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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1920 ~ RARMERS MISLED " SAYS PRESIDENT | OF GRAIN MEN | Convinced ‘They Are Abused by the Entire Country Follow | e a“ COOPERATION L$ URGED Annual. Cofvention of National | Association Opens in — : Minneapolis Minneapolis, Minh. Oct. 12—The next movement in this country will be an agrarian movement, P. E. Good- f Demagogues , 4 Constipation Serious Ills One of the world’s greatest scien- tists says that more than 90% of all human ‘ills can be graced directly or indirectly to constipAtton, “How many sufferers, realize this?» °°: Most of them continually dose them: ~Selves with so-called laxative pills, gail’ calomel, oil, purges and cathar- tics.and force bowel action. @To, do that is a mistake. ' ens the bowels and liver and « makes constant dosing neces- sary. Ali un 4 Why don’t you pht; tp. day to overcolne you ene ibn eva \, that congtapt drugging will be un- ™ \ necessary? | You can.dq so: it you get / a 25e* box of Nature’s Remedy (NR Tablets) and take one each night for @ week Or 80. , NR Tabjets do much more than merely cause pleasant, easy bowel ac- tion. This medicine acts upon the digestive as well as eliminative or- lactive in politics than business and get your s¥stem jin such shapas\~ % q Tomorrow Alright} 1% Get a25* Box rich of Winchester,/Ind., president, of the "Grain Dealers ‘Natipnal associa- tion, declared at the opening of the as- sociation’s annual convention here yes- terday..He said that,the farmers, mis- led by -ambitious politicians, .were forming organizgtions for class legis lation stronger’ than the nation’s la— bor forces. “The ‘mors, nearer 100 per..cent American n any“dther class, “have been all but convinced that. they are abused by the entire country, that the fruits of their labor argtaken without anything, like a fair return,’ he said. “Through ‘the great organigation they- are building up they. seek to: eliminate competition through class legislation. Here the danger lies. They want the legal right for collective marketing, to combine and hold their pfodne until the price is forced up, thys com pelling the consumer to pay uc prices. = Mislead Public} “Designing politicians ,will aid in the movement. Farmers are more men. They will wield a great power.’ “Mr. Goodrich declared the pultic \ If you are its victim, try’| strengthening your di- gestive and eliminative organs with Nature’s Remedy -- it’s better than laxatives, : NR Today— Keeps. the Doctor Away gans—promotes good digestion, causes the. body to get the nourishment from all the food you eat, gives you a good, hearty appetite, strengthens the liver, overcomes biliousness, regulates kid- ney and bowel action and gives the pe body a thorough ‘cleaning. out. And NR does this without a sign of griping, pain or un- leasantness. It. works gently, ut promptly and” thoroughly. In a few days you notice the Teal result. You begin to fesl BP that you are living again, with new, ‘strength, new energy, vim and pep and ‘ginger. You soon find your , howels acting regularly without help. Try" Nature's. Remedy (NR Tablets) and prove this, It is the best bowel medicine that you can use’and costs 25¢ per: box, containing enough to last twenty-five days. Nature's Remedy (NR ‘Tabiets) is sold, guar- anteed and recommended by your druggist, « PiJlows need more than an oc- casional airing. 1 Oils’ from. the, hair and scalp; soil from handling, dust from the ait—aii work thru the ticking into the feathers, just as they do into your clothes. Pillows need washing to re- move this dust, accumulated through months — perhaps years—of constant use. There are sound health rea- ‘sons, too, Why pillows should be ~washed at least as fre- quently as other heavy bed- ding. ‘ Your family doctor will tell you that the purity of the air you breathe all night-long de- pends upon the freshness of the pillow on which ‘your hea CAPITAL LA 311 Front Street, - we es Make Defi income afd, expenses. Once you have such materialize. . Old. Pillows: Washed Into New Life <You will find it of great assistance in sav- ing if you have plans which you fully made so that they are suited to your be interesting for you to save and see them ‘We pay you 47 on Savings. | *Frst JATIONAL BANK BISMARCK, N.D. We will assist you to carry out. your sav- ings plan—THE OLDEST BANK ON THE MISSOURI SLOPE AND THE LARGEST BANK IN THIS SECTION OF ‘THE STATE —with deposits of over Two Million Dollars —invites deposits of $1.00 or more, drawing 4 per cent interest, compounded‘quarterly. rests. f You-send us a pillow soiled and lifeless. We return to you one ‘that is sweet-and fluffy, with feathers light and downy. In our modern laundry your pillows are washed. in their own ticks, first immérsed. in a cold rinse of soft_pure water; then given thorough wash- ings in fleecy suds; next hot and cold rinses in clear, fresh water—and finally dried to luxurious softness ina cur- rent of warm, clean air. Sweet, soft pillows mean better. sleep and better health for yourself. and your family. Send your pillows to us. Tel- ephone today, and our driver will. call. ; UNDRY CO. | ~ We nite Plans lave care- definite plans it will- + At i This ig the statement of +. Phone 684-4] Tf lin the almost. complete e i means that a car stenciled ‘80,000 | had been misled as to grain market- ing. conditions. “It might be interest- ing for the public to know,” he said, “that the cost -to the down trodden farmer of handling grain by the coun- try grain merchant, the terminal mar+ ket buyer, including all weighing fees, interest on money, inspection and 211! other charges except treight is fess than ten per cent of the price paid to the producer. “When grain, wag very cheap the cost was five ‘per cent}; It is well know fact that in no Sfher country of the world are farm pro-}| ducts handled as cheaply to the pro-| ducers.” ¢ Co-operative Marketing. Co-operative marketing of farm! products by the producers will not] prove a success, B. E. Clement, presi- deyt of the Texas Grain Dealers asso- ciation, told the annual convention he National Grain Dealers’ assoc | tion Nere yesterday., “Some say the producer and the} consumer must be brought. cleser to- and otherwise engaye in the of farm, products,” Mr. marketing Clement said. “They can do that and dé it plecoss- fully it they quit.farming afid go to grain merchandising. When they ¢o this the mer will have traded one set of so-called middlemen for anoth- er with the added ‘liability of paying for the education and the mistakes of the newly. created ating f while sacrificing the ,;constructiva force of individual initiative a! sive impulse of self-interest, which qualities are inherent only in those én- gaged in business for themselves. The competitive system that evokes all, the physical and mental faculties of man cannot be surpassed. The great grain: exchanges, dominated by supply and demand, are the most economical food distributing agéncies in the! world.” FREIGHT MOVES INVESTIGATOR Roads Are Reducing Number of “Cars in Bad Border and Get“ ting Heavier Loads , SOME ARE OPTIMISTIC ‘BY RUSS SIMONTON, N. €. A. Staff Correspondent. Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 12—“The rail- roads of the United States are now moving freight more miles a day than ever before.” 1e Rail- way Executives’ association. The game report adds: me i ;“The-roads are reducing the num- | ber of cars in bad order and they are not only getting heavier loading pec the Ke operation of shippers, quicker load- i ing and unloading.” Now, after ten days spent in the offices of one railway and aboard its freight trains and in its yards, 1 can | understand why the Nickel Plate road is one of the railways which the executives’ association says is moving its freight rapidly. @ When Uncle Sam took his hand | from the throttles of the nation’s lo- | comotives, he left the owners of the roads more troubles than the oldest railroaders had known. Many Obstacles. \) Regardless of the merits of fed- eral control,, no: one seriously denies that when. the railroads went bak io private hands last March, these were the conditions. 1, Thousands ‘of freight cars and imiles o& track out of re 2. Labof conditions - bad. 3. Congestion, of freight ang a lack ; of, co-operation’.on the -part of ship- j pers. # ;ear, but are securing, through | Hardly had the roads begun their f {work of reconstruction -when the ; Switchmen’s strike broke and the | whole machinery of-railroad operation | was disorganized. > 4 Now seven’ monthg of private own: ‘ership with the incentive of compéti? | tion and the, possibility of reward fo¥ e resulted comeback” efficiency. and - loyalty, of America’s railways. * All Are Optimistic. From President J.J. Bernet, who gave me the letters which enabled me to ride the freight trains of the Nickei Plate, to the brakemen on the cars, | foundthe same spirit of optimism for the future. Before I left the Stony, Island ter- minal ygrds of the Nickel Plate at Chicago on a~freight train trip to Buffalo, I spent several days in a short kindergarten course in the great mystery of railroading. Ben Place, a freight representative, who tried , to find a car for me, and brother officials, gave me their views. “Bad order cars, terminal conges- tion and delay on the part of consign- e€s is responsible for most freight delays,” they told me. fThings are better now than they were and we have cleared our own yards rather thoroughly. “It is hard to make some shippers unload their cars and lift the bills of lading because of the money shortage. Some of them have no storage room and would rather pay demurrage on} the cars than move the goods. They are better now but still we have trouble.” . Bernet told me that the Kittle ship- pers and consignees were the greatest “demurrage offenders.” “Sometimes a huckster,” he said, “will use our car as his storeroom aniSgalesroom, block a|valuable, track and keep that car out of service long- er than he should.” 4 No Idle Term. I found that “co-operation of the shipper” is no idle term or matter of theory. Much of the railways’ effi- ciency depends upon the shipper. The Interstate Commerce commission ie } advises that all cars be loaded abow, their marked carrying capacity. That! pounds” shall be loaded to 85,000 or even 90,000 pounds. The same is true in the matter of | prompt loading -and unloading, and along the line I found many other matters, well known to shippers, in which they can assist the road, usual-| ly at little inconvenience to ‘them- selves, E: ‘ 'RARGO WAGES the aggres-|. FASTER, FINDS | For the 100th time, the Standard | Oil Co., Fargo, N. has em- ployed a graduste of iness College of that ci Mr... Torgerson. Students from this school are preferred largely be~ cause they’ re taught methods as well as text boo! fit right in and advance quickly. Miss Rose Appert is the Sth De B.C. pupil for Equity Packing Co. “Follow the $ucceS#ful.’? Write F. 1. Watkins, Pres. 806 Front ~$St, Fargo, N. D. and ask for plar and purpose of *“*1UU0-New-Pupi! Club,”” BISMARCK WAILY TRIBUNE WAR ON RATS Fargo, N. D., Oct. 12.—Rats dwell-|” ing in Fargo will have to move, says R. Scott Zimmerman of Washington, + government biologist, who is investi- gating the ‘city. . Thousands upon thousands of, large, brown house rats, such as spread the black deathgthrough» Europe during the middle-ages, infest the city, Mr. Zimmerman gays. Head ters of | ~-ttom are atthe city: garbage dump heré,- ‘zabout dusk the rats at the dump are most noticeable@\says Mr. Zim- merman. “As soon .as_ night they come out by the thousands and start what might be called their eve ning frolic. One can hear them for blocks around, squeaking and fighting and making almost ‘ ewery , possible noise among the cans and rubbish of ‘Me dump.” But, he continues, the rodents by no means confine their- activities to the/dump. Many thousands live in the business and resident section of Fargo. And with severe winter weather mikes the dump an unten- ablé dwelling place, many more will come trooping into the town. ~ The rats do damage amounting lo many thousands of dollars,in proper- ty loss, says the federal inspector, but that is the least important phase ot the harm they do. As one of the worst forms of pestilence carriers known to man, they present a gr menace to the health. oz the city cording to him. The’ extension. department of the North Dakota Agricultural college shere, City’ officials and boy scouts will joim<ige modern pied piper in the move to drive out the rata, A-gampaign of poisoning /vill be in- ECZEMA ON CHILDS Fate, In Little Pimples. Hands Poisoned. Cuticura Heals. “Our Sittle girl was three montlis old when eczema started om her fz in little pimples. Sie | bbed until her face ; s almost like raw meat. Her hands be- came poisoned so that | Thad totieone ofthem | b> 7 up, and she cried, Ml is PeaMeread about Ci cura Soap and Ointinent so we boug bh acakeof Soap and a box of Oint and in four weeks she was kealed.' (Signed) Mrs. J. D. Dupler, Thorn ville, Ohio, June 18, 1919. Prevent Further Trouble By Using Cuticura Daily Prevent these many distressing, disfiguring skin troubles of .child- hood by using Cuticura Soap, and no other, for every-day toilet and nursery “uses instead. of impure, coarse, or strongly medicated soaps. Mothers, think ofyhat, it means’ t your child to go fgrth into theworld | handicapped by @ disfiguring skin’ trouble. ‘ie | ete eh fatcar Sym al ° It Hinges on You ‘Will you protect yourself against loss. from fire, or will you take chances that may mean financial ruin? A Hartford fire Insurdnce policy protects you against financial loss from fire, It assures you promp¢ settle- . ments of all just claims. Better get one now. MURPHY “The man who knows insurance” Bismarck, N. D. Phebe falls. |" stituted and efforts will be made, for better garbage disposal. tons..of soya beans and bean products valued at about $87,000,0°0. THE NEW ELTINGE | BISMARCK BIGGEST, BEST AND NEWEST PHOTO Phas || ———_THEATRE_——— “"“Tast Time Tonight *~ : \ Tonight Only Lee Norma: Talmadge ——in. —in— DRAG H RLAN. , ; The New Moon THURS TOMORROW AY 3 WM. RUSSEE : WEDNESDAY THURSDAY ——nl——— a «; A y “THE MAN WHO DARED” ~~, mi i F ee Commencing Friday , LOUIS TRACY'S’ \ “THE SILENT BARRIER” Win, Fox Big Comedy Drama “HER HONOR, THE MAYOR” = a A ton of cork occupies a space of | 150 cubic feet, a ton of gold that of} 2 cubic feet. The Moors are credited with having introduced cotton manufacturing into. ' London in 1590, + In 1918 China exported 1,8 80 ss Look Out for Rheumatism ~ As Winter Approaches Wen vecee eens: eee enS see eae ee eg * §o many/cases of Rheumatism blood remedy’ that has been. sold by come from a tiny disease germ that |Cruggists for more than fifty years. infests, the blood, that physicians 8.8.8. acts by driving out of the eee a i blood the disease germ that causes are beginning to realize that this) Rhcumatism, thus affording real source of -the disease is becoming relief, quite prevalent. Of course a cis-| Begin taking S.S.S. today and if ease that has its source in the you will write a complete history - blood. cannot be reached by local|of your case, our medical director’ ies applied to tha surface. will give you expert advice, with- One remedy that has given splen- : ‘| 4 E Death only ¢ ‘2 of short time. Don’t wait u pains. and aches becom:t; incurable diseases. Avoid | gaintu; coysequences~ by taking - GOLD MEDAL -- to 1 out. charge. '“Address' Chief Medical id ‘results in the treatment of| Adviser, 151 Swift Laboratory, (Ate: °.\! ARLEN, On * heumatism is S.S.S., the fine o! a. ; ee SEER EEE EERE EEE h eet The world’s stand: liver, bladder and }Tational Remedy cf Guaranteed. Three Lect ict the name Go's i ne eceer® ud since 1696. Hi druggists. 1 on event box | ' FOR SALE — : My seven-roommoderii house, facing New ; High School, corner 7th Street and Ave. 'C. F. E. PACKARD PEPE Ey ‘s BUTTER & NORTHERN is in disorder, crying children, and on. top of all js suffering from backache, bearing down pains, or some other form of feminine ills, , then she should remember that hundreds of women in just her con- dition have been restored to health and regained their youthful strength by tal:ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound an not rest until she has given-it a fair trial. ; Proof that it Restezcd tho Health of These Two Women, , Chattanooga, Tenn.—“I used Lydia 1 “Vegetable Compound 7 caine when I could no ¢ time, ago I got so uble that Lthcoughs edon, had Cairo, T1L—* So: bad with felnale t I would have to be ope ‘before my be a bad-displacement. My right. side longer keep up.. It strengthened. my would pain me and. Lv nervous [bac lieved, me of the ill effect? could not hold wh ) often dgvelops at such times. That was my first experience with the Vegetable Compound. “Years after: wards I took it during the Change of Life and got along so well I scarcely @ver had to lie down during the day, and seldom had dizzy, fainting spells. times I would and git down or jloor In a faint. Coctors and ev to st would f consulted several one told-me the same but I kept fighting to keep from having, - the operation. I had read_so many * lo ail | |- times of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it helped my sister so T began taking it. better than I have since then*and I keep house and am able to do ail my work, The Vegetable Compound is certainly one grand medicine.”—Mrs..J. \R. Marrnews, 3311 Sycamore Street, Cairo, TL og zy I have néver felt Ailing, Overworked Housewives Should Rely. Upon. Iam now well and strong, can f y housework with perfect ease and it ‘a comfort. to,mé to be able to say/to other suffering women ‘take Lydia‘B. Pinkham’s_ medi and be strong.” J will be\gihd to have you use my ngnje if it will. be the means of. helping any. ong.” — Mrs. I. A. Farrpury, | 606 Orchard Knob Ave.,Chattanooga, Tenn. oueceucnnaaneuensoassncusasusesaesaucneccaneseusenonces cocceseceeueesecseusceesennacsesseuesseseces