Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
© matte Sd AOS a 3 " ‘THE BISMARCK TRIE THE- BISMARCK TRIBUNE . Aili that you could trade your life, would! - : Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as ; Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - 2 oe ——— Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY = CHICAGO DETROIT * Marquette Bldg. / Kresge Bldg, PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - e ‘Second 24 Editor - Fifth Ave. Bldg. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise; eredited in this paper and also the local news published herein, All rights of publication of special dispatches hefein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANC Daily by carrier, per year .........++ yb Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily. by mail, per year (in state outside 5.00 Daily. by mail. outside of North Dakota .. wee 6.00 | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER x ? (Established 1873) , io _ THIS IS THE TIME WHEN—* There are other seasons of the year, but none so full of hope and joyful, promises as the first days of gladsome Spring. This is the time when youth looks far ahead, and lives many lives, that of today and of tomorrow; life indoors andelife outside; lives of marbles, tops and kites as well as lives of pencils, slates and books. e I s winter shell, and E 7.21 ss , vhooed is bursting from beli lessly ! * : F ‘ This is the happy day when one little boy can track up more square yards of new erubbed floors than an arniy of women can clean ‘in the same time. as tp \ fy This is the’time when the last ounce ofiattrac- tion for the schoolroom has withered. and: fled from the mind of Master Boy. : This is the time when one departeth with a mother, it. certainly is not doing it noise-| you? With whom would you trade? i SIER 10 BREAK. ’ When the federal child labor law was pending olina opposed it on the ground that it was an infringement of the state's rights. They promised that North-Carolina would en- act modern child labor Jaws and would see that they were faithfully enforced. , North’ Carolina did enact a child labor Jaw. And ‘now the North Carolina-Child Welfare Commission issues its first report on how that law has been obeyed. “There have been 750 violations of the state child labor law during the past 17 months,” says the report. Is that why those North Carolina mill owners were sich ardent advocates of staté rights? Be- cause a state law is more easily broken than a federal statute? n ABOUT SWEET PEAS The growing of sweet peas is a mighty import- attention. In many an almanac will be found opposite the date, March 17, this: St. Patrick’s Day—time to SOW sweet, peas. \ The sectet: of successfully growing /sweet peas is divulged by an expert. Le says: “Sweet peas want root room, rich‘soil spaded deep, with a cool, moist condition about the roots. Dig a trench 12 to-18 im 1 to with- in six inches of the top 5 mixture of. soil and manure and plenty of rotted leaf mold or stable bedding. Fill ‘up: gradually as the plants grow, thus keeping the roots down deep. “Plant the seeds thickly if you wish to be sure plants to a foot, and if the soil is exceptionally vich-one will be enough to each foot of space.” , light heart aid"d pocket laden. witlr marbles to return long after suppertine with a heavy heart and a much lighter pocket—for the loser. This is the time wher the basement floor is cluttered up with kite sticks and the glue bottle is not, to be found in its accustomed place, and mother’s kitchen apron does duty as kitetail. , This is the time when more energy is spent >! pon finding-last year’s ‘top than Columbus de- voted to the finding\of a new world. This is the time when young hearts glow with delight upon hearing that Veape school. will have to be let out a few weeks carlier because the school fund: is running low. This is the time when any little lad would rather be the driver of a deliyery wagon which rumbles along the open streets than be president and sit in a White House all day. This is the time when. it’s too.early to hoe weeds or mow lawns and to@ late to shovel’ snow +t off sidewalks. : — This is the time when a fellow can begin: prac- ticing up on his curves and\iiaybe make the pitcher’s job on the Hill‘Gang team. § This is the time when being a boy is the best _ soceupation on_earth. ae This is the time when—shucks! a fellow could +. goon like this all day! =i WOULD YOU TRADE YOUR LIFE? A Denyer girl says she “traded lives with an- other girl.” She, so the story runs, was mucli like this other girl in appearance, and it was easy for them>to exchange names, histories, identi- ‘ties; made easier still by both living among peo- ple who had not known them in the days before they traded Tives. Co en ’ What the Denver girl did was merely to swap names, to pretand-to be the other\person, but she went right onliving her ewn. life. By taking the other’s name, lover, job and reputation, she no more became that other person than she could, ‘have become ber by swapping clothes. ei Each. of these girls went’ on living Wer own life, as far as they-were concerned. Their trade may. haye affected the lives of others. It may have changed \the lives of their'friends, and even _of themselves. } ee Poe ae / “ # @ When the time comes that humans may trade lives with each other— What will happen? And how? : * Would you-like to live P| this world when (if ever) lives may be traded® ~ Would you, if you could, trade lives with any} Would you trade with a! other living }human? ; Rockefelle / Or au emperor? Or Hyarding?} Or Mary Pickford?’ Or Babe Ruth? ‘ * * * \\trade more than just names and wealth. They] vould trade friends, relatives, loves, morals, ideals, ambitions, hopes, memories, everything. | They would trade moments of death, too. ~And , they would trade eternity, -for to trade lives. one ‘- must trade souls.- ‘ Zs : Trading lives is the biggest problem-human; mind has ever conQived. Beside it bridging the. . oceai, tunneling from America to Asia, journeys: ‘+ to other planets, all these would be easy of ac- complishment. _/ ° * *) # Trading lives will be possible when mortal . man has discovered how to create life, and how “** to restore life when’ it is lost. | -- .Until such a time has arrived thosé dissigisfied with their lives may patch, mend, repair; they; -| The officials in charge of the bank have assumed .' Remember, if one could trade lives they would! the right to withh6ld such tunis as'are actually | is weak, run-down, This treatment will assure a great bloom. And the more one picks the more will the plants blos- som. That médans the more pleasure you give to your neighbor by passing along the blossoms, the more blossoms there will be to give away. : y queathed $40,000 found a “short cut” to fortune. According to New Haven grads, an~ Angell is none too good for the Yale presidency. What the Harvard boys say is something elgp again. we Sey EDITORIAL REVIEW wt or may ‘hey are may have being dis- , Comments reproduced in this column my, not express the opinion of The Tribune. presented here in order that our read both sides, of impértant issues which cut in the press of the day. FROZEN SOLID - The state of North Dakota is financially as 4o many times its total liabilities, but its stock ‘of money on hand and its banking Credit, hd suf- ficient to provide for all its needs. The trouble is that neither the assets of the state nor its credit can be realized on. The state is'in the po- sition of a mill by a stream that is frozen to the bottom. The mill suffers from no lack of water.| /There is as much water as there ever was. The trouble is that the water does not move. Let the streain become thawed out, with all the little, rills that upply it, and the flow will be resumed, ‘and the wheels will begin to turn. The water, passiiig into the great reservoir below, is lifted by the forces.of nature and returned in the form of showers on the uplands, to continue its work ‘of supplying power for industry. The era of socialist experimenting and worse aggregate a lof df money. Whatever money has) been stolén or frittered away is gone, and to that | extent the state has suffered a positive loss. | But serious as this loss is,.and inexcusable as , - Uhpse who are responsible for it it amounts to} but a small fraction of th money witch would | be available for the conduct of the state’s busi-; ness were the state freed from the grip of the) frost that-has paralyzed it. ei \ The public funds of: the state have been cen- | tralized in (he Bank of North Dakota and by that; bank have been redistributed in the manner best | calculated to promote the politic: vities of | a desperate and discredited: faction. In ‘many! cases they have been-so placed that they cannot, be realized on except after long delay, if at all! in their possession, and ave dishonoring the de-| mands made on them for funds needed for the} payment of township and county: expenses, sf payment efschool tea hers’ salaries,-and obliga tionsigf like character, (Such a state of doubt: and confusion has been created thatthe conduct | of business in (he/ordinary manner has become | impossible. . Banks outside -the state are no| longer willing to send money into North Dakota, | for they have no means of knowing what uesper- | ate measures may be takei‘next to shatter public; confidence. | The consequence of all this is that the financial | stream has ceased to flow. It is frozen solid. | Less the few million that has been squandered or | stolen, the’sta¥e has as much money as-usual. ‘Let the stream begin to move again and the em-| ~* may eliminate habits and acquire others; they “They may change, but not trade_lives. , But we have gotten away from the question. ism.—Grand Forks Herald, , arrassments of the present will be forgotten, | some time as ¢ result ef ovr plunge into social- \ in Congress the’cotton mill owners of North Car-| jant subject just now’and demands immediate| of.a good stand.\ But do not have more than'two| The Chieago butcher’s cashier who was be: sound as any state in the union. Not only has it} abundant reséives of actual wealth’ amounting) than, experimenting has ‘cost the state in the; , 66 | safest wo | ._ WHO'HE Is. BIRTH-—Feb, 18,1870, at Evans- | ville, Ind.” ‘ DUCATION — University of Michigan, 96, | MARRIAGE—Maerch 18, 1911, to | Miss Marion Thurber of Detroit. ‘Pwo children, A OCOUPATION—Lawyer and ‘‘tomobile manufacturer. / 1 | | | | CHUROH—mpiscopalian. \ (N, E. A, Staff Special.) | Detroit,” Mar. 3-—-When “Gob” Ed/ | Denby applied the holystene to to] | creaking deck of the old gunboat Yan | tic, when he swavbed the smoking! ttery aboard thc} ead when as a rine recrtits-amid the heat and sand of Paris Island’he had no fies that | those mysterious “secnav'\.orders that | controlled his movements ever would; issue from his own hand. \ Now President-elect Harding has; | chosen Denby for his secretary of the ; Ravy and after March 4 this Detroit automobile man will sit at the mahog- |any desk and’ issue orders to the | “gobs” with whom he used to toil.! } # au- | | | When Denby, a risfng young lawyer, | enlisted in the. Naval Reserve just | Prior tO the outbreak of the Spanish | | War, he did nét ask for gold braid. | He signed up-as Edwin Denby, appren- | tice seaman. He had served six years in Congress ; when the call ‘to cems.came in 1917, i but he asked no post of referment, when he gave up his busineSs and his family. ‘His enlistment papers read: Edwin Denby, private, U. S. (Marine Corps. - Denby. at this time, was ‘married, overweight and overage. Only his j success in obtaining’ waivers \from Washington eno bles ain to sign up. * } Denby's Work in the Mavy was not/ easy. As a-lad he had far too muehi| | bulk for his age. Shipmates on the! | old training ship Yantic tell how Den-| | by struggled for half an hour to climb/ | onto a boom from’a swinging Jacob's | | Ladder. The same ‘persistence that | finally crowned his efforts with suc- cess retsef him, through various sea- man ratings until he was a gunner’s | mate, third class. nee | Denby was born in Evansville, Ind., Feb. 18, 1870. He was attending Evan- ville high sclteol. when his father, | Charles Denby, was appointed minis- iter to China and Edwin accompanied ‘him to the legation_in Peking. While in China he was given/a po- sition in the Chinese customs service and held nN ay his return to the states in 1894¢ * * He graduated from the law depart-! ment at the University of Michigan in| 1896 and was admitted to the bar in the same year, ),He entered law prac-| tice in ;Detrojg and .returned to~ it! after the 3: hy;War, until he- was cent to the Michigan legislature in} | 1902. ‘ser he In 1904she was elected to Congress | and served three forms: | | In 1911.-Detiby ‘entered the motor | industry, then beginning to make. it-' self felt: in ‘Detroit. He became vice president of the Denby ‘Motor, Truck Co. and today’is also treasurer ofe! Hupp Motor Car Co..and a member of the law firm of Chamberlain, Denby, Webster and-Kennedy of/Detroit. | Denby is rated’ as having made a “quick fortune’ of more than a million in autos, but shared the downs as well ag the ups and his. status today! is defined‘as well-to-do. From buck private in the marines during the World War Denby rose in| ayear to the rank of major. After | Fving in France he was returned to aris Island as. camp morale officer. | * The leading candidate for governor of Michigan in 1920, Denby withdrew from the race before the primaries on the plea of stress of private affairs. Late in that year he accepted an ap-) vointment as probation officer for the Detroit municipal’ courts. Denby was married in 1911 to Miss Marion Thurber of Detroit. There are | two children, -Kdwin, Jr., 8, and ‘Mar- ap | ion, 6. | | The Talkidig: Machine. North--Has ‘Marjorie any education | along musical ‘jines? West—I'’should say so? ‘Name any record and she'can tell you what's on | HOME—Detroit, Mich. 1 | o— “Secnaw” Orders Puzzled “Gob” Denby: Now He’s Going to Issue ’em } Edwin Denby, new secretary. of the-navy, Mrs. Denby, and the Denby, Home in Detroit. , ‘§ S \ on / WINDS ' . By Florence Borner Wind_of the Northland, buoyant and free, z Bringing a breath of that frozen clime, Where the aurora borealis lights the skies With’a radiance that is grand, sublime; What say you as you journey forth? 5 > ‘Lord of the Air, with the’beard of snow, Turning the pond to a gfare of ice, a Causing destruction-wherever you go. 1 Wind of the Southland with perfumed breath of spice and myrrh from the Orient; Pictures of car@vans fall and rise, 2 » Then a shadowy palm and a flapping tent, ’ Where the travelers rest ere they journey on, fTired from the heat of their desert ride, Glad for the respite of the night, And the gleaming stars in the heavens wide. « Wind of the Eastland, courageous and strong, Swift as a warrior’s speeding bow, You sush; at.the sound of your strident voice, The tall pine shakes, and the oak bends low, While you mean and sigh on a stormy night, + Like scme tostured soul that has been condemned, . To the depths of darkness, forever banned From the frown of foe or the smile of friend. #22 300E Wind of the’ Westland, calm and serene, Like the night when the day is doné, 2 + Softly descending from out the sky, ~ Bringing the joy of some task well done; AL Silently, silently, onward you steal, : 2 ‘anning the brow that is.damp with sweat, Cooling the lips that are parched and dry, Striving to make us forgive and forget. ; - LEnvoi bd Pure as the touchyof an angel’s’lips, Ona sleeping‘ child imprest; Calm as the notes of a vesper hymn,’ Are’ the zephyrs from the west. , Zi present time. place, I am not saying much at the the others side!—Cartoons Magazine. | | | Here Comes \The Bride!” Everybody wishes her well! Happyjand radiant she starts out on. life’s adventure. She should have health Ao begin, with. Good looks in woman do not depend’ upon age, but upon health, You never see a good- looking woman who irritable, out of sorts, fidgety and | nervous. Headaches, backaches, | dragging-down pains, irregular- | ities and troubles of that sort are | decstrévors of beauty. Men ‘do Not. adinire Ft is wii ‘y Woman to te well, healthy and | strong if six: will take Dr. Pierce's | Favorite Prescription. It is the | n’s tonic because it is | made entirely of.roots and herbs, | without alcohol. (Ingredients on label.) It, is 50 years old, and its | age testifies to its goodne®. A medicine that has made sick wo- men well for half a century. is surely good t6 take. Women from every part of America tes- tify to its merits, K ‘ Send, 10c to Br. Pierce’s In- = oe 3 3 Fes = ° ~ @ g FS g 4 + may make their lives different than they were.|except that we shall have to keep paying bills for| valids’ Hofélsiu. Buffalo, N. Y., ; for a trial package and confiden- | tial medical advice, or bocklet. | (PYERE “"? PEOPLE'S FORUM PEOPLES FORUM BLAMES: BOTH SIDES / Beach, Maf. 1. To the Editor: = I can't help but take notice of Mr. Le Seuer’s statement of our State Bank and ‘how he advised it should be\conducted. good suggestions. HGwever the League platform was a Rural Credit Bank. The Socialist. platform for North Dakota which Le Seuer had. as much or more than any other person in.de- claring its principal in 1912,’ was “A {State Bank” with absolute monopoly yon atl state funds.” This” conforms to ‘the Socialist platform of Marx & Sngles only nationally instead — of State. While I am personally inter- ested‘in. North Dakota‘and what takes TT TRUE I feel the two opposing factions are endeavoring to put too much blame on the opposition. ‘ When you assert that these who for| any reason ever voted the League ticket should be taken on probation | you are forgetting what took place in North Dakota prior to the Non-parti- san League and yvu will also find quite @ number leading politicians in North Dakota, whom — the farmers would need to take on probation for a long time, before they could believe} their scemingly interest in the farg-| ers. A large number voted with the Lea-! gue td ‘remove thig class, so the farm-! eré organizations might obtain a few! laws, that never could get consider- | dition is not all one-sided. A READER: BY CONDO OS eR eo. Saat] FIRST ARIP HERE, AND heet| OU JUST GOT IN, EXE PK=) were, WHAy DO You Kien OF ez 78 =] City, anyway % \ NO, giIR, TVE Never BEEN =| WEL, WHAT Do =< ==~|\ You THINK oF =] THAT City, — =| ANWWAY 2 ation. The blame for our present con- | THURSDAY. MARCH 3, 1921 : 7 ~ You might be surprived to Know, that | the best thing you can use for a severe cough, is a remedy which is easily pree ared at home injust a few moments. t’s cheap, but fer profapt results it beats anything clse you ever tried. Usu- ally stops the ordinary cough or chest cold in 24 hours. Tastes-pleasant, too— children like itand it is pur id good. Pour 2% ounces of PinexX in-a pint. bottle; then fill it, up with plain granu. lated sugar syrup. Or use’ claritied molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup; if desired. Thus you make a full pint—a family supply—but costing no more than, a small bottle of ready-made cough syrup. ‘ ‘And as a cough meditine,, there is ~ really nothing better to be had at any price. It goca right to the spot and gives quick, Jasting relief. It promptly heals the inflamed membranes that lin the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, Joosens the phlegm, and soon your.cough stops en- i plendid for bronchitis, croup, and: bronchial asthma. Pinex is’.a’ highly concenteated cot ound of Norway. pine extract, fame for its healing effect on the membraucs, To f ask your dru; i Sree fond “don't, accent else. Guaranteed to give absol a faction or money refunded. The Pincr Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. | SMI How About Bird-Seed? / A teacher was instructing her pupils in the use of the -hyphen..:Among the examples given by’.the) children was appointment void ¥, ounces of ist for “2' . “Thats right,” encouragingly. “Now, ‘ommy, tell me why we put a hyphen in_ bird-cage?’,” ¥ It’s for the Dird to‘sit on,” was the Startling.. rejoinder._Science an In- vention. 3 “bird-cage.” - | % \ | His Viewpoint. | iin Ka 838, ,Where I live,” said a | tourist, “ rr HP dozen farmers who ; Reep. books the,same.as merchants, .-and can tell at any. time exactly what, “ft costs them ¢o grow any particular crop.” % “Eh-yah!” returned Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge, Ark. “I’ve heered of them fellers that work theirselves to death by ‘rithmetic.’—Country Gen- demay. . = | Did Her Little Best. “Dorothy, dear, 1 hope-when you | took back the picture book ‘that you thanked Mrs. Naybur for lending it to you.” 5 e i ic “There was nobody home, mamma, | but’ the door: was open ‘so I’ went in | and put the picture book on the table jand said ‘Thank you,’ an’ comed | away.\—Boston. Transcript. ees As Ordered. : Capitalist: _ “I want -you' to draw this:will so it can't bd broken, under stand me?” 5 |. Attorney: “All: right,-sir, Tl make | it--heir-tight:”. — Américan . Legion | Weekly. ee i * \Perpetuity of a Custom. Didn't you object to being hazed?” “No, it was worth:a little inconven- | ience to learn the, tricks of the game (Or future ‘ reférence.”—Washington Star. Pn “The Minister's Fault. ; A man in a treadbare coat and a_ week's beard came out of a downtown ! mission, where he | pledge and joined the church, only to be. nabbed for theft a half hour later. “Why did you make off with the pocketbook you saw this lady Wrop in / the. street?” demanded. the judge in court. ¢ ars “It’s all the-minister’s fault,” clared the thief, in deprecation. ‘1 went to him discouraged and out of money, and he told me I must learn to take things as I found’ them)"\—, le Judge. 4 MAKING PLACES *_ FOR DIMPLES Wondertal Eivect of Reolo in Filling Out Holiéw Cheeks With New - Firm Flesh. Regardless of what and how much jyou eat, if the nervous system is un- ; Strung and the iren has, been ‘burned ‘out of the blood, the Tong, drawn ;face and haunted expression will | remain: But put Reolo into your | blocd, let the nerve: centers_come in igOntact with it, amd then you have started upward. There is one com- jponent of Reolo that actually pro- | Vgkes an increase of. flesh. In com- bMation with this element there {are Jingredients that. increase red | corpuscles enormously in _ certain j anemic: conditions. In a day or two ‘the“appetite improves in a way that is a revelation to those who found )it -hard. work to: eat, and soon. the bluish pallor of the skin is replaced ~ ‘with ‘the pinkish hue of health. You now not only feel weil, you look it, jsuch is the ramarkable influence of ;Reolo in but a few short days. But this it not all. Reolo has intensified the activity of the vital processes to such an extent that the old feeling lof exhaustion after effort is com- | pletely gone. It is certaiily a most ‘ | comfortable and satisfactory feeling of reassurance, and there is no other | condition to be compared to it. ! Ask any of the clerks at Finnéy’s | Drugstore and any other leading drug |store about Reolo.. They are selling lit and recommending it upon the {strength of what they seé every |day, men and women the: very pic- | ture of health who six weeks before ;were nervous and bloodless despond- |ents: Get a $1.00 box of Reolo to- ‘day and live. 189 ce had signed the _ is y ’ « ie ( / ne a. ’ . an joe j a x aia 4a a7 vy ' 8 ' ‘ ‘ > ‘ Sit AN 4 “ AS v4 / i wm dors t ‘ t » : H