The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 28, 1919, Page 6

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BILL TOO MUCH FOR SOME M. P’S es ea (Continued from Page One) House Bill 81 xepeals\ all lawy relat- ing to the certification of techers, ‘Does Senate Bill 134 now take care of this, making House Bill unnecessary? Has ‘House. Bill $i.been. merged into Senate Bill 134? ;“To my mind Section 9, which reads, ‘The powers and duties of the state superintendent. of public in- struction as heretofore provided by law shall be subject to the supervis- ion and control of the board of admin- istration only insofar’ as such powers and duties were by law subject to the supervision and control of any or all of the hoards mentioned in section 5 of this act,’ is pure camouflage. Punitive Measure. “This bill is not a league measure; it is not drawn aceording to the gov- ernor’s message. J¢ is a punitive measure, purely, an attempt to undo in part what was done at tie last election. Would the former state su- perintendent consent to become an underling such as this bill would make him were he now in office?” Hl Insufficient bonds. Senator Mees particularly objected; to Section 2, relative to bonding, “We! now. have five members on the boatd of education, each bonded for $10,000, | and three members of the board of control, h of whom is required te xive a Section 2 of} this act $10,00 bonds of this commission, which would 50,000, or $75,000 short of the security now given the state. I do not believe this security should be reduced. The board | of control last year ‘handled more than $1,500,000 in actual money, and the state and its taxpayers are en- titled to this protection.” Too Much Power. | Senator Cahill, rising again to the defense of the bill, declared it did} not interfere with the present super-| intendent. Had Macdonald been re-| elected superintendent, he would not | have been made a member of this voard, ill, but;-he declared, there Nielson wa that she was, put on. about the samé powers she now has, explained the man from Grant He insisted that Macdonald had en joyed too much power; that he had revolutionized blanks and forms and reports and books and stationery, he was afraid that if left alone Miss Nielson would do a little revolution- izing on her own hook. He criticized the present text hooks, installed un- der the Macdonald regime, which he declared educated the hoys and girls away from the farms and into the ci- ties. He thought boys and girls on the farm, should be taught how: to to ter-fat, percentages In cream ‘and ta shot up, and matters like that. Senator Church admitted the. bill) the was not a léague measure, but thsist:|Dneiper, conquering all as he went. He became a tribal leader ed it had been “agitated by. leading educators.”” Jacobsen:Talks. / Senator Jacobs@n of Mott made one of the best *speeches heard during the present session in defense of.the com- mon school/‘system of the'’state. He declared -there was not another state in, the union where three boards had been combinéd under such a plan; he objected to the presence of the com- missioner of agriculture and labor on this board declaring that if he: prop- erly attended: to his own duties as head of the agricultural departmri and member of the industrial com- mission and the credit) cOmmission and the workmen's compensation com- mission he would have no time left to give to the work of the administration | y board. 7 He told how the common schools of Jowa in his youth had béen dominat by. the higher institutions of learning and how he had been handicapped in his younger days because he had ‘no certificate from one of these institu- tions. He declared that all his life, because of the hold which the higher institutions of learning have, he has! { had to battle against discrimination | because he is not a college graduate.| ‘These higher institutions have aj rope around the neck of our cdmmon schools now,” said the gentleman from Hettinger, “and this bill proposes to e bonds tight When the turned back at Chateau blow in. all) ninety ner cent of those brave American boys who fought there had never received; more than a common school educa. | j tion. When those boys come home they will have something to tell- you| of the military snobs; of how they were kept down because they were not West Pointers. Let us not handicap our public schools by fastening the} j higher institutions upon them. Let us give our common schools, the only schools that 90 per cent of our peo-| ple will ever know, an opportunity to} work out their own destiny. No mat- ter what our political differences may be, we should stand. together where the welfare of our boys and girls is concerned.” i WEAK IN AIR AT AT THE START Great Britain “Had bu but Four squad. rons of Airplanes, but Made 2 : . Rapid Strides, London.—The declaration of war by Great Britain at midnight, August 5, 2914, found the Royal Flying corp: with only four squadrons in ben: gepresenting well under 100 airplan ‘Bheee of these squadrons went instant- Fax France. A new squadron fol- ed these pioneers in-about ten days’ e, while a fifth squadron mobilized d set out in 24 hours, reaching the encrs wane about the middie of Sep- Gan those early days of the war; shines: were'used simply for strategical geatice. It was not urtit aes beige of the Aisne, when i eat re were eablioncd, that ' 2 trom the air and forms of ¢o-dperation with |’ were practiced aud de Here an Bolsheviki, dress nese that he comme back to lead them in the conquest of the world. gain their aid in the spread of Bolshevism, according to Swiss dispatches. fitude of Asia- toward Bolshev: M will wage religi . BE Pore leader of the «Cup as Geng! is Lenine, this picture, dal through Chi Chinese that he convinee the theirflegendary hero veincarnated, is reported, Lenine’: Mongol: of headdr pletures reported. y this 4 propag: aida Lenine, it would arov to battle ¢ a national her i ilands between the Volga and t! Lenine would convince. the Chi is Genghis Khan He would Here is another view of the at- colonel ugselmen of Asia 2 yon Bol- shevism if Christians fail to stamp it out, Py CARL SANDBURG A. Staff Correspondent | Returned from Northern Europe “If Europe and America fail to hold’ back the Bolsheviks, 000 Musselmen pf Rus in™ thes strong resemblance to oe ow sty ras lov as- | » millions of | worn out by ze ” conquest of the! western world and the cause of Bol- dock and grade grain and figure but-|ghevism. Genghis Khan know how many blades a wheat plant| Mongol legend and history. time penetrated into Russia as far LENINE GENGHIS KHAN? DOESN'T FOOL ALL AStA 20 MOHAMMEDAN NATIONS WOULD FIGHT palsies Ki kept .in power bya series of war red by his mother until he was*old gnough to-lead his forees, and then golis is Iie subdued the Tartars, astutely it; won yecognition of religious ‘Tenders a8 | the Khan of Khans,,.who should vule ’ the whole earth, and section by ction conquered northern China. He an Persia and the Caucasus and yi swept.the whole of southern Asia and jinto northern India, Me died in 1227, undefeated years of warfare side, Genghis instituted some liberal laws. He tolerated all Feene exempted.,. phy sand from taxes and military ser made hospitality obligatory and so thoroughly policed his great em- pire that travel from: one end. to the afe, Theft, hoinicide and severely punished, On the | win begin a holy war. Islam will de- stroy Bolshevism if the Christian na- tic Jo not. “Every man who. has two dollars | should give one dollar to fight Bol-' | shevism.” |. Sos Magomet-Beck de Hadjet- jlache Skhagonache, who has been col- ponel of a regiment of Caueassian cos- friend of General Korniloft, hauthor of a three-volume history of [Islam and 40) ather boeks—and ‘called some “the: Theodore Roosevelt of e Cancasus.” J had three long talks jwith Magomet Beck, through-an inter- | preter, “I came to St ‘kholm to help or- ize an expedition to start from d,, e@ eet rograd first, and then id the colonel. TING TROOPS ZED” 2) Mohammedan & ve but} quickly became master of all Man-| |and they let)me go. |“PAGGAGE ALL PACKED, | THEY TOOK. M¥ MONEY” Dr. ing’e You'going'on tite job" Feo 4s continuous "3 ode “ ange goecing ce dee evi Fei sehimencnperet Dr. Vi rents, £2 usa al have ued cad ‘it aathe sais, surest, 12 forsake remedy they, gnt Kgep Bowels Qa Schodule Lote, retarded fur ictioning throws the whole day’s citisa’ out cf czar. | Keep the system cledsed, tite lively, ‘the stos tonic in action. Sold every ized against the ee evi the Caucasus, Tart barguisi and Ural-1 tain regions. (“These are the’ rough ‘riding: cavalry: that everything before: it. from Finland. “The Bolsheviks who rule Russ how are demagogues: and murderers built up: has been: destroyed by th Bolsheviks. days. , They were: ‘Phen they found of the United So ing to kill mi “My baggage “was ‘all packed. and 80,000 rubles in Russian pieces, MAGOMET BECK DEHAQJETLACH - SKHAGONACHE - Show Your: : Patriotism Hamed . ... Bolshevism will never get very far in a lank where aie man who is willing to WORK and SAVE may readily become a HOME owner. In bountiful America, the mechanic, the clerk, the small busy: nesg man, has his chance to get up in the world along: with ‘the BEST of them. By industry, atid thrift, he can acquire -title to a bit of- real estate i’ Bismarck. which can-scarcely fail to grow in value under his gunersiine and which within a few short years. will put-him past worry about tomorrow. _ A few dollars down will s cure a building site for a bitite HOME—ai ‘ance the lot is paid #08 there will be no difficulty in raising the funds with which to IMPROVE, the. same. Buy : a homesite without delay! Buy it on the ‘payment plan! | owners start that way. It is a habit that’ breeds GOOD CITIZENSHIP! «aa N ea Makes clean ‘amerieins! ‘Sone : The man whois paying for a home is a steady wage-earner. He sees hetter pros- pects in life than the man who wastes his ‘sparé time in’ harrooms, kicking about, lot in life—which in a land like this is what ne chooses ta thake it! * eh Be a ‘patriotic, out-and-out Americari—han You can! The Real Estate columns of The ‘Bish the HOME-OWNING cl t ane ian vill bone the raptonyoa _Felievea theni and kecp ===————SSS nations to the so’ th. of. Rusia organ- These are cassia, Kha- pe fighting troops in Europe, ‘so-called ‘wild’ regiments, sweeps . They wiil get \to Moscow and meet our expedition What Socialists and Progressives have “Ihave just come. from Moscow. The Bolsheviks had me. in jail seven. ‘was an officer <of Musselmen |é was going to Stockholm. They came to my room and: took away from me | $20,000. of. American money, $108,000 of Swedish kroner-notes, French gold pieces. amounting to. $50,000 trans: 0 Il the idea of Young America going in os i : et ent makes rubbing need so strong for sports and we ought Neuralg’ Jou can -asier and cleaner to use than to give the boy$ military training in- depend on Sloan's Liniment. ‘The _ plasters or poultices. .1t does not stain, ¢ “Phen they took me before Uritz- sky, the head of the commission to mbat the counter-revolution. He shook a revolver inf front of-my face and saidg‘I will shoot you, you coun- ter-nevolutionist, if you don’t tell me where you've got the rest of your money.’ 4 felt like juriping at his throat, taking his revolver, shooting him_and then myself. ost. precious of all they took away, from me was a gold-handled, diamond-studded Damascus _ blade sword. ; It was limber steel and you could bend it dguble without breaking .|the blade, It had been in our family 350 yaars,, And they got a -leather belt: with gold buckles and decorations. T had intended to give it to aymu- seum. ,| LENINE A SILENT, SELF-WILLED FANATIC “I knoW Lenine. ‘As a boy he was silent. One ‘of his brothers was hanged for being a revolutionist and this made him more silent. He stud- ied much. science and is cool in his be- havior.,. He..is. very self-wiled, has many fine ideas, but he is a fanatic who is dangerous to Russia. He is not like ‘Trotzky; who. is a grand talker anda demagogue. rea held me fm prison seven days. ‘Then Uritzsky called me before him and said, ‘Sit down, comrade. Weare going to set you free, but we will keep your money.’ Then*with a grand flourish he signed a paper that re- leased me. “What about’the future? - If the governments cannot do more for the people, the people will make trouble for the‘ governments, When the people cannot have butter to eat they do not ike to see a government official. with, fat paunch. ‘In the Caucasus we hhave democracy. There the noblemen and the peasant talk like nelkhibors, Obsessed with'the big idea of sista ss at home, father often omits the essential protecod \ of his most vital asset+-strength. | is* -ais ubenieficial to” the hard-working, man ‘of business es it is to. the growing child. Scott’s imparts @ the quality.to the b blpod that cnables the body to grip strength fast. Scott’s helps solve the problem " that faces every business-man—-that of keeping up |, with the wear and tear on the body. \ Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, Ned. 18:28 . WEST VIRGINIA’S JEALOUS Clarksburg, W. Va., Feb. 27.—This section of West Virginia wants to know why Michigan gets all the pub- licity' about importing liquor by air- plane, balloon, ete, That's: not considered: abouts. The state. police are even talking of starting, an: airplane patrol ‘to cover the:moustains. of the Kentucky border —whence come ‘the moonshine—and air battles: between mioonshiners, and Y flying cops ‘are. in. prospect. | language Women. “were found far The principal. landing place of | quicker in spotting letters of spies than: booze-caryying airplanes is said to be| were the men. . —————— HERES ee als RE at Mount Clara, a small mining town. Gun fights are pulled off every ‘week: ‘ ee ‘between bootleggers » and offiters en- : {forcing the prohibition act, according - to W. H. Hallanan, state prohibition commissioner. Whiskey retails: here for as high as $18-a quart. here- new “EMPLOY 3,890, — Br postal iz ‘ar employed. 3,800. women 1,000 “men, fluent: in 34 / LONDO: eensor-” ship du ia a Ts. NOT STRONG FOR SPORTS President Schurman of | Cornet _Uni- versity Says We Should Give: Boys Military Training. Jacob Schurman, president. of Cor- ! nell-university or something, opposes e." counter-irritant - the skin or clog the pores. A bottle of is alk youneed ‘for’ i' rom the ‘pains,of stead. Well, that’s what the kaiser ra gave his boys: in Germany for 40 years soothing, Ke Sloan's Linimer quick-rest andy or stifiness, and: then when “ther test “came® the Af 2? deob’ "oO o the'sore part rains, -b ‘kache,’ stiffneck, 2 Soe ie ps ears: » Sprains, ache, stifinge! eerlen oe Tene ra ray | raw, thes Whiog gC and most fdrms of rheumatic twinges. : ers and sq.on made the. soone-ateD ners tardtemove Generous size bottles, at,. druggists — s look Hke a collection of Bréwery hands pre: everywhere, a s trying to do a hundred-yard dash, What's the answer? Thig Pleases Harvard. Lieut. Robert H. Gross, a hockey snd baseball star, has returned to Har- | .vard, 1 »\ it natil your blood is im- and ail- Mountain the germs ombeh,., regu 's spring tonic Don’t w: poverished and ing; take Holliste: Tea n i of Wint late the howelgs—natur cleanser. J. Breslow. Wester Sales Co. Distributors of MAXWELL AND OLDSMOBILB AUTOMOBILES. Radiator: Repairing } \ “and— : Battery Repairing’ CORWIN MOTOR CO. . -;.” Expert Developing — i _FINNEY'S DRUG STORE PORTAGE TIRES Bismarcls NV . >” Bismarck, .N. D. > S\ GREENDRAGON |BUICK and { SPARK: PLUGS Automobile Acces-. || _'-.. OAKLAND} ; sories of All Kinds Valve in Head noe FILTERED _ | CORWIN MOTOR C GASOLINE Free Air and Water BATTERY * SERVICE STATION ~» Bring’o ‘mail in your SHOE FITTERS ~ "MAIN: STREET — DAIRY _MILK—CREAM PURE. PASTEUR- IZED MILK | ‘Our Milk Station Open Daily |. 8 A. M. to 6 P: M.; Saturday BANNER HOUSE Boarders wanted; room and board $8 per week. Two in a bed is $7.60 night to, 9 O'clock. Sunda: apiece. Single and doubl ms. e \ all is Board ia ‘az 00d a place as in’ the From 9 to 1PM. Only. sl e er ie mone’ wnel in s, “, prietor, Sam Nicola, 104 Main St, BISMARCK DAIRY CO. f pa 210 Broadway Phone 348 UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS. ——————— SMOKER’S FACTORY PRICE PERRY WEBB. BROS. Per ‘Per Per - as 3 1000 1006 UNDERTAKING Undertaker — Exbalmers® |) B0y's’ big 100 : 5 ‘” PARLORS — Fameral Dirgetora—|/comicrsi cabs "tho "4th ommercial Clubs 1 8:00 ae sel. sige 1 tlle Billy's 2... 4000 4.00 5 North Dak. Star,, 40.00. 400 ‘ Our Hero 40,004.60 Day Phone 100-M Licensed Embaimer in Charge jH me Industry... 2600. 3.60 N.-P. Special 22. 81.00--- 3.10, WE SHIP CIGARS BY PARCEL! Post Night; Phones 100 or 687 \ es Phi Py Naight Phone.65 Licensed Embalmer in Charge DR. A. SCHUTT. {) DENTIST © yf Special Work In Extracting Mageare, Block Phone 250 Bismarck, N. D. = ft 1, BURKE a Phone 18, ee)

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