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he aM { ap THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1921 | highway, building or'sonjething of private own-; Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, Class Matter. : GEORGE D. MANN - = - - 5 ership, a railway depot,\ a dwelling, or a new N. D,, as seer \ ifence round the cow pasture. Editor} Westand upon the threshhold of spring. There jis no better time for starting a Get It Done! Foreign Representatives G., LOGAN PAYNE COM CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. NEW YORK : : PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH IES EEE Pepe movement. Start It Now to Get Tt Done. PANY DETROIT Kresge Bldg. Fifth Ave, Bldg. A DEADENER OF ENERGY j The Associated herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published When in fear and in anger, physiologists tell | us, the adrenal glands secrete into the blood a chemical known as adrenalin, which gives us added energy> That is why man, when he is in a desperate situation, “his back to the wall,” MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION shows a superhuman strength. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE Daily by carrier, per year ...... Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota IN ADVANCE « 7.20 wee 5.00 ceeeceeeeees 6.00 But in cases of chronic fear or anger this ab-| normal secretion of adrenalin produces fatigue. | The energy-producing substance is not worked off. Tt becomes a deadener of energy. } THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) GE S> THE JOB OF KILLING The Utah Legislature has repealed its: infam- ous “shotgun execution” Jaw, and will hereafter electricute condemned murderers, no improvement over the gallows, Utah found. Hence the electric chair. Utah, you remember, inaugurated the “shot: | gun execution” some years ago. given the “privilege” of choosing between the : rope and the bullet. Most elected to be launched into eternity by aid of the gun. So far, so good. The law provided that five cit chosen to do the shooting. At the last “shotgun execution” plied for the job. Only five were chosen, and were paid $70 each for sending a bullet into a human heart. That shooting set the state to thinking. Some citizens argued that such a large list of ready shooters indicated a growing desire to take hu- man life, legally, and for a price, of course, but killing, just the same. There were more aplicants for at the last execution than at others; the list of ready killers seemed growing. Utah decided to call a halt before the state was crowded with men overly anxious to take human life at $70 per shot. If you want to seare'a plump ome ‘junkmen’s death weigh her on scales, m The employe who is in constant fear of acci-! dent or ill-health ov of being thrown out of em-) ployment, which would reduce him and his fam- ily to want, is easily tired out. He cannot pro- duce as much as he could if his mind were re- lieved of these fears and worries. Therefore a guarantee against these fears is) an economic asset to the employer. The work-/ men's compensation act relieves in one direction the fear of accident. The maintenance by large organizations of nurses and physicians relieves in another direction the fear of disability. Group insurance is another guarantee. A MAN The gun was Murderers were DEFLATING THE FARM Reef cattle prices have fallen to less than what they were before this country entered the war.! Hog prices are but a trifle higher than in 1917. The average acre corn crop is worth less than in) February 1917. About the same low level has been reached by every farm product. There is no doubting the statement that the farmer is on a pre-war basis—as far as selling goes. He is still buying fertilizer, machinery, gasoline, and other necessities at prices consid- erable higher than he paid in the early months of | 1917. walks. The more fortunate had seats m i jin windows facing the avenues. The American farmer cannot long continue, at the capitol the East plaza with selling on\a deflated, and buying on an inflated |its standing room for thousands, was NaS * calls . evar: : Packed and the crowd overflowed out market. His selling prices must rise, or his buy-!over the park -spaces and avenues ing prices must drop. He isn’t a philanthropic wuee converge eres aes of these lei ag ee soe au ane at syo].| thousands were able to hear the in- institution; he ign’t even in the privileged cred augural address as.Mr. Harding’s voice tor class. But he does stand between the city;was carried out by means of a worker and starvation. AaTN Tm izens, should be K : a pelea ha NEW PRESIDENT ENTERS CAPITOL WITH WILSON 7% men ap- — Continued from page 1) the shocting job sound-amplifying device | installed ‘over the platform. FAL RARE Tae When the offic HAVE YOU GRAPHOMANIA? the capitol it was A . . ep olf the Senate che An inordinate desire to wrife and to attach) president and Mr undue importance to what one writes is “graph- tie Vice-presiden cmania,” as defined and described to the French | esl ing Oe 1 party arrived at escorted into a room mber and the Vice- Coolidge went to room to await the emonies in ‘the ident Wilson woman half to selling Senate “‘ehani Academy by Mr. “GET I The germ of a splendid id s developing in ome that takes various forms. Ever write your name over and over again? Bergson. It is a disease, and’ w bills which shad closing hours of the Six! gre: ssed in the xth Con- Senate Galleries Filled* the middle west. They call it the Get It Done movement. The label well explains its purpose —Get It Done! Nothing new in the idea. “Do It Now.” Kansas City has set to work to Get it Done, now, immediately, today; not next week, nor next year. And,. the idea being held so City Chamber of Commerce passes it along to other cities where they are not getting it done, bat where they should he getting this, or that, It is but a renamed Ever have a consuming desire to put it on, walls, trees,:in books, on desks? "i are a’ crap] aniac! lof the new Président, Vice-President, You ave a’graphomaniac! : [Speaker and Justices,of the Supreme Ever have an irresistible passion to write,let-|of the United: States supplied with ters? Just write and write and write? And [coveted sols eA esion, rere jsigned to the East side. Guests of sen- send ’em to people you hardly know and who | ato ere assigned to the: ehthaas could hardly be expected to be interested“in your gallery and guests of representatives problems? : |to seats in the! three west ones. | The party in.the galleries was little M. Bergson says that that is one of the forms less distinguished than that’ on the oa PRT ARES floor. It was comopsed of American of graphomani ey. ; kee ,,_|Women scarcely less known than their Bergson says the graphomaniac is really quite husbands taking part in the ceremony | y ‘ “He is 3 “ey 2 fost apg] | below, families of- foreign diplomat common. “He is a prey to the irresistible need | oi@ nen and other women in the fore.! | Sénate\gallgries “had been. filling |long before *thts* hour. * ‘Invited’ guests; tom orrow, nor highly, Kansas of writing. The subject copies and reproduces done right away if they are to out of the slough of depression, Get It Done is the slogan of willing worker, one who has come to realize that sitting around waiting doesn’t get him farfl Nor nations. doesn’t get cities far cither. Get It Done is sound and solid lie_and private consumption. squarely on the head, be that n public improvements, sewer, pavement, bridge, 200 RAID _ BAKE SHOP Detroit, Mar. 4-—Two hundred men and women customers raided a bake- shop as a protest to high bread = SENATE HOLDS INDUS- TRIES IN GOOD SHOWING (Continued from Page 1) 7—nat Brinton has been proved a perjurer when he testined he never borrowed from Scandinavian-Ameri- can bank for the Publishers’ National ‘Service bureau and notes of that bank signed by Brinton as president of the bureau were produced, the notes total- ing $3,000 and signed in the name of Brinton, Hit House Committee. _8—In opinion of this committee house auditing committee made an at- tack on Bank of ‘North Dakota in at- tempt to destroy entire industrial pro- gram and that senate committee is absolutely satisfied beyond question that a well organized conspiracy ex- ists to bring about destruction of en- tire industrial program, and that ene- mies realize that if they can destroy; the Bank of North Dakota the pro- gram will die. They strike at the mill and elevator program, of which they claim to be friends, while at the same time they strike at very heart and life blood of. the mill and elevator program by attempting to destroy the bank. 9—If the. industrial program is to survive, the committee believes that the Bank of North Dakota should be held intact. at all costs. i The majority report is signed by A. A. Liederbach of Dunn, B. F. Baker of Renville, and W. J. Church of York, \ Nonpartisan members, A minority_re- port thoroughly disagreeing with eel It hits the nail pull themselves a brave man, a|ease gets him, It advice for mib- | efforts fail. ail.a matter of finds is made by F, EB. rloyhar of Valley’ City and Senator Murphy. The senate committee bitterly at- tacks Francis Murphy of Minot and J. 'F, Sullivan of Mandan, house com- mittee attorneys, and scores ©, L. Bishop, president of Bishop, Brissman & Co., who made the audit and: fe- fused to zppear before the senate,and explain the audit, as well as Waters and the other Bishop firm employes. Herbert Temple of Temple, Webb & Co., Minneapolis, also is criticised and accused of failing to find profits which existed on the books, and that he mis- represented actual earnings of the bank. Taiks of Situation. It is claimed that the financial cris: in North Dekota is not confined to \this state and that the reason fo- tight money is that deflation of farm} product values and withdrawals of} money from the state total $50,000,00)) and not more than $3,000,000 can be! charged directly to the industrial pro- gram. i The report says money in. closed} | banks is guaranteed by the state de pository gueranty acts and that the state-owned bank will not suffer loss. That Waters charge that Cathro a —————d Wife Helps Elect Hubby ¥ i “After having been m hed half the time for a year with severe pains in my right side over the appendix stomach trouble and bloating, which ‘the doctors seemed unable to reach with medicine, and advised operation as the only ermedy, my nursé ad-|, vised me to try Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, and its results have truly been wonderful as I am now entirely well and strong, and at the last elec- tion worked hard to elect my hus- band.” It is a simple harmless preparation that removes the catar- rhal mucus from the intestinal tract | and allays the inflammation | which ; causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including ap- pendicitis. One dose will . convince or money refurded, Adv. ues to write and write and write.” The “will to live” often wins where doctors’ It was to be expected that Talk make a fine flight at night. \ every thought that comes to him. He once might} have produced original work, but once the dis- he loses that power, yet con-| Knight would! favored Scandinavian-American and{ financed its league paper is false, as when Waters was manager of the; state-owned bank, the Fargo bank had $302,360 of league paper and that, this now has been reduced to $153, 099.98, That Bank of North Dakota }s in extremely good:condition and holds collateral on a two-to-one basis for all notes is claimed. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Modern room = gentle- men preferred. 300 Sth street Phone 377-K 3-4-1wk. FOR SALE—Six room modern house: het water heat, $1200. cash balane easy Also nice bungalow Don’t buy until you s. Will save you sce my prop money. J. 11. Hotikan, 314 Broad-' rostrum, Vico. President Coolidge way. Phone 745, 3-4-2 was escorted to a seat on, the plat- FOR SALE—Oliver plow, 3 bottom: form, engitie gang. Phone $33-L J. E Coolidge ‘Takes Oath Dowis. 312 8th Street So, Bismarck! N.D. 3-4-lwk WORK WANTED—Carpet _ beating. window Cleaning. house repairing or any odd jobs. Phone 833-L Dowis 312 Sth street So. Bismarck, N. D. 3-4-1lw FOR REN7—Mocern furnished room suitabie for SSI '-902 6th si.eet 3: DRESSMAKING— 622 3rd. __ stree. Phone 132 R. 3-4-3t , Remarkable Remarks | | & o “High cost of loafing is the mother of high cost of living.’—Harry P. Strausbaugh, president, National Can- ners’ Association. a * * “Love for play is the cause for most of the crime which lands men and wo- men inside prison walls.”"—O. F. Lewis, secretary, New York Prison As- sociation. i soe | “A red-haired girl never has a tur-| bulent ‘temper.”—Sarah Louise Ar-; nold;formesdean of Simmons College:} ‘by the committee on..arrangements, | ‘entered the J. Eg 4. then he deliver ront of the social life of the nation. While the Senate was assembling | for its special session, the first of the: €7th Congress, the diplomatic corps; was arriving and assembling in the marble room, to be escorted into the chamber. | Gorgeous in Colors Gorgeous in the colors and gold of their court uniforms; the corps enter- | ed headed by its‘dean, the Ambassador of France, Jules J. Jusserand. The other diplomats. entered by precedence in the order of the time they have been, accredited to this country, the ambassadors coming first and the minis last. * Next came the Chief Justice and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, in the’ sombre black, silk, gowns of office. moving slowly, and dignifiedly to the, place reserved@for them in chairs placed in the front row facing the Viee President and gt his right. ‘f s Immediately afterward, the.member: of the House of Representatives were announc A seat had been placed on the rostrum for Speaker Gillett at the left of Vice President Marshall. The Representatives filed through the chamber to places reserved for them , on the west side while the Senators were seated on the East. | | President-elect: Harding, escorted Senate chamber at the! main door and was escorted to the seat on the floor on the right hand side of the main aisle and facing the The Senate chaplain, the Rev. J. J. Muir, offered prayer and the Senate th Congress was called to or- Vice President Marshall. As | settled over the chamber, Vice dent Coolidge stood beside Mr. 1 h men raised their right spoke the | ed his address. While the new Senators were being | sworn in the remainder of the party | began moving out of the chamber to- ward the east portico, All of the party on the Ser floor and the guests in the ‘galleries, by prearranged direc- ions, moved along the rotunda in lines which converged at the main entrance and thus out to the portico The guests were in their places befor Mr. Harding appeared on the speaker's stanc 1 structure 30 fect square, built with iron girders and with a coy: ered canopy above housing the sound- amplifying instruments. The whole was decorated with flags and bunting. ! Pass Through Marines As they came out of the Capitol the | Baptist, at company from‘ the Senate passed i through a lane of Marines to places on the Capitol steps and under the east portico, back of the Presidential party. Mr. Harding Wes accompanied by Chief Justice White of the Supreme Court and the Congressional committee which had seats on the platform with him. Then before a great sea of human- ity, official and unofficial. invited and uninvited, Mr. Harding took his place at the left of the Chief Justice and at the vight of the arrangements com- mittee. ‘The assembling of, the Presi- | dential party, its departure and the demonstrations of the crowd were the only specatcular features of the out- door ceremony. Simplicity andj solemnity marked the actual ceremony itself. When the President takes the ingug- ural owth, the Chief Justice, bible in hand, steps forward; the man who is about take oath stands beside him with raised hand. Slowly an olemn- ly the Chief Justice repeats the oath prescribed by the constitution, the ses the open bible and mony is ov for the de- livery of the Pr inaugural ad- dress. de 1 When that was concluded the Senate d to its chamber for the spe- sion called by the retiring dent to consider nomination of sident Harding and the President started out with his Iry for the White House. There he “hung up his hat” and went to w HARDING FIRST PRESIDENT OF | BAPTIST FAITH | Washinston, ‘Mar, 4.—The_ twenty- ninth president is the first of Baptist} faith. Mr. and Mrs. Harding have not yet} made known which church they wi ttend, but it may be that the Sixteenth and O streets, Northwest, will number them among its congregation. The Rev. Henry Ai- len Tupper is the pastor of this church, whieh is one of the oldest in Washington, having been founded 119 years ago.” Of the negrly 400 churehes in, the; capitol, only nine can count presi-! dents as once members’ of their con- gregation. So many. chief executi have attended Si. John's Episcopal | EVERETT TRUE \ HECco, . tt sees THAT SMITHKINS DED LA and H., streets, juare from the known as “The Church of the Presidents.” It was in 18!6 When Washington was out of the ashes after its burning by the British in 1812. Several chief executives, including Lincoln, attended the New York Ave- nue Presbyterian church, a red brick structure which stands at the inter- section of New York avenue and Hi street, only a few blocks from the White House. Lincoln was said to have attended many mid-week prayer services at this church unknown to the congfegation. He would walk down to the church, enter a little room next to the assembly room by way of the alley door, and there in the dark, with, the door open just a crack, would silently remain through the-service. Washington worshipped at Christ's church in) Alexandria, which — still | stands as a shrine for the visitor inj search of memories of the Father of) His Country. Jefferson and John} Adams attended Old St. John’s church | in Georgetown, The church where, President Taft, the only chief executive of the Uni- tarian faith, worshipped at Fourteenth and 1. strects, has been razed to make way for -a commercial building. President Wilson attended the Cen- tral Presbyterian church at Fifteenth atid Irving street, Northwest. The lit- tle Dutch Reformed church was_ the one most frequently attended by Pres- ident Roosevelt. President McKinley was eave, of the congregation of.the Metropoli tan Methodist church as was Presi-| dent Grant. President Cleveland at- tended the t Christian church. while President Garfield worshipped ' in-the Christian church, then a little! frame structure og Vermont avenue, on the same site’as the edifice since erected there as a memorial to hi memory. Man To Be Elected To The Presidency Washington, Mar. 4.—Warren G. Harding is the first newspaper pub-, lisher to serve as President of the United. States. He isthe 29th chief executive. reckoning Gleveland’s two terms as separate ones because he BY CONDO THE PACERS” T NIGHT. THAT DOESN'T SOUND ANYTHING UKG STUEE You SHOT OFe PASSED OvT ll AGoUT HIM B THE BOW IN YOUR HAT re | In ancient days hats for | huntsmen were made with a buffer, laced with a nar- | rowribbonand tied in a bow- knot. This helped keep the | hat on the hunter's head. | 5 | Today the bow is still there, but it is style backed by | quality that keeps Gordon | Hats on the heads of most men, = The richness of the mellow i colors shown in this season’s | Gordons is due to the qual- ity of the hat. | was the only President serving twice | who was not’ reelected. Nineteen Presidents’ were lawyers , at the time they were elected. Three |are classified as statesmen; two 98 | soldieraz two,as farmers. one as a etal. Mr Berne might i iss of states- i ears | the Senate when elected and was: the ‘first senatof to he elected President. Virginia leads in: the nativity of Presidents. Eight of her sons-Wash- ington. Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, | William Henry Harrison, Tyler, Tay: lor and Wilson—have held the highest office in the gift of the nation. Ohio has given seven native sons to the Presidency—Grant, Hayes G: field, Benjamin Harrison, McKinley. Taft and Harding. Eighteen Presidents have been co!- lege men; one was graduated from West Point. nine had no college edu- cation. A Pen Sketch Warren Camelie! Harding. Twenty- ninth President of the United States. Born ‘in Blooming Grove, Morrow | County, Ohio, Nav. 2, 1865. | Student Ohio Central College, 1879 1882. | Entered newspaper business,’ Mari- |on, Ohio, 1884 and publisher Marion Ohio, Star since that time. Vaneee Florence Kling, Marion. Member Ohio State Senate, 1899 to 5. Lieutenant-Governor Ohio, 1994 to Republican candidate for Governor Ohio, 1910 (defeated). Hlected to United States | Nov. 3, 1914, | Elected’ President’ November 2, Baptist. Home, Marion, Ohio. CLERK OF COURT PROVIDES BIBLE FOR INAUGURAL ington, March 4.\-Custom has Senate. 1920 ‘mae it practically a law that the * | Bible eused in the inauguration of new President shall be provided by the clerk of the United States Supreme | Court and¢hat a new Bible be furnish- ad every four year: Only on three o sions, so far as the records show, has the custom been departed from. President Cleveland insisted that the Bible given him by | his mother be used at both of his in- ‘augurations, and President McKin- ley, when first sworn in, agreed to use a volume presented by a body of African bishops. Since it was his task to hold the book, the late James H- Kenney, then clerk of the Supreme Court, is said to have viewed with much trepridation the huge Volume sent by the bishops. To the clerk of the court falls also the office of opening the Book for the President-elect to kiss and the responsibility for noting carefully }the exact verse upon which his lips touch. After the inauguration, the Bible, fittingly autographed, is sent to the White House, and presented to the wife of the Président to be her persona}spraperty. jet" James D. Maher, present clerk of the Supreme Court, has officiated at four inaugurations and, from his pri- vate budget, has purchased four copies of the Holy Writ for the ceremonies. In preparation for the installation of Mr. Harding, he purchased an “Ox- ford Edition, St. James text,” which will be given to Mrs. Harding tomor- row. ‘ Selection of the verse which the | President’s lips touch, is left entirely to chance, Mr. Maher says. The sin- | gular appropriateness of the quota- tion touched by presidential lips in the past must be ascribed to pure ‘coincidence. or to psychic influence, Mr, Maher holds, for no prior selec- tion was attempted. Records of the clerks office show the following list of Bibtical selec- tions from past inauguratio! Grant .. 1 Hayes .. | Garfield .. --Isiah IT -118th Psalm 11, Proverbs 2;1-i Arthur .. 31st Psalm 123 Cleveland .. 112th Psalm 1-6 Harrison .. -121st Psalm 1-6 Cleveland ist Psalm 12-16 |MeKinley ....... 1st Chronicle tines ‘ Chpt. 1; verse 10 | McKinley... bs 16; verse 20 | Roosevelt .. é | Taft .. Wilson .. Wilson End Your Bunion Troubles! AIRYFOOT ‘soothes, absorbe and brin; foot back to te normal size and shape: Tt will cost you nothing if it does not satisfy. Josonh_ Breslow my ez. ‘ ’ ah ,>@ a hoes ‘ ey £ G) 65 28 dy AM at 4 Sah m : Stati aye