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PAGE FOUR BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - : Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT Kresge Bldg. Marquette Bldg. =e PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D,, as Second Class EDITORIAL REVIEW |] Comments reproduced in this solumn may or psy ot express 3 pinion of ‘Ibu ry our readers may have both of important issues which are fying. Giscusseé im the the day. ‘ SECOND DISTRICT | CONGRESSMAN From sources which have been Fifth Ave. Bldg. | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS it _..The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use OF! word comes that past differences bitterly opposed to each other, in | the last six years, the encouraging republication of all news dispatches credited to it or NO$! have been settled and all is serene lished herein. otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- |in the second district—ag relates | the office of Congressman. Strange All rights of republication of special dispatches hcrein are ‘as this may ‘seem, coming from a also reserved. Daily by carrier, per year. Daily: by mail, per year (in Bismarck) sae cee eens see Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THE TEACHERS’ CONVENTION MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION a a SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE $7.20 | both parties is no little trick, but 7.20 \it is very apparent mow that a . 5.00 ‘Bismarck will be host in November to the members ot the North Dakota Education Association. that more It is expected | than 1,000 teachers of the state will be here. The! Association of Commerce is cooperating with the committees of the education association in hopes that a banner attend- ance can be secured. ‘Thomas Chalmers, leading baritone of the Metropolitan Opera company, ha: 1 ing’ an artist of this calibre to has been secured for two evenings. Bismarck is quite an under- Bring- tuking and one that the citizens of the city should support whole heartedly. The concert on the first evening will be complimentary to the teachers but on the second evening the public generally | will be given an opportunity to hear a rare musical treat. The education convention is the most important gather. ing Bismarck h: had in years and the responsibility ot | making the affair a success is a duty that rests upon each citizen. To successfully entertain such a number of -guests de- mands the best kind of cooperation this community affords and from time to time citizens will be called upon to serve and the response should be spontaneous. Let Bismarck make the 1923 convention one long to be | remembered. Roger Babson’ rather gloomy predictions for 1924 are | in sharp disagreement with some of the forecasts made by national bankers in the recent convention of the American Bankers’ Association. ¢f even a Babson going wrong. ) ORAL HYGIENE Few people realize and appreciave the amount of valuable | health teaching done in the public schools, especially on the} Of course there is always a chance subject of nutrition and the care of the mouth and teeth. The development of knowledge relating to these matters | has been very rapid the last few years and people are be- ginning to realize. moye and more that many of, the physical ills common today can be avoided by ‘the simple observance ct ‘certain well-proven|principles of hygiene. Leading public health workers have for years been trying to supply the public with reliable information, but the’ big problem has been to reach all the people and maintain an uninterrupted contact with them—a feature which is quite The public school offers the best essential for good results. opportunity for such a contact. The dental profession last year in cooperation with the school authorities developed a course of study in the schools} of the State so that the principles of mouth health are being | taught along with reading, writing and arithmetic. North Dakota dental association has been instrumental in} the publication of a text book, “A Study of Oral Hygiene,” : edited by Dr. R. A. Towne of Bismarck. _. While North Dakota is the first State to place Oral Hy-| ? giene into the schools as a course of study, some of the! larger cities cf the east, notably Bridgeport, Conn., have *peen -in the work long enough to show interesting results. After ten years of this kind of health work, the general “{mprovement in scholarship and general efficiency of the s.whole school system of Bridgeport was so marked that the | * profdsition which was looked upon as a questionable experi- : ment ten years ago is now considered so valuable and essen- tial to the welfare of the schools and the city generally that zin 1922 the department of Oral Hygiene received $45,000 ! from the school and health boards with which to enlarge | {upon and.continue the work. tutes this fall. been provided for carrying on the teaching. The dental profession, of “the drys #lis connection. ee ““ENGLAND’S TAXES, The é The teachers of North Dakota are very much interested | ‘in the work and are recétving training in the County Insti- 4 Special courses will be given in the Normal |defeat Congressman Young. | Schools throughout:the -year. Charts and text books have , the State is to be congratulated for responding to the call of the educators, and for their | ‘unselfish contribution to the ‘public welfare. It is a cause | vital enough to merit the support and cooperation of all j i people interested in the welfare of our future citizens. -A-headline in a Twin City paper declares that the “Open- f Jiquor sale-in Manitoba so orderly as to be almost | Of course it all.depends upon the viewpoint, but won’t agree that “solemn” is the suitable word in | <«., London bankers claim that the average Englishman! ak been paying about ‘50 times as much taxes as/| They reckon this on: the basis of tax! jeeeturns in June, latest month for which complete statistics ware available for both countries. The figuring is in terms ently has average German. = taé gold-value money.’ = It’s a good thing as, SARS PREC CAR, Ot LD ICAN HOMES SENSIBLE ‘ar more sensib! : A _ Americans, the people o! any other country. ‘The home is nine-tenths of Pres wr is DAIRY COW ‘' for the rest of the world that the Men ho engineered the collapse of the’ mark weren’t on the man general staff during the war .. .. Or were t le and convenient homes | declares isco woman after an extensive tour of the world. s is a more valuable asset to our nation than leader- in production of coal, manufacture of autos, and the any civilization, except to| ia ed glen hey ? | a San | in ‘district which has had the most jitter opposition the last cam- ign from each ‘side, pne mus: | look to the cause for the burying jof the hatchet. To unite upon one |man satisfactory to members of lregular prairie fire is going to | sweep through the second district jin the next primaries in the se ond with an avalanche ‘of vot jsending Gerald Nye of Cooper: }town to the next Congress after election. When the name of Mr. | Nye was first mentioned to us by a member who has been 100% IVA |for the past six years, we didn’ believe there was such an animi. We listened, hopefully we'll admit, to the tal® but didn’t Aake muc) | stock in it. Then from league sources comes fhe radio that Ger- ald Nye is the unanimous choice of every member of the league in the district. And thus for several weeks we have been ‘writing a number of letters and find ‘that Geo. M. Young, who has held the job for many years, is going to face the hardest battle of his c1- reer when he tangles for the re- publican nomination with Mr. Nye. Who is this Mr. Nye? Reader we will sum his standards und ding “Fair, Square, Trie and True, the Golden Rule Policy |To All.” Mr. Nye is a North Da- kota man of rs standing and has spent his life in the newspaper business. During the recent cam- paigns he conducted a monpartis.: | newspaper in the state in a strone IVA city. And when the people of that city found him the square shooter that he is, they staved olf all IVA attempts to establish an- jother newspaper there. But the did not edit one of those rabid, radi- cal, bolshevik shects, but instead gave a paper to his readers which was fair to both sides and sane minded. His was a paper whiclr won the esteem of both factions in the battles of the past and today the policy would tbe classed as a supporter of Nestos for his poli- cies today are almost the same as those that Nye espoused for years. But aside from his business ef- forts, Mr. Nye has taken a great lead in community, life. He has the united support lof all folks of jhis county, and the entire esteem as well, They know him to be ope2, honest, above board, infact, ‘they know ‘that as a. Congressman he will represent hig state and district as few ever have in the past. Watch Nye’s campaign, voters of the second district. cn ae * The above is from the Tower City Topics, and if we didn’ know that George J. Hefnze was sup- posed to be the editor of that p2- per, we would say that it sounds like the evaporings of one William Langer. However we have ‘heard of this great surprise yin political ctroles for some time and have been waiting for it to be sprung. We have no fight to make on Ger- ald P. Nye, but we do want to say that. we cannot see any remute possibility of the voters’of the sec- ond congressional district sending him to congress in the place of George M. Young. The present congressman has attained a posi- tion in congress where he is get- ting to be of real service to the people of the state and in addition to that is doing all that any, hu- man being can do to give service to the people of the right sort. Mr. Nye may be the unanimous choice of the league members of the second district and all that, but-we very much doubt it, but if should be& when the votes are counted he will still bo snort sev- eral thousand of having enough to We do no twant to go into any details of the newspaper situation at Cooperstown, but we could write quite a story of conditions there, were we so disposed, but we will let that rest. For some time now Heinze or some one else furnishing the motive power for his vaporings, have been seeing things, and we suggest that he or they, or who- ever it is, go and get some reai medical attention before they get too serlougs a case of brain storm. —Valley City Times-Record. HARDLY CREDIBLE The N. D. Commissioner of Immi- gration is reported to be making speeches in the eastern states, de- claiming ‘against. any government support in stabilising wheat prices, It is hardly credible that any offi- cial representing the wheat growers of this state, could object to any aid from any source, that will help pre- vent the further sale of farm lands, for taxes that go to-pay official sal- aries—Jamestown Alert. Is Champion House. Cleaner — “Your medi greatest cleaner I thought such stuff man. bei: younger since taking t! { Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, and am {telling everybody it js the champion house cleaner. My bloating in stom- ach and pains are all sone and I can eat anything.” It is'a sifople, harm- less preparation that removes the .eatarrhal ‘mucus, from the intestinal certainly the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE LETTER FROM SYDNEY CARTON py as I am sure‘you are going to TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT (' | jnake Leslie before you get through Of all dod-gasted fools, John Pres- cott, you are the dod-gastedast. In the first place it seems to me | with it, I never yet have been able to. an- swer the conundrum of why a wo- that anybody, with a wife id baby | man who seems so sane on other on his hands and a rattling, aod in-| matters, should fall. for a man—even come and prospects’ of steady im- as good a man as-you think you are (God help you!). : Perhaps it wns because the good God understood that unless the women were misled in regard to our general cussedness, the race would saan ‘die out, > ~ : : | I hate to,add to your troubles, but fa‘fviend of mine has just come from Los Angeles and tells me Paula Per- rier is earning five hundred dollars a week and probably will be earning provement in it, who would 7@tart to gamble in stocks has -lost- hj. mind. In the second place, if bY any possibility a man should bé@such A fool as to gamble in stocks ‘he would not be ‘so silly as to!y trugt Harry Ellington to be his’ brokef. Why, don’t you know that mgr has just escaped the law two or’) three times?. He is due for “asother smashup very soon. ‘i I'm ashamed of you, Jack; and I'm terribly angry with you. Perhaps| ‘thousand -within the next six more so beeause-it is impossible at| months. He tells me she is entire- the present time fér to help you, ly ‘alone out there. If’ that child on your doorstep be- longed to her as we suspect and if she cares as much for it 4s she seemed to when I saw her in New York, you can‘ make up your mind that she will try to get it back. There, I think I’vé said enough. Gvodbye, If you had written me four di sooner, I might .have given you the two thousand dollars I have just put into a couple of lots which I think are going to raise in value in the next six months, I don’t understand you, Jack. Tt wasn’t like you to say you were do- ing this because you were anxious to give Leslie and the boy something better than they had, Why hide be-! hind Leslie? Has she complained? I don’t think she has, From what I know of her it seems to me she has been a pretty good little sol- dier.* She has stood the gaff’ and carried on much better than you, if| Martin-Adams company was orkan- anyone should ask me. ized at Barney this week for the pur- Whenever I see one of you, chaps pope of selling potatoes. Officers are make such a damn fool of himself all. residents, of Barney ang afe as as you have been doing,'I'm mighty,| follows: J. V. Martin, president; glad I've never married. I would} C.,,W. Adams, secrefary-treasurer, not like to make any girl as unhap-4-and.A. E. Adams, Jr., as manager. ; S¥D. (Copyright, 1928, NEA’ Service, Inc.) Company Organized To Sell Potatoes Wahpeton, N. D., Sept. 28.—The 1 7, : = prs —_— =: -| much. are turning. Winter is few more baths. be out but never down, by football coaches. arithmetic wrong. go. lmay it wave.” taken for pearls. noses. Operation’ is’ simple. pees Christmas necktie: Due to the annua # against \ be two suits of underwear. Wouldn't. it. be great if an. old summer suit brought enough to get an overcoat out.of hock?. Don't keep your wife at home too may learn to , If you do she make salads, ~ . SThere ‘is money. for someone in putting up coal Jike cough drops to be sold in grug stores. There is. no: excuse for a’ bootleg- ger’s daughter staying single. ‘You can’t. convinee those who take up tickets at the movies that mar- riage makes two people. one. A man will cuss his stenographer all day because his wife refused ‘to cook hini‘ any ‘breakfast. anything to shoot ingy he e costs him. per hug. E cata Great success is To get it y: or too many. Baie. per cent intere: Eighth wonder of the world HAicTangle a. | ins coming pretty quick Lay in some more coal and take a 4 Dempsey whipped Firpo s0, now Firpo wants tp fight again, He may! One cause of trouble is fall is so pleasant you have to cuss. other things besides the wenther. : Boys are back in) cdllege again. Some get there by day coaches, some | Many a small boy is kept in after school because his father worked his Hairdressers’ say bobbed hair must Their’ cry: is, “The “hair, long’ Since oysters came back nine mil- lion pieces of stie}l have been mis- In spite of rumors during the summer women are not getting their fall styles from Scotland. Doctors are changing people’s Sticking yours* where doesn’t belong often changes it. Monkey gland ‘business continues. Gland goes from monkey to: monkey.’ Almost time for Thankagiving tar- key to call hunger strikes. Better start 4etting your whiskers grow now as preparednes: coal shortage the most popular.winter resort will When. going “hunting. without» license always. be careful not to:find ‘ One tells ue’ she Has a fellow 20 ; show ‘much it they're ‘all: fed and turned out. for either, work too;much it N. D. Boy Wins Health Contest At Interstate Fair Fargo, Sept. 28,—Victor Lindgren, Park River, N: D., won the health contest which was ‘a feature of the annual competition between boys and girls club teams of North “Central states at the’ Interstate fair, Sioux City, Iowa, Inst week, Lindgren scored 99.8, points, as the most per- fect physical spécimen of the boys competing from 11 states. : | North Dakota’s club teams, won second place in’ farm, sanitation, fourth place in home economics and seventh place in stock) judging in ‘competition with’ teams from 11 i states, at the Interstate fair. War Debts of District To Be Entirely Paid Mott, N. D., Sept. 28—F. G. Orr, local banker who is thé federal col- lection agent of the War Finance corporation for the district compris- ing the section west of the Missouri river in North and South Dakota, is authority for the statement that practically every dollar advanced in the territory will be repaid this fall despite small crops and,law prices on wheat. There still remains unpaid about $1,000,000-in, the district from the money advanced in the spring of 1922 through local banks to the farmers for seed and -feed expenses, but the comparatively small share owing by the North and South Da- kota farmers is rapidly being clegn- ed up. Mr. Orr expects to require about seven weeks to cover the ter- ritory in his district. Note Against Estate Stolen Linton, N. D., Sept. 28—A $1,300 note against the Mewing'estate, filed with County Judge Thomas, has been stolen from his office, The note was received several days ago from Winona, Minn., against the ‘Mewing estate, both makers of the Things are getting brighter right |note, the husbang and wife, being along. Even the leaves on the trees dead. Burned To Death . In Gas Explosion Grand Forks, N.'D,, Sept. 28—Roy Holliday, a well known, ‘farmer: of Reynolds, was fatally injured this week, as the result of an explosion of'a gasoline engine. He wag ex- amining the. oil tank,. holding a match high above his head when the explosion occurred.: He’ was taken to a Jocal hospital where he died a few. hours later. His parents, who sur vive him, had left only a’ few days before, for a visit in Springfield, Ill. Farmers To Leave Potatoes ‘In Ground : Fargo, Sept. 28.—Many farmers throughout - Clay-and--Caes counties are “hilling up? their potatoes and will leave them {n the ground as long as possible to prevent the dumping which has glutted-the market and: ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Roberts Barton Mister Dodger’s holige in the corn- field was nothing, more nor leas than a corn-shoek, +.) ; There’ were many.: other “corn- shocks in the ‘field and they all looked exactly alike, piled, up in points like Indian, wig-wams. 7 Bat they weren't alike at all—that is, Mister Dodger’s hose: was different from the others, as the Twins were to find out. , be Once inside the- narrow doorway they shouted with ‘delight, for ‘the large room| in’ Which they found themselves ‘was lighted’ up with jack. o’lanterns ‘and decorated with wutumn leaves pf every color. “Isn't it lovely!” exciaimed Nancy. “Why, it’s like Fairyland!” Di took,’pff his corn- t and knocked the ashes out ob pipe. “it is part of e said . mysteriously. “It's a great secret... No one knows it at all—or about me. And now if you, will sit down, I'll te}! you all about everything.” Down popped the Dwihs, » They had met many fairies on their ad- ventures but mone: more interesting than Mister Dodge: a they were anxious to hear whatihe had to a “It’s this way, children,” went on ‘the queer ’ little: fellew. “It's my duty to look after the barnyard: folk ‘and sée that’ nothing» happens to them. Dig you. ever think how the cows and pigs:and ‘sheep and chick- ens and‘ ducks andi:turkeys are al- lowed to ryn around all. day. without: a soul to look after them? 4Farmer Brown :thinks. that after Fairyland FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1923 Northwest News brokew the price, it is reported by O. M. Olgon, former Squnty agent of Clay county. Mr. Olson has been making a study of the potato situation and reports that this plan of hilling up the po- tatoes ang leaving them in the ground for a couple of weeks is per- tectly safe, “It is safe to leave potatoes in the ground until Oct. 10 to Oct. 15,” said Mr. Olson,.“provided they are hilled up with a cultivator so that potatoes exposed or lightly covered wil] be covered to a depth of a couple of inches. i Banker Suspected As Leader of Gang Of Auto Thieves Deadwood, S. D., Sept. 28.—The federal grand jury in session here indicted Julius E. Linde, president of the Citizens Bank and Trust com- pany, of Rapid City, on two counts, receiving and storing stolen automo- biles, and conspiracy to violate the national motor vehicle theft act. The bank is now in tHe hands of a bank examiner, who closed its doors sev- eral wéeks ago. Linde is suspected, according to members of the district United States attorney's office, of being one of the leaders of a band of auto thieves operating in South Dakota and nearby states. Two members of the gang were sentenced to Leaven- worth a year ago. Linde is’ out on $300 bail. Early N. D. Pioneer © Succumbs of Cancer Fargo, Sept. 28.-Mrs, Mary Krab- benhoft, an early pioneer of North Dakota, died Wednesday at a hospi- tal here, as the result of a cancer. With her husband, who preceded her in death, she came to this state 45 years ago, and gettled near Sabin. Her husband was one of the firey farmers of the valley to begin rais- ing potatoes, and was one of the first farmers to take up the better farming methods, Fiery Cross Is_ A Seen Near Flaxton Flaxton, N. D,, Sept. 28.—Was it merely the meaningless prank of some misguided ‘practical joker or was the burning of a fiery cross Sat- urday evening. on a state road near this village an indication that the Klan is organizing, * That is the question which has bothered a number of citizens of Flaxton since the pyrotechnic dis- Play attracted unanimous attention during the duration of the flames. The majority of the citizens, seem- ingly, have paid little attention, to the ‘demonstration, with the question of practical joke or adyance notice of Klannishness to come considered as of minor importance. M. E, CHURCH DEDICATED Valley City, N. D., Sept. 28—A new Methodist church was dedicated 14 miles, southwest of Spiritwood on Sunday by Rev. James Anderson, dis- trict superintendgnt. Rev. John S. Wilds of Valley City preached the dedicatory sermon, fol- lowed by dedication services of the church. “Not fanny at all!” cried Miste® Dodger: “You wouldn't see me now if you hadn't, your magic shoes. They not only take you any place you wish to go, but give you all sorts of fairy gifts besides. Well, well, well! Time’s going and we’ better get to work.” a (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) Shaft at.Pawnee Rock Marks Route Of Pioneers in West Topeka, Kan., Sept. 27.—In their campaign to place permanent mark- !ers along the routes of the pioneer wagon trains through Kansas, the women’s organizations of Kansas aeleeted as the site for the most ela- borate monument of all, the historic Pawnee Rock. It was here, histor- ians declare, that’ the most bloody battles with Indians oceurred in the old days of the Santa Fe Trail, which passes within a quarter of a mile of the rocky eminence, ) On the crest of the outcropping of eddigh, voleanie rock which, served as a natural look-out for the Pawnee Indians in their last stand against the whites’ invasion, a granite shaft, 40 feet in height, has been erected. In bold lettering at the base are the words “Pawnee Rock” and just con ee is an immense buffalo head, graved in‘ relief on the shaft, an the inscription: “In honor of the brave men and women, who passing over the Old Sante Fe Trail endured the hagd- ships of frontier life and blazed the a fath of civilization for posterit; It was through the efforts of « men’s organizations that a tyct of ‘about five acres was donated to the #tate as a park by Benjamin P. Un- ruh, in 1908. Year by year these or- ganizations have improyed th eday; that:that is al). there is to ity He expects::the cows to come t: milking time, and. the ‘at ‘roosting \, 8| wore wrist-watches when to do things.“ “Well, sir, ‘That with a granite gateway and observation tower, the mounting of two pieces of heavy field artillery and a flag pole, ‘and finally the gran- ite shaft. Though the éfforts of these or- ganizations scores of ‘granite mark- ers have been placed along the ori- ginal routes of the Santa (Fe, the Oregon and other historic trails in this state. i d * STATION AGENT INJURED. Fargo, Sept. 28.—The condition Francis is, | Mapleton | stati i} [agent, ‘who was injured when he was ‘struck bya N. P. ‘passenger train, is was pushing ay. ipa? rain, Phu, an. it shoving” . He. aue-