The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 15, 1923, Page 2

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PAGE TWO rattle thi and bring WARNING IS man. Legion Director Sees Plot to Put Hoherzollerans on for propaganda Throne of pover : at Mr. Yowell geclred of my stomach trouble that I can’ ceiving a marked amount of atten- | ‘ ration C7) “But this German propaganda is! cat anything I choose without any | tion in a : 4 ra? t . 4 r ; 3 E u great many states at pre- | me hs at being exerted to bring the Am ud effect.—Mrs. E. F. Pettit, 810) sent, especially in those having leg- | wiler omen ue _Hohen-| ean people to bi otherwise.” |S, Broadway. | istatt wibtE ollerns. is ippending in y fies hh MAE ar motaclas JU irene | der Von Hinderburg’ All druggists. Tablets or liquid. | In South Dakota, it is reported in the opinion natic di commission Legion ¥ of the issued 3 n propaganda, lenburg to Lead by ing in the American pa t did in 1914,” Mr. Powell] begin refusing to pay France and the allies on the plea! Dy. Pierce's Golden restore the old regime. He opened this campaign by calling, teen y for war with ce in his address | troubl to the German veterans’ league 1 | acute indigestion and would suffer Hanover yesterday.” j untold agony. Nothing I ate agreed ,- he American , said Mr, Powell that Ger-|food did not nourish me. I also had | n afford to spend millions! a lingering cough that was very an-' Many Bodies Have Subject i hile | noying. : people do in America wi reparations “Germany today is in a better! of n tion for war, than the world| my cough and completely cured me Work Is Begun At Minot Normal ; ears eT provided to properly maintain state | Mar. 13-—-Carpenter and federal aid roads as required | to the pouring! inasmuch as the cold weather pre-| by the federal law. Si forms at the new | vents the pouring of cement. Five bridges across the Missouri ng of the Minot Normal, has| The cost of the wing, exclusive | rive contractors, Work! of equipment, will be approximately | their order of ¢ nerete foundation wil] n¢ ntil warmer Weather sets in,| building of the structure let in 192: PROP AG AND A stated. “He has been selected b | Have You Indigestion, | HIGHW AYS IS the Germar HOD AHL party t | Gas or Stomach Trouble? | bre in the Kaiser style|{ } bout a coup d'etat to|READ THIS REMARKABLE CASE. | has| Albert Lea, Minn.—“For over fif-| I stiffered with stomach I would have spells of net! with me, gas would form, and my’! I was down sick in bed to|when a friend advised me to take Medical Dis- | cove It not only got me ‘up out ick bed, but jhas rid me of | Send 10c to Dr. Pierce: N. Y., for trial pkg ree medical advice. otal amount of contracts for the | b ‘An appropriation of $100,000 was | . | and the difference between this fig- ji . ° Easier to stopit-Now! That oppressive burden on your hard-packed and throat and chest robs you of sleep by night and peace by day: “start this evening to break it up. Eventhough the cold is deep- seated—even though phlegm !s after every meal. digestion a “kick” WRIGLEY’S. Sound teeth, appetite Keep fit and fine with WRIGLEY. stubborn—even though throat and nostrils are un- ‘ly sore—Dr. King’s New overy, dependal family cough remedy. brings prompt re lief, Now—eet it from your druggist, )-year-old Eat wisely, chew your food well—then give your with a dood and proper digestion mean MUCH to your health. all this work—a pleasant, beneficial pick-me-up. Pure materials, scientific manufacture, absolute cleanliness—then sealed Hand-Wash _ and Iron _ Silk Shirts . Capital A Phone Just as carefully as any housewife pdssibly can. W, us¢ only pure soft water from olr own artesian well. Lux is the only soap we use. Every care is taken with Silk, Wool and other materials at this Laundry. Laundry Co. Launderiers and Dry Cleaners. WRIGLEY’S ‘ts a helper in with its i down to the acre basis by Mr. Save the against all impurity. That peppermint f fiom the ASRCHIeUrAt él. Mi? ig WRIGLEY’S as you get candy» and county agricultural agent, pao fresh d full-fl d. 5 |A. L. Norlin, who had called the GIS it—fresh and full-flavored. Jacket | meeting. The average of the figures * Fhe Minos: \given by the farmers present were 684 j purchasing of equipment. | school this y ‘PAPERS MAY |. Dubuque, Ia, Mar. 15. terious disappearance of Vraniak of Verdin, Ill, cunder eir- Father | | Father Vraniak ‘Was murdered has revived hope of Dubuque relatives jof the latter Father Belknap of jLead, S. D., who was murdered Octo- jber 26, 1921, in the outskirts of |Lead, that the slayer may be appre- hended. In the, papers of Andrew Rolando, | who is suspected of having killed | Father Belnap, are some lettets ‘from a girl named Kolm or Colm at Verdin, with whom he seemed to ! g; i 1 visited Verdin a number of times. |g The papers are now in the hands of the sheriff at Lead. Rolando was known to be strongly |q jit being a mania with him, against jez ts and anything connected with | q, the Catholic church, | These facts led Mrs. John Wagner | of Dubuque, sister of Father Belnap | Vraniak, mother of the missing | Verdin priest, enclosing a descrip- j tion of Rolando,’ who disappeared from Lead the morning Father Bel- nap was killed. A country-wide | 5 | search has been made for the man |), | but no traces of him ever were dis- covered. The fact that this descrip- tion tallies with those the Verdin | author! gave, makes the Dubque |* family hopeful that at last Father |, | Belnap’s slayer wil] be located. 2 ‘WHEAT RAISING e COST IS TOLD] FLOATING RUM | McLean County Agent Fig- \ ures $13.88 an Acre Mar, 15.-—The cost | 4 | estimating m to get at the cost of growing wheat in MeLean county was held at Garrison. Garrison, N gave their estimates of the time and jexpenses required to grow an acre jof wheat, | Each Separate operation was fig- jas follows: Use of land per aere....... 2.$ 3.00 Seed per acre, 1 bu. at $1.80.. 1.30 -100 hours man labor at Board for men /, . 20 and 28-100 hours horse labor at 10 and 8-10c . Use of machinery . Manure ........- 2 pounds twine at 1 . Threshing 15 bushels at 6c... Management (bossing the job). Crop insurance .. ae Other expenses ... AA Total cost of growing an acre of- wheat ............. 5 It was estimated that the average ield was 15 bushels per acre. Thosc | who raised 15 bushels grew it at an average cost of 92c per bushel. Those who raised 20 bushels grew the wheat at 69¢ per bushel. Those who raised 10 bushels did so at a cost of $1.38. $2.77 wag the cost per bushel for those who rujsed five bushels on the ; average. Moorehead Girl College Head Cambridge, Mass., Mar, 15.—| The election of Miss Ada Louise Comstock, dean of Smith College, as president of Radcliffe College, | was announced. She will be the first full time president of Rad- | cliffe, succeeding President Le Baron R. Briggs, who for 20 years | has been both head of Radcliffe and Dean of the Harvard faculty of arts and science. Miss Com- stock, who was formerly dean: o: women at University of Minneso- ta, will assyme office in June. PLAY SAFE 3|\ Order your Easter suit this | week. - Klein's Toggery- in Buffalo, that the gasoline tax may be ex- | und write for! pected to be increased from le to 2c | lor 3c. A state fund will have been | river are expected to be named in | provide was set aside by the 1921 legislature | the funds become available. | ure and $71,000 will be used in the ; Some unfavorable ‘further road development, there is | School officials hope that the wing | now e | will be completed in time for use | no difficulty will be at the opening of the fall term of | providing for two ten-million dollar bond issues for the next two years. | | to have been strong in both Mon- | tana and South Dakota. In Montana | for instance, although the bil not yet been signed b the automobile li | ed to be turned ov {the state highway department's | gineer considerably cut. The state and federal work in Montana will, 5.—The mys-| therefore, not be | {cumstances that lead the authorities ( | there and at St. Louis to believe that y| Report on have kept up a correspondense. There | under the Nimocks is also a note book in which entries |investigate the feas were made that indicated he had! qucing the number of state boards duce the expenses of the state gov- rnment, to complete the public! antagonistic, almost to the poiné of |troduction. bers, who-are to receive $4,000 « year, or $500 a_ year less thar ; most board members yow receive. [to write a letter to Mrs. Johanna |The bill abolishes the state drain- game and fish commissioner, the state land improvement board, the reclamation board and the board ter; the department of public ex- aminer and the surveyor of logs missioner of lands, | ind | timber, the commissioner of min- of game, fish and public parks. | was a great bustle today in the}; three-mile The farmers ei who Were present from the Garrison, if Piles Send | Coleharbor and Emmett communities 59 Pyramid nates struggling with the paih and distress of itching, blecding, pro- truding piles or femorrhoids, ask | SUBJECT IN LEGISLATURES Before Them During This Winter i The subject of highways is re-! ruction by the uth Dakota legiwlature. A state bridge fund of 1-10 mil] has been , the bridges to be built as | In Minnesota, while there was ntiment against ry reason to believe that | erienced in Anti-good roads sentiment seemed | the governor, | ure propos- to the counties, | of the gas tax reduced to 20 reent and the aries of the state xceedingly great in the next busine: ip |) MINN. EXPENSES Reduction of Offices Is Ready St. Paul, Minn., March 15.—The | pecial house committee appointed resolution to ility of re- ind departments and thereby + lomain bill and prepared it for in- | The bill provides for a public lomain commission of three mem- |} ge department, the office of state f immigration; the state forestry ard and the office of state fores- | nd lumber. ‘ The three new appointees are to} known respectively as the com-/| i forests and) ral lands, and .the gommissioner FLEET HAS FLURRY Highland, N. J., Mar. 15.—There ing rum market off Jersey’s Foun limit. Several swift For Pyramid d tories Are wr ore. for the | Known | Every wi 10) Wonderful Rellef They Have Givea. If you are one of those unfortu- any druggist fora 60 cent ~box of | Pyramid Pile Suppositories. - Take no substitute. Relief should come so quickly you will wonder why anyone ‘should continue to’ suffer the | pain of such a distressing condition. For a free trial package, send name | and. address to Pyramid Drug Co., 626 Pyramid Bldg. Marshall, Mich. ; jrunners came out from Highlands |this morning bound for the liquor | carryin 4 ed to 15 crafts. Two tugs from fleet which had .increas- New ‘York were sighted this morn- ing visiting the sumed ‘they carried supplies. addition a number of motor leet. It is as- In Armada. Noted upon the new arrivals on|from the rum row ‘was a former New York |cargo. The Chicago Tribune in an editorial March 6th, says: — - “The senate committee on manufactures, directed by Senator La Follette, has returned a‘ typical La Follette report attacking the various Standard Oil companies as, in effect, monopoly more dangerous than the com- pany was before its dissolution. The action emphasizes a growing tendency in this coun- try to break down anything which is a success. ‘*We ‘quote one paragraph as illustrative of the thought or lack of thought which produced the whole: ‘While it may be that a Standard company in a particular territory does only about jalf the business in that territory— and some of the Standards do more than half and some less—yet in all territory some Standard company is so much larger. than any single competitor that it has come to be almost universally accepted that the tank wagon price in any territory is controlled ‘absolutely by the Standard marketing com- , pany for that territory.’ ‘In words not arranged by Senator La Follette, that can mean only one thing, namely, that there is competition, and that prices are determined by the most efficient organization. If not, it is clear that a smaller company would undersell the Standard, and so bring prices down. The purpose of the ps oh is to break up and destroy the more efficient organization for production and de- livery of oil and oil products. What would it leave as a substitute? Numberless small concerns, doing business inefficiently and with high overhead costs, which without the com- petition of the Standard would immediately force prices up, not down. Incidentally it would stimulate promotion of all sorts of wildcat oil companies which would dupe in- vestors or speculators and help raise‘the price of oil products. a “In more detail, the report complains of the private use of Standard pipe lines, and wants to make them common carriers. In other words it would penalize a progressive organization and force it to divide its means of service with inefficient organizations, That sort of tyranny over business cannot go on. Human beings will not work without reward. They will not improve service or cheapen pro- duction and distribution if the profit of such improvements is to be legislated away from them by socialistic demagogues. If this re- port became the basis of the legislation it seeks it would destroy the incentive for im- provement and energy in the oil business, and that business would lapse into a condition where we would pay many times tbe price we now pay for its products, “Such thinking and such attacks upon suc- cessful business of any kind threatens the same disaster. It means demoralization of industry and energy and threatens an end to all improvement. “The writer of this editorial does not now own, and never has owned, nor expects to own, one share of Standard or any other oil stock. He has, however, owned flivvers, which consume oil products. He can understand how owners of ‘automobiles would like to see the price of gasoline and oil come down. He can understand how a man like La Follette would seek the approval of the millions of automobile owners in this country by shout- ing that they are being robbed, and promising to stop it. But he believes too much in the intelligence of automobile owners to think they will seek lower prices of gasoline by destroying the most efficient producer and distributor of gasoline. Tt would not only be folly to bring that about because of its immediate effect, but be- cause of its future effect. The Standard Oil companies are doing more to establish new sources of supply outsidé this country for ‘American consumption than any other busi- ness we know, They have ar eget and engineers and financiers working throughout the world-to obtain wells. Are we so Jacking fin intelligence that we would destroy a con- cern which is'seeking to pede for our needs after our domestic supplies are exhausted ? '“There-is but: one suggestion in the entire report that appears ‘sane and’ reasonable. That isthe one for prohibition or regulation of rt. That is worthy of consideration and study. It t be advisable, though even-then we would have to consider: possible yetaliations~and the question of whether it would be wise to cut off such a portion of our*fereign trade. National: defense might warrant it.” ee Standard: Oil Company _ 910:So. Michigan Ave. sites a bobbing around the|yacht, which left the fleet week and pu had returned jahamas with a new

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