The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 21, 1920, Page 4

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it ~ Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second flaunting. _ treme reserve, and those who believe it is a beauti- PAGE FOUR’ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1920 . eSB thought about openly, frankly afd’ cleanly, * Matter. Class GEORGE D. MANN : RESTS AND: QUIET Now comes the time when many persons, worn . Editor Foreign Representatives by noise and confusion of the city, go to the coun- emcaco™ vooa Pa ome DETROIT try for rest and quiet. There, while they lie awake Marquette Bldg. Kreige Bldg. in bed at night: ‘ NEW vonntath® ele an aT Ave. Bidg.} Insects hum, buzz, zizzz, zipp, trill, chirr, quav- er, whir, tick and click! The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use Frogs croak! for poblication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published} A small dog yelps, yarrs, yawls, and goes “wuff! erein. f All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are wuff !” A big one barks. He barks at his shadow. He barks at the moon. Between times'he just barks! also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | A windmill squeaks! Daily by carrier, per year........ dle Go aiele oa 0cis ooh lO. Daily by mail,“per year (in Bismarck) :. 720, -A rooster crows, Another answers. The first ) 8.00} crows back! With daylight the noises rise to a chorus of clucking hens, quacking ducks, neighing horses, mooing cows, squealing and grunting pigs, baaing sheep, while early-rising humans make more noise than all the rest combined! The point of it is one becomes accustomed to any familiar sound, while unusual noises are dis- turbing. The noisest place to a stranger is likely to be some thin-waHed hotel at a crowded summer re- sort. } Daily by mail, per year (in state outside B marck Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.. . THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) > A FARCICAL LAW. North Dakota Republicans and whose who mas- querade as Republicans but who at heart are Social- ists and committed to the theories and vagaries of that party meet today to perfect county Republican organizations and, to name members of the Repub- ‘ican state central committee which will meet in Bis-| Phere are plenty of persons with strong nerves marek in September for organization, who are not easily disturbed. One such wrote to The situation in many counties is ludicrous and a summer resort to which he went last’ summer: presents a situation which should be corrected as} tHe wishes to return. But he insists that he must soon as possible, In the meantime all the Republi-| pave a room in the main building. North Dakota Republicans and those who mas-| «] gon’t, want the room I had last summer in mitted to Republican’ principles and pledged to re-| the annex,” he wrote seriously. “Pm kind of deem the party and purge its ranks’ of the funny that way. -I can’t sleep over a bowling interlopers. alley !” 5 q ; In many counties of the state where the anti- Townley organization won, they lost the Republican control because under our fantastic primary law one vote is as potent asa million when it comes to precinctmen. The Burleigh county situation is typical. South pT Ted cee ee ica Wilton, for instance, with its precinctman represent-| McAdoo would have the government pay presi- ing a constituency of seven votes has as much voicejdential campaign expenses. By issuing Bonds of as the precinctman from a Bismarck city ward who} Hope? may represent 600 voters. The league failed to capture the Burleigh county vote but because the Nonpartisan league precincts are numerically great- er than the anti-league precincts but much smaller in voting. power, they may control the so-called Re- It all depends on who gets “hi” in Ohio. Vegetarians are men who smoke the cigars of today. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinions of The Tribune. They are pre- Ms unos sented. here in. orien vhat ore Teaders. may have importan' jues Ww! are being publican county organization. the preas of the day, This is a presidential year and the necessity for a state Republican organization committed to the principles of the party is paramount. The national GOV. COX UNDERWRITES MR. WILSON Governor Cox, after a conference with Mr. campaign cannot be handled by Townleyites who] Wilson, pledges himself to assume the liabilities have been flirting with the Third Party enthusiasts] of the president’s foreign policy and to discharge at Chicago and who are committed to socialism,|them, if elected to succeed him. “What he prom- communism and to the principles of the Russian rev-) ised, I shall, if elected, endeavor with all my olution as promulgated by Lenine and Trotzky. strength to give,” is ‘the last sentence of the Mr. William Lemke, pseudo-Republican state]Democratic candidate’s brief statement. For chairman, has no more moral right to the position hejfarther particulars the public is referred to ‘his holds than Eugene Debs or any other red card So-| formal speech yet to be made in acceptance of the cialist. He has the legal title which the primary] nomination. law gives him, but that carries with it no power to]’ Governor Cox could scarcely do less. direct the Republicans of the state who are violently |avow Wilsonism would be fatal to his candidacy, opposed to the economic program of the league and| though complete assumption of all of Mr. Wilson’s to the national political affiliations of Townley, | pledges, those that have been kept secret as well Lemke, Frazier and others who are heartily in sym-]as those that have been publicly insisted upon, in- pathy with the Third Party movement. volves almost equally great dangers. North Dakota Republicans are not going to be] But the governor take the less fateful horn of directed by any soviet political headquarters, They|the dilemma. Perhaps he counts on escaping the must act independently of the Townley-Lemke poli-| condemnation that certainly would be visited upon tical abortion. Mr. Wilson, were he the candidate, by taking ref- The power to function as Republicans in North|uge behind generalizations and ambiguities. At Dakota has been well nigh abrogated by the primary |any rate, we have now his pledge, to be followed law, but those who believe in the principles of the|by specifications later on. party have not forfeited their independence nor} Meanwhile, Senator Harding demands specific To dis- moral right to the title they are parading and|American people are entitled to have in the fullest ernor Cox to their support. The Democratic plat- eS THE BATHING GIRL form pledges the candidate to complete support of Which is right— c the administration’s foreign policies, despite the The councilor of the town of Tonbridge, Eng-| weasel words inserted at San Francisco by oppon- land, who said if young men were to see young ents of the Wilson Covenant. girls in the modern bathing suit they would not] ‘It is well, therefore, to get down to precise de- marry; tails. Does Governor Cox support Article X as Or Mrs. H. A. L. Fisher, wife of the minister of] it stands, or does he favor “cutting the heart out education, who contends that instead of militat-}of the Treaty” by excluding it or changing its ing against marriage it “would lead to the best} substance? Does he favor the Armenian man- marriages, and the marriages which result in real | date, to which the president has pledged himself? happiness, because they are based on knowledge] Does he endorse and insist upon Mr. Wilson’s solu- and understanding as well as true love”? tion of the Fiume question? Does he follow Mr. The question is as old as the race itself. The} Wilson in desiring to give Thrace over to defeated two views as expressed are the views of two sec-| Bulgaria, or would he confirm its possession by tions of the human race. our own ally, Greece? Does modesty consist in concealment or revela-}| And what secret promises and pledges of Mr. tion? There is a fundamental difference in the| Wilson does thg Democratic candidate now under- views of those who believe, with sincerity, no| write? Let us have-the full details of what he doubt, that the human body is something which | undertakes to endeavor with all his strength to should be concealed and mentioned only with ex-{carry out. If Governor Cox really assumes the full burden ful, healthful and glorious thing in itself. of Wilsonism as he says, he must stand stoutly for The view of the first of these schools of thought | ratification of the Treaty and Covenant unchang- is that sex is a matter of shame, that it must not] ed in any essential respect. He must be against any be mentioned in public, that knowledge of it must] and’ all reservations that protect American rights be scrupulously kept from the young; that ignor-| and privileges: He must stand ready as president ance constitutes purity. , to send American troops and ships anywhere in The view of the second is the view that is com-|the world to preserve the territories and status ing more and more to be held by educators, physi-}of any member of the League from attack. Ac- cians, scientists, and those who have given. most | cording to Mr. Wilson himself, that is a moral, if thought to the question of sex. It is that youth | not a legal obligation. and maiden should grow up, together in open,| The American people will be satisfied with frank and honest comradeship without a sense of | nothing less than the most explicit candor from secrecy and shame over the facts of sex. It is that} Governor Cox in these matters. They are not in boys and girls should be taught the wonderful the least disposed to send him to the White House facts of sex, taught, to admire rightly the handi-] to carry out pledges and promises of which they work of God as expressed in the human form,/know nothing or of which they strongly disap- taught that healthy, beautiful bodies are to be| prove. : admired, not regarded with shame, and that love] Governor Cox cannot stop with generalizations. and marriage and children are clean, healthful, im-| te must give the country a bill of particulars.— portant things which deserve not’ to Be clouded Minneapolis Journal. over by mystery, ignorance and superstition, but fa will they recognize political leaders who have no}answers to certain questions, answers which the iaileenes oeitiod Bike U. S. War detail before they pass upon the claims of Gov-| a—- To stabilize To prosper To think of ‘To exalt Ta live for Washington, July 21.—Twenty mil- lion people are members of the Rus-; sion Cooperative Societies, through which a large percentage of’ this coun-| try’s.new trade with Russia will be carried on. In order that American exporters may be informed as to these societies, } how they are organized and supported, what commodities they handle and what their relationship is with the new Russian government, a booklet on the “Russian Cooperative Move- ment” is being issued by the Bureau of | Foreign and Domestic Commerce. Although trade with Soviet Russia has been thrown open, under limited restrictions, through all commercial channels, it is'expected that the ma-}, jor share of whatever trade may re- sult in the immediate future from the lifting of the blockade will be with the cooperative societies. Not the least of the matters of in- terest that may be disclosed by the lifting ‘of the trade barrier against Russia, will be the strength and effi- ciency maintained by the cooperatives even under the strain and stress of war and revolution. All types of cooperative societies | were repressed, like other popular movements, under the old regime in Russia. They proved their vitality by steady though gradual growth, says Keonomic_in- Trade Board’s Russian Bureau. Briefly, these societies are divided into three groups: First, consumers’ societies, which enable their members to make direct purchases and thus dispense with middlemen; second. producers’ societies, which arrange to make direct sales of what their mem- bers produce and thus eliminate mid- dlemen, and third, .credit societies, which form the credit framework for the great structure of cooperative buying and selling. o f ' | PEOPLE'S FORUM MAN WHO SENT 3,000 TO PRISON RETIRES FROM SECRET SERVICE See Louisville, Ky., sent almost 3,000 counterfeiters to federal prisong since he’ entered the U. S. secret service in 1886, Capt. Schuyler A. Donnella, “Grand Old Man” of the Customs House here, be- lieves he has done his “bit” and has resigned, effective August 20. He is 73 years old. Among the many counterfeiting cliques ‘that Capt. Donnella helped to break up was that led by John Rob- erts, said to’ have manufactured $1,- 000,000" in. fake notes; the Montgom- ery gang in Butler county, Pennsyl- victed; and the McCarty gang of Omaha. He trailed the McCarty crowd & HEALTH ADVICE ‘BY UNCLE SAM,'M. D.' Health Questions Wilt) Be An- swered if Sent to Information Bureau, U. S. Public Health Service, Washington, D. C. | | | t ee FLIES. The house fly (Musca, domestica), which represents over ninety per cent ot those found indoors, deposits prob- ably one hundred and fifty eggs at a; time. Only’ten or twelve Ways elapse between the dropping of the eggs and the appearance of the full-grown in- sects. The females of the, new brood in turn begin to lay their eggs in a few days after birth: The development of the-fly is sim- ilar to that of the mosquito. First the eggs are deposited; within twenty-four hours these are hatched and the larvae appear; after a further peridd of five to six days the latter pass to the pupal stage, and from this to the full-grown fly in three to six days. The larvae are well... known as “maggots.” and are about one-fourth to‘an inch long. They are white crawl- ing bodies, having the appearance of caterpillars, They are commonly tound during the warm weather upon EVERETT TRUE fs AND DON'T READ. © PAPER WHILE i'm CALLING YOUR AT TENS [TION XO YouR FAUCTS !f 1 THE NEXT TIME \~ou —--—— sinus LARDING'S. CREE UL “tity, Uncle Sam:“ Shake, Warren —My idea exactly!” July...21.—Having | for two years. ey Donnella arrested Ja- cobs, maker of a Monroe $1,000 Dill, who had passed 20 of them before they were detected, and helped to bring Miles Ogle, a Cincinnatian, to book. f ; The veterah secret service man had many narrow escapes. He was shot {in the ear at Dayton, O., by a man named. Guydon, .a.member.of the Driggs-Guyden gang of paper money makers, which he rounded up. “Capt, Donriella came here in. 1899. ; Before that he had served as a detec- \ tive ‘in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Cleve- land and Atlanta. His reputation for ‘ yania, 23 of whose members were con-} fearlessness, gained while chief of po-|. lice at Huntington, W. Va. won him his appointment to the secret service. almost any manure heap, déad animal or other decomposing substance. ‘ Flies will breed. wherever there is any ‘kind’ of filth. Carelessness re- garding. manure heaps, garbage and any other forms of decomposing mat- ter is responsible for the constant an- noyance of flies in farmhouses: and country homes. Unfortunately, the public has not a very clear understanding as to the means by, which: flies-may be:etiminat- ed, or the object sought in carrying gut this important sanitary measure. Innumerable poisons, fly catchers, and “swatters” are on sale, devised for the purpose of trapping or destroying flies. While these are very. popular, ‘they have little or no practical value, for, as in the case of the mosquito, the ex- termination of flies can .be success: fully accomplished only by the destruc- tion of their breeding places. Forty-five ‘thousand men. and $50,- 000,000 have left the state of Nebras- ka for western -Canada in the last 20 years; according to a report cy! the Canadian government office at Omaha. Last year , there were 364,495 sheep in Alberta, which produced 2,115.000 pounds of wool valued at $1,250,000, | FLOWERS’ eee | ____By Condo “SAN UT WITH FLOWERS,’ MRS, TRUG, "SAY IT WITH f Sherwood, N. D. Editor The Tribune: The Anti-Socialist Crusaders are up there in a region where it is evident there has not been much light shed on the vital issues that confront us ‘dt this time. We find many good well meaning people in these neglected lo calities who are glad to get the light. Almost every day men come to us af- ter our meeting is over and tell us that they never saw these Socialistic tendencies in that light before and de- clare they are done with Townleyism. | The open air meeting is surely the way to reach the masses. We get the attention of hundreds of people in the open air on the street that we could never get into a hall of any kind. Our bugler calls the: crowd together by a few of our familiar Army calls and then our two first class musicians give a short musical program and when that is over the audiences are in good shape to listen attentively to whatever Mr. Arnold and,I have to say to them and with very few exceptions we have a rousing enthusiastic meeting. At every meeting ‘we distribute litera- ture, the best there is published on the Socialistic 'question, which the people are glad to receive and will read with profit to.themselves. This in my judgment is the only way to get literature into the hands of the people so that they will read it. Nine- ty per cent of the campaign literature that is sent out by mail is thrown away and never looked at. To my mind it is time our people who are opposed to the Townley Socialistic regime got busy and put over a campaign that will reach every small unit in the state. Yours for the Cause, SMITH STIMMEL. SS SSS=S=S=S= Me | hg ee ACH YT \\ \W\ USE TRIBUNE WANP*ADS =e ie SS _——————— a J Onn pack =A well-known eled: h ngih er, of ‘Liberty, _Mo., who says that to look at him to-day no one would ever take him to be the same man he was before Tanlac, restored his health, Has gained forty-four -pounds, “For two yéars pervious to the time I began talking Tanlac, I lived princi- pally on a raw-egg diet. During this time | was laid up in the hospital for five months and practically no hope was held out for my recovery. I don't suppose’any man had a worse case of stomach trouble than I did, in fact they said I cou'd not live. “Tanlac did not seem to help me much at first, and [ had almost mace up my mind to give it up, but if 1 liad. given it up it would have been the mtistake of my life. I stuck to it for _|.@ fair test and am thankful that I did for after finishing my fourth bottle, my appetite was better and I noticed /:myseélf/:improving. “This encouraged me to keep on taking it’ and in two months I ‘was able to eat a good square meal and digest it a’ good as anybody. Then it wasn’t long until 1 got so I couki go back to my work and at the time 1 had finished my jlast bottle, I found 1 had actually gained forty-four pounds in weight. “To look at me today no one would ever take me to be the same man I was when I began taking Tanlac.” The above remarkable statement was made recently by John H. Packer, well-know electrical engineer of Liberty, Missouri. Tarlac is sold in Bismarck by Jos. Breslow, in Driscoll by N. D. and J. H. Barrette, in. Wing by H. P. Ho- man, and in Strausburg by Straus- burg. Drug Co. —advt., =o WRITE IT ‘MILK,’ NOT. ‘MILCH’ Latter Term Is Too Teutonic, Accord. ing to Federal Department of Agriculture. ¢ Washington.—Hereafter it will be i “milk cow” and ‘not “milch cow"— at least so far as the department of figriculture is concerned. This decision marks the. termina- tion of a controversy in which etymol- ogists in the department have had not a_ little interest.. Those defending “milch” have pointed to scriptural use j and certain of the classics as establish- ing precedents, while the opposition has contended that dairymen, rafhch- men and farmers in general use “milk” instead of “mileh” almost universally. The advocates ‘of “milk” also favor- ed that word because they contended it was more strictly an English word, while “milch” was akin to ‘German. Since Americanization of language as well as ideals is an article in every patriot’s creed, it is thought that this -last sally of the “milk” defenders help- ed as much as any to decide the ques- tion in their favor, KILL SEA LIONS FOR SHOES Fishermen to Carry Out the Sugges- tion of British Columbian Premier. Prince Rupert, B, C.—Premier Oli- ver’s suggestion that sea lions in this province be slaughtered and their skins used for making shoes has met with approval of fishermen here, and plans were under way for killing the animals on a large scale, Fishermen pointed out that killing of sea lions also would save the fish in these waters, for the average sea lion devours 50 pounds ofefood fish in a day. One ffSherman recently killed 700 sea lions with the aid of three companions in two days on the Queen Charlotte islands. ig ssobsenleosetaecoretblecesbestog Woman Uses Hatpin at Bargain, Counter. Spokane—Because she was charged with having used a hat- pin. in a bargain sale rush at the opening of a new 10-cent store here, Mrs. F. J, Brown was arrested on a charge of third-degree assault on F. Lang- eloh, a fellow shopper. “What else could a woman do?” she asked at the police station. dP revosorccooccosccooccooococcoooe} Tommy in a Moving Picture Stunt. Columbus, Ind.—Tommy, a large Maltese cat, found himself marooned on top ofa telephone pole by the rapid rise of a creek. The owner of the cat went to the next pole, which the water did not reach, and called te the cat. The animal finally walked the cable between the poles to safety. Money back without question tf HUNT'S Seive Tall, in the Qreatment of IT! ECZEMA, RINGWORM, TETTER or ether itching skin disessen Try © 975 com bon et ouzriak; (67 JOSEPH BRESLOW, Druggist fae ‘a

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