The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 15, 1919, Page 2

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PURITY EXPERT PEARS MORALITY 18 ON THE WANE President of National Federation Says Temptations Are Multiplying AUTOMOBILE IS BLAMED Cars That Brings Road House to City Limits Considered Great Menace Pittsburgh, Pa., Noy. 14.—Condi-! tions with respect to social purity are not at the present time “in every ge” B.S. Steadwell . president of the Na-j tionat “ederation, at the conference on s of the Third World’s Chri: zenship Conference being held here. Although a marked advance was scored by restriction and prohibition in mi countries upon “the twin of social pe” the use of int ing| liquor as a. bevel Mr, Steadwell | cited as offsetti somewhat “ay general increase in the use of tobac- co throughout the world by — both} sexes,” and while there has been much desirable legislation and wide on of information that the} speaker considered beneficial to the} movement, yet he pointed to much} ining to he done, MULTIPLYING | still rem: OPPORTUNITIES FOppogiunities — arg mutiplying rapid: for sexual temptation and | licen: The associations | | ef t durin deferred until middle life most autho n is on the ine sex appes in the 1 e theater, thay movie, the street carnival, the dance, the fair, the successful novel depénds on it, our m les cater to it, society reeks wit the home is steeped in it, condones it and often ranegs of Oakland, Cal. is te einecaalion ae sion » wallow: Re Om Kk sondon. Sina ve A era dollars from the British government:| jmanded amquestioning obedignes, re. if we do not turn about face soon we| Tt is to come from the es her a plaything, refused to will land where some of the Oriental; )usband, Prince Tbraham 91 her clothes, and finally beat her,! peoples stand--we will worship it,” [ceUsin of the deposed — khedive of) she declared, pt. ; ‘ - | The princess brought action AUTOMOBILE A MENACE he Ameri ptian princess is) fyraham in 1913, but due to the wa He declares the automobile is a}the daughte ‘ornia furniture} yemained unsettled. When the fe greater menace to morality today manufacturer, cpt. the pring than the red-light districts were thir-jand el on Broadway in a numbe: ite fell inte the hands of the Brit- ago because it puts the}of successes, under her stage name of | ish government, The princess took up grotd house practically at]Ola Humphrey, Her first. play was’ the matter through our state depart-| a “The Fatal Weddi tf ‘y limits. The stand taken by the American government on its entrance into the war against social vice and disease, Mr. Steadwell termed “by far the greatest thing that has ever been done + - ho knows? Better let them | in behalf of public morality He] Wao: xt yee iets | presented arguments for and agalnst|The action by Congress in approving ait | the “Amer plan” for the control |e amendment ought to win their | | of social di drawing the con-/SUPPort in those states where tl clusion that it was not well-adapted eiready paver pre) dena suller ae to civil life however beneficial it] 72at ought to be enough for“ t “ap might be for an army, and he offered in its stead a program of education, together with enforcement of all law: bearing on the social morality prob- Jem, S OUR ARMY American army w: in the world” statement he , and “Is not saying t deal for it’ It was the cleanest army, he thought. because it started with the cle: body of men ever mobilized for and he rejoiced that a sincere effort Was made by the government to keep it so. Ie believed, he said, that the influence of the y i men of hign i is in the army “did more to keep my clean than all the social | ex: | DISCUSS! That the “cleane: s the com- tf our hygiene and remedial measures pended during the v WOMEN FEAR LOSS OF VOTE IN 1920; STATES INACTIVE Only Eighteen Commonwealths ‘to Date Have Ratified the National Amendment By HARRY B. HUNT, N. E. A. Washingfon Bureau, 1128-1134 Munsey Bldg., Washington, N. D. Women may not vote throughout the nation in 1920. | Their battle isn’t won. { “Only 18 states have ratified the suf- ferage amendment. Bighteen more are needed, The women depend largely on Re- publfcan support. Sixteen Republican states have not yet acted. Only two of these, will hold regular \lsssfons of the législatura “before 1921. ‘The 14 Republican governors of the remaining states have so far declined to: call. special sessions to ratify the amendment.—although there are indi- cations such sessions will soon be called in Maine, and New Jersey, as North Dakota has done. Sufferage leaders are getting sus- picjous. “Ig it possible,” they ask, “that Re- publicans don’t want the women to vote in 19202” Supporting. this horrid thought, they find the following logical and possible explanation: “The Republicans are confident of a present advantage in the 1920 cam- paign. They believe they will have a, waik-away, unléss conditions radical- ly change or some new and disturbing KBRITISIE GOVERNMENT TREATS AMERICAN G HER Hassan who was Pe: them, we're virtually certain to win. That’s on the cards. But with them: time.” ferage leaders as to why ratifica has been delayed. ratification in time*to the vote in 1920, or ately, cannot be proven, but—knowing something about the devious proce of masculine politics—the women are getting s' by the majority of thes gathering. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE SHE TELLS HER PRINCE TA-TA, BYE-BYE | * * * * * * AND BRITISH GOVERNMENT PAYS HER WELL FOR IT i TT OiNTERNATIONAL, ; PRINCESS \ OLA HASSAN =~ BETTER THAN DID ROYAL EGYPTIAN JIE New York, Noy Princess Ola! took plac 1 Ola Humphrey | wett to : months Jated the uphappy | ment, and the award of § pace 000,000,000 | Jeyptian prince’ has just been made, } Her marriage to N LEGION MEET. Anyway, that’s the explanation that | 4 s developing in the minds of the suf- Finer Representation of 100 Per Cent Manhood Never Seen Before © The Republicans can either se ive the wo n block it, . OTT ‘THE PICK OF OUR: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1919 Na : 2 : = 7 , | 2/00 ‘THE 60-H. P.. BIG-SIX LMM Built Up to a Standard and not down to a Price : . \ 60-horsepower motor; 126-inch wheelbase; cord tire equipment; shock absorbers; Gypsy top with plate glass B windows; genuine hand-buffed leather upholstery; cir- cassian walnut-finished instrurnent board with silver- faced magnetic speedometer, ammeter and jeweled 8-day clock; glove box in back of front seat; extension tonneau light. Price $2135, f. o. b. Detroit. BISMARCK MOTOR CO. Phone 23 C. BERTSCH, Manager 416 Broadway ul hall be extended to: the men who ser- cade ago and promised the extinction ved in the army and navy in this of the narcotic in China has complete- war and their dependents, but’ thatly subsided. Laws’ ‘prohfbiting the ed to instill its alty and. progre: ism into the affairs of the nation This*was the feature of the convention the basis for the Anie Legion’s activities. That. and justice of delegates here .to effect the per- to all eliminating any tinge of self-/this justiee must include in its con- drug: traffic’ aré ignored atid millions manent. organization of the ‘American | ishness for the legion itself, sideration ‘every other man and wo- of dollars Worth of opiim aré annual- Legion, Youth ‘predominated. In every. hotel lobby of the city where the delegates were ying youth forced itself into recognition. - It was an active, bristling youth serious and h-minded, with a feeling of responsibility born of inva. uable ¢xperience abroad, No, other man on thé man in the land. The American, Le jy smuggled, The latest evil is moz- gion stamps’class selfishness as wrong phine, imported’ by Japanese. and short-sighterness as individual self Sees ishness. Made up as the American Legion is of men from every class and in every walk of life, it will set its face against the supremdcy in Ame ca life.” CHINA STRUGGH “What.is best for America—that is what the American Legion wants to do ad ©. W. Wickersham, son of form- er United States attorney general and delegate from New York. “The organization is. not to be a elfish one. It is to have the inter- s of the whole country and the whole people at heart.” ! AS INFLUENZA is an exaggerated form. of Grip. LAX- ATIVE BROMO QUININE _ Tablets hould: be, taken in larger doses than 3 prescribed ‘for ordinary Grip. A good plan is not to wait until you aré convention That they are blocking it, deliber- | *|ALL FOR AMERICA FIRST picious. action, quick ¢ affirmative | KLEIN : spondent Only he has organiz- will dissipate the storm cloud that is| | . jpicked youth of Amer ee na raaane toe Ht aan _ This ‘ideal is embodied in the Je-lwyrrit DOPE EVIb istek, but, PI EVENT ar. by taking |mobile face and glistening eyes accont- 2100'S constitution and the member-| Shanghai—The anti-opium . sentl: LAXATIVE, BROMO QUININE 'Tab- uate energy that is in his, He ex: ship itself is its guarantee. Not only|ment which reached its height a dé lets in Time, the soldiers, marines and sailors, who :Served in France and the ‘United States, but the women of the Red Cross and other auxiliary organiza: tions were represented. / Their thoughts and’ purposes were presses it with a serious determina- tion to get things done. The seriousness with which youth has entered into national aff is shown by the matters brought up at HAY FOR SALE of r factor is intruded. . “How, then, about the women vote? Can the Republicans afford to take a clatice on it? ate pat i Hs polf- undfscipiived in sanship, un- a ‘an they be trusted not to the.G. 0. P. apple cart? Without upset The young women in the picture and Day Camp in St. Louis, Mo. one of the thousand or more orga approaching Red Cross Christmas tuberculosis activities, ~~ Only are winning back health un This camp is conducted by the nizations allied with the National Seal sale campaign will benefit Tuberculosis lurks in wait for persons who become i Man in health, With theif power esistance diminished they fall easy prey to the death-dedling germs, which’ in many instances, have been in their system since early childhood, “Predisposed” cases are received at the Night and Day.camb, the convention. Throughout gil. rung further expressed” hy Colonel Henry D. Linds! chairman of the legions xecutive committee in thi statement: “The American Lefton i tends that justice from government 8-22-tf Every Ford Owner Should Know Just what Ford Service’is, and why it is different frot ordinary garage service, and why it is more’ profitable to patronize the Authorized Ford Dealer—The Ford Dealer is a part of the Big Ford Family. He carries a large stock of geriuine Ford parts for repairs and replacements so you don’t have to wait while he sends: for them, and He uses only genuine parts because he knows the imitation parts aren't de- pendable: and- don’t wear. He has a thoroughly. equipped, up-to-the-minute garage with tools that enable his Ford Mechanics to efficiently and properly make any fepair—from, a minor adjust- ment to a complete overhaul. And when the \work is finished, his bill represents the reasonable, standard Ford prices. * i Now, we are: Authorized Ford Dealets—a part of that great Ford Service organi- zation which was formed: chiefly to put: within each,community, a dealer who would have more than a passing interest in Ford repairs and adjustments. We. are prepared and equipped to render prompt, careful Ford Service. Drive in or phone and: we'll come after your car, r ? K THE DA OTA MOTOR COMPANY > Phone 38 9°) North Dakota Bismarck der ideal conditions at the Night St. Louis Tuberculosis Society, | Tubercutosis Association. The this and thousands of other anti- AY a INSIST ON GENUINE FORD PARTS

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