The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 4, 1919, Page 4

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D, MANN, - - - i Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, CHICAGO, - - - - DETROIT, Marquette Bldg. - i AYNE, BURNS AND SMITH VEW YORK, : - : Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS i The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise |. credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of pubsication of speciai dispatches hereia are also reserved, MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail, per year (In Bis . Daily by mail, per year (In state outside Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.........+4+ THE STATE’S OLDEST. NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ASSAY ON POLITICS ities is that which works the government works as little work as can be worked. Po with Politics is the ancient game of working both ends], from the middle. Polities is government buy the people. Polities is the trouble with us. We decry agai it and then wish we had the ‘snap’? of some politi- cian. Politics is the bandage on the eves of justice. Poli the filthy bird that fouls its own nest. Politics is the rust on our fine Damascene blade of American government. Polities is testimony against the polling judgment of the United States voter. Polities legislation. Politics is the business conducted by this country’s law-makers for themselves, gn the capital of the people. Politics is the evasive pea seldom exposed to view ‘neath the shell of public investigation. Politics is the boomerang lightly cast into the bal- lot-box, that recoils foreefully and disastrously upon thte balloter. Polities is the reel on which is wound that famous- for-its-snarl-producing governmental cord which ties up so many worthy projects red tape. Polities differ from government in that the latter is statecraft and the former, stategraft. HARD WORK WINS The king and queen of Belgium are back home in Brussels after what it is hoped they will always re- member as a pleasant journey through the United States. When this royal pair first returned to their! home about a year ago after four years of exile en- forced upon them by the kaiser, the collars of the Belgians, according to a remark of Brand Whit- lock, ‘‘seemed to fit rather loosely.”’ But things are different now. Belgians are fat- tening up. Things are going well in the little coun- try that will always stand forth in history as the Editor Kresge Bldg. is the worm at the core of our apple of |” opportunity was the sending of Ambassador Mar- tens to New York as Bolshevik representative. Russia, see fit to administer appropriate treatment to Martens. That has been left to the state of New York. When Lloyd-George told the house of commons the other day that whatever direction h¢ took in the Russian matter he was heading into a fog he must have’been consulting with Washington. Carl W. Ackerman reports in the ‘Boston Transcript that Senator Kenyon for some unpub- lished reason deliberately refrained from expos- ing Red: Foster as he might have in the steel strike. If Kenyon had used the information at his disposal he could have proved Foster to be one of the wildest radicals in the United States in spite of Foster’s/ hypocritical evasions; could have proved that Foster had only 83,000 ballots printed on which to take the strike vote that would affect 500,000 workers; could have proved that one man in Pittsburgh alone cast 1,500 bal- lots in favor of' the strike. Why not investigate Kenyon? While Mr. Gompers is pretending that the closed shop monopoly is not an issue in the steel strike, his “Weekly News Letter” is printing neo-legal arguments to demonstrate that the union has a right to force men to join it. How far Mr. Gomp- ers and his neo-legalists are out of tune with American opinion is indicated by the vote of the national council of the National Economic league —276 to 153 in favor of general recognition of the unions, and 380 to 89 in favor of the open shop. Count Tolstoi, himself a! liberal of the liberals, set a good many foolish things straight when he explained at the Detroit Board of Commerce this week that Raymond Robins in a three-hour speech in New York had convinced him that Robins knew nothing whatever about Russia. And Robins had bee nthe white hope of the American Bolsheviki. thought when he also explained that Kerensky would have held his power if he had not been “a Billy Sunday,” that there were not 1,000,000 Bol- sheviki in all Russia, and that they would be all through in a few months. Proof of our contention that the coal strike was a strike for the nationalization of the mines is in the hands of Governor Cornwell of West Virginia and the department of justice. It is hard for decent Americans to realize the kind of deviltry they are up against; but nearly every strike jus- tifies the warning of the American Defense So- ciety to American officials some months ago to be} on their guard against revolution. From Seattle to Boston the reds who run the unions have been reconnoitering for the best place in which to cen- tralize an attack on the United States govern- ment. great martyr of the war. The thrift, independence and industrious temper are showing big results, as; they always do. The Belgians have a reputation of | being about as hard working as any people in the! world. Skillful and resourceful, too, as their prodv tion of giant Belgian hares and giant horses proved. The country excels in the- number of siall land-} owners—about one man in every six; and only about 30 per cent of its people in the large cities. Reconstruction work is proceeding rapid The ance country was not ravaged as was northern F. by the Germans. Their own necessities imposed upon the invaders limits to their tendicies of wanton destruction. As a gateway to the lands beyond the Rhine, the Belgians have a comme of which they are now, as former g advantage. Belgium, the first to feel the full of modern war, is well ou the road to ree the world rejoices. rial opportunity ee | WITH THE EDITORS {| =i aca aa ee ON THE TRAIL OF THE REDS Bolshevik Russia is boycotted, according to As- [" sistant Secretary of State Phillips, because the) Bolsheviki “have availed themselves of every op-| portunity to initiate in the United States a propa-| ganda aimed to bring about the forcible overthrow | of our present form of government.” One such! i that the Bolsheviki maintained their control of One of the Bolshevik brethren writes us from Akron, Ohio, that all our charges against the Rus- ian soviets are lies. One of the “lies” set forth Russia through a reign of terror. Comrade Mar- Nor did the federal government, while boycotting | g A - Pp. OISSELL tens, the Bolshevik “ambassador” in New York, |Problem of the reckless hunter is one mittee that this is true. Here is a bit of the ver- |‘ batim report of his examination: a considerable number of commissars (heads of the local soviets) at one time or another been-exe- cuted in soviet Russia? “A. Yes, sir. “Q. How many? “A. 1 think about 1,500.” If that is what the Bolsheviki do to their own gang, what happens to the other Russians? Here’s another one for our Akron friend: If the Russian people like Bolshevism, why is a reign of terror necessary to sustain it? France has beaten the bootsky of the Bolsheviki in the national election, but our own Bolsheviki in the I. W. W. are still permitted to use the United States mails for the destruction of the United States government. Who’s loony now ?—Detroit Saturday Night. See rasan ata Re by Colonel D. ¢ tells the New York legislative investigating com-| that hunters be required to pi great war. “Q. As a matter of fact, Mr. Martens, have not mene hug t sald Oo ha the field, from Alaska to M any other man in the northwest. is a dead shot and ig president of the field this fall and yarious saggestions for new legis- Jation on nimr Colonel Stiver: i Stivess of Butte! an pxamination before being licen: Colonel Stiy a hero Hie also is one yf America a killed more big ico, than st. He Rocky Mountain Rifle cub, twice champions of America. Numerous deaths in the hunting e aroused the state have been made. that no man should be allowed in the field who has not been trained to hunt and that the only drastic solution of the problem would lie in requiring all who apply for licen: as to their knowledge of fire-arms, of game and their general fitness for the sport. to undergo examinations MEET ALUMNI FIVE TO START SEASON In the first. basket ball game of the season Friday night at the high at ee re te active cases, ANNUAL MEMORIAL * SERVICE OF ELKS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ‘The annual memorial services of the Bismarck Lodge of Elks will be held Gas On Stomach? Adler-i-ka! “For four years I suffered from gas- tritis, bloating and belching. Was in misery all the time Nothing helped until I took Adler-i-ka.” (Signed) W, Taylor. Z Adier-i-ka flushes BOTH upper and lower bowel so completely it relieves ANY CASE gas 0) the stomach or sour stomach. Removes foul. matter which poisoned stomach for months. ‘Often CURES constipation. Prevents appendicitis. Adler-i-ka is a mixture lo | ing to participate in the services the nday in honor of the departed ers of that organization, especial- hose who have died in the last } The arrangements are in the hands f J. P. Sells, exalted ruler of the Bis- marck lodge, and the public is cordia!- ited to attend the services, If here is sufficient large crowd intend- auditorium will be used otherwise the ceremony will take place in the Elks hall. A special invitation has been extend ed to the members of the American Legion to attend the service and it is expected that a number of the former service men in this city will be pres- ent. Included in the services are several musical numbers those on the program being Mrs. W. T. Craswell, Mrs. H. 1. Steele,-George Humphries and Henry Halverson. J. F. T. O'Connor of Grand Forks, known thruout the state for his ability as a speaker who is attending the spe- clal session of the legislature, will de- liver the memorial address. Final details for the service will he decided Friday night at the regular | Meeting of the Bismarck Elks at which time several new members will prob- ablv be initiated. SOLUTION FOR HUNTERS’ PROBLEMS ARE PROPOSED Helena, Ment., Dec. 4—Among the novel suggestions for solution of tne | WHEN MEALS DON'T FIT “Pape’s Diapepsin’’ is the quickest Indigestion and Stomach Relief When meals hit back and your ston- ach is sour, acid, gassy, or you feel full and bloated. When you haye heavy Jumps of pain or headache from indi- gestion. Here is instant relief! Just as soon as you eat a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin all the dys- pepsia, indigestion and stomach dis- tress caused by acidity ends. These The place where the services will be held will be announged Saturday. of buckthorn, cascar, glycerine ani oe ine other ie: dpeeedicnt —— Jos.| Oh! Yes! JOHNSON’S for ee pleasant, harmless tablets of Pape's Dispepain neyer fail to neutralize the pa Hf ore a thee apart i once, and cost 80 at arg stores,” school gymnasium. the high school alumni will meet the local team in what promises to be an interesting and hard fought battle. The high school team has been practising almost continually since the close of the football season and with seven veterans among ‘the fifteen can- didates out for the varsity team ex- pects to land the state basketball championship. The alumni team composed of form- er players on the high school teams ir. the past, altho somewhat heavier and older does not anticipate any walk- oyer in the game, The alumni play- ers have been -practising steadily for the past two wetks and is in good condition, The candidates for. the high schoot team, most of whom will be given an opportunity to play Eriday night, are Holta, Bob George, George, Mack, and Charles Burke, Vetter Cook, Scroggins, Alisson, Taylor, Boise, Rigler, Clute, Bowers, McPhee, Fogerty. The alumni team is composed of Benton Flow, Alfred Humphries, Al- bert Blummer, Paul Cashman, Rudolph Bork and George Smith. 1 The high schoo} team will meet Washburn on the focal court on Dec- ember 12 and the Mandan’ five here’ou December 19. ( SMOLDERING y of the Red Cross Christ- the story of a woman's faith. “Nobody will) buy the seal,” this woman was told when she outlined her idea, But she persisted. the great. v She had faith in tm heart of humanity, Miss Emily P. Bissell; then secre- tary of the Delaware Red -Cross at Wilmington, is the woman whose vis- ion triumphed over the practical judgment of experts. In the past 11 years the Red Cross i 1 has been the ins Y responsible for ig $8.500,000. “seed mon- ey.” This money has been used to help bring: about the building’ of. tuberculosis sanatoria and. other institutions worth in the aggre- gate over $100,000,000.. The num- bers of lives saved and-and the amount of need suffering and grief prevented these meas- ures, are human yalues which can never be estimated. It is to con- tinue this work that the Nation= al Tuberculosis Association which Sponsors the annual sale. is offer- . ing ‘to the ‘public more than $6, 500,000 worth of the seals this year, beginning Dec. 1st. A recent survey by this organization shows that 150.000 lives are claime { each year by this unseen pestilence. America’s greatest disease menace, anil that th are more than a million At her home in Wilmington. Miss Bissell told of the early difficulties en- countered in launching the first Red Cross Christmas seal campaign in 19073. . “The tuberculosis situation in Dela- ware, was most unpromising,” she .* “A group of doctors had stari- da. small: sanatorium on borrowe.l ground in an out-of-the-way place, and were rapidly finding it impossible to jnaintain. The Delaware Red Crors desired to come to their relief, but had no funds. FREE TO Pile Sufferers Don’t Be Cut— Until You Try This New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. Simply Chew up a Pleasart Tasting Tablet Occasionally and Rid Yourself of Piles. Let Me Prove This Free My internal method for the treat- ment. and permanent cure of piles is the correet one. Thousands upon thon- sands of grateful letters testify to this, and I want you to try this method at my expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent development, whether it is chronic or acute, whether it js occasional or permanent, yoa Should send for this free, trial treas- ment, No matter where you live—no mat- ter what your age or occupation—if you are troubled with piles, my method will relieve; you promptly. Tespecially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases where all forms of ointments, salves, and other local applications fhave failed. I want you to realize that my method of treating piels is the one most dependable treatment. This liberal offer of free treatment is too important for you to neglect 4 single day. Write now. Send no money. Simply mail the coupon—bat do this now—TODAY. ——— FRED PILE REMEDY , E.R. Page, E 8410 Page Bldg., Marshall, Micn.| Please send. free trial of your| Specials on odd pieces of fur- niture, also on several floor and table lamps. Ask to see them. Webb Brothers, ~~ “method ‘t 4 Tolstoi shot a bolt of light into American|}ONE WOMAN’S VISION BROUGHT ABOUT THE ADOP TION OF RED CROSS CHRISTMAS SEAL STICK THIS SEAL ON ENVE- LOPES AND PARCELS MERRY CHRISTMAS acy 6 Nice i. aoe ey THIS IS THE 1919 RED CROSS CHRISTMAS SEAL... ' “P had read Jacob Riis’ article on the children’s Christmas hospital. stamp in Denmark, printed in the Outlook of July,6, 1907. This stam) was issued to maintain a. children’s hospital. I realized the great educa- tional value of the penny stamp, which would reach the poorest as a symbol of the fight against tuberculosis.” Miss Bissell then told how she had made the proposition to the Delaware chapter, but. there was no money to finance it. She found two friends who were willing to invest $40 in the pro- ject, and with the official consent ot the Delaware Red Cross Chapter, the first’ Christmas stamp was issued and placed on the market in Wilmington, Dec. 7, 1907. m The first order was for a few thou- sand, All Wilmington. stores agreed to sell. them, the newspapers and the club women helped. Results were amazing. The Christ- mas seal idea spread like wildfire. EByerybody wanted them, “The rush began before we were even ready for them,” she continued. “With a scant three weeks.until Christmas the print- ers could not keep up with the popu- lar demand. “With $1000 of the money raised by the first Red Cross seal, the Delaware Red Cross paid the first installment on the site of the first tuberculosis sanatorium in Delaware, which is call- ed Hope-Farm.” The next year as a result of Miss Bissell’s demonstration, the National Red Cross decided to take up the en- terprise on a nation-wide scale, The varent organization was handicapped for lack of funds to carry on the cam- paign, ‘but Miss Bissell. again found the. necessary backers who shared her faith. ‘ ete 5 The scal design: varies each year. The first was a simple holly wreath surrounding the Red Cross and ‘the greeting. “Merry Christmas.” The 1919 stamp is the first one to carry. the double-barred cross, which symbo- | lizes the first against tuberculosis. FIDDLING CONTESTS ARE TO BE REVIVED Pipestone, Minn.. Dec. 4.—Fiddling contests where old time fiddlers of the community come together to contest for valuable prizes, is the “latest thing” in the entertainment line im this section of the state. Fiddlers of Cottonwood county hay already had their contest at Windom and John Hamilton, who was the first fiddler in Cottonwood county, and who is more than cighty years of age, car- ried off the high honors with his violin solo and Clog dance. Other contests are being arranged. AS INFLUENZA . is an exaggerted form of Grip, LAX: ATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets should be taken in larger. doses than 4s. prescribed for ordinary Grip. A good plan ts not to wait until you are sick, but PREVENT IT by taking LAXATIVE BROMO: QUININE Tab- lets in time. + THURSDAY, DEC. 4, 1919 Is Over When The Day ed When the A \q houschold Zipcares and the werries of everyday life ‘have dragged you down, made you un- happy, and there is noth- ing in life but headache, backache and worry, turn to the right: prescription, one got’-2 up by Dr. Pierce fifty years ago. _ Everything growing out of the ground seems intended for some use in establish- 1 conditions. Dr. Pierce, of N. Y,, long since found out what is naturally best for women’s diseases. Uo ‘ned it all through treating thou- sands of cases. The result of his studies was a medicine called Dr, Pierce’s Favor- ite Proscription. This medicine is made of vegetable growths that nature surely intended for backache, Headache, weak- ning, bearing-down pains, irregularities, pelvic inflammations, and for the many lisorders common to women in all ages of sife. Dr. Pierce’s lavorite Prescription i3 made of lady’s slipper root, black cohos!: root, unicorn root, blue cohosh root and Oregon grape root. Dr. Pierce knew, when he first made this standard medi- cine, that whiskey and morphine are in- jurious, and so he has always kept them out of his remedies. Women who take this standard remedy know that in Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription they are “| 255 getting 2 safe woman’s tonic so good that, druggists everywhere sell it, in liquid or tablet form. : : —— \ MARKETS | —$— $$$ — “SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVE STOCK HOGS—Receipts 7,700; 15¢ to 20¢ lower; range $13.40 to $13.60; bulk $13.50 to $13.55; plgs $10 to $12.75. CATTLE—Receipts 7,000, weak; fat steers $6 to $17.50; cows and heifers $6 io $10.25; calves slow steady weak $5 to $15.50; stockers and feeders slow $5 to‘ $12; sheep receipts $42.00, steady weak; lambs $5 to $15.75; wethers $5.50 to $10.50; ewes $1.50 to $8.75. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN (WLOUL,— Unchanged; —_:yaipments: 87,195 barrels. a BARLBY—$1.23 to $1.45. “RYB—No. 2.$150 5-8 to $1.51 5-8. 'BRAN—$.40., CHICAGO. LIVE STOCK HOGS—Receipts 53,000; 20c to 25¢ lower; bulk $13.75 to. $13.20. top $14.- heavyweight. $13.75 to’ $14.20; mediumweight: $19.85 to $14.25; light- weight ($113. $14.20; Mghtlight 013.75 to $14.00; hoayy packing sows smooth $15.10 to $13.60; heavy pack- ing sows rough: $12.50 to :$13; ‘ples 1S tONP1S. TH EMO NE a CATTLE—Reveipts 15.000, firm; beef. steers mediuin and heavyweight choice and prime $18.25. to $20.75; medium and. good’ $10.75 to $18.25; common: $8.50 to $10.75; lightweight, good and, choice $13'65 th $20.25; common: and medium $7.50 to $13.50; butcher cattle heifer $6.50 to $15; cows: $6.50. to. $13.65; canners and cutters, $5.25. to $6.40; veal calves light and handy weight $16.50 to $17.- 50; feeder steers $5 to $12.50; stock- er steers $6 to $10.75; western range steers $7.50 to $14.75; cows and heit- ers $6.50 to $12.50... SHEEP—Receipts - 22,000, weak. lambs 84c Ibs down $14.50 to $16.50; culls. and comnfons $10 to $14.25; ewes -medium’ good and. choice $7.75 to $9.50; culls and common $4.25 to 9/.20; breeaing $7 to $11.25. MINNEAPOLIS Wheat receipts 281 cars compared with 480 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern, $2.95 to $3.05. Corn No. 8 yellow, $1.48 to $1.50, Oats, No. 3 white. 75 3c to 17 1-2c. Flax, $5.37 to $5.48. A discount of one-third on all framed pictures at Webb Bros. Tribune Want Ads orig results, Common-Sense for Corns, “Gets-It” The ‘Great Painless Corn’ Loosener. ‘Simple as A. B. C. Never Fails. If -you have ever tried to get rid of a corn by bundling up your toe with bandages, or by using salve that made your toe red and almost raw, or tried to drag your corn out with a knife, there will be a surprise wait- ing for you when you use “Gets-It.” Imagine peeling your corn, off gorge- ousy, easily and painlessly, just like peeling off a banana skin. Well, that. is what happens ‘when. you use “Gets-It.’ There is nothing else that gives you this same result. Millions of folks have had the same blessed experience. Why putter and suffer, lump, and spoil a good time for your- self and your friends, or your peaco of mind while trying to ‘attend to business? ‘Use “Gets-It.” the simple common sense: ‘way. “GetsIt,” the only sure, guaranteed, money-back corn remover, costs but a trifle at any drug store..M’f'd- by EB. Lawrence & o., Chicago; I: i) Sold in Bismarck and recommended as the world’s ‘best corn remedy by Finney’s Drug Store,’ Cowan’s Drug fore, Lenhart Drug Co., Jos, Bres- OW.

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