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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUN HARVEY QUITS PUBLICATION WHILE ENVOY Last Issue of Harvey’s Weekly Appears as Editor Goes to England New York, April 27—The last is- sue of Harvey’s Weekly has appeared, its editor and owner, Colonel George Harvey, having announced upon his appointment as ambassador to Great Britain that he would discontinue its publication, ‘Under the caption of “Goodbye: A Brief Autobiography,” the demise of the weekly was announced with a re- view of its three years fight against)) President Wilson and the League of ‘Nations. “The final test came in the national campaign,” the autobiography state: “And when the votes were counted, the glorious news was heralded that America had redeclared her independ: ence by a majority of nearly 8,000,000. It remained only for the new presi- dent to clinch the nail already driven into the coffin of the wretched league, and this with fidelity to his pledge and with characteristic finality, he did in his first message to congress. “So the war is won; the league is dead; autocracy is no more; the nin- compoops are out.” The “autobiography,’ presumably written by Colonel Harvey, adds that the weekly has been accused of “sav- age attacks and vehement and vit- riolic assault.” “The charges are true,” the auto- biography continues. “I have drawn upon all my resources. I have given freely and I have accepted cheerily. A fight'’s a ght. I maintain simply that I have told nothing but the truth. That I have set down naught in malice or vindictiveness and that J cherish no resentments now when | pass on as innocent .as may be upon the fulfillment of what I conceive to be my mission. My editor * * * 1 owe one debt+of deepest gratitude. When .he decided that for various reasons he should change his voca- tion, he refused to treat as a com- modity. I cannot say truthfully that I die happy, because I love life, in- deed I do; but the fact remains that my work, such as it has been, is fin- ished and I rest content in the arms of my maker.” The current number of the North American Review, of which Colonel Harvey also was editor, contains an announcement that henceforth he will have no connection with its di- rection, PARACHUTE PAPER London, April 27.—The Aerial Mail will soon go to press. It will be edit- ed and printed in a flying airplane and distributed to various cities by parachute. There will be editions for Boulogne, Rouen, London and Paris, Planes leaving Paris will print the Mail in English. Those leaving London will print in French. ‘ . The paper will publish special stock exchange reports and late sport news. The Aerial Mail will consist of four pages and will be published by sub- scription, From Our York Correspondent By Newspaper Enterprise. ‘York, S. C., April 27.—“Judge” Fred Black couldn't do a thing for Alex Stewart when Alex came with a com- plaint about Martha, his wife. Judge,” Alex told the magistrate, “dere ain't no way to git erlong wid dat ‘oman. She's ’stravagant. She puts three sticks ob wood under de wash pot when one stick would keep de fire het and de pot bilin’. “Furdermo’, she am always hodder- in’ mahself fur money. Ebery day, an’ sometimes two or free times in de day, she come a-pesterin’ me ‘bout money. Ah is mos’ crazy, Ah is, suh.” “What does Martha do with all this money, Alex?” inquired the judge, fol- lowing the telling of the tale of woe. “Ah duno, sah,” replied Alex; “Ah hain’t nebber gib her none.” NECK BROKEN, WALKS London, April 27.—L. Mennie, 70, has a broken neck, but he walks about the streets of Hoxton like any other man. Paralysis set in after the acci- dent. It was treated successfully and doctors say Mennie’s life will not be shortened. Do You Know the “Knack” of Shaking Hands? Know how to shake hands? pose 1,600 people faced you, could you give ’em all a good, firm grip and still be able to sign your own name or lift your aching arm? Answer: you could not—unless you know the PEACE SENTIMENT GROWS AMONG JAPANESE America and Japan can solve their problem peacefully if each properly upNderstands the other. Tg contri- bute to this understanding 4nd thus avert the peril of war, William Philip Simms is studying conditions in the Orient for the readers of the Bis- marck Tribune. Every Simms article is vital to you.The Editor. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS, Written Expressly for The Newspaper Enterprise ociation. Tokyo, April 27.—There is a rising tide of sentiment in Japan against war and in favor of peace. And this peace party is looking to the Unitec States to take the lead and give the movement direction. The army and navy clang are ex- tremely powerful, and Japan’s high po- sition among the powers of the world is mostly the result of’ their handi- work—a very strong argument in fa- vor of their continuing to carve out the destiny of the empire. But a re- action has set in against this domin- ation and if given proper encourage- ment, particularly by the other great powers, a new turn may he given to things in Japan. This party—the term is not used in its political sense—has learned, that war brings disaster even to the win- ners. Vast armaments, it knows, keep the country’s nose to the grind- stone no matter how good its busi- ness. Landgrabbing doesn’t pay as a for- eign policy, it readily admits, and it does not want to see Japan engage In it. This is no foxy pose on the part of the Japanese who express. these sentiments. I have heard them from too many sources, from men in too many different walks of life for it to]: be a put-up- job, One of the first I heard utter this desire for an understanding between the United States and Japan was none other than a second steward I knew who worked on a Japanese ship ply- ing betwen Hong Kong and San Fram cisco. t I met him by accident: in Moto- machi, a side street in Yokohama, “I hope you say something in your paper about no make war,” he said, after passing the, compliments of the day and introducing. me, to his family —a little girl, perhaps 10 years old, Half Mad With Itching? Clean Out Your Blood That flaming, torturous itch that | S.S.S., the vegetable blood remedy, drives itch elf raw} is excellent. rity i aotecily ca pended on it for half a century. and bleeding is generally caused by impure, disordered blood. You can religve it thoroughly only veer the impurities o is eep-ft wholesonias Then as are due pag ey fe wok noseib old UseD 5) YEAR FOR SKIN TROUBLES Thousands have de- Your druggist, will supply you with S.S.S., and if you 5 Will write us a history of your trouble, we will give you expert medical ad- vice free. Address Chief Medical Advisor, 842 Swift Laboratory, At- lanta, Georgia. SORTS SSUUUeneenueancecuccencocacccnconneescocaicanien Ellington Howard Modello and Monarch nUnaaunucenuancauoageT LE. MAYNARD’S MUSICAL MERCHANDISE ‘ 214 Main Street. Phone 978 The House of Baldwin Pianos ‘iddicom| Phonographs Sheet Music Player Rolls Phonograph Records Last Word Terms for Those Who Do Not Wish to Pay Cash” Pianos, String: Instruments and Phonographs Repaired MANUALO ‘The Playcr Piano That Is All But Human” , HUKUEOUSAUOUSAUOOGHUOLOUOON in Pianos Sup- “knack” of wholesale handshaking. The president has to know it; Other- wise his hand and arm would be sore half the time. Here, for example, is a line of 1,600 delegates to the D, A. R. convention, waiting to shake Presi- dressed in a gayly-colored kimono with tobis and clogs to match, and a little boy, similarly, though more sob- erly, attired, “Why do you say that?” I asked, a bit surprised. “Japanese people no want war,” he replied. “They fight if make ‘em fight, but heap rather work, make money, get rich.” There he had said it. I was after- wards to learn that there is a wide- spread desire, in high circles and low, to see Japan adopt a policy of “peace- ‘ful penetration,” sell her goods all over the world and wax rich. And what they are afraid of is that some other nation, or nations, notably the United States, will block the rgad by the use of greater wealth and greater power. Propagandist Busy. There are in Japan, of course, a class of. business men whose like are in every country, They would like to see Japan gobble up China, tail- feathers and all. These, naturally enough, side with the “strong-policy- in-Asia” crowd and both are desirous of having Japan declare a Monroe Doctrine over the Far East and make the doctrine go the limit as a primacy of interests. Too, there are some Japanese «iho sincerely believe America has set about deliberately to get in Japan’s way whichever way the country turns. These usually belong to the old schbol, Chauvins to the core. So there is a fertile field for anti- American propaganda, some sincere, some not, while there is every reason to believe that outside nationalities— but nations, necessarily—are putting their finger in the pie, too. There is a well-grounded belief among some of, the Americans out here that certain classes of people in nations outside Japan-and America, who would not lie awake nights wor- rying if these two countries should go to war. Both these countries pros- pered during the war; both might he taken down a peg. If there ig the slightest grain of truth behind this belief—and to he honest with the readers of this paper I must confess I-have had it from sources neither American nor Japan- ese but from most unexpected quar- ters—it is a dangerous situation avd the two countries thus egged on would do well to go slow, particularly as the best opinion in both fs against war. At the Japanese Foreign Office 1 was assured that Japan has no ag- gressive designs against the United States. Everywhere I have been the story has been,the same: Instead of conflict with the United States the Japanese insist they are anxious for a complete understanding. “If we are to be friendly,” Viscount Ei-ich Shibusawa, “the Grand Old Man” of Japan, told me, “the whole question must be thoroughly and frankly threshed out,” This was said one afternoon. at his Taki-no-kawa home near Asuka Hill I had arrived by appointment, at 2:30 P. M., for a short talk and it was now 5:30 o'clock, the Viscount has missed two other, appointments and the conversation was still going ju | on. \ Told of Errors, I had told the viscount very frank- ly what, in my opinion, had been some of the Japanese errors in California and elsewhere on the coast, and he, in turn, had replied just as frankly that all the errors had not been on the side of his countrymen. Tea wa: served in the viscount'’s “European salon,” and finally the conference ad- journed to meet again the following Tuesday, at the Bankers’ Club, Tokyo. at which time Viscount Shibusawa would have some of his friends pres- ent. At ‘the Tuesday conference, in ad- dition to Viscount Shibusawa, were Viscount Kentaro Kaneko, graduate of Harvard University, class of ‘78. and lifelong friend of the late Colonel Theodore Roosevelt; Dr. Takuma Dan, director of Mitsui Bank; a former mayor of Tokyo and a number of eee WEDNESDAY, RIL 27, 1921 CLAIM 800 SIGN UP IN MINOT RECALL \ ‘tions seeking a recall of W. M. Smart president. of the city commission, and Commissioner G. D. Shaft have he- tween 800 and 1,000 signatures today, it is stated. The drive for signatur is being carried on quietly and the pe- titions will probably be filed with the city auditor sometime the latter part of this week for action at the meeting of the commission a week from today. it is stated. _ Thus far no one man or set of men have admitted to be responsible tor the petitions being circulated as fi as can be learned, but there is stated to be an effort toward securing signa tures. It is stated in some quart that the petitions are heing circul: i by persons who were promised city positions by the new regime while other quarters claim the petitions are ‘the work, of city employes who were / not re-appointed, Sentiment as to the. recall seems divided, Reports have it that a petition is being circulated to ask the board lo ;Te-appoint Chief of Police McDonald. President Smart’s friends claim the | recall igs being pushed by city em- ' ployes who lost their positions whea :apppintments were made. ‘WHEAT POOL BOOMS, Kansas Farmers Pledge Crop to National’ Association By Newspaper Enterprise. Hutchinson, Kan., April 27.—Kansas dent Harding’s-hand. His weekly rou- tine includes shaking hundreds, often) thousands, of hands. The “knack” is illustrated in the close-up picture.: Beat the other party to the grip. And: 1 me farmers are counted on to meet the font erip the offered hand too fa"! 51 990,000-bushel minimum for the | wheat pool in this state. Five hundred of them, members of others, The. meeting lasted through';the National Wheat Growers’ Associa- the afternoon, during dinner, and well|tion, have voted unanimously to adopt after, the gist of the conversations; the 100 per cent compulsory pooling being that the time has come when|Plan for the 1921 crop. both nations must put their cards| Ata mass meeting here they cheered face up on the table, meet and thresh|When officers of their association out the whole string of differences |turned down the plan of the Commit- and ‘get back on a basis of the friend-|tee of Seventeen, indorsing the option- ship which Commodore Perry and/4! Plan of pooling, recently adopted at Consul Townsend Harris began. j@ conference in Chicago. All signed “Sh aa “contracts to pool their grain and vol- Shibusawa-ism, junteered afd as workers. Viscount Shibusawa has been ac-| A. C, Bailey, chairman of the Com- cused, in America, of hypnotizing| mittee of Twenty-one, in charge of American visitors to Japan. I found} gétting the minimum pool for Kansas, him a:very earnest, very hospitable} said: old gentleman—he is eighty-odd, but; “From now on our pool will go like looks yourfger—merely sincerely de-| wildfire. We were not sure at Chi- sirous of bringing Japan and the|cago that the growers would back us United States ‘to an understanding.|up. Now that we have the backing Nothing sinister about him. ithere will be no compromise.” “I feel that “is my one remaining| Other state gatherings will be held Unless you see the name Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost — - + | Remarkable Remarks | i “Some of the biggest men have told me that wet England cannot compete in the commercial world with dry America,”-—"Pussyfoot” Johnson, * * “Young women of today expect to encounter rudeness from young men! and they don’t much resent it.” Charles W. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard. ee oe “If we brought in all the people who are making brew in their homes, we'd have one-fourth of the people in jail.” Municipal Judge Seidel, Columbus, Ohio. “This age is no more wicked than Every generation is d to make it inter. Abba Hillel Silver, esting.”—Rapbi Cleveland. se 4 a gigantic econo- rles E. Hughes, | “Soviet Russia i. mic vacumm.”—( secretary of state. * # 8 “The ambition of the youth of today is to smoke a cigaret, and from ap-! pearances most have accomplished the} feat.”-Judge Black, Flint (Mich.) ju-} venile court. +4 | “Moral laws will be a condemnation | unless under them is a moral power,” | ‘Bishop Philip M. Rhinelander, Epis- copal, ‘Pennsylvania, mission in my life,”’hé told me, “and,” | by the National Wheat Growers’ Asso- he chuckle#’ “if that is ‘Shibusawa-|Ciataion in Oklahoma, Texas, Nebras- ism’ then I don’t mind how much they |ka. North and South Dakota, Minne- accuse me of it.” jsota and Colorado. Continuing, he said: “I feel it ‘my mission all the more| to promote friendship betwen the two! countries because I was first anti-) foreign and came, through my visits; to the United States, to see my error. “You see, I was brought up in a small Japanese’ town and was taughiti to hate foreigners. Then Perry came,! and Townsend Harris; then I traveled abroad and changed ny mind.” Want U. S. to Lead. All these people—they are mostly business men, though Viscount Ka- neko is a peer and a member of the privy council—are anxious for th+} United States to take the lead for aj general understanding, They want America to show Japan and the world the way to disarma- ment. j They want some kind of an under- standing with the United States as to! China and the Far East generally. They foresee danger if things are allowed to’ drag on and they are | therefore eagerly waiting for Presi- dent Harding to sound the key. President Harding said: “We hold no national prejudice. We do not hate.. We do not covet. We dream of no conquests nor boast of armed prowess.” He also said: | “Mankind needs a worldwide henedic- | tion of understanding.” If he can make the Japanese understand and believe what he said about prejudice, hatred and covetousness, Japan anl the United States will be well on their way to an agreement. | (Copyright, 1921, N. E. A,) SMALLEST MAN SUES FOR DIVORCE By Newspaper Enterprise. Laporte, Ind., April 27.—This is about a divorce. The: long and short of it is that Che Wah, smallest man in the world, has sued his wife, who is more than three times as tall, charging that she abandoned him, Che Wah, 28 inches high, traveled with a circus until ten years ago as the Mongolian Tom Thumb. ‘He weighs 40 pounds, is 83 years old, and wealthy. ‘His wife is nearly six feet. She married Che Wah after his first wife! had died. A son by his first wife! grew to be a normil-sized man, Judge Pennington has taken the case under advertisement. 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Foley’s Honey and Tat Compound fives prompt relief from coughs, tolds, horr-eness, tickling throat, whoopic | modi¢ cfoup ead broac! | “Oh, Goodie!’ OU, too, would bubble over with joy if Established 1902 “We have today not a national cur- rency in circulation among the people, but a banker’s currency.”—Represen-! tative Sinclair, North Dakota. | someone handed you Krisps. Know what they are? Deliciously crisp graham crackers all covered with rich chocolate., Taste and nourishment in one. Big Sioux Coco Krisps, like a// Big Sioux Cookie-Cakes and Crackers, are especially delicious because made methods with purest, tested ,ingredients, Get a packagé at your by skilled bakers. grocers today. G SIO Aapirin ts the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaccticactdest _ WARNING “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for Minot. April 27.—The recall peti-!' 24 years, and proved safe by millions—Say “Bayer”! SAFETY FIRST! 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