The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 9, 1923, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR rie THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as 4 Second Class Matter. BISMARC K TRIBUNE co. Comments reproduced in_ this column may or may not express th >» Tribune, They re in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, are Publishers | | Foreign Repre: entatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPAN CITICAGO Marquette Bldg. DETROIT Kresge Bldg. A SIMPLER SCHOOL CURRICUL ort on tac edu PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Ui ena attintatinate velop county NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | climax criticisms of our lower and EST g: adury school system that ha MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Keen growing to an ominous ASOT 0 a = | nutter, y dreams of going The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the 4 use or! back to conditions i st me een republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- | is feniecmeryeee te wen ina We wise credited in this paper and also the local news published | gi.¢ 0 an ible per do herein. | not bel many, of our All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are; schvo! tatee (ei i been also reserved. Fi Aer an fe aut the Amer- _MEMBE R AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCUL ATIQN Hv pause ue ae SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE __| Piss ind itls should. know, Daily by carrier, per year. CeO ie + $7.20) meaning of two great words, Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . SUDOU oe aay er Wha? we uo pol Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . GUO wuts dee Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. oye bess 16 6.00 | thoroughness.” oe ‘*: wee It is often saic aat the home THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER UBIY Coe atuennje nor UneutaUnUEEs (Established 1873) | to the teaching af asa and = = 2 an un burden is ‘ QUICK THINKER? ‘thrown upon the teachers by paren- tay neglect, Tais is deplorably true, but for that very reason the s ught to readjust itself Caught | mect the changed demand If you drive an auto, you've noticed that some people, | when in danger of being run over, jump more quickly than | others. At one end of the line is the pedestrian who, in a tight corner of traffic, also the power of instantaneous decision. That party knows | exactly what to do, makes up his mind quickly. The other extreme is the person who, suddenly trapped | in a maze of cars, loses his head and tries to jump in all} directions at once, so that the motorists haven’t the slightest | U#iming and not : 3 venient hitching idea which way to turn. | read to matrimony so as just has perfect control of himself, | #"™ #8. Pess ate the has So acning pro roa personnel of ion goes, there Heth caANAEREN improvement. teachers now enter their work a serious requiring careful simply as a con- post on the high They are aundi vst weer The speed with which you are able to make up your mind, | capped, however, by a situation be in emergency, is what the brain students now call one’s “re-} Which so much is’ required in the acti: j n ? way o administrative detail and ele Whale , f Pict tele se aoe the teaching of mulifarious ‘suir- How many seconds in your “reaction time”? That is, jects taat eh. acter building suffers long does it take to telegraph danger, or the need of quick | and th ¢ pupils too freque action, to your brain, then make decision and start the body ae Snel “ ae fy era uires carrying out orders without faltering? prolonged study to render profitable. Sania t that tod. so complex number of Let us face ization Nh there : “Reaction time is the in- | \ \ how | in A government bulletin n infinite val of time that elapses between the instant a sign or signal is seen and the necessary action started. A driver} ee 4 ue aud ee starts to pass another vehicle when suddenly a third vehic le}: tudy, m children the appears which may block his path. The driver must dec ilo eemsiioo On Mn ou L Hoole | whether to pass the vehicle or drop back. If his reaction | ee Tt ere ina a eal time is slow he may not realize the danger until too late to| inganiaslenis abNeeA unis but the avert an accident. stubborn fact nt the days are from bred | intellectual none too | ou The childr we! ive | we “The reacation time of some people is very solw and un- doubtedly is the cause of many accidents. Does the public safety require that such people be denied drivers’ licenses The Bureau of Public Roads is not yet ready such as. emerging ) | to advocate | ny then learned neitier such a policy, but considers that it should be investgiated | betes ner basketry, neither ee ed ae : a nor art forms (nor disparagemes as a possible safety measure. of uny of these subjects). but some A very able suggestion. Put into effect, it would climinate} how id learn to. be at least a fourth of auto drivers—and the to hard task until it was pedestrians. cent of same per f ences, it ae (diay soldtesl Gy ub Ulta ffamiecns hit What determines your “reaction time’? What makes| were in th Waen they got out one person quick to reach decision and act in emergency,| i life, which would have profited while another is slower? The answer leads us back to the] the™ ieee dee ee body’s endocrine glands, interest in which has lately been} which enabled them to i eclipsed by King Tut, Coue and the Chaplin-Negri incident.! problem and togits Cline: The adrenal glands, attached to the kidneys ,are the reg-| There is growing need that ulators of “reaction time.” ‘They really reserve energy in| ial’ anq splined Te te none emergency and telegraph through blood and nerves the! important to teach a few things well command to halt ac y in all parts of the body except the| than many things after a fashion. parts needed to extricate the body from the emergency. ; |‘, jicnoh eevere. ee erante Bleod is rushed to ase up the muscles needed “in a pinch.” | ¢61) jroper author! Sth — ingness to shun a task just beenuse AFRICAN ' [it is difficult, than to im Zobhua, native chief of Swaziland in Africa, visits Lon-| “little knowledge which is a dang- crous thing” about many unessen- don. The sights that impress him most are the rushing crowds and the snakes in the zoo. He says ,the hustle and bustle and mad rush and the roaring 0 traffic 2» sapped his energy and left him very tired, | Civilization is doing that to all of us, constantly. In ¢ our nerves have to withstand a frightful number of shocks. | The wise man goes to the country, to recuperate in peace } and quiet, as often as possible. Civilization at its best i more of a monster than a benefit. Airplanes to the rescue. They will break up the cities by enabling people to sc atter | and live in the country | tial subjects. -Minneapolis Jou COLDS The epidemic of grippe this winter reminds you that the | common cold is the worst disease pest inflicted on civili tion. By undermining general health, it indirectly is one of the leading life destroy The common cold, coming sev-! 4 eral times a year and year after year, would wear us out} eventually even if we had no other diseases. All very fine for scientists to search for a way to make, us live 200, years or to rejuvenate old age by monkey glands. | But the world is in greater need of something that will anni-| hilate colds—from the common type to grippe and flu. Med-} ical science has no greater field. ! as you gel Noth Ca lina ind the towns get newah, And even your motor-has, more pep The hookworm’s Iwnished, the coun- A lot more energy, The livest sign a ie pep and jz Northerner couldn't di ite than No'th Ca’lina! irms look fatter, the hamlets ain't Quite ignorant of th FORGETTING When the war ended, the average Englishman believed | that his country never would trade with Germany again on! @ big scale. | sight of They're building co and they're Yet John Bull, balancing his foreign trade books, finds |. Det content With sand and clay, but they use that England last year bought about 120 million dollars | worth of German goods. | ~ Have you observed how rapidly the war is being forgot- | Fie in our country? It’s fading in Europe, too, though at a! And lower rate. Hatreds would die a lot faster over there if Politicians were not pouring kerosene on the fire to hold their cement, And the mill hools look jood, re busy and the ou get to No'th Cal'tin: nat dreaming of da state's jobs. Time heals all wounds. | gone by, a 4 es modern glint in each mor FALSE i 4 There’s an old saying about “starving a fever and feed-| AM! the village belles and village | ing a cold.” Modern laboratory research proves that une Ave’ de vinirliy, drkagele nein eran Al eo way to get rid of a cold is to starve it. which flows When you have a cold, eat lightly. And go to bed. Al On Gotham’s streets. You must give! bv days in bed is more effective, for almost any iMness,) ‘em credit, ps an pills or other kinds of drugs. When you re on your, ape Oke fully awake, you ck, the heart has an easier job than’ when you're on Your) yu. meet the “boostah Goi boxe | and moving about. By going to bed when feeling out: the “whinah,” sorts, we relieve the heart of part of its customary bur-| As soon as you get to No'th Ca'lina! BERTOON pee EY, n, enabling it té rally our energy for an attack on disease | rms. | (Copyright, DN cercacaso: MON A THOUGHT . ae Wherefore do the wicked live, b: come ol —Job 21:7. If the wicked flourish, and thou suffer, be not discouraged; they are fatted for destruction, thou are diet- ee: for health. ete Tribune Want ‘Ads ‘Bring Kesuits Zobhua, tang of the black -natives\in Swaziland, Africa, impressed by “the streams of people with sad’ faces” in ndon. That always strikes visitors to cities who come m quiet parts of the earth. If you want to know what city congestion is doing to our tions and spirits, study the expressions on.the faces in ‘dense crowds of city streets. Nine out of ten look gloomy, And yet they cling to t the city. Do we love eh é Ge * ge and to have a healthy | yea, are mighty in power? | THE M. BY FE. PHU.LIPS OF PENHEIM | EVERETT TRUE (t DID. You BREAK THs SIGHTS CNTY AMENDMENT 3 BIRD “PRETTY S THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~* ‘"* ~~ FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1923 OF A “It was not my affair to search | procure one for her, but in vain, 1 ‘for him. That was a matter for the |had no choice but to offer her a 5 |She was looking very fragile andj solving the mystery of a crime, 1 I ah ARD jtired as she accepted my offer with LU’ i m generally prepared to, do my |g grateful smile and sank into a va- . Otherwise, 1 do not interfere. ; u J She curled up as gracefully 1 She laughed bitterly. cat and went fast asleep. When sh Copyright Phillips Oppenheim “Since he lett the Lodge that | opened her eyes, the people were night,” she replied, “and you kicked | streaming down the corridor in an- | your heels over ut the Dormy | gwer to the first call for dinner, House because of your parole, 1)" Have you eaten anything today?’ : have neither seen or heard of him.” | 1 inquired, BEGIN HERE TODAY Jissue the little r which I shall] <I suddenly realized with a little «Nothing, and Tam ravenou Vendetta begins between | presently prop u.”” : shock that she was plainly, almost | she admitted frankly. MICHAEL SAYERS, noted erimin ian Ob) king things) shabbily dr __pole read | my} T committed the atrocity of dining 1 5 rather for granted,” I reminded him.| thought in_most disturbing fashion.| yt jalf-past. five: Afterward she Sit NORMAN of Seot-|, “Your co-operation is a certainty,"| “A terrible neighborhood, this,! once more took a corner seat in my] lands vandea Beautiful |" tenlied with a smile. “There will| to frequent in one’s last year's gar-| compartment and lit a cigaret. She Nousemiaids be half a million fran, for you,| ments,” she observ smiling.” “I]was a good deal more like her old JANET ens him from Sir Norman {#2deyou must be getting short” of] was just thinking that [ should like | fog, Raters ee war |moyey. Furthermore, by a very} black-and-white-cheek tailored; «tfas your husband sent for you?" nce o aiticer Sent teasing coineid the brains of | suit. Would ygu like to buy me one,| asked bluntly. eet itn nah Saree oe eect iitrolted by your |Sir Norman? You really ought to. “The parole has expired,” she re-| poor am leper eee IP wneient. enemy. you know, We made terribly little | minded me. denownctent aa 14") | “The scheme i commend- out of that bank affa owing to] “Listen,” I continued: “I am not Na Cal eG Eel oe your flash of inspiration. _ fout to do the work of Scotland Yard. f |iesstexpound it “I admit the liability,” I replied. It do not know where your husband “will tell you a curipus story,"]“Which establishment shall wel may be hiding, My journey to Paris is approached by another! he proposed, ODES ck : has nothing to do with him or h criminal named Paul se "At heart I believe that Tam an] aff, Yet! you must understand , who offers to take him as a] Greyes T His Side honest woman,” she sighed. “I can-/this: If chance at any time should a plot to ruin a noted] 7 celebrated b: vn to England | 22t Pear the thought of your paying | put me upon his track, I should fol- | While awaiting an’ inter-| and eivilization by a stroll down | Cut notes for the adornment of my |tow it up and hand him over to jus- y with Gont at the Taverne Bond: Street on the morning after + Vou shall give me lunch in-| tice, Nothing,” I added, looking her is ‘Afte a eanenl ‘I am certainly very hungry.” | steadily in the eyes, “could’ alter my ish quite an aincmnnntean anaes 1 new city ta me. T met}, “% turned toward Regent’ Street | determination so far as that is con- with Sir Norman Greyes, When Gont | few acquaintances and exchanged | lunched in a restaurant of by-| cerned.” | Pee that Janet | prestings witht a couate. of Tega | gone fame, half bourgeois, half Bo-|° (Continued ,in Our ‘Next Issue) has been sent for to’ assist in the |Fhen, at the corner of Condua | temian. She would tell me nothing | ua : plot under considerati BeReRe ite Give eal tome cucemeriin Ot ex mannenmotgilitel or lof aher|| hems Ho epea Shren Janet Gtawas e eaa t somehow or other I For the moment 1 am puzzled," | me home, Sir Norman] fancied. reading between the lines, ADVENTURE OF (ee eneampomen ey samme Dupeleds) ie sau that life had become something of a tell you this, however, Your wife me\ shooting) the cpupera| teen | rete reed Tao THE TWINS wis ‘sent for according to my im-| said” she eontinued, “Tell wer my | Wecrstely for my judd bub ge 88/8) ‘Bcc! E Re ae ae Bus i MY) fused me hers. She angled for an- i ya vers: littlelabout |/ene as interesting as man- ne live Barton Roberts suet one it pode vere I ISe abou HRnamgs wal lH aa) intznehie/ns/ mii fie invital cia but ahookinerincad|| Tea Olena London who keep me well informed|; “Hach has its thrill,” 1 reptica,| “280 1 protened it. i \ 15) wiaUuthe inepenieaide-the as to what goes on your side of |{but you must remember that I long hese meetings with you,” she} paper that was in the last egg tho the Channel; and from certain| ago ceased to be a professional hunt: declared, “stimulate me more than T| Cut-Out Woman had given to the (things I have heard, 1 came to the |er of m i can tell'‘ygu, but they leave behind | Twins, | conélusion that she was the one per-| “So that is why you have let my aA iW 4 Aannet acting: HH It said, “When you go up the lad- son who could bring to a successful | husband D Jon, Sir Neca not just eet ah {der knock once on the chimney, BY CONDO SUPPERY TH ORNING, CVERETT HAR. HARI ] A FEATHER | | ‘question of France's attitude toward determined to make Germany . brewing at Jagainst Lutarde. It has been gested to us that a thoroughly | able secret-service man from this | side might be of assistance in un-! raveling it, You follow me, I hope. | { Sir Norman? | "1 think so,” I admitted. “But what. is the nature of the plot?” “One can only surmise,” Lord | Hampden replied. “We do not be- lieve, however, that it is assassina- tion. That would only make «| martyr of Lutarde and sanctify his | cause, We want you to go over go/| Paris ‘and consult with a person whose name I will give you. You! will be backed by unquestionabte | | authority in any steps you may think | well to take, ‘It will be a difficult commission, and in a sense a vague, one; but I may say that, in the event of your achieving any success, the | Government Would consider _ itseif under the deepest debt of gratitu le | (DONT KNow WHICH OF MY BoYS | Like BETTER “I will do what I can, of cours?. {T promised. “When do I start?” | “We should like you to catch the o'clock train tomorrow morry the Cabinet-minister suggest f you will dine with me at eight o'clock tonight Terrace, I will furnish | every other detail.” on the following morning, in than 48 hours after amy return ;to England, I found myself going through the ordinary routine of the Continental tra r, registering my | luggage, arranging my smaller be- longings in the seat which had been reserved for me, and strolling back to the bookstall for a few final pur- There I came face to face | with Janet Stanfield, engaged upon | | the tusk. She was studying a ladies’ journal and looked up at the sound of my voice. She was frankly | bin’ Carlton you with she “Where you going’ ‘0 Paria,” 1 claimed, answered, “And lyou | “We are fellow-travelers,” she [said slowly. “Why did you not tell {me yesterda | “In an armed truce,” I pointed out |*the tants do not usually dis | close future pla I performed several small offices for her on the journey, for which I | uld see that she was thankful, At she had no reserved seat in crowded train, I did my best to | the 9 no nt seat. You have news of him? you, le any She pinned at her watch and bur- \Norman—not just yet, at twice on a shutter, and three times on the door of the domino house.” ried off. I had.ab idea that she was |, riae must mean Jack Straw's Feats ESSEC EET er ene housed cxiod) Nanex, Pay INS Ra tie ce “It certainly does!” said the called at my club, talked for an hour or two with some friends Andi tad in dug | tooster with the spectacle S uC for one am going to stay around to made my way ‘ Bis rooms. 1 was restles nee what shaprens: i ly disturbed, Fortunately, distra Well,.wolll heya nto) be starting Le cau wes right away," said Nick, “Goodby. “Mr, Rimmington has been wait-/' “Goodb eaGieameeaten ing for you for some time, sir,” my |, OM trotted Nancy and” Nick to servant announced, “He is in the; the place where Jack Straw’s house sitting-room with another gentfe-| Pun ‘round and ‘round on top of a man teeple. “My friend There stocd the magical ladder come me as I entered. I shook hands |anl there lay the magical mattress with his companion, who was known | in case they should fall off the magi- to me slightly. cal ladder. ‘The Chief asked me to bring Lord | Up, up, up climbed Nancy. rose eugerly to wel- Hampden to you,” Rimmington ex-| Up, up, up clambered Nic! plained. “He came this morning to And when they — reach Jack ask for your help in an affair which | Straw's house all the ee stopped is rather outside our province, The | Chief thought that you might be of | ning around. assistance.” They knocked once on the chim- “Let me” ‘hear, algut. it,” 1 begged |ney, and thrice on the shutter—and |then suldenly a voice’ called out. today,” Lord! “You can’t knock three times on my nge upon the | door for you don't know which domi- no the door i “Oh, yes we do!” said Nick. “King Even-Steven told us. It’s the domi- no with the double’ five on it.” And utteribost. farthing, and 0 lin that he kagukel: ene! two; thie auceze, the lant, drop of blood ont te c.-on Jerk Seas front door. cf her. The opposing party is all for | Suddenly binge Rang econ compromises, encourag ment of Gere) the h es hs ‘ie pice Liat man trade, and, even for a rapproche- ie e peuse phe geen .abon mien Satta Gevatany you, bare ot (soe Fn ANS ore pane se course, who is the leader of the pu- | TWins. But they ,anded on the soft mattress that came out of the egg triotic party?” : : “Lutarde, I/shoulll imagine.” janl that the Cut-Out Lady had giver. “Philippe Lutarde,” my visjtor as. | them. sented, “He is hated by the pro-|' Jack Straw tumbled, German party, as I will call them, |and all. ‘ first because of his bitter chmity| .“Wh+what’s toward Germany, secondly because ; gasped. of |his devotion to*-Bngland, and “Your houre fell down and now thirdly because of his unfaltering | you've no place tg live,” said Nancy. ude, An attempt was made upom|“You had better. give us your magic his life not long ago, and the French | ring so we can turn Mix-Up Land police have been instructed to watch | into Apple-Pie Land again” him night and day. Lately, however, | (To Be Continued.) there has been more uneasiness than | (Copyright, 1923, NEA NEA Service, Inc.) t | ever among Hae OTM | perty. ‘ is. I fear, t that the jief of the rant evince te] BEULAH COAL pow 84.78 present moment | ter Transfer Co. Phone 62." blowing, and the house stopped spin- “French ‘polities Hampden explained, “ Germany. There is a party--the pa triotie and. military party——fiercely | pay o the too, peg-leg happened?” he and there is, without doubt, a plot the Hlege to open a t If the Chicago man who paid = 000 for a kiss asks us, we know where they cost one ice cream soda. ‘The first sign of spring in Leba- non, Ore., was when people started worrying over a flood. One difference between us and Congress Congress has passe the income tax and we haven't. The first sign of spring in Seattle {was when a man remarried his di vorced wife, Trying to pronounce —Tutankh- amen has increased the number of stutterers in this country. George Washington — was the father of his country and Johnny Rockefeller is its rich uncle, her education ard’s famous half! does pay. Har ck has left col room. y seem to think mother of intervention. The first’ sign of spring in San Francisco was when a boy of cley eloped with a girl of ten. Two robbers who held up a New York actor wasted their time, More would live to the safe and sane age if it weren't for the un safe and. insane age first The sad thing about having a wire is when you look for something it has been hung up somewhere. People who long for the good old would hate to read this stuff Bobbed hair may come und bobbed hair may go, but making hairpins uses up 25,000 tons of stecl yearly. *Boston man wants a divo cause when he asked her how before be long. supper she said it with flour. A couple that shouldn't vorced is strawberries a he di- ds cream, Come on 1 spring fever. By W. W. Chalmers U.S. Representative From Ohio, { inth District. Early risers alwa of themselves, Two farmers were boasting of their achievements in that particu- lar, and one of them, resolved show up the other. Sé “he rose one morning about 2 o'clock, went over to his neighbor's house and knock- ed on the door. The neighbor's wife called out: “Who's there? “It's. Jim Place,” replied the vis- itor. “I'm looking for your husband. Where is he?” The wife scented mice “Why I don’t know swered. “I guess he’s out around the farm somewhere. I haven't seen him since early this morning.” ‘ 3 MANDAN NEWS Mrs. B, W. Shaw was elected pre sideht at the annual meeting of the Mandan chapter of the P. K. QO. Sis- terhood ‘held at the home of Mrs. Walter C. Tostevin Wednesday aft- ernoon. Other officers elected were: sare very proud to she an- E. W. Peterson, recording scc- retary; Mrs. George H. Wilson, cor- responding secretary; LBW. Miller, chaplain dnd Mrs, F. Ly- man, guard, Mathilda Thiele of New Salem und Grover Bahr of Almont were united in marriage by County Judge B. W. Shaw Wednesday afternoon. Helen R. Anderson and Harold C. Meye both of Flasher were united in ma riage by Judge Shaw yesterday, Members of the Sons and Daugh- ters of Norway lodges and_ th friends will he entertained at a party and dance this evening Rowe hall. \ Mrs. Thomas J. Kasper underwent an operation at the Deaconess hos- pital Thursday afternoon for acute appendcitis, Mrs, Lucien Diling of Schmidt en- tered the Deaconess hospital for me- dical treatment. { oe le Mrs, Carl Sunmark of Mandan who has been a patient for some time at the Deaconess hospital re- turned to his home yesterday, The Helen Burns Entertainers, a lyceum attraction, will appear’ in a Program at the high school building Friday night under the auspices of the junior class of that institution. The program will inlcude readings, piano, instrumental, and vocal solos. Miss Burns was formerly ingtruct- or att he Minot Normal last year and is unusually talented. PNEUMONIA... fick Over 17. era ss é i

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