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TI EBISMARCK TRIBUNE shot ea ieieo iL Entered at the Peateetice, Bismarcl Class Matter. - GEORGE D. MANN ies 5 r Foreign. Rep: czentatives '_G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT CHICAGO Marquette Lye Kreare, Bldg. AYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively. entitled to the use for republication of all news dispate! aot otherwise credited in this paper and ner ublished herein. ry Tights of republication of special dispatches herein | are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ~BUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN AONE | Daily by carrier, per year.........++ Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismare! se 6.00 | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.......-+-.++ 6.00 | —— THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) — -FOCH’S VISIT Bismarck is especially honored as the appointed | city for the state wide reception to Gen. Foch, probably the greatst military leader of the age. | There is every evidence that Sunday will be one of Bismarck’s grzatest days. Her citizens who “heeded the call at home and abroad when war | gripped the nation are anxious tomorrow to pay, reverence to a great patriot under whose com- | mand many American doughboys faced fire and | gave that full measure of devotion in defense:of 2 world cause. America can never forget France. Many of her} Editor also the local; as secon Fifth Ave. Bldg. es credited to it or, ruled Wy the man with the quickest trigger finger. <londike gold-rushers, who pai ibute to the Hi by Smith gang at Skagwayy that. | White man’s civilization brings the ballot in place ‘ of the bullet. Like the bullet, the ballot joften is a blank cartridge. STUFFY In an area of 25 miles from ‘the city hall in New York, there are more people than in seven of the western states. That is figured out by Jo- \seph K. Hart, educational authority. Too many in the dining room, not enough in the garden. ithe city. LUNATICS countries spend five years’ work perfecting the jmost frightful war devices. The idea is, that the world would become so terrified at its destructive |power that it would gladly disarm. | That is a wrong idea, for this reason: | | War is a form of mob insanity. i The insane do not reason from cause to effect. | ‘They cannot. Bad policy, to leave razors and| ‘pistols around a lunatic asylum. HEALTH | Dr. Stephen Smith, who will be 99 years old/ next February, attracts attention at a health ex-; position. He founded the American Public Health ; ‘Association. To live long, says he, work hard} keep out of | hrave sons, attracted by the spirit of democracy |the easy life, get plenty of sleep, drink lots of | that inspired America nearly 200 years ago, gave! their lives that this nation might become the| great Republic she is today. Gen. Foch, facing the sinister hosts of a cruel its wide desolation, was as much a defender of | all that the United Sti#tés holds dear as the gallant | Lafayette whose name is written big in the an-| nals of our Republic. i imilk and do not eat too much meat. Dr. Smith knows what he.is talking. about. ‘ He} jwas sickly until he reached 60. Lived on crack- ‘ers, toast and thickened milk. Then he became; ‘ autocracy in those dark years when war spread robust by the rules he recommended. FORTUNE. Thirty years ago, four Chinese were prospec:- ing for gold in the Tulameen district, British Col- | | | 4 | Pay tribute tomorrow not only to the man /umbia, Canada. They had $48 worth of platinum. Foch but to the spirit of France which he typi- fies, His visit arouses a fresh feeling of national amity toward our sister Republic who fought the | great fiight for the preservation of those ideals without which life itself would not be worth living. Marshal Foch will see a different America than Lafayette did on his memorable visit in 1824. It was nearly fifty years later that the first steam railroad arrived and the struggling republic which that “distinguished leader assisted to its | feet had been in existence slightly more than fifty | years. It is fitting that his route is through the great | wheat producing states that fed the, hosts of de- “ moeracy during the world war.’ He‘has expressed | Not wanting to be bothered with it, they buried it in a saki bottle under a rock. * Time went on ahd the patinum was. forgotten. Last spring, the. four Chinese ‘met in China, got talking about old times, remembered the saki bot- Ite. Apparently not being any too‘sure of each other’s honesty, all four crossed the Pacific, found the platinum .under the {rock and sold it for $7100. i You never can tell shat time will do to values, |up or down, EDITORIAL REVIEW eS SS SSS a.desire to, see those other fields where sacrifices | _.too , were made to preserve the ‘integrity’ of a ‘world. Le ‘Bismarck and the people from every cor-| ner of the state gathered here to do honor to a) * great man, show-their appreciation anew for the t historic sacrifices made, Let/every color as it is carried by :be: properly honored... If you do ‘not : know the tribute you owe to the Tri.color and the Stars and Stripes, Watch . others. ‘There should surge ip the breast of everyone who witnesses to: | morrow’s ceremony proud thanksgivings that het, is an American citizen or enjoying the bounty of a great republic linked inseparately with another nation whose ideals square with ours. “Let no one, - overlcok. the deep significance of Foch’s ‘visi Just remember that the war was a common sacri fice.for a common purpose and that Gen. Foch j ‘Aypifies the great leadership that brought about a great peace, ‘and let us hope a lasting peace. 2 GONE | ~ The crowned head passes as Germany’s sym- ‘bol. New postage stamps, printed in Berlin, bear ‘images of farmer, miner and blacksmith, instead | sof an imperialistic design. This shows a strefigthening of the democratic ‘sentimenéin Germany.” In the long run, that is =more important to the world than payment. of| “indemnity. MOTHERS Mortality of expectant mothers has increased ‘in recent years, says Dr. Ralph W. Lobenstein of _New York, expert on child hygiene. Fs To explain ‘the reason, sociologists’ advance} The correct one is that women,) semany theories. like men, are paying the penalty for not living the atural life. WEAPON : Three submarines, with a cruising radius of 10,000 miles, are being built for the American avy. Each will carry a crew of 54 men and will be ‘able to cruise a month without taking on supplies. These submarines will please militarists. “They also should please peace advocates. Developed as , @ war device, the submarine’s greatest use will be 1 exploration + of the ocean depths.. War thus.is.a } path to peacetime progress. Another instance is _ the’ airplane. j YUKON Far up north, in the frozen Yukon, a political campaign is being waged. Candidates are travel- , ing hundreds of miles on dog sleds, rounding up * votes. Comments reproduced inthis’ column ‘may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here. in order that our readers may have both sides of important isaues which are peng discussed in the press of the day. ONLY ONE KIND OF ALLIANCE « | : FOR AMERICA For the first time in his recorded addresses President Harding has clearly set down the only terms on which the United States can enter an alliance of nations. Speaking at the opening of lthe armament conference, he said: “The world. demands a sober contemplation of ‘the existing order and the realization that there |! can be no cure without sacrifice, not by one of * ibut:by all of us.” This, -we\ \assume, means that any alliance which| the United: States may enter must be a world alli-| /a@nce open to all, the nations of mankind on an ab- jsolutely equal basis. / No partial alliance limited \to a group of powers handed together for thig or ‘that purpose, however. innocent that purpose may seem, will do. “All our national traditions are against any such entanglements in the politics of Europe. Any administration attempting, to com- imit this country to such amstringi ing of its, ‘powers for universal service to ‘all mankind would be repudiated by the people. tee France has come. to this confei maipably desirous of an arrangement; with ‘hb ih By by. which we shall go to her rescue if she is again at- itacked by Germany. Mr. Wilson arranged such la treaty, but was wise enough not to submit it to! ithe senate. France should know, from the words. cf President Harding, the only terms on which |her safety can be guaranteed. ‘If the whole world jis in a league to forbid any nation making an un- provoked attack against any other nation France need not fear Germany, nor Germany fear France. On the other hand, .an alliance, say, between France, the United ‘States and Great Britain, aimed at Germany, only would provoke another and counterbalanciiz defersive alliance, once the powder magazine of -war. The Triple Entente gave birth to the Triz's Allianc>. The two to- gether spawned this world conflict. land far more effective, is an agreement among the nations, big and. little, to hold in check its unruly and aggressive members everywhere. cone less meets American national traditidns and American national aspirations. Not one of us, not any one group: of us, can kill war. All of us, working honestly and sincere- ly together can. But first we, all of us, the whole world of us, must want to, want to so badly that we will make generous sacrifices of national sel- Kt is ‘only a few years since the Yukon was fishness for the nobler, finer ideal of world broth- erhood and world peace.—Detroit News. { ; “I’m reading a great deal. ‘sun’ streaming. Bettar Tar, | state could proceed to sell the houses BY fee AGNES ABELIN' LING (Copyright, 1981, hy NEA Service) Washington, ‘Noy. 26.—This ig, the firat interview Mfs. Woodrow Wilson. has given since the failure.of her husband's health, “I have just come from Mr. Wil- son”—her hand extended, she crossed | the long room. .“‘At this tme in the | morning there ure usually a few | things 1 do for him.” Her smile was } radiant. “Will Mr. Wilson ever he really well?” I asked. The whole ‘world is jasking the same question. Mrs. Wilson shook her head slowly. | |—Who knows that? The line of her mouth straightened | | stightly, but lost none of its softness. | The solution of city problems is to get out of [There was nothing of hopelessness in , jher attituae, one scarcely misses the impossible.” Still smiling. She was facing the win- |dow, a window overlooking the hill | ; Inventor Edison suggests that scientists of all|and drive leading straight to the city’s heart, a’ place a-thrill with life rela- tive to the arms limitation conterence. Calls and teas, while the daylight | lasts; dinners, beautiful women, gor- geous gowns and well-groomed men ° as the dark comes. “As we get aloag laughed lightly as if gently amused at the reference to the speeding of her own years, “time to think isn’t bad, !you know.” ‘The burden) of an invalid husband | }seems to sit light.y on this beauti- ful woman, on-y a: short time ago the {social triumph of America and’ Eu- rope. “There are a great many beautiful | things in life,” a shade more serious-- ly, “that we iniss in the whirl which ; seems to carry us on in Youth. .We | {miss much in’ books, art, flowers and even in the ‘people we have known j well—we find this when we have time to think. “There is much of sweetness in life ; that one doesn’t find when one is too. | busy,” she finished with a slight ' Jaugh.~ i “Mrs. Wilson, ma'am.” It was. the old colored servant standing in the } \door. “Yes.” She was on her feet, hand | extended, ready to go back to the side of her invalid husband, to sit as | '4°comforter in the silence of tha H iMdst closed houge—the’ house of ' itery as: Washington has come to it because ‘its doors are so rarely. open | ito visitors and {ts occupants are seen ; \so rarely. “Good-bye.” ‘Her voice was lus- trous. She was standing. at the edge ‘of the little flight of stairs, her back to the windows which looked toward the city and its whirls of brilliant life. Time has dealt gently. with Mrs. ‘Wilson. tise gown, black’ figured with chenile, cut away at the throat and girdled in old green metal clung to the lines of her figure with some- thing of a regal air. Her hair; ‘done with the suggestion of a part'in ‘the middle and’ a -flat. | wide coil at the top, is touched only | lightly witli, gray about’ the face. Her | laree eyes are.keenly alight. i There is’ dignity about the tilt ‘of her chin; the’ ‘Mnes of her figure, her. poise, The drawing toom ‘Gf the Wood- row Wilson’ home’ is a°glowing place, Strom’ the back, win- dows ‘looking’ ddwn ‘across the: hill. On. ‘the! ‘\wals—Ryder paintings, those thrilling*sdft syniphonies of un- forgettable: ¢reens, blues and yellows. About: ‘the’ stm-kissed place, here and there;@single yellow chrysanthe- mum, gloriously accenting the golden browns ‘and dui! rose: of cushions and upholstery. ‘Books—oné whole side of the wall from floor: ‘to cefling given to books. A writing table—leather appointments besveak . culture;: tainment. life’s greatest at- ON BOND SALES Bismarck; N. Dak., Nov: 24. | Editor Tribune: Dear Sir: If it is a fact that the ! out going Industrial Commission con- ; tracted to sell one million dollars i:worth) of Home Building bonds,' there can be but one thing done with tha’ money ‘and that is build houses with The building trade is' the back-bone } of all our towns’ in this state. If there is. no building going on there is no. business for the real estate dealers, lumber yards and all classes of bulding trades labor, and when the laboring class is out of work the storekeeper gets no trade. So if men are out of employment, business | men are without business. And that | is the case in our city today and | sy here else, as well; and it will as long as people are out 1 | | i i i There are rw ‘reat many more houses needed in this nity @8 well as every | other city in the state. If the new se administration | would take that Hol jmoney and. proceed to™ perity would soon return toy rhe body in this state, I believe the new Industrial (Ne mission should start and build t ty or twenty-five; houses in all tite | | i | i i uild homes i in the several cities of the Bate, pros- | { | larger cifies of the state, and begin tect get out plans of a good modern | bungalow, and then advertise for bids Germany gets on her fezt. \ jon them to be submitted by local con= | tractors and material men, and then | Partial alliances are the mat-hes that explode jet the contract to:the lowest bidder. | The architect could see that the state | got what it contracted for. After the houses are completed the under. the Home Building association law, or it could at Teast rent them. But there is no danger but what there ‘wow!d be plenty of. buyers. Winter is here, but houses can be } built any way by putting in tile hase- | ments. There is no reason Why work | could not be carried on in spite of | cold weather. | There have been houses built in this ! city bythe state that according to | reports are costing a great deal more | than was expected. But their = |cost: was caused by unnecessary of- fice expense that there is no reason for under the contract plan. “There are those that believe the Home Building program should be I tind wv little,” ne. z 70 THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER _ We know that you were there, ” We know not whether you were born, OO Orr) eee i | | if i | | AS MRS. WILSON LOOKS TODAY , i (F Ioenee Borner.) We know not who you were, brave lad, Nor. even whence : ou 2ime f you were 9f aumole pirth, 2f illustrious ‘ame; ‘But when our country needed men, To bravely 'o and anen ‘And help preserve our. glorious Flag, Upon some fareign’ strand, 4 Or: if you first saw light »f day In this, our own air land;” z But when dark ‘douds of war arose, To send us to despair, j When our :brave soldier's. marched away i We know that you, were there. i | We know nct-who you were, brave lad, Nor. what ‘ysur mcde of life; But we know this; you yielded all Upon the ‘field’ of strife; We know you bravely.met your: fate, To save our flag, so dear, You offered up' your. noble “life, ‘And knowing, we revere. Sleep, ‘noble Jad, in sweet repose, In peaceful ‘Arlington; No more for you:the bugle -ealls, \ No. more the:sound of gun i Will break. upon: your slumbers now To call you to the sacrifice, For you have reached, far, iar from here; A grand, sternal ‘Armistice, {the cat out. ees There was a queer jlittle bent shoulders. with bits of Oriental inscript‘ons. All | \ PEOPLES’ FORUM | done away with, and ,I believe’ it {should be if it can’t be made a suc- cess, but I see no reason why. it can inot be made a success, and it will help {real estate dealers sell their-lots, lum- ‘ber yard men sell their -lumber~and labor put to work and business in igeneral revived. ‘to carry out the recommendation of the national unemployment’ confer- jence by each city starting some work |to relieve the unemployment, -And I ‘think this city should do something in that line’ by real estate dealers, llumber men, labor organizations and ‘business men in general getting to- yipgether and requesting the new admin- This city has so far made no, move « laws of ‘our state by building houses for people, and put our state in the; front rank of prosperity for all. THOMAS JENNINGS. | HUSBAND AND WIFE WRITE. Mr. and Mrs. James Carson, Colum- bus, N. M., sign a letter saying, “We| have both concluded we shall never be without Foley Cathartic Tablets and we believe them to be essential to good health.” They keep the stom- ach ‘sweet, liver active and bowels| regular, They banish constipation, in-} digestion, ‘biliousness, sick, headache, | bloating, sour stomach, gas on stom- | ach, bad breath, coated tongue. Not habit forming. ‘ snoozing ~away Honesty is the best foreign policy. Marriages have decreased, so skirts will be lengthened. We favor open winters openly ar- i rived at. A bird in the hand is worth several dollars. Nothing hinders: digestion like wor- jtying over Japan. Briand strengthened the world’s jfriendship for France. Other heroes ‘are Woodfl and York. The road to peace is ‘paved with good preventions. Marry in haste and lose half the { wedding presents. Jazz music will not stop until boiler making pays better, When a girl sees a movie kiss she ; wants to second the motion. Fortune smiles at some people and laughs out loud at> others. About 15,000 are killed eagh year at railroad crossings:. How. would un- dertakers for flagmen do? ny happy medium was jailed the other day. i : Ireland's! national dance: and it fsn’t:up “yet. Nations will find there is no wrest in peace, Lots of men, who think they were fools when they married, haven't changed much. “3 China's open door proms) toy have let Reports say “thousands of knicker- beckers are being made for spring; but there may be nothing in them. From the way they tussle about the floor “dance haul” is correct: Lives of great’ men: oft remind us that their lot was pot ‘sublime. Washington °, married a. widow— that’s one reagon he was not able to tell a-lle, \~ —————S— ADVENTURE OF | By Olive Barton Roberts Pim Pim’ led» Nancy’ and’ Nick through, the giittering, shining cham- bers of ‘the: Land: of: Underneath, ex- plaining: things to°them as théy'-~went. little + eaoutway through-.which ‘Browntes were’ pass- ing and carrying great sacks on their Pim: Pim said that was, the underground way to all the gardens. in the world, and that the Brownies. were packing the roots of the rose bushes with warm’ moss to keep them’ from’ Treesing through the winter. +» Then they went: ona distance’ fur- ther, looking this way and that at all the’ wonderful ‘things they saw. The Twins had never seen 80 many glow worms or ‘fire flies or’ glimmering beetles in their lives, each jone of | them doing his best to light up the crystal caverns of the Brownies. After a’ while they passed ayother door, and through this one too, ; Brownies were hurrying and carrying strange burdens, . “That,” pointed Pim Pim, “is our secret passage to Dreamland, where many of ‘the ani- mals go in winter. Of course the creatures ‘never suspect it) but Brownies put blankets and warm comfies:. over ‘thems!nwhile © they're in! their’ holés.Mr. \ Building bond | - at once by having’a competent archi- | \ esx ration to proceed and carry out.the [Everert TRUE __BY CONDO || THE. SUMMER ih} OVER, ANNO & WANT tou to TAKE Down, THE ‘FLY SCREGNS THIS MORNING AND Pur THEM AWAY FOR THE WINTGR . GSTEN, "MY vEaR— T. HAVE A SUGGESTION To MAKS. WHY NOT GEAVE THEM ve TILe SPRING? THEN WHEN THE FUES COME BACIC THE SCREENS WiLL BE in (N OLACS AT THE EXACT \ am PSYCHOLOGICAL MONENT. ! ! fou | "ALWAYS. rr ATSIaaeStiod Gi To MAKe ISNEVER THERE'S ANYTHING, FOR YOU TO AROUND THE HOUSE. ExcerT -ANSWERIN THE (CALLS TO THE DINING AACE © Wouree ACWATS TAcs NS. ABOUT THE OLOSICAL Moment”. = SHAVES a PRedvceo OnG ee TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS 1 i | Ground Hog hasn’t the vleast idea of jit, of course; thinks: he’s fattened’ up on corn and has grown enough fuzzy {wool all over him to keep him warm all-winter, but he couldn't keep warm enough on nights when the thermom- eter is 40’degrees below zero, if my Brownies. didn’t . tuck -him in, and ‘round about .,with their nice little blankets. They are storing away a lot of new, blankets in waderground cupboarda; iow. That. fs hat they dre carrying—every size, from those for wee Mr. Meadow Mouse to the-big ones for the bears.” The Twins thought it. very. inter- esting. They had never known be— fore how very useful Brownies were. ‘ (To Be Continuéd) (Copyright, 1921, NEA Service) USE SLOAN'S TO Cea ese ‘OU can’t do your an cap Petes Sloan’ ns Line ey with. ing, and en; penetratir | Glow of warmth and comfort. | Good for rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains and strains, aches and | sciatica, sore muscles, stiff joints and 1 eae effects of bps in’s ene: Ask {* your yo oer cep Sloan's 1, | As all argues 70c, $1.46. | Sloan . Liniment @ BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Kaocn ell over: the Northwest for Quality © MAIL US YOUR FILMS © | ni