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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Cais cine atari ied fateh ira Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. D. MANN, - = = Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, ORICA oa . . . . Marquette q Wee nT ne aw PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, eee his Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the we for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local mews p All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION BUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYA Daily by carrier, per year... Daily by mail, per year (In Daily by mail, per year (In state outside by_mail outside of North Dakota...,........ 6. THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER, (Established 1878) <> hae — |say that a huckle-berry pie, properly aged—. tion for those who devote their lives to the guid- ance of tomorrow’s Americans. Nor is it money alone that teachers need. Par- ents who shift the whole task of educating their children on to the teacher’s shoulders wrong teach- er and children. Fathers and mothers can deaden the benefits of school by indifference; they can obstruct by fussy interference or they can promote the efforts by co-operation in the home. THAT. JIMPSON WEED TEA! Crafty research to put one over on prohibition has brought up some strange substitutes. They Or three raisins dropped into—. Or hair tonic diluted with—. But among the very earliest jags accomplished in this country was that produced by the Jimpson weed, or thorn-apple, a rude, rambling plant found EXIT ARISTOCRACY jin almost every vacant lot in the United States. There is not much resentment left in the world; against idle aristocracies for the simple reason that idle aristocracies are on the way to oblivion. | In Russia, the aristocrat went up in smoke,| sometimes literally ; in Germany the aristocrat is| pawning the last of the family plate and looking for a job; in England, after a gallant war record, the aristocracy is packing up to leave. Old British families, frightened by “the inse- curity of vested interests due to the socialistic trend of present day legislation,” are removing to East Africa and Canada. They may thrive in these places, but not as aristocrats. The United States never supported, openly, a class of rich idlers. It always has been unfashion- able in this country to be a do-nothing. Like mar- rying for money, habitual loafing has been frowned on among men. A few centuries ago only the lower classes were producers. To work at anything, save war, hunt- ing and gallantry, was humiliating. But not any more. The tradition of aristocracy has died hard in England, but die it must before the pressure of economic change. It cannot be denied that certain arts and graces have been fostered by aristocracy, but the true aristocratic ideals of urbanity, self-control and ap- preciation of art will not perish on that day when everyone must earn his living. Hoarders have begun to transfer goods from one city to another in order to dodge Uncle Sam. We anxiously warn them that it is about time to transfer themselves to Canada. WHAT WILL PRICES DO? Who says that prices will remain as high as they are or go higher? The oracles of Wall street. High prices make a bull market, with stocks returning heavy earnings and speculation thriving. All that worries Wall street is industrial unrest and pestiferous legislation. Sages of the ticker tape actually argue that the cost of living has not increased out of proportion to wages! Wall street is perfectly contented to have prices go up and stay up. Who says they will go down? Unprejudiced students of market conditions, who check up the present state of affairs with that prevailing after the Napoleonic wars and the American civil war; who compare our scale of costs with England’s, where the decline has al- ready begun. These men insist that the peak has been reach- ed and that a gradual return to something like normal will occur. Grocery bills will not be cut in half next week —no one is arguing that the economic penalty of war will be lifted over night. But the wisest observers give many reasons for their conviction that a period of healthy re-adjust- ment is at hand. The country is about ready to adopt any plan of railroad control that will remove the necessity for appropriating a half billion dollars for expenses every once in a while. SCHOOL DAYS RETURN Mr. Shakespeare pictured the school boy as anything but an enthusiast. He went to school because he had to. Schools have changed since then; have changed Yadically in the memory of the present generation. It was a long time before the idea of shaping boys and girls to fit a system was abandoned, and the system constructed to fit healthy, hungry-minded ‘boys and girls. J The normal youngster actually looks forward to school again. Many will work at lathe and forge in manual training shops. Girls will sew and cook. Schools of today are real training grounds for _the men and women of tomorrow; not mere places of captivity, where unwilling youth is stuffed with Latin grammar and cold dates in history. It is unhappily true that the great body of teachers does not greet with joyous expectation _ the resumption of work. Teachers haven’t threat- ened to strike, but a demand has arisen all over ‘the country that they be better paid. te Wha profession is entrusted with a larger re- ponsibility ? We cannot expect the spirit of service and the ‘of #elf-sacrifice to constitute the only attrac- The Indians made tea from its leaves and swig- ged the stuff by the glow of their camp-fires. It was served, tradition says, at the wedding of Poca- hontas. Song, laughter and loud conversation were among the symptoms to be acquired from Jimpson Weed Tea. BUT DON’T TACKLE IT. Science says that atropine and hyocsyamine are the active principles contained in the leaves and seeds of Jimpson and the medical books admit that these drugs produce “fits of laughter” and “frontal headache” but that isn’t all that they pro- duce. “Coma, exhaustion and death” also are on the program. It has been seriously suggested that Jimpson tea be revived as a social beverage. But as a drink it would seem to class with wood alcohol—and, be- sides, it tastes something awful. If you were ever held up on a dark street and requested to part with your watch or be perfor- ated in various parts of your anatomy, you know how congress feels now. Captain Matlack having cheated the bandits out of $6500, to which they had no right, we must now catch and pay these sweet thugs or class our country with that other “without capacity for covenanted peace.” After all, there is no difference between a Mexican bandit and an American prof- iteer, except that the bandit makes no pre- tense to righteousness. Brig. Gen. Mitchell thinks that 1200 officer aviators are not enough to maintain an expedition into Mexico. That number is 1200 more than Gen- eral Scott had when he conducted down there. | WITH THE EDITORS | THE FARMERS’. TROUBLES An inconspicuous news item, that should in- terest Senator Gronna and the National Board of Farm Organizations, states that the Federal Grain Corporation has issued orders to the 20,000 licen- sees buying wheat which fix a complete scale of discounts for the lower grades. One scans it in vain for any indication that No. 4 or No. 5 wheat will be pushed down to $1.50 or $1.75. Gronna talked of much of the crop going at the first figure. But No. 3 wheat is to sell for six cents, No. 4 wheat for ten cents, and No. 5 wheat for fourteen cents under No, 1. Further discounts are possible for certain causes, but they could not amount to more than a few cents. On the $2.20 basis, farmers will not be impoverished. Bread buyers have all along been willing to pay the farmer his due, but not to hear the farmer’s representatives clamor that he is being robbed.—New York Post. BOLSHEVISM IS ALIENISM The other day twenty-six men were arrested in Cleveland for revolutionary activities. They had advocated the overturn of the American govern- ment, and are charged with planning to substitute an exploded European system for the tried and true-American system. Out of the twenty-six, one proved to be a citi- zen of the United States. All the rest were aliens; not merely foreign-born, but aliens. Though by no means all aliens are lawless plot- ters of the revolutionary destruction of everything that is precious to Americans, ninety-nine per cent of such plotters are aliens in birth if not in citizen- ship. These men are here of their own free will, bene- ficiaries of America’s too open hospitality. Being here, instead of shaping themselves to American institutions, their effort is to destroy those institu- tions and erect on the ruins new institutions—like Russia’s, for instance—born in the mad dreams that rack their fevered brains. Their hate of gov- ernment was formed in other lands, but they have brought it here unchanged., It is all they have to offer in return for what America has done for them or can do for them if they will but go to work and behave like Americans. The Cleveland case is not unique. Any Bol- shevist or red radical movement, analyzed, will assay not more than one per cent native-born or less than ninety-nine per cent alien. Bolshevism and red radicalism are alien, not American; that’s why.—Duluth Herald, foe BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE’ “To School, to School, to Follow the Rule” ALBERT WHITE !! You MAY REMAIN A¥TER SCHOOL ! BET TEACHER WILL MAKE A . Fuss OVER. ME! CO-OPERATION BETWEEN WORKER AND BOSS PAYS HIGHER PROFITS, GREAT INDUSTRIES Not Only Theoretically Possible But: Practically Effective in Many Great American Enter- prises, New Plan of Solving Labor Difficulties Is Believed by Expert Investigator to Come to Stay. BY FREDERICK M. KERBY IN. E. A. Staff Correspondent ‘New York, Aug. 30.—Co-operation between capital and labor is not only theoretically possible, ‘but practical- ly -effective. - It ig-not only going to be done; it is being done. And the greater the .extent of the co-opera- tion the better the industrial results. These three propositions sum up the results of my investigation into the actual examples of co-operation in big and little enterprises. Co-operation between employers and employes as it exists today takes. many forms. The smallest measure of genuine “get-together” consists of the company savings plan, by which employes are enabled to save money and purchase stock in the corpora- tion, thus obtaining a direct interest in the profits of the concern, The largest share of co-operation exists under what may be called the “Leitch plan” of “industrial democracy,” in which a government modeled upon. that of the United States actually runs the factory or industrial plant, and! in which the workers have actually as much voice in management.as the capitalists who own the corporation. Between these two extremes exist co-operative plans like those of ‘the International Harvester Co. the Standard Oil Co., and the Colorado Fuel & Iron Co.. Essentially, these plans provide a method by which em- ployers and employes may sit down together and discuss and reach a mu- tual agreement upon any subject in dispute, whether it is wages or water coolers; hours of labor or sprinkling machines. American labor is not fundamental- ly “radical,” as that term has been used.. If the owners of industry. in the U.S. A. offered tomorrow to turn over, their industries to the working- men to operate them, the chances are that the workingmen would-vote nine to one against attempting to assume control of these industries. All that the average “American workingman wants is a “square deal,” as he ex-|" presses it. But while American workingmen by HEARTBURN Caused by Acid-Stomach WAGES AND MORE LEARN no means want the responsivility of attempting to run dustry, two things they do want, which industrial democracy gives them: 1.. They want to be taken completely into the. confi- dence of the management with reference to operations of the plant. ~ Si ma 2. They want to be given an effective voice in deter- mining the conditions undér which the operation shall be conducted. The greatest single problem faced by American ‘industry today is the indifferency of the workingman ‘ to efficiency in the industrial process. “What is it to me,” says the average workingman, “if material is wasted, time lost, machinery runs badly. It’s the boss who loses, not me.” And though economists may argue their heads off to show the working- men that the loss of efficiency in in- dustry eventually ‘falls upon every man, woman and child in the country —that if production falls off, there is not so much goods. to ‘be shared by everybody—they will argue in vain, so long as workingmen as individuals have no incentive to increase effi- ciency. But when increased efficiency in the factory means a bigger pay enve- lope, then every man and woman worker in the factory has a direct in- terest to see that all work is done ef- ficiently. The basically is what “in- dustrial democracy” has done for the Demuth Pipe Factory on Long Is- land, the David Mills at Patterson, N. J., the Dan River Cotton Mills at Dan- ville, Va., and a large number of oth- er corporations that have adopted ‘John Leitch’s plan of a cabinet com- posed of the officers of the corpora: tion, a senate composed of the fore- man and a house of representatives composed of representatives of the workers. Under his plan, nothing af- fecting the factory can be done until it is adopted as a law by all three bodies; and any saving that takes place in the factory is divided equally between owners and workers. RADICALS PLAYING FOR .RED CONTROL, LOSE LABOR VOTE ~ Paris, July 80: (Correspondence of The Associated Press.)—The recent collapse of the movement for a gen- eral strike is explained in some quar- ters by the saying that, while the ex- tremists were getting control of the Sccialist party, they were losing their held on the labor unions, which, 300,- 000 strong before the war,.now have a membership of more than 1,500,000. The 300,000 were well in. hand, it is sald, but the 1,200,000 have brought with them a certain independence of thought and action. The consequence is that the vast majority of union men are not ready to accept such radical measures as a general political strike. The national committee of the Labor Federation has issued a sort of plat- form declaring that production should be stimulated and increased by all pessible means, and demanding cus- toms barriers be broken down, that inflated paper circulation be sup- pressed, that a national economic ccuncil be organized together with a national organization to control the provisioning of the country. ONLY 4000 LEFT IN CITY OF VERDUN Paris—The mayor of Verdun in- formed M. Clemenceau that only 4000 people were left out of a population before the war of 14,000 and many of these would have to leave if their homes were not quickly repaired. ARTIST CHRISTY AND THE NEW WIFE That bitter heartbum, belching, food- repeating. indigestion, bloat after eating— - all are caused by acid-stomach. But they are only first symptoms—danger signals to warn you of awful troubles if not stopped. Headache, biliousness, rheumatism. eciatica, that tired, listless feeling. lack of energy, dizziness, insomnia, even cancer and ulcers of the intestines and many other ailmente ace traceable to ACID-STOMAC! Thousands—yes, millions—of people who ‘ought to be well and strong are mere weak- ‘ings because of acid-stomach. ‘They really etarve in the-midst of plenty because they do not get enough strength.and vitality from the food they eat. Take EATONIO and give your etomach @ chance to do its work right. Make it strong, cool, sweet and comfortable. EATONIC brings quick relief for heartburn, belching, indigestion aend other stomach leone ah roves digestion—helps you get ful From your food. Thousands say EATONIO fg the most wonderful stomach remedy in the word prousut them relief when every- thing else failed. f ‘Our best testimonial fs what EATONIC will colton ou. So get a pines box of pees today from your druggist, us = if you're not pleased, return it and get your BATONIC NEW YORK.—This picture of Howard Chandler Christy and his bride, who was for eight years his model and posed for many of his war posters, was taken just before they started on their honey- | moon. TUESDAY, SEPT, 2, 1919 *Bee-Whiz! How it Hurts-« The Pain in My Foot!’ Sometimes it is in my arm. Merciful @eaven, how my back hurts'in the morn- ing!” It’s all due to an over= abundance of that poison called uric acid. The kid- neys are not able to get rid of it. Such conditions you can readily overcome, and prolong life by taking the ad- vice of Dr. Pierce, which is “keep the kidneys in good order.” “Avoid too much meat, alcohol or tea. Drink plenty of pure water, preferably hot water, before meals, and drive the uric acid out of the system by taking Anuric.”” ‘This can .be obtained at almost gay drag store, Send a bottle of water to the chemist at Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y,, and you will receive free medical advice 23 to whether the kidneys aro affected. When your kidneys get slug- zish and clog, you suffer from backache, sick-headache, “diery spells, or twingcs and pains cf lumbago, rheumatism or gout; or sleep is disturbed two or three limes a night, take heed, before too iste. Get. Anuric (anti-tiric-acid), for it will aut new life into your kidneys‘and your antire system. Ask your nearest drug- aist for it or send Dr, Pierce ten cents trial package. DON’T BUY HALF FILLED CANS, SAYS MISS ELSIE STARK Home Demonstration Agent Co- operating With Government for Full Cans The “gospel of the full can” is be- ing preached this.year to commercial canners throughout the country by the department of agriculture through its. bureau of chemistry, which en- forces the federal food and drug act. common known as the “pure food law.” Accérding to Miss Elsle Stark, home demonstration agent here, the chem- istry bureau will send investigators to the canneries to advise that all cans ‘be packed as full. as possible without injuring the contents. They also advise housewives and other pur- chasers, according to Miss ‘Stark, to !note the relative amount of solid and liquidstin‘ the cans: they buy and to give preference to those products that have the, largest proportion of solids. ‘Miss.Stark stated that an examination of cans reveal:a wide divergence in this, particular, “Thex:bureaw: of: chemistry special- ists have made investigations to de- termine exactly how much solid food —food from which the liquid has been drained—may be put up in the cans of different sizes in common use with- out in any way injuring the quality of the product,” said. Miss Stark to- day. “A certain amount of. liquid, which varies with the different pro- ducts; is necessary. The addition of more liquid than is necessary results in less food in the can, makes an in- ferior product, wastes shipping and storage space, and is unfair to the customer. Therefore, watch what you buy in the canned goods if you wish to get your value from the money you spend.” NO WOMEN AT FUNERAL London.—‘I do not wish any wom- an to be present at my funeral, and no flowers,” was an endorsement on the will of the late Eva Elizabeth, Countess of Harrington, a sister of the Marquis of Lincolnshire, who has left property of the gross value of 36,869 pounds sterling. The new Commonwealth Drydock at South Boston is the largest of its type in the world. CUTICURA HEALS BAD CASE ECZEMA Mostly on Arms and Hands. ltched and Burned. . “My grandmother had a very bad case of eczema which was mostly on her arms and hands, It took the form of red etuptions that itched “and burned soshe could not sleep. She would almost ‘scream when , Watertouched herhands. “Then ‘she read about Cuticura and sent fora sample. She bought more and after using the Soap and Ointment for two months she was healed.” (Signed) Miss Lorene Ster- ling, 288 Collins St., Blue Island, Ill. ss-Cuticura Toilet Triome Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Talcum, promotes and. maintains skin purity, skin comfort and skin health often when all élse fails. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Oint- ‘Ment to soothe and heal, the Talcum. to powder,and perfume. Then why ae make these ape, fragrant, '-creamy emoilients your every- day toilet preparations? 2 old at 25 centa each. te each free by mail. A, “4 Dept N Botton? Se HURLEY’S ORCHESTRA - The Latest Popular Dance Music 10 MAIN ST. PHONE 130K 4 q a “ ‘ 4 ‘ « o i a ‘ ’ 3 4 tag *