The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 26, 1921, Page 2

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“PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, aw. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN = ee ee Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. 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. ne ae " All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. er MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year ....... igcuneeseassionsea$ eeu. - Editor Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) ....... 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota .........+.. 6.06 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) aio BETTER USE FOR IT In 110 days more than $50,000,000 passed they could not save themselves from engulfment by the millions of their competitors who lived on | the lower plane. Blights and. infections are living things which | prove themselves fittest to survive when they de- stroy higher organisms. The fittest human beings will survive—fittest for the environment. What that environment ‘ shall be is society’s business. And the life of so- ciety depends on how it fischarges it. THIS WAY LIES PEACE, NOT WAR There is no reason to get excited about the rather tense situation that has grown out of the controversy between the United States and Japan ‘over the island of Yap. ' The suggestion of the possibility of war to set- ‘tle this controversy is too preposterous for words. | The sooner we get over the habit of thinking and talking about war every time our govern. ment and another government have a difference, ‘the better off we shall be. - The unraveling of the Yap tangle presents an- noying difficulties. This is the price we must through the betting machines of the four big. pay for permitting the tangle to occur during the Maryland race-tracks. While the ponies were running farmers were pecause the Senate and the executive were en- Hippo and her neighbor. ‘That's alt} would we better go next, Nick ‘two years that our government didn’t function begging banks for extension of loans, and busi-| gaged in a death struggle. ness men in cities were crying for additional cap-| But the difficulties are not so great as may ital, but the ponies kept on running and the bet- appear on the surface- unless the governments ters kept on betting. ;and peoples of the United States and Japan have The civilization that has plenty of ready money; gone crazy—which, in spite of hysterical tenden- for the race-track and little for the field and fac-' cies in certain quarters, hasn’t happened. tory is one which might be improved, don’t you The very fact that this government has spoken think? Surely there is a better use. for currency, frankly and courageously to Japan and. the other than passing it through betting machines. NO BLOODHOUND NEEDED ‘nations about the Yap. business, and that Japan |has answered with equal courage and frankness, [is a good rather than a bad sign. King Keous of Kau, Hawaii, led an army against| This sort of diplomacy leads toward’ good un- King Kamchameha, in 1790. Kilauea, an active| derstanding and peace, rather than toward mis- vocalno, erupted while this army was on its march understanding and war. and one of the three divisions of native warriors! Note the opening paragraph of one of Mr. was destroyed. Pele is the wrathful goddess of| Simms’ interesting articles from Japan: this volcano, as many learned from a popular play called “The Bird of Paradise.” Prof. T. A. Jagger, Jr., in charge of the voleano| observatory, was exploring a lava desert recently when he found a multitude of footprints pointed) away from the voleano, All were in one direction,! deep at the toes and light at the heels, indicating; a great number of men in full flight. Originally the tracks were in volcanic ash. Rain turned it hard as concrete. These footprints, are to be preserved in a part of the new Kilauea) National Park. Armies often aim to leave imperishable monu-' ments to they victories, but not to their flights. It remained for nature to do that. : CHINESE EGGS The steamer Tuscan Star arrived in New York ' “There is a rising tide of sentiment in Ja- | pan against war and in favor of peace. And this peace party is looking to~the United | States to take the lead and give the move- | ment direction.” : The United States can best take the lead in this matter, by: continuing to deal with Japan as frankly and courageously as we have begun to do in respect of Yap. ' Can’t believe summer has come until we see a | girl in furs. | jPieces in circulation? - | Speaking of mathematics, do you realize how ; many make a million? Very few. people worked so engrossingly on. civilization that! Do you remember when you used to see $5 gold ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS | By Olive. Barton Roberts ~ \ i | Nancy and Nick and‘ lippety-Flap| “Another thing, when I passed Mrs. ! sat on top of an empty band-wagon | Bobadil’s house [I saw her husband's ,and talked things over. “Let's “tclown-suit hanging on a line in’ the | the firyman was saying. “How many | back-yard to let the smell of camphor ‘animals have we brought back to the| balls blow off, Besides J heard some ‘ circus?” one practicing on a big brass horn : Nick counted up on_ his fingers.|'The band’s getting bt But heigh- “The elephant. Mrs. Kangaroo and|ho, we must not be loafing here, kid- Kicky Kang, her son, the Lion family,| dies. A half a circus is better Cy | Mr. and M Seal, Gyp the Giraffe. | none, I dar y. but a whole ¢i s is the Monke amily and old Granny | what we are after. Let’s see. Where of the fingers I've got, cy. youl have Nick ran his eye down the li to help count next time. names on the fairymat “Fine,” exclaimed — Flippety-Flap.] iph Camel.” he read. “The excellent part of it is. they are} Great Brown Dese As: all happy and glad.they came; better | the. 2-Can-Reach.” H still they wouldn't. leave now if all] Nancy clapped her hands. “Oh. the gnomes in fairyland let them out|let’s go get him,” she cr gd 8 jand handed them their railroad tic-| wouldn't be a good c id | kets home on a gold plate, but best of | camel.” i all, I saw a man put a big stock of “No, indeed!” answered Flippety i pink tickets intd a drawer this morn-] Flap, slidding down. ell round up |ing, That means. that we are to haye| the old rascal at once. | a real circus this year. (Copyright, 1921, N. E. A.) nnn nanan! | : _ GOING BACK By Alfred Arnold | i I’m going back; I’m going back, ., . | Along the old well-beaten track, | To stand outside the old house door i And look and listen as before. s ala | i The murmurings in the dooryard trees | ~ Will whisper of cool evening ease; i The honeysuckle trellised there | Will scent with welcome twilight’s air. : | And from the windows soft will shine | The light that’s hers, and yet is mine; That lights up love and peace and rest, Any joy in trustful childhood’s breast. And listening, I’ll hear voicés say, | This'time he’s been so far away”! And with a laugh that makes a tune, “He can’t be long: he’s coming soon!” Then, as I knock upon the door, There'll rise an instant wild uproar, With many an “Oh!” and hug, and smack, I’m going, back! I’m going back! , Yes, Father Knows It’s Bargain Day, When i Mother Charges in the Fray! | TODAY’S RHYME BY FRANCES: BOARDMAN | Today’s Rhyme by Frances Boardman j ‘“(iood-Bye,” the Blood-Lust gleaming speculation, before | demand. BUSINESS LETTER bi, ; : i BARE SHELVES, OFF AGAIN—ON AGAIN WILL SPUR | In the days of George TI BUYING » the well dressed man carried Ten more weeks of standstill busi-| his hat, but never wore it ness, then a general revival about} ° Bee July’ 1, | for fear of ruffling his wig. y That’s the opinion of Judge "e Robert §. Lovett, after a long trip’ Nowadays, a man is more through the middle west. He's shalt: | particular about his hat ° man of the board of the Union Pacific ‘ Railroad. | than his hair; he buys a Lovett: found stocks of necessary | cs 1 handise very low all through ‘the, Gordon because it looks But many things have to be good on his, head. bought, good times or bad. Merchan | dise stocks can get just so low, then buying is compulsory, Hence Lov: ett’s prediction that “the end is in! sight.” More optimistic fs the If} Committee on Kconomie Research. which believes that “the period of soneral decline of busines and com-' modity pri s.may be near its end.” J Money Rates Loosen, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston re- - duces its rediscount rate from 7 tc 6 per cent. Period of easier money started. This is further indicated ee by revival of speculation. New oil) stocks are being floated more. easil Ordinarily it is several months er e1 money and revival of eneral business! picks up. But Fede Reserve Sys-| hoped that all who e interested in tem may have shortened the gap so| world problems will avail themselves that speculation and busimess will re- | of this privilege, vive almost simultaneously. io rai tg Kent extremely teh HARDING'S MARION Cattlemen are he rdest nit, | €HURCH DONATES. CORNER STONE Building Trades In the 184 leading ¢ -Marion, Ohio, April 26.—There’s go- ing to be a new Babtist Good looks in a hat is de pendent on quality—one reason why this scason’s . Gordons are s6'sightly. ig s, number of building permits issued in March was 47, compared with 35,382 per mits sa month, 1920. tolal decreased a fifth, but is explain-| Chalk Butte, Meade count ed by lower building prices, s kota, The cornerstone i American Contractor. : ‘laid Soon, and when the stone savings building later in the year i3' into place, the clink of the troweils predicted by Louis J. Horowitz. He’: ill sound a message of gocd will president of Thompson-Starett Com: ‘from President Harding, pany,, world’s largest builders. friend of the pastor, an Siraws In the Wind. | president's church here, Situation in England, large cotton, tigt, . taker, causes gloom in cotton trades! ‘The men’s bible class of the Marioa American culton exports last weeit church that President Harding at- 88,753 bales against 116,794 bales’ tended, before he left for Washington, same week 1£20 and 95,702 bales in| pas taken up a collection ty pay for 1919. ‘the cornerstone, assuring the church's War Finance Corporation will loan) pastor, Rev, John Wynn that it want- $2,000,000 to private. concern to +eq the honor. i finance export of 30,000 bales cotton. ~ Rey, Mr, Wyn used. to preach here, The corporation plans heavy financ-, in the days when Mr. Harding w. ing to boost general exports, which; 4 country editor. He was pastor of are falling off $100,000,000-a month. the Baptist church at Green Camp, _ Price cut by U. S. Steel Corporz-| Marion county, and at one time pas- tion has not yet stimulated sales.|tor of the Emmanuel Baptist church Trade dope is that it will be followed | here. by wage cuts and further price la When the new church at Chalk ing. Cut in tin plate was mad ‘Butte became a_ reality,’ Rev. M1, keep Welsh plate’ out of American; Wynn wrote the men’s Bible c ot markets. Me Trinity church, agking if it didn't Half of idle freight cars “how -are| want the honor of purchasing the coal cars. | stone. Stock market continues dead. Com- A collection for the purpose wa’ bined average of 50 ieading railroad taken up in record tims, *and the and Industrials rose third of a point, moncy is.all ready to forward. The last week. Now point ayd a half high-' corerstone will cost $40. er than end of 1914, | eh. Vv dull) markets: sugar, coffee. NRW CHIEF OF DINING SERVICE IN. LOCAL HOTEL copp & Crude oil output increasing stead-| ily. Brisk gasoline demand, but other | by-products have to be, stored; little! New fall rug and carpet pr Fonnesbeck, of Minneapolis ken charge of the McKenzie ho- "\ tel dining room. Mr. beck was with a cargo of 188,000,000 eggs from Hankow,: China. ' E f :, |. Words, Children, possibly may Fail| in: her She joins the Shock] , 4 y biggest mak Soon, the well-known raspberry will. make it-) in dealing with the Bargain Sale, but| Troops at the Front, and starts a Aeron ey ene eee ' self apparent, in pie and on shirt bosom. iI shall do my best to Sing this Form fierce, relentless Hunt for Something; | price ligt. But housewives are in no danger of having; io ajeensed pgting this Fearsome | Anything will Do that shows a Price ete for nine a half years superinien- H “A 5 | - eminine Carouse, in which the meek-; Mark cut in Two. A Sailor, Hat, a dent of s e for t cafe these eggs passed off on them as the product of Some day someone will write a movie in which''e%t little Spouse who ever made a; Yard of Crepe a Dish-Pan Garters o1 MISSIONARY TO in Minneapolis. and lat vith the Golden Pheasant Inn. He recently completed a four-mouths trip to the t seeking ideas American hens. Chinese eggs are broken before, +, .. . | Cup of Tea, becomes an Aborigine! | sore Tape; a Bird-Cage, Corsets, Ox- i {the husband and wife love each other uninter-! : i a oe tek ee a ee sai being exported. They are then frozen into a: ; Once let her get a passing Hint from | ford Ties or any Sort of Merchandise TALK HERE ON in) the ; : : | rupted by a third party. | Something in a Public Print, that) solid mass, sometimes scrambled, often with the yolks and whites separate. : It would drive a retail dealer mad to explain and argue enough to sell such a product to the canny woman with a market basket, so the Chi-; nese eggs go to bakeries and similar trades. Family-lamp philosophers will wonder why the Chinese do not export their eggs without break-| ing them, and enter into keen competition for our household patronage. The Chinese exporter ex- plains that eggs in the shell break very easily in ocean shipment and that it would be a distressing problem if, say, 188,000,000 eggs got broken in the hold of a transpacific freighter. from American fowl and would not appeal to | ‘an recently deceased grandmothers having jbeen resurrected, business will proceed with full benefit of office boys until the Worruld Serious. i "Comments reproduced ‘in this column may or not express the opinion of The Tribune. They. are prepentea here. in order that Cor renders mney have: oth sides of important issues which are ing; aia cussed in the press of the day. " \ DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH No feature of the socialistic propaganda is more : : But that is just the Chinaman's alibi. The real. familiar than the statement that the great mass; fa bringin, ae abaut’ acusull vues dark reason for shipping eggs “in the knock-down” is Of. wealth is owned by a small minority of rich; himself among the i that Chinese eggs are much smaller than those;men. “Nine-tenths of the wealth of: the nation) ™@"kind and mark the beginning of) weather boarding prove his skill. ‘is contyolled by one-tenth of the people. As H \ By Newspaper Enterprise. . EDITORIAL REVIEW ow rd M. House, one-time confidential a eee }mer's, tha need for joint action by Costs are being snapped in Halt an buy it cheap, to’ Boot she Laughs a grim and ghoulish | And that is Father's Cue to sa. , Laugh, puts on her Hat, and says; Woman DOESN’T always pa: “The i¢ 9 John P. Kraus, neighboring farmer, i€ , iCOL. HO SE Ss ADVICE: and complaining witness for the state. But it also recommended that Smith! be placed under bond for six months New York, April 25.—Colonel Ed- | adviser to former President Wilson, BLIND, UN! points out in “What Really Happened} * | at Paris,” a new book issued by Scrib-{ By Newspaper Enterprise. | Oklahoma City, April 26.—Homer} | world powers in reducing armaments. | Daugherty, 32 blind since he was 4, {House says that. if Pr nt Hard-}has about completed building his} jing should call a conference of the} home, unaided. {| principal powers to provide w: and Daugherty was stone mason, car- means to bring about limitation of penter, painter and paperhanger. He works on the house long after henefactors of] Lack of hammer marks on the a new era. house-wives, particularly those who often won- against this Otto Kahn lately declared that, “of !rding will do this great and need-} PYRRETT TRUE der if it wouldn’t be fairer to sell eggs by weight. the total income of the nation, 88 per cent. goes | The American hen has the true American spirit:to those with incomes of $5,000 or less, and barely | ‘It in seclusion, hidden behind doors, and lays the big eggs. No wonder she cackles so 12 per cent. to those with incomes of $5,000 OF | ment of which would. necessitate m loudly. THE FITTEST—FOR WHAT? The first law of nature is that the fittest sur- vive. When we come to the crown and flower of na- ture, Man, the same law prevails—the fittest sur- vive. The Man only among the living creatures of the earth has the power to determine the condi- tions which surround him. He may make his environments those fit for great. men and wo- men, for a great people, or he may allow it, to re- main, or to lapse, into an environment fit for hu- man vermin. In our society, the fittest will survive—the fit- test for the environment we make or allow. If we let monopoly and privilege work to enslave the masses, the people who survive will be those who are fitted for enslavement. If we build up a: so- ciety in which all the higher qualities of the hu- man race can flower out, in which the economic life will be lifted to a high plane, in which labor will be only a means through which the physical life shall be supported as the foundation for a great spiritual and intelleetual life, then the fittest for enlightenment : for the exercise of the pewers cf the brain end soul will survive. The world ha many great empires made up of swarming pe:ples whose. only fitness for survival lay in wers of multiplication. It more.” The statement is confirmed by the income tax returns for 1918, which have now been thor- oughly analyzed. According to these, the rela-| stive percentages are even more striking, 89.17; other will likely follow.” tand 10.83. |_ This does not, however, tell the whole story. cessfully to the imagination and the ‘From another table it appears that, of the net in-| pomp of war stirred the imagination os *, i . 4 a + come reported, people with incomes of $5,000. or} R28 Passed. | Peoble undersfatd: now less received 59 per cent., while those with in-| comes of over $5,000 received 41 per cent. Thus,| | though only 10.83 per cent. of those reporting had ' incomes of over $5,000, their total incomes were, ‘roughly, two-fifths of the total of net incomes re-| ‘ported. In other words, slightly more than one-| ‘tenth of those reporting received two-fifths of the! ‘income reported. But this figure is subject to a) considerable discount. The total of net incomes | reported is something less than sixteen billions,| which is manifestly less than the normal income, on the resources of the United States. It is well, known that many, and especially those with the! smaller incomes, not only escape payment ‘of the, income tax, but fail to make any report. In the! total of the national wealth, moreover, are to be reckoned multitudes whose income falls below the: minimum for taxation. Out of a population. of above 100,000,000, only 4,425,114 paid an income tax, or about one in twenty-two. Jt is thus obvi- ous that those who receive two-fifths of the total of incomes reported. receive far less than two- fifths of the total income of all Americans.—New has seen others’ which have waned because the’ York Times. : ; a : “It is to be hoped that President : full thing,” he says. i : “Then statesmen. could no longer So MRS. TN and formulate policies, the enforce- Now {T'S tary and naval strength, A grandiose ‘foreign policy has been one of the | fruitful causes of war. Such a‘policy and militarism are of one warp and woof and when the one goes the NAAN NAAN NULYEFPRUIDANY House says that the day when the| jingo and imperialistic appealed suc- he says, what such policies entail and never again will submit to conditions which bring in their train so fright- ful a trail of suffering and death. ay ee EDITOR ACQUITTED Minneapolis, April 26:—George H. Smith of Maple Plain, editor of the Lambasting, Lampooning Premonitor, was ‘acquitted recently by a jury of “12 good men and true” in Judge W. C. Leary’s district court with a fly in the ointment. This jury said he was not guilty of firing four shots, with intent to kill, at $3 FREEZONE = Sri Corns Lift Off with Fingers — Ss WN ts THAT LAN i AIA ANN a Drop a little “Freezone” on an ach- ing corn, ‘instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. It doesn’t hurt a bit, Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the cal- luses, without a particle of pain, \\ An NW will satisfy her ‘Craze for Loot, if ‘she ae el {as many CALL ON You AT 3 O'CLOCIC, AND EE, MRS, TRUE, JUST HOw IT IS | ‘ge keer WALTING se | largest cates. Mr, Fonnesbeck 1 deliver an address in| believed he knew 21 n church, Wednesday) who had patronized th zers dur evening at 7:30 in the main audi-/ing the time he was with that torium. Paisley has been in. Bismarck, he declared, w: India, nce 1913 and has witnessed’ throughout the Northwest a t changes that have been whose people demanded the ve place during these crucial, jn everything. times, and will bring a message re-| ‘phe McKenzie managem plete with interest to the student of| to serve meals during the world affairs. Opportunities like this]tne root garden, weath sum r permilting. ! cannot be duplicated save by a per-} pdlsniest tate rackehi al visit to these distant lands, a HELPED HER LITTLE GIRL. privilege that comes to few, and @pidren need all their s a rength fi should be seized as presented. The erowing. A Tit ‘ evens chorus choir will furn h ne them so that the WHET tack by mor s been Sek) Amanda Flint, ssent to enjoy) Pat cured my Tittle girl of . sce | tickli cough, as women and il irae teed 3 : got Foley’s Hon mediate relief ng, tearing coughs. . BY CONDO) SMITH PROMISED TO in ressing, — Ady, NAME NEW OFFICERS: Minot, Ap: The follo pointments have been made by city commi n of Minot City attorn John J. City auditor-—Mr ¢ Assistant city, auditor—Roler ie. y treasurer—Mrs, Helen Scofield. City engincer—William F. Geiicl- man. Superintendent of waterwo:ks—W. W. Peterson, 7 Chief of police—Larry M. Bryne. Police matron—Mrs. John Camp- You CAN 4:30 | Musterole. Loosens Up. Those | Stiff Joints—Drives Out Pain You'll know ‘why. thousands use So tt — THERE SHE COMES | Musterole once’ you experience the (MARTE LU | glad relief it gives. | Get a jar at once from the nearest | drug store. It is a clean, white oint- ment, madé.with the oil of mustard. | -Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Brings ease and comfort while it is being rubbed on! Musterole is recommended by many doctors and nurses. Millions of jars are ‘used annually for ichitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheu- matiam, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or. joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (itoften prevents pneumonia). 35c and: 6§c jars; hespital:size $3,00

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