The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 25, 1919, Page 4

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war.” Well, let’s abolish greed and ambition and| THE BISMAK K TRIRUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matte... \ GEORGE P. MANN ~~ > Eetor G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, | WITH THE EDITORS | ; larquette | NEW YORK, Fifth Ave Gidg.; CHICAGO, M ldx.; BOSTON, 3 Win. St.; DETROIT, Kresege a : __ Bldg.: MINNEAPOI IS." 410. Lumber Exchanges LET'S GET ON THE JOB i MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRES: Every year, just at this time, it is customary The Associated Press ix e:clusively entitled to the U8e/+) shout “Clean Up and Paint Up” from the house-| tops—so that all may hear it, and, hearing, take} heed and obey the command. This year the coun for punlieation of all news ¢ edited to it or not otherwise ed tod in this paper and also the local news published ty and city health officers are co-operating in| the campaign. i herein, tom abs of publication of special dispatches hereia are Dai » by carrier YORE voces si eclees + $7.20 So far as the city is concerned, if we would} Da‘'« by mail per year (In Bismarck) . -. 7.20 f 7 st cl out attics,! Daily by miail per Seer (in eater a i} 6.00 have a healthful town, we must clear out i race suicide and human nature. | ervi also ' “MBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION § 3SCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE mail outside of North Dakota . ‘00| cellars, sheds, stables, as well as the yards, alleys, | THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSP. streets and vacant lots, and get rid of the accu-| (Established 1873) mulation of trash, dirt, junk, filth, garbage, rags,! apn icans, bottles and weeds. We must empty toilets, | SS... —— dispose of manure heaps, drain barn lots, fill up! THE CORNER STONE OF DEMOCRACY | mudholes and slimy, ill-smelling ponds, open gut-| Now that the war is over, and as we count an-| ters, repair streets and burn rubbish. | other milestone on the highway of our national Then we must use soap and scrub brushes, | life toward a truer democracy, we can see that | brooms, rakes and shovels. We must throw lime} all our progress is the result of quiet, orderly! freely about toilets and stables. Why? Because! thought and discussion of our public affairs. | disease germs and germ-carrying insects, espe-! That each time that our democracy has been cially house flies and mosquitoes, breed in filth | threatened, within or without, it has been the ill and spread typhoid and consumption when they! advised action that comes from feeling, emotions, | enter our living rooms, alight on our food or bite} predominating thought—within ourselves or our|us while we sleep. | enemies. | And after the dirt. is gone we should repair} That the only threatening cloud now on the our buildings and fix our fences—and then lay on) horizon of our national life, small as it may be, is|the paint! Paint everything that needs it, inside| from a source that precludes all factors of reason.| and out, for paint is the best known preservative | |and its brightening influence will make the dullest: The foundation. of all our democracy is order ‘town in the world look spick and span. and system. | Of course, when we buy paint and lime we put) Our Colonial forefathers learned order and, money into the paint dealers’ and lime dealers’ | system. from: the- discussien-of their social, busi-, pockets. But, if we get_aic’s and die, the doctor, | ness.and political. affairs long before the American, druggist, undertaker, ton and tmbstone man- Revolution—théy practiced it in town meetings. take our coin. Most folks would sooner spend! They learned to make compromises. | theirs on paint and lime—t Keiyour choice. They learned that progress, reform, does not Come on, now folks. Let's get on the Job. come as a will or ideal of one—that the might of The prize is worth the trying—health and happi- one or of a few does not make the right of all. | ness.—Harvey (N. D.) Journal. Our Colonial forefathers carried the spirit of| quiet, orderly discussion to the framing of the; Declaration of Independence, later to that very orderly and systematic document, the Constitution of the United States; and after the Revolution a this habit of quiet, :orderly discussion, proved the; “* "Phe Coutier-News, Townley’s:personal organ at + -training for self-government, one generation unto| Fargo, which usually speaks with authority on i F : f : i 4 ters, has the following editorial which :another, in the national life which has followed.) may be presumed to indicate the policy of the bank | _it may have been penned by Secretary Morris of ' Fditors Note-—At recent meeting of che In- dustrial zommission .o which state bankers were invited the scone of state nanking was ‘liscussed informally. At ihat iime Governor Frazier was not in a position to assure che bankers what che policy of the state ii jon would be and to what extent it would conflict’ with privately owned banks. ASSERTIONS ANSWERED It ended its article If Lenine feels insulted about Hun threats to adopt Bolshevism, he can get even by threatening 4 to cast aside all remaining scruples and adopt ‘the. Indugtrial ° cpitmigston, | formerly manager of ABRAQE Fi = Pa ated hy ic cdl f } Anyway it isthe first attempt to explain some - eration, and particularly young men and women | of the questions of interest to the bankers of the is ‘that we should pursue the practice of quiet,! ie orderly discussion as individuals—the practice! This editorial should not be construed as reflect- hat. ing the opinion of The Tribune. this nation, that we may become strong as indi-| ee 2 Not many days viduals and strénger as a nation, | altho the state bank manager had defini That every young man and woman should | bankers—though no assurah : “make the joining and participating in an organiza-| deposited with member ee : i i itiz ip.| the Jamestown Alert was s tion a part of his or her education to citizenship. | Ree "thie weonld ASE be do ' Begin with the school organization, follow it : vituperation upon this by gjving seven reasons church, the lodge, the club—any that have a pur-| which reasons it declares have not and cannot be a! pose beyond themselves. be answered, They caanoe of course: be ans cored Aa fr » discussi pj irs;| the satisfaction of the Alert. A newspaper that sti Learn from the discussion of their affairs ;| insists that state funds are to be drained entirely away i vi ei 7 g reli ‘| thing. It belongs to the same order of enlightened beings always quietly, with thought rather than feeling:| thing. Ht belongs to the same oracr of entghiened pein Learn to compromise. i a Sa 73 “omjge are! Vinced of the utter untrustworthiness of the kept press, | Learn that those who will not compromise BIC) oho may be abeking light on this measure. For thei benefit The Courier-News answers the Alert’s seven “rea. Learn that the strongest men and women in| 1. Takes money from the county, making it these organizations—the leaders of them—are| harder to secure short time loans. _ Against this unsupported assertion by the Alert we! quietly—with ‘the most "thought and the least | accepted by every banker in North Dakota. _ feelin 2, Cannot lower interest rates on first mort- Coke h gages, as federal land bank, is now loaning mopey Ibserve that feeling, emotion, loudness of B, But the federal land bank has thus far reached only a small fraction of the farmeta ef North Dakota. The never proof of the soundness of belief. | average interest rate on the state’s $309,000,000. in farm i 4d p y i 4 . Hearn that those who argue with the most feel- | re so strict that most farmers cannot secure federal loans. ing and temper have their own vanity at heart| The state rules will be more liberal, and without question _ , | appreciably. At the very least it will enable many more That while people are often carried away on| farmers to secure cheaper money. a wave of emotional oratory, yet it is never of | 3; Conneb make)loans for: tees than 10 years: permanent conviction. | payment of one or more annual installments, for the re- | duction of the principal, or the payment of the entire against an organization, that even a whole people | 4, Cannst make loans oa chattels, crops or ” ‘. rar | notes to help farmer buy seed, hire labor or harvest may be wrong at times, yet it is only the process | crop. | house receipts. It does not aim, however, to enter regular Learn that permanent reforms come by SOW | commercial banking. ‘That is left, as now, to. the private and orderly courses, that they are disturbed and| banks. By ending the control of their funds by the Twin Cities, however, and keeping all North Dakota’s money in one process on another, quietly, unnoticed, natur-, loan money at a somewhat lower rate. If they insist on ally, like hanvi: ar—wii {making unduly large profits they will simply create a Ys fe the c anging seasons of the year—winter demand for extending the powers of the state bank to 5. Takes from county interest paid on public funds by local banks. it to the state. The state bank will not let its funds go without proper remuneration. Probably it will get better interest than most of the counties have been getting. The Jesson from this, for all of us‘ of this SEN-| she Nonpartisary'Leaders 4 i state. that has been found workable in the upbuilding of | SOME | funds deposited with the esteemed Alert, which pro with. the business or social organization—the ews thinks that all of these re; can) learn from a participation in the discussions—| from the small communities is past convincing of any-| flat. But perhaps there are honest doubters, not yet con-| the real obstructionists. sons” against the bank, the first of which is: . | those who present truth ;with order and system, | have the acsurance of the bank manager, which has been | on first mortgages at 5 1-2 per cent. speech, and, above all, exhibition of temper, are | mortgages is over 8 per cent. The government’s rules ‘rather than the good of a cause. | the state bank’s loans will bring down the interest rate The banking act provides that (Sec, 1%): “Advanced That while an individual may be right as, principal, may be made at any regular: installment date.” . by which they finally get right. | The bank can loan money to any farmer on ware- retarded by feelings and force; that they come, | fy re er ena ey ehee a Nor een rotats money in into spring, spring into summer; summer into fall. | commercial banking. If it takes this interest from the counties, it will give And, if the counties lose the interest, it will be applied to | kultur. a reduction of the state tax, so that the effect upon the ; | taxpayer will be the same. j 6. Places millions of dollars in hands of gover- 4 The war has taught us that the only way to nor without ample means of safeguarding people’s [THE THOROUGHBRED” it opposes the bank bill, :* € * ed around is « | He walked fast because, when he got a SS Ccaauih Lee LCT Hl (als NI ‘li : ( 3 erro Wa author of “The Rea! Adventure,” “The Painted Scene,” Etc. i I Bu Henry Kitchell Webster | » got his first hug out on the z : They squeezed througir the e wouldn't be able ©. narrow doorwaycrome: tmp Dem she ould be really held bim off for a Ipok. ely, enough “Youre tiréd i > days—te'd. find | ~Almest worried. Right up there. the chief} spot she indicated with her lips was! ‘9 to het: put-| between his eyebrows, ‘Nothin; z< out. Well. | soné wreng to-day. bas i T for “Never less im the worlr lot- | ed her. jhe 1 g he fretted * he assur; t have gope on and said the dmit that | thing right out, Bat she went straight Down on and supplied au explana tiong for! as not. | herself. # Fd “It's just the heat, of course, hat! made yon at to. smnuke. ands the | smoker was packed— He pushed her av pretty hotter as the in jolted and crack-| he a t loathsom | aty and dirty, with a lit-| ‘i thay usual on account | at al . and then that smoki street | Car was the limit! J ought to have, 4 still radiating the! freshened up a bit before I let you sonably early susamer’s | come close.” ated noise, too, from Her answer was to z nda ball game, aud from | little laugh, hug up istance visiting that was|could, and cuddle back and forth across the his chest. pack ed e} At his sta out antomatic rapid walk they lived inv heat. of an un day. Tt rac Hurdy-gurdy some Tong: going on treet. a contented tight us she, face down} her “Do you suppose Ij ne said. .““Do you mind me ually Alfred liked this. reflecting, y Tam? perhaps, Celia’s warm delight in it.| She wore, as she usually did at this! But to-night he strode through it all| time of . a big all-over apron with} unheeding. except as perhaps the heat | short sleeves, instead of a dre: and a& and the confusion added a few degrees | little cap that she could tuck all of her} to the temperature or his interior stew. | hair into. His answer didn’t require any words, te a certain door—the door his latch-|but his memory, gave him a lighthing key fitted. a mirncle was going to hap- flash of ‘a contrasting situatlom® be- pen. Tt happened every night, add| tween them—-the time he'd come home | yet it remained none the less a miracle.| on the eve of that last dinner-party | He never misseck a moment of exquisite} of theirs, come home to tell her that! fear just before he opened the door./he was through with the life they'd Jest to-night it wouldn't happen, The} been living: that he'd eudu j miracle was, quite simply, that after! to the last day th he'd opened that door and stepped in-| He'd found he side. he was inca place called home—| toilet-table, with all he: eustiously ale | a place unique in all the world— +a! luring parapherr 1 about her—-the place of ineffable security against all! rose-eolored stockings and — slippers possible assaults of fhe world, To-night | which auptehed, the sown whieh lay | more than ever, he was, hungry “and | across the fot of the bed—the, perfume impatient for if. Lof her powder subtly “pervading the It didn’t always happen in exactly | air as be jose and ask the same way, Sometimes Celia was }a_ kiss. cooking something noisy in the ki so that she didn’t hear bim unti ridden out in the smoker ul wonder- latch-key clicked in the door at theled what unspeakable tobacco men head of the stairs. But other times she | smoked in such places. Then she heard him at the outer door and had| urged him to hurry ‘along and dress, the inner one open for him before he | because there wasn't time to fool, real- was half-way up. ly. This was what happened to-night, oe ry ra (To Be Continued.) BA a a ee + county central committee. For your ° | PEOPLE’S FORUM iF information, I desire to state that I o 2 — —}4m not an aspirant for political pref- eo Lerment, nor have I ever been request- ted by Mr. Prater to become a can- ididate for county judge or any other | office within the gift of the people of | Burleigh county. Yours very truly, H. P. KNAPPEN. NO. 4 SMOKED OUT. Driscoll, N. D., April 23, ANOTHER ONE SMOKED OUT. Arena, N. D.. April 22, 1919. Editor Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. D. Dear Sir: [ noticed in; your issue of April 15; that you have what you claim to be! some information on who will be thei county candidates in 1920, and that: 1919. money. The people’s millions are now in the hands of private bankers, over whom the people have practically no control, The governor is their elected servant. The farmers’ legis- lature has submitted an amendment making him subj to recall. Is he, or a private banker, likely to safeguard better the people’s money? 7. Is not necessary to carry out building and run- ning of terminal elevators and mills. ‘hi In Na of Sep? fcsperate fight ny etd ah ie against the mill and elevator bills, how far would the state get The kaiser is to be tried. That is, he is to be |in establishing those institutions if it aid not have i a! own ban finance them at woul appen if tl arraigned, heard, and convicted. state, after getting them in operation, had to have, in a tight place, million or so, which could only be obtained from the Twin Cities banks? The state's industries can- not be operated at all without the bank. It is the founda- lor the whole structure. bank. 3 Bech foe’ the Alerts the A The French senate wants some provision that be "the assertion ge a ‘Bint lg Send tol sey earcnlys amy 7 SN Ron ll Hout get results is to centralize authority. But every married woman knew that before the war. The bandits are killing a few American citi- , zens in Mexico, but think of the profit American citizens get by selling them ammunition. Spring is near when winter underclothes sug- _gest the feel of cooties. na , you have me ,scheduled for county} Editor Eismarck Tribune, treasurer. Now, I want to inform you | Bismarck, D. that the information in regard to my; Dear Sir: candidacy for county treasurer is ab- In a recent issue of your newspaper solutely wrong. My intention is toj;I notice that I am mentioned as a can- stay right here on the farm, especial-;didate for register of deeds of Bur- ly now as we have some good. laws leigh county. |In regard to this mat- to make the farmer's life more satis-/ter I desire to state that I'am not a factory. jcandidatée for register’ of deeds or Hoping you will publish this as a|any other office nor has Mr. Prater matter of letting the truth be known, | asked me to become a candidate for 1 remain, ¢ any office. Sincerely, | Will you kindly pulish this com- FRANK G. PRATER, {| munication, and oblige, Arena, N. D. Yours truly, WILLIAM MEYER. pated | knowledge of when they are to come for the stutt. | home. ‘ | toy,co And, if she'd waited a second. | § { Editor ribune. , FRIDAY, APRIL, 25,- 1919. ~_____) DONT NEGLECT 4 il BULLSHEVISM | RHEUMATIC PAIN Go after it with Sloan’a H Liniment before it gets - | dangerous : Apply a litle, don’t rub, let it penes tralerand-—good-by twinge! Same for external aches, pains, strains, stiffness of joints or muscles, lameness, bruises. cant relicf without mussiness or d clothing. Reliable—the biggest CO“ liniment year after year. Liniment Kills Pain 30, 60e, $1207 jumn “With the Hditors," regarding the liguite burning test held at St. strange that some people $ ening to the fact that our lignite coal is fit, to burn as a steam coal. For'instance,'at St. Paul overed that the fuel when burned was practically _ smokeless. {Did it ever oceur to you’ that your Bismarck was pra 2 Did it ever occur ‘to you that all the business houses of 'the city were heated by central heat jand that on none of those buildi lis there a trace of gaseous smoke Very few people realize that all the j latest building additions in our city jare built without the unsightly chim- jue) Perhaps~you can seé the rea- | son why some of the larger cities fur- ther Qast appreciate a fuel that will | form a perfect combustion. When you think ‘what @” nuisance smoke really lis and what.a detriment it is to any |comniunity that''is ‘thriving for more (expansion and a bigger and better | city. Bismarck pe thankful that it has not the smoke nuisance to Gon- |tend with and it does’ not have’ to ‘trouble itself about hiring competent suicke inspectors like our neighboring ies that use other coal than lig- ure the troops stationed in Ru: would appreciate an opportunity ling the editor of deliberately fal for instance a city that har: railroad shops or a fac- © per cent of them burn other coals than lignite and what do you witness Bellowing from the. stacks of e plants, nothing but great vol- t ch black smoke.. From acks do or a smokeless ack im, France, Ru: éless or one which w' Siz here else. am editor; issug a smal ¥Ghunie of white smoke Naas aay enere irae tbatiedttar are "fare except Wwhere/lignite is used n Russia are esick, | as_@ fuel des. ge: we ieretand ae ar Ae eee “Yt stands to reasom, if St. Paul can is doing them a great injustice by| Use lanl a3 ae ite will ae ae nen old el e: “it ;| tioned in thejarticle. a great dema holding them ‘there without any/ How long tt has taken néighbors’ of the know the big war is over and; abundance and quality’ of North Da- who were in it coming ho: ta lignite. Howeptrange it seems and they know -they are getting a ra’ hat they haye just adthitted that lig- deal, by being theld there indewniely.| Bite Gan be huemedwhen we here in use them of falling for Bol-) Dakota have+been-trying to convince rot is to insult them by infer-/them for the: ast ae years. her f i igenc atriot-| Was no need making a,test at St. piri igrace agi mairioe | Paul.. We! have’ mer here: in Dakota oys are goud. sound, healthy | Who. burn our native fuel make the hey |test every day. AN that. was required of them was to come out here and let us explain: | Bug’no, they considered nor any other form, Very break down the! White @ our deserted their cause for the one t were sent ‘to-fight against is a plain, unddulerated Har. ius block-heads. What did we know I lean a trifle toward nonpartisan/about combustion, they. are only myself but if a fellow cannot be non-| 8Feen ones in the field out there; but 2n without also being Bolshe | it was pleasing to notice that the test (and judging from, the “Courier-Ne {turned out satisfactorily. Perchance, one cannot) I sure will stop leaning.{ ome one fanriiat with fuel from The Red Guards and their ilk seem to| Dakota conducted the test. Thank his stand ace high with “the News” and | stars. Hé saved ‘the future of our lig- for that reason this is addressed to| Mite industry for the Twin Cities. It you. where it will receive a square |™makes’me smile to think that other ci- part deal. jties are commencing to realize tho Yours truly, ; Value of our fuet and to think that we PERRY. j have 32,000 square miles of coal that = jis workable and it is estimated at 500,- Bismarck, D., April 24, 19 {00,060,600 tons. No other state in {the union has so inuch coal as has’ Dear Sir: The writer was much) North Dakota, and few. realize the Pleased in’reading an article from} vastness of our resources in this val- the Minneapolis Journal which the; uable mineral. “Tribune! made a copy under the col-| CLARENCE ¢. Headaches Caused by Acid-Stomach 8 much closer connection _ acid., Brings instant relief f ie A the stomach and brain than gestion, Heartbure tout beens indi; rE peop! ean crimes lt he beoause of repeating, bloat and gas and makes al ronpection that indigestion, the stomach cool; v sromactt and comfortable. leh a teh et ertes—all of whit Dentists wara ius i signe of acid stomach—are so effects of acid Hout porate on i) lowed by severe attacks of — that the acid eatsithrough the enamel , €plitting headaches, Pern of the teeth, catsing them to decay. * spleesnnss, ental You can easily imagine then the staclancholia an amount of damage excess acid will many othe~ disorders which afiect the i jizatio: brain can alsoyncazly alwaye be traced, the cornet vevente, organi ce bo tae etal BOUToS d-stomact ° Thousands of People are using a bo obvi sou ar Pree pple Lamy EATONIC and the results obtained are 2 nervous I think ces; __—-«€0 remarkable as to bt = Ss lee BB bey get a good night 8 lievable. Yet their Tettere of geatiene, p env more, reall on’ many. of* whi pce ity, cdge.’’ Little do tuev dream that acid prove Seomine that PATO ays stomnach is the direct cance of their all and even more than we claim. The troubles because very citen there are medical profession, too. nize the no pains in the stomach at all. So you great value‘of this 'wonderfa remed a €: you can't alwave judge an acid- bi learned Michigan doctor wrote ae Sicmech Sondition’ by the way your cently: “I have had snch wonderful a ab , itself, feels. zp Success with EATONIC that I want com aot are Weak, nervous, unfit—if _every.one to know. how quickly it vill yon are hot up to your old time form’ neutralize the acidity of tho the stom- —i. you lack your accustomed enthu- ach (acid-stomach) and the: stomach ¢ pep—make this test will soon be sweet and normal again, see if iS isn’t acid-stomech that is i ug vou back — robbing you of on ease coe eee taDby box of our healt, strength and vigor. Get So a big box of LATONIC—the wonder- EATORIG toon yet dra tod: pate snecid o ae ont fe sanickt If it fails in any way to Bive you tbs S 0 stomach to righta. It is ki isfaction you w: i im the form of pleasant tasting tableta Bask ne eteeon v8 ioeey, el that_ yor eat like a bit of candy. doesn’t want one i ‘money unless EATONIG belpe you. LARSEN, ten ‘indi: Nex 2 t NUMBER THREE SMOKED OUT. Editor Bismarck Tribune, na Bismarck, N. D. ‘ Dear Sir: > I notice in a recent issue of your newspaper that [| am mentioned for @ place on a county ticket whith you silege has fi a oW, Prater, ANSWERS COURIER-NEWS. j Van Hook, N. D., April 20, 1919. | Editor Bismarck ribune, Bismarck, N. D. Dear Si ¥ In a ‘recent issue of “the Fargo ” ed an.edito / , man of cent trouvle among] -ATONI C; you notice the.

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