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at eS , Kills OpNEW YORK OTH ti * Mort. si pictui John ing a impler sale, amend bills. As garett warde Acti | report ' bill te ers 0: was 1 the fi, were Sen 1Ramsy \jan ar "movin “porate “Ef thave Vfaresr '\days ‘Met tl ! Jone '3Senat. \ arose he bh 1 | of th sure | iterso: dshoul Ishout, and I Tilton, jakke ‘rede rets of Ba Hijon, = id ‘ pau) omar 1 ‘ ic L a: bd ‘ . ¥) h, 1 u ACPAGE TWO naturehant Tailor: | texcepiNe feu : 3672;,8mall children ? 80 & —has ‘been checked. o have defective eyesight. Ws af instead of con; ae d as we have become.to almost any shock, we shud- the thought that we may be nearing the season wher colored bathing suits will be the vogue. latter. EORGE D. MANN CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS Publishe: DETROIT oe BISMARCK TRIBUNE tered at the Postoffice, plu N. D., as Second Class r N Foreign Representatives i G. ANY | . LOGAN PAYNE COMP. Kresge Bldg. AND SMI TH MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The American Press is exclusively entitled to the use or! ished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein’ = ‘are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE in Daily by carrier, per year...... terda(Daily by mail, per year in (in Bismarck) .. killed Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismai ave Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........... rek) THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) (Official City, State and County Newspaper) CLOTHES A man’, should include: Four overcoats and severs Tuxedo and full dress suits. 1 suits of sport clothes. Waistcoats (the more the better.) Sack suits for business (number optional), either single r double breasted. Riding suit. ilk hat. 4 To most of us this sounds more like the wardrobe of ‘bill wmatinee idol than the ordinary citizen. itaken clothes orielse we are a nation of ra: gmuffins. Either it is a lot o wardrobe, says the National Association of Mer- poned * Morning coat and waistcoat, with striped trousers and .The garter manufacturers shamed us about the appear- \ i | | 4 Fifth Ave. Bldg. | republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not seneration is decadent and that | ‘otherwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub- | $7.20 | : ne: - 6.00 | wit testi the pance of our hose supporters with pertinent queries as to their ‘was fooks “this morning.” “Perhaps the merchant tailors will yet make Beau Brum- Is of us all. TRADE Our export trade ‘partment. is now about 10 per cent above itthe spre-war figures, that of our leading rivals about 15 per cent | :¢time below, according to Dr. Julius Klein of our commerce de- We have learned a lot in recent years about export trade. ‘4amenUntil the war our sales abroad were limited mostly to raw| :(prommaterials and to a few manufactured articles protected by * Senour patents. But during the war our production increased so much that had to get foreign markets to take care of the surplus aator left by the armistice. And although we have to charge more for our goods, ‘our rivals still cling. ‘ject Same, because they’re worth more. rae -Another factor in our big export trade, says Dr. Klein, is 2 “I that we have scrapped many of the old methods to which begause of high production cost, we market them just thej ' th Picard USELESS eres The other day a four-year-old baby in Seattle shot him- voaeeseHf in the head with a revolver he found in a bureau drawer. | bate Presumably the gun was in the house for the “protection” passaofits inmates. Now, that the damage is done, the weapon probably will Forthe barn door after the horse has been stolen. Of what real use is a revolver in a house where there are} To insure them against accident one must i Peck.cither unload the gun or keep it locked up. And what good. WRuschin an emergency, is an unloaded weapon, or a loaded one Agaquite out of reach? « fed in Uys L vi Ms: inbe thrown away or else securely hidden—a case of locking: Why don’t we weigh the consequences of our acts before The recent typhoid fe ‘aw oysters. OYSTERS ver outbreak in Chicago apparently This was the one that led to the ban on we commit them? Loaded weapons within the reach of chil- hidren is criminal neglect. Circumstantial evidence seemed to point to the oyster s tHe: spréader of the disease, although the city’s water f oysters as a general rule. supply, asi well as milk, lettuce and celery, fell under sus- dicion for ‘a while. ’ Chicago’s health commissioner, however, wants it un- lerstood-that he is not aiming to discourage consumption In fact, he recommends them as a food, because of their EYES Approximately 12,000 school children undergoing vision ll the children examined. hool curricula as arithmetic. inue this neglect. lests by the United States Public Health Service were found This represented 37 per cent of It-is “striking evidence of the limited extent to which the yesight of school children is being given attention,” sa e Eye Sight Conservation Council of America. Especially so, since the number of children with defec- indive vision at 16 years of age was four times the number at | | qy-ix years. Regular eye examinations should be as much a part of ys We are criminal if we con- f STREETS Ofie reason our pavements do not last longer is that they ag...The surfacing goes to pieces prematurely. ‘Then the street has to be paved over again. Fishes ot gress. a son will grow u; y-net do away, once for all, with this foolish waste, ing all the pipes in tunnels? initial investment, to be sure, would cost more. ‘in.the long run the saving would be tremendous. ““‘Mést mothers cherish the fond hope-a P|c Just a little different fromthe father, the dam ‘brute. | pick-out: the foreign born. They cuss capital 2 lodine content with its consequent specific value against goi- :4 (er; because it i$. a non-fattening food and because any safe “ood taken fromi the sea fosters national conservation. re forever being dug up to. repair sewers and other pipes. |); ' Sométimes, it seems, the finer the job done by a paving crew,'|caactly who it was. Come on, every- icker it will be plowed into and patched by diggers. the pavement is replaced, the patches inevitably | come to | successfully except as it is spirit- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, Editorial Review _ Comments reproduced in this i column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. Thy are presented here in order thet our readers may have both sides ise of important jues which are being discussed in the prese of the day. tt THE PESSIMISTIC NDRYMAN | | (Detroit News) offers | al bit of con- the present | what he s: is the fin: clusive, evidence. th modern: family life is demoralized. “You don’t see many darned! socks in a laundry any more,” he d. “If you counted the compara- tive number of holeg in the stock- ings that have come in here over a period of years amd plotted the totals in statistical curv you would have an exact bar ter of the spread of feminism. “Seriously speaking, the p! darned sock does indicate rival of a new period of do- ie economy. Any laundry: that the sti Judy O° the colonels lady now same thing next to their skin. CAN BUSI THE MANAG LD? i | | NESS | WORL i erry i} (Edward S. Martin in Harpers) | There is no objection to business | managing the world if it is the best | force to do it, but it cannot do it ualized. Is. it Perhaps it Ls eae les about becoming spiritualized? . Sometimes it seems When we talk today business we are talking {about something different than was covered by the same word thirty, or twenty, or even ten years ago. The war was not in yain. ~The (world becoming _ spiritualized. Busin hows it. Science shows Education and the churches are aware of their great need of it. All the great departments of hu man activity are working nowa- days to save the world. If they can be sufficiently spiritualized they can do it. The leadership among them will go where the capacity for that} leadership exists and minor faults and imperfections will not hinder ® “Mf business has that capacity in| the great degree, let it go to busi- | It is no time to be scared) They say snuff may become pop- by names, But if business is to |war in society again. Perhaps, ut manage the world it must be sig |!#st, an end te petting parties is in business; very big, indeec!—com- sight. rehending all things. eee —— : eee ase the saddte, let! The arguments over child labor us see what it can make of the job. laws show we do more for infant in- iE dustries than we do for infants. et | In Berlin, a doctor sues for re- moving a double chin. He should be ‘paid. Two chins are not better than one. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | | The women are rolling their stock- ings again, we hear. Chirp Chipmunk and his wife, and Peg Leg, the peddler, and Nancy and Nick, the Twins, all hurried back to the dining room. Mrs. Chipmunk reached up on the} mantel shelf and took down the old! tea pot and taking off the lid, held Don’t strain your eyes reading late “ai night. Take care of them. Skirts’ will be shorter this spring. Skirts will have to be shorter. They couldn't be tighter, not with- out walking on crutches. the under her husband’s nose. “See!” she cried. “The money’s gone, and who else could have taken it but you?” “Honest to goodness, I didn’t Clorinda,” said Chirk. “That money was for a rainy day, and although it looked like rain today I never touch- tea pot A skirt is a garment which always seems to be too long, too, short, toa {tight or too something. itened return of snuff is a protection. It will be great little chaperone. ed it. Someone else took it.” I Heving Rinne GA hWiosihi Bak eeu ea lot of money,”|, Huge packing plant in Worthing- said Mrs. Chipmunk, “How could t™ Ind. burned. As usual, we it smelled jcooking. like a thousand brides you buy me a birthday present if you hadn't?” “[ went out and earned it,” said Australopithecus Africanus is the oun spre neat coy eooacey Tae [name a London scientist gives to dhs, “When ake Reddler and. the! What he calls the missing link, Re- member it, please Twins came, I thought, ‘Now's my chance to get out and earn a |jttle money without Clorinda knowing it], ? : oe Pad anearise Hee jfused to let an American have its “Well, I'm sorry I was so hasty,”{°i! Wells. Doesn't such treatment said Mrs, Chipmunk forgivingly.{¢@™@"d war? “But I did get such a turn when I found the money gone, I -couldn’t quite get over it.” “But who took the money?” said Nancy. “That's. it! Who?" repeated Mrs. Chipmunk. “Someone saw Chirk, go! out and knew I would be busy look- Y0URe man for marrying her daugh- papery Peg: Leg’s bergaine;!t¢%, We believe such action isa and they've slipped in the back door j) and out Who could it have been?” It_was a great mystery. “How did you earn your money, | Chirk?” asked Mrs. Chipmunk, kind- ly, for after all the little chipmunk The Italian government has re- the people want a As usual, in bread we say the staff of life is In Belgium, bread probe. probes, crooked. In Oklahoma, a woman shot a "Young: man for marrying her daugh- New California well gives natural jsteam. If it isn’t watched, it is liable {to run for office. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Ine.) | °———_—___.—____________ lady was pleased that her husband |{ had remembered her birthday. 4 POET’S CORNER x “It was this way,” said Mister |&—@—————_-_ Chipmunk. “Old Daddy Cracknuts TRUE REPENTANCE In a lonely forest, Far away from home, A little girl sought Jesus That she might no longer roam, lost some of his nuts down a little hele in the tree where he lives. Mrs. Cracknuts and the boys were} away and Daddy is too fat to get in- tu places where he used to be able} to go, so he asked he to help him get the nuts out. He said he'd give; me half a dollar if I'd go. That's where F’ve been.” Suddenly Chirk stopped. “I've got it. I bet. you I know who stole our money. As I was passing Mister Bags’ store on the way home, I saw Frisky Ferret buying about a thou- gand dollars worth of, candy.” “And he never worked a, day in hig fe!” cried Mrs. Chipmunk. “That's She had wandered far away From \her mothers teachings, And her life grew miserable And her poor heart aching. She had ceased to kneel To the Great Father above. She enjoyed the pleasures here And had forgotten Jesus and His love. Out in ‘the lonely forest She knelt and prayed aloud, That dear God would save her body. We'll go andgfind him.” And remove the dark, bleak cloud. So off to Mister“ Bags’ store they ail went, Peg Leg coming last with his, pack. And there was Fricky Ferret at the candy counter, his pockets: stick- ing out like balloons, with all -the candy he'd bought. He was just, handing. the money over the counter when in. they marched, - “That's my money!” cried Chirk hipmunk suddenly. it , With one leap, Frisky was over their heads and gone. a Bet the Chipmunks ..got. their money end Chirk bought his wife a pink polka-dot sun-bonnet to wear when she hung out the washing. From Peg Leg, of. course! And fister Bags didn’t care a bit. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Ine) | ' God heard her little prayer And spread. His great arms’ wide, To receive this little soul 3 That had wandered from His side. Oh the, joy, that she experienced When received by Him, How she hurried to tell mother And spread the news to men. If you have never sought Jesus, Seek Him, now to day; In your privgte closet. You. must kneel. and pray. Ask the Lord.to take you ‘And help you walkvaright, He will lead you gently And always in the light. : Velva Bailey, | The New Papa. | j find Jim. +: The Tangle LETTER FROM SALLY ATHERTON TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT As I telegraphed you, we are in a particular mess down here. Iam enclosing two notes which explain themselves. I don’t know what made me come back to the office last night after dinner except that I thought] possibly there might be « telegram for somebody telling me about Les- lie. You can imagine my surprise when I found the two enclosures which I am sending you. There wes no time to waste. Happily I knew Detective Suntley of the police force, and by calling the central station was able to 1o-| cate him, We wirelessed immediately ev body in harbor sailing between m Fnight and dawn and started out to In the meantime a telephone mes- sage to the state prison told us that Mabel Carter's husband had not es- caped. The woman had evidently be-| came’ tired of sitting around while Jim was busy on his new job, and he had’ taken this way of getting herself and him out of the country. After considerable delay we at last found them on a small boat leaving for Argentina. Jim was all for braving it out and talked very big until my friend the detective threatened to put him under arrest, and I convinced the boy that the woman had lied to him, that her life was not in danger, that her husband was still in the state prison. Then he went to pieces, Mr. Prescott, and was just a heart-broken boy whose illusions were all dispelled and whose trust was forever shattered. The wonderful sacrifice that he thought he was making had resolted itself just into sordid theft. His love was murdered and his life was ruined. I took him home to my “flat. I | do if this is not given him. also got the money he was taking with him except about a thousand dollars, which he had paid for the tickets to South America. Both these tickets I gave to the woman. She cam sell one of them. Up to date I have succeeded in keeping everything out of the news- papers. Mr. Santley has been a host within himself. He did everything necessary for me. Of course, you can make any ex- ample of Jim that you wish,’ but I think Jim. has learned his lesson. I don’t think the boy is a criminal. I wish I could influence you just a little tow: giving him another ce. I hate to think what he will If Leslie’ is well enough, perhaps you might come up for a day and fix things up for me. T assure you, I do not know which way to turn. Sincerely, SALLY ATHERTON. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) | A Thought o———_- ———— |) So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immor- tality, then shall be brought to pase the saying that is written, Death is! swallowed up in victory.—1 Cor, 15:54, oy A Ts death the last sleep? No, it is the last final awakening.—Walter Scott. Directions for making vinegar from any kind of fruit are given by a recent government bulletin. Machines that will wash and fill 3600 milk bottles an hour are a new feature of dairy equipment. EVERETT I GL THIS MORNING. ~WAATT FROM A CONCERN UP ALL THE LCOCAC FIRMS DSALING tN CERTAIN -COMMOPITIS ONCE AD I RAN ACROSS ‘Yau “HERS'S A LETTER EN TO ME THAT X WANT YOu WELL, GIVE. MS A ~CHANCS TOiReand’ (7 THAT WANTS TO LING AFTSR I HAD READ (IT OVGR SEVERAL TIME! im sn yy MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1925, SANDERS’ ABILITY BY HARRY B. HUNT NEA Service Writer” Washington, Feb, 16,—Fitting ad- ministration..shoes to congressional feet. That, figuratively, -is the really important job Everitt Sanders of Indiana must undertake in. his new position as secretary to the president. His eight years’ service in the Heuse has enabled him to gauge rather accurately the size and shape of congressional “understandings.” If Sanders isn't able to ‘‘sell the Coolidge line,” built on “common sense” soles and with Puritan vamps, then he's lost the knack of sal manship he acquired,as a shoe sales* man back in Terre Haute and Bloom- ington, Ind. If he “sells” the line, then Con- gress will march comfortably along with the president for the next two or four years. If he doesn’t, then there'll be.a lot of. limping, much: pain and anguish, and many gaps in the ranks: where, stragglers with misfits have dropped out of line, Sanders, like Coolidge, is a serious sort. Son of an underpaid Hoosie: minister, he had to make his own way through normal school and col- lege. : While clerking in a Terre Haute store, the year before he entered college, he intimated to the pro- prietor one evening that he'd like to take the next Saturday off. “That's not a very convenient his employer anéwered. “It’s Do not’ take the advice of neighbor on how to care for the has been good for one baby may not be, good for another. It is hoped that.the baby will be breast-fed, but if by any ¢hance this is impossible, a doctor, or a -baby health clinic,is the only- safe place for advice. Sometimes it is hard. t, ch a child to like some of the foods recom- mended for ‘him, after he has grown old enough to take food other than milk, but the chijd should not be permitted to grow finicky about this food. To teach him requires patience, SALESMAN TO BE TESTED FABLES ON HEALTH GET COMPETENT. ADVICE baby, Mrs. Jones was told. For what] ° AS A always our busiest time. Wouldn't sume other time do just as well?” “Well—it wonld be a bit incon- venient,” Sanders is said to have re- plied. “You see, I've arranged. to.get married Saturday.” i Unlike C. Bacom Slemp whom he succeeds as aid to the president, -|Sanders is lacking in that indefin- able quality known as “magnetism” er “personality.” By contrast with the tall, swarthy, stiave Slemp, he seems unimpressive and colorless. “Physically of rather stodgy. build, swith a large head and) heavy shouf- ders, Sanders looks miscast in a sec- retarial role. There is a sallowness to his skin that suggests his big body would be benefited by an @at- door job. The tensely intent lines on _ his face, too, suggest that it is his will- power, his determination, rather than his personal preference, which holds him behind the big flat-topped ma- hogany desk in the office adjoining the president's. For a time at feast, following in- auguration, the White House is to lose its “star boarder.” That title has been bestowed, by common consent, on the pudgy, well- fed figure of Frank W. Stearns. Not in the memory of the oldest inhabitant has any individual not+a member of the presidential family spent so much time at the White House as has Stearns. But after March 4 he is leaving for a two-month stay itt Europe—on vacation. and it may take years to establish habits that may save trouble later n. “Mother-love is far-reaghing. Yt should be farseeing, and. be. willing to insist on some unpleasantness now for the sake of the future hap- piness of the child. New foods should be introduced into the diet slowly. The child's stomach is no more prepared to dir gest heavy foods than his muscles are prepared to do the heavy work ‘of a man. Therefore be careful of such heavy foods as dried potatoes, doughnuts, sausage, pork, spiced pickles, rich pastry and cake, even after the child is old enough to attend school. New York, Feb. 16.—‘“Is there no great beauty in New York?” queries a man from Kentucky. “So much of what I read about New York con- ens the ugly, the morbid, the sor- id.” Come with me,, old man, and we'll find some beauty. ig Here we are in a great canyon, of tall buildings. Look up at the sky and see a wisp of white floating like a bit of lace against the blue. The sky oxer an ‘ugly city or a beautiful field is the same at high noon. However, it is different in the morning here. We'll get up early tomorrow and see the sun rise. Dawn breaks green here. There is some- thing in the fog and mist of the city that blots out the red to be seen in ke early rural sun and: brings out an eerie green. | Tonight we'll go up on a roof and see the city by moonlight. There it will lie with the throb of it dwindled to a gentle pulsing, little puffs of steam and smoke here and there turned to silver in the magic of the moonbeam. Gone is all the drabness, the tenement tawdriness you behold in the daylight. Over there are great towers attenuated in the soft light and the shadows. See, they sway! They seem fo, like trees hold- ing communion jin an enchanted for- est. Let's go down to the harbor and watch the ships, come and go. There's a square-rigger riding at anchor. Old sailing vessels, row upon row, emblems of a passing oge,| relics of pirates and storm and wreck and flying spray. What a picture to paint? And here comes a dirty little tug towing a barge of freight’ cars many times its size. Its power is fasci- nating. Ard there goes a giunt liner; bright and trim as it starts for for- eign lands, seeming to beckon us to go along. After while, when the sun goes down, the water becomes a crimson tide of the blood of the heavens. Then purple. Then ‘gray., Then black with the night. ; And there is beauty in the lives-of those raat here. I want yougto meet the blind man who sells pi. ba across the way and the blind woman with him. They are husband and wife, each helping the other to see. Ishave never seen them but what they were smiling. B ‘And there are thousands of homes here where a man, or a woman, or child lives and ors and sacrifices for the happiness of dear ones. I can take you along the byways of poverty where song and laughter tise above wretchedness. In the spring } can show you. lév- ers strotting arm in arm through the parks jn the -half-light of dusk. .And almost every day I see-young- sters at their games living the great Adventure of youth, as it ia lived the world over. : Yes sir, old man, there's beauty ere, just as there's benuty in Ken- tucky.. Beauty, you know, is half in the eye of the beholder. suige JAMES W. DEAN. « ‘(Florence - And fashion a wonderful Foe here-is a scene from Once Beain’t look; And_1 see. unrolle Firat, glad -childi nd ‘the -earneat ; But a ‘beifig loved ‘better 'Potht-out the pathway of eauh itsimensuse of Gay days and: gray days,, Are intermixed: on Life's Seenes I have lived thru Ringing thei Jewels of Mingle their tlemes 1 see the Alps,-in white garments drest, And a traveler climbs up ‘their snow, olad-breast, F.see glad: pictures of Sunny Spain, ‘And the rock bound ‘coast of ithe atate of Maine; I see the .storm-swept seaside’s crest, And the verdant plains of the houndless West, AN these I see in the fire's bright glow, As the Tlickering flames hurry to anil, fro, But ‘the. scrofl-turns on, and the days of Youth, (Almost forgotten in Worry’s maze. ee FIRGSIDE FANCIES Borner) I love to sit hy the fireside’s glow, And watch the pictufes that come and go, As I gather the visions that come to me, tapestry; Glad are the scenes in ‘the glowing hearth, And they represent places all over the earth, sunny Japan, And there is a picture from |old Amsterdam. @ Rew scene appears, jays: with, ir ai joys, ‘which each child arena’ ‘OW Santa,’ then was, no’ dream or myth, than, kin or kith, light and truth. How the yeare flit. by; each on golden. wings, rapture ‘brings, sunshine.and rain, eounténpane; lad -ecenep and sad scenes fal om heer epee a tall and rise, before my eyes, in bygone days, : Geptios Of beatity their turréte rise). in ir forms: on the distant skies, roby ‘and bag pat in ‘the thteside'w dight; Ron, ‘Hillieg with withered ark Pua nce Po which my 1 hen ‘the lights ‘leaves, fondly cleaves, urn tow, <