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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. | BISMARCK TRIBUNE co. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may ‘not expret the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, eee EEEeeme A WORD FOR LIGNITE - Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - . 3 Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Sw ‘ 4 ot - « ie .) W7 it v YORK SERIE s Fifth Ave. Bldg.’ proposed solution to ee er a ny . 2eQ0 7 = | problems, and one calculated to MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS {reduce the high cost of heat and art ie am power. Their headquarters at Bismarck claims to have 965,- 000,000,000 tons of lignite coal in the state, which be shipped to Minnesota at prices very much less than the Eastern coal. Their coal is worth trying —as something must be done to reduce the demand for high priced fuel, — Carlton | (Minn.) Vidette. DETROIT | Kresge Bldg.| The North Dakota Lignite Cos Operators’ ‘associa The Associated Press is exciusively 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. “MBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVA Daily by carrier, per year. . Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) om on Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota..... JACKIE COOG SURPLUS VAL tire confidence cannot be din the news paper story that kie Coogan has been offered half million dollars and 60 per cent of tue profits from four p' a would complete his servi is u small boy with a p and eyes for film photography, plus unusual cleverness. Nobody who has seen him in Oliver Twist and in ‘THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) SPORTING SPIRIT | 4 If you want to get a man’s real number, study him when | gther productions will deny him he’s playing, not at work. Ten minutes on a golf course, | these credits. But for a young boy for instance, reveals more about a player’s real character | to demand in ae gate sums an a week in hi F annually greater than the average than a week in his of: \ | ager gatt ent le You ¢ tively men in a lifetime and a reversal of of actual values. , that picture anning wild and les up-side n also analyze a man by the recreation he instine- eecks. Real leaders have taken to golf because it’s a | § game in which they can actually participate as players. Un-} * like baseball, a form of theatr in which spectators tak no part except in paying the bil conception One might think jons were business prine & jdown in thus bidding for Jackie Recreation is the key to the psychology of nations, the CORO” | oo ay ido fe is not a same as individuals. Tne Germans accurately mirrored | yenius. Tare? aveuacavorapwa shane their national traits by their Turnverein gymnastic and | athletic movements—the members doing the same thing with | a solidarity, sterness and machine-like functioning as one | united movement. This spirit, of subordinating the indi- | vidual to the organization, was the war-time spirit of the German army and the home people back of the lines. dred, perhap§ a thousand American boys just as capable of screen cess as Jackie. Seemingly compe tive effort for similar boys for the movies has not been made. | Why not? Why is ail the competition centered on getting Jackie, and not on getting other boys just as clever and fit for juvenile parts as he? go to the advertising de- for the solution of this It will tell us that Jackie has a half million dollars’ worta of advertising behind him; that his value in the market is really the value of the advertising he has re- ceived. It will tell us that adverti ing adds to the value of anything that may be used for a profit, ani- mate or inanimate, that it is indeed jand in truth a creator of values | by the service it renders in acquaint- jing the public wita intrinsic values j—and it will be the truth.—Chicago | Journal of Commerce. In countries which have the bull-fight as national re: tion, the people naturally have the bull-fight spirit—espe- cially hero-worship and explosive emotions. Did the bull- fight spirit of the people create this bloody and cruel form | of contest, or did the contest make the people sink to its own | level? Which came first—egg or chicken? | The. Chinese take to chess, dominoes, and gambling, in| preference to active physical sports. So naturally the Chi-| nese are speculative business people, with philosophical chess | brains, and not inclined toward physical contests such as fist | fights or war. America and England have the Anglo-Saxion team spirit, which asserts itself in games like cricket, baseball and football. , _ Hach player constantly tries to make a star play for him- self, but his individualism does not make him forget that the team comes first. So one player is constantly watching to cover or neutralize the errors of his team-mates. ' THE PITY OF It i a | Nothing more pitiful has appeared in the news for along time than the account of the tragedy of John F. Manary, the Kansas legislator who Under this team attitude there is a genuine sporting spirit ; shot dee a wed Aeneey SAi@as & i i was a substantial’ and success such as you find in no other nations. The team may be | it ee cutie ban Haece beaten, but there-is-no personal humiliation involved. The Joser cheers the victor, the victor cheers the loser. They shake hands and practically forget the game, getting ready for another. The British fought the Boers. Then, about 15 years later, | you found the Boers helping the British fight. The team spirit had drawn them into the British team. ‘The French have no team spirit in their personalities. For sport they turn to fencing — two opponents, one to be victor, one the vanquished. It’s all highly individualistic, | Eee peration: no getting together and shaking hands after the duel. Probably this explains why France is unable to do team work even with her closest war-time ally, England. , “France goes it alone.” He had a family. He Stood well with his neighbors. In Topeka ae happen- ed to fall in with a fast crowd. He darnk a little too much, his friends tailed to look after him, he was ar- rested and when he came to aim- self remorse overcame him and he took refuge in a bullet. The very’ fact that he could not face his humiliation testified to his good career, to his inexperience in the sort of thing that preceded his death. If he had been hard boiled he would have laughed over his mis- |fortune. But he showed tie sensi- | tiveness of a boy who has done something that ne is ashamed of and is then found out. v4 | The tragedy reflects on’ the law = | enforcement conditions at the state | capital. But for poor John Manary RICHES an jand his family there can be only In New York state 1245 persons had incomes of more pity and sympathy.—Kansas City | Star. chen $100,000 a year apiece, in 1920. This is just made ; x public. I aa re Sa apes Each year the number of big incomes increases... THE CHANBEE UE EE ANE This distresses serious thinkers with socialistic minds. | But the average person is chiefly interested in the fact that there are more chances of his attaining a $100,000-a-year | income than formerly. The more plums on a tree, the more chances you have to get one of the plums. raise, her boyitgybe a lady’s \maid, hor a valet, nor yet a lap-dog. So he explains in his side of a | court. argument which resulted in ‘an interlocutory deérég) of divorce , We permit people to have incomes above $100,000 a year ; for Marseret Freon re prima because we hope to have such incomes ourselves. Big for- (enna of tae Metropolitan Opera tunes are created by majority desire, just as we wouldn’t| Glotzbach says, moreover, that he have any stage stars if the majority of us didn’t nurse a | would rather be a chauffeur in Cali- suppressed desire to be a great actor. |. fornia, as he was when Madame first ss sighted ‘nim, than to live in luxury F the petted adjunct of a New York iy “FITS” j singer. He seems, indeed, to be a 4 ; 1 ‘ fairly complete materialization of ; Here’s the latest gland news, and it’s a “heap slight” | what the Mise know as a “strong, more important than experimenting, on old men, with silent, red-blooded man of the out- monkey glands. | of-doors;” an addict of the “vast Dragstedt and Luckhardt, scientists at University of | 0Pe" sPacess” for one of the issues Chicago, discover that inherited functioning of the parathy- | HAIR Ge GE eee Raa Eee roid glands in the neck. Also, after two years of research | bed. That isn’t the Glotzbach icea work, these two scientists announce a way to control the ing) cf starting the day’s nutritional pro- herited kind of this dread disease. Next step may be a clan- | 8"8™. And jis inhibitions are run- i ning full time when it comes to hang- it cure for the other type of epilepsy, caused by shock jing around drese’ng-tables and trans- or blow. nie | lating gears and clutches into terms ‘ This discovery will save the taxpayers millions of dollars | of fominine attire. ; now spent yearly in caring for epileptics and their offspring | ne tigmatizing his, ex-wife as an r e ing 1 - rehild, he appropriates for himself in3public asylums. A big gift to America, tie sobriquet. “wild Seater ead : his late spouse evidently agrees that it suits him, for she obligingly supplies the name of a lady said to have helped materially in promot- ing his wildn Be that as it may, he has gone 4 ALCHEMY j since the Dark Ages, scientists have sought transmuta- how to change one of the basic,elements into another. | goal is finally in sight. In the research laboratory of | i ; een A 7 | back to his faithful taxi in ‘Del perry Gyroscope Co., chemists believe they have discovered | Monte, while : she eS anther onto change carbon into helium. They are checking up. j orderly; and the Great American Pe 4 A : odes, i: for | Husband is left, as ustal, to wonder ‘elium, which neither burns nor exp , is needed | just where he’ gets ‘off-+St. Paul figible airships, destined to dot the sky by thousands. \ ith scientists changing carbon info helium, you are not | Pfoneer, Press, pger f being laughed at wh t that f | @——--—____________» Seer Or ei mil be changed int gold, °"° °'|* PEOPLE'S FORUM| u b eo . ae 5 b 5 treet, editer, Cheater ar hig, se ag never| - Oriando, Florida, , ; lace of the newspaper as a distributor of news. vi Feb. Jet, 1928; sed h-drivers had nilar ideas-about the first rail-|: The venthoe neve in very ¢ when.they heard of-the) Some days ¢! ecry.” ‘a “ sround 80 degrees above events. slong be- warm of Jangary, it whereas ‘the nor: 3 fox the ‘month, normal for the m bein. 137 inch }mal is over 3 in an aver- , if not higher than that. Per- haps one-half of it has been gath- ered at this date. The quality is fine but northern apples seem to be ap- preciated even more than oranges, —they are too common! Building operations are quite extensive in this city at this Not only the proceeds from the Citrus fruit erop but, I fancy, the tourist money: from the north his aiding in the apparent prosperity. It cannot be denied, how- that Florida is being developed ouite rapidly and may in time-equal California; but they do not have the soil fertility here that prevails in the “Golden State.” They ‘boast of producing a superior quality of Citrus fruits than those produced on the Pacific Coast. It may be that my taste has been perverted but I a wi MANDAN NEWS Local Basketball The Mandan ball team won the return game from Glendive high Saturday evening dy tured by guards in the fi and Giendiv Ma THE FOG Team Wins From Glendive, 35 to 17 th of F. on high school basket- The Roths score of 35 to 17 in a game fea- the work of the Mandan half of the game surprising comeback of in the cond period. This inth su sive victory for the trict the Mandan reiled up eighteen points us e Benz, cause of the delayed train will pro- bably not be played as the Mandan schedule is filled. The Mandan Commercial club en- tertained yesterday at noon about 75 farmers and a few, business men | at dinner att he Lewis & Clark hotel | occasion of the visit agricultural the Northern Pacific railway. here agent o° Jury chiller vs. in the City which has been on trial in the dis-| court returned the full amount asked, $500. case of Jacot of Mandan a verdict for Miss Wilhelmina Paul and Aloysi- x were united in marriage yes - | and hauled out a square envelope like the quality very: much, grown out» west We had the pleasure of listening in the first. half and held the Daw- son, county team to only four free throws ending the half 18 to 4. In the second half Mandan scored 17 terday morning at 8 o'clock at the home of the bride’s parents, by Rev. | Fr. Clement. The couple was attend- | ed by Miss Catherine Paul, sister of, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1923 \ ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS - By Olive Barton Roberts “Any mail for me today?” Nancy looked*over the counter of | the postoffice .window where people} ‘came to ask for their mail, but) { there wasn’t ‘anybody there. | So sHe went on helping Nick and} Mr. Stamps, the fairy postmaster, | ' to sort. the letters and put them into little boxes with numbers on | them. 7 | “Any mail for me today?” | This time Nick looked. But still | nobody was there. “That's queer!” he remarked. I ‘was sure I heard somebody. Bye ‘n’ | bye he went back to his work. | “Any mail for me-today?” | “For goodness sake!” cried Mr.| | Stamps, “Who ig.it anyhow? There j must be somebody there. I'll look | myself.” “Boo!” said @,voice suddenly and | everybody jumped. | «Why, it’s Mr, Pim Pim, the | Brownie man!” cried Nancy with |a seveal of delight, “No wonder we | couldn’t see him, he’s so _ little. | There he is, on ‘the window sill.” Mr, Pim Pim walked right througp the iron bars, and sat down on an | ink bottle. “Hello! How’s everybody?” he said with a @heery smile. “I came} to see if anybody loves me~ well! enough or dislikes me un-well} enough to send me a valentine.” | Nick looked in Mr. Pim Pim’s box! “It's from Crookabone, the gnome,” cried the Brownie-man in | glee, “Oh, just wait till I read it to! | you. I'll bet it’s dreadful. He’s so} | jealous.” H “Magic mirror, tell me true, Who's the greater of us two, Mr. Pim or Crookabone, { | Brownie-man or elfish gnome? “Said the mirrcr, ‘What you asic, {Is for me an easy task, Pim Pim doesn’t know a thing, | You. dear sir, are really king. | “Ha, ha!” laughed Mr. Pim Pim. “What did I tell: you? One thing I know. I know that Crookabone wasn’t smart enough to write that valentine. I bet you he paid Jack Cut-Up five cents for it.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service) CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose with ; and mail it to Foley & Co, 2 ; Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Ill, writing your name and address clearly. You| | will receive in return a trial pack- age containing Foley’s Honey and | Tar Compound for coughs, colds and | expup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ail- ments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, au wholesome and thoroughly cleans- ing cathartic for constipation, bili- ousness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. SUMMONS last evening to the world-renowned Mme, Schumarin Heinke in the Beach- am Theatre of this city. I suppose and. Glendive 13 jpoints. took the scoring honors of the game Newgard the bride- and George Kupper. her singing was but my away above carly musical education, w par, by. dropping in six goals and Love also broke his uk of hard luck and dropped in five. Members of the Fortnightly club met this afternoon at the home of Mrs. A. H. Paterson, Floyd Glotabagh’s mother didn’t] rainfallfor Florida: was. pwzy: below |- sorely neglected, I fear, and I. w wishing, if not hoping, that the pres- ent Legislature will do something to lighten the burden of taxation in the state we love so well! If they fail to do so their names ought to be ‘Dennis, politipally, hereafter. They will prove to some of us that they ‘are not ‘big enough for the ‘igh’, 4nd should give way to better men. ‘Ve With best wishes for a prosper- ous year, I am, Very truly yours, H. A. ARMSTRONG. a ROVER’S CHANT | .By Berton. Braley | Let's go roll, roll, rolling down ‘the Toad)= : Tramp, tramp, tramping down the trail! Oh, we'll roam. roam, roam, till we come back home, Greeting every rover with a hail, hail, hail! Let's go blow, blow, blowing with ’ the wind, Swing, swing, swinging on along, Oh, we may not know where to go, go go, But the beat, beat, beat of our faring feet Is the drum of our marching song. Under the vault of the sky over- arching, We shall go marching, marching, marching, | Over the hilltop and down in’ the hollow, Following paths that the wanderers follow; Who has the heart and the soul of a@ rover, Weary of doing things over and i over? a Let him be one of us, treading the loam, ; Round the wide world, round the wide world, Round the wide world and home} ; Come, come, come along, us, Hum, hum, hum a roving song with us! “ Sun, wind and rain and the free road befpre us, Hark to the beat of the chorus; Let’s go-roll, roll, rolling down the road, i Tramp, tramp, tramping down the trail, For we'll roam, roam, till we come back home, Greeting ‘every rover hail, hail! | Copyright, 1928, along with with ah: eis Twilde 2. at Beach which was ‘called off De- | EVERETT TRUE |. BY CONDO ‘| LTO WAVE You Foe MY ‘(CONTRACTOR TO BUILDIPILL'S NEW Home: loUT ON THE AVENUE THAT'S ONG Haves JUST Com.- NEA Service), ia Free’ throws—Burdick 6; St. Cyr Subs—For Mandan, Arthur and Glendive—Twilde and Alver. als—Stanley and Vogel. Beach Game Cancelled The game to have been played delega NOW, BSFORS LY Decine My NEW HousG, & Want TO SIZS UP Some SAmeLSES OF KoUR Woris. THAT You HAVE HANDLED HERE IN TOWN. PC eastern cities, ollowing her visit in Avoca, |been filed in the office of the Cletk Mr. and Mrs. A. Moline returned |of your failure to appear or answer, ye: | Following is the summary and not “carried away” with it as much | ,, Fellov ; as some others pretended to be, jud- ie d nana Corer le eR rehey se dss 4 ie therapplause they sgaye: thea Burdick, it allie aleextatoragsvernindayene We expect to return to North Da- Newsard, rf. ve Core pea? oy former amathe; kota in April, if the mud is not ton| Hevd pocies teacher uu ths. local blah deep to permit our motoring through se ae q 4 it. Tam not looking forward to as} Wiliams, Mise 7 Ritchey) Sill prscesds toy Chi pleasant and enjoyable a trip as we Tbip nee staat had motoring from the Northwest,| 8% Cyr f ng there _mo | Serdotz, f, for about ten days before both young In coming here we encountered no ; e Roe eee ee ener a RERUGEMAEAC. ladies leave for a trip through the at all, We came vin Washington City,| Cavenaueh, B. Pave) EET but contemplate returning via At-| MePonald, ee ee cone Teen Goals—Burdick 3; Newgard 6; nbie, sCHALRRCOR ACES Pass Williams 1; Cavanaugh 3; | last evening from a month’s trip to ate eTsD. IT'S +>: Mrs. Elizabeth Dow, district de- puty of the Women’s Benefit Asso- ciation of the Maccabees will be a of the local lodge to the quadrennial state convention of the order which opens im, Fargo Thurs- day, Feb. 8, You may} : oe Doctor: i GuUSSss You've SEEN IT. | To 366 ITI! tee TORN DOWN HAVE & Seen IT FYE 6VERYBoOY IN TOWN HAD PUSNTY CHANCS* IT WAS UNDER, CON, t Coucmmit Ter WHETHGR IX WAS BEING BUILT OR BEING In district court, Fourth Judicial District of the State of North Da- {kota, County of Burleigh. Carlos N. Boynton Land Company, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. William Dougherty and Eugene Dougherty, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the jabove named defendants: You are hereby summoned to an- swer to the complaint of the above named plaintiff which complaint has of the District Court in and for Burleigh County, North Dakota, and to serve a copy of your answer 6n the subscriber at his office in the City of Bismarck, North. Dakota, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive lof the ‘day of service, and in case judgment jvill be taken against you by defaul€ for the relief prayed for in_the complaint. Dated this 3ist day of December, | 1922. kd SCOTT CAMERON, J Attorney for Plaintiff, residence and postoffice address,’ Bismarck, North Dakota. ),16,23,30-2:6,13 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE | Default having occurred in the condition of the mortgage hereinafter described, notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage executed and delivered by Floyd J, Niles, a single man, mortgagor, to Edwin Beadle mortgagee, dated the 29th day of April, 1913, and filed for record i the office of the register of deeds the county’ of Burleigh and state North Dakota on’ the 3ist day May, ‘1913, and recorded therein book 111 of Mortgage Record pages 350 and 351, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described at the front door of the court house of Burleigh county, North Dakota, in the tity of Bismarck, in Burleign county, North Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., on the 9th day of March A, D. 1923/to satisfy the Harding says’ Uncle Sam paysy he goes now. Wish Sam would sta, Illinois minister has married 3001 couples and is still at large. Man in Alaska got Cuba on the radio. Which isn’t so much. We got central on the telephone. Great Britain is getting bchind with her crisis facing. Giant cobra in New York zoo has shed its skin. They will skin any-- body in that town: All France has gotten out of the Ruhr is coal minus. Census shows the U. S. has 63 424,- 000 hogs which Ieaves only one-thir:l of us who are not. What's in a name? A: famous opera singer is named Gigli. Rest assured that even if Turkey does fight England it will not cut off our Turkish baths. Sam Gompers spent his seventy- third birthday working, which may explain why he has reached 73. Mount Clemens (Mich.) aviator fell four miles and wee vninjured, but it is a dangerous habit, gggp Five sailors almost drowned off Sandy Hook because the nearest land was a mile away and under them. The difference between a night- gown and an evening dress is two yards in favor of the nightgown. Only reliable first sign of spring is when we see the last sign of winter. Who says wine improves with age? None is as good as it once was, , A man and his wife are one even though they sound like a dozen. Very few people like lettuce and yet it has a good heart. What this country needs is for , prices to be reduced 100 percent. Only thing around the house that never gets in the way is the yard. Dempsey’s manager says he may fight three times this year. Sure, and it may freeze next July. Cheer up. About $13,000,000 less gum was chewed last year. ‘ csi Next couple seeking divorce will ley: corned beef and cabbage. The best thing about most things is that they don’t matter. “APITOL. By Charles R. Crist U. S. Representative From Georgia, Third District Sandy McDonald was-a bachelor, and well satisfied with his state. But ome evening when there was a full moon and the spring breeze was, soft and languorous, and the very leaves whispered of fove, he took a very pretty girl for a walk down a coun- try lane. And before he realized it he had proposed and been accepted! - Then he, was silent as he sudden- ly came to a full realization of his * precipitancy. But the girl seemed . to expect something more, “Sandy,” said she, “hae ye nothing more to say to me?” “No,” replied Sandy, “I’m thinkin’ I hae said more than enough al- ready,” | ATHOUGHT | (nA ile Srila He maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves thereof are still.— Ps, 117:29, Peace is always beautifuk——Walt Whitman. Beulah Coal now $5.25 de- amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale, The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as fol- lows, namel; The northeast quarter (NE%) of section thirty-four (84) in township one hundred and thirty-seven st) north, of range seventy-seven Avcst of the fifth principal meridian in Burleigh county, North Dakota. There will be due on ‘such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of four cents: ($998.84) [: disbursements ‘and expenses of this foreclosure. Dated this 28rd day of January, A. D. 1923. ' ROW DN BEADER: eee a jortgagee. GEORGE M, REGISTER, . apie Attorney for said mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. Es 1-28-30-—2-6-18-20-27 livered. Wachter Transfer Co. Phone 62. BROTHERS CHOSE |, SCHOOL WISELY . ‘They might have finished school Gooner bytaking a! short Ge°caies elsewhere, but O. B. and S. O. Graff preferred the thorough: methods of Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D. They knew that D..B. C. graduates ‘get ahead—nearly 230 tising to bank: officers, So would bank éashiers, O, B. Graff at the Grover. State Bank, 8. -O. Graff at the Hesper State Bank. ‘ iF “Follow the Succe$$ful.’”) Begin with Spring term, M: Sth. Be ready for a position in Fall. ‘Write ‘ F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front> , St, Fogo, N. De os | t _ oes a