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PAGE FOUR ; BISMARCK DAILY- TRIBUN! MONDAY, NOV. 15, 1920. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - ~~~ - ~~~ ~*‘Editor at Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK: - - + - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all newsycredited 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. . 2 MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year . = . Daily by mail, per ydar (in Bismarck) . ++ +720 Daily by mail, per yea (in state outside Bismarck. 5.00 Daily by mail, outside ‘of North Dakota............ 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) <p> WHOLESALE ADVICE “Old men for counsel. Young men for war.” When an older man‘speaks in public to his jun- iors‘ it is usual to expect advice. He must tell them how to order their lives. And so he descants on this virtue and on that which seem to him im- portant and appropriate. This is often interesting and sometimes useful. But there is always the danger that some or all of-what-he says willbe taken to heart by’ the wrong members of his audience. Let him speak of splendid feats. of courage, and the foolhardy amongst his hearers will de- termine to outdo them, while the timid feel all the more sure that they are “queer” affd out of the running. f Let him sing the praises of patient industry. and it stirs some docile drudge to greater efforts, while the independent idler dfaws the speaker’s portrait with appropriate adornments on some convenient scrap of. paper. i Let him tell of the debt owed to parents and teachers, and once more the wrong member of the audience responds and overdoes his devotion, | while the selfish fellow it was meant for simply for simply does not listen or announces that he should worry. . Thus there is always danger of preaching to the converted who would be better off without it. Perhaps‘the remedy’ is not to preach at all, but to interestitand explain. they can generally be trusted to work out. their own ways of acting. PRR areas ‘from Townleyism. themset . , If people understand , houses of the next legislature. The change from | mselves and the situations that confront them, | Nonpartisan league control by a majority of more You can’t read of Florida’s experiences Ynd- jeer at Cuba’s election day death list. es EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both eldes of important issues which are being dis- cussed in the press of the day. . WHY NOT? In McHenry county, where the Townleyites swept everything in the general election, the Ap- peal to Reason was one of the papers voted on for official county newspaper.—Dickinson Press. ' ELECTION RESULTS | The election held on Nov 2, 1920, marks the beginnig of the end of Townleyism in North Da-| kota. Frazier, Lemke and Hagan and a few other | socialists who got on the Republican ticket, suc-| ceeded in sliding in under. Mr. Harding’s coattails during a Republican landslide. The independents have elected a majority to the House’ of Repre- sentatives and will possibly have one majority in the state senate. Miss Minnie Nielson has been reelected state superintendent over the league! candidate by a heavy majority. All the initiated laws have carried by majorities ranging from 10,000 to 16,000, and about half of the Townley newspapers have been defeated for official news- papers in the several counties of the state. Town- leyism has been given a severe drubbing in all; other states, but North Dakota—whichshas’been made the socialist haven—will have 'to feed a! large part of the Townley army for perhaps an- other two years. Logan county has had enough of ‘Townleyism and McIntosh is also well purged | excepting that the Wishek News was defeated official newspaper by the ‘so-called “farmer” pa- per at Ashley. , Bro. Greiser;has been making a} manly fight against Townleyism, but the Town-} ley sheet—the Ashley-Fribune—had the advan-| tage of having a number of voters tied up with. that sheet as stockholders and the prestige of| the Townley machine which extends into every | 'precinct—and no organization was effected there’ to offset it. It was like a vast drilled army in- cading a country where there was no opposing ; army, and that the News lost by only 200 votes. ; Napoleon Homestead. i THE LONE DUCK NEARS COVER i PEOPLE'S FORUM * Editor The Tribune: Now, that it is all over, if we sv choose, we may shout to raise the roof, over the triumph of Miss Min- nie J. Nielson at the polls. NORTH DAKOTA PROSPECTS Latest figures from North Dakota indicate ; that opposition to Townley will control both, than two to one in the last previous legislature indicates a big change of a majority of the voters Nothing but the Republican BUGGY VS. AUTO | landslide enabled Townley to keep the governor- The old-fashioned buggy“ has challenged the ship at the recent election’ : flivver.. This good old vehicle seeks to postpone the day of extinction by entering into debate with’ !ature will give the opportunity to investigate | :musement {all departments of the Townley administration, | the flivver on: their respective, advantages. \ As previously noted, this control of the legis- including the Bank of North Dakota, the indus- | icity, and probably Apropos of her well deseryed vic- tory, $ good, hearty, comment or two. cannot reasonably be stifled, by rea- \son of ‘the. special methods employed ‘for vote-getting by her opponents in the recent campaign. From the dodgers showered over the throughout the, state, electors were forced to beli that in the furious campaign conduc ed against Miss Nielson, the Nonparti- , excitement incident-to the game. But, |do fair minded men and women ac- |the expense of decency? One asks, lis their sense of fair-play dead? is it-the conviction of the N. P. L. cam- | paign committee that their mud-sling- ing tacties were the only tactics un- derstood by their followers? | They failed to take into account ;the fact that North Dakota women in both noisy town and quiet country- side, were doing a lot of independent thinking during those, riotous day> | preceding election. Notwithstanding |Miss Nielson’s victory, they are still sore, and resent the raw methods use by the Nonpartisan league to coerce jthem into ‘letting others do their thinking for them. Indeed, it was _Serveariely. ee ' iher exceptional opportunities for the | display of changing human emotions. e —4 tually enjoy any sort ofa game at!“The Prey” will be shown at the .Eltinge theater tonight. The opening} scenes of this intense romantic drama, showing the ball- ‘room and other parts of the Reardon home, persents Helen in,beatific-moods | over the knowledge that James Calvin ‘cares for her. In her room, when the guests have gone, she is cooing over her engagement ring when she hears her father’s voice raised in anger. She goes to the stairway, alarmed, looking ‘over the banisters and hears her fa- ther call her lover “an ungrateful} cur.” She runs down the stairs and jpleads wih her lover to explain, but; ‘he answers he can tell her nothing ex- | cept that he is seeking to save her fa- san league found its chief strategie | rank insult to the intelligence of the|ther’s honor. There is infinite pathos points, by dredging the gutters. The |Voters on both sides, to hand out|in the scene which follows as Helen weak-minded and children “love mud- throwing, but seldom if ever, is that indulged in by. -sane, grown-up men and women. ‘ On looking over their campaign lit- erature, we wondered to what class of ‘just plain thick mud, and call it ar- |gument—in order to disparage the | prestige of Miss Nielson’s qualifica- | tions for office. But mud is mud. And ‘we all know mud, when. we see it. A grudge, however, reacts unwhole- returns the engagement ring. Horror and grief follow swiftly, for Helen over the tragic death of her fa- ther. And then her brother, Ja comes to her with a confession that in a moment of desperation he has com- NOTHING LEFT BUT MEMORY OF HIS TROUBLE THIS IS WHAT ST. PAUL MAN SAYS OF HIS TROUBLES AFTER TAKING TANLAC, , “After eight years of suffering, Tanlac has made a well man of me and I will praise it as long as I live,” said Michael (Martin, ‘of 142 South Robert St., St. Paul, Minn. “T was troubled with indigestion, disordered kidneys, rheumatism and a general run-down condition. After every meal’ T would bloat up with gas until I could hardly breathe and have almost unbearable pains in the pit of my stomach. My kidneys bothered {me constantly, and when I bent over {my back felt like it was breaking in | two. | “At times every bone in my body seemed ‘to ache with rheumatism. My | Sleep was always restless and broken, and there were times when I lay awake all night and in the morning felt absolutely played out. I kept get- ting \orse and was losing weight rapidly, and finally I got to where I had no strength or enegry at all. “But Tanlac straightened me out so {completely that there is nothing left now of my troubles but the memory of them. I can eat just\anything I want and digest it perfectly and have gained eight pounds in weight. My rheumatism has left me and my kid- neys have quit bothering me. I sleep soundly every night and feel rested and refreshed in ‘the morning. I feel as well as I did years ago before these troubles started, and all the credit goes to Tanlac.” : ;Tanlag, is sold in Bismarck by Jos. Breslow,..in Driscall Dy N,D. and J. H. -Barrette,.. in fs Wy H. P. Ho- man, and in Strasburg by Strasburg Drug Co. ° (Advertisement.) sult of speaking with an empty stum- mick.”—London Mail. Something Free “Were things very high at the sun mer resort where you spent your va- cation?” “Yes, very high for everything ex- cept fishing worms. A native let me have all the worms I could find for spading up half of his garden.”—- Detroit News. Sorrow's Crown “What's the matter, old man? You look unhappy.” “T am.; I am almost as unhappy as a woman with a secret that no- body wants to hear.”—Boston Tran- script. A Bad Crash Peters—I hear Randall got kicked out /of the hotise When he asked old Walters for the hand of his daughter. Was he hurt much? .Poiser—Yes. He reckons he came out 'so fast that he collided with him- seit going/in.—London Answers. DAY OF WEEK FIXES COST: OF MARRYING The Hague, Nov. 15.—The cost of | getting married in The Hague all de- ; pends on the day of the week. For |; Some reason that has never been ex- plained Monday is society day anid Ina discussion now going on in a farm Paper, ; | old folks are taking sides with the buggy while! trial commission, the home building commission the younger ones are defending the auto. The eldé¥s speak from a wealth of sweet ex-| ated to control the state university, the state, {readers the Nonpartisan league lead- | | and the board of administration, which was cre-|¢Ts made their peculiar appeal. In} presenting their arguments to elec: | tors, who took the coming election fore, let's say, all’s well that a well, sit back and smile broadly a the unexpected outcome following the ; self in the power of Henry Lowe, a profiteering. millionaire. Lowe de- mands that Helen marry him as a con- ‘marriage on that at the City Hall, somely on those who hold it; there-!mitted forgery, thereby placing him- jwhere every couple must go for the official ceremgny, cost 60 guilders, | (Nominally eqtivalent to 40 cents each). On Saturdays the charge is j normal school and all educational work in a prop- ; aganda for socialism. ‘The legislature will have to make the most of its powers in sixty days, the limit of its session, when it will go out of existence, for all practical purposes. It may create an investigating com- mittee to work during the recess, but such a committee would not have to testify to compel witnesses to testify by the threat to put them perience, consisting of long moonlight buggy rides taken on quiet country roads in the days when their young lives were golden, or gilded, with romance. : They were slow rides, old Dobbin just loping along, as if he realized that the loving pair behind him had a lot to say to each other and wished to Postpone as long as possible the moments of part- ing. 4 in prison if they refuse. Folks could hold hands in buggies, the old-} | With the Independents in control of the legis- timers say, for, as they point out, it was, unneces-| lature, further ill-advised legislation will be stop- sary to hold the reins. Dobbin knownig all the|Ped. The}governor may veto. bills passed to undo dear old roads of hallowed memory. He was a] Socialism already attempted, but in that case the | initiative clause in the state constitution may be | great help to romance in those times. Sanctified, as it is, by tender memories, the] invoked, as it was in the recent election to pass passing buggy seems to have the better of the| five laws that were opposed by the league. argument among the folks near or over 40, but} The industrial commission may go ahead with some day, perhaps, the automobile will be as ten-| its socialistic projects of state mills and pack- derly defended against the encroaching airplane. | ing houses, under present laws, if it can borrow : the money, but the present rate and state of the You’are informed that the weather bureau’s | ™oney market, together with the severé blow that prediction of “fair” does not necessarily’ mean Nonpartisanism, has dealt to the state’s control, sunshine. Thus is forecasting made safe if not }™a¥ block sueh action. In addition, the new law, sane. { adopted by the people, which repeals the require- 2 ment that all public:money may be deposited in ..When Shamrock races she stimulates the tea|the Bank of North Dakota, wilt cripple the in- business so it’s fair td assume that Delaware has| (Ustrial commissions’ operations severely. boosted the mackerel trade. The league will gain two state offices, those of the attorney general and the state auditor, but thé a : temper of the people indicates that such advan- A million weddings last year and only 70,000 tages will be on!7 temporary.—St. Paul Pioneer houses were built. ‘This explains the recent pop- Press ularity of \mothers-in-law. i & / jseriously, and wished carefully to | Nelgh the merits ofthe respectiv/ candidates for superintendent of pub- lic instruction, those electors must have wondered again and again /if they | were supposed to be complimented by ithe sickening mass served up to in- i fluence votes. ' No one denies the fact, that, at the height of a vigorous political cam- ‘paign we all, more or less, enjoy the ———oooaooO BETTER THAN CALOMEL |Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute Dr.. Edward’s Olive Tablets—the Substitute for calomel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver is almost /instantaneous. These little olive-colored tablets are the result of Dr. Egwards’ determina- tion not to treat liver and bowel com- plaints with calomel. 10) The pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have no bad after effects. They don’t injure the teeth like strong liquids or calo- mel. They take hol of the trouble and quickly correct if. Why cure the liver at the expensé of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. So do strong liquids. It is best not to take calomel. Let Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets take its place. Headaches, “dullness” and that jlazy feeling come from constipation jand a disordered liver. Take Dr. Ed- wards’ Olive ‘Tablets when feel “logy” .and “heavy.” They clouded brain and “perk . up” spirits. 15¢ and’ 30c: the WILL ROGERS (HIMSELF) General Barnett he added’ ett says he added up wrong and Jokes by ROGERS. 2250 instead of 3250 Haitians were killed. What’s a thousand Haitians between friends? WELL. T SEE TREY ARE STILL ARGUEING ABOOT THE EChTEENTH Scientists who are hunting for the missing link might knock off for a while and hunt the voters | who were missing election day. | Canadian worker in a jam factory quit when} he was bequeathed $267,000. From currants to| currency. i If anything, the increase in divorces seems to! stimulate marriages. 2 Defeated candidates are too conceited to admit the women’s votes beat them. It ised to be rude to tell a man: to go to Hali- | fax, but Halifax:has voted wet... ARTICLE TEN STICLE TEN AND THE AMENDMENT ALL WE Hear. action of the Nonpartisan’s committee | dition of his savin her brother from in their lavish waste of poison gas. and their useless barrage mud. —A Mud Hater. POETS’ CORNER | a) DERELICTS - A worn-out ship lies on her side, Down by the ocean's pier; But she wag once the Captaih’s pride, ; And many a voyage she did ride, Before she found her bier. He was a soldier brave; | And many. a story he can spin, About the battles he was in, | Sweet Freedom’s cause to save. ‘And, shall we call them derelicts, The brave man and the noble ship, Because they have grown old? Nay, rather call them privateers, Who sailed adown the Sea of Years While blue skies turned to gold. i —Florence Borner. | With the Movies oe A gray old:man walks down the street, ' r spirit broken by prison, and shy f tragic events, con- jthe succession | sents. Helen finds life with her husband in* * tolerable. He tries to compel her to stimulate affection by renewing the threat to send Jack to prison. Then she appeals to the man she really loves. What follows, as a result of this ‘unusual situation, provides many ‘thrilling scenes in the intensely in- teresting play. —_—__ =. -. JUST JOKING J] i* ’ Only Beginning Mrs. Neighbor—I saw the doctor's j automobile standing in front of your j house this morning. Who is sick? Little Edwin—Papa. Mrs. Neighbor—Is. he very sick? | Little Edwin—Not yet. The doctoi Detroit News. Mean Maud—Wonder how old you are. Agnes—I just told you my age. Maud—I know; that’s what set me | wondering.—Boston Transcript. % ALICE JOYCE IN INTENSE DRAMATIC FILM, “THE PREY” i in Difficult Society Role. As Helen Reardon in the Alice Joyce special Vitagraph production, “The ; Prey,” the star enacts the role of a | young society girl romantically in love *|withya young attorney earnestly en- gaged in the prosecution of wealthy profiteers. The forceful drama gives i at is Star Gives Noteworthy Pe erformance | > W'S A WONDER “TREY WOOLDN'T Ger TANS ARTICLE TEN SETTLED IN SOME WAY of2 OTHETe ANT THAT WHAT YOO Bay e- | “It goes so slow you can stop off ievery block, get.a drink, and catch up with it.’—Dartmouth Jack-o’-Lan- \ tern. The Sad Reason Old lady (to mendicant)—But, my | good man, your story has such a hol- . low ring. “Yes, missis, that's the natural re- ‘just started to come this morning.— | five guilders, or nothing at all, de- pending upon whether the couple wish a séParate ceremony all fot themselves or be married in groups of twenty couples at a time. At these group marriages, the of- | ficiating clerk reels off in five min- jutes the marriage formula, all the couples listening in, chorusing “yes” jat the proper time, and then all file in and sign the book. Then they are married. ‘ ASPIRIN it Name “Bayer” on‘ Genuine package of genuine Bayer Tablets of i Great! Aspirin. Then you will be following 1 eyes t Bi o th vat the directions and dosage worked out \eraott ,Sreat to be on the water-) 1.” ohysicians during 21 years, and “How’s that?” proved safe by millions. Take no chances with substitutes. If you see the. Bayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumb4go and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of. twelve ta- blets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. WHAT'S NEWS TODAY? Drawings by GROVE WELL IF THEY w, OLUFY THE Varn el> MENDMENT A ‘ OP THE SA NP OPEN Take Aspirin only’ as'told in each é