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eorge Published ismarek, N. Independent Newspa, THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1872) D. Ma Subscription Rates Payable In Advance The Bismarck Tribune’ the Bismarck Tribune Company,| stunt in these words: 4 and entered at the posteffice at ismarck as second class mail matter. President and Publisher THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE folks and takes a tourist interest in things traveler is supposed to see when he wanders forth into the wide, wide world. Then comes Arthur Brisbane and takes the “kick” out o all e average American's “He never reads the foreign ne goes along through life very muc chicken in his chicken yard, if he has a | chicken yard. Fortunately for the nation id adr gu year Cin Dismmstcas 35) it is not made up exclusively of average ally by mail, per year, i citizens. (in state outside Bismarck) ... oe 5.00) . ‘orally by mail, outside of North Dak eee cad Succeeds Debs ‘ Congressman Victor Berger is successor to kl y’ by il, in state, per year ... « 100). rs ,, “aes ety 'br att, in ats, Shirke years fo! :.. 2.50 Eugene Victor Debs as chairman of the Social- Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per list Executive committee. It is natural that Do YORE siscecessseeeeree . + 180/the radicals should turn to this militant rep- Member Audit Bureau of Cireulation . resentative of their cause Like Debs, he has te ‘ faced the gaff. Congress refused him admit- Member of The Associated Press grip SER a G The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the|‘#"Ce; he has been sentenced to prison, but fate has alw been more or less kind to the editor Yee for republication of all news dispatches credited to 8 or not otherwise credited in this j Sal news of £) aad Lot Aare Berger, like Debs, vigorously and honestly i Foreign Representatives opposes the present system of government. « G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY However, he 1s a practical politician and will iC HICAGO DETROIT | probably compromise more in the interests of cower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. holding his seat in Congress than ever would. 1 PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH Ave. Bldg. Debs. In 1924, he did not oppe vigorously'| i gEW YORK - te 2 Fifth Ave. Bldg. | +10 merging of Socialists with the Farmer- La- x ¢, {f (Official City, State and County Newspaper) e ® It's so easy to forget; and 1918 was nine long sears 1 Yet there are some things that we must! j Armistice “aia Day brings some of them to our minds. 1 There is no danger, of cours Sctually forget the war. p jails of it are a bit hazy for some of us; already ynemory is beginning to pla | xs, softening the harsh outlines of past events) Ind bathing unpleasant happenings in a soft,! osy light that makes them seem actually en- ever Lest We Forget ago. let ourselves forget. And Yet oyable, in retrospect. When the a papers and alsg the | ntaneous origin published herein. All) lights of republication of all other matter herein ere/ that we will dy the de- her old trick on} ge non-combatant thinks of the war, for instance, what are his emotions?) He thinks of the easy money that prevai then. He thinks of the waving flags, of th veasant, spine-tingling thrills of patriotism) hat came to him so often. He thinks of the} vave of idealism that swept the land in those lays, under which the humblest citizen could ‘eel that he was part of a great army of broth- rs. All in all, the war doesn’t seem half. bad, n retrospect. And the ex-service man;;how does he feel -sbout it? . As like as not he, too, has memories that,; m the whole, are not unpleasant. The horror) ‘and the terror that were part of his life do not; ntrude themselves so much nowadays. In- stead he remembers the easy comradeship, the ‘appy-go-lucky good fellowship of the army. de recalls the songs he used to sing, the mates with whom he drank and went on gay esca- yades, the times when he went gaily A. O. W. way crossing does so at his own peril, now be- comes the law of the land, made so by the hig! est court in the land. who is the victim of a grade crossing accident,| nor his heirs, may recover damages. should anybody on the train be injured in s a collision, it would probably be possible, in the) p light of the Supreme Court’s dictum, to recover damages from the motorist or his heirs. there doubtle. decision a discrimination in favor of the cor- poration and against the individual. di: i Mr. Justice Holmes, sometimes been criticized for his over-liberal- ity; never for over-conservatism. right ever actually po new law set up by the of the Milwaukee Leader, for he has been able to hold his place in the sun and is the first So- cialist elected to Congress. for the presidency on the Socialist ticket, a job death, { Editorial Comment | | Let the Driver Beware | (Minneapolis Journal) | Every individual who drives an automobile} should note, and should remember, the r momentous decision of the United Stz |preme Court absolving railroad compan. all responsibility in grade crossing collisions. That every driver who ventures upon a rail- | | Henceforth, no motorist} Ind Among chronic critics of the Supreme Court are some who will see in this Which rimination is entirely in their own minds. ho wrote the decision, has No, this court-made law robs nobody of any ssed. Indeed, it is no ‘ourt, but rather an old i | borites, | There is even some mention that he will run| that Debs had almost in perpetuity until his! pr tha lay. ther mo ‘price,” surely. u. and eluded the M. P.’s in Paris. This is as it should he. iinth anniversary of the war, is a good day vor jogging our memories, for reminding our- #élves that the war wasn’t all skittles and beer. { War is quite all that General Sherman said *t is, and a casual inspection of one’s memory of the days of 1917 and 1918 will bear out that statement. : The non-combatant might recall the daily n wages and salaries rose. And why? than fight to end it. ‘ies may arise to torture us again. Lignite in Germany on, but the consumer pays $9 a ton. standard of living. prosperit this age of intensi yen may of 214 cents an hour, ty. '¥ Why an Average Citizen’ do unusual stunts merely capi flight or Yet today, the Sasualty lists; the worry and anxiety over ab- him, ‘sent loved ones; the unsightly spectacle of| Hence, as Justice Holmes points out, the sole| zrofiteers waxing fat on a situation that was] obligation is upon the motorist. If he cannot) ringing grief and destruction to all of Europe; the regimentation of mind and speech through- * Sut this country, with jail sentences for those] and investigate, rests upon him. who did not think as the majority thought; the sky-rocketing prices, so often rising fast-| preme Court, this la 4 And the soldier might recall—well, he knows] future decisions of the lower cou: hat scenes of horror he can turn his mind , without our telling him. He can recall the ud, the filth, the hard-boiled officers, the ma-| grade cro: ‘phine guns, the shrapnel and the re: he}more heavily traveled trunk highways, nows that, however many tricks his memory} when others will be protected by safety devic y play on him, these things were not pleas-|that swing the warning of an approaching train 4 Such are the memories we might stir up for + Not to advance the cause of “peace at any Not to make ourselves a paci- tic nation, willing to accept any situation Simply to remind ourselves that we went rough a terrible experience a few years ago, | that that experience had a definite pur- he bringing of freedom and peace closer 9 every man on earth—is brought nearer ful- iment, it will be well. If we do not, our More than 80,000 lignite miners recently nt out on a strike in central Germany and is crisis brought to light some interesting relative to the condition of that industry d the price paid for the product in the bins. are drawing only $9.60 a week and the oat of the coal to Berlin middlemen is $5.20 a The miners claim the spread is too great be- een the wholesale and retail price. Natur- lly they assert that the weekly stipend is not : nm a living wage. The miners ask merely ich means j than 100 00 to the owners of the mines. i situation in the coal industry reflects situation in Germany, conditions are ble. There’ must. be a. betterment in That is essential to ee ified publicity and when talize grest i - : of b- any increment of pu ic. recent paring ofan average ing of the North Atlantic. we at follows channel swim. The law discovered by the Court and put into writ- ing. For minds that function in an orderly manner it always has existed. For, as Justice Holmes says: When a man goes upon a railroad track, he knows he goes to a place where he will be killed, if a train comes upon him before he is clear of the track. He knows he must stop for the train, not the train stop for otherwise be sure a train is not dangerously | near, the obligation even to get out of his car This rule, now formally recognized by the Su- the driver heware—will, of course, govern all! in damage | claims growing out of grade crossing accidents. The time is coming, no doubt, when most} ings will have disappeared from the right in front of the driver’s eyes, like the de- vice that protects the Elk River crossing on Trunk Highway Number Eighteen. But a man run over on a cow-trail crossing is killed just as dead as a man run over on a trunk highway c ing. It is inevitable that grade crossings will continue to exist on a great many highways for years to come. So the motoring public will do well to let this Supreme Court de- cision sink in until the act of stopping, looking and listening at railway crossings becomes an instinctive human habit. A Flight Worth Watching (Cleveland Plain Dealer) One becomes dizzy jerking one’s neck to scan the skies. With an airplane here and an air- plane there and all the sky to be watched and the sea too, we are somewhat confused. Just at present we are so busy watching the North At- lantic that we have failed to pay sufficient tribute to Costes and le Brix who not only crossed the South Atlantic from continent to continent but also made a daring flight of 1,200 miles ove the perilous jungle of Northern Bra- zil, These men have already made a record, and they may make more records before they are through, They are the first men to cross the Atlantic westward from continent to continent without a stop. In 1922 the Portuguese Sacadura and Coutinho made the crossing, but they started yom the Cape Verde Islands instead of from the mainland, and they suffered disaster at St. Paul's rocks and a new plane had to be provided for them. Subsequent flyers over the South Atlantic made use of islands to diminjsh the distance from land to land. No one has come anywhere near success in the westward cross- Costes and le Brix will fly to many of the South American capitals, thereby emulating Franco, the Spaniard, who made the crossing after the two Portuguese had pointed tRe way. Franco’s South American air-tour was a trium- hant success, and there is no doubt that the n will receive equal honor. undertaking is likely to be ex- tended to include a visit to North America and ry see ae hig sed from —, 4 Tarte, Boek a round was attem; ‘inedo, cour- ageous Italian, but Hike Bath . y of caveat raedarius—let | th AND AQMISTIE DIY | | fused a man and were altogether superfluous. Senator McWhorter won an elec- tion on a campaign plank calling for simplified dictionaries with simpli- fied spelling, but the legislature double-crossed him after many nasty arguments over Senator McWhort- ler’s pronunciation wl...ever he at- tacked such needless words as in- tegropallial, tapinophoby, zoiatria, lI and disestablishmen- WASHINGTON LETTER y RODNEY DUTCHER 1 ator J. horter, friend of the| what can we hope for in é. atriot and fe ii p E _ ba Caer aes try if even the library of C a tarianism. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1927 are being used to restore the body to the normal, every care must be taken to, Drevert & recurrence ee the attac! pressure mus be reduced to normal with dietary measures, assi the employ- ment of any mental mean which iate cause of most at- lysis is a blood clot on the brain, dug-to the rupture of vessel or an injury to the brain from a blow. A cure will de- nd upon the absorption of the ood clot as soon as possible. icken one should be kept warm, and hot towels applied to the spine every half hour. No food of any kind should be given mntil the absorption of the blood clot has been completed. If no food is given to the stunned body, the thinned blood stream will slowly take away the blood clot which is pressing on the vital nerve centers in the brain. Keep up the fast for one week or even longer if necessary. Every morsel of food taken at this time will interfere with the cure; nour- ishment taken in the form of enemas will even produce more harm and create a larger amount of toxem A two or three weeks’ fast will ac- complish more at the start than the next two or three years of treat- ment by any other method. Remember the simple rules I am giving you in this article, and- your knowledge may be the means of bringing about a quick cure of a par- alysis which may occur to some Joved one in the future. In the event that paralysis has loccurred a long time ago, the same \fasting treatment will be the most effective form of treatment it is pos- sible to employ. However, the re- sults will not be as quickly felt, as the absorption of the old blood clot will be very slow. Appropriate physiotherapy treatment should th be given to increase the blood ci culation and to encourage develop- ment of muscular power in the parts affected by the pai . High blood pressure, with hard- ening of the arteries, is usually present. A correct diet should be used after the fas< to encourage the absorption of the calcareous deposits on the walls of the arteries. All grain foods should be strictly pro- hibited because of their large per- centage of starck. and minerals. Plenty of fresh fruits should he used daily, and at least one ‘neal of only Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal atone ta health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. will develup a tranquil, poised mind, free from anxiety and care. Self- control must be developed, and tem- perate habits formed to avoid en- other more serious attack. Questions and Answers | Question: Henrietta _writes: “When I am walking my hands swell up so much that they ae me terribly, especially when touch them. At Lines only one hand will swell and the other will be perfectly all right.” ; A Answer: Swelling of the hands is quite common when walking rapidly or for any grea’ distance. The swinging of the arms <orces the blood into the hands, but shuld not cause any discomfort unles: you are suffering from rheumatism. Some- times an impingement of the nerves which issue from the spine and go to the arms will be the controlling factor in causing one hand to swell and not the other. An osteopath or chiropractor could tell you if this cause exists. ae: Question: Marie asks: ‘“:3 it healthful or uot to drink a whole (not beaten) raw egg in milk?” Answer: I do not recommend the mixture of rev milk and eggs. If these foods are used together they should be cooked in the form of custard. Question: Mrs. T. R. asks: “What can be done for a six-year- old boy who is constantly making faces? The doctor calls it some form of nervousness. Have had any El eli mecot a adually growing out of shape. s welcomed the opportunity to|isn’t one hunded per cent 4 associate himself with that other} ican? friend of the people, sterling patriot and foe of all foreign nations ex-| “That cept Liberia, Mayor Williara Hale! we wil] h jompson G hicago. ing While Mayor Thompson bombards | Pres: jlibrary has a large section of un- the ramparts of Chicago’s public)the over” he sentim: of the |expurgated books of such character library, Senator McWhorter will| American people and come up and! that they cannot be taken from the undertake to cleai out the library} make a brief conflagrate. 7 eddress.| precincts and when Senator Mc- of Congress. _ I am sure we can depend on Tom|Whorter tried .o take some home, he The senator, like all other sen- Heflin and a few other noble pa-|was informed that not even a sen- ators and congressmen, recently|triots to participate in the official| ator could do that. received May jompson’s collect | ceremonies, especially our so-called telegram inviting all ds to join}isolationists and irreconcilables.| © the American First Foundation at| Something probably will have to be|| JN NEW YORK $10 a head. He is willing to overlook|done to keep Congressman Tom ry © the charges on the message, but feels| Blanton from grabbing books and| that it is not ey ‘ora man | throwing them at people and Borah; New York, Nov. 11—Manhattan, of his record to pay $10 te prove! probably will try to swipe some of his patriotism and that no doubt|the Spanish books, but those are when he has gone into action Mayor | minor details. Thompson will loosen up with some| “After that we will go after the honorarium for the senator if not}traitorous books written by English- a definite cut-in on each $10. men and half-of-one per cent Ameri- sabiecnites cans. I read a history book once. me of the senator’s opponents go so far as to suggest that $ uncompromising attitude toward e library of Congress is the result of the library’s uncompromising at- titude toward McWhorter. The mists from the deck of an incom- ing ship, seems a mirage. Manhatten, from a point between the lights! and quarantine, seems an exquisite mass of towers that ‘ § have melted into a strangely sym- Such news as this, of course, is|It was in grammar school. And I| metrical mountain. I could think bound to have an effect on the polit-|am personally willing to take thejonly of those fantastic backgrounds ical gilly pot, for it is known that! responsibility for burning the his-|of the Maxfield Parrish paintings. both McWhorter and Thompson have|tory books which traducc our fore-| The harbor mists give it an un- presidential ambitions. Already | fathers. there has been some mention of aj “As you must realize, I do not/di Thompson-McWhorter ticket, but|believe Mayor Thompson’s cam- Senator McWhorter assures us in|paign is comprehensive enough. I confidence that this was a typo-| will give this campaign scope as graphical error which placed him on| well as dignity. y_does he de- the wrong side of the hyphen. clare war on ng George Third will readily be seen,” says|and King George Fifth and leave nator McWhorter, “that Mayor/out King George Fourth, who was mpson’s activitic: must of ne-|jas bad as any of them? ind why ssity be limited because his au-| does he yell only at the British when ity does not extend outside his|the French, i y limits and there is no library|South Americans, in Chicago or anywhere else that|other nations are as bad ny of offers such a field for patriotic op-|them and all anxious to overthrow erations as the library of congress,}our great institutions and high where everybody has to send free | tariffs?” % es copies of his book when he copy- rights it, so that there is hardly any} While book in the worll that we cannot/are cl turn on the capitol grounds if we so Bold pens waa icsire. usual, are on the job. ‘st impressions for some “I propose that the Congressional} They have resurrected old news-| ai Fro papers. But now he branch of the American First Found-| paper clippings to show that more|was ready to give up. ation start right off collecting all/than twenty years ago, when Mc-| “This,” he said, “is not a task for the books in the library printed in| Whorter was governor of his state,|the writer; this is for the painter.” the foreign languages, because no-|he waged a bitter though fruitless ee ad 2 body can read them and there is no|campaign against Webster's diction-| At the prow of the ship, ary. on the ground that there were| crowd of immigrants had for hours of knowing whether there which only con-| been eyes, almost pro| ida, Bolshe' — eee | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern fri WE HAVE BEE HONORED - === GENTLEMEN !cTHIS 1S THE P-WITd THs MissiosSTo INFORM ===] PROUDEST MOMENT OF MY YoU, THAT You WERE OFFICIALLY EVENTFUL LIFE! ~~ EGAD, “DECLAREDTHE WINNING e EXCELLING BY FAR, THE HoNoRS BESTOWED oN ME CANDIDATE TOR DUSTICE, BY dual sky cri per is defined. It is as though all the cathedrals of the world had been elevated upon some hill and robbed of the broken lines of their spires and towers. It is more beautiful than a mountain, for you know it is man-made; and being fashioned by hand its lin have been deliberately shaped to a pattern of infinite fascination to the eye. ees I was standing on deck beside Andre Maurois, the author of the very popular “Ariel: the Life of Shelley,” who was coming to Ameri- ca for the first time. es Z Often, as we the’ deck, I had tried to tell what it would like. He had told of writing * members of Congress Senator McWhorter’s ‘is political enemies, as “HE ELECTION BOARD! BY. ROVALTY, ~~ ECLIPSING NouR oPPostTion\, THe Wax 7! THE DELIGHT OF MY SCIEATIFIC EXPLORATIONS, AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDINGS ~~ SUPREMELY HAPPY, BECAUSE OF THE “TRUST » DUMMY, WAS RULED out AS BEING AN ILLEGAL CANDIDATE! « mm ti! ATI a HHA Sawa PS RRS sh te SC NENT, ee seen through the early morning] ha! believably spectral quality. No in-| baby- the! woman who does as much work as rT! Would be glad of any help.” orange or grapefruit juice should Answer: The greatest cause of used. Exercises of all kinds must be taken to re-educate the deadened muscles and restore proper tone. Constipation must be overcome or daily enemas taken to insure a free ination of intestinal - poisons. Daily message of the entire body vill be of great help. . ting them on a wel While these methods of treatment} irritating diet. PE an Bn BL iil LA eal F<) a yi Amt ah 8, Faith followed Bob to the door that Saturday morning, tremulously ippy ‘over his unexpre: but very evident approval of her atti- tude toward her father’s marriage to Kate Lundy, her former servant. “Listen, dear,” she began, link- ing her arm in his with affection- ate tenderness; “since Joy is not ‘dete to be with us any longer,| Cherry on the back seat staring lon’t you think we might get along] sulkily straight ahead of her and without a maid? There will be| Bob unconcernedly reading the edi- only four of us, counting the] torials in the morning paper. by—” “What does an employer do when his secretary won't speak to him?” Bob demanded humorously of Faith, as he assisted her to the front seat beside him. “I'm afraid, dear, you're only her brother-in-law until you’ve reached the office,” laughed Faith. ‘The rest of the drive through the resident sections and on into the business district was like a thrill- ing adventure té Faith, for Bob sat beside her, conversing easily and naturally, even gaily, calling “ greetings to other business men board. Get a god maid and plan to| driving to work, laughing at their have some free time of your own.| glances of surprise directed at the If the devil finds mischief for your) handsome young woman who sat be- idle hands, I won't kick,” he| side him. She had the delicious feel- Phare IEE se inne | RESO Geetha a rou’ me r if| eager interest I did’ become a little | devilish,” site was beside him.” o Faith suggested jealously, nu “Get a good-looking ” Bob pleased at His thoughtfulness. called out blithely, as Fafiriere the “Fishing?” he teased. “You do} car at the employment agency’s ! But I simply can’t| building, “Blonde preferred! Then. abide the martyr type, and any By Herne of beauties will be com- plete.’ Faith felt quite proud of herself that Bob’s eagtinge Drought her not a faint twinge of jealousy, It was nice to have him joke with her! NEXT: Faith at the agency. Where else on the face of the carth tating food s ha upon producing irritation all over the body. T have never seen a case of these troubles with that could not be quickl; ployment agency? I'll wait till you Powder your nose. C! doesn’t Beem to be ready yet. She’s prob- ably punishing me for daring to scold her.” When Faith was ready five min- utes later, she found Che: and Bob in the sedan before the house, “And the baby counts for about four herself, in the amount, of your time that she uses up,” Bob retort- ed. “No, you can’t wheddle me out of my determination for you to have help in the house. You may enjoy doing enough work to keep two strong women busy ten hours a day, but I don’t enjoy having you do it, and that’s that! There are other ways of' economizing than by ruining my sweetheart’s health. Cherry is — contributing twenty-five dollars a week for her you've been doing is bound to get a martyr complex and expect her usband to spend the evenings pol- ishing up her halo. Want me to drive you down this morning to pressing their noses against the V very sky-line. .. _ | is there such T wandered‘ among them, trying} Nowhere! . to catch words that would tell what|hatten. . .. they were thinking. But no words They were awed into silence. Here was something that even fan- tastic imaginations could not con- jure. “Well?” I said to a spellbound little Frenchman and nn wife. ‘|“What do you think?” * “It cannot, be,” he said. “It must be a mirage.’ “But it is. That is Gotham!” eee And yet, it isn’t Gotham. : It is the reflection of the beauty that New ‘York holds captive, but. which is released to the eye only. at a distance. Once you are in the swirl of the city; once the confu- sion sweeps about your once -your ears in begin resent the eternal! Kee} and your eyes swim . watch- your dizzies from Luxuries the swiftl; pageant, it aditiledie to beligne that | you have not looked te Epon a mirage. From the ship the illusion is com- Ye See Wee Ses Bree 8 a grea GILBERT: SWAN. FF FF is otf [ : He oe cured y “pute « look over the candidates at the em- ; a ay cv