The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 19, 1921, Page 4

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ae ‘PHEBISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered ut the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. | GEORGE D. MANN 7 Bite Foreign Raprosentatl eet NY G. LOGAN PAYNE DETROIT Kresge Bldg. 'D SMITH Fifth Ave. Bidg. : | CHICAGO Marquette Bidg. : PAYNE, BURNS AN NEW YORK - - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the nee | for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or) got otherwise credited in this paper and also’ the local | mews published herein. All rights of repub! are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. | Daily by carrier, per year. $7.20 | Daily by mail, per year (in Daily by mail, per year (in state outsi Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) lication of special dispatches herein | ismarek).. 5.00, veeseesecce 6:00! | | YOUR WEAK POINT | Mevies show you strong, plump Hawaiians, | splendid specimens of health. But real life dif- fers from reel life. The native Hawaiians are a! dying race. H Legislation, now being provided, will attempt : to get the Hawaiians to give up tenement life and | return to the open-air existence of their ances- : tors. Government land will be opened for them. | It appears that the white man, as in the case of , the American.Indian, is civilizing the Hawaiian | by exterminating him: The people of the ukulele “Jand cannot survive the boctlegger and the dis-| exses of congested civilization. | They Jack the resistance which the white ra has been accumulating gradually for centuries. i | ce | Ge i Your ancestors of 500years ago probably were! as healthy and as strong. agoxen. But. if they could reappear in our civilization, changed ways of living would quickly deal them a death,blow. I .- So, too, would you die quickly if you were| = whisked back to the rigorous life of previous cen-, turies. We are coddled.now. The least exposure} . te the elements, and we “catch our death of cold.” Resistance to weather and climate has been de-! “ stroyed. | In its place, we have developed resistance, ‘hands and knees and bump forehead thrice on the! you find business?” That always breaks the ice. through life by raids on the banks of small towns Hail to Muncie!’ The more bank robbers that visit the town in the future the fewer of them will be left to visit other towns. WHY YOU DO IT A league against handshaking—the Ligue Con- tre La Poignee de Main—is growing like wild-fire in Paris. Its members are trying to stop the} spread of disease germs by physical contact. Much explanation is said to be required, to avert, duels when one Frenchman refuses to shake an-/ other’s hands. | . Is our ancient’ custom of shaking hands doom- ed? Why should two people shake hands, any It signifies no more than when two orientals rub; noses. The custom started in cave-man days when the! fighting right arm was extended ‘to indicate that; the war club was not tu be used. \ In New Guinea, when natives meet, they pluck) a leaf and place it on the head, instead of shak-’ ing hands. The leaf is their symbol of friendship | and peace. Why do men lift their hats when meeting wo-| men? This custom probably dates from the days; when knights raised the steel visors or face-lids! of their helmets, to get a better look at the ladies | and to display their own facial charms. | Yet, if you uncover your head in the interior of | Turkey, it is considered indecent. | When you are in Rome, dosas Romans do. If in China, and meeting an old friend, fall on} ground. Meeting the same friend here, slap him on! the back, pump-handle his arm and say, “How do! Our peculiar, customs, such as shaking hands} and removing hats instead:of:coats when meeting} the ladies, all date back“intd'’thd remotest his- tory. They demonstrate how custom becomes a habit, how a national habit becomes hereditary — in| short, the human tendency to go on ‘doing the| same thing forever. We run, mechanically, in certain ruts, genera- tion after generation. Possibly the present age of automobiles will; | | | | i | i i against impure water, air and food. City people eliminate the handshake and develop a generation | : live in small apartments, cages that would destroy that carries auto horns for greeting each other. _@ savage. The human body, most delicate of all machines, | “develops and changes resistance or protection to; fit environment and geography. ! Demonstrating how finely this resistance is ad-' justed: You live in one locality and are healthy. ,You move. In the new town, the water doesnot | agree with you. . The. least .exposure, starts, you| # sneezing. Changed sources of food supply upsets your stomach. Changed conditions of living call; dormant muscles into use, wearying you quickly. . Your unconscious mind sees behind these things and you say, “I’ll be all right as soon as I’m ac-) *.climated.” Most sickness results from breaking your rou-| tine—departing from habitual paths and doing : things against which your body hitherto had not) : found it necessary to rear defenses. & Changes in living conditions and environment; should be made gradually. Hawaiians changed | “ too suddenly. If their transition to the civilized : state had been spread out over centuries, they | would not be a vanishing race. ‘ MUNCIE, KAN., AWOKE o Muncie, Kan., is the kind,of a town that would “he termed by the polished city gents of the bank, .. robbing fraternity a “hick town.” It is not a big! “city. Perhaps one or two hundred souls, all told, | ‘enjoy the advantages of life in the town of| Muncie. : * It was that idea, perhaps, which led three! :young men from Kansas City yesterday to take; “an early mornin, drive to Muncie, in a stolen car,| : of course, with the purpose of robbing the Muncie bank. - sibly by the same men. Anyway, the bank was _ robbed, and Muncie didnot relish the experience of seeing bandits come into the town, hold up; z their bank and ride away unmolested. Muncie! “made provision against a repetition of the inci-, dent. The young men who rode out to Muncie yester-! =day morning to turn a trick in a “hick town’) ¢found the journey back to safety in the big city a! _long one, by reason of Muncie’s preparation and the co-operation of Turner, also a small town. 2One of them, it was reported yesterday, probably “never will take another ride of that kind. And “another one will probably take his next ride on a ,railroad train to Lansing, for Kansas doesn’t look “with favor on the pastime of robbing banks. The! game of banditry has never been popularized in Kansas. . to the bank robbing profession, but it has afford- “ed an example which other small towns might of yesterday fully justify whatever expense and trouble Muncie. expended in preparing itself aganist unwelcome visitors of that type. A re- ception of that character in every town would have a wholesome effect on the ambitious gunmen -who live in‘Kansas ‘City and help to run the poli- ers, but always upon herself: Jf jt is necessaty Lauzanne in the North American Review. Recently, the bank at Muncie was robbed, pos-|, ino nation can rise higher than its manhood.” He + Muncie not only has afforded an effective lesson| Stoke on every hole. Or you can cheat. | gagainst bandit raids. The results of the incident, follow. to advantage in the matter of protection|it into his play. FRANCE WILL NOT FAIL | France, arrive what may, will face her financial | destiny as she has faced her military destiny. She! will neither beg nor crumble. She knows that | now more'than ever she must-not count upon oth-| she will stand up once more, and déspite the bur- den that threatens to-crush her, she willfind in| herself the energy necessary to carry it stilt fur- ther and still higher. tied Some European country may perhaps go bank- rupt in'1922; but it will not be France.—Stephane : STINNES Hugo Stinnes, mysterious German multi-mil- lionaire who seems destined to have a finger in| every important German business, “is buying his way into the North German Lloyd Steamship Company.” Next day he puts 125,000,000 marks into Ger- man movies. Nearly every day, a new Stinnes venture, thrilling Wall Street. Bankers are wondering, who is Stinnes? Real mystery is, who is back of Stinnes? Some one, you can gamble on that. Is it the military: party? Stinnes is rated as a, billionaire. Even Rockefeller couldn’t do that in half a decade. | EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or express the opinion, of ‘The Tribune. They are pres not here ma: cited, in order that our readers may have both sides of i jseues Oe ree eescaeey Tune teow ok tte ee CLEAN SPORT AND CLEAN NATIONS It is cheering to find the University of Minne- sota apologizing, and apologizing outright and unequivocally, because the coach of its football team played a trick in numbering players, which amounted to an evasion of the conference rules. It is cheering because it matters a good deal to} America that its cclleges should mean to win or lose by the merit of their play. Said President Ganfield of Carroll college the other night: ‘No nation can be cleaner than its sport, no man can be cleaner than his play, and| meant, we suppose, that the kind of man you are shows up more clearly than anywhere else in your! play. You do the thing you want to do, no one compelling. If you like, you can play a lazy man’s game, taking whatever scorc drops out of the hat. ‘Or you can fight for every possible inch, every | ailments indicate disordered kidneys. Cheating in sport doesn’t hurt one’s adversary | {much. It only fools the cheater, who gains-noth- ling at all. But if a man is a cheater, he will carry | We need clean sport in America. Perhaps we jneed it now more than at some other times. For word seems to have got around to some men down ‘at Washington that.if you can cheat other na- tions and get away with it, you’re pretty smart. Minnesota apologizes for an evasion of the con- how?| . | Nick knew about, for he gave a whoop} (Florence Down in the depths of sadness, Into the Vale of Far from all joy Striving but all in vain; Comes a voice filled with mercy, Saying: “all is not loss’— Over the precipice gleaming, 1 see a cross. Out from the depths of sorrow, Into the Vale of Hope, Seeing a new tomorrow, Bringing a wider ‘Trusting each da: Unto a land afar, ‘High in-the heavens beaming, oot 4 I see a star. ADVENTURE OF | THE‘ TWINS By, Olive, Raxton Roberts f — is | ! betel (Nancy and Nick had ,put on their} sweaters! @fii' tariie an@tan down io; their, favorite play ground under the; old ckéstnut- tree in the; meadow. The} tree had phen busy alf’summer and: autumn. in its awn quie: way, although after its Id#ély, féatherty, golden blos- soms had disappeared in July, no one; had noticed.much,whatit was doing. | ‘But now they were to ‘find out,, the; Twins were, for suddenly Dick stooped ; and picked up a round, greeny-yell-! low, prickly thing cracked open at one end, and looking awfully like a secret ,. inside, like a dark-brown, satiny, de-! licious secret, and one evidently that! of delight.. “Oh, look, Nancy!” he cried. “Just lookee! It’s the first) chestnut-burr! ‘Let’s open it and Bel} the nuts!” H He carried it over to the big gray! stone you already know about, chil- | dren, and if you don’t I'll tell you that: it was where the Twins’ adventures} first began, and where another one; was about to begin, although, of! course, that’s a secret that I shouldn’ mention perhaps, fior Nancy and Nick| never so much as:suspected what was | in store for them. ‘Nancy ran for a little stone to han mer with and Nick laid his prize o! nice flat place, handling it very care fully, you may be sure, for chestnut burrs are stingy things. - Suddenly out of the autumn still ness came a sound they knew well voice. “Good morning, my dears!” i said, ‘“I.see that Jack Frost has donc something useful at last. He's help-; ing the nut-trecs to unload their} ” oroh, you dear old Magical Mush H room!” cried Nancy. “Where are you? | Ch. there you are! I see you now. We're so glad to see you, aren't we, Nick? Where have you been? You'll have to tell us all about yourself.” How, with Nancy rattling on so, could Mr. Mushroom tell them atout the Fairy Queen and Pim Pim? (To Be Continued) 5 (Copyright, 1921, N. E. A. Service) ADVICE FOR WOMEN WHO SUF- FER “] advise every woman Who suffers with kidney trouble to try Foley Kid- ney Pills,” writes Mr3- Bessie Brawn- er 2522 Scoville Ave., Cleveland, 0. “1 could not do my. housework, but since taking Foley Kidney Pills I feet like a new woman and am able to do my work.” Rheumatic pains, swollen ankles, backache, stiff joints, sore muscles and sleep disturbing bladder i Foley Kidney Pills act promptly. Multigraphing, Addressing, Mailing, Mailing Lists. Business Service Co., First floor. Hoskins | Block, Phone 662. @ BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA w Kaowh all over the Northwest for Quality tics ofthe municipality, but who make their way fo aaeeee maa ) ference rule.—Milwaukee Journal. | ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS ® | SAN MR,TAILOR = CANT You MAKE ME A Sul PATTERNED on THAT Sl¥Le’ 2 FAITH UNTED STATES aie VERY PLEASING AND COMFY Borner.) Pain, and gladness, scope; y sor guidance, ** Sa a a | AM A MONARCH (By H. 'S.: Lovach) Before my brcath the’ earth must freaze, © Dias And bare stand bush trees; ‘ wave my sceptre o’er the lgnd And straightway all its: life banned. and! “naked I is From regions of the North I call The sombre cloud batalions, all; I marshal them in heaven high, And bar the sunlight from the sky. ‘With skillful hand designs I trace ‘On window panes, of flowers and lace; p T howl and whistle nound ‘about Till scarce a soul dare venture out. Across the lake I blow my breath And all the waves are still as death, 1 forge.them fast in fetters cold, Tama monarch strong and bold. Where’er 1 Breathe, lo, over. night = The blossoms fall: before my blight; nd where at eve their fragrance fel! The dawn reveals icicle, \ A RINE High in the Northland is my ‘home? Amid eternal ice I roam, 1 am the! winter hard and cold, Tam a monarch strong and holds! jXou HAT — 174 t REMEMBER, SMITH, | 1 PROMOTED YoU FROM TH WELL, fou WON'T DO} IT HAS GROWN MuctH eo Smack Mt | SUPREME COURT | Ff eee ee From Ransom County ‘Henry O. Olson, Plaintiff and Re- spondent, vs. Horton Motor company, a aorporation, W. H. Horton, W. G. iKirby, and ‘W. L. Martincka, Defend- . {ants and Appellants. . Syllabus: (1) The plaintit brought an action against defendants for false urrest and imprisonment. Certain issues of fact were submitted to a jury on a special verdict. The Court in. sub- mitting the special verdict also gave what is regardel as general instruc- tions of law. It is held that this was reversible error. " (2) At the time of. submitting a special verdict the Court also submit- ted two forms of general verdict under the same instructions, and in connec- tion with the special verdict. It is held the’ submission of the: ‘generai verditts in*the’otrruntstances: in‘which they were submitted was reversible error. +4 Appeal from the District Court of Ransom county, North Dakota, G. M. McKenna Judge. } Opinion wf. the Court by Grace, C. J.|- Bronson, J., concurs in the result. Robinson, Christianson and Birdzell, J. J. Specially concurring. Judgment reversed. Curtis & Remington, Lisbon, and E. T. Burke, Bismarck, N. torneys for. Flaintiff and Respondent. Lawrence, Murphy & Willes, Fargo, N.'D,, Attorneys for Defendants and Appellants. From Cass County The Johnson Construction Company, Respondent, vs. Melvin A. Hildreth, Apoellant, : "Syllabus: . ‘For the construction of basement wall under the house of de- fendant on: Eighth Street, in the City éf Fargo, the jury found a verdict néainst him for $243.44 and interegé, Held that the verdict is clearly right and the judgment is affirmed. | BY CONDO A SHORT TIMGS AGO E RANKS ANO PUT \ HERE'S Your 4 f a, cement *DAppeal from the District Court of | “NOVEMBER 19 Cass county: Hon. A.1. Cole, Judge. Animes. j bi atouh pinion of th¢ Count jby Roun op. . (Bronson, J., bar 36 ‘sult. i S. L. Nucholy and M. A. #lildreth, in Pro. Per. Attbrneys for Appellant. Taylor Crum, Attorney for Respond- jent. J. n From Dickey County “ohn Kupfer and Harland Kupfer, : Appellants, vs. James McConville, Re: spondent. Syllabus: 1. Plaintiffs contracted to con- struct a well under a special contract. | They failed to substantially perform the contract. and. voluntarily aband- Yoned it, over the protest of the own- er, before they had constructed a well at all. It is held, for reasons stated in the opinion, that no recovery can be had on quantum meruit for the ‘value of the labor furnished and tho pipe put into the ground. From a judgment of the District | Court of Dickey County, McKenna, J., Plaintiff’s appeal. 4 Affirmed. | Opinion of the Court by Christian- 'son, J. Grace, ‘Ch. J., specially concurring. W. 8. Lauder, Wahpeton, N. D., At- ‘torney for Respondent. F. J. Graham, E. E. Cassels, Ellen- i dale, D., Attorneys for Appellants. In destroying these ships, do they want to “Sce America First,” About alk,a:farmet’ gets out of his corn,is. the use of it. Chicago's. grand opera is being heard 1500 miles away. Must have a new bass. If dentists sent. their bills first we could grind our own teeth. A hard-boiled janitor can’t scare a ‘inometer. : man who stot his wife's ear off, is being sued for divorce. The part- ing shot. The man who talks to himself has is now in ‘Charles mishapsburg Madeira and madeira is in Charlie. St. Louis twins born in a taximust te bouncing baby boys. Only 12 were bagged on the first day of Ohio’s rabbit hunting. Twelve hunters. To set’ about a job is fine, if you don't set too long. | i Some men.are so honest their arms never steal around (a girl. They are called capital ships be- cause it takes it to. build one. iy Four billion dollars will be spent in running the government and taxpayers next year. ‘ Do your Christmas mailing early and avoid the crush. When a man leaves his wife, he doesn’t leave her much. Why -not start knocking the waltz jand let it stage a come-back? Our mails have gone to the Devil; yes, our mails have gone to the Dogs —Devil Dogs. " The stingiest man on earth stops (his watch at night and starts it again the next morning. Politicians who go from side to side don’t make much speed forward. DINNER DANCE AT McKENZIE HOTEL Beginning Saturday evening, \p "19th, The McKenzie Hotel ‘wilh. resume their Dinner Dance for the winter season $1.00 per couple... Tables reserved. No service less than 25c. Dance be- gins Nine-thirty. Three piece Orchestra. The McKenzie Hotel Orchestra-’ has perfect" Dance | Music with Pep. Mrs. WILLIMAN TESTIFIES Declares Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound to Be the Best Medicine for Girls and Women Hamilton, Ohio. I had such awful | pains in my back I could hardly stand z - on my feet and] was without a If I } housework. I would have hemor- . thages every two weeks and draggin i ‘down pains, ad | been feeling badly for three years and had two of the best doctors in the city, but I kept getting worse and only weighed 1: unds. Isaw your adver- tisement ard I took eight boxes of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Tab- | lets, four bottles Lydia E. Pinkham’s ! Blood Medicine and your Liver Pills and noticed an improvement right away. i Now I weigh 188 pounds and feel fine. Everybody tells me how well [look and asks ‘me what I took and I always sdy, | ‘Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound, the best medicine in the world for any si ss to which gi women are subject.’ I wi good word for your medicine and you may uae, pein whenever ish.’’ —Mrs. JosEpH WILLIMAN, 722 South + 9th Street, Hamilton, Ohi is

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