The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 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)

PAGE FOUR SaRAaai trav: hss hose THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entéred at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. ) GEORGE D. MANN *) Foreign Representatives \@: LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO, DETROIT Marquette Bldg. BAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH YORK - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - - Editor NE The Associated Press is exclusive- ly entitled to the use or republi- cation of all news dispatches cre- dited to it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of “ speéial dispatches herein are also p [ | | MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF i | CIRCULATION | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE | IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year....$7 Daily by mail, per year (in Biss’ il 2 marck) n + 5,00 h 6.00 S OLDEST NEWS- PAPER (Established 1873) = STUDYING YOUR HABITS Howard J. Wischaupt gave hear- ers here in the-first of his “Better Business. Week” talks an insight in- to the study of the habits of people whigh is now being made yby big. and smafl business organizations forthe purpose of climinating® guessing in business. Amazing: tales were told of, how’ this comparatively new science in business. has brought results in dollars and cents. One who doubts the story may be convinced by a con- crete illustration, or by, turning | one’s thoughts to one’s own daily lifes ‘ i Mr. Wisehaupt is known as “the | pep-man” of business. He is: making } money and dealing with big'men and ) + big -organizationg: in his} line; of work. What was considered theory a few years ago is now actual practice. Business men and salespeople of all business will profit by hearing such talks as Mr. Wisehaupt gave last night. : _PRICE OF FAME How would you like to have been Napoleon? Would you exchange Kresge Bldg. | ‘the old standby, cannon-fodder, It imay have occurred to you, that the war has been over nearly four years and that the process of boys grow- ing to. manhood has almost replaced the cannon-fodder lost: by Germany during the w: NUTSHELL The new sugar. tariff. will cost | American consumers $60,000,000 a ‘years, says B. F. Atkins, American "manufacturer of Cuban sugars. ’ His 11 words tell more,about the tariff question than the average economist can cram into a book. On the other hand, the American | producer may. fall by. the swayside \unless’ a tariff protects him against cheap foreign competition. Nearly all problems are “six of a tice is a matter of striking a sensi- ble happy medium, LEPROSY ‘ Twelve hundred lepers are at large in our country. This is report- ed by the United States Public Health Service. It is ‘not many centuries since lepers were ‘stoned out ‘of town, their terrified assaulters crying, “Un- clean!” Miserable creatures, they were allowed to beg only at the gates -of ‘cities, Now lepers are rounded up when discovered, isolated to prevent con- ‘tagion, and given good food and lodging and medica attention at the community’s expense. ‘We'aye more sensible than our an- ’cestors, also more humane. Human j nature does change. FEET A woman with feet only 6% inch- es long steps into the spotlight in ; Washington, D. C. She is Mrs. Carl 4 W. Linker, She believes; that. she ‘has smaller feet than any other American woman, Many women will envy her. Whether an extremely small foot jon a ‘woman is artistic, however, de- pends on her height. The standard of beauty, established by the ancient ; Greek sculptors, decreed that a foot ‘to, be artistic must bea sixth or a seventh the height of the body: How: close do you come. to the | specifications? Get out a yardstick. Here is one form of statistics that is jnot apt to cause headache. | ' pees | CHANGE _. ° Chiropodists. at a convention dis- cuss the probability that women in |another few generations will have tonly four toes on each foot, instead of five. kind, half a dozen of another.” Jus- | places with him, trade your life for his career and fame? | Don’t be too sure about it. Before ; deciding; better investigate’ the real! Napoleon—his health and tempera-' ment. mS é Napoleon was a freak. His nature, was-sluggish, his pulse rarely higher’ than 50 a minute, according to Cor- | visart, his personal physician. The reaction from this sluggish- ness. came explosively in epileptic fits;'with the customary convulsions and: foaming at the mouth that ‘ac- company this dread disease. % Napoleon never loved. He was ‘in- capable of it. Often he was attract; ed to a woman, in a sudden and vol- eani¢ outburst of —passion—which. subsided’instantly if not responded to. ‘ Violent ‘abdominal pains made ~ it’ impossible for Napoleon to sleep more than a few hours at a time, In captivity at St, Helena, he wound up with pronounced: -phsical' and / mental decay. Tight shoes are deforming and dwarfing the little toe. Instructors at swimming pools frequently. com- ment on the number of women whose little toes have almost dis- appeared, bays “Back of; this is the biological, prin- ciple that nature makes additions to the body when needed, and takes| away ‘parts no longer necessary. Thus in. Mammoth Cave are blind, not needing eyes. A’ change of diet ; has made a\long human organ shri- yel into a small appendix. BOW-WOWSs Someone is. always predietin that ;the “country is. going “to: thet bow- wows.-The latest is Chase S. Osborn, former: governor of Michigan.” Osborn makes the’ interesting’ esti- mate that (‘the white race has seized j three-fourths of the ‘area of the ‘earth and placed two-thirds of’ its population in tributary slavery.” Unless ‘we mend our ways, he féars that. the United States will decline Dr. Louis’ H. Berman tells these pra 'K® Babylon, Greece and facts about Napoleon,’ in his book,; i f ° : k,j “That fall is bound ‘to come'event- THe Glends Regulating Personali-/ aily, No empire lasts forever, for everything on: earth dies sooner or , later—even mountains. But nothing dies until it has served its purpose. America has not yet served its pur- pose in destiny, nor will it for some thousands of years. Providence will provide whatever brakes and clean- sing we need nationally. man notes that “the rise and [of Napoleon followed the rise and fall of his pituitary gland.” This! gland is in a thimble-sized cavity of i} the=skull. We i}. Berman takes another great man, i Cha¥ls Darwin, the evolutionist, Dar- it, Was a neurasthente genius, That } is, his glands were unbalanced—like GAMBLE an “orchestra out of tune. | In- youth, Darwin was athletic and Rodger Dolan wants to know why | happy. Then his glands began act-| nearly all Chinese are born-gamb- ( ing abnormally. He became a hyper-'lers. Possibly it is because they ‘in- thyroid, with violent pains about the herit the observation of an ancient heart, alo palpitation... Insomnia people, that everything in life is h aunted him. pretty much of’a gamble. Darwin became so easily exhausted that he could work only in the morn-| For instance, look at recent Chi- cago. market quotations. Fat hogs ing;-and then only a few hours. Patt aeed heidi his ee writing are. listed at -$10.70' at hundred- q volumes and 51 scientific ‘papers, i ve hy alternating small doses of work| ey’ OT free more, than a year with large doses of rest. Be oriter ot ards wnest ‘baings $1.15 a bushel, or 46 cents less than a.year ago. Darwin was one of the most mis- Farming returns ‘are uncertain, erable beings, mentally and physi- call, that ever lived. That was the due to the element of chance—gam- bling. The farmer doesn’t do the | price of his fame, gambling, but he furnishes most off the chips. ; ij i |. The more sciencenlearns about the} i}. mysterious endocrine glands of the f human body,’ the more it believes: }'> that genius is the result’ of chemical abnormalities of the glands. Among; famous geniuses,’ we find tehse epileptics: Julius Caesar, Mo- hammed, Lord Byron, Dostoyevsky and ‘Flaubert. : { Fame is a fine monument. But, like everything else, it has {ts price. | If real happiness is the most de-| sirable goal, lucky is the individyal | who: is normal. —_————_____ EDITORIAL, REVIEW | Comments reproduced in this | column may or mav not express j are presented here ‘in order that onr readers may have both sides of importanty issues which are being ‘discussed in the press of tho day, ———— THE WOODROW WILSON AWARDS This is a wise decisidén at which z IMPROBABLE Frequently you read something the opinion of The Tribune, They | or Bucharest, New York or Washing- ton. It is wise to disregard geograp- hic lines in building to the memory of one whose ,service was to the | world. It is wise not to define too closely the kind of public service which future administrations of the foundation may single out for the receipt of honors so certain to stim- ulate contributions to the advance‘ |ment of civilization—New York World. . NP ( WHAT CAN BE DONE WITH A POET } the University of Michigan in Chi- cago, Friday, President Marion Leroy Burton commented , enthusiastically hon the success of the experiment of | introducing a poet into the life of the university. | Last fall Robert Frost, a New Eng- land rhymester ‘of renown, was en- gaged to ‘live a year in Ann Arbor at the rather unpoetic salary of $5,000. He has had no official duties in con- | nection with any of: the college fa- culties, has held’no classes and has been perfectly free to spend his time as he saw fit. Yet his activities and his influence have been. such that never before has the interest, not in poetry alone but in all literature, been so great anfong Michigan stu- dents as' it is now. That interest has been manifested in the inauguration by the students of a lecture course bv outside poets, and in numerous other ‘ways. Decidedly here is a poét who has. made good in college life--how good may be judged from President. Bur- ton’s assertion \that Mr. Frost’ is quite as popular on, the ‘campus. atj Ann Arbor as is that eminent expo- nent of the athletic; arts; Mr, Yost. Chicago: News; : 1 GWENDOLIN. 1 y Of course gambiihg ie forhidden in England, but everybody has! bet on the derby and’ those whojdo not lay a wager with ,the bookmakers play the - sweepséakas. Of these the Cal- jcutta, Sweep is tha. largests:'The tic? kets of this lottery are ‘bought: by Englishmen all over the world, for in India or Ayetnalie dreams of ° sudden fortune anda triumphal r turn home. This ‘year the hopes o the™exiles' were vain. The Calcutta went to Miss Gwendolyn Thomas, a clerk in an insurance office in Liver- pool, which is about the most unro- mantic spot’ in the empire. However, Gwendolyn is a romantic name and|{ so is the name of the derby winner, Captain Cuttle. | Although Miss Thomas sold_ half her ticket before the race her win- nings amount to $239,000. Even when the income tax collectors finish their jobs she will have about - $175,000 left. To step from the small: wage: of a Liverpool insurance clerk into an income of perhaps $9,000 a year is like walking, into 'a wonderful dream, and particularly so for a woman. , Shes A man figures a new fortune ‘in terms of money, but a woman reck- ons in terms of things—houses, fur- hiture, clothes gnd. caramels. A. wo- man in England who has $9,000 a year, or even what is left of it after) the taxes are: extracted, ean’ get more for it than the same ‘income would buy here—New York Herald, | AT .THE MOVIES | —> THE ELTINGE “Smilin’ Through,” the fine, new: Norma Talmadge picture will show, at the Eltinge for three days begin- ning today, Tuesday. Advance reports state that this is the most ambitious production yet made by Norma Talmadge. It is-an adaptation of Allen Langdon Mar- tin’s stage, hit of the same name, in which Jane Cowl appeared on), the speaking stage. ° _ Appearing opposite Miss Talmé¥ge.|; are two: leading men, Wyndham Standing and Harrison Ford, and.a} splendid supporting cast, including Alec B. Francis, Glenn Hunter, Grace Griswold, Miriam ‘Battista and Eugene Lockhart. The production deals with the ro- mance of beautiful young Kathlee who is left in the charge of Johi Carteret ‘following /the death fh wounded, by he! the day. of her f When Carteret learns°that Kathleen is in love with ithe: sén of the man| who killed his bridé‘ he interrupts the romance of the young people and - the absorbing plot gathers dramatic; momentum. SEES baie Norma, ever a great emotional acy tress, is said to havé taken advan tage of the*great dramatic opportun; ity presented‘ hen” { CAPITOL Tonight will witness the final showing of Shirley Mason in “Lights ofthe Desert” at’ the Capitol Thea- ter. Rarely have local audiences ; been more enthusiastic over a mo- | tion. picture. This Fox production is a pleasing’ story well acted and | excellently directed. Its dramatic high lights are well balanced with” | tighter vein touches. The’ settings are undeniably beautiful.. Don’t let: | Lights of the Deserts” depart with- jout seeing it. | . Addressing a group of alumni of |. the son of 'the empire who may ba) that sounds improbable, and wonder if it is true. A: case in point is the party re- ported to have swallowed his false tecth. This particular incident is confirmed from Chicago, where ) Janiés Stroud, Des Moines electri. | to death. probabilities. would be amazed at the true print. ~ BIRTHS eS » of births so far in 1922. Mortalit: experts compare the other generation the French popu. - to war in 1870, they had about equa © populations—40,000,000 apiece. © many had moved up to 70,000,000. }- cian, is found in a yard. He had kind of public service for which| swallowed his false teeth and choked | they may be given. | Newspapers print many true. im-| tention to the economic ills follow-| If you were behind. * the scenes with the reporters, you; They must. It is the condition of ;is not subject to. demurrer merely ul but incredible events that never reach! France is alarmed at her decline p birth trend ‘with deaths, and predict that in an-; lation will he 'diminishing 200,000 aj ward in recognizing how much they | year. i i When France and Germany went! Inj great steps forward. |.) 4914 France had the same, but Ger-) Modérn war has wonderful wea- “pons, but none of them is equal to as likely be rendered from Eraggel ent é the National Committee of the Wood-| DECISION OF SUPREME COURT row Wilson Foundation has arrived; that for the prizes to be arranged as/| From McLean County |@ memorial of Mr. Wilson, people of| David J. Ripley, Plaintiff and Ap-) all nations are eligible; and that no| pellant vs. J. A..McCutcheon, Defen- limits -are set as to the number, dant and Respondent. or character of the prizes or the} Syllabus: (1) In the enforcement of a sim- | ple contract it is necessary to allege Statesmen are paying’ anxious at-| consideration. : i } (2) A complaint, otherwise al- ing the cruel destruction of war.|leging a valid enforceable contract,' survival for civilization that these | because it alleges an erroneous’ mea- problems shall be faced until they| sure. of damages. are solved. But there is in Europe{ (3) An order overruling a de- alone.a population nearly equalling | murrer to one of several counter- that of the United States which can|claims is an appealable order. j Hever forget the first fine rapture| Appeal from an order overruling a gained, with Woodrow Wilson as the| trict Court, McLean County, Nuessle foremost champion of self-determin- | J- ation; nor are neutral nations back- | Reversed. | Opinion of the Court by Bronson,| owe to his heroic fight against anci- J. ent tyrannies built on subject races. ! Economic independence has taken | R. L.. Fraser, Garrison, N, Dak. J. A. Hyland, Bismarck, N. Dak. Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellant. 5. E, Nelson, Garrison, N. Dak. 1 f realization of political freedom | demurrer to a counterclaim, in Dis-| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS . By Olive Barton Roberts © 7 Buskins, the funny. little fairy- man in the apple tree, looked at poor Mr. Peerabout, the Moon-Man, in (2 + ‘9 surprise. Mr. Peerabout had fajlen down from the Moon, you know, and landed in the top bdughs. — 4x When Buskins found out who the Moon-Man was he offered to take him upto the sky in his little ele- vator. i “Oh, thank. you,” said Mr, Peeta- bout gratefully, And he lost. no time in climbing, through ‘the — apple- branches to the, funny little house or elevator, or whatever it was. {7 Buskins, pulled a handle and~the little elevator began to move, slowly. at first, then faster and faster,’ pp through the sky. : | They passed 1 Sorts of olid places, but Buskins was so. intér- ested in the Moon-Man’s story ahd theMoon-Man was so busy talking, that*ncither of them say a thi iHad they looked very hard’ would have seen Nancy and and tho’ Weatherman ‘riding a green umbrella. But they: never saw a sign of; them. ge ae And what do you think they did? They went right past the Moon— right ‘past it—on up—past stars and Mats and Venus and everything, All at once Mr. Peerabout' looked around. “Where are. we?” he exclaimed, Buskins stopped .the elevator. “Blest if I “know,” he sai “I guess we've gone ‘to far. We'll have to “go back. Here’s Bluster- Gust Land where the Weatherman Mr. “Perabout’s sharp eyes ed something. He’d noticed MWeatherman’s House with its chimney and tied to the chim- ey by a long rope was a star. “Look,” hegeried, catching | Bus- kin’s arm and pointing. “There's the star that Comet-Legs rides. Do you \s’pose he’s here? He’s the one that pushed me off the moon. Let's stop!” To Be. Continued) (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) oF is ' TODAY'S WORD | ¢+—______.__, Today's word is SUBSIDY. It’s pronounced —. sub-si-dy, with accent on the first syllable. It meant originally, in England, a parliamentary grant to the crown of a sum raised by extraordinary: tnxa- tion. Later, a sum granted by one state to another, as to a friendly power to aid the latter. in war; a governmental grant of funds or prop- erty to a private person or corpora- tion to assist in establishing supporting. an enterrise deemed ad- vantegeous to the public; a subven- tion; any gift by way of fitancial aid, ¥ It comes from—Latin’ ‘'subsidium,” the troops stationed in reserve in the third line of; battle; reserve; sup- port; help: ? usage,’ says Webster, ‘sub (oe 37:5-6. | The public services which the Woodrow Wilson foundation will wish to recognize, and reward may E. T. Burke, Bismarck, N. Dak. |en, than in the strength of Anateu: Attorneys for Defendant-Respond- or the thunderclouds of Aetna.— jesbe Ruskin. while, we,were buryitig the dead, by Generel Custer, then: laid out. would: left rit left breast at, or near, the heart. I examined: marks ar there were none. There were no mutilations; Planets and the Milky Way and’) ying 25, 1886, I was on the battle- field with Chief Gall who gave me a graphic story of. the battle, he us- ing signs and a few words of Eng- lish. v Standing Rock, I”had him tell /me the story through interpreters and the aid of a map. r son to believe that he told the truth, he talked ‘straight, as the Indians would put it. him: Why was not Custer scalped or It's used like this—“‘In ordinary * > | ATHOUGHT =} —+ Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass. And He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the noonday.—Isalm Light is, in reality, more awful than darkness; modesty is more ma- |jestie than’ strength; and there is ‘truer sublimity in the sweet joy of a child or the sweet virtue of a maid- (GENERAL CUSTER NOT A SUICIDE, SAYS GEN. GODFREY OF MASSACRE —_—— ’ School children’ of Forsythe, and mutilated as was done to all Montana, read in. their histories} the other bodies?” He answered with- the crroneous statement that/General | out the least hesitation: ‘Because he Guster committed. suicide, “Becording was the Big Chief and we respected to Genéral E.'S. Godfréy, of Crooks-| his rank and position,’” I asked oth- ton; New Jersey, who:'served in Gen-| er Indians who were there and they eral Cugter’s regiment ‘and: is Known] gave, me, substantially the same its historian. b .* fanswer. ( Stes Learning that the history used in|’ “I asked if he (Gall) knew who schobls of Rosebud county, Mon-| killed the: General and his answer a, ‘state that General Custer com-| was tothe effect that they did not mitted »gnicide, General. ‘Godfrey | recognize anyone during the fight, vrote,.ito, Mrs..A. S. Hotchkiss, of| that during the- battle anybody sandcnburg, Mont., as follows: ‘| might have killed him; that he was ‘really a great shock to|not recognized uatil after the bat- jow 3that'. the. school ‘history of | tle. Furthermore tHat: they’ did not: intansiahould, contain /an. unsup-| know, what fgor8 they .were fight- d azcous statement] ing Against’ “until~ the “battlé was il 'Custer, committed sui-| practically ‘over when some’ of the ‘ called ito ‘the Custer | Agency Indians, recognized’ individ- (where the monument, stands)| uais they had seen. ‘ “I think that it was General R. J. Dodge (Infantry) who wrote a book (I forget ‘the title) who stated in ‘it that the~Indians considered: it ‘Bad Medicine’ to scalp a: ‘conp’, the per- son of a suicide, hence the inference that General: Custer committed sui- cide. i “Be that as. it » we who: fol- lowed the trails and battled with the hostiles for-'years considered it as a sine quo non that the last shot would be reserved for self infliction rather than fall into the’ hands of the hostiles alive {for torture and the stake.” commanding officer, Major Re- élp identify the dead at that inti “E saw ‘the, naked body op He o, wounds. either. of which ve been fatal, one in the le and the other in the! | : carefully for powder he was not On the tenth anniversary, iIped. About 50 out of every 100 na- tives examined in two ~ villages near Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, showed infection from - malaria. “On our return to the Agency, I have every rea-| « . In. Morocco no native woman whb is truly religious is seen on the (streets at any time.except in cases of jextreme necessity. ;, i: BY. CONDO I put the question to’ EVERETT TRUE tT HAD ONLY. ONG FOOT ON THe CAR WHEN You Gave We MOTORMAN THE BELC, |BoT THer'Re Bore ; OWN NOU t!Y! ete - TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1922 These bathing suits make gome ot our girls, look skinny. —o Things could be worse. Suppose every grouch had. been twins? It is time for “Babe” Ruth to stop living up to his nickname. Wonder what a: bachelor. thinks ubout a bigamist? Washington girl has the smallest feet. Her feet, make one foot. One thing funnier than’a country | fellow in town is a city fellow in the country. worth as much as a quart. “We are on top of the world” ca- ble Mt. Everest climbers. Look out or you will be under ground. f Every man knows what he would do if he had the money. f et New styles in men’s shoes are so narrow you get corns on your feet ‘loking at them in the window: If you don’t give the dog, water | these ,hot days. he may get mad. A sure sign a:man is getting old is when any girl seems to be good looking. . s The bartenders who have been a: sea can go there now. Amundsen: says he will stay at the north. poleeven if: the © weather doesn’t‘ agree with him. - : If Congress doesn’t act quick, peo- ple are going to have money. In a New: York hospital they takd all the babies’ finger prints. Probably get them off the wall: A friend who keeps your cat while you are on a vacation is often an enemy. when you return, Germany has come, across with some, money;,. but. no. matter how much we collect war never pays. They are hunting the 12 greatest women. Utah has a candidae, She weighs 3242 ‘ wee Greenest .,thing invany park lis a young couple. This is the hottest'summer we have had since'last year-—~- RAINFALL FAR AHEAD OF LAST “YEAR IN STARK Dickinson, N. D., June 28.—With a week yet to go the precipitation in the Dickinson vicinity for June has reached. the highest point in the past eight years and. has been exceeded but’ twice in\the 30 years that obser- vations have been rogularly made and recorded-here on the Slope. The total rainfall for the month up until Thursday, was 6.49. The precipitation for the|week was .84 of an/inch. Since April 1 the total rainfall re- corded. by the government guage at the ‘Dickinson fo station; has been a trifle about 9.50 inches. When compared with the rainfall in other parts of the Slope for that period is it about a half inch more than that recorded at Beach and about an inch less than that recorded: for Hettinger county and other points' on the South Slope, where the irainfall totalled more than ten in- “ches. i Had Hatfield, the rainmaker, ac- cepted the sporting offer made him early in the season by the commis- ‘8foners of Slope county, it is claimed that he would have carried away more than’ $35,000 in commissions. ‘| Of, course if. he signed the contract and moved his rainmaking machinery to this’ section of the state he would probably have taken credit for all the’ rain GOOD HELP IN SUMMER. Indigestion causes worry, nervous- ness, sick headaches, biliousness, coated toygue, bad breath, bloating, J gas, constipation and constant dis- tress. Henry C. Thorne, 1002 Harri- son Ave. Boston, Mass., writes: “Since taking Foley Cathartic Tablet: I feel fine.”. They cleanse the bowels, sweeten the stomach and jnvigorate’ the liver. Cause no pain, no nausea. Not habit’ forming—just a good, wholesome physic. - : DON'T VOTE FOR | O. R. Vold:for. the Legisla- ture, unless you are for @ Non-Partisan. It has come to our attention that Mr. Vold is giving the impression to vot- j\.ers in Bismarck, that he is not a Non-partisan. Mr. Vold hag been endorsed for the Legislature by the Non-Parti- san Committee, according to statement in the Farmer La- bor State:Record. ‘Tbe Anti-Townley Conven- tion has endorsed, Messrs. Anderson, Heaton. and Har- -rington, for the Legislature, for Burleigh County. men is asked. : BURLEIGH COUNTY JOINT CAMPAIGN COMM, . (Political Advertisement,). Strange, but a bushel of rye isn’t Your vote for these three; | Bo ivy e HERBERT A. HARD Democratic Candidate for Secretary of State Resident. of North Dakota 12 lyears. Flood Control Engineer past 6 years. I belicve nomination car- ties an obligation to SFAY op the ticket through .November election, and the undenied fact that certain | Jamestown candidates _ agreed to withdraw, makes them unworthy of your ballots. I further believe that Democrats who are’ regular, prog-. ressive ‘and constructive, can’ assist the national: organization to a: clean- cut victory in the next general clec- tion. North. Dakota has vast natural re- sources: which it has as.yet made lit- tle effort to develop. I believe the state should;at once proceed along. sound.-business: lines to develop its lignite, clays and water power; to aggressively carry out its flood con- trol projects on the Missouri, Red, Mouse, Sheyenne, and James rivers and its irrigation’ projects in, the Missouri and Meuse — valleys; ‘en- courage the Great Lakes) waterways project. Mr. Hard has in the past 6 years developed, shaped and to an extent financed © extensive plans for pre- vention of disastrous floods in, the Red Valley; has directed extensive surveys and prepared maps, designs and cost estimates on ‘dams, reser- voirs and channel’ improvement for same. These~ are ready for use when the next flood has driven the three affected states to action.—Pol. Adv. > | THE WEATHER For twenty-four hours ending at noon today: ? Temperature at 7: a. m. ‘Temperature. at noon. Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday Precipitation ‘Highest wind, vel 2 : Weather Forecasts | For Bismarck and, vicinity: Unset- tled weather tonight and Wednesday, with. possibly. showers, warmer: to- night. a Nor North Dakota: Unsettled: we: ther tonight and Wednesday, with, possible showers west. and central portions; warmer tonight. General Weather Conditions The pressure is low over the Roc- kies and over the Mississippi Valley and showers have occurred along the northeastern. Slope of the Rockies and at scattered places in the Cen- tral Plains States. and Middle Mis- sissippi Valley. Temperatwres are near the seasonal normal generally.’ Amenia).... 76 49 0 el’r Bismarck “74 °° 50. 0 cl’r Bottineau 67 50 O-f er Bowbells .. 75. 51 Os pe. Devils Lake 72 48 0 D.c. Dickinson . 73 49 0 ce’. Dunn Ceriter 74), 49° 0 cl’r Ellendale... 73 50 i} eldy Fessenden... 74 45 0 D.c. Grand Forks 76 49 02 el’r Jamestown .~72 52 0 clr Langdon~.. .; 70 44 0 cl’r Larimore .. 76 50 0 er Lisbon 74 50 0 e’r Minot .. +75 41 0 el’r Napoleon 73 42 0 cl’r Pembifta <2) 81 45 0. el’r Williston .. 74. 54 0 eldv: Moorhead .. 74 52. 0 clear ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist. MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS Read This Letter from Mrs. -W. S. Hughes Greenville, Del.—‘‘ I was under the impression that my eldest daughter had someintsrnaltrouble las ever since the first time her sicknessap- peared she had to go to bed and even had to quit school once for a week. always . take Lydia E. Pink- great benefit fromit. You can use this let- ter for a testimonial if you wish, as 1 cannot say too much about what your medicine has done for me and for my daughter.”’—Mrs. Wm. S. HUGHES, Greenville, Delaware. i Mothers and oftentimes grandmothers have taken and have learned the value of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und. So they recommend the medi- cine to others. ‘The best test of any medicine iswhat , * it has done for others, For nearly fifty years we have published letters from mothers, daughters, and women, young and old, recommending the Vegetable Compound. ney know what it did for them and are glad to tell others. In our own neighborhood are women wha Low. of its great value. ot : Mothers—daughters, why not try it? on . @ 9 4 l @ { 1a Aad | g a ee

Other pages from this issue: