The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 21, 1921, Page 4

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PACE TOUR: _ TH EBISMARCKTRIBUN E/‘itting eculd be used on a'big scale. A very com- ey cn Recpod | eee idea. It produced 'the'stédm engine. co pagar ine Ds tenth A Paris printer saw a compositor pick up small 5 Editor Pieces of colored paper that had been punched out ‘cf bookkeeping forms, throwing them on a girl ‘worker in a rainbow shower. Other printers had |seen that. This one, however, commercialized the idea, inventing confetti. Jacques Montgolfier got caught in the rain. i 4 A he’ aoe Drying his shirt before a fireplace, he noticed that mee absoeiated rene ee ten Meare) aR *y'or the hot air swelled out and lifted the wet cloth. not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local [,ots of others had noticed that, but it didn’t sug- mews published herein. 53) ai inigest anything. Montgolfier developed the idea i tion of | dispatches herein | &' ry" g. ‘ “ry ea amie lee aaa and, with his brother, invented the first balloon. are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION History has thousands of similar cases. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Opportunity of this sort is lying all around us Dally by carrier, per year...» --ss recess +9725 today, waiting to make us rich. The plums are They mean great fortunes for J y mai in Bismarck)..... . . i eee pay Py mall hee pind a state outside Bismarck).. 5.0 ‘ripe for picking. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.. |those with imagination enough to apply common- “THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) a? ad CAN'T BE HIDDEN Can you read character ina face? Can you GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CAICAGO Peele tte Bldg. r acai PA YNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK fe 5 Fifth Ave. Bldg MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CARELESS WITH OUR EYESIGHT Actual money you guard carefully. Even afte ‘ture and other belongings, you insure against fire. size up a person and know whether or not he can pit og evesight—that greatest and most valu- be trusted? ‘able form of personal wealth—usually is handled! Occasionally you meet some one who has the | as carelessly as if it were so much sand. i instinctive gift of penetrating any, facial mass; ‘Fen thousand men and women are interrupted | “That fellow,” you'comment, “has eyes that look | 4 their right through you. He can see to the bottom of ; 3 ‘Conservation Council of America. one’s soul. He’s a good judge of character. lof the worker Examinations i This is a gift that can be acquired. Develop its defective eyéaights ork by investigators from the Eye Sight) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE — were granted in the United States in 1920? That one of every nine mar- riages ends in divorce? That 38 per ‘cent of them are granted for deser- tion? i Do you know that every four min- utes of every hour, day and night, | some couple is getting the knot un- | | place happenings to useful devices. ' it is in the bank, you hide the bankbook. Furni-} how that 53 out of every 100 have! as one of your powers. It may save you from a that explains much inefficiency. ' heavy loss. \ You have observed the different expressions that flit across a man’s face as he sees something pitiful, strange, terrible, dangerous, ridiculous or new. - fe Those expressions reflect emotions that have vies that may cause blindness. been aroused. The face, in nearly every case, is | the mirror of the soul. Each of us is dominated by some one emotion —such as fear, caution, recklessness, greed, gen- ion | CUT erosity, affection or trickery. When that emotion | Ss iAnaililice Dek November 11: aplaiitha ee is excited in the average person, the face responds | ” ’ 5 ith a betraying expression. When that emotion °cutive branch. of the national government. had with a betrayin; sion. gies Fat ‘917,760 employes on its payroll. is frequently aroused, finally becoming dominan ’ This had been cut to 597,482 on July 31, 1931, it is constantly mirrored in the face. : ; \says the Civil Service Commission. It took the No difficulty in fathoming the man with alcommission three months to compile that figure, worried look, ~ man Mie a aa ee [indicating the need of a better bookkeeping sys- countenance, or the man with a greedy, “Item. pression. You know what to expect of them. | The total of federal employes whom the tax- When you look into any person’s face, merely ipayers have to support is getting back near nor- ask yourself: “What emotion is this face betray-' mal very slowly. Still, they are being fired at the ing?” That gives you “his number.” irate of 260 a day. That helps. Looks sometimes are deceiving. But this is the) exception that proves the rule. Nine times out of: TERROR 10, the face is a glaring billboard, easily read, An airplane, protected by steel armor plate and revealing character. ‘mounting 30 machine guns, has been perfected by ; f so eee M. Larson, Long Island inventor and engi- The study of psychology, through analysis of|neer. facial expression, is being furthered by the mo-| Daily it becomes more certain that the next vies. The film characters are constantly register-| war’s major combats will be fought in the air. ing emotions, teaching people the meaning of, The coming disarmament conference has it facial expressions. within its power to prevent that “next war.” Then That gives you a great advantage. Your grand-/ brains like Larson’s can devote themselves to the father had no such teacher. His knowledge of |Perfection of fool-proof transportation of passen- facial expressions was acquirely slowly, by ex-/8°s perience. He had to reason it out, step by step. Tevice turns the clock backward. Therein is the real intellectual value of the mov-': ' RUBLE ing picture. It is making us a nation of shrewd} Deyeholouists, esening us Bow $2;trait the MUTOF in American money. Now it costs 1000 rubles to of the human life. : . \ride on a Moscow street car. This is a field in which men have much to learn. The yeason? Because the soviet’s printing In the past, women have been the greatest PSY-inresses have flooded Russia with 5,750,000,000,- choloiats, Cooped hay in their homes, with very|qo9 paper rubles. Note that the figure is trillions, little to occupy-‘their minds, they have, by con- not billions. : centrated analysis and deduction, become experts It isn’t the face value—the amiount—of money at, “getting his number.” jyou get that really counts. Buying power is the \thing. ; ! for a short time, often corrects imperfect vision. Have your eyes examined. Lost money can be replaced, _ Lost eyesight is gone forever. Keep out of the 'City of Dreadful Night. \ EASY MONEY Wealth, in the form of a valuable new idea, may come unexpectedly, to you—to any one. Take the case of Haskell, president of a western gélf club. One i ‘The Goodrich Company,,.some years ago, was experimenting with golf balls. It sent samples to country clubs. Those first balls were “dead,” like pieces of wood. Haskell suggested to a Good- rich salesman: “You could put life into the golf ball by com-/ pressing the rubber core, before winding it, the! same as squeezing a sponge.” i “Been tried and doesn’t work,” said the rub-| ber man. | “Then,” proposed Haskell, “take a rubber core! full of life, and wind it like a baseball, using a! strip of rubber for wrapping. That will keep the! rubber core under tension, without destroying its) life.” i Shortly afterward, says the Wall Street Jour-/nails may need man‘ nal, Haskell’s idea was bringing him $30,000 a little loose and his pants may bag at the knees; year royalties. WINTER | A white robin is noticed by Mrs. H. C. Studley, linnkeeper at Lorain, Ohio. Though not supersti- \tious, she thinks this means a hard ‘winter. Most certainly, the coming winter will be more severe than the last one, says Dr. P. H. Dudley, weather observer for the New York Central Rail- road. Cold winters usually follow hot summers. “Lay in” your coal. Prepare to dress warmly. EDITORIAL REVIEW 7 Comments reproduced in thie column mav sar may not express the dpinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day A PLEA FOR DAD He may wear a last year’s straw hat, his finger land the tin dinner bucket he carries may be full Herman Frash, a young man, worked as a,of dents and doughnuts; but don’t call him “the chemist for the Standard ‘Oil Company. He quitjold man.” He’s your father. and took up sulphur mining. Getting sulphur out) For years and years he has been rustling around of mines was costly and bad for miners’ health. ito get things together. Never once has he failed Frash drilled a well into sulphur deposits. He'te do the right thing by you. He thinks his son pumped down hot water, melting the sulphur, the greatest boy on earth, bar none, even though then pumped the melted sulphur out by compress- the son plasters his hair back, wears smart ed air. \clothes, smoke cigarettes and fails to bring home It was a simple idea, but it had made Frash a/a cent. He is the man who won the love and life; | partnership of the greatest woman on earth — iyour mother. Millions of men saw steam in a tea kettle lift} He is “some man” not “the old man.” If you the lid. It remained for Watt to realize that|win as good a wife as he did you will have to go pteam generated power, that the-tea kettle lid-'some—Wisconsin Apprentice. multi-millionaire when he died a few years ago. she mre, | | Guard them around emery-wheels or‘other de- i i igers and freight by air. The inventor of a war| 1: Russian ruble used to be worth nearly 52 cents! h <; his vest may hang a! this face may show signs of a sézond day’s growth! In most cases, defective eyesight can be rem-! : ledied. The wearing of proper spectacles, even | Beli’s Advice to Young Wives | ~By James Bell WIVES OF TODAY DON’T HAVE | ENOUGH TO DO. That’s where a lot lof trouble starts. Either the wife! ‘has a maid to do the drudgery or the modern labor saving machines which take the work out of housework. Two | hours of work a day is not enough for lyou. That’s what I say to Mrs. Mod- jern Housewife, GET YOUR ENJOYMENT AT HOME.—That doesn’t mean all the time—but generally. Too many wives ‘think first of getting cleaned ,up and ‘stepping downtown. It’s always a wild rush for something new; new faces, new, scenes, new forms of ' amusement.’ Make use of the good | books, newspapers and phonographs ‘in your own sitting rooms. | IMPROVE. YOUR MIND. How imany wives keep in touch with what ‘their husbands are doing in a busi- |ness way? Not enough of them! You {shouldn’t have marviedhim if you | didn’t intend, to 4 Leal helpmate. Talk over his affairs with him. Sug- gest things thati Mill) makehis work /easier. 4 |. KEEP THINGS TIDY'AT HOME. | A husband likes to come home and find {his abode looking neat. And he also enjoys. sitting. downto @ real meal. ; Only a brute will tire of a wife who {thinks and acts on these lines. | DANCE WITH YOUR HUSBAND. i When the dance music starts up to- jdav you usually find a man dancing | with some other wife than his own. {Don’t let your husband be a last re- sort. Let him know’that he is as good a dancer as any ofithem. FIGHT THE BIG OBSTACLES OUT. Too many wives abandon their husbands when a bit of trouble turns jup to mar married happiness. That is just the time when he needs your elp. GIVE HIM A CHANCE TO UN- DERSTAND YOU. No man can be- ‘gin. to understand his wife in one year tor ten, for that matter. In my own | case, I have kept learning right along and I expect to keep on learning. sg DIVORCES ARE UN. Oe € RY! It used to take a ay izable rock to wreck the matrimonigk ark, but now it seems the ship ‘grad- ‘ually settles on a sandy shore and at the first indication of danger the prin- cipals jump for their lives. But they jump the wrong way. Jump together instead of apart— and work out your little troubles NOTICE All property owners are here- by notified to clean snow from their sidewalks before eleven o’clock in the morning following the date of any storm. In case of failure to do so the same wili be cleaned ‘by the city and the \ecst charged to the property. M. H. Atkinson, | City Auditor. | Soldiers were first paid for their { services, during the, days of ancient jeome: | Jade was conspicuous in religious and ceremonial use of China 18 cen jturies before Christ. f i {4 Breaks | old y ¢ | | Instant Relief! Don’t stay stutfed- jup! Quit bi ng and snuffling! A) \dose of “Pape's Cold Compound” taken every two hours until three doses are! jtaken usually breaks up any cold. | The ‘very first dose opens clogged inostrils and the air passages of the (head; stops nose running; relieves the headache, dullness, feverishness. | “Pape’s Cold Compound” acts quick, | sure, and costs only a few cents at drug stores. It acis ‘without assist- ance, tastes nice, veatetns —Iysist upon Pap oy go quinine dv. Do you know that 133,000 divorces} tied and alimony arranged? JAMES BELL——104 DO YOU WANT T@STAYM ” ‘THESE CENTENARIANS TELL YOU HOW That. in six counties, statistics show, the num- ber. of divorces in 1920 exceeded the number of marriages? Do you know that in the last’ 20 years, 3,767,182 American men and women obtained divorces? That, ad- ding the minor children named in {these divorce suits, nearly 5,600,000 By NEA Service. Abrams, Wi ing Mr. and M “yp She is 102 ‘They have ju: Nov. 21.—Introduc- ames Bell! old; he is 104. celebrated their 85th wedding annive in their little log cabin, which nes in a forest on the outskirts of Abrams. Their married life? One’grand suc- cess! : “Spats” now and then, to be sure, but they never amounted to any- thing. In fact, as they both explain, they never have time for serious quar- rels. Mrs. Bell divides her time between milking cows, tidying up the farm- yard and. applying deft fingers to fancy work. Her husband is ‘a lover of the outdoors and takes a daily stroll to town after his routine farm work is done. Recently Mrs. Bell started a patch- work quilt: to present to her “little daughter,” Mrs. M.A. Schultz, who is 76 years old. The aged couple are already talk- ing about how they will celebrate their 100th. anniversary. i And incidentally, :théy are both strong believers in “and they lived happily ever after.” AT THE BISMARCK The brilliant’ acting ' of Barbara Castleton, beautiful star of stage and screen, is one of the Brightest high- lights of “Shams of Society,” the un- usual photodrama directed by Thomas B. Walsh and now being screened at the Bismarck Theatre. Although the popularity of Miss Castleton is widespread... she. takes pride in the fact that her greatest fame obtains in her home town of Little Rock, Arkansas, where she was born. Here, unlike the prophet who was never without honor save in his own country, Barbara numbers a le- lion of friends who find the utmost satisfaction in her triumphs on the screen, _ After attending elementary school in Little Rock, Miss Castleton was: sent to “The Castle,” a prominent fin- ishing school in New. Rochelle, N. Y. Here her development was rapid and when ‘she was graduated .she was [ready to embark upon a career on the stage, toward which she had been looking for many years. AW [EVERETT TRUE —~—~—~—=«&éBY CONDO| | WE'RE Lous, OF TURTL -|notony. Americans had their homes wrecked by divorce since 1900? F In view of these appalling figures, The Tribune has’ asked Mr. and Mrs. James Bell, both over 100 years of age and married for 85 years and still happy together, to tell what is wrong with the American home today and how it can be remedied. MRS. BELL —-—102 Mrs. Bell’s Advice to Husbands By Mrs. James Bell. MAKE A.FUSS OVER YOUR WIFE. That’s my advice to young men who are married. In my days the girls used to like that. I guess it’s pretty much the same today. A mar- ried man too often forgets the little courtesies he formerly. bestowed on his wife. EVERY GIRL LIKES TO BE TOLD SHE IS AN ANGEL. It pleases her when her !husband remarks that she has ‘the sweetest face and is a smart home manager. People will grow old but a girl likes to be made to think she hasn’t aged. THE HUSBANDS OF _ TODAY AREN' } Too often the young married man comes home tired out and is about as uncommunicative as an oyster. It’s a good idea to mention special dishes that are prepared for the evening meal and to notice little changes in the home. A.MAN SHOULD REMEMBER THAT HIS WIFE IS ALONE ALL DAY. Husband, of course, is in the company: ‘of other’ mén. He has busi- hess to think of and folks to talk to. Wife, however, has plenty of time to just think about HIS coming homie. And when he arrives—and retires into his shell—what a disappointment. GIRLS LIKE TO LOOK UP TO THEIR HUSBANDS. It’s up to the husband to make himself worthy, of it. A woman is naturally a hero wor- shiper. -Is husband a real hero? Not always. _ GIVE YOUR WIFE A CHANGE. It is cruel to expect her to cover the same routine every day. Take her to the restaurant once in a while. Share in her jov of planning a vacation. Give her something to look forward to. DON’T BE “SMALL” ABOUT MONEY MATTERS. The young wife deserves credit for running the house- hold. Praise; don’t scold. If she is really extravagant, summon all your tact and ask her cooperation in cutting down expenses. But don’t lay down the law to her. DON’T SPEND EVERY EVENING AT HOME. If you don’t belong to a lodge, invent some excuse to take you out at least once a month. She'll ap- preciate you. Boredom follows .mo- Ace THE ‘ 1 WELL; THEN BRING ME Some of THE Rice if ’T OBSERVANT ENOUGH. |. ;earth, up to the stars, MONDAY, NOVEMBER. 21, '21 Join the marines and see the mail robbers, If Ford makes cars out of our bat- {tleships they might back-fire, When a boy says he likes ‘to go to school it is almost Christmas, | “Dr. Soa-Ka Sze,” Chinese minister | to United States, is pronounced “doc- j tor.” i | Corn dropped to 45 cents. Forty- | five cents a bushel. Not gallon. | Shaw's saying he never neard of {Babe Ruth reminds many of Shaw's | “Ignorance of the Educated.” | Bebbed hair must go; it makes you lose yeur hold on a Woman. teamsters striking for less autos, are probably | | Chicago | Most friends are good bookkeepers. They keep all we lend. Well"Germany is using her marks at any rate. Sene of these song hits should {have missed. A soft answer doesn’t turn away as much wrath as a hard look. If the professor who {8' counting our cuss words, will step’ an some- one’s corn, his job will be done. _ The only arguments some people listen to are their pwn. Will China be scrapped also? It is hard to get a woman to one of these big shoe sales, Oysters are good, during any month with an “r” unless captured during a month without an “r.” A man has never gone to the devil until he is dead. “After international g{sarmament, what?” asks the Digest. We would say “local. disarmament.” Some optimists with hidden music believe in safety first. -” About the only thing the new Wirth cabinet passes is crises, A’ successful man ° always runs things; he'never walks them. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts |. How quickly the Twins slipped off their own little stout brown shoes, and how excitedly htey slipped on the wonderful magical green ones that the fairy mushroom had brought them. They knew. the power of those won- derful shoes, how, with just the merest scrap of a wish, they woull carry their wearers to the ends of ths under the ocean, over the mountains, and into any part of Fairyland. And now they were going under the earth and into a part of Fairyland where the Brown- jes lived. They were going: to help Mr. Pim Pim to gather up all the things for the Christmas trees. Of {course Mr. Pim Pim doesn’t trim the trees, but you’ve no idea how Santa depends upon him and the Brownies for help. They get him all sorts of bright dyes for tree-toys out of the secret places under the earth. Sacks full of golden-glitter and ‘silver-sheen, boxes of gleaming-green and blazing- blue, cases of ruby-red.and sapphire: shine, and whole pounds of glittering, glowing, sparkling, wonderful white to put over ‘everything: ~~ Now,'you know, my dears, how the good Mr. Santa gets’ his wonderful colors to dye all of hts ornaments fer . the Christmas trees. . From Mr. Pim Pim and the Brownies, and,, who knows? When you look‘ at your tree this year you'll never know but that Nancy dug up some of the beautiful blazing-blue.far the Jovely,.glass hall. near the bottom, or that Nick helped Mr. Pim*Pim?to fihd the crystals of i ruby-red to color the big glittery star [at the top. 1 “I think,” said the Mushroom “that the entrance to the ‘Land of Under- neath’ where Pim Pim reigns, is just by the dog-wood tree.’ Yes, I remem- ber perfectly, that’s just where it 18, to the left of those stones.” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1921, NEA Service.) BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards’Olive Tablets. ‘The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gen- tly but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them {> natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without Sriping, pain cr any disagreeable effects. Dr. I. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac- tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Olive Tablets are Purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one ‘or two every night for a week. + andnote the effect, “15¢ and 30c,

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