The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 22, 1919, Page 2

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“THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN APP. ___ HOW T0 DEVELOP A BEAUTHUL: NEC Four famous artistse—James Mont- gomery Flagg, Howard Chandler, Howard Chandler Christy, Penrhyn Stanlaws and Harrison Fisher—gave the “golden apple” of beauty at the annual Chu Chin Chow ball in New York to Miss Edith Hyde. Miss Hyde is now telling Bismarck women her beauty secrets in a series of 18 arti- cles written expressly for the Daily Tribune, and illustrated by photo- graphs of Miss Hyde herself. This ar- ticle is the second. : BY EDITH HYDE. “The Girl of the Golden Apple.” Great care should be given the neck. It is easier to protect the ne from cold, the sun and dust than the face. Hibbons and furs worn around the neck should be carefully selected as they often contain substances de- leterious to the skin. If you can stand it always leave the neck uncovered. Everything that re- stricts or tightens it tends to make the face red. Frequently massage your neck. The process for the neck is the same as that for other parts of the bi ys use a certain gentleness. The Gifferent procedures are: Gently stroking, pressing, knea ig, patting, beating, pinching and shaking the skin. ++ Exercise your ne bending the head morning ten times to the right and ten times to the left. Also bend the head backwards and forward the sat number of time This will impro the blood ci the skin, give a is thin and reduce there be any. Do this by y night and wes- Gentlemen Shave With —aaa Cuticura Soap The Healthy Up-To-Date Cuticura Way No mug, noslim no free alkali, no w even when shaved soap for all ust ‘ing, bathing and shampooing. Doubles razor efficiency, not to speak of value in || promoting skin purity, skin comfort _and skin health due » its delicate, fragrant Cuticura medication, Lar- gest selling skin soap in the world. war Cuticura Toilet Trio aa Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Talcum are indispensable adjuncts of the: daily toilet in maintaining skin purity'and skin health. By bringing these delicately medicated emollient in frequent contact with your ‘skin as in use for all toilet purposes, you keep the skin, scalp, air and hands clear, sweet and healthy. ‘The Soap, Ointment and Talcum 25¢ each everywhere. Forsampleofeachfreeaddress postcard: “Cuticura, Dept. 12T, oap, no germs, no irritation ‘daily. One ". Boston.” Hides & Leather We are wholesale dealers in Hides, Skins, Harness = Leather, Lace Leather, Oak = and Chrome Tann; and will = pay Top Market Price for = Hides and furnish leather at Rock Bottom Prices. It will pay you-to figure with us before you place your order. GROVE HIDE & FUR CO. Bismarck, N. D. = UAOOUEDEOUGONOOGONOONONOGENONONoNNOONONONOONOOT every investor. will be safe if investéd in turn within a short time. YOUR MONEY.--How to Make It PRODUCE ~ To invest funds where they will be absolutely safe ana earn a satisfactory return is the desire of We offer North Dakota farm land at réason- able prices and satisfactory terms. “BISMARCK. REALTY COMPANY _ . Bismarek Bank Bldg. Bismarck - —Tel. 314—° No. Dak. ——— SATURDAY EVE By Justice J. March 21, 1919. \“You Can't Fool All the People All the Time.” There is no public utility so impor- | tant as banking. In New Zealand state banking has reduced the annual debt burden 50 per cent. - In North; Dakota the yearly burden of debt is $50,000,000. In the United States it is $1,000,000,000. It is equal the total value of the average wheat crop. The prevailing s. of banking and us- ury is fast alth of the world. and consid $280,000,000,000 3,000,000,000 | 14,000,000,000 Savitigs banks 5,500,000,000 State banks depo: 5,500,000,000 National banks-—cap | tal and surplu 2,000,000,000 Loans and discoun 10,000,000,000 Net earnings for year Reserve banks—total resources 212,000,000 -. 24,000,000,000 Capital ws 75,000,000 Net earnings for yea 11,300,000 You will note that the bank deposits and discounts are several times great- er than the total currency of the coun- t This shows that in most cases t bank loans merely its credit and that it loans the same over and over age It collects interest on its debts and makes its customers pay interest Mos - bills by keeping always on hand— Vicxs Vapor Seeecesccccencecessecsesseseorenees, Protect Your Income —by— Disability Insurance PAYING INDEMNITY For ALL Accidents and ALL Illness whether the disability so caused is for A DAY or for a LIFETIME. —Ssee— J. B. Halloran & Co. For Insurance in All Branches POEPOPOS OP OLELELOD DELILE D DODD DIIED ELD ODS: POLLS IL ODILOLOLOOL LOR ODE IDLER DODD ODIO IS: Vecesessecccocoorccocs 1 s. Your money it and will earn a big re- E” TELLS | pinecone neem NING LETTER : | . E. Robinson el ‘On their debts. In that way a shrewd banker may commence with $10,000 and clean up $50,000,000 in a few years. = In accordance with -the , recent amendments of the constitution the legislature has passed a state banking act, which is now in full force and ef- fect. The act provides for the organi- zation, control and management of a state bank, with a ciptal of $2,000,000. The bank is»made a depositary for public monies and when any money is deposited in the bank the depositor is d from all liability for the same on deposit. All deposits are guaranteed by the state and are ex7 empt from taxation; and that is all right. The act may be rated as a good beginning and a long step in the right direction; but it is only a begin- ning; it is too long and it contains too much detail matter, too many hamper- ments, too much red tape. The man- agers are bound, as‘it were, with new ropes and are not vested with discre- tion as liberal and proper as the man- agers of other banks. Hence they cannot be as efficient. I think that in drafting the act Bishop Lemke was too meek and conservative. “He lingered shivering on the brink And feared to launch away.” He ‘was not sufficiently deaf to the adverse winds and adverse storms of oratory. I liked’ best the New Zealand sys- jtem, which has proven a grand success, \Every state bank and every public utility is a corporation under the man- agement of from six to nine directors. |It is organized on a petition of 100 or \more. persons who subscribe to one- third of the capital stock and elect one-third of the directors. There is a {state bank in every large city and in |most every county. The directors have all’the general powers of directors in |private banks. ~“[hey are not impeded with any needless hamperments. The \bank stock is exempt from taxation and loans are made at four per cent on any good collat or bankable se- jcurity. Under this system the citizens of a locality would compete for a bank and subscribe for its stock and in that give a pledge to sustain the bank. As,a bank may loan the same money or credit several times, it may borrow at six or eight per cent and loan at jfour per cent and make a good profit. | Doubtless -at the next session the leg- islature will have more courage and will amend the banking act:to secure‘a yearly profit of at least. $17,000,000, A state banking act must be accounted a failure if it does not stop the ruin- ous mortgage foreclosures and limit the rate of interest to five per cent without any commissions, In public ownership there ‘is power and strength; in private ownership there is courtesy and efficiency and economy; in a union of both there is success. But from the control of rail- roads, telégraphs and telephones ‘by Ways and means so drastic and ruin- ous, so discourteous ahd wasteful as that of the national government, Good. Lord deliver us. srnee EN Orion FALL RESTORES WOMAN'S ABILITY TO WALK ALONE Brainerd, Min, March 22.—Mrs. Donald |Quiniaven . for many years was unable to walk without the aid of crutches, the result of a fall, Ke- cently while visiting relatives at Lit- tle Falls she fell and injured her head. When she recovered from the injuries received in the second fal}, it was found that she could yalk with- out the aid. Recently she danced for the first time in ten years. MONTANA’ FAIR: CHIEFS PREPARE PREMIUM LISTS | By aps ‘Mont, March ’22—Directors Montana State Fair-‘are gather- of the year. 5 im lst isto. be completed and‘ (inal ap- BISMARCK: DAILY TRIBUNE « . To Be Had Only in This “A Nightmare in a Lunatic he South on a Cotton Strike ‘ Wortd-Reconstruction Plans : America Getting German Trade in South America ~ Why Business Men Should. Study Weather Maps The Puzzle and Glamour of Weimar Alabama’s Neglected Literature . Evil Discords in Church, State, and Industry ; Spaniards in the United States Personal Glimpses of Men and Events Tasks for the New Congress Now Published For The First Time--- Week's Literary Digest-- Gen. Pershings Own -_ oF THE — -. Great St. Mihie This large ,colored Map of the St. Mihiel salient was gtound:for the official use of General Pershing, ana_w day-by-day positions and progress of all. American Di locations of the French colonial troops, the enemy defen: lages, rivers, etc. It is indispensable in tracing the prog all-American offensive on a large scale. The Map is a article drawn from the Commander-in-Chief’s own report. : preservation, and as the demand for it will undoubtedly be very heavy, we advise you to go to your news- dealer at once and get your LITERARY DIGEST. : ia ; There are many other distinctive articles in “The Digest” this week, among which are: a 2 ~_ Bolshevism’s “Heaven on Earth” Asylum” is the Way Russian Fugitives Who Straggle Into Switzerland Describe Life in Russia Under Lenine’s Rule J lines, When England’s pared : Home Rule Agitation in Spain - Germany's Good-bye to War Pris‘ oners , To Argentina by Rail Testing Brain-speed by Reaction to Pain The Tide in the War Poets’ Inspiration Long Hair and Statesmanship The Episcopal Plan of Union Diplomacy Ignoring God Poetic Tributes to Roosevelt ‘ Many Striking Half-tone Ilustrations and Humorous Cartoons “The Digest” a Reliable Mirror of Modern Conditions There is nothing more characteristic of man as distinguished from the remainder of creation than his insatiable thirst for information. One and all, we desire to know. The.pursuit of this admirable - idea, relatively easy of accomplishment in the centuries that are gone, with their leisurely meth-. 2 ods and gradual! progress, is now become a matter of extraordinary difficulty. ‘Peday we live so fast and so much happens évery twenty-four Kours that ‘Tis a Mark of Distinction to }: Be a Reader of The Literary 7 Digest put on the plans of Secretary Ensign for the 1919 shov This is to be a Victory Exposition and Veterans are expected to take a prominent part. The Montana World War Veterans association, recently organized, prob- ably will have an oficial place on the program, There may be a duplication of the war exhibits of last year, which| will elect officers tonight. Pat Car- attracted wide attention. ‘ney of WatéNoo is the present presi- Victory and Peace and not, war will! dent. be the central theme and the chief aim will be helpful instruction and education along the lines of rehabili- station and reconstruction. - There will not be betting on Aorse racing at the fair, the governor hav- ing vetoed a bill to permit the pari- mutual system. The directors, in session here todyy Genuine Castoria even our great army of magazines and newspapers can not record it all and the man who should endeavor to peruse a tithe of them would inevit- ably be a candidate for an insane asylum. there is one happy solution of this vexed problen. Read THE LITERARY DIGEST, magazines in one,” every week and gei the gist of all the worth-while news acci .-stel:", concisely, and impartially presented. Test this out NOW. March 22nd Number ‘on Sale Today-—-All News-dealers--10 Cents | Battle made by headquarters experts on the battle- ent by him to “The Digest. ‘ons engaged in this great offensive, also the nd all railroads, tramways, towns, vil- ress of this brilliantly victorious drive, the first mpanied by a highly interesting descriptive This authentic Map is well worthy of Navy. It shows the “ Was Unpre- But “all the All Choked Up With Catarrh? ~ Why Continue Makeshift Treatment? Sprays and douches will never cure you. Catarrh is ai ing enough when it chones up ostrils and air passages, causing painful and diffi- cult breathing and other discom- forts. But the real danger comes when it reaches down into your lungs. This is why you should at once realize the importance of the proper treatment, and lose no time ex- verimenting with worthless rem ME TELE eS Uf dies which tonch only the sprface. To be rid of Catarrh, you must drive the disease germs out of your blood. Splendid results have been report- ed from the use of S. S..S., which completely routs from scour blood the Catarrh germs, for which -i¢ is a perfect antidote. Ss. S. is sold_by all druggists. If you wish medical advice as to the treatment of your own individual case, write to-day to Chief Medical Adviser, Swift Specific Co, Dept B, Atlanta, Ga. ; Safety for Insurance: ‘ Policies . Y An insurance policy is evidence of the pro- tection you have purchased. It is valuable. There might come a time when you would suf- fer a severe loss without it. : Within the steel walls of our Safety De- posit Vaults-your insurance policies will al- ways be protected. When you need them or want them they will be ready. The cost is trifling. Come in and get the key to your Safety Deposit Box today. -' «phe Friendly Bank” BISMARCK BANK Bismarck ~ North Dakota

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