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SPN BISMARCK DAILY TRIBOND THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second ¥ Class Matter, GEORGE D, Ne a = 5 “Foreign Representatives G. toga PAYNE: COMPANY, CHICAGO, - - DETROIT, Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. sey AYNE, BURNS AND ‘SMITH NEW YORK, 5 Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER Or ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year ... $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (In Bismarck) ten Daily by mail, per year (In state outside Bismarek) 5 i i ide of North Dakota........-..+ ‘ATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) <GES> COMPLIMENTS ITS OWN The Courier-News in questioning the advisa- bility of attempting to impeach Hall, Langer and Kositzky, because some of its own farmer mem- bers in the senate might be bought by, big busi- ness, pays a high compliment to the intelligence and integrity of the men whom Mr. Townley has elected to our legislature. If the Courier-News is so confident that its own league legislators are vul- nerable, why not impeach them first? There are some whose loss would not be greatly felt. Editor SAFETY FIRST No amount of safety devices will totally over- come human car elessness in the matter of acci- dents. The presence of safety devices often increase the disregard of caution. Very often we think that where safety devices are present there is no need of care. The number of accidents have been reduced in all their classifications, but still 80 per cent of the accidents are due to carelessness. It is very rare, for instance, that the owner of a new building or anyone not used to it is ever injured in climbing about during its construction. The reason is that they are unused to it and are careful. Usually it is the workman who is injured—the one used to climbing about a new building as a matter of everyday occupation. used to. it that he fails in even ordinary precau- tion. Sailors say that it is never the novice who falls and is injured:in climbing about boats and on‘ and. off docks. : : Usually it is the old sailor who is doing it every day of his life and by his one time failure to use care. There are fewer accidents in the hazardous occupations than ordinary ones. Considering the hazard there are relatively few casualties in the production and handling of high explosives. Everyone knows the hazard and uses due caution. There are more accidents about the farming industry than any other. Farmers are frequently working long distances from their barns or tool houses, and in their opera- tion they use a fence rail or a club rather than take the time to go after a crowbar or the proper hammer. The prevention of accidents is just 80 per cent more a question of-mental attitude than physical devices—mental attitude in our own caution and in seeing to ‘it that others 'use caution. We have né:concrete, irrefutable evidence that Germany) is conducting a Baltic campaign except the fact that she denies -it. This is a free country, and our foreign element is free to think and live as it pleases as long as it doesn’t get too free with the rough stuff. Gompers isn’t a leader. He is a driver, And the biggest job he has ever had is his present one of holding back on the reins to keep his world from running amuck. We are an efficient people. Witness the short space of time required to get the output of fool rumors about the president’s’ illness on a quantity production basis. Poindexter complains of the government’s “supine inaction” in the case of the radical ele- ment. “Supine inaction,” being interpreted, is the fear of losing votes. Whenever an effort is made to put stripes on prominent crooks of one sort or another, there are equally prominent lawyers to inform us that it is unconstitutional. et f WITH THE EDITORS. | fe ee ete “CHEEK DANCING” BANNED . Hereafter it will require more cheek than na- ture allows to do “cheek dancing” in the inner circles of Detroit’s exclusive clubs. The initial step to abolish this “clubby” form of Banc was issued today by the entertainment He becomes so|‘ this notice is necessary to abolish the socalled ‘cheek dancing,’ which is being indulged in by a few at the club. This form of dancing will not be tolerated and a repetition of same will be referred to the board pf directors for suspension.” their right cheeks together. The result is a Siam- ese twin effect that disturbs the sense of propriety of sideline spectators and the more dignified sons and daughters of Terpsichore.: In some instances when the lady is obliged to nestle her head in his neck, all of which provides an added shock for the elders.—Detroit News. THE SOVIET CONSPIRACY If the astonishing evidence given to the senate 8 | committee investigating the steel strike by Mar- * | golis, the Pittsburgh lawyer, anarchist, is vera- cious, Judge Gary is well justified in his renewed refusal to arbitrate the strike. And by the same token Samuel Gompers and the American Federa- tion of Labor have permitted themselves to be- come involved in a bad business. The object of the promoters of the steel strike was not to obtain “justice” for the downtrodden employes of the steel companies, who are earning more money than they ever earned in their lives, but to start something revolutionary. They are not steel workers themselves; they are workers of the steel workers. They are ambitious to become Lenines and Trotskys. They dream of soviets and socialized industries. They are seeming to over- turn society, hoping to land on top of the debris. The steel strike was begun from the outside. It was never a spontaneous movement of workmen who felt themselves abused. It was artificially stimulated for the aggrandizement of the Fosters and Fitzpatricks and Margolises. The pity of it is that Mr. Gompers and his organization should have permitted themselves to be used, and that Mr. Gompers should even now feel impelled to arise in the industrial conference and defend an indefensible strike with impassioned eloquence. It would be a real misfortune for the American Federation of Labor if the steel strike should be won by the strikers. It would be the beginning of the end of that conservative association of high grade trades unions. The work of the “borers from within,” as Foster has described himself and his helpers, would soon be completed. Trade union- ism would win a costly victory, because its own existence would be menaced by sovietism. Organ- ized labor would be’ in dire danger of being Bol- shevized. Fortunately, Judge Gary and his associates have stood firm. They would not compromise or bargain away a principle. They saw clearly that to arbitrate would be to surrender. The revolu- tionary plot has failed: We shall not begin to sovietize in this country for some time yet.— Minneapolis Journal. WHAT WE REALLY NEED Senator Watson in his speech in the senate Monday went into particulars and called the names of a long list of men in the employ of the govern- ment who are enemies of the government—radi- cals of various kinds—bolshevists, anarchists, so- cialists and nondescripts. Having named and de- scribed these individuals, he raises very properly the question, “Who appointed these men to the government service?” There is before the senate a proposition to investigate conditions not only in the federal trade commission, where the senator located some of them,.but in other departments of the government, and shakes out of positions of confidence and trust men whose open professions are hostile to the spirit of our government. Never before in the history of the country has here been in the service of the government, and partciularly in political posiitons in Washington, such a horde of employes holding opinions hostile ‘0 the aims and purposes of our government as ex- ists today under this Wilson administration. The presence of these men on boards and commissions and in the departments is a menace to the peace of the country and the stability of our institutions. The military authorities who have been inves- tigating conditions at Gary have unearthed what looks like connections between the leaders of com- munist and anarchistic agitation among the steel workers and. government agencies supposed to be engaged’ in checking or preventing anarchistic movements in this country. A correspondent of the New York Times de- clares that these communist leaders have been for months in possession of secret government infor- mation and that the private telegraphic code of the department of justice has apparently been known by various “red” leaders. Code telegrams, he says, sent to and from Washington bearing on various phases of the “red” investigation seem to have become as readable as plain English to the “red” leaders through this information. How djd they get it? If Mr. Watson’s charges are true—and he is by no means lacking in defi- niteness and directness—it is not difficult to imagine how the secret messages of the depart- ment of justice fell into the hands of the very men whose operations that department was seeking to suppress. The presence of numbers of men of this character in the departments can hardly have been an accident. How did they get there? iS committee of the ae Golf club on an engraved ip ag th ne ay i blue and gold ipti ntert inmen comm “hotérs from jyithin?; aa well as from adversaries without. What we really need is an American : “Cheek dancing” is done by partners placing: This is a question which, whether it is ever answered or not, is going to cut a figure ir the next general election. It is rather important that some steps be taken to protect the government from + HOW TO MAKE AN AIRPLANE THE WINGS OR ,“PLANES” WRITTEN ESPECIALLY FOR THE BOYS OF BISMARCK 24 Part: ——— ——— ———_ SPAN 30 INCHES | ; Pape Boa Boe Pe Dake ap Oy ‘Co bamboo a'ad" j ! ! i Os x4"SPRUCE 2 t By Ee 4 j * Za | es) a Ce pending ee Samboo ribs MAIN j PLANE 4 ma RIB SECTION OF rosea SPAN IaRINCHES — — =f MAIN PLANE Ribs g'wide-ie" thick oo There are itwo wings or planes— the large main plane at the rear and the small plane at the front end of the frame. Rubber bands are used to attach them to the frame, so_ they can be shifted to adjust the balance, and to! prevent them from; breaking when the machine lands. ** formed with a 5-foot strip of 3-16 inch by 1-8 inch bamboo. It should be: se- lected for straightness and all the knots must be trimmed off with a coarse file and finished with smooth sandpaper. At the wing ends, the curved out- line is formed by holding the bamboo over the heat of an alcohol lamp or a candle, taking care not to scorch nor bend it too quickly. of the main plane is a 30-inch length off one side, making the stick section a half oval The ribs are bound to the 1-4-inch face of the supports with silk thread. Taper the extreme ends (where the bamboo wing tips are to be bound) and see that: the stick is straight and smooth. On the larger wing there are 10 ribs, 5 inches long and 5 ribs 3 1-2 inches long, all of 1-16 by 1-8 inch bamboo. They are bent to the curve shown, over an alcohol lamp, and af- ter being smoothed off are bound and glued to the flat side of the spruce stick, spacing the ribs 2 inches apart. The bamboo edges of the plane is next bound to the,rib ends. (See “A,” “BY” and “C” onthe: plan.) It will make a neater job. if fhe ends of the ribs are trimmed down to a thin edge, so that when the wing outline is bound on, a lump will not. show. The small front plane has 6 ribs 8 1-2 inches long. and 3 ribs 2 1-2 inches long, made of bamboo 1-8 inch wide and 1-16 inch thick, bent and finished similar to the main wing ribs. Ribs are carried on a 13-inch length of 3-16 by 1-8 incl’ bamboo or spruce. The ribs are spaced, 1 1-2 inches apart. The outline or edge of the plane is made of a 28-inch strip of 1-16 by 1-8 inch bamboo, curved and finished off in the same manner as the larger plane. A coat of shellac on the finished wing frames will-‘keep them from warping: For the wing covering, “bamboo paper,” “silk-paper,” or plain china silk is used. (Dark yellow or cham- pagne color china silk closely resem- combined, = The ‘outline of the main plane’ is | The principal supports for the ribs | of 1-4 inch by 3-16 inch spruce. Round! Glenn H. Curtiss, America’s foremost builder of airplanes, endorses the Daily Tribune les- sons in model airplane building for boys. He says: The future of aeronautics rests with the coming genera- tion. America’s place in air- craft building and development depends upon the enlistment of the inventive. genius of the coun- try. Encouragement of the boys and young men of mechanical and ‘inventive turn of mind to turn their energies into the aero- nautical field is most important. “The building of model air- :| planes will encourage the boy: i| of America to learn more about, aeronautics to the benefit of themselves and thei¢g ‘country. The American air, service is’ to- day filled with boys who a few years ago were building models and studying aircraft building and flying.” bles the fabric used on full-sized aero- planes). The material should be cut to the outline of the wing, leaving a 3-8-inch margin all around to lap over the edges. Glue is applied to the ribs, the edges of the plane, and along the lapping margin, and. the fabric laid over the wing frame,’ streched smoothly and pressed firmly. to cause the fabric to adhere to the frame. When the glue has set, the wings are given’a coat * of» “dope?” : which makes them air-tight. This “dope” is composed of. about half a ‘wine- glass of banana oil in which trans- parent celluloid is dissolved, You‘can get the banana oil and celluloid at the druggist. It is applied evenly and quickly with a ‘soft brush. When dry, the covering will be tight and smooth. It can be made still higher, if ‘de- sired, by holding over the steam from a boiling kettle for a few seconds. Tom Mix at the Bismarck the- ‘atre tonight in “The Wilderness Trail,” his newest special of love, daring and thrills. A wonderful picture with all the scenic beauty of the great northwest. Phone: 75—City Fuel Co., for Medora Coal. North Dakota is being started. The United States Government Bought millions of pounds of BAK POWDER for our troops over seas— more than all other brands : What Better Recommendation » (Can You Ask For? And the PRICE is the same ‘now: as before the war— Relat Ue: 14 ope 12%} ‘ Row at THE PLANES FORA iB \— Ei RIB Seon? FLYING MODEL ae 4 Ue : —— i [ee ee | AEROPLANE tt wee | 2 hlin, HeUReIERaEn, AGA re FINE! SAYS CURTISS Tobacco Habit Dangerous days Doctor Connor, formely of Johns Hopking hospital. Thousands of men suf- fering from fatal diseases would_be in Rerfect health today were it not for the leadly drug Nicotine. Stop the habit now before it's too late. It’s a simple Process to rid yourself of the -tobacco habit in any form, Just go to any up-to- date drug store and get some Nicotol tablets; take them as directed. and lo; the pernicious habit quickly” vanishes, Druggists refund the money if they, fail: Be sure to read large and interesting an- nouncement by Doctor Connor soon to appear in this paper, It tells of the ates ger of nicotine poisoning and hew avoid it. In the meantime try Nicotol tablets; you will be surprised at the re- sult. Lenhart’s and Jos. Breslow. N ORTH DAKOTA AFTER COYOTES The co-operative work in the exter- mination of predatory animals in Bate- man and Gillings, who represent the United tatSes biological survey, have bad a conference with Director Rand- Jett of the North Dakota agricultural college extension’ division. Due to the limited funds .the.work will have to be Umited to .'sections where the need seems greatest, ands where the great- est co-operation .is“offered,. The funds for the work are furnished jointly by the state of North’ Dakota and by the United States department of agricul- ‘ure, A_good ‘dealof .this work has been eatried on in Montana and other west- ern states. “Very effective methods: of hunting and. trapping wolves and ecyottes have been worked out. North Dakota, will have the benefit of these new -methods. “PHE OLD RELIABLE” Sell your cream and poultry to our agent. If we have: no agent in your town, then ship direct to NORTHERN PRODUCE CO. BISMARCK, N. D. Tom Mix at the Bismarck the- atre tonight in. “The Wilderness Trail,” his newest special of love, daring and thrills. A wonderful picture with all the scenic beauty of the great northwest. ING FRIDAY, OCT. 24,1919. COULONT PUT HAND BEHIND HIS BAGK Mitchell Gams Fifteen Pounds And Gets Relief From Rheumatism “Well, sir, out of all the medicine I have taken since my health failed me six years ago, Tanlac is the bnly thing that has done-me any good at all,” said Casper Mitchell, a well known employee of the Bardwell Robinson Lumber Co., who lives at 220 Washing- ton Ave,, North Minneapolis, (Minn., while talking to a Tanlac representa- tive the other day. “When I commenced taking Tanlac” continued Mr. Mitchell, “my nerves were in such terrible condition that I could hardly hold a knife and fork in my hands when I went to eat a meal, and such a thing as a good night's sleep was out of the question with me. I guess this condition was due to the and so long from stomach trouble and rheumatism. Why, my stomach had gotten in”such ‘bad condition that ev- erything\I ate disagreed with me, and I would ‘have the worst cramping pains you ever heard of. I had no end of trouble from gas forming and bloat- ing me up, and’ finally got to where I could hardly ever retain what I ate. I had rheumatism in my shoulders so ‘bad that there were times when I couldn’t put my hands ‘behind my back and in fact I very often had. rheumatic pains all through my body.’ I also suffered a lot from headaches, and finally got to where I thought I would just have to give up, as nothing seem- ed to help me. “That was the condition I was in when I began to hear péople talking about the good Tanlac was.doing them and I made up my mind to give it a trial. I could see a ‘big improvement in my condition before I had finished my first bottle of this wonderful medi- eine, anditls Wie steadily improved Never siticé: istomach troubles have been so completely, overcome that I can'eat three hearty meals every day. I have already gained fifteen pounds and am so well and strong that I can put\in \full time at my work every day. I have just about gotten/rid of the rheumatism, too, and those awful headaches are a thing of the past. Yes, sir, I certainly will recommend Tanlac for any medicine ‘that will do that much for a man who was in the awful condition I was, is simply worth its weight in gold, and I beleive that if it helped me it. will help others who suffer as I did.” Tanlac is sold in. Bismarck by Jos. Breslow, in Driscoll by N.D. and J. H. Barrette-and in Wing by H. P. Homan. BALED,-HAY, .FOR SALE. Phone 163, Oscar. H.; Will & Co. S—_—_——————S——S=——== Safeguard Your - Family’s Health In the: selection. of a base burner there ‘are three things: you have a right.to expect: First, a water pan -built right into the» stove that will return the moisture as fast as it is stolen during the process of. heating. . Second, a stove that uses each side of the ash pan for a floor-warming surface. Third, circulating flue that steals cold air off the floor and sends it thru the stove superheated. This flue should be of proper size so it will heat two rooms up- stairs. \ You have a right to demand } these improvements in the Stove you are going to buy, and when your selection is the genuine Round. Oak Base Burner you receive all three. It will interest you to know this is the only stove on the market that embodies all of these improvements so nec- essary to health, vitality, and fuel economy. Sold only by spre] Lonias Hardware Co. jolt oe agekg BISMARCK, ND, fact that I had been suffering so much * Sy ( af A v t | } I i H i | | 4 | » if ae.