The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 23, 1921, Page 4

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BSG -Morals—(a) There’s hope in even ‘a ‘Dismal i.1,¢ But the dark day. for your. Uucle Samuel is with the present rate. of jncrease, it may become a’problem in a few years how we shall-care for the. buffalo on the national, preserves.” : Those pre-histortans who 'féared the extinction of the bison may now sit back and let the tax- payers hustle out and buy more pasturage for! : ' THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MeN apenlbarnw no aa a a & ffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Bee gs arse Matter. « ¥GEORGE D. MANN |- -. - Rs Foreign Representatives : 2. @ LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ~~ fe CHICAGO’ iat pereorr the buffalo. Manqoeite BU YNE, BURNS AND SMITH “y That is exactly what Dr. Nelson .wants the, |@NEWYORK - )- - - Fi Fifth Ave. Bldg.| covernment. to do—buy a few. thousand acres’ “Whe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the vse/near Yellowstone Park for the rapidly growing, & ication of all news credited to it or not o ePWiSe| ay ny : a en aper ‘snd ‘also. ‘the joval news publighed | LilTalo family, yee - | = herein. nts of publication of special dispatches herein are} Cowgtessiman Welling, of’ Utah, has intro-| galieighta of publication of special diapa ~“Iduced a bill in Congress appropriating $300,000 Elion the purchase of a bison-stocked island’ in OF CIRCULATION, . te SAAN Great Salt Lake: He says if Uncle Sam doesn’t = EE LION BATES: PAYABLE 7.29|tuke this buffalo herd off the owner's hands = by mail, rear (in Bismarck) .. +0 1.20 paw by mail, ter sear (in state outside Bismarck. }.: 16.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ..........+. 6.00 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) E Editor ing, at $200 a head. ~ \ And this is what we may be coming to—back to the Buffalo Bill days when every boy again i Sa eT may dream of hunting the buffalo. i = Protest against staging these buffalo hunts : _ SHIRTS STILL IN VOGUE '|has been made to the U.'8. Department of Agri- The sense of relief that comes with the an-|cujture, which, however, gives notice that it will * nouncement of the high moguls of fashion that take no steps to halt the shooting. z akirts will “reach down to the knees,” jg-better! The buffalo is something of a white elephant, z felt thai expressed. : » |. It may be that the thing to do is to preserve % The tendency. to abbreviate has redched such|the buffalo as we preserve other pre-historic ani- 2 a stage that some men actually refuse to go into} mals, stuffed, on pedestals, in.museums. There _ a-theilter aily more for fear they will mias some-| they'll eat uo hay. we ti butso 3 thing. | : — Et ra situation reached a real danger point re-|. Disarmament is comething no nation wants a eeiitly when Dr. Ernest Thompson Seton’ canie monopoly on. © out with the.information that the, shorter a ? Cae a : 2 Woman's shirts and ‘the lower ‘het, bodice, the} The futility of riches is taught in the Scrip- * greater her moral influence; affirming that| tures and the income tax blank. % the natives,of interior Africa who’ do not Ne . awake nightaptudyjng what to wear are the most * moral people in the world.) - ~. Ap aes = . Happily, the lepding’ modistes, are, not’ ‘yet P Benny ty accept. ImCanG saver hee ansireadly American husband ‘is afraid to 4 youie for at least another. season. Further than aoe the obvious comment. ;, this we have tio authenic information. oi ots bon } Daljou happen to remember the last time you got a five cent shine and saw a ten-cent movie? Footless hosiery. is hailed as a novelty in Paris We'd give a dollar to know what Mrs. Wilson said about the president’s furniture when it ar- rived from New Jersey. You see, it was bought before her time. 5 : #\ - HOW GOOD. ROADS. HELP :Good:.roads ineah better country schools. in lower ‘prices to the city, man for products, They mean a vastly improved life to ‘the farmer, hig:family: and his:ém-|}’ general improvement ‘{n: farm oth a ‘tightening of labor atid’ the éa- ut: Of the. better ings of: life, becaut Q © much ‘more easily attainable.| 7 fated that more than a billion dollars|’ fod, as gathered fidim those n appropriated for good roads programs. ‘of our readers wiythave valle at the Mail office Ne pel fonal, state and city governments, a8 welll duping the past couple:wéel/s, is that do compro- & township sections, na going ahead with it} ise between ‘the: socialistic leaders, now in Something “like «five: hyndred maillion Will be! charge of our state; and’ the forces opposed to vallable this coming season.| «i 1them, is desirable. If‘ the -Indpstrial. program Phie-cost of Aabor, materia) andthe ability of] has any chance of meeting, witl - suiecean, $e“will jaapiortation systems to make good, will figure] pe ruch more suckessfully handled by. itd’ apon- VAILING OPINION: bys panes Pres t Pane We f i 809 he af tho?South’ Pole. inthe nifimate onteome, but the movement for! sors than it could possibly, be, by. men who oppose; A yoice was speaking |to them. an *, good roadschas a momentum that only -cémple- those theories, while on the other hand if it ig invisible voice! “Yes,'you are sood- : ue county’ over will stop, » {doomed to failure, and it has always been pre- ‘owners of 7;600,000 passenger. cars, (Of | dicted by the Mail that it could not succeed, then )000, thotor tricks, of whbth the, owners of 2, »*| by no means should the present office holders ‘day {and age'the mud road is not for them. and tracks are farmers, know that] have the handling of the finances to be used in its burial. Neither should the recall be used ex- ‘cept as the very last resort, as the law was never’ designed to be used except in the most rare and furgent cases; and while the present conditions are rare and urgent to:the extreme, yet it is to be hoped some more definite and: decisive cure] « may be found than the re-call.—Marmarth Mail. "THE DISMAL SWAMP...) | rs ago a credulous man bought a “farm” lows south. He had visionie of a southern. plan- tition,. with derkies: singing, and all that, but » thé :apot ‘was ‘finally located toward the: middle of the Dismal Swamp. saa Nothing could have appeared-more worthless , BOOTSTRAP SCHEME FAILS nen, es ‘ |: If the proposal of North Dakota and Twin : Poday it is estimated by C. C. Qeborn, inthe Bulletin! of the United States Geological Survey, that the Dismal Swamp contains’ 672,000,000 tong of peatavailable for fuel. a \ (Ais ‘swamp Hes ‘in Virginia’ and North Caro:| agreed to, there’s a good prospect; that ‘the peo- lina. 3 re : 4 cat _..|ple of the state will-be saved from the general At is not a8 dismal as it was before the digging] financial disaster that has been imminent. Such; .. of; the Disinal Swamp canal, along with various|@ consummation will be. something to be thank-| er ditches, has drained 700 of its 2200 square rl for, while the experience will be a warning! Bape att re ees" Jagainstsuch juggling with public funds as has | not occurred in this,country in half a century. k When the dust has settled down, it probably | ,500 square iniles are’found| Will. be found that’ the affairs ‘of th Bank of; ray red from: one North Dakota, if it,is allowed to contitie doing | ment of that state, on condition that the Bank of North Dakota is wound. up:and the law. revised n- deposits: ra 5 toB tis begt;in the'depp spoaite ;| business as.u land:bank ov for any, other purpose , te black: and ‘conipuratively ‘fi ‘nen who know-something | foth'im.| Will'be in the hands. of ‘Phe thick beds ly iuig in ety o Déunimond. uewliat recehtly and’ pelt 48-fest alee) ‘about the bankiug business. Pee Ould be folly fn. the. axtrenie merely to pass’ Festrictive laws said leave" the:adnginistration of | tliem in the same hands as'before. | i On the admission of the Nonpartisan league, :. Swamp, and (b) there’s peat for heat when coal] officials, the wheat ‘strike, which was intended #' has gone. to accomplish much fr the farmers, has had aj Se CRY u 2 large share: in the states financial difficulties. | BAOK TO BUFFALO BILL DAYS Nevertheless, the bank crisis would have occur- | i. Uncle Sam has another bison problemi on ‘his| red if there had, been no holding of wheat, al-| z, hands. Not long ago he was fretting because the|thotgh it might have been postponed a littld| "* buffalo: was sliding out of existence. Now he’s While. : 4j ftissing. with the same puzzle from another angle.| ‘The theory of the Bank of North Dakota was ; Zoo many buffalo babies. Bison herds heard about the anti-race suicide’ false premise that there are loanable funds in :,. stuff somebody preached. Resulf: 500 bison|the state, sufficient to finance its natural and if ealves a year, and birth rate climbing steadily healthy growth and ex-money from outside. It} upward. / was attempted to use 'the tax collections as a ; “The dark day of the bison has passed,” says | means of dictating to foreign capital the condi- Dr. E.. W. Nelson, chief of the United States|tious-on which it could do business! in the state. gi Biological Survey. But the Non-partisan league ‘could not devise a i way by which the people of North Dakota ‘could lift themselves by their bootstraps.—St. Paul of fdet;”-continues ‘Dr. Nelson,’Pioneer Press. j ema Juat: oer en ~ they'll be auctioned off to sportsmen, for shoot- H looking youngsters! that. TI never read'my ;oetry to any- ; one that is not good-looking. Would you like to hear some? quickly. 1 shall tell you my tale in a song, j} And my praises vara eye all wrong in the first place. It was based on the| M BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE | Copyright, 1921, NE. A.) ~ wang eon d ick: had arrived at the| Cave of ‘Gems under the Sleeping Pool.' At last they were in the secret pas- sage the Star had told them about, and if things .went’ well they would Rai to _ A volce was speaking to th And I'm glad of yes!” “Oh, ‘explaimed the twine So the voice began: “I am Pierre de Pierrot de Bong Tong, 1 am soft, 1 am: silky, “In color I’m milky, And I'm known from panies to Hong- kong. ‘T can dq most unusual things,’ ne sings, I'm extremely -adrait, And my tricks 1 exploit, : |City, bankers to advance money to the govern-| Remarkable Remarks | “There should: be more liberal treatment of the men'who are under- 40 as to prevent any ‘more ™WHlUeat banking is| going vooatlonsl) ti ing.”—Henr. retary of war. ' . ining in an at+ ake themselves support- L. Stimson, former sec- ee 1 “It is no sin'to fail; the sin is not trying.”—Meredith Nicholson, novel- ist. eceteebed “At the present time France has no wishes or ambitions as far as new colonies are concerned.”—Andre Tar- dieu, French diplomat. le ce “The railroad today i¢ getting tho Square deal; a‘generous ‘one, accord- ing to a good many folks.”—Edwari Hungerford, author of railroad ‘stor- sty * se “We have got. to: pay more for our teachers in the ‘futuré—more. than teachers-in the\public’'schools hay ever been paid in the past.”—-F hiland- er P. Claxton, U. 8. commissioner of education. . GIRL LOVED BY. ALL WRITES BOOKS THAT SHOCK ADMIRERS Unusual Story of “Cousin Kate” Makes Exceptionally Fine Motion Picture The bishop could not approve of the. outragecus theories enunciated in books written by Kate Curtis, but nei- ther could he disapprove of the writer. lany persons besides ‘the bishop might consider her writings abomina- ble and yet feel that Kate herself was altogether adorable. In fact, Kate Curtis has been known and loved by hundreds of thousands since the Charles Frohman play, ‘“Cousin'’ Kate,” by Hubert Henry Davies, began its long run at the Empire theater, New York city, with Ethel Barrymore in the stellar role. Many bids have been made for the photoplay rights to “Cousin Kate” in the past few years: but the price nut upon it was ‘hormous. ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS By Oliver Roberts Barton. e tae! | Dip you EVER. SEE ANYTHING QUITE SO DIRTY AS f “THESE CURTAINS ? THE WALLS ARE FILTHY, J Too. THE WHOLE “HOUSE ISNT FIT TO LIVE IN, ’ AND THe RUGS? im the glory of great circus rings. “IT can jump through a great paper | hoop, 1 I’m a wonder at looping the loop, - I can beg, I.can pray, =, 5; I can wish you good-day, oo n. An invisible voice! i {I ¢an walk on my hands with a whoop: “If you tell me just where you would 50, . I’m most. likely to be sure ‘o inve | The road you. must take, And you'll niake no mistake, If you follow the way I shall sho-v, “There's another verge. Wouid you like to hear it?” “Yes,” nodded Nancy. ‘Very much, indeed, but won't you appear first?” “Bless me, can't you see me?” an- swered the voice. “That's right, I forgot.. I get invisible every other day. But wait! It’s nearly 12! There, it’s striking now!” And at the sixth stroke there slowly apperred a white French poodle, only “Pierre de Pierot.”’ as he said his Name was, was quite as large as an ue ~ lence of the story for motion picture purposes, however, and especially its wonderful adaptability for the talents, charm and power of expression of AI- ice Joyce, préVailed upon’ Albert E. Smith, president “of. Vitagraph, to méeethe demain” Therefore “Cou- antdh cb: EVERETT TR RI i've_ so MACHING. . <j i sin Kate” has been visualized as an| Alice Joyce special. production and wil be snown at the Eltinge theater my Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Causeand Remove It Dr, Edwards’ Olive } Tablets, the substitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do. the work. People afflicted with bad breath quick relief | taking them. | Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. They act gently but firmly on the’ | bowels and liver, stimulating them to. ‘natural action, clearing, the, blood, and purifying the entire system. They do: that which calomel does, without any of the bad after effects. Take one or two, every. night for a week and note the effect, 15c and 30c a box BUCKWHEAT CAKES : By ALFRED ARNOLD, Whenever I smell buckwheat cakes | E get just like-—for goodness sakes, 1 wonder can I tell! ~\ I feol a sort of mournful pride, And something all gone, here’ iuside. Well, well; well, well; weil! It takes me: back to Sixty-seven; In winter. 1 was ’bout eleven. My mother, at nightfall Would/stir the breakfast’ batter; ‘n‘ then pa dias + “My boys eat mere than men; Where’ do they put it all?” I-saw_her just before I spoke: As natural!—standing in: the’ smoke, The gridille hétter'n jing! And piling ‘up a ‘buckwheat stack Enough to break d¢ horse's ‘back, And ‘singing—she' would sing! Yes, singing; though ‘she was’ worn and tired. Say, some thoughts: are just’ too all- fired ‘ ‘ = Sad-sweet like—! Suffering snakes! Is that a tear upon my nose? How far’ an, d. man’s’ memory goes! Sure, Hive ‘buckwheat. cakes! ALL ea eer THE SNOW STORM. By Florence Borner, Tt Have ELSCTRIC WASHING to-morrow GET WHAT ‘YOU WANT By WHIT HADLEY. _Senator Henry F.’Ashurst of Ari-/ zona has never believed in the Micaw- ber-like business of “waiting something to turn* up.” He ;started ‘life as and farm ‘hand.**' - { “He told friends he would: some day} become United States’ senator or die trying. ‘They laughed. < * In’ Phoenix he went to,.work as a hayfield hand. Then he became a lumber-jack. and a jhod-earrier. - o|,, He studied shorthand ‘at, 49, ana|” | worked during spare. time ab a re:) porter. . At Williams) Ariz., lie worked as a clerk-stenographer in-a‘law ’ office andvread. law. In 1896, when: 22,,he-stumpe the} , state: for. Bryan and, elected :to the legislature. He says: A friend is one “You can get what you| want: if’ you want it; lard’ ciiough.”| A FRIE By Alfred Arnold. who's lived awhile And learned a world’ of stuff; ‘Who smiles a kind of patient smile Through things be smooth or rough. | : i i A friend is:one who's tired, you out;'+; for| a cow-puncher| t { had. himself The swallows all have flown home ‘to the south, ‘ : The roses, that I loved ara dead and gope; / The snow that swiftly falls from out the sky. A Tells us that once again Old Win- i ter's come, With raging. fury.soon the wind ar- rives,) / _The same is he-to either friend, or He gathers. up the swiftly falling to wade. High’ up the chimney. fly the flaming “sparks, -; i As louder still the wind begins to low; ‘ Like little ‘gnomes intent on some , Queer. prank 5 ‘ They minele with the whirling flakes Nu of snow. Fae ‘\; All things are changed; no more the landscape looms ; In-grays and browns, so tiresome to | the eyes; ‘Like ‘to the magic wrought by fairy wand The world is turned to winter Para- dige. ‘Who's heard your every. plan; WORD GREW OUT OF Knows all your weakness and your : < ; doubt, | RURAL REVOLUTION * And ‘says, “I like that man” A friend is one who stands a lot; Yet tells you you're a sin-.er; And after:that, as like as not, Invites you out to dinner. A friend is one who knows your faults, Yet doesn't hide his own; Who'd rather walk with one who halts That. plod along alone. Grove’s is the ‘Only Genuine Laxative BROMO: QUININE tablets./ own bailiff, often found it more con- The first and original Cold and Grip! (Be sure you get BROMO.) | Tablet. 30c. BY CONDO DON'T THINK, MRS, TRUS THAT WE RGALLY NCSD ONG —. <a Atout (ti. "We" WASHINGS —— < DO i OWN AND TURN Tee Su'T Wet We" THINK ue t cht DON'T Do HS tHem Ul! Do THEM WHICS COV Sit , * A SWIVEL CHAIR DOWN =F —= [ey _{ lets cost few ‘cents. Chicago, Feb, 23,—In this day of un- precedented farm organization and de- velopurenit,i¢te, noted, here that’ the very words farie and farmer grew ‘out of the first “rural revolution.” As told in a history. of the English people & is shown that it came about in the fourteenth century. In describ- ing the Peasant’s Revolt, 13/ to: 1381, the history states: : | “The ‘Lord of the 2fanof instead of cultivating the demeane through his vevient and profitable to let the manor to a tenant at @ given. rate payable; either in money ‘or in kind. “It is this system of leasing, or rather ‘to the usual term for the rent it entailed (feorm; {rom the Latin, firma), that we owe the words farm | and farmer, the growing use of which ; make the first step iy the rural revo- lution ‘which we are examining.” Beulah Lighite Coal $5.50 and Bear Creek Coal $12.50 deliver- ed. Wachter Transfer Co. Phone 62, or 63. For the, last three centuries 82 per- cent of Mexico's arable land has beon held in, large estates. ; .° Name “Bayer”, on Genuine NI Take Aspirin only as told in each backage of genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin. Then you will be following the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 years, and Proved safe by millions. Take ‘no chances with substitutes. If you sce the Bayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rhenivatism, Earache. foothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Hand} tin boxes of twelve tab- Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade’ mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salieylicacid. flakes, ? To make: a’ crystal. Monument of now. | Like.to abridge that spans the flow- < ing srean, woe Between thejhouse and. barn adrift - is madéy a aby Swaicn . St. ney commence ig: thelz, evening chores,:,.., ‘The: farmer, And his 8008 will have 5 { @mee -->

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