The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 11, 1921, Page 2

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co AD H | ' , PAGE TWO CUSTER RAID . the principal business. , namely: (Rapid City, Deadwood, Cham- a IS REVIVED IN CLAIMS Indian Tribes Lay Claims to Richest Lands in Black Hills GREGORY, S. D., Jan. 11.—Rem- iniscences of the Custer massacre in the Little Big Horn in 1876 are reviv- ed by the recent action of South Da-! kota’s Sioux Indian tribes in present- ing their demands on Black Hills Jand before the United States court of claims. ‘ ‘Several million dollars worth of the richest land in the western part of the state is involved in the claim. The treaty of 1868 provided for pay- ment to the Indians for a section of the country in which the Black Hills! are located. \No payment was made,! und in 1877 another treaty was enter-; ed into. By the second treaty the, agreement of 1868 was modified so that the clause pertaining to settle-, ment for the land was stricken out. | The Sioux contend that the earlier) treaty expressly provided that no! modification of its provisions shouldj be held binding, in any treaty, which} might be subsequently made. It is also alleged that the treaty of 1877 in behalf of the Indians was) made by a few chiefs, not under full! authority, who acted under fear of} Punishment for their participation in| the battle in which Custer and his| small command was completely wip-| ed out. Various other uprisings and) outbreaks under the reign of Sitting! Bull, it is alleged, were brought to) bear by the whites in coaxing the chiefs to sign the latter agreement. To prepare to present their case efore the court of claims, Indians! representing all Sioux tribes of South) Dakota and representatives . of the! Cheyenne and Arapahoe tribes of! ‘Wyoming met at Fort Thompson, S. D., recently. Selection of counsel to handle the red men’s claims invo{ved Former President William Howard Taft, Charles Evans Hughes and Jo- seph E. Davies were recommended as attorneys to represent the Indians in the contest which is said to be one of the biggest ever brought before the National Department of Indiana Atl fairs, | | SOUTH DAKOTA BISMARCK DAILY TRIBU MRS. MacSWINEY RETURNS ' MAKES GOOD WITH Crowds. of singing childven, wearing sashes of Sinn Fein | colors, and scores of Irish sympathizers were at the pier to say goodby when Mrs. Muriel MacS ‘ork, sailed for Ireland o nthe lt The complete list of senate com- mittees follows: Agriculture — Ettestad, Ingerson, Nelson, Wog, Nathan, Gross: Berg, Carey, Eastgate, McLachlin, Gardner. Apportionment—Murphy, chairman; Ettestad, Olson, Church, Porter, Thor- | son, Ingerson, Beisel. Bond, Hagan, Rusch, Benson, Levang, Stevens, Nel- son. Ward, Ployhar, Fraser, Lieder- bach, Steel, McNair, Gardner, Oksen- dahl. chairman, | Winey, wife of the late mayor of *,S. ship Panhandle State. SENATE COMMITTEES: nal—Patten, chairman; McLaughlin, MeNair, Mileage and per diem—Eastgate, chairman; Wog, Fleckten. | State Affairs—Benson, chairman, Olson, Wenstrum, Ployhar,, Fleckten, STANDARD OIL £0. Word is received of the. p:omo- tion of LR. Jones to chief clerk of the Standard Oil Co., Kansas City. His advancement there has been tapid since his graduation from Da- kota Business College, Fargo, N. D. He began as bookkeeper. Records show that over 100 Da- kota-trained. students went to the Standard Oil Co., many becoming chief clerks, asst. managers and managers. D. B. C. pupils are trained for progress. Big firms want them all the time. “Follow the Succe$Stul.’” Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front &., Fargo, N. D. for terms. son of Douglas. Railroads—J. D. Root of Gulph. Public and School Lands—P. G. Hanson of Northwood. State Affairs—Martin Olson of Dev- ils Lake, Tax and Tax Laws—J. A. Jardine of Fargo. y | panic ta watch the working of the: poi- |son with which his arrows. are. some- | times tipped? Love, like all other emotions, mus | be checked by reason, | The Wade-Nott case is the | of love gone mad! GOV. EDWARD AGAINST BLUE SUNDAY LAWS . |_ Trenton, N. J. Jan. 11—Governor Edwards in his message to the incom- ing New Jersey legislature urged re- jection of any bill designed’ to bring about a restrictive Sunday. He con- ‘demned the “blue laws” and express- ed the opinion that Sunday laws should be liberalized. “BLIP EDWARDS” AT: AUDITORIUM it result Warehouse and Grain Grading—u. | A. Larson of Timbridge. ‘Ways and Means—M. W. Kelly of Napoleon. TRIED TO. FORCE WIFE ON RIVAL Finally Sued for Heavy Damages, Alleging Alienation of Affections. Trenton, N. J,—A remarkable love triangle in which ‘the husband insisted that the “man in the case” either mar- ry or give up forever the wife loved by each of them, was revealed in a $100,000 alienation suit filed here by Charles B. Chisholm of Newark, N. , against William C. Parker, soctety man of Morristown, .N. J. One of the unusual features of the case, as set forth in the affidavits filed with the suit, was that the three prin- | clpals held numerous conferences a | (Everything is in readiness for the | performance of “Flip Edwards” at | the Auditorium for ‘the benefit of the | Ancient Order of United Workmen | band. The cast in the play: held a | dress rehearsal this morning, and’ af-' ter the rehearsal Frank Barker, di- rector, declared that he was sati fied that every person in the audi- ence tonight would enjoy the comedy drama. This afternoon at 4 p. m..the curtain went up on the matinee per-) formance, The’ curtain rises tonight at 8:15 p, m. i i Yb oR cpt a ta Se Legislative Notes { ‘Homer Ganz, former chief, clerk of} the state auditor’s office, left today! for Kulm, where he wil] be assistant! treasurer of the bank in which Sena-; tor E. A, Bowman is interested. Mirs.| Ganz will remain in Bismarck un after the school term closes. She is! teaching here. | ae TUES DAY, JANUARY 11, 1921, AIDIS ASKED FOR CHILDREN -—-AOROSS SEAS Local Committee Will Seek Funds to Help Starving Cen- | tral European Children | MANY ENGAGED IN IT i _ | ‘Religious Organizations Join in. | the Appeal Started by Lit- erary Digest Do This For Constipation’ THE public should know that there is a vast difference in the action of the various remedies for constipation. Some are “flushes,” purges, physics. They gripe and weaken. For lasting effect use a laxative. | Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin acts gently and mildly so that even a tiny baby can use it with safety. Itisa compound of Egyptian Senna and othersimple laxative herbs with pep- sin and pleasant-tasting aromatics. A sixty-cent bottic will last an aver age family many months. Dr. Caldwelks Syrup Pepsin is the: most popular of all laxatives and more is used in American homes than any other. Last year eight million bottles were sold by druggists, the largest sale in the world. TRY IT FREE Send me your name and address and Iwillsend youa free trial boule of any Syrup Pepsin. Address me Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 513 Washington St., Monticello, Ill.” Everybody now and then needs a laxative, and it is wellto know the best, Write metoday. | People of Burleigh county will be| asked to help save starving children | in central and eastern Europe. | The campaign will be held January 18 and 19. At a meeting held yester- day afternoon at which several, per- Sons deeply interested in the- cam- paign inaugurated by Herbert Hoover and the Literary Digest were present. | J. A. Roherty was asked to become} | general chairman of the campaign. | Committees will be named immedi- ately, and it is expected that a sub-/ stantial sum will be raised in the two/| days next week. The country-wide | campaign began only recently, when) ithe Literary Digest, touched by the} reports. of conditions, inaugurated it. The fund is asked by the Huropean | | relief council, and hag no connection with the Near Hast relief or Armen-| ian orphan funds. Children in Hungary, Czecho Slo- |vakia, Austria, Baltic provinces, Ger-| many: and Russian refugees are ob-} jects of the relief ai Unless aid is) given to help the children until the} nee harvest many, Will perish Att he death of Frank Ogema, 84 years The following statement was read! of age, Indian guide, trapper and in congress in explanation of the ef) hantez, here recently, this district lost fort: ne of its most. characteristic figures. |For halfa century the ne “Ogema” dven in eastern und central Kurope| }38 been connected with things prim have no alternative to ‘disaster be-| eval. He was a true native of the tween. now and next harvest, except} forest, having been here on the res- American aid. For. months, because| ervation’ at Nipigon where the famous the needy were so numerous and the| Indian band oceupied their time in available funds so limited, these most| fishing and hunting and trapping furs | FAMOUS INDIAN GUARDMEETS DEATH Port Arthur, Ont., Jan. 11—With The Appeal. “Three and one-half million chil- WAR POISON RECURS H helpless sufferers: in the track of war which they discussed the “best way /ago W. B, Dennon of Stearns, Ky.,| have been admitted to American feed- ‘CINCINNATI, Jan, 11.--Two years! | for the Hudson’s Bay company and other fur traders. Ogema was one of the oldest of the | McNair, Mikkelthun. Bond, Carey, ! Baker, Steel, Porter. Liederbach, | Murphy, Bowman, Thorson. | Military Affairs—Ployhar, chair-! man; Patten, Wenstrom, Sperry, Mur-| phy, Baker, Fraser, Berg, Eastgate. | Mines and Minerals — Fleckten,| chairman; Nathan, Bond, Garberg,! | was burned by German mustard gas. | He was thought to be cured when dis- | Charged from the army. He is now ‘in a hospital, his hands and = arms Dlistered with a recurrence of the | poison, f ‘ing stations only is tragically under-| | O¢ nourished, and have ‘received Ameri-| Nipigon band and the best known of can medical aid, only if. desperately; Indians at the head-of the-lakes. He threatened by death from disease. | was known by almost every miner. “Winter is closing down. The mon-, hunter, surveyor and construction en- ey of many. nations is valueless out-| gineer who had cccasion to visit here ‘side of their own boundaries. Wco-| and the surrounding district. His | nomic and crop conditions, aggravat-| valuable knowledge of surround Appropriations—Church, chairman; | Levang, Liederbach, Carey, Patten, Byrne. Peterson, Carberg, Van Camp, | Fleckten, Bowman, Gardner, Mikkel- thun, Storstad, Nathan, Stevens, Ken- dall. Banks and Banking—Levang, chair- URGES STATE Asks Appropriation of Million! ry, Ettestad, Mikkelthun, McLaugh- for This Purpose | lin, Steel, Welsh, Stevens. — |e nleanetiy CHATTED eeBs " | 5 oi » Fri » Garberg, ‘Pierre, S. D., Jan. 1.—Recommend- Tusch ee elie Hagan i ation that a further appropriation of; Corporations other than Municipal Of $1,000,000 be made, to be added to| Berg, chairman; Olson, Storstad a similar appropriation allowed in| Noltemeier, Kendall, Peterson, Baird, 1919, for the construction and opera-! Oksendahl, Nathan. tion of a state owned cement plant,! Counties—Kelsh, chairman; Ben- to be located nedr Rapid City, is the gon, Liederbach, Ingerson, Fleckten, substance of the report submitted to| Oksendahl, Wog, Steel, Beisel, Thor- the South Dakota legislators by. the! son, Van Camp. State Cement Commission. | Education—MeNair, chairman; Ok- The commission goes into detail, re- sendah), Byrne, Murphy, Fraser, Stor- garding its investigations since its or-| stad, Patten, Gross, Baird, Kelsh. ganization in August 1919. The report Thorson. shows that 41,495 barrelsof cement Judiciary—Fraser, chairman; Gar- were used in the state in 1919, almost! berg, Levang, Van Camp, Whitman, double the amount used in 1914 and Ward, Baird, Olson, Stevens, Ployhar, the average cost that year was from Sperry, Nathan, Baker, Beisel, Nolte-» The report meier, Wenstrum, Oksendahl. Enrolled and Engrossed Bills— Church, Bers, $8.00 to $5.00 per barrel. also shows that data gathered from! u the five. points under consideration, ,Storstad, chairman; Bond, Oksendahl. F berlain, Yankton, Lake Andes andj Federal Relations—Gardner, chair- Mitchell discloses that a well-equip-| man; Liederbach, Noltemeier, Baker, ped plant at Kapid City could manu-, Fraser. Rusch, Welsh: A facture a product equal to the best! Game and Fish—Oksendahl, chair- now on the market, at a maximum! man; Ward, Noltemeier; Byrne. Stev- 3 iens, Baird, Mees, Bond. Fleckten. Bane 1020 nae on ie Beste ct Highways—Mikkelthun, chairman: Cities and Municipal Corporations | Gross, Baker; | In. selecting the ‘location _ near Liederbach, Whitman, Ward, Kendail, Rapid City, the commission declares | it found the best grade of cement} materials in that vicinity and that/ owing to the cheaper fuel, water! power-tow available, cheaper quarry operation and other factors, cement) hi could be manufactured there and de-} livered to the consumers in the state much cheaper than from any other) point. Si In accordance with the power in- vested in it by the last regular legis- lature, the commission has contracted | for the purchase of a site near Rapid | City, which contains sufficient ma-| terial of an excellent quality. This :site also includes sufficient land for a future town and has municipal, water rights, sewerage disposal facil- ities and fertile soil for home gardens, adjacent to the plant and available for employes’ homes. The commission also reports that a plant of 2,000 barrels a day capacity | such ag is proposed, would supply about two-thirds of the state’s de- mand and could be built and equip- ped, including site and operating cap-| ital, for about $2,000,000 the estimate} based upon August 1920 prices of ma- chinery and materials. (Of the $25,000 appropriated for tne investigation the commission has ex- pended to date, $12,658.11, according to the report. BOARD TO MEET The Board of Trustees of the Bis-| marck Evangelical hospital will meet/ Tuesday at the hospital, | Finds Something to Do) the Business “I tried everything that I heard’ of for the stomach and bowel trouble and. bloating, but got no permanent | help until I struck Mayr’s Wonderful | medy, and that did the busines: y son in Canada has also taken it| and writes it has done him a lot of| good.” It is a simple, harmless prep-| aration that removes the catarrhal Mucus from the intestinal tract and) allays the inflammation which causes | practically all stomach, liver and in- testinal ailments, including appendi-| citis. One dose will convince or mon-' en refunded, All druggists. advt.' Sperry, Ettestad, Mees, Wog, Shrenk. Byrne. Immigration—Byrne, chairman; In- gerson, McLaughlin, Eastgate. Nolte- meier, Benson, Whitman, Porter, Na- man; Gardner, Shrenk, Hagan, Lied- erbach. : Insurance — Ingerson, chairman Murphy, Olson, McNair. Garberg, Car- ey, Schrenk, Levang, Kelsh, Sterstad Fleckten. Irrigation and Drainage—Nelson, dl Kelsh, Ployhar, Ettestad, Byrne; Livestock — Nathan, Ward, Ingerson, McLaughlin, Wog Nelson, Noltemeier, Ettestad, Kendall. Carey, Benson, Whitman, Beisel, Hast- gate, Patten. Temperance — Ward, Mikkelthun, Beisel, Bond, Stevens, Bowman, Olson. Church, Carey, Gard- ner, Nathan, Wenstrum, Hagan, Por- ter. Warehouse and Grain Grading— Liederbach, chairman: Olson, Inger- son, McLaughlin, Hagan, Beisel, Ward, Byrne, Sperry, Van Camp, Ken- dall, Schrenk, Peterson, Bowman, Berg. Ways and Means — Wenstrum. chairman; Fraser, Bowman, Kendall, Mikkeithun, Eastgate, Whitman, Fleckten, Patten, Olson, Carey. Women and Children’s Welfare— Baker, chairman; Gross. Benson, Ha- gan, Stevens, Thorson, Gardner. Public Printing—Thorson, chair- man; Berg, Ingerson, Patten, Fast- gate, Hagan, Porter, Murphy, Ettes- tad. Railroads — Benson, chairman; Murphy. Gross, Levang. ardner, Steel, Ettestad. Sperry, Nelson, Olson. MeNair, Patten. Ployhar, Ward, Ken- dall, Peterson. Berg. Statistics—Rusch. chairman; Na- than, Whitman, Baker, Kelsh, Fleck- ten. Mikkelthun. Tax and Tax Laws—Bowman, chairman;. Berg..Mees, Storstad, Nel- son, Fttestad, Whitman, Baker, Thor- san: Wog, McNair. Rules—Garberg- _ chairman; ang, Steel, Mees. Fraser, Gross. Elections — Hagan, chairman: Church, Van Camp; Carey, Baird. Kendall, Mikkelthun, Levang, Bow- man. Revision and Correction of Jour- Lev- an. , Indian Affairs—No!temeier, chair-- hairman; MeNair, Storstad, Church, | chairman; | chairman; | Wog, Baird, Sperry, Byrne, Mees. Public Health—Gross, chairman; Byrne, Steel, Nelson, Wenstrom, Ok- sendahl, Porter, Benson, Rusch, Public Lands — Wog, chairman; McLaughlin, Gross, Kelsh, Nelson, Baker, Bowman, Garberg, Schrenk, Patten, Peterson. Public Buildings—Beisel, chair- man; Kelsh, Oksendahl, Hagan, Ben- son. Charitable Institutions — Porter, chairman; Whitman, Bowman, Chur¢n | Ward. Educational _ Institutions: — Baird, chairman; Stevens, Gross, Storstad, Baker, Garberg, Fleckten. Penal Institutions—Steel, chair- 'man; Liederbach, Sperry, Mees, Na- than, Noltemeier, Mikkelthun. State Library—Van Camp, chair- man; Patten, Schrenk, Hagan, Wen- strum. Joint Rules — Bond, _ chairman, Fraser, Garberg, Porter, Beisel, Lev- ang, Ettestad. Chairmen of house committees fol- | lows: Agriculture—Vic Anderson of Still. Appropriations, Wm. Watt of Leon- ard: Apportionment—Nels Kindred, Banking—M. O. Grongaard of Rog- | ers. Counties—Del Patterson of Donny- brook. Olsgard Corporations other than Municipal | —S. 0. Allen of Jamestown. Mines and Mining—Carl B. Olson of Medore. Delayed Bills—John J. Plath of Davenport. Drainage and Irrigation—C. Ness of Wahpeton. Education—Jos. A. Kitchen of Sen- tinel Butte. . Elections and Election Privileges— | D._E. Shipley of Dickinson. | Engrossment and Enrollment—Ad- am Preszler of Medina. |__ Federal Relations—Paul Johnson of orton. Game and Fish—Wm. Stevens. | Highways and Bridges---Jos. |Gauvran of Osnabrook. he Insurance—Roy Johnson of Cassel- on. Rules—L. E. Heaton of McKenzie. Judiciary—C. H. Starke of: Dickin- Bauer of Mc- son. Livestock—B. B. Mouck of Minot. sities—John Freeman of Grand Forks. Minot. ileage and Per Diem—Nels Ols- gard, Kindred. Public Health—C. A. Sagen of Ed- more. Public Debt—John Maddock of Mad- dock. Revision of Journal—Andrew John- Wn sly NTS Me 34 AWTS TAVANEETNS “Pape's Cold Compound” Breaks any Cold in Few Hours ‘Instant relief! up! Quit blowing and snuffling! taken usually breaks up any cold. the’ head; stops nose running; lieves the headache, dullness, fever- ishness. *“Pape’s Cold Compound” acts quick, sure, and costs only a ‘few cents at drug stores. It acts without assist- ance, tastes nice. contains no quinine ~Insist upon Pape's! of| Military Affairs—A. B. Carlson of | courtroom—a comely, slender girl of} 1, i | | | | jtalked mostly about horses and of the| | | | | | The very first dose opens up clog-| short time. ged nostrils and the air passages of | the children.” Te-j 1 COWS ON WINTER TOUR AMERICUS, Ga., Jan. 11.—Sam Me- | Garrah, farmer, is going to set a new | fashion at Palm Beach this winter. Instead of taking along a Pekingese | or poodle, he’s going to take his herd |of milk cows. He will have fresh cream and butter and he will make expenses. /CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH | MONEY. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Shef- | field Ave., Chicago, Ill, writing your |name and address clearly. You will | receive in return a trial package con- taining Foley’s Honey and Tar Com- pound for coughs, colds and croup: | Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and .back; rheumatism, backache, | kidney and bladder ailments; and Fo- | ley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome |and thoroughly cleansing cathartic | for constipation, biliousness, head- | aches, and sluggish bowels. i | | | |. 100 LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- | ern house, suitable for one or two | gentlemen, close in, 202 Sth St. or out” for all three, Chisholm says he | phone 656. 1-11-lwk discussed the situation with both,; A BARGAIN—4-room house with fur- 2 “Take Her or Leave Merl” eventually giving to Parker this ulti- |; niture, 75x150 ft. lot for $2,000. matum: “Take her or leave her. You Good location, Riverview. one x. 1-11-1w must do either one or the other or face a suit for alienation.” Chisholm | affirmed that Parker refused to take | Mrs, Chisholm, saying that he must’) Coal Miners Wanted by Beu- lah Coal Mining o., at Beulah, N. | ed over considerable areas by actua) | warfare last summer, make famine, | with its terrible train of diseases, ja certain visitor until next harvest. | Inevitably the helptess children will | suffer most. No child can grow to | health and sanity on the pitiful make- i) |of European adults must. content | themselves this winter. It is obvious ; that the remedy can come only from | outside. “America saved 6,000,000 ‘European children winter before last. Normal recuperation cut the need nearly in half last year, but unusual conditions ‘have resulted in scant shrinkage of | child destitution during the twelve j months just past. The response of | America must now decide whether | 3,500,000 of these charges, in acute distress, shall begin to be turned | away in January from more than 17,- 000 asylums, hospitals, | feeding stations dependent on Ameri- ;can support. There would be no | tragedy in history so sweeping or 30 | destructive of those who can deserve no evil. Countries Ald. undersigned ng every race and creed, | many engaged also in other forms of relief, agree unanimously that the jplight of these helpless children | should have complete priority in ov- lerseas charity until the situation is | met. This is an issue without poli- | tics and without religtous lines. There }can be no danger of pauperization. |for the $23,000,000 for child food and | the $10,000,000. for medical _ service | that we seek will relieve only the crit- “The | working amo! hifts for food with which millions} clinics, and | organizations: | first educate his sons, i The plaintif€ sets forth: that the in- fatuation of the couple had its incep- tion in the summer of 1919..when the Chisholms and the Parks occupied summer cottages at Culver’s Lake, N. J. Chisholm’ says that he became firmly convinced that Parker really loved Mrs. Chisholm and that,’ follow- | ing a conference, Parker promised to see no more of Mrs, Chisholm. Parker broke his promise, and the alienation sult followed. LOVE GONE MAD IN WADE- /NOTT MURDER CASE (Continued from page one) Warning to Girls I looked at Mary Seery Wade in the 24, of the. type we call “nice” and “well brought up.” And I felt that she would like to warn young girls that love must have! both elements in it, the personal and the mental. | “When I wrote to Elwood in our} ,; Sweetheart days,” she said from the} witness chair, “I wondered he never | answered. Years later I found out he could scarcely read. His mother used to help him. “When we drove out together, never discussed current events. we He milk business in which he worked. I tried,” she added pathetically, “to be interested in the things he was.” Husband’s Stupidity “After we married I saw he had trouble making out bills. Evenings I tried to teach him simple figuring. It took him a week to learn that if a Don't stay stuffed: | quart of milk cost 9 cents, a bottle) >" Ajeach day for a week would come to 63) dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken | cents, every two hours until three doses are \ away. And then he forgot it right fter a for “He took no interest in me And he never cart Yet she loved him, and ‘was faithful. Mystery of love! Perversity of love! Even the older woman, with committing murder for love of this boy, is obviously his superior in mental keenness. Why does she “love” him? Isn’t it enough to send Cupid into ee D. Steady work. Apply at Mine’ ical cases. The medical supplies, of) | ing territory made him a‘much sought | after guide, especially by prospectors. | oe a ENACTS FIRST LAW. Pierre, S. D., Jan, 11.—The first law, | enacted by the Seventeenth session of ; the South Dakota legisiature becomes {fective late this afternoon when | Governor W. H. McMaster attaches his signature to the measure which | was introduced by Senator Charles Alseth of Kingsbury county. The bill, which. was. passed un- | changed by the lewer house Saturday, authorizes the state tréasurer to is- we warrants at the lowest possible jinteregt rate, to meet the necessary | current expenses of the state, to jevoid embarrassment. The warrants will be based upon revenues already assessed for current and preceding | years, but which haye not been col- i lected. The only change in the orig- {inal law is that where it limited the interest-rate to 51% per cent. semi- | annually, the newly authorized issue i lis unlimited* except by the words ; “lowest possible rate”, Fix Minimum Wage. Edmonton, Alta., Jan, 11.—Thirteen dellars a 'week is the minimum wage that is being recommended to the | provincial government to apply by order in council to all female work- | ers and to others under eighteen years of age. For apprentices of less than one year’s experience the wage is to be $8.50 per week. \or at Bismarck office in Haggart | Bldg. | Introdaction of Engitsh Walnuts, | The English walnut cume to the Pa- | | elfic coast in 1867, when Joseph Sex: | | ton of Santa Barbara, Cal., brought a sack of nuts from Chile and grew | 1,000 trees at Goleta. _ SYMPTOMS WOMEN DREAD Mrs. Wileon’s Letter Should | Be Read by All Women Clearfield, Pa.—‘‘ After my last child was born last September I was unable todo all of my own work, I had severe | pains in my left side every month and had | fever and sick dizzy | spells and such pains | uring my periods, which lasted two; weeks, I heard of | Lydia E. Pinkham’s egetable Com- pound doing others | 80 much good and | = thought I would give | tatrial. I have been very glad that I | did, for now I feel much stronger and do | all of my work. I tell my friends when they ask me what helped me, and they | think it must be a grand medicine. And | itis. You can use this letter for a tes- | timonial if you wish.”’— Mrs. Harry A, | Witson, R. F. D. 5, Clearfield, Pa. The experience and testimony of such | women as Mrs. Wilson prove beyond a) doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- | table Compound will correct such trou- | bles by removing the cause and restor- | ing the aygtem to a healthy normal con- | dition. hen such symptoms develop | kaches, bearing-down pains, dis- | | placements, nervousness ano “the, | blues’’a woman cannot act too promptly in trying Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable j | Compound if she values her future com- | ‘fertandhappiness, | [had a more poignant call than this. | Lump Coal course, must be an unqualified gif', but for every American dollar used | in child feeding the governments an) communities aid furnish $2 in the form of transportation, rent, labor, clerical help, cash contributions, and | such food supplies as are locally ob- tainable. x “America has not failed in the past in great heartedness. She has never) Contributions should be turned over) to the local committees which are) now being formed for this national | collection or sent to Franklii K.| Lane, treasurer, Guaranty Trust Co.) & New York city. | (Signed by) Admi “American __ Relief inistration: | by Herbert Hoover; American Red} Cross, by Livingston Farran' Amer a Reh sa ican Friends ‘Service committee, | e greatest picture in (Quakers) by Wilbur K. Thomas;| | Galery of Life is Nature's “Pic- Jewish Joint Distribution committee, ture of Health.” Every w urg; Federal Council) of Churches of Christ in America, by | Arthur J. Brown; Young Men's Chris- |, tian Association, by C. V- Hibbard; | Knights of Columbus, by James Fla-| herty; Young Womens Christian As-| sociation, by Miss Mablé Cratty, na- tional board. ‘ | a “QUCH” A LOVE WORD CHICAGO, Jan. 11.—In war days Migs Ysabel Hahn danced with How- ard H., Evanston, aviator. ‘Ouch! She had stepped ‘on his foot. That | started things that have just ended at the altar. | wants to be the embodiment of healthandstrength, foritisperfect ical condition which brings ppiness and beauty and wins general admiration and popularity. BF ‘The Grea? Generel Tonic is a wonderful aid in keeping the im- portant bodily func- tions—stomach, bowels, kidneys — in normal, active condi- ‘ton _ py Felix Warbi (ae a ‘Royal Neighbors The Royal ‘Neighbors will meet in regular session at Elks’ nall Wednes- day evening at 8 o'clock. All mem- pers are requested to pe present. For Bear Creek and Beulah call Wachter Trans- fer Co. Phone 62. a" MOTHERS FRIEND For Expectant Mothers Useo By Twnce GENERATIONS ‘Warsz Pon BOOKLET on MOTRERMOOD ano Tne BADY. rece | BRADFIELD REGULATOR GOve DBFT. 5-D, ATLANTA. Ga recognized therapeutic value. It is @ pure medicine, Ask Your Druggist Sole Mansfacturers LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY New York Kansas City Fe ee

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