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The Bismarck Tribune i An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | sj marck, N. ‘&s second class mail matter. George D. Mann Subscription Rates Payable in Advance {Daily by carrier, per year . oeeeats Daily by mall, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year, (in state. outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakot: Weekly by mail, tn state, per year Weekly by mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mail outs'*- of North Dako a, Member Audit Burcau of Circulation led to the use » for republic credited to it or ‘not otherwise credited in this newspaper and local news of spontancous origin published herein. Ail rights of republication of all other matter hereir are also reserved. Forcign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Z Logan Payne Co CHICAG NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) oves Upon South reshold of an 0 unionize t of the hill whites into iven rise to the bigs jabor | riots of 1892 | ! celebrate. to 3 about ry, where t ton mill towns has problem since the Homestead stcel mill ‘ In those riots Pin! shot down strikers in bar-) ade battles, In this disturbance of the South, sheriff's hot down men, women and children in ihe policy to k hillbillys hillbillys, or “common white tras There is a trial at Marion, N. C.. now to try and convict | four labor defendants of rebellion and insurrection | against the state of North Carolina. j ‘The executive committee of the Pan-American Feders- lion of Labor in the 1 part of October called off | indefinitely the th Pan-American labor congress set | for Januory 6 in Havana, Cuba, on the ground that | _ the very > of the organized labor movement wi \ threatened by ¢ ons in the Southern states. Presi- dent William Qrccn, also head of the American Federa- | tion of Labor, at the time stated that the labor move-| ment in the South finds itself confronted with one of the most gigantic campaigns ever launched by employers | to prevent organized labor from doing its duty. Thus it will be seen that with more than a million members | to be called upon, the American Federation of Labor | finds it necessary to concentrate all its energies and re- | * sources on this titanic sirugele in which the very ¢x- istence of the organized lahor movement is at stake. Those who have been following the developments ‘n southern labor will recall that much of the trouble in North Carolina and Tennessee was caused by commun- istic elements taking advantage of the opportunity to foment a labor war on a red basis. Organizations in line ’ with the American Federation of Labor went before that | bedy in the recent international meeting at Toronto and enlisted the sympathy of the organization in trying to . clear up the North Carolina situation. A big unionizing drive was decided on as the remedy of advantage both to the South and to the labor movement. At a meeting in Washington Thursday labor moved to the attack on the problem. The senate was asked ‘*o pass a resolution for an investigation of the whole South- ern textile industry and to so act that “those responsible "for the loss of life in North Carolina should be brought to justice.” The conference pledged its support to the Southern workers in their efforts to organize into trade unions affiliated with the American Federation of Labor and to secure higher wages, reasonable hours of ‘work and tolerable conditions of employment.” ‘The situation in the South is the result of transferring & portion of the cotton mill industry to that country to benefit from the supply of idle whites in the hills. ‘These workers were a cheap supply. They were obtain- | able at low wages. The result has been very much like | the institution of slavery in the field of competition. The South could sell its cotton products to the disad- | vantage of the northern, or New England, mills. | ‘Then something that had been overlooked began to express itself. The sociological and psychological factor | hegan to operate. The hillbillys became industrial whites. The desire for further betterment developed as | they tasted the joys of their contact with industrial | civilization. As the labor conference in Washington stated it, when brought in touch with a new social and industrial order, the desire of Southern workers for the enjoyment of higher living standards and for the posses- sion of those attributes which are inseparably associated with a higher standard of living became quickened and intensified. “They had been transferred from their isolated homes in the mountains and small communities into a new! F environment where mass association and collective in- + terest had been substituted for individualism. Discon- et tent and dissatisfaction, aggravated by the imposition | af the ‘stretch-out’ system in many places, caused strikes | and disorder in a number of mills and factories.” The American Federation does not express its view of Southern conditions wholly in selfish terms, but looks _ ‘on its plans to unionize the workers there as an economic 4 cause by which the whole South will benefit financially a and commercially as well as industrially from the view- point of the laborer. At Toronto the Federation said: _ “The South has raw materials, American workers. ower resources and a need for more industries. But ‘unless these industries are prepared to give a square deal | % to workers they are not only pillaging the resources of | @ the South but are sowing the sceds of class conflict in| { most dangerous soil. The Southern worker will not } meekly.bear injustice when experience teaches him stan- dards of justice.” | _ At the Washington conference the Federation added to its prior statement the declaration that the “social ‘and industrial unrest manifested by the workers in the - unorganized indusiries of the South can only be inter- preted as an expression of a deep-scated desire to secure social freedom. ““The Southern worker has long been regarded by em- Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs | President and Publisher riso the | ‘ »| Squads and executing somebody. | through a terrific Civil war. The Soviet and the Thistle The whirr of modern farm machinery and the sharp crack of the rifled firing squad arise over twelve years of soviet Russia. Both are keynot The soviet republic celebrated another anniversary November 7. It celebrated in the spirit of a great ac- complishment, for that is the appraisal Russia puts on revolution, whatever the rest of the world may con- s the experiment in whole or in part the world something. At any rate the soviets 1 Tom Campbell of Montana, the greatest farm- > United States, to give his ideas on wide-scale and thus learn, if not teach. It has machinery on the farm and as of 175.000 acres as an experi- icsia the wheat granary of the ey can accomplish it on a may te: called plish it. Russia ought to suc- ple process of killing off all who dis- ief. Recently several scores of kulaks nts, were shot by firing squads to in- the policy The kulaks could not to promoting the government's farm- ‘olved the ‘ender of their own soil, steam-rollered them. | i quads and shot them: they had been so many traitors—and / aL they were in the view of soviet principles imp! iri this mowing down of recalcitrant peasant s was the real observance of Russia's decade of ionary rule. Russia so far has produced nothing ntly conspicuous to compare with the policy of ng Opponents of soviet rule as the major activ- ommunistic republic. Every activity calculated and clevate soviet rule, whether in the form ic schools, communistic newspapers or com- ic drama has but led to this apotheosis of shoot | ing down those who disagree on what the soviets hold | | salutary for the former empire of the czar. A queer country with queer ideas of what is worthy to Compare it to the United States and its in- accomplish a great triumph of} THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 1929 fo R BOARDING HOUSE By Ahe “TRIP Jae EVEN IF (S YOUR BROTHER, FoR A TELESCOP! Gay o dependence da In 153 years this country has been able to celebrate its natal day without calling out rifle; This country passed | But it didn’t line up Jef-/ ferson Davis or Robert E. Lee or Private John Allen; and shoot them. Sovietism smacks of Mexico, where such | ways of dealing with opponents is strictly di rigeur.{ Whereupon an American noting the analogy is apt to; conclude that sovictisin is a failure even before it began. The celebration of the tenth anniversary was a well-! staged piece of drama, only in this instance it was, a well-played piece of buncombe to impress the} rabble of Russia with the puissance of the strong man! of the sovict regime, Joseph Stalin, the power behind Kalinin, the puppet president of the republic, as the all- Potent obscurity of secretary general of the communist arty. Stalin had been mysteriously out of sight @ month | preceding the anniversary—Revolution day—perhaps dy- | ing or dead. Russia wanted to know. The audience at | the Imperial theater, Moscow, wanted to be informed, what was wrong, where he was, when they would see him again. Kalinin made apologetic answers. He talked of the amount of wheat squeezed out of the peasants. had the audience sing revolutionary songs as though in an effort to mdke it forget. Then Stalin appeared in the old imperial box. The| {rest was vaudeville. A troop of revolutionary enter- | tainers cavorted to the stage and sang songs, one of which, it was announced, met the favor of the dictator. Tt was a Georgian lovesong. Stalin is a native of Georgia. | Next day brought a flamboyant announcement of | soviet communistic aims from the dictator. Comrade | Stalin wrote under his signature: “With giant strides we move toward Lenin's aims— industrialization, cicctrification and mechanization. “We are attacking capitalism all along the line and defeating it. Without foreign capital, we are accom: Plishing the unprecedented feat of building up heavy in- | dustry in a backward country. This year our capital | investment in industry will amount to 3,500,000,000 rubles (about $1,750,000,000). “When we have industrialized the soviet union and set | the myijiks (peasants) to driving tractors, let the honor- lable capitalists with their ‘civilization’ try to outstrip us. Then we shall see which country can be called backward and which the vanguard of human progress.” Russia makes much trouble at home. Evidently it is minded to sow trouble for the whole world. The Russian thistle has been an annoying weed. The Russian soviet republic seems to be about as welcome a contribution to the welfare of the world. | There are no goose-stepping stones to greatness. Winning, Too, Is No Sin (Detroit News) A teacher of bridge and a national authority thereon states plously that the game of his choice is creating a hew morality among men. is { Sponsors of baseball also have long asserted that this sport conduces to high ethical conduct. |, we | are never allowed to forget, roots out the evil and plants the seeds of righteousness, Golf, as all play- ers know, purges the soul of dross, ving only | gold. x x x Splendid is the sing! inded passion with which game players in our land devote themselves to the pursuit of virtuc. They remind us of the little girl hasn't missed Sunday school in ten years. They re! us of Socrates scouring the byways of Athens { definition and an example. And what is that roar of applause that rises in a great wave from the bleachers, mounting upward till it beats against the sky? ‘Tis the acclaim of probity by the spectators. A lad with a megaphone has shouted that the flying halfback abst tobacco and has nev lurrah: Hurrah! The halfback by a coincidence has just made a winning touchdown at the same time. But go ahead, there is no need of stopping the cheers on that account! Dress Indians on State Seals (Minneapolis Journal) Research in Massachusetts having brought out the ct that modesty is in so authoritative a position in the | Bay state as to make the seal of the commonwealth per- fectly safe to look at, it is desirable‘that Minnesota be tion of an Indian as he was known required no sartorial conversance for the in rt c just as knew anything at all about Indigns migh! and enjoy higher wages, proper and humane conditions | ' SPpear employment and the exercise of economic, industria} | of HP IM BEGINNING 0 GET TH’ TwWItcHES ABOUT JAKE Not BEG HOME YET FRom HIS DUCK HUNTING “TH” TYPE THAT USES “TH’ BARREL OF A SHoTauns HE HE'S =r a ALLAY YouR FEARS OF DAKE AND “TH Ducks HE WEN ba (0) ASY DUCKS “fo BRING Home ? ~dMe, T KNow Him LIKE A pea < oe HUNT ~~ No HARM HAS BEFALLEN| Home NET, (S ETHER oF “THEM? ~~ JAKE'S ABSENCE 1S CONSPICUOUS BECAUSE HE HASNT Li we T. STILE CLAIM -TH? REASON SAKE ISN'T Ee +r 4 “THAT “TH” WEIGHT OF “TH” Ducks HE’S BRINGING BACK HAS SLOWED HIM DowN “fo “THREE SPEAKEASIES A MILE? duction of the temperature of the body and often with steadily in- creased vitality. If starch and sugar are needed to supply heat and energy, AVOID TOO MUCH STARCHY FOOD The food on the average table is composed of three-fourths starch and sugar, While the other one-fourth is composed of proteins and greens. It would be a better proportion if the non-starchy vegetables, both in the cooked and raw form, com over three-fourths of the quantity of food used during the day, with only a small amount of protein and little if any search and sugar. We have iallen into the habit of using many starchy foods, mostly be- cause they can be made into tasty dishes, and not because of their food value. They also fill up well and their cost is less than that of the vital proteins and gree! It is also pos: sible to have a variety of starch: foods stored away on the pantry shelves, as these foods keep well over a iong period of time. There is another reason commonly given for their use, and that is, they are needed to supply heat and energy. This assumption, I consider to be : " manifestly untrue! is a = Man is at the same time a carnt- | Hive ot Auer ol tee Gann A vorous, frugivorous and herbivorous | f° atte olf: he lay. ner tee ly animal, and can live for long periods | ate afternoon. as never been of time on any of these classes of | OVer bee Bhs its and usually 99.4 de- foods, aed ee. fruits or herbs. | TS0*. stone” nervousness cause such The fact that one can exist for “a ars on meat exclusively is conclu- Oi at a sch examina- sive evidence that starch and sugar | tion could determine the cause of is not necessary to the body. The |Your rise of temperature. Sometimes tiger has plenty of energy and main- it is an indication of tuberculosis or tains a normal bodily warmth on | bronchitis. In some people it seems | flesh food entirely. Man can do the |t© be normal, and not associated with same, if this is necessary, without any | ®"Y disease how do you explain this phenome- non? Also, where does the tiger get his energy? If my readers could understand this veritable truth, they would no longer burden themselves with ex- cesses of carbol ites under the mistaken belief that the body is an engine which can be stoked with fuel the same as & locomotive, and conse- quently much disease could be avoided. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS High tures aT eG, | BARBS | o Americans pay an average of $2,500,000 daily for automobile acci- dents. says a statistician. How is it,: then, that you never can collect? ees A beauty expert recommends , yawning exercises. To be lovely, go) to grand opera. | you invite senators to a wet dinner. ** A writer says that before long THIS MAS MATPENED BONNIE DUNDEE, young ote- a t criminclen?. ercurce to be ear a, MAS. EMMA HO- GARTR wi 7 tl ery “Marder! vings os OUSTY. Mrs. Recband, maswree ti on and go another time. She {s atrangely acitated. NOW GO ON WITH TRE STORY CHAPTER IV was nearly half-past 8 that fateful Saturday evening when Dundee, escorted by Norma Palge. arrived at the closed door of Mrs Emma Hogarth’s room on the sec. ond floor of the Rhodes House. Just as Norma lifted a hand to knock, a throaty voice with a peculiar trill in it could be heard distinctly: “Emma, you're an old fool! The words were followed by ® loud, hair-raising laugh. “That's Cap'n again—the parrot. you know,” Norma whispered, smil- ing. She knocked. and two voices answered her. almost simultane. ously: “Who ts it?” It was hard for Dundee to distinguish between the two speakers. woman and bird. “It's Norma, Mrs. Hogarth,” th sirl called. ‘There was the sound of a vast Srunt or groan. as if a tremendous body was lifting itself slowly. Then came the thudding taps of canes upon the thin summer rug. “She always keeps her door locked, and asks who it {s before she will admit anyone.” Norma whispered. “Poor dear! {t must be terrible to be old and nearly belp- fess and to be suspicious of every: one, because you have @ little money bidden away.” A key turned in the tock, and Norma Paige and Bonnie Dundee entered the room. It was about 10 minutes to 11 when Dundee emerged from that room, sions. He hesitated outside the closed coor for a moment, in indecision, and was aware that the A British baronet says that eating ' But so many people have quit drink- together is a social, and civilizing ; ing water. anyway. e thing. But it's alsé dangerous—tif| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ; one office of food in the body is to Americans will have forgotten how to! walk. Oh no! As long as there are babies men will walk. * A gallon of water often contains ub AvengI (©.1929 by NEA. busy. meet you. “I see you're busy. story is going all right.” Dundee said cheerfully. “ interrupted, but Mrs. H me to tell you that ‘millions of germs, says a scientist.|ber where you put things.—Le Rire. “And they sent me to protect her! MEI" he groaned. Bonnie Dundee stepped quietly to Bert Magnus’s door and knocked. “Who is decidedly irritable, “Dundee, Magnus. I have a mes- sage for you.” Dundee glanced about the small room as Magnus retreated to per- mit bim to enter. fashioned roll-top desk, with an ancient typewriter, beside which lay sheets of yellow paper, testified to the fact that Magnus indeed it?” The answer was A large, old- Hope the shouldn't bave rth She seems to be very key was being turned after bim A jtic remarks, that she peculiar old women, but sot “queer”; he wa: sure of that, But he had @ message to deliver. Mra. Hogarth bad told EEELHE aries 532 g H 3 gzk I ‘school? { Azores were. Service, Inc.“ —~ | appreciable loss of energy or heat. Chores Carable After years of study of the food |, Ph rece ota ¥ an we i re phere Hols segchleced wreck and it left me in bad shape. T have been crowing steadily worse till I now have a well defined case of chorea. The doctor tells me there is no cure for chorea, but I am loathe to give up. What is your opinion in the matter?’ Answer: Many cases of chorea are benefited by a fasting and dieting regimen such as is outlined in my supply tissue waste and to build up new tissue, and that heat and energy {are inherent in the body, and in no ‘way depend upon food for their main- tenance. I am cognizant of the fact Son: I didn't know where the/ that this is contrary to accepted the- ories of psysiology. One may live for many weeks with- out food of any kind, without any re- LIKE VATHER— Father: Why were you kept in at Father: In the future just remem- the fast at intervals of one or two months. In addition to this regimen it is necessary to conserve the nervous vitality as much as possible by avoid- p am a swivel chair, drink! plunged into a bott! “Hotter'n Hades, ain't it?” he growled, by way of greeting. “Want & bottle of pop? I'll send a flat foot out for one—”" “No, thanks. . . . Well, I've seep Mrs. Hogarth, but I had mighty ttle chance to get her story.” “Because she didn’t have any- thing to tell, more’n likely,” Strawn, gtowled. “I think she bas,” Dundee in sisted cheerfully, fanning bis face with bis hat, “The trouble was, no sooner had | been left alone with her and befcre 1 could state my official connection—grin, darn you! than people began to drift in to pay the old lady a call. First came Daisy Shepherd—jolly, fat girl, who looks a syiph beside Mrs. Hogarth. Then before Daisy bad left, Mra. » Who is working off a condi- tion or two in State University this summer, eo he can play on the sophomore football team this fall.” “Talk to the old dame alone at all?” Strawn asked. “Only about five minutes.” eee ; i | i again, very slowly. Poor devil! the ji class of the Pecking away with one finger at high school enjoyed a straw ride last stories that would mever get any evening, and later a supper war nearer the screen than they were served at the M. J. McKenzie home. ss ae talned o number of friends at 8 card ry ata JUNDEB ran lightly down , , BES soe lees enn party at the home of Mrs. Wobert. deserted, took hi hat Miss Katherine Ryan returned to- day from Sedalia where she has been Mr. and Mrs..W. C. Gilbreath have rented the Deitrich house for the win- iwi ehraee Sa who e EE i SE I i! 4 A se E : ik t Hi i Es i it i fl i i itl itt 4 a: Es int rH i it fi Lieu i