The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 27, 1919, Page 6

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A. GOGIN._ ON. CURRENT PROBLEMS “LOOKING FORWARD” a and to the outside produc facturers, handler: commodities that we port. And yet, ever since statehood our electorate has almost. invariably voted for the Republican or high pro- tective tariff policies—and then, paid more than three times as much per agricultural! products, paying the high-| capita as the average which the bal- est rates of tribute to handlers und nee of t jation paid of the indirect and.carriers of our outgoing products! taxes thu@ levied upon’ themselves. IN THE SPRING-TIME fore his ills become serious. During a hard winter or the following spring one feels rundown, tired out, weak and nervous. Probably you have suffered from cold or influ- enza which has left you thin, ;weak and pale. This is the ime to put your system in order. It the time for nouse-cleaning. A good, old-fashioned al- erative and temperance onic is one made of wild roots and barks without the use of alcohol, and called Dr. ierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery, in tablet. or liquid orm. This is nature's tonie which restores the.tone of he stomach, activity of the iver and steadiness to the nerves, strengthening the whole tem. Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 10¢ or trial package Tablets. Every citizen of this state of Norti Dakota must realize that, in-the con dition in which the White Man found it, this was preeminently an agri- cultural region. doubtedly also r present time, it but a producer and exporter of raw RaNY one knows enough to carry ap umbrella when it rains, but the wise one is\he who carries onc when itis only cloudy. Any one will send for a doctor when he gets bedfasi, but the wiser one he who adopts proper measures be- Brainerd, Minn.—“Some time Vago hen [ was in a run-dowg condition, elt tired all the time, 1 took one bottle of Dr. Vierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery and it completely restored me Tam ad to recommend it as a splendid Mrs. M. Li, Morrison, 623 S; . "Horn of Plenty” Offers You Healiin Western Canada for yeats has helpedto feed the world—the same responsi- bility of production stiil rests upon her. White high prices-for Grain, Cattieand Sheep are sure to remai), price of land is much below.its value, Land capable of yielding 20 to 45 bush- els of wheat to the acre can be hadon easy terms at from $15 to $30 per acre—good grazing land at much less. paid for from a single year’s crop. Raising p and hogs brings equal success, The Government ‘8 farming and stock raising. Railway and oficr unusual inducements to Home Seek- may be stocked by loans at moderate ikterest, da offers low taxation, good markets and ship- gols, churches and healthful climate. ‘ irs as to reduced railway rates, location of land, apply to Supt. of Immig., Ottawa, Can. W.E. Black, Clifford Block, Grand Forks, N. D. . i Canadien Government Agent. illus: ne OF a RSs = Pick Vegetables Fresh F ) manu nd canriers of the ire Obliged to im- “a smal! hotile of read Ts it any wonder that such citizens |are now being led and mislead by Mr. Townley and bis lieutenants? And is it any wonder that our recent Town- leized legislature spent its time and n went beyond the bounds to which |the fundamental law of democracy limits the governing body of the mo- ment, in its mad or sensless chasing after such will 0’ the wisp jterial benei to be gained thru state owned terminal elevators, and other |socialistic experiments—under orders from the Bo: "Tis said that ex~ | perience is a good teacher, but appa ently experiénce teaches nothing to ;some men and some large bodies of jmen. | Came In 1887, ! "The writer came into what is now | the state of North Dakota: in 1887 and jimmediately went to work in a line |elevator; and since has been either ‘or both a handler or producer of Nortl Dakota grain, and is no stranger.at the {terminal markets nor to any of the methods of operation at the grain ex- | changes; jand unmi jand s. while, as my record clearly akably/shows, my, interest hies are all with the farmer in his quest for industrial justice and equity. y then am I apparently ot in favor of him having the pos- stble advantages of a state owned ter- minal elevator? Suppose you come back with me to the year I became a | Dakotan and let us together retravel | that 32 ye: pathway of experience and observation in regard to the hand- ling and marketing of the North Da- kota farmer’s grain. In 1887 no one but a-line elevator could get a car to load with grain for the terminal markets. In 1888 the street buyer appeared and began a long and very uphill fight to get cars.¢ By 1891 the farmers themseives were trying to get cars to load—and <then | fighting one another . for possession ot the occasional cars that were grudg- ingly doled out to them weeks after the date on which ordered. In the late nineties the farmers began to organize and building, or buying, elevaters of their ‘own; and then followed the So ciety of Equity, George Loftus and the Equity Cooperative Exchange. Yet dur Ing all those years until the national government—because of the war— stepped in and temporarily took over control of grain and the business of handling it, conditions had gradually ——SSSS——=——SE—S—S LOE Hb EH The Quick Way to Stop a Cough This home-made syrup does the work in a hurry, Ensily pre- pared, and saves about $2, siecle onde ote speage nde foto odo: | serhenestontestoobectesfctatestoobefeonfedecbete seefecogetoots You might be surprised to know that the best. thing you can use for a severe cough, is a-remedy which is easily pre- | pared’ at home in’ just a few. moments, It leap, but for prompt results it beats vthiag else you ever tried. Usually stops the ordinary. cough or chest cold in | 24 hours. Tastes pleasant, too—ehildren like it—and it is pure and good. Pour 2! ounces of Pinex in a bottles then fill it up with grantilated sugar syrup. Or use elarir j fied molasses, “honey, or corn syrup, E ed. than ‘a sugar syrup, if d dy-made cough syrup. a full pint—a ing no. more as a. cough’ medicine, there is y nothi It ant | plain ing better to be had at any ] right to the spot and quick, lasting relief. It promptly the inHamed ntembranes that line and air passages, stops the throat tickle, loosens the nd soon your cough stops en- Splendid for bronchitis, croup, ng cough and bronchial asthma, ighly concentrated com: orway pine extract, famous ng effect. on the membranes. appointment ask your ruggis 4 ounces of Pinex” with dircetions and ‘don’t accept anything else.\ Guaranteed to give absolute satis: factioNor money promptly refunded, The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne. ‘fra pouna itor its h for is ‘Yaur Garden Crisp and deliciaus, picked at just the right time- vegetables fresh from your own garden. the right kind of sce. =there is nothing like Lay your plans now and begin with Northrup, King & Co.'s seeds are bred to produce vegetables of finest flavor and quality. ‘Tiicy are hardy and vigorous. buy because they are always carefully selected and tested. successfully depended upon them for thirty-five years. alers in néarly every community handle Northr: y “Merchants They are safe seeds to Gardeners have up, King & Co.'s seeds. * }Mreams, there was never a time | products.” , any more than the manager of a farm- |fore had started in the elevator busi-j ;Mmept.of, by and ¢@ot-the people, the BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards’ Olive. Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the substi- tase id Steed eo gently on the bowels ane itively do the wor! art People. 4 swith bad breath find quick relief through Dr, Edwards’ Olive. Tablets. , The pleasant, sugar- coated tablets are taken for bad breath by--all who know:them. «Dr. Edwards’ Olive T-tlets act gently but -fifmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to matuzal action, clearing the blood and gently purifying’ the entire system.) They do that which dangerous calomel does without any ofthe bad after effects. RAS ‘All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cat ics are derived from Dr. Edwards’ Olive sreblete sitheut griping, in or any disagrbeable effects. oe F. M: Edwards djscovered) the formula after seventeen years..of prac-. tice among. patients afilicted with bowel and;,liver:.complaint, with the attendant bad breath. ‘Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color” Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 10c and 25¢ per box. All druggist- and all the while gotten worse for the plain farmer who was a farmer only; and the only benefit or grains accruing to him came thru the voluntary re- duction of"freight rates by the raile roads; so-that in 1917, as I then point- ed out in the offices of the Equity Cooperative. Exchange in. St. Paul, with all this history of a struggle and effort and with that institution run- ning smoothly and in full realization of its. founders most. extravagant mn all those 30 years when the plain farm- er fared so badly at the hands of the grain handlers: as he was then far- ing; never a previous time when he paid such high or excessive rates of handling ‘charges on his outgoing grain and the returning manufactured products as on his 1916 crop. And no official of that exchange atempted fact. What is Their Goal? Perhaps. my brother farmers who ure such’ sheep-like followers of Mr. Townley will say that all this is ar- gument in their favor; that this mere- ly recapitulates the farmer's struggle and progress toward the goal at whicir they, under the leadership of Mr. Townley and his Socialist associates, are aiming; the goal wherein “the people will themselves own and con- trol the means of handling and manu- facturing their grain and other farm But men should remember, nor ever forget, that the state NOT the people ers elevator is the farmers who finan- ced, built and equipped that elevator, and which manager sometimes and often, to my certain knowledge, ab- seconds. leaving... deficits. .as-high as $20,000.00 for a few struggling ‘farm- ers who only three or four years be- ness on a patd’ up capital of $6,000.00. Even in the-case of a State which comes the nearest to being a govern- reigning forces of government are not The People even hough they may be more or less reprdgentative of the peo- ple governed. And how near they do or.do not truly.-fepresent and SERVE the "people governed drpends*,upon whether that State is or is not what Mr. Lincoln at Gettysburg called “A Nation under God”, and whether. they accordingly, are actuated and guided by the Divine or:Christian principles of /Faith, Hope and Charity or, by the worldly. antithesis.of these—and which just. now ‘is very much in the ascendancy—, envy, greed and selfish. hess. On the other hand an Autocratic or a Despotic: State is anything but The Peopte, aid its distance from or op- posite to The-People is rheasured only by the, extent to which it is despotic and..arrogant, _ No State or Empire of history.has“been so despotic and far from “being The People as a State founded upon Socialism would be; for in the latter, the State*is everything and the pople are merely its wards or chattle.to. be handled and done. with in’ whatever way: the State chooses. A Homesteader as a Simile. As this state of North Dakotu is not so old that its citizens know -nothing, about pioneer conditigns and problems let us consider what..a young. and capable man: might be expected to. do upon going..into-a forest wilderness to there hew- outa home for himself. Do you think that he would begin. by’ immediately ‘undertaking. to provide himself with what we call a modern residence and builded of pressed ‘brick or, do. you_suppose that he would de- cide that. the first. requisite was .the laying out, clearing, grading and bridging of a first class road from his land to the far distant railroad or-river town? In fine, do you think he would demand that the future with all it&\promise must come and still meat Utke Meets a wing’ a Gosd Ola Fricaa’ Flave ait triea ‘Pyramid? it ne ; why don’t you? The trial is frees ferety ino SMBO RAY ARO, oe - praising Pyramid Pile Treatments a3 their_deliverer—why. ‘ sng Brtectan Reta "Wow: trom SiRMAgeNt anywhere.” Take "no FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. i ai ia aaa ag healed P a Pile me a a samp! op ot to refute or deny that assertion of}, sabi h SIE ks ERMETICALLY sealed in. its wax-wrapped Pack- age; air-tight and impurity _. Proof— is hygienic and wholesome. The goody that’s good for young The a we sit at.the doorstep which he had yet} to establish? No! even a Townleyite would not} expect such from this cleareyed young man. And being both a vigorous. and intelligent young man who fully real- ized where he was and what he was undertaking he might, rather be ex- pected to first look over and get ac- quainted with his land, find out the nature and topography: of its various portions, where the most desirable and convenient building spet. was, which part, had. best be cleared first and. which left to the alst or for. the, later |. day .wood-lot; after which he would proceed, to. act’ upon and according to his findings and -result sions. 3. Pees 4 EE If this young man is.made up of the stuff that conquers success and forces it to.serve at the footatool, of his en~ deavors, he will ever.kéep.a keen eye: out, toward the future; and the goal of his ambition will not be. bounded by- ony~ One more or; less. foolish or trivial thing ‘to Be found in or wrested from either the present or the future, | ° but will embrace all of the time as applying \to him, i. e. the present, the near and the:distant future. When that all. absorbing, sensible and worthy young man has been thoroughly. an- alized and defined it is found that it simply spells, Home and Individuality. This is the natural impulse and goal of the coniplete man and for the simple reason that-God has decreed that Man cannot attain to anything higher in this world... ~~. LETTERS FROM FRANCE. Following is a copy of a letter re- cently received-by Frank- Fifrick, lately connected with the Lahr Motor Sales Co., from his brother in Ffance: Dear Frank—You , said something about coming over. ‘As much’as I know about France its a very poor country, especially the parts I went through. , But it has picked up a-lit- tle since 'the war. I.have heard that those that come here from the states and started a store have made mon-|_ ey fast. .That-is. father back~ around Toul, toward Paris. Although it. would be. a nice trip.for you:to take if. you. were with some one that could speak French and while the U. S,“army. is here.and I think wef:be_here along time. s ake It had been very cold, @own .to’ 5 below zero,-but,the last few.days we sure had some warm weather. Among the hitle {1 grass is green and the French are working in their fields. Makes one feel like living again.. We came near. freezing to death in those old barns. Hard to get wood. -Had an-allowance of only a few pounds!a day and had to ‘put up with some very tough life. ant . decis-,': birds’ ar singing, ‘the |” and old. Flavor Lasts WRIGLEY'S ICY FRU CHE WING GUM JU door. You can imagin what odor ‘there is on the, streets.. \ One: day we hauled some ‘of the manure away in the field where they wanted it. One French woman didn’t want it hauled; we told her we were going ‘to take it away regardless. The next morning we discovered that she hed draged it into her kitchen. The village I am in.is called Viller- sen ‘Haye Alsic, Lourain.front about 8 miles from Toul, All that I-can see is very old folks and a few very young girls. es ‘Janies Fitri r= G3 Net Contents 15 Fluid Draoh - ol _——— " Ahefpfat Remedy for Annan Di The French have some very dirty. villages; They. throw ‘their: stable re: fuse “right in. front“oF their. Ritchen 4 f- she “For Infants and Mothers Know That Be sure to get _WRIGLEYS Look for. the states’he is not well and is living with a German family near the Rhine river. With best, wishes, I am Your rothe ath Division 64th Inf, Co. H. Am. EF. P. 0. 793. Phone 75,City Fuel Co. For.the Beulah Coal No Roller Skating at Armory this: week.- J. O’Connor. Children Genuine Castoria jen hirty.

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