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PACF TOTIR ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ jEntered at ‘perPostoffice, Bismarck N. Y:, as Second Glass ? ‘BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - 3 E: - Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY +: CHICAGO - - - - - Marquette Bld; Publishers DETROIT ig. Kresge Bldg. : PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK : - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 4: The Associated Press is exclusively entitle€ to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not = otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. Fa All rights of republication of special dispatches hcrein are | also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION * SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE : Daily by carrier, per year........... 2 * ‘Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck).... : Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........... THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER © (Established 1873)+ | 7 SKYWARD An office building 80 stories high will be erected on the ¢ ‘site of famous cld Madison Square Garden in New York City. | The Woolworth building is only 58 stories. From street | # ‘level to its very tip-top it measures 792 feet. The new build- | ‘ing that will eclipse it will rise toward the sky 1100 feet, which is over a fifth of a mile. 3 This will make it the highest man-made structure in the 4 :world, 100 feet taller than the Hiffel Tower in Paris. We wonder what the builders of the Tower of Babel would say of it. They’d probably gape. . 7.20 - 5.00 . 6.00 The skyscraper, an American creation, is the result of the attempt to escape from high land values and the tribute > ‘or toll that has to be paid to them. Land being too costly, the buildings bulge into the air > ‘instead of spreading out over a large territory. All this is a result of congestion: of population — the ‘swarming instinct that began when men banded together for common defense against wild beasts and savage rival tribes, and which has reached its worst in our generation. An 80-story building wonderful? Well’ it’s a wonderful monument to our submission to a frightful economic prob- lem—land ownersniv. The airplane probably will relieve the eon by en-| abling men to live hundreds of miles out in the ¢ountry, quickly flying to and from work, with cities abandoned except ; as.center of trading and recreation. To build an 80-story building solidly and equip it with : ‘elevator and other service, requires almost phenomenal skill and intelligence. ‘The best brains today are in industry, not the arts or professions. ~ YOUR ENDURANCE , Av-nine-year-old Indian boy got lost in the dense woods 2 {near The Pas, Manitoba, Canada. He wandered for 17 days. ‘covering at least 100 miles of wilderness, never seeing a man. Then he was found and rescued by a party of hunters. During the 17 days, he had to fight nature face-to-face to keep alive, for when he got lost he had neither food nor sup- plies of eny kind—not even a pocket knife. He made 4 bow-and-arrows; killed enough game to keep alive. Now, the bow-and-arrow is obsolete with the Indians, ; of this lad’s tribe, except as playthings, the high-power rifle ¢ , having taken it place. ** But if he hadn’t known how to make a bow-and-arrow 3 | outfit, he’d have perished... Knowledge often seems worthless —until emergency. That’s what knowledge is really for, fter all—emergency. ‘ The more education, the better. Another instance of the human body’s powers of endur- ance:. In Canton, Ohio, P. H. Hassan fell into a pool of warm asphalt. He couldn’t get out. Struggled until he was ex-| hausted. This was in the evening. j When rescuers found him next morning, the asphalt had hardened into a solid block. Hassan was firmly imbedded, | =. only his head and right arm showing. They had to chop him out. A terribie experience. = ‘he lives, apparently none the worse for his experience. The cases of Hassan and the lost Indian boy illustrate how: difficult it is to extinugish the life spark. Man fights | a rd, can cndure‘ almost anything, when death threatens = him, But -: BABY DEATH RATE Seventy-five thousand Americans a year are killed by = accidents, according to President Dow of National Safety F Council. This should startle us into carefulness, especially | 3 ne 20,000 are babies under five years, 20,000 are children under 15. = The bulk of these accidents, of course, are avoidable. | The big death toll is largely due to our rush and’ hustle — i the Speed craze caused by our nervously speeded-up ways of iving. : : JAP EARTHQUAKE : To rebuild the devastation of the Japanese earthquake ‘ ; will require three times as much building materials as were * ‘used in all the army training camps (cantonments) con- 5 ; Structed by Uncle Sam during the war. Mi This means that Japan is in the market for over eight | i j million tons of building materials. A lot of it will come from ‘ America. Our building trades already are feeling the stim- ;ulus of this outside demand. oh SEMPLE SPELLING , Industrial engineers in the east are launching 2 move- : ; ment to-simplify‘spelling. Roosevelt had the same idea, and it’s a sensible one. Stenographers alone waste thousands i of hours of time by needless typing of such things as “ph” ; Where “f” would serve as well. Or “cigarette” for “cigaret” f i and: “catalouge” for “catalog.” z 2 a7. The supply of time dnd energy available for each of us : i {is limited. Why waste any of it with useless effort? In 25 years 24 Mitte bas eet i years 24 ci ve> mn to Mme. Marie Michel ‘Grasses of France. She gets thi id Chmsotuas. ; the medal? If every mother had as many 72 Soc engl ll ig tg gl Qi , woul one dense mob together like sardines. And think of Father’s job, Y ae \ B tometer in 4 Soapetative’ bi rable 0 | sages from the artic, where weath- | | Here's Minnesota news. Forest | fircs raging. So are the farmers. These fires are not Magnus Johnson. When a compressed air tank blew | up at Columbia University students thought it was a professor. Dyke broke, flooding a Florida town, ang all we can hope is that it got some burglars’ feet wet. Stove exploded on an Alabama farm where all cooking is not done on a can opener. You know, sad thing about cook- ing with can openers is you can't sit around them to dry out. McMillan sending radio mes- is er is starting south for the winter. Good radio news today. New gen- erator eliminates hums, Some new programs would eliminate “Ho- hums. t Prince of Wales danced in a Can- adian ‘hotel; but not, we'll bet, be- | cause he saw his bill. Reykjavik, capital of Ireland, may | sound as foolish as it does from | shivering with cold. Widows cannot marty in India so bachelors there are considers fair- ly safe from harm, Siamese boy may play quarter- back for Boston University. Lucky for him he wasn’t twins, American woman has stopped bull fighting in Cuba. Now she can wor- ry about rat eating in China, In Toledo, 0., a boy of 18 months has a six-foot pet snake, so Demp- sey may lose his title yet. i — i St. Louis aviation searchlight car- ries 20 miles and would be fine for hunting a collar button, | i} out again, Charley and Bob had to, pull it out with ropes.” * | “My, my!” cried all his listeners. | A successful Minneapolis business | “Wasn't that splendid of itt ; “Say!” quacked Daddy Duck. “Did Roman advises people to play poker, | yoy ever notice what a fine voice it has?” i Seay “And its eyes,” Pittsburg Carnegie Museum has | oe an egg 50,000 years old, which some | Mouser rowdy. CEG Vout] Taek RLY, “['m sorry its horn has been cut| Kansas City objects to Sunday cir- | ff", moced Misses sohaeeatl ae nasa car has won their hearts by doing.a, 7 .. ‘f e kind act.” Forme? prize fighter is preaching eeu Baking ; + in St. Louis. so we bet nobody tries | (COPYTIEN. 1088, SEA Sedvice, Ine.) to sleep in hia church, hi: boone They caught a one-armeq bandit in New York. Bandit work there is be- coming pretty easy. Cleveland druggists say they are not bootleggers. Then what are they? Some even may be druggists. miewed Thomas “They're just like late, VIENNA GETS |” FARM PRODUCTS Vienna, Oct. 18.—Farimers’;, carts: again are to be seen in the yaarket,| squares of,,Vienna; a circumstance which means that the farmer today is perceiving the necesgity of be- stirring himself if he wants to: dis-| pose of hig products. With this will come competition, and a. plentiful] ® supply of fruits and vegetables for the city dwellers.at lower prices. Gone are the days when Vienna’ housewives, rain or shine, had to troop out to the farms laden with | ° city finery for the farmers’, wives |which they turned over for the re vilege of digging a few pounds of potatoes; while the farmer stood aloof, smoked city cigars and made sarcastic remarks. You know, drug stores are fast be- coming just old-fashioned ‘ross- roads stores moved to town. Live fox escaped in Chicago. While at large it did not try to sell any strangers oil gtock. i I do. Cincinnati girl claims a conductor squeezed her. It will increase strect | car traffic there, | ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS ——_ By Olive Roberts Barton iI A Thought A strange thing Squealy-Moo Land. Farmer Brown bought an automo- bile. Charlie and Bob, the farm horses, were often too tired after working all day to be driven into | all, ' jhands? Then he shall answer, Those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends—Zech. 13:6. Animals are such agreeable fri and Mrs. Brown liked to go to thejno criticisms.—George Eliot. movies. | So they got a nice little black car, shinier 'n a new stove, and kept it in the wood-shed. | All the Squealy-Moo Landers gath-| 7 ered around to have a good look at| it, and they passed remarks, you may be sure. : “Humph!” quacked Daddy Drake. “It copied my voice. A copy cat! That’s what it is!” 1 “And it copied my eyes!” miewed Thomas Mouser. “They shine more brightly at night than they do’ in the day time. I should be the one to say ‘Copy cat’.” ¥ i “Speaking of copying,” mooed -= “I hear it has a horn, although I don’t see any., Perhaps, like mine, it has been. cut mes TE Missez Cow mildly. off.” “I don’t care about it copying,”. re- marked Goosey Gander, “but I have heard that these things have dread- ful ways. Whenever they meet any- one on the road, they run over him. An fact,-many a time in my wander-| ings, I have stood directly in Sele | path and hissed my scorn, daring them to touch a feather. But always the same thing happens—they honk , impudently back at me and téar right along. If I were not a, good jumper I should not be here te: peak | of it!” 3 | All this time the little black auto-! mobile stood silently regarding his! visitors. Never a word did it say, but a few drops of water ran down: its nose and they did look like real tears. “7 think it’s a shame!” said Nancy | to Mister Dodger. The fairyman and the Twins were near enough, us- ual, to hear the whole affair. “Never mind!” he said wisel; “Just be . patient, my dear. 8o: times we have our own-way to make in the world, Wait and see!” A day op two later the ‘Twins had reason to remember Mister Dodger’s words. ‘For all the Squealy-Moo péo- vent their heads it w \F ‘You. MUST KNOW SHOW You. LETTER MERS TO HIS FINANCE, BEATRICE GRIMSHAW,. I am not going to apologize even though I haven't written you for two weeks. me has gone. At times it seems to me as though I can never finish what I have begun. I've written you a good deal about athered that something I her quaint dionfS and her constant display of insophistication, something that is *g taré in Hollywood.as a goat-with ippgr teeth, she is a peculiarly ap- realing little figure. Atid oh, how she does work! 11 this town Ido not believe there ,are two people who work as she and I told her this the other eve- ning and she said, “It is to forget I work, monsieur. you work?” T started to working to get 2 home to bring you te, Bee, and someway, I cannot tell why, the words died in my throat. It wasn’t because I did not want her to kitow it, neither was it because I was not working for that, but some- way I just couldn’t tell her, that’s \ I gimply_made some foolish remark @['bout it being impossible for. me to happened in| ; what ‘are these founds in thine|’e&up work whether I wanted to or nof\ Thi dd yet Iam almost sure you e it. You #re too conven- ends | tional ‘our life is bounded by too town at night. And Farmer Brown |—they ask no questions. They pass! many rulex to see any merit in these | peste who work like demons when | EVERETT TRUE | BY CONDO [_] WHAT HAVS You Gor HERE IN THE OVEN, xO TAKS THSM THEey/RS Biscuits... RAISING, BUT SINCS YOU OPENED THS OVEN AND UST IN. THE COLD bh) * X RICHARD SUM- they do work and play and laze away the hours when tney are not work- ing in a’ way that I have never known grown people to do before. You intimated in your last letter that you were ready to come if I FROM I don't know where the I work early and|Wanted yu. Of course I want you and yet I just can’t see my,. way clear to come for you. ~ Mr, Einstein said the other day it would’ probably be a year before I would be ablé to get out of the town. er and from your last let- tf j|Of course I never would have the “lnrejudieed you against her. I am | temerity to ask you to come to me, ure-if you could her, Bee, you | fr _you are not the girl, Bee, to toulq not feel this at all. Witn|¢ross the continent to marry the little French accented |™an you love. You would rather wait, I am sure, until I can ‘come to you, I will then have that’ ban- galow, and, have itifixed absolutely in the way ‘that will make you ‘more than comfortable when I get you here, I must close now, dear, because word has just come to me that Paula Perier has fainted on the set and they are having hard work to revive her. Poor girl, I knew something like this would happen to her. She has been’ working altogether too ‘hard, Your devoted DICK. (Copyright, 123, NEA Service, Inc.) In What is it for that tell her that I was MANDAN NEWS | HOLD FUNERAL FOR PIONEER Funeral services for the late Mrs. Flora Adams were held this after- noon at the Presbyterian church with Rev. H. H. Ownes in charge. ‘Mrs. Adams passed sway Tuesday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Flor- ence Nauck, Livingston, Mont., where she“has been making her home for the past two years singe leaving Mandan, although’ she had made ex- tended visits to children living in Laurel, Mont. : The deceased was a pioneer’ resi- dent of Morton county having come here in 1875 from Stevens Point, Wis., where she was married to Tho- mas Adams a few months previous. She was born in Montreal, Canada, April 3, 1855,.coming, to Wii shortly. after with her parent husband passed sway in March °80, 1909. She is survived by five daughters and three sons. They are Mrs. Jen- ny Warden, Gresham, Ore.; Mrs. Florence Nauck, Livingston, Mont.; Mrs. Ida Grannis, .Laurel, Mont.; Mrs. Bertha \.Pfolh, Livingston, Mont.;. Mrs. Ella Huncovsky, Man- {ins The sons are: Roy Adams, Liv- a beautiful spot out here, {OUT AND THEY, WER ingston, Mont.; Wi i Jr. of Mandan. vicinity. Mrs. Warden is the only one of her children who] | is not ‘here*for the funeral. She is in poor health and was forced to re- from Liyingston where hi and W.) ivingston and Lau in-law are also here for “Pallbearérs were Oscar Morck; W. Mandap, “FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1928 when the machine skidded from a road south of the city and turned over in the ditch. % Miss Myrtle Munsof of Brainerd, Minn, who has been a guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Curtis for the bast five'months left today for her home. Miss Munson fs United Press opera- tor: in the ofices of tho Brainerd Dispatch. Paul Lucenti, local railroad em- ployee, paid a fine of $25 for drunk and disorderly conduct:and for reck- less driving yesterday morning in a | hearing in justice court before G. L. Our A wiener roast will be enjoyed by mefibers of the Epworth League of the Methodist church this evening at Chautauqua grounds. G. W. Stephens, gardener in Man- dan, has marketed about three car- loads of vegetables including squash, carrots, pumpkins ,watérmelons, to- matoes, and numerous other varities. Mr. Stephens plans ‘to. exhibit his truck at the International Grain, Corn and Livestock show next year. Training a Man- Hater By MYRA CURTIS LANE The Trevor women -were queer, every one agreed—old Miss Mary and her niece Helen. Three da; before the date set for Miss Mury’s wedding ehe had been jilted; her lover had run away with another woman. Miss Mury Trevor had withdrawn into her house, no man had been allowed to eater it there- after. She was known ns @ map-hater, In cher old age she /avopted her niece, Helen. By this time Mary Trevor was a harsh, gaunt, engle- beaked old womdn, universully dreaded in the village. She walked with a masculine stride, and treat- ed men as If they were'the dirt be- neath her feet. The women lived In a wing of the Trevor home. All the rest had been shut up, left just as it was when Mary Trevor was jilted. When she adopted Helen and nade her. her heiress, it was understood that Helen was never to speak to € man, was to carry_on ker tradi- tion of man-hatred throughout her own days. \ vx ‘ Scandal files quickly through a small town. At twenty-five Helen Trevor was small, pretty, with a quick, bright, timid way ubout her. People sald it was a.shame that she couldn't even have a be Then they began to couple the name of the squire’s son with hers, All eyes were in the conspiracy of observation. If the aquire’s son, Jim Benson, were near, it was sald Helen's quick color came and went. It was rumored that they had been seen talking on the outskirts of the ‘town, j Everybody said that !f old Mary learned of it Helen Trevor would be turned out without a penny. The ld squire had nothing, and a large family to support on jt... Jim Ben- gon had erical. position in the bank: It would be madness to affront nich old Mary Trevor. Nevertheless the gossip pelalat: ed. Once it was sald they had been seen together at a nea:-by town, walking hand in hand\along the roads. Nothing more developed, however. Not for a long time, at least. Did old Miss Mary ‘really expect to mold her niece into a man- hater like her ‘crabbed, bitter old self? She was sharp as-a hawk watched Helen. all the.time from behind her shade—even when/the postman came or the bake: called. No man had ever set foot within the precincts of, the Trevor home since she had been jilted. Age was creeping on her, but, instead of softening, 8! ew hafder, She was even, ft sald, suspicious of the airplanes that sometimes flew overhead, for fear tbat some lover Of Helen’s might be aboard, looking down. It was mania, of course— Helen’ grew more ‘wistful as the summer days grew into winter. One day a whisper ran ike wildfire through the town, a térrible, devas- tating whisper. Another day it was confirmed. After that the women watched her from behigd thelr shades. Some turned away when she passed. if , Old Mary began to watch. She began to taunt her, She grew sar- castic; then she grew sweet. Then one day her rage overflowed in a fury like a storm It beat dowd: the defenses of the stammering, terrified, girl, and that long, beringed, accusing: finger pointed at her like a. sword. "You——!". > x It was a word that hed never passed Miss Mary's lips before, “It’s true!” len could not speak. A mist we Sree erie her, out of it tl t old’ eyes, blazing into “Go into:.the streets! Stop! Who is the man?” - . The name filtered though Helen’s ps, janatie, “T shall kill him... We Trevor women are able to defend our own honor.” if ‘Suddenly Helen fell: at her. feet ane el area hep, Sab, “Listen! ‘ou shall listen to me now. Ji ahd I ae married.” a ig “We were married last spring fo Tilton, We loved” other, ; Ve couldn't live without ench other. Many a time J wanted to tell you and your forgiveness, but 1 didn’t dare. \Now I’m not ashamed. T'm proud of him!” She walked to the door, head up, i AM. Vallancey, D. R. Taylor, Jr., John} shoulders. squared, Then ° some-: Fosan, W. D. Hughes, and Dennis To- big, all ‘of Mandan ‘and friends of the family ‘during their: residence Ng) oma) TRUCK ARRIVES er equipment, for ‘the Man fire department arrived yesterday. The city commissioners, ‘and firemen have been agtive gétting. the new thing In Mis, Mary broke. ‘The-girl turned. “Run and open uy; wnat ae ba? 1988, We re Nis SCOTTS WA CEMULSION the rest of the ————— , PRESENT TIME GREAT ACe In Future We Will Be Envied for Having Lived During One of the Great Periods. Without going into the question of nationality in art, I do think we know enough from psychology at present to believe that man pro- duces out of his subconscious mind, that that subconscious mind fs the well wherein all the early impres- sions are stored, and that it is Probable that those early impres- sions are the ones that influence our minds most deeply. So it seems j that men will be most apt to pro- duce permanent and valuable things when they move along their own natural lines, Learn from other People all you can, but attach that knowledge to those natural lines. It is not wise to go off on an en- tirely new line, Werare living in a renalssance<a time of great spiritual activity. In the future we. will be envied for having lived during one of the great periods. That activity in this coun- try has undoubtedly been increased by contact with the wonders of Euv rope, but let us be sure to use those things to Increase our own creative activity; to use them neither mere- ly to collect nor to copy. In the Italian renaissance this is what happened: The old things showed what man had done, and the ftal- lans said: “We, too, are men such as these; we, too, can create”; and the world was suddenly filled with the glory of their achievements. And then knowledge increased and the creative flame burned more feebly, and the power of the objects of the antique world became great- er than the power of the soul of the antique world; the shadow was taken for the substance. See Santa Marla del Miracoli in Venice, and see there the renaissance alive with creative beauty, making something never before made in just that way; | the spirit speaking again through the vivid Nhe and form. Then after long years, when man stopped dreaming and had waked up, know- ing facts and forgetting fancy, see the hopeless pile of stone in Paris called the Madeleine.—North Amer- ican Review. a HOW TIGER KILLS BULLOCK Breake Animal’s Neck in Odd Man- ner—Refuses to Fight Jungle ~ Beasts Armed With Tusks. The rhinoceros is a short-sighted beast, but his sense of smell is ex- ceedipgly keen. He will not, howy ever, clash with an elephant. The two big animals are shy of each other, although the rhinoceros ig not a match for the elephant when the latter, coils up his trunk out of the way and goes at the other beast with his great tusks. The tiger,.on the other hand, is no match for a rhinoceros and will not fight beck. He has no weapon strong enough. The tiger is not even a match for a water buffalo. His method of killing the largest animal he attacks—a bullock, for example—is to break its neck. Standing on his hind legs, he :réachea one.paw. to the builock’s shoulder and the other to the lower thigh. Then, taking the animal’s neck in his jaw, he throws back his own head, jerking the neck of the bul- lock up and over and cracking {t— _ Asia Magazine, How to Repair Fountain Pen. Secure a silk thread as nearly like the color of the pen to be re- paired as possible. Then cont the section, covering the crack with al- coholle solution of shellac. Before the shellac sets, wrap the section with the silk. thread as uniformly as possible, and with all the tension that the thread will stand, making, no provision \for the. ends of ‘the thread except to smooth them down wel] In the setting shellac. Aftere this shellac 1s dry, which will only require a fey minutes, the job can be finished by covering the thread with another light cont of shellac. The part thus repaired will be th® strongest point in the pen, and If It be the barrel of the pen, it will be absolutely necessary that the shel. lac be light, for If it is heavy It will not make a neat job, whereas if it is too ight it will set before it can be wrapped. If too light give the place a second coat, when the first has half set. Pulsations of the Earth. It has been proved ‘that, in. ad- dition to the many tremors due to seismic or earthquake influences which modern delicate instruments detect, there are certain pulsations that seem to have some other orl- /gin. Some of these are diurnal, and are probably due to the influence of the sun and the weather on the ground. In wet weather the sides and bottom of a valley carry. a heavier’ load than’ the bounding ridges; in dry weather the case Is reversed. Diplomacy. The Young Bride (looking in win- dow of jewelry store)—George, I'd Jove to have that bracelet. The Husband—tI can't afford t buy {t for you, dear. The Bride—But {if yon capld, you would, wouldn't you? The Husband—I'm afraid not, e lusband—It isn’t { enough, dear.’ - yy The Bride—Oh, you darling— Lite. y J \ A Real Tragedy...55°- | He—We have missed the boat. We shall have to stay ‘until the ter part of the week. £ She—Horrors! I1/ only brought ret ‘dresses and bof I shall have 0 weer some of t! twice.—B ton Transcript.’ si 8 ig Z Se . Circus Pjay. Small Child—Are you the trained / ‘nurse mamma sald was coming? Nurse—Yes; dear, I'm the trained Burse. = Small Child—All right. Let's see you do some of your ¢ricks, $4.75 Order now ioe Ta 4 VE) ,