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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ee Gutered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second i Class Matter. = GEORGE D.MANN -.- - - Foreign Representatives . G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY eerie bla ; rare Bld, Ri et Lnsuhew AYNE, "| Before the holiday bills are surmounted, along! 5 SMITH 4 ’ PA . BURNS AND TEA hea Bide. SNEW YORK - Soe ee te comes the income tax blank. a y The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use "| of all news credited to it or not Coe aeeiea thie paper and elso the local news published than the cost of one modern battleship would save the lives of these children. : Who do you think Ben Franklin would talk, thrift to if he were here today? To the Ameri- can school children, or to members of your Con- gress? . Editor NO MEDDLING WITIL RUSSIA Another champion of F'rench and English cap- before the revolution is heralded in the foreign $$ 1 “MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | dispatches. Two others.have gone before—and 7 failed. e UBS! PAYABLE IN ADVANCE . SUBSCRIPTION RATES ap $72¢) The United States can have no legitimate in-! ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches bereia “ italists who invested heavily in Russian roubles| reserved. - Daily by carrier, per year .......--sssee0 oe r (in Bismarck) ... 2007.20 A . era a i | Deity by mall aT Lid (in state outside Bismarck. 6.00 terest in attempting to overthrow the government | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.......1+++» 6.00/even of a Trotzky and Lenine, either in the in-| —————. 5 . terests of French and English investors who have! oer RAS eer Tei) hes been caught short, or for the glory of a possible zs genuine Russian minority leader. ' Our own slogan, under the Monroe Doctrine, A DIFFICULT TASK is “America for Americans.” With regard to eas-, Speaker Twitchell is to be complimented upon tern Europe it should be, “Russia for the Rus-| the fairness of :his rulings and general policy of sians.” directing the house organization. His is a diffi- And in the meantime, if it will add to Ame cult task made doubly so by the presence of a can prosperity and the well being of American; deadlock which showns no signs of abatement. citizens for us to trade with these Bolsheviki/ The Cass county representative is ia close that Europe doesn’t like, then who is to say us! ay? “ » v ar ake | student of legislation and his advice has always)" We don’t. have to fall on their neck our-| been on the side af economy. There have been tense moments'in the house when the temptation selves, just to do business with them. ' “No meddling with Russia, and no trade boy- to play peanut politics was present, but even his enemies must. say that he has risen above par- cotts,” will be the best American policy. If Wil-| son doesn’t see to it, Harding should. tisanship and has sought to be fair to all fac- tions. : Those seeking his ear upon legislative matters have received the most courteous treatment and one of Speaker Twitchell’s best points has been hie willingness to listen to the other fellow, and to treat every is8ue placed before him ‘strictly upon its merits. - arabes No one can hope in view of the even aap i i reat remedia ‘ eee valgss ‘this farce The eat that] It has lately leaked out that the Incomparable can be done is to delve thoroughly into the oper- Mary is endowed not only with a silver voice, but ation of the industrial program and propose] With a volatile temper as well. measures that will safeguard the best interests} When she became manager of the Chicago Op- of the state. era Company recently, she-sensed danger ahead “here will be sharp dissention among the fac- and had the good sense to recognize ,her short- tions as to what is the best remedy for the sit-|Coming and decide that she must first learn to) uation that confronts North Dakota and only| manage herself if she was to manage others. time and careful counsel together will evolve the} The bigness of the task she fully realizes, but right course which ‘must be worked out in a/declares she is a good fighter and will do the j Bi “| thing she has set out to do, emphasizing her de- sprit of fairness to all.. ; ‘In the formation of such a program, ‘Speaker’ termination by throwing out to the skeptical this ‘ challenge: Twitchell can be depended upon to giye the state : sound ‘advice acquired: in years ‘of-/Jegislative) “Watch me win!” ; eed , And win she will. She is the winning sort. experience. ¥ pe While her fight is going on, the yest of us will! Petrograd is now inhabited by cripples; at|lok on with absorbing interest, many of us wish- 1 the population has been reduced 71 per cent/ing in our hearts that we ourselves had the ; and jt is assumed that everybody who could walk| strength of will to go and do likewise. Deborah means bee in Hebrew and maybe Borah in Marion means something that stings. MANAGING ONE’S SELF | After having allowed our temper to ‘run riot for 40 years, can it be brought into subjection and made to serve us instead of our serving it? Mary Garden thinks it can be done and has set out to prove it. A couple were married at the base of the, Statue of Liberty. Howcum, Liberty? | ‘ J Many famous men drank liquor but that does not prove that alcohol made them great. i RESTRICTING JURIES ‘=A district judge in Atlantic City, N. J., has is- ~ sued instructions 'to the bailiff that women juries shall contain: = “No busy wives of workingmen, “No mothers of children, “No admixture of men, : .“No immature women who giggle, rouge and powder, but do no think.” .Excellent! Especially the last. But— Congressmen. evidently think the eighteenth| amendment has failed as a discourager' of immi- gration. Senator Penrose is reported to have become! THE BISMARCK TRIBU loquacious, thus giving normalcy another jolt in the ribs. ; » Logically carried out such a rule would disrupt i the jury system. Why pick on women? How * many men accepted for jury service show any vis- . ible signs of thinking? Would it not be wise also to refuse jury service to men who: Take chances on bootleg whiskey, Wear lavender or yellow spats, =< Attend six-day bicycle races, ‘ Allow barbers to scent their hair, Believe “woman’s place is in the home,” | = Spend whole evenings in jazz cabarets, Think the country is “going to the dogs,” ' >: Are affected by oratory rather than facts, ~ Weep when a hired lawyer is working up his case, Serve on juries out of a bawdy curiosity, ' ‘ €oncentrate on ankles rather than on evidence, Are susceptible to the charms of pretty mur-| There’s something dubious about the grief ex-! pressed by a man who spills soup on the Christ-| mas necktie git gave him. \ = Dan Cupid is nominated for chairman of the house committee of Ohio’s newly-formed Widow- | ers’ and Widows’ club. Any other nominations. | EDITORIAL REVIEW | Comments reproduced in thia column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are Brogented here in order that our readers may have th fides of important issues which are being dis- cui the press of the day. Weed ONE MAN'S FAITH IN HIS WORK | i deresses, : : There is a business lesson in the appraisers’, " - Are—?—but fill out the list. It is exceedingly list of the items in the estate of Frank W. Wool- = long. worth. : | Fy This great merchant owned about $600,000 in The Uniontown, Pa., man who carried dyna-| bank’ stocks and about $150,000 in. railroad | : mite on the hip would have been all right if a'stocks. The remainder of his business invest | mule’ hadn’t supplied the kick. ments, amounting to more than $25,000,000, was | ee } in his own enterprises. : ! i TAKE A TIP FROM BEN It. was not that he lacked confidence in other! : Right now our school children are hearing a; men’s judgment, but ¢ he had a consuming} ® great deal about Ben Franklin, one of the very’ passion for his own business. He built it up, best Americans who ever lived. They are being, from nothing. As if grew he returned the profits: told some things Ben Franklin said. Among! to make it grow the more. He had faith in his| them'is this gem: — jown business and was. content to have practi-| ; {Af you’re in debt spend less.” cally all his wealth tied up in enterprises which | ¢ *. It is all right to teach this to our children, but, he himself directed. \ , it isn’t right to preach it to them when we grown-| One thing that this. country needs just now is a ups aren’t practicing. it. spread of the Woolworth attitude among busi-| The nation is in debt—heavily in debt. We,ness men. Some of them lost a genuine fighting face a deficit of two billions of. dollars this-year.| interest ih thei own enterprises when the war! * And we are doing this: made things too easy for them. Some of them, | “Our naval estimates for 1921 are nearly | believing that their, plants could run without, $700,000,000, as compared with naval ap- |their constant attention, began to play other) propriations of about $400,000,000 in Great’ | men’s business games in the stock market. } Britain and about $150,000,000 in Japan.” The business men of the United States have) * , There are three and a half million children! got to mind their own businesses and in the way) gtarving in Europe. . Herbert, Hoover says less' that Woolworth minded his—New York Herald. i Public ,Health Service, Washington, €.) | almost as soon ag T-get him rid of one. ; fresh air, “Do not keep him indoors; NG) COUNTER Zea ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS By Oliver Roberts Barton. | The. Walrus Helps | he notice that the walrus, lying near Wicked pedplé are sometimes very stupid, and the palace, was stupid. { Day after day, the twins played checkers, as the* Jini stood by, com- pletely forgetting who they were, where they were, and the errand up- on which they had started. But outside, théir friends, the wal-| rus, waited patiently. [He had prom- ised to help the children and he had not been idle, although his great, awkward, lumbering form seemed so useless, and his long sharp teeth look- ed' so fierce. The Jinn, watching carefully to see that Nancy and ‘Nick did not kick oft the Slippers of Forgetfulness, did not notice the many dark forms that had gathered in the waters around them. Day by day the gréat black, bulky shapes became ‘more numerous crowding more and more closely a- round the floating ice-palace, Nor did (Copyright, 1: Uncle Sam, M. D. Health in Witter (Questions concerning your health will be answered by experts if gent to Information Editor, United States D, Colds. Q. I have a boy. three years old who had pneumonia twice last win- ter, He is subject to colds now and cold he takes another, Can you ad- vise me what to do to/keep him from taking cold? He has enlarged tonsils. A. Let the child have plenty of unless the weather is cold or damp or there is a high wind. Have the windows of his bedroom open at night except in very severe weather or dur- ing an acute attack. The temperature of the bedropm at night may be about 50 degrees 'or 55 degrees. Cold sponging of his chest, throat and spine when he arises in the morn- ing probably will be beneficial, Let the room be comfortably warm and rub him briskly a‘ter the snonging. It is possible that his enlarged ton- sils are accompanied by adenoids and; if so you cannot hope for much relief | until these are removed. Severe Coughs, Q. Would you advising me remov- ing tonsils and adenoids of my 6-year-|! old girl in wivter, or is it better to; wait for soring? She is. subject to colds for the last two years and has attacks of severe coughs—at night can hardly catch her breath. What; will you recommend to stop the| coughs? j A. In many cases it is better to} wait for the spring for ‘the removal) of adenoids, but 4f your little girls breathing is so obstructed by the ade- noids that she cat’ scarcely breathe at night, it probably would be well to remove them at. once. . Take her| to your family physician or @ nose and MAIN AND MAPLE STREETS AT wicked wizard, the| giving directions, just as the captain Bobadil Jinn, who’ had taken Nancy/ of a ship might order about his crew. and Nick prisoners in his iceberg; crav ded near, the. floating palace moved more and more j his crew of whales most cleverly. a { to the water's edge, seemed to be As the waales (for the black shapes | | | | were whales, you must know). crowd- ed near, the floating palace moved more and more swiftly southward out of icy waters and into tne region of warm ocean currents and balmy winds, The walrus, knowing wherel the waters were warm, had directed ‘Suddenly, just as the children were finishing an exciting game, there was a rush and a roar of water jnto the room where tney were sitting. “We're melting!” shrieked the Jinn, and dis- appeared at once. The twins were soon floundering in the ocean and their Slippers ot Forget- fulness were gone! Then memory re- turned quickly, and for the first time since their imprisonment they remem- bered their errand. They realized, too, that the Box of Charms had vanished once more. : 921, N. E, A.) throat specialist and have a thorough examination made to determine; EVERFTT TRUE i Aw HIS LIFG, a RM. RRA AR Rann nannannnan my tea or coffee without spilling it. | at once, jp AND Re MAN MAY I5CEN A TEETOTALER: BUT ON THIS Day He —— FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1921 RS. SYLVIA FOSTER, of Bui- falo, N.Y. who. says she wishes she could go into every home and tell how Tanlac com- pletely restored her health after sho had lost all hope of ever being well again. WGH SPEED NON-RUSTING | “They had given up all hope of my | ever being well again but thanks to | Tanlac I am feeling as well now 15 | Lever felt in my life and 1 only wish iT had time to go to every home jan: | tell every sick person about this | grand medicine. | “A year ago last January I had a | severe attack of influenza which lett jaime: in a terribly weakened condition j and my appetite was so poor that I j ate little more than ‘enough, to keep | body-and soul together. | “My heart palpitated so dreadfully . | at times that it seemed like it had | stopped altogether and I would think {my time had come. I was so weak | that I couldn't go up the steps with- lout holding to the railing. It was im- | possible for me to do any housework. if was so nervous that | couldn't drink Aedes i | \“My sleep was restless and broken whether. the operation should ‘be done | ind I would have smothering ‘spel's Let her have plenty of fresh air and} and would just have to get up and go play out of doors except when she! to the window so I could breathe. “I finally started taking Tanlac ou pa ae the advice of a friend and before I Frozen Ears had finished taking the second bottle Q. About two or three winters ago|my neighbors could tell I was im- I had niy eears slightly frozen and ev-| proving right along. Well, it has er since then I have been terribly; only, taken five bottles to restore my bothered with them: They are red} health completely. and swollen, and itch a great deal. 1! “My appetite is just splendid now, can hardly keep from scratching them./ my nerves are strong and steady, my What shall I do? ¥ | housework is.a real pleasure and [ A. In cases such as you describe) can sleep like a child at night. in considerable relief is often, obtained} fact. I never felt better in my lire by painting the. affected part with an| than I do now.” alcoholic solution of menthol, If this; The above remarkable does not suffice, consu.t your physi was mgde by Mrs. Sylvia Foster, of cian, ; 206°S. "Division St. Buffalo, N.Y. a j well-known and highly respected res- has a cold, statement ———— $4 | ident of that city: | POETS’ CORNER | | Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jos. “be | Breslow, in Driscoll by N. D. and | J. H. Barette, in’ Wing by. H. P. Ho- | man, and in Strasburg by Strasburg | Drug Co. t ~-advt. NEVER SAY FAIL Should the dark clouds of sorrow, Beckon you on. the tomorrow, Never let your. spirit. narrow, But the field of optimism harrow. /o+—_____________, | JUST JOKING’ 7 - { Too Short a Notice Father (to Sammy, coming home in 4 x. | & bedragg-ed condition)—Great Scot! Should your friends be so deceéiving;| how you look! Let your mind do the leading; Sammy—Yes, Pa, I fell in a-mud Shun them without a heeding, ., | hole. And seek the pal worth while’ (ather—What! and with your new shielding. pants on. — But never say fail. Sammy—Yes, I didn’t have time to i ....._/ take them. off—Boys’ Life, He never wins who stands aquivering | At every trifle that’s perplexing. Look in the eye each foe a lurking; ‘ Should they spoil your reputation Withovt facts or authorization, Strike with all“your animation: | Don’t give way, to lamentacion, i And never say fail. Without Effect y c urki “To see ourselves as others see us Challenge him without ashirking. would, as the poet suggests, cause And you will never fail. . | Us to think things over.” 5 Clara Garnier.| “Perhaps,” replied Miss Cayenne. ' “But it doesn’t seem to make much | of an’ impression on some of the mo- | tion picture stars.”—Washington Star, FRIENDSHIP, Welded together for weal or woe, Heated in Destiny's fiery flame, Proven and tried on the forge of life—. . These are worthy of Friendship's name. Hope Springs Eternal Murphy had veen detailed to carry the-sad news of the boiler explosion Fs ekg to the weeping’ widow. Sharing each other's joys and cares, “Sure, now ye shouldnt take on so,” Sailing together life’s solemn main,, he gaid, consoling, He was' sitting on Knowing and reading each -other’s. the hoiler when. it blew up. ‘They souls— . ,.| ain't found him yet, but he may come These are worthy of Friendship’s gown firm and dandy any day.”"— name. American Weekly Legion. Florence Borner,’ “™°r!can Ue Neighborhood Stuff ,. “ hear the Joneses have BY CONDO | ivetnousandsagaiar, ear?" |» “When‘did they/ever get it?” “The car?” “No, the five thousand.” got a “Oh, they haven’t got that yet.”— Ohio Motorist. Sto NOW, Go AHEAD WITH THe | Wicd SLEGP TILL You Philadelphia and Pittsburg are the ‘only big league baseball cities that still prohibit Sunday games. Ue ly ste MU ee o . AWS 7 THIAMIN PINS “Pape’s Cold Compound” Breaks any Cold in Few Hours | | i | Instant relief! Don't stay stuffed- up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A RY — LT THINK HE ause of “’ape’s Cold Compound” taken, every two hours until three doses are saken usually breaks up any cold. The very first dos® opens up clog- ged nostrils and tue air passages of the head; stops nose running; re lieves the headache, dullness, fever- | ishness. “Panes Cold Comvcurd” acts quick, ‘sure, and costs only a cents at ‘drug stores, It acts ut assist- | ance, tastes nice, contains no quinme | —Insist upon Pape's! MINNESOTA BATTERIES (Guaranteed 2 years) ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE COMPANY 215 Main Street