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BISMARCK DAILY: TRIBUNE SATURDAY, JAN. 31, 1920, f THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | A GARDEN LESSON ; - Last spring the writer of this piece grudgingly intered at the Postofiice, “Bismarck, N. D. as Second} gave space in. his flower garden for.a five-cent 2 package of lettuce seed. Editor! They came up happily, ungrudgingly, and inas- much as they nestled among the flowers they were given a reasonable amount of cultivation. From May 15 until July 15 lettuce from that tiny bed graced the wife’s table every singe day in goodly a Gao PERSE eating quantities. Midsummer heat made the i MEMBER OF ASSOCI hard seed stalks grow, but no matter, fromtJuly Yellen ‘ot ail Ena Ghetiited tb for not otherwise 15 until September 15 the stalks yielded leaves for ted fn this paper and also the local news published the pases of salads and for various purposes, deco- ‘Fights of publication of special dispatches herein are rative among others.’ When it was all over, the jalso reserved. mistress of the house announced that‘if she had MBABER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | purchased all the lettuce used during that four PON eee PAYABLE IN ADVANCE |, months from her grower, it would have cost $16. | Day roa per year (In Bismarck)... - 720 This is offered as just a little lesson to the city eily i bypmall, per year (in atete putside Bismarck). 59° householder. You) can get a very respectable, Pedy dy mal, out money-saving vegetable garden on a very small gy THE a i rrr hs ad plot of ground. Six feet square will carry a half : dozen different kinds of vegetables, and require aad ‘very little attention and work.. A patch 10 by 6 THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION _ is better because it would be no more labor to the The ‘republican state convention called by Na- Man or woman who is willing to take care of six tional Committeeman Gunder Olson has come and feet square. : gone Without furnishing any of the sensations Moreover, you get your vegetables fresh with which: Red river republicans so cheerfully pre- all the delicious original flavor. : Aes dicted, It was a simple, harmonious gathering You will get health from the little exercise in of sinton-pure republicans, who met together in a the fresh air. ed F ‘ friendly and informal way, discussed ‘hational is. And you're a poor stick if you, don’t. obtain sues, renewed their pledges to the principles of oad in seeing your own things grow and grow ir { istened to a patriotic republican ad- and grow. sunt ie itor Botiec oa Metuaker nominated Get ready for a little bit of garden the coming a natjonal committeeman, aceeset to “e aa spring. tionak convention, presidential electors and alter- —_—————__ nates; and adjourned, all in ah orderly and per- CHANCE TO INVEST ; fectly regular manner. 4 The Inter-Stellar Rapid Transit Co. (quite un- Thé state convention resembled an old-fashioned limited) may shortly announce an issue of stock. town imeeting more than anything else. There was _ Dr. Robert H. Goddard, inventor of the multiple no slate; nothing, apparently, had been <‘fixed” explosion rocket’ by which it is thought contact in advance; there was nothing to deliver and there With the moon may be ‘established, proposes a was no attempt to deliver the impossible. Noone Popular subscription fund of $50,000 or $100,000 whose republicanism could not stand the acid test ito develop the air and other ways to the satellite. was admitted to the deliberations of the conven-| The gentleman who sold the Paris subway sys- tion every republican who was known tolbe 100 tem and Londen bridge and that other ambitious per dent pure was admitted, and every individual financier who located a polar ice depot on a Da- had just as much to say about what was done as | kota farmer’s acreage, will ‘be less interested in any other individual. Surely nothing could have} Inter-Stellar Rapid Transit than those folks whom beer fairer and freer of any suggestion of bossism. | Barnum said come into the world at the rate of 60 The Tribune trusts that its Red river friends are |each hour. ; now satisfied that they were barking up the wrong| ‘ However, the people who still ‘must mortgage tree; and, if so convinced; we are confident that! their, sealskins and automobiles to purchase beef- they are manly!enough to admit it., If, there. is steak and cereal may never have an opportunity to be a second state convention, the:proper thing | “get in on the ground floor” on this proposition for this assembly to do would ‘be to endorse. the|that must “eventually soar by leaps ahd bounds,” ; ticket nominated by the delegates who gathered tfanscending even blue sky: laws., Consider. the there Wednesday at the call of National Commit-| chap who paid a comet discovered $50,000 recently teeman Olson. f to act as god-father and namesake for the celestial If the republican ,party is to accomplish any- newcomer. No, “Cautious Investor” and “Inex- thizig in the epochal state and national campaigns perienced,” no, this stock will not be for such as whfch are to be waged this year it must battle in|You.' Stick to your oil and your punctureless tires united, solid phalanxes. It can do ‘nothing if|and new-fangled fast mail pouch catchers and divjded into several camps, even if the aim. of ail leave Inter-Stellar for those who can afford to in- thése rival factions, is the same. Some harm al-|Vest in notoriety, even honor, without regard to ready has been done, but it is, not 80, serious that it |Profits. ; yon cannot be corrected. 5). complete restoration of |” colifidence among, the leaders and in the.rank and file is the only remédy whith will'do the pene . Voreign Representatives * G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, , -; | DETROIT, | ochre Sag. - : : = -Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Jet we) oe | + Fifth Ave, Bhig. “ At is just as well that Clemenceau withdyew: & han accustomed to real power. couldn’t: be happ: li | __ W¢ trust that the doltting Thomase thé Hed in a minor Position anyway: ; fir | | sso river valley ‘who! are. ane cs ify thé tel ET aL a | °)> “publicans of North’ ta; willl ecnttpleta ‘this ‘task ey ee neers |). to:their own datisfaction/ end that! they Will then | _ WITH THE EDITORS ..; ‘': i beckindl enough to inform ah axxiols public “Who's; eee o”” in the grand old party.’ This done, wemay| ©. A LINCOLN CALL TO LOYALTY: | |) - pebeéed with the:more important business which| ‘The name of Abraham Lincoln,is,oh the tongues } we have,at hand; aL Ff of! men, today wherever liberty and justice and ; vO a spalase ea pehce are dear. He is memorialized as one ofthe i ' BUILDING SHIPS human landmarks of world history. He wal ti “he refusal the other day of the United States statesman, seer and prophet, a friend.of human- shipping board to accept a neat little appropria- ity and a believer in orderly progress. From:a Re; tion of $125,000,000 is not only unique in these speech made by’ him in Springfield, ‘Ill, we call : dayg of reckless’ spending of ‘the public’s money, these words: fi : ba bot it brings’ to the fore the facts of America’s, Lét every American, every lover of liberty, wonderful leap into the business of making ships.| every well-wisher to his posterity, swear ‘by ‘In the past two or three months there has been! the blood of the Revolution never to violate very careful accounting in the shipping board’s' in the least particular the laws of the country . alfairs. - The personnel of the force has been re-'\ and never to tolerate their violation, * * duced, a number of wartime departments consoli- | Let every man remember that to violate the dated and on top of it all the board has received a___Jaw is to trample on the blood of his father, tptal of about $100,000,000 ag rent for government ; and to tear the charter of his own and his chil- yessels that have made many and profitable voy-: dren’s liberty. Let reverence for the laws be ‘ages during the past year, ‘ breathed by every American mother, to the {All this puts the shipping board on a peace _ lisping babe that prattles on her lap; let it be basis. In April, 1917, when the board was organ- taught in the schools, in seminaries and col- ized, there were 61 shipyards in the United States _leges; let it be written in primers, spelling with 234 ways engaged in buildings. In Novem- books and in almanacs; let it be preached ‘per, 1919, when the armistice was ‘signed, there, from the pulpit, proclaimed ‘in legislative Swere 223 yards with 1,122 ways. halls, and enforced in courts of justice. And, + In 1917, the United States launched 106'ships,| in short, let it become the political religion of “dotaling 708,970 deadweight tons;\in 1918\the| the nation, and let the old and the young, , <)Qumber was 812 ships of 4,344,126 deadweight, the rich and the poor, the grave and the gay -°-Zonnage, AND.IN:1919 THERE WERE LAUNCH-| of -all sexes and tongues and colors and condi- : =D 1,065 SHIPS WITH TONNAGE OF 5,982,277!| tions sacrifice unceasingly upon its altars. > There remains of thé war construction program! Here was a ringing call to patriotism and good 534 ships of 3,661,767 deadweight tonnage, to be Citizenship half a century and more ago; it ap- *«completed and delivered prior to August, 1920, _{ Plies today as if it had been uttered but yesterday. ‘~S: Eighteen ships were constructed in Japan for It is not alone for those in whose hearts is the will * “a tonnage of 146,323. All these activities and the to destroy all law and government, but-as well for taking over of the German and Austrian ships those who, in the name of loyalty, mistakenly try ,gives the United States a merchant fleet in dead-. to take the law into their own hands. ‘ Obey the weight tonnage of 8,700,912 sieei ships, 1,799,123 law as it is, aud if the law be wrong help to make ;Wood:.1 ships, 63,000 composite, 10,000 concrete, it right by the peaceful means that are at the com- "or a total tonnage of 10,573,040, excluding 3,661,-|™mand of the people—that is one essential pari of _ €67 tobe completed in 1920. see ‘duct its affairs under, the 100 ner cent: Americanism.-»Minneanglis ‘Tribune. DRAIM PIPE. SEEMS To’ BE STOPPED UP- OU, HELEN, | SEE THERE tS A PEACH OF AMovIE. NER To THE CORNER TweaTeR! 1 HEARD IT DOINGS OF THE DUFFS “Tom, | WAVE SOME THINGS FOR You T_PO THis EVENING -FIRST | WISH Yo¥D FIA “This ICE BOX-ThE wag a frameup. I speak for the del gation from the Sixth Judidtgl: Dis:.-, trict. There were thirty men from Stark county, four from Sioux, some from Billings and Golden, Valley, Het- tinger and Grant counties who were ready to bolt the convention the min- ute anything in the nature of a frame- up showed up and when that district recommended for nomination such men, as Mr. Tostevin of the: Mandan Pioneer and Mr‘ Peterson of the Dick- inson Press I do not belieye that any sane person can say that there was a frame-up between that convention and Ag Townley, I have attended where things were cut and S dried: Defoe the convention opened but ° in this Gage.I do not believe that any- one could ‘Say from the manter ‘ii avhich the whole mass convention was conducted that theré could possibly have been diframe-up as any old line politician e@uld:haye stolen the con! yention at. ahy, timéithey wanted to. “\-: Tam) ‘going’ into: this“ lengthy ex- planation ¢ for </the? Fédson that your article leaves: tlie impression that I have _ been’ ‘dubbed. As yavhereas the greatest’crime that I baye committed ‘ts ‘that: attended a mass convention of ‘the Republican party ot the ptate of North ‘Dakota to which party I have always* belonged since ~ I casted my first:vote: at Fargo. 1 copyof this letter to the Bismarck Tribune so that if you do not see fit to publish it it will receive publicity. in’the’ Tribune. Yours truly Tom Has a Happy Thoyght. BY ALLM AN 7 NOW NEVER MIND WHE] CHEESE UT GET , T ICEBOK FIXED; ( tT You To Pur OW, HELeA!, WHEN! DID You GET Tus): FINE. CHEESE P Tam, DoNov REALIZ8, MAT Nov DID FR THAT ICB.BOK AND: STE Tunics Foe MEP EDWARD: OHNSON. Go Ta THE ne i UNCLE. SAM, M: D., GIVES © | MONIE DION T: | " YquP | HEALTH ADVICE = . u , Written by Experts Under Dir- | | ection of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. 8: Public Health Service, % * aoe —> IF THE FLU ATTACKS. YOU In guarding against disease of all kinds, it is important that the body be kept strong and able to fight off disease germs, . Perhaps. the best. way, this can be done isyby having ‘a proper } proportion of work, play’ and rest, by — , keeping the’ body well clothed, and by, : eating sufficient * wlioleséme and ction with diet, it is well to remember that milk is oné of the vest all-around foods obtainable for adults as well, as children. In a influenza health authori- The Golden Rule Applied to Business er skeptical about staying as when T had heard that such men as Judge Young and Judge Spaulding of Fargo, vhere recognize. the very close relation between its spread and overcrowding, While it is not always possible es- BY NAPOLEON HILL. It seems ridiculous to refer to the Golden Rule as a “weapon,” but that is just what it is—a weapon which no resistance on earth can withstand! The Golden Rule is a ‘powerful weapon in business because there is so little competition in its applica- tion. : i | At the time of this writing the whole world seems to have gone into the business of. “profiteering,” which means the same-ad “getting without giving fair value in return.” t This spirit of greed cannot, long prevail. What an‘ opportunity, ‘then, for the fa eights men who will! adopt the Golden Rule as their busi- ness motto now. The contrast would be so noticeable that it would excite business that could be handled, and) long after the profiteers have gone out of business those who have ap- plied the Golden Rule would find that they had “built their houses upon a rock.” { i What a glorious: opportunity’ the labor unions have to ride to victory —permanent, profitable, bloodless vic- :|tory—by applying the Golden Rule ; {and making it their motto. Will un- ion labor be big enough to see this opportunity and utilize it? What an opportunity the present situation of- fers: sone man in the rank:and file of labor’ to rise. to’ leadership, not only ‘of ‘organized labor merely, but to the highest :and ‘most responsible, Jéadership the American people have to offer, by influencing labor to con- Golden Rule philosophy. There is not a, situation on earth which does not offer a splendid op- portunity for some one to benefit by making use of the Golden Rule. The time is not far distant when it will be business suicide to try to con- duct business under any other stand- ard except the Golden, Rule, | This fact is so obvious that it seems to this writer expedient for the wise ones to fall in line now and thereby Trust Your Complexion To Cuticura jority of skin and scalp troubles wight be prevented by ine Cuticura Soap exclusively for all Ff On the slightest sign of redness, rongh- ness, pimples of dandruff, apply a little Cutititra Ointment. Do not fail toinclude the exquisitely scented Caticura Taicum. inyour toilet preparations. 2aceverywhere. xae-Cuticura Toilet Trio Sa isting of Soap, Ointment and Talcums ons ng okable adjuncts of the daily tor. | skin purity and skin } health. By these delitately medi- cate ernolltente ne peat enlace ee | skin as in use for all toil 8c, yoink sae en a aban | clear, sweet and healthy. let in maintaining widespread comment and bring all the | ¢. 2 Soap, Ointment and Talcum 2: Tee Selere, Hor sampleeach free. “Cuticura, Dept, 27, Malden, Mass. ‘WF F“Cuticura Soap shaves es get credit’ for something which they will later have to do anyway. Adopt the Golden Rule as -your both of whom T haye known practi- cally all-of my life claimed that there was a frame-up to sell/out to the Non- partisan. league and therefore’ it Was necessary to urge me to stay and it Was for the purpose of finding out whether or net there was a. frame-up | that I asked Mr, Benson, your cor respondent what he knew about 2 frame-up and it must have -been at that time that he dreamed of the seven approaches he refers to. He told me that he knew of nothing in the line of a frameup, I may possibly have told him that I was urged to stay as a number of friends were anxious to find out whether or not there was a frame-up as alleged by Judges Young and Spaulding ‘but I most assuredly would not have the public get the idea, that’ I was sand. bagged and hog-tied for the reason that I am six feet’ tall and weigh + pounds qnd usually haye my own way about things that I think right and my Fargo friends might think from (the impression your . article leaves that I have gone into decay and unable to defend myself, Now in all fairness: to, all parties concerned ‘did your correspondent also tell you as hé told me‘ on the: night of the 28th that he did not believe there was any frame-up whatsoever irresp ve of the fact that he was employed. by. Jerry Bacon. » I believe that you should give | that:. matter ‘publicity also “for the Yeason that” it isthe “truth and your whole article from the 28th insinuates that there pecially in times like the present, to avoid overcrowding. people should consider the danger, to health and’ make every effort to reduce home overcrowding to a minimum, The Yalue of fresh air through open win- dows cannot be over-emphasized. So far as avoidance of direct in fection through inhalation: is: concern: ed, it is advisable to beware of the person who coughs or sneezes without covering his mouth and nose. It also follows that, one should keep out of | crowds and_ stuffy places as much as possible ; keep homes, offices and work- shops; well wired; spend some time out ‘* of doors eaeh“dhys’ Walk‘to work if + at all practicable; in, short, make : every effort. to breathe as’ much pure © air as possible: ~ ‘ The indirect transmission of iuflu-, ” enza while more difficult to avoid, can” , perhaps, be guarded against to a cer- * tain extent, Less shaking of hands, shunning unclean ‘soda’ fountains and restaurants, avoiding the use of com- mon drinking cups and common towels, insistence on the observance of, sani tary practices in food-handling estab- lishments, ‘and on the enforcement, by the authorities; of the sanitary regula. tions. governing:such places—thegedré all measures that will help gnafe againgtsinfection, Their more geuipral practice:would do ;much to peeved H the ‘sprend of disease: generally, So far as our’ present knowledge. goes, to a large extent the prevention of in- fluenza can be summed up in the single word “Cleanliness.” vertisement you publish. you handsomely, (Copyright 1919, Hill’s Golden Rule Magazine.) * NOTICE: This i8 number seven of. a series of fifteen editorials ‘by Na poleon Hill. Clip each of them out. paste them in a book, and after you read the last one please let us know if you wish the series to continue throughout the. year. If you do we will ccutinue to publish them,—Hditor. f PEOPLE'S FORUM | It will pay A LETTER TO THE PRESS (COPY) | January 30, 1920. ARGO ‘FORUM, Fargo, North Dakota, Gentelemen ; I notice in your issue of the 28th inst. in’your write-up on the recent, Republican convention: at Bismarck that your gorrespondent quotes*me as having been ‘practically hog-tied .and sand-bagged into staying for the con- vention. I imagine that Mr. Benson of the Grand ’.Forks Herald, covered the ‘conVventiom for ‘you, as.-lie was’ the only cOrrespoitdent,. with! whom ’°T' spoke. ‘I came to the convention rath- } Sales at the A: W. Lucas Co’ White EVERETT TRUE By Condo beslus at 9 o'clock sharp, Monday WAIT A MINUTG, EVERETT; AND SLC WACK DOWN 4 wrtH You. I WANT To TELL You A STORY if FOR SALE One hundred’ gallon. self’ measuring! oil tank for sale cheap. See Faunce 4th Street, i 3031-2) SS =—= ESCAPED AN . T HEARD A COVELE OF DATS AGO— = ’s Vegetable Com i Many.Such Cae. Cairo, Ill.—‘‘ Sometime ago I. got so bad with female trouble that I thou ht : I would: have take a ; operated on. I had i a baa displacement, My right side would pain me and I was 80 nervous I\ could not hold a glass of I would have to si NOTHING. DowG!! [REFUSE To USTEN I! IF Xou'VE GOT A REALLY GOOD STORY, FOR, THE COVE OF apd ind pas acl cen (o} SCSI nO AND TIRESOMG WAY it! several doctors and : ——— every one told me the same but I kept fighting to keep from having the = Cr Ve 5 hadrendso many timesof Lydia \ ——==== E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound = ——7 ( it helped my sister go I began taking / — =a ( r Have. never felt better, ae Ihave == “5 Sim len an ouse eS SS SS s i toda my works Ve; tablec - As = (| pound is certainlyone grand medicine.”? | Ss SE EEE ee IR. MArrHEws, 3311 Sycamore SS SS Of course there are: serious: > = man! SS EE EEE that only a surgical operation will rer a <8 lieve. We freely acknowled; bat SE = the above letter, ‘and many others! ike it, E amply prove that many operations are ) ecommended when medicine in many “ OHt yin want spetal aavice wits to G tal advit v : WS) | isdia'e Pinkham Medicine Gor trong dential) Lynn, Masa, i