The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 9, 1921, Page 2

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HOSPITAL WILL ‘training yesterday, will THE, BISMARCK TRIBUNE Visiting in Jamestown. Miss Dagny Johnson is visiting in Jamestown, (MANDA Sons of Ncrway Megt. ‘The Sons of Norway held a regular meeting last night at the Rowe hall. INGREASE ITS BED CAPACITY Arrangements Completed to Uti-- lize Third Floor for Use of Patients Senator Mees in Emmons. _ Senator F. W. Me is in £mmons county on a business trip. Robertson III. on of Cammuins-Rob- ined to his home with Arrangements have been com: Return from Twin Cities. pleted whereby the bed capacily of Mr. and Mrs. R, C. Perry have re- the Deaconess hospital will be much; tunred from a two weeks’ visit to the increased. The hospital authoritiesTwin Cities. | have been able to acquire the upper —_+ flat of Mrs, Melton’s home for the use Guests: of Mr, and. Mrs. Paul are the gue: | Mrs, E, J. Conr of the nurses who have occupied the third floor and this floor wil] now be available for patients. (Miss Margaret Lee, nurses who finished her one of the 7 period of Returns to Glendive. remain with 4 ckman, who has been the hospital and will be placed in, visiting Mi gie Bannister, has charge of the third floor which is ee returned to her home at Glendive. served for obstetrical cases. | Leaves Hospital. Pat Smith of Mandan, left for his terday after receiving medi- ment for several days at the Looking After Estate J. Roy Gilbreath of Minneapolis, is} home y in Mandan looking after details in) cal trea connection with the closing of the es-; hospital. state of his father, W.-C. Gilbreath. |) a | Pietrala Goes Home. 2 Charles Miller Discharged. | John Pietrala of Huff, Little Charles Miller, who was suf-/ ed from the Deaconess h fering from a fractured arm sustained | terday. He had been receiving médi- when a wagon ran over it, left the| cal treatment. Mandan hospital yesterday for his) i home in Beulah, | Will Elect. Officers. - —_—— Officers will be elected by the Man- Give Dance for Players. | dan Civic league at a meeting which A dancing and card party will be} will be held Monday at the Commer- given April 20 at the Elks’ hall by the; cial club rooms. Secretary Thomas Knights of Pythias in honor of the} J, Sullivan of the club, will deliver an cast and management of the success-| address on the opportunities before ful comedy production, “The Seven} the club. Creation of,a park board Keys to Baldpate.” | system will be \considered, i BRITISH FACE LABOR REGIME Lloyd George’s Advisers Urge Premier to Force Election in Hope New Order Would Fall Quickly y By Milton Bronner. London, April 9—Many of Lloyd George’s closest friends are urging him to precipitate an immediate, final showdown with labor. Some of the most conservative of the British premier’s advisers are hoping for his defeat—and a labor government! That is at the bottom of the politi- cal-industrial' upheaval caused by the British miners’ strike against return of the mines to private owners and the . acion of, the railway and «transport workers:in supporting the miners. In spite of the demand by Arthur Henderson for a general election and the defeat of Lloyd George, it is uo secret that many other British labor leaders don’t want a labor government —yet! Running the, British government Just now is a ticklish, unpopular job. That is also the very. reason why some of the bittgrest opponents of la- bor are hoping labor will be thrown into the-harness at once! Those who take this view Jook for a labor government sooner or later. “Let’s have it now,” they say, be- lieving that labor would find today’s problems too much, for it; that the government would be short-lived; and that labor’s political hopes would thus be killed for a long time, Britain is confronted today with the most troublesome problems she has ever faced in peace time. In addition to the present industrial , upheaval there are: 1—Burdensome taxation to pay war debts. 2—Tremendous unemployment and huge unemployment doles. + 8—Renewal of the Japanese alliance. 4—Thé war in Ireland. 5—Dispute with America over Mes- opotamian oil. 6—Treatment of Germany, 7—Future of navy and force. 8—Future of railways which are re- moved from government control .in Angust and in bitter dispute with the government about financial payments. Since the resignation of Bonar Unionist leader, Lloyd George’s coal- ition government has had a hard row. The Liberals are badly split, many op- posing the premier. The Unionists, who under Law gave Lloyd George DAILY EPS SERVICE @ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA © Known all over the Northwest for Quality ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS ne 521 Broadway / Phone 18 i E> Light and * _. Heavy Hauling SAND and GRAVEL House Moving c Piano and Furniture Moving’ Excavating and Grading COAL and WOOD ‘ All Work Guaranteed his staunchest support, are not so obedient to the new leader, Austen Chamberlain. If Lloyd George won in a new elec- tien on the battle cry: “Save Britain from Bolshevism;” he might, have. a smaller majority than the present pa- per strength of the coalition,«but. it would be newly pledged=to his: sup- port. Those urging the premier to force 2 show-down point out that if labor should beat Lloyd George the govern- ment would be-short-lived—especially with the Welshman himself on the op- position bench; ; tape! Then, they remind him, he could come back in the next election with a much simpler industrial situation to deal with. Lloyd George has apparently been preparing for some time to meet labor in a real test of strength. He definitely ceased to flirt with la- bor in his recent speech, laying down the thesis that the next political bat- tle would be fought by-a new center party representing the/middle classes and the propertied classes as against the Jabor party. Queen Elizabeth traced her descent all the way back to Adam. ether 075 cent bez at eur riek. )| PREDICTS WRITER WILL RISE» “ te oe eome ao Gicer LAND TO LEAD RUSSIAN Henriette By Newspaper Enterprise, ‘NEW YORK, April 9.—Henriette Safonoff, a singer and cousin of the symphony conductor. W. Safonoff, has come to this country: for the first time for a concert tour, She says that the Bolshevik govern- ment is smothering the art for which Russia once was known and that art- ists and scientists now are starving. «“Dignity and peace and honor have gone out of Russia,” she says. “There rentaing.only..a. disheveted, mournful people who have insufficient food and who ‘have lost the power to think. It is’ worse than the French~revou- tion because when it occurred human nature jhad never reached a greater Spring Suits Guaranteed zr Patterns : Made to Your Order | $22.00 $75.00 All Work Guaranteed Frank Krall “TAILOR JOSEPH BRESLOW, Druggist SCLINTIOCK general banking business. - Safety Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE ARE BUILDING O With our new. McClintock Burglar Alarm System which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your _ Liberty Bonds and. other. valuables aswell as to do your First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. GET. A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW UR BUSINESS AVOLIS. MINN First ca ts | BUSINESS ME ‘BEHIND: i §. (Continued ‘from: Page 1) | ; twenty years ago when he*came to the country with less than $50, ° ;. Talking of successful i | Judge Nuessle said that some time) ago he was holding court..in Wash-' ; burn and in ‘looking. over the jury - i panel, he found twelve-farniers, there. All had come to Mclean county with ‘nothing, he said... Kveryone in the jury box was‘ worth more than $25,000 and one worth $100,000,;: he said. Mr. Wilson, of the, Northern Great Plains £xperimenta) Station at Man-) i dan, talked of the. experiments. mage in the station. He gave many. statis- tues of how the statioh {3 determining ! the best kinds of wheat to raise, and vt of experiments with livestock, trees and vegetavles. Ls t For County Agent. The \first speaker. of the evening was Mr.- Wolt, of. the College, until recently. a. resident of Wahpeton aund-»president of the Wah- peton Commergial .clab.. fe spoke-in sehaif of the. employment of.a county. agent-in;Burleigh county. Mr, Wolf saiu. that since he started out recently to. place county agents, seven counties which have never had agents have hired them, In Burleigh county, -he. said, there is no agent,’ and the county: ¢ommissioners do not, wish .to, hire one now because of the expense., , Mr. Wolf’ declared that the county..would loge more than. it would, save in not-hiring an agent. ‘He read the list of U.S. seed: loans given recently, ~showing Burleigh county low:.in*the list:. The counties! ‘ which have..conaty. agents have. got’ the most. loans,‘he-said, .°*~ | Mr. 2 Wolf.preflicted.‘that, sweet cl ver would revolutionize: farming the western. part of the state. He also spoke, of a.hew dark wheat evolved} at the: agricultural collere. hich is) | proving :superior to. anv, other wheat. ! The college will. hava. considerable | | seed: th distribute next year, he sald. |/The counties which have agents ‘will; ! get thesmost seed, he said... CUT, THIS ae Is WORTH ||, | | Cut .out this. slip, enclose with 5¢ : : and mail it to. Foley i Co. 246 Shef- | Safonoff + | fleld Ave., Chi cAED. 2 wri wie sont, development and the ‘plunge back in- i reveal ” ee thal Me kage con-| tothe depths’ therefore was all the! taining Foleys Honey and Tar tom- | aes any hag ent th .; pound for coughs, colds and croup; ; pis are’ not foo frightened 4o talk, a for act, tedinetiea, pecan, bide great writer wil rise up and tell the| ney and bladder ailments; and Folev! whole terrible truth. And out of out} Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and/ miseries of the past. will rise a new Agricutturat It was.announced today that As- sociated First-National Pictures, Inc., would. present.the drama _ eternal “Man-Woman-Marriage” at the Eltinge theater on Monday. for.a limited en- gagement. ‘Thig super-production is said to mark the last word in rich- ness of. presentation \and investiture, That it will prove the screen sensa- tion’ of 1921 is predicted by the lead- ing motion picturg critics, Some idea of the magnitude of th: task of. making this drama, can be ymed frém. the authoritative. state- t tWat over four hundred thousand fect of film went into its construction , Batteries-of cameras were directed on some of the massive scenes, yet the completed film is in: only ‘nine reels. In other words, the film was boiled downto less thay two per cent of.the total length “shot.* This means that scene after scene of startling beayty and dramatic piquancy flashss on the screen in tense sequence, The zetion, or, tempo, as. the picture pro- ducers: call it, is breath-taking in_ its effect. . ‘ Dorothy. Phillips, one of the tew great emotional stars of the sereen is starred, in {Man-Woman Marriage: It.was produged by, Allen Holubar, presented by Alhert A. Kanfmen and released by Assgciated First Nationa! Pictures, Inc... Sub-titled “The, Love Woman” this intimate cxposition’ of social relations of’ man ang. woman promises to set | tongues to, wagging over never set- tled questions. Rider Holubar brings tohis dramatic ar- gument.the force of historic truth. He renders.biology popular and finds ro- mance in the Neolithic Age. , As a personified beauty, woman, dances through the entire/plot, passing grace- ‘fully from age to. age and ever re-|: turning to the present to continue the plot’s supreme, purpose of entertain- ment, vif ¢ An. excited,.world is revealed in the third period of the story; society as it has developed (nr descended) in’so- celal circles is‘ pitilessly’ stripped to our view. Its pretentions and its mas~ ove are shown to be just what they are. Truth has never gone further ment.” and a better and stronger “How to Meet the y city where twelve persons live in three rooms; where four persons sleep in a kitchen every night; and* hundreds of rooms in which four or five persons sleep. There is tuberculosis and there have been isolat- | ~ overn if gi constipation, biliousness,: leadaches,’ jontiess disclosure of the passions and thoroughly’ cleansing cathartic \for’ ta Holubar has taken it in this re- and_sluggish bowels. Adv. Hit eet Phe pe in America Shortage of Dwe fotvties of a world into which the steps of the woman are directed by an am- bitious, proud and faithless husbana, The slavery of woman shouted again with all the ener; a passionate soul, and that slavery ts shown to be as complete and as humil- ‘ating as ever the bars of an Oriental =~ harem interposed betwen woman and rerThghtful development. Holubar has his own’ ideas as_te ‘ow the strife between the male and he female of the speczes ottg1t to be .Oneposed, and he oes not hesitate Ww itate it’in ‘terms of dramatic tlong;but acceptation of the theories why be granted or withheld by the Mctute-patron without interfefing in *h@ least with the thrill and tux an vigor oR the real, vital olay. The Romans used to make sacred, cakes in honor of Diana. nN When the call came to feed starving millions across ‘the seas, American generosity, efficiency, and foresight were not-wanting. Now comes a call to provide shelter for a-great nation, without ‘Homes enough fér its growing population—and that nation is the United States. In the largest city of the country, 100,000 families are doubling up with one or more other families; there are places in the i ed cases of typhus. These conditions exist and this description appears.in a report of a committee of the United States Senate which calls for governmental action to help build homes for our people. ‘~ In THE LITERARY DIGEST this ‘week, April 9th, the leading article is devoted to the hous- ing shortage and the steps that are being taken by Federal and State Governments, Builders’ Asso- ciations,-and other agenciés toward alleviating the ‘Among the other striking news-articles in this number of THE DIGEST are: TEARING UP THE TURKISH TREATY condition. ye While the Allies and Turks Are Engaged in This Action, The Greeks Wage War - What) Viviani’s Visit Means To Cut Taxes by More Borrowing Lenine’s Gold Declined : Germany’s Rampageous “Reds” Greece Having It Out with Turkey The Bolshevik-German Partners Is a White Australia Unfeasible? School Punishments Guarding the Peéple’s'Cash _, 3 Electric Dust Explosions Colonial: Inheritance in Architecture The Japanese Problem in Fiction ra on the Turkish Nationalists in Defense of the-Treaty The Y. W. C. A. and the “Class Struggle” Problems of. Democracy Alsace-Lorraine? Topics of the Day Many Interesting Mlustrations, Including Cartoons The Sunday School vs. Bolshevism A British Spy Among the Bolsheviki How Daugherty Helped Harding _ Into the White House Has. Belgium Annexed a Little ‘ The Germans are in Paris Again Best of the Current Poetry April 9th Number on Sale To-day—News-dealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers x A JATURDAY, APRIL 9; 1921 “MAN-WOMAN-MARRIAGE,” VAST "MOTION PICTURE 1S_ANNOUNC farming, Aten Holubar Present Dramatic Theme of Mother-Right and Woman's. Strife Through All “Ages to man 13 y oot drama of the i

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