The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 18, 1921, Page 4

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= measles’ patient,” says a report recently made by | contentnient reigned Hi Why choose a tiny, helpless baby? pa ! of the American ion executive oe i committee; exonerating the ‘Legion ‘ THE PLUM TREE from all blame ‘in ‘the affair were de- ‘ LARGER REAL WEALTH The faithful are gathering beneath the local] yelopments tast night in regard to the %, Of the nations A "with the least . #2: industry: +: though a less rate’of{profits will be made than if| or Everybody has the right to select his own) s% and there are others who could. make up no list) vice list. 4 tain little boy comes about as near to picking the PAGE FOUR . . tll THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE lof Mr. Speaker, and others who would include — Mary Pickford and exclude Mr. Arbuckle. Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck; a4. D., as Second ; But who is there to say that mother and father ~ are not the rightful leaders in any small boy’s list) GEORGE... MANN IGN STe ye ese seater of “greatest?” ; . en en el aes ts eee Da CHICAGO &S perRorr “A STYLE OF HER OWN” Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. “She’s a woman who has a style of her own.” PAINE: By BNS AND Sth Ave. Bldg.| It is a statement sometimes meant as a compli- NEW YORK | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| ment; more often as an excuses : “A style of her own.” But just what is style? ‘for publication of all news credited to it or not other Ee in this paper and also the local news published | We teamed from our copybooks at school that All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are style in literature is “the expression of personal- aise, reserved: lity through highly developed techniqhe.” MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Well and good for literature—and in some cases ‘A eames TION Bates PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. | for clothes! But the former nobody need read Daily by mail, per year (in B cl 720 unless he wants to, while the latter all the world) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside 00 must look at unless we walk the streets with Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota . ‘closed eyes. ‘ ae STATE LDES Nae | It isvofily the ultra-clever woman, Sarah Bern-| * /hardt, for instance, who can successfully develop} <i a style of her own. Mary of England also sets 1 {her own styles. But these two women are queens, ‘ TRY It ONCE, AL ree y . ‘one of the stage, the other of an empire. Meredith Nicholson, novelist, writes a line of : " | True style in dress is never freakish, never a/ quotation from some poet, below his name, when . he signs a dinner check at a club or hotel in his; P°S* and above all never accentuates personality. home city, Indianapolis. i The wise woman fights shy of a style of her) A friend who tells about it records that a day | OW" She knows.it is a delusion and a snare: So selects what other people are wearing, keep-} they ate together the novelist signed the check | She i i ‘5 : with “Love is not loye which alters when it alter-/!"& 1 mind two things: ation finds.” ‘i | That gentlehood is never conspicuous. The waiter: went; away, knitting his brow in| That “beauty is a joy forever.” an earnest effort té dig some meaning ftom the’ ee REO, Fae line, then grinned and slapped his leg when he TIME TO THINK found it. How prison bars clarify the vision ! i Nicholson’s idea is interesting. i - How many tragedies would be averted if only| Edification of waiters and cashiers need not be;men and women were given to see! from: the out-| the only object. |side as they see from the inside! It would be no less amusing and beneficial to} A moment of anger; a fit of jealousy; a passion those who take the trouble to think of a line to! for revenge; the flash of a pistol, then prison bars. write. If one wrote on a restaurant check which; And, with the prison bars, time to think. Time] is to be paid in cash, not signed, the poetry might | to recall the days of innocence before the glare. of | help to take one’s mind off the check’s total. —_ the bright lights dazzled the vision and the hectic] Eel nite RR RRIRE tt night life seared the moral sense. i ee MONKEYS AND BABIES | Time to think of the simple life lived back in the We injected in a monkey 8 cc. of the blood of a’ 414 home where the homely virtues satisfied and Dr. Charles Nicolle and Dr. T. Conseil, famous | 5 p microbiologists of the Institute Pasteur, Paris, | une Fn tadena reer’ patois tae France. The report continues: [things that have been driven out of mind in the 5 “Nine days later it’s (monkey’s) temperature convivial grill room when serious thought dared to had risen to 40.7. Forthwith we inocculated with intrude, ‘ the blood of this monkey two other animals and an ‘Time towveigh values and eeeywith the horror of enfant: * : e : despair how the fleeting joys whose pursuit has ' “After nine days of inoculation the child pre-| them brought into a felon’s cell, shrink and fade| sented all the classical symptoms of the malady.) out of sight when compared with the solid virtues| The blood of the child. was then in turn injected | they have ignored in their mad chase for exciting into three monkeys, etc., etc.” I pléastibes: , \ Have we come to the threshhold of an era in| The splitude of-a cell brings men and women which babies are to be used like monkeys, guinea face to face with the tragedy of wasted opportun-| pigs, and. rabbits, in laboratories ? ‘ » (itySandgcausesitha@things they have left behind to If haman life must be used on the experimental 'gssume astounding proportions. : ; ¥ tables, why not limit the microbiologist and the; Liberty was never so sweet; virtue was never Surgeon to those humans who are old enough to so beautiful; self-control was never so admirable; consent to being made subjects of experimenta- | honor was never so glorious, as when viewed fro’ tion? { behind the bars of a prison cell. * af The United Stat wrestling with a world faces it. is not the only country federal plum trée to wait for the luscious fruit flation problem. All of the) that is about to fall. \ _ Ast | The trees in the administration’s orchard are pprica and Great Britain seem;| heavy with ripening postmasterships, district at- ¥stic—and they have the best {orneyships, revenue collectorships and other de- <i _ |Sirable offides. , of large London bank in-| Patronage has always been the bitter that went 4 British chancellor of the ex-| with the sweet of the presidential office. No Fyion of the war, indicates how | president since Andrew Jackson has been exempt pat of carrying out deflation from its torments. Some have protested against @ful effects upon trade and its exactions on their time, their patience, their : | good nature and their peace of mind. Others will be very gradual, and’ have suffered in silence. , n A month or so after he was elected president, | Byvill be on a larger quantity, | Harding delicately suggested something of what| } s fe room for a fair return on he was already then enduring from the pursuit of capital and a fair ; rd for labor. | place seekers and their friends. “This is the kind’6f deflation at which we ought! “Turn the rascals out” first became a party to aim—a deflation which will be brought about/ slogan in the administration of Jackson, who be- by a larger supply of the commodities we all need, | jieved in rewarding hiis friends\and giving his en-! a greater surplus for foreign export, and a larger! emies what he thought was coming to them. | total of real wealth.” | Up to Jackson’s time few men had been removed | Such a program of deflation would be ideal for from federal office for political reasons. Presi-| * America to adopt, don’t you think? dent Adams removed only ten men, one a de- |faulter; Jefferson 39; Madison, 5; Monroe, 9; |the younger Adams, 2. | i | Clay, Calhoun and Webster condemned the greatest men and women.” Probably no two spoils system, but not until 1871 were steps taken! would agree on the dozen “greatest.” For “great-|to curb it by civil service regulations. Later the, vs Reginald McKei ., Britain feels conf prices were stableyt and there can stitiy WHO ARE THE GREATEST? =; est” doesn’t mean the same to each. There are assassination of Garfield by a disappointed spoils-| some who would never include the first Napoleo: ‘man. resulted in an e.largement of the civil ser-, without him. Cleveland at first set his face against s| oils and| But there are many who will agree that a cer-/ ‘ : y i the beginning of his administration was anything | but satisfactory to politicians who wanted a clean, sweep. But in the end Cleveland yielded to pres-| 7 “greatest” as mortal ever came. The class at = school was asked to write down the names of the) sure, and before the third vear of his administra- «. dozen “greatest” men and women. @ “gi tion had closed, 2bout 45,000 out of 56,000 office-| This little fellow was the first to hand in his| holders had becn ousicd. | paper. It read: | A partisan has presented the now administra-| Mother, father, Uncle Henry, Grandma, Grand-' tion with a new broom to which is tagged the in-| Pa, Aun Blanche, Tris Speaker, George Wash-| junction “Use It.” ' ington, President Wilson, Pershing, Fatty Ar- buckle, and Miss Geddes. It may be explained, to the unknowing, that the, a mild winter. : Miss Geddes referred to, is the little fellow’s = schoolteacher. Mr. Speaker is a well-known’ Germany will find the booming of industry bet- = baseball player, his team won a world champion-'ter for her health and wealth than the booming of é ship; Mr. Arbuckle occupies a large portion of the cannon. : Ss. movie screen almost every night. | 2 There may be some difference of opinion'as to, When.a man’s in debt ‘he goes to work, or the = a few of these “greatest” men and women. There! poorhouse; the same path lies before the nation , Name “Bayer” on Genuine Old King Coal isn’t such a merry old soul after} UNIV. OFFERS SCHOLARSHIPS Grand Ferks, March 18.—Four fel- lowships. and three scholarships will be awarded in various colleges at the end of the present semester of the uni- versity, it was announced yesterday. The largest fellowship offer is for the school of mines, $400 being issu. ed in this connection, In this depart ment work is encouraged that will aid in solving problems relating to the resources of North Dakota. The other fellowships are available in any of the other schools or col- leges of the university, carrying a sum of $300 with each of them. These ap- pointments are made according to the merits of the individual. The scholarships make provision for an annual! income,of $150 and are given invany”*of the ‘schools’ or col- leges. Applications are: to, be made not later than the* last ‘of the present month according to . an — announce: ment, Anformation on applying for ‘h benetits uray be“had from Dr. A. J. Ladd-of-the-grdduate-depart ment. LEGION NOT IN_TAR MOB farch 18.—The investigation by Hopkins.and a Floyd, member Great’ Bend, ordering ofan dffic! Attorney General R. statement‘ by: Jahn: last Saturday and Sunday night, when J. O. Stev& and C. D. Parsony, league organizers, were.tarred ‘by a crowd) said to have numbered 200 men and} former United States Senator Burton} of Kansas, his wife and a Professor Wilson, who was traveling with them/ were ushered from town. This Is a Dry Joke | By Newspaper Enterprise. ‘ Butte, Mont., Mar. 18.—In days of| old there: flourished a gold mining: town, Highlands, City,;12 miles. north af here. pee) | It has a brewery’ ‘neverything. Now almost all the duildings are gone, The one that has best with-' stood the savages‘of time is the brew- ery. ‘ | It’s used now for a Boy Scout camp.} $100,000 LOSS IN FIRE | AT ANAMOOSE Anamoose, N. D., March 18.—The; hotel and store owned by J. J. Schmidt ‘president of the American} +} SixtY @GwrtS National bank of Anamoose, were, : totally destroyed by fire Saturday; , A POUND ANO when the well which farnished the! city with water went dry and water; was not available to fight the flames.) The loss is estimated at $100,000. THANKED AND KISSED, London, March 18.—Harry Lauder! thus describes the final ceremony Which_made_him_a__knight: “The | ASPIRIN Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre-, scribed by physicians for twenty-on2 years and .proved safe by millions.| Take Aspirin only as told in the Bay-| er package for Colds, Headache, Neu- | | ralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth-; ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy | tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of | Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists ‘also sell larger packages. i | the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture Aspirin is: tare those who. would place “Babe” Ruth ahead similarly situated. of Monoaceticacidester. of eae cid. ; __ FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1921 JEN MAS ATTNS ATA Zz S Or S \ ‘Pape’s Cold Compound” is Quickest Relief Known Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of Pape’s Cold Comp-und” taken every two hours un- til three doses are taken usually | breaks any cold right’up. The very first dose opens clogged nostrils and the air passages. of the head; stops nose running; relieves the headache, dullness, feverishness. “Pape’s Cold Compound” . costs only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, contains no. quinine -Insist upon Pape'’s! s king seized ma hand and he said, :Thank ye for the splendid: services rendered to. your country." .J filed out Of, the: chamber-‘and: there, was ma wife an’ she threw her arms aroun’ ma neck and gave me a verra fine Kuss.” : LEADY FILES APPEAL BOND Fargo, N, D., March 18.-An appeal bond was filed in the case of two of the three defendants convicted in United’ States district court last Fri- day of conspiring to violate the nation- al prohibition act in transporting a cargo of whisky from Moorhead to Siour Falls, S. D. Oct. 6 last. The required amount of bond set by Judge J. W. Woodrough Saturday, in seutenc- ing the prisoners was given for Robert B. Leady, former acting pronibition group chief of the Fargo offite, sen. tenced to one year and one day, and KE. O. ‘Haugen of Moorhead sentenced to 30 days and a fine of $100. STREET LIGHTS TREAT Woosung, China, Mar. 18.—Chinese are flocking here to see the ele street lighting system installed by the Pao Ming Electric Light Co., backed by Americans. Service to homes costs a light monthly, in terms of Ameri- can money. EVERETT TRUE THOS TAKE FOUR | OFF ‘WITH THE OLD, ON WITH THE NEW | i \ SORTA PINCHES, En, SAMY, h- SATTERFIELD ‘DOPE SELLER GETS SENTENCE Minot)March 18—Emma Miller col- ‘ ored, who entered a plea’ of guilty to having narcotic drugs in her posses- ; $1@n when her case was ‘called in ; the district court, was sentenced to serve six months in the penitentiary ! and pay a fine of $500. ‘The Miller woman was one of four arrested by Minot police in the recent offensive against the dope ring in Mi- | not. A fifth, also believed to be iden | tified with drug traffic, left the city | when the other four were arrested. | The other three are out on bonds | pending their appearance in district | court. | pete ok Be i WILSON GOES FARMING | Stanley, N. D., March’ 18.—Ueorge ; Wilson, pioneer newspaper man and | until recently proprietor of the Wilson ‘Hotel. in Stanley, plans on farming | this summer, He disposed of his hotel | the first of the year. rete eee ee eens ea a {STOMACH ON A STRIKE “Pape’s Diapepsin’’ puts Sour, Gassy, Acid Stomachs in order at once! a a = | Wonder what upset your stomach— which portion of the food did the dam- |age—do you? Well, don't bother. If ‘your stomach is, in a revolt; if sick, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented and turned sour; head dizzy and aches: blech g°ses and acids and erustate undigested food—just eat a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin to help neutralize acidity and in five min- utes you wonder what became of the indigestion and distress, If your stomach doesn’t take care of | your liberal limit without rebetlio.; if! your foot is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless antacid is Papes Dia- pepsin, which ‘costs ‘so little at drug stores. ‘ POUNDS te — tHELCOF YES MAM. On, YES, weet, we] os, mA rt} Yes, MAM L HAVE THEM TEN AND FIFTEEN CENT CANS THERE'S PINEAPPLE, =] CHERRY, PUMPKIN ,-— SS SSVAPPLE, AND — F] CAN SEND You iN ae Me. Sate S FOUR. POYNDS Senne | EVERY FARMER SHOULD > PUT IN SOME MARQUIS — Three thousand good farmers throughout\ the Northwest have been asked their opinion regarding the va- tiety of wheat which ought to be sown, More than twelve hundred answered and the great majority state positively that Marquis. is. in. spite of every- thing, the best wheut to grow. However, in a gr many localities there will be a great deal of wheat of | other kinds raised for various reasons, that whatever thelr decision, that they put in a field of Marquis at the very beginning of the sowing season. It is not possible for farmers with a large acreage to get all of the wheat in early, but it. will be good business for the first few days of sowing to put in Marquis. , Marquis put in dur- Ing the first three or four days of seeding and on the best ground gen- erally turns out well. Early sowing cannot be over-emphasized. Every- body knows that Marquis is the best quality and that everything else is merely a stop gap..Good millirg wheat always brings a premium and if this is a favorable year, Marquis: will vindl- cate itself in quality, quantity and price. : There ts room for some good Du- rum, not more than 10 per cent of the total spring wheat crop, however, can possibly be profitable. D-5, Red Du- “| rum or rust-proof wheat (all one and the same thing), does not make good bread nor macaroni. Its only merit is weight. TESTING SEED WHEAT FOR GERMINATION mouldy in storage or for many other reasons, it may not grow at all or else have only a low percentage of ger- mination. It is advisable therefore to make a few germination tests from different parts of your seed whent. How to Do It © da This may be done by taking an or- dinary blotting paper, folding like a book, wet it, open flat; count one hun- dred kernels just as they come; place them on one-half of the blotting paper so that they do not touch; tear a strip of cloth about two inches* wide and ten inches long, put it in the fold of the blotter; fold as before. Pile up your tests, wrap a cloth or piece of waxed paper around the tests, leaving the ends open, letting the cloth strips hang down, like the wick in a lamp, in a glass of water. This will keep the blotting papen always wet. Don't let the test freeze or dry out. Always keep water in the glass. Read the test after seven days; separate into three lots; strong, those growing an inch or short stems; dead, those which have Hot gerniinated ‘at<all'”’ Good seed should sprout 95% strong. | If test is poor, fan the seed again. | poesia eee as Good Wheat in Rust Years. “In wheat production, I would em- | phasize careful selection of seed, soil preparation, rotation of crops, clean- ing of seed, early seeding, and more live stock,” says Mr. G. E, Brunsdale of Tralll Co. N.'Dak. “I find that I can raise good wheat in ordinary years. Last year und this year I | Tatsed Marquis that tested 58 and 59 pounds to the bushel. The last wheat T put in this yecr was on last year's corn ground and it was the best qual- ity wheat I raised. I raised some wheat on ground that was disked in the spring. This is the first time I disked any wheat, but would rather do that than spring plow.. The yield was not as heavy as the first sown, | but fully as good wheat.” Grows Marquis, “Have been growing Marquis for eight or ten years,” says Mr. J. T. Wild, of Cavalier Co. N. Dak. “I ; would emphasize :—use only the best of seed and that well cleaned. | Seed only on fertile soils and seed | early. The latter, I think, is very im- | portant. Marquis wheat does not seem | to be a very popular variety with the neighbors, although we have had pret- ! ty good luck with it and think it will | pay out well if good seed is used and | ground is well prepared and seeding | done early.” i To Escape Rust. | “I believe an early season is the ; only escape from rust. There area | considerable number of barberry | bushes used for hedges in the villages ; around here and if there is anything | im what they claim that -barberry bushes carry rust spores, don’t see any | Feason why they should not be de- | 8troyed.”—Osmond Groven, Grant Co,, | Minn. Seed Bed for Wheat. | “The seed be@ for wheat should be | firm and packed,” says John F. Zim- | merman, Cass Co., N. Dak. “Early seeding of not later than the 15th or | 20th of April will escape the rust sea- | son. It has the last two years, so | without any doubt it is the barberry | that causes this loss to the wheat | growers.” . | { | | Good Marquis in 1920, “We have the best Marquis wheat j this year we have ever raised,” say Erickson Bros., Burley Co., N. Dak. | “If we are to expect a crop, the | ground must be worked properly. We | raised quite a few bushels of Marquis wheat this year and it is all No, 1 | seed.” RUGBY MAN WANTED ‘Rugby, N.'\D., March 18.—Carl Jacob | son, employed by G. A. Troyer, forged checks amounting to $23 on his em- | ployer, it is stated, and then depar\2d |for parts unknown. He leaves a wife } and three children in Rugby; but to all of these farmers wiio Intend’ to change their wheat, it is suggested If wheat has become heated or: more; weak, those just starting with |

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