The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1921, Page 2

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“that the loss through lack of painting is greater in ling cards must be penned with great flourishes| “PAGE Two | THE ‘BISMARCK TRIB U NE stamp out this dreadful plague,” said the ‘Ameri- 'ean, Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, wW. D., as Second | The mandarin ‘suddenly ‘lost; interest. Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - . - . Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE_COMPANY “Why, inquired. “There are too many people.” CHICAGO DETROIT | i i | | press against subsistence always. There are some Marquette S PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Breske Bide.) _areas of land in China which could be reclaimed: NEW YORK -__ Fifth Ave. Bldg.’ and made to grow food; but the birthrate would The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| fill them almost before they could be reclaimed. for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise! What China needs is a lower birthrate. Until credited in this paper and also the local news published| i : herein, i she has it something will always kill off the popu- All rights of Publication of special. dispatches herein are) lation until it can live off the country. If not ty-! also rese pci Sh eee a EER MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE TONEY! Daily by carrier, per year ..........eeceeeese eee s $720) i Daily by mail,“per year (in Bismarck) .... 7.20, Were you ever invited out to a swell-dinner and Daly RY Maik burke Rott euaae Biemarck-- B40 neh got stumped on which fork to start eating. ragpase ‘with? Did you pick up your water glass and sip, THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSP. (Established iia, ore ‘and sip until someone took the-lead in picking up QE —AND KEEP IT UP | other wore satin-lapel undertakers’ coats? Why confine spring house cleaning to the house? If so, salvation is at hand, for a flood of books! Someone must have asked this question a few!” etiquet is appearing in our midst. It seems years ago to himself or herself—doubtless it was! that none of us is t6 be ‘spared, for the flood in-' a woman—and the answer was obvious. Why, | icludes an “Encyclopedia on Good Form for Little indeed, should every housewife clean her house Ones.” during the spring and the community at large do, These books on how to be polite prove that ev- nothing. jerything travels in a circle. They are a resurrec- ‘phir or plague, then starvation. So the campaign was started with the slogan’ 'tion of a craze that swept the country a half-cen-_ It took a campaign to} tury ago. arouse community interest. How has it suc-' Joe Miller's joke book had nothing on the eti-' ceeded ? iquet guides, of by-gone days. -In them you could Seven thousand cities in the country now have; find everything from “how to set the fable for a, spring “Clean Up and Paint Up” campaigns. |six-fork dinner” to “model for a letter from a. Civic pride has been awakened as never before. | ¥°4U0& man a{ preparatory school requesting funds’ The necessity of a clean city to preserve health fromvhis father.’ My Heteemed Parent! ran al has been fully demonstrated. jletter, et cetera, et-cetera, et cetera. : : “Never remove false teeth at the table without} Hundreds of thousands of people, especially! holding a napkin over the mouth,” was one of the!: children, have became voluntary inspectors of printed rules. their cities. i It further appears, on perusing the old volumes Millions of dollars have been saved in prevent-\in the attic, that it was bad form for a gentleman), | | “Clean Up and Paint Up”. ing fires by removing unsightly and dangerous} to pick his teeth with a quill when riding.in a hack,| fire traps and in removing rubbish. It was the height of impoliteness for younk folks The life of buildings has been’ lengthened| in the twenties to lead the conversation when old| through proper painting. Actual tests have proved| folks, were present. /To:be in-good form, one’s call- Kansas than the loss by fire. ‘that looked like an X-Ray picture of the bones of; Cleanliness, sanitation, beautification, ‘conser-|a black-bass. vation and safety are all civic synonyms, They| Politeness is most coatin dagable=-Garticulnety| symbolize good citizenship, and good’ citizenship|in.adjuring us not to eat pie with a sharp knife.| is good business. : Ina josling, selfish city a return to good manners Bismarck citizens can'do no more valuable ser- vice to their city this week than by joiying whole-}* heartedly in the “Paint Up and Clean Up” cam- paign proclaimed by Mayor Lucas. And after cleaning up and painting up—keep it! polite person act like'a trained monkey. up. Abe SG aba But let’s hope the etiquet-book craze won’t whip! side-whiskers when the code demanded that ‘the’ | THE CONQUEST OF THE UNKNOWN Twelve -years ago this month—April 6, 1909— Mandan ‘sustained a heavy civic loss Saturday|Read Admiral Peary discovered the North Pole. in the death, of ‘Rev. Charles Hamilton Brown.) You recall his,great contest with Dr.‘Frederick'A.| Rev. Mr, Brown was.1nore than a minister of the| Cook, who claimed that he had reached the North Episcopal church. He was a city leader. | Pole April 21, 1908, a year ahead of Peary. Those His personality was:one which gaye him rare were exciting days—and the dispute still lingers. opportunities. He was.never narrow and his! Peary is dead—exploring the ‘Hereafter. warm, hearty smile and handclasp made all feel, Cook lives at Ft. Worth, Texas. He seldom] that in him they had a friend. breaks into the news. He knew North Dakota and knew its people. He; Roald Amundsen reached the South Pole Dec: had lived the life of the typical pioneer of the state, homesteading and then holding county of-| Now the only thing that is left in the way of; fice for fifteen years before resigning to enter| difficult exploration is the ascent of Mt. Everest the ministry. in the Himalayas, on the frontier of Tibet. High- est known mountain: peak on earth, it towers up- YOUR HEALTH |ward about five anda half miles. A British expe-| Swiss insurance companies announce that their! dition is preparing to climb it—which will take! A CIVIC’ LEADER Editor Should we go to all that trouble and expense?” he) And there are too many people in China. They’ ‘a fork? Or did you ever show up at.a party in| street clothes and be mortified because all the: would make*this’a happier world. i us back tothe stilted days of hoop-skirts and/or “Better | and fully, ay | based on the expérieng THE BIEWARCE TRIB MONDAY, APRIL 11, 1921 i | | FRER ut et AT eta Dentists to See Comical Pictures Every adult person in the city is invited to attetid the irge,;moving pic- ture show at: Auditotiam tonight, The picture! AI to he shown uhder ithe auspices: the state a ag a part : Fe TA romareatio itextain ies gs any films shown. -*"Dhgetirst one (Wa be shown, “Come Clean,” is a comical picture, @,pt a-soldier: The film carrigs the tdblay ie sity of keep! tepth al health, but “moral” of tl the rejection, soldier in th army petatise of defec- tive teeth, tells ‘how ‘he: got in and depicts.in a comical way: the funny ex- periences of the soldier... Another film. produced by the Red}Gross, is both comical and instructive, Local dentists brought the films from Chicago, and one dentist who saw them at a Chicago convention | declares they: kept 1,000 neople laugh- | 16, 1911. |ing all through the showing, The pictures were shown this after- noon tor children. 4 ACKLEY WINS _ PLACE FOR N. D., Grand Forks, N. D., April 114.—The rates for insuring women hereafter will depend! two-years, on the women’s clothes. Short skirts ‘and low; You, toiling in the penitentiaries which we call’ necks will mean a higher insurance rate, the in- surance doctors having found that these seaig babs saan much illness. The old-fashioned mother who urges her daugh-| You ef this generation have lived through the; ter to bundle up in cold or rainy weather has ages final chapter of man’s conquest of the earth. of wisdom behind her. | How many years that conquest was in ‘process, | Often a woman dressed like a chorus girl can scientists’ disagree. defy the elements. , But she’s the exceptional case. - Chinese claim that.their Buddhist monks visit- - Wet feet and chills are the deadliest enemies of ed America as far ‘back as the year 432. Thirty- the average waman. | two years later, Hoei-schin; Chinese-explorer, pen- Fashion books say that women next winter, etrated to a point that may have been San Blas,! won’t wear galoshes. If this comes true, it will: Mexico. That is, if you believe the entries in the! be one of the most unfortunate changes in the’ Chinese Year Books, now ‘in the-British Museum. mad history of American fashions. : | ‘Trish monks made the first. expeditions north- IF NOT PLAGUE, THEN FAMINE ‘and. Dispatches from China tell of the forcible cut-| Norwegians claim that their Bjarni sailed along ting off of the queus of Chinese as a measure of/ the coasts of Nova Scotia in cae Europeans| sanitation in the fight, against typhus, which is’ to see America. propagated through the bites of lice. . |. Lief the Lucky, Eric the Ked; Thorwald, Madoc! But the orthodox Chinese believes that if he! of Wales and finally Columbus—each was the! dies wihout his queue his soul will be lost. As be-| Peary, the great explorer of his day. tween living in China with the fear of eternal per-' dition, and dying now of typhus, good Christians! Man has virtually completed his conquest of thel can see that there is much to be said for.the Chin-| EARTH. aman who prefers queue, death and salvation. | _But man’s explorations ‘have ‘little more than There is still another argument against the, started. stamping out of typhus which appeals.to certain’ Airplanes now explore the upper ‘air. Who Chinese minds. Years ago an American scientist, knows but what some future Peary may explore ‘traveling in the interior of the Flowery Kingdom} the vast stars out in the universe, traveling in an found a city in which bubonic plague was raging.| airship or in a rocket such as Prof. Goddard pro- He called on the mandarin who governed the place] poses firing at the moon? and explained to him the cause of the spread of! Every man gropes into the unknown. this disease—through the bite of fleas infesting, Rarconj, in discovering wireless, was an eX-| yates. | plorer. The mandarin had nevey heard of this, but he, Sir Oliver Lodge and othr scientists are trying| ‘vas an intelligent man, and was keenly Snterested. to explore beyond the grave. Yes,” said he, after all his questions had been| pgrees with the facts.” ip Give me the men and the authority, and I will: fourth dimension, in the mysteries of time, : | alphabetical order’ are: ‘ward. In 725 they established settlements in Ice-) And this month, 12 years after race electri’ answered, “I can see that what you say is true. It! fied the world by reaching:the North Pole, Ameri-| jca is viited, by Albert: Bintein, explorer in the! three students winning honors in the | interstate oratorical contest held last evening in the Presbyterian church, leities, probably wish you could join the Mt, Ev-| Grand Forks, and who will participate! 4, in the final interstate competition in j | South Dakota in May-as given out in Howard C, | Ackley of the University of North Da- kota, Thomas \Q. Harrison of the Ne- ; braska Wesleyan University, and Rus- | sell Hartman of Penn College, Iowa. The place won by Mr. Ackley for | the first time put the University of | North Dakota into the final contest of | the interstate oratorica) association. His oration, entitled - “The Master. Builder,” in which he , maintained | America to be the master builder for ‘the future peace of the world, was one of exceptional merit. Re winning orations, ‘Mr. Hartman's “Hinges of Peace,” and Mr. Harrison’s “America’s Answer,” were remarkable! | in both thought and composition. | iBACK FROM. CALIFORNIA | JAMESTOWN, IN, D., April 11— | Oscar J.-Seiler, who has been in Cal- ifornia. for his health, ‘has returned to. Jamestown: much iniproved. ~— STOMACH UPSET? Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets sufferers-are doing now. Instead of digestion, they are attacking the (Teal cause: of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered towels i Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothits, heating way. | When the liver ‘and bowels @ per- | forming their nai functiofis, away | goes indigestion and stomach troubles. Have you a bad taste, coated tongue, appetite, a lazy, don’t- |. fing, no ambition or energy, | rouble with undigested -foods? Take Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards’ Olive ctablete are 8 vegetable compount wit purely on will ow them by their olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two7* % j relief. Eat what you Public Generally Invited by Loca ommittee of |* The other; lee at the 1e Real Couse— Takes | | ‘That’s what thousands of stomach: taking tonics, or trying to patch up a le : IF-THE MEN DRESSED AFTER THE MODE | he superb aéting of Dorothy P| lips in ‘Man-Woman-Marriage,” Allen | Holubar: 's famous Associated Wrst [wane sHsllo folks;: how's“ After°Mr. Seal hid finished telling his wife about the. circus he ‘had ‘lett, he picked up his newspaper and: his pipe and started to read again, or at least he pretended to read. But he was chuckling to himself .and his “(pororay PHILLIPS RISES TO GREAT HEIGHTS IN “MAN-WOMAN-MARRIAGE” ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS By: Olive Barton Roberts YOUR HEAD'S © AFFINITY In the old days hats were too big, or too little, or too ornaté. They outraged the face and insulted the head. | Today, in the Gordon, con- , tours are conceived in such SJ subtle variety that every head can find its affinity. Sightly novelties for the smart young man and con- servative shapes for those that want them. world's hest cinema stars that_ jis little doubt that fandom cord her tribute as the screen est dramatic actress. Until the advent of Miss Phillips’ in independent productions movie s have heen prone to cla y stars for some partft ing, One has excelled in emotion, other in comedy and others along va: ious histronic lines, but the sublime work of dainty Dorothy Phillips in a picture abounding with dramatic sit- * ced her in“a:class which embraces all the finer points accorded tovher sereon sisters, Those who have watched the hrtiz- | tic growth of this.star have realize? ~~ that it was always in the stories of | Allen Holubar and under his direction that she has excelled. ‘In “The Heart of Humanity,” Miss Phillips first con- vinced the moyie-going public that she Was on the jroadito syperlative star- dom. . In “The: Right .to. Happiness” ‘she took advantage of each situation Wational produ:tion, now: playing-at, to display her great: ability as an ac- the, Bltinge theater, has placed Miss ‘ress, but it was not yntil sh Phillips so far in the forefront of the | furnished with a vehicle of still great- ier possibilities that she reached the peak of screen_art. Born and reared in Maryland where she was schooled in a convént; this brilliant star began her legitimate Stage career in a Baltimore stock com- pany. From there she-went to New York where she appeared as “Modes- ty” in Henry W. Savage's production of “Evety-woman.” For two seasons Jane’s Pa” and she might have heen mer vacation ying jeads for FE: )sanay.in Chicago. ‘Her work there en couraged her to leave the stage and take up screen reen acing as a career, 1 Today’ Today's Weather Fi For twenty. four hours ending at noon, : Monday, April 11. ‘Temperature at Ta. m Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday : ke Lowest ‘last night. called a. voice, Precipitation .... She'd .soen elder-ducks Highest ; wind veloclty and gulls but they w wiftte and gray For North: Dakota: Part! : ae - ‘artly cloudy ues the. scy aude an Bs ee ofall! tonight and Tuesday; somewhat cold- she wanted a Z er in the northeast portion tonight. She suddenly noticed her husband’s fat sides going out and in, and s ks?” called birds. PAYS HIGH fat. silky sides were going out and in| a sigh she had begun. Thomas, N. D., April 11.—Be- | with his chuckles, ed, “I believe ie lieing that no seed wheat however He was pleased at himself for im-] “Laughing!” s . Seal soher- is Any too good for Red pressing upon his wife that a circus] ing at oncg. Nothing of the sort! It's River Valley sil, Minnow Dotzert, a Was no place for a quiet, home-loving | just hiccoughs, e two pecks of Proseprous faxier living five iniles [ seal. He's really made out that it | was’ a dreadful affair, Mrs, Seal was disappointed. She had hoped that when she was mar~ ried her husband would: take. her around to see the wonderful wide world that she had heard so much: about. ° ot She'd heard that beyond the icebergs, e world was green instead of: white, ‘and that there were lovely thihgs of different colors growing in the ground; called flowers, and other things of ‘lovely colors flying around in the air; | | EVERETT TRUE AND THAT MY OPERATION nn COUPLE OF YEARS lor ' ASO — OH, Bor! NDITION, gee y a THE ANAS STHETIC roe Two SourD HOURS. ‘You SEE, TO BEGCIN WITH, “THEY Took AND CuT --- ow HAVE TO DISCO Lows RiceT AT THE NEVER RECOVERED {Yt Bor|e You with ALL THS DSTAILS OF | EIR “OPERATION”! ee A CaeBon ALMOST WISHES THEY HAD thwest of thi city ,has shipped in seed’ wheat that cost him 1. It is believed that this is the highest price ever paid for seed wheat in this ection of “thaeeountry. =————————————— EUGCUOUUEROCUOUSOGUGEOCUEGUAUNRONONCONOROONNOOUOOY salmon for my lune know, better at mig-day. to dibt again. I'ni getting too fat.” Mrs. Seal was about to sympathize a nice patient wife should do, when a cheerful voice called. “Hello, folks, the twins, YES! “Good lands!” said Mrs. Seal draw- 3 t ing back in alarm, that a man: This is Clean Up and Paint Up and‘a lady and a clow Week, (To Be Continua.) You are going to have that, Clean Copyright, me N. E. A.) Up feeding tor Your Home, © Then after this is done you per- BY CONDO haps” will: have a ies e-Nea esr | MUSICAL FEELING REMINDS. ME OF And would you like to have a Piano Phonograph to make the home more cheerful. You would have bought .a Piano or Phonograph long | ago, but always Said, we cannot afford | one. With the payment -plan we have in selling the Baldwin Pianos, and Wid- dicom) Phonogravhs, you can afford to own one, and best of all enjoy its music while paying for it. |: Just -call-at our Music Store and look over our Baldwin Piano line and , the Widdicomb Phonograph line and see how well made they are. ‘We will be pleased to explain these wonderful instruments: — Baldwin, Ellington, | Hamilton, Howard Pianos, and the |Manualo, “The Player Piano” that is all but ‘human. , Widdicomb Phono- TWAS INVA FIERcE IT WAS YVAIDER | graphs. : Ne ue Fo MAYNARD MUSICAL TE. MERCHANDISE fs permive care | | Papa NBL \ | ‘Phone 978 TUVEREREUUULOUUEREOUROUOEREADEROOGRORONEONUOOONNONS O NOTICE Anyone desiring conerete work at cemetery would do, J well to consult W. M. Griffis,’ soon, as he expects in a: very, short time to begin working| at cemetery on work already: contracted for.—Phone 366 R. nations of all classifications has plac-' ‘she was: leading woman of “Mary -- upon the stage yet had it not:beon . for the fact that she spent one sum:"*

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