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PAGE EIGHT MONEY VALUE | OF BUSINESS SHOWS GAIN Improvement in This Dis- trict Due to Higher | Farm Prices dD. June » of busin district nt greater he first 17 per cent greater, the summary of agri- cultural, industrial and financial conditions in the district, made pub lic here today, shows. The physical volume of business, as reflected by car loadings in May was five per cent greater than a year ago, the Te to sand potatoes; re er volume of building contr ed for, to heavier shipments of ore, linseed products, grain, building materials, agricultural implements and vehicles and less than car-lot merchandise; to a greater volume of futures trading in ns and to gains shown by} wholesale trade, retail lumber and copper output,” the report ‘As compared to a month ago, how ever, there was a “small seasonal | decline in the money value of busi- | ness tr fay, but | sonal inc loading report continues. “The unseasonal decline in money value was partly { due to high levels reached in April. | | These recessions are more than coun terbalanced in money value of the | gains in grain receipts and pri lionr production, retail: lumber | and a quadrupling ef iron ore ship-| ments. | “Nine cities out of the eighteen that report building permits to this oftice exhibited gains in the valua-} tion of permits granted in May as | compared with last year, but the t tal valuation for the eighteen cities was five per cent below last y ‘Vhe extraordinayy gains shown month as Ra with a year earl- ier could hardly be expected to con tinue in Ma “There wa in bank- ing conditions during the month of May. Demand deposits increased and | loans declined in small amounts at| the banks located in important cities | in this d iet Their borrowing | from this Federal Rese reduced and their h serves and securities in ing the first two'weeks of June ever, there were many substantial | gains in demand deposits and equiv alent increases in loans. — During the month of May, there was a sub- stantial increase in, the quantity of securities by banks as compared purchases and me decline in the amount of com- It would have been a strong com-} paper outstanding in this \bination, too—China — contributing BY CHARLES P, STEWART bulk and Japan modern training. ious Mtopic jews,” the NEA Service Writer | Moreover, the Chinese were begin- report continues, in part, as follows: | The Washington government is, nin ake to the plan, “Cheek payments Je through | worried ab ord his death, as notable banks in impor i in this] § » Kellogg's warn- the late Dr. Sun Yat Sen district continued in record volume] ing to Pr Calles that he must! declared It promised to be an during May, but were apparently re-| take cnr ean inte! h-making triumph for Ja 8 ceding from the levels of earlier] south of ti SARL il Bae months. These debits to individual) to the po being almost. un- sacne accounts at banks in seventeen cities | diplomati Ruined of this district were 17. per cent) In effect, ( was told that fail; All this time, however, Japangse greater in May than in the ure on his f net on Washing-! business interests in China stuck’ to month a ‘ago. In April there|ton's suggestions might make it de-!the old system of merciless exploita- sret pean 2 27 ner cent increase over| sirable for the United States to side|tion and brutality. They kept it up the same month ago. Debits|against him in ca y 1 there was an explosion. © toan citing in Mav. tary attempt d ryhing was all right between 1925, amounted to $71,140,000 a8 people to unseat h io and a few officials in Pekin wparen wit adoT visu an Mays| The state dey quite! but the masses of Chinese hated 4. In all cities of the district. ex-'say, in so ma thing with the Japanese label. ront one. increases were registered | better “be good. hated most other foreigners, in May over last y will stir up a revolution against hin’! too, except Americans and Russians, “Carloadings in reached. & and back it up, too, but Calles isn't} but they hated the Japanese worst total of : cars, which was theyas bright as he’s given credit f The latest outbreak in China spe second largest total in a May|heing, if he doesn't read just that; complete ruin of the Nippon gov- since our record began in 1919. They threat between the lines, enema plan on-wh. emed the loadings were larger Lene. very eve of its succe’ | The in- 5 | America has every chance to profit) crease in compared © with the|by this if she. doesn’t allow herself ar was due to larger with May merchandise in less- loadings of ore, than-carload lots, miscellaneous com- modities and coke. “Flour production in the northwest during May was five per cent larger than the April volume, but 16 per cent smaller than the volume in May a year ago Nplour shipments from Minneapolis were 27 per cent smaller than in May last year, and decreased 2 per cent| very highly. between April and May, which is|* "phe Mexican radicals didn’t like precisely the usual seasonal reduc-| jt, however. They considered that tion. The May volume of flour ship-|Caties had betrayed them and have; smaller than in r in our rec- in 1910, and the month since ments this year w May of any other ords. which begin smallest volume of any July, 1917. : “Shipments of important commo: ties into the Northwest trade terri as reported by the Minneapolis raffic Association showed more than ‘onal reductions in May from the but shipments of build- ing mater ind agricultural imple- ments and vehicles, other than au- tomobiles, and trucks, were shipped in much larger volume than in May last year. Agricultural implements and vehicle shipments amounted to 198 cars in May as compared with 264 cars in April and 104 cars in May last year. Shipments of repre- sentatives building materials totaled a04 cars in May as compared with 820 cal in April and 300 cars in Mav last year. Automobile, “truck and tire shipments, totaling 1,348 Cars in April, were the second larg- est monthly total of shipments from Minneanolis in the history of the in-|* dustry.” ENGLISH EDUCATORS LONG FOR AMERICAN GENEROSITY Oxford, Engy June 29.—()—The want in England of that abundant philanthropy in aid of education Which is one of the highest distinc- tions of American men and women ‘of wealth is leading to the slow star- Yation of the women’s colleges of Ox- ford. Twenty thousand dollars a year for ‘2 ten year period has recently been alloted them out of the government grants, but, as the master of Univers- fty College pointed out in moving this appropriation, so small a sum can only aid them a littlé for the present, without assisting in neces- Sary further expansion. Many ef- forts have been made to raise money for the women’s colleges, but they have succeeded only in a very small way which does net-approach the minimum needed, for normal expan- sion. Nearly al} these colleges have long waiting lists of young women who are debarred from university educa- tion by the fact that there is no room for them in the present col- leges. ' ape SNEEZE GAS USED Manila.—Sneeze gas is being used to rout stowaways from the holds of GHT TO DEATH FOR HE NEQ’ to combin haps not defensively world. BRIEFLY TOLD would be to win the Chinese by ing them their friends, by convine jing them that their interests were in common--the obvious idea being two countries, per-j y, but at the le: ern w |who do say so and deprecate |ders, what are these friends of the | make any distinctions in their favor. ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1925 CHINESE BAD ACTORS WHEN THEY GET MAD Foreigners Put in Hard Sit- uation by, Strike Riots in Orient BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer Washington, June _29.—United States Consul General Cunningham js coming in for a certain amount of criticism in Washington for re- porting the international police testi- fied in firing into a mob of native ‘strike demonstrators during the Shanghai clash which precipitated the latest anti-foreign outbreak in } China. aditionally friendly to the Chi- nese, as a people, official Washing- ton tends to the view that foreigners among them drove them to violence by their own high-handed behavior, j arrogance and greed. In some quarters the guess is haz- j arded that Cunningham has absérbed ‘the atmosphere of the Shanghai | “European settlement” until he has |come to share its prejudices. NO MORE FINE CLOTHES © cn Just What Is An Automobile? ‘An automobile is transportation—-not merely a mechanism capable of locomotion. automobile you really When you buy an D though sometimes you want transportation, get only a machine. The manufacturer makes the machine. The local dealer enables it to deliver transpor- tation. Keep your eye on the main value when you buy a car. And get it from a dealer who i will not lose interest after you take posses- sion. LAHR MOTOR SALES COMPANY. Willys-Overland Fine Motor Cars. the treatment of the Chinese by “Euro- peans”—all aliens, including the Jap- anese, classed as “Europeans” in China. But in case of anti-foreign disor- natives to do? They needn’t imag- ine a mob of ignorant coolies will | It’s up to them to help stand off peans” in Chit Even a small mix-up with a crowd lof the Chinese coolie class is” un- pleasant and the rapidity with which such affairs start is astonishing. Out rather late one nigat in Shanghai the year before the war, an | American friend and I stopped on the way to our hotel for a bite to eat at the Carleton Club, a fashionable restaurant in the foreign quarter. ! My idea was to pay off our ‘rick- shaw coolies and let them go— lrickshaw being a small two-wheeled gig in which the passenger sits at ease, while the coolie runs between the shafts in front. My companion’s notion was that it would be better to have them wait outside. Well, they did. Finishing our lunch ‘and coming out 30 minutes later, we couldn’t pick our pair out from the 75 to 100 of their kind gath- ered at the club entrance. Sensing our dilemma, the whole swarm bore down on us. Of course our two were among them and entitled to their money but it was hopeless to try to identify them. A riot started. In about one minute that street was packed with a jabbering throng of Chinese—and not one chance under Making all due allowance, however, ae | for the fact that the Chinese have f plenty of reason for hating most of the “foreign devils” in their midst, | yet the further fact remains that the qettee. Ae ed es An inmate of murderer's row in the Los Angeles county jall, Dr. | spective jobs to repeat the famous] them, and people generally welcome AReteeras ti areqaltienseleerte ney | omae Young, accused of kflling his wife in a plot to get her mil-| prayer of the Savior in unison it was| the novelty. the natives go on the rampage. lions, wears the regulation rogue’s costume. John S. Cooper, ‘tis at-| uncertain to what extent they could some of the society chroniclers Haare ce laclly ite alluveryewelli to |(torues) 18 taming with Young: respond. . What would London do without say that the foreigners bring trouble They responded unanimously, it}its American hostesses in these ( on themselves. There are foreigners was observed. Anglo-Saxon voices| days?” JOHNNY BULL TOO SLOW FOR high idea of England as regards one thing, and that is hotels and in all the big dancing places, you can see Miss America be- ing accompanied by Bull. all. steps that the U. S. A. declared out of date long ago. all sorts of new steps and’ curley cues have beén invented by the young people, which make dancing really dancing. adheres to the fox trot and the one step plain and unadorned. Which is why Miss America says to Mr. John Byll: “{ have certainly company, but I will tell the that what you call dancing is simply walking around the room to the tunes of a band.” One of the mourners at the funeral of the late Earl of Ypres, known as Lord French, was Marshal Joffre. in life. in his estimation of the greatness of the hero of the Marne. before his-ceatn, ne was taiking o£ the French general animation: pany, the teller of witty stories which set all the guests roaring with laugh- ter. The fortunate man is none other than Harry Pilcer, formerly known to fame as the dancing partner of| Gaby Deslys. | were joined by Frank; Latin by Lev- antine. Those whose memories or understanding faltered caught the pace from sonorous leaders. It was ‘on the rise just above 110th Street but in the devotional scene carried back to the cornerstone days of St. Peter's Tours, Cologne, Rheims and other renowned medieval cathedrals. ANTELOPE HERD THRIVES IN CANADIAN NATIONAL PARK Calgary, Alta., June 29.—V?)—An- telope. which were threatened with extinction in Canada have been suc- cessfully preserved in Nemiskam Na- tional Park. When the preserve was established in 1915 there were only 4% in the herd, the last survivors of the thousands that once had roamed DEAN INGE NOW ADVOCATES SUNSHINE AND SEA BATHS London, June 29.—()—By way of a change from religious and philo- MISS AMERICA KING OF ENGLAND ADOPTS Amiea TE Glett wave) ba ‘ SURI TEC i sophical topics, Dean In nter- Seer ee ee eae ae Basti Cit ecejf qoured | eee TLCE na cotsteine tklersaeAcT sophical topics, Dean Inge has enter} " “AMERICAN STYLE IN GLASSES |the prairies. There are now 235, an- Sect other, ‘The Huan | vaunchdit/et Aguanes, Galil ed | te ene orate ten no rushes | Yankee Girls Have Poor ce ihGincor of the Sunlight League,| London, June 20—(?)—Conserva- |imals in the herd, a gain of 190. How Wound, Nuckols, U. S. immigration TET RU SER EIDIGES) jjenenpolicel ne, Gp hg uk) dh Which aime at the abolition of smoke| tive English people are adopting | well they breed in captivity is shown : n _Nuckols, U. § migration og a n at gain momentum ee Opinion of Young and slums, he said in his opinion| American ideas and habits to a great- by the fact that there was an increase with six wounds. He charges that McClenny, armed Wit) Tiere ere 30 ey Chinese that sen bathing could be employed to the|er extent than the average English-|of 55 in 1924 alone. andages, iodine and knife, pinned to disfigure hem for his cael Rey, re mighty hard Ww stop when London Blades betterment of health. — man cares openly to admit. The most| Antelope once were prized trophies attentions to Mrs. ‘McClenny. i they fairly get started. | a a _“The present practice,” he con-| retent ‘case, of King George wearing and suffered such ravages in numbers — — = = = Quite likely Cunningham ha 2 ——._.. tinued, “of mixed bathing, with the| big tortoiseshell glasses, has been | that extinction of the species i ) Geli, Gdoaning eae of this kind in mind in BY MILTON BRONNER body completely clothed may be an! followed by several English hostesses | sight. A herd finally was | fie pelo Fe can & his defense of the Shanghai inter- NEA Service Writer agreeable social function, but hygien-; in fashionable London following the | in Southern Alberta and the tract of Hetounsroft Islanders’ see O cea nauoualmoiee manatee ‘adefense| London, June 29.—Young Miss ically it is practically useless. I)example of a prominent American | 5,000 acres on which the animals were > up their minds that a bette Of the general conduct of “Euro-| America, who 1s on a visit vo tuese|deprecate the absurd ‘restrictions of feeding was surrounded by a fence { & who entertained 60 couples to dinner at small tables, while a cabaret en- tertainment of the most expensive and up-to-date nature went on. Evening parties with music are now comparatively rare events, and al- though some of the more important of London’s hostesses are trying to introduce them, the American idea of a cabaret dinner is likely to outstrip some of the town councils of ocr seaports in this connection, I sug- gest that at certain hours of the day on certain parts of the beach, men be encouraged to run about with the minimum amount of clothing, an ex- ceédingly healthy recreation. “As for women, another portion of the beach, properly safeguarded from intrusion, might be reserved and en- closed for their similar recreation.” WORKERS ON CATHEDRAL UNITE IN EARNEST PRAYER New York, June 29.—(#)—The Lord’s prayer was recited in half a dozen tongues. when nearly 100 ma- sons, stonecutters and laborers in workclothes joined with contractors and clergy in a prayer service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, be- fore laying the first stone for in- terior walls of the nave recently. The service was requested by the men themselves, according to Bishop William T. Manning, who, in full epis- copal robes, conducted it in the: open air on the-nave foundation near the south wall. No tradition of the men’s crafts was tnvolved,, Bishop Manning said. The request came from their spon- taneous feeling of the special and acred character of the work they are not going back with a very of woven wire and all the work wa done without disturbing the animals IMPATIENCE WIFE—Next time, you spend an evening at the club, please let me know if I am to keep breakfast wait- ing for you—Klods Hans, Copen- hagen. : dancing. In all the oung Mr. John n't get along at ill dancing the old And th Mr. Bull is Over in América Conservative England still your world enjoyed Her le: Most POWERFUL They had been fast friends ECTIC! In fact, French never varied Some time and said with heaven of explaining ourselves. all most of the mob knew, killed somebody. For we'd “Joffre, what a revelation! The morning of the battle of the Marne, when the fate of the world hung cathedral! The small bareheaded congregatior ig in rearing one of the great of the world. em ng ANU e radieal—| | id | ppens with these | 5 aS soon as entrusted to} n al responsibility i them, ones in the presideney he be- gan to show signs of conservatisi This greatly pleased the Washington | administration, , which, from being exceedingly suspicions of the new executive, took to speaking of him) been exerting tremendous pressure to force him back into line | J. R. Sheffield, American sador in Me Cit | eG thought he saw signs that was yielding, for he rushed home in hot haste to report to Secretary Kel- loge. Intervie he denied that y atter, but that, in’ real 1s, is proved | b Kellogg's mes: Calles rectly following. in Washington. H to become involved with the nation- {alities the Chinese are in insurrec- tion against but she'll have to be very careful, for the others are try- ing desperately to mix her into the trouble with themselves, not desir- ing to see her gain any dvantage at their expense—though through their own fault. CALIFORNIA CL U. S$. MAILS EXTENSIVELY Los Angeles, June 29.-—(#)—Ap- proximately, 3,000,000 pieces will con- stitute the outgoing mail of the Auto- ile Club of Southern California ear, it was indicated in statis- thi “\ tics released recently by the head- quarters of the organization. The figures were based on the amount of mail matter sent during 1924. First-class letter postage of the motoring organization averages 8,500 letters a day. In addition 2,000 pieces of second-class mail matter and some 150 parcel post pockages are sent, totaling for the daily outgoing mails an average of 5,650 pieces. The fig- ures, allowing 300 working days in Retiring into the club, we bolted the door while the manager tele- phoned for the Sikhs—the Indian po- lice the “settlement” mainly depends on. The row being a trifling affair, it took only half a dozen Sikhs to break it up—with the butt ends of their carbines. I'll say, however, that we were glad to see those Sikhs, and J think I understand Consul General Cunningham's viewpoint, even though he may have been sorry for the Chinese killed in the recent disturb- ance. As for our two coolies, of course they lost the money we owed them and maybe were “beaned” by the Sikh policemen into the bargain. Which was too bad, but how could we help it? NOT A STEP-DOG A young five-year-old friend of ours who had been permitted to play with a neighbor's dog recently ac- quired a canine animal of her own. “Now,” she announced with satisfac- tion, “I havea dog of my own—and upon came to his room. there tranquilly drinking a cup of hot. chocolate. excited, but he calmed me by saying everything was quite ready and in or- ler. chocolate with evident relish. That morning I understood that a French- man vould be quite as phlegmatic as they say the English are.” When you think of Holland you think of the invading sea and that makes you think of the which fight the water and drive it from the land. out windmills wouldn't seem Holland. But some years ago it was found that it was far easier to protect the land by means of electrieal machin- ery. id start electricity working than to attend to a sluggish windmill. the land the windmill o¢cupied was valuable and might be used for other things. was torn down. contained sons of various faiths as; well as races. When: the Bishop asked them before ‘returning to their re- the outcome of the battle, I He was sitting FOOK I was anxious, even And he continued sipping his windmills In fact, Holland with- First Showing: ——OF THE— It was easier to press a button Also So windmill after windmill ina Greed of Japan's business men out annually 1,6! undone, in China, the work her dip-! However, this is but lomats have beén engaged with ever more than since the Tokio government a conciliatory policy toward neighboring mainland people. Up to four or five years ago the| Japanese method of getting, or try- ing to get, what Japan wanted from fices by the sends out approximate PREPARING Down in Atlanta, Ga., William Jehnings Bryan ip getti ‘ships here. More than a dozen men a ly were driven off one ship by ares } s iba } ly the year, revealed that the club sends ,000 pieces of mail. a 50 per cent of the total opted outgoing mail, for the orga fraction ization 1,200,000 {copies of its monthly magazine. In addition some 100,000 letters and packages are carried to 30 branch of- the highway patrol fleet China was by force or threats of it. which the club maintains. HIS “FIGHT ON THE DEVIL” not just a step-dog!”. Herald-Tribune. FINANCIAL DIAGNOSIS nosis, doctor?” “Only once. mor, Madrid. jew York Did you ever make a wrong diag- I diagnosed a simple indigestion and found out afterward that the patient was rich enough to have had appendicitis."—Buen Hp- Then suddenly somebody woke up. He realized that a land without wind- mills would be a flat dull land and tourists don’t come to flat dull lands. Tourists come to Holland to see windmills and tulips and_ pictures. Cut out the windmills and you cut down the number of tourists. today there is in Holland a society whose job is to see that windmills are preserved. ready to settle this Tennessee “ is ness” once and for all. He is shown here in contre keeimlth attorneys for. fia oraeratan re a Phas John T. Scopes trial. Levt to right are 8. J. Hicks, J. G. McKenzie, Wm. J. himself and H. EB. Hicks — zi , all from Dayton, Tenn., except Bryan, i There is a young man who has the entree at the Elysee, the Paris home of the President of France, ‘when many. a grave young old politician has to ‘cool his heels in the ante room. He first won the regard of President Doumergue by his clever dancing at a private entertainment. And later he increased his pull by showing at a pfivate dinner that he was good com- By Cléaning Repairing Remodeling Dyeing Hence} LADIES AND MEN'S ! a CLOTHES - Hats Cleaned and Reblocked 24 flour Service on Mail Orders, We Call For and Deliver. Chrysler Four . s At Our Show Rooms. Sunday, Monday, 'Tuesday ‘All models will be on display. Factory Representatives are with us to explain the features of this remarkable automobile. -Corwin- Churchill: Motors _