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} ‘AGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune anywhere unrecognized. A professor of science } who discovered some element that revolution- » mankind’s habits of life might walk in the | THE aes ER = sun unknown, but a boxing champion! erish the thought! Published by the Bismarck Tribune ‘Company,| Heavyweight champions have aways been | mance! CaS ea) aie bostoffice at} well-known because of the color that surround-| ae eorge D, Mann President and Publisher|€d them. Who wouldn’t have spotted at once WHO OA BE rj the mighty John L.? Who'd fail to pick out ENCLOSE STAHPED AODRESSEO Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Gentleman Jim Corbett in a crowd? And Jef- sa co “s ail eaily by carrier, per year ....... $7.20) fries, Johnson and Willard—do you suppose — z ret ty auc oT le 7.20 they ever could have wandered around for half A SHORT ORANGE FAST | sufficient to satisfy the appetite is UGS Onteide Bienatck) .;..++ . &00|4n hour any place on earth without being rec- T have been teaching the value of| 4d prevent any feeling of hunger. jaily by mail, outside of North Dakota . +e+e, 6.00] ognized ? bide ne) a 80 ree years! directions, in tomorrow's , Je I Dempsey would have been known the min- that it seems. like an old story to| will outline a definite plan for you Member of The Associated Press ite hi .! Teed into the Albany station—or an, me. Many doctors who write health] to use in taking an orange fast, and The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the oth ig bts hi barr fi Le. 1 ni degree. Ever 4 articles have, for years, criticized| show you how to follow it with a x 3e for republication of all news dispatches credited to|OtNer. He has “it” in large degree. Every. my teachings along this line, but it| curative diet. C or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the | thing that a champion should have he has, is gratifying to sce most of them Questions and Answers by ‘cal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All! But Mr. Tunney? Oh, he reads books! changing their minds and coming to| Question: C. M. D. asks: “Do 1 Es plata Se a a PoaTANRG ’ Ltt 7 these beau eae ene which ped think it pig eae . fi ave been advocating for more] tive organs Os 1 than twenty years. 7 wer Foreign Representatives | i om! Only the other day one of our tadly dracaicago” CAN PAYNE COMPANY | vpn ent Comment leading mcdial cola wrters| personal questions a health and r, 7 . / Uj pr H } came out Wil an entire article on diet, addressed to him, care of subower Bl Kresge Bldg. |. Tearing Up Gantry Y the benefit of short fasts. Another ‘ , yor PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH (New York Times) | nysician, who is the head of al] "ME rioce'e stamped addressed Trew YORK - s+ “Fifth Ave. Bids) 14 is to be hoped that when Mr. Bayard Veil- stents: papier fore Feed Fis) envelope for reply. toi (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ler tore up his dramatization of “Elmer Gan- Th ten ats: La) re = 1 try” he kept a carbon copy. His reasons as There is no sensible reason why| much as ten or twelve times im- h The Myth’s the Thing announced sound fantastic, but no one has : / physicians have been afraid to try pe coe ee siualice y a The truth, according to Biblical authority, is|come forward with any others. And if they / NU A / Te EOLA of coe t particnlanly harmful about taking a make men. free; yet there are times when|are true, he is almost sure to regret the de- / / a complet: fast, as orange juice fur-| few breathing exercises after eat~ Tht might be better that certain truths could be| struction of the manuscript, and that is where dN / / nishes 120 calories to the glass.| ing, but the best time is probably to “ncealed a carbon would come in handy. 7 x ed fruit sugar ele Salen (cs bane mae sere le } Y i Hf imil ysical $c! For example: a few days ago a grandnephew) He has one successful play on Broadway at | by Y y ated by the body. In addition, the| Question: John A. writes: “I tt John Howard Payne, author of “Home, Sweet| Present. Why he should imagine that it stood Q (] / orange contains a small amount of| consider you are doing a great and A ome,” tossed a monkey wrench into plans for|in need of publicity, when it is doing capacity |) Protein and muscle building food (se teks I ind Ha Be by witaising funds to preserve the Long Island home| business, is beyond the understanding of any- = © lfm) valuable cance ie cad, acti years eld and suffer from indiges- a ( inghere the immortal song was written by an-|one not intimately associated with the stage. N - g | | which are blood, bone, and brain| tion, My food consists of powdered peiouncing that Payne really wrote the song in|He fancies ane his play is to be attacked by tissue building elements. an milk (aiuted) and a — ovat ‘ i i ice crusaders, = = = i tirely on} bread, fruit, and a smi raiiaris, and that he never lived in the Long|the MEN chee et) zs a en, one lives en # ive, Take pees firnland house at all. ; If his name, already under suspicion by au- N\ \ 1 AAAS / ff i crane duice, Rs wee well sup. a Cot iy aati eds ant ty a All of this is a severe blow, no doubt, to|thorship of the piece which the reformers deny Vig hen the “heavier” foods are not| pain and lassitude after eating.” tiny trusting souls. Half of the charm of the|they ever thought of attacking, were associ- \\\" a, used the bodily forces can eliminate} Answer: You should use more Be ettinn Seat’ ” ii ; t|ated with “Elmer Gantry,” he would not have : \ i t y toxic substances more readily. This] greens in your diet, and be care- Fecong, “Home, Sweet Home,” for this writer, al tg ince: : ji ve = is due to the fact that the energy| ful not to overeat on the starches, rast, has been the thought of that picturesque,| leg to stand on in the defense of the first ‘Bo steely used in digesting auch wee use bread and acid fruit to- Wbmfortable-looking house on Long Island; the}one. : foods, can be used to increase the| gether. ee oe ought that his was the, home which Payne| Here is what it comes to: With any kind i ida aa la a ee functions i er peewee apallt: M lpptnl wien ed a) Re cotiuene i of luck, the law will investigate the success sistant district attorneys has not | Polsons of all kinds are thrown out/ are times wi age ved, the home for which he longed, the home| o! i ; S oe been revealed. Perha: there} 2¢ a rate which is many times] mostly in arms legs after I bo ut which he poured out his heart in that|to wile lt ete its author has ae atten- wasn’t any, =< cad sat) ey than is aE ee io work, and a a me i the lisimple, a) ling song that made him famous.|tion. It will be found harmless, and: business The jurors, who now express the | Meals are eaten. The absence of| day my eyes want to close. I even fai: 9 nee te te *t isn’t sot will fall off accordingly. To beguile the most bitter enmity toward Kidwell, | Waste cellulose material in the in-| get those weak tired feel while find out that it t Pri And now we find out that it isn’t so! 1 {frowning muse, the playwright will dig up the never realized that th ir every | testines oo it ene, to a pied reall ee it anemia, or is *; id Bp rt . x ii one or two enemas daily 0 wash} i jue to malal ran ee a uant not to eh a See carbon of the lost “Elmer,” and the same peo- a r thine deteettees bene erry apobsedd out the intestinal toxins‘which are} Answer: I would certainly like ‘ulation. joever saw a.! c4 9|ple who denounce the book will denounce the BY RODNEY DUTCHER- cision was based and these affi-| ment says were in Sinclair’s employ | mostly in a semi-liquid form, to diagnose your trouble but can- dez28 not several degrees nicer than eden play. Thus do a playwright’s fortunes pros- NEA Service Writer pene repeated Kidwell’s alleged| were trying to make contacts wi It is really a very simple thing| not do so from the meager Seecrip- “ ae is nights ago tho National Press Gub| nn wvcWho_ tipped you off to, the| Wie necessary for one to do is tal given ma, ‘Go to'a good diagnostic really believes it, is a warm, nourishing thing; held 2 meeting to vote on its new es In the old days, before eset shadowing — a juror?” one of the ake ves ane Here ie cian and ot a as es mond ” y nape , constituti ion, unscrupulous private det i i eo ia, jai en ie ®a thing that can make other things more real, Old and New Northwest "AC weWapuget coe paamelicaeyl tives —- aud cometitar overtone ONCE Ea ee aoe | past ceauitarare obtained i colyea esi aud Twill: berdad to eae oe more precious, more valued. (St. Paul Pioneer Press) called out of the meeting to answer |Papermen, it is to be feared—occa-| «A, detective?” quart to a quart and a half of! you some literature which I have ‘ The truth-tellers have been perniciously ac- We who speak now of the northwest, know-|a eee cal doce sae eis ae oe puanecting eens “T can’t tell you,” he replied. = ee a used (during any| ee Prepared on the subject of i * i —w, ay) 7 ie voice on the other el the joons an ug! iquor for i's i jay. is amount usual either. tive of late. For some time now they have as-| 08 He tegg roableond eae be Noe wire was of such quality that the|them until they gave up the in- cee an cuewtiona ppietners ony. = Bl ‘sured us that George Washington did not, 7 . ana, North and) correspondent. thought a drunken| formation that was sought. Every the same manner and replied in ex- x really, cut down the famous cherry tree. They South Dakota, with parts of contiguous states|man must be talking to him. one, of course, knows the tendency | actly the same words ave told us that Buffalo Bill really kille 'd onty this side of the ey mountains, might not oy advised ae that he vend the # ae ae Lae pe ee BiuteeesGalbhectives tare eae “ be “ 7 s vit s "e v7 | mysterious caller were nof nown | 5! en ul iquor's 1 =| hi i ime. }two Indians in this whole life. They have in- eared suche par ry bbe etl yo ene to each other, but that the corre-| ence. ; Whether one of them “fo1d suis Sy Anne Austin * em, d » "sisted that the empire of Montezuma, con-| ; Ponte. Mere cn tner Fe-| spondent was’ known to the latter| But, the little place on 4% street] the government, as private detec-| “I don’t want you to think for a] “I never ex, to hear you red by Corte: in reality little more |%2, which now no longer lays claim to the] by reputation. is a “soft drink parlor” despite its!tives have been known to do, may| minute” Keto Locdy’ Lene horas | say aie ” Jim Lane said Ce VOrken, wan | appellation. The name, northwest, like the| According to the correspondent,|exact resemblance of an old time| become public information in the| defensively, cnifine. agaist gee ath ene “ignity, aa kis’ bend {splendid or imposing than the ordinary pueb- star of empire, moves westward. the other man talked vaguely and| saloon and it is less than two blocks| near future, z teace ean atthe Bechara oan [ot Lente] cnn 28 pret ilos of our own southwest. 2 ‘s es Sie not very coherently. from the Prohibition Unit head- b saat had b, seht : her ae +| head “But I didw’t feel auch lke é Ra is a fine thing, but there| ,, There is a movement afoot in Illinois, In-|" The other man said he had some-| quarters, so it is hardly to be sup- ek: “tuad tA gainy toute eto let me tell you! So when y The trut always is a fine thing, bu ere] diana and Ohio to celebrate the birthday of|thing to tell about the “Sinclair| posed that Akers, in revealing hs eyes, “that I’m going to butt into] a man, let me you! are cases where it is out of place. For exam- y On| ial Bathe. wen. « sterious| story, acted under the influence of | the family and make a nuisance of| Kate came al and made me oe pein Bact : George Rogers Clark on November 19. It will + abi betel iaadicenstirtae (old ‘oti WwW myself. I married Jim, not his fam-| ashamed of myself, for not being ; \y ple: in that part of Illinois where Lincoln once be the one hundred and fiftieth aieecaet and ambiguous that the reporter Sitting ee pure patziotiam a m ily. He wanted me and needed me,| man enough to support myself and lived it is reported that no thrush will ever of the settlement of that first and older north- Recnree ie at mee pede by anytning coher iene faak and . » and I reckon that’s excuse enough| take care of my baby—for my job ing on the anniversary of Lincoln’s death. Of Ct. d th hundvedg Finally, he hung up, asking the| naive disposition for any woman of my age to marry| of raising Joy ain’t finished yet, ares etiistncscibly may not be true; but west, an le one hundred and seventy-fifth as vols 4 [J Pe ss ered dine’ titacidam a man that she’s been fond of since| mind you—I bucked a little at first, i. rgd . hice 4 anniversary of the birth of the explorer who| Mysterious stranger to come gi af rit 2 geeondom Nov. 9—Random notes! the first minute she clapped eyes on| but I'soon gave in, and now Kate f Saren’t you glad to pretend to believe it, at 7 office and see him, while looking for Akers. We were | ¢, h ute sh t ? led the way to the settlement of those middle] ° ‘That correspondent has been kick-|two strangers there. The -barkeep| {f™ # ramble about London. . . . .| him—poor thing! and me have come to let you ¢hil- - Sleast? i. is| West. states and through whose activity their] ing himself ever since. quickly assured us that no beer or| Baker street, where Sherlock|- “‘Poor thing!’” Che cried,| dren know that we're going to make . } Let’s keep our legends. Let’s ignore this WRT SS tained! to the eolonies ‘in; th cee liquor was for sale. In fact, the| Holmes came from. . , . And| almost beside herself with anger.|@ home for ourselves and for Joy sstatement that Payne did not live in that de-|‘erritory was retained to the colonies in the ‘ Jou dinow: ab once why Conan Doyle MHle’é had a. good home with Faith | if she'll live with us, bottled ginger-ale and lemon soda| P!¢! is spot, for a sense of| an en. wit! lunior ever since ‘Goody, goody gout, ui old e ese 4 pei: 4 - tery and broodi loom hangs| Muggy died—oh, Muggy, Muggy!” Your shirt-tail’s out! in Buf- Viewing these states now with their indus-|telephone call from one J. Ray | for five cents a bottle. Yet, it ap-| myste ing gi rs _died- ae: eae na dag north peri to|trial and agricultural development, it is diffj-| Akers, a street car conductor, who| pears that these soft ie pe ee beast i ee Loe end eine ae began to ered Eoody gin, ae: a cult to visuatize them as a wilderness, where} 2**¢4_Whether, the newspaper was|popular enough and _ profitable orithe ti Bern Shaw . . .| cry ae Oe ta wids'| Soy. ctucted ‘theta ‘ail by carroline - ghelieve that the Aztec empire was all that the y fe 4 y interested in “a new lead” on the|enough to keep the place in opera-| Wit ose projecting shafts to ‘Now, Cherry,” Jim Lane with-| Joy : y : > aSpanish romancers-said it was. buffalo abounded, where log cabins housed the Fall-Sinclair trial. tion. We two reporters certainly] Warn away the curious. . . . It|dfew his hand gently from his] inelegantly but with no attempt to ‘ i 4 - * . Later that evening, a desk manlonly refreshments available were | lightful old Long Island house. Let's reaffirm} *iN#l settlement with Great Britain, on a Washington paper received a ‘ A ij i i © ed with the -| Must be terrible to be famous and| wife's clasp and walked with a new| disguise her delight. “I’m going 8 Away with these little truths! The legends|¢arly settler and where the hardships of Mo: chan Res pnd hewing ie lenis possiblities of five-cent lemon| set upon by the public. 7% dignity, not the shuffle to which his| to have a mama and a papa of my Yare better, neering were met—and that so recently as 150 fore Mr. Akers, ccting to I ee soda and five-cent ginger-ale. , The statue of Peter Pan in Ken-| children had become accustomed, to| own again, like the other ids! Can Hi years ago. Yet it was into such an unexplored quent affidavits, added that there| It certainly was a quaint little| ington Gardens. . . . Hhas the| the girl who sobbed uncontrollably,| I call you Mama, Mrs. Lundy?” And d Tracks Are For Trains country that George Rogers Clark came at the] would be a “hung jury” and that | hole—this a drink, barroom an a Palen haan ever een, 80 caught her pen howed:an her cinare aon ie reat aime Mrs, swan 4 S _ 5 - | he had bee: i b dirt; rt ‘ashington, where | 2! eee evel re} her brig! copper-and-gol curls arms ih: Peapod ‘eacks 209 for trains and highways | 20 it Gventy and opcne! the way to settle ee ee oe a ee ae tae cy cant ates ocitname| het, lah. copper-and-qcid oxrs| flung Der. e2re for motorists. Trains are just a little ° ‘ The newspaperman succeeded in|trials in American history had been \ 5 peeping into the windows of the pes against which they fell. “Lis-| “Of course you can, if eheavier and mightier than automobiles, which| _ There is another assumption that we who making an appointment with Akers.| upset by a garrulous leather work-| past. . . . If ever you go to Lon- En te your dad, Cherry. God kriows| to,” Mrs, Lane assured ter. i train ile | live ii new :| According to subsequent affidavits, |er-juror and a street car conductor | don take my advice and toss your|I haven't intended any disrespect| broad face grimacing with eis to te point that whens ead autorecniie eel Ses ewer they went toa es on South: who had to tell the worlc what he} guidebook in a corner for a day. your mother’s mgmory, marry-| which she tried to Serer meet, the train comes ou! per cen F Mi te 4 west 4% street, where Kidwell ‘in- | heard! Go into the highways and stop the| ing again a little less than a year] you'll let her come, Mrs. - edd athe.time. Trains are hard to stop and auto-| from Minnesota westward to t! e Rocky ‘MOUuN-| dulged in indisereet conversation clei E first bus that passes, giving ni heed| after ter—her—after she left me.”| I'll do my best to be a good mother ~~ s are easy, which is to the point that/tains, partner with Captain Meriwether Lewis| about the possibilities of reward in| ‘There was more to the evidence| to its destination . - + «Wherever! he said huskily. “But it ain’t na-| to her. Your father’s got a Sos i iles| in’ i iti case Sinclair Fall wei uit-| demanding a declaration of mistrial| you go you will not re; it. .. .| tural for a man to live with his chil-| job, starting Monday, with a cabi B. Pighways cross tracks, automobiles ieee anon: Fr aleesty Crk exeuition of ted. ~ ee a | than what was said. behind. those| London is like that Ts (And ie) ee eee ee te ea OE cay dia’ “acend aS i a goes upon a railroad track, he wilderness. We have ina Raat the it ise cuted in tha Jory, schon nae eTThat Pali ter oop cae oo Seely a tas bin ieee. pas caper tae oe pn na J id 019 interes: in story uently lence was supplemented, get a le slip} ing is up wo! ni i if a trai mn jname. George Rogers Clark and William Clark|put over a tremendous “scoop”|and in fact overshadowed, by the| of faper.. . Don't ask me why.| he don’t try very hard to get work vag np ot the een He eae were haters. The former, born in 1752 When ft announced. three days Tater | rather grim shearers that the |. . . The never collects| or keep it" nen he's got it, No in- : F opened the old northwest of Illinois, Indiana| t&t,the government would ask that | jurors were being shadowed by pri-| it and everyone immediately tosses| centive, you might say. You chil-| ture. He’s going on salary at first In uch cicmatanoés, it sccme tut |and Oho, ‘The latter, born in 3770, obeedthe|ikeeeres ee Teh Mtn geet ye erimnane| hemo ue now Some | renwal gee to metea| ey Sen 6 wen—aed ma in sl circums' seems us . p » evidence was suc! it mistrial | lin] idwell. incident} one sai log n |, a8 a matter fact, 50 pretty soon h J if a driver cannot be sure otherwise|new northwest from Minnesota westward. would be granted. Akers and the|and the raid on the headquarters of| was merely paper tickets flying] didn’t do much to hold up my end| own: And I'm var - ages : obs newspaperman furnished two of the| Burns detectives when reports of| from windows and blotting out the| of the burden. Reckon Faith and| I’ve got my plan: ther a train is dangerously near he must] So, not only d cl kinship by inheri. pwne a is dan sly le ayy y do we claim Kinship by inheri-| s¢tidavits on which the mistrial de-|operatives were seized by U. 8. as-| background, ee Junior’s had many a night of worry] little home and do b ae out - ae venice, a. ob tates of the gang orga 4 with the middle for fear the old man was going to| catering for dinners and y he will no mn required lo} west region that first bore it, but we are, as dances, I'd lay down on the job completely and] like to have your order, if you'll try smore than stop and look. It seems to us that|it were, the heirs of these two brothers who, OUR BOARDING HOUSE ' : By Ahern |} #*t.ite,5 en him th protested.| gi eer a nave aNied to Fath ee a — —. “You did your share, raising us all, pe eh Ne es ‘if he relies upon not hearing the train or any|forty years apart, led the van of civilization —<—<———— : slaving for us and Mother. We loved want her rs “ tt a seo mo f and takes no further precaution, he does | first into the old and then into the new north- . his own risk.” = wests, are the words of Justice Holmes of the] The old northwest is the elder brother of nited States eu court, applying to ajthe new. Sixty years is perhaps as fair a fig- : . ; Those interminable graveyards. falgar it for because his automobile/ure as can be set between the ages of the two. : , And. Sop od oe oe of Dickens ad fa B by.a train. The elder has had the advantage of that time SOME CULPRIT : fans Lens out st you aadcotn oe logic in rushing across a rail-|to reach its mature growth, to build rich and HAS sET AFIRE 8 pleasant feeling of passing an old, ere is no sense in not stopping] great cities, to develop its seemingly endless friend. uch is Black- precaution to avoid being] resources and to become a dominion that com- There is only a world of| pares with any on the globe in wealth and ess, prosperity. vous with death.| What of the younger son? He has been ming. eating the husks of depression. But when was it otherwise that the younger son did not have to take a little the worst of it, until he came » & Kansas City lawyer, was|to manhood’s estate and could assert his rights day wheii he|and privileges? ~ t had run} The northwest of today will be as great and his car, the|rich and populous as the northwest of yester- Mega ma rs cer Nor oe it papel pyre: Per ig ud ‘And wi e | difference in age. The speed of this day is no j 5 Bloomsbury, Clerkenwell" R d him, he swung] that of the ox-cart of 1772. This is the gaso- Mildle ‘Temple, Charterhouse and ‘turned the -|line age and it moves on wings. A ane 3 ~~ the} There still lie untouched millions of tons of ver. iron under Minnesota soil; billions of tons of Pall don anes cot ae ee ae coal, copper silver in Montana; of \ E : it. Wel portland cement, silver, mica, gold and co} per mi : . eee ee Taner, Spare eer after-|under the frowning brows of the Black fi Is SIN. ACH - . +» «(Which {quite natural: sitice god lawyer |i superior tn frig to mgt Mth ob cet We IER < nA he metacngtantiadown| su! in y to! old north- “ ; ss - : = ni menacing, tum! furniches @ sure foundation for the su- ete ‘ \ Ae : De palia gee © did it XS i I ge eins | fi Rito on OPS in Drood.” . . . Or BEFORE NIGHT! = OH,“Tif .