The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 10, 1922, Page 4

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i. i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ' =PAGE FOUR : ; ‘ent, Governor Miller, gave the state a sound administration. | } 3 HE BISMAR CK TRIBUNE ‘He was outspoken, and he was ndt a good vote getter.. Only | / Bittered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | the Harding: landslide pulled him. through in 1920. | A Matter. ’ The wets in New Jersey are celebrating, where Senator | GHORGED. MANN. - - ~~: ~”~«SBditor Frelinghuysen, friend of President Harding, an acknowledged | dry, was defeated by Governor Edwards, openly wet. But, | jstrange as it may seem, Edwards is confessedly personally | dry while Frelinghuysen admitted his cellar was well stocked. | -DETROIT In Nebraska the dry vote. made itself feit against Senator Kresge Bldg. Hitchcock, a Democratic leader. He avowed himself a dry,) | but his personal views in the past were moist. His successor | is a Republican and he also had built up a large personal | following because of his work on the city administration of | 5 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS {Omaha, where he was a strong advocate of municipal owner-| aa ship of public utilities, and he was classed as an ardent pro-} The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use OF | cessive républication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-| Our sister - a pte * | 4 ogee cals ‘ A | ur sister state, Minnesota, sends many things to North Ree ct edited in this paper and also the local news published Dakota, but North Dakota also sent the germ which became| “ saat sal di. . ‘inculeated in Minnesota voters two years ago and led to the 1 eee aie of republication of special dispatches herein are victory cf Dr. Henrik Shipstead, friend of Townley and Fra-: “ -Foreign Representatives 4 G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ‘CHICAGO - S g ' Marquette Bldg. ; PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ' NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. oe | euietie = = izer, a dentist and a farmer-labor candidate. Senator Kellogg | MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ‘is a strong and able man, but could a vou her the nee , "RIP TRS ‘ination of the voters to\give vent to their feeling. of djscon-| SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ‘tent in the ballot. Dr. Shipstead was brought forward by | Daily by carrier, per year... ...... +++. 7.20' A.C, Townley, but Townley urged his balance of power plan! Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... .. “ 7.20 ‘in Minnesota last year and his previous supporters .broke | Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)... 5.00) away and joined the Van Lear organization with Shipstead. | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota......... cesses 6.00 ‘General discontent, the price of wheat and oats, too, had its; " "SOL NE ‘effect in Minnesota. ah ' H sa Bee eathane Ista). ia cial Lodge, the Republican leader in the senate, won but by a} narrow margin against a weak candidate. Senator Townsend, | THE RIGHT KIND OF TONIC ! poe Republican, was Serre chien bares: of | g -?P eee _|“Newberryism” was raised against him. It did not handicap! y Bias hetieger he piven are Gap Geae and ae Fon in the primary against three other candidates and there| i k ae the Rialto Theatre last evening. His message is’ 8 reason to believe that. his defeat was a part of the general! H ones ‘. Sat anne apt SG “ytd, (reaction against the Washington administration. i most opportune coming as it does upon the eve of a city wide Senator La Folletie’s ‘vict 8 expectadenc lt { campaign to arouse a community spirit and to quicken city! enALON, 2 “ fale 2 AC rh isles ee a to bs a endeavor along broad and comprehensive lines. | matter of an So Prete F g oe Tile North (a | * His broadside left nothing unsaid. Dr. Bready never hart in Towa was also expected, For lowa, like North Dakota, earentiptn e ce » thing |Still likes to vote in the Republican column. In Ohio a Re-' landed in the City Hall of Pontiac by calling a spade anyt rok | Publican senator was chosen. Senator Pomerene was de-| btit a spade and he got under the municipal hide of Bismarck seated. He was an able man. His defeat was occasioned by last evening and | unless all signs ail started something | .omewhat the same attitude on the part of voters that de-| that will develop into real city unity and gradually abolish footed A. J. Beveridge, a progressive;Republican, in Indiana. petty factionalism. ee ate : ,,_,| Senator Pomerene had been outspoken in his views on labor. | Bismarck is a progressive city. Despite the fact that Senator Pomerene talked plainly of his views on the labor | its Commercial Club in the past has not functioned as it! situation. So did Mr. Beveridge. His campaign was really should—and that now is simply water that, has passed under | that of a conservative. The labor vote was' active in both| the bridge—the metropolis of the Slope has forged ahead. ' states, Political strife may have militated against a greater develop- The Socialists lost one congessman from New York but ment, but the miracle is that in face of divisions incident to} Milwaukee sends Victor Berger back to claim the seat that all capital cities of this size the world over, Bismarck, the | has been denied him. ; gateway to the West, has had a most wonderful development | ‘The whole story of the election nationally is one of an} _in the last ten years and is a mighty good city to live in—and | old-fashioned change from one party to another. The as-| to fight for. tounding results in many quarters may, however, serve as a! Dr. Bready gave the essentials of “The Four Square City” |warning. The Republican administration must attempt to last evening—“Loyalization,” “Fraternalism,” “Organization” | translate the vague demands of the people. And as much and “Visualization.” Of course the keystone is loyalty to|as it may be to the country’s benefit to\get it back to norm- the city without that every structure is built upon shifting alcy is cannot be in the good old-fashioned method which must sands. That civie virtue once firmly implanted in any com-|be sugar-coated and iabelled under another name. munity and the others follow naturally. ‘ | The result in North Dakota is not due to the same causes | # The futility of attempting to develop a community spirit} which influenced the turn-over in many other states, except through polities, lodges, churches or any special organization | that the attitude which North Dakota has got used to on the was‘ logically demonstrated. Working through such forces| part of about half of the voting population has only now been merely means limited group action and worthy as it may be, | expressed in her sister states. has cnly a limited appeal. Where the welfare and interest of The election of Governor Nestos, as. pointed out before, Bismarck are at stake, every citizen unless actuated by self-!is an endorsement of his administration and his efforts dur-| ish motives ought to meet on the common ground of an active, | ing a short period in office. The tremendous size of his ma- ie, going commercial organizations such as Bismarck must | jority is explainable in part in that William Lemke was ‘a/ velop out of the campaign so auspiciously, launched. weak candidate, ‘Lemke, may: possess all the virtues. or.all |. Everyone must measure up to the pitch upon which the] the vices which have'been credited to him heretofore, but | campaign was ‘initiated publicly last evening. The old slate; before the voters he was a‘candidate lacking in those qauli- has been cleaned, What is builded in the future is up to you | ties which inspire a swell of votes.‘ : Mr. Citizen. You will get just the kind of a Commercial Club The defeat of J. F. T. O’Connor by a small vote is never- or Chamber of Commerce your energy, your sacrifice and! theless a tribute to his personal popularity. He was loaded : your vision create. The American City Bureau is here to see | down with the weight of being on the Democratic tickef in a that every inducement is offered to the citizens of Bismarck | state overwhemingly Republican, and he ipo lost many to get shoulder to shoulder for the development of: all the | votes both through the determination of many to stick by the city for all of the people, not part of the city for the selfish | Republican party label and to the temptation to “vote ’er| advancement of a particular few. | straight.” = When the call goes out for a movement to better condi- Many of Mr. O’Connor’s friends feel that the Ku Klux, tions in Bismarck, politics, factionalism or personal interest can well be put aside. Everyone is and must be big enough | cost him many votes. Before the election it did not appear, | | to work with anyone when the objective is simply the com- | in view of the tremondous vote for Mr. O’Connor in 1920 for| mon good and the building here of “The Four Square City.” | Governor, that. this would amount to much more than talk. | , Dr. Bready gave the citizens a dose of horse sense which | Whether the thoughtless activity of Mr. O’Connor’s friends | has always been the salvation of the American people in the or the vindicativeness of his enemies produced a situation | , hour of the second sober thought. This city has come through whereby religious prejudice entered into the voting, every | , the heat of a bitter campaign. It can well afford to forget | responsible citizen ought to deplore and condemn. The action the petty animosities stirred up and with a united front move! of any. voter so moved is un-American and lacking in, the ‘forward to,a realization Of those ideals so eloquently pictured | practical application of Christian teachings. by Dr. Bready. | League spokesmen assert that bad weather in the western | = The city’s good is paramount to any personal interest, part of the state and the weakness of Lemke cost Frazier and if;this is not true then, évery individual interest is men-| several thousand votes. é 'aced and there can be no civic growth. Dr. Bready stressed'- This is the second time that Mr. O’Connor has been named | the point that men must’be prepared to live not simply to die! for office on a fusion platform. This election also brought | the old mistaken view that paints the golden’ in the names of other candidates on a fusion ticket. The | streets and pearly gates up above in some nebulous zone. He} Nonpartisan League has tried to go outside the Republican ; convinced’ the people of Bismarck last evening that in the column‘after a primary and has failed. It ought to be plain | building of a‘four square city, the golden streets and pearly | now that the fusion ticket cannot work. Voters may switch gates come as a natural sequence to right living and progress en masse to a Democratic leader, as they did for John Burke, and that conditions here are what, we make them. Bromides| but they will\not tolerate what they believe is control of both the cynic may say, but nevertheless the vision of Dr. Bready,| political parties by the same group. fs | \the fighting parson mayor of:Pontiac, is what everyone in| The little bunch of I. V. A. leaders, who do not represent | the city needs. The pace is set for the next few weeks. Tie! the bulk of the Independent adherents in the state, announced | cepe on the hammer and— ‘their fusion plans boldly before the primary. They openly | ; LET'S GO! |and covertly opposed Senator McCumiber in the primary, al- 5 a | though he represents ideas of government they claim to sup- THE SURPRISING ELECTION ‘port, and protests were made to them that the fusion plan | = Results of the election disclose very’ plainly that the) could not be successful. They were urged to unite in an effort voters of the country were in an ugly mood. The Republican | to nominate McCumber. This was not done and the results majority in Congress was almost swept away, two close reflect the mistake of fusion on national issues. But the friends of the President were beaten for return to the United | I. V. A. leaders apparently loved McCumber less than Frazier. i States Senate, the “wets” scored decisive victories, three;One who made such a protest before the primary told the | farmer-labor candidates were elected to the United States!]. V. A. leaders that they would, by their own actions, handi- | Senate and a one-time bosom, friend of Col. Roosevelt was’ cap O’Connor and elect Frazier. This man went on the stump defeated for the senate in Indiana. ifor O’Connor, and spoke effectively, in Bismarck and else- * A reaction from the tremendous Republican majority of where, but he had told the truth in the first place. 1920 was expected. The great overturn that came was un-! The Tribune deplored the fusion plan and the opposition | expected. The people were voting for no constructive ideas|to Senator McCumber,‘ not because it was inimical'to Mr. | por platform; the vote was one of discontent. The railroad |O'Connor, but because it believed the state ought to try and) i and coal strikes, disturbed conditions in industry, the liquor nominate in the primary a man of Senator McCumber’s capac- | | issue and other elements entered into the mind of the aver-|ity, who had reached such a high place in the senate and in, | age citizen in casting his ballot. The people voted negatively. | the party councils. The defeat of McCumber and O’Connor | The after-the-war readjustment period has been trying _to means that ander the ordinary rules at Washington Senator | | miost people; the great mass whose votes counted believed! Ladd and Mr. Frazier will control most of the patronage in| |there was something wrong and because the people in office North Dakota. It gives them the opportunity to place wheel- | had not made thnigs right they were voted down. There horses of the Nonpartisan league in- public jobs and to per- jis no assurance on the part of most of the successful candi- petuate their organization at public expense. If the state! dates chosen, that they know how conditions may be bettered. has not “finished the job” the onus must rest upon these few : It was in part a negative vote that precipitated the Hard- political leaders who beat Senator McCumber because of per- ing landslide in 1920. Long established confidence in the sonal grievance, and elected Frazier by their attempt to suc- jability of the Republican party to manage the business affairs 'ceed in a patently improbable effort. And the tribute to joe the nation was a factor. The majority of people in North | Frank O’Connor lies in the fact that in spite of the handicaps | Dakota have been voting negatively for the past six years. } ' Though the Nonpartisan league has offered a platform un-frace. z over which he had no control he made such a remarkable déniably its greatest appeal has been through criticism of} ,evils which the farmers believe they have suffered; there A WORD OF THANKS ‘is nothing on which to base a belief that the farmers of the The Tribune cannot find adequate words in which to thank Hi state are convinced that the proposed remedies will accom- the voters of Bismarck for the loyal support given for official ) plish what they desire. ipaper. Every ward endorsed this paper and in all but one, |. ‘The result in New York was a tribute to tremendous per- the vote was most substantial. The Tribune sought earnestly ;sdnal popularity, as well as to the previous administration | and honestly to bring these official notices to the readers of | of Governor Al Smith, who was a good governor. His oppon-|the county, but as was the case two years ago a three cor- | Klan in Grand Forks county and religious prejudice in others! |; LEZ LZ nered fight, the fact that some 200 or 300 failed to vote in 'Bismarck on the issue and the position at the foot of the ballot militated against 4 complete expression. The newspaper law is most vicious in principle as it forces a business into the hurly burly of politics and naturally restricts the frecdom of the press. The law should be changed providing for a special ballot such as is done on all other special issues. It should also be required that a newspaper to qualify should be in existence at least a year and by a sworn statement prove that it'has a paid general circulation. As the law now stands, it become the instrument of poli- jticians to work their venom upon newspapers they cannot control or dominate—while the public#business is denied pub- licity in thespaper most generally read! and people in many instances are forced to print legal notices in two papers—in one to conform with the law and in the other of general circu- lation—TO GET RESULTS.’ The Tribune again thanks its thousands of patrons for their support and encouragement. It hopes to merit more and more this confidence with the assurance that the interests pfthis community regardless of political patronage, are para- mount to the selfish interests of a few designing politicians. ~The farmers of Burleigh county are to be congratulated upon the loyalty they showed to an organ in which they have av financial interest and which is the mouthpiece of their spe- cial interests. : ~ As for The Tribune its course is independent—a Square Deal to All. It will continue to commend where credit is due and to rebuke where criticism is necessary in the interest of-the public weal without view to political reward -at the public crib. * The campaign is over—what is more important is the big task ahead to bridge that gap which separates the city from its best customer-—-The Farmer; to banish.forever the ugly terms of opprobrium and abuse in that spirit that must event- ually prevail if the state is to continue to forge ahead. GHASTLY When woolens were scarce in 1919, many of us, without knowing it, wore clothes made out of casket cloth. used for lining coffins. This is revealed in a New York City court, when two textile firms go to law about payments in an old contract. Remembering the wearing quality of some of those 1919 garments, many of us will agree that they certainly would have been more appropriate buried than worn. Ann EVERETT TRUE BY CON T THINK THAT A MAN OF YouvR AGE COOKS CiKSE A © ee ]Foou when He WeaRs ay . HIGH SCHOOL. RS ? CcotHSs $ ERG You Go AGA! CANIT Sou i SAX SOMGTHING NICE ONCE IN A WHILG F —o You ASKED ME FoR MY OPINION AND Tf GAVE (Te L cace THat i peetTy. wee Wl LE. ' 1 | | FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1922 | \ A MESSED-UP JOB | EE) ADVENTURE OF | | THETWINS | —-—-—____—_—_* By Olive Barton Roberts Jack O’Lantern was __ leaning against the barn. He was unhappy and dejectét in spite of the 4act that the corners of his smouth wacn- ed up in a grin showing two rows of enormous. teeth, “I don’t understand it,"he said to the turkey. “For awhile I was the) mest important person. hereabouts. Every mght the, children put’a can- de in me and carried me around on a broomstick and scared the whole neighborhocd, and my, but we had the fun.” “Yes, I know,” gobbled the turkey | sympathically. “Indeed, I was very jealous of you getting all the at-/ tention. It just shows how, fickle people are and how soon they tire of their friends.” “Well, you don’t need to be jeal- ous now,” spoke up Jack o’Lantern with spirit.:“The whole family have suddenly grown quite fond of you. Master feeds you enough corn to ms&ke you burst, and Mistress says a dozen times a day, ‘My, but that turkey is getting fat!” As for me, not a soul looks to see how thin I am getting. I feel all gone inside!” Jack o’Lantern sighed such an enormous sigh that he fell over on the ground and his head rolled off his broomhstick body. “Now I am done for,” he cried out weekly. “No one will ever see me here.” Suddenly a voice asked, “Does anyone know where we can find Mr. Jack o’Lantern?” “Goodness!” thought Jack o’Lan- tern. “I must bé off some impor- tance after all! Somebody hasn’t forgotten me. I wonder who it is. Here I am!” he called as loudly as he could. “Who wants me?” “Nancy and Nick,” came Nancy’s sweet voice. “We're looking for Mother Goose’s broom. Did you see it?” cea Se ies St | NEWSBRIEFS | ¢——-—___________+ | (By the Associated: Press) Sioux Falls, S. D.—Jury awarded Mrs. Anna Smith $14,000 damages against. Mrs. Etta Waldrum, for al-| leged alienation of affections of Ja- cob Smith, husband of plaintiff. Sioux Falls, S, D.—E. G. Misen- holdern, Parkston, fined $200 in fed- eral court when, pledded guilty mai ufacturing and selling copper sti for making liquor. First case involv- nig Dakota, Washintgon.—A federal revenue of | approximately $445,000,000 \this fiscal | year from import taxes, or about $100,000.00 more than ever before, was forecast ky customs officials. Washington—The shipptig board ! granted permission to transfer the registry of the steamship Reliance and Resolute from the American flag to the Panama flag. Stockholm.—The Nobel prize for literature Was awarded to the Span- | ish dramatist Jacinto Benavente. Chicago—Col. Alvin M. Owsley, national commander of the American Legion said Ilinois big majority for the soldier’s bonus reflects the al- titude of the entire country “for a square deal for the ex-service man.” Fast St. Louis, Ill—Two bandits held up a Pennsylvania roundhouse foreman and a clerk who had cashed checks for roundhouse employees. The loss was $3,315. Traverse Cit: abandoned inves death of Mrs. John Mattice, who dis- apepared two years and whose skele- ton was found by hunters a few days ago. tion of New York.—A half pound screw driver fell 19 floors, landed on the head of Mrs. Ella Coleman, penve- trated her skull and punctured her brain, manufacture of stills in South | y Aan enuihennee , et the | 2 BP, Tom Sims Says Several Baltimore butchers have ‘been told to, mend their weighs, | | | | | i | Drive on tax dodgers jhas started. Drive on taxi dodgers Continues. Entirely too many lions and cle- phants are being seen by hunters. Beyond the Alps lie Italy’s politi cians. ae Some towns are lucky. Near Wit- tenberg, Mo., two robbers were | killed, | | | | | | Wire says Pershing and his party |elaim they killed 200.ducks, but \docsn’t say how many they did kill. It is strange how we put things off,-In Kansas, a man necded a | shave 30 years before he got it, | Russian Soviet government is five years old now. Like all youngste-s it never has had enough to eat. | Doctor says fatigue is a disease. ‘Most of us do get sick of work. | Our'most famous rich America | hunters are chorus girls. | Greek language has not changed 'much in 2000 years. Not even when Greek waiters speak English, The United States is in such a bad condition it is going to lend Cuba | fifty millions. le -—_— Former kaiser gave his bride @ leostly present, which comes under the high cost of loving. i Cape May farmer shot an cage istealing his pigs. This will teach jeagles to leave pigs alone. Villa was reported dead in Mexi- co and it wasn’t his time to be re- ported dead. It was Lenin’s time. ! Our bootleggers are loafing on the job. Arthur Veranay has sailed for [India to hunt pink ‘ducks. ‘In Beauvoir, Miss., a couple have | been married 64 years without shoot~ ‘ing each other one single time. i | Indiana man has found a new j comet in the milky way, but it may be the dog star gone after milk. \ se, The poor we have with us always, but\the rich are often against us. An_old flame with love letters can make it hot for a man. -Most of the gas politicians hand out is laughing gas. : THE MOVIES | aoa | AT THE ELTINGE | Among the noted players who ap- pear with Miss Windsor in this all star First National attraction show- ing at the Eltinge Theatre Friday and Saturday, are Henry B. Walth- all, whose work in “The Birth of @ Nation” will long be rememexed 2s a histrionic masterpiece; Joseph J. Dowling, of | “The Miracle Man” fame; Irene Rich, Milton Sills, Doris Pawn, Donald MacDonald, Shannon Day, Edith Yorke, Nick Cogley, Fred | Kelsey, William Marion, Albert Mac- Quarrie, Annatte DeFoe, Stanley | Goethals and Richard Belfield. The story of:“One Clear Call” by Frances Nimmo Greene, has had 2 wide circulation as a novel. i!.. ATHOUGHT ! ——— ———____— | What. shall we then say to these | things? If) Ged be for us, who can | be against us?—Romans 8:31. God sleeps in the stone, dreams in {the animal, wakes in the man.— | Goethe. ‘Eat Raw Cranberries | And Live to Ripe Old Age, Doctor Advises | BOSTON, Today—“A few cranber- ties a day keeps old age away” might well be the slogan of Doctor | Richard Hogner, a prominent physi- feian of this city who declares that jeranberries contain certain proper- ties, including the well known and | handsomely advertised “Vitamine-C,” which conduce to long life, health |and happiness. | According to Doctor Hogner, the |éranberry is about the most useful ‘of any of the berries which the Amer- ‘ean housewife makes into jellies, ms, preserevs and shorteakes. In ns, preserves and shorteakes. In berry, raspberry, huckleberry and blackberry pale into insignificance. While admitting that the cranberry jin its cooked, preserved or jellicd ; state is. delicious and healthful, the | Doctor asserts that to get the full nefits of its health-giving proper- s the cranberry must be exten raw. ong this line he. says: ‘ “Almost any healthful, nourishing {fod can be spoiled by the wrong kind jof cooking. Boiling too long, over- heating, too little sugar (not endugh to prevent alcoholic fermentation, | which destroys the vitamines), too |} much paring, peeling and coring, ltakes away the food value of many ) fri “Now the cranberry is exceedingl: |xich in vitamines—as necessary to life as is water. It is an easy mat- ter to eliminate a proportion of the itamines by improper cooking «: ‘ureserving. To get the full benetic them the friit should be eaten 4OARSENESS | Swallow slowly smal! | —tub well over the throat. a4

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