The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1917, Page 4

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THE TRIBUNE Matered Pestoffice, N. {SUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT DA SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ‘ADVANCB Qufly, by mail or carrier, 4.00 Wally, by mail, one year in North Dakota, Corfe seeoe, 6.00 Daily, by mail outside of North Dakota, three months. 1.60 Daily, by mail in North Dakota three months .........se006 1.25 ‘Weekly, by mail, per year ..... 1.50 Audit Bureau of Circulation — (TES OLDEST NEWSPAPER food than will be eaten and that it is demeaning to reckon closely.” Now, we know that is true, don't we? If we will be perfectly honest with ourselves a good many of us will have to admit that what the sec: retary says comes mighty close to de- scribing our own state of mind. Another phase of the situation is referred to by the secretary in these words: “The food waste in the house: | hold results, in large measure, from; ‘bad preparation, and ‘bad cooking, | from improper care and handling.} and, in well to do families, from serv- | ing an undue number of courses and! an over-abundant supply, and failing to save and utilize the food not con-; sumed. As an instance of improper ~|handling it is discovered that in the (Hatablished 1878) LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. | For the 24 hours ending at noon, } April 11, 1917: | preparation of potatoes 20 per cent} of the edible portion in many cases} is discarded.” Now that that may last for years—it is the pa-/ We are at war—a war Temperature at 7 a. m. - Bl | Hue | Temperature at noon - - 42! triotic duty of every man, woman and Highest yesterday 41/ child in the nation to do everything Lowest last night : 4] | possible to make victory certain. sient wind velocity - } | Food conservation is one of the! ‘vital elements in the tremendous | For North fie Fair tonight |Problem that now confronts the na-| and Thursday; warmer Thursday and | west portion tonight. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, | Meteorologist. COOSSOESESEEEOO OO ° Patriotism is a blind and 4%} irrational impulse unless it is ¢ founded on a knowledge of the “ blessings we are called to se- @ cure and the privileges we @ propose to defend.-—Robert & Hall SEER EOEEEEEEEES ———— AT COOPER UNION. Governor Frazier’s address in New York, Friday, April 13, will be watch-| ed with considerable interest at home. He goes there upon the in-} See see vitation of a Socialist of the most) ty purchase, pronounced type, to speak upon the farmers’ revolt in North Dakota. The Hast has a hazy idea of the! with healthy Movement that has been eulogized iby some of the conservative newspapers | defic; of the Kast which, as yet, are not apprised that the “revolt” is merely socialism rampant. Probably after Governor Frazier's address, the press will be better informed and the cor- respondents sent here to explain the political upheaval may have to admit that they, too, were deceived. In a recent number of The Country Gentleman, a periodical hardly given to socialistic doctrine, is a long eulo- gy of the league, much of which is a tissue of misrepresentation. The au- thor could have written just as good an article had. he procured a few notes from iA. C, Townley and D. C. Coates by mail. But Governor Frazier is going east to tell his story of the economic emancipation of the farmers. Probably there will be wafted back by ontorprising press agents, a valid excuse for the veto of the terminal elevator ijl. North Dakota farmers may glean something from the Coop- er Union address. Argentina, the Put a gar- threatens land of wheat and cattle. den in your back yard! Famine CONSERVE FOOD. “The world's food crop is deficient and the situation is becoming alarm- ing.” is the word which has been sent from Rome, where the International Institute of Agriculture is now in ses- sion. This.institule is the highest author- ity there is on world food conditions. Its sessions are attended by dele gates country and judgments are based upon the most complete and accurate data that the world's foremost agricultural — ex- perts can gather. When the International Institute of Agriculture speaks, it is not guess- ing; it knows. And when it finds that the world’s food supply is so short that it is nec- essary to sound an alarm, the nation or the individual that does not listen and heed the warning is unspeakably foolish and is courting disaster. The question that every individual should ask himself, in view of this alarming warning, is: What can I do to increase and conserve the food supply? The answer is obvious. Cultivate every square foot of soil that you possibly can and do not waste food. The secretary of agriculture recent- Jy stated that the experts in his de- partment estimated the food waste in this country as reaching the enorm- from every its + ous total in value of $70,000,000. Think of it! Nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars worth of food wasted in a year! There are a hundred million pecple in @his country—about 20,000,000 fam- ilies., The food waste averages about £35 a family. This probably is upwards of 10 per cent of the ‘ood purciised or grown by the average family. “Of course, the waste in families of very limited means is slight,” says the secretary, “but in the families of ‘moderate and ample means the waste 4s considerable. . As a nation we seem to have a disdain of economizing. In any homies there is a strong feeling that it is only decent to provide more tion. i “Waste No Food!" This should be, our motto from today until the end | of the war. Remember that food is wasted: When we eat more than our bodies need for growth and repair and to supply energy for our work— When food is burned or spoiled in cooking— When too for a meal— | When too much food is served at} a meal— | When anything edible is allowed to; go to the garbage pail or allowed to! spoil for lack of proper handling— | When food is handled carelessly, | Say to yourself now, Mrs. House | i | i | much food is prepare.l} wife: “For one month I am going} prepare and serve the 0 food for my family on the basi | the most rigid economy cons I am going to do my toward conserving the world ant food supply. i part only be proud of what you have done ‘but you never will be satisfied to go back to the old wasteful methods. Those ‘bloody Baltimoreans rioted ‘David arr Jordan's peace meeting. It was “crool,” “crool!” LET THE WOMEN DECIDE. The New York Times discusses the suffrage issue from a very sensible angle in the following cditorial: “A bill before the Wisconsin legis- lature proposes to allow the women of the state to decide by their votes whether the majority of them do or do not want the ‘ballot. That is a sensible plan. The growing habit of legislatures to impose a limited suf- jfrage upon women without giving {either the women or the male voters en if the majority of them desire the ; Privilege which enthusiastic suffrag- ists and easy politicians are so eager to thrust upon them. Then let the male voters decide for themselves whether they want this addition to the electorate. That is the fair, or- “The Ohio legislature consulted is of any importance to find oul what the opinion ‘of the women is. They must be ‘emancipated, whether they prefer their chains or not.” Somebody stop the war until the willfulness is lanced out of Bob La Follette! TOWARDS HOME. A scene is to be witnessed in north: ern Asia such as this old world has never before beheld. It is a proces- sion of fifty thousand sledges loaded with men and women from the mines and convict settlements of Siberia who are freed by the downfall of autocracy, people are mostly martyrs to their opinions. They thought or acted too strongly for the cause of human freedom, but now they are on their way to their old homes ina free country, their own country. The world’s war is unparalleled in its horrors, but who, looking upon this multitude of people restored to home and freedom, shall say that the war is without great compensation. Millions of Jews restored to man- hood and the miserable, enslavea hordes of Siberia on the way home: When the angel whipped Adam in to the wilderness to earn his bread ‘by hard labor, there was still the mer- cy of God in it. hell, when, through it, a hundred and ninety millions of people step out into the sunlight of freedom, with full op portunity to progress. ‘No more shall Russians who dare to think of justice, equality and ltb- erty stagger through the snow, with hopeless faces turned toward the Si- derian blackness, with the leshingz ; Blorying ex-slaves, Fam going tO) and the arch fiend of avtocracy is a voice in the matter is Indefensible.| Sherwood; he's only 82. First ascertain by a vote of the wom-| derly and just method of procedure. | | Jews, free Siberia and now absolute; neither the women nor the men. It; This war fs not,all) of brutal drivers on their bacis. To- day the long trails to that he'l in the far northeast crowded by an end- of smiling, singing, bound for home less procession demonstrate thrift in my home, to! under jock and key. make saving, rathersthen wasting, bY! Rejoice with Russia, all ye who household standard. |work hard, love strongly and aim Then at the end of a month care-| pigh! fully analyze the results and unless | = — are greatly mistaken, you will not) wel), if Woodrow won't give Teddy that division of rough riders, there's the proposed regiment of Pueblo In dian caval Teddy has simply gol {to be whooping it up at the head of something, and mere sight of those Indians behind Teddy ought to pi fear of the Lord into the Germans. Too bad that the children of Amer- ica ¢an’t send a great wreath of flow- ers to Germany. Emil von Behring, of ‘Marburg university, is dead. He gave a big part of his life to children and discovered diphtheria anti-toxin | Viewing that | Lodge from a distance, we opine that what Massachusetts pacifists want {s attack on Senator plenty of ‘room to fight. should tackle Representative But they Tke | Texans are alre; WZzing a | regiment of Rough Riders. We aurry to nominate Cousin Will ‘Taft for colonel. There ain't nobody for whom {cavalry riding would he rougher, | | Prohibition, political freedom, pop- lular government, free Finland, free freedom of religion! a! Hail, great Rus- passed a suffrage ‘bill. A popula referendum will be taken, so thal the} - men, at least, will have their day in} Von nn HOU ote a apec tine, court. ‘Nobody seems to think that it} Mis Texas states Mayne De thinks that ‘Carranza can't take Tex- as, fall. Arizona and ‘New Mexico, after | Roosevel s personal call on Wilson shows that Teddy has the nevve left for “leading a division at th froat” anyhow. Bob von Follette of Wisconsin is {another man of big possibilities who prefers being a big frog in a little puddle—and that puddle himself. Villa announces that he is “an in- corruptible neutral,” as between Un- cle ‘Sam and Germany. It’s a strong pull at old Carranza’s whiskers. Pan-Americanism means anything more than sticking together for the money that's in it The single man who can't or won't get into the war service and who has $1,000 income should pay an in- come tax. \Here’s forerunner of crow: Ber- lin dispatch says two tons of elephant meat is to ‘be made serviceable for food. ’ Anyhow, that Washington pacifist parade marched part way up the hill j;and down again. If your back yard isn’t big enough |to grow potatoes, grow carrots! Put your private life on a war ba- sis! Cut out the fuxuries!- — « We're now going to see whether} 33 CHRLOAS EMIGRANTS. BOUND FOR WESTERN PONT with Supt. T. H. Lantry, superintendent of the Yellow stone division of the Northern Pacitie, he said that there will be a train load fu an interview of 33 carloads of emigrants pass through Mandan today en route to various points west of Mandan. One car of the will be cut out at) Man- dan. This is the first solid train load of emigrants that has passed through Mandan that’ is ‘remembered. Mr. Bantry continued that he will be compelled to remain in Mandan for several da, ccount of the exceed- ingly heavy business coming into Man- dan ftom the cast. The recent de- moralization of traffie caused by the high water has held back hundred of carloads of freight and the busine: now is overwhelming and a difficult matter to handle. +e FA. S, Moffit returned yesterday from Glendive, where he Hed on ac- count of the critical illness of his brot! er Arthur Moffit of this city. Friend of Mr. Moffit will be pleased to learn that he is on the road to recovery. Mandan News Bureau ELKS HOLD SERVICE FOR DEAD BROTHER ing Hundreds of friends gathered at the home of Michael Cantwell this morn- J. Sun Bismarck traveling men. Clement spoke the Jubf sad rit 1 services werd halk at 9 o'clock and were in charge of the Elk ae & fimera Miss Marian Newton was hostess to! the members of the Y. club at her day evening. Ma ty attend the funeral of the late who was drowned. Easter ty morning: with ‘four. prominent. Rey. Father The W. Wo OW. OW, home on Sixth avenue Mon- * 6 Aishop Tyler of the Episcopal church orth Dakota, will confirm a large ‘Thurs Dr. and Mrs. Bernard 8. Nic! pleasantly entertained: the: member! at the local Episcopal church lay evening. . ‘son of their auction bridge club Monday eve- ning. * ie Mrs. Ray McKaig, will tomorrow afternoon entertain a large number of friends at her home on Fourth street northwest. Mr. and M 8 W. McKendry and Mr. and Mrs, Percy Hart of Mandan, NOTICE missioners of the City of Dakota, that. it is necessary that sewer con- nections be connecte the following described property: TO. -MAKE. D_DECL, TIONS AND DEC ard ‘of City Com. Be It Resolved by the Road of City Com: d and constructed to it Addition Tot Bee Northera. Pacific. 2nd, Add. 3 25 G we an 4 26 i c “ 4 27 “ “ 2 38 “ “ “ 3 39 ‘ “ “ i 37 “ “ “ 13 37 “ “ 39 “ “ 38 : . One Dose of Mayr’s Wonderful Rem-|; 41 “ : edy Drives Them Out—Ends a2 “i ep “ Torture. 42 “ “ “ Ha “ “ “ Stomach poisons breed millions of} 1 65 “ “ “ germs that eat into your vitals, caus- ing Gas Pressure, Indigestion, Consti- pation, Torpid Liver, AutoJntoxica- tion, Yellow Jaundice, Gall Stones, Appendicitis, Cancer and Ulcers of the Stomach and Intestines, etc., etc. Thousands of sufferers have been re- stored by Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, among them Justice of the Supreme Court, Congressmen, Doctors, Law- yers, Bankers, Ministers, Nurses, Far- mers, Mechanics—persons of every class—probably your own neighbors. Stomach troubles are due mostly to catarrhal poison. Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy removes that poison, thor- oughly cleanses the system, drives Jays inflammation and ends suffering. Unlike any other remedy. No alco- hol—nothing to injure you. One dose convinces. FREE book on Stomach Ailments. Write Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, Chicago, or obtain a bottle of Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy from Lenhart Drug Co., or any reliable druggist, who will return your money if it fails. Leen ee neces returned yésterday morning, having at- tended the O. R. C. ball in Dickinson Monday evening. ee 8 Mrs. Robert Hig; and son of Glen- dive, who is visiting the former's sis- ter, Mrs. Carl Dorfler of this city for a few days, will return today. ee 8 Charles Hughes returned yesterday morning from Philadelphia. He was called on; account of the critical con-|. dition of a sister, * ery erry prey out the disease breeding germs, al-|2 = oes McKenzie & Coffin's Add. Prof. Spencer Boise of the high © a 3 school faculty, returned yesterday H “ « morning from Fargo, where he spent} 1 “ “ his Easter vacation. 1 52 a s Fern Bayless, who had been] 1 : e “ spending her Easter vacation with relatives and friends in Iowa, return- ed DOINGS OF THE DUFF‘. SURE DANNY WAS HUNGRY ron) DUFF HELEN, You'p> BETTER TAKE Him DAT BON, DANNY, AM HUNGRN = DAS WHATS DE MATTER, MISTAH | Guess You Won't Do,oLD . BOLE 1 ay morning to resume her} 1 3 (03 68 DOD m3 de ORDO DOT 62 AIMEE Oh S OT TU OES ONT SOOT SOO ET CEST OD AS OU ORM TOM CS I OOOO Mm SELON SOMISEEMMSVON duties as commercial teacher at the te - high school. : “ d eee “ nae hee Miss Louella George went to New a oe Salem yestere afternoon on No. 7 “ “ “ to assume duties teaching school. 1 “ o e Michael Tschida of Glen Ullin, was i “ “ “ in Mandan. yesterday on business. He}1 ‘G e oS returned this morining. t : “ ‘a es se 8 3 “ a“ Bob Roberts ; returngl!: today from} 1 es we Glen Ullin, where he had been visiting | 1 a aes rélatives and friends. 2: “ ae oo, 34 fe “| The Golden’ Rulg. [ee : Fs a The famous phrase in “David | 27. { Hes tf Harum” which reads: “Do unto the |2§ “ Gigi other fellow ‘the way ‘he wanld like | 30 & fon G to do unto you—and do it fust,” hae | 3} “ st ae had ‘almost universal currency, and| 3 bs “ = to most people its novelty was one of 4 “ “ “ {ts attractions, But, if you turn to| 8 5 haa Dickens’ “Martin Chuzzlewit,” | you a “ “ “ will find that young Jonas remarke|11 ire a in one place: “Do other men or they i “ “ “ will do"you.” Not so very far apart |21 a ieee except in time.—Hartford Courant. oH “ “ “ 36 “ “ow gs “ “ 5 38 a “ The Hotel of Character and Com. 31 a i [oe Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis. 1 “ “ 3 “ “4 3 “ “ow 7 “ ad ae 3 “ “8 H “ “oo By Aliman ||: rn: if “ 4 28 iz “ «4 u “ “oe # “« “4 3 “ “4 Fry “ re i$ “ “ute 18 : wes | HERE ,DANNY'- Look, 20 e ee NICE. BOTTLE - 2 i is 35 “ i ag 36 “ “ 37 “« “ 28 “ “ 39 “« “ 30 “ ‘4 31 “ ee al “ “on Sy Northern Pacific Add. r} “ NY1 “ * ery RESCH MARA OOUNM ANS IR IR HD MLs, poqorerey Notice is hereby given to e: owner of, the above described ‘propnty they said sewer congections. be made from the street ‘sewer to a point two (2) feet in- side the curb line. And notice is hereby further given that such sewer connections must be made not later than April 20th, 1917, and if such sewer connection. is not made prior to the above date then the City Commmrtiioa stall have sutbetity to contract i€ construction of and assess the cost thereof past tee property. Notice i that the work above described must be done under the direction : of the City Engincers "°° ‘he satisfaction You'll enjoy the Radissen, apolis. Minne ale nine 4 é

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