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a a) op sem _ BISMARCK DAILY TRIB mirror (ITY PAYS HIGH FOR INSURANCE me) woman ig) well and healthy—:} there's a| 4 sparkle in| her eyes, a| rose tint in her cheeks, 4 and she ha rich red blood. There’s elasticity in every move- ment and 2 spring in her | § step. Love comes to every woman who ha: bounding health—but when she pallid, dull eyed, languid, she has no magnetism nor does she appeal to any man. Such a change in feelings and looks! After suffering pain, fecling ner- vous, dizzy, weak and dragged down by weaknesses of her sex with eyes sunken, black circles and pale checks—such a woman’ is | effect October 1. This insurance, how- quickly restored to health by the | ever, expires August 1, 1920., less than Favorite Prescription of Dr. Pierce. ace year. mn a hy he cptas ‘ Ins. fovea | The property insured by the sta aes heal) looks pir | the value of each and the amount o' we « i : Te- | premiums 2 follows: scription the skin becomes clear, | City Auditor 000 fire insur- the eyes brighter, the cheeks | ance, premium $82,000 tornado plump. © It is purely vegetable, |! he ye contains 29 alcohol. Bo eee Dru lit in tablets or | liquid. Send Dr. Pieree, Buffalo, | § N.Y,, 10¢ for trial package. Than One Year Amounts to More Than $700 The city's ¢ ‘Nic buildings have incre: due to the recently ring the pub- insurance premiums Ss than one year. The covers both fire and tor- r senate bill No. 32 passed by a mbly, the various in the state must and tornado insurance |with the state insurance board of which S. A. Olsness is head as com- issioner of insurance. Up to this y has only had-fire insur- | ance on its property and has not car- | ried it-on the full value of the prop- erty. This must be done, however, | under the new law which went into time, the ¢ nee, premium $2.76. the city already carrie: Itching, Scratching, Skin Diseases That Burn Like Flames of Fire Eczema and other skin es of ions. This wonderfulremedy hat will get results. d to write to-day full advice as to e treatm f your own case. Chief Medical Adviser, ecific Co. Dept. 2, Ats com cleaned often wear twice aglong. Have your old ones French dry cleaned by the NEVENS COMPANY clothes cleaned, pressed and repaired is iment. INNEAPOLIS Mon., Matine t With BLANCHE SWEET and a Notable Cast Marshall Neilan fy Director Oe *€ & 7 Come and gone laughi as ee way—jesting at we who wer ae ehind. For a crazed moment I ought God had deserted us.” Seen tree eet ama PRPS A SRE rS T0 STATE BOARD zzz: $60.50; $20,000 tornado ins |surance, premium $20. Besides this Increase in Premiums for Less ed by $737.59 | | IDITORIU $2,500 in fire insurance on this build- ing. City scales building—$1,760 fire in- surance, premium $10.96; $1,760 tor- insurance, premium $2. . The carried no insurance on this | | | nado | city h | bu City hall—$10,000 fire insurance, the city already $10,000 fire in- surance on this building. All of the state insurance is: based on an 80 per cent valuation of the city | property. The urance carried by the i ate companies, costs in pre} 0 and runs for about five more y' At the expira- ‘tion of this period, under the law the | city must take out insurance for fire and tornado at 80 per cent of the full f buildi ssioner, 1 of the ab excess of the-actual. cost of the build- |ings and their contents, King Albert Flies Over New York and Likes Experience Oct, 4.—King Albert of the Belgians, flew over New York this } morning a navy hydroaeroplane | piloted by Lt. Commander B. Hasner. When the king alighted he said en- stically: “It was a grand spec- \ i } New Yo | tac | “THE ALBE SIN” ARDO} | Little old New York has a bad habit. 'It likes to brag about its theatrical | activi Tourists wandering into} he city soon become impressed with ;the many wonderful attractions of Broadway. They fairly stagger the beholder with their magnitude of pres- entation. The Rialto and Rivoli, for} ome reason or other,, have been the/ by-word of everything great when it comes to celluloid drama. ny of the greater attractions were either made de at these great theatres. y vent big” at the Rialto or} | Rivalo it simply meant that they would | do the same in every other city. If they didn’t—they wouldn't. i When Ha producer of “The Unpardonable S picked De- triot, Mich., for the American premier of this great cinema production, the New Yorkers said, “It can't be done.” on said he had a picture big ugh to open anywhere. He proved In Detroit every former motion icture record was not only broken, ‘but more people saw “The Unpardon- able Sin” at the Broadway-Strand theatre in two weeks than a fous masterpiece had in_ thre ures for “The Unpardonable Sin” were} ;compiled trom the government war] jtax statements, the producers claim, while those of t next highest were taken at the figures given by the con-| ers of the film. its st American showing, d mber of large cities, inc! Xngeles, San F i sburg, Philadelph 0, Minneapolis, M aukee, St. Paul for New Work—it started to there but a short time ago and reports indicate it is still being} er of weeks of eedingly successful prdserttation. The picture will be at the Auditor- ium theatre, commencing Monday, October 6th. Wt ET ‘ues. Wed, Oct. 6-78 9 e Daily 30c & Sic 3 s with the state in-| ildings are somewhat in} the fight. We declared John Fitzpatrick, when. he declared that United States Steel Corporation, bec : speech, press, and assemblage,” and it affirms, help, and from $7.00 to $8.00 a day for skilled help. New York’s Publishing Crisis The Meat Packers State Their Case Bulgaria’s Penalty Withdrawing Troops From Russia Britain’s Hand in Persia Bolshevism’s Relapse to Czarism How to Choose Your Clothes A Ship That Wouldn’t Sink Mechanical Aids for the Deaf Can Gilbert and Sullivan be “Jazzed”? ~ Whistler Retested by Modern Stan- dards \ WHAT RED BOLSHEVIK THINKS. OF RUBE FARMER AND HOW TOWNLEY’S LEGISLATURE PROTECTED LATTER A True Story With a Moral Set to Incidental Music by Lenine and Trotzky—And It Happened Right Here in North Dakota, in Imperial Morton, in Fact i . Sa “We are going to socialize the basic industries of the United States. ‘e going to have representatives on the board of directors of the Steel Corporation,” Chairman of the Committee of Twenty-four, representing the twenty- four separate American Federation of Labor unions participating in the steel strike. T. J. Vind, general organizer of the American Federation of Labor in the Chicago district made even a more defiant cry “The strike won’t stop until steel-workers become the lawmakers at Washington.” While many editorial writers outside the labor press: take these and other statements of the strike Jeaders as an indication that they aim at nothing less than industrial revolution, The New Majority, of Chicago, organ of the Labor party, counters with a charge of “high treason” against Judge Gary, of the because he denied the strikers “their constitutional rights of free f “he has set himself and his steel trust up in defiance of the ~ — Government and Constitution of the United States, as superior to them.” ' Concerning the union demand for increased wages the labor leaders admit, according to a corres- pondent of the New York Tribune, that the wages to employees in the steel industry have increased about one hundred per cent in the last four years, but “even this increase has not sufficed to improve their originally wretched conditions. They tell of human beings living like cattle in miserable shacks and hovels. The answer of the employers to this contention is that with the foreigners in the mills and fur- naces the rate of pay has nothing to do with the standard of living, as the purpose of this class of laborers - is not to live well, but to live as poorly as possible in order to save,as much money as possible, usually with the intention of returning to Europe when a certain size stake has been attained.” The employers support their contention by pointing to a scale of wages ranging from $3.50 to $6.00 a day for unskilled Are Steel Strike Leaders Patriots or Bolshevists? Fora comprehensive review of the great steel strike from all angles, read THE LITERARY DI- ST for this week, October 4th. Other striking features in this week’s DIGEST are: The Japanese Press Attacks the American Senate article consists of direct translations from Japanese Journals, one of which declares that “It is not to the honor of the American Senate to place itself on the same level with the Bolsheviki.” Open Doors for American Music- Teachers Mercier’s Appeal to America Does the Devil Hate the Tongue of Luther? Best of the Current Poetry World-Wide Trade Faéts Albania—the Country, Its History, Its Claims D’Annunzio—Poet, Esthete, Warrior, Rebel Many Fine Illustrations, Including Maps, and Humorous Cartoons October 4th Number on Sale Today—All News-dealers—10 Cents. The rary GRUBS FOR YANKS ACCEPTED BY WAR MOTHER CATERERS The American War Mothers’ com- mittee which has charge of the ban- quet which is to a feature of the Bur- leigh county and Bismarck soldiers’ homecoming, beginning October 15, now ready to accept contributions This is the beginning of Digest s: FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW. YORK ee Se UN BER SS OO ST SDD I (OER SE SATURDAY, OCT. 4, 1919.” [of food of all kinds. The War Moth- ers expect a hungry horde of boys to feed. during the homecoming, and anything that is good in the way of grub will be acceptable. Donors of food stuff for the banquet are asked to call Mrs. J. W. Burch or Mrs. Peter Reid at once. A man int St. Louis, arrested for stealing 80 pounds of metal, a hand- ful at a time, said he did it\because he was “suffering a bad wooden leg” and wanted money to buy a new one. od was in the midst of his thresh- He was paying $30.00 an hour ing. for his threshing rig, and seventy cents an hour to the harvest hands. Along came an Lv W. W. organizer, made his way across the stubble field to the threshing engine, got the atten- tion of the meu throwing wheat bun- dles into the separator. “What pay you demanded. “Fifty cents an hour and chuck,” he was told. CUTICURA HEALS BABY’S ECZEMA On Back. Spread on Face and Hands, Very Much Inflamed ‘and’ Itched. \avhen our baby was about four months old a small spot of eczema appeared op his back. It spread over his face and hands and: became very much inflamed, and formed = scaly dry sur- face over his face. Ap- parently it itched, for the child: was very restless and the eruption was disfigurin, .. “Wedecidedtotry.Cuticuta. Al four cakes of: Cuticura Soap and two bozes of Ointment healed him.’ (Signed): Mrs..D, B/ Hearick, 1915 Fillmore §t., Topeka, Kansas. s-Cuticura Toilet Trio Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Hevea promotes, and ase te skin purity, skin comfort and s! health often when all else fails. The getting?” — he Jones, farmer living in Morton; | “You poor damn fool! boys. You fellows ar: damned fools. You got this rube farm- er just where you want him. Lets quit unless he comes through with a $1.00: an hour,” was his talk to the half dozen men who came up to listen to him. Now John Jones, farmer, was righ! there, He saw a big storm coming and there was reason to hurry the thresh- ing work. He walked: walked up to the I. W. W. ofganizer: “You are not on this threshing crew. Come on now get off the place. These men are getting good pay, there ’s a rain coming, we're nearly through with the work; how do you get that way coming onto my farm and _ starting something. If you don’t get off tie place I’ll have you arrested,” said the farmer indignantly. The I, W. W.-sat on the pole of 9 wagon, picked up a straw and began running it between his teeth and gria- ned while the farmer was talking. “You see, boys,” he addressed the harvest hands, “you’ve got him in a pinch, Lets squeeze him.” nt Then addressing the farmer he said, Do you think you could get me in the jug for this. Hell I’ve got you dead to rights and you stand a fat chance of — starting anything’ With me. Here you simp read- this......” and he handed the farmer a printed slip. i “Haye some, boys.” -And he passe] them around. In- column width type the (slip. carried a correct copy of House Pill No. 57 fathered by John O'Brien of Jamestown a8 one of the Non-Partisan league measures, . “An act limiting the power of the courts to grant injunctions: and ‘prohibiting the issuing of restraining. orders: and. in- junctions in certain labor matters.” The story was related to ‘Attornez General Langer ‘who. hag been investi- gating the I. W. W, activities, “Yes, It is. interesting, However, I have known for some time that every isten, bill, In the guise of a b the laboring man, it- deprives the courts. of, all power. deprives’ police uf- ficers of ‘all, jurisdiction, and Jeayes only with the governor the’ power to Ali out troops. It repeals the law cn (Continued on’ Page Six) ‘ Child AMAA SSNS SSS \ SN) The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which : in use for over thirty years, hes ‘borne the rain insir e and has been made under his pere GLA: x ro Supervision since its infancy. Odd 1 v low no one to decei 5 All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ coe bor Experiments that trifle witz and endanger the‘ health of Infants ‘dnd Children—Experience against, Experiment. Tw Bs ou “J ¢ cnthat is CASTORIA astoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric; Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant, It contains neither Opiim, Morphine nor other narcotic’ substance, Its age is its guarantee. For. more. than thirty years it Has Tien fa oe ue ded Any relief of Constipatioa, Flatulency, oeas allaying Feverish: ‘ising « therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach aia Bowes; aids the assimilation of Food; giving health The Children's Panacea—The Mother's vlan rare : GENUINE CASTORIA ALways Bears the Signature. of i SSS : In Use For Over 30 Years he Kind You Have Alwayé Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW VoRn CITY, ry = “ « . | f on y a ’ t e ’ « »