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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 'EX-SENATOR GORE TELLS } ey WHAT HE WANTS TO SEE Istateamnn Whose Eyesight May, : eS het Be Restored Yearns to | a H : | Look on Wife j . 1a BO (By Norris Quinn) HIGH SCHOOL Weshington, Oct, 24—After more | : than 30 yes in perpetual darkness, ex-Senator Thomas P. Gore of Okla- y toma has been given hope that his ; Sight may be restored. | lf the treatment he is now under- \going at the hands of a Boston spe- cialist is successful, what will the y blind senator, lawyer, schoolmaster and sociologist be most eager to see? ‘First of all, his wife. He courted Games This Week, However, Are 204 wed her 21 years ago, but he has "y never seen her. Then— Expected to Decide All ‘His 18-year-old daughter and 10- District Winners ar-old- son, whose growth trom in- hes been able to follow only MANDAN IN y fancy a by a pat ef the hand. ‘Then— ‘The, 36,000 books of his fibrary, 68 TO 0 WIN whose contents the holds in his un- {usually keen memory— hington, where he has served 14 years as senator but never saw the , Capitol, the White House, the Wash ‘ington monument or the Potomac edhon- | River— ate high school football race rowing down to a few teams, The sta isn a result of Saturday’s gates. liston inas the undisp ors in the ‘Northwestern part of the) An eutomobile. He rides in one state, The team is far ahead of daily but they were unknown when he any vothers that it has met that it ap- | last saw the light of day. pears Williston stands mm line for the} World a Mystery state title again this year @jth little In short, Gore wants to see the difficulty. It defeated Crosby Satur-j hundreds of new things that have day by score of 165 to 0, using! come into the world in the last 30 mostly ond team men. Williston: ¥ He wants to a city for the is scheduled to meet Minot next Sat-/ first time and contrast it with his urday for the district. championship | native farm villagc, the only commun- und should win by a large score. | ity hetever saw Devils Lake’s team is going streng.| But Core doesn’t really expect to Deteating Minot, 25 9 0, Saturday/|see any of these things. He's not as the Lake team suppor are looking | optimistic as his physician, Dr; Sam- forward to the game to be playedj|uel ‘Harris of Boston, If sight comes, next Saturday by Devils Lake and|it will be welcome. It it doesn’t—well, Grand Forks. If De Lake beat is so used to darkn: that he Grand Fo! the Lake team support he glowing world around ers will claim the no: trict championship a: and the two teams probably will meet. re enjoyed natural eyesight vntil he was e Then a stick, thrown at 1EX-SENATOR GORE prived him of its use. ter a shaft from him in the right eye. eye removed. For a time Gore was able to dis tinguish the outlines of large objects. Then that power left him and h2 was able only to tell night from day. ‘This eet remnant left. hing before he was 1. Three years Ja- crossbow struck He had to have Senat Y Gore is practicing law here, specializing in tax and land matters. He comes to his office punctually. ry morning. His secretary reads Grafton row stands far in the lead in|a cow by pone of his tarm lad friends, to him from law books, He pro- the race. struck him in the left cy2 and. de- ‘es his cases by dictation, The race in the southeastern dis- a — 7 trict was somewhat complicated by the Fargo-Jumestown game, which re- sulted in a7 to 7 tie. Wargo had . “iminated other teams in the district, | frm. (However, Jamestown’s showing! By virtue of this same dope, con- gainst other ceams is not sufficient’ tained in its much unbalanced to give her the right to claim the!the Big Ten does not have a ga title against Fargo. The Jamestown | which should be in doubt. team tied the sqore by making a/is entertaining Michigan; W touchdown in the last 25 seconds of | is host to Minnesota, and’ Purdue has play. Towa ag a rather unweicome visitor, Mandan and Bismarck |unlees the Hawkeyes mend the \ Mandan and Bismarck will fight it) they s hosts to Notre Dame out for the southwestern champion-} and Chicago; supposedly ship here on Friday, Mandan defeat- | resting from the arders of the Prince: ed Dickinson for the second timerSat- | ton pattle is enter ig a team from urday by a score of 68 to 0. The) mountain top $ do and the hattl first game resulted in a score of 33 to | of the day in the section is at India i inson was trampled by Wil-) ayolis where Indiana and Notre Damay liston a week ago, 108 to 0, so that the | sqray out the Hoo: ampionship. | comparison is in favor of Williston. | woyachn and Pat | CA ‘ zs ; Wabash and Pat Fa Butler Col Williston has no men on ‘its team | jose teamans who cen be compared with MeDon- | ent. ‘The twot ald and Gray of Mandan, according to | Ti AP ase Coach Williamson of Dickin3on, who | he ana ae x et compared the teams after the game. | le same may demon ‘Mandan for the first time this sea-| Page has done to son used forward passes freely: and | from the depths, effectively against Dickinson, four In the Missouri Valley conference, touchdcwns being gained by the} Kansas, emulating Dakota, will stage al J route. In the last quarter Dick-| its University-Aggie scrap, the game, inson played Mandan a close game, | also taking place at the home of the her spirit being awakened by. a near| university at Lawrence. » Nebraska touchdown, Mandan using seven subs.| meets the Missouri Vailey champions are u ‘in Benny Owens team from the Uni- versity of Oklahoma. Tlie: “Sooners” have not shown the ability they ex- pressed last year, but may come 19 U. AND AGGIE . [life cn the field at Lincoln. ‘The other ‘scrap. is the annual kattle between TEAMS CLASH | Drake university and ihe University "of Mi ri. Intersectional games include the | F meeting of the colorful Center Col- lege team and Harvard at the di- | the favorite of the dopeste ig not a year when dope ru true to teams meet ia and the resutt of te how muca bring Butler up um. Tulane university of Louisiana, making the first of its two northern trips, is meeting Detroit at Detroit, while Penn State and the Golden Tor nado of Georgia Tech meetin Nw York. ~ ‘ The east will divide its attention between the Pennsylvania scrap in which the University of Pennsylvania will try to retrieve its laurels in a game against Pittsburgh, the test of Cornell by Dartmouth ana the regular Irish scrap which takes place with tho meeting of Fordham and Boston col- lege. The far west has two stellar battles in the meeting of Stanford and the Oregon Aggies and California and Washington State. Collegiate football interest in North Dakota this week-end centers in an engagement at Grand Forks, where the feotball team of ‘the state univer- sity will attempt to demonstrate to the fooball team of the Agricultural college, that its particular brand of culture endows it with- more ability, muscularly, speaking, chan does the ethical tuition of the Fargo schcol. The Aggies also have their particular brand of argument for the considera- tion of the unjversity team. While both schools held their especial home- coming attraction against-the schools of South Dakota, Saturday the game but this} * not admit the last state-| | Saturday Games = Williston Crosby 0, Minot 0. 14, Lisbon 7, Fargo 7, Jamestown 7. LaMoure 14, Lidgerwood 7. ‘North Dakota U. 21, South Dakota UL. Moorhead 21, Ada 7. uth Dakota State 54, N. D, Ag- , $ ada 41, Utah Aggies 0, J. of Calitornia 39, U. of Oregon 0. ‘egon. Agricultural college 24, U. ¥ ington 0. h 62, Bozeman 0, leyan 14, Northern ell 14, Friends umiversity 7, npion college 6, Luther col- biake university 41, Cornell 0. University of Colorado 10, Univer- sity of Denver 7. Varleton / (Northfield, Knox 6, Montana Aggies 26, Montana School of Mines 0. 3 ‘New York university 7, Wesleyan university 7. Hobart 14, Hamilton 0. Amherst 13, Massachusetts Agricul- tural college 0. University of ‘Maine 7, Bates 7. Tufts 6, Norwich 0. (Bowdoin 16, Colby 6. Boston university 14, Trinity 0. Pennsylvania 21, Virginia Mine In- stitute 7, ‘D&pauw 21, St. Louis 7, ‘Coe college 28, Dubuque univer- sity 7. , Kansas Aggieg 1, Missouri 5. Georgiz ch Ss, Rutgers 14. . Minn.) 14, Centre college $8, Transylvania 0. Oberkn 38, Hil Denison 14, Oh ie Tulane 7, Mississippi A. and M. 0, Georgetown 28, Holy Cross 7. Oklahoma Aggies 7, University of Arkansas 0. University gf Wyoming 14, Colorado Schiool of Mines 7. ‘Oshkosh, ‘W: ville Normal 7, ‘Alexandria high 20, St. John’s uni- versity 14. Jadiana 0, Minnesota 6. Chicago 9, Princeton 0. . ie .. Normal 28, Platte- between the two is always of interest to old timers, and neither team will Jack supporters when they line up cn the university field. Neither’ squad takes the advantage ing maes played. Both had to show all possible ability agaimst theiy Sat- urday opponents and both had about equally hard battles the week before. Both were able to try out their scor- ing plays, October 15 and hoth, were tried out in defense Saturday. * While the two state teams are bat- tling at Grand Forks, Fargo and Jamestown Colleges will decide Lib- eral Arts supremacy at Fargo. Re- cent defeats for the Jamestown men. and home environments makes Fargo | BAD BREATH. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get ' | at the Cause and Remove It _Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, act gently on the | bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards’Olive | Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. — Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gen- | . tly but firmly on the bowels and liver, | stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of | the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from | Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without | griping, pain or any disagreeableeffects. | Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac- | tice among patients afflicted with bowel | and liver complaint, with the attendant. | bad breath. | Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect, 15c and 30c, The Roma, bought from Italy for "ASSEMBLING NEW DIRIGIBLE assembled for its first flight in this country at Langley Field,-Va. the U. S. Aviation Service, is bejng » has served three terms in the | _| placed’ in me by. my constituents. In | | Yale 14, Army 7. LaFayette 28, Fordham 7. ‘Detroit 28, Boston College 0. ‘ MacAlester College 6, St. Olaf Col- | ae 7, ‘North Dakota 21, South Dakota 0. Harvard 21, Penh State 21. a Dartmouth 31, Columbia 7. . [ce ‘Notre Dame 7, Nebraska 0. Kansas University 14, Iowa State’ College 7. \ vo.uel 31, Colgate 7, Wisconsin 20, Hlinois 0, | Ohio State 14, Michigan 0. Hamline 17, St. Thomas 0. Beloit College 0, Lawrence: 36. WITH BOWLERS ; Pat Deaahue of the Barkers team reled high score for week, 241. J. Wyciskola holds second place with 232 ‘The following are last week's win- i) ners, ' | Pat. Donahue .. J. Wyciskcla . | Geo. Ireland . \Art Bowers .. | Pat. Donahue ; Theo. Martell peo ia 2 | MANDAN NOTES | | —_— | Veteran of War | Returns to Farm) | Earl Presley, 28, holder of the! j United States distinguished service | | medal, arrived in Mandan on ‘Thurs-| day after a five months trip by horse } and wagon from the home of his par- ‘ents near Fulton, iN. Y., and plans to | take up farming where he left off over | i three years ago, ‘Presley previous to | the war had been-a resident of Mor- ;ton county for eight years. :He was | ‘drafted into the service by the Mor- | | ton county board in April, 1918, and reported for duty’in Utah where he; ; had gone for ayvisit. }_, After training at Camp Lewis, | : - Whsh., he was‘assigned to combat duty with Company K, 364th. Infantry of the 91st division, His citation shows that on: September 28, 1918, af- ter having just returned from a re- connoitering patrol in which machine gun bullets had plugged his/canteen | and ripped a ‘breast button off his | coat, and in the face of an expected at- tack from the Germans, he; with a {companion had shown extraordinary brevery in the. face ,f fire from one {pound cannon and machine guns, and | ; “went out between the lines to secure 5 ja wounded American soldier whose} #80, brings the revelation that wo- | foot was shattered, and who, “a target | Men may look the future as well as for German snipers, was dragging! her mirror in the face without fear. himself towards his lines,” | “Yes, I’ve had my face surgically | ‘Presley and companion, using aj| ‘made over’,” said the small person, irifle as a seat for the man, carried) looking very much like a girl of {him to the American trenches, escap- | 19. “I guess I’m the first woman to jing the German fire by miracle. admit it. And not-only that—but |. Mustered out of the service in New| I was filmed ‘n the act! | York state, he left Fulton, N. Y., June! “I'll not only permit exhibition of | 6, last, driving a horse to a light| the film, but I'll appear in person to wagon and with Harold Zufeld, a for- | show that it’s real. | mer “gob,” took five months to drive} “Of course, there are all -kinds of to Mandan. | people who ‘remember me when’— Hz is belieyed 49 be’the only ser- | Well, some of them won't ‘believe I'm BY ALICE ROWE > New York, Oct. 2!--:-Have you seen Edna Wallace Hopper— the 1921 model, I megn? An interview with the diminutive actress who was famous a long time ; vice man from this section of the! the same pepson when they see me | state who won the_D. S. C: | Now. ~ | vere Bue i. “It's just great to gaze in the mir- |New City Commissioner ova see my face looking as young Z as ‘eel. | Makes Statement Here! “on, it you only knew the trage- . Betas Soh dies that have been revealed ‘to me. N. H. Romer, who was elected city | by women since I’ve had this’ done! {commissioner at the election held in} All women in this age are young. in | Mandan Friday made the following | spirit. It’s awful, when you feel 25, | statement when he learned of his ‘election: “I want to assure all the a t i people of the city that I will do all in | ouiedly find wide favor among the my power to merit. the confidence rapidly growing Daniels clientele. The star is supported in the picture by an exceptional cast. Playing the leading male role is no less a film pe?- sonage than Harry Myers, great success in “A Connecticut, Yankee in King Arthur’s Court” still continues to be an outstanding feature of current photodramatic history. As “Tod” Rollins in this production Mr. Mycrs shows the same engaging na- -turalness which won his previous tri- umph. accordance with my promise made be- fore election, I will endeavor to treat everybody fairly as an official of the ! city.” Mr. ‘Romer will: fill the unex- pired term of Nelson E. Luther, who died from injuries received in an auto accident a month ago, He has beon'a resident of Mandan for. nine yaars. having moved there, from Jamestown. | Mrs, C. D. Sterling ‘lett yesterday jfor hor home in Montana after a visit j at the home-of her dapghter, Mrs. | Reymond. Tipper. | FIRST LOVES MARY. Richmond, Eng-, Oct. 24.—After he had been\married twice John C. King met his first love, Mrs. Harriet M, | Claridge, and became her second hus- He is 82 and she, 74. Mrs. Charles F. Ellis and Mrs. E. R. Lanterman of Mandan, were shopping and visiting friends in. Bismarck to- day. | band. Miss Alice Cordon of Bismarck | spent Sunday the guest of Mr. and | Mrs. Fritz of Mandan. Mr and Mrs. Carl Sunmark and baby idanghter of Mandah, spent Sunday | _ visiting friends in Bismarck, | *AT THE MOVIES | OO “THE CONFESSION” | AT tHE ELTINGE “The World’s’ most beautiful love story” is said to describe Hal Reid’s play, “The Confessicn,” which has ben made into a marvelous motion picture by the National Film/Corpor- ation, featuring Henry Walthal. The story of the picture is one cai- culated to hold its auditcrs spel] | bound from beginning to cnd, encom- | nassing as it does the gamut of.every | human emotion, the love: of sweet | heart for sweetheart, brother | brother, and last, but not least, the | love of a mother for her son. ‘ES; | “The Confession” as a stage play | had a wonderful career and in its new; ; form {s: much better, trom the fact | that it is net limited to the few stage | scenes possible in a theater. | | On the program wita “The Confes- | | sion” at the Eltinge today and tomor. row are the news pictuies and Topics; . | of the Day.. | SUSE SRO: JAD i | RAINBOW GIRLS AT THE REX | MAKING HIT | Harry “Ikc’ (Evans and his girl} | stow have caught the public fancy at! ;the Rex in greet shape and all the| | biks he has so far presented have | ;more than made -good., Today the | ' vaudeville, offering will be “Bringing | |Up Fathet,” while “The Hall Koom | | Boys” will be seen in “False Room- | lers," and Bebe Daniels, in “A March | | Hare” will be\the feature photoplay. | { From the moment tomboy Lizbeth | abandons her back-lot .ball game to! j speed a fast car after the “Limited” j which she was to take for New York, | | there isn’t_a single idle minute in this’! | fast-moving offering. And when she, | arrives at her aunt’s, fun galore is on | jtap when the young heiress finds an; \Palmer with intention to _ profit |side-saddle. {® irresistibly youthful and will un. bury, Long Island. No, she didn’t fall | ADMITS HAVING FACE MADE OVER whose ; EDNA WALLACE HOPPER bie nae som sae | ** EDNA WALLACE HOPPER LOOKING YOUNG AGAIN! to see the tell-tale lines in your face person's point of life—it’s career happiness—it's that makes hi “Some one- a} said long ago that a nian is : he feels and a woman <s o Jooks. Weill, I believe w: the right to look as old as “The only uplift movemen social. The unlifting of wom sagging ‘lipes is just as im) It makes them happier, health‘er men. “Science has made it possible for women to keep youthful feces, to keep youthful figures. It won't be long before science prolongs life. And if scientists want to experiment on! any one—here’s a small person ready for them. i “It's nice to hear you say I look wonderful—but_ the only wonderful thing about it.is that I’ve told! You see many women every day and won- der how they keep so young looking: Why, they’ve had plastic surgery per- formed. And it isn’t women alone who go in for it—it’s MEN.” INCORPORATIONS Articles of incorporation filed with the secretary of the state include: The People’s State Bank of Ender- lin, Ransom county; capital stock $25,000; 36 stockholders, of which first thaee named are Wm. Ed. Fraed- rick, Charles J. Baugert, Henry J. Rohde. McCormick Coal Company, New Sa- lem; capital stock, $50,000; incorpor- ators, J. V. McCormick, A. D. Gaines, Charles F, Peterson; to mine coal. Slepe Mercantile company, Mann- haven, Mercer county; retail] general merchandise, capital stock, $20,000; Bohrer, Ernest Bohrer. Elliott Printing company, Fargo; capitol stock, $25,000; incorporators, THE SIDE-SADDLE COMING BACK It takes daring to leap'the hurdles sitting securely astride a horse. And} |imposter posing as Miss Lizbeth Ann penis year more and more society horsewomen are returning to the less secure: | Here Mrs. Fairman Dick (nee Gladys Roosevelt) on “Forsythe” | |through thé connection. The star role jas she takes a high hurdle at the annual Meadowbrook Hunter show at West- | incorporators, Albert G. Sailer, Walter; MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1921 ——— ‘Biwin'S. Elliott, Geo. McKee, Howard | Harvorson, Fargo, Jonn 0. Elliott, St. Paul, Minn. ‘Red Cross Aid _ ; Covers Wide Field Washington, Oct. 24.—Forty-three disasters ranging from the grasshop- perzplague in North Dakota to tho Chinese famine called tcr emergency relief measures by the American Red Cross during the fiscal year ending last June 30, according to the portion of the gociety’s annuai report dealing with the peace-time service, made pub- lic today. i _The disasters resulted in the death ; in the United States of 850 persons and the injury of 2,500, caused property damage estimated ii $50,000,000, af- fected 67 communities and rendered 65,000 families homeless. Attendant relief activities resulted: in an ex- penditure hy the Red Cross of $1,- 871,000. The summary of the year’s disasters as given in the repcrt showed that Red Cross relief was furnished-in the case of jseventeen fires; five floods; seven tornadoes or cyclones; Gne de- vastating storm; three explosions, in- cluding ‘the one in Wali street; one building accident; two typhoid epi- demics, the more serious’ being that at Salem, Ohio, whch affected nine per cent, cf the population; 2 small- rox epidemic in Hati; a train wreck; the Tulsa, Okla., race viot; the famine in China, affecting miljiong of~per- sons; the famine among the Indans of Alaska; the grasshopper, plague in North Dakota and an earthquake in Italy. The most serious disaster in the United States was the Pueblo flood last June, in which the Red*Cross as- sisted in rehabilitation. ‘In marked contrast with the pre- vious year, only one tornado assumed | the propcrtions of a major disaster, | the ‘report said. This (occurred last April in the border sections of Texas and Arkansas with. the city of Texar- kana as the center. The famine in China, galling for expenditure by the Red Cross of more than $1,000,000, was the mest serious of foreign disasters in which the organization gave ‘aid. The report declared an increasing | effectiveness on the part of the Red Cross to deal with emergencies was manifest during the year. Through ‘its chain of chapters, iinking virtu- | ally every county in the country with | national headquarters at Washington, the Red Cross, it was said, has estab lished a network of a communication through which instantaneous relief may be dispatched to any part of the United States. Through its ‘nursing service, its -|"ome hygiene and care of sick, nu- ‘ition, first aid and lie-saving class {cs and health centers, and in numer- jous other ways designed to acquaint | masses of citizens with proper meth- ‘ods of Nving, the Red Cross carried | its message of health into all parts of | the country. The American Red Cross nursing service, the reserve of the larmy, navy and public health service, j at the end of the year had enrolled 37,787 nurses, an increase of 1,084 | over last year: More than 73,000 cer- tificates were issued to women and girls whc\completed the Red Cross course_in home hygiene and care of sick and through its 260 health: cen- ters, the Red Cross reached 90,252 per- ‘sons with health infor:natlpn, ASPIRIN on Genuine Name “Bayer” \ 4 Beware! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on pacKage or on tablets yqu are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- scribed by physicians for twenty-one | years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the | Bayer package for Colds, Headaches, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tab- lets of Aspirin cost few cents. -Drug- gists also sell larger packages: Aspirin ts the trade mark of Bayer Manufac- | ture of Monoaceticacidaster of Salicy- | Neacid. af cee TYPEWRITERS ATE All makes <@ sold and rented : Bismarck Typewriter Co. Bismarck, |. D. ©. BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Knovin all over the Northwest for Quality @ MAIL US YOUR FILMS % RECALL ELECTION ANTI-TOWNLEY TICKET Friday, October 28 VOTE FOR Governor— i R. A. NESTOS.....:..... X Attorney General— i SVEINBJORN JOHNSON.. X Com. Ag. & Labor— JOS. A. KITCHEN........'X VOTE “YES” on i Constitutional Amendments i and Initiated Measures Both Men and Women Vote This Election (Political Advertisement.) Ae = ll esha