Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
t i i sa THEBISMARCK TRIBUNE| ea a TT Ta eee ES Tae er CT Entered at the Poster tice, Bismarck, N, D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - zi - Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, - -+ Fitth Ave. Bldg. | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise | credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are | also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year........++- Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Ra EFFICIENCY Editor a1 20; 5.00! + 6.00 in Belgium has made his final report in the great- est humanitarian enterprise in the history of the world. Ten million people were sustained over a period | of from four to six years at a cost of $1,300,-) 000,000./ The most interesting figures in the report is the 0.42 of 1 per cent, the cost of administration. In| other words, out of every dollar spent over 991} cents reached its. objective. Even after making every allowance for the thou-| sands who gave their services to the cause: :with-! out pay,’ this? result was a triumph of executive] genius. WASTE Ever since the war, the Leviathan, forrherly the Geyman ship: Vadlerland,:has' been tied up at} her dock at Hoboken, for all practical purposes a useless piece of junk. It now develops that it is costing the taxpayers of the country $500,000 a year,’just to maintain watchmen and caretakers aboard the ship. Making due allowance for the enormous ‘size of the Leviathan, a half million dollars a year seems to be an outrageously extravagant figure... “This is one of the minor incidents in the orgy of money wasting, in which the shipping board has indulged during the past two and a half years. ECONOMY The ‘first act of Congressman Madden as ‘hew chairman of the House Committee on Appropria;, tions was to introduce a resoluiton which should meet with general public approval. It calls: for ai constitutional amendment which will make it legat’for the president to vote any part of an appropriation bill without vetoing the whole bill. ; : The constitytional restrictions on the presi- dent in regard to appropriation bills haye cost:the taxpayers millions of dollars. The resolution is said to be part of the administration: program ‘for’ centering control of government expenditures, MUSIC A Boston man, undergoing an operation, re- fused anesthetic and steeled himself during the ordeal by playing on a mouth organ. The power of music-to make men -more:heroic than they otherwise would be is recognized the world over. Tribesmen marching to battle’to the weird music of tom-toms and the civilized nations of the world fighting to the music of augmented brass bands both rely for victory ona stipring of the passions. “Music, of all the liberal-arts, has: the greatest influence over the passions,” said Napoleon. If you have not*felt this influence as you have listened to a band or orchestra, you have missed an experience. ' DISARMAMENT ee The mixed commission on disarmament of the League of Nations is meeting in Paris to formu- late at least a tentative program for disarmament to be presented to the league assembly when it meets at Geneva in September. The suggestion that the commission defer action to await; the Washington disarmament conference was rejected after former Premier Viviani of France made the following illuminating and significant argument: “The question of disarmament is so difficult, so complex and so delicate that. those who ‘ap-! proach it meet ignorance, prejudice and ;tradi- tions in both military nad-economic fields; so that there cannot be too many men trying to solve the problem. .It.'will not have been: worth while to carry the burdens of the great war if we cannot derive from it benefits for our children.” Such sentiments from’one of the’ most aggres- sive statesmen of militaristic France indicates) how world-wide is the desire, for peace and relief from the burden of armaments. RENEWING ALLIANCE It seems pretty certain that ‘the British-Jap-! " (ter, Pa., has worh "4 two deep holes in the brick of good relations with America of far eae im- portance than a:renewal of the treaty. ; The British premier accepted ‘this view. Those prophets of calamity who have been talk- ing about the probability of‘a war between Amer- ‘ica and Japan with Great Britain and ‘her domin- ions backing the Japanese,’ have been undone by the events at the Imperial conference which has ‘decided the fate of the’ ‘Anglo-Japanese ’ treaty. POLITICS |“The time has come for woman to get into poli- ‘ties, for the country needs her badly,” says Gene- “7 | vieve Cline, a lawyer of Cleveland.. | And ‘it’s time that men were getting into poli- | tics, too, instead of being merely silent partners, 7.20’ voting once a year, and “letting George do it” the rest of the year. Politics will continue to be the profitable game ;of a few men, so long as the average’ citzien is ‘content to stand ‘on the side-lines, watching the | professional players. hicles have reduced the number of horses in cities. | | There’s less than half as many ds in 1910. | | But in spite of the number of automobiles and| tractors used on farms, the number of"horses on| farms is greater than in 1910. The total is 21,- 109,000, valued at nearly $2,000,000,000. Evidently it will be a long time before the only |horses in this ecpntry are: tuffed, specimens ‘in| ibe. museums, me ; HABITS (ens A railroad crossing watchman at West’ Ches- i pavement where he “stands duty, by. constant tap- ping with his heavy walking atic, during four) years, x AEG ‘We think any, Bréacher i in ‘Biginakele é ald use this as a text for a’ sermon on “Hab Habits | are like the stick tapping. the’ brick. They bore} into your character:and finally-the little holes be-| come great cavities into which you fall. | INVENTORS OF COLD | Next time you eat ice cream, consider the debt lyou owe to Sambo Jackson, negro pastry chef in| a New York tavrn, who gave the world its first! \dish of ice cream 105 years ago this month. For years, Santbo‘had a monopoly on the man-! jufacture of ‘ice credm, because he kept his pro- \Known about his 4 povery: is that ats Was an Seek: dent, ..: , It- might ‘not be'a‘bad idea: tsiedect a: shintisineht somewhere to Sambo. And, while about it, sur-| round his Hlack-marble statue with, effigies.of the men’ who gave us'the other thins'tHat help make summer endurable — artificial ice, lemonade, re- frigerators,and fans, Ice, the ‘gift of Hature. You may think it’s only ‘recently that Tan ‘earned to cut it in ‘win- ter and store it away in sawdust which, insulat, ing, keeps out the; heat and prevents thawin Yet as far back as the days of. Nero, Boma slaves packed snow in underground pits, pounding! it into ice for summer use. Dealers in ice and packed snow were common in France 150 years ago. In 1799, ice cut from a pond in New York City was shipped by boat’ to ‘Charléston, 'S. C. "That was the beginning of a great | ‘ike export business. In those days, artificial ite was hot commercially practicable. Scientists had experimented for-cen-| turies to produce lows teniggratures artificially, but} the first American‘patent for making artificial ice. was not taken out; until 1834—by John Gortiey yl doctor in Apalachiola, Fig. Ee Charles Tellier, who died in 1913, was the in- jventor of cold-storage refrigeration, without which Bismarck and other, cities would find it very | difficult to exist. eh When he was 86 he said: “The advantages’of | poverty are over-rated: The rich declare that pov- erty brings out a man’s good points, Well, so it dces—by the roots.”- And Tellier knew what he was talking about. Despite the incalculable value of his invention to ithe world, he died in poverty. | Fans are ancient. All races have them. The ‘cave man probably fanned himself in July with a dried palm leaf or.a slab of bark. _ : Electric fans, without which’ you'd find summer jharder to endure, were of slow evolution, many contributing. 4 But they were made possible by Thomas Daven- |port, an impoverished Vermont blacksmith, who in’1884, built the first rotary electric motor. | Lemonade, alone of the five great reliefs from isummer heat, cannot be traced to any individual. Lemons originally grew wild in India. Arabian \armies transplanted them to Asia. ‘The Crusaders carried them into Europe nearly 1000 years ago. Chairman Hoover of the Committee for Relief] ; | -HORSES ... | | A’census bureau report shows how rhotor ‘ve-| | céss‘a closely. guardéd secret. All that-is. definitely ) lis both ‘expensive and inefficient. side the Willow-Tree, after Marty ‘Ming: _slidst mney water. hey Ha tt Cob, Coon’ had also tan citgaueth that ~ he! In’ eriga; with j Bleckte Base at nine o’clock that even- ying, and:tl wandered whagy hp | denty. gare Oa ie 80 popular. Sprinkle-Blo jing Marty Ree tow Pretty’ soon Cob came snooping along the lower, branches of the wil- low-tree‘and “looted dowh.: “Good!” said- ne. “Not only has Mr. Sprinkle- Blow made the water muddy so that Blackie can’t see me, but he has ‘blown out the moon. All I have to do is to hang onto a low branch and reach down. I know exactly wher Mr. Bass Fish is, but he can’t see me. ,And Cob rolled ‘up his sleeves and was suspicious, know- , H * BY H: B, HUNT. ‘Washin: July 28.—He practices what he'’preaches, does Charles G. Dawes, Uncle Sam’s te gommis- | sioner. ci ‘When Dawes came" to Wahington| to-show- Uncle Sam how to save money, he recognized ,living:in hotels Quiet. surroundings, agreeable com- panionship. and .some semblance of {home life, he holds, ig necessary to ‘keep a man toned up and fit for his work, Also, he; figured, ‘while two may not be able to live quite as cheaply:as one, they can live a lot more cheaply to- gether than apart. So it was that an arrangement was made, in the common interest of -ef-j ficiency, economy and comradeship, whereby Dawes and his old pal, Gen- eral Pershing, share an apartment out at 2029 Connecticut. avenue. in a busy day. Always Up Early. quired. reas before he. went overseas with the A. BE. F.—he js through with | his bath, shave: and mornnig Papers | before breakfast ‘is announced, at 3.) Breakfast over, he bids. Pershing adieu for the day. The general. will | ride down to the War. Department. | But Dawes, will walk. | | Motorman ‘Not Losing; “I don’t think anyone ever suffered ; more from stomach trouble and bloat- | ing than I have. I had to lay off my | run more. than half ,the time and could get no help from prescriptions | or medicine. One of my friends ad-! oa Ne i i ake ive the}'sa lorgotten | is honed | :: “HELEN MARIA” DAWES PUTS IN BUSY DAY Before this hour of relaxation| . comes, however, Dawes.will have put! * Out of: bed early—a habit he ac-| , Any Time Is swings open and a slender, slightly stodped’ man in a gray suit,’ rather t the knees, enters, “Helen Maria” wes ison the job. ‘cabinet officers ‘come’ to ‘him. i An “open door” policy” is maintain- ~ bed, “ Works at Lunch, 1 At.12:30 a halt is called for lunch This, usually is taken with someone, yi viwho has asked an engagement on »|-budget matters. Normally, the day ends anywhere betwen 5 and 6 o'clock. That ordi- marily. means .a walk back to: the | apartment and dinner .with Pershing. But often he takes dinner downtown and goes back to the office for a night session. ..These. have: run. ag late. as 12:30 A. M. Dawes: isn’t. “hard-boiled.” : He As fessentially raheiraas ad tonder Heart: ed. The eal Dawes is revealed ‘bY the an who buildsand maintaing ‘hotels| - >for ‘unemployed 'men and’ women, who adopts into his’ tiomé an® orphaned oy and’ ‘girl, who recognizes, BO ‘keenly’ the ‘airfferin { soldiers‘ on’ the ‘firing line’ that’ hi stands ‘up’ ‘before *Benators' and tells hem straight out ‘they: tiave | been’! in an ingore “the » relia’ fatryminp ‘got: on his: Wn and di ‘Appeared fare) the ‘top of’ the eaten fe. “REMARK: ABLE put almost at once h 8 back, nod- |. ding and smilj Mi ‘4{ told him’ about Marty and Cob.” Delinquen A among’ eis is in- he whispered, “The sleepy old ‘thing ‘creasing and delfiquents: appear to wag dozing. Thought there was no| become younger in years all the time. danger because he couldn't see. He's| Mina C. Van Winkle, Washington wo- behind .a big rock now, safe amd| man police lieutenant. sound. Let's see what happens.” pyright 1921 by Newspaper Enter- prise.) (To Be Continued.) Bobbed hair isn’t making good girls bad, and bad girls aren’t bobbing their hair, so why all. this fuss?—Miss Frances Knight, Detrolt probation of- ficer. The great business of the college is to inspire ideals-and to inspire con- fidence in ideals:—Dr,: A. B. Storms, President, Baldwin-Wallace scollege. | ‘It’s two miles from the apartment atthe top of the Connecticut. avenue hill:to the treasury pbuilding. Dawes states covers the distance in about ‘40° min- Liberty, bonds will be sbeak at par utes. within the next thrée ‘years.—David ‘Shortly after 9:30 each morning the | Friday, ‘University -of “Michigan ” ‘eco- dot of room 382% treasury building nomics expert. CRE THE IRISHMAN.” HE SAID THN | Was 4 4, SEAL COW TRY, BECAUSE ny Saw A: MAN: errost rss, SST A. 10 - DOLLAR | Maney 20 TOLD ~MAaT WRONG, EVERETT. Iv WAS A 25° DOLLAR MONGY ORDER FOR 12 CENTS ~-- | got scarcely any s:ecp loose across the shoulders and’ baggy |’ He'may go to’see:the président. The} and “hardehips! 2 FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1921 ~ N TO ITS MERITS’ Halfen Says There Isn't: A Man In South Dakota Healthier . hea Among the many enthusiastic cham- pions of Taplac in Sioux Falls, S. D. is E. H. Halfen, chief clerk at’ the Hotel. Albert. His statement is char- acteristic of those which have made |Tanlac a household: ward; everywhere, He said : “In my opinion Tanlac is as differ- ent, from any other medicine ag, day,:* different from darkness and ‘ t. Before I began ta king Tanlae n0- | thing 1 ate agreed ‘with me. The:ledst** bite cl fccd would biet me up with” gas, press against my hearat so I eould - hardly. breath‘e, I! was s0 nervous.1 < felt’ an in- tense weariness all the Tho lit- tle I did manage to edt gave me no ° strength and I grew weaker. and thin- ner every day.: ‘J “[ do not know: how Tanlac did: it~ but it took hold of me right from the start and built me up, gave me a wonderful appetite and put my stom- ach in such first class condition that’ ; everything I eat agrees with me. [| amas healthy a man as there is: in the state, and while it is remarkable it is true that J have gained forty- five pounds in weight and every | pound of it is good, solid flesh. I just feel tip-top, in fact, and want to go.on record as saying that Tanlac isthe best medicine ever made.” Women reform. themselves. Upper Silesia is ‘upstage again. The Irish Ulster is. too hot for... peace. As building goes down buildings go up. « Russia aholi ahed health: ao wealth — and i “ These are the days: we. will wish, a for in’a deh months, : i i Fine feathers make‘ sad "birds: when a the “bills come ‘in 4 Al coutitries are Tearning the best - ‘scrap’ is their’ own, 4 Harruere wives probably miarted : | this ‘move against kissing. | Uncle'Sajn’s ‘running expenses are’ jutting railroads and running ships. * Many an‘égg is too old to be @' ‘chicken; ‘but you never find a woman, that way. it ve b Another, way ‘to’ help, permane peace is not to park cigaret butts on. ~ the piano. i A Harvard ‘star jumped _ over 25 feet. Probably got his training dodg- ing autos. The question is, which will be wip- ed out first, the national debt or the taxpayers? Some women are born beautiful; others have beauty thrust upon them by the society editor. \f Long. island judge orders man to. hey..wife one day each week. If she’s , wise she'll choose payday. 2 Francé is having a hard, time keep- ing ahead of America. She is kicking about no-piece bathing: suits. Every Bismarck man knows ‘Aimer- ica’s home-run king; but who is 'Bov- ernor of- Minnesota? SPECIAL... DINNER : SUND, > NIGHT ON: THE ROOF «7-5 Special dinner will be served Sunday night in the beautiful .. dining room a-top the MeKenzie, recognized as North Dakota’s most unique and aitractive place for dining service. Musical pro- gram from six to. ten, dinner served from six to eight. ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine Beware! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you % 4 — anese alliance is to be renewed with modifications, | Later, sailors brought them to America and plant- vised using Mayr’s Wonderful Rem-! Though the precise nature of these modifications |ed them. bali Groat a vee, «| has not been made public there is little doubt that} It has taken centuries, thousands of years, pos-|have not lost a day since taking it. their purpose is t) make it more'certain that the sibly millions, to put lemonade, ice cream, electric) 1¢ 18 worth its weight in gold.” it) is, a simple harmless preparation that treaty can in ro way disturb British relations| fans, artificial ice and refrigeration within reach removes thé : catarrhal mucus from | with the United ‘cates. | of all. | the intestinal tract and allays the in- This has been sted upon by the premiers of \ | flammation which causes practically | What new devices for making summer ' More! aii stomach, liver and intestinal ail- the British domizions,-who frankly told the Brit-/éndurable will be discovered in the centiries that ish premier that they considered a continuanee jlie ahead? ments, including appenWcitis. One RAS gE Seg ab tet ; are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- | scribed by physicians for twenty-one 2 | years and proved safe by milifons. | ; Take Aspirin only as tola in the . Bayer package for Colds, Headaches, a Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, |Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pata, Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tabs. | lets of Aspirin cost few cents. Drug.‘ gists also sell larger packages. Aspirin te the trade mark of Bayer Manufae- . tgs Monoaceticacidester- of Salicy: Gh Uf (¢ AUNT TITTY dose will convince ‘or money refund- ed. For sale at, all druggist: