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PAG). any KI Birth iS Has . to New is mit then }) contro agains march forth ways | ler thi lic knit she is. cop di aught: force ' ng tri iteratt inpubl gain, ‘losely act al ‘Fron it 104 uch ¢ Marion 3 lea inne ddres; ‘bear vould yo he sé vas s@ joney Nuch : Virtt opes | t 246 eappe teratt Se — pals PAGE TWO LEGION'S STAND ON LEGISLATION TO BE DISCUSSED State Commander Says Borus - Question Will be Important ' in Convention LEGION STEADILY GROWS Sixteen- Thousand Members ‘in State Indicate Healthy Con- dition, Says Dawson The stand of North Dakota “ex-ser- vice men on bonus legislation prob- ably will be the most important topic béforé’ the American Legion and 26, according to C. A. Dawson, state commander, who ‘was in Bis- marek on legal business yesterday af- ternoon. The state executive committee, Mr. Dawson said, has stood back of the ie Is soli ses only, Summer * _« Lassitude. ngdealing days and’ swelt- ering nights wear down the reserve force and leave the mind and body . impor grished. Rebuild your and, mesyore your: ‘ab ion “with ‘ y \ The Great General Tonic "$id By All Reliable Dr: Sole “Manufacturers: “ EYKO ‘MEDICINE COMPANY New York Kansas City, Mo. state | conyention at Minot on August 23 | “Who’ Hopper?” a musical show. acrobatics, national organization on its “four-fold adjusted compensation ‘plan, Reports to be ‘made to the, state convention will shéw a fine growth for the legion in, the state, the com- mander said. There are now abou: 16,000 legion members. North Dako- ta ranked high. in the last member- ship drive, and is one of the best organized states in the union, he said. N Expect 2,500 Plans are being. made for a_ big gathering at Minot. There will be about 600 delegates, 2,000 other esr- vice men are expected tobe present and there will be three or four bands fo help along in the entertainment. “One of our immediate tasks,” said Mr. Dawson, to clean up all va, | catiohal training cases. Twenty-two men, vin charge of various districts of the state, now are engaged in con ferences with ex-service men and ait ing them to get the full benefit of provisions made for vocational train- ing..to disabled ex-service men. P. G. Harrington is the representative in this, district and he. will» gladly aid any ex-service,»man along this line.” * x Insurance Recnétatement The. legion ~erganization already BISMARCK THE: GREAT MODEL OFFICE TRAINING. homeo ’ Corner Main and Sixth Sts. BISMARCK, N. D. been equipped, with a f f “ reat q > his college is amo T the ‘best equip institutions of its kind in the United States; ; The Principal is among the oldest, and mbst’ successful , educators in the - country; every member of the faculty is a specialist, and the Man- ager numbers among the former graduates of his col- legeg, thousands of the most successful business men\and women in the land.’ Large numbers of the most success- ful merchants and bankers in this: immediate territory, at- tribute their start to the training secured in one of his | insvitutions. The Bismarck College has view to making ‘it one of the most thoro and: practical in th eouittty: It makes a spevialty of training young men and women for the higher business and banking eral ne SONNET uates are apa stenographers and: accountants, and serve satisfac- torily from t Expert training pays. to $100 a month from the start, * ‘Look thtu this Model Office ‘Practice. School,’ we have done for thousands of others under less favorable conditions, you will want to attend. Enrol} refund your tuition money. thousands of former students. Tf you will look thru the B, may. enter at, any time. than an eighth grate education. and room: reasonable. , . f For full particulats write, G. M, LANGUM, Temain until. qualified, and we will send you to a good position er If-you must have the very best business training ‘money can buy, ; you cannot ‘make a mistake by enrolling in\a college that i8 recom- * mended, by every merchant and banker in its acquaintance, and by departments, visit our ‘classes, and talk with our students, you will be convinced that nowhere else can you train for business hd bank- ihe under more favorable conditions and where you will be so abso- lutely sure of a pleasant. and profitable position, College in session thruout the. yeax—no vacation’—and students Preparatory department for all with less For All Baking Renuteements: Use Climax Flour ; contains. ‘a high percentage of glut n. | Necessarily a high priced flour on account~ of its high quality. For sale by.all grocers. | Russell - Miller Milling Co} | Biemarek, ‘N: start the Tost exacting employers of office help. Cc. graduates command from. $80 and are in ever increasing demand. When you know what now, let us plan a course for you, B. €. Banking and Office Practice Tuition charges and cost of. board Bismarck, N. Dak. which is ,al- ways \iiform in quality and | DANCES 2607 NIGHTS! Yondon. —Retty Blake challenges the world to beat her record of 2607 nights of continuous dancing—seven years! Her dancing ‘includes some strenuous On the ogeasion of her dancing her 2607th dance she was pre- sented with a floral basket carring the numerals, ? ° | Congressional ies Me FRIDAY, JULY 3 WEALTHY HAVE. : HARDLIFEIN, GERMANY NOW One Man Says Son Mens. His Shoes and His Daughter Cuts _ His Hair’ USE TURNED ENVELOPES Berlin, July $0—How the erstwhile well-to-do’ live in present day Ger-| many is described in the Allgemeine Zeitung by an/etdetly high state func- vionasp, a married man with a family, who “says: that although he. belongs to the upper 30,000 in Prussia, accord- ing to the income tax schedule, his suyle of tiving is reduced to that of a plain laborer. - . “I-_awn.a fine mansion in. a fashion- able Berlin suburb,” he writes, “but we have been. obliged to let four rooms furnished, and will have to restrict our own apartments still further, | “Before the war, we breakfasted on eggs and bacon ter, and tea with qeam and sugar; now we have to content ourselves with thin gruel, black: bread, no. butter’ or su- gar, and the nondescript ‘official’ jam, “Only once: or twice a week does meat appear on the dinner table;_nev- er a joint. Wine hasgbeeri abolished. Supper consists of porridge, herrings or cheese. Before the war, the family used sevep-pints of milk daily; now’a quarter of a-pint is the allowance. p ~/Clothes are worn threadbare; my Miss Blake is now dancing in has aided many .ex- “service men.to re- instate their war risk ‘insurance, he said. > C..T..,Hoverson is the state war risk insurance officer, recently appointed. “The time or period ‘tar reinstate- ment of insuranceshas been extended to January 1, 1921,". said Mr. Dawson. “Insurance can be reinstated on the game basis as before under -this, new ruling, with . the. Payment of two bremiums.” WHAT IT COSTS ' i TO PRINT WHAT ‘CONGRESS SAYS Record Takes $537,640 to Print for. ASI f" Washington, July 30.—The cost of publishing the Congressional’ Record, the government puUlication recording daily everything that, is said and done in: congress, a well as some things outside, was. 03/640 last year, prac- tically the same as, for 1918, but about — $300,000 less than the 1917 cost. These ‘figures were giyen -recently by; Russell O. Beene, accountant (gt the government ‘printing . office, yin hite bread and but- |- ear. son mends my shoes and my daughter! cyts my hai ‘Letter writing has ‘become too ex" pensive, I tear off unused half sheets Bt letters recgtved and use ok! envel- opes, inside out. Baths are cut down to one-half. “We can no longer afford to énter- tain.company to meals; we meet, our friends, after, gupper.” 7 The present lean timed, ‘the’ writer confesses have. not impaitad, his health very, much, ‘although he’ says he has become “omewhat spare in, <body. y, ewig Eee T! MILTON PICKED ' ‘TIRES CAREFULLY FOR WORLD RECORD! { S “Just, suanetiig how. it would feel: to Arave] 156 miles an-hour in an automobile, like Tommy , Milton . did’ raesntly at Dayton Beach”, said a representative -of the Dakota Motor Co., local Goodyear Service dealer. ‘And just imagine also how it would feel to have a, tire burst while going at that speed, and to be catapulted possibly into oblivion, .sut Tommy went at the_rate of 156 miles an hour for a new world’s record, ,and he didn’t, catapult. into oblivion ‘ana none of his tires burst becaige they were Goodyears. “It isn’t every tire that can stand the strain at such terrific speed. And there.aren’t .many proteges of Ralph DePalma and Tommy Milton willing to try such a. speed.. For the aver- | age motorist, and light car, owner, a maximum, speed of 60 miles an} hou. it slifficient. s when Goodyear tires --can- stand a Speed_of 156 miles an hour, its easy for them to stand up under lower speeds for thousangs .of miles of travel. “Goodyear Clincher. tires are ds- signed especially for the light, motor ‘They: tan stand moré: punish- ment than any prize’ fighter who ev- Vv Baby Girl Wins _ is Parents of Louisiana’: «Champion - Baby” raised her on Dr, Cald- wwell’s Syrup Pepsin’ |? + THERE: is always a good deal of sickness in the summer “months, dueto thehot meaiesand » The heat is especially severe on babies and chil- dren, and often it interferes with their development and jh. They lose ap- petite, pass restless nights, suffer from indigest In tl gt igive a Combination of HB ‘herbs with pepsin, at the'first symptom [pt constipation, This formula {s:known to druggists as’ Dr, Caldwell’s' Syrup 14 Pepsin, and they have sold it ui der that name for a’ quarter ofa century. "It is “now ‘the sole meditinal ‘reliance in thousarids of families, Little: Dorothy Boylan, knows’ what \real hot weather is ten months of the “year. ‘She’is the daughter of Mr, and Mes. Harry H. Boylan, and Jives ‘at 216° North Alexander St, Int New Orleans, -She has won’ thrée sticcestive’ first ‘Grand Champion Baby of Louisiana,” and he# parents say the only medicind they;have ever given her FREE i Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It has Kefted her healthy and built her. up, and ed take ft possible, they write, for Bepeae tobe a prize-winning baby. You can obtain a bottle of Dr. Cald- well’s Syrup Pepsin at any drug store, ‘You will find it pleasant to take, and it | does hot gripe orweaken. / Millions of people of all ages suffer from Scedslonat or chropiciconstipation. Le! Dr. W,. B. Caldwell, 512’ Washington Street, ' ‘Monticello, ‘IIL, tar a freé sample bottle of his wonderful Syru 8 million bottles were boughtat ‘drug stores last year, the largest salen t tl Let them send: name.and:address fo mie er .entered the squared arena, and | All- Weather Clincher tread -impres- a fight to the finish is pic. for them, for, they give,;maximym seryice until they’re. ready” to fallto pieces. And when you, couple with them Good- year. Heavy Tourist tubes, the motor- ist’s. worries about tire trouble are nil for he knows he's, got four shoes under his car that /will not/falter oy leave him-ig the lurch; “Goodyear’ Smooth, Anti-Skid and | of its » ‘ jot sions. are as abundant along the,high- ways and byways of, America &s are freckles on the beaming visage of 2 red-headed -youngster—proof stiffici- ent. that Goodyear Clinchersy deliver the goods from start to finish.” Since 1880 Chile has derived a tax of nearly $40,000,000 of ‘the export itrates. answer to an inquiry of representa- tiye Magee, of New-York, as to the possible saving. that would result from .the discontinyance of the rec- ord. Mr. Beene gave the cost. ‘for 1917 as. $801,790.88 and for 1918 a8, $027.40, ‘Cornelius Ford,. tKe public printer, was asked for an ‘explanation of t' high figure in 1917, but\ confebse his ignorance unless, it happéned that congress “did more talking”. thar year. Mr. Ford said that jn 1917, songress~was in session 200 days; in. 1918, 307 days, and’ in ee 209 days, / The printed pages in the Record ‘| ‘for these years were 652,511,964 in 1917, 568,672,587. -in 1918; -and 455,- 130,450 in 1919. The cost of paper ‘has increased greatly within the past three years, but the use of a lighter and less expensive quality has helpea reduce the aggregate cost of the pa- per ysed. For 1919, the paper cost was. $130,000 a6 compared with $162,- 000 in 1918 and $300,000" 4 in 1917, -||GERMAN CLUBS ON _DECLINE BECAUSE _, \OF €OST, OF BEER A Pint Now. Costs Two Marks, but the Teutons Say That It : is Too Much Berlin, July 29.—A. venerable Teu- tonic institution, the Stammtisch, is disappearing. The Stammtisch was the middle-class man’s club, but since | the price of beer has gone up from 30 | pfennigs a pint to 2 marks for less than a pint, the inducement to gather round the oaken board in‘some-vault- ed “Keller”: to discuss politics, art or. philosophy has. faded away and the great decorative steins with the em- ‘bossed pewter Hds have become mere | shelf jornaments- Berl} n Stammtische were many and varioug. Each ‘had>its. own’ customs ;and chinivia ritual. Some, where {paintess, cartoonists, actors and liter- ary Rien foregathered, were famous throvighout the German,’ speaking wor}d and had been in continuous ex- istence for over a century. «The latest one to go is the artists: | Stammtiseh at Siechens,'in the’ Beh- renstraspe, with which many famous names are associated. Ty of the Stammtisch) means the end of 'Gemutlichkeit? that particularly be- atific state of mind induced by good cheer and high thinking. Notice to Coal Dealers Bids are; requested to furnish. 1000 tons, more or less, , best. Screened lump. lignite coal delivered as re, quired in the bins of the several city 1921, inclusive and subject.to State North Dakota analysis. Right reserv- ed to reject any or all bids. Bids to be opened at’ special meeting “of Board at'High Schodl building, ‘Tues- day, July 27, 1920. By order of Board of auetiee, RICHARD PENNWARDEN, Clerix. 7-26-5t. the traditional German, the end|_ | public Schools,: during years 1920 and 7 ine a were invited to a concert every month to hear the gredter. artists ting and play their newest offerings, you would quickly take advantage “of ,it. That is exactly the opportunity the Victor presents to music-lovers everywhere. You can hedr these new numbers ut any Victor dealer's; and_if you have a Victrola, you can enjoy them when- - ever you wish, in your own home. : ‘4 Each Shining Hout = ~Hoine! (Doma) \ 1 Zata—Marnma visciva di case (Mother Has Gone) Quartet No. 3 in E Flat Misiot—Setierio (Techaikowsky) Heaven is My Home : Mabel Garrison 64891 Introduction snd Tarantelle | (Sarasate) Violin Jascha Hei 74626 Last Night Mine. Homer and Miss Louise Honier 87570 ‘Whien Night Descends —~_ John McCormack“Fritz Kreisler 87571 ‘Blue Danube Walts \ ‘Prelude in G Minor (Rachmaninoff) Otétlo--Era fa notte (Cossio’s Drsim) Old Folks at Home =. All Star—One-Step Hy'n Dri—Foz Trot ‘The’ Love Nest Bive Diamonds ‘Tiddle-Dee-Winks ‘T Love the Land of Old Black Joo Love Nest—Mediey Fox Trot ‘A Young Min’s Fancy—Pex Trot’ Gems from “Apple Blossems” 4+ Goma from “irene” 4 . Any’ Victor. ‘dealer will paity give you an_ illustrated booklet’. Aescribing. these new Victor Records andj play any music yoy wish to iéar. New Victor Records on sale at all dealers on the lst 'of each ‘month.’ Victrolas in great varicty from $25 to $1500. an Niniber Size, Price Emilio de 64888 10 $1.25 ainy Destinn 87310 10 1.25 Farrar 187311 1.25 Flonzaley Quartet 64889 1:25 Piano / All Star Trio All Star Trio f 2875 ‘Baly need 8677 * Billy hhattap died Peerless Quartet Joseph C.'Smith’s psreroe stra Joseph C. Smith's Orchestra Victor Light Opera seam 35697 . Victor Light Opera Company 10 Yi 12 1.35 ‘This trademark and the trademarked 1 _ “Vietsola’? identify all out ‘products, « Look under the Hid! Look oa: the label! VICTOR TALKING MACHINE Co. Camden, N. J. z Machiné Co. » ‘AEG, U. Bi PAT, OFF.