The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1921, Page 2

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MANDAN NEWS CLUB BANQUET | IS PLANNED The banquet committee of the Fed- erated clubs of Mandan have made arrangements to serve the banquet which’ will be tendered the visiting delegates, at the Lewis and Clark hotel, Thi: ‘dinner which will take place on May 25 is a part of the program for. ithe District Federation meeting, and’ a large attendance of Mandan club members is anticipated. The committee on toasts and program havé not as yet ‘decided their num- bers, which. will be announced later as will also the general program and that of the Endowment concert to be given at this time. RETURN HOME Mn and Mrs. E. A.- Ripley and daughter Lois are again at home after a sojourn in California which extend- ed through the late winter and spring months. FEDERAL JUDGE SELRCTION NOW BEING 1 DEBATED Political Leaders in in State Are Deeply Concern Over New | Appointment MANY ARE MENTIONED | Need for Additional’ Judges is! Held Urgent Through Illness of udge Amidon The appointment of a new federal judge for the district of ‘North. Da-| kota is arousing great interest in} North Dakota among men interested! in politics and among the lawyers. The, bill introduced by Senator Mc-! Cumber, designed to permit ap) int-| ment of a federal judge to sit in North: Dakota as a.companion judge to J udge| Amidon until the latter retires, is ex-! pected to become a law soon. There] is little doubt of its passage and the} certainty of it becoming a law has! caused talk to be centered upon the! judgeship. Andrew Miller, of Miller, Zuger. &| Tillotgon, of Bismarck, is being urged! for the position, Yesterday a number of his friends in Bismarck here signed! an endorsement of him, to be trans-! mitted. to Senator McCumber. Mr,| | ceivership for our railways. s+ 8 umnnanannnrannunundunnnunaunnniel MOTORS TO BISMARCK (Mr. and Mrs. Thane Sponsel motor- ed to Bismarck Wednesday, where they had business and social engage- ments. RETURNS FROM MINNEAPOLIS Mrs, George H. Bingenheimer re- turned from Minneapolis Wednesday morning. ’G. A. Bingenheimer of the ‘Bingenheimer Mercantile company ac- companied her to Mandan. HONOR GUEST Miss Onetta ‘Ferguson was an honor guest at the social evening which fol- lowed the regular meeting of Daughters .of ‘Isabella on Tuesday evening. ‘Miss Ferguson left Wed- nesday for her home in Minneapolis, ‘AT DEACONESS HOSPITAL, Mrs. Glen Rathman, who was oper- atted at the Deaconess hospital some time ago is convalescing rapid- ly and will soon be sufficiently re- covered to be discharged from the hospital. Republican majority in the Senate. | There are a number of Republican | senators who feel that the White ‘House is attempting to dictate to the Senate what it shall and shall not do, “The Senate is being denied free- dom of expression and. action,” one irate senator declares, “because the | president thinks action by us on cer- tain questions ‘would ‘force his hand’.” (Watch the New York, ‘New Haven & | Hartford railroad as an index ‘of rail- road hardihood and endurance during the present railway crisis. If that | | tellway is able to, keep its head above | water.for the next three months, rail- roads generally will pull through, is ‘the word passed out by government railway experts. If the New Haven fails to weather | the tide and is forced into a seceiver- ship, it may be the break that will start our whole railway structure crumbling and result in a general re- Afternoon guests ‘at the. White House may be refreshed, if they choose by a sip of tea. But while tea is on tap for the callers, Mrs. | Harding herself will have a cup of | Java, thank you. The first lady never partakes of ea—abominatés it, in fact. But cof- fee? ‘Well, thats different. There's something to coffee! ‘ Tariff revisionists are having a hard time, . All the old landmarks by which: tariff schedules could be gaug- ed have been wiped out by the war | and the Pregent world-wide industrial chaos. Too high a tariff, or in many cases any tariff at all, will choke off im- Miller is understood to be in Wash:| ington now. / Ladd’s Choice.) | Senator Ladd has announced he will! recommend. Seth Richardson, of ‘Fargo, defeated in the primary and at the election as candidate for ‘supreme| court judge by Judge Christianson.} ‘While Senator ‘Ladd, being junior sen-| ator, is not expécted to have the! power to distribute much patronage! _ in ‘Nortlt Dakota, Nonpartisans are) backing up his contentions in favor ot i Richardson. A third man who is understood not! to be a candidate in any sense of the! word but whose friends have urged | his name is Judge’ A, M. Christian-| son, of the supreme court. Judge} Christianson entered on his second! six-year term on the supreme. bench of the state last. January, and. some of his friends are loth to see him, suggested for a position which would} transfer his energies {rqgm the su- preme bench to a federal Position, | while other friends say he js the; best qualified of all suggested. | ‘Several others have been mention; ed, among them former District Judge Crawford, of Dickinson, who; became widely known as a jurist while on the district bench.- Judge W. L. Nuessle, of Bismarck been mentioned in the talk of men for the place. Judge E. B. Goss and Francis Murphy, of Minot, also are mention- ed. Judge Goss’ friends are said to have proposed his name when the decision was reached by (McCumber to Introduce the bill) providing. for another place. Few lawyers in the eastern part of the state have been talked of as candidates for the position, excepting’ Richardson. Is Urgent Need There is held to be ar-urgent need for the appointment of a federal judge for North Dakota, because of the illness of Judge Amidon, It. is said there is a man in jail at Fargo who has been waiting for trial in fed- eral court for several. months, and the court business has been piling up, Federal Judge Woodrough, of Omaha, disposed. of much business Jast year, when he was temporarily transferred from his own district. e position of federal judge is a life appointment, with retirement pay provided, THE INSIDE NEWS AT _WASHINGTON Hunt By a BH Washington, May 12.—Pressure from}, ports and -thereby Jessen the. ability | of other countries to buy from us and to pay us what they already owe, Low tariffs or no tariffs at all | may. result in flooding the» country with cheap foreign manufactures and the closing down of our: own factories. RED LEADERS OF RUSSIA SEEK ‘TO PLACATE FACTIONS Helsingfors, May 12,: — -Recent speeches of Bolshevist leaders.in Rus- sig and the utterances of the- Bolshe- vist preas have jndicated a:double pur- pose—to appease both peasants and city workers, whose interests: are yery different. This two-sided attitude is aintain- ed, it is said, to. concliiate the peas- ants, who form the vast. majority in Russia, even at the-cost:of sacrificing some Communist préncipl ‘and at the same time of persuadlog Y the town workers that:the adoption of @ con- servative land. policy like the grgnt- {ing of concessions to forelgngra,-'s ig a clever bit of tactics. Nikolai’ Lenine, the» Bolshevist Premier, addressing a meeting of rail- way workers at Moscow the other day, dwelt on “the last battle” with the peasants, whom he..characterized as an uncertain factor that might swing in favor of. capitalism or of the. pro- letariat. “The. peasants helped the revolu: tion,” he declared, “but now they are tired and have swung around to a Pronounced petite bourgedisie. They might even turn monarchist.” This “last battle” with the peasants is in reality-a battle of conjolement. It is a campaign to win over the land workers. The well known, journal |’ Derevenskaja Kommuna (Village Commune), has ~been jerchristened Derevenskaia Pravda (Village Truth), ‘and the peasants are peget to re- gard it as their special paper and to make their wants known’ to its sym- pathetic ear. “You. must. know, peasants,” - it writes, “that if you will not support Soviet rule, tomorrow the: resuscitat- ed white generals will reappear. Only the czar can replace the Bolsheviki. You must decide for yourselves wheth> er you want him or not. Meanwhile the peasants are filled with relief at the substitution of 3 corn tax: for the odious requisition and the re-introduction of free com-| merce. many sources to induce the adminis- hs tration to take a hand in the wage feadjustment problem will fail. That is a question, administration |i jheada hold, which must be ironed out!) by capital and labor. themselves, with- out influence from the. government. ‘As one cabinet member sums it up: “It is not the province of govern- ment to tell a worker what wages he should accept. or an employer what wages he should pay.” An anti- Paaaaleiratiol group, al ready is beginning to form among the | ‘KODAK FiNISHING| lity Work for the Amateur _ *SLORRY STUDIO succes: HOLMBOE the; Enrico Caruso’ 's recent illness left hi noted tenor smiles the same old im thin and ‘weak, but the Caruso-smile. He is able to be out now for a brief daily automobile ride in New York. This pic- ture shows him entering his apartment with Mrs. Caruso, after .{a ride. CAPT. COOPER JUST, CANT: BE- KILLED ABOUT bees TIME 0’ YEAR By Newspaper Enterpris Warsaw, May nee Merian C. Cooper, commander of the Koscius- ko squadron, Poland's famous flying corps; has just iearned the war is over. He rejoined his command here after. escaping from ‘a Bolshevik prison camp near..Moscow. All Warsaw is at the feet of the American. ace who ' was twice” shot down from the clouds, twice endurcd the squalor of prisoa camps, twice was reported dead. His comrades’ gathered about ‘him and-asked for an account of his ex- periences. “Shucks.” he answered. “I just heard a few days ago the war js over. If there isn’t any more work to be done I might as well haye stayed in prison.” i Off With the Beard! While in prison he was without benefit of razor,'so had to wear a flow- ing beard—just like the Bolsheviks. “I never felt so good in my life as I did frien I got rid of that spinach,” he said. “A man has to hate himseli to wear that kind of facial mask. Guess that’s the reason the Boishies wear ’em.” , The official organof the aviation corps hailed him as “perhaps: the greatest hero of the war” at the close of the World War. Record of his exploits is gained only from ‘records and accounts of com- rades, for Captain Cooper refuses to talk about, himself. Close to Death. . “He piloted a bombing phine over Alsace, Sept. 28, 1918, aid. was en- gaged in fight by. the Huns’ flying cir- cus. He and Lieutenant E. C. L-on- ard put two.or three German SccZern out of commission, Leonard’ was shot through the shoulder. Agother bullet set the petrol tank afire. “Cooper started to vol- plane. The fire burned-his hands. Cooper, thinking Leonard was dead loosened his life belt ‘o leap to a more mercifu] death than burning. Seeing Leonard. writhe in pain and knowing he still lived, he grasped the controls between his leather-covered elbows. ‘he plane landed in a forest. While Cgoper was ministering to ‘Leonard they were captured by Germans. Armistice | negotiations ‘saved’ tm from the firing squad. ! Saptain Cooper. served with the Hoover Relief Commission in Poland. Then .with other erican aviators who sympathized with the Poles’ fight against the Bolsheviks, jhe organized the Kosch squadron. He was repeatedly cited for bravery” General Pilaudski decorated him. — * Price. on Life. Rewards for hig capture were of- fered by Lenin and Trotzky. He was shot down and taken prisoner, but gaye aM assumed name. He again- faced starvation at freezing in a prison camp. Comrades and relatives knew nothing of his fate. BATTERIES Guaranteed for 2 Years Electric Service & Tire Co. 215 Main Street i But his comrades sald, kill, Coop.” They were right. Cooper learned that the Bolgheyiks had identified him. Cooper and two Polish officers bribed a guard and escaped through barbed wire entanglements, They traveled “They can't YOUNG GIRLS NEED GARE M thers!" Watch Your Dat Daughters’ Health ‘Health Is i easicr for her. She needs th Tn alLauch cases L ns.it i IB Read how Mrs. Eicher hel “At the-age of sixteen my She bad pains across her beck would pi matried-daughter recommended and I read'the books which were | and give you permi T was thirteen: nee ry backward I I would bear 1 ‘Toad in oe daily paper about ae took my 5 pending money and that I Sooke it regulatiy after at a have any more pain or Backache now enou: shall give her none othet at might. and posed’ ag. German refu- gees. . He reached Riga and cabled bis father at. Jacksonville, Fla.,. that he was safe, ‘Then he proceed led to War- saw to be mustered out of “service. A (Copyright, 1921, 21, by Ne N. B.A) MISSIONARY IS... GIVING LIFE 10. AID OF LEPERS Heroic Story.of Sacrifice of Mary Reed in Indian Village is Told sy rics London, May 12—A story of berive self-sacrifice and devotion, has. reacn- ed England from the. leper. village ot Chandag, India, where Mary Reed,.a solitary white woman. missionary, giving her life to ministry to the sut: ferings of her fellow. lepers. ‘ News. of, her, isolated life was brought back by. Mr. Oldrieve,. organ- jaing. secretary of the Mission to Lep- ers, who. has. just returned from a 70,000-mile journey. visiting. all the Lepers, who. has just returned from a 70,000-mite Journey. visiting. all the Jeper colonies in India. Thirty years ago ‘Miss Reed wen! into this desolate spot inthe Himgl- ayag, 6,000 feet above the sea level, WA newspapers.”’—Mrs. KATIE EICHER, ae N.F Mrs. Williams will profit by her own When aah oa had sick spel and my Spother knew nothing about it. ears old and have cheond girl of my own, and aay than Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve; Sac Pa ag offering -herself to. the leper cause. Although a victim of the malady, she is’ till able to carry on her spiritual work among these afflicted like her- self. Migs. Reed’ seldom gees white. peo- ple for her station {s 80 miles from the nearest railway line. There are 46. women. lepers in the community and 19 men in the men’s refuge a short distance away. - According to Mr. Oldrieve, there are 200,000 lepers in India. ‘At pres- ent,” he declared, “it ig not right to say.that any cure: for leprocy has been found.” thir COMMITTEE TO MEET MAY 10 ON LEGION PLANS Devils Lake, \N. D, May 12.—The executive committee of the North De- kota department of the American Le- gion will meet at Devils Lake, May 10 to help arrange for the first state convention of auxiliaries to Legion posts ‘of the state, to be held here (May 12, The Tim Running post of Devils Lake and its auxiliary are cooperating in making convention ar: rangements. More than 200 wonten are expected Happiness From the time's girl reaches the age of twelve until womanhood is estab- lished she needs all the care.‘ the thoughtful mother can ives Pie condition that the \\ irl is then passing through () * co eritical and may have ’ guch far- reaching effects ae her future happiness aud health- that it is almcst criminal for a mother or guardian to withhcld coun- sel or advice. Many a woman has.suf- fered years of proionged pet, and- misery through been the vi f nee lessnrhe ue rauceon re Part o those who should have guided her through the dangers and difficujties that beset this Peothers should teach their , fee what’ danger comes rom standing around with cold or wet feet, from lifting heavy articles, and. from overworkin; Do - not let her overs: If she com: plains of headache, pains in the back and lower lirnbs, onif. your netice aslowness of thought, nervousness or irritability on the part of your itful care for a few. years. ydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound should be given cially adapted for.suth conditions. It contains notbing that can injure an aa he taken in perfect safety. her.daughter. ter was having trouble every month. in .her sides. Every month her back ther so she could not do. her work and would h ave to lie down. My Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound door. She he (gk it faithfully and is now regular and has no pain.- We recommend ission to publish this rcorarend in jour little ‘daughter, male life She says: table Compound books and in the © i St., ‘Philadelphia, Pa. erience. She says: s each month and as I was ikham’s Vegetable mpound ‘and a abottle. It helped me so much had taken tee bottles and I did not ve been a healthy, strong woman. I am when het eta On on pound.”’—Mrs. C. WIiiaqs, 2437 W. Toronto St., Phil For almost. fifty relieving women, y' neighbors about it, for 4 ‘Thawsends of is of ‘letters ii of Pinkham Medicine Co., and f Compound for years such letters Lat been it is worth yout while tomake a fair trial of Lydia E. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been a Lal ‘old, of ailments peculiar to their ex, Ask your every. neighborhood there are women who know of to the above are in the les of the Lydia E. blished. Surely ’3, Vegetable vdia_ EB. Pinkhamvs Private Text-Book pon TPES pope to. Women” will besent to you free upon request. Write ydia E. Pinkham M contains valuable in: icine C Lyan, Massachusetts. to attend the convention, when a North. Dakota department of the ‘women's auxiliary will be organized and officers elected. » All members of the executive com mitteo of the. North Dakota depart- “ment of the American Legion are ex pected to be present at the conven- tion. The committee is comprised of all’ the Lee officers as fol- lows: Landers of Minot. com: eee en Bangs of Grand. Forks, vice commander; Jack wane ot Fargo, adjutant R. Paird of inson, treasure and LW. Upshaw of Jamestown, ‘chaplain, DISMARCK.N.DAK. O1aMONDS.“JEWELRY. GRADUATION AND ) WEDDING GIFTS ARE OUR SPECIALTY We so hard to know what to.give. Why not let us help you: decide? We have had many years epiene i in-helping people select gifts. We have a large and carefully selected stock from which to choose. And there’s an added satisfaction in purchasing .a sift here — an added pleasure to the Graduate or Bride who receives it. The name of this store is a symbol of Qual- ity. Both giver‘and recipient know that the article is one - of real value and ayality—that it is exactly as it appears to be. F. A. KNOWLES Jeweler and Optician — Established in Bismarck since 1907. JAGER 521 Broadway Phone 18 Light and Heavy Hauling SAND and: GRAVEL _ House Moving Piano and Fuiniture Moving || » Exeavating and. Grading COAL and WOOD All Work Guaranteed For that Thirsty Feeling : Try fey he ‘No Boiling. No Fussing Ask Your Dealer‘ Bismarck Grocery Co. Distributors. 4 “CAR WASHING CORWIN MOTOR co N The First Natibnal Bank Wishes to Announce The Organization of The Burleigh County Boys’ and Girls’. Purebred Pig Club. Conforming to a general movement in our great Northwest to promote the raising of Purebred Livestock, the First National Bank of Bismarck’ has: procured at weaning time twenty purebred sow-pigs which it will place in the hands of twenty Burleigh County Boys and Girls, The pigs will be allotted by an impartial drawing io” boys and girls not under ten years of age nor over eizh- teen, subject to the usual rules governing the formation of such clubs. A copy of.these rules and suggestions for the conduct of the club may be had on application to the First National’ Bank. Applications for Pigs will be reg- istered at the First National Bank and ~ DRAWING WILL BE HELD ON JUNE 2ist. 20% Discount on all Brunswick Tires and Tubes > t i “ ’ j 4 ‘ i se Hy j Ww Tee q H 4 . ¥ H 4 ) eo a, » N ¢ ra " ee ft . “ a f oe | ees \ ee | i i tal a

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