The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 15, 1921, Page 2

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MONDAY, AUGUST 15 "MRS. BABCOCK IS ~_*__ BY STANLEY) “HIGHLY PLEASED AT THE RESULTS Huron Resident Says Change In ‘Her Condition Has’ Been ‘ Simply Wonderful: “I just can’t begin to tell all that ; Tanlac has done for me,” said Mrs. “PRE BISMARCK TRIBUND » 10: PAGE TWO" THEBISMARC KT RI B U N Begin raising the'température and the midlecules —_$_$__________*“"_“istart moving, revolving around each’ other like a; Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second | warm of flies. The more the temperature is ‘in:| ieee Mier. | creased, the faster. the molecules move. They. ‘Jose the property called cohesion, and at certain G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY \temperatures they vaporize—fly apart into smoke CHICAGO DETROIT or gases. “ } eee a YNE, BURNS AND surg 2 Pe Heat iron. Its molecules swarm wildly. The’ NEW YORK See Fifth Ave, Bldg. \ iron becomes liquid, ready for the molder to pour. | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |Heat it more. The molecules fly off into. a vapor- GEORGE D. MANN Editor Foreign Representatives i | \ ! i i » HARVEY George Harvey may or may not be a great am- = - { { 'bassador, but during the few weeks he has: been/ a é = 2 i y i in London he has succeeded in getting more news- — ie 1 | paper publicity than any of his predecessors. The} Britishers are simply amazed at the ambassador’s| habits. He drives his own Ford through fashion- able Pall Mall, plays golf in his shirt sleeves and drinks nothing stronger than water at public ban-! quets. FLYING IN CHINA | If we don’t watch outjipven the backward Chi- nese are going to beat us at the airplane game. They have inaugurated an air service for passen- gers and mail between Peking and Shanghai and rm : is to is ty. it is proving so successful that-the Peking gov- ; 4% VG \ | Frank Gale who conducted the ernment is arranging for its extension over the [ghoTuses Of the Ae tae ce entire country. In the meantime nobody in our day from Chicago and will make Man- government, outside of the flying divisions of the jdan his hom army and navy, seems to be taking much interest |in airplane development. who had been business in Mott for several years is locating in Kan- sas City, and Mrs. Burns and_chil- idren left Thursday evening for North- field, Minn., where they will visit be- s City. for nt ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS: The Associated Press jis exclusively entitled to the use! i7oq state and the iron vanishes from: sight. iJ. M. Babcock,, 310. Dakota avenue, news published herein. ' ; icine could make. go big a change in MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Sun to you by light waves. j that. no’ matter what, | ate. I suflered Daily by carrier, per year. 0' molecules that make. up your body are swarming | 1 used to have, ard I cer- Daily by: mail, outside of North Dakotag...... 6.00 | “L was weak and nervous and, had \ taking Tanlac I am like onother wo- > Your body, desiring to remain together, suffers a 2 , y | | & i He by : I | dition, and as | kept taking the me.l- § * i! oe - dose. [ eat three hearty meals a day, What would you‘do if you got off the street car Heat it is that keeps you going. : ~ 'in my life. Tanlac was just an un- Cave men, whose blood flows in your veins to-! everywhere.” Six million years ago the dinosaurs roamed the and those interesed are urged to prints in sand which now is hard rock, buried! they go? And why? Did they wander into the Fossil dinosaurs are found frequently in the far extended from the Gulf of Mexico northward to [fore going to Ki scientists to spend a long summer vacation search- for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or} | Huron, 8. D. not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local) f — “it is simply wonderful that a med- tt ai ._.| ‘That is the process going on in you when you} ff Ny i Soon Na : | All right: republication of special dispatches herein e { J dl | anybody. When I began taking Tan- are toe ii ‘complain of the summer heat, brought from the; ‘ | lac my, stomach was so disordered , ! from i2c¢ ion afterwards. I shud- SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | As you get hotter, it merely means that the. 1 Lining of the awfel . $7.2 Aas Fi i in Bi x f i | taimy ain coligiied that they have Pay ry mae her aon & pipet Bismarck) E00 or revolving more wildly. i | gone aiong witi my othe, troubles. | If the heat reached sufficient intensity, you'd iso little energy I could hardly drag THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ‘disintegrate into smoke. Another rise would turn! | myself around the house, but since (Established 1873) . eae \ \ you into invisible gas. jman. Even the first bottle made a | remarkable improvement’ in. my c¢an- BEFORE ADAM ifrom the heat which tries to disintegrate you. i c . ; icine I could just feel that 1 was get. , ' | And yet— . = x . mH ; ting new life and energy from. every near your home some dark night and met a lizard | child ta Pe ae uehcae oan 70 feet long and 20 feet tall? j told blessing to me.” | “anlac is sold by leading druggists day, encountered such monster reptiles. Scien- | tists digging up the fossils, call them “dinosaurs.” —————aJ the central school, ‘which’ alt parents valley of the Connecticut river. Few skeletons Tea have been found, but thousands left their foot- deep. ‘of What became of the dinosaurs? Where did great desert that existed in New England millions of years ago, and perish? | west. If they strayed there from the east, how did they cross the marsh-lined open sea that once the Arctic Ocean? These questions are causing a group of curious ing for the answers in the valley between Green- field and New Haven, Connecticut. Speeding is a “fine” art. Robbers Saturday night entered the | sales room of the Fleck. Motor Sales ‘company, Mandan, and cleaned the | racks of all the tires that were there, | together with tubes. Mr. Fleck esti- ‘mates his loss at $500. It is thought |by police that the job was done by | persons familiar with the place, as | they had no difficulty getting in the | place. CONFERENCES BEG TODAY Under the direction-of, Miss Ek- |man, county Red Cross nurse, a series {of Child Health conferences will he {held beginning today. “Keep, Well | Children Well” is the slogan that has gait | been copied ana Parente oe request- ‘ : _jed to avail themselves of this oppor- Poca ame ey me of erage, tunity to profit by the experiences “ ++| Of others, and dried | Moss... “There they BRE, | The Mandan conferences will be arenes ere bey Lae ‘heid in the Elks hall today, tomorrow “Nick, what are these queer looking | “24 Wednesday of next week. things?”, | FREE TEXT BOOKS FOR SCHOOLS “Lizards!” answered Nick, wisely.| The ladies. of the. Child’s. Conser- Don’t you live under. the big, stone by; vation league who have had charge Farmer Smith’s barn door?” he asked.| of the work of gathering school books “Yes,” answered one, shooting. out; for the use of pupils who enter school his tongue, “and we want to go home | when it opens on Tuesday, Sept. 6th, There aren’t enough flies up here. We are renewing their activity along this can’t get down because we haven't) line. any wings oy any climbers.” | There was a ready response from “We'll take you back to, your moth-| those who were reached, , but. there er,” said Nancy kindly, putting one in! are still hundreds of books out, and her pocket, while Nick took the other. | children ae Feauested bi look afer all their old school books and bring Scramble Squitrel ,lgoked ever SR | them the first day of school. They “ ” Sep | t : Se net Tene CaS ese ioe vl will be supplied without cost with Love at first sight; : divorce at first fight. - Fools rush in where wise men fear to wed. 4 You think a detective is wonderful when he tracks down a master mind in the criminal world. But, as a Sherlock Holmes, what do you think about the scientists who slowly are untangling the mysteries of what happened on earth millions of years ago? For instance, this much has been discovered about the mystery of the disappearance of the dinosaur: 4 The skeleton of a gorgosaurus, giant prehistoric beast, was dug up in Alberta, Canadian province. It’s mounted in the American Museym of Natural History. Bit by bit the scientists have learned that oc- casionally duck-billed dinosaurs strayed from’ the banks of rivers where they hid. The gorgosaurus, chasing on four legs, could not catch the dinosaurs for food. Mr. Gorgosaurus was stupid—but intelligent enough to learn that he could run faster on his hind legs. Thus he caught his prey. From then on, the dinosaur was doomed. H. H. ROGERS’ LITTLE JOKE During his early and middle life, Mark Twain! was about as bad as a business man as he was ;great as.an author. He went through bankruptcy | ‘i some years before he died and had a hard struggle). rTP. “$ : | getting on his financial feet and paying ‘off his : \ debts, which he finally did to the last dollar.: Then his friend, H. H. Rogers, Standard Oil millionaire, took him in hand and gave him some lessons in thrift and finance. “You write, Mark, and I'll under-write,” said Rogers. ; Mark Twain’s heirs are now profiting by the Twain-Rogers partnership. Last year they were paid $94,000 in royalties by. the Harper publishing house on the contract advised by. Rogers. A man who admits he ,is a failure can't be disputed. “For Rent” epidemics make land- lords love children. A cold bath is improved greatly by adding hot water. Bolshevism may satisfy t! he mind, but not the stomach: i - “Say,” he called down to the Nancy, and Nick left the Pollies at the Zoo and returned at once to. Whis- pering Forest. They landed right un- der the big maple tree where Scram- ble Squirrel lived. They had left Scramble, you know, hurrying anxi- ously to his home to see what Whizzy. Tornado had done to hig family. | “Say,” he called down to the twins jthe mipute he saw them. “Can you come yp? I'm in a fix.” Nancy and Nick wished themselves up at once, and crawled into Scram- | ble’s house at the base of a big limb. ‘What's wrong,” asked Nick. “Did you get some poll parrots to look after like Ben Bunny did? We just took them home.” “Poll parrots” exclaimed Scramble. “Why, maybe they are. My family is gone, and I found some queer crea- where are ‘they? ‘And’ yet, the only rent to worry a hobo—is in his pants. « : Georgia is having Congress should enter. turtle races. Now watch the eye specialists kick against longer dresses. Now that we have;learned to tell a good cantaloupe, the season is over. E The disarmament party menu should THE PLACE include dog-of-war sausage. While the official announcement has not been made, there is no doubt that President Harding will name Washington as the meeting place of the disarmament conference. This will be disappoint- At last we know why Bill Hay- wood wants to return from Russia. An oasis is a bottle of hootch en- tirely surrounded by a hip pocket. Then came man. Hunted by huge beasts such ; They won’t have equal rights un- as the gorgosaurus, man of necessity —to pre- serve his life—had to develop his brain. Probably he hit the beast with a stone, and saw that it made no impression on the tough -hide., Then, observing how easily a thorn penetrated his foot, man conceived the idea of sharpening stones to a point, fastening them to poles, and with these spears he slowly conquered and exterminated the great prehistoric beasts. That shows you two things: FIRST: The power of brain, of the intellect’s supremacy over the brute physical. mu SECOND: There is a solution for every prob- lem encountered by man, including yourself. No, problem is too big for you to master. : MYSTERY OF HEAT What is this thing you call ‘heat? Try to an- swer that and you are up against something as| mysterious as electricity. oe Until 120 years ago, scientists believed that heat was an actual substance, a form of matter—like beefsteak or coal. Now we know that heat is invisible, with no weight, no dimensions, no substance. ‘It can be produced, by sunlight, fire, electricity, friction or chemical action. You get a sensation of warmth from the hot summer sun. You can get the same sensation in zero weather by drinking enough whisky or rub- bing your palms briskly. Crush a lump of sugar into sand-like particles— granulated sugar.: Crush one of those particles and you have powered sugar. Can you break that sugar finer? Yes. Drop it! on a hot stove and it breaks up into particles of smoke. If you had physical means for doing it, you could! keep on breaking ‘up each particle of smoke al-| most indefinitely, down to infinitely small particles called atoms, which are grouped together into molecules, There are a billion times a billion such; molecules in a cuvic inch of air. ale || ing to. the several cities, including Chicago and Cleveland which have asked for the conference. But when everything that can be said has been said in favor of other cities, the advantages of| Washington are overwhelming. Climatically, Washingtqn, approaches perfection in November, and the Pan-American building, in which the conference will probably be held, is un- equaled by any building in America, for beauty and the nicety of its appointments. J In addition to this is the’ still'more important fact that the archives of the American govern- ment as well as of the embassies ofall the nations represented at the conference will be invaluable; to the delegates. 44 tures here when I returned. Whizzy 'Tornado brought them at the same time he took my family away. Are poll parrots green?” “Yes, indeed, they are,” nodded Nancy, “as green as grass. That must be what you've got, Scramble; PRE aw MANDAN NOTES | | ‘Prof. and Mrs. C. L. Codding of Wil- jton are visiting friends in Mandan. George Paul of Milbank, S. D., who jis on hig way west stopped over in |Mandan on business. | George Newton of Duluth is the |guest of his uncle, J. H. Newton. Mr. |Newton is enroute home from a trip ;|to. Glacier and Yellowstone National “THE CIVIL SERVICE The United States chamber‘of commerce, with 2, membership composed of 700,000 firms and indi- viduals, has registered 90 per. cent in favor of the proposed reclassification of civil service employes for thegovernment. The reforms which are fav-j ored by the members of the national chamber in- clude the following: : mB Recasting of the: policy of employment; ade- quate and uniform pay under like conditions; re- classification to be installed by. budget bureau; promotion as the preferred-method for filling va+ cangies; civil service to apply to all officers not responsible for determining . politics; improve- ment in the rules governing separations from the service. , The common sense business brains of the United States have now passed upon the-problems which were considered by ‘the committee on reclassifica- tion. The solution suggested by that committee has been overwhemlingly approved... The disease | Buffalo. Parks, A. B, Hagerman, cashier of the ;Elgin State was transacting business in Mandan on Saturday. | Mrs..J, C. Beattie has returned from Coleraine, Minn., where she has spent the six months visiting relatives. Her sister, Mrs. J. L. Hooper returned with jher and will visit in Mandan Mrs. Ruth Swalestuen arrived Sat- urday from Minneapolis and will be the guest of her cousin, Mrs. R. S. Leekly heré. : Mrs. W. T. Sprake “has returned from Shoreham, Minn., where she has been at the lake for the past two weeks. i John Racek left Saturday evening for Milwaukee and Chicago where he will spend a few weeks vacation visiting relatives. Mrs. William. Bannister, who has been visiting relatives here for the Past five weeks has. returned to her home in Seattle. Mrs. Matt Gortell of near St. Anth- ony is the guest of Mrs. F. W. Mc- Kendry for several days. Mrs. George Holmes, who has beei the guest of Mrs. F. W. McKendry for some time has returned to her home at find Samantha and‘ the kiddies. They many be at the South Pole for all I know.” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright 1921, by Newspaper Enter- prise.) |) dart b Loe School association atthe time its session was held in Mandan. Mrs. H. O. Burns and three ‘chil- dren of Mott were guests Wednesday of Mrs. O. M. Larson. Mr. Burns EVERETT TRUE such books gs are needed. In order to do this of course it will be neces- sary for all to bring their discarded books for the use of those in grades low than they are-now in. The books that had been gathered were all taken to the school and were fumigated. by Principal Ber- geim, who is deserving of much credit for the interest he has taken in the| work, A meeting to organize a Parent- Teachers association has been call- ed for Thursday evening August 25th in the eighth grade room of BY CONDO| til they call feminine pa-jamas “ma- jamas.” Chinago will publish the age of women voters. Why not repeal suf- frage? Italy opens a matrimonial lottery (But marriage long has been a gam- ie, Dress reformers are beginning . at the bottom. There ig also room at the top. 4 When a wise man gets home late he tells the truth and lets his wife wonder where he has been. The Other Way Around, A commencement speaker warns against the “conceit of learning.” Cop- ceit proceeds from ignorance rather than the opposite. The .more one knows, the more one appreciates the. vast fields of knowledge he cannot reach.—Pittsburgh Gazette-Times, British Coinage, Seven million coins are turned out every week by the British mint. One week's output of coins would, if laid out ‘in a single layer, make a gold, silver and copper. carpet ten yards wide and more than a quarter of @ mile long. Where the Bible Is Barred. Over 200,000,000 Bibles, translatec into 528 different languages, have beer distributed by the British and Foreign |: Bible society. Thibet, Nepaul, Abyssl- nia, part of Arabia, and Afghanistan are still closed to the society,” Dream Lore. To dream you see a flag flying in the wind denotes trouble. To. carry one yourself foretells. a change ..ip your affairs, generally. for the -better. To see one at half mast denotes trou- | dle, Vaccination for Marriage. In Sweden and. Norway a legal mar | riage at one time was not allowed to be performed until both parties i had produced certificates stating that | they bore genuine vaccination marks. Excellence Accounted For. jthat afflicts the government service has been well ae feo le EC : |. C. H. Simpson and ily of Mc- At Absolute Zero (273 degrees below Centi-|diagnosed and the remedy prescribed. It is now] Ville Were ih the city yesterday en- grade), there is no heat and all molecules are mo-' up to.congress to apply the remedy without undue, wae ee ste. eine tionless—absolutely solid, delay —Washington Post. son will be remembered as-the pres- STIS Sa oP ER | {ident of the North Dakota Sunday “Mother,” said little Roger, “I know why. Norah's cookies taste.,.so,,good,, She always sings when she is mixing and the song gets into 'em,”—Bogton Transcript, J

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