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fore ko Cor est ] gricv dleg ‘arck | Wal aet ,orn yeaki ~ qudd, pred ie st. "Co le oF asba “t of veet gum ssfu akin ors 2 lat hea "Id reat te | suc] gret 2 ne rm. sthor reit} 1 iliza rieti mbit >» be x qi 1 orth ¢ _, falfi ” pver ‘ ou atk eme | ed. oe ie } solve—we resolutely go to work to forget them. iret i, tn ‘ev no statement uncontradicted. The safe and sane course ante follow seems to be, in this case, the middle course. G p> OF yeaa _—. \ Every American community, from the smallest to . the largest, is struggling with the problem of automo- , bile parking. ip Parking bans have not proved practicable in the GE FOUR : An Independent Newspaper ) THE STATE’S OLDES] NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) EEE EEE bactroban Published by tho Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis marek’ as second class mail matter. George D. Mann ... Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ........ sss Daily by mail, per ~ear, (in Bismarcx) .. Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail, Weekly by mai Weekly by mail, outs POF VERT 220.0... seseseeseceseeess ene yd) Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press in state, per year ...... in state, three years for ide of North Dakota, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin berein. All rights of republication of ter herein are also reserved, ublished Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, St and County Newspaper) OUR UNBURIED SOLDIERS Ten years can seem like a long, long time. There are in America. today hundreds of thousands of young men, married, holding responsible jobs, fin- ished with their schooling, who were too young to be in service when the armistice ended the World war. The World war, to them, is a distant memory. Even to the rest of us, who were older then and knew some- thing about it, it seems far away, blurred by time. Yet, in the bramble-grown gullies and ravines of the Meuse-Argonne region, in the over-grown dugouts and machine gun nests of Belleau Wood, and in the tangled region about Chateau Thierry, there are still lying, undiscovered, the bodies of more than 1300 Amer- ican soldiers who were killed in action. This is something in the nature of a reminder for pill of us. We tend to put unpleasant experiences out of mind. Whether we gained or lost by them—whether they ‘were closed episodes or left us with new problems to We tell ourselves, “Well, anyhow, it’s OVER.” We have been doing that with the World war. It is not only the pain and suffering of the war that ‘we put behind us. We put behind us, also, the vast hopes and high ideals with which we entered the war. ‘We were keyed up, then, to a higher point than we hhave been able to reach since. We were ready for sacrifices. We had our eyes on an ideal. And today? Well, we don’t like to think about those things. We know that we have somehow missed the ideals and the hopes. We have come down to earth again, and it is uncomfortable to remind ourselves of it. So we try to forget. But—there are still 1300 unidentified bodies of our soldier dead lying where they fell, on the battlefields that our ideals and our hopes brought into being. And ' they will not let us forget. Those 1,300 boys, who have lain for 10 years in snow. and rain with bits of lead and steel in the dust of their hearts, died for something. They had a dim, possibly confused notion that the world would somehow be a Latter place because they died. They surrendered themselves to a force that moved the hearts of their country. They paid with their lives for a belief that a new day could be made to dawn on earth. ° The rest of us were spared. We lived on, to taste the joys and ecstasies and victories of daily life that those lads missed forever. We were permitted to go on with our work and our play as before. But with this privilege went a responsibility. To see to it “that these heroic dead shall not have died in vain” is our greatest task. Somewhere between 1918 and 1928 we have lost the great vision that sustained these young men on their last march. Nothing—noth- ing that you can imagine—is more important than that wwe regain that vision and act on it. A new dawn was to come. It is up to us. We can, fof course, pursue our present course of materialism and do our best to forget all about it. But will it be ca PB8Y> while 1300 of our dead lie yet unburied? WHEN TO CHALLENGE Lecturing to a group of university~students a soci- blogical expert told her audience that one of the ques- tions put by psychologists to business leaders—in an attempt to construct an Anatomy of Leadershitp—was: “Do you always try to correct people who make erroneous statements?” \ Tt would be interesting to know whether a “Yes” or “No” to this inquiry is regarded as exhibiting the qualities essential to leadership. On the one hand, it ‘might be argued that a person who insisted on correct- ing the erroneous statements of others in and out of season would probably be knocked on the head by justly infuriated fellow-citizens before he advanced very far in life. On the other hand, a person who never forrected the erroneous statements of others might tniss any chance of being picked out for leadership by pearing to identify himself with the mistakes of his fellows. This seems to be one of those questions which re- quire a certain tact in answering. Probably some of those who have succeeded in life would propound an- other answer by way of reply and inquire: “Erroneous statements made by whom?” Public esteem does not go out to those who habit- ually permit misstatements to go unchallenged, nor is he held in high esteem by his fellow men who leaves The born leader has the faculty of knowing when to challenge and when to leave to flexible Truth her own WHERE TO PARK Larger centers of population deal with the troublesome situation seven days in the week. With the others it is mostly a Saturday night problem. n the suggestions advanced from time to time for relief of traffic congestion, the one that appears to hold most promise is that parking in congested areas be banned. But that does not solve the problem of the hundreds of motorists who come into town to shop or find entertainment and would be kept away if de- prived of parking facilities. nce of storage depots. If parking is to be ruled out congested areas there must be established garages ‘sutomobile parks of ample size, situated in the heart ch zones. That city is fortunate that has acces- ‘vacant lots conveniently located or adequate ge parking space. to time it is suggested that underground provides the only solution for relief of con- st thus far in the United States there huve been | subterranean depots of any mag- ‘must be restricted or probibited and The Bismarck ‘Tribu ne| and entered at the pvustoffice at Bis- «ee.-President and Publisher 87.20 1.20 ll other mat- automobile users made to walk many blocks to their destii provided. Underground garages may prove to be the PARENTS A common and seemingly warranted complaint among public school teachers is to the effect that parents in general show too little interest in the education of their children. it has been said, as a general prop- osition, that parental assistance, however untrained, is more beneficial to the child than educated but indif- ferent parents. Most parents consider their obl ion and respon- sibility ended when they pay their school taxes and see that their offspring are punctual and regular in their school attendance. Their interest in the school prog- ress of the child begins and ends with the signing of the monthly school reports. Teachers claim they can single out of a large and representative class the pupils who receive, at home, instruction and sympathetic cooperation in their school work. These pupils—usually few in numb je ably show greater progress. , They their classes. e the leaders in The parent who displays no intcrest in the progress of the child cannot expect the child to show much interest in his own progress. The n ctful parent is very apt to have a delinquent child. One way to abate the disturbing upward trend of school taxes is to return to the home part Of the job of educating young America. Is this asking too much of the parent? THE AGE OF ART The American people are in revolt a On every hand the demand for beauty ‘ Parks are not the only sign that the public is beginning to recognize and value beauty. In addition to millions authorized for the purchase and maintenance of parks for pleasure, authority has been given the expenditure of more millions for the erection of imposing public buildings. There are beautiful statehouses, city halls, postoffices and other public structures. Modern school buildings and grounds frequently rival in beauty the handsome estates of the rich, and the children who at- tend such schools unconsciously receive an education in taste and beauty. \ It was proper and necessary for the nation to build for utility first. Rapid growth is not conducive to art and grace, which are the fruits and playthings of ease and plenty. America can now afford to spend time and money on “dressing up” and is doing as efficient a job of it as she did with her development along utilitarian lines. Slowly, but surely, her face is chang- ing for the better. Americans go to Europe and Asia to view the archi- tectural and engineering wondets of the past. All the world travels to the United States to see the engineer- ing and structural wonders and the architectural beau- she is making up in grandeur and grace. CHRISTMAS FOR POSTAL CLERKS Postmaster General New announces that postal clerks | are going to get their Christmas holiday this year even | if undelivered packages fill the postoffi hen Dec. 25 dawns. When work is finished on Christmas Eve, everything will wait until the day after Christmas—no matter who has to wait for his presents, This is good sense. Christmas has often meant a period of utter misery for the postman instead of a time of rejoicing. He deserves a little consideration, and we're glad to see he’s getting it. There is, of course, a moral attached. It is: Do your Christmas shopping—and: mailing+early. If you put it off to the last minute, you can hardly expect over- worked clerks to give up thcir holiday so that your gifts may arrive on time. And, if you are, delayed—don’t forget that the air mail will expedite delivery. OLD BOOK SHOP GHOSTS (New York World) In an old building, rich and mellow with age and memories, which has looked out for 200 years on the proc ion of writers in London, its 200th anniversary is being celebrated this year. Two hundred years ago this old book shop in Bond strect was not so closed in 28 today, for one could stand at the door and look into Hyde park. It was Prince Frederick, who, had he lived, would have been king instead of George III, that haunted the shop in its earligy days, a friend, a patron | of the proprietor; but its most interesting period came later. That was when gruff old Samuel Johnson was in the habit of holding court occasionally among its books, when he drove in from Streath with his voluble Mrs. Thrale to look over the prints, and when Edmund Burke and Charles James Fox from time to | time prowled about its dark corne: They say the! shades of these immortals haunt the old place sti And then another generation of immortals in procession —Scott, on a visit from Abbotsford, and Ruskin and | Tennyson and the others of the golden day. There is an infinite charm in a book shop; but when it is an old shop mellowed by memories of dead gener- ations there is something to touch sentiment in the most practical; and when the ghosts of the monarch: and princes of literature who have partaken of pitality hover about one as he turns the pages h silence, an old bock shop ns just a bit sacred, and to enter it is to worship in a way LIFE-SAVING CHAN’ (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) Seldom have the salt-flavcred songs of sailors been put to better use than in the stckehold of the steamer Trojan Star when it caught fire at sea late last week off the coast of California. The tale was not told until the harbor at Vancouver, B. C., was reached; then Fire- man William Hull appeared as a hero who kept his head and put the chanteys which inspired seamen to labor in unison to the higher duty of life-s . Eight were trapped in the heat of the boilers when an oil line burst and ignited. Between the men and safety was a wall of flame. The usurl fierce heat of the hold was intensified. The stcel plates of the floor- ing, always hot, became unbearable. The situation was desperate. It was then that Hull bethourht him of the gongs loved by seamen. He raised a chantey and | kept it going. The first finished, he rallied his rates with jests and then started a new song. So he kept it up, song and story alternating, with never a pause, keeping the men togethor and holding their courage firm. Only one wandered into the engine room and there was lost. The others stuck it out, in bilge water, for three hours and a half, the chanteys and the jokes coming in unceasing stream from Hull. Providentially a steam pipe burst and the oil flames were smothered. we fireman was not at the end of his resources even then. Emergency is the discoverer of genius. Many men under the stress of the World war reached height t' would have estimated impossible for their powers, Hull was such another. The fire which threatened his ship found him ready for the test. Seven men owe their lives directly to him. Canton News: A Poughkeepsie woma. waited forty- one pers to ask for a divorce, thus blocking any plans her husbend might have had for a second venture. Ohio State Journal: Among the other distressing features of the campzign which we believe we haven't mentioned yet is the stuttering whisperer. Butte, Mont., Standard: thief in. the cone jail. Th sheriff savs there isn’t ry wonder there are so many Louisville Times: Mr. Fox: ef the Athletics has done so well this sesron he should be entitled to add another “x” to his name. tions, or satisfactory parking facilities must be | cheapest and most eatisfactory way out of the dilemma. | | | | | HUMANITY’S FRIEND IN NEED! RED CROSS WHO CAR ENCLOSE STANPED ‘TOXIC SUBSTANCES IN FOOD Asparagus contains asparagin which stimulates the kidneys and is to some extent a nerve sedative. This is eliminated as methylmercap- tan in the urine, and has a peculiar odor, which is very noticeable. This | is a very good non-injurious test for | kidney elimination. e Cooked bananas sometimes de- | velop an odor of amyl nitrate, a! heart stimulant. Bitter almonds, | peach pits and cherry pits, when old | or decaying, may yield hydrocyanic acid, a deadly poison. f ‘The tops of carrots and leaves of | celery and parsnips yield an essential | oil which is irritating and may be | Poisonous in large doses. Coffee, tea, cocoa, not only con- tain caffein, thein, and theobiomin. | respectively, but contain purins, | xanthins, and tannic acid. | Horse radish, mustard, radishes, watercress and onions all contain are somewhat irritating to the in- testinal tract. Lettuce contains a small amount of hyoscyamin, a hypnotic or sleep producer. . Some varieties of mushrooms con- tain poisonous substances, principal- ly muscarin, a deadly alkaloid. Garlic contains allyl sulphid, and may produce gas and intestinal irri- tation. Oats and buckwheat contain | slightly irritating materials which | produce skin eruptions in suscep- | tible people. SATURDAY, N 10 REGARD TO.NEALTH € Sess aromatic sulphur compounds, and the intestines are the OVEMBER 10, 1928 Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, oes to him, are of the Tribune. % Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. NS RN ing principle, but has not much effect since only minute quantities are used in food. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Adhesions ae Question: A. L, asks: (1) “Will abdominal adhesions cause excessive gas in the intestines? (2) In ‘breaking up the adhesions is there any way of being sure they are all broken and how? (3) With proper food combinations and exercises will adhesions remained cured?” Answer: (1) Yes, adhesions to result of the contributing cause, excessive gas pressure, as the adhesions binding the intestines in peculiar positions encourage pockets of gas to form. (2) It is possible to break up ab- dominal adhesions by manipulation with the hands, (3) After the ad- hesions are cured, the use of proper food combinations to avoid intestinal irritation, and the taking of daily exercises, will prevent the adhesions from again forming. Ice Cream Question: G. E. R. asks: “Is pure ice cream good for your health, ties of the present. What America lacks in antiquity | $300,000,009 of }] ANNUAL ROLL CALL s NOV. 11 -29 ENROLL NOW/| and she walked under the ladder to test the Premonition. Time-honored custom compel Flatt Tire company. : (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, third. In 1927, the rec-| 2,410,087 visited Canada | been a or more. This year the} great windfall for One Ca- nadian newspaper estimates that Uncle Sam’s money in the 1 y number pre where near £00,000, to announce today that in Evans- ville, Ind., is a firm known as the | + Quebec next and British if IN NEW YOR New York, Nov. 10—Where Diana mably will run some-| once perched on graceful, nimble) jtoes atop Madison Square Gardén, Dr. Hall insists that some Amer- , there now rises a modernistic turret | The pomegranate rind contains an | and when should it be taken? Will alkaloid polletierin which has pow- | it help to build up the body?” erful anthelmintic (anti-worm) and| Answer: Ice cream is a whole- astringent properties. some food, rich in fat. It is best Pumpkin seeds also have anthel- | when prepared without starch, and mintic properties and may be used | forms a good combination with fresh in the treatment of tapeworm. fruits. I will be glad to send you Potatoes, tomatoes and eggplant a recipe for home made ice cream |also contain poisonous alkaloids. | if you will forward a large, self- However, not in their edible por-| addressed stamped envelope. tions, cxcept when potatoes are Dry Mouth : green, when they contain a poisonous Question: Constant Reader writes: narcotic, the alkaloid, solanidin. | “I would like for you to tell me the Rye and corn smut are poisonous, | reason and cure for dry mouth at the former containing ergot and the| night. I have had this trouble for latter ustilago maydis. |a few years, not constantly but oc- Rhubarb contains an exceptional | ¢ What trouble does it quantity of calcium exalative, espe- | in¢ cially in the leafy portion, and cases | : You either have an oc- of poisoning have resulted from casional fever from some disease, or | stewing the Icaves as well as the some of your meals are irritating to stem. your stomach or intestines. This Cassava root, from which tapioca | would make the body call for more just Is us Inc.) | suggested that mission be appointed to determi how to get rid of oll this dough, to estimated $2,000,060 for liquo ill. | he found sleeping in parked ca above the border f out. It has been|a drink while there. He points out |a clear day and from a good point of government that there are many other beautiful | vantage, can be seen at great dis- | th about Cancda—beautiful | tances glowing against the Manhat- ‘scenery, beautiful roads, beautiful | tan sky. 4 because the dollars are cluttering | hunting, beautiful ing, beautiful! Where P. T, Barnum carved his up the Dominion like so many old | French-Canadion girls and what not.) name among the immortals of the razor blades and nobody knows what} It may be merest coincidence that | amusement world ..... where presi- do with them. Nevertheless, | our motorists have begun to appre- |dents were made and unmade. . . .. Canada is bearing her cross bravely. ce will have been before the yea a © beauties only since Can-| where heroes of the prize ring rose ed liquor permits as an‘ and fell, a great white monument action. of modern business now stands. of those liquor permits, Seen across the bare trees of Mad- government representa- | ison Square upon a sodden night, ded a note of | with a wet moon half hidden by haze, visiting Americans.|it is not hard to conceive th2 pre! ‘ence of many spectral figures hove ada e Dr. Ray Hall, assistnt chief of the | added finance and investment div the Bureau of Foreign and Dom r Commerce of the United States De- | ti partment of Commerce, whjch is his) war full title, tearfully admits that, ac- | Said he cording to the reports of commerce | “It’s not the initial cost. It’s: ing over the tip of the newly br department and coi jar represcnia- | the upkeep!” [hey York Life Jasueance buildiag. tives, tourist traffic across the bor- | | : der has grown with such joyful) ® The removal of such a concern BARBS \| from lower Broadway to Madison very largely, because Canada has no | g@——_____________¢| Square is a bit of pageantry and prohibition, His reports show thet | Pore efficiency to be seen only in Man- in cne province our tourist: | Ahmed Zogu is paid $86,500 a year | hattan. A number of miles separate resident cf Albania, If the pres-|tower Broadway | from Madison id rate of growth of the; Square. Yet a little city of 3,500 eee ;souls must pick up bag, baggage, we may be typewriters and ledgers and over- leaps and bounds partially, if not! | in G pos No full reports for 1928, of course, are yet available on the amount we have stuffed into Cana‘ other province another esti: 2,000,000 for the same vile pur- ent United States contin: able to afford a little raise for our | night, change their scene of business action. During the period of re- president, too. 1 > moval the overation of a concern But in Quebee, it is estimated to The political writers, all of whom | must not halt for a moment. It increased from $50,009,000 in 1 ceem to bo analyzing the vote now | must all click with cl work pre- to $60,000,600 this y: and that the election’s over, haven't told | cision. us yet who got the mechanical man | | vote. | | To manage this the little army of 3.500 must operate in eight-hour shifts, like figures in a relay race. Scotia reports a 50 per cent increas: in tourist business The $200,000,c0 oe 8 imate of the y Ht yspape ted above,! Aimee Semple McPherson held a} One group must come up when the canada saehat eae eeereted as ¢ in Clasgov. Maybe Aimee | other checks out. The entire ros- Roger Bzdco: so much for the money,|ter of employes must occupy rooms al at $259,009! * in the neighborhood so that they “* estin 0 I, Estimates for 1927 rsn from | - . 000,000 to $275,000,009. | The former German crown prince i ee writes a magazine story of how he lost at Verdun. The St. Louis Car- dinals ought to find out how he does it. o may be within instant call at any jhour of the day and night. Ar- |rangements must be made weeks in advance and entire hotels are bought uy for a period of a few weeks, until a final readjustment to former routine is achieved. A complete kitchen department is installed, £0 adian immigration authorities say a million of us passed over the border on Labor Day. Not only then, but at other times, visitors we: 9 's and * * oman in Evenston, Iil., defied * in hotel lobby chairs because there , the walked under a ladder and | that the workers may have their weren't enouga facilities for so many it fall on ker head. But probably | food at hand, A temporary medical of them. ” {her fe: “intuition” told her it | department is set up, with doctors |was going to happen just like that, | and nurses in constant attendance in By Akc | MEIN HERR PROFESSOR, ~<«“THE LAD IS A MUSICAL PRODIGY, BUT RIGHT AoW His CENIUS IS DORMANT ! EGAD,~T WAS He SAME WAY MYSELF UNTIL I WAS YouRTEEN fe | ~o-THEsS IA SEVEN MonTHS L MASTERED THE EXTREMELY | DIFFICULT THIRTY- STRING; KWANG oF “URKESTAN f ~~ © wee INSTRUMENT WAS s STOLEN FROM ME fi CHICAGO, AND (1 1S IMPOSSIBLE “fo GET ANloTHER ONE, AS (T WAS POPULAR BEFORE “HE TIME oF GENGHIS Ontario gets the largest number of | UK BOARDING HOUSE Nn AM MR. HooBLES,~ BESSER I SYouLD TELL You Now, << ALFUN VILL NEFFER LEARA “fo PLAY DER VIGLEEN !~No f= ~~ FOR DREI YEARS I HAF FRIED To TEACH HIM MUTZIK, BUT ITISS IMBOSSIBLE, LIKE VATER SHOULD STAY ON DER Duck's BACK! =TODAV I BRING HIM A NEW Piece, DER VEDDING UF DER ELFS,~—<~_| UND YoU KNowW VoT He SAY 2. “OH PERFESSOR, IM GOING fo BE A NUMGATOR UND FLY ooP IA D, DER SKY, LIKE 3X, DIS, ZOOM ! BAH !. icans go to Canada and never take | with bright golden peak which, upon | ,, |is prepared, contains -a_poisonou substance which is removed by wash- | ing. | Vanilla contains a slightly irritat- | water some d or nights, after an especially irritating meal. Stop the use of condiments, and be careful of your food combinations. the event that anyone is injured dur- jing the process of moving. There jis something of the riovement of an army in this procedure. ee Tens of millions of negotiable securities are moved in the dead of | night, with armored cars creeping along for protection; with motor po- lice escorting and with electric flares | piereing the darkness for blocks | ahead to detect the presence of pos- sible marauders. Priceless records go in great trucks, all carefully guarded against loss, and around the | | building a small army of police stand watch during the night until every- thing has been safely stored in steel vaults. 2) | Behind the white, Beyarekching| walls, 8500 men and women work to keep the metronome in some sort! of rhythm. A certain tension at- taches to their activities, though this is somewhat hidden by the general confusion of life about them. i Within a week the routine goes on es usual, se * The other day Ben Lucien Bur- | man came back from a summer in north Africa. Burman, you may) recall, wrote a number of scrial| stories for the syndicate which is- | sues this daily New York letter. At any rate, Burman had been quar- tered in a little town, wherein were members of a religious cult which, on Friday evenings, worked them- selves into frenzies and performed | seeming miracles, which the occi-| dental mind could not comprehend. | Before his very eyes, said Burman, ; he had seen men crash glass and swallow it; had scen them eat hand- fulls of live scorpions and lie upon, the needles of cacti. | But, said I, what would your Af- rican men think of men who allow themselves to be packed into sub- | ways; who would grab their food from a soda fountain while stand- ing 10 deep; who would drink bev- crages brewed out of slightly dis- | tilled poisons; who. would house | themselves in quarters so crowded that there is scarce room for breath- ing; who would breathe air’ from which most of the oxygen is’ lost and inhale the poisonous exhaust! of millions of automobiles—who | would—but why go on..... Millions | of us do it in New York, and such is our state of mind that we don’t | know we're being. tortured. | : GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | [ Our Yesterdays 1 | . .TEN YEARS AGO The Methodist Episcopal clergy | of the Bismarck district wes holding | its ennual conference here. Dr.! Charles E. Vermilya was in charge. | Governor Lynn J. Frazier was in! St. Paul to attend the national con- vention of the Nonpartisan league. Dr. C. C. Hibbs returned from) Milwaukee. where he was the guest | of his daughters, Mrs. Pauline | Hibbs Covault and Mrs. Viola Hibbs, Peterson. Military men were urging that) Fort Lincoln be converted into an! aerial station on the proposed! Chanute-Bell air line from Boston to! Seattle. | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO | Miss Grace Moore of Red Oak,| Towa, was visiting here as guest of The Bismarck orchestra gave a concert in Grambs and Wolber‘’s | villain, gets over with leeri store, The Neighborhood Whist. club | Picture “the ansy Mrs. Jesse O. Pearce. |marine general’s ro met with E. J. Taylor at his home on Fifth street. FORTY YEARS AGO Ex-Governor Pierce and Mayor Bentley went to Casselton to attend the reception which wes given in honor of Col. C. W. Plummer. Mr. and Mrs. L, N. Griffin re- turned from a visit to their former home in New. York state. John Higgins and Miss Ida Erick- son of Bismarck were married here by Rev. George Kline. is date in AME RICAN HIST ORY November 10 1674—New York was formally re- stored to English authority. 1869—England and .the United States signed a pact in set- tlement of the Alabama claims. 1876—Centennial exposition at Phil- adelphia, attended by 9,789,- 302 persons, closed. 1911—Andrew Carnegie gave $10,- 000,000 to the Carnegie Cor- poration, At the CAPITOL THEATRE “Tempest,” the John Barrymore screen masterpiece that New York acclaimed during a long run at §2 prieces, will bring America’s most distinguished actor to the Capitol theatre on Monday in a romance of Russia’s revolution, Camilla Horn and Louis Wolheim appearing in chief support of the star. The Now York World thought “Tempcav” th inest, most genuine motion tre John Barrymore ever med and “one of the most glowiag film dramas which have come cut west,” while The New Yor': Vimcs called Barrymore’s picture “a mas- terpiece excellent entertain- ment.” The highlights of “Tempest” are scenes of passionate fury between a princess of the blood and a peasant, between royalists and revolution- ists, between genrrals an! pedlers; and love scenes s> convincing that The New York Telegram calls the to the modern er.” _, ELTINGE THEATRE aqhichard Dix is back in uniform in Moran of the Marines,” his latest offcring which comes to the Eltinge for Monday and Tuesday. In his new ricture, Dix essays the role of a marine buck private and gives an admirable characterization typical ——-———— > Movies movie meic |of the kind which has brought him to the ninnacle of screen fame. In this picture also does Ruth | Elder, the preity transatlantic avia- trix make her bid for motion picture prominence, “Moran of the Marines” is the story of a youth who gets inv trouble and takes a few D Chinese . bandits and a thrilling fight to get him back in good graces, Mean- while he attempts to win tue gen- eral’s daughter and succeeds, but only after many hair-raising, hum- orous end dramatic incidents have come to pass. oscoe Karns gives his charac- Re teristic humorous portrayal;: Capt. ’ E. H. Calvert impresses with hi tin convinces one hat rey really hard-botl Marine Corps, Brooks Benedict, i menacing, not to mention his "te tempts to barrassment. ” De rope led sergeants in the. and om: - | | | | | | | s ate