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Grand Forks herald. [volume] (Grand Forks, N.D.) 1916-1955, May 26, 1919, Image 2

Image and text provided by State Historical Society of North Dakota

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85042414/1919-05-26/ed-1/seq-2/

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PAGE TWO.
BIG SEAPLANE
Y*" 'i-
Largest Flying Machine in
World Has Accident on
First Flight.
1
3
J\
j,,.
s! v.
&
London, May 26.-—One man was
killed and several were hurt when a
giant Tarrant triplane, the largest in
the world, was wrecked this morning
w^ile taxi-ing for its first flight near
Famborough. The machine weighed
twenty tons and was equipped with
six engines.
STATE BUSINESS IS
SUSPENDED DURING
VAN DYKE FUNERAL
St. Paul, Minii.,- May 2C.—State
businpss was suspended today from 11
a. m., until 3 p. m., the hours during
which the body, of Congressman Carl
C. Van Dyke, late representative from
the Fourth Minnesota, district, lay in
state in the main rotunda at the capi
tol. State officials and employes,
Spanish-American war comrades,
former associates in the postal service
and hundreds of friends paid their
last respects during those hours.
Private funeral services for rela
tives and close friends were held at
the family Rome at 10 a. m. Late this
afternoon a military funeral will be
held.
Fain would I climb, but that I fear
to fall.—Raleigh.
He that seeks to beguile Is under
taken in his wile.
SEEGAR
Refrigerators
The Sweetest
Rnxmuig Car
itf the World
f1 z*Trti\ V!
«l
First 17. S.
^jvjgjjjgjggjjggggg
W
t'-
rjr$tft
4&y
I.1"4*
U. s. S. «Mt*Kd HO, relief oMp,
Refrigerators! Refrigerators!
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARGE CONSIGNMENT OF THE
FAMOUS "SANITARY" LINE REFRIGERATORS AND ARE SHOW
ING A LINE OF PATTERNS RANGING FROM A 55-LB. SIZE AT
$14,75 TO A 200-LB. SIZE AT $60.00, BEFORE INVESTING LOOK
OVER OUR LINE. WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON YOUR
PURCHASE.
Time
Remember the *SEEGAR" is the Original "Syphon.*
NORMAN & SONS
Furniture and Undertaking.
201-203 North Third St. Est. 1890. Grand Forks, N. Dak.
RI
THE ABOVE TRIO OF CARS
ARE THE FASTEST SELLING CARS
IN THE CITY
OKANUi»qHHWHBKjmU,i
Relief Ship With Food
For Poles and Jews Reaches Europe
The U. S food administration Is mow dlrectinf the distribution of the flret shipload of food'aent by the Foliah
national committee for relief of the Polish and Jewish war sufferer* in Poland. The U. S. S. Weetwatrd Ho car-,
riadht efood to Kiel. It was shipped from there to Warsaw for distribution.
SANITARY
BRAND
Refrigerators
The. Car for
Economical
I
s?
in KM lock.
federal directo:
em'
1 ploy me
....
Grand' Forks, Ny Oi
J'n
V-1
KMIUflIMBHtfr.muaw
•if*. r-amseiw-*r*TrY*v
JRKitD FORKS HEPALD, MONDAY, MAY 96, 1910.
s-wsas/jfr
r%lln4^
Vs.
FOUR THOUSAND
UNEMPLOYED
MENJN UTAH
Present Conditions Will not
Be Changed Until After
June 1.
Salt Lake City, May 2fi.-—Tftere
are about 4,500 unemployed men in
Utah, according to Parker
B..Cady,
of the United States
,ent Service for Utah. Mr.
Cady was speaking of ail aorts of un-
employment and he figured that it
would be at least the first of June be
fore the present condition would be
alleviated.
There is some demand for miners,
Mr. Cady explained, particularly in
the camps of Park City, Eureka, and
Frisco, but this demand is not large
enpuph to take care of all the unem
ployed miners in the state. Melting
snows will probably open up the Big
Cottonwood mining district about
June 1, and this, it is thought, will
help relieve the situation regarding
miners. The situation at Bingham is
Still acnte, everything depending upon
the copper situation. Utah coal minea
are working leea men than in former
years, but they are managing to give
those, men employed three or four
days' work'each week, reports to Mr.
Ouw sjiW.
There is no. active demand in Utah
for strictly farm labor, although there
(s hegipning to come into ttje office
of the employment aerviee a demand
for workers in beet fields. This work
pays high for experienced men—as
much as )i an acre—but the inex
perienced man can easily .top more
than a half acre of beets a day, and
then board and room is said to be
included.
Utah has been besieged with ..a de
mand' for single farm labor for Idaho,
and although there are many unem
ployed farm hands on the lists in the
federal employment service office, the
Idaho requests are not being filled
principally, according to Mr. Cady,
because transportation is not fur
nished the heio.
Utah can furnish almost any eort
of la&or, Mr. Cady says, and he is
looking for openings in states other
than Utah in which to place the auro
plus of labor now prevalent here. Al
though- the unemployment in this
state at the.present time is large,
much of it being due to the demobil*
lzation of Utah's soldiers and sailors,
Mr. Cady believes that- the situation
should show much improvement by
the fall -months. Openings of mines
will have much to do with taking care,
of the .labor surplus, and every effort
is to be made to persuade the federal
government to take seme measures
which will result in more mining
•work.
Probably one of the moat impor
tant fieldp for Utah's aurplua iyor
ia the big at|cte highway program au
thorbted by the recent state legisla
ture "and by several county commis
sions. If the Tfork on these highways
gets started aoon there is likely to be
BUY SERVICE
NOT JUST GLASSES
When yoo buy glaaaea, pay
enough for them to include
the careful Intelligent aenr
iee which muat be a part of
every pair of properly made
and fitted lentfag.
The glasses that we sell
are made from a formal*
baaed on a careful examina
tion of. your. eyes. Particu
lar care is given to every
little hetall, and they coat
leaa than you mifht taAffne.
If. 4th St, (bad Vodka,
:Y,
4. #.
mahu
», shortage o' common Ufcpr rstjwir
tnin $
rarproi.
Inereaata la tha ooat cww»odJ»
ties and food in Utait
.Hr^'v^v
hi- -J!
wh
The average cost of
per cent. In some commo­
dities the increase has- been very much
greater- Particularly is this true in
the ease of hardware. 1916 showing
a 100 per cent increase over 1915
191S 20? per cent, and 1919, 190 per
cent
BIG WEEK FOR MASONS.
Helena, Mont., May 86 —Montana's
big Masonic week begins today.
The largest gathering of Masons' In
.the annals of the state is to culmin
ate its reunion Friday night with the
initiation of 800. novitiates into the
Mystic Shrine.
The earlier days of the week are
given over to the Scottish Rite, which
will confer degrees from the fourth to
the 82nd, inclusive.
These sessions are secret. It is
j*«(e
known only that the
lattMt yet gathered
Mafcrs
tk* i-
ginning of ^ie European war In 1114
have befn etiormoup,. according t«? fig
urea compiled byt tfc# Cottmeroiatolub
of
this city Increases inwagea ha**
been unusually smallv in-eome lines
of
work not amounting to more than
per cent.
A study of the eoihparative costs
foods and nebeaaary commod'"
..i 1914 as against llt 1b said tO-l
sent serious difficulties by the club's
statistician*.
a
great many
commodities. Including foodstuffs,
clothing, building material, coal and
other commodities, shows a general
Increase between 1914 and 1919 of
fcbout
45
THEthe
lesa than
0m«T«* 916SI
'.S~
Before A.
C.
Townler.and
thb UJa jbaara:
an JngUuftt trfti
&rs are here from *11 sections of
th* state for the ceremony.
reputation and standing
in industry of the big
Nash institution is yow best
assurance of die high quality of
trucks bearfeng the ISfash name-
tw jmn»
SIMS AUTOMOBILE COMPANY
Distributors.
Grand Forks North Dakota
NHBH TRUCm
3.
TmJmClwiih
•. "jtr^
elMS Is the
wd Masonic
WW
—POLITIC./
WIN BIG
•meaarfrea which'have been enacted into lawa by the Npnpartlaan,Legislature. Before A.' C.'-TOfW"
ley ever dreamed of having anything to do with the Nonpartisan League, I, with others„b*d"-Btart- .v
ed the fight in this state for'the farmers. And. I' have, paid the price: for standing
br
for aaauare deal for the farmer. The Hanna crowd attempted to "discipline" me by wrecking my
bank. (Send for a copy of my book, "Legalized Bank Robbery," which,had more to dp with
opening the eyes of the-people of this state to the iniquities of-the old gtUUT than all talk
Townley haa ever made.)
The farmera*' movement In thia atate ia bigger than A. C, Townley. It la bigger than Grant
S. Toumana, than BilJ Langer, than'Tom Hall, or Carl Koaltaky, or a» of thena combined ten
re a in in if a I a a a a a I a re
have worked harder for, have apent more money for, than any man in North Dakota in bringwig
about the New Jay in North Dakota.
The enactment of the lawa which are now being attacked by a referendum ,vote mean h--:
more to humanity than all the laws of all the statea ever enacted. They embrace tha New Free
dom, which givea the producer and tfce laborer a .chance.
Opponents of the meapurea baae their oppoaition chiefly on the grounds that -Townley con
itrola the Nonpartisan League. While many people have -doubtlea*. been made tovboUw. thieu aj
there is ho doubt in my'mind that the attacka agalnst'Townley are inainceTie,_and are used aa mpra
camouflage in order to' deceive the people.
fear Grant Toumana. Langer, Hall- or
FARMERS OF NORTH DAKOTA. In order tVkill the farmeraV oifcaniutlon the ^ppoaitlon la
eenteriiig its flght upon some of t)fe leadaip of the movmeht.
It would be a crime for this movement to fail oh. the eve of Ha succeas. it leftist not fail.
And ft WILL NOT'FAIL. The man who, pretending to be a friend of ths farmer.-who would
jeopardise the succeis of this great movement for mankind is either diahoneat or. fAlia to grasp •.-f
the'full meaning'-and\benel)t of the n*w laws,
Don't l^t any ialk of the: row between Townley and Youmaas dtscelve yen for one moment &
Don't let the row betweerf Townley and I^nger. and Hall and Kooitaky divert your at^ntton FROM.®'
A SINOLB OlflS OF THE MEA8URBS TO BB VOTED.,ON. VOTE FOR EVERY OSB. Don't 2^
MISS ONE. A
This ia not the 'tin* for peifOQftl saltoh-btokartog All thoee things ean ba •ttanaad'-te^s
at their proper time.
The one big^ thing, the outatanding, overahadowtng and all Important thing, ia to FOT THB
FARMER PROORAK5 OVER. Not for thf sake oLany one man or any •et of therfv'BtW'l^R^*
THE SAKE OF THfS COUHOK GOOD. Let'a be BIG 1
THE SAKE OF THJ9 COMMON GOOD. Let'a be BIG ENOUGH to forget peraonal (ntei^ata ai(4
quarreta to the end th^t the tfAmmon people mair have^n
*&<**
EVENING EDITION.
The Soottiah Rtts eeremoniea ^rlll
close Thursday night with ^anqwt
in the local temple
A S O IN E E E
Durable Double
aecret
able
nary. ..—
ftt 4»vQv to W»0w
of •ervloe.
ate*. Tires Kbee.
29at9 •••••.,#..I4.J5
Slxt 5.fe ItJJ
SIxlH t.St I.1J
ISqtMiS.S. o»ly7.59 J.90
SIM 9.40
M-
78% OBT AM l«li .___
XT ONE-QUART®®
nllM
USUAL
^rira! maSe .douM7_iJ®58B8:J?*i
r^s^srsrsss sss
?is.
»x4%
^en er^Btvejat^wMgher^n
lOUIEKJawn ECOMDMfDVL 'mANMQBTATtCfl
TtreaT^,
S«*4%
17*4
SSxS
mi
•"•-.trr'a its
9.99 ».«0
Toor'flrat trial makee *00
»«a
Riuinp%raBB*inTB njiiwc yum
11.5# 9.90
1J.00 K1B
..12.25 9.90
12.75 9.99
aa long J«
B^t«£STl5i£
cilftoher. ^Ini tTdM'tm' aaeh tube, balaace C. O..D.»
I^toSSHia^WsSSSS WweSSlSaeowt Of
5 per ewt If «p°i«t«wtlll tt*
DucaUe^Tire & Rubber Co.
Dept 19, 14#«"W. vCbioejpe"Av. Chleage, m.
& f"
or^er'
-^1
"TOS
•At
Ih*j art alraftdjr in tin
nrviee of audi concern* The Palmalfoa
Company ThaBortonStora, of Chicago Morris
& Company} The Standard 03 Coupany and
other*, f"
Good Territory Open for Live Dealers.
v'f"'""'
Townjey was ever heard of I waa actively a^ work creaOng sentiment for
inning in
government anythl?ig you want to. Call Toun^ana everything you can "think', of.- Ouaa
BUI .X4WCK. Hul and 'XoiiSftytintil Tbv Jat tslaoK In the f«ea. BIJTVQTB FOB
BILLS, not one, or two, BUT EVERT ONE.
lt,
..
Watch tha manoeuveto of the opnoalUon. They will atterapt to play ToumaM against
.»»! wid Koaitaky again* Townley. ThatVtheir old game. _Beware of
raiy^f attempts to divide League Forces. Don't ljt your mind diverted
WsH
jORA^T 8. lOnUXI, HWOT. If. I.
•v.
ft
w)
K*ih Qiai ObMrif, D2S0
fir
r"%
labor, and.
tl
4'
the sg«|rf,.of tlieirve«n
WE
W
m4
Vf
.*«v

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