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\. Matter. GEORGE D. MANN, - - - Foreign Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, CHICAGO, - - - - DETROIT, Marquette Bldg. - - - Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK, - - : Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise eredited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of pubsication of speciai dispatches hereia are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year .. : " Daily by mail, per year (In Bismarck). Daily by mat per year (In state outsid 7 > t they elect. are lost. So we have a long path to tread before we achieve complete democracy. Such democracy would allow us as a nation not only to vote on the laws that shall govern us, but what is often more vitally important, there would be a way whereby we could vote upon the industrial disputes which affect our job, our comfort, our food and raiment, our very lives, It is this spirit of perfected democracy which is the essence of the plan for a court of industry which The Tribune presents to its readers today. The court would hold hearings on industrial dis- putes just as any other court does in ordinary cases. And having rendered its decision, there would be an appeal to a higher court, just as there is in our ordinary courts. Only in this instance If the men fail them, the measures es My BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE regs oy WOODS ARE FULL OF ’EM If TUESDAY, NOV. 18, 1919 ee te a al UT 0’ ORDER STOMACHS Indigestion, Acidity, Sourness * and Gases ended with “‘Pape’s Diapepsin’’ 0 otter tester OO B Ore The moment you eat a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin all the lumps of indigestion pain, the sourness, heart- burn and belching of gases, due to acidity, vanish—truly wonderful! Millions ‘of people know that it is needless to. he bothered with indiges- tion, dyspepsia or a disordered stom- ach, A few tablets of Pape’s Diapep- i r i: ¢ sin neutralize acidity and give relief Daily by neDakote: the appeal would lie to the highest form of su- at once—-no waiting! Buy a box of bio d 1873 preme court that we can conceive of. It would Pape’s Diapepsin now! Don’t stay go to the sovereign American people. We can’t imagine either capital or labor ob- dyspeptic “Try to regulate yout stomach so you. can eat favorite foods without causing distress. The cost it saa ae ee we jecting to that. As the majority of people are so little. The benefits so great, Radicals in lat k t ‘i ar fs workers, the working men in carrying a case from adicals In labor ranks, extremists who are IM-! tho decision of the court of inquiry to a nation- ¢ 7 clined toward Bolshevism, find little satisfaction] \iqe referendum, would have nothing to fear from ik TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY dl in the ultimatum issuing from the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. It is altogether too American to please the agitator who would solve industrial problems by the bullet. There is a fine note of Americanism running through the engineers’ approval of the proposed new industrial commission. It sets forth in plain language a doctrine of right and justice which must appeal to the overwhelming majority of labor unionists who would rule by ballot, who be- lieve in the gospel of true democracy as preached the voters if their demands were in a way fair, rea- sonable and justified. The employers on the other hand, claiming as they always do that the public is the chief sufferer from strikes and does not want strikes, could lodge no objection to allowing that same public to express its opinicn through the ballot. There would be back of their decisions a force that is lacking in decisions by courts or arbitra- tion boards. Arbitrators find it practically im- possible to be unprejudiced and disinterested. WANTED—Office clerk having experience in filing. High school graduate or equivalent general business experience, address Box 103 Tribune. 11-18-3t WANTED—First class cook at Minute Lunch 11-18-1t FOR SALE—A ladies fur trimmed coat, bought only two weeks ago, will sell for 50 dollars less than purchase price, Inquire 515 2nd_ street. 11-18-2 HOUSE FOR SALE—House of 6 rooms and store room, modern except heat, South front, cottage style, nice tree: lot alone worth $1,000.00. Five blocks from Fost orice. ice Ve aaa cash. This is a real bargain. + J.H. HOLIHAN, Lucas Block Telephone 745. 11-18-1t FOR SALE—Pool hall stock, consist of three tables, soda fountain, ice box, cigar and candy cases and other fix- en ee ee and practiced in the United States. Their findings often meet with the disapproval of tures. © Write Lock Box 107 Regun, X: ( The engineers—85,000 of them—admit this is] public opinion. FOR SALE—Couch. Can at $11 9th street. =18- a period of labor unrest, of disputes between em- ployer and employe, of a high cost of living, but they firmly pledge themselves and their organiza- tion to work for a solution—not by general strike, by riot, by bloodshed, by horror—but by getting together and talking things over and settling them in man-to-man fashion. The B. L. E. will have none of the Bolshevik firebrand and bullet, preferring the good old United States methods (tried and tested) of the conference and the ballot. GAMBLING RETURNS A gamblng craze sweeps the earth. American investors are losing hundreds of millions in stock speculation. The finances of great nations go on a lottery basis. Germany, France and the all-Russian gov- ernment at Omsk will float lottery loans, adopting the Chinese method. The British parliament receives a petition, signed by 100 members, urging prize bonds. They would keep) English money at home instead of flowing into continental lotteries. The German lottery plan will create ten new millionaires annually for the next eighty years. A heavy mortgage on the future. France goes her one better. She plans a lottery loan that will yield a first prize of $250,000 and And here we were, believing that gambling— like John Barleyecorn—was vanished from the civilized world. He is one of civilization’s oldest settlers. Plutarch spun a yarn about how Mercury gambled with the Moon. The stakes were a 70th part of the moonlight. Mereury won, put the light particles together and used them for daylight on the birthdays of Isis and Osiris, Egyptian gods. How did Mercury gambie with the Moon? Prob- ably dice. Dice are the oldest gambling device. Men had dice before cards, although cards ante- date recorded history, probably originated in China. | i Life to the ancients was a lottery. he They symbolized this belief in the four divis- ions of playing cards—hearts for love out of which life is born, clubs for knowledge, diamonds for wealth, and the acorn or spade for death. Vicious as the gambling spirit is, its study did much for mathematics and science by revealing the law of chance and the calculus of probabil- ities. Holzmann framed the kinetic theory of gases by reasoning in terms of gambling mathematics. The blue color of the sky can be explained only by gambling mathematics—the law of probabil- ities. To understand the-explanation, you must | So to college for years. The peculiarity of the law of chance is its cer- tainty. It has solved many of the problems of astronomy. It has given us the odds system be-| hind insurance. When you take out insurance, you merely bet the company that you won't live as; long as it thinks you will. How much of so-called courage is more than a} gambler's belief in the law of chance? Couple this gambling instinct’ with the desper- ation of impoverishment and the reaction from But in this referendum plan we would have the public as the chief party at interest in the dis- pute, the public as the judge and the public as the jury. Its findings would be binding upon itself. It would decide what it thought was best for the nation, which is itself. If it made a mistake, it could blame only itself. And it would quickly rectify the mistake in the next referendum. In brief, the beauty of the plan is that neither capital nor labor will rule. The whole American people will be masters in their own house. Discussion of the treaty has done one good thing. It has given senators an opportunity to air their views concerning everything in the world except the treaty. Senator Thomas is surprised that the chap- lain’s daily prayer has accomplished no improve- ment in the senate. Results must be measured by the size of the ‘task. Lodge says it would be a travesty to invoke divine blessing on the treaty. Well, at the worst the treaty can do no more than occasion war. And we invoked divine blessing on the war. ; ee ee | WITH THE EDITORS | 4 | An a then meena farmers, might think that they amount to some- thing. But remember that if every last man of them went on strike business would go on just the same. They are absolutely non-essential non- producers—barnacles on society. The dirty for- eign miner is more important to the industries of the country than the traveling man and there is no comparison between his usefulness and that of the farmer. So shut up, Mr. Prune Peddler.—Nelson County Arena. MR. CATHRO’S DIGESTION GOOD My, but this man Cathro is a “steady: feeder.” During the month of September our $10,000 bank manager was “off his feed” but one day. That was on September 17, when he ate but 35 cents’ worth for breakfast. But he perked up a little for lunch and managed to get away with 75 cents’ worth, and for dinner he was feeling fine and consumed food for which he paid 95 cents. During the other days of the month Mr. Cath- ro’s digestion seemed to be excellent. His aver- age seemsd to be about 85 cents a meal, break- fast, lunch and dinner. September 7 and Septem- ber 21 were his best days. On the former his meals cost you and me 90, 95 and 95 cents, respec- tively. September 21 ran it a close second, and the Cathro appetite was fine that day. The meals eas 90, 90 and 95 cents, respectively, just 5 cents ess. It was curious that Mr. Cathro never got above the dollar mark for a single meal. He always stopped short at 95 cents. Since we're paying for it all, Mr. Cathro should not deny himself this way. He ought to plunge some evening and spend $1.25. Thomas Allen Box used to touch us up for $7.50 a meal, and he had the figure to show for it, but Fred is looking thin. And then, we are worried about his room. ‘He war excitement and the great lottery loans to be staged in Europe are easily understood. It is a singular thing about our institutions that while our people, as citizens of towns or counties or states, may vote on measures’in their larger function as citizens of the American nation, they may only vote for men: To achieve measures is paying only $70.50 a month for it, and we don’t believe he can be comfortable for that sum. We are worried about his bed. Have you a box spring and a hair mattress, Fred? Have you enough comforters? These cold nights, you should be U | | >» SAKERTE DD THANKSGIVING It is a time-honored custom, es- tablished by the Pilgrim fore- fathers, to set apart a day in each, year whereon to express thanks to Almighty God for the blessings vouchsafed to us in- dividually and as a state and na- tion. The harvest season would not be complete nor our duty per- formed without this expression and abservance. At this time we have abundant reason for the giving of thanks, for during the past year 30,000 staunch defenders of the rights of humanity have returned from field, camp and ship to again take up their abode within the borders of their beloved North Dakota. Famil ve been re-united, and homes re-established, thus secur- ing these greatest budwarks of society and insuring thrift and happiness among our citizenry. What greater reason for sincere gratitude could be desired than this fulfillment of our hopes and answer to our prayers. Let us be glad also that there has not been a recurrence of the frightful malady that raged in our midst a year ago, and BISMARCK FOLK TELL OF M’KAIG | AND MRS. O’HARE (Continued From Page One) the lobby together. She also saw Me-' Kaig and Arthur LeSueur together in the sovby of the league hotel during this time, \ “I took a particular interest in the} doing of Kate O'Hare,” she testified, “because Iam the mother of two soldiers who went to France and T heard that the O'Hare woman had | said that mothers of soldiers were no; better than brood sows on a Nortn} Dakota farm.” A METHODIST GREETING A Bismarck newspaper man testi-} fying under amination as to the! nature of McKaig’s meeting with Mrs.| O'Hare in the federal court room, was asked by McKaig’s counsel: i “Did it look like a good old Metho-| dist greeting?” referring to the fact that Mel had been a minister, “Well.” was the reply, “if Mrs, O° | Hare had been a very old again, then it might have been lk that.” \ MCKAIG NOT PE The publisher of a Bi paper told of a visit from McKaig the Mr, Townley, The reading of this deposition was Texas Druggists State Every Bottle Sold Has Given Satisfaction Paris, Texas, March 1, 1919. “In re- gard to results obtained by us front sale of Number 40 For The Blood, will state same has been far above our ex- pectations. We sold out our opening order in about a Week and are about out of our second ‘shipment. Every bottle We have sold has given unusu- ally good satisfaction and has not only repeated Dut has caused us to sell others after they saw the results ob- tained. Please ship another gross at careful. We can't afford to have you so ill you can’t collect your $10,000 salary regularly. It’s nice to get it all clear, this way, with no expenses once.” Palace Drug Store. 40 is in- dicated in chronic rheumatism, catarrh constipation, stomach, liver and blood troubles, eczema and all skin erup- tions. PROCLAMATION | interrupted when the publisher’s testi- j THAT TIME UNDER INDICTMENT andjed that McKaig had defended Mrs.j dear member of the church, and if she; O'Hare to him, saying that “he could had been away for'a long time, and if|not see why so much fuss was being the pastor was glad to see her back; made over the remarks Kate O'Hare ED {he heard Mrs. O'Hare speak at Gar Tek NEWS trison on July 19, 1917, on which occa- day following the local publication of! coldiers as brood sows. the O'Hare-McKaig greeting. “He said/nag seen Mrs. O'Hare and McKaig in that he was not peeved, but rather | company in the lobby of the league; asked as a friendly favor that the/ note] here, and that after Mrs. O'Hare newspaper publish a bit of political/naa procured a key from the desk she gossip which McKaig thought might! 9nq McKaig entered the elevator. He help him with the “Big Boss,” meaning/caiq he saw them together on one} Providence has bestowed upon us, within the year, nor is it of con- sequence that we do so. What is of prime importance is that we know and appreciate where these good things come from, and offer thanksgiving where and when it is properly due. In conformity to custom and the statutes of the state, and in accordance with the President’s proclamation, I hereby designate and appoint Thursday, November 27, 1919 as Thanksgiving Day, and call upon our people on that day to lay aside their usual duties and to gather in their accustomed places of: worship, there to give thanks for the blessings we enjoy. Also throughout the Holiday sea- son let us endeavor to bring hap- piness and good,cheer into the | lives of all the people in every part of the state. Given under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of North Dakota, at the Capitol at Bis- marck; this fifteenth day of No- vember in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and nineteen and of’ the Common- wealth the thirtieth. LYNN J. FRAZIER, mony regarding an evening meeting at wh Townley, LeSueur, Brinton and McKaig were the four speakers was being read. MeKai; attorneys euf- ered an objection to a question as to whether ALL OF THE FOUR EX- CEPTING MCKAIG WERE NOT AT FOR DISLOYALTY. The court re- served its decision on this question. JONES WAS IMPRESSED B. E. Jones, Bismarck insurance man, testified that he was in court during the O'Hare trial and that he Was impressed by McKaig’s greeting as a matter of particular importance. He said that at the same time Me- Kaig passed behind the railing to ap proach Mrs, O'Hare, Emerita Yegen, then, he said, under surveillance be-} cause of the things she was teaching! in a Bismarck night school, as was the proprietor ‘of a restaurant in which} she was employed during the day, greeted Mrs. O'Hare. W. H. Stutsman of Mandan testifi- Yad made at Bowman.” J. E. Sullivan of Garrison said that sion she referred to the mothers of He said he other occasion. _ McKaig and his counsel wishes to ;Waive the reading of the cross exam-} \ination of Sullivan, but the reading} jwas continued. Asked if he Knew; | where McKaig and Mrs. O'Hare went when they entered the elevator, Sul- livan replied: “Up—that was all I Saan USES NAUGHTY WORDS | McKaig used some very unminister- jial and naughty words during the ex- jamination of Fred J. Rist of Bismarck McKaig had taken a position directly} in front of the witness, and counsel} for the defense dramatically charged} ‘him with having attempted to intimi- date the witness and with calling him a lar. ; “Did you intentionally call that man: a liar?” counsel for the defense asked. } “TI did not,” said McKaig. He made a statement on the stand and then he turned his head my way and grinnei at me. He gloated. I didn’t say a word, but in my excitement my lips did move. Re “T didn’t say, ‘you're a liar.” My lips said, ‘You're a — of a b—.” started for McKaig, but was restrained, and the court advised Mr. McKaig to’ control himself. At this point counsel for McKaig arose and pleaded with the court for an order prohibiting the. newspapers from telling of what had happened. “IT have heard your suggestion—I shall take no action,” said Judge Mc- Carthy. LEAGUERS CLASSIFIED An interesting feature of the defense was the introduction of “thumb-nail” biographies of A. C. Townley, William Lemke, A. E, Bowen and other league leaders, With ‘side-lights on their pub- lic and political lives, PATTERSON TESTIFIED »E. G.. Patterson,” proprietor -of the local league hotel, was among the witnesses for Mr. McKaig. In rebut- tal the defense cross examined Mr. Patterson as to the early days of his career in Bismarck; bringing out by Aaffidavits and direct testimony many interesting incidents which the older citizens of Bismarck will readily re- call. BAD FREIGHT SMASH TIES UP SOO LINE last Tuesday morning that tied up traffic between here and Bismarck un- til Friday evening. Only one person was injured. a brakeman, who regeiv- ed several injuries of a quite serious nature, Five cars were derailed one car containing wheat being practically, demolished. on the rear end of the train the loco- motive remained on the track but be- cause of the long strip of track torn up it took the wrecking crew from Wishek until Friday to lay new track and get the wreckage cleared away. Tuesday and Wednesday the passenger from the east came up this far and then turned around on the Y and went back to Hankinson. To Fort The System Against Grip. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets which destroy germs, act as 4 Tonic and Laxative, and thus prevent As the derailed cars were: YEOMEN’S DANCE LAST NIGHT WAS BEST EVER HELD BY ORGANIZATION The dance given by the Yeomen's homestead 503 of this city last night at the Knights of Pythias hall was the ‘most successful that this organization ever held and was well attended by both members and friends. : To the strains of Hurley’s orches- tra, the dancers enjoyed themselves unti] a late hour and everybody showed a fine spirit of happiness during the entire evening. The committee in charge of the dance provided refresh- ments. The next dance of the series will be given next. month just before the Christmas holidays. Don’t forget the K. P. dance at Armory Thanksgiving night, with O’Connor’s orchestra. Over 4,000,000 pens are destroyed daily. JUST SEE HOW POSLAN HELPS SKIN OVERNIGHT apply a little on some affected part at night. In the morning, your own eyes find evidence of its healing work. If the trouble was slight—a pimple or inflamed spot—the chances are that it has: disappeared. If a virulent erup- ‘tional disorder, it should be subdued, so much so. that you will want Pos- lam to keep right on. Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th St. New York City. Poslam Soap is a daily treat to ten- der skin. Contains Poslam. BANK PRESIDENT HAD RAPID RISE After completing a Commerce Colds, Grip and Influenza. There is}and Banking course at Dakota only one “BROMO QUININ =.” E. W.! Business College, Fargo, N. D., GROVE’S signature on the box. 30c. Mr. Hilmer Carlson became JOHNSON’S for Phoenix Pure Silk Hose. . “SYRUP OF FIGS” CHILD’S LAXATIVE Look at Tongue! Remove Poi- sons From Stomach, Liver and Bowels Accent “California” Sytup of Figs only—look for the name of California on the package, then besure your child is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the - little stomach. liver and bowels. Children Jove its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each dot- tle. Give it without fear. bookkeeper for a bank and later assistant cashier. Next he went to the State Bank of Karnak as cashier. He has fecently been elected president. H. R. Skarrar went from D. B. C. to the Farmers and Mer- chants Bank, Iroquois, S. D. C. E. Halbert is with the Farmers National Bank of Ellendale. Nearly 700 banks employ D. B. C. graduates. “Follow the successful.” Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. MOTHERS We can save you money. No doubt your husband has an old suit or overcoat which is past his use—so bring your garments and we will make the little boy or girl a suit, overcoat or coat from this material. Come’ in—let’s talk it over. KLEIN Tailor and Cleaner H two numbers worth $100,000 every day for two|FOR THE LEAGUE HOTEL BULLETIN BOA Wroueht: sell tipreredent: haves Governor. Boslamssoothies, sretreshes, aud Neale 3 years. Thereafter foy eighteen years two prizes a ms RD among our populace. By the Governor; Kulm, N. D.. Nov. 18—A_ broken| suffering skin, with never a possibility i * $250 Ania Sat prize One listening to prune peddlers, on the trains It is not possible to enumerate THOMAS HALL, flange was the cause of quite a bad|of narm. A brief experience with Pos- ' of $250,000 each will be drawn weekly, and at hotels, as they blast the state and the| the many _ ble Ss Secretary of State. freight wreck two miles west of Leht liam will prove its value. For instance f ape ESE } Mother! You must say “California.’s ayer nagiowegsy amstaAtamcnaltiemeten fos oC ee ee = i i . th faith of ‘ isn’t it?—] they must depend upon the good ‘ = ae to mec, isn’t itt Fargo Forum,