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“ PAGE FOUR _ THE BIS Shee US TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matter. Editor GEORGE Dz “MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. ; PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH \ EW YORK - -___ Fifth Ave. Bldg. SOCIATED PRESS The A sociated 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 | herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are | also reserved. MEMBER OF THE AS ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE H | back” | | EDITORIAL REVIEW w | 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, COMING BACK STRONG Calamity howlers who have in the past taken great delight in j knocking the state and particular- ly the Slope country .as a poor | place. to live because of the con- tinued drouth’ and crop failures will soon have to move elsewhere to be heard tor the Slope is ¢om- ing ack strong and with that “comeback” the faith of its peo- ple in the future prosperity of the jcountry has been renewed. Probably the most healthy indi- | j cation that the Slope is “coming , is in the ability. of land- | holders to pay their taxes fop the! Hearrent year and to clean up ob- | ligations to the county and state | that they were unable to meet dur- | | | | l | i { | i | Daily by carrier, per year... .. 60sec eee eee eee en es PT20 ing the bast year of ive Hy al Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . settee ee eee . 7.20 Prati faotey hie been received | Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00/a¢ the office of the county treas- | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. seceeeeseeees+ 6,00/urer than during any like period $$$. aa for many years. The delinquent THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) 5! LET’S FORGET IT With an election just over, with officials elected not even on their new terms, the idea of a recall of Governor Nestos is given prominence in the Fargo Courier-News. One might well. inquire whether a great many people really believe that the chief industry of North Dakota is| politics, or their mission in the state continually to stir up: political strife. , In a state where officials are elected for two-year terms only, a recall is unnecessary. We have had three elections | jn a little over twelve months. That ought to be enough for awhile. ;. The Tribune has opposed the recall before, and will oppose it again, as a matter of principle. The greatest needed in the state today is a recrudescence of friendly feeling, cooperation between the farmer and city dweller, mutual consideration of mutual problems, dissipa- tion of hatred and a strife which only destroys, and building with a common purpose for the general welfare. No one need keep silent to maintain this-spirit. Friend or fee may rightfully criticize or praise the acts of public officials. ‘There ought to be discussion of state and local problems at all times. But this can be done without resort- | ing to the forum of a recall campaign. | Let’s forget electicns until the next, which is, by ‘the way, but about a year and a half away. “HERE, BOY!” | Around factories, offices, stores and any other places where people work together, a thing frequently noticed by visitors is the hard-boiled attitude of grown-ups toward the boys who are on the payroll. The boss usually is salaamed and toadied to as if he were a sacred cow. Miss Pansy Plush, the beautiful tyist, gets a lot of fawning consideration. And ‘even the male grown- ups treat each other with a mutual deference or respect, de- spite a considerable amount of facetious joshing. But whert it comes to the boy who works around the place i as if he were a trained dog that had to be handled roughly on the theory that, give him an inch, he’ll take a mlie. Rough treatment, lack of ‘consideration, and a stern re- buke are difficult for a grown-up to “swallow”’—despite the callouses accumulated by the sensibilities during years of | toil and contact with the hostile pack that are trying to get the same dollar we’re after ourselves. The boy, fresh from home and just striking out for him- self, has none of these callouses. His nature is sensitive, without insulation. And making him the target of the un- necessary sharp word or lack of consideration is about the | Jowest-down act that the so-called human being is guilty of. : When it comes to girls, a thousand times more so. i Maybe you remember, years ago, the heartaches ony spiritual injuries and disappointments that were yours wher! you first began making your own living. Probably there were things that occasionally brought a few tears to your) eyes. If we all kept this memory fresh before us, the boys who work today would get a better deal. : Considering the harsh and thoughtless treatment that most boys get on their first jobs, it’s no wonder tHat so many | of them grow up brutal, cynical and defiant toward their | fellows. You ‘ean tell how much of real manhood there is in a! grown-up, by the way he treats the boys who work around | him. And you can spot the bully, roughing the lads in a way he’d not have the courage 'to try on men his own size. | Another thing: These boys now working with us, and! \dustry 4s, concer rned,... (principle, withdrew all ithe wrongness of the time. tax list for Stark county this is a third shorter than lasts means that 30 per cent more of} the freeholders of the county were, able to pay their taxes for 1922] than in 1921 and this does not in-| {clude the large amount. that has) been collected in back taxes for} former years. The stme-cbndition | exists in practically every other! county on the Slope. This hag been a most peculiar season so fay as the \farmiing in- j After har-| vesting one of the largest crops | in the history of the Slope farm- ers found themselves unable to {market the greater part of. their jgrain during the..falk because of the prevailing car shortage. For a time the situation was acute and! disaster threatened. But the delay has not been with- out recompense. During the past few weeks wheat prices have slow- ly but surely crept upward and in- dications now, are that the upward trend will continue. It is a situa- tion that should give all people cause for rejoicing. Men from eastern states who have been in Stark county during the past week investigating condi- tions are going back to tell their neighbors that real opportunities await them in western North Da- kota. And despite the various handi- caps that the merchants have been forced to contend with business. has been better during the past fall than for several years. More- over, there is every prospect that it will remain good during the winter.—Dickinson Press. _ SEA FREEDOM ‘One “of the interesting drifts brought out ‘in’ all’ the - discussion of the Dardanelles ‘settlement is. toward more concrete definition | of a phrase that was much heard during the world war and toward a larger grouping of peoples around the basic idea. When, under the Circumstances of the war, “freedom of the seas” meant a loosening of traditional blockade rights, or of such natural modification of them as the devel- opment of new weapons (the sub- marine) compelled, and particular- ly when évery raising of the ques- tion played into Germany's hands, Nothing definite could come. Wil- son, who sajv the future wtih re- gard to it 4who evidently had in mind precisely the considerations; that now lead another American administration to advance the emphasis from it in the latter stages of the war and at Versailles because of ay It is not an unreasonable begin- ning, though calculated to cause some trepidation among powers in| position to control’strategic bodies of water,. when. America takes. at Lausanne the stand described in the following ‘paragraph trom yesterday’s news stories on Am- ibassador Child’s declarations: “Richard Washburn Child, | the American ambassador, adopted the broad standpoint that the very interests of the countries bordering, on the Black sea madé'-it ittpetative to keep the straits open. The United States in common with every commercial nation wish- making mistakes due to inexperience (as we all did in our turn), are the future leaders of the world. For all some of | us know,’ our only claim to greatness may be in having | jvorked with some great man of the future, now a boy ner- | vously fumbling at his first job. A certain baggageman didn’t realize this years ago when | | he permanently injured a train-boy’s hearing by boxing him | on the ears for cluttering up the baggage car with electrical | apparauts. The train-boy was Thomas A. Edison. fe A A i HULA Soa seen at leading social events is more ! The civilized dancing immoral than the hula-hula, says Vaughan MacCaughey, | school official in Honolulu. This is true in occasional cases, but not as a general rule. ! The human brain apparently is incapable of discussing ; morals without exaggeration, one way or the other. That’s also true of the discussions of everything else, partciularly | in America, a nation of extremists. . FLOOD Germany prints 59 billion paper marks in one week, which | brings her total circulating currency up to 485 billion. | Half a thousand business firms over there get permission | to print their own money, the government presses not being able.to print marks as fast as they’re needed. The two doughboys who traveled all over Russia, using | cigar store coupons for money, should now be able to con-, tinue their journey into Germany. OLD The Coue theory of auto-suggestion, by which many be- | lieve they can cure their ills by repetition of an “I’m well| now” pharse, seems new to many. | : But in Tibet, for many centuries, people have believed | they can become healthy-and happy by saying, over and over, | “Om mani padme om,” which ‘means, “O, the jewel in the! Lotus, 0.” =--Are Caucasians also becoming mystics? x Fi . } money without question. ed access to every free body of water in the world, and Amer- ica would not be satisfied if her ships of war-could not pursue their peaceful erands wherever American citizens ond merchant craft were ac- corded that privilege.” This is not the last that will be heard of freedom of the s Whether the settlement Ame: advocates with regard to the Tur! jish straits is reached or not, whether everybody accepts the {principle enunciated or not, the | commercial needg of all the great peoples will constantly press tor a | Sreater degree of acceptance and| ‘for broadening of the principle’s | ‘scope. | o—. It was one thing to propose in} ' effect changing the rules while the | military and naval game was in} | Progre: It is another to achieve | moilifications affecting any future “games."—-Des Moines Register. QUIT TOBACCO | /So Easy to Drop Cigarette, Cigar, or Chewing Habit No-To-Bac has helped thousands tu| wacco habit. Wheaever you have ¢ | longing for a smoke or chew, just place a harmless No-To-Bze tablet in} your mouth instead. All desire stops, Shortly the habit is completety pro- | ken, and you are better off m ental physicelly, financially. It’s so so simple. Get a box of No-To-Bac jand if it doesn't release you from.) gi all craving for tobacco i vour druggist will in any form,; refund your! Ady. | Comments reproduced in_ this | “thir | ship, the vhearth. , i Se o_——____________¢ | PEOPLE’S FORUM | o—- ——t Bismarck, N. nen SERVICE, D.. Dec. 12, 1922. To the Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. D, Gentlemen: It has come to me lately (I think it is no secret), that eighty of, the high schcol students of Bismarck, numberi 400, or one in five; have failed in one or more subjects; , or one teen, have ,beea advised to four subjects ven of the entire student bod. ched the Honor Roll; that is, having a standing of 90 per cent or more, and I wonder why? ; . We have fine building, well ipped, a good faculty, choal nurse'and doctors who, if necessary, look after the physical welfare of the students. They are given phy eal culture lessons and a splendid man provided by the business, men in drop all and but twent; of the town to supervise their out! , \LadyJocelyn Leigh find: her heppi- door activities, and a school board of honorable upright men. As a mother whose inte is in the high school, I am wondering how large a per cent of those who have failed among those who are attending dance parties. In the school paper, the Pep, I see much of the high idcals in. sports, which is good—but nothing of high standards of scholar- 3 Years ago in the hills of Ken- tucky, in ‘A rude cabin a little boy was born, His sweet young mother had little o luxury to give but a great love and tenderness for /her little boy. As he grew she taught him to read “The Book” at her knee and to writ Later he attended school for a few wecks. The rest of the time his desk was the clay floor, his. light a piteh pine knot stuck in The days were spent learning from Nature and as his frame grew tallf angular and awk- ward, his heart grew tender as a Ilt- tle childs. Did he fail in these sub- jects? No, his hungry mind reached out for niore and. still (more. f Did his parents insist he was growing too fastand needed recreation—a lit-, tle dance .party to make him grace- ful. and eaéy in society? They did not. But God took him and pui hin, in His hard school of life where he grew in strength and stature und in favor with God and man, a friend to all weak humanity or éreatures, and finally to accept the highest hon- or a nation could give him. Mothers of Bismarek, North Da- kota, is a wonderful state; An hour of skating, or skiing, or hiking should bring our youths in with jchecks tinted with carmine (not rouge), and brain alert. Are we in- fusing those ideals into our children ‘that will make them worthy of our great Lincoln and the schools of our town? Let us see to-it that these | failures are not our fault. ANOTHER MOTHER, | A AT THE MOVIES | | sl Sa SAR CAPITOL Did you ever tle with her little monk looking | lup wistfully into her fa monk and) Irene are insepa Wherever Mrs. Castle goes, too. One is. known the other, and botn will be seen in a picture called “French Heels,” which comes to the Capitol theater to-morrow for an engagement of two days. Mrs. Castle his the star while “Jocko mall, part-—fust a bit; a they in the profession. * But while “Jocko was acting his “bit” he made more | break the costly, nerve-shattered te | trouble for the director than all the |) other actors and gether. “French Hells” is a stor, jence Buddington Kelland, i printed in “Everybody's actresses put to- y Clar- ch was Magazine.” +/It was adapted for the screen and di- rected by Edwin L, Hollywood. In it Mrs. Castle has the part of a young who is obliged to garn her own living and chooses dancing as the means. She becomes a-member of a Broadway cabaret chorus and in a pictures of Irene | ;|band and return to the bright lights | ” porting case short: time is the talk of the town. Then she meets Licut. John Tabor and the romance begins, It takes her to the far nortl, in the cold and discomfort of a logging tamp, where through intrigue and treach- ery, she is tempted to leave her hus- | of New York. It is said to be one of the most novel und interesting stories ever screened, and will no doubt be welcomed by large at- tendances througout its engagement tendances througout its engagement in the city. THE ELTINGE. “To, Have and .to Hold,” showing at the Eltinge, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, is en elaborate pic- turggation of Mary Johnstons famous foMly a story of cld England in the days of James ‘yvapd of Virginia ‘soon, after its settlement in the sev= One sees the mag-| Court and little whe: € feonth century. nifieenee of King J:yhes’ when the s¢ene shifts to the settlement | at mestown, illed with excitement zation in quick attacks and pir- It is a picture ot tic power, deep ap- * peal nd beauty. ‘The featured play- ers “Betty. Conpson and Bert rte the latter making his first ap- pearance as a Paramount star in this picture. . Among those in the sup- are Walter Long, Theo- dére Kosloff and W. J.: Ferguson. . NEWS BRIEFS | -——® 8. D.-Five ement were F. Fellows, ness, one-is t! beeause. of the vi suecdssion of Indi ate jonslaught:. remarkable dv: ‘Rapid. City, indict. ments charging embe returned against H. former secretarya of the Dakota Packing Company, and three against Fellows and 0. G. Rhinehart, form- er vice-president, jointly charging embezzlement andé making alleged grand jury investigation of Com- | pany’s affairs while under jurisdie- tion of cort n oficers. Yankton, S. D.—Authority to: en- ter into eontract for steel super- structure of the Meridian Highway across the Missouri River here here given to newly elected board cf dircetors of the bridge company, elected atannual meetine here. D. B. Gurney chosen president, Grand Forks, N. D.—De against the sales of assets of the de- funet Pecples State Bank of Grand Forks and hear arguments on peti+ tion for removal of recciver. ‘ ' Vermillion, S. D.—Verne Saunders of Aberdeen, S, D., ‘éldcted: captain cf 1923 football squad at University ef South Dakcta. He played guard this. season? The Hauge—John Bassett Moore of the United States, gvas appointed chairman. of the’ International, Comn- mission, of Jurists for the revision of laws of wanfare, which started sessions in the péace palace. ~ Monteviedo!—Dr. Baltasar ’ Brum, president. of the. republic, challeng- ed a political opponent to a duel. Pari he invention of an_elec- tric depth finder ‘which would Idcate the hulks of-lost vessels and enable ships to proceed :safely through fogs was. announced, _ Cheyenne, Wyo.—Mrs. Wyman, widow of Albert U. Wyman, former treasirer of the United | States, died, Washington—The supreme court adjourned. until January 2. ! Warsaw, Poland.—Rioting loss of life and injury to many per: j'sons ftarket’ the inauguration of | | Gabriel Neratowler as president of | false ‘returns. Indictments followed Poland. i | EVERETT TRUE "BY CONDO | ‘ALG, RIGHT, MRS TRUE — su Be THSRE IN A’ MINUTE. DONE RS EVERY THING'S \= You're Gone To GAT IN THGRG, HERE'S THES | uaayin 9) i set for argument on an injunction'| ' Saturday. Mareet T. | with, aoe DECEMBER 12, 1922 * ADVENTURE OF * ’ ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS HSL BAe THE TWINS | | By Olive Barton Roberts | Dr, Snuffles, the ‘little fa'ry hace stor man of Whispering. Forest, | ving the Green Wizard’s doorbell | one diy. i | Nancy ran down the stairway ‘on , |the ins.de of the b’g pinz-tree where gnd opened the! \\the wizard Lved, ‘door. “How do ycu do, Dr, Snuffles, | 'she cried when she spied her little fold friend. “Come right in and walk ‘upstairs, please. Mr. Wizard will be? jever and ever so glad to see you.” | When everbody had said how-do- you-do and shaken hands all ‘round | land Nick had set a cha’e for the ; + |visito-, Dr. Siuffles told them why. ‘he had come. “I want a little magic medicin2, said he. big of magical. medicine.” | \“Why, what’s wrong with yours?” | | asked the Green Wizard in surprise. /"Oh, my medicines all right, but : jit’s the people,” answered Dr. Snuf. { fles gloomily. “When I get ‘em ‘cured of a cold, they get the rheu- | matism, and when I get them cuted | 9? that they get ‘the chilblains, and iwhen I f.x that all right, they get | the shingles, next it's the lumbago, jthen cyspepsia and mumps and ear- ‘ache ‘and—well, some folks just never get cured. I thought ¢hat_meb- ibe you knew of a megical medicine | “I see—I see!” declared the Green | Wizard. “It’s the same folks who |keep sending for you over and over and you want to get them cured up) | for good ’n’ all.” “That's just it,” replied Dr. Snuf- |fles. ‘You’re a very understandin: “Nancy, |my: cupboard,” sa‘d the Green Wi ard, “and, Nick, bring me that big \piteher with the clear stuff in. it.” | Next the wizard filled the bottle | out.of ‘the pitcher and then pasted, on.a big label which said, “Magical |Medicine. Good For All That Ails | You!” |_ “There,” he said. “That ought to |fix them. But be sure to show your |patients the label, Dr. Snuffles.” Dr. Snuffles took the bottle, \thanked him and left, | ‘MARTIN CALLS | CONSTITU, NTS | State Senator Witliam E, Martin | of Morton county plans to find out | what his constituents want-him to do before he enters the state legisla ture. enee in Labor hall’ in Mandan on Friday, Dec. 29 “for the purpose ot considering new ‘legislation, or re- peal of existing laws,-in which we want a free and full. expression of the opinion of all upon these ques- > tions which are of such vital inter- fest to all.” “If you can't come, send a dele- gate for your neighborhood,” he said in a public invitation. @ LIBRARY BENEFIT. A rummage sale for the benefit of the-city library will’ be held in’ the Commercial club rooms Friday. and Since the library is’ sup- ported entirely by volunteer contgi: | butions; there are no public taxes levied to support the institution as is done in most. other cities, Con-! mercial club rooms, not later than ; Thursday. Those who are not able jto send down articles themselves. are asked to notify Mrs. George H. Bing- jenheimer, Mrs. A. H. Peterson, or | Mrs._B, S. Nickerson and they wil | be called for. j On Saturday ‘a hot lunch and home | made goodies will be, served from ryu: 80 a’clock until /evening. QUIET WEDD! A quiet wedding was solemnized lat 4 o'clock Sunday when Miss Dora |Hagerott of. the Yucca vicinity and |Nels Pérsburg, Jr. were united in | marriage by the Rev. C. J. Fylling of ithe city at the parsonage. The cou- |ple were attended by Miss Helen} Hagerott and E. Hageroti of Yucca. tthe bridegroom is the sof of, Nele Porsburg of the Rosebud vicinity wher® the young couple arg both well iknown. Following a short wedding | visit the young coupl« will take up itheir residence on the bridegroom's |farm 11 miles north of Judson. BUSINESS TRANSFER. |. He C.Kinzel has sold his interest ‘in the Kinsel Service shop to go into |into the taxi business exclusive! having opened.a taxi stand on Thi | Ave, N. W., near the Palace theater, John F. Wilson who has been in | partnership with. Kinzel since . the | firm, was started will continue to be manager of. the Service Shop which {will continue in the same business ‘of tire and radiator repairing. | Robert Sullivan, son of Mr. and | Mrs. J. O. Sullivan of Mandan, a jaca at the University of Minne- sota will be a member of the Gopher} i basketball squad. His picture was {in a Twin, City paper Sunday, show- ing him as a guard. The last of the series of the hice} ‘parties in connection with the nula! | grande tournament of Mandan Elks | |lodge was sheld last evening. | The ithe local chapter of the White |Shrine of Jerusalem is planning a| |New Year's night dance Jan. 1, at | the Masonic’ hall. Mrs, John Fleck of near Mandan, } and Mrs, Frances Ehlis of the city | ‘have entered the Deaconess hospital |for treatment. John Stevenson of | | Flasher has left the hd@pital afte: lbeing under treatment for some | time. ‘ The public, library will ba ‘open ‘to ithe public Tuesday evening ‘at the | regular time, 7 to 9 o'clock. This lis the first time the libtary has! been open since the fire. 2 ’ “Or, I should say, a good | | that would cure everything at once.” ; tring me a bottle out of | | MANDAN NEWS | He has announced a confer-} tributions should be sent to the Com- | entertainment committee of | BREAK A COLD’ IN FEW HOURS | Pape’ 's Cold Compound” Acts Quick, Costs Little, ‘and Never Sickens ! Every druggist here guarantees jeach package of “Pape’s Cold Com- pound” to break up any cold and end grippe misery in » few hours or money returned. Stuffiness, pain, headache, feverishness, inflamed or congested nose and head relieved with first dose. These safe, pleasant tablets cost only a rey cents and mil- lions now take them instead of sick- ening quinine. Tom Sims Says Oh, what are the cold waves .say- ing? Oh, they say “Where’s the | coal?” | | | | i {| What iy worse than having some- | body give you the mumps for Christ- mas? | When Rome of ‘the |Fascisti are’ doing as the Roman {eandles do. in some What you girls give for | Christmas? A silk muffler hanging |around his neck will remind him ef jyou. will "| Just a short time ard we will be | writing 1922 by mistake and scratch- ing it out to write 1923, | Princeton has a water shortage. jShe won so many football games it may have been used as chasers. Umbrellas make good gifts be- {eause you have a chance to get them back. A New Jersey man wrote his on a butcher's order- book. It {thought -he was gaing to price steak. . * — MW is a Two Atlanta, G robbers were caught who were Georgia crack and safe crackers, but not so very safe. 1 ! 4 Some day a farmer will equip his hogs with radio so he won't have to lyell his head off calling them. } Hell hath no fury like a woman | when you track mud in her houses An @lectric iron is a swell gift for your wife, and besides it will keep her fect warm at night. London reports say Harry Gard- jner is 98 and growing a third eet of teeth, but they ‘may be false. ig pee | Paris offers 180,000 francs for | plans for @ moving sidewalk. Our suggestion is a! drink hard cider. | William Wempt escaped from the | Brooklyn, Conn., jail twice, and: it you think thi@ is easy just try it. lher husband to keep him at home. Tear this up before your wife sees it. Pe . aeons | Stockings are good gifts but gloves are better because then you can always. see what you got for your money. Near Quiney, Cal., six hunters may have harnessed 12 wild deer and driven out of a snowstorm. Anyway, they claim’ they did. i de African prospectors who thought they had a coal mine were disap- | pointed to find it was only diamonds. The Turks want to trade with us. We could sell them Turkish cigarcts, Turkish towels and Turkish baths. Six tons of cranberries were bured in a New oYrk ‘fire. Cooking | steadily it would take 100 brides two jweeks to burn this many. i Hat makes a good gift for a wife because you must buy her one any- | way. ACID STOMACH MEALS SOUR OR FORM GAS, GAS | Chew a Few Pleasant Tablets Indigestion Gone! Instant stomach relief! Harmless! |The moment “Pape’s Diapepsin” | reaches teh stomach all distress from | acid stomach or indigestion ends, Im- thediate relief from flatulence, gases, heartburn, palpitation, fullness or | stomach pressure, y |. Correct your indigestion for a few cents. Millions keep it handy. Dray- | gists recommend it, } 2 H Detroit woman say¥ she stabbed’