The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 27, 1921, Page 4

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} i i ' TRE OTS PAGE FOUR THEBISMARCKTRIBUNE i SC PT EEE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. CS IRS csc GEORGE D. MANN - - tt fe Editor GEORGE De Man Nei Wass Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO atte Bldg. Marquette Be VNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEWYORK - . Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED. PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it on not otherwise credited in this paper and also the loca’ news published herein. Sah ae 7 Al Fights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, | Daily by carrier, per year....++--++ $7. Daily by mail, per year (i Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bis Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota......+++ THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ee (Established 1873) - SE REMEMBER YOUR GUESTS Nothing is more refreshing to any traveler than to go into a city where he is greeted as guest of the city. It is a spirit that nearly every booster organization in any little or big city in the United States seeks to inculcate in its citizens. Such.a spirit can only exist where there is pride in one’s city; confidence in its future, and a sense of responsibility to the city and to one’s neighors exists. Last spring there was held in Bismarck a “Do You Know” week. It was, the Town Criers said, a week devoted to “selling Bismarck to ourselves.” They feel it succeeded. Surely one could not have witnessed the exhibits of the varied activities of DETROIT Kresge Bldg. walk out on the street and give never a glance at a ragged kiddie in need of a pair of shoes. DESTRUCTION Lumbermen chop down one of the largest Doug- las fir trees in British Columbia. Rings in the trunk show it took the tree 420 years to grow. It! ' sprouted nine years after Columbus discovered | America. | Yet man cut it down and destroyed it in a few! minutes. | Honor and success are like that ttee. It doesn’t | \take long to destroy what required a long time to! ‘build up. Germany, the fallen. world power, will! jagree, i H ! COAL : | To keep hard coal mines running, 18 tons of i water have to be pumped to the surface for each) |ton of coal produced. | The tunneling involved in mining anthracite | leach year is. equivalent to building a double-track | subway between New York and Chicago. | Those impressive claims are advanced by the ‘anthracite operators. Both items are included in labor cost, which averaged about $4 a ton in first |four months of 1921, latest figures available. | Hard coal is selling around $8.25 a gross ton at ‘the mines. Overhead, profits and royalties cost ‘as much as labor. { DOOM ‘ The king of Rurutu, island in the South Seas, ,worries because mines have been discovered in his} domain. That, he fears, will bring the white man. | We boast of our civilization. Its coming means | lan end of the savage’s happiness, and gradual i ; | i i i s a stage newsboy shivers amid paper snow, then $ALESM. AN. $. AM ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE * He Land His First Customer "JUST TAKE A LOOK AT IT — WANT 2~"AND A BARGAIIGS w te Att TOO! — ONLY %50. EAWH- Et - ETC — BUT MY DEAR SIR = THIS 1S SOMETHING NEW - DIFFERENT — A BOOK YOU CAN'T DO WITHOUT > ETC - ETt Gaal (LL. SAY THATS SOME 600K. — THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF JOHN BARLEYCORN. s NO ree) SS BY SWAN amount of goods that can be sold 13 the city’s commercial life nor learned cold facts regarding its past, its present and its future without feeling pride and confidence. extinction of the savages. signated as “socialability sales” by one merchant. jeer the king worries. The merchants of the city want visitors to enter | But does civilization bring something better? In a material way, yes. The Dollar Day sales of the merchants are de-|Man, however, is happiest in the jungle. No won-) | mense incomes must be dis ‘paid by those of small incomes and, | judging from this standpoint, who 1s ‘better able to pay, the 6,000,000 out of work together with the 20,000,000 of smail incomes, in mos‘ cases barely large enough to cover living necessi- [MANDAN NEWS| their stores, make a more careful inspection than | BULLET aa f , or the - comps ely few who A | * * Funeral . ! Attorney ‘E. R, Lanterman has! 7 s h . rt of the ever before, see what they really. have done in an| At the siege of Vicksburg, W. V. Meadows, Con- of Mrs. Skiod ltedt for Duluth, Minn, where he willl Genin or een ie moe ei effort to bring to the people of the community /federate soldier from Alabama, got a bullet in his} the things that they need and want. There doubt- eye. P. J. Knapp, northern veteran, finds he fired less will be many visitors in the city. The mer- jthe bullet. He gets in touch with Meadows and a chants have already given evidence of their wel-|warm friendship springs up by mail. come by offering sacrificing bargains. The people} Would you feel friendly to the man who shot out afternoon. of the city generally may cooperate splendidly in/your.eye? The Knapp-Meadows incident proves | the Methodist church will the general movement if they will reflect their|that warring people do not hate each other indi-| pride in their city through a showing of neighbor-| vidually. The real germ of war is in the system |corded | four liness and hospitality to those who are guests of|of government. the city. HOTTEST JOB The hottest job in America is mining in the| Comstock Lode, in Nevada. Miners there, 2500| feet underground, work in a temperature of: 145 degrees and have to be sprayed continually with; cold water. Under your feet, the temperature increases an| . average of: one degree for every 60 feet of depth. jsnown as the tericultural Bloc; We live on the thin shell of an egg filled with! liquid fire. Tap the interior and you'd have the Pendens papell jas Republicans possibility of war with the Japanese. Why? SENATE power of a million volcanoes. " tas Sir Charles Parsons, inventor of the marine |time. turbine engine, says man eventually will harness : the earth’s interior heart and-make it do most of jporate interests. under control. his work. | Who will do it?. Have you a baby boy in the, bastinet? Maybe he’s the one. i EDITORIAL RE Americans have discovered the cheap German| Boek, uldes of important issue “which are Patte ie- process of taking nitrogen products from the air. / rd ners amlsad This is announced in New York at the annual meet- THE THIRD DEGREE ing of the, American Chemical Society. It means, cheaper fertilizers, dye-stuffs and ex- plosives, making us independent of the nitrate deposits of Chile. Next stop for chemists is to learn how to make artificial rubber cheaply. Also, how to grow our feat . .. H If you visited Japan, you’d make friends with | well beloved ‘as: Mrs. Skjod had pass-| nearly all you meet. Yet you seriously consider |¢4 away. She had.been in very good tives, y Do we give our governments too much power? Financial jourfals are annoyed. because the whip hand in,the Senate is held by a coalition This bloc, rep- resenting farmers, includes Democrats and Inde-; | The farmers are having their inning. ‘It’s about \farmers, protects the little people by keeping cor- In his suggestive article on “Travesties of the Law” Mr. Ftizpatrick pays his respects to the practice of “the third degree’ — the barbarous system by which police officers’in some communi- ties force confessiéns from persons suspected of Held This Afternoon ‘attend a meeting of the presidents and! to be considered the discrimination be- ; eX eeretares of Rotary clubs. of ia overt the integrated business and the The funeral of Mrs. James Skjod,! i : single process competitor. le pro- 'who died suddenly Saturday evening | H. G, Taylor returned Saturday | duction ‘and the distr buon, of eee joe apolexy will bé held from the!from Panama City, Fla., wHere he ioe HAINES tae rr a Lutheran church’ at two o'clock this/was. called two weeks ago by the | ‘Tction, manu hi pret Rev. W. R. Thatcher of! death of his father. | cases running up to eight, ten or even officiate. | beers Senet more distributions on which a tax must i H q rwi oe! i ch ti he other hang Her sudden death, came as a climax Mrs. R. M. Erwin and son, who have! be paid each time. On U ; © a week. in which. Mandan had re- {been visiting in the west since last | in the case of the large single corpor- sudden: and violent |Spring has returned from Portland,’ ation as for example, the steel trust, jdeaths, and the community was deep- | Ore: »Duponts or Ford, the several steps or ly grieved to hear that a woman as} ——— processes of extraction, manufacture Mr. and Mrs. Joseah Gaver spent! and sales'is covered by the one tax of Sunday the guests of Glen Ullin rela-/ one per cent against the 5 per cent o WAS eas 110 per cent on the saue goods from health andlgighs een Thursday. and) - the smaller dealers. ii can readity Friday assisting the Methodist church; Fred Bantleon and John Stevenson} i 4 . ~ . 5 seen; this, vorki ross in- in. making, a dnjxe’ for funds to|of Flasher came up Sunday to ate on Cee maaietities it complete the new. ighurch. She was, tend the funeral of G, J. Solum, ‘also furnishe$ a strong ‘iducément to entertaining -her sister and her hus- ar RE EES Ae band, Mr. and Mrs, A, D. Williams,| J. R. Gilbreath of | Minneapolis ig |igoneel ation are mouonely. ee of Hope, N.,D., who ‘were on theirjhere on business. etting back to “whetner, or: . sales tax is a trifling 1aatter. Quoting ay, homeptromy ongauts; trip. in. the; | Professor T. S. Adams 4 “one per cent west There was no intimation of an | PEOPLE'S FORUM |) 2x on gross sales is more than one- i : i pal third of the net profits in dairying and Martha Macoy Skjod was born in!¢———____+—__—-®| meat _ packing. It is ..ore than one- Fond du Lac, Wis. Arr 13, 1861. | soditor The Tribune: Shevlwasvuniteduin tnareage to M fourth of the net profits in the manu Skjod in Minnesota Band vei to] Th€ sales tax—and do we néed one?| facture of, millinery and artificial i ; . One of the principles ci sound eco-| flowers, in the grocery trade, in the Mandan in 1907, the family having’ somites is to place a tax where it wilt| Sale of many forms of leather goods for many years. Five children | 2 > that the tax will be: much more than one-fiith of the net were born to them, the oldest having | a had tao Ga cousin a as are all{ profits in Sie wholesale iumber trade, died in Rush City;Minn. | The ‘taxes anyway. In other words, it is to| in coffee roasting, grisi and flour mill. viving children: areieonn ant be a tax on consumption. ‘ing, rice milling and cleaning, smelting jane) Charlesneniodnelepandan, and) Nothing so well measures taxpayers and refining, and the nufacture of Mrs. Leona Hudson of Aneta,.N. D.| ayiity to pay as income or should waj leather goods, hat $ and some There also survive three sisters and] cay one’s ability to pay should be »/ silk products.” This being the result oe brotaers Mee dD. ne basis for all taxes. Ine present in-| or effect of one per cei, what about iN D. at Net as . Hopes! come tax with its graduated rates wita an incredsed cost of 8 per cent to 10 Steen ie ettie azelett of i the larger the income, the, heavier tne| per cent, which as a matter of fact Saunita eNews Geo, Macoy of St. rate are figured on this basis: No tax| must be paid by the small single pro- Paul ia as. Macoy of Fond duj which is expected to raise several Dil- anufacturers wiile the larg? Lae, Wis, Her husband, James Skjod,! tion dollars per year-can be called] single integrated corporation pays onc is one of the oldest employces of the! trining amount even though e| tax of one per cent. Does any one be- Russell-Miller Milling Co, | it low 28 1 per cent. It must nec-| lieve that the large manufacturer ily be felt by some one. would not take a merciless advantage sales tax becomes a tax on the| of his power to undec-setl and squeeze actual needs of all of us instead of a| out his small rivals? tax on our individual ability to pay.| The sales tax means an addition to It! must follow that the largéd rates| business cost. Goods must be sold at which run up to 60 per cent on im: |a higher price on account of it. The Mr. and Mrs. George:Janda arrived | from Selfridge, by auto with W. H. Ordway. Mr. and Mrs. Janda will make Mandan their home again, the former accepting a position with the First National Bank. After spending la few days here looking after busi- ness matters, Mr. Ordway will leave ‘A balance of political power, held by the | mete ene nome, on Pighth Ave: S| not be shifted. ‘The: belleyers. in ajand the wholesale feed trade, At 18; TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 diminished. Industry 1: sowed down. This is not a time for edditional busi- ness costs but should bs a time of ex- | pansion while in reatiiy business {: } sick and the pick up wili not start by. | added costs on the consumer. | Again, do we need a sales tax? The excess profits tux has been repealed. Was it the purpose of the Republican party in promising tne répeal of ‘this ‘tax, merely to shift the burden on to | those less able to hear it? | It Seems the only excuse for the sales | tax is its ease of administration, but er Olsness to represent the state de- main jt seems even this argument goes } glimmering and instead. only’ adds | more complications. H ye FRED HANSON. WHILE ‘OM SIMS | A love match is one where neither side s_rikes. There are too many self-made wid- ows and widowers. | Nobody can see a man who is all wrapped up in himself. Every week is becomiug cleanup week for the railroads. We can't have universe] geace and cigar ashes on rugs, ‘A fashion show seems to be eithér 'a show up or a show down. Most of the checks on liquor-mak- | ing are cashed’ at the bank. Don't expect’ a girl toa share your jlot if it is mortgaged for a car. Kinstein says;time doae not exist; st be addressing his creditor: . FAV. D205 Nobo} cares what the world is coming to—just so it does come’ t6! world seems to be in their stomachs. Another way to force Japan to dis- arm is to give her our wooden ships. Last year we were all crazy to spend our money—and now we admit it. i | Reformers won't be satisfied until | they shut up everything oxcapt their mouths. The average man thinks the only thing that could live on his salary is ya germ. Bryan says he'will never run for office again. Now we know what jexcited Mars. The squirrel hunting season is open.’ When in the wads don’t act jlike a nut. Nowadays the son who follows his father’s footsteps is likely to: wind up in the cellar. A treasury report says the average man has $250 in the bank; but the re- Port’ can’t be verified. The difference hetween movies and vaudeville is that at the former the audience does the talking. ig— ie ae es H ; ‘ || With the Movies | |¢—_—___—__—___—__¢ THE ELTINGE | The popularity of the automobile race pictures in which Wallace Reid has ‘starred has resulted in the screening of “Too Much Speed,” an- other original Byrqgn Morgan story | with the race track as a backgnound. In this new picture, at the Eltinge theater tomorrow and Thursday, Mr. Reid again will be seen in the pilot's overalls and helmet, speeding around ‘the course to the speedometer's ‘tune jor a hundred and ten miles per hour jand winning a race and the consent of the girl's father, to her wodding. The picture is a continuation of the jexperiences. of the characters in {“What’s Your Hurry?” Mr, Reid’s pre- vious automobile picture, and the three principal characters of that Our place among the nations of the ) own coffee and tea. Then, entirely self-suporting, we can tell the rest of the world to go whistle. _ JOBS A Chicago mass meeting takes steps to use! $100,000,000 of state and municipal bonds to pro- vide work for unemployed. The resurrected War Finance Corporation is on the eve of releasing $1,000,000,000 for agricul- tural and livestock credits, mostly to finance ex- ports. No trouble finding money for railroads or Euro- pean buyers. at any rate, still use it. They don’t actually apply \the old-fashioned instruments of torture, but they |might as well. iwhose resistance they are trying to break down|number of ladies Saturday afternoon jtice, and he condemns it strongly. He could not | possibly condemn it too strongly. Nobody could. We had hoped that. this cruel institution had}e,, Ww. E. Bowen, assistant to thc ‘gone out of use. Ayparently it hasn’t. ently policemen in the larger cities, some of them Their treatment of a prisoner} A, M. Burt, as crime. He makes a strong case against this prac-/for Selfridge with Mrs. Ordway and son to make their home. stant to the presi- dent. Mr, Kvle, general store keep- EVERETT TRUE lL DON'T BELIEVE THE WATER! to life. BY CONDO s‘ory, Dusty Rhoades, played by Mr. Reid, Virginia MacMurran, played by Agnes ‘Ayres and. Pat MacMurran, | played by Theodore Roberts, are again / -. | zencral Appar jand| Mr. Elliott of the purchasing de- partment of the Northern Pacific here jwere in the city yesterday checking over the supplies on hand in the loca’ yards. s IN THIS SWIMMING POOL HAS Ren CHANGED FoR DAYS WHERS'S THE Manacer ¢ mechancial superintendent, Mrs, H. 0. Alt#@w entertained 2 y Rhoades is on the point of ig Virginia, when he races a rival dealer on the open road, and en- rages old Pat MacMurran, who de- clares the wedding off. Dusty elopes with the bride, old Pat pursues and both are jailed for speeding. After serving his sentence, Dusty, with Vir- ginia’s help, secretly buys Pat's Pakro racing car, which has been out of the |is quite as cruel.as though they had used the rack ‘or broken‘them on the wheel. | Of course “confessions” thus extracted from It's high time the unemployed had an inning ™e2 willing to do or say anything to put an end at this financing game. Country needs billions That'd provide jobs. Start the financing. EE ae TROUBLE e door of a Boston police station o doc pens and Mrs. William DeYelfo complains that her husband chased her out of the house with a carving knife. Friend husband, interviewed by the patrolman, said the trouble started when his wif ¢ home brew down the sink. e poured his ‘It seems that the really important problems of civilized community. life have nothing to do with 1 the Li - tions or the tariff. fea a pee PRU Se ash Ge ; MEOUW! ‘ Three thousand homeless cats, Teft in Atlantic ito their torture are worthless.’ A court before _ of dollars worth of roads, canals, buildings etc, | Which triumphant police_officers bring such a i ‘confession ought to free the prisoner and send ithe policeman to jail. \ The “third degree” is a relic of barbarism, and lif there were not so manv upheavals of barbarism {these days when we are discovering that mankind | {has not traveled so far from the brute as we had \thought, it would be surprising to learn that it still is in use. But it ought not to be in use, and it ought not to be tolerated for an instant in any Nor would it be tolerated if the decent people of that community could wit- |ness a bunch of policemen applying it to a human being. . The policeman is a necessary institution, and he does splendid service in protecting society City by cottagers, are driving the town wild. The|22ainst the deeds of its unscrupulous members. trouble may be multiplied ere 1922. What kind of a human brute is it, that will cud- But society needs protection against one common jdevelopment in the policeman’s maind: the con- Ge a cat and google over it all summer, then aban- ception that an accused man is net:essarily guilty, don it to starve? To find out, go to a theater, see a spectator weep Herald. and has no rights that deserve resspect. — Duluth Bh a Per bare ees iskfn becomes. for Mrs. W. H. Ordway; who is to jleave soon for Selfridge, N. D., to make her future home, Mrs. J. ©. Clark/left. last evening fay her home at Auburn, Wash She has been spending the past jmonth visiting friends ,and relatives here and at St, Paul. | A telegram received from Anton Qlson, who accompanied the remains jof Nelson Luther to Bigelow. Mo.. ad- wisec that the funeral was held there |Sunday at 4:00 p. m, © Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Remor return- lent yesterday morning from Tnmes- ‘town where they were called last week by the death of a nephew of the former. GIRLS! BLEACH UGLY FRECKLES Squeeze the juice of two'lemons: inte a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the_best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion. whitener. Massage this sweetly fragrant lem- on lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands* each day and see how freckles and blemishes bleach out and how clear, soft em@@ zosy-white the IF CLUSANLINGSS 1S NEXT To GODLINGSS, GET A GOOD FLYING START, FOR “ou'Re A LONG, CONG WAY FROM TIPPERARY ¢ Tam game for two years, enters the big event and wins the race. The sup- |1orting company is excellent. i SE NE ate BS AT BISMARCK, “The Raiders” the big story of the Canadian North West Police, starring Franklyn Farnum, which is to make ‘its first appearance at the Bismarck theater tomorrow, has neen acclaimed by press, critic and public as being among the very few great pictures of ‘the season. Heretofore Mr. Farnum has confined his dTamatic efforts to- ward the typical western heroes, bul in this picture, Mr. Farnum sheds his chapps and his wide rim sombrerro and is’seen in the familiar uniform {of a private of the Royal North West Mounted Police of Canada. | The story is a picturization of the |movel by Bertram Sinclair and was ; made into scenariy form by the well i krown adaptor, Williaia E. Wing. The picture was produced in Cali. } fornia and Canada under the personai mn of Colonel W N Sclig, who jis one of the pioneers of the picture | business and has perhaps done as muca }for the development and uplift of the }film drama as any-maa in America. | HEALTHY ONLY. ; London, Sept.—After October 1, all | potatses. and other pluits with woody stems above ground, that are importe1 jinto England, must have an officiel ; health certificate from the country of i their origin, epee Rr Ea y

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