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AGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SHIFT BURDEN OF TAXATION continued trom Fage 1) | ch is subject to taxation is to be t 75 percent of its value. essors » required to list thi perty at full value, and the as | sment is reduced 25 percent by | nty auditors after the state board | completed its equalization, The apply to the assessment | in 1923.’ i five cla of property on } partial exemptions were re- vd were farm machinery, dwell- ho wee , house- d furniture and working tools of nechanic Money and Credits ut little change was made in the concerning: and credits, EW TAX LAWS | | y Ww de he ich money so invested and used into competition with in the stock of to be assessed and taxes up- 4 same basis as bank stock, he | tes, adding that it is difficult to | mulate ny definite rule by | ich to determine whether money- capital is so used or invested ne ested rks i the aah $Qese customs of t during the Eighteenth Dynasty—3,509 ye the custom of the ancient Egyptians o' personal belongings, as well as toylike models of h to reconstruct the daily lives of these peoples, their we are able manufacturing food they ate and many of their scientific ass of property remaining ex- S belief PEUERUBIere: with the ‘single | ATG SNBIOUS Jelcss: i Hee OHOIEA! CAP The Esyptians of Tut-ankh-amen's Gay believed in the survival after death of a combined spirt This spiril as the Ad. food and drink in the after-life, it was] necessary that the dead take these things from because of their acts on zarth, could not reach Heaven, were doomed to cke ry In the eartl it it comes into competition with | an existence. im » business of national banks. iiieie sri yvisions laid down in this were: belicved re prompted by the federal i ainlikeveliein ear ating to taxation of national | gocire happine Ink stock. | sary t Slight changes in the inherita < law, an increase in the gasoline < and removal of the kerosene ta neal of the capital stock tax, t w income tax law, a law taxing | Al reserves and mineral reserves, + county budget law, limitation of | < levies law, the law to prohibit | uance of ants in excess of | nds on hands, requiring bond sales be advertised in all cases, reduc- m of the flat tax for hail insur- ce purposes from three to one-cent | acre, change in the penalty on | al estate taxes, repeal of the seed | d feed bonding law, and affecting | us of range stock for taxation | 8. Property Levy Lower The state general property levy | Il be distinctly lower because of | le income and other taxes, Mr.| nverse said, A new income tax law was sub- ituted for the law which has been | e nee 1919,” he said. The w law discontinues the exemption | income ‘from estate loans | real id from bank deposits in the hands residents of this state. The new lv also abolishes the persona] pro- rty tax offset and dise stinction which effect between earned and so-call unearned income. mpt to income from North Da- ta investments in the hands puresidents. A hcome iled discussion of it is not neces- ry at this time. “Much additional revenue will be Lrived from income taxes paid by dividuals under the new law, The creased revenue derived from the come tax and from the oi] tax will duce the amount of revenue for ate purposes which must be raised |; direct property taxation, and the ate levy will be substantially low- The tax limitation law, Mr. Con- | rse said, could not possibly have | sen made to apply to every condi- | on existing in different parts of | he state, and it for this rea- | on that a provision was inserted | aking it possible to autho: a| hyy up to 40 percent in excess of | he limitations contained in the sta- ate by majority vote and 50 per-) nt in excess by a two-thirds vote. | Ihe statute applies to levies for 023. The statute applies to vil- hges, cities, townships, counties and chool districts, he added, but not b park districts, and counties were mited only as to the amount which hay be levied for road and bridge urposes, the limitation being 2 1-2 hills The theory upon which other lounty expenditures were not limited has that county commissioners ossess virtually no discretion as to host county expenditures other than hose for roads and bridges, i ir, Converse. “They have absolute- ly no control over the amount of lourt expense which must be met, ir the amount of mileage which hust be paid to sheriffs and county luperintendents. They ‘have had no lontrol over the amount required to } jay mothers’ pensions, and there are hany other items of county expen- iture over which they have little r no control. The support of thej| insane is another illustration. It vas, therefore, thought that in plac- Ing a limitation upon levies for road Ind bridge purposes, a limitation fas being placed upon expenditures ‘ i s concerning county commissioners re by law vested with discretion.” Praises Legislature In praising the record of the leg- lature the tax commissioner said “One sometimes hears disparaging lomments concerning the ability or Mtelligence of legislators; but it ‘as the general observation of those yho desired to be fair in their riticism that the recent session of ihe legislature not only accomplish- ld an astonishingly large amount of vork in the short space. of, sixty lays, but that, upon the whole, the hembers managed, in some way or nother, to give to most of the pro- josed legislation careful considera- fion; and it may weil be doubted hether any other legislative body our country can show an equally reditable record of accomplishment sixty days, having regard both. to uanity and quality. This is not laying that they made no mistakes, udged from‘ my viewpoint, but that, it things considered, their achieve- ent was exceptionally creditable. “We fit the hard to fit in pmen’s shoes. Style and assured. Men’s It does not at- |» of |the gr this law does not |of the important events in his carthly ffective until next year, de- | existence. ilavishly equipped with the necessities and luxuries of life befitting so eminent the have to do w Translations hicroglyphics sh which had beer of the locai_god. food and drink was suppos it doubly effec BREAD COMMON 4,000 YEARS AGO The sacred -vritings on the walls, the votive offerings and the tombs them- selves, all show that bread making was @ well-known art among the Egyptians even 4,000 yea to placing the tombs shows hot d to be for the susten- | considered brea: | ance of the KAS of their departed dear ones. Several hundred years before the time of King Tut-ankh-amen, there lived in {Egypt a great prince of the | Dynasty named ntinues the | wetre was the has hitherto been |of the Royal Palace of King ep, TIT, and, in addit | ous, was immensely wealthy. ‘This Hfact enabled him io take with him to caref His a peractee) in 1920, an expedition from the Met- “SEX SPECIALIS BY MILTON BRONNER. ecial Cable to NEA Serv The Bismarck Tribune. Copyri 1923 by London, Ap created “b “superfluous solve vanced tod famed “sex These 20,000 old maids husbands, hor i enough men mates. eorge has tion to the ing from the sociologist, of the situati to the romant men over more to the war Ahan all gether,” s it i a tempo: 30 or 40 ye off the s eration will eration, as us! Loss man is worse fore the ground that war. “Whole her services. passed out o gether with that ex-servi has helped wages and th for them. ness way. capable; tha’ lines they: cot us. “One of thi were thrown during that world. worsé off as the women over been some charge. of wome “Those wh themselve: their tisfied—bee has been interested in ev “The present preponderance men ‘The present generation ne. next generation; and that next gen- ly divided between the sexes, “For the time being I think wo- | war, seems to have industries during the war in which woman sold “Socially there has been a big ad- vance for_women, men met women only socially. ing the war men met them in a busi- “Men learned that women were assigned to them; England was that the professions Learn Team Work. “During the war women learned to-do teamwork. The fricndships, and comradeships: formed among women cases been kept up; splendid thing for them and for the “Morally 1 think woman is ho consequent, preponderance been some hysteri talking and acting no one will gain- say. ButI do deny that it has been on any such scale as some people There are now and always have been.in the world three classes “Those who may be plucked, AS How Gut- #.000_ BY RESEARCH DEPARTMENT ~' co ‘ Washburn-Crosby Co., Minneapolis, Minn. ~ HP.OUGH the discoveries now being made at the tomb of Tui-ankh-amen near Luxor by the Earl of Carnarvon, thousands of people have gained their first glimpse of the King ‘Tut-ankh-amen reigned rs Yet, through f burying with the dead the things on earth, he ancient Egyptians. ago. processes, the kinds of I body ands combination was known order for the Kd to have, h. Those spirits which th of some of the ancier pow that it was a com- dy Egyptians that ceive bread and drink ! before the altar ing of the d to make and desirable. nb! Th ti discovered by chance a the plunderet room had been sealed. the replicas of his life Mehenkwetre had taken the grave. rs ago. The care given bread symbols in the yw essential the Egyptians years ago. leventh Mchenkwetre. Mehenk- Chancellor and Steward Mentuho- jon to being very| sa the whe: the ‘There with papyrus scrolls, e two in measi ropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, digging among the ruins of Mehenk-| wetre’s tomb, which had long since been pillaged and robbed of its ancient finery, the tomb which had been overlooked by For 4,000 years this In it were found “events which From an examination of these minia- ture replicas, many of which are now on exhibition in the Metropolitan Mu- seum, it is possible to obtain a clear idea of how bread was made 4,000 OVENS LIKE QUR WATER COOLERS as shows the granary sitting in the court aking count of the. and load it into Other men carry the grain Thome eae small room in with him to are the ever- ¢ yard men scoop up ully worked out replicas] and dump it into three large bins. ‘The before t bins the yes present a most realist body in the grave was| app< en after these thou-yof br sands of year floors still] perfe In covered with the original grain the hake n the front door with a OF 20,000,000 ‘A Service, Inc. pril 4.—-The ‘problems y Europe's 20,000,000 | women and girls will | s, in the opinion ad- by W. L. George, world- pecialist.” ),000 are doomed to die} normal desire for | mes and children un- ause there are not; to supply them with ! { | \ i paid particular atten- omplex problems a situation. Economist, | ist and novelist, he aspect on, from the biological | ie. of wo-| is due in the put to- herefore; in Europe losses of men other causes Georg situation, ra. 1 last} ” ANALYSIS PLIGHT The Wealth i cl An in | marck Boy | Boys Conf iso great in work and watching ad making to as a Bismarck Boys | haracter of Her Sons tation has come to the Bis- . Knowles Shield games night, jof three points |The strain and the excitement ‘time and again easy PROTOS UNDER Wwacd ¥ UNDE RweCo which barrel. had developed the art te of remarkable the mo i} first room, two women stoppered ju ta flour, One mau | wall. h cakes of dowzh !the m sion bringing their of Bismarck is in the to the?r feet. Ti attend the Olderj tied the score in at Fargo April 13, to nce Mary—J. Olson nce is to develope ala 2 points, hip and Ideals of and the Presamen won 10.to 11. The Wm. to 4 in the firs in ‘the two game: Saturda points on fouls. Lobach 11 points short Saints seored a ficld goal. boarding the goal in a desper The Wm. Moore first te: the Freshmen by the close score of Moore led by 6 half but the res anhkh-amen eVears her treads into a mash in a Nearby, the rising mash stands in four tall crocks while the yeast fer- nts, and, when it has finished work- her man pours it into a row igs which stand along the NNO OOOO Ol | peared that the holdérs of the shield were determined not to £ Both teams scored in quick sucees res ree minutes to go nd Jim Olson netted agfoul which order Richholt e it up. fans the ‘14 and 15, This Conference will be ‘held under the Auspices of the Y.| ate effort to pull the game out of M. C. A’s of North Dakota and | the fire when the nal whistle releav- Northern Minnesota and the State | ed the situation. Sunday School Association. The ob-| The teams lined up as\ follows: pt. 8 points, alser P 2, J. 2 point, Benser. lost to s particulars may | Roehrick, McCarty J. be had from Mr, MacLeod. Richholt—B. Klein Capt. 6 points, ‘Basket Ball—St. win the] H. Milde 2 points, J. Jochim ' Knowles Shield for F. Landers, G. Landers, E h | St. M cinched the City Cham- | pionship ating Richholt, 1 men foul shooter Lobach took ad- year's Champions, 12 to 10 in a very | vantage of Wm. Moore's fouls and \ close hard fought game. This makes | made five out of six tries for his | the fifth consecutive win for team; in fact Lobach did all the Mary’s and the second time scoring for the Freshmen, Wm. they have defeated the Moore had a fast team fouls ‘team. There was only a difference | were *their undoing. seored five field goals while the Freshmen scored, only three, but five The teams Freshmen—-F. Strauss, F, Wanner, W. Larson, Koleman, ll. ng . Then it 3 | \ game started with a rush, St. But the present gen- W. L. GEORGE 'M scoring the Wm. Moore—H% Hohn, Al Wat! be the parents of the the Richholt boy 2 points, R. Gobel 6 points, B. Jacob- “Those who are easily plucked. with another goal. St. Mary’s seor-| son 2 points, R. McGcttigan. ‘I don’t think the ual, will be about even- the es in Industry. | men, off than she was be-|get a pretty definite line on things. | sailed right into the game and nett- economically. She “There are three periods when! ed three field ‘goals for six poin' | team at the top of the second di lost. much of the married persons take their troubles! while St. Mary's were only able to] sion with two wins and she gained during the|to the divorce judge: ‘gather one. The score now stood 8 | game. were created They were totally Many of these have f existence. This, ‘to- the rightful insistence ice men be given jobs, beat down women’s hus made things harder up comes soon. Before the war, dured the yoke for Dur- dren had grown \up. it the could do the job that in certain uld hold their own with made. The backwash ie immediate resuJts in “I don’t believe the ‘open to women. of women who will “period have in many and that is a. men. would always figure a result of the war and of That there : hi that there has in thinking, men. Aoosene 0 can’t be plucked, has yppreciably changed the | numbers in the three classes of wo-| to Richholt’s If you watch the courts you | never to have been married at all.) could never get along, and the break-| “In the fifth or sixth year, the| | restless men and women who find) the marriage tie irksome. | “In the seventeenth to twentieth | year, those who have not found hap-! piness in ‘marriage but who have en-| they wanted to wait until the chil-! “Now during the war ter it there were a great many mar- riages which should never have been; seen in the divorce courts. is now rapidly diminishing. i of women over men in Europe will ‘ greatly increase either the number lives or form illegitimate urions or who will go into nunneries, “The average woman doesn’t thini about this excess of women And even if she did, she would not take the subject to herself. one of those who were going to ve married and not ong of those who were going to be an’ old maid.” Kendell ow he Nols! Ouy over © MAIL US ‘YOUR FILMS ©, aftermath of the ¢ i \ H | “In the first year, those who ought to 7 in favor of Richholt and it ap- ed on a foul and rd of the half stood 5 In the second half the Champions a field goal and 2 5 points second and the 2. ato 2 score. Th The game between the Freshnien teams was won by ‘the Freshmen by defeat for the Richholt puts the St. Mary’s second Richholt second one tie The Teams—Freshmen—-C, McGro- re DSomen grind- Ing ea ata |] resent day il tr The t pestles; women grind the flour between round stones; men mix the dough and make fancifully shaped loaves and cakes which others bake in ovens shaped some what like our water coolers. The most usual shape of bread was a small round loaf resembling the modern fin, Curiously enough, there have CUPID, BEGONE! Yvonne Gardelle, dancer and act- ress (shown here) married her f ter-father, Carlton Gardelle, sculp- tor. Now. she asks Los Angeles courts to grant her a divorce, charging cruelty. rie 3 points, C. Danrot, Fitch, H. B. Holta, M. Gordon ang A. Von Hagen, Richholt—T. Nelson 2 points, H. Same oven been found loaves shaped like the modern Vienna bread and sprinkled on top with seeds. ‘These investigations and habits of the ancient Egy that bread, then as now, was a basic part of the people’s-dict. ‘The persist- ence of this habit through century upon century is evidence enough that man has never been able to discover any etter “staff of life”. ime, month. ittle will meet the Wm, Mary's will pl outcome of th fect St. Mary’ cl because they have the good. Referee, J O'Hare; Time ter next fer Ed. Alfson and official scorer f ect the mythical egal ck Bur Friday. he Cardi: Good s will Scroggins, S. Marquette, T. Ander- son, H. Danrot, A. Cordner and P. Mowry. Next Saturday will see the close of the league games when Richholt incompatible, | years becaust! “and just af-' from this was! But that preponderan lead immoral over She that she was. 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Everybody’s«saying. it’s” Undertaker : BN < DAY PHONE PERRY See aia Pichure J A unique feature of ancient Egyptian bread making was the practice of bak- ing a large number of loaves at one According to the “Statement of Bread”, written in hieroglyphics on the tomb of Hekanakht in 2004 grand total of 7,000 loaves was baked by this notable on a single occasion be- fore he left for one of his periodic trips to sce the sights of Memphis, ORIENTAL BAKING LITTLE CHANGED TODAY _Today, the descendants of these an- cient Egyptians bake only every other ‘Their bread is in the form of tle biscuits which seem to keep i definitely but which become so hard in I ON Cs. VS ay the Fr ances for the Shield Clem Saturd: There were no game: on WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1928 Be a Model of MEHENKWETRE's ee eee asibwas — x found: top removed . 50 nts may be see Ramans of bre €rom ancient vil! 2000 B.C. Above PICTURES COURTES' METROPOMTAN MUSEUM ‘OF aRr oven age the course of time that they must be well soaked before they can be eaten. The methods of milling flour and baki bread used in Palestine today? are little different from those used in the days of Tut-ankh-amen in Egypt, One im- provement that has been made is a slight increase in the weight of the crushing stone. The oven in use today is almost exactly like that of 4,000 years ago. GREAT PROGRESS OF MOD- ERN BREAD-MAKING IN THE UNITED STATES The bread eaten by these ancient Egyptians and: their modern descend- ants may make us more appreciative of the “staff of life” which we cat today. Our carefully grown wheat, our mills producing beautiful white flour, our modern, clean tile ovens in scientifically perfect bakeries, all combine to give us a bread which would haVe been cake to the people of even a few hundred ycars ago. Pound for pound and dollar for dollar our modern bread is probably the cheap: est and best food that man has ever known, of the practices yptians show B.C, a Moore ang St. shmen, The mes will not ef- Pi the senior 1 In the Junior League the Blac t will the Crows and 2 Sioux will meet the Dakotahs. * The Pioneer Grand Council will | | | Browns in meet two games to Scorer Herb Kelly. ss game and Jack lerb O'Har all city et meet on Monday night. . The Lineoln Pioneers of the Wach- ter School_willNmect on Wedne Re- Burke will des will meet on Thur ~ s will hold fort ay morning at 9 Saturday The Conf¥: day night. he Young © usual Satur The -Pioncers and the Comrad: at 10: Yankees, nals Vv Paint and Varnish Products Prevent Desfruction R= Pe Wild Horses Could Hardly Do Worse! ~ “pms ‘and time again your furni- ture charges ‘across the floor, cutting, gouging and ripping the wood, * Again and again it stareps viciously down with steel-clad hoofe—grind- ing ugliness and ruin into the fibres. Stop this destruction! Apply Devoe Paint of Varnish to the floor. Then the wood, coated as with armor, will be protected against the worst thas furniture or hee's can do. The whole room will shine with added beauty! pa ’ A. E. SHIPP, Bismarck, N. D. WEBB BROTHERS | Embalmers Funeral Director Lieensed Embalmer in Charge 246 - NIGHT PHONES 246-887 UNDERTAKIN