The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 16, 1926, Page 3

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TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1926 BLEVEN CREAM |. STATIONS ARB) ORDERED SHUT Operators Had Failed to Com: | ply With Rules—Inspec- | tion Continues | } i Eleven cream stations in various! parts of the state have been closed | by the state dairy department since| March 1, Dairy Commissioner John! Husby suid today. y | Closing in each case was the re-! failure on the part of ‘the| cream operator to comply with the} rules and regulations laid down by the department last October and ef-| fective March 1, — Sixcy-6ne_— other} cream stations, inspected by the de-| partment, were approved. i h case, Husby said, operators | ed the order which forbids; handled by! ts in connection with pur-| chases of eream. Some were buying | in open stores, others in butcher, shdps close to rendering vats and in| some cases the cream station was found to be generally unsanitary. In ull but one case it is expected that the cream station operators will he permitted to re-open atter from! 10 ta 30 days, during which repairs | and changes to mect the orders of the department will be made. In} one case, however, the inspector re-| commended revocation of the purchaser's license. In that ez was explained, the statian ope had per ently violated dair; partment rules and refused to the changes suggested. ‘ | The campaign will be continued,| Husby said, antil exch of tne re maining 1,718 cream stations in the | state have been inspected. Improve- | co ment since the order was issued in| Before October is noticeable, he said, most cream buyers having complied with! the department's rulings without be-; sng forced to do so. | \for the Nines of 5 + | Baltimore. WEREGIVENTO MAKING FILM. winter, Lives Were Lost and Govern- ment Archives Combed in Getting Pictures and th the cheerful and climb, minus Many lives were lost, of a dozen or more nations searched, | and eight years consumed in the mak- ing of the great film classic, “The World War,” which will be shown at the Bi rek City Auditorium Friday and Satu y evenings under the auspices of the Bismarck post of the American Legion. Proceeds from the affair will be used by the Legion to- winter flight wards the erection or furnishing of, western state the proposed Community Building.’ fornia. Spor There will be but one showing of the picture each evening. | Mr. George F. Zimmer, connected ity, fearing t with the 0. S, Naval Intelligence De-| manent dec partment during the war, and who! these birds. was commissioned by the United) States Government to make the filn went personally into all fields of a tion with his st obtain the “shots” seen in this pic- ture. Mr. Zimmer was with the Grand Fleet in the North Sea; with subma- rines in their under-sea work off the! coast of Ireland; he crossed the! ocean to France and England count-)jevel in the ver less times, on destroyers, battleships ern Ala and transports, always in the zone} of action. He was with the avia-| tors, not on the ground but with them in the air where the action was taking place; he used land_planes,| sea planes and: dirigibles. He went aboard surrendered U-boats, destroy- ers and secured never-to-be-forgotten close-ups of submarine warfare. His cameras were trained on the greatest concentration of artillery fire in his tory; his men recorded the bombard- ment of seacoast towns from vessels thirty miles out at sea and his cam- _ ras were covering President Wilson’s moves while he was in London and Paris. |. A notable se jtory wild fowl ve expre: ed S j reall bird: than it ist coast of Bri snowfall which January, 1926, rem: jern jumbia. Copper and near there, Service To History Commenting on Mr. Zimmer's serv- ice to his government in making this film, Admiral W. S. Benson, U.S. N., ired, said: Zimmer has performed a great service to the Government and to hi: to Throughout the entire work of making this great picture during the war and during the aftermath! he personally directed the making of pictures, and the actual experience of having seen and lived through them has given him.a special knowledge of nll our actions “over there” possess- | ed by no other person. He executed his duty in an excellent, efficient manner and obtaifled splendid results. The conscientious and fearless way in which he carried out his work amid hardships and dangers deserves the warmest praise.” jee. A trom advised the large number oo fTopay | o (Continued from page’ one) health, happiness, time saving and. efficiency. To buy it on time is as wise as buying real-estate on insta ments. pate ‘But automobile makers will kill the oes that lays gotden eggs if they compete along fines of unsound finan- cing, instead of competing in be quality, lower manufacturing and dis- tributing costs. Reckless financing will glut’ the second hand car market, so that even’ Europe and Asia will not absorb the surplus at junk prices. Then look out. Mascagni, famous Italian composer, says zz”' is dreadful and the saxophone “makes. me positively ill,” imitating. sounds made by the most repellent animals.” ~ Mascagni shou'd remember that hu-. man: beings have all those. “repellant! animals” locked up within them, rec- ze and respond to the saxophonc’s voice, as to the voice of a relative. Mascagni writes an. opera around a murder. To musicians of ‘the fu- ‘ture that wouid seem inexplicably horrible, worse than any saxophone. The British will probably solve one big problem by buying the national coal mines, leasing them to operators, under government regulation of wages and pete. i That news will sit badl; arectable stomachs in thi ¢ ates. But they” paless they find a way to run their , The stock market yesterday continues the jumped out of the window when t well arranged drop came. In Wall street and s, hold fa Hope, her on from M. stri without de- lic of coal in’ mid- upward littte Iambs_ tha ‘Prove the archives! California’s Game | Birds Are Enjoying a Winter in Alaska occurred during of such migra-|numbers of them have come down | ducks and ¢ C he recent fall in a number The Biological Sur es Department of Aj however, that ther ff of camera men to, notably large northw in the spring of 1 the situation looks The warm sh Columbi: ern Alaska is without parallel. snow is reported below the 1,000 foot aska whe: arving ow Telegraphic reports to the B eal Survey during the third week of rticularly ested in the conse Unit rd yr more nter on the nd south- No region of southe year ago deer i to the vy buried their foo log showed an_unprece- dented number of ducks and geese ning along the coast of south- ka and northern Brit An abundance of du geese has been noted as far no the flats about the Bering Wrangell, Alaska, come many ducks and ‘geese o nd flats in northern British Columbia, | are reported to be free of snow i wireless the Alaska Biologi Col- and h as the From of mouths of rivers. reports the the ine River and dated January 22 E on that of mallards and thou- sands of geese were on the St 4 ‘on some_re- FR Ziegfeld, cham) . the Pal ‘ h Country Club’s Im ac’ Hl ‘come to it, : C B: tl : kine Chorine Flo ssi ion chorus girl ine himself for time husband. urgery cperation, pictured above, which erased the | s face. i flats | Facial. youth has come back to May Yohe, once a stage star, as a gift from Lord Fran i lastic year y Evil days fell upon the actre ti oh ¥ ti e EIGHT YEARS | British nobleman, but she would accept no money from him. | ployed the surgeon instead, to demonstrate his continued esteem for her. For Lord Hope paid The operation was performed at her divorce from the So he em- ‘hats, ‘this ‘ti a me of the year. Decrease Not Indicated searcity of birds in various ts of the west during the full and |winter of d 1926 does not ponding ac- tuul : the total number of ‘the existing wild fowl. Mild fall and iwinter weathe Jand along thi ited St: in southern Canada ‘northern border o! and the deficient in the west have ed er- movements among these birds, of their usual haunts having been passed over by them in the ‘southward flight. The fact that millions of bir | reported on some of the large ¥ ing grounds in the southern pa that s are er- ‘ts of the comtry is evidence vast from the north, BOOZE MAKERS WILL BE TAXE ON MOONSHINE | Will Also Pay Greater Part of Expense Washington, March 16. () ans to use the taxing power of the fovernment us a weapon against bootleggers were announced today by eretary Andrews of the asury, in charge cf prohibition en- forcement | Deputy internal revenue collectors {will be designated to serve with | prohibition admémistrators and levy j and collect taxes on the manufacture of_moonshine, Not only will this prove an et cient enforcement step, in the opin- ion of Mr. Andrews, but sufficient | revenues should result in a few years to defray the entire cost of enforce- | ment. The law provides, he pointed out, on distilled spirits which are divert- ed to beverage purposes, Attempts: will be made, he said, to collect taxes not only on the amount of liquor seized but on the total | amount which prohibition authorities stimate the bootlegger has manu- factured. CoNection of such taxes already | has been tried out in tae Pittsburgh /and Texas districts and has proven | successful, he added. Fines amounting to $50,000,000 an- ‘ nually are now collected by the gov- ernment from prohibition’ violators, he estimated, and with the addition of the taxes Mr, Andrews is confi- dent the annual federal bill of about $30,000,000 for prohibition enforce ment will be met, 3 MINISTERS FIGURE INST. PAUL PRIMARY Rev. Williams Candidate for Mayor—Two Others Seek Council Berths St. Paul, March 16,—(?)—Three ministers figure prominently on the ballots in today’s municipal primary election to nominate candidates for mayor, councilmen,and other city of- fices. . The Rev. Howard Y. Williams, pas- tor of the People’s Church, ‘endorsed by. labor, is one of the three candi- dates for mayor, His opponents are L._C, (Larry) Hodgson, former may- or, and Frank L. Powers, former city commissioner, Mayor Arthur E. Nel- son is not a candidate. remarkable occurrence for Ik ‘ | | Will Help in Enforcement and ‘for the collection of $6.40 a gallon| WOMEN VOTERS TO CAMPAIGN FOR BIG VOTE Committee Appointed to Map Out Plans for the 1926 Drive for Votes { Washington, March 16,—A 1926 get- out-the-vote campaign directed par- Fticularly toward the attainment of a | heavy vote in the senatorial, congres- sional, state and local elections this fall is th be waged by the National League of Women Voters. Announcement to this effect was made today by Miss Belle Sherwin, president of the league, who'at the {same time made public the appojnt- {ment of a preliminary national get- te committee, Mrs, Caspar of Irvington-on-Mudson, | New York, heads the committee, and { other members are Mrs. John O. Mil- {ler, of Pittsburgh, Mrs. Edward F. laser, of San Francisco, Mra. €. Wilbur of Woonsocket, R.I,, and 3 Marguerite M. Wells of Minnéapoli: The committee is delegated to map j out plans for the 1926 drive for votes, and to present its recommendations to | the leagu: nth annual conven- tion in St. . the week of April 14-1 It_is expected that the ingen- | ious and intensive methods which fea- | tured campaigns conducted by state and local league in 1924, again will be brought into play. To Follow Same Policy In making early plans for the 192 elections, the league follows the pol- icy established in the first national get-out-the-vote campaign in 1924. It was in the fall of 1922 that league of- ficers- conceived the idea of an ap- peal for a majority vote, because less | one-half of the voters were pai | ticipating in national elections. Bi | forts in 1924 resulted in raising the | voting percentage slightly above the {50 mark. Reports reaching national league headquarters here give evidence of an jearly and keen interest in the fall elections, in which there will be 32 senatorial campaigns, and 3} guber- tests. Special attention ix ed to the study of regis- and election’ procedure cores of local leagues throughout the country. ft ‘CURVES ARE : “IN AGAIN’ SAY | THE MODISTES, | Gowns to Have High Collars, Long Sleeves—Skirts Remain Short Chicago, March 16.—(P)—The slab- like maid’ whose lac urves has [been her glory in the fashion world [for five seasons may say farewell to the straight lines which have been fakes motif of women’s clothes since { 192) ! Curves are in again, it is agreed by istes gathered in Chicago this weck from throughout the country to attend the fifteenth annual show of the Fashion Art League of Amer- ica. Clinging fabrics—-georgettes, chif- fons, crepe satins—are in vogue, and the woman who wears them well must have contour. The styles in spring immer clothers are “ll curv ig is doomed to suffer, modis- ‘ for that extra five or ten pounds which so many women have striven hard to lose may have to be put on again by the well-dressed woman, High collars- and long sleeves are phenomina of the seasons styl indicated by gowns on displ shion Art League’ ts sponsors say, ingle factor in’ populari wome styles in the United States. But skirts remain short, stil! an inch or two below the knee, Course on Fruits, Vegetables, Trees, Offered by College “What kind of trees and vegetables shall I get and how shall I plant them,” are questions that will be asked by some member of every fam- ily in the northwest during the next six months. These are financial as well as home-making problems be- ht varieties, properly planted, add value and home pleasures to every farm and every city lot. It is a known fact. ii of dollars of cash money have been paid out for unadaptable shelter, shade and fruit trees in North Dakota in the past.. To save this waste of human energy and to help the home-loving people of this state realize their dream to have shelter-belts, feautifui shade trees and fruit bearing trees, the North Dakota Agricultural Col- lege has prepared a correspondence course consisting of twelve lessons on the subject of fruits, vegetables and trees. The first four lessons deal with trees—varieties to plant, location of ! soil, ordering the stock, planting and up fruit trees from the standpoint of adapted varieties, location, soil prep- aration and cultivation, varicties, pruning, spraying, winter protection—- in other words, the essentials for suc- cess. The last four lessons cover the subject of vegetables with special pmphaste on varieties, ordering seed, making hotbeds, planting, transplant- ing, cultivation and harvesting. This is a service course offered by the ‘state college to the home-loving and home-making people of the north- west. Everyone taking the subject has the opportunity of receiving personal advice and help from Prof. C. B. Wal- dron, who has been horticulturist in North Dakota for over 30 years. More information may be secured by writing to the Department of Cor- rebpondence Courses, State College Station, Fargo, North Dakota. KING ALTERS YACHT Cowes, March 16.—Work has been commenced on alterations to King the shelter belt, preparation of the) later care. Lessons five to eight take}. ' j i 2 OANA OTT EE LL BRED SN ONT DMR: ApoE LRN PAGE THREE SPRING HATS From the Finest Makers 75 Different Styles If you want to stand in with fashion, choose one of our outstanding styles for spring, 1926. COLORS Tan, Grey, Quaker, Pearl, Pelican, Fog, Jade, Lark, Sand, Manila and Wolf. SHAPES Bold and Breezy BRIMS Roll Brim, Snap, bound or unbound. Brim. or Flat-set, MALLORY $6 - BANDS Solid shades or colorfully striped in effects designed for us and confined tous BERGESON’S TAILORING DIVORCE RING -INYUCATANIS BRING PROBED Man Questioned by Inspectors | Says He Sold 100 Di- | vorces in a Year ‘ i March = 16.—(#)— Kr is were today investi- gating an alleged international ring to obtain divorces fraudulently in - Yucatan. Agents of the ring, the headquar- ters of which are believed to be in Merida, Yucatan, are suid to have {been operating in New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, d other gities. For $600, prospec- tive clients, it is stated, have been promised divorces within 30 days and without the knowledge of the other spouse. Postal_inspectors who questioned Gordon W. Disharoon say he admit- ted that he had sold nearly 100 di- ‘vorces within the last year. His business card, the inspectors say, bears his name and one cor- ‘ner is the word “divorce.” On the reverse side is printed: “Divorce in thirty days. “No legal cause necessary. “Notice given after decree | granted. “All transactions absolutely con- i fidential.” | Government agents brought Disha- |roon to the federal building yester- day for examination. No charge was preferred and he was permitted to return home with the promise that he would appear again for question- ig. Postal inspectors said the state de- partment at Washington would be asked to investigate any illegal prac- |tices emanating from Yueatan, |ELECTION OF - GERMANY IS .: POSTPONED (Continued from page one) portion of her surplus population amigeate annually. % The representatives of the Latin- American members of the league met again today to discpss the council cris Afranio Mello Franco, the Brazilian representative, appeared and explained Brazil’s reasons for. adopting her present attitude. The meeting adjourned with practically all the participants voicing the opin- fon that Brazil would recede from her position, in response to the coiaed appeal sent from Geneva yes- Up to early afternoon, however, no reply had been received.. It was an- nounced that ss soon as it came the council members would immediately be summoned in an informal session. A public sitting of the council was already scheduled for four p. m. have notified the Spanish journalists supporting the Primo de Rivera re- gime to be prepared to leave with them. At present, however, i probable that Forei i guus Y. Messia wi ain for the which he i: with the inten- tion of declaring that since Spain has not obtained the permanent to which she believes her pr and population entitle her, s refuse all further collaboration in league activities and discontinue nding delegates to the council and assembly-—this, however, without formally withdrawing from league membership. 83 Delegation Disagrees Moreover, internal friction is re- ported in the Spanish delegation. It is said that Foreign Minister Yan- guas is at odds with Count Quinones de Leon over the manner in which the Spanish claim has been pre- sented, Spaniards close to the delegation say the foreign minister is refrain- ing from telegraphing Premier Primo de Rivera for fresh instructions, fearing that they might be of such stiff natare as to render any furth- er chance of progress impossible. BRIAND SAYS TI! E NATIONS ARE UNITED Geneva, March 16.—()-~Premier Briand of France made the categori- cal statement this afternoon that | Germany, Great Britain and France ‘are now absolutely united on all ! questions connected with the controv- | ersy over reorganization of the league council, but he added that if new difficulties began to surge on the hor- izon the only thing left to do was to adjourn the assembly to September. M. Briand, in speaking of new diffi- culties, was alluding both to the de- mand. of Brazil for a permanent seat and to Rumania’s demand for clear cut assurances that she would be elected to a non-permanent council seat in September. i In this’ event -a communique will probably be issued stating that the Locarno atmosphere of conciliation and accord remains urishaken, and that France, Great Britain and Ger. ENDURANCE Children and grown people steadily increase in vigor and endurance when _ Scott's Emulsion pti regularly. itch vitamin-tested nourishment CLOTHING many are in complete harmony on all estions arising in Geneva. orted that the Spaniards ng the movement for ad- journment in order to gain time in which to press the Spanish claim for & permanent counc Foster Co. Court Decision Affirmed A plaintiff in a court action cannot invoke the action of a court and then, when the case has: been determined on its merits challenge the jurisdic- tion of the court without its leave, the supreme court held in the case of J. L, Allen vs. Charles Bohner, appealed by the dofendant from the Foster county district court. The court affirmed the action of the lower tribunal. Twenty-three women of are known to earn their chimney sweeps. england living as —E———EEE ooo 25 “n" 25¢ More than a pound a tor a quarter | missioner of public rs .| seeking re-nomination for the city| area and improve her speed. William council as are five of the six city| Fife, famous Clyde yachtsman, will] per The Rev. L. R. S. Ferguson, com-|George’s racing yacht, Britannia. education, is|‘The changes will increase her sai! councilmen. He is an Episcopalian.| be in charge. The third minister interested in the primary is the Rev. Joseph Harkness,! There still are more than a dozen Sr., a Presbyterian. He also seeks! widows of the war of 1812 on the a council berth, { pension rolis of the United States. - 4 ee o i Spain's Action Disquleti Another disquieting element in the situation arises from Spain's disap- paintment nob being granted a manent seat, her claim being put aside while Germany, Poland and Brasil successively were having their tropbles ironed out by the council. ‘Phe Spanish delegates have their tickets ready to depart tonight and. Bismarck Marble & Granite Works ee ee rr ; . pred es ete Ry Ss F Relieved at once by ANACIN Physicians’ favorite CAPITOL THEATRE Tonight (Tuesday) Wednesday & Thursday Performance at‘ 7:10 Adults 50c—Children 25c THE MERRY WIDOW with Mae Murray as the Widow John Gilbert as the Prince Expect something bigger, more beautiful and more thrilling than anything you’ve ever seen before on the screen. You won't be disappointed. The greatest romance cf all times! A breath-taking spectacle! Gay! Glorious! Please Come Early OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE

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