The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1919, Page 4

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FOUR volun esuebuaee poe BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THURSDAY, SEPT. 11, 1919. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postattice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second ss Matter, GEORGE D. MANN, - - - - - «= Méitor ~~~ Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, EICAGO, | . . . . DEE Marquette Bidg. * 4» 6 ow Kres: lg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORE, eee | ___ Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to thé use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise eredited im this paper and also the local mews published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. 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 Bismarck) 6.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota... - 6.00 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER, —| (Established 1878) THE BOYS IN BLUE Once—and that not so many years ago—north-| ern veterans of the Civil war marched by the hun-| dreds of thousands when they came together in national encampments, and thus it was for decades of American history. They came in great num- bers to the Atlantic coast, the Pacific, and to citi nland, year after year, with ranks thinning so slowly that we who stood on the side and cheered the Boys in Blue scarcely noticed the dwindling, the ebbing away of what armed forces this world had been the greatest of had known, And then, so suddenly that most of us were| startled, we began seeing the growing gaps in those Ranks of Blue, the shortening of the line, the aging of the faces and the bodies that marched | by reviewing stands upon which Lincoln, Grant, Sherman, Hayes, Garfield, Sheridan and Logan had stood. It was the beginning of the end that we saw. And today, in Columbus, 0., we see it more plainly than ever before as the fifty-third national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic brings but a handful of these brave veterans to-} gether. This may be the last time the Boys in Blue will walk in slow and measured tread before ‘that reviewing stand, and even now the tax of a bare half-mile march is too great an effort for time-worn bodies. And in the early ’60s they marched miles and miles. They were young then. They are old now. It is the way of life, of the bravest, the young- est, the strongest, of every living thing. And even as that is life so too is this turning over of Civil war treasures, prized more highly by can packing plant is a marvelous machine for transforming animals into food without waste. Efficiency everywhere. ' But ‘the public is only indirectly benefited by all the products of science and industry in the packing business. Packers first, public last, and the recently manifested disposition of the public, through the government, to regulate the system for the good of the many rather than the few| greatly alarms the preferred beneficiaries. | They are groaning now, these packing gentle- men, and presently their groans will rise to} shrieks. The announcement that Mexican bandits had captured two American aviators. came as a sur- prise to many people. They didn’t know we had, that many still in service. It w: if pr ur prices o $1.00 and N x the price 0. 1 doubled to $2.00, t WHEAT SCALE MAY BE OPPOSED, IN FARMER MEET ing [ean aan basis / day night. O’Connor’s orchestra. | REASON Prices Fixed by Julius H. Barnes’ 1! : , vcording to Dr, Waters, was apparent. z Unsatisfactory to Southern = jin the critical day before the Gisin'(Growars | harvest, it seemed to farmers and farm arain Growers leaders that weather conditions would | \ SS the grade of the big bulk of : ae baw 1 ha 1 in Kansas and Mis- NO. 2 PRICES IN QUESTION siouri to No. id No, 4 grades, when ja No. 2 en anticipated, Kansas Cit ability that d tional farm cc » Which meets lv Septembe Will take definite ac tion in the controye ives fixed by the U tion, was rhe prop.’ Uden the grain c pt ane Prob’. No, 4 wheat would a loss of pr pound in the red to be fair ¢ ket custom by ich the government —] that ‘vould, a cording t pee cel of the Meant a loss of m 1 Maeda RE sarmers of the Mi # These fears of siade. fortunately oO ras ie e of improved nd something of accomplished the : Julius H. Barn grain corpo! A yitation to k here. Following a round table di: of wheat pr in which farm others attending the congress will be given an opportunity to question Mr Barnes at length, “the congress m take action in the form of passing re- solutions either in approval, in disap- proval, or suggesting ¢ corporation’s price-tixins cording to Mr. Drummond. TO MUCH MARGIN The controv developed in the Mississippi valley at a critical time! when it seemed the much-heralded | bumper yield of wheat this year would grade lower than } 2, Opposition to! the grain corporation's policy in price- fixing, which, although more than doubling the pre-war price on No, 1 wheat, had also made a difference of r2ore than double the pre- rgin| between each grade of wheat, me) fe particularly from official quarters in! Missouri and Kan: nd from some, |: of the leading fs pers in the’ two! states.” Dr. H. J. Wate formerly | t dean of the Kansas State Agricultural ! School, led the opposition to what he termed an overturning of customs set! by years of marketing experience be-| [: tween producer and buyer. The contention of Dr. Waters and of other oppenents was along this line: Under ‘the usual system of marketing practized before the war, it had be- come customary to make a difference of about one cent a pound between} cach grade of wheat. When a stan- dard price on No. 1 wheat, now more should be maintained for as contended ‘for’ illu: also should be doubled, making it lers of the opposition 4 the one-cent ditferc n, SiX cents a pound 1 by the corporation and prices followed, but, according to Dr. s, the principle of the corpora- votes, we ROM CHERRY-BLOSSOH LAND The Japanese Give Good Example ache, spine-ache and headaches, followed by irregularities and as a result diseases of the womanly organs are more common ».| tion’s price fixing polic when the opportunity tion Mr, Barnes, he declares the lead- crs of this opposition will put Missour and’ Kansas firmers clearly on record | as to their position in the matter of es of wheat, given to ques n No, 1 wheat 99° cen} should ha hen the No. “| fixing prices on lower 7; contend- t should Big dance at Armory Satur- is wrong, and time this week. ne organizers have been employed, members having been solicited solely Gas On — Stomach? Adler-i-ka! from gas- “Four years I suffered s, bloating and belching. Was in ‘y all the ‘time. Nothing helped 1 I took Adder-i-ka.” (Signed) W. i-ka flushes BOTH upper and sd completely it relieves gas on the stomachtor . ‘Removes foul matter oned stomach for. months. pation. Prevet ‘orporation’s — polic have sold at ne under the No. ically four ¢ difference in’ p and in keeping with those who opposed wice o”M illion: iddle West. wheat being of low were unfounded be- weather conditions, a lull in the contro- 5 It is a pro a | verb of Corry Blossom Land that beauty of face and fig- ure depend on womanly health, sallow-faced, with dark cir- cles under the eyes, and very often old at still its poi from back- G. Helleman HEILEMANS vu Slyle £aa Is Snappy | that makes our There is nourishment ‘and Smet eta health-building properties in every bottle of this delightful cereal beverage. forty-five wher it i i eee because it is famous for its in their prime? snappy, taste. Women suf- 4 vine fer in girlhood You'll always insist on it if you try it. than double the average price of pre- war days, was set by President Wil- son, the fixing of relative prices on lower grades was left to the ‘etion of the United States Grain Corpora- than any one but a physician in active practice could suppose. Co, After long experience in the treatment hee of women’s diseases, Dr. Pierce evolved a 8. vegetable tonic and corrective which he U.S.A, flavor is just as~ distinctive as the label. Its taste is int of excellence - called Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Preseri This is a purely vegetable preparati tion, which’ fixed prices for those ion, out a particle of alcohol contained grades in tha same ration of increase which determined the increase in price} 1 of No. 1 wheat. This system of estab-| 0 it. lishing standard prices, however, made] @Vhen a woman complains of backache, three cents a] dizziness or pain—when everything looks a aierehe of about pound between each grade of grain,| black before her eyes—a dragging fecli whereas the opponents of that policy| or bearing down, with seiner ats asserted that, in determining the prices} ‘should turn to this “temperance” herbal for lower grades of wheat, the grain) tonic. It can be obtained in almost every corporation should haye followed cus-) drug storc in the land and the ingredients tom and marked on the down scale of} are printed in plain English on the prices by one-cent differences in each} wrapper. grade. an The grain corport tt ie-satd, BEEP EH ay fp Hes or liquid. r. Pierce, of Invali ‘otel, Buffalo, New Style Beverage Co. Distributors num. Bismarck, says Mr, Pollard, will be district headquarters of! the lumber managers’ union. (} on ZENS i} a SID i Ml | : C.B. Olson & Son, Grocery Co. | », ?, : fm the Boys in Blue than any other thing they own, BISMARCK H 0 ME Wanted—Extra cloth- aot aA ls at Se Sees ee Ne era ae ing salesmen. S. E. Ber-jnor’s Orchestra. | Oa eee Meee eek geson & Son. Tribe Want Ade bring resulta And the cheers for the passing mingle with | at cheers for the coming. But our cheers for the! | younger heart and stronger body will not lessen LABOR ALLIANCE our love for those who almost have become'a mem- ory, a sacred and glorious memory for all time in = i American history and the minds of American'Heads of Retail Lumber Yards Hg hy people, Organize to Get Better For untold ages after the last of them shall Wages and Conditions have passed away they shall live a part of our pera { lives—as long as America lives.. The Grand Army POLLARD IS SECRETARY jof the Republic does not cease to exist when the | i hee veteran passes by the last reviewing stand of Former Thompson Representa- : nee a tive Here Only Visible Execu- : : CAG eae eae tive of New Association Ses EFFICIENCY AND GREED "MARGUERITE CLARK. | 4 Practically all of our economic, industrial and] Retail lumber managers of the Famous Pla: ers-Paramoumt § =jsocial problems center about the fact that the }nerthwest to the number of 350 hay Lay “Sree Se geniuses of American business, advancing the tre-|*"endy affiliated with the North-) | ; mendous mechanical prosperity of the country,| Nese Tamber Managers’ associa- i | mendous mechanical prosperity e ¥>| tion, organized to procure better work-| Marguerite Clark, the famous | have had in mind public, Service only to the extent] ing conditions and higher w: tor| little actress, stars tonight only | ‘ , that service was absolutely required for profit-j members, ises F. R, Pollard of) at the Bismarck theatre in “Li taking. Bismarck, of the new orga-/ tle Miss Hoover” from the story | Taste Better , ; Hl tion, ‘The reta “The Golden Bird.” | X The packers now complain that raids on Old Se eatnenie a - Passe jf bate of Essieo wah your poan bor. storage holdings of meats will seriously disrupt slates, 3 through the medium ofa ciréglar ‘Tet- your snioyment ver food the supply for future months. aan the liter. 5 | —and aid jigestion. It is almost impossible to check this statement! On August 1, says Mr, Pollard, the ona, Mae i " if wembership when it show ry of retail, lumber I : Between the ranch or stock farm and the con- deg S| rength, s in the northwest Wa »- | ’ sumer’s table, the packers have established a sys-; pollard at Ne "I tween $100 and $105 per month, ‘These . , tem so vast and complex that its workings affect f ; met, he state re all under bond, in the daily lives of 100,000,000 persons. ociation, althou: puecamount sd : , poser Fre. leted at they spon. : Holding dominion over this system is a little} ‘ Poroninen 000 orth of property Different — ‘ group whose one and only aim in existence is|" bees Nonhverern Lune | Better— “ITS. } a Se Dakota | ne, “which | Sofiocl ones Hani shipping and the storing |?" Montana, wi states THEE own and operate n the} Satisfies ! ; In the butchering, the shipping and the s Oring | Ado retail, [ube ail of northwest, have Sold and served at all soft-drink stores of meats, this system works wonders. An Ameri-| whom Pollard ¥ Bismarck fo : | i ar \ sf! SF ‘Royal Cord’ ‘Nobby’ ‘Chain’ ‘Usco’ ‘Plain’ ’ Your Money’s. and nited States Tires are Good Tires We know United States Tires are good tires. That’s why we sell them. BISMARCK MOTOR CO. Driscoll; Regan Motor Inn, Regan; Anthonys Driscoll Motor Co., Driscoll. How are you to know? Since we are in the business— take our word for it? We say to you—thereare no better tires built than United States Tires. They have proved good by performance. - They are tough, hardy, eco- nomical, efficient. They stand up, and wear, and live, and satisfy. There are five of these good tires. Let us show you the one that will exactly “fill the bill” for you. vs Worth ears You. want tires that give you the most for your money, —measured in mileage. you know us—why not C. W. HENZLER Lang & Klein, St.

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