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~ Grete pewmenaenn srveogatvace i f Bismarek, - Daily by mail, per year, (in A227 Bb t Betead Be sos m We all enjoyed it very much,” F v (Established 1873) Logs he ee as second class mail matter. George D. Dat arrier, per year . oo eee oe year, Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, Tin’ state outside Bismarck) ....-+. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail, in state, per year ...... ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for. Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per YOO ccacccvescesersee Member Audit Burcau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to per, and also the Erishea herein. tights of ale of all other matter herein are it or not otherwise credited in this local news of spontaneous origin pu! also reserved Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS NEW YORK - bd Bismarck Tribune m entered at the postoffice at j.eeeeePresident and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance & SMITH Fifth Ave. Bldg. “The Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspaper 1 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER “ Company, eoeeee 6.00 6.00 woos 1.50 All DETROIT Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) j A Sinister Note Observance of Armistice Day this year was marked by a curiously sinister undertone. Re- membrance of the thankfuln 3 felt by all peo- ples when the world war crashed to its close nine years ago was this year mingled with a touch of uncertainty, with a feeling of dread for the future. war seemed so completely “over.” fs dead, long live the king!” man nature, Jast year or two it has drifted very swiftly ir the past. Yet there is evidence of a feeling that the world may soon be saying, “The king Jt would be hu- At no time before, perhaps, has the world During the ly into The fact is, that war is not being talked bbout with bated breath any more. ing contemplated as .a distinct possibility. More than that. Voices are again being raised, as they were before the great conflict, which say that “war is inevitable.” During the last year the outlook for lasting It is be- peace has been definitely marred by several concrete developments. England’s Russia was one. league of nations have been made. and the deadlock between England and the| United States at the Geneva nava have been invested with dark meaning. The powerful reaction against war, it seems, is being followed by a reaction against that re-| action. That would be human Wnature, too. But the most sinister sign is this pering that “war is inevitable.” tone has not yet assumed grave Today it is merely to be noted as a Sign and a portent, ’ In view of the American craze for specding | in everything, however inconsequential, it is strange no one has thought to try g skates, A Needed Word (Pittsburgh . Post-Gazette) Secretary of War Davis, in dedicating a new air corps aviation field at Dayton, Ohio, ut- tered a needed word to his countryme that, while we must keep up reasonable acrial military preparation, we should no! an inferiority complex in the matter of aero- nautics. With our Lindberghs, Chamberlains establishing one r Ww er another, with the government steadily im-| proving the character of its flying craft and with states and municipalities preparing for the new industry, we need not feel exactly downcast_ when the subject of aviation is men‘ tioned. Secretary Davis has hear how far this country is supposed t the principal European nations in military avi- ation advancement. Then he went only to find an undisguised belief that the United States is ahead in that resp “America,” the secretary said f military airplanes tion, and she has better pilots. forget this inferiority complex. —B: der the presént program, the United States army air corps will have 1,800 military planes of the most efficient type. This double its present strength.” To be sure, the country must continue to be! on guard against false security, bu’ right, as it goes along, to take what tion it can from the facts and common sense. Charges in both England and France that governments are sabotaging the as good as those of any na-| It's time to break with The clash 1 conference vague whis- This under- proportions. olf on roller It is t fall under Byrds and record aft- rd much of 0 be behind to Europe, pect, inally, “has | sy 1932, un- will nearly t it has the tisfae, ' “Jt was a wonderful dinner, Rhoda, said, smiling into her new “maid’s’ flushed, happy face. “Joy will help American girl, some day be SAINF =i SINNER and undoubtedly will very rich girl. 's things,” he caught himself up contemptuously. script. And each role ford’s story is filled by tried to “li than merely act it, th measurably to the rea production, Not ” his or her part rather The leading man, Charles Rogers, in Miss Pitk- a player who adding im- ism of the ticth congr consider various and if the people of the United States refuse to get excited about thes of them have been up in one form or another for the last 125 of 150 years. : or Bill Thompson of Chicago howling against King George IIT just as the st A PPE MOE TEN NEVER THE Less I AM IN OFFICE ! ~ BY DOVE, MY FAIRY. QUEEN, I LOVE YouR BRUSQUE MANNER! WITHAL, You HAVE “HE CHARM OF A DEBUTANTE,~4 |] AU, INDEED VES fw HM-mM—- ©... ER, AH, ~—umM-~ WOULD LC BE IMPOSING ON YOUR GENEROSITVA - FORTHE GRACIOUSNESS OF A pH DOLLAR OR-MWo2~HEIGH Ho ¥)7 we YES,~LVE HEARD ALL ABOUT YOUR ELECTION !~HMF ~ ~You DUST BARELY MADE (T BY THE FRAY OF YOUR CUFFS!< ~~ LEAVE (T-TO A HOOPLE, LIKE YOUR BROTHER SAKE GOT, FOOD PRESERVATION ‘fous changes and, in fact, the meat One of the chief. difficulties of | 80 preserved is ite eetiy digest- the primitive man was his lack of] ed than when fresh. Many vege- knowledge of ways and-means.for| tarians and dietitians do not seem the preservation of food. Even in| to realize this fact, and their ° the Babylonian days it is apparent| ments that flesh goods are Tinwhote- ee ee time ped <= epee pat upon ta ne lear--d how preserve ions wi were often true a foods against decay, and were F sao : woF HIM HOLDING A TRAY OF DISHES! ~~ WELL, ( century ago. YOU'RE IN THE PUBLIC EVE M'DEAR, —~ WHAT SAY 2 fore forced to eat such food as meat,| Again, man’s ingenuity has tri- 1, 4 ! we hat Se a P| a ae ae “AAS A CINDER !. ‘scope of our dietetic “tke and Answers Question: E. L. M. writes: “I am troubled most of the time by a drowsy Bey, feeling. It does not necessarily follow » I some- Dr. Me will answer atuial cota and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribun ie. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. use The primitive man learned to dry| broadened the she sed rhath te beep tim cocnt horizon: - inst decay and conserve them for the time when they lentiful, but it seems that only the forth American Indian understood the art: drying meats. He cut the meat ‘into ips and dried them in the sun, Presetved the meat for weeks snd even months, and supplied the triad with flesh food du the winter and when game ‘was scarce. I was si recently when visiting small Mexican towns quite close to the United States border that t'e butchers do not have any way of preserving meat except to hang it in screened enclos keep out the files.. The customer imited in-his sélection, as usual- ly only one kind of meat is avail- able until the whole carcass of the pulled Lda bh wate 5 Bd meat gets pretty ripe a few days. - The eres Kb bons] ot ae preservation came when a French- man named ‘Tellier invented ‘the first cold storage process. in the year 1876, when he (ead a load of steer. meat from Seuth America to England. The French were so doubtful cf the success of refrigera- tion tat they not allow the times have it immediately ‘upon avising. Will you please tell mc the cause and remedy?” Answer: You are probably suf- fering from some kind of toxic con- dition. Try eating less and exer- cising more. Take a good walk twice daily, finishing with a coid shower each time. Question: Mrs. C. J. writes: “I would like to-know what you think of using pete soda in cooking bg eo newer: I do not recommend the use of soda in cooking vegetables, as it is wholly unnecessary if the vegetables are Properly cooked, al- though-I do not believe that the use meat t- land in France, and so Tel-| af bicarbonate of soda is particuler- lier sold the mest ‘in England’ and/ ly injurious. - ‘ the i : J. L. writes: “I am probably English on} “Question: their roast beef habits. a dail, r of your articles, and It is only a little over fifty years| I would be deeply indebted to you since this revolutionary refrigera-| if you would answer the following tion method was tried, and its p-| questions in your column. Nobody Plication has “completely changed/ seems to be able to answer the first our dietetic. habits. .[one: (1) Whats the cause of ap- While meats are, undoubtedly,| pendicitis? (2) Is there any way one of our most nutritious foods, aye itoutside of an operation? bes great care had to be exercised in| (3) Is it a’dangerous operation?” Duke Fernando of Spain, arrest-| their use prior to this time because] Answer: (1) Inflammation of ed in Paris as a swindler, says he| of the putrefactive processes which| the appendix is mostly caused by would like to make a fresh start] so easily set oer constipatic and any eating in Americ, We need several young] Now, when: meats are’ properly] habits whici. will bring on colitis. men like that in this country. refrigerated there is little change} (2) Most cases can be cured by eotiien in the nutritive qualities and prac-| dieting, and colon cleanliness. tically no decomposition for over] (3) The average operation for many years. this trouble is not dangerous, as it If the viscera are-completely re-| js seldom ..ore than an inflamed moved before the meat is put into] condition. If pus has developed, the cold storage there will be no injur-| operat'on’ may be dangerous. ACD. US. PAT. OFF of ‘adding new amendments or re- Pealing any existing. ther instances of repetitive his- tory might be cited cundlesaly. BARBS 2 Everybody is crazy to see the new Ford. In a year everybody will be crazy to find a road where there aren’t any. es WASHINGTON LETTER § BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, Nov. 17.—The seven- ess will soon meet and issues of import perity the burden which we ourselves ought to bea: ait EY The national parent warned against any undue affection or hatred toward any foreign country, remarking sapiently that “There can be no greater error ,than to ex- pect or calculate om real favors from nation to nation.” sues, it may be because many An honest confession is good for the soul, but bad for the lawyers, Avoirdupois is like compound in- terest. You start with a small Eloquent. pleas concerning the sanctity of homes raided by_prohibi- tion agents without warrants gen- The twentieth century finds May- you wash the dishes—” she speared the last flaky crumb of Rhoda’s perfect gpple ie. “L didn’t have to help irs. Lundy! Isn't -Rhoda going to be our new—” “Joy ith’ with warning. ishes the glasses nicely, Rhoda. ra 2, lazy little demon, someti Come into the living room and listen to the when you two children igh in the kitchen.” scarcely waited until sh of 2nd Faith and Bob were in the living R room before she turned upon her sis- © $2 ter in fury: ny re “I think the whole thing is per- 1 fectly ridiculous! Getting a maid 1 and then treating her exactly like Ba one, of the family, or even better! a Boulevard when this story gets | ye, around! Dad marries the first ae ant you have and then you hire an- | Mother one, and—” lig “Cherry,” Bob interrupted, in a =H portentously stern voice, which : @ moaned a? paresis contempt- +! uous fire er gol eyes upon Shim. “I thought I made it clear et ei before dinner that you were not to meddle in this particular affair. ‘Faith is the mistress of this estab- “Aw, Faith!” Joy protested, as | i meni: ed that she would be an_ honored Hae of any family that was luck} Probably she herself has had ‘hired »| girls’ helping on her farm in Minne- | sota, and has treated them like farm {folk do. |country born and bred, as self-re- specting sonally, I admire her spunk, and I'll 48-lishment, and I am, to use an old- We fashioned but very (food ion, SMthe head of it. 1 think it is up ty sttus to decide how this child shall be » Bob,” Faith pleaded. not to quarrel,” Bob said is perfectl; Jonson @ rather fine type of New York, Nov. 17.—When the works” recently to @uccessor to “Kid informed the with a bullet, back. It js code never to give the slightest chance. never. meet an opponent in its travel, like wolves, een nt gal is Loa; they -) cars, ‘rom & window and then on gta . che East Side, though it has a devel sense of law and der, invariably closes its eyes , 1g war is on. Crowds may in the push-cart belt the more elaborate market places a pistol cracks from a pass- car—as was the case in the ying of “Little Augie”—but no seems ever to remember the mber of the automobile; no one irs who anything or heard b; us fear works as an Accom- «IS no ire ivolve them- affairs. travels with| so {At the Movies | ——— “The she is not a servant in the| sense of the word. I saw that it had never occurred he would be humiliated, place,’ as a _domesti imply took it for grant- cnough to get her as a helper. You must remember she is u are, and in her own as not degraded herself by ing the only employment for which her life has fitted her. Per- tell the world I admire her cooking!” Faith’s hand bad crept up his arm as he talked, and before he had fin- ished, it was cuddling and patting his cheek. She had not felt so close to him in many weeks as she felt then, curiously enough, when he was defending another girl against Cher- ry’s selfishness, has been declared by no legs an au- thority than Miss Pickford* h to be one of the most prom young players on the screen. meteoric rise has been one of the sensations of film circl Hobart Bosworth, who is noted for his char acter portr: PI as the! millionaire in Mary’s “nickel-and- dime” story. Miss Pickford’s ,“parents,” with Lucien Littlefield as the hen-pecked postman-father, and Sunshine Hart as the hypochrondriac mother, pro- vide many of the laughs. Mack Swain, the famous comedian of Charlie Chaplin’s “The Gold Rush,” appears as the police judge in the night-court sequence. armelita Geraghty plays star’s wild and wayward “s Avonne Taylor, known as the “pe fect society type,” enacts the part of Rogers’ fiancee, and Evelyn Hall, the well-known English dramatic (star, is cast as the millionaire's wife. John Junior appears as the “cheap the “Thanks for the chautauqua lec. ture on democracy!” Cherry flashe refusing to admit defeat, but accep! ing it in her own wa: “Please don’t be bitter, Cherry,” Faith pleaded. “Bob is right. It would have been an unpardonable cruelty to send her away from the table tonight, to banish her to the kitchen, I only hope we can keep her, that that awful brother of hers doesn’t come to claim her. Be sweet to her, honey. You can be so very sweet when you want to be.” NEXT: Rhoda springs a surprise on the Hathaways. _ ip (Copyright 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) guard at bis sid. Many of these mythically ferocious chieftains have rat-like weaklings, with pinch- ed faces, undernourished bodies and more cunning than strength. They could not hold their own in any equal contest and so go about, day and night, accompanied by a huge bruiser—usually a down-and-out prize-fighter, 7 largely a “bruiser” business. The chiefs hire out their gangs for “rough work” in labor troubles. Labor fights in this part of the world are mean fights, accompanied by cracked heads and bruised bod- ies. ‘ For, perhaps “$50,000 a “Little Augie” would undertake to “settle a strike” for the bosses. In fact it was just such a transaction, I told, that sent Augie to his grave with “a bullet in the back.” He roused a few jealousies through the ss Sa eycined of lieutenants. So he “got the works.” Tomor- row the -new chief who takes his place had best’ look out. “Little Augie” left -friends behind him. They will avenge his death. There will be another,“shot in the back” some Saturday night and nobody in the passing crowd will be uble, two minvies later, to remember having heard or seen anything. G LBERT SWAN. CAPITOL “The players in Hat Bes Girl’ are well chosen for i The gangster business today {s| ba: sport” and smaller parts are han- dled by William Cortright, Pat Har- mon, Harry Walker and Frank Finch-Smiles. The picture was di- rected by Sam Taylor, who handled the megaphone on such Harold Lloyd successes as “For Heaven Sake,” “The Freshman,” “Girl Shy and “Safety Last.” ELTINGE Fiercely—tigerishly, row upon row is steel-jawed Rough Riders fling S grass in the blazing open plain be- fore San Juan Hill. Death creeps with them through the jungle and decimates their ranks. Bullets whine and sting with lightning far: ells from concealed batteries on the en- precied Spanish heights maim and ill. But nothing halts their rush. Before them is their battle flag- a blue kerchief with white dots that whips out like a Fennant from the neck of Theodore Roosevelt. Roos: velt is up in the front, six-shooter in hand, the roar of a hero in combat coming from his lips as he charges straight up the slope toward a rbed-wire fence forty yards below the Spanish trenches, The Rough Riders have already taken Kettle Hill, taken it almost | p; with their bare hands at a vicious cost of life, launching themselves di rectly into a concentrated fire whic it seems no human life could with- stand. And now they are rushing u; the steep slopes of hell itself, with the joyous laugh of madmen in the harsh ecstasy of battle. . This is what ntly transpired less than thirty miles from the heart of San Antonio where film troops. re-enacted the glory and tragedy of San Juan Hifi in the picturization of “The Rough Riders,” now showing at the Eltinge for today and Friday ink Hopper as Roosevelt, Noah Beery, Charles Farrell, George Ban- croft, Mary Astor, Charles Emmett El tion of George Wgshington had its Ives through + the hot high| eighteenth century found the fathers howling likewise. The administra- problems of taxes, debt reduction, federal economy, armaments, third term, foreign relations and so on, even as the administration of Calvin Coolidge. There were blocs and lobbyists then as now, and there were statesmen to protest them. ** Washington waited until Septem- ber, 1796, ‘two mohths before elec- his famous farewell address. Inci- dentally, he used a form of the word “choose” when he apprised the coun- try of his resolution “to decline be- ing considered among the number of those out of whom a choice is to be made.” He was not ambiguous; he actually apologized for his decision; he used about 500 words where Coolidge used 10 and everyone knew what he meant. There was no talk of drafting him and the senate had of years admonishes me more and more that the shade of retirement is as necessary to me as it will be wel- come,” he said. ... “While choice and prudence invite me to quit the political scene, patriotism does not forbid it.” ee @ Washington, too, apparently had a “western wing” on his hands, though it may not have reseml the NorrissBorah group which un- dertakes to array the west against the east. “In contemplating causes which may disturb our union,” he said, “it occurs, as a matter of serious con- cern, that any ground should have been furnished for characterizing parties by geographical discrimina- tions—Northern and Southern, At- lantic and Western—whence design- ing men may endeavor to excite a belief that there is a real difference of local interests and views... . Phe tion time, to decline a third term in| erally only cheap imitations of the court argument of James Otis in 1761 a a st the Writs of Assist-} General Gomez had a large fu- ance. Otis proclaimed that “special | neral at which thousands marched. warrants only are legal” and: “One| The Mexi government sh of the most essential branches of | its liberality by not interfering. ; English liberty is the freedom of ‘one’s house. A man’s house is his} Mayor Thompson took 1,500 peo- castle; and, whilst he is quiet, he is} ple to Washington with him to im- as well guarded as a prince in his) press upon the Congressional _com- castle.” 4 mittee the need of flood relief. We Patrick Henry, in his long-winded tion against the federal constit tion, raised the issue of congressi: al apportionment which recent con- gresses have so artfully ducked. He objected to the wording of the pro- vision that representatives should “not exceed one for every 30,000” on the grounds of ambiguity. Henry may have been overheated, but his protest that “four of the smallest states, that do not collectively con- tain one-tenth the population of the United States, may obstruct the most salutary and necessary amend- figure and keep doubling it, ee inventor. There’s not a joy the world can give like that it takes away, When the glow of earthly thought declines. in ‘feeling’s dull de- cay; ‘Tis not on youth’s smooth cheek Br ales alone, whic) fadeqipo But the tender bloom of heart is gone, ere youth itself be past. Oh, could I feel as I have felt—or be what I ha ¥ could been have wept y @ vanishec scene; * As springs in desert found seem sweet, all brackish though ‘ they be, So midst the withered wast. of life those tears. would flow to me! the friend. bring in millions. its own members. —————— ee \ Justajingle | SOc: ONE Aone Bie robes bid oe Meteo hearts, players heard say. Then both opponents passed just as His. partner passed—away. e The average person in the Uni- ‘been discovered, Nov. 18. hed need cosDass ny. antirthine ten ments’, is reminiscent of the pres-| ted States makes only 185 tele 4 —borge Pi tiavsal Byron: feom Good music. New and old-time resolution. . ref r uak Tor Music, | dan “Every day the increasing weight ent day plaint about the difficulty| phone calls in a year. stan: y ces, . WeWantYou tc Make Careful Comeerison Our special aim is to offer absolutely the best value: “found any- ‘ where. We want you to know that you will always find them here. Whatever you may need to complete your home furnishings—wé inhabitants of our western country .« have lately seen ... a decisive proof how unfounded were the sus- picions propagated among them of a policy in the general government and in the Atlantic states, unfriendly to their interests... .” He warned against blocs and lob- ies—“all combinations and associ: under whatever sible char- acter, with the real design to direct, c-atrol, counteract or awe the re; lar deliberation and action of the constituted authorities . . .”—which would “put in the place of the dele- gated will of the nation the will . of a small but artful and enterpris- ing minority of the community .. .” as likely to become “potent engines by which cunning, ambitious and un- principled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people.” As“for economy, armaments and debts: “Avoid occasions of expense by cultivating peate, but remember- ing also that timely disbursements to prepare for danger frequently Mack and Frank Hopper are fea- tured, [ “a Foust —] Let not your heart be troubled. —Joha 100, i pia roubles Worry {s rust upon the blade— Henry Sen ———— ' Kitcher. aprons, bags fi hoo! book#, raincoats, beach slippers, radio. covers and L maay. einer pas, mi pal new are aed ‘rom avoid much greater disbursements to repel it; avoiding likewise the accu» mulation of debt, not only by shun- ning occasions of expense, but by pages exertions in time of peace to discharge the debts which un- avoidable, wars may have occasioned, not ungenerously throwing on prose Sed adults by’ phyecase everywhere. = Per Gate By HALL'’S DRUG STORE. . Bismarck, have it here at a substantial saving. Come and see;for yourself. | fe Pt ._-._. Eight-Piece Dining Suite — : Ko better suite was ever offered at the pri¢e, ‘Consists: of table; . five site, chairs, arm chair, buffet. _ Built of walnut and gumwood, ny _. Bowman Furniture Comp ‘SOUNDS REASONABLE “I got it at last!” shrieked the “I'll make a fortune.” “What. is it this time?” asked the country will bu; collecting box with different slots ‘for different: .coins; money falls on velvet, while cop- pers drop on a big bell.”—Tit-Bits. * The Smithsohian Institution endeavoring to find the, complete 5 skeletion of an:American elep! Incomplete skeletons: ‘alread; Dance at Menoken Friday, Lockwood’s “Just a little device, but it will Every church .in ly one. It’s a All _ silver is it. re ly Hall,