The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 30, 1919, Page 4

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PAGE @. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ——— Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN. - - - « Mditer Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Mestts Bigs —oErnOr sravette “PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK. : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. “MEMBER OF ‘ASSOCIATED PRESS Bled Associated Press is exclusively ontitled'to the ese ublication of all news credited to it or “not otherwise eed in this paper and also the local news p beret I rights of publication of special dispatches herein a are rese! MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, Daily by carrier per year $7.20 Daily by mail per year (In Bismarck) . 7.20 Daily by mail per year (In state outside of Bismarek) z my Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .... : THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Bstablished 1878) TODAY’S WORLD PROBLEM IN DISEASE PREVENTION Dr. John H. Stokes, of the Mayo Clinic, Roch- ester, Minn, has just written a book under the above title, which he has given to the United States Public Health Service for free distribution. No stronger editorial on an all-important subject could be written than is found in the author's fore- word, in which he says in part: “To make every intelligent man, woman and} child a legionary in organization of public health, some of the knowledge so long sedulously kept as the property of the profession of medicine must be imparted to the rank and file. One by one the geratest scourges of the race are succumbing to} this new strategic method. Malaria and yellow! fever are giving away not alone before the advance of medical knowledge, but also before the popu-) larizing of that know ledge which makes every-day} people cooperators in the campaign. Tubercu-} losis mortality is falling, not alone because of new) conceptions in its treatment, but because of the) tremendous force of public knowledge and senti-| ment. In time the same fate will await cancer, | syphilis and gonorrhea. “Syphilis and gonorrhea perhaps more than) any other of the great plagues which scourge hu- manity need the new strategic treatment * * * ./ “There is no device known to a cruel, un-! scrupulous and implacable opponent which has not been used against us by the twin scourges. They} have crept into our homes and murdered the inno-' cent and the helpless. They have appeared to} many a sincere well-wisher of mankind not in their, true semblance of brutal, wanton and savage muti-' lators and destroyers, but in the disguise of well-! ; wishers, guardians of moral life, painful but just chasteners of iniquity * * * . “Syphilis and gonorrhea are not what public jn 1887 and again in 1894. The I. W. W. tries] class misconception makes them. Quietly and dispas-| sionately examined, they can be easily seen to be} no more disreputable than any other disease ene-| mies of the race * * * . In fact an understand-| ing of them is the more obligatory upon us becau they undermine and attack the citadel of life itself. The clothing of mysterious words and allusions, of shame-fast silence, of false disgrace, of painted | horrow that surrounds them is their cloak of dark-| ness which protects them from the vengeance we) would visit on intimate and secret enemies. “To look at syphilis and gonorrhea with the! verbal veil withdrawn is not to turn to stone be-/ fore the Medusa gaze, but to be inspired to dash at. the monster and demolish it.” j | | THE VANGUARD OF CIVILIZATION Any seaport of any civilized country in the world is more accessible from New York today} than was Denver, Colo., at the time of its first/ settlement in 1858. Thus the world has done pretty well in the mat- ter of transportation. It is also donig much by means of this same} transportation for it is making a world prosperity, | a world peace, and one people as near as the ele-! ments of the race and climate will permit. Lord Bacon said: “There are three things! which make a nation great and prosperous; busy} workshops, fertile fields and easy means of trans-! portation for man and goods from place to place. Lord Bacon also said: all inventions of, modern times, the alphabet and printing press alone excepted, those inventions eek abridge dis-| tance have done most for civ: We are q jamin Frankli ago. The French sions in ga: ing and prop cussed—cros gested. Someone asked Franklin if he believed an aero- naut would ever be eer his balloon: “The thing is in its infancy, Franklin, “it is neces- sary to wait.” “But what useful proce this questioner continued. “It is a child just born,” replied Franklin, “let us wait and judge it when its education is com- pleted.” And so it is, aviation is just now youth is just now playing wi which it will finally manifest i complishments. It is idle for us to prophesy, but it is the opin- ion of Tesla and other inventors that it will be fully 25 years before aviation has reached the point of perfection and usefulness that the automobile o attained.15 years ago. Tesla states that the fu- sid ane aeronautics 136 years i just then made a few ascen- and the probability of steer-/ hese crafts was being dis- g the Atlantic was even then sug- eto sala will it ever serve?” youth— the tools with n larger ac- ture of the aeroplane is going to be the ability oF sitpryebcnseananetneerensa enna eneomemaanynnanmeemenetn lot labor's rights. It has fought and won and lost} |recovering lost ground. | | this. | slight consideration. ; was himself murdered by the Huns. And that sort; ‘of thing explains why France wants some guaran- ‘program of the Nonpartisan league management} |for them, but the light has not yet come. make great speed and ascend great heights in or- der to be free from storms, The first constructive purpose in the greater perfection of aerial navigation Will be in the ability to go to places of discovery and prospect—as a carrier of men and mail to remote parts, and water and rail transportation as a carrier of bulk freight will finally follow air courses. It will serve as the vanguard of civilization, democracy and trade in now inaccessible regions, THE PULL A little boy went out to fly a kite. He “let out” ball after ball of string until the kite was lost in the clouds. “How do you know your kite is up there?” Ww} asked a kindly old man. “Because J can feel it pull,” replied the little boy. Many men and women have given unaccount- able kindnesses until the objects of their help have been lost in the crowd. No doubt, there are many who would ask them how they know their goodness is appreciated. The answer would be pretty much the same as that of the little boy—"“they can feel it pull.” One never knows when a good deed is coming home to roost, and the more you have out on inter- est the more returns you’ll have. And, there is that other and bigger angle of doing good—the more you do the better you feel and the better you feel the happier you are. LABOR KNOWS It shocked the boudoir Bolsheviks who were {ealling the sipirts of proletarian revolt from the ivasty deeps of war-troubled waters to be told by the representatives of 4,000,000 organized work- ‘ers, “Clear out, we want nothing of you.’ A working-class revolt without the workers, \a dictatorship of the proletariat without proletar- ians is truly a hard play to produce. Union labor knows how gains are made and held. It has made and held very many. It has | added now a jot and then a tittle to the charter and returned to fight again, with infinite sacrifice} land endless pains to achieve the smallest gains. Labor has also tried the sudden leap and spent |months and years after nursing its bruises and|i It knows the great effort of organizing even| for an immediate victory. impossibilities in the way of rallying labor, in alc democratic country, for forcible upheaval. It, knows the impossibility of reorganizing the crush- ing chaos that follows such an upheaval. Know-! ing, labor will have none of these tactics. These tactics have been tried. They were tried} them constantly, and organized labor’s heaviest in- dictment of the I. W. W. is its futility. It cannot! point to a single industry and say, “Because of | us hours are shorter, wages higher, labor is w: ield-| | ing greater power and is or; ganized and disciplined to hold and utilize its gains.” | Sporadic riots, “general strikes,” and similar) | upheavals, do rarely win victories, but never or-} ganize and utilize them. These latter require the \long training, discipline and self-control of demo- cratic organization. Union men and women know It is bred into their inner consciousness. | | With more radicals than ever before among its! delegates the convention of the American Federa-) tion of Labor gave Bolshevism the bounce with]; This is discouraging to the revolutionists of | * pen and platform who have “seen the Soviet in} action,” and are anxious to become Trotzkys and, dictate in the name of the proletariat. Labor knows its disciplined ranks are sweeping steadily on from victory to victory. Knowing this it does not listen to those who preach the possibili- ties of mobs and ghost dances. M. Vanshee lost thirteen sons in the war, and) tee for the future. We ask for a small navy in order to show our faith in the league, and ask for a great appropria-| tion for the air service because battles of the future will be fought in the air. ————— PLUNGED WITH CLOSED EYES Under our democratic system the will of the} majority becomes the law for all. Fewer of the} people of North Dakota approve of the socialistic} than voted to turn over to that management the contro] of state affairs. In most of the sections of of the state there are evidences of the growth of | > understanding that eventually will unseat and re-|re pudiate the fallacies and the mean responsible! The majority at this time is in favor of proceeding 5: with the amazing experiment entered upon by} s Townley and is entirely within its rights Discussion and argument-and with this declara-' tion. North Dakota chooses to enchain itself in) this fashion. It prefers to learn through experi-. ence, rather than be guided by precept. It elects to essay the experiment and pay the price. There! is nothing but to wait with sympathy for the} time when the majority will have had their eyes: opened as wiser and sadder men, the sympathy go-| ing to the minority who protested in vain but must! } j It knows the infinite | fulates the hours of labor for females, j abolishes the old common law defenses pay their share of the cost—St. Paul Dispatch. | WORTH MORE THAN ALL MONEY ON EARTH Mrs. Raspberry Able to Do House- work First Time in Four Years. Gains Thirty-five Pounds. “I had rather see my wife well and happy like she is since taking Tanlac than to have all the mony in the world,” declared Henry Raspberry of 1812 Campbell St. Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Kaspberry, who has recently been employed as a foreman by the Ar- mour Packing Company, was former- ly in the service of the Missouri Kansas & Texas railroad. “Before my wife took Tanlac,” con- tinued Mr. Raspberry, “she had rheu- matism in her limbs so bad she couldn’t even dress herself. I would have to help her out of bed in the mornings and put her clothes on for} her. Her stomach was in such a bad condition that she could hardly digest anything. The gas on her stomach would cause intense pains in her side and such awful speels of palpitation | of the heart that she could hardly stand it. She was extremely nerv- ous, her breath was short and very offensive, and she had fallen off in weight until she was hardly more than a frame. “At the time she began taking Tan- lac she only weighed eighty-seven pounds and had not been able to do any of her housework in four years. But she now weighs one-hundred and twenty-two pounds — has actually gained thirty-fve pounds—and is as healthy and active as she was thirty years ago. The rheumatic pains have all lef: her and she can do all her} work and look after the Heer! with- out the least trouble. She can eat meats, pickle, all kinds of vegetables and anything else she wants and nev- er have a sign of indigestion. She is} mot the least nervous any more,| sleeps like a child every night and is as well as she ever I can't find words to express my thankfulness for what Tanlac has done for her. It is nothing short of wonderful.” Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jos. Breslow, in Driscoll by N. D. & J. H. Barette and in Wing by F. P. Ho- man. Advt. Operation of Five Referred Acts Is Suspended Until 30 Days After Special Election (Continued from Fage One.) were generally provided with emer- | gency clauses which made them effect: | ive on as signed b he governor, Senate Bill 41- re-c for taxation purpes :d other public util lusive of structu }ments; bank stocks, fh ors, Warehouses and storehou: improvements on rights of leased’ sites, are included in C ssesgable at 100 per cent of their ae tual Value. Live stock, agricultural and other tools and machinery ; strue ures and improvements used for homes city lots and all other property: a fcally mentioned, is included in two, to be @ssessed at 50 per} | vent i i 4, \ my ‘especially exempts religious and charitable institutions | and their property ; all structures ani jmprovements on agricultural lands structures and improvements used as a place of residence by the owner on village, town or city lots, to the amount | of $1,000; household goods to the| amount f $00; clothing up to $300; mechanics’ tools to, the amount of | $800; agricultural “imptements to the | amount of $1,000. | | | All railroads | Idand, ex- | and improve- | s and} a LABOR LEGISLATION, Important labor legislation becoming | effective tomorrow includes the maxi- | mum-hour and minimum-wage bills for } Women; the workmen's compensation | fact, and a law requiring the union la-/ bel upon all public printing. | House Bill 1S4 places the regulation } i {of the hours and conditions surround-! ing the labor of women and minors un- | der control of the workmen's compen- } | sation bureau, which is given very ' complete administrative powers. _ It is | rade unlawful to employ women or} minors in any occupation “for unreas- | onably long hours,” and the determin- | ing of reasonable hours and a fair; standard of working canditions is left | largely to the discretion of the bureau, | which may at any time inquire into/ wages or hours or working conditions, | and from whose decisions on questions | of fact there is to be no appeal. House Bill 186 more especially reg- providing that “no female’ ployed in any “manufscturi 1 or mercantile establishment, Isun- dry, hotel or restsurant, or telephone | or telegraph establishment or office, or | im any express or transportation com- | pany in the state “of North Dakota | mcre than S and one-half hours in any / one day or more than six days or more than 48 hours in any Wi To make the bill acceptable to farm-| er solons who were interested in rural provided, however, that thi rot apply to “females working in rural ite@ephone exchanges or in Villages or n 300 population. = COMPENSATION. The werkmen’s compensation act snd lability acts and creates 2 state} fund in which every employer of labor, | except as to farm, domestic and rail. way Workers, shall insure his employ for protection against injuries incur | red in the course of their occupation. | The act is administered by a commis: | sion of three, of which Commissioner; of Seepsitpetay and Laber John N. H-} 2 is chairman, while two members, S. MeDonald of Grand Forks, a rep | resentative of orzanized labor, and L. | H. Wehe of De’ Lake, a Iswyer,! pave been appointed by the governor. | The act provides for medical and hos | | pital attention to injured workers to be for out of the state fund and for Tee ific indemnities for permanent, | partial or total disability or for death, snd for compensation at the rate of not 'tess than $6 nor more than $20 during ag period of temporary total disebil- Ss hest of other acts, affecting rer- enues or of 3 regulatory mature also become effective tomorrow. To Attend Business College. Delbert Bossinghem who was re cently discharged from the navy and | who had been living with his parents at Leith since that time, lef: Tu: day for Bismarck, where he wili take & course at the Bismarck Business college.—Leith Index. eo-eccvvevee eccceecooors POCO C COCO EL OLE EE OL OEE O LOOT OOESOEIOOII OOS LIOLIIODII LOLOL OLIOIOLOEL OES: i | ; | | | | i a | | | | | | 8 8 8 8 MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1919. Victor RECORDS Voice the mighty power of the world’s greatest artists. To speak the lan- guage of music in the sweetest tones that spring from hu- man lips or are charmed from an in- strument by the skill of a master’s hands that is the province of Victrola Records. They are true tone portraits inscribed with the priceless art of the most famous singers and instru- mentalists this gen- eration has pro- duced. The genius, the power, the beauty of every voice and every instrument all are inherent in Vic- trola Records. They present a stupendous musical review displaying the diverse gifts pos- sessed by the great- est artists of the world. A privilege exclu- sive with Victrola Records a distinction $ conferred upon them in recognition of their absolutely life- i like reproduction. We are glad to demonstrate Victro- las and Victrola Rec- ords at any time. Victors and Victrolas $12 to $950 Our Store Hoskins The only exclusive Victor Dealer in this Territory. NEW MUSIC OF THE SUMMER A NEWLY-POPULAR LOVE-SONG INTERPRE- TED BY McCORMACK Other~ songs also, sung by such Qoted artists as Alda, DeLuca, Gar- rison, DeGogorza— Selections by world famed instrumen- talists HE millions who admire John Mc- Cormack for his sweet singing will doubtless agree that his voice is never so sweet as when it is love's mes- senger, in just such a song as “When You Look in_the Heart of a Rose” which he ngs on a new Record You trola this month. may guess some- thing of the nature of the message of the rose, but you will hear this inter- pretation of McCormack’s many times Lefore you measure the depth of sin- cerity and heart yearning which the great Irish tenor contrives to put into the simple waltz refrain of this fas- cinating song, that was first presented in “The Better ‘Ole. The exquisite beaut; fe which we call mor- nispers_ what Beethoven transcriber, had “the violin arrange- . terpreted by Elman, enhances : beauty of Chop- in's conception. Frances. Alda, f the fore- trola Record. to “cajole the than to link e Aga in the pre- twe pieces on a new ictor Record by V rt chestra. Who Herbert better tha: And of all more ° y puts to sh leep under the lazy moon, fer babs Tt bimsical lilt to it uu don't get the preliminaries to a con, The rhythm is unusually catchy and the ly takes several gdd turns that will tickle your ears, Mabel Garrison sings an old-time favorite Those who remember the quilting parties of other days are whitehaired now, but still din their memory is that song be Quilting Party,’ known, ape perhaps, as it is this song popular soprano of the Metro- in opera interprets anew on a la Record. A charm lingers is old melody, and Mabel ‘La Favorita” ed on a Victrola Be h this noted one sings is secrets operatic pict ; waiting day by day with her face pressed to the window pane for someone who bas gone to do bis duty across the sea. “The Boys Who Won't Come Home” is a companion piece on the reverse of the record. It is a song of tender pathos which describes the wav- ing flags, the music, the marching feet of returning soldiers, and—the woman whose boy is not among them. This is effectively sung by Henry Burr. ‘An artist new to Victor, audiences makes his debut this month in the per- son of John Steel. He starts off by singing “A Rose, a Kiss, and You" forma Trinity of Love, And on the reverse of the record he sings “Girl of My Heart,” from ‘“Somebody’s Sweetheart” recently presented to New York audiences by Arthur Hammerstein. oo Martial music by two popular Bands Can't you see the Rainbow Division actually marching by as Pryor’s Band plays, on a_new Victor Record, the “Rainbow Division March”? It has a swing and snap that is worthy of the men who so readily went to France io push back the German line. On the other side of the record Conway’s Band plays “Spirit of Inde- pendence March,” ight and care-free- in style. You can fairly see the old flag flying in the breeze and a happy crowd of liberty-loving people cele- brating their freedom. That lovely old gains richness and beauty as sung by the brilliant bari- 4 tone, DeGogorz on a_new Vic- trola Record. His rich but tender voice seems just the medi! for its charming old- world — sentiment, and his Latin temperament adds just the roman- tic grace the melody demands. #4 The Flonzaley Quartet favors us agan this month on a Victrola Record, this time song, “Juanita” ‘Quar- “theme” or tune started by” one instrument ct ice”, answered five scale tones away by a sec repeated as at first by ‘a third instrument, ana again answered, and so ceeds merrily alongs a sort of mu: conversation has thing intelligent to, Crises develop and pass, new ideas spring fi h ones, and there is a wealth of erest in this ‘ork played with abandon as these masterly sing- g Bring Bea Those Wonderful Days” when you could get “dinners for a quarter and m ithout water,” eggs at ten a dozen, juicy steaks, heat and many other. thi long to a not-too-distant ‘past. And along with him on the same record comes Marion Harris’ singing, “Um a Jazz Baby” to- suc! you never heard, There's: laugh in every line, and in the way she. sings ‘ou will recognize. in Adele Row-' a headliner in vaudeville, but will hear her for ‘the first time as a new Victor artist in “When you See Another Sweetie Hanging. Around” 2s she sings on a new Victor Record. It is in, jaunty ragtime, with many clever turns both in words and melody. On the same record-she also sings “Mammy O’Mine,” another | number rich in ragtime, with a wonderful swing to it * “Peppy” dance music that keeps the feet going Van Eps is about the cleverest bane joist of his age and when the Van Eps Trio gets going it is hard to stand still and harder yet to stop when once you've started dancing, This Trio plays a medley one- step, “Oh - Susie, ehave,” on a new Victor Record which includes in addition to the title piece, “I'm Going to Settle Down Outside of London. Town” and “Rip Van Winkle Slept With One Eye Open.” On the reverse of the record they play a medley fox trot, “Monte Cristo, Jr” which also includes ‘ -Flut- ter, On, My Broadway Butterfly,” That, ever-popular. dance music or- ganization, Joseph C. Smith’s Orches-: tra, presents a couple of foxtrot selec-' tions this month on one Victor Record. On one side—“Out» of the East” foxtrot. The incessant beating of tom-toms and the clash of brazen harmony make this number live up to its title. On the other: side—“Rainy Day Blues” foxtrot is.a bit of pure American jazz, with a song introduced toward the end to add to. the general bilarity, Another new Victor Record con- tains a couple of additional numbers by Joseph C. 's Orchestra, “Oh My “dear” foxtrot i medley of popu- lar songs, _ incly "L” Wonder Mhethee 3 and “City of Dreams.” e other, a one-step _ medley, “Somebody's Sweetheart” and “Good Morning, Jud ludes “Girl of My ‘Tw and “I Was So alist has chosen a melody that ong the most popular of miodern pretation on a It is Drdla’s The clear, ig peculiar to able feature of s playing is the sense of design back The longer you live with this record Zimbalist has made the will Xt tinelli, that great, dramatic accompan- m, the chame- Sterpieces of © by the world's. greatest are the popu songs of the day presented by leading concert the latest hits the headliners of Teatest bands and play under the direc- . foremost leaders, the for dancing are all ni of those who have a Victrola in home. Indeed, none need be deprived of this pleas- ure, since any V rt dealer will sladly play any of these selections you wish to hear from month to month

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