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

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soealidiich is 2 ampibattatr, should be met PAGE FOU! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! Riered at the Pustoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. MARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - ~- Publishers BIS. Foreign Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT Mavquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The American Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise 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 JRIPTION by carrier, per year.... Sanestors Bonus 074!) by mail, per year in (in Bismarck)............. 7.20 y by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)... y by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873. KORETZ PAYS PENALTY | Crime news abounds in the nation. The master swind- ler, Leo Koretz, is caught, a trusted “ace” of the postal in- spection service goes to prison for his part in a 000,000 robhery, five New York brokezs are sentenced for frauds reaching into millions; scores of other crimes of murder, embezzlement and theft occurring throughout the country; so many that newspapers and the publi¢ alike tire | of them, The most notorious of the late revelations is, of cou that of Leo Koretz of Chicago. A man of business abil apparently, for he engaged in gigantic schemes of fraud, and was able through clever manipulations to entrap the | gullible into investing $2,000,000 in his various oil enter- | pri. His agility at manipulation and his ability of in. | trigue stamped him as a man of much ability. He gat $2,-! 000,000, but he w. forced to live furtively, to continue | his deception, and finally was caught and now ‘will pay the penalty. Koretz was called the most successful confidence | Da Da se, | man of his day, but he told the court he wanted to go to | position whi prison as a lesson to his son to trod the straight and nar- | them, cannot approved. iA citizens, tions und cense than ipub- and no responsibility save to row path. Koretz may leave an impression on some that it does | 1o go straight. Perhaps to others he will leave the | ic m: impression that the “get-rich-quick” field is still rich for | its own conscie exploitation among those whose good sense is d longing for rick : PERMANENT RELIE! President Coolidge and Congress have time to plan per. | the author ent relief for the farmer. A world crop shortage has | afforded the American farmer a good price for this crop and in the months ahead legislation should be prepared that will give the farmer the same protection as is given other forms of industry, for the farmer is engaged in the biggest busi- of the world—that of feeding the world. Price fixing. artificial stimulants to stabilize markets ily with not do. Reforms must strike deeper and lastiny. A workabie plan is not easy to devise and ident Coolidge points out, progress must be gradual nefits wre to be lasting. )yoeration ii marketing, better balanced crops, a more ystem of marketing and a‘ better regulation of the of agricultural produets in view of the demand as obtains in other industries must be worked out. The Agri- cultural Commission now in session should be able to devise some feasible plan. The plan may not be as drastic as some ot the radicals desire, but if it is a step forward, in placing agriculture on a better basis, whatever the recommenda- tions are, they should be given a hearing and careful con- sideration by Congr MODERN TASTES Modern tastes in drama it has often been charged no Jonger demand the pla that thrilled our fathers. The plays which Joseph Jefferson, Nat Goodwin, Sol Smith Rus- sell and others endeared to many, now seldom hold the boards. They have given way for the vaudeville, movies and the problem drama in which sex strife forms the chief theme. But are the critics always right about modern tastes in drama or music? Recently Sheridan’s famous comedy, “The Rivals,” 150 vears old, played to box office receipts amounting to $26,738 at the Broad Street theater, Philadel- phai. This surpassed records made in the same house by the immortal Sarah and some of the more modern successes. The public usually responds to clean drama well acted. Problem plays are short lived, but those which have a strong human interest appeal las and students of the drama to the contrary. SIMPLICITY President Calvin Coolidge’s preaching of New England thrift and regularity in the business of government has proved refreshing to the country, with the decline of the pomp which marked many public affairs during and just after the war. The sident wants to talk to Senators, so he invites them in groups to breakfast conferences. Quite different from the uusual idea of polities—of a long conference reaching late into the night or early morning hours. Mr. Coolidge prefers to sleep and then talk. Also, the President goes to an agricultural and livestock exposi- tion in Chicago. He and Mrs. Coolidge save the govern- | ment some money by riding in a regular Pullman car and ; eating in the dining car. Interesting but not important, | unless it is forcibly to impress upon Congress that he meant what he said in his message on economical government the day previous. | f BROADCASTING STATION Gcvernor-elect Sorlie’s suggestion of a broadcasting | station at Bismarck is an opportune one and should receive | support at the next session. Most state capitals have one. Radio fans know those conducted at capital cities in the middle west. | Many facts concerning the state and of interest to the farmers can be broadcasted from this point and the state capito] building would be an ideal place for such a station. Sorlie’s suggestion should be backed by the businessmen of Bismarck, acting through the Association of Commerce | and the various civie clubs. As part of the publicity plan! for disseminating the truth about North Dakota, a broad- casting station would be a most important factor. A WORTHY CAUSE Bismarck should support the “Bismarck Winter Sports | Club,” the main objective of which is to keep up a skating rink at the Ball Park. Skating is one of the most healthful |: | may {his district or THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE , : Editorial Review | The Eighth Wonder of the World ~ sy Y DoT } Comments reproduced in this the opinion of The Tribune. They | (— ‘ pe ate pret our Teaders may have both sides of tmpertant issues which are being disc in the press of the day. LIMITS OF POLITICAL INDEPEND- DENCE ap pl ding of the four Senators out of Republican Party. } unwritter tated by th confere Mr. LaFollette, Mr. I and Mr art were effect, be no longer in good und] anding the Republican] congregati« irritates Mr. Nor-| when any set of ort of autho set themselves up to judge the pol itical conduct of their equals, They helieve this resolution reads four men out of the party, but it actually r the Re. nate, He ness. He doesn't care f publican majority of the i bat “to represent the sentiment the the people “of North Dakots Mr, Ladd is an able hoch he ands n, but take a » honor: ator Norr however tenable by generally The great body of pri given to independent con votes, has a wider A public man large responsibility. Within y he press independent of h own, uch a2 oman Geor quire in Congress as well as in}of wh State the respect and come from a per. has a has 310,732 farms, some h are not mortgaged at all. y th Yellowstone National Park h ception of | about 3000 kinds of birds, but New sincerity and hig c vy} York City has around seven million. can party fa man — like Mr, r having | We didn’t even know a friend of striven for s for the Republican | our married until the other day Having done his best to defeat and) meaning: destroy his party, why should he be, dence. allowed to cling to the privileges of Republican seniority in the Sen-; In the colonial days sugar cost on him, Unless p to be given up, parties must be e- | them, sponsible as a whole; and, alloy 4 = the widest reasonable range for dif-| There are no statistics on the sub- ferences of opinion, must have a} ject, but congr creed and solid body of doctrine, The| sense than is gene four disciplined Sen; not Re-| publicans unless wFollette’s| The jig-saw p Cleveland platform, not Mr. Cool heco idge’s is the authoritative Republi-| the jig is not up. can symbol. A national party must! be one. The temporary political re-| Wives are often paid tor on the gionalism upon which Mr. Ladd and installment plan in southeast Africa, ly suspected. ale, in six letters, his associates rely and always in the United States evil thing, Government hy parties, a party in Many people in America had even power substantially united on essen- | Tther hear a man practice on a saxophone than hei word puzzles one work cross- tii a party in oppos united: that is the Ame ; Statesmen who don't like it or feel that their abilities and deserts ar not sufficiently recompensed under it are free to form third parties. It is their privilege to try to overthrow the party whose name they have used)!” Japan, dre; for their own purposes, but they can ‘he pound and bread by the y hardly expect to be allowed to keep aM you're one yourself because this their honors and perquisites in the "C#lly ix true. (Copyright, The potato crop was short int Eng- land this year, leaving boarders little to eat except salmon, are bought by NE. Service, Inc.) which they have deserted, Do Mr. La Follette and his partners’ Vera Persons. Alvin Schlenker. FTY-THREE NAMES ON HONOR ROLL Honor Roll Given After Sec- x Weeks Contains But Fifty-Three Bessie Anderson, Ramona _Boepple. Elmer Benson. Caroline Barbie. Jean Converse. Ruth Gordon, Isabelle Johnson. Bernice Johnson. Wilma Kafer. Robert MacLean. Jenne Setzer. Marian Sandin. Jane Stackhouse, | six weeks contains the names of fifty- | Pupils on this roll have an ave grade of ninety percent or Those on the roll and their classifi- cation follows nomination for President, after fight-| we saw him carrying an umbrella, ing for years the essential Republi-! a third par-| An elephant consumes about 200 "s candidate and applies to the Re-| pounds of hay a day, which is why publican, and to the Democratic Par-; his waist line is disgraceful. ty, for that matter, all his voeabular i) of — sulphurous nd tormenting tters, meags a fuil- flames? pm-an Ttallan word |Pension Bureau : | Mails Out Checks which is a coinci-| —Preparation 7,171 checks for 9,004,814 was an in the year's business of the bureau's _an- jand mailing of 6, gregate of §! 1 report today said 9 names on its pension lists, ,756 4 year ago. now on the roll War veterans; ate? The discipline ultimately to he 75 cents a pound, but please don't inflicted upon him isn't deadly, let your grocer see this. and in Wisconsin he h charmed | — political life; yet it was right for the| The first monarch to own a pri- Republican jority to serve notice} vate airplane was the king of Spain,! ty government is| others going up in the air without{ smen have more y veterans, and Spanish War Mexican war veterans and 33 widows of soldiers of the war of 1812. During the past year ring” more popular, proving Simon Miller, OL Wilma Olson, War veterans and 11,444 Civil War widows. These decreases were large- ly offset by a gain of 16,645 in the |Spanish War soldier roll and 2,937 in the Spanish D)PHOMORES Muriel Benson, John Birdzell. Estalle S$. Dale. A recent reorganization bureau has resulted in more exped- {itious settlement of pension claims, and the speeding up of disposition jof pension payments, besides making possible elimination of 150 positions with an estimated saving of $246,000 in government salaries annually. Milford Dresbach, James Gorman, Sidney Hoffman, Gwendolyn Jenson. Francis Neussle. ‘RETT TR SS : ever think what sort of discipline z i o Socialist lies would | Is This Your | lvetinian L Birthday - | a . o> SATURDAY, Dec. 6,~Be sure you are right, then go ahead. a A Thought ALE lb not tarry a ling in work: o———__ - “————* ing out your problems, ax persons For there shall be no reward to bern on this day are prone to do, ihavarilimian: thatcanaleranienerciny= ¢ the initiative after you have fei aballl he’ path ontecinoy, 24 given all matters some thought, but . nonin lif you wait too long your opportuni- As sure as God is good, so surely ties will have passed by. there is no such thing as necessary — Strong of will, and With a great onsen a love nature, your love affairs’ will Ae Ss eae be happy. You have a leaning to- tastie dolls have become popu- Wird arts which should be culti- y among London society women. Y, DEC. 7—Persons horn are prone to day dream con- eRe but these dreams will be ° a profitable to you if you try to make them come true, | EYRE JOB 3°). veis tees se coca and ty enerey 8 and The word “cocktail” is of Ameri-! can origin. | side elf-confidence you can put in'o pr many of them whieh will THIS 1S TODAY BECAUSE make you many lasting friends. YESTERDAY HAS © Do not permit the deep thinkin CONE AND TOMORROW | POISON CAUSES DEATH |* Dickinson, N.D., Dee. 6.—General poisoning from an infection in pe ‘hip caused the death Wednesday | morning of Richhrd Alois, six-year- | old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nist- ler, farmers near Beach, The body was shipped to Beach that afternoon, day The little fellow was one of five children “NOTICE of sports and the youth of the city should have some clean, well sponsored place for the enjoyment of it. It is a most worthy cause and the matter of financing it,, Ho pared Fo Se FM ps aN "Do not experiment. To buy Beulah Coal is winter wis- ’ .. | dom. Wachter Transfer Co. ie Phones 62 and 63. j (Copgright, 1 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1924 50 KILLED TODAY By Albert Apple Another victim of reckless driving—this time a child, a little girl. But no one pays much attention, for there are 50 victims today—every day— Eighteen thousand people killed in auto accidents this year in the United States! The horror is not fully realized until you grasp that ji means:+ One victim will be killed this year for every 760 autos. In 10 years, it’s one chance in 76 of each car killing a pedes- trian, driver or passenger. Driving a car, this is the dread calamity that lurks. The toll of needless speed. Never to be forgotten. Ever to haun: the memory. . . . The huddled, lifeless form on the pave- ment. . . . A nightmare through eternity. i Caution would have prevented it. AS Are you a safe driver? ‘ Or will yours be the “one car among every 760” this year to mangle the flesh, crush the bones and kill a human —— FABLES ON HEALTH: PROPER VEGETABLES ; | I'm always hearing about these|considered a table of these vege vegetables that I ought to eat with | tables: jug create; but hae tarettneye? Spinach, cabbage, kale, artichokes, TRt nee AAA wy lettuce, asparagus, cauliflower, string In asking this of Mis physician; MY. | ceas, tenniel, best greens, oF dande Jones of Anytown voiced a question | jjon greens, that occurs to any number of people.| Of the “straight vegetable” list a There is a great deal of talk about | Selection may be made from the fol i“green and leafy” vegetables, and of | O(N? giving them to growing children. | hea | Here, then, rrots, onions, turnips, beets, , peas, eggplant, lentils, toma- given what might be / otes‘ und parsnips, ADVENTURE OF |{ MAN | THE TWINS _ | DAN NEWS |, BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON P, T, SPEAKER COMING A. H. Yoder of the extension de- partment of the University of North “I am going to ask another rid- ¢ dle.” said the Riddle Lady, “but it| Dakota will be the speaker at a meeting of the Mandan Parent-Teach- ete i uz {et association which will be held lee eae Sei Men: 1,» | Some time the early part of the week ike them better when they don't.” | it was announced today. Mr, Yoder | “So do we,” said Nancy and Nick. jis coming to this part of the state “So do we,” said Mr. and Mrs,| at the invitation of several of the i Peter-Peter. Parent-Teachers associations in Mor-, ton and nearby counties and has of- ~ fered his services to the local organ- ization. is not going to rhyme.” “So do we,” said Sleepy-Head and 'Slow. “We like things better when {they don’t rhyme.” | So the Riddle Lady began, “I PNEUMONIA VICTIM jhave a thousand arms and no legs} , G. Woodworth, a brother-in-I \which is more fortunate than if I] of the Reko brothers of . this jhad a thousand iegs and no arms, passed away at Minot on Thur: [because I am a serubby sort of | according to word regeived here. person. The cause of his death was pneumon- { “My friends are the scrubbing] ia, with which he hag been ill only a {bucket and the wiping cloth. short time. Mrs, Woodworth, who “We like to talk things over. Just recovering from a ‘serious “We talk about the pup. He | illness if at present with relatives at tracks in mud and splotches milk | Oakes, N. D. Besides his wife and tout of his pan when he drinks. father and mother, four children “We like to talk about the baby. | survive, He is just old enough to walk and a eat bread and butter. He spills TEMPLARS ELECT greasy crumbs all over the floor. At the regular meeting of the “‘We like to talk about Mr, | Couer de Lion Commandery held at Brown. He spills ashes out of his|the Masonic hall the following offi- pipe and makes the place all messy.| cers were elected for the comingp “‘We like to talk about Billy. He | year: Commander, H. ; never wipes his feet on a rainy Generalissimo, Grant mer; Ca “We like to talk about Betty. |tain-General, A. B. Welch; Senior She drops sticky caramel papers and | Warden, Dr. A. O. Henderson; Jun- never picks them up. ion Warden, EF. W. Miller; Recorder, ““All these people make work for | August Timmerman; Treasurer, F. us to clean up, but we never com- | A. Ripley. plain. “‘If there was no work they| Acquit Funks _ would not’ keep us and then we Id be it of a home.’” ere it a broom?” asked Mm. Of Manslaughter Muffet. “No,” said the Riddle Lady. “A| jae cere Apa ee 8s aye Sp ee| Y, Sy lay ac- forme enniichs elWAYercleansUPIBCichy| (er ited Euhauuky dermeriy | of Jamestown, of the charge of man- slaughter in connection with thed death of his small child, alleged to have been fatally sealded by moon- wrne| shine mash through carelessness or ye eee pranne weweerer: “IWS intent of the parents, ‘The case “That's right,” said the Riddle | 2#0imst Cora Funk, his Avie, ees rhat’s ; ; with the same crime, was dismissed. adv. aAndethara!s stheiprise: “Ally Sian aHlivelieitaren iieke Me: dina, was acquitted of assault and battery with a hammer upon Leonard Peterson, a neighbor. Henry Hurst pleaded guilty to as- saulting Walter Roman with a knife during a row at a threshing machine. He will be sentenced later. “Is it a-—is it a—" began Mrs. Spratt, then stopped. She really couldn’t think of a thing. “I know,” said Mrs. Grundy who nice new scrubbing brush. Mrs. Grundy would rather—much rather—have had a new sugar spoon or a nut-bow! or a candle-stick, but she took her prize with a thank you and a smile and carried it home and showed it to Mister Grundy very proudly. Because after all a prize is a prize and when you win one it shows how much smarter you are. Another thing, my dears! If it D. GRADU, ones ae ee deol ATE brushes, how would a world full of cuparnpoons and nut “bows and |MIRES D. B. C. MAN, candle-sticks look! ! Like nothing at all—like nothing] Knowing by personal experience, at all! the superiority of Dakota Business “Here is another riddle,” said the . Riddle Lady. “Just a short one, | College, Fargo, Mr. Ellefson, credit What is it that has two arms, but | "an for the Northern School Sup- no hend and no feet, yet goes where | Ply Co. naturally phoned his old I go?” school when a bookkeeper was 8,” said Jack A’ Spandy. needed recently. James Brown was said the Riddle Lady. i NACEBRIET Gandia Lege: sent. Mr. Ellefson, himself, began “No,” said the Riddle Lady. as bookkeeper, but, like hundreds that riddle. the ranks. And the Riddle Lady had to tell. 227 D. B.C. graduates have be- * fate pce emaane. comebank executives. Build YOUR NEA Service, Inc.) | future ona solid foundation. Watch each week. ‘‘Follow the Succef$- A .man ‘in Brighten, England, | ful’—Monday. Write F. L. Wat- walked’five miles in his sleep. kins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, “ RITTEN AT “W KILLARNEY How soft the pause! the notes melodious cease, Rost 9p sock nt el nota sound ey fa t ts | And do. you know, no one guessed | Of “Dakotans’’ quickly rose from ‘and funeral services were held Fri-| ed e

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