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t # Be i) Pye AE nate Ad Fyn saat & wie fee tat tn ot At ste, Sone & = &, Fama i F) & 3 sal Sere: & fe 2 Syl sand are Benegal fdntys tages they grees ute nf . Entered at the Poses PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE fice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second ‘lasg Matter, GEORGE D. MANN : Editor resentatives : PAINE COMPANY DETROIT : Kredge Bldg. RNS AND SMITH NEWYORK - |---| Fifth Ave. Bldg. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled-to the use for Piblication of all news credited to it or not otherwise herein. Forei; G. LOGA Marquetis Bd PAYNE, 3B in this paper and also the local news published All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. _—————— MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU ‘OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year. eee Daily by mail, per year (' ek) os 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.. 6.00 fHE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1878) ea SIN’S WAGES x “Be sure your sin will find you out.” It cer- tainly will. But how and why? ; A child may picture an all-powerful Being in the sky, who issyes commands and keeps punc-, tilious account of every failure to obey them— until at last the day of reckoning comes and the disobedient are overwhelmed by punishments im- posed upon them by the will of this same Great Power. ., But as the child grows pp the picture sometimes changes. The Great Being is no longer an arbitr- ary ruler but a Father, and his words are not commands, but warnings; there is perhaps no keeping of books or'no great day of J udgment. But every deed has natural results, and silently and slowly the fruits of good and evil waysappear —character and reputation are fixed; the past}’ cannot be undone; and the individual sees him- self maimed or seared or weakened or caught like a traveler in a quicksand that he has been warn- ed to avoid. Not because his Heavenly Father wants to hurt him, but simply and solely because he reaps what he has sown. Men call it sin because it has those wages. And ali the king’s horses and all the king’s men can- not make|them any different. A Jap’s command is a Chinaman’s cue. Ais ES a BATHTUBS When the advertisement: offers a house;for rent, “modern,” one visualizes the situation ‘at once. That means with a dandy little bath, immaculately white ‘and hot and cold water. And more than that: it means a daily hot or cold bath morning, noon’ and night, or morning, noon and night, as one wishes. But the bathtub, comparatively, is of recent invention and installation. The patrician, George Washington, didn’t know], a bathtub as we know it; nor did the sage of Mon- ticello, Thomas Jefferson, nor even Andy Jackson. Not on your daguerrotype! Those boys, if the truth, was known, probably dragged out the old tin tub'6n Saturday night and “took their” just}' like the rest of the gang. : - One reads of: the wonderful baths of Rome, and the reading does sound food. , But somewhere be- tween then and the 1600s there must have been an awful slip in cleanliness, for in those-good old London days when Sam Pepys, the diarsit, was cutting up, things were pretty dirty. And no bathtubs. In fact, in some places “over there,” the bathtub is still a novelty and in its infancy. But over here it is surely appreciated. Crowds viewed the first one in Cincinnati, called the first in the country, on Christmas, 1842. Neat little thing—solid ‘mahogany ‘lined with jsheet lead! Newspapers said “vanity ;”' doctors said “unheal- thy.” ae shad Not.to say anything about the rest of the coun- try, just what would the plumber do without the bathtub? Who'd spring the joke about the hotel guest who didn’t want a room with bath because it wasn’t anywhere near Saturday, if there were no tubs? i Those who converse with clever people are nev- ev made fools of. HEALTHY MANHOOD Between January 1, and August 31, 1918, the medical boards examining ‘drafted men in Eng- land examined 2,080,709 men. ae Of these’not more than 36 to 37 percent were placed in Grade 1—that is, approximately, only one in every three-had attained the normal stand- ard of health and strength and was capable of en- during physical exertion suitable to his age. The British Medical Journal, commenting on this state of facts, says: “The preliminary results indicate that prevent- able disease is responsible for the bulk of the phys- ical disabilities, and demonstrate the ravages which industrial life has made upon -our real national capital—the health and vigor of the population. Too little food, too long hours of work, too little sleep, too little play, too little fresh air, too little comfort in the home are evidently the chief factors concerned in producing this mass of physical inefficiency with all its concomitant human misery and direct loss to the country? But that was in England? True. But in Amer- ica the percentages of men who passed the physi- cal tests was below 60 percent; while in only one- fourth was the percentage as high‘as 70 and 80; in the remaining half of the states it ranged from 60 to 69 percent. _ Furthermore, analysis of the records .by the . General Staff. show that the country boys made better records than those from the cities; white BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE registrants better than colored; natives better than alien born. It is, therefore, as true of America as of Eng- land that industrial life has made ravages in the health of our young manhood, and that the poorer and most exploited of our population—the indus- trial population of the cities, the negroes, and the foreign born, are suffering physical ills traceable to “too little food, too long hours of work, too lit- tle sleep, too little play, too little fresh air, too little comfort in the home.” It is a warning that America ought to heed. a | ASI Congress should tax excess baggage platforms.| Washington, D. C., July 27.—There are over. 400,000 American citizens } in this‘ country who are completely disfranchised. They are taxed with- ENJOY YOURSELF Let’s live while the living is good. One passes this way but once. Tomorrow may never come. The man, and the woman, who makes the very best out of every day is he who gets the most en- joyment and comfort out of life. i "Take the wife and the children, father, out on that little picnic now. Just bundle them up, get into the flivver or the eight-cylinder motor and be off. Trite, but true: procrastination persists still in being the thief of time. There’s time for work and there’s time for play. And the good Lord never intended, surely, that any of his children should limit the play to his two weeks’ vacation. Along with the day’s work it would seem healthy -and wise to crowd into it a little bit of vigorous recreation. An hour of recreation should put two hours of pep into the brain and the mus- cle of every worker. © i Get out in the open. Change the pace. Mix them up. It'is a beautiful world, made for every person to enjoy every,minute of every day, sun- shine, cloud or storm. ; Get your share. out representation erned by a pre: they have not par ated. They! obey laws by a senate and a house for the members of which they haye not voted. They have committed no crime except that of living in the Distr.ct of Columbia. Everyone is aware of this fact, but this in whose cho! it is not always presented i light. Washingtonians, howev beginning to feel the situation ly, and there is evidence of a spread and per‘ for suffrage, not only for wom: - frage but also for the old-fashioned, | INot a’ schoolboy, it is hoped, is ig- omalous situation, by which residents of the capital are deprived of repre: sentation in the capital, arose. Wh this nation was in its infancy jeai- ousy between the 13 states was acute. The seat of government, ‘apparently, had to be situated in one of the upon the one to be honored. Accord, ingly, ‘after ew York and Philadel- phia had each served for a term, the capital was finally established in the District of Columbia, ceded to the, federal government by Maryland and Virginia. ‘Furthey to remove the capital from minor political dissersions and from petty ‘bickering the residents of the district were given no votes. At the time this was not thought an injus- tice, but residents of Washington are now grumbling at their disfranchise- ment and are supported by 10cal or- ganizations and the local ‘press. One of the papers here hit, somewhat hu- morously, at the situation in a cai- toon -printed the day before Govern- or Cox arrived for his conference with President Wilson. The picture showed a man hanging political ban- ners and the caption was: “We can ‘pannerize even if we canhot ballot.” A minority party is a henpecked husband. One advantage in being president of Mexico is that you are sure to rest in peace. It looks like the more long-green women pay for their dresses the shorter they get. aes See “Never put off until tomorrow what can be done today.” It may cost you about $1 more. EXCEPTIONAL CAST SUPPORTS CONSTANCE , BINNEY In order. to keep up with the births of new oil companies, watches ‘with a faster tick should be made, Ary oe 4 “Erstwhile Susan,” a Play of Amerj- can Girlhood Constance Binney, the youthful ac- tress in ‘Realart Pictures, will make |: her debut as.a screen’ star tomorrow at the Eltinge theatre, in “Erstwhile Susan.” This delightful story of the Mennonite maid:'who won out despite poverty and educational handicaps, was adapted from Helen R. Martin's novel, “Barnabetta,” which was the ‘basis of a successful stage vehicle ‘ror Mrs. Fiske a few -seasons back. The picture was directed ‘by John S. Kobertson. i Miss Binney’s leading: man is Jere Austin, who made his stage debut, in “The Squaw Man,” and later en- tered the picture ficld where his noteworthy performances ‘n “Resi rection” and “A. Perfect Lady” brought his to the fore. The part of Juliet (Miller, erstwhile Susan, which wyas played vy Mrs. Fiske in the stage version, was cre- ated tor the screen by Jane Alden, long known to’ film audiences for her work in “The Birth of a Nation,” “The Naulahka,” “Common Clay” and “The Unpardonable Sin.” It is of in- terest that Miss Alden was at om time associated with Mrs. Fiske on the stage. So, also, was Georges Ren- avent,. who plays. the role of Emar- uel Dreary in this photoplay. ‘Another well-known actor in the cast of “Erstwhile Susan” is Anders Randolf, ,whose delineation of the fi- nancier in the picture version of “The Lion and the Mouse,” was a distinct hit, Some men will pay a bootlegger $20 for a quart of poigon without a murmur, but use unprintable language when charged $20 for shoes. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinions of The Tribune, They are = sented here:in order \bat our‘readera may have both des of imj it issues which are being im ,the press of the rs WILSONISM AS AN ISSUE , “No man is big enough to run this great-repub- lic.” In that terse sentence Mr. Harding express- ed a fact which he puts to the front in his speech of acceptance as the paramount issue of the cam- paign. He doesn’t dodge the League of Nations, on the contrary, he welcomes the “solemn refer- endum” which the president demands, but he has exhibited a remarkable faculty for reaching the heart of the situation when he seizes upon “four years more of Wilsonism” as the uppermost con- sidération in the minds of the people. : Mr. Harding takes up first the necessity of a return to our traditional form of representative government with constitutionally balanced pow- ers and functions of the executive and legislative divisions, and the abandonment of the autocratic domination of the executive, of which’ we have had such an offensive exhibition during the past year and a half. Over against this he sketches what he proposes in the event of his election as his ‘program of co-operation and council with a cabinet of great capacity, aided by the participa- tion of the vice president as an adviser and colab- orer, and co-operation with a-House of Represent- atives fresh from the people and‘a Senate which has already proven itself to be the conservator of the nation’s independence. That this: will appeal to the public we have no manner of doubt, for we believe that there is no consideration lying in the back of the heads of more voters as the determin- ing factor of their action at the polls in Novem- ber than the desire to be rid of Wilsonism and get back to fundamental principles of administration in a representative democracy. And this feeling loses nothing of its keenness from the outgivings of the Sunday conference at the White House, where, we are told by the participants, Mr. Wilson and Mr. Cox were found to be in perfect accord.— Minneapolis Journal. GOOD ENOUGH FOR ME. Some folks are always wishin’ That ‘they could live in California, Or down about the tropics Where the vulture ‘builds her nest, Their minds are never contented Their hearts are never free— ‘But the grand old’ state of North Da- kota Is good enough for me. Some folks sigh for Florida And long for old Kentucky, Where the meadow grass is blue. Some like Louisiana And some like Tennessee. But this grand old state of North Dakota Is good enough ‘for me. Our people have no room to kick out what they have to eat. And as for our climate ’m sure it can’t be beat; Why do they want to leave us? I’m sure | cannot see— for this grand old state of North Dakota } Is just the place for me. So they’re welcome to their tropics, Agd the places they like best, Their Florida and their Oregon, Their Kentucky and Missouri, For I love this: good old state Where my heart is light and free. So give me Worth Dakota—my North Dakota— Tis good enough for me. —Rev. Charles W. Ruth, ‘ McKenzie, N, D. One of the Nonpartisan candidates for railroad commissioner in North Dakota is qa member of the legislature which increased the pay of railroad commissioners in that state; in fact; introduced the’bill himself. Then he ran for the office in the recent primary election. That looks like clever politics—boost the salary of an office then climb into the office. .But the state constitution says that no man shall be eligible for any office the pay of which shall have been increased by the legislature while he was a member of that body. In any other state that constitutional provision would be sufficient to exclude this thrift pol from a realization of hig plans. How will it work in. Nonpartisan North Dakota?—Minneapolis : Tribune. \ Wanted: | Girls or boys ‘over 16 years of age to learn press feeding. Apply Tribune’ office. WANTED A new or used ceiling fan, 110 voltage. S. E. Bergeson & Son. WANTED—Boy between 16 and 18 years old for general work. Apply Chocolate Shop. Cuban factories in 1919 produced 157,000,000 cigars for export. They ‘are gov-|: norant of the way in which the an-}/ sptates, but’ it- was difficult to agree }' Jonathan Edwards, “Mark | Hopkins, ney, named by_,/November first. EVERETT TRUE M-M-4 Rh Geauga 2 M-m-m— M- mea =m-M Fp i= m-¢ he-man variety. re Tene va HOW MANY MEMBERS . ial | Twenty New Names Soon to be Added to U. S. List—Univer- sity Students Make ‘Their Guesses. : | er BY LORRY A. JACOBS, N. E. A. Staff Correspondent. ‘New York, July 27.—Out of the list of -those ‘whose names” appear in America’s ‘Hall of Fame, how. many can you identi Do you .know. for what they: wel no! ty - _ A recent, poll; taken at New -Yori university, revealed that but one,stu- dent knew ‘the entire: list, Fifty-six in the'-List The present, list, to. which °20' more are soon. to be added, contains the following: : i Ralph. Waldo Emerson, . Henry Wadsworth ‘Longfellow, Washington Irving, James Russell Lowell, Abra- ham Lincoln,'George Bancroft, Wm.) Cullen Bryant, James Fenimore Coop- er, O. Wendell Holmes, John..u: Mot- ley, Edgar Poe, Francis Parkman, Horace Mann, Henry Ward Beecher, William — E. Channi Brooks, Peter. Cooper,’ G body, John J. Audubon, Asa Gray, Louis Agassiz, Joseph Henry, Robert Fulton, Samuel F. B., Morse, Eli Whit- Elias. Howe, Daniel Boone, Da- vid G. Farragut, Ulysses .S. Grant, Robert! E. Lee, Nathaniel, Hawthorne, William Sherman, Gilbert. Stuart, James Kent, John Marshall, Joseph Story, Rufus Choate, John Adams, Henry. Clay, Benjamin ‘Franklin, Thomas -Jefferson, John Grdenlat Whittier, George Washington, Daniel Webster, James ‘Madison, -Jonn Quincey Adams, Mary ‘Lyon, Andrew Jackson, ‘Emma. Willard, Alexander Hamilton, . Ha Beecher Stowe Frances E.: Willard, Marie Mitchell, Charlotte S. Cushman. One of the rules is that. you ‘have to ‘be’ dead. before, you, are’ cligibie to the Hall’ of Fame. Ottmar M genthaler, Samuel Clemens, Charles Dana, Hoface Greeley, fioger Wil- liams, John Paul Jones, Pocahontas, Helen Hunt Jackson, Susan’ B. .An- thony and’ Dolly, } to, be among the list that: will we "Phillips rge* Pea’ Established in 1900 j The American. Hall.of Fame was established, 20 years. ago by an wi named friend,of the New York" Uni- versity. The fund was then. $100,009 and later increased to $200,000. Hen- EXPERIENGE Of Interest to Expectant . Mothers Goshen, Ind. took Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound with good eno results Sfter I had suffered. for-some time with female trouble. Someyears H ago I had twin boys and took your Vege: | table Compound fore they came also before my four year | | old. boy was born, | and afterwards, and think it fine for such cases. I tell others mane it did for me and-you may. publish my testimonial.’’ ave. ‘GEO. iN Foos, 711 S. 9th St.,, Goshen, Indiana. The experience of Motherhood is & trying one to most women and marl distinctly an epoch in their-lives. Not one woman in 2 hundred is-prepared ‘or understands how to properly care for | herself. Every woman at, this time should rely upon Lydia E; Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, a most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. © In many homes once childless there are now children because of the fact that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound makes women normal, healthy and, strong and this good old fashioned root and herb remedy con- tains no narcotics or harmful drugs, JORSHESTRA PLAYING WITHOUT ACCOM= last twenty. years. I have u: ‘Pierce’s Golden Medical :Disedvery at times, as a general toni¢, with excellent: re- < sults, One bottle in the spring, and) one in:the fall, vi usually: It has ‘given “me added strength’ and endurance and has greatly .aided- me in following a strenuous, life. Io MY "V7 have. also. found _ Doctor’ Pierce’s, Pleasant: Pellets very beneficial and mild in action.’ ‘ ONE WOMAN'S: |. HUMMING TUNG IN ACCOMPANIMENT WITH ORCHESTRA> PANIMENT.e OF HALL OF FAME CAN YOU IDENTITY? AANA RAL {Ty gMitchell. McCracken, was the first director. rt. William Vanamme;, is deting director while Dr. John$on,is in Europe. He ‘was! sueceeded by Rob- Underwood } Johnson : ‘and 'Mée. The electorate consists ‘of authors, educators, editors, presidents of uni- versities and colleges, scientists, jur- ists, historians,’ high public officials | Ask Your Neighbor the Miuwaukeeg, Wis." Dr. vis ME fficient2-\ | have been through Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel.and Surgical: Insti- tute in Buffalo, N..Y., and have found everything as ‘represented. The pictures of their buildings are genuine.”—JoHN W: McLain, No. 188 Wisconsin’ Street. Over filty years ago Dr. Pierce manufactured this “Discovery” from roots and barks—a corrective remedy, the ingredients of which nature had put’in the fields and forests, for keeping us healthy. Few families have not at some time or other used this “Golden Medical Discovery” for the stomach, liver or blood. Over.'twenty-four million bottles of this tonic and blood remedy have been sold.by druggists in this: country. Send 10 cents td Dr.: Pierce’s Jnvalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., or trial package of Golden’ Med- ical Discovery Tablets, - Soften the Blow Torhadoes invade every “in- habited part of the country.-One “blow” devastated 4,000 square miles. One city lost a million dollars; another ‘14 millions. In two weeks’ time the Hartford once paid losses in 80 cities and | towns, in 15 different states. Don’t. wait until one heads ° your way.’ Insure now. The Hartford policy covers Torna- do, Cyclone and. Wind Damage to buildings and contents. We write it. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance”. Bismarck, N. D. ® Y, JULY 27,1920 \ SAY “DIAMOND DYES” — Don’t streak or ruin your material in a poor dye, Insist on “Diamond Dyes.” Easy di every package. Leo e-eoneree GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH; WHITEN Make Lemon Lotion to Double Beauty of Your Skin a a 9 er enenenenenenenenentnerenenene- Squeeze-the juice of two lemons in- to a ‘bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White which can be had at any drug’ store, shake well and you have a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach for few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lo- tion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty of your skin. i Famous stage beauties use lemon juice to ‘bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy-white complexion. Lemons have always been used as a freckle, sunburn and tan. remover. Make this up and try it. | and men of affairs of 34 states. Elec- tion takes place every five years. The Hall'of Fame is in a colon- nade which circles one of the build- ings. of the New York, University. ee CUS WANTED—Boy between 16 and 18 years old for general work. Apply Chocolate. Shop. WANTED A new or used ceiling fan, 110 voltage. S. E. Bergeson & Son. —_—_—_—__—_————_ BUSINESS MAN : _ “SINGS PRAISES “I suffered for years with stomac: trouble ‘arid gas continually, Doct thought I stomach, ulcers or cancer. After last attack they advised going to Rochester, Minn., for an operation. A friend advised trying Mayr’s Won- derful Remedy, which | did, and 1 cannpt sing its praises too highly, us I can now eat anything and every- thing.” It is a simple, harmless pre- paration that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver dnd in- testinal ailments, including appendi- citis.. One dose will convince you or money refunded. fe NOTICE TO THE PUB- LIC I have been notified by the State Motor Vehicle Registra- tion Department that all 1920 Motor’ Vehicle | Licenses have been received and assigned to all applicants. In view of this fact the said department has re- quested me to vigorously en- ‘|force the laws of State requir- ing autos and motorcycles to have and display the proper 1920 license plates at the front and rear of each motor vehicle. On and after this date there will be no excuse for any one to op- erate an auto or motorcycle without the proper license plates displayed at the front and rear of each motor car or mot- oreycle. I trust that the public will be governed by all the reg- ulations, concerning motor ve- hicles and that the City of Bis- marck and Burleigh County will not have a single violation of the law. F ROLLIN WELCH, ‘Sheriff. {% ’Twas Said:- t A girl and a man sat under the palm just outside the ballroom. “Is your love true?” asked the girl. . . “As true,” the man answered, in low passionate tones, “as true as | the delicate flush on your check.” “ “Oh-er-ah,” the girl stammered -hurriedly, “isn’t—doesn’t the band play nicely?” _, Camouflage may be alright in its place but it has no place ‘in this .store—you’ll find. our quality true’ to standard and that every statement regarding our march- andise, prices or service made by our salesman or in our advertising can be depended u} Our policy is to adhere strictly to statements made and to see that every prom- ise is fulfilled. You take no chances when you buy your hardware needs here. Lomas Hardware Co. So “ '