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pe ntneys re THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE) Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Seco Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - ~ ASSASSIN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. H PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW \YORK = - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS jrun along as usual. |bullet-proof system. An assassin usually has about as much effect Nakaoka, assassin of Premier Hara of Japan, is said to be proud of his deed, regarding himself as a martyr and benefactor of his country. {another guess coming. A new premier will take 'Hara’s place and the Japanese government will Hara was merely a tool of a He has 1921 FRIDAY, DECEMBER SALT LAKE CITY BUSINESS MAN REPORTS GAIN By Olive Barton Roberts “Did Kip steal the key to the En- | chanted Cupboard in’ Brownieland ked } cy of the next gnome. ‘He dign’t tell me,”-he ans: “Did he bring it her turning to his next neighbor. red. | Wet) Known Utah Citizen Adds Ten she asked | H Pounds While Wife Gains 28 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use {OM the course of events aS Xerxes, who, enraged | | "He did if he didmt leave it he-! Pounds in. Weight for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or;at the ocean, had his soldiers punish it by slicing | hind." was the reply. | f not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local ‘the waves with their swords. H “Where did Le put it?” she asked; pon J, Perry, 370 Quince St., well- ‘ news published herein, ! : i nai : janother one, N ‘known Salt ‘Lake Gity, Utah, bh ess Fe " All rights of repubtication of special dispatches herein) An interesting execution awaits Nakaoka.| Dae oe sitid,he brought it,” came| man in reporting re arkable ga s ia 1 als: serve { pet . zs | ithe answer. \ wel; f wife, are also reserved. ‘Officially, he will be “hanged,” cable dispatche: 3 O8OH, “chi oh?" cried” Nancy stamip-| Saree both ‘by hia outer MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION _jpredict. Only a Dante can picture the tortures’ ing her foot. “I think you're all hor-! “My wife gamed 28 pounds and lL ssin. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE that await an oriental as Daily by carrier, nent $7.20 | Daily by mail, pe 2) | AUDIENCE rad. You haven't told me a thing!” | gained ten pounds in a few weeks by ; “it won't do you any good to get | vangry,” remarked Crookabone. “Wej} jall know that you and Nick came to taking Tanlac. The change in Mrs. Ferry is all the more remarkable, as she had been going down hill steadily Daily, by mallper 3 sae | H ‘ j = ‘find Kip and get the key to the En-!fior four or five years. She got no sa O00 A play from England recently failed in New! TM CeAvING Cote rue oe ke ec ‘chanted Cupboard in Brownieland so | nourishment from her fod and J don’t ‘ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER lYork: “Brady, theatrical producer, lamented “‘the) [PECAUSE IM COOKING OVER Pico SIA ‘you can get the magic shovels and|believe she avcvaged three hours (Established 1873) porns a 2racynuten Urical producer, “lamente e I NOTICEDTHE LGADING MAN'S NAME! lhelp Pim Pim to dig the glittering | sleep out of the 24. — decline of the drama in America” and commented | | stod to make the Christmas toys. But! “While my condition’ was: not a3 i THE WRONG ROAD Tf it could get into the history books, it would [that the public wants light stuff. | Now cables says that “Heartbreak House,”! George Bernard Shaw’s latest play, has failed inj read like this: “Nov. 24, 1921—A Thanksgiving ondon- Pat ect ea ga ig day excursion carried 1000 scientists and profes-'..,. ree | sional men to Staten Island, in New York har- | ities say it had too much talk, not enough ao bor, where they witnessed the tearing down of | a chimney, 148 feet high, 47 feet in diameter at/ A producer usually blames the public taste the base. Despite the huge size, this smokestack when something uninterestingly fails to interest. was razed in the record-brzaking time of 55 min-' ea utes,” : PLEASURE | The*history books would ignore the chimney’s | Americans are spending four times as pouch for’ usefulness and the fact that it took two months candy, gum and ice cxeam concoctions a8 on the BE WARNGSD IN TIM misery Uy coo i DON'T WANT MY MONGY BACK FoR L CONSIDER IT WELL WORTH THE PRICE To © OF THE’ IMPENDING ‘UH answer your questions for you. | 'Kip did take the key, and he came} here with it and it’s hidden under the! {largest lump of coal in my cellar. | |'There! Now I hope you are happy,, all the good it will do you. Are! ” he asked sharply. i “N--" Nancy nearly forgot again | ‘Crookabone had tried over and over! 'to trap the Twins into saying “yes” | jor “no” so they should turn upside! ;down and he could steal their Magic; ;Green Shoes. “Not very,” she said! instead. i “Now you come Nick,” said Crook-, ;abcne motioning Nancy away. “Ask j ianything you like and be sure that [you will be answered well.” i | So Nick took Nancy's place in the; | center of the cirle and began at once.. serious as hers, I had been under the weather for some time, had no appe- tite and was bothered a good deal by indigestion. ‘Tanlac has certainly proved all and more than is claimed for it with us.” “Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jo- seph Breslow, and by leading drug: gists everywhere.” Ady, ————aaa and 315 Indian pupils are enrolled .1 the public schools on the agency. MIFE BRAM. Paris, Dec. 2—The French govern- ment is planning what is said to be the largest lighthouse in the world for its international air‘service. It !s to be built. near Dijon’ aid be equip- Sere ar. accord): atistici: ow fa ei east? oe ed with eight lenses capable of and two days to build it. ‘army, according to government statisticians. | W here is your house” he- asked dnrowing rays 200 miles. i : y Well, what of it? f | Crookabone. “Where do you live? f " in, a recor * Fj ? : | ey ape, et 4 ES TEES RPE History is 98 per cent a record of destruction. ! Across the street from the chim-| \v ion theater ushers ivere first Money spent for war purposes goes for.creation It is designed to teach us what man has done. | ney sweep,” the quick answer, “around the corner from the haker's introduced in New York, in 1884. th i But it clings almost entirely to recording what ©! Misery. \ ier z and half a block from the bean-pot man has done “denttosed p | What we spend for chewing gum and sweets i % \ Incorporations | | aes i said Niel 5 (I DIGESTION, GAS, af adda to the joy of life, AW Hark -andaig lay) U/C cian at tnearporation filed #ith "to Be Continued.) OR BAD BREATH : An bxcellént movement is gaining headway in makes Jack a dull boy. Within reasonable bound}, | cl aN See lee Deets renast (Copyright, 1921, NEA Service.) TAKE “DIAPEPSIN” America, to revise history as it is taught in our the luxuries of pleasure are absolute necessities. | ~ Lewis Coffee and Grocery Company; CRE aa asi tt st schools. What the child gets now is,mostly a record. of ; slaughter and destruction—the history of ill will’ between England and America, North and South, 'victed of murder. While the court was sentenc- races, religions and politics. ing him to be hanged, his son Rudoph was being | UNUSUAL ye At Middleton, Conn., a storekeeper was con-, In choosing father it as light on him a r’s present, make possible, | Fargo; capital stock $150,000; incor— Fargo; H. in; FY P. porators, Robert P. Lewi :D. Lewis, St. Cloud, Mi; ‘ Butler, Chicago. | Pioneer Farm and Coal Land, to jdeal in real estate and farming; ; Mannhaven, Mercer Co.; capital stock INDIAN CHILDREN LIKE SCHOOL, Fort Yates, N. D., Dec. 2.—Ot of a total of 888 Indian children of school age on the Standing Rock, reservation, but 73 were not in school when a re- cent survey was made by agency and county officials. The number was re- duced following the survey by the “Pape’s Diapepsin” has proven itself the surest relief for Indigestion, Gases, Flatulence, Heartburn, Sourness, Fer- nfentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost immediate stomach relief and shortly the stomach is corrected so you can eat favorite foods without fear. Large It took over 60 years of organized fighting, and | married within a mile of the scene of the-murder.| A man at home is worth two on the thousands of years of progess, to give our women |The telegraph clicks this: “Rudolph. knew his Foad, the ballot. Yet this, under our present system, father was to be sentenced. But he chose that will get less space in.school history than some particular day for his wedding.” ' battle that took only a few hours and had an in-; An interesting piece of psychology. Can thej finitely less effect. |movies beat it? Rarely. What was -Rudolph’s What happened in 1776? The Declaration of purpose?’ How do you explain it? Independence, of course. But some school his-, tories have forgotten to tell you that in the same’ year James Watt sold the world’s first steam) engine. $70,00¢; incorporators, Hubert Bohrer, T. A. Bohrer, Jacob Bohrer, all of ‘Mannhaven. One objection to women smoking is |! they can’t hit a cuspidor. case costs only few cents at drug opening of a new school at Cannon a store. Millions helped annually. Adv. Ball. The reservation school is full Dr. Fisk says dying naturally is I Shoe Sale | | Boost and the world boosts with | you; kick and the world kicks at you. A Sing} Sing guard, unarmed, cap- {tured seyen escaping prisoners. Sev- en of them—‘Gepd guard!” EDITORIAL REVIEW Germany is starting cafeterias and all hope “is lost. The real history of the growth and progress of | our countyr is not a matter of battles or Indians| shot by: Daniel Boone and other explorers. BY The Monitor, which fought the Merrimac in|THE PEOPLE HAVE DECLARED FOR PEACE 1862, was the first armored ship. Every school! The people have declared “the universal long- | child has had the marvels of that invention drill-|ing.” It is the capacity of government to satisfy ed into his brain. But he reads mighty little of |that longing which will now be tested. They will zthe more important inventions—typewriter, mov-j not fail to satisfy it, they will not dare to fail, if “ing picture, electric light and motor. ‘the popular will for peace continues to bear upon History practically ignores the evolution of|the delegates throughout the conference—Syra- barbaric government into American democracy, |cuse Post-Standard. * touching, however, with great emphasis, on bloody | ———_—_—_—_—_——————_ \ Ee a pho battles incidential to the progess. | THREE NEW ARGUMENTS FOR THE Ara fritte) Saul Moult, be 0 i CONFERENCE Virginia Rappe must have laughed ; A world, weary of war, wants to disarm, though, Three items of routine news in a single morns| oan it has only partly convinced its diplomats. Weling’s grist ought to carry an appealing interest Beat Place fora: week-end is the} are turning from destruction to construction, and|to the delegates assembling in Washington for| i Comments, reproduced in this 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 issues which are being discussed “in the press of the day.” % sd8 Sacer : i If a girl's face is her fortune jthere’s billions in a drug store, 5 ‘Looks jJike ‘a ten-year naval half-} holiday. ay i Most short skirts have something j to go up in the air aliut. i , i is fine; | “America for America |“Americans for America” finer. Greengard’s Bootery. Announce Their Second Annual Shoe Sale. Starts Saturday, Dec. 3rd, and Continues For 15 Days. Will be the greatest sale we have ever staged. Highest grade footwear for the entire family at great savings. : } A man wants a divorce bec: wife spent his money on hats often goes to tHe head. Indiana says she has 300 poets, ! the first step in that direction should be a com-|the conférence for the limitation of armament. i Srna 9 * f i i plete revision of history text-books for schools. |Experiments have begun with a new type of know/ng ‘iti would leak out anyway: i Women’s High Shoes Growing Girls i a School histories now in use lie—not that they| American submarine which has a striking radiug|, “man with an ugly wife always’ $6.85 Shoes,.this sale............-- $4.95 High Shoes, sizes 214 to 7, nidde in do not tell the truth, but because of what they jof 10,000 miles. Successful tests are reports ok Bieter Telenor ‘ 1 aoe a shades of Brown Calf. and Kid Leather. omit. | 9" aevice which ientist: ‘ng in| lft skirts are growing shorter, legs: . 97-50 Shoes, this sale........ eens $5.95 Some with perforated tips and rubber ; : 2 a device which our scientists were perfecting in are growing longer. \ . . heels. Many styles in Black Calf and Kid To revise history, the government might or-|the last days of the World war. It is a flying! ae ; $8.50 Shoes, this sale...... wuts: $6.95 || ree Sey, -ganize a commission of persons high in the public'torpero, made to be charged with death by gas; The census has figured everything | $9.50 Shoes, this sale.............. $6.95 _ Fi ae esteem, with intelligence broad enough to enable |or explosive. It is rather an anti-climax to men (aoe “perventage of our par be ees te sak $13.50 Shoes, this sale.......... + $9.85 them to be impartial. ition that of all the expenditures of our govern:! 4... is a house shortage because AA. “a BY eR St eae ur | $4.50 Shoes, this sale _ \ment from its foundation, war items have counted |nouses won't make 60 miles an hour. (ff. $11.50 Shoes, this sale............ $8.25 $5.00. Shoes, this sale. :. CHEER THE ARMY OF 504,000,000 DOLLARS '78.5 per cent—New York World. eat | It, eurideity “Kills:-b cat, ‘where ‘can $11.50 Shoes,, this sale...... sees $8.45, $6.85 Shoes, this sale. ; Some of the richest American families got their - hiwe get some curiosity? i 12.00 Sh thi 1 $8.95 $6.50 Sh hi 1 . . te 1 i 4 S, TMIS Sal... .. cece eee re a Sy URIS BAle. oi F. oar. start by staying out of the cyclone cellar during | SHORT CUTS TO LONG LIFE | Votivg’ has made $6,000,000 for Zion’ $12. oes, this sale oes, this sale as coe ie followed the Civil War. Cy-| A Chicago physician is the latest to offer a|City in’ten years. One of his drastic =———_—_—_—_—_ clone cellar is safe. But, outside, you can grab |short cut to a long life. His trick is even simp-|Teforms must be no buttons in the : ; cra a ; i : . P- | contribution plate. : » ae ioe) ne ‘ite HF . ‘ler than Professor Voronoff’s grafting of apes’| J: e ‘ es | be rere MISSES eas . CHILDREN’S SHOES ore big fortunes are now in the making. ix! elands. It is radium pills! $ | Only five more months until straw $3.75, oes, is sale..... 15 Men’s Shoes $2.00 Shoes, this sale. $1.65 t t Six! ! vill be too high. 5 5 : } hundred and thirty-four new business enterprises.’ Carlyle, writing his “Past and Present” tol Teed Shea, thie ales gat [8600 Shoes, this sale.....$495]) $2.50 Shoes, this sale, { with a capitalization of more than $100,000 each, pare the industrial and social ills of Britain, was! Fe eee ae Mantes iat $5.50 Shoes, this sale.....$4.25 J 87-00 Shoes, this sale.....$5.95]f $3.50 Shoes, this sale i started during October. Their combined capifal furious with those who demanded a single, quick | the Kiwanis club have entered the $6.50 Shoes, this sale... ..$4.85 an ee ae Cae $6.75] $3.75 Shoes, this sale | . ses, this sale.. 95 is $504,000,000. sale... When the biologist in| fight to eliminate illiteracy in Fargo. Night school will be supported, three $4.00: Shoes, this jcure to put all to rights. LITLLE GENTS $9.50: Shoes, this sale..... ae eae dollars will help General Pros-'Shaw’s play “Back to Methuselah,” broaches his nights a week and in addition, the $3.00 Shoes, this sale.....$2.35 , [| $10.00 Shoes, this sale....$8.559) $4.50 Shoes, this sale... perity. Dollars set loose in hard times are the'theory that men might live 300 years, the poli-|members of the club will person- $3.50 Shoes, this sale.....$2.95 ‘J $10.50 Shoes, this sale... .$9. hardest fighters eas ally interview individuals listed as il- cine hi nibreale sg 7 TERN | OF ee) 2 i ticians at once wanted to know the name of the! iterate in an effort to ‘interest: them $3,75: Shoes, this sale. $11.00 Shoes, this sale.... Timidity is the milk that keeps business alive. | medicine. Perplexed and troubled, men have al-|in the problem of learning to rend. $4.00 Shoes, this sale. $12.00 Shoes, this sale.... $4.50 Shoes, this sale That’s what Edison meant when he blamed hard |ways dreamed of some direct and magic way out. times on fear. : i Be their differences shvsiological, social or men- Nothing venture, nothing gain. jtal, they have ever been ready to cry for a patent jcure. The alchemist in the middle ages toiled BOYS’ SHOES Sizes 3 to 6Y, ‘EXTRA NEW SHIPMENT EXTRA SPECIAL New Shipment of, Ladies’ Black Kid one-strap Pumps, a $4.00 Shoes, this sale with Military Heels, made> to i $2.95 : DELUSION long in search of a way to turn the gresser metals sell at $8.50, reduced to $5.95 seat oe ie aus < pee of Women’s 4 Buckle The dollar is wearing a mask these days, fool- into gold. A litte lat-r the Spanish followed | ee $5.85 Shoes, this sale..... $4.85 $5.50 Shoes, this mapas 3435 Brown ard Black $6.50 Shoes, this sale. ing many. It no longer is an accurate measure of |Ponce de Leon in quest of the fountain of youth. | “Pape’s Coid Compound” J ee $7.00 Shoes, this sale..... business activity, because of its fluctuating pur-!Some thing, some device or medicine, would, they Breaks any Cold chasing power. : An illustration: [thought, bring riches or happiness if only it could in Few Hours i One of the big mail-order houses moans that be found. : PER Ze its business is 22 per cent less than a year ago.! This persistent faith in a simple nostrum be-| yan, Relief! Don't stay stutted- $6.50 Shoes, this sale. Overshoes. All Sizes. Parana up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A : ~ Tweedie ae dollars. eae {sets many today. A bookseller tells us that by |dose Oty Paes Col Compound” taken Baby Hast su is company in September | * . every two hours until three doses are 00! uate i Daas : P' er got 42,249 or. [reading fifteen minutes a day we can become edu-|taxen usually breaks up any cold, Shoes ith 80.861 ie i ons of goods, compared. cated. Get wise “quick.” Up in Omaha a prose- The very first dase opens clogged 59¢ Tops wi orders and 343: i in| i nostrils and the air) passages. of th oy , 8 tons of shipments in|cutor said recently that the farmers of Nebraska héads@stops “noses Subang: volieved _ $2.85 September, 1920. Actually, business is better than a year ago. To appreciate the gain, and cheer us up, maybe we should do our figuring in German marks, had lost $250,000 in unsound. securities. lrich “quick.” A doctor announces he has a tablet or serum that restores youth to the aged. Get healthy “quick.”. Get the headache, dullness, feverishness, “Pape’s Cold Compound” acts quic! sure, and costs only a few cents al drug stores. It ac?g without assist- ance, tastes nice, o@g&ims 20 quinine —Insist upon Pape'st 5 Adv. Next Palace Theatre Greengard Building Mandan, North Dakota