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a FORMER LOCAL TEACHER GETS IOWA POSITION George T. Br resnahan Is Offered . Position as Coach at. lowa University George D. Bresnahan, cross-country coach at’ Wisconsin university and formerly a teacher in the Bismarck high school, has resigned to become track coach at Iowa university. An article in the Daily Cardinal lished by Wisconsin university “George T. Breswahan, ‘14, country coach, will leave the univer- sity about February 15 to become track coach of lowa university, Word of the promotion, which adds another \Wiisconsin coach to the already large number jn the Western conference, was received late yesterday by Tom Joneg,-track coach, from Mr, Bresna- han, who went to Jowa City last week to investigate the offer, In ‘Department Two Years, “My, Bresnahan has been with the atuietle department for the ‘past two years, acting in the capacity of cross- country y s! stant track coach. Pre nee he was teaching at Bismarck, _D. He graduated from Wisconsin in 1914 and was captain of the cross: ct umtry team, that year, ‘| feel that the appointment of Mr. Bresnahan,’ Coach Jones stated, ‘will be a loss to the university and his leaving is regretted Vv much by the athletic department. The post tion which he will take, howe is one of the major athletic offi the Western conference. I was ¥ glad to give _my recommendation for him.’ Studied Methods Abroad. Bresnahan returned last fa'l from Europe, where he attended the Olympic -games during August at Antwerp, Belgium. While on the trip he visited in several countries, t tak- ing note of the track mtethods em- ployed by the leading athletes~ “The successor ’’.to’ the present cross-country coach has not yet been chosen, Mr. Jones states. The new ‘al will very likely be a Wiscon- sin man, he further says. The an- nouncement w ill be made in the near future.” “Mr, VAN HOOK WINS _ ANOTHER GAME n. 31.—4Phe fast, Van Hook basket ball team ‘has won an- other big victory in the defeat of Washburn on the Washburn’ floor Friday night by tle close score of 35 to 34. Van Hook has only lost two games this season. The playing of Birdsbill and Grant featured the contest. The line-up was: Van Hook Right forward Van Hook Stockford Nygaard Birdsbill Peferson Johnson . Everson Setzler . Petersoa Left guard Grant .. . Robinson VALLEY CITY IN MANDAN VICTORY Valley City defeated. Mandan, 15 to 14, at basket ball in Mandan, Satur- day night. The game followed Valley City’s victory: over, Bismarck school here on Friday night, 20 to 16. Jamestown was defeated, 25 to Iie “py Fargo high school, at Fargo Sat- urday night. “Had His is Fill of : Co-op. Nevepaners” Napoleon, N./D. lan. -G. Bedwell, of Helena, Mont. who form: erly was with the Logan County Farmer, has written an unusual, let- ter to, the editor of the Homesteag. Independent. paper. A “Thad my f fill of- working on €o- ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on ‘Genuine i 8 Beware! Unless yoit ste the name Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- scribed by physicians for twenty-one years’ and proved safe by millions. Take, Aspirin only as told in the Bayer. packdge for Colds, Headaches, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tab- lets_of Aspirin cost few cents. Drug- gists.also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of-Bayer Manufac- ture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicy- Jicacid. Howse inthe West ugh Prices end Returns. reed mmedte for pore Hie tae end fall nterasations D.BERGMAN 5 (0. ST. PAUL -MINN y and cells at exch .énd, ~ Washburn 4 high , MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1921” loves her New An eee in York City. Show operative newspape nd that was about all there was left in Nort Da- kota I could find work in,” he said. He is particularly bitter toward Herman Hardt. SIOUX COUNTY TO HAVE JAIL @1.—Sioux ve a jail. Courthous: B a fire: proof vault for records, 8) § a oneteld structure, with a vault in the cenier be con: structed... The county paid out large sums of money to have prison- ers kept in the Morton county jail MRS. TWO BEARS", HEADS CHAPTER DEE dan. is to hi Ft. ¥a county Ft. Yates, N. n., 31,—Cannen Ball chapter of Am an War, Moth- ers, compesed of mothers of ‘Phdian | soldiers. have elected o' rs as fol- lows: President, Mis. Annie Two Bears; ‘ vice-| president, Mrs. Herine Kk; secre asurer, Mrs. James Fast Ho ry) Mrs, Annie Eagle Boy. Two men advijsers select- ed were Basil Two [Bears and Paul Fast, Horse. \ oe Bs SOME ‘Efi és Count 'em. Forty on each ear. It Is one of the big customs of the “Garo. Fills” tribe in. India for a warrior's widow tow ey these unicue -parrings as a means of phew ink her sorftow. GREENLAND IS woviNG WEST. Danish Scientists Figure It Has Trav. eled 875 Miles in 100,000 Years. Copenhagen.—Greenland 1s slowly moving in, a westerty direction, Ac- cording to observations made in 1907 by J.P. Hoch of the Danish Mylius- Erichson §cientific expedition, Green- land was ‘three minutes ‘further. west thrn in.1870, when a German exped!- tion made astronomical observations. In both instances.the, same northern latitude was found, Therefore, Green- land moved west 1,833) yards in 37 years. The first observation of the longi- tude of Greenland was made in 1823. Comparing the findings in 1823- and 1870 one arrives at the conclusion that Greenland “wandered” ten. yards westerl} every year. That tends to|* show . that’ .Greenland. and Norway, now about 875 miles apart, once wer connected, the separation taking. place; 50,000 or 100,000. years ‘ago. (No woman, has entered’ the convent | of St..Catherine, on Mount Sinai, for more thah 1409 years. OOOO TE WORLD'S) CHA MP 1ON i | Prospect—that’ s thi lof milk in one yea | gallons. At the ( where Segis lives time. ion ste stated th Wot DN ‘T YOU 2—Little Frances Whitel pet duck more than ever, competition with dozens of ducks at the Madison Squate Poultry AR cow's name——h ler ¢ JENS FLO KING q — Are Coming Frat i Alt Corners® of the Globe. ae aeferal Secretary Sy ad the Zionist Or- ! ganization Issues Statement Telling | of the Progress That Has Been Made —Program to Handle “Pioneers” Was Formed at Conference of Cefe tral European Bureaus—Enthusiasm of the Jews le Growing. ALES, | Representatives of all the Jewish | jemigrtion bureaus in central Europe | ‘met recently at Maehrich Ostrau on all of New Y ork, the horder between Poland any Czecho- It copped first Iprize, in Slovakia and adopted a program to provide for the rush of Jews return: \ ing to Palestine. The conference was | called: by Mr. Landmann, general sec- retary of the Zionist organization. of | London. Mr, Landmann afterward is- | sued a statemedt in which he said that Jews from ‘the remote: corners of the-) globe are arriving: in-Palestine, and‘in which he outlined ‘(he problems which | Yhust be met. The statement reads: “The movement of Jews to Palestine SMUGGLERS RUN WIL Traffic Carried on Huge Scale on German’ Border. Customs Officials Are in Plots and in fact ever since the destruction of Government {fs Unable to the temple in>70 A. D.—there: have Check Evil. been individuals. who felt the cajl, and | sah) on.séveral occasions: whole groups have sorlin.—Smuggling over the Dutch ‘ken the wanderer’s’staff in -hand-and and Danish frontiers, which the Ger- (nude the pilgrimage to Palestine. But man government had gone to great ef- ‘it has been reserved for our;own time fort to suppress, again is flourishing |‘ $€4 the beginning of a national re- “on a colossal scale,” and at some/ Urn, of the gebirth of a people after points with the full knowledge and 0 Many cen! ries of waiting and hop- nnivance of many government offi- cials, according to reports reaching Sy here. “The Balfour declaration was inter- ted by the simple folk in this part | Smugglers are declared to-be out of The worlt-as the establishment of a bidding the government for the aid Jewish state! and an open invitation t of dishonest officials, and the “ver- ‘tll to, come. \Many, sold their belong itable army of customs-offiters on the | !P8S anit set out on foot inthe midst | borders have permitted. millions of | f war conditions, Very marks worth of tobacco, cigars, ciga-| thele\ haven; military. rettes, coffee and sugar to cross the; | the giles of Palestine closed, even 19) border duty free within the-Jast few | the Jew. months.” Good Class of Pioneers. Flying squadrons of customs officers | “The actual migration was compelled | have been organized by the fovern-/ (o wait until the political future of the | ment to catch the smugglers who are| country was finally settled at San | said to have so thoroughly system-, Remo last April. The reports read at atized their opérations that “customs | the conference by the delegates. who receipts are rapidly falling back to) were in charge of ‘the Palestine bu nothing, for custom control is agein Feuuggin Poland and Vienna show that | only, on paper.” after San Remo thé number grew enor. Fifty, thofsand pounds of coffee, are| mously. The aggravated political con. being 4muggled ‘over the border daily | ditions in Poland also contributed to; at qne point,.a report says, and smug-/ hasten the decision of those who had ; glerg\everywhere\are working with the} half, resolved to go. ! Between .the sympathy: and ofaee of all dwel-; months of May and September. ¢bout Jers along the-frontia , 50,000 persons registered. their names Men, women and even children, are | as ready to undertake the journey. said to be engaged in thig trade. High | “The class of these plongers is very | prices, low wages of customs officials| good. They are almost ‘exclusively and the depreciated value of, a mark | young men and womén—about 10 pe! 1s credited as one ef the principal | cent are women—between, the agea_of the widespread violation | seventeen and twenty-five. ‘They are of import and export regulations. | called by the Hebrew. name. ‘Chalut- The smugglers are described.as be-| zim,’ meaning ‘pioneers.’ They hav inf so well: organized and so confi-| been preparing for theif future life’ dent they carry on their business “by| work in various ways. Many have left Jand and wholesale scale, and quite| their schools, and colleges and gone ta} openly.” \ | til the soil with thei own hands in = | order to be prepared. 4 sesccerdccccceoccosoovooocosore$| “Apart from these pursty agricultu- ' ral pioneers, there are others who are i agatha yea sely bs BY | being trained as bricklayers, masons, causes ) for | tinsmiths, plumbers and. in all other | branches of the building trades. (The | erying need of Palestine is for houses and shelter for all the new arrivals, “In addition to the knowledge of a \ handicraft, Hebrew speaking, is an in- dispensable part of the curriculum. | Between, 70 and 80 per cent of all who leave for Palestine can peak Hebrew I was myself. in Palestine two months | ag0, and visited the settlements of | some of the newly atrived ‘CHalutzim,’ | and was greatly impressed-with then— the men as well as the women. “Many cgme from well-to-do fami- lles and had not been accustomed to hard manual work. Yet they cheer- | fully cleared the stones from the soll im the broiling sun and planted seed- lings for ‘the future fruits of Palestine. Many in Need of Funds. + “There are hundreds of thousands Frojonoooococsoororseseeenneeoen’ lik&them yet in central and eastern ; 2 Eas Europe, and the great problem is to Consumers Back Textile Mi ,, transfer them tg Palestine. ‘There are Gera, Germany.—A great consumers’ | two main die ies to overcome. The association hag been formed, at this! first is due to the economic ruin .of manufacturing. center of Thuringia to, central, and eastern Europe. In ordi- purchase the products of the Gera tex-’ nary times most of these pioneers tile mills in an lattempt to force down .would, have a tolerable sum of money prices and relieve unemployment. at their dispgsition forthe journey, fe I Sa ae and for their first soltleent in Pal California lemon growers. are in! tine. ‘Today the German and Poltsh jah ington lobbying for a high’tariff’ mark and Austrian and Hungarian on Italian lemons. crown and Russian ruble are so low that comparatively wealthy persons have to ask for assistance to pay) their passage. “The other difficulty is due to the =" condition of Palestine. The land has been desolate for so mang years that | It cannot be rendered fit for habitation without the expenditure of millions. The enthusiasm among the Jews ll [per the world is growing, and I dm ‘confident that in a very few, years w shall see\a strong and thriving: Jewrsh population in Palestine. The well-to- ' do will establish factories when once | the foundations are laid.” ——— Corn Used as Fuel in Colorado. Corn on the coh is being utilized a | fuel ‘in eastern Colorado by farmer: whoesay they cannot afford to pa. transportation | costs ‘and sell. their crops at the present market prices without suffering a loss. . The corn is cheaper, they say. than coal at $10 a ton, plus the haulage, ~ Miss—A party of hurters: whi just returned | here from Bayou Casotte reports that on Saturday the men saw an alligator .prepare to attack a weasel, whereupon the ‘Weasel, with remarkable alacrity, leaped into the ’gator’s extended jaws *$ and slid down into its stomach, The hunters say they were as- tonished at the actions of the weasel ‘and awaited results. Within fifteen minutes they ob- served the weasel eating its way through the entrails of the mom ster. According to the hunters, the fondness for eggs prompted the slender animal to ake its chances in the alligator. Pascagoula, Why a horse rises from the ground | on its forelegs and a cow on its hind i legs. has never yet been explained, ; ‘ | - Andfew-Carnegie left.a pension fund of $25.000 a year for ex-presidents ef tie United States. \ 7 PRODUCER—Segis / Vietertic s produced 37,3814 pounds iy production Ys about 12 k farms, Oconomowoc, Wis., is is a new world record. Chicago has a snow-loading machine’ whigh does the work of 12 trucks and I ATO is no hew phenomen$n. For centiries— * 0 'men. H WHY BE THE MILKMANS GOAT? —Women-of Covington, Ky., have the ‘ milkman’s goat. the ‘IMilch Goat Club” and ‘have t ‘the high cost out of milk. A goat lke (that of above, (Mrs. produces from} two ho gud They have’ formed W. G. MoNay, Fs quarts ‘of ‘milk a day and costs very little to feed, URNS Cover with wet baking spda— afterward applf gently— HLAUUFRCUS UEDA PAA mus, “READERS ENTITLED TO. BOTH SIDES’ OF ANY QUESTION ELSE PROGRESS BY INDEPENDENT THOUGHT IS Eig old You frequently hear it said in some aiigh way as this: : \ \ 4 VAPORUGS 17 Million Jas Used Yearly “What I object to, and where I think too many news- papers avoid their responsibility is printing opinions as news; for then they take away from the public, that. must- depend upon the newspaper for the major part of itsin- formation, the opinion without which the best progress is impossible.” = A newspaper's first function is to print the news. sea Its views 2 argo, secondary importance, but~ news is the chief. commodity which the reader buys, The Tribune’s policy is te carry y the news to the people ‘ { every evening without feas or favor in local, state and national affairs. . IT HAS NO. POLITICAL AMBITIONS TO SERVE. / “TT IS THE SERVANT OF NO VESTED INTER- ESTS. \ \ IT INTENDS TO BE INDEPENDENT IN THE HANDEING OF NEWS, HEWING TO THE LINE-AND LETTING THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY. If you want to buy news rather than propaganda— < join the ever increasing circle of Tribune readers. LEGION PLAY _ ; FILLED WITH ~ BUNNY SCENES “Laugh and the world laughs with you.” N+ Me a When Ella Wheeler Wilcox’ wrote that line sh&expressed a great truth This is specially exénjplified in the theatrical world, whére the great laugh producers like Charlie Chaplin, and other comedians are the world’s favorites but the’ stdge crepe hangers, whose only mission seems to be to make, people unhappy are foam | \rele- gated to oblivion. The Lloyd Spetz Post No. 1 of the public want genuine amusement, now arranging to present the fun est comeghe ever written, “Are’ You a Mason” ar “How \ Father Joiued the Lodge” at the auditorium Tues- day, Feb. 8th, at both matinee _ and night perfor ices. Everyone 0 enjoys bright clean snappy up-to-date comedies will be pleased with this production, and the entertainment committee have no hes- itancy in guaranteeing that all wha attend will be more than satisfied BATTERY SER basis for founding -the ‘~~ North Dakota's oldgst newspaper. Not a class organ, but dedicated to the best interests « of Basmatck, North Dakota and the nation. \ SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier in Bismarck, per mofith............-- By Mail in Bismarck, per month. ai Wacawrentts, meee By Mail outside City Limits and i in state at large, boa year en ere Os ‘Outside North Dakota, per year ... Fatty Arbuckle, Douglas’ Fairbanks, | fie i Legion realizing that the | u ———— for their outlay of time and money, A big laugh from start to finish-is assured and no one should miss it. ’ ‘Women .in China dress less extray+ agantly tifan the men- IT FILLS THE HEED When ‘your doctor decides: that you need Sects Ension you may rest assured that he knows.that it fs fill the need better fat anything else. Seott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. ———ALSO MAKERS OF KI-MOIDS (Tablets or, Granules) For INDIGESTION: EXCLUSIVE Seryice and parts for Delco, Remy, Northeast and Auto Lite starter$, Boseh~Eisemann and K-W Magnetos, Exide and Minnesota bat- teries, and Klaxon horns... ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE CO. ‘Bismgrck, No. Dak. CRP We have more calls for Bank As- sistants than we can supply. If a good \- BANK POSITION ever appealed .to, ycu, lcok through the Ranking room;ac the Bismarck College, ~Conceded among the tt equipped College ban the country, Here the student 1 to do by do- ing. It is real banking, using college money, andyreal Lank accounting, up- to-date. é We maid a specialty of training young men and women for the high- er-salaried bookkeeping and steno graphic positions; Send for particu: Jars. When you know what we have doné for thousands of others, you will attend, Write G. M. Langum, Pres. Bis: N. Dak. ymarck, ELECTRICAL SPECIALISTS independent _ $5.00 $6.00,