The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 23, 1924, Page 4

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no = = PAGE FOUR ° THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class e Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK DETROIT republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not utherwise entitled 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 ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.............- aie oo. $7.29 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck).. és < 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........... THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THAT THIRD PARTY Charles «E. Hugh secretary of state, has given an especially strong characterization of the third party which is promoting the candidacy of Senator R. M. LaFollette. It is best told by direct quotatioi “The Third Party seems to live on suspicion and Jumny. It attacks every one and everything but itself. It would have you believe that everything is rotten in business, in finance, in diplomacy. You would think that this is the unhappiest country on curth, whereas it is the one country envied by all; the country of highest wages, of the best living conditions, of the greatest opportunities, where even the poor in ever y life have comforts and coaveniences which most of the well-to-do in other countries do not enjoy. It is difficult to thwart economic for by political action, but there is a short political road to economic distres: You can- not have progress without the security and expan- sion of enterprise. The extreme radicals have never been able to understand why they could not have the golden eggs after the goose was killed. The dictatorship of the proletariat is the effort to distribute eggs that are no more. It would not take much to destroy our prosperity. All you have to do is to shatter confidence. This would happen if the Third Party should really approach succ This would measurably result if the Third Party could produce a dead-lock in this election. I said the other day that Senator LaFollette was aiming to keep enough electoral votes away from Coolidge {o prevent him from having a majority and then to put in Bryan as Vice President, who would be- come President because of a dead-lock in the House of Representatives. No, indeed! shout the sup- porters of Senator LaFollette. We will not make Bryan Vice President, they say, but Wheeler. Well, if anything could be worse than to put in Bryan, it would be to put in Wheeler.” No one interested in the restoration of Europe should vote for LaFoliette and Wheeler as against Coolidge and Dawes. The operation of the Dawes plan should be of in- terest to the German people of America who, while they have severed all political ties with the land of their birth, still follow with interest, developments in the restoration of a stable government which as time continues will increase Germany’s trade with this nation. This is what Chancellor Marx has to say about the operation of the Dawes plan, a concrete scheme to aid in the restoration of Germany: “Both the German people and the German Gov- ernment are keenly interested in a successful con- clusion of the negotiations now under way in Lon- don. The German people sincerely desire it and are prepared to do everything in their power to accom- plish enforcement of the Dawes plan, particularly us the results of the London Conference have yielded a sounder and more healthy basis for re- sumption of normal relations between Germany and her former enemies than any previously suggested solution of the reparations problem. The German people see in the loan a means of stabilizing Ger- many’s finances, while its failure on the other hand would have a far-reaching detrimental effect on the entire situation and might even mean the collapse of the Dawes plan.” FORD ON LAFOLLETTE No one can accuse Ford of being particularly friendly to Wall Street. He has been regarded as rather “progressive” in his political ideas, to use an overworked political term which means nothing, but has become almost the sole asset of the LaFollette group. Some politicians get the name progressive attached to them and it proves enough for some people who don’t investigate to ascertain whether the label means anything or not. Mr. Ford does not see anything especially progressive about LaFollette. In a recent interview he said: “L_aFollette and other members who fought Muscle Shoals played Wall Street’s game knowingly or unknowingly. Wall Street wants it for exploitation. It does not want the people to know the actual cost of power. That would bust the power trust.” And again: “The trouble with him (LaFollette) is that he fails to distinguish between big business and the money interests.” Ford’s support of Calvin Coolidge is based upon the fact that he sees in Coolidge a safe American to guide the des- tinies of the Republic through the present crisis. He gives his reasons why he is for Coolidge in the following: “TI haven’t changed a particle in my views on Calvin Coolidge. I do not know Mr. Davis, but I do know that President Coolidge comes from a kind of Puritan stock that can do its own thinking. He knows the undercurrents of our national life and he has an invaluable gift for knowing when to say ne?! HERCULES In love matches you observe the workings of nature’s tendency to even things up—restore the balance before spe- Publishers Kresge Bldg. Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or Editorial Review Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important {ssues which are being discussed ‘in the press of the day. GOING SOUTH (Rochester Herald) Great flocks of birds risi regular formation from field. stubble, or settling on the cat of a marsh, remind the farmer and vacationists that the North; will soon be no place for delicate | constitutions. ‘The sparrows, ithe! crows and a few gulls may con- | tinne to hunt their meals about the { countryside, but most of the other j birds goon will be on their way to- | ward more generous — latitudes The annual rush of travel South- | beginning in birdland, i one of the constant and} ries of nature that of wild birds migr: onally, with almost the regu- ‘y of the earth’s revolutions, There are variations, to.be sure, but they are the more mystify er. When the spring come go do the migrant feathered ho: When winter nips at the heels of August, the summer nestling pla- ces are abandoned weeks earlier than usual, and the flocks move Southw: idly, even though | ays may still be warm, Usu- ally, the migration is propivetic of weather changes, for when the birds take wing early at the close of summer, the ‘breath of winter is felt soon afterward! in these Northern lake plains. Just why the is should go South when there is no lack of food to he had in the Northern| fields is a puzzle to those natural- | ists who ye migration is a jon of food supply. In_ the there is food aplenty. Hav- ched Central America or Brazil, therefore, why should the Northern birds ever return to the cold climates trom which they flee every autumn? It cannot be food alone that drives them irresistibly | Northward in the spring and| Southwarc! in the fall, for they} leave a land of plenty in the South | in the spring, and a Northern land ng with bird food in| { the Possibly many of the si the future may reveal | rets of nature, but until mankind is able to read the minds of bird-folk, it ig not likely | that science will be able wholly to.| explain the great mystery of mi-| gration. i i i ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON THE APPLE-TREE FAIRY “Yes,” said Daddy Gander to the Twins as they rode along through the sky on his magic dust-pan, “the tin| rooster was right. There any doubt that the Maiden-All Forlorn and the Tattered-Man have gone to housekeeping in the House-That-Jack -Built.” “Oh, look!” cried Nancy. is someone beckoning to us from that apple tree. Let's stop and see So Daddy Gander said. “Whoa!” to his dust-pan and it stopped in the tip-topmost branch of the apple tree. “Why, hello!” said Nick. “It's the upple-tree fairy who runs the ele-} vutor up to the sky.” “[’m glad you haven't me,” said, the apple-tree fairy. “I thought I’ heard someone talking about the House-That-Jack-Built. Was it you?” “It was me,” said Daddy Gander.| “Do you know anything about it “Do 1?” Well, I should say marked the apple-tree fairy. to live in an apple tree on Pippin Hill where Jack and Jill and Mrs. John live, Indeed, I was there when Jack built his house. I know all ubout it. It's got the cutest porch forgotten I mean do you know where it's gone?” asked Daddy Gander. “It's los “Ants wings and snails cried the little fairy in horns surprise | Nancy, “It’s gone The tin! yes,” said {and we're hunting for it. rooster on the barn and Higgledy Piggledy, the black hen, said that they thought the Maiden-All-Forlorn and the Tattered-Man had gone to housekeeping in it.” “I don’t believe it,” suid the apple-| tree fairy. “They wouldn't do such i Wait a minute! I've an there a wind-storm there- abouts when the house disappeared ?” “Not that I know of,” said Daddy nder. “But then it's pretty hard to tell sometimes. We never can be| sure in Mother Goose Lund whether | it's a wind storm or Poppleton Bun, j the miller-man, snoring. Why?” “L was just. thinki the: apple-tree fai the} seventeenth floor of the sky there is | a place called ‘The Department of | Lost Things.’ It’s for the wind-storm 1 | i | i “Whatever are you talking about?” | ick. “What — wind-storm | “Oh, pigs, and baby-carts, and hay- stacks, ang churns, and automobiles | | s and things like that, that ay in tornadoes. A tornado is a wind storm,” said the apple-tree | fairy. “They have to blow some-| where, don’t they! So they blow up| to the seventeenth floor of the sky; and we fairies sort them out. It’s! quite a village.” | “But how could Jack's house be! blown up there when nothing else! was?” asked Nancy. “Oh, easily!” said the fairy. tornado is just a wind cloud “A vy “There THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | | Somebody Always Has to Spoil the Party wink his| (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Our experience is that pride goeth! {with a fall. las There isn't ing under a delusion, an: Lots of us can see how the styles have changed by comparing our j suits with the new ones. ! Truth is stranger than fiction, and, among our present books, « stranger to fiction. The soil of Siberia is sometimes n to a depth of 63 feet, so it is y difficult to dig fishing worms. fr The Dead Sea is fishless, compar- ing in this way favorably with ail streams, lakes and seas. The lengths of a mile vary in dif- ferent countries, and with different people you rd is of Chinese idently, is the habit The visiti origin, and so, ev of signing letter While yellow of Chinese officials now seeing red. ington has devel- which should quantities for they are busy A man in oped a stingle be shipped in picnics. bee, large Germany plans to lead the world} in aircraft building. She once mis-| y led in aircastle building. In Victoria, B. C., already 1): cases of salmon have been packed, boarders being powerless. They held a parade of girls with long hair in Hull, England, which was very nice and quaint and old- hioned (Copyright, 1924, NEA THURSDAY, laying plans for a “rainy day ‘ not, do so at once, for you are des- tined for adversity which you can ied against. d year will be a precarious you nust be cautious of s. You ‘have a good You: one, an. bus’ | mind, and your magnetic personality will serve you well. You are fond of excitement, but ju must not overdo. You will b= seught after by the opposite sex, but don’t choose without great deliber- ation. '*~X Thought i aca _-—______—_—_____© He that passeth by, and meddleth with strife/ belonging not to him, is like one that taketh a dog by the ears.—Prov. 26:17. We should enjoy more peace if | we leen made (aes this, never.” vorite color! LETTER) FROM LIE PRES- coTT TO THE AY LITTLE MARQUISE, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER CONTINUED Mother was ‘sleeping quietly a her long night vigil when Alice ar- rived. Both John and I went to the n to meet her and Karl. She seemed v much put out about something, and her only observation “Have all the arrangements Poor Karl looked worn out. How- ev he made no complaint. When she arrived at the house, in spite of everything either K 1 could say, she went directly to her mother’s roomy and throwing her- self down beside the bed, began to reproach us all for not bringing her heme in time to see her father once again. Of course, this awakened mother, {who opened her eyes to hear: “If my dear dad had been really him- sel’, he would have sent for me in Itime. You, every one of you, had a chance to bid him goedby, but you | forget me!” she wailed. i nothing to you; Leslie’ not here to share your and you jet him die with hfs eyes resting only on you. I, too, the daughter ef my father, and I will never forgive you am “Hush, hush, daughter!” remon- ated mother before she was ftarr- None of us knew tho s so near. Of course we have known your father has been serious- ly ill for a long time, but until yes- | terday morning [ tried to make my- self believe he was going to get well, His serious illness, Alice, did uot keep you from running away m him and marrying Karl. You urself forgot him. T suppose he id not ask us to send for you be- cause he wanted you and Karl to y st little while of your marriage without being calleq to EVERETT TRUE EASY TO QUIT SMOKING? By Albert Apple A medical specialist, who ‘along with his pills, serves a lot of mental science tells us that it isn’t a tenth as hard to (case Lady Nicotine as the average smoker believes. He cites this case: One of his patients was informed | that he was in the early stages of tuberculosis of the lungs. i The bad news came unexpectedly, like a bolt out of the blue. | The doctor told him that he hadn’t a Chinaman’s chance un- ‘less he quit his cigarets. | This man was a tegular fi i three packages a day. And | without difficulty. ) the same. | wants to. he is smoking too much. He he has the motive—as in the Fear helps him. obstacles. ae: D> certain agony. Jokes help keep it alive. jcigar, pipe or cigaret, always in some cases, to be fatal. another matter. tude toward them. But what if he didn't send tor ne? You sent for Leslie and Jack!” wailed Alice. “Leslie came, my dear, before you y to be married, and John came at your father’s tequest, made many times to him by letter and | telegram in the last few weeks.” “Did he not ask: you to send for Karl and me, as well? Why should he send for John alone. What did my father want of one of his sons- in-law that he did not want of the other?” Alice demanded. “He wanted me to take charge of the plant and execute ‘his will” cxme bluntly from John who was tending behind Karl and Alice without touching land.” “Oh, I know you influenced. him, | But the most blase of all observers Jchn Prescott!” hysterically cried {was a taxi driver on Seventh avenue. Alice, wheeling around. “Why should | Seeing people peering up into the he not want Karl as much as you,|clouds he poked his head out, took and_me as much as Leslie?” one brief look and turning to his “Simply because Karl has never | passenger said, “Some heen tied down to business in. his | drove on. life, and he knew you were a mar- ohne us plot. You hear much of London fogs, “He loved Karl perhaps better | but little of New York's, Yet New than he did me. He has known him | York has its own little fog every longer, and I presume Karl is more} morning in the fall and spring. It lovable, but he knew that 1 from | arises with the sun. sheer necessity if nothing else, am| Standing atop the 24-story Printing a better business man. So he has| Crafts Building at Eighth avenue not only made me manager of the steel plant, but has made me execu- New York, Oct. 23—When the ZR-3 loomed out of the fog and greeted New York thousands of per- sons gazed upwards, speechless at the sight. Some waved their hats or hand- kerchiefs. Some manifested their emotional reaction in tears. One wo- man, asked why she cried, said, “Be- cause it has been up there so long and 33rd street the morning the ZR-3| end for fags—smoked two and yet he stopped instantly and It was simply a case that he desired to live more than to smoke. Chronic alcoholism unsually is much It’s relatively easy to quit if the drinker really He usually doesn’t want to. The average smoker periodically gets the notion thag begins to “taper down.” Presently his body responds and his indigestion or in- | somnia or whatever his trouble happened’ to be, responds. | He feels so fine that he unconsciously smokes more, and soon is hitting it up as hard as ever. The only way to quit any habit is to quit it entirely. In trying to break off the tobacco habit a man rarely has a sufficiently strong motive to make him win the fight. If case of the tuberculosis victim fighting for life—he wins against nicotine with ease. Given enough fear, man recognizes no No drunkard, for instance, can quit liquor until he de- velops a genuine fear of its power over him. i Nearly every one believes that to quit smoking means That’s the popular notion. It is inherited. So do the boasts of self-imag- ined martyrs relating their agonies when they abandoned with exaggeration. Admittedly, to quit tobacco is no easy job in the case of. a confirmed smoker, particularly an old-timer whose syste! has become accustomed to it. For a man of 65 to quit is apt, But the point is that it’s not as hard to quit as most men believe. As to whether there’s any use of quitting at all, that’s Doctors disagree. Obstacles are about three-fourths a matter of our atti- You recall the famous prizefighter, knocked out by a loafer who didn’t know whom he was hit- arrived, I was unable to see the first five stories of the Pennsylvania Hotel, just one block away. , James H, Hocking was 69 the oth- er day. He celebrated by walking 69 miles in 14 hours and five min- utes. That was 55 minutes less than he took to walk 68 miles on his last birthday. He started from his home in Yon- kers at 3 a. m. and had the benefit of a full moon unti] dawn, He wext through Hastings, Dobbs Ferry, Elfm- sdorf, Briarcliff, around Croton Lake to Amawalk, and ate a light lunch at Peekskill, 41 miles away, before noon. He returned to Getty Squere, Yon- kers, at 6:05 p. m. He was paced part of the way by Mr. Murphy, prin- cipal of Hastings High School, and by Alexander Jessup, former presi- dent of the Walkers’ Club. : In his youth Hocking was path- finder for ‘the Walkers’ Club of America. —James W. Dean. tor of his last will and testament.” Alice grew very pale, but Karl, God bless him, came forward and took John’s hand in his. “Father powers of mind to grasp and deal with the problems of daily life; and without enlarging and enriching the soul life; individual happiness, com- munity strength, and national pros- perity cannot be attained. So, he plans and strives to furnish educa- tional opportunities for every child and to instill a thirst for knowledge in the youth of America. The American Legion and the Na- tional Association have joined in an aggressive warfare on illiteracy, ig- noranée, and intolerance, and have requested that a week be set aside for the special purpose of stimulat- ing a general public interest in this splendid program. NOW, THEREFORE, I, R. A. Nes- tos, governor of the state of North Dakota, do hereby set aside and de- signate the week of November 17 to 23, 1924 Hamilton _ was right, Alice: John, you are the one to take charge. of his business.” o— Proclamation K peerrameoneter The cause of education is near to the heart of every true American. He realizes that without, training the body for health, strength, and en- durance; without developing the as AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK AND DO strongly urge the American Legion, the Legion Auxiliary, wo- men’s clubs, service clubs, | the churches, the educational forces of the state, and all others interested in a finer development of our cift- zenship, to concentrate their efforts during this week in a mighty cam- paign of educational progress for the purpose of-creating in the minds and hearts of our citizenship a Aa and determination to secure g¢: er physical fitness, added mental power, finer spiritual insight, higher ideals, loftier patriotism, and an increased faith in God and country and there- by enrich and ennoble our citizen- ship and promote the true welfare of our state and people. Dated at the capitol at Bismarck, this 18th day of October, A. D., 1924, and given under my hand and the Lee Seal of the state of North Da- cota, ' R. A. Nestos, G or, loverngr There are no records to show that any human beings have been buried alive in the United States in the last 10 years. THAN ALC THE REST OF THE CFFICE FORCE PUT TOGETHER, AND YOU Da Bringing a breath of that Where 'the aurora borealis You rush; at the sound of While you moan and sigh Like some tortured soul WINDS Wind of the Northland, buoyant and free, frozen clime, light the skies, With a radiance that is grand, sublime; What do you say as you journey forth? Lord of the Air with the beard of snow, Turning the pond to a glare of ‘ice, Causing destruction wherever you go. “wind of the Eastland, courageous and strong, Swift as the huntsman’s speeding bow, your strident voice, The tall pine shakes and the oak bends low; on a stormy night, that has beed condemned, To the depths of carkness, forever banned, From the frown of’ foe and the smile of friend. Wind of the Southland, with perfumed breath, Of spice and myrrh from the Orients, Pictures of caravans fall and rise, Then a shadowy palm and a flapping tent, Where the travelers rest ere they journey on, Tired from the heat of their desert ride, Glad for the respite of the night, And the gleaming stars in the heavens wide, Wind of the Westland, calm and serene, ‘Like to the night when the day is done, that! we did not busy ourselves wii eokallikalaikitalanthialtaillDhal tail Vergevaea/aeean one neeiee oni comes along and—whisk! It can blow|appertain not to our charge, Jere- you right off the map and leave the/my Taylor. ; person you were talking to without| . eee 80 much as pushing an eyelash put] Every mother who entered a baby cat shee yy RS at a show held in Folkestone, Eng- K Gander. | land, £ ing . “We'll go there at oneé and look.” |by. sormbelien fe ele. 2 ta “Just leave your magic dust-pan ean here,” said the apple-tree fairy. “I'll’ The visiting card is of Chinese ori+ run you up in my elevator as quick gin. Z NOW, 3'M GOING To PUT A STOP TO IT IF You DONT AND L WON'T Do IT With FLEA POWDER, EITHER cimens of her handiwork get too far from normal. Beauty marries the Beast. Black Eyes weds Blue Eyes. Intellect mates with Creampuff Brain. Mysterious? Not at al. Just nature restoring the balance. ‘An exception comes to light in England. Saxson Brown, billed as the world’s strongest boy, 19, marries Britain’s a... Btrongest girl, 16. Softly descending from out the sky, Bringing the joy of some task well done; Silently, silently onward you steal, Fanning the brow that ig damp with sweat, Cooling the iips that are parched and dry, Striving to make us forgive and forget. - y tne i ENVOY : ure as the touch of an angel’ Hotes wie lips imprest; cao aha as the notes of th Aeaueseatn ie vesper hmyn, cee te : 2 + Florence Borne: . The older a man gets the more young people there are.

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