The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 14, 1921, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - Philadelphia mint, and they will bé cir culated THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | through the banks. While they are bright and “tered at the Postoffice, Bismarels a. Dy ag Steond shiny, it is possible that-people will carry them Ce ibsananca around, but it seems there is an aversion to them, ORGE D. MANN’) =? 2 Editor the public much preferring paper money, so it is Foreign Representatives very likely that ‘as time goes on the 1921 dollars; G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT will ‘complete the circle and land back in ‘the Unit-| Jnrauette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. ed States treasury again. : me f 5 ED YNE: BURNS AND SMITH aud YOR - . Fifth Ave. Bldg. h dP iaatvaly Gatitled to the use UNITED STATES: AMERICA‘ y sively entitled to iapheation of iets credited to it or not otherwise “U.S. A.” inscribed on an_article ‘purchased bR jedited in this paper and also the local news.published » citizen of: America, sojourning temporarily ii vA: hes herein are London, means a great deal to said Ameriéan, but ll rights of publication of special oe i340 reserved. it doesn’t mean anything'to an Englishman: * In fact, “'U. S.‘A.” doesn’t mean afiything to’ the! é Dion ; MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION eyes of those the American manufacturer would . he -20' like ‘to impress. « ;UBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE iN ADVANCE 5.00’ Angel R. Clark’of the United States’ Buitau of ly by carrier, per year .. ily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . ily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismar ily by mail, outside of North Dakota . THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Establishéd 1873) Co a y a He cautioned “epbtets to place “United’ WHY STICK IN THE MUD? ‘ America” on the mitiufactured articles sent from; When agitation for good roads bégan some this country, to foreigi 1 lands. ‘oars “ago there was intense opposition. Scores y * arguments against embarking on an extensive jvad building program were advanced whenever A new state—Liheoli—may be' ‘placed on the 1 extension was suggested. US S.A. maj’ if “congress” views’ with favor’ the! | Times have changed. No one argues’ against ' gang’ disunion petition, prOpoged in the Idaho. od roads. -No one can deny they benefit all; legistaiture: 5 asses of people, all classes of trade, the farmer! ‘ad the business man. No one can defend the! _ asteful system of pouring gold dollars on a poor. vad—it i is much like filling’ up the sea’ with sand. “ Why, then, should we continue to stick in the ud? + Lack of initiative perhaps is ‘the gyeatest cause’ ‘ck of concentrated effort to’ accomplish the! /iilding of a good roads system. The-North Da- ota Good Roads Association is the key to the, ‘tuation. There is an organization through, ‘Merce gave its approval’ to the nay” state m ah hich .all the good roads enthusiasts can center Ment. This is the first time it has met with’ i ia eir energies, an organization which will consis: |!" southern Tdaho. ‘ontly and continually strive to arouse us all from The northern part of Tdao ‘is closely contiéeted ar lethargy. The association asks your support ‘With ‘Spokane, ‘more closely, in fact, than Spokane! ris week. And this week i is the time to give it. and eastern Washington are in-touch with’ Hey Braid western part of that state. FOOD'AND NO FOOD: i If there is to’ be a new state no better name; * American housewives propose to do without could be given it than Lincoln. me of the food they otherwise would place. on ings : 1e table so the starving of China may eat. WHEN YOU. JUDGE A MAN , American farmers are gazing with sad eyes up- Knut. Hamsun, Norwegian novelist, jrenney I “a bulging corn sheds and grain elevators. “They and poet, is known now as the winner -of the) Loc: AL comMIrrEEs ACT te faced with a problem of disposing: of surplus } Nobel Prize for literature in, 1920. Hod in a land that has'too nich food. Once he lived in America. He was dhknown:| ® Afnerican housewives mean well"in their’ self-| |He worked on a horse car in the Halstead street | 5 Hine in Chicago. : venial movement. But—self-denial—isn’t neces- % \i lary. There’ is food, pletity of it, for’ China’s! One Who! kiiew him tien says now: “I still, amine-stri¢ken. The trouble is this—the food is Temember his chapped, red wrists, Where ‘his coats) 14—Oite milli ? fe million iA Tmericanswarelidusesvand: the starving are in’ Sleeves forgot to meet his mitténs. Such ‘a'dream-_ dollars: Will: be-Icaned’ ta thrmett ih nee ev! The passengers used to’ get mad. Hé would) drouthstrickén areas of North Dakota "The problem is to get them together. forget to pull the rope. ‘They missed their corn-, of the $2,000,000 appropriated by Con- gress io be lozned to farmers for the neg? i m Obviously the’ starvitig cannot’ be brought to °S:.,. purchase (of Sead, thie: balatice: ‘tele e food. The food must be taken to thom, One’, can’ imagine’ what those _ Passengers iNtrinatiae aootrenca tusnotuen! ot Farmers «themselves have started’ corn gift thought of Knut. jeration in Fargo. ubs, and have sent carloads to the Pacific. No’ brains! The fund will bé administered: by E Mads overseas, A. block-head! sees rina Uedteaey en ae = ‘ 0 wo What China needs more is a sudden and heav: ‘ Y ‘The answer to’ that question is suggested by the ae reel et a vial tallied in, ’ 0d to China. his later achievement. * “ witha nee" Banilok tae} 3 4 ' é It isn’t safe to judge a man’s mental capacity Tea office here to Mr. Warburton, There’s plenty of food for we at home, at every), Juag pa y These loans wil. be made’ through} the wolf of hunger in China if— \of the job he holds. | Guta ees ae tore barca © There are dollars enough to get the surplus over. 6.00: Foreign and Domestic Commerce, in Mobile dis-” cussing “How manufacturers. can engage in ‘for: ‘igthites: THE STATE OF LINCOLN ° new jute sone 1 and possibly’ the. western wotioit” of- Wastington. | The petitioners wait the new state to be named | Lincoln. ‘ |” Spokane and’ Lewiston are sugges ed as possibie| locations for the capital, ° Just recently the” Pocatello: ‘ciatiber of cori | | MILLION READY | State: Farm Bureau. Federation Assists in the Distri- bution Bill of Senator Gronna Provided Two Million; for ‘Bwo i | States ‘Fargo, N. D., Ma | the Norih ‘Dakota Farm Bureait' Ped- A‘ stupid’ fellow! maller American, meals won’t help get those car- ei yarburton, agronomist’ with the What was the'condictor thinking? ‘assistents Monday. (Headquartes for uring out of dimes and dollars. These will get res, ; tendered the use of the state‘farm bu-/ eal, and still a aurplis lage enough to drive! LY the condition of Me clothes, or by the nature | the: county agents, according to in-| What is going on-in the héad of the street car! executive commitecs wih aut reat ‘conductor with whom you are vexed, and whom) vistory committees for the county :you may chance to think is stupid? j agents ia the farm bureau counties. | No informaticn has been received as; os ; to how the fund will be’ handled in’ couuties’ having no ‘county, agent: With Coolidge in the chamber’ a stimmer ses-' ‘Th bill making the appropriation, | which was’ introduced by” Senator ra provides; “That the’ secretary of agriculture That noise thes hear'is not from the boiler fac-. is hereby authorized, for the crop ot! - tory: the tari ink rers 3 21,:to make advances or, loans to t ry3 tinkerers are busy again farmers. inthe drouth-stricken *: “areas | of thé United States, where he shall} The sea nionster: found off. Miami makes the Sng ines ebccial sneed for wanes | , se Of old New. Jersey sea serpent look like'a sardirle: Veneatcigais, ‘barley snd Mauseey nd ee seed .purpcses only, to procure such :| Seed and sell same to such: farmers. | A. first Hen on the crop: to..be’pro-: ) duicea from. seed obtained through a} | loan, advance or'sale made under this section shall, inthe discretion of the! SPOONING OF THE SPOONERS * Every so often somebody rediscovers the im- ssibility or halting’ the’ sun ‘in’ its wild flight sion may not-seem’so arnt to the Senate. rough space. Otherwise ones learn’ the disad- CPibewes 7 | aon ae vantages of butting brie’s head against a stone, yall, and the futility of opposing an irrestable yorce. ; Enroll among these wise persons Sheriff Khott Pf New York. i Knott will not interfere with the course of.true : fove in the city’s parks nor upon the streets, nor’ “pon the front porches. “Let the spooners spoon,” retorted Mr. Knott hen sundry goodly Puritans complained against: ‘spooning” in parks, on streets, public vehicles and -Yront porches. Now, why, you may ask, should spooners be per-' itted to spoon. Sheriff Knott dug up a mighty fine reason: “They always did. They always will.” Who? ° EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments RT Ee in this column mayor may g i Aprene the option of The ‘Tribune: Chey are | Secretary of agriculture, be’ deemed ‘A here in order’ that our teadera may have || SUfiicient security therefor. . The total | jes df impurtant- issues which are being dis- ; amount of such advances, loans or eusned In. the rege of the day Ny sales to any one farmer shall not ex- ced the sum of $800.00.” A MODERN DU BARRY The proposition: of applying for fed- Mrs. sake L. Harnon’s eralcaid for drcuth-stricken areas was’ outburst against Clara first breached at a farm bureau meet: ; Smith Hamon, at the outset of the latter’s ‘tril, | ing held at Minot last January when | a resolution introduced by M. O. Hall is a reminder that such killings are: not personal | of Mohall was unanimoysly. adopted affairs between the parties and that it is not a ate The sheriff answers: Z question of déciding’the relative“degrees of blame naEe SS “Everybody.” of the man and the woman in the case. The ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Gennine That makes it about unanimous. widow represents the state, whose dignity has’ Everybody who isn’t spooning now did spoon been outraged’ bya homicide, and’ the trial is to | Fchen he (or she)’ was younger, or will when he! determine whether’ it was ‘a murder as charged. ; or she) gets older. \ Clara Hamon was no better than Jake Hamon. j “7 jIt is a good thing for public morals, being a re-: WILL COIN “IRON MEN” ! straint on such derelictions, that it is hard to Soon Uncle Sam will-resume his task of turning, break up such illicit relations than to begii them. Silver bullion into “iron men.” The 1921 silver|The irregular attachment of that sort which re- tollar will be the first placed in circulation since|fusés to be shaken off, serves as’ a’ warning’ to 905. : others, not to get caught in the same kind of trap. These coins are authorized under what is known But the state will not sanction a wrong to avenge | 18 the Pittman act of 1918. Under that the secre- another supposéd wrong, particularly’ when‘ both ; sary of the treasury ‘was authorized to break up parties are offenders. That the woman:is the one! eke Aspirin-only as told in: each ind sell 350 million silver dollars. That was dur- finally brought to answer to the law ought not to Racjee CL scnuine Barer Tablets, of dig the war when Great Britain needed a lot of jhrouse any false feeling of sympathy, for’ she is the directions and dosage worked out > ver for use in India. ‘not on trial for her account with Jake Hamon, DY, Physicians during 21 years, and a wah D ed safe b; i The same act provided that enough silver ‘but with the state. Shanes withigabctiutse tevoe see bd chances with substitutes. If you see F should be purchased to replace the dollars broken! Clara Hamon led the'life of a moderri Du Barry. Ee Cation, ene | 1p and sold. As the French revolutionists manifested—little Headache, an ; ‘The law provided that-the government should'sympathy with Du Barry, but: put her to death, "aracte, T cothache, Lumbagg and for \ Neuralgia, Rhemuatism, Pain. Mandy tin t 1 ay a dollar‘an ounce for this silver, though the so’ there is no otcasion for sympathy with Clara lets Ce antes Saiiste al narket price right new is but about 60 cents. 'Hamon,-if the evidence establishes.a-case of. mur- gel jhtect, package These new silver dollars will be coined in the der in the first degrze,—St.-Paul Pioneer Press. : , Aspirin is: the, Manufacture of} of Salicylicacid.| Monoaceticacidester FOR NO. DAKOTA, Druggists’ also oy Ss SAMERTIED, CHARITY By Berton Braley mG There’s a poor little woman just over the way Embroidering pattern on Who sits in her window and™sews the whole day, From dawn unti! darkness she sews and she sews daintiest hose. She’s pale and she’s thin and she doesn’t lock well, And she’s weary with work, I can easily tell Her life must be anything rather than gay, The poor little woman just over the way. Yt Her form is anemic; it’s evident that Her food’s not the sort that makes anyone fat, And I think, as I watch her, how fine it would be If she could be sent to_the mountains or sea, To bask in the sun and to rest in the air And ‘get back her-color and comeliness there, A rest would do marvels, For that little woman just’ over the way. It’s’ sad to glance over and watch herons eyes Grow misty with tears as you mark what I say, I sit and surmise’ How hatsh life must be for that poor little thing; Her teil and her poverty *May tenderest heart-strings. just“seem to wring 1 And since that: ig: true “ My course is made clear, there’s but one thing to do; >So I’m packing my stuff and I’m moving, today, \ 1 Where I won't be seeing her over the way! (Copyright, 1921, N. E. ‘A.) asking for federal aid for the purchase of seed by farmers in the dry areas. ‘Where Farm Bureau Acts. Counties in the state in which the local farm bureau will function in dis- tributing the funds include Bgttineau, Hettinger, Divide, Mountrail, Pierce, Slgpe, Ward, McKenzie, Morton, Mc- Le Grant, Kidder, Mercer, Golden Valley, ‘Emmons, Williams and west: ern Stutsman. Renville' and Burleigh countiés have farm bureau organiza- tions but no county agents, and the other counties in the drouth-strickeu area, which have no»county agents, include Bowman, Oliver, Burke, Mc- Henry, Rolette, Sioux, Dunn, Billings, Sheridan, Stark, Logan, Adams, and McIntosh, All of the farm bureau iounties heve wired their congress- man for federal aid. It has been. calculated that the fund of $1,000,000 will provide seed loans for’ more than 3,300 farmers of North Dakota if each secures the maximum allowance of $300. Shi LEAVES WASHINGTON. Weshington;” Mar, 14. — Senator Ladd’s latest information from_ the department cf agriculture is that C. W. Warburton left Washington Saturday. EVERETT T SARA AAAI | noon for the west to take charge of field operations in connection: with the ribution of the. seed’ fund. - Mr. steps towards Senator Ladd to urge the sary detail. ow Drift, ‘burton will arrive at Fargo Tueg- day”evening and will immediately take organizing his field forces county agents will give the; widest publicity as to the filing out of application blanks Mr. Warburton has full authority to approve the ap- plications also to issue checks for the purchase of the necessary seed the de-| partment of agriculture hag requested mers to submit all inquiries ‘to -the county “agents so as to expedite matters and) relieve the head office of all unneces-; y ean MONDAY MARCH'14, 1921 - BAD BREATH + Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute Nor calomel, | act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad ‘breath find qe juick relief through Dr. Edwards’ Olive ‘ablets. .The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Reid Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gen- but firmly: ox the bowels and liver, eae them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently puri! tbe entire system. They do that which oa erous calomel docs without any e bad after effects. « ofl the benefits of nasty, sickening, aoe cathartics are derived Edwards’ Olive Tablets: sa griping, pain or ey. disagreeable Be ae Edwards discovered the formula’ site seventecn years of prac- tice. among. patients afflicted~ with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or o every night for a week - and note the effect. 15c ee CRABBE MAKES — SIX RECORDS - WITH JERSEYS ' Fargo Man’s. Dairy Dairy Herd Cap- tures: Many: State Championships Fargo, Mar. 14—Out of the first eleven’ Jerseys to finish year’s. test at South Park. Farms, owned. by, 8am K. Crabbe, Fargo, six have become state“ chaimpions for. their ‘ages, and one qualified in addition as the high- est producing Jerseycow in the state, and other the seventh Jersey of this herd tinished seccud in the class for her age. ‘The conditions under which. these cows were tested were not always fa- | vorable, frequent changes of milkers class for during the year being necessary, many of whom were inexperienced, Champion Yearling. Sunflower’s ‘yinance is awarded the ampionship honors in the yearling e state of North Dakota. She was-staried on test at one_ year | pounds oi butter-fat. | the senicr two-y | taine, and out of i I and eight months of age, and pro- duced 7,813 pounds of milk and 442 She is by Coun- tess’ ‘Lad’s Knight and her dam is Marjoram’s Sunfiow ‘Financjal Noble qualified as ear-old champion. She produced 7,166, pou 391 pounds of butte starting test at two years and six months of age, She -is-sired. by Financial Fern Fon- Noble’s Angela's Bess. ‘ Leads Four-Year-Olds. At four years of age Challenger’s Relay was started on test and produc- ed 10,992 pounds jof milk and: 608 pounds of butter-fat, entitling her to the leadership-in the.junio¢ four-year- old class ih this state. ‘Her sire is Ophelia’s Challenger and her dam is Midshipman’s Reminder. _ Marjoram’s Financial June Droduc- ed 9397 pounds of milk and 464 pounds of butter-fat making her the champion senior four-yeat-old Jersey. She was started on'test at four years and six months of age. She is vy Goldwin’s Financial: and her dam is Marjoram’s Louise. The championship latrels ‘for cows twelve years: and over at the start of test is awarded to Benedictine Bell,, whose test ;was. started at. thirteen years of age.. She produced 8,362 | pounds of’ ‘milk. and 367 pounds of butter-fat. This is a very creditable | performance wen it is considered that Dr. Livingston, Minot dentist, drove most dairy: cows have passed’ on to to Kansas City in” his three weeks ago. automobile Returning he hit! cow, “Cow Heaven’ before reaching this edvanced age: She is an- imported sired by Beredictine’s Jockey, a snow drift about two miles: from and her dam ‘is Jersey: Harvest. Bismarck yesterday, and had to reX turn home on the train. Dr. Living- ston said that the sarhe balmy spring weather that prevailed here was evi!| dent all along the route, and at Om- aha jroses were in ‘bloom and lawns | were being mow hed i | Tet TAY THE MOVIES | — Tom‘ Mix does some more hair- {raising \stunts in his latest William | Fox picture, ‘The Road Demon,” which will open at the Bismarck the- Mix’s famous horse’ Tony has a rival in “The Road Demon,” because |Tom uses a racing car for many of the thrills and daredevils escapades. But Tony is there just the same, anid will do his usual’ best to help Mix | entertain, The big part of the story hinges on two big auto races. It is ‘comedy, too, and of the livétiest ‘sort. Clairc Anderson is Mix’s leading wo- man in “The Road Demon: ————————— a eat eee piataca ee ater, i Srounesdy. night. The First and Original ! Cold and es Tablet “of milk and’ 7 we v Bromd Quinine tablets x. Be sure you get... 4 The genuine bears ale signature

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