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| | } PAGE FOUR THE BISMARC K TRIBUNE ‘MONDAY, JULY 3, 1922 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! has Jess work to do in pumping thé ood. Gntered at the Postoffice, Bismarck,| Rest and complete relaxation~ N. D,, as Second Class Matter, leven for only 10 or 20 minutes at a | time--often will enable the body to lrecharge its batteries sufficiently to i] d off what might develop into ous illness! GEORGE D, MANN - Editor Foreign Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO 2 DETROIT) Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg.! lying down, PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITII NEW YORK -— - Fifth Ave, Bldg. a. U The Chin ation before MEMBER OF to or Europe learned Mongol, Tartar ve-| Mancha, they have flown man-carry- ly. entitled to the use or republi-| ing kites for centuries. If they had cation of all news dispatches cre-/ had a mechanical genius to provide . jse cre 1 . fy dited to it or not otherwise credit-| them with motors, they might have ed in this paper and also the local) pombed Rome with giant firecrackers news published herein. | 2000 years ago. -All rights of republication of) phis interesting information is special dispatches herein are al89! circulated by the Aeronautical Cham- reserved. ber of Commerce, | It discloses the principle lthe decay of briental — civil | China especially. The Chines behind ations, were MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIO: great is squeezing all the juice out of the orange, instead of just a few drops. Success, as has been pointed out freauently, is 10 per cent inspiration or “hunch” and 90 per cent perspir- jation or concentration on develop- ment of the original idea. | BREWERY 'THE GREAT AMERICAN HOLIDAY| In Egypt, 3700 years ago, an un- For nearly a century and a half, known sculptor made a small-scale the Fourth of July has been cele-| model of a brewery, showing 12 men brated by the people of this coun-: making beer from barley, try as the birthday of the American] Dr, Flinders Petrie exeavates the Nation, the beginning of American’ model near Cairo. He sends it to the independence. It has been symbolic; museum of the’University of Penn-| of freedom and liberty for self-gov-| sylvania, cerned people and stands out preemi-| “In view of the fact that man has nently as an American holiday. In’ been drinking alcoholic beverages for the past it has been a day in which] thousands of year, is it any wonder the people showed an almost child-! we find it so hard to make prohibi- like appreciation of the fact that, tion absolute in a few years? they were the freest people in the] Liquor feeds on itself—creates a world by all sorts of patriotic exer-| craving. A drinker soon finds that ises, processions by day or by night alcohol has become a necessity. This vith brass:-bands: playing patriotic) biological process through thous- tunes, by the waving of flags, fire-| ands of. year has given. the world tin horns, and.-exuberant| many inhabitants born a certain flights, of oratory..[t-has been more} number of drinks below normal. To representative of; Young Jefferson’s time titan of the present.| normal, you see them go to peculiar John Adams expressed the idea of, financial and criminal extremes. Independence Day for the early pa-| —— triots in these words: INTERESTING JOB “It ought to be commemorated as; George W. Sherman, 83 years old, the day of dcliverance by solemn| cuts out for himself the interesting acts of devotion to God Almighty. It| job of walking 614 miles in 31 days, | Gught .to be celebrated with pomp/ to join his old comrades at the re- and parade, with shows, games,; union of Confederate veterans in sports,. guns, bells, bonfires. and} Richmond, Virginia. illaminations, from one.end of this Pictures of this white-bearded pa- continent to the other, from this|triarch looked as if, in a pinch, he We get ill on our feet. We recover TION RATES PAYABLE) vonderful originators, But they prohibition got its real start in per year....$7.20| rarely developed anything beyond a America, % year (in Bi tenth of its possibilities, The handwriting is on the wall, The thing that makes America) Manila. quakes are gradually lifting the en- tire mountain higher into the air. One quake in 1899 raised a nearby beach 47 feet. Stupendous forces are locked up inside the earth, down under our feet. To an unknown extent, these forces will be harness the work of our d Prohibition visits the orient, stays 48 hours and gets out, ‘This hap- pens in a, where a new law prohibits sale of liquor on registra- tion and election days. It is the first time that part of the world has had a bone-dry spell since primitive men of the Philippine ands discovered that fermented juice of the nipa palm “went to the head.” Manila took the closing of bars good naturedly, and chuckled as it patted the hip-flask. It might not chuckle if it knew that locking. the barroom during voting wis the way EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The ‘Tribune, They are 7 in order that || our r e both sides || of important which are |) being discussed in the press of the day. * |. ABSURD SENIORITY RULE The defeat of McCumber would be a small price to pay for a complete uvenation of the United States | WHAT KIND OF MEN \ When a | gore among Hs overs ofthe au the | Poth intiea Ke raufe shad impel ‘wth enlan woadanatr Sighs th osensnt oh fons inch fumes Prone He yond!» icant ' Tyas D Doers ng pleat optus an te nght at amene a Cay": ul bon de pals f | Been eda er, Hei hasnt he Spent ane snl fafig enpetinn’ ent fe ton | Be LO idramneien f tgs atader punt ablehing Me id on wee he hitene, hed fhiulll not be Langa fs (he chemandir ala Diced haste nage sts ‘thes ih Moe we yf eae beter wrul fick ts new hea nvr 45 only —— He baw val Byithen byadlalive bedite att we ed he aan He ha feed ip Eat fated w America of | bridge that gap, raise themselves to | | Senate and an escape from the situ- ‘ation pictured by the fears of Re- | publican leaders. With McCumber lout, La Follette becomes ranking member of the finance committee and | Borah is second place on the Foreign relations committee. If Smoot’ and Lodge should be eliminated by the turn of the off-year wheel, the radi- cal from Wisconsin and the insur- gent from Idaho would become the respective heads of these paramount committees. The prospect, Corres- pondent Markham says, makes the Republican organization shudder. We may add, on our ow part, that, it is calculated to fill the whole country BY ALBERT J. SMITH. Graphalogist. What were the characteristics of the men who penned and signed the Declaration of Independence? | Historie strokes of the pen,, pre- served on that sacred document, re- veal the wisdom and vision and | with apprehension. But why should this come about? Why should the Senate be bound hand and foot to the antiquated and absurd rule of seniority? If it is a public menace and a party liability to put Borah and La.Follette into |these responsible chairmanships, the public will resent it and’ the party should be made to suffer the conse- time forward forever.” (might cover the distance in two Until 1914, the Fourth of July had | gradually developed into a day in which the “parade, bells, guns, and bonfires” had become its most signi- ficdnt- features, Since thousands of, our boys were sacrificed on the bat-| tle, field of Europe to prove to those autocratic powers that America still believed that all men are cre- ated’ equal, endowed by their creator | with certain inalienable rights! antong which are life, liberty and! the pursuit of happiness, thousands of Europeans as, well as Americans have gained a new realization of the central idea of the Declaration of! Independence,—that governments de- rive their just powers from the con- sent of the governed. In Bismarck as in every city and hamlet in the United States we have! too iuny boys who were in training camps in this country and on the firing’ lines in Europe to allow us to! forget the real significance of the| day. Though there may be few par- adés tomorrow, nor yet’ solemn: pro- cessions, America does not forget the | day of “her birth, nor the men who! fought ‘and died to make her fre@! Shd hides her deeper feelings under a show of lightness. But who shall say she-does not fight the, better for] her lighthearted way of commemor-| ating the birth of her freedom? It is difficult for a nation as for an in- dividual to express their deeper feel- ings, so let.us enjoy in sports and| oth@r’ways the Fourth of; July for! what better way is there to express’ thé joy of freedom. : t PLAYING HOR: Wg, should walk on all, foprs in- stéad of on two feet, for nature in- terided man to be a quadrijped. This’ thgilliig suggestion comes from an| able authority—Courtiere, celebrated French scientist. Men-who. have hunted for coller-' buttons under the bureau will not agree with him. Nor will the father! whose young son, insists that, pa “play horse,” dufidustry, at present, often spends Courtiere’s suggestion is valuable, howeyer, if for no other reason than| the laughs it starts, Anything that takes people’s minds off their prob-! lems .and stops morbid introspection | —analysis of self—is a stimulant and a tonic: That: is why so many men, fagged out from the day’s work, turn to the newspaper comic pictures, before! they reau page-one news, stories. | LTA | Evolutionists believe that man once scrambled about “on all fours,” like a monkey. What made him get up! on his. hind legs? Probably it was the discovery that he could walk. that way and use his fore-legs to carryhome an armful of cocoanuts for his family. In those days, human arms must have been as long as the legs, like) monkeys ‘you have seen in the circus with .their hands reaching ‘below their knees as they stalked about. Gradually the arms shortened to a more convenient length. Such is the, scientific theory—interesting, ther you believe it or not. whe- is not the only scientist we are violating natural law by. not walking like quadrupeds. Standing up, your stomach other internal organs sag. Their ar- rangement indicates that ‘their most natural position is when we are on hands and knees. Possibly this e+ plaing- our instinctive attempt to brace up our abdomens by corsets, belts-and tight trouser-bands. The correct position of the body in walking may be debatable. But Courtiere who thinks this much is certain: When feeling! dizzy or ill in any way, nothing beats lying=on the back. A person lying down relieves his internal machinery of the strain that 1s always present when moving about on the feet. The heart, too, live days, when you are 83? ' and | weeks, : ‘quences. La Follette is ‘a Republican Do you think you will be able to, for personal advantage only. There walk 20 miles a day for 31 success-|is nothing in common between him ‘and the party. Borah, is serving his Could you do it now? |last term’ in. the ‘Senate. His party Our generation is a lot weaker,| connection and allegiance hang by physically, than the one before us,/an‘attenuated thread. He is a thorn The schedule points to a race of in Republican flesh. If this twain of weaklings a half century hence, | worthless come into committee hon- ———_—_ jors it will be only because the rest HEALTH CLOWN |of the Senate lacks the courage to Chew Chew, a health: clown, makes | abolish the seniority rule dnd make the rounds of New York City schools, | fitness the test in selecting chair- spreading the gospel of fresh air,| men. ‘ | proper food ‘and cleanliness, \'| ‘The House set the Senate a bright With him is his little dog, Creamo, example in this ‘respect.’ Representa- whose stunts include pawing his face tive Davis, of the Third Minnesota as'if washing when asked what he| district, was entitled to the chair- does in the morning. |manship of the appropriation com- The school-children are going wild mittee under the seniority rule but about Chew Chew and Creamo. They his. party majority in the House ig- are absorbing health facts, because | nored the rule, turned him down and the presentation is made in an inter-| advanced another member for ma- esting way. And they will remember terial, not party, reasons, Has_ the the health clown and what he taught,| House more intelligence or a higher in their old age. jsense of duty to the country than Making school interesting is the| the Senate? It will be:demonstrated greatest problem of education. Peo-|in the days to come. Neither body ple in this boresome civilization re-| need fancy the country is not keep- member interesting things, forget | ing a watchful eye on matters like the uninteresting. these.—St. Paul Pionecr Press. | WHEN THE SPUD WAS KING If the American people were ask- ed to state the highest price flight attained. in the war inflation by any food product, any necessary of life —any commodity whatsoever of gen- eral’ consuniption—how many would COAL STRIKE The suspension of anthracite coal mining in Pennsylvania since April 1 has cost the miners about $42,000,000 and the operators $53,000,000. This is the recent estimate by Clifford B. Connelley, Pennsylvania’s —_ State Commissioner of Labor and In-' guess it? © \ dustry. Sugar touched the. clouds, but it It is only a fraction of the total| wasn’t sugar which made the ele- individual and economic losses due vation record. It wasn’t coal or coke. to the national coal strike. Nor was it’cotton print cloth, hides, The cost to consumers will not be| steel or lumber, with all the climb-' known until coal begins rattling into | ing any ‘of that list did. It was the cellar bins next winter. humble potato, ‘ ! If all men were far-sighted, sensi-|| By the index number of the depart- ble and, fair, the conferences thie ment of commerce showing whole- eventually end such strikes could bq sale prices at the war peak, the held ‘hefore.the strikes started—and | Price of wheat for the producer got with thé*same results, waste elimi-, up from a normal of 100 to 320, as nated. . compared with 140 last February. “If,” however, is a big word, In-| Cotton print cloth reached 480; it a/was down in February to about 160. | Hides just missed sealing 500; now [about 80—below the index number MUSIC |normal. Sugar rang the bell at 600; Music is one of the four necessi- now a little better than 100. Coke ties of life. The other three are topped 600, and went on a bit high-’ food, shelter and clothing. So says € to about 630—down now to about Ubelt Urquhart, talking to a con-| 110. vention of men who make music on! But the potato—the farm price industry. to the producer—got just beyond This is true, admitting that life is 700! And, having broken all the price on an emotional basis, which it is. flight records, the champion high Any period of history is mirrored | price flier of the war has since re- in its popular music. Jazz music fused to get down to earth again, came with a jazz period. It is pass- still being at 200.—New York Herald. ing cut as the national temperament = = becomes normalized. If’ you want DEBTS OF CALIFORNIA to keep an eye on “the trend of the’ According to the report of State times,” watch the new music as it Controller Riley, during the past de- comes in. If we react to wailing cade the total bonded indebtedness tunes, if will mean that the public for all forms of government in considers the outlook discouraging. | California has increased from $93,- (906,423 to $821,616,238.66, or 242 per cent, while the wealth of the state The house in which William Tay- has increased about 60 per cent. This \lor Adams wrote many of his tremendous increase, that aggregates “Oliver Optic” books is being torn more than 3 per cent of the total jdown at Dorchester, Mass., to make wealth of the state, should have the | way for a garage. attention of all tax levying bodies. This will open up the memory of| Controller Riley also suggests the many old-timers and recall the days unwisdom of straining the _ state when they “took out” Rolli, Oliver credit by financing too far in ad- Optic, G. A. Henty, Elsie Dinsmore vance. Should we continue to in- |and the Prudy Books from the Sun- cre in the same ratio for the day school circulating library. next decade the resulting taxation | The times have changed. Youth would be confiseatory. During the in the old days read adventure based last fiscal year the state and its on the outdoor life of a world that subdivisions expended $27,559,297 for was far from conquered commercial- interest and redemption of public ly and geographically. Today youth debt. finds most of its adventure ‘in|. The proposed authorization of quarter to save 25 cents. DEAR TO YOUTH a science, jnew state debt of $500,000,000, in | Dah S ry Penn ears ras addition to other public debt author- | Mount St. Elias ized but not issued, would increase If President Harding makes his out authorized public debt by about | trip to Alaska he can see one of the two and a half times at one fell strangest things in nature—Mouat' swoop. What the state and cities St. Elias. would do to themselves thereafter | This mountain is 18,024 feet high one can only guess. But we ean and today—lut it is growing. Earth- shall stop the $500,000,000 folly.— The San Francisco Chronicle, yuakes are its growing-pains. - ‘ , equipoise— courage of the founders of our na- tion, as expressed in the immortal words, “We mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.” And they rored individually in the very’s FATHER OF HiS COUNTRY. | In the signature of Washing- ton (above), we have the man of peaceful mind, at ease with the world, in which good humor rules. The scroll shape “t” bar cative of these eharacter The, separation of the letter old fashioned “s” apart from the “hand the blunt “g” gaping away from the “t”—shows an affection- |}! ate, tender, affable and friendly nature, The Father of Our Coun. try must have been in a happy frame of mind when he struck this ature, and he has been con- sistent: in its’ repeated’ m: for this style seems to h lowed him at every oc history has revealed in s of his script. ion that of the document adopted by the Con- tinental Congress, July 4, 1776. Thomas Jefferson was the autnor of the Dee! tion of Independence ond the original document is in his handwriting. Unusual depth af mind, great lit erary ability, tender sympathy, vir- tue, justice, strong will, power, a{8etub doorsteps and wash, up cups sense of rightful thinking and great|@"d coddle an cee , : tenacity of purpose are shown in|, “Goodness!” gasped Nancy. “Is Jefferson’s handwriting. The malt | that what a bandage-roller means?” legible ‘strokings indicate depth of| \“Tut mo!” said Dr. Snuffles crisply. “But if fd put all that in mind, the. joining of letters. logical reasoning powers, and the careful and prudent pen marks: show his practical turn/of mind. Persistent use of the Greek rorm’ of the smali letter “d” shows bis literary ability. Clearness of perception is disclosed in the consistent spacing of his. lines. Less ‘teriacity of purpose is shown in John Adams’ ‘signature than in Jefferson's, But in Adams’ seript we see constructiveness ‘ind order, the eternal fitness of things, based of a just conception of what the writer evnsiders to be right and equitable. He had persuasive qualities essential to the completion of almost any un- in dertaking,.. Jefferson was a fighte the open; Adams a subtle fighter, tellectually acute, inating, calm and pr The signature of John shows many of the characte John Adams, with probably ¢ better balanced conditions of moral, soeial and political forees While he had more balance, he lacked the argumentative powers of Adams or even of Jefferson. His mental acuteness was less than either, but he made up in deliberations of mind what he lacked gn firmness and reso lution. This is shown by the round- ness of the tops of his small letters und the precision of formation. ‘The familiar scrolled underscope is 2 mark of self-approbation and pride. e —% "AT THE MOVIES | > o THE ELTINGE ch Your Sten” is the feature attraction at the Eltinge for the Fourth and Wednesday. A Mermaid) comedy, “Step This Way,” and News pictures are also on the program. Why are stories like “Watch Your Step” popular? Because there’s a small town in nearly everybody's life, Maybe you were born in one; maybe your grand- mother lived in one, and you went to visit her; maybe you've always liv- ed in a big city, but dreamed about! living in a little country town, where | you could have fruit trees in the front yard, and chickens in the back | yard, and maybe stories like this are popular because we all sort of recog- nize that from the small town comes | the backbone of the nation. \ “Watch Your Step” is a human and natural story of a country town.! Cullen Landis as stimulating as a yeold drink on a warm, day, Patsy) * ecimens ||; halk the matter over.” SIGNED THE » DECLARATION? in CONGRESS, Juty 4, 776") Gfe unani mons Declaration wv: sine oie Dtofes of Vimerica, at of Kerry avon 1 ams msefinny, J is aol Mi Hit fin her it igh imino arm ahalbacrn mt Chi 8 ic ec ncancinghe ll raprrer kabel Prat udurcdlong toon of abate sinvnan? and top tho | eunfte fina to which Hay ae accu A ronetas thoy te 0Fre thes ferancd pl 4 pobtshount fan a fea on Mi once wheleoome and regpinry fo the pubbe yor 600 es Uofert thaw ba harmed aut whan sofnprntid te nip thaw tinh smal wbegeid ta ngh Gy snuoul can tory Fionate uputtaly Ruth Miller, his dainty leading lady, is so new to the screen that she could not have become sophisticated or have lost the bloom of youth on her cheek, had she* tried. “Watch Your Step” will bring some of the real, substantial things of life ‘to ou. Foie AD te VENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts _Naney and Nick stepped up to x little fairy man who was tacking a sign on his house. re you Dr. Snuffles?” asked Nick. s, sir,” answered the tiny gen- tleman pompously. “I have that hon- or.” “And bre you wanting help?” went on the little boy. indeed!” replied Dr. Snuffle with a sharp glance: out of h shrewd eyes. “Why? Do you know of somebody 2” “We#were thinking maybe you'd take us)” said Nick. “Oh sir! Would “you?” boggee Naney.! “We'd love to help.” “Wm!” cotghed Dr. “Just step inside, please, and we | + , So in they all went, leaving Chir! Chipmunk, who'd been listening, ali! eyes and ears, to skip away ana chatter the news all over the whole place. \ “Well, ma'am,” said to Nancy, “what are mendations for the place you do? Can you iron Dr. Shuffles ! your recom: What can ce frifls my advertisement I'd never get ar answer. Can you?" “II. gues you show me how.” git ney. “Good,” said the fairyman, rubbing his hands together most businesslike. Then he turned to Nick. + “And what can you do, young sir?” he asked. ponte foroe the tattcat bands chk have connactd Kame wh anette, and & Goa mth hom sdaome meputtlo he oprraena gl mantond regres et Mey that tothe ttegilpertints thet al wim stecwiah qual, Heat tay we y SIGNATURES TEL np ments we oust armen Moms, oa put oe jalin er toabelahit, onal li mitt maw fhe “Tl try to do anything you tel. nswered Nickie. right,” said Dr. Snuffles “All heartily, ‘you’re both hired.” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) + POETS CORNER + % | WHAT OLD GLORY MEANS _ (Florence Borner.) In this dear land of ours, | ’Neath the old Stripes and , Stars, There seenes that. are fair see But the flag that we love, Tho afar we may rove, Is the fairest of all, to me, All the stars brightly shine, With its folds they entwine, Tn a tender and soft caress; Other flags, there may be, Waving over the sea, , \ But our flag is the truest and best. When I look at the red,” I sce precious blood. shed, In the cause of the just and right, And, Hopes banner, unfurled, Shines anew o’er the world, Whene’er I see her stripes of white, When I look at the blue, I see boys brave and true, Who will fight ard dic for liberty, “And the stars in the field. Say: “We never will yield,” That is what Old Glory means to me. + | U TODAY’S WORD |! > Todays’ word is ATROCITY, plural ATROCITIES. It is pronounced a-troc-i-ty, with; accent on the second syllable, the: “x” as in ask, and the “o” short. It means—outrageously cruel or; wicked, a deed savagely brutal. It comes from the Latin atrox, atrocis, meaning crucl, fierce. | It’s used like this—“The atrocities, of the recent mine massacre in Illi-| nois were committed by men who probably never would think. of com-/ mitting murder while alone.” i New Orleans is to use poison gas VERETT TRUE “AND THEN ILATER :A H R-2-@Rinc. u GooD MORNING, MES. CVERYBOOY'S WELL, WELL. How % To GET CUR ORDER We THANK oe — we wee JSOES HY DooR Barc! - i | CISTEN, HELEN, LL CALL You YR) NO TEL You THE Rest! ,-Rooo BYE Hos WE WENT DRIVING NEsTER DAY. OH, NO, WS WENT OUT THE STATE OAD AND CAME BACK BY WAY OF THS FooTHICy By Bovc Evaro. W % SHOULD Say (Tt WAS C; GUESS MRS. TRY OVER THS PaRTY LINE ! in an effort to exterminate rats:, BY CONDO | | — 4a at GREEN. OW, MES, WSIRE ALL “6S, i A Giorious DAY 4 ! \he had a fountain pen to borrow in stead of a goose quill. 1 ; port.—Schliermacher, *\ ber of the Reichst | clares higher wages are ne Sims jevents it becomes necessary for en: lightened folk to celebrate. Exactly 146 years ago today Phila. |delphia was all excited. She hasn’ | been excited since. No one knows how she knew i was thé Fourth. Perhaps it was be- | | | eause the banks were closed. her independence. lucky for King George. went home: , And ever since the British ers over here, After chasing George’s shooting firecrackers, fingers off. But after 146 years’ practice i ing better ways. come to town, their bills for overtime, Country ants that have never eat- en a human find great feasts in tore for them. thrown at them won't be able to say the same tomorrow. And the country folk in town are wearing the edges off the buildings looking at them. Many a pair of shoes “were sur. prised today when they saw their first sidewalk. And there are patriotic gatherings where folk wish they knew the words to our national anthem. We favor a safe and sane Fourth of July. There are 365 days in every year. Why. not ,have -one, of , thes 365 safe and sane? i | ATHOUGHT | OO .O ye simple, understand wisdom; heart.—Proverbs 8:: Wisdom is that attribute of man through which every action of a man receives its ideal value and im- ’ BUY CHOCOLATE CANDY IN SPITE OF POOR WAGES Berlin, July 3—Chocolate candy, the war-time “iron ration” of armies, has been increasingly popular since the war among the laboring people of Germany despite the hand-to-mouth existence in which they are forced to live because of low wages and high prices. The workers here are said to have now usurped the pre- war position ogcupied by the middle classes as the greatest consumers of this “luxury.” Simultaneously with comment in workingman’s budget, figures are an- nounced which show that the Ger- man laborer today is recgiving bare- ly sufficient to keep him and his fam- ily in the necessities of life. Clara Bohm-church, Socialist mem- , reporting in Vorwaerts the results of an inquiry into workers’ living conditions, de- ary and that the present state of affairs is due to the practice of userers in agriculture, industry, and trade. Interviewing an industrialist, she writes, she ‘was told that diligent workers in his establishment. re- ed “good” wages at about 1,15v marks a week, equal to about $4 in American money. She sought out © mechanic and found that was the e act amount of his stipend, and that She cites also the case of a ba’ ber’s family of five, including three children between 10 and 15 years of age, which lived on the man’s salary of 1,000 marks a week. In a third on earnings of 3,800 marks a month, WORKING ON WASHINGTON © HAS HAD TMS To THE GROCER ‘ | ‘rout | MEMORIAL ., July 3—With the Alexandria, V | turning of the first sod on a beautiful | spot on the outskirts. of Alexandria | overlooking the National Capital, work ‘has begun on a memorial to George | Washington which will be a fittin, ‘ companion | Memorial at Washington. a stately temple in- | i spired by Greek and Roman archi- | tecture, is being erected by the con: | bined efforts of all the M piece to the Lincoln The edifice, sons. ts ana ates, Masonic orders in the United and will be a tribute to Washington, | the man and Mason. Says And now in the course of human On this day John Hancock wishea Then he seratehed his “John Han- cock” and Great Britain was given There were exactly 13 states rep-| resented. This number was very un- We shot at George's soldiers seves) | years befare they all got mad and! have been getting even by sending lectur- soldiers things seemed so ‘quiet we began Every Fourth of July we take al day off and some people take a’ few celebrating we are gradually learn- All of the city people go to the country and all the country people Fourth of July picknickers always make the country mosquitoes put in| sity. Birds that have never had a rock| and ye fools, be‘of an understanding | the press on this anomoly in the| he supported a wife and child on is; family of four, the budget was based ; It will be two | WAS READY FOR HIS BIG CHANCE Soldier, student, accountant, |ditor, all in less than five yea his is the experience of Wm. |fockhart. After the battles of rance, he made ready for the bat- j les of commerce by attending "| Dakota Business Collegs, Fargo, 'N..D.° He obtained a place with aus .| dishop-Brissman, Accountants, 1| Now he has been appointed audivor of jor oth State Board Aministri.tion, it) a gkora Business Coll you to meet Op, ollow the Succe! 2 vito kL. Wai mn | —————_———— | hundred fect from portico to obser- vation platform on the top, and will be surrounded by an extensive land- seaped garden to be known a Washington Park, It is expecte | memorjal will be completed in from | four to five years. The cost will b. approximately $2,500,000. ! NEWSBRIEFS | | —-———_____—_—_—___--__» (By the Associated Press) Washington, July 3.—Two earth- quakes, one estimated to be 3,800 miles from Washington and the othe> 700 or 800 miles, were recorded at Georgetown univers! __ Chicago, July 3—Luke: F. Hart St: Louis was elected supreme advo- | cate of the Knights of Columbus. Baltimore, July 3.—Two elevators | containing 500,000 bushels of. grain, a pier and sixty carloads of tobacco | were destroyed by fire caused by lightning. ek | Halifax, July ‘wo earthquakes | believed to’ be comparatively near, were recordéd at Dalhousie univer- i eaeele Yokohama, July 3.—Seeretary Den- jby and members of the, Annapolis [class of 1881, arrived to hold their class’ reunion with their classmate, | Admiral Bazon Sotokichi Uryu. ., July 3.—The blue | law lid was ¢lamped tightly. No ree reations were permitted, confection lary stores and telegraph offices were closed, the editor of the morning newspajer was threatened with ar- | Vicksburg, | yest if he worked his staff and | newsboys selling Sunday papers were | arrested. | Duluth, Minn, July 8—Four Du- luth men were drowned and a fifth |injured. when their automobile ‘crashed through the gates at an | open drawbridge and plunged into | St. Louis Bay. Baltimore, July 3—Fire at the B. ‘and O. railroad terminals at’ Locust | Point, caused by lightning caused a loss of between $3,000,000 and $4,- | 000,000 destroying 500,000 bushels of ‘grain, sixty carloads of export to- | baceo and injuring several firemen. |. Chieago, July- 3—More than a score of Chicago's cafes, cabarets land roadhouses were raided by fed- eral prohibition agents and more than fifty owners, managers and | waiters arrested. New York, July 3—Work will be- |gin soon on the American Eagle, a |100 passenger hydro airplane with |which it is planned to circumnavi- |gate the globe. Milwaukee, July 3.—Ten persons | were killed and thirty injured as the result ‘of automobile accidents in Wisconsin. . Carrying the furniture of the for- mer kaiser to Holland called for 53 railway vans. A SWEET LITTLE BABY BO ; @ Makes a Bright Spot in Every Home. A Comfort in Years to Come he a Park Rapids, Minnesota.—‘“‘I have taken your medicine — Lydia E. Pink~ ham’s Vegetable Compound — when I was a girl for pains and before and after have a sweet little w{ybaby boy and will send you his picture if you wish to publis} it. * My sisters als take your medicine and find it a great help, and I recom- mend it to those who | suffer before their babies are born,’? — | Mrs, Wa. Jounson, Box 155, Park Rapids, Minn, , To marry and arrive at middle age without children is a great disappoint- , Ment tomany women. Think of the joy and comfort other women have in their children as they grow older. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has helped to bring great happi- ness to many families by restoring wo- men to health. Often the childlesshome e due Ge area sown, eonditton ot the fe, which may elped b: dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable’ Gompeand. It brought health and happiness into the home of Mrs. Johnson. Why not to yours? > All Makes sold and rented Nismarck Typewriter Co. Bismarck, N. D my marriage. Inow - i ( | hee . yo? |