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an BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE pachtwo BANKS NEED AMBITIOUS BOYS Nearly 700 banks employ stu- dents of Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D., because they are trained hustlers—many developing into officers:and executives. | Recently. the First National Bank of Kildeer wired for a capable book- keeper and teller. D.. Swanson was sent, ‘The Citizens National Bank, Casper, Wyo, got F. H. Champlin. ‘The First National Bank, Fairview, Mont., sgcured Geo, Clark. To fill prospective positions a 1000-New-Pupil Club was formed | Join it.and ‘‘Follow the Succe$$- ful.’ Write F. L. Watkins, Pi <s., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D MATCH SHORTAGE HITS PORTUGAL] Lisbon, Sept. 11—Matches have dis- | appeared from the market, much to tke discomfort of smokers and houge- wives. Waiters and cigar store clerks | who are able to furnish a few matches have been extremely popular for two weeks. In view of the high prices here, the operatives of the Match Company de- ; mand higher wages, and the company! to meet their wishes petitioned the government for permission to raise| the price of matches. This consent has. not been given and in view of the deadlock the inhabitants of Portugal | | have had no matches for about a fort- night, since the stocks in the shops were exhausted. : H GUTIGURA HEALS" RED PIMPLES OnSon’s Face, Neck, Arms, Body. LostSleep. Cuticura Heals, “When my son was two months old he got little red pimples over his face, neck, arms, body. ‘\\ They were scattered and \! grewworse. Every place was filled with severe eruptions. He could not sleep, but scratched and wouldcry. I had to make mittens for him so he would not scratch. “Nothing gave relief. Ithen used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. When Tused about six cakes of Cuticura Soap and six boxes of Ointment he was healed.” (Signed) Mrs. Lewis Savella, 806 Elm Street, Hancock, Mich., Aug. 27, 1919. Cuticura For All Toilet Uses Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal- cum are all you need for your skin and all toilet uses. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. Unlike strongly medicated soaps, Cuticusa Soap is ideal for the complexion because so delicate, so fragrant and so creamy. @Cuticura Talcum soothes and cools the skin and overcomes heavy perspiration. For sample Soap, Ointment and Talcum freeaddress: “Cutieura, Dept.R, Malden.” "Cuticura Soap shaves without mug, Service If'your starting battery is beyond repair we tell you so. Mf, on the other hand, an exami- nation slows that it’ would pa you to have it repaired, we will give you a first-class job and the same attention that you would re- ceive if you were buving a new batterv. ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE COMPANY Bismarck, N..D. CHILDREN TO BE; RULERS AT FAIR GROUND TUESDAY Officials Place Finishing Touches on Plans for Big Mis- souri Slope Fair Next Week DISTRIBUTED Children of the Slope country will be kings at the opening day of the Missouri Slope fa t Mandan Tues- day. More extensive pians are being made this year for the welcoming and attracting of the children than have ever been made before. t All school children will be admit ted free of charge upon the opening day of the y, and the distribution of tickets to all parts of the Missour. Slope is now nearly completed Those children attending — rura schools can secure tickets from thei TICKETS | teachers. In the Bismarck public schools the tickets raay. be secured by applying & the superintendent's office on any day prior to the opening day. Sent out Tickets. Mrs. Evarts, in the office of the county saperintendent, was busy. thi afternoon mailing out the children’: tickets to all the rural school teach ers in the county. a making next Tuesday a holiday fo e-children who wish to attend th: r. Reports from Mandan indicate tha when the fair opens next Tuesday everything will be in readiness te show the people of the state a real ex hibit of North Dakota’s products anv energy. The new buildings, to house thc live stock and the county exhibits, ar: being fast pushed to completion ant will be finished by the end of th week. The Westerman Brothers’ carniva company has been showing at James: town and reports from there indicate that they are pleasing. the people an¢ proving to be an amusement attrac tion of clean cut quality. Miss Stark Busy. Miss Elsie Stark, who is in charge of the women’s department at the fair, has. been busy all this week pre paring for her comprehensive exhibi. tion showing the need for and neec of modern conveniences in the farm home and kitchen. The return of the county agent, & W. Gustafson, gives him an opportun- ity to help Wilbur Field in the ar rangement. of the farm products ex- hibition for Burleigh county. Mr Field, by the way, states that if any of the farmers or housewives of the county have any farm products which they believe should be in the coun- ty exhibit, he will be glad to hear from them. Pi) Added Features. ‘An added feature of the fair will be 1 parachute drop by Aviator Bly, of Valley City, who has been engaged to perform aerial stunts at the fair. He will make daily jumps from his plane and land with the aid of the chute. He is said to be able to perform all stunts. which can be done with a Curtis plane. : ‘Train Service. STENOGRAPHER DEVISES NEW CABLE CODE Seattle, Sept. 11—From a $20 per week stenographic position to inter- iational fame and a fortune that will make her independent for life, with the product of her mind. being use by corporations and individuals. in virtually all parts of the world - such is the career of Miss Margaret W. Keegan. Miss Keegan is the au thor of what is known as the three- letter cable code. Heretofore all. codes in general use have been of: the five-letter. cypher Miss Keegans system is based on the three-letter cypher, which is said tc allow a saving of at least 33 1-3 per cent on every message transmitted eee Northwest irrigation convention at Seattle, September 16-18, by panora mic. photo views. of the Montana Pow- er company’s irrigation projects at Holter, Great Falls, the Madison riv. ar, Hauser lake, Thompson Falls and Canyon Ferry. The photographs were assembled yesterday by Secretary Max Goodsili of the Commercial club, to be taker by the: delegates from Helena to Se- attle next week. : RUSSIA IS KEY 10 BUROPES ECONOMIC MIX Says Europe Is in Deep Dark Pit, and She Must Work Herself Opt of It Budapest, Sept. 11—“The people: of Europe are in a dark, deep pit and they must work themselves out of it,” says Roland Hegedus, bank’ director and fecturer at the Budapest Univer- sity. : “The United States is richer than she knows but she cannot reconstruct Europe by loans. All the nationg, ot Surope are beset by a succession; ot political and economic problems that are well nigh insolvable. “Russia is the key to the situatioi Reduced fares of one and one-half and until some sort of consistent gov- regular fare for a round trip ticket will prevail on both the Northern Pa- cific and the Soo tines for some dis- tance in either direction. ‘ Special trains will be run daily from Bismarck to Mandan, leaving here shortly after noon and leaving Man- dan on the return trip a short time before midnight. IRRIGATION IN ‘MONTANA SHOWN Helena, Mont., Sept. 11—What Mon- tana is doing in the advancement of land irrigation will be shown at the oT Tt ie Keeping. your Bowsle reguiar do Tome aadiced’ tor weakening purest or mineral Jaxatives; just try KOROL safe, gentle, wholesome. Hest and _goc farther". Obtainable. at busy éruagt whore Xorolax $4 relief for mai {neluding, constination, _ head: ‘betehing, gas, hy apetts, 9, tburn, torpiu fiver, bbraath, 1 <3, dyspepsia, Indigcs: joa, obesity, ‘end physical” guitness, Soap and Water Sweetness e OAP and water swe our laundry. Floors, washers, tables, racks—everything with which your cloth handle them come into contact—are scrubbed with oceans of fresh, b bling soap suds every day. There’s the secret of which you will find in our laundry—that’s one of the reasons for the fresh, fragrant. purity of the clothes we send home to you. This old-fashioned gospel of soap and wa- ter cleanness means salvation for your fam- ily linen. A trial wil the day and hour for our driver to call and he’ll be there on the dot. CAPITAL LAUNDRY 311 Front Street, . pay ' ae Send it etness is a religion in es or the people who oiling water and bub- the radiant cleanness Il convert you—name CO. : Phone, 684 ernment is establisued there, we car. hope for little here. “What the United States can do. perhaps, is to work to secure free trade among these Central European countries. None of us can do any business with tariff frontiers. “I believe the paper money situa- sion will force a revision of the peace treaties. AM these. little nations are living from hand to mouth, printing 4p money to keep going. Poland ‘is hardly a year old and already she has a ‘national debt of 130,000,00( marks, with a 40,000,000,000 deficit. The same is more or less true ot Czecho-Slavokia, of Hungary and ot all of us.» The armies are eating up half our incomes; yet each nation is uraid to disarm because of possibl¢ attacks from neighbors. — , “With this: paper money. carnival, central Europe can not trade with sountries having better moneys, such 1s Spain, Holland and Switzerland Chis, situation also. applies to Italy and France. “Meanwhile our civilization is go- ing by the board. Because of the’ex- shange, our, universities and reading people can not afford to subscribe foi science ,or law publications of Eng- tand or the United States. “For the same reason our educated ‘ut impoverished classes cyan not g¢ vbroad to find work, provided they sould secure passports, / “These conditions are not alto- gether the results of a big war but o! . bad peace which has fallen harder on- Hungary than.any other country God made her the center of a geo graphical unit and the peace fron- tiers ruin not only new Hungary bu: the parts taken away.” ABOR SHORTAGE ON FARMS PERIL .TO FOOD SUPPLY New York, Sept. 11—Shortage of labor in the agricultural states is re- sulting in a reduction of acreage which threatens Americas food sup- ply, according to the findings of Per- ley F. Walker, dean of the Kansas University engineering school, made public today at national headquarters of the American Society of Natjona! Engineers. The Dean is head of a re- search committee of the Mid-Contin- ent section of that Society. Dean Walker found population at a standstill or declining in agricu!- tural sections, pointing out that 16 of the*105 counties in Kansas pre- vented that state from decreasing in population in a decade, the increases all being in industrial sections. “The same thing holds in lowa and doubt- less in other states for the same peri- od,” the Dean reported. 5 Many farmers g¢annot pay their 1919 debts because the railroads are ‘unable to move their wheat harvest, and they are paring down produc- tion, he said. As a remedy, Dean Walker suggest- ed a study by engineers of the eco- nomics of transportation and produc- | tion with a view to systematizing a \ hh Senator Harding’s mention of putting “teeth” in his evokes only jeers from the Democratic friends of the League of Nations. a hat Republicans Otter ace of the League proposed reconstructed Hague Tribunal “Political dentists,” ob- serves the New York World (Dem.) “will tell him that without a League only false teeth are possible now,” and the Richmond Journal’s (Dem.) title for an editorial on the subject is “Harding’s False- Teeth Proposal.” On the other hand prominent Republican newspapers are enthusiastic over the Re- publican candidate’s plan, the New York Tribune declaring no millennium, it is definite and affirmative, whereas the that while the Harding program “promises Cox program is vague and negative.” So that the public may more fully understand just what is offered by both parties, THE LITER- you will be able to vote more intelligently at the coming The Financial “Drive”in Politics Mr. Burleson’s “Burned Fingers” Why Coal Should Not Cost More Decreasing Fear of Immigration “Cuban” Independence for Egypt A Shipping Alliance With Germany Dangers of Japan-American Fric- tion Why Bulgaria Is, Anti-Bolshevik How Ireland Locks to Continental / Eyes Prohibition’s Shadow on. Australia The Last Word in Wireless New Paper Pulps ; Fireless Fireworks / , Why Work? Movies for Everybody Linceln’s Statue’ in London Debatable Beauty of Women The Mr. | ’ calities. This, he thought, would! be used successfully in the manufac- | British ation where. needed. and would pre-| effort to induce manufacturers to util- vent continued inability of the trans-| ize these two trees. I am sure, in portation systems to meet the de-| view of the world shortage of priut mands, upon them. paper the manufacturers will come 'ZEING GUEST OF - Boe otlinis iad oF Gaaer annie VILLA SET THIS. in Canada and its use will add ma- The shortage at p: it, h | MAN BACK $5,000) ave ross to ince ot tinct tan to i | supply.” terially to the wood and pulp supply. . adequate mill facilities.” | ; 3 “The present shortage has led to eagelin, formerly a resident of} vastly increased investments in the n, $5,000 to be a “dirner| wood pulp industry. New mills are guest” of Francisco Villa, the Mexi- ii a san ex-bandit leader, according to a being built in northern Manitoba and letter received from Mr. Heagelin who is president of a brewery com- pany at Sabinas, Coahuila, Mexico, by relatives here. At the time of Heaz lin’s, experience, reports of_tie napping” were carried in press dis- patthes. In his letter the brewer says it was really an i :ffair” and probably was Villa’s last bandit act, as the. following y he surrendered to the federal forces. After a corps of Viila’s men had raided the brewery and had beei ap- peased by a diplomatic employee who gave the bandits twenty pesos each, Heagelin says that he informed of Villas invitation to dinner. They virtually placed the brewer under ar- rest and acompanied him to Villas headquarters where he dined with the bandit chieftan: Villa carried the rele of a most hospitable guest, according to Heagelin’s letter, then in conclu- sion informed his guesi that he must @vrite a check for 10,000 pesos, which Heagelin did. The following day Heagelin | re- quested Villa to return some mules which the bandits had driven atvay from the brewery. He complied with the request... A REFORESTING OF PULP FOOD AREA IS CANADA’S PLAN | Ottowa, Ont., Sept. 11.Three mil. lion pine and spruce trees have een blanted in the cut-over and burned | over areas of wood pulp forests in Ontario this year, according to Dr. E. J. M. Deschame, deputy minister of ; lands and forests of the province. This is figured at the rate of two new ‘tr@ps-for every thre cut or burned doWn. This is the first step in a gov- ernment campaign to reestablish the Kan., Sept. 11.—It cost treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, RINGWORM, TETTER of other itching skin diseases. Try 75 cent box at our risk. JOSEPH BRESLOW, Druggist NOTICE TO TYPEWRITER USERS Harry Herschleb, expert service man for the Rem- ington Typewriter Co., will be at the McKenzie Hotel all week, where he will be glad to take care of your typewriter troubles. Just phone 258. All work guar- anteed.—Remington Type- writer Co., Geo. C. Kettner, Manager. y PHONE 909 4061, Broadway The Bismarck Sign Co. wood pulp forests on a_ productive basis as quickly as possible. “To increase the supply of wood pulp,” said Dr. Decheme, “the gov- is mad experiments which j September 11th Number on Sale Today—_News-dealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year work out better distribution of popul-; ture of print paper. It is making an immense new sources of wood pulp ARY DIGEST in its issue of September 11th publishes an enlightening article, drawn from editorial statement by American newspapers, comprehensive, unbiased, and deeply interesting. Read it and election. There are many other news-articles covering a wide field of interest. Among them are: Speeding Up Culture in Movies Play as a Church Function Vacation With Pay for Workers ; Cocoanut Industry in the Phil- ippines What the Heroes of the Great, War Are Doing / How Saghalien Was Captured by e “a Dauntless Japanese Adven- turer” Wilson Under the Scrutiny of a Psychologist A New Day for American Sailors American Planes for the Gordon Bennett Cup Taking Chances on Gasoline Explosions . Science, and Invention Best of the Current Poetry Tonics of the Day — Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Maps and Humorous Cartoons Columbia which will exploit people. “a eee | Collgges in former times used to _ Two wineglassfuls of an ale of un-|-brew their own ale and hold festivi- usual strength, still brewed at Oxford, | ties known as College Ales. - COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPHS COLUMBIA RECORDS ' ON EASY TERMS IF DESIRED COWAN’S DRUG STORE Essential Schooling Learning to take care of money—to save—is a vital part of the child’s education. The bank account habit started early in life develops business exactness, economy, foresight, , and a pride in independence. While your children are learning mathematics in the schools, let them learn to apply the study in real life. Broaden their education: by starting them in the banking habit. a Our Certificates of Deposit pay 5% interest. Bismarck, : : - : North Dakota Bismarck Bank Eng., are enough to intoxicate most ee ons