The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 3, 1922, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

” 1) PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE -Enterediat the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second a , how. to cook corn in the delicious forms prepared “ment spent $531,182,891 during the last fiscal, Class Matter. - ‘. i GEORGE D. MANN. - - ==) Editor, EAE Sa { Foreign Representatives ‘\ | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | is PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ‘ i NEW YORK .- é .-~ Fifth Ave. Bldg. | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication, of; all_news, dispatches credited, to it or not otherwise crédited in this paper and also the local news published herein. t—China lick Japan. \many troop. No hurry. When we get through,| source’of all inspiration, the generator’ of cheer? fulness, the dispeller of gloom. ,Tpat is her great, est function in all ages—furnishing the electricity that drives the motors. CHINAMAN i If you enjoy the confidence of your Chinese laundryman or waiter, he will tell you this: : “In solving the Far East’ problem, China’s’the goat. What happen now, no matter. In 12 years—1933 We-make plans now, (drill All rights of republication of special dispatches herein iro Japan left.” are also reserved. i ‘ Nah az, MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | That line of talk is common among Chinese, all SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN AVANCE 99 there must be fire. China, long suffering, will Daily by:carrier, per year..... eehiet No Socaje-a 8 | iat 2 7.20; take care of herself in time. Deliver us from the Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... : Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) re lwrath of a good- atured man.: \ a an Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. 1 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) INCOME ; «> f Are you an average American? Then in 1913 COLD |yvour inceme was $354 for each member of the ‘family. ThiS rose to $629 in 1919. But it was In climates with cold winters, plant life will not pee RACES i i ay resume normal growth in the warm weather of OMY $358 in actual buying power, on the basis of spring unless it has been subjected previously to pres you had’ to payjin 1818: a period of chilling. So says a scientist in the; . : i He aa ead Institution’s a pata :ef Economic Research, a name so formidable that This suggests that cold winters are necessary t carries conviction. for the health of people who live in northern’ states. Not so in the south. The chemistry of during the war. So we were—on paper. The climate and weather, and their influence on the; fellows who cashed in before the break walked body, are mysteriés. That's why we all talk so/ off with the pack-pot. much about the weather. Crit: COSTLY | Four hundred and sixty-three thousand men,|France to replace hives stolen or ‘destroyed by working for $2000 a year each, earn in a year just|German warriors. : enough to. pay. the interest on our national debt,| The shipment of bees:, includes 460,000,000 says a statistician. | workers gnd 230,000,000 drones. That tells the real story of the cost of war.” | A combjarison: +0 the; figures adds fresh and ; A war ae aia val yee pellet rather cohvineing proat, that the scientists are » . "bees closely resembles our own. is the only real wealth. It pays for every war, < : long after the cannons are rusted into dust. - eee . bt $ DRONES | DOLLS DELICIOUS Only 17 per cent of the corn crop moves outside the country in which it is grown, says THC: Pow-' ell, Erie Railroad official. What corn growers need is a-greater market. Farm organizations should band together and con- duct national campaigns, educating Amerfcans away the toy elephant that Santa Claus brought to Tony and Waddy, elephants in the Boston zoo. | They are.as delighted with their toy as a little girl with her Christmas doll. : | The parental instinct is the basis of. all life. Mothers, by teaching their small daughters to care for dolls as if they were ‘growing children, can help shape. the characters and’careers of the third generation, as'yet unborn. by ‘southern “mammies.” Educate other coun- tries, also. Foxy raisin growers do this. You've see their ads: “Have you had your iron today? Eat} raisins.” {REBEL ALPREDSS EDITORIAL REVIEW i Comments reproduced: in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have hoth sides of important issues which are being discussed in, the press of the day. ; SPENDING ; The War Department’s annual report can be boiled down to this one sentence: “The depart-; A NEW SWEDISH MINISTRY ° | Following the general election in Sweden, a new year. ul : ' That’s too much for war purposes in a peace Ministry has been formed, with Herr Branting at year. i its head. . The new prime minister first endeavor- The economy that is being applied in, the War €4'to enlist the aid of the Liberals in the forma- Department must be intensified. ‘Same with all|tion of a coalition cabinet; but the Liberals re- other departments of government. jfused their co-operation. Congress’ goal should be to cut Uncle Sam’s| In addition to serving as prime minister, Herr spending to less than $1,000,000,000 a year, not; Branting has assumed, temporarily at least, the counting war debt interest. portfolio of foreign affairs. In his statement of Bee II |policy, published in the Svensk Handelstidning, MORE i In Upper Silesia, the average miner is digging 190 tons of coal a year, compared with 340 tons before the way. British miner's yearly output has| dropped from 258'to 204 fis. -That’s an interest-| |. inite sugge§tions as A ing sidelight on what’s wrong with Europe.. isesa oar ees ae pesto te. policy I med rien A a « aa ove eee ek s ee oe | Other problems of his inaugural statement deal su} 8 P! gs *\ with military expenditure—which the prime min- since the war ended. ‘ister declares must. be cut down to an. absolute We'll be out of the woods before any other coun-} minimuam—and with the democratization of in- ee as aa Laie 8 Pee bihig ae i dustry, which he believes will require serious gov- a 2 ant ey aa A Cline pro uction. ag ornmental consideration pape early date. P y means. mereased’’ As to fiscal mattersyitie recent elections dis- prosperity—for the producer and all others, |closed an overwhelming sentiment against protec- unemployment problem to be the most urgent task ef the new ministry; but, beyond indicating that the government will accept no fanatistic proposals for the solution of this problem, Herr Branting MARRIAGE jits readiness to follow. As respects foreign pol- One divorce in every nine weddings in America,/icy, the prime minister ‘declares that this must| | York, bending low before God in pray- and we are rapidly approaching a one-to-five. con-|center around the League of Nations. — Living, dition, says the Rev. Jones I. J. Corrigan, Boston! Age. . ‘ College. p ! In the last 20 years nearly 1,900,000 divorces} were granted in the United States, breaking up! the homes of 1,320,000 children, most of them un-| der 10. ' j There even are states that have one divorce to, three marriages. The great dragon that is at-; tacking American home life is the Divorce Evil. It is. leading our social system toward a State of! consecutive Mormonism. ‘ THE RUSSIAN THRONGS or your work. Imagine that through your street, | prosperous, cheerfully lit, with its. bakeries ‘and eat, you heard the sour’. of veople coming, pass- ing by, and coming again, an increasing stream, | two or three thousand of thom every hour. ;agine them pouring past you, after day, week jafter week, for al! the hours of the day, with a WOMEN Men are just little boys grown up, says the/ Vigorous or feeble, or the short light steps of chil- philosophers. |dren, If all the Russians who are dying from The boy stubs his toe, runs to mother, cries aj hunger, or disease that follows hunger, this day momerit, gets a pat on the head anda cookie and | and tomorrow and every day until spring, could then returns to play again. file past your window, your street would be filled It would be.a much darker world these days for| With a like procession, and ydur soul haunted by the men who-are out-of work, if it were not for|it. How many hours could you listen to those the wives, mothers and sisters who encourage|Uncountable muffled, shuffling footfalls, hinting them, keep the flanié of hope alive in their hiearts| at feet padded with miserable rags or bare alto- and send them forth anew on the quest for pros- If you want to flirt with death, try to take; butcher stores filled with every kind of thing to! 1 Im- ter another /came in; then three or | four others. | monotony broken only by the varying footfalls, | over the world. Where there is so much smoke,| These figures come, from the National Bureau, . | { A trainload of bee hives arrives in northern) | HOW REVIVAL OF 1857 BEG jconnected with waited half-an_ hour,| twenty-four were present. ;the penitent was heard. | suread (Men felt impelled to pray, as y an irresistible impulse. Christians, gether, before you gave a good many of your least! without respect to denominational dis- necessary dollars toward helping to make them|tinctions, rushed into and filled all ‘THE! BISMARCK TRIBUNE _ ~" MY CASTLE T’'ve d:castle hiea with, tréasures, Found in many distant lands, } ‘ T have sculptures fair, and paintings rare, ~ Wrought by Old Master’s hands; T have jewels worthy of a crown, And laces fit for queens— ‘Oh, I have a'world of wonders, In thé castle of my dreams, Fast within the walls of Somewhere, ‘On the stream of By and By, I'can seé its turrets rising Close ‘against the distant sky; ‘ Thru its :lofty halls’ I wander, Ne me ~ While.the moonlight sheds its beams On each treasured thing of beauty, | Sarat ia Nearly all. of us. thought we were getting rich| ‘In the castle of my You would ask that dreams, Could I take you to my stronghold, you might stay, Where the birds in joyful chorus, Chant the songs of yesterday; Where the golden light of Fancy, Like some distant beacon gleams, Guiding on to scenes of rapture, In the castle of my dreams, : * Oh, the castles of fair Dreamland! Tow their turrets fall and raise, As we draw the nearer to them, In our swift winged And, oft-tim That when v argosics; the thot steals o’er me, \ e left carthly scencs, We shall find a welcome waiting, In the castles of our dreams, CORNER Lee ay IN DREAMS Editer’s Note: John Bradford is serving a term of one year at the State Penitentiary. The Tribune has published several of his poems.) (By John Bradford.) The dismal shadows creep along the tiers, Like ghosts that seem to guard. the prison cells; ‘ And:thoughts again drift back to gold- en years Where memory in recalling often dwells. Though fondly turn our musings to the past, la cloud that dims the present looms between, And where the shadow of regret is cast, The cold. realities of ‘life aré ‘seen, But haply, and full soon, the night shall bring Release from thoughts that sometime prove unkind; \ there beneath her generous mother wing, The cradled dreams of slumber I shall find. : And Then fancy free, again in dreams I roam, ‘O’er winding, ways, by meadow brooks and streams; j And hear the cattle lowing in the loam Where watted zephyrs fill the vale of dreams; As-then of yore,:a-down the mossy lane, \ The. meadow, lark! fshear, Yn rapture ‘spurred es ‘ Spending.most recklessly his favor'd F fa NT eae tps: that I ever fig! moments of an sal \ Whereftyes Pet cpectantiy for you; To see\¥aur.jform appear. through woodland’ bower. Coming to meet me in our rendezvous. But leve"was: yo) ‘Sthen, and tgo _basiiéd af, héprt Enough‘with fui impse the form’ to trace. But now—in dreams—when Cupid spend’ his dart,, « ‘ He’ leaves’ you captive inl my. strong embrace, x How fair it seems in slumber land's repose; To live again where youth before has gone. But ah—like drops of dew upon the rose Our dreams like them have vanished at the dawn. ABSENCE ithe prime minister declares the solution of. the)... youta na row b> weepin’ Mf you ha’ told mie true: 1 would: a-now been sleepin’ And, dreamin’ then 0’ you. gi me back the token— The letters and the ring; The heart o’ me is broken And ‘never more shall sing. “Sacred, the words I’m sayin’ To him that’s far fnom shore; Ave Mary, hear me prayin’. I will na say them mor —JOHN BRADFORD. ie PEOPLE'S FORUM be te te ‘As told by Rev. E. Wigle in “Pre- lage Oy rs | tion, and this mandate the government proclaims} yailing Prayer,” published in 1891, by ithe Stanton Printing Co., Grand Rap- ids, Mich. “In 1857, a city missionary in New er for the perishing souls about him, | pleadjagly ’¢ried: ‘Lord, what wilt thou -have.me to do?’ He daily reiter- ated the cry. His earnestness be- came INTENSE. His faith took hold of the promises, and he rose to the ex- Turn for a moment, Americans, from your play: pectation that hundreds and thousands would be converted to God. He, had no idea how this would be brought about. He resolved on a noon-day prayer meeting. On’ the twenty-third of September he was found in a room the Fulton Street Chappel. He when one person entered; shortly af- With these six persons the prayer meeting proceeded and ended “One week after, in the same place, another meeting was held, at which The Holy Ghost, was present too. It was re- | solved that a meeting be held the next day, at which a large number were ;Dresent. ‘This was the beginning of the Fulton’ Street Daily Noon-day Prayer Meeting. The room soon be- |came. too small, and they moved into |the middle lecture room. God moved upon the people, and soon the cry of The fire places opened for prayer. operity. tor Woman is the shining light of the world, the|less frequent ?—The New Republic. ti ne " must \ jmita “The UNION of Christians, engaged Rn | so intensely in intercessory prayer, |stru:k the world with amazement. It jwas felt that ‘this was prayer indeed. A love for souls sprang up. Sinners felt that it was awful to trifle in the place of prayer. It was felt that Chris- tians obtained positive and direct an- swers to their prayers, and when, they UNITED to pray for any PARTICU- LAR person that person’ was SURE to be converted. The spirit of prayer in- jcreased; and in. the,fifth ;month; from the;‘biginning prdyer-mMeetings | were held in ‘churches, theaters (court rooms, public hails; workshops and tents, where crowds’ attended and filled the places. The interest rapidly spread. to other cities—Boston, Balti- more, Washington, Richmond, etc.,— until the whole-land received the rain, )The most hopeless and forbidding were brought under its mighty powefi saved.” _ Ht A Revival wai pin 1892. It was given 4 f ayer. ‘It.is MORE. NEE} ike It will Wee given in answer to UNITED (Matt. 18: 19, 20), PERSEVERING (Luke 11: 5- 10; 18:1), BELIEVING (Heb. 10:23- 125; 11:6) PRAYER! Let prayer bands be formed everywhere TO PRAY FOR REVIVAL. Let nothing hinder! Ob- serve the Week of Prayer. Pray in private, at the family. altar, in the public congregation, everywhere, FOR REVIVAL IN THE BODY OF CHRIST. Thousands of churches all over the land are observing watch night and are uniting their prayers for a great re- vival. A great American statesman recently said vival, else we will have a revolution.” Let. us have the revival! Several , {churches in this city are observing the W ek of Prayer and special evangelis- tic services are conducted in the Evan- gelical.Church, corner 7th and Rosser. St. There is.a great longing in the hearts of the Christian people of this city for a genuine spiritual awaken- ing and we believe it is coming. “Lord send us a great revival and let it-begin in me!” Revive Thy work, le. ‘Lord! Thy mighty arm make bare; peak with the voice that WAKES THE DEAD, and MAKE THY PEO- PLE HEAR!” FARMERS FEDERATION Fargo, N. D., Dec. 21, 1921. Editor Tribune: Kindly find place in your paper for this letter. For. your information I wish to ‘state than on the 3rd day of December, 1921, a few farmers met together. in Fargo, N. D., and agreed to form an organization to be. known, as the “Farmers’' Federation of America.” Constitution and By-laws: were duly adopted, and decided to proceed witn this organization. . The undersigned was appointed general manager and chairman: of the organization. have the farmers themselves set the fixed price’on all farm products based on cost of -preduction plus a reason able profit. tl is just as essential for HELLO, CHARUGS BEEN KEEPING Sig Z The object of this organizaton is to], the farmers to have profit as-it is for "person to*have food.’"No'person can or will dpny the facts thet the farmers ought’ to’ have; at least high endugh price on their: products to give then) cost of production with a Httle profit and‘no one is more capable to figure out this price than the farmer himself and if he does not do this himself, it will not work out satisfactory to all classes-cf. people.- A corporation. can- not do it ard the state cannot do it; the federal government . never has done it in. the past nor will they: do it in the future. If the government sets the price on:farm products, they must do so with manufactured products also and that will be declared’ unconstitu- tonal, but the farmers must organize on’ business princip.es, ‘systematically right, so that they will and can set their ‘price. © + : ; ‘The, present, money, panic is caused by business activities ,and: selfishness va One Side and the tarmers own neg- ligence on the other side. All busi- ness men are organized up to the hilt; all well organized societies will create abuse for non-Organized. The non-or- ganized cannot defend itself against the good organization, therefore it be- hvoves the farmers! to organize on a business basis on’ a par wth business wen tor their own we.tare and for the welfare of the country at large. When the farmers are prosperous all is well. | The Farmers Federation of America is founded on the right principles. The organization-is one of and by the farm- ers tnemselves tor the good of all hu- manity. f Var | wns organization’ will b spread ‘over ull the states and we invite and | solicit the cooperation from ‘all farm- ar organizations and the right thinking epopic and press to help spread this movement and we most earnestly ap- any capacity. in your own locality and state to kindly correspond with me. Sincerely yours, FARMERS FEDERATION, OF AMERICA; N.K, Wicks, < General Mer. ee ADVENTURE OF ‘THE TWINS . By Olive Burton Roberts Buskins pulled on the rein: of the green paper elephant he had been TH- ig: au came;to;a stop. i es coming up behind him, stopped too aad slid off. Reddy Bounce and’Blue Jumper, the fat jolly rubber. balloons, arriving just then took charge of Nancy’s pink pig and Nick’s ‘blue’ poodle. Now,” said Buskins, straightening hig bead-kerchiet and pulling up his high beots, wnich had vecome unset- tied in riding, “1 want you to see the batloon nursery. It’s here in: these woods.” -he Twins were all, curiosity by this time ‘for the Land of Lost Balioons was apout the queerest place they had ever ‘We must have @ Te-|neen in, and wonders were not to} cease, to judge trdmjthe noise that was coming trom-the woods ‘where Buskius was leading them, a forest of great‘rubber trees like the pictures in ae geography, books. ’ 5 Mua these rubber trees. were differ- ent because they bore such queer truit—balioons, \f you please, of all couors’ and sizes, yes, and shapes, too, tor where’ in ‘the old days rubver bal- loons’ Were allot-a shaps,and round. as moons, nowadays it’s nothing at all) tor a balloon to look exactly like a large watermelon; or a squash, or a string of sausages, and one I know of, my: dears, had ears like a rabbit. Ev- feryone kind of balloon was growing here: _ But the noise!. All babies were cry- ing. vie A “It makes them grow,” said Bus- kins. “All the balloon people grow here,” he went on, waving a hand, “And the babies are the squawkers. stand ’em in the city. Some times they cry so hard they fall off the trees, then they can’t grow any more, and they are sent to mortal children to play with. mortal parents aren’t fond of their noise cither!” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1921, NEA Service) Birth rate among the Indians in the MY NAMG 1S WHGRE HAVE MOU Sscce peal to ail that are willing to help in| Naney! aida! ‘key make such‘a noise folks can’t; _But 1 understand that | ral 4 “30! TUESDAY, JANUARY’, 1922” PHARMACIST Is: OUTSPOKEN IN COMMENDATION Well Known St. Paul Resident Tells What Made a New Man Out Of Him | John P. Wall, well-known phar- macis! living at 118 Cambridge Ave., St. Paul, Minn., after putting Tanlac to a personal test, says: ~ “I heard so many of our customers who'tried Tanlac say that it benefitted them so wonderfully aid was so dif- ferent from other mediciaes that I be- gan taking it, myself for indigestion and a run-down condition. I had ‘been bothered a’ good deal, too, with dizzy spells which lasted for days at a time, and at night I would like awake for hours unable to sleep, ¥ “Tanlac acted on me just like it hag on so many other people. It just made a new man of me in every way. When it cones to putting a man’s stomach right and building him: up, the merit of Tanlac’s. unquestionable.” 4 eae sold in Bismarck by oseph Breslow and by le: = gists everywhere.” i siatd are Lots of society buds become: bloom- ‘fig wall flowers. o Out ‘where: they hide moonshine in the bushes it pays to beat around ‘the | bush. ze Spme girls think they have got to | Be fast to catch a husband. - - * | .T he. Katsudoshashin © Kabushiki Réfbiia ‘is a Japanese movie trust, so mare, ;that’s why they wanted to eht., : : i When we speak of the good old days we often mean the bad ones, Let's hope these foreign aviation Programs don’t mean they will slip ; something over on us, : It never does for a sweet and sim- ple girl to forget the sweet part. | The cobbler with three daughters. who inherited $10,000,000, says he will paint his house first. It must neel painting worse than the daughters. House-hold: hint Pay your rent: The egg is easier to get than the | Rogge. Somebody ‘ought’ to get up.‘an ex- ercise for reducing fat-heads. | | The actress, suing for $20,000 on a +broken finger,’ must’ have used it to twist men around. “Beauty hint: Carry a-handkerchiet |when you have .a winter, cold. That still small voice. is the voice ‘of the people. © oo. seacenie“y One fellow: who .isn’t cutting much ice now is the iceman. seed The man who is right is never left. rumor they both go to work. This concert of nations is singing on American notes. Lots of movie stars who get thou- jeands a week only work one week a Pyear. 2 i Police reports show all the robbings are not south for the winter. Riguritig on your marrying is easier than’ marrying on your figuring. A wrestler’s ambition is to come out jon top. | Statistics show a shortage of 15,006 { plumbers, but they may just be late. | “The Sting of the Lash” opens an | engagement of two days at the Rialto ; theater today and local film devotees are promised ‘a: decided. treat in the splendid acting of Miss Pauline Fred- erick, who appears in the leading role Miss Frederick’s unusual versatility has long since placed her in the high- est rank of dramatic artists and tho role she interprets’ in “The Sting of the Lash,” was designed to give her versatility full scope. | At the outset she is a smart young woman of New York society but her fortunes collapse jand herself becomes a Arudge. But \ she triumphs in the end and smiles of happiness creep through the haze of tears. A splendid cast supports Miss Frederick. “The Sting of the Lash” lis an R-C Pictures Corp. production. |A BISMARCK MAN’S | EXPERIENCE Can you doubt the evidence of this Bismarck citizen? \ You can verify Bismarck endorse- | ment. | Read this: | John Wray, 1011 9th St. N., says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills have been an old standby in our home for several years. When I first used Doan’s, my idneys were sluggish in action and I had a } lull, steady pain in my back. T often | had to get up several times during the night to pass the kidney secre~ tions. Doan’s Kidney Pills were rec- ommended to me and I_got three-boxes lat Breslow’s Drug Store. After using ‘them my. trouble disappeared. I rec- ‘ommend Doan’s Kidney Pills for suci | trouble knowing them to be a remedy of merit.” | -€0c, at all dealers. Foster-Milbura Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. ¥. When ‘an ‘idle gossip meets an idie.. and ‘she ‘becomes the’ wife of ai ‘Teter fi xt,

Other pages from this issue: