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MONDAY, JULY 18, 1921 WILSON WOULD FIVE BABIES eid AE ONDE EEE NOT AGREE 0 WAR DEBT PLAN Executive Rejected Suggestions For Cancellation of Obli- gations THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE © PAGE THREE ‘THE BOSTON Se eee or MTIIIMUUL MMUMMUULUMUU MUU LULL OULU Clothing Specials T today is 93,155, while its membership‘ teering” idea of world business has in 1920 was 103,258. | bronght.us?...Are business men really The’ ‘total membership is scattered | going to -play. this game to a finish? a mong 4,445 posts in every state.) ©Do we really think that we can Ohio, with 10,241, has the largest: mem- | throw the coal, cotton, corn, oil, and bership, with Pennsylvania second with: 9!l the labor of the country and ‘the 122; New York, third, 8, Illinois, World into the big jackpot and gam- 6,868; Indfana, fifth, 5,949;| ble over it, and land anywhere ex- isetts, sixth, 5,356. No other/cept in some awful hell? ee slates have 5,000 or more members. The labor problem is the invitable Property owned by. all posts is val-| Precipitant ot causes at work every- dat $2,075,027, including real estate| Wehre in the world. The whole in- rth $802,841. | dustrial fabric is in unstable equili- Members in. the old confederate|brium. And mankind is in a state of states to’al approximately 2,200. j psychologeal instability. & |" Wise men in all ranks of life ought ‘to face the albor problem as muman- Washington, July 18.—A letter from ; President Wilson to Premier “Lloyd George of Great Britain declaring that the United States could not consider piposals to cancel or exchange Great Britain's letter to this nation was | placed in the Congressional record by Senator Lodge, Massachusetts, Repub- lican leader. Hl ‘Mr. Wilson's letter, dated Oct. 20, 1920, was submitted to the senate for- | eign relations committee by Secretary | Houston. It said that “suggestions looking to the cancellatwm or ex- change” were made to the former President in Paris. The communica- tion apparently was the reply to the British premier’s letter made public eet week in the senate finance hear- | Ing. MANY FARMERS | TO MAKE TOUR Accept Rotary Club Invitation For New Salem Visit A large delegation will leave Bis- marck Wednesday morning for New Salem dairy tour. A number of Bur- leigh county farmers have accepted the invitation of the Rotary club vf this city to join them on the trip. The party will leave ‘Fourth and Thayer streets, Bismarck, at 7a. m. Wed- nesday and will return probably about 8 p. m., after completing the tour of the New Salem dairy circuit with 300 to 500 other persons from over the state. ‘Farmers who desire to accompany the Rotary club and have not regi3- | tered may call Finney’s drug store or French. and ‘Welsh Hardware com- pany, LADIES GIVE MONEY EARNED FOR NEW POOL This morning’s. mail brought a check for $27.00 for the swimming lity’s terrible predicament, and quit {calling names or hiding our heads in ithe sand. Don’t let us “fiddle while 'Rome burns.” And not a moment is to be lost. Churches, rotary clubs, ‘chambers of commerce, colleges, peo- | ple’s forums, farmers’ unions should ‘take hold of the problem and never pool from the rummage committee of | relax util daylight comes over our MRS. MARGARET TORRENS AND HER KIDNAPPED DAUGHTER (ABOVE) AND MARGARET (LEFT) AND JACK (RIGHT) WOODLAND, WHO HAVE BEEN STOLEN FROM THEIR MOTHERS. By Newspaper Enterprise. New York, July 18.— Five babies} are the heads,of many of the country’s agricultural — organizations. | forever. the Presbyterian church, representing | money the ladies earned serving din-} ner at the Masonic District Conven- | tion June 1, the Elks’ committce an. } nounced today, | (Many inquires as to the free age | limit bathing privileges are received. | The committee wants to make it plain | that any child under the age of six: teen has the free use of the swimm- j ing pool. This is one of the main fea- tures promised the kids by the Elks and the Elks make good. FOUR TERRIFIC PROBLEMS In a recent speech in Des Moines, J. Stilt Wilson, mayor of Berkeley, California, said: ~The world is facing four terrific problems. The whole world is involved in awful. complexity, These four great problems are as fol- lows: Supremacy: of White Race First — Inter-racial, _We lost 50,- 000,000 of the white race in the last five years, half of that being superbest manhood. I:am not speak: ing excitedly, but after long study when I say that one more debacle like that in western civilization and the supremacy of the white race may pass I mention just one book worth careful study, Lathrop Stod- dard’s “The Rising Tide of Color.” * ar Second — International. standing the overwhelming mapority of Senato rHarding and the announce- ment that the “League of Nations is dead and scrapped,” as one might an- nounce ,the defeat of a high school football team, the white world abso- Nothwith-| perplexity. The Spiritual Problm Fourth—Our fourth great problem is the spiritural problem. hWat’s the], use of dodging the constitution of man? an is not a mere stomach, nor a mere cash register, not a mere jack- in-the-box, built to have a good time. Wherever he got it and whatever is the end of the trail, man is a creature | that can perceive right and wrong in {his relations to his fellow men. More- over, however vague, he has some ‘deep knowledge that he is at, least as | vitally related to the whole universe jas the light in an electrei bulb. He j can’t jump out. He is of the stuff of ithe universe. He is an immediate j creation of that reality that"men com- |monly call God. Man is a spiritual being. ; Now, men, you can’t call a plumber | to fix your watch, or a blacksmith to jfix the phone. So, you cannot rem- edy the world’s ills and ignore man’s spiritual nature. We have forgotten God in our man- nerism. We are deliberately disobey- ing the great social teaching of Christ. We are bent on pleasure. We ace worshpiping the gaingods and the ‘false gods. A terrific spivitual prob- |lem confronts mankind, confronts ! America. BEST HOGS AT $10.00; | TOP BEEVES $8.90 | Hogs Highest Since Last of March—Cattle Prices Best Since Middle of May Bismarck, $30, $85 and $40 Suits $45, $50 and $60 Suits Best & Huyck now $25 now $35 North Dakota (May. $8.25 to $8.75. from: as $7.50. heifer: against $8. $3.50 to $6.00. ‘Hogs continued A small lot of fed yearlings go- ing to city butchers topped the week's trade of $8.90 Friday, with a good showing of sales of these Heavy drylot sold readily fnom $8.00 to $8.50. of. the beef steers at the close n 0 to $7.00, with some of the best offerings of grass steers as high A few of the sold around $7.09 to best fed. cows fnom $6.00 to $ the bulk of the butcher she stock go- ing from $4.00 to $6.00. Canners went largely from $1.50 to $2.00, with cutt- ers on up to around $3. Bologna bulls $3.50 to $ top to packers on veal c 25 the previous Saturday. Stockers and feeders advanced around 50c for the week, bulk selling from tio advance and prices are on the highest basis since the last of March. Range at the close $8.50 to $10.00. bulk $9.00 to $9.50. Good pigs $9.25. Lambs ve tower for the week, closing top on natives $8.50, crnice westerns quotable to around $10.00, choice yearlings to $7.50, choice wethers to $5.75. Ewes closing firm, choice light ewes quotable, $3.50 to $4.00. fairly from. steers Bulk sold best ted 7,50 and 50, with, at the close. TERS } TYPEWRI Closing | 4 All makes es $8.50, we sold and rented Bismarck Typewriter Co. Bismarck, stolen here in less than a week has| larger shattered all records for kidnapping] Area headquarter: epidemics. in Minneapolis, lutely must find some «modus oper-} oe andi by which futuré wars among the| South St. Paul, Minn., July 18, 1 "| white peoples. of the whie nations are; Continued light receipts coupled with FIVE MILLION will be established To Underwood Typewriters Aid of all eastern police depart-| Omaha, Des Moines, Denver, Detroit, ‘i si a ; FOR MINNESOTA ments has. been asked and a search} St. Louis, Oklahoma City, Milwaukee, rendered forevetty Junpossible, The) q relatively broad shipping. domang is being made by wireless of all ships| Indianapolis, New Orleans, Dallas, Los | Stet War was notaing ut a civil war! resulted in a general gain in cattle | ees 4 4 i among blood brothers of the same! pric f around 50 to 75 during the jat sea in an attempt to restore; Angeles, San Francisco, Little Rock . eael Wetats Hy wy | Prices of around 90 ‘ RO AD PR ECTS missing children. Those kid-| Louisville, Fargo, N. D., Mitchell, S. D., great peoples. AS WOUEINE basis with! week's trade, putting priced. at the Sold, Rented, L. C. Smith : - Raabe MEANS nin 000, ussians, a lowship | piet is since the iddle (0! A Pater | mapped: Cleveland, Baltimore and New York. "| With ail middle ‘Burcpe, an absolute | 'shest levels since m Rebuilt Remington iS Sara unbreakable alliance of the two great Oliver St. Paul, July 18.—Minnesota is spending mbre than $26,000.000 on roads this season, according to an- nouncement by the state highway de- partment. This big fund is made up entirely of automobile and local tax revenues and federal aid, except for $5,000,000 of county bond money. ’ Charles M. Babcock, state highway commissioner, estimates that about $13,500,000 will be expended this year for maintenance and permanent im- JACK WOODLAND, 8 years old. PARGARET WOODLAND, 2 years old. jMARGARET TORRENS, 9 months old. . CHARLOTTE MAYO, 2 years old. EEIZABETH KIEFFER, 2 years old. The two Woodland children were taken from the Woodland home at Cape May, N. J., by a man and wo- 'man who had been registered for several days at a Cape May hotel, and 10,000 VETERANS | OFG.A.R. DIE - SINCE LAST MEET Indianapolis, Ind., July 18,—When the Grand Army of the Republic holds its annual reunion this year, more than 10,000 of the Civil. War veterans who attended the encampment of 1920 Anglo-Saxon’ speaking peoples, the Biritish empire and the United States; this must be accomplished. Every statesman in the, world must be held accountable to porking. out this task. The Labor Crisis | Third—The _menacirig labor _prob- lem. What is the use of us blinking at the facts? All Europe hid its eyes to the terrible’ élouds' gathering in 1914, and went over the abyss. Mr. Gompers and Mr .Foster and the I. W. W:. do not make the laborq prob-; RE YOU PALE? WEAK? 'Snrich Your Blood Why be sallow, thin or weak when thousands have improved their condition by taking 8.3.8. Build up your blood. 8.8. 8. is the recognized general tonic and system builder. It is also” used successfully in tho treat- ment of rheumatism and skin ppb pied one 7,000-mile system who had been attempting to inera-| will be counted among the missing 18] lem. They are not causes, they are) diseases arising from impover- o The ‘hi uae ie) Ach ia tiate themselves with Jack and Mar-| the ranks have heen depleted to this| effects; they are-almost symptoms. | ished blood. ighways department has or-| caret, The last seen of them was at] extent through the last year. Why close our. eyes to the absolutely For Special Booklet or for indi- ganized a force of more than 1,100 pa- trolmen—one for each 5 to 8-mile trunk section—to keep up the regular trunks and detours around the new construction, Commissioner Babcock has approv- ed and ordered more than $5,000,000 of peruwmnent improvements by contract, and is calling for bids on many other new construction projects. Trunk funds include more than $5,-| 000,000 of automobile taxes, $5,000,-| 000 of county ber" » — ceds under the} state reimburse... _.un, and, it is} expected the annual federal aid ap-! portionment of $2,840,000. This money is being spent to keep the main high- ways in god condition, and for per- manent betterments including more than 75 miles of paving, 500 miles of gravel surfacing and 700 miles of grading. The 1921 state program com- pieted, Minnesota will have nearly 250 miles of paved highways, and more hundreds of miles of gravelled roads | for which it is widely known. State aid and local road taxes ag- gregating $12,500,000 additional, are being used by county authorities to build up the secondary road system. The Babcock plan for a good road to every farm gate as well as heavy traffic highways betwecn the cities and; towns and connecting the Ten Thou-} sand Lakes, according to popular opin- Lewes, Del., across the bay from Cape May. A private yacht had been chartered by them to make the trip. Mrs. Robert E. Woodland, the mother, believes the children have been taken aboard a boat bound for South America. Mrs. Margaret Torrens has col- lapsed, following the kidnapping of her nine-months-old daughter Mar- garet from the summer home of her father at’ Pompton Lakes, N. J. A woman, who asked police not to disclose her name, said she had seen a woman very nervous, and a baby answering the description of the Torrens child, aboard a United Fruit Co. boat bound for Cuba just before it sailed. Cuban officials have been asked to look for the woman. a New York lawyer, was stolen from its crib at the home of his sister in Rutherford, N. J., after midnight. Kieffer traced the child te an apart- ment in Brooklyn, which was raided with the aid of police. They entered the door just in time to see the baby and its cuostodians vanish down the outside fire escape into the night. The child has not been seen since. Mra. ‘Roy Alfred Mayo, wife of a New York broker who took her 2- year-old daughter away from her hus- ion, is rapidly advancing Minnesota inj; the ranks of good roads states. | BOOTLEGGING IN ORIENT | CHITA, Farm Eastern Republic,’ July 18—The Far Eastern Republic, | which: has a_bone-dry prohibition law, is having its trouble with boot- leggers. Every incoming train} brings loads of booze. Liquor prices; have doubled. Dry officials are placed! at ports and railway search arrivals. Held For Desertion. stations to; band and out of the jurisdiction of the New York courts, has returned | with her attorneys to meet her hus- band’s lawyers. The child has been left in another state until such time as the. parental differences can be settled. Parents separated. in all of the cases are FARMERS GIVE A young man giving his name a3 | Fred Crotter was picked up by the po- | lice, and is being held as an alleged, 10 ARMENIANS Chicago, July 18.—Five million The baby daughter of Paul Kieffer,’ The total membership of the G. A. R. PARACHUTES 15,200 FEET FROM PLANE ce impossible condition that our “profi- ; vidualadvice, without charge, | os secs | \ { | | 1 writo Chief Medical Advisor, S.S.S.Co., Dep't 437, Atlanta, Ga. Get S.S.'S. at your drug S.S.S. \For Rich, Red Blood A ETD UUSUUEAUENTEAU NCAT NNEaUUNATUNATeNT Phone 565 BATTER SERVIC ul MMMM OUvu RCN NNER ENENCNTNdeNNtt Our rebuilt machines carry the same guarantee as new machines. We will deliver them on approval. BISMARCK TYPEWRITER COMPANY, L.POLLAK Ete. ‘Rayal & Corona Agents. C. R. SHERWOOD 207 Broadway EXCLUSIVE ELECTRICAL SPECIALISTS Service and parts for Delco, Remy, Northeast and Auto Lite starters, Bosch, Eisemann and K-W Magnetos, Exide and Minnesota bat- teries, and Klaxon horns. ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE CO. Bismarck, No. Dak. deserter from Camp Lewis, Washing- | pyshels of wheat and corn for the des- bi | titute widows and orpians of Armenia Sk Oe ‘and Syria will be collected by the near Purchases Car Here. | east relief in co-operation with various Joe Rueter of Garrison was in Bis-: agricultural organizations, acording to marck the last of the week and pur-! an announcement today by Alonzo E. Open to the public every evening for dining and dancing except when engaged for private partizs The Dining Car Room which chased a new Overland car from the Lahr Motor Sales Co. Mr. Rueter also took in the Fargo-Bismarck ball game. GIVE ME | This is the term used when customers enter our Sanitary and Exclusive Meat, Market to buy our Home Made Sausages. They are so familiar with the high standard quality, that they have habited themselves in say-| ing, “give me” so many pounds; of this, or that sauage, without | asking prices, or if they are! fresh, for they know Dohn’s Sanitary and Exclusive Meat Market, makes fresh sausages | Wilson, who has been designated in- ternational campaign director with headquarters in Chicago. The actual collection of the gift grain will be made during September and October and the campaign will be based on the experience gained in connection with a similar campaign last spring when five million bushels of grain were offered but only one mil- lion bushels used because of the lim- ited activites for handling the grain available. “Hundreds of thousands of the ex- jled refugees in addition to 120,000 helpless orphans must be kept alive or provided for by the American people, if the world’s oldest Christian nation is to survive.” Senator Arthur Capper, of Kansas, MISS PHOEBE By Newspaper Enterprise. St. Paul, Minn., July 18.—“It was so terribly cold; that was the worst of itt” Miss Phoebe Fairgrave, 18, St. Paul high school girl, has just broken the world’s airplane-parachute jump rec- ord for women, dropping. safely to earth from an altitude of 15,200 feet. “It was awful!” added the .96-pound Miss. “My hands were numb when I picked my way along the wing of the machine. is chairman of the committee in charge daily. of the campaign. Associated with him “When I had dropped 5,000 feet my; stomach began to ask life I was sea-| sick.” FAIRGRAVE The air was so rare when she drop- ped out of her plane that for the first 5,000 feet the parachute shot down without opening. In her plane were Pilot V. C. Omlie and Paul Goldsborough, official corder, Minneapolis In her flying and Miss Fairgrave wed a silk shirt, helmet, ketball shoes with suction soles. She also wore around her waist an inflated automobile inher tube, in c she should fall into water, as she h not yet learned to swim. | iM DL ee adorns the Roof, will be open every Wednesday and Saturday evenings, service A La Carte. A Special Sunday Evening Dinner will be served a-top the McKenzie every Sunday at the regular Sun- day Dinner price. Patrons of the Roof and guests of the Hotel and their friends are invited to attend the open Air Concert every Sun- day Evening. Come up and watch Bismarck and Mandan grow a-top the McKenzie Hotel. Edw. G. Patterson Owner and Proprietor. sNsAGUUOONUUUDOUENOAUONOOUCNONOGNOAGUOEONODOGNUONBOGNOOOUUEGONEDOUONUNODOGOGOOUONTOGHVO NY ¢11 sr ervgpngqunundauseagr ‘OUTTA CUT PEGUDTEU EUAN