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_ FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D, MANN, - - - 5 : Foreign. Representatives Gurckeos LOGAN PAYNE Sona mTROTe tease Bie BURNS AND noe aie ese 1 i EB, a W | panic is only possible when there is an over- NEW YORK, : Fifth Ave. Bldg./»oquction, when goods are piling up in the ware- MEMBER OF AS: S | ses ¢ nOnstantiy. reciati i an- ‘The. Aasodiated ‘Presa’ is exclusively at to sthe tase | Houses and constantly depreciating with no ap for publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise | Parent possibility in sight of disposing of them for cuted in this paper and also the local news published | ceyen a fraction of their real value. All rights of pubiication of speciat dispatches hereia are! Factories, mills, contractors everywhere also reserved. | throughout these United States are fighting to MEMBER AUDIT ;make production meet demand. There is hardly Del ee caesiaroar !a factory or mill or contractor in the whole land Daily by mail ee yea that isn’t swamped with work and also making Daily by mail, outside of = THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) understand some basic economic principles and particularly the principle which governs financial Editor panics. A panic is not possible when there is an under- |production, when the demand is far in excess of RCULATION 2 IN ADVANCE 5.08 | « 6.06 What chance is there of making producers ie | frightened and pessimistic about future demand o j under conditions like these? HEARING FROM THE PEOPLE No, there’s no chance right now for a reduc- Politicians have been mulling over the next! tion of prices by means of a panic. The high cost Presidential race. Prospective candidates, dark /of living, if it is to be reduced, will have to be horses and others have been listening to the buz-| brought down by some other method. zing bee. Campaign managers have been cam-| a Se paigning and managing. The sum total is 00. Which is better, no sugar at 11 cents or plenty For twenty-one states have made provisions | of sugar at 30 cents? for the popular selection of Presidential nomina-| ————- tions. The monarchist party in Hungary wants a king In five weeks Presidential candidates must file | but not a Hapsburg. Why not try a want ad? their petitions in South Dakota or lose their right | ———_— to participate in that state. The first Presiden-| In Petrograd those who will not swallow Le- tial primary will be held in New Hampshire nine’s doctrines have little opportunity to swallow March 9. In North Dakota March 16 voters get|@nything else. a chance to vote directly on Presidential candi- | oe dates, A week later South Dakota votes on them.| ‘The Reds can’t understand why a man able to . In April Michingan, New York, Wisconsin, Ilinois |invent electric lights should not waste his time Nebraska, Montana, Massachusetts, New Jersey |Chopping his own wood. and Ohio hold primaries. Florida, last of the pri- ae cea mary states, votes just before the national con- em ee ep Tae ed ventions will be held. | | WITH: THE EDITORS | In no preceding nominations have the people | nye Sse ee De RIG had such a direct voice in the nominating of the} SLOGANS FROM GOVERNOR COOLIDGE “standard bearers.” In another four years there} Governor Coolidge made comparatively few should be forty-eight primary states. speeches during the recent campaign, but out of eka se eee | them came many a slogan well to remember: NO PANIC NOW | “Let men in office substitute the midnight oil Every now and then someone rises to remark! ‘or the limelight.” that if we could only have a panic right now iti “Honor compels that honor be recognized.” would be a good thing for the country, it would | “We need more of the office desk and less of the bring down prices, make men more anxious to|/Show window in politics.” work instead of merely anxious to strike and in- crease the purchasing power of the dollar. “Expect to be called a demagogue, but don’t be But! demagogue.”—Boston Post. What other phonograph dares this test? ID you ask some one about the Edison Tone Test recital given last Tuesday in Bismarck Auditorium? The startled audience heard Amy Ellerman’s living voice flood the packed house. It then heard the New Edi- gon* match that voice, even unto its finest variation of shading and feeling. It heard the Flem- ing Sisters Trio repeat the experiment with their instrumental selections,—and again the New Edison matched every quality of harmonized violin, ’cello and piano. Any one who was present will tell you. The art of the living artist and RE-CREATION by the New Edison can not be told apart. It is no idle phrase that you can enjoy Case, Middle- ton, Hempel, Matzenauer, Spalding—in your own home. The New Edison brings all that the great artist can bring, except his physical presence. It is the phonographic triumph of the age. \ @) et “The Phonograph with a Soul” Come in and, hear this wonder for yourself — the Three Million Dollar Phonograph* that RE-CRE- ATES the very soul of music. , COWAN’S DRUG STORE 123 Fourth street Bismarck, N. D. *The instrument used in Tuesday’s Tone-Test is the regular model which sells for $285 (in Canada $481). It is an exact duplicate of the Laboratory Model which Mr. Edison perfected after spending Three Million Dollars in experiments, RACES Pvt. racl = = = whoever makes a remark of this kind fails to]ST. LOUIS SELLS 2.75 BEER, WRITES FORMER LOCAL RECRUITING MAN Johh [, Webb, charge of the recrulting station at this city, has written friends in this} the local station. his stay at Jefferson Bar- reunion a Mo., where he was transferred | their friend at has been very HUUNUNAR.UN..UIUL VOU. GC. E Bergeson & SON UNI UA “WARM ‘COATS erate eternal Ne MRR AAS BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE ‘SATURDAY, NOV. 29, 1919 mitted to be sold. rett, who followed d send their in this city incidently | Whistling ‘Eddie and Blg Chris. pleasant, a We have a wonderful assort- ment of Warm Overcoats, big Ulsters, some with fur collars, regular coats for North Dakota weather—warmth. without weight. All wool, warm, fleecy fabrics. All prices $35 up. Stors Hours 8 a. 'n. to 6 p.m. mentioning that beer in St. Louis wits 2.75 percent alcoholic content is per- Another former Bismarck recruit- ing soldier who: is also stationed av formerly in| Jefferson Barracks is Pvt. J. R. Bar- febb in charge of Both men held a regards to} ding | I On Honor Roll. this month, Young Yater is in Miss Douglas Yater is the only student|Moore’s class and has a perfect rec- in the third grade.at the Will school|ord for attendance and not being who is on the honor roll for his class | late, s Civilians Buy Army Raincoats From Government Contractors at Cost THE PEERLESS CO., Dept. 30, 80 Branford Place, Newark, $7, 50 N. J., will ship, postpaid, to you direct on receipt of.......... ~ The one type of Raincoat both waterproof and sanitary. The result of two s’ experimentation by, army experts. Made strictly to government speci- ations of. government inspected cloth, guaranteed durable and fast color. wet can get through—hermetically cemented, storm-proof collar with rm-proof tab, interfitting fly front, adjustable fastenings around wrists, le pockets with additional slit to reach inside clothing without opening coat. Back is sanitarily ventilated, concealed by duplex yoke, giving cape effect. use the war ended unexpectedly and military requirements ceased, civil- 's may buy these government approved raincoats at factory cost, $7.50. - Peerless Raincoats are the Genuine Government Model OFFICERS’ DOUBLE. with inverted pleat down back; belt all around with BREAS{ED MODELS buckle; convertible collar; outside patch pockets with 4 flaps; buckled wrist fastenings. Retailed during war for $25 to $80.’ Delivered free to your door on receipt of. $12. peseeaeeselaeeos 12. WHEN ORDERING EITHER COAT, STATE CHEST MEASUREMENT Tf not satisfied, return coat and money will be refunded POPOL TT RL POISE TTESEELEOEOLELELETEEEOOOLELOUDELORSEEREELORELOLEUOUET QUALITY and ‘SERVICE These two prime factors are so closely . woven into Risse Process that the manufacturers guarantee them for 8,000 miles against puncture, blow-out Cost Less. Per ars RY or rim-cut. Mile We are sole distributors for North Dakota and Eastern Montana Risse Tire Sales Co. Langley & Schlabach, Managers POLLO ELEC EEO DIOOO ODL OOEO OL OAT ELECT ERLE OO EODOED EL EDED ODED DO DOEDDODOOL TT, 410 Broadway Phone 888 Bismarck Steel-Studded Tires OP OCee POLE OL PLEO LE IELELELESIDLODILIDIODDODODIDIDODIDODODOODIDODDDDDS Who Is Responsible For Smashing The ~ Treaty? Jubilation reigned in'some quarters when the Senate’s emphatic rejection of the Treaty of Versailles came as a sensational climax of one of the most bitterly fought political battles in our history. It smay have been a victory, and the destroyers of the Treaty and the League of Nations “may exult in their triumph,” but, retorts the Springfield ‘Republican (Ind.), “they will go into history having constructed nothing and selfishly leaving the world to its darkness and: woe.” Opposing this view the New, York “Sun” declares that “there never was anything more wrong, more ridiculous, more preposterous, than to maintain that the war was going on and must go on until the United States Senate and the American people conserited to swallow Mr. Wilson’s pernicious League of Nations,” In fixing the responisbility, the pro-League Rochester “Times-Union” (Ind.) says that “the United States Senate under the bank- rupt leadership of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge has killed the Peace Treaty,” but the’ Republican papers like the Philadelphia “North American” and New York “Tribune” lay the responsibility for the failure of the Treaty at the President’s own door, in effect charging him with “infanticide.” 2 Under the heading “The Rejection of the Treaty,” THE LITERARY DIGEST, this week—Novem- ber 29th—prints as its leading artiele a summary newspapers of all shades of opinion. The article c of public opinion in the United States as expressed in overs every phase of the controversy over the Treaty and makes very clear how the country. regards the Senate’s action. . ~ Labor’s Right to Strike The Opinions of Labor Journals on “Government by Injunction” and the Opposing Views of Newspapers in Defense of the Court’s Action in the Coal Strike Case “Booze and Bolshevism” Curbing the Speculative Frenzy American Legion’s War on Disloyalty New Seeds of War in the Balkans “Pussyfoot’s” Pilgrim’s Progress - What’s Wrong With China? The Pay-Dirt in City Streets Hygienic Hair-Cuts Measuring Ocean Depths by Echoes A New Kind of Electric Motor-Car Founding “Health Towns” Books That Children Want to Read “Jack Cade”—The First Bolshevist British Plans for Rehabilitating the Holy Land Selling Public Health to the Nation Clergymen Are For the League A Split in English Jewry : The Russians in America—(Varieties -—Widespread Distribution — Poli- tical Tendencies—Socially Consid- ered) Farm Acreage, Crops and Values Quiet but Convincing “Cal” Coolidge ‘A Casual Visitor’s View of the Coal Miners’ Lot / Prices Lower in London Than in New York a Self-Trained Head That Runs the Shipping Board Germany and France Will Gamble Away Their Debts The Spice of Life The Best of the Current Poetry A Fine Selection of Illustrations, Maps and Humorous Cartoons November 29th Number on Sale Today—All News Dealers—10 Cents FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPA! U (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK