The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, October 26, 1920, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    NORTTI PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE.
Where Vanderbilt's Remains Rest
msnDDRTTW
V-V AW .V A --a v f !
TOilN OUT 13,000
SHIP OFFICERS
Merchant Vessels Gain Many Re
cruits From Newly Established
United States Schools.
PUN TO EXTEND SYSTEM
Shipping Board Suggests That Shore
'Stations Be Established Where
Men From All Parts of Coun.
try May Be Taught
Washington. More tlinn lOO mer
chant murine officers have heen grnd
tinted from the shipping hourd'H train
ing hcIiooIh Hlnee their eHinhllshment
three years ago, und 72 per cent of tho
(.'radtiulcs have been licensed for orv
lee nt son, records of the board's re
cruiting service show.
Olllceru for the government-owned
merchant murine nro trained nt Cnmp
Stuart, Vu., San Francisco, and Seattle.
Four wooden ships operate on the At
lantic const ns combination training
ships and cargo carriers, Uach has a
capacity of 200 apprentices mid 1,200
tons of cargo.
On the Pacific coast? one wooden ship
cnrrylng 1,800 tons of cargo and 110
apprentices and n new J,8(HMon steel
vessel with space for 140 apprentices
operate on the triangular run between
Seattle, the Hawaiian Islands and Sun
Francisco, (
Plan Extended Syetem.
Extension und development of Its
system of training Americans to com
mand the craft of tht merchant ma
rine Is planned by the shipping board.
It Is suggested that shore stations bo
maintained where men iroin nil sec
tions of the country enn he assembled
and given Instruction In seamanship,
bont drill and other preliminary work.
The men would then Do sent to ten
John D.
Like
Richest Man in the World No
Longer Interested in Mak
ing Money.
CHIEF JOY IN PLAYING GOLF
Responsibility for the Future, Care of
the Rockefeller Fortune Is In tho
Hands of John D., Jr., and
Selected Trustees.
New York. The richest man In the
world Is no longer Interested In tank
ing money.
More thnn thnt, ho Is not oveily
concerned with what becomes of tho
greatest single fortune ever accumu
lated, although he hopes it may be
used for good purposes.
John D. Rockefeller, now traveling
toward his eighty-second milestone of
life, Is a hermit. Surrounded by 11 few
taithful servants, the man who has
piled up millions upon millions until
today he Is worth a billion of dollars
a thousand millions finds io hap
piness In money or the retention of It.
Ills chief Joy In life Is playing golf
and he Indulges that pleasure from
an hour and n half to two hours every
day the weather permits.
Secluded In his Pocnntlco Hills
(New York) estate, with only n few
Intimate cronies to chat with at Infre
quent Intervals, and never solng a
casual caller, tho man who was oil
king for ho no longor wears tho tltlo
has turned contemplative, phl'-osoph-
ical and disinterested In worldly uf-
fnlrs.
No Longer Interested.
Ho no longer devotes himself to tho
worries Incidental to possessing such
a vnst fortune the responsibility to
day for tho future euro of the Itocke
feller fortune Is upon the iihouldcrs
of John D Jr., nnd selected trustees.
Hut this change In direction and
control of tho Itockefeller vvetMth Is
due In no sense to the age, mental
At Republican state headquarters
iplls went through nil the motlom. of
View of the magnificent mausoleum In the little Moravian cemetery at
New Dorp, S. I., where the body of William K. Vandcrbllt was Inld to rest
beside those of William il. Vauderbllt, his father, and Commodore Cornelius,
his grandfather.
In modern steel freight ships, which
would be utilized as combination car
go carriers and training vessels, carry
ing about ,125 apprentices. It Is
planned to place these ships nn trade
which would Insuru a voyage out und
return In about 00 days, four vessels
on the Atlantic and two on the i'a
clllc. Concurrently with the sen training
the recruiting service plans the estab
lishment at colleges and universities
near the principal American ports of
a maritime commerce course which
would Include accounting, business cor
respondence, business principles, eco
nomics, elements of statistics, tnar
Uets, transportation, principles of for-
Lives
Hermit
or physical Incapacity one might link
with so nged a man as John I).. Sr.
"Mr. Itockefeller. Sr., is not senile."
stnted Ivy Lee, publicity director for
the Itockefeller Interests. "Ills health
is excellent. Hut he simply has with
drawn from I lie world.
"He does not care to seo visitors.
"Mr. Itockefeller rends quite a hit
.inil spends much of his time In reflec
tion. He hits become philosophical, but
his Interest In things of the world bus
waned.
Watches Bequests.
"Naturally he Is Interested In his be
quests to various projects ho has fos
tered, such as tho Itockefeller Founda
tion nntl other broad constructive work.
He Is fnr more Interested In that than
In acquiring further money.
"Hut he Is not so wrapped up In
the details of his benefactions as you
might imagine.
"For Instance, members of the
Itockefeller Education board, com
prising fifteen of the most eminent ed
ucnAors In America, Inld a meeting at
Lakewood, N. J where Mr. Itocke
feller has a summer home. The edu
cators thought their benefactor might
attend a meeting, so extended him an
Invitation. Ho Ignored It. All he
wished to know was whether the work
was going nliead as intended and,
realizing It was In capable bauds, de
clared he was not Interested In de
tails. Hut he did Invite a couple of
till; hoard members whom he bad
known personally for many years to a
round of golf with him.
"Mr. Itockefeller shrinks from fur
ther publicity. 'I just want to be left
alone to my own thoughts,' he ex
plains. 'Why should the world bother
about an old man llko me?'
"Mr, Rockefeller renllzes ho has
only a few more years to live, nnd
ho wants no futher trouble with any
body." Old "John ID." hns hod n quiet
though enjoyable summer at Pocnntlco
Hlllh, occasionally talcing 'nuto rides
with attendants, He attemls church
regularly every Sunday.
Women Learn How to Cast Their Ballots
in Now York city n school for women voter was opened uuU the fair pu
casting their ballots just as tney will
elgn trndo, exports and Imports, lan
guages, railroad and maritime rate?,
business administration, business law.
admiralty law. advertising, ship opera
tion and other basic subjects.
Paid While Studying.
The year would be divided Into four
three-month periods, (he first one or
two (piarters to be spent In college
work, and the subsequent quarters In
practice under competent supervision
In tho ofllces of steamship companies
nnd on board ships. Tho men would
be paid" for their services while em
ployed in olllces and on vessels nnd
thus would be able to obtain their edu
cation without tluanclal cost to them.
It would be sought to so arrange
the course ns to extend over a period
of four years with a degree upon com
pletion. Shipping board olllcluls be
lieve tbih would build up and leave
many other well-trained men In ull
branches of maritime commerce.
KILLS GIRL WHO MOCKED HIM
Soldier of Distinguished Record In the
World War, Ends Child's Life
and His Own.
Scranton, Pa. It was recess nt the
school at Old Forge. Little Anna I'ltt
ruta, aged 14, hair streaming, chased
11 playmate In an effort to "tag."
Michael Jaronowlcz. 21. swung Ids
leg slowly over the fence, seized Anna
by the wrist ns she fled by. And ns
she panted lie drew a heavy ,45
caliber urmy revolver and shot her
dead.
She had hardly touched the ground.
The screams of the recessing children
hnd not yet pealed. He poked the
muzzle Into his ribs, fired und fell
dead beside her.
The story that lies behind tho
tragedy Is old. Though Jaronowiez
was a war hero, n man who hod
earned tho decorations of two nntlons
for his bravery, he lacked tho "open
sesame" to the heart of the yotih
Plttrutn girl. She mockpd him inH
spurned him until he lost control of
himself.
Baby Consumes Two Jugs
of Moonshine in Ten Days
Mike Hrngoll of Hammond.
Ind., has a little store, nnd re
cently the police dropped In for
the third or fourth time this
year because it had been report
ed that he was selling liquor
there. A Jug with about two
drinks of moonshine In It was
found under tho counter and a
ktimmel bottle, belonging to
Mike's wife, was also found.
In police court Mike said that
he kept the liquor 011 hand for
the bahy, and that the Infant
had consumed about two Jugs
of moonshine during the last
two days. Judge Klotz was
plainly skeptical and decided
that Mike should pay $50 and
costs.
in the polling piuccs.
Old King Coal Handed a Hard Wallop
WASHINGTON Official Washing
ton, now thnt the water power
act Is In effect, Is especially Interested
in nn Invention by a Cnnndinn. Prof.
J. W, Dorsey of the University of
Mnnltoba nt Winnipeg has nnnounced
nfter nn exhaustive survey of the wa
ter power resources of the Winnipeg
river thnt ho hns discovered a new
method of transmitting electric power
which will reduce tho cost one-half.
Ho will come to Washington, D. C,
where he has been called to lay his
discovery before the United States bu
reau of standards.
"Long before the coal fields of the
world are exhausted electricity will
have supplanted coal ns the universal
fue) In homes nnd the 'motive power
In Industry," said Professor Dorsey.
"By tho development of wnter povv-
Co-operative Marketing of Grain Crop
THE American Farm Bureau Federa
tion hns ntmnimpiiil tlin nnrcnrmn!
if the committee of seventeen ap
pointed by President J. R. Howard to
work out n plan for co-operative mar
keting of the American grain crop.
Methods of co-operating grain eleva
tor associations in the middle West
and of tho grain raisers of western
Cnnnda will he studied, as well as the
systems used In slmllnr mnrketing en
terprises by fruit growers nnd other
producers, the federation said, esti
mating that It would require two years
of preparation before n co-operative
plnn for the grnln crop could be put
In action.
The committee Includes George LIv
ngston. chief of the United States
bureau of markets; Dr. II. .7. Waters.
Kansas City; C. II. Gustafson, presi
dent Nebraskn Farmers' union; Wil
liam G. Eckhnrdt, Illinois state farm
bureau ; C. V. Gregory, selected by the
American Agricultural Editors' associ
ation; J. M. Anderson, Equity Co-op-
eratlvo exchange, St. Paul, Minn.; I
fc,. Powell, Missouri Farmers' Grnln
Dealers' association; C. A. Rlnghnm.
Michigan state farm bureau; John C.
notes, Kansns Equity union ; Dr. E. F.
Lndd. North Dnkotn Atrrlcultural col-
lege and Republican nonpartisan noirp
inee ror senator In North Dnkotn; L.
J. Tnbor, mnster, Ohio State Grange;
Clifford Thorne. counsel for shippers'
To the Victor Belongs the Jap Question
TERMINATION of the treaty of 1011
with Japan, legalizing Japanese
Immigration into tho United States
and the leasing of land by Japanese,
is a question that Is destined to be
pressed upon the next administration
as n result of the race Issue develop
ing serious proportions on the Pacific
coast.
So long as this treaty remains in
effect the exclusion of Japanese will
be illegnl nnd the United States will
bo compelled to continuo to rely for
protection from the "yellow peril" on
the "gentlemen's agreement" which
the Callfornlaus charge Is being evad
ed by the Japanese.
Tho treaty Is to remain In effect
until 1023 unless terminated before
thnt time on six months' notice by
either party.
Article 1 of the treaty provides that
Berries to Be Kept
FRESH berries and cherries in mid
winter are possible, the experts of
the department of agriculture an
nounce after extensive experiments.
Successful methods of storing fruits
nnd berries In frozen condition have
been demonstrated and, the govern
ment experts sny, these should be
more fully utilized In relieving the
market of surplus receipts of highly
pcrlshnhle fruits while In sound edible
condition.
They declare that preservation by
freezing Is cheaper than canning, espe
cially when the containers are costly,
as at present, and an Important Indus
try of sternly development Is looked
for In this line.
Fruit held at proper temperatures,
the experts say, has a more natural
tlavor than when enniwd or dried, and
Is fully as satisfactory as fresh fruit,
Is superior to canned and dried fruit
In making Ice creams and sherbets, and
for cooking In the form of pies, pre
serves, Jellies and other desserts and
confections.
Strawberries, red and black raspber-
er It Is possible to do nwny with the
necessity for conl. If the potential
water power of the Winnipeg
liver were developed it would be suffi
cient to turn every factory wheel In
Canada nnd hent every home and of
fice In Winnipeg, even If the tempera
ture remained nt 40 degrees below
zero nil the yenr round.
"It would be vnstly cheaper for
Winnipeg to obtain Its electric heat
nnd power from the river SO miles
than to haul coal 1,400 miles from
Pennsylvania. With such nn Immense
supply of cheap power to draw upon
Winnipeg must Inevitably develop In
to one of tho great manufacturing
centers of Cnnnda."
It Is from the Winnipeg river that
the municipally owned hydro-electric
system derives Its power' which Is
sold to Industrial plants.
If Professor Dorsey's method of
transmission will reduce costs one-hnlf
It follows naturally that under the
new water power law there will be a
tremendous activity In the establish
ment of hydro-electric plants, espe
cially In the West.
Tho discovery also adds to tho feasi
bility of tho St. Lawrence canaliza
tion project.
t k
organization, Chicago; II. It. Mclsch,
Farmers' National Grain Dealers' as
sociation, Minnesota; A. L. Mlddleton,
Eagle Grove, Iowa, nnd Rnlph Snyder,
Kansas state farm bureau.
"I desire emphatically to deny,"
said President Howard, in nnnouncing
the committee, "thut any policy or
plnn Involving price fixing has been
decided upon by the American Farm
Bureau federation, or any committee
appointed by It. We desire merely
to evolve a marketing system which
will eliminate useless handling costs,
unnnecessnry selling expenses, ruinous
price fluctuation due to mnrket Jug
gling and speculation, and to so co
ordinate supply nnd demnnd ns to In
sure thnt on the one hnnd the pro
ducer receives tho cost of production
plus n rensonnblo nnd living profit nnd
on the other hand the consumer gets
nn adequnte nnd uninterrupted food
supply nt the lenst possible murk-up
over nctunl costs."
"the citizens or subjects of aich of
the high contracting parties sbnll have
liberty to enter, travel, and reside In
the territories of the other, to carry
on trade, wholesale and retail, to own
or lease and occupy houses, manu
factories, warehouses nnd shops, to
employ agents of their choice, to lenso
land for residential and commercial
purposes, nnd generally to do anything
Incident to or necessary for trade up
on the same terms as native citizens
or subjects, submitting themselves to
the laws and regulations there es
tabllshcd."
The right to own land for any pur
pose and to lease land for ngrlcultur
al purposes was omitted from the
treaty, and the Callfornln law prohlb
Ring the ownership nnd restricting
the leasing of land by aliens not elig
ible to citizenship, ns nro tho Japan
ese, Is not In contravention thereof.
The evasion of this law through cor
porations and trustees for American
born Japanese children, who nro
Amerlcnn citizens, the Cnllfornlnns
plnn to stop through additional leg
Islatlon to bo submitted to n refer
eiiduin nt the November elections. Gov
emor Stephens nsserts thut this pro
posed legislation does not conflict with
I tho treaty.
Fresh by Freezing
(wTT f Iliil. I Vv
rles, blackberries, loganberries, blue
berries, gooseberries, currants nnd
sour cherries have been found to keep
successfully after being frozen.
Berries can be frozen In tho crates
lu which they are marketed In tem
perature below 10 degrees Fahrenheit
to zero, and below und withdruwn
from cold storage when wanted.
The fruits become waterlogged when
taken out and collapse and therefore
must be used Immediately. Govern
ment experts say. however, that they
retain their natural flavor and lu ev
ery way are comparable to the best
fresh product.
w H 1 1 in J 1 1 n nr
Over fifty years ago a younfr
physician practiced widely in a.
rural district and became famous
for his uniform success in the-
curing of disease, This was Dr..
Pierce, who afterwards estab
lished himself in Buffalo, N. Y...
and placed one of his prescriptions,,
which he called "Golden Medical'
Discovery," in the drug stores of
the United States so that the pub
lic could easily obtain this very
remarkable tonic, corrective and
blood -maker. Dr. Pierce manu
factured this "Discovery" from,
roots and barks a corrective
remedy, the ingredients of which:
nature had put in the fields and.
forests, for keeping "Us healthy..
Few folks or families now living
have not at sometime or other used
this "Golden Medical Discovery"
for' the stomach, liver and heart.
Over twenty -four million bottles
of this tonic and blood remedy
have" been sold in this country.
Vaseline
Reg U..S.Pat.Ofr.
Carbolated
PETROLEUM JELLY
An antiseptic
dressing for cuts,
sores, etc. -
A necessity
where there
are children.
AVOID SUBSTITU TES
CHElEBgOUGH MFG. CO,.
Stata Street New York
No More Misery
After Eating
Just Takom An Eatonio
"The first dose of Eatonlc did me.
wonders. I take it at meals and amj
no longer bothered with indigestion,'"
writes Mrs. Ellen Harris.
Thousands of people, like this dear
lady, gratefully testify abMit Eatonlc,
which does Its wonders by taking up
nnd carrying out the excess acidity and;
gases which bring on Indigestion,,
heartburn, bloating, belching nnd food!
repenting. Acid storanch also causes;
about seventy other non-organic ail
ments. Protect yourself. A big box
of Eatonlc costs but a trifle with your
drugglst's guarantee.
KeepYourSkin-Pores
Active and Healthy
With Cuticura Soap
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c
FRECKLES
POI rpVtlV RIMOVSO If Dr. Bwtt
coi''aj'a fc"hi
nr. c. H. R.rr.
He Couldn't Tell.
"Where were you yesterday, Tommy
Crlbbs?" asked the teacher.
"Please, mum, I had the toothache?"
answered' Tommy.
"Has It stopped?" asked the teacher
sympathetically.
"I don't know," snld Tommy.
"What do you mean, boy? Youdon'fc
know If your tooth has stopped ach
ing?" "No, muni, tho dentist kept It."
Catarrh Can Be Cured
Catarrh la a local disease greatly Influ
enced by constitutional conditions. It
therefore requires constitutional treat-,
rnent. HALL'S CATARRH MBDICIMB.
Is taken Internally and acta through
the Blood on the Mucous BiirfacM ot
the System. HALL'S CATARRH
MEDICINES destroys the foundation ot
the disease, elves the patient trneth tiy
Improving the general health and assiau
nature In doing Us work.
. . 1 nIViat. rMrfMilarn fnn
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
If some fool.l were to rrnmln quiet
they might acquire a refututlon for
wisdom.
Some writers never dlsurb the truth,
thnt lies nt the bottom cf the Inkwell.
VyyjIIIDIMP Nldhtnnd MoralagV
"fmf WIf they Tire,I ten,
7o(MkwsL Smart or Burn, If Sorty
&i.7TrVA-C IrrlUted, Inflamed or
YOUR C.Yt5 GrMulated.uteMurine.
often. Sooth, RKhe. Safe foi
Infant or Adult. At allOrugglsts. Write for
Fre Eye Boole MtrVt E? Kteu4TCs.,CUari