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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE = AMERICANIZING| MANY ACCIDENTS thing, if we set our minds and hearts Adversity is an opportunity. { “Pm glad Pye been poors it makes jone more human, But—I don’t want Attempts To Make Berlin Street, be starving poor any more!” Life Look Like 42nd Street Ste and Broadway Such is the creed of a woman who, lleft widowed and ‘practically penni- ) less at 30, has made fame and fortune BICYCLE HABIT POPULAR in two lines of endeavor; first as a composer of songs, second as pub- vanes 4 | lisher of the output of her brain. Berlin, Feb, 15—The fact that) ‘This woman is Mrs. Carrie Jacobs- street accidents in Berlin have in-| pond, best known as the author-com- creased 600 per cent since 1913 has led poser of “A Perfect Day.” to the suggestion that one of the) “when you meet the Mrs. Bond of causes may be the apparent effort to| togay, prosperous, exquisitely gowned, put American pep into the city’s every) gracious, cultured, it is difficult to day life. One newspaper writer as-) picture her as battling poverty 20 serts Berliners have become too busy| years ago. : to greet friends in passing, that the|” “When I was only four,” Mrs, Bond spirit of hustle is disturbing the gen-' gaid, “I could pick out on the piano eral routine, and that the citizens on| any melody I heard. But in the little the whole are growing nervous. He} wisconsin town where I spent my deprecates “the attempt to make Ber-| girthood, no special attention’ was lin street life look like Forty-Second | given to this gift. street and Broadway.” “When in my early, twenties I mar- Official reports say most of the! ried Dr, Frank Bond. We lived at accidents are’ due to speeding auto-| fron River, Mich. Most of my hus- mobifes and careless pedestripnfy | pand’s patients were among the poor “who step off the sidewalks and walk/ miners, For two years, following the the streets in every direction without | panic of 1893, my husband virtually once looking to see if they are in the! doctored the poor gratis. way of vehicular traffic.” “Then, in 1893, Dr, Bond died. I There is no ordinance regulating |went to Chicago to fight my own fight pedestrian traffic. Even at the more| for existence. I knew something of crowded intersections the peoplej china painting, and it was by paint- cross the streets at will, taking their | ing china I managed to earn enough chances with the automobiles, street! to buy food and clothes. Then I began You've Heard “A Perfect Day;” A Paarier Day ‘Words and Musto by CARRIE JACOBS-BOND Now Hear How It Happened! ped. Dances are to be conducted during the evening omy. No dancing later than 2 A, M., and all Indians to return to their homes not later than the following morning.- f In order to carry out the rules, as above set forth, I earnestly request the co-operation of every Indian on. this reservation, whether citizen or restricted, LEPERS RECEIVE CHAULMOOGRA It Takes One Ton of Seed ,To Care .For 1,000 Lepers ' For a Year Manila, P. Iy Feb. 15.—(Mail)—Lep- ers of the Philippine Islands are to be cured with the products of their own land, according to Dr. H. I. Cole, organic. chemist of the bureau of science, who has just returned from |an extensive investigation through the southern part of the archipelago where He found in abundance the Hudnocarpus Hutchinson, the tree which bears the nut from which chaulmoogra oil is obtained. This oil is made into ethylester which has al- ready been used successfully in the Hawaiian Islands and other places in the cure of leprosy. Many of these trees were found on the island of Mindanao and Dr. Cole OIL TREATMENT; Hot-water Warmth in your house | atonce ! “TAHIS is the slack,season for your Heating Expert. He can install Arcoxa for you now before removing your hot-air furnace or stoves. i Think of it! In justa few days you can be enjoying perfect hot-water warmth —an American Radiator in each room. And the cost comes back to you. ARCOLA pays for itself in the fuel it saves, Telephone for an estimate today. AMERICAN known court life, that of Paris and cars, omnibuses, trucks, and horse cabs. There are no traffic policemen in the Teuton metropolis, but it has been decided to establish such a force. In the meantime the “Security police,” are doing this duty. The bicycle habit is very popular with all classes, and particularly with the police, who ride in squad forma-. tion. It is not uncommon to see a man rigged out in top hat and evening clothes riding his “bike” to the the- ater.” 4 PRINGESS SAYS SHE HATES THE RUSSIAN MEN Claims They Are So Wishy- Washy—She Was The Wife of a Mussulman Suizran on the Volga, Feb. 15—If Russia ever amounts to anything it |“‘The wor will be jthrough the organization of her women which has not yet taken place, declared a sprightly, merry lit- tle woman to the correspondent on the through train from Tashkent, in Tatkestan, to Moscow. Before the revolution she had borne the title of princess. “I hate Russian men,” she went on. “They are wishy-washy. They have given us a land made of nitchevo (it doesn’t matter) aftra (to- morrow) ja nieznayu, (I don’t know) and avos (perhaps).” She has been to Tashkent to specu- Jate in gold. Everybody had to do something to live nowadays. She was the wife of a Mussulman, | once owning thousands of acres of land with an income of $100,000 a year. She had warned him to get out of Russia, three ‘years, ago, sell his Jands, but he was obstinate and now he was wandering she knew not where, both he and she were sepa- rated from their children and she had nearly died in a Soviet prison. Taking one thing with another, she didn’t regret her sufferings and loss- es. It had taught her a lot. She had London, Now the revolution had drop- per her into abject poverty. She was tired of the struggle. The prison had broken her spirit, Like many Russians, she was morally bankrupt. She had had her fling in politics and at times‘had a lot of fun at it. She wanted to get abroad: but she wondered if she could ever settle | down in a calmer atmosphere; she | had become go -used to excitement. Some, o her family had been exe- cuted through ‘he efforts of’ another Woman politician and she had tried to have that woman and her husband executed in their turn. It had been a struggle between ‘the Reds and the! Mussulmans of the Caspian Sea coun- | try. The Reds had won and she was} made a prisoner by the woman she | had tried to have executed. It was/ Kismet. Tried to Commit Sufeide, Rather than satisfy her woman en- emy, she had tried to commit suicide in the Cheka prison by taking anj overdose of cocaine. It had failed. She had been put on the prison train and shipped north, with several | hundreds of others, destined to an} Archangel prison, after the Soviet | manner of locking up people in places! distant from their people and homes. | She had to sell even down to her un-| derclothes to get food. | Fortunately, she was able to make| herself ill, She put snow on her| chest, caught cold, and then the} typhus, and had to be put off at a wayside hospital. There a sister of! charity recognized and befriended her | and she was brought back “to a sem- blance of health, and through friends} in Moscow was finally freed. How | long her present freedom would last | she couldn’t say. She knew she | could not endure a second imprison- ment, not even for a week, so she! carried about her enough cocaine to defeat the prison. Meanwhile she was working, trying! to keep afloat. She had sold most of; her old jewels, and things. Some-| times she did odd jobs as a seam-| stress, sometimes she went to the! country and brought in baskets of: eggs to sell. Just now she-was pros- pering. She was sending money to her children. She.had stored away some family jewels in a distant place to keep them as a reserve for the| future. i {coming back.” to try out some of the verses and tunes that came to me as I worked. “T painted my own title pages and offered these first songs to the pub- lishers. ‘hey were accented; ‘but they brought me mighty little in the way of royalties.” An opportunity came for Mrs. Bond to sing at the executive mansion in Springfield. She needed the publicity and prestigé such an appearance would give her. But she had no gown fit for the occasion. “An old lace curtain was sacrificed and the gown was made,” she says. About this time she decided the roy- alties she was getting weren’t enough, So she determined to be her own pub- lisher. , The first publishing plant was in- stalled in a hall bedroom in her Chi- cago boatding house. The supplies were kept in a closet. To advertise her songs, she accept- ed “concert” engagements at $10 per concert. The tide turned for the better, how- ever, in 1910, with the publication of “A Perfect Day.” Since that time more than 5,000,000 copies of this one song haye been sold. “There have been many incorrect stories of how and where ‘A Perfect Day’ was written,”. says Mrs. Bond. were written for a dinner card. Later I hummed the words one evening and a friend exclaimed: ‘Oh, you've got another song!’ “‘Maybe you're right,” I said. “The success of the song proved she was.” At the White House the other night, when Mrs. Bond—stopping on her way to Europe—was a guest, “A Per- fect Day” was the closing number of the musical program. It is Presi- dent and Mrs. Harding’s favorite mel- ody., The president, in autographing a photograph for his guest wrote: “With the gratitude of one who ever delights in an undying composition.” Mrs. Bond’s publishing house has grown from the hall bedroom in Chi- ‘cago to a completely equipped music publishing plant at Hollywood, Cal. And Mrs. Bond no longer has to won- der where the next heal is coming from or how the gown for a concert is to be improvised, 3 “I think the present trend in mu- sic,” says Mrs, Bond, “is decidedly away from the riff-raff and toward more melodious music of the really human sort, ~ “Many music houses have failed re- cently, There has, however, been a steadily growing demand ‘for the songs We publish at my plant out in Hollywood. “I do not know that the publish- ‘ing of ‘jazz music’ or a slump in the demand for that sort of compositions had anything to do with the failures but I do notice a growing demand for the melodies that carry a real human note. The old-fashioned waltzes are Ducks, while asleep in the water, paddle about in a circle with one foot to remain in: approximately. the same place, Ses BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It - Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively'do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards’Olive Tablets. The pledsant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gen- tly but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to ngfural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived. from Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. r. F, Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac- tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath, Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 15c and 30c. Farmers, Trappers—Altention LET US TAN YOUR HIDES AND FURS into useful articles, such as robes, coats, rugs, mittens, caps, fur sets or any kind of leather. If you prefer selling, send your fur to us for full_market value. WRITE TODAY for FREE fur price list, tanning price list and shipping tags. : ‘The Bismarck Hide & Fur Co, Bismarck, N, D. OME, by Carrie Jasote- nf." MRS CARRIE JACOBS-BOND AND THE SONG THAT FIRST WON HER FAME, 5,000,000 COPIES BEIN G SOLD. * 8 ee A PERFECT DAY BY CARRIE JACOBS-BOND When you come to the end of a perfect day And you sit alone with your thought While the chimes ring out with a carol gay (For the joy that the day has brought, Do you think what the end of a perfect day Can mean to a tired heart ‘ When the sun goes down with-a flaming ray And the dear friends have .to part? Well, this is the end of a perfect day, ° | Near the end of a journey, too, a7 But it leaves a thought that is big “and strong, | With a wish that is kind and true. | For mem’ry has painted this perfect day | With colors that never fade, And we find, at the end of a perfect day, | The soul of a friend we’ve made. aye a INDIAN DANCES CARRIED TO- EXCESS; | NEW RULES ADOPTED AT FT. BERTHOLD | Van Hook, N. D., Feb. 15.—Indiams . 2nd. Dances are to be limited to of the Ft. Berthold reservation Have believes he has discovered enough to yield ten tons of seeds annually. He has arranged to have the nuts gath- ered for shipment to Manila where the-oil will be extracted at the bureau of science. 4 “Chemically the chaulmoogra oil made from the Philippine seeds is as pure as the ofl from India,” said Dr. Cole. “It takes one ton of seed to care for 1,000 lepers for.a year. We have a supply large enough to care for 10,000 lepers and we may be able to find. a larger supply. In that case we will probably send some. of the oil to India, China and other Far East coun- tries which have leprosy.” Wood Takes Action At present there are 5,000 lepers on the Island of Culior in the Philippine, group, several hundred of whom are now receiving the chaulmoogra oil treatment. Governor Wood who has expressed special interest in the treat- ment of these lepers has ordered a large quantity of the medicine and he plans to increase the number to whom it is given as fast as possible, until all have been given the benefit of it. : Dance at Baker’s Hall every Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- ‘day nights. Best. music and floor in state, 10c a dance. legal holidays. 8rd. ‘Citizens ~~ attending Indian | dances to be required tc observe the} same rules as non-competent Indians. | 4th. No presents to be exchanged | or gitts made at the’ dances. i 5th. Big. feasts and donations of! foodstuffs for dances to be discontin- | ued, except ®n special occasions un- | der special permission, 4s i 6th.’ No man under 21 or girls un-| decided in council meeting that danc- ing is being carried to excess, as well as exchanging of presents and travel- ing from one dance hall to another. AS a result, Superintendent E. W. Jermarck at Elbowoods has promul- gated rules governing dances with the idea of curtailing ‘and controlling them, with approval of the Indian council. The rules issued by Super- intendent Jermarck follows: 1st. Permission for Indian dances! to dance, or wear dance costumes at} must be obtained in writing from this office, such permission to show the 7th. date and place. yee FMM TTS % ~ ( — ATEYS irre eG) \ Instant Relief! Don’t stay stuffed-] nose running; ‘relieves headache, duli- up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A/ ness, feverishness, sneezing. dose of “Pape's Cold Compound” tak-| “Pape’s Cold. Compound” is the ‘en every two hours until three doses] quickest, surest relief known and are taken usually breaks any cold] costs only a few cents at drug stores. right up. Kt acts without assistance. Tastes The first dose opens clogged-up nos-| nice. Contains no quinine. Insist up- trils and air passagesof head; stops] on Pape’s. Adv. My Notice of Redemption To holders of Victory Notes and others concerned: \ Notice is hereby given as’ follows: 1. Call for redemption of, 334, per cent’ Victory Notes. All of these 33, per cent series of United States of Amer- ica convertible gold notes of 1922-1923, otherwise known as 344, per cent Victory Notes are hereby called for. re- demption on June 15, 1922, pursuant to the provisions for redemption contained in the notes and-in Treasury depart- ment circular No. 138, dated April 21; 1919, under which the Notes were originally issued. Interest on all Victory. Notes of the 334, per cent series will. cease on said re- demption date, June 15, 1922. 2. Suspension and terminatiion of: Victory Notes conversion privilege. In view of the call for redemption of all 334, per cent Victory Notes on June 15, 1922,.and pursuant to the provisions of said Treasury department circular number 138. The privilege of conversion Victory Notes of either series Victory Notes of the other series is hereby suspended from February 9, 1922, to June 15, 1922, both inclusive and on June 15, 1922, will terminate Victory Notes accordingly cease to be interconvertible, effective February 9, 1922, and on and after that date no conversions of the Notes may be made. 3. Detailed information as to the presentatiion of the surrender of 334 per cent Victory Notes for redemp- tion is given in Treasury department circular number 277, dated February 9, 1922, copies of which are available at the Treasury and the Federal Reserve Banks. A..W.Mellon, Secretary\of.the Treasury. 1922. February 9, der 18 years of age to be permitted! the dances. { Promiscuous running from, one dance to another must be stop- “Pape’s Cold Compound” Breaks any Cold inaFewHours | RADIATOR COMPANY ~ IDEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators |. 688' Hampden Ave. for every heating need St.Paul, Minn. END OF RAILWAY STRIKES SEEN IN ENGLAND London, Feb. 15.—Railway officials of Great Britain hope that at last they have found a means of prevent- ing strikes. Elaborate machinery has just been devised with that end in view. This, includes a series of joint com- mittees and councils leading upto central railway coungils for each rail- road, It will work in this way: When a dispute arises in one locality it will be referred to a loca lcommittee. If the committee fail to agree, the ques- tion then may be referred by either ‘be referred to a local committee. If this in. turn fail, the dispute goes be- fore the council for the whale rail- road. Failure of this council to end the dispute will, send it automatically to the central wages board. ~ g The scheme was adopted after.long negotiations between managers of the railways and. representatives of the three unions of railway men. Leaders of the unions say this ma- chinery is a8 elaborate as human in- genuity can devise. _ Tonight! A good soup and— IG SIOUX Waldorf Sodas. Soups are mighty enjoyable .on nights when the Look for the Big Sioux Trademark freshness of the air sharpens your appetite. Waldorfs are the most satisfying crackers. Big, hoarty crackers, crisp and fresh. Baked in our sanitary bakeries (tte only cracker bakeries in the Dakotas), in accordance with our strict purity guarantee and backed by Manchesier’s 20 years’ baking experience. WALD eat Soild in the familiar large- value package, by your grocer. Gei some today. Manchester Biscuit Company Sioux Falls, S. D. and Fazgo, N. D. pe Pstablished 190.2. = ORF SODAS