The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 31, 1919, Page 3

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FRIDAY, JAN..38, 1919, ! BISMARCK ‘DAILY TRIBUNE the labor condition’ th’ the“United Kingdom. If anything the situa¥ion has become more serious. Te strike movement is spreading to large in- dustrial establishments, and the dis- orders may bring’ a proclamation of martial law. \, The view taken by the government is that interference now would be unwise. The strike movements are ‘local and against the advice of the Mocal trades unions. It is believed |that the absence of strike pay for the men will soon bring about -a col- lapse of the movement. LABOR SITUATION IS UNCHANGED London, ‘There wag no prospect today of any betterment in ‘COWAN’S CANDY SPECIAL | ,Clasgow Jon, 31.—Several persons were injured’ here today when the jpolice charged a crowd of strikers. | —for— {The mounted police were called out, { and a number of arrests-“made. Saturday & Sunday TO CONTROL JUICE. WE WILL SELL London, Thursday, Jan. 30.—Control jof the generation and distribution of | clectricity throughout the United i Kingdom is proposed in a bill now | | being prepared. Authority vould be ‘ LOWNEY’S CHOCOLATES «|| octise ship ate mt ALMONDS | !es b ¥ ri ‘YY | When you are wearied from over Ser price” $1.00 pet |work, feel listless and languid, can't 80 [sleep or eat as, you shoulll, you are |) ES es Senet Te Cc getting. run-down—an easy prey to| . dangerous disease germs. Hollister’s ; Rocky Mountain Tea—nature’s herbs —should- be taken without delay. J. Breslow. COWAN Drug Store Phone 75, City Fuel Co. For the Beulah Coal OOUUUUCEEUENEOHEAUeOuduenUcceneanuduenuanenveauanencesuevecucavescasuveaesuiiiy fs | Company, ATTENTION Reserved Seats for the Soldiers ANG TN IO NE ore —at the— METHODIST CHURCH SUNDAY, FEB. 2nd, 7:30 p. m. Unveiling the “Boys” Memorial Tablet ONDUANOORDONAURNNONOSESURONES2OqRNS30NSg00RNC09q90 Everybody always Welcome TOOOTSO90000008004040N0004n004qgNeCoNeanndnced}ecococntortoHaatedndstunitinniiinittne= 114 FOURTH STREET. | *PHONE 34 Brown & Jones Our.stock.is replete.with celery, head lettuce, cab- bage, carrots, parsnips, etc. Oranges, bananas 4 and apples. DRINK-- And Be-.- MERRY -- \ Monarch Coffee. convinced of the quality. by the satisfaction that you will feel: from the remembrance of the de- licious flavor imparted to the meal by the Mon- arch heverage. Pure, High Test, Sweet Cream COTTAGE CHEESE made on the farm | We Clean for the oO) Entire Household! Have the worn garments skillfully GONE OVER every once in a while—the clothes of the BOYS and the GIRLS, the business suits, dinner suits and dress suits of FATHER and GRANDPA, the gowns, wraps and coats of the WOMENFOLK—not forgetting GRANDMA! Ss BOMBAZINE! Our careful cleaners are capable: of handling. any fabric, no matter what, in the textile line—and “our charges are by no means high! Proper CLEANING and PRESSING—with some- times a DIP to freshen up the COLOR—will make clothes wear and wear! Call the wagon! WE WILL CUBAN. PRESS“ AND REPAIR Furs Gloves ae EAGLE - Coats TAILOR SHOP rgpeoell Blouses expense. Opposite , Postoffice “PHONE 58—WE CALL FOR,AND.DBLIVER ALL WORK. “The Most of the BéstFortheLeast” ‘I THIS PRINCESS WAR MYSTERY When the war pulled curtain 6n happenings in English people began to of the Pri of Ph West, the beautiful | oeen, married at the age of 17 for 20 y ad presided ov castle in Sile: When the wi ame, pr nee’ went to the: front, the hut off tfom intercourse sh friends and watched by German officials who feared she might be led by love for her native t of her adop- asking, ‘Has e hardships and the war has brought go dow a othe and his tion. Now she surv hatred which Germany?” WOMAN BOSSES MINE | Heads Corporation Controlled Ene. » tirely by Her Sex. Operates Garnet Mine in Alaska and Lead, Zine and Silver Mines $ * ‘in Arizona. Ea: New _ York. ‘om the far West there now comes to us the lady miner, (Miss Anna Durkee, organizer and, con- trolling element of a $1,000,000 cor- poration run entirely by women. Miss Durkee operates’ a garnet mine in southern Alaska and lead, zine and sil- ver mines in Arizona. She is the lar- gest individual mine owner in the Oat- man district of Arizona, and the most widely known woman in the mining world. It was while she was in Alaska seven years ago, inv: ting a proposition in copper, that Miss Durkee first be- came interested in a garnet mine, was given an option on it and finally took it over in the name of a corporation which had a board of 15 women direc- tors. At the beginning the mine did not seem to amount to a great deal, but s Miss Durkee began to develop the first claim with which the corporation started, veins were discovered opening out in every direction, and as the work continued the amazing fact dawned that the entire mountain was a gigan- tic mine of the beautiful crystals, with ledges of garnets extending from the sca level to a distance of 3,600 feet up the mountain Side. | But the greatest value of the deposit consisis in a by-product of garnet waste, discovered by Miss Durkee, sed two years in a chemical jaboratory working it out. She had observed that garnets when milled did not fuse with irdn or brass, aud follow- is up, she discovered a new use for the waste garnet, of which there were hundreds of thousands of tons. ‘Ground to a cerain mesh and put through a secret process the waste gar- ra 1| net makes a separating powder. valu- able in foundry work,” she stated. The garnets of Miss Durkee’s mine are of the finest variety, almandines. Because of their beauty and hardness, geologists have given them the name of “precious garnets.” ‘ Two Senators Live in Same Street,in Topeka 3 § Topeka, Kan.—Topeka claims to be the only city in the country which boasts of two United States ‘senators living in the same street. They are Senator Charles G. Ofirtis, now repre- senting the state; and Senator- elect Arthur Capper: TO SPEND $40,000,000. 9% Washington, Jan. 31.—The naval policy contemplates ‘the construction of 10 craft at’a cost of $4,000,000 each, Carney Coal Phone o 0. E. Anderson Lbr. C. Old Hickory Lignite, sold by Finch F , Lumber. Co., phone 17. lish ‘girl had i George Plaza: Smith, the Public Opiniow of Bismarck, where | he gave his direct personal attention. | | tion as opposed to government owner- | ship and state socialism. reason he was for three years one 0! North: Dakota’s most active and_bit-) ter eae movement. i raziér, leaguer, governor. came out. wif ment declan porting Frazii six months of his*life he:was. appar- vently in. complete: harmony with th | league program. ' closes a unique epoch’ in the deyvelop- ment of North Dakota. closely movements tion was the Nonpartisan league that | he may be regarded in a respect as | the father of the new era. warm friends in every section of the | northwest death, coming at a'time: when he w: in his prime. troops have reached, Rio Gallegos and and Port Naturele: } Long Unique Figure In Politics, Is Dead| 72 (Continued From Vage One.) | Smith was’ an. edvocate of coopera- For this of the Nonpartisan | ' Following. the 1918 j when Lynn J. ‘as nominated for | John “Steen, * Smith | a two-column state-| his intention of sup-; and during the last | opponents maries, \howéyer, ovel The passing of. George Plaza Sinith} PARAMOUNT - ANBIeKLE» COMEDY He was s0j . associated with ‘all*of the, Whaneti josie, eulmina: \ comedian in the world, Butcher Boy” Theater pon He had | deeply regret his who will proceed inland to act Maximilists. The formed that the revblajionar: CALL UPON TROOPS. Buenos Ayres, Jan. 31.—Argentine | the es at Chile, HERE'S WARMING, SOOTHING RELIEF FROM YOUR RHEUMATIC ACHES For prompt relief f-om Rhouma: Newt or Lumhago, ra A few dtepe £0 Tig! e blvod :froi remove the eprains, and most fi Why NOT Test Your Seed SEED NOTE THE GERMINATED The Picture Shows the Tester Uncovered, After Test Is Made This tester isa carefully made, tight ‘fitting tin box, containing a square of. firm, pressed felt punched with just 100 square holes.. Each hole has room for one or two kernels cf corn, or for several kernels of small grains. Full directions for testing accompany each tester; it is much easier to handle than the “rag doll” form of tester, and the results of a composite test will be just as accurate as in any other form of tester; in, fact better than-in most, because the felt inside the tightly closed case holds sufficient moisture from one wetting for the entire test, and there is no danger of too much moisture. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADV. ANCE D by carrier per year. Daily by mail per year (in ‘Bis marck) Daly by mail per year (in Dai THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bismarck Tribune Co. Bismarek, N.D: : Enclosed find Name, ic. Fatty Arbuckle, the funniest n The | at the itismarek | inst the | government is in| ituation caused by | Punta | is grave. yto take a chance on a crop from such seed do you? ‘Then TEST YOUR SEED! f ly by mail outside of North Dakota THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) . —, FREE ... We will give you, absolutely FREE ‘of every charge, one of these Seed Testers, for every year’s subscription you pay now—and bring your due-datein advance. . ORDER FORM {Good for both New and Old Subscribers) “ Sebd Testers postpaid, and without extra charge. the Bolsheviki, ’ The+ Gi ment, while less categorie 'fi expresses-strong oppositlor has been received from ee, ikie TWO REPLIE Paris, Jan, 31——The peace confer: ence so far has had two replies to its invitations to the; various Rusfsan governments fora conference. In one of these the government of North es to meet with BISMARCK THEATRE Engagement Commencing MONDAY, FEB. 3RD | | | i | The question is no longer, “Why test your seed?” but “WHY NOT test it?” Almost everyone realizes that testing the seed gives opportunity to know before planting whether or not seed has a chance to grow, or whether it will fail to sprout even under the most favor- able growing conditions. It is easily obtained protec- tion against planting poor Seed. This is especially true when seed must be bought. Many a man who wouldn’t buy the finest looking horse in the country without a careful search for defects, will buy seed, if it looks all right on the outside, with- out making an effort to find out whether or not it will germinate. This spring the man who buys seed corn must test it, or stand a chance of a poor crop. Everyone knows that there ‘vas an immense amount of corn produced last season which is not fit for seed. You don’t want Many people don’t test because it is inconvenient to make up a “rag doll” tester, and because they don’t know just how to fix it—how moist to keep it, etc. The Bismarck Tribune tester described on this page. solves those problems. “Printed instructions accompany it; it is small enough to be kept in a warm place without being in the way; after you “oad” it, you don’t need to go near it till the testing peried elapses. It is a con= venient, handy, “sure-shot” tester, and it costs noth- ing, because it is given with subscriptions to The Bis- marck Tribune. ate outside of Bismar ‘. . BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA February, 1919. for Which mark my subscription paid in full to .. Route .. ~- Box ... . State ... =e san

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