The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 7, 1924, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matter. || Comments reproduced in this | a mi not express BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. EDITORIAL REVIEW i aS Rey A | jere in order that Publishers 4 ‘ have both sides of important issuq which are being discussed in”the press of the day, Foreign Representatives i G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | - DETROIT | Kresge Bldg. CHICAGO Marquette Bldg PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. CALL FOR A REAL LEADER The political whirligig has ween moving fast in Greece in the last] MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Evian, Gademmatin: wir | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or|acclaim and then ousted again republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not|Alexandgr died of a monkey's vite. | otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub-| (;"0"* cane Coat Gest bey | lished herein. : |Govermnents have come and gone All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are| Cabinets have risen and fallen. | also reserved |The tides of war ran fair and thea foul A lovely dr 1 of expansion MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SE a us pai) SUESCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, | ALG ewe MTA OEIE ieee OE Daily Be Sail nek yeee CA BISMATCK) sears cassie oe i and now hat u Veni ay shone | resplendent a then was wide tor to the best inte: Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.09 Now, for the time being, repub-| THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER the upper hand. ‘The (Established 1873) | ~ has no occupant. = has bi invited back | ae ee | Paris to t the reins of | BLACK CURTAIN |state, and he has ed. How| More people die in January than in any other month, the j long he sail ma * to be de. | Penee soinag venorts. as Si dition 92 | termine e is a str min | Censu : Bureau re ports, ba: ing its Intorma tion on 1921. A linehtnlly and In force: of « ctor. large life insurance company claims March has the greatest | 16 nas the wisdom of a statesman. | death toll, according to its records for 1920, 1921 and 1922. | Whatever some of the f | At any which begins around the first of the year and lasts until H summer. : F |that Greece shall be hap March is especially favorable to the undertaker. In | perons nnd progressive. s March comes the harvest of winter weather and winter |! ‘he ironies in the fates of na- h: t it 3 In lime tes that ha ee) ld Ri ters op! > get les: {tions that even some of those of habits. In climates that have cold winters, people get less jjjs country who tave their mis-| fresh air and outdoor exercise than in summer. now ¢ “run down” in the ability to fight invading disease germs. | inc is needed to Defenses are weakened, especially lungs and blood. March ae eo an comes. People pay for wintertime health negligence. March | fourths of the members of the n is a notorious friend of flu, pneumonia and organic heart }essembly have joined actually trouble. spirit, in king him to come ack to Athens and lend his lea in the new emergency sce may think of hi rest of the world ‘be i 11 patriot. honestly desirous: pros is one They get tgivings about him A that his genius Summer is the healthiest season, only one death in five |> t 1 \ The “grand old man” is not eag-| tuking place then. This, too, despite summertime hazards jer for a political fray. He wishes | ‘ % : i ers 1 at bh rd ¢ s such as autoing, boating and strenuous outdoor physical | it understood that h ql es 3 lare offered ony as temporary activi ‘ ielp in time of trouble. If he can | More auto deaths in August than any other month, the | right the Ship of State, he will be insurance people warn. That's the time to run your own sed. but he is well Safety' First campaign. |to accomplish that tas’ - 1 » must Ihave willing co-operation, {his desire to know just w § January leads all other months in suicides. The man next door suggests this may be a result of Christmas bills. ' April ranks second for suicides. It’s spring fever month—- this distance’ it appears hence! helped M THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE \ ¥, AS & a 4 a . Gork . WPF Gur’ i fe oe f a Conservatives {INE WILL SORTA is \ Gore Quiel DOWN — | fe) a i ie ELECTION | " ' Ieee TROIS RES ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Roberts Barton Nan n n and Na e the Ola lazy — the logical time for folks to try to escape effort and |), arrowed aie: < eee et Taaeee ul had trouble. m 1917 to 1920. Tae| They didn't guess for o There are more inviting subjects than death, we admit. ak came out wa a ai | that the ores demage But death is the final goal, the ultimate outcome of every |temers in Parte at Ble, Peace | House. Thos aidnte unow ; person and every endeavor. The world would be a better |tabies, and not a few there were] the sand tickled their 4 place in which to live if people gave more thought to the !who s he was the most impr very one of them had-s -urtaine ostinati: 9 > 3 . ein ane sive figure in that conclave. curtained destination at the end of the long, difficult road. |{0° Ri" isioned enough g ann “SOAgian ESE when the end of his usefulne WHAT BECOMES OF STARS the time was at hand, and he w ! 5 big enough to act in accord Star students—Phi Beta Kappa men—of 10 years ago |with what he siw. Now he gz are out in the world now and earning an average of $3000 2 {enough | overlook the adverse) Bee es part of his mast and respond to the! year apiece. The best mixers among their classmates—the ones most active in campus and oscial activiti aging $10,000 a year. summons of! a people in political travail. The world will watch w to discover what he does and s—are aver- So reports a professor at Univers of Michigan. does it. he fails—well, he| & return again to private life. 4 The star students, nevertheless, probably are more gen-|¢ontent with the knowledge a for Minnea poli 4; uinely successful than the mixers. Success is not altogether | ne * in money, not by a long shot. Income is not the only out-|) come. Not surprising, that students who are “good mixers” have found it easier to make big incomes than men of mental superiority. It doesn’t read this way in the platitudes, but | gave the best he h fare of Greece. — WORL 1|; personality and influence are as important as natural ability, asomnict asthe No Dale ke ‘ in getting ahead. : : . iN cultural College, made the asser A grouchy or otherwise disagreeable disposition is as tion wee the Sta ould tell the AReaandican acubel ee i ing in World about its 19: ‘op. a a a as “} ‘ b ac: A ri 3 much a handicap as being born with something lacking in Tholing! wilh thisjpoliey Gf ctelle the'upper story. D The lovable characters who fail are in the jn minority. And then their only failure is financial. g the World,” the A {Commerce of Bisn |moted what will be } | First Corn Show and wh ation of h wi SILLY PREJUDIC trom now, many of the bitter prejudices and bones of conten- tion of today will seem of 1797 seems to us today. tfon is curried on to much bettter udvantage. The constant increas: ing of the crop from year to year, {Will mean more hogs, more cows, | ridiculous as the silk hat episode | a more sheep, and more DISCOVERY OF A SKULL There is nothing tha Nort ‘ Looking backward: The most important delving into the! Kot 's certain that it needs to do more than to increase the numb of hogs, cows, sheep, and pou't Land which is good corn land i: auluable land because of the very ct that corn is one of the big ne- unknown past in 1923 was the discovery of the skull of a} man who lived 150,000 years ago in South America. Such} is the belief of one distinguished group of scientists. | Previously the anthropological experts doubted that man | (2c). 23" A : f existed on the American continent earlier than 20,000 Se aciMwene eee erae eal years ago. jsure basis for a steady aml cer-} People in the year 2000 may look back and classify this| tin farm income. : ei : 3 Any means employed which wil!) as, the most valuable contribution to knowledge in 1923. lhe of a nee in the work cf pro- | moting t? ing of corn is there- |fore worthwhile. The Forum b Thomas Jones, Boston College senior, rides 48 miles a eves. Hse the Corn Show at Bis- day on railroads between his home and school. Has to get Winine: na Hike. oad ae ore up early, the train from home leaving at six in the morning. | “tell the World” just what is being A man willing to go to all this bother to get an education | **¢owp ished certainly deserves big success after he graduates. The price! sia s “of knowledge is higher even than the cost of diamonds — | redit for gettirg beni though paid for in a different sort of coin. PUBLIC DEBT Census figures show that in 24 states the municipal, | county and state debts in 1922 were two and a third times | as big as they were in 1912. They’ve increased since then. | A considerable part of taxes goes to pay interest on these | debts. Extravagance in national government is dangeroysly acute, but not as much so as in states, counties and munici- palities—with few exceptions. * : “COLOR HEARING” Lundborg, the Swedish physician, is specializing on “color “hearing.”:. That’s one form of what is known as confusion ¥ the senses The victim of “color hearing” sees certain lors when he hears. certain sounds. Throughout life the colors are called up by the same sounds. Stranger than this are alleged authenticated but rare es where the sense of sight is transferred to the fingertips. 3 getting into uncertain territory, the psychic, so let’s AMBITIOUS STUDENT ind a mo jment which is so timely and which 1 only result in good to every MUCH RELIEF Dickinson, N. D., Jan, 7.—Stark county during the year just clofed gave relief in the amount of $4,445 to dependent mothers and their | children, through the medium of mothers’ pension according to 're- cords on file in the office of Fred Maser, county judge. Included as beneficieries of the mothers’ pension fund are 15 women and 61 children under the age of 16 years. Month- ly allowances paid by the \cocnty range in amounts from $20 to $50, according to the number of children, Judge Maser said. The law provides that a dependent mother"may be pid $20 monthly with an additional $15 for the support of each child with a maximum allowance of $50. an mig es ; : ‘ y | ples pipe. suddenly let his head sink on ast and began to snore. he three fiddlers brought by King their that) their fiddles fell from their chins, | Cole it | the Queen of Hearts, wi g | struck him in the e in a der Land people from Jack and Jill's party. Woman them. ains had floated out a’ that Jack built. party that Jack and ng had come to a suc ister Piper, Tom’s fz blowing out his ch nd playing a meri br suddenly stopped i their heads n-pins King Cole dropped himself dan orgeous bow when the s a heap at her feet- he Oueen herself, rea gave one -ven.ng chair—dead to t ou noe Woman kept h svery grain | and over the house 1 Daddy Gander | to sweep up| y Gander got | ancy found one minute of-all had e Old Shoe that when noses and neezed his off nearly, that a great many the pateh tops tb And that Jill. were iden end her, who s like ap- jig on his bows, over like neing with making a leepy sand e, and he sank nd asleep lv for a curt- wn and fell back into he world. And every one af the Daddy Gan- th n tothe Sprats, fell and her e Crooked asleep at The Old Shoe | children among SEEMS LIKE Never QuIEIS ia. va Necessary Nuisances Voure Lucky MINE Wa \F built was a very complete one in- | deed. {| Well, after the Old Shoe Wom house has been swept clean, Dadd i Gander and the Sandman and the Twins got their wits together still haven't found my lost peo- aid Sandman. till haven't found the said Daddy Gander. nd lit we don’t find them, Jack's party will be spoiled. How can they end a ple’ “And we Tomato canning increAsed in 1923. Something should be done This is cruelty to boarders. lost pies, | party without refreshments? here The 1923 prune crop was short, so jis no other way to end a party. And |inat helps boarders some. I the party will go on and on all night. = = Something must be done.” “Let's suggested Nick “That’s a good idea!” nodded the Sandman “Maybe I can persuade the old Shoe Woman's children to come home to bed anyway. So off they went Railroads made money last year. This, however, is not news to peo- ple who bought tickets. Pig iron broke all records in 1923. The industry has grown so big it should be called hog iron. go back,” And you know what they saw iat when they got there. Every single} The demand for locomotives is in- |soul as sound asleep as mummic creasing. Why don't auto drivers But they saw something more, for | jook and listen at the crossings? when they rushed back to the - kitchen’ there Was every pie and Cigar smoking increased only 4 every cake and the cream freezer! per cont in 1923, there being so few and everything right in the cupboard | political campaigns. where Missez John had put them. Not a thing had been touched. ‘Well, well, well! What a topsy- turvy place this is!” cried poor Daddy Gander. “A little while ago we had a lot of people and no pies. Now we have a lot of pies and no people. I hope you are satisfied, Mis- ter Sandman.” There was a mystery! Cigaret consumption increased last year, the word “eonsumption” hav- ing an excellent meaning. Chewing tobacco fell off in 1923, maybe becau too wide to spit across. The manufacture of smoking to- were soon to find it out. bacco declined last year. We knew (To Be Continued.) ‘that. Nobody seemed to have any. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.) ! = pcan cone eee Lg, ' A, THOUGHT | Cs And they ords in 1923. erude movie production. i Last year 540 bank: failures were reported. Besides this many chil- dren’s banks failed Christmas. Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom; and with all ( \held in the Capital Oly Jan. 3 Jack and Jill and Missez John, too, thy jgetting get understanding.— : c In 1797 a man was arrested for wearing one of the first! ana 24. 3 5 on | fell asleep still looking dey ge miss- ney aa There a a tesmenduas fruit crop | ™; silk hats, in London. He was charged with wearing a tall! eiPorucn wishes tot | ing pies that the Twins had gone to But to know __. «| for 1923. We tell you because prices €® structure having a shiny luster apt to frighten ti i, : ie The State will henafit in two, hunt. Missez John in the panty That which before us lies in daily | forgot to. mention it. Be St PERE 2 Suny USter al ghten tumid people. | 2ys at least; first, in advertising | Jill in the kitchen and Jack in the life, ae The magistrate considered this so menacing that he’ bound¢tine fact that it can raise just as,Cellar. For the house that Jack |Is the prime wisdom.—Milton. Shoe production increased last yo over the dude in the sum of $2500 not to wear his silk hat |good corn as the recognized corn | | year, but- enneraseiey, wasoling tanks 'o. again. belt, and second, in moting | may soon cut this gain. . SAS Ane aily Mat nae Gees ater corn acreage within the} ‘ Seems improbable. London Daily Mail, however, digs the | 2(¢it' | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO Building booms boosted: the lum~ story from ancient records of the courts. A hundred years|” Where corn is king, diversifica-| te rower phase { timber being plentiful. Fur pusiness was good in 1923. All domestic pelts sold. They come |from skinned husbands. Brickyards ran steadily in 1923, so they may have been busy making | bread for restaurants. Perhaps bricklayers seem slow be- cause after laying“a brick they wait for it to hatch. By jove! The demand for tea is increasing. But perhaps, old top, i the women are to blame. | California raisin crop"for 1923 was, 237,000 tons, so why use wood al- j cohel and other poisons? +See You HAVE BANANAS 3, TODAY keep up the payments. | bank deposits merely shows a huge | increase in will power. j those who look out. | resolutions are broken. ! Tribune Want Ads Bring Results | “CASCARETS” 10c BEST LAXATIVE FOR BOWELS | “They Work While You Sleep.” 1 I¢ you feel sick, dizzy, upset, if ‘stomach is sour or gassy, just’ take ‘one or two pleasant “Cascarets” to | relieve constipation and biliousness. No griping—nicest cathartic-laxative on earth for Meh, Women and Chil- dren. .10¢ boxes, also 25 and 60c sizes—any drug store, i i The huge 1923 increase in savings | of which only two lived. Only a few more days until more) seasons amounts to $311.50. jand I would SEM, sete LETTER FROM RICHARD SUM- MERS TO BEATRICE GRIM- SHAW, CONTINUED I tried, Bee, to tell her this on the way home. As soon as she could speak without sobbing she seid, “Poor Dick. You misunderstand. I do not think, in fact I know, I would not make « good mother. I fee: a woman who has really the mother instinct. would under no consider- on allow anything to come be rand her baby. “She would not allow her baby to en from her and I am almost he | sure, Dick, that if I had to choose between my profession and my chi! I would always choose my profession. “I know T would be very unhappy always be retching out my hungry unfilled arms for my baby, but still I would choose my profession.” You may think it strange, Bee, that I am writing alf this to you, but honestly I am trying to explain to you what a wonderful little woman Paula Perier is. ak I could see from your letter that you did not appreciate her. We are beginning her new play next week. Einstein is going to make it n$ch more elaborate than the last. T have just finished making a com: putation of costs and everything i: ne: set. n working so hard in this bu , Which seems to be the most en. thralling one in all the world, that Ihave no time to go anywhere or see anyone except those who are just ne | connected with out lot and our pic- | tures. % I was very glad indeed to see Car- ton, although when he talked gf | John Prescott and Leslie and I even mentioned you it was almost like | speaking to someone I had known in a different incarnation. Of course, my dear girl, I do not expect to hear from you very soon jfor you probably are very angry be- cause I have delayed so long writing you. But surely. now that I have, written you, you must thank me for la very long letter, | I have not spoken to you about j one thing that you wrote to me. At | first I thought I would say nothing | about it. How can anyone think that. be- cause Miss Perier has an artistip mind and has brought to the sercen such wonderful human and dra- matic picture, that she must have | lived ‘some of the episodes? Of course no ‘woman has ever written a play or a book that some- one hasn't said she was writing her | life's history, particularly if it were tragic. They never that about men, and yet I believe women have uch more imagination, much more jinsight into human motivation than men. How terrible it is that people should have such evil minds and I onfess I never thaught that you, | Bee, would retail such gossip as you wrote me in your last letter. | Beatrice, I would stake my life jthat Paula Perier is the sweetest, |truest and purest girl alive. Affectionately yours DIC YOUTH MAKES GOOD SUCCESS RAISING PIGS 14-Year-Old-Boy of Williams County Wins Out, Start- ing with Borrowed Money HIS STORY TOLD Williston, ence the M. G. Sh N. D., Jan. 7.—Clar- fourteen-year-old. son of an lives in Champion township, Williams county, R: N D. When a boy about eleven year: old he noticed an advertisement in the “Successful Farming magazine published at Des Moines, Iowa, offer- ing to loan a boy or girl any amount up to with which to purchase some type of livestock. The only requirements of the newspaper were that the applicant sign a note for the loan and that the application be signed by one of the parents and two residents whom in this case were Miss Helen Shell, Deputy County Su- perintendent of Schools and County Agent E. G. Schollander. During the spring of 1920 Clarence purchased a registed Duroc sow for $20 from his father. The sows reg- istery name is Golden Sunflower—a really pretty name for a pig—and the boy. was proud of the purchase. That the Successful Farming is making no sidewalks are getting | mistake in offering worthy boys and girls such loans has been demonstra- ted and particularly so in this case. The note was paid when due and the ownership of Golden Sunflower was complete. The returns from Golden Sunflow- Crpde oil production broke all rec-|er since the time of purchase has The same is true of | been carefully kept and it was hand- jed the county agent about a month ago by Mr. Sherman—(while Clar- | ence was at school which was not quite fair as the boy undoubtedly would have taken a great deal of | pride in giving the data)—-and shows a remarkable income. Here are the figures as given by Mr. Sherman. Golden Sunflower farrowed seven pigs June, 1920. One pig was sold at seven weeks old for $12, three bar- |. rows were sold in December for $42; one sow was sotd in November, 1921 for $26.40; one sow was butchered and sold in December, 1923, for $45; ber trade last year, even presidential \the third sow of the litter is still owned by Clarence and.is estimated to be worth $40, which may be rath- er high in value. Total cash sales from the first litter $125.40 and in addition one young sow. In the spring of 1921 Golden Sun- flower farrowed a litter of eleven pigs of which nine lived. Two of this litter were sold at seven weeks old for $32, seven were sold the fol- lowing January for $128.10. Tota cash sales from the second litter $160.10. ’ During the spring of 1922 Golden Sunflower farrowed a litter of ten pigs of which seven lived. .One boar was sold-in July for $10, two bar- rows were sold in September for $18 and Clarence kept four sow pigs es- timated worth $15 per head or $60. Total cash sales from the third lit- ter $28 and in addition four young About $580,000,000 worth of. furni- | sows worth $60, which again may be ture was sold last year, if they can|too high in value. In the spring of 1923 Golden Sun- flower farrowed a litter of eight pigs (This “sis a hairless litter.) One pig was sold at eight weeks old for $8 and the other was traded for a heifer calf The outlook for 1924 is bright for|worth $10. ! The cash receipts from Golden Sunflower's litters during the four Clar- ence still owns five sows of different ages estimated worth $120 which’ may be too high at the present value of the pigs, one heifer calf worth $10 } and Golden Sunflower now known as a great-great grandmother. No con- sideration has been made here of the offspring from the litters mentioned above. This in itself would mean a neat sum. 2 1 AT THE MOVIES | your head is dull or aching, or your | @————____>_@ GENUINE LIFE DRAMA IN CHAPLIN PICTURE For real, genuine interesting enter- tainment go to the Palace Theatre, ’ Mandan and see Charles Chapt.n's first dramatic production, “A Woman of Paris,” with Edna Purviance. This | United Artiste “attraction, which ‘playing an engagement of two d | Jan. 9-10, is one of the real tr which are so often sought, but so rarely seen, in pictures. This poignant drama of life carries 5 \one through a phase of Parisian life, following the carcer of Marie St. Clair as though one had known this interesting character oneself, that one feels one is a part of the drama being enacted. CAPITOL A stage play of strong dramatic ibre is the basis of “Drifting,” the” Universal-Jewel special feature that will be shown at the Capitol theatre beginning tonight. scilla Dean, led the “Dean of emo- is the star of the screen y version, When Unive: ded to make “Drifting” it was ized that the story would require unusually elab- ate sets and a great deal of care in jthe costuming and technical work. In order that this would be handied nan, as authority on Chinese Tho Gubbins, was engaged in thé filmfng. Dean's peculiar abilities re- {quire that her roles be strongly dra- matic and full of human character. Cassie Cook, the heroine of “Drift- ing,” is a white women without a friend and alone in China, The peo- ‘ple she knows are opium gellers. She ‘is one of them also—and “Drifting” tells of her redemption from this life of crime. | with the greatest accuracy a noted life, PIONEER OF | STARK CO. DIES | Dickinson, N. D., Jan, 7.—Fronk Lish, pioneer resident and busii.ess man of Dickinson, died early Fri- at San Antonio, Texas, where he had gone a month ago for the bene- jiit of his failing health, News of his passing came in a brief telegram to his children here. Mrs. Lish and | daughter, Miss Marguerite, were with him when the end came. The tele- {gram did not state when the’ grief | stricken wife and daughter would [leave for the north with the body ‘but it is expected that they will ar- _rive in Dickinson early next week. For 42 years Mr. Lish has been a resident of Dickinson, coming here | when the west slope was little more than a wilderness inhabited only by a few settlers and Dickinson, a straggling hamftt of houses and rail- road buildings just erected. As president of the Liberty Nat- ional bank and senior member of the Lish Hardware company he was: re- garded as one of the city’s most sub- ; stantial business men, His long ex- |perience made his counsel higkly |valued. Of a genial, kindly nature he was beloved by all and the news of his sudden passing comes as a great blow to the - hundreds of friends and business associates. i The odds against a whist player holding all the trumps are 158,753,- 889,899 to one. Don’t Let That Cold -- Turn Into “Flu” Rub on Good Old Musterole That cold may turn into “Flu,” Grippe or, even worse, ‘umonia, you take care of it at once. sted parts see ui it brings relief. oy Colds are merely congestion. Mus- terole, made from oil of mustard, camphor, menthol and other simple ingredients, is a counter-irritant which stimulates circulation and up the cold. helpe Aseffective as the old mustard plaster, does the work without blister. Just rub it on with your r-tips. You will feel a warm tingle as itenters the pores, then a cooling sensat t brings welcome relief, seca To Mothers: Musteroleis now ~ pede in milder form for

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