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| A PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE -_ Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ‘CHICAGO Marquette he NEW YORK : MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DETROIT Kresge Bldg. > x » BURNS AND SMITH 5 cs Fifth Ave. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wares in this paper and also the local news published erein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE __ Daily by carrier, per year........... +» 504.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) « 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) «... 5.00 4 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... . es ... 6.00 - THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) MUCH WORK TO DO A broad and comprehensive program was Jaid before the legislature today by Governor Nestos. Many problems in the management of the state which cannot, except by stretch of the imagination, be considered anything except real business problems were presented for solution. The legislature, if it devotes much time and careful study to many of these, problems, will not be engaged in spectacular legislation but.in business none the less important to the | welfare of the state. q Out of the recommendations of the Governor on the state industries may come some differences, but it is prob- able that they will be chiefly differences of procedure among the members of the legislature. For, so far as the contin- uation of these industriés is involved, there is agreement Ketween the political factions in the legislature. The prob- lem before the legislature is, for those who are opposed to i; the-state industries, to convert members without regard to i} «political faction. This may not be done, yet the consider- } ation of the financial condition of the industries, and a look into the future may bring about a realization upon the part of many that to launch the state into business is expensive. and even though it is successful in the end there is pretty apt to be a big bill for the taxpayers to meet until such f/ industries have undergone that building up and seasoning process by which the great industries of the nation havc been built. And if the industries are successful financially, there will also arise the question of what good they are to thé people of the state. The Governor urged revision of the taxation law, and there is no one who will disagree with the statement that inequalities do exist. It is to be hoped that members of the legislature will not be forced to consider such important matters hastily, for more harm may be done than good. H Taxation has been the subject of controversy since taxes | were levied. No perfect system has been devised, but there is the opportunity to endeavor to approximate an cauitable } division of the cost of running the state of. North Dakota. ; There is in this, connection a suggestion of Governor Nestos which may not meet with favor among many who have devoted time to study of taxation. A tax on luxuries is advocated. Such a tax has been levied, but usually by the federal government, and the tax has been attacked on the ground that it does not reduce the tax burden but opens another avenue for greater expenditures. The proposal of Governor Nestos for a constitutional emendment for longer terms of office state and county officials ought to receive careful attention. It ought also to4call attention to the disastrous waste of time and money, and the damage done to the state through too frequent elec- tions. In most counties it is customary on the part of the voters to give a two-year office holder a second term. Yet he has to maké a second expensive campagin for it. The people of the state, too, cannot and cught not to expect the state officials to give the fullest measure of service in their positions when they are required to spend so much of their | time campaigning. -Governor Nestos urges cooperative marketing as a solu- ba } tioh of the farmers’ problem rather than through state in-! dustries, and his supporters, jn the legislature can point to many examples where.greater success has been obtained through this method: than any other. The proposal of the to the-farm appears at first thought to be a perilous under- taking from a business standpoint. If such a plan can be maile effective there is no doubt but that it would be of service in providing a more orderly marketing of the huge grdin crops in North Dakota. ‘It is very plain from reading’ the Governor’s message that it was intended to urge a program of legislation upon which there was a good chance, in most cases at least, of action being reached without regard to party or factional differences. 5 SWARM ‘ ‘Chicago will be a city 125 miles across, with 50, million pogulation “in the not distant future.” This is predicted by an association of city planhers, headed by William H. ScHuchardt. coe Keep this news from the boy whose father is trying to | keep him on the farm. ‘ i wThere’s a limit to everything. The farmer may get tired of feeding too many city people and stage something like a national strike in another generation or so, maybe sooner A percentage of city residents are engaged in useless pro du¢tion and duplication of effort. q “WHITE COLLARS” j : 0 “white collar” occupations are guareron ded. 100 sane i illi do the grimy tasks and hard work of life. eS tevin cascr Pot eee once a steel mill worker, Davis, secretary ¢ 8 a member of the “white collar” brigade. é | 4@H-be interesting to watch and see if America can get y lifting the immigration from 10 weeks to 10 years to get out of his ‘le its _unskill -day-labor work done after a few more years, overalls. FORD tes’ for the purchase of another big coal pro- os Creek holiings in Kentucky. Recently he deals of the same nature. ja board’ to tell us that one of these to find Henry smashing forth in the zor he has shown in the auto trade. ius, like Rockefeller, Goal offers him a bigger: 's getting a late start, however—60 Bldg.| chief executive that bonded warehouses be provided close | ||; 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 sid of important issues which are being discussed In the press of the day, THE RACE OF THE CITIES ‘Roger W. Babson, trained and skillful observer, thinker and de- ‘du of truth from correlated ays in, an article in the City Star: i “During the next ten years | we will witness a great | municipal race. The cities which are now he- hind will have an opportunity of getting in the front ranks, while some of the cities now in | the front ranks will drop back | into lower places. The result of the race will | depend upon the vision of | those who direct the affairs of | the cities. | | This is altogether likely. happeried before that some citi have come up while ot dropped | ‘back. It will happen again. It is| _|going on all the time. It always | will be going on.” Manifestly, there is something ihere for to think | about. | One aspiring city that ought to} \be thinking about it is Duluth, i | “The result of the race will de-| pend upon the vision of those who | [direct the affairs of the cities.” | Duluth’s fate in the race will de-| i aspiring cities pend upon th ion of those who; rt of Duluth. Upon the visfon.” What is the} of Duluth and its future | een by: those who dire What the Duluth of will be depends very large upon the answer to that! question; for achievements, wheth- | er of individuals, cities, states or | nations, are the reali {visions that’ dominate ations of the them, | Cities grow not by accident or | |chance, but by the vision and en- | jterpris2 that govern the use of! | the natural advantages. They |grow by the directed, purposeful development of those advantages. |Not by taking away from other cities |to them, but by using and increas- | ing what is their own. Duluth has many and they are great. re between citi | entered in that rac | pends upon the vy {who have charge of its affairs. the vi (that hold it are also enterprising ‘and not afraid to take a chance, j and if the community holds it also {and backs up the enterprise of | those who lead, Dulwth will rise {far in the next few years in the list of cities, passing those with narrower vision and less enter- | Prise—Duluth Herald. advantages, a There i and Duluth Its fate de- ion of those If | STATE INDEBTEDNESS Special mention is made of the {North Dakota farm loan bond ‘is- | sue, present and prospective, in | compilation of figures on state in debtedness in general. The state j has issued $3,500,000 of farm loan bonds, and is empowered to issue $10,000,000 more. Assuming that j the entire lot is issued, and that the proceeds are invested, as in- j tended, in farm mortgages, the state will be listed as owning $13,- ; 500,000 on this account, which of ner in which the state is going to | the bad. As a matter of fact the {sale of these bonds as proposed | will not affect the financial posi- [tion of the state at all. We shall ‘owe a lot of money on roads, and | we shall ‘have an equal amount in- | vested in first class interest bear- jing securities. | The real danger in any enter- prise of this kind is that~not the jstate shall issue bonds, or that the farmers shall borrow the money, |but that increased facilities for |borrowing money’ may lead some ;farmers into borrowing more than (they can afford to borrow. If the money realized from the sale of these bonds is used to refund pres- ent loans at a lower rate of inter- jest, to lay a safe foundation for {really constructive work which is well within the known powers of |the individual, or, in a few cases, ,to tide over emergencies which: [can be dealt with in no other way, and with the fixed purpose to de-| vote redoubled effort to the early {retirement of the loan, then the {whole enterprise will ‘be beneficial jto the state. Q@therwise it will not. —Grand Forks Herald. GREAT CRY, LITTLE WOOL | Representative Keller of Minne- sota was first elected to Congress, largely by the aid of the labor vote jas an independent. He classifie: jhimself as an Inpendent Republi- can. Independence of mere facts jactertistics. On Dec. 1, in reply to the request of the House Judic- \Jary Committee, he produced a long ,document making fourteen specific ounts in support of his resolution, |offered early in September, for the {impeachment of Attorney ,General {Daugherty for high crimes and imisdemeanors. These specifica- | tions were answered in detail by | Mr, Daugherty on Dec. 3. On Dec. :12 began the hearing of | charges hefore the House Judiciary ; Committee. | hearings were a series cf babbling, ;and brabblings. Mr. Keller was strong in charges, weak in ev!- ‘dence.. Mt. Volstead, the Chair- ;man of the. committee, is not, ner- jhaps, of an eminently judicial | temperament, but Mr. Keller’s at- tude made, most of the committee | | impatient. He was afraid to dis- close the names of his prospective | witnesses. He showed almost the; hallucination cf persecution. He Was always prating about “terror. ism” and ‘spies.” Of covrse, the committee w>+ ‘packed,” in hig estimation. On Thursday he bounced ont of the committee room in a passion he- cause the comm'‘ttee won'dn’t let him +ead a statement passionate’y things that rightfully belong | large, and if those} itself is a rather tidy m of; money. Some of our eastern friends may feel alarm at the man- ;seems to be one of his chief char- | the | i thereof. From the first. thes>| _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | - EBB TIDE | Py | gave out a statement, in which he! jsaid that he wouldn’t “Ye true to| ‘his responsibility as a member of | | the House of Represen if he | further participated in this comic- opera proceeding, which is a bare- faced attempt to whitewash Harry M. Daugherty.” tt $ comic pera proceeding, but hed > had conspicu- 4 friendly | by Mr. Keller. | cus talie: | labor-chief witness t believe |that Mr. Daugherty’s omissions | and commissions are a subject for} | impeachment. . | lt may be that Mr, Keller, , the arper wi that in: him, have accomplished their pur- pose. That was to create and con- tinue an atmosphere of ‘suspicion | and to discredit Mr. Hardang’s Ad- ministration. Yesterday Mr, Kel- ler, summoned by the House Ju- dicary Committee, didn’t’ appear. The committee intended to mak him tell under oath what infor charges. As a discipleack123456 | tion he had in support fo his) mutable truth he had refused to be sworn. The finding of his state- ment in front of the irate Mr. Vol- stead and the solemn exit—the Minnesotan didn’t walk, but “stalk- ed,” like Way and Famine—show is talent for scenes and effects. | ever discipine, if any, is to} be used against this tempestuous | tribune] the Judiciary Committee shoud go on. Accusations have been brought against Mr, Daugh- erty. They should, be proved. or disproved. Mr. Keller has chosen to slink away from his task. Though that conduct, and Mr. Keller’s whole conduct in the mat- ter, may be considered a reduc- tion to absurdity of the charges, | Mr. Daugherty is entitled to a fair |hearing and to justice. His ene- { mies, and the enemies of the Ad- ministration, are trying to cover him with a cloud of injurious sur- jmises. The public sense of fair {play resents these evasive dishon- esties of attack.—New York Times, and NOTICE OF MORTGAGE _ FORECLOSURE SALE DEFAULT having occurred in the conditions of the mortgage herein- after descrjbed, NOTICE IS HERE- BY GIVEN, that that certain mort- gage, executed and delivered by I. M. Capper and Belle S. Capper, his wife, mortgagors, to Investors Mort- gage Security Company Inc:.,Mortga- jgee, dated the 20th day of March, 1920, and filed for record in the of- fice of the register of deeds of Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, on the 20th day of March, 1920, and re- | corded in Book 143 of Mortgages, on page 46, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the courthouse at Bis- marek, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at ten o'clock A. M., on the 5th day of Feb- ruary, 1923, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the. day of sale. 2 The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, arg situated in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and described as follows, -towit:—The Southeast Quarter (SE%) o1 Sec- tion Eighteen (18), in Township Une Hundred Forty-one (141) North, of Range Seventy-eight (78) West, cc=- taining 160 acres, more or less, ac- cording to the government survey The mortgagee has heretofore de- clared, and now declares, the whole debt secured by said mortgage due and payable. said mortgage on the date af sale the sum of $305.96, (which sum i cludes interest paid upon a_ prior mortgage on the same property) be- sides the costs, disbursements and expenses of this foreclosure. Dated this 27th day of December, 1922, INVESTORS MORTGAGE SECURITY COMPANY, INE., a corporation, Mortgagee. Newton, Dullam & Young, Attorneys for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 12-27-1-3-10-17-24-81 — A church at Santa Ross,’ Cal., built from the wood of n° single wm red- attacking it. Subsequently he * ghia Racca | ‘wood 1 {when ‘she There will be due on|- av SAVE WOMAN _ FROM TURKS to Philadelph a, Jan. 3.—Thanks her fcur gold teeth, wh'ch s have given her a charmed life. woman here is happily reunited with her fe experiences in the Near East. Th's “Woman of Mystery, Tuiks called her, is Mrs. Yevniegh Yacoub'an, She was living in the Armenian town of Caeserea when the Turks came. Her husband was shot, he: Ley was taken from her and she was fbout to be carried off by.an officer ed her téeth. “the effect,’ (vs. Yacoubian, was almost unbelievable. The Turk dropped his gun and stared at me. ‘The life of my boy was spared, and | I was saved. “In thrace the poss teeth reflects something almost su- pernatural. Picked Uj fter two wee we were started on a march to the Arab'an desert 1809 miles away. ‘On the way I contracted typhus. I fell in a faint on the road. The so diers thought I had died. “But I managed to eawl along the road until I reached the edge of the , cating nuts the bark of trees and licking the moist blades of grass. A band of roving Arabs found me, They had already learned of the ‘mystery woman’ who braved the Turkish officer. They rec- ognized me by the gold teeth. hey took me to some Armen- ans in the nearby country. “Then I learned the children had been taken to Konia, to a Near East | Rel'ef orphanage, Reunited we luck” ly caught the last train to leave the interior of Thrace before the EVERETT TRUE | ssion of gold ° had} = n to! at r children after terrifying . as the | imprisonment, | Sets $50 a year. MR. TRUS, XL Don'r THINK THIS Sicc ts Exe AETCY RICHT. UNDERSTCOD THAT THS AMOUNT Were --'7, ' | FOR OVERCOMING STOMACH scarcely had strength to sweep the Cause to Worry About * i land am as healthy and happy as can keep on shining at the present rate 4187 Aldrich St, N., Minneapolis, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1923 | i] 2 SUN G00D FOR | FROM 94 POUNDS MRS. GROSS PRAISES TANLAC YE ARS MORE TROUBLE OF LONG STANDING, | SAYS RESULTS ARE PRICELEss. : CMA “Before I took Tanlae I only “| | Swedish Authority Sees No weighed ninety-four pounds and floor or make the beds; but now I | Sunshine Supply weigh one hundred and thigty-two pees \be,” this remarkable statement was Stockholm, Jan, 3—“The stn can ; made, recently, by Mrs. Mabel Gross, Minn. |for another 86,000,000,000 years, and! «For nearly two years I had been |if human culture is to perish it will |in a seriously weakened condition |not be for lack of sunshine.” This ,and suffered nearly all of the time Stakes “etal WHEAT from headache and backache. My bean [nerves were beyond my control and ,was made in the course of a recent |I was terribly dizzy. I couldn't half |lecture by Dr. Svante Arrhenius, the |sleep and my stomach was so out | Swedish authority on astrophysics, /of order that even the sight of food in Nien OHS Ke abe nauseated me. eet ate bette ae “The benefits I have received from leseaane ries regarding solar Tanlac are priceless. I am now a : | perfectly well woman and my friends ) | “Suppose the sun were a mass of joften speak of how healthy I look. ‘ "said Dr, Arrhenius, in order to I certainly have a great deal to praise Tanlac for. Health is worth ‘ jillustrate his problem. “Giving ; |forth heat energy at the present rate, |everything, and that is what Tanlac | has meant to me. ) it would then have lasted only 4,000 years, or about half as the period| Tanlac is for sale at all good drug- ¢ known human history.’ But since | gists. there were living things of some| Over 35 million bottles sold. {kind on earth at least 1,000,000,000 -~Advertisement. ===} years ago, and since there has evi- — | statement SSSR | dently been very little deterioration | of the sun during that period of time | any theory of the expenditure of solar energy must provide for up-| wards of one hundred billion years.” | Though it is very difficult to in-| j |terpret Dr. Arrhenius in popular jlanguage, it may be of interest to| state his general theory. Heavenly bodies begin as cold nebulos masses S of hydrogen, helium and the so-eall Sa y ed nebulium, Light then ariss | through raido activity. The hydro- | gen is condensed to form the other}, %" Humbolt county, Cal, a man two elements, helium and nebulium, | Killed a catamount with an arrow, and from these develop a whole ser- | Much to the surprise of both. of heavier elements, the most undant of which is tron. After this stage hasbeen passed the radio- active elements again resolve them- selves into unstable elements and aa } produce helium. This chemical pro| When it comes to quail hunting cess, going on in cycles, accoun:s|most men are fine at shooting spar- for the lavish production of light | rows. and heat by the sun. met What becomes of dead suns and | stars? Dr. Annherius replied to this question that celestial bodics which have burned out may flame up again in case they happen to wander into nebulous regions where condensation and production of heat again takes place. Thus he explain-| ed the discoveries of new stars which | f 2 Aare are frequently announced by astron-| (he older you are the quicker Rineed. ristmas comes, and the younger Dr, Arrhenius paid a tribute to| You are the quicker it goes. the successful work of American as-} Hissar axed tronomers, remarking wistfully that,| You may think a boy carries erhay in addition to bright skies) they are | things in his pocket, but take a look also favored by ample funds for re-|in a woman’s handbag. search and experiment. = | | | Sims People who wear tight shoes may be glad to, learn a fire destroyed a shoe factory in Newton, N. J. Can’t : Quit The dangerous thing about shovel- + ing snow is you are liable to fall down on the job. Wojeiehowski is Poland’s new president even if he does sound like a typographical error. | |the law supply and demand, Philedalphia has had its worst dry spell in 103 years. Of course this refers to Philadelphia wexther. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS Los Angeles has a boy of 14 over + six feet tall. He certainly went west “ By Olive Barton Roberts Something new in injunctions: andighewauniwithithelcanntry: Corunna (Mich) business men are | ,-!ve been robbed!” he cried. so proud of the efficiency of their | Many of the wood folk and meadow mayor, Forrest B. Perry, that | folk go to sleep all winter. they're going to seek an injunc- But many of them only sleep-for|If the results differ from what you tion to make him run again. He | week or so at a time. | think, we will let you know. i One of these is Scramble Squirrel. | | Scramble sleeps awhile then wakes up long enough to get a good ‘meal out of his tree pantry. Then| the goés to sleep again. | After one of these sleeps, one day Scramble opened his eyes, then he | yawned ‘and stretched and finally sat up. “My, oh, my, but I'm hungry!” he exclaimed, jumping out of bed and Detroit will test speeders’ sanity. Yale students voluntarily decided to limit drinking, but some may think the sky is the limit. Turks began their wholesale deport- at’on. ‘In three days we reached Con- stentinople. On the way we were | stopped twice by Turkish soldiers. | But everywhere ‘t seemed, the Turks had heard the story of Caeserea. | When they saw my “gold teeth they | refrained from inteffering with me. | jinning over to his pantry door. “I “These teeth may not be what you| must have slept 10 years!” Americans call the ‘right style’, but | «Tut, tut, tut!” they have meant life and happiness | sige him. “Don't exaggerate, Scram. to me! |ble. You've only been asleep since |last Wednesday morning. I saw you! | put the last of your hickory nuts| jaway in your hickory nut, barrel.” | Scramble turned and beheld Dusty - | Coat, the little dwarf, looking at him. | | Dusty Coat, followed closely by Nan-| cy and Nick who wished themselves up in the tree, with their magic Green Shoes, - | “Oh, how do you do, friends,” said), , All of us make big mistakes, + among the biggest being setting an alarm clock an hour too early. Every bald man likes to say his wife did it, which is seldom true. They are kicking about the shells said a voice be-|a famous dancer wears, claimin, | the young lady shell shocks the pub- lie, O71 98 The trouble with New York bootles booze is you have to be drunk before you can drink the stuff. Cheap umbrellas last the longest. Carry one and no friend will take it by mistake for his. Artists and photographers say a woman’s face usually is more beau- tiful seen from the left side. BY CONDO Reader is wrong when he asks if r {Scramble politely. {won't you. “Have a seat,| I'll talk. to you when I| get a’ bite of lunch. Really, I'm al-| most. starved.” | “Certainly,” said Dusty Coat. “I! 36 niches make a coal yard. The situation is not quite so bad. What good if your past if you don’t use it for the future? just came to see if you wanted any | magic sleeping powder. I've got a| | Accoring to occulists, women gen> bagful.” i | | | erally have better eyesight than 1 “Sleeping powder!” laughed Scram- ble. “Not J, thank ‘you, sir, with| all my nice sweet nuts to eat. You! see I know just where to, put my| ey SP SVERY AND It Witt BS ate: a TiMsS SYAGT lw co Hen ane wack . e (Tw OUT, AND GET BuUsY wit SHeseck Boor or x CHARSS FOR“PROEGSSIONAL SERVICE’ i jhand ‘on every one of them.. This | barrel ‘is full of acorns, this one is | full of walnuts, this one of hazelnuts | and this one—” .¢ramble had been | | raising all the lids one by one and} | now. he happened to glance down. | ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! Suddenly he .gave'a gask. I’ve been robbed.” he cried. \ | “There’s not a nut left! It’s my | rascally cousin Rustle Red Squirrel, I know. He’s been here while I. was asleep. Oh, oh, oh! Winter here f and no food: What shall” do?” 4 “Take alittle of my sleeping pow-! : der and’’go to Dreamland,” said Dusty Coat softly. * a | “Vl do “it,” declared'::Seramblo. 4 NOUN | «Give it here at oncé.”. Dusty Coat| CU ADD ANOTHER] | shook a little on his tongue | (To Be Continued.) | fe g ! y i Unless you set the name “Bayer” v 5 on package or on tablets you are not hh see an Esuuine Sayer product } Prescribed by physicians over twen-. Ipha Lambda Rho, a fraternit; we {at the state university, was. paca Hides ay PED ANS, Drewen bate by, all: si a charter by. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Colds Headach at’ their biennial convention held in] Toothache Lombacs, Détroit, theseiter part of December.| Barschs Sheets »} Among the members of this organi- Neuralgia P: i - fart zation are ‘Archie Olson and Bernard Accept “Bayer Dablete, of Bidar Porter-“of Mandan. ya only. Hass mpbrpkan, package con- t luserauesocomeemncesnd ; ing proper directions. Handy bo: Beulah Coal, $5.50 ‘per ton, es ae twelve tablets cost few vents, ruggists also sell bottles of 24 delivered... Wachter Transfer | 100. Aspirin ts, the trade ack | - - Bayer Manufacture of fe. Phone: 62, A cldester of Salieyicacids ne t