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§ { t ie ba 4 grouped around him, also on all fours. | i such matters the president took a keener 'in- =, ¢ceau, and absorbed with extraordinary speed # American expert sitting on the sofa beside x This sounds like a gang of men repairing a; = European diplomats to get down on the carpet and; = Diplomats, after all, are human beings, and. & there come times when the dignity of silk hats that by this act he has qualified as a'lifesaver. - # when the head of the German reparations com- at 65, women at 62. Among the everyday busy, hah ees yes Ne ';__ tioned there during Napoleon's captivity. > Tristan is such a healthy place ‘ago they got tired of having it around in the way; ;so they ditched it into the sea. * You've dreamed of a place like Tristan. It’s the sort of paradise you yearn for when life in Bismarck gets our goat and you'd like to crawl THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ph Entered at the Postemties, ism tele Nv, D., as Second » GEORGE D. MANN SP ane eine Editor Foreign Representatives bd G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY in a ‘hole and pull the hole after you. CHICAGO DETROIT eee Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. Only about 100 people live on Tristan, but they boast that-no one ever wanted to leave. The only ship that ever visits them is a British cruiser that drops in once a year. No other con- tact with the outside world. If you could stow leo, recor vege! Ts on away. aboard that cruiser, you’d find, at Tristan: MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION An island 21 miles around.. A snow-clad ex- 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | tinct volcano rising in the center. A small village Bait Py car rer yece {in Bismarck $7.20) on a fertile green peninsula. Nothing to make Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bism people work. Nothing to pay taxs for. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota pinsasatiees 6.06 The inhabitants eat fish; wild fowl, birds’ eggs, HE STATES soe rT NOW EEAPER, clams, fruit and wild potatoes. When they want meat, they go out and kill wild sheep or cattle. <= Clothing ‘and ammunition are obtained from the crew of the cruiser by bartering skins of the seals DO YOU EAT POISONS? sade Any noon in a Bismarck restaurant you see in-| that sport on Tristang rorky shores. door workers, who don’t get much exercise, eating an order of meat large enough to feed four blood-| hounds in an “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” show. Bad business. This is why, says the Red Cross: There are two kinds of foods—repair foods and fuel foods. Repair foods, called “proteins” by doctors, in-| . clude meats, eggsietc. They rebuild body tissues| 24 government unnecessary. - , : 1 xercise and mus-|° The nearest neighbors are 1,200 miles away. Arent Nee [ua | While everybody in Tristan has all he wants and Fuel foods include bread, vegetables, sugar, |'8 contented, there’s nothing worth stealing by butter, etc., Doctors call-them “carbohydrates| invaders. Hence, no worry about wars. and fats.” They keep the machinery of the body in motion, and store up energy and heat. You need both fuel foods and repair foods. But there’s grave danger if you don’t balance them properly. t Too much protein decays in the bowels and makes poisons. This works the liver and kidneys too hard in throwing off the poisons. Degenera- tive disease (like cancer and heat, blood and kid- ney troubles) start this way. Eat sparingly of meats and eggs, particularly = if you sit in an office all day. Eat plentifully of vegetables and fruit’ And now’s a good time to start. The fresh vegetable = season has begun. BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK AY NE BURNS AN? Si Fitth Ave, Bldg. ee eee The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise " is ited in this papéfand also the local news published £ in. 4 oy All tights of publication of special dispatches herein are » tlso reserved. in the world that has no organized government. Inherited discipline from the people’s soldier- | ancestors, along with such an abundance of| everything that there’s no reason for committing 'theft or other crime, has made laws and organ- You finish life’s: race breathless. ' : And another fellow who has a soft snap at this! time of year is the leading man in bathing girl comedies. Many a hard working paragrapher wonders why he ever grew up when he reads: Jackie Coogan making a million a year. The Girl Next Door suggests that a perfectly | ilovely bathing suit can be made of the woolen hose she wore last winter. Mr. Einstein will confer a great boon upon man- kind if his theory of space and time makes pay! |days pccur more frequently. * Probably. the fellow. who has a bushel of Ger-. Man marks laughs at the worthless, stone money. used in Yap. , ‘ “EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced: in this Rot express the opinion of The ted here in order that our th sides of important iss cussed in the press of the ie 5 «, BIG. FOUR.ON, ALL FOURS _ Has.& book agent hooked you into buying any || of the 100} historiesef “What Really Happened at the Peace Conference”? If 80, you probably have the notion. (granted -« that you read the books) that thé’peace confer- ence had all the solemnity of high school graflua- tion “exercises.” : But the Big Four actually crawled around-on their hands and knees when they were carving the map of Europe, according to Dr. Charles Sey- mour’s book, “What Really Happened at Paris.” He says: liver ailments, than a wagon, that he immediately | “The Council of Four met in the front room | Proceeds to show you how far you are wrong and | of President Wilson’s house. There. one. |to prove that his heart has been bad since the year might have seen President Wilson himself on | Of the big frost/and that his liver and spleen and all fours, kneeling on a gigantic map spread | dorsal vertebra and tendon of Achilles has no upon the floor and tracing with his finger a | Worked right for seventeen years and is getting proposed boundary, other plenipotentiaries ° delightfully worse every time he takes the hood; In [off and looks at his gear. Funny’critters we all'are.’ It is a singular fact, ‘but it seems to be a sort of ‘reproach for“anybody to tell any of us we are well, and the chief reason | we tolerate doctors at all is that they confess right | at the start that the fellow who comes for medi-| cine has something the matter with ‘him.—Ral- eigh News & Observer. ‘ column Tribune ney are Deing dis- os NIE VICE OF BEING WELL °°. The discussion of health by the doctors in ses-| sion at Pinehurst this week calls to mind the. ‘singular antipathy the human race ‘mainfests to- ward good health. You have noticed many a time that if you intimate to the fellows you talk t that his heart is all right, or that he has no mo: terest, than either Lloyd George or Clemen- the salient points relating to an issue, which were frequently whispered to him by some him” : | ‘WHY SHOULD EXPERIENCE BE'JDLE? | There is no probability that Postmaster Gen-| crawh about on all fours is in tune with American Fal. Hays will get a Carnegie medal for takin “shirtsleeves’ diplomacy.” the arbitrary age limit out of the retirement order | for postoffice employes. Yet-it is quite possible, flivver, rather than a peace conference.\ Inducing; and high collars has to be laid aside. ‘For instance,|_ Under the order as it stood, men had to retire z mittee takes out his china pipe and has to ask. People of the world are men and women carrying | Lloyd George for a match. Or when the map to much greater burdens of years, doing their share| be divided anew covers so much territory that it Of the world’s work as ably and eagerly as any| has to be spread on the floor or inspected from a Younger workers. For many of these to let go of f stepladder activity would be a step just ahead of letting ‘go‘ Re : ‘of life itself. ; Funny, isn’t it? The fellow who lives near the: Economic advantage there always is in the re-} seashore is planning to go to the mountains and tention of experience in the public service. That] the man in the mountains plans a seashore vaca- | there is a phase of the hemane in keeping veterans tion. jat work is a:detail which often’ is overlooked but 5 ‘which we like to think was in tho:mind of Mr. THE PLACE YOU DREAM OF “Hays. : There still remains one place on earth, inhab-, Rather difficult from the postal instance is the | ited by white people, where there’s no work—and C@S¢ of the mandatory bill, just vetoted by Mayor no taxes, no laws, no police, no tag days, no strap-| Hylan, for the pensioning, at their request, at age hanging, no alarm clocks—and nothing to worry |of 50,of NewYork street cleaners who have served about. |twenty years. Under such a measure the depart- Tristan da Cunha is the place. ;Ment would come face to face with that menace miles southwest of St. Helena, where the impris.| Police department. There would be Tepested too/ oned Napoleon died. The Tristanites are descend- the experience of old police-pension days, with ants of the relief garrison of British soldiers sta- retired men taking new jobs and drawing on two| | Paymasters. Neither economy nor humanity is that nobody | S¢rved by drawing a dead-line on industry. in Mid- | ‘Tristan is said to be the only white settlement |” ips: jchapter 38, session laws of special It’s an island in the south Atlantic ocean, 1500 °f a vanishing fund which once confronted the |: rms adevencels = en wees eee = bg TA gb Tey With the Movies | tt REID AT THE ELTINGE Walla Reid's latest Paramount pictur: he Love Special,” is differ- ent from any in which ‘Mr. Reid has been seen for some time, It isa picture of the great outdoors, with real ‘thrills, beautiful natural settings and a delightful romance Mr. Reid plays the role of a construction engineer on a mountain railroad divi- sion, The production contains a great many beautiful exterior scenes, most of which were filmed in the famous the recording acts in (his state apply Yosemite Valley. to executory contracts for the gale of af ed on “The Daughter of! land; to. mortgages; ‘and’ to) assign- the best novels of ,ments of mortgages. acu aN 2) ° A purchaser of a note, secured by a mortgage ‘upon an equitable in Aerest in land acquires’ an, eqititabie interest in the mortgage; but; follow. ing Henniges v. Paschke, supra; upo. failure ‘to take ‘and ‘rec signment.of the security’! inferior to that of a subsequent ‘pur haset of the'‘land in’ good’ faith”and for value ‘without notice.’ ‘ 3)---One- purchasing teal’ pronerty may ‘rely upon the public’ records to determine the existence of mortgag: liens, and where such a len‘ is dis- «€) charged’ of record by the person or Transferred one ;of the notes for the purchase price.’ The contract. was re- corded. C. Transferred ‘oné of the notes to the plaintiff and subsequent- ly deeded the land to the N. bank. The H. bank obtainea a quit-claim deed from Mrs. H., aud subsequently sold the land to A., wno paid full val- ue for It. It is held: ; 1) Following Shelly vs. Mikkelson, 5 N. D. 2, 63 N. W. 210; Henniges v. Paschke, 9 N. D. Simonson vs. Wenzel, 27 N. D. 638, 147 N. W. 804, stage for several years with .., The et re fat than the) persons having prima facle authority play, its e ih cea ere even to discharge it a subsequent purchas- oped, ey bot ti i that er of the property is not bound to in- ened and «the P| sages sulk quire’ as‘ to’ whether negotiable, se- el Julienne! cured notes are outstanding in the hands of assignees where there is no record of such assignments. * . SUPREME COURT Appeal from the district court of Rolette County, Buttz, J. - 3 3 ‘¢| Affirmed. Opinion of the court by From Burleigh County. Birdzell, J. Bronson, J., concurs in Henry Bossen, plaintiff and respona-| the result. Grace, J dissents eg ent, vs. S. A. Olsness, Commissioner ee Si atlaak Rolla, N. D., attor- of Insurance of the State of Norta at Dakota, defendant. and appellant. Cuthbert, Smythe & Wheeler, Dev- Syllabus: ‘Section 5, 9 and 11 of ils Lake, attorneys for respondent. TAG DAY NETS $100 id , Wilton, \N. D., May 20.—Wilton Boy Scouts are nearly $100 richer as the result of a Tag Day hie was pulled i . The boys were ver, the law does not apply automatically times tarmbrets ctidentore and Wile (2) Where an assessor had 00t] ton‘peopte responded most: generously. classified land as .tiNable and had| pe toeal scouts will, suse part of the made_no return to the county auditor! proceeds toward purchasing tents and as required by law, showing the num-| other camping’material. Richard Car- ber of cultivated acres, and where the} ter ig the Scout Master and the local owner had not made the affidavit re-| organization has a large membership|' uired by Section 6 of the hail insur-} and is doing good work. ce act, his risk ig not covered and he is not entitled to recover indemnity upon an attempted compliance with the law in the month of July aftez Joss has been sustained through hail. Appeal from district court of Bur- leigh county, Nuessle, J. Reversed. Opinion,of the court by Birdzell, J. Grace, cn concurs in the result. | Wm. Lemke, attorney general, Bis marck, George K. Foster, assistant at- torney general, Bismarck, attorneys for appellant. . Sullivan, Hanley & Sullivan, Man- dan, attorneys for respondent. From Rolette County. The Rolette County Bank of St. John, N. Dak., a corporation, and Fred E Harris, its receiver, plaintiff and ap- pellant, vs. Josephine Hanlyn, et al.,| . defendants and respondents. C., theowner of: certain, land, con tracted to sell it to Mrs. H., the latte: g-ving notes for the purchase price. The contract was -recorded. C PRECKLE-FACE Sun and Wind Bring Out Usly Spots. How to Remove Easily. session, 1919 (the state hail insur- ance law), are construed and it is held: . & (1) The ingurance provided for i WELL, Everett, at CAST 3 HAVS BouGHT 4 CAR, keeP A to D Here's a chance, Mias Freckle-face to try a remedy for freckles with th: guarantee of a reliable concern that it will not cost you a penny unless i removes the freckles; while if it dov= give you a clear complexion the ex- pense is trifling. _ 2, Simply get an ounce of Othine— Ndouble strength—from any druggis: and a few applications should show you how easy i ig to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beaut: ful complexion. Rarely i8 more thar one ounce needed sfor ‘the worst casc Be. sure to ask idruggist for the double strength’: Othine. as this ., vet gets sick, so there are no doctors... 0: dle Age and compelling experiences to people had a chest of medicine, but about run New York World. ee ‘strength is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails. to. remove freckles. “| halding: Nera odin Rcinatiartettnrtntinrtrtrtin etttinet titrtnatindinrtrtntn inant inrarttiatinrlan tata meter intiet mire at EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO AND THAT'S ALL Kou'cL LK ABoUT FoR. WEEKS If You WANT To KGGP IN SHAPE AMIDON ASSERTS |STATE ENTITLED TO. APPOINTMENT Another Federal Judge is Need- ed in State at This Time, Judge Says HAS. DONE WORK .OF TWO Fargo,May’ 20.—North Dakota, ac- cording to’ Judge’ Amidon, !s entitled to have a federal judge on the ground all the time. He said that laymen think the’: judicial work in only in jury -ferm and_ that: th aed § ten, alate t court ‘is nothing un! jurym’n a A The fact is, according to the jurist. that the important cases are chancery cases or cases in which a jury ‘has been waived. It is seldom that a jury. term lasts more than a week and for a term to last longer than two weeks has Nardly" occurred dufing the 25 years that’ Judge Amidon has been on the bench. He said that 80 per cent of the judicial ‘work is done in his chambers’ and ‘requires a judge to be present, his services being ‘needed from day to day. 2 “So. it is a grave mistake,” said Judge Amidon, “to think that simply having -a judge dart into. the district and hold jury terms means he is per- forming the duties of a federal judge. “I have often regretted that I have been compelled to be out of the dis- trict so much as 1 have been in the doing of work: in other districts and in sitting in the circuit court of ap- pears.’ That has been a real hardship upon the bar and the people of the state. As it was necessary, however, to meet the pressing calls to do work where work seemed most imperative- ly required, I considered tat it was one of the unfavorable features of the federal court.” ‘ In Favor of the La Judge Amidon said that i favor of the law that is. now pending wat FRoM ME Ie Rive iri! . | “On Aug. 31, 1 shall have been on the GRAND FORKS MAN OBLIGED TO STOP WORK Shape Before Taking Tan- : lac—Is All Right Now. “Tanlac has been 80 fine for. me that I have already recommended’ it to many of my friends; and I want to let everybody else I can -reach know ‘about it,” sald W. J. Harfee, “well- known employee of the Red River Power Company, and who .Nves at 211 Kittson avenue ,Grand Forks, N. D. “Before I got Tanlac I had/ suffered a general breakdown in health and felt bad all the time. My appetite was mighty poor and the little | ate didn’t ‘seem to give me any strength or energy. At times i felt so sick and weak that I would break out all ower with perspiration and'I would have to stop work. I took all kinds of medicines and treatments“but noth- ing seemed to reach my case; for I didn’t get any better. |; ‘ “I finally got statted on Tanlac, and what this medicine ‘has done for me is certainly something to be thankful ir. I eat good and hearty at every meal now, and the. medicine ‘has re- Meved-me entirely of that weak, worn out feeling, Why, I.am. just brimful of new bife and énergy-and am in bet- ter health than 1 have been in years. I am mighty strong ‘for Tanlac a.d my wife, who is a professional nurse, things just as much of the medicine ‘| as I do.” eS for the appointment of an additional federal judge in the state. “I’think it should be passed and an additional judge appointed,” he saia. bench for 26 years. During that time I have done the work of two judges. “I have done nearly all the work of |.North Dakota and have done much more work out of the state in other districts anton the: circyit court of appeals thati mylentire work in North Dakota. Bier’ ‘ “There is only one district judge io the Eighth circuit, which extends from Manitoba to Texas:and from the Mis- sissippi river to New Mexico-who was on the bench at the time I was ap- pointed. My health now forbids me to face the'rigors of the North Da- | kota climate any more. My physicians have spoken emphatically on that sub- ject. “My associates. on the bench tell me that during the° five years re- i maining before I reach the age of 70, when I shall be entitled to retire, 1 am entitled to do no more work than ‘is consistent with my strength: That sentiment has been so‘generally ex: pressed that:I think it must true. | Appelt mt Must Be Sou “Now,.to.return to the law that is j pending before congress. Unless it is made entirely clear that the ap- pointes will be sound on national pro- bition the law will not pass. Mr. Volstead is. chairman of the judiciary -epmmittee -and will control the bill. Tremember... aMinnesota was sorely in need of an additional judg for 20 years and: during all that time the bill was’ passed by the senate at every ‘session but failed in the house. |The law finally got through. Judge Morris. of. Minnesota, was a member of the house and it wag generally un- derstood. that if the’ bill passed, he would be appointed judge. Qualifications Outlined, ek will only say this about the ap- | pointee. His integrity must be clean land he must be a first rate lawyer | and equal to any lawyer who will ap- pear before him. The matter of su- preme importance.is to get a man of unimpeachable moral integrity. “The state is now rent by political | factions. There is not an able lawyer who does not belong to one of these factions. Any man who has not iden- tified himself with one side or an- other in the important issues now pending would not be a good Ameri- can or a good judge. “On this subject, however, this is the capital smotigy. ind which I want to‘emphasisell / tact that a mau belongs to one political faction ought not to entitle him ‘to be appointed. Neither ought the fact that he be- longs to another political faction, dis- entitle him to be appointed. “We will all ‘agree that the office | fs°not political patronage, but can we step-to a higher. level and say that the fact that a man belongs to a cer- tain political faction does not disen- title him to be-selected for federal Judge? That aegly fs something we ought to go apaft from our passions and think over, and see where the truth lies. Political factions have no more to do with: this-than religious denominations. The appointee will be in office for life. He will be serving the people of this district, and if he is an able map, the people of the whole country, long after he is un- longed to in 1921. | “The bar association is urging that a list of 5 or 10 lawyers be selected by the executive committee of the North Dakota State Bar association and that the president be urged to sc- lect the appointee from the list. “If that list is fairly prepared it will be helpful, but if the names on | the list are confined to any faction that will be clear proof that it dught jto be disregarded.” s Ask your friends a lends about the New Garrick’s Candies and Ice Cream. It Started Something “Your medicine is the talk of the | town since pulling me from the grave. I have told dozens ‘about it and I | taking Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, all with good results. I never saw any- | thing like it, One man who had been Tj operated on for gall stones and had | them come back, took it and says his ‘}symptoms are all gone now and he | swears. he is cured.” It is a simple, | harmless preparation that removes tae | catarrhal mucus from the intestinal j tract and allays the inflammation ; Which. cauzes practically all stomach, | liver and intestinal ailments, includ- , | ing appendicitis. One dose will con- | vince or money refunded. { Sold at All Druggista...000 / cs — Harfee Says He Was In Bad — able to remember what faction he be- | know of at least ten who are now ' i ft Be .