The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1922, Page 4

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PACE FOUR “(HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE’ THE BISMARCK’ TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. Dj as Second ney ry Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN : - = ¢ . Editor Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO 2 < Marquette Bldg. 5 PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited *to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and ‘also the local news published herein. = All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. —————— MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE 1N Ai)VANCE “Daily by carrier, per year........ wee S720 Daily by mail, per year (in Bisma: a epee oe, 1.20 ‘Daily by mail, per year. (in state outside Bisniarck) .. 5. “Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........ whee 6.00 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Establisned 1873) <i F THE AIR PIONEERS \ Twelve hundred Americans now have their own _airplanes, says the Aeronautical: ‘Chamber of; DETROIT. =Commerce. Ss iscreaming colors, is restful to.the eyes and sooth-| The figure is for civilian fliers. It does not’in-' ing to the nerves. HY “elude aviators on the government payroll, During 1921, these 1200 civilian air pioneers flew a total of more than 6,500,000 and carried 275,000 passengers. ¢. This«means that.if you had your own flying machine you could expect to get out of it about, 5417 miles a year and give rides to 230 friends | a year, on the average. { | Experts estimate that flying by civilians gained | a fifth last year. xe «In the long run, the history of humanity may select that-as the most important progress made) Shy Americans in 1921. y Conquest of the air made rapid: strides last | -year. American fliers broke many records dur- ing 1921. = Finn c Uncle Sam’s air mail force increased its aver- gage efficiency to about 90 per cent. It now is) ecognized as a model the world over. ' Two-day nail seyvice across the continent! ope | Flying forest rangers discovered 838 forest | fires during the year. ate in 1921, Stinson and Bertaud_ broke the, endurance récord by remaining in the air 26 hours | #19 minutes and 35 seconds. : : i ~ Another record broken in America during 1921) was by Lieutenant J.-A. Magready, who in Sep- tember reached an altitude of more than 37,800 feet above Dayton, O. ea i se Successful parachute drops from a height o | spell between fits, - Real disarmament will come + It’s the only strait-jacket that can jyqitor The Bismarck ‘Tribune: 25,000 feet were made during 1921. !8 > © We look on these as achievements. So they are. But the achievement of today’ ig the common. place of tomorrow. \ The first airplanes were looked on as county- fair curiosities. But so were the first steam rail ‘road locomotives, which burned cord-wood for fuel and hiad side-brakes like a stage-coach. | Few of us fully realize the tremendous strides: a at have been made by airplane flying. at It.is only 4 matter of a few years until flying| * will be:as safeas traveling on the ground. . he great flying feats of America’s air pioneers | paving the way for safe, cheap and phenom-| jally flying by the average American, now rid. | “Ging in street cars or autos. | , “And it’s an American invention! | \ Geek S RELIC | Tl Baloo Where the Bronx cocktail was: in- “ven d,“is sold in New\York for $10. “And still cthere are some people who think that proltibition ““Gsn’t workin’.” 4 # The transaction is of historical interest. It will start a lot of old-time, bar flies roaming “through memory. \ : _ In another generation, it will require an hour's %research in a library to learn the meaning of| “Bronx cocktail.” 3 REVEALED .. The first monument to the boll weevil—cotton | destroyed—is unveiled, at Enterprise, Ala. It is, _-& bronze fountain, in the business district, with! the tablet reading: “In profound appreciation of; “the boll weevil,” etc. = The idea is, that the boll weevil, by its ravag- ing the cotton crop, is turning the one-crop south} into a self-supporting agricultural country. Crop diversification is the farmer’s insurance “against failure. ae - DAWN Seven new women’s colleges have started in the “Far East. ‘Three are in China, three in India, one “§n Japan, says Mrs. Murray Frame, of Yen Ching College, Peking. é The gradual emancipation of women is the big- first, real proof that the erient is awakening. A civilization is accurately measured by the way. it treats its women. GROWTH Up to the age of 6, boys average only a pound heavier than girls, and about a half inch taller. This is shown in a survey by the federal children’s bureau. aie The- tallest and heaviest children are in Cali- fotnia. That’s one of the mysteries of climate. Kresge Bldg.,) ‘In maturity, difference in height and weight us- ually is attributed to sex. It may be largely due ‘to difference in environment. Women, entering business and pursuing out- ‘door sports more than formerly, unquestionably are becoming taller. e i PROFITS A railroad propaganda bulletin mourns that the! lrailroads, in the 12 months‘ ended last Sept. 30,| learned an average of only two and three-quarters | per cent:on their property investment. ay Thousands of business organizations would be| lin their seventh heaven of happiness if their show- | ling were as good. Some of the big dinosaurian businesses, which; ‘lately have been hanging around receiver's -court, | ‘will second the motion. i i quia | “ STAGED i | When brides get cranky. Or when the baby } ‘eries. Maybe all that’s wrong is the color of the | wallpaper, says Ross Crane, artist. and interior} decorator. | A harmoniously furnished home, without: | Happiness. is harmony. It is never achieved in; an inharmonious environment. 1 Wemen, in furnishing and decorating. a home, should go about it as if they were staging a play. = te - TENANTS ei lea ipl The average rental of farms is only’ 34 per cent of the value of the land. This is announced | by the Department of Agriculture, after an “ex- tensive investigation” which included a third of | all rented farms: : FRE | On the basis of these figures, farm tenant not as big a problem as has been generally “#e- lieved. - 2 Most of the Great American Problems ‘exist only vaguely, if at all. In the midst of compara- tive plenty, we Americans bay the street lamp, thinking it’s the moon. JILTED Breach-of-promise suits are becoming rare in the courts of England. In. wartime they were many and sensational. Emotions are setting back to peacetime calm and girls are looking twice be-| fore they leap, comments a prominent London sex lawyer. ' The calming of wartime’s highly-strung emo- tions is noticeable in other ‘ways. ~ Oh, little bird that sayly flits i Gane \ Oh, little flower \I sense thy fragrant bloom, ae A WAYSIDE PRAYER Borner.) \ Krem twig to leafy tree, And ‘helps to fill this sad old) world With sweetest harmony, [hear thy music every day, Then, why must I forget to pray? along the way, ‘And stop to revel in the bliss, 1 Of thy sweet, faint perfume, » Thou givest all thou hast to me, Then, why must I live selfishly? + Oh, singing bird, and swaying flower, A lesson ye have given; | 5 If I but ‘seek to gain the prize, In‘ vain have I then striven. Bat if a helping hand I lend, The world will know me for a friend. This then shall be my wayside prayer: : Lord; grant my light so shine, - mo nea That others seeing it take heart } To brave the steep incline, . : And, when they’ve reached the topmost stair, They'liveave their lights still shining there. Alf emotions run riot during a war. ‘|P, E. Island Takes The / More than 200 architects and mas- ter mechanics are at work on the ‘Leviathan preparing her for pass- enger service. The Germans re- fused to relinquish the skip’s plins }for less than $1,000,0000, so the /draftsmen are at work in the ship’s famous winter garden making dia- grams of wires, pipes,.ete. [EARN A WORD' | EVERY DAY _| 7 “fe ee te “-®eday’s word. is DECORUM, : It's, pronounced—de-boh-rum, .. with acceht on the second syllable. it means: pmiiness, ;:fit- ness, modesty. It. comes from—lLatin decorum,” comely. 2 Companion word It's used like this— ety you should beha A THOUGHT FOR | - TODAY - — I will be glad and rejoice in. Thy mercy;.for Thou hast considered my trouble; Thou hast knowg, my soul in adversities Psalm 31:7. \ To love ‘someone more dearly every deconous. “When: in soci- ith. decorum.” & & ee i day, ~: iE ‘To help a. wandering. child to find the way, To ponder i9’er'a noble deed and pray, And smile when evening comes— This is'my task: . —Maud Luise Ray. ‘ 4 ‘would you call the fight on poison Aiquor a “safety thirst” move? | | | | i ‘\ Banks say’ the new dollars won't stack up. The old ‘ones’ didn’t. i Health hint: Always laugh when the boss tells a joke. ! Maybe Will Hays will have charge of the movie mail robbers? Some men expect a girl to buy $5 stockings and wear ‘long skirts. With freedom. won, the Irish peo- ple. want to stop picking fights and | start fighting picks, . | Perhaps _ business doesn ‘come back because it hasn’t the railroad fare. + * BT Grounds for divorce are frequently. battle grounds. J The small boy thinks. sister covers her ears to keep trom washing them. Very few married men can drive an |auto with one hand. ‘“Politicians are scarce,” says, a . | writer. We heard‘one was tdry ‘avery iminute. 7 | All was fair in love and war, but the peace parley changed it in war, Fine’ motto: Don’t look for wider fiélds’ until yow cultivate those~you | have. , There is always room for another rumor: “ Rance 8 sbive bite » have "thventét’’a “new Reformers “\dance.: All they ndel “fow'is'to in- vent a new girl to dance it. About the scarcest ‘thing on earth are ex-movie stars. i | “We only work three hours a day,” says a senator. We can all be glad jthey don’t work six. When ‘a poor man gets married he knows it is for love.‘ \ @ The fiapper thinks a grand. piano [i one that plays by pushing a but- on?) es Mary Garden's life’ has been threat- jened. ~ Some neighbors can’t "ais- tinguish between good singers and bad j Singers, ery — Cheer up! The first three months eventually. \emotional insanity. . Peace is the retuperating confine. the patient when he again shows signs of motional violence. ‘ Se EDITORIAL REVIEW. _- ———————_——— » Comments reproduced in this column may or may not ‘express the opinion of The Tribune.’ They are presented. here in order that our readers may have both dides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day., t THE “INROADS” OF LIGNITE “Lignite coal from North Dakota is prov- ing a bugaboo to dock companies, with in- creasing reports of shipments made to the southern part of the state. Dealers are not handling the fuel, inroads being made by the ‘snowbird’ route, the curb dealer who ran- sacks the countryside for orders,’ gets his car and then collects' the cash.’ . Dock com ‘panies are unable to compete with the pri : lignite is being offered at, even with the cheapest grade of coal.” —Minneapolis correspondence of The Black Diamond, official organ of the coal trade. If North Dakota lignite can make such alarth- ing “inroads” on the southérn Minnesota market, where freight. rates on lignite’ are one-third to one-half greater than to Fargo, and. where eastern coal ‘is considerably cheaper, why is it that at least two- thirds of the fuel consumption in Fargo is of eastern coal? i 5 The foregoing quotation is written from the coal ‘dealers’ standpoint and it appears in a journal that should be exceptionally well in- formed on conditions in the coal trade. Another reference to lignite is contained in another issue of the same journal. It says: “Shippers from the twin cities are much concerned with reports that lignite from North Dakota is making serious inroads into , their southern Minnesotd busiriess. One small ' ‘southern Minnesota town is reported to have | already, received nine cars of lignite. With business in a depressirg sirain, dock men did | Perhaps dock men might not welcome the |cheaper coal. As long as freight rates remain at |two big problems with which the lignite pro- formation about lignite and how to burn it, and | the freight rates. Both problems can be solved |by energetic and co-operative effort and when |they are this. state will very quickly jump from the class of those mining 1,000,000 tons of coal The two sexes have an e: itis, °° Be I to those mining five or ten times that amount.— Fargo. Form. . i, War is PEOPLE'S FORUM || However, upon interview, Mr. Swanish regrets: are necessary as same does pees, the last agg,,would, 2. Gcne-half of the tenth game, provided, not welcome the news.” i is news, but “the consumer is less concerned about! ; ji “ i * Sys ~ |, “Allof my six brothers and sister, gest news coming out of the Far East. It is the!the dock men’s feelings than he is about getting) as well as myself, ‘have suffered since \their present high level, the sole hope of cheaper | . |fuel for North Dakota lies in its own lignite. The ducers have to deal are the .public’s lack of in-| best of health and feel like a new; oe REPLIES TO’ WILTON Regarding? ithe? newspaper discus- sion of the inconsequent, game played at Wilton’ @iring’the*holidays permit the followitg comment: The writer realizes thd" futility ~4 childishness of petty bickering over’ such ‘trival | matters especially inya dignified or- gan such aga city newspaper. Since the“article reférred to is more ot a personal attack than a discus- sion of. thé events, the writer refrains from discussing the bulk of the claims. merely’ claims incompetency on the Part of referee. - é Regarding any “feeling” referred to in the Wilton article, will say that no not exist°as majority of our school does not even know’that the team played a game with Wilton on the un- official vacation trip;and one never ‘hears tffe matter even referred to about the building. In commenting on the game will say that a team playing ten games’ in 11} days committing a. makimum of:4our mls in. any one‘of the nine:.s pt to commit. 21 fouls in practically the officiating during the tenth game wer with ‘the — preceding ine. ses out of 100 af sat- isfactory officiating in athletic con- tests, same can be attributed to in- competency rather than lack of integ- rity on the part of the officials. _ VO. DeBolt. ~* INCORPORATIONS Articles of’ incororation filed with the secretary of state include: Simon Cash Store, Wheatland, Cass county; capital stock, $10,000; incor- portors, Bella Simon, Hazel Simon, Wheatland; Dave Naftalin, Fargo. Samuel B. Weinberg.Co., Inc., Wil- liston; general merchandise, capital stock, $10,000; incorporators, Samuel B. Weinberg, C. V. Seibert, Sadies G. Weinberg. a South Side Drug Co., Dickinson; capital. stock, $25,000; incorporators: Wm. Chervansek, John Wm. Ansen- berger, Irwin Wm. Gabe, Dickinson. Gordon Clothing So., Minot i. tal stock, $50,000; — incorp Burnett Wolfson, Minneapolis; ) Gordon, Dudley L. Nash, Minot. 7 Small tree is still growing on the roof of the courthouse of Greensburgh, Ind. ‘f - Whole Family Sick childhood. from, stoma¢h, and liver’ trouble and bloating. I thought it ran, lin the family and that I could never | be cured, but, thanks to Mayr’s Won- | derful Remedy, since taking it nearly |a year ago 1 have been enjoying the perso! I have no trouble from any- i thing I eat.” It is a simple, harmless | preparation that removes the catar- rhal mucus from the intestinal tract } and allays. the inflammation which | causes practiclly all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, inclading ap- pendicitis.. One dose will convince or Ottawa, Ont., Jan. 12.—Prinée"Ed- ward Island, according ‘to ‘statistics just issued by the Dominion Bureaw of Statistics, leads all Canada in’ fur farming, the provinces having 309 fur farms with a value of amounting to- $3,089,970. The princi- pal business continues to be in foxes, the sale of pelts.in 1921 reaching’ a to- tal of $1,000,000, the largest in’ the history of the industry. ; In. the. nine. provinces of Canada: and the Yukor there were 587 fur farms in operation during the. year. Silver, patch, red, blue and° white foxes’ being bred, also mink, raccoon, skunk, fisher, lynx, martin and: Kara- loxes on the farms, three blue foxes and only one’ white fox. The total value of these animals was $4,722,995. During the year there were 9,345 silver foxes born on the different farms, and 3,558 were killed for pelts. A further 414 adults and 1,035: pup- pies died natural deatys. One thous- and seventy live foxes were. exported. =“Btitish experts estimate the known ilable coal fields instre.a “supply enough for normal needs of the world for 4000 years, We BLAS MY WAY To ‘Your kK UP THERE kuksheep . There were 13,694 Suver | _ | Phone 453. CE — WE MIGHT] My eCERK WiLL Frankfort, Ky.,. Jan. 13.—Three | Kentucky: counties contained. no au- tomobfles of any-kind on July 1, ,|4920,, when the assessment of taxes live: 'stock,| 'for'1921. were made, according to the annual report of the State ‘Tax Com- mission, These, were the mountain counties of Knott, Leslie and Clay. Six other counties . had mo’'motar trucks .although. a. few. automobiles were . listed. - They ‘were: Owsley county; two passenger cars valued at $550; Powell, 62 passenger cars val- ued at~$19,325; Rockcastle, 103. pas- son. three passenger cars valued at $700; Magoffin, four passenger cars valued at $700 and Breathitt, six pas- senger cars valued at $2,150. 1 All of’ these counties are in the mountainious section: of the state. An electric invalid chair ‘has. been invented. Coal that is coal. Washburn _Lignite_ Coal Co. o EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | A WAS # WHY, » LM WIT BOING. fT taGRe NOW, BUT | H TAKE CARE OF } You — \ You ARE AND @O QUISTLY ASSUMPTION “CHAT : Joe !! HACE tHe wvuR PERSONAY, INTERESTS ft! money . refunded. :. For -sale ‘at: all drugests. : Ady. ti takes Gerke aie U GOING THERE RicHT NOw! - WILL HAVE To TAKE GARE o> You Hl Nou Gor THAT JOG’ FROM THS TAK PAYERS OF THIS COMMUNITY (ON THE WOULD BE ON THS OR YOUR Creer ou TIME OUIRE RUNNING AROUND COOKING AFTER: Lead In Fur Farming 3 Kentucky Counties 1a are ‘the “oldest. ' ie By Olive Barton Roberts Soap-bubblee Land was a funny place. When Buskins stopped the little apple- i itee elevator and the, Twins stepped off, dozens of soap-bubble people of jevery size came bobbing along to greet-them. There were soap-bubbles from almost every nation on the earth. jalthough it is shecking to say that senger cars valued at $38,970; Jack-| there are places (and big ones at that) jwhere there are np soap-bubbles be- | cause there is no soap. S One big fellow sprang lightly up to the top of Nick’s head and. bal- anced himself there for a minute. | “Hello, Nick,” he called into the lit- tle boy's ear, “don’t you know me? I’m the big bubble you blew with your |daddy’s shaving soap. I’m considered ivery aristocratic up,here, L.shine with No better) hundred cofors and gmell werysnice. onalitv at anv price, anywhere.! Thank you very muchfor 1wsingsuch fine soap.” wtf Jortat “You're welcome,” said Nick. “Bat when daddy found it out he took my blow-pipe jaway for a week. I have to use laundry soap now.” “Don’t I know it," grumbled a cross looking bubble, rolling up. “I'm thé }last one you blew* “Look at me, brown las a lump of mud_.and a Strong scent fof kerosene. Ugh!” . | “That’s.itoo bad!” saitt ‘Nic you see I:couldn’t help it” PD!" * |. But the bubble’ had worked himselt into such a rage that he’ burst with indignation, | “Well, he ‘wasn’t ‘hay anyway,” |said.Nancy. “Oh, look there!” | A bunch of “bubbles came along | singing a song which went like this: | Se }“A rub a dub, dub, «; |We were born in a tub, Where we splashed and we foamed and we played, | | We slid down the board, And with laughter we: roared, Til we frightened ‘Susannah. -the maid.” Away they all scampered, playing leap-frog and a dczen other games known only to soap-bubbles, It was a jolly place. (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) “(To Be Continued.) QUALITY-FOOD _growth, Scott’s Emulsion is a quality-food that many to help tide over times at

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