The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 13, 1924, Page 2

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ew eee ee PAGE TWO ~ RADIO FROM AIRPLANE 'tO SUBMARI By NEA Service mic ne wowing its wa } THREATE! iS DY AMITE Fae eee v ; All the forest fires are not in the 1. New York, New Jersey, Penn Y ed ‘ i” vania and Marylanc! have been geht disastrous fires for week vg bie one shown here came perilously close toa pant of the DuPont tie er ' bell i Co, gear Baltimore, where 25.000 pounds of dynamite were vl ission de business of the U. S. is transacted Uh NEAL Hae abe instruments. ‘That means about six THE BANK CROOK Bankers Association Official Gives Rules to Foil Crimi- nals and Avoid Loss. MacDonald To Visit America? M By JAMES E. BAUM, his ha Manager Protective Department oat American Bankers Association. ng The direct cost of all crimes in} : this country bas now reached {ts ere highest peak isties reveal star ee bene t tling fnereases in nearly eve: Re ReeiES GadGHine. Ut of x the past ten years. | ; iiekund lune s through (he | i tion| Ope criminals is estimat-} eee y) ed at more than $3,600,000,000 for hit hip this year, A fey of the items fol. low 120,000,000 400,000,000 | RADIO" IS THE WORD bezztony th will fin The AL de 100,000,000 100,090,0 RADIUM TUBES + Lam giving cold figures, not to Ke i aie Te ERE Tepe ety startle any one unless it ie toward fi " i more extreme care in handling and} radio-active elem safeguarding funds and valuables, the electror vari tied from| Right here let me quote rules to filamen | help foil eviminats known as “check ; they wil jous loss passers” or * help you to av Never write cheeks with a penetl | | Hi Don’t erase Errors should be writin, yew che rected | A Gieamy Mass of Hair! you have p M “Danderine” does Wonders for Any Girl's Hair deposit It you elied vouchers as leaving none up » you si nature. bit your sig-| 10, Beware of gic of the word riitied Ary. certifiea= tion stamps can be duplicated as eas- yas any other rubber stamp. ks whieh woure, would your money, 7,000,000 | and | for they represent | are more} that of 68 | and | ¢ a| and one-half billion checks will be written by bank depositors in this country during 1 and they will total about — $500,000,000,000 in amount, or one hundred times the money in circulation, Banks War on Crooks The average bank depositor when queried as to what hig bank does to protect his deposits, will probably tell you that they are kept ina great vault and that arm. ed watchmen are employed, as well as an claborate and efficient burg: ry and robbery afarm = system. May not know that the 23,006 banks comprising the American Bankers Association have constant ly and conveniently available ap army of highly trained specialists who wage a continuous and relent |less warfare against the bank crital al. These operatives are within y reach of any member bunk is know that if they attack yCri 0,000,000 Gale |a member bank they are attacking on of the most powérful and ef. tive protective organizations in existence, Another medium by which bank- ers prevent many financial crimes or losses is the warnings continual ly broadcast ‘om the American nkers A ion and forty. ight state bankers associations, e warnings keep the trap con set and carry out the Asso tion's plan of crime prevention as contrasted with detection. Danger Ahead American farmers should not in ase their wheat acreage for 1824 If they increase the a axe by three million acres, as is indicated by the Intentions to Seed Wheat Survey of the government, and nor. mal conditions again prevail in other wheat producing countries next. y wheat market will be glutted and once more wheat prices will be ruinously low. The presem high price of wheat is due to poor crops in other countries and in cer. in sections of the United States. -W. M. Jardine, Advisory Coun. cil, Agricuttural Commission, Amer ican Bankers Association. Where (Bankers Come From The smaller localitic! are to a large extent the recruiting grouné for the profession of banking. 4 recent survey discloses the fac) 2 senior bank officers ir the largest States, 406, or 60 per cent, were born in the country or in smal. towns. Of the 682 senior bankers o} kers' campaign for every: | vir body to “pay by check” has borne | fruit. It bas been estimated that today more than 95 per cent of the , Or approximately per cent, had a high school o1 p education. The conclusiot ple that the smaller en coupled with an educa for in the eld. American Bankers tion Journal. ge cities, tion, bankin Associa PROSPECTS IN MEXICO At 11,00 Mites are sur are oved here he found in much it plowed this fall ret ny drug see. how or counter and youth? Ady. DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Biemarck, N. 1), OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 5th St. Phone 428 killed theirsfather. Patrick, Margaret, dtugh, Kath ry mother died now m the shog' » Kupene, ae, £ Raymond, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Germans Do Not | Observe Eight | Hour Work Day' iit hour} Hy an Con) aranteed | ution observed | Jan investigation just conducted by | jthe Factory Workers’ union. Of thet Hx) locals of the union, 320 turned orts covering 4,360 concerns | Jor ing ABIAI9 ps | ‘The results show that only 54 per) cent of the employees in the con- | {: rn investigated work up to 48) hours per W while’ 3.6 percent jwork from 48 to 51 hours, 2 =| cont from 51 to 54 hours, and 15.9! Jpereent over 54 hours per we ' \ | = a 5 Estate Will Aid | Zion Movement Jon, Nov. 13. An estate which | he eventually worth a million} pounds has been left for the benefit | of the Zionist movement by the will} of an English Jew. The fund will be} to “restore the Jews to their incient home in Palestine.” Power To Lessen Farmer’s Burden| uttan, k , half done with a experiments series of to determine ithe extent to which electricity ¢ Jie used by farmers and farme nd their wives would have time for golf, visiting or other diver- s hay ind women, Among the which electr would perform the farmer pumping water livestock, grind- sions for for Jing feed, furnishing better water [supply. threshing: grain, curing hi | preparing silage, storing — alf | mitt separating ere steriliz milk and clean farm buildings. | Among the tasks which clectrical J power would perform for women are ating washing machines, chopping foods, , heating water, cooking cleaning. Whether to he or ironin homes, and is the model communit ed depends upon uti sion of ty that public corpo Profe ar nd other Kansans to (aged electrical ations agree to pro funds | taken. | idly increased use of electricity { rms in the next ten yeats is j forecast’ by the experimenters—te- cardless of whether the experi {tal community is formed. | The farm electrification survey i ertaken last spring when i han M, Davis appointed committe, ty to agriculture, | At first the experimente st the princip tempt- 1 agricul ¢ production as well as lighteu ical burden of r Walker 1 means money as well points out the furmers easily time. | by could sav HOW TO STOP CAR Do not jam on your brakes suddenly. Begin to reduce speed 50 feet or more from the st too pir and simply roll up halt with a final and gentle appli tion of the brakes. Always ayy se then in and hold the brakes and then stead of putting them on system. ACCEPTS PLACE M. W. Arndt of Powers Lake, for merly with the State Bank of Pow- ers Lake, has been, made a Na secretary of the Depositors Gu - ty Fund Commi on. RECEIVER placed in often op: . particularly will often upset — the the t nothing to warp ie PLACE If a radio FOR receiver i front of a window that i ened, damp set say ALO. U Dance tonight. W. .|Patterson’s Hal—Everybody welcome. ! in a Brook nge from 2 to one year, wives’ hopes soon to continue the ex periments in a model farm commun- | ity. In this model community farmers | eas much | ghting | a de- | .| over also the bank the experiment will be unde’ | on the relation} your | | ing them there, Jamming on the brakes at high speed wears out the | rake lining and loosens up the during | vn cotrt to ask damages Left to right: NO SUCH LUXURY FOR THEM Now | , Brent Glassock, nitil t carryin according to postal inspector: alleged leader of th Roundout, ing a ing in Chicago, nels the tal inspector who HL, last een on the ri THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1924, $6.50 FOR AN AUTO uctéon at Bayonne, %. ce MIL FOR $3 | i A Kelso (Wash.) motorist is public Iu, resulted in the sale cf a lightjto have driven 60 miles in i popular car for $6.50. It is be ium-priced standard car at jto be the lowest price ever of $53 for gas and oil. the entire t! for an auto. repair on CoFFEE gang that staged the $3,000,000 spring, and his wite were ed in Battle Creek, Mi jock, at the time, was And Glassock was sport- s them ts wife in the centee returned them on the left ~ OPPOSES FEDERAL RAIL OWNERSHIP Government Operation Would Mean Increased Taxation j for General Public, Says Rail Head. y, Mo, Nov, 13. A farm Utopia in which much of the y work of the field and the drud- xery of the household are accom-! : electricity is being: plan- ned: by Professor I. B. Walker of! the Kansas State Agricultural Col-{ Opposition to Government own- ership of the railroads, not because of the interests of the present own- ers but rather because of the bur- dens and disadvantages the change would impose upon the people as a whole, was expressed by C. H. arkham, president of the [linois Sentral Railroad, in an address be- the recent convention of the rican Bankers Association. i “We have never favored Govern- ment ownership as a national poli- vy,” Mr. Markham said. “If the ailroads are taken over by the | Government, we must face the fact | that the big step in reversing our old and settled policy will be taken, If there is no particular reason why the Government should not own and run the railroads, is there any reason why it should not take , the stores, the tories, the farms, until all of us | are Government employees and the ideal of the soviet is attained? The railroads are the first line of de- fense against those who would make this country a second Russia, “The railroads have about 2,000, 000 employees, approximately as | many employees as there are in all | the Government services—Federal, | State, county and municipal—put | \ together. jf the railroads are taken over by the Government, there will be one Government employee out of every ten wage earners in the country, instead of one out of every twenty, as at present. heaviest taxpayers. Last year they paid taxes amounting to $3 for “every man, woman and child in the country. In some counties, par- ticularly in the Middle West, the railroads pay from 10 per cent to nearly 50 per cent of the taxes col- lected. - Under Government owner- ship, the railroads would be no more subject to taxation than the Post offices now are. In some way {he Government would have to make up the difference of $3 a head for every person in the coun- try. In many counties the taxes on the remaining property would have to be nearly doubled. The result would be an unbearable burden that might force-many of our local governments to stop payments on their bonds and go into bankruptcy. ts of the state ten years} Doubling Taxation _ Despite the trend te-; «hen, too, there is the matter ! d diversifieation of crops, it Was! 92 tasation, The railroads, under rredd that electricity would — in-t ¥ ‘ | | private ownership, are among our i 1 \ deal more vexatious than It is ‘a day. ! hen, too, the acquisition of the! railroads would add more than | twenty billion dollars to our na.! tional debt. if Government rail- roads in this country were no more , successful than they are elsewhere | today in the world, the interest on that twenty billions of purchase, price would be the cause for addi-, tional burdens on the taxpayers left to carry it. As the tax burden developed, it would not be surpris- ing to see other industries welcom- , ing Government ownership for, themselves. They would gain im- munity from taxation in turn, and their owners probably would be protected from loss. The Consti- tution prevents the confiscation of private property, and Government ownership can be accomplished AUDITORIUM ONE NIGHT NOV.22 Benefit Thursday Musical Club. - ‘Daniel Mayer’ presents “est Den Curtain 8:15 IS | only by paying a fair price for the , the properties taken over. K ‘Bad for Public Denishawn Dancers “I do not oppose Government onda ownership of the railroads on be-! half of the present Owners of the railroads, many of whom would obtain safety in Government bonds ; in return for gecurities which have not paid a return in years. I op-' pose Government ownership of the railroads because I believe that it would be bad for our people as a whole. It would open the way to Government ownership of every- thing, and at the same time it would certainly lead to the wreck- | ing of our highly essential railway service, if the lessons of experience offered by other nations mean any- thing at all to us.” Spiyphiny Qartebe 1S CUSTUMUCS Famous Spanish Ballet “Ciradro Hames Divertissments Prices Lower Floor $2.75.. Balcony $1.65 and $2.20. SEAT SALE NOVEMBER 20. Harris & Woodmansee. Mail Orders VAUDEVILLE AUDITORIUM Doc Emmett & Pal “The Wonder Dog” Youngsters Exhibit 290 Pigs Fourteen banks in Lee County, lowa, recently cooperated with the | : Breeders’ Association in conduct- |~ ing a boys’ and girls’~club rally. | The boys and girls brought in the best pigs that they were raising | and exhibited them for $150 in cash prizes which the banks con- tributed. Quincy, Illinois, bankers are of- fering pure bred boars and high grade seed corn to the value ‘of $500 to farmers who attend the Adams County Fair. . These prizes will be distributed by lot to farm- ers of each township, the amount to be based on the township at) tendance at the fair. The Missouri Bankers Associa- | tion inter-county contest for boys’ | and girls’ clubs is the result of ac- | tion taken at the annual conven | tion, when $1,600 was provided for | premiums. The premiums, not less | than $25 each, are to be awarded to counties to pay the expenses of | club winners to junior farmers’ week at the Missouri College of ' Agriculture; $100 is to be used to pay the expenses of the state cham- | pion demonstration team to the | meeting of the Bankers Associa- | tion, where the team will present | Now. __The tax problem would be a great|its winning demonstration. ~ | i cet aban =F ' . *. . “ 4 eas gy | LION INTRUDES } Japanese children srdinafily write | California Trio—“Musical Oddities | Cairo, Nov. 13. -Al Wellington. better with the left hand i glish tou fed the lion “Napo-| = 383» —___— sean leon” peanuts menagerie here. Wheri Weili eft the tent, Napoleon m tic attempts to follow him, Late that night the lion did break away and came through the window Wellington's hotel room in quest o refreshments, | d__ popcorn rom\the company whose tri \“Gets-li” Makes Mary, John, James, Frederi Palmer & Huston—“The Old Flirt” Hal Young Troupe “A Chinese Oddity” \ Indies, known j gives | tree in the W to the nat Water piping against frost by plaited straw rope. The earliest fos: sharp teeth. be covering can protected | it \ of birds have] One Show Daily — 8:00 p. m. Admission 50 Cents Corns Wanis’ HAVE YOU SEEN THE CORN SHOW SPECIAL PREMIUMS é EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS PROMINENT SPEAKERS . AMUSEMENT; wi Come to Bismarck See The Show —- Help Boost Your State and County. Come to Bismarck For An Outing—-Learn and Enjoy. is sold in this i Co. and Finne

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