The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 11, 1921, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE __ , Entered at the Postemices Bismarck, N. DP, as Second ; GEORGE D. MANN - 2 - - Editor Foreign Representatives 5 G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY THE 6 BISMARCK TRIBUNE MARCH 11, 1921 those who have pioneered scores ‘of great indus- tries or guessed correctly the real estate move-, ment of cities. \ How many years are you looking into the future? : Have you given any thought to your condition WHO NE TS | BIRTH—Oct. egar. Wales, HOME—Pittsburg, Pa. OCCUPATION---Director - gen- 1873, at Tred- | - Secretary of Labor Only Member of Cabinet Born Outside U. S. ] ~~ YOUR HE AD'S AFFINITY In the old days hats were too big, or too little, or too CHICAGO DETROIT | 80 years from now? eral, Layel Order of. Moose. , Marquette Bldg. Kresge Blig. CHILDREN=Two, James J, ornate. They outraged the Jr 4, and Jean, 2. face and insulted the head. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH . _ NEW YORK AYNE, BURNS AND” Bifth Ave, Bldg. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use|* q for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published : herein. os - All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE , Daily by carrier, per year $7.2 FOR GOOD GARDENS Washington Mail. sacks, loaded with the 1921 consignment of free government seeds; are speed- ing over the rails to almost each of the most re- mote townships in the country. H More money is being spent by the government to supply these seeds this year than ever before.’ Seeds that cost nearly $400,000 are being distri- buted for free trial. \ ' | (No ES jal.) Pittsburg, Feb. 11--When James John Davis of Pittsburg joins the Harding cap'net fraternity a~ ry of labor, it will make his) , nineteenth, Davis already has undergone tne) initiation ceremonies that made him) a member of 18 fraternal lodges, and} has taken an active part in many o7! them. He hag bean. especially in-! Today, in the Gordon, con- tours are conceived in such subtle variety that every head can find its affinity. Sightly novelties. for the smart young man and cap- servative shapes for those -that want them, : Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) 7.20 terested in the Loyal Order of Moose 1 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck... 5.00! Mail order seed houses are being beseiged by { havine joined the orter sin 1903 / Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota .... 6.00 “ithe 247th member. aoe THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) VITALLY INTERESTED All grain growing states are vitally interested in the conferences being held over the Northwest to evolve a fair and just system of marketing food products. There have been several plans _ proposed. Some are fathered by the Federal Farm Bureau, functioning through the Committee “of 17. Other agencics are at work upon the same prob- lem to bring an honest solution of the problem ‘ef handling products of the soil in the terminal markets of this and other nations. The Tribune believes these efforts are in the right direction an army for catalogs. Already the'windows of the corner grocery: store have blossomed with the big seed boxes con-, taining their thousands of packets. The lowly | bean is next to the giant crimson tomato packet, | and the gaudy green lettuce seed flirts desperate- | ily with the radish. Your government aims to aid you in making a jsuccess of the backyards garden. It wants to: |help you now béfore you’ve turned a spade in the, loam. | If you care for information on gardening it, asks you to write to the Secretary af Agriculture, Washington, D. C., for any of thése farmers’ bul- ietins, which it believes will help, and which will! ‘be’sent you free: | Fermer’s Bulletin 1044, The City Home | * two trips to Fran chairman ot: the Moose War’Telief conrnittes, At present he is) director-general of the) order and governor of Mooseheart, | the wonder town and unique cional school, 35 m'les from Chicago that is open only to children of d members of the Moose. 't ws la ly the work ofDav's that made tle) town and instituticn possibie. aoe # P Davis is thejonlv member of the binet who was born outsde: the; United’ States, “Wales was his. birth-- place. Oct. 27,1872, was the date. With his father, mother ard five; brothers and, sisters, he’ came | te! America in ‘1881 and at the age of 11 ne went to work in the steel milly at Sharon. i ‘ eR i The new secretary worked in’ Pitts- | burg mills as a puddler in 1892 and! i‘ 1 i | | DAKOTA BRAVES 10 DANCE, SING ‘ON JULY FOURTH |indians to Revive Ancient Relig- ious Ceremony on Reser- “WAYSIDE PRAYER _By Florence Berner Oh, little bird that .gayly flits N i and should be encouraged by all business interests Garden; Farmer’s Bulletin 937, The Farm \a year later went to work in the stecl | Frem twig vo leafy ree, = | x to that end that sound business principles obtain} Garden in the North; Farmer’s Bulletin No. | mills et slweady and i Bye years| as And helps to. 00 hue cat old world : vation i 4 . H . [later he was elected citv. cler o ae Se } ES eee iin any marketing plan that is finally adopted. 856, the Control of Diseases and Insect En- oivoya. cerving until 1902, He se-ver | T hear thy music every day, * 4 > ie wie ela d emies of the Home Vegetable Garden; Farm- then for four $s as county record- ‘Then why must I forget to pray? PICTURE CHIEFS nl 4 € { ur year: county record- | Well, it took the Jap to put Yap on the map. er’s Bulletin 884, Saving Vegetable Seeds for’ °" of Mec agn eeu ind. 1 Oh, little fléwer along the way, ; gy ' eed ——— the Home and Market Garden. i | Davis, while at Etwood, was elect-| I sense thy fragrant bloom, $ | Rosebud | Agency osebud panaian 5 ed vice president of the Amalgamat And stop to revel in the bliss, | Reservation, 8. D., March 11—“E ya int E t. a ve-e-¢ ye Hid a THE ACT AND THE BONDS ani ed. Association, --f Iron and. Steel Of thy sweet, faint perfume, phe wores ye he-yei ze the. Davee The fact that there are a few Red teachers in; cine sive «! braves will sing and. the sun dance U. S. Supreme Court has stamped its O. K. on i | Workers-and js’ still an active mem- | . Thou givest all thou hast to me, | will begin : ~’ "1 our schools doesn’t excuse us for underpaying the! ber at Granite City, Il. Then why must I live selfishly ? i val of ‘this ancient -religious the federal farm loan act; the law is constitu- loyal ones | “He also is president of the Amori-| eae 24 Fae rev Li eh tartan aoe tional. And the bonds, too, are O. K. pie jean Bond and. Mortgage Co. in ti(+ Oh, singing bird and swaying flower, (Sulpteciebratton® thie year" on the Th 5 per ti t, s be: 2 = ; Warmers’ Bank building here. ' . A essorrwe: nave given; ; Rosebud reservation. Chief Mazi K re ey pay 5 per cent interest,and come near be- Many solutions of the housing problem have! ae ar i If I but seek to win the prize . i ing the safest of investments for the man of small means. ions for city consume hus aid their rural brothers in the production of food. Buying a farm loan bond is more than a mere investment. It is helping some farmer, somewhere in this country, to improve his farm so that he may raise more and cheaper food This may be through the purchase. of adjoining acres, better livestock, machinery, or the paying of a high-interest. mortgage ‘which has been making low production costs impossible. The suprenié court’s decision ought to make farming a more attractive occupation for agricul turalists, for it‘opens to them a much neéeded‘ave- nue to credit, without which no business could thrive. : ver : The new color, Harding blue, is several shades lighter than the feelings of the disappointed of- fice seeker. TOO DUMB TO VOTE! Baron Saito, the Japanese governor of Korea, has opened a fine field of research by his refusal been suggested. but none better than the one to build, some houses. | ee ae eT REET ee ae MON Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented tere in order that our readers may have both vides of Important issues which are: being dis- cussed in the. press of the day _ CENSORSHIP OF MOVIES . ; ‘the one exception of the press, there is, to- day np, jnore éxtengive means.for ,the publication | ef individual sentiments than’ the® movie-p:ciure | screen:’Its primacy as an instrument for daily education and influence of citizens of all classes is | second only to that of the newspaper. The movie-picture performs the same funetions | EDITORIAL REVIEW os ws |! | tonight. 4 , from Sir Gilbé ; novel, “The Traslation. of a Savage” Davis is married and has two c dren, James, Jr., 4, and the chi Ss it Something unusual in. the way of! photoplay pradygtions is promised in George Melford’s “Behold My Wife!’ theater for three days, commencing | The ‘picture was adapted which wi!l be shown at the ace LINTON EDITOR AGAINST RECALL; 't Parker's popwtaty | and is détlared to cotiibine a deeply appeating s‘ory With lavish’ and artis-' tic settings. ' An arjstocratic-young Englishman, temporarily located -in'Canada, and an; Indian girl, whom, in a moment of rage because his parents have ‘caused his fiancee back home to jilt him, he mar- | ries are the chief. characters in the! victure. Anxious to disgrace his folks, h the Movies. | __ v és —+ | Blaska (Flattened Iron) and Tatan- ka-Ptecila (Short-Bull), the aged seer {of the Dakota nation, and others of the older generation who took part - in the ceremony. when it was conduct- (ed in real earnest half a century ago, | will supervise the reproduction to see that proper effects are attained. The sun dance (the paleface name | for the.ceremony which the red mea ; know as the offering) is the chief ~~ r~we~~~X= | episode in a ritual embracing a series j of ceremonies lasting from three to ; sx days. The actugl dance begins at sunrise and. continues until the fol- F | lowing Auarige in. the ritual but the rotten conditions under the league | time will, be shortened — materially. administration: He who wisies 1y| Originally. the: dance . was, held..upon alttind out for himself. may now do so. | the: appearance ots the full en OoMy OC" So, if the leaguers who are s‘ncere) CUrtms at or next afler the summer 4 7 Istic will ‘take a little trotble to look into’ *° ne x : matters, they may determine the fu- , lmPressively, the sun dance | will ture for themselves. It. isn’t. nece: pbeein “ Dia er sana 8 sary, then, for the Inderendent: e ean the d 4 rn 7 , lancers. will slowly fatand the. trouble and expense chant to the Great Mystery a prayer recall. It's upto the honest leaguers) that all evil may be lifted from the who are property owners, and who| iv In vain have I then striven; But if a helping hand I lend, The world will know me for a friend. This then shall be my wayside prayer: Lord, let my light so shine; 5 That others seeing it take heart, To brave the steep incline; And when they’ve reached the topmost stair, ; They’ll-leave their lights siill shining there. ae . WOULD KILL LAW ENTIRELY F. Bi Streeter, editor of the Linton Record; is-against) ne recall elect declaring ‘he’ recall would’ my grea. expense and that as a matter of governmental principle the recall should’ be ‘used “sparingly.” He also expregses, himself in favor. of kill- ing the regal laws at first: opportun- ity, saying it “will not work prop- erly, in practice.’ Mr. Streeter says as the press. The only differences between Nese | he sends liis redskin brid to England.! vey icati ie i Fi But he has reckoned without the girl’s/ two instruments of publication lie in the varying | "0 ‘tharscter and tie big-heartedness mechanical methods of production and display,! of his elder brother, For. in.a few: | i i iori i ici | years, she blossoms {nto a real belle.' with 2 comparative Superiority Mh efficiency and | Dramatic events bring about a recon-| merit, sometimes with the one, sometimes with | ciliation betwen the '{ll-matched pair.| the other. The movie. portrays the event, the; Mabel Julienne Scott, Milton Sills,| * * a and Elliott Dexter are in the cast, and| story, the sentiments’ of the scenario writer—all! the picture is a Paramount. \ in part: cj The.big argument now among the Independents is the matter of a re~ all. It seems that the Independents have done their duty: up some of the facts pertaining to have aS much at stake as the Inde- pendents to take the necessary steps If the leaguers-can stand present {tion, the Independents certainly can ie : oT SMILES | like to play opposite a comic custard pie thrower?—Houston Post. individual and from the tribe, that | their desires and wants may be grati- fied, and that they may be spared {fi }fortune. With the final note of the They have dag | conditions until the next regular elec- | fourth repetition the drum is struck, the time of the chant is quickene1 into spirited song, and the dancing begins. Gazing ever,at the sun, the’ i dancers, garbed in the skins of wild animals and painted about the face to extend the electoral law to the natives under|its messages—by pictured legends flashed upon) eae : han ones RE ms eae Muffler Wanted. ‘and upper part of the body with the f is charge. ne screen vie pibo visualises them in ati ‘ heal f Remarkable Remarks | agg That Horrid Word Again. Agente ‘have ers. a Hats inven, acted red, will nertorea the gyrations e Q i r|life or as in the living drama or comedy. e 5 “What's the matter?” cried Mrs. ake t cs au “| and free movements of the dance, cir- says the Koreans are mentally incapable of ig y — Mr. Henpeck—For goodness’ sake, cling about the sun pole to the tune ) exercising: the duties of citizenship. In other words, they are-too dumb to vote. * How dumb must a person be to be denied the ballot? It surprises a citizen of this republic to learn that ‘any man—or woman either—outside a ‘booby hatch, can be termed too dumb to vote. © Here for years we’ve been voting dummies of press—that is the newspaper or the printed book) oyumner of divorces granted in the’ or pamphlet—also conveys its messages by pub-| United States is mpre than Pele as) ie i i if.| great as in all the rest of Christen- ‘lished words and pictures, and is no More or Gite | Eee ombinea:”_“Prol, J. 1. Corrigan, ferently ‘a publication of “sentiments” than the! poston College. 5 movie, except that its portrayal is confined to the * excep Pp yi | “There will be no. soup on the) immobile lines of the stereotyped plate. White House menu. Iam supporting ; Therefore, in fact and. in law.the newspaper) the movement among American houses, | wives to aid Chinese famine victims 4 Jones when Bobby cime running into the house in tears, dragging his little tin sword behind him and rubbing the seat of his trousers, “I thought you were hiving such a good time play ing soldier.” “We were,” sobed Bobby, “and I was Sherman, and papa heard me.” American Legion ‘Weekly. Something Soft. The movie star—I’ve been doing don't tell my wife.”——Science and In- vention. Getting Personal. He—They say there's no fool like an cld fool. ‘ She—Yes; I suppose it worries you to: We getting old.—Boston Transcript. Flour, sand or dirt is the: most ef- fective extinguisher of gasoline or oil of the Offering song. The singing ‘| begins in high notes and gradually | declines until, it; is:almost gutteral. | The representation will include a | replica of.a Dakota Indian village-— \/tepees of buffalo hide erected in 2 circle about an opened space in whici will be erected the sun pole or “mys- tery tree,” symbolic of the center ot | the four quarters ofthe heavens; a every kind and caliber—even dead men in a crisis;and the movie picture are identified by the same) 5," sotf-denial.”"—Mrs. Warren G.! taity Gud breakneck stunts for a year | ice sacred tent of preparation ‘and 2 —and not getting excited about it. ‘classification as that which is comprehended with-| Hardifig. wife of the president. pnd now I think I'd like to try some-| isis | dance lodge, in which the dancers It would be. interesting to find out. exactly. how dumb is a Korean and how: much dumber is a dumb Korean than a dumb American politician. Let’s hope the Japanese aren’t going to get too, fussy and establish a lot of mental standards in the Far East that will stir up all sorts of compli- cations if they creep’ westward. - American, politicians like - their constituents dumb and they'll be everlastingly dumbfounded if . they’re ever anything else. ' Senator Dial is on the watch; he’s all wound up over the idea of having Judge Landis impeached. Perhaps it’s poli-ticks. YOUR FORESIGHT The greatest magician that ever lived was Ro- bert Houdin, French conjurer, born in 1805. But Houdin, after all, was only a human being and the time came when his bag of tricks was ex- hausted. At least that was what everyone thought when Louis Napoleon called Hordin to his palace gar- dens and told him to produce a new trick or lose out at court. Houdin went through a lot of hocus-pocus and said: “If your majesty will have yonder oak tree cut done, in its heart you will find 4 gold box and the gold box a message written by your father 30 years ago:” g b The oak was felled: The gold box and its mes- sage was found. Houdin, in his memoirs published after his death, confessed that 30 years before, he had foreseen just such a situation and had cut into the oak tree and buried the box. : What do you think of that for foresight? in the protective prohibitions of our constitutions; lagainst interference with the freedom of the press. In all of their legal essentials, they are| RRR CCR a , } ci? ty r ” i sonable basis 0! iV! ng.”"—Judge m4) the same thing. They are both publications by) bert H. Gary, U. §. Steel Corporation. ' persons of “their sentiments,” the right to publish sale ! iwhich, without pre-publication censorship, is: vouchsafed to “all persons.” ee OF A : : + oe Without further enactments, every safeguard “The public is being educated in’ necessary or desirable for the protection of the, food values almost entirely through’) public_against objectionable publications, whether | Se ei atte aise teach by the press or by the movies, is already on the, school. istatute books. e present statutes against, ob-| * dies ee ‘ The p eRe, hecab ete ie: rt |. “Great: Britain ‘administers the af. | scene and libelous publ'cations and all legislative | tairs of one-fifth of the people of the | |restrictions on newspapers apply, or can be made: worl? Prot. William = McDougaii to apply, equally to movie-pictures. The objec-! exe baa oe j tions to statutory censership, which has been “The future of the white race re : Pesce Ber wai atl Se _ lies on- driving out the two evils. of s ¥ s se WS T'S, | 5. 8. ou! s scrupulously avoided ‘in the case of ne WSPAPETS, | siGuor and prostitytion’’—Dr. Charles argue with equal force against the censorship of | ww. whist, president emeritus of Har-! the movies. ‘| | Vard university. . : . i Li Any state or nat’onal censorship of the movies ‘—meaning a cens ro the publication— misstety for us. Only a el lees reas 4 ie TUuker with the poet mind con p would bea eg to the autocratic tn. ‘mists that hang around. man’s: suppression of inc of speech and of origin and destiny."—Dr’ James J. |publication suffercd Ly tho Engilshman of Mil- Walsh. lecturer. ton’s time. lt would imitate the brutal dictator-' “Death certificates .of many chil-| ship of Sovietism, now prevailing in Russia. Ttparen pion be signed ‘not properly : é ae ‘ so in. trained by parents:’”—Dr. John Lovy- would bea revolutionary invasion of the frée in (ett Morse, Harvard. Medical School. stitutions of our American system: of government.' a ee : * a A 5 jor-.. Bread prices may drop in about As with the press, so with the movies, a censor- | 5: months.”—C. "Nv Powers, pros! ship is necessary. Such censorship, however, dent American Association of Baking | must not be a pre-publication censorship by some, Industries. 1 meddling political appointees under an ultra-blue-| law statute. It must be that more intelligent and| lawful censorship which in the end must inevit-; | ably be encountered and passed with approval—* f, E tant , the post-censorship of a discriminating and, so Gees By T : Shakin ons _ “Every one should make every cov-/ sistent effort toward bringing abont an early return to a normal and rea- “T loathe this habit of smoking in! public by young pretty girls who are! | otherwise charming.”—Paul Helleu,’ artist. 4 Normal se { “Science has not solved a single the master | ee He thing soft for a while. The director—All right. EVERETT TRUE THINK 'TMACHUMP $ — TRIBUTE MONG How'd you | skins. SRE ASKED TO Cone} AND STUFE TO. SAVE THS STARVING CHILOREN CF OUR ENEMISS, GUT WHEN WS HAV] OUR NEXT WAR. SOME or SSE SAMS CHILDREN WILL BE SHOOTING US UP! HONESTLY, TR Now, ISN'T THAT THE COLD BEEN Losec ¢ AL Rice NL In India lizards aze hunted for thelr BY CONDO. wil make ready and the afflicted ) will be treated with the curative wild } Sage, just as of yore. It was the cnstomfor each’ dancer | to make a prayer to the ‘disposer of | the things he needed, through an ap- j peal to thé sun. In the dance eaci ' persisted in his part until he had re- | ceived a vision from the sun. And | if, at the close of the ceremonies, he | had received no vision he resorted to | self-sacrifice, which was called “vis- j ion hunting.” |In Addition, Club Will Buy Arms for Girl (By Newspaper Ehte: ris Fairmont, We Na, Mare ir store than $1,1°0 has: been deposited to the | credit of the ‘Rosie Sacola Hero Fund” j in the Fairmont State Bank of Fair- | mont, W. Va. | |The money is to be used for the | special education’ and. training of | Rosie Scola, America’s greatest hero- i ine, The fund was started after Rosie | lost two arms in an accident and then, | while in a hospital, gave skin from her body to save the lic of another child. As. soon.-as Rosie's shoulders are | thoroughly healed is to be taken to Chicago, where she will be ‘provid- ed with artificial arms, The West Virginia Board of Chil- dren's Gu*rdians then expects to place her in a private home under private ! tutoring. The Bns‘ness and Professional Wo- men’s Club of Fairmont announces it | Will pay for Rosie’s new arms. The money in the “Rosie Sacola Herd Fund” will pay for the education and training. , i 1 CHARGE HORSE STEALING. Bucyrus, N. D., March 11.—Several horses are said to have been stolen in the Wolfe Butte country, a man , named Yohes having lost five, and another man named Ulingers reports “Yet Houdin’s ability to figure years in advance far as necessary to make it effective, a militant ‘Was: von BOOKLET. on NOTRERNOOM Ine THE. BABY. Prev ‘ the loss of two horses. Hamaorieco ReeuLarae Co., Ditt §-D. AtLanca Ga | Was no’ more remarkable than the’ foresight of Public opinion—Minneapots ‘Tribune.

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