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. for publication of all news PACE FOUR BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN . . . . Editor Forei tatives | G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY 3 ge . Syne, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK . we. Fifth Ave. Bldg. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use credited to it or not ot! eredited in this paper and also the local news published herein. eo. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are flso reserved, MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.........+. $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck . 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.........+-- 6.00 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1878) a> THE SUNDAY SCHOOL Every Sunday some millions of little folks— and adults, too, for that matter—all over the Christian world, meet in churches of some kind, sing “Showers of Blessings” and the like, recite a lesson from the scriptures, and then, maybe— stay for church, The Sunday school is popular— church with the. sermon left out, as some one has described it. One likes to mull over the beginning of the Sunday school. Its “inventor,” was Robert Raikes and, in 1812, he lived in’ the little English town of Gloucester. Raikes came out of his home on a bright Sunday morning, only to see the town raggamuffins fighting and quarreling about the village well curb. Raikes, on the spot, started the first Sunday school. He took the boys across the way to his home. Ragged they weré and other decent places were closed to them. But Raikes took them in, and taught them. And on the next Sunday there were more boys. And the idea of the free Sunday school spread from one English town to another, and into France across the channel, and into Germany and leaped the seas to America. Now the story of the Bible is told tn every civilized country in the world on every Sunday of the year without money and without price. Raikes’ effort has grown to be a wonderful force in guid- ing aright the young of the world. Ball players these days prefer the immunity bath ‘to the well-known shower. ile ALMOST ‘HOPELESS ’ At the national convention of the Service Star League a resolution was passed advocating sensi- ble dress for women. There is room for improvement. Short skirts do not always enhance the beauty of the wearer. In fact, in some instances, close observers say, they reveal what might as well have been concealed. Vivid cheek color, they insist, often clashes violently with the still more vivid color on lips. It is an inspiration, they assert, to meet a girl who doesn’t mince along because it’s supposed to be fashionable; who doesn’t slouch because the fashion illustrations do. They like the girl whose clear skin radiates health, and whose stride is free and swinging. She wears neat blouses and a natty suit and never do her frocks rival a spider’s web in transpar- ency. She does not look like the display window of a jewelry shop nor is her hair done up in a fashion that looks suspiciously like that employed by the women of the South Sea islands. The,§ervice Star League women mean all right. Doubtless there, is, much reason for their crusade, but they are going at it wrong. They cannot hope to accomplish much by passing good resolutions —not as long as their sons and brothers persist in their admiration of the up-to-the-latest-fashion girl. An English suicide wrote farewell notes in} seven languages but he hanged himself with one rope. HUES IN NEWS - News these days teem with color. Not by any meaning to charge that it is “coroder,” but merely that color plays an important part in the under: standing of international affairs. “White Russia” used to mean one thing; now as contrasted with “Red Russia,” it means not a territorial entity, but rather a group in opposi- tion to the Communists. One hedrs about “Red Guards” and “White Guards” and more lately about “Green Guards.” The Red Flag and the Black Flag fly above factories in Italy. Phalanxes of radicals dub themselves “red” and hurl the accusation of “yellow” at their com- patriots slightly to their right. Other defini- tions seem to indicate that a radical group less “red” than another group is “pink.” Now comes no less an authority than the U. S. Army War College and defines the term “pink” for a waiting world. The War College has is- sued a map—a confidential map—on which it plots in interesting colors from day to day the shifts of the various “governments” in Europ: and Asia. | The War College was faced with the problem of properly labeling the most recently formed rev- olutionary government in Far Eastern Siberia. It met the task heroically! It discovered that this government, though not Bolshevik, was ‘tinctured with Communist ideas and permeated with Bolshevik notions and radical officials. Weighing these facts carefully, the Army War College decided on its label. The Far Eastern government is now definitely cataloged as “The Semi-Red Government of East- ern Siberia.” ; In other words, it is “pink.” Now the world knows what color pink is. It is “semi-red.” PIE IS OKEH At last somebody has got right up in the meet- ing and said a good word for pie. Usually the na- tional pastry is condemned. But pie fans keep right on eating. They view with alarm the dis- sector who can make eight wedges appear where but five appeared “before. But they don’t quit putting pie where it will do the most good on that account. No sir. They just say: “Gimme a couple pieces today.” And so it is good to know that no less an au- thority than the Journal of the Ameriean Medi- cal Association comes to the front with an article assuring the public, both within and without the “pie belt,” that pie, when properly. made, is not cnly toothsome and wholesome but. a digestible product, and that a “helping” of ice cream on top doesn’t hurt any. Pie has been up against a lot of criticism in years gone by. It has almost taken the count at times on the “indigestible” indictment. Even mince pie is given a clean bill by the jour- nal’s pie expert. It has béen proven by tests. that in the race through the alimentary canal, pudding wins, pie second and ‘cake third.: Is it a consola- tion to know, too, that in the tests made it took longer to digest angel’s food than devil’s cake? With the fresh pie season at its height, if one may say it, one would hardly have the crust to make an adverse report, anyhow, would one? The White Sox shrunk in the wash. One good squeal deserves another, said the ball players when they heard Cicotte’s confession. The fatted calf will grow up to be a cow even if the former crown prince does return honie. EDITORIAL REVIEW : Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinions of The Tribune, Beg & are faa -sented here in order vhat our readers may bave hoth aides of important issues which are being a the press of the day. 2 = Wy MR. WICKER’S REVELATION Mr. George Wicker, candidate for the legis- lature in Dodge county, has done the people of the whole state of Minnesota’a service in calling attention to two planks in the platform of the Working People’s Nonpartisan Political Jeague. Mr: Wicker, who was not a candidate of the league in the June primaries, was given to understand that he might have the indorsement of the league, if he would pledge support to every article of its program. This offer was made in a form letter and presumably was sent to every aspirant for a place in the legislature. Mr. Wicker absolutely refused to sign the pledge, which was to be “with- out reservation,” and mentioned two paragaphs in twelve which he could not tolerate. The fifth paragraph demands “public owner- ship and operation of railways, steamships, bank- ing business, stockyards, packing plants,.grain elevators, terminal markets and all other public utilities and the nationalization and development of basic natural resources, waterpower and un- used land, with the repatriation of large hold- ings.” _ If that does not mean socialism and wholesale confiscation of property, it means nothing. The tenth paragraph, after much rhetorical preface, - demands “governmental supervision, which shall ultimately put those who wok by hand and brain in control of industry and commerce for the benefit of all the people.” A purpose to es- tablish a soviet system could not be more plainly expressed. hg It is not necessary tocquarrel with the right of any group of people to ask indorsement of any program they see fit to construct. It all depends on the nature of the program. The letter received by Mr. Wicker, containing the fifth and tenth paragraphs as mentioned, shows what the candidates of the Working Peo- ple’s Nonpartisan league are pledged to support. They have declared themselves for socialism and ultimately for the soviet idea. A vote for any of their candidates is a vote for Leninism in aero GIRLS! MAKE A LEMON BLEACH : ! Lemons Whiten and Double ' Beauty of the Skin ! Snentneneranenemenens I Squeeze the juice of two lemons 1n- to a bottle contajning three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best frec- | kle and tan lotion, and complexion beautifier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has’ the lemons and any drug store or tojlet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents, Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how | freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless | and’ never irritates. | ord O’CONNOR DRIVES HOME TO BIG AUDIENCE BASIC ISSUES BEFORE VOTERS | (Continued from Fuge Oned nor most of his life, told the audience, in introducing the speaker, that M. O’Connor always could be found firmly on the side of right. At the outset of his talk Mr. O’Con- nor went into broken promises of the league. He referred to Governor Fra- zier’s veto” of the terminal elevator bill in 1918, when he, O’Connor, voted for the bill because the people had said they wanted to try the experi- ment. ue “He gave as his excuse that he didn’t want to raise the money by di- rect taxation—it would have required | about $200,000," said Mr. O’Connor. “Two years later he signed a bill io raise $200,000 for immigration pur- poses by direct ‘taxation. “The reason you have no ter. minal elevator in:this state today is because the league denied it,” said the speaker. . “If any other Covernor dared to oppose it they wpuld have said he was | a tool of Big Biz and had been bribed | by the Chamber of Commerce,” said { Mr. O'Connor. “I wonder if this is 2 | club so that if. the Governor breaks, with these: people they will say he, too, betrayed them.” Mr. O’Connor said he had subscribed to a fund to finance the elevator when bonds could not be sold. After he voted for the terminal elevator he said the Courier-News praised him, saying he “had dealt a death blow to the grain gamblers.” Now it accused him of being a tool of. grain gamblers. “I must be destroyed,” he said. “Every man who dares to oppose them must be destroyed, they say.” See Tax Receipts He advised his hearers to get the best answergpn taxes by comparing their tax receipts for the last few years. He said he was satisfied with what they wgnld find. s He referrg# to gnother broken prom” ise of . the teate bosses—a .Non- partisan’ state election. This was 4 Teague plank in’ 1916, he said, and then when it came up in the legis- lature the league killed it. He spoke for the initiated measures | . to, safe-gugrd fhe Bank of ‘North Da- Kota. o “I would make the state bank- a bank of deposit for state funds,” he sald, “and then model it alogg the Lines of the federal land banks or the Bank of South Dakota, making it truly a rural credits bank.” iieferring to the misrepresentation on his attitude on the grain grading act he said that Dr. Ladd had stated on the witness stand that he (Ladd) had nothing to do with fixing grades —he had to ddopt grades fixed by the United States government. The manager of the mill and eleva- | tor association, J. A. McGovern, testi- fied that he was-grading a certain wheat No. 3. An insepctor showed that it should be another. grade. The ac- tion of McGovern .was costing the farmer 10 cents a. bushel, he said. Mr. O’Connor referred to the ac-, complishment of the’ California fruit grawers in marketing, which he sug- gested as the remedy for farmers in getting full value for their products. As an example, he took livestock. Suppose, he pointed out, there was an association in each county with a county agent, and in turn a state as- sociation, with a secretary who could, but communicating with his county agents, market 10,000 hogs for all in- stead of each farmer marketing in- dividually? Would not this accom- plish the desired result, marketing in a big way through co-operation, he asked. Mr. '0’Connor, who always has ‘ supported woman suffrage in the legislature, said that he had done so because he believed it was fundamentally sound. ‘There was a large number of women in the audience. Women, he declared, I Dey 4 iy hain’s Vegetable Compound a trial. of ‘Tom, 5 ; 1 { il cseatt 0% Read the Letters of These Two Women. ey North East, Md.—* I was in ill health ,* four or tive years and doctored with one doctor 2fter another but none helped me. I was irregular and had such terrible pain in my back, lower o, part of iy body and down each sido "ae that I had to go to bed three or four K 1 days every month, I was very nervous, 9 rl - tired, could not sleep and could not eat %@,. without gettin; A friend asked | ‘| me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- Pa table Compound and Lam sorry I did not take it sooner for it has helped me wonderfully. I don’t have to go to hed with the pain, can eat without being sick and have more strength. I recom- mend your inedicine and you are at liberty to publish my testimonial.”— Euizanern Weaver, R. R. 2, North East, Md. the. state—the home and’ the schools, “If ‘I am” elected I will serve ‘the state with all my strength,” he said. “I have “fade no promises. -If the call cothes. to me I will step into the office free to do the very best 1 | can forthe state with my hands free.” aeesesesegesesesesesesesesesesesers i Makes a Family Supply of Cough Remedy Really better than ready-made a ‘cough syrups, and saves about $2. * Easily and quickly prepared, _If-you combined the curative proper- ties of every known “ready-made” cough remedy, yeh probably. coutd, not get as nuch: realieurative power as there is in this simple, home-made cough syrup, which is easily prepared in a few minutes. Get ‘from any druggist 2¥% ounceg of Pinex, pour it’ into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with syrup, using cither plain granulated sugar syrup. Clarified molasses. honey, or corn syrup, as de- sired. . The result is a full pint of really better cough syrup than you could buy ready-made for three times the money, ~ ‘Tastes pleasant and never spoils. ° j . This Pinex and Syrup preparation gets ; right at, the c#use of a cough and gives almost immediite relief. It loosens the phlegm, stops the nasty throat tickle and lieals the sore, irritated membranes so gently and easily that -it is really astonishing, A day’s use will usually overcome the ordinary cough and for bronchitis, eroup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma, there is nothing better. Pinex is-a'most valuable concentrated druggist for “2% ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don’t accept any- thing else, Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptly re- Nervous Breakdown “T am so nervous it seems as though I should fly” —“ My nerves are all on edge” —“I wish I were dead.” How often have we heard these expressions or others quite as extravagant from some loved one who has been brought to this state by some female trouble which has slowly developed until the nerves can no longer stand up under it. No woman should allow herself to drift into this condition without giving that good old-fashioned root and herb remedy Lydia E. Pink- Nervous, Ailing Women Should Rely Upon Ten Years YoungerT His Years: Doesn’t it make you feel good—cause you to straight- en up and feel ‘“‘chesty”— when someone guesses your age at ten years or so younger than you really are? You look into your mirror, smile with satisfac- tion and say to yourself: “Well, he didn’t make such a bad guess, at that.” The point is: You're no older than’ your vitality. If'a man is strong, vigor-) ous, mentally alert, fine and fit at 50 he has.a better chance of living up to 80 than,a man of 30. who is weak and run-down has of living up to 60. While none of us can stay the years nor stop time, we should all make an heroic effort to suc- cessfully resist the effects of time by ever keeping our vitality ‘at par. When you sense a feeling of slowing down of your weakness—when you notice a lack of your old time “pep” and @‘punch’’—in other inn.—“ Twas run down and ne ud not restat night and was more din the. morning than when I went to bed. I have-two chil- dren, the youngest three. months old and it was drudgery to care for them as able and generally worn oyt. k of rest'and appetite my haby did not get enough nouri: ment from my milk $0 Istarted to ive him two bottle feedings a‘day. “‘Attéer’’*" taking three bottles of Lydia. E. Pink- ’s Vegetable Compound I felt like a new woman, full of life and energy. It is a pleasure to care for my children, and I am very happy with them and feel fine. I nurse my baby exclusively again, and can’t say too much for your medicine.”—Mrs. A. L, Minter, 2633 E. 24th St., Minneapolis, Minn. han mence at once to restore your energy, strength and endurance by taking e The, Great General Tonic This master body-builder will help you keep young in spirit and mental and physical action, because it will assist Nature in maintaining your vitality at par. * Itenriches the blood, restores worn-out tissues, soothes jangling ans r-wrought nerves, in- sep, sharpens theappe- estion—in short, will put new life, new, vigor ‘and new Vim in every fibre of your body, You will be surprised how much better you'll feel after ing a treat- ment of LYKO, if you are tired and worn out, nervously and physically ex- compound of genuine Norway pine ex- physical forces—when JOUP sDeusted. 1's tract, and has been used for generations stomach, liver, kidneys and ™'ldly laxative to break up: severe coughs. other ormans’show= Sienis off bensle tm dine To avoid disappointment. ask your Sans SHOW Signs O condition. Get LYKO is sold in a bottle from ayes’ only, like, pict your druggist Refuse all substi today. \ Sole Manufacturers Minnesota.—St. Paul Dispatch. _nil protet the two Dutwaris of ea Segre espe Res Waa |< porte when gee” ERO. MEDICINE COMEANY WILL.ROGERS (HIMSELF) IN WHAT’S NEWS TODAY? Jokes by ROGERS IW NOT SO MOCH NEWS TODAY — WILL =~ WHERE A/SwINDLER. Is HAVIN’ A TOUGH TIME Yes- HE LAIMS THE, SO DID THE {/ PROHIBITIONISTS PROMISE TO HELD BIVAN OUT AT THE DEMOCRATIC — CONVENTION Drawings. hv ‘GROVE Gere ae e . : ’ . ’ , a? , “