The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 24, 1922, Page 4

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e 5 « about April, when income tax returns; are filed jptone with his thoughts. } ‘} i ’ GEORGE D. MANN - : - B \ not. otherwise credited in this paper and also the! local | like a coral reef into better and better civiliza-| carriage with steam as motive power. Friends . of stogies and ma would have more new dresses, “ _ small enough to crawl into a gallon jar. “PAGE FOUR _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE OPPORTUNITY THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ee ON DS a . He rose f Second | Roland 0. Lamb, 71 years old, dies. Li aan staat reine Sa ae \from office boy to president of the John Hancock. Z Editor Mutual Life Insurance Co. ) Henry Ford had a bicycle repair shop. ~ In 1904, G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ft this first -year as an auto maker, he made 1708! : Se a'| jears. This year, about 1,000,000 cars. Opportunities, young man, are just as big and ‘just as many today. They always will be. Foreign Representative: 7 CHICAGO Marquette Bide. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | The Associated Fress is exclusively entitled to the use; for re} ublication of all news dispatches credited to it or} . LIFE \ If you want to live to be so old that no one can news published herein. i All baie of republication of special dispatches herein | raise a question about you, eat solid, substantial are also reserved. ‘food and walk as much'as possible. ~ ! MEMBER. AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | That is the sensible formula of F. F, Mekus, SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE jeelebrating his 110th birthday anniversary at De- Dally by eerie per seat i net te 20 fiarice, 0. yall mall er year (in Bismare! ee be fi Daily by mail, a ae (in state outside Bismarck) .. 5,00 | His third -ingredient is “plenty of pinochle.” | 6.00| Any other hobby will do. Takes a hobby ie keep Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota \ THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER {the mind and heart young. | (Established 1878) i seo IMPORTS | In the first 10 rhonths of this year, up to Nov. | GOLDEN JUBILEE 1, imports-of merchandise into the United States Civic bodies of the city as well as the city) totaled: $2,055,762,580. That compares with| fathers should unite in a fitting mammer to com-! | $2,504,021,908 in “the corresponding 10 months of} memorate the fiftieth anniversary of Bismarck.! 1917, when prices were lower. | In connection with the dedication of the Missouri| Something has gone wrong with the calcula- river vehicular bridge, the event could be made | tions ‘of the men who predicted that America a historic one, equal to the gala event when Bis-| would become the dumping ground for a flood of | marek became the territorial capital. ‘foreign-thade goods as soon as thé war Stopped. This year also is the forty-ninth annivergary | Most of the things we fear most never happen of the Bismarck Tribune. Col. Lounsberry issued | at all. the first Tribune as a weekly July 6, 1873" Reg-, — | ular railroad ee NES in 1878, but the -year 3 JAPoev before combination freight and passenger ser- | Until 1854, Japan was isolated, refusing to have | vice was maintained so the Northern Pacific: is ‘anything to do with other countries. Then Com- vitally interested in 1922 as it properly marks the] |modore Perry unlocked'the doors. In 1860, Japan fiftieth anniversary of the extension of the road | |sent to Washington its first commercial and poli- from Moorhead to the Missourj river. | tical delegation, in gaudy oriental robes. Bismarck’s Golden Jubilee gould well be cele-| President ‘Buchanan, who received the. delega- brated with a Homé ComingWeek. An interest-' tion, would have heart failuret 4 dpuild come to ing program could be arranged and the attendant | life and see the:Japanese.z Xt thecaetns-limitation publicity: would serve to accentuate the great im- | conference—silk ‘hats, ‘stenographers, battléships |. portance, of the new bridge to the. growth of the and other accoutrements of “civilization.” Bu= entire Slope section. This city has had a wonderful development. It i is not given to “blowing its own horn,” but there WEALTH | can be no Criticism in marking in a fitting man-| Thomas Baldwin, 94-year-old Long Island her- ner the fiftieth year of its existence. imit, is found dead in his shack. He died in rags, Such a jubilee would afford a fine oppartunity.'though he had.25 good suits hanging about the to advertise the new improvements in the city pro- | walls. per, the increase in business volume, general; Thomas probably got great satisfaction, con- growth in schools and other institutions and above | templating the 25-suits and knowing that he would | all to show the enterprising spirit behind the best ' never want for good clothes. little city in the world. Let’s get busy on a plan—the time is short. |Franklin, he’d have seen this: Pon ISAT EE Te his that has it, but his that enjoys it.” SEE EACH. GENERATION. ADVANCE Misers usually forget that money is only a Radcliffe College checks up and finds that the means to an end. ¥ fathers of its girl students represent 151 differ-! ent lines of work- Fathers range from. lawyers‘ PIONEER and doctors to cranberry farmers and horseshoers.|+ The telegraph wires from Rochester, N. Y., Rich or poor, the father never lived who ‘did \bring news of the passing of George. Baldwin not say: “I want my child to start out with a' Selden, 77 years old, “inventor of the first gaso- better chance in life than I had.” | line-propelled vehicle.” Thus each generation advances higher, built up} In 1878 Selden quit trying to make a horseless tion. : jjoshed him. For three more years, defying jibes, Under the top layer, in nearly every case, are jhe worked on an auto engine designed to explode a father and mother who deny themselves to edu: | ia Mmixturé of “laughing gas” and kerosene. cate their children, giving’ them better weapons Finally, in 1878, he drove out of his workshop in for the battle of life. Thoughtless children should |a gasoline car: ‘Laughs stopped. z give this occasional thought. If it were not for| What place should Selden have. in history? John and Mary, pa would smoke perfectos instead | |Clear a few acres, to make room. ALONE WHERE ARE TAXES TO COME FROM? Is the ex-kaiser planning to marry again? His sqand ste DAD SHAVE — “WAY D Down (EAST > GRIFFITH FILM ~~ APPEALS 70 LOCAL: AUDIENCE is no meatal to the great; most great, most careful attention to detail with | There i i i ‘chanan and Perry certainly started something. , | production, “Way Dow! } . H the Capitol Theater thia splendid andj land adaptation i e from eyo large’ audi- thrilling amplification of the famous play of brought p! ences. “Way Down East story to tc!l, and-there effective method em picyed, with a culmination of tremen Indeed, nothing, has eve Bi or-mreen to equal forward and depicting the“ wanderi: , nd Ifhe had read Poor Richard’s Aimanae, by Ben Se EE eee ee eane Wueynopelege “Wealth jis not young woman by. David Bartlett as i she lieg on an ice floe* on the ‘brink of Realism is herq brought to theultimate andthe sGynes are pre- with sincerity by; pillian Gish ichard Barthelmes: a falls. sentei “Way Down Bast!) EOPLE’S FQ RUM ur ast,” and at he same name \ has a, human a straight- the scenes represents the commends respect closer observation to-me to“proniote the. “Cause and}to' insure a| more free actior along’ new fields to be explo veloped. A survey EDUCATIONAL DEMANDS The Present. Syst9in. i = Our present system. cupveducation | and speaks | for | the needs, e lines of | and de-1 ign and American schools show that the. in- terest has fallen off pate toward | the school; especially as teachers, | support <by school districts, general | care and sanitation of schol: to-attendance sufficient ta, maintain ; the proper school spirit and to the necessary size to offset intone thus expended for larg: the Two of the big meat packers lost about, $50,- | choice j is said to be the widow of a German colonel | 2" Sara seamen “also asi lintenance fis refers schools 000,000 last year. The corporation that has-been killed during the war. She was such an intimate of various states: especially the south able to break even, without plus, is lucky. Many of the Ke-bears in win-| she was given charge of. the empress’ jewels on ter, have been living off their fat. ‘the eve of the flight to Halland. & This is showing up now in financial statements! The rumor about Bill’s possible remarriage says covering business operations in 1921. . | that the is lonely.’- Sounds logical. It will show: up.a lot more emphatically, along would care to exchange A i with him and be and studied. Low profits mean low tax yield? Deficits mean | H q ns no tax yield ‘at all. . Congress, champion spend- | EDITORIAL ‘REVIEW ! thrift, had better buy a’pair of rubber boots. It’s; | sacrad; _ due to step ona live wire. . | 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 sides of important isaues which are being discussed in’ the press of the day. J | = RAISING FREIGHT RATES ON GRAIN Pekge, chow dog, got lost, far from home. He) FOR THE STARVING | ‘traveled 66 miles cross-country, through the | | It has too long been a business axiom that when snow, to get back to his owner, Mrs. E.R. Adams, the government is a buyer it pays two prices. No of Newton Highlands, Mass. . _ |Svoner did congress appropriate $20,000,000 to buy That was a considerable trip for(Pekoe, who is ‘and ship grain to the starving in Russia, stipulat- ‘ing that it must go in. American bottoms, than! The thing that carried Pekoe to his goal was the American shipping board jumped its rates 30 that he didn’t have a human intellect to make him Per cent, or to $3 a realize the obstacle to be overcome and human Charge. » Secretary Hoover, who is head of the imagination to multiply the obstacle many times. American relief committee, is hopping mad about Obstacles are no longer than our imagination |it, and with every reason to be. i makes them. ’ Every additional dollar laid out in freight keeps ¢ jane sixths of a bushel of wheat or a bushel and{ NOVEL 2 half of corn at prevailing prices, from, reaching | Ultra-rapid movies, which show you first action | !a people who are dying off by tens of thousands | slowed down so all details can be watched, are be-| [Bow for the lack ‘of the barest necessities: ing used t show boxers and golfers their defects.| If the increase is not absolutely necessary, then| The golfer who cannot understand why he it is blood money. There is no other way to char- Uncle Sam's problem: Where to get tax money} to pay his bills- | ONLY A CHOW DOG “watches a specially made ultra-rayfid movie of him-|ly at the door of the. shipping companies. self. They; jare due for some tall explaining. If the jump in| It is man’s first success at eliminating time — whatever impression may exist that we ought to} _ to Einstein, who says, that time and space are find it out, subsidy will be flat as a pancake for al _ relative, not actually exidting as fixed units. eneration to come.—Newark News. . to its sur-| friend of the Hohenzdllerhs in the old days that) and cast st Few people) srertest ton more than foreign ships { MOTHER! OPEN CHILD’S BOWELS WITH | CALIFORNIA FIG SYAUR | sroveeesensengeronedt enforcement would aid grgatly in matter We pride ourselves free school lands, We reverence those who have struggled so. school what We speak never ending p and gr by our! to make the power, influence courses rendered Every man with dig: boyheod and school da: profession. .He takes sion, to perform it to him in earlier da: A smile of kindne: as witl book, or “the lad who {graduation ag a mark of inter the cl a the youth who is to take our ple is not enough for the course of a strive to make hi taste of “Galifornia Fi if constipated, bilious ish or full of cold. A | er fails to cleanse the playful child agam. Our School. | possessed of teaching influ- i ence/(hat he is unable to obt: te his + and a wordsof } cheer is rendered to our boy or-girl | who comes home ¢ Your little one wilt love the ‘frulty’ els. In a few hours you, can see yourself how thoroughly it works a the sour bile, and undig; misses the ball, quickly sees his defect when he (acterize it. This puts the burden of proof square-! of the bowels and you have a xe Consolidation\and the the attendwtide ‘Inws pal uaging this} a haying the! systeth of all the es of | gently + today. faratory ; ‘chools. , Teferg. to his as’Soihething | up his “profes- it was\taught | ~ h the speaks | e@ within ig Syrup” een: irritable, tev- moon tla liver and ull gested food of Millions of mothers keep “California Fig Syrup” handy. | morrow. Ask your dr: uine “California Fig Syrup” which hi transforming a minute into an hour. Comforting have ship subsidy,.and the American people ever /directfons for babies and children all, ages printed on bottle. You must say “California” or you may \ get an imitation fig syrup: } winaece yy 2 They know a te Watch this invention, for important discoveries, the rate is made for the purpose of intensifying | spoonful today saves a sick child | uggist for Mother' | portance than were ours. to the | TUESDAY, JANUARY. 24, ’22' within the nei seasons of the year. Little touches such as are distinctively Griffith have poétic valuo and there is a most lib- ‘al proportion of fun, sometimes of a| January 23, erous sort, but. always in” the it of tle tale. The barn dance ith Creighton Hale as a bewildered ne-ot the big fun | hits of the piece. J In the cast are Vicia Ogden, Burr a ate Bruce, Lowell Sher- man, Florence Short, Mary Hay, George Neville, Mrs. Morgan Belmont, a social leader of New York and New- Port ard others. The picture is shown to the accompaniment of a special condemn, score that js theinatic and colorful and that enhances the showing. Some rely new effects devised by Grif- crier,” to cr It is use war.” ighter, happier and of greater irf- Od ay LEARN A-WORD * EVERY DAY oe Today's word is DECRY. - phere It is pronounced—de-kry, with ac~.|.-———+—____.s cent on the last syllable. It means—to blame, to censure, to |) t It comes from—Old ut against. like this—“The - whole world decried .the action of the Ger- man empire in plunging Europe into Large. sums “‘preparcdness”: |’ Efticiency ahd Legisintion. To increase the ‘efficiency. of our \ystem I would favor a system of leg- islation introducing Compulsory High School attendance. throughout our whole system of, schools, one_bring- ing in.the youth who is not in attend, atice under thirteen years of age and eighteen or graduation. This would * "A THOUGHT FOR ~ TODAY ‘Many-prophets; and kings have de- sired to see the things, that ye see, and have not seen them; and to hear the things that ye’heal and have’ not requiring attendance to the age of {heard them.—Luke 10:2: There is no victory possible with-|fore you are hurt, children, or shiver ——+ “Too. many. veterans. are getting \“rest” instead. of “forward march. half-soled; but all of us can’t be. Dress {dént. Will Hays has quit work and: Bone dAnto the movies. {Wouldn't it be great if worry made your face instead of your head ald? New York doctor who operated: on tie right girl. but the wrong foot dught to make foot-notes, Hig Spring is only three tons away. < | A-wise man never tries to convince a woman against her will or to un- scramble an egg. Every year is leap year for thé pe- destrians, Would you call the woman. with tive children who has started practic- ing law a “mother-in-law?” | ~ Cotumbia psydhologists studying \; Roker faces may mean hands. “Trousers are Wider at the bottom, says fashion, A slight fringe is also being noticed: It we could all‘do' as we please who would wash the dishes? Only low rents are in stockings. Love is blind, espectally love of li- quor—so is the Icver ae drinking effecting the whole may be expected | some of it. future, at least to; extensive appropriations, reorganiza- tion, and fedezalization, are expended for war and ‘too little tor our school system. May wo look through the azure of the | tle a fine wheeze, havens to a sublime light that does 7 some admirable landscapes. and with | not spell tae Bremarednests f i senes that s cou stead spells peace, prosperity, educa- scenes that show the countryside at all tional senilgbtment; and unity of g0v. -jernment with its people. ERNESY 1. CARMICHAEL, Hoe 107 Burnstad N. D. $22, Home-t ite girls make homes. “Goo! berry, ragé-berry, blue- berry, New-berry” '—Use one of these to whit- Charlie 7 Chaplin “lost $100,000 in Wall Street. The bottom must have dropped ‘out of custard pie. | “Some packers are selling goat for lamb,” says Washington. ‘That's the only trust whose goat we've gotten. | Worst thing about your clothes .be- ing on the bumvis you're the bum, ay Government. employes S| when they will. | ADVENTURE OF — THE TWINS = By Olive Barton Roberts A sudden swirl of white fluffy, flakes filled the air as Nancy and Nick. fol- ved Mr.. Crampleg Crane to his fac- “Ku-huk!” coughed ‘Nick; “Brrrrr!” they. both ~ shivered. “Where did the snow come from? Why, it’s hot ag summer down on te earth and the blossoms are all out on the trees!” /~ Buskins laughed. and. Mr. :Crane | choo!” sneezed Nancy. all solemnly. “You mustn’t cry be- tend to elevate the education of our {ut humility and magnanimity, and no ! before you are cold,” he said. “That’s vee decrease crime, aid the Jabor-|-magnanimity stion by giving labor specifically to tal Appropriations. Our schools are becoming more na-|—Thomas Hug tionalized, by , delegations to capital SEES jes and to the national capital each ear; this’ demands greater. national upport for the cause of the. schools n appropriations “and organizatioiis. ur. schools should be pis ly federal d. The governm: R nach in the vocational ‘a within the, last few years: world’s coal is States. | EVERETT TRUE (oq Cok SD or ‘humility possible j without an ideal; and there is no one who are true supporters of the | Who has not heard the call in his own Ke heart: to put aside all evil habits, and to live a brave, simple, truthful life. hes. Approximately 40 per cent of the | in the. United mined In 1919, out of'a total'world pnoduc- n,, tion of 77,000, 000 pounds of raw silk, “Jal pan produced 63,000,000 pounds. WELL, OSCAR, WE THIS” AN®D: To BE A Ww& FOUND P1Ece DE RESISTANCS ' j \ net snow. It’s fegthers. It’s goose- plucking time and Mrs. Smith’s hard at it down on her farm. If-you notice, these feathers are coming up to the sky, rot going down to the earth, Al- so you are not catching cold. ‘Some of the featliers are getting into your nose and windpipe. I hope I have made things clear.” “Yes, yes indeed,” answered’ Bus- Kins tor them, as the Twins were too amazed to’ speak, But finally Nancy said’ Hitidiys: “Are we almost there?” “Hist” about,” answered’ the crane stalking. gravely on. “Yes, there. is the factory now just ahead. But, hark! ‘What do I hear?” And Mr. Crane stop- ped suddenly, putting a foot ‘behind 1sound, “socking cradles!” he exclaimed in an exasperated veice. “It's those silly | Storks, T-can’t ‘ tica Nick, too curi- js. to be cither polite or Brame “Baby comfarts,” answered Mr. Crampleg Crane. “They come here and get soft pinky-blue silky ones be- lore they fly off to Babyland. They set them to carry the new babies in. ; Why I just gaveeach of¢em about half a-dczen and they've used- them all up already. Well they'll just have to wait until we get new ones made.” (To Be Continned) (Copyright, 1 1 EA. Service) HEAD ACHED AND BODY ACHED There are various symptoms of ‘kid- hey trouble—rheumatic pains, back- ache, sore muscles, stiff joints and “always tired” fecling. | Mrs. Geo. Morgan, B, Fairfield, Vt., writes: “My. | head ached and my whole body ached So T could not: sleep. Foley Kidney Pills gave me relief.” They heal and ~ Strengthen weak, disordered kidneys and bladder and help them in, their. wordk of filtering the blopd. and cast- ing out of the system. the impurities that cause pain and disease. Prompt in actfon. 2 JELLY {s guaranteed by 3 years service to ‘millions of of Aesticane Kondoa’s rks wonders for your \ cold, sneezing, cou, one of his ears, the better to catch; ay Harding is “having. his éld. shoes « ee examination and can be Ciyil turned around and looked at\them - _

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