The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 10, 1924, Page 4

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Se ts bd > RO ONA Bw - seats for Fred Stone’s show, “Stepping Stones,” during the PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Publishers CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. . PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or Yepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not : otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.......... 6 $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)............ 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck). 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) WILL HELP STATE North Dakota needs a general salesmanager to sell the state to the great outside. Good work is being done in the state immigration department with meager funds available. Governor Hanna once made an excellent recommendation that a business agent be selected who could attract settlers and capital into the state. We need an immigration agent to handle the publicity, make addresses and keep the advantage of our state before | the people, but it is as important to have a salesmanager for how weak and ineffective is an advertising department that | Sis not backed up with a vigorous sales organization. Six years of adverse advertising in the great centers of the nation has prevented that steady flow of settlers into the state and something should be done to secure the serv-| ices of a real salesman or business agent of proven ability who can sell the state to the thousands who would pour in on the vacant acres if they only knew what we had to sell. Visits of such men as John N. Willys and his associates are of great advantage to the state. He ranks high in the} financial circles of the east from the centers of which cap- ital and settlers must come to build up this mighty state. After the reception in Bismarck, the conference with its! businessmen, the story of the State’s resources as related by Gov. Nestos, Mr. Willys returns to the east the best kind of an advocate this state can have. In his contact in Toledo, New York and Washington more will be done to counteract the falsities than has been accomplished in many months. We need to have more of these leaders of industry Bismarck and we need more and more to send our me to the great centers of the e in order to dispel the im- pression that the Northwest is broke. DETROIT Kresge Bldg. YOUR MOTHER Z Mothers give all and ask nothing in return. To bring us into the world they endure the agonies of the Valley of the Shadow. To them we turn in childhood for guidance and} Their self-sacrificing is continuous, their love more Small wonder, that men have ex-| cred state and mother love as sym- all that is finest.in life, vre than a decade ago, M »:iginated Mother’s Day. ay 11. While every day should be Mother’s Day, it is excellent ‘that we have a special day set aside for remembrance, tend- erness and gratitude to mother. Especially is it a red-letter day for ones whose mothers -are living. Send her flowe: If tar from home, write her a Mother’s Day lett She will treasure the remembrance be- yond the understanding of men. These little finer touches mean so much to her, especially if she is close to the sunset of li s Anna Jarvis of Philadel- The entire nation will observe One in every four American school children has defective vision or eyestrain. This is announced after examining more ‘than four million students. It also is known that defective eyesight is the cause of ‘much mental backwardness among school children. { The dunce used to be whipped and steod up in the corner} “with a paper cone on his head. Now the teacher sees that he gets glasses and gives him special training, maybe a glan- ‘dular extract to stimulate his brain through his thyroid. Some of the old-time teachers, in their treatment of “dull” pupils, were as much dunces as the one with a paper hat. FAIR An old lady leaves $250,000 to a former actor as “ a token of my appreciation for his friendship at a time when most needed.” The actor rejects the legacy. million over to the old lady’s sons. That is real honesty, justice and decency of the finest kind. Interviewed, he refuses to discuss the matter. He’s the sort that should be down in Washington helping run the gov- ernment. Or in control of an industry with a corner on necessities THIRSTY Buyers of liquor hereafter will be prosecuted in Hart- ford, Conn. This attitude, say officers of the law, is based | on the Connecticut statue which holds that any one assist-| ing, aiding or abetting in the commission of a crime is equally | guilty with the principal. | It’s true that a bootlegger’s customer incites to crime by} furnishing the incentive—profit. . | However, the public might voluntarily show more respect, for prohibition if some of the attention directed at small vio-, lators were devoted to the whales. By the way, what has become of the beer and light wines we were “going to get shortly” for several years past? He turned the quarter} ENTERTAINMENT FOR DEMS | A kind-hearted Democrat has bought $75,000 worth of: theater tickets to distribute among delegates to the Dem na-' tional convention in New York. He took all the orchestra | month of June. We trust some kind-hearted Republican will do as well for his flock in Cleveland. It’s only fair that the nominat- ing conventions, which will furnish so much entertainment for the nation, should have entertainment in return. It will require quite a sense of humor to take politics seriously this year, in view of the various investigations. Spaniards killed 300 Moors near Tizziazza, which sounds _ more like a mosquito than a town. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reprogucee im this Just Wait Until It Begins to Boil! column may or may not express the opjnion of The Tribune. They sented here in order that O sides ues which are jed in the press of A JANITOR WITH A PAST | Alexander Turaeff, once a onel in the czar's guards, is nov porter in a building on Broadw: New York. His sword is a broom-| handle, his shield a dustpan, | Before the red flag of revolution Colonel Tar-| F iucing mines! in Siberia along the River Amoor. He was worth at le: 3% million| dollars in gold The colonel Irkutsk, and per czar in his own fit. He had} carriages and f luxurious homes, winter and summer, and a| wife and growing daughter who! wanted for nothing that wealth and station might procure. And| then came the overturn | Colonel ‘aeff and his family! were marked for looting and de- structi Their fortum with the swiftne: { w stationed at) was a little} ts, sureness of ind made desolate | by a cyclone; the colonel’s mines were l by the Red govern- ment; their lives were saved by the | intervention of the colonel's sol-| diers, | Colonel Ti “ff made oath to} Armenian — citizenship nd = was drafted into the ‘bolsh t army. | His wife and daughter were drag-| ged to the level of the ferocious, | destitute mob. | “We spent many years under | these conditions,” said the former | soldier of the ezar the other day, | and all the while I was working | to get my wil the country. “It was only ay ago that the chance came.’ . The colonel obtained his permit leave through a commissioner | had served with him in the| car's guards. He made his way to | the coast through Siberia, one ride | and daughter out ob 1 ar and a half} D to cal Se he took costing him 2,000 rubles, and other expenses being in pro- portion. “When at last I saw the blue wa- ter and was on the ship that was to carry me to the land of the free I wept with joy; and the trip was all too long before I could clasp to my arms. c d, and so; what The English I speak 1 and with my HOSPITAL DAY BRINGS URGE FOR VISITORS May Visit Local Institutions and Witness Modern Meth- ods of Aiding Sick can I do? learned since 1 came knowledge of French and Italian and Austrian, and of music, I am In this country of where so many of my men have made great for- tunes, there is but a pittance for me; and for mine.” And he shrugged his shoulders and smiled a brave smile, as he grasped his broom-handle and pan. ~-Philadelphia Public Ledger. May 12, 1820, almost 104 years ago, was born a woman whose fame pro- bably is greater today than at any time ang whose name apparenily is gaining glamor h the passing years, Florence Nightingale, whose birthday is observed as National Hos- ;pital Day, has received a greater heritage of fame because of her re- volutionizing the profession of nurdé ing but as a matter of fact, her con- tributions to the development of hospital service, were at least on a par with her nursing accomplish- ment. Dr. M, T. MacEachern, pre All that I am, my mother made me—J. Q. dams. « ciation, and an international author- ity on hospital administration, re- cently rted that Florence Night- ingale had even a greater influence on hospital development than on nursing, and since most of us are familiar with ‘her wonderful j plishments in ‘laying the foundation for modern nursing, her hospital ac- tivities make her an even greater benefactor of humanity President Coolidge in a recent let- ter commenting on National Hospi- tal TC wrote: “In selecting the birthday anniversity of Florence Nightingale you are making the occa- sion, incidentally, a memorial to one of the great women of the nineteenth century.” In keeping with the double aecom: plishments of Florence Nighting: in hospital administration and in nursing, Blank Hospital, along with some 5,000 others in various parts of the world, will have a program em- ing its service to the commun- a hospital and as a school for The future destiny of the child always the work of the mother.— Nupoicon. They say that man is mighty, He governs land and sea, He wields a mighty scepter O’er lesser powers that be; But a mightier power and stronger Man from his throne has hurled, For the hand that rocks the cradle Is the hand that rules the world. Wm, Ross Wallace. No language can express the pow- and beauty and heroism of a mother’s love.—Chapin. Unhappy is the man for whom his own mother has not made all other others venerable.—Richter. If there be aught surpassing hu- man deed or word or thought it is a vother’s love.—Marchioness ue Spa dara. Bismarck hospital in keeping with the custom i number of the larger citie There is in all this cold and hollow world no fount of deep, strong.) United States extend a cordial invi- deathless love, save that within | tation to their friends to call, Mon- mother’s heart-—Mrs. Hemans. day afternoon, between the hours of 7 2 and 4 o'clock and visit the numer- Who ran to help me when I fell, | ous departments of the hospital. And would someypretty story tell, | Short talks will be given by the Or kiss the place to make it well? [heads of each department, giving & My Mother! f outline of the work Jane Taylor, | ed, i y <i The hours at the St. Ale When God thought of mother, Ne} pital and plans h must have laughed with satisfaction, | heen mitte-to examine and weigh all id framed it quickly. 0 | babies horn during the past year on deep, so divine, so full of soul, power p this day and advice will be given ond beanty, was the conception—| mothers as to care and feeding for Henry Ward Beecher. those found needing attention. The instruction reached at the ei Cee. mother's knee, and the paternal les-| WWEN A WOMAN HAS | sons, together with the pious and veet souvenirs of the fireside, are er effaced entirely from the sout --Lamennai: WOLF BOUNTY FUND PAID OUT _ The state's wolf bounty fund of $40,000 has been exhausted in eleven months, according to State Auditor NOTHING MUCH ELSE To OO SHE WASHES HER | _ HAIR, D. C. Poindexter, The legislative appropriation was for two years. Persons presenting certificates in the future will have them register- ed, and the legislature may be ask- ed to make a deficit appropriation. Mapie county took $3,744.45 out of the $40,000, the rest being paid out | in wolf bounty. A total of 24,964 / magpies were killed and bounty claimed for them. aaa i It’s Shrill Enough \ STAGE STRUCK MAIDEN (atter trying fier voice)—Do you think 1 can ever do anything with my voice? STAGE MANAGER—Wwell, it may come in handy in case of fire.—Pear- son’s Weekly (London), dent of the American Hospital Asso- ; | And the March Hare replied that he couldn't understand that at all as it ch good And then the er said that no rumbs had | ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | g in as the Hare he breadkn: i Mister M who had had and Nick # y to Ali derful nh two nutes sle days al so long “that | w quventures in a) 4 » called Wonderlan ice, Al said Ali days instead of| r, but the-n | ways getting offended. Dormouse began in the first place by crying a whole} res ' lake of tears and an drowning 2?” asked Nance the poor thing; then while we were pe a es both swimming: about, I happen to mention Dinah, my cat, who. i such a good mouser, Next I spoke | of the terrier next door, and the| first thing I, knew he swam away How I wonder what you're at, in a great rage, But he came back Gpaahoveathe worldianahish; and atter that, when I begged: his Dike taétea-tray! inithessky” pardon, we ran a race to dry our-| “The Jast time he said it, the selves after our wetting.” sleepy Dormouse went ‘twinkle, Who else did you, see?” asked | twinkle, twinkle, so many times that Ne he fell asleep again. “Oh, let me see,” said Alice, : “I! “Phe last I saw of them, the Hat- went to a tea-party while I was) ter and the Hare were trying to put there. A queer tea-p: was! | the Dormouse into the teapot,” said The Mad Hatter and the e| Alice, ‘Oh, dear! That was funny,” said Nancy. “Do you know any more?” ll tell you another part of :ny It was even] adventure tomorrow,” said Alice, “if remark- ed Nance: “Wasn't it, though! |queerer than it sounds, for their| yoy like it.” 7 conversation was most unusual,”|~ (To Be Continued) © said Ali ya riddles | (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc ) without nd the Dor- su Dagese oeaee mouse slept time. They] .———______-____—_—_+ really didn’t invite me, but the table edaheoiione anal tne: Cirseyoes Chee A Thought took up so little room, I invited my-| ®————_-—_—_* self, As they used up the clean| It is more blessed to give thgn to dishes,. they kept moving along to| receive—Acts 20:35. new places and I had a hard time| The heart of the giver makes the talking to them at a gift dear and ‘precious.—Luther. “What did they sked Nick, sno who was more interested in the March Hare and- the Dormouse and Learned His Mistake LADY—We saw the advertisment the Mad Hatter than he was in} about this house being for sale and i _ | we've come to see, it. all very si id Alice OWNER—Yes, madam, but after “Hatter complained was two da slow oiled reading the agent's description of it we have decided not to sell,—Passing Show. . be- it with butter. his wate cause he ha EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO THIS (S Mr FIRST VISIT TO TOUe BARBER SHOPS} YOU WILL, OF COURSE, NOTICES THE ABSENCE OF ANN THATCH ON TOP OF NY READ. You HAVe SOME KIND OF GosD HAIR, RESTORATIVE THAT XoU CAN RECOom- MEND TO Youre PATRONS. * NOW, LISTEN: ALC L WANT LS A CCOS@& | with- out flowers. after ‘sufficient allow- ance for food has been made. You can plant them ‘either in formal patterns in the yard or as a decor- ative bordering in the vegetable plot. Full-foliage plants which grow to considerable height serve as attrac- tive screens for fences, objectionable views and other obtrusive objects. They may also be arranged against buildings. Castor-beans, sorghums and sun- ‘flowers are included for this pur- pose. For the rented dwelling, annual plants may Be cheaply grown in sub- stitution for expensive. shrubbery, However, it “mist “be borne in mind, that the first killing frost will obliterate whatever landscape effect they produce. Hence they ‘should be sown as early as possible in order to gain the longest lasting bloom, Soil for-annuals should be well ! supplied with every. possible plant food. It should be well drained and of such character to permit reten- tion of reasonably large quantiti of moisture. Possibly the best average soil for most of these plants can be prepared {from a light, rich loam well mixed with rotted manure. The best practice is to make the bed of suitable depth and then fill it with the enriched earth. se of rotted stable manure, hen manure, prepared sheep and cow manure (obtainable from florists or any agricultural supply house), cot- tonseed meal or bone meal, of rela- tive value in the order named, is al- most essential to successful growing of flowers in your ‘garden. Before any of these materials are employed, however,’ the ground should be reasonably good as to tex- ture to start with, and the fer- tilizer should be thoroughly worked into ‘the soil. Drainage is another important fac- tor to consider. Flowers need pleng ty of water, but not too much. To prevent gathering of excess moisture dig your flower bed to a depth’ of three feet and ‘on the bot- tom place a layer of crushed stone covered by inverted sods. Over this foundation place your soil. f * The drainage layer thus prepare’ should be equipped with some sort of suitable outlet. A stone drain may be used for the purpose. But it is better to have the outlet run to a sewer or adjoining ditch, Seeds for flowers may be sown broadcast or in rows. But the in- experienced gardener had best plant them in rows. This applies especially for slow germinating seeds liable to be mis- taken for weeds and pulled up. Flower seeds grow best in soil having slight, rather than excessive moisture. The soil should be mel- low and protected from drying winds. The beginner will probably obtain best results by starting his flowers in window boxes, hotbeds. or cold- framps. Construction, of these devices has been explained in a foregoing chap- ter. Their use when properly employed will hasten the period of bloom by almost two weeks. LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT The train was Wery iate, dear art, consequently I got into New York just in time to drive directly 0 the dock. There-was'a bad acci- ent on the tracks just in front of us, and we'had to wait until it was cleared away. For the first time in my life, Jack dear, I, got a little creepy fecling around my heart when I saw the long line of ambu- lances and undertakers’ wagons’ tak- early morning from the wreck just ahead. It was almost a stroke of provi- dence that we did not zun into, this wreck, because our engineer . missed the signals and only stopped our other, However, if we always worried about the accidents that might have happened or the troubles that might have been ours but for, some lucky stroke of providence, I. think we would be very unhappy people. I got a rather morbid feeling, Jack, however, as I waited there in my compartment for the train to start. I wondered just what you and little Jack would do if I never came back to you. Now that isn't a nice thing for an absent wife to write to her husband, is it? But I'm trying to tell you frankly just what I do and think from now on. I don't know whether I mentioned to you that I had a letter from Bea- trice Grimshaw the day before 1 came away, and Sally Atherton had written her that she thought all o. us were more or less hypocritical, tribute tl their souls imals took on with train within a short distance of the |, and said that hypocrisy was the at-| I wonder, Jack, just how hypo- critical she thinks you are. Shes very clever gri, and she’s not tell- ing you or anybody else all the things she is thinking. She comes the nearest being confidential to Beatrice Grimshaw, ‘who, by the way, tells me that her engagement with Dick Summers is liable to Be ‘started again, ae Why is it, my dear, that thé’ wo- men who are most fascinating for the moment to men, are the women ing the people past my car in the|they would never choose for wives? Personally 1 think’ Paula Perier would make a charming wife for any man, Perhaps, however, she _her- self, did not want to’marry Dick. I think that might be the. case, al- though I would not tell Beatrice. | Iwonder why I have written all | this about Sally Atherton and Dick and Paula Perier to you, when I should be telling you about. meeting my father and mother and, Alice. I wonder if 1 looked as strynge to them as they did to me? Alite’ caught sight of me on the dock first,’ as the ship nosed into the slip, and honest- ly, Jack, I wouldn't have known het if she didn't shouted my. name over and over. Daddy's looking ivery well, (but, much thinner than when he left, Hd seemed to be awfully glad to get back into America aghin. Karl Whitney is more solemn than ever and dear, dear mother made me realize how much I have missed her wher she took me in her arms and told me how glad she was to sce , me again. Jack, you wouldn’t know Alice. TOMORROW: Letter from Leslie Prescott to John Alden Prescott, 1 continued, om Sims Says Ml iam Jennings. Bryan, who believes in faith healing, has a hus- band who believes in faith electing. Practically all Budapest newspa- pers have suspended. publication, so what will picnic» parties use ‘for wrapping, lunches? Hartwood Golf Club of -Hartwood, N. Y., was destroyed by fire, so may- be four members sleeping. there went around the course in. nothing: Almost a hundred million dollars worth of, tobacco. will go up. in the United States this year, Statistics show, our rural. popula- tion is: falling. off. because down on the farm they are down on the farm. The annual honey crop of ‘the United States. is about 250,000,000 pounds, which certainly is sweet of the bees. , ; When they want a divorce in Co- chin, China, they break two chop- sticks, but in America they break furniture and Heads, Pag eal They afd tighting in Iretaxia again. We knew if spring just kept on the Irish would get restless. * pete, Gobi deserts, 'so they: ould be fine places for picnics. bo In New York, a girl of 17 had two husbands, while some girls twice this child’s age can't Men get one. In Blythéville, Ark. a man tried to run down his’ enemy with an aut instead “of With his mouth. ‘ A spotless reputation needs’ more ‘ | It never rains in the Sahara and | care than a pair of. white trousers. One thing the scientists have shown us is that the first: million years have heen the hardest. = . _ New York girl who led a double life reached her end just twice as quick Electricity. Cleaner. ——————————————— DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. ‘Cook by It is BISMARCK TYPEWRITER CO. | é Royal and Corona—Agents, ‘Machines Rebuilt and Repaired . Es GARE. : | J, GARFANEY ©. J, HAMEL, | ay. | —————[——=———— Go To The Bismarck Shoe Hospitaa For First Class Shoe Repairing. H, BURMAN, Prop. BE A BARBER: BARBERS in big. demand. wages-Easy work Foo vere completes by our methods— Expert instruction—Diplomas granted, Positions. guaranteed when competent. ‘his is ab- solutely the best time in the year to learn, Write for Free ustrated Catalog and the most extraordinary Spriny offer we have ever made in 30 MOLER BARBI 210 Front. Street Fagor Ne Dy

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