The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 27, 1923, Page 2

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PAGE TWO prHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “, Hntered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class . Daily ie carrier, per year............. cece cece eee + $7.20 | corn is not sold for cash,” replied | son county ai ee Gees ahi « Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) 7.2 |tie wheat mourners. “It makes entering the political arena of hei i ; in Ktat “do Bismarck). 5 OQ | little difference to the farmer what native state. During her term as . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5,00) ;, fae! price of corn so long as state librarian she married the late ‘ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.09 |iivstock sells well since the corn | William Cromwell, one of the best *% Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Foreign Representatives ” G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Publishers CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, DETROIT BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exelusively entitled to the use orfend unmarketable surplus of 20.- Tupublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANC! THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ! THE NEWEST REPUBLIC 2 2 Greece has joined the Jong list of nations in whieh ; Taonarchs have been deposed and republics formed. Al- } though political conditions in Greece are in turmoil at this Kresge Bldg. | : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE EDITORIAL REVIEW —SSS See Comments reproguceé in this column may or may not express the opnion of The Tribune. They are p§ sented bere in order that our readers muy have both sides of important {ssues which are being discussed in the press of the day. BY GLEXN GRISWOLD (Chicago Journal of Commerce) We heard recently a great cry of distress from agriculture because wheat had fallen below $1.00 a) ‘bushel. ‘There’ was a depressing 900,000 ruin. | Then came terrible stati ns | to show “us that the surplus was, much Jess than reported, was of | poor quality and not a matter of | great moment ximce wheat is less then 7 per cent of our agricultural | production. | “Ab, but wheat is one of our) three great money crops, while bushels and farmers faced | 4 | is all fed.” \ Specions as is this reasoning. | und important as wheat may be,| now comes a factor that sets both | arguments awry. For corn ig fast| becoming a cash crop and tenden- cies jn that direction already point to new affluence for a large part of | our agricultural world. Tat us consider the factors involved. Latest Big Noise in the Political Barnyard THURSDAY. | WOMAN By NEA Service Frankfort, Ky., Dec. 27.—Wonan- hood’s claim for high places in Amer- ican politics again has been vindi- cated, this time in Kentucky! f course, in a race of woman versus woman, there was no chance for a man. Cromwell of Frankfort just had to defeat Miss Elanor H. Wickliffe of Louisville for secretary of state Mrs Cromwell has-long been in when she was élected state librarian after a stormy session of an equally divided legislature. ties to energy, hard work and a constant devotion to the principles | of democracy,” explains Mrs. Crom- well. Mrs Cromwell was born in Simp- | known men in the state. After serving sutcessively as den- rolling clerk of the House of Repre- sentatives and a member Frankfort school board, Mrs. Crom- jwell entered the primary race, for secretary of state against Mrs. Mary Elliott Fidnery of Boyd county and won by a safe majority The secretary of state-elect has So Mrs! Emma Guy | politics in her state. starting in 1896 | “I feel I owe my successein poli- | of the. DECEMBER 27, 1923 CAPTURES OFFICE - | OF SECRETARY OF STATE MRS. EMMA GUY CROMWELL [clubs and of the Frat ‘ber of Commerce. lime, there is hope that Mr. Venizelos will place the govern Bumper Crops, Yet None Left taught classes in parliamentary law | Mrs. Cromv off , ment on a firm footing. Always a liberal, it is more than| After Soap cone ye tumipe at University Be Mette is a ae wo! io pllag)! : ! likely that Venizelos will make a constructive ¢ .|corn crops, there is practically no author pf a.text book on this sub- | importance in the history of Ke Lilke ly, yet Y ens los: will make a constructive pute we, |corn left. The visible supply, as jae at HORDEMCOE kny "WORN | tucky t mined effort to assure the permancy of the republic. He | reported by market statisticians,is | 3 “ey may rally the people and bend their energies toward a peace- |ulmost invisible. Ours is the only | a Spanner ful reconstruction program that will restore much of the |country in which corm is grown in| fed “oe Sleage Ate tiings -pan fter 1 . ‘ cor of P a os | pen to leave his magic dust-pa After 1 forme ae : Hallonie ne mmercial quantity. lowa raises | 3 ; E former glory of the Hellenic nation. more Indian corn than all the} around? I've swept up twelve times | checked, | The accession of Greece to the list of republics is espe-|world outside the United States. today after the Queen and my back | vigorous] | cially important in view of its possible effect on the Balkan | Other nations have never learn-| is nearly broken. The magic dust- | started to take down the oe intri j ed to eat or feed corn and may pan gets ’em all in a jiffy the min-|had put up on her hot states, where court intrigue and race and national hatreds Seat be ts ae Boe they tae! ute it touches the floor and I'm sure} “Why don't yc : have fomented many conflicts disastrous to all the Balkan | geyeloped a haw opaetile ‘of appar- he wouldn't mind letting me have jt down?” one of th ‘ states but of little avail to anyone of them. There is the jently unlimited consumptive ca- it.” é hx aatnate caine , {| “Bre ain't be'n a possibility that the action of Greece and the policy of | pacity for corn products, corn oil, ani RIE EE ee w rene Abii “itizenshi ay ultimately minimi: he da syrup, breakfast foods, starches said Nick. ete ty is?) | nailed up. e peace loving citizenship may u tima' ely minimize the Aner | cia oer” conilentette:.; -GUREmeS | = aE (To Be Continued.) alone?”—People’s Home of the frequent outbursts in the little Balkan states, stabilize [ports of these things are Jmitel | wnile each South Carolina delegate (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.) | i the economic conditions of all and lead them to a greater |almost solely by supply. Amer-. will represent only 656 Republican ; ‘They effort to improve the lot of the common people ic ans are developing suas tly voters. One South Carolina Repub- ® sede ” The former premier faced many difficult tasks in Greece ee tee ene Bort ot | ce tall tials catia] 34 8e nuenors jwe read, but ‘ rae ; r Rea - ore gest makers Of Republicans. In like manmer, 2,- | eres Pes during the war period. He has before him an equally trying |corn products went to his bankers 394 Mississippi Republicans will — - \ {gome till t begin ch task, but with perhaps greater possibilities than ever before. |some weeks ego and asked for a fave as much weight in the Con- | | hibition pri San D. z large loan, much larger than ‘he yention as 19,238 Minnesota Re-|LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT one els¢ that a woman can love a | But Who Are Guilty? a ‘ 5 jhad ever asked, to buy corn. He publicans. Similar comparisons TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, man very dearly and not respect him. AMERICAN VISITOR (in 1 } WILL END SYSTEM lepeeeed Hive ey ai might be made for other large Re- CONTINUED “Your love began to grow cold * . ho gave her. husband'|don)—Say, waiter, agkatet niyo | State officials of Alabama, headed by Governor William |wouta “be obtived to. close his Ta aicioereeta Goorvvenbipeniciaitl Bits Seabees nee ee en cue eneees pur ease of ae “igure for Christmas tells us |eVer laugh in this hotel? W. Brandon, are working to the-end that the ree lease plants. ‘The loan was made, the June should reach the nomination | a yeuson to myself for me feet of be, seaviiies Sars ‘Toves the man ane, there afe 741 mew swear words. F eagle coe eRe tem of that state will be abolished January 1. The pro- ‘tying of that mam hd something of a ticket through the interven-| j Slab ye honeet atin SACe. wa 2 aa .__ | had ‘complaints.— ki 4 tic-etlvance : bese] ely hon espects most. There is so much Apion ve au leacdins posed plan is for the state to lease several coal mines-from {0,30 with the edvan'e of corn and tion of these) Southern delegates) thing that we human beings maternal in a womun’s love. 1am, ,2%d a manip holgete ciginl a diss operators and use the convict labor in them. This, of course, |, husnel on the com he has stored, for it and against the wichee of | X"0%,” 1 continued, “must be ad- quite cure thut I would never love a jurwing is not enough. \ Fre to Asthma and is somewhat of a makeshift plan, but it would at least pee It couldn't be bought at today's the great Republican States upon Hea onl eee by de ae eee I a a Be 1 pa | H e a ¢ ote i 2 state c abume emove the blot of being the; price, however. This manufac-|whom the ticket must depend for}. Tiare Sahat Ae rere He eliet % eS ue jo not| Kissing too long without looking | ufferers 8 ae “4 ee rasa i prisoners |!¥Fer knows that prices may be|its success, the eaniest might | 92" Rath, is often in violent dis- know—in fact no one knows—just yp is dangerous. It may make | ay Fever Suiferers pnly state in the u 1 Aicking: pri softened as the new crop comes in,|easily be disastrous to Republican |°°? With the law of nuture. We the conditions that have led up to your nose grow crooked. to shameful degree is permitted. And if the system is abol- put he will buy the new crop and|hopes—Minneapolis Journal, have been taught to separate our Sydney's liaison with Paula Perier, - | Free Trial of Method That Anyone ished, it will make another victory for the North Dakota hold the old. He sees a greater pat raed e, brains, our senses, our reasdn and’ just what circumstances brought) Years ago, before so much rouge | ein in ean Diane citizens who began their fight on the inhuman system which batelty of om ffext year than thig SHOW YOUR CORN tS badabines ooo Ae eee arns Honea At ie eeeudeney snairu and pense, a eal suit didn’ . = eae aes nerds 4 s ‘egardless how much govern- u ni s . son into the background. But, need cleaning so often. . sent Martin Tabert to his death. ment figures may reek i 4 henvail i : i ae aa | = gures may be increased in| Bismarck isto put.on a big corn|™*!¢n all the while the mind and the/I am quite sure 1 know him well — Ss cams Vf alee aC RAMS — the final accounting. show on Jan. 22, 23, Mode first} Benses say be partners and frends enough to know that his dinachense) You can take an oid Christmas! We have a method for the cont = A Little Corn Left state corn show ever held in the} Just #s-husbands and wives may be has been on the job ever since that/horn and use it for a funnel, if you of Asthma, and we want to try it RUSSIAN VAUDEVILLE ._yy{,. There is little real corn land left) state. The purpose of this corn fa: | P#rtners and friends all through life. affair. That is why ne does not like|ever need a funnel ’ our expense. No matter whether i A Russian vaudeville’ show, the famed “Chauve Souris a je countTy, tet, 3 not my qd). Touexare® ne North beeen Ee it is oe ee Po all teen e here. peo et of his child : s s Bi foe A rae rae is of dane ae ding or re- { . % “a ; ae , saan ; +|planted to corn as often as wise| corn ranks with the best and to te!! emotion and sentiment and we have s him to the heart. That is the Jandy may be gradually w off | cent development, whether it is pre>- om PaO: dgnoun splhel ne a py Cs Grp aay crop rotation will permit. Hence! the world about it: (2). To en-| been taught that men are all reason psychology of human nature which|the seat of the trousers by putting ent as Chronic Asthma or Hay Fev | comes once in 10 years. Excellent production, artistic DUl|the conciusion that supply cannot|courage interest in corn raising and intellect, when if the truth were tells us the difference between right {Sandpaper in the chairs. | you should send for a free Tri \ nevertheless extremely interesting. ; _ [imerease apace ~ with demand.| among the farmers of the state known I think women are the hurd- and wrong. And yet according to fe jour method. No matter in what cli- | Some of our dramatic critics claim American vaudeville, Be Uo eee ee wee ate poche competition: » (3). ee es- | er pudentre sensible of the two undsmature and nature’s law, little Jack { as ie ney tare au | mute you live; no: matter han you 2 aris is crude. That’s > “O} 2S is” only is bec a cash crop! tal a standing of counties, 50 men the more eimot! is a splendid’ example of fes,|tache inhale steaming: | age or occupation, if you are troub!- by comparison, is crude. That's true. But “Chauve Souris” liu: it ig yecoming a sellers crop | that effort will be made in future. mental, Consequentiy: men and wo. He is the handsanert aed seen: | soft and comb out candy. ed with Asthma or Hay Fever, ou | is the CREAM of Russian vaudeville. The cream of Amer- i : ie i a and e e handsomest and most per 3 ! 18 tne wun ere ge . Another sidelight: In 1916 The! years to improve the quality of the men can never combine on the old fect baby physically that Ihave ever}... ST | method should relieve you prompt! ican vaudeville, gathered together in one show, would com- president of the orm e peat corn in ie ee paris. traditional basis any more than we known.” ‘ ey ayy be ran ared from ithe | We especially want to send it to fawies ‘ompany (that grea ckefeller | It is wholly a publicity scheme for can combine oi] and ime uch tes ance hair by cooking your head over night | phos, Beane Ah ohaleas | pare very favorably. Be ap. |experiment in making corn a cash! North Dakota, Farmers in Barnes “ny rrp te use meter, (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.)| in a bucket of kerosene. | quele all feria 6e iohalers,(a Distance lends enchantment. We imagine the AVER-|¢rop) sata in his annyal report to| county are raising as fine corn as think of this more and more so, where a si ei LS « AGE Russian vaudeville production is not any better than | stockholders that theré was no as-|is raised anywhere. We thope 72.1 70™. because I a oie Go Scrape the inside of anew pipe be Amaxears ces hive failed, We ent sens. set ale bend te cmon sot | ome thom bend A mae sae josres etn i [ADVENTURE OF [tore stcting io he See wagon arenes oe ave (ed Wek “(@hauve Souris,” Russian vaudeville, is not drawing as |<: \** ycar eo das low as 194.) to the corm show By Bisuane esx mired und respected THE vist aaers dee | that our method is designed to end a aig ? A dss Since then great earnings have ith.—Valley City Times-Record. feet ie ge TWIN =e iffi ae ahecalne big crowds as it deserves on its road tour out of New York.|jeen made und the stock has near pated 34 tees As y 2 ne mane ye s Christmas ties are all right, ermine brenging al] wheezing, The show is in Russian, which scares many people away |ly touched $140 a share. In 191¢|@——————___—______@ «er known, not including Karl Whit- Everybody else wears them. Go on, |4Nd all those terrible pa: 8. . 4 4 " ; ae te 4 ey iu 4 nat This free offer i® too important to y from the ticket office. Thousands would attend if they |¢orm svrup was exported in tin A Thought Se isdaeres eee aeesca By Olive Roberts Barton | don’t be so self-conscious. lpenee Se HaGae waite aaWiand 1g 6 ” cans and few went overseas. To quise, d realized it’s “an eye show,” and would be no more attractive | jay it is chipped in tank steamers, | @ Cee 2 Surprising: question. + | Suddenly Missez Bprat sniffed.| New silk stockings will last long- | begin the method at once. Send no / in English than in Russian or even Chinese. This leads to two conclusions: | Im the mouth of two or three wit- “Don't you respect Jack, Leslie? 1| She smelled something! Bacon fry-| o, j¢ washed before worn, and trim | Money. Simply ‘mail coupon below. 4 Another audience-chaser: Americans have the-notion, fret, that corn almost certainly | nesses shall every word™be estab- bares a ays fee a mas Fae ee EL lands!” ihe “erled,. springing [200% 12° nails, too. [Pe i Today—you even do not pay Pr ian literature ¢ i ay pee ssian | Will compensate agriculture many | lished.—2 Cor. 13:1. ct the’ man she loves. I felt my! 2 i e derieds springing, —~- | postage. ne eee id iether tet times for its lorses in wheat. Sec- ove going the moment I began to/MP from the floor like ® bouncing | In Mexico's ci@Ml war they do | e ‘ De eae 3 ond, farm land best suited for corn} The want of belief is a defect !s¢ ™y respect for Harry.” H " an eueve Ty “Chauve Souris” is a barrel of fun—several barre! The trouble with “Chauve Souris” attendance is the fault of. its advertising rather than of American taste. ON HALF TIME Claiming 400,000 school pupils in New York City are denied full-time study because of the shortage of schooi buildings, parents formed an association to fight for more growing will some day in the not distant future sell for more tian was paid in 1919 and 1920 by spec- ‘betting on protected This appe ulating farmers guck future ond shoertring margins. to be true for rea the on hat the time to buy anything is when nobody else wants it. which ought to be concealed where it capnot be overcome.—Switt. i nose? Do I smell bacon or do I not {smell bacon, my de “Yes, you do,” said Nancy. 1 © you didn’t, Ruth,” I answered. ou should know better than any ~ just had to try out some of the new ytin things and the ni@ ittle stove. ;And as the Butcher Man just left ja_nice piece of bacon I decided te jslice some off and fry it in my new :|frying pan.” = “I always did say Thursday was my ducky day! declared Missez everything but act civil, » \ Qur government is experimenting with hogs., Yes, real hogs. Not 'of- fice seekers. Department of Agriculture is try ing to teach hogs to bring home the bacon with morg lean. One-seventeenth of the world’s people live in the United States, ana schoolhouses. This association is now on the warpath. | Soret es a uld you mind putting on | should be glad of it. New York City already is spending more than $100 #) 4.) 4, T ascauit [""No, indeed!” said Nancy, tying as ited sale Ren ! nae P tte fle ies ame te Nationa epublic: j eam riee Ae for he Unites ates spends more o! year for each of its 978,000 pupils, but that seems to be in mittee. in jon her kitehen apron again. “I'd| oaucation than the rest of the worla, sufficient. session at Washington exhibited the same sort of coward- ; just love to.” ‘ cas ‘ : ‘iti ; ‘ i \""“Aand may 1 inquire,” went on |*¢t has so little. Other cities are in the same boat. Cities are rapidly jice about Southern representation | Misuez Sprat, “if.4¢ ai ‘quite t ‘ Fe ‘ becoming “impossible” for child-raising. After a city passes | that attacks Congress when @ rreap- \tar?” PERE $ quite, quite}, There are 6,500,000 illiterates in ; : ime acKin taba toria} College, qd defeat r i leggers, if there's ay ted gploring A Be ens Me apply iH pth a e loteat wae the Noy SLGGPING! “NGITHER |! POI end ue air iha eer iaslins WINTER COUGHS AND COLDS | _ to wood alcohol. vernment is criminally negligent in not) ‘There were 16 «nition Harding AI BoPY SL $0) J\at her. Usually when one has te Pewee at i | safeguarding the public against wood alcohol the same as it|votes in 1920. It reprosesitation 5 afi 7) Vihave one’s nose’ bandaged, he stays | With the changeable weather a certain point, it begins breeding wilderness disadvantages that cities were supposed to end. ot WHAT IS NEWS? What is “news”? No one has ever satisfactorily defined it, which is the chief reason so many newspaper men do not “last” more than a few years. In our business, you know, a man who starts young is a veteran warhorse at 35. Hundreds of thousands of women powdered their knees when skirts were extremely short.’ That didn’t attract pub- licity. But recently it was disclosed that Harry Lauder pow- ders his knees, and this still is appearing on the front page of newspapers, it being exceptional for a man to powder his ay ‘News is the unusual, barring the routine that affects #! of us. 4 - ‘COLOR CAN RED ' Color gasoline red, as a safety measure to prevent its 8 being mistaken for water, urges W. A. Jacobs. He's a gov- ernment chemical engineer. While we don’t doubt that a lot'of people ‘are buying disguised’ gasoline from their boot- restricts the sale ‘of all other poisons. CIGAR CARRIES “BOOZE” course; is the real gauge. Whisky at $10 a quart looks like i portionment is to be. made. Con- gress invariably makes the already unwicld House larger, rather than deprive any stand-still State of some’ of the seats it holds. In like manner the Committee declined to cut down Southern rep- resentation: even to the small ex- tent proposed in «tentative plain last October, and instead added more {ham a hundred delegates to the already ‘huge membership. This was done by giving each State that voted for Harding three extra delegates, makiniz a Convention of ia delegates, ug against 984 in * Thus the dangerous injustice of ‘over-representation for the South- ern Republica; ig ‘perpetuated. Twice at feast this has brought disaster to the party, by forcing nominations against the will of the reat Repwhlican States. The sec- ond nominations of both Harrison and Taft were be!) brought ut by Southern votes whieh repte- sented no strengii in the Hlec- were based ‘dire:tly on this vote, and.there-were a thousand seats in the Convention; -each ’ delegate would represent 16.000 ™epub'ican Thus each Minnesota delegate will WHAT'S THES IDEA THAT? | in g 7 HOW DO You. EXPECT A PER Sleep You’ ware “I'm afraid it has Some sticaks of | Jean in it,” said Nancy, “but you can cut them out if, you wish:” | It was Nick who. had thought of sending for Jack Sprat himself to come and help.the party} yout. Ie ran across the street and | brought Mister Jack over in a jiffy. | They were all having « fine time, when a sharp rap sounded on the front door, Before anybody could answer it it opened itself, and there stood the Maid-in-the- Garden. “Wel, I declare!” she exclaimed. “Is everybody in the world cating all the time? I just left the Queen at home in the kitchen eating bread and honey and here I come and fina you people at it, too!. I do believe i] that if all the trees were bread and ii] cheese’ and all the sea werc ink ,it | would disappear in. two bites and WHISTLING Uke there woudn’t be any. world left.” All this’ time nobody had said a single word. For that miatter, no- | body. got’a chance. But.there was | another reason. The Maid-in-the Garden had a bandage around her <& eo) ee SN INS in doors till it’s off. I mean urit the bandage is off—not the. nose! But ‘then, dear ony knows, per- haps the Maid-in-the-Garden’s nose aM SHIN + “That *teininds ne of what I came the happy | , the United States, which is ignor- | ance on-their part. About 35 per cent of London's war fows have married again. Beware ~ widows during leap*year. + Largest diamond in the world is worth $100,000, -but a small.one may be’prized more highly; *-; ! China is: behind ‘the times. A Peking Woman lived with her hubby 4G years before shooting him. A report that Cleveland will lose her presidential convention due to a liquor shortage is untrue. Weather is all a matter of habit. When it drops down to 96 in Africa 8 they start shivering. vo 3 Watch your overcoat in a restuu- rant on a cold d : A thermometer can’t» read the weather ‘man’s forecasts. ‘ which we have at this season of the year ‘coughs and‘colds ate ‘very pre- valent. Be prepated ‘for them, Have a bottle. of ‘FOLEY’S HONEY AND once used you’ will never be without ; The latest 1 carrier is a phoney cigar, hollow. \ It] voters of 1920... 1n that event, Min- If i i, se | TAR COMPOUND, ‘handy; ond with » carries one ‘rink Big sales. When you notice the extremes} 8¢°0ta would’have 32 eats, instead rh OF | TE fhe ince atekee it ott "| the tirst sign of w cough or cold take : j to, in to ge Na ior dnd carry it with: |°fthe 27 awarded her by the @om- ie | tr tit ‘sorry that we appear to|a dose and prevent # seriou’ ailment. - people have to go to, order et lquo! ‘ Casry, i mittee. But South Caroline, which 4 | he ‘to. greedy,” Ni , FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR COM- i: taal be i Orla anes Bhar goo oe. 3 Pri F t i330, on ecninwe Pipeat ta Friel HR] | her voice to. say. POUND has been perl eiatie fami- ure: e. Wete claim. he cd : sad HI | trying tO be fospitable. We're néw| ly cough rentedy for ovgs 85 yéars, { + Zz i 1 te to: Ihave. four, delegstes. bid S eePuasd, you ‘now. bringing prompt . relief and when desert stuff to us.” ) ner wren doad apn iippich bobo ps represent 19,238 Republican voters, | for,” 3ai the Maid-in-the-Garden it, FREE TRIAL COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 226-B Niagara and Hudson S' Buffalo, N. ¥. Send free trial of your method to: Convenient to all theaters, fay stations, the retail and

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