The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 1, 1921, Page 2

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HER WILL MARCH 4TH HAVE IN STORE Twelve to One It Will Be Fair and Bahny Statistics Indicate , Washington, March 1-—-Viewing the weather probabilities of Inauguration Day in the light of the law of averages the odds probably would be laid as fol- lows: Fair and Balny ....... Mild but overcast Cold and’ Damp .... Very cold and very damp . Snow, Hail, etc. 2 Blizzard ..... . The cold mathemati record would indicate such o fair. It is an even bet that Mr, Hard- ing will need a heavy overcoat when he rides to the Capitol and three chances out of five that sonie one should be nearby with an umbrella and overshoes. It seems to be sa twelve to one that Mr. Harding not experience the perfect spring day which greeted Mr. Wilson on the oc- casion of his first inaugural. On three occasions Washington has given the Ainauguration crowds a weather welcome in. which’ warmth was conspicuously absent. President Grant's second ceremony was “bitter coll” the cnroujelas of that, day re- corded. the wig ing of the “keen. fierce” kind. gy . “Young cadets parading without oy- ercoats were removed insensible from the lines,” says one account which de- scribes the quadrial ball as “a most dismal affair’ at which the “various! champagnes were found fr . Mr. Harrison met with a “bleak and bitter cold day with a raw wind blow- ing,” but the historians neglect to men- tion the conditions of the liquids. x ‘sne tlimatic climax, liowever, came | with the inauguration of Mr. Taft when a blizzard howled out of the north, crippling telegraph wires, stall- ing trains and utterly-spoiling. an elali- orate program. Thousands of spec- tators waited in. the railway cars in cold drifts miles’ from Washington while Mr. Taft was being sworn in the senate chamber, the first indoor ceremony in seventy five years. If the historian will ignore the more or less informal inangurations of Tyler, Fil- more, Johnson, Arthur and Roosevelt for unexpired terms The fierce nature of Washington's weather gods has led to many move- ments to change the inaugural. date— the proponents of a later date’ being about equal to those who believe that the induction of the new presidens and Congress. should ‘follow more closely. the “verdict of the polls.” Tradition, only, is responsible for the mainten- ance of March 4 as ‘the time for the ceremony, it is said, a careful res2arch of legislative. records. failing to re- veal the specific naming of that day. Two theories are prevalent as to the manner in which the present date was selected. One is that the Revolu- tionary fathers: after an exilaustive computation that March 4 wguld not fall on Sunday in any leap year. Some- vody ‘evidenty errongousiy evaluated their “x” quantity, in that case for March 4 has come on Sunday three times since Washington’s inauguyal in’; New York. es "The second theory, is based “onthe minutes of the first constitutional, con- vention where the ‘delegates (under date of Sept. 13, 1788) “did resolve unanimously * * * that. the first Wed- nesday in January be the day for: ap-| pointing electors ingthe several stat that the first Wednesday. in February be the day for the electors to assem- | ble in thgir respective states and vote for President, and that. the first Wed- nesday in March, next le the time and the present seat of Congress the place for comm ing proceedings under said Const , “The first Wednesday in. March next,” happened to be the 4th, aceord- ing to those holding with the second idea, and ‘March ‘4th, thenceforth, her notwithstanding, has been the day for “commencing proceedings.” Cold In One Pay. Laxative BROMO The genuine bears (Be - 12 tol tol . Even To Cure Take GROVE'S QUINE tablets. the signature of 1. W. Grove: sure you get BROMO.) 80c. The Necdfess-Misery That Women Bear HEN the house- hold cares and the worries of everyday life have-drag- ged you down, made you un- happy, and there is nothing in life but headache, back- ache and worry, turn to the right prescrip- tion, one gotten up by Doctor Pierce . over fifty years ago. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., long since found out what is naturally best. for wom- en’s diseases. 3 He learned it ox | all thru treat- 2% ing thousands ¥ | of cases. The result of -his studies was a medicine called Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. | This medicine is‘made of vege- -table growths that nature surely intented for backache, headache, | weakening pains, and for many disorders common <to women’ in | all ages of life. ; Sold-by-druggists | in tablet and liquid form. Send | -Dr. Pierce 10c. for: trial: package. | chief engineer of the bureau of min ‘CALL OF WILD’ WON NEW SECRE Herbert Hoover, Mrs. Hoover andthe Hoover Home in} ta Washington. WHO'S HOOVER? BIRTH—Aug. 10, 1874, West Branch, 1a. MARRIAGE—1899 __ to Lou Henry . of Monterey, Two children. OCCUPATION — Mining engi- neer. HOME—Washington,. D. C., and Standard University, Cal. | — | (N. E. A. Staff Special.) i i at Miss Cal. New York, March 1.—Herbert Hoo- ver, new secretary of commerce, is) better known throughout the \ world today than any. living American with the exception. ‘of Woodrow Wilson. | When. the war brake out Hoover was a stranger to most folks. But, with one jump he landed in the cen- ter of the world’s spotlight when. as food administrator of the United States and head..of the relief work for the stricken countries of Europe, he began to exert a tremendous gas- troncmic influence on a great,-part of the earth’s population. Aug. 1, 1874. ‘That's ;when Hoover | first began to think about food. In a two-reom cottage at West Branch, Ta. His father was a Nacksmith, his mother a preacher in the Quaker church. Orphaned when he was 10. Hoove~ went ‘to Newburg. Ore, to live with an uncle. Here he worked his way ! through, high school and later | through. Stanford university. At cclléwe Hoover tried a waiter's | job. He didn’t like it ahd carved out+ a job for himself ‘by being appointed ! college agent fora Taundry, on a com- | mission, Vacations he spent with; geological’ surveys and in other edu- | cational. work. Cae aie 3 Heover graduated as mining engi- | neer at 21. Then he went to work ; as a miner at. $2 a dav for practical ! experience. And got it. The lure of the wild was in Hoov- er’s system and after he married Mics Jou Henry. a classmate at Stan- ford, in 1899. he set out with his! bride to sce the world—and _incident- | ally to continue his engineering work. | Hocver has trekked the African veldt, ridden the Australian bush, ercssed the Siberian steppes by drosh- ky, suppressed riots of Chinese cool- ics, been wrecked’ on the China coast} and undergone scores of other adven- ; eures. And throuch it all Mrs, Hoov- | er has eccompanied him. Paar Hover ‘made his fortune before ‘he | was little more than 30. A mining engineer at 21. he became independ- ent in Australia by applying modern | Feduction- processes in an old-fash- | ioned gold mine. At 26 he became } of the North China government ond | WEALTH TARY OF COMMERCE Huggins, manager of thé NewYork | American baseball team, accepted én! offer of $30,000 from Clark Griffith of the Washington club for the release of Frank Baker, formerly Known as the “Home run king.” Baker did not play last season and was on the Volun- tary retired list on account of the death of 4s wife. Baker has tenta-! tively indicated a willingness to play again Cut out this slip, enclose with 5¢; and mail it to Foley & Co,’ 2835} Sheffield’ Ave... Chicago, Ill, writi your name and: address ,clearly. You will receive in return trial. packy: age containing _ Foley’s Honey and| ‘ar Compound for coughs, colds and » -roun; Féley Kidney Piils fox’ pains | in sides and back; rheumatism, back- ache, kidney and bladder ailménts. and Foley Cathartic Tablets, 2 whole- some and _ thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, — billious- + ness, headaches, ‘and sluggish bowels. | | titled salary and expenses. SENATE WANTS: “FEDERAL INSP. OF MOVEE FILMS Upper! House Passes Resolution Asking U. S. Government te Cencor Pictures The scnate yestetd defin y postponed-, Hous > providing for the se ? nat: i] and state p Indications are. that when it reaches, the .mo ship bill in -the calendar The report of the com mending its passage w rnoon in- iL 8s f th the senate nittee recom} adopted | Ask Federal Control | Senator Mces:-of. Morton, introduc. | eda resolution asking the fede! 1 government to provide {or the consor-'| ing of ‘the movies at their source of | production. The Nonpartisan group! wus not over enthusiastic in suppo-t of the ‘rsolution but it carried’ by =} vote of 40 to $. Other action, taken was as follows: | Bills Passed House Bill 206—atthorizing boards cf county commissioners tw bond for the purpose of aiding farmers in se- curing seed and feed. House bill) 1'18—Relating to the comm’ssioner of rbxious weeds. House Bill, _119—Providing destruction of sow. thistle. House Bill 125—-Rélating’ to com- pensation of members of the live stovi: 'y board: se Bill 168-—Relating to the in- vestment of University and Schoo! nd funds. House Bill 159—Relating hours for shooting. House Bill 106—Amending the act prohibiting the killing of beaver and Otter for a limited: period. House Bill 160—Relating to the: bag limit of game laws. House Bill 171—Creating a stu\) dent’s loaning fund-in state normal schools, House Bill: $1—Requiring eggs tu be candled and prohibiting sale of eggs unfit for human use. House Bill 154-~Prohibiting the manufacture, sale, disposing of giv- ing: away and_ soliciting orders for cigarettes or cigarette papers. Bills Killed House Billi 29~Amending Section 1137 of the General “Schoo! Laws en- for to the House Bill’. 187—Putting , depari- ment cf grain inspection under raii- road; commission: 5 House Bill 191—Waiving certain re- quirements of the laws rules and reg- ulations relating to public, grain Warehouses. i House Bill 190—Empowering | the stategrain. inspector’ tg, fix, maximum rates: for handling grains. TUESDAY, MARCH. 1,:192f. ~ ig Lives to See the Prescription’ - He Wrote in 1892 the Worlds 7 Most Popular Laxative Remedy. =| prescription:in 1892 * It is particularly pleasing to me to: know that the biggest half of those eight million bottles were bought by mothers for themselves and the chil- dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50 aver-- age treatments is sixty cents; such‘a bottle will last a family several months, Ihave never made a secret of what is in Dr. It.is_a compound of Egyptian Senna.and other simple laxative herbs with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics. / These ingredients arc endorsed in the U. S. / Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. DR.W.B. CALDWELL TODAY Born Shelbyville, Mo., March 27, 1830 Began the manufacture of his famous Founder of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, long past / Biblical old age, but hale and hearty—Still sees patients daily— Wonderful achieve- ment of a “country doctor.” HEN I started to practice medicine, back-in 1875, there were no pills or tablets or salt waters for the relief of constipation, and no artificial remedies made from coal tar. The prescription for constipation that I used early in my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un- der the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid remedy, and I have never had reason to change it: I intended it for women, children and elderly people, and these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim- ulant as Syrup Pepsin. lam gratified to say that under successful management my. prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest sel liquid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million bottles were sold by druggists last year proves that it has won the confidence of mothers whose chief interest is the health of their children. , Pharmatopoeia. I consider Syrup Pepsin today in the serious 82nd year of my age, as I did in 1892, the best remedy a family can-have in-the house for the safe relief of constipation and its accompanying ills,,such as headaches, bilious- ness, flatulence, indigestion, loss. of :appetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds: and fevers. sitint Millions of families are now never without Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and I believe. if, you will once start using it you will also always have a bottle handy for emergencies. ! T R Y I To Sei1 me your name ond gees and I will send you a free trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin. FREE House Bill 158—Relating to elec- tions. t House Bill 198—Amending the nat- ional primary law, separating state and national elections. /House Bill 68—Amending men’s compensation act. House bill 68—Making private or state workmen’s compensation insur- ance optional. FIND REAL GOLD BRICK San Francisco, March 1—Joseph Mil- Jer and John Stein, Redding prospec- tors, who found a-nuggct weighing 307,45 ounces in Motion creek 3 branch of the Sacremento river, shortly return to Redding with $3,4' 57, the actual value of the nugget after smelting at, the Mint. Shanahan says that although much larger quantities of gold from.a single ledge have begh brought to the Mint from time to time, this is the largest individual nugget found in Galifornta since 1870, when George Gerard dis- work: |. govered a pure gold nugget weighing a ued e Berwick, Morney & Co., a'_ ish minine _ corporation. | Hoover and his wife weve in the! siege of Tientsin duriny the Revers} Hoover helped man a ma- ; unising. chine gun. Mrs. Hoover helped serve ; Serve) | | tea to the foreign colony. e ae) Atvthe cutbréak of the, war, Hoov- | er was in London bossing 50.000 em- | ployes in mining enterprises through- | out the world. Stranded. Americans | appealed to him for aid. He ingtitut- | ed organized relief—so successfully | that when the Commission for Re- | lief cf Belgium was formed Hoover ; was the unanimous choice for its! head. Then came his appointment as’! United States food administrator. | That part of his work is too well | known to need reneating. a | comes _ So well was Hoover thought of na- tionally, as a result of his war work, that when time arrived to nominate | a new president of the United States last summer. Hoover was one of -the first, possibilities considered by both republicans and democrats. Despite his refusal to accent a nomination he | got nine votes at the republican show in Chicago. Leese The. Hoovers have two sons, one 17 and one 13. The home they have used principally in the last few years is in Washington. They also. own a} home in California, SENATORS 7AV $30.00 FOR “HOME RUS? BAKER Cincinnati, Ohio. March 1 fore leaving Cincinnati tonight, 3 marked change ? D° you know that by tar the larger number of the common ailments.of women aré not surgical ones; that is they are not caused by any serious displacement, tumor, growth, or other O. you know that these common ailments produce symptoms AY that are very much like those caused bv the more serious ‘ surgical conditions? ; : \ O. you. know that many women and. young girls suffer need- lessly from such ailments? More than that, they endanger their health by allowing their ailments to continue and develop into something. serious. ; If treated early, that is, within a reasonable time after the first warning symptoms appear, serious conditions may often be averted. ‘Therefore, at the first appearance of such symptoms .as periodic; pains, irregularities, irritability and nervousness, Eydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound should be taken. It is prepared with accuracy and: cleanliness “from medicinal plants. It con< tains no narcotics nor poisonous drugs, and can be taken with perfect safety. The Vegetable Compound acts on the cotiditions which bring about these symptors in a gentle and. efficient manner.- The persistent use of it shows itself.in the disappearance, one after. another, of the disagreeable symptoms. In a word, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound acts as a natural restora. tive, relieving the present distfess and preventing more serious trouble, Address me Dr. W. B: and then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. Write me today. ~ USL UHAS20221 280 ESUUNOUEERUNOOUE EDS aldwell, $13 Washington Street, Monticello, Illinois. Everybody now thirty-four pounds in the bed of Flat|creek. In size the nugget was “about creck, whieh {8 not far from Motion; as large as an ordinary clay brick. The First National Bank Bismarck, No. Dak: SHRAUTHOOUTEUVAUOUNAUOE TELAT GALA Established 1879 The Pioneer Bank Capital and Surplus $300,000.00 UTULLUGUEENESUSDENTUUOEGGELGAEASAL Safety First TTI mm TT iE TULUM Crewsky’s Shoe Shop Shoe Repairing . Rubber Boots ‘Half Soled Rubbers Repaired Hot Water Bottles Repaired Shoe Lace Tips Put on -Free of Charges We are Equipped to Repair-Anytht

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