The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 2, 1920, Page 3

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f ( HELD AT FAULT THURSDAY, | SEPT. 2, 1920 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE THREE ROOSEVELT IS FOR BiG WASTE Britten Says Democratic Candi- date Cost Government $41,000,000 ‘HAMPTON ROAD SCANDA Chicago, Sept. 2.—Recalling the no- torious Hampton Roads _— scandal Where $41,000,000 was “dumped into a naval base at Norfolk, Va.” and other cases of gross extravag: and mismanagement for which Frank- lin D. Roosevelt as assistant secre- tary of the navy was in large shar responsible, Congressman I'red A. Britten of Illinois in a speech here tonight struck hard at the efforts of the Democratic vice-presidential can- didate to make it appear he is a great champion of economy in government expenditu Congress) Britten said. “The oft-repeated public statements of Franklin Dy, Roosevelt, assistant secretary of the navy, in his quest for votes, that the present Republican Congress has been extravagant and that he and his soul-mate, Cox, when elected a going to give the country an economical administration, are certainly not in accord with his man- agement of tremendous expenditures in the Navy department. “I recall the Hampton Roads scan- dal where $41,000,000 was dumped into a naval base at Norfolk, Va., and a $7,000,000 unnecessary never-to-be used training station, called KE Camp, was erected after the armis- tice. “The contractor was awarded 2 $3,- 445,000 contract, which amount was increased’ by supplemental agreement ‘extras’ by more than 100 per cent to approximately $7,000,000, all after the armistice, in development of an enterprise known throughout the American navy a8 the™‘gold mine’ be- cause of the vast profits supposed to have been made by contractors. In the Norfolk district where the War and Navy departments, combined dumped more than $250,000,000 within a radius of 20 miles. - “The only reason that the East Camp has not been salvaged before mow is because the assured scandal in selling just prior to a national elec- tion, a $7,000,000 plant for $5,000,000, so that instead of saving at least the latter amount the 410 buildings whici are of frame construction are being allowed to rot and fall to pieces, thereby creating a total loss. “Some departmental genius, prob- ably Franklin Roosevelt himself, con- ceived the idea of making a_366-acr aviation field at Hampton Roads by nee Milk Should Be a ae the Daily Diet of All of Us By P. G. HOLDEN. HERE is no more important ar- ticle of food, especially for growing children, than milk. It con- tains more of the materials necessary to health and growth than any other food. Growing children need whole milk. Dr. E. V. McCullom of Johns Hopkins university, declares that “No family has the right to purchase meat until each member has a pint of milk daily.” Milk is high in lime content, and lin®& is good for bones and teeth. Be- sides being easily prepared, palatable and of high mineral content, milk is one of the “protective” foods. Green leaves, such as lettuce, spinach, chard and cabbage, and the yolk of egg, are the only foods which con- tain the protective, growth-making principle in any quantity, Milk Cheaper Than Meat, It is cheaper than eggs or meat, and there is no waste. No other food can take its place. Thirty first-grade pupils in Brook- lyn, Iowa, were given a pint of milk at recess periods every day from Jan- “COW GREATEST PRODUCER OF HUBAN FOOD My THE FOOD VALUE IN THE MILK PRODUCED BY THIS COW IN ONE YEAR. WAS EQUAL To THE FOOD VALUE IN THE-BOOIES OF THESE FIVE HOO LE. STEERS: uary through April. Fourteen of the 80 pupils were underweight in Jan- uary, six of them being more than 7 per cent underweight. Children Gain, Weight. At the end of the four months, the records were completed for 26 of the children. Eighteen of them gained weight; four remained the same; four lost weight. Twelve of the 14 underweight children gained weight and none was 7 per cent or more un- derweight. The average actual gain was two pounds per child, which was one-half pound above the average normal gain. During April, the final month of the test, 30 pupils of the second grade were used as a check. They were not given milk at recess time, and all lost weight. Only three, or 10 per cent of the first-grade pupils, who were given milk at recess, lost weight during the same month. We may drink milk or we may eat it with bread or crackers or with fruit or cereals or as part of milk soups, creamed dishes, cream gravy, cus- tards, puddings, coco, cream pies, {ce cream, buttermilk, cottage cheese, or cheddar cheese, but in whatever | AMERICAN GIRL AIDS POLISH ‘form we like it best, it should be a ' part of the daily diet of each of us, WOUNDED IN WAR WITH REDS WIGHNIA 2 ChE ee ee nae A Polish-American girl, Miss Anna Wichniarck, of this city, is serving with the Polish White Cross, aiding the, Polish we nied in the war with the Bolsheviks. Miss Wichniarck was in France as a nurse and interpreter during the World War. B Afterward ake went to Poland along with other Polish Legion- | aires. at of the Today’ S Weather _ dredging sand and mud ov Roads and pumping it of a breakwater. Rear ral Parks, 9, ete Daa te cl AWE, =| chief of the bureau 0: and docks told me that this cost the! For twenty-four hours ending at noon government $2,196,000, $6,000 an September 2. m. acre for a field which might easily Temperature at 7a. | Low t last night f r r iv Foreeast MOST OF STATE) yo, continued cool. Tae aes ated on much better Highest Precipitation North Dakota: Partly cloudy} Lowest Temperatu Lowest FALL Cov ERS | Highest wind veloci ;and somewhat unsettled tonight and | Rargo .. state recei twenty the entire good rains in the last hours, the report of the weather bu- reau shows. Predictions for twday were unsettled, with a probability more rain. ceptionally Nearly fou 50 46| rl IDs heavy rain ported from Pembina, in the east part of fate, the - totalling 2.10 inches. At Grand For it was 1.09 inches. The total fall in Bi 2 at other points follow O45 pn Dickin > Jamestown Lishon 56: | London Sener 10; Larimor Fessenden | sweeney was renouial to be mi apoleon 30; Dum Center 0 : this morning, althougn he is Bottineau .05; Wahpeton . ight and cheerful. cae a3 cen weakness developed dur- veo aa ; the night, bus w uly otf a TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ue - two hours of fitfull sleep. The 1 = j mayor’ with him ht. This morning that the mayor was glass hout the ni stated so weak he could not raise a o his lips without assistance. FOR DRESSED SPRUNG CiTiCH for your Sunday dinner phone 621 shand second 0, small Co WANTED—One refrigerator. More th on patients pass , Sell your cream and poultry | through the New York hospitals ; to our agent, or ship direct to, YY ; i a es Northern Produce Co., Bis-| 1, js estimated that to collect one| marck. Write us for prices 09 | sound of honey 62,009 heads of clover and ltr orthern vast be deprived of their nec mak- | cream poultry ‘ing necessary 2,759,000 — vis from | Produce Co. | Welch with the traditional bow, of the Sioux, which the older Indians claim to be close to 200 years old The bow was given to the late chi by his grandfather, who received it MOVED WEDNESDAY i 64 world's j not MAJ. WELCH GIVEN TRADITIONAL BOW BY SIOUX TRIBE Ft. Yates, N. D., Sept. A. B. Welch, of Mandan, the unveiling address here as isome monument was placed at the: head of the grave of ‘the late Sioux Chief John Grass. At the ceremonial feast in the ternoon the Indians presented 1 Major in this territo MANDAN BANK IS The equipment of the State Bank of Morton county was moved to the Farmers’ Equity bank late Wednes- day afternoon. A deed for $100,000 worth of land, in control of W. A. Lanterman, was ecorded during the day. A. H. Peter- son, who assumed the cashier's ties of the Equity ‘bank, started this new position today. in Sept. : receipts, Good to choice steers mostly cents higher. Bulk choice $17.00 from one of the first French settlers THE NEW Six reels of Fairba LAST TIME TONIGHT, DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS “THE MOLLYCODDLE” ELTINGE | BISMARCK THEATRE TONIGHT ONLY, “The Sport of Kings” AND “When the Cougar Called” Tomorrow and Saturday, Elmo Lincoln, ptar of “Targan of the Apes,” Tomorrow—Saturday, Robert Chambers’ novel, “The Fighting Chance” ’ humor, thrills, love, speed, action, His in newest and greatest picture. “Elmo, the Fearless” ie Pe eae Brag and Madlaine ‘Traverse in “Camille of the Yukon” pete ee | Japanese Military Authorities | Refuse to Treat, Except for, $17. Bulk good and choice ye calves, $17.00 to $17. Hog receipts 23, 000,” Mostly 15 to 2g cents lower. Sheep receipts, 26,- 600. Steady to lower: al Livestock Mostly ~South St. Py Hog receipts, 1,700, 25 cents lower, e, $13.50 to Se Bulk, $14.00 to . Cattle receipts, 4,500, stead, weak. Fat steers, $6.00 to $16.00. Cows and heifers, Calves 50 cents 5.00. Stockers and feeders steady, slow. 00 to $13.00 Sheep receipt: » 50 cents: lower; 10 to ‘Killers slow ‘to 9,000, Lambs steady sheep 50 cents , lower. Lambs, $4.00 to $13.00. Wethers, $4.00 to $7.00. Ewes, $2.00 to $6.50. Old Rome Has Paper Shortage. Le Figaro of Paris has unearthed for t aders what it believes is the first recorded paper shortage. quotes fr the “Causeries du It | Lundi” where Sainte-Beuve, translat- ing from Pliny, says that under Tibe- rius there was such a scarcity of pa- | per in the Roman empire thpt it was necessary to appoint senators to regu- late distribytion; in other words, a congressional board of control, Sainte-Beuve, grown cynical in his day of excessive erudition, books, ink and paper, added: “How welcome such a_ shortage would be now! But such things hap- pened only under Tiberius. We can- hope for like happiness today.” L Figaro tinds Sainte-Beuve re- freshing reading, but in view of the situation in 1920, unduly appreciative of Tiberius. Sheep Should Be Sheep. A recently published book dealing with political and social affairs in England is called “The Island of Sheep,” whose authors (one of whom is a prominent British statesman) are disguised as | “Cadny and “Har- monia.” The sheep referred to are the English and the island Great Britain. The Butcher's Advocate, aroused by the happy thought of an {sland filled with muttons, writes for a copy of “Cadmus H. Harmenia” to review, “it being.” they claim, “of stional interest. to the people reached by our weekly.” USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS bees. AS LOS? Noted Englishman Believes Tir of Pilgrims? “Jordan thought ay Tlowe {7 Phe barn at Old showing heavy timber: io have come from the European 3 Dr. Rendel H scholar, who is an € picture of which ography at Camb oo ~ = lieves he has» dis vhen the Mayflower disap- of that te > owned a quarter share Pilgrim Fathers to 4 He thinks’ the origins the vessel are in a gre Jorn i i Giles, pikes Ob Another quarter share | a farmer living near | arn at Old} shown that the ship was! trade as late as 1654. o. - {The pre ari peel s that soon after he n able to) that ti he was broken up for her ie owner of the farm ati Umbers. a He found on of histor jin the MAYEFLOWER 1 BEEN FOUND New w orld Shiv Used in Building Farm Barn Four material points are cited as presumptive evidence that the barn! contains the Mayflower timbers. First, the timbers ye been ex- amined by an expert and pronounced to be old ship’s timbers of a vessel about the size of the Mayflower—180 tons Second, the brickwork on which the timber walls rest has been pronounc- ed to belong to the 17th century; Third, one of the timbers has an iron attachment which appears to have been part of a ship’s keel; and— Fourth, remains of a carved in- scription, which points to the May- flower, have been discovered. i on Land West of Chita NOTE—The following statement of the relations between the Japanese ind the Far Hastern Republic of Si neve was obtained by an Associated $ correspondent in the course ot » journey from Vladivostok acre beria and Russia to Moscow and Fin-; ana. Sept. 2.— Kastern Verkhne-Udinsk, Siberi Representatives of the Far Republic recently established here} been frustrated in their efforts to make peace with the Jananese mili- tary command in Siberia by refusal of the latter to treat with them except as coneerns territory west of Chita, recording to statement by A. M. he new republic, to The Associated otchekoff, foreign minister of |== Press correspondent. Parleys_ were broken off when the Russians insist- ed that the scope of negotiations should nuprace the entire Far Eastern situ- ition, should assume an international aspect instead of parleys between mil- tary commands, and that military op- rations should) be completely sus- pended while negotiations were in prog: AR EASTERN REPUBLIC FAILS IN ATTEMPTS TO MAKE PEACE, ‘tublished eastward. Russian mission and repeating the offer that the pre-Baikal railways be temporar'! within the phere of influence, thus ally renouncing sovereign rights territory for the sake of considered Japan pract in th peace. j temporarily, until an agreement re- | garding Japanese evacuation could be reconsidered; and that through tran portation and) communication be es- The princ of Monaco, with an ‘area of only eight square miles, has a population of 23,000. Give Up Railroads | “Phe Russians insisted upon parley- jing regarding the Far Eastern situa- |tion as a whole, that fighting cease on ul fronts, and that the negotiations assume the aspect of an international conference instead of parleys between , two military commands. | “On May 25 the parleys were inter- rupted because the Japanese wished to discuss the situation west of Chita, only, stating that they were not au-, thorized to do more. “On June 2 Krasnotchekoff sent memorandum to General Oi express- | ing surprise that the Japanese mission was not empowered to treat with the! QUANT Germany has 38 times as much money in notes as is represented by its gold reserve, Money. back without question if HUNT’S Salve fails in the treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, RINGWORM, TETTER oF other itching skin diseases. @ 75 cent box et our risk. JOSEPH BRESLOW, Druggist The Red Biood of Business Newspaper advertising is the red blood of business. It is the power that puts the merchants’ goods into the homes of the peo- Efforts of the Far Eastern Republic to establish ndly relations with he Japanese. even at the expense of nder temporarily of sovereign hts to a wide belt of territory were described by Krasnotchekoff as. fol- lows: The Demands hetween the J ple. It is a necessity in modern business methods. It revives a sluggish business and puts new life into the atmosphere. It goes into the homes of the people you want to reach—your home people—people who know you, and who know, when they read your advertisements in their home paper, . that on and a m Eastern Republic were begun on 24 at the station -Gongota, be- n the Japanese-Semenoff and Rus- sian fronts, about 70 miles west of Chita.’ The Japanese mission, headed ‘y Colonel Rurosawa, presented three demands, namely that the Soviet must. return west to Lake Baikal v new zone be established we: Chita tent and contain- ing no armed ‘Tore that free trans: vortation and communications be ‘ablished and that the Japanese have presentation in the railway manage- May lw “The Russians replied that the So- viet army had not progressed beyond the left bank of the Selenga river, (southwest of Lake Baikal) and that ‘he question of their return west of Lake Baikal must be taken up by Ja pan with Soviet Russia. “The Kar Nastern Republic mission wropoesed that the railw: nd Stretensk districts be considered ere of influence of the command in Siberia vithin the s} lapanese militar “CORNS* Lift Right Off Without Pain ig ‘t hurt a bit! Drop a lit ne” on an aching corn, stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist seils a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, in- or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irrita- tion. you are talking facts, and that you are on the premises to back up and make good every statement. They know you mean what you say, and you also know that they are governed in their purchases by the state- ments you make. The Tribune goes into the homes of practically every family. in your city, and you know that most every adult member of the family is eager to read the local news- paper, In your“home paper you can say what- ever you wish, as much as you desire, and whenever you want to tell the people of your community that you have something fresh from the market, that will fill their wants or satisfy their. desires. Your home paper is your partner in business. It works for you when you are slesping and keeps you busy when you are awake. It is the medium through which you can have a heart-to-heart talk with the people of your community and keep them informed regarding the commercial progress’ of the world, so far as it interests you and them. You may think that long residence in the community and your reputation for the square deal are sufficient; but the fact that you are an old resident and are well known is all in your favor as an advertiser; for the people who know-you and admire your ster- ling qualities, will believe every word you say in your advertisements, and when you announce the arrival of new goods, or that you have such and such things to sell, it puts them in mind of the fact that they.need or soon will need the very articles which you are offering, ‘and they will go to you because you have advertised the things they need and want. The better and more favorably a busi- ness man is known in his community the greater the value of advertising to him; for his announcements are backed by his good reputation. ivTEQ0A ULE OUGEREAGRLEUOLNUUOLUAAUEUUOUEGUEUUEUOOTUO GOLAN eS iE Hy TU TTT TEL LUM TLL =| Fe a IDRY CLEANING Pressing, Repairing, Remodeling, Re-linining KLEIN TAILOR and PHONE CLEANER —— = 110 IVHVUNONUAOOAOOAAUOGOEUAOOAGTOEUOEOUONEREOOUEEOGEUUAEAHOTAERUAOAEOUAAUAAUUEAUUEEUAEUONERUAUUOEUAGUAORUOOUOEENAOUUAELOUHEOAOUAEEREAOUUOROUOOEUUUELUAORANEROEOOUOOUAEUOLOUUOU UA

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