The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO COLLEGE GAVE A RARE FIND FOR THESTAGE th ie akc : Famous Star Deserted it For SATURDAY, ANUARY 19, 1924 ve to fo! out of business if{ Jamestown or Wimbledon more ex- peditiously than cquld be done in the twin cities, he said. The railroad was built 10 years ago, Am Yet ‘i RTE tA HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i. 3, | HUERTA ENVOYS IN. D, RAILROAD BANKER-FARMER . ASKS THROUGH MEETING NOTES | |’ RATES MADE! Vit wilt h | the concession is not made, The plea of public necessity in this | kind of case is new, and if the com- | mission grants it, a precedent said to | effect th@ whole rate structure will | be ket up. Mr. Houck said there is|* not enough local business to make |the operation of the road profitable, She ‘Misunderstood. An excited gentleman dashes into store. “Something you wish, sir?” a clerk inquires. Yes,” he replies, “I have lost my ite!” “Mourning department , on The Midland Minneapolis, Jan, 19. running be- Continental railroad, | tween Edgeley Wimbledon, North Dakota, 70 miles, pleaded be. A conference of bankers and farmers of the Fifth Federal Re- | serve District held recently at: Raleigh, North Carolina, under the | auspices of the American Bankers and fore jan examiner of the interstate | higher than those of the longer line | commerce cdhimission in the federal | but pus ang truck competition h web Hat-making Business, But Returned COUR TRAILED ae ts | Fd Wynn, “The Perfect Fool” who | will be the attraction at the Audi-| torinm Theatre, performance only, Friday night, January 25th, in his mu 1 show, is so much of a fixture now-a-days that the fact that he had to go through the usual paces before arriving at the top o the ladder in the musical comedy world has generally been lost sight of. Wynn is a Philadelphian and first went behind the footlights | ember of the chorus of the Mask and Wig Club of the Univer: t Pennsy 1901 and, through a with Corse ton a ye got his first profession in the “Thurber and Nasher Reper- | toire Com | After this experience he left the | stage for six months and joined his | father in the millinery business in | Philadelphia, but he found the call of | the stage deeply uleated in his | mind and shortly he entered vaude- | ville, Basing his vaudeville on his college experiences, bit by bit | he began to acquire 2 reputation in this field of. entertainment. For years ho was “The College Boy” in| the two-a- In the course of his! vaudeville experience, which extend ed over 11 rs, he made nine com- plete continental tours, Then musical comedy ang Wynn had a part in “The Deacon | and the Lady” Wynn's suc in| this production attracted the atten- tion of Florenz Zicgfield and he was engaged for the 1914 “Follies.” He | was not particularly prominent that | year, but in 1915 in the next edi-| tion of the “Follies” he scored a sub- stantial succes: His course since that time is fair ly well known. He was in a number | of Winter Garden Show time” and in the 1918 “Gaieties engagement which was broken up by | the actors strike. The strike, inci-| dently led directly to Wynn branch- | ing out for himself, for it was then | he wrote “Th Ed Wynn Carnival” in which he enjoyed a season of ninety weeks, playing until early summer in| this vehicle, At the close of this en- | . L, Erlanger made ar-j angements for Wynn to appear in his new musical show “The Perfect Fool” under the direction of B. C. Whitney. iis one meeting r later, he xperience | Give Him Time. BOSS (to office boy busy drawing pictures)—Say, young feller, da think you get paid for drawing THE OFFICE BOY-—No, s ain't got enough reputation to charge you extra for it yet.-qJudge. WHAT ADVERTISING DOES Americ has the best life on this earth because it has the best ad vertised life, says Colonel W. G, Edens of the Public Relations Com mission, American Bankers’ Asso: elation. He goes on: “American health is the best in the world be ‘cause American people are best in: | formed in the ways and habits o! | health, largely through advertising ‘American business {is the largest jand most successful in the world because it uses advertising the oot American business’ men eu: Sarge their business institutions in ‘proportion as they advertise them. |American buyers become more |shrewd in spending their money in ‘proportion as they read advertise: ments, “The press of the United States js regarded by many as the most ‘powerful of our institutions. It ‘must be numbered with ‘the schools ind the churches as one of the trinity of most powerful creators jot knowledge and patriotism. “Advertising is what it is today largely because of the power and isaccess of the daily paper. Never- itheless, it is true that the dally paper {8 as successful as it is to day because of advertising. : “The banking business has been ‘benefited largely by advertising ;within the last dozen or fifteen ‘years. Banking institutions have years, Banking institutions have done more advertising than ever before. ‘They have installed adver- tising departments which acquaint their communities with facts for- merly regarded in the light of in- stitutional secrets. The banker publishes facts which build up con- fidence in his institution. “The result has been that mil- ; jions of people who formerly would not place their money in the cate of bankers, but who hoarded it’at home, entrusted {t to friends | or invested it in wildcat specula- tiéns, now regard the bank as the safest place in the world. Hun- drads of millions of dollars have been brought from their hiding places and placed in circulation. mitch to the advance of America | and American institutions, as wel! | as-American business. Newspaper advertising has done more for | Afferican banks in the last dozen | years than any other le | beckoned | [ Assoelation Agricultural Commis sion adopted the following prin- ciples: “Mm order to encourage and pro- | mote a safe, sane and constructive system of farm practices, the Bank- er and Farmer Conference of the | Fifth Federal Reserve District would make the following recom mendations. with reference to tae activities of farmers and bankers | on which to concentrate efforts | during the coming year: “1, Encouragement of loans by bankers to bright and deserving young men and young women who wish to go to college to study agri. culture and home economics. “2. Promote in a rational and conservative way the economic in- crease in the productiveness of the soils of the district so that a larg: | er nnit of crop production may be | secured. Small unit yields of ne cessity are expensive, while mod- erate to large yields of crops are generally the cheapest. Larger | yields per acre coupled with a re- duction in the acreage, when ad- visable, should and usually will be more profitable, and when han- dled properly will not lead to an over-production. at “3, Encouragement of a proper ! system of diversified farming ia which farmers will grow, a8 far as practical, all the food’ and feed crops “necessary for feeding the | family and livestock of the farm, | and to keep the farms on the req- ufsite kinds and amounts of live stock best to meet the economic | needs of farming. | “4, To formulate and put in mo | Russel Kaufman and Elroy Yerovi (top photo) unearthed a piece of hammered lead with this inscription: gin Dare, Died Here, Captive of Powhatan, 1590 Charles R.” The tablet is shown in lower ‘photo. The find was madeson P stree W., Washingion. Further excava- tions will be made by Smithsonian Institute, Jacob Zelmer, Miss Mary Stroh, Man- uel Scheffer, Vivian Rose, Emil Stroh, Thelma Rose and Miss Ethel Lewis. oe - Me ‘News of Our | Neighbors | Mr. Daniel Klein was a caller at lthe G. B, Lewis home Thursday. ALTA NEWS The following were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stroh, Wednesday evening: Mr nd Mrs. John Steinert, Miss Dora Schri- mer, Mike Kozak, Anna Hochhialter, John Stroh, Jake Hochhalter and Ethel Lewis. this program, it is urged that the Agricultural College of the District put a county agent in every county and that a banker-farmer confer- ence be called to meet early in the fall at the agricultural college of each State.” NATION’S SAVINGS PLANT TRIPLED Savings banks and banks having distinct savings departments, not counting branches, have grown In numbers in the United States from 5,376 in 1912 to 16,709 in 1922, or, an increase of about 210 per cent in ten years, says the Savings Bank Division of the American Bankers Association. Savings de- posits, it is pointed out, now com- prise about one-half of all bank de- poalts of every description, NORWEGIANS WILL. GATHER IN GRAND FORKS Grand Forks, N. D., (Jan. 19. — The annual convention of the Satesdalsla an organization of Norwegians whose. forefathers or who themselves resided at one time in the district of Satesdals, Nor: way, will be held in Grand Forks on June 26 and 27, according t n announcement made Wednesday afternoon by the executive commit- tee. < “More than 2,000 delegates and members of the organization are expected here for the convention, according to Bjorgulf Bjornaras of Wanke, Minn., president. Senator Henrik Shipstead Minneapolis, Representative Knu | ce a Wefold of Hawley, Minn., June . ; = 2 |Governor R. A. tos of Mr, William Hurlbert and Wiiliam |Hickel repaired the furnace in the | Pl sant View school house, Satur- Melvin Burtch was a caller at the 1. B. Lewis home Thursday. Jacob Hochhalter, Vivian Rose and Miss Agnes Lehr, who has been at- nel Lewis were Alta callers Sun- tending high school at Mandan, re-| turned Monday, after a two weck: vacation® with her parents here. ——— z Steinert was a caller at the Henry Schotz home Sunday even- ing, John Hausauer was a Regan visi- tor Tuesda Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Burteh family were caflers af the G. Lewis home Sunday afternoon. Reinho Steinert, Manuel Stcin- and Theadore Steinert were call- at the home of their brother John Steinert, Sunday evening. and B. e The following were entertained at — the home of Mr. and M John, Mrs. Gottlieb Steinert, S Miss Al-| been ‘ill for some ti Bins chotz, Miss | the hospital Monda Hochhal- hhalter, Otto headbre Stein- : Reinhold David Steinert, who has e, was taken to morning. as a caller at Sunday. | Jacob Hochhalter, the G. B. Lewis home revi! PAYS MAN TO Mmun, » RAISE CHICKENS v Hochhalter, | That is North Da- —— kuta js shown by a statement issued liam Hurlbert and Mr by H. Brustad of Mayville. He had s made a trip to the hens and 20 of these set and brooded chicks during the season. The hens are Anconas, Leghorns and Plymouth Rocks. The following is a record of the) received and the amount of they brought: Number Miss Fisher, Fred ert, William Steinert, Mz Steinert, Edn Thelma Ros Jacob Hochhalter A very ple ing games. Lang, Steinert, Teddy and ant evening was coal mine Roy McCullough was a Regan vi sitor Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ad callers at the Iph_ Bender 4 mer home Fr Amount oe 5.08 Mr. Gottlieb Steinert was ton visitor Wednesd Bel arch April May of William Steinert ma the coal mine Thu de a trip to 40 | The newly appointed emissaries of the De la Huerta revolutionary “gov- ernment,” Ruben Vizcarra (above) and Luis H. Ramirez (lower) have tion definite plans for carrying out , .stablished headquarters on this side | of the Rio Grande. Vigcarra former- ly was president~of the Mexican | House of Deputies, and Ramirez was a deputy. > —_— Arne Grundyson of Fisher, Minn., treasurer; Thor Rynestad of Thiet River Falls, Minn., director, and Ellen Ellenson of Grand Forks, 2 member. A portion of the: old Roman wall of London has recently been uncov- ered in Hounsditch. It is 8 feet 9 inches thick faced with stones, and filled with smaller stones, over which cement had been poured, e squared |" Atfords Utmest Protection PREVENTIVE for MEN oe —<od Large Tube a5¢. Kit (4's) 81) ot au eatets or * 1 Kit. Devt, A. man te eee ‘York | Tuly |-.<.- 29.93| Dakota will be asked to occupy the Aueust 31.03, principal numbers on the program September 24.84 | of talks, the committee decided. Octobe! 11) The meetings will ibe held wt the November December . Emil Zelmer and Jake Hochhalter were callers at the G. B, Lewis nome Saturday afternoon, \ent plans. The musical part of th program will consist of violin se- lections by noted violinists, Nor- wegian folk dances end community singing. Members of the executive com- mittee who met here Wednesday are: Mr. Bjornaras, president; 0. B. Olson of Buxton, vice president: A group of young folks, consist- ing of the following, were entertzin- ed at the home of Mr. and M Hochhalter Friday evening. Total . ie0. = —_s Mr. and| Platinum wire used in certai M ke Stroh and daughter Lorine, optical and electrical instruments is Mr. and Mrs. John Steinert, Miss drawn to a fineness of less than one Dora Schrimer, Miss An Wahl, twelve-thousandth of ‘an inch in Paul Wahl, Ruth Wahl, Emil Zelmer, diameter, ~ AH-HAH! SO THAT'S IT agency.” RUST COMPANY GROWTH | Bearly, fourteen and one halt pil- | lious of dollars are the total pres | f resources of trast -compani i i United States, - Instite | ‘reporting number 2478, ax coai- pated with 2,372 a a ago. The | 1 figures for the year endirs i 80 last are $24,441,500,000 jo- as compared with $12,722. im 1922, representing a gain iat insaanenttia cue ace f 7 i -"X marks the spot,” is a saying you're doubtless familiar with. But you'd ‘be surprised to Tearn what the cross marks mean in this picture, It seems thatthe first thing a new prohibition agent js taught is where to Id0k for liquor on cafe diners. And’ the crosses show the likeliest places, according to latest instructions from San Francisco dry authorities, a ee, fai + ‘city auditorium according to pres- | building in Minneapolis for through rates in connection with | I Rageley, with tinental lines so that freight could | ot be routed over it as cheap! any connecting link railr ley Houck, counsel for the road, said | fie at Edgeley trans-con | Rates were allowed to it which 4 [limited relief by this 1 d connects with the Milwaukee at the Northern Jamestown and with the Soo s over| Wimbledon. Because of lack of con- Stan-| gestion, the road could take the traf- and Th means. floor\"--Kasper (Stockholm). Yes, It Might! It might help a little if Congress were given a commission on all th: money that it saved the taxpayers.--- Charleston (Wi. Va.) Gazette. Pacific | at transfer it SSS $30,000,000 Worth of Locomotives ‘Sold by Telephone in Three Minutes “Not long ago I concluded negotia- tions and took a thirty million dollar order over the telephone in three rhinutes,” says Samuel M. Vauclain, President, Baldwin Locomotive Works, in a recent issue of Success Magazine. “Tt saved perhaps five days in time,” declared Mr. Vauclain. “Fifteen min- utes after I had hung up the receiver the shops had started work om the order. In the old days, work would not have been started until every paper had been signed. “The telephone breeds confidence,” says Mr. Vauclain, “and once that is established prosperity is certain. Ican call: up Havana and in five minutes or half an hourfind out as much about the other fellow’s point of view, and tell him as much about mine as I could by wasting ten days in a trip South.” ~ Mr. Vauclain sells locomotives by telephone. Other men use it to sell flowers, fish, pencils, tires, specialties—scores of widely different pro- ducts,more quickly and more economically. Do you sell by telephone? AORTA DAKOTA INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE COMPANY “A Good Advertiser is a Safe Borrower” “mtttttthn, Under the bank cashier’s wicket every day pass thou- sands of dollars in loans to the manufacturers of America. They make automobiles or soap, adding machines or candy, talcum powder or furniture. Why do these business men borrow large ‘sums with confidence ? Ua Because by persistent Advertising they: have each created in thegreat buying public a demand for a particular automobile, a special brand of candy, a particular make of furniture. They judge the future by the past. What advertising has done, it will do, and do increasingly. \ There-is an in? exhaustible fund of good-will for the advertised trade- marked product. An idea is sold'to the public,and kept sold by well-planned reiterated Advertising. \ Published by The Bismarck Tribune, in co-operation with The American Association of Advertising Agencies

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