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i Editor . Week, now being observed. Every father during ~ 7 pulpit. : FAGETWO FHEBISMARCK TRIBUNE TS Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. 'D.,' ab Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MA’ : : : a = | Koreign Re resentatives | ete DETROIT | Marquette Bldg. t i Kresge Bldg. H MITH NEW vous? Ne BURNS AND SMITH ch Ave. Bide. . MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use geod abtication of all news dispatches credited to it or got otherwise credited in this paper and also- the Jogal news published herein. All Miehts. of republication of special dispatches hereia are also resenved. / MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year. ie Daily by mail, per year (in ech CHICAGO ismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of Pe tacts E STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER cake (Established 1873) < FATHER AND SON Nearly every elderly man, now living, looks: back to his boyhood, and recalls that his father] was strict, solemn and stern. In those days, chil- dren usually kept in awe of their fathers—ruled by. fear. = 3 " That system, now changed, had its advantages. | When father said something, he meant it. When | he- exchanged confidences with his son, he ‘spoke words of wisdom. To,son, father was an\oracle, | aman of wisdom, a figure mighty and with a pe-, culiar atmophere of mystery. ‘Times have.changed. Children in our day are! ruled more by reasoning and by guidance than by fear of father and the’ wood-shed’s paddles. But, in the change, childhood has lost something of great value—the intimacy of proper attention by father to son. ' 4 Fathers in 1921 are too, busy. . Telephone, tele- graph, fast mails and_express trains, along with a growing intricacy of civilization’s economic machine kept father’s mind on many parts of the country or other countries, instead of concentrat- ed near home. Son suffers by neglect.” In ‘the endless procession of! special weeks! comes One really worth while—Father-and-Son | this. week should take time to cultivate his son’s confidence, take a special interest in son’s activi- ties; and impart words of wisdom. While we are| at it, it would be a good idea to make every week Father-and-Son Week, LAR al Ace YOUR SON Every father, as soon as the doctor announces that “it's a boy,” begins nursing a hope that. son| will follow in father’s footsteps. ne It is a great comfort, in old age, for John Blank to see “Jolin Blank & Sons” nailed over the door of his shop./’ It means that: the institution which father- toiled so hard to build up will live; on after his death. A machinist may earriestly want his son to “get an education and have a better chance,” but deep, down in his heart he knows-that he/would be.ex- tremely ‘happy if son became the finest tool maker in_ the world. : ; ; No doubt Thomas Lincoln, poor farmer, hoped his ‘son would become a rich farmer. Abraham Lincoln became president. Lawyer John Adams probably urged his son, who became a president, to study law. So on, all through his boyhood, is eagerly watch- ed by father to see if he displays any of the par-| ticular brand of ability that pa turned into a means of livelihood. For 101 years the Rev: Andrew Broaddus has occupied the pulpit of the Salem Baptist church at Sparta, Vt. The first Andrew Broaddus, preaching in this church from 1820 until his death in 1848, Was suceeeded by his son, another Andrew Broaddus. In turn, his son inherited the “Now there is # fourth’ Andrew Broaddus, son of the present pe », So far, he has not show- ed ‘much inclinatio 46 take up the work when his father retires from the ministry. = You would have to travel a good many days to find a similar instance of heredity. \ =:Many businesses, built up by father and sons years ago, are, still operating under ‘the old firm name. But control of the business has passsed iftto the hands of outsiders, frequently the fam: ily not being represented at all. 7 It may be disappointing to a father for his son to turn to a totally different line of work. But, after all, it is a wise provision of the scheme of things. If son always followed father in the same busi- ness or line of work, the world would run in a rut. Many lines of activity would become overcrowded, one father’s place being taken by three sons, later. by nine grandsons, still later by 27 great-grand- sons. None would be available to fill new positions that are opened yearly by new fields of activity. The wonder.of what your son will become is one of the most thrilling mysteries of your lifetime. t : 2 LUCK , Twenty thousand dollars is quite a piece of change, particularly if you are 4 telephone girl and win it in a lottery. That is the luck that fell to Mrs. Maria Ramirez, widow and chief operator for the telephone company at Pinar del Rio, Cuba. A lot of folks will wonder what Maria will do 0 a Fy i f H ide Bismarck “99 |the Department of Agriculture. All the way from Daily by mall Pade e cergharerd z cane 6.00'South Carolina to Kansas, Bob White is abund-! |$225. That is getting close: to the» $140 fare Instead, |. They not their mother, won-the $20;000-Motk= the children, in advance. PHENOMENAL America’s youngest married,couple with the largest family is claimed by Halletsville, Texas. | August Dornak, 46 years old, and his wife, 44,1 have 18 children, all living and at home. How would you have liked to support 18 chil- dren for the Jast four years, considering the cost| of living? Just imagine—40 eggs for breakfast?’ Oh, death, where is thy sting? | QUAIL - Quail are more plentiful than for years, says; ant. : é This is good news, for those who like quail on| toast and live in states with open seasons. What a pity, though, that the brutal hunting instinct still survives.in man. If we stopped killing birds for two decades, America would be a paradise of! bird songs now rarely heard: i Hunting is the desire to get something for) nothing. : GRIND Grace Wilshire, ‘Los . Angeles ‘school teacher, married Luther Drake, Omaha banker. A year) ago she found herself a widow with half a million) dollars in cash. \ She returns to Los ‘Angeles, back to the old teaching job. A school teacher with $500,000 is; the eighth wonder of the world. Observe, also, | that Mrs. Drake could not keep away from work. Same with you, if you became suddenly rich.| After the novelty wore off, “the old grind” would! look like the Promised Land., | 1 OLB 2S OCre iS yA If you wanted. to take an airplane trip from, New York to Havana a year.ago, the ticket cost $750 each way. Now the fare has been. cut to| charged on the railroad and steamship route. ' More important! The airplane has reduced to 19 hours’ flying time the journey from New York| to Havana, distance 1521 miles, which by railroad and fast boat takes four,days. The airplane is eliminating distance. | Soon you will be able to travel as eheaply by Air| as by rail and boat. Safer, tod. Inventors’ will see to that. : * -. CHAMPION An Orpington hen Jaid 314 eggs in 336 days, at the Délaware College experiment station. ‘This is said: to break the'jworld’s record. Four. thousand dollars has been offered for the hen, but ‘she’ is not for sale. . ‘ > / The hen doesn’t deserve much credit. It was the-brains of science, clever at cross-breeding, that created that record number of eggs. Some day those brains will make every hen produce as much as this $4000 Orpington. Bs Most of our important activity in this gerera- tion is experimentation—making valuable discov- eries for our descendants. . SAVED ‘ Foregts in the United States cover 463,000,000 acres—more than four acres for each of us. Fires! have been destroying 10,000,000 acres a year. Re- forestation requires a minimum of 20_years. However— In nine months, on the Pacific coast alone, gov- £:)) wttiseoverdd 832 i | } a, im the’ west-| ern'woodss= => ‘ean aa > Government aviation is paying for itself, ‘dol- lar fot! dollar, and yielding a profit,-in that one item alone—discovering’ forest fires before they get beyond control, ~ : i - \ 2 EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments. reproduced, in ‘this column may jot express the opinion of The Tribune. They are’ prese nted ‘here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. ) CLEAR-HEADED LABOR F “Big Six,” the New York branch of the Inter- ational Typographical union, has vote to refer. to arbitration its wage controversy with the em-; nloying printers. The executive council of the monthly to.maintain various ‘waning strikes, | and wisely. seeks to avoid further burdens of the; kind. Strike sentiment among the official circles of therajlroad brotherhoods is said to be waning. Thé| leaders. are not eager to precipitate a strike of} railroad men at a time when the country is full of idle workers, hunting for jobs. President Lee of the trainmen ‘declares he will not respond to the strike vote of his organization until the other brotherhoods ‘unite in such a@ movement. He has jpassed the buck, with full knowledge that the \others will dodge it. : Shrewd labor. leaders know that this is no.time ifor strikes. Only the reckless Howats batter their heads against the stone wall of onditions in the industrial world. But even the wiser ones might consider the $800,000 indemnity burden of the I. T. U., and thereby appreciate in full the THE BISMARCK TRIBUND ers are the same, the world over, They. hever get |” ‘anything. Whatever comes thelr way belongs to, OO: Aw, ay be CS eigen ; . a! femme try @me A Toe hurt your ‘ola catch Gosh, bain os dnqavy 3 ys ; yon Kin Teen ap Sg'? thot as | Belg pins eemer Ie LT : pane V Tee you Corry ny rifle les€ week 7 ¢. ATMORNING - (Florence Borner.);; )7 RETO? The robin with his roundelay >: Path wal me at the break of day; "The® bluebird in the peach tree swings, And to is God a hymnal sings; Then soon bird voices fill the air, And blend their music rich and rare. The sun, from out his hidden steep, B me Above the hills begins io peep; While myriads of twinkling eyes, + fi Stig ok Grow faint and fainter in the skies; i Then, as the hilltops turn to gold, bt i ~The moon grows pale, and dim andscold, ' The dew that fell thruout the night; Now sparkles in the morning light; And gleaming there-it seems to me pike candles on a coulsties tree; seemingly with a happy shout : The sunbeams blow the candles out. : ath WHAT PAPERS ARE SAYING , ‘ABOUT THE RECALL END HATRED The political turmoil the past. five years has beetone of class liatred and in'many comiignities has teached the Tome, creating unfriendliness between neighbor and nejghbor. This should not be. continued, “It is’ a’ difficult | solemnly pledged. to this, to bring in | millions of Cheap Money Immediate- ly, not next year, and we hope for the|' sake of the hard-pressed farmers ‘that the Iva administration can keep. its volunfary. pledges. matter for axbommunits. ot town ‘to advance -undefi{those conditions. It requires the cooperate and jefforts of Again, lest. wa forget, don’t: forgét that the great and vital.grain grading end railroad rate lawsuits are now in the hands of Attorney, General-elect I. T. U. is collecting and disbursing $800,000 °t all. © This appliés to the, town, com- munity, County and state.’'It is time for-the? friendly; ties) to:‘be cinitdd “in North. Dakota ;;and’ ;cease . following theories andl s that will not get, them or the ‘st te anywhere.’ Those who have; béami(led: to believe ‘that the business man is their enemy|selves that Johnson would fight hard- should’ form ie {ty And unis with them:|/er to save these laws than ever -Bill in getting the things, worth’ ¥ hile for |‘Lemke did. It is further. true» that the. community!!“‘They will ‘then learn | Commisstoner-of. Agriculture and La- that the business: man is their friend} bor-elect Kitchen derided the grain and one of, ‘them:—Carsop, Press. grading act, but he also is pledged to —_—< enforce this actif elected. A TREMENDOUS TASK As for-the railroad rate cases, ‘With the counting of the ballots cast} Lemke ,has practically won’ them al- in, the .recall -electiof,i North Dakota/ ready and, hence, if Johnson now loses. ceased.to be a modern Utopia for so-| out inthe courts, mo one can blame cialists who have for the past five| Bill Lemke, though somebody will try years crowded about. t he public! to do so. i troughs and shoved the’ welfare of the! Lest you forget, don’t you farmers fon... It is trie that a8 late as last ‘September Johnson ap- perred in’ the Federal coprt in Fargo and tried to have the grain grading ace declared unconstitutional, but the loot the -purse of the taxpayer andj stands pledged to immediately get you use the proceeds as they desired but; millions of Cheap ‘Money.—McLean more: especially to further their own) County Independent. ends. ’ ¥ ‘ ‘The banishment of three of the lead- ing “state officials, however, canuot in| now produce one locomotive and eight itself bring the state out of the chaos: freght cars daily,, besides many ma- created by laws designed: by socialists! chines and devices. ») 71 for their own particular Benefit. Only the earnest ‘cooperation’ of all loyal citizefis ‘can do this “and then it will) sible to view, old. paintings as they take time. ! appeared originally by means of pol- No single class of people can place} arized light. .c the affairs of the state. once mote on}. t a stable basis. It will take the ef- forts of all. More than that it. willl take a far longer period of time to re-| cohetruct the stafe than it has taken} the ‘socialist leaders who have domin- ated the government far the past five} Mobis i ECL TE? A French scientist has i de. it pos- | years to wreck its laws and ‘destroy its! AES A LEAGUE PAPERS VIEW i iLest: you farmers forget, especially | you I: V..A. farmers, don’t forget that; Nestos, Johnson/and ‘Kitchen go into| office plédged by thet? own word and] thé ‘word of all the I, V. A. bankers/ and leaders to.at once bring Cheap) ay into the state, Govéernor-elect; Nestos having stated that all he hadj to do to bring in $35,000,000 to $40,000,-! 00 of ‘Credit would be to strike the; barren “rocks of high finance with a few telephone messagos‘and streams; of money’ would immediately gush} forth into the arid deserts of North! Dakota. . | ‘All the Jeaders of the I: V. A.\stand) ‘KEEP LOOKING YOUNG It’s Easy—If You Know Di. ’ Edwards’ Olive Tablets JZ, The secret of keeping young is to feel y to do this you mus$ watch your iver and bowels—there’s no Deed of having a sallow complexion—dafk rings r your eyes—pim bilious ‘look in your face—dull-eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness comes from credit.—Dickinson Press. | DRIVIN G THAT CARs ‘anactive bowels and liver. | VERS Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician | WN tHE! in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com. . Wit HiME pesnt mixed with olive oil toact on the { er and bowels, which he.gave to his | patients for years. 1 ‘Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, are gentle in their j action yet always effective. They bring should enjoy by toning up the liver, and fact that strikes are losing games, not only at with the money. Two guesses aren’t needed. She has four daughters and two sons to support. le tee jPhiladelphia Bulletin. 2S tits 5 at |this: particular time, but nine times out of ten.—} ‘ j | | about that natural buoyancy which all | clearing the system of-impurities. | Dr.Edwards'OliveTablets are known by their olive color, 15¢ and 30c, ADEN Iva leaders have all pledged them-fdren long enough to hunt his supper The famous Krupp works at Hssen, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, °21 > Some. movie actresses marry ame ideal and some a good deal. ) 3 Gun silence is golden. | Perhaps England is called the ‘Mother country because she has ‘so many worries. sf The taxpayers think our streets are .| paved with gold, |. Suppose the chorus girl who got {£19,000 for a broken heart had broken }| 8 Meg! \ It's hard to sing in A flat and B natural, * i i / If, things don’t come your way you {may be'on the wrong road. H x paras Radicals want to pull down the American eagle and have a lark, Some are misused car deajersy , Why is it a fade to critiiize women? Half onr parents are women. Uneasy Yes the head ‘that wants to wedr a crown. DENS foo Since we are’for the Legion and the Legion is for a bonus, what are we hesitating for? Joshua couldn’t make the modern son stand still. CONTR a We suppose the new Swiss dancer has a Swiss movement. It must be awful to be too poor to need an operation. STDS WB tabeini ‘fives with care is a: good teory, ‘but ‘it takes coal, eDfOuH IIe; A man has figured that-a snail can | make a mile in fourteen days. | 8ress is oug of the race. Con- 7A thing of beauty is usually an ex- | pense forever. . The melancholy days have gone, ;the saddest of the year, and now we \all are “happy ‘cause we know just what to wear. ; —— e { ADVENTURE OF - THE-TWINS © By Olive Barton Roberts 7 But Mr. Fifteen-Spine Stickleback Fish coming and eating up the eggs avhile: his wife was away, for -»Mr. Soaritieh “was haying ‘trouble. of! his ‘pwn, As the Twins passed his*front ‘door, wasn’t he fussing around, too, ‘about not being able to leave his chil- For, and isn’t it funny, Mr. Boar-Fis was as much, afraid of his fierce little neighbon as Mr. Stickleback was ot him, neither guessing about the other. worst of all. ,He, too, wasa shore- fish and lived -right along there near ithe others. Of course, he might have closed down his roof, and gone and hunted his wife, for Mr. Goby kept the eggs, which would soon be little gob- des, tucked away in a hollow place in the sand under a great cockle-shell. But he was afraid of the pipe-fishes. state aside in their greedy desire to| forget that the Nestos administration} jong and thin, like grass-blades, for they could lift up the shell just as easy and slip their mouths undtr, and Mr. Coby knew it. To say nothing of Spike Star-Fish, who. could pick *p a cockle-shell with his suckers as easily 3 you.could pick up a raisin {cookie ith yous fingers. Yes, poor, dear Mr. Goby décided that he’d stay at home nd statve-to-death before he’d let n he was cross just the same about Mrs. Goby gadding. | Nancy and N¥ck went, on to pir. y Zz THAT WAS GVERETT TRYE OvR: STREET. INnSPECcTSRsS ~Way down south in the land 6f cot-] ton, the’ price is good_but freight rates || rotten. i fy didn’t need to worry about Busy Boar- | But poor, dead Mr. Goby ‘was the! ything happen to his children. But! i | | EDWIN. W. FIELD Milwaukee, Wis. “I'm convinced if 1 had taken Tan- lac twp years, ago, when my troubles first begen, I would have beech saved a world .of suffering,’ said “Ed. W. Field, $38 Jefferson St., Milwaukee, Wis. “My ‘caso pnoved that when a’man's stomach goes wrong, everything goes wrong with him. The first thing I noticed out of the way’ was: loss’ of appetite and next; that ‘mo matter how sparingly sf eter| was swe ‘to BF have an attack of indigestion. This | was two‘yéars ago and tyem that time on, until, efter I started on Tanlac. I kept’ going down-hill at -a:steady ‘rate. I finally got sq I couldn't walk a cou- ple of blocks without having to stop and rest and Iwas so nervous: that fften I sat up in a chair all night long. “Tanlac has.made a/new man out of me, my stomach is as sound as a doi- lar and. feel fine all ‘the time. Jam a-firm believer in Tanlac, because ‘I } | know it delivers the goods.” leading drug: . “Tanlac is sold by | gists everywherel” Adv. SS Pipe-Fish’s house, but he was away. They met him, howover, hunting for jhis wife. “I take the eggs along when I go,” said ‘he, tapping hfs pocket. “Then they're. safe.” .The . kiddies looked on in wonder, for Mr. : Pipe- Fish looké too thin to: move) himself around, let alone‘a'batch of , eggs. + What queer ‘uns the Wiggtefins were! {To Be Continued): a: {4 (Copyright, 1921,,.N. B. A. Service) } es |S [DIVORCE | J} .EDUCATION | Soo (By Winona Witcox ; Can one. be inoculated against di- yorce, as, agaihst. typhoid?) ‘ Doubtless, by fortifying oneself with information about the:,primitive int etincts of man, and the impulses, thé | working of the human..mind, the in- stability of human emotions, and the will _as.a-stabilizer of human conduct. “But tHat stuff is..too high brow. |It’s a post-graduate .course for stu- | dents jomeone protests, ‘INot at-all. A liberal edueation it may be, but it is of a kind: not im- poasible to a nation which in ofe gen- | eration learned how to contre typhoid, jand malaria; and how. to.swat the fly. There's this difference, however: we wanted to get rid of the physical diseases and we swatted the fly with glee. We are not so anxious to rid the race of the emotional diseases the composite of which is divorce. We can~<kill off the germ, of di- vorce only if we wish to do so. The wish must set. the:.will-to..work.~ Jt is not doing. so at the present.1ime. Why? ae , Kipling’s ‘ vérse puts thus: “These are the four that are never | content; that have never been filled "since tho world began— ~: | “Jacala’s mouth, ‘and the giut cf \the Kite, and the hands of the Ape; jand the Eyes of Man.’”* * ., a ‘To the unfilled eye of man is due ‘the phetiomenal growth of divorce to- day. On an average, more than twice aS many divorces are ‘granted to the wife as to the husband. fs Now this is unpleasant information for’a girl who is filling her hope chest and looking up tho etiquet ot wed dings. But it is jfformation-which she ought fo have suf fertfover as-well. ° Cupid issues no ‘insurance -policies. Proper precaution prevents many a ‘conflagration. If-it were admitted be- fore marriage, that the man is twiee as. Hable-as the’ woman to give cause for divorce, the well disposed lover would gladly set a waich upon emotions which might. prove unstable. ‘And engaged parsons would profit- |ably discuss a truth as ‘put by Chest: erton.. He writes of “the dance of dt | vorce: 5 “If aman had a hundred houses, there would still’ be more houses ‘than he. had -days’ in which to. dream of them: if ‘9 man had -a.hundred-wives there would still be more women than’ we could ever know. | *‘* .* TI be- lieve that behind the-art-and phileso- phy of our-time there is a considerable clement of this utmatural hunger. * * They are crying for the world, and if they had it; they would want asother: * * © What. is witally needed: every- whero, in-ethies; in poetry as in poli- {'tics, ig choice; a ‘creative power in the will as-well as in the mind.” ONCHITIS — Awbedtime rub.the throat and 4 chest thoroughly with— 3 Ick F VAPORUB | tho “reason \ TYPEWRITERS All makes~-