The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 22, 1921, Page 3

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22 is the name of a poem published in} : Home Journal, written by Mr. James} |W. Foley, former Bismarck man, who| | now lives in California. } Mr. Foley, began ‘his writing career} with the Tribune and for a long time Only a Few Matters To Be Clean- ed Up in Both Branches THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 1 ‘man attack upon themselves) and } {brought ‘a ‘storm of denunciation | jabout his ears. To these Americans | jof German blood Mr. Watterson made | lanswer that presumably they had | come tc the United States to escape the thing he asserted the German! rulers were endeavoring to, ‘fasten) jupon, the rest of the world) and} {warned ‘them that if they identified! themselves too closely with the cause | lof Germany's rulers by giving it sup-! as al | was city editor. He later was secre- ¥ jport, they would later regard their! Se Eee SY |tary of the North ‘Dakota senate, bene eee Rapwss the horn of | Cou se with regret. | Washington, Dee, 22.--Congress was|¥' position he held for several ee oticne € horn of too much is the; “Mr, Watterson also devoted some of ‘adjourn today for a recess over the holidays until Jan. 3. *A resolution! Many Bismarck people will be par-| providing tor such action was adopted | ticularly interested in his latest poem | late yesterday in the house after the} Which is especially like the poems; senate had taken similar action. Thera ithat have gained for him considerable were only a few miscellaneous mat,/ fame in the literary world. ters to be cleared up. | peace aie ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS | By Oliye Barton Roberts | —t | Everything was ready for Christ-! mus at last. i The toy-maker had carefully put; the last crystal ball into Santa’s magic \ k which held tho treetoys, and crowded the last jumping-jack into! the other sack which held the gifts. | Pim Pim had brought the reindeer | ind to Santa's front door and Kip! had helped to hitch them to the won-| Los Angeles, Dec. > derfal sleigh, phase of the defens The chimney-sweep had come with Arthur Cc. Burch, charged with the his worn-out broom, bringing the! murder of Kennedy, the well known now that every chimney was ready. | broker, was begun today. Sprinkle-Blow, the fairy weather- |. Efforts to prove the accused insane man, Had sent North Wind with the were to be continued today, ‘Witne: news that snow had already begun a es to appear are the mother of the fail and Santa himseelf was button-| cased, Mrs. Dora Burch of Evanston; gs up his. creat coat, preparing for | his former wife, Gloria Quayle, and Laas watt? op }).| her father, Bishop Quayle of Lou ond N k, come here! gal The other angla of the defense 5 apt i {denial that Burch shot Kennedy. ! (Nancy, did you get all the! ned?” : i Mr, Santa,” answered the lit | irl, “and here is your magic{ MAID needle, I found ever and ever sj i $i f the servants many stockings that needed darning.” | Hee re entice GG tee “Dh % ‘i ry ‘when poverty forced her to lease her nant my; dear! sald Ganta ancestral estate to a wealthy Amer- ne 81Y ican, Lady Noreen of Kildoraw had Nick had, as we know, and handed MAny amusing adventures und a few them over to Santa Claus who stuffed | Tather humiliating ones. Lady Noreen them into his pocket. jis the heroine of “Room and Board, “And, now kiddies,” nodded the |'which is showing at the Rialto theater kindly old saint, “I want to thank you | tonight only, and the role of the high- and to: tell you what a help you have| spirited, fun-loving, courageous, proud INSANITYTO - BURCH CASE Second Phase of Litigation; Starts with Examination As 'To Sanity ie .—The second in the trial of ti e NOBLEWOMAN IMPERSONATES d in the mney! ye ‘We need new resolutions because he old ones are all broken. A grin goes a long way, but it al- ways comes back. The south is going to raise less cot- on and morigages. It is casy for a wrestlor to get these Good hgotleggers serve everything except free lunch. Prices are said to be falling again. {It is also said the moon is made ot! dress at the dedication of the Colum- ; Pink cheese. ii So The money a man saves by not helping others never does him any ; or od, Misery may love company, but com- jpany, doesn't love misery. To compliment a marricd ell her she doesn’t look it. _ Tomorrow is always one day late. woman, Tapioca pudding looks almost good j nough to eat. If war is anything like arguing with our wife, Sherman was right. Opportunity knocks only once, Ne- formers knock ail the time. Some people seem to think they are wing ‘wypng by living. All married women are not good cooks, but all .good cooks are mar- ried women. A The social swim is full of fish. Better to have worked and lost than never to have worked at all. The world is ‘getting better every or less magic, but greater than all its mystery is its wonderful spirit of un; selfishness and that is what you Twins | have been, the real spirit of Christmas, | been. Christmas .is,.of course, more | | for you have never once thought of{ yourselves. aS i “Goodby, now. Wish ywurselves home and may you have happy holi- days. 1 won't see you again, for when [ come down your chimney, you will be asleep. Fairy-time and earth-time being in no way alike, no doubt you have never been missed.” ‘With that he kissed them and was gone. | (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1921, NEA Service) a a a a Xmas Gift Suggestions little Irish noblewoman fits Constance Binney, the star, admirably. NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That James W. Lee’s interest in the American Cafe has been taken over by the undersigned Wong Wee and John On, and that said James Lee has nothing further to do with the said Cafe.; Dated this 21st day of Decem- ber, A. D. 1921. WONG WEE. JOHN ON. day, but what about the nights? A fool and his money are started. COL. WATTERSON STRICKEN BY HEART DISEASE soon (Continued from Page 1) interrupted ust as jhe attained his ajority by the outbreak of the war. With his father, he opposed the se- cession movement, but upon the dec- laration of hostilities, he returned to his Tennessee home and joined he} army of the Confederacy. He served throughout the war, except for @ per: iod of ten months when he established and operated at Chattanooga, Tenn., “The Rebel,” a semi-military paper. Mr. Watterson served first as an aide to the famous cavalry . leader, |General Nathan Bedford Forrest, and \later was on the staff of General Leonidas Polk. | Smokers’ Cabinet A» very practical’ Cabinet for the man who smokes. Contains sections for Tp- bacco, Cigars, Pipes, etc. Walnut, fumed Oak, Mahog- any finish. ¥ From 5G up. During the campaign between Gen- ‘erals Sherman and Johnston, Watter- |son was chief-of-scouts of the Con- |federate army. | Achieved Popularity. _ ; “The Rebel” instantly achieved great popularity. The paper was out- spoken and independent, forecasting jin many things the Louisville Courier- | Journal, a linea) descendant to follow | it within a few years. Abraham Lincoln was said to. be Foot Stools . From $2.00 to $9.00. ROCKERS From $6.00 to $60.00. Many other useful articles at low prices. Bismarek Furniture 219: Main St. S} from the table in comfort and ‘the great passion of Watterson’s life. His lecture on “Lincoln” was deliv- ered in hundreds of cities and it was his pride to tell of calling on Lin- ‘eoln the morning of his inauguration and of standing beside him at the | ceremony. “Let no. Southern man_ point his finger at me,” Mr. Watterson said, |“because I cannonize Lincoln, for he !was the one friend we had at court when friends were most in need.” & Upholstering Co. Phone 669 Santa Claus’ Eats Good Pie when he partakessof Mince or Pumpkin baked by u: Sound, wholesome ingredients and skill- ful bakittg account for our suc- cess: Want a°Christmas cake to adorn the table and make your family and friends sit back ‘himself, he urged all to follow his course in complete submi: ‘Federal government. Mr. Watterson always advocated a “Tariff for Revenue Only,” a phrase ion to the enjoyment when the Xmas din- ner is over? Give us your order early. ‘ Hughes Bros. Bakery Fifth St. Phone 546 |adppted by’ the Demofrati¢: partyt |He was an ardent friend of Grover {Cleveland during ‘the latter’s first ‘administration as president, but op- posed Cleveland’s third nomination. His service ,a public official was }confined to-a fractional term in con-j; gress. He accepted a seat there in 1876-77 at the wishes of Samuel J. LING DNC) NGIAG): ; E | iD VA DW We DW Dw DDI DON’T THINK FOR HOURS “Say it With Flowers” THE CHOCOLATE SHOP ‘ Florists and Confectioners Phone 744 : FLOWERS TELEGRAPHED ANYWHERE. Tilden, with whom he was closely al- lied.. Mr. Watterson refused _ re- ‘nomination for the full term. Fre- quently urged to run for high office he always refused, maintaining: “J shallistay where I am. Office is ot for me. Beginning in slavery to end with poverty it is odious to my sense of freedom.” * From 1872 to 1892 however he sat! ‘at all national conventions of the} Democratic party as a delegate-at- jarge from Kentucky. He presided jver the convention that nominated {Tilden in 1876 and was chairman of 'the Platform Committee in those of 880 and 1888. | Mr. Watterson opposed William} {Jennings Bryan in his candidacy for \president in 1896, but in 1900 the| SDA AAI Richmond And Don’t Forget. —That- Big Removal Sale of Shoes ‘Courier-Journal ‘gave, him lukewarm | support. In 1908, however, what Mr. | Watterson denominated as the “free ‘silver heresy” being “as dead as Afri- can slavery” in the United States, he became a warm supporter of Bryan. When the storm of the European | War broke over the world Mr. Watter- +son assumed an uncompromising stand ‘in support of the cause and ideals of the Entente Allies, declaring his be. {lief that their cause was the cause of freedom: and democracy and that of the Central Empires that of autocracy jin a \the end of practically every editorial jhe wrote on the subject for many months: “To hell with the Hohen- izollerns and Hapsburgs!” ’s Bootery | When Watterson founded the Jour- jnal he made a plea for harmony in 1 the South. Thoroughly reconstructed}: | which he coined, and which finally. was | | His attitude was tersely set forth | single sentence that appeared at | 'his editorial attention to social ques- | {tions: He once made a savage attack | fon New York society women, calling ;them “a flock of unclean birds.” ‘He; accused them of a fondness for dis-! play that ruined the men, and 4 love; lof champagne and bridge tnat even-| tually ruined) their morals, { His dashing style gave him’ suchj {nicknames,as “Light Horse Harry” !and “Henry of Navarre.” He was} imcre popularly called plain “Marse | Henry.’ i | As effectively as he wrote, Mr. Wat- | ;terson spoke on the public platform. ; His reputation as an orator reached | its climax when he delivered an ad- | bian Exposition when he appeared as {the government's official spokesman. | Among the several books He wrote ! cmpiled were “Oddities of South- | jero Lite and Character,” « volume of , | Southern humor; “The ‘Spanish- American” War,” ‘written concurrently | {with the events, and his latest work, | {“Compromises of Life,” u compilation | lof his lectures, addresses and nu-| s editorials from the Courier- 1 Of his career Mr, cently said, ; - “I came out ofthe war like“many cf the young fellows of the South, a|/ | Yery picked bird, indeed. An order to| escape the humiliation-of borrowing | {from a Northern unele, whose polities jt did not approve, T went with my j; Watch to an ‘ugele’ who had no poli- tics at all and got fifty dollars on it. Alongs with two blanket-mates, who myself, I started, or revived, publication of an old suspended newspapér at Nashville. Nothing could withstand the energy} and erdor which we three threw into the enterprise. We were working for bread and had to have it. When ‘we began .there were nine daily papers struggling for a footing in the little Tennessee capital. At the end of the year there were but two, and of these curs had two-thirds of the business. After, two years I was called to Louis- ville to take an editorial position on the cld ‘Louisville Journal, the paper of George D. Prentice. Six months later Walter N. Haldeman, who owned the Courier, joined with me in com- bining the Journal and Courier. In- cidentally this led te the purchase of the oid Louisville Democrat, this pub- lication losing its identity entirely. | That is about all.” The consolidation of the papers was the first of the great newspaper combinations. It resulted | in the first appearance of the Courier- spare, November 8, 1868. ‘In his early years he superintended the detail of every department, and {or more ‘than thirty years “put the paper to \press” every night. He was born in’ Washington, D. C., on February 16, 1840. Heaton Shelters Escaped Convict; Didn’t. Know It Charles Bryer, convict who es- caped from the state per itentiary here, was sheltered by Represen- tative L. E. Heaton, of McKenzie, east of here, according to Warden pele oe Mr. Heaton, however, did not know that he was sheltering an escaped convict. A man, appear. Ing cold and hungry, asked for food, and shelter. “Mr. Heaton opened his doors and gave both. The conviet was given some warm, clothing by Mr. Heaton. He lett, profusely thanking Mr. Heaton, Later It was discevered he leit a cap in which was his name. Bryer escaped hy scaling the prison‘cell house, | ‘Cael eee I CITY NEWS 4 To Attend Convention, |) G. L. Peterson will go to Minne- ‘apolis after the first of the year, to “ittent the pain and glassmen’s con- vention to be held in that city. ) ese Watterson re- three | ot \ To Minois, Beh Nixon, who had been employed at French.& Welch's Hardware store for the past several months, left to- ‘day for Illinois, to spend Christmas with his family. Entered Hospita A. C. Wengel, of Hazelton, was among those to enter the Bismarck hospital yesterday. Others to enter yesterday, were Henry Moe, of LeRoy, | Minn.; Mrs. George Engelter, of New| Salem. Mrs. B. Whitman, of Robin-/ son, underwent an operation at Bis- ‘marck hospital yesterday. ST. ALEXIUS HOSPITAL. E. R. Smith, of Wichita, Kan., and E. A. Freigang, of Underwood, left the St. Alexius hospital today for thei homes. Miss Marion Rud, of Petti- bone, entered the hospital today. SOLDIER’S BODY | BROUGHT HOME) The remains of David O'Brien, for- mer soldier of Company A, was| brought to Bismarck last evening and this. morning was taken to the sol | The date of the funeral has not been | announced. , | Mr. O’Brien enlisted with Company {A and was later transferred to the), eighteenth regiment, first division. He} {was injured by high explosives andj| died over in France. N RACE PLANNED. Shaw, England, Dec. 22.—Sir Wil liam Hopwood has accepted the chal- |lenge of Major R. Barker of Sowerby | | for a race between the homing pigeons | of the Shaw area and those of Tod-/ | \ His ‘scathing indictment of the Ger- jmorden. The stake is $5,000, leadership was interpreted by | many of German blood in this country | FOP. RENT—A four-room modern cot- WANTED—Girl FOR SALE—$30 per acre; NW 1 |dier’s home at Wilton for interment. |!<cigh [to answer the complaint of Otto John- Only 2 More Days. Then Christmas. \ Suggestions From Toy Land For the Kiddies. Train Blocks Dolls Balls Paint Sets Mechano Sets Tinker Toys Games Air Rifles Drums | | WEBB BROTHERS] “THE STORE OF CHRISTMAS CHEER” Store Open Evenings, Until 9 O'clock. Gifts That Will Slip Into An Envelope. Handkerchiefs Gloves Veils Neckwear Fancy combs Silk Hose Silk Underwear Lingerie Clasps Camisoles Boudoir Caps HINTS FOR LATE SHOPPERS If you have not completed your Christmas list, by all means visit this store for it is full of inspiring suggestions to help you select. Just because you have seen Give Her Hankies handkerchiefs in your life, please don’t take these for granted. They are entirely different and ever so much more attractive than any we have ever had. The hand- made ones are just as dainty as they can be and very Frenchy. Others in solid col- ors are just to the liking of young girls and even the plain white ones have quaint embroidered motifs in the corner. handkerchief into every gift package as a little additional Merry Christmas. 10c to $1.50 | | -She’s .Expecting a. Blouse All dressed up and no place to go doesn’t apply to these Blouses, at least not the last part, for there isn’t a woman who wouldn’t welcome one of them at her home on Christmas morning. That’s why their de- signers treated them to the newest shades, the newest trimming and newest styles. Priced at from $5.50 up. a great many Slip a Christmas Gloves! in all the desired styles. A Pair of Gloves Will Solve Any Christmas Problem. They occupy a prominent place in the gift personnel, and every woman who puts on the gloves she gets for Christmas gives them an extra pat of approval. Here you c _ Gauntlet styles, Wrist Gloves, Mous- quetaires, Silk Gloves, Wool Gloves. Silk Hosiery Silk Hosiery is so definitely a part of Christmas Gift Plans that it is no wonder the Hosiery department has such a Christ- mas aspect. Here are women’s plain and novelty silk hosiery for street and formal wear. Wool hosiery in new weaves and colorings, delightfully smart to wear with the new Oxfords. an buy gloves a TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY tage, almost new. Call evenings. Phone 706-3. 12-22-2t FOR SALE—Sweet cream, guaranteed to whip, 50¢ at Herman Ode. Phone 364-5. 12-22-2t for general hous work. Apply Cowan Drug Store or 310 Ave. B. 12-22- , adjoining Driscoll; gcod build- ing Subject to $3500 mortgage, | balance cash. S. D, Adams, Lisbon, | N.D. 12-22-31 | MONS, County of State o ota, Burleigh. In. Justice Court, before Geo. H.| Dolan, J Otte nd Carl Johnson, do- ing as Popular | Johnsons in, Priced § e, plai i Chill, defendant. of North Dakota io the nt: county, ‘clock in the of January, A, D. 1922, then and the son and Carl Johnson doing busine Sto: as Johnsons Popular Priced against you alleging that you them a check for $20.00, and tha are no funds to pa: they have issued ment summons and davit, and the garnishee has ¢ that it has in its possession and con- trol the sum of $26.00 belonging to the defendunt herein. And demanding judgment agains you for $20.00 and that the said hove described be nd y ——— ——— ; ° so fendant will take against you accordingly. GEO, judgment the asked a woman whether she has a large family. “No,” she said, “only ae n. DOLAN, in and for Dakota, White. Rice Popcorn, best for Live Lobsters just received| Popping, 10c per lb. 5 Ibs. for from coast of Maine, now being|35c. Oscar H. Will & Co. served at Hotel McKenzie. FOR SALE — Choice Ca RUE GIs SORE Se 35 A 1118 SMALL FAMILY. Singers. A very appropriate London, Dec. 22.—The magistrate Gift _for Xmas. Jacob Bull, at Bow county court got a jolt when! Dickinson, N. D. 12-19-5t LAST TIME TONIGHT “CONSTANCE TALMADGE in “MAMMA’S AFFAIR” TOONERVILLE COMEDY “The Skipper Has His Fling” and Aesop Fable, “The Hare and the Tortoise.” TOMORROW and SATURDAY—Tom Moore in ‘Beating the Game’ Matinee Daily 2:30. Evenings 7:30 and 9.

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