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“ Entered at the Postofiic GEORGE D. MANN MARCKTRIBUNE Bismarck, N. D., Class Matter, HEB I as Second Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. i All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.......... oo $72 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck Daily by mail, per year (in state outsi Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........++.++ 6 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) <p> MILLIONS Steel works, mines, farms, forests—the entire’ Austrian estate of the Archduke Frederick—are| taken over by banker Charles H. Sabin, publisher Frank A. Munsey and other Americans. The property is worth $200,000,000. | A big deal, -but it’s only the beginning. Amer-| ican brains and capital will salvage Europe, which, when it tries to salvage itself, seems like a man! attempting to lift himself by. his own bootstraps. | JAGS | More drunkenness in America than anywhere else in the world, says Gaston Monnett, traveling investigator for a French brandy concern. Come back in 10 years, my dear Gaston. Drunks will be rare then. An evil thousands of years old can’t be wiped out overnight. Most jags now come from home-made hootch.; After the novelty wears, off, cellar chemists will decide it’s more bother than it’s worth. i JAPAN | A peculiar angle of disarmament is that Japa-| nese newspapers think limitation of armies will cause more argument than the naval end, at the Washington conference. Japan and France are the only two big powers that still have peace-time conscription. The Japanese attitude probably is that, in an| emergency, Japan could build battleships faster, than armies. Also, battleships wouldn’t be any; good at putting down revolutions against Mikados. HUBBY Before Mrs. Richard Kaufman,.of Chicago, mar- ried, her husband promised to wash the, dishes; every night, She has just had him arrested for} the fourth time for breaking his promise. The; judge holds that the promise is binding, and Rich- ard goes back to the dish pan under a $50 peace bond. Do you remember the promises you made your) fiancee before marriage? How many have you kept? A little louder please! | REAL MONEY Italy has officially recognized that America has taken the place of Great Britain as the world’s financial center by changing from. the pound sterl- ing to the gold dollar'as thé basis of the Italian gold lira. The reason, unofficially stated, is that “dollars are real money, the best money in the world.” Be Rather jarring to British pride, but these are days that governments as well as individuals must deal in realities instead of traditions. And cer- tainly the British sterling as the basis of interna- tional exchange values is a tradition. CHINA | Dr. Sun Yat-Sen says that his political party, ruling from Canton, South China, is the real Chi- nese government. Not so, says the official govern- ment at Peking, where Japs lobby. Now a third! “Chinese government” sets up shop at Hankow, in the interior. fas) \ Will China eventually split up into several coun-; tries, each with more people than the United) States? Not if Tokio can help it. Keep the Chi-| nese fighting each other and they can’t fight us, is Japanese policy. The Chinese Giant will take! care of that when he gets the opium and bribes! out of his system. % | CROWD | In Randolph, Vermont, town of 3500 people, ' Rev. Fraser Metzgilg .reports his congregation | average 900 seated, 100 standing in the rear. Ministers who preach to small crowds will won-/ der how he does it. It’s simple. Movies! “The Life of Christ” and “The Servant in the House” are samples of movies shown in Rev. Metz-| ger’s Congregational church. International | Church Film Company, of Boston, supplies the films. ; Many ministers will not approve of the idea,| but it seems to be sure-fire for bringing lost sheep back into the fold. HOUSEWORK Housework is the chief cause of insanity among > women, English asylum heads report. In making lunatics, dish-washing heads the list. Yen, in shop and office, meet friends daily, Editor} |night, some American couple arranges alimony. jwrecked by the divorce mills. ‘compared with $35,069,000,000 in 1914. | produced. | ployer. jtion and consideration that. were not of their own| en-: eel lcounter new experiences, always something inter; jesting. How many men realize the monotony of house- \work, to the wife working alone? | Husbands should take their wives out for recre- jation, at least twice a week. Work loses its monot- ony when occasional pleasure intervenes for con- jtrast. | ‘ERZBERGER | The assassination of Mathias Erzberger did not) create much of a stir outside of Germany. It would be more of a sensation if Pola Negri |spained her.ankle. _ | Yet, less than four years ago, the world’s un-| jdivided attention was concentrated on Erzberger| las he advanced to meet Marshal Foch and sign the jArmistice that stopped the war. | The big war characters are rapidly going into; eclipse. | SONG The tune of “The Star Spangled Banner” is that! lof an old drinking song, says a music historian. The drinking song, “To Anacreon in Heav’n,” was composed about 179 years ago for a carousing club that met at the Crown-and-Anchor tavern in |the Strand, London. Francis Scott Key used it to carry his famous patriotic stanzas. | This information should give the problem of getting Americans to put much pep and vigor into singing “The Star Spangled Banner.” DIVORCE England is alarmed because it had 4041 divorces last year. Every 11 days, America has as many divorces as England has in a year. About 133,000 Amer- ican families split up in 1920. 2 Every four minutes of every hour of the day and In the alst 20 years, 3,767,182 American men and women secured divorce papers. This involved| 5,600,000 minor children, whose homes were DEBT When George Bernard Shaw, in 1915, was ask- ed who would win the war, he answered: “Who won the San Francisco earthquake?” Now that the war-eathquake is over, the na- tional debts of the world total $293,651,000,000 To pay the interest on this debt, the world’s people must contribute $11,886,000,000 annually. Bankruptcy will undermine western civilization if the Washington disarmament conference fails. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express tbe opinion of The Tribune. are presented here iu order ‘vat our readers may have both vides of important ‘sues which are being dis- cussed in the prese of the day. —— THE WILL TO WORK It is strange to find the belief surviving any- where that those who sit in the shade, twiddling; their thumbs and twaddling with their tongues, deserve pay for it, as though they worked and, The rule of labor is. the underpinning of the universe. The Creator Himself set the example. He toiled and He rested. He is the “master of every trade.” Man, made in His image, can hard- ly expect divine favor to rest upon sloth. On every hand, however, we see people trying to crawl under or over or around that uncomfort- able prescription about earning one’s bread in the sweat of one’s brow. On’ the dance-floor the two- step and the one-step ,may;,come and go; but in the workshop the sidestep and the sidestepper are always with us. ; Young men are hunting for short, cuts to wealth. The shortest cut: is the straight line of responsi- bility and duty and good faith with one’s em- If your employer happens to be your own self, there are certain things you owe yourself just as much as though somebody else hired you. You} owe it to yourself to report for the day’s work fit; to do it. You owe it'to yourself to keep your ap- pointments at the time set for them. You owe} it to yourself to be steadily industrious. You can- not in self-respect take money that you have not earned nor demand a fabulous income for a fictiti- ous effort. Creation’s cry goes up on high From age. to cheated age; Send us the:men who do the work For which they draw the wage! t There are men out of employment this morn-! ing who are the victims of economic mal-ease and| readjustment. They have beea caught betwixt grinding milestones of circumstances. They de- serve sympathy and a hearing and an opportun- ity. That opportunity is likely to come, soon and suddenly, if they hold on. But there are others who deserve no sympathy. They deliberately elected to be idle. They defied God’s law—they condemned likewise all concilia- selfish and greedy dictatorship. Certainly the chance to earn a living—which, jis the greatest single blessing that is vouchsafed \mankind—ought to go to those who have the will ‘to work and not the desire to stir up insurrection-| ary discontent and make trouble in the .peace- loving, law-abiding ranks of the industrious, who “know of toil and the end of toil; they know God’s | Arbuckle case. jasking if the origina THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MOVIES AN Movies and morals are being dis- cussed everywhere as a result of the “What price must a girl pay for a movie career?” people ask. The question is answered in this series of articles written espec- ially for the Bismarck Tribune by Mrs. Florence Calhoun, mother of Alice Calhoun, the Vilagraph star who in five years has risen from a day extra to a $1000-a-week perform- er. (By Florence Calhoun) other of Alice Calhoun, Vitagraph Star, the Youngest in the Movies That beauty is the only quired to assure a girl suc movies is a fallacy, but it is a popular belie?. Animated by it, many of Alice Cal- houn’s fans send hc: their pic.ures, s are qualified for camera work, Some are so charming that she of- ten wonders why fate directed her in- stead of some other iny) the world of photo play. Beauty is esscitial—but beauty of face and figure alone will not suffice for enduring success. There must bo beauty of soul—and this beauty is achieved by resistance to tho tempta- tions that beset the girl on her way to stardom. These temptations are not neces- sarily of shadowland. There are many outsiders who make it their avocaton to prey upon the girls and women of screen or stage. These seem to think that because a girl en- tertains the public, she is public pro- perty. Strongth of soul usually goes hand in hand with health of body. ‘And given a certain amount of good looks, of a kind which will photograph to advantage, good health is the next essential to film stardom. It cannot be denied that beauty of a certain special type which directors | and came“a men recognize at a glance is a factor-in'the makingjof a star. But there is.a tremendous wear and tear upon beauty in the movies of which the young aspirant and the fans seldom dream. This is not; the wear and tear of Oe ee eee BEEF OATTLE BOOST PLAN OF MORTON PICNIC “A Real Barbecue” ‘is ‘the heading of a flaming poster announcing the Morton cotiity farm and‘ city picnic to be held Bn! Thufsday, September 22, at the Oak ‘Céulee/rancit! of Join Daw- son, 26 miles southwest 'st Mandan on the Flasher"Foad, weather permitting. The event’ is to’ be held under the joint “auspices of “the Farm Bureau and the Mandan Contmercial Club. There will be’ music, sports, speeches. The “nut quartette” will ‘appear. Pro- minent authoritigi on beet cattle raising will speak. Special invitations have been extended to the Morton County Development Association, residets of Manning, Mandan, Freda, etc., all (North Dakota farmers and all city residents, the poster announces. The music and sports will begin at 10:30 a. m., the Angus barbecue at noon and other events at 1:30 p. m. Automobiles will leave Mandan at 9:30 a. m. The demonstration is to be in the nature of the New Salem dairy tour, except that it is intended to lend the same encouragement to the pure breeding of beef cattle in western North Dakota as to breeding pure- q it FUNDEN | A pretty wedding occurred at 5° o'clock Saturday -eevning at the! Catholic rectory when Miss Margaret Helen Kennelly became the bride of} Claude. Funden. The ceremony was read by Rev. Ft. Clement Dimptl,; pastor of the St. Joseph Catholic church. and. was witnessed by the members of the immediate families and a few intimate friends. Miss Mabel Oleson, Frazee, Minn., was at the piano! and ylayed the wedding march from Lohengrin as the bridal party entered the rectory, and following the exchange of vows, played the Mendelssohn march as the} recessional. i The bride wore a brown suit of} duvet-de-loine trimmed in seal fur and accessories to correspond and; wore a corsage bouquet of yellow! and red roses. She was attended by! the groom’s sister Miss Tesse Fun-j den who wore an afternoon dress of! blue taffeta with a corsage bouquet! of asters. Roy Kennelly, brother of| the bride, was groomsman. Following the ceremony a wedding dinner was served at the home of; BIG FIRMS FAVOR TRAINED WORKERS - “Big business’ hasno sentiment. | Influence ‘won’t get you a job. | Proper training will. In Fargo, N. | D., every wholesale house but one employs graduates of Dakota Bus- iness College, of that city. Five * Dakota Courts call on them for stenographers. Out-of-town banks | send to this school for bookkeepers who often develop ‘into officers, A. H. Denning has recently been made assistant cashier of the First National Bank of Oates. Enroll now forthe Fall Term and “Follow the SuccéS$ful.’’ Write for terms to F. L.. i law is plain.”—Philadelphia Public Ledger, 806 Front St., Fargo, How Do Employers Regard Girls? \\ / Mrs. Calhoun Tells care. dissipation—but the strain and st oe [MANDAN NEWS| the bride. The rooms were “prettily decorated in pink and white. Misses Helen. Gray and Vivian sisted in serving. and. Miss Oleson of Frazee, were out.of town guesis at the .we ding. Sunday trom a wedding tyur of. two| weeks. ‘Fhe bride nee Gerturde, Wein- gartner left. Mandan about Sept. Ist / for: her home in Minneapjolis andj Mr. Gauer followed a few days later. The wedding took place on Sept. 6th at the pro-Cathedral in Minneapolis. } young. people and are today receiving; the congratulations of. their friends. The bride has been employed at the! First National bank for the past two years as one of the tellers while the groom Mandan Mercantile Co. They will dence “8rd: Av Catholic Order of Foresters Thurs- jwere elected for | Herman ranger; ranger; George Ford, chief ranger; ‘Henry Handtmann, recording secre- John Opitz, Treasurer; John Mushik, bredsaaity: COWES REE speaker. The next state convention MISS KENNELY BRIDE OF CLAUDE} the Foresters will be held in | EVERETT TRUE D MORALS x ers ALICE CALHOUN. sion of quick and precise acting: be- fore the camera. very woman knows ‘the effect ol@ overwork upon good looks-—until one has recuperated. The movie industry is run primar- ily to make money. A high-salaried star is a large investment. of thousands of dollars are invested in her name alone. i iHence movie producers want a star to safeguard her health. They prize most the sta> whose private: life is such that she will serve them longest on the screen. \ This means that evory girl, hoping to make a substantial success in the movies, must ordain her life with ‘But there is a supreme, mprale. without which no movie; artist, ever arrived anywhere. Of it I will write Brown as- Mr. and Mrs. Funden left Satur-! day evening for a wedding trip to the! poor this year, we hav2 never been so twin cities and eastern points. Miss Breen of Bismarck ‘Minn Helen MARRRIED IN MINNEAPOLIS i Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Gauer returned | Both are well known and popular ity, Nashville, Kent. ky. t ay i r. and Mrs. J. S. Reese, who have , {feen guests at the home of their \AMrs. B. W. Shaw for a few days. Hundreds | |-| children for which I cculd not buy ; buy coal and groceries ‘on ‘time. = et ventions have been held every three years and if the annual convention is {decided on at'a meeting to be held |soon, the convention will be held here next spring, / Mr. and Mrs. Orin Albrecht and son Carlyle and Jens Johnson of Vasher were visitors Monday at the iMcAuliff home. Carlyle left Monday evening for Dellafield, Wis., where he Military Academy. | Miss~ Maude i Williams of Minne- |Bpolis, who is enroute home from a |several months visit in the west is {making a several days visit with her \cougin, Mrs. Raymond Tipper before returning to her home. ett i Clyde Welch, who has spent the past} six weeks visiting his parents, Mr. and 'Mrs./Robert Welch here has returned jto Mis studies at Vanderbilt Univer- laughter, Mrs. Jesse Reko for the past ~onth have returned to their home at San Diego, California. i Miss Helen Center has returned to ‘er studies at Macalester College. St. Paul, after spending the summer at ner home here. Mrs... R. Ricker of Bismarck is > Suert/ at the home of her marents, i \ (Mrs. W.-H. Vallancey of Mandan was a Bismarck shopper on Saturday. i \ ——a | PEOPLE'S FORUM | Heitor The Bismarck Tribune, |. Pismarck, North Dakota. + Dear Sir: As a reader of The Tribune I take | great interest in what “‘ne Pot Boiler” has on the stove boiling for its read- I Uke to, do cooking and always did like to watch a pot| boil, so the very name “pot boiler” 1s fascinating rs. to me. I like to cook and eat pea soup, and aS I read ‘vhat “the Pot Boiler” has to say, I ‘cannot help | but think what our great state and the wholé world needs is “Peace Soup.” But what prompts me ‘to write is the coming in contact with a farmer to- | dav:. just one of the many in our state jat this time who had no crop this last | year, and then the reading in The | Tribune about the preparation for the recall ballot and the expense of print- ing the mandatory publicity pamphlet, which\ is to cost about 510.000. I will give the farmer story first,and I am in a position to know ¢hat his story is true, and also that he is only one of the many in our state at this time that has the'same sad, bu: irue condition to reveal, With distress written on; his face he told me this. “We are very) poor. We had no crops. From: two acres of potates planted we recaived one ann a half bushes. i fave ten | elothing last year, and this year we! haven't even money to buy thread to mend the old clothing. Winter is com- ing and I have no money to buy coal. I cannot borrow money, and [ eatinos cannot see how we can live through the winter. We have bee withouc light for several nights as I have no money to buy oil.” In the face of these facts, I said to myself “the recall” must not be: But what the state must do and do speed- ily, is prepare to feed iis hungry and clothe its poor, keep them warm dur- | is the bookkeeper for the make their home in the Hoffman resi- E. ‘ At the last regular meeting of the the following officers the coming year: Tavis, deputy high chief ‘Henry Schlute, past chief day evening ary, John Tavis, financial secretary; ine the winter. so that they can live and are physically able to read the publicity pamphlet when it must be printed in June. Public health nurses tell me “you have no idea of the pov- erty in the state on account of re- peated crop failures.” For individuals of the state to spend money for any- thing unnecessary at this time when thousands are starving the world over, is wrong. What our state needs is less sursing and more praying, and it nee:!s men who can pray and appreciate God’s guidance. and then He will see fit to bless the soil so that it will pro- duce abundantly. So for the sake of the needy in our state and elsewhere. “the recall” must not be. Mandan, but the time remains to ‘be Jecided wpon at a later date. Con- VM GOING To STEP OVER NEXT D-.oR ANDO SEE MRS. BRAGG — f ; THOUGHT OF -SOMETHING IMPORTANT— Yu. BE Back A “MINUTE”? THAT HOUR MGAN OH, DEAR tt — THERE WAS NOBODY AT Home § ISN'T THAT JUST Too PROVOKING “A POT WATCHER. ‘TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS BY CONDO Jose Iv A Minure ! MEANS AN — BUT tT Acso s will resume his studies at St. John’s mere shadow. Holidays now are celiarbrated. F Harding likes dogs; but not war dogs, ‘ America seems to be Russia's filling station. Many old bachelors are trying to marry: young. Arbuckle is probably convinced no- body loves a fat man, ~ The home stretch these days is in the pocketbook. : The end of a perfec’ night is when the alarm clock rings. Most necessary book for college students: Dad's check book. These hot weather kickers will soon be cold weather kickers. Beis The League has 51 stu-cs, not count- ing the State of Unrest. A camel can go nine days without water and 80 can a bootlegger. The;man who said tatk was cheap never tried a long distance phone. They say smokeles powder is strong- er; 80 is the smokeless cigar. Among the imitation ‘vathers on the market are restaurant steaks. If reformers, want followers . they might carry a bottle down the street. Shaw says he doesn’t want. to come to America. That makes it unanimous. A Chicago burglar posed as a land- lord; of course his. disguist was dis- covered, Some men stay out late because they are single; others because they are married, ‘ : ee ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts All the badges and sticks and fairy policemen and Twins and ‘Magic Green Shves in the world didn’t both- er Tubby Terrapin a bit as he lay ilat on nis stomach on the bottom of tme sea. ‘here he was and there he was going .to stay, right.in every- body’s road... He looked like a large biown rock and he. lay. there with his head and his feet and his tail all tucked inside his shell. Nancy and Nick climbed up on top of him and sat down. ‘He isn’t doing 80 very much harm, is he? asked Nick, tinally. “the fishes can swim vver top of him.” Cap'n Pennywinkle -grunted. not worry about. what's over him he replied. “It’t what's under him that’s on my mind. The old fellow is lying on quite a few of the dwellers of the Land of Wigglefins, Spiky Starfish, Crawly Crab and several Oysters. They'll: be smashed flat.” Curly, the sea-horse, spoke up “I know something, Cap'n Penny- winkle,” said he. “There's a fisher- man’s net/spread out in the bay over yunuer. if we could get it over here and wrap a corner of it around—” He got no further for Captain Pennywinkle jumped and slapped his knee. “Curly, you’re as smart as pop- corn! That is certainly a fine idea! Nick, Nancy, do you want to do an errand fo me?” The Twins sild down from their seat on Mr. Terrapin’s ‘back and de- clared that they. were ready. “Then,” said Cap'n Pennywinkle, “each of you et hold of a corner of Mr. Fisher- man’s net and bring it here to me. This old fellow, who insists on sitting here like a bump on a log, will have to be taught a lesson, and there is no use wasting. any time about it. The syoner the quicker!” (To Be Continucd) READY TO HELP YOU 3 If you are subject. to billiousness, bloating, sick headache, sour stomach or other ills that result from indigestion and constipation, you can “pm get relief with Foley Cathartic Tablets. They. are a genuine, wholesome physic that affords prompt, sure and safe re- lief without griping or pain. J. T. Osburn, R. F. D. 1, Lucasville, O., writes; “Foley Cathartic Tablets are fine. 1 had stomach: trouble. ‘I. took Foley Cathartic Tablets and now J can cat anything.” adv. To Clean Leather. The leather on furniture should he rubbed over occasionally with a cloth slightly dampened with oll or witha gan) leather polish: ‘Thought One Clean Shirt All He Needed “Ten years ago I-was reduced to a T was yetlow as a gold i | i i i { | | piece and would often ie doubled un with mest excruciating pains in my stomach. Physicians could only re- lieve me with morphine. I was advised to try Mayrs Wonderful Remedy and it helped me at once. What is more I have been well ever since. A friend j Said he thought one mce clean shirt was all I would wear. It was a simeve was all I would ever wear. It is a simple, harmless preparation that re- moves the catarrhal mucus from the intes“*nal tract and allays the inflam- mation which causes practically all | stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. convince or money refunded. For saic One dose will at all druggists,