The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 21, 1919, Page 4

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NESDAY, MAY 21, 1919. BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUNB TH BISMAR! \ TRIBUNE) itt tiie ar co et BUCK PRIVATE WILL BE FIRST HEAD OF AMERICAN LEGION, > fe NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. ldg.; GHICAGO, Marq bushel. THE NATION SALUTES YOU! en) Bldy.; BOSTON, 3 Win: DETROIT, Kresege Dalities. shi . Luinber Exchange. Seeds that have been electrified in laboratories I oliticians Watching the Organi zation With Fear; Roosevelt’s TED PRESS are also more productive, but must be sown | ely entitled to the use nie, Pits jon of all news « ‘dit Ho ornut otherwise | promptly, as the effect lasts only about one month. Name Both Asset and Liabil-| erediiad in this paper und ulso the local news published | 4 crop grown from electrified corn is less suscep-| ity; He Says He Wants te! . ’ % yytts of publication of special dispatches hereia are|tible to wireworm and fungus diseases. 4 also reserved. q ! Keep Politics Out. raped AUDIT BORRAT OF CIRGULATION | "Dis suplication of electrics 10 fenuing perines 3CRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, throws entirely new light on the possibilities that By E. C. RODGERS. | Bail oy a nee year (TB Bismarck) so will open up when our country’s water power is|_ St. Loule, Meiaetay 17. —The Amer-| . . 7 : ‘ican Legi / veterans, | Daily by mail per year (In state outside of Biamarék) 6.00 harnessed and made to turn giant generators. | formed here in an organivation build. Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...++++++++: Picture a farmer counteracting a late season by | 18 convention, is going to be strong! TE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. i on policies and short on politics. 'T i THE STA (Established 1873) merely throwing on a master-switch ! is the opinion of practically every! 8 : * * * delegate from very state. H GED> Shon ahy Despite the attempt of politicians of; eee Curiously enough Fry, the electrician who has] both parties to get in en the ground | made most progress in the n field, knew little | floor. they have not thus far succeed-} HALL THE PEOPLE VOTE ON progress: ew field, kne ed. It looks like a patriotic rather} about agriculture. Outsiders frequently make for | than a political organiz most progress within an industry—they come with| , First thing the deles: Bi flat-footed for. open di: a fresh viewpoint and see the obvious. Spinning] star chamber, executive s tion LEAGUE OF NATIONS? Says Senator Hiram Johnson, California: came out! No i sion pro-) “If there is any way to get a referendum on either the peace treaty or the League of Nations it ought to be done. The people who must inter- pose their bodies in the defense of-a new American was revolutionized by a barber, weaving by a min- ister, and despite the teakettle story Watt was a manufacturer of delicate scientific instruments when he invented the steam engine. gram stood for a poment. This came! when Delegates John J. Sullivan of Seattle ,a corporal, and city attorney, | suggested that the press be excluded) PROTESTS KILL EFFORT s¢ : from convention caucuses. | policy in world affairs, should be permitted ‘to de- | cide the issue for themselves. 1 hope there is a} referendum.” a TO BAR THE PRESS. A riot of protests followed. and the; MAYBE THEY LOVE US American Legion went on record in} Japan has always insisted that she cared noth- | fvor of letting the people know what} a a si . as they were doing and saying. ing for our worldly goods, that she only desired our} Another thing the convention is al-) good will and confidence. most solid for is elimination of ny | rang in veterans’ organization, na-! And numerous people have taken her protesta- Home and socal Fi bal ions ¢ ‘ace VE “We had all of rank we wanted dar | tions at face value. ing the war,” one delegate shoute Perhaps present rumors of plot, and counter! So temporary, Chatrma jitgos ! ry i P ic: CARO TAG i got to calling delegates “Mister” { cerning the League of Nations. The way to get} plot, and Mexican conspiracy, are some of the old] stead of captain or colonel or core, st effectively is through a real na-jWoll, snrieks. ral. ree oe i that light most effectively is th gh al ni ; Wolf wild shrieka , % ee uniforms were in evidence. By; tionwide poll.” | But there is one spot in the United States that | tar the most of the delegates came in} will never believe anythizg but evil of the Jap. |civies, as citizens who had done their) duty in war ,and now were prepared * * ak Says Senator W. S. Kenyon, Jowa: “I am very much in favor of having a referen- dum on this subject. And I believe it can be done. The senate is entitled to all the light it can get on the subject of what the voters are thinking con-: * * * Says Senator Howard Sutherland, West Virginia:| “Peculiar as it my sec:f*this isthe only spot to be peace Americans. ( \ “Tf a vote could be had thpgughout the nation, where the Jap has settled in this coutitry in suffi-| Peta were the, private sora : such as would allow ample discussion of the ques-|cient numbers to allow us to get acquainted with'| zation. Delegates here now predict tion on its merits, so the people could be thor-/his moral and social and business methods. tt the re MIRE unt cumtctioe day oughly informed as to the issues involved, it would It is California, and if there is a Californian | convention in Chicago, will be an en-! 7 se | yy ’ otc . * listed man. | be most useful. It would be a great help because| who doesn’t bristle at the mere suggestion that} "Theodore Roosevelt could have the} it would show the senate the opinion of the coun-|the bars may be let down to Japanese immigration | presidency, just as he could have een Po SOTKERFIELD = try regarding the matter. There would be no|heis a freak. {chelrinan ore Be Eons pourention) guesswork about it. Such a nannies i See The Japanese have entered into competition | 10" ee oe aces ere them and Col. Réosovelt more than ind” it mighty hard to go without {flamed that 1 have to wear blud gog- ty -cons' q any ug * A : 2 26 ‘oO see the legi ct a | soldier their 20 gles.” x referendum would be exta eonstiuuenals but iti with white men in many lines of endeavor in the| Roosevelt legion, His will be a power-|for its president next FAC Ae Ne ar SU aeLe han Non wad etal Gan ee might possibly be arranged.” Golden State, and they have unfailingly bested SE eee coe anaes pation this convention | drop back of experietice before a fellow é + 7: é ch s ‘S}into the ranks,” Rooseveli asserted. know just’ whicl mafent — me ¥ him until the November convention, but , 6 ae yi ee by Says Senator Wm. E. Borah, Idaho: When it comes to co-operation, to sticking clos: he now insists that he only hopes to! wouldn't: He tg ie four tl jon. ie, tin the mo; t cohol Judge, slippe toa ley eoumiained, Bs & y i é ¥ ie get the legion firmly founded and then . a “Hosiery care” on “Hatticon leseoaeet Ne he’ W, ry : “Every friend of Popular government as er to.each other than the traditional brother, the|be permitted equal voice and honor| SEVERIN E Ra RC EETE Days Eee ees every well-wisher of this republic will sy mpat hize| Jan has it over any race on earth: wgih grory ptnermember. ae | SUCH IS LIFE EN Say ee ne MUST aa it dean soc Mune oe a aD {Wéeply and profoundly with the idea of a national) “The Jap can extract more-out of the soil, or a| RUN ITSELF * 6 oAleNHEE opIEIEIE et Gelber tl Pee Sceah oatatye= chins sey 8 3 Ore pOUl Of son, RUN . aR A rehing ¢ m of undress. on the aurvoll ¢ (Illinois) thought it :Beferendum on the League of Nations. Se el contract, or a garbage barely than six @leight of FA Te Jomo: one Rogeevall hasghert or, Hint 2. 1. JOYE ti [New York stage in what he called |Was. punishing a Mexican hobo., by ‘which we can secure the true sentiment of the), gay, tion. In the preliminary caucus helis fastened to the trunk of a’tree for pl “Hlaw. He was the only guest if the he Ce 5 , let them run wild, so to speak, and) the purpose of recording i y Var-| |. and got, to lke jt so well when ican people upon this stupendous issue. We cathe? : a : ; American people up: pt Impossible? never once made use of the big stick! jations in size durin powinn, 4853," FH CAIQUAR SOR Ass EAtile a cera need ae pause to ee the an binding} — Not at all; he puts in 18 hours in his truck in, ranning. fiings. ‘That, however: season. ant ke menting wttn ou in Mahel's Room,” | the costs and now they can't release ‘effect of the vote; what we want is the opimon[; . : rien we gts i i E f 8 nd J wht is experimenting’ with where we'll have ‘Tea for 8" with | hii ftom the idl. Taw says he must Lee : are Fe oa aii Gar garden fields, and snatches his sleep on the six- mea. Some officers thought ite cau! a dendragraph which may be Meds to: “Phe Wernag in Hom 18." dor. “rok stay weit she nays the costs tthe : of the people of the c y. ‘ hour drive to and from the city market. cuges pair Y have pean antler a radish toctell When its big enough ‘It irom Me,” ‘She is a Good Fellow.” trial, and he won't pay because he \ more firmly. But-the privates were) to eat, 7 “Come on Charley,” in “The Crov it's the hest and cheapest board- | j his term was @ ‘ fo get it’) sO. ee The Japanese is the hardest working, least|in the majority. And nearly all were a var © fed Hour’ “It Happens to Everybody" | ing house he ever (Ei, SOOT ; understandable, least octidental, most independent | Youre. Gray, hair, wos Lae Lope eae iat umeene tee fen “Some, Time.” so “Toot Sweet.” Tame] - Seibel ey / tet Says Senator Charles Cart ARAN 1q| migrant we have, and in California he has prov-| iciegates are too young to have wives.| scissors Iunif way. throngh™ dona | Kit Wye ph Aud “Please Get Married” for |GERMAN, MOTOR INDUSTRY t=) “Under existing conditions each senator snou'd’) oy that he can take the American’s land, his busi-| , ,"e American Legion, first concelv.terman nes Seq si tis ING | “Pretty Soft”. eh? REVEALS PROSPERITY a ry ‘Sao the best he can and find out the feeling of his : dae ed in France by enlisted men and offi-; “Honest, doctor, Tim ‘glad she wasn't! pip pH RACE SOON-ENDS “ ; sa trladlsto ‘findswhak/ttie ness, and eyen his schools away from him ten|cers of the American expeditionary | shaving .me, whey T lingged-her,”’ he! op am afraid that your son ix a fol-| Berlin, May : i ee rey y . Ao ee anata with times out of ten; and“that, bound dows by every Heese» abana sar eas peal eeibisal jlewer of Bacchus.” said the iicher | prosperity sind optimism of the Ger- people 0! énsas. want. y icti fi ‘ . ere _ \THIS, TOO, HAPPENED TN CHT, Who. was ing on old Gotrox. [man motor indu: is a gauge, Ger- restriction the law, can devise, outside utter eX-|her after return from Europe and) : “A follower!” exclilined old Gotrox. | many is not xo bad off, “A. secent inoue o Wan Ton Lee had never had his 7 ; hoes shined * can style”) He Why he caught up with that guy]of a journal devoted to the automobile: them, talked with them, and heard from many by| clusion camps. Col. Roosevelt believes tha f . Ne ber convention it wil i ; or ; letter.” et ne Maes 3 by the: Siilton T scmvers And. that! took Yom off and sent them te,a Chie Bacchus and passed him years ago. contains 230 pages and all es $$ | when it spread into every township in} go bootblacking establishment, ~—Milwaulee Soutinel. ¢ advertisements cov- Ben Anthony ap- te - A ea he United States it will have pra An hour later, back in his laund: ering evel se of the industry, The Says Senator Philander Knox, Pennsylvania: | WITH THE EDITORS. | ore aly all he four million boys whi @ happened to remember the ¢ Yonkers “{ think what is substantially a plebiscite on donned uniforms, for it throws mem-|¥200 bill he had atulfed ats thie fhe for eared het 5 Gity Judge Gowdy. to e rushed back to Di i - SUCHISLIRE UNV ONKDRS majority of the ads are in colors and the proposed League of Nations is not only feas- ANOTHER BURLEIGH COUNTY bership open to both sailor and sol-|s#fekeeni cr greeted Se Hf something couldn't be done to where this highly -artistic and expensive. ie dier, to general as well as private. prevent girls from wearing buckles on | ‘ ible but essential. It is essential a ees the con- The roads now graded in this country are per- : “Pour million Hie can doa wonder him: “4 t 5; \the'g hats, Anthony said every night! 4 stitution of the league proposes that the govern-} mj i ” . ul amount of good for our. Jand,” said Whe ‘ +) roposed-to young When he returns home from work the} stitut f t gue prop & mitted to go to waste. It was'a crime to spend Col. Roosevelt in talking to me about pene titres beline cn Me street car is crowded with, young ment of the United States shall delegate to an-jgood money on grading when there was no pro-|the future he hopes for the legion.|yfi;6 Love” Mr, Al utd women and that neatly every one of ' other political entity powers delegated to this gov-| vision made for maintainancé afterwards. This nea cnnee ie Of he cou [write a snapne tittle them wear bright buckles on their fl ' ernment by the people in the constitution of enum-| works out in the same manne ildin Oe tera: Wuow WhatcAmericanisin| Few Tune Brides .Con’b Pry Be see strane thactite\iea area ’ s by which-th t manper'gs building a house SEE ee ey ciaadat | from the buckles strik ted powérs by which-this government was cre-| g at j é A . ‘/ means and what it means to stand in}, 4 me in the @ he, suid. “and:a: std afltet ehcnp ( erated powers bj : ge ib ; and either refusing to put a roof on it or placing a| one great organization. ‘They can’ ac: {clo Eara-ctthese city, fellows Will sult my eyes are now so sore:auds in pe dee ated. It is feasible because the people may amend |Jeaky one in position-and being too blamed lazy or compligh muh cree ; | saitteted (Sines: He. Wes ree cw ose "a otiNitia a 9 : aps . R IN NS | ( the constitution. fry careless to keep it in repair. Not another cent ba has [EVERETT TRUE as BY CONDO: Old—Gains 16 Pounds On rc \ ‘ ae i should be spent, under any conditions on the roads ans tremendows power or the el $s 1S Palla a | Tanlac—Now Well FARMING WITH ULTRA-VIOLET RAYS | until a plan has been adopted to improve the roads | ™0n banded. toget ner te ener | StS my CT TES WELL, DON'T You ' and S | Pp politicians. This potential’ power! niece, AND I WANT To THINK ITS Tite Now rong. ‘ ' Taizan Tsuji, Japanese scientist, has been] after they have the dirt piled up along the lines, | they dre trying to annex. To every| i 1 “My z a : : o ve 4 ree Ca ESt | My hew, James Hogan, who is aac = ei 3 « >4, 2 /delegate. here it is evident that no MAKE HER A PRESENT TO START TRAINING ee » making fascinating experiments with the ultra-|Roads h—. There ain’t no such animal in’ this Hee area eee ia. ittegiiats OF A REAL GOOD PAIR THE CITES GIRLS violet ray, that first cousin of light, sound and/county—Farmers’ Press, Amidon. veals of a four-million-men legion—no| |O® SHOES OF COMMON [fifteen years of age, has gained six- teen pounds on Tanlac and is now a FOOT TOA LONG, j robust, lappy boy after thirteen years: i ongres: 0 group of politicians. S fy sult ” wireless. ‘ 2 ss ae a T They ‘paliete the Taelon can eet hat: SENSE PROPORTIONS NARROW, SHOS Z Gone auton “aid Miss Maggie These rays, vibrating 750 trillion times per POOR LANGER ever it will ask for. Members say| lee a Ep Rone Memphis, De roldsm has been con- rat ‘ they will ask for nothing not for the nected wit » Joe athor country’s good... However, the poli- ted with the Joe 1. Ullathorne second, exist in the sunlight but are largely ab-! Seed Co. of that city for twenty-seven (Contributed by Uncle John) sorbed by the gases of our atmosphere, at the ex- pense of plant life which they stimulate greatly. Dr. Tsuji grew pineapples riper, larger, sweeter and juicier by exposing the rows 40 minutes each morning to the ultra-violet ‘rays from a mercury vapor lamp. Similar results were obtained with sugar cane and etiolated bananas. Tsuji predicts that, as soon as the rays can be produced cheaply, sugar cane will require only 12 instead of 27 months between planting and harvesting, and that bananas will be picked green, shipped to market and ripened when needed. Asiatics, as result of necessity arising from dense population, lead the world in intensive farming. Chinese coolies, whose labor made pos- sible the construction of the first transcontinental railroads, and who flocked to the mining camps as cooks back in ’49, gave California its wonderful fruit industry. Even more expert in farming are the Japa- nese, who support half the population of the Unit- ed States on a territory smaller than the state of California and only 14.37 per cent of which is cul- tivatable. ; * * . Electricity, another new crop stimulant. Dr. A. B. Macallum, British government scientist, has Poor Langer! Raised on a farm near Cassel- jton, thoroughly familiar with farm and farm life; this folks still farming in the same place; worked to get an education; was really considered a manly lyoung fellow, a decent student, good churchman, jand a fearless state’s attorney, and later exalted ‘by the Townley. bunch as a great man. | Look.at him now! How are the mighty fallen? | Traitor, coward, outcast! Why? Because he does not want to be bluffed and bull dozed and used as an undertaking tool by Townley. Langer’s uni- versity friends, as well as his friends at Casselton and Mandan have long wondered if he had really \lost his reputation for nerve, and if he really would stand for the chestnut game that Townley has been playing, but too much was too much. Bill |saw the taxes piling up mountain high, and graft \and grab going on all around him. No one is won- dering about his nerve now. He defied the bunch lof bankrupts, adventurers, parasites and cranks | who had fallen upon North Dakota like a bunch of coyotes, howling, yelping and. sucking its life blood, besides making it a laughing stock before ithe rest of the American people. Now he must stand for the smut names Townley, a bankrupt; Brinton, some kind of an ex-pug, and Bowen of Bowman reputation, hurl at him. The farm, the ac‘'eved important results by stringing high-ten-| high school, the university, the church, all failed sion wires in a network with 30-foot meshes about) to bring him up to the lively standard of’ their five fet above “ground. This process is estab-| saints and prophets.—Edinburg Tribune. ticians Who sit, around. the convention know that,almost ‘any candidate with legion suppert can win, and with le- gion opposition will be defeated. | Theodore Rooséyelt and Bennet Clark, Republican.and Democrat, both sons of distinguished Americans and politicians, declare they are moving heayen and earth to kéep politics out) of the legion and to keep the. legion/ out of politics. ‘ t And yet, the legion, if it is nation- ally organized, cannot only nominate! but elect the next president, and can do the same with practically every office to be filled In’1920. For a‘gen-, eration to come they will’ hold the! political power in their hands. If the legion is wrecked on anything it will be Theodore Roosevelt. He is the legion’s biggest asset, also its big- gest liability. There is a minority un, dercurrent against him. Democratic party men are opposed to Roosevelt domination ‘in the legion. They pro- fess to believe that young Roosevelt is trying to capture the war veter- for the Republican} party in velt’s political ambitions in particular. Thev say the legion is a product of Wall street. This is largely due to the} fact that young Roosevelt worked for a Wall street brokerage concern. The anti-Roosevelt opposition is) why Roosevelt's name and prominence now is being played down. That's, why Roosevelt was not chairman of| the convention. And that is one strong reason why he will not permit them to consider his name for president of the legion, The so-called Roosevelt men in charge of the preliminary caucuses told“ me‘ that’ nothing would please MAN AND Make A SPEECH } HAS STocK IN SOME CORN AND BUNYON VOST WAIT HERE, KATHRYN, UNCLE WANTS TO GO OUT ON THE SIDEWALK WITH THE GENTLE -| T THINK HE jsix times a month and last abowc j was vertigo, I years and is a stockholder and or in’ the company, “Ever since James was two years old.” continued Miss Goldsmith) “he: has been afflicted with stomach’ trou- hie. ‘Two or three hours after eating, ly the evening meal, he would [hesin to complain of severe pains im hi ; omach which would increase un til he would go into conyntsions. These spells would come on five or thirty minutes and he would be wa- conscious for an hour, Some said he had heart trouble and others said it condition kept. down to almost a skeleton hina i aa pitiful to see how he suffered. His mother took him to St, Tenis, and many other places of treatment, an me bent thousands of dellars. try- ig to find some relie: i Was all to no a 1, poe Meg “But all that awful load of anctiety and worry-has been Vfted, James is now 2 well and happy boy ‘and is. go- ing to school, anda few bottles’ of Tanlac did it. He always complained of having to take’ other medicines, but he med to like Tanlac and since taking five hottles he ig Sixteen pounds heavier and doesn’t look like the same hoy. He wants to eat all the time au eat anything without it hurt- It makes us rejoice to see f well and stout and enjoying life like other boys, We are not looking for notoriety, hut for the sake of suffering humanity, we are willing to sive our unqualified endorsement for Tanlac.” i amlac is sold in Bismarck bv Jos, Breslow, in Driscall by NLD. & J. HW Barrette and in Wing by F. P. Homan, — Advertisement, ‘ect- '

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