The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 30, 1924, Page 8

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MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1924 PAGE EIGHT EDUCATION PROBLEMS TO BE DISCUSSED E. A. Sixty-Second An-| nual Convention to Con- tinue Until July 1 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ZIONISTS | GATHER AT PITTSBURGH Convention Interest Centers on Removal of Headquar- ters to Jerusalem Exultant? Of Course! T hey’re Cheering “Her Bill” 'Mr. Bishop gave brief talks. An of fering of $101.00 was taken, which will provide for 101 bibles in the state. Governor Nestos last night subscribed’ to the fund, and the pro- fesional men of the city are back- ing the campaign. The drive for money with which to bible the state will continue until sufficient funds will have been rais- ed to complete the work. Bismarck alone will reuire 500 bibles. CAMPAIGNOF GIDEONS GETS IMPETUS HERE {For Members Gather For Banquet Held in Bismarck Saturday Night The Gideon banquet Saturday night at the Grand Pacific hotel was attended by forty members ot the organization and their friends male chorus of 12 entertained the company with three selections. A. L. Bishop, state president, was the principal speaker of the evening, presenting the Gideon program of work and stating that the eyes of Gideon's throughout the Unitea States were watching the North Da- kota. members in their bible drive. Other speakers were Rev. C. F. Strutz and Rev. S. F. Halfyard, who encouraged the Gideon’s in their work in the state. Mayor Smart of Minot, and Governor Nestos were unable to attend the banquet. The meeting was pronounced by several of the local Gideons to have been the most enthusiastic ever hel din Tipeats found in the tombs of an- cient Egypt are similar to those played with by the boys of today. ( Donee BROTHERS: Special — Type Cars Washington, June 30. second annual convention National — Education — A opened here today with de attendance dred allied tions. It through July program has b President C liver a speech o list. of speakers the general fe speak include John ‘I States Commissioner who will deliver the come, Samuel G the American Feé Senator Royal S. Carrie Chapman Catt, President of | Pittsburgh, June 30.—With 700! delegates from all over the United States in attendance, the 27th an- nual convention of the Zionist Or- ganization of America, the largest gathering ever held in the history of the movement, opens here tomorrow at the William Penn Hotel, with Louis Lipsky, National Chairman of the organization, presiding. The ue conventiqn closes Tuesday night. Vis st, Unite : : j Interest in the convention centers it _Bueation, in the proposals to remove the oes aoe World Zionist headquarters from tien oF Labor,| London to Jerusalem, which Mr. Lip- ee la sky has urged since his recent re- turn from London where he served The sixty of the ociation ates in hun WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 from more than a educational scheduled 4 organiza and ar drawn up who will de 1, heads the will addres: Others to | PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in Confort the League of Women Voters. Olive | M. Jones. President of the tion, will preside at the conference: | The departments of the | association will hold numerons meet ings in which all the fronting education and the of teachers of all categories be discu Chief among these will be business, immigrant, kinder garten, musical, physical, vocational, and rural — instruction Wallace will be one of the speaker on rural education, ‘The visual to teaching and the value of motic picture as an aid to education will be also examined What the government is doing for public education will at a meeting of the Press Association of Appleton P. ©. Griffin, sistant Librarian at the Congress; eK. Burge tor of the Bureau of Stand; Walter Fewkes, chief of the of Americ Ethnology Smithsonian Institution; Mr and other government officials | Secretaries Hugh Hoover and Msistant Secrets will address tional Council the National Associations cil of Prim general | various problems con- | welfare | will} Secretary | | | | the | Tigert | and Roose the N Studie respectively, for Social League of nd the National Coun- | Education Council intendents and ucation will hold meetings to! decide upon the best means of equal izing the education opportunities of | all the children of a state, or, if} possible, of all the children of the | nation. | Two lectures will be provided by! the National Geographic Ralph A. Graves will give a picture story of the Society's expeditions in China, Tibet and Mongo of the archeological discove Peru. Robert Cushman Murphy will] discuss the Pacific Ocean and the South Seas as a future important economic and political arena. | L. S. Rowe, Director General of the Pan American Union, Olive M. Jones, and Guillermo A. Sherwell, formerly Secretary of Education in Mexico, will speak on education as a factor in the development of Pan Americanism at a regional confer- ence of the World Federation of National Education Associations. chers’ | ry of State $ | Commissioners ! Corner Stone Exercises Held At Dickinson)! Dickinson, N. D., June 30.—An elaborate program was carried out yesterday afternoon in the laying of the corner stone of the new Con-| gregational church at Dickinso Dickinson lodge No. 32 A. F. & A. M. was in charge of the ceremonies, the full ritual of the order being used. i Lodges at Killdeer, Hebron, New| England, and Beach each sent dele- gations to the event. 1. S. Henry of Valley City, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Noxth Dake j & A. M. directed the ceremonies. | He was assisted by the Past Masters | of Dickinson lodge, who acted as| grand officers | The complete program of the cere- monies follows: Invocation—Rev. Alexander Coffin,| of the Episcopal church. Anthem—Combined’ choirs, gregational and M. E. churches. Address--Rev. A. C, Hacke. Offertory. Violin Solo Address—T. S. Henry, Grand Mas ter of the Grand Lodge of North Dakota, A. F. & A. M. Laying of Corner Master Henry, as of Dickinson lodge. Anthem—Combined choirs of the nal and M. E. churches jon. . W. R. Morrison of the M. E. church. Construction work on the build- ing is now well under way and it is expected that the first unit will be completed within the time specified in the contract. Rev. James Elvin is pastor of the church. JAPAN DROPS NAVY WORKERS Tokio, June 30. (A. P.)—The Navy department announces that it will diseharge 7,330 workers from its ar- senals during the next month as part of its retrenchment program. Nearly half of these men will be taken over by private shipbuilders. Aw effort is being made to induce some of them to join the growing stream of emigration to South America. Con- tis Lee. Stone--Grand ; ACCOUNTANCY! FIRMS MERGE “St. Paul, June 30.—Merger of two of the oldest accountancy firms in i in jsays that his aA. F:|" sisted by officers | This interesting just as the McAdoo demon almost exalted, expre people about were lost fr JOHN RINGLI AIRS VIEWS Robbins Brother Cireus Here on July 9 Will Conf Ringling Ringling, & John Barnum circuses, An gre ind the o the the that th busines publi¢ that ple th cur most is show o long that he of it, and one it, However, wher the road the public every day the show 3 ed lion act eason refuse missex Society.| with the question, “Where are th lions were and within a fe couring the co’ lost. act. He ¢ most satisfactory ey find their it is the fore the public and phant act as the next. that of all the he believ a ives Mr sa managerie to be the most popu next and the monkey third. r% but sea lion act is the most popu of animal act before the When considers the 1 juggling the animals their acrobatic f jug fire brans—a seafish hand ns improbable, tain this no doubt one lion, the Tiebor's season wi conside C lives in Tonow has a training e: He is the ountry who can He himself will with the Robbin Hi tssistant quare any It is with Robbins fortune Capt, ex lions pre h st only ‘ wecomplis, Bros. ei two sons are Thi cireus ot of dros would world that their sery wonderful animals the good s of Tiehor for thi ippear at and evening perfe ason Capt. Tiebor senting his talk Sk Paul was announced Saturday. ample, Webb & Co., and’ Bishop < Girisstben Co., under the consoli ‘tion. will become Temple, Brissman (Ce, - q song. (East Side, West S! thousandg were gathered photographic yet itis a man personally tidy of Mt tration, at its peak hoon her face, It om vision in’ that NG Wiliam wa was fe moment. G. McAdoo her Bill” and, German Retail Trade Has Worst Year In History June 30. (A. P.)-—-The been the worst’ in the tail trade in Ger «to the annual seiation of ores publi ed influence he business of 1923 were the steady diveline of the mark and the oceup tion of the Ruar, which upset con- ditions 4 lly. While manufacturers endeavored adjust the to the situation : by quoting in dollars mes Ue’ pounds, and who slers just as rap: dly followed ‘suit, numerous new laws and divers regulations prevent- cd the retailers from joining this proce: of inflating pri nd rig'dly bound to a narrow profits. officials contend © of the coun- than any period ‘uring the war, With the stabiliza- the rentenmark, however, re this yean expect that, busi ness generally will get back Ao the pre-war ba Berl ni best year ha of the of the Depart of irm hain ent s Ive prices or the i to book the show got‘on i it and pestere sion w week to that be the ele Ringling in the} PIONEER OF WEST DIES ‘i’. D. Cantwell on Boat Taking upplies to Custer Thomas DeLaney Cantwell, syed 82 years, a pioneer of the North- wost. died in Mandan last night about 9:20 o'clock, after sever: weeks illness. He was horn in Ir land November 27, 1842, and en grated in 1858. He was in the Civil War, and was capture, but escaped. Ho is said to have been on a boat taking: supplies to General ( ter before the ,massacre of Little Big Horn, the last boat carry supplies. Five children survive: Mr Massey, Mrs. H, J. Sehafer and ‘antwell of Mangan, Mrs. Carney and Bridella Cantwell. eral ices take place Tues c lace 3 | Read Tribune Want Ads. untry im of et tailers sea lion the form public. narvelou perform, ling of ling fire fact which Robbin best t al e breaks in the the feat. appear reus thi » carried t alone in the pleasure announce the hi the to ine Julia and eason. | both the ormances, pre Here’s how Madison Square Garden appeared at the height of th sands joined in the song of of Pits tude tie ‘Sidewalks New York”. ide” men and women shouted. to celebrate in honor of Smith, ah kG Cpe the box in whic! the cameraman Note the ecstatic, ates, all things and was snapped he face indi by her ‘GROWERS OF TOBACCO TO COOPERATE ‘Tobacco Growers of Bulgaria Will Cooperate, Other In- dustries Follow Stanimaka, Bulgaria, June 1. (A. | holding |The management of the. plantations | and factories \ four-fifths | Fun i P.)—Starting five years ago With a collective capital of. about $12, a co- operative society of tobacco: grow- ers of the has been so phenomenally succesgful that. jt is starting a nation-wide coaperative campaign that is attracting much at- tention. No district a atter how large his stoca member has but-one. vote. is ‘elective by, direct vote snd the cooperative idea “has been carried into ali phases of the i Ife of ‘ts members. It shown by the annual report iust ed that the society controls of the business of the extends to its members physical, educational and moral help. Its own physicians, visit sick mem- bers, they are taken to society hos- pitals in society ambulances. It maintains a large orchestra which gives semi-weekly concerts in its own hall. It its own legal ad- visors and its own court) for the settlement of disputes between mem- be : When a deterioration in the quant- ity or quality of a co-operator's tv bacco crop is observed, they send the society chemist to analyze soil nd crop and determine the cause of the decline. Not only does the socivty refuse tc deal with non-cooperative pro- ducers of tobacco, but it insists up on employing co-operators as car- penters, om producers ot building materials and of machinery. One of the results is a remarkable improvement, in the morals of the town.» Drunkenness is practically { animaka is the > industry, also co- operative in its oper town. It intil they were hoarse, The city government is almost com- | pletely controlled by co-operators. i wad demonstration for Al Smitl as bands played the famous Tammany marthing And on the streets se 3 as a member of the World Zionist executive. Other important subjects upon which action will be taken by the conventian, are: “Coordination of the work of all fund-raising organi- zations for the rebuilding of Pales- tine, of which the Zionist Organi- zation is the farent body, in order to eliminate duplication of effort and provide a large central bureau to handle all matters pertaining to the reconstruction of the Jewish Na- tional Homeland. Non*Zionist participation in the Jewish Agency for the upbuilding of Palestine, recently advocated by a group of leading American Jews, headed by Louis Marshal of New York, President of the American Jewish committee. Proposals for the regulation of the Palestine budget with particu- lar emphasis upon an extension of the colonization work, which draws its support largely from the contri- butions made by the Jews of Am- erica through the Palestine Founda- tion Fund, the principal financial instrument of the Zionist Organiza- tion. a The opening session tomorrow will be featured by reports on conditions in Palestine as viewed by recent in- vestigators including Miss Henri- etta Szold, President of Hadassah, the Women's Zionist Organization; Abraham Goldberg, member of the Administrative Committee and of the Actions Committee of the World Zionist Organization, Jacob Fish- man, managing editor of the Jewish Morning Journal and member of the National Executive Committee; and Dr. Joseph Silverman, Rabbi Emer- itus of the Temple Emanuel of New York. “DAY OBSERVED’ Kiwanis Club Hears Talk on America’s Fight For Liberty Members of the Kiwanis club here today held an Independence Day program, since the Fourth of July s to be celebrated this week. E. B. Cox gave the principal address, re- viewing America’s fight for inde- pendence. Eric Thorberg, one of the club delegates to the Kiwanis Inter- national at Denver, gave a resyme of the trip he and Worth Lumry made, and describing the inspiring scenes when 6,000 members of the organization were gathered together. Pat Byrne #won the attendance prize. Otto Bowman was chairman of the day and Judge Berry of Man- dan, Lou Bohn of Fargo and Joe Simmons of Cheyenne, Wyoming, were visitors, COUNTY GOES FOR NESTOS Carries it by 51 Votes, Unof- ficial Returns Show Governor Nestos carried Burleigh county, by 51 votes, the complete un- official returns from Wenesday's pri- mary today showed. The last pre- cinct, Rock Hill, was reported to the county auditor shortly after noon to- day. . Thre vote was Nestos 2,315; Sor- lie 2,264. ‘There were several candidates ad- vanced by sticker on the county bal- lt. For county superintendent of schools Mary Hubér got 15 votes and ‘Elizabeth Jones three votes. For sheriff Frank Barnes received nine votes, Rollin Welch 25 and Chas. Rue five votes. For coroner R. G. Phelps received 27 votes and B. F, Flannagan 67 votes. J. N..Roherty and J. M. Hanson re- ceived scattering votes for county surveyor. The vote on justice of the peace, excepting two precincts, totalled as follows: Anton Beer 1821; C. G. Boise 1864; R. H. Crane 1478; W. S. Casselman 1911, W. D, Perkins 107; A. E, Shipp 1882. BERRY LEADS _ IN FOURTH DisT. Returns from the Sixth judicial district, with the exception of Bil- lings county, six precincts in Sioux six precincts in Grant and seven pre; cincts in Slope ,county, give: Judge H, L. Berry 13,416; Thomas Pugh 12,559; Lembke 11,355; Miller 6,836; Simon 5,794; Johnson 4,327, Cook by Electricity. Clean, It is Bismarck. held at the Presbyterian churh, at which Rev. Strutz, ; Rev. Postlethwaite, C. L. Young and pene Skibtidel ace RL Last night a union meeting was Rev. Johnson ’ Have You Signed a Blank Check? The automobile owner whodrives his car without adequate insur- ance has signed a blank check. At any moment an accident may occur which may make him liable for damages to the extent of every dollar in the bank and every bit of praperty he owns. No man with property can afford to take such a chance. AETNA-AUTO INSURANCE protects the motorist against in- surable motoring risks. It is your one guarantee against the pos- sibility of financial loss due to the operation and ownership of your car, Henry & Henry Charge. Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R. SPECIAL — THIS WEEK! We have just received a shipment of Tennis and Sport shoes, best quality and specially priced. We are offering for this week. WOMEN’S SPORT OXFORDS White, with Black trim— Leather or Rubber Heels. AT $1.98 | CAPITAL CITY CLOTHING STORE 5th Near Broadway . To The Public I wish to express my many thanks to the voters of Burleigh County for the large vote I received at the primary election. I am so satis- fied with the outcdme, that I cannot express in words, since I heard from all the voting places in Bismarck and the rural dis- tricts. I thank you. Yours for economy and service. FRED SWENSON Insurance Agency Register of Deeds of Burleigh Co. NOLO LO NT ATT AAT ATTN TN SPORTS: Four days THRILLS: formers, strations by culture. ENTERTAINMENT: MUSIC: THE HUB 0 Auto Races on Monday. Sensations every day, EDUCATION: The largest exhibit of Live Stock, Poultry, den Crops, Dairy Products, Fine Arts, ‘ Exhibits to be found in Western Canada. outdoor stage. one management. . The poueleal program. provided for this « sive. Hear,the ilitary Band of Canada, famous Concert Band from Starkweather, Spee: the Bring your tent if you want to—there will be free: Brandon, July 4th Over The Sunshine Highway Or J. B. Trail To The PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION OF MANITOBA JUNE 30TH TO JULY 4TH. DAYS OF SUNSHINE EDUCATION AND AMUSEMENT THERE WILL BE of Horse Racing, See the real ones. High Diving Acts and Motor Cycle and six real full grown Polar Bear per- Field and Gar- Domestic and School in, n Exhibits and demon- the Dominion and Provincial Departments’ of Agri- The finest vaudeville program ever offered The most complete ahaee Midway ever placed under year is more exten. sixty strong. parking an i space on the Grounds. / ‘ ra See F GOOD ROADS WELL MARKED,

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