The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1920, Page 8

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z BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE ‘JUSTICE FOR ALL IS HAYS SLOGAN; “WHO'LL BE PRESIDENT?”—No,'3 ‘TUESDAY, JANUARY 6; 1920 CANVASS OF CIT COMPLETE SHOWING A Victrola’ Any Home Can Afford This wonderful instrument—a Victrola—makes it ‘possible for very one to enjoy the best there is in music and entertainment. It brings the opera, the concert and the vaudeville stage within the reach of all—right into the home. Let us put a Victrola in YOUR home today. Hoskins Victrola Store Bismarck, N. D. RED CROSS TO DIVIDE $30,000,000 BETWEEN DOMESTIC RELIEF, EUROPE AND FINISHING Dr. Livington Farrand, Head of Organization, Tells of Momen- tous Plans Mapped Out For Ensuing Year—Strict Eco- nomy Necessary to Meet Uni- versal Demands a fund work Washington, Jan. 6.-—Out of of $30,000,000 available for i this year, the American Rea C: has set aside $15,000,000 for Furor re lief, $13,760,000 for use at home and $1,250,000" for completing its program In Siberia, In making public today pls carrying forward peace time rativitien, Dr. Livingston Farrand, head of the organization, declared that a consid- erable reserve must be held for emer- geney calls “incident to such possible events as the anening of Russia tercourse with the United a This determination, Dr. Farand said, was reached afler long and full con- shderation with. government. repre: sentatives in this count 1 Europe. MUST PRACTICE ONOMY. » With’ appesis: irifinitely beyond. its resources, and unable to count on ad- ditions to its total fund ‘this year, the | executive committee, Dr. Farrand said, found. it “both wise und necessary to consider the application of its funds so that the soundest possible sense of proportion might prevail.” Allobligations to soldiers, sailors and their familles must he provided for, Dr.- Farrand reported, while. the Ned Cross mnst be. ready at. the same time to meet relief demand due to dis- asters, | “We are pledged.” he added, ‘to the establishiment:of a peace time program in America for which $12,750,000 wili be made available, LOCAL RXPENSES TO LE! SSEN. “In considering this item it must be kept clearly in mind that while expen- ditures inthis country arising direct ly out of the Yar remain hich they should rapidly diminish, and while eur work for establishment of peace time * wndertakings will increase, in some measure, this increase will ‘he incon- siderable as compared with the reduc- tlon of war items.” To provide disaster. relief, the report said. a substantial sum. should be available, and that while the Red Cross was prepared to meet. instantly all appeals for help, “the public can be asked to’ replenish the. disaster fund after preliminary action Has been taken rather than before.” ‘he committee expressed the helief that’ the home reserve fund would nroperly protect. the Red Cross on ob- ligations in the United States which are considered of “primary impor tanee” -SCIATIC PAINS | QUICKLY RELIEVED , the World's Linl- at oe handy fy to allay aches HOUSANDS of men and women when the ‘least little rheumat “crick"! assails them, have Sloan’ i Liniment handy to knock it out. Popular a third of a century ago — far more popular toda ‘That's because it is so wonderfully helpful in relieving all external aches and pains — sciatica, lumbago, neural- gia, overstrained muscles, stiff joi . Weather exposure results. A little is : all chat is necessary, for it soon pene- trates without rubbing to the sore spot. 1 Leaves no muss, stained shin, clogged : pores. A bottle today is a wise pre- caution. Keep it handy. All druggists— 35c., 70c., $1.40. Sloan's Limiment heerp ts handy Shoe Repairing Joe Crewsky repair shop does uality shoe repairing. A fancy job at a reasonable Pree Many jobs can be done while you wait. Send your work to me by parcel post and I will do the rest. JOE CREWSKY Phone 898 nae 2 SIBERIAN PROGRAM WORLD-WIDE SUFFERING Turning toward ihe rest of the world, Dr. Farrand declared the or- ganization was “confronted by a de- gree of ‘suffering and helpfulness which is infinitely beyond the possi- bilities of any funds at the disposal of the Red € and of. all other relict izath ombined adequately to meet.” s the wish of the Ameri- can people, he added, that as much money as, possible should be raised to meet emergencies abroad, Concerning the general European relief situation, application own funds, but i¢ should be recognized that it holds at all times, So far it mily he practicabla, to administer anv other funds which may be entrusted to.it to‘ relieve distress in. all parts of the world where it maintains commts- ions or representatives or which the anization is able effectively. tv From its own treasury the Red will appropriate $15,000,000 for general European relief. FASTERN RUROPE. i of suffering, s partionlarly . far beyond any- thing that. the resources of. the Red Cross and of all other relief agencies could hope to meet, It is certain, how over, that this snin, together with’ the surplus military supplies, ‘partly en: trusted tous by the United States g67 ernment and partly previously pur chased hy. the Red Cr ean, wisely administered, go far. to ‘mitigate ex- treme suffering. “Of: this.appropriation of $15,000,000 for European retief.“a considerable re- serve must. be held for emergency calts ‘incident to such possible. events as the opening of Russia to intercourse with the United States, or other fundamen: tal changes. in foreign conditions, WORK IN SIBERTA, ‘It is also estim: pletion of our wo for an appropr of $1,250,000, These proposed appropriations ani reservations represent the ability of the Red Cross at this time to mect the conditions brought about by the war. It is clear that these expenditures will only ‘to a very limited degree meet. the needs pf the stricken, needy, helpless and disorganized parts of the world. They will, however, enable the Red Cross not only to relieve extreme syft- fering. but to carry, as well, a message of cheer and re-assurance, and of American sympathy.” Bad for the tor. People of Siam are cautious. about getting Into debt. When a debtor is three months in arrears he can he seized by the-creditor and compelled to work out hig indebtedness. Should the debtor run away, his father, his wife or his children’ may be tield to slavery until the debt is canceled, SPOKANE JOB FOR FARGO GRADUATE Spokane, Wash., is not too far away for Dakota Business Col- lege, Fargo, N. D., to place its students.. Pupils are accepted on the recommendation of this exceptional school all over the United States. Miss Edith Lebo, a D. B. C. graduate, was anxious to locate in Spokane and was employed by the Great Northern R. R. on D. Mabel Bourman was recommend- ed to and placed with the Fisk Rubber Co., Minot, N. D.,~as cashier. “Follow the $ucce$$ful.” Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D., for. informa- tion. HEARTBURN or heaviness after meals are piper coher “K-MOIDS: pleasant, to tak aci ecidiy and raele tevtere sestore DADE BY SCOTT @ BOWNS OF SCOTT'S B. C.’s favorable report. Miss{- TO BE MADE T0 HELP CHURCHES Religious Affiliation and Prefer- ence of Every Person to Re Listed A complete religious canvas of the city's Inhabitants wil be made under the direction of the various churches and a committee consisting of Rev H. G. Postlethwaite of the Preshyte- rian church and Rev. George H. Quig- ley of the Methodist. church has been named to secure the approval of all the pastors of the city. This action was taken at the mecting of. the “Ris- marck Mlulsterial assoclation yester- day. ‘The association bas planned to have a committce of five members from each church and these various committecs will meet at the Commercial club on the afternoon of January 13 for the pur- pose of perfecting plans for the canvas- sing of the city. This main commit- tee wilt have 60 members, the mem- bers. of which will visit every honse in the city and obtain the religious af- filiation of every person. INCREASE CHURCH ATTENDANCE: The purpose of securing the roligious affiliation of each person is to increase the interest in church work and at- tendance, The cards with the names and cburch will be given ‘to the mi ters of each church for the purpose of getting non-church goers more in- terested in church attendance and the work the various churches are doing. George W. Keniston, secretary of the Commercial, club, addressed the minis ters on Go to Church Sunday” and “TAKE ‘JAZZ’ OUT OF POLITICS” the religions canvas was the result of Mr. Keniston’s talk, LAW ENFORCEMENT SUNDAY. The ministers present at the meet- ing unanimously decided to co-operate with the gevernment in observing “Law. Enforcement Sunday” on Janu- ary 18. The government has requeste1 the ministers throughout. the country to speak on this topic in churches on that Sunday stressing the importance of aiding tho government in observniz the national prohibition act, This mat- fer was presented to the association by Rev. F. 1. Watkins of the law en- forcement league. [Gry NEWS 4 x) ons DICKINSON ON: BUSINESS. C.-A. Barton left for Dickinson this morning on business and will return to this city tomorrow. PRINTING PRESSMEN. MERT. The monthly meeting of the Printing Pressmen'’s union will be held tonight at. Lahor hall on Fourth street. PROM PAUL. returned yesterday from St. Paul, where he has heen v! ing over the Christa s holidays. MEET AT K K.P. HALL. Capital Clty Homestead No. 200 will mort tonigte at the Kalghts of Pythias hall, All members are urged to be present, ———_ BABY BOY ROR: A boy. was. born Sunday afternoon to Mr. and: Mrs. Mike Bashara, 113 First street, The baby and mother are doing well. a VISITING F. FE. MCURDY, A. ©. McCurdy of Backoo, ts vistt- ing his brother, F. FE. McCurdy. Mr. McCurdy. intends returning .to. his home tonight. Is ry TOSPITAL: TL; Van Wook is confined in the Bis- mharck hospital, Mr. Van Hook is, not. very fl and expects to be able to re- turn home soon. A. OW. W. MEETS TONIGHT, The Bismarck chapter of the An- clent Order of United Workmen will hold its semi-monthly meeting at the Fiks’ club tonight. HERE RE FROM HALLIDAY. Irving Lewis of Halliday,. was in Pismarck yesterday on business an‘ visiting friends. Mr, Lewis {s a promi- nent real estate man of Halliday. CURRENT EVENTS CLUB. The Current Events club will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. A. P, Lenhart, 64 Avenue B east. An interesting program has been pr. pared, ELKS INITIATE SOON. A number of new members will be initiated” into the Bicmarck lodge of Fiks on January 16, Considerable preparations are being made for this ceremony, chureh left yesterday for Teun, where he is attending a series of meet- inga that will be held during the pres- ent week. mas TAF IN BED, Charles Owen of the City National | bank, who has heen ill in hed for the past few days. is recovering and ex- peets ta he able to return to work {n a day or two. RIV THICK, The Ieo in the Missouri river at Ris- marck is 26 inches thick, This is a record for this time of the year. old- time residents say. Much ice has been cut already for commercial purposes, KASTERN ST) i The Bismarck chapter No, 11, Order of Fastern &tar, will hold: ils semi- monihly meeting tonight at the Mason- le temple. Affiliation and balloting on petitions will be the principle buai- ness, TO MINE Mr. and Mes. Andr night for Minneapolis and St: Paul. where they will spend a week's vaca- tion, While there they will join Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zuger, who went. to the Twin eitfes Saturday, RANKS ISSUING BOOKLETS. AS an evidence that the new year has really started all of the banks of the city are giving their customers and others booklets containing the calendar for the year with suitable space for memorandums and valuabl information, Amofig the books that ate WILL #1. (BY. H. P. BURTON) New York,. Jan. 5.—His name is Will. Not Bill nor William and, in manners and aspect, he fits that plain and satisfying appellation. Will H. Hays, for two years chair- man of the Republican National Com- mittee, is now, ‘at 39, not infrequently mentioned in‘ connection with the can- didacy for the highest office this nation has to bestow. Ife comes from Sullivan, Ind., 4 plain American. from a region ric American..';-He speaks, when the pro- per inspiration is upon him, n_ the pungent, homely phrases that we have come to regard ‘as Lincolnesque.| “I'm not So concerned, as to whether our men’ and women, yote the. Repun- Hean ticket,*he said to me, in starting to discuss:'the coming campaign, “as 1f gacredly equal.” am in getting them ontXinto, politic. Vill take a-chiance ‘on. their joining ous party, once “they get into action, “People have come to view politics as some mysterious thing way up in the Glouds Where faucets ‘are turned on and off hy ‘remote sorcerers of some sort, who have a knowledge not of this earth. NOTHING MYSTERIOUS ABOUT POLITICS “As a. matter of fact, there is abso- lntely nothing mysterions and dustily academic about potitics, -Its.technique is siniple and grows more simple (1s more, brains ‘are injected into it. No longer do we ‘take sertously the old- style voodoo men of. politics with their incantations av they. stirred the pot on. the: stroke of 12, PEOPLE SHOULD NELP TO GOVERN THEMSELVES “We have got to take the reputation for’ ‘jazz’ out of polities, too; so that serious-minded men and women—the kind who. aroused by. the republ: recent':peril, did such wonderful work r our Liberty. Loans, our Red Crosa bureaus and our canteens—will just naturally accept the fact that helping’ govern themselves is-part of their business, “Tt doesn’t ‘matter which side they belong to: I attribute honesty of pur- pose ‘to the opposition and all that 1, as an American, insist on is that the contest between the parties shall be based on which best can serve Ameri- ca, which most can give her. “The only clever ‘politics’ now as we used to use the word, is finding out HAYS what fs best for the country and do- ing it first. “During the war, the Republicans determined ‘every act by deciding how we could contribute most to the sum total of the war-god. Now every act shall he measured absolutely by how we can contribute the most towar. making and keeping conditions right ir this country for the welfare of the peo ple and the glory of the nation. FRER POLITICAL in faet, just one kind ot possible successful political manage- ment and that. is to make it. absolutely certain that the rights of. the individ ual membership within the party to partic’ ipate. in the party’s affairs shall remain always. equally sacred. and HAYS’ IDEAS WILL SOON BEAR PROUIT The concrete result of this under- Standing of the rise in political em»- tion on the part of Will Hays wilt soon show in the formation of the. Re- publican platform for the presidential election, Sixty representative men and women have been drafted to meet and draw this up, carefully and with expert pre- cision, Every group inthe country— business, labor, the, farmers and the public—will be. represented, and six months will he given dyer to the evolu- tion cf the document, heen sufficiently recognized in councils of the nation. In the erisis was our salvation. . The labor of this country is entitled to, and wil] receive of the nation. ¢ We will hay Jnst re: medial legislation for te hotiermert of this great group of one population at all tlmes, not only bees use it | their due, but because by Justice we can always prevent ihe ‘nsidions tn- fluence of the crimina) clement of the I. W. W. from taking hold in (ho nuit of real labor. “The business men of this country were supremely loyal and are entitled to every consideration including the tight. to run their own business, “It -is simply a matter of Roose- velt’s ‘square deal’—exact justice for labor, exact justice for capital, and exact justice for the public, the third) side of the triangle.” eee eae mor rr Ow—vOR>RE>DOO~™O™me—ese—=~> exccedingly attractive are those given by the Bismarck bank, the First Na- tional bank, the City Naticnal. bank and ‘others, VISITING SISTER. Joseph Barth of St. Paul,.who has heen: visiting ‘his sister, Mrs. Charles Owens, for the past week .returned to his home last night. Mr. Barth is well known in this city and was formerly connected with S.°E. Bergeson & Sor. TERE ON Bt ASS. C. E. Wanner, general dgent of Bar- ton & Beck at Devils Lake. was in Bis- marck yesterday visiting the local offt cer of that company, Wr. Wanner re- ports business in. the northern city very good. SPEEDSTERS F Marry Barton, ‘automobilist and life insurance man, and J, +C. Cameron, Rismarek’s higdman, were hefore Po: Nee: Magistrate” Howell yesterday on charges . of: speeding and. operating RIN A Wholeseme, Cleansing, Reireshing and Healing Leties—Murine for Red- ton licking end Burning [tching a: rning s R, VESoe the Eyes or Eras a fur sa re cea, fas Care. Murine vine Rive Hemvedy Co., Chicago their automobiles without. mufflers. Barton and Cameron both drive Essex and they claim it is pretty hard to Keep the cars down to the legal spee.l mit. ANNIVERSARY SURPRISE. A «number of intimate friends of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McDonald sur- prised them Sunday night at their home in honor of Mr. and Mrs. McDon- ald’s twenty-fourtl? wedding anniver- The guests, of whom there were five couples, brought various good things to eat along with them and the evening was spent in an enjoyable manner, ———o_o_O___—_——_=_= |BUY GOOD COAL; IT IS THE CHEAPEST Get acquainted with our Black Diamond Coal —the coal without a fault. We have a good supply on ‘hand in lump and egg sizes, and will make deliveries prompt- Gati/ly,. Phone 115. F. H. Carpenter Lumber Co. Now fs a Good Time The Trouble Is in the Suuimer: catarrh, ably its nause- ous discharge, stuffed up glands, difficult breathing, and summer colds, is had enough, but the worst yet to come if you neglect to check ‘ihe owth that is form. ing tc attack you with ‘ten-fold Greater power during the winter. That's why. treat citar ib ‘is so ga EN yt To Driye Out Catarth Tt is now an established fast that catarrh is in the blood ou thaf lotions and salves do not i relief. The experience of ot! ee has proven that S. S..S. striki the root of the trouble. AVaste 3 \ time in this matter, for of the utmost importance. Write to our Medical, Advisor about your case. Address Ss Specific Co, Dept. “Our party feels that labor has. not ‘ the}; through which. we have. passed, Inhor |. fair representation in. ol the counetls |* Nettleton: —AND— Florsheim Shoes for men who care Rosen’s Clothing Shop ‘Fashion Park Clothiers WOMEN SITTING WITH MEN IN G. 0. P. CONFERENCE TO RESCUE AMERICA _ Chicago, Jan, 5.—Nearly 1,000 republican men and women from fourteen central west states- are here today for the first of three two-day conferences arranged by Will H. Hays national chairman ; for January. The second will be held in Denver on January 8 and 9 and the third in San Francisco. on January 12 and 13. Women are to take a prominent part in these gatherings. according. man’s anda drink. drink — woman’s | cit to party leaders who are planning their national campaign’ on the supposition that. the national suuffrage amendment will be rati- fied in time to give all women votes at the November..election. To Cure a Cold-in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE: (Tablets). It stops the Congh anid Headache and works off the Cold. I. W. GROVE'’S signature on each box. is the old Virginia Dare you have always loved —minus the alcohol. Delightful plain, or mixed as you would a cocktail, highball, punch, cobbler, or tickey. Virginia Dek Orange Cocktail The juice of half an orange, wine glass of Virginia Dare, s! large glass with fine ice, serve in cocktail glasses. entertainment. Sold everywhere. Ask your dealer, or write us direct for “The Art of Hospitality” —a book that solves the problem of social GARRETT & CO., Ine. Bush Terminal Bldg. No. 10 BROOKLYN, N. Y. ake in @ Phone 370 for advice on the care of Storage Bat- teries. Questions cheerfully answered. WILLARD SERVICE STATION 408 BROADWAY

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