The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 30, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE SIX ERICKSON DAY | OBSERVEDHERE. BY KIWANIANS Judge Johnson and Governor | Nestos Tell of Early Nor- | wegian Explorations DISCOVERY OF AMERICA SOME DIFFERENCE IN AGES! |Kenmare to be the Scene of » THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CONVENTION OF 1.W.W. WILL BE HELD IN STATE National Gathering of The Wobblies Minot, Sept. 30.—A national con- vention of the I. W. W. organization clared today that no action will be/to a ruptured ulcer in the stom- taken on their part in an endeavor|ach, by physicians who conducted to prevent an assembling of the con-|a post-mortem examination... ...... vention and that any further action on their part will depend on develop- | >A NI MOTORS IS ments after the convention assem- nie city hall committee of Ken- SUCCEEDED BY NEW COMPANY mare, of which Mayor Blood is chair- man, has rented the hall to’ repre- senor ae au Tiew, “> Society tl se. cloud, Sept. 30.—Another chap- ter is about to be written jn the his- tory of St. Cloud’s motor plant, ori- ginally the factory of the Pan Mo- CHARLEBOIS _ RITES FIXED) tor company Articles of incorpora- tion for the Diamond Motor Parts ; Company, a $1,000,000 concern, were Funeral services for Edward ‘Charlebois, who died Sunday ‘TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1924 to be filed today with the Secretary of State. = =“Phe + -corporation- theoretically purchased the Mutual Motor Com- pany plant and equipment—original- ly the Pan Motor Company’s factory —and replaces the mutual concern as a corporation in Minnesota. The 3,400 stockholders in the Mutual Mo- tor Company automatically become stockholders in the new company. Their stock is equity to about $200,- 000. Plans to sell stock up to $800,- 000 are being formulated. A series of symbols resembling the modern shorthand notes were invented in the days of the Roman Empire. FOURTH DAY OF BATTLE OVER Shanghai, China, Sept. 30.—(By the A. P.)—The fourth day of continuous fighting between rival Shanghai armies near Shanghai was com- pleted tonight with no evidence that early termination of the battle could be expecte Cook By Wire Instead of by Fire, Members of the Kiwanis club were taken back into history at the luncheon yesterday afternoon, when Judge aking on program, told of e: ies in America and “| eg Nestos told of the famous ngtou Stone found in Minne- ee i PY os About the year 999 or 1,000 Leif, ; @ ko Erickson was sent to Greenland by 3 : : the King of Norway to introduce 8 Christianity, and there heard the} story of Norsemen being driven; out of the course and discovering ; Kor a rare combination of ages, just turn to the J. F. Collins family land in the f , Judge John-| of Abilene, Tex. Papa Collins is 6%, Mamma is 17, and Doris May, son said, Lei kson organized | their daughter, is just four months old. Collins’ wife was just 14 when an expedition about the year 1,000 they were married. or 1,001 and with 35 men struck | = out and landed in two places on} : soeaiaeon nat the North Americ: continent. | Ale vertheless, [T recognize tha ‘They remained over winte; al it is the privilege of our voters to r | 44 support anyone they wish at the a1 hich, he said, probably was Macs | polls and feel that the laws should A brother of Leif Erickson later | hot be «rawn for the purpose of organized another party and still | bie aune ste pee 1 would ate sefni anized a third | apply this ru onl y arty, ti rel atte) sith atin: | _— | complaint, about Louisiana, but to had encounters with the In-j a as {all the other states of the union. ind attempted the first per-| Daughter of Minnesota Farm-| secretary of State Joseph Bailey nt settlement in America, the | " refused to permit the names of! RGauEGr anid! The first white| er Must Return the LaFollette electors to go on child was born in this settlement. aces the official ballot, basing his ac- Judge Jonson, revic ng thes: Fargo, Sept. 30.--The unidentified) Hon upon a state law which re- discoveries, said that most of hi quires Petitions relating kouimde infor ‘ame from the story : pendent candidates should — be Of Erick. The Red, reduced. 19{ Sete and hatless on September 18 i") signed by voters who have declar- writing in the Thirtcenth or Four-| THill county and who has since been] ed themselves independent of af- teenth century. jlodged at the Florence Crittenton! filation with any party when they | He 1 that Columbus had vis- | Home o: been identified as| registered. The petition presented ited iceland in 1477, and that there | Elvir y E er of altoday by the LaFollette leaders s speculation as’ to whether or | farmer of Beltrami, } a bore the signatures of hundreds umbus heard about Amer-| iff Nelson of Polk 3 an-| who registered as Democrats or ica while there. ied by his wife, arrived in Fargo this} Republicans. Judge Johnson said a recouni-| noon to take charge of the girl. Se ing of the story of the Vikings did! Elvina, 18 years old, did not want not detract at all from the discov- | to return home, but authorities ruled] 3 WOUNDED IN eries of Columbus, because } a! she must. ROBBER EFFORT there was glory enough to goj| She is one of two daughters of round. the Beltrami farmer and although —_. | Dowell, Il, Sept. 30.—At least} pite her| three persons were wounded in an a step-mother she is said to The | exchange of shots with four robbers her name as Olson| who held up the union state bank| sington Rune Stone now has 4} of Brooks, North Dakota after she| shortly before noon today and cs- permanent place on a farm near! had been taken in charge by the}caped in a motor car with about} Ephriam, Wisconsin. The stone) sheriff's office of Traill county. Mrs.| $1,100. when found near Kensington, Min-| Agnes Rex, juvenile court. commis: nesta, carried a date more than! sioner, haq sent her to the Fargo 800 years in the past, and scien’! home pending a search for her par- ie med that it was inscribed‘ ents, Notice of her whereabouts ly Norsemen who landed in; yexched Polk county, Minnesota, of- America in search of fellow coun- gicjals who wired they would come to en | take the girl in charge. \ Ward county, beginning Friday, Oct | Sto iy Oe Revd, Wedmenday, 2 a HH MIIIINMIIININNNUIIIMUVRNNUANATOE HH TELU AAU ELA ober 3, and continuing for one week,| Brothers chapel. Burial will be in the sessions to be held in the city| Fairview cemetery., hall in that city, according to Ward| Mr. Charlebois’ death, which county officials in Minot. came after he was seized with County authorities in Minot de-’ acute illness, was found to be ‘we Plant Tulips Now % —Our Dutch Bulbs Have Arrived — Hard to Fit? Men who are hard to fit are taken care of, too, in this store. Big heavy men, short men, stout men; tall slender men — no matter what your figure is our tailors can fit you. Have your suit and overcoat made Right in Bismarck by Tulips, Hyacinths, Daffodils and Narcissus in splendid assortment. ‘The sooner you plant yours the better. ~ “The easiest flowers there are to grow. Simple cultural directions furnished with each order. irl who was fyund wandering foot- OSCAR H. WILL & CO. Greenhouse 319-3rd St. Phone 784-W AUNIUNEUOA0O0S00THUTEEOACUEOUNEUEGEREGOEAGUAUUAOEUGEUEELUAHOOSOEGUGOUAERONENOEOOOOROALUGEUOOOUOAEOA Kensington St Governor Nestos, t the Kensington Stone, declared his | decla ibelief that it was genuine. The Ken-| girl about Bergeson’s In his new book, “The Organization of Modern Business”, W. R. Basset says: READ TRIBUNE WANT ADDS. “One hears a good deal about the iron heel of capitalistic despotism squeezing blood profit out of the poor, down-trodden worker. But, I have yet to discover a company that became really Prosperous when operated on the lemon-squeezer principle.” The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) long since appreciated the essential value of putting the How the stone came to find resting place in Minnesota has | been a matter of conjecture for} many years, but one theory, the | Governor said, was that it was carried down in a glacial drift from the region of Hudson Bay. Governor Nestos read the transla- | tion of the inscription on the stone! as follows: “Hight Goths and 22 Norsemen | Would Have LaFollette Given|S© VEN 1S better~ Special Discount GRANTED TO FIRST ae STUDENTS ENROLLED. Mandan Business College COURSES: PREPARATORY — COMMERCIAL STENOGRAPHIC — SECRETARIAL. DAY AND EVENING CLASSES——— Experienced . Teachers — Modern - Equipment’ —ndividual Don’t fool your- jself thinking the SQUARE DEALihat that costs’ ‘on an exploration journey from: Vinland through western regions. | Chance in Louisiana § 1 ( - 60 cents, Any man or woman can We had camp by two skerries one! day’s journey from this stone. We were out and fished one day. ‘When we came home we found 10 men red with blood and dead Ave Maria. Save us from evil! “We have 10 of our party by the sea to look after our vessels 14 days’ journey from this island. Year 1362.” Another theory was that the; story of the exploration party’s | (presence in America is that an © pediti y in 1355 by Paul Knutson in relict | of colonists in Greenland. It is| helieved that Knutson eventually | meached Vinland and, not finding | those of whom he came in search. journeyed on to what is now the Hudson Bay country. Funeral Held | In Wilton Today | Funeral servic were held in Wilton today for Stella Shlorhun, | . aged 10, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, John Shlorbun of Wilton, who was killed when a shotgun acci- dentally <charged while the family was hunting in Grass Lake township Sunday. Coroner Gobel said it was not necessary to con- duct an inquest, there being wit- hesses to the accident. Most of the radium used in Europ- ean hospitals comes from Belgium, Austria and the United States, Who Is Your Skinny Friend, Ethel? Tell him to take Cod Liver Oil for a couple of months and get enough good, healthy flesh on his bones to look like a real man. ‘Tell him he won't have to swallow = the nasty oil fa with the fishy . taste, because 4 the McCoy La- boratories, of New York, are now putting up Cod Liver Oil in sugar coated tablet form. ‘Ask for | Me- Coy’s Cod Liver Oil Tablets. —A — and every druggist worthy the name sells them—60 tablets put on five pounds of healthy flesh in thirty. days, or the money paid for tablets will be refunded. One woman put on fifteen pounds in six weeks. Children grow robust and strong. 1 the Gordon is all’ vew leans, Sept. 30.—La i | cute “healquatters “for iouisiana a ZOO hat should: here gave out the text of a tele- gram from | President, Coolidge) Jy d l with reference to the situation in} O@ aNd COSts al this state where _LaFollette-| Wheeler electors have been barred dh d from the ballot in the election inja OO! at nee ‘November because of a state law relating to party affiliations. . dol Fe ety an Totnes |COSt-- five dollars. leaders said was received, follow: “Replying to your telegram, it my desire that full and free oppor- tunity be afforded under the state; laws of our country for an expres- | n of the popular will in the { election of all public officials. my regret, there are states in the | union where the law is such that this is not possible and it is too late now to change such laws. * * *| —for every roof in town | Danie building to-day costs enough to deserve the full protection of asbestos. You want to protect your property from fire, weather and the wear and tear of time. That is what Johns-Manville Asbestos Roofing eee = i Se About price—it costs very little more than rag-felt ‘soofing which often won't give ow half the secyien: ‘You'll like Johns-Manville Flexstone Shingles and Roofing. It is slate surfaced in three rich colors—red, green and blue-black. We sell it both in shingles and in plaellg cfesigpde Fecomenens it for platoet ayet7. Bes pose, but we carry grades of roofing to meet) any price requirements. “Get MeCoy’s, the original and gen- wie Cod Liver Oil T Finney Drug Co., Cowan Drug Co. gad A. P, Lenhart Drug Co. J. F. PEARCY, Business Mgr. F. H. CARPENTER LUMBER CO. and Small Group Method Instruction, School Opens SEPT. 29th. Students may enter any time. Your opportunity to save—Arrange For Your Scholarship Now; Before the First Fiity Students Are Enrolled. For Catalog and Further Particulars, Address Mandan, N, D. WeCan Put Goodyear Balloons on Your Car in an Hour If you want balloon tires, for either new small diameter wheels or the wheels now on your car, get them from us. 4 We have Goodyear Balloon Tires in both types and in your size. In design and construction, these tires the est development in the phates flexible-wall, easy-riding tire now in such demand. "he neg Supersutee Gord ts usell cx, clusively in Goodyear Balloons. We sill fernith Goodvese Balloon Tires to ft your » ou prefer, small- oes talinon tinge eel ce coee ts celle less than you have been paying for the tires now on your car. You'll never have a better opportunity to balloon tires on your car. La Order your Goodyear Balloons today. Lahr Motor Sales Co. 66 e@ 99 “right” labor policy into practice. And such a Policy is as important to the community as it is ‘ to the Company. Labor Poli The only way to achieve a “right” labor policy is to consider it in its broad aspect as affecting the whole social fabric. Consumers as well as em- ployers and employes profit by industrial peace. The public as a whole suffers when an industry does not afford economic protection to its workers and their families. The Directors of the Standard Oil Company (Indi- ana) in every policy they institute, consider all parties involved—consumers, stockholders, work- ere, and the public as a whole. The keystone of this Company's policy is that all must be benefited by ite existence as an industrial organization. One of the latest plans by which the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has recognized the part- nership of ite workers, is to establish a death benefit plan for the dependents of its employes, It must be clearly recognized that this policy is not a benefit solely to the employes. It benefits, indirectly,,every one in the community because it is a forward-looking, sound, economic measure. A sage summary of the service rendered by this measure is given by the Lapeer, Michigan, Clarion: “The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has in- sured the lives of its 25,000 employes. The insur- ance costs the employes nothing, The Company pays the premiums. “Here we have a splendid example of the new spirit which is pervading industry, and which if persisted in must eventually level the barriers that often lie begween employer and employe. “There may have been a time when corporations exploited their employes and yielded to them in better wages and working conditions only as they were forced to do su. Possibly a namber of this type of corporation survives, but they are pass- ing, Mutual distrust and antagonism is giving way to mutual friendliness and co-operation. If a social revolution ever threatened this country, the “This single generous act of the Standard Oil ‘between capital and labor than all the propa- ganda in the world.” Standard Oil Company General Office: Standard Oil Building 910 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago

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