The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 2, 1924, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE. BISMARCK TRIBU AGE Sin —_— tered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMI - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not ih se entitled in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein of Athlare also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PA Daily by caxrier, per yee Daily by mail. y. & Daily by mail, per y is tend Daily by mail, out NEW YORK ny Vet The American Press per year in (in Bismarck) . y (in state outside Bismarck) de of North Dakota. . OLDEST NEWSPAPER tablished 187. A deadly poison is carbon-monoxide, generated by the “chexplosion of gasoline and throws off in the motor-car ex- : haust. If you run your auto engine several minutes in a i age with closed doors, you endanger your life. deysands die this Way every year. Emil Chalupa. New Yorke process that eliminates this pois demonstrates to physi claims he has a chemical on gas from exhaust. ians, remaining 15 minutes in a closed age with his motor running without injury. London Bridge is really fe One of the piers Hing down—too heavy a traf- It‘ll be repaired. This famous bridge was originally built 748 years ago. Can you imagine any modern bridge lasting that long? Highways, paved by the Romans 2000 ‘ears ago, today have stretches as good as new. ation builds for the moment. ment, why not more attention to endurance and less on mile- will eCfie strain. the same with roads. In the Good Roads move- Exports from emake a new millionaire every “ency for over a year. y In the last 134 years our exports have exceeded imports We live in the fabled land of milk and Jehoney, even if a lot of us do lose out in the division of xceed imports by enough to This has been the tend- billion deliars. e-winner of New Yor! “perfect baby” contest a year ago, dies from eating ch has bee bread buttered with cockroach poison under a refigerator. it exceptional for babies to into “floor plugs” Schaefer, pr’ he duties City’s This is not unusual. lat overhea be ‘electrocuted by sticking their finger job a mucwhich furnish vacuum cleaner and other current. have a baby, play safe by keeping plugs tightly screwed in ‘these sockets. HONOR JAP The unidentified Jap, who committed suicide in protest _ against exclusion of Japanese from America, will lie in state in a military’cemetery alongside heroic generals. made him a hero and martyr, With Japs patriotism i They have a form of religious fanaticism, That will be Japan’s greatest strength in any future war, which, by the way, will probably be a death-grip with China. German children are no longer fond of lead the report from toy makers in Nuremburg. Thi: important for the peace of the world than the attitude of adult Germans, for children of today will be the pacifists or cannon-fodder of the next generations. To help the cause of peace, don’t give your children any The toy drum generates more war toys this Christmas. militarism than t A fully stocked grocery store in any large city has to ock 6000 to 7000 s carry in its an authority in this tr »parate items, In a town of 5000 inhabitants, the grocer must have 2500 different articles to satisfy the . wants of all his customers. Chain stores as ‘where between 500 Running a store isn’t as easy as it louks. cording to a rule cut the number of items to some- A radio signal from Wales crossed the Atlantic and ex- ploded a flashlight powder in New York. was roundabout and required a receiving ! But it opens startling possibilities. | r with artificial lightning sent by radio s The decadents of science would be tickled to death to discover such a weapon. apparatus at this end. Picture a future w: The use of medicine is on the wane. worry the country’s 49,000 druggists, for the old-time drug- stor has evolved into a “genera! store” with a bewildering On the line of ice cream, quick lunches, mah jongg, electric toasters, flirting toys, etc. These 49,000 stores do a total business of 800 million ‘bre dollars a year, or an average of about $16,300 apiece. A great many babies have had their lives snuffed oui way. Nearly every mother uses stea- Keep the can out of baby’s If this powder in an unexpected cint meet Yate of zinc as a baby powder. And handle the powder carefully. gets into baby’s lungs, it is extremely dangerous. other things, it ean cause pneumonia and strangulation. j EXPANDING Expecting a trade boom, corporations are raising money In October 438 million dollars’ worth of chief bonmnew stocks, bonds and notes were issued. h only: 266 millions in October, 1923. The money raised by the sale of these securities means »|more jobs. It certai Jate sues woul reach. for expansion. pre is compares A hoard of $4000 is discovered in the hovel of a hermit tho died recently near Frostburg, Md. This attracts atten- There | tion, for people consider hoaders “queer.” invested his $4000 in an, auto that/he couldn’t would have been accepted as normal. Editorial Review Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that eur ices ma, have pore sides of important issues wi are being discussed in the press of the day. INFINITE ENERGY IN LIGHT (Literary Digest) ! All scientific men agree that | huge stores of energy are lucked | up in the atoms of matter. Som believe’ that this energy will never | be releasew'; others suspect that! some wag of utilizing it may one day be found. At least one, Dr. Gerald L. Wench, dean Of the | school of chemistry and physics at Pennsylvania State Colfege, thinks that he has taken the first steps toward it and is within measur able distance of his goal. He i quoted, indeed, as stating definite- ly that experiments already con- ducted’ py him give “ri promis that he will di secret and succeed im utilizi for the benctit of mankind. would mean anew and immeasur- able suurce of energy independent vf coal and oil deposits, hydroelce- tric and ever: ‘orm of power known at pr . it was said by Dr. Wendt, and by other scientists in attendance on an intersectional meeting of the American Chemical | s at Lafayette College, F, an In his experi- ments Dr. Wendt placed a tungsten | wire in a vacuum-tube, through | which shot energy, with the result that more energy came out than went in and the tungsten was transformed into heiium. The problem is one of controlling the spontaneous disintegration of ele ments. ‘The New York ‘limes quotes Dr. Wendt as follows, “I have been using a tempera- ture of 60,000 degrees F. in my in- vestigations. The sun only 10,- 000 F., and hettest star is 40,000 de- grees. At that temperature we know that there is no evidence of metals in a star, and that it is composed of hydrogen anc! helium gases. As it cools we get more complex element: Hitherto one of the great difficulties has been that we could not get a sufficient heat higher than the hottest stars. | T have been using 100,000 volts of electricity for this purpos “Copper, gold and iron ments, and thus tar we ha unable to change them. not sz “If L succeed in n ii ill mean the tion. Energy is its base, that makes all! ergy is there and another thing to unlock it and make use of it, but I have already peeped into the first little crack.” Dr. W. fF. Hillebrand, chief chemist of the Bureau of Stand- ards at Washington and the dis coverer of helium, says that if Dr, Wendt were successful in his e deavors he would i revolutionize lif He continued: “At present it is possible to gration of metals on an intinites mal scale by using the greatest forces at our command, but the use of these forces beyond the ability of most laboratories Said another commentator, Pro- ssor Leon L. Jenks of the Wor- cester Polytechnic Institute: “Assuming that Dr. Wendt could relea: atomic energy and do it cheaply, he would have found the source of all the heat and power that the world needs. “But we must be able to get it cheaper than we can get coal and petroleum at present. It is pos: ble today to operate a moto with alcohol, but alcohol costs 75; cents a gallon, and gasciine {s | cheaper. That, by the way, is one reason why we will never sec} ‘dollar gasoline.’ ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS: BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Ml and lily pond, this old vagabon vandering from hill to hill, |Past farmhouse gate and clattering | mill. “He keeps right on, and never stops, Not even on craggy mountain tops, He struggles up and bravely over! He's courage, has this wand'ring rover. “He has no roof, he knows no home, | He lingers not—he lives to roam, He does not move and yet he runs, ‘Neath winter snows and summer suns. “He runs right on through town and | city 4 And never stops to look—z He hurrys by the castle wall And never stops to gaze at all! pity! going, He'll take you there without you| . knowing, \He wants no thanks, he asks no pay, ‘For showing you the nearest way. “He is posted for your guiding, If you're walking—if you're riding, load, He’ helps each one, this kindly—.” Vell, I should hope that I know what this is,” said the Crooked Man. “Anybody who ran a crooked mile as often as I have should know it.’ “Alack!” cried the Ojd Lady Ban- berry. “When I rode my white horse a good—.” “Tut! Tut!” said the Man-Who- Owned-the-Gray-Pony. “I hope to tell you that I know what the an- swer is, I-loaned-my pony to a lady THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | He Asked for Bread and They Gave Him a Stone ’ SANA CLAUSS PROMS |B} SURE! OLD SANTA WiLL BRING YOU ANYTHING jlad. Jackie returned from Europe recently with 27 trunks. “Mrs, Riddle Lady, what are we go-! degree of temperature in our iab-|ing to do about it? Everybody has oratories but now we can produce | py The Tangle will come to us. we going to id Doctor Foster. answer perfectly. I was going and stepped in that puddle! ying that it can’t be done, !and ruined all my | and I think I have reasonable |you said winter snows and summer Jack and grounds for the belief that 1 will {su be able to unlock atomic-energy. |dlc y endeavors | April showers whi volution of lof all dirt roads. “Oh, oh, oh! Jack was going to see her the evening he wrote my let- He seems to think that if she is all that Ruth thinks she is, she will be a great help to.me—and yet I about it?” » ele- ;know the shouldn't I, when TTLE MARQUISE, THE SECRET DRAWER, CONTINUED arquise, I am sure that | ally Atherton are greater Gloster worry about it all. er into your house is a very serious I hope the girl will like me. presume all this coming me when I have had such a discon- certing letter from Jack’s mother, is the real reason why I anticipate hav- ing some unhappiness Prescott has written. me a particularly nasty letter i she tells me that Priscilla Bradford has told her that I own half the lin- gerie shop and threatens to tell Jac You may think this is a perfectly ridiculous thing to worry about for certainly a wife that can much money as I ‘have earned in the last year in an absolutely legitimate manner, ought to fill her husband’s mind with pride. know, however, that Jack will not like it and I am in for a bad quarter of an hour. (Copyright, 1924, you didn’t say half. Mrs. Rid-| friends th: I'll beg to remind you of ‘tells her things that he wogld never ch are the undoing think of telling me, and I am Doctor Foster said} Before my marriage I had a deep- . cried the Mother Goose peop! s valuable. It is Ome |«poctor Foster guessed the last thing to show that the atomic en-/ ger could not be lovers without friends or comrades. aid the Bun-!to the conclusion that when a man “[ knew it! wants a pal he usually goes to his Jown sex und occasionally to another It's a road!” I have come didn’t at all,” all the said the Crooked “onl * declared the Man-Who- | heart sensuous at all | Owned-the-Gray-Pony. se for pushing people.” “It was a slip of the tongue, aid Doctor Foster with “} am willing to do without just to show how quently after marriage when finds that his wife must be sensible reac A man gives his veach Tithe admiration of a lover but with (holds the much more subtle compli- respect and regard of a control the spontaneous disinte-ja “We were only fooling,” said the} Crooked Man and the Old Banberry Lady and the Pony Man. And really, my de: yet how they settled it. Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Service, Inc.) little Marquise, anal ‘ing and critic ture just after I have received this satisfying letter from Jack. Oh, I cannot tell you how happy it made me and yet all the seemed too good to be true. should explain this reaction to Jack, y that I couldn’t look at in my condition, Nie ieee Is This Your | Birthday joes 2. — Prosperity, health and happiness are destined for those born this day if they will live up to and carry into practice the {never having been a mother, cannot j advise, but I would like to know why | everyone thinks that a woman in my should suffer any -mental al pains just now. tural condition, quite as commonplace as eating and sleeping and quite as necessary to the preser- thoughts that come to their mind. Self-discipline will be easy for you and you should turn the advantages offered through a personality and energetic mind into something worth New Work police $ i the crooks on the run, but doesn’t} are in front or behind. Keep in a happy mood and always do unto others as you would they s kicking up 2 IF SPS UT oy should do unto you. ain even if he! seund more like a wr acts as though it were something entirely new to the se, something unique. I think it is a foregone conc! little: Marquise, that Zoe Ellington | sun. EVERETT TRUE psa a AHA-A-A-A-A 8h EVERETT, YOUR MAN WASN'T ELECTED I! ‘WHAT DID t TEU Yous The comet is preceded by its tail when it ig moving away from the i ago shot himself be-} cause he lost his broke like the rest of us. ‘BY CONDO AHA-A- A-A —A caped from Joliet} New York man robbed a woman! d got arrested, possibly impersonating the hotel owner. Big Chieago mail-order house has quit selling pistols, maybe because so many women are using arsenic Coolidge went aboard the May-! flower in a snowstorm, not minding! it in the least after a landslide. Perhaps an auto which ran a bank in St. Louis wanted to see if¢| ‘its owner had any money left. They think a cigaret caused That’s an argument for It never caused a chewing tobacco. “He'll guide you any place you're | A hand-carved desk recently sold for $1600, when you can find a mil- lion of them in our schools. =~ Wee Yous. DON'T = Te You % sn Diow't 1 HALF -HOVR, Give With mother sitting up with the HIM THE SEDATIVS. there's quite a bit of sleep being lost. The prince's couch—the farmer's| 414 those who awore they would never play mah jongg have started swearing against crossword puzzles. Los Angeles doctor hus « way ‘to stopgsnoring. It should be stopped. fisturbs thé burglars. “Smiles,” writes a magazine writ- er, “are golden.” Yes, in many cases 3 ' to Banberry Cross, how could I have | yoy can see it between the teeth. gotten there unless there had been | They claim an Ohio man who threw the phonograph out the window was jcrauy, but we don’t think so. F esse there wars siPine as x Many a man comes home from work and she rode him through the mire with a lot of fault which he thinks belongs to his wife. | (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) \ | TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1924) } - JACKIE COOGAN’S-MONEY a Albert Apple | | i { Jackie Coogan is earning more than half a million dollars a year, it’s claimed. Yet his parents are only paying him |$18 a week. He says, “As I get older, I will be advanced.” | The idea, of course, is to make him appreciate money. 1 It should’ keep him from becoming “spoiled.” Many par- ents will think $18 a week is too much for a lad of his age. His vast earning power and the luxury in which he liv (must be taken into consideration. Everything is relatiy {and $18 isn’t any more to Jackie than 50 cents to the average, ; ‘He talked to the reporters sensibly, intelligently. The children of our generation do not have enough re- jspect for money. The man who in boyhood thought a penny | was as big as a house now has a son who is insulted at in \offer of less than a quarter. Maybe fhis is’ the root of. what’s .wrong with moter youth in so many cases. ‘ A child who isn’t taught the “value of money” will guP) out into the world under a great handicap. It’s worth the cost of a trip to New York just to take the children to the ; top of the Weolworth building and impress on them that this magnificent structure was the creation of a proper appie- ciation of the power of nickles and dimes: Transactions are in dollars, profits in cents. q i \ : |: Jackie Coogan is said to have to “work” for all the imoney he gets to spend. Whenever he figures out an idea ;for putting more snap into his movies, he gets a bonus of } | 75 cents. For a new gag he is given half a dollar. Here, again, is wisdom. It keeps Jackie on the alert: stimulates his mind. He is absorbing the wholesome policy of furnishing service for every reward. We know d shrewd father who*has’ never given his son anything without making him earn it. If the boy wants even a penny he must perform a service even though it be no || more than emptying a wastebasket for his mother. A trip to a movie must be earned by doing a chore, by keeping his belongings in order for a given period, or by being prompt at meals. Honesty is in actually earning everything we get. And parents cannot begin too early to get this idea into youthful rains. ee | H f New York, Dec. 2.The money A friend warns her that she is to’ changers have entered Be Sante belldtpearienemsnottendedivanlithe of art. St. Paul bows his head as ; ee thel throngs passes THAtheEMEteopolle | eceee emt eccenrs) cue SS tan Museum of Art. He was bought | tion. in 1921 for $3000, under the repre-| By flickering candle light she is sentation that he was born several|shown musty old paintings. Candle * centuries ago under the genius of {light and secrecy from the govern- Luca della Robbia. ment —something romantic abont And now Jean Vigoroux, noted art | that. critic of Paris, says that the statue Oui, Madame, a genuine Raphael! is a fake. And further, that very |And that, voila! a Corot! many of the paintings and sculptures| Madame will take the Raphael ut bought by the nouveau riche of Am-|five figures. erica since the World War are| The cute little wormwood holes in fakes. the frame were shot in with a shot- ‘Be not downcast, St. Paul! Even|/gun. The picture is at least three the blessed Virgin has been bartered | weeks old. under: false pretense! Angelo, Turner, Raphael, de qo Vinci, Botticelli, Corot—what ci%iwe: In the south of France. At the}are committed in thy names! close of the war. An ancestral War-fed millionaires strutting chateau. An impoverished son of an|their stuff before spurious copies of impoverished father. your masterpieces. Dull women seek- In Paris. An American woman|ing brilliance from musty counter worth millions. feits. ‘An invitation to visit the chateau| Money will buy anything for those at night, The government will not |emptyheads—even reality for a false permit art treasures to be taken out | Madonna, : of the’ country. ‘nee —JAMES W. DEAN. FABLES ON HEALTH EXERCISE FOR TEETH Do you give your mouth the right |bread does for the teeth and gigs exercise? |, |what exercise does for the muscies Mr, Jones of Anytown stared at|-—it makes them stronger. the dentist who. propounded the} Most people insist on soft, easily question. 4 Jchewed breads and foods. But the Active use of a tooth brush is an|tecth do need exercise. Also they excelent stimulant for the mouth,|need certain calcium salts th but carefulemastication of the, food|be found in buttermilk, spinach, is as much an exereise as walking|paragus, string beans or carrot: or rowing—but it affects the tecth{ Calcium helps to build strong alone. teeth and should be particularly Thus,, chewing hard crusts of | advised for growing children. CT “| Sasanoff was granted clemency i A Thought {| by. President Harding after the ar- oe | tist had transldted his conception ot the compassionate Christ on the Have we not all one father? Hath | gray walls of the federal prison in not one God created us? Why do we| Atlanta. His fame for this picture deal treacherously every man against | spread and the Big Brothers Bible his brother, by profaning the cove-| class of Montgomery, one of the nant of our father?—Mal. 2:10. lurgeat interdenominational clingy ir. the south, obtained the artist for __ ,_ | similar task at the state prison. If’ we love one another, nothing, in] Prisoners at Kilby have donated 5 truth, ‘can harm us, whatever mis-| cents each, one-third of their week- chance may happen.—Longfellow. ly allowance, to aid in meeting the = SSE expense of the painting. It is ‘hoped PICTURE OF CHRIST TO GRACE | that it will be ready for unveiling WALLS OF SOUTHERN by Christmas. PRISON : - Montgomery, Aja. Dec. 2.—Having| The catacombs at Rome will be il- painted his way out of the federal |1luminated during the holy year-cele- penitentiary in Atlanta, Max Sasa-| bration next year for the bene! noff, Russian artist, has been com- the visiting pilgrims. missioned to paint a picture of — a Christ upon the,_walls of Kilby pri- | MARCEL AND CURL: LAST LON son near here. a ER after a Golden Glint Shampoo. |

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