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ices emtonrones G UU jous international situation they have to sper at home The Bismarck Tribune * An Independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER tablishea 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. eorge D Mann sident and Publisher | Affect known f Heat Subscription Rates Payable In Advan mithsonian Insti Daily by carrier, per year, Daily by mail, per yea Daily by mail, per ye (in state outside Bismarck). Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Cireu! Member of The Associated Press : The Associated Pre clusively entitled to the Further st uge for republication « ches credited +1 to it or not ota edited in this paper, and also the local new dus origin published here in, All rights of rep ation of all other matter herein are also res S of spot To Detect Flaws Bureau dete bh nge: ndards is nod and « to inside upon Forelgn Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, AND SMITH EW YORK - th Ave, Bldg. indies tes that 1 flaws pro rties of the defi girde in the magnetic pr or « BUR N - However, t tors which also pro e changes in the magn + properties, tudy is neefed so that it can determined quickly and (Official Accordingly fur sily when the chang due to flaw and when if is due to some factor eh doesn't weaken the girder or cable q hances are in umbr 4 1 fieant as iRu Seer aie oaen Editorial Comment ale Oh, Let Him In , (Chicago Tribune) low You Look i JUSTAS GooD be) TONE AS ‘Ou 2) DID LAST YEAR, “+ BY GOLLY | nd capi ‘ ot necessarily synony. | 28 Pur rsee who represents a} | London stu hous commons, to] | ‘apital is wealth invested productiv ‘America| COme #9 the United States because he is a com: | has alw invested its savings Peeccine ee eee en tolcuave eee oe Mexico i the products of Hadas ie i ne ort Interpartiamentary union . it sometimes to iiadraa, quilitiresor Ananeiil| Hington as a member of the British parliament a Th T i exchange .for art, for church ornaments, | °U#!'s committee, has uttered a great cry of angu 7 | and other economicaily unproductive purpose [over the incident and promises to utter amother on | GuepprxG- FROM THE PITTSEURG when the buth The result is that America has capital to operate,| ‘Ne Senate Moor after congress convenes in De: | SUN | eee Hace oie in a capitalistic civilization, while Mexico, with |C°™Per. 1 4 iecotie cas aearoaal the} Ge tt vec 1th for one sort of clvilizaton, lacke capital for | We wish respectfully to remark that in our view | un office th Giver ‘and. it. ‘broke ir ‘a hundred (Mr. Kellogg: made a mistake when he issued his [of the p : neces, “Among the > found . nines ae Alguinen: bane “onetse ia dee | erters: ‘ i recs that on the Bigness ; of all proportion to) Ga up to are i iigcaswie-aduwtie, Ga tre eueiieNea Hie his real stature. Just figire tis ie niece nd into one of these the beyond [may be determined trom ele: 1 | upon being informed that he could not come to tr by thi The first ea © horseback size lunitea States,“ vot to the United States.” he | Prow up. the onal | to find the ENCE Ghes-were’stage’coactiaize,, “The gvrent weatsti | tet 4 If 1 got to the United States.” he | jendinee in the pbetnard tas z ; railroad si And the world is growing airpiane | “""" ; Cee ee tary Kellogg a Mar.” Weis ing to writs igce against all| specimen of the famous black iF youn only ether he expected this generous | REWSPaper offic fon, which in- ing dy nd ex- small. It izzy time. Go west, old fogy; and | nry rac whether he expected this generous | ¢ 1. that the news should be put in ble: the learn how big your country i? a would tempt or bully Mr. Kellogg ragraph of A ruction, Mr. Prese Ling his mind. i I< Svc-aolvedithe But, across the great » of this matchless a He va p 1 cide cre ry el ta ay Ived the 1 land, you see one thing that you can see nowh ukfauvala: 18) SUGHIABIANL potatoes: th friends of Mrs. Prescott, how- finding of the jewels in the! else in the world very well have been admitted without end: ways sure that there is | F house prove: most ee ye 7 . m" the peace a 7 of our . cout ss - told that will be sen. tu that Comm That is indred million people, stretching from neace: and: ion four Jang. He conti av to the most spten [ w's theory is correct, OGean to ocean, all spouking the same langunge and come here, teaveted up and down the country and of earls in Pittsburg | = that Miss Ellington, hearing ran . . eparted ) © believe, stirring one to t was given to the re-/ noise downstuir down, iving, feeling end thinking in) much the same [¢PAarted without, we believe, stirring any on this morningdheeps up. the | his time the ‘thi 1 not gott ivehion: revolt, The ‘London proletariat may be willing to , . } nto the house. With rare presence Mie! high: schoo) -theulilesor Lewiston; Me, candi = nh = leadership of an oriental, bat our P pearls have be nl : E Je i Hington horns wees | eau 3 in aimed Bi i nove fe pearis fron _ safe, Lewiston, Ida., could exchange yp ss and go on th © f no! No man named Shapurji aklat here she knew the burglars imum a could be a hero in this country. Even if he could vrched the diately look, and dropped them in| next day te ching the same things to pupils of the vious training and coming from the homes. The nowhere things are possible. We peoples, hit over 350 he'd have to get another name. Secretary Kellogg made a mistake and Mr. Bor. King another in magnifying the incident of all proportion to its true importance. The fz is that the law and public senti same sort of eis else on earth where such are no more but we undardized” in some other nt in t have done it on an enormously wider scale. out they the vase. s then that the thieves made | , and were probably | t to make her give up : in nation of the sefe when Svdney Carlton heard the noise and | came down. ir | ee re on the side of excluding communi (Gonsmient Hees INE) | Chicago's Crime Wave Mr. Kellogs: is well within his rights in closin ee pees et Sentence of the two Drake Hotel bandits to death S&tes: But Mr. Kellogg is in danger of cuttin demonsteation an ap within a few weeks of the commission of the crime iculous figure that any grown man must present Biuition sificidls would:dlose tnesetub.| indicates that the mills of justice en be speeded “BCH he is seen standing om a chair-cowering be You can’t find an empty seat in the up when public opinion brings the proper tors a) Mouse, (Mr Boral. te dnythe sameidiagertn re He club was about to shut up aon unleashing his oratorice lightnings, in a manner Vacien aE Anche Gusinese: Tikeace of speakin on such mild provocation. The old plea of insani case, but was quickly disposed of by both judge ¢ jury. No doubt the Loeb and Scott cases gave crim- inals over the nation a renewed feeling of security against the extreme penalty in capital offenses, There js no more potent antidote for crime than speedy justice and making the punishment fit the crime, Both the public and the press of Chicago are thoroughly aroused and the Drake bandit case indi A Hanging Verdict (Chicago Tribune) and fixed the death penalty in the Drake raid mur der case deserves the thanks of the The crime was a wholiy wanton one. killed without the shadow peven in a gunman's code. his murderers, yet he was shot down as if he were arat. The guilt of the pri: There was no re: A communi dict of guilty Rodkey was or a shade of cates how results can be secured when there is com between soners was well attested. sonable ground for doubt. y ou mlete cooperation these civic life. of two agencies ht to be able to assum ver- nid Personality un application of the extreme Personal still a powerful influence in poli- |Pen#lty im such a case, but there have been too tics, despite all efforts to have issues submerge the | ™#ny sczndalous failu of justice for us to hav andidate. any confidence that justice will he done even when Rf wea VAt. Smith’ ity that enabled Tam-| the case is clear and the offense heinous. We are Rainy lo déteat Hylan in New York for re |"¢lieved, therefore, that these twelve citizens have nomination. not listened to the fallacious humanitarianism And in Wisconsin people have been placing an “x” | “Bich is urged upon every jury. Instead they did after the name La Follette for so long that the dead | ‘heir full duty as citizens, and in so doing they have Wisconsin senator's personality has been stamped | Proved themselevs ri not bogus humanitarians. indelibly on their minds. They thought his son| They have shown pity for this city and for its pep would “carry on” for his father and young Bob La |'Pl¢ rather than for tie murderers of the innocet Follette won the Republican senatorial! nomination. | Rodkey. They have shown pity for the still livir In both contests, issues were secondary to person. | Victims of thugs and gunmen, who would have b to kill al, alities, encouraged if justice tailed to punish supposed to be ‘built about th ‘ a | flagrant a crime as the Drake raid and murde:. eer of Al Jolson... To Economy Necessar is going to be a little s i for decent men nd | rouah eat ane PR atic Ape French Finance Minister Caillaux was looking | ¥0men because these twelve men did their pliia| tapes he mse drift hiher and. von over the French government payroll the other day. | Wty, distasteful though it is to sentence any hums jas his will listeth him, T envy him He found that 100 years ago a sentinel was placed | being to the gallo ROE Bis ae fer anee ile 28 mere om duty at the Palais Bourton, where the Chamber} The public will also pe grateful to presidins | evere _-Saw Israel Kle aratiaputies met. Judge Hopkins and to the prosecuting attorneys. vener, who is orman and Romano, and to the police for the: {prompt work at the time of the raid. . ALL of thir |was service to the community which it greatly |needs, and we .trust that the ter: influences which play upon the processes of just this ‘state will not succeed in undoing the good accom plished in the conviction of these murdercrs. lcrime was sensational, and were it to go unpan ished, or inadequately punished, we might as well repeal the criminal code and shut up the courts. Attorney Crowe says “There has been a sance of law and order in this verdict,” and | We believe with him that it will encourage all the agencies of law enforcement, from the policeman That sentinel got on the payroll then and has been on ever since although there hasn't been any real need for him there for the last 99 years. Is it any wonder that government expenditures all over the world are so high? Real businesslike economy is the great necessity in governments today. sin e in France A Parisian paper ridicules Caillaux’s paln to pay the French debt to the United States and hints that it may result in hostile demonstrations against American tourists. ¥f France would work half as hard trying to pay ’ the debt as trying to get out of paying it,.a large |” his beat to the Supreme court justices on their portion of it would have been paid by this time. {high seats. False sentiment has failed at least in ‘And if France doesn't want our tourists to spend | this case. True sentiment hag won, It marks a their good money, it certainly won’t cause any change toward better conditions. The jury which has brought in a verdict of guilty community. excuse, He was not threatening from Tex 4 ‘ / clephoned for reservations. The manager told her that all the tables were reserved and that there s no room for her. umong others. great succes: Now the place the middie and she Annette Kelie a MES W. DEAN. man do seem as sylph-like | | Gee/ LAST You Indignant, she spread the word ng some of her intimates. The | « manager spread the word quietly IS BEEN A LONG, LONG lige SINCE * | SAW j= Italy 1 shorta coid aghet Franc Winter's ge. Im- ermany have “agreed URSDAY;'S fever can be controlled and prevent ‘ed; that there are several methods lof’ prevention that may be used against. malaria. First: by getling rid of anopheles mosquitoes, which cause malaria, | Second: by not letting these mo- | squitoes get to well people to hite | them. | | Tnird: by so treating men having malarial parasites in their blood | that they will not infect the mosqui- | to. | Fourth: by so protecting healthy | people that even if they are bitten ‘hy infected mosquitoes they will not [develop malarial fever. | | | quito ing their shelters and breeding places. ‘They llive mainly out of doors, atid as they | cannot bear the Het sun they shelter themselves in the brush and high weeds all day and come out at dusk to feed. Ali brush and high weeds near the house should he cut down. The brush about their ces should also be cut down, ss brush left to shelter mosquitoes the better, for if they are exposed to the hot sun many of them die. The breeding places of malaria mosquitoes may be destroyed in two ways First, by draining or filling up the pools and marshes in which they breed; second, by oiling such pools as cannot be drained or filled. Oi ing the pools prevents breeding be- cause it kills the larvae. Try this on an old water barrel full of “wiggle tails" and see what happens. ; Oiling should be done once in twelve or fourteen days. Use enough oil, or kerosene, to form a layer all over the surface so that you can see it. Anopheles or malarial m may be destroyed by destro; The will often blow the oil over to one side so that the surface on the other side is not covered, On large pools and grassy pools oil cannot be depended upon. Mal- BO eee ere et camcionly found in barrels or in artificial eon- tainers. Malarial mosquito larvae have other enemies besides man, The type of minnows that are so abun- dant in some of our small sluggish streams eat large numbers of them. Where there is grass or brush in the water frequently the fish cannot get to the larvae. Big fish do harm ‘because they eat the minnow | The second method of preventing | malaria consists of preventing ac | 1 "Te there is much grass in the pool lithe oil will not form a layer all jover it, If the poo! is large the wind {| cess to anopheles to well peop. mosquitoes aria bearing FABLES ON HEALTH | TELLS HOW TO PREVENT ‘*» MALARIA FEVER breeding ; | | ; ; | BY DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING — [use of mosquito bars. All holes of | Surgeon General, United States Pub-|any kind by which mosquitoes. ci | lie Health Service enter the house should be serecned | You should know that malarial |G¢, closed. | Recple should stay in- {cannot reach them if they | region where malaria is prevalent, Mosquito bars should he of fine hobbinet. with no holes in them and with no slit up the side, They should |not go over the head or fool posts of the bedstead. | At night they should be tucked ‘under the mattress all around and {never be allowed to hang down to jthe floor, The third method is by preventing infection of mosquitoes, You should know. that persons with malarial urasites in’ their blood may be treated so that they will not infect mosqui Th First, by treatin has these parasit til he is cured. | business, Second, by keeping these neople in a sereened house or at least und mosquito bar at night as long they have malarial parasites in their blood, The fourth method employed in fighting malaria is the immuniza- tion of people who are exposed. You should know that healthy men can be protected so that even if they are bitten by infected mos- i they will not develop .ha- may be done in two ways. every one who in his blood un- This is a doctor's may be done by the use of quinine. If quinine is taken by any one in small doses during the ma- laria season it will generally pre- vent malarial fever, In the United States generally four to five grains of auinine eve: day will be enough. When malar is very prevalent as much as seven and one-half grains may be neces- sary. nine is best.taken after meals in one dose or in divided doses. Quinine taken in this way does not injure those who take it. It has been taken thus by many people for lone periods of time without injury. Sometimes when quinine makes a person uncomfortable at first this discomfort will disappear if he con- tinues to take i Quinine may also be administered to children as a malarial preventive. About one-half as much as for grown neovle. even less than. that for small children, is the dose siven, The auestion is frequently asked, do people who are thus prevented from developing the fever by these small doses of quinine ever have the parasites in their blood? Yes, un- fortunately, sometimes they do. Malarial fever is Yable to relapse. Untreated or impronerly treated it is almost sure to relapse and to re- several or even many times. infection frequently lasts over on to another, the man well for’ months | lapse The from one se: ing appartatly about We. don't -know| be Prevented from getting to and ¥h t. But when they agree on any-| O/€tng “ne 4 nae Gar tb? Wave ene First, by screening the house. "5 Second, in some measure, by the ve s to know what 1 will happ the future, But then idn't it is no are amusing bout three peopte. be so bright as Take th old and he is -—___ _—____—_ | A THOUGHT -: o—_—_—___—_—__-—_* Every man that striveth for mas- r than any elreus. is temperate in all things—1 » few indies and gentlemen drive #1 se their autos like jadies and yentle- d ters are mostly the greatest men. servants in the house—Italian pro- News from s own shoes. h man had th t his heels. Stone age keeping his wife man keeps her ai! travels a foot in four min 1 fact, isn’t it ¢7 treet car. Most people are disappointed be- ca are ppointing. too hard has one advan- tive. You don't have time to realize} vou don’t want to work too tard. _ Arrested a man le he wag olay. ine golf in Nashville, Tenn. of this should be done, Rear attacked ia Arkon omething bruin, ' are terrible. Many fish would starve if it wasn't for the man who tries to catch them. Saw Ted H who was a cartoonist and} us ever. a fellow} then a cigar dealer, Between cu tomers he picked out tune on ee guitar and composed a song or two, and that put him on the stage. . FINISHING Saw Charles A. Bickford, who plays, ‘THE TECLING a hobo role in a production, J , lam told that in his youth he r or FUNNY | tramp and STORY. ¢ contract with a busle a Frisco stock companies to make j stands throughout the w Ellalee Ruby, « | from Broadway jmade her first public the age of one, when she | better babies contest. w Don | Marquis, erstwhile colyum conducto | and am told that his new pla of production because he with the producer on the character should be played Phoebe Foster and that reminds ithe play in which she is appearing eking | nd Klein has the happ: of making the owner of ie believe his set is bette neutrody than reflex and the or r of reflex believe his set js better than a | | neutrodyne. seeing so many,| gle many aga altho radio exhibiis Tan| Cet) ROU) Mater greitly unsettled |; Some about the three- bulb peanut. outfit Ihave, wonder. | ing whether to turn it in for one of the outfits a demonstrator says will fetch in L-20 every night...... CRACK tt! Competition among the night clubs grows. Within the next few weeks more of them will be running here | than ever before. This is resulting in many novel bits of publicity’ and propaganda. | One night club. with an old-fash-| ioned bar, advertised free lunch. Then men were hired to stand in line {to attract others. The club manage- [ment quietly passed out the word EAN hh ate deci ntne s | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO LIKES THE STORY, 1 BuT SupPRESSES ' MIRTH. IF THAT’S A FUNNY STORY, SVERETT, WHEN Dot | Hilti Bulgaria. King shined 7 About the only king left who really knows how to shine! a hard time? feet. Modern And_ believe tas a More vrokibition agent H> shonld have known | The prices on some verb, ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS _BARTON Afer Tick Tock had told the Twins all about Big Ben and showed them how the big clock worked and struck the hours and quarter hpurs and half hours, on bells that weighed tons and tons apiece, he said: “Time is short, my dears, so I wiil take you to very few more places. ‘here are still a few big clocks to be een, and then after that I shall tak you to see the most wonderful clock in the world.” The clock fairy led the way from the clock tower, and after walking down three hundred and sixty stairs, the three wee. people again found themselves in a London street. “We would see many wonderful locks in Paris,” said Tick Tock, “but we shall not stop. The most wonder- ful clock in the world is not there. ; Take my hand and I shall lead the way to a distant city.” ‘So the Twins took the fairy’s hand, and almost instantly they were whisked away through the starry night to a place where there was an enormous church. On this church was a thigh steeple, and in the steeple was a clock. The fairy and the Twins were set down before it just as the big clock struck five. “See!” said Tick Tock grandly. From where they stood, the Twins real men walking about the clock. “They are the figures Twelve Apostles,” said Tick Tock, “They appear when the clock strikes. Besides, the clock shows the changes of the moon, and the calendar. That is the famous clock of Strasburg.’ in the world?” asked Nick, “No,” said Tick Tock. “Come!” Away they went again, and this time they went to the city of Mechlin where again Tick Tock set them down before a wonderful cathedral. “That clock is bigger than Big Ben,” he said, pointing upward. “Its face is forty feet across.” “Is that the most wonderful clock in the world?” asked Nanc: “No,” said Tick Tock. “Come on. The clock I am going to show you took a thousand men to make.” “My goodness!” said Nafcy must be as big as the world.” “You'll see!” was all Tick Tock would say. He took them finally to a little house on the edge of a small town. “And no’ you'll look in through the kitchen window you will see the most wonderful clock in the world!” he_said, The Twins. pressed their faces close to the pane, and tnere in the faint-light of coming dawn, they saw a plain, hontely old clock, hanging on the wall. It’s face was plain and cracked, its case old and shabby. A point was broken off one of the hands, and a hinge had been replaced by a piece-of string. “What are you talking about?” said the Twins in surprise. “It isn’t wonderful at all!” “Yes, it is,” said Tick Tock. “It is very old to begin with and five gen- erations of people in this house have lived by it. The children watch it for school time, the mother watches it when she bakes, and when she feeds the baky, the father work by it. By it they go td bed and get up. By it they live. It is the good old family clock—the most won- derful clock in the world.” c “lt could see gilded figures as large as, wards i of. the| vent war. joes tol” Be Continued ) A study conference qn “the churches and world peace” will be called in Washington, the first week December, to consider ways to- rds a “warless world.” is t good purpose, and the con- nee may do some good. It may help crystallize the opinion jof some millions of Americans, But the smediate situation is the opinion of twenty millions, or a hundred millions, does not count, so long as the power of in- action rests in a small minority of {the present membership of the Unit- cd States Senate, Less than a dozen irreconcilable isolationists, but these few intrench- ed in the packed Foreign Relations Committee; a few more timid and vacillating; a few Republicans too reactionary to follow even Republi- can leadership forward; a few Dem- ocrats too -partisun to follow even their own platform if Republicans | approve it too—these few, sk.llfully | manipulated, have been able, und may be able again, to prevent ‘the only concrete action now possible. They may still keep America, alone ' of ‘civilized nations, out of the World | Court, founded on’ American princi- ples and established by American | initiative. Unless America can take this sim- | ple and obvious step, it is useless to plan any other. The court, to be sure, can not alone mak a “warless world.” But it is the most elementary step to- Cooperation is the only way to pre- There is nv nat‘onalistic way to do it. Unless the nations can organize for peace, there will be no peace. And so long as_ the richest and most powerful nation of all refuses “Is that the most wonderful clock|to join in any international organ- ization, the rest can do no more than half the task, These conferees may help convert {the millions. But until the dozen are converted, the millions are im- ‘ potent. 1 That can not be done by argument. It has not yet been done by the platforms of both parties, the lead- ership of three presidents and the martyrdom of two, and the common voice of the rest of the world. Noth- ing is strong enough to affect the present situation unless it is strong enough to budge these few senators. Perhaps a Roosevelt:an big stick would be effective on some whom they have been able to use. The leaders are proof against even this. aaah tunica Phe MORE CHILDREN You Have THE MORE YOUR NEIGHBORS. — KNOY