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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ” “WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1,'1922°“ OF HUNGRY CHILDREN APPEAL 0 YOU Do you realize that ten millicn children in eastern Europe, just such kiddies as yours, are starving, dying for want of food, clothing and medicine. Their parents love them as tenderly as you do yours, but they too are without the ordinary necessities of life. How would you feel if you had nothing, abso- lutely nothing, in the way of food or clothing for your faimily—no chance to earn one penny—you would willingly suffer torture, hunger, death for your own. That is just the situation in eastern Europe. MONEY WELL SPENT By subscribing to this fund you are aiding ehildren who have never known laughter or play, who know no foods but the } grasses, and the bark of trees, whose emaciated bodies have scarcely a are wandering like wild beasts in the woods, many motherless and. fatherless. of money. eens rag to protect them from the winters blasts, who You can do so much for such a small amount GREAT BiG, GENEROUS AMERICA Do you realize that @ few pennies will save the life of a child? Do you know that.a dollar given now will nourish a child for a month? : This means you, it means every man, woman and child in this United States. Ten million chines millions of Sisthins suffering people ee you for help, ap- peal to your great hearts for assistance that they may be tided over tiis terrible time. GIVE A DOLLAR---SAVE A LIFE We are asking for but a little from each, we owe it to‘ourselves to help in this philanthropic work, it is o ur duty and privilege. EVERY, DOLLAR FOR THE CHILDREN Read what Herbert Hooverisays regarding this relief. work: “Each year when the_American Jewish Relief Committee has made its appeal, I have had the honor of commending its work to the Amer- ican people, and likewise each year I have observed the continued neces- sity and the continued high efficiency of its service. “Tt has always maintained a broadmindedness in the matter of race and religion and has given its support, both financial and moral, to every’ effort in the alleviation of human distress. “Ltrust the committee will have the same support again that it has: HERBERT HOOVER. had hitherto.” ZONE 7 AMERICAN JEWISH RELIEF COMMITTEE FOR WAR SUFFERERS. P. R. FIELDS, and H. J. DUEMELAND, Chairmen for City of Bismarck PROMINENT. BUSINESS MEN OF. THE; UNITED STATES Here in our own. good United States prominent men who have studied the dreadful situation in Eastern Europe are giving their services free and endorse this great work. - Governor Nestos, of North Dakota; Pres- ident Harding, Herbert Hoover, Jacob Loeb, Julius Rosenwald. HON. ALEX STERN, Fargo ALEX ROSEN, Bismarck ARTHUR S. BOLSTER, Bismarck State Treasurer. SWEET GLOVER TO PLAY VERY IMPORTANT PART IN NORTH DAKOTA'S AGRICULTURAL FUTURE This is The Opinion of Deputy Commissioner Catron, Himself A Practical Farmer IS A FINE ROTATION CROP Stands at the Head of the List| ; As a Soil Enriching Crop h an extensive in the opinion of that he wi weet clover } plans of the state. that the roots, which ex- & ing moisture »elow the the ground and that aiso ned under adds humus to the t this pl. to be ered for many attle food, but been di loped into a good i cut at the proper time, ‘ss been found to be of * plant of the clover group in enriching soil is a recent develop- ment. It had been recognized from the st as'a plant that would “in- * soil so it would produce al- Proves Best Friend That other states dre finding that in very poor soil, or in semi arid, or KEEP LOOKING YOUNG. It’s Easy—If. You Know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young: to do this you must watch your liver and bowels—there’s no need of having a sallow complexion—dark rings under your eyes—pimples—a bilious look in your face—dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell ycu ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liv Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com- pound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which ke gave to his patients for ‘years, Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action yet always effective. Th about that natural buoyancy which all should enjoy by toning up the liver and ° clearing the system of impurities. Dr.Edwards’OliveTablets are known by their olive color, 15¢ and 30c. for pasture, should also be | where the rainfall is less than twenty inches per year, sweet clover is the best friend of the farm_is shown in two recent developments, one in Il- linois and the other in Nebraska. In the Illinois experiment, conduct- ed in the rt of the state where the y poor, sweet was used as a rotation crop. planted,with wheat one year and owth turned under for year’s hay and pas- Treatment brought land pera bushels with a and wheat s test was mducted by the Agricultural school versily of! Illinois. ing crop, the white er stands at the 8 one wot the in- gives is «nt the it refers to to the gen- imilar in the Dakota. " Builder a land builder and legumes. sweet clover a good growth on soils too humus for profits g ys one of the N dds hu- ying roots, together with the stems and stubble, when plowed under. In common with other legumes, it has the power of fixing atmospheric nitrogen by means of nitrogen gathering, bacteria in the noduleg of the roots. “Sweet clover is growing in favor for pasture as it will. pasture more than double as many head to the acre as the ordinary pasture because it can be pastured late the first season and early in the second. Some stock like it from the first and others learn to like it. “A stand of sweet clover is much easier obtained than alfalfa as it is a hardier plant and can be sown with a nurse crop to good advantage, It will grow on poorer soil, in drier land and will enrich the land much quicker, than alfalfa, P “By rotating with sweet clov: er, you can ccver the whole farm in a few years without losing the use of any al and in the meantime have the best of pasture. You can keep more stock because you. have more and ‘aper pasture land. It enables~ the farmer to keep and milk more cows. It is one of the finest honey plants in nois in the ability of sweet clover to e production of other crops. irt farmer” is quoted as fol- low: “In 1918 stalk ground t in about five pecks of seed to the acre. | worth of metals, mostly copper. I sowed forty acres of. spring wheat, putting nas the best temporary | grazing coun | i- | Son’s famous brook is keep: County’ Chairman, His ‘Holines? Pope Pius XI at ‘the moment of ue coogned: the head of the Roman Catholic church: : ered about him are‘the dignitaries of the church who dire:ted the ceremoniés attending the coronation, I sowed 20 pounds. of yellow sweet clover on this same tract when the wheat was disked, It yielded twelve bushels of spring wheat to the acre. In 1919, I cut the first crop of clover for seed and-threshed six and a half bushels. Part of this land was sown to oats in the spring of- 1920, on top of the clover stubble, making forty-one bushels toythe acre, while other, land. in the vi cinity was making twenty- three to twenty-seven bushels: Clover was coming thick 'so 7 left it,’and in’ 1921 this oats land produced a volun- tary crop of clover, ‘which, cut for seed made 5.8 bushels. ‘The balance of the 1919, clover. land was, put .to corn in 1920 and’to oats in 1921, both crops doubling adjoining tracts.” CAN'T BE’ FARMS, hurst, Eng., Mar. 1—Tenants houses here ave been keeping chickens until the council hi |hhad to put a stop to the practice. BROOK DEFLE Somersby, Tng., March reputation ito “go on. foreve! spite water shortage in North Li colnshire, the brook’s still babling. Butte, Mont., produced more mining district has than $1,000,000,000 ‘up “its | De- | “CITY OF. THE SNOWS,” ‘Auto Travel Morning Fol- lowing The:Storm Bismarck is a “City.of the Snows” and will continue to be so until the sun comes to the rescue or time gets the better of the piled up heaps. Tho morning following the ‘storm, | residents of the town had one. occupa- : | tion and one only, and that was cloar- ling pathways. ‘When the snow had | Now the tenants are limited to eight | been cleared from the sidewalks in {fowls apiec business district, continuous ks lined the walks, four or five ing out to the street, where the snow was so deep that autes ran only with great difficulty. Ridding the railroad tracks around the Northern Pacific ation piled snow ten feet high in places and window high to the coaches cn the average. , Drifts, ten feet or-more in height, | Prevented auto travel to the state BISMARCK Drifts, 10 Feet eet High,’ Prevented | high, wtih little alleyways lead- | Treasurer. Gath- ; hcuse-and it was not until late in the ;aflernocn that a big truck and sev- jeral shovellers first broke the trail. |Tke first state house employes to reach the buiding made the trip by | sled and.a good team of horses. By noon, walking was possible but un- pleasant but ‘most of the state em- | ployes who reached the building at |all employed this method. State of Washington has 125 hydro- electric horsepower for every square mile of its territory. SCAR The nicest cathartic-laxative in the world to physic your liver/and bowels when you. have Dizzy - Headache, Colds, Biliousness, Indigestion, or Upset, Acid’ Stomach is candy-like “Cascarets.” One or two tonight will a HAVE LOST PEP SAY OLD TIMERS Our Weather Men _ Disagree With This Opinion, However BUT FIGURES PROVE IT argo, N. D., Mar..1—What has be- come of the blizzards of North Da- xcts—the white tigers which roared across the prairies in the eighties, freezing wanderers, cattle and hor- ses? ‘vhey have gone, old time residents say, like the wild Indian and the cow- bey. he winters are milder and the storms “have not got the pep they used to have.” Weather men ¢isagree with this saying that there is no de‘nite change in climate, year by year. If the win- ters have b2en milder for a few years it is a ‘avatier of Chance. Weathe: bureau figures ‘bear out the ‘old timers” however. Recent winters have been milder in temper- ature, and have had less wind and snew and rain than the winters of the eighties, acccrding to data compiled from figures given out by R. E. Spen- cer, in charge of the Moorhead, Minn., United States weather bureau. ‘These figures are for the winters of the Jecad: of 1881-1882 to 1890-1891 representing she early days as .oppos- ed to the winters of 1910-11 to 1919-29. Five months of each year are con- sidered—November, December, ‘Jan- uary, February and March. They show that the average temperature for the winters of the earlier decade was 11.78 degrees above zero while the last decade was 15.98; precipita- recently .653 monthly; wind velocity averaged 10.37 miles per hour in the olden days and only 9.13 miles per hour during the last ten years. “Weather experts agree that such changes are due largely to chance,” said Mr. Spencer. the worst blizzards they ever en- countered and forget the milder ones. Thus every blizzard which comes jalong has to bear comparison with the worst ‘blizzard of a. lifetime—or ETD. | For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, , Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver empty your bowels completely by morning, and you will feel splendid “They work while you sleep.” Cas- carets never stir you up or gripe like Saits, Pills, Calomel, or Oil and they cost only ten cents a box. Children love Cascarets too. MODERN STORMS: tion, formerly .803 inches monthly— |’ “People remember } with a rather enlarged memory of it.” THE FACE. IN THE MIRROR. Your face, does it wear the con- tented expression cf good health, or are the features drawn and pallid? In the latter case, your story is read by all who see you, and what woman.of spirit wants to be pitied for her phys- ical condition? There is 2 way to get the nervous, tired Iines out of your face and the slump out of your ‘body The use of that standard remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, will strengthen the nerves and tone up the system to resist that ex- cessive fatigue. Adv. ‘Foley’s : Honey and Tar COMPCUND CLEARS THE THROAT of phlegm end mucus, stops that tickling, opens the uir passages for easier breathing and coats the raw, inflamed surfaces with a heal- ing, soothing medicine. Grateful Father Tells What It Did W. E. Curry, 190 Up 6th St., Evansville, Ind., writ have a Iitle girl 6 years who has a good deal of trouble with croup Ihave used Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, giving it to her according to directions, and obtaining instan’ \reliet tor her. My waite and Iu whenever Pothered with a bad ‘cold or cough, ond | w: Gay that st 18 the best remedy for a bed cough, thrvat trouble or croup that l ever saw. Parents who use Foley's Honey and Tar know it is safe and ro harm will some even if an overdose.should be: given by accident. It tastes good-and, children Ike it. It woa’t upset the del cate stomachs of young children, delicate ersons of elderly people. DAILY EPS SERVICE BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA w Kort oll over the Northwest for Quality @ MAIL US YOUR FILMS &. TYPEWRITERS All makes sold and rented Bien er Bismarck, ie 7 ———_$ Take an inventory of your ward- robe and have your Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Needs cared for by CITY CLEANERS & DYERS. We call for and deliver. anaaa—————————— Farmers, Trappers—Attention 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 pe tanning prfce list and shine ime ags. The Biguarck Hise @ Far Co.: