The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 19, 1921, Page 3

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iS rll aa oo Qs i y «ft! 4, ‘ Py & % ie ; { a Ly . , ql l 4 , THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1921 U. §. WOULD WHIP _ JAPAN, ASSER'NS YH. G. A, SECY Talks to Audience at Chicago on Trip tothe Orient , Chicago, May 19.—<A fight to-a fin- ish between Japan apd the United “After Every Meal” y Get thrice-dally benefit trom this low-cost aid to appetite and digestion {t keeps téeth white breath sweet © and throat The F :avor-Lasts States would result in Japan’ being wiped off the may,” George Bleason, returned from a trip through the Orient declared) today in addressing the international disarmament con- gress here. . Mr. Gleason declared that “only those living in the kindergarten of: in- ternational affairs could picture the possibility of war between this coun- try and Japan, ; however, “and that combined all the friction growing out of the Yap, Korea, China and Califor- nia would not affect the: remotest cause for war. LEYS Y, M. C. A. secretary, who has ‘| t KNIGHTS ELECT .'D re | NEW OFFICERS TALK HERE ON {Baars Man is Advanced By of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar were clected here as follow Grand. Commander, J, H. Frai Grafton. ‘Deputy Grand, Commander, FE. Eddy, Fargo. Grand Geileral Devils Lake, fof Grand Chaplain General, Otto Bauer, Mandan, (rand Senior Warden, J. H, -‘Tur-, ner, Bottineau. - | Grand Juvior Warden, G.'H. Russ,' Jr., Bismarck. \ Grand Prelate, Rev. John Orchard, | Dickinson: . ‘Grand Treasurer, E. G. Guthrie,! h©argo, Grand Recorder, W. L. Fargo. Grand Standard Bearer, A. D. M Cannell, Minot. Grand Sword Bearer, G, H: stead, Grand Forks, Grand Warden, Alfred Steele, James-! town. i: ‘Grand Captain of the Guard, Henr. W. Wilson, New Rockford. . \Sir Knights are present from vari-/ ous parts of the state for the com-! mandery. meeting. One of the features) of the entertainment was a trip to the! Bad Lands. | i EXPENDITURES — OF HINNESOTA $10,000,000 St. Paul, Minn., First Baptist Church Next Sunday “ | Dr. George W. Morrow, of issimo, A.V. Haig,’ will speak at the First 1: here next Sunday : “Amorica’s P y, at:‘Home.” Stockwell, Omn- DR. G. W. MORROA x | Dr, Morrow is wasiag a campaign i for more rigid enforcement of the pro- hibition laws, and has crossed the continent several times in speaking taurs as representative of the Anti- Michigan, re- cently said a terrifie lay 19.—Minnesota, saignment of the dying 30, 1921, will pass the $100,000,000 mark in combined expenditures and ¢h, " disbursements for the first time in ie binge anaie pan history, George LaFond, chief ac-! countant in the office of Henry Rines, state treasurer, said today. Ten years ago the amount to pass the congrega- ‘om applause.” John G. Wooley. had been assigned by the National Anti-Saloon League headquarters to orth Dakota, but when that gentleman a few weeks ago urer in a year was only slightly more}of illness, Dr, Morrow was prevailed than one-fourth as mitch as today,| upon to fill Mr, (Woo! s dates ‘and while twenty years ago the total was! was secured for Bismarck for next a little more than an eighth of the| Sunday. v 1921 figure and thirty years ago, or | —_— in 1891, it was $8,487,243.11, or about | a twelfth of the present. figurt. Y LOSSE Few states are called upon to han-; die the vast sums that the Minnesota treasurer does in a year. OWNERSHIP penditures for 1920 were approximate- Paris, May 19.—Charges that. the | ly $210,000,000 or $20 ner capita, while | $40, based on Minnesota's population | | French government’ usually syffers a Parshall, N. D., May 19-Johnnie/ ¢ was asserted, that, the gayernment’s Indian “day: office, telepiionevand stelegtaph lines Mipnesota’s $100,000,000 year will mean a per capita state funds total of of approximately 2,500,000. . pr foss in its busipess ventures were CAPTURES PELICAN, | made in recent debates in pafliament He mee Mee higabae operation of} the, state, v2 iad post- into a°flock of pelicans which had alighted near his farm home and cap- tured one of the great birds by throw- igg a blanket over it. The bird weighs} forty pounds. the gasoling, opoly and its sale of American’ aioe i ttes left over from. 1 ar, were alt unbusi- nesslike, and the cause of heavy bal- j ances on the ‘wrong side of the ledger, | The state rgilroad’s estimated defi- cit for 1921 is’ given in the budget as the equivalent of $59,450,000. “Every itime the state railway received 100 | francs,” says the Senate Public Works Wrist Watches. able prices. NO ONG NAIA GAT AG NCA CELEBS RO EEL GT NE from— _ Wrist Watches You will be right on time if you buy one of Folsom’s ten four bottles of Lyaia We carry the reliable makes and sell them at reason- | We have a complete line of those ranging in price $14.50 $150.00 | Folsom’s Jewelry Store A9/ AV DW De De WV We DUB AVA 79 1/4 | Commission, “the taxpayer must take 57 francs out of his pocket to balance | the raflroad’s, accounts.” Operation of posts, telegraphs and telephones calls, in the budget, for a deficit of about $44,302,000. | Government trade in gasoline—a || monopoly held over from the ‘war— | was said in the chamber has been | costing the state $1,125,000 monthly. |The government has on hand eight (|| months’ supply, bought on a higher B)' market-and worth now on the world’s | market, according to ofl experts, about $150,000,000 less tharr it. cost. | Twenty thousand employes of the! post, telegraphs and telephones, ac- | cording to a senate commission’s re- port, were ordered discharged after the war, at the insistent suggestion | of parliament, in order to give their | old places to war veterans. The gov- |ernment, the report continues, gave them from 400 to 600 francs each, when discharging them as temporary jemployes and then according to an | imaginative conversation recited in HEALTH FOR ~ WORKING GIRLS | Those Who Suffer and Are | Unable to, Work Need | Helpful Suggestions \ Springfield, Il. —‘‘Ihad periodic trou- ble with weakness, cramps and back- mm ache and I could not Ai] work. A neighbor mati recommended — your medicine and I took ill B. Pinkham’s Vege- H table Compound. Ham now strong and aij well, able to work, fll and recommend your hiimedicine to my Ufiriends,’’—ANNA Rimkus, R. R. No. | 8, Springfield, Il. | Why will girls continue to suffer nth inand month out as. Miss kus | did when case after case is related where pound has removed the cause of the trouble and brought good health. For more than forty years this old fashioned | root and herb medicine has been the | standard remedy for such ailments, and has the record of hving restored more | suffering-women to health: than any other medicine. If there is any complication about your condition you donot understand | write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., | Lynn, Massachusetts, in regard to your | health. ame) OWTO Dickinson, N. D., May. 19.—Officory’ Michigan Orator Will Speak At! ‘Dr. Morrow delivered | for the fiscal year 1921, ending June! drink traffic ‘ang@‘the teeling grew. so 2 8 \ intense that despite the sacrednessiof! through the office of the state treas-j had to cancel his dates on account Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- | ISMARC | TONIGHT THEAT RE : and Tomorrow WOE Cece Roped and tied without a kick! For under the light of maiden’s eyes, Sher- iff “Slim” Hoover was weak as a new- born calf. But bring on your greasers, out- laws, halfbreeds, Indians and things, and he’d brand the wildest maverick that ever ran amuck. A romance as big as all out-doors! In Six Big Reels From, the World Famous Play by 4 Edmund Day (JESSE L.LASKY PRESENTS George Melford PRODUCTION FATTY Ye * (ByArrangement ‘unth: AsephM Schenck, A i} | | | | | | \ | Be oon nn vom erie of 7 With ' Mabel Julienne Scott Star of “Behold ‘ My Wife.” vy 4 ay rs occupant of his former residence un- covered the charm undamaged while 2 KILLED, ONE . HURT. IN RIOT spading. in the garden and returned it May 19,—-Two ne I and a whife man PLACE PIKE FRY. ; Flot. Crookston, Minn.~-May 19—During the past week several million pike fry, » | have been placed in @ number of lakes in Polk county by Deputy Game Ward- en William F. Munch, The fry, hatch- ed at Bemidji, were placed in 27 lakes in this county. the senate by Senators Pelisse, the | government said to the employes: | “What would you say if I were to; keep you, beginning tomorrow, ag sub; | stitute workers. You will get the) 2 same whges. Do you accept.” ‘Byronxitle, “Yes,” replied the discharged oe eroes Rabe aalled and? ployes, “but must we give back the | S°OUS!Y wounded if’ race bonus?” athe | F i “Oh, no,” answered the government:! You | TWO KILLED BY N. P. PASSENGER ay 19.—Two were one perhaps fat “That would not be gencrous. have the bonus. Keep it. You are discharged but remain with us.” j ger train touring car near . struck a | Maple, Wis. ‘The dead are: | Adoiph Jotsman, Wales, N. D. | Adolph Hanish, Wales, N. D. a ry WARDEN NAMED TO LEAVENWORTH fa s = : a fWashington, ‘May 19.—Appointment The injured are: Carl Jerkma and) o¢ \ij}iam I, Biddle, of Leavensworth, Campart, of Wales, not expected) Kan, to be warden of the federal pen- ee itentiary there was announced today by Attorney-General Daugherty. J St. Paul, Minn., May 19—A com- he| FINDS W State Hospital for the?’ Billings, Mont. ding to a report of the| charm lost nine yea! rd of Visitors for Public In-| returned to its owner, J. W. Cook. br 1912 Cook lost the charm, and .subse- quently moved to another home. The in the treatment of epileptic Perens Eat TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY State Bo: stitutions. Superintendent George C> Welch,*a physician, gives the credit for the suc cess of these treatments to Dr. W. L. Patterson, sistant superintendent. In practi ly every case treatment hag reduced the number of epileptic seizures and in some instances ap-| pear to have done away with them al- together. ree | RAINFALL AT - MANY POINTS IN NO. DAKOTA! Rginfall reported in the state in the, last’ twenty-four hours by the weather} Program bureau follo Ameni: dale, 1.16 ‘ LAST TIME TONIGHT vinggon to; Pashon, 76: Napol CONSTANCE TALMADGE on, 16; Pembin Wahpeton, .1% in. tal “LESSONS IN LOVE” 4 pb, Rain has fallen from the northern Rocky Mountain region a { BE Minnesota, excepting pe ‘Treat Em Rough Tuition for Blushing Beaux., Correspond- ern Montana, most of act course For the Bashful. Hints to the Broken Hearted. Pop-the-Question Demonstration For Bashful Beaux at every performance. j western North Dako “THE RACE OF THE AGE” South Dakota, the report said. ers are probable for tonight and F The picturization of the Heart Breaking Race Between Man °O War and Sir Barton, the.World’s Two Greatest Thorough- day. breds. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WALLACE REID in “THE LOVE SPECIAL.” i Monday and Tuesday—FLORENCE VIDOR in “BEAU R f FOR RENT-—-Furnished apartment, 2 4 rooms and bath, | 422 5th st. 5-19-3t LTING THEATRE Direction Valleau Theaters Company .m. Eveni :30 and 9. _ Pat 8 ee E30. uniess otherwise subiect to change without notice. Bowhbells, 10) central and! TROTZKY SAID | SERIOUSLY ILL Riga, ‘Letvia, May 19.—Information| has reached here tending to confirm the report that Trotzky is seriously |. IS DESTROYED COMING THOMAS MEIGHEN in “THE CITY OF SILENT MEN,” WESLEY BARRY in “DINTY.” 5 . “ISOBEL” or “TRAIL’S END,” by James “Oliver Curwood” ELSIE FERGUSON in “SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE.” DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS in “THE MARK OF ZORRO.” DOROTHY DALTON in “THE IDOL OF THE NORTH.” MAE MURRAY in “THE GILDED LILY.” 4 The Pow ‘om royed by fire 19, Wilmington, Del plant of the Flashless | pany near here was de: |following an explosion. |FIGHTING IN HILLS RESUMED (Williamson, W. May 19.—Firing, from the Kentucky hills into Rawl, W. Va., was ‘resumed ‘ Wednesday night, Prices Always: Matinee 15 and 25c. Evening 15 and 35c.

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