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CARDINAL DE‘ CABRIERES A GREAT BISHOP i i Gave Shelter. To Thousands of | Vineyard Workers-In Wine * Riots of 1907 Paris, Jan. 24—Cardinal de Cabri- | eres, bishop of Mcntpelier, who died | recently at the age of 91, was France's | uncfiicial but effective envoy to the Vatican during the World War. Pres-; ident Millerand referred to him as not only a great bishop but a great pa-| triot, , | He never yielded an inch of the: rights which he belieyed belonged tq; ‘TO GIRLS [BEN LINDSEY’S WIFE REAL BENEFACTOR = his-church. When the law separating -the church and state in Ftince went} into effect, he went to the prefecture, and solemnly excommunicated prefect. But when the war began he; placed himself at the prefect’s dis-; posal. { In the wine riots of 1907, which} have been characterized as a revolu- tion rather than a riot, the Cardinal! gave thousafds of vineyard workers} shelter in his cathedral and ordered: his clergy.to do the same with their! churches. It is more than possible; that his action saved the city from | being. sacked. i A country vicar Who received the| Cardinal during the war scoured the! country to find the finest chicken to; honor his visitor aud. ordered his cook to show herself worthy of the occa- sidn. “Fit for a king,” said the Car-| dinal when the chiékét® appeared on; the fable, “but you “have forgotten | that today is a meatless day, by or-. dev of the government; Decrees should ; bexrespected.” ~~ H CONFLICTING INTERESSS ) ). j-wauld make even Phidias rave— IN DANZIG 7 / Created a Free City By Treaty of Versailles Is Becoming | Internationalized | Danzig, Jan. st—.nis old German port on the Balti created a free city ty the Treaty of Versailles in order to ve the Poleg access. to the sea, is ‘becoming internationulized and a cen- ter of conflicting interests. Onc of Danzig’s largest stores adver- tises that nine lanenages-ate spoken by its clerks, and thé colors of Eng- jand, France, Polany Italy, Sweden, Lithuania. Spain, Norway and Den- mark greets visitors at the main en- trance. “ Vt is seldom hat the Poles and the Dandigers agree on anything and on this account the League of Nations has a Wigh Commissioner, General Haking, an English army officer, om the graynd to settle disputes when possible. The Danzigers aiways con- tend the Poles want too much and the Poles say the Dayzigers. continually are, trying to give it: tween the two are really improving and that in the Jong run the Poles will have all that is due them by inter- alliel agreement, that the business and | life of some 300,000 Danzigers will ¢o on about as usual, and that Danzig! where the will prosper in future as a free city; hand the just as the framers’ of the Treaty of | “Dan Versailles intended, But the great change in the life of! “Gdan: Danzig during ‘the last year and a half hag not been without resentment. Re-! town’s cosmo cently the Danzigers have been open-!abouf as an out . ly opposing the influx of the Poles on} touch of. night life and gaiety has been the! . [famous judge of the Denver Juvenile i 1 | MRS. BEN. LINDSEY BY ALICE ROHE. New York, Jan. 24—Enter madame. Young, beautiful, goldgn hair, big blue eyes, long ‘curling lashes, pink and white complexion, cupid’s bow mouth, perfect teeth, a nose that | | confidences I know it is because they! read understandiyg in my face.” | % Of. course all of Judge Lindsey's | friewis know the important part his; wite—-formerly Henrietta Brevcort of} Detroit—hasplayed iu his life. i Cliktee of Girls, °°) SHiS'Sedrétaryand- I have} charge ofthe girls’ Work,” Mrs. Lind- | sey explained. “Naturally I try to! conserve the judge's strength andj time by arranging his appointments.; I did study to ‘be an intefigr decora-/| tor—yes—I have decorated the old; Lindsey ‘home after converting it into) apartments. You see, we needed the money.” “The court is my lite” Madame speaks and lo—from - her lips pour words of wisdom. We stare—in_ astonishment—What! A perfect woman who combines beauty and brains? We ask this radiant creature, who is Mrs. Ben B. Lindsey, wife of the Court—“How come?” She replies: if “Honestly, I don't see. who started ° And now that, the work for boys is a universal- | hem the worst of | - = Sel General Haking says relations -be-! i i | | { | \that theory that a woman has to be ne ae ae ean | WATTENT 0 a fright if she has good sense, or a low-gtade moron if she is at all at- tractive. How can a face be beauti- ful unless it’ reflects: mentality?” t 5 | She Is Modest. “If your fairy grandmother had not given you both gifts, which would you have chosen, beauty or brains?” I asked. “I refuse. to be so conceited as to even pretend I am éither beautiful or brainy.” - y And then Mrs. Lindsey talked about} her work. ¥ | “When girls come to me with: their! are enforced Polish workmen will soon force thousands of a. laljorers out of ‘their pi Thousands city’s curre ever the contentioy that unless restrictions | given the city by introduction of cab- | posing fines on the inhabitants of the | ly accepted fact, .the girls’ work is important. 8-54 “The kay..to. the future.scems to me to Ie in the judge’s. new. method | —recognizing. three . ages in™ every. girl—the biological, psychological and | “Many: a girl who is a court case could have .been saved if her, parents had recognized these different ages. We' have ‘so many ‘cases of :girls who are chronologically 14,:but™ who are biolozically 20 and psychologically ;10. “phése are ‘the girls, offered up) through ignerance not=only ‘as* -vic- tims but as temptations of, society.” I i ‘STOP RIOTING Then Raid Towns and Villages|§ In Jaffa District To Col- lect The Fines oe . \ Jaffa, Palestine, Jan. 24—The gov- {| ernment forces in this district are at-| ‘tempting to stop rioting here by im-| cormmunities which participate in| them and following this up with, raids upon’ the ‘towns and villages in the Jaffa dibtrictti Collect the fines. | -|arets and at Zoppct; a suburb, gam- Ts | Dling resorts by: the sea have become ! quite famous throughout Central .Eu- Tomake youstrong and“brainy” and put the power into your blood to overcome The food you eat ccntains carbon. When your food ig digested it is ab- sorbed from the intestines into. the blood. -When the carbon in your food comes in contact with the oxy- gen carried by the iron in your blood, the carbon and oxygen unite and by so doing they give off tre- mendous energy, thereby giving you grea force, strength and endurance. Without iron” your blood carries no oxygen and. without cxygen there is nothing to unite with the carbon in your food, so\that what you eat’ does you nd godd—you. do not get any strength from it—it is like putting ccal into a stove without a fire. You can- not get any heat unless the coal unites with the fire. i The strongest weapon with which to prevent’ and overcome colds, pneu- thonis, kidney trouble, rheumatism, nervous prostration, in fact almest any disease or disease germs is plenty of good rich, pure blood, strength, energy and endurance and the greatest ener- gy carrier in the ody is organic iron, not metallic iron which people usually take, but organic iron like the iron in spinach, lentils and apples, and like the iron .ccutained in what is known as organic 'Nuxated Iron) which may be had from almost any druggist. Nux- uted Iron often increages the strength, encrgy and endurance of weak, nerv- in two weeks’ ous, run-down, folks time. or the manu efund your money. Sold by all drug- gists in tsblet form only, HAWAII TOILERS |known ag the United Workers.of Ha- fine large bodies of ConIIBHY Jewish yone. . The expbrfaleit "tan unusual one | and. its succeds"ip to the present, ‘is not evident. ‘The Zionists are jubi=} lant and see in this action a definite alignment of the governnyent on their } side. On the other hand, it has sti red'up- bitter feelings on the part of ! the ‘natives who see in the govern- WOULD COMBINE i | posed’ by’ the government on five Honoluu, T. i, January 24— ‘towns and villages in the Jaffa dis- Workers of all races, in Hawaii. are j trict for alleged attacks made — last considering an Internatio 1 organiza-!ariy by. their. inhabitants upon Jew- tion mong the rank arf file to be ish colonies nearby. .To collect: the wali, with the aim of readjusting the!and Hindu troops having madhine trade unions in Hawali and building up} suns. surrounded Tul Karem and four an industrial form of organization that} other villages near Jaffa, sent in men will umite fn one body all the wage] and confiscated -all the live-stock: in- workers without discrimination as to | Cluding the oxen, led the animals into sex, race, creed, craft or color, and s gaining a direct voice in the manage- -ment of industry, according to the preamble ‘to the constitution being voted on by the various bodies. “We believe that labor is entitled to a voice in the management of industry and as a right to determine the con- ditions under which it shall function, to the end that it shall receive the full value of waat it prodiices,” the preamble conte “We desire to co- operate to the fullest extent with the It quickly eases. the pai sends various national and international) @ fedin if pels ome trade unions and with the American! aching part. Sloan's Federation of ‘Labor, but-we call at- i rubbing.| x | tention to the fact that conditions in Fine, too, for theumatism, neuralgia, Hawaii are different from those on @ciatica, sprains and strains, stiff joints, | |the mainland or in any other country,| lame back and sore muscles, | an we Anstst that we dre the best eae as years pain’senemy, Ask | | judges of our own needs and of the RG ‘tactics te be followed to aed the At all druggists—35c, ery? i \ lends we have in-view.” f | ~The objects of the organization are ; Stated''as: e e rE: s4iecn used and highly recom- } ; ei modern’ economic “To bring within the folds of one central organization al! human be- who are engaged in the neces- work of society, i 0 bring about c ress and solidarity am ers, “T. educate the ¥ \ Clear Your Complexion nf pim ples, acne and other facial disfiguremen jee freely Dr, Hobson's ‘Oint: Good for eczema, itching skin, and other skin troubles. One of Dr. Hobson's Ramily Remedies. DrHobson’'s. Eczema Ointment | tics. | “To gain for. the j voice in the ma ment’s action the beginning rf Jewish | ; i “domination and the betrayal, of their i passionate ‘longing tor national’ free: ing t6°$25,000 was im: | i: ! t } | Closin the fields and placed them” under | the disttict, called the leadin: itizes guard. i! | togeth ¢ Tul Kar> | Then notices signed by Sir Her-/em an A ue Cat- bert Samuel, the British High missioner/ were posted in the streets lemanding payment of: the fines. Mr. Campbell, assistant: governor 9f, Regular values up to $13.00. - Closing out prices $2.98 $4.50 $6.98 | Union Made Overalls — | Values to $2.50. Sale ‘prices ........98c, $1.48 Men’s Heavy Shirts « Cheap at.$1.25. “Sell- ‘ ing price ..............69¢ Extra, sizes. Values to $4,502, ; Now. . .«..$2.48 to $2.98 | ' Men’s Heavy Wool Under- Values Now selling / at. $3.48, $4.98, $5.48 | Men’s-:Heavy Fleece Lined | | Cheap at $2.50. Sell- ing out - prices.98c, $1.25, $1.48 | Sale Starts Wed. the 25th. -EMPORIUM ‘DE Men’s Dress Pants —. >; 20% discount. ing. out Men’s Union Alls up ,to. $9.50. Underwear Mail Orders Filled. i om-|tle would be kept under guard for only five days and if the-fines had not been paid by-. that=time they would be sold at auction and the pro- TAXI RATES T One Passenger as Each Additional Passenger... .......10¢ CLOSED HEATED CARS - EXPERIENCED DRIVERS Prompt Night and Day Service. Rohrer Taxi Line. Men’s Heavy Sweaters Value $2.50. Selling price ............... $1.48 Full line of men’s Spring and Summer “underwear at. Men’s Dress Shoes ., Values to $9.50. Clos- ~ at..$4,98, $5.48, $5.98 Men’s Heavy Work Shoes Always sold for up to 2 $6.50. Toclose out _ | 20% off. $2.98, $3.48, $3.98 ..Men’s Dress Shirts | ‘Very ‘specially priced. | at.:.:98c, $1.25; $1.78 _ Men’s Dress Caps -Values up to $3.50. | | 4+: 98c, $1.48, $1.98 | Men’s Extra Neckties Special values4Q¢ and 98c | g out our Men’s and Boys’ Dep ment that we will specialize on Ladies’ and Children’s - wear. We will at once dispose of all Men’s and Boys’ Goods. at Tremendous Reductions. Every article in these lines art ree - MUST GO AT ONCE———— _ Come Early for Choice Selections. ” | > Men’s Collars: : All sizes, 25c values, ihe 4 only ................. 19¢ ‘ Men’s Suits Values up to $45.50. Now...§19.50, $22,$29 ff _ ~ Boys’ Suits Valués up to $18.00. Closing out prices. ees ee $5.48, $6.50, $9.48 Full line Ladies’, Boys’, Children’s and Men’s Shoes . Men's and Women's storm : and rain coats, 20% off. 2 . . Latlies’ Aprons | 5 Values $1.50. -_ : : German Calico Value 25c yard. Spe- z cial, yard..............12e / Gingham—28 Inch Value 30c yard. Now..16c . PARTMENT STORE 116 5th St., Bismarck, N. D. ceeds turned over to the Jaws who or plowing their fields and it is feared were. victims of the raids. - It remains {that this) may’lead to more unrest. yet to be determined whether the |, fines will be paid. The seizure of the | Cattle deprived the farmers of means Siam has a contingent of girl guides, “We Pay Cash eae a Pound-for frozen Hides, or 6 cents a Pound In Trade. 17 cents a Pound Cash for Wool 18 cents a Pound in Trade, \ South Side Grocery The Briek Building Across From Standard Qil Co. - ' : SAM SLOVEN, Proprietor. : Bismarck,