The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1924, Page 4

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‘PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE iBriered at ‘the Postoffice, Bismarck, N, D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Publishers MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not viterwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. Ail rights of republication of special dispatches herein aie also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ly uly by carrier, per year... eeiet G . $7. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) 5 .. 1.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck)... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.00 ' THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) COOLIDGE VICTORY Sane government properly regulated in its progress and “eted by constitutional safeguards, circumscribed by com- plete separation of the judicial and the executive won a mashing victory at the polls Tuesday. Senator LaFollette, apostle of discontent, advocate of destructive principles «med at tearing down constitutional guaranties cut only a small figure in the great upheaval which has put Calvin Coolidge in the White House for another term. Noi a party victory, but a great tribute to a great man. While cnthusiastic politicians sought to force him into positions inconsistent with the high office, into statements thet would answer the ribald attacks of the soap box agi- tors, he stood steadfast for the great American principles ui the tenets of sound government, economically and con- servetively administered. Those who followed LaFollette and those in the na- tien who endorsed the internationalism of Davis, prob- ably iegard Tuesday’s victory as a conservative vic- 1¢ but they are looking through partisan eyes and are dreaming still of a league of nations without restrictions, of a foreign policy uncontrolled or actuated by the best ditions of America—but the millions who c their Hot for Coolidge know and feel that Tuesday’s victory a wveat endorsement of the kind of government this conceived in and which has always been a great rd orderly and secure progre: man Calvin Coolidge stands out preeminently in ‘tory. The G. O. P. has been obscured in the triumph of the siient, keen Yankee whose chief assets are backbone znd the will to say no when. it is necessary to discount the ortunings of self interested and self seeking politicians. North Dakota may show in the victory and those who held hgh the Coolidge banners in this state rejoice with the m lio s who today are celebrating the victory that means so much in this present crisis when a steady hand at the im vs never more sorely needed. Cecldge's stand tor the right, his refusal to compromise eid hecge upon the vital issues have been most triumphantly vindicated in this election. It should spur parties and lead- ers everywhere to discard expediency and compromise and stand fox the right—because it is the right and not because it may or may not be profitable in the contest for votes and prefer »ent. He vetoed the bonus bill, he stood for revi of the bedget downward so that tax relief might spur a nation to new preduction in the field and in the factory. To sume his plain Yankee economy was a dull and stale policy — other ornate and high sounding theories seemed more vital issues. but the voters of the nation have placed their stsmp of approval upon a regime that taking the government out of private business and initiative and putting more businesslike methods and frugality into the conduct of the people’s business. “falollette’s pet issue of government ownership should be buried for at least a generation in view of Tuesday’s election returns. The farmer, the railroad man, in fact: all \fhose whom LaFollette has been trying to tell would benefit from such a plan have been most ardently against it. The effect in North Dakota should be salutary and spur leaders of-all tions to end the costly and foolish program of in- > $duatrialism that is putting a load upon the shoulders of this and coming generations. Tet the next legislature take courage in face of the Coolidge vote, to smite state ownership through legislation that will speedily liquidate and salvage state owned indus- tries before more milions are lost. Sorlie as governor of North Dakota, has one of his greatest jobs mapped out for him in saving the property of this state from confiscation through a foolish entry of the state government into a highly competitive and intensely specialized business which if it did succeed financially, would serve no good end and bring only unfair competition to those who follow the grain and milling business for living. ig volitician who is so busy looking for an issue that will foist him into a job that he overlooks the basic principles that mean victory when followed with the logic and courage of a Calvin Coolidge. We need more Yankee shrewdness in the conduct of every office whatever the political division of our state, county or city government it may be. The fruits of the Coolidge victory should be most bene- ficia! for the endorsement imposes a most solemn obligation upon congress to support the great American who swept the nation at the Tuesday election. ALMOST UNANIMOUS For sometime The Tribune has tried in a non-political way io point out how retrenchments could be made in the conduct of city affa by a reduction of items in the city budget and the ending of a system in the employment of a city engineer that is most unbusinesslike and slovenly. It has not been a pleasant ti to tell the people of Bismarck how their hard earned dollars can be saved by putting the brakes upon public expenditures. Tax eaters and their iciaries are powerfu! and insistent, but it is the duty newspaper to inform the public and urge a saving where such a saving can be made without impairment of public service. The vote on the proposition at this time to build a $300,000 court house reflects the temper of the people in Burleigh county. With special assessments high and other taxes too high, the people of this county want to catch their breath before they plunge into fresh debt and additional taxes. This vote reflects the attitude of the people and any effort that tends toward easing the tax load is going to make a hit with Mr. Voter. The Coolidge vote in its broader as- pects is a tribute to the president’s insistence that public expenditures to be cut down so that business can expand and give more jobs, do more building, increase the number of happy homes which is impossible under the burdensome taxes that beset and cripple nearly every political subdi- vigion in the state. . Tax reduction not tax expansion is going to be a mighty fiopular slogan in the days to come. - In time of peace prepare for more peace. Coolidge’s vote contains a great lesson to the manipulat- Editorial Review in this or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are bel discussed in the press of e day. Comments reproduced column may HELD DOWN BY THE COLLAR (Bruce Barton in Good House- keeping) With the increasing complex of life there necessarily few business and more jobs. well-bred = American boys ome out of school with no idea except to get a respectable white-collit! position. They have been under direction for twenty years or more and they look not opportunity for sons of our Jewish i as ity” and no differently. They will shine shoes or sell papers just long enough to purchase a shoe shining stand or a paper route, and with that s inning th i independence. ‘To a considerable extent the old American ideal of “every man his ‘own employer.” j has passed from us to them. This does not imply, of course, that every American lad ought to be at the head of his own enter- prise. Rather, I would suggest | this—that in all ewacational ex- | periences there is nothing whict quite takes the place of a sense of personal responsibility, and that sense is never so keen as when profit and loss involved, So at some time in their upbringing | would have boys engage in busi ness where they would have the whole burden, perience’ the thrill of poss and the It sobering worry of possible loss. business the might be a minor refreshment booth by side, or a contract for ment walk, or any! choose; the size make: ence, it is the char er of the thing which counts. he maturing | experience of matching wits with competition, and climbing alone, with no parental mattress under- neath in case of a fall. road- a_ce- | you | no differ- | ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS | BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON The magic teapot poured out four vanilla ice eream sodas into the four empty glasses and -the Twins and Daddy Gander and the peddler ank them all up to the last drop. An then something very queer | happened. | as though she had swallowed a wind-bag, and Nick felt as though he had swallowed a bale | loon and Daddy Gander felt as though he'd swallowed—TI don't know what. They felt so queer and so light! they couldn't keep their feet on the | ground. Their feet began to dangle and} then they knew that they had leit | the earth and were moving right up through the air. “Ha, ha, ha!” laughed the old peddler. “I put some floating pow- ders into your soda water so you'd go away and never come back to Yum Yum Land. If you had staye no doubt you'd be wanting my magic teapot and as it all | have left, I'd like to keep it. Good-bye! Give my love to the Man-in-the-Moon.” “Oh, dear!” cried Nancy. “I won- er where we are going now!” “Oh, dear!” said Daddy Gander. | “It's dreadful to be up in the air without the magic dust-pan to sit on. One never knows how long the | ic powders will last. If they | give out we'll go down like sky-roc- | ket sticks.” “I'm not afraid Mhey cook's up here some in the too. Perhaps we find the | and the dust-pan.” “Why, I never thought of that,” said Nancy suddenly. “He'll let the ; lair out of the bread-sponge in the | ack-Built and we can take it back to Pippin Hill and give it to Jack and Jill and Mrs. John. | Won't they be happy?” es,” said Dadd under dis- j “But who is going to let r out of us? You can't stick | us with a fork. If something | doesn’t. happen we'll be sailing jaround up here in the air until we turn into stars.” \ But, my dears, we shall have to | leave Nancy and Nick and Daddy Gander sailing around in the talking to each other. They weren't a bit uncomfortable so it didn’t hurt | them a bit to be there. i Down in Yum Yum Land the king | was back on his throne, and it wasn’t | so bad to be king again because the | Lord High Counsellor and the Prime Minister, and the Keeper of the | Bird-Cages, had al! learned to cook | a little, and when it came dinner} time, the king's meals were served jin the dining room at the palace | the same as usual. One can alw: get along without cooks if one hu i | And the peddler was very happy | as he went down the road of Yum | Yum Land in his old duds, because | he had a new idea. ! With his magic {teapot he would start a lemonade: ! pop-soda-water stand and make a fortune. = | But the cook! You haven't any | Jidea what had happened to him, after he disappeared in the clouds | like a speck of dust, have you? | He had spied the House-That-/ Jack-Built up on a cloud and was | going straight toward it on the magic dust-pan. | (To Be Continued) \ (Copyright, 1924, NEA § a Ine.) | reat cacti | A Thought | ——_——_+ Though he slay me, yet will 1{ trust in him—Job 1 5. ‘Trust men, and they will be true to you; treat them gently, and they will show themselves great.—Emer- son. Utilization of gasoline in the aver- | age automobile is less than 15 per cent efficient, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Our Latest Affliction “ou MA ! MAKE FREDDY Give_me THE DICTIONARY “ Well, & Fresno (Calif.) woman bought the jail and will live in it, but we don't know if her friends will feel at home. York boy New is bald at 16, so n't claim his wife pulled it out. When a man is mad, he & When a woman is mad, she cries. Cussing doesn’t get the man much, A landlord killed himself in Los our WoW Nine IMA CROSS-WoRD PUZZLE WOW A 4 \esim-AVERY SAD CASE. TiS POOR CHAP GOULON'T- “THANK OF ThE NINETCENT Leer nm THE ANCIENT INCA_ ALPHABET AN? NE WENT Go0-CoO Before HE FINISHED HIS Coss- WHAT A Foot AM 4 ayo IF You SuOY HARD AND GET Your LESSONS, SOMEDAY You wu. BE ABLE To WORK CRoss- WORP - PUZZLES= WON'T Thal BE AICE O° IWASTO SKOW MY GIRL THESE CROSS LETTER FROM MRS. SALLY AT’ HERTON TO JAMES CONDON | 2: The Tangle | Jimmie, that vou so your financee, 1 am sorr | libly pr@mised my friendship to} travagant wants someone, anyone, to flatter and make love to her. When ‘her husband was ning the mone; too busy to supply her e her whole idea was You ought to know | to find someone else to “play around me well enough by this time to know) with her.” | that I do not like to be disposed of | in this lordly fashion } Lam very much a id that 1 will | not be able to know “the | imagine. Tam not in any wv and especially p not been Jimmie, I know you very eruel. [ know think I am other but I also know that I cannot be otherwise than honest, Angeles, but we can think of no| anyone, not even with Leslie, who is} that he wished there was some way reason why a landlord should be tir ed of living, gin: children, the old must be a big w t being five, whigh hing. yn safe was robbed Y., while the police walking his beat. The police s in force Roston professor ucation is worth ¥ At present liquor more than that ids are being built n so, they can’t be roads. Two ne in the Alps. F higher than our Grand Rapids (Mich.) man quit his young wife f sister, prov- ing wisdom doesn’t come with age. The strange thing about a Cleve- land (O.) baby that can stand on h head is she doesn't do it accident California man asks $100,000 for her husband's stolen love, which probably w. th a nickel, sks money for welcomed _ its seventeenth child, but just wait until Chris 6--You are fo ess the rare combina- redited you under tunate to po: tion of qualities astrology reddings. Eminently bu nesslike, ) ful, yet qualifications of the artist. Friends will be yours aplenty. G: erous and whote-hearted should be your aspect of life, though you should be ful not to be too e agant on the things of life that vorth but little. Self-consciousness has robbed you of many happy times sily conquer it. Music should be undertaken by you and it will give you mach comfort in later yeurs, Germans Resent Acknowledgement Of War Guilt: nkfort, Nov. 6.—The fa Germany is signing the Versailles Treaty acknowledged herself to be solely responsible for the outbreak of the World War carries absolutely no weight as far as the scientific establishment of the facts in the case is concerned, in the opinion of the German Historical Sopiety, which recently held its fourteenth convention here. The signature, de- clare a resolution unanimously adopted, was obtained “under duress, and is of no significance whatever for determining the scientific truth.” The German historians hold that, seis: : 2 a woman has’ 13} but you can! ! et thatj jone of my oldest and | | have determined to make # great suc- jcess in the business world and have devoted m, yntire time to it. If 1 have any spare moments when T ar- rive in Pittsburg I know that Leslie will consider that I owe them to her in her present great sorrow, and t would not hurt her by making new friends if I had the inclination to do so while neglecting her. i Jimmic, don't jump at con- 1 not finding any fault h you for what you are pleased vo “falling in love.” You must know what you want and from your lette! you evidently feet that you found it, but I may as well tell you {honestly and bluntly that your plea for my sympathy fer the woman you are going to marry falls on deaf ears. I do remember all that sensational trial in which she figured and from her own testimony she marked her- self as a soulless little vamp who could not be true or loyal to anyone, whose whole ambition was to find 1] of making her p: fay and | unserupulous. y legaily for what she did in connection with the mur- der of her lover by her husband I cannot amderstand how she has been able to get you.“of all men, into the | net. : | Go into some newspaper office to- morrow and read all the t over again. I remember it very elear- ticularly for it did not seem to me at the time that any wo- man could be so utterly callous and 1am heuttbroken that you have engaged yourself to her and I only hope that the affair will be terminated before you are leg: bound to her. Otherwise you have a life of great misery and un- happines: I did not mean to tell you this when I started. 1 thought I would wait until [ saw you but as I have written it I will let it stand. I expect from now on our friend- ship is lost forever and that you will hate SALLY. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Ine.) estimony before the question can be x fiecally determined, all offi enti- must chives of all nations concerne be made available for thorough and methodical research. Small sedan has 225 board feet of lumber in it and a large closed car Eye Strain? This Helps am- etc, as One case weak, For straine phor, hydr: mixed in small bottle helps any strained or sore eyes. It will sur- prise you. Aluminum eye cup free. 325 feet. Jos. Breslow, druggist.—Adv. EVERETT TRUE oP | |wise To Make ANY INVGSTMENT OF j [Tear kid! so | [DON'T HANG ON | 0 Ricur 2 (INSIST — Ace You | Pa 1 1 | ase, BY CONDO Bur ASTEN, Sverstr, | ‘Nou WON'T NGED TO PUT | A CENT FOR SIXTY Dave x TOLD YOU 3 Do Not RIGHT, BUT THis (3 THE | HANG@ ON, THen you are saying {that no woman can be kind to an- sweetest | -[and prettiest doll of a woman J ca I would Jalways give anyone of my sex the benefit of the doubt but when I re- member ‘how the judge from the bench excoriated her and told her; THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1924 PARALYZED BY FRIGHT .. By Albert Apple A woman in Garfield, N. Js, is unable to talk or move ‘hand or foot, as a result of seeing her husband in their blaz- ‘ing garage. The fear that his death was certain actually paralyzed her. No doubt, it is temporary and she will recover from the i shock, possibly already has. The case is an exceptionally powerful illustration of the {power of mind over body. { Can disease be cured by the power of mind, by will- ; power and faith? Many think so. Many others do not. But it is an accepted scientific fact that many diseases can be CAUSED by the mind. The most extreme instance is hypochondria. This is a mental disorder, in which the patient has a morbid anxiety ‘about his health. In turn, he imagines, he has about every- ithing under the sun—and actually develops, by the influence ;of mind, symptoms that are apt to baffle all except the most expert diagnostician. It is believed that his mental condition upsets the normal functioning of adrenals and other endocrine glands, there- | Power of mind over matter? Let 10 people in a day tell you that you look ill, and it’s 50-50 that by night you will be ‘in bed or think you should be. To aid recovery, never tell a |patient he looks badly. Instead, impress on him that he ‘looks better. H Look at the thing backwards—the power of matter over the mind. Some years ago (1891) Prentice Mulford wrote ;a series of books, “Your Forces and How to Use Them.” {Mulford and others of his school of thought advanced the theory that people rise or fall to their surroundings. In {proof of this: so-called “culture” is about 90 per cent en- vironment, 10 per cent heredity. David Gibson has pointed out that a pig isn’t naturally a dirty animal. He merely descends to the level of his sur- jroundings. Raise a pig in a clean pen and he'll spurn filth. 'This has been demonstrated on experimental farms. ; Most important in our environment is the matter of per- sonal associates, in business or private life. When inferior and superior come in contact, superior descends partway to the other’s level and the inferior correspondingly rises. You can “get a man’s number” by his choice of friends, the same as business is reflected by its customers, or the customers by the firm they deal with. The Leviathan, looming as large in the background of tall buildings as if she were a whole city in herself, pulls away from her giant dock in the North River, New York, for a voyage across the Atlantic. The Leviathan, looming as large in the background of tall buiidings as if she were a whole city in hersel f, pulls away from her giant dock in the North River, New York, for a v oyage across the Atlantic. New York, Nov. 6.—Went down to jwatch the school kids have a good time on the battleship Texas, dock- ed in the North River. And had husky, healthy men on his battle- ships such meals us were prepared on the Texas at 48 cents a'day, why is the cost of living so blamed high for the rest of us? The baby-carriage garage busine is picking up over on the East S' Mothers in those ‘high tenemen ip |more fun than the kids, rambling jaround the great decks and sticking }my head in the muzzles of 14-inch guns ‘and elevating the anti-aircraft iguns until. they pointed straight \heavenward. With all of which, and imagining all the time that enemy ;men-o’-war and bémbing planes were labout, had a rare.good time, Next {time the job’ palls on me, I’m going {to join the navy and see the world. In the turret of every big gun on bourd the::Texas there was a phon- tograph, And almost every gob on ‘board hud his sweetheart—or his {inother—to dance with him. A big {battleship like that carries more {Phonographs than a music store, And if Uncle Sam can feed the When little ‘Mollje Jones began to take singing lessons, the teacher had quite a talk with Mrs. Jones of Any- town on the subject, | “Of course’ it's nice to’ have chil- jdren with good, voices,” said the teucher. “But dld the health equa- tion ever ovcure to you?” Few ‘people ever think of singing in terms of health) What with. ra- dios and phonographs to supply the songs it would’ seem that — singi ee FOR TARNISHED NICKEL’ Wash tatnivhed-. nickel with a FABLES ON HEALTH MUSICAL TRAINING wear themselves out dragging baby carriages up and down long flights of, stairs. And thieves would steal the carriages if they were left on the sidewalk. Generally the baby- carriage garage is a bootblack shop which closes for the night. The rate for the week is 25 cents. His father was a boilermaker and so he became a boilermaker. But he was shunned by the girls beca he couldn’t wash the grime from his hands. He quit boilermaking, cleaned up his hands and took a course in a beauty school. Now he is one of the most -successful marcel wave, experts in all New York. And nog girl shuns him. JAMES W. DEAN. about the homes is becoming a scarce article. Yet it is of great value in teaching proper breathing and singing. Fur- thermore the organs of the chest™ are greatly benefited. How to attain the proper pos- ture and how properly to breath are questions best answered by a profes- sional trainer. In many schools singing exercises are daily events and this should not only be encour- aged, but included in the home pro gram. BUTTER IN “SELLY Jelly is not so apt;to boil over if ¢) | paste of alcohol: and- whiting. applied |you put butter around the edge of “* with a flannel cloth. the kettle in, which it is cooked. Si

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