The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 21, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO \ A GNOEIUL MOUVWSIA GAL WATSON HITS | AT PURPOSE OF MANY PROB. MARKET NEWS leaders to guin a Crop Reports Lead to Better WNL Activity on Board a part and sjudge both th it of the people ovember come takable ving that smanship, , that vitup «© temper if, whe! the idence unmi « (By the A. Pa ports from not mud: | that , tion is nounturn in Liverpool quota tions gave the market here an upward swi i deali wheat people embedded Need of ind racted special which ‘ principles, wy iska PEGE zhth panacea illen Repub the the eptember $1,077 noderate addition- strong in the ey nv een pendent: Socialism labor the the and this weakne blicans alism, Against our te rip fro} The cents s emphasized Hs cu ru bute Mterpri Haver Rep h uct BISMARCK GRAIN We ‘(Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) social | conditions, with which naught in common to keep up the stride struck this nation, go forward. friendly to mall and great, this nation through inven- genbup have America supremacy in and primacy in the in- orld. Correct the abuses, depart- justice and prd of Europear $1.08 1.04 a has ' we are industry wnkly of and nizing wt Shell Corn curb a Yellow White tandards & Mixed r play, to be sure, but let us not eld to the ery the demagogues and that the investor, the produce: carrier, the distribu- all regarded and treated mies, lest by so doing Iriven from produc- the fires in the the wheels of our turning, und the steady.| An e pass through what y ex-|they heretofore have experienced because of the temporary dominance n government structive forces to tear down the pillars of from of or more porists the be Sie L 4 le per pound discount under Rar corn Se under shell, = z enterprises, xo out, CHICAGO PRODUCE tes! » May 21.—Butt Creame standards to M% cents; fir seconds 30 to 3816 | unchanged. Eggs | prosperity. eipts 27.646 cases. } 24 ordina 22 stora cents ONPARTISAN KEY - NOTE IS GIVEN PUBLIC (Continueg from page 1) cents; cents; 26 cents; Poultry unsettled, to 25 ce roosters 14 cents CHICAGO Liv Chicago, May 21.-Hog receipts 000. Moderately active, mostly if cents lower. Top $7.65. Cattle recepits 12,000. Killing classes slo Beef steers, 10 to 15 cents lower. Top steers $11.40. Sheep recepits 6.000. Fat lambs slow, early sales steady to weak alive = Tock ere not governed hopes, wishes and desires of its; 110 million people but by the force of the almighty dollar Failure Charged harged the present state ad- ion had failed to make good of two years ago, to in ate offices and cheap = money = and ion of the cre- open books and ency in adminis ed that the’ only taxes made were for corporations primarily, then the banks, and other corpor ations like the telephone and. tele- graph companies. | Mwouyeira wo we were wromiscd I that the credit of the state would | restored, said Mr Thoresen. |"The calamity which has befallen |the people of the state during the two y of the present adminis- Siow | tration sufficient proof of fail- ure. Not only this, but it would cents | to. 20 | Seer that a deliberate attempt has | tes | by the He ministr: its promises homy duction, of ST. PAUL LIV Paul, May TOCK Cattle re- opening weak lower, Steers and most. early Fat sh K if kind upward to and cutters . Bologna bulls slow, bulk s Stockers and feed line with general trade Calves receipts 4,000. Strong to cents higher. light cal $9.25 to $9.7 to packers around $! Hog Shippers lower, cents light P: plenty dit of hones ration the and He reductions the railroad cents dec! yearlings off i in $10, Bulk receipts — 15,000. ted buying mostly Packers bidding lower. and ig sows $ or pig 3 Best klaugu:| * ter pigs around $6.00, Sheep receipts 300. mostly — direct. Lambs Sheep 25 to 50 cents lower clipped lambs quotable Good to choice 7.00 to $7.50. Receipts steady Best up to clipped ; | Water, pouring at the rate of 3,500 cubic feet a second on the giant. tur- MINNEAPOL IS FLOUR é bine of the recently completed 70,000- Fiour 4,960 to $18.00. un- « bar- els | FOR enger touring | overhauled, re attery, in first class H. Russ. Phone | t SALE Five pa C thoroughly painted, new condition. 204, G, OR SALE—My home residence ot | six rooms and bath, three bed rooms, full basement, all modern except heat. st front, fine lawn, shrubberry and flower plantings. The location is excellent, on paved street middle of block, taxes very moderate. Nice neighborhood. | Reasonable price aiid easy terms. | 0. J. St. Onge, 608-9th Strect, Phone 596-X. 5-21-4t | | FOR SALE—Standard make piano. | Call 5-21-1w | NEWLY furnished modern » for rent, 38 Rosser. rooms Phone 503-W. 5-21-1w Piatra urvine and Ceaeraior oad Bias 8 843. FOR RENT—During the vacation, 7 | well furnished rooms of my home ““ineluding first floor, with sun room, porches and garage. Terms ~ pxeasonable. + @18.3rd St. 521-3 | horsepower hydroelectric upit of the Niagara. Falls power company, does work that would require 700,000 tons of .coal ampually if the Bs iach ie i generate yy steam. So ient is. Fhone 745 or call at | Cenerator, said to be the Ingest in the | world, that it uses no more water than NICELY -Futnished room in modern | Wa8 Tequited for seven 5,000-horec- home. Close in. Call 402-5th St, | power units formerly, and yet delivera Phone 836J. Be 21-1w | energy.equivalent.to that produced by, ey .; fourteen of them. Specially designed, EXPERIENCED office eM wishes cars were required to hau! the castings ' position, Good references. Write for the turbine, the revolving elementa Tribune No. 778. 5-21: hl of which ‘weigh approximately 500 ioe | toms. “Nearly 83 per cont of the If the population of South Africa | ja as fei of the water is gained through on i creasin, at the present din, within the Mext 50 years the; {#¢ ‘ine adjustment of the parts. An* jation. will ‘have grown tof , 900,000 and the black to oleic agg ieranetorominecii ee i y WANTED TO RENT—Piano, Phone | aad ‘be completed Project will house elevator ( of Parts Com; people of the state that could easily have been given. The Bank of North Dakota, which now being oper- practically rural credit not made loans to the the porportion to the find that the administra- the restriction of the bank. while hundreds, farmers are every is bank, farmer need. tion the in We boasts operation they boast theusands of their farn He charged that “sy tors have employed $74 a day, so [am told, to this one banker because connected with a bank sup-| friendly to the League} hundreds of bankers in this are « hundred times more of fraud and deception than this man, and not a word said nor an action started by the attorney general's departn to prosecut them He charged tration could th of Well yes losing ial prosecu- at the been rate pr of ecute as posed to be while guilty the present adminis not be expected to and elevator ‘that the on opposed the mill and elevator dispute. While cone before the voters of and they are willing trial, they are i for its undoing,” declared that out of $100 taxes Dakotan pa upkeep of the Jared the mill and program could be made a make say succes k of North eee charged to get the He put kota. North Da- e bulk of opposition is center- ed upon the Bank of North Dakota, said Mr. Tho “The political question of today, be they state or national, eventually simmer down to a money quéstion. Finance at the bottom of the Ruhr controver- y. Finance was at the bottom of the world war, Finance was at the bottom of the Mexican trouble. Fi- nance is at the bottom of the scan- dals in Washington. The big inter- ests are willing that you get any- thing, just so long yyou leave the money to them. That is the reason for the fight on the indus- program and especially against f North Dakota.” What Fight Is friends,” said Mr. Thoresen, is not a fight between the exeept insofar some of politicians, receiving their or- from Minneapolis and God knows where else, have been able to fool some of the business people to believe that the farmers and la- borers stand for their destruction, No, this is not a fight between the people of this state. If it was, it would have been over with long ago. On the one side is the capital- ist system with all its money and with all its agents fighting to keep the great mass of people from ing possession of their govern- nt. They know that they must ep the people from exercising their rights, otherwise they will lose their grip upon the people of this state. And they know too well that as soon as the people of one st has wrested themsely from their control other states will follow. They know the end will come ome day Their only hope is to keep that day away as long possible. But thank God, regardless of the outcome of this election the vietory is almost won. The pro- gressive people throughout this great nation are rising in one ghty wave, and as Pharoah was swallowed up in thg Red Sea so will the spoilers be drowned in their own inequity. is as My “this people these ders as AUDITORS OF STATE GATHER D., May 21.—The state auditors convention opened here today, with about three-fourths of the auditors in the state present, The auditors will be in session two d Jamestown, N What the World Is Doin | As Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine Giant Turbine Is Installed at Niagara units with a total rated capacity of 000 horsepower. Water is to be supplied from the rapids above the Fi At Unit at dtisgace care Fa, Shore frangement falls, for this and. proposed: through »~hydraulic’ pressure tunta thirty-two feet in diameter and 4,300 feet long. Heart Tissue Is Still Alive after Twelve Years Preserved. ii food for its cells, a piece of chicken’e heart has been kept Years ‘by Dr. Alexis Cat oratory. sity, "rhe treason an pe versary in ‘its “new nee te? fi t tao other: similar unit: is being installed | directly from fowl to the fluid. of | | | girls from | interpreted they | (haa : Uncle Sam. MANY EVENTS KEEP VISITORS : | TO CITY BUSY) | (Continueg from page 1) | Convention Opens | Yesterday afternoon's ses: | the convention opened at | unity chorus singing . W. E. Fitzsimmons, Reports of the delegates from the | different clubs of the federation fol- owed the announcements made by | the various committees and officers. As the various reports of the differ- ent clubs were made the folloving the Junior High school in a fitting manner the principal activity of the club. The following girls represented the dif. ferent-clubs as listed: | Bismarck .. Ardeth Gusvner | Bowbells . Dency Dickin3on {Devils Lake . Betty Lofthouse | Dickinson Agnes Nieisen Fargo es . Jeanne Setser Grand Forks . Bernice Joslin Jamestown os e Livauhl Kk . Audrey Rohrer Lisbon Maxine Burnside i Mandan ..,,,, Margaret White Eagle From the Indian School : Jane Stackhouse, & Professional Women = | Helen Bradley Business Girls Club | Valley City . Vietoria Dunn} j Williston ... . Helen Robbins | Albertine Odhe | Nettie Ellis of Mandan| Miss Prichard Talks Miss Adelia Prichard addresses the | convention on the mission of ‘the! national federation to the local or! te clubs and to the individual, Her | k was most thoroughly enjoyed by all privileged to hear her, Miss Pritchard spoke as one wo- man to another in her address and briefly told of the importance of the national federation to the state and| individual club and the individual} member, saying friendship, co-oper- ation and good will were the key- notes to the advantages to be deriv- ed from affiliation with the national organization; stating further that) the national organization would ne er be any finer or any better than the individual member, herself. Sho pointed out that ench member of the organization was either a liability or an asset and that none should care to be the former since they de- tracted not orily from themselves but the entire organization. Call For Service Miss Prichard stated that though the club will have lighted its sixth birthday candle at the annual meet- ing of the ional Federation to be held at West Baden, Indiana, this summer, the call had already reach- | ed the national officers to extend the | helping hand to the -business women in other lands across the seas,and in the neighboring country of anf@ that the American business and professional woman holds a particn- lar and significant place in the world today, for ere long the time will. be ripe when ‘the national organization shall have to launch out and become international thereby benefitting the most by universal service. Women of Switzerland, Japan, China and Canada have asked for help and inter- ested themselves to learn of the con- surrounding the American woman, who Miss Prichard maintains have received a rich heri- tage from those pioneer women who blazed the trail in the business, in- dustrial_and professional life of wo- men and a great debt of gratitude is | due these pioneers for their deep and abiding faith with a vision and cour- age to carry on, The problem of the organized B. & W. Club as Miss Prichard secs i is to help teach the young girl en- tering a business and professicnal| life, factors entering into the suc-| cessful service to that life by doing’ her part in creating a better busi- ness world for after all the great mission in life is service. The added privilege of citizenship has given woman another occasion g Simple Device Stirs Milk While Cooling Fresh milk.\is often stirred im order to cool it, and this is usually done by hand, which isaslow and tiresome task. A simple device for doing the work automatically by water flowing into a tank, as shown in the drawing, can be /made by any farmer from materials that are’ available everywhere. device consists of a shallow box, made of 1-in. pine boards. The ends are sloping and the box is divided into | two equal parts by a board extending vertically in the center about 8 or 10 in. above the sides. .The box is mounted at its center on a wooden azle, and a stirring paddle is attached to ‘each end ae indicated, These pad- diey are made from Jaths, planed smooth, and having‘a number of short crosspieges nailed on. In use, the milk | cans aré placed in the water tank and the stirring device arranged ‘as chown in thé ‘dedwing, the rock box being located under 8 water pipe so that the water first flows into one side and then the, other side alternately. Ag soon as one side of the box is filled the weight of the water causes the box ion of with led by | Minot Bus Minot unada, | serviee and Miss Prichard made| strong plea for “more education and less legislation,” She stressed | the thought that the time was fost, approaching when women would be! PARLEY HELD” Stutsman Meets Workers From Several Counties May 21.—ingependent aders from McHenry, Mountrail and Wa Minot yeste: man concern- ve campaign June ye the gathering ive pend for independents. called upon to think and act together one great whole for the better- nt of humanity. Development of Ideai ( Three assets are at the disposal of cuch for the development of the ideal conditions: namely, time, money and, strength and in each state there have been and still are leaders who giadiy i sacrificed ech for the ideal of | © sco ed in Federation. She said: “We are 5 ate to be living under the only government founded on an ideal, for neration has had its great aithful followers, who work s believed: i ideal. We are wig 8S y igi tone he explained; and it is. the| World War that it is often nara: to; AteHoiiig svbte> SHAE SSeeRUIIN aial| get the message clear, for duty, but rEmiWites, WENETSTEREERIE | Roosevelt had truly Hone: a full tute out uit, 88 | courage and brains were the quali- atilé cry Gf the: REAR ties necessary for any successful] pu pticans,” he. said: hen, with the | voters of the state in possession of | the facts there need be no feaz re- | garding the outcome.” “The st quarters will carry | ampaign to get the} the people of every; in the stat i County organizations cording to} Stutsman, will be perfected in ; county in the state, taking | the work down to the precinets: | “Everywhere I have been, U have | | Minot, N Republican he to! Stutsman there impers on the part of is said | will be Miss Prichard maintained, the ideals to be imparted to the young woman entering the bus- | in professional life, for at no} time was there greater need for these terling qualities for with brain. power goes heart power. She closed her splendid addvess| with a plea that the members of the federation band themselves together in sympathetic understanding, tr to themselves, each other, and their nation and reach with bands of love out to all which will in the end mean the universal band of sisterhood. Echoes From Dallas Miss Madora Knox of Grand Forks made the closing talk of yesterday fternoon’s session in which she re- counted the social and business meet- ing of the national beard of directors at Dallas las Following her talk the nominating committee held un executive sesion and the conven- tion was adjourned until this morn- tng at 9 a, im. DEVINE SPEAKS TO BANKERS J. hese were ss or found splendid sentiment,” said M “It is realized that work is needed and the men and women ure taking control in encouraging fashion.” Mr. Stutsman is holding @ confer- ence at Williston today. EXHIBIT AT CAMP URGED Advertising Ciub Woutd Dis- play Burleigh Co. Products Stutsman. wondertully | i= | | | | exhibit of | Burleigh rek jeve Plans for an agricultural pro of county by members of the Bism Advertising Club. Members be this exhibit will prove to the thou- nds of people expected to stop at the camp during the course of the summer touring son that Bur- leigh county ranks among the best | agricultural counties of the North- dvertising Club offi up the matter with t camp committee of the n of Commerce, i ident Young of the ing Club named F. J. man of a committee to p Yesentation for Bismarck in the New | Holstein circuit tour. | | Commissioner of Imm M. Devine will speak at sodiation zone meetings on subject orth Dakota Needs More Good Farmers .on North Good Land,” as follows: Devils Lake, May d Fork: 3 Coo- perstown, May Mandan, May Forman, May, Fargo, June He spoke at Minot yesterday, PETITIONS FOR OFFICE FILED h the secre- included: For Frank Feetham of Grand Fo for congress, O. B. Burtness, first district; for district judge, M. J. Englert, first district; Charl Wolfe, third district. Cook bv Electricity. It is safer, Advertis- dy, chair- Filing for office w tary of state today Salem-Flasher preme court, MUNICIPAL” DAIRY | Mayor Samuel A. Carlson of Jamestown, N. Y., is going to estab- d milk dis- tributing plant, s the sixth step he has taken since 1908 in the | acquisition of private enterprises for the city. TY i. a fi a Portland Cement Stucco Endures No wonder it is unaffected by weath- er conditions —that rain only makes it harder. For Portland Cement Stuccoin all essentials is Concrete. And you know how well Concrete serves in foundations, invhomes, in hospitals, in mighty dams, in ‘roads and skyscrapers. Be sure, therefore, taat you always specify stucco by the full name, Portland Cement Stucco, and get the enduring strength which that tenacious’ binder, Portland Cement, assures. Architects will tell you that Portland Cement Stucco assures a home of distinc- tion and beauty. No other exterior treat- ment offers such a variety of color and texture. It harmonizes perfectly with any landscape setting. And the ideal backing for Portland ‘Cement Stucco is Concrete Masonry— Caneryte Block or Tile. se 8 ‘Watch for advertisements telling about the many other uses of Portland Cement. And remember that the Portland Cement Associa- tion has a free personal service to offer you. Whether you use concréte or have it used for Yous this service will give you more for your money, Write today for your free copy of “A Plain Talk gn Beautiful Homes.” “ PORTLAND oe ASSOCIATION MINREAPOLIS, MINN. POLIS, A National Organization to tilt,over, and the other side of tha box is then to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete OFFICES IN 30 CITIES INDEPENDENT [Ssvanese Prince | [iseiaune ahi Yamashina, | erting the coming summer. | goric, he WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1524 6 years old, is known as being the nashina, the “Prince of the Air,” lies to have taken up aviation, He wer said to be an efficient aviatoc. 21,—Prince Takehiko ad of one of the Im- families, pla to States and Europe nee i is Tokio, May Scientists predict that the domi- nion of man 1s on te wane, and that in time woman will be the rul- ing sex. Children Gry for MOTHER:~ Fletcher’s Cas- toria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, prepared for Infants and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of, Cont fhth Proven directions on each package. Physiciags everywhere recommend it. ee This Little Dollar Goes To Market Every year every family of your acquaintance spends about 70 per cent of its income just for living, exclusive of rent—so economic experts tell us. Think what this means — seven dollars out of every ten invested in food, clothing; household utilities and all the multitude of things that keep a family comfortable and happy. It’s a big job to spend so much money wisely and well. It re- auires careful business methods to get the best possible returns from each dollar that leaves the family purse. The clever woman goes for help to the advertisements of her daily paper. There she finds a direc- tory of buying and selling. She learns about the offerings of mer- chants and manufacturers. She compares values. She weighs quality and price. She takes this opportunity of judging and se- lecting almost everything she needs to feed, clothe, amuse, in- struct and generally bring up her family. Do you read the advertise- ments? ‘You will find them will- ing and.able to serve you in the daily business of purchase. ADVERTISEMENTS ARE GUARDIANS OF YOUR POCKETBOOK — READ THEM CAREFULLY

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