The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1920, Page 2

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TWU < I" A- Wartime Recipe STEELE AGAIN 3 | ray immediately -made black, brown or | A sire, by the use of the following rem- és jedy that you can make at home: y get a box of Orley powder | tany drug store. It costs very little xtras fo buy. Diysolye it, boom of distilled or rain’ water and Feomb it through the h Full direc: j tions for use and a $100.00 gold bond ee, tconm@s in each box guarantecing the Directors and oftic of the Pr vie user that Orlex powder 4loes not cons dent Life Insurance Co. of this city; tain silver, lead. zine, sulphur, aner- were named Wednesday at the annu-| enry, aniline, coal tar products or their al meeting of the co » The of- | derivatives. H *rovident of Bismarck Re-elects | Officers Who Served During 1919 fieres are: TLL . president: |. It is: sate, does not rub o! | fore On dent and gen-! sticky or gummy and eral counsel; jonklin, secre: | flutty. oy tary; J. L. Bel and Dr. W.{ person look 2 H. Bode medical director, { The dire of the company named | by the stockholders at the’ annual! yy» Conklin said: “With the attained meeting Cc. B. Lil lin of Bi: h of Page. H. H. Dahl of, Norma, | - of Bismarck: F. L. Conk-! of the Provident: Insurance Co, L. B. Hanna, W. J.| the insuring public has gained a know- orek 5 ledge of its has ma Other members plans and purpos: record for prompt J. RL Davis of Goodri ment of its death claims and h . Haminer of Cooperstown, record fer sound and ethical 7 Young of Bismarck, W. H. M: ices; the company is being built on Platou of Far-j a sirong foundation, looking to a great life insurance company in its. home te furnishing substantial protection policy holders and giving the state the benefit of its investments.” sued and de-} Election of officers under the newly nee for the year 1919! adopted constitution will be the prin- 778,492.00 with a total | cipal business at the first annual neet- ing of the women's auxiliary of the Tismarck post of the Ame an legion, The meeting will start promptly at 8 o'clock and will be held in the Eiks club on Main street. Jt is expected that the investiga- tion comffiitee, which was clected at | the organizatign meeting of, the aux: iliary two weeks ago will make a New Salem, Dr. L. S. go, John 1. Reuter of Underwood, W. L, Richards of Dickinson,.H. H. Steele | of Mohall, W. ©. Taylor of LaMou The company h had d very s livered insu amounting to in force at the end of the period of+ 2 i The annual pts amounting to S415 to policy holde year 1919 the compa favorable mortality ratio, being 41.9 per cent of the amount th could be expected accordatig fo me | | tality tables upon which the reserv®| very important report-covering ils ac- is based tivities since that time. The nature | The notable increases in the stete-|of this report, it is understood, of such importance ‘hat all members of ment ar _of| the auxiliary should be preseht when Inc mium income, 66 per cent; inc sets, 70 per cent; | action is taken on it. increase in nee forces 69 per Besides the election of officers, the cent; increase in policy reserves, 117] election of members of the invest per cent; inc in new business, | tion committee will also be held,-as well'as the election of two members The busin of the company for|to the executive committee. An ur- the last year was produced by 51 gen- | gent request is made to all women in| eral and special agents working un- | this on eligible to mentbership in der all time contracts and 173 local | the auxiliary who have not already agents, making a total of 224 active | signed up to attend this meeting and producers on the agency force. affix their names to the membership In speaking of the company's growth | rolls. 60 per cent. VAG SP SO ST) Soe Sees and drudge; no time to be sick; tired, ailing, yet can- not There comes a time when something nifps” and they find themselves “simply worn out,” and to make matters nse, have contracted s ninine disorder which almost onsiaat overtaxing of a womin’s strength, Ww ETRE iolows th henid remember that there is no remedy like tkham’s Veretable Compound—the expe- @ wo women establishes that fact: § vy, Ohio.—“ Afterthe birth T had organic trouble. id it caused by I would ion. n operation =f v, haying, | ee Ww Compound khaim’s Sana- \| ing and sewing for my and also do sewing for other people, Tatil take a bottle of Vege- | table Compound every spring for a tonie. L recommend your medici todthers who have trouble: to mine and you can use my letter i Mrs. Paub PAPEN- e St., Sandusky, Qhie - 2 Out Women Should Take of any k TT. Ko: » Tow Ati Wor: ‘ Columbia Phonographs — Columbia Records ON EASY TERMS WHEN DESIRED COWAN’S DRUG STORE \ “BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUNE AGED BLIND WOMA N PLEADS FOR THE CHEROKEE TRIBE | | 4 N. BE. A. Washington Bureau, 1128-1134 Munsey Bldg. WASHINGTON, D. €. Although 76 years old, afflicted with total blindne widowed and flepend- ent upon her children for the Dare ne- q ies of life, Mrs.’ Susan Sanders yirtually friend and, counsellor to 2 whole tribal “rate. — Vested swith the power of attorney, equipped with age- old historical records, and undaunted by has brought her. appeal directly to Vv ington for an adjustment of the claims between the government and the Cherokee Indians, Almost. paralleling the: initialofforts of the United States government to dissolye tribal bonds and. absorb the Inditn into the generat population, 1s thé career of Susan Sanders. Born in Going Shake-co, Indian Territory, in 1843, in Common with other members of the intelligent Cherokee tribe, she Demeaned the broken arrows and dead campfires of a decadent race, She ob- 1 in suspicious wonderment the f the first railxoad track in Indian ritory, and yelates with picturesque description how the pro moters of the railway succeeded in en- only the daring few to take the initial ride on the picnie exeursion Susan Sanders was among the over- whelming majority who was afraid of the “thing.” Ter_mission to Washington has. for its purpose the ‘collection of $18,000,- 000 from the government, which she Gaims is due‘ the Cherokees beeause of treaties and unfulfilled prom ses with respect. to the adminis- acres of t n of 14,000,000 land decded the tribe in ¢ tory west -of the Missis “There were 4919 deed ered persons, Who were dom by the United States, but it is unconstitutional ‘for them to use our and Says Wwe deeds issued to white nersons contrary te law and treat “Intermarried whites v “500 a head ‘to. share Cherokee lands, which the; The money was. to be en the na- tional fund for the Cherokees, Only one white man has paid the specified re to pay our beloved did not do, | $500—Jos. Abscales, a veteran of the old days American through and through. We have -heen waging this fight for our rights since 1898.” America’s Duty ie | to Russia’ Shown os ad s duty to & Commenting on Amer a, Elihu Root. say y is the time to-lay the: foun- daticns, to~take the first steps; to establish the relations necessary for the friendly and useful intercourse ot trade between the United States and Russi One form of, activity which carries no condescension Qn de nor humiliation on the other, is, beneficial to both parties, ‘air trade. The people of Russfa need—deeply, desperately. need—-the things. that we can. supply ‘to them, by the establishment of intercourse in the exchange of products, which has been the basis of all the pros- perity -and the opportunities for growth among civilizednations. Must Destroy Bolshevism. “The third thing-I want to say is, that Russia is the place for cans to fight and destroy Bolsh We are fiddling around here few Bolshevik agents, and we pick up a great outcry in the newspapers about deporting them, a few; among the thousands; and the men who have gained-control of old Russia by the use of German money, by ihe use | of mercenary troops, by the exercise of a tyranny and terrorism and cru- elty never surpassed in history—those men are using the resources of that great, rit country. to pour. out a steady stream of. propagandists, who laugh at our feeble efforts. / “We are like the physician who attempts to heal a mortal disease by a poultice upon’ the surface, instead of cutting to_the seat of the infec- tion and curetting the wound. ‘The way to destroy Bolshevism is to put. | the strength and heartiness and cour- age and hope of prosperity into the people of Russia, who are ready them- selves to destroy Bolshevism if they can but have the means, to support lite and to hold themselves together; and to secure supplies and ammuni- tion and to pay their troops and to furnish them with shoes and <lothes, and to make head against that horrid group of cut-throats and a: ins and yrants who are now oppressing them. That is the way to fight Bolshevism, at its centre, at its source, the source of its supplies, and the source of its ‘Weak, Thin, Nervous People Should Take Bitro-Phosphate What It-Is:And How It Increases ‘Weight, Strength and Merve-Force. Judgiig fro the countless-preparations an@ fF treatments which are continually being adver- tised for the purpose of making thin people fleshy, developing arms and neck, and replac- ing ugty hollows and angles by the soft curved lines of health and beauty, there-are evl- dently thousands of men and women who keenly feel thetr excessive thinness. ‘Thinness and weakness are often due to starved nerves, Our bodies need more phos- than ig contained in modern foods. rsiclans claim there is nothing that will supply this deficiency so well as ‘the organic phosphate known among druggists as bitro- phosphate, which 1s inexpensive and fe sold b; most all druggists under a guarantee of satis fuctiorr or money back. By feeding the nerves directly and by sup- plying the wedy. cells with the n ary phos- phoric food elements, ditro-phosphate should fon produce a wolcome transformation in the appearance; the sncresse a welght frequently dein; onishing. \ Tnerease in. weight also carries with It a general improvement in the health. Nervous- Hess, sleeplessness and lack of energy, which always accompany excessive thinness, should soon disappear, dull eyes brighten, and ple cheeks slow ‘with the bloom of perfect health, GAUTTON:—Watld D3itro-Phosphate is un surpassed, for the relief of nervousness, general Gcbility, -éte,, those.taking 1t who do not de- sire to put on flesh showld use extra chre arolding fat-pioduc! 1 ‘ss Of unsuccessful effort, she |, 2 dozen or a hundred and make , sitength. And we sit idle, doing noth- ing. Hasn't Lost Faith. “J have-lost no faith in the future of Rusgia. It is. but a short time, less than three years, was dethroned, laration of Independence in 1776, aud amid turmoil and confusion and di! sension, we reached a settled govern- ment only in 1789, more than four times the period that! has clapsed in Russia; and we had the advantage or great gnd then unprecedented ex- perlence in the art of, government, for we had_been building up self-gov- erninent’ for “a’ contury and a_ halt when‘ our American Revolution came. “How long it was before France— France, with all its culture, its sci- ence, its art, itsJiterature, its polite manners—before France achicved its evolution and settled goverament a: ter it. XVI, and ‘hen came the Terror and the Directoire and the Empire and the Restoration and the Second Re- public and the Second Empire; and two generations passed befo: she government. “The English beheated Charles 1 in 1649. How long it’ was before she attained settled condition: Eleven years later she so despaired of the success of herjattempt to secure pop- ular freedom that she went ck in the Restoration of Charles J, and it was not until what the Engl called the glorious Revolution of 1688, ly forty years later, that her became settled.” MUSTARD GAS AND MACHINE NEW YORK; Jan, 21.—Mustard gas and machine guns. are.to be used by Captain Harryode:¥indt, «an English erplorer, against the poisoned arrows of a’ tibe described .as “white canni- bals” on Tiburon Island, on the Pacific coast, he announced here today, Cap- tain “de Windt said he would leave New York in 2 few days to lead ‘an erpidition of -six civilians and th score Mexican soldiers to the is Tiburon is said to have rich deposits of pitchblende from. which radium is made. The island is about 48 hours by rail from Coronado Beach, Cal. habitants are ‘said to be descendants ;of Dutch, Swedish and German pris- ; oners who escaped from Mexican pri ons several centuries ago, teen persons known to have the island in the past few y parties of two and three, nly are said to haye retyned al others £ ng victims to the flax-ha el, blue-eyed, “white Indians”>as the Mexican peons call them, i miles from the Mexican aid Myr. deWindt, “Tiburon is Yaqui Indians, who live on the main land, call Tiburon the ‘Island of Death’ for the, reason that any person who lands on it is shot by poisoned darts and then eaton the natives, The canni in ad- to hows and ancient plunderbuss. They ed to numeby from 500. to sons, | “Besides, myself. the expedition will lead will Consist of Mackenzi Grieve, the companion of Harry, Haw- ker when he fell during\his attempted transatlantic flight; an expert radium mining engineer, an expert copper mining engineer; Anten Gibbon, neph- ew of: Pres of Mexico, in whose name the concession permit ting the exploration of the island was vant and sixty Mex . assigned? to the party in governinent, 1 imagine the searchings on the island will con- sume about three or four months. WOLVES DEVASTATING BIG GAME FASTNESSES nd. an Fisher iver, Man. Jan. 21-— Wolves are devastating the big game haunts in the Poplar river region north of Lake Winnipeg and hun- dreds of miles north of the end of Steel, according to F. G. Stevens, a missionary who has returned to the local station after a long journey through the wild country inhabited by the Blood Vein and Berens River In- dians. “Timber wolves are simply ,swarm- ing the country north of Lake Win- Trap: nipeg,” said the missionary. Pers told me they are destr many times the number of 4 moose that was killed by hunters last season. Deep snow has aided the lsavage packs and the few vesidents of that country are hoping the gov- ernment will do something’ to con- serve its game resources.” Fur bearivg’ animals are reported to be unusually scarce in that coun- try this winter. Sharp competition by advance agents of fur doalers is said to have resulted in dishonest practices which already has “resulted in lots of trouble,”*the missionayy de: eclared. It is’ claimed that trappe obtained possession of sheets contain- ing buyers’ prices at stations nearer In 1793’ she beheaded Louis, § reached her goal of settled popular The in- | ‘Daily Matinees. .. . ‘ 1920, THURSDAY, JANCARY 22, FIRST SHOW.....3 p. m. SECOND SHOW ...7 p.m. ‘THIRD SHOW.....9 p. m. eccrine Nights -10c Children ... . Le ‘i -20ce Adults » -25¢ These Prices Include the War Tax me? You Are Hereby Summoned—- | With Your REX Any Performance Today at the Wife, Sweetheart, Mother or Sister THEATRE to.act as judge and jury in a case of exceptional interest. It con- cerns a girl who bare d her soul. With her hand on the Bible, she swore, “I was guilty with Drake, I was guilty with Dana, when my husband asked me I could-not tell him. ‘But her words were lies. os ‘ , HAD SHE “THE RIGHT TO LIE?” To Her Husband, to Save Her Husband? 4 _ PATHE REVIEW In Colors—One Reel The Rex Symphony Orchestra An Absolutely Fireproof Theatre Clean, Sanitary and Well Ventilated ROLIN COMEDY “SNUB” POLLARD —I IT'S A HARD LIFE” Friday and Saturday—“A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS” DAILY MATINEES AT 3 P. M. ous agents pierced the wilds in an effort to buy furs at former prices, | they received a warm reception. ‘Threats to boycott: Indian trappers } Were met with threats to boycott the agents, it is claimed. . “Keen satisfaction. was expressed by the few white’ men in that couwa- try over the official announcement that the Royal Canadian Mounted Po- lice, the organigation recently devel: }oped from the old Royal Moun will have posts north of. Lake »V nipeg,” said . Stevens. “Murders, thieves, libertines and poachers have done about as they pleased in that; country.” SOUTH DAKOTA CITIZENS MAKING BIG WOLF DRIVE South Shore, S. i of South Shore ities gathered here tod: nt wolf drive of the year s section of the state. Cattle sheep, losses from -wolves andj I and coyotes in the last two months of ivtd were claimed. The plan is to drive the predatory créature toward Punished Woman's lake and to do the killing there. The hunt will cover an area of 64 miles. | In addition to private and state ies, the hunters will be able to of the unprecedented, it -is pelts at top notch . It is probable that the finan- cial income from the round=up will he distributed equally to those who CANADA DETERMINING WORLD'S WAR'S COS [RIN Night at Morning «if p Your Eyes Write For tree Eye Care Book Murine Cc. Chicago, USA. Fixtures and Dishes cheap if taken y at once Broadway Cafe Opposite City Scales “GUNS TO QUELL CANNIBALS civilization and that when adventur-! indicates that’ the total cost to date | expense for 1914-1915 was’ $60,750,000, is more than $1,500,000,000. + Statistics compiled up to March 1919, showed, that the war cost for Canada at that time was $1,322,793, 312. Expenditures since then are esti- mated at $250,000,000, Three. quar- ters of a billion dollars was spent tor “Pay and ajlowances.” ™ War costs mounted annually. IN CONSTANT USE BY , PHYSICIANS EVERY DAY more than fifty years has been used as\S. S. S., which is recognize Almost every human ailment can|ed as the best known blood médi- be traced, one way or another, to|cine on the market. | \ impurities in the blood. So you] This fine old remedy is still made cannot overestimate the impor-{as of old from roots and herbs of tance of keeping your circulation] proven medicinal value. In fact, built up; so that your heart will be| physicians everywhere recognize constantly pumping rich, red, life-|the wonderful efficiency of these giving blood to all parts of the/roots, and they are prescribed in system. Any slight disorder or im-|some form or other almost daily. purity that creeps into the blood is} And now after being in con- a source of danger, for every vital] stant use for more. than half a organ of the body depends upon|century, S. S. S. is mote-popular, the blood supply, to properly per-|than ever. It is sold by practically form its functions. It ‘is quite|every drug store in the land, and true that practically every one is every druggist is well acquainted equally exposed to the attacks of|with its sterling merit, for they; disease. You are just as liable to| have seen its results. be attacked as the man or womany S. S. S. is a yery valuablé agent sitting next to you on the street] in the treatment of Catarrh, Rheue car. It all depends upon the con-| matism, Eczema, Tetter boils, pim- dition of your blood. If it is thin] ples, skin eruptions, malaria, and and impoverished, and has been] other disorders that come: from allowed to reach a low state by] blood impurities. : the accumulation cof impurities,| It is also without an equal as a you have not sufficient vitality to| general tonic and system builder. resist these germ attacks, and they|By its efficacy in cleansing the find a ‘tertile field in your system|blood of impurities, it builds up the Irie’ next’ year the total was $166,- 197,000, In 1916-17,~it was $806,488,- 600, in 1917-18, the total increased to $343,836,000 and in 1918-19, the amount was $446,519,000. | Oh! Yes! JOHNSON'S for The | Hosiery. eet ik Ba Bs Medicinal Value of S.S. S. Is Fully Recognized. Toronto, Ont., Jan. 2L—-Canadian| to spread disease. appetite and gives new life and government — officials and financiers | Over a hundred years ago the In-|yigor to the entire body. - are gathi statistics to determine dians made many excellent rem-| You are invited to write for val- the dominion’s war expenditures and dies and tonic from’ roots and|yable literature and medical ad- official and semi-official information herbs gathered from the forests. |vice, which will be sent without i One of these formulas was hand-| cost. Address Chief. Medical Ad- viser, Swift Laborator ed down to the white man.and for , Atlanta. \ Now under construction in the delightful city of Minneapolis. HE new CURTIS will be a spacious, metropolitan Hostelry--spiendidly complete in its appcintments, and having many rove! and unusual features to insure the Comfort and Enjoyment of its Guests. Reinforced concrete. fireprocf construction. Will have 600 single and double rocms with private baths~many attractive Suites-a commodious and inviting Lobby~public and private Dining Rooms--and exceilent facilities, for Dancing; Music, Parties, and. other social diversions. Moderate rates. 1 5 Ready for guests in the near future— write for our descriptive Booklet. CurTIS HOTEL. COMPANY < —_ ; Third to Fourth Ave. S.on Tenth St... Minpeapolie, Minn. *

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