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PAGE EIGHT _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CHILDREN CHOOSE BOOKS WITH CARE Many Factors Enter Into Se- lection by Children of Books at Libraries COLOR, PRINT FACTORS) ) 10. (By the Associated Pre Grand Forks, N. D., Mareh Johnny selects his library with meticulous care, often spending | more time in making sure that he has the book that he wants than be} does in reading it, while his mothe sends him down for 4 book in « cover to match the parlor ner or simply sends a note: “Desr| Librarian: Pie give Johnny book for me to read over the week end,” says a review of library usage made by the university of North Dakota extension division The extension service, after askin several North Dakota librarians how children choose books, as compared’, to the, methods used in this operation Gf oyidier by their elders, finds that boys and) girls spend hours between the stacks while the older folks grab the first, ous itle or have geod taste have book with an appealing the librarian guide their re {t Jing. After Johnny has received the book have pick wor his mother had the librarian for her, he goes downstairs to! type and famous artist operating bonds up to Dee, 31, 1924 nage " the children’s department where he! That children's book taste is a came to $68,420.24 and to jreet this een in life while we are Inoue the section in. which the Well developed is largely to their own a tax levy of $76,238.65 was made |) "pis j ie ane SEabsehavies tikes fare kept. creat, the librarians said. Less | ‘ N jin 1923. In 1924 a tax levy of $60,- Lanes oes ue ie Then he goes systematically down than five percent of the parents come} ry was made to take off the inter- | sustrial life, not as a question! the) rows) (aking (out | book at a to) the library to help them selucty eae est on these bonds for 1925. justice, not as a question of ex- eo books oy to find what sort of reading| Outside of this interest the chief |i aienay, but ane weauae we According to the librarian who's available for their childrer. —) Some Improvement. Is Noted #te™ He peaiseat banal is de" |nced brotherhood more than any- gave the extension information on ihe se i pono: oe thing else.” the subject, he, in some lous in the Last Six Months of {comes to, Seance eu ieee ai Ewereannatj? she: eontinued), “Have fashion, can tell at glance whether H the Year 1924 leouated tf g22 68027. This has (Teslity in our religion unless it WM eRibipses. Rail Pa aMeMlyle? | ( Pe Fein ibeen materially reduced during ees er ieec ease bat id Mattie ip ged “probable”. “When he hay half! i months since the losses Un- 11? vedo not ee the world as a field t dozen “probable” selections, he | KY) FIRST HALF IS BAD der this sume category from Aug: |5.," teamwork, for. brotheriood. We ne to the : ble, looks them all, H ieee vane eerie eee ree ae a place for struggle after through and decides on the best two ; z whe Ne TR hee Sees Es e things we want.” or three. Son of Columbus, Ohio, Man,’ ,,7" ee a eenteees | The primary question, Bishop Mechanical makeuy gover to a) It Is Said and made ‘| VOTE FUNDS Jones thinks, is not what are fair large extent J choice, the ex-| L ‘ Hiatt wages, what lare fair hours, fair Ruaionieers Tae book! \ Be ea FOR CONTESTS |tiniitions, or fuir returns upon an must be illustrated, written in the} Huron, 19,—Huron’‘ : » North Dak s+ nvestment, “but is the basis upon | nf the North Dakota indu 2 A ‘ 8 first person; its pages must show mystery man, s found uncon: mivisaion just made public] Washington, March 10.—Authority | which we are trying to do the plenty of white space—that is have scious on the street: February 14 and funds for the Senate elections lots of conversation; the print must has been definitely identified a 1 on the audit made at the committee to begin investiga’ 20h is | ———————————————— be fairly large; and the book must A. Stecle, son of Oliver Steele dclevator by the Temple {Summer of the contest involving the be of moderate size. | Street, Colinbus, Ohi, it|fyiesmen Co. the repeet skgwe thes | zeute Of Senneded) BEGGIN (sows) If two books have all these char-) nounced here today ion Dec. 31, 1924 the deficit incurred |‘ Minnesota and Bratton, Ni 1 ree Last Member of Antierican Army of Occupation in Germany Arrives Home on the S. S. President Harding INDUSTRIAL PROGRAM OF CHRIST TOLD Bishop Paul Jones Gives Views in Talk Made at St. George’s Church WAS SQUARE DEALING “Industrial Teamwork,” or the ap- plication of the teachings of Jesus t» the various problems of our group relationships, was tthe subject of the Rt. Rev. Bishop Paul Jones’ talk last night at St. George’s Episcopal Chureh. Jesus, he pointed out, did not have an economic program, even though people have tried to deduce one from his teachings; but he did have a principle of lite which he was ‘an- xious to apply to all questions, and which does apply to our group re- lationships, whether in industry or Photo shows Loftus, the in the Americ Army of Occupation in Germany to re-jelsewhere, and that ‘is the idea of urn home, He been there since 1 s Zreetol by his mother, who met him with a delegation | brotherhood. and, Sergeant Kneippled s hands with shim. 5 “We need this principle of broth- x ——|ethood,” said hop Jones, “in the iNustrations whieh distorted! reales sin aduiion)tleresumebadtaw meen omberent vpiscegtn aise: 17tne ‘ j 8 if wees place where men do their work. largely disappeared,| levy of $241,468 made in 1924 to |Ryne Mere Men oe i rhood. simpl hey said, and well known publishers meet the interest on these bonds for CAA RIALS LUE : MILL BETTERS 1 printing good pop paper acteristids the one with the more disappeared from Columbus!hy the enterprise still. outstanding | Me tractive cover will be che one Johnn ary und not until tne father was 3 GR, une 30, 192414 takes home. | picked old paper containing this deficit was The Although the titles and stories are the Associated Press account of the reduction shown in this ‘deficit dur- new, the same general type of stor- man. s Huron nearly ing the six months following repre- ies that held the parents and grand-' three weeks ago did relatives know jsents actual profit for that per- | sembles parents, ure the favorites today, ac-) what had me of him liod. cording to the review. ‘The fairy tule] reco: d his name at! Year Not So Good Fearii und its relatives rank first in popu- once and also that of his father, but! Taking the year 1924 as a. whole larity; close upon these follow the adventure stories and travel stories of children in foreign lands were found to be third. A newcomer in; juvenile fiction is the book from: which a motion picture has been tak- en. Children’s books must have action, their views to the librarians indicate. | They return a book with the state-| ment “This is a good one, “lots of pep,” or “I didn't like this one so well—no pep.” Besides action, the books that are favorably reported back to the librar- ians are those ending happily. The young reader don’t like a book that presents a problem and leaves it un- answered or unsolved with the re- ward hanging in mid-air. The series books, those that have “Young So-and-So on the Water,” “Young So-and-So in the Air,”| “Young So-and-So in the Jungle,” ete,, are scarcely seen on the library shelves, because when one youngster brings back his or her book, a com- panion is in tow who has been told of the wonders of the particular episode and immediately takes the book out. Profusely illustrated books, such as those portraying modern newspa+| per comic strip characters, also come in for a goodly share of thumbing, according to the review of the juve- nile library situation. It states that girls often like the books written especially to please the boy readers, while boys seldom brouse in the stacks of girl’s books. The youngest reader lispingly in- quires for “readers”, in which short stories in shorter sentences, are marked by many illustrations of ani-| mals, “A young man or woman of six or seven acquires treméndous self respect and confidence in re- ceiving, reading and returning such volumes,” the review says, The North Dakota librarians told the university extension service that there is little doubt but that the books available for youngsters now- adays are better than those of yes- terday. Cheap paper and poor ink which injured the eyes, grotesque or fatu- LOOK OUT FOR SELF POISONING . sNeglec: of the liver results in self poisoning! Not so quickly, perhaps, ‘but just as surely as it +you drank poison out of a bottle. if your liver,is not doing its work his fs aid he stoutly decla her|the showing ad that was dead, Young ¢ ‘The interest | to jis not so satisfact have suff inju to his hea und) depreciation ¢l es for the ly o, resulting: in’ pe ry e shown 3 38.78, iods of amnesia on several other oc-fagainst which is set operating ons. profit for the entire y of $90,- No instructions were — received | 960.6 his reduces the deficit for afi from the father as to what is tolthe year to $282,478.1 ductic be done with his son. Th fact during the first jsix months of the year, the mill and siv lelevator lost money on operations, [which had heen steadily mounting FEUD OPENED nee its wheels began to turn ned its maximum. At that point, Two are Dead as Result of #beve | re | how it turned the corner with the result tha! this deficit. was re duced by over $50,000 as shown before the end of the year. Analysix 6f De! Montaineers’ Fight The analysis of the 1 deficit shows that it is divided as follows: Wore emt, Meni antares on construction —boni broke out on old troublesome Creek," 4,1 Interest on operating bonds, $63,-) Take every Breathitt County, brothers were s| y in y and two third man accused of the killings has fled to ‘ é se Jee he operating | are thei ymountain. 1ekines eee ane interest would also have been! first di tormpenger information 7ece\ver Nir’ |dncurred regagilesa aot Waster 02) gives BRS Te not the mill had been operating | second eas dead [were Crocket Marshall,| Gosing the last yeak! since a part | doses OB yang) aden w) lof these bonds were disposed of in| break John D. Noble, 25, was said to have fired the fatal shots. According to) “The construction bonds issued for the report, Noble's father had tuken|¢n@ mill and elevator amount to the Marshall boys to his home.’ The) 3,090,000 and the mill operating four men had been drinking, the re- Interest accrued iy men ad: Deen dehiDe bonds to $1,350,000. port said, when the trouble began. | on construction bonds up to Dec. ‘The Marshall brothers were said|sr was $405,16! " F 131 was $405,152.07 to meet which to have been shot “in the head and! tay Jevies of $398,755 had been hetween the eves.” . | PROTEST TO WHITE FATHER 192: no quil ate! pound. thirty-t wo ft. “et helping digestion, eliminating “waste from the bowels and puri- 2 fying the t:ood, you will always be ~ troubled with sick headaches, nau- » sea, ‘dillousness, bad ‘breath, gas, “gour stomach, or constipation. Cleanse and tone your liver! Put your system in condition so you feel your very best again!’ Try juet:a spoontul of Dr. H. 8, Thach- ‘gaa’ excellent Liver ‘and Bloo: Syrup after the next few meals ‘i the quick .improvement Took and |. Indian chiefs of the Yaktma tribe of the ptate of Washington have journeyed there to protest to the “Great White Father” that they have been deprived of huning rights on their own reservation, rights guar- anteed ¢o them under the treaty of 1855. President Soniase. te shown fbetweén two of the chiefs on their visit to tié White ‘Sis-But- ; Palmer (left) and Youkosh Owhi. . have the work of {put under way during the recess and \to hold hearings after Congress as- until th tal by the entenprise | cause temporary blindness, is refusing licenses to drive busses to men wearing spectacles. two tablets three hours je doses . The jose always relief, The and third completely up the cold. Pleasant and safe to take, nine or opi- @ Contains Millions use “Pape’s Cold Com- Price, ive cents. PLAN 10 DIVERSIFY NOW. YOU'LL PROFIT BY YOUR PLANS Do you want to make 1925 a year of better profits succes: a Druggists eran 2° st” Then diversify ! There is no more reason for farmers taking chance by depending on a single crop whén the prospects are good than when they are doubtful. Diversify —and double your chances of The interest accrued on the mill co were voted by the Senate to- Chairman “Spencer expects to counting ballots that the sun shining on ‘the lenses of their glasses might London Brunswick a Phonograph }and Records, the true repro- Webb Bros. COLDS “Pape's Cold Compound” Breaks a Cold Right Up P. C. Remington, President, - ‘ A. Gfatiam) Vice Président and Cashier, C. M. Gchasiorer, Assistant Cashier. in the off hours, after we have got- ten through with our main occupa- tion of the day; brotherhood ought | FOR INSURANCE March is the month of high winds and wind- storm damage. Are you properly insured against windstorm? Windstorm insufance costs little but it may “save you a lot. See Murphy today. NO. DAKOTA +| with an aching back? world’s work one that means an op- portunity for growth in vision.” Using as an example the problem of our-migratory workers, “so gen- erally the I, W. W.,” he raised the question: “Have we asked ourselves what we think of a system that makes it necessary for hundreds of thousands of men to wander around from season to season without a chance for a home or stabilizing in- fluences?” “We cannot,” he said, “have real prosperity in the world for one group at the expense of another, whether for one social group, or one section of the country, or one na- tion.” “So the problem in industrial team- work,” he concluded, “is to try to find a way of expressing in a more definite way a new basis that har- monizes with the idea of brother- hood.” “Already in the ranks of labor,” he declared, “is there a reaching out after a different standing in indus- try, a realization that that is far more important than returns.” Tonight; the {subject of Bishop Jones’ talk will be the problem of race relations, or “The One Human Family,” at St. George's Church at 8 o'clock. 5 Is Your Work Hard? Many Bismarck Folks Have Found How to Make Work Easier. What is so hard as a day's work Or sharp stabs of pain at every sudden twist or turn? ‘There is no peace from that dull ache. No rest from the soreness, lame- ness and weakness. Many folks have found relief through Doan’s Pills. They are a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Bismarck people recommend Doan’s. i Mrs. Jack Kenyon, 417 Mandan Ave., Bismarck, says: “I had an at- tack of kidney trouble. I had puffy sacs underneath my eyes and pains in my back. It was hard for me to do my housework at times. My kidneys acted irregularly, too. Three boxes of Doan’s Pills cured me. I am glad to recommend Doan’s, know- ig them to be a remedy of wonder- ful merit, for the cure they made has lasted.” Price 60c, at all ‘dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan's Pills—{he ,same | \that Mrs. Kenyon had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N, Y.-Adv. YOUR GOOD WILL Our used cars are sold with full knowledge and appreciation of the fact that the customer’s good will is at stake. Consequently our prices are reasonable and our cars are right. M. B. GILMAN Co. 212 MAIN BTROET BISMARCK PHON® soe Dozs6e Baorners Deacers SEit Goon Used CARS Nashs OFFEF Rich-Satisfying QUALITY MAINTAINED Inspiring the activities of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is one compre- hensive conviction: that the great gift of science to man—that of motor trans- “ portation—should be brought within the reach ofall. = / The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is doing its part to bring this condition about by making enough gasoline to meet the demands; selling it at a low price, and distributing it so widely and so thoroughly that every one may com- mand it at will. To render a service so essential to the public welfare, an organization must have foresight, initiative, size and power. To reduce the cost of refining; to standardize the quality of gasoline, and : to conquer the difficulties of thorough distribution, requires vast resources, The ideal of service to all, has been the stimulus and incentive behind every expansion of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). In building great steel tanks to: hold oil in safety and without waste; in organiz- ing tank wagon fleets, or building out- post service stations; in devising more economical refinery methods—the deter- mination to serve has inspired the effort that overcame difficulties and made Standard Oil Company (Indiana) prod- ucts,/household words. ° This Company has never been baffled ‘by the magnitude or difficulty of ‘any task. It never has shirked toil nor the. - burden of initiative! It has blazed the trail, and the fruit of its daring is—gaso- line for all, at prices all can afford to pay, The efforts of this Company have been: abundantly rewarded, It is axiomatic that &enuine service, honestly rendered, always receives its just reward. But the profits won are only part of the pay, for this organization sincerely rejoices in the thought that through its exertions, motor miles for business or pleasure, Mave been increased, -bringing easier living, better health and wider oppor- tunities to millions of families. Standard Oil Company ' General Office: Standard Oil Building 910 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago one aoe eee serene hematin, sme