The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 12, 1921, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismacck, wv. D,, as Second Ciass Matter. GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT tte Bldg. mae PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - herein. : Editor Kresge Bldg. 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 | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1921 Now Greece has tried it again. She has been| getting another walloping. She has big casual-| ty lists and has spent a lot of money for nothing. | Whether she has been spurred on again by Paris| and London, is not-known. One thing is certain,| though—Greece invaded Turkey in defiance of ad- vice from the best allied military experts. Gi Mustapha Kemal demands autonomy for Thrace | instead of giving these rich Turkish agricultural | ‘lands to Greece. | He also demands restoration of Smyrna to Tur-: All rights of publication of specia) dispatches herein are, key instead of putting it under Greek charge for! also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE a fixed term of years with the probability of even-! ‘tual Greek ownership. | Rich plums for the Greeks! Constantine reaches Daily by carrier, per year . is i Daily by mail, per year (in Bis 720 for them. Daily by mail, per year (in state outside 5.00, The allies who “frowned softly” when Constan- | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ............ 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) <a> SCHOOLS FOR ALL Congress is more or less angled up with dis- cussions having to do with a Department of Edu- cation, headed by a cabinet member. Those in favor of the proposal insist this will raise the educational plans of America. It is just possible that a secretary of education may do more to educate American minds than a commissioner of education, acting under the di- rection of a secretary of the interior has been able to do. But— No secretary of education can do much more than a commissioner until there are— Schools enough to. prevent overcrowding of pupils; ; ; Teachers enough to give each child individual attention ; . Compulsory attendance to include at least two tine returned to his throne, now see the Greek’ l|armies going down Turkey’s gullet—and the al-) * lies’ position in the Near East endangered. | The Greek people may soon wonder if the game} ‘is worth the candle. THE SELF-SUFFICIENCY OF AMERICA Mr. H. G. Wells, in writing of the inter-depend- | ence of European countries and of the self-suff: ‘ciency of America, says: “T doubt if it would make any very serious dif-| ference for some time in the ordinary daily life of ; Kansas City, let us say, if all Europe were reduced to a desert in the next five years.” | In a limited degree, this is true. Kansas City ‘would not seo the desert which Europe had be- come. Her streets would look the same. Outward- | ,ly she would live to a large extent the same life| ‘she lives now—and so of othe rAmerican cities} ‘and farming regions. | | We would be shocked in every intellectual and bus-' liness fibre. For one thing, we would. be left to, ‘bear the banner of the white race alone save for!" But all America would feel the change keenly. | - —— ———.—-4 With the Movies’ | Jeet fe “Man-Woman: riage,” ——* presented high school Oe, ; : ., some nations which are weak in numbers and oth-| The finest school system in the world will avail’ o.. which aré weak in whiteness. We would feel us little unless there bs plenty of schools, teach-| 4 sense of helplessness in confronting so changed ers and time for children to attend school. a world. To be sure Mr. Wells says “for some en time”; but the time would be measured by the ‘ ELECTRIC ECONOMY . lapse required for the transmission of news only. Americans used about 13 per cent more electri- We should b ick nation, i q ; city in 1920 than the year before. Electricity, | © should be’2. sick nation, if Europe svere lost; ‘and in all probability, we should be sick nearly or says the Geological Survey, saves the nation about quite anto-death: 41,000,000 tons of coal a year. | In a material sense, we should suffer obvious Herbert Hoover and other engineers have long’ ovis which everybody would be conscious of. _ Pointed me ae ganas waste hauling ar The main trouble with this country today, with over railroads and handling it in factories and) gouth America, with the whole world, is that we homes. They predict a day when coal will be burn- | Great credit is due f i ‘are trying to get along without Europe. Europe’s ed at the mines, running giant power plants that part in our life is largely pak are an pe ;math of the war. The railways, the farmers ,the \factories are suffering because we have in large, 'measure lost Europe—becauise in certain senses, | i Europe has become to us, temporarily at least, a | desert. ay will put the country on an electrical instead of a steam-coal basis. Those in the know say it’s a dream that’ll come true. Electrification may be the solution of the rail- road problem. Out of every 100 tons of coal mined in the Unit-} ed States, 26 tons are used in operating railroads. Hauling this coal ties up thousands of freight cars. There is similar duplication in handling the coal until it goes into locomotives. ‘ It used to be said that there wasn’t enough cop- | per in the world to electrify American railroads. | i But the producers now have at least 400,000,- 000 pounds of copper in storage. They are offer-| ing’ it abroad at 10 cents a pound, or less than al third of the war-time highest. | Now might be an excellent time to start general electrification of the railroads. Roads that have! changed to electric locomotives say they wouldn’t| go back. ‘ | It’s a big job and would take enormous capital. | But it would also provide jobs for thousands. And, money is never so scarce in the United States that! it can’t be gotten for any project that will save. millions in the long run. | TURKEY DEFIES THE AX i Greek armies, invading Turkey, are whipped by the armies of Mustapha Kemal. The battles are so close to Constantinople that the allies’ hold there is imperiled. It may develop into a general scrap. Kemal for a year has been boasting that he would first whip the invading Greeks, then drive the British out of Palestine, French out of Syria, and the Italians out of their foothold at Adalia, in southern Asia Minor. The outstanding feature of the situation is that the allies are going to have a mighty job enfore- ing the unratified Turkish peace treaty. The treaty of Sevres left little to the noce-power ful Turkish empire. It ended Turkey’s rights in Egypt and Morocco and reduced her to the rela- tively small strip of territory between Constan- tinople in the west and the Armenia-Arabia line in the east. The Sultan was about to sign this treaty, when Mustapha Kemal took a hand. Followed by the leading nationalist leaders, he retreated to the in- terior and set up rule in the Anatolian city, An- gora. Today Kemal is the real ruler of Turkey. He has a well-equipped army estimated at 200,000. And he’s where: the allies can’t easily get their fingers on him. Kemal demands revision of the Sevres Treaty. He defies the sultan and wants’him divorced from headship of the Mohammedan church. His chief row is with the invading Greeks. Lloyd George and Millerand a year ago told the Greeks, then led by Venizelos, to ”go get Kemal.” ‘other. | You can take the clean out of Clean-up Week iby cluttering streets and yards with handbills. EDITORIAL REVIEW | Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being dis- cussed In the press of the day. HARD SURFACED ROADS If proper co-operation between city, county and federal government is shown Grand Forks will! before the end of the present season have the first stretch of hard surfaced country road in North Dakota, namely, the bit of road leading out of the city to the north and reaching the'property of the Mill and Elevator association on the one hand and of the Northern Packing company on the ; i There are two projects originating in the city,, cperation. One is the piece of road referred to, ersity avenue. The University Avenue project does not involve the county, is all to be done within the city lim: its. Here the two parties interested are the city, and the federal government, the latter paying a Tals | and creative: genius borne home to one. presented by Albert. A. Kaufman and is a First National attraction. It has been pronounced by crities to be amazing in the magni- tude of its theme. | by the most. human details. Miss PI the completion of which ‘requires this sort of co-! lips is splendidly supported by | Kirkwood and ani | noted pict and the other is that at the western end of Univ-, lishting. etfe costuming and gorgeouw perbly add to the gene as the work, ma: at the Eltinge theatre yesterday cre- ated a furore. It is said to have cost} half a million dollars to produce and that over five thousand people appear in the scenes, Much has been written about this remarkable superdrama and — much Was expected, and that it filled every expectation was evidenced by th breathless interest with which it was witnessed and the frequent salvos of applause which greeted its amazing sequence of brilliant and colorful pic- tures. Dorothy Phillips is the star and as. cends ‘new heights in her truly won- derful interpretation of — Victoria. Allen Holubar, the is masterly — skill are director-author, 1 constantly The feature is Few stories with such spectacular The story is: of universal appeal. It traces the ascendancy of woman into. the In the sereen’s early days, girls be- came stars because of physical pul- chritude. nae tion of talent, Today great pictures] Come!” she ¢ | demand a star with talent for acting, , “atch personal magetism and that indefinable screen | Marriage” combines at once a story} with a plot, punc and new screen. ideas. ; it stamps an indelibie tmpr: on the mind, it creates a desire to morepictures of its remarkable cati br. The director lost no opportunity t | bring out the ablest work of the st It was not so much a ques- characteristic personality. “Man-Woman- a mighty less It entertain excellent tone of this ificent production. WAS IN BED THREE DA Mrs, Josie Reed, 217 N. E: Okla vas in bea took writes: with my back. 1 designaed portion of the cost of the work and) Foley Kidney Pills znd in two days the city payirg the rest. that part of the government. In all cases, in order to cbt necessary that the work shall be performed ac-} cording to approved specifications and under the supervision cf an official engineer. ! Bids on all t work have been presented, and the figures named appear to be fair and reasonable under all the cir “neces. Federal aid will be available cn the propes completion of the work. The city is provaved to do its nated share. , The county board has not yet ected, but it is” taken for granted tha! that body will be suffi- ciently appreciative of theinterests involved to, take suitable steps for the completion of the part of the work for which it is responsible. The subject of good roads is one whose impor- tance is just beginning to be appreciated. In, Minnesota there has been greater activity in road | 'mprovements than in this state, and there will be. greater acivity now that the Babcock amend- | ;ment has ‘been passed. We cannot afford to lag! Marshal Foch said fhe Greeks couldn’t do it, that| behind. Good roads are as important to the far-| it would require half a million troops. The Greeks| mers and townspeople of North Dakota as they | went ahead, invaded Anatolia, and in June, were badly whipped by Kemal. 1920, ee a their Minnesota neighbors.—Grand Forks | ) Herald. - a This is true, also, of was au northern project lying within the, hey pins erence in temperitire of on thousandth of a degree. ‘ \ Pres., work again, I cannot p © too much,” stop bladde ethen system the he, rheumo- re muscles, puffiness un- —Adx. cment of Agriculture has that will detect a dif- ten- The Dep: rmometers BANK EXAMINER GETS ASSISTANT Announcement is made of the appointment of H. L. Levitt as Asst. Bank Examiner for South Dakota. Mr. Levitt isa graduate | of Dakota Bu e, Fargo, N_ D., and will undoubtediy meet many cther ex-students of this com- splendor have. held such a depth of heart ingerestior w ;at no time do ‘even these gorgeous scenes draw one’s attention from the thrill ofsthe modern story which they so enhancingly illustrate. alth of detail’ Yot literary | through the opalescent haze of myth- | ology and the confusing reality of the: medieval period ; Whirl of the modern day. Customs i and hadvits are strangely his engrossing drama of ; man-Marriage’ through the ages past. I. ‘ontrasted in “Man-Wo-| , tion is composed of farn ness men of Burleigh cou following purposes: Inducement mercial school in his work, asabout § 220 of them have become bank officers. Many, began as steno- graphers and bookkeepers. Every Fargo, bank and 685 others employ D. B.°C. graduates. “Follow the SucceSSful.”” Spring term is best time to start. Write | for particulars to F, L. Watkins, ; 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. amazing he: almost ' t called | Now, By_TH BEARD oF BEN ALL i. wort #0? ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts clow fairyman and the tw “Is that:a man dnd a n? sald) Flippety-Flap. all, over the sides s T couldn't 2 paste posters ej) of these icebergs do it all myseif, 1 ced Mrs. 8: appeared Mr, Seal looked as tnough he wi ers alo ‘ : ‘ ed the earth would open and swallov “Po ! cried Mrs, Seal. “Are up the visitors, but he put down his y Can you wear them? pipe and newspaper and said pleas- antly, a young man called a boy, that is a young lady called a girl, but I’m not sure about the other. He has no spots, neither has he a pig, a donkey, nor a billy-goat.” “Oh, you can’t tell what I have in ere.” laughed Flippety-Flap pointing his arry everything along with me thé Jikely to be nee f of eggs, to a ni Mrs, Seal delight. n fish?” she Ye're in the ad e MR. TRUG, To SEG TouR MIND ARBoVT ITS THe CHANCE OFA UFETIMG ~~ \ ---- \ v ou ge2,” said Flip y-Flap. with a elong look at Mr, “They're posters of a circus ‘The Greatest Show On Karth”” ed Mr. Seal jumping This is “Yes and no, my di Seal. called. “What!” ¢ about a yard. But Flip was busy long-handled brushes and rolls of pa- per from hi “Here you 2 handing out th dren. the on thet vd the side that one, and the an‘mal pictures over there, I'll be with you in a min- yite.” hoes. “I've been known to each of the chi ring performances spring pped h {ms Ce asked glad} you dive and ancy. (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1921, N. KE. A.) xplained Flippet BOOST FOR BURLIEGH COUNTY igh and adjacent counties from (Contrib: of as ent of better “1 farming and a more ragement of agricultural ef-: towards corn, tame gr | genera into) forts of immi BY CONDO I'vE Come (in ACA HAVE CHANGCSD THAT LOT. le Nov NO, t HAVEN'T Crane e Mind} Bur I KNOW SOMEONE (Oo 1S GOING TO 'CHANGS HIS very sHorTUY— IF HE HAS ONG! > Ss <1 t 4 | THE HUNGRY TURK sut-these help-i » CUT THIS OUT: e MO | ctable toni¢ should be taken. ; made up of Blood ro | Bark, DRWE AWAY HEADACHE Rub Musterole on Forehead and Temples A headache remedy without the dan- gers of “headache medicine.” Relieves headache and that miserable feeling froin colds or congestion. And it acts at { once! Musterole is a clean, white oint- | Inent, made with oil of mustard. Better | than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Used only externally, and ir no way can it affect stomach and heart | as_some internal medicines do. | Excellent for sore throat, bronchitis croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia i aN congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum: bago, all pains and aches of the back | or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises | chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the i chest (it often prevents pneumonia). hospital size $3.0€ |. 5¢ and 65c jars; —=—===—_—_—_—_—_—_—_————— | stock, dairying, hog and poultry rais- ; ing. ‘3 Creation of a better feeling of con- | fidence ‘on the part of all the people | in the poten’ ies of the Slope coun- | try and enthuse a better spirit of op- ; Umism. Enlist all of the people to | push for the general good—Bismarck ! will grow only in proposition to the development of the country and hence | this movement is directly engaged for /a better and bigger Bismarck, The slogan of this movement will ibe “get away from the wheat busi- ness” as a long suit. Wheat has bust- ed all other sections of the country at one time or another and North Da- kota is the last state to get in line from here to the Atlantic and south _ to the Gulf, To all people concerned we trust | you will push and if you have any in- | formation or names of friends eélse- ' where that you wish to do a real serv- ice for get them in touch with the rck Immigration Association. It formed wholly without profit for making Burleigh a bette: and bigger county.’ Mr. Runey will start this | week for the field and will be glad to get in touch with all people locally or elsewhere. "Remarkable Remarks | x “T cannot bear the thought of em- ploying a girl whose jaws are con- stantly moving, to say nothing of the unpleasant odor of gum,"—C. Hamp- son Jones, Baltimore health commis- sioner. : * “I do not think the present styles any worse than the prudish long orian period.”— e@ Robertson, Ok- a # ‘ Congresswoman Al “ahoma. i so4 is no housing relief in sight lication of a revival in build- —John H, Donlin, presi- ling trades department, American Federation of Labor. rear + best “Work was” alwa man's friend. Leigure is a pleasan look at, a had one to wear. | Lauder. sk 8 “The time for a business man to EY. “Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Shet- field Ave., Chicago, Tl iting your name and address clea You will receive in return a trial package con- taining Foleys Honey and Tar Cont- dd croup; 3 in sides ache, kid- ind Folev wi Foley Kidney. Pills for p and bac ney and bladder ,Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation. biliousness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. Adv. For Your Blood You are just, as strong and healthy as your blood. It is like- wise true that you are as young zs your ar- teries. Vigor and bealth come with Boog blood. Without good red blood one hasa weak heart and poor nerves. It may show weak, tired vousness or in that One that will do the house-cleaning, an | oid-fashioned herbal remedy that was ‘uséd by everybody 50 years ago is still safe and sano because it con- | tains no alcohel o: arcotic. It is . Oregon Grape root, Queen's root, Stone root, Cherry without alcohol.—and made id tablets. This put out by Dr. form as Dr. ical Discovery. let form, as for a large 's Invalids’ into both liquid blood tonic was Pierce in ready-to- Pierce’s Golden M Druggists keep t well as liquid. trial pack: Hotel, Try it NOW.7 Do not TRevtes ATTENTION DON'T SELL _HIDES AND FURS ON THE PREVAILING MARKE’ FARMERS robes, price list

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