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i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1980 ‘THE BISMARCK TRI buckskin shirts and coonskin caps, came up in a long, Yet the fighting that day was quite as bitter as any- : : ‘ Lerga, stamped, aalf addresned eavalope east be encdosad.’ ‘as the doughboy of the World war who was blown to WHY WE CRAVE RICH FOOD | or 5,000. When you are overeating thing. The British, in their red coats with white facings, | —-——_-——---eeeeeeeneeeeneer et : | All Right, Boys! Now Bring on Your Opposition! | HERE/(TO. YOUR, fy, THE STATE'S OLDES] NEWSPAPER steady line. Everything was quite in the old, colored- a Di AUTHOR , OF “THE FAST UY thing in 1918, The man who got killed by a round bul- a : 4 Y ‘Wik on eno sido of paper cal, Letters aut ant encned bits by a high-explosive shell. That battle looks quaint, ‘As the hi race evolves, we find | You are simply overworking your di- new ISMARCK TRIB U N E were on the summit of the mountain; the colonials, in ’ Uthograph manner, with officers waving their swords H EA. LiiH tle scene! ? : : . (A qediess vogurding Hosts end Dish wll be ensvered.' let from a revolutionary flintlock became quite as dead coe . ia ogee hmm ptm sar c's cory) at this distance, but it had no quaintness for the men ms | gestive and eliminative organs and a tm EE Bp who took part in it. * » peed . Today, though, it is interesting to look back on. The ‘ ‘Weekly by ceremonies at Kings Mountain attract us because they 9 or re-create for us the image of a vanquished day. And it Weekly may be that it is good for us to realize that some of the foundation-stones of modern bigness were very tiny. The Trail Grows Warmer The current and latest oil scandal brings to the fore again two North Dakotans in the persons of the young and vigorous Senator Nye and the almost as young if not 80 ebullient Attorney Seth Richardson. Yee A gentleman named Kelley, trusted employe of the interior department, charges that all is not as it should ” i be with regard to the disposition of oil shale lands in Coiorado and then, later, gives it as his opinion that the justice department, as represented by Richardson, doesn’t appear to him to be wholly unbiased in the affair. Everyone is entitled to his opinion and doubtless suf- The Least of These ficient facts will come to the surface to give the public ‘With Bismarck’s annual community chest drive under | something upon which to base a judgment in due time. way, it is well for those who are in position to give to| Kelley, having resigned from the interior department— ponder well what their contribution should be. at least so far as he is concerned—has started a series of ‘The advantages of the community chest idea to the articles for one of the metropolitan newspapers telling Hered in starch, sugar giver are well established. He gives only once and that | ll about it. These will be watched with interest. he once suffices for all the multitudinous activities which go Conferring with Senator Nye, he convinces that Lindh to make up modern city life and which demand funds | gentleman that his statements are at least worth inves- -from the public. tigating and at the same time says the Hoover admin- gus, » q He is spared the bother of being eternally solicited for | stration, desirous of avoiding a scandal, is ar - this and that and—above all—he escapes the possibility | Tar the lustiee department, to “pooh-poou” the} 4 _____4] with the popularity gained by ‘his|ods and aims are identical with those that, in giving, he may give not wisely but too well. Un- “ Today Is the war achievements, Hayes became the|of the church.”—Ware W. Wimberly, less some restraint is put upon them, there is a certain] Then Mr. Nye, after his interview, says the oll shale ; outstanding candidate for Congress|P anit 7 class of people who will solicit money for whatever cause | &Ndal may not be laid to Mr: Wilbur, the present secre- ‘Anniversary of in his district and was easily elected. * * * fe seems likely to have“an appeal, and the cause—whatever |*#r, and who, Kelley hinted, was to blame. : » ARREST EE Ae governor of peed nocd he was} “Together, the most inspiring word it may be—rarely sees much, {f any, of the money. Tt all makes s very fine hodge-podge, clarification of BIRTH OF HAYES Co ee TIO Atee eerolene [in the English language. Coming to- Giaaie: MG rout nec } But there are other advantages in supporting the chest | Which will probably take considerable time. On October 4, 1822, Rutherford B,| Presidency, in 1876. | Atfer close racist ‘meats: Reginning.. Keeping to: lean | ring to your article on the liquor i and not the least of them is the satisfaction which every-| Just why the Hoover administration should worry |Hayes, 19th president of the United| was inaugurated in 1877. He had Sina gorse Onions tly hon and cereals, abundant. per ietaran c fo beta ts one gets from being a part of a worthy effort. At all | out @ possible scandal, however, is difficult to imagine States, was born in Delaware, O. ‘von by one electorial vote. Everett Hale : een times and in all places there are people who, through no in view of the political record. Meenesisroeree yt Debs Sos hr pair ISTE ae RSGWEET AV Ghas le tik teat fault of their own, need help. Often these people have| The scandal which sent Harry Sinclair to jail and : ater by refusing to pander to per-| New York’s Schools few days will positively any ¥ friends and relatives who will come to their assistance. | Condemned Albert B. Fall to the penitentiary was 2 reat g in|tisan politics. Cost Huge Amount abnormal craving for porte Te ~ In such cases the public hears nothing of them. Others,|°¢. It was expected to shake the nation and it did. But f4 to | Wishes drinking Jacking help from sources individual to them, must get | it did not prevent a fine harvest of votes by the Republi- ar Sa for can party at the next succeeding election. The answer berson. help from the general public or sink into an abyss of spiritual and physical nothingness. ‘No one.doubts but that the money contributed to the community chest will be spent wisely this year of all years, There will be 100 cents’ worth of work for every dollar to do and the people in charge of the chest know this. © But in this effort, :s in all others, it is the individual ~sho count:, The aggregate sum sought is large ‘it cer- tainly no larger the~ the need. And in taking counsel with himself as to what is his ‘ New York, Oct. 4—Sending its At the out | Quotations children to school costs New York was that the people of the nation were not inclined to} saves enlisted for the whole war.| °° * |City pretty penny, the Board of express disbelief in a whole political party merely because | as lieutenant colonel, he led the| “If the maintenance of prosperity |Education has just revealed. During of the actions of some individuals belonging to it. There | Twenty-third Ohio regiment at South | becomes a governmental function and | the 190 school days of 1929 it cost the is no reason to assume they would do so now. Mountain, a battle in which he/ duty, it will inevitably overshadow all|city about $900,000 a day for school Viewing it all in all, Kelley's claim that the adminis-|8ined considerable fame. He was|others.”—James Truslow Adams, his-|purposes. This amount included in- in this torian, in The Golden Book. struction, maintenance, operation, tration ts not interested in knowing the truth may merit | S°V<TeY wounded in this engagement, x * * administration, auxiliary agencies some challenge. If there is one thing with which the/|the rank of colonel. After this he| “Mob mercy is as bad as mob mur-|and amount spent for new sites and Hoover administration may be credited, it is an inde-|led several important expeditions, the|der.”—Sir William Joynson-Hicks. buildings. most important of which was the one * x * es fatigable thirst after knowledge. The facts probably will Morgan, who finally was} “I resent the assumption of the| A factory at Hickory, N. C., manu- come to light in any case and it would do the adminis- | reed to surrender. Anti-Saloon League that their meth-|factured 3,100 wagons last year. fair share, each Bismarck reaident might also take coun-| ‘ration more good to ‘present them of its own volition sel with Him te whom the poor never pleaded in vain.| ‘han to let them come before the public from other ‘They should remember that “Even as you do unto the | *urces. least of these, My brethren, you do also unto Me.” At any rate the trail grows warmer and the newest Political cat soon should emerge from the sack which It Will Be Well Spent now shrouds it. Jamestown college announces the gift of $50,000 by Mrs. L. E. Watson of Fargo to finance the construction of a new men’s dormitory to replace the one which recently burned. The whole state rejoices with the institution at the good fortune which has come to it as the result of Mrs. g Sane 3 8 E Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published with- gut regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. cause she would see us in pictures, ;was knocking off for the night. goes a log way,” Paul said. “But and hear us talk. I feel vei “What's bothering you, my boy?” jit’s the production department broken-hearted, Da: ‘ |And he added with a broad grin |that’s hardboiled. Getting by them “I know it. It's pretty tough, |that he could guess. “Let's get out|is sometimes a different matter. (Red Cross Courier Tho, bestaning 20 an extra, Bae (Anne. But you'll have to try not|of here for a while. Grab your|But you don't need to worry,” he In this day whgn the world is affected in waves of ron to feel badly.” And he asked how |hat.” eee added positively. “They're not The ‘Parliament of Humanity’ concern by conomic and political undulations, it is nee = Mona had taken it. “I guess it hits |) 4N- spent the following forenoon |‘!zzy enough to pass that up.” most of us now living are dead. comforting to mankind to realize that in Brussels, from tract an seenavio writer at Cons |Mona pretty hard, doesn't it? D writing letters, a task that he| “No?” Dan was skeptical. “You At the same time, the gift brings to the limelight | Oct. 4 to 11; there will be in session a conference whose Du “Terrib! had no taste for; but he wanted to |40n’t know how dizzy a production the important and effective work which is being done |S0le purpose is the advancement of human welfare. oyiaee cotadte execttiee | When she had hung up he told he at home in the event of a tele-|department can be. I’ve had ex- by this and other sectarian institutions of higher learn- | More than 60 countries will have representation at this Paul Collier what had happened. {phone call from Grand United. He|Perience with one. Plenty,” he y > ine. fourteenth International Red Cross Conference, and at er, “It's a rotten shame,” Collier | wrote a long-overdue letter to Ziggy |®dded with bitter emphasis, a the twelfth meeting, of the Board of Governors of the dally “tor said, but he, too, agreed that Evalyoung.. Ziggy was clamorous for eee ‘We hear much of the public schools and of the sup- ie of Red Cross Societies, which is held the same va AR had done wisely. “It would be a to which they are entitled. No one questions this | Week. Judge John Barton Payne, chairman of the good thing,” he said earnestly, “if a news of himself and Anne Winter, UT Paul said he wasn’t dealing port r and few persons grudge the enormous amount of money American Red Cross, Vice Chairman Ernest P. Bicknell, a few thousand more of them packed and Ziggy said that his moth with Continental now. “This is Mrs. Henry P. Davison, Mrs, August Belmont and they" down in Tulsa, who was very fond |a real outfit.” Which 1s spent in maintaining the public school system |Gustavus D. Pope, members of the Central Committee, emeelves a it of grief” | ''*|9f Anne, had wanted to know what | Anne was curious to know what and state institutions of higher learning. compose the American delegation. . of 8 peraot in Rorimer was. /had happened. She called him up But this should not bar recognition of sectarian schools| The International Conference has on its agenda 31 Paul eclared that sometimes! “and if you don’t write pretty |the following day and they went 4 hen he got to thinking of the ” "i rou 3 separate items, and 15 questi to come before the be c soon,” read Ziggy’s threat, “I'll tell © of the spirit which makes them possible. Jamestown | Beard of Governors of the ee Ot Red Cross So, Anne lives with two othes jextras he felt very blue. “Posi-|ner, Furthermore, I've still got java bei Phaser ae danced. hy college is only . MONA MORRISON and BVA ltively, I know a few, and I'll ares the eae cine ik sanyo One of hundreds of fine colleges and uni- | cieties—all problems related to a quickening of the EY. Mona and Eva are ex- 4 : that telegram you sent me just be-lthat he had danced with her, and versities in the United States which each year train | humanitarian movement throughout the world, It will tras, bat Mone werks caly Swear I don't see how they get itore you fitet called on littie Anne|ne seminded her of thie,” thousands of students for Christian life. They, like the | D¢ # Week of great industry for the various commissions plonally and Eva fut rarewy-.che along, And there are lots of them |_and those neckties you sent me “Who's been taki: ar” public schools, teac! g which will-consider and report on problems, teagie love experience. While tm |W0rse off than Eva Harley; Eva at/are just about worn out. They A DOOR WKAR. ZOR-ATORD h teach love of country, respect for its in-| An outstanding problem of the league is that of New Xork Dam had written « play |least had a couple of friends must have been pretty cheap.” And Anne laughed gaily. “Ob, % ‘ stitutions and the best kind of Americanism. obtaining financial support proportionate to its con: eee eaten ate aaciis [could count on.” | In reply Dan wrote that the ties |2°t many people.” ae And the finest thing of all is that these schools may |stantly increasing responsibilities in service. to . the sends it back to him at a time |* ee 6 had been sent as @ mark of grati-| .Fienty, I'll bet.” He knew that Public Interested be found under the danner of every leading religious | MAtional soc : TE the “relestion of ‘his “intest |FJ® sat down then to bts type-|tude; he'd send none as a bribe, |*he had been going out a good deal . denomination, Protestant and Catholic alike, they turn A ica Di d sereen atory. writer and began to write, and|and Ziggy might as well get his |” oar PRs Neale Severe | In Sultan’s Harem out gradustes of which the nation may well be merica Discovere: wih Diag Nae te Calitert Bork of [acter & while ho laid what ho had |blackmailing ideas out of his head.|,, yo" “2° a coats — Proud, (Napoleon Homestead) ' written in front of Dan and asked|“And those ties cost six dollars) S21. ake: Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 4—Since the for their standards of instruction usually are as high as him to read it. laptece, which is more than you pay|,,_Ye8B? Don't tell me. I know a any. And they do it without cost to the general public, Jt was a “column” about the|for a hat, you little red-headed|‘bing or two about some of the depending upon friends of the institution and members Of thelr own religious faith to carry of the work and| 74 Hollywood extras, a moving little story about an army that was fore- squirt.” benseape ‘boy friends. What chance has * He wrote a letter to his parents a@ hack sriter got inst these young .screen idols?” eats Sontiomad ‘ . doomed to failure. Daa, when he it iny “+ hae on Invariably, a ee ere is pee seranzic etter te had read it, nodded approvingly and |< nimeclf trantos toncath is ReRSASR, CLONES ak bebe 1453 the chambers of the harem have g i hare Fj ae ; ie Jamestown college is well spent. Since 1492 America’s vast natural resources have been declared 1 was a pretty piece of tree, Paul had taken it. And there| weir, what am I?” a2: she soane of all. Ae Ire, Paul, he thought, ought for “ i ete be Seal ea al eB a 8 sae on ett P| Per hee, aw Te A Battle of Long Ago - all of her great possibilities in education, Gene Gah evening i But when lunch time rolled !gazed at hin thoughtfully across ‘There is comething extremely interesting about the im- girl the telephone switchboard best column you've turned out in start a vaeime no phone the little table where they sat and pending celebration of the 160th anniversary of the battle downstairs informed them that | weeks.” : “esas RE Rise Tied lies Oren en ee of Kings Mountain, in South Carolina. there had been a call for Mr. Rori-| Paul took it and began to “read| .., ay ein yourself more. Some - stop discovering America. We must go on rj all,” Dan thought, departing for|times I think you just don’t care Anything connected with the revolution is interest-] and on until the full possibilities of a democracy ere a copy” on it, Some day, he prophe-liunch. “Maybe something turned | what happens.” ing, to begin with. Despite the efforts of the de-bunk-| realized. It may, indeed, take many more generations “From Miss Anne Winter. Ghejtied as he brandished his pencil, |) : “Ob, yes I do.” ing school of historians, most of us persist in looking | before the United States of America reaches its height lett word for you to call her, Mr, |somebody would dig up a real story 1, though, had told him that : on that era as a sort of golden age, when men and is- in the development of its resources and reaches the full Rorimer, as goon as you came in, crimes and murders which accompa- nied the rule of the Sultans since it first began. Py More than half the money spent ... ’ on hard-surfaced road building goes 4) ly to workmen, says Fred R. ‘ White, chief engineer of the Iowa highway commission. Five cent of the a Ree Pedestrian ac: o Pau! lollywood, “It's here, allie Phillips promised to read it im- “Then stop calling yourself a Shall through tor jrigh - hack writer. You know very well cidents are among high- sues were sketched in clear colors, elther definitely white Loo Nong iow for /F'SIt you weren't so lasy,” Dan |Modiately and give him s verdict,/tnot' "hack weiter couldnt write a (f(a Tepelrs and construction crews . Dan nodded. “If you will please, |told him unfeelingly, “you'd write “They don't us play like yours.” atm and endeavor of all of our people to reach the goal! | We're right up.” it yourself.” ' “Well, nobody bought it.” He FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: which is undoubtedly destined for this country. Aane as soon as she beard) Paul irritated; him sometimes. grinned. i UL. & PAT. OFF. oO his voice: “Eva's gone, Dan.” Dan thought he was a little too|dio could make up its mind to “Oh, you're too unreasonable to It Might Have Been Worse ; , yes or no. But Phillips argue with,” she said impatiently, (Mott Pioneer Press) action—and I tell you they’re - |“You’re hopeless.’ When the writer was a boy he heard an Englishman “ ing tor a story for Lester Moore.” | “Buyll-headed, eh?” and at her récite » simple poem depicting all sorts of dite . J In midafternoon there was a call; | despairing head shake he became which happened to a-man, but at the end of each @ girl at Grand United—Phillips’|serious once more, explained that were the haba Ee wien Here seen wore, dd eens eet him ae sa the gna poh ™meant more to him “ Kings words seemed to picture le lo: scenario was very and {than she thought. Mountain was one of the decisive combate of | man other Engtishn the writer has me They ‘ fwas not around at prevent, Dut he “It's come to mean too much, he revolution. It altered Lord Cornwallis’ southern | wha' lence life has in store for them as e had instructed her to inform Rorl-jAnne. If it isn’t accepted I think Campaign fo materially that his final capture at York-| an incident which is all a part of the game of life. 7 mer that-he had read the play and|ri—1'll_ cut my throat or some- town ws eet aay nny, tw xi | conn Pi al ut gen, ly rae Teentaal recommending ing. at Ge wr ot Portant to the colonial cause as Saratoga. But what a | histo: ri pigs it for production. it now.” ; amnall scale it was pitched on! food laughs fn the future, Tt io time to wet excited He told me especially not to for-| “anne watched him light « clga- Colonel Ferguson, the British commander, had only «| 9F panicky. “Business as usual” si x Pid be eas "put Tet, Watehed him with a wistful tried to reach you once before, but |rittie amile trembling on her lips as mo ond answered.” '|he blew out the match and dropped and living in- general will be easier again. “That's great ne Dan sald,|it in the ash tray. She said, as Farmers are generally in 8 depremed state of mind : Php ae meee BS 305 he lifted bis eyes, “They'll accept im is WO! only ie local ° : ie Ores the Aan Ce ad an unlties, exclusive of prison- | ci'the writer sold wheat as tow as 42c per bushel When jeral places where he might have|his kindness very much ee aided oe i 90 @ young man after hauling it 25 miles with oxen, and ; improved it; but that was always| “I'll do that, and we'll get in ie ey : Pd fa! Pe Re such a diminutive cepfilct | the whole country survived: Oats sold at the threshing the way. “ |touch with you as soon as we know |celebrate,, His blue eyes twinkl helped settle the destinies of the two great- | machine at from 8c to 10c per bushel and barley at 18¢ He threw his magazine down and |what the decision is.” again. “And I'll begin to sleep : , In the Civil war » fight|t® 5c. Hogs sold as low as 3c per pound and beef 5 got up and strolled aimlessly| ‘There was nothing to do, then, |"°swarly again.” under 5c, but this is all just an amusing life experience through the apartment. Paul|but wait, but it was something to| If it was accepted, he was think- tothe older men who lived through it. No one starved to write so bravely. : glanced at him once or twice and |know that Phillips was for it. ing, he’d have a suggéstion to make have passed utterly unnoticed. | or had to go without the necessities of life. It was, not “And she said”—Anne spoke with |then turned back to his typewrit-| “Just how important is Phillips, |to Grand United. But Anne need hhaye fought to better effect |® pleasing experience but the people who were in the @ catch in her voice—"she said|ing; but presently he announced |anyway?” Dan asked Collier. [Rot know about that until later, Mountain, miepbehifte which eee one eeannement Gut of the) Hh that. ic:wamn't goodby really, be-lwith a great deal’of noise that he got. big Job; his word (To Be Continued) old-fashioned picturesqueness of the bering that “It Might Have Been Worse.” S . z