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All in re price at te price iron and miser uatio) cent permi crense June. merci: vestm outsid inerea duced amour reul. crease FA: HI presid of the ie chemi: a con: “Vor vigilan ler q1 1, “We hardne steel, : has be: “Par rear a constar therefc machin ed to poscibl “We ment t stery which and ag ‘pocket water + iod of quality “The; and th tests j ant to “Tt is exercist togethe spectior that ha Lue sup We tric ‘ine ski) rus wor per wlote 4s much do’ you PAGE TWO 1? THE _BISMARCK TRIBUN Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class _ Matter, GEORGE D.MANN. - ee Publisher Foreign Repr G. LOGAN PAY CHICAGO - ~~ ee DETROIT | Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH \ NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. According to Moscow Pravd; ——— ~ “=~ - Ee —-jthe ingenious Russian peasant MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | taking very practical advantage of | ; * | the new Si Hir-| The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news d otherwise credited in this paper, and Spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republi- cation of all other matter herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION and supposed to he subjects = —~ Jor popular reprobation SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE _ But better and freer mar | Daily by carrier, per year ea iivvaes $720) H ae ai bay id uel pease Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) .... - see 7.20] an islaver & ieay Rei r (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00] be sure of somewhat limited exten 6.00) — in this emergency. He can se | mail, outside of North Dakota THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) si . Sr — work is done, to (Official City, State and County Newspaper) her over the winte 4 = — es _—— = Among the other advantages of | STREET NUMERALS this popular device, according to} Two: this hard to find in Bis Cate: OE ay {tte Moscaw paper, the | peas gs hard to find in Bismarck are: (t) real}does not have to pay either cas: | liquor; (2) street numbers. ingurance or wages, or trouble himself over ain i In the telephone book and city directory every residence listed is designated by a street numeral. A rough estimate would fix the proportion of Bismarck buildings showing street numbers at 1.75 per cent. In the business district as well as throughout the residential sections of the city, street numbers are conspicuous by their absence. Census figures, compiled last week, show the city’s popu- tion to be nearly 10,000. The city, years ago, passed the ‘age where everybody knew where everybody else lived and could tell you where any resident would most likely be found at any hour of the day. Without visible house designation, Bismarck is finding trouble keeping track of itself. Lack. of residential numerals works a positive hard- hip on tradesmen and merchants obliged to deliver their wares in a fair-sized community with nothing to go by but the compass. The city commission might be of assistance in correcting this situation. REDUCTION CAMPAI A national nonpartisan organization is needed to conduct a campaign for reducing county, state and municipal e: penditures, according to General Herbert M. Lord, director ot the budget, in a speech delivered at the seventeenth annual conference of state governors held reeently at Poland Springs, Me. “As a result of this economy campaign, in which we have been, still are and will continue to be engaged, we can point to the federal government an example of courage- ous retrenchment,” General Lord said. “While public ex- penditures, taxation and indebtedness of the small divisions: of the government in this country have been mounting higher and higher in a most dangerous and alarming degree, the federal government has set an example of reduction in spending, reduction in taxation and reduction in indehted- negs that can be followed with profit by our states, counties, cities and towns. “What the federal government has done along lines of retrenchment, the states, counties and municipalities can do and should do. This country urgently needs at this time a nation-wide, nonpolitical organization to carry on such a|, campaignn. * * * “In the four budget years there has been pruned from executive estimates by the Bureau of the Budget, acting for the President, a total of $1,203,771,929, an amount nearly equal to the national debt when we went into the World war. COUNTING OUR BLESSINGS A philosopher has said: “Man can make a garden out of a desert and a desert out of a garden.” This means that the struggle to make a garden out of a desert brings out of men the best there is in them. With the result achieved, the serpent of discontent enters the gar- den, and what has been attained by so much labor and sacri- fice may be lost by a lack of appreciation of what has already been accomplished. It is well that we should give thought to the wrongs and abuses of the social and governmental order, but ‘it is also essential that we should give thought to the advantages and opportunities of our social and governmental heritage. Perfection in society and government is not to be ex- pected so long as the men and women who go to make up 4 national or social order fall short of perfection. If we wil! take a good look within ourselves we may be able to discover reasons why we have not yet arrived at the New Jerusalem. When we survey history and look about the world as it is today, we Americans will find many reasons to be thankful that we live in the age and in the land in which we have been born. Things are not perfect, of course, but they are so much better for the average man here and now than they have ever been at any time elsewhere, that we ought to count our blessings, thank God and take courage. READ THE COMICS - “The lowly newspaper comic strip, looked down upon by the elite and scorned by the highbrows, is a good thing from a hygienic standpoint, according to Dr. Frederick W. Steward neurologist, who did not hesitate to say so in a recent ad- dress. The comit strip soothes the nerves and puts us into a better temper, according to Dr. Steward. *“People whose ire is easily aroused, who fly into rage on the slightest provocation, are candidates for nerve exhau: tion and ,prain fag,” Dr. Steward said. “A calm, even tem- perament is an invaluable health asset. i “I advise neurasthenics to look for the funny side of! life. The liberal sprinkling of our newspapers with comic strips is a decidedly beneficial thing from a health stand- point.” : ae TOLERANCE A plea for tolerance’is usually a plea for tolerance along religious and racial lines. But tolerance really goes farther than that. Religious intolerance is a dreadful thing, but the other forms are al- most equally objectionable. *Toleratice is largely, withholding judgment on our fellow {ing labbr when you can get it free spatches credited to it or not | is so the local news of | ana the prejudice against so do- jing is strengthened in | the fact that people of the employ- cure one new fictu! hand by m: ing a vigorous young pe in the spring when farm labor be gins, and divorce her afte tating formalit He did) not +moke, He never | forty-fou Eaten Rae jswore. His career left trim no time! ucgnttte Regt hme” said Nick. for amatory inctalgence or amatory [CAPE We Bem Yu ai THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _Editorial Review | Comments reproduced in thin || column may orn not express | | the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here tn order that our readers may have both sides of Important issues which are being dixcussed in the press ‘of the day. CHEAP LABOR--FROM WIVES (Living Aged marriage caw. never popular with employers, Kussia vy ‘e considered, under the ft creed, kulaks and pror- y: ant gins swith which require employ Soviet author ers of hired lhor to comply. ‘The | summer wife is not timited to the legal eight-nour day, but works from dawn until sunset, She can- not strike, and under the some | what severe family Cscipline which Bolshevist modernism does | not seem to have undermined as | yet in peasant homes —she is not allowed to loat <r THE U OF NICHOLAS. CARTER {o ON Ce er areca [through such a place without magic. One shares the mystification of} At last they came to a house of Silas Bent, who in the New York | burnt orange with a purple roof and Book Review prot an inability | pink lean-to. The last kind of a to see why the parents of an earll th ouse one would expect to find in a er day were so bitterly set But there it was in cucumber patch! looking as though all the painte that prince of det BELLY CR \ ter. Mr. Carter lives in gorgeous | the worlé had dumped their paint- lite! more gorgeously illus: | pots there, fable “at s the) On the porch an old woman was he re jcutting cucumbers and counting the luted his miraculous adventure: the third person. Yet if you wish ed to peru the narrative of exploits it advicable to tack | she said whe' “I've cut cu- morning and red seed yet.” do!” children. cumbers since five th ven't found th the burning words under your | it red seed?” asked Nick, jacket and hide out s ‘here i “Oh, any red seed,” said the wo- nl the ‘barn, For Nick Carter! man éblor in. cthe. anathema to the family gov | world ex nd when I find a ernment powers of his time. red seed the spell will be broken. If But why?) Mr. Carter was one of| I don’t find it I shall have to stay ere all my life and raise cucumbers. I've been here for four-hundred and forty-four years.” tuous of men. As M lid not dri the most Bent points out he Se He was a red-blooded discourse. a ‘A the old woman. “It is a rule that American. Wrong-doing in) any] whoever comes into this patch must form was to him abhorrent. 1) spend one-hundred years helping me any case to waich he lent his tal-| to find the seed. If he finds it before ents virtue invariably triumphed.) that he may go.” Here, if ever, were the old morali:| She gave each of the Twins a knife and they set to work cutting up the huge cucumbers into pieces >|and sorting out the seeds. But all the seeds were cither white or low. Not a red seed among them 1 don't know how long they would have stayed in the Cucumber Patch if a fairy had not appeared when the old woman's , back turned. The fairy flew to shoulder and! pered. “Take your magic key! unlock the little door behind; ties supreme. Why, then, was*knowledge of Mr. ¢ considered iniquitous erage man must share the ignorance of Mr. Bent. Perhaps i was ‘because of the fact that wh his age considered the apprehen- sion and punishment of malefactors meritorious it was yet held that the adolescent should properly remain without knowledge that there were any such things as malefactors. h and you.” The fairy disappeared, but Nick* turned and saw a tiny door in the! lean-to that he had not noticed be-| i fore. He put the key in the lock, the door flew open, and there lay a lurge cucumber. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS piWhat are you doing?” shouted} 2 the old woman turning around. | BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON |) “That is a magic door. I was told never to open i Without answering Nick took his knife and cut the cucumber. It ‘was full of red seeds. THE CUCUMBER PATCH The Sour-Old¢Woman-Who-Lived. Under-the-Waterfall told the Twins that three things would stop them|, Instantly the old woman turned on, their way to-Pixie Cave. into a beautiful maiden, the little The first obstacle was the Pebble-| house turned into a palace, and the Wall of the Bean-Shooter-Man. Cucumber Patch into a bower of| The second was the Mire-of-Mud| blue-bells and roses. “Thank you, my dear. You have broken the spell,” said the maiden. ‘Now where the Saddler and his ‘wooden horse lived. The third was the Cucumber you may go safely on your Patch that belonged to the Pickle| Way to Pixie Cave.” — Woman. (To Be Continue) The Twins passed the first two of (Copyright, 1925, NEA: Service, Inc.) these safely and came at last to the a — Cucumber Patch. Here the cucumber vines grew so|” thick and so tall that it appeared to the children like a huge forest towering over their heads. There was a tiny path leading right through the vines, however, with cucumbers growing on either side as large as watermelons. Each cucumber was covered with sharp prickles that stood out like long thorns, and the children had to be very careful indeed, not to touch them as they passed, Indeed, it was their magic shoes New York, July 13.—What is prob- ably the only curb real estate mar- ket in the country is operated every day Brownsville, a very densely populated Jewish section of Brook- that made it possible for them to| lyn. move at all. No person could ever| Scores of real estate brokers in the world have made his way} swarm on one corner exchanging! , ies for sale an operating in finding buyers, splitting the commissions on deals’ made in this manner. It is not uncommon for as many as six brokers to be interested in the sale and purchase! of one small lot, with the commis- | | lists of prope’ sion for each amounting to only a! few dollars. Women ‘are prominent in the! crgwd at this curb market. Many | of them do not engage in real estate as a regular occupation. Some of them are housewives who hear that [a certain home or u certain lot in/ their neighborhood is for sale at at favorable price. ‘They then go to the curb clearing house and trade this information to the broker who offers jthem most in the way of commis- sions. 1 am told that the business trans- jacted in this. unusual realty . ex- |change often aggregates a sum of six figures in a single day. One situation. which: always bet! men until we know all the facts. nee : “How seldom. we really do know them all. : ;The man who broke into your: house ‘and robbed it; how now of the struggles and trials he went hrough he did it? ; an ee En oko gave back your son’s ring and went away with another man; what do you ‘know of the impilses and - erogs-currents that eddied back’and forth in her breast? *Bven if you do know-all the facts, it doesn’t hurt to be ig.’ “Atid when you ‘don’t Aint shes seectuneatag sim sane 2 [rere ers producers of musical revues that of pruning the show. aft has opened. Almost all -of the pre- tentious shows of this variety pres- ent # bill lasts unt{]. two or three o'clock in the morning. upon its t presentation. It ‘usually re- quire: week or more to eliminate urplus material If It Isn’t One Thing It’s Another nd retain». bal-| anywh a bad break, Of course, I didn't think this, Lit-| se, was forced, to cover Do you know, Little Marquise, I Marsuise, that night, for wel bit curious about what Syd rted immediately for the Travel-| t been saying. His last few went on to a Club, and la da dance, speeches could be taken two ways,| show But when I sat MONDAY, JULY 18, 1925 MUST BE If you live in a part of fores go into them. them. Don’t leave rubbish about Don’t pull up wild flowers | exc The forest is inflammabl city fire department. forest. Reverse your city habits. is really out. Quench it with earth. Legitimate use is. depleti Don’t add the waste of fire. either international tyrant. an invertebra It h cept as that state gives it to i such jurisdiction to an ‘international tribunal, and in accepting its deci- sions, even when they are unwelcome. If you wish to argue that the per- manent court of international jus- tice is not so good a tribunal as.the Hague panel éourt, to which we al- ready belong, that argunicnt, if uny- body makes it, would be entitled to a hearing. you argue against the ‘ourt merely because it is an international tribunal, and you do t believe i tribunals, that i res ! Senator Reed will understand that legal phrase. It means that the has already been decided and is no longer open to discussion. The Un-Americanism of Our 100 Per Centers when he told Jagk and me that M down today to write to you, I Besides, there is no issue as to ville Sartoris posed as ‘not believing | had the first chance I have had to| what the World Court “would” be. in virtuous women or honorable men.| think over that whole evening, and] [t “is.” You will remember that 1 impetu-| follow out its undercurrents,” and] American may go into it or stay out ously exclaimed that I wished he| that is what, Tam doing, of it, but the court. is there, either had not told me. ‘Then, as. though] — Melville met us at the] way, with jurisdiction over the rest he spoke before he thought, in al-| club wher private dining room.| ofthe world, necented ‘by: it ws ‘the most warning tone of voi a most gorgeous table w set. I did} tinal auth rity to determine the law Remember, Leslie, not think that Pittsbu: ’ able ol Madonna of the Snows.” |to do anything so beautiful. Nae ER HIRELARRO ALG Just what did he mean by that,| It was my first visit to the Travel- dori the first seiner in our ers Club, as my father Traveler, and neither Flowers in profus Little Marquise? Was he afraid that I would also be one of those women who “adore” Melville Surtor’ was not a Ji When Jack remarked with convic-| place a small package. tion, “Some day Sartoris will find a] I picked it up curiously a man that is honest and a woman| there was a question in’ my s that is good, and I'd like to be! sed them to my host, for around when it happens,” why did Sydney say: “You probably will be"? ally thought the guest of should have a favor, and Even poor old Jack, who is usually very dense to any meaning that i nique guest of honor, one! not expressed on the surface ve a unique favor. I looked about among my souvenirs of travel | for one that might amuse Mrs, Pres- cott.. Twas almost giving up ih despair, when I happened to think of there was something in that that had not been spoken. Jack was satisfied with S: swer, but WAthought his p about a marfdeing more able to find] a little piece of carved ja the best woman in America. than] (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) on each quart of booze retailed in individual drinks an additional prof- it of $5 is made. JAMES W. DEAN. NEA Service, Inc.) this latter situation by producing separate revue using all the odds an ends left over from another rev Popularity of the » has great-| (Copyright, ly decreased during the summer, This ‘ is evident in the subways on Satur- day afternoons. Readers now 1 the weekly radio sections in the In the winter they took the sections home and left the sections of the paper in the cars. HALITOSIS I've had hallucinations late- Why don't you use lister- Puppet. OUR BOARDING HOUSE Night clubs and cabarets are mak- “Do you have much iety at ing enormous profits out of the in- rding house?” crease in the cost of bootteg booze we have three different due to the recent drive on Rum mes for the meals."—South Wales Row, Bottled goods went up about| Echo. Java is about the same size as Cuba, but it has ten times as many people. a dollar a quart after the drive on — Rum Row, but the night clubs now charge $1.25 a drink instead of a dollar as formerly. This means that EVERETT TRUE Now, DON'T GET Sete TLED FOR THe EVENING. MOU AND & ARS GOING TO A LECTURE ON DOMESTIC SCISNCe, & YD HEAR A UsctuRrS sy HOME ANY How t! THIS WAY situ! GET S30ME VARIG TY Eh! VARIETY” GHE I HAV THIS PERCOLATOR 4T You BEFORE {!! pour own international cases out of international t1 ment, fact that all such FABLES 0) SANDY ISN’T VE One billion pounds of candy are consumed annually by the people of the United States. This is an average of 10 pounds for each man, women and child. For this candy — $390,000,000 is spent, an average of $4 for each man, wi and child. Candy may properly be calied a food, yet it is u denatured food, It is lacking in lime, iron and vitamins, It has the effect of satisfying the ap- petite, and in this effect lies one of its principal dangers. It satisfies hunger, but gives noth- ing. It fools one into thinking that he has been fed. Children are fed When candy. meal-tinie comes they are not hungry ~~ VISITORS IN OUR FORESTS CAREFUL By Chester H. Rowell the country where there are - s, this is the time of the year when you will want to This means that you should also want to take care of your camp or picnic grounds which you would not leave around a permanent home. py the roots, nor pick them ty Don’t pick rare ones at all. And, above all, don’t run risk of fire. is not paved, afd it has no Throwing matches and cigaret butts around, city fashion, and leaving a fire tb go out of itself, are dangerous in the Be sure that your camp fire water, and then cover it with st enough. ng our forests fi Where Senator Reed Makes a Mistake According to Senator Reed, the World Court would be invertebrate or an international Which is the Supreme Court. of the United States? It has no power to enforce its decrees, and yet it is not jurisdiction to invalidate the laws of sovereign states, and yet it is not a tyrant. The World Court has no jurisdiction over any state ex- t. The United States has been the very pioneer in giving judged at the bar of that “opinion of mankind” which we recognized in the very act of our national birth. We have the physical force to defy that opinion, but we have alwa preferred the attitude of “decent r spect” to it. The Isolationist attitude the World Court, proclaimed in the name of American tradition® is act ually a violation of that tradition. It is the most un-Ameri our “hundred ‘per cent Ame have yet succeeded in doing. toward Handicaps Usually Give Extra Bit of Skill A boy who had lost both his hands takes the prize in penmanshi That is almost the rule. What one does against handicaps is generally done better than what one would nor- mally do. Helen Keller not only learned to it but to do it better The handless man writes and paints better, the legless man walks dances better, the deaf man p! better music, and the blind man finds his way about better than most of the unhandicapped. The best assurance of 1 long life, Oliver Wendell Holmes said, is to get an incurable disease. And # sure way of acquiring skill is to have to do it in an abnormally hard way. j IN HEALTH RY NOURISHIN! Malnutritign oft- ’ |and refuse to eat. ‘en is the result. Hunger is the result of muscular contractions of the stomach. When food is present in the stomach these contractions are so gentle that they are not noticed. When the stomach is empty, how- ever, and food is needed, these con- tractions become so intense they give rise to an unpleasant sensation which is called hunger. . Any sort of food will quickly cause the disappearance of hunger by le: sening the intensity of the contra tions. Candy acts on the stomach contractions in this manner. It fools the stomach, i (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Once Sunday was a day of rest. Now we spend six days resting up from Sunday. No matter how hard the wind blows on a bathing beach, it hasn't much to blow about. Procrastination was invented by a sink full of dirty disnes, Every young man dreads the time when he will bécome old and useful. The modern girl who doesn’t kiss is dangerous. She is trying to get married, You must make your own way to really have it. Women are people who wish men wouldn't be so foolish, It is easy to mistake ignorance for a good disposition. ‘These are the days you are too sick to work and too well to stay home from going fishing. You couldn't say slapping a man on his sunburned back was striking him in the right. way. Even if women do have more sense than men. you never see a man with powder on his nope. Lose your temper and someone will help you find it. 2 Blood is thicker than water, but heads are thicker than either, Being desperate may be the best luck you ever had. anced. program... Then the producer is ‘faced with’ the problem of employ- like | ing the. talent he has engaged under contract but which-he has eliminated fromthe bill, One firm ~ ha * ‘The ‘girl with’ pretty ankle, boxer, depends & lot ol There are two sides to every ques- tion, beth of which very often are entirely wrong. With skirts: so short, a mouse must think every woman sees him, Sometimes it you are fight and then hesitate, is best to’ be sure it doesn’t matter so much if he does get the wrong answer. ing broke is a short trip from any summer resort. The world changes in spite of those who refuse to believe it. Loafing around in the shade keep cool makes you fat and hot. to Leading a double life keeps you feeling funny in the middle. \ The way to man’s heart is through his eyes and ear: Better stay awake around a girl with dreamy eyes. You can do almost anything with money, except grow hair. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Ser » Inc.) o—_—_-________- | A THOUGHT | oe ssid aclu dO Speak not evil of one another, brethren.—James 4:11. If there is any person to whom you feel dislike, that is the person of whom you ought never to speak.— R. Cecil. FOR SPRING COSTUMES There seems to be a preference for failleg and ribbed fabrics rather than satins for spring costumes Satintbacked! crepes are almost. ii evitably used with the dull surface to the fore. i! LITTLE JOE | ‘+ IE JACK OF ALL TRADES \S WHAT THE TRADES MEN COLLEeT Ow. | SATURDAY : ees