The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1920, Page 2

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PA CET 10: , tae i NATIONAL WOMEN AID STATE G. 0. P. Mrs. Robinson and Mrs. Robins Will Arrive Soon—Mrs. Mc- Cormick at Hibbing Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 23.—Three republican. women of national reputa- tion have been lent to Minnesota for the intensive campaign among wom- en voters of the state, it was an- nounced today. Mrs. Douglas Robin- son and Mrs. Raymond Robins will arrive soon; Mrs. Medill McCormick of Chicago, already is in Minnesota on a short campaign tour, She spoke in Duluth yesterday at a large gather- ing of women, and today is in Hibbing and Virginia, closing her series of speeches. Mrs. Robinson, sister of the late Theodore Roosevelt, will make two speeches in Minnesota next week, in Minneapolis and Duluth. The dates are to be announced later. Mrs. Raymond Robins, president of the National Woman's Trade Union league, who is to be in the cily all day Friday, is to speak in‘the Auditoriun. at § p.m. Arrangements are being made for her to address severe groups of women in industries dyr ing the di Mrs. W. W. Remington, president o! the Minneapolis Republican Women's club, was to return late today from Oklahoma, where she has been a mem ber of the national “women's flying squadron.” ‘Today two information bureaus for women voters were opened by the re publican women, one in the G. O. P teashop, 54 Ninth st S, and the other in the county republican headquarters for women, 308 Meyers arcade. Speaker at the G. O. P. teashop Saturday, the f Teachers’ day, wil: be Mrs. ice Warrington and = M Elizabeth Hall. Judge CG. E. Dickin- son was to speak today at the shoy and Judge J. W. Molyneaux tomorrow) at noon. Mrs. Manley L. Fosseen, cozchair- man of the national speakers’ bureau s returned to Chicago’ from Nebras- and will go to Kentucky, Satur- HUGHES AGAINST N. Y. SOCIALIST OUSTER ACTION New York, Sept. While So- cialist leaders were conferring on the next p to obtain represen- tation of the party in the New York assembly, ‘Charles E. Hughes, head of the bar association committee h opposed the ouster for the So- ist delegation last winter, issued statement condemning the second ating. The ouster of the socialist: mem- bors of the ussembly is an act of in- eredible folly and is in flagrant d regard of the fundamental princi of American institutions,” said Hughes. “IT am opposed to so is because I wish to see our in tions preserved that I take this action. AU AN Drugelsts ‘Special Boskilet on Motherhood and Baby, Free IBRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. DEPT. 5. ATLANTA. Ga, Special attractive price on car- load lots of Fancy Northwestern winter apples, assorted varieties loaded in bulk and in boxes. .We own the crchard and can please you on QUALITY, PRICE and SERVICE. Shipments October. CONSUMERS SUPPLY CO. St. Joseph, Mo. Write us at once. will start early_ in WINTER APPLES Just Received Strictly fresh skin- » less and headless CATFISH ; Bd GUSSNERS_ ; ee STOP USING Tobacco and Snuff —Gold Seal No. 10—Is a guaranteed vegetable treatment for the tobacco, snuff and cigarette habits, Sworn affidavits and _ testimonials from} grateful men who have been cured from the use of this poisonous drug. Complies with pure food laws. Price of full treatment, $2.75. Our book “A” tells why you should NOT use tobacco or snuff. It is FREE, FREE, Send right now. Show your friends this advertisement. Address INLAND. CHEMICAL CO. Dept. D, Bismarck, N. Dz t Room 1, Tribune Building “It is the more fla; these members of the assembly had just been re-olected in accordance | with our laws and at a and because, so far as provisi the constitution of the socialis' gavo any pretext for the pre ouster, these had heen removed, “The statement f As: blyma Martin, chairman of the judicia committee, pu the mutter very clearly. He 3 “There was no charge against any of them personally as individuals. No personal guilt was charged against them. Since then their orga on has complied with our constitution and our laws.* We have no right to} exclude them’, MINING TO BE RESUMED barre, Pa. Sept. 23—Com- plete resumption ef mining in the an- thracite region by Monday after a curtailment of production the mounted “to about 70 per cent w assured today when the 8,000. st ing miners of the Pennsylyaniz som pi at Pittston voted to returi to work next week. OLD BATTLE LINES Evidences of War Thick ia Vicinity of Ypres. Shell Holes Beginning to Grow Green, but Battered Tanks Are Every- where in Evidence on the Scenes of Slaughter. Leaving Zeebrugge the first day’s journey by motor takes the visitor something more than a hundred miles, with Ypres as the turning point and every variety of war-stricken lands and recovering countryside on the way ther It was a point moot- ed with wearisome frequency in the real days of the place—when it was “functioning,” as ene would have said —and among front-line troops in the salient, whether they would ever care to come back and see that. foul place under a peaceful. aspect. Agreed, there were thos¢ at home who thight be taken, not without profit to them- selves and the world in general, over the low ground under Kemmel, or where Passchendaele looked down on the swamps, and there were not a few of the armchair gentry whose instant presence would have been wel- comed. But, for himself, it, was the common verdict of the man in the mudhole that, once out of it, Wipers and he could be the best of friends— at a distance, sa writer in the Manchester Guardian, Riding into the place from which rises the battered tower.of the Cloth hall, in the high day and under a burning sun; coming, too, unscathed and unfearful from what was. unmis- takably the direction of “No \Man’s Land,” one had to question such a verdict, and finally, under the’ stimu- lation of.a hundred quickening memo- ries, allow the appeal. For the in- terest of Ypres and of all the ground in front of it would not be denied. The place was like itself—in a degree hard to credit. And if only some mimic had been there. to reproduce the shrill. crescendo of an ‘approach- ing shell one would undoubtedly have Pyramid ‘ Gives Relief If Plies Itch, Are Painful and You Need Quick Relief, Get a Box * of Pyramid Pile Sup- positories Today. In the privacy of your own home Pyramid Pile | Suppositories — give quick relief from itching, bleeding or protruding pil such rectal troub, t bsti icient. Suppositories, in plain wrapy. Name. Street city, FOR SALE One Overtand, Medel 86, Equipped with Six Cylinder Continental Motor. ‘5 Cord Tires. Two Dodge Touring Cars. USED CAR MART Main Street. . dD. Bismarck, s BUTTER & NORTAERN ir election, SOON | | —_ aken Cover. Going “Out by fie Way of the Menin gate and turning up into the high road to Poelcapelle, with first schendaele rolling up to the skyline as a background, is to pass into the field of an endless battle from which noth- ing has been cleared but the dead; and though elsewhere something has already been done of that “concentra- tion” of graves which is to give our dead an orderly and lasting memorial, they still lie here, for the most part jn the scattered resting places to which the hurried hands of their com~} It rades consigned them. The shell holes begin to grow green, but it is only a beginning, and if the trenches are almost unseen as oné goes down the road, were they ever very clearly defined here? It is a long time before a place is reached ftom which no Lattered tanks can be seen, and now and again they stand three or four deep on the very edge of the road—ditched in their first attempt ‘at the mud. To look back on war at its worst, with almost all its evidences jut present slaughter, one could scarcely better the viewpoint. of this iroad, .A few miles’ farther, and the murdered forest of Houthulst, with its acres of stricken trees and not a live one, gives a new edge to terror. There is something sound in the notion ,that one can see the battle fields in a day; the repetition would give no new tone, but intrinsically the jsame impression, ‘As. a lesson, Ypres jand_ its province (could nat be fhe ipassed. Coming ‘out at Dixmude;*de- hind what was an almost permanent boche line, the car returning to Zee- brugge comes again into a country which is alive, For the hinterland of Belgium has returned qugckly to it- self. The army huts which serva in the broken areas as shelter for thuse who have returned to the shatte:ed ¥ ive uplace here to cottages s tially repaired; aad the frugal cultivation of the soil goes vl with Gy energy and resourse- ul of no class in the world the Belgian or Freneh Birds and Their Nests, The robin is one of the best nest builders. Robins prefer trees not too heavily foliaged, like an apple tree. At times the robin will build her nest in ‘) a gateway or beneath the eaves of a house where there is a solid founda- tion, But as a general proposition it is in a tree of fairly good size. It: is built of straw and grass and string and mud and is solid and heavy. A robin’s nest may ‘be exposed to the weather for five or six years and not go to pieces, but it is never used but once. A few birds use a second-hand nest, but when they do.so they clean it out and pateh it up with new ma- terial. The oriole uses one nest year after year, but always improves it by putting in new material and seeing to it that it is tied with stout strings to the limb from which it is suspended.— Exchange. ls a Hathox a Passenger? Papa’s. Spank: eause the English woman was sleep- ing in the diminutive railway compart- -ment. First he tossed a lighted match near the head of the sleeping woman, that his daughters and their hatboxes could be properly accommodated, Ar- thur Stanley Riggs, who describes this adventure in “Going to Leon” in Travel magazine, was growing more and more indignant, ‘and indicated that hatboxes do not belong in seats. Then, papa became a miniature Vesu- vius in full eruption. He turned to his pretty daughter, with an eye full of choler, and cried: “Sit on her then! Sit on her, my daughter! Over-Supplied. “Don’t you! think the lady who ts trying to start a new school ought to consult an oculist?” . “Why?” “Beeause she has several pupils in her eye.” 5 —: | The petroleum * deposits of Alsace | are the only ones in the world oper- ated by shafts instead of bored wells. CHICAGOAN SUED FOR $100,006 AFTER DREAM BUBBLE BURSTS) Hooge and then St. Julien, with Pas-j h blood was fired ‘be- ; then he demanded that she sit up so j <- SELLA TAL PN ER? \ H She Used to Be His “Darling,” | ‘. But Now He Calls Her His! i “Cave Woman” Chicago, Sept. 17—She used to be his 2 his “dear” | and his “angel Id,” and her neck, to him a “darling litue necl And, besides all that, a certain stalwart office building, pictured in one of his love notes, could never “hold tie amount of love” he had i wasya_ swee j dream “bubbl 7 | And now he calls her iis “cave | woman.” l, Sues ior $190,000 i A Chicago judge w ries of Mrs. Ruth Tur Martin and} James Wright ‘Martin, Jr, The} “cave woman,” alias “angel child,” : has sued Ma t vU0 breac of promise following suit for annulment : ceremony performed at Crown Point, in January, 1920, months auth Turner's divorce trom S. Bishop. Martiu insists, that-Mrs. Martin pur- sued him andgifreaicned to comtnit suicide PHO not = mar her, whereupon he did marry her before a year trom her divorce had sed. She makes the saine claim, s. that he forced the il in one of his love to, vLMr agara Falls. ‘ “Until Niag “Angel Child: you with my er pencil, 1 a using a scratchi pen. Howey that does not have anything to do with how much I love you, which, of! course, is more than this (arrow itters down to the structure here) building could hold.” Mrs. Martin is the daughter of the; iate Colonel Henry Lathrop Turner. : As a slight ray of hope, Mrs. Mar-| tin’s attorney say vend in the payment of $100,000. Harry | James, Some of the cater ‘ the region of the Darling river in Aus- | tralia are more than used in the Irish riots. ifound eve “alley apples’ her suit need not} b “A | Minnes | 400 cases | fall term court to open vriting | cording Pag Hildreth. : ; A large number of cases deal with mugging ilildreth. liquor Mr. riage ceremony will just about! com fix it up,” said he. ‘Mrs. Martin doese not want money, she wants line hi | the found inj the Grai District (p) > Es] tT, I | G fo ie — So Z Pe —Between 309 and eon the calendar of U i PRICES REDUCED TOUBING | ROADSTER COUPE SEDAN TRUCK . FORDSON TRACTOR for the! ed States district | rgo Oct. 5, ae} Attorney M. A.! and selling, . said | | | i i { | IS IMPROVED | Paul, Sept. 2 considerable improvement. s 75 per cent of its own ca orthern Pacific $4 per cent a orthern 87 per cent. i Leing moved slowly at pres- hes long.’ ent but the farmers do not appear to RAR ee BE ele —Reports received; man, is in Bismarck today transact- ‘A. L. Flim, traffic expert of the| ing business, lroad says that the car situa-! tion of many northwest roads shows and warehouse | The Soo IRISH RIGTERS USE “ALLEY APPLES” BELFAST, Ireland—Stones are agnong the chief weapons: When trouble starts the rioters can be Pease Sat aia CITY NEWS TaNelgi ee, j city today. ; to Glen Ullin yesterday where he took vhere with heaps of heavy stones and it is these * that form the-“heavy artillery” in street fighting. ! gied-up nostrils and the air passages / nice, no quinine. H THE UNIVERSAL CAR ~ and Fordson —— TRACE MARK AH Cars Equipped with Electric Lighting and Starting Systems Above prices F’. 0. B. Bismarck including gas and oil in getting delivery Phone 318 ) be anxious to ship grain and few com-| drove from that place -to’ Bismarck 8 COURT ‘plaints are being received. ° rom Dawson S. E. Kepler, of Dawson, is in the} city teday on business. i At Van Horn i Francis A. Ruckle of Williston, is istered at the Van Horn hotel to- day. From Wilton, ! P. J. Cahill, a well known Wilton Enters Hospital Mrs. Julius Andahl of near Bis- marck entered the Bismarck hospital today for treatment. Fargo Visitors Charles V. Wilson and J. M. Fer- s of Fargo, are registered at the rand Pacific hotel today. * To Show Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Simpson, of El- bow Woods, motored up to-see the “Linger Longer Letty” performance last night. Son Born Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Frances of this city announces ,the birth of a son early this morning at the Bis- marck hospital. / Land Transaction O. W. Roberts today closed a deal with John M. Soderland, when he bought some land from them in the McKenzie addition. * From New Salem William Schwartz, from New Salem, came down to Bismarck yesterday to join the band in their trip on the Booster tour today. Fleck Buys Car R. J. Fleck of Mandan was in the While here he bought a Chandler automobile from the North- western Automobile C. \ Takes Pictures Fred Holmboe of the Publicity Film Co., flew with Lieut. Ely of this place | a number of pittures of that place. | Nephew Here C. W. Paulson of he Grand Pacific hotel, has as his guest, his nephew, W. H. Paulson of Davenport, Ia., who Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing} and snuffling! A dose of Pape’s Cold Jompound” taken every two hours un- til three doses are taken usually | breaks up a severe cold and ends all/ grippe misery. : i The very first dose opens your clog: ; | clique.” $614.50 567.50 859.25 911.25 642.00 868.00 ES RR he ce your order at once so you will not be disappointed THE DAKOTA MOTOR COMPANY North Dakota by auto. . Leaves for Jamestown George S. Register, a’ graduateof the'class of 1918, son of Mr: and Mrs. Geo. M. Register, of Bismarck, left today for Jamestown to enter. the Jamestown college: From: Dickinson C; P. Merry of Dickinson drove up to Bismarck yesterday to attend to business matters. He was accom- panied by his daughter, Miss lrene Merry. From St .Paul Earl J. Noonan, of St. Paul, arrived in the city yesterday to begin his new duties as superintendent of the construction on the New Memorial building at the Capitol grounds. On Business D. W. Lantz, from Chicago, weré“in’the city attending’ ‘to bus nes8-matters, and incidentally to at- «tend the show at.the auditorium. On Business »,George,O, Tattord of Fargo is in the city today attending to business matters and incidentally looking into the prospects of making his perman- ent residence here. eompanied him. SOCIALISTS TO MAKE BIG FIGHT Nek York, Sept. 23.—The socialist delegation, ousted from the New York assembly, will. make‘ a tour of the state with the hope of winning elec- tions for enough socialist candidates “to take control out of the hahds of the present bi-partisan reactionary Mrs. Tafford ac- Morris Hilquitt, party leader, made this. statement this afternoon. JEWS ‘MURDERED IN THE UKRAINE Londan, Sept. 23—More than 200 Jews were killed in the Galician po- groms instituted by the Ukranians, according to the latest reports receiv- ed in Kovno. The Kiev correspondent e Daily Herald described the “reine pogroms in the Ukraine, declares that 10,000 new refuges have reached Kiev. __ Four per cent of the milk produced in this country is used in ice cream manufacture. of the head; stops nose running; re- lieves the headache, dullness, feverish ness, sneezing. soreness and stiffness. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest relief known costs only a few tents drug stores. It_acts without assistance, tastes —advt. and Rushford Falkner: Aberdeen, S: <D., and ¥

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