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The weekly times-record. (Valley City, N.D.) 1912-1922, October 29, 1914, Image 2

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PAGE TWO.
ey CityTlmes-Hecord
COTT, NORTH A4KOTA
4 UNT
$1.60 a year, In advance
at tn» postofflce la Valley
Oak., as second claaa mall
Official Paper of Barnes County
12
EVERYBODY'S TICKET.
Vote For Women.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
Congressional.
W. I. Senator
Asia J. Gronna
Omcresimen
1st District H. T. Helgesen
2nd District... .George M. Young
Ird District P. D. Norton
State Officera.
Dovernor
L. B. Hanna
Lieutenant Governor
John H. Fraine
Secretary of State
Thomas Hall
Btate Auditor
Carl 0. Jorgenson
Btate Treasurer
John Steen
Insurance Commissioner
Walter C. Taylor
Attorney General
Henry J. Linde
Commissioner of Agriculture ft Laboi
Robert F. Flint
Commissioners of Railroads
W. H. Stutsman
O. P. Anderson
W. H. Mann
State Senator, 38th Dist.
Martin Thoreson
Members House of Reprecentative8,
38th Dist.
A. P. Hanson
Members of House of Representatives
Di«t.
Frank E. Ployhar
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Sheriff.
James Kelly
County Auditor
Charles W. NelsoQ.
County Treasurer
Thos. A. Collins
Clerk of C°urt
Harry N. Olsby
Register of Deeds
O. M. Roe
Stag's Attorney
M. J. Englert
County Judge
0. H. deS. Irgen?
County Surveyor
C. A. Myhre
-Coroner
N. O. Holberg
Commissioner 1st Dist
Henry T. Lee
Commissioner 2nd Dist.
Thomas Gudmestad
Justices of Peace
I. J. Moe.
John Gibson
C. E. Greenwood
Leo Ratcliff
Onstables
Thomas Gale
Andrew Hartman
Geo. H. Malosh
Julius Thone
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET
United States Senator
W. E. Purcell
.Representative in Congress 2nd Dist.
James J. Weeks
Governor
Frank Oscar Hellstrom
Lieutenant Governor
James E. Hall
Secretary of State
W. J. Anderson
State Auditor
Frank Skanley
State Treasurer
Marthinus F. Hegge
Attorney General
Scott Cameron
Commissioner of Insurance
Charles S. Whittlesey
Commissioner of Agriculture & Labor!trip
E. A. Lillibridge'
Commissioner of Railroads
Oscar Greenland
Sam A. Hall
Wm. Loughland
COUNTY.
Sheriff
J. B. Shearer
THE BATTLE OF PURITY.
Purity in a great many things is
what the modern world is striving aft
er in the work of disease prevention.
Pure water means freedom from ty
phoid and other water-borne diseases.
Pure air is a factor in health. Pure
foods are necessary to proper nutri
tion. The struggle to obtain them for
the people has become nation-wide.
If these three sources of trouble were
eliminated, .many of our common dis
eases would disappear.
Indiana recently observed Disease
Prevention Day. The Governor pro
claimed a public day devoted to san
itation, cleanliness, decent habit, and
purity of air, food and water. Health
increases with civilization and people
live longer as they become cleaner.
Disease lurks in dlTt The day in Indi-
fightings amongst us.
But purity has not as yet been ex-
great word purity,
in the battle!
and surroundings. If there is any
thing established on firm foundations
in the matter of dirt and disease, it Is
that impurity of mind is also a fruit
mind as well as of body and surround
ings.
health than the infection of an impure
world suffers is the impure mind.j
Some attempts have been made to pur-
ify the minds of the people as well as
as to cleanse their water supplies.
In the Gospels it is noted that Jesus
"unclean" by the word "unclarified."i
That is. the "unclean spirits" were the linen
spirits who had not yet clarified andjdi3hes
cleansed their minds of evil. They
Th"re will be no true health till the
idea of purity is broadened to cover
nf
Ba
be health, which is an abstarct noun
,,
f^^ o,iII"^p ,°_!
&
administration of financial affairs by{
Mr
Hanna PnmmenHncr tho
ter the Wahpeton Globe Gazette gives
a clear version of the attack as fol
lows:
Mr. Hellstrom, democratic candidate l'T
for governor, is gaining few if any!
most of his time in an endeavor to^"1
convince the voters that the fedmin-i
tration of Governor Hanna has not!Cl°SB
been a good business administration1 fT"
and that the state is in poor financial!
condition and poorly managed by the
present administration. Among other
things Mr. Hellstrom makes a state
ment to the effect that while Governor
Hanna's trip to Norway last summer
was a good advertisement for the
state, it cost the state a great deal of:
money which could have been spent to!
matter is that the trip of the governor
and his party cost the state not one
red cent and every one who made the
t0
Norway
nminnl n/lminSntMniiAK
tended as it should have been to cover ley City were all in a happy frame of Chattanooga and across Tennessee,
all possible sources of infection. We mind, Miss Tess Henry, says next to more thin enough to supply him fifty
have been making clean the outside Valley City Bismarck is the best town thousand tit men for a march to the
of the platter. What should be the ob-1 in the history of the state, and that Sea.
jection to washing the inside as well she is working hard and having aj Sherman proposed not only to live
In other words our concept of the
(g00(j
was at
Judge Burke actually shows the
(feet
or since
sition he now
the former methods of
prisoners
cast out the unclean spirits. p]ates, sitting on crude and unsani- slde.
Mathew Arnold translates this word tary wood benches, the men now eatl
TT
derived from the word whole. Health
is "whole-th," wholeness
the whole field."—Ex.
11-imi
"im
ILI»
THE ADMINISTRATION.
Governor Hanna has given the state
at a regular table spread with spotless
an(J use about the game sort of
and cutlery ag ig uged Jn
fnntm.!oe,
ployed-
a
„o i0rdmary
purity of mind as well as of body.
Otherwise we have done but half of
the work. Study your own mind.
What are you thinking that is unclean
and disease-bringing? It can be de
tected and cast out, and the result will
that is gradually being changed from1
a filthy prison,, to a home for
... friendless where everything
It covers
the
winter
I
of the state are in such shape that °,ws
state affairs can be and are handled I 1^"'
a
nes®
come out
8h,°W'
jv
asis 011
pr'est and
fore existing, of loss to the state. In' t„ the
,, |10 tne men in the auditorium. The laws, there
he Jomp'taq
f^
6r°
a home out of
l0Cf people-
over the state Mr. Hellstrom devotesthe
SHERMAN'S DECISION.
Fifty years ago this October Sher
man in Atlanta came to a decision. It
was own
better advantage. The fact of the QLiiesced, nevertheless it was Sherman nized that Cannon has been identified
last summer concedes march to the Sea. The destruction of serves to further emphasize the fact
,that it was one of the best advertise-j Atlanta not only would remove it for that there is surely a good reason for
tments for the state that has ever been'the enemy's use, but also would de- this action on the part of the voters,
undertaken by anyone in North Dako-I prive Sherman of a base. I May it not be possible that the very
ta. The Governor paid his own ex-| He meant to swing clear of any base. People who opposed him and the man
penses and the expenses of his family As Grant abandoned a base for a few
and every member of the delegation' days in order to gain the rear of they could not fulfill, even that in
representing North Dakota also paid Vicksburg, so Sherman would abandon
his own expenses. The trip cost Gov- his base, not for a few days, but for fulfill* and thus laid the foundation
ernor Hanna several thousand dollars such time as he would be lost in the
which was paid out of his own pocket' enemy's, country before emerging upon
and he reaps no more benefit than the Sea. talks without ceasing and might be
does any other citizen of the state, A fact and a theory induced Sher- termed an agitator and there is the
Even the statute of Lincoln which was man to his decision. The fact was
presented to Norway cost the state of that it was extremely inconvenient as
North Dakota nothing, as the money well as useless to continue to hold At-
was all contributed by private sub- lanta, which had already been destroy-
scription. As to the administration of ed as a depot and manufactory for the
the general business of the state, any- Confederacy, was not strategically im-
!in
omical administration its history.
A DAY AT BISMARfK.
one who will take the trouble to in- portant, and was becoming strategical- re-electing Uncle Joe.
vestigate thoroughly will be convinced ly perilous. The theory, in which'
that Governor Hanna has given the Grant shared, was that the Confeder
state the most businesslike and econ- acy had become pretty much a hollow
TIMf "ECORO THURSDAY, OCTOBER ?9, 1914.
ana was wildly observed, and the ob- headquarters for "educators" and ed. campaigners, who knew liow to where everybody is "Col." is now a
sol vation called renewed attention to they were there and everywhere in forage, how to take care of themselvea, thing of the past. "In four years Min
the many preventable evils which are large quantities and a variety that how to make the best of hard coadi- .nesota will go dry and in ten there
our own fault and which we have too'would furnish a supply for the most tions. will not be a spot of wet territory left
long laid at the door of Deity. When! exacting taste. Practically the entire Such an army Sherman had to have, in the United States" is a statement
a city drinks polluted water it is not .faculty of the Normal school was an army trained and toughened by two recently made by a prominent Minne
God that sends typhoid fever as a present and appeared to be very ac- years of hard campaigning, veterans of sota man and thus we see John Barley
punishment. Man's own folly and tive. Last evening the governor ad- Vicksburg, Stone River, Chickamauga, corn, who has created misery, crime
carelessness are chargeable, just as dressed them and during the day he Chattanooga, Kenesaw, and the battles and unhappiness almost sinco time be
they are chargeable with the wars and was receiving many of the visiting around Atlanta. The force that Sher- gan being driven out and the. human
teachers at his office. man had, while scarcely sufficient to race protected by laws from its deadl:
At the capitol those formerly of Val- hold Atlanta, and a line thence to influence,
time when off duty. Capt. Frank upon the country through
against dirt and disease, will have to Wanner, secretary to the Board of country in as wide a path as he could Parties returning from the Donald
be broadened to take in purity of control was busy and very much in- contrive. He would carry the war Campbell's sale at Hannaford yester
mind and heart, as well as of body terested in several plans being work- home to the Rebellion. He would day report that at 4 p. m. there were
ed out for proposed improvements in waste plantations, tear up railways,,one hundred twelve automobiles park
conditions at the various institutions.! destroy what bo could not carry off. ed on the premises. It is stated that
e'*
ful source of sickness and trouble. To, work of his office, which he is filling Ply tor the armies of the opposition,
be wholly well we must be clean of,
with
which he handled the duties of Dis- bama. He would rip through the vitals
trict Judge. To him several of
the
In fact, the infection of an unclean Barnes County visitors are under peace in the Rebellion's heart, in the starvation,
mind is much more dangerous to
(obligations
weu a8 a tr{p to the
body. In some quarters of late years' Times-Record representative being Jefferson and Tombs, in the hatchery
it has been recognized that the source
among
of much of the disease with which the stitution wonderful improvements John C. Calhoun,
have been made wjthin
Mandan for the day but Ernie would pass, but also to ravage that,one would not think so by appearances,
would make Georgia and the Caro-
of passing years and the exacting. linas valueless as a reservoir of sup-
the same marked ability with whether in Virginia or Northern Ala-
of the South he would conquer a
for a ride about the city as' Cotton Empire that had made the War,
penitentiary, the in the dooryard of the conspirators
the number. At this great in- of secession, the South Carolina of
the past year Sherman's decision was perhaps the!°ot
harden Talcott took the po- most momentous in its scope and con-
holds. In contrast to sequences that was come to in the
handling the War. And William Tecumseh Sher-
when they were fed on tin man was the genius on the Northern
.. I tlie factories where the men are em-' reference shall be made to war in the foii™
tacli themselves. They were cast out.! „i„„.,,
., other fellow,
ui, fii +v,
a 1
no^
factory as
ble is done to make for better condi
tions for the unfortunates.
There is not room here to give a de
tailed story of the great institution
-Minneapolis Journal.
average home and fed with only the jg quite right in rej&cting the
*°'d tkat he was in teaching of history in the
a a a I a a a
everything possi- history at all. As Mrs. Young
with a.view of making the place home-1 mouths of Americans to assert that pot block, the whole business center'
like. There are 247 inmates at this var, though always regrettable, is al- takes on a different appearance. There
time which is a very large number and ways "wrong." Without war we1 is much yet to be done in the way of
several different forms of amusement might be here, as individuals, but we1 parking the railroad property but the
are provided for the men, a large au-| would not be Americans, nor would improvements up to this time are so
ditorium with comfortable seats dur-,r.his nation exist as such and be the'great as to be almost beyond belief.
,ing
an ideal administration and for the, moving pictures every Wednesday, What is especially needed in all pleted and other improvements Valley
first time since statehood the books while almost every week traveling :ivilized nations in teaching the war City will be presentable from now on
a Protestant minister speak' However obedient we may be to the
North Dakota penitentiary Is truly a not, as individuals, avoid taking
outsid and "M "H °W °n won^er^1^ institution and enough 'ires of self-defense, which are "war" ioner *n the jail next day. Few men
have taken fn/hi« ^vean^
WiU never be given those
men
the FeCent
a place
tbe
here-,
imPressi°n
-!flrst
steppmg from the
tofore considered "a hell hole." What we really need to do Is to
l"ere ia,s'
friends by the method of campaign he1 exposition, financed ^ehood which still dominates
is using this year. In his speeches!^
was in
most
8 Klng Wlth alfalfa
S6COnd'
be,
seen in the
months is supplied with oowerful influence for peace that It is. With the splendid new depot com-
in the afternoons and phases of history is clearer distinction
the men beingtaken ibout
Ifrom the work during the performance. More of this, and less of the "glory"
Each alternate Sunday a .Catholic tspect, would be desirable.
motives and causes of wars.
swing an^ruHng classes of some countries.
wonde»-|
eV6r
Sh°Wn
ln the world
,free
from this
Whlle North Dakota tervention in
apples and a11 kinds of fruit ls that the Mexlcans
exhibits of
several
counties and even walnuts were no-,own country,
ticed.
UNCLE JOE CANNON.
If Uncle Joe is to be returned to the
United States Congress, there must be
some reason for that "act on the part
decision. If Grant ac- of the voters. It is pretty well recog-
who proposed and disposed. with the big interests and that if re-'ture so that it can be read and a stamp
Sherman would do two things: He turned he will perform for the same with the scrawl also affixed to make it
would destroy Atlanta he would old masters, and this very fact only legal would be a saving for those who
who
thelr
STRINGENT FINANCES.
Some business men and farmers de
clare that money never was so scarce
which he in North Dakota as now. However,
one-fourth of the autos had departed
when the count was taken. They
were not all Fords either.
This display of automobiles didn't
look like poverty, yet the owners of
these machines tell woeful tales of
YOUNG FOR CONGRESS.
Owing to the pressure of business at
Washington Congressman Young will!
be ln the state untiI a day or 60
€*ectlon'
as
his presence here is 80
lf»
congressman seems to be
WAR, HISTORY AND THE SCHOOLS county should make a special effort toj
pay him a complimentary vote, al
Chieago Herald: Superintendent
though as a matter of act hjg
were in trouble and went about seek-1. .+ 7, ."7"' will be so heavy that it will hardly be! Dr. Chaa. H. Hunt, Physician audi
ins victims to whom they might at-,'t,1Q
^man__ 1 ,S_._^
worth wMle
in the public
says:
"We can't teach the advance of the
Quman race and leave out war. It
are times when we can-! hustler, when he goes after a criminal
meas-
measures, or appeals of physical force.
changes' Neither can nations, however
desirous
The business men of Bismarck are eliminate the conception that war is handling the duties of his office in all
boosters a live town where things are!
a
be*j
's
n°t
thought that
important as it
that he on the job
making good
but none of them more than the Valley
ias had too great a part in the prog- more noticeable during the past few
ress of the world for that. Many na-' days than ever before. With the low
•ionshave been able to assert their,ering of the poles on the principle FOUND-One red and white cow om
the eights in no other way." streets, the placing of the gutters andj
is done Especially does it not lie in the the removal of the rubbish on the de-'
City man and as a compliment, if for pQR gALB OR TRADE—14 room
no other reason, every resident of the
CITY IMPROVEMENTS.
The effects of the various improve
ments in the down-town districts are
HE GETS THE MEN.
James Kelly, deputy sheriff, also|
candidate for election as sheriff, is aj
j^ere is almost always another pris-
have
there this! Political action. That is a mediaeval|'^on^.ucting of :lu- affai-., of he ifflce(hospital
Our own people are not altogether
de,uslon-
11 they
running ajwe should not hear arguments for in-
w«e
Mexico on the ground
stand in the way
.of the material development of their
a better record in this particular
^an this. candidate and it ought to
of peace, always avoid war. count in his favor. Not this alone but
he
has
legitimate method of national ad-'its branches and has made a good offl-
gets when vancement-a proper instrument of^r and his election insures the safe'
es t.
defeated him made promises that
anxiety they never intended to
for
the defeat this year. There are
two
classe»
otller
to
votes in
letter
shell, in which an army with the au-| The saloon is growing in unpopular
dacity to pierce it would meet with no ity. The latest is a message from
determined opposition. Kentucky that Bourbon County, Ky.,
The corollary to Sherman's proposi- has gone dry. The home of whiskey
A representative of the Times-Record tion was that such an army could live where a large per cent of the popula*
yesterday had the privilege of visiting off the country through which It pass-'tion have made their living by manu
that "busy city on the muddy river" ed. The Cotton States were capable facturing poison have repudiated the
and was pleased with the scenes of of feeding an army. The army must saloon and banished It. The march of
activity apparent on every hand. The be moderate in size, to be sure, and it modern civilization is passing into un
splendid McKenzie hotel seemed to be must be composed of veterans, season- expected territory and the "mint Julip" in at Rugby.
of reformers, the one
fellow who is usually rather slow
believe evil and acts, talks, and
Perfectly good faith and in-
slsts that a11
Promises be kept to the
and'
is
altogether likely that
may be this
latter influence that is
BARLEYCORN BATTED AGAIN.
been equally successful in
Vote for James Kelly
in the future,
for sheriff.
the
ELECTION COMING.
WHY NOT?
A law compelling a signature type
written to every letter would be of un
told help. Few men write their signa-
have a heavy mail to handle.
What Would You Do?
There are many times when one
man questions another's actions and
motives. Men act differently under
different circumstances.
As T. M. Murphy was burning off his
garden patch east of Sanborn last
Wednesday morning, the wind sud
denly became a stiff breeze and the
fire got away from him. The old
creamery was the only building in its
path and it was soon totally destroy
ed. There is no mourning over its
loss as it has long been a nuisance to
that part of the town.
New sewer extensions are being put
Happy Home
JLtead What Parana Did)
i"?rs. James F. Summitt, No. 1006
tiast Eighth St., Muscatine, Iowa,,
writes:
"My health was so miserable for
years that I was practically an In
valid. We had no family, owing to
my 111 health. I was Induced to give
Peruna a trial, and found very quickly
that it was helping me.
BOW
well
Wehro
A Baby
He is our
first and
•1 am now well and happy. We
bave a baby boy, which we believe Is
the direct consequence of my Im
proved health. He is our first and
only child, and if Peruna had not
cured me of my ailments we should
never have had him. I hope every
Buffering: woman will give Peruna
trial, the same as I have."
Those who object to liquid medi
cines can now procure Peruna Tab
lets.
°»r|W
there-
A N S
house, fine location in Valley City.
Address Mrs. Eliza Ayers, Ray, No.
Dakota. 10-ft-wtf
to count the votes for the, Surgeon, has located over StegfrtodV
Pharxaacy. fll rtt
C. O. P. Smith, Cheropractor, Room.:
6 and 7, Grand Theatre Building^
Phone 77. Office hours 9 to 12 a. m.,..
2 to 5 and 7 to 8:30 p. m. Sunday by
appointment. Residence Phone 336.
10-8- 4tw*
section 8, township 139, range 57..
Owner can have same for paying thap
charges. Mrs. Anna Thilmony, Rt
3. 10-9 3tw.
NO WAR PRICES,
See my furniture, ranges and heat
ers. Agent for Singer Sewing Ma-
c^ne-
Cash or monthly payments-
ec""1T"'
Machines for rent. Witham's Second
Hand Store, East Main. 10-17-12td-2w*
Dr. G. H. Hansen, Dentist, Rudolf
Block. Phone 47. 10-24-dtf-wtr
Robert L: Fauteck, a switchman in
the Great Northern yards at Mandan
had his left leg smashed by being run
over by a car Sunday morning. Fau
teck was holding onto the side of a box
car at is was being moved along and
dropped off to turn the switch. He
the switch when he
jumped and was thrown under the
wheels, his left leg being run over just
struck
against
away
position, which will be a strong factoi-1slck'
in detracting from the general inter-
wag taken to
and the Great Nort
tor Dr
One more week until election. The
indications are that there will be a!
very light vote dolled. The local re-' Constipation, indigestion, drive
publican ticket ha8 practlcaliy no op-1
aPePtlte
hern doc-
vanDyke was called. He am­
putated the leg right away and at pres
ent the patient is getting along very
nicely. Fauteck is a young man about
32 and single.
and make
restores the
y°u
The question no. 107 8:37 p. m.
is, what would -on do right now if you'No. 31, Freight 8:25 a. in.
had a severe col
a?
.oiild you do bet-j NOTICJB—Street ear leavM itii mn.
ter than to take Chambarlain's Cough. gj mleetee prtor to departure «T
Remedy It is highly recommended'
by people who have used it for years
and know its value. Mrs. O. E. Sar
gent, Peru, Ind., says, "Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy is worth its weight in
gold and I take pleasure in recom
mending it." For sale by Siegfried
Pharmacy.
weak an4
Hollister'« Rocky
Mountain Tea
aPPe«te. drives away di­
sease, builds up the system. 35 cents,.
Tea or Tablets. City Drug Co.
TIME TABLE
-OF
TRAINS
East Bound
No. 196 6:30 p. m~
No. 107 8.37 a. m.
No. 30, Freight 2:13 p. m.
West Bound
No. 105 6:10 a. m.
TIME CARD
—OF
TRAINS.

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