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‘ th 4 type i eee s E hibition ‘will, no do 2AGE TWO MID prow A DAT mnrmesares N.D.MAN TELLS «OF CRISIS OF TURK VICTORY «Splendid Setting in Red and : White Prepared for Entry | of Victorious Army e story of the climax of the $ seen by an Amer- n in the New East at that time told by Lester Briggle, of Linton secretary of the Constantinople Wo. men’s College. The description fol- low: Two weeks ago I promised a de- scription of my trip to Angora but the events of the last few.days have been so great for Turkey and Con- stantinople that it would be to bad to put them ‘off. They are easier to write about now and will be much fresher for you if you get them at this time. Today is the ober The Turkish gr tan- tinople on the liv- Ing completly under Tur- kish rule. foreigners have hid their of the possibility of some accident that the author night not’ be able to cope with and consequently life has been miserable ax them for many days and they J have cast un unnecessary gloom bout their friends \ “The fifth and sixth of October {i go into Turkish History as dates »t* the est importance. the fifth was spent getting th ed troops of the whole Turkish army PO EE re ssembled at Hadar Pasha on the a RORY Akiatic side of the Bosphorus, pre- Greyhound racing at night is r: paratory to the Grand entry into the ity proper on the yxth and indeed hothing was done by halves and the at Atlantic City, New Jersey. been a grand event fitting to the un- bounded joy of the Victorious Tur- Nation. . Regardless of what feet above the track kigh tion or enemy of Turkey the world ili be obliged to gi great a bang here without the sfightest credit for having m: ef- tilting, and the poor foreig who {ott in reentering and taking 01 not adjust himself will simply t national city Truly, we | in proper © tom ve a right to expect this atmosp out ang inté a wetter but I mention it for the benefit of “I believe that nearly wll foreign- those who think it impossibie. ers remaining in Constantinople are Setting For Event well pleased with the way the new decorating #°vernment has taken over the man- agement of aff The remaining. ak for the ipl to adustersis ihe duction, and attraction of outside \“Days were spent in and. making the proper setting for the great event. There are very few people in the world that have the | duct Dn natural ability or knack to stage a c#pital into Turkey, With this, con great event like this as the ‘Turk fillence is assureg and prosperity is has, Nearly his whole color scheme | Sure to follov is’ red and white. The Turkish flag | is red with aleresent aud star in the] STATE HAIL _ fay and striking colors and wnen! ~~» FUTURE NOW IS DISCUSSED this old city is flagged and decorated in real Turkish fashion it is a uni- que sight nowhere else to be found. “The main thorofare of the city! (Continued from Page 1) ience before the court as a repre- beginning with Seraglio point, where! Mr. Olsness said “I think the ex- ative of Germany in the Wimble- the troops land onthe European| trem fa ng condi-}don case and two others concerning Side of the Bosphorus, across the | ti en as the!lthe rights of German minorities in famous old Galata bridge, extending} principal one. the whole length of Pera to Taxime,|. “Particular! this apply toy Schiffer says President Hard- where the tr@ops nded to the; wheat,” he nd no doublt this] ing's advocacy of American particiy various barracks, Was one solid} ounts “for strange fact that | tion in the court puts the ‘court in stretch of decorations consisting of | although thousand = more:a newslight as American participa- every conceivable design worked out! losses were reported this year than! tio would give a certain guarantee in elaborate triumphant © arches] in 1921, the liability of the fund is|of impartial judgment. ‘This action across thé~streets and huge frame-| about $100,000 1c This of the late President of the United ; works in front of |fincipal stores; can be accounted for Im ; States has in a measure, in the opin- and office buildings covered . with| that a great many f jion of Dr. Schiffer, causéd Germany green branches and the most elabor-| part of their crop st promis-/ to renounce iyg.distrust in the court, ate and beatiuful Turkish and Per-| ing fields, but \ retain the insur-| os the Amegie@h’ effort’ to .separate sian rugs, interwoven with red, white | ance on the and green electric lights which when | ing a lighted at night gave a most ‘strik-|a greatly ing and artistic effect. On either) factor side of the street at intervals of | patrona thirty feet were erected twenty foot | numb Poles wrapped spirally with strips|land of red and white bunting giving the | who effect of an avenue of barber poles, | hail in which would have to be seen to be| because fully appreciated. land se better ner king for a is the ra e in the increasing over. to r creditors cancel. the own Then over the tered over d nt etions. tops of these poles for a distance of | of the st ves them a good dis- one and one-half miles stretch- | tribution hence it Dod ed a continuous rope of green lau-| business to carry their ral branches, an enormous piece of Second, these absent land owners do work which only the patience of the | "ot, relish to look to the Tyrk would work out. Nearly every | tenants for nt on account of window facing this parade street | the premiun which is charged had a beautiful rug suspended be-| #gainst their lands, neath it giving the street most charming appearance and while the troops were passing all window space was at a premium. Made Army Welcome “Nothing was spared on the part of the Constantinople Turks to mak their army feel that it was thorough- | ly appreciated and weleome, but the army itself-from the point of view of the foreigner was no doubt a great disappointment, that is, any citizens of any of the allied powers | who had been accustomed to seeing | their well fed and well dressed troops on parade, that saw his grand | entry into Constantinople must have | noticed a great difference in appear-| All-over brocades in silver and ance. The officers when seen in| White are effectively trimmed with Sroups about the city present w very | dark furs, tine appearance and impress one as | reg eee oo being. highly intellectual and effi-| y cient, ‘while the common Turkish sol- | WHEN dier give ione quite the opposite im- Pression, ‘ He been underfed for months past. His uniform is made up of the spoils of vietory and is very much ‘the worse for wear. When on Parade the men did not seem to be » extremely happy. They impressed one as being sick of war, as_ the whole: world is today, but extremely conscious of a deterthination to sce the thing through to:a successful fin- igh but at the same time anxious to throw: off the long worn accoutre- ments! of war. The cavalry horses genes mé of our fwestern horses thé plains-that have been used to roughing it through the winters. Pawing their food from under stow. That is, they were hard. eped to rough usage but not the best purposes, +; _;. Prohibition Question L Now, since the ‘allied forces have gone and the Turkish governmént is in: full control: the quegion of pro- ibt"sbe quickly t various: zeasons not seen fit to any part i ‘Near East tangle, however, |i Turkey, she would find the on *the on pr last mentoned e | creased ar and incide walls a e, direetly due sresaid depress- x insur- the fall- tten hy from the amounted *to 40 per- due chiefly to deflat- ed grain prices and general depres- mong the farmers. Wifen a armer has a good erop, he said, he will i e not. ‘This, Mr. Olsness said, is good business, w GOOD COMBINATION. t i red, America £¢ . They were'a bunch af jail vention. id they .suro pa iy oe little: toast: to California's’ tar-famed trom. the old i | 7") So that devotees of the sport may have n whole affair from start to finish has the Atlantic County Kennel Club has encircle -| ammunition for Poland, which was at that time engaged in war with So-}, GOOD FELLO orld’s:Fastest Greyhounds in Night Race THE TRIBUNE’ JINDIAN VETS | OF WORLD WAR 10 BE AIDE BISMARCK Veterans Bureau Announces * Plans For Extending the Work in North Dakota ‘TO HOLD CONFERENCES | Washingten, ‘Oct. 30,—“Indian| Summer” is not a definitely fixed | D2ason in the calendar, officials of ; the Weather Bureau declare, but! varies in date and durction and is, not, strictly speaking, a season at all but merely a type of mild, calm, ; hazy weather likely to prevail at any time in the autumn or-early} 4 The ponvlar belief that “Indian Summer” ts a period oc- curing more or less regularly, every autumn is not based on ac- ctr Le mer vcotomesl ons rvations, The term is applied in this coun- try to a period oc mila fal: weacn- er following - spall of uncoason- ably cold weather know as “Squaw | Wint Thoreau, in notes ou) winter conditions’ at Concord, | Mass., from 1851 to 1860, records the occurrence of “Indian Summer” wenther on dates ranging from September 27 to Decemker 13. In @ifferent pa Surope this mild weather i “St. ‘Martin’s Summer,” “St. Luke's Summer,” or “St. Michael's Summer.” sett 2 lluminate the course so brilliantly that the assembiage in grandstan< tay be the opinion of any foreign '@Md paddock can easily see the canine contestents from start to finish of each GERMANY IS HAVEN 10 Motley Crowd of Refugees Come to Fatherland for i Home Berlin, Oct. 27—The Permanent Court of Internatiogg! Justice at The Hague is warmiy commended by Dr, Rugen Schiffer in a statement |whjch is based on his recent exper- |the tribunal entirely from the Lea- gue of Nations leads to the hope that the tribunal is, operating alon other,lines than tho8e forecast in the Versailles Treatey. Disefsing the decision Wimblcdon case, which was against Germany, Dr. ‘Schiffer’ says it h: not been ‘thoroughly understood in |Germany. Germany prevented the | British ship Wimbledon from _p: ing through the Kiel Canal on the | ground that the ship was carrying on the viet Russia. The contention of Eng- that undeg the Versailles Germany had=no_ rigit to uch action, even if it was done on the ground that Germany was maintaining neutrality by pre- venting arms and ammunition irom going to a nation which was actually war with another. Dr. Schiffer the principles upén,which the court rendered a verdict against Germany are contained in the Ver- illes ‘Treaty and put Germany in the wrong. me Decision was against Poland in the two ‘cases which involved the rights of Germans living under Polish rule. Consequently “Germany won two out of three decisiéns and Dr. Schiffer is; firm in his belief that Germany's first experi@ce before the new werld court was suchas to show that Germany is not lost before interna- ‘apidly claiming enthusiasts among the throngs of visitors 10 difficulty in watching their favorites in actions > d the quarter mile track with eighty-eight 300 watt Western Electric Sunbeam” Mazda lamps. These lamps FUGITIVES ;| the total smoke of a city, is partic- | SCHOLARSHIP CONTEST OPEN. 70 DAKOTANS $10,000 in Cash Prizes and Scholarships to be Award- ed Under Garvan Gift Miss Minnie J. Nielson, state su- perintendent of public instruction, has been officially notified of the opening of the Prize Essay Contest of the American Chemical-Society in which all students of high and sec- ondary schools in the state have been invited to compete in a nation- al contest for $10,000 in cash prizes hand scholarships to Yale, Vassar and other universities and cc¥leges. The contest, which is the result of the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Garvan of New York, is a memorial | to their daughter, Patricia, and is nded to stimulate interest among hool students in the develop- ment of chemical sicience in this country, All arrangements for the contest are in the hands of the com- mittee on prize essays of the Amer- icanieGhpratcal® Society, with head- quarters at the Munson _building,| New York City. Six prizes of $20 in gold are to be awarded each state } to the Interior Depgptment indi-| in the union and scholarships to Yale cate. The campaign was suspe! jand Vassar will be given for the six ed during the war, when most of| best essays in the United States. ne country’s smpke ordinances | These scholarships will carry, with were held in abeyance to allow in- | them tuition for four years in chem- trics to operate -unrestrictedly | €n maximum production was mounted on mast arms twelve event. , by the voice of right and justice and jdo away with the appeal to force. Dr. Schiffer expresses the hope that the new court will develop a |truly international law by creating | Precedents and by steady administra- jtion of justice, thus securing itself authority in the face of -changing ions in Europe. He says in some respects the court is still an imperfect instrument in the eyes of legal experts, but itis a start in th right direction and gives reason Ao hope that the big problems of in- ternational life may be solved by lawful” investigation rather than by | force of arms. SEEK HEALTH IN PURE AIR nuisance in cities ing the attention of ties and organizations in their ampaigns for elimination, reports actress of the west coast. They oyster and found a pé@rl worth girl, isn’t she? ry or chemical. engineering and 500 a year in-cash. In addition to these many other scholarships will be offered through various universi- ties and colleges. MRS. McGOVERN DIES. Fargo, Oct. 30.—Mrs, J. A. -McGov- ern, 1042 Third St. N., wife of the former state grain inspector, dieq at the home of her son K. W. McGovern at Judith Gap, Mont., Friday. Death vas caused by asthma from which she ‘has been suffering for several years. She went to Montana about necessar With the return of normal conditions many cities have shown a determination to | take up this matter seriously and out a solution. | idence smoke, while making | bly less than 10 per cent’ of | i pro j ul rly cbjectionable because it i produced in the section where its | damaging possibilities are at a| maximum. Such smoke Hag a seri-| ous pathological aspect in addition | to its destructive effegt on proper- ty.. Acute lung distase, such as} umonia, bronchitis, and pleur-| sy, are affected by the corrosive | fumes to a marked degree. In- cstigators agree that there is a! rect relation ‘between a heavy | smpoke-lafen atmosphere and the | morbidity of the population; more- over, to tends to lower efficiency and increases crime and suicide. { SERIOUS BLADDER TROUBLE, “Could not stand nor sit and was | foreed to cry out from intense pain,” | writes Henry Williams, Tarkio, Mon- tana, “The doctors said I had in-| flammation of the bladder and an | operation v necessary. ‘Tried | Foley Kidney Pills and improved at | once. Tell all_my . friends about | Foley Kidney Pills as it will save | many from, suffering and perhaps, as in my case, a dangerous opera- tion.” Bladder and. kidney trouble demand “prompt treatment. Foley | ‘tional tribun’’s. which are influenced WS GET is y ‘of "Tex, ere: in San TOGETHER Kidney Pills‘ give quick relief. f ! jegation to the Americ Francisco, “sparkling fluid in. their’ 5 . No} Force structive And here is the latest story they tell about Carmel Myers, movie say—get tlfis—that she bit into an 16,200,000,000,000 German marks! Lucky girl. We haven’t tried to verify the story—but she is a beautiful OSB EES OSE ITS 14 month ago in the hope of getting relief, Her husband was with her at the time of her death and will accom- pany the body to Fargo Tuesday af- ternoon. Funeral arrangements have not been made. MOVIE THEATER FOR BEACH. Beach, N, D., Oct. 30.—The Bijou theater, one of the most elaborate movie houses built m western North Dakota in recent years, will be open- ed here Nov. 15 by W. S. Davis. Final. work is completion of the building js now being done. OM the day when its first refinery was opened, it has been the earnest endeavor of the Standard Oil Com- pany (Indiana) to be a constructive force in the industrial life of the nation. With all modesty we say — frankly, sincerely, and with profound convic- tion—thgt this organization has been N such a force. ; after year. This Company always has been a leader. The advanced work it has done in research, discovery, technical application, development and manufac- "TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 192 INK OF IT! LIONS P0:T ALK AT MEETINGS S. G. Severtson Discussed the Guaranty Fund Laws and Their Effeets on Banks a Members of the Lion’ clubs will ! speak at the future meetings of tie clubs noonday luncheon upon their own professional or business inter- ‘ sts, it was: decided at the’ luncheon held at the Grand Pacific hotel yes- terday. The new plan wag inaugurated to- cay when 8. G, Severtson, cashier of the Capital /Security bank and member of the State Guaranty Fund Commission, spoke on ,the guaranty fund laws ang their effects upon the | state banks. ‘When this Company. was organized, only a few products were taken from crude oil, Today, hundreds of prod- ucts—useful, convenient, imperatively needed by the public at large —are _taken from this single base This industrial-husbandry, redoundiig to the material benefit of mankind, is eloquent in demonstrating the kind of work which the Standard Oil Com- pany (Indiana) has been doing year turing, has added of the world, Hundredé of industiies have improved their manufacturing processes and largely increased their productiveness because of the advanced work this ave Company has done—and ‘such improve- ment has enabled the manufacturer to “sell his products at a lower price than would have- been possible otherwise. Because of the Company's advanced. thinking, planning and. preparation the. " price of petroleum products generally in the face of a demand which is unpre- cedented in history. | \ Every factor in this great organization is carefully attuned to the constructive ideals of conservation, equity, fairness and justice, which in turn. have oper- “ated in a comprehensive: way to the ' isty million people living in the . - 910 S. Mickijen Ave, Chicago, IL. i dress that there were two He said in the course of his. ad- many mall banks with @ diminishing or diminished capital as a result of | deflated securities. That the fund on | hand at present was not large enough { to cover present deficiencies of the ; closed banks and that this tended to | reflect upon the banking of the state. He said that at present as the law is | working out, it is tending to help the é inefficient: banker at the expense of i the banker who is keeping up ‘his obligations. ij Members of the commission are doing their best, however, to en- | force the provisions of the law, said Mr, Severtsom, and that while they can not pay off all liabilities plans may be worked out whereby nioney can be borrowed at the present time to pay indebtedness and assessments ac- cumulating iaterfeing used to make up the deficiency., This would be the only way #T which to keep up the food reputation of the state, for the state has guaranteed the money of depositors and as a result induced many from outside that state to sena- their money in for investment. At the next mecting*of the Lions Dr, R. E, Enge wjll explain chiro. practices, and Dr. C. D. Dursema and Judge I. C. Davies at the next re- spective meetings will talk of den- ry and probate law. Other mem- bers of fie club will hav. oppurtunity to ex of the professi which they are membe: I e the same plain the principles ion or business in y engaged until all rs have had a chance to speak. — much to the wealth 4