years and proved sefe by mil- lions for j iedil Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package con- tains proper directions. Handy box- es of twelve tablets cost few cents. sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- sidester of Salicylicacid. {“Only One Love Ever Fills ‘The Heart,” and “Let Me awake.” | ° For twenty-four hours ending at noon, Temperature at 7 a. m. 45. Temperature, at noon 60. Highest yesterday 66. Lowest yesterday 46. Lowest last night. 45. Precipitation 0. \Highest wind velocity 12. . Weather Forecast Bor Bismarck and vicinjty: Gen- 4 For North Dakota: Generally’ fairy 7 Weather Conditions The low pressure area is centered entire| over Minnesota and Manitoba this presentation and the cast which was|-morning and precipitation occurred advertised as the original New York] in the Great: Lakes ‘region and Mis- Century theater company was uni- formly acceptable. “Song of Love” ‘was by sissippi Valley. Showers also oc- curred along the north Pacific coast far the | and at scattered places in the north- most charming and beautiful melody| ern Rocky Mountain region. Moder- of the fine array of songs, which in-| ate tem, cluded the “Serenade,” “My Spring- time Thou Art”, “Tell Me Daisy,” peratures prevail in all sec- tions. Orris W. Roberts, Meteorologist. ————— ——————————————— CHILDREN CRY FOR “CASTORIA” Especially Prepared for Infants and Children of .Al Ages The kind you have always bought bears signature i eae . G . NIGHT PHONES 246-887 ‘PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 100 Night Phone 100 or 687 rc] s ‘25¢ and 15¢

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