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PAGE FOUR i { + to mipdern Indians. . _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE rene ena ee Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck; N. D., as Second Class | ~ Matter. EDITORIAL REVIEW | Comments reproduced in_ this column may or may not express Suereetees Beane BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - Publishers the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides THOSE WHO EA MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1923” ’ T MUST WORK a up Buster. “I she said. ' “I wonden if I'm dreaming,” said| ‘Buster happily as the little girl! | nears, then picked like this one bes' SHE SAYS TANLAC “IS BEST OF ALL” | tucked him. under the arm, ist. Paul Woman Hecares (To Be Continued.) ((Copyr'ght, 1922, NEA Service.) Stomach Trouble Is Gone of important issues which are oeing discussed in the press of the day, Foreign Representatives ; G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - DETROIT HARIMTRELUIRG FAME Marquette Bldg. Kissy Bide. E PUBLICITY PAMPHLET é PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH If the Publicity Pamphlet issued NEW YORK G - - S Fifth Ave. Bldg. by the state prior to elections can _ ny m AGCAMATEN DDmGa | be pushed as a vehicle for advertis- 7 " MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [ing the personal business of the The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or “#ndidate, and there ig noting to republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- | "Inder such use, about the cheapest wise credited in this paper and also the local news published #vert-sing a man can buy is by herein. becoming a candidate for office, ‘ sae icq las i James E. Robinson, former Jus eae of republication of special dispatches herein are ice ot the Supreme Court, adver- da book he is writing through me EDP aaa the pa hlet. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION leNgerenronanty: a wueltecstol: seta lege president couldn't do. like- _ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE aries Daily by carrier, per year..............%. 0000006 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)................ 7.20 «$7.20 | sould teil 2 fine story about hool, the sui its gradu plendid course [he has outlined, all as an argu- He hi PILE MEBBE ILL For You WELL, IF You CHOP ALL This WOOD AND ARRANGE IT IN A NICE SEE IF 1. CAN DO SOMETHING \\ Z GZ aly | | PEOPLE’S FORUM |) —— EDUCATION, THE SOLUTION. | -| Jan. 6, 1923. | Editor Bismarck Tribune: S$ nce rcai’ng an article which ap-| | peared in a recent issue of the Tri-! Lune in regard to proposed legisla-| tion, making it unlawful for any | person to have liquor in his posses-| sion, reminds me of the recommend- | at ons that were made a few years ago to the Legislature which was then in sess‘on, in regard to prehib- it'ng the sale of cigarettes and cig- arette papers in the State. It was And She Has Gained 10 Pounds “Tanlac has meant healt® and hap- piness to me, and I thipk’ it out- | classes them all,” declared Mrs. Al- bert Kaping, highly respected resi- dent of 29 E 10th St, St. Paul, M.nn. “{ was so terribly run down my housework scemed like a mountain 0 me, and lots of, (qjes I hai to give up and rest. Iwas nervous, weak and had splittng headaches and awful dizzy spells. My stomach was so badly out of order almost everything I ate would sour and I suffered terribly from gas, heart- burn and a distressing smothering feeling. I. could not sleep nights, my back ached terribly, I lost weight till my clothes d'dn’t fit, and was contended that if the sale of these! was prohibited, the use of such would be lessened among our boys. Such a law was enacted and what | do we find today? We find that there in a generally wretched cond tion. “But now I get real joy out of caring for my house. Since taking Tanlac I have gained ten pounds, Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. . saises 6 OOD - THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ment for his election to office. It might cést the candidate about u 4 /$200, but he would reach 220,000 t (Established 1873) voters. | a aa eE pe eee = Perhaps the Publicity Pamphlet " "OTT rves some good purpose. The é : THE REAL you ‘orum could never see it as an} Some of us have our music in our souls instead of in our trumentality that lent itself to ‘more intelligent voting. It cost lot of money, and should be ¢ pensed with.-Fargo Forum. voices, says David Gibson, dean of business writers. So, in the last analysis, we’re all great singers. All we lack is the power of expression—a certain mechanical arrangement of flesh in the throat. The real you is revealed in what you like and appreciate, rather than what you can do. To? . ”, 4 ’ : We’re all singers, we’re all dancers, we're all artists. CHALLENGING THE MAN SALARIED The wage scale of union plaster- ers in St. Louis has been raised to | take effect Jan. 1, from $1.37% to Maybe we cannot paint a picture. But our souls have the 3150 an hour. At eight hours «| art sense—the desire to paint, also appreciation of art | 4 nd days a week thi when we view it at the museum. Flattering to the vanity, | means a weekly wage of $72. This baeirue. reward will be open to any union : plasterer who can work ardless —— of his grammar, the diplomats he All of us are inwardly clever, artistic, shrewd, wise and |h#s not or other disqualifications good. But only a few of us can express what we feel. The °! education or refinement. rest “can’t t it t.’ It’s like a cork in‘a | 1 | A spokesman for the contractors | rest “can’t get it out.” It’s like a cork in a bottle. justifies the new wage rate by the | You are reminded of this when a friend, with a voice like | fact of a shortage of plasterers to | filing a saw, tries to convey to you a melody he has heard ees me de ttl andliallure oF aes and which he is carrying in his soul. He has the message, | jrentice: hip. As is the demand all right, but he can’t get it across. , r service so shall be the reward. | Wisdom resides in everv soul. So-called knowledge and | is a rule wien should work | ducati ‘ely are spades with which we uncover our |°Ut,i” labor as well as in busines educa’ Jon merely are spades | v which we COVE! | What is to be the result? hidden wisdom. The uncevering, we call “developing.” But |tendency to skilled labor scarcity the real power is there all the time, latent, dormant, other- | is universal. There is no reasox ris ore Wi *t be anvthi , jto suppose that the upward trend |; wise there wouldn’t be anything to develop. |will) bap confined! to) plasterers? i | wages alone. This means that, in | ithe end, the rent of the white-col- | | lar man, whose salary is even now We all have evil streaks in our make-up. The people we call good are the ones with the ability to keep their evil natures suppressed—locked up. Others haven’t yet found jauchiiers ena ror enee ore the key, so the evil runs at large. \living will become impossible, and, Good lies buried, dormant, in our make-up, same as evil. alary It also has to be uncovered (developed). A more diffi- cult job in some cases than others. Often it takes a heavy blow—sorrow or misfortune—to | bring out our better selves, our finer emotions. And some- times the same sorrow or misfortune sets loose the evil na- I1 if } manual worker. sor in a publi of the burdan placed upon the col-! 1 The |¢ | Towner 5 not raised, he will! Bluff, Phillipines, when 1 become a plasterer or other skilled | ins bring jin Lieutenang | who was wounded, and ’ Company, | A Washington university profes-| man gave coffee, and we visitg speech complains ;@ while,” Senator Atkin, “ ents who matriculate | calling w! NEA-SERVICE. LEGISLATIVE HALLS | on by Sperry of Burltigh] he thought about the next ses: ve it for tking of } planning to Mose Rosen cig is yunning county were hg yarns, i i se, ° y eereation; we invite Both found t ved in the of the third house, and; ple may have recreation; ey *hillipines. hi ull who will vote for him| tourists from the ends of the earth of Hollywood. to see the wonders of our justly Daley Ge! celebrated and widely advertised | Some of Walter Maddock’s political opponents are a bit quizzical—he’s smiling too much lately. th Dakota “IT rememb: W1899, after the skir re hillipines It was rumored that a_ petition ‘would be presented protesting all his harmony talk, with Carl Kosit- y, Alex Liederb: Dell Patter- son, and William Bauer among the isigners. “That was m rs coffee |) Rotarians in the house and sen- ANT MW EAN S for eve ¢ stroy an impertant part of the es- H { thetic value of good roads. We talk about inculcating love of the beau- | tiful as an antidote for social rest- we build roads at an enor- lessness; cost party ‘n order that peo- ou state, and then we permit the v sta to be plastered with signs conveying the inconsequential informat‘on that it as twelve miles to Bill Kidder'’s hardware store or that somebody's essence cf henbane is an excellent remedy for whatever als you; moreover, when these signs do pur- port to give useful data, they usually prevaricate. For information as to distance only authorized signs placed by the State Highway Commission are worth while. a for economic and other and theif. * 5 Soa igs good feed ates: Mes 2 there all the time waiting to be brought forth. the answer. There must ‘be a point Wwaso% and thellgan to attend the Rotary luncheon | r'ght to determine whether the moad- Theoretically you may disagree with some of this reason- ey whi gngcnan ee Recon The | Yeter illipine insurrec-| there, Pray citecitichallihe: uscdifoniadyers , ou can isagr vi ki aed Rep anemie al had been mighty ict tus ses or not. : ‘ou cannot disagree with the great truth lurking | Sa had ghty : wing purposes 0: ; Bae nee Y 4 z | white col r at other times}’ Reason for the climination of bill-| “Signboards erected on private in the back-ground. That truth is this: In the make-up oe patch. nearly every human there lie buried/ tremendous powers and ea marvelous abilities. To bring these out is the problem of| THE GOVERNOR'S MESSAGE life, of success, of happiness, of destiny. ; The Real You is a vast storehouse of treasures, waiting | to be opened. , One cannot read the message of | Gov. R. A. Nestos to the legislature without being impressed with the, executive has on state affairs at YOUR MASK ; |large. It is All criminals lie, but rare is the man who can stick tO} previous message to the law-mak- | a lie, says Michael Hughes, Chicago’s detective chief. ‘“We|ing body ever so thoroughly ¢ vel find a liar will tell a different version of the same story to ered the condition of affairs a almost everyone. So we lead a suspect into telling lies, then we-check him up, and finally in his mental confusion the! Tne document reflects clear, | truth comes out.” |sound thinking. Unlike the mess- | This bit of criminal psychology is based on the principle lees en here Geliverce St of multiple personality. In other words, that we present @ | int of rank partisanship, | separate and distinct and entirely different personality to each person we meet. The conclusion drawn j closely digesting the message 15) that R. A. Nestos is serving as gov- | Take your own case. In the presence of your mother you act a certain way, display a certain attitude. This is your personality, as mother sees it. , To another person, you are entirely different in actions and attitude. : Naturally, no two people see us in exactly the same light. ‘And naturally, we often disagree and argue about the merits or defects: of mutual acquaintances. You may con- sider an acquaintance o. k. Your friends may consider him lReen to helvasrsun ine legislature | n. g. Neither of you can understand the other’s attitude. ‘eould do no better than follow We all know people who are devils in public, but “mighty | without deviation the recommenda: | sweet to his mother, and that atones for a lot.” peene ce ne eevee ee | Another familiar expression: “Don’t mind him. He’s a teen jaia | A y 5 been laid down. The people of| good fellow when he’s sober. Liquor brings out hidden | North Dakota called in a clear] personalities. ; voice for certain changes and} i i i i elusi " | remedies. R, A. Nestos was elect- | Carry this analysis to its logical conclusion and every one | 7 Pevinee, toe enki aie tioaG| has a distinct and different personality for every person} changes. The sentiment of the| with whom he ever comes in contact, It is humanly impos-/ people was reiterated at the No-| | tiong to the legislature are aimed | {for the benefit of the people of all | factions. | The governor has drawn the} | plang for active work on the part) of law-makers. It is to be hoped | that the document that was turned | ‘over them today will serve as a! | very definite pattern for the meas- | da us remarkable grasp the independent | ill afe to state that no, dsqual {that given to the joint session of | night, the scnate aftd the house this year. | work. at | crowded yesterday, with many legis- lare sa after } dry law {ernor of all the people of North | He evolved a neat gcheme for regis | Dakota and that his recommenda- ; tering committee preferences—and sible to treat two people in exactly the same way—to exhibit vember election when Gov, Nestos | bullets were flying. bourds and s‘gnboards along our | publie highways has been advanced in the Narth Dakota Highway Com- «mission Bulletin as follows: “That a motorst while reading essle is disqualified, Judge Cooley | ten’ (10) words travels on an aver- rand Forks will sit in the Ca-| age of about 140 fect, a distance suf- in which Judge Johnson is} ficient to permit several kinds of ace'dents, He might run off the road or come in collision with another .|.machine. Advertising value depends |‘upon the extent to which signs are read and reading is: accomplished at the cost of safety, Doubtless the innocent vict’m of a collision would regard the price as altogether too high. “It is well to bear this phase of | the question ‘n mind. Constantly in- creasing travel makes it expedient to include no precaut on against acci- dent. Yet the older and. still_more impelling reason for holding road- ide signs a nuisance ‘s that they mar the scenery, spoil the picture of Morton county will supreme bench Wednes-| 1 cas which Judge nspecting the state penitent ‘hardened for the week’ Bismarck churches generally were there—and the moonshiners fied there'll be lifting of the lators Licut-Gov. Hyland set a precedent. EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO — ANS THE MORE L LOOK INTO THIS THEORY THAT THE GARTH 1S FLAT THES MORE IM INCLINED To AccEPT iT. ° ITHAS NEVER BEEN PROVED ABSOLUTGLY THAT THE! 4 EARTH IS ROUND, RAS ITF HAS mit ZY) property present a different problem the solution of which widl be reached through arousing a sound public sen- timent, which would be opposed to the practice. And wh'le, as we have suggested, the argument of safety has weight, no one need be ashamed to confess that he is ‘mfluenced by | the esthetic motive. It is no indica- ition of effeminacy or any kind of j weakhess for a man to take tlte | stand that as noble a prospect as the average drive in North Dakota presents to the comprehend'ng eye ought not to be descrated by the paint pot and lettering brush.” ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts “I like this one best,” she said. Buster Cinnamon Bear was asleey for the winter. : Nancy and Nick and Dusty Coat, the dwarf Sandman, had tucked him in and covered him up. Then thing: began to happen. He was wakened with a bump. had been dreaming that he was o toboggan-sle ride down a steep hill when bump— it- was all over! Suddenly a complaining voice said, “Say! Who do you think yout are, crowding in like this without being asked! Move over!” “Huh!” grunted Buster. “I didn’t He na are more cgarettes smoked than ever before and can be purchased in almost every town ‘n the state. ; It has madg law violators out of | hundreds of our best citizens, some | being even elders and, members of ; various churches. To make it unlaw- | ful for any person to have liquor | in his possession, will add thousands | q¢ law violators on the I’st and re-| quire almost half’ of the citizens | | to watch the other half. Any person who travels around the state, must! admit that there is-more liquor used today than ever before, in fact so, much that in some towns liquor can be found in every home excepting | | the parsonage, and then only after) some Sundays. I do not smoke or drink and hard- ly know what is best to stop the | use of I'quor or tobacco, but believe that a campaign of education con-! ducted by the State, proving to the | ity. Would accomplish more, then | by all the laws that will be enacted, | | I do not approve of saloons and trug lover of nature, de-| hope we will never see them again, | | but I am satisfied that no law will | stop people from us'ng tobacco or | liquor. The only way to stop its use | is injurious to health and prosper- | never have indigestion and all my aches and pains are gone. I take pleasure in recommending Tanlac.” Tanlac :s for sale by all good drug- gists, Over 35 mél‘on bottles sold.—Adv. Tom ) Sims Says A man slipped on walk and broke his lution, slippery side ew Year reso- human race that tobacco and liquor! 5° any holiday cigars were sold ithe price ofccabbuge may go. up. Our id&h! of the easiest job in the \world: ig} h good-looking rich girl marrying an ugly man, “Ladies First” is the men’s slogan when it is dishwashing time. ‘s by a campaign of education. MANDAN NEWS Auditor Makes Co. Appointments | County Auditor Lee Nichols Sat- jurday announced the appointments jof the county board of commission- ers in the public health service. | Dr. F. E. Bunting of Mandan was appointed superintendent of the coun- ty board of health; Dr. B.'S. Nicker- son, Mandan, county surgeon, and 'Dr. Geo. H. Spielman, Mandan, Dr, 0. C. Gaebe, New Salem, Dr. 0. T. Benson, Glen Ullin and Dr. DeMoully Flasher as county physicians. The appointees were receiving their notification of appointment to- day from the county auditor. A meeting of the Catholic Daugh- iters of America will be held Tuesday jafternoon at 3 ofclock sharp at the auditorium of the school. Instal- jlation of officers will take place at this meeting. |_ J.J. Reko returned Thursday night jfrom Oakes where he and his fam- ily had been guests during the holi- jdays of relatives. They also visited jin Hutchinson, Minn., with a sister of Mrs. Reko. Miss Ruth Rendon who has beon \spending the holidays here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. |Reden, left yesterday for Northfield, Minn, |to resume her work at the St. Olaf college. Mrs. H. G. Taylor and daughter, |Mae, left Thursday for Butte, Mont., |where the former will visit with friends. Miss Taylor continued on her way to San Pedro, Cal., where jshe is attending college. | (Sones | Lieut. Duane Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs: H. G. Taylor of this city, |who has been stationed on the U. S, S. Idaho in Pacific waters has been Promoted to senior lieutenant ac- honor places him second in command on the sh é 1 Dr. G. R. Lipp has moved | his office to the Little Bldg. | Office Tel. 742, ask to come here and I’m just as{ | Sr i crowded as you ere. Where am ‘f,| NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLO-| anyway?” j SURE SALE “Well, I declare!” said \the voice. | A Cincinnati man who expected a street tar to detour around his auto will recover, doctors think. Thinking you know is never Jimportant as kno+:ng you think. as Sleep is a great thing, It keeps some people from cussing the gov- ernment 24 hours a day, i : Sir Edward, an English Peer, will marry Lady Joan who for a while ‘was without a Peer. Money is not very important un- less you haven't any. “Don't Worry” makes a bette. motto when you add. “Others.” | Entirely too any girls get mar- ried to keep from being old maids. The most dangerous word in this language of ours is “yes.” | We often get mad and think the ship of state is a hardship. The ,rumor that Gerany is lapsing is four years old now. With forty million other things to hope for, some still insist on hoping the ex-kaiser’s wife beats him. A-traveler tells us at home unless they and throw cinders in col- he can’t sleep rock the bea his face. The question of the hour ‘is, “Is that blame clock right?” This world seems worse than it is because you never hear much about the bad things that don’t happen. bk ' Stand on your own rights and you can't be told where to get off. The best nation | in the world {explanation, is Just to be the first. for 1923 we say, “Shop Early.” | Stons In City d having a nice whizzy jcording to word received here, The| Monroe Berg of Cooperstown, wh? jteday began teaching mathematics jand supervising athletics at Under- {wood, visited Bismarck over Sunday with University friends, =a of North Dakota « ae ASPIRIN alysis; are uncanny almost to the point of being terrible. ; was given a tremendous majority | and both branches of ihe Heglala: | . ._ ; ture swung to the independents. Some philosopher said something about us entering the There is no reason. why the ing i we also! work outlined by the governor world alone and laying. it alone. To a large degree, ork cutlinan ye fuel AnveRtOr go tBrough life alone. . iend, | ‘etall. for it is exactly what the No matter how intimate we may become with friend, | omié of North Dakota want.— mother, father, wife or husband ,there is always something | minot Daily - we keep to ourselves. This hidden personality, safely masked, is the Real Self. ‘And none of us ever fully understands our real self. We think we do. Then comes a time when we think things over | in a bewildered sort of way and are unable to_ understand | certain of our actions. greatest mystery, n “universe is human personality. Our real selves, the same personality to both. ‘Urges Far East Language as Part Of Curriculum the most interesting thing’in the} Honolulu, Jan. 8.—Governor For- under an- |rington has requested the territor’al department of public instruction to |prenare a program for: the inclusion | of Far Fastern languages in the pud- lie school curriculum. i My thought is to find out what will) be necessary to place Or'ental lan-; gurmes on.practically the same bass as European foreign langnese’s in tl public schools on the mainiand.’ Governor Farrington said. “This is what will eventually be done, bee-"<¢ the people 0 do business on this side of the ‘world have the simel) Truth may be : INDIANS i i ; stranger than fiction, but not. when it comes NESEY eae Beene We stain, Bede harvested, last season, by the red mem engdhere 9 Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan. ide they raised aes items as 80,000 bushels of pota- nd 55,000 tons of hay. Baers a i bit somehow: we prefer fp cause for requiring a knowledge c*|- Oriental Iangauges that the business ortant 8, possibly, the feds i his: wild native state. emerges ou rapidly. on our continent. . pert Aicilon eock tobe standardize people and] men of the Atlantic have af. raqnir- ing a knowledge of Sprnish. Frencn hite civilization seem to mechanical and dull as possible. or other European langu = =| EVERY Day, AND (IN CVERY WAY, | THAT NUT (8 GOTTING eal == = —— = = —f — —" ee “Say fellows, this teddy-bear won-| Notice is hereby given that! i ders. where he is, Ha, ha! That’s| certain mortgage vexecuted pe oe a good joke.” |livered by Elmer Josephson and “Teddy-bear! I’m no more a teddy- | Olive Josephson, mortgagors, to F. L, bear than you are,” retorted Buster. “And I'd thank you kindly to tell me where I am.” “Well if you are no more a teddy- bear than I am, you are a teddy- bear just the same, for I’m a teddy- bear, myself,” said the other. “And we're both'in the a counter in a toy- store. But as it is night, the store is closed and the lights are out and we are all covered up with a big cloth. There were six bears in this counter before’ you camie, "You make | seven. Now you know all about it.” “Hoop de doodle!” bried Buster, “Am I really a teddy-bear, stuffed with sawdust-and sewed up at the seams? And have I shoe-buttons for eyes ‘n’ everything? I've always wanted to be one,so I could live in a house and play with the children, and hear the music. What's that?” “Hush\” said the other teddy-bear. “It's daylight now and the store is being opened. Soon they’ll take our cover off and customers. will come in and look around and buy.” “Will they buy mi ter. e 5 ye, ‘asked Bus- “Perhaps,” said the bear, \ ‘Just then the cover was lifted and a little girl with curls stood. beside the shopkeeper. She/looked. over the | Rogers, mortgagee, dated the first {day of December, 1919, and filed for | Fecord in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota on the Ist day of June, 1920, at 9 o'clock {8 m., and recorded in Book 162 of | Mortgages on page 78, will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage’ and hereinafter des: cribed, at the front door of the Court House in the County of Burleigh and | State of North Dakota, at the, hour [Of 2 o'clock p. m. on the 20th day of January, 1923, to satisfy the ;8mount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises des- eribed in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows: The Kast Half of the East half of Section 28; the ) West half of. Section 27 and the East half of Section 33, all in Town 142, N. of Range 76, W. There will be due upon such mortgage on the day of sale the sum of Six thousand four hundred and forty-nine and | 77-100 doll together with the | costa and disbursements at this fore- i Oheure: A ated at Wing, N. D., this 7th day of December, 1922. Say “Bayer” and Insist! AQ Unless’ you set the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Dayer product Prescribed by physicians over twen- ty-two years and braved safe by mil- lions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Pablets of Aspirin” only, Each unbroken package con- tains proper directions, Handy bo-- F. L. ROGERS, Mor G. OLGEIRSON, | wrney for Mortgagee, Wig, N.. Dakota 12-11-18-26 1-8-16 es of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggi: sell bottles of 24 and 100, Aspirin is the trade mark of, Bayer Manufacture of Monoacctica- [ cidester of Salicyltcacid. \ |