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FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1921 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGF FOUR eam ——— ry : 8 $B te ESE STEN = —" = $e eee = aoe apa wu i | THE BISMARC). Th:BUNE There the town council passed an ordinance | IUUUVAUAOOTOAUURAUUGUOLUUAUEAOATGAOAATEUUAA SUE {gp aaa = banning all forms of dancing and motion pictures. | = ONCE UPON A TIME Once upon a time a man was dashing toward the sea to commit suicide. . The wind blew off his hat and he turned back after it. By the time he’d recovered it he had changed his mind and decided to live. It went a step farther, forbidding those under | 21 fiom being away from home after 8 p. m. Scotts Bluff couldn’t have conceived of a better way to drive its young and spirited boys and girls| into larger cities. Do you happe to know a young person who} would want to live in a town like Scotts Bluff? When you were under 21 would you have liked | living under the dreary shadow of such anti-joy laws? . i And yet, Scotts Bluff fathers and mothers this), A man hates to lose a hat like the Gordon—it has a , Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, ne D., as Second i Class Matter. , GEORGE D. MANN - : - - tm Editor Foreign Representatives A G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Gf Uaao ts tte Bldg. resge e aed PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. The Associated 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 herein. . wee All rights of pubiication of special dispatches herein are . ve ” ._| very day are wondering why it is that their sons “Say it with Flowers” ry | SHE CROWNING GLORY OF EASTER IS, AS EVER, IN THESE RADIANT FLOWERS FRTUTUUEERAAGREALUAMEAEUAASUOEUASEQU RGAE GRaEE UAHA AEN For Easter We have again Our Usual Assortment of both Cut Flowers and Flowering Plants ready for immediate delivery. reserved. | f MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION |and daughters look with desire at railroads trains} jizable personality. | f SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | to the outside world. | a | WE SUGGEST _ ier, year weccccwecsees eee _ Jon i low * | H Daily by mai er year (in Bima tan SGU H Von BEE ea fateh ehboortiet | Hydrangea ........$3.00 to $6.00 Rambler Roses . .. $2.50 to $5.00 : ily b; il, ei in stat tsi ismarc! aI fecclaoes i , * | ou’! jate, | ‘i : ‘ wd yx Daily by malt Petaide of North Dakota -----ss-.,, 600! A sming old man, nearing his 85th birthday, ees Pot ‘Tulins ..... 066-066. ,-$2.00 Pot Daffodils ..........-+++ $2.00 : THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER |has just been married. He is George W. Adams} \ 1 And Dozens of Other Beautiful Plants (Established 1873) of Dorchester, Mass. His bride is Elizabeth A. | ; : Eo Wood, 59, who has been his housekeeper for sev-' = IN CUT FLOWERS eral years. : { } ' CARDINAL GIBBONS ae probably is the oldest bridegroom of this! } | Roses at........... $3.00 to $12.00 Carnations at ........-.+-- page The great sphere of influence of Cardinal ies generation. Study his picture and you will com-! : \ Darwin Tulips at ..........$3.00 Regular Tulips at ..........$2.0 ; bons whose death occurred yesterday, was not} ment that he also is one of the most smiling and ' Daffodils at 1 een 2 $2.00 ‘ pounded by the wide scope of his ecclesiastical au-| pest looking. ' thority os canta age: Uta ai Some may marvel at his courage in embarking sion upon all questions aifecting the weltare Of oy the sea of matrimony at such advanced years. Members F. T. D., and can deliver in any city of United States or Canada, on a few hours notice ; facing the roads, This burnt clay America and of the world his messages were re- ceived with attentive respect by the American} people at large and his counsel was sought by! : leaders of the nation. | As a primate of the Catholic church Cardinal ‘ Gibbons wielded great influence. He was the con-| fidant of three Popes and it is recorded that when, | . in 1918, he explained Pope Benedict's war policy | > the Pope was so. pleased with his masterly pre-| sentation that the article was ordered translated and spread abroad. A friend of Theodore Roosevelt and enjoying the respect of president Wilson, Car-' dinal Gibbons’ influence upon the direction of | ' affairs of the nation doubtless was felt in many| ways. | Two of the great churchmen of the world of! : the present day are Cardinal Mercier, the heroic . primate of Belgium and Cardinal Gibbons. In ‘ the death of Cardinal Gibbons the Nation at large; | ‘suffers the loss of a foremost citizen. THOSE LOANS TO EUROPE i Again more talk about canceling the loans that Uncle Sam made-to ‘Europe and starting with a} clean slate. Many idealists think this would be a simple matter of writing off a loss. + | To make these loans, the government sold Lib-; : erty Bonds. Ween H But that doesn’t end the transaction. The Lib-| ;, erty Bonds have to be paid for again—retired—, , when they mature. | 'me up in the morning and I don’t have to go to} ibed at nine at night. ‘and I’m as good a man, mentally and physically, Surely. it is a good omen that his name is strange- ly similar to that of the world’s first husband— Adam. In the matter of physical ability to earn a living! for a wife, Adams can put,many voungsters of 50 or even 25 to shame. He is a giant in build, six feet one inch tall. { Originally a railroad engineer, he claims that} he is still: energetic enough to fire a locomotive on a long run. . “I can get out in the back lot with the rest of the kids and bat a baseball,” says Adams. “I.can! touch my toes with my fingertips, without bend-; ing my knees. I don’t need an alarm clock to wake) I like to watch boxing, matches. Fact is, I’ve reckoned everything up asa youngster of 25.” | .The matrimonial venture indicates that love,, like hope, springs eternal in the human breast. | It is a beautiful tribute to marriage as an in-| stitution, that both have been married before, the bride is a grandmother of three children. She says: “A husband needs to be a man of un-! flinching courage, a man of worldly experience, a man who is a man all the way through and loves his home and his wife. { think I have found him Anybody else can think what they want.” Will this marriage be successful? One of every;nine weddings is terminated in} i from the Bad Lands has been found to be very satisfactory as permanent road-building mater A county road building program is being arranged to fit in‘with the state program, INDIANS TO PRESS CLAIMS) Fort * /°s, N.D., March —Eleven claims ag t the United States gov- ernment will be pressed. by Indians of the Kosebud, Sheyenne and Standing Rock Indian reservations, according to a report delivered here by Benjamin White, delegate to Washington from the Standing Rock reservation. The main claims involve ownership of land in the Black ‘Hill attacking the validity e of old treatic has been added to 10 old claims which have been pending fer some time. HELD UP HIS — OWN BROTHER and . binding the Indians | A’ pony claim | HO Cavalir N. D. March 25.—How he held up his own brother and a man named James Cox at the point of a! un, and. took from them 19 cases of whisky, is told by \Villiam Martineau ; Walhalla farmer, in a written confes- sion, after he had pleaded guilty to charges of bootlegging and manufac turing whisky. Martineau is now in he Cavalier county jail awaiting sentence. { MISSIONS MUST TM rain or snow, colder in the west and; { | nVILAUUESEAUUUA LULU stantly killed, ‘when a shed her father | SKINS Incorporated ‘s INOOTNODOUALOOAIONGLONANONAAOOAAOOOSOOGEOOUANONANOUANOOUGNENGAONOGER AEA AOTOOONEMEUUOEEOOOOOEOEOUONEGOOTOOUOOEGUEOERGAEUGEAGtAUA \ INTL ARREST ‘SMITH, i x ‘ | + If Europe pays, part of the bonds'will be cared’ jj { for. i ‘| | divorce’ court,' according to the Bureau of! Census, | EMPLOY: YAN If Europe doesn’t pay, then Americans must] but Adams has in his favor the benevolent law | north portions. was moving tipped over upon her and | crushed her to dei .N. P: BANDIT Washington. z Heads of a | diplomatic missiqgns have been order: | 3l KILLED IN » get busy earn the money and pay it in taxes to re- that governs exceptional cases. ed to get Hid! of 4 “xmerican at- : STATE TEMPLE Salt Lake City, March 25.—Delbert ‘ : i ? 3 £ sf get rid: of all non-American at-! 7 ‘ . x ; tire the Liberties. Moreover, according to Sir George Lewis, the} taches by July. 1. ‘ i MILAN THEATER) IS FORMED Smith, charged, iin ashing op oe ber 2, near St. Cloid and killing of 23.—Many, 2° postal mail service clerk, .Z, E. «| Strong of Minneapolis, has been .ar- pointe al rested here, 4 |fashionable divorce lawyer of London, the danger SEAT ER \ : _point in wedlock is not reached until the tenth/ TAKE DOWN “NO Mita, Italy, Mar, 25—Latest re-| Minot, N. By that time, Adams will be 95, at which| Which? D., March , | year. Knights of Pythias from DRIVING YOUNG FOLKS AWAY Rural communities long have been worrying @dvanced age very few things matter. over a problem peculiarly their ow young people leave the home town n: Why do our) ? i If that\c. of 1. keeps on dropping we may find | One of the answers is contained in a news dis-| the five-cent piece of use again in shopping ex- patch from Scotts Bluff, Neb. EXPECT HARDING RUSSIAN VIEWS TO BE STATED | Washington, March, 23.—- Some’ statement with regard to the Russian question may be made today either at the White House or at the state partment. It is understood that this) was agreed upon at the regular Fri- day cabinet meeting at which the ap- peal of the Soviet government for_re- sumption of trade relations betwéen the United States and Russia was dis- cussed at length. i FLOUR DROPS | TO LOW MARK: Tacoma, Wash., March 25 today reached the lowest po’ 1917, millers announced, announcing, a decrease of 40 cents barrel in family) patent grade. The drop makes the} price $9.20 a barrel. | since) — — i GEESE FLY NORTH Fargo, N. D., March 25.—Great lour| = : peditions. WILL PROBE LUMBER CO. Thompson, N. D., March 23—Stock- holders of the Home Lumber com- pany, purported to be a co-operative lumber company in which more than| $500,000 worth of stock has been sold to farmers in North Dakota, are forming a protective committee for the purpose of investigating the man- agement of the company, Men identi- de-| efid with the movement are H. J. Hjelmstad, Henry Miller, Theo. Gus- tafson, John Kvam, Mons Rasmus:' sen, Carl Gustafson. and ‘Arthur Fischer all of Thompson and Royce S. Dean of) Hatton, all heavy stock- holders in the company. D. H. Carroll of Minot is president of the concern, the officers of which were recently transferred from Minot to Spokane. BUREAU SETS. “FAIR” WAGES Wargog March | wages for farm hands at a rate of trom $35 to $40 a month was advocat- ed by the board of directors of the (ass County Farm bureau at a meet- ing at the court house yesterday. Tho {Payment of PANAMA HEAD “GALLS CONGRESS Washington, March 25.—President | Porras, of Panama, has called a spec- ial session of Congress for next Mon- day to consider (Panama's attitude | toward the demand made by the. American government that Panama ac cept as final the “White award” as to the boundary between that | and Costa Rica. = | CHICAGO MAN TO Washington, March 25.—J. G. White of Chicago, it was reported today, will interior department for appointment as Indian commissioner, He has been j in the government service for many | years and recently has had charge of ; the Osage Indians property. STARK ROADS" BEING DRAGGED Dickinson, N. I.,/March 25.—The | c | Washington, Mar. 25.—The sign) ‘“No visitors allowed” was remove? | from the state, war and navy build- ing, where it had ben since war with Germany was declared. |PROTEST RUSS TRADING PACT Washington, Mar. 25.—The National Civic Federation and the American ‘| Defense Society filed protest with Sec- retary Hughes against resumption of trade with Russi: i CITY TIES. - | UP FUNDS, “Devils Lake IN. D, March 25.~-The city of Devils Lake has garnisheed country! funds of the ‘Bank of North Dakota] in hanks in Ramsey county to tect about $10,000 which the city has | on deposit with’ the state bank. The; pro- WEATHER REPORT For Twenty-four hours ending at be recommended by Sec, Fall of. the} poon March 25. | d S Temperature at 7 a.m. . Highest yesterday. . ‘Lowest yesterday. Lowest last night . Precipitation .. .. + Highest wind velocity . | For North Dakota: Increasing cloudiness ‘to-night, followed by rain jn the west portion, Friday probably VISITORS” SIGN: ports show 31 kylled and 100 injured Bank of ‘North Dakota has been reg-; INDIAN Feet istering the city’s checks. ‘orecast i \ in the bomb explosion in the Diana theater. SHED CRUSHES ~~ LITTLE CHILD Bowdon, N. D., March 25,—The 3- year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Dietrich of this vicinity was in- | wobifesianed prcimah iene: | in 1899, later transferred North Wakota were present at the| ceremonies in Mipot when the tem-| ple of the Dramatic Order of the; Knights of Khorassan was instituted | The temple was organized in Fargo to Li and subsequently brought to It is the omy one in the state. A street parade: of Dokeys. in full uni-} form featured the event. 1 S 8, WM. WEINSTEIN, Prop., FARM LABOR IS HELD PLENTIFUL Washington, Mar, 25.—Farm labor is relatively plentiful this year at wages less than.last year, according to reports to the Department of Agri- : culture. t BROADWAY - CLOTHING STORE 504 Broadway | HE BROADWAY CLOTHING STORE is now open to the public for business, with ai complete new line of wearing apparel for Men, Ladies~and Chil- © 5 Saxe ia | found. - Arrangemen‘s have heen made for It was decided to hold the annual’ the secusinz the state of a cater-} There Was Nothing So Good flocks of geese were flying north over, directors based their estimate of what county commisioner of highways is| 7 | Fargo today. wages should be on data gathere making plans to put all of the Stark! ; H from various parts of the northwest county roads in good- condition im-| | The labor supply is plentiful, they me ely. a 3 stk Bee | Millions of people know that it is; needless to be bothered with indiges-| tion, dyspepsia or 2 disordered stom-' ach. A few tablets of Pape’s Diapeo-| sin neutralize acidity and give relief at once. ' When your meals don’t fit and you feel uncomfortable, when you belch; | Blobe. The installation was perform- ed by prominent Fargo Rotarians, Addison Leach an international officer B. L, Bentson, Norman B, Black and Aubrey Lawrence who instructed the new members of the club in the princi- ples and purposes of the order. The installation occurred at the banquet at the Elks home at noon. dent. . Then I had pneumonia. After} recovering 1° crossed’ a’ pasture’ when a bull chased me, tossed me over the | fence and broke my ‘right leg. (uj; {1910 I had typhoid fever; since then 'severe -stomach and liver trouble, } | which no medicine or doctor ‘touched until two years ago I got a bottle’ of ; Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, which finger-tips. See how quickly it brings re- ief—how speedily the pain disappears, Use Musterole for sore throat, bron- chitis, tonsiiitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges- tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and a of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, Ss; Chile _ blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). MENTS, MEN’S, LADIES AND CHILDREN’S SHOES. - This opening stock is new in every detail, and you will find all the latest styles at the Broadway Clothing Store. Watch for our advertisement next week when we will Phase Rte gases, acids, or raise sour, undigest-| ed‘food. When you feel lumps of in-| yfinot, N. D., March 25.—James digestion, pain, heartburn or head-| Nesley, charged with selling cocaine ache, from acidity, just eat a tablet was acquitted by a jury in the district ACQUIT NESLEY BF ok | proved the first ray of light in thir- \teen years.” It ‘is a simplé, harmless! preparation that removes the catar-| { rhat mucus from the intestinal tract 35c. and 65¢c jars; hospital size $3.00 give attractive low prices. , bi meeting of the farm bureau in con- pillar tractor for use in dragging the; * i i { }qnection with the annual fa for Congestion and Colds ; 5 ; ‘i + STOMACH 0. K.: 1 Menle'tobe nett ache he T*fich soorid wlll be sed for_aur| as Mustard dren. Mr, Weinstein sees the necessity for a store like Bape a a a a | aBit, the, gliashioued _mostar- the one he is opening, where he will at all times carry ae enh ;| rear eae > s1| acted. Get i the latest styles arid materials, ready t : t ) Pe Toh, ge pa act t the relief and help that e latest Styles a materials, ready to wear garments, Hi ¢ Luck and the Devil : : : : y ; waa 1 INSTALL NEW Skiers ot Hin, | Plaster and without’he bisten “= and his stock will consist of all the leading and popular ied + Indigestion, Acidity, Sourness ;. ROTARY CLUB hoenan ba Musterole does it, It is a clean, b ds of ‘ ; » r | white ointment, made with oil of rands 0 2 and Gases ended with tl Sanrae a Ds Marche “don't thin ary one hes had more! tard, Te ia scientifically peenared, 146k “‘Pape’s Diapepsin’’ #) town today, this city joining the sys 7°49." ry Sckness dian I have'| that it works wonders, and yet does | . a { j tem of Rotaries that now encircles the calla bone. br ee in ee gad aca no ler the tere ai MEN SN) CLOTHING, LA DIES READY TO WEAR GAR: of Pape’s Diapepsin and the stomach court before John C. Lowe yesterday , and allays the inflammation which} distress is done. ———_——— causes practically all stomach, liver! 4 The cost is so little. The benefits| The Smith family number about] and intestinal ailments, including ap-' 4 80 great. You, too, will he a Diapep-| 14,000,000 members throughout the| pendicitis. One dose will convince or = ‘bin enthusiast .afterwards. world: money refunded. jo abet