The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 2, 1925, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE EIGHT ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUN SORLIE WANTS — TRUTH TOLD ABOUT STATE Orders Devine to Combat De- Propaganda Against Insitutions famatery Govern nounced plans combat defan reputation Without Feundation pap with ndat it f wheat ele tate-owned bank of A system of state-owned A chain tate-own) nsura 1 store 1 creamery state admin flow and und bank cols more wned to depositor mn dollar tate-owned news a} than quit’ busi © ownership the e-owned stores went broke. The state-owned creamery quit carly with a loss of $15,000.00. In one year under this regime the beudea inaeotean Da- ot North 100,000.00. losses taxes increased in r ience of le: am convineed that thi in the economic syst » governme: * for My nm more which state enter tto is, each man for his PUBLIC NEED | | Railroad Commission Makes | Rules to Guide Body in Future Decisior Announcing a dec certificate of pub! necessity to the Thr fer compan Minot and New Rockford, the railroad commis ciples expected t future decisions, The Great Northern a Bra ener granting of the certifi there was no pub quired by law. had declared there was no need for rail bus between Devils Lake | and Williston this time, but would | install such service later on if con-{ ditions warranted. Train Service Held Insufficient The rail commission found one lo- cal, or accommodation, train each day was not sufficient service to meet public needs, and the decision indi- cates a | al policy on the part of the commission in granting permits to operate bus lines, over protest of railroads. At the same time the com- mission denied the application of J. T. Woodruff of Crosby and the Red Top Transport company to install passenger bus service between Minot sa cNitlisten, and announced that the Radio Bus company of James- town had withdrawn its application to furnish motor freight service be- tween Jamestown, Medina and towns on the Streeter branch of the North- ern Pacific. | The Devils Lake-Minot-Williston bus case was regarded as one of the important ones before the commis- nm, Service Need Is Issue The issue in the proceeding, the commission found, was Whether there was need for additional service be- tween the points, “It is commgn knewledge that lo- cal freight trains, doing switching at the various stations, do not as a rule maintain their schedule and cannot be depended upon for passenger ser- TO RULE BUS LINE PERMITS: | years in | i ear Int ion | pa | part EXP Dr. Jagger Tall B rt ent plogists: scientists, ac-| come u u im- | the seeping. down through the earth's to Dr. T + Volcan-| possible. Then the vehicular tun-' crust of waters which follow a sink- | ologist’ of the Society, | nels. It must be remembered that! ing column of la Moreover, re- {who has just trip We need not conceive of these tun-| cont studies he has made have ‘con- Hto the Pacific coast and Washington nels being crashed down by such an! firmed his belief that burning hy- lto resume his post at the Ha uph . It would be more than drogen plays an essential part in [Volcano Observator Kilauea. nough if the machinery on the sur-\ true lava eruptions. he predic nees or their int Jag of Dr of the likely th entific uses th, fore le vai atistical da hat the pa ex | wht should he ony regarding purely local frenght al iige tPAvEl ARCA BlveL arious | great geologists of America that de-|volcanic heat and lava flows on the th of time to such an extent{#te#s Where earthquakes and trem-/ centraliza urban development! earth been partially confirmed tai led: the: tendency. tot ave done immense da cated ‘hy recent studies of somewhat sim- ie his own vehicle, although the! ¢#® the danger of dam ya fi The recent terrible lesson learned, ilar phenomena on the sun and the dae wiligicatlsamneaing ture disturba on cific! in Tokio been taken to heart! moon. The spectroheliograph, vst more per! the local than w with ither compar tion than during » god nger supply the hy the public or which they are en- ‘ rvice to titled.” The commission found one — Local hat the n between no rail con- as New Rockford and) Also, the commission found the Soo line oper done local passenger train daily between Minot! and enden, ‘The hus line. pro-{ posed to ap t different hours than the local passenger trains, In view of these facts, the order of the commission states, granting the bus line permit is not duplication of ser- vice PUPILS COMPETE | IN ARITHMETIC PRIZE CONTEST ic examination ester Memorial L. Conklin and ad, daughters of the in his honor, tudents from the count: of them being from Bismarck, the examination in the Will yesterday afternoon, vill be graded immedi- Announcement of the win- I then be made Only eighth grade graduat year in which the exam given, are eligible. The s of the neatnes: IRST IN THE SUMMER VACATION KIT, put a bottle of CHAMBERLAIN ’S! COLIC and DIARRHOEA MEDY Invaluable for sudden and severe pains in stomach and bowels, intesti- nal cramp, colic and diarrhoea, 50 se—50 years dependable and when needed worth 50 times its cost for a singledose. Equally valu- | able at home, when traveling, or for emergencics by night or day, EXPERT ACETYLENE WELDING Having engaged an expert welder, we are in a position to give you expert service. We weld everything. Also repair springs, any spring made, or old — spring rearched. G. E. PETERSON 714 Thayer St. and larg question ! june number of 3 would cons accurate iol yet eartha' cit The Southern Ca tion coast be minimized? This is the hard that on with v ve set themselves to answer. Warns Agains Higher Buildings Dr. Ja Los Ang Mount. extreme property ar 2 ele y wit of the he wished to destroy squeezed into| a small are: tremoi passenger train, “bein inies there faced, sier, parkways must be in-jfew minutes. Other photographs of each direction each week day the fact that the creased in number, n life and| the moon's surface also show defunct tween Minot and Williston, Minot and! eering Foundation industry must replace concentration,| voicanic craters of engulfment, sim- Lake, Minot nw Rock-| interested in prepa emergencies, such a prediction, to be of | migrating peoples would not only ct from the point of v but would have to indicate definite: ca ast also awakened the pub- ' property inc the vehicular tunnels, the overly tall buildings, intensify beyond ordinary ken the danger of loss to life and time there has been m ERT AVERS property in New York. idisturbance. He “They talk of |New York,” he said. erecting serts That Too of ¢ in such a place skyscrapers, the heavens’ when i stories hey. or more, as is| awakened from thi ; mooted, is sheer insanity. A dis-, difficult even for competent observ- | ngs Inten- |turbance that should strike lower er ; ; ! New York in the neighborhood of the occurring. Some scientists | hy sify Risk | Equitable Building might cause sserted that the pressure of steam | trical effects. neni {fire that, sweeping north, would! far down in the earth, forcing out to | 2. -Voleanie erup-'ty and snuff out hundreds of thou-! and vapor, tremors and earth-\ sands of lives in an amazingly short! [t is his own impression that steam national menac to time. Think, too, of the ‘streets’ is only a secondary agent in the es, crowded with automobiles and hu-| process. Steam, he holds, does cause zie Instit man beings. To flee from the thrust | ire of an earth disturbance that might. the without notice would be explosions, steam’s form: ion he explains b; and ic disturb-, face supplying — in the opin. Passages with air ceased to function only a small The inevitability of death from thi pro and the automobile exhausts to those using! of immediate soluuon, these subsurface ways is easily at, despite the advance i know concerning | these underground | Explains the Force of Hydrogen His explanation is as follows: When waters do not seep down in- to the earth's internal fires to pro- the steam, which is the spec- acular agent in voleanic eruptions, |water is produced chemically on the | spot and vaporized. The subsidence of great volumes of rock into vol- craters of an active charac- bring to the gas-charged lavas aterial they need. These old as yet can prove o He points out that, on! fores' the danger from earth ta collected over a large! quakes. He speaks from an intimate | 0). earthquake on| knowledge of both the geological | ter coast of the|implications of earth disturbances | tho 8 be predicted forjand the economic import they bear. rocks, very often heavily laden with s of the San Fran-;He is the foremost voleanologist in| fron release their oxygen but the) the world laboratories | content in the nresence of rising hy Kilauea, tha and pictur-i drogen. ‘This oxygen then combines outing mountain of fire on’ easily with the hydrogen present in dof Hawaii, he looks down| solution in lava, heat enough to last the world views the’ for years is released, and the water | changes in its earth-crust and in its js thereupon chemically formed—for water, as every boy learns in his Kilauea, in more senses than one,| high "school, is composed of two y centre of the globe's vol-| parts hydrogen and one part oxygen. sturbances. On lall’ sides | The water is then vaperized by the cific lie the known great heat, expands and rises with the lava ari volcanic danger points—-New Zea-!that flows over the crater’s edge, f\land, Java, the New Hebrides, Cen-! and often, as the case on the and South America, Japan, the Island of Hawaii in 1919, floods into pal areas to ve tobe more! w of time, n jof the ignated, yet, const of the United States.!the sea for days on end, killing the n would fail of its pur-| Alaska and then on to the lesser/| fish by thousands and ca i to the popula-! of the North American| waves of varying intensity. series of minor) continent and off into Eurasi the flow of lava comes the settling be fear-inspiring | life of the earth's crush for miles around damage, while aj marked areas|the active volcano, and there may be ake could wipe out alof poss joined in Dr.! earthquakes with of destruction an-made structures in the vicinity Jaggar arefully evaluated knowledge of the economic import and the snuffing out of human lives. of such disturbances. is on the| The important part played by free basis of h rk and that of other hydrogen as a fundamental cause in ifornia co ure of an ¢ geolo aie other | an throughout the world. Put in instrument developed by the Direc- t form, Dr. Jaggar indicates,'tor Emeritus of Mount Wilson Ob- ppened in Tokio was that a/servatory, Dr. George E. Hale. sinking of the bottom of a portion!enabled a close study of the gi of Sagami Bay so jarred the crust of | emana from the sun’s surface the earth that the soft alluvial) that have puzzled astronomers for ground on which the city is built) more than a century. shook like a jel The buildings of| Dr. Jaggar has brought back with Yokohama and Tokio were inflam-|him from the observatory some re- mable, automobiles and gasoline| cent photographs —- considered the were_eve here, the knot-| most sensational yet made of the ted tight into a small area without} sun’s surface — showing volcanic pply—there was no escape.| whirlpools in glowing hydrogen and ‘ondition to great ex-| calcium, making eruptions thousands i an cities, At all] of miles high, chiefly hydrogen, and his belief, escape must be| these are observed to change ‘in a its scientist in con- the various public bodie: took a picture of the metropolitan area « his show The ns would find all earth- the At- a. The recent rs throughout nger that the great cit- r reets must be widened, ing of cease. und park-| ilar to those in Hawa The photographing of the sun's {surface in such manner as to dis- has ears in the high must oY WO DRINKS ! that celebrate one day but the manner of ene ser cence nee ee a aT s like New York and| The science of voleanology, Dr. ore its “voleandes was made pos- h difference! the analogy of the sun's volcanoes of opinion among geoldgists as to|to those of volcanoes on the earth, the actual components of a volcanic; the spectroscope was employed pointed out that, analyzing the gaseous content of the ler buildings for often impressed by the spouting gey-|SPouting geysers of the solar burn- “To think of sers of fiery ash that boiled up into: ing tornadoes. The ctive mountains | 8pectroscope identifies chemicals by r slumber, it was|Means of their lines and jthe rainbow formed : to determine the chemical pro-|the presence of large quant: hydrogen, Clicquot Club Ginger Ale, Regular, is the dashing, full- flavored, martial beverage that is celebrating its fortieth glorious Fourth. Clicquot Club Pale Dry gives you the’ subtle exhilaration of a milder, drier drink, with a deli- cacy of flavor that is still real ginger ale. @ Each is blended with that just right quantity and quality of pure water and pure fruit flavors that properly sets off the tingling refreshment of real ginger ale. @ It takes time to make as good a ginger ale as Clicquot Club. It takes that subtle, artful skill in blending that has produced the drink that first taught America what real ginger ale tastes like. @ Here it is Clicquot Club Ginger Ale, in two flavors, with two full glasses in every pint bottle, with the gpe ingredient that no one else can put into’ bottles — the forty years of knowing how to make good drinks the Clicquot Club way. The Clicquot Club Company, Millis, Mfass., U. S. A. Dr. Jaggar looks upon the volcanic wipe out $100,000,000,000 of proper-, vent itself, carried up rock and lava! problems of the world as_interna- ' {tional, for volcanic areas know no {national boundaries. jters the two-fold aspect of physics and economics; and in both branches scientists throughout the world are cooperating. An earthquake in one | country is now reported on the seis: mographs of another, and the work of relief and rebuilding after vol- canic disaster becomes international. the Symbol of Complete Transportation Service — THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1925 everywhere and observed as the as-|his own age, had been shooting at tin tering his thigh and penetrating to the knee cap. The shot was removed Monday aft- ernon by Dr. N. O. Ramstad. H condition is not serious and his re- covery will be complete. i IETS ef, ! GETS $50,000 ILARGE CITIES | Boston” from disturbances of the J. r pointed out, is growing rap- sible by pears, at RB tally, pro: tronomers do the sun and the stars. Ioan targets at the home of his uncle | }earth’s cru He pointed out: that, id/ Recent advances. have been| duced “eclipses” of the sun. ese pica: oe aaa eae at : 0 ea | [the ‘narrow streets, the congested made in the machinery necessary for' eclipses were formed by the use of | Cand Jansoniu in Wing, where he was visiting. Be: =" | | traffic enormous wealth, the a closer study of the character and, metal pated sutere te from the iS Tevibe, that he id cinntiee the rifle, ‘ee? great storage points within the cit cause: f h disturbances. He,camera’s focus ai ut the sun's *. e began cleaning when the re- | QUAK \y | ee ‘combustibles GER a fuel oils’ was frank uaa take: for ‘a long edge. And with the discernment of Shoots Himself maining shell exploded, the bullet en- * With “Empty” Gun * Carl Jansonius, son of Ju and Mrs. Fred Jansonius, who accidental- ly shot himself Sunday night while cleaning his gun, a .22 repeater rifle, is now in the | Bismarck hospital where his condition is reported as satisfactory. The boy, together with a friend of in The color plate—the a eee a Fresh dressed spring chick- vquaneitics en, per Ib. 45c. Central Meat Market. and also giganti ——===——_=___= Here, too, en- Seer GEREN TAI Gnu AMlanICeR : : are working hand in hand in SEHAGUENE aid tue’ Velenoe, Moree Harmer rie bigs annua T ] R E. S %|. At Rock Botton Prices. 33% $6.95 (Others cqually low) CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, INC. .. . OFFICIAL ROUND-UP PAVEMENT DANCE AT MANDAN : July 2nd--3rd and 4th. 7—PIECE ORCHESTRA —7 Featuring Clare Cobb, Saxophones; Grant Helmling of Mott, Cornets and Saxophones; Archie Olson, Cornet; Al Dutton, Drums and Piano; Joe Sullivan, Banjo, Drums and Xylophone; Herman Leonhard, Tuba; Walter Tostevin, Piano, Banjo; DeLano of Grand Forks, Electric Unafone. “MUSIC TO SUIT EVERY TASTE” Route of the North Coast + : Limited - } _ Special Low Round Trip Rates . pa Seattle-Tacoma - - $65.70 Yellowstone Park - - $29.70 Ju effect until Sept. 15; returning Oct. 31 Northern Pacific Railway . W. A. McDonald, Agent Bismarck, N. D. Steamship Tickets on sale to all parts of the World ”

Other pages from this issue: