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seeped & “AGAIN IN FULL ‘SWING IN GITY, Cannot Get” in | ~ i ! NEW BUILDINGS PROMISED ‘Three Additional Structures Will Furnish Much | Needed Enhanced Capacity pen ee The rejuvenated Bismarck Indian school, which reopened January 1, af ter two years’ idleness, under the management of Supt. O vadgett, formerly principal of a Cherokee school in Oklahoma, now has an en- roliment of 90 young Indians trom Berthold and Standing Rock reserva- tions, and there are 75 applications for admission from children who can- not be accommodated with the pres- ent facilities of the institution, The Bismarck school has always been very popliar with the Sioux of Standing Rock and the Rees, Gros ventres and ..landans Berthold. | There is a kinship with hor fact that the sc.ool is locat mighty Missouri, about which the tribal life of these Indians has cen- tered for centuries. The school is al| so. within easy access to all these) tribes, who make a point of visiting their children several times each year and who take great pride in their progress. New Buildings Planned. Commisisoner ‘Sells, through Rep. P, D, Norton of the Third district, a member of the committee on Indian affairs of the house, has been inter- ested in the possibilities offered by the Bismarck school, and the present year, promises to we one of unusual | development. There are planned three new buildings—a boys’ dormi- tory, a dining room and kitchen and) pounced and abandoned. jof Leicester employes’ quarters, to be construc ed during the coming summer. Thi will greatly increase the capacity of! 6 the school and will enable it to accom- |, modate scores of young people who} canont now be admitted. Superintendent Padgett, a, comparativ eleven years’ successful educational experience among the Cherokees and Choctaws of Oklahoma and the Chip- pewas of White Earth reservation iN} slaughtered by diseases inoculated in- is his first superin-!t9 tke system b: tendency, and he comes to Bismarck} tjgn, This Minnesota. with an ambition to make this institu- tlow a real success. Buildings Repaired. More than $5,000 was spent during the fall in repairing the heating plant damaged by the explosion of a year ago and‘in general rehabilitation, The | present buildings, as far as they go,| are niow in good condition, Superin- tendent: Padgett’s chief immediate dif- ficulty is in securing good teachers.| There isan excellent opening at the schooi for teachers who are interested in Indian work. Although the new superintendent has served among some of the most prosperous and enlightened Indians in America, he declares he has never found a more intelligent or adaptable class of young people than those who’ come to the Bismarck school | from Berthold and Standing Rock Mr. Padgett is a native of Illinois, where he grew up in a region where good farming was a rule. He is inter- ested in agricultural development in connection with the Bismarck school. and he expects this spring to break up. large amount of land, in whose! cultivation the young Indian boys can learn the rudiments of modern farming. The new superintendent has been here since October, and Mrs. Padgett and two children are with him. | Appropriations Made. Washington, Jan. 23.—The Indian appropriations bill reported to the House » today carries the following items for the northwest: Support of Pipestone school, $54, 650; support of Indian schools, $4,000; for White Earth celebration, $1,000; logging, booming, towing and manu- facture of timber at Red Lake agency, 59,000; building bridge at Red Lake river, $3,000; support of Chippewas, $100,000; Indian labor to be paid to St. Louis, county for road work, $2,- 900; support of Devils Lake Sioux 000;°° Fort Berthold reservation, $30,000; Turtle Mountain band sup- port, $13,000; Bismarck Indian school, $35,725; Fort Totten school, $89,0 Per capita payment to Standing Rock Indians, $25,000; reimbursement to, Benson county, $676; South Dakota} items, Flandreau Indian school, $88,- | 650; Pierre . school, $64,250; Ra | City school, $71,875; support of Sistx, | $307,000. | Phone 75, City Fuel Co. | istics , For the Beulah Coal The Joy Recipe! Take Cascarets Regulate liver and bowels, and sweeten the stomach— spend 10 cents and see Enjoy life! Straighten up. Your system ts filled with an accumulation of bile and howe! polson which keeps you ‘bilious, headachy, dizzy, tongue coated, breath bad and stomach sour “Why don’t you get a 10-cent box of Cascarets at the drug store and. feél tine—Take Cascarets tonight and en foy the nicest, gent liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced—Give Casearets to children ‘also, they taste like candy—Never gripe but never fall, Sick, bilious child this laxative ROBINSON FINAL SHOT AT VACCINATION (Continued from Page One.) tion to become general, it would be; certain to cause the sickness or} death of a thousand children where one child now sickens and dies from smallpox. e a different story is told by the class that reap a golden harvest from vaccination and the dis- eas caused by it. Yet, because of their self interest, their doctrine must be received with the greatest care uliny. Every pe. of com- and observation must know not the welfare of the chil- cau: the vaccinators to tines and to incur dren that preach their do the expense of lobbying for vaccina- Certain it is that In ttled prairie country, not necessary to pre-/ tion’ statutes. this sparsely s vaccination i vent the spread of smallpox or Pig | minor person must: be vaccinated, not! gress approved July 17, 1916, entitled |e excepting those yho have had the/"an act to provide capital for agri-|these two gentlemen had drenched/ Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, (Sec. 425). And by a gen-| cultural development, to create stand-|the vergin soil with barrels upon bar-| and: described: as follows, to-wit: .... cholera. England, with its dense population and unsanitary conditions, was the first country to adopt compulsory vaccination, but there it has been de- In the City vaccination has long n tabooed, and there, because regard for cleanliness and itation, the people fear no But in Prussia, Germany such countries, the light and other t, althougl'} shineth in darkness and the darkness | y young man, has had! comprehendeth it not. i In the book of Dr. Peebles on vac- cination there are statistics to the ef- fect that 25,0 children are annually compulsory vaccina- It_ is sho beyond doubt that vaccination is not infrequently the cause of death, syphilis, cancer, .con- sumption, eczema, leprosy and other diseases. It is shown that if vaccina- tion has any tendency to prevent an attack of smallpox, the remedy is] worse than the dise: Small pox is th st dangerous of the infectious d With proper care no person dies of smallpox and the dise: gives the patient and his descendant more or~Tess immunity from other disease: It commences with a fever and takes the patient to hed ral days before the disease hecomes infectious. {ts Infctlous” char. acter commences (as the fever sub gides) with the formation of small, peculiar cutaneous eruptions or pus: tiles all over the body and these emit ‘the offensive ismelfng ipifec- tion At the close of three or four with proper care, the patient and becomes hale and hearty, immunity from the disease. with It is true that smallpox and other infections disease’ do not prevail as much as formerly, but that is not due to vaccination. As time passes sani- tary conditions improve; men and animals become more and more im- mune. Nature is everywhere work- ing and learning hy slow degrees to protect both the animal gnd the veg- etable. The pig that has survived an attack of cholera is immune, and; for several generations its breed Is partly immune. In some sonthern countries where pigs are kept in a filthy condition or live on droppings from cattle, they are very subject, to cholera, and there pig vaccination and inoculation may be a proper sanitary measure; but in a northern state, where the pig has a good pasture, a good wallow and is well fed and housed, there is no pig cholera and hence pig vaccination would be a bar- barism. Indeed, the pig growers would rebel against it; and so of child vac- cination in a state where smallpox does not prevail, it has no excuse; it is a barbarism. It is the duty of child growers to rebel against it. Surely the child should have as much protec- tion as the pig. The question is_to be decided on the fundamental law, the statutes, common knowledge and pure reason. By the constitution the public schools must, be open to the children of the state. (Sec. 147). But when a child, has an infectious disease or in an infected house, then it may not attend the schools (Sec. 26). By an absolete statute every 1 For the Beulah Coal ysis ie “DONT ENDURE. RHEUMATIC PAIN! ~ HERE'S QUICK RELIEF FOR YOU Stop the pain! Giveme relief! Thet’s what you Lae: when, you're u That’s what: you get with Sloan’s Li merit. It not only “kills pain,” but dos it quickly, -without delay. Hi you're tormented by Rheu matism, Ni : ins, Bruises, Backache, Neus: Sprains, seats er ‘ = iment gives- fisst application rests ” Secihs is reach right = € down, to the seat of the trouble, warm- ing and easing the nerves and tissues. You can almost. the inflammation, coiling or stiffness subside, as the pain grows less and less. You don’t even have to wait to rub in Sloan's Liniment. It penetrates, and its clear, ¢lean liquid can be poured sight on the skin without staining, Get @ generous size bottle from your druggist today. n love to take } eee STATE LEGISLATIVE AND OFFI a. CLIFFORD BANKER. H. A. Knudtson, Clifford banker, wee a visitor at tha capitol yester- ‘ay. McKAIG BETTER. was very ill at St. Alexiud with the flu, left the hospital -yesterday. He is still quite weak. PRATER OUT AGAIN. Rep. Frank Prater of Burleigh county, who was hors de combat with hi eat in the honse, ‘ HALL IMPROVING. Secretary of State Hall was at his Cfiice for a few houts yesterday for the f time since a recent severe attack of tha flu. 4 NEW LEAGUE BANK. The People’s State bank of Fassel- ton, Incorporated by J. J. Hastings of Fargo and P. C. Jahnke@ind Thomas Ahen Box of Casseljon, and others, with a capital stock of $50,000, is a recent addition to the league's finan- cial institutions, NEWSPAPER MEN HERE don Farmers’ D. W. Dickinson of the Crosby Re- view are among the well known news- | paper folk visiting the capital. i VISITING BURL CARR. i of Earnes stopped over in the city | t! last evening to inspect Representative | fi Burl Carr'’sc performances. en route home from the annual con-;s smallpox. ated. [ts power of infectious diseas and domestic animals. has no power to amend either the con- stitution or the statute, to add to ors), ke from the same, one jot orj (Sec. 400). It! tittle | In Egypt, Palestine and other semi- tropical countries, under condition: which prevailed three thousand yea ago, circunci sanitary Yéligious rite. such re; n for circumcission, pig, or conditions ure, and not merely a! 1 here. -prevailing in this son to pursue and obtain safety and} happiness and the right of every child; to attend the public ‘schools. [tf it. be- conceded that vaccination is a safe” preventative of a baWt disease, (and it; ig not), still children do not cry for it and it has not yet become a relig: ious rite. Vaccination” has er pre-| vented any child from carrying to} school the infectian of umgjipox. The disease at once takes a child to bed; In writing a judicial opinion it Is customary to fortify it hy a reference; tao authorities, that is, to decisions in} similar cases, but here-it is ho pp: sible because all the judicial decisions have been given under different stat- utes and conditions. In Europe, Asia, Africa and in the Atlantic and Pacific States the conditions are so different that there vaccination may be a good thing, while in this great northwest it inight prove a veritable curse, In Jacobsen vy. Massachusetts, 1904, it was held by the supreme court of Massachusetts, and by a majority of the U.S. supreme court, that vaceina- tion may be required of all the inhab- itants of a state where smalipox is prevalent and increasing. 197 U. S. The New York court of appeals has sustained a statute excluding from schools _all children not vaccinated. 179 'N. Y. And so it has been held in Pennsylvania and in. several other densely populated states. It is quite remarkable that judicial decisions do commonly run in the ruts of ages, re- gardless of changing conditions. Thus some two hundred years ago, in Massachusetts, because of custom and because it is written: Thou shalt not suffer a wizard to live, judges were found ready to convict and sentence the poor women who were burned for witchcraft. In every age and country some judges have been too ready to follow the example of Pontius Pilate —to wash their hands—and to blame a supposed law or_a precedent for their unjust decisions. In Illinois it is held that the legat right of a child to attend the public school. may not be denied unless. in localities’ where smallpox prevails. 167 Ml. In 1908, under a statute, giving the City of Chicago power to make all regulations and-, pass: all ordinances necessary and expedient for the pro- tection of the public health or the sup- pression of disease, the city passed an ordinance excluding children . from public schols unless vaccinated, and it was held null and void. 234 Ill. Finally the proper safeguard is. by sanitation. The chances are that within a generation vaccination will cease to exist. It will go the way. of inoculation, bleeding, purging and sal- tvation.. “The vaccinators must learn to live without sowing the seeds of death .and, disease. Order reversed. Mandamus awarded: December 10, 1918. HOUSE NEWS FOR THE DAY Ray McKaig, state manager of the! Nonpartisan league im Idako, and who the flu for several days, has resumed? M. Young. publisher of the Ami-; 8nd a member of the state budget rmers’ Press and the Bowman | Doard. Governor Kraable is just vis- Leader, and Mr. and Mrs./iting ‘round, while Senator Kretsch- j made the senate .a bylef. address, ad- County Commissioner Frank Heimes, vising members that{f.they small yoice which spoke lusion on*the part of Senator M. L. r McBride as chairman of the Stark!’ Mf, on the 1st day of March, A. D. unty republican central committee/ 1919, to satisfy the amount due upon He was: wrong. d T. F. Murtha, as chairman of the} said mortgage on the day of sale. The [as to income derived from bonds or |}, debenures of other joint-stock ; ‘A roars oe eee at ted bon at {than in those which gave Murtha, and ¢ Koquette a majority, Therefore, when longing to such joint-stock land bank. ou was accounted 4 and coliected by the state treasurer. | @ commis-| Substantial number of votes. But now there is nOjsioner has pow for, into incom hild vaccination; under the| point assessors for the same and to fix their twentieth century, we live in a sparse-| fix S lly settled northern country under’a! pfoval of the bo: constitution which gitarantees person-; Tie salary of each distric al liberty and the right of every per-)'# not to ©: and prevents it from, going to school. ¥ 14,25, and lambs~liec to 25¢ lower. 2he to 50c lower. . 13.25. \ lower; $6.50 to 12.25. TRIBUNE ee Ca CIAL GOSSIP AND DOINGS cine - hs a “se + vention of county: commissiortersat ,| Vickinson, where he-was elected #ec- :| retary and treasurer of the state as- soefation: BETTER STATISTICS, Storstag of Cass, wil enaie counties {made by the secretary of the state | board of hegith shall be filed. with the |. county auditor. The pill lias strong | upport fromm’ "ineal health authori } OLo-T IMERS HERE. old-tine, | Two law-maekers, jeously yesterday. One was former jLieut.trov.-AL-T. Etaable of Critford, | who served in the assembiy for 80 Many years that he appeared a fix- ture. Governor Kraable presided ov- er the senate in the exelting days of the 15th assembly, and it fs not known | that either the minority or. the major- ity ever had cause to criticize one of his rulings. The other old was former Senator Paul Kretschmar of Venturia, who served in the upper house of the last session’ and. who |° was chairman of the appropriations committee from the session preceding mar just happened in. president of the senate was escort- ed to the chair by a committee of sen- L. obeyed he still, rom within ~ they ould not go far till in France. eral order the state board of health)ard farms of investment based upoN|rels of whiskey, as the contestants has tried to amend) the constitution; farm mortgages, to equalize rates of | charged. . and the statute so as to exclude from/ eee upon a loans, to furnish e the schools a child that is not vaccin-/4 market tor United’ States bonds, to 3, it wi i | ty-s' is only “to make Create government. depositaries and larities,, Jt: wag’ a ‘case of six to one): © needful rules to prevent the spread! financial agents for the United States, among persons and for other purposes. “Firteenth. Corporation organized, | i ontrolled and cperated vy the state.” | 4 All of the ti provided for are to} sed by the tax commissioner | ¥! n making asi nents, to: divide the state tax districts and to ap- Hes, aries, subject to the ap- Subject to the ap-| vd ot equalization, eir 5 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. ° —HKeceipts; y about | o Throwouts. $16.00 to: 16.50, 2.25 to 15,00, Receipts 8,000, dull, Butcher ‘stock, cows’ and uelfers, 7.00° ta 14.09, Stockera and‘ feeders; $10.75 to 1 calves $14.60 to 14.50. Sheep—Receipts 9,000; ° yearlings Seep steady to lowe Lambs $16.10 to 16.15, Ewes $1040 to 10.65. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK. ts 6,000; steady. & to 17)00. to 17.00. CATTLE—Receipts 3,500; killers Steers $6.25 to 18. ‘Cows and heifers $7.50 to 12.50, Veal calves 50c lower, $6.00 to Stockers and feeders weak to 25¢ SHEEP—Receipts 200; steady. Lambs $10.00 to 15.25. Wethers $10.00 to 12.5. Ewes $5.00 to $10.00. , MINNEAPOL:S FLOUR. Flour unchanged, 41,800 barrels. Barley 82 to 90. Rye No. 2 1.53. Bran 50. ‘Minneapolis—Wheat _ receipts compared with 116 last year. Cash ‘No. 1 northern $2.21 to 2.82. Corn, $1.28 to. 1.31. : Oats 56 3-8 to 57. Flax $3.28' to 3.30. 92, | viere 17, Phone 75, City Fuel Co. Coal For the Beulah, INCOME TAX TO PRODUCE MORE ; PHAN. $500,000.00 (Continyed; Prom, lecting income thet expenses, to an organization which'it- self ig exempt from the 1ax impone by this title, or, goer ys “wthirteenth. Federal ‘find bank’ oF frorn, and tufning over the entire amount thereof, less} Senate Bill ‘No: 34, Introducda‘aby |’ to keep check on thelr-vitat-statisties, | [it requicing that duplicates of repoets /PCHNICAL, IRREGULARITY | ty precinct in hich there was the! jeast elections committee of the house thi: by |morniag found F. L. Roqnette and T. chance, arrived-im Bismarck simuitan-| p, i candidates for the legislature, to have | majorities larger than original certi- | tied ‘over Anthon Reilly and Valentine elections committee unanimously vot- ed to recommend to the house this af- Murtha. stalwart | thrown out because the ballots of six flu sufferers had been voted at their} homes, cinct was thrown out because the bal- | lots, after the close of the polls, were | removed to the home of W. K. ‘Mozley, judge of elections, to be canvassed. ~chigh precinct was thrown out be- The former |Cause Jacoy Roquette, a brother of Fj board, and Fertile Valley precinct was ators yesterday. afternoon, when he|thrown out because ‘the votes Were) <crineg, at the front door of the court counted behind locked doors. Mr. Kraable’s two sons are| C0 an democratic central committee, not established ‘by the least scintilla of] and: which will be sold to satisfy the vidence. Nor was it proven that! same, are situated in the County of | nd a half-dozen of fact, it was proven ‘before’ the coms | “Fourteenth. Joint-stock mittee desisted from its investigation. | ing, to rteenth. Joint-stock land bank, tnar more of these irregularities had) survey thereof i een committed in league precinets NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE. BY; rane ADVERTISEMENT | Phone 75, City Fuel Co. delivered by Mortgagor, to H. E, WILDFANG, Mort- gagee, dated the 25th day of May, A.D.. 1917 and filed for record in the offi kota, on the 4th day of December,” A.. D. 1917, and recorded in: Book 144 of {Mortgage at’ page will be -fore- closed by a sale of the. premis: in : such: mortgage and hereinafter de- inch Lumber Ce;-for Mon-| ROQUETTE AND MURTHA SEATED | Increase Majorities of the Stark County Men | | ij i Sn ee eS t *Atter throwing oul ever Stark coun-| suspicjon oY irregularity, the | Murtha, -independent democrattft ; ernoon the seating of Roquette and The entire vote of Belfield was; Hungary precinct was thrown ut for the same reason. Rader pre- . Roquette, had served on the election Charges of fraud, conspirac and col-} were the other. came to a matter of throwing out | 11 the precincts in which there had} een technical, although not glaring, jolations of the election laws, Murtha | nd Roquette were the gainers by a! IVEN; That |- executed:.and EDVENSON NOTICE IS HERE hat certain ‘mortgage, JOHN f the Register of Deeds of the, County | f Burleigh, and State of North Da- COLD RIGHT-NOW: Got “right after it with @ bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery She never let a cough or cold or case of grippe go until it grew dangerous. She just nipped it when she began to sniffle or cough before it developed seriously, * Men, women, and children of every age have used this preparation for fifty -years.as a prompt reliever, All ages are using it today because of its positive results. Generous size bottles. 60c and $1.20. Constipation Corrected Dr. King’s. New Life Pills: tonight mean clear bowels, a clear head, cleat thinking, a day well, begun in the morning, good digestion, clearing skin. Mild‘in action but sure and comfortable, ‘At drug stores everywhere. 25c- For more than thirty-five the | | house in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota; at the hour | tion two: (2), ‘Township one hundred In the, matter of technical irregu-| thirty. In| meridian, contaihing one hundred sixty | (160) acres land more or less, accord- | ing to the United States Government{ pany, gage at the date of sale the sum of | arch coal. $111.47. ! Dated at Bisinarck, N. Dy this 22nd a Pt day of January, 1919. | 5 H. Kk. WILDFANG, Mortgagee. ; }) 1 24-31--2 7-14-21-28 nl Ta A SRE TSE PACT TEE WPLETRA LARGE | _NPILARGE | NOLME WP Fou UNPRIME | POOR UNPR t eiualbaretnce | eA tO AVERAGE en ott Moses auur sro st ean DON’T SELL YOUR FURS AT“ANY OLD PRICE” . when “SHUBERT” is paying such extremely high prices... . . RETURNED SOLDIERS See ae Life Insurance of- fers. you at once an established profes- sion—with an earn- ing capacity in ex- cess of any, other oc- cupaiion—it is work you will enjoy, as jit reaches the real ‘human side of life. Our foree is mage, up. of men with whom you will like to asscciate. We will educate and. assist financially ~ return= ing soldiers from this time on in pref- erence to others. our work will be even more attrac- Tf yon are disabled, at our office or write us for infor- tive to you. Either call mation, BARTON & BECK7Stale Agents, PROVIDENT. INSURANCE CO. Bismarck, N. D. Zi TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR +house on Henry Gates. ity of Bismarck, in the RENT — Five-room modern 10th street. Inquire of Phone 743X, of, ten o'clock ! 124 2t premises described in said mortgage | FOR RENT—New, strictly modern cottage, 5 rooms and both. Phone 282-L. 1 24 1 wk BLACK FILLING-IN dirt free for the hauling. Apply.‘ Hughés * Eleetrlé=*- “Power House, or Phone 98. . 1 24 3t XPERIENCED automobile mechan- ics wanted. Lahr Motor Sales Com- 1 24 3t_ Southwest quarter (SW%4) of Sec- 7} -nine (139) North Range seven- (76). West of the fifth principal c. A. Finch Lumber Co. for Mon- There Phone 17. such mort- | 1 be due on F. E. McCURDY, Attorney for Mortgagee. Bismarck, N. D Expectant Mothers - APPLIED EXTERNALLY: © For the Beulah Coal Get the habit-; to. ship: your hides; furs and): | that “pays the’ highest’ matket price. Send for..qur price list and tags... We. pay..the.express and postage: on:furs.. : “We ‘also ‘tan ‘hides into Condi, Rabe OVER-ACIDITY of the stomach ‘has’ upset many a night's rest, ‘If your stomachis acid- disturbed, dissolve two or three ,- “EMOIDS on the tongue heforesetiring sind en- joy relseihing sleep. ‘The purity and goodness of Ki-moida id by, MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION. ‘BISMARCK: HIDE: & FUR CO, » Bismarck, N. D. Mee ; You-Can Enroll a BISMARCK t This: wet. & ‘MODEL OFFICE PRACTICE: school under guarantee of a sat- isfactory position as soon as competent or your tuition re- funded. Send’ for ’ particulars. When you know more about this ‘college and what it has done-for: hundreds of the’ most sucééssful: “business ‘men‘and. women, you'll attend. Write’ 3 Bismarck, UM, Pres, N: D,, ‘DON'T SELL that Extra Large Skunk K | 15.0000 12.09 225i 1.75 | 1.60% 130] Lito 90 -18bte 1.60 “SHUBERT” Wants North Dakota Furs—All You Can Ship “SHUBERT ’ bas been Fur Shippers an honest and: liberal ee or edhering “better Sorvioe'=qakhec™ prices—sénding retarne cet YOURS FURS. OIRECE TO : ae A.B. SHUBERT». AMERICAN ‘RAW FUR junk-to-the firm .