The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 25, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune Au Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Establisheg 18 Published arek by the Bis fbune Company Rismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, as second class mail matte George D Mann President and Publ! Sabserlption Rates Payable In Advance Dally by carrier, per year 4 Daily by mail, per year da Biomareks iu Dally by mail, ear (in state outside Bismarek) 00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Goo Member Audit Burean of Clrenlation ated Press en Assoc) Member o The Associated Pre nae for republication « to itor not otherwise the local news of spon in, All rights of herein are also re publics rved. atives COMPANY DETROL Kresge Bldg. SMITH Forelgn %. LOGAN Represe PAYNE CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNR, V YORK : BURN AND COMeial ¢ ate and County Newspaper) State Needs Advertising Fifth Ave, Bldg. | Will of hate Should Be Supreme ridge opposes vir Hawes plan tor \ ri P Senate rules, on the geound that tendency is toward too many hows, anyway it is a good thing to have place where a ently determined resistance, even by a minor Gan stop them teas this necessary function ing tent, which ought to be lodged mewhere, 1 ( itution has alee: ovided for that, and ontided respousity Wh oebetraction, wot individual senator, or stall senatorial group to the president. Congress aets rashly i business of the president to Interpase hi rien t of the nation turned on te puted Jaws it has to be cnt ed with a nex use Of responsibility t can only be a by a twodhirds vote of Phat is all the obstruction the Constituth 2 and it ts enough The Senate properly reserves the right to deli: erate. But after it hao deliberated, it suould alse! have the power to act, and the exercise of that power ought to depend on the will of the Senate, whd not oon the consent of one enator, Water Consumption It is hardly believable that water consumption in | Bismarck through the city waterworks util has | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE nd of His Rope | aring the F ‘4 / OA Boy! aa I'LL SOON GET MY BUMPS In Monday's ‘Tribune was an editorial reprint af deer Can it be leaky mains or “leaky” books? | h le by Brano Lessing in the Loy Angeles ‘The consumption should be on a par with waat i | Examin amending Governor Sorlie for his fear, Was a year or two ago and doubtless more. An ess stand against the paid moral reformer, but ine, interesting comparison would be the number of cidentiall indulged in two sweeping editorial) gallons pumped and the number charged for on eneralities Waich North Dakotans resent with all the | the books of the city, It is just posstole that lo posses Ference is raade to | volume of business has deereased, but with a fine | ato tatements fiitration plant, expansion of water mains and low North I has not ma eoslightest contri- | rates, the consumption should be much greater bution to art 6, literature or any © activities the human mint whieh Automobiles ond improve The progress America makes is vividly ilus | North, Dako y far as the rest of the word is trated by the automobile industry | neerned, rep merely agricuttare, blue Lew Twenty years ago everyone thought the “horseless nd contribution to the nation’s population, freight) carriage” was a joke. Now the motor industry ia | rates and taxe one form or another pays taxes totaling the } “Bruno” doubtless knows very little of North Dé) sum of $500,000,000 a year, Its certainly no long ke His ping statements, uttered empirically | an infant industry | | i and arrogantly, brand him as & poor student of | p ahi Mt interesting to read imp) French doctors say they never saw oa chest ex \ H some nave of North Dakota. ‘The pansion as big as Gertrude I Proving SIMS editori hows the necessity of a att North tthe FPreneh docs have never been int vicinity | 18 ; ' tied ie 5 ‘ detistlo ne dar aeop ie : | LETTE form! But I could do nothing, for Dakota Association to combat this kind of propa- | of a golfer who has just holed in TORIS | 1 knew they were going through the| ® vanda, The Los Angeles Examiner not the only | exercises of artificial respiration. i newspaper of importance that unwitttingly belittles Now r ane ent is a choking | went, in Louis a tailor petted the great resourees this: state and) insults tne ae ee Se eng This ucemed | Bis wife with an iron so the touchy fieiicaice of her caple. Editorial Comment Cateath thesia coater of the | Noman wants & divorce Rarnest, loyat North Dakotans are now engaged | the swuter struck | partly untonscioas man beside YOU) *Gne might say the St. Loula tall: this state. ‘The literature, advertisement> and fie! vou Oh ake vou the Snows did the thoug fai ‘ palace iad work to be done will combat the impression: that CWaatiATEN White In-themporia'Gazet ey ee ee MEA ME. MWRTO. THAES CUI eoulll bach \ In union suits there is, strength, ; zs is » orce its are caused by som this state has but one commodity —wheat—and prac Judge Elbert chairman of the board of were not where L expected you to be| Preseott Again Tc eethece, au meseQUsedhes: : Aigo is pin ailigale | lireciors: sok Inited. States Steer cor: n you go down. Il cyes upon you, und understood t Ly a tices twelve montis in the year rtain radieal | directors of United States Steel corp) ikon, “I think T cailed | his brain was’ full" of the same] ava seme of7aale diverce si ism in the direction of state aif and Richard Washburn Child, former ame © surface. You did | thought. eiig gies should wave been sent Governor Sorlie in hi ches has often referred, to Ttaly, are sponsoring a movement int dT went down 1 wonder if 8 Carlton has | ¢o'the eleanor first i ; . nd your husband,| ever dared to tell you that he loves | to the tuet North Dakota too long has heen regarded) to lessen America's disgrace in unpunished erim mile Te WNuse COnTEMaH| Nou ?AL UNTnIe mote eater he te | la — i ‘i ; ; ey : aa . Divoree s worse than bath asa “branch states” He is seeking to ereate mar They have organized tentatively a national 4 Che were alt goad shy ama who Held his | ing suits leave some- kets within the tite and agencies of distribution | pmimission and th pose to enlist the serviews | TE een | gener Nene he doos his bas: | thing for the mn ion controlled by the residents state, By earnest of rich young men all over the country to punish down, sup pect. Always you “have | ne might say the Moscow stock- cooperation some of the adve advertising cau be! the band and robb dus kinds whose aE A SES a of any th ing shortage is by our steing ee re vouon the pier Carlton, whe | n Thin friendship on is park | ee a ates Nees stockings here reom highly organized metho: muking the punish the side of the Which dels ine No. his. a mucli [308 e Seelea ek Une “Bhockings ‘hers: sing when he says North Dakota has not made! ment of crime in America most difficult. | ceenth the surface ee aed than And Moscow has a shoe shortage. ightest contribution to art, science, literature Ik was Roosevelt's idea nearly forty years ago | (ME Youn husband, who was his doukven “teow. Cellinessauat mhey havenit saydleather: Yauiean or any other of tie activities of the human mind! that young men of wealth and social position owed,” Willing | _ however, helped | loves you, because being som leathersof iol Moscow ; eautify and improve life, shows a profound. te ety some intélligent and 3 eff | him to r the inert body and Jay | must renain in your ¢ Rey ctl acai Bick which beautify and improve life, hows 1 profoun ) i me intellig: ent and strenuou: ; fort Ole leaide: HOuUen ARRRGEe: CARERCIHASENG <ebes efiNie tetena veut Wise one amnee there vare::no stockings ignorance of the great achievements of this siate,| better s and felt that they could he'p in law | fitly ‘exhausted. butche. quiek- your disinterested but sympa- | in Moscow mosquitoes, will get s Its state universities at Grand Forks and Fargo, enforcement. i vee eeee and I ae i hi friend. nae - ati ‘ i ate a ‘ a j i " a ss ae i first glance was not toward the man y sailing out of your vision, ya i i have high rank. Much original research work has} His theory was justified fort Sago, Toy ye had rescued from death, but to. | may to you what 1 wish, Mine |, Jawa gaan tried to make is ton been done at both places to advance science, to it is questionable, ward you, is the hapnier fate, 3 he will Claim he te a wales. bos cmt Tea Fae : The t i Ss ; I resented the rough way | TOMORROW—Letter from — Mel- | E BAN ON beautify and improve life. As far as. literature The trouble with too many rich young men of ille S : isoneeas gene ea 4 5 ‘ they used your unconscious | ville Surtoris to Leslie Prescott. Avhoys talle. ua chedwillbauelad goes, one pf Californ i's favo} a adopted sons is) America today is t they don't feel that they when college starts. Says he hasn't games W, Foley, a native son of North Dakota, poet socially good until they have stoked un girls in the y silks and had a decent drink all summer. and litterateur, whose contributions have featar belts at least two contraband ¢ocktails a i vers, and young men in flannels a a ern ‘ the press of the Sunkissed state ben oteot Th panini niece nooze fighti eth ies knickerbockers. Most of them have] Had a. slight earthquake in Mex- ne press of Sunkissed state. A number of 0! he rum running and dooze fighting of these de iSundaved: I used to say when a ico. California doesn’t know yet writers who have made their name in other stttes generate days is largely to satisfy the social de- | local reporter, at a beach or in the how these others crossed the border. arte eir ‘Anas, ich vc es - ee | mountains and are returning direct. is started alt ir ea her mands of the rich young men of the country, and j ly to their jobs. Or they have been That’s why the Mexican border is “Bruno” should come to North Dakota and be their fook young wives who think that no dinner | so tudsered out that they were guarded. So tourists won’t return shown “The Best of the West.” jis socially decent except it be prefaced with an | unable to arise in time to transfer with a bottle full of earthquake. | Cea | their keys and change to their work- an Sie j illeee! cocktail: New York.—See-sawing up and} aday habiliment When coal starts f6r the cellar its st Likes Western States They continue to serve wine at their tables de" | down Braaduay L-saw Nan Halperin, | —JAMES W. DEAN, | Price heads for the attic. In the great closed spaces of the East, where the | Spite the moral obligation which they owe to 80°! who all her life has desired to ap- ae air A Cloudburst hit Fabens, Tex., mak- untamed taxicabs roam the endless expanse of | tiety not to do so, pear on the stage as herself, but who | cia Rae eens fs) “eee | ang. the: place almost as wet as New [aren sce A ; peas de o oring ethics is to be| York. boulevard, where men are lesmen and women| The annual consumption of Nquor in this coun-| finds as the years pass that her one | drawn up by a group of nationally ure feminists, there seems to be no end to the de. try has been cut down more than 75 per cent, but | way to suecess is through imperson-| known men. The code is sponsored| Laughing may make one fat, but mand for more and wilder western tales. the advertised consumption of liquor in this country | ations of otners............ Saw | by the American Automobile Asso- being fat in this weather no ae : eneyed & ‘ {has been increased 200 per cent because a lot or | Violet Teming, whom a few years | ciation. laughing matter. For the most part the hackneyed and unvs oa ‘ere D ; a “ 1 {te I regarded as the loveliest of all ts and scenes, the poor quality of writing and | Tich young people insist upon buying contraband | actresses, but now she appears fa- y i ‘a y er | the complete lack of any research into either char- | Goods. ened ang Tony ene pete | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO acter or history upon the part of the authors com, The poor man who used to have keg parties formers and wonder why so many | bine to bring them under the general heading of | the park of a Sunday, and failed to show up Mon- | yearn for such a career............ | eer, ay ne Fe lane ae nin ore Me Aa aC oo... Seeing Jimmy Walker, ‘Pam. | EVERETT, 1 HEARD A GooD ONG ne ieee a 08. G ing. many candidate for mayor, I ‘reflect WESTERDAYS But one or two there are who take as their back ground some of the highly colorful and glamorous incidents with which the history of the West overflowing, and build upon solid sands, For such qualities this Surveyor has for some time been a bit partial toward Hal G. Evarts, who not only is a fictioneer but has done some splendie | animal sketches and outdoo | His latest book is “ ish J with a curse pronounced by the P; 1 who dwelt in certain section of Texas from hich they had been banished. The situation: is created ‘by the Mexican cession of the great fertile valleys to the United States and the subsequent l has to do Oo Indians upon | | i grabbings under the government registration law, during which the Indians were frozen out. Combined with the elements of the eerie are thrilling and often accurate pictures of greedy types i and feverish struggles, done in a style which, if | _ not literary, is at least good journalism. Death of A. B. Skinner Press dispatches from this state recently carried a brief account of the death of A. B, Skinner when his automobile turned over in a ditch near Tokio, N. D. American Indian and had carried on explorations and researches in many parts of the United States. One of his greatest contributions to the American Museum of Natural History was obtained among the Seminole Indians. With three companions and two canoes he toured the swamps of Florida and gath- ered a unique collection of dresses, cooking uten- sils and much data upon this interesting tribe. At the time of his death he was under commiasion from the Heye Foundation to collect historical data and relics’ of the ae that once roamed the plains of Dakota, He had with him an Indian companion, Amos One-Road. Skinner had been adopted into | producing ; Morons, produces more advertisement to encourage | crime than a hundred keg parties of poor devils He was well-known as an expert on the | ‘bandits, the gunmen and their the trime’dfMenominees and was’ given the title of Saykoska or “Littte Weasel.” The price of booze has stopped him. The middle-class, chureh-golng, God-fearing, law- abiding majority in this country has stopped drink- ing. But the country club crowd fs the booze fighting bunch in America. Three or four quarts of o0z dance affecting less than three or four at a country cluy score of pepole and conspicuously picked seeking to forget their poverty produced twenty five years ago. \He began his career as TCE-HSGH — A EFeL_ow upon the requisites for filing the! political Btnitee mat laun (common: —A ISO re HAw! HAW WENT vealth, Walk k ° public pei we alker makes more public Inco Haw Haw! Haw! Haw | speeches than any m and in everyone I ha referred to his humble origin eg tare: w George MacFarlane, leading man in comedy with mus a choi in Montreal........... the petite Edna Hibbard, who has | heen endowed by nature’ with sta- ture, voice and ‘other essentials to| play juvenile roles, yet she con tl ently avpears in the role of scarlet woman oe Saw George Jean Nathan. the critic, He is here and Lillian Gish is in California, and | pean ge This country clubi bunch, these rich young men |More than that T cannot say... | (a BECCOW WENT INTO A — who Mr. Gary and Mr, Chiid would enlist in thetr | jhe oniy promoter 1 know who Tooke HEe-HAW {$C Hae! Hae! war! effort to suppress crime, are by their social develic ‘and dresses like a promoter... 1 { 4 ee tions, doing more to give impulse to the crime wave | 3 shastra jane miele Goldens: the | HAE. HA. @ NECloh) than anything else in America, The best thing that the rich younz men in this country can do is to shut booze out of thelr homes. When the booze leay the homes of the rich, when it goes out of the country club and. the vari- ous college clubs, the Harvard clubs, the Yale clubs, and university clubs, the Union League clubs over the country, then the stickup men, the organized political pals, will} begin to realize that the war on crime js in earnest. Until the rich young men drop booze they~mizht as well yell down the rain barrel for ail the fear they will instill in the hearts of the bandits. Wealth has a deep cbligat’on to support the laws. After six years it is evident that the country is solidly, consistently and unalterably back of the| Volstead act. It will be made stiffer rather than weaker, And the sooner the wealth of this country railies to the support of those who are upholding the law ‘by custom and by social practice, the sooner we shall have the crime wave checked. + Let’ the rich young men put that in their pipes and smoker it, i} x 7 (lA. mellowing jazz music until it sounds eee ecclesiasti: Looking upon hfs nose, a vagrant idea occurred to me, and ‘it was that ip ease the tuba should get out of™order his might serve to fill the breach. 5 cea Saw Joseph Kilgour, who for four years in winter and in’ sum- mer wore a heavy fur coat in “The i ” He became an actor the stock broker he worked for in Chicago went out of busine: : iS Saw Florence Shirley who was once the stage’s youngest ingenue. She was 12, At 14 she played an ingenue role with Blanche Bates ...... iio teoN Seana Saw newspaperman of Evansville, Ind., who has come here to carve his name and fortune in newspaper columns. One thing he perceives here which is peculiar to this city is that the crowd is in no one section of the city but all over the city........ Saw Ed Mi a Cincinnati editor, and he was smoking the biggest cigar I've seen in months... = WENT INTO — HAR : HAR moore The, Monday morning crowd is un- like that of unymoemer morning. ' Pouring out of the subways and the stations one sees office and shop Politics not to forcement wins! General Anderson have his non-political -e, organized on | at must st the political ap- the senator the s their districts ope of course, the high- whom he had so prohibition — enforcement ept appointment on even if they could get Jit, which is'unlikely. In fact, many lof them had already told him th | they would not consider the servi at ‘all unless they would h same opportunity to accom) sults that they would have in bus ness—that is, control of their own subordinates “and the authority to pay them the same compensations that business would pay for similar | se lass exe- t to sue | pery | would not | these term These are precisely the two things which politics will not permit. Si if we get rid of the present corru tion and inefficiency in the proh bition service, it will probably be | to see ‘it renewed in other cal patronage-monging and loyal enforcement do not mix. Should We have Such Politics? should there 1 in Why | “politi other ser ‘the public fally, do this sort of the prohibition or any It does not improve Neither, gener- it be the person fortunes of those who in- More politicians are de- patronage than are made | We have got rid of it in the! ied departments of the civil, serv political sist on it stroyed b: by; it. ! BY DR. HUGH S, CUMMING Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service jup the dust and to warm and mois-! jten the air. The nose ded | is d {into several small channels through which pass on its way to division of the nose the, warming bronchial tubes at their ends are surrounded by very thin walls. | These tubes lead to thousands of lit- 'tle rounded cavities known as the air sacs, It is estimated that if you! could takg these air sacs in your y m open and spread out side by side they would! lungs, ‘them cover more than two thousa square feet of space, The walls of these air thin and in these wal i fine delicate blood ve ‘ar they are en! ‘through these” eapillar | the blood in your hody than a minute and a de that all amped in r half. When you breathe, air rushes it If jyour lungs chest are elast may expand ful the walls of your so that your iungs y, you will find that there will be a difference of from 3 to 4 inches between your chest meas- urement before taking such a deep jinhalation. A lack of adequate chest expansion means: that your blood is not getting a sufficient lamount of life-giving oxygen. | Strong vitality and endurance and well-developed lungs go together. For every breath a draws, a baby breathes {and half to two times. The re-| j quirements of the baby, therefore,| are relatively much great®r than | ‘the requirements of the grown-up. | You can, therefore, easily under- | grown-up | from one ; much | child | service, to everybody's benefit. never ‘with the willing consent Congress, Pressure was lessury, from the presi But of | the people. Yet in those services, the spoil system produced nothing worse than extravagance, ineff! , favori- tism, injusti " has meant the prohibition all these, and corruption and con- tempt of government besides. The announced policies of General An- derson promised improvement. atorial interference will probably already provement impo: A Safe Remedy Would Be to Bite Off Less Let ance take warning of Car- thage! When the ancient Punie n. tion got so engrossed in business that it hired foreign mercenaries to fight its wars, that began the de- cline which ended in its complete destruction by the citizen armies of Rome. Centuries later, Rome suffered an analogous fate. ace, though for different reasons, seems to be risk- ing the same rash experiment. African troops in Europe, and now German mercenaries and American adventurers in the Riff, are a dan- werous beginnine The reason, to be sure, that France is under- taking to conduct an imperialism greater than has the men or t | resources to maintain. In homelier Americanese, it his “bit off more than it can chew.” But false teeth are not the remedy even for that predicament. The only safe course is to bite off less, FABLES ON HEALTH RESPIRATORY NEEDS AND SLEEP stand how false is the arg’ vanced by some mothers maller children require 1 ir than their older children. ment ad- that thei fresh The r passages of the human; As a child grows older he should body begin with the nose. The nose| be taught the value of regular hours tis lined with a thin, moist for sleep. He should be ‘taught that {brane whose function it is to {the quality sleep is just as im- portant as the amount of sleep. He should be taught that if he does not awake refreshed after a night’s sleep that something is wrong. Sleep should be the great reserv which your child can dip newed energy and ambition. Nothing more natural sleep. When a child is busy during the day at play or at small ta and at night finds himself unable to sleep, you should remember t this is unnatu nd that there pn which you should set about cover into re- for due toa lumpy y corrected, It to a late meal is du sleeplessness or to unwholesame food, that can be remedied. Howey if sleep. ss is due to so-called “nervous- frequently be re difficult to get at. Thi < especially true in the ease of dren, inasmuch as children Idom understand the causes of sleepless- ness or if they do understand them they wish to conceal them. You*should know that some chil- dren are far more susceptible to nervous disturbances than are others und that children as a rule are more susceptible to nervous disturbances than many people are accustomed to think. You cannot assume that a will sleep merely because he a child. No child sleeps so sound- ly simply because he is a child that noises will not trouble him, that sounds will not disturb his slumber. Do not forget that night terrors are often due to frights received during the day. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Everyone of the birch bark notes have been heard from,” said Will O° the Wisp to the Twins. “And no one seems to know a thing about the last lost button you are hunt- Juggle Jump, the fairyman, jun- gled the buttons in his pockets, the eleven they had already found, and said, “Well, I think we shall have to make these eleven buttons do. Time is going and the Fairy Queen will wonder where we are.” “How many buttons were there?” asked Will O’ the Wisp. “Twelve,” said Nancy. hole,” suggested.Mr, Will, ‘ be possible to keep Puff’s coat closed! with eleven pearl buttons if he took be better to keep on hunting until they found the other button? Suddenly he laughed aloud. “I've just thought of something,” he said. “PN go to the grocery store and get some sneezeless pepper. Then the eleven buttons will not “only be enough, but they will be sure to stay on because Puff won't sneeze} any more.” “I hope it will be as you say,” said Will O' the Wisp, trimming the wick of his lantern and filling it with oil, as it was getting late and almost time for him to make his usual rounds as night watchman of Dixie Land. “Thank you, I am sure we shall, if we look in the right place,” said Juggle Jump, So they all shook hands with Mis- ter Will and said hood-bye, and thanked him for helping them and then as Juggle Jump pressed one of his magic buttons which said “ever and ever so small,” the three trayel- lers shrank to the size of pigmies. There were the three humming birds beside them waiting, and they all jumped on, “Stop at the Green Wizard's house on your way to the Fairy Queen's palace,” ordered Juggle Jump. So away hummed the humming birds, And the Green Wizard will- ingly and gladly gave them a box of sneezeless pepper,. % Then they turned inthe direction of the Fairy Queen’s palace which they reached at. about five o'clock, Puff was just getting tes. Every: body in the palace was cross, eyen the Fairy Queen's cat, for aa tHe Twins learned afterward, not a de cent thing had Puff cooked since they left. “For how,” said he, “could | “Couldn't you sew up one button) | Juggle Jump considered. Would it! O— a violent sneezing spell, or would it! I cook with one hand? I had to hold my coat shut with the other.” ‘Well, well, I certainly am glad to see you,” smiled the Fairy Queen, “Did you find any of the buttons Fleven,” said Juggle Jump, em tying his pocket. “But the other one must be at the bottom of the se: We looked and looked, and it’s no- where on earth. “Yes, it is,” laughed the Fairy Queen. “It was at the bottom of the soup. Puff found it in the soup kettle. So everybody was everything was lovely, one thing. happy and All except Puff wouldn't use the sneezeless pepper. “Why I just love to sneeze,” he said, So if he loses all his buttons again I see where the Twins will have it all to do over. (To Be Continued) A THOUGHT ! ‘There ia joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth.—Luke 15:10, He who is sorry for having sinned s almost innocent.—Seneca. CLEAN ACCIDENT SLATE Of the 70 cities of more than 100, 000 population, New Bedford, Mai alone came through the first five months of this year without an auto- mobile fatality. The city has been conducting a special . police cam- paign of education, LINE EFFE Diamond - shaped patterns and dlagonial handlings are noticed in the new _wool fabrics, ee LITTLE JOE | ~ Yo CAN LEARN SOME = THING EVERY DAY,BUT THERE ARENT ENQuoy DAYS FOR SOME PEORE + aye

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