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q i FAGE TWO THE BISMARCA TR«BUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, a. D., ae Second! Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - ‘ - : —————— Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - Fifth Ave. Bldg. [ach it lah A A = The Associated, Press is exclusively entitled to the use for Rebneation of all news credited to it or not otherwise| eredited in this paper and also the local news published | herein. ea rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. hcl ht rhs MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck. . «- 6.00; Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ........+++- 6.00 sat THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established -1873) > FOR THE NEXT BOOM For keeping a finger on the pulse of prosperity | or depression, the local banker® probably is more! expert than a professor of economics or a- Wall; Street financier. _ One of these local bankers, quoted editorially in the ‘Cedar Rapids (Iowa) Gazette, says that busi- ness is rapidly getting back on a sound basis. He points out that even in the farming districts, where producers were hardest hit by deflation ot prices, bapk funds are piling up. This means that new capital is being accumu-; lated, ready to back new business projects at the proper moment. Editor In this sense, business is a lot like a sick horse. t Deflation Medicine has been administered. The Business Horse gets on its feet. It noses in the manger for food to restore its strentgh and make it fat again. the neighbors, for the food to feed the Business| Horse is being brought in by bank depositors and| is piling up in the Bank Haymow. The Gazette, explaining the bankers’ optimism quotes him: “More individual accounts were opened in. my| ‘bank, in. January that in any other month in its) history. And February has been another remark- able month. This indicates that peoples are com-| * ing to their senses. Instead of drawing out~ac- counts, the public is opening news ones. The banker. shows that in 1919 the loans of Towa state and saving banks and trust companies increased about $52,000,000. But loans have shrunk steadily. This means that obligations at the bank are being met. MONEY IN THE BANK Tlie nation grows thriftier. Deposits in Ameri-| can savings banks increased more than nine er! cent during 1920. In total money on deposit, Ohio made the great- est increase of all middle western states. But Wisconsin takes the gold badge for thrift. It had the greatest percentage of increase during the year—26 per cent. As savers, however, Americans lag behind the| rest of the world. Our savings are only two per; cent of our national wealth, against three per cent in other countries. This is because our percentage of savers to total population is smaller, for we lead the world in average size of saving account, also in average deposit per inhabitant. The world is a spendthrift. In the 24 leading! countries, savings accounts average $158 each, or $22 for each inhabitant. The thriftiest people in the world are in Tunis, | a French province, where Jsavings accounts ayer-| age 3784. \ There never yas a time like the present, for saving money. The byying power of the Amer- ican dallar is increasing daily. A dollar will buy} twice as much wheat now as it would during. the price peak of the war. It is not beyond possibility that $1, saved now will in actpal buying power, be worth $1.50 or’ even $2 a few years hence. Are you getting on the band wagon? Is intellect supreme? No brain is as fast and accurate as an adding machine. WHY YOU CRAVE ADVENTURE Do you love adventure? Yes? Then you have} the makings of success, for the craving for ad-| venture is the cause of all progress, according to Prof. J. Arthur Thomson, British scientist. All forms of life, says Thomson, voluntarily | choose the difficult path of hard work, to gratify, their desire for adventure. Life in the water is much easier than life. on the; land. Yet for millions of years, animals have been} fattempting—with success—to get out of the sea in order to live more interesting lives on land. “Worms, which came out of the sea, were the! first colonizers of the earth,” says Thomson. “In! every acre of soil there are 53,000 worms, con- stantly plowing.’ Without the worm, plant and ani-; mal life would be impossible. “All life came from the sea, including man’s | &ncestors. .. “A codfish lays 2,000,000 eggs and takes no fur-; + 0 $7.20; 20 soldiers going to war, immigrants seeking new! The owner chuckles, and so do all, THE BISMARCK ‘ TRIBUNE der was the. first living. carpenter, the first engi neer, the first plasterer. “The,second invasion of land was by flowers| land insects. | “Amphibians were the third invaders, eding’ up to all the higher animals. With their coming, | ‘the world’s awful silence was broken. The first | voice was the croak of a frog—first aftimal with a! | tongue. | “Back of these invasions and developments was, ; adventure.” ‘ ' x | Isn’t the search for adventure the dominant | emotions of our, lives? It begins with the boy. hunting imaginary Ind-_ ‘ians, | Stock market plungers, builders of railroads, | lands, country boys setting forth’ to battle the! | cities—adventure is behind them all. | ‘| Sad is the life deprived of that tremendous ad- iventure, love. | Finally comes death. Is it by chance or by| | guilding instinct that we call it The Great Adven-| ‘ture? | | BASEBALL BATS : i A boy goes to a store to buy that: precious pos- | session, a baseball bat. He finds that the ash stick, he paid $1.65 for last year now sells for $3, | | If the boy’s father is in the lumber ‘business | ¢! making bats has been cut in two. | Hardware and sporting goods dealers say that: they can’t get enough bats—that the manufactur-| lers are only partly filling orders Jand. saying, .“You; ‘can’t have any more this year.” | Some of you manufacturers who have idle wood the possibilities of, bat making. | When you get blue, have grandpa tell you about | 1873. We.are lucky and don’t know it. } Poles ‘should find consolation, in that the Siles-| jians now will have to help Berlin pay the indem-| |nity. | | EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may. or may | not express the opinion of The Tribune. neyo are | Both sien of in order that our readers | th sides. of important lasuee which are pelos aise cu in the press of the day. ‘CRIME AND THE NEWSPAPER - Last December a daily newspaper, the Ameri-: can Standard, was started in Chicago, under re-' ligious auspices with the idea of minimizing | | crime in its columns and of devoting to good | causes space commonly devoted to such news. Now it has suspended publication for lack of} | support. | Too much of a moral should not be een from) | the suspension of a newspaper, especially one not! firmly established, in these times of high costs, which, in the case of the newspaper, have not yet abated materially. Suspension is the easjest | | thing, such a newspaper can do, and the records| | show that many newspapers much more firmly es- tablished than this one have given up the ghost in the last few years. | So it does not necessarily follow that this Chit cago experiment failed because of its policy to-| ward news of crime. But it is not probable that this policy at all delayed its failure; for whatever individuals here and there. may think of it, the public seems to want a liberal proportion of the news of crime in its daily fare. It is true that one strong daily newspaper, the Christian Science | Monitor, flourishes despite its exclusion of crimi- inal news, but that is because it has a specially pre- spared clientage to sustain it. | Crime news can be overdone, and some news- ibapers do overdo it. But the idea that publication, jof such news promotes crime seems not well/ |founded. Nor is there any reason why it should) ‘be well founded, for the news of the commission} of crime usually is followed promptly by. the news ‘of its punishment. Though America does not pun- fish crime ag speedily as it should for its own good, surely anybody who follows the criminal - news |with much the same instinct that leads him to, ‘vead detective stories and other sensational fiction! ‘sees enough of the seamy and sordid results of it; not to be encouraged to experiment with a life! of crime. 3 Reading crime news is a matter of taste. Pub-| \lishing it, in the case of a newspaper which pur-| ports. to reflect current life as it is, with no at-|, ‘tempt to represent, it as either better or worse than it is, seems a matter of duty. Newspaper men Ino. matter what some people think to the con- ‘trary, like pleasant news at least as well as they | like unpleasant news. If they are to report life vas it is, they must report as much of it as it is \seemly to print, picturing it not as they would like [it to be but as they find it. To picture it as other than it is would be misleading and-therefore mis- chievous. The first step toward curing an evil is |to-‘make it known; and thus the_newspaper, even; ;when it prints news of things-not pleasant to con-| | template, often does a real service. It is question-! able if it would do any real service if it suppressed | { | inews of that which ought not to happen but un-| : ‘happily does happen all too often. \ |he’ll tell his son that the price of ash wood for! . working machinery might with profit investigate ther thought of them. On and every creature Providing it does not unduly emphasize the un-' must care for its eggs and .its young—all hidden: pleasant. side of life—and if it does that it is as: ~faway in secret holes and cleverly constructed ‘unfaithful to its duty as it would be if jit sup-| hests. ,pressed the unpleasant side—the newspaper does | “As an enemy approaches a spider’s home, down | \its duty when it prints the news of crime. It ex-, tcomes a wonderful trap-door. fitted with silken Ceeds that duty when it makes a specialty of crime, hinges. Spider’s young are lowered through a,or caters to a morbid taste for the relation of, leep_and well-plastered vertical tnnnel.Tho enj_.criminal details—Dnluth Herald FOW DEAR-THIS 19 ONE | IME OF YEAR WHEN iA. WOMANS. WORK LS’ NEVER, DONE — Gor [IUST FUNE- WITH THE HOYSe WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1921 “| DONT BELIEVE: BILLY REALIZES WHA ADA HEART-BREAKING JOB HOUSE CLEANING 1S— ALONG -AND.A NICE FRE cieanine | ) WIFE'S VERY TO DAY. - Flippety-Flap point ed to.his magic shoes. the features of the annual exhibition in May of the Architectural League Nancy and Nick and Flippety-Flap! up in the mango tree listened to whac, the lions were saying. i Mr=-Leo Lion said, “Lily, it’s time! the children were in bed.” . “Yes,” purred Mrs. Lion. “Come, fon, children, Wash your faces and roll in.” i “We are washed, Mama,” came 2; little mewing voice. j “Did you wash good?” “Yes’m, only. there’s a black spot | that won’t come off on the end oi: Lumpy’s tail,” said Lily. “Come here, Lumpy,” commanded Mr. Leo Lion, gruffly. “Let me He your tail.” Mri Leo looked closely. “Well, well, | well,” said he. “You're going to) be a fine fellow. Mama, Eumpy’s get- ting a fine black tassel on the end of, his tail like mine. He'll soon be get-' ting a mane. It’s tme we were \teach- ing him cireus) tricks.” | “Won't I get a fine tassel and a mane?” inquired Lulu meekly. She| was Lumpy’s sister. Mrs. Lion sighed. “No, dear. We women have to make. up in. dtapost| tion. what we lack in™'looks. But) that’s no reason why! you should not learn circus tricks, too. The onty: thing is that out here in the jungle! there's a small chance of finding a) nice.round ball for you to stand on, a hoop to jump ‘through, or a see-! saw to balatice upon.” Flippety-Flap, the.fairyman, winked at the twins and pointed to his great; magic shoes. “I'll surprise them,” he whspered. “But as it’s too late to} fo circus tricks tonight, we may as’ well stay in this mango .tree until morning.” (To Be Continved.) (Copyright, 1921, N. E. A.) i “The Pagan” sector [Statue of Undeaped. Bolshevik Woman to Be Exhibited — By Newspaper Enterprise. New York, March 30:—For the first time in the history of American art a sculptor has brought court action forcing an art committee to, exhibit his wook. As'a result cf. a Necision | Justice Newburger, “The Pagan,” by! Charles Cary Rumsey, will be one of . Foley’s ~~) Honey and Tar , COMPOUND AN OLD RELIABLE FAMILY REMEDY. recommended for coughs, colds, tickling of the throat, spasmodic croup, whooping cough, la grippe, and bronchial coughs, hoarscuess, tc. The First Dose Gave Relief , Neb. writes: Summers, Holdres S ago l contractes ares severe cough id me — I took a second dose bed ond can, teutbtully say Edid ell mght ey using 2 ys my cough was_entir ty Feity’s Honey and Tar full’ credit for wy speeds and permanent sceovery. bor more than thirty years ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts Fwenvot at eee On YOUR os AW COME Berl TOWN AN HAVE: DINNER, EX, Wi j; and Manship ‘extrolling ATP NCH : ‘ DRESSING FOR THE SALAD -HENRY. MY | \ - sanvermelesd of New York at the Metr opoliten| att seum of Art. Rumsey, a-sculptor, polo player, son- in-law of Mrs. E, H. Harriman, and reputed to be worth $25,000,000 appli- ed in Justce Newburger's court for an order directing the Architectural ifn. gue to show ¢ why it should be required to place “The Pagan” on exhibition. In his petition Runsev charged that. the work had been accepted by tire league and that later a sub-commit-' tee had H opetuded it on the gro ind that | it wa “lewd and obscene. Two sculptors, Paul lrrederick W. MacMonnics, went to Rumsey’s defense, MacMonnies declay- ing that the sub-committee’s verdict was “unfair, improper, and unjust,” the artistic Manship and merits of the work. . | “The Pagan’ an embodiment of Rumsey’ a of the Bolshevik wom. an. She is represented as gross, muscted, bulging far from beautiful. —— — \ TYPHOID AT MINNESOTA, St. Paul, March, 30.—Sixty cases of typhoid fever have been reported from! WHAT DOES MOTHER MEAN TO YOU? By Lena D. Sheptenko What does Mother mean to you Do you truly know? Many people do not realize How much to her th From childhood into manhood icy owe. Does Mother care for you, F Yet, she still loves onward, No matter what you -~ Many nights were given up, Many pleasures too. Many days of hard labor, do, BROMO.) All this she did for, you. Now her days of toils are And her trials won, ~She cannot travel on life’s Saal over | rugged pathway, As She had always done. So, ’tis up to you to uphold her, And help-her along the way. | Never be ashamed of your Mother, | And slight here in any way. | God gave you a Mother, never another, - She is only one pal for you, So love, honor and obey, For there is no other. EVERETT TRUE OU PEPE STAY ay ‘CAST A\ so true. i —=Contributed | BY CONDO: | since Dr. i ‘SIGHTS I SAW | -QUIGK RELIEF FROM CONSTPATION Get Dr. Edwards’ ( .rds’ Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry. of thousands Edwards luced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. No griping results from these pleasant little tablets. They cause the liver and; bowels to act normally. They “| never force them to unnatural action. | Dr. | soothing, healing, vegetal | mixed with olive oil Edwards’ Olive Tpbletat ead “If you have a bad taste, bad breath, feel dull, tired, are constipated or hilious, you'll find quick and sure re- sults from Dr. Edwards’ little Ole! Tablets at bedtime..15c and 30c, a | the University of Minnesota to Dr.. A. | J. Chesley, acting secretary of the state board ‘of health and head of the department of preventable diseases. Dr> Chesley late today stated that itis impossible to reach even an approxi- mate total of the number of stitents j affected at the present time, because | Most of the students are at their homes for the Easter. vacation. > IN CAPITAL | By Ye Correspondent WV ashington, March 30.—Wili Taft paid a visit.to his old home on ‘Pent nsylvania avenue ‘last week and. chatt- , ed a while with the present tenant, | Warry Harding. Will says he feels | more free to drop in for a. visit now with an Ohioan in the old home. John Weeks had lunch Wednesday ‘at the Army and Navy club with of- | ficers of the army general staff. The big guns in the army are trying hard | to make John enjoy himself. ‘Len Wood, who was talked of for president some time ago, is leaving for a five-month visit to the Philip- pines. A lot Of newspaper fellows have been telling their boses that they could get some bully news in the Phil- ippines if they went alcng. Warren to see “ ‘ding and his wife went , National theatre. That’s the namo of a show.’ They had’ a pleasant evening. Rainy weather spoiled several good days for golfing last week. Postmaster Bill Hays is back in town after a hurried vi to Chicago ahd New York. Bill says the mail men in the big cities are hustlers and he intends to treat ‘em right. Gene Debs paid a visit to Harry Daugherty at the Department of tice Thursday, catching the text back to Atlanta. Come again, Go when.you can stay longer. Charley Hughes has re letter from Russia saying N is sending over some want to talk business, C rey can’t talk Russian and he’s not sure he can understand what the visitors will have - to say. Senator McCormick suggests they can be understood if Money talks FUTURE !S REFUSED ‘Milwaukee, March 30.—Mrs. Clara Powers, 50, inmate of an insane asy- lum, has read stock market news for years, predicting that she would be rich some day. Her brother died and | left her $100,000. She refused it. For Colds,. Grip or Influenza and as a Preventive, take GROVE'S | Laxative BROMO QUINNINE Tablets The genuine bears the signature of E. W. Grove. (Be sure you: gel 30c, ‘ MOTHER! “California Syrup of Figs” Child’s Best Laxative Accept “California Syrup of Figs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stom- ache, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste.’ Full directions on each bottle. You. must say “Cali- forni 5 Suit Guaranteed All Wool « New Spring Patterns Made to Your Order $22.00 to. $75.00 All Work Guaranteed - Frank Krall _ TAILOR the other night at the -