The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 18, 1919, Page 8

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SAFETY FOR SAVINGS The fact that through- out the forty years of this bank’s career no de- positor has ever lost a single dollar is in itself evidence of the absolute safety furnished to de- positors. We welcome Savings in any amount cordially j t and pay 4 per cent COM- POUND INTEREST. Whether you have much or little to save, you are | equally welcome at Tne First National Bank — | t the largest bank in this ~ section of the state. The Oldest and Largest Bank inthis sectionof the State EVERYBODY’S BANKER One of our ledgers shows quite a number of ac- counts bearing the same surname—a “family of accounts. There is an account for every member of _that family—young or old. Yet each account is as separate as though, in widely separated banks. Every member of your family can profitably use the strength of this bank. And every member will find it a pleasure to carry an account with this friendly bank. “The Friendly Bank” The Bismarck Bank Bismarck North Dakota pees” CH/P/STMAS \ PRESENTS VOW {| OUR HARDWARE STORE ty You cannot know what’a big line of gift goods we have until you come in and see them. ‘We have presents for every member of the household from baby up. We have things that,will make sensible gifts. Your Christmas money will “go far” in our store. So don’t do your Christmas buying before you come to our store and see what we have. ‘ 4 Our Hardware is the best; it stands the test. 7 SHEET METAL AND RADIATOR 4QL Cserd Lt 1L HARDWARE PHONE 756 WORKS BISMARCK BLLIS ISLAND'S DEFECTS SHOWN UP IN REPORT {Tightening Up of Treatment of , Reds and Anarchists Pro- posed in Congress NATURALIZATION COURTS |Urged That Tribunal For Mak- ing Americans Be Estab- lished in Big Towns New York, Dee 18.— Some of the defects of Ellis Island and seven ree- ommendations which the Congressiona! committee will make to the House for | a “tightening up” of immigration reg- ulations throughont the United States, particularly as they apply to anar- chists, bolshevists and other ultra radicals, were indicated here today by officials of the United States Immigra- tion ation and by Representative Isaac Siegel, a member of the commir- tee which has been investigating this port of entry. These recommendations, acording to Mr. Siegel, will include (1) naturai- ization courts in large cities; (2) a method of requiring all young Ameri- cans to take the oath of allegiance upon reaching 21 years; (3) abolition of the office of commissioner generat of imigration; (4) appointment of an assistant secretary of the department of labor to supervise all immigration affairs, (5): mandatory legislation pro- viding for more rigid inspection at Fl- lis Island where 80 percent of incom- ing aliens arrive; (6) a miltary immi- gration patrol’ on the Canadian and Mexican borders; (7). more dras penalty for ship owners who permit alien members of crews to desert. HOW To TELL A RED “You can't tell a Red by looking at him,” declared one of the Ellis is “You can’t catch a Red bs amining him. They are far and shrewd, It is only after they have been in the country for a sufficient length of time that you dis- cover their pernicious beliefs anc when you do no time should be lost in ! deporting them. No examination, priov to entry, can give the protection in- tended by the law. It is necessarily and ineligible aliens are hound to slip through because of out wrong methods.” New York has the biggest immigra- {tion station in the country, he said, the others being at Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New Orleai San, Fran- cisco and Seattle. Wash. Norfolk, Va., and the rest. It is comparative. to shut out the mentally and pb. ly defective when “they come in at these big ports, said Congressman Sio- gel, but the big problem is to prevent the entrance of undesirable aliens over our Northern and So ES our immigration ma- chinery may be in New York and other large ports,” Said the Congressman, “ir is much more effective than the ma chinery we have along the internationa' boundary lines of Canada and Mexico, We have no means of knowing how many men and women, hostile to American institutions and democratic government, have surreptitiously en- tered the United States. Still another means of illegal ingress has been for Reds to ship as sailors and desert up- on reaching this country. Under our present law the ship owners edn/he penalized by 2 $10 fine only. We pur- pore, making the penalty more string- ent.” The House committer, Mr. Siegel said, will recommend the. establish- ment of the Naturalization Court so that Federal and other judges, whose time is taken up with hearing hun- dreds elvil and criminal cases, may be relieved of a task of immense im- portance to the country’s welfare but which, by the-yery nature of things at present, is generally slighted from sheer judicial necessity. Last year. Mr. Siegel said, the gov- ernment, realized a net profit from nat- uralization fees of $450,000 and the profit to date since the beginning of the immigration service has been $10,- 000.000. Such a court, it was said, could expedite hearings and “undesir- ables” instead of being released on their own reccgnizance of parol in the custody of their lawyers. could be or- dered deported within thirty days. NATURALIZATION MADE FARCE One judge, said the Congressman, his mind preoccupied with other cases recently had a lot of naturalization eases hefore him. .The crowd in the courtroom represented several natior- | alties, Soon a bailiff shouted: “Att you Czecho-Slovaks hold up your hands!" Win went the hands of about, a dozen. The judge, thinking of other pressing matters, soberly remarked: “Gentlemen of the jury!” but quickly recovered, himself and admirkstered the oath of citizenship. Here was a ceremony which should have heen at- tended with great care and solemnity turned almost into a vaudeville show Late Simon Fraser Was of Pioneering Northwestern Type Father of Adjutant General Descendant of Noted Can- adian Explorer Simon Fraser, father of Adjutant General G, Angus Fraser, in the early days {An hotel and -regtanrant business in Fargo, and whose grand father, Simon Fraser, led the expedl- tron for the Northwest, Fur Trading company across the continent on the Canadian side in 1905 in an effort to obtain possession of the Oregon coun try for the British Crown, and after whom the Fraser river in British this week in Fargo, his son, Angus Fraser- ndjut ae tant eral of North Dakold, 1s president president. : éXpedition for the Northwest Trading ") pedition, Colunbia was named, was laid to rest For the last 10 years Simon Fraser had been connected with the Cass County. Abstract company,..of which Well Known Kansas Woman Nortonville, Kans,:—"During middle life I became all run- down, weak and ner- vous. I took Dr, Pierco’s Favorite Prescription and it brought me through this critical period in splendid health, I have also taken the Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery ‘as a blood tonic and for the liver and found it equally as $000. always glad to recommend Dr. Pierce's medicines.” —MRS. WM, OCKER. A Nervous Breakdown Kansas City, Kans.:—"Dr. Pierce’s Fav- orite Prescription brought me through a very critical period for which I shall always he very grateful and Tai glad to tell of it that other suffering worsen may take my advice and try the ‘Prescription.’ 1 had a severe nervous break-down, caased by woman's trouble. Doctors called it inflam- mation. T doctored for about five years with very little help. I saw Dr. Pierce's medicine advertised and was so discouraged that I was ready to do anything for relief. I at once got both the ‘Favorite Prescription’ and the ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ 1 think I took about a dozen bottles but it was surely worth it as it restored me ta good. health, curing ine of all my ailme ots.” une: LUCY FOREMAN, S14 8. :?ack- Remarkable Case of a Kansas Woman A‘chison, Kans.:—About twenty yeara ago I first commenced taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for displacement and other feminine weakness, ‘The first. half dozen doses gave me great relief, and by the time I finished the first bottle 1 felt stronger than for a long while. Since then I have taken this medicine whenever I Have felt run-down, weak or nervous and it. has always given me the desired relief. I am very glad to recommend ‘Favorite Prescrip- tion’ as a woman’s real friend.”—MRS. IDA TICKNER, 1118 N. 10th St. =—————————————— Mr, Fraser continued his clerical du- ties until about three months ago, He had been a resident of. Fargo since 1882. i LET BIG EXPEDITION fr. Fraser's grandfather led the company the same year that Lew Clark were making the American Mr. Frasér ‘traveled the northern route. He came by boat up thé Rainy river, and crossed the Rei river of the north. He went north uf the Red river to Fort Gary, which was the Northwest Fur Trading company’s post. ~The party then traveled to Lake Winnipeg by bogt to the Saskaz- chewan river and 800 miles west on the’ Saskatchewan river to Peace River Landing. portaged into the Atha- basea river and traveled. west on the Athabasca stream to the foot of the Canadian Rockies’ from which point they traveled on foot over the moun- tains until they reached the head o! ORE, THROA with warm. salt water, then apply— Vicxs Vapor a D "YOUR BODYGUARD" - 30#, 6OF, #120 BASKET Mandan High School yg Bismarck : High School Evening, Dec. 19 GYMNASIUM the river which they named the Fra- ser in honor of the leader of the ex- pedition. At this point they con- structed boats and made the balance of the journey to the coast by water. finally reaching the present site ot Vancouver. They thought the river on which they had traveled was the Columbia, and seized all the land for the Crown. Simon Fraser was accompanied oa this trip by flye white men, and 32 Indlans,, The trip required about 17 months. ATTENDS DEDICATION Mr. Fraser, grandson of the noted explorer; in 1907 journeyed to West- minster, British Columbia, despite hts advanced age, and attended the dedi- cation of the monument erected thera he British government to the great explorer, his grandfather, who came to America in 1772, and settled in New York. Later the family emigrated into Canada, SPECIAL SESSION REPEALED HEALTH Good Health Less Important Than Good Jobs Under New Day Regime The special session of the Sixteenth assembly left North Dakota without a hoard of health, Among the items ot the 1919 budget deleted entirely in order to cut the league's coat to fit the cloth was an appropriation ot $10,720 for the state board of health, whose secretary is Dr. C. J. McGurrin of Devils Lake, a ‘brother-in-law of Attorney General. Langer, who has been president of the board. No ex- planation of the\ elimination of this item was “made in either nouse. Ic appears, as a matter of fact, to have slipped by unnoticed, although the repeal of subdivision 24 of the 1919 omnibus appropriation bill, which covers the board of health fund, was specifically noted in the title of the amended bill. The ‘bg ards: of health’ has been in existences, for Many years. “It has conductéd*Health surveys in every county in the state, has published monthly or quarterly bulleins of vital statistics and has promugated from time to time orders affecting sanita- tion and health conditions throughout the state. Other items which were eleminated “ST OAN'S LINIMENT NEVER FAILS ME!” Any: man or woman who keeps it handy will tell you that same thing SPECIALLY those frequently attacked by rheumatic 8 A counter-irritant, Sloan's: Lini- ment scatters the congestion and pene- trates without rubbing to the afflicted part, soon relieving the ache and pain, Kept handy and. used everywhere for reducing and finally ‘eliminating the pains and acheis of: I'mbago, neuralgia, muscle strain, join stiffness, : sprains, bruises, the result of exposure j to weath ( . _ Sloan's Liniment i sold by all drug- Liniment BOARD ALLOWANCE THURSDAY, DEC. 18, 1919 COMPLETE SHOWING Nettleton ! —AND— Florsheim Shoes for men who care Rosen’s Clothing Shop Fashion Park Clothiers {i Lee entirely from the 1919 budget were subdivision 19, appropriating $38,600 for the state board of control, ana subdivision 26, making an appropria- tion of $22,300 for the board of ad- ministration, upon which two league members of the ‘board of regents and one league member of the board o1 control are now serving. ni Tribune Want Ads bring results. YOUR CATARRH MAY LEAD TO CONSUMPTION Dengerous to Use Treatment|path. Your owr experience has us 8 taught you that the disease can- for Only Temporary Relief. |not be cured Ly sprays, inhalers atomizers, jellies and cther applications, S. S. S. has proven a most satis- factory remedy for Catarrh he- cause’ it goes direct to its source. The real danger comes irom the| Get a bottle today, begin she only tendency of the disease to continue | logi treatment that gives real its course downward until the! results, For free medical advice lungs become affected, and then | write Medical Director, 4? Swiit dreaded consumption js on your {Luboratory, Atlanta, Ga, VISITS CAPITAL CITY Oscar Anderson of Driscoll, promi- nent farmer in the eastern part of the county, was a business visitor in the city yesterday, Mr. Anderson visited ihe ollicials at the courthouse while here, There is a more Serious stage of - Catarrh than the annoyance caus- ed by the stopped-up air passages, and: other distasteiui features, @ Phone 370 for advice on the care of Storage Bat- teries. Questions cheerfully answered. WILLARD SERVICE STATION 408 BROADWAY Keep im hand Heart lai WILL You Vore FOR ME AGAIN: HIRAM, (F 1 Run FOR THE SENATE? FOR USE FOR ANY PERSON WHO STICKS UP FOR TOWNLEYS FREE LOVE OUTFIT Published by Citizens Economy League, Bismarck The ‘Red Flame. That is Burning the Out of North Dakota ——_ : No, NO, KING } HAVE NO LET BAILEY aan ASI. HIM ND You Fe Sic Hirt / WILL VOTE FoR US? ae 1 owe SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS

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