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2ACKE FOUR The Ris: at ck 1 ribune The next chapter, even more interesting than | the struggle just witnessed between the two | A Hard Full Ae FESRULTIEST NEW EPAPER men, is now in the act’ng and hes yet to be fe (Established 1873) written. How shall it be written? Cian 7 ba ' i Sperreanes Is Trotzky going the way of the complaining ompan, . . . : . ure Peaiaienered site posture at{old man who raises his voice vainly in the ismarck as second class mai! matter. streets and wherever he can find an audience? Yeorg? D. Mann ............... President and Publisher |Qr jg he already on the way Lack, gathcring about him the nucleus of a new leadership and $7.20/preparing for the moment to strike? These - 729) are interesting conjectures. The next few years hold the answer. , Trotzky at least knows this—that, plaudits, after all, are empty and Fame hurries along. |People havea way of speeding Fame on her Subveription Rates Payable In Advance rally by carrier, p ear on ty mail, per y (in Bismarck) ..... br ma by 4 . per year by mall. t », three years for. . ios i n by ma!l, onside of North Dakota, per | journey, It’s just a natural trait, perhaps. r hone. : + 1.50 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation | Tt was to be expect-d that the political camp Momber of The Associated Press »pposed to Governor Sorlie would object to the ‘inted Press is exclusively entitled to the -eriook evtion af all news tsp thes peat Hin » credited in this paper. and also the * : ontaneons origin published herein. All| ly to Governor Soi ‘ts of republication of all other matter herein are] good time the go ts and that in ve his reasons ‘dhe bisMMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1927 is no statute that esto until he pro- rved. for ca'ling a se z compels him to is Foreirn Representatives 3. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY claims the date of such s on. In the mean- 4HICAGO" Lo DETROIT | time, we can all oy the fine Indian sum- ower Bldg. aac Kresge Bldg} mer; the farm f fall werk done fet me PURNS & Sti Ave. Bldg {89 they can read the proceedings of the ses- ‘a eas : = | sion, thus beguil'zg the long, tedious and chilly (Official City, State and County Newspaper) é nichts out where t The Lund “Come-back” Boiling the politics out of the latest Lund} ie winds howl, out where the coyotes bay at the moon. certified report upon the transactions be-| ‘i Ween certain Minneapolis grain companies and Editorial Comment | he State Mill and Elevator, the residue clearly -—$<——__ —_—_——_—— dicates that the dealings with the state mill Not a Fair Test in Maine vy grain companies were handled exactly as] (Boston Tr + ine’s referendum on repeal of y law ft Ited as every competent ud predicted, once it became under- the proposal was to destoy the pri- em and not to correct Jefects. By| out two to one the Main orate | gainst a flat return to the old system and delegate nor uch items are for other mills and in some! The state of M. nstances the state institution even secured the prir vetter_p than some of the old line mills. | q)copyer Joubtless the report of Governor Sorlie’s au-! ot ood the litors will give a complete account of the trans-| mary ictions under fire so that the taxpayers and) 9 yote of voters of the state can judge as to the merits | decided of the fact finding report. * lof caucu It might be pertinent to ask: Did Lund |ofgices, which was the on! ser go near the Midland Grain Co.? Also how} g yosult which would follow in nany hours did he spend actually going over o+her state if that w. in audit of the books? Furthermore, it might jaye made clear repe ve asked without presumptuousness, is Mr.) was not so to amend the D und a certified accountant and if not why not?) stitute intelligent se Also why is not a certified accountant whose! process aeninatt seports must be accurate and who is under the yond not employed to engage in such an im- | prin yortant work? wisdom of an inco Why? Me ng a more s EL Ra ae nst the propose A Laughter Marathon be a recollection The Chicago school situation seems to have) tory of state -esolved itself into a nose-thumbing contest. | inder the old : Superintendent McAndrew, about whom the! was too frequently ihe pattle rageth fiercest, didn’t attend his trial| wise of the prohibitory | che other day, but instead went off to lecture M. before an Illinois college some distance from) < Chicago. ! Pro-Thompson members of the school board alled his act “treasonable;” cautioned specta- ‘ors not to turn the affair into a vaudeville show. £ of sted, but} tem under which the electorate take no dancerou chances. The joint special committee oint: ed to investigate and prima ‘ not without provi 4 i Pah of King William Hale’s court, because the} aaaeceswiEne conti piibedneat wouldn’t let him get at the English wy a} " J similar books in the public librar will allow jchoice of candidates whose a reasonably be known to t! to the convention tem for guidance w. respect to others wholly self-advertised, whose fitness is wholly self-proclaimed. In other words, Massachusetts wants the privilere of drafting certain men and women, some of them unwilling, to administer the affairs of the com- monwealth, but she is unwilling to have ignor- antly nominated for her higher offices dates whose only qualification is their o Latest-of all comes the announcement that ‘our library volumes have been stigmatized as n-American, and as soon as the courts will Now, they are to form the piece de resistance}! t Mr. Herrman’s bonfire. e Chicago is getting a big laugh out ‘of this rial. So is the rest of the country. Dayton, Tenn., can join the chorus of mirth as its gar- een brother takes the enter of the Stage But it should be remembered that, according to a “1 ty, scientists, one can laugh only so long. It may desire Me fill ener: be that the country outside of Chicago can It will be distinctly out of order for the ad- ket a new record for sustained laughter, but it vocates of the present unscientific primary wn ation of the} § My, SENATOR = \T looks: ao} Me LIKE. CAL HAD ALREADY "FESSED uP! look. LETTER Unemploy- again noted this country. is €ar from mostly tage, but 1927 has seen, tions. i major industries, se of seasonal condi-| September, ne idleness throughout reported for July,| , pecially marked increase’ na marked surplus until May, ‘ i midsummer! when a gradual improvement began. labor surplus and| slack was especially true in the sum-} when industrial jobs were! in er, found employ- a higher level in a number! g industries, although: the, we y large volume of job- ucd. Employment was b bd yy C]) ” in September, the! aris ice found, and ex- ess, ze Various opinions have been ad-] compa: anced as to the amount of unem-| less: ent existing. A speaker at) erican Federation of | employment jor conventi¢n said that more; cept for the 2 a million persons were jobless: plus of bi and about 3.500,000 working part. “basic industries on the whole’ t the hundreds of thousands—| August. No marked change was ex-| Luxemburg. * millions—who have no jobs. pected fo: October, * . se « filled with yesterdays, Netin of the’ Depart-' siderable labor surplus in January nt of Labor which, issued under which continued through February] nasse, lie off at the Cafe Dome. e auspices of a “prosperity ad-' and March, owing to bad weather.| The ii inistration,” certainly does not err April brought he long awaited im- July and August found the employ- He teens) “spotty” vith the "el sti “ imc proverent™ Svat reeds eens and “D”, which are called the anti-| are prominent due to the beginning tember, with a more optimistic out- neuritic vitamins, are found in the! of spinal curvature. Also have Employment in the coal mines re BY ROD: ae erg { In ‘une slight curtailments were Theeeeaa pti Aeris ath scorbutic vitamin prevents the de-| to follow the well balanced menus ov. Boot and shoe workers enjoyed an i ” of em- yment in September. There had creased general sur-| Paris, Nov. 1—Everybody’s writ- ten reams about the Champs and t j the Arch and the Tower and the But there seems no way to showed increases of workers over} Tuileries and Notre Dame and the ‘ial Employment In-| Building trades showed a con-|to che left bank of the Seine, and, driving up the Boulevard Montpar- Greene vie ee het loved Bob? “Anything, of course,| edged with « shrug. “He still wants the side of pessimism. There) provemer.t, but a surplus still existed| never achieved, The Cafe Dome is| 4@tling. And I'll promise to be as|to marry mc. I would have married ows the story of employment and and -sntinued through May with| what Greenwich Village might have| 8y™mpathetic sees She te Haste pudeews, il hadn’t shor mployment this year as traced by| some improvement in June. There| been if it hadn’t been located in al Chcrry’s small, cold hands tight’ such a beast when Hope was kid- HEALTHDIET ADVICE USE MORE TOMATOES the Italians call it the “golden ap. The tomato is a very valuable! ple.” n fruit, and its use is very rapidly; Those who «ill use tomatoes lib- increasing. It is one of the fruits] erally will find they are plop bearing seed after its kind” and| worth the:r weight in gol was first cultivated in Peru andj Begin spending more money for Central America. It was, for a time,| tomatoes and other fruits, less considered unfit for food, and even| for denatured food products, within recent years the ridiculous statement has been made that toma- Questions and Answers toes might be the cause of cancer. Question: H. C. asks: “Can There is not the slightest bit of| cholecystitis and chronic appendi- evidence to show that the use of| citis be cured without an operation? tomatoes could be harmful in any| Have been ailing for three years.” way, and on the other hand, abun-| Answer: Most cases of cholecys- dant evidence to prove that toma-|titis and appendicitis can be cured toes stand at the very top of the| without an operation. The first thing list of healthful foods, containing, | for you to do is to eee the func. as they do, so many of the vita-| tiofing o your intestines. The coli- mins together with the organic min-| tis which prec des appendicitis must erals and valuable fruit acids. be eliminated, When this n The use of tomatoes has a dis-|acce-nplished, any inflammation tinctly beneficial effect increasing| which may exist in the gall bladder the function of the liver, and a/or liver usually disappears as these tomato fast often produces marvel-| biliary organs become irritated most- ous results in the treatment of! ly because of intestinal poisons, hepatic isorders, which are reabsorbed, from condi- Of course, the tomato, like all| tions of colitis and intestinal in- fruits, contains a large percentage flammation. of water, but there is also a smalli Question: Mrs. J. R. asks: “Of amount of protein, fat and carbohy-| what fruits does the fruit diet con- drates, as well as a goodly propor-| sisit, and how taken? Am troubled tion of mineral matter. which is; with sour stomach after eating. strongly alkaline, beigg composed of | Would this diet retieve it?” the salts of potash, lime, magnesia,] Answer: An exclusive fruit dict and iron. Owing to the presence of | would be fan in overcoming your citric and malic acids the tomato is; sour stomach. Only one kind of not alkaline when eaten, but after| fruit shculd be taken on any one being burned in the body leaves an| day, but you may use as much as alkaline salt. you desire. I have found the follow- For those who are suffering from} inz fruits to be most useful for this any kind of acidosis, there is no purpose: Apples, apricots, peaches, better fruit to use, as the action of; pears, grapes, oranges, grapefruit, the acids of the tomato assist in| plums, berries, tomatoes, pineapple removing such wastes as uric acid! and melons, from ‘he system. Question: A Reader asks: “What The tomato is rich in the fat} exercises and diet can a girl 18 soluble vitamin “A”, which is known! years old take to gain in weight and as the anti-rachitic vitamin. Its| development? Height is five feet, use should therefore assist in pre-| three and a half inches, weight venting rickets. The vitamins “B”) ninety-six pounds. The chest bones tomato, so\ the tomato should be! round shoulders.” good in any form of nervous di: Answer: It is not necessary for order, Vitamin “C” or the. anti-| you to take any special diet except velopment of skin disordets. This| which I give every week in this is found in large quantities in the} ¢olumn. Consult a physical culture fresh tomatoes. expert and have him give you spe- Frech tomatoes should be used| cial exercises to correct the spinal whenever they are available. The} curvatute and round shoulders. I hothouse crop has increased more] could give you some special exer- than 500 per cent during the last] cises for this purpose, but I believe few years, so tomatoes can be| it would be better for you to have secured the whole year round. some private lessons given by a The tomato is called the “love| physical culturist. who is able to F sudy out your particular needs. ame apen NER “I can tell you the truth, Faith? | social position? I won’t marry a All these: guide book places are Anything? You promise not to be| lout like Chester Harte—” shocked or disapproving or—hurt?”| “Have you been seeing Thester?” The best available survey of na-| Now to trace the ups and downs! To catch some of the fragments| Cherry asked ~istfully, a new, lovely) Faith interrupted in astonishment, i itions appears to be the! of workers in some major industries: today, you'll have to cross the bridge note of humility in her voice. It seemed ager since Cherry, out of Faith was glad that the dusk hid; pure love of conquest, had “vamped” any expression of fear that might | Chester Harte from her. Not that have flitted across her face. Was) she had been sorry to lose him! Cherry about to tell her that she! “Oh, off and on,” Cherry acknowl- con pilation and analysis of these! was a marked decline in building in| part of the world where enough| #&ainst her breast. napped by Chris. And—and I would surveys ++ date. however, and further decreases] people had a sense of humor. Not|_, The Whole trouble with me,|marry Bruce Patton, though I January, 1927, showed more em-) in August and September, leaving| that the French lack a sense of| Faith,” Cherry burst out passion-| haven't an ounce of real respect for ployment than December, but aj “consid.rable unemployment.” humor; they smile at the Dome as| 4tely, “is that I don’t belong to any-| him, if he would ask ine. But he mp was reported in a few major| Some of the furloughed workers ries and bad weather retarded] in the automobile industry were re- i one. Oh, to Hope, of course, but) won’t! I hate him and I’m crazy quickly, a1 tee neat ra Bi she’s Just a tiny aby ae hardly on him! hee know rea he pa nearly all outdoor work, for which| called 1 January and improvement] business causes them merely to| Seems like a person to me yet. Since/ fects a girl! Heaven knows better conditions were expected. continued until May, Then came a shrug their shoulder, whereas Amer-| Muggy died —” and her voice broke tumbled quicl: enough!” Industry “marked time” in Febru-| slight decrease which grew worse} ica would ae the news all aroynd| on that babybish name for her moth-| Fuith’s face flamed in the dusk, ary; very few major industries in-| during June and resulted in a “large| and josh the vould seem that Chicago itself is just about em to point to the Maine election in justi-| creased their forces and several cut surplus” of unemployed during] much as it ‘did the Village. produce another three-ring circus, for if he earching scrutiny of the citizens as a whole. (Milwaukee Journal) ; e reaction after the hysterics have passed is} _We should like to know why, even making costs of that fleet have been quadrupled while It’s a Way We Have With Us, Mr. Trotzky the strength of the fleet has practically stood Ten years ago this Nov. 7 in Red Square, the/|still. In other words, what sent the overhead Heath knell of a czar was sounded and Russia’s|into the sky? Ybloodless” revolution began. There were} Admiral Magruder has his explanation. | pound to be storms for the new ship of state| After 1916 the naval establishment was planned | o weather, but there were two strong men at|on a much bigger scale than ever was realized e wheel to whom all Russia looked as captains. |in battle strength. We manufactured red tape e men were Nikolai Lenin and Leon Trotzky.|at an enormous rate, but we never built battle- This year, marking the first decade of the| ships to keep up. Most of those we had plan- new government, a “man in the street” will|ned were scrapped after the Washington con- itand and watch the army and the workmen’s|ference. But we didn’t scrap the red tape part., ganizations parade through that same square. | Today, we have 519 swivel chair officers in the hat man was one of the “captains” of the new| national capital, where we had 146 in 1908. Russia, fallen now from his great estate. Leon| And, says Magruder, we have so many admirals O will be a spectator where he used to|that we cannot divide the navy into. small p the central figure, where he once was the|enough commands to accommodate them all. nan og pie reviewing platform receiving the| Red tape, overhead, red tape! utes of all Russia. Sg The questions raised by Magruder are bound _Lenin and Trotzky together intrigued, plan-|to get into congress. the admiral will be mapa’ policies, drew up codes, won the|called before committees. He already bas been zar’s soldiery, lived in cellars, hoped, waited, |asked to submit a plan to Secretary Wilbur, worked and then—in that supreme moment of | who first thought of discipline and then thought 1—ascended to the very pinnacle of fame in|again. The hope will be that the discussion Lenin lived six years after that great |will continue on the high plane on which Ma- ream was realized, Before he folded his hands| gruder started it, and not be dragged down by death he launched a last testament to the|the political barnacles of Washington. Russian people, upholding Trotzky as the man porthy Bags iy, oe ae aia Decline of Rail Passenger Business What has happened? Three years after (St, Paul Dispatch) enin’s death Trotzky is expelled from member- How to check the accelerated decline of pas- hip in the Co: pay unist Executive, and the group senger business is now declared one of the prin: ad by Stalin controls the party. ? cipal problems of the railroads. The Railway Here is one of the great ee of history Age says that the decrease in passenger earn- rorkin ender fits ae and sae ings has been greater in 1927 than in 1926 or “aed neant ton. Looking baw to the French 1925. The revenue from that source has fallen evolution ther e are parallels into which ‘our’ to less than a third of that before the days of day has read a new significance—Danton’s automobiles. The reduction for the first seven then Robespierre’s. It seems that the men months of 1927 was at the rate of 5.4 per cent > Igad revolutions are crushed themselves compared with the previous year. It was 1.7 the mighty machine they start rolling. per cent in 1925 and 1.5 per cent in 1926, Russia offers a study that is worth while.|. The greatest loss this year has keen in the lin, firm in his belief that the victory of the'|S0uthern states. It amounts to $16,000,000 olution can be won only by holding the power |£0r Seven months, as much as the loss in all the irmly in the hands of his own group and using|Test of the country. rery possible means to prevent free discussion| For distances of 100 miles or less, it is evi- ranks of the party and to prevent what |dent that the greatest inconvenience is waiting ve might call a “democratic election” of offi-|for trains or busses,” When a person can reach to | party. Trotzky, assailing/his destination in his own automobile in less ims of. and party officials|time than he would have to wait for a train, his Stalin,” and de-|decision is easy to make. ition af control to the rank and pl LT ceria: 1 aks earvies tart . : uent or allow pasenger business to | | | | | 1 loesn’ is li oon to com der the Congress Will Discuss It weather in practically every state”! tion was reported “spotty” in March, ; iene kely. Soon: to come unde Aopen increase did not New England mill workers being of Americanos who wouldn’t dare | and the emp! (inary hardest hit by mill closings and cur-| appear within fifty miles of Main| had a home of my own, a man of! think ‘t would do him any harm to ikely to be far from pleasant. allowances for general increases in prices, the cral major industries increased | trend” in several big industries and But March brought “inclement} plus of textile workers and the situa- reach expectations, although a gen- hand nan exe: ae ¢ ee she pleaded, as Faith was about to/ feel exhilarated. And Bob has lace to death—pretty| er, 8 it always did — “there has) but she did not loosen her comfort- been no one who puts me first. Oh,| ing clasp of thuse twitching, cold Bice oct Ration of thelr point of view. ‘he test was | hem tom i Sreeeacce| ule moa pl Sepeis| ie See Demet el ela a oa ee es be | meta Nats on nee 4 ir . | 3 r situa- . n Mr. Thompson had better make haste to|N0t @ fair one. Hon ‘in March, sanante The first two months found a sur- eet Mee ded oh will tind i” jens of me sometimes because you| the werld. I was just being human, love me. No, please, let me go on!”| for once. Of course he did make me n interrupt reaseurances. “If I just; se—grouchy of late that I didn’t eral improvement was noted. Sev-| tailed operations. A slight improve-| Street in the regalia they affect] my own, & normal life of my own!; see ‘hat someone else found me at- forces and the all-around outlook} May and labor surplus and curtailed] on the si was described as “very bright.” production continued. This situa- . Se tion was somewhat affected, how-| Here it is you will find Jimm April showed a “slight upward| ever, by a very gradval improvement] Jones of Des Moines wearing employment map in the flood ter-| rated below Sapecity in January,' from the stage A) itory showed large blank spaces and| improved in Fel w valley. workers lost their jobs in June and ec idle in the lower Mississippi| lay off a few workers in May. More dis; OUR BOARDING HOUSE (fms UTELL You MATOR, WE'RE NOT GONNA LET "EM MAKE A SAP ouT i) OF You WITH THAT WAX DUMMY # wn HAW EGAD,~ BLESS You DENNIS, You IRREPARABLE OLD PIRATE! = Tit SENTENCE Vol) AND HAL | To TEN DAVS IN AN EASY CHAIR UP AT THE OWL'S CLUB? ~~ Come Now, Naum ME AN’ HAL HEMKA FIGURED —TH’ SCHEME OUT, AN’ ALL Nouw'LL HAVE / To Do IS CAST ONE VoTe FoR | . YOURSELF, AN’ Nou'LL BE ELEcTeD JUSTICE AGAINY wr IF ME AN’ HUM SOFTLY, ONCE HAL GET CAUGHT AN’ PINCHED, AGAIN,~ 5 For itis ITLL ONLY BE A PETTY CHARGE, AMWAYS Fain AN’ BEING SUSTICE, YoU GAN WEATHER UF FINE US A COUPLE OF OL? 4 FIRAW HATS oR } during August and September. hair well over his collar and his col-| murder’! They forget I was acquit- outdoor activities increased, but the] The iron and steel industry ope-| lar will be a brightly colored steal ted pache costumes, & 5 ruary and March,| while his sweater will have those| honey,” Faith cried pityingly. “The ‘a great many men and women”| stood still in April and began to! ree~ ond black stripes of the same| Public soon forgets— ment in April failed to continue in| when they sit sipping “cafe finns”| !’m taboo here with the nicest men.| tractive, to feel a little twinge of ‘heir mothers and sisters would| jeal she was about to add thew tits if they rushed me, wanted lf,” but aread of precipitatin, 10, ETT» Tenet sho wes tried fox| trios matters to-a crisis betmenn the tied for| brizg matters wae rag poole ed three of them rtayed her tongue in time. Cherry laughéd nervously, a little too loudly. “That was my psychol- ogy exactly! But pel once A I “Not in your own home town!”| only had a prosy old brother-in-law “You mustn't brood about _it, ifs ae to him will be sitting a Cheers contradicted bitterly. “lI’m| with which to make Bruce \. ! They didn’t just try me|I didn’t mean to hu-t you, st for a murder Tdi’ sonal bey I san eas did I?” she ask tat n and—' anxiously. He] Pee it, Any man that | “Oh, No!” Faith lied gallantly, meet now thinks I’m fair game. And but she was relieved that the crisis only ibs ee ue sone care ga | once more had been avoided, tl of em dare go wii — ig ‘What chance have I got to get | NEXT: Bob and Cherry meet married to a decent man of good again, “ ee — middle-aged man, whose hair has| hear these names bandied about, for been done in ringlets such as you! Hemingway—our most recent dis- ot since Little Lord Peers ‘went out of style. covery, if you don’t happen to know e third member of the party| it—lived among the Montparnas- will robably be Maggie Smith, from| sea.s, but did something about it. Denver, Kansas City or Pittsburgh He has pictured them in at least and she will te gar! in such at-| one novel 4 tire as you have never beheld on| But the ual Domers go in land or fea. Of course, she is try-|for barb: its, weird blouses ing to “look artistic’ and so i8/ and weirder dresses, strangely made Jimmy from Des Moines and the| up faces and strangely cut hair, ec- fellow w:th the long ringlets. centric ornament and—but you know sniparpange and Montparnasse is| "Rnd Seth but tof thei se jontparnasse i mos! ir the heart of the Latin Quarter and| numbers are bated from our the Latin Quarter is going to be|cities of Brooklyn, San Fr “arty” no matter wast happens. =| Chicago, Kalamazoo and Sauk Cen- sf Ts Here at breakfast hour and late GILBERT SWAN. into the night, gather all those ve tes who have fled 3 young, opera themselves” or to , Old Masters “express themselves” or to “live |g. ircling beautifully and freely.” Let it be| kin ‘id the sald for Montparnasse that re are Teed, ay, ah, am! en. Lead Thou me on! night Lead me on! Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see The distant scene — one step enough for me. Fi i fi A So 'ong Th; hath blessed cure it stil ” BRE i O'er moor end fan, o'er crag and sae! a