The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 28, 1923, Page 8

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1/7 ter he ser fic rec Ma ex} by to the cor sic mz He thy ior oe PAGE EIGHT MEXICAN REVOLUTION DIDN'T GAIN WEALTH BY SAVING BITS Made His Wealth by Dabbling in Real Es ate in ne LIVE IN OLD WAY Intends to Leave His Wealli to the Children, Does Not Care to Spend It BY JOSEPHINE VAN DE GRIFT NBA Service Stal Writer Whitest N. ¥., Wee. 28 y i J (queens \ ) ‘ who ret.red from ervi t ther day rth more ner Fuusto p (tort), General ran iso Serrano (center) arid n $200,000 t rat taeir pei at fedesul troops near tae battle line, ‘ he ‘ « i of manadcr-in-chiel after routing the repe’s on the Esperanza ‘ront. nd when he i cived just 515 weekly! didn hi out of h pokin, through the courteous bank clerk When he Vt reseu blond burning indow carey from te ph pole puiting in time turning over jobs of real estate. © reason that in addition carly pension¢which he hereafter fur his 20 years co int department, he en neome of $9,000 $200,000 investment apartment d little town ) ldn't_be another five to be i Le. Pre. ident Obregon (right), from | General Topete joined his ¢ m- ! they j typical of that of tens of thousands | ope Gale Use of We {went over to call on Hill te ask im what he intended going with ail m Bill himse ne OUR the porch to greet 1 He had Preneblun sweater and f could sec Mexican federal troops under personal leadership are re*'ying to the colors to do battle against a | () i Siig a little ‘bald el chiefs Hisucharces ia Various parts Gl the disrupted republ Here is a de- ppose,’ 1 said, nt you're Hillery with ns and immament lated on waiting tran jon to the firing | going to do quite a little fixin’ up wn’s sold’crs are provided with lites: type flel’ capable of long d nce range. t 1007 <a es es oe aid Bill We've ral ion. 1 told him the fruth You don't go looking for trouble ° for y EN IRL my head and by my eyes, disturbing a hornet’s nest in your, y change no: U w to help you,” said the old neighborhood, but you mount guard: her pork chop! prin. ove: your honey just the same, 0 dinner ome days later he unnounced to NIGHT STORY happened: 1 an escort of Raisuli’s men, he would antod 1 little a itt me. always receive with chicken 90 Nand H mped at the chance. 1 went y store, paid up ‘ the use of the $200 taat re | Young Writer Hunts Brigand What could one @ looking avound. | 22 3 i warriors? place, when h ryan ic con-| to Give World a Book y a tedious trip, we reached ef tour-and-vhal! acres and ! oe isuli's village of Tazrut in Beni_ Be ak es ones tel of Memoirs Ares. Here he h really wonder- 3.500 ter Bail bortewed tas oa ful Moorish palace. It was night job in the ire EXPOSED’ TO DA time when we arrived and the chief- der pone of the| re i tain came to greet me, I have never house old the + en his Uke RY MILTON BRON f Correspondent “He very tall tong. He is and He's beon t profit ever vout 116 Bil! London, Dec Here's areal ‘ ed. hon His, n ii there weren’ of Arabian Nights adventure heuseho'd consists of two wives, both three and four-room apar s the stories of fiction ughters, three sons, marrie! — people 20 shave and 15 little slave couples. ALL Mie bankers laughed at slender English him, so Bill had to # t of town to | wh ume enough to When T grected him, [ said: | ‘1 the money. But ¢ ke a long chance; and its hero is you the only gift worthy a riments were finished the Raisuli, the world’s most famous ‘eé man—a shimmering bl: li bandit. “To which he replied: ‘By Allah, e It began in a you should have been a man. Your! “! suppose,” 1 said to Bill, “that | M and en words are as grea if vou don’t intend to move into ajthe Sahara Desert. “He lodged me not in his palace, | pe wheuse or anything, maybe you'll) But let Mrs. Rosita Forbes, youth-| put in tht courtyard in a black and put vour money in a swell new moto: | ful explorer, adventurer and writer, | white — can r tent furnished | ‘tell her own story: only with a sleeping mattress and | “Nope,” said Bi ame old bus,| “Not long ago,” says she, the | camel's-hair blanket. 1915 model.” | writer of a funny column in one of! “The next Br aeror ten ase “Well, then, T suppose you have|the London papers ran a paragraph i came to me in the} some pretty swell times?” about Raisuli retiring from his Well,” said Bill, “I go fishing | brigandage, and added — facetiously! morning until three or four quite a bit and then sometimes Kate} that now the b and I go to the theater. But we sit | write his memoirs, in th» balcony. Twenty-five dollars | Jt suggested an i ndit would doubtless me the story of his life, “Being a very good. ‘Moslem he} Why mn week could cover everything We | should dnt T go to him and get his fasts three s a week and forgot buy ‘ ( | story? that I was not voluntarily fasting. | pelts youve got any ancome 0: | “I knew that no white person had! [¢ was quite an ordeal but it was} 000 a year,” I wailed “What're | ever entered certain of the ses of fascinating to take down notes on} ou going to do with it?” “The children can have it,” sais Bill. “If [ had a million IT wouldn't do a bit different.” ara. I knew that the journey | his career. ir of the Moroccan chieftain,’ “] asked him about the time he |soldier and brigand was replete with | kidnapped Perdicaris. You remember iy dent Roosevelt sent: hi Bill’s going to let the neighborhoog | at's why I went. Life without message: ‘Perdi i kids have his firemen’s helmet nger is little f ini dead”. aves penelnae ida ger is little fun. alive or Raisuli dead. But igs a ia ote parts | “Knowing that Raisuli subseribed; “Of his adventure Raisuli said He says they'll be dandy to zo fish- tg 4 newspaper clipping bureau to’ with twinkling eyes: i ing in Lore |see what the world says about him, | ‘Allah is good and great. He I had a little story put in the papers| placed America far away from Mo- Implement Men to the effect that I going to| rocco.’” Morocco on a secret mission, [ fig- —— Plan Meetingyarci that p y might BANDI re [be aroused. ! Some of Rai ayings as re- Fargo, Dee. 28.—Gov. R A. Nes ‘It w for no sooner corded by Mrs. Rosita Forbes: tos, Dr. D Robertson of F reached Tetuan than I was Man is made for war and woman} ©. M. Thurber of Owatonna, Minn.. on by a grave Moor who was i for his relaxation. and Dave E. Darrah of Charles City, | man of Raisul Jown, will be the principal speakers | and soon he on the program of the annual con- We bee: wanted to me friends, know my Daughters are a misfortune—why did Allah make them? vention, North, Dakota Implement} — ike Dealers tion to, be held in LEADS BOVINE “400” Fargo Jan The featute of the convention will | be a thorough discuesion of tie North Dakota implement dealers | problems for 1924, declares R. A Lathrop of Hope, seeretary, in mak ing the program public. i FEDERAL JURY MEETS. Fargo, Dee. 28.-—A federal gran’ juzy will convene in Fargo on Jan 8 to consider a number of cases, it | was announced at the office of Unitea States Clerk of Court J. A. Mont gomery. | A term of United States district court will convene at Jamestown on Jan, 15. Judge Andrew Miiler will ! preside. SANTA aM HOPE ‘TREE. Hope, N. Dec. 28.—The city of Hope a aaa in the Santa Claus | role at its annual community Christ- | mas tree. All churches of tie sity | co-operated in the arrangements Santa {laus appeared as scheduled | presenting every child with a box of | goodies and other presents. A large, crowd attended. on Sad ines ton a pound. ‘Tribune. speaking of aristocrats, White Sox.” of Essex, Eng., said so at the recent International Live Stock Sa tion in Chicago. Broadus—what a pretty name—is owned by A. A. Armstrong & Son of Carmargo, Ill, And Well, you shouldn't forget “B:oadns He is the world’s champion steer. Judge Will’am Mei as your courage.’| Minimizing Losses Due to Bad | “from six in the | folks pay their bills promptly and | in the! the habit of is| Profit was greater this way than afternoon he would sit there telling: growing right along, according to| |H. J. Kling, manager of the Bismarck | Credit Bureau, organization which i | bureau is rendering service, accord- | ing to Mr. Kling, ang the bureau, has (furnished to’ the ter. This information includes lists of new residents, ehanges in ad- dvess, a weekly summary of all | however, | funds” is issued-so that merchants An Englishman keeps his word; a Frenchman is brave; a Spaniard good-hearted, But in war the Moslem forgets all this and remem: bers only that each is an infidel. MOST PEOPLE HERE PROMPT TO PAY BILLS, marck Credit Bureau,, Af- * ter Several Months Opera- tion, Finds Improvement | BUREAU ‘_;, DO WHAT Accounts Held of Advant- | age to All” The greet majority of, Bismarck prompt payment started on May 1, 1923 with a mem- bership of 40 business houses and) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PICTURES - ‘the produce, and placed | farmer ‘FARM MARKET TS SUCCESS | WITH WOMEN ! Make Discovery After Loos-' z 53 Acres of Fru Trees in Frost SXPECT SMALL RETURN Proved to be Popular With! Many Who Called Constant- ly at Little Market, By NEA Service Toledo, U., Dec, 28.-"Three ye age a heavy Irost destroyed 83 a. of on the fram of sit do Mrs. Anna Hept, + Lakeside, O. ‘This sticke of ill Zortune, instead ! ruin, as | of proving their expecied 1t them on financial woud, really seu Forced to do some thing to keep ! |the wolf from the door, the sisters | | began an experiment with | farm a little nyuket in their front yard. used a small table to display their ¢ They dren in charge. Table to Shop pected a small They patronage i | John Borg, avi Street operator, ‘has tuined over -his entire budiness |10 junior members of the firm, say- ling he ‘had made as much ‘money | he would cure for. | TO OLD AGE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, Custom Tailoring 3 DAYS SER VICE ‘ PLAN PRAISED SAYS DR. HEL Ooo FUND fromh passiing motorists, but littie alr gla ee a did they dream they would attractu, Glands Are the, Basis of the} # W. Me . , the customers that soon started to ! Bi se ae flock to their roadside mart. The result was so satis‘actory that next season counter to replace the table erected a large builetin Board. At the end of the second year th d paid off all of the obligatio: gainst the farm. Now they nave a shop known as “Pomona | keeping with the farm, “Pomona Acre net in a single summer ne They much profit as the average town gro- |cery stbre makes in a year. The experience of these sisters over. The It is re- of farmers the countr utomobile is responsible. versing the old plan whereby the brought his goods to the Now the consumer comes to the farmer. The roadside market is lusiness men of the farmers and dealing a stiff blow to the middl man, Thousands a them are m ing, in three or four months, incom as large or larger than the annual ary of the average city welle: With the profit from ihese le marts, hundreds of farmers are pay- their mortgazes just as did Sass and Mrs. UH Owner | unde: have bought automobiles the income and nt tne money in market. making k- co National F: reau here recently sent out que-tionuires to farmers in Michigan. Indiana, Illinois The bureau received 54581 replies from farmers who were run- ning bona fide roadside markets ur per cent reported fi- nancial success, 41 per cent declar- ing they had made $2,000 or more in a season. Fourteen per cent had made more than $5,000 Other answers aled that -vo- vere conducting 21 per cent ¢f rkets and that 34 per cen' + stands, selling some Market Bu. Ohio, d Wis- | commedity in winter. Travel on Profits. Fighteen per cent declared they had raised farm mortgages ,‘rom. the profits; 2214 purchased automobiles, | 708 installed radio sets, 2,612 bought pianos, phonographs or other must- cal instruments and 312 spent the winter in Florida or California on their market profits. On ‘hundred per cent s: their dealing through a middleman ana 3,168 sold all their products through | their own stands. The average number of Customers per market daily is estimated at 38. But one of the roadside stands re- | now has 80 on its lists. | ported 1,486 customers in a single It is for the customer’s protection las well as the merchant that the adopted as one ‘slogan “It’s a mark lof distinction to have a charge ac-! count with a member of hs, Bis- marck Credit Bureau.” The bureau was formed ‘to keep merchants in touch with credit stana- ing and paying habits of the people in the territory. Information is various member day! All of which proves that the road- side market is here to stay. H ieee TRAPPING SHOWS INCREASE. Grand Forks, N. D., Dec. 28.— Trapping appears to have become | more popular in Grand Forks county | this year than has been the case for | several years past, 12 licenses hav- ing been issued by Martin Haugen, county auditor. In former years two or three usually have been the limit. merchants. each week by the manag- chattel _mgrtgages that go on fecord in Burleigh county, also all’ judg- ments docketed, bad checks issued. Through this and similar informa: tion it is disclosed it is stated by the. mai ager, that some people who should trade in their home town and’ boost for the city do not invariably do so. Collecticns are made for members | by the bureau and in this ‘way the | bureau ‘is brought-in-touch with: per- | sons from whom it is diffieult’ for | uny merchant to make — vajfections | and congequently dre desirable trade risks. ch week a list of ‘checks issued which come back “not «sufficient may be acquainted’ with anyone ha‘ ing a failing along this line. A number of merchants have re-! ported improveg credit conditions | under the operation of ‘the. credit ‘bureau, and have found its activit- tage of all to minimize /the losses suffered through bad seveyni, BURLINGTON MINES. REOPEN UNDER LOWER WAGE HENS 28) the | Buplii tori, N. D., Dee; struck~ ent wage res ee clesed Dec,*17, when mii in protest against a 10 cut, are. again Operat: mine eS 10. Hhagecilet with 7. > seeing wee ‘cut ay ‘stated. ies: met in good spirit by customers, | who realize that. it is*to the‘ advan- | SPLENDOR» | Recent’ dispatches from Luxor Midway. and City mines here, which | Egypt, deseribe the Shrine of Tae Howard , Carter, in ‘ions, is shown here tor at the drawing board, where he care. ate | fully records all objects before they hamen as “overwhelming” in magnificen charge of excav: are removed from the tomb. they built a ten-foot | ana} { | NEA Service Writer sand lethal ill, ¢ | Method Léading Back | Eternal Youth Chicago, Dec. 28—“Stop worrying | and you won't have to get old.” So says Dr. William Held and pro- BY GEORGE BRITT | in \chimpanzees in his laboratory an| xir of youth which may produce! changes in life as sharp as the 'prim- | ordial transition from simian to hu-| Rejuvenation is his promise, and | ticutment to any ailment, either of! |uge or disease. The only insurable he s i Back To Youth Glands are at the ‘basis of the j method.” Dr, Held does not trans- | low plant *them, however. He puts. the atient’s own glands to. operating; nat youthful efficiengy. The} ult is to give.a full-fime new; lease on life, whereas it is claimed | ed the vigor produced by the Steinach methou is short lived. bs a ae ialist in for ‘years, theories ith fresh now after 3 he studiéd and checked on researches made -previousiy. | Chol'n Brings Age “What brings old age is not yea but cholin,” says he, pronouncing nge word “kolin.” in liberated: in the bedy, in-| creasing as time passes. It is the juineet cause of afteriosclerosis or rdening of the arteries which ac-j companies ‘senility, It gla over! the glands. so thcy function under a} growing handicap. Obtained From Monkeys “The fighting. elements in the blood. are trying} to combat this cholin. From tests of the blood it is possible to tell which glands are suf- fering from attack, “Having found ‘out which elements in the human system need reinforce- ment, we induce a development of those elements in the monkeys. Then we withdraw the glandular fluid so produced, add extracts made from separated animal glands and inject in the patient, The cholin is split, the patient’s own members go to work again and rejuvenation is ac- complished. | “I won't say how long life will be jextended. You wouldn't believe it. But it will; make the traditional | threescore years and’‘ten look i | significant, And lengthened life will‘ jbe a blessing, because vigor and health and increasing wisdom will accompany i Remarkable Cures Cited | It works already, Dr. Held de- clares. He cites the.case of a wo-! man of 50, suffering from high blood pressure, short breath and fainting’ spells. Afar threo mihi decholinising!| 'treatment the distressing symptoms | | disappeared and she joined a gymna-_ sium class. A man of 91 took the treatment and went back to active | work in his law office. In three cases, white hair began coming in at, | its old-time darker hue. oe —__—_ -__- ——___—_—_-¢ i A Thought I had rather speak ‘five words with my understanding, that by my voice 1 might teach othera also, than ten | thousand words in an unknown, tongue—1 Cor. 14:19. 1 i i Whatever we well understand .we| express clearly, and words flow with ease,—Boileau, When Silence Is Bliss “Sam, do you solemnly swear to {telf. the truth, the whole truth and } nothing but the truth does, sah.” . Well, Sain; what have you got to y for yourself?” “Sedge, wif all dem limitations you jes’ put_on me, Ah don’t believe Ah has anything’ at.all to say.”—Ro- chester (N, Y.) Times-Union, Anemic Cirls Al Business Cain Strengthon SCOTTS EMULSIOM | day Chicago, Dee. spre ed up to date. southern On care. region last night and early with snow and with the lowest tem- degrees be- zero at Moorhead, Minn., were a part of the winter advent. perature y | CHOLIN BRING AGE} vod to his state. Governor McMaster was a urging diversification work and has been a consistent ad- vocate of financial aid for to insure its successful development, | | eceds to draw from the monkeys and] WINTER HITS MIDDLE WEST 28.—The first snap- } man, \py winter weather of the year has over the upper and he is ready confidently to appiy his} Mississippi Valleys! that has prevail- A storm centers over, Gales in the lake recorded OTICE The City of Bismarck has assum- charge off the Water Plant, and according to the agree- | ment with the City of Bismarck and giand! the Bismarck Water Supply Co., a announces list of the delinquent users of Water assurance, for the time up to the afamer in Europe where | the City took been turned over for attention. It is urged’ by the |marck that ‘the patrons ONS have | ‘ neglected to pay their bills due the Bismarck Water Supply Co, “¢ holin | December Ist, pay these before Jan- uary Yst and in this way it will as-|city fire attorney. \ sist the City very materially in their | work. Payment may he made at the City | ferred to by patients as t Water office, 207 12-28-29. In the production of- s toes Georgia ranks fi states, TIME GOES 28-—Governor | South Dakota, | to diver: ssary to financial | well being of northwest farmers to- characterized the Coulter Plan for a government loan of pen) 00 00U) ito promote mixed farming, structive measure, certain to ‘ring Bighteenth Body From Ruins of Illinois two over the bth St. City of Bismarck, Water Works Dept., A. 3. Arnot, Treasurer. | | combustion, In rush cases we make suits in our shop J, in three days. Spring fabrics on display now. Why: not select yours now for delivery any time you-say S.E.BeERGESON & SON 4A SEPARATE PROBES MADE INTO BIG FIRE night destroyed an of the the insane at Dunning, on the north- west edge of Chicago, were way as the body of the 18th victim was removed from the smouldering ruins. Ten of the 18 vietims of the fire had been Besides the eight bodies unidentitied, five other inmates of were still missing last night, being among made their tion during the fire all would be returned to the hospi- tal soon, Coroner Oscar Wolff announced that three, and possibly four prom inent Chicagoans had been selected to sit on the coroner's jury which will investigate the fire in which |More. than 590 patients were rescued. Independenty investig: been started b; H. Jenkins, ate department of public iof C. and by Twenty four hours after jing of blaze \deepeeal by a patient were | vestigated but hospital officials said it would he And It’s Sure To Be that we'll “SHOT” £0, house,” the o1 ‘as much of a mystery | it’ started. of cold weather before Spring arrives —- WHAT’S THE MATTER? with “laying up” your ward- robe with an_ exclusive “KLEIN” THIS WINTER — AND NEXT ? ? ? $32.50 to $55 1923 Is Taken Insane Hospital: Dec. 28.—Four separate rations of the fire which last building for annex hospital Chicago st: under, identified 1} e yesterday. the building these bout 50 patients who pe from the institu- None of them ngerous, hospital officials d expressed the opinion that ions the state in charge director of the" welfare, nd the county judge Jarecki the rag the old wooden structure in of the fire when The cries of spontanes defective wi lighted started by a difficult to det ine how the fire sts have a gool O’COAT FOR One Murphy Bed and Steel Kitchen in Every home. Saves two rooms. %¢ algo saves $500.00 th cost of we A.J. STRANDER for fatormarion. Bismarck, N. D.

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