The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1922, Page 4

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y ~ two rival ant colonies in a war that lasted two weeks. The € _ PAGE FOUR E THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE| Entered at the Postoffice, Bisrsarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matter. | GEORGED.MANN - - - - — = Editor) Foreign Representatives ee G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY } =CHICAGO~ - - - - -: DETROIT | Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg.! = PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH i NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg.| MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS asa . The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-| wise credited in this paper and also the local news published} lyerein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are| also reserved. = MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION UBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | mail, per year (in Bismarck) ......-0..+..02. 7.20 3 1, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00. y by mail, outside of North Dakota. . ." 6.00, —| THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Ss 3 COOPERATION IS HELPFUL i The invitation issued by Superintendent Saxvik to par- | ents to v covld be accepted with han the school authori tion of parents in educational work. . The school and home ave linked together. Teachers know that they can, do more effective work if the parents are interested and wil] Yelp. | Bismarek’s school system is one in which all citizens | chould take pride. It has expanded rapidly, and so effectively thai the number of students from outside the city is increas- ing vcarly in the high’ school. %& A study of the schools by parents will bring before them | the many problems which teachers are required to face, and | No one realizes more fully ' profit. be a potent argument for pay equivalent to the training need- ‘ice given. ed and sery CONSUMERS GET NO HELP Several cities of the state are coming to the belief that the railroad commission law is supposed to protect not merely ihe utilities but the consumers as well. - The City of Jamestown is a party to a case involving electric and steam rates of that city, and the figures produced, | én their face, indicated the consumers are likely to benefit | in the decision. : ib The City of Minot appropriated $750 to pay an accounting firm to help in the electric and steam utility case of that city. | Consumers of Bismarck also have made a start which lends hope for success here, but here the consumers do not, have the aid of the city commission. ' LETS GET IN THE ed * Jt is perhaps unnecessary to add that all those who so exgerly joined in the new, Association of Commerce. work } Should immediately: get into the harness and function for the geod of the club and the city, It is easy, however, to find Some matter of passing mément to deter one from regular attendance at meetings. It is hoped that every member will find it possible to attend ‘the general and group meetings | Wednesday night, and cooperate in. outlining a program of ; work for the club to follow. ‘ : MOVIE & “A new English movie, “The Battle of the Ants,” shows ants are shown building bridges, attacking in mass formation, looting the enemies’ homes, carrying away their building materials. | = Audiences seem most interested in the ant sentries who guard the bridges and challenge all who pass. = Movies of this sort, picturing thrilling adventures in na- ture, wil! become common if audiences ever weary of seeing | countless new versions of Cinderella, the favorite movie and ; fiction plot. & FXCEPTIONAL = Only about 28,000 American tourists crossed ‘the Atlantic this summer, steamship officials estimate. Many of them behaved bestially at European bars. ° And from the 28,000, a considerable section of Europe will form its opinions of the | average American. | = Opinions usually are based on minorities. You read of a} few scandals and decide the nation’s going to pot, forgetting | ‘the millions of respectable people who never get publicity | for the simple reason that they are respectable and law- | abiding. \ \ 2 IVAN’ a = Henry Ford predicts that the 300,000,000 - people of | Russia eventually will be manufacturing and buying more | autos than Americans. | ie Russia’s comback may be a lot nearer than most of us | imagine. Ford says that “within the not distant future” he | eXpects to have plants in Russia producing autos from Rus- | sian raw materials exclusively. i :, When pessimistic about the final outcome in Russia, re- | member that dormant power cannot be locked up forever. Russia may be our best export customer by 1930. HOUSEWORK | The best.thinking seems to be coming from small towns, | as usual. The Brookville Record furnishes this: “It is hard |y¢ tO understand a sex that is too proud to do housework at $15 | a.week, but will marry and do it for nothing.” The housewife, of course, works for love, not money. | Still, this isn’t a satisfactory explanation. As a mystery, | love is even more baffling than life. Life doesn’t survive. | Love does. : BOOM . This reflects prosperity, now and to come: The railroads | loaded more than a million cars of freight in the week ended Oct, 21, latest reported. To beat that, you have to go back two years, and even then traffic. wasn’t much heavier. \ + Don’t worry about a stock market slump, as long as the; railroads have more business than they can handle. When} freight moves heavily, people are buying and business is bet- ' ting on. prosperity. : The former chief of Scotland Yard, Sir Basil Thomson, | says that the Bolsheviks are losing the foothold they gained | in England. Thirteen soviets were formed over there, in the early part of 1919. \ | . The soviets are breaking up as business improves. Pros-| perity and discontent do not travel together. stomach, no one can be a radical—unless he has liver trouble. j for ey . . * [it is a q *) p | it che schools during American Education Week | qeter puilding in towns for other ies the value of ‘whole-hearted co- ‘al use by lot owners. . jter what his political ‘belief; who is ;, respect.—Steele Ozone. |—Killdeer Herald. jthe soil from Iowa, and the results With a full| | EDITORIAL REVIEW (| EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO Comments reproduced in_ this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here ir order that our readers may have both sides of important issues’ which are being discussed in the press of the day. | WOU SEG) WEIRE ABLE GooDs AT SvCH ATTRACTIVE PRICES BECAUSE, jwG DON'T AOVGRTISS, SAVE A LOT OF MONSY AND OV CUSTOMERS GET WHE DIFFERENCES - To SGCL THAT CING & IN THAT WAY WS CHECKS HOUSE BUILDING Every now and then we hear complaints of the scarcity ot houses for rent, here as well as in ower tow Houses ‘are hard to secure for those who wish to re- move to town, These people do not stop to consider that present tax regulations for town, property are largely responsibe for this condi- tion. Where “a house owner lives in his house he gets clear of tax-, ation. on the building for a nom- inal sum but if he rents his pro- perty a large tux is levied, because it is classed 2g income property. Does anyone expect people to in- vest money in houses for rent un- der these conditions? As it often happens that rents are upaid by me tenants for a long period, there is a heavy loss to revenue. ‘Then the upkeep and insurance are added to the tax so that little is left the‘ owner. We know of one small cottage Which rents for less than $10 a month of which the taxes are $65 for last year; take out the insurance and repairs and you see Where the owner gets off. poor law, calculated to REGION BOUNDGD Tas GARS AND OW than the absolute needs of person- The idea of the League probably was to soak it to the town resident and pro- perty, holders on the ‘tifeory that his income should be reduced ARTER A HASTY EXAMINATION OF THE |. GSoDS I'M CONVINCED THAT THS CUSTOM ERS GST THS DIFECRENCS — IN THES ON THe NORTN BY HS Sovta CY THES COLLAR BONG ! by taxation. , Of course this is in line with the out against pr '$ On money investment, a nar- row and obstructive policy. We would like to see the man, no mat- looking around, for a chance ‘to in- vest his money in the lowest. rate | find. It is to be hoped the legisla- of interest paying business he sie | ture, will change the statute in this | THIS 18 A GREAT COUNTRY | i # Where has the North Dakota of the old days gone? Here it i Thanksgiving Day and only three | weeks tg Christmas ard a fellow! can’t’ evn go skating. No ice, no! snow, no sleighing, skiing, r’any-| thing! This will soon he a worse }- state than California in which ta) | ©_ 1992 _NEA live; full of anemics, rich old’ crabs, retired aristocrats, tired | ght ee * plutocrats, squeaky old maids and THE FORTU. batty old bachelors and widowers. | ‘ded When the winters are as effemin- | “ ate and soft and easy as they have | leather cover. The writing was fine been these last few years, it is al-!and delicate and the ink yellow with mpetstine or. a real Ry Ba jage. Monsier Jonquelle turned the ‘0 ve to Florida or California or | janes Ts sea some other more appropriate cli- | pages slowly and with care, for the! mate. Although the writer was, Paper was: fragile, We had dined It was an ancient diary in a ‘born in this state, we’re almost {early and come in later to his house ashamed of it.. The climate ig as}on the Faubourg St. Germain in far-behind the times as a telephone! Paris. * \ book. . When we were a kid, all the}; He Wishéd: to show me this old winter underwear was fur-lined diary that had come down to him, and we'used to walk up one side }from a branch of his mother’s fami- of the house and slide down the/ly in Virginia—a branch that had other. people had to speak with their} Virginia was a crown colony. ‘The hands because the words just froze | Collateral ancestor Pendleton had up solid the minute they left the | been a Justice of the Peace in’ Vir- lips, fell to the ground and were /Sinia, and a spinster daughter had lost in the snow. | written down some of the strange Now a fellow, in order to keep | cases with which her father chad} from sweating to death, has to wear | been concerned. Monsiewr Jonquel sleeveless underwear and cotton | believed thet these cases in their socks all winter, and can’t turn a’ tvagic details; and their ,inspiration- hand without using a fan, ial deductive lmindling equaled an Where are the good old North|f modern times. The great libra Dakota winters which were made / overlooking the Faubourg St. Ge for regular men and women, only! | ain was curtained off from Pari | Monsieur Jonquelle read by the fire; | and I listened, returned as by some WHAT OTHERS THINK | recession of time to the Virginia of North Dakota has ‘been investi-|%, YaMished decade. The narrative of : ong windows ldoked out on a formal garden, great beech trees and the bow of the river.’ Within. it was 9 sort of library. There were boo! cases built into the wall, to t! are that a number of renterg of | that state are going to move to this | state. Scmetimes it takes an out- sider or a resident from other | states to appreciate the many vantages in North Dakota., ,Atjan' | tervalé: between them, rising from puesto Usclgien made by the farm-/the floor to the cornice of the Dekel Caren Prost for North | shelves, were rows of mahogany akota: ess. drawers with glass knobs. There a flat writing table. the room of a traveler, 2 INSTITUTES a f letters, a d er. On th IN COUNTIES... tie wore an intpot of carve ade, \a rknife of ivory with gold but- HAVE BEGUN (‘erties terflies set in; three bronze stork with their back together, held an ex- County Institute work began De- | disite Japanese crystal. hembor. dthcins the iatnat | The room was in. disorder—the Sika Pasi ee country | drawers pulled out and the contents with a schedule of two weeks meet- | ransacked. ings at least outlined before the members of the instructing corps re- cess for the Christmas holidays. The My father stood leaning against \the casement of the. window, looking corps, which is the same as one of the organizations! of last year is out. The lawyer, Mr. Lewis, sat in a chair beside the table, his eyes on the violated room, “Pendleton,” he said, “I don’t like composed of D. E, Willard, Mrs, G,| this Englishman Gosford.” W. Randlett and Mr, W. F. Reynolds, |, The words, seemed to arouse my The central matter of instruction | {ther out of the depths of some t this year will be farm accounts and | flection, and he turned to the lawxer farm finance, this being of course | Mr. Lew’ based on some of the\elements of; Gosford *% he echoed... diversified framing presented through | the same communities last year. The the lawyardit,. Lewis, went slogan of the county institutes this |. “Mark. my word! He comes here when Marshall is “dying; he ris, of the movement; “Balanced Corps, stock, Balanced Rations, with quality marketing: will make a successful farmer.” ecording to men at the head Fi e head | corees his way to the man’s bed; he sed Live. | Puts the servants out; he locks the Balanced Liver tor, Now, what business had th Englishman with Marshall on his deathbed? What business of a se |erecy so close that Marshall's son is barred out by a locked door?” He paused and-twisted the seal The schedule for the early meet- ings of the organization follows: December 6—Bentley. \ ying on his finger. December 7--Mott. “When you and I came to visit December 8—-Elgin. ick man, Gosford was always December 9—Carson. here, though he kept a wa December 11—Shields. upon us, and When we left, he went December 12—Selfridge. | always to this room to write “his Ict- December 14—Solon. as he said. ae December 16—Killdeer. nd more than this, Pendleton; December 18—Werner. shall. is hardly in his grave be- December 19—Halliday. fore Gosford writes me to inquire Sais what Jegal process the dead man’s Oo HEETAT TONER papers may ‘be examined for a will. | A THOUGHT And it is Gosford who sends a negro \riding, as if the devil were on the jerupper, to summon-Jne in the name ..Re thou faithful unto death, and ¥| of the ;Commonwealth of Virginia, will give thee a crown of life—Reve- | to“appear and examine into the ¢ lation 2:10. ‘cumstances of this burglary. Men re enlisted for the labor tha:| “I mistrust the man. He used to Kills; let them be enlisted for the hang about Marshall in his life, upon labor that feeds; and let the cap-| some enterprise of sec and now tains of the latter be held as much he takes possession and leadership i gentlemen as the captains of the/his affairs, and ‘sets the man's son former.—John Ruskin, } aside. In what right,’ Pendleton, Criumphs ‘Jonquelle:¥, by MELVILLE Davigson Post! When it was real cold,| gone out with a King’s Grant when} height,of a man’s head, and at in-| @,.dne. NE TELLER does this padvénturous feel himself secure?” My father did not reply to Lewis's discourse. His comment was in an- other quarter. Englishman “Here is young Marshall and Gacki?? “he The lawyer rose end come over to the yyindow. Two persons were. adva cing from. delicate boy, ‘anda ‘strange old man. The old man walked’ with a quick, jerky stride. It, wag the old country {doctor Gacki, And, unlike any other man of his profession, he - would work as long and as cfrefully, on the body of a horse as he would on the body of u man, snapping out his Vquaitit oaths and ia stress of effort, jas though he struggled with some invisible creature for its prey. The niégroes used to say that the devil was afraid of Gacki, and he might iave been, if to disable a man or his (horse were the devil’s will. But I ‘think, rgther, the negroes imagined ‘the devil to fear what they feared themselves. | “Now, what could here?” said Lewis, “Tt was the horse that Gosford bring Gaeki ‘The | overheated in his race to you,” re- plied my father. “I saw him stop in the road where the negro by was leading the horse about, and then jeall young Marshall.” ghall, Pendleton,” said the lawye: | #But, also, he is no match for Gos: ‘ford. He is a dilettante. He paints little pictures after the fashion he learned in Paris, and he has no force or vigor in him, His father. was’ a dreamer, a wander: the world and its frivolities, and the ae takes that tomperament, /|He was\a person with the ianner of the direction Of she. #ables—a tall) “It was no fault of young Marz , one who loved soft- | “Whet court has appointed a guar- {replied Gosford, a sneer in the epi- dian-for young Marshall?” |thet, “but no other. Marshall wrote “A court,” replied my father | the testament in his own hand, with- “that docs not sit under the authori- | out witnesses, as he had the legal ity of Virginia, The helpless, Lewis | right to do under the laws of Vir- in their,youth and inexperience, are ginia, The lawyer,” he added, “Mr. not wholly given over to the spoil-{ Lewis, will/confirm me in the legali- er.” é jty of that.” The boy they talked about was{ Another installment of “The For- | very young—under twenty, one | tune Teller” will appear in our next! would say. He was blue-eyed and issue. jfair-haired, with thin, delicate fea- | tures, which showed good blood long inbred to the loss of vigor. He | had the fine, open, generous face of | one who takes the world as in a| fairy story. But now there was care and anxiety in it. and a furtive sha- yw; ‘as though the lad’s dream of | lige had got some rude awakening. | At thjs moment the, door behind | my father and Lewis was thrown violently open, and a man. entered. In just a few more weeks this year ‘a barrister, precise and dapper; he | will be last year. . had a long, pink face, pale eyes, and } a close-cropped beard that brought out the hard lines of his. mouth. He | bustied to-the table, put down w sort of portfolio that’ held an inkpot, a writing-pad and pens, and drew up « choir like one about to take the minutes of a mecting. And all the! while he apologized for his delay. He| p, ‘ ; had ithnartart letters to get off in{, Paddock claims he ran five yords the post, and to make sure, had car- |i one-fifth of a second. Christmas, | ried them,to the tavern himself. ; however, cothes faster than this. “And now, sits, let us get about | this business,” he finished, like one who calls his assistants to a labor. | My father turncd about and looked j at the’man. | “Is your name Gosford?” he said | in his cold, level voice. | “it is_sir” replied the English | man, ‘Anthony Gosford!” “Well, Mr, Anthony Gosford,” re- nlied my father, “kindly, close that | door that you have opened.” Potatoes are so low # farmer whe lost. money on his potatoes calls them the roots of all evii. What this country needs is heavy underwear ‘that will not itch. Our style kick is yow can’t puil these trousers on over ygur shoes. . , It doesn’t matter much, but Mus- silini, leader of the Facisti in Italy, sounds like a Greck, wrestler. Autos are not a3 thick during tke rush hours as some of the drivers. 1 Tennessee hunter’ who climbed | aewis plucked out his snuffvox through a fence with a shotgun 3 and trumpeted in his many-colored | learning to write with his left hand | handkerchief to hide his laughter. | i |The Englishman, thrown off his! It gets dark so early now night | patronizing manner, hesitated, closed | schools can hold two seSsions. ithe door ashe, was bidden—and jscould not regain his fine air. pp cake A fish caught near Greenland hau | “Now, Mr.: Gosford”: my . father | 28,361,000 eggs inside. Go out end) went n,./‘why was this room violat-} gead:this to your hens, | Hed as we see it?” : ie es i “It was searched for Peyton Mar-| Germany sent Russia 680 locomc-' shall’s will, sir,” replied the ‘man. | tives, but Russians have no place “How did you know that Marshall | t9 go, i had a will?” said my father. : i “I saw him write it,” returned the | aoeetn i inatianmaneythete. in thiay Fverd as cea wee: Pou, MONE, tone NVS YOU | PERT aae de® cighteotith t husband for Christmas? Let us sug day of | ante October, 1854." j gest about $10 worth of matches. | “That was two yeu ather. “Was the will he | tral alas. the will Bore at it stock madder than reading aboas | “Tt was, He told me on his death-’| these big Standard Oil dividends. bed.” 1 “And it is gone now?” i “It is,’ replied the Englishman. “And now, Mr. Gosford,” d my! father, “how do you know this will! is gone unless you also know pre-! cisely where it was?” | “T do know precisely where it was, sir” returned the man. “It was in |a row of drawers on the right of the | window where you stand—the sec- ond drawer from the ton, Mr. Mar- ; shall put it there when he wrote it and: he told me on his deathbed that it remained there. You can see, sir, that the drawer has been rifled.” { My father looked casually at the row of mahogany drawers rising along the end of the bookcase. The second one and the one above were open; the others below were closed. | “Mr. Gosford,” he said, “you would have some interest in this will, to know about it so precisely.” “And so I have,” replied the man, “it left me a sum of money.” | “A large sum?” “A very large sum, sir.” “Mr. Anthony Gosford,” said my father, “for what: purpose did Pey- ton Marshall bequeath you a large sum of money? You are no kin; nor ‘was he in you debt.” The Englishman sat down and put his fingers together with a judicial air. “Sir,” he began, “I am not advised thet the purpose of a, bequest is relevant, when the bequest is direct and unencumbered by the testator with any indicatory words of trust ot uses. This will bequeathes me 9 sum of money.: I sm. not required ago,” “sav Nothing makes a holder of fake Clemenceau has proved he de- i serves to be called -Tiger. He per-/ suaded a Pullman porter to make his berth before 9 o'clock. We often sit and wonder what the man who invents Christmas toys thinks about them’when he is sober. Lovers of Swiss cheese will he glad to learn 840,000 pounds have ‘been imported instead of made in America. The human race is said'to be 800,- 000,000 yeers old. In all that time men haven’t learned better than to talk back to their wives, T£ everything got lost as easily as a good pipe, everything would stay lost most of the time. | , | Life is getting so complicated. Now | it is just three or four darn things after three or four others. ~ | Ministers telling about fire ani) brimstone will not do much good un-y itil coal prices go down. { | Christmas story: “Mama, there is a wagon in a window just like what I wish old Santa would bring.” What this country needs is more | hound dogs and less lap dogs. | — oon” ADVENTURE OF | by any provision of the law to show . THE T Ww INS | the reasons moving» the testator. —_— Doubtless, Mr. Peyton: Marshall had! py Olive Barton Roberts reasons which: he deemed excellent " i for those course, but they are sir,| ‘The next person that’ the entombed in the grave with him.” |yizard helped was one, My father looked ‘steadily at tho’ ¢giries, man, but he did not seem to consider| Indeed, it was his explanation, ‘nor to go any ‘fur- of the none other than | city ‘water within requirements, samp! ‘marck, to conduct auto transpor Green | J, Olson, F. D. Mr, Scribble Scratch, the thin school | nograph behind this business, Pen- | ther on that line. “Is there another who would (know about this will?” he- said. - “This. effeminate son would know,” ened by his mother. He ought to have a gu: i “He I eh Feu: e, .” replied my father. dian!” ” repeated Lewis. Se A age Er ci ESE “When you see the Stars and Stripes displayed, son, stand up and take off your hat, Somebody may titter. It is in the blood of some to deride all expression of noble sentiment. You may blaspheme in the street and stagger drunken in public places, and the bystanders will not pay much atten- tion to you, but if you should get down on your knees and pray to Almighty God, or if you should stand bareheaded while a company of old soldiers marches by with flags to the breeze, most people will think you are showing off. But don’t you mind! ahd let them think what they please! When the band plays The Star Spangled Banner in a restaurant or hotel dining ircom, get up, even if.you rise alone; stand there, and don’t be ashamed of it, either. * is Don’t be ashamed when your throat chokes and the tears come when you see the flag flying from the masts of our shops on the great seas or floating from every. flagstaff of ithe Republic. You will never have a worthier emotion. For ‘of all the signs and symbols since the world begun there is none’so full of meaning as the flag of this country. ous future. It is not so much the flag of our fdthers as it is {the fleg of our children, and of countless children yet un- porn. It is the flag of tomorrow, the signia of the “good time coming.” It is not the flag of your king; it is the flag of ourself and your neighbors. Your flag stands for ‘humanity, for an equal opportunity to all the sons of men. Of course, we have not yet arrived jat that goal; injustice still dwells among us; senseless and iergel customs of the past still cling to us, but the flag leads \the way to righting the wrongs.of men. : Qur flag is the world’s symbol of liberty. That piece of ired, white, and blue bunting means five thousand years of ‘struggle upwards. It is the full-grown flower of generations ‘fighting for liberty. It is the century plant of human hope Legion, Indianapolis,, Inidian. | _-_ RESPECT THE FLAG | -When Old Glory comes along, salute, | Other flags mean a glorious past; this flag means a glori- | ee ploom.—Alvin M. Owsley, of Texas, Commander American | master’ of Meadow Grove School. One day he met Nancy and Nick walking in Whispering Forest. He was on his way home to his little \house by the bitter-sweet patch and {he looked tired and discouraged. When he saw the Twins, his face | | brightened. “How do you do, my dears! he | | said pleasantly. “I'm glad to see | you.” i \“We're pretty well, thank you,” lanswered thep. “And we're glad to see you, too. We hope you are well.” The schoolmaster , sighed. ‘Just pretty!” he said “I Wish I had you back to help me.” : “We're helping the Green Wiz-| ard,” explained Nancy. “But per- haps we can come when—.” “The very thing!” said. Mr. Scril?- ble Scratch suddenly. “You can help me where you are. Will yo ask the | Wizard if he has such a thing as a | magical wisdom cap? If I just had a wisdom cap, I'd be all right.” i “Why, I thought you knew every. | thing,” cried. Nancy astonished. | “fa, me!” exclaimed Scribble | Scratch. “I don't need a magical | lwisdom cap, my dear. It's my stupid ipupils. If I had a wisdom cap, I'd | give ’em each a turn wearing it. And |then think how smart they'd be!” | “Why, that’s a fine idea.” said | Nick admiringly. “We'll ask Mr. iGreen Wizard at once.” | The Wizard did produce a magic- jal wisdom cap and the Twins took it to Scribble Scratch who fairly eried for joy. A week later the Twins, passing. |saw a sign up which said, “School Closed!” There sat Mr. Scribble \Seratch at his desk looking as for- |lorn as a rainy day. | “What can be wrong? ‘ey kindly. “They. all got so smart they knew leverything,” said the ‘schoolmaster |ruefully, “and now they won’t come jand I'm out of a job.” “Oh, don’t worry,” Nick assured asked Nan- }him. “Give us the wisdom-cap and we'll bring you a dunce-cap in-, peed SRE A SAME PRICE jor over 30 years 25 Ounces for ox Use less of KG ‘ TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1922. [BAKING POWDER “than of higher priced brands. The government used millions of pound AMTUEOARATATAGRSUAGSG ERAGE: MONTH’S REPORTS ARE RECEIVED BY COMMISSION The city commission last night re- ceived the report of the city weigh- er, showing receipts of $192.10. The bacteriologist reported that tests during the month showed t of milk and cream tested were with- in requirements and several restau- rants and meat markets investigated were found\in sanitary condition. + Correspondence between the city attorney and city engineer regarding the water company’s method of pro- tecting hydrants with manure during the winter was read. The water com- pany claimed, it was stated, . th: lowering of street grades by the made necessary this step. The cit} engineer asserted this was not so nd that the company had been re- imbursed for lowering of grades. The city auditor was instructed to advertise, requesting presons seein; electric arc lights out to check up the time out and notify the city auditor. Bills were allowed as follows: Otto Dirlam .......... Frank Grambs (sewer) . Frank Grambs (sewer) . Wachter Transfer Co. . Street and sewer payroll Lawyer and mills .... Bismarck Typewriter Munson Stipply Co. . Bismarck Tribune Lomas Hardware Co. Humphreys and Moule Harris and Woodmansee . "53.00 134.50 Geo, Gussner Washburn Lignite Coa 126.54 Wachter Transfer Co. + 11,00 French and Welch Hards-are 105.61 6.50 E, M. Stanton ..’. .: Washburn Lignite Coal Co. Geo. Gussner . Geo. Gussner™ Geo. Gussner . 10.00 N. D. Ind. Tel. Co. . 12.00 Police payroll .. 66.00 Geo. Gussner 10.00 Geo. Gussner 10.00 F. Sasse 4.40 Geo. Gussner . 5.0 ‘, | | Incorporations | ay Articles of incorporation filed with the Secretary of State includ Interstate Transportation Co tion business; capital stock, $50,000- incorporators, J. G. Belanger. R. 5: Hamro, Oliver P. Vold, Bism: R. Vold and Cornclia Vold, Re: Richland County Abstract Wahpeton; to make abstracts; tal stock, $10,000 illis, S, . K, Olson. To Hold Examinations Competitive examinations for ste- typist and typist in the U. S. Civil Service will be held in Bismarck on the second Tuesday in March, June, September and Decem- ber, it is announced by the commis- sion. Other cities in’ the state in which examinations will be held are Dickinson, Fargo, Grand Forks, Lis- bon, Minot, Wahpeton, Williston. Mosquitoes of the yellow fcrer | variety kept at the London zoo will {feed only on human blood. ATE 100 MUCH! A FEW TABLETS BASE STOMACH Instant Relief from Indigestion, Gas, Sourness, Flatulence Stomach full. The moment you chew a few tablets of “Pape’s Diapepsin” your stomach / feels fine. All the feeling. of indiges- tion, heartburn, fullness, tightness, palpitation, stomach acidity, gases) or sourness vanishes. Ease ‘your stomach and correct rane dizestion fe> a few. cents. Pleas- Th apes k isa! 5 “evless! Any tore, You mus strug a may get an imi incorporators, 0. Digestion stopped! \ c u j d , x t » b c 1 of hn s t ae: va a ¥ ( H ¢ i ‘ ‘ , : t t ‘

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