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' over a hot stove and looming cheeringly through - dof $6,000,000 and lost it in African gold mine rHEBISMARCKTRIBUN Bismarck, N. D., as Second Matter. GEORGE D. MANN : : g Foreign Repzesentatives j G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. AND SMITH NEW npn Ne BURNS 5 Fifth Ave. Bldg. BER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The ee Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news | not otherwise credited in this paper and also the lished hi a ” " meal Tights ‘of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. “MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. il; arrier, per Year..-.seee> eer 1 Baily dori pr Near (in Bismarck). ....+++++0 +++ a Daily by mail,.per year-(in state outside Bismarck).. 5. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota....sssceeres ‘ATE’S OLDEST. NEWSPAPER ane (Established 1878) es oe oe : ELM STREET What happens on Main Street does not tell the real story of the small American town, even though Entered at the Postoffice, ‘ Class - Editor CHICAGO local cidentally starts heated arguments. If you want a real picture of the small town— and,.for that matter, a true picture of America- as-is—inspect the residence thoroughfare, with- cut which there would not be any Main Street.; Patent wedicmouman’ who a the, first big! The street of homes goes by different names in different communities. Most towns call it Elm Street. It’s the most popular street in the world right now. Main Street was all right when times were fiush. But the boy, out of a job and nearing his last cent, is slipping back home to Elm Street, to winter with mother, sister or aunt. If you are in touch with the small town or the farming community you came from originally, you have learned that a lot of the boys have come drifting in, ahead of the first snow. \ Somehow, when a man gets down to his last; cent, he can nearly always locate a mother or a sister or an aunt or some other of the women-folks | people whom he or she dislikes. who are certain to have a side of bacon, a bin of potatoes, a barrel of apples and a cellar full of! stroyer. canned fruit. Men are nothing but little boys puffed up like balloons. As soon as the shoe begins to pinch, they run to the women-folks. Instinctively, they know that a woman, wherever she is, can always rustle up some food for a hungry man. There’s a mighty big story in the boys who are; going back home to winter with mother, sister or aunt. It’s a pathetic story. And it is extremely important, for many of the boys have gone back for good. If a census could be taken about next Christmas, it would show an ebb tide from thejboy, recalling their childhood pangs when a new cities. Population is getting balanced again. Families are being reunited. In the: background, toiling! the smoke, with a frying-pan in her hand, is that wonderful personage always sought by the hun- gry—the home woman, the only person who never gets out of work. J |Psychologists say it is a form of vanity, the SLAVES OF HABIT A woman in Passaic, N. J., deserted her hus- and. Her farewell note had this. P..S.: “The| soup is in the oven. Goodby forever.” t Why did she trouble to fix his lunch? Maybe; it was just a joke. It was no joke. He got a divorce, the other day, on. grounds of desertion. She never came back. Solicitous for his welfare? She was through with him. The soup? Just plain habit. than you think. : Why do you always. sit in the same chair at the dinner table? Habit. Why do you rush for a , Seat in the same part of every street: car -you “board? Habit, again. Which shoe do you put ‘on first? -Why®’hopthe- other one, for a change? Habit, again. =, ee Human being get into ruts more easily than a wagon on a bad country road. « It’s stronger ft t ADVERSITY Countess D’Artigues, of France, whose husband| was a cousin of Cardinal Mercier, had a-fortune| ventures. ‘The countess had to give up her castle with 22 bedrooms, her 200 hunting dogs, 18 horses, 12 : autos and similar luxuries. ‘ \ Now she lives quietly at Waikiki Beach; Hono- lulu. Supports herslef by teaching French. “In spite of all that I have lost, I am happy,”| ,, She says. “God is good. He never gives us more suffering than we can bear.” ie Sound philosophy! People can adjust them-! ‘selves to any kind of adversity. In the: long run,| * money is secondary. Often, more happiness in! a cottage than in a palace. IMPROVEMENT Sugar cane originated in India. Three thou-| ' sands years ago, says the American Sugar Bulle-| Should swallow his loss instead of making tenants , tin, a Hindu lover wrote his sweetheart, “I have! * surrounded thee with a clinging sugar cane.” Every grain of cane sugar, grown in the world today, probably dates.back into India. But, though India is the home of cane sugar, the Hindu method of sugar manufacture is the! dispatches credited to it or, 6.00 | {polar explorers, cables to Alaska that he is return-| ing to civilization after an absence of six years.! : property. |by another court. | principle, loses 60 per cent of the sweet contents. jThe germ of progress thousands of years ago jleft the Orient for Europe and America. | SPEED | George S. Hossfeld, of Patterson, N. J., retains ‘his style of typewriting, speed champion of the world. He types 136 words a minute, beating all jcomers. . | ‘That seems fast. But how many words can you read a minute? Take out your watch and 'time yourself. You'll find your brain works from ‘two to four times as fast as the’ world’s fastest fiingers—those of Hossfeld. That's how the brain saves our slower physical machines during Captain Harold Noice, one of the youngest He left for the Far North in the summer of 1915. Fortunate Notice! hoarders, the cataclysms incident to American ‘participation in the war,,the inflation of living| costs and the financial storms of depression. i |comes back, but many of us would give our eye- lteeth to have been with him, escaping the 1915- !1921 period. | MEDICINE jadvertisers, are coming back. Drug market is |flooded'with pills and powders and colored liquids |with fancy names. é : | The head of an advertising agency attributes the new patent medicine to “a reaction from the war.” It may be true that conditions are getting on the nation’s nerves, making people crave} “cures and remedies.” | But a label stating, cent alcohol makes '‘m tonic. tents are 90 per ee}-in need of a RUMOR Twin of the assassin who stabs in the back is the malicious person who starts rumors about Rumor travels True or false, it is a de-} like the wireless wave. A bank is closed by a state examiner. It was| in sound shape. But a baseless rumor started a run, which called for money faster than the bank} could liquidate its loans. Most states have severe laws against spreaders of such rumors. Padlock thy tongue, gossiper! | JEALOUSY At Norwalk, Conn., a nine-year-old boy com- mitted suicide by {jumping into mill pond. He was jealous of affections bestowed on a baby step- brother. Many. adults will sympathize with the arrival in the family shifted the spotlight from them. Jealousy seems to be born in the blood, it man- ifests itself so early. You find it in all human re- lations — work, sex, amusement, sport, family | life. What is jealousy, the green-eyed monster? craving for admiration. In other words, selfish- ness. That is why the person without a jealous streak is as rare as the dodo. t “G. AS” . ‘The use of automobiles is increasing 170 per cent a year, while production of crude oil, from which gasoline:i pee is increasing: only 10 per cent a year. { These figures cause knitted brows at the Amer- ican Mining Congress, in Chicago. They become} of interest to you' only when you take pencil and paper and try to figure out when gasoline will go to $1 a gollon. Probably, never, says geologists. Oil wells are giving out. Enough oil, however, lies in western, shale rock to supply the world for centuries. Right/ now. it costs too much to extract by distillation. But a way will be found. GAMBLING Ancient Egyptians had a form of put-and-take| tops. These consisted of seven sticks, round on one side, flat on the other, shaken in a tall disc| box until one fell out. Samples of this interesting gambling device are brought from Egyptian! tombs by Prof. George A. Reisner, of Harvard. The Chinese for thousands of years have had ex- actly the same device. How did it get to Egypt? Did the Chinese once travel all over the world, as they claim? Antiquity may have had civiliza- tion as wonderfil as ours. REN? Landlords will cheer the ruling of a New York} court, that rents must be based on the landlord’s! investment, not on preset market value of the This reverses a ruling, made a few months ago! It decided that the landlord who bought at top prices, before the market broke, pay on that part of his investment which had vanished by depreciation. The case will be appealed. By the time it} reaches the Supreme Court, Judge Economics will] have applied the law of supply and demand. Com- petition by properties built at lower costs will same as it was 1000 years or more before Christ. ‘An Tidtan’ stigar mill, on the mortar“and pest? | force all properties to rent on the basis of replac emergency. | ADVENTURE | He escaped the sugar; it does sell many books for Sinclair Lewis and in-| Our changed world will puzzle him when he! t i ed (Florence ~) T’ve a picture in my “Aad as curly as can wae eee ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS By “ive Barton Roberts It was Nancy who discovered that queer things were, happening to Flatty Flounder ang’she called Nick order to grow up. The Twins watched Flatty curious- ly, and this is what they saw. First of all, one of the little fish boy's 'white sides, not the one he was lying on, but the upper one, began to change color. First it got gray, then it changed toa greeny brown, and -last quite slowly to a dark brown, “T .wonder if his underneath side ig getting brown, too,” said Nancy. “If it isn’t_he’ll be lopsided.” Flatty was too sound asleep by thig time to hear a word she said. But Nick peeped. He lifted up a little flap. of Flatty’s thin body. “No, he said in surprise. “Flatty’s still white underneath. When he wakes up and tries to swim, he'll be brown on one side and white on the other!” “Just wait and see,” said a sober voice nearby. “You've something to learn .about flounders.” It was Grandaddy Jellyfish swimming aw Next the Twins ‘ noticed Flatty fins. They were changing shape. Instead of a top and bottom fin, they were now both side fins, and matched exactly. But the most amazing thing of all happened then, Flattys underneath eye began to travel. It traveled ‘round on top of him and settled down right beside: the other eye at one corner of hig mouth and there it stayed. Suddenly both eyes open- er. “Now I'm grown,” be an- nounced. “My underneath side has become my tummy, and my upper side is my back. Now I'll go away. Nick, you may take down the ‘detour’ sign.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1921, N. E. A. Service) Natives of Ceneral Africa send out news by means of drum signals. ~ WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world’s standardremedy for kicney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL ae Tbe National Remedy of Holland fos id endorsed ment value. { i centurie! by Quoen ‘Wilhelmina, Al! druggists, three sizes, honk AND THE CATS ARE COMING BACK HER PICTURE Borner.) c watch-case, “ ‘Of a maiden fair to see; f Meir is of a reddish-golden, be; Eyes‘that seem to speak of heaven, While the pearl’s retulgent Is no brighter than the beauties ‘ Which between her ripe lips gleam. beam Would you like to ‘meet this maiden, Who has placed a°golden art, Like a fairy’s glad enchantment, All around my throbbing. heart? Certainly (’ll introduce her, an If you’ll only come with me— She’s my darling little daughter, And her age is almost three! { MANDAN NOTES 1 OO “Miquee’ Graham” Plays For Large . Minneapolis Audience Miquee Graham, whose real name to see. The tired little flounder boy | is Caroline Alice, and who is’ said to hand’t’ been just talking when he| possess/the most’ remarkable mem- said that he ‘had to go to sleep in| Ory in “Minneapolis and who is aon- sidered a musical prodigy by critics in Minneapolis and in eastern ‘cities, where she recenty gave concerts and also made records for a reproducing company, will ‘probably come to Man- dan during the winter months and will give a recital here. Mr...and Mrs. F. S. Graham, the little’ girl’s parents, are former Mandan resi- dents. Mr. Graham was formerly president of the Merchants National ‘bank of Mandan. The little girl, who is but five years of age, who can neither reach a full octave nor touch the piano pedals, when seated at the infrument, in- cludes compositions of ‘Chopin and Grieg in her repertoire ‘and plays many of these pieces correctly, after having heard them but jonce. Her power of concentration in music mat- yi \ ters is so great that psychologists wno have examined her say that such power would be exceptional even in a@ verson of mature years. (Mrs. Graham, Miquee’s mother, says that there are no members of either her or her husband’s families who have skiown marked musical ability. “I. attribute my little dauglyer’s ability to the fact that she has an unusually developed memory: ‘She played| the Chopin prelude, Opus 28, No. 6, only once, but had it practi- cally memorized at the end of tho first reading. -(Miquee recently played before an audience of.600 persons at the Minne- i ‘apolis. School of Music. . - |Campbell-Tokasch _ Nuptials Yesterday na bi Si 4 Miss Mary “Rosé Campbell, /daugh- ter of B. J. Campbell and Joseph: To- kasch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Tokasch, were married Monday morn- ing at the St.: Joseph church by Rev. Fr. Leo. ) The bride was attended by Miss Clementine Staudinger and the groom was attended by his brother. Others attending were the immediate rela- tives. Following the ceremony the wed- ding party left for the home of the bride south of the city where a wed- |ding dinner was served and a dance at the same place was held last eve- ning. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Tokasch will make their home in Mandan. J. M. Devine of Minneapolis, a for- mer resident of Mandan, is a patient at the Deaconess hospital. The nurses’ staff of the Mandan Deaconess’ hospital entertained Sal- urday evening at a Hallowe’en par- tv at the: nurses home. A number of frietidg from the city were guests of the évening. Queen Mary’s colors are geranium red with a narrow blue stripe. wHat’S THIS $— "SX PERSONS ‘MEET SERIOUS makes SEVGN que ACCIDENT JIN TY TODAY —- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, ’21 cople who find them- selves chronically, cor.st! pated. Dr. Caldwell 'sSyrup 4 Pepsin will give you daily §§ elimination in a mild, gentle out ene 2 | medicines of all kinds c: jed with. It is much better carthartics, salts, min- be diape at then dra evals, pills, ete, DR. CALDWELL'S | SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE Thousands of old folks will only | | take Dr. Caldwell'’s Syrup Pepsin. It | f is a safe vegetable compound of Egyp- f tian Senna and other simple 1>zative | herbs with pepsin. The formula is on i package. A dosecosts lessthanacent. HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE Few escape constipation, so even if you do not reduive @ laxative at this moment let me send ou a Half-Ounce Trial Bottle of my Syrup Pepsin FREE OF CHARGE so that you will have it handy when needed. Simply Zend sour name and address to Dr. W. B. Galdwell, sta Washingzon St., Monticello, Ti. Write metoday. Some political plums are grafted. The most popular restaurant drink is soup. That key ta success opens a bank account, ! Facing the music is: hardest when the music is jazz. Let’s hope Japan’s policy of silence includes her guns. If the ex-kaiser is really broke. he may get in Dutch. omen may not.-have their way, but they have it. When a girl's eyes get too blue they need looking into, It isn't where a politician stands; but the way he will jump. Cheaper farm produce will come to us if we mend our ways. Babe Ruth is- the highest paid in- fant prodigy in vaudeville. The woods ought to be beautiful; posses are always scouring them: One state that allows wimen to work 24 hours a day is the state of matri- mony. Harding: saw the: Republican party while in Georgia and says he is look- ing. fine. A democracy must. not. include pedestrians; the world hasn’t been made safe for them. Trotzky, of New: York, certainly did make a name for himself. He has changed it to Travers. “Fifty-four per cent of our homes are rented,” says the census. Others must charge too much. If Papafrangoes succeeds in bor- rowing that $33,000,000 for Greece he will be some sweet Papa. “Sue for. Breach of Promise”— headline. What's the matter, Sue? Edna’ Krippendorf, of Cincinnati, swallowed a dime and then a penny for war tax. An X-ray ‘showed small change in Edna, OPINION OF THE SUPREME COURT. From Williams County. {John Peterson, plaintiff-respondent. vs. Isaac Ogland and Nels Ogland, defendent-appellants. Syllabus: i 1, Where; on a motion for dissolu- \tion of an attachment, the existence of the grounds of the attachment is properly denied by the defendant. the ' burden is placed upon plaintiff lo j show the existence of such grounds; and. where he fails to sustain such burden, the attachment should be dis- solved. im ¢ Appesl from the district court of Williams county, Moellring, J., defend- ants appeal from an order-denying a motion to dissolve an attachment. Reversed. Per curiam opinion. Robinson, J., dissenting. Fisk & Shafer, Williston, N.°D., at torneys for appellant. Burdick & Knox, Williston, N. D., attorneys for respondent. 4 PART PERSON TOO MANY Cape Town, S. A., Nov. 1—A tene- ment house landlord in Port Eliza- beth was fined $7.50 because of over- crowded conditions there. Sanitary inspectors reported the landlord had one and three-fourths persons more than. allowed for the air space fur nished. Saccharine is stance known. DID PAIN DISTURB > YOUR SLEEP? HE pain and torture of sheus matism can be quickly reli by an application of Sloan’s the sweetest sub- | Liniment. It brings warmth, ease and comfort and lets you sleep soundly. Always have a bottle handy and \ epply when you feel the first twinge. denetrates withous rubbing. , It’s splendid to take the paia out of tired, aching muscles, sprains strains, stiff joints, end lame backs. For forty years pain’s enemy. your neighbor. At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40. Sloan. Liniment