Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
: i 4 eer PACE? ~ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - = = = G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative NEW YOFK, Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHICAGO, Marquette Bldg.; BOSTON, 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresege Bid; EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not other. wise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. i All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are_also reserved. 2 MEMBERS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year . Daily by mail per year (In 12 ily b: il per year (In ) 5 aerate - 6.00] ,, Daily by mail outside of North Dakota.. THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. Established 1873) i> MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. $7.50 | | BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE of Donnybrook, which were of a similar tenor, pleased a very small minority of the majority. It must be said to the credit of the league major- ity that this minority was exceedingly slight, and that practically every leaguer in the house, aside debate, were thoroughly in accord with acting “jorder on the floor: of the house and declared the | debaters out of order. Hanson’s motion was voted; idown by the usual steam roller majority. Go! war.” But our 2,000,000 emigrants have brought |a big problem to central Europe. from the trio which actually participated in the! ARNSDORF FETED. Speaker Miller when he held such repartee out of | Mendent of public instruction, was), ner tendered at Valley City last nig. to the retiring members of the norm: | faculty. ! PAT LOSES OUT. L ecEEcEEIEaEEEGaneteeEne eae EEEeEenee etter | STATE HOUSE NEWS i LEGISLATIVE AND OFFICIAL GOSSIP AND DOINGS ame H. G. Arnsdorf, deputy state super-| r of Turtle one of the guests of honor at a aneyt the United THURSDAY, JAN: 23,/1919.. FOR THE DAY position he succeeded Duncan J. Mc- proprietor of the’ Van Horn, is ded by Harry R. Dun- Lake, general manager ims a nt a | BEAU ADONIS HERE. H. A. Mackotf of Belfield, a stand- | pat, old-gang member of the last nsumers’ Stores Co. ; 4 CITATION HEARING . PETITION| FOR APPOINTMENT OF ADMIN- ISTRATRIX. SATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County; of Burleigh—Ss. In County Court, before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In the matter of the estate of Wil- liam Welton, deceased: Mary Welton, petitioner, vs. Wil- liam K. Welton, and all other parties of interest, respondents. The State of North Dakota to the; named respondents an@ alll] interested in the estat2 of} lam Welton, deceased: You and each of you are hereby no- ADLER-I-KA :DID, IT! - “L had. pain ih the pit of my stom- ach, no appetite, sour stomach and very much gas Doctors could not help me.’ The FIRST dose of Adler-i- ka helped me.” (Signed) Henry Weilp, Lake View, lowa. One dose Adler-i-ka , relieves sour stomach, gas and constipation I1N- STANTLY. Empties BOTH upper and lower bowel, flushing ENTIRE alimentary canal. Removes ALL foul matter which poisons ‘system. Often jRES constipation. Prevents appen- We have sold Adler-i-ka many It is a mixture of buckthorn, years. cascara, glycerine and nine other sim- tified that Mary Welton, the petitioner ple drugs. Jos. Breslow. house, who smiles just like anything | herein, has filed in this court petition, “We had no immigration problem during the! deputy sheriff’ and who has for the! pid,” eith called “Cherub” or “Cu- of which fits, was around telling Pat Heenan, former Ward county! when Fa jlast two years-done good work as| the house chamber ye:perday, praying that letters of administration jupon the estate of William Welton, }late of the town of Ealdwin, in the| Why the prayer of said petition should county of Burleigh and state of Nortn|not be granted. !state transportation agent, in which | ‘em how, | In extenuation of Billy Sunday’s alleged appro- | priation of the ideas of others, it must be remem-| —_—_— WHY THIS GAG? | bered he was taught base stealing while a player | }of the national game. | The application of the gag rule to the discus-| i sion of appropriation bills does not appear a wis' policy. When the league majority shut off debate on an emergency appropriation of more than $5,000 for the council of defense it cast suspicion upon the merits of this bill or the claims back of it. If the council of defense is so valuable to the to spend more than $20,000 of the people’s money some right to know how this money was spent and why what was accomplished with it. The league, or the circle within the circle of the league, may know just what the council of defense is good for, but why not take the people} into your confidence on so important a matte “BIG CHRIS” "| easier ‘by Secretary Glass’ promise. WITH THE EDITORS | THE FIFTH LIBERTY LOAN AND AFTER | The announcement of Secretary Glass that the} ' care of future necessities by | will relieve the minds of those who had indulged |lar loans to be supported by “drives” in the face | lof waning enthusiasm. it It will be \a final effort in which the various committees and \the public generally can unite in patriotic self: r Every now and then slow-going, smiling “Big! sacrifice. The size and terms of the lcan tenta-/the Chris,” less commonly known as Chief Martine-! tively announced will help it to a success worthy son, does something to compel attention. He did! of its place in the series as the “Victory Liberty “"7) one of those things yesterday when he nabbed Loan.” red-handed a clever alleged thief who is charged | with having gotten away with $2,400 worth of produce from a local cold storage house. | This man was no common criminal. He was) intelligent and shrewd. He held a position in the! have been triumphant tests of patriotism involv-|; business life of the city which did not render | him liable to suspicion. The alleged pilfering had heen going on for weeks before it was report-| their money.and getting good interest on it. But; ed to. the chief of police. And the alleged pilferer had always carefully covered up his tracks. “Big Chris” tackled the job alone, and he saw it-through: And once more we must pause to say a word in praise of our chief of police. He’s| THERE. WHOM. THE GODS WOULD DESTROY | President Townley would do well to: reshuffle} his floor-leaders in the house. When any lot of; men so far forget themselves as did some of the Nonpartisans in their discussion of Representa | tive Hanson’s innocent resolution yesterday, they are a menace to their party. Surely, there we nothing criminal in the desire of this thrifty farm-| er from Grand Forks county to know how the league housekeeping account compared with that} of the “old gang.” Hanson isn’t an old gangster. | He’s only a plain, and, we believe, honest farmer. Everyone knows that many of the in eS in} expenditure shown by the present administration j have been legitimate. Perhaps they all have. And| if they have, why get red in the face and begin} calling names when someone suggests an investi- gation by a committee with a two-thirds ma) ity of leaguers on it? % | INTOLERANCE Intolerance reared its reaking head, snarled, bared its fangs, and stalked naked and unashamed in the house Wednesday afternoon. It was not a pretty spectacle. Even the majority, by whose members the exhi- bition was staged, were a trifle abashed by the aevelation. It was Bolshevikism, plain, unadorned. The bourgeoisie was pilloried as mercilessly as any disciple of Lenine or Trotzky, speaking to a} fanatic audience of Russian soviets could have desired. And the exhibition has set some house mem-} bers and certain others to thinking. It was so far from pretty that there was a general sigh of relief when Representative Miller of Souris, who had the chair, put an end to the procedure. { It all came up over a resolution introduced by Rep. Hanson of. Northwood, member of the minor- ity, asking that the chair name a committee of two from the majority and one from the minor- ity to investigate administrative expenses for the last biennium and to compare them with those of the preceeding biennium. Rep. Hanson’s mo- tion may have been designed to stir up the ani- mals. If so, it had the desired effect. It remained for Rep. Alberts, league member from Crosby, to go the limit. He read out of existance the bourgeoisie of North Dakota and consigned .them to the same limbo whither the Bolsheviki of Russia have sent such of their fel- low countrymen as chanced to have accumulated food sufficient for another day. He branded all of the minority members as tools of big busi- \Nneas; accorded them no right to be heard or even ‘to appear upon the floor of a house representing s|be sold “over the counter.” But great care should be taken not tg shut the ‘small investor out ‘of the treasury’s subsequent | flotations. The Liberty loans have been far more than mere borrowings from the people. ing great self-sacrifice. Liberty bonds are good investments, and those who buy them are saving many have subscribed far more than they could pay for out of their inccme without the most rigi economy. credit to the government. These sacrifices have been potent in the forma- tion of habits of thrift. Subscribers have been they are pledged to do so.’ These habits of thrift should be encouraged. There should certainly be plenty of opportunity in treasury loans after the Fifth for the small investor who has learned how to save. . Government bonds should continue to They should become as standard a form of investment for Americans | as they have become for Britishers and French-} men.—Minneapolfs Journal. i AS BRESHKOVSKAYA SEES IT Madame Breshkovskaya, “grandmother of the! Russian revolution,” has hung on the Bolsheviki of her country a tag reading, “Destroyers.” She finds that their passion is to tear down, to ruin;} not to build up. : | The madame may be classed properly as a radi- ical, even in these days of changing purposes and| ideals, but she does not let her interest in the proletariat blind her to the fact that true re- forms come slowly and along the roads of reason and common sense. She believes in socialism, but would temper its practical working to the human material there is to deal with. The Bolshevist in Russia does not grant that ithe other fellow has a case and that he is en- |titled to a hearing. He insists on his own way and he uses means quite as diabolical as these of the old Russian imperialism to have his way. He |invokes force of the most cruel and oppressive kind. He prefers the bludgeon to the ballot, the bullpen to the forum, the dictatorial command to the friendly appeal. He condemns and destroys the old before he has formulated anything to take its place. No human being has more cause than Madame Breshkovskaya to cherish hatred of the old order of things in Russia. She was exiled in Siberia for years because of her political faith and prac- tice. She has been a martyr to Russian liberty and justice. When imperialism was overthrown she rejoiced in her heart, thinking the day of emancipation from oppression had dawned in a sunlight that would not be broken. Then she was disillusioned. The Kerensky government, which believed in reasonable moderation, fell before Len- ine and Trotzky, destructionists. Oppression from a new quarter, as vicious as that of czaristic days, came upon the-people, taking away all individual incentive and turning thousands into bandits and murderers. It is from that condition Madame Breshkov- skaya fled and came to this country. Her faith in the ultimate working out of a beneficent order in Russia is not dead, but she is convinced that the end will not be attained until the curse of Bolshevism is lifted and saner counsels prevail. Whose judgment is the more to be relied on— ‘the people. “We are the people.” His remarks, and those of Rep. Dell Patterson Sega ata a RRP NPS MARIE EEA RIB MS NN Se NMBA hers or the defenders of Bolshevism in this coun- try.—Minneapolis Tribune. OPA MTL {Fifth Liberty loan of next April will be the last | gasolineoperaied washing state of North Dakota that it is to.be permitted! one of the series, and that the treasury will take| and a hundred other tht _ : to mak h fF the ho marketing its bonds | Messen will be tou within one year’s time, the people surely have) through the banks and other financial institutions, floors. Never has | | bor-saving devices j able as jin anxiety over the prospect of a series of popu. / fain | fe i ; : jwite and it is up w The flotation of the Fifth loan will be made| Friend Husband 4: Others have gone in debt to lend their; FARMERS’ WIFE WI OF INTEREST AT BIG AUTO EXHIBIT! Things that will interest the farn er’s wife as much as her lord and m ter will be provided at the Northw ern Automotive and Industrial exp the Exposition buildi neapolis, the week of F: 1 {than any show visitor ever saw in his | fac But there will also| | ¢ {be some additional things that will; foremost fe in one place. interest the women. The latest wrinkle: in elect an chin culare ewife mor the thre during the | never dreamed of a on hand wh Speciat efforts he management to e been made b ltrip to Minneapoli: her. There will be | [hold devces thar | understand h nd cannot Hast if a northwest- jer ow with: out h | seere There SINGLE TAX IS _ BEFORE SENATE’ WITH'N. P'S 0. K. “ontinued from Page One.) , mortgages and ed in the county shall be di: of ich person or corporation is 1o- jcated; or if suciy person or corpora-| operative and mutual associations j astonished to find how many things they can do on pee ne principal plage pot busi-! non-profit-sharing corporations ‘of all i “anc a ean save when! ‘ are aco rted 6. kinds, together with agricultural, without and how much money they can save when | where the corporation does busin i afaniitle conde rellelouaTaOnGuee: ati lect on mortgages.and,now Dakot property Héld by out: ers, on North ide own- Another bill reorganizes the state hoard of, equalization and gives it. power to appoint a single tax com- misioner for a term of six years and making this official responsible to the. board and removablé by it. Another jtransfers all reports required for the’ assessment of taxes from the state audftor, who is Mr, Kositzky, to the state tax commisisoner, who wil be Mr. Packard, which means that-Mr. Packard has won the final round in his ages-old feud with Mr. Kositzky. TAX BILL GOES INTO ASSEMBLY (Continued from Page One.) come, statement to the commpisisoner of internal revenue. Corporation Taxes. Corporations, joint stock companies or, associations will pay a flat tax of EVERETT TRUE See, BEFORE THIs ALL in : [invited are Henry Ford, John Willys, and trucks! Alexander Winton, the Dodge broth- advance in la-; leads the American eviators with 26 so remark-|dead Germans to his credit, and he; e doors open. rerest the house- | ¢ to see that|tertain the greatest crowd in history : make the| during show week. week without! big exposition the week of Feb, 15-22, aving house- her!General Merchants’ association will .| wil convene in St. Paul. y.{ing peace that has made prosperity ,, otic tinge will be lent the exposition -| by the fact that it opens on the 21st y }tleship Maine in Havana harbor, and the principal place of business) being the intetitidn<6f the bill to col-' New Equalization Board. 4 SAND THEN BICC SQUIRES CAME INTO THE ROOM — Bur I'M AHEAD OF MY STORY. WAS HURT IN AN ACCIDGNT, AND LL FIND MUCH Men whose names are a household word in all parts of America are ex. | pected to attend the show and give “| lectures different days. Amang those W, C. Durant, head of the Buick 'y, and several others. Rickenbacker, aviator of so the anny, d | Ricken, ithe American army, and announced} e|that he would attend several automo- | e, hile yhows before going to work. He las been specially commended vy Gen- aj Pershing for his work over the in France. He was an auto e driver before entering the army. The twin cities are preparing to en-} In addition to the the Farmers’ Grain Dealers’ associa- jtion and the Minnesota’ Retail and jyonvene in Minneapolis, and the Re- tail Hardware Dealers’. association “Peace and Prosperity” might well be the name af the show, for the pros- perity of the northwest and the last-! possible will be celebrated. A patri- aniversary of the sinking of the bat closes on the birthday of the Father: of His Country. three per cent on total net incomes; jand on any income of such corpora i such as reserve or surplus, not | districted six months following -.the jend of every calendar year-is made subject to an ‘additional tax of five ; per cent, providing ‘that this burden ; Need not be borne'by undistributed in. come actually ‘invested or employed in the business. The bill exempts fraternities, and allcorporations,, owned,.and operated ‘by the state. Become. Slender A Simple, Guaranteed Method. If you would like to lose, weekly, from ‘one to five puunds of burdensome fat while ting and drinking all you need, also enjoy- ing life far better than at present, just follow, | Hhis advice: ‘ | Take seven deep ths of fresh air each morning and eveving; after each ¥ @ little oil of korein; eat all you chew thoroughly, and follow’ othe plo @irections of the guaranteed Korein system, Men #&d women who were waddling around, with heavy, sluggish; bodies have, in many cases, reported a gradual, agreeable* reduc- } tion of thirty to eighty pounds, with wonder- ful benefit to heclih and figure; This very | season is the time to become slender, attrac~ tive, vivacious and healchi easily. | Get oil of korein at the drug; it comes. in cupsules, convenient to and is row sold at before-war low pri Weigh and measure yourself week to w ' wearcely realize the joy that aormal symmetrical figure, with good longer life,, Show others this advertisement. ‘By Conde You j HAPPENED, FRED SMITH - pale His WIte WROTE A Sent «.— ‘THERE, STORY AGAIN — L HAvenyT PATIENCE fo \F You DID! Glasses JO CERTAIN SLOW You DOWN SO NOUR STORY COULD "'Y WEAR St Fred's SISTER, WHO UVES IN SAN FRANCISCO, IM ANCAD OF MY. ER, BUT IT was LOST. YT = Dakota, deceased be ted to; By the court: | Mary Welton, and that the id peti- |, 1. C. DAVIES, tion will be heard and duly considered Sudge of the County Court .y this-court on Wednesday, the 5th}. Dated the 22nd day of January, A. day of March, A: D: 1919, at ten) ., 1919. o'clock in the forenoon of that day, at the court rooms of this court, in the county court house, in the city of Bismarck, county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, and you, and’ each of .you, are hereovy cited to be and appear before this court at said}, time and place, and answer said peti- tion, and show cause, if any there be, { i i the American} among those invited. r returned recently from es,|'France to open a flying schoo) for} Do Not Neglect It. When you use medicated sprays, atomizers and douches for your Ca- tarrh, you may succeed in unstopping the choked-up air passages for the time being, but this annoying condi- tion returns, ‘and you have to do the same thing over and over again. - Catarrh has never yet been cured by these local applications, Have ou ever experienced any real benefit om such treatment? x Let the service of the above cita- tion be-made. by personal service on all resident heirs, and by publication in Bismarck Daily Tribune published at Bismarck, N. D., once each week for three successive weeks. I. C, DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. 1—23 30; 2—6. Catarrh is a Real Enemy and Requires Vigorous Treatment Throw these makeshift remedies to the winds, and get on the right treat- ment. Go to your drug store to-day, get a bottle of S. S. S., and commence a treatment that has been praised by sufferers for nearly half a century. §. S. S. gets right.at the source of Catarrh, and forces from the blood the germs which cause the disease. You can obtain special medical advice regarding your own case without charge by writing to Medicsl Direc- tor, 22 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta. Ga. SUUUUeUeLseMAneaNaUeNAUNAUEUeGeRUAOUeGOOUGEGROUUGEGAUROANGOUoREAEOGEsuaANecusecagoogoacocaty Ss JUDGE OUR GLASSES BY RESULTS The first function of good glasses is to enable you to see clearly. The second is to give you eye comfort and range of vision. : The third is to add to your looks and personality. We combine these, elements through our skill, good taste and expérience, in the fitting and making of. glasses. Bonham Brothers Jewelers “ESB Woodward; Optometrist”in’ Charge of ‘this Dept. * é A .SOUND INVESTMENT At this time of the year when people are receiv- ing dividends and interest, we suggest our CER- TIFICATES OF DEPOSIT as being the safest, most convenient and profitable form.of investment for all surplus funds. \ These Certificates are issued in large or small amounts, bear 4% interest and are protected by our ample Capital and Surplus, combined with Federal supervision. byte ~ BISMARCK =~ BANK ISMARCK -,- OF VALUE TO DEPOSITORS | The strength and ex- perience acquired by the First National Bank dur- of success is of inestima- ble value to all individ- uals, firms and corpora- ~tions availing themselves of its facilities, This banking service is ‘at your command, wheth- er your requirements are of large or moderate vol- ume. ‘We invite Check- ngi Accounts and in our Savings Department we pay 4% interest ~com- Bismarck,ND. The Oldest and Largest Bank in this'sectionof °| OTe Orin pounded quarterly. the State -